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                    <text>The Spectrum
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«,

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State University of New York

VolTui,

ftal

cvj

uxr

No. 59
_JUi

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4

*

9
Inner
city
students
to he admitted in fall

4

Under a plan approved July 19 by the

Executive Committee of the

University’s
Faculty Senate, 100 minority group students from the metropolitan Buffalo area
will be admitted to the State University
of Buffalo in September.

This plan is to be accomplished through
the extension of the enrollment quota for
the forthcoming academic year and an
adjustment of the admissions criteria.

Dr. Thomas E. Connelly, vice chairman
of the committee, called the project, “one
of the most exciting educational enterprises that have been proposed with respect to the inner core city.”
Beginning Monday, the University’s Of-

fice of Admissions, with the assistance of
various organizations and agencies of the
non-white community, will begin recruiting students, all of whom live within
commuting distance of the University.
The plan has grown from proposals of
students and faculty, culminating in a
specific recommendation of the Select
Committee for Equal Opportunity, headed
by Dr. James A. Moss. The concept has

the endorsement of the Faculty Senate
Committee on the Education Policy and
Planning, chaired by Dr. Cesar L, Barber.
The Black Students Association, a campus
organization, has been helpful to the committee in developing the plans.
The plan is in keeping with President
Martin Meyerson’s charge to the Select
Committee at the announcement of its
inception to “enlarge substantially the
proportion of non-white and Spanishspeaking students attending our Univer-

sity.”

Details of admission, curriculum and
financing are being developed by the appropriate University offices and committees. The program’s initiators anticipate
that it will rely heavily upon faculty tutorial assistance to be volunteered by individual faculty members.
The Select Committee emphasized that
the program is not to affect the regular
admissions quota of the University. Enrollment of the 100 students is to be in
addition to the original University plans
for the forthcoming academic year.
A project director is yet to be named,

Volunteers needed

Resistance stages rally
A noon rally Wednesday in the Haas
Lounge centered on the “2
-f 2 is on my
mind” theme of the Resistance.

The popularity of this message, according to Russell Smith, graduate student and
member of the Buffalo Draft Resistance
Union, means that the “average kid, not
just the college student, is beginning to
have fundamental doubts and questions
concerning the war.”
“The message of the Resistance is affecting the lives of the average Buffalo
kid.”
Explaining the strategy of the Resistance, Bruce Beyer, a student who faces
imprisonment and a fine for refusing induction, said that it is simply “enough
people saying ‘Hell no, we won’t go’.”
Mr. Beyer also discussed the recent ac-

tion by the Unitarian Church expressing
sympathy with draft resisters and offering

sanctuary in their churches.

As long as people are in complicity
with the Selective Service,” he concluded,
the killing will be done in their name.”
William Mayrl also a member of the
Buffalo Draft Resistance Union, then appealed for volunteers to work at the Draft
Information Center at 937 Ferry St. He
explained the activities of the Center and
the success that the Union has had with
the people in the Buffalo community.
“Our prime purpose is to resist the war.
The most effective way to stop the war is
to resist it where it hits closest—the Selective Service. But we are not a one issue Union. The office is a base in the
community from which to plan action.”

Raps
‘deception’

A former math professor at Cornell,
Robert Greenblatt recently visited Hanoi
and the Paris peace talks. He blasted
Pres. Johnson for alleged "deception“

about the bombing halt.

TV. Viet bombed more since
halt Hanoi visitor charges
,

The “false promise” of the Paris peace
talks was challenged here Wednesday evening by Robert Greenblatt, visitor to both
Hanoi and Paris. From June 9 until June
20 Mr. Greenblatt talked in Paris to both
sides in the peace negotiations, after visiting Hanoi in May.

Mr. Greenblatt focused on what he
called the deception of the Johnson administration—the “politics of escalation".
In the past five months, he said, there
have been many changes on the American scene, but essentially none in Vietnam,

Enumerating the changes, he explained
that the fear of the possible use of tactical nuclear weapons (proposed in January) has subsided and Khe Sanh
is no
longer strategically important. Senator
William Fulbright, claimed Mr. Greenblatt, has investigated the possibility that
Khe Sanh was purposely made to draw
enemy forces in order to unify public
opinion in the United States against the
North Vietnamese. Also a change on the
American scene is the fact that President
Johnson has disclaimed presidential aspirations in 1968. To Mr, Greenblatt, these
signs are deceptive.

Illustrating this “deception,” he said
that 13,000 more troops have been sent to
Vietnam and more bombs have been
dropped on North Vietnam after March
31 (when Mr. Johnson announced the
bombing halt) than before. This bombing,
the speaker claimed, is taking place in
Vietnam’s most populated area, up to 250
mile north of the DMZ.

"Spectacle of bombs"
To counter this diplomatic move, Mr.
Johnson issued the March 31 statement,
but so quickly that the bombing policy
for the next day could not be altered.
This precipitated “the spectacle of bombs
250 miles north of the DMZ.”

Mr. Greenblatt theorizes that the speech
was only a propaganda ploy and that Mr.
Johnson did not expect the enemy to accept. When they did, he delayed on such
issues as an acceptable site for peace
talks in order to gain time to form a coherent policy.
Describing the spectre of chemical and
biological warfare, he said he believes
that the war cannot be won otherwise.
A purple heart marine veteran in the aud-

ience concurred.

The anti-war speaker concluded with a
to resistance: “As long as things continue as they are, Hubert Humphrey will
not walk the streets if I have anything
to do with it”.
call

Mr.

Greenblatt’s address concluded

that “the war goes on . . . and so does the
Resistance.” Sponsored by the Buffalo
Draft Resistance Union, the program was
designed to bring the Buffalo community
“out of a summer lull caused by a false
sense of security.”
The speaker is a former mathematics
professor at Cornell University who left
academia and

became the national di-

rector of the October March on Washing-

ton.

Resigns to gain freedom
Turning to U.S. politics, Mr. Greenblatt
theorized that dissent here was more intense before it was channeled into respectability by the McCarthy and Kennedy
candidacies—too intense for Mr. Johnson
to freely continue the war. The president
therefore resigned to gain free reign, to
create a climate of false promise disarming to his opposition, and to place in
office a man ■'favorable to his thought
(Vice President Humphrey).
He also cited a New York Times report
recently that there will be no draft callups in August or September; opposition

is silenced until after the election.

Mr. Greenblatt also gave his explanation of the March 31 announcement of
President Johnson. March 29, Pham Van
Dong (the North Vietnamese Prime
Minister) agreed tojalk to Charles Collingwood, then visiting Hanoi, about the circumstances under which North Vietnam
would negotiate. The date set was April
3. Obviously a major policy
statement,
this message was relayed to Washington
March 30, taking the President by complete surprise, according to Mr. Greenblatt.

a

two day program of Resistance reminders

Robert Greenblaftt
As long as things
continue as they are,
Hubert Humphrey will not walk the
streets if I have anything to do with it."

�Music of our times

The 6overnight success myth
9

that covers his entire personality and be-

by Shaldon H. Bergman
Spectrum

Staff

The sudden emergence
of a singer the
8
ohenomenon of the “overnight1 success
s only a press agent’s illusion One does
into a
studio,
overwhelm the management, and instantly
produce a "million-seller smash.” I became aware of this when I met Debbi

”

f
L

11 means bein 8 tau 8 bt to sing ,n a
unique manner. It emails working with a
choreographer to learn how to move on
a ". image. It ends months later with the

Each Wednesday and Friday&gt; approximately 150 freshmen leave the State University of Buffalo after being subjected to
three days of testSi tours, conferences,
lectureSi advisement and registration. AcCQrding ’ to Miss sheila rancher, director

Now the matter is entirely a question of
whether the record company has properly

designed to introduce
University life.

ing

Reporter

Sing

Lynn Erdtacher.

Debbi has studied voice, ballet and acting, Her parents have poured thousands
of dollars into her pursuit of stardom
(singing lessons alone were $20 a week).
What is really surprising however, is the
fact that there are hundreds of girls like
Debbi who are equally talented.
The recording industry is one of the
most difficult citadels of art to breach.
First, you must have a contact, an ‘in.’
Only those with pull and ‘chutzpah’ are
even going to get this far. Once you know
someone, you submit a tape and this is
made to run a gauntlet surpassing anything the Iroquois ever dreamed up. The
would-be singer stands on the quality of
his voice alone —there are no electronic
gimmicks at his command.
Only after the tape has passed the
screening committee does it go to the
A4R man. He has the final say for he is
being paid as much as $250,000 a year for
accurate appraisals. If he puts his imperial
imprimatur on the tape, the singer has
only started his journey.
The A&amp;R department sends the novice
over to what could only be called “Development and Training.” He is taken in
hand and given a style. This is a phase

of the programs,

evaluated current tastes of the public and
whether it promotes you properly. The
odds are constantly being piled higher
and higher against you.
Yet there are many hundreds who try
to break into the market. They study and
train and push for years before they even
succeed are often emotionally exhausted
when they reach what they sought so arduously. And even if their first record
sells well, their days may already be numbered.
For few manage to stay on top. The
‘one record success’ is a constantly recurring event in record circles. All those necessities that got him to the brink of stardom —talent, training, drive, Ujck—will
not guarantee permanency. The alchemy
of personality, the mystery of charisma
must be there too. And this quality is
impossible to measure.
So Debbi Lynn and her countless cohorts will continue to seek. They will
pour their lives into ‘making it.’ They all
realize that the odds are incredibly high
against them, but each is positive that he
is the one who can break the bank. They
will face myraid failures, but only disaster
will even temporarily deter them. Dreams

die hard.

New School of Architecture
to begin operation in 1969
by Marge Anderson
Campus

Editor

“When using a technological approach

to city planning, we must first look at the

city itself—and its problems and its opportunities, We must allow solutions to
develop from our understanding of what
the city is, and what we want it to be.”
This observation was made by John P.

Eberhard, newly appointed dean of the
recently established School of Architecture and Environmental Design.
Only after an understanding of the city
is achieved, he feels, can we develop the
new technologies needed to design and
build great cities of the future.
Mr. Eberhard is a registered architect
and former director of the Institute for

Q
John P. Eberhard
New Dean of School of Architecture

Innovations introduced
into summer conferences

Applied Technology at the National Bu
reau of Standards in Washington, D C.
The first students to attend the new

school will be enrolled in the fall of 1969.
During the coming academic year, plans
for the direction that the school will take
will be formulated.
New professionals
The still undetermined nature of the
school was an important factor in Mr. Eberhard’s deicsion to accept the post here.
He sees an urgent social need for new
kinds of design professionals and expects
to develop a school here that will answer
that need. In the next year he hopes to
clarify just what they might be and to
formulate the academic programs which
will train them.
The school will not be “a conventional
school of architecture which trains the
architect simply as an artist,” he explained. “Environmental design should be
the infusion of our technological processes with a sense of man's individual and
social needs, so that the resultant products reflect their users' life styles and
aspirations."

The school will be based in three of the
University’s faculties—Arts and Letters,
Engineering and Applied Sciences, and
Social Sciences and Administration, Mr.
Eberhard will receive a joint appointment as professor in Arts and Letters and
in Engineering and Applied Sciences.
The inter-faculty base of the school, according to Provost Eric Larrabee of the
Faculty of Arts and Letters, “is an indication of our hope that the school will offer
training which takes technology and the
social environment into account, as well
as the asthetic problems with which architects have traditionally dealt."

PLAZA SHOE REPAIR
ONE STOP SERVICE
CENTER
Shoe* Repaired While-U-Wait
Laundry &amp; Drycleaning
ONE DAY SERVICE

University Plata

836-4041
Pape Two e The Spectrum e Friday, July 26, 1968

these

conferences are

to

the students

Included in the planning conferences
is a lecture given by a volunteer faculty
member describing his activities outside
the classroom and a 25-minute film designed to introduce new students to the
services available to them on campus.
Edward I. Dale, assistant coordinator of
student activities, commented that these
features, among others, have made this
year’s planning conferences a definite
improvement over “the all time low which
they reached last year.”
When asked if the main thrust of summer planning conferences was simply to
accomplish the necessary bureaucratic
maneuvers required to place incoming
freshmen or if the planning conferences
attempted to help the student adjust to,

and become an integral part of, the Uni-

versity community, Miss Fancher replied
that “these people are not college freshmen when they come here—they are high
school seniors. Any adjusting they do
will have to be donejn toe* own when
Some attempt is made to expose fresh-

men to student views through use of student aides. These aides are chosen, ac-

cording to Miss Fancher, on the basis of
their maturity and enthusiasm toward the

program. However, Miss Fancher found
that some of the applicants were enthusiastic, but had a negative attitude toward
the University.

“Quite frankly,” Miss Fancher said. “1
don’t want that sort of person talking to
the freshmen.”
Miss Fancher noted that the effective-

ness of summer planning conferences as a
means of introducing and assimilating
freshmen into the college community is
severely limited by the present two and
one-half day approach, which leaves them
to solve any real problems of adjustment
only after they have arisen.

Jazz groups to appear
Rochester will be host for the “Schlitz
Salute to Jazz” in War Memorial Auditorium Aug. 2, 8 p.m. This jazz concert, produced by George Wein, is one of 24 such
concerts to be presented this summer by
the Newport Jazz Festival in cities from
coast to coast.
Jazz grew up along with the rock music
era. Its influence rubbed off on the old
rock and now it is a constant source of
innovation in pop music.
The top jazz names assembled for this
one-night Rochester concert are: Dionne
Warwick, known recently tor hits like
“Alfie” and “I Say a Little Prayer;” the
Cannonball Adderley Quintet, featuring

their national bestseller “Mercy, Mercy,
the Thelonious Monk Quartet,
who rank among the best in the history
of jazz, and the Herbie Mann Quintet,
foremost in the movement to include
more ethnic musics in jazz.
Mercy;”

Also appearing

will be the Gary Burton

Quartet. Although relatively new in the

business, they have already made their
name in the jazz world.
This important group of top name jazz
artists is expected to draw a capacity
crowd. Therefore all seats will be reserved. Tickets are available in the Norton Hall Ticket Ofice. Checks can be
made payable to “Schlitz Salute to Jazz.”

Tower House Council is promoting

resident involvement with campus
“Offering activities to the people of
Tower” is one of the primary functions
of the innovative summer Tower House
Council. For the first time in its history,
the council is operating during the summer months.
Peter Anelli, president, explained that
the purpose of the council is to “get Tower
summer residents involved in the activities of the whole campus.”
Activities have included a softball
league, discounts for concert and theater
tickets and a touch football league. Coffee
hours and movies are also planned by the
council.
Meeting each week with the assistance
of advisor William Conroy, the council
members approved the continuation of

the penal code and open house schedule
that were in operation during the academic year. The open houses are Fridays
from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m., Saturdays from
2 p.m. to 6 p.m. and 9 p.m. to 2 a.m, and
Sundays from 2 p.m. to 8 p.m.
The council coordinates activities for
the residents of five full floors of the dormitory. Three representatives from each
floor comprise the body of the council.
Tower is the only dormitory having a
council this summer, operating with funds
obtained from the Inter-Residence Coun
cil.
Other summer officers include Phil Mor
ris, vice president; Harris Berger, secre
tary-treasurer and Jack Weet, correspond
ing secretary.

HEY SINGLES!! GO WHERE THE ACTION IS!!

The Lively Set

Western New York’s Largest and Best Club for Singles Only
(and we mean only)
Don’t be skeptical. Come out to our
Swingle party and find out how much more fun the summer can oe.
You qualify is you are 20-35 years of age and want
something better than bar-hopping.
North)
PARTY TONIGHT: Holiday Inn, 620 Delaware Ave. (near
TIME: 9:30 P.M. 1:30 A M.
FEATURING: Soul music by The Delroys
DRESS: Heels and ties.
COME ALONE OR BRING YOUR FRIENDS
-

—

—

�Film review

Entertainment
Calendar

‘2001: Space Odyssey’
by Timothy Tulloeh
Special to The Spectrum

During the last moments of a showing
the other night of “2001: Space Odyssey,”
someone called out quite audibly: “But it
doesn’t make sense,” and another was
heard to say as he left the theater: “You
have to be an Einstein to figure out a

“2001" is an extremely beautiful movie
visually. The exotic blooms of space age
technology drift through space to the
music of Strauss. The interiors of the
space station and ships are versions of to-

PLAY: “South Pacific,” Melody
Fair, 8:30 p.m., through Aug. 3.

day’s gleaming corporation headquarters,
the end result of the passion for orderliness, cleanliness of lines, and good design that flight seems to have fostered in
us. For if one wants a glimpse of tomorrow, he needn’t go to Expo or even to
movies like ”2001.” He need only go to
airports with their crisp efficient personnel, their air of important and constant
movement.

The reactions are worth consideration.
The first was not just the piqued response
of someone who thought he had paid too
much for a bum movie. People don’t call
out like that very often in a movie theater. It's just not done.
That someone did in this case is some
indication of the audience involvement
this film asks for and, I think, gets. We
want, the fellow who called out wants,
the movie to make sense; we want to
know what it is telling us. It is a movie
that creates in its viewers a desire to understand. How many movies do that?

Saturday, July 27:
CONCERT: Chamber Music, Festi

val Theater, 11 a.m.

PLAYS: “Romeo &amp; Juliet,” Festival
Theater, 2 p.m., “Seagull,” Avon
Theater, 2 p.m., “The Three Musketeers,” Festival Theater, 8:30 p.m.,
"The Seagull,” Avon Theater, 8:30
p.m., Stratford, Ont.

The film has a macabre humor. Hal
9000, the super computer, programmed
to have feelings, also has a will of his own
with malicious designs on the human crew
of the space ship he guides through space.
Absurd? Laugh when the screen shows
Hal’s beady electronic eye, the unwinking
eye of a sleepless machine staring at you.
Although he speaks in a rather effeminate
(honey-coated) monotone, Hal nates, fears,
has ambitions, and brooks no opposition
from erring humans.

second reaction expresses the
same frustration, but with something added. “You have to be an Einstein,” just
isn’t so. True, the film has esoterica that
will revive flagging conversations at cocktail parties. But the movie makes sense in
its own very special, symbolic way. Its’
mode is to the cliche-ridden formulas of
hundreds of sci-fi movies that Hollywood
has ground out, “2001” asks for new perThe

Sunday, July 28:
CONCERT: Buffalo Philharmonic,
Delaware Park, 8 p.m.
CONCERT; Schieller Ogdon, Festival Orchestra, Festival Theater, 2
p.m., Stratford, Ont.

CONCERT: Tommy James and the
Shondells, Melody Fair, 8:30 p.m.
Monday, July 29:
RECITAL;
Organ

Hal’s swan song—during his death scene
—one of the most remarkable passages of
a film full of them—is "Daisy.” Moments
later Keir Dullea plunges into a psychedelic trip of fantastic beauty.

ceptions.

call-

Kehl, Kenmore
8:30 p.m.

PLAY: “Romeo
Theater, 8:30 p.m.

If “2001” is very much of this time, it
is also something more: something enduring, something poetic, and something of
the stature of myth.

seriousness it deserves.

Two very able men are responsible for
its creation: Stanley Kubrick, director of
“Dr. Strangelove,” and Arthur C. Clarke,
one of the very best of science fiction
They have fashioned something very
much of this decade, of this particular
moment in the erratic odyssey of the people of earth. The movie is shaped and
influenced by contemporary things: Human anxiety over advancing computer
technology, the beauties of psychedelia
and the ideas of Marshall McLuhan.

PLAYS: “The Three Musketeers,”
Festival Theater, 8:30 p.m., “Cinderella,” Avon Theater, 8:30 p.m., Stratford, Ont.
PLAY; “The Importance of
Being
Oscar,” Niagara-on-the-Lake, through

Aug. 4.
MOVIE: “Before the Revolution,”
Conference Theater, 3:30 and 8 p.m.

Festival

Theater,

Thursday, Aug. 1:
PROGRAM: Sacred Cantata Program, Festival Orchestra and Bach
Soloists, Trinity Episcopal Church,

8:30 p.m.

PLAYS: “The Three Musketeers,”
Festival Theater, 8:30 p.m., “The Seagull,” Avon Theater, 8:30 p.m., Stratford, Ont.
MOVIE: "The Bicycle Thief,” Con
ference Theater, 3:30 and 8 p.m.
Friday, Aug. 2:
CONCERT: “Salute to Jazz ’68,” including Dionpe Warwick, Herbie

Mann, Thelonious Monk, War Memorial Auditorium, Rochester, 8 p.m.

Saturday, Aug. 3:
EXCURSION:
Mormon Pageant,
Palmyra, N. Y., bus leaves Norton
5:30 p.m.
Sunday, Aug. 4:
CONCERT: The Who, Melody Fair,

8:30 p.m.

MOVIES IN BUFFALO:
AMHERST and CINEMA: “The Odd
Couple”
BUFFALO: “The Good, The Bad
and The Ugly” and “You Only Live
Twice”
CENTER: “Wild in the Streets”
CENTURY: “2001: A Space Odyssey”
CINEMA I: “How Sweet It Is”
CINEMA II: “The Detective”
CIRCLE ART: “Hour of the Wolf”
COLVIN; “For Love of Ivy”
GLEN ART; “The Fox”
GRANADA: “Therese and Isabelle”
KENSINGTON: "Yours, Mine and
Ours”
NORTH PARK; “Petulia”
TECK; “Doctor Doolittle”

MELODY FAIR

now approaches.

Tonawanda

SUNDAY, AUG. 11 8:30 P.M.

Of the movie’s ending I will say nothing
except that it is a moving statement of
hopes that just now begin to take shape
and that, I believe, will grow in our
hearts.

WBFO has announced the start of a
program beginning in the fall. This program is to feature poets and composers
of the Buffalo area.
Besides poets and composers, WBFO is
also in need of students to read the
poetry on the air. Students and members
of the Music Department will be performing the musical compositions.

8:30

Theater.

PLAY: “Rumplestiltskin,” Melody
Fair, 2 p.m.

Niagara Falls Blvd., N.
-

JUDY COLLINS
Tickets available at
Norton Union Ticket Office
$4.50 $4.00 $3.50

WBFO to air local poetry, music

■

.

20lh feENRIRY FOX Presents

5TH AND FINAL WEEK

FRANK SINATRA

Interviews with poets discussing their
works and works of other poets will also
be a part of the new program. This program is still in a formative stage and
they are looking for students to participate in September.
Interested students should contact Bob
Jesselson at 831-3405,

HOWLINGLY F

1

GEORGE WEIN PRESENTS

«WAWWnPCTl«Sr

SALUTE TO

gzgSJcfeZZ
I

E

“Tartuffe,”

p.m., “Cinderella,”
Avon
8:30 p.m., Stratford, Ont.

I mean the people who arc turned on to
the frontiers this incredible world of ours

Like Dr. Strangelove, 2001 explores the

oscar

Juliet,” Festival

8:30 p.m.

“2001” is an experience. That is, it cannot be retold, or paraphrased or reviewed
properly. Its effect will be different from
person to person, greatest on those who,
to use a current phrase, are “turned on.”

A science fiction movie in the year
2001 is going to be quite a different thing,
not just because it will be further out
than this one, but because the makers of
that film-to-be will perceive and create in
very different ways, especially if the sudden acceleration of change in human attitudes, beliefs, etc. continues at the present dizzying rate.

&amp;

Tuesday, July 30:
RECITAL: Chamber Recital, Albert
Fuller and Jacob Berg, Baird Hall,

Much science fiction makes the point
that we are still huddled around the primeval hearth, only now that hearth is
earth. “2001” makes the point stunningly.
Earth holds few terrors now—except man
himself—and we huddle around this
hearth of ours wondering uneasily what
is beyond and what is next.

writers.

Recital, Roy
Methodist Church,

MOVIE:
“Hunchback of Notre
Dame,” Norton Courtyard, 9 p.m.

Enduring, poetic, mythical

ing “2001” a landmark of the cinema, or
at the very least, for treating it with the

PLAYS: “A Midsummer's Night
Dream/’ Festival Theater, 2 p.m.,
“The Seagull,” Avon Theater, 2 p.m !

Cliburn, Festival

Theater, 2 p.m.
PLAYS: “A Midsummer’s Night
Dream,” Festival Theater, 8:30 p.m.,
“The Seagull,” Avon Theater, 8:30
p.m., Stratford, Ont.
PLAY: “Heartbreak House,” Shaw
Festival, Niagara-on-the-Lake, through
July 28.

'isualIy beautiful

movie like that.”

Cinematic landmark
A convincing case can be made for

Friday, July 26;
CONCERT: Van

anxieties, the possibilities, many of them
awful, of this age in which we live and it
applies the same satiric view to the com
puterized astronautical society of 2001.

f

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CANNONBALL AODERLEY
produced by Newport

Jazz

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FRIDAY, AUGUST 2nd,

War

1968

—

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Friday, July 26, 1968

•

—

PAUL NEWMAN in “HOMME"

Th* Spectrum

•

Pag*

Three

�Draft resisters in Canada--Part II

CAO brings Indian
youths to visit campus
Wednesday afternoon approximately 35
youths from the Gowanda Indian Reservation visited the State University of Buffalo
as guests of the Student Association and
the Community Action Organization

The youths', ranging in age from 14 to

18 years, started their visit with lunch
provided by the University Food Service.
A tour of campus followed. Included in
the tour were visits to the nuclear reactor,
the dormitories, and a laboratory facility
in Acheson Hall.
Later the visitors moved on to Norton
Hall, where they were officially welcomed
by Robert O’Neil, assistant to the president, and Tracy Cottone, second vice president of the Student Association. A representative of Admissions and Records
pointed out opportunities for enrollment
in the University.
A spokesman from the Office of Financial Aid informed the youths of financial
assistance available to those interested.
The talks were followed by a movie prepared by the Instructional Communica-

Indian

film

The married immigrants

tions Center. The movie, entitled “Where
Do I Go From Here,” gave them a brief
look at the job done by the placement
service in career planning and finding
employment for college students.
The visit was completed with a trip to
the interim campus. There the youths saw
a 464 computer and received a brief explanation of its operation.
The trip to this campus is one of several tours of local colleges offered to
young people on the Gowanda Reservation. According to Michael Green of Community Action Organization, recent action
by Congress has set up the program to
“get them interested in higher education,
or even just finishing high school.”
He added the tours were intended to
give an overview of what college life is
really like. The participating youths include both students and high school dropouts, many of whom have no conception
of what a college is. Mr. Green hopes
trips such as this will widen their horizons.

to be shown

"Hum Dono" ("We Too"), an Indian film, will be shown in
Diefendorf Hall at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow. Sponsored by the India Association of Buffalo, the movie is in Hindu with English subtitles.
Admission for non-members is $1.25 and for members $1.00.

This is the second in a series of stories
about draft resisters and their contact with
The
the Toronto Anti-Draft Programme.
following story is typical. Names are
changed and some points have been edited

for

clarity,

but the content is factual.
by Lori Pondrys
Spectrum

Feature

Editor

Jim and Carol K. were married in September while attending Columbia University. He was a senior majoring in education, specializing in modern languages.
About mid-October Jim heard that
draft boards were decreasing teacher deferments. He became apprehensive and
visited the counseling service on campus.
They advised him that one of the most
effective means to avoid the draft was to
move to Canada, Jim and Carol were
not sure they wished to make such a
drastic move, but they decided to visit
Toronto during Christmas vacation.
While in Canada, Carol, a native of
Connecticut, discovered that she did not
particularly favor the lower temperatures
characteristic of the country, but they
visited the Toronto Anti-Draft Programme. The Programme informed them
that since Jim stih had several months of
his. deferment left, the most advisable
method for entering Canada would be to
apply through the mail. Jim was still extremely wary of this process, so the Programme decided to go over the procedure with him. All applications for entry
into Canada are based on a point system,
given in nine categories. Points must
total at least 50 of a possible 100.
Point allocation
The first category is education and
training for which a maximum of 20
points can be given. One point is allotted
for every year of completed education so
Jim was entitled to 16 points. A maximum of 15 points are given for personal
assessment. Jim was married, was fairly
clean-cut and his parents had agreed to
lend him $1200 for his move. This gave
him 12 points.
The next classification is occupational
demand. In the Toronto area there is a
great demand for teachers, so he was allowed the maximum 15 points. He was
also given the maximum of ten points
in the age category because he was between the ages of 18 and 35. A job
promise can entitle a person to ten points
on the application, but these can only be
given when one applies at the border or
from within the country. This deprived

Jim of any possible points even though
the Ontario Education Department had
assured him of a teaching position in the
fall.
Occupational skill entitles one to a
maximum of ten points. Jim received
eight because he had his degree but not
his certification.

Languages and employment
A knowledge of English and French en-

titles an applicant to a maximum of ten
points. Jim could speak, read and write
English fluently but he was not so adept
in French. He only received nine points.
Five points are also given if one has a
relative residing in Canada. But he has
none.
The final category is employment opportunities in his destined area which can
entitle an applicant to five points. As
mentioned earlier, the Toronto area does
have a great demand for teachers so Jim
was given four points. Jim had a total of
74 points which was well over the required number and he left feeling confident. (It was not necessary for his wife
to go through this process.)
Jim received the necessary forms from
the Immigration Bureau and returned to
New York. There he decided that there
was no harm in applying, so about Jan.
15 he sent his school transcripts, marriage
license and references from his employer
and professors along with his application.

Final decision
During second semester Jim and Carol
began seriously thinking of their future.
Though not activists, they still were very
much concerned with the war and the
possible consequences of the draft. The
draft call had also been increased in their
area. At graduation Jim made the decision to immigrate to Canada, About
three weeks later they received their

notice of acceptance.
Early in July, they made their move.
Jim had applied for a teaching position in
April and upon his immigration is now
assured of a job in September. He is
presently working for his certification.
Carol has found a temporary job in one
stores and is in
of the city’s department
good position for acceptance at the University of Toronto in the fall.
They have found an apartment, and
though they have not lived there long,
they have decided that Toronto is definitely a pleasurable place and are optimistic about the future.

UB wins 2 awards
Buffalo,
Two awards wore presented to the State University of
of
last
National
Conference
week's
Public Relations Department, at

centered
American College Public Relations Association. An entry
received a
Meyerson"
President
Martin
Inaugural
of
around "The
the
certificate of Special Merit. The Colleague, monthly magazine of
University, also received a merit award.

siNeiNe

Proudly Present

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FROM ROCHESTER, N. Y.

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off with student I.D. Card

THE MIRAGE

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(DEPEW EXIT, N.Y.S. THRUWAY

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Admission: $1.00

Pag* Four

•

Tha Spactrum a Friday,

July 26, 1968

IN PKJ-U80IEJJK-WUONO WWW PBOOUWC*
»

rriwlN

...the uncommon movie

~i SUGGESTED fOW SUTUWE AUQgWCESJ

—

bwiihkiiib. wm«?sw
SE-Itnwcwr
AI«-COHDIIIOMfO__

I

�Football Bulls
the spectrum of

Defense looks strong
for ’68 grid season

sports
wr

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_

.

||

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by Rich Baumgarten

m

Sports Editor

Editor’s

to have record year
It sounds almost impossible to believe
but the 1968 State University of Buffalo
Ice Hockey Club will be even better than
the 1967 (15-0) squad which won the Finger Lakes Hockey League pennant.
Credit Howie Piaster, general manager,
with another superhuman recruitment job.
How Howie does it is a mystery to all, but
come November Buffalo hockey fans will
be cheering for some of the finest players
ever to- wear blue and white uniforms.
The scoring potential of Plaster’s recruits
is fantastic. To say these Buffalo rookies
have impressive credentials is an under-

Terry Quenville—Right wing—transfer
from Canton Tech.
Playing on the same line with Caruso,
Quenville also had a big season with Canton. Terry scored 16 goals and had 18 assists during the 1968 season. A good skater who was a thorn in the Bulls’ side when
Buffalo played Canton twice last season,
Quenville will be a welcome addition to
the 1968 Bulls.
Brian Boyer—Defenseman
Canton
—

Tech.

It appears Plaster made a clean sweep
of Canton's outstanding players when he
corralled Boyer. A two-year letterman who
was voted Canton’s best defenseman,
Boyer is considered a “hard hitter” on
body checking. Brian scored five goals
and 12 assists during the 1967 campaign.

Robert Albano—Right Wing—Welland
Junior College.
The word from the Buffalo Athletic Department is that the Hockey Bulls have
quite a prize in Albano. Albano, who
played for Welland in '67, was named to
every conceivable Junior B All-Star Team
including the All-Ontario squad. Bob also
received the Paul Hodowan Trophy as the
leading scorer (22 goaIs-19 assists) in Jun.
B competition for the '67 season. Albano,
who has played hockey since seven, has
led every team he played on in scoring.
Robert Bundy—Center—M o h a w k Col
lege.

The Buffalo Bulls played Mohawk Col-

note; The 1968 State Univer-

sity of Buffalo football Bulls open their
season Sept. 14 against Iowa State. This
is the second of three articles analyzing
*he '68 Bulls. Today: The defense.
When a football team plays the likes
of Iowa State, Kent State and Massachusetts, it had better come up with a pretty
good defense if it wants to win ball

And Doc Urich, head coach of the
State University of Buffalo Bulls, wants
to win some football games.
Here’s a look at the Buffalo Bulls’ defense for ’68. It’s a rock-’em sock-’em
type unit.
games.

Defensive line

statement.

Here’s a look at Plaster’s hockey recruits for the fall:
Tom Caruso—When you talk about raw
hockey talent, you talk about Tom Caruso, An excellent skater, Tom was voted
to the 1967 Finger Lakes Hockey League
All-Star team along with Buffalo’s Lome
Rombough. Caruso holds two all-time Canton Scoring records. Tom’s 60 goals scored
in his 2 seasons at Canton, as well as his
119 career points, are both Canton marks.
He will probably team with Rombough
and Bill Tape to give Buffalo a dream line
for 1968.

II

preview—Part

Robert Albano
just one bright new addition to the
1968-69 University Hockey Club team.
lege of Hamilton in an exhibition game
during the 1967 season. General Manager
Plaster was so impressed with Bundy that
he made a concerted effort and succeeded
in bringing Bob to Buffalo.
Bundy, whose father George was a professional hockey player with the Toronto
Maple Leafs prior to World War II, is
rated an excellent prospect.
He scored 24 goals and 30 assists to lead
Mohawk in scoring during the ’67 campaign. A repeat performance for Buffalo
is not unlikely.

Michael Dunn—Goalie—Fort Erie Junior College.
The feeling at the end of the 1967 campaign was that Buffalo needed a 2nd goaltender to spell all-leaguer Jim Hamilton.
Plaster, who doesn’t settle for second best,
recruited Mike Dunn to compete with
Hamilton.
Dunn is the athlete’s athlete. At 5’ 11”,
185 lbs. Dunn at Ridgeway High School
earned varsity letters in football, lacrosse,
and baseball.
An outstanding football player, he was
invited for a tryout at the Hamilton Tigers
Football camp.
One more thing about Dunn—he was
voted the best Junior B goaltender in Ontario as well as making the Junior B allstar team for both 1966-67 and 1967-68
seasons. Dunn is a good one. Jim Hamilton
will have to work hard to be the Bulls’
starting goalee in the fall.
Ronald Sunstrom—Defenseman
Mohawk College.
Along with Bundy, Sunstrom comes
from Mohawk with impressive credentials.
Ron was named the Hawk’s outstanding
defenseman for the 1967 68 season. A former star of the Stamford Junior B’s,
Ronnie will bolster an already strong Buffalo defense.
Robert Goody—Defenseman—Kitchener.
One of the less publicized of Howie
Piasters recruits, Goody could turn out to
be the “sleeper" of the whole lot. Plaster,
a fine scout in his own right, is really impressed with Goody’s defensive potential.
Every hockey team, including the Bulls,
needs a “hatchetman,” a rugged defenseman who will rough up the opposition.
Plaster’s report on Goody reads; “At
6’ 1" 200 lbs. Goody is the strongest defenseman I have ever seen.”
The overall potential of Plaster’s nine
recruits is tremendous. When these nine
rookies join veterans such as Lome Rombough, Billy Tape, Frank Lewis and Bill
Newman, the 1968 Hockey Bulls will have
to be rated the odds-on choice to capture
their second straight Finger Lakes Hockey

Tough is the word for the Bulls’ defensive line. Urich has five lettermen returning, and they are all good ones. Veterans Bob Kovey (5 feet 11 inches, 202
pounds) and John Przybycien (6 feet 1
inch, 200 pounds) have the inside track
for the defensive end slots. Though
neither Kovey nor Przybycien has that
real big size, both are quick enough to
put a good rush on enemy quarterbacks.
Senior Tom Murphy (5 feet, 194 pounds)
and junior Prentice Menley provide adequate depth at defensive end.
It’s all smiles at the defensive tackle
position, where big Joe Ricelli (6 feet 2
inches, 245 pounds) and Dan Walgate (6
feet 2 inches, 255 pounds) return to rough
up the opposition. Coach Urich is especially high on Walgate who could move
into the All-East category this season.
The tackle depth is excellent. Russ Beck,
a 6 foot 3 inch, 232 pound junior, continues to improve, and should see plenty
of reserve action. Barry Atkinson, a 6
foot 4 inch, 245 pound sophomore tackle,
had a fine spring practice and could be a
future star.

Linebackers

Next to offensive receiving, there is no
position in which the Bulls are as well
fortified as in their linebacking crew.
All-East Mike Luzny (5 feet 9 inches, 212
pounds) heads the list of Urich’s five
returning linebackers.
Luzny,
who

blocked four punts, intercepted one pass
and recovered several key fumbles dur.
,ing the 1967 season, will be pressing for
All-American honors in '68. Luz underwent knee surgery during the spring,
but according to Urich is “coming along
okay, and should be ready for Septem°
ber.”
Veterans John Lupienski (5 feet 10
inches, 210 pounds), Dave Richner (5 feet
11 inches, 197 pounds), Don Sabo (5 feet
10 inches, 210 pounds) and Jim Mosher
(6 feet 1 inch, 212 pounds) combine
with
Luzny to give the Bulls one of the best
linebacking corps in the East.
Urich further improved the linebacking
situation when he shifted offensive tackle
Scott Clark (6 feet, 210 pounds) to outside
linebacker. Clark was so outstanding as
a strong-side linebacker during spring
practice that he probably earned a start
ing job in September. Ed Kershaw, a fine
prospect with the '67 frosh, makes the
linebacking picture look that much better.

Defensive backs

This is where the Bulls must improve
for ’68, Lettermen Gary Grubbs (5 feet
9 inches, 175 pounds) and Dick Horn
(6 feet 1 inch, 188 pounds) have some experience, but Grubbs underwent a knee
operation during the off-season and Horn
is weak on long pass patterns.
There’s no doubt that help is needed.
It will have to come from a group of
promising, but inexperienced sophomores.
One of these sophomores is Nick Kish, a
quick 5 foot 11 inch tailback who has
been switched to defensive halfback. Another impressive soph is Len Nixon, a
5 foot 11 inch, 180 pound speedster from
Cleveland, who has looked good at defensive safety, Urich remains cautiously
optimistic about his ’68 defensive secondary.
‘There is inexperience,” admits the
Doe, “but the overall ability is good."
Doc Urich sums up the defense this
way; “Qur defense has more good players
and morfe- ability for the ’68 season. Our
only inexperience will be in the defensive secondary.”
Next week: The opposition.

—

Dan Daniels
Athletic Director James Peelle has appointed Dan Daniels new athletic business manager. Most observers agree
that he will have
his hands full managmg the financially broken department.

League Crown,

Joe Ricelli

John Przybycien

defensive tackle

defensive end

Biochemistry maintains lead
The summer session softball league is
nearing the halfway point and the Division races are really beginning to tighten.
Division A still sports two undefeated
teams—the Golfers (4-0) and Biology (3-0),
while Psychology (3-1) and Microbiology
(2-1) are coming on strong, and cannot be
disregarded.
But the real excitement seems to" be
generated in Division B where a group
of
young undergraduates called the Brooklyns (3-0) threaten to topple defending
league champions, Biochemistry (4-0). The
Brooklyns and Biochemistry clash next
Wednesday at Clark Field (4:30 p.m.) in
what promises to be the key game of the
Summer Sessions League. The Brooklyns
will probably start their hard-throwing
right hander Samolsen, while Biochemis-

try can be expected to counter with their
all-league hurler McClean. It should be a
good one.
Chemical Engineering (2-0) and homerun happy Computer Services (3-1), both
in the thick of the fight, should give Biochemistry and the Brooklyns a run for
their money.
The standings as of July 22:

DIVISION
Golfers

A

B'o'ogy

Psychology
Microbiology

Education
Administration
Nuclear Blues
Physics

A

Pathology and
Anatomy

Friday, July 26, 1968

•

W

L

4
3
3

0

2
2

1
1

0

o
1

1
2
1
3
2

0

3

0

3

DIVISION

B

Biochemistry

VV
4

3
2
3
Chemistry
2
Housing and Food 1
History
1
Statistics
0
Campus Police
0
Counselor Edu.
0
Brooklyns
Chem. Engineers
Computer Services

Th* Spactrum

•

L
0
0

0
I
2
2

3
2
3
3

P.«. Fiva

�Film review

‘Therese and Isabelle’
by Philip Burbank
Spacfrvm

Staff

R»port»r

ghdes softly through the
vacuum to seek another lips touch, bodies
embrace, Therese and Isabelle are again
..

A hand

.

...

id Isabelle.’’ at the Granada
Theater, is a story of romantic love between two lesbians in an aristocratic girls’
school.
There se, older, returns to meet the

British students
bring reforms to
Hornsey College
by Sheldon Bergman
Special to Th» Spoctrum

LONDON, England—Students at Hornsey College of Art here have developed
a new style of student power. They concentrate on working within the system for

reform.

This past month, they occupied the
school’s buildings until their representatives were allowed to present their demands for reform. They held out for
six weeks until they achieved results.
There were no riots. No violence. And
more suprisingly, a good deal of popular
support.
Hornsey College is a fragmented institution, with its departments spread
throughout the city of London. Its apathetic students were asked by faceless leaders to participate in discussion on how
the college could be improved.
Everybody was surprised when 400 of
the school’s 900 students showed. They
voted for a sit-in. This is where the situation becomes a case study of peaceful

persuasion.

A student delegation worked-out ground
rules with police. As a result, police refused to remove students for trespass,
and the students maintained occupied
buildings in good condition.
A press department was organized.
(Something American student leaders
should have realized long ago.) No political philosophy was touted; students
merely concentrated on articulating positive demands, refusing to allow one single
rabble-imaged leader to emerge.
Results: Appalled by short cafeteria
hours, they put food service on a 23-hour
basis. After three weeks, food prices were
cut. And they now have genuine power
in formulation of school policies. Hornsey has been reconstructed.
Junior faculty joined forces with the
students.
But the most amazing thing was commercial press treatment of the situation.
When a reporter entered the college, a
press officer quickly answered all questions honestly and intelligently. As a result, the movement received much favorable press play, and the public did not
react with its customary hostility, A
tactic U.S. students might do well to copy.

•

•

•

ghosts of her student days. The school’s
prison-like nature with its massive yet
spacious composition, symbolizing the
jts inhabitants, is revealed imsp ir j t
mediately by a sign: “STRICTLY ENpoRCED: KEEP OFF THE GRASS.”
Images and soi mds from the
in the present, cinematic creations of
Therese’s memory. The technique is reminiscent of Antonioni’s “Blow Up” and is
our introduction to its director’s (Meltzer) electic style.
Like Bergman’s “Persona,” Meltzer
probes at the psychological, but his subtlety does not seem to slice past the razor
edged dimensions of the photographic
film. Isabelle, whose blond hair flows
behind her like the clouds floating across
the sky, is a younger version of Therese’s
over-affectionate mother.
This obviously simple Freudian analysis
of lesbian love somehow leaves the movie
unsatisfying, its artistic culmination in-

completable.

Yet the movie can draw our souls into
its illusory reality. The lonely room in
which Therese’s mind is enclosed is a
pathos of which many of us are aware.
In the strain of the struggle either to
relieve herself through masturbation or
to frustrate her physical and mental desires, human guilt is cinematically displayed and a vulnerable sore of the audiBaudelaire’s poetry sings to the sensuality of Isabelle and Therese as they unite
in the physical and spiritual harmony of
love. The union of two members of the
same sex climaxed in fulfillment may surprise some people.
Actresses Essy Persson and Anna Gael
are beautiful beings, which probably disappoints the males in the audience, considering the roles they play. The acting,
faced with the biases of the audience’s
expectations and beliefs, was nevertheless
made convincing to a degree by their
talented performances.

An artistic creation
The photography and music add to
Meltzer’s efforts to make the film whole
—an artistic creation. Though the film
was shot in black and white, the trees,
grass and soil from the earth take on
dimensions of color in the human imagination through skillful editing and photography. And though we can not dance
to the music, at times we can become
one with it.
“Therese and Isabelle” is a shadow of
many movies. It does not completely
cover the ground, but its coolness does
shade some aspects of human experience.

Ridge Lea starts
art exhibitions
The library at Ridge Lea Campus, 4238
Ridge Lea Rd., has announced the start
of a revolving art exhibit. Space is available for approximately 15 to 25 paintings.
All artists interested in exhibiting their
works may contact Mrs, Meyers at the
library.

we

you to

volunteer
•

Tha Spectrum

•

poor

people
get

dragged

into

ence exposed.

just want

Page Six

Some

Friday, July 26, 1968

things

•

•

•

The Spectrum needs people. People who are interested
in becoming a real part of their University. In September, we will be expanding all of our staffs. We will
be expanding the coverage of the paper. Current plans
call for increasing our frequency of publication to
three issues a week by the spring semester. All this
depends upon members of the University community.
There is no school of journalism here to fill our ranks.
We depend on students. Experience is not necessary.
If you'd like to be a part of your University, if you
like to write or take pictures, if you'd like to be a part
of the production of one of the most respected college
papers in this area of the country, come up to 355
Norton and ask to see the managing editor.
We

feel

promise we won't drag you into something you'll
sorry for later.

�Action line
331-5000
.

.

Hershey orders halt of
pre-induction physicals

.

Q: Why doesn't the University set up some type of outdoor theater by the fountain area? A screen could be hung outside of Norton
Hall and the projector placed at Lockwood Library.
A; As you know, silent movies are being shown outdoors this
summer and have received many favorable comments. The Norton
Hall staff, however, thought your idea a very good one and are now
investigating its feasibility. Each year they talk about the possibility
of live theater outdoors but find the costs prohibitive Ynnr irioa u a
more practical one and perhaps it can become a reality soon.
Q: How long does it take to have an official transcript of a student record prepared and mailed?
A: The Office of Admissions and Records stated that “transcripts are mailed within one week from the date requested, providing
the student has no financial obligation to the University and has not
indicated that the transcript should be held for further information
(i.e., grades, entry of degree, etc.) When a transcript is needed within
a shorter length of time and the student has indicated a deadline date
on the transcript request form, the transcript is prepared and mailed
by the date specified. A post card which indicates the date transcripts were mailed is always sent to the student. Those who feel that
transcripts have not been received by the addressee may find that this
was due to their giving an incomplete or incoferct address on the
transcript request form. Also, there might be a delay in processing
records at the receiving institution.”
Q: Why put freshmen in Allenhurst and not in the dorms on
campus?
A: Mr. Clifford B, Wilson, assistant to the director of University
Housing, stated that “it is the housing office’s policy to honor upperclass hall requests. In past years there have been an overwhelming
number of upperclass males requesting Tower. Thus, freshmen were
placed in Allenhurst. This past year we had a substantial number of
upperclassmen request Allenhurst and so placed a number of freshmen in Tower. This coming year will find an even larger number of

WASHINGTON (CPS)—The severe financial problems plaguing the federal government as a result of the Vietnam war
are beginning to take their toll on the
—
Selective Service System.
Selective Service Director Lewis B.
Hershey has ordered all local draft
boards to schedule no more pre-induction
physical examinations for August or September. The move, in effect, will limit the
draft between now and late October to
persons who already have passed their
physicals, or have received notices to take
them.
Gen. Hershey said physical examinations were being temporarily halted as an
economy measure made necessary by the
$6 billion reduction in Federal spending
ordered by Congress for the fiscal year
which began July 1. Gen. Hershey also rescinded the filling of vacancies and promotions in the Selective Service System
until further notice.
Selective Service officials say the suspension of physical examinations will
have no effect on their job of supplying
manpower for the military. They also emphasized that the “embargo may be lifted
at any time.” As long as the suspension
is in effect, however, all draftees will be
taken from the pool of “slightly more
than 100,000 men” who already have taken
and passed their physicals, but have not
yet been inducted, officials said.

relatively light until about January, when
they will skyrocket unless there is a major cutback in the size of the armed ser-

vices before then.
Mrs. Vetter, an expert on the effect of
the draft on the nation’s manpower needs,
saysTren. Hershey’s order suspending physical examinations will have both a good
and a bad effect on college graduates and
graduate students who no longer have de-

ferments.

One graduate semester possible
“Assuming the order stays in effect and
the Selective Service System has to take
its share of the budget cut, this will delay the induction of many graduates and
graduate students who have not taken a
physical until at least November,” Mrs.
Vetter said. “It will allow many students
to start graduate school and possibly get
in at least one semester of work before
being taken.”
But Mrs. Vetter also said the suspension
on physicals may reduce the number of
high school graduates not planning to go
to college who volunteer for the armed
services. She explained that many noncollege men tend to volunteer for the service when they feel the draft breathing
down their necks after they are called to
take a physical. “They don’t have a student deferment and they know they’re going to have to go, so they volunteer for
the branch of service they perfer. But
this order cancels physicals for these
young men as well as for college graduates,” she said.
“Every time you lose a volunteer, you
add another draftee,” Mrs. Vetter said.
The more the draft call is increased, the
greater the burden becomes on college
graduates who already have received their

freshmen in Tower. In fact, Tower will be almost one-half freshmen.”
“We in housing think this total integration by classes is a plus, as
it has many educational benefits.”
Q; Was it necessary for the Bookstore to close for inventory at
the beginning of the third summer session, just when books and supCalls light
plies are needed?
The draft call for August is only about
The
Bookstore
was
closed
on
18
A:
July
and 19 because it was
18,300, compared with a level of 40,000 a
felt that these days were the best from many considerations—student
month last spring. Although the Departneeds, time of the year, inventory requirements and Bookstore staff.
ment of Defense has not listed the call
The beginning of the third session was July 15, and the Bookstore
for September, Mrs. Betty Vetter, execuremained open from 8:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. from July 15 through and
tive director of the Scientific Manpower
including July 17. Provisions had been made for emergency sales of
Commission, expects draft calls will be physicals.
textbooks and supplies during the period the University Bookstore
was closed, and these were made at the basement entrance of the
Bookstore, from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
For quick action
The Bookstore regrets any inconvenience that its closing caused
the academic community, but feel we can appreciate its problems.
call 831-3610
Editor's Note:
In an earlier Action Line column, we indicated that only two
University Bulletins were available. Mrs. J, Mohl of the Publications
FOR SALE
HORSEBACK riding, hayrides. Waverly
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE low cost. ImOffice has informed us that “six bulletins are now available from the
HONDA MOTOR BIKE, beautiful condiStables, Service Road No. 18, Niagara
mediate F.S. 1, premiums financed.
respective offices of: University College; the Faculties of Law and
tion, call evenngs 836-8565.
Parkway. Canada. 8 miles north from
UPSTATE CYCLE INSURANCE, 695-3044.
Peace
Bridge.
416—295-3925.
Jurisprudence, Arts and Letters, and Educational Studies; and the FORD FAIRLANE, 1962, Peacock blue,
(EPUBLICAN
STUDENT NEEDED to
Schools of Health Related Professions and Nursing. Bulletins for the
clean and in good condition.
head Buffalo student operation of
NEED MONEY? Be a sales representaCall
836-0740.
prominent
Schools of Medicine, Pharmacy, and the Graduate School will be availState politician. No salary.
tive for a socio-politico-satrical new
Amazing
political experience.
poster line. Ideal for individuals
Apply
able by Aug. 15.”
1965 TRIUMPH, Herald convertible, moand
Spectrum
Box "O,” 355 Norton Hall.
organizations. Write for complete poster
tor excellent, body good. Weekdays,
Regrettably, the bulletins are late this year, but the changes in
profit
kit: GROSS NATIONAL PRODUCT,
831-3922 or 874-0898.
University organization made such delay unavoidable. The PublicaAPARTMENT WANTED
Box 427, Wayzata, MN 55391.
tions Office, Ext. 2228, welcomes any inquires about the specific date FOR SALE, YAMAHA. 1965, two hel
APARTMENT NEEDED for three female
CAT SITTER WANTED, live in or out,
$160.00. Call 831-3200 after
mets,
when each of the other bulletins can be expected, and will be glad to 5 p.m.
Graduate Students in September, deAugust
6th through August
30th.
sire location near Campus: 3 bedrooms
Call 854 4608.
answer any questions about the production schedule.
preferred. Please phone
HOUSE
SALE— Rent/option,

CLASSIFIED

Li
0,'
831-5000.

Your questions, and lor direct service, call Action Line
prefer, phrase your question in writing and address it to Action
Line, e/o The Spectrum, room 355, Norton Hall or the Office of Student Affairs
and
Services, room 201, Harriman Library.)
°"

s

'

veri

It you

,

iff*

\

Restaurant

~

CHARLIE'S

TONSORIAL CENTER

s

HAIR

.

For the Finest in
STYLING, RAZOR CUTTING
end BEARD TRIMMING

3584 MAIN ST.

Next to University

TF 6-9080

Plaxa

——CLOSED MONDAYS__

Open 24 Hours

BIBLE TRUTH

TRY OUR FAMOUS

Authority of Scripture

HOAGY SUBMARINE

Al« scripture is

given by

inspiration

-||
of God."
Tim. 3:16
"Holy Men of God spake as they were
moved by the Holy Ghost." -II Pet 1:21

Across from Hayes Hall
3248 MAIN ST. at HEATH

FOR

steps

to UB or Bennett H. S.

roomy 2-car

immediate
2408.

4 bedrooms,

garage, gorgeous kitchen,
occupancy. Bill Klie,
875

WANT

McCarthy? Write to the delegates now. Information on McCarthy
bulletin board, Norton: or call 882-2477.

MISCELLANEOUS
EXPERIENCED TYPING DONE
home. Call 892-1784.

in

my

I

SEPT. 69 FRESHMEN
ONLY DURING
PLANNING CONFERENCE

FREE

—

ROUTE 77

—

EAST OF IQCKPORT

Phone Lockport
•

•

•

•

•

—

735-7127

Supervised by Real Cowboys and Cowgirls
300 Acres of Wooded Country Trails

Moonlight Rides
Horse-drawn Wagon For Hay Rrides
Horses For Any Occasion

Call 832 3613.

APARTMENT FOR

LIMIT 2

SPECIAL
$1.00 OFF
ON REGULAR LINE

RENT

—

SWEATSHIRTS

Saturday, July 27
CLIFF NOBELS

"THE HORSE"
Sunday, July 28

THE SERMON
Weekdays

716-833-7131
Across From Clement Hall

Colonial Ridge Stables

pus.

UNFURNISHED apartment for 1 or 2
male grad students; occupy Aug. 1.
882-8806 weekday evenings.

3610 MAIN STREET
BUff AlO, NEW YORK 14226

9065 Chestnut Ridge Rd., Middleport, N.Y.

wanted for Fall.
$50.00 ncluding utilities, on bus line,

U.B. DECALS

STORES, INC.
at

Wi

private room, 876-8661.
ROOMMATE WANTED from now through
school year, ten minutes from Cam-

COMING TO THE

TEXTBOOK
HORSEBACK RIDING

ROOMMATES
FEMALE ROOMMATE

—

BUFFALO

.

erage

call 873-1319.

LARRY,
desperately need those philosophy notes I gave you, as soon as
possible. Donna. Room 208 PE.

LIMIT 1

LET'S GO

NEED 5

PERSONAL

886-0460.
WANTED
well dressed college men, av$4.00 per hour, car necessary,

THE HITPOCKETS

MELODY

SUMMER

FAIR

SALE

Niagara Fall* Blvd., N. Tonawanda

SUNDAY, AUGUST 4

—

8:30 P.M.

All Stimmor Sportswear
REDUCED

THE WHO

20% to 50%
Poise’nlyy

Tickets available at Norton Union Ticket Office
$5.50

■

$5.00

-

$4.50

1066 ELMWOOD AVE.
5:10, Thun, *W *00
Da»ir
Friday, July 26, 1968

•

The Spectrum

•

Pap* Sevan

�f||E

Editorials

(}

0p "’ l

°“

Without expression, freedom of expression is meaningless

Suburban discrimination
The Orchard Park Town Board July 3 invited 40
Buffalo ghetto-area children to use two town playgrounds
for two weeks.
A week ago, they withdrew the invitation
Town Attorney Ogden R. Brown said that the board
was not empowered to permit non-residents to use town
recreational facilities.
PACT—an Orchard Park community relations group
had offered to re-pay the town any expenses that the offer
might have incurred. But the board withdrew it’s token
good neighbor bid anyway.
It is typical suburban thinking that Buffalo City’s
problems are its own. Oh, the city is a fine place to work.
Or entertain one’s self. But let the city taxpayers bear the
burden of urban problems.
Suburbanites may work in Buffalo, use Buffalo streets,
expect to be protected by paid professional city firefighters
and police while here. But when it comes time to pay for
these services, they flee to their little box houses in Stick
Village
Forty-five percent of the property in the City of Buffalo
by J. L. McCrary
A is for Alabama, home of George Wallace.
is tax-exempt.
B is for Bribes for political office
The city contains major state and county office faciliC is for Convention and we’ll stop priming right
galleries
main
art
library,
offices,
zoo,
the
the
ties, diocesan
here, thus avoiding D for Democrat and all the
and museums—all of which benefit city and town dwellers rest, and get to a point of pertinence. The conventions are almost upon us in living color, you
equally, yet are paid for exclusively by city taxpayers.
see, with Chet. Dave, Walter and Mudd in your
Park,
Cazenovia
Cleveland
Buffalo operates Grover
eye, and all those salty politicos, eh?
Park and South Park—each of which is surrounded on three
It’s going to be 14-hour days of non-stop, nonsides by a city suburb! On any day, most persons using think verbalizing and hole-patching and refrigerator advertisements live-and-direct, with cameras
recreational equipment in these parks are NOT Buffalo poking,
probing and in general producing the bigresidents.
gest spectacle since the lions and Christians had
Most children who win prizes at the zoo’s annual Easter at it.
D is for delegates too, understand, the decisionegg hunt are sons and daughters of suburbanites.
who are of two basic genders—pledged
makers,
and
playbeaches,
suburban
parks,
Yet nearly all
and uncommitted. So now that the scene has been
set lets move everything to balmy palmy Miami,
grounds are for “residents of the town only.”
It’s no secret why. Letting in non-residents means sight of the GOP convention.
J. L. will commentate:
letting in Negroes
“Good afternoon, political fans, and welcome to
care
woke
to
subup
urbanites
who
Isn’t it about time
the 1968 GOP National Convention. Yes-siree!
You’re just in time to watch the nerve-chilling exurban discrimination?

Readers
writings

’

Refractions

Yes, appropriate
Thursday, the Buffalo Draft Resistance Union picketed
the home of prominent Buffalo mortician Donald A. Doino,
1843 Hertel Ave.
He is one of four undertakers on Local Selective Service
Board 83.
How appropriate that funeral directors might select men
for slaughter!
The board has jurisdiction in the city’s ghetto area, yet
not one of its ten members is black.
How appropriate that white men might select black
men for slaughter!
The Union said that all this is an example of how most
persons in society have no voice in decisions that effect
their lives.
How appropriate!
during
every Tuesday and Friday
Spectrum it published twice-weekly
Fridays
from June to September,
regular academic year, and weekly
Association
of
the
periods
by
Faculty-Student
the
except during examination
State University of New York at Buffalo, Inc. Offices are located at 355 Norton
Hall, State University of New York at Buffalo, 3435 Main Street, Buffalo, New
York 14214.

The
the

—

—

—

Editor

HAYNES
DANIEL LASSER
POWAZEK

RICHARD R.

....

(Managing Editor

Business

SAMUEL A.

Manager

Campus News
Feature Editor
Photography
Copy Editor

—

Marge Anderson
Lori Pendrys
Robert Hsiang

VACANT

City Editor
Sports
layout
Advertising

Peter Simon
Richard Baumgarten
David L. Sheedy
Murray Richman

The Spectrum is a member of the United States Student
and the Associated Collegiate Press. The Spectrum is served
International,

Association
United Press
the Los Angeles

Press
by:

College Press Service, Gannett News Service, and
Times Syndicate.
Republication of all news dispatches is forbidden without express consent
of the Editor-In-Chief. Rights of republication of all other matter herein are
also reserved.
Editorial policy is determined by the Editor-in-Chief.
Second class postage paid at Buffalo, New York.
Represented for advertising by National Educational Advertising Service, Inc.,
18 E. 50th Street, New York, New York 10022.
Basic advertising rate: $2.75; summer rate: $2.25 per column inch. Contract

rotes upon request.

•

Th* Sp*«»rum

To the Editor:
About a week ago
in Lockwood Library.
When I came to

•

831-3610.

Friday, July J6, 1968

I went to the Poetry Room

it, I was met with a solid
closed door with a small sign saying: “Please come
in.” The first time I saw it, I thought it was not
the Poetry Room because it seemed uninviting and
hidden. When I went into it, I was surprised!
An alarm sounded as long as the door was
open. I went in there in order to look at E, E.
Cummings’ CIOPW. One cannot browse in the
Poetry Room; you must ask for a book and then
the book. She seems
wait while a librarian seeks
feeling
to do it because she has to and that is the
her perch
that is transmitted. Then she retires to
and resumes her watch of the people present.
When I had finished with the book, I had to sign
my name to the card and present my student card.
I then left and again heard the alarm go off.
I do realize that important and rare poetry
books are kept there, but couldn’t something be
done that it might have a more comfortable atmosphere? If perhaps the door were left open, or if
people were allowed to browse?
Poetry is an enjoyable subject, but it is hard to
enjoy in an almost prison-like arrangement. People
do not like to go into a place like that. Why not
help expose people to poetry—not hide it?
A. C. H. D

citement of the roll-call-vote-by-state beginning
with A for Alabama, home of George Wallace.
Mistuh Chairman, the Great State of Alabama
pledges all its votes to the next President of the
United States, Richard Milhous Nixon.”
“Yes, fans, you heard it right, these are committed delegates, or should be. The Alabamians
have voted for Dick Nixon, but in their excitement
mistakenly called him the ‘next President of the
United States.’ This is not necessarily so, according to usually reliable sources. Also, they mentioned something about a ‘great state’ and that
adjective ‘great’ is highly suspect among many
knowledgeable political observers. With that in
mind, let’s hear Alaska’s vote.”
“Mister chairman, Alaska, the biggest state in
the union, home of honest people and Fair Banks,
To the Editor:
is uncommitted. You see, being miles away from
If Dr. Efron (“Experimental school to develop
the country and north of Canada, we’ve got this
freedom—Spectrum—6/28/68”) is truly
child’s
really big hangup about whether you’d really miss
he
keeping-up
in the field of modern education,
“(-'on
us if we were gone. It’s a long way from Miami to
soon discard such tired old cliches as:
would
Nome, where the polar bears roam. So we really ventional learning,” He would soon discover that
don’t care, except for one thing: either Alabama
“conventional learning” is no longer force-fed, ou
reconsider its vote or we seceed. Thank you.”
more and more diversified by dedicated teachers.
“J. L. here again. What you heard was unAnd while collecting private funds for “excllu
committed delegates making what some might call
afford i .
ive free” learning from parents who can
an unprecedented move. I mean it happened beun e
he might pause and remember the many
fore, back before the Civil War. But if Alaska privileged children who would be thankful for
seceeds it could mean a civil war with fighting on kind of school instruction most American young
Canadian soil, and that would certainly be untake for granted
precedented. As you can see, there is a lot of sters
Nancy Niggt
commotion on the floor, so lets take you directly
there.”
“Thanks J. L., this is Harry Carrie somewhere
between Alabama and Alaska and the groups are
v
trying to see if some sort of compromise can be
a
j
worked out. This is what is called
floor fight.
To the Editor:
Delegates are taking long shots, short jabs and
There is a crying need for the University
to
ma
the
students
some pretty good left hooks, not to mention some
here I specifically include
dark horses that are hoofing it here, adding to the
itself felt in the community by stating rele .
opinions in letters to the local newspapers,
confusion. So J. L., this is uncommitted Harry
to n '
Carrie back to you.”
letters are published and thereby serve
“Thanks Harry. While the floor fight drags on,
the larger public of the very real grievances
I’d like to say a few words about how great it is students entertain.
com-m
to see democracy in action. Here we have 1500
To persist in a disengagement with the anj
delegates deciding the fate of this nation. Many
munity is to adbidcate the right to protest in
w
have come uncommitted while others have presicontext except that of mewling commiseration,
dential preference. And now, we who voted for course, one could become a Cabot and talk
these delegates can watch them fight it out on to God
the convention floor. Lets take time out now for
Dunstan L. Haettenschwiller
Graduate Assistant
Readers’ Writings.

Criticizes Efron’s cliches

-

Calls for letters to editor

°

1

•*

...

”

Summer circulation! 10,000.
Telephone! Area code 716; Editorial, 831-2210; Business,

Pag* tight

Poetry Room is ‘prison-like’

on.

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                    <text>The Spectrum
_

\

State University of New York

Citizens Committee

Plan would merge
area police forces

af^Wfalo

Vol. 18, No. 58

FhJ&amp;f,

JuJ

o^&gt;

Draft Union to present
program on Resistance
“2 + 2 is still on our minds.” To remind the rest of the University community, the Buffalo Draft Resistance Union is
presenting a two day program based on
the theme “the war goes on . . . and so
does the Resistance.”

The program will begin Tuesday with a
performance by the New Chicago Funk
Lunch, a rock band, at 8 p.m. in the Dorothy Hass Lounge. A poetry reading will
also be conducted at that time.
Wednesday’s activities will include a
noon rally at the fountain in front of Norton Hall. The key speaker at the rally
will be Bruce Beyer, head of the Buffalo

Draft Resistance

Union. Russel Smith,

spokesman for the Union, indicated that
“other local people will also speak."

Mr. Russell, a graduate student in the
department of modern languages, further
explained that “future Resistance plans
and activities will be discussed at that
time.”

At 8 p.m. Wednesday, Robert Greenblack will speak in the Dorothy Haas
Lounge. Mr. Greenblack met in Paris recently with members of both the United
States and North Vietnamese delegations
to the peace talks. “This is a privilege
that very few people have had,” Mr. Russell explained.-

A former mathematics professor at Cornell University. Mr. Greenblack was a national director of the National Mobilization March on Washington in October. He
travelled in Southeast Asia from Apirl 22
to May 30, spending part of that time in
Hanoi.

What's happening
Mr. Russell described Mr. Greenback's
talk as “an insider’s account about what's

happening in North Vietnam and Paris.
He will tell where things are going to go
on the battlefield and at the peace table.''
According to Mr. Russell, the program
will help to emphasize the fact “that people are still dying in Vietnam even though
people here have been socked into a summer lull by the peace talks. The Resistance is still growing and developing a
method of dealing with a war machine
that’s still actively functioning.
“Even though the people in Buffalo are
trying to escape the heat and sultriness of
summer, people in Vietnam are being napalmed to death. The real heat is still
very much on in Vietnam, the heat that
rains out of the skies burning bodies.

"To remind people that the far-off Asian
war is hitting close to home, the Buffalo
Draft Resistance Union is sponsoring the
series of speakers."

Hi h school bo arrested

initiated by
Executive Edward Rath has rc-

A citizens committee
County

would function

as the policy-m a k

group.

las suggesl

crating by January 1971.
The Citizens Committee on Inter-Municipal Affairs (CCIA) concluded after nine
months of study that an increasing crime
problem can be solved only by a metropolitan approach. There are presently 29 separate police departments in Erie County.
The committee, chaired by Gerald C,
Salterelli, urged the County Legislature to
approve the plan by Sept. 4. If they do, it
will be decided by the people in a refer-

endum Nov. 5. To survive the referendum,
the proposal would have to get a majority vote in each of Erie County’s three
municipal categories: cities, towns and
villages.

Seven member board
Under the provisions of the report, entitled “Consolidation of Police Services in
Erie County,” the force would be headed
by a seven-member Board of Police Commissioners. The members, including a fulltime, salaried chairman, would be appoint-

ed by the county executive, subject to
County Legislature approval. The board

an attempt to eliminate political interference in police matters, the chief would
have “tenure in office until the legal re
tirement age, unless he should fail to perform his duties as required by law." He
would be chosen by the board of commis-

sioners.
Policemen would be trained for two
separate patrol systems, one serving Buffalo and other urban areas, and the other
serving non-urban towns and villages.
The county would be set up in 11 districts, with a commander in charge of
each. The Sheriff’s Department would no
longer have any law enforcement duties.
The committee feeis that police salaries
should be upgraded and that “moonlighting," holding a seccnd job, should not be
allowed. It recommends that existing personnel of police forces throughout the
county be merged, with no loss of pay,
and whenever possible, at equal rank.
A metropolitan force has had scattered
support in recent years, but did not seem
to be a possibility for the near future until the report was released.

Focus: Inner City 9 on WBFO

4

WBFO-FM, the State University of Bufalo radio station, has begun a regular Saturday program of Black-oriented broadcasting entitled "Focus: Inner City."
Tomorrow's broadcast begins at 2 p.m. with folk music hosted
by Ed Blair. At 3 p.m., "Youth Speaks" will feature John Reading,
Buffalo coordinator of the Poor People's Campaign; Jim Miller, a
graduate student in English; Al Brown, an undergraduate student,
and George Graham of Us Now. They will discuss black power, the
black community and black youth.

Guy Colston will host a 4 p.m. "Soul Clinic," a jazz and rock
show.

Mr.
taking a
ing with
People's

Colston will also moderate a special program at 6 p.m.,
retrospective view of Resurrection City. He will be speakMr. Reading and Cornelius Givens, coordinator of the Poor
Campaign in New York City.

Girl attacked on campus
A female student complained to campus
police Monday afternoon that she was attacked in front of Hayes Hall.
Buffalo City Police have arrested a suspect, a 17-year-old student at Seneca Vocational High School. They are also questioning him about an assault of a 19-yearold married woman, who was attacked in
Bailey Ave. about a half hour earlier.
Police said the attack at Hayes Hall
occurred shortly before 2 p.m., when a
youth stopped the girl to ask what time it
was. He allegedly seized her from behind. She screamed, and he fled across
the loop.

A summer student, Paul Sciabarrasi,
said he was driving through the Main St.
campus entrance when he saw the youth
being pursued by a girl in a yellow dress
and a nun.
He said he overtook them in the Baird
Hall parking lot, and Joined the pursuit
in his automobile. He lost track of the
youth on Allenhurst Rd., he said. But
saw him again on Main St.
Mr. Sciabarrasi said he and two friends
apprehended the suspect at the corner of
Main St. and Minnesota Ave.
Police booked the youth on charges of
harassment.

New chairman appointed for
Speech Communication Dept.
The University has announced the appointment of three new members to the
faculty

Dr. Michael Ray of the University of
Waterloo, Can., has been appointed to the
Geography Department at the State
University of Buffalo beginning Sept.
1. He
is presently associate professor in
the
Geography and Planning Department at
Waterloo,

Dr. Ray has written numerous papers
and articles for magazines involving the
problems of regional development
in
eastern Ontario.

Provost Warren G. Bennis, of the FacSciences and Administra-

ulty of Social

tion, has announced the appointment
of

Dr. Charles R. Petrie Jr., as chairman of
the department of speech communication.
Dr. Petrie is an associate professor of
speech communication at the University.
He previously served as acting chairman
during the spring semester. His major
areas of interest include communication
theory, persuasion, group dynamics and
quantitative methodologies. Dr. Petrie is
currently a consulting editor for the

Journal of Communication.

Henrik N. Dullea has been designated
Assistant to the President and named a
lecturer in the Policy Sciences program
at the University He will also work with
Albany in the areas of public affairs and
general University needs.

ing

Campus

fire

A 2-alarm fire in the University Service
Building, 250 Winspear Ave., was quick-

ly brought under control Wednesday by
Buffalo firemen, who said the fire
erupted from an open container of naptha. They estimated $15,000 damage.
It was Buffalo's 35th multiple-alarm fire
of the year.

�raft registers in Canada

Entertainment
Calendar
CONCERT: Danny Kaye. Melody Fair.
. also Saturday
PLAY: “Heartbreak House!" with
Tony Van Bridge and Paxton Whitehead, Shaw Festival. Niagara-on-lheLake, through July 28
FILM: “L’Avuenlura." Conference
Theater, 3:30 and 8 p.m.
PLAY: “Out at Sea" and “Act Without Words,” Workshop Repertory Theater, 8:30 p.m., also Saturday and Sun-

p.m

8:30 p.m

day,

PLAY: “Tartuffe,” Festival Theater,

"Royal Winnipeg Ballet,” Avon Theater,
8 30 p.m. Stratford, Ont.
Saturday, July 20:
PLAY: “A Midsummer Night’s

Dream," Festival Theater, “Cinderella,”
Avon Theater, 2 p.m., "Romeo and
Juliet,” Festival Theater, 8:30 p.m.,
Stratford, Ont.
Sunday, July 21:
CONCERT: Ramsey I,ewi.s. Melody
Fair. 8:30 p.m.
CONCERT: “Four Seasons" Festival

Orchestra, Festival
Stratford, Ont.
Monday, July 22:

Theater,

2

p.m.

MUSICAL: “South Pacific,” Giselc
&gt;nzie and Giorgio Tozzi, Melody
Fair, ‘i.-ough July 29
OUTDOOR MOVIES: Below Zero, Big
Business, and With Love and Hisses,
Laurel and Hardy. Courtyard. Norton
Me,

Hall, 9 p.m.
PLAY: "The Three Musketeers,"
Festival Theater, 7:30 p.m., Slralford,
Ont

Tuesday, July 23:
Vampyr." Conference TheFILM
ater, 3;30 and 8 p in.
POETRY READING: Benedict Kelley.
Conference Theater, Norton Hall. 2

Wednesday, July 24:

&lt;

Albert Fuller,

"Romeo and Juliet," Festival
Theater, 2 p.m.. “Cinderella," Avon
Theater, 2 p,m„ “The Three Musketeers,” Festival Theater, 8:30 p.m., "The
Seagull," Avon Theater, 8:30 p.m.,
Stratford, Onl.
PLAY;

Thursday, July 25:
FILM: "Les Abysses," Conference
Theater, 3:30 and 8 p.m.
BACH FESTIVAL: Orchestra and
Secular Cantata Program, Festival Or-

chestra and Bach Soloists, Baird Hall.
8:30 p.m.
PLAY: "Tartuffe,” Festival Theater,
“Cinderella,” Avon Theater, 8:30 p.m.,

Stratford, Ont.
Friday, July 26:
PLAY: "A Midsummer Night’s
Dream,” Festival Theater, "The Seagull,” Avon Theater, 8:30 p.m., Stratford, Onl.
MOVIES IN BUFFALO
Amherst and Cinema: “The Odd

Couple” (couple of what?)
Center: "The Green Berets” (French
boy scouts?)
Century: ”2001: A Space Odyssey’
(fantastic photography, weird movie)
Circle Art: “Hour of the Wolf” (any
lime between 9 and 5)

"Prudence and the Pill’
live dangerously)
'Thercse and
Isabelle"
Granada

Colvin:
(don’t

(just friends)
Shea’s Buffalo: “Thomas Crown Af
fair’’ (some people arc always greedy)
Shea's Teek: "Doctor Doolittle" (sum
nter juvenile entertainment)
Glen Art: "Elvira Madigari" (she's
still around?)
Cinema I: “Where Were You When
the Lights Went Out" (none of your

pm

business)

PLAY: “A Midsummer Night's
Dream.” Festival Theater, 8:30 pin..

Cinema II: "The
strikes again r

Previously the name Canada had always implied that America-like country
north of the United States.
Now, to many it is a new tome, a new
life, an alternative to the armed services
of Uncle Sam.

occupation, future plans and reasons why
he came and wanted to remain in Canada.
The Programme had advised him to be
completely honest. He answerd that originally he was avoiding the draft, but also
that during his stay he had learned to like

to serve his country.
Recently Spectrum Feature Editor Lori
Pendrys visited Toronto and talked to the

address. Two months later the notice arrived that he had been granted land.ed

“

"The Seagull." Avon Theater, 7:30 p.m.
Stratford. Onl.
FESTIVAL:

Detective''

(Sinatra

”

leaders of the Toronto Anti-Draft Programme. There she heard the following
stories about draft-age immigrants to Canada. They are about two different but
typical incidents involving the problems
and circumstances that arise. Names are
changed and some points have been
edited for clarity, but the content is factual.
pill B. was a 19-year-old high school
graduate living in New Orleans. He was
working as a garage mechanic when he

received his induction notice.
About two weeks before the date he had
a conversation with his sister’s boyfriend,
a soldier stationed at Fort Polk, La. They
talked about the intensive jungle training
that the army center conducted and Bill
wondered about the necessity of learning
to kill effectively.
When he told the soldier of his apprehension, he jokingly resopnded that “there
is” always Canada. In the following days
Bill seriously began thinking, not so much
of Canada, but rather of why he was entering the service and the possible consequences. Three days before induction
he made a desperate choice, to leave for
Canada.
Only way out
He did not want to fight and this
seemed like the only way out. He left
in his old '59 Ford with most of his belongings and with the thought that someday he would return to explain.
His car made it as far as State College,
Penna, —location of Penn State University.
Arriving at the school he asked some students where he could find a place for the
night. They asked him where he was
going and nervously he answered.
They referred him to the college’s draft
information center and there he received
the address of the Toronto Anti-Draft Programme and a few dollars to buy a bus
ticket. Bill entered Canada as a visitor
and immediately contacted the Anti-Draft
Programme on Yonge St., Toronto.
After a few phone calls, a professor

from the University of Toronto offered a
room where he could stay. Talking to him,
Bill became more convinced that he possibly might want to remain in the country.
On the following day he returned to the
office to discuss his plans and problems.
He would have to apply for landed immigrant status which would entitle him to
work in Canada.
Documents needed
He needed his birth certificate, school
transcripts, personal and work references
and money for the application. At this
lime Bill made an appointment one month
in advance with the Immigration Service.
While wailing for his appointment he
searched for a job and found that most
of I he people were sympathetic, but would
not employ him till he received his immigrant status. He found some odd jobs
around the professor’s home and the programme supplied a little money.
Finally the day arrived when he had to
report to the Immigration Service on University Ave. Bill had received his high
school transcript, the Programme had lent
him $500 and the professor wrote a character reference.
He decided against writing to his former
employer, feeling that "his prejudices
would probably do him more harm than
good. The interviewer asked him many
questions concerning his age, education.

MELODY

immigrant status.

No regret
Now, six months later, Bill is living in
a boarding house and working as an apprentice tool and die maker. He has written home and explained but does not regret his decision.
Programme personnel were more specific with the following incident due to
familiarity with the circumstances.
Don R. was a junior majoring in history
at the State University of Buffalo. He
had been an activist and received information from the Buffalo Draft Information Center. Don had visited Canada many
times and liked the country. He was receiving failing grades which left him the
choice of struggling to remain in school
—which would probably result in his facing the draft—or going to Canada.
At this point he also realized he was attending school for the lone purpose of
getting a deferment and that education
would be more meaningful to him later.
In Toronto they had told him it would
be best to apply at the border for immigrant status. So he stopped attending
classes and got a job at Bethlehem Steel
Corp. During the time he worked, he
saved $700 and enough money to buy a
’62 Dodge. Driving is the most advisable
way to enter Canada.
He made several more visits to Toronto
to look for a future job and to arrange last
minute details.
A few days prior to leaving, he got a
hair cut and made certain he had ail necessary documents. He drove to the Rainbow Bridge and told the customs officer
he wished to apply for immigrant status.

Customs problem

The officer was extremely rude and told
him he needed medical forms and at least
a thousand dollars and refused to grant
Don immigrant status. He continued to
Toronto anyway as a visitor and was told
by the Programme that the immigration
department could demand medical forms,
but that he definitely had enough money.
They also told him not to return to the
Rainbow Bridge and to avoid the Peace
Bridge, where some officers had a reputation for misinforming potential immigrants.
He returned, obtained medical documents and tried the Queenston-Lewiston
Bridge, as advised. This time the immigration officer was very courteous and
helpful.

Don had a promise of a job at a factory
outside of Toronto which counted in his
favor on the application. When the immigration officer asked him if he had applied before, Don became nervous and replied no. All documents in the cases of
refusals are returned to applicants at the
border, so even though it was not correct
to be dishonest, there was no danger of
a check on his answer. After a period of
questioning, he was admitted as an immigrant.

When Don arrived in Toronto, he found
a room at a commune, and presently he is
living there, working at his new job. He
eventually plans to complete his educa
tion.
Next week a case of a young married
couple and their decision to leave
United States will tell more of the requirements and procedures involved in moving
to Canada.

FAIR

FINAL WEEK!

Niagara Falls Blvd., N. Tonawanda

SUNDAY, JULY 28

—

8:30 P.M.

TOMMY JAMES

WEHRLC
rtheatreC
out

TP ANSI TAt W£H/fl£ €33-6475
-

Part

Two who left home

Friday, July 19:
PLAY: “Sunday in New York,'
Golden Nugget Saloon, Fantasy Island
Grand Island, also Saturday and Sun

BACH

—

&amp;

THE SHONDELLS

Tickets available at Norton Union Ticket Office
$4.50

-

$4.00

•

Elvira
M«£gan
11th WMk!

Colorl

r=rnf:

$3.50
WILLIAMSVILLE

Page Two

a

The Spectrum

e

Friday, July 19, 1968

�Theater review

UUAB wants to rouse shut-ins
6

‘Acts Without Words’

*

The University Union Activities Board has announced the start
of two new programs for summer "shut ins."
The first of the programs to be started was free game hours,
which are currently in effect. Students may use the pool and pingpong tables and bowling lanes in the basement of Norton Hall free
of charge every Wednesday. On alternating weeks the hours will
be from 10 a.m. to noon and from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m.
The second program will be put into effect tomorrow. Busses to

and will leave at 9:30 a.m. They will be ready for boarding at Sherkston at 4 p.m. and will depart at 4:30 p.m., returning to Norton Hall.
Tickets are available at the Norton Hall Ticket Office. There
will be a nominal fee.
Robert Henderson, assistant coordinator of student activities,
commented; "People have been complaining about being stuck on
campus without a car. This new program enables resident students
without a ear to have someplace to go and a way of getting there."
The continuation of this program depends upon response from

students.

by Richard Parlmuttar

bolically, much as in Golding’s more ef-

Spectrum Theater Reviewer

fective Lord of the Flies.
The decision of menu is made by Joseph Krysiak as Fat, who quickly forces
his domineering character on the other
two. As the Story Teller and now as Fat,
Krysiak seems a natural at playing the

The current fare at the Workshop Repertory Theater on Elmwood Ave. is curious
modern theater, but compares meekly to
previous productions such as “The Story
Teller from Flea Street.”
Without

Words” and

Polish p]

laywright

opposite end of the scale in build and in
leadership. Thin resigns himself to his
absurd fate and Merchant acts the part
with an appropriately nervous meekness
and anticipation.
Ron Wofford is Medium and suitably
adjusts his tones to be stronger than

Slawonir Mrozek’s short work, “Out at
Sea.”

Surprisingly, the mimes, though not exceptionally moving, are more creative and
rewarding theater than the one act play.
In “Act Without Words No. 1,” George
Mauer is thrown onto the stage as we
hear the beat of drums and clashing of
cymbals (it’s a symbolic play). Mauer is
subjected to a desert heat and relates his
uncomfortable circumstance convincingly

Thin’s and weaker than Fat’s.

But this lukewarm allegory of justice
and the cannibal way is slow and simple.
In a play this short, Director Krysiak
should be able to hold our attention
stronger than he does.
These exercises in moden theater are
available tonight and tomorrow evening
at 1645 Elmwood Ave.

pores from his brow.
He is teased by strange beckoning calls
and a pitcher of water suspended just out

as sweat

of reach (like Tantalus reaching for his
grapes). After successive tauntings he
gives up struggling, resigns himself to his
fate; he passively despairs, and the drums

Mountain music
set for Norton

beat louder.
In the second mime, George Mauer and
Graham Marehant rise from their sheets
to perform a series of banal activities and
then return to their sheets. Mauer moves
sluggishly and sleepily; Marehant is speedy
and nimble. The former requires pills to
keep him going, the latter needs only the

The Purple Mountain Majesty Blue
Grass Band will be featured in a free concert in the Fillmore Room, 8:30 p.m.
Wednesday. The Band will present their
foot-stompin’ traditional mountain music.
They will be followed by the South
Happiness Street Society Skiffle Band
with Gene Cooper. Their good-time music
has been heard at the Norton Fountain

reassurance of a mirror.

Whether Beckett is depicting the life
cycle, youth vs. age, or other various interpretations, you must determine.
Who to eat?
Then comes the one act play which at
least has words, if nothing else. Three
men (Fat, Medium, Thin) on a raft are
hungry and without food so they fumble
around with different political systems to
decide which character should serve as
the meal for the other two. The decision
is predetermined, but the political jibbering is a rationalization of that decision.
Justice and government arc treated sym-

Jeremy

The Graduate Philosophy Association of State University of
Buffalo has announced publication of a philosophical journal composed mainly of work submitted by graduate students.
The new journal, Telos, is- edited by Marilyn Ferrandino and
Peter Kauber and is presently on sale in the bookstore. Subscription
requests may be made at the Telos office located in the Philosophy

Jeremy and Satyrs to make
UB debut in UUAB concert

Department at the Ridge Lea campus.

MOVED HERE FOR
YOUR POST-GRADUATE

jazz and blues to a little bit of musical
nonsense.
The group so far has had only one
venture into the world of recording. Their
album, entitled simply “Jeremy and the
Satyrs,” is not up to the quality of the
live performance that the group is capable
of giving. One song starts as a straight
jazz number which begins to settle down
until the group begins to fiddle with
knobs and turn on amplifiers that blast
with sounds of traffic, dogs barking, etc.
Tickets are available at Norton Ticket

p.m.

Of special interest to many will be the
electronic flute playing of the group’s
leader, Jeremy Steig. To complement the
electronic flute will be an entourage of
musical forms, ranging from hard rock,

Both groups will be appearing July 27
at the Newport Folk Festival.
Free tickets for the University Union
Activities Board sponsored concert are
available today through Wednesday at
Paul Davidson’s Wicket and at the Norton
Ticket Office, Students must show ID
cards to obtain ticket. Those attending
summer planning conference may give
their names.

Grad students publish journal

Will appear with his satyrs and his elec
tronic flute July 30 in the Millard Fillmore Room, Norton Hall.

Noted for sophistication of style and
consistency of musical ability, Jeremy and
the Satyrs will make their premiere at
this University July 30. Their concert will
be sponsored by the University Union Activities Board and will be held in the Millard Fillmore Room, Nortoif Hall, at 8:30

several times.

COURSE!

ACADEMY
AWARD
WINNER

M»T DIRECTOR-MIKE NICHOLS

JOSEPH E. LEVINE HNUNTI

A

MIKE NICHOLS
LAWRENCE TURMAN PRODUCTION

Office.

THE GRADUATE
COLOR

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NOW

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PARKING

AIR CONDITIONED!

DEB0RAN KERR

Restaurant

Niagara Falls Blvd., North of Sheridan

at the

U?8

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Home Fries
Sausage or Bacon
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THE ACTION SPOT

890

GLEN AVENUE
WILLIAMSVILLE, N. Y.

3248 Main St. at Heath

Across from Hayes Hall

J)

’HOUR OF
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A HILARIOUS LOOK
AT 20TH CENTURY
NIGHT LIFE!

Color by

f
HURRY! LAST
5 DAYS!

°®iJS

hr

mm

Friday, July 19, 1968

zsssr' r Lr,

KENMORE

•

&amp;

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'’

COLVIN

•

(71-M40

The Spectrum e p age Three

�Portables and the complexities of racis]

Board taking classrooms to court
by Corydon Ireland
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

court action has been called for by
Superintendent of Schools Dr. Joseph
Manch in order to test the legality of a newly

Immediate

Buffalo
to

erect

portable

classrooms.

Although

the

Board of Education has a contract with Sectional Structures of Oswego. V.K., for IS of
the prefab structures , all action has been halted
to await the outcome of the legal action.
Proceedings will be officially initialed by
the Board of Education as the sole petitioner
in the case. Dr. Manch wishes to conduct the
case with all possible haste in order to /promote

the Board's policy of “quality

tion" in

Buffalo

area

schools.

integra-

The building

firm and the Slate Education Department will
ait as “friends of the court," submitting briefs

explaining why the building code should be
declared invalid.
A little more than a wee/, ago, the City Common Council overruled a veto b\ Mayor Eranl,
Sedila, who was in favor of the School Board's
original proposal for the portable units , by a
margin of 11-4, thus enacting the dormant
building code which forbids additional structures on school grounds unless they are the
same bind of constrin lion as the mother facility.

Thursday, July 9, 1968. City Hall. Floor

13. The sunny, semicircular cham
ber of the Buffalo Common Council; the
12 pillars of wisdom all around: Truth.
Justice, Courage and what are the rest?
The crowd begins to drift in and fill the
seats in the auditorium. Except for the
proud semi-circle of faces, black, from
Woodlav i. Junior High School, there are
not many young faces around. I get some
looks from ihe old-clerkish looking ush
ers.
are not many young faces
around. Oh my hair, I think. Oh my boots,
I think. Oh my God.
The members of the Common Council
file in and now the place is full of people
around the walls in the back and in the
seats and down in the pit region. Politicians, Strut yes I believe that this is the
safest strut will you try one of these cigars amble I believe these pencils go in
this drawer here now what do you say we
try these neat chairs now and rocka. The
meeting starts with the pledge of allegiance and with a very long prayer. (Yes.)
Voting against relocatable or portable
classrooms were: Councilman Wm. A
Buyers, Councilmen-at-Large Alfreda Slo
minski and Edward Regan, University
Councilman Wm. Lyman and Councilman
John T. Elfvin (Republicans): Gerald Whalen. Council President Chester Gorski,
Raymond Lewandowski, Gus Franczyk, An
drew Morrisey and Carl Perla (Democrats)
Voting in support of the portables were:
number

5

Councilman-at-Large Dclmar Mitchell and
Stanley Marowski, Horace Johnson and
Charles Black.
The arguments of the opposition revolved around the alleged poor construction of the portables (Councilman Buyers
called them ‘‘kiddie coffins”); the fact
that they are not manufactured by a local concern; budget considerations (Develop what we have first! What about the
Ellicolt Project?); "theft" of playground
space; and, the strongest, legally based
argument: The fact that portables are a
violation of existing building codes.
Those in favor of the
made
good use of Corporation Counsel Man
guso’s statement that the building code is
“discriminatory in purpose, nature, and
object.” As Dr. Manch said later on in the
day and as Horace Johnson, a Negro, said
during the session: "The real issue here is
integration, not portable classrooms."
Councilman-at-Large Delmar Mitchell
said this just before the vote was taken:

“For the past several years the Council
has challenged the Board of Education.
There is only one way to go now and that
is to the courts." After the hands were
counted, the odds were 11-4 in favor of
that one way to go.

Not

a rarity

Portable classrooms are not an odd phe-

nomenon. In a recent poll of 45 major
school districts all over the United Slates,
the typical district has used relocatable
units for the past ten years. These were
either purchased outright or constructed
by the district. Most were used for selfcontained classroom units although a great
many other educational uses became evident—lunchrooms, libraries, reading clinics, faculty workrooms and so on
The number of pupils affected by Ibis

Pag* Four

•

The Spectrum

*

arrangement ranged from 270 to 100,000
pupils, or a median of 4.9% of the total
enrollment. Each unit averaged a tiny 29
pupils per unit. Of the cities polled the
largest number of units in evidence was

'4

50 (Boston). Buffalo has been fighting over
18 units.

fell

There is a complicating factor, however. Less than 10% of the units recorded
in all of the different cities were used for
the direct purpose of integration. Most of
the portable units were used to relieve
overcrowded conditions and, in the case
of Willis of Chicago, were actually used to
promote segregation. Cities which ostensibly use portable units to relieve overcrowding do not meet the subtly racist
opposition evident in cities like Buffalo,
where integration is so obviously the
question—and the objection.
This is undeniable. The Buffalo units
were to handle only 540 core area students as a temporary measure to promote
“quality integration” until 12 new middle
schools arc built by 1973. The units were
safe and they equalled or exceeded Buffalo’s usual building code requirements.
They have been described as “spacious,
well-lighted, well-equipped and self-contained."

The site work was to be done by local
people and the entire tab was to be picked
up by the state. Aside from a phony building code requirement, the opposition' to
the measure really had no argument, except one emotionally based—racial pre-

in
Within
day this
few very
judice

This is a portable classroom
and compared to UB's portable structures, it's
—

its subtlest Northern forms

Portable

the Council chambers on that
hint of racial prejudice took a

controversy

interesting turns, Raymond Lewanski, voting for the opposition, dismissed
the whole idea of portable classrooms as
“racial experiments.” Alfreda Slominksi
said straight out: “I do not rely heavily on

beautiful. The Buffalo Board of Educa-

tion wants to construct buildings like
this one on school sites in white neigh-

borhoods, to make room for ghetto
children, in an attempt to integrate
schools. But the Common Council said
"no," and the Board is going to court
to flex its muscle.

the Corporation Council” (Manguso, who
legally backed the portables). William
Buyers claimed: “It is not a question of integration because all of the schools in my
districts are integrated."
In a beautifully unknowing sumupance
of this subtle racialistic view Couneilmanat Large Ed Regan posed these two incredible questions: “Why racial balance
in our schools? What has it ever done?”
A fitting final note to the whole proceeding was the city clerk who was taking the
notes, but who had nothing to do with the
legislation, as he counted the eleventh
vote:
We passed," he said in a low voice.

but in the next

Some good points

system.

The members in opposition arc not entirely without reprieve, however. For one,
I will admit that they made good points
about the city budget and how it should
concentrate on existing facilities and all.
We are all sensitive in the money belt.
And to extend this economic point of
view, in the words of opposition leader
Buyers: “I would not be against the relocatablcs if they were built locally and
with good materials."

'Rose-colored glasses syndrome'

Also, according to the Keener Commission Report on Civil Disorders, the opposition in this case would be advocating a
perfectly viable means of integration: the
"Enrichment Choice," whereby conditions
are improved within the ghetto areas. The

qualifying factor in these positive qualities
of—excuses for—the opposition is that
they avoid “with all possible speed." The
Kernel- Report also states that this nation
is rapidly becoming a divided one—black

inner-cities and white suburbs.
The clerk whom I mentioned above is
a simple middle-class fellow—we all have
one or two next door—and thinking about
him leads me quite neatly into a consideration of the racial complexities of the
normal middle class person. To what ex-

tent

is he racially prejudiced?

The House of Commons has recently defined racial discrimination as any case in
which a person treats another "less favorably than he treats or would treat other

persons," This preferential treatment is
more than ever in America—and right
here in Buffalo—evident along color
lines. Horace Johnson made this immediate in the Council meeting by saying:
"Black vs. White is the issue today and is
the issue here." He expressed the view
that “hope lies not in the next election.

Friday, July 19, 1968

generation," suggesting

the ground-in quality of this ruling generation’s racial prejudice.
The Kerner Commission Report refers
to "the persistence of discrimination" and
Dick Gregory is famous for calling the
United States the “number one racist
country in the world." And the mere fact
that the “people against racism" movement is based upon the “re-education of
adult whites" is significant. In a recent
teach-in at Norton Hall Mr. William Mayrl.
a graduate student in sociology, defined
the racial problem in America as one ...
of a more subtle dimenson," a social phenomenon. Racism is inherent in our social
“

This racial problem is aggravated in
the middle-class sphere by the artificial
and falsely gay attitude of the suburbs.
Dr, Peter Govacchini, professor of psychiatry at the University of Illinois, calls
this phenomenon the “rose-colored glasses
syndrome. This sweet euphoria is a neurotic symptom, used as a defense mechanism against their basic anxieties and
misgivings over what is happening in society and the world." This syndrome, this
neurotic comfort of the suburbs is exactly the kind of attitude which promotes
racism in the core areas, if for no other
reason than fault by omission.
The most recent reports from HUD on
the effect of the open housing provisions
of the 1968 Civil Rights Act on this situation in the suburbs seem to indicate that
it will continue. Not many Negroes will
be moving into these areas and what Negroes do move in will probably be middle-class, thus just reinforcing the “rosecolored glasses syndrome."
This next generation, the children of

these syndromed suburban parents, are
“rejecting the forced cheerfulness of
their parents because they can detect the
emptiness behind it." The parents, in a

job—re-educating people and shaping
their attitudes on the race issue. His em(Wall Street Jour
phasis is on youth
nal-12/4/67). Malcomb Erni, a new Negro
television personality on the local stablack childtions, is convinced that
ren are the key to restoring pride in my
race.” To make that fact even more im
mediate, Councilman Horace Johnson, a
Negro, said that he places his faith not in
the next election, but in the next genera..."

"...

tion.
The anti-racist tendencies of the next
generation, except for the more militant
of the Negro groups which display a kind
of reverse racism, are expressed by the
young white community through groups
such as CAUSE (the white counterpart of
BUILD) and “whites against racism,” as

mentioned earlier. More often, however,
these sentiments are expressed directly
through the University community. Note
President Meyerson’s recent selection of
a committee of University students, faculty and administrators (the Committee
on Equal Opportunity) to “enhance and
expand educational, economic and environmental opportunity for minority and
disadvantaged groups” in »he Buffalo area.
After months of traveling around the
United States a few years ago, Negro
author John A. Williams had this to say
about a situation which today, just three
years later, is much more critical:
ma“. . . I now know that a great
jority of white people have no intention sharing with the black people
what we have called the American
dream—unless they are forced to.
Since the democratic process works
slowly, we can assume that they are
not going to be forced to immediately
Yet the inequalities which exist in

this land could be done away with
if conscientious citizens
could become involved in responsible
government.”
overnight

—from This Is My

sense, “disinherit" their children psycho,-;
logically

If this rejection of their parents’ values
is as complete as Dr. Govacchini would
have us believe, it may extend to a rejection of racism.

Leaders of both black and white movements for civil rights seem to place special emphasis on youth today. Dick Gregory is
intercsted in the long-haul

Country

Too

days
George Wallace, in Boston a few
ago. was speaking to a group of support
ers when a few obviously indignant stu
dents got up and walked out. “Those are
an
the free speech boys,” he quipped,
calling after the group he said: “I wish
have stayed around, I’ve been known

you’d

tjo convert people."
How about you, bubby?

�Road reports

ACLU statement hits
all university sectors

?

wmm

The

grump
by Steese

Greetings from Steese’s traveling freak

Special to The Spectrum

scratching a tree six and a half feet above
the ground, five feet from the back of
the tent. And it was kind of funny about
an hour later to wake up and hear him
sniffing around the tent—in which there

show. This time from Tacoma, Wash,
where I sit typing this collection of foolish verbiage some nineVget above Pudget
Sound, and eight minutes
from high

NEW YORK, N.Y.—In a statement on
campus demonstrations, the American Civil Liberties Union has criticized students,
faculties and administrations alike.
The Union declared that “the time is

know t,he reason. How did we get to
houette of this paw come down and touch
Tacoma? Oh, by the usual inept and
the tent and then watch him depart with
great haste when we yelled at him.
fumbling Steese fashion.
We started out for Vancouver, see, and
It was sort of neat in broad daylight
then I noticed that there was this wild
to be able to say: “Look at the way this
bend in the road that went towards
silly bear put grooves in the canvas of
Seattle instead, and since we were getting my tent but did not rip it.” Turns out
a little tired of living in the tent and I
that when this bear comes back three
had this friend in Tacoma with this house times in 15 minutes around midnight and
built on pilings driven into the tidal flat
doesn’t seem a darn bit bothered by being
of Pudget Sound—which nobody knows yelled at that some of the humor goes out
who owns because of there being a differof the situation. Since the humor had left,
ence in the high tide line and low tide
we did too. At 2 a.m. we left, almost
line—so he pays (200$) a year for his killing ourselves and a huge moose in the
house (and I still say that semantically
process.
the $ sign goes after the figure, not before
That was the day we crossed all of
it) —so we decided—what the hell I deAlberta, just as we crossed all of British
cided and poor old wife agreed—that Columbia yesterday. We make these huge
rather than spend two hours setting up hairy 600 mile jumps and then sit for a
the tent and two hours taking down the
week. If you had a bear chasing you,
tent, we would drive through for four wouldn’t you run 600 miles to get away
hours and get in at 3 a.m., since poor old from him? The friendly old ferry operfriend type only has to get up at 6:30. ator who hauled us across the river from
(I mean if Ulysses really turns you on——ready?—Turtleford told me in his own
like coke, or is it pepsi?—there you are.) jocular way that bears just liked yankee
So here I am sitting above the high
meal. Ho. All of which caused a bear
tide and watching old shoes float by and
psychosis and I kept finding myself wakdrinking grapefruit juice and vodka we
ing up and listeing for beary noises in the
snuck across the border five minutes benight. It was almost unbearable.
fore this poor guy was supposed to close
While glancing through a newspaper
up his part time border station, and ocnorth of the border, I saw a letter which
casionally peering around the corner to
I liked—being prejudiced toward s—see if the two chicks in bikinis are still
against?—certain types of people. It was
cluttering up the landscape on the old
a letter by someone urging that Canada
dock a few houses down the way. The
should pull out of NATO, if for no other
world, my friends and non-supporters, is reason than it
would prevent the possioccasionally not a half bad place.
bility of troops having to fight under
we
came
Anyway
here yesterday from
Westmoreland. This gentleman apparentBanff, or a campsite near there. The
ly feeling that Westmoreland had demstretch from Jasper in the North, to
onstrated the limits of his competency in
Banff—as far south as we went, and then
Vietnam—Joseph Alsop not withstanding.
west—sort of—down to Vancouver is very And when you figure out
Why Westy is
good for the soul if one tends to be a
the best qualified soldier—excuse me,
little too cocky and overly self-confident.
officer—to head the army, will you please
You can drive for several hundred miles let me
know. I stand as confused about
in this stretch and never be out of sight
that as about most other things. It may
of a ten thousand foot peak and numerprovide some radicals with a moment of
ous smaller slabs of rock rising merely
hope however. If Westmoreland is as
eight or nine, although they too have the
familiar mantling of snow and glaciers. competent in our major cities, if and
when the long hit summer arrives, as he
One feels rather puny and insignificant.
was in Vietnam, why the second revoluNot that we needed to be taken down
tion may be achieved without worrying
any. A bear had already done that quite
nicely in Prince Albert National Park in about the military at all.
upper Saskatchewan, Along about six
Enough of this cheerful jabbering. We
in
the morning—the sun comes up at four
move south from here to (he cities by
you
are
if
interested, which means you
the bay so that the next episode may well
have a total of about five hours darkness
be a thrilling expose of that myth. Stay
—this damn bear came by raiding garbage
tuned to this newspaper for further thrillcans. Well now, it was sort of interesting ing developments.
Help, an outraged sea
and naturalizing to open the back window
lion is trying to jump through the window
of the tent and see this rather hefty bear
and eat me alive . . .
SEPT. 69 FRESHMEN
ONLY DURING
PLANNING CONFERENCE

FREE

—

U.B. DECALS
LIMIT 2

TONSORIAL CENTER
HAIR

3584

SPECIAL —$1.00 OFF
ON REGULAR LINE

SWEATSHIRTS

TEXTBOOK

STORES.
INC.
3610
MAIN STREET
BUFFALO, NEW YORK 14226

716-833-7131
Across From Clement Hall

B6ARD TRIMMING
MAIN ST.
TF 6-9080
Next to University Plaza
—CLOSED MONDAYS—

oi,

"

Progressive

neglect

“The internal condition pointed to by
the frequency and intensity of these disturbances," the statement added, “can

“In view of the brutality of some police
actions, the formulation of such rules appears to be a matter of urgent priority,”
the statement added.

THE BREVITY OF LIFE
And
once to
m*nt.
How
so great

as. if is

appointed unto man,
after this, the judge
-Heb. 9:27
shall we escape if we neglect
salvation?"
-Heb. 2-3

die. but

DO YOU QUALIFY TO ATTEND?

LIMIT 1

BUFFALO

For the Finest in
STYLING, RAZOR CUTTING

and

lure
me siuuem uouy ana ns relations
internal relations of the university on
with faculty and administration, a change
every campus,” and called on universities
of which the latter groups have hardly
to involve all concerned groups in the debeen aware.”
velopment and execution of academic polPassive faculties, it said, have permiticy at every level.
ted most of the power in universities to
At many institutions, it pointed out,
“there have been grave violations of the be assumed by the administrations, who
have exercised power “in an essentially
principles of sound academic governance
managerial way, with little regard for the
by administrations which have denied stuand social rea
dents reasonable participation in matters characteristic intellectual
lilies of academic life, . .
of university policy in which their interests have been clearly involved.”
Activist students have played a useful
The statement also criticized “faculties role in helping to draw attention to the
which have been indifferent to the needs imbalance of power within the university,
and aspirations of students, and . . . stuas well as to the increasing identification
dents who by various actions have interof the university with a social order of
fered with the process of teaching, learnwhich it should properlj be the critic and
ing and the right to free speech.”
conscience. At the same time it seems
short-sighted, in the attempt to modify
While condemning some demonstrations
as out of proportion to student grievances this social order, to seek to destroy the
only institution capable of playing such a
and "in violation of basic principles of
academic freedom,” the group declared role effectively,”
that in most cases “students have . . , jusThe statement also noted that when unitification for their concern, if not for
versities call police onto the campus, such
their manner of expressing it.”
invitation “endangers the autonomy of the
As examples the Union cited protests
institution.” The ACLU
that
against compulsory ROTC, the suspension police not be summonedrecommended
to campuses unof politically active students, the neglect
til all other means of dealing with deof Negro students, the use of slum parkmonstrations have been exhausted “and
land for a university facility and the unithen preferably under strict procedural
versity’s ties with defense-related rerules laid down and agreed to by adminsearch.
istration, faculty and students."

Bible Truth

CHARLIE'S

—

best be represented as a progressive nc
gleet of certain principles (full ami open
communication between all elements withand a rigorous pri
in the university .
ority of academic and human considerations over financial and organizational

THE LIVELY SET

It's the best way to spend a Friday night.
Come alone or with
friends. "TLS" meets tonight at the HOLIDAY INN, 1881
Niagara Falls Blvd. Live music from 9:30 P.M. 1:30 AM
Heels and ties.
Qualifications: Must be single, 20-35 years old, must
be a
-

college graduate, military officer, professionally employed
or

female.

"Come and See What It's

Like!"

Friday, July 19, 1968

.

The Spectrum

.

Page Five

�Football Bulls

review

—

Part

Offense promises punch for
Editor

I'.iliInf's \nlr: The 1968 Slain I niirrslh
Inin Ion!hull Hulls ufini llifir snisuii

iinnhzlnil llw

nrlii 11

68 Hulls,

/

nl

/(«/

14

mini

III

When a football team loses only four
leltermen from an offense which averaged
over 24 points a game, you might expect

similar scoring potential the following
If you add Dick Ashley, the second
leading pass receiver in Buffalo history,
to that same offensive machine, you've
gol the makings of a football powerhouse
And that’s exactly what the State--1’nicer
shy of Buffalo football Bulls could be for

season

their 1968 collegiate season

Here’s a look al the Buffalo Bulls of
fense. the unit that could make 1968 the
Year of the Bulls" at (his University
Receivers
Oulstandinp is the word for the Bulls'
Two of the
pass-catching department.
finest receivers ever to wear a blue and
white uniform will be in the starling line
up in September. Head Coach Doe Uriel)
not only has the Bulls' record holder for
pass rcceivir.it in Chuck Drankowski &gt;37
pass receptions in 1967), but Dick Ashley
who returns to action after hemp side

their football games. There’s no doubt
that Urieh has the horses to do the job,
bul questions have to he raised about the

size and depth of the offensive line.

Inches, 214 pounds, returns at center
Wesolowsk; is a two year veteran, bul
behind him there is no proven depth. A
back-up center will have to be found from
among Bob Moler. Chuck Donner or Joe
Hudson.

The Bulls appear to be pretty well set
at guard. Seniors Tom Kowalewski (5 feet
II inches, 210 pounds) and Mike Maser
(5 feet II inches, 214 pounds) both have
plenty of line experience. Sophomore
Dave Beiniug (6 feet I inch, 205 pounds)
provides fair depth as a swing guard.
The tackle situation is a little different.
Talent is there, but the experience is
lacking. The Bulls have only one veteran
tackle, but he's a pood one. Chris Wolfe,
a 6 fool 3 inch, 220 pound lineman who
came on strong last season, is a pretty
pood bet to start at one tackle position.
The other tackle slot will be filled by one

of four promising younp prospects—Tom
Santaforli (fi feel, 210 pounds), Frank
Heid Hi feel 3 inches. 217 pounds), Don
Mar.iele Hi feel, 224 pounds) or Bill Murphy (0 feel 3 inches. 230 pounds)

rushing in 1967 (666

Challenging Patterson at tailback will
Ken Rutkowski. who averaged more
ban five yards per carry in 1967 At 5
eel 6 inches,
160 pounds, Rutkowski
loesn I exactly shred enemy defensive
with amazing
mi’s But Ken is gifted
peed and is a good threat to score. John
■•alter. an eviling runner with the '67
cosh, moves up to the varsity lids season
ml will probably be used tor spot re
.

ie

'lacenienl

Replacing Lee .Junes at fullback Is a
definit'* problem for Coach I'rich, but
bard running (lary Chapp i5 feel 9 inehes,
2111) pounds) may be just what the Doe
ordered The Hulls' pro-set and I type offensive formations demand a fullback
who can both run inside and block effec-

lined for the entire 19(57 season with an
ankle injury. If the (5 fool 2 inch, 200
pound Ashley is completely recovered.
Drankowski will be switched to flanker
and Ashley will move in as the number
one split end.

There'.- no problem al t iuhl eiul i ilhor
Veterans Terry Kmlress. (i foot 2 inchi. 200
pounder, and Paul I.anp. (i foot; 210 p&lt; iinul
er, are Loth fine receivers who are morr
than adequate blockers. There's good
depth behind the starters as Kd 1
Mike James and Mark i T.auphlin
ready

in

reserve

Offensive

line

This is where the Bulls will win

01

tively outside for both quarterback belly
plays and tailback sweeps, l.ee Jones was
Ibis type of fullback, (lary Chapp may also
fill the bill.

"Chapp is preen and has a lot to learn,
admits Urich. but based on his good spring
showing and a fine attitude, Chapp seems
to be the man for the job. Sophomores
John Zeek. Joe Zelmanski and Barnev

Woodward provide adequate, though not
spectacular, depth at fullback.

Quarterback
With the football season only eight
weeks away, tMe Urieh still doesn't know
who will he his number one quarterback.
Miek Mnrtha, the Bulls' regular signalealler. has been afflicted with painful
bursitis of the right shoulder for his entire
varsity career Miek further hampered the

Scouting &gt;avs off

Hopes

are

high for frosh football

It's still too early to tell, but State
University of Buffalo Freshman Head
Coach Jim McNally might have one of the
finest frosh football teams in Buffalo
history.

A total of 25 high school grid prospects have returned signed letters of in
tent to the University Athletic Depart
menl. These contracts, which are NCAAapproved. bind the athlete and the State
University of Buffalo to four years of
association, grades permitting.

Doc Urich and his staff did an exceptional job of talent hunting in battling
scouts from Penn State, Syracuse and
Notre Dame among others.
Page Six

•

The Spectrum

•

Ed Perry, a 205-pound left-handed sophomore, will be the team’s third quarterback if Murtha does play. Perry showed
fine potential with the frosh in ’67 and
impressed Urich with a good spring practice. A hard runner who is tough to bring
down and an accurate passer. Perry will
be groomed for the future.
Doc Urich sums up the offense this
both
way: "They’re an improved group
in ability and attitude. Our offensive unit,
provided we solve a few position problems. will give us a good representative
hall club."

Outstanding personnel
The list of personnel on the 1988 frosh
team includes Henry Uhek. a 6 foot 2
inch, 195 pound all-high end from Hutch
Tech in Buffalo; Gan Watt, an agile
6 foot 4 inch, 255 pound offensive tackle
from Orilla. Out., amd a couple of highly
rated guards—Barry Bandenbergh. 6 foot
4 inch, 235 pounder from Albany, and Bill
Winnelt. a 6 foot 3 inch, 234 pounder from
Canton. Ohio The Bulls also corralled a
potentially fine quarterback in 6 foot 1
inch. 185 pound Doug Phtlp who made allcity

in Toronto,

Friday, July 19, I960

Wvr free/.

;

Tin' Hulls' ih’icitsr

Denny Mason and

Mick Murtha
are

yards in 144 attempts)

should be even better with a year’s experience under his hell

returns to o'-'On

Waiting in the wings is veteran quarterhack Denny Mason, the Daryl Lamonica
of the Buffalo Bulls. For several years
Mason has been battling Murtha for the
signal-caller's job. There are those who
feel that Urich has gone too long with
Murtha. Mason does have the credentials
for the job. At times in relief roles, he
has looked like a world beater. Denny
has the confidence as well as the running
and throwing ability of a good quarterback. Only a lack of consistency has kept
Denny from being number one. But based
on his fine spring showing, and his headsup attitude, Urich would have no qualms
about starting Mason in the fall.

—

Running backs

Doe Urieh has the material to give
Buffalo an exciting ground attack for
1966. Tailback I’al Patterson (5 feel 11
inches, 191 pounds) heads the list of returnees Patterson who led the Bulls in

Dick Ashley

situation by injuring that same right
shoulder during spring baseball practice.
Will Murtha’s arm permit him to play
football in the fall? “We’ll have to wait
until September to know," is Urich’s only

contenders for quarterback-slot

New director of sports
information looks ahead
The career, past and present, of new
State University of Buffalo Director of
Sports Information Richard E. Baldwin
echoes the recent strides made by the University and the even greater steps envis
ioned for the next decade.
Baldwin graduated from St. Lawrence
University in 1954, a year in which the
Buffalo football team managed only two
wins against small-time gridiron schools
like Alfred. Brockport, Brandeis, RPI and
Baldwin's own school, St. Lawrence.

1958. when Baldwin received his
Master's Degree in television from Syracuse University, the State University of
Buffalo had risen td become the best minor football college in the East, beating
such teams as Harvard and Columbia en
route to the Lambert Cup.

By

In 1980, when Baldwin became assistant
director of public relations at St. Lawrence. Buffalo played its first season as a
major grid power, posting a 4 6 record
against the likes of Army, VMI, and Bos-

ton

University.

Six years later, as Richard "Doc " Urich
introduced the "new era " to Rotary Field
football fans. Baldwin moved to a sports
information spot at Dartmouth College,
where he stayed for two years.

Baldwin assumed duties here at Clark
Gymansium June 17, 1968. Eighteen days
later the State University unveiled a vast
athletic complex as part of the new Amherst campus, including a 20.000 seat stadium. hockey rink, fieldhouse and rowing

facilities.

stu
is the support of the undergraduate
dents. He links the students with three
other vital ingredients for major college
status:

New York State—“The state now
seems to support athletics, but the stu
dents must show enthusiasm for the state
to continue its aid.”
•

Alumni—“The alumni have an on
thusiastic but small nucleus. The seed to
alumni backing will be vigorous student
support."
•

•

Other

major colleges—“We

will

have the facilities to host big time schools.
The students must prove that they want

major college status."

The days of Syracuse-Buffalo football
games, Little Five Western New York bas
ketball, and a nationally famous hockey
team are all “definite possibilities” pro
vided that they are warranted by student
support, according to Mr Baldwin.

Bowling tourney
is scheduled
Wednesday there will be a Moonlight
Scotch Doubles bowling tournament in
be
Norton Hal). Lights in the lanes will
pro\id
to
pins
over
the
turned off e.cept
a 'proper atmosphere."

c

The tournament

will start at 7:30 P
at-

"One reason 1 came here." stated Bald
win. "is that the University is on the
\erge of athletic prominence. Every other
state in the country boasts a university
showpiece—academic and athletic. New
York certainly has proved itself academically. Now this state is expanding its athletic program."

Faculty, staff, students and those
ar
tending summer planning conferences
floor
invited to sign up at the ground
recreation desk

There is a SI.00 entrance fee per co
and a S1.00 fee for three games.
The winners of the tournament will
ceive two tickets to Melody Fair. r°
anytime. Second prize will be two tic
to any movie theater in Buffalo.

r

Sports

Key to success

(

by Rich Baumgarten

68

9

Baldwin believes that the key to the

success of the

University's

athletic future

1

�Summer softball league
has ties in both divisions
In the first two weeks of the Summer
League, topflight pitchers
like Bashnagel of the Golfers, Samolsen
of the Brooklyns, and McClean of Biochemistry have kept their teams undefeated and atop their divison standin

have capitalized on heavy home run hit

run, are tied with Microbiology,
winners of the longest game in league
history (32-7 over AVA), for first place
in Division A.
League B sports three co-leaders; Biochemistry, last year’s league champions:
Brooklyns, and Computer Services, who

Administration
Biology
Psychology
Education
Physics
Pathology and
Anatomy
AVA
Nuclear

earned

I

ling

The

standings as

division

Action line

a

of July 11

W

L

DIVISION

i
i
i
i
0

o
o

Computer Services 2
Housing and
Food Services
Chem Engineers

0
0
0

1
2
2

i
i
1

B

W

History
Chemistry
Campus Police

Q. Have there been any new decisions regarding board contracts
being used in the several cafeterias on the campus?
A. Due to the already over-taxed facilities of Norton Hall at the
noon hour, it has been decided that, at the present time, board contracts will be honored only in the dormitories. When conditions
change, i.e., when the new campus is built, the Food Service division
will be glad to reconsider this accommodation. At the present time,
students holding board contracts can eat on the interim campus, if
their classes so dictate. Arrangement for such, however, must be
made in advance through the Food Service Office.
Q. Do course credits transfer full value from one State University
unit to another?
A. Yes. Our Office of Admissions and Records informs us that
each course, as such, is given full credit in any other unit of the
State University. However, a problem arises when the requirements
for certain major fields vary from school to school within the unit,
and consequently specific course credits may need to be used as
electives where formerly they filled a prerequisite requirement.
Q. When is the first tuition payment due for the fall '68-'69

visor who signed Rick. “Wells has some

power, and he’d be a good running catcher. If Wells has to try it as an outfielder,
he’s got just a chance. If Rick can make
himself a catcher, he’s got a chance to be
in the majors a long time and make a lot

of money.”
A third member of the Buffalo baseball
team who was selected in the baseball
draft, pitcher-outfielder Ken Rutkowski,
turned down a contract with the San Francisco Giants, Rutkowski will return to the
University in the fall and play tailback for
Doc Urich’s gridders.

Chem club to hold meeting
A series of 20-minute talks by graduate
students from area universities will give
students experience in presenting their
material on a formal basis. The morning
session of the meeting will consist of lectures on physical and inorganic chemistry.
The afternoon session, beginning at 1:30
p.m., will deal with organic chemistry. All
students and faculty are invited.

A “Meeting in Miniature” will be held
by the Graduate Chemists Club tomorrow, beginning at 10 a.m. in room 70,
Acheson Hall,

The meeting will be patterned after
American Chemical Society meetings and
will be the first of its kind to be held by
the club.

CLASSIFIED
FOR SALE
MOTOR BIKE,

brand

new,

bilette, $170.00, call evenings,

erage $4.00 per hour, car necessary,

PERSONAL

SALE—Rent/option, steps
to UB or Bennett H. S. 4 bedrooms,
garage, gorgeous kitchen,
immediate occupancy. Bill Klie, 875
2408.

Will sell separately.

DEAR

837

MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE

ROOMMATES

ROR RENT

WANTED to share furnished
apartment for third session. One
mile from campus
own
bedroom,
$10.00 per week. Ron 835 2089.

ROOMATE

September

through
May,
three bedroom flat. Completely fur
nished. $75.00 plus utilities. 883 7854.

J
■

ALL your psychedelic needs
*

—

WANTED

FEMALE GRADUATE STUDENT, to
large
share
furnished apartment
with three of the same, until Sept. 1st.,
private
10 minute
bedroom,
walk.
$35.00 per month, plus utilities. Elizabeth. 836.2021 after 5 P.M.

7011.

� STROBE LIGHTS
INCENSE
� PRISM GLASSES

low cost, im-

mediate F.S. 1, premiums financed.
UPSTATE CYCLE INSURANCE, 695-3044.

MICROSCOPE: Olympus-Elgeet in ex
cellent condition. $140.00. Call 836

}

ROOMMATE. I have

found some
renters for your empty room for a
few weeks. The boarder we've had for
the last almost 11 years is returning
today from his successful vacation.
—Me.

1961 DODGE LANCER, 6-cylinder, 4-door
sedan. Best offer. Call Pete, TR 6
7439.

}

men, av-

call 873 1319.

HOUSE FOR

APARTMENT

call 831-3610
MISCELLANEOUS

NEED 5 well dressed college

Mo
TF 3-

roomy 2-car

SUBLET:

For quick action

WANTED

1965.

9384.

}

...

� PEACE BUTTONS
PEACE MEDALLION
�~ TINTED 1 SUN GLASSES
*

'

I

NEED MONEY? Be a sales representative for a socio politico satrical new
poster line. Ideal for individuals and
organizations. Write for complete poster
profit kit: GROSS NATIONAL PRODUCT,
Box 427, Wayzata, MN 55391.
HELP A DAMSEL in distress!! Driver
needed from East Cavalier Drive area
in Cheektowaga. Contact: Anna Pel
ysko at 894-7568. After 6:00 P.M.
HORSEBACK riding, hayrides, Waverly
Stables, Service Road No. 18, Niagara
Parkway. Canada. 8 miles north from
Peace Bridge. 416-295-3925.
FREE: Two kittens, seeking good homes.
Please call 833-3952.
WANTED: An Italian tutor that is a native Italian and can speak English
WELL. 833-8206 5-7 PM.
WANT McCarthy? Write to the dele
gates now. Information on McCarthy
bulletin board. Norton: or call 882-2477.

APARTMENTS WANTED
APARTMENT needed for three female
graduate students in Sept. Desire location near campus. 3 bedrooms preferred. Please phone 886 0460.
APARTMENT FOR RENT
UNFURNISHED apartment for 1 or 2
male grad students; occupy Aug. 1.
882-8806 weekday evenings.

*

*

*

PLAZA SHOE REPAIR

�
*

ONE STOP SERVICE
CENTER
Shoes Repaired While-U-Wait
Laundry &amp; Drycleaning
ONE DAY SERVICE

Sleepwear, Handbags, Dusters All 30% Off
Many Other Items Not Listed

Misenlvy
PHONE
886-0011

1086 ELMWOOD AVENUE
(Be*. Bird
Forest)
&amp;

University Plaza
836-4041

*

MAIN~STREET

_

Daily Till 5:30

Thurs. Till

Phillies.

been sent to Corning of the New YorkPenn League where he will be tried as
a catcher.
“We want to make a catcher out of
Wells,” said Syd Thrift, KC scouting super-

Hansen, an All-American catcher from
Detroit, inked a contract with the Philadelphia Phillies of the National Baseball
League. Brian, who led the Bulls with a
.477 batting average, was assigned to
Huron of the Class A Northern League.
According to Bulls’ Head Coach Bill
Monkarsh, Hansen has been doing very
well at Huron. “He’s batting about .350
and playing real fine defense,” said Monk.
Wells was signed by the new Kansas
City Royals of the American Baseball
League. An outfielder who clubbed .418
this past season for the Bulls, Rick has

string pickup.
7554.

REDUCTIONS TO 50%

'■*;*

Brian Hansen

Riek Wells and Brian Hansen, two key
1968 State University of
Buffalo baseball team, signed professional
contracts during the month of June,

POWERFUL 200 Watt Fender amplifier.
Also De Armand's best acoustical 12

Starting Thurs., July 18th

m wm

signs with

figures on the

semester?
A. Official dates have not yet been established. Generally, they
are set ten to 12 days after registration. Inasmuch as registration is
Sept. 3 and 4, we can anticipate that the first payment will be due

ALL SUMMER SPORTSWEAR

9

i

Wells
andHansen sign
pro baseball contracts

Q31-SOOO

MID-SUMMER SALE

#

*

joins Kansas City organization

.

Miss'll Ity

"

lyi.

Rick Wells

Counselor Edu

For specific answers to your questions, and for direct service, call Action Line,
831-5000. If you prefer, phrase your question in writing and address it to Action
Line, c/o The Spectrum, room 355, Norton Hall or the Office of Student Affairs
and Services, room 201, Harriman Library.

v
w«S'jfc

L

Statistics

Sept. 16.
Q. Is any part of ROTC Department operating expenses paid by
the University, i.e., salaries, office equipment, telephones, services?
A. In checking this, we found that the major operating expenses
of the Department of Aero-Space Studies are borne by the Military.
The total University budget amount for the department for the
calendar year 1967-68 was $12,227 which covered salary items for
the stenographer and typist, office supplies, and equipment. During
the same calendar year students earned 1206 academic credit hours,
for which the University did not pay for instructional services, inasmuch as the department’s instructional staff are paid wholly by the
Military, which amounted to approximately $115,000.
Q. Why can't the summer jobs, under the Equal Opportunity
Program, be given to State University of Buffalo students rather than
the high school students selected?
A. This program had been commissioned to reach students from
disadvantaged minorities who have not been reached previously
through other means. It is presumed that a student in attendance
at the University has had some of the advantages and opportunities
of the College Work Study Program and the resources of the Office
of Financial Add, i.e., loans, scholarships, and Economic Opportunity
Grant money. Therefore, the high school student is the logical candidate. Any matriculated student interested in additional work opportunities should contact Mr. E. Martell in the University Placement
and Career Guidance Office.

3t

.

Session Softball

9

J

*

NEW

LOCATION, DIAGONAUY ACROSS
FROM HAYES
Open From 10 A M.-5 P.M. Monday Saturday
-

HALL

£
£

‘‘A*****************************************^^

Friday, July 19, 1968

•

The Spectrum e Page Seven

�([ )

"||| £

Editorials

Without expression, freedom of expression is meaningless

Ja students for reform

SLUtlOlll aeiiviai poWqr is rocking Japanese campuses.
Fifty-four of Japan’s 846 colleges are in the midst of
student disturbances.
Medical students at the University of Tokyo have been
on strike since January: at another large university, three
of 11 departments are closed; at still another, ten students
were seriously injured at barricades they manned.
They have paralyzed railroads in some areas Revolts
have spilled into the streets
The Japanese Ministry of Education pins the causes
of student unrest upon “bigness, dehumanization and massproduced education.”
Since World War II, higher education in Japan has
grown gigantically. Rut rapid growth has brought poor
quality education.
Private Japanese universities are heavily in debt
The Ministry concedes that students have legitimate
grievances. Most of them sound like a Buffalo student had
thought them up:
They live in shabby housing;
They sit in large lectures listening to professors read
30-year-old notes;
There is little faculty-student and administrator
student contact;
Many students are lonely
Student rebellion is often an emotional escape valve to
release pent-up frustrations and gripes.
That’s why

iwg

'if

Refractions

•

by J.

•

•

•

A time to worry

University administrators have privately expressed fears here that next semester there may well be a
really large student uprising- the largest Buffalo has ever
.

. .

Some

L.

McCrary

J. L. did the most patriotic thing he could think

of over the Fourth of July weekend—he went to
Canada. Probably a thousand other Yankees were
in Toronto that weekend, tourists you know. But
a reporter is never a tourist
Among the many new structures going up in
Ihe metropolitan area is a student co-op near the
University of Toronto—perhaps 15 stories worth.

The co-op will offer most any kind of living arrangement a student could want, be he married,
single, divorced, looking or hiding. There will be
three and four room apartments or single rooms.
Co oping is a great way to live, food’s included,
price’s

cheap.

seen.
And they fret not without just cause.
Dow is coming in November. The Faculty Senate has
opened the campus to military recruiters.
Paris peace talks that seemingly get nowhere, missing
faces on campus among graduate students gone to armed
service, crowded University housing (lots of tripling next
year), and what we fear will come out of the Democratic
all these things will frusand Republican conventions
trate knowledgeable students like they have never been
frustrated before.
Vice President Siggelkow tells all the incoming fresh
men that “universities are fragile institutions.”
That means they are easily broken.

The co-op will also be a residential college,
with living-in professors, grad students and arttypes who leach on the premises.

McCarthy

A kind of
"Chickenroan" —a man who walks around with a
cane and a featherless chicken dangling head-down
from his lapel—adds spice to the typically hippie
scenario.
Most of the individuals on Yorkville St. are
mere part-time hippies—who maybe take their acid
aphorisms seriously—though honest acid-heads are
rare birds.
Many tennyhips hawk the Harbinger, Toronto’s
version of the “free press." Some claim the vending job to be their sole means of support. The
Harbinger sells for a quarter and vendors make a
cool $.10 a copy.
Toronto is probably the draft dodgers' haven
of Canda. While dodgers arc welcome and Canadians 1 spoke to were generally sympathetic to their
plight, the fact is that few jobs are available for
them. In Toronto unemployment is high, especially in the summer when thousands of students are

...

during
every Tuesday and Friday
The Spectrum is published twice weekly
from June to September,
Fridays
the regular academic year, and weekly
periods by the Faculty Student Association of the
except during examination
State University of New York at Buffalo, Inc. Offices are located at 355 Norton
Hall, State University of New York at Buffalo, 3435 Main Street, Buffalo, New
York 14214.
RICHARD R. HAYNES
Summer Editor
Managing Editor
DANIEL LASSER
SAMUEL A. POWAZEK
Business Managei
Peter Simon
Campus News
Marge Anderson City Edito
Richard Baumgarten
Feature Editor
Lori Pendrys Sports
.. ..Robert
Photography .
Hsiang Layout
David L. Sheedy
Murray Richman
Copy Editor
VACANT Advertising
....

The Spectrum is a member o f the United Stales Student Press Association
and the Associated Collegiate Press. The Spectrum is served by: United Press
International, College Press Service, Gannett News Service, and the Los Angeles
Times Syndicate.
Republication of all news dispatches is forbidden without express consent
of the Edilor-in-Chief. Rights of republicafion of all other matter herein are
also reserved.
Editorial policy is determined by the Editor in-Chief.
Second class postage paid at Buffalo, New York.
Represented for advertising by National Educational Advertising Service, Inc.
18 E. 50th Street, New York, New York 10072,
Basic advertising rate: $2.75; summer rate' $2.25 per column inch,
Contract
upon request.

Summer circulation:

Telephone:

Page Eight

•

Area

10,000.

code 716;

Editorial,

The Spectrum

•

831 2210;

Yorkville is highly touted but disappointing.
At night, police patrol the two-block street and ask
groups to "move along” occasionally. Tourist-trap
shops, discotheques, streetslands and

coffeehouses offer entertainment.

woes

The New York State Democratic Committee dealt McCarthy backers a bad hand in giving the Minnesota senator
only ISVli of 65 at-large delegates.
But the cards were probably marked from the start,
McCarthy idealism reflects the philosophy of most
Democrats: Kennedy and McCarthy supporters. But not
the philosophy of party bosses, like New York State Democratic Committee Chairman John J. Burns.
And Mr. Burns, we might note in this game at least—
is the dealer

rates

Toronto is a clean city—the streets are clean,
the subway shines. Everyone is conscious of
cleanliness. On Yorkville St., hippie capital of
Canada, for example, one irrate cleanliness-conscious Canadian called from his car: “Why don’t
you join the clean-up campaign?”
The subject of the query, bearded and dressed
in levis, a blue work shirt and beads, answered
simply enough: “Up yours!”—a colloquialism which
I've never quite understood.

Business,

831-3610.

Friday, July 19, 1968

a couple of

job-hunting.

Canadians describe the war with the usual adjectives—stupid, immoral, disgusting, dirty, genocidal . . . And more than one told me: “It makes
me glad I’m a Canadian.”
The war, race riots and violence in general in
the U.S. make many "glad" to be Canadians. 1
suppose.

Trouble is, for better or worse, the destinies of
the U.S. and Canada are wonderously woven. As
goes one, so goes the other, as long as the U.S.
Simon Says on an intergoes first
a kind
national scale with Simon really not saying, just
money talking. It's wonderous because our impact on Canada was never planned, but was unavoidable. Size and proximity were all it took.
Now it's Trudeau's move to begin plotting the
...

future of a united Canada. Viva. I wish him well.

Readers
writings

’

1 rdllhCripih.

Ultimate
UllUIldlC

menace
IllCIldt
C

To the Editor:

Fighting valiantly for four years, I have over
come enormous problems at this “great University”
to finally graduate magna cum problems. I have
passed most of the flunk-out barriers such as three
exams in one day, teachers handing grades in late,
proctors forgetting to come to exams, strange bills
from the Bursar and the library, lack of courses
necessary for graduation, missing textbooks in the
Bookstore, forgotten necessary junior evaluation,
disappearing advisors .and stolen ID card.

But ho, I have not been detered in my battle
for culture and knowledge! While the old menace
of the Bursar and Admissions and Records have
disanneared in the sunset, a deadly new one has
taken their place: THE TRANSCRIPT DEPARTMENT. There must be a secret conspiracy to block
me from graduate school, since they could not slop
my graduation. Most of my transcripts seem to be
misplaced or lost between the State University of
Buffalo and the graduate schools. When one calls
to get information, the typical answer is: “This
office is just so busy and the lists are not alphabet-,
ized and it would take me all year to find your
name and we probably sent them out and if not we
will get at them right away. Please call back in a
week.”
Meanwhile most graduate schools are chopping
my name off of their lists because the essential
parts of my applications are missing. I wish the
transcript department would write a nice note to
my draft board to tell them why I have not heard
from my graduate schools.
For the most part, I have enjoyed my tour
undergraduate years at this University. I regret
that this big University must make each individual
feel extremely small. There is no excuse for extreme bureaucratic bungling on all levels of campus life. The red tape one must go through at this
school is choking. I pity the incoming freshmen,
they have so much to go through.

morris *&lt;108082

Sostre coverage

criticized

To the Editor:
Your editorial of June 28 characterized
so
Sostre as a “convicted dope dealer.” In occup
you have fallen to the same level as that
u
by the establishment-owned mass media. 't°
to snl
contributed to their campaign designed
the
Sostre and make him a scapegoat for
June-July Black Rebellion.
&gt;'

18
We on the Committee must ask why it
The Spectrum refused to print an article wr
by the Martin Sostre Defense Committee pm
the trial giving Martin’s side of the story. n
were the letters written to the editor never pr»
Of course the News and Courier participated m
black-out of coverage too. And why, even
after the kangaroo court conviction, has The •
s si
trum still refused to present Martin Sostre

Gerald Gross, Chairman
Marlin Sostre Defense

Comn

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&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>The SpECTOU||i
State University of New

Ycrk££ Buffalo

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52

Vol. 18, No. 57

Friday, July 5, 1968

Analysis, direction of
societies is lecture topic
by Rod Gere

Spectrum

Innovation is ke

tote

Development plan for
new campus revealed
by Marge Anderson
Campus

Editor

A contoured pond is one of the highlights of the site development plan for
the Amherst campus of the State University of Buffalo, approved Friday by the
Executive Committee of the State Board

of Trustees.
Dr. Samuel Gould, chancellor of the
State University, announced the approval.
Stressing that the announcement concerned the site development plan and
not the master plan, Dr. Gould disclosed
that it includes three parts: residences,
a health sciences complex and academic
facilities.

Site preparation for the first six residential colleges will begin in the fall,
with actual construction commencing in
the spring.
“We are now at the point where details of plans will be settled and con-

struction will proceed. The University’s
record of construction is the finest in the
country, noted for quality, efficiency and
dispatch,” said Dr. Gould. Referring to
the new campus construction, he commented: “We are preceding with such
speed as to make it a reality as soon as
possible.”

'Innovative departures'
The plan for the Amherst campus, according to Dr. Gould, is “going to be not
only a magnificent campus, but it will
translate the needs of the academic community better than any plan seen so far.”
He added that the campus will include
many “innovative departures that show
different attitudes.”
In terms of size, the plan calls for a
total of 14,600,000 square feet, approximately seven times the size of the Main
St. campus. Parking space alone at the
new site will be more than the total area
of the present campus.
Dr. Gould predicted that most of the
major construction will be completed
by
Among the specifics that were outlined
by Dr. Gould are plans for a
pond that
will provide both needed fill and a
recreational area.
A cushion against
flooding by Ell.cot Creek
will be created
by the building of the pond.
Overlooking
the jond will be “a modest sized
central

Union.” Most of the student union type
facilities are decentralized to the
Faculties and the Colleges.
One of the focal points of the campus
will be the high-rise library.
Tentatively
planned for
II stories, the building will
also house the presidential
offices of the
University and the facilities of the Councils for Higher Education Studies,
Inter-

national Studies and Urban and Regional
Studies.

Raised mall

Pedestrian passageways, including a
raised mall 18 to 20 feet above ground,
will connect most of the buildings. Dr.
Robert Ketter, vice president for facilities
planning, explained that there will also
be a rapid transit system.
Dr. Ketter also disclosed that plans are
now being made for a transportation system to link the Amherst campus with
the present Main St. site. The report of
the Joint Impact Study of the Buffalo
Amherst University Corridor should be
out in September, he said.
Parking facilities on the campus include structured parking at each end of
the campus, under the Faculties, in addition to surface parking on the periphery
of the site. Mass transportation will connect this surface parking with the main

buildings.
The core of the campus will consist of
four sub-campuses: the Faculty of Health
Sciences; the Faculties of Social Sciences
and Administration, of Educational Studies and of Law and Jurisprudence; the
Faculties of Natural Sciences and Mathematics and of Engineering and Applied
Sciences, and the Faculty of Arts and

Letters.

Two gateways
This core area will have two major
gateways. A concrete canopy more than
1000 feet long will serve the functions re-

lated to Arts and Letters and the other
nearby faculties. Under this canopy provision will be made for theaters, exhibit
spaces for the arts and sciences and meet-

ing areas.
Balancing this canopy will be a gateway on the opposite side of the campus,
which will serve as an entry for the Faculty of Health Sciences and related hospital and other facilities.

In addition to the central library, each
of the four sub-campuses for the faculties will have a major library with separate wings for each faculty. These libraries will be connected to the central
library, including a reference and reading collection, by several means, one of
which is a library area under the concrete
platform in the campus core.
Dr. Ketter said that the central buildings of the campus will “go into design
in the late summer. The development
plans for the units will start this fall.”
The chairman of the Executive Committee of the State Board of Trustees
termed the action taken Friday “a major
decision made to go ahead full steam.
A new adventure in education is taking

place.”

No Spectrum next week
The Spectrum

will not be published next Friday due to examinations to be held marking the end of the first
summer session.
We would like to wish our readers who will be leaving
the campus next week a happy vacation for the
remainder of the summer.
The next regular issue of The Spectrum will be published
day, July

19.

Fri-

Staff

Reporter

Social science, according to Dr, Amitai
Etzioni, should concern itself with analyzing societies and formulating policies by
which societies may direct themselves.
Dr. Etzioni, professor of sociology at
Columbia University, made this point in a
talk here! Friday.
He graduated from Hebrew University
in Jerusalem and received his PhD from
the University of California at Berkeley.
Currently a member of Columbia’s Institute on War and Peace Studies, he has
written extensively on a variety of topics.
Dr. Etzioni’s latest book, “The Active
Society: Theory of Societal and Political
Processes,” is regarded as a highly significant work in the field of social analysis.
In his lecture Dr. Btzioni called on social scientists to make the needs of society’s members the base of their work.
He termed societies as alienating to the
degree that they impose on their members
structures which are not responsive to
the members’ needs. In this sense he saw
most societies as not active.
It is possible, he suggested, to fix the
time when a problem comes to a society’s
attention. “If you come back ten, 20 or
30 years later, it will not be solved.”
Dr. Btzioni gave America’s pluralistic
past as a partial explanation of this country’s inability to move rapidly, but claimed
that even mere homogeneous societies cannot handle their own problems. He gave
the example of th Soviet Union which adopted the goal of a classless society in
1917. “Today, they have moved so far
away from that goal, they don’t remember
they even had it.”

Israel an active society
He classified Israel as one of the

most
active societies. That nation, according to
Dr. Etzioni, has shown an ability to mobilize its membership and give them a
meaningful goal. However, he added, Israel still has not been able to overcome
the problem of absorbing its immigrants.
Dr. Btzioni sees modern society in a
condition Where man does not understand
and cannot control forces shaping his life.
Modem society, he said, has released

forces which could not be mastered until

recently.
He compared the social environment to

“an oceanliner propelled by an outboard
motor,” which is guided mainly by the
currents, with the motor huffing and puffing

in back.

The last few years have seen a technological breakthrough, which Dr. Etzioni
believes gives society the option of regaining primacy. Acknowledging the developments in communications, he asked: “Can
the values and needs of the membership
now give society guidance?”

Social indicators developing
He believes social indicators are being
developed which will give a picture of
what is going on. Dr. Etzioni mentioned
that previously social scientists were “engaging in all sorts of surgery without
maps.” He now feels they have the means
to develop decent social theory.
Dr. Etzioni marked the period since
1945 as one in which this country developed the technology for an active society.
He said the big question is whether or
not this technology will be used.
This “active society” has two characteristics, claimed Dr. Etzioni. One is social
guidance and control from the government. Second is development of genuine
concensus building from the membership
upward.
He defined societies having too heavy
a control structure as “overmanaged,” to
the extent that their governments are unable to acquaint themselves with the de-

sires and abilities of their members.
At the other extreme Dr. Etzioni placed
the “drifting systems with too little control.” Government action here, he said, is
too little and too late to benefit its members.

Totalitarionism and anarchy
He sees the active society as striking

a

balance between overmanaged totalitarianism and anarchic drifting systems. The
power base of the active society will be a
pluralistic one with equality of power, he
claimed. He further called for genuine
participation by the membership in their
society’s affairs.
Dr. Etzioni fixed the function of the
policy sciences at providing guidance for
the formation of an “active society.” He
concluded with the optimistic prediction
that many of those in his audience might
enter this field.

WBFO to cover Council

WBFO, the radio station of the State University
of Buffalo, will
present live coverage of a Buffalo Common Council
meeting Tues-

day, July 9.

The council's agenda will include discussion of the use of portin the Buffalo public school system for purposes of
integration and an open housing resolution.
The broadcast will begin at 2 p.m. at 88.7 me on the FM
band.
WBFO may also be received at 780 ke AM inside dormitories
on
able classrooms

campus.

UB to begin exchange plan
with University of Parma
jrss. ssr X’ cs srsr* srisjr ■;
-ss
P.™..

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It* .111 bos,

JStZX

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,

Ho major oullom of the world.This program is sponsored by
the
Council on International Studies
and
World Affairs, of which Dr. Kurtz is
chairman.
The first participants will be faculty
members who will serve as visiting professors beginning in September. During
the first year, the fields of medicine,
international law, philosophy and literature

lK“1
JSS? ss“if
ofa““’"M
'

Dr, Luigi

Venturini, distinguished

“

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pro-

fessor of law and rector of the University
for the past 11 years, will
follow Professor Antonio Sanna, head
of
the Institute of Microbiology at the
University of Parma, who is currently here
Dr. Venturini will serve as Visiting Professor in the State University of
Buffalo
Law School for the 1968-1969 academic
year.
of Parma

,
'

�Dance review

Theater review

‘Evening of Dance’

‘Heartbreak House*
by Richard Parlmutter
Theater

Spectrum

by Corydon

Reviewer

George Bernard Shaw was profoundly
upset by World War I, but he was tortured even more by the general condilioir
of Europe, its attitudes and futilities,
which combined to form the frustrating
continent known as “Heartbreak House.”
Shaw transmits his abhorrence of Europe’s

rich in his usual manner, through satire
which is at times bitter and strong, at
times subtle yet piercing.
He creates ten characters whom we
candidly observe on the eve of World War
I. The message of the play is conveyed by
studying them as a group, but the humor and dramatic content is related
through the individuals of Heartbreak
House.

of dance.
poetry
“iriraninx*”

urac

is largely due to director Val Gielgud who
has helped the players depart from complete stage theatricality to achieve a surprising degree of likeness to life.

His job is difficult because the play is
long, but Mr. Gielgud allowed it to drag
only momentarily in the later acts. The
continous shifting of the action from couple to couple is achieved smoothly.

Paxton Whitehead plays Hector Hushecomes on looking like a warrior
walrus. He is a genuiriely fine actor who

bye and

Successful combination
The early century British costumes by
Hilary Corbett are interesting and enhancing to the characterizations.

Second session
registration set

Shaw’s production notes are explicit on
set design, and Maurice Strike has done
an excellent job of creating the ship-like
room which Shaw described.

Students who wish to attend the second
six-week session of Millard Fillmore College (the evening division of the University) may register for classes Thursday
between 6;30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. in Diefendorf Hall. Additional information about
registration may be obtained from the
college at 831-2204.

most impressive, but it is the fortunate

combination of directors, actors, costume
and set designers, each performing his
task with a high degree of excellence,
which is responsible for this undoubtedly
successful production of “Heartbreak
House.”
The play is of a quality not often available to Buffalo audiences, but you have
until July 28 to prove this to yourselves
by visiting the quaint Niagara-on-the-Lake
Court House Theater.

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HORSEBACK RIDING

In the dream sequence a nugget of hope
relieved the dark scene in the form of a
girl-spirit figure, played by Linda Swiniuch, whose calm, Hellenic beauty and
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Friday, July S, 1968

ing from a conflict between a soldier and
a priest, played in excellent complementary form by Bird Singlepary and Jim Austin respectively, over the favors of a nurse,
a part drawn to life by Billie Kirpich. this
verse was the darkest of them all. Although the priest and the soldier “fight”
on stage, there is little suggestion that one

is different from the other except for
choice of uniform.
This same train of thought is again expressed in a movement which converts
gay, uniformed girl scout figures, maypoling, into ominously gay bride figures, presided over by both the priest and the soldier. Even the anticipation of marriage
(and sex) has its grey undertone of the
expected, the marching, the military inevitability of it all.
In the next, and last, movement of verse
three, these shreds of anticipation are
pinioned, imagistically, to despair. The
nurse is raped (seduced?) by the priest
and a final dimming glance stageward
shows the priest bending darkly over the
nurse. And even he looks bored. Dumb,
predestined, dreary duty is the message
here, with all of its religio-military patterns.

'Sinforietta'
Verse four was the premier performance (as choreographed by guest Ray Cook
of the Ballet Center of Buffalo) of Sir
Mailcomb Arnold’s “Sinforietta.” Mr. Cook
entitled it “Island of Dreams” and attempted, with good success, to illustrate

the word ‘love’: he did this in three parts,
love of a Bird for a Plant, of a Man for a
Woman, and of Everybody for Anything,
(in that order).
The transition of animal and plant love
to human love to humanistic love is very
neat, even though it does stretch the term
“love” a bit out of (into?) shape. Since the
action takes place on an island, where one
thing ultimately affects all others, and
since the same dancers are used in each
movement, giving the whole a continuity,
and since love only propagates the same,
the dance sequence has logic and signifi-

cance.

grew
The signs of hesitation in love
dimmer with each movement, disappearing, except for comic relief in the last, Joe
Clark must be singled out for excellence
here. His lifts were strong, his technique
in general was bold and polished, and his
interpretation properly dramatic.

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at

man’s dream.
The third “verse” was inspired by “An
Unfair Argument with Life,” by Lawrence
Ferlinghetti, and rendered musically by
John Harmon, a former graduate student

in

man.

—

%
Restaurant %

__

”

The play itself is certainly one of Shaw’s

THE SPECTRUM

hpamtifllllV

of dramatic action, from the calm inaction
of the opening exercise-verse to the violent despair of the third part and finally
to the hopeful gaiety of the last verse’s
last movement. The essence of this four
part dance-poem was that love can be
found anywhere, if only for a moment.
“Sequence for Six” was the first, and
least consequential, verse of the program.
More than anything it was a warm-up,
both for the audience and for the dancers,
although its light tone was a foreshadowing of the undercurrent of the hope and
love expressed, in variation, by the whole.
The accompanying music, composed by
David Rosenbloom, was electronic. But
even given this unpredictable background
—cuts of pop music, street sounds and so
on_,the movements of the six dancers
were balanced and coordinated as they
assumed the attitudes of exercise. This
was a new number, as was the last and
developed especially for “Evening.”
From O'Caiey poem
Technically, “The Star Jazzer,” the second “verse," was the most impressive in
the program, integrating successfully three
different media: film, music and dance.
Inspired by a Sean O’Casey poem from
The Green Crow, this sequence told the
story of a dreary tenement existence which
was relieved only by the dream of a long
ago past: “Now a woman, and once a
kid
The dreary, despairing mood was set by
an Alan Grabelsky film which showed a
series of bored, weary drudges climbing
up and down a forever set of frowsy
stairs. Brilliantly unnoticed, five women
sifted onto the stage, dancing with crushed,
limp movements to underline the mood of
the film. Superbly in control of her body
as an instrument of expression, Billie Kirpich, the main figure in the dance of despair , drained every possible nuance of
meaning from the score by Julius East-

All of the characters achieve an aura
of reality throughout the production. This

Warrior walrus

mnospH.

The emotional content of the program

in later acts.
The role of Captain Shotover is played
very well by Tony Van Bridge who feels
the part so much that he quivers with age.

philosophizing.

on

rose and fell as one verse progressed to
another, pyramiding in the classical style

vincing

Jessica Tandy gives a most endearing
and skillful performance as Hesione who
spends her days flaunting, flirting and

Reporter

a series of four graduated sequences, or
“verses,” as I will call them.

Diana Leblanc is a young beauty who
plays Ellie Dunn, the thoroughly disillusioned visitor to Heartbreak House. In
the early scenes Miss Leblanc tends to
allow her narrative to lapse into monotones, but her role becomes more con-

cast.

Ireland

Billie Kirpich, in her recent “An Evening of Dance Theatre,” has touched the

selves.

Hence it is fortunate that the characterizations in the Shaw Festival’s production at Niagara-on-the-Lake are handled
remarkably well by a truly professional

Staff

Spectrum

can evoke laughter with his carefully
timed tones and expressions.
Frances Hyland plays Lady Utterwood
whoe dignified effronteries are an object
of Shaw’s ridicule. At one point she
boasts: “I am a woman of the world,” an
ironib statement since Shaw is showing
how she and the others are ignoring the
world, thinking only of their own trivial

For quick action

call 831-3610

MADE classical guitars, also gui
tars made to order, call Jos. DeRocco
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MISCELLANEOUS
FREE kittens. Call Heidi. 886-1640.
TYPING services rendered, Rounds Ave.
Call 833-1023.
NEED MONEY? Be a sales represents
tive for a socio-politico-satrical new
poster line. Ideal for individuals and
organizations. Write for complete poster
profit kit: GROSS NATIONAL PRODUCT,
Box 427. Wayzata, MN 55391.

learn

eyes first

HORSEBACK riding,

hayrides, Waverty
Stables, Service Road No. 18, Niagara
Parkway, Canada. 8 miles north from
Peace Bridge. 416—-295-3925.
EXPERIENCED typing done in my home.
Phone 882-5224, after five.

DO YOU QUALIFY TO ATTEND?

THE LIVELY SET

It's the best way to spend a Friday night. Come alone or with
friends. "TLS" meets tonight at the HOLIDAY INN, 1881
Niagara Falls Blvd. Live music from 9:30 P.AA. 1:30 A.AA.
Heels and ties.
Qualifications: Must be single, 20-35 years old, must be a
college graduate, military officer, professionally employed
or female,
"Come and See What It's Like!"
-

.

...

for three female
lograduate students In Sept. Desire
campus.
3 bedrooms precatioh near
ferred. Please phone 886-0460.
Begin
GRAD STUDENT needs a home!or apartning Sept. 1. Room In heme
within
apartment
willing
to share
ment.
walking distance of campus. Will be
to
make
July
coming to Buffalo in late
write
definite arrangements. Please Apt. 1.
4801 Montrose.
George

APARTMENT needed

Rivera.

Houston,

Texas

77006.

ROOMMATE WANTED
JULY ’68-JUNE
from campus.

’69, 10-minute walk
Call 832-3613.

FOR RENT
5-ROOM

house,

monthly.

Eggertsuille. $125.00

837-4833.

FURNISHED APARTMS
FURNISHED apartment, all

Dartmouth; will take 3 students
PM.
until 2 PM; a«er 2

834-0112
1176.

„

„

M

�Entertainment
Calendar

Family Album fun

Friday, July 5:
PLAY: “Cactus Flower,” Craig Stevens
and Alexis Smith, Melody Fair, 8:30 p.m.
PLAY; "Heartbreak House,” with Tony

Festival, Niagara-on-the-Lake, through
July 28.
PLAYS: “Out at Sea” and “Act Without Words,” Workshop Repertory, 8:30
p.m.

PLAY: “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,”
Festival Theater, 8:30 p.m. Stratford, Ont.
Saturday, July 6;

The Family Album will appear Tuesday in the Fillmore Room,
Norton Hall, at 8:30 p.m. They are known at a unique group of musicians who provide an evening of music and satirical wit that won't
be easily forgotten. They are electrifying musicians who take their
audience into a happy, magical world of sight and sound.
Admission will bo $1.00 for students and $2.00 for faculty, staff,
and general public. Tickets are on sale at the Norton ticket office.

Summer activities open
to faculty, students, staff
For the summer session students eager

The Clark Gym swimming pool is open
3 p.m. to 5 p.m. to
faculty, staff, students and their families, provided that identification is presented upon entrance. The pool schedule
includes family swim nights Tuesday and
Thursdays from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
While the family swim nights are being
held in the pool, the Physical Education
Dept., will sponsor a physical fitness program, complete with weight machines.
The program will stress wrestling and fitness exercises.
All guests of the University wishing to
take advantage of facilities for summer
activities should obtain permits in room
312, Clark Gym.

to stay in shape or to enjoy a few minutes

every weekday, from

of recreational

activity, the University
provides plenty of opportunities.

The wide spectrum of activities includes
badminton, basketball, golf, handball, tennis, softball, squash, swimming, volleyball weight training and wrestling.
According to Mr. Bill Banazewski of
the Physical Education Dept., all summer
session faculty, staff and students are
welcome to check out equipment from
room 314, Clark Gym, between 1 p.m. and
4 p.m. daily until Aug. 21. Additional
equipment is also available at the Norton
Hall recreation area.

Softball league

action opens

The opening roll call—chemistry, physare up to you; it’s your league,” allowed
ics, microbiology, chemical engineering, the representatives to vote on such issues
statistics, biochemistry
sounded more
as base-stealing (unanimously defeated),
like a top level scientific conference, but bunting (passed), and permitting one
with its June 24 orientation meeting the pitcher to hurl every game (passed with a
Summer Softball League began rolling.
few objections).
League Commissioner Bill Banazewski
Most ground rules will be up to team
announced to the 20 team representatives
captains and umpires. Games will begin
present that they had been accepted on
at 4:30 p.m. and will terminate after seven
a first-come basis from among 45 appliinnings or at 6:30 p.m. depending on
cants. The twenty-five tardy hopefuls which occurs first. A team will forfeit its
were rejected due to a lack of facilities.
contest if it cannot field seven men by
“Even now,” stated Banazewski, “we 4:45 p.m. Because of the extremely tight
may be biting off more than we can
schedule, cancellations due to bad weather
chew.” Banazewski’s professed desire is will be decided by the league office,
and
“to get as many people playing and having such games will not be replayed.
a good time as possible,” but he cited the
Banazewski summed up his attitudes
fact that the 20 team league must operabout the league (in which he doubles as
ate with a depleted equipment supply and
a player on the physical education team)
a smaller budget than that of 1967,
with: “Remember, the league is basically
Banzewski, adding that “the decisions recreation.”
—

Sunday, July 7:
CONCERT: Duke Ellington, Festival
Theater, Stratford, Ont.
CONCERT: Four Tops, Melody Fair,
8:30 p.m.
Monday, July 8:
OUTDOOR MOVIE: “The Navigator,”
Buster Keaton, Courtyard, Norton Hall,

9 p.m.
PLAY: “Tartuffe,” Festival Theater,
8:30 pjn. Stratford, Ont.
PLAY: “This Was Burlesque,” Ann
Corio, Melody Fair, 8:30 p.m. through
July 13.
POETRY READING; Michael Mott, Conference Theater, 2 p.m.
BACH FESTIVAL; Charles Rosen, Piano
Recital, Baird Hall, 8:30 p.m.
Tuesday, July 9:
PLAY: “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,”
Festival Theater, Stratford, Ont.
BALLET: Royal Winnipeg Ballet, Avon
Theater, 7:30 p.m., Stratford, Ont.
FILM: “Sullivan’s Travels,” Conference
Theater, 3:30 and 8 p.m.
ART EXHIBIT: “Five From the City,”
Center Lounge, 7:30 to 9:30 p.m., through
July 19.
CONCERT: Joni Mitchell, Fillmore
Room, 8:30 p.m.
Wednesday, July 10:
PLAYS: “Romeo and Juliet,” 2 p.m. and
“Tartuffe,” 8:30 p.m., Festival Theater,
“Cinderella,” 2 p.m. and Royal Winnipeg
Ballet, 8:30 p.m., Avon Theater, Stratford,
Ont.
Thursday, July 11:
BACH FESTIVAL: Sacred Cantata Program, the Festival Chorus and Orchestra
Amherst Community Church, 8:30 p.m.
FILM: “She Done Him Wrong,” Conference Theater, 3:30 and 8 p.m.
PLAYS: “A Midsummer Night’s
Dream,” 8:30 p.m. Festival Theater, “Cinderella,” 8:30 p.m. Avon Theater, Stratford, Ont.
Friday, July 12:
PLAYS: “Romeo and Juliet,” 2 p.m. and
8:30 p.m. Festival Theater, Stratford, Ont.

p.m.

Monday, July 15:
OUTDOOR MOVIE: “Pleasure Garden,”
Courtyard, Norton Hall, 9 p.m.
Tuesday, July 16:
ART EXHIBIT; Snowfence Art Exhibit,
Fountain Courtyard, also July 17.
BACH FESTIVAL: Piano Recital,
Charles Rosen, Baird Hall, 8:30 p.m.
FILM: “To Live In Peace,” Conference

Theater, 3:30 and 8 p.m.
Thursday, July 18:
FILM: “L’Aventura,” Conference Theater, 3:30 and 8 pjn.
BACH FESTIVAL; Orchestra and Secular Cantata Program, Festival Orchestra
and Bach Soloists, Baird Hall, 8:30 p.m.
Movies in Buffalo:
Amherst and Cinema; “The Odd
Couple” (no comment)

Buffalo: “The Thomas Crown Affair”
(crime do pay)
Center: “The Green Berets” (Irish or
queer)
Century; “2001: A Space Odyssey” (paranoic fantasy)
Cinema I: “The Family Band” (three
rubber bands and a jug)
Cinema II: “The Detective” (Sherlock
Sinatra)
Circle Art: “How I Won the War” (and
proud of it?)
Colvin: “Prudence and the Pill” (safety
first)

Glen Art: “Elvira Madigan” (pretty pic-

ture)

Granada: “Therese and Isabelle”
(shades of the fox)
Kensington: “Guess Who’s Coming to
Dinner?” (chicken delight?)
North Park: “The Graduate” (Mrs. Robinson, whereforth art thou?)

i

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PLAYS; “Romeo and Juliet,” 2 p.m. and
“Tartuffe,” 8:30 p.m. Festival Theater,
“Cinderella,” Avon Theater, 7:30 p.m.,
Stratford, Ont.

BALLET: Royal Winnipeg Ballet, Avon
Theater, 8:30 p.m. Stratford, Ont.
Saturday, July 13:
CONCERT: Lenox String Quartet, 11
a.in.. Festival Theater. Stratford; Untr
BALLET: Royal Winnipeg Ballet, 2
p.m., Avon Theater, Stratford, Ont.
PLAYS: “Tartuffe,” 2 p.m., and “A
Midsummer Night’s Dream,” 8:30 p.m.,
Festival Theater, “Cinderella,” 8:30 p.m.
Avon Theater, Stratford, Ont.
EXCURSION: Weekend UUAB excursion to Stratford, Ont., for the above mentioned plays.
Sunday, July M:
CONCERT: A1 Hirt, Melody Fair, 8:30

GAME OF
WHO'S GOT
THE PILLS!

TRIO
JULY 21
SUNDAY 8:30 P.M.
-

coming to dinmr

$4.50

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•OTH THEATRES TONIGHT AT 7:30 A 9:40
Friday, July 5, 1968

•

Th» Spectrum

e

Page Three

�Editorials“

Jn£ SpECTI\|IIVI

°

Pini

°

nS

Without expression, freedom of expression is meaningless

Another Lymanbung
University District Councilman William F. Lyman suggests legislation requiring landlords to notify Buffalo police
when they rent apartments or flats to college students.
He says a recent incident involving a student tenant
who left an upstairs flat dirty, with psychedelic paint and
obscenities on the walls prompts this idea. He claims he has
received many complaints about student tenants in the past.
Councilman Lyman has a penchant for introducing wild
and constitutionally questionable legislation whenever he
lets his imagination and prejudices get the best of him.
Here is a man whose major qualification for being on
the council of a large city is that he owns a liquor store.
v r.
We can’t think of legislation so prejudicial, so ridiculous,
so obviously ill-conceived as coming from anyone except,
well, shall we say, someone as “flamboyant” as Councilman

Refractions
by J. L. McCrary
The Paris Peace Talks have gotten
where, but what can you expect? The
are only meeting once a week, every
for five and twenty minutes. They’ve

!

tjj

The thought of him representing the district in which
the University is located, becomes more and more hilarious
with each publication of his anti-youth ideas, of which this
fifflSMUi,
is only one in a long series.
Subconsciously, could he be lashing-out at college stu"And
dents as a reaction to his own meagre education?
Or does he really hate us that much?

The drive to raise $150,000 to support big-time sports
(read football) at the State University of Buffalo has reached
the half-way mark.
Snicker, snicker.
Is the football money pot half-full or half-empty?
The alumni-oriented drive, extended far past its scheduled deadline, has been a colossal flop for the athletic department.
Looks like alumni are about as eager to pay for the
college educations of huge ball-playing chunks (read handsome football heroes) as were students in May when they
voted-down compulsory athletic fees.
Too bad, Mr. Peelle. We’ll miss the cute antics of your
crew-cut boys, won’t we students? Students? . . Students?
.

during
every Tuesday and Friday
Spectrum it published twice-weekly
Fridays
from June to September,
the regular academic year, and weekly
of
the
Association
periods
by
Faculty-Student
the
during
examination
except
Norton
Stale University of New York at Buffalo, Inc. Offices are located at 355
Buffalo,
New
Hall, Stale University of New York at Buffalo, 3435 Main Street,
York 14214.
...RICHARD R. HAYNES
Summer Editor
DANIEL LASSER
Managing Editor
SAMUEL A. POWAZEK
Business Manager
Peter Simon
Campus Newt
Marge Anderson City Editor
diehard Baumgartmt
Feature Editor
lori Pendryi Sport*
David I. Sheedy
Photography
layout
Robert Hsiang
Murray Richman
Copy Editor
VACANT Advertising

The

—

—

—

—

The Spectrum is a member of the United States Student Press Association
and the Associated Collegiate Press. The Spectrum it served by: United Press
International, College Press Service, Gannett Newt Service, and the Los Angeles
Times Syndicate.
Republication of all news dispatches is forbidden without express consent
of the Editor-in-Chief. Rights of republication of all other matter herein are

also reserved.
Editorial policy

is determined by the Editor-in-Chief.
Second class pottage paid at Buffalo, New York.

18

Represented for advertising by National Educational Advertising Service, Inc.
50th Street, New York, New York 10022.
Basic advertising rate: $2.75; summer rate: $2.25 per column inch. Contract

E.

rates upon request.
Summer

circulation: 10,000.

Telephone;

Area

code 716; Editorial,

831-2210; Business, 831-3610.

3584

.4*1

\

X/.iL

M

Lyman.

Half-way

negotiators
Wednesday
hardly got

acquainted.
One negotiator has described it as a kind of
breakfast club, where the parley personnel exchange pleasantries about the weather and Paris
accomodations, while abominations are on the rise

w

*

almost no-

ipg»i

thoy

worried about rioting
in the streetsl"

war®

Readers
writings

UB is for visitors
To the Editor:

In the name of academic freedom, freedom of
speech and liberty to beef, I humbly request equal
time and equal picas to tell Sue Schwartz a
question even as she told us the question, “UB:
for students or visitors?” in the June 21 issue of
The Spectrum.

According to simmering Sue, a person who
studies several summer months here is a student
while one who studies here only five days is a
visitor. By some twist of female logic, a full summer visitor has more rights than a five-day
visitor. So Sue supposes. She overlooks the fact
that the five-day student pays as much or more
as Sue does for each hour of instruction. Sue obviously isn’t aware that the University obtains the
free services of over a hundred creative experts to
teach anyone—including Sue—who pays the nominal fee—how to behave more creatively.
“Why must men live in Goodyear?” asks Sue.
Because dorms rented in the summer help pay
for those facilities and thus help reduce the winter
rates. Why can’t she attend lectures that interest
her? Who told her she couldn’t? Did she try?

Sue, are you so selfish that you do not want
the University to exist for all the students? Was
your real beef that those you scornfully reject as
“visitors” were mostly “adults?” Was the shock
of adults having a wonderful time while working
hard too much for you? Were you yak! yak!
yaking! on the erroneous assumption the enjoyable creative achievement is reserved for the
young? Have you erroneously assumed that education terminates with graduation? Have you too
all too soon become an uncreative, stifled adult?

in Vietnam.
There is a chance that one day the talks may
get down to the real nitty-gritty, the weighty matter of war. But it seems more likely that before
that can happen there must be a gradual escalation
of the Paris confrontation, and someday we maysee the following on living color TV:
“Good evening, ladies and gentlemen, this is
Walter Concrete in New York . .
. .
And this is Charles Colldngtree in Paris
. . Bringing you a Special Report, live and
direct from Paris. Take it Chuck.”
“Thank you Walter. There seems to be a new
mood in Paris today, as the 827th meetings of
American and North Vietnamese negotiators gets
under way. Over the past eight years, the negotiators seemed to be moving toward a kind of fondness toward each other; the Vietnamese accepting
American brashness and the Americans coming to
accept the Viet’s unrelenting attitudes,
“But that progress was bound to be reversed,
and the first sign of that reversal came yesterday,
on the eve of America’s 200th birthday, when the
North Vietnamese suddenly, and without explanation, infiltrated the conference with a new hardliner. The U.S. is expected to retaliate today with
a new soft-peddler and there’s not telling what
may happen. Let’s switch you directly to the
scene where Averall Harriman is just beginning.”
“Hello Loc, how’s Ho Chi been?”
“Fine, honest Ave, how’s yourself?”
“Oh, just fit to MU.”
stop thinking of
“You Americans just never
s
new neviolence, eh Ave? By the way, who that
gotiator I saw you with?
“That was no negotiator, that was my wife!
Ho Ho Ave. I really like your sense of

“Ho

humor.”

“Thanks Loc. Actually, it was George Hamilton,
„

.

...

our new soft-peddler.”

“Don’t

you

think you’ve soft-peddled

long

enough, eh Gringo?”

“What’s the matter, smarty-Loc, can’t you take
it?”
“Look Avis, just because you’re only number
two, don’t take it out on the while delegation.”
“Let’s get down to the weighty matter of war
and peace, okay? Now look, Loc, we’ve made just
about enough concessions. We’ve stopped the
bombing, pulled our troops back to Nevada, agreed
to the formation of a coalition government .
and all so you could save face. How far can friendship go?”
“Does the American negotiator, after all these
years of friendship, of Wednesday morning meetings, through rain and hail and glorious revolutions and DeGaulle be-headings, doubt my sincerity? And after I called you ‘Honest Avc’ on Radio
Hanoi, too. Tsk!”
“Look Loc, you know I think of you just like
a son, but can’t you see you’re being spoiled?
I can’t just give you everything you ask for.
There’s an end to the road in this soft-peddling,
you know.”
“Aw, nuts!”
“Take it easy, son!"
nuts, nuts, NUTS, NUTS, NUTS!.
. T . . S ! ! !”
ends another session of the Paris Peace
lies and gentlemen. Perhaps commentator
iditall said it best when he said, ‘They
jail them all and throw away the Loc

PLAZA SHOE

REPAIR

ONE STOP SERVICE
CENTER
Shoes Repaired While-U-W«it
Laundry &amp; Drycleaning
ONE DAY SERVICE

University Plaza

836-4041

Page Four

•

The Spectrum

e

Friday, July 5, 1968

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                    <text>The Sdectrum
mm

1

n.

/A

)
Vol. 18, No. 56

rida'

&gt;^une

S'

Sibley disclaims violence
as social change vehicle
by Rod Gere
Staff

violence would not entail costs greater
than gains it would produce.

Reporter

“The more violent the revolution, the
less revolutionary it becomes.”
This viewpoint is held by Dr. Mulford
Q. Sibley, visiting professor of political
science from the University of Minnesota.
In an interview, Dr. Sibley argued that
violence inhibits rather than furthers revolution.
He holds that effective application of

He argued that genuine change can only
be effected by non-violence: A government requires cooperation from its people
and cannot exist without it. The way to
get rid of an existing system is to withdraw from it.

Imaginative non-violence

Turning to history for support, Dr. Sibley cited the success , of the Roman plebians in achieving their rights by threatening to leave the city. He also noted that
Norway paralyzed the Nazi government
during World War II by refusing to cooperate. The more recent developments in
Eastern Europe are viewed by Dr. Sibley
as part of a process of fundamental change
in response to non-violent pressure by dis-

cause

Teach-in focuses on
white racism issue

State University of New York at BMalo

■■■&lt;’•

Spectrum

Self-perpetuatur

White racism was the subject of a
teach-in in Norton Hall last week.

Dr, Mulford Q. Sibley, in the department of Political Science at U. of Minne-

Association, the program featured a panel
representing all phases of the educational
experience. One dean, three professors
and a graduate student participated.
Mr. William Mayrl, a graduate student
in sociology, defined the racial problem
in America as one “not of the personal
prejudices of the Wallaces and Slominskis, but of racism in its second, more
subtle dimension,” a social phenomenon.
He explained that racism was inherent in
our social system.
A high infant mortality rate and chronic
long-term unemployment are self-perpetuating in a competitive system, such as
semi-laissez faire capitalism, he con-

leads to inaction.” After “we have beat
our breasts in sympathetic anguish for our
suffering colored brothers, we must take
definite action,” he continued. Dr. Sibley
closed by cautioning that once the present
crisis between black and white is solved
by miscegenation, we must beware of the
use of racist thought by the State Department against the yellow race to further
their own political ends.

tended.

'Indifference, inaction'
Mr. Mayrl was followed by Dr. Lewis
Perry, a professor of history who cited

the well known “villains” of the Kerner
Commission Report, ‘indifference’ and ‘inaction.’ Dr. Perry suggested courses in
Black History and Culture be taught to
white students to help eliminate racial
prejudice, and that deflacto social racism
was of overriding importance.
Dr. Fred Snell, dean of the Graduate
School, was next at the podium. He illustrated his talk with an account of his
early life in China.

Algier's Motel beatings

Dr. Edgar Friedenberg, professor of
sociology and education at State University at Buffalo, the final speaker, gave a
resume of John Kersey’s new book about
the Algier’s Motel incident in which three
Negro men were apparently beaten to
death by Chicago policemen. He quoted
one of Kersey’s interviewees as saying:
“I think police are just prejudiced
against people.”
During the discussion period following,
Bill Simons, a graduate student ip history, said that he thought the panel
had “missed the point.” He decried the
chauvinism of the United States and denounced the inherent evils of the capitalist system.
Several other students also attempted
to communicate this basic question of
“what can be done.”

satisfied elements.

lw

He believes that in this country nonviolence must be used imaginatively for
achieving racial equality, He called for
new adaptions of non-violence which tailor the means to the situation. Bloc-voting,
economic sanctions, civil disobedience and
cooperation within the Negro community
were cited as alternatives to violence.

Planning

Mulford Q. Sibley
cult of ineffective violence
violence requires strong leaders, willing
followers and a possession of a degree of

technology. Such factors will only create
a “basic regime of inequality" by the time
the process is completed, he said.

Dr. Sibley pointed out that turning to
violence puts a high premium on those
individuals who use it best. This creates
a tendency toward dictatorship, rather
than a restructuring of society. He cited
the Russian and French revolutions as instances in which the use of great violence
distorted the revolutions’ objectives.

The first of 13 three-day summer planning conferences to
be held
for incoming freshmen will end at noon. The conferences
designed
are
to give students a glimpse of University life, a
chance to plan their
courses for the fall semester, and, for those from
out of town, a first
look at the Buffalo community.
According to Miss Sheila Fancher, director of the
programs,
there will be two conferences held each week through Aug,
9. Miss
Fancher said that a highlight of the conferences
will be a lecture by
a faculty member active in research or in campus
or community
activities. This week's conference was addressed by
Mr. J. P. Jones
of the Political Science Department.
Another feature is a film that has been prepared by
University
College advisement office showing services on
campus available to
students. Miss Fancher said the 25-minute film
includes such areas as
the student health service, student counseling,
financial aid, the
placement office, admissions and records and the
bursar.

Dr. Sibley expressed fear that increased
community and
continued apathy in the white community
would make violence inevitable. These
two factors could be complicated by what
he termed “stupid and unimaginative
police forces.” The result is a spiral leading to racial warfare.

He explained that using violence as a
means gives the ruling class a moral excuse to suppress elements pressing for
change, and that inviting the ruling class
to violence is especially frustrating to revolutionary ends since that class often has
a near monopoly on “effective violence.”

Dr. Sibley also raised moral objections
to violent revolution, asking: “Can one enlarge respect for human life by killing?”
He said he cannot think
of any way that

Cult of violence
For this reason Dr. Sibley argued the
importance of both black and white America realizing the consequences of vio-

lence. He believes non-violence must be

directed at more than the complacent
white population. He said it is also important to “dramatize for Negroes that
there is another way.”
“Revolution has to begin in the mind,”
asserted Dr. Sibley. “The idea is to change
the people in the white community. You
don’t get them to change by shooting them.
You may by confronting them.”
Dr. Sibley acknowledged that there
seems to be a “cult of violence” in the
U.S., expressing concern that it is extending into segments of the student population. Many students have adopted a romantic attachment to revolution, he observed.
He feels that those advocating revolution
are not very familiar with history.
“People who appeal to violence have a naive
notion of how social changes occur,”

Recent appointments made in
various
departments of the University
proinclude
fessorships and a newly created faculty

position.

J

Dr Rene Girard has been appointed
faculty professor of arts and letters
He
will not be attached to a particular department.

Eric

Larrafcee,

of Arts and

provost of the

Faculty

Letters, described the profes-

sorship as “a newly created position
designed to encourage interdisciplinary
study

within and among faculties.”
Currently a professor at the Institute of
rrench Studies, Avignon, France, Dr. Girvproif35 taufht at several American Uni5
18 the general editor
of a
Journal, Modern Language Notes.
316 A’ HiHer has been appointed
nrpf
lee Pressor,
and Dr. Ronald Tremain

innrlva?

Sle/

"

Program to provide campus
jobs for disadvantaged youth
A primary step has been taken to engage
actively the University community
dif-

Newly appointed Associate Professor
of
Sociology Michael P. Farrell is
currently a
teaching associate at Yale University. The

in
ferent aspects of the poverty program.
President Meyerson’s Committee for
Equal Opportunity has created a summer
jobs program for high school youths.
Tracy Cottone, heading the program,
explained that the purpose is to provide
on-campus jobs for disadvantaged area
youths aged 16 and over.
All University departments and service
units have been asked to explore possible
job opportunities. Many jobs requiring
different levels of skill have been created to
date.
The art department will hire students
to
prepare clay materials and also will provide jobs that may develop latent talent in
the employees. Research jobs are being
provided by several departments including
research jobs for interested youths in
civic engineering, political science and
endocrine research.
Pharmachology is providing laboratory
work. Sorting and interpreting IBM cards
and possible keypunch experience has
been offered by Data Processing. Jobs
in
physics and astronony will be available for
basic electronic familiarization.
Jobs preparing chemicals and machine
shop opportunities requiring manual dexterity are being offered by the Physiology

Farrell

Cooperation needed

French professor appointed
to new arts and letters post
has been appointed professor in the Music Department. As a Slee professor, Dr.
Hiller will visit the Music Department for
the 1968-69 academic year as a distinguished composer, lecturer and guest professor. He is chiefly known for his work
with computer produced compositions.
Dr. Tremain is a specialist in the hisand analysis of 20th century music.
He is presently a senior lecturer in the
department of music at the University
of
Auckland. New Zealand.

winner of a number of
expects

fellowships, Mr.
to receive his doctorate

this year.
AH appointments are effective Sept. 1,
1968,

1

begin

Approximately 150 members of the class of 1972 leave the State
University of Buffalo today after three days of tests,
tours, conferences, lectures, advisement and registration.

frustration in the black

—Hsiang

conferences

Department.

The main problem at present, Miss Cottone commented, is to obtain cooperation
from all departments in finding openings.

The problem of subsidation has been partially alleviated. Fifty jobs will be
funded
by the Summer Sessions Office, and
the
work training program of the
CAO will
fund another 50 jobs.

According to Miss Cottone, the program hopes to provide 125 jobs. Students
are being selected by guidance counselors
who will submit the names for jobs
which
will begin July 8.
Barbara Emilson, also of the program,
pointed out the relationship between the
purpose of the program and the
University. She commented: “It is the responsibility of the University to provide
opportunities for exposure to the University
environment and of the University to fulfill its commitment to the community
as

a whole.”

Introduction to SEEK

Besides providing jobs, it is hoped that
the program will do much
more for the
participating students. Youths will be introduced to SEEK and Upward Bound
programs. They will also be given
summer
,•. cards in order to have full facilitv
privileges. Miss Cottone
hopes to be able
to provide other special programs
for the
participating students.

T^

ere WI be several follow-ups to the
•
job program. During the summer
several
people will be acting as counselors to discuss and work out any problems that the
youths may encounter. At

the end of

the
summer, an evaluation of the program

will be done.

�LET'S GO

.

.

Experimental school to

.

develop child’s freedom
by Pam Wigand

HORSEBACK RIDING

Spectrum

at

“Freedom
lilosophy

9065 Chestnut Ridge Rd., Middleport, N.Y.
ROUTE 77

—

EAST OF

Phone Lockport
•

•

•

•

•

—

IOCKPORT

735-7127

Supervised by Real Cowboys and Cowgirls
300 Acres of Wooded Country Trails
Moonlight Rides
Horse-drawn Wagon For Hay Rrides
Horses For Any Occasion

At someUniversities
they call their newspaper

Journalism 121
School of Journalism. A lab.
The staff works there because they're getting credit for being
there.
The result is a student press put out by people more interested
in getting A's than in serving students.
At (JB it's a different story.
You can't earn credit for your work on The Spectrum.
&gt;ur people work through sheer dedication. They enjoy making things happen. It's a case of students working
for students. We wouldn't have it any other way.

If you have the interest and dedication, there's a position
waiting for you at The Spectrum. Staff positions
include:
Layout

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Copy

•

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*

•

Sports

City &amp; Campus News
Photography

Help us work for students

The Spectrum

Pag*

Two

•

The Spactrum

831-2210

a

Friday, June 28, 1968

for children” will be the
of a proposed new elementary

•school, which will probably open in the
fall of 1969, are now being formulated by
Dr. Arthur Efron of the State University
of Buffalo English Department.
Dr. Efron feels that public and most
private schools, both in the United States
and abroad, are too authoritarian. Adhered to is a relatively rigid pattern of
learning which inhibits free development
of the child.
“Schools ought to be based on freedom
for children,” Dr. Efron said. “They ought
to develop the natural freedom children
need, and display if you let them.”
In allowing children to follow their
own inclinations, Dr. Efron expects they
will leave the school with a broader
range of experience than they could obtain in most schools. The focus will be
on developing the whole child rather than
a few exclusive technical skills.
The school will include children from
ages five to 11. In lieu of the conventional and somewhat rigid grade system,
children will be allowed to advance at
their own speed, eliminating what Dr.
Efron considers inherent artificial comword underlying
the school’s philosophy. Since the school
will be authoritarian at neither studentteacher nor teacher-administration levels,
teachers will have to unlearn much of
their training. Discipline in the classroom will be avoided.
“Instead we shall appoint teachers
whose inclination and commitment are toward liking children enough, and being
unafraid enough, to want the children to
develop freely,” said Dr. Efron. He hopes
this philosophy will eventually influence
current teacher training.

Option of "play"
He continued:

“Children will be offered the option of
‘play’ rather than ‘Study’ if that is their
preference. We recognize that learning
is of many dimensions, in many media,
and that it takes place in a multitude of
situations. There is no inherent conflict
between formal Study and other kinds of
learning. We expect that in practice the
teachers and students in the school would
work out a suitable equilibrium.”
involved
Dr. Efron recognizes the risks
an adin such a system. There might be
justment problem when the children have
system
to fit back into the public school
at age 11. He feels that such a difference
in early training is likely to generate
the
some feelings of separation between elmschool and the rest of society. The

dren will be somewhat independent in a
society dedicated to conformity.
There is also the problem of the child
who wants to play all of the time or who
However, Dr. Efron feels the children’s
“own healthiness is the strongest safeguard” against these risks. Knowledge
will be made available to them. “Vou
have to invite them and they may turn
down the ■ invitation.” But if allowed to
follow their own inclinations, he believes,
their natural interest will accomplish
more than force-fed teaching.
The families of children enrolled in the
school will be an important factor. Obviously, the child who goes home each
evening to an authoritarian-oriented family will be faced with a dilemma. However, Dr. Efron doesn’t feel this will be a
serious problem. The philosophy of the
school will be made quite clear to interested parents, and he expects that only
thos families based strongly on freedom
would seriously think of enrolling their
children.

Private and non-profit
The

admissions

group

will consider

“only those children whose parents really

like the educational philosophy of the
school. The school will not be a place
for a child whose parents are primarily
interested in the amount of conventional
learning he can absorb. Nor a place for
the parent who is worried lert his child
‘waste time’ by enjoying himself. Nor
for treatment of seriously disturbed children.”
The school will be private and nonprofit. It is expected that there will be
a tuition charge, but the founding group
is now investigating other sources of income, such as grants.
Approximately 25% of the students will
have tuition scholarships, providing a
variety of economic backgrounds. The
group wants to bring in children “who
would not normally come to a private
deal
school. Children benefit a great being
by being together and are hurt by
class."
confined to one economic involved
Other1 faculty members

in the
Neil Schmitz of the Engoroiect include;
L. Simmons mid
feh Department, Michael School of
of the
EdEastman
George
Dr
Boddy of the Economics
ucation
and Neil Gallagher of the

Word

Philosophy Department.

The philosophy of the proposed school

is not entirely new. Similar experiments
in education are Fayerweather School m

Cambridge, Mass.; Peninsula School in
Palo Alto, Calif.; Bberdale School near
founded 40
Toronto; Summerhill School,
Angeles,
years ago, and Westland in Los
foundMichael Simmons, a member of the school,
ing group of the planned Buffalo
has had teaching experience at Westland.

Campus food prices upped
to compensate for losses
an

Feature

355 Norton Hall

Reporter

petition.
Flexibility is a key

Many college newspapers are simply an extension of the

*

Staff

Reasons behind a food price increase in
Norton Hall were explained by Mr. Becker
and Mr. Baron of the Food Service at a
Sub-Board in meeting last week.
Of 189 Rathskeller prices, seven have
been reduced while 88 were increasd.
The Food, Service representatives stated
they were “given a mandate to operate
without a loss.” Basic reasons for the increase were given as increases in food and
labor costs and a low turnover.
Explaining the low turnover, Mr. Becker
said that in the Rathskeller “people stay
for hours purchasing the minimum and depriving possible customers. This changes
the revenue picture.”

attempt is being made
He added that
operations.” He
efficient
to have more
expressed the hope that “when beer
is allowed, it will help make up cos
««

»

,

,

contracts aoina
con
9
9

up
P
Mid tea
and
Baron
Mr.
Mr. Becker
a result of the increase in food and
costs, “the Food Service manageme
grets the fact that the board
price for 20 meals per week will P™
have to be increased from approxima
$2.11 to approximately $2.28 P
is anticipated that the board con
price will be $262.50 per semester.

Board
Boa™

€

.

,

�FREE! Your Choice of 5 Valuable Gifts
NOW THRU FRIDAY, JULY 19

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ALSO AN OPPORTUNITY TO WIN ONE OF 5 WONDERFUL DOOR PRIZES

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Only. Ticket must be deposited in the container provided for that purpose
at this office during the Opening Celebration. YOU DO NOT HAVE TO
BE A DEPOSITOR TO WIN A PRIZE. YOU NEED NOT ATTEND THE
DRAWING WHICH WILL BE HELD ON FRIDAY, JULY 19, AT 8 P.M.

A FULL fll

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Individual Accounts welcomed to $25,000,
Joint and Trustee Accounts to $50,000

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($25 or more) to open a savings account as checked.
Please send passbook and reserve my free gift at your Town of Amherst
Office
to be picked up no later than Friday, July 26, 1968. No

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gifts will be mailed.

Individual Account
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Please check one:

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enclose with check
If you send
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cash, use Registered Mail.

Friday, June 28, 1968 e The Spectrum a

Page

Three

�Action line
331-5000
.

.

.

bureaucracy?
In
Do you often think it impossible (o untangle the Umversdy
Tiie Specrum is sponsoring
cooperation with the Office of Sfudenf Affairs and Services,
gof
on answer to a
Through Action Lino, individual students can
Action Line.
gel
ouzilinq question, find out where and why University decisions are made, and
ACTION when change is indicated.

Q. Is it possible to place a coffee machine in Acheson Annex?
A. Vending machines were in Acheson Annex for several months
two years ago, but the confusion and the noise generated by their use
marie the adjoining offices extremely hard to use. It was decided at

is checking further to see if any change of position would be feasible.
Q. Where can I get extra copies of the recent commencement
program? .
A. Drop in to the Office of University Publications, 250 Winspear,
and Mr. Palermo’s secretary will see that you get an extra copy or two.
Q. How does one apply to be accepted in the four new colleges
publicized in the Buffalo papers last week?
A. Beginning in the fall semester, 1968, the four masters announced last week will be actively soliciting student involvement in
their new colleges. At that time any student who feels he would be
interested in a specific college should write a letter stating his interest addressed to the master of that college.
Q. Can summer school students ever stay on campus overnight?
A. There are no facilities for transient student guests in the
dormitories due to the number of full-time summer students and
meetings being held throughout July and August. However, residents
of the dormitories (Tower and Goodyear) may have overnight guests
by requesting an additional cot for their room through their resident
adivser. If you have a friend on the campus who resides here permanently, you might check about this occasional guest facility.
specific answers to your questions, and for direct service, call ACTION LINE,
831-5000. If you prefer, phrase your question in writing and address it to ACTION
LINE, c/o The Spectrum, room 355, Norton Hall or the Office of Student Affairs and
Services, room 201, Harriman Library.)
(For

x

Aretha Franklin, famous for a half-dozen millionselling records will appear in person at Buffalo
Memorial Auditorium on Sunday, June 30, at 8:30
p.m. "Lady Soul," as Miss Franklin is known, will
appear with an all-star cast in her only appearance in Buffalo this year.

‘Lady
Soul’

the

Want to teach dancing?
The Community Aid Corps needs an instructor to teach modern
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The times and hours of instruction are open, to be set by the
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Green Berets

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ZOth Century-Fox
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PAUL NEWMAN in "HOMBRE

Friday, June 28, 1968

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�Music review

Movie review

‘How I Won The War’

Quicksilver and 2*2-?
by Joseph Fernbacher

by Michael Calleri
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

John Lennon’s groin is not decimated in

technicolor in Richard Lester’s film “How

I Won The War.” I mention this not out

Magazine has given a still shot of'Lennon
bleeding his vital guts out much attention,
as if this were the focal point or even basis

of the film.
“How I Won The War” is worth a lot
more than mere magazine sensationalism.
As a statement against the idiocy of war
the film succeeds, although its Lesterian
cinema techniques may baffle more than
a few viewers. Lester, you will recall, is
the man responsible for the Beatles’ “Hard
Day’s Night” and “Help,” as well as the
English smuttacular “The Knack” (good
smut though, luv).
Lester specializes in jump cuts, meteroric flashbacks, hyped camera speed and
sight gags; “How I Won The War” is chock
full of nuts in that bag.
Basically the film is about Goodbody’s group and their adventure in North
Africa during World War II. From this
framework, the film fragments into a variety of cinematic pieces.
There are jumps back and forth to some
excellent scenes betwen a captured Goodbody and a German prisoner of war officer
as well as periodic visits to the home of
one of the Goodbody platoon members
where we see his wife writing him letters
describing her new-found romantic interests (which in reality are only reports
of what she sees on the streets below her
apartment.)
Interspersed through all this are various
assaults on German camps, an attempt to
bring a bit of Britain to the blazing desert
via a controlled cricket match, worries
over how much gas remains with which to
run the vehicles and a series of war movie
cliches that would send John Wayne scurrying for cover.

Cliches and cockney

The cliches include the company coward
(who survives the war and is quite proud

of the boys who did the fighting); the

young soldier who gives his life with as
much apple-cheeked courage as possible
(while he begs for water), and a highlight
of the film, where an officer talks to his
fallen tanks, his cavalry, and shoots one of
the tanks to put it out of its misery.
This is pure Lester, the best Lester, and
it’s unfortunate that the entire film doesn’t
achieve this kind of classic peek into the
insanity and inanity of war.
The sight gags that miss are obvious
failures which tend to muddle the film’s
progress. Many times the spoken English
(some form of Cockney I imagine, since
Cockneys are in) is unintelligeable.
Some of the staging of the film is haphazard, as if Lester merely plopped his
camera somewhere and had his actors improvise some piece of business. It’s a Godardian touch, and perhaps only Godard can
pull it off.
Despite these lapses, and an occasional
flat joke in Charles Wood’s superb screenplay, the film never lags, is never dull.

Even bad Lester is interesting, but what
is more important is tjjat Lester does
triumph in his desire to juxtapose the real
and unreal qualities of war, as well as
doubly depicting the characters as not only

themselves, as soldiers, are artists creating
art in an artistic endeavor.
War; An art form
Lester wants us to know that he believes
war is as much an art form as the cinema,
and that the men who wage the wars are
as much artists as painters or writers or
even film directors.
In the movie, the characters are aware
of the fact that they are part of a film.
After one scene, the camera pulls back
to reveal a stage setting upon which the
sequence has taken place, and Goodbody
mentions during one of his conversations
with the German POW officer that he is
merely playing a role in a movie.
Lester also applies documentary and
semi-documentary techniques to much of
the film. Often the death of a soldier is
viewed in documentary style (black and
white grain with some form of color filter—green, blue, yellow or purple) and
the shot is duplicated by the death of the
same soldier in a technicolor frame. The
complex contrast between the war and the
film, and the various levels of understanding within, is carried off beautifully
by Lester’s precise handling of his art.

Vicious side of war
The film is not overly brutal. War never
was a friendly game of checkers, and Lester gives us the vicious side of the conflict, although not to the extent to which
we may have been led to believe. Lester
displays the killings honestly, and the key
deaths are shown twice (filtered and
straight).

Lennon’s death is veiled by an ultraviolet film, and is not as cruel or jingoistic
as Ramparts fathoms. In point of fact, Lester tries to give the death of the shorn
Beatle some humor. Lennon looks at the
camera/audience and states quite blankly:
“You knew this was going to happen,
didn’t you?” The audience chuckles nervously, which after all is what Lester
wanted it to do.
Lester has two representatives in the
film, in addition to his directorial post. He
is the Fool, and he is Goodbody.
The Fool is the film’s finest character.
Wearing the traditional plaid baggy pants,
he comments on the course the war and
the film are taking, and provides us with
some of the best visual humor. This is the
intellectual Lester.
The acting Lester is seen in the antics
of Michael Crawford who plays Goodbody.
Whatever' Crawford does, and he does it
excellently, is exactly what Lester would
do if he were in front rather than in back
of the camera. A film with the total Lester
—actor, writer, director—would certainly
be welcomed.
“How I Won The War” is currently at
the Circle Art. It’s a significant film, an
adventurous film.

Spectrum

Staff

senled with one of the slickest musical
transitions ever to be impressed upon
this reviewer’s already weary mind. We
are given a steady beat for a while and
then we have a slow fade until little or no
music is heard. Then there is a click

Reporter

One of the most exciting and original
groups to come out of the West Coast
is the group known as The Quicksilver

that successfully blends beautiful guitar
and drum work into a sound that is both
fresh and groovy.

it, beside the bass and drum which seem
to be in an echo chamber.

Still another few minutes pass by and
we hear the lyrics that have so far been
non-existent. The lyrics are weak and
are sometimes ignored completely as the
listener becomes caught in the music
being performed. Finally the cut ends up
in the sort of confusion that was made
famous in a number of Beatle songs. All
in all though, this excellent cut is a real
tribute to Gary Duncan and David Frieberg who are the group’s composers and
guitarists.

The lead cut on their first Ip, entitled
“The Quicksilver Messenger Service," is
a Hamilton Camp tune entitled “Pride
of Man,” The lyrics (which are meaningful to many) are at times overshadowed
by the intricate marriage of bass, lead
guitar and drum work. It is a tune with
a good solid rock background and lyrics
in the style of the most successful folk
artist.

World of 45s.

In one of the many instrumentals on
this Ip, the one entitled “Gold and Silver”
stands out. We hear the vibration of
strings against guitar and drum against
skins. Ultimately this tune will prove to
be the quintessence of the Quicksilver
Messenger Service, and prove it is true

One of the greatest single records to
hit the market in the past few months
is the tune by a group known as the Bob
Seger System. The song is entitled
“2+2=?” and is among the most outspoken of records that express feelings of
this modern generation of “war-protesters.”

that many modern groups are still focus-

ing their attention on their music rather
than their lyrical contents.

A good example of just what the lyrical
content of this record is like is the line,
“I am young, but your rules they are old.”
Coupled with the others in this single,

The second side of this already great
Ip contains two songs, one more than four
minutes in length and another almost
12 minutes long.

we are finally given a picture of just what
the common youngster of our time feels

The four minute cut is entitled “Too
Long” and is another example of just
how good the new sound is that combines
the hard driving rhythms of the ’50s with
the occasionally melodic and eerie sounds
of the modern “psychedelic” genre of

about establishment and the rules it is
forcing many of us to live by in these
unsettled times.

Vocals in background

musicology.

After concentrating at first on the
tune’s lyrics, this reviewer sat back and
got absolutely caught up in the music.
The guitar work is some of the most
inventive and enjoyable I have had the
pleasure to hear. And it shows just how
many of the new (and old) groups have
developed the style of pushing forward
their musical instruments and letting the
vocals fall behind.

Marriage of forms
The 12 minute cut is entitled “The
Fool” and has to be the grooviest sounding thing on the market today. Again we
have the successful marriage between
three musical forms—the psychedelic, the
hard hitting rock sound, and the blueeyed soul.
As the tune starts out we are given
a regular rock style on guitar, drum and

The other side of this record is also

bass. This continues for about five minutes and then blends into another style
which closely resembles that of blues or
soul. This is accomplished by the beautiful handling of lead guitar and bass.

good. It is entitled “Death Row” and is
one of the most ingenious methods that
has ever been used to let the commonfolk know just what it is like living out
one’s last minutes on death row.

After another few minutes we are pre

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•

The Spectrum

e

Page Five

_

�m

■

‘Portrait of My People’
to focus on black culture
by Akmal Shared
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

“Black is beautiful,” says Malcolm Erni,
and this summer he will attempt to prove
it to local television viewers. Usually softspoken and reserved, Erni’s voice vibrates

&gt;—Li

&amp;

j wnf |Ck^Hj

BHI^H

triumph for African culture in his home
town.
The show, “Portrait of My People,” will
be on WBEN-TV each Saturday at 7
p.m., beginning August 3.
One can almost feel him reaching beyond the stage to the next step in his continuing campaign to restore the black
man’s pride in his heritage.
When Mr. Erni began encouraging acceptance of black culture, it was considered an insult to most Negroes to be called
“black” or “African.” The opposition to
his attempts at establishing a center for
African art, music and dance in the community caused him to be considered antiNegro.
He was forced to leave the church in
which he served as assistant pastor be-

cause of his controversial ideas and dance
lessons he was holding in the church base-

ment.

—Hsiang

fair

The craft shop sponsored a fair Wednesday and
Thursday, attracting students to their Norton Hall
basement headquarters.

Entertainment
Calendar
FRIDAY, JUNE 28:

CONCERT: Sid Caesar and Imogene
29.
Coca. Melody Flair, 8:30 p.m. also June
FILMS: "Musicals of the Thirties” and
“The Lone Dale Operator,” Conf. Theater,
3:30 and 8 p.m.
PLAY: “Tartuffe,” Festival Theater,
Stratford, Ont. 8:30 p.m.
DANCE CONCERT: Billie Kirpieh, Fillmore Room.
SATURDAY, JUNE 29:
PLAYS; “A Midsummer’s Night Dream,”
2 p.m. and “Romeo and Juliet,” 8:30 p.m.
Festival Theater, Stratford, Ont,
SUNDAY, JUNE 30:
PLAY: “The Importance of Being Oscar,” starring Michael Mac Liammoir,
Shaw Festival, Niagara-on-the-Lake.
CONCERT: The Vanilla Fudge, Melody

Fair, 8:30 p.m.
CONCERT: Aretha Franklin, Memorial
Auditorium, 8:30 p.m.
MONDAY, JULY 1:
PLAY: “The Cactus Flower,” starring
Craig Stevens and Alexis Smith, Melody
Fair, 8:30 p.m. through July 6.
PLAY: “Romeo and Juliet,” Festival
Theater, Stratford, Ont., 2 p.m.
TUESDAY, JULY 2:
POETRY READING: Daniel Zimmerman and Mark Robinson, Haas Lounge, 3
p.m.

FILMS: “A Short History of Animation;
The Cartoon and Trade Tatto,” Conf. Theater, 3:30 and 8 p.m.
PLAY: “Tartuffe,” Festival Theater,
Stratford, Ont., 8:30 p.m.
MEDITATION: Krishna Consciousness
Transcendental Meditation, room 232,
Norton Hall, 7 p.m. every Tuesday and
Thursday, open to the public.
WEDNESDAY, JULY 3:
FILM: “The President Vanishes” and
“Pow Wow,” Conf. Theater, 3:30 and 8
p.m.

Forced to go it alone, Mr. Brni concentrated his efforts on ghetto youth at a
number of east side locations. In 1966 he
moved his quarters to 350 Masten Avenue,
the present location of his African Cultural Center.
He is convinced that black children are
the key to restoring pride to his race.

“We must have a Heritage Nursery for
so that they can begin
to learn the things omitted from the history texts in the public schools. Our children can no longer identify with Greek
mythology and must stop clinging to stone

our black children

One of many projects
The telecasts are but one of the

erature.
“I wish there were more places where
black culture was being taught. The need
is greater now because the youngtsers are
accepting Africa as theirs and want to
know the languages, the customs and the
religions. Even the white communities
want to better understand our past, and
us.”
Because of the efforts of Mr. Emi, who
will host the telecasts, black culture and
the ghetto will enter suburbia, and black
history will reach those in the core city.

It promises to be an enlightening experience for all who will be hearing this
ebony oracle for the first time.
But whether Malcolm Erni speaks of
Africa or America, Haiti or Harlem, he
always colors it black, and when he is
finished there will be no doubt in the
viewers’ minds that black can be truly a
beautiful thing.

Vanilla Fudge Pour Into

Movies in Buffalo;

Amherst and Cinema: “The Odd Couple”
(Dr. Doolittle and Thoroughly Modern
Millie)
Buffalo: “The Thomas Crown Affair”
(Bonnie meets a potent Clyde)
Center: “The Green Berets,” (story of
some moldy hats)
Century: “2001; A Space Odyssey” (take
plenty of aspirin)
Cinema I: “Family Band” (suggested for
immature audiences)
Cinema II: “The Detective” (original
title)

Circle Art; “How I Won The War” (and
lost the battle)
Colvin; “Prudence and the Pill,” (like
a horse and carriage)
Glen Art: “Elvira Madigan” (good pho-

Sunday evening at Melody

Dance workshop to perform
The University Dance Workshop will
present “An Evening of Dance Theater”
tonight at 8:30 p.m. in the Millard Fillmore Room, Norton Hall.
Under the direction of Miss Billie Kirpich, the dancers will perform two highly
acclaimed numbers from its established
repertoire, and two new dances created
especially for the concert.

existence.

tended

dancers, providing continuous action be-

tween the 'screen and the stage.
A second piece, a dramatic work in four
movements for eight women and two men,

The program will open with a new
piece choreographed by Miss Kirpich.
One of the previously performed works
is a lyrical work for five women, an emotional statement of a single uplifting
moment of dream, plucked out of an

tography)
Granada: “Therese and Isabelle” (great

loneliness, alienation and the
cavernous interior life of contemporary man.
The oOier new work on the program
was created by guest choreographer Ray
Cook. His suite for five dancers depicts
a series of dreams on an island to the
music of “Sinfonietta,” composed by Sir
Malcolm Arnold.

reflects

seemingly

CHARLIE'S

TONSORIAL CENTER

photography)

For the Finest in
HAIR STYLING, RAZOR CUTTING

Kensington: “Guess Who’s Coming to
Dinner,” (time’s up)
Teck: “Dr. Doolittle” (a lazy physician)

end BEARS TRIMMING

3584 MAIN ST.

TF 6-9080

Next to University Plese
_____CLOSES MONDAYS

DO YOU QUALIFY TO ATTEND?

THE LIVELY SET

or with
It's the best way to spend a Friday night. Come alone
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HOTEL,
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A.M. Heels and ties.
Qualifications: Must be single, 20-35 years old, must be a
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doled Wednesdays

Bible Truth

-

CHRIST IS COMING AGAIN
"Behold He cometh with clouds;
end every eve shall see Him. and
they also which pierced Him: and all
kindreds of the earth shall wail because of Him.**
—Rev. 1:7

Pag* Six

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"Come and See

Friday, Juna 28, 1968

What It's Like!"

PLAZA SHOE REPAIR
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EYES EXAMINED
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Buffalo

The Vanilla Fudge will make their area debut in an 8:30 concert
Fair.
First in a new series being presented this summer by tent manager Lou Fischer, the Fudge will be followed by such groups as The
Who and folk-singer Judy Collins.
The Vanilla Fudge has been playing to standing-room-only crowds
all over the Eastern Coast.
through
They play with a haunting style, brought about primarily
Stein.
organist
solo
work
of
Mark
the hard-hitting
V.nn.e Marten,
Also in the group are Carmine Apple!, drummer;
lead guitarist, and Tim Bogert on bass.
RenaisOf special interest is the Fudge's new album entitled
album is
to
date.
The
group
the
by
sance," the best effort put forth
work backing
full of long organ solos with excellent stick and guitar
Donovan tune called
them up. One of the best songs on the Ip is a
that at times fore"Season of the Witch," done with an excellence
himself.
Donovan
shadows the original tune done by

PLAY: “A Midsummer’s Night Dream,"
2 p.m. and “Romeo and Juliet,” 8:30 p.m.

Festival Theater, Stratford, Ont.
POETRY READING: Leonard Nathan,
Conf. Theater, 2 p.m.
THURSDAY, JULY 4:
PLAY: “Tartuffe.” Festival Theater,
Stratford, Ont., 8:30 p.m.
FRIDAY, JULY 5:
PLAY: “A Midsummer’s Night Dream,"
Festival Theater, 8:30 p.m.
SATURDAY, JULY i:
PLAY: “Romeo and Juliet,” 2 p.m. and
“Tartuffe,” 8:30 p.m., Festival Theater,
Stratford, Ont.
PLAY: “Cinderella,” Avon Theater,
7:30 p.m.
SUNDAY, JULY 7:
CONCERT: Duke Ellington, Avon Theater, 2 p.m., Stratford, Ont.

many

projects Mr. Erni is now involved in. He
is completing a book which has been accepted for publication and plans ventures
in recording, publishing, and filming of
black cultural art, drama, dance and lit-

SEPT. 69 FRESHMEN
ONLY DURING
PLANNING CONFERENCE
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ON REGULAR LINE

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BUFFALO, NEW YORK 14226

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�Bai

Spock trial fails to

;arten on si

UB athletics needs money
Sports

deter war protesters

A fund drive was started to raise $200,000 for the University Athletic Depart-

by Rich Baumgarttn
Editor

Collegiate Prett Service

ment.

The student body of this University has
made a terrible mistake. By a vote of

—

Mr. James Cox, chairman of the drive,
has done a creditable job. But to this

of the antiwar movement.

will not support their own athletic programs, why should the Buffalo community
have to help out?

$18.00 mandatory student athletic fee in
favor of a $12.50 voluntary fee. If this
decision is not changed, the results will
be disastrous.

never

come to

Convicted last week in Boston on
charges of conspiring to counsel, aid and
abet young men to evade military service
were pediatrician Dr. Benjamin Spock,
Yale University chaplain William Sloane
Coffin Jr., Harvard University graduate

pass.

guilty.

The immediate reaction of the peace

movement to the convictions was represented by a statement issued by Resist,
one of the major organizations opposed to

athletic fees.

If the athletic future of the State University of Buffalo means anything to you,
sign that petition. Bring back mandatory

Let down by the student body, Buffalo
Athletic Director Peele had only one recourse. The Athletic Department took its
financial woes to the Buffalo community.

to the war and the draft. The statement
pledged that “we shall continue the work
of resisting the war. In this effort, we
are joined by over 25,‘000 Americans who
have pledged their willingness to risk
prosecution in carrying on resistance to
the war."

fees. If you don’t, it will be your loss.

CLASSIFIED
ously awaiting my gift.

FOR RENT
TO SUBLET from September 1st until
January 15th (Fall Semester) 2 bedroom Completely Furnished Apartment.
All utilities and garage included. $100.00

per month. 2152 Main Street. 837-6342.

—ME

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THE SPECTRUM
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'Thousands will protest'
The statement added that thousands of
young men opposed to the war will participate in more than 100 projects around
the country this summer. “These are organizing opposition to the war and the
draft among college graduates, men in the
military, high school students, and ghetto

For quick action
call 831-3610

—

Partners? Press, Inc.

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Some war critics who plan to resist the
Selective Service System are still hoping
for a confrontation with the government
over the legality of the war and the draft.
The trial of the five men in Boston had
been viewed as the major chance for this
confrontation, but 85-year-old Francis J.
W. Ford, the presiding judge, ruled before the trial that the issue of the legality
of the war could not be discussed. The
defendants had contended they could not
be held legally responsible for opposing
an illegal war.

student Michael Perber, and author
Mitchell Goodman. The four men will be
sentenced July 10. A fifth defendant,
Marcus Raskin, co-director of the Institute
for Policy Studies here, was found not

A petition for a student referendum is
being prepared. It will be available for
signature beginning Monday. When it
contains 200 signatures, it will be sent
to the Student Association as the first
step in initiating another referendum, a
referendum which can restore mandatory

Out of 20,000 undergraduate, graduate
and night-school studenlts, only 6000 paid
their athletic fees. The Athletic Department which usually banks $280,000 from
these fees, received only $80,000. Take
$200,000 out of a $28,000 budget, and you
have a tremendous amount of pressure
exerted on the Athletic Department.

It added; “We will aid and support
these efforts, as we have done for more
than 85 projects already, and as we shall
continue to do until American troops are
withdrawn and the Vietnamese people
are allowed to determine their own
futures.”

But most observers agree that the convictions are not likely to have a serious
impact on the movement, at least in the
immediate future.

There is only one solution which will
insure a bright future for University athletics, and that is mandatory athletic
fees. If athletic fees are not made mandatory, then the Buffalo sports bubble
will burst, and dreams for big time football, baseball, basketball and hockey will

If you don’t think the situation is serious, take a look at what happened tins
past year. As a result of a decision in
Albany, mandatory athletic fees were
abolished and made voluntary. The 196768 student athletic fees did not have tp
be paid, and as a result less than 33% of
the student body responded positively.

MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE low cost, immediate F.S. 1, premiums financed.
UPSTATE CYCLE INSURANCE, 695-3044.
HEATING ENGINEERS: Bring your old
flame to Shakey’s
It’s a Gas. Hotcha Banjo Music, Thermostatic Pizza,
Liquid Fuel on Draft. SHAKEY’S Pizza
Parlour and Ye Public House. Niagara
Falls Blvd., North of Sheridan Drive.
834-9000. Hot pies to go too.
DEAR ROOMMATE.
It is with an ambivalent feeling that
I wish you SHALOM. I will honestly
miss you, but it sure will be great
having a room to myself. Will be anxl-

Draft counselling centers, antidraft ‘caravans,’ programs to aid men
classified 1-A, and demonstrations at induction centers and draft boards will continue and expand. So will legal attacks
youth.

WASHINGTON
The convictions of
four prominent critics of the Vietnam war
on charges of conspiring against the Se-

Rent/option, steps
4 bedrooms,
roomy 2-car garage, gorgeous kitchen,
immediate occupancy. Bill Klie, 875—

to UB or Bennett H. S.

2408.

GAS STOVE $25.00,

With the major issue eliminated, the
defense tried to prove that the war critics
had not engaged in a criminal conspiracy,
but had merely attempted to publicize
their feelings about the war. Attorneys
emphasized the public nature of the defendants’ activities, and indicated that the
scope of the alleged conspiracy is so broad
that it encompasses, in effect, the entire
antiwar movement.
The four defendants already have announced they will appeal the jury’s verdict. Thus, the case will go to the U.S.
First Circuit Court of Appeals in Boston,
and possibly end up before the Supreme
Court.

Triple Your Reading Speed
I'
25

Refrigerator $15.00.

Call before 5:00 at 831-2413 and after
5 P.M.
NEW 50CC Honda;

6800.

Best Offer, Call 875-

CRIB and mattress, Colonial couch and
chair, reclining chair, cocktail tables.
Used one year. 839-2970 evenings.

Spectrum classified

15 words $1.00
call 831-3610
—

Dr. Joyce Brother*
Author, columnist, radio and television personality,
voted one of the ten most influential American women,

Dr. Joyce Brothers is Executive Consultant
and Program Director of the Read Ability System
•

Students

-

Businessmen

CLASSES START

-

Professionals

JUlV

10

in Amherst Hamburg Downtown Buffalo
FOR DATES AND LOCATIONS, CALL 839-1160
OR MAIL COUPON
-

-

R-W-S MASTERS CORP.
4511 HARLEM RD. (at Main)
SNYDER, NEW YORK 14226

Please send information on
□ Demonstrations
□ Classes
□ In-Plant Courses
□ Guest Speakers

The
Read-A bility System

NameAddress
Tel. No.

Friday, Juna 28, 1968

.

The Spectrum

.

P^, n

�The Spectrum f

““

°

Without expression, freedom of expression is meaningless

Oh, Commissioner

/

Buffalo’s riots a year ago
Or at least that’s the impression Buffalo Police Commissioner Frank N. Felicetta gave the House Committee on
Un-American Activities this past week.
He said that members of the Buffalo Youth Against War
and Fascism, whom he termed “a communist spinter group”
(and they are) distributed leaflets to ghetto residents that
incited them to riot.
He also blamed convicted drug dealer Martin Sostre for
having had his hand in convincing hundreds of supposedly
happy, contented black Buffalonians to rebel.

lessormy

®5S*

•

o

&lt;*

a-

0&gt;

'

V

M
7?*lCS AMStUS VMtS

Come, come, Commissioner. Just whom do you expect to
believe that?

Felicetta compliments us all, if that were true
The fact is that happy people have no need to revolt.
A few students couldn’t convince an entire community to lash
out in violence.
We are all responsible for the riots. Scapegoats are egosatisfying, but this is too great a tragedy, too vast a problem
to pin on a few persons.

r c jL«

'I would see to it that you could walk the streets of Washington if it took 30,000
troops with two-foot bayonets.' —George Wallace

Refractions

’

by J. L. McCrary

frauds ever perpetrated
against the American Public is the commencement
speaker!”
J. L. McCrary, in anger. June 25. 1968.
"One

of the

biggest

—

The Dodge Rebellion, and coming up to Kools, The Pill,
liberalism, Sunday services, higher education, and Tigerama
and a hundred thousand other things that make-up the
American Way of Life caused 1967’s riots: All the same
things that will cause 1968’s riots.
Two hundred million Americans
black and white
and two hundred million more from whom we inherited this
country , . . share the blame for riots.
—

—

And the Police Commissioner can tell congressmen all
day about subversive activities and subversive literature and
subversive subversives.
But he cannot erase the black pall of censure that hangs
over us all.
Rats, poverty, ghettoes, unemployment, white racism,
black racism, inadequate schools, poor housing, indignity.
They are, at once, America’s children for she spawned
them and America’s murderers.
—

—

Commissioner Felicetta should have told Congress about
them.

Old tricks

level.)

A similar move was made a year ago, when the Tiffin
Room re-opened after promises to demonstrators that it
would “close forever.”
We don’t appreciate the tactics of the men in those
little white coats.
The
the

every Tuesday and Friday
Spectrum it published twice-weekly
during
from June to September,
regular academic year, and weekly
Fridays
except during examination periods by the Faculty-Student Association of the
State University of New York at Buffalo, Inc. Offices are located at 355 Norton
Hall, State University of New York at Buffalo, 3435 Main Street, Buffalo, New
York 14214.
—

—

Summer Editor

—

—

RICHARD R. HAYNES

Managing Editor
DANIEL LASSER
Business Manager
SAMUEL A. POWAZEK
Campus News
Peter Simon
Marge Anderson City Editor
Feature Editor
Lori Pendrys Sports
Richard Baumgarten
Photography
Robert Hsiang Layout
David L. Sheedy
Copy Editor
Murray Richman
VACANT Advertising
The Spectrum is a member of the United States Student Press Association
and the Associated Collegiate Press. The Spectrum is served by: United Press
International, College Press Service, Gannett News Service, and the Los Angeles
Times Syndicate.
Republication of all news dispatches is forbidden without express consent
of the Editor-in-Chief. Rights of republication of all other matter herein are
also reserved.
Editorial policy is determined by the Editor-in-Chief.
Second class postage paid at Buffalo, New York.
Represented for advertising by National Educational Advertising Service, Inc.
II E. 30th Street, New York, New York 10022.
Bot|c advertising rate: $2.75; summer rate; $2.25 per column inch. Contract

rates upon request.

Summer circulation: 10,000.
Telephone:

Page Eight

Area code

•

McCrary here. I don’t really believe that quote
I’ll eat those words if l ean get all
the high school principals, elected officials and
valedictorians who have made insulting pronouncements to do the same.
This is the week that commencements came to
an end, the week that the mellow yellow strains of
for another year
Pomp and Circumstance echoed
up there. And

—

their last.
Oh pity the graduating class of 1968 who have
been told variously that love and respect, honor and
courage, inspiration and perspiration, realism and
idealism, hope and the Pope, blood sweat and tears,
education and desegregation, brotherhood and
motherhood and chastity are the only real hope for
the world.
And pity the Class of ’68 who have been told
variously again
that the greatest problem the
country will face is: crime in the streets, pollution
in the air, riots in the ghettoes, Nixon in the White
House, rebellious students in administration buildings, a left takeover, a right takeover, a new fascist
radical middle-of-the-road slowdown, the balance of
payments deficit, societal violence and—-oh yeah—involvement in that jungle half a world away.
But what can you tell a graduate? J. L. has the
perfect answer, the perfect speech, and here it is:
‘Graduates: You came here to get your diplomas today . . . that’s real diplomacy (wait for
laughter to subside). Seriously, I’m going to give
you just one bit of advice—-Plastics! (Wait again
here.)
“All kidding aside, I say go out into the world,
kick up your heels, keep your ear to the ground
and don’t buckle under. ‘The times they are a
—

—

—

‘

The University Food Service is up to its old tricks again.
It waited until summer sessions—when most students are
not available—and then surreptitiously raised prices. Some
prices were hiked as much as 20%! (Which wouldn’t be
too bad if the quality of food was reciprocally raised 20%.
Of course it was not. Quality wallows at the same grubby

716;

Editorial, 831-2210; Business,

The Spectrum

e

831-3610.

Friday, June 28, 1968

Readers
writings

changin’.

“As John Arbuckle, the famous tea merchant,
once said; ‘You get what you pay for.’ Peace on
earth can only come through good will toward men,
but it’s going to take a lot of blood sweat and tears
so be a doer if you hope to achieve prosperity.
“Remember to keep the faith, baby, whatever
happens in the air, on land, and see what you can
do for your country, not what your country can
do for thee, if you have the time.
“Rely on yourself and beware of evil. The
greatest things attainable by mortal men, after
all, are attainable only through the noble efforts
of people.
“As future leaders I put my stock in you.
Don’t make the same mistakes we did. Learn from
history because you shouldn’t repeat the mistakes
we’ve learned from.
“Whether you become a doctor, lawyer, teacher,
tinker or tailor, keep your cool. Love your neighbors, your brothers, your countrymen, whether they
be red, yellow, black or white and reject extremism.

“Dream of dreams that were never dreamt before, but steer clear of unthinkable thoughts.
“Your diplomas represent not an end, but a
new beginning. People like to scare graduates
by telling them what a rough world it is out there.
Why should I break tradition and tell you differently?

“Abraham Lincoln, in his famous Gettysburg
Address, said: ‘People will probably forget what I
say here, but they’ll never forget what happened
here.’
“In the same vein, forget what I say here. You
are commenced.”

Resident demands privacy
To the Editor:
The University has done it again.
The weekend of June 14, University Housing had
the nerve to house a group of Canadian students
from the University of Waterloo in Tower Hail, unknown to the RAs until after they arrived. The point
is not the students’ nationality, but the fact that
they were housed on the same floors as the residents.
Anyone who was within hearing distance of
Tower on Friday night could have heard the party
these students were having on the resident floors
until the campus police broke it up.
The noise wasn’t enough, but one individual was
injured when a bottle struck him from one of the
upper floors. He was hospitalized with cuts on the
head. This plus a number of minor disturbances
Saturday night and Sunday morning (at 2 a.m. campus police were called again) was disturbing to all
residents, including those in Goodyear.
The University should realize that the resident
the
floors in the dorms are for those enrolled at
University only. These are our legal homes for the
summer and this right should be respected.
We too like to sleep and have privacy, as do the
University officials. It is understood that the University has summer programs and noise can’t be helped,
but these visitors can be kept off the resident floors
and should be. We should not be sacrificed for the
sake of saving money or because a few bureaucratic
people think the students will take all this garbage
without protest.
Ralph Cessario

Why not rooms for visitors?
To the Editor:
I am a resident student living in Tower for the
summer.
Recently four of my friends from Cornell University came to visit me. They are foreign exchange
students from Tunisia and are on very limited bud-

gets.
When an attempt was made to secure a room for
them in Tower, I was told by housing that, although
there are quite a few empty rooms on my floor,
these rooms would not be opened. The only way
they could stay there would .be on a cot in my room
or in an occupied room With an empty bed.
This system is inadequate because dorm rooms
have barely enough space for two people, let alone
moving in a third cot. It is also an infringement upon the rights of a person who had requested a single
room to share his room with another person, even
if it is only for a few nights.
r
I feel that a better system could be set up
1
visiting foreign students, for there is not a shoring
of empty rooms in Tower.
A Tenth Floor Student
&gt;°

It’s Kingman, not Kingfish
To the Editor:

.

.

Samuel P., who wrote last week complaining
about that poor lady regent who talked about Java
at graduation, is something of a stupe himself.
There ain’t no Kingfish Brewster. The president of Yale is Kingman Brewster,
And furthermore, Java is nice.
I’m tired of reading jerky letters to the editor
anyway

Joseph

McPartlan

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The Spectrum O
Vol. 18, No. 55

received
JUN 2 ! 1968
university

Fri

State University of New York at Buffalo

*R&lt;3HfV%^ 968

Tentative plans aired
by Mark Siegel

Spectrum Staff Reporter

Basic plans for the development of the
State University of Buffalo’s new Amherst
Campus along a collegiate format were
discussed Friday by br. Claude E. Welch,
dean of University College, and Mr. Allen
Sapp, director of Cultural Affairs.
Ground breaking for the first six
colleges (which should be completed for
the fall semester of 1970) will take place
New masters chosen—see p. 2

this fall if the University’s plans are
passed by the State Board of Trustees.
The first six buildings will be located in
the northwest section of the campus site.
This region was chosen because it will
provide highway access for college residents via Sweet Holme Rd., Skinnersville

Rd. and Millersport Hwy., and an area
safely removed from possible flooding by
Bllicott Creek.
The college type of campus arrangement is not a new concept. Several variations of collegiate organization have
evolved, particularly in undergraduate institutions.
Harvard and Yale have been using the
house and college systems for years, and
Michigan State and various branches of
the Universities of California, North Carolina, Indiana, Kansas and Massachusetts
have attempted to utlilize them more recently. Other universities of the New
York State system, Binghamton and Stony
Brook, are planning residential colleges at
present.

'Educational entities'

According to Dr. Welch, “the uniqueness of the State University of Buffalo

Schwab warns against
danger of student apathy
Student Association President Richard
Schwab proposed Monday that “representatives of all five student associations
meet within the month,” because they are
“drifting further and further from a real,
meaningful community student government,”

At a meeting of Sub-Board I Mr. Schwab
noted that committees of the Faculty Senate are forming and their machinery is beginning to work, while “students are doing little to cooperate in the efforts of formulating policy.”
“The implications of this trend
good,” Mr. Schwab emphasized .“I

more and more

power vested

are not
can see

in the Fac-

ulty Senate as months go by, and concomitantly, less and less say by students in the

affairs of the state of the University.
“The Faculty Senate structure has done
much to bring faculty members into the
role of questioning and formulating University policy. The new undergraduate
constitution was written in the spirit that
undergraduates are interested enough to
do the same.

Another Columbia through inaction
“I feel that each representative government should begin asking the following
Should the Faculty Senate be
the supreme law-making body, which listens when it likes to student opinion? Or
should we move toward a bi-cameral University government with a Student Assembly as the lower branch of University
questions:

government?

“There are many alternative proposals—it’s limitless—but unless we begin talking
about what can be done soon, another Columbia could be in the making by our own
inaction.”
In other action at the Sub-Board meeting, an appropriation of $400 was made to
the Select Committee for Equal Opportunity, to show the Board’s interest in and
support of that group. Summer budget requests were heard for several organizations, including the Community Aid Corps,
Commuter Council, Anonym and the University Bands.

college system lies in the fact that the
colleges are to be educational entities.
They are not just dormitories to house
students nor are they just Student Unions,
though there will be certain basic facili-

ties.
“The colleges may provide 25% of the
formal education of a student at the University as well as offer extracurricular activities. They will offer the opportunity
for independent study through resident
faculty members and seminars,”
The creation of the colleges within the
new campus is another phase of the acaedmic reorganization announced last year basic plans for development have been
by President Meyerson, following the esformulated.
tablishment of the seven provosts and
faculties at the University and the confar the easiest task of any university.
cept of University-wide deans.
Having that contact play a significant role
Dean Welch said the new college sysin the growth of intellectual perceptions
tem was chosen specifically because it
and outlook, however, is a far more comemphasizes “the interrelationships beplex task.”
tween living and learning” necessary for a
This objective will be attacked by embig quality university.
phasizing the importance of ‘informal education,’ and reorganizing the use of col'Intellectual osmosis'
lege facilities (such as dining halls, study
“Effective education within which inand extracurricular facilities such as
tellectual potentialities are awakened and areas
sports and dramatics) for use by all levels
applied is in a large measure a sense of
of University inhabitants
undergraduintellectual partnership,” added Dean ates,
graduates, and faculty.
Welch. “The implication is one of inIdeally, faculty members living or
formal learning—aii intellectual osmosis,
teaching in the colleges will be drawn
if you will. To create this atmosphere refrom all the ranks of the University. Proquires more than a certain student-tofessors, assistant profesors and teaching
faculty ratio; it requires a suitable university setting, permeated with the spirit assistants will all help to develop courses
especially for the colleges.
of inquiry.”

New campus site

—

“One of the educational strengths of a
collegiate organization is the opportunity
for faculty-student contact outside the
formal classroom setting. (Plans call for
up to ten resident faculty members in
each college.) It seems apparent that
supplying the content of knowledge is by

Development of leadership
Student government will be the foundation of each college. A balance of power
and a system of checks and balances will
characterize the structures. A well defined

�

Please turn to Page 2

UB hosts program in
creative

problem-solving

Today is the final day of the 14th annual campus Creative Problem-Solving Institute.
The five-day program has involved nearly 300 persons from 36 states and Colombia, Norway, Brazil, France, the Republic of Panama and Paraguay.
The Institute is designed to develop
creative skills by means of a number of
inter-related programs. Basic course sessions, workshops, symposia, and discussions are designed to instill in students
the ability to sense, define and solve

problems creatively.
In addition to the participants, 120 experts in creative thinking are on hand to
serve as faculty, speakers, discussion leaders and resource personnel for the Institute.

Included are educators, leaders in gov-

ernment and business, military officers,
engineers, scientists, lawyers, journalists
and specialists in health, religion and wel-

fare.
The Institute opened Sunday evening
with a general assembly in Butler Auditorium, Capen Hall. Participants were
welcomed by Dr. E. K. Fretwell, presiednt of State University College and Dr.
Raymond Ewell, vice president for Research at State University of Buffalo. An
orientation address was presented by Dr.
Sidney Fames, director of the Creative
Problem-Solving Institute.

Creative instruction
Monday was the first of three days of
basic course sessions intended to provide
the equivalent of a semester course in the
development of creative behavior. Institute participants in small groups were instructed in: Gaining an Overview of the

Total Creative Problem-Solving Process;
Stretching Our Creative Abilities, and
Applying the Total Creative Problem-Solving Process to the Participant’s Own Problems. Advanced sessions for those who
had previously completed the course were
held concurrently.
Thursday and today the participants are
instructing several hundred specially invited members of Western New York
community groups in the methods of
creative problem-solving. These sessions
deal specifically with problems faced by
those involved in and working for com-

munity groups.
Sessions involve representatives of 35
area groups including the YMCA and
YWCA, the Community Welfare Council
of Erie County, and Build Us Too (BUST).

Workshop-symposium
The

Institute

has

also

held

several

special evening programs for the participants. Tuesday, two concurrent workshop-symposia were held in Norton Hall.
The first was led by Dr. Benedict J.
Surwill, principal of Campus School of
State University College, and stressed the

development of creative behavior in the

classroom. The second session dealt with

creative management methods. Dr. Joseph H. McPherson, manager of Personnel
Research and Development of Dow Chemical Co., was the speaker.
Concurrent with the Institute, a special
library of materials on creativity has been
made available to the Institute.
The Institute is co-sponsored by the
Creative Education Foundation of State
University College and the Office for
Continuing Education of the State University of Buffalo.

�Teach-in to study ‘subtle
aspects’ of white racism
Audience participation will be the key
factor at a teach-in on white racism tonight in the Millard Fillmore Room, Nor-

ton Hall.
Aecording to William Mayrl, one of the
program's coordinators, "We don’t care

Wallace sense. The teach-in will be most
successful if we can get a heated discussion going among all the people that
are there.”

The program will begin at 8 p.m.
Mr. Mayrl will discuss the dimensions
of racism in American society. Other participants will include: Dr. Edgar Z. Friedenberg of the Sociology and Education Departments; Dr. Lewis Perry of the History
Department; Dr. Mulford Q. Sibley, visiting professor of political science, and Dr.
Fred Snell, dean of the graduate school.
John Marciano and William Yates, the
program’s other coordinators, said that
the teach-in is designed to point out the
more “subtle” aspects of racism in Am-

erican society, which is basically a white

society.

They said that these aspects are those
which affect the white person who is not
prejudiced against blacks, but who lives
in a societal framework which does dis-

“A perfect example of this is the draft,”
said Mr. Yates. “White students sit up
here (at the University) with their 2-S deferments while black men are getting
drafted. We’re not actively discriminating
against blacks, but we’re putting up with
a society that does.”
Tonight’s program is the first in a series
to be presented this summer on white
racism. The coordinators hope that these
discussions will eventually lead to action
to change the racist aspects in American
society.

They are presently attempting to set up
courses during the fall semester dealing
with these problems. Some future plans
will be outlined at the teach-in tonight.

Nonsmokers have more
status, according to study
A study recently conducted by Dr.
Saxon Graham, professor of sociology and

of preventive medicine at the Slate University of Buffalo, indicates that nonsmoking may eventually become a status
symbol.

A random sampling of 3500 'males over
18 years of age was taken in the Buffalo
area.
Results indicate that nonsmokers and
successful quitters had a higher occupational and educational background. Dr.
Graham feels this is due simply to the
fact that “men in these groups are more
aware of the dangers of smoking.” The
most obvious example is that a large number of physicians have stopped smoking.
Although cigarette sales have continued
to increase in the past three years, Dr.
Graham feels that the figures may be
misleading. He notes that the sale of
cigarettes per capita has not increased,
and that gross sales are decreasing.
Dr. Graham says that the results might
have been slightly different if the study
had included women, as there is evidence
that smoking among women increases
with class. In general, however, he sees
a marked trend toward nonsmoking.
Dr. Graham studied four categories:
(1) those who had never smoked; (2) those

LET'S GO

who had tried to stop smoking and succeeded; (3) those who had tried to stop
smoking and failed, and (4) those who
had never tried to quit.
Other research he has conducted indicates that “risk of lung cancer increases
with the mean number of puffs taken per
cigarette and with increases in the average length of time taken to smoke a
cigarette regardless of age or amount
smoked per day , , . Smokers could lower
their risk by taking fewer puffs per
cigarette, taking them shortly after lighting up, and smoking with only short intervals between puffs.”
Dr. Graham’s interests in the fields of
sociology and preventive medicine involve him in social epidemiology. A fairly
new field, it attempts to trace the distribution patterns of various types of disease among different national, religious,
racial, class, occupational, residential and
other social groups.
In the near future, Dr. Graham plans a
joint research project with Dr. Kenneth
Newell and Dr. A. F, Wesson of the World
Health Organization. They will study acceptance and rejection patterns of people
in underdeveloped countries toward innovations, such as vaccines, which would
protect public health.

.

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Masters chosen for
4 Amherst colleges
Mr. Allen Sapp, Dr. John V. Huddleston,
Lyle B. Borst and t)r. Mac Hammond
have been selected as the Masters for four
of the first six colleges to be built on the
new Amherst Campus site.

Dr.

sity College, announced that these men
were chosen because of their academic
qualifications and because of the vast enthusiasm shown by each for the college
system.

Mr. Sapp, presently director of Cultural
Affairs and professor of music at this University, was a teaching fellow at Harvard
University for eight years following his
graduation there. In 1958 he became a
lecturer in music at Wellesley College,
and in 1961 Mr. Sapp became head of the
department of music here.
In 1965 he was appointed head of the
Division of Languages, Literature and the
Arts, and in 1966 to his present post of
director of Cultural Affairs. He is also
co-director with Lukas Foss of the Center
for the Creative and Performing Arts.
Mr. Sapp has authored several musical
compositions and is active in numerous
societies in the community. He hopes to
have a drama department connected with
his college.
Self-government stressed
Dr. Lyle Borst was appointed professor
of physics at the University in 1962. He
is at present president of Sigma Zi, a
scientific research fraternity, and chairman of the local chapter of the American
Civil Liberties Union.
Dr. Borst said that he hopes his college
will be representative of the entire University, but that it will also contain a
majority of science students. He also
stressed the development of self-government within the college.
Dr. Mac Hammond, associate professor
of English and author of a volume of
poetry, came to this University in 1965
from Western Reserve. He is the newly
elected secretary of the Faculty Senate.
Dr. Hammond feels that the goal of his
college should be “to guide students in
the direction of being magnanimous
adults attuned to realities and possibilities.”
Dr. John V. Huddleston, professor, Faculty of Engineering and Applied Sciences

The Masters
Top row: Dr. John Huddleston (r); Dr.
Lyle Borst. Bottom: Dr. Allen Sopp (r),
Dr. Mac Hammond.
here since 1967, was associate professor of
Civil Engineering at Yale for 11 years. He
has published numerous treatises in his
field.
Dr. Huddleston is interested in the applied sciences for humanitarian purposes.
“I would like to see one college explore
the ways in which science and technology
are used to the detriment of mankind,
the way industry has focused upon the
increasing of profits and not that of helping man. I would like to see another college study the positive benefits to man
of science and technology.”

Tentative Amherst plans
Continued from

Page 1

system of appeals will be implemented
with special emphasis placed on the development of good student leadership, according to Dr. Welch.
Student affiliation with a college will
be on a voluntary basis, but Dean Welch
said that he felt “the excitement of the
college concept and the wide range of
faculty and other student relationships
will make them popular among the students.”
A master will be assigned to each college to develop, along with student participation, the character of each particular
college. The first four masters who have
been appointed are: Dr. Lyle B. Borst,
professor of physics; Dr. Mac Hammond,
associate profesor of English; Dr. John
V. Huddleston, professor of engineering,
and Mr. Allen Sapp, director of Cultural
Affairs and professor of music.

Physical plans

The first six college structures will be
comparatively low structures of three or
four floors. Each college will consist of
various groupings of single rooms, suites,
faculty residences, and the master’s living and working area.

...

Student living areas may consist of two
or four bed suites, two graduate suites,
two single rooms, and a general room
with living area, dining room and storage.
The colleges will share satellite kitchens, thereby cutting food costs and service as well as saving space.
It is estimated that each college will
have approximately 1000 students affili-

ated with it—about 400 residents and 600
commuters. Each college will also have
a library and reading rooms, seminar
rooms, administrative offices, laundry facilities, snack bars and other services and
sport activity areas.
Of the first six colleges being built, one
will contain a photography and ceramics
workshop, and others will have a swimming pool, drama workshop and a computing center.

Dr. Welch cautioned that this tentative
program must still be verified in Albany,
and that this is only a sketch rather than
a blueprint. However, he felt confident
that the trustees would agree with him
that it is time for education to “regroup
and reidentify,”
He noted: “In order to grow big we
must grow smaller.”

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Page Two

•

The Spectrum

•

Friday, June 21, 1968

�Three hew department
heads dean appointed
New social welfare dean

Comments heard at Allentown Art Festival;
"It was like a carnival"
"lots of paintings that were nice but
nothing you would buy"
"Too crowded"
"Many pseudo-hippies and pseudoartists"
"Allen St. the only good thing"

A special consultant to the President’s
Task Force on Older Americans, Dr.
Franklin M. Zweig, has been appointed

"Obscure artists got to sit on the street
two days and do their thing"

Zweig has been a case worker for the Traveler’s Aid Society of Detroit and a re-

"Wasn't the best art in Buffalo"

,

Di. David G. Hays has been appointed
chairman of the Program in Linguistics.
Dr. Hays is currently a social scientist in
charge of the program in computational
linguistics at the Rand Corporation in California. He has also been a visiting lecturer in linguistics, sociology, business administration and English at several universities and a consultant to many large
companies and colleges.
A professor of history and public affairs
at Princeton University, Dr. Robert A.
Lively has been appointed professor and
chairman of the department of history. Dr.
Lively is currently director of the Center
for Studies of the Twentieth-Century American Statecraft and Public Policy at
Princeton.
Dr. Theodore M. Mills, associate professor of sociology and director of the In-

teraction Laboratory at Yale University,
has been appointed professor and chairman of the department of sociology.
Dr. Mills is an expert in group relations
and is currently serving as a consultant
for the U.S. Navy Bureau of Personnel. He
has also been an assistant professor at Harvard University.

scenes

"It was great"

paint
success
picture

watching the people"

search consultant of the Rhode Island Department of Social Welfare
He has also been National Advisor for
Community Planning to CHILDREN (Dept,
of Health, Education and Welfare) and has
been a consultant on community renewal
and anti-poverty programs in Georgia,
Michigan and Florida.
Another recent appointment was announced by Eric Larrabee, provost of the
Faculty of Arts and Letters. Dr. Peter Heller, Commonwealth Professor of German
at the University of Massachusetts and director of its Atlantic Studies Center in
Frieburg, Ger., has been appointed chairman of the newly formed department of
German and Slavic languages. Dr. Heller
has taught at Rutgers, Harvard and Columbia Universities. He is the author of a
number of works including manuscripts
on Lessing and Nietszche.
The new department of German and
Slavic languages is one of three departments recently created from the former
department of modern languages.

;

The appointment of three new department chairmen and a dean has been announced by Dr. Warren G. Bennis, provost
of the Faculty of Social Sciences and Ad-

Allentown

"many really beautiful people"
"the submarine sandwiches were good"
"a bunch of garbage"
"people fakin' it"
"oh, hell"

—Valberg

Volunteers bad! needei

CAC programs seek new
life for the impoverished
by Donna Van Schoonhoven
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

Merlin, co-director of the Community Aid
Corps and head of Woodlawn Tutorial.
The Community Aid Corps also sponsors
a big sister program. CAC volunteers act
as companions to underprivileged children, taking them to the zoo and on field
trips, visiting places unfamiliar to them
and giving them an opportunity to experience an atmosphere different from their

“Let Each Become All He Is Capable
Of Being.”
Although it is the motto of the State
University of New York, it also sums up
the purpose of the Community Aid Corps,
Through various community projects,
members contribute to the further development of society by helping those who
own neighborhood.
need it.
The companion program is also attemptThe Woodlawn Tutorial Program is one
ing to establish a big brother section.
such project. Volunteers, on a one-to-one
basis, tutor children in the Woodlawn
One case
ghetto in subjects in which they need
Gloria is a very tiny two year old with
help.
light brown hair and very big brown
The most important factor is earning eyes. Months ago Gloria
did Uttle else
the confidence and trust of tutees so that than eat, sleep and
smile occasionally.
they will want to learn more and more.
She is a brain-injured child, a victim of
The physical aspect, such as taking trips
cerebral palsy.
and playing together, is also emphasized.
Three months ago her femily took her
Two young girls in the program have
to the Institute for the Achievement of
never been to a beach; some have never Human
Potential, a Philadelphia clinic.
been out of their neighborhoods.
This summer, students belonging to the
The program also attempts to get the
CAC’s “patterning” program began to
family involved.
work with her in hopes of retraining un“We try to get mommy and daddy to
damaged brain cells to take over the job
read to them before bed. It
sounds funny of injured tissues.
but that’s because your parents did
Throughout the week, volunteers visit
read
to you and theirs never have,” said Jeff her
home in groups of three. Each group
works with her twice for five minutes
each half-hour. This is done four times
a day. She is placed on a table
where
the volunteers, starting on the right side,
move her arm and leg upwards at a 90°
angle to her body. Then they repeat the
process on her left side. This is known
as homo-lateral patterning—the earliest
Stage. After five minutes of each session,
she is then expected to crawl down a
slide four times.
Through this “patterning,” she has begun to crawl, and during her visit to the
Institute this past week doctors rated her
efforts “a six month improvement.”

Reservation activities

The Akron Indian Reservation is the
site for another of the Corps’ programs.
Twice a week this summer,
volunteers
will join with residents in recreation,
sports, arts and crafts, cooking and field

trips.
They are also working with the

Community Aid Corps
A student

volunteer tutors ghetto child.

’

°°

A solution may soon be found to the
perennial question of what to do with 510
acres of flat land owned by the FacultyStudent Association near the Amherst
Campus site.
The land was bought by the FSA for
$750,000, four years ago, and ever since
it has been a source of conflict for the
official FSA land use committee and the
Graduate Student Association.
The GSA protested so violently at
earlier “immoral” proposals made by the
land use committee to use the land for
purely recreational purposes that SubBoard I instructed the committee to re-

consider its recommendations.
After considering the GSA counterproposals, which included an urban community relief program, and a student
opinion poll conducted by The Spectrum,
the final recommendations of the committee were submitted to Richard Schwab,
chairman of FSA Sub-Board I last week.
The report, compiled by Robert Henderson, land use committee chairman,
recommends that the 510 acres near the
new Amherst Campus site should be developed as a nature park, a nine-hole
golf course, and a childern’s recreation
area.

reser-

vation’s Teen Council. The council provides these teenagers with an opportunity
to discuss their problems.
All of these programs need interested
students who want to put their
energy into action. Anyone ideas and
interested
may contact Jeff Merlin in
the Student
ffiCe r m 205, N rt0n Hal1
°

Urges golf course, park,
rec area for FSA land

°

’

The nature park would be kept free
from mechanical traffic and would eventually be covered by shrubs and trees. A
barrier to this development is the ffict
that all the FSA land is flat, open farmland barren of heavy foliage.

Golf course: profitable
The nine-hole golf course recommended for the northeast corner of the land
/

has been justified as revenue producing
and would offer time and price advantages to the University community. No
definite plans for the layout of the course
have yet been considered.
The children’s recreation area would
include the present picnic and recreational area near Sweet Home Rd. and
would expand these areas northward. The
primary focus here would be for the University community. But, as Mr. Henderson pointed out, the facilities will be
open to Community Aid Corps and other
Urban Aid groups who wish to provide
recreational opportunities for ghetto children.
Mr, Henderson said
that his committee
has recommended the immediate development of this area, and that this much
at
least could be accomplished over the
summer, provided the recommendation is
accepted by Sub-Board I which has the
final say.
Mr. Henderson said that the recommendations of his committee were guided
by a questionnaire printed in The Spectrum March 15. This limited sample (271
responses) of student opinion was, because of its nature, used only as a guideline rather than a mandate.
Although only 51% of the response

favored a

golf

course over

a large park

and recreational area, 73% were neutral
or in favor of having the facility. The
nature park and picnic area also received

high ratings.

Finances were also a problem for the
committee because no estimate on the
probable available capital has been made
for the FSA land.

Friday, June 21, 1968

•

The Spectrum e p. g( Three

�Music review

Oral Health Service
expanding operations
Staff

Reporter

“If you don’t like students, you don’t belong here. If you don’t practice good dentistry, you don’t belong here either."
This comment by Dr. George Goldtarb,
dental director of the Student Oral Health
Service, sums up the goals of what he
hopes will eventually be a complete student dental service. He hopes that professional. student-oriented dental service will
one day be available to all students.
The modest beginnings toward this end
are presently housed in 1200 square feet
of dormitory space on the second floor of
Michael Hall. Included here are waiting
room, administrative offices, examination
and treatment rooms, and a darkroom. Because of limited space, funds and personnel, the service is limited to three categories, two of which are emergency care and

diagnosis.
Beyond this there is little actual treatment. Students might be referred to a private dentist, but because of lack of facilities, treatment is not possible.
The third category, which is given the
most emphasis, is preventive dentistry.
According to Dr, Goldfarb, it is estimated
that an effective program of preventive
dentistry can decrease cavities and oral
disease by approximately 40%. He explained that preventive dentistry is painless dentistry which can save time and
money as well as increase the patient’s
comfort. It is easier to prevent cavities
than to go through the ordeal of treating
them once they are formed.
During the course of the regular school
year, priority is given to students in the
Health Sciences. This is done to reach

by Joseph

those persons who will potentially be dealing with health and introduce preventive
dentistry as part of their educational ex-

by Rod Gere
Spectrum

Jimi Hendrix Experience

perience.
During the summer this care is being
offered free to students on a first come,
first served basis, as far as limited facilities allow. Service includes a dental examination and X-rays. Students can also have
their teeth cleaned and receive a floride
application.
In addition, a film explaining the value
of preventive dentistry is being prepared
in cooperation with the Audio-Visual Department, and will be in use within a short

time.

Dr. Goldfarb urged that as many students as possible take advantage of this
service. Those interested may call Mrs. Jill
Senzer at 831-5341, from 1 p.m. to 6 p.m.
any weekday but Wednesday.

Pilot program

The dental service being offered makes
this University one of the few in the nation that concern themselves with the oral
health of their students. This is largely because of the commitment of University
Health Service Director Paul F. Hoffmann
to the idea that complete health service
for students includes dental care.
The present facilities are seen as a pilot
program from which a complete dental
health service will evolve. Although at the
present time service is limited mainly to
preventive dentistry, Dr. G o 1 d f a r b expressed a desire to see the program become a comprehensive oral health center
where students can receive professional

care.

Bill Buckley loses again
Special to the Spectrum

Controversial conservative columnist William Buckley Jr. continues to have his problems with the electorate.
Running in protest of Yale's "liberal bias" Mr. Buckley was
of
defeated by Cyrus Vance for a seat on the University's board

alumni trustees
Mr. Vance has been one of President Johnson's chief trouble
shooters for the past few years. He is presently serving as deputy
chief of the American delegation to the Paris peace talks.
The election resulted in a record vote. Almost half of Yale's
65,000 eligible degree holders cast a ballot.
Keeping with tradition, the University did not release election
figures. If is believed, however, that Mr. Vance won a relatively
easy victory over Mr. Buckley. John Mussner of St, Paul finished
third.

Mr. Buckley was defeated by John Lindsay in New York City's
1965 mayoral election. Mr. Lindsay already serves on the board,
formally known as the Yale Corporation, which owns and operates
the University.
Mr. Buckley hoped to become the first Roman Catholic and
third petition candidate ever to win a seat on the board.
However, according to Michael Koenig, who represented the
class of 1963, he was "a little too conservative for the typical Yale
*

graduate."
"I'm quite relieved," Mr. Koenig added.
Mr. Buckley reacted to the defeat with his usual candor: "I
congratulate Mr. Vance, and I hope he follows the same ideas I do."
One Buckley vote was cast by 85 year old Vasa Bracher, a
representative of the class of 1903. Mr. Bracher "thought he'd be
a good member of the corporation—shake 'em up, maybe."
The election was summed up well by the Rev. William Sloan
Coffin Jr., the Yale chaplain who was recently convicted of conspiracy to counsel evasion of the draft:
"I'm sure we'll hear from Bill Buckley again."

MOVED HERE FOR
YOUR POST-GRADUATE
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-

MIKE

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•

Page Four

•

The Spectrum

•

-

PARKING

AIR CONDITIONED!

Friday, June 21, 1968

With hair that looks as it has been
teased by a thousand-volt generator and
the soul of a madman, Jimi Hendrix and
'his group would bring a smile.to the face
of the Marquis de Sade.
The Jimi Hendrix Experience, the
group’s official title, has become one of
the most popular rock groups ever to set
their amps on a stage. This popularity
has been a result of their first record album called “Are You Experienced.”
The group plays music that has been
described as “accidental,” not so much as
the style attributed to the Cream, but
more like three blind men running the
one hundred yard dash. This is adroitly
seen in the aforementioned album.
Decidedly the quintessence of Hendrix
so far, (“Are You Experienced”) is full of
deep blues with a brash interlacing of
avant-garde electronic modulations. Cuts
on this album run the full spectrum of
Jimi Hendrix and his immense talents.
They range from the straight hard rock
of ‘fFire” to the electronic love song “Foxy
Lady.”

Southern blues

&amp;

electronics

Throughout the whole album we are
able to see the strong influence of Muddy Waters and others of the same mus-

ical genre. Hendrix has taken this background and has come up with songs like
“Purple Haze,” a mixture of deep heavy
southern blues and the many electronic
oscillations for which Hendrix is known.
In the title song of this album, “Are
You Experienced," we are witness to what
seems to be an ardent love affair between
man and guitar. One can just feel emotion
being poured into Hendrix’s guitar as he
takes us on a wild journey into the worlds
of the surrealistic and macabre.
Another journey into the world of the
future is the highly experimental tune
entitled “Third Stone From the Sun.” At
the end of this highly exciting song we
hear a guitar making itself out to be a
train rolling along the countryside of hell.
can
It is also true that the Experience
do straight hard rock numbers as seen by
their rendition of “Hey Joe” and “Fire,’
a tune written by Hendrix himself.

Frenzied music

In “I Don’t Live Today,” another cut
a very
on this Ip, we are presented with
interesting picture of the delicate interplay between drums and guitar. The tune
starts simply ala Jimi Hendrix and then
fanbreaks out into all kinds of utterly
and bass
guitar,
with
drums
sounds
tastic
The frenall going in different directions.
zied music builds up until we reach the
point of eruption and we hear Hendrix in
that
a most convincing manner telling us
“there ain’t no life nowhere.”

After this album reached all time highs,
as far as sales go, Hendrix and his creatures spurned from the womb of hell came
up with their latest outing entitled “Axis:
Bold as Love.”
—It is in this album that we
Hendrix as expressed in lyrics as well as
music. The lyrics are stressed a little bit
more than the music which is at its usual
peak of efficiency.

Saucer satire

The lead cut on this album is a beauty
called “EXP” and boldly interplays the
voice, drums, bass and guitar. In this tune
he stereo machine becomes a heckler and
taunts the ear as it switches music from
speaker to speaker. Hendrix, the best guitar player on the scene, starts his second
outing with what seems to be non-guitar
sounds. The song is a satire on the many
UFO believers all over the world.

The one song on this album that seems
to express explicitly the philosophy of
Hendrix is the tune “If a 6 Were a 9,” in
which he states that he is doing his own
thing and nobody but nobody is going to
change him and we’ll “wave his freak flag
high, high.”

Steppenwolf

Some of the most interesting guitar and
lyric work to come out of the rock scene
emanates from the group that calls them-

selves “Steppenwolf.”
In the lead cut on their album (entitled,
by the way, “Steppenwolf”) the group
gives us a song which is rich in blue-eyed
soul and hard driving guitar work. The
song called “Sookie Sookie” is really a
pleasure to listen to with its marriage of
soul music with some guitar work that,
for want of a better term, can be labelled

psychedelic.

“The Osterich” is a tune that tells of
growing up according to the great Amorgan.
erican way. It is rich in guitar and
The organ solo at the beginning is excellent and should be extended into a full
length cut. Other songs include “Born to
being led by
be Wild,” a song of the life “Berry
Bides
many a motorcyclist today;
Again,” a tribute to the great Chuck Berry, and “Desperation,” a song that tells
tribulaof life and its many trials and
tions.
’

Banned on radio
The best cut on this album is the tune
called “The Pusher” and it strongly con-

of
demns the men who are in the habit
shovelling snow to peopel who need it.
on
It is a song that will never be played
frankthe radio for in it we are told quite
pusher.
ly how god has damned the

“Steppenwolf” is new and their sound is

a long
new but they will be in demand
ladder
time and will step right up the
ladder.
into the high spots of the musical

Build Us Too plans tactics
Several members of Build Us Too
(BUST) met Sunday at Riverside Salem
Church of Christ in an effort to add some
poiltical muscle to that organization.
BUST is concerned with advancing
racial equality by moving against elements
of resistance within the white community.
Those present Sunday were in general
agreement that grass-roots action in local
politics is a necessary activity for the
achievement of the ends of the organization.
Following extensive discussion of how
BUST could best make its presence felt
in local politics, it was suggested that a
committee be formed for further study.

MELODY

THE GRADUATE
an EMBASSY PICTURES

Reporter

This committee- will determine which
elected county and city officials act as
of
the greatest obstacle to the achievement
the organizations ideals.
Past electoral patterns will be studied
to determine which local politicians are
most “vulnerable.” The political action
committee will also examine ways of exertby
ing concentrated activity on a block
basis,
,
block
Following adjournment of the meeting,
individuals of this new group met wi
1
the steering committee of BUST, 1V
committee on political research was S
recognition as a standing body and
steen g
lowed a representative on the

committee.

FAIR

Niagara Falls Blvd., N. Tonawanda

JOSEPH E. LEVINE PMMHTt A
MIKE NICHOLS
LAWRENCE TURMAN
COLOR

Fernbacher

Staff

Spectrum

SUNDAY, JUNE 30

—

8:30 P.M.

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Tickets available at Norton Union Ticket Office
$4.50

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3248 MAIN ST. at HEATH

�Music of our times

The instrumentals
by Sheldon H. Bergman
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

Anyone who has tuned in a rock station
recently is bound to hear an interesting
record with a strange “whoomping sound:
by
“The Good, the Bad, and the
Hugo Montenegro. It is only the latest
record of a form of music that has been
with rock 'n roll since its inception—the

instrumental.
The instrumental rests its merits solely

on melody.

Perhaps that is why only four or five
instrumentals capture our attention each
year, and why we remember them for so
long.

The first instrumental of this musical

era was “Canadian Sunset” by Hugo Win-

terhalter in 1955. The Big Bands had
passed from the scene almost a decade
before this, but nothing had replaced the
swing of Goodman-Dorsey-Miller. “Canadian Sunet” was the first instrumental
to incorporate a backbeat, gentle as it
was, and it marked the end of one dynasty
in music and the birth of a new one.
Perez Prado’s “Cherry Pink and Apple

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Blossom White,” which had been issued
a few months earlier, was the last of
Latin-American swing records, the last
record to hark back to the ’40s. From
then on, it was a steady build-up of backbeat which culminated in the hard-rock
instrumentals of the late fifties.

Dr. Warren G. Bennis (r), provost, presents Bookstore manager George Bielan with a copy of his
most recent book, "The Temporary SocietyThe
book, just released this week, is on display in
the Bookstore.

True still remembered

The true instrumentals are still vividly
remembered.
A case in point is a number by Dave
“Baby” Cortez. “Happy Organ (Shortnin’
Bread) was a pleasant piece, but “RinkyDink”, an original piece, was one of the
top instrumentals of the ’50s. Only a few
performers consistently released quality,
original instrumentals: Duane Eddy
(“Rabble-Rouser”), Floyd Cramer (“Last
Date”), and Martin Denny (“Quiet Vil-

Entertainment
Calendar
FRIDAY, JUNE 21

THURSDAY, JUNE 27

PLAY: “Your Own Thing,” Playhouse
Theater, Toronto 7:15 p.m. and-9:45 p.m.
on Friday and Saturday.
PLAY: “Romeo and Juliet,” Festival
Theater, Stratford, Ont. Also June 25, 27,
29 and July 1, 3 and 6.
CIRCUS; Hetzer’s European Circus, Melody Fair, 8:30 p.m. and June 22, 10:30 a.m.,
EXHIBIT: James Joyce Exhibit, Lock-

SUMMER CINEMA: “Musical of the
Thirties” and “The Lone Dale Operator,”
Norton Conf. Theater, 3:30 and 8 p.m.

wood Library.

PLAY: “A Midsummer’s Night Dream,”
Festival Theater, Stratford, Ont. Also June
24, 26, 29 and July 3, 4, 5.
PLAY: “Tartuffe,” Festival Theater,
Stratford, Ont. Also June 26, 28 and July
2, 4, 6.

POETRY READING: Robert Duncan,
Conference Theater, 2 p.m.

28.

DANCE CONCERT: Billie Kirpich, Fill

more Room.

SUNDAY, JUNE 30:

CONCERT: Ray Charles, Raeletts, Melody Fair, 8:30 p.m.

MOVIES IN BUFFALO:

MONDAY, JUNE 24:
CONCERT: “The Show of Shows,” Sid
Caesar and Imogene Coca, 8:30 p.m.
through June 29.

TUESDAY, JUNE 25:
Foreign Correspon-

dent, Que Puerto Rico, and Children Make
Movies, Norton Conf. Theater, 3:30 and 8

p.m.

MEDITATION: Krishna Consciousness:
Transcendental Meditation, room 232, Norton

Thurs.,

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26:

PLAY: “The Emperor’s New Clothes”
Peter Piper Players, Melody Fair, 2 pm’
POETRY: Electronic Poetry Workshop
Conference Theater, 4 p.m.
PAIR: Craft Fair, Fountain Courtyard
12-4 p.m. also June 27.

at

the

Movies were also starting to contribute

to the deluge with such songs as Exodus,
El Cid, More, Pink Panther, Magnificent
Seven, The Alamo, Never On Sunday, and
The Apartment. A few novelty instrumentals even managed to creep in: Alley
Cat, Desifanado and Green Onions.

Alpert losing authenticity

But even with the mass production of
instrumentals, only one artist managed to
produce a series of hits: Herb Alpert.
Starting with “The Lonely Bull” (which
I still consider his finest record), he recorded one instrumental after another to
an ever increasing audience. Today he is
considered the number one recording artist of 1968 (Billboard). But in recent
years, he has limited himself merely to
playing songs that have already made it
big. Admittedly, he plays them better
than most, but he is no longer producing
true instrumentals.
And that has been the philosophy of instrumentals for the last few years. Only
“Cast Your Fate to the Wind” squeaked
past the Hollyridge Strings and the Boston
Pops in the past three years. Perhaps that
is why “Love is Blue” created such a
storm. It was the first true instrumental
after a long draught of pretenders. (“Walk
in the Black Forest” was based upon a
public domain song and “A Man and a
Woman” was from a French film.)

Into obscurity?

Paul Muriat and Hugo Montenegro will
probably go the way of Santo and Johnny
(“Sleepwalk”), the Royal Tacos (“Flamingo Express”), Sandy Nelson (“Let There
Be Drums”), and of countless others (semiobscurity or, in many cases, utter demise).
For the instrumental bridges the gap between the musical generations, and both
generations make heavy demands upon it.
Only Herb Alpert has managed to ride
this musical surfboard for so long, and to
do so he had to replace the vitality of
his early recordings with a vague blandness.

feature

For the entire summer, the Music Department will be featuring
programs of Johann Sebastian Bach's greatest works. The first
recital will be free to stimulate interest in the festival.
Thursday an organ recital will be given at the Trinity Episcopal
Church, 371 Delaware Ave., by Roy Kehl. Starting at 8:30 p.m.,
the program will feature the Prelude and Fugue in D minor, the
Sonata #2 in C minor. Die Kunst der Fugue and the Fantasia in B
minor. Mr. Kehl will also perform the Fugue in B minor on a
Theme by Corelli, Prelude and Fugue in A major, the Passacaglia
in C minor and the Fughetta-Von Himmel Hochbakomm Ich Her.
The rest of the festival will include several orchestral programs,
a piano recital by Charles Rosen, a program of chamber
music with
Albert Fuller and Jacob Berg and a Harpsichord Recital.

Amherst and Cinema: “The Odd Cou
pie,” see “Therese and Isabelle.”
BUFFALO; “The Devil’s Brigade,” are
going to you know where.
Center: “Chubasco,” sounds like a hot
sauce.
Century: “2001: A Space Odyssey,” in
the Rocketship 7 tradition.
Cinema 1: “In Cold Blood,” supposedly

better than the book.
Cinema II: “Guns for San Sebastian,”
Anthony Quinn, any ammunition?
Circle Art: “How I Won the War,” in 25
words or less.
Colvin: “Yours, Mine and Ours,” co-op?
Glen Art; “Elvira Madigan,” only one

A dazzling
trip beyond

the stars!

sex scene.

Granada: “Therese and Isabelle,” see
“The Odd Couple.”
Kensington: “Guess Who’s Coming to
Dinner,” toned down to banality.
North Park: “The Graduate,” good-

RESERVED SEATS
NOW AT BOXOFPICE
OR BY MAIL

neighbor policy.

HEPBURN . . .
AWARD WINNER
"BEST ACTRESS"

Movies contribute

Bach to be summer

CONCERT: The Vanilla Fudge, Melody

Fair, 8:30 p.m.

SEE TOP NAME
BANDS

In contrast to the dismal ’50s, the early
’60s fairly exploded with memorable instrumentals.
The two solid jazz pieces of the 1950s—“Take Five” and “Night Train”—inspired
a whole recording company of instrumentals: Wild Weekend, Java, Pipe Line,
Wipe-out, Walk, Don’s Run and probably
the finest work of the group, Telstar.
They all had a solid, driving beat, and an
almost overpowering melody.
On the other end of the musical spec-

RECITAL: Bach Organ Recital, Trinity
Episcopal Church, 8:30 p.m.

SUNDAY, JUNE 23:

Hall, 7 p.m. Every Tues. and
open to the public.

Inspired '60s

PLAY: “Heartbreak House,” with Tony
Van Bridge and Paxton Whitehead, Shaw
Festival, Niagara-on-the-Lake, through July

SATURDAY, JUNE 22:

SUMMER CINEMA:

lage”).

trum were the moody, lingering themes.
The sweet sounds of “A Summer Place”
are distinct and unbljrred.
The “Theme for Young Lovers” had an
appealing guitar background which highlighted its soft sounds. “Shangri-La” with
the chilling sounds of Robert Maxwell’s
Harp and “Wonderland by Night” with
Bert Kampfer's soaring trumpet are two
unique and outstanding records of the
early ’60s.

EXCLUSIVE
AREA
SHOWINO I

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COLUMBIA PICTURES

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Friday, June 21,

1968

•

The Spectrum

e

Page Five

�Baumearten on

iorti

si

How Howie did it

the spectrum of

sports

Picks up Rombough

by Rich Buamgarten
Sports Editor

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tight JML pennant race
a

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by Alan Jeff
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

A hot pennant race apears in the offing
for the National Baseball League this season. In contrast to last year, when the St.
Louis Cardinals won with ease, six teams
are bunched tightly together, with only
five games separating first place St. Louis
and sixth place Philadelphia,
The 1968 St. Louis Cards remind one of
the old “Gashouse Gang” of the ’30s when
Dizzy Dean was master of the mound and
Terry Moore patrolled the outfield.
The current Cards present the best balanced team in the NX. Although they do
not excell greatly in any of the four critical departments (pitching, hitting, defense
and speed) they do not lack in any either.
Their pitching rests on the arms of Bob
Gibson (remember the ’67 World Series?),
Steve Carlton (7-1) and Nelson Briles
(7-4). Speed brings forth Lou Brock (55
stolen bases in 1967), Curt Flood and
Julian Javiar.
Hitting gives us Orlando Cepeda, Curt
Flood (.327), Roger Maris and Tim McCarver. The defense boasts of Dale Maxvill, McCarver and Mike Shannon.

Dodgers have Drysdale

Hot on the Cards’ trail are the L.A. Dodgers and the Atlanta Braves, currently
the second and third place teams. The Dodgers have excellent pitching in Don Drysdale (six straight shutouts and 58 2/3 con-

secutive scoreless innings), Bill Singer,
Claude Osteen and Howie Kekich. The acquisition of Rocky Colavito and Ken Boyer
from the Chicago White Sox has added
considerable punch to an otherwise weak
batting attack.
There is no question that if the Dodgers are to threaten the Cards’ hold on
first place, they will have to rely on their
strong pitching and sharp fielding. It is
well to remember that the ’63, ’65 and ’66
pennant winning Dodger teams were built
along similar lines.
The Atlanta Braves, on the other hand,

combine barely adequate pitching with
strong hitting, (Felix Milan at .303, Felipe
Alou at .324 and Hank Aaron. It is not advisable for Braves fans to get pennant
fever because the list of teams winning
titles possessing poor pitching is very
small. If the Braves are to threaten St.
Louis seriously over a long season, they
must improve in the hurling department.

Giants: 'sleepers'

The San Francisco Giants, currently in
fourth place, must be considered the
“sleeper” of all the contending teams. The
only thing holding the Giants down is
their lack of consistent defense and pitching.

The Giants possess three of the top four
homerun hitters in Jim Hart, Willie Mays,
and Willie McCovey. Throw in pitchers
Juan Marichal (10-2), Mike McCormick
(1967 Cy Young award winner), Frank
Linzy and Gaylord Perry, and one wonders why the Giants aren’t in first place.
The one team that is perhaps a bigger
mystery than the Giants is the Philadelphia Phillies. Whereas one wonders what
holds the Giants down, one also wonders
what holds the Phillies up. Philadelphia
has little more than Richie Allen, Bill
White and perhaps pitcher Woody Fry-

man

(8-5).

At best, the Phillies can be taken with
a grain of salt.

Cincinnati?

Another leading contender (along with
San Francisco and Philadelphia) for the
1968 mystery team has to be the Cincinnati Reds. The Reds possess the leading
hitter (Pete Rose at .358), the number
three hitter (Alex Johnson at .327), and
the number nine hitter (Tommy Helms
at .302). They also have Tony Perez, who
currently leads in RBI’s with 34. Yet their
pitching leaves something to be desired.
In the final analysis, the St. Louis Cardinals will prevail, but not before an exciting and highly stimulating pennant
battle.

league

being organized
The University summer session softball
league will be divided into two conferences this year.

Richard E. Baldwin
The State University of Buffalo has
hired Mr. Richard E. Baldwin as director
of Sports Information. For two years he
has been sports information director at
Dartmouth College. He has also served
as director of sports information and
assistant director of public relations at
St. Lawrence University.

~

-

The answer is a man named Howie Plaster. Now in his fifth season as the general
manager of State University of Buffalo’s
Hockey Club, Plaster has literally made a
dream come true. The story of the Buffalo Hockey Club is also the story of one
Howie Plaster.
In 1963, Plaster, a young history grad
student, found himself the general manager of a hockey club which had no money.
In the club’s earlier days, hockey was a
self-supporting proposition. The players
had to supply their own equipment (at a
cost of more than $100 per man) as well as
pick up the ice tab for both practices and
games.
It was rough gomg in 1963, but the Student Senate bailed out the Hockey Bulls
with some badly needed funds, and Plaster's club was off the hook temporarily.

That year the hockey club paid dividends on the Senate’s investment as the
club posted a 14-2 record in the newly
formed Finger Lakes Hockey League to
finish second to unbeaten HIT.

Equipment gift
But General Manager Piaster had more
bridges to cross. The 1964-65 season saw
the Hockey Bulls once again fighting for

their very survival. The student senators
threatened to cut off all financial aid to
the club because they felt that hockey
came under the auspices of the Athletic
Department, while the Athletic Department countered that it couldn’t help the
club because of its own tight budget. Only
some very effective lobbying by Plaster
and his playerg saved the Bulls from demise as the Senate backed down.
It was then that Mr. Peele, the athletic
director, foreseeing the future potential of
the team, helped out with almost $1000
worth of equipment. The 1964-65 club was
10-3 for the season, but with heavy graduation the Bulls slipped to 5-7 during the
1965-66 season, and a 7-7 record for the
following year.

Softball

—Valbarg

Some day about three years from now,
when ice hockey is the number one sport
at this University ’ some interested stu
dent is going to ask: “Who was responsible
for bringing big time ice hockey to the
State University of Buffalo?”

Each conference will boast nine teams.
The league schedule will limit teams to
intra-conference competition. Each entry will battle all of its conference foes
once with the divisional champions ultimately meeting in a “University Series”
for the league crown.
Games will be played Monday through
Friday at 4:30 p.m. on diamonds near
Clark Gymnasium, Teams are scheduled to
play at least once a week during the
June 24 to Aug. 14 session.
The league is open to all male summer
session faculty, staff and students. Departments and organizations are invited
to select a team representative and enter
the competition. Pre-season betting lines
list the boys from biochemistry as likely
pennant favorites. Nearly all the members of 1967’s biochemist squad, which
captured the league championship, have
inked 1968 contracts to play.

With financial difficulties

way, Piaster was able to

out of the

concentrate on

recruiting good hockey players, which
brought another problem to the forefront.
The State University of Buffalo gave no
hockey scholarships. How was Plaster to
lure good hockey players to this University if he had nothing to offer? The solution offered interesting possibilities.
Knowing that his best chance to get
good hockey talent lay in securing players
who wanted to remain near home, Plaster
moved to nearby Canada prior to the 196768 hockey season. Results were almost beyond human expectations.

With uncanny salesmanship and a magnetic personality, Flaster succeeded in
snatching Lome Rombough from the
clutches of Colgate. Yale and Michigan
State, and bringing Lome here. Along with
Rombough came Billy Newman, a highly
sought prospect who scored 29 goals' for
the Niagara Falls Flyers. Getting Billy
Newman wasn’t enough, so Flaster also
brought back Billy’s father, Steve, as the

club’s trainer and assistant coach.
From St. Catharine’s came Bill DeFoe, a
highly polished defenseman who could
score. Flaster also paid a visit to nearby
Fort Erie and corraled Franky Lewis, Jimmy Miller and Bill Tape—three key players from the Ft, Erie B’s. Buffalo Muny
League scoring champion Daryl Pugh was
all set to go to Oswego State, that is/ before he talked to Flaster. Pugh decided not
to go to Oswego, and found that a Buffalo
uniform fit pretty well.

But in addition to talented personnel,
Howie Flaster gave his hockey players a
team spirit—a sense of pride which carried
the Bulls through a tough hockey season.
Before the 1967-68 season got under way,
Flaster told his players: “We’re going to
go undefeated. We’re going to take the
Finger Lakes Hockey League pennant.”
The rest is history. The Hockey Bulls
did go undefeated with a 15-0 league record, The Hockeymen did bring the glory
of a FLHL pennant to this University, and
along the way Lome Rombough broke every league scoring record ever set with 37
goals.

On March 10, the Bulls played defending
champions Oswego State for the Finger
Lakes Hockey League invitational tournament championship in one of the most important athletic encounters ever staged at
this University. The Bulls, after having an
apparent winning goal disallowed, bowed
5-4 in overtime to a powerful Oswego Six.
fans at
Even in defeat, Flaster and 1500
the Amherst Recreational Center could
not have been any prouder of the Buffalo
Hockey Club.

Still hard at work
But the general manager of the Buffalo

Hockey Club is not resting on his laurels,
With the memories of a dream season behind him, Piaster is already working hard
on the 1968-69 season, a season which will
see the finest Buffalo Hockey Club in history take the ice. Plaster is going recruit
ing again, and that means anything can
happen. This past season the Buffalo Hockeymen had the League’s top six scorers.
The league’s number seven and eight
scorers, Johnny Caruso and Terry Quenville, both of Canton Tech, will be coming
to the State University of Buffalo next
season. Howie Plaster leaves no stone un-

turned.

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Pag* Six

•

Tha Spactrum a

Friday, Juna 21, 1968

3610 MAIN STREET
BUFFALO, NEW YORK 14226
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p« Road reports

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grump
CTCCCC
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a
regular columnist for The
Spectrum, is currently enroute to Berkeley. Calif., with his
“wifely wife" (w-w) via "the most northern route I can
find.’’ The Grump will file his “road reports” with The
jpectrum wh
wi enever he can find a place to set down his
3r~
typewriter.

Editor’s Note: Eric Steese,

■■

He apparently feels that uniforms make all the
difference, as do a significant number of the American Public (background strains of John Philip Sousa,
please). His refusal to see any connection between
mass media and the acfilling the mass
the
he war reports filling
tions of people in his country is an interesting example of mental tunnel vision at best.
Interestingly enough, even LBJ seems saner than
much of Congress and the public that body represents. Too much violence, right?
So how do we cure it? By bigger and better
police forces, of course. Which makes sense to that
type of mind which has impeccable faith in armies,
police and controlled violence in general. It being
only uncontrolled and undisciplined violence that
the good burghers (sorry Pres. Schwab) that the
good citizens really object to.
Enough of this prattle. What I am saying is
scarcely new, and probably is not significantly reworded enough to make any difference to most of
the people who are going to read this.
On a somewhat less pretentious note, don’t altogether believe the opening dates or locations of
camping sites if you are driving through Canada.
We got into the first two fine,' although we couldn’t
find anyone to pay, but the third night we missed
one, which had three different directions to it in
various guide books (I didn’t find what was probably the correct one until about 30 miles later), and
we found another which consisted primarily of
about eight inches of loose mucky mud from which
it would eventually be formed. Under development is a very tricky phrase and one is advised to
pay close attention if it crops up in the course of
the description you are consulting.)
So we drove on until five a.m. arriving at Whiteshell Provincial Park here in Manitoba. We went
there because W-w wanted a shower. This sort of
nice harrassed individual at said park said that they
intend to build them this summer.
Or would you rather hear about how we drove
across 200 miles of gravel highway and wound up
with so much garbage in the brakes that we had to
have them blown out with an air hose?
Or how about the 15-inch pike that was so
ashamed of being caught by so inept a fisherman as
myself that he didn’t even fight, but just followed
the lure in without even arguing. He ate well even
if he was placid. (Non-violence does not extend to
food animals in reasonable quantities which I am
not given a chance to empathize with. like I have
only been able to tolerate fishing since artificial
lures. I still get awfully gruesome guilt pangs about

a

—'

i

-

Greetings from Riding Mountain National Park
was sort of assumed
by both myself and the summer Spectrum staff
when I left that communication of some sort on a
regular basis would be maintained. If I may be forgiven by the tourist associations of Ontario and
Manitoba for speaking the truth, the problem has

located in middle Manitoba. It

been weather.
The Steeses managed two good days in Toronto
—nice weather, nice town, good people—before hitting the road. As soon as we left Toronto, we moved
into an overcast gray drizzly sort of goop which has
stayed over us for seven days. It finally broke yesterday and today seems to be fulfilling the promise
that the bright blue skies held last night.
Between the overcast skies and the events of the
last week, it seemed of very doubtful value to try
to write anything coherent. I can recall very clearly
the feeling of horror, shock and disbelief that I felt
when I turned on the radio in a remote, wooded,
almost deserted camping area to hear that our sane,
healthy, benevolent society had lost another of its
hopes for the future.
There are a number of thoughts that strike me
that no one else seems to be expressing. The fascinating fact that conservatives are never shot at is obvious—or at least nobody I know has ever pointed
out to me that there has even been an attempt on a
prominent member of the Tightest element of our
society. Granted that the political character is similar, it seems almost to defy belief that all of these
men should be so young, in terms at least of the
power structure in the United States today.
Without really wishing to seem paranoid, the
thought of some secret association of ancient conservatives secretly controling people through brain
waves seems almost more probable than the odds
against two brothers of the same family and the
leading black moderate of the mid sixties being shot
within five years, and the last within months of
each other.
The frightening concept of it being a crime
against nature to be at all liberal and be at all
powerful seems not too distant from reality . No
more distant surely than the reaction of the President. One has the feeling that if LBJ were to be
shot tomorrow, he would lie there with his last
breath proclaiming the health of the society he gov-

sticking worms on hooks.)
Will close this on the note that hopefully things
will be kept cool enough on the home front so that
I will not be afraid of sedition if I try to write something. Oh, and if anybody has the time, would you
find out if I graduated. I was too busy to make sure.

erned.

Not that I wish the violence which puzzles Lyndon so much to strike him or anyone else. It may
be he is truly mad, or at least his inability to see
that violence is violence is violence.

Attention you wandering minstrels and
excursion goers: The University Union Activities Board is out to capture your fleeting attention this summer.
On July 6 the UUAB is sponsoring a
tour of the Corning Glass Center in Corning, N.Y., a crystal clear example of
American craft; but enough of these Corning jokes. On with the trip.
Coming will be polished off with a visit
to the Gold Seal Winery of Hammondsport. This promises to be a lively, tipsy
demonstration of the most popular use
of the glass made in Corning.
For the ardent theater devotee
two
weekend excursions to Stratford are also
planned, July 13-14 and Aug. 10-11. The
first will provide a choice of viewing the
Saturday afternoon performance of either
“Tartuffe” or “The Royal Winnipeg
Ballet,” The evening brings forth the dif-

CHARLIE'S
tonsorial center

For the Finest in
HAIR STYLING, RAZOR CUTTING
and BEARD TRIMMING
3584 MAIN ST.
TF 6-9080
Next to University Plaza
CLOSED MONDAYS—__
.

—

Bible Truth
and
l?st

Sf

RIGHTEOUS JUDGMENT
CSUS

-,ay ?:

,He
rejecteth me,
not my words, hath one
L
h,m: the w rd ,hat
have
same ,hal1 ud C* him in the

e,ve th

Q. Will there be catalogues detailing course listings available
t|, e University facilities?
r jor
yes Catalogues for the Faculty of Arts and Letters and the
Law and Jurisprudence are presently available and can
Facu [ ty
-

u-

-

—

-

Office expects all other catalogues to be on campus by July 1.
Q. When will the University change to the four point grading
system?
A. The Four Point Grading System has been officially authorized
and is now policy. All courses completed in the present Summer
Session will be graded on the four point system (except in the
The following chart
Schools of Dentistry, Law and Medicine).
illustrates the difference in the current system and the new system:
Grading System

Use

In

Each sem. hr. of

Grading

All

for

Completed Prior
June, 1968

Courses

A —3 quality points
B 2

•*5

day H*'

L

i

1

°

-John

12:48

=

=

_

C=1
0=0
F

Grade

point

=

=

D=1
F 0

-l

average

of

=

3.0
2.0

1.0
0.0
-1.0

=

=

=

A
B

Grade

1.0

D
F

=

=

A
B
C

D

=

=

Q. Does the University health insurance plan cover me when I
am not registered for classes?
A. Yes. The student insurance plan protects students of the
University throughout the year and, thereby, provides coverage even
while the student is on vacation from classes.
(For specific answers to your questions, and for direct service, call ACTION LINE,
831-5000. If you prefer, phrase your question in writing and address it to ACTION
LINE, e/o The Spectrum, room 355, Norton Hall or the Office of Student Affairs and
Services, room 201, Harriman Library.)

CLASSIFIED
FOR

HAND MADE

tars made
NX 2-2779.

SALE

classical guitars, also guito order, call Jos. DeRocco

MUST SACRIFICE, 63 Corvair,

just

in

896-5760.
DINING ROOM SET, Cheap, Call'TR 6spected, please call

4626, Evenings.

ELECTRIC STOVE,

good condition, $25,
836-1880, call evenings.
THREE BEDROOM house, Town of
wanda, 1 block Lincoln Park and
Pool, Garage, 5%% FHA assumable
mortgage. By owner-share savings on
commission! Call 834-4391 or 831-1347.
DIAMOND,
new, neverset, and few
household items, private. Call 8832685.

POWERFUL 200 Watt Fender amplifier.
Also, DeArmand's best acoustical 12
string pick up. Will sell separately. 837755.
1952 OLDS, automatic, R
H, Great
Running Condition, body, tires like
new; Inspection No Sweat, Stan 8326036.
NEW 50CC Honda; Best Offer, Call 875-

APARTMENT WANTED
APARTMENT needed for three female
graduate students in Sept. Desire lo-

cation near campus. 3 bedrooms preferred. Please phone 886-8460.
PERSONAL
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE low cost. Immediate F.S. 1, premiums financed.
UPSTATE CYCLE INSURANCE. 695-3044.
MISCELLANEOUS
HORSEBACK riding, hayrides, Waveriy
Stables, Service Road No. 18, Niagara
Parkway, Canada. 8 miles north from
Bridge. 416—295-3925j
vacated Doctor's offices. 4
bedrooms, storage room and bathroom. Ideal location, on bus line. Call
Mrs. Mullen 826-4593.

Peace

RECENTLY

YOUNG LADY with Exotic tastes and independent income to share pitcher of
Black Beer, Smoked Oyster Pizza and
music with Pre-Med student,
Banjo
Dutch, Meet 9:30 p.m. SHAKEY'S Pizza
Parlour and Ye Public House. Niagara
Falls Blvd., North of Sheridan Drive,
834-9000.

SUBLET

TO SUBLET
from September 1st

SUMMER WORK
Earn $7.00
a

How

month. 2152 Main Street. 837-6^42.
ROOMMATES WANTED

Be

you

much

per hour. . . over $50.00
your own boss, work
want, when you want.
you make depends on

This is a product everyone
and wants
A Zip Code Directory. For your free sample and
complete details send us your Home
and School addresses. Zip Code Publishng Company, Inc., 7426 W. Captol
Drive,
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
you.

needs

or working girl needed to
share apartment with same. June 21
through August. Call TT 2-6784-after

5:30

day.

where

STUDENT

p.m.

...

53216.

THE SPECTRUM
printed by

Partners' Press, Inc.

STUDENTS
and
TEACHERS

ABGOTT &amp; SMITH PRINTING
1881 Kenmore Ave.
Military)

Phone 876-2284

SEPT. 69 FRESHMEN
ONLY DURING
PLANNING CONFERENCE

FREE

—

U.B. DECALS

LIMIT 2

SPECIAL
$1.00 OFF
ON REGULAR LINE

PART-TIME
If
work two nights
and Saturday, or three evenings, we will guarantee you
$55.00 per week if you meet
our requirements. Must have
car, and be over 18.
you can

SWEATSHIRTS
LIMIT 1

FULL-TIME

BUFFALO

ONLY $79.50 FOR EACH
SIX-WEEK SESSION

Summer Employment

TEXTBOOK

For details call 831-4339 or contact the
Food Service Office in Clement Hall.

1

=

A. Yes. A Mid-Year Commencement will be held Feb. 12, 1969,
at 10:30 a.m., in Kleinhans Music Hall.

per

SUMMER BOARD
CONTRACTS AVAILABLE

SAT.

4.0
3.0
2.0

=

—

INTERIM CAMPUS: MON.-FRI

of

=

until
January 15th (Fall Semester) 2 bedroom Completely Furnished Apartment.
All utilities and garage included. $100.00

Information for these and other voyages may be obtained by contacting Robert Henderson, room 225, Norton Hall,
831-3670.

A.M. 10 P.M.
7:30 A M.. 5 P.M.
11:00 A M.-1:30 P.M.
»
AM.-1-30 PM

average

C

—

7:30

point

0.0 F
Q. Will there be a Mid-Year Commencement this year?

TO

Palmyra.

f »'

System Beginning

With Courses in the Summer
Session of 1968
Each sem. hr. of A 4 quality points
B=3
C 2

to

6800.

ficult choice between “Cinderella” or
Shakespeare’s “A Midsummer Night’s
Dream.” Sunday afternoon you will hear
the English Chamber Orchestra.
The excursion of the Aug. 10
weekend
leaves you to choose between “The Three
Musketeers” or “The Seagull” and “Tartuffe” or “Cinderella.” Sunday afternoon
the Stratford Festival Orchestra will entertain.
Accommodations will be in private
homes in the Stratford area and transportation will include an air-conditioned excursion coach.
Also planned for your summer fun is
a July 27 trip to the Mormon Pageant in

NORTON UNION: MON.-THURS.

.

bureaucracy?
In
Do rou oHon think it impo.iibi. (o untangle Iht University
Sp.crom ll iponior.ns
rooo.ro/ion with Iht Office of Student Affairs and S.rvic.1, Jht
to
o
aniwt,
tludtnlt
got
ton
on
Ibrouob Action Lint, individual
Action lint.
Bunting qutllion, find out where and why University daemons ore mode, and get
ACTION when cbnno. it indicated.

&amp;

UUAB organizes outings
for summer school students

.

.

M|||||

"

XlUIlf

A*.

STORES, INC.
36TO
MAIN STREET

BUFFALO, NEW YORK T4226
716-833-7131
Across From Clement Hall

Friday, June 21, 1968

Earn up to 1500. Call be-

tween 10 and 4 at 856-3129
for interview.

•

The Spectrum

•

Page

Seven

�Editorials

J||[ SpECTI\UM

f

Without expression, freedom of expression is meaningless
/

The restless people
restless,
of Tuesday’s State primary election: The people are

They are ready for change.

to McCarthy.

John R. Pillion, locally, was defeated for the GOP endorsement in the 39th Congressional District, by a littleknown Cheektowaga supervisor, Daniel E. Weber. Pillion was
the Republican candidate in that district for 16 years.
Further indications of growing voter impatience with
current politics include the defeat of all four Buffalo City
Common Councilmen who were seeking higher office.
All this may point to a trend a growing one, we hope
which will make the nomination of Eugene McCarthy
hopeful.
—

The last summer

This is the summer that everyone has been so anxiously
awaiting.
These next three months could see cities turned into
battlegrounds in America or battlegrounds turned into cities
in South Vietnam. We may see the heat of political passion
produce Presidential candidates who react with the misguidance of the past or respond to a vision of the future.
The fire of combat may make this a last summer for the college student. Whatever course events may take, this is the
last summer for President Johnson
This is also the summer of decision for universities. This
is the last summer that schools can self-righteously regard
themselves as paternal proctors of the minds of the young.
This is the last summer that students can remain apathetic
to their societies.
This is the last summer that professors will have to remain aloof from those they teach. This is the last summer
that the American people can afford to let pass without
realizing that they are no longer a frontier society.
This is the last summer in which the disregarding of
the poor, the disrepecting of the black and the arming of
the ignorant can be tolerated.
And it is the last summer for the powerholders of old.
Be they Communist, Capitalist, or committed only to themselves, this is the time of their last hurrah.
The powerless of the world are also experiencing their
last summer. Because the request for change is becoming a
universal demand for the power to make those changes. Some
societies will have gentle reforms before next summer while
others will suffer cruel revolutions. But this is the last summer for the complacent, changeless governments of the
modern world.
during
every Tuesday and Friday
Th. Spectrum it publithed twice-weekly
from June to September,
Fridays
the regular academic year, and weekly
by the Faculty-Student AMO.tat.an of the
except during examinatian periads
Norton
Stole University of New York at Buffalo, Inc. Offices are located at 355
Street, Buffalo, New
Hall, Stale University of New York at Buffalo, 3435 Main
York 14214.
RICHARD R. HAYNES
-

-

-

Summer Editor
Managing Editor

....

-

DANIEL LASSER

SAMUEL A. POWAZEK
Business Manager
Pe,er Simon
Marge Anderson City Editor
Campus News
Richard Baumgarten
Lori Pendrys Sports
Feature Editor
David
L. Sheedy
Robert Hsiang Layout
Photography
Murray R.chman
VACANT Advertising
Copy Editor
The Spectrum is a member of the United States Student Press Association
Press
and the Associated Collegiate Press. The Spectrum is served by; United
International, College Press Service, Gannett News Service, and the Los Angeles
Times Syndicate.
Republication of all news dispatches is forbidden without express consent
Right, of repoblieolion of oil other tnoller herein are

of th. Editor-in-chief.
also reserved.
Editorial policy is determined by the Editor-in-Chief.
Second class postage paid at Buffalo, New York.
Represented for advertising by National Educational Advertising Service, Inc.,
18 E. 50th Street, New York, New York 10022.
Basic advertising rale: $2.75; summer rate; $2.25 per column inch. Contract
rotes upon request.
Summer

circulation: 10,000.
Area code 716; Editorial, 831-2210; Business, 831-3610.

Telephone:

Page Eight

a

The Spectrum

•

Friday, June 21, 1968

ewtfwiMnweiT-

Now, Mrs. Slominski

Refractions
by J. L. McCrary
historians
and political scientists sit down
When
to write up this topsy-turvy—sometimes tragicpolitical year, perhaps one significant element will
escape their skilled perusal. Accordingly, perhaps
fittingly, J. L. notes it here.

This was the political year that the young
got involved—and got
involved in a big way.

voter, the college student,

Look around you. Look around Buffalo. On
Elmwood Ave., near Utica St. stands a McCarthy
for President headquarters, a makeshift storefront headquarters.
By the time you read this they’ll probably be
moving out. But their activism and their interest
in politics will never move out.
A week ago, this hot-shot silver-throated columnist visited that headquarters in the unbiased nonpolitical fashion.

First thing you notice is that it’s not like the
election night headquarters you see on TV —before
CBS’ VPA has given it all away. There’s no tickertape, no dancing and hugging, no gaily dressed,
straw-hatted folk, no indeed.
The mood at McCarthy headquarters a week
before primary was almost somber. Campaign
workers talked in hushed voices. Long-still flourescent lamps buzzed incessantly overhead. The
four or five students manning the office conducted
a broken, rambling conversation —about the Kennedy assassination, about McCarthy’s chances, about
how they got involved, what happens after the
primary, after Chicago . .

Readers
writings

’

A time to control guns
To the Editor:
The time has come for the people of this country
to do something about the control of weapons. Too
long has this topic been ignored. It is about time
for the government to treat guns in this same way
in which they do automobiles.

All firearms should be registered, and to use one
a person must have to have a license. Before either
one is given, the State should make a study of the
history of the person applying. To take this one step
further, all guns should be sold only through staterun stores, in the same way as is liquor in a number
of states.
people who
If the above proposal were passed,
st1
e th®”V
wanted guns for hunting coul A,
cqui^
for them and
It would just be a little more difficult
this will rid our
this is good. I do not claim that
if
country of its. maladies, but it would lessen, evenand
spread of firearms,
only to a small degree, the
record as saying that guns
would put the country on
are not the way to solve our problems.
isThe Spectrum has long been silent on this
a
sue and I would very much like to see it take
legislation.
firm stand in favor of strong gun-control
®

,,

Jeffrey S. Merlin

.

The conversation was drifting into local politics
when a visitor walked in, almost apologetically:
“I’m not a college student . . . but what can I do?”

UB; for students or

visitors?

To the Editor:

You live around here? Do you want to canvass?”
She lived in West Seneca, she said, and came
because she was “worried about war and peace.”
“I’ve got four sons and one is on his way to
Vietnam,” she explained.
She left with an armful of McCarthy buttons,
posters, bumper stickers and campaign literature.
Later, a canvasser came in, dejected; “Man, I
was in the Masten District. Nobody’s voting there.
Since the assassination, they’re completely turned
off by politics. They’re not anti-McCarthy, they’re

stuIs this University run for the benefit of its
dents, or for those strange groups of individuals
who appear for 2 days to a week for summer conferences? I’m getting the distinct impression that
the latter is irrefutably true.

It appears that the Creative Problem Solvers,
whatever they are, were having luncheon, complete
with table service, in the Goodyear Dining room today. The staff apparently had forgotten completely
about the paying students, and after a half hour deanti-politics.”
lay we were ushered into the Clement Dining room,
dining
Other canvassers began returning. Volunteer
told that tonight, as the Creative folks were
secretaries tabulated results. On a large table,
privileged to return to
we
would
be
Norton,
in
a detailed map of the city traced the canvassing
larger room, but lunch tomorrow would be the same
effort.
as today. “This week will really be interesting
“We hope to have the complete city covered ■You’ll never know where you’re eating.’
a
Andrews,
explained
Rick
before the primary,”
Buffalonian and a student at Buffalo State. Like
The meal was especially heart-warming.
Pea
Problem Solvers had requested Cream of
many, Rick has "been in this thing since the betor
ginning.”
Butter Soup with their meal, and we _ were
s
ate enough to get it too. Atrocious is not sn
The core of the Elmwood Ave. group began at
the State campus in the winter months. When a enough to describe it. Then came either
gu
’
cohesive group was established, they hooked up
Salad (it was good) or Grilled Cheese (as n
enough to
with the Coalition for Democratic Alternatives and topped with cream puffs frozen hard
opened the Elmwood Ave. storefront headquarters. any taste they might have had to offer.
For all of the volunteers, the campaign has had
Why are we subordinate to the interests of the
t
ups and downs. LBJ, their main opponent, dropped
people?
Why must men live in Goodyear, ride a
out of course. McCarthy had two ups—flew Hampon the seventh floor where girls
meet
elevators,
shire and Oregon. Money never poured in—it living? Why can’t we attend some of their lectu
hardly trickled. And then the assassination of Sen, which might be interesting to us—are we not
y
Kennedy took the spirit out of everyone.
to absorb what is available? Isn’t the Universi
prmcip
That spirit will be regained, I think. And this
or
is
that
anymore,
for
its
students
istent
new involvement of the young will hopefully make
merely abandoned for the summer? Why?
obsolete the time-worn notions of party hacks,
Sue Schwartz
political bosses and smokefilled rooms.
„

1

1

They are tired and impatient. And Tuesday was a clearcut victory for Senator Eugene McCarthy, symbol of the new
path in politics. Because Paul O’Dwyer, a McCarthy backer
with” decisive support in New York City, won the Democratic
nomination for United States Senator.
O’Dwyer was expected to finish behind well-known Nassau County Executive Eugene Nickerson and Ellenville Congressman Joe Resnick, a multi-millionaire who seemed to be
on radio and television more often than Genesee Beer and
Ban spray deodorant combined.
But he beat them. And the McCarthy camp can be proud.
Senator McCarthy also emerged the winner in the State-wide
race for Democratic convention delegates. A large portion of
New York’s 123 elected delegates will go to Chicago pledged

‘

_

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                    <text>Racism teach-in to be
held in Fillmore Room

C

T

ll|f

Students will be

State University of New York at Buffalo

Vol. 18, No. 54

‘Bigi :est emplo er’ b

Friday, June
_

.

.

,

’75

Millard Fillmore Room.
The teach-in is organized by

.

City

Editor

Councilman-at-Large Edward Began has
called for “vigorous initiative” in “three
crucial areas of endeavor” including “the
growth of the State University of Buffalo.”

He also stressed Buffalo’s urgent need
of “rejuvenating downtown Buffalo,” and
“building a rapid transit system linking
downtown with north Buffalo and Amherst.”
Councilman Regan, a Republican, expressed the opinion in a recent speech at
ECTI that if we can succeed in these three
interrelated fields, “the Buffalo area can
soon jump 50 years ahead of any other
metropolitan area of its size in the nation.”
He made clear the potential impact of
the State University of Buffalo on the
community by stating that it “has trained
its sights on building within the next
decade the biggest graduate school and
law school in the nation, and the third
biggest educational institution of any
type in the world.”
Mr. Regan predicted that by 1975 the
University will have doubled its present
enrollment and have become “the Niagara Frontier’s biggest employer.” By
this time, he added, State University of
Buffalo students will be spending more
than $25 million in this area on nonacademic expenses each year.
The councilman-at-large feels that “this
educational complex is sure to attract all
kinds of new, sophisticated industries to
the Niagara Frontier.”

0

,

Stable Buffalo campus
Mr, Regan feels that recent student uprisings around the nation “should wipe
away our negative attitude as we begin to
appreciate the stability that pervades the
Buffalo campus.”

Private colleges’ interest in receiving
state aid should serve as a warning to

Buffalonians, according to the legislator.
“If we in Buffalo,” he explained, “show
little interest in our own State University,
it is conceivable that the funds that
should go to the State University of
Buffalo may be siphoned elsewhere.”
The councilman said that progress has
been made in rejuvenating the downtown
area. He added, however, that a “new
stadium must be built on the Crossroads
site to sustain and quicken the impetus of
downtown renewal.”
If we “group

our assets,” Mr. Regan
feels that “Buffalo can have one of the
most dynamic downtowns in the nation.”
Councilman Regan considers a rapid
transit system the “only wise alternative
to digging a six-lane highway down the
city’s midsection, with cloverleaf interchanges entangling so much valuable
land.”

“But with a stadium located to make
downtown boom, and with the State University of Buffalo mushrooming, Buffalo
could be in a position to pull a master
stroke by linking the Main St. and Amherst campuses and downtown with a
rapid-transit system.”

Council rejects concept

of portable classrooms
by Pam Wigand

Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

The Buffalo Common Council Tuesday
voted in favor of an amendment to the
city building code, which, unless vetoed
by Mayor Sedita, outlaw the use of portable classrooms in city schools.
The portable units were planned as
part of the Board of Education’s policy of
integration. They would have been used
to enlarge facilities in schools in predominantly white neighborhoods, so that black
grammar school students
could be bussed
in.

The amendment passed by a 9-4 vote
with Councilmen
Delmar Mitchell, Horace
Johnson, Charles Black and Stanley Makowski opposed. Councilman Carl A. Perla
Jr. and Andrew J. Morrisey were absent.
he city ordinance addition prohibits
ep
on school grounds of buildings
ao different type
of construction than
the original facility.
-

A peaceful demonstration by BUILD was
e ,. In Niagara Square
immediately preceding the meeting.
a

l

s°. held a “teach-in”
the
floor of City Hall throughout on day.
the

Voicing opposition to the amendment,
a Democrat, said
since “it is national and state policy
ate tlje scl, ools,” amending the

councilman Johnson,

budding code might later
be found disiminatory by the courts. He continued
8 hat the P°rta ble classrooms
nou!d be thought of as a visible symbol”
01 the integration
of our school system.

shr.Ma'I i

He felt, in addition, that the portable

‘

people

'group which directs jts energies against
the prejudices of white people.
14, Itoo
Diaolgue at the teach-in will be initiated
by William Mayrl, a program organizer;
Dr. Mulford Q. Sibley, visiting professor
of political science, and two other faculty
members.
The schedule for summer seminars dealing with racism will be announced at the
teach-in. Members of the “people against
racism” group will emphasize in these
classes the effect of racism in literature,
community history, education, economics
and liberalism.
,

UB expansion is asset to
Niagara area, says Regan
by Refer Simon

confronted with the is-

sue of white racism during a teach-in
scheduled for 8 p.m. next Friday in the

0

Dialogue to action
In an effort to move from dialogue to
action, a joint meeting between interested
persons of the campus and the Buffalo

community will be held next Saturday.
Clergymen, community officials, members

of local labor unions, and students will dis-

cuss “how to carry out their objectives
fruitfully,” according to William Yates,
another program organizer.

Building pro;

The “people against racism” group is
presently coordinating several activities in
the city. Members are discussing white
racism with several community groups including Build Us Too, I Can, and Citizens
A group of undergraduates, home from
college for the summer, have enlisted
their help in designing curriculum, assemblies, and group projects on racism
in the city high schools.
A research committee has begun study
of the ethnic and political history of Buffalo.
Carl Ratner and Jerry Coles, both doctoral candidates at the University, are cochairing a faculty-student committee to
study desegregation in public schools.
Their first effort will be to aid high school
teachers in counteracting a pamphlet, entitled “How classroom desegregation will
work,” which is being mailed to public
school teachers throughout Buffalo and
Erie County. The report, published by
Patrick Henry Press in Richmond, Va.,
was written by Dr. Henry E, Garrett. Mr.
Yates said the pamphlet aims to prove that
“Negroes are innately and inherently inferior.”

Teases

Ridge Lea
Construction continues at the Ridge Lea
location of the interim campus.
According to William F. Doemland,
director of planning and development,
two of three proposed buildings wjll be
completed by Sept. 1 and April 1 respectively. These will be utilized for

classroom and office space.
The third building, planned for completion at a later date, is designed for
eventual use as laboratory space as it is
needed. Until this space is so needed,
the building will temporarily accommodate classrooms and offices.
Library, cafeteria and recreational facilities, built to accommodate an increased number of students, are regarded
as complete, with no future enlargements
envisioned at this time. Bus service, however, will be adjusted for increased student volume.
The interim campus, when completed,
is intended to meet the needs of the University during the transitional period preceding the completion of the Amherst
site of the State University of Buffalo.
The Ridge Lea campus, the site planned
at Elmwood Ave., and various other acquisitions throughout the city, are to
accommodate the increases in student en-

is

growing

rollment, faculty, and services that are
necessary before the final move to the
larger Amherst campus can be completed.
According to Charles S. Green, assistant
director of planning and development, the
interim campus was not necessitated by
delays in building the Amherst site, but
was planned as an “emergency valve” for
the increasing University population and
accompanying services.

The interim campus is to tie in with
both the present Main St. location and the
Amherst campus, where construction is
planned to begin in 1970-71, and will last
until about 1974. The reason for the
Ridge Lea location is its convenience to
both the Main St. and Amherst sites.
Since the interim campus is only temporary, money could not be allocated from
building funds for the Amherst location.
Money for the temporary sites comes from
rental and operational expenses of the
University.

The sites are on a five year lease with
of one year renewal options.
Neither the land nor the buildings are
owned by the University. Both will revert back to the development contractors
when the Amherst campus is completed.
a series

classrooms would be a means of relieving
overcrowding in the Buffalo school system. He mentioned that 40 cities are now
using portable classrooms—three for integration, the rest to relieve overcrowding.
He suggested tabling the amendment
until a committee could be appointed to
study, the problem further.

Councilman Black said that while the
United States is technologically advanced,
socially we lag behind. He quoted lines of
a poem by Edward Mark: “in vain we
build the world/Unless man also grows.”

regimentation

or

anarchy"

Democratic Councilman Raymond Lewandowski, supporting the amendment, denied that it is intended to be discriminatory. Referring to last week’s legislation
committee meeting when a brief shoving
match occurred, between Councilmen and
members of BUILD, he said: “The issue is
no longer integration; it is regimentation
or anarchy.”

He suggested that instead of forcing
children to study- in what Councilman
Buyers referred to as “portable outhouses,” the city should concentrate on
building and improving schools in the
core

areas.

Councilmen Lyman, Regan, Buyers and
Slominski agreed with Mr. Lewandowski
that funds should be provided to improve
schools in the core areas.

Mr. Buyers, a Republican, opposed the
portable classrooms because of construction problems, such as heating, illumination and fire hazards. He said that the
� Please turn to Page 2

—Hsiang

Education at
City Hall

Protesting the inferior educational standards of
Buffalo's ghetto schools, BUILD held a teach-in
on the first floor of City Hall Tuesday as the
Common Council passed a measure to restrict
the Board of Education from bussing students
to periphery schools.

�Pag* Two

Th

Music of our times

Food prices raised for
all on-campus activities

The fragmented market
soul music could not be contained as
blacks started to search for their own,

by Sheldon Bergman
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

To us, the record was wholly absurd
and totally ludicrous. But to the primary
school set, he may become an idol. The
point is not whether Britt can turn on the
first-graders of this country, but that
they are capable of pressuring their doddering parents in coughing up the $.89.
With many of the parents supporting a
Barbie doll family, complete with maternity dress and divorce court, little Steve
might get his gold record quite easily.
The music marketplace has become an
overwhelming bazaar of lavish stalls
catering to all tastes and fancies. Folk,
rock, folk-rock, raga, raga-rock, electronic,
psychedelic soul music all have their own
followings. There is no predominant sound
as there was before the Beatles.

I am not attempting to overstate the
contribution that the Beatles have made
to our present music. It is just that they
make a handy demarcation on my musical
timeline. Before the Beatles there was
fairly solid teen market. It supported a
broad, rather bland, rock’n’roll Sound. It
\was flexible enough to support some folk
and Motown-soul without letting either
usurp its dominance or divide the market.
The Beatles carried on in this tradition with their first hits. But once they
took off into experimentation with electronic and chance music, the younger set
dropped out. With the intensification of
the war in 1965-1966, the older, collegeorientated members of the buying society
demanded serious songs that carried a
message.

Already the market was cracking into
several sub-groups. The emergence of

TOWNE &amp; COUNTRY
MUSTANG CLUB
presents

TIME SPEED
DISTANCE

to dollar power!

And so, another star is born. Hero of
the post diaper-set, I salute you. Obviously the future of music, as well as the
destiny of this nation, is now in your
hands. With Steve Britt leading you on,
to the tune of “These Boots are Made for
Walking” and “Let Me In” (draw your own
inferences, you dirty, old college men),
you are shattering the Musical Establishment of this corrupt society. Don’t fret
that your alternatives, like those of your
college brethren, are none too appealing.
Remember that you are carrying on in
the noble tradition of the rebelling, revolting American youth of today. We who
are about to die of old (post-20) age salute
you.

GRANT CITY

Further Information Call:

RON -634-1743
DAVE
632-6205
—

U.B. DECALS

Two reasons were given by Dr. Puffer
for the increased prices: “First, this year
a 10% increase in salaries was made
throughout the state. The University endeavors to pay its employees as if they
were employees of the State. Second,
food prices are going up. These two rea-

The bookstore budget is also determined by the Faculty-Student Association.
However its operations are independent
of food service. It is not known whether
or not bookstore prices are scheduled to
increase.

Council rejects...
Councilman Slominski felt that the
portable classroom project is “slipshod”
and poorly run.

The portable classroom issue was called
a form of “enforced and artifical integration” by Republican Councilman William
F, Lyman.
Edward V. Regan, a Republican councilman, said that the portable classrooms are
a false issue. The real issue, the Republican councilman continued, is to vote
money to improve ghetto and middle

schools. He said he would support Mr.
Johnson’s suggestion of forming a committee to study the issue further.

26-inch bicycles for
condition. Call 831-3693.

TWO

sale.

Good

dining room set, $35; complete
bedroom set, double bed, coffee table,
$10; electric stove, $25. All in good
condition. Call 836-1880 evenings or

weekends.

LIMIT 1

RENAULT

1967

BUFFALO

(R 10) in top shape
Excellent appearance.
Mr. Coleman, Math Dept.,

mechanically.

call
831-1101.

Please

TEXTBOOK

HELP

STORES, INC.

WORK

WANTED

Earn $7.00 per hour
. . . over $50.00 a day. Be your own
boss, work where you want, when you
want. How much you make depends on
you. This is a product everyone needs
and wants
A Zip Code Directory.
For your free sample and complete details send us your Home and School
addresses. Zip Code Publishing Company, Inc.. 7426 W. Capitol Drive,, MilSUMMER

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BUFFALO, NEW YORK 14226
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waukee, Wisconsin 53216.

FULL-TIME
Summer Employment
Earn up to 1500. Call between 10 and 4 at 856-3129
for interview.

e

HORSEBACK RIDING
at

Colonial Ridge Stables
9065 Chestnut Ridge Rd., Middleport, N.Y.
ROUTE 77

—

EAST OF LOCKPORT

Phone Lockport
•

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•

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The Council also voted against overriding the mayor’s veto of a referendum on
the portable classroom issue. The vote
was 7 to 6 in favor, but 10 votes were
needed for passage.

The meeting was interrupted for about

ten minutes when Rev. Robert Moore of

the group Build Us Too was denied permission to address the Council. Council
President Gorski ruled that only councilmen and department heads could speak.

A group of about 50 people supporting
Rev. Moore then marched out of the council room singing “The Battle Hymn of the
Republic.” The doors were locked and the
group continued to sing for some time in
the corridor.
During the course of the meeting, Mr.
Gorski twice threatened to clear the room
following outbursts of applause from the
capacity audience.

APARTMENT WANTED
APARTMENT needed for three

female
graduate students in Sept. Desire location near campus. 3 bedrooms preferred. Please phone 886-8460.

ROOMMA1
MALE roommate

WANTED
to share two-bedroom

furnished apartment, near U.B. $60
utilities included. Call 8393286 or TR 3-7170.
APARTMENTS FOR RENT
ROOM FOR RENT; completely furnished;
$10 a week. Call 832-0708.
WANTED
per month,

NEEDED: One very uninhibited girl to
act in Art Department student film.

886-6966.
PERSONAL
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
Call Danny

mediate F.S.

low cost, Im1, premiums financed.

UPSTATE CYCLE INSURANCE, 695-3044.

Bible Truth

NEW LIFE FOR OLD
"Therefore if any man be in Christ,
he is a new creature; old things are

passed away; behold, all things are
become new." "And all things are of
-||
God."
Cor. 5:17, 18

LET'S GO

PART-TIME
If you can work two nights
and Saturday, or three evenings, we wilt guarantee you
$55.00 per week if you meet
our requirements. Must have
car, and be over 18.

from Page 1

portable classrooms would not alleviate
overcrowding because children from Clinton and Woodlawn Junior High Schools
and other core area schools would be
using them.

9-PIECE

Across From Clement Hall

STUDENTS
and
TEACHERS

Increased board rates are expected to
be decided upon at this meeting.

FOR SALE

LIMIT 2

SATURDAY, JUNE 15

crease.

CLASSIFIED

—

SWEATSHIRTS

Increased wages affecting fodfl prices
include those from food service supervision to kitchen help. Increased wages of
faculty,
and other University employees not involved with food service
operations do not contribute to this inMr. Vandersteur said that the only increased service given students is that the
cafeteria on the first floor of Norton Hall
is open in the afternoon during the regular school year.

� Continued

A new star?

AUTO RALLYE

Main and Transit

will continue through fall. However, Dr.
Claude E. Puffer, vice president of business affairs, made it clear that a meeting
of sub-board HI of the FSA will discuss
food prices for this year and next year
at a meeting next Thursday,

Meanwhile, the proliferation of new albums catering to the many varied tastes
of this nation continues. No matter where
you find enjoyable music, the record companies of this country have enough
records to surfeit anyone’s appetite;
enough in fact to destroy one’s desire and
eardrums, entirely. Even Tiny Tim fulfills a need.

SPECIAL —$1.00 OFF
ON REGULAR LINE

6:00 P.M.

Raymond G. Becker, food service di-

rector, indicated that the new food rates

radiation of television. His parents relent
to his demand for whatever goodies are
best promoted on TV. This market has a
strong potential and our record companies
never leave fertile fields fallow. Dino,
Desi and Billy were the first group to
make it with the pre-teen set and the
rush was on.

SEPT. 69 FRESHMEN
ONLY DURING
PLANNING CONFERENCE

FREE

Student Association took effect June 1.

The gap between pre-natal care and
pre-puberty preparation has been narrowing over the course of the last few years.
The “age of innocence” seems to end the
moment a child is exposed to the mental

—

recom

sons have made it necessary to

According to Pieter Vandersteur, the in-

crease in prices, passed by the Faculty-

Puberty and pop

-

Time:

Food prices'have been raised through-

non-white identity. But the most amazing

I have just received a promotion record
for a singer named Steve Britt. It would
have been ignored as are the great majority of such records we receive if it
had not been for the fact that the singer
is a sever year old kid.

Friday, Juna 14, 1968

Spectrum

•

—

735-7127

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Horse-drawn Wagon For Hay Rrides
Horses For Any Occasion

For quick action

call 831-3610
MISCELLANEOUS
VOLUNTEER

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driver needed to take a
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family to a day
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Call

Buffalo, any day of
Aid Society, 854-

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hayrides,

Waverly

Stables, Service Road No. 18, Niagara
Parkway, Canada. 8 miles north from
Peace

Bridge.

416-295-3925.

SUMMER-TIME
WORK
Salesman and canvassars
wanted. Car necessary.
High commissions paid.
Call Fence City, 633-5810,
ask for Mr. Ryan for appointment.

�Th« Sptclrum

Friday, June 14, 1968

P»9« Thra*

NL draft makes bid for
‘Sick values at work former UB ballplayers

Baumgarten on s torts
’

by Rich Baumgarten
Sports

enee.

Instead, point the accusing finger
at the owners. They are the people who

Editor

make the money.

etched their way into the world of sports.
While a nation grieved last Saturday
during Sen. Robert F. Kennedy’s funeral,
and Sunday, which was proclaimed a
“day of mourning,” much of the sports
world went right ahead almost as if nothing had happened.
even soccer games were

staged. And the turnstiles clicked. The
money kept rolling in.

This all goes to prove one point. The
dollar bill reigns supreme in the American sports scene. It’s a sickening thought.
Fortunately, this does not apply to the
entire world of sports. The middleweight
boxing match between Emile Griffith and

Andy Heilman was postponed last Friday
at Oakland. Minor league baseball did
give it a half effort. AH Sunday games
were postponed in deference to the late
senator but most teams in the International League had doubleheaders Saturday night immediately following the

senator’s burial.

The professional athletes cannot be
blamed for this terrible display of irrever-

The Major League baseball draft held

have the most to

Buffalo’s All-American catcher Brian
Hansen and pitcher-centerfielder Ken Rutkowski were among the 1050 players selected by professional baseball during the
two day draft.
Hansen, a .477 slugger and a first team
College Division All-American catcher,
was selected by the Philadelphia Phillies
of the National Baseball League. In a day
when good young catching prospects are
at a premium, Hansen has quite a future
ahead of him.
Rutkowski, who carried over a .300 batting average for his three year varsity
career, was tabbed by the San Francisco
Giants, also of the National Baseball

Sunday against Pittsburgh. Houston’s General Manager Spector Richardson countered by saying: “Sen. Kennedy would
have wanted us to play.” The game was
played.

Alas, it’s the old story. Professional
baseball players are bound by contract
to play, and if any team refuses to take
the field, that game would be forfeited.
Milt Pappas, Cincinnati pitcher, put it
this way: “Of course we will play rather
than forfeit a game.”

Rutkbwski’s strong point is his

League.

hapd.

The players on the Houston Astros baseball club voted to a man not to play on

The California Angels likewise voted
unanimously not to play on Sunday, but
they reserved the final decision to management. The game was played.

Baseball games were played, horse races

were run, and

They

field, was Buffalo’s top pitcher chalking
6-2 record with a microscopic 0.38
earned run average. Like Hansen, Ken
has all the tools to make it big in the
baseball world.
A third member of Buffalo’s 16-4 baseball team who will also get a shot at a
professional baseball career is outfielder
Rick Wells. Wells, who hit a whopping
.417 and continually impressed with his
hustle, will probably be given a professional tryout within a few weeks according to a prominent Buffalo baseball
up a

scout.
A fourth member of the team, Tim Unaskevitch, was drafted by the New York
Mets last season, but decided not to enter
a baseball career.

Have a problem?

I still remember President Kennedy’s
assassination in November of 1963. It
was the middle of a tight football race.
That Sunday National Football League
Commissioner Pete Rozelle had every
one of the scheduled games played. His
explanation was the same as Richardson’s:
“President Kennedy would have wanted us
to play.” Or was it really “let’s play because postponements are expensive?”

Hey, summer student! Need help? Do you find it impossible to
untangle the University bureaucracy? Beginning next edition. The
Summer Spectrum will continue the regular Spectrum's reader

. Action Line.
service column
Through Action Line, individual students can get answers to
puzzling questions, find out where and why University decisions
are made, and get action.
Just dial 831-5000 for individual attention. The office of student
affairs and services will investigate complaints, and The Spectrum
will print the most interesting problems and replies. Everything, of
course, is confidential.
.

Entertainment
Calendar

.

CHARUE'S

TONSORIAL CENTER
For the Fines, in
m,
SWk,’tS&amp;Sm

bhl^iVlVl.lN
1 11
FhA
■

‘

‘

3:30 and 8 p.m.
CONCERT; Danny Kaye, O’Keefe Cen
ter, Toronto, 8:30 p.m, through June 17

“Good-Bye

Charlies,” Philip
Sheridan School, 8:30 p.m., also June 15.
PLAY: “Tartuffe,” Festival Theatter,
Stratford, Ont., also June 17, 19, 22, 26
28 and July 2, 4 and 6.
SATURDAY, JUNE 15:
EXHIBIT: James Joyce Exhibit, Lockwood Library, through Aug. 1.
ART: Allentown Art Festival, also June
16,

PLAY: “Romeo and Juliet,” Festival
Theater, Stratford, Ont., also June 19, 21,
25, 27, 29 and July 1, 3 and 6.
TUESDAY JUNE 18:
FILMS: “Everyman-News Number 3
“Pacific 231,” “The Mystery of the Chateau of Dica” and “Wisp,” Norton Conference Theater, 3:30 and 8 p.m.
PLAY: “A Mid Summer Night’s Dream,”
Stratford, Ont., also June 20, 22, 24 26
29 and July 3, 4 and 5.

”

,

ANNE HEYttOOD SJKT

closed

IN D H.LAWRENCES

OPEN 24 HOURS

Century: “Dr. Zhivago,” Omar Shariff,
Julie Christie; starting June 19, “2001: A

I

M

All

Space Odyssey.”

Scrtmplty by tCWIS JOHNCAWtlNQ and MOW.AWQ
KOCH
Produced by Raymond sntoss Directed t* mark rvocli
C°*of **°*tu ** Ffom ClAWKXit PICTUWCS
•

S

Restauranl

Cinema I: “In Cold Blood.”
Cinema II; “A Dandy in Aspic,” Mia
Farrow, Laurence Harvey.
Circle Art: “And There Came A Man,”
Rod Steiger.

Breakfast Special

entertainment

experience,
a dazzling trip
to the moon,
the planets and
the st| || more
distant stars!

Orange or Tomato Juice
2 Eggs
Bacon or Sausage
Home Fries
Toast and Coffee

Colvin: “Bye, Bye Braverman,” George
Segal.
Glen Art: “Elvira Madigan.”
Granada: “Benjamin;” starting June 19,
“Teresa and Isabella.”
Kensington: “Guess Who’s Coming to
Dinner,” Sidney Fortier, Spencer Tracy.
North Park: “The Fox,” Sandy Dennis
Keir Dullea.

890

mgm

Across from Hayes Hall

JOStPHC

eau, Alan Arkin.

S

LCVMC

MIKE MCHOiS

/

II
Jk

\
\

/

HEPBURN . . .
AWARD WINNER
"BEST ACTRESS"

COLUMBIA

EXCLUSIVE
AREA
5HOWINOI

PICTURES

presents

Stanley Kramer

a

•i

?

mikiiipn

KiCfcllS)

HURRY!
\ TUESDAY

THE\\

GRADUATE

kubrick

production

1

BEST DIRECTOR

\

Stanley

\\V«r mm

ACADEMY AWARD WINNER x I
~

nn

movies in buffalo
Amherst and Cinema: “Inspector Clous-

,»«■ SIZZLING WEEK!

'

ffl

J.

V^—«“*»&lt;•

STARTS It 12 Nm, 2, 4,1,1, II PJ.

production

i Katharine
TRACY 1 POITIER 1 HEPBURN

Spencer ( Sidney

guess who's
coming to dinner

RESERVED SEAT TICKETS
NOW AT BOXOFFICE
OR BY MAIL
.

TECHNICOLOR'

melody fair

Niagara Falls Blvd., N. Tonawanda

Sunday, June 23 8:30 P.M.
-

■

\

Ray Charles Show
and his
Raeletts
Tickets available at
Norton Union Ticket Office
$5.50

-

$5.00

-

$4.50

S: George Segel-Allan

.

PERFORMANCES AND PRICES
Sun. thru Thurs. Evas
•I 8:15: Orch. $2.50,
Loge $2.75. Fri., Sat t
Holiday Eva*, at 8:15:
Orch. *2,75; Loge *3.00,
Mon. thru hi. Mai*, at
2:00; Orch. *1.75, Loge *2.00
Set. Mel. at 2:00: Orch. *2.00,
Loge *2.75. Sun. and
Hal.
Mat* at 2:00: Orch, *2.25,
loge *2.50.
special
Far
attention In theatre
partias and studant groups call
(7U) 834-8593 or 852-2408.

Western New York
Premiere Wednesday.

King-Godfrey Cambridge

NOW

June 19th

SHOWING!

JZcn t urs*
c
*

i

PLAY:

Buffalo: “The Private Navy of Sgt.
O’Farrell,” Bob Hope, Phyllis Diller.
Center; “The Graduate,” Dustin
Hoffman, Anne Bancroft.

&gt;

NtA.-.Y eAZKlNrr

•

FRIDAY, JUNE 14:
FILMS: “Echoes of Silence” and “To
Parsifal,” Norton Conference Theater,

■

j_l»l HUTU AVt

.

•

«

&gt;

•

-

*

�Editorials

The Spectrum

(

Without expression, freedom of expression is meaningless
BELOW OLYMPUS

We think Father Robert S. Sweeney, pastor of St. Brigid
Church, summed it up accurately: “Buffalo is a divided city,
of
A few of our Common Council members are going out
us
back.”
hold
their way to

By Interland

i
I
/

Most persons on the Council don’t appear able to see
past the next election. Twice in recent weeks they have
tried to block construction of portable classrooms, ostensibly
because they are “unsafe” or because they “withdraw valuable recreation areas from use,” or because they are “too
cold in the winter.”

1

Pi

But everyone knows the real reason: Portable classrooms provide Buffalo’s first opportunity for true school

integration.
In mid-May the Council passed a resolution calling
for a divisive advisory referendum on the issue. Mayor
Sedita vetoed it. This week, some members tried to pass
a resolution changing the City’s building codes, making the
portable structures illegal.

but it'd ruin our image as kind,
gentle, courteous, peace officers. Mother!"
.

.

‘Dancing the fiddler’s song’
To the Editor;

At the end of April, I entered two of my best
paintings in an art exhibit in Cooke Hall.
After many futile attempts of trying to recover
my work when the exhibit was over, I finally spoke
to a janitor who informed me that a female cleaning lady had discarded them (of all the damned
Mitchell
chided
them
Delmar
L.
Councilman-at-large
things to do). These unauthorized acts typify the unTuesday. He said that they’d better “realize we are in a balanced structure of this University. And how
social revolution that is going to the very heart of this would the cleaning lady like it if I threw out her
nation. We’d better get together and work for the common mop and pail?
The monetary value of the works is only supergood.”
ficial; nevertheless, it is the time and effort placed
in the work that concerns me most and disturbs me
He admitted that in the past, he only “looked to the most. However, when the personal possessions of
it makes
next election,” but now, he said: “I’m going to look to an individual are handled so precariously,
is a reflection
the next generation and try to solve some of the problems me wonder if this “precariousness”
to the
of the actions of the University in regards
that exist in this community.”
welfare of the student. To me we are all dancing
the fiddler’s song—for this bureaucratic structure
That’s a fitting resolve for all of us.
is still calling the tune.
I’m damn mad.
Sandi Buchberg

Those at the helm of anti-integration forces are Councilmen Slominski, Lyman, Lewandowski, Whalen, Buyers and
Elfvin

during
every Tuesday and Friday
Tit Spectrum is published twice-weekly
from June to September,
Fridays
the regular academic year, and weekly
Association of the
except during examination periods by the Faculty-Student
State University of New York at Buffalo, Inc. Offices are located at 355 Norton
Hall, State University of New York at Buffalo, 3435 Main Street, Buffalo, New
—

—

—

—

York 14214.

Summer Editor

Managing Editor
Business Manager

RICHARD R.
DANIEL

HAYNES

LASSER

SAMUEL A. POWAZEK

.Peter Simon
Campus News
Marge Anderson City Editor
Richard Baumgarten
Feature Editor
Lori Pendrys Sports
Robert Hsiang Layout
.David L. Sheedy
Photography
.Murray Richman
VACANT Advertising
Copy Editor
The Spectrum is a member of the United States Student Press Association
and the Associated Collegiate Press. The Spectrum is served by: United Press
International, College Press Service, Gannett News Service, and the Los Angeles
Times Syndicate.
Republication of all news dispatches is forbidden without express consent
of the Editor-in-Chief. Rights of republication of all other matter herein are
also reserved.
Editorial policy is determined by the Editor-in-Chief.
Second class postage paid at Buffalo, New York.
Represented for advertising by National Educational Advertising Service, Inc.
18 E. 50th Street, New York, New York 10022.
Contract
Basic advertising rate; $2.75; summer rate; $2.25 per column inch,

rates upon request.
Summer circulation; 10,000.
Telephone: Area code 716; Editorial,

831-2210; Business,

831-3610.

Decries Harrell issue apathy
To the Editor:

After hearing that Prof. Bill Harrell of the sociology department will not have his contract renewed for next year, I was shocked and disappointed, to say the least. What has happened to
at
the spirit and the voice of concerned students
the State University of Buffalo?
proBill Harrell was one of the best sociology
fessors on campus when I graduated. He forced
the
students to use their intellect and go beyond
course material for answers. If a few administrators
have set up some false standards by which a college professor’s worth is determined (publication,
etc.)

and the students let these standards go un-

challenged, then quite obviously students don’t give
a damn about education.
There is no excuse for apathy, nor is there any
justification for removing a man like Bill Harrell
from his position
Susan Lepard,
Sacramento, Calif.

fl
by J. L. McCrary
When President John F. Kennedy was sniped
down in Dallas in November 1963, people said it
was the work of one fanatic. When Rev. Dr,
Martin Luther King Jr. was shot in Memphis two
months ago, people blamed racist hate, and many
acknowledged that a collective guilt was forming.

Sen. Kennedy’s assassination, apparently at the
hands of a young Jordanian immigrant, has triggered new feelings of anger and guilt. Americans
ask: ‘Are we really a violent people?’
Sen. McCarthy says we are, that we have been
made that way in part by the Vietnam war. Sociologists and psychologists blame the constant diet
of violent movies and television. Television viewers were told by societal critic Eric Severied that
such movies as “Bonnie and Clyde” (though he
didn’t name it outright) blunt our moral sense.

Whatever society’s critics say, it doesn’t make
sense to stop at saying we are a violent society.
The recognition of that fact won’t stop assassinations.
In the same sense, a strict gun control law
probably won’t stop assassinations. There are other

weapons; there are other ways. An assassin is of
one mind. Whether he employs a bomb, a gun
or a poison dart, he can do his deed. The human
body is so vulnerable.
So what’s the answer? Better protection by the
Secret Service? That might stop an assassination,
surely. But President Kennedy was gunned down
in full view of several Secret Service agents.

President Johnson arrives and departs in secreUsually his appearances receive no pre-publicity. It’s true —the President of the United States
cannot move freely in his own country. Gov.
Rockefeller says that when a candidate loses that
right, democracy is in jeopardy.
Perhaps he’s right. Perhaps, under our present
system democracy is in jeopardy. Maybe it’s time
we looked at new means of electing presidents.
at the danger of camRobert F .Kennedy scoffed
had to
paigning in the exposed way he did. He
way.
only
the
It
was
people.
the
take it to
So are we a sick society, after all?
The answer is yes. We are the kind of sick
society that has allowed a war to continue to kill
systematically or leave homeless thousands of
South East Asians. We are the sick society that
has allowed segregation, discrimination and continued rape of an entire race of their rights. We
are the sick society that has kicked around, with
counlittle reservation, the first inhabitants of this
try. We are the sick society that allows children
to be eaten, literally, by rats in the ghetto, and,
figuratively ,of pride and self.
No doubt, America is a sick society. Sen.
what
Robert F. Kennedy realized that. That’s
Kennedy was all about. Gene McCarthy realizes
don’t yet
that also. Some of the other candidates
see it. Perhaps when they do, it will be too late.
cy.

But Sen. Kennedy did. His brother, Edward,
said it best: “He should be remembered simply as
a good and decent man who saw wrong and tried
it,
to right it, saw suffering and tried to heal
saw war and tried to stop it.”
If only all America could

see

so well.

Clean beautiful line of cibu

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�</text>
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                    <text>The SpECTi^uivi
State University of New York at Buffalo

Vol. 18, No. S3

Friday, May 7, 1968

Council gives president
of SA control over fees
A proposal that the Coordinating Council give Student Association officers authority to set activity and athletic fees was
unanimously approved at the final Coordinating Council meeting of the spring

iM
&gt;v #

tost

In Memoriam: Robert F.

Kennedy

\

#

A

:ainst racism’

‘Peo

New program to aim
at white re-education
Volunteers from the University and the
community are launching a “people
against racism” program.
It’s directed at “white people—their
racism, their prejudices, and their problems of being white,” said William Yates
and William Mayrl, program initiators.
The program will not take the traditional approach of providing white volunteers to work in the ghetto. “We will not
speak as representatives of the black
community,” emphasized Mr. Yates, a
University graduate student, “but address our efforts to white people.”
The group will act as coordinators between the campus and the city. With the
University as the initial base for discussion and action, an “atmosphere of
awareness of the depth and implications
of problems caused by racism can be
created,” Mr. Mayrl said.
The following University programs are
tentatively scheduled for the summer

and income distribution, Mr. Yates believes.
In these campus activities “it is important,” emphasizes Dr. Fred M. Snell, another program organizer, “that we don’t
just talk to each other.” Faculty and students must realize their “role and responsibility in the Buffalo community,”
At the first organizational meeting of
“people against racism” Saturday, Tony
Massa the organizer of a group of about
35 Tonawanda residents
interested in
studying problems of white racism said:
Please turn to Page 5
employment rates

semester.
The mandatory student activities fee is
proposed at $40 or $42 a year. Athletic
fees will be voluntary at $12.50 a semester. Final decisions on these amounts will
be made by July 1.
The previously voluntary freshman fee
of $4 was made mandatory for all new
students on a motion by Nancy Coleman,
new student affairs coordinator.
A vote on candidates for the Publica-

tions Board resulted in the nomination of
five students. Judy Mann, Charles Zeldner, Margaret Buck, Ira Lee Falk and
Tracy Cottone were approved by a collective vote.
Two additional members were added to
the Student Judiciary. They are Elbert
Hargesheimer III and Neal Slatkin.
Following a motion by Student Association Vice President Tracy Cottone, the
Coordinating Council recognized establishment of a club for African students to be
called the African Club.
Barbara Emilson, student services coordinator, reported that the calendar committee requested that schedules for final
examinations be printed in The Spectrum.
The schedules for first semester would
be printed by Thanksgiving and for second
semester by Easter vacation. The committee also reported that there will be a

mid-year commencement in February, contrary to its original recommendation.

Miss Coleman said that five out of six
Bulletin Board' courses submitted to University College have been approved.
Pamphlets will be mailed to students who
signed-up for the approved courses.
Student Association President Richard
Schwab said that he hopes to make available to every member of the polity a report on what has been accomplished and
an outline of programs for the coming
year.

Mandatory fee for
summer

accepted

Mandatory undergraduate activities fees
of $3.50 ber session during the summer
have been unanimously passed by the
Student Association coordinating council.
Fees will be paid to Sub-Board I, the
financial arm of the five student associations of the University.
Both the Millard Fillmore College and
the Graduate Student Association have also established mandatory summer fees.
Students refusing to pay the mandatory
fees may not be allowed to participate in
student activities, and their grades, transcripts and credits may be withheld. Students with “hardship cases” will be given
special consideration.
:f

You are cordially invited

.

semester:

Academic reality
Professors are encouraged to make
courses relevant to current social problems.
•

e Special courses

Students must go outside the departments to learn what reality is,” said Mr.
Yates. Special courses will be designed

around the aspects of racism.
Although black students are clamoring
for Negro history, he feels that “real
American history should be taught: A
history that emphasizes the role of the

Jiterature, industrial develop-

ment, music,

policy.”
•

coal mining

and foreign

Free discussion

Dialogue in the “intellectual community” will be encouraged. Special teach-ins
and forums will be arranged for students
and faculty to discuss racism with local
and national figures. Speakers could include Otto Kerner, chairman of the President’s Riot Commission Report; Buffalo
Mayor Frank A. Sedita; union officials;
representatives from various Negro
organizations, and Police Commissioner

Frank N. Felicetta.
•

Research

Much research is needed in all
areas of
ghet
problems. There are very few accurate surveys of Negro population,
un°

■\r
ill}
'

progress
nwrwYH/\on

Panic
MT drib

.

Today's Spectrum is the first of nine issues to be published
this summer. Visiting students are needed to fill openings on each
of its production staffs; city and campus news, feature, copy and
layout, photography and sports.
Anyone interested in working for the paper should contact the
managing editor at room 355, Norton Hall.

sessions and will continue into the fall

Negro in

.

Hanoi's new man in Paris, Le Doc Tho, (center) is now the CornmuniSts' chief negotiator at the peace talks. Both sides met
Wednesday at the 7th peace conference, and still \no sign of
progress is evident. Talks have been temporarily broken-off while
the U.S. chief negotiators, W. Averell Harriman and Sargent
Schriver, return home for Senator Kennedy's funeral.

�Friday, Jona 7, 1968

The Spectrum

Page Two

Faculty opts for open campus
The faculty senate passed a resolution
May 20 to reopen the campus to military
recruiters after a five-month ban on recruiting.
The resolution, passed by 223-42 vote,
also contained an amendment put forward

pate fully. Dr. Robert H. Rossberg, secretary pro-tern of the faculty senate, said
that by senate bylaws, the meeting had to
be scheduled 14 to 30 days after the April
25 meeting at which the issue was raised.

The conflicting exam and vacation
schedules—of the—various graduate—and
to
tention of full status and privileges to undergraduate departments also had
students who choose to emigrate or go ■ be considered.
Dr. Rossberg observed that the exam
to jail rather than participate in military
schedule of a profesor had never been
service.
known to correlate highly with his poThe decision was largely the result of
litical inclinations and that supporters of
an investigation conducted by Robert
both sides of the issue were probably
O’Neil, presidential assistant, following a affected equally.
December resolution by the senate to
He attributed the heavy victory of openpostpone military recruitment until concampus forces to superior organization
troversy caused by conflicting statements
and campaigning.
of the Selective Service and the Justice
Department was resolved.

No summer recruitment

No effect

Student Association President Richard
Schwab said that, although attendance of
250 faculty members was complemented
by only a handful of students, a student
opinion poll earlier in the year indicated
that a majority of the student body would
have supported the resolution that was
passed in the faculty senate. Mr. Schwab
personally termed the senate’s decision
“a good thing.”
Dr. Jerome Fink, associate director of
University Placement, said that there will
be no recruitment on campus during the
summer, but that plans have yet to be
formulated for the fall semester.

Professor O’Neil reported that he had
found no evidence that Gen. Hershey’s directive to classify draft protesters had had
any effect on the activities of any draft
boards. The concensus of opinion in the
senate was that if the constitutional right
of students to dissent is impinged upon
in the future, it is almost a certainty that
recruiters will be barred.
There had been some previous speculation that a date had been chosen purposely to decide this issue when exam-bound
students and professors could not partici-

Lazy

SEND
THE
SPECTRUM
HOME

—

daze

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14214.

These special Introductory
rates are available for a short
time only.

—

are hard at work, studying
Hall's front lawn.

on Norton

PLAZA SHOE REPAIR

You can have the SPECTRUM mailed directly to your home. The very phases
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here, are primary subject matter of the SPECTRUM . . . reported accurately,
brightly, concisely for your parents’ reading pleasure. Help bridge the generation gap.
SEND THE SPECTRUM HOME NEXT SEMESTER

Fill-in the attached coupon and
mail it, with your check, to:

For at least two of the University's 10,000 summer students
it's time again to hit the books.
These girls
hardly recovered
from the past semester's grind

ONE STOP SERVICE
CENTER
Shoes Repaired While-U-Wait
Laundry &amp; Drycleaning
ONE DAY SERVICE

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836-4041

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THE SPECTRUM

355 Norton, SUNYAB
Buffalo, N.Y.
Gentlemen
Enter my subscription for

MELODY FAIR

Niagara Falls Blvd., N. Tonawanda

1967-68 at these I

special introductory rates.
□ $2.50 Fall Semester Only

□ $4.00

Sunday, June 23

NAME

\

■
■

ADDRESS
STATE

8:30 P.M.

Ray Charles Show

Both Semesters

CITY

-

ZIP CODE

|

'

i
'

and his Raeletts
Tickets available at
Norton Union Ticket Office
$5.50

-

$5.00

-

$4.50

University Coalition for McCarthy
presents

A Concert of Chamber Music
Artists performing
ROBERT MARTIN —cello

CHARLES HAUPT —violin
JESSE LEVINE —viola

SEYMOUR FINK
Including works of BEETHOVEN

Baird Hall

—

—

-

THEODORE MAYER —contra bass
piano
MOZART SCHUBERT
-

June lOth

TICKETS ON SALE AT BAIRD AND NORTON

—

—

8:30 R.M.

$2.00, $1.00 STUDENTS

�Th

Friday, June 7, 1968

Sptctrum

•

Orij in:

Pag*

The**

California

New strategy to handle
protests suggested
“Almost any contact with the demonstration groups must be considered as
a scouting or probing operation to test the
types of counter-measures to be em-

CHICAi
in dealing with stu
dent demonstrations, college administrators ought to use such tactics as photographing demonstrators and a public relations campaign to keep the students “off
balance,” according to the deputy attorney
general of California.

•

ployed.”
During the demonstration, photographs should be taken of the demonstrators and their conduct, since they may
produce evidence of illegal activity or
may counter adverse publicity.
“The college’s public relations campaign,” says Mr, Momboisse, “must be
aggressive so as to keep the opposition
constantly off balance.”
There should be two tape recordings
of any conference, one made by each side.
According to Mr. Momboisse: “This procedure assures an accurate record of the
proceedings and tends to restrain the
•

Writing in the May issue of College
and University Business, a magazine for
college administrators, Raymond M. Momboisse offers several “tactics for colleges
facing student demonstrations.” Among
them:

•

•

The administration should gather in
formation about students and their meth
ods and co-ordinate its “intelligence” operations with local police.
•

The administration should find out
who is the “actual” leader of the demonstration. “Often those who are publicly
paraded as leaders are merely puppets of
the true leaders who for various reasons
wish to remain unknown, and unseen,” Mr.
Momboisse says.

demonstrations.”
He said demonstrators often have legal
advisors, fly to their brothers’ campuses

•

A 14-year-old Viet Cong prisoner is
questioned by Vietnamese Rangers after he tried to enter Saigon this past
week. He abducted a woman on the
outskirts of Saigon and forced her to
pose as his mother. The hoax was dis-

Child
enemy

covered

at a

to help out, mainly want publicity, conduct “intelligence evaluations,” and recruit professors “fresh from the fever
fringes of our great universities.”

Poll picks Nixon Humphrey

road-block.

,

Special to

the

Spectrum

Modern Lit. program set

Richard Nixon and Vice President
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn.
Humphrey will be nominated as presidential candidates, and Humphrey will win the election, according to a poll of editors of college

The fifth Summer Program in Modern
Literature sponsored by the English Department will present a program of graduate and undergraduate courses in literature. The courses will be taught by regular faculty members and a number of

Results of a nation-wide poll conducted by the Associated Collegiate Press, a national college press association, show that 73%
of the editors expect Mr. Nixon to be the Republican choice over
Gov. Rockefeller, and 50% xpect Mr. Humphrey to win out in a
four-way race for the Democratic nomination.
Sen. Kennedy trailed the Vice President with a 37Vi% chance of
winning the nomination, followed by Sen. McCarthy with 9% and

visiting professors.
Among the visiting professors teaching
undergraduate courses during the second
semester of Summer Session are Robert
Duncan of San Francisco College, Michael
Mott of Kenyon College and Fritz Senn,
European editor of the James Joyce Quarterly.
Graduate Seminar instructors include

Hugh Kenner of Santa Barbara State College and William Bmpson, professor of
English at the University of Sheffield, England.
Teaching both graduate and undergraduate courses will be eBnedict Kiely of
Emory University, Albert Montressi of St.
Louis University,. Leonard Nathan of the
University of California at Berkeley and
Brian Vickers of Downing College, Eng.
A series of panel discussions and readings by these poets and novelists is being planned by the University’s Department of English, Each of these programs
will be open to the public.

CLASSIFIED
FOR

SALE

9-PIECE

dining room set, $35; complete
bedroom set, double bed, coffee table,
*10; electric stove, $25. All in good
condition. Call 836-1880 evenings or

2-BEDROOM apartment, furnished for
the summer. From June 15 to Aug.
31. Excellent furniture, all utilities. Females only. Call TR 6-9150.

1967 RENAULT

2-BEDROOM apartment, fridge and stove;
all utilities; available June 15. Faculty
preferred. Call TR 6-9150.

873-3510.

weekends.

mechanically.

Please call
831-1101.
TIRES

(R10)

in

Excellent

Mr. Coleman,

top

shape

appearance.

Math Dept.,

whitewalls, 6.00x15
for VW or Volvo, etc. Excellent con
dition, $9 each. 874-3490.
—

Goodyear,

MERCURY, good

1960
Call

886-4650.

condition. $50

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If you've done enough writing
to know it's hard work and think
you
can hack it on a commercial
basis
come in and we'll see if we think so
too. Call Bob Hengerer
at
—

Advertising, 883-6187.

Comstock

SUMMER-TIME
WORK
Salesman and canvassars
wanted. Car necessary.
High commissions paid.
Call Fence City,
633-5810,

ask for Mr. R yan for
appointment.

call 831-3610
PERSONAL

ONE-BEDROOM apartment, furnished
or three-bedroom apartment, furnished. Call 836-9776 after 1:00.

MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE

needed

mediate F.S.

low cost, im
1, premiums financed.

ROOMS, UB one block, male graduates.
Call TF 3-9261 or TT 2-5058.

■

God's Remedy

all have sinned." Rom. 3:23.
wages of Sin is death; but the
of God is eternal life; through
Jesus Christ our Lord."Rom. 6:23. The
choice is ours.
"For

"The
gift

CHARLIE'S

TONSORIAL CENTER

For the
HAIR STYLING,

3584

Finest in
RAZOR CUTTING
and BEARD TRIMMING
MAIN ST.
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—CLOSED MONDAYS—

In Memoriam

POLITICAL

polling and interviewing, excellent part-time work, good hourly
and mileage; car necessary. Call

873-9946.

2 ROOMS, male students, kitchen privileges or board, Bailey near Kensing
ton. Call 833-7520.

SUMMER BOARD
CONTRACTS AVAILABLE

For details call 831-4339 or contact the
Food Service Office in Clement Hall.
7:30 A M. 10 P.M.
7:30 A M. 5 P.M.
»
A.M. 1:30 P.M.
-

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Robert F.
Kennedy

ONLY $79.50 FOR EACH
SIX-WEEK SESSION

INTERIM CAMPUS: MON.-FRI.

Bible Truth
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for three female

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governor.

MISCELLANEOUS
HORSEBACK riding, hayrides, Waverly
Stables, Service Road No. 18, Niagara
Parkway, Canada. 8 miles north from
Peace Bridge. 416—295-3925.

graduate students in Sept. Desire location near campus. 3 bedrooms preferred. Please phone 831-3610.

NORTON UNION: MON.-THURS.

President Johnson with 3V2%.
Sen. McCarthy was a strong front-runner as the editors' personal
choice, but they named Sen. Kennedy as the Democrats' best
candidate with Gov. Rockefeller given the best chance for the
Republicans. Sen. Kennedy was picked by 74% in a mythical race
against Mr. Nixon and by 60% in a contest with the New York

UPSTATE CYCLE INSURANCE. 695-3044.

APARTMENT WANTED
APARTMENT

newspapers.

For quick action

APARTMENTS FOR RENT

PRE-MED, pre-dent Bausch and Lomb
Binocular microscope; exceeds any
school requirements. Must sell now.

—

AUHV

�Albee &amp; Co. to visit Studio
Arena; subscriptions on sale

Record review

Canned Heat: ‘Boogie...’
he sounded a little better than
the great Hendrix.

must admit

by Joseph Fernbacher
Staff

Spectrum

Reporter

"Boogie with Canned Heat

is the tale

of the album and good solid rock is the
type of music inside. This album has all
the ingredients of becoming a number one
seller. It is good soul guitar with great
blues guitar, with good moaning bass and
solid, hard-hitting drum work. Combine
all these ingredients and toss in the rich
heavy voice of the lead singer and you
come up with the group’s name: Canned
Heat,

The group is composed of five hot musicians who play with heat and intensity.
They are: lead singer Bob “The Bear”
Hite; lead guitarist Henry "Sunflower”
Vestine; drummer Adolfo, “Fito” De La
Parra: bassist Larry “The Mole” Taylor,
and Alan “Blind Owl” Wilson, player of
the Bottle Neck guitar, vocalist and harp
player.

This reviewer first heard Canned Heat
when the popular underground radio announcer “Brother Love” began to play
them on his show. The first time I heard
them, I knew I had to get their album.
This I did. So, now I want to share it with
the world. Hence, this review.
The song I heard was the fantastic
“Fried Hockey Boogie.” In this number
Canned Heat did their thing, as the saying
goes. Each individual gives a solo performance on his instrument. It is one of the
best cuts I have ever heard on any record
to date. Of special interest in this cut is
the amazing guitar work of the “Sunflower.” He really lays it on thick and
heavy. His solo reminded me a lot of the
guitar of Jimi Hendrix, and at times, I

All those who attended plays presented
at Buffalo’s Studio Arena Theater this
year and who were impressed by their
quality and variety should note wl

Mole.” He can play the bass guitar with
as much soul as anybody I have ever
heard. He plays in the tradition of Jack
Bruce of Cream and his moaning is truly a
pleasure to experience. “Fried Hockey
Boogie” is one of the best tunes ever to be
pressed into a record.

been lined up for next year.
(Some of the notable plays presented this
year included: Edward Albee’s Box-MaoBox and A Delicate Balance; Pirandello’s
masterpiece ‘The Emperor,” and currently
showing, Ann Jellicoe’s play “The Knack.’’)
Next year, Studio Arena will once again
offer their usual appealing program. As a
pre-season offering the theater has arranged for the two week engagement of
Edward Albee’s experimental company,
1969 Playwright’s Repertory, These plays
will be limited to several performances
each and seats will be at a premium. Tickets go on sale in advance and exclusively
to subscribers.
To begin the season the Studio Arena
will present the comedy, “You’re a Good
Man, Charlie Brown.” Presenting this play
will be the original company and director
Joe Hardy. Other presentations include:
The Lion in Winter, A Thurber Carnival,
The Killing of Sister George, The Entertainer, and Lost in the Stars.
March and April presentations will be
selected from the following plays: Black
Comedy; Arthur Miller’s new play, The
Price; You Know I Can’t Hear You When

“Amphetamine Annie” is the ballad of

a young lady who is in the habit of shoveling great amounts of snow and suffers the
ultimate high in the end. The thing that
makes this cut outstanding, besides the
singing of “The Bear,” is the underlying
guitar work of “Sunflower.” As the album goes on, “Sunflower” gets better and

better.
Boiling over

“Evil Woman” is another heavy tune
full of rich sounding guitar work and singing. This tune is a good example of what
“blue-eyed soul” can really be like.
“On the Road Again’ ’is the modern folk
song set up with an electronic musical
score. Again the “Sunflower” blossoms.
In the instrumental on the album, “Marie Laveau," we are given the quintessence
of Canned Heat. I know it’s repetitious, but
the “Sunflower” is at it again and really
wails in this cut. Also of great quality in
this cut is “The Mole” and his bass work.
This is a true hard rock number full of all
sorts of interesting musical journeys.
Canned Heat is truly boiling over into
the mainstream and should soon be one of
the hottest groups going. They haven’t
been around for an awfully long lime, and
they should stay around a lot longer and
really lay it on the musical millions.

Black Journal, first in a pioneering
monthly series of programs by, for and
about black Americans, starts Wednesday,
at 9 p.m. on Channel 17.
The hour-long program will have a
magazine format that covers everything
from polities to business and education to
the arts. The series is designed to intensify
coverage of the black community and to
promote understanding by the white viewer of the needs and accomplishments of
the black citizen.

The first program will include the folfilm segments; A satire written and

lowing

FRIDAY, JUNE 7;

PLAY: “Th Knack,”
how to get it.

An integrated production staff enables
the program to serve as a workshop for
training Negroes in television as production men, reporters and editors.

STARTS WEDNESDAY!

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Studio Arena, and

JAZZ FESTIVAL: Thelonious Monk, The
Jazz Quartet, O’Keefe Center,
Toronto, 8:30 p.m., at least Toronto’s cool.
TV SPECIAL: The Art of the Asmat,
New Guinea, collected by Michael C.
Rockefeller, Upton Hall Gallery, Buff.
State, through June 8.
FILMS: Excerpts of Birth of a Nation,
The Love of Jeanne Mye, Potemlin, Olympia, You Only Live Once, The Man I
Killed, Our Bread, Spare Time, The Story
of the White House, Girls in Business,
Conference Theater, 3:30 and 8 p.m. Kaleidoscope, much?
TV SPECIAL: “The Creative Person:
Georges Simeon,” Channel 17, 8:30 p.m.
“Thirteen Against Fate: The Lodger,”
Channel 17, 9 p.m.
EXHIBIT: Inaugural Tribute Exhibition,
Burchfield Center, Rockwell Hall, Buff.
State, through September.
MOVIES: “And There Came A Man,”
starring Rod Steiger, Circle Art, 'only one?
“Inspector Clouseau,” starring Alan Arkin,
Amherst and Cinema, bungling detective
Modern

directed by comic Godfrey Cambridge,
titled “It’s In to be Black” concering race
and America today; a special story on the
attitudes of graduating seniors at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts and Morehouse and Spellman Colleges in Atlanta, including subjects such
as, Black Power, the draft, the War and
jobs, and a look at the teaching of black
and conventional American history at Harlem Prep in New York City.

—Aicher

the Water’s Running, and George Kelly’s
The Show-Off.
process of its fourth annual subscription
drive and is offering all the above plays
to the people of the Buffalo area at a cdn-

siderable savings. The drive will last until
June 15 and will not be offered again in
the fall as in previous years. The Studio
Arena complex depends quite heavily on
these subscriptions (advance sale of, the
entire series of plays for the season) to
help underwrite the coming season.
Season ticket holders benefit
The advantages of becoming a subscriber to Studio Arena are numerous to say
the least. The subscriber enjoys a whopping 15% savings over box office prices
for the eight play series and has his own
permanent seat for performances of his
choice. He may exchange the ticket for
any other performance he wishes within
the four and one half week run of each
play.
Since the beginning of the drive on
March 15 the sales of subscriptions have
totaled 2500 and they are continuing to increase every day. The Studio Arena is one
of Buffalo’s proudest possessions, and

without the support of all Buffalonians, it
will not be able to operate and its fullest
potential will not be reached. The subscription drive will end on June 15.

Entertainment
Calendar

Black Americans to he
focus of new TV series

I

Friday, Juna 7, 1968

The Spectrum

Page Four

•

873-5440

in same type movie; “Elvira Madigan,”
Glen Art, watch the music; “Half A Sixpence,” starring Tommy Steele, Colvin,
danger of inflation; “30 Is A Dangerous
Age, Cynthia,” Cinema II, and Stella, and
Carol and Gertrude, etc.; “In Cold Blood,”
Cinema I, good, but . .
“The Graduate,”
starring Dustin Hoffman and Anne Ban“Benjamin,”
housing;
croft, Center, open
Granada, coming of age, a francaise; “The
Secret War of H.arry Frigg,” starring Paul
Newman, Century, has Newman lost his
sex appeal? “The Fox,” starring Sandy
Dennis and Keir Dullea, North Park,
Sandy Dennis cries wolf.
.;

SATURDAY, JUNE 8:
JAZZ FESTIVAL: Miriam Makeba, O’Keefe Center, Toronto, 8:30 p.m., Stoke
ley’s girl.

MONDAY, JUNE 10:
CONCERT: Victor Borge, Lanie Kazan,
O’Keefe Center, Toronto through June 15,
good housekeeping seal of approval.
TV SPECIAL: “The Volunteers,” Channel 17, 9 p.m., four young Britons donating and and good will and pursuing
self satisfaction in the country of Malawi.
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12;
TV SPECIAL: “Black Journal,” Channel
17, 9 p.m., premiere of monthly series
about black Americans.

URE

�Friday, June

7, 1968

People against racism
Continued from

Pag* Five

The Spictrum

Page 1

*
.

“I don’t want to see University experts
come and say whatever my community
should be saying. They should listen and

The “people against racism” will organize a teach-in Thursday in Norton Hall.
The exact time for the meeting in the Millard Fillmore Room will be announced
later.

The “people against racism” program
becomes a two-way educational task: Dialogue and action.

Members of the core group will outline
their proposed many-faceted program for
the campus and city. Speakers frtftn the
community will also be invited.

With the Buffalo community this kind
of action could take place:

Dialogue among members of the University will focus on problems of white

rm

1

racism.

Labor relations

•

Tentatively scheduled for June 29 is a
joint meeting between interested people
of the Buffalo community and the campus.
Through various workshops, members of
local labor union, clergymen, students and
community officials will discuss racial
problems.

Members of the group might speak at
labor union training sessions held during
the summer. Discussions would involve
the workingman’s problems—both Negro
and white.
development of unions,
workers could “identify with the early
struggles of labormen,” Mr. Yates thinks.
“Italians may become more sympathetic
to the Negro struggle if they learn that
their grandfathers fought in bloody riots
for three years to gain some labor privileges.”
By studying

•

The American-Israeli Student’s Club is
sponsoring discussion to commemorate
1967’s “six day war” between Arab nations

Speakers core

Members would “gain an effective entry
into community organizations” by responding to invitations to speak on racism, Dr.
Snell believes.
•

Israeli officers
to discuss war
and Israel.
Israeli officers who participated in the

war, and who are now students here, will

High school leadership

Norton Hall.

Many high school students need aid in
publishing underground newspapers, he
said. The group might also encourage and
help students organize teach-ins and
special speaker programs centered on the

'

Movies, slides and pictures of the
will supplement discussion.

*.U

Church affiliation
Many church organizations sponsor
summer seminars for underprivileged
children. Student volunteers from the
University and local high schools could
participate.
*

College

coalition

Projects could be coordinated with local
colleges and universities. (Existing programs include

the storefront extension

centers.)

The “people against racism” program is
unique because it involves the University
as an educational base and springboard for
action. Similar efforts are being organized in Philadelphia, Boston, New York
City and other major cities, Mr. Yates
said.

J»

anyway.

racial crises.
•

n

me xveu

war

leader Daniel Cohn-Bendil
marches in Paris this week in a student
union demonstration against the Gaullist
government. He had been banned from
France, but dyed his hair and entered
Student

‘Danny

speak tomorrow at 9 p.m. in room 339,

HEY SINGLES!

Sibley to lecture
here Wednesday

GO WHERE THE ACTION IS!!

!

The Lively Set
Western New York's Largest and Best Club for Singles Only
(and we mean only)
Don’t be skeptical. Come out to our
Swingle party and find out how much more fun the summer can be.
You qualify is you are 20-35 years of age and want

Mulford Q. Sibley, visiting professor of
political science from the University of
Minnesota, will present a series of three
lectures in the Conference Theater.

something better than bar-hopping.
Airways Hotel, 4230 Genesee St. (at Airport)
1:30 A.M.
Live music plus prizes for finding "Mr. Goodlife"

PARTY TONIGHT:
TIME;
9:30 P.M.

FEATURING:
DRESS: Heels and ties.
COME ALONE OR BRING YOUR FRIENDS

The first in the series will be a discussion of “Non-violence and Revolution”
Wednesday. The succeeding lectures will
cover the topics of “The Theory of the
Just War and Vietnam,” June 25, and
“The President of the United States as
Monarch,” July 9.

—

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*

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Open From 10 A.M. - 5 P.M. Monday - Saturday

LET'S GO

ROOM 339

'

3266 MAIN STREET

}

if

Israeli officers will tell of
their experiences and show
movies, slides and pictures
as well as songs.

i
M

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ET
*

SATURDAY, JUNE 8

'

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�T h

Page Six

•

review

Music of our times
by Sheldon Bergman
Staff Reporter
I've just heard a recording that was
popular 12 years ago.
Spectrum

After the original shock value had subsided, such relatively polished groups as
Dion and the Belmonts and Buddy Holly
and the Crickets pushed the early pio-

sung; the aceontpanists vied instead of
jibed with the singer: the entire production sounded like a first rehearsal instead of the final cutting.
But there was a raw power emanating
from that record—an overwhelming back-

The ultimate softening of the gospel
base came with the emergence of the
Drifters. This Negro group only used a
semblance of “hard rock” in soft ballads.
Yet the “soul sound” was beginning ,vto

unwavering as ever—an amazing display
of the power of an inanimate diety.)
The record jarred when set against the
slick commerciality of today’s recordings.
The manufactured similarity and the lacquered smoothness of the fabricated
sounds of the past few years were missing.
In 1954, Little Richard brought gospel
singing out of the church with “TuttiFrutti” and “Good Golly, Miss Molly.”
It was the birth of the past 14 years’
most popular form of music,
Chuck Berry amplified the baekbeat
with “Roll Over, Beethoven” and “Maybelline.” Bill Haley was one of the first
whites to grasp this music and his combo
enjoyed great success for several years.
But the rawness and natural vitality of
this early “rock-and-roll” was a little too
much of a change to a buying public
weaned on the Ames Brothers and Patti
Page.
As a result, white groups such as the
Crewcuts (“Shh-Boom”) and the Diamonds
(“Little Darlin’ ”) took hits of Negro
groups and modified the songs to make
them palatable to the buying power.

Out of Detroit—Motown— came Smokey
Robinson and the Miracles in 1960.
This sound advanced swiftly, but it
soon had to beat a strategic retreat in the
face of the Beatles invasion. Again, the
public turned to a weakened gospel sound.
Compare the Beatles’ recording of “Roll
Over, Beethoven” with Chuck Berry’s.
There is no question as to which is the
stronger. But as the English surge began
to recede, the soul explosion started to
expand rapidly.
Today, even the Beatles have to acknowledge that we are returning to the
powerful naturalism of the mid-50s (“Lady
Madonna”).
The cycle appears to have finished its
revolution.
Nostalgic listeners
But doesn’t nostalgia have something to
do with this revival of the early rock’n’roll? Atlantic Records alone has produced six records of this genre in the
last four months. The three most popular “rock” stations in Buffalo have all
committed a good deal of time to the
playing of classics.
Audience finally ready
I think that the final factor in this
nascent revival is the sheer force of the
music. The mass public had to be gradually led to the point where it could accept the heavy, raucous beat that the
early groups and singers pounded out.
For the past 15 years it has been underneath every trend in popular music. It
is only now that we are returning to the
beginning because it is only now that we
are becoming able to fully appreciate it.

beat that drove criticism from the mind
and replaced it with a compulsion to
move, jump, bounce, shake, rattle and
roll. Bill Haley had returned. The
Comets were back. And I was again
living in the middle ’50s.
At first I thought it was merely one of
the old hits that WYSL had resurrected
for its “Golden Week.” I was a bit bewildered to discover that it was “a new
release destined for the top ten.” (After
15 years of payola, riggings and exploration, faith in thie totem appears to be as

Friday, June 7, 1968

Spictrum

Allentown art festival
Staff

Reporter

Here Ye! Here Ye! All you lovers of

etchings. Come to quaint olde Allentown
more t.

worl

wax strong again.

awarded in seven categories (including separate classifications for realistic and ab-

by Jim Brennan
Spectrum

late

Bulletin: Mayor Sedita announced
Thursday that the Allentown Art Festival
would be delayed one week because of the
death of Sen. Kennedy.
This 11th annual outdoor art festival is
sponsored by the Allentown Village Society, who boast that this fest is the
“largest outdoor art festival” in New York
State.

The displays, occupying several city
blocks, attracted more than 250,000 visitors last year. The festival headquarters is
located on the corner of Delaware and

Allen Sts.

Artists who have not preregistered will
be able to secure space assignments at
headquarters each morning, where the locations of various artists will be posted
for the benefit cf the public. As an added
goodie, a special newspaper will be distributed throughout the area, providing
visitors with a map of the area and general information about the various exhibits.

On display in Allentown will be paintings, drawings, sculptures, ceramics, photographs and all sorts of artsy-craftsy

items. Both realistic and abstract art will
be included from the most traditional
forms to the newest psychedelic phenomenon. Most of the creators, whose works
are being exhibited, will be on hand to
discuss purchasing prices with prospective
buyers.

than $2000 in prizes

More

will be

stract
They

art)

by two professional judges.

are George Vander Sluis, professor

ment at Cortland State College. Winning
entries will be selected by the judges or
Saturday as they tour the art show. The
winners will be presented their awards on
Sunday at 3:15 p.m by Mayor Frank Se-

dita.

Readings, live music
Continuous entertainment, featuring
well known dance companies, choral

groups, orchestras and blues rock groups,
will be presented during the festival. The
musical presentations will be staged in the
Open House Parking Lot, 512 Delaware
Ave., and admission to all events is free.
The musical groups participating in the
festival on Saturday are: The Rising Sons,
a blues band at 2:45 p.m. and 8 p.m.; the
Zing Kings Jug Band on Franklin and Allen at 3 p.m. and 5:45 p.m.; Community
Ballet School at 3:30 p.m.; Phorion Chamber Eensemble at 4:15 p.m. and 6:30 p.m.;
Ballet School of Buffalo at 5 p.m., and the
Empire State Ballet Company at 7:15 p.m.
On Sunday the schedule is: 1 p.m., Phorion Chamber Ensemble; 1:45 p.m., Poetry
reading by Jean Coutuier; 2 p.m., Zing
Kings Jug Band, Elmwood and Allen; 2:30,
The Rising Sons; 3:14 p.m.,Presentation of
awards by Mayor Sedita; 4 p.m., Villa Maria Academy Glee Club; 4:45 p.m., Royal
Academy of Ballet and Young Dancers
Workshop; 5:30 p.m., Zing Kings Jug Band;
6:15 p.m., Dancers Workshop; 7 p.m., Community Music School Chorale, Kurt Weill’s
“Down in the Valley” and at 7:45 p.m.
“Call Me Lorenzo,” a play by Roger Squire,
presented by the New School of Art.

Television review

McGoohan’s ‘Prisoner’
by Richard Perlmutter
Spectrum

Staff Reporter

It is always an occasion when television
gives birth to anything which is different,
and hence “The Prisoner,” a summer replacement from overseas, is a notable
addition to TV fare. Finally a TV series
is equipped with traces of symbolism and
subtlety.
The story-line is only moderately exciting; a man resigns from a confidential
government post and is kidnapped to a
small village encased by mountains and
sea. Imprisoned by these natural Berlin
Walls and some authoritarian captors, the
man thinks only of escape. Patrick MeGoohan plays the unconvincing stereotyped heroic idealist determined to regain his freedom and retain his individuality.
The other people in the village, presumably there for similar reasons, are all
characterized by striking uniformity. Mannerisms and actions of the villagers are
identical.
People stroll through town in robotlike symmetry. They are known by number only (our helo is number 6) and must
carry numerous ID and credit cards. Here
we have the series’ essential comment on
the individual’s loss of identity to become
a number in a mechanized society.
But the message is conveyed with finesse and subtlety, most unusual foil 'TV

AVt

Big Brothers watch
The village appears to offer everything,
everything but freedom of thought and
action. Big Brothers are everywhere regimenting their brethren. The comparison
with Orwell’s 1984 gtfrs further. Original
thought is taboo as the town is dotted
with such taciturn quotes as “Questions
are a burden to others,” and “A still
tongue makes a happy life.”
The eyes of the leaders are everywhere
peering from statues and monitors guaranteeing that their subjects fit the mold.
The village chiefs even take it upon themselves to keep and write the personal
diaries of the people.
The series is trying to make its viewers
conscious of their loss of significance
and individuality, a necessary consequence
of membership in a mass computerized

*

.

ArUlCSn

The Allentown Art Festival is expected
to attract more than a quarter million
persons. Mayor Sedita will award prizes
totaling $2,500.

ACADEMY AWARD WINNER

X

BEST DIRECTOR

|
|

,X\

KWhol,
/
—

(®

civilization.
In this it is moderately successful but
it remains to be seen whether a TV public
conditioned to low-key adventures and
blunt comedies can accept a program
whose message is just below the surface.
In any case the superb special effects
in themselves make the hour worthwhile.

-m

/

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Stanley Kramer
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Spencer | Sidney Katharine
TRACY POITIER HEPBURN

1

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It HEKTCi

ing pawns.

1

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The village society, comprised of a group
of totalitarian heads and their subjects,
are compared to a human chess game
with the people serving as pawns—weak, obedient, and identical to neighbor-

Vk
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guess who's
coming to dinner
'"jjl

TECHNICOLOR

-

�Friday,

June 7, 1968

P«9* S*v«n

The Spectrum

the spectrum of

spor ts
f

Baseball Bulls close
with record of 16-4
by Richard Baumgarten
Sports Editor

The 1968 State University of Buffalo
baseball team finished its season in fine
fashion. The “handballers” mowed down
their last four opponents to finish with
a 16-4 record—respectable, but not quite
good enough for a major tournament bid.
Any way you look at it, there can be
no tears for the Bulls. From the first
game to the last, the team provided its
fans with an exciting brand of baseball.
The Bulls’ many highlights ranged from
Ken Rutkowski’s steal of home against
ECTI to upset wins over Colgate and
Rochester. Head Coach Bill Monkarsh had
nothing but praise for his players. “I’m
really proud of this team,” said Monk.
“They hung in there all the way. Many
of our games we fell behind, but we came
back to win.”
Surprising infield
Monk was also pleased with the defensive performance of the infield. Considered to be the sore spot on the ball club,
Monkarsh’s makeshift infield with Jim May
at first, Stan Odachowski at second base,
Fran Buehta at shortstop, and Paul DeRosa manning the “hot spot” at third,
surprised a lot of people. “The infield
got better each game,” said Monkarsh.
“They overcame the large handicap of inexperience.”
But it was the senior

triumvirate of

Brian Hansen, Ken Rutkowski and Rick
Wells which really made the Bulls tick.
Hansen, an All-American catcher from
Detroit, closed out a brilliant collegiate
career, leading the Bulls in batting with a

'

Hansen finishes with .47
.

sizzling .477 average, serving as a pillar
of defense behind the plate. Hansen
should go high in the major league baseball draft next April.
Rutkowski was also an important cog
in Buffalo’s baseball machine. Besides
hitting a healthy .310, “Rutko” was the
‘stopper’ on the Buffalo pitching staff,
racking up a 6-2 record with an incredible
0.38 ERA. Rutkowski pitched the Bulls’
top game of the season on May 3 against
arch-rival Buffalo State, shutting out the
Orangemen 2-0 and striking out 15.
Wells; .417
The third member of the “big three,”
outfielder Rick Wells came through with
his biggest varsity season ever. The senior
from Ithaca ripped the ball at a .417 clip

and belted three homers. Wells’ continual
hustle and heads-up play earned him the
respect of his coach and teammates. Coach
Monkarsh once said of Wells: “He’d go
through a brick wall to catch the ball.
He’s that much of a competitor.”
Losing Hansen, Rutkowski and Wells
via graduation is only part of the rebuilding job facing Coach Monkarsh next season. Senior pitchers Dick Pirozollo, Tim
Uraskevitch and George Hofhedns also
hang up their spikes, as do shortstop
Fran Buehta, utility outfieltders John Grad
and Ken Razka, and second-sacker Whdtey
Hubbard.
What’s the outlook for next season?
“We’re going to need some help in the
outfield,” said Monk. “But our pitching
should be strong, and we have some good
prospects coming up from the freshman
team. We also may get some help from the
junior college ranks.”

t

Ldttle

Baumj ;arten on

Bob Lunn of Sacramento, Calif., grimaces as his 9th hole putt at the Atlanta Golf Classic curls away from the
hole, earlier this week.

ports

Buffalo needs stadium
The National Baseball League did the
City of Buffalo wrong. There will be no
major league baseball here at least for
the immediate future. Nothing can be done
about the National League’s decision—it’s
water over the dam. But what happens to
the domed stadium which the Erie County
Legislature had agreed to build? Will the
city leaders show courage of convictions
and go ahead, or will the proposed dome

become an “almost” stadium.
There’s no question about it. Without a
new stadium, preferably domed, Buffalo
has had it as a big-time sports city. Who
in his right mind could blalme Ralph Wilson, owner of the Buffalo Bills, for pulling
Mr. Baumgarten, Summer Spectrum
sports editor, takes a view directly opposite
the editorial opinion of this newspaper. See
related editorial, page 8.
his team out of the Queen City? Face it,
War Memorial Stadium is a white elephant. Besides being unsuited for baseball,
and just passable for football, War Me-

At

A/ Unser

Indy

the 500-mile
was not hurt.

ing

morial Stadium is located in one of the
roughest neighborhoods in town. Throw in
a deplorable parking situation and you’ve
got a strong ease for a new stadium.
If the “wise” civic leaders of this community possessed just one ounce of foresight, Buffalo would have had both a new
stadium and a major league franchise. Instead of building a stadium first like San
Diego and Seattle, and then making their
baseball pitch, the ‘wisemen’ in city hall
voted to add 4500 seats to War Memorial
Stadium at a cost upwards of $1 million.
There is nothing this community can do
about the National League’s decision to bypass Buffalo as an expansion city. What
this community can do is build a sports
complex, and the sooner the better. The
alternative is plain.
If the stadium is not built, you can expect to be reading about either the Seattle
or Montreal Bills. And if you think any of
the present major league franchises would
transfer to a stadiumless Buffalo, don’t
hold your breath waiting.

bounces off the wall after los-

two wheels in the southeast turn of
race

Memorial

Day. He

Bulls knick ECTI, 7-2

This year’s varsity tennis team,
behind
the steady play and leadership of captain
and first singles player Jim Ripley, presented coach Bill Sanford with his 200th
career varisity tennis triumph. This high
of the season came against a strong
team ' The entire state University
of
including the manager, was
for
this
match and prevailed
psyched
,

Pisonl nc

a cketmen ’ alth
°ugh com
an
n
S ng
faced the toughestrecord for the sea
faced
and best compet0

tf

.

°

,

i

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n.

ff

ition ever. The team played the likes of

Colgate, Pittsburgh, Syracuse and Buffalo
State. This led Coach Sanford to label the
squad as “good competitors, boys who never gave up, and were always
fighting,”
Sanford has high hopes for the coming
season. He inherits a freshman team that
compiled a perfect 4-0 record. This freshmen team, described as “the best ever” by
Mr. Sanford, plus several key
returnees
from this year’s varsity, should
combine
to give Buffalo a strong and highly competitive team for next season.

Wins at
P I
Belmont

Stage Door Johnny (7) wins the Belmont S,akes in New
York. While students at most colleges this week were
s till in the midst of exams, some persons
were making hay" at the race track.

�Editorials

J(||

(}

Without expression, freedom of expression is meaningless

Well, the Faculty Senate went off by itself a few weeks
ago and came out of its meeting sporting a neon-lighted sandwich board that flashes in alternating red and blue lights:
“We support an open campus.”
And that’s nice. The Spectrum supports an open campus, too. WeTe glad—in a way—that military recruiters will
be allowed on campus. We don’t think that anyone should be
barred from speaking at an institution of higher learning, so
long as somebody at that institution wants them there.
And we’re sure that there must be someone in the University community, somewhere, who actually wants recruiters here. The rest of us, then, should accede to those wishes,
and let the military be heard. Yes, even recruit on campus.
We share the fears of President Meyerson, that exclusion
of one group now might lead to exclusion of others in the
future.
But we also know that there are many persons who feel
that the issue of military recruiting for an immoral war deserves special consideration. They believe that the tragedy
of Vietnam overshadows the traditional concept of the open
campus. And they have every right to be heard. They should
have been heard. But they weren’t.
And for that we are very, very sorry.
The Spectrum urged the Faculty Senate May 7 not to
consider lifting its earlier recruiting ban until September.
Until student opinion could be ascertained. Until all sides
could adequately have aired their views. Until a deliberate
and comprehensive review of U.S. policies in Southeast Asia,
Selective Service ravings, and campus-related consequences
could be made.
But instead the Senate cowered away somewhere—when
students were taking exams and were unavailable—and hastily decided to uphold the open campus policy
Congratulations
Now we wonder if the Faculty Senate will wind up counter-reversing itself in September, because there may be hell
to pay when returning students realize what has happened.
And in the long run, this decision may actually alienate some
persons toward the open campus philosophy . . . particularly
when those first few gradaute students get drafted.

Forget it

Erie County has a unique opportunity to save $50
million!
It can forget about building a new stadium.
We’re not weeping over the loss of Buffalo’s bid for a
National League franchise. Not because we don’t want a
major league baseball team in this city. But because at
this point in her history, Buffalo needs much more than a
multi-million dollar investment in mass entertainment.
It is inconceivable to us that the County Legislature
would spend the enormous sum of $50 million for a sports
arena, when the City of Buffalo—core of the county—is
beset by so many problems that just a few million dollars
would go a long way towards remedying.
Montreal, one of the cities included in the NL expansion,
is the proud possessor of a mere $3V2 million stadium.
With Buffalo’s staggering problems—race relations, inadequate school facilities, crime, fire, underpaid employees,
traffic, pollution—even a $3Va million stadium would be too
extravagant an investment.
If the white middle class really must have this ‘toy,’ let’s
refurbish the stadium we’ve got, and thus make a commitment to the urban core.
We don’t need this thing. We hope the County Legislature comes to the same conclusion.
during
The Spectrum is published twice-weekly
every Tuesday and Friday
Fridays
the regular academic year, and weekly
from June to September,
Associaiton of the
except during examination periods by the Faculty-Student
State University of New York at Buffalo, Inc. Offices are located at 355 Norton
Hall, State Univeisitv of New York at Buffalo, 3435 Main Street, Buffalo, New
—

—

—

—

York 14214.
Summer Editor

...RICHARD R. HAYNES

Managing Editor
Business Manager

SAMUEL

DANIEL LASSER
A. POWAZEK

Campus News
.Marge Anderson City Editor
.Peter Simon
Feature Editor
Lori Pendrys Sports
.Richard Baumgarten
Photography
Robert Hsiang Layout
David L. Sheedy
Copy Editor
...Murray Richman
Judi Riyeff Advertising
The Spectrum is a member of the United States Student Press Association
and the Associated Collegiate Press. The Spectrum is served by: United Press
International, College Press Service, Gannett News Service, and the Los Angeles
Times Syndicate.
Republication of all news dispatches is forbidden without express consent
of the Editor-in-Chief. Rights of republication of all other matter herein are
also reserved.
Editorial policy is determined by the Editor-in-Chief.
Second class postage paid at Buffalo, New York.
Represented for advertising by National Educational Advertising Service, Inc.,
18 E. 50th Street, New York, New York 10022.
Basic advertising rate; $2.75; summer rale: $2.25 per column inch. Contract
..

....

request.
Sumtnpr circulation; 10,000.
Telephone: Area code 716;

rates upon

Editorial, 831-2210; Business, 831-3610.

r*

i

QjTjmfK

y

i

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k

II

,-n IWttMNUIK
sntNoneg

Batts...

&lt;*&amp;&amp;.

'Time for your warm gruel and milk, mon

president.'

Readers
writings

’

Refractions
by J.L. McCrary
McCrary here. Hot shot silver-throated columnist for The Spectrum summer edition. For the
whole long hot summer I’ll be here, pot-shotting
polished pasteurized politicians, lambasting lilylivered liberals, rousing rackless raging radicals,
cornering confounded cantankerous conservatives,
and axing at all America’s awesome arrogance.

That’s the joy of columnizing. Mixed with that
joy of pot-shotting, lambasting, rousing and cornering is the revolting, though very real, responsibility
to you, my friend, the reader.
What this column intends to do is, by one means
or the next, portray this campus, this city, the
nation, the world, the universe in simplified terms.
What will happen is this: We’ll take a complex
problem like France. And Big DeG. Now most
know that France is undergoing its most trying
days since Doug MacArthur lafayetted himself back

Java for graduation?!
To the Editor:

My parents came all the way from New York
City to watch my graduation. I knew that nobody
would get much personal recognition from the
proceedings. The State University of Buffalo is
a big school, after all, and very diverse.
What troubles me is that such a fine institution
couldn’t come up with a better speaker. People
like Walter Cronkite, Kingfish Brewster and even
LBJ are speaking at colleges not too far from here.
So what do we get? Some lady Regent relating

her travels in Java!!
I guess I shouldn’t have expected much. Four
years at Buffalo with all her crowded classrooms
and dorms has taught me not to expect much.
But next year, not for me, but for a friend, let’s
get someone good, like President Wallace.

into that noble land. Trouble is, few know what
the real story is. France is just plain revolting

Samuel P. ’68

to some.
A confusing situation like France can be scaled
simplified into something very less
complex. Like Columbia, gem of a university,
with its clawed and kirking students.

down and

together the threads of the argument. Call French students Columbia students,
seizing, barracading, struggling individuals attempting to initiate changes. Call DeG Kirk. Call the
Gym Gold. Paint the walls. Call striking faculty
members confused unemployed factory workers.
Deck the halls. See how easy it is?
Let us tie

Now we have France distilled and boiled down
into Columbia and Columbia stinking with rotting
eggs and France stinking with garbage in the
streets which, if you remember, was the result
of the Garbage Strike in New York.

So boil the eggs and boil the garbage and you
will find as the end product the sickening slush,
the basic substance, the ultimate mass, that all
men call the world.

It must be understood hereonin, trusty reader,
that JX. McCrary is no advocate of simplification.
The technique, the methodology of it, was not
developed in a day, however, and it is with real
purpose that it is done. In some words, it’s this:
The ramifications of the simplification of a given
situation are of such a nature that the reader
can begin to know bis world. And that’s important;
especially important in this post cold guerrilla
nuclear war age.

In the weeks ahead, we’ll simplify national
politics, the international gold situation, the balance of payments debacle, the new left, the old
right, the Poor People, the filthy rich. And near
the end we’ll take a close look at the press—in
Buffalo and in the nation.
Hoping, fjriends, that it will be as enjoyable
a summer as the Queen City can afford; and not
the one that, because of indifference or inaction,

Buffalo burns.

UB: ‘horrible’ for summer
To the Editor:
This is a perfectly horrible place to be stuck
for the summer!
I’m a commuter. But if I lived on campus, I
think I’d croak-out over the summer.
Norton Hall isn’t open on Sunday, nor very late
any other time. It should be opened around the
clock, not closed at 4:30 p.m. Saturdays.
The bookstore isn’t open very much. Ugly.
What are resident students without automobiles
to do?
Going crazy,

Mark Y.

Good luck, draft dodger!
To the Editor;
Four photos on the front page of The SP ec‘
trum supposedly displayed futile attempts to burn
an induction notice by Mr. Bruce Beyer. Casual observation reveals Mr. Beyer puffing on a cigarette
not
in two of the photos. Mr. Beyer evidently did
have the persence of mind to use the burning butt
dangling from his mouth. As such, he probably
tn
would be of little value in a situation wherein
exercise of common sense might mean life or deai
aI would like to wish Mr. Beyer success in his
tempts to evade the service. There are two reasoi
for this desire:

1—The

off
army would probably be better

without him.

2—1 graduated this May and face induction
myself within the months immediately ther
depc
after. I sure as hell wouldn’t want to
upon him to guard my flank.

Joseph A.

DiRamio

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                    <text>Drafters may compromise!
A special University convocation of all students, undergraduate and graduate, and faculty will be held this afternoon at 3 p.m. in the Millard Fillmore Room.
The purpose of the meeting, called by The Student As-

uate School, will be to discuss and help formulate University
policy in regards to a recent disclosure that it may be possible
for some graduate students to receive occupational deferments.
The state-level advisory committee to the Selective Service
System suggested in a meeting
Saturday to State University of
Buffalo representatives the “possibility” that some graduate students who engage in “full-time
teaching” may be granted occupational deferments (II-A) under
the Selective Service System.

SSS procedure

Under the suggested plan the
student and the University would
notify local draft boards (in whatever state) of their intention to
request II-A classification, or in
the case of students already engaged in their duties, would request reclassification to II-A.
At the initial contact, a request
would be made that the local
board seek advice from the “Advisory Committee on Scientific,
Engineering, Agricultural, and
Specialized Personnel” (this body
advises the State Office of the
Selective Service System in Albany) regardless of where in the
U.S. the local board might be.
Should the H-A classification be
denied, the student and the university (if the university had already joined in the initial request) would then appeal the
classification, while at the same
time requesting a change of jurisdiction to the New York State
appeal board.
The local board must grant
such a change of jurisdiction.
Then the New York State SSS
would make a final decision.

Referendum

There is a standard form to fill
out, each entry having a certain
“unit value.” Most of our present TAs would, probably, score 32
units at most; SSS representatives
have indicated, off the record,
that 25 units has been suggested
as a guideline, but there is no
guarantee that such a guideline
would be maintained, or that our
TAs would actually be allowed
the 32 units claimed.
Today’s meeting has been called
“urgent” because of'the need for
the University to make a decision on the matter before June
1, when the reclassification be-

have informally offered several
contradictory guidelines and
formulas: (1) whatever load a faculty member ordinarily carries;
(2) whatever the university can
mester; (4) a person cannot be a
full-time teacher and at the same
time carry a substantial program
of study.
“To add to the confusion, it has
also been stated informally that
teaching required of the graduate student as part of his degree
program cannot be grounds for
occupational deferment.”
University policy says that al-

most all graduate students must

do some teaching as a part of the

Ph.D, requirements.

Assistantships

“Although officials are unwil

ley say
or Research Assistants may also
receive II-A classifications. They
seem to plan a sliding scale here,
top priority to go to students
working under federal grants
such as Public Heatlh, Depart-

ment of Defense, National Science
Foundation, etc. It may be that
scientists would be deferred before non-scientists, if local practice in the past is any indication.

Stoehr.
The statement reads as follows
Facts and guesses
“According to SSS representatives, it will not be SSS policy to
defer all graduate students, but
only some of those who are engaged in ‘full-time teaching.’
“General Hershey, when himself pressed recently for a definition of full-time teaching, refused to be specific. SSS advisors

A special Polity meeting is scheduled at 7 p.m.
tonight in the Millard Fillmore Room to discuss the
issue of mandatory fees.
A referendum will be held tomorrow to determine whether the student activity fee and/or athItic fee will b mandatory here. The outcome will be
binding pending the decision Thursday of the State
University of New York Board of Trustees.
Only undergraduates will be able to cast ballots
at the polls in Norton Hall from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
The Student Coordinating Council passed a proposal last week recommending that activity fees be
made mandatory.

regulations

concerning

Please turn to Page 9

WAV

"

VED
1968

ttrsity

CHIVES
Vol. 18, No. 52

Tuesday, May 7, 1968

Albany's reaction

Protesters may be denied state aid
by Peter Simon
Assistant

City Editor

The recent events at Columbia University
ALBANY
have set off a reaction in the legislative halls of Albany.
A bill has been introduced in the State Senate which
would deny state financial assistance to any student who
violates the law while participating in a campus demonstration.
Senate Majority Leader Earl W. Brydges, a Niagara
Falls Republican who originated the bill, made it clear that
it is largely a response to the Columbia demonstrations.

return the award to the student
on the basis of his good conduct.

—

After viewing pictures of
the disrupted Columbia campus, Sen. Brydges remarked
rifling of the desk of the
president of the university
just can’t be tolerated.”
If the bill passed, New York
State scholarship and scholar incentive awards would be taken
away from students at any col-

lege, who are convicted of perpetrating felonies and various
misdemeanors, including trespass,
on college campuses.
The Board of Regents would
have the discretion to decide after two years whether or not to

Sen. Brydges introduced his
measure following a 45-roinute
Senate debate focusing on Columbia’s construction of a gymnasium
in a Harlem park, over neighborhood objections.
During the debate, four Democratic Assemblymen from New
York City called for the resignation of Columbia’s president, Dr.
Grayson Kirk.
Assemblymen Jerome Kretchner, Albert Blumenthal and Leon-

ard Yoswein declared that the

president’s decision to ask police
� Please turn to Page 8

rate that may be charged.
The minimum rents vary from
$30 to $55 for each of the authority’s housing projects. However, the minimum for students
at all of the projects is now set
at the $56 figure.
A graduate student in the English Department of the University,
who wished to remain anonymous,

said that “it doesn’t matter if
you’re not affected by the minimum amount because your income brings your rent above that
level. The point is that they’re
(the Housing Authority) discriminating against students by setting their minimum rate higher

The number of students living
the Kenfield Project, which
houses only married couples, is
estimated at between 125 and than others’.”
150, Of these, most are graduate
students at the University.
"Worth the money"
There are, however, other area
The student, a resident at the
projects. All of these are affected
Kenficld Project, described the
by the rate increase.
units as “worth the money.” Most
Unreported income
of the units are two- or threeAn official for the Buffalo Mubedroom apartments. The size of
nicipal Housing Authority said
the apartment an individual is
that the different rate for stugiven is determined by his numdents was based on the assumpber of children, and does not aftion that students have sources fect his rent.
of income which they may not
The student complained that
report when applying for hous‘'all that is irrelevant. The fact reing. The rent in each housing
mains that they’re going on the
project is based on an individual's assumption that students can pay
stated income and his number of njore than others, and that’s not
dependents, with a set minimum always the case.”
in

Mann's 300 Club and adjoining business were
hit by a 4-alarm fire last week, that left many
campus beer drinkers sad indeed. Firefighters
are accustomed to answering calls in the University area—most of them false. Story on page 13.

45-minute debate

Public housing projects
raise rents for students

$40.

•

specific

State University of New York at Buffalo

Charges of discrimination were
aired by students living in the
Kenfield Housing Project, 39
Tower Ave., as a result of an
increase in their minimum monthly rent from $40 to $56 beginning May 1. The minimum amount
for other residents remains at

||
(Hidif

in ‘the national interest,’ according to SSS criteria. This was explicitly stated by the SSS representative.
“Other fellowships may have

*

Students living in area
public housing are now finding themselves paying up to
40 per cent more in rent
than other residents.

C.J

example, stipulate that no fellow
may teach during his first year,
so that a ‘National Defense’ recipient would not qualify as being

The Spectrum

gins.

An ad hoc committee, made up
of students, faculty and administrators, released Sunday for consideration at today’s convocation
an explanatory statement and a
list of suggested alternatives.
Signers of the statement include; David Edelman, Andrew
W. Holt, Barry Holtzclaw, Dr.
Irving Massey, Carl Murphy, Richard Schwab, Dr. Fred M. Snell,
Ronald Stein and Dr. Taylor

It is not clear where the cut-off
point would come.
“Students on NDEA or Graduate School fellowships or traineeships would not be considered for
deferment unless they were teach-

�Th

Pag* Two

•

Tuesday, May 7, 1968

Spectrum

Smaller budget to bring
Need shown for increased services set-back at new campus

Health auestionnair

During the
sion

and to find out how much stu-

January interses-

980 full-time

may have alsi

dents knew This educational fac.

undergraduate

whole suggested program; you
just don’t hand them (contracep-

questionnaire concerning their attitude toward and knowledge of
pre-marital sex and contraceptives. The Student Senate Health
Service mailed the questionnaires
to the randomly selected students.
From a response of 381 (39%),
the originators of the questionnaire, Maria Goerss and Marge
Zinsley, decided there is sufficient need for the University
health service to increase activi-

tives)

out.”

Of those replying, 47% said
they have had pre-marital sex. It
was also found that only 12% had
used no type of contraceptive.
Among those students who took
precautionary measures, “the pill”
was labeled the most effective.
It must be taken into consideration that the study was done at
random, and that the response
was probably too small to be
called definitely indicative of the
sexual habits and thoughts of
the whole undergraduate class.
Miss Zinsley said “that of those
who sent back the questionnaires,
most were interested in contraceptives. The fact that many people get engaged in their junior
and senior years and that many
upperclassmen move off campus

ties and aid students in two ways.
One would be free dispersal of
contraceptives by the health service, the other to set up a family
living

course.
Educational factor

According to Miss Zinsley, the
questionnaire had been planned
“with the idea of showing the
Health Service that there was a
need to disperse contraceptives

Students get chance
to evaluate courses

cruitment and new programs
—serious consequences if the
New York State legislature
does not consider re-appropriating $600,000 cut from
the State University of Buffalo’s operating budget—will
cause a definite set-back in
the preparations for Amherst.

Learn from friends
The need for greater sex education was demonstrated by the
fact that 60% of the students
stated their best source of knowledge on sex was their friends.
The reaction of the health service, however, has not been encouraging to the survey’s sponsors. “Dr. Hoffman realizes there
is a problem,” said Miss Zinsley,
“but there is no money. Right
now they're understaffed; they
don’t expect a new physician for
two years. In order to issue girls
birth control pills, a complete
physical examination would be
needed. This means the health
service would have to acquire a

The 1968-69 budget allows for
recruitment of only 21 new faculty members this year. The
University hired nearly 100 professors last year.
Kxttubu Wee president Peter
F. Hr;:,in explained lie decrease
in Universities monies as part of
the “economizing” of the State
government. Inner-city problems
and elementary education, have
higher priority he said.

I

gynecologist.”

Funds for the University health
service come from Albany, This
University is considered to have
a good health service, thus additional funds are not likely to be
forthcoming. Money for their proposals would probably have to
come from other channels.

Discuss problems
The Health Service is willing

to discuss any problems a girl
presents to them and they will

Attend class on Tuesday and help "formalize
the grapevine" of second semester courses.
IBM sheets will b distributed at the beginning
of each class for students to evaluate the professor
and his methods of teaching. Students should bring
a No. 2 pencil to class.
The comments will be compiled in the second
edition of the Student Course and Teacher Evaluation booklet.
Penny Bergman, co-chairman of the evaluation
project, urges students to also write evaluations
of professors "who refuse to participate in the
program."
The Buffalo Scale, which evaluates first semester courses, is on sale in Room 205, Norton Hall
for 75c.

refer girls to gynecologists.
Although 68.6% of the students
who responded desired contraceptive dispersal, only 37% wanted a family living course.
Probably no definite action will
take place as a result of this
survey. Miss Zinsley, who is graduating, said that all she could do
was “leave the information behind for other students to carry
on.”
This University was one of 200
schools to conduct a recent survey on these topics. However,
95% of the schools put a restriction on which students could answer questions—girls had to be
either married or over 21.
Besides the above totals and
percentages some questions were
correlated along certain divisional
lines for additional information.
For instance it was found that
the percentage of male students
engaging in permarital intercourse rise from 50% in the freshman year to 65.4% by the time
they are seniors. For female students the percentage is 24%&gt; having premarital intercourse in
their freshman year with an increase to 59.6% in their senior

When the State legislature approved the $50 million budget in
March, the University found itself almost $600,000 short. Dr.
Regan said the “significant cut”
came through an increase in the
savings factor, an amount one
assumes will not be spent when

planning a budget.
The legislature assumed the
University would have fewer
graduate students this year, he
said. ‘Actually we’ve received
2000 more applicants.”
“But the game isn’t over yet,”
Dr. Regan continued. Both President Martin Meyerson and Chancellor Samuel Gould will “fight
tooth and nail with the legislature” to have the cut restored.
“We must convince the Gov-

ernor’s office that the Univer-

sity must expand by 50% in the
next five years” said Dr. Regan.
The legislature looks at Buffalo as a more “mature institu-

tion” than any other unit in the
State University system. The higher level comes from the larger
enrollment of undergraduates and
graduates and the number of degrees granted each year.
“gradual build-up,
But the
which is the best investment for

Twelve undergraduates are canLiving quarters also proved to didates for the University delegabe a factor. 46.6% of males in tion to the National Student Association Congress this summer.
University Housing have had premarital sex, compared to 70.4% Only four will be elected.
Voting will begin at 9 a.m.
of males living in rented apartments or rooms. This gap is even tomorrow in Norton Hall. Only
larger with female students, the undergraduates with validated I.D.
increase being from 25.4% to cards will be allowed to vote.
66.1%.
Polls will be open till 6 p.m.

The Pumpkin Eater
with ANNE BANCROFT of "The Graduate"
and

PETER FINCH and JAMES MASON

CONFERENCE THEATER
THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY

11 on Friday and Saturday

The
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battle with the State legisla-

fure

the University” must be continued, Dr. Regan advised. In the
planning for the new Amherst
campus, initial increases in faculty and academic programs
must ‘'precede increases in space
and enrollment.”

If both Mr. Meyerson and Dr.
Gould fail to convince the legislature of the University’s view,
Dr. Regan predicted that serious
“belt-tightening” will have to begin. Over the summer months,
economizing would take place in
certain areas as secretatarial
pools and central duplicating service areas.
A bulk of the $600,000 cut was
budgeted for new programs and
continued staffing in departments. Ecnomy measures may
cause a two to three month delay
in such programs as the School of
Architecture and Design, the Immunology Center, the Policy Sciences doctorate program and the
undergraduate program in Amercan studies.
The library, which will “suffer”
more than any individual area,
will be cut in acquisitions of new
books, Dr. Regan said.

CHECKPOINT foreign

Friedman, Martin Guggenheim,
Cindy Jones, Harry Klein, Jeffrey Merlin, Richard Miller, Daryl
Rosenfeld, Denise Silverman, Barry Tellman and Shelly Zoier.
The 21st NSA Congress will be
held August 17 to 26 at the University of Kansas, Manhattan,
Kan. Delegates will be entitled
to vote for the University at all
legislative meetings and will have
full Congress privileges.
Student Association President
Richard Schwab, NSA co-ordinator
Ellen Price and NSA regional officer Meryl Markowitz will also
be part of the delegation.

This year’s theme is “Student
Coming of Age?” DisPower
cussion at the Congress will also
include continuation of the NSA
Drug Education program.
—

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car

sales

KENMORE AVE.—a few blocks

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service

from Campus

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The candidates are: Tracy Cottone, Barbara Emilson, Michael

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836-4041

�T h

Tuesday, May 7, 1968

•

Pag*

Spectrum

Thr**

Committee formed to Faculty Senate meeting to discuss
solve ghetto problems postponement of military recruit rs
by Linda Laufer
Spectrum

by Steven Pray

Staff Reporter

Spactrum

Staff Raporttr

Discussion of a resolution that
“The University can only do so much and if the Univerof
sity fails in its commitment to the black ghetto, it’s not the “recommends postponement
military recruiting on campus”
fault of the administration but the fault of the 20,000 people all
will continue at a Faculty Senate
who walk around here in fantasy land every day.’ This commeeting. The exact time will be
ment is William Austin’s, president of the Black Student determined by a meeting of the
Association and member of the newly formed Committee on Executive Committee this week
to be called by Dr. Adolf HamEqual Opportunity.
burger.
Four students have been apPerformance lacking
The Faculty Senate will discuss
pointed to this committee. Repre“Why should South Vietnam be a motion which would delay decisenting the Student Association
given special privileges as far as sion concerning military recruitare Mr. Austin and Ronald MarAmerican know-how and energy ers on campus until student opindenbro. Randall Porter and Mrs.
Beatrice Mason represent the
Graduate Student Association and
the Millard Fillmore College Student Association, respectively.

Community committee

Mr. Austin said: “This commit-

tee should start not as a University committee, but as a community committee making use of the
expertise of the State University

of Buffalo. The committee should
attempt to alleviate the problems
with feasible beneficial programs
for the community. It should have
the full support; of the University
and the community in the implementation of these programs.”
He also feels that the University can not be the center; that
it can “help, but can not lead or
direct or dictate.” Believing that
the University should have a
strong supporting role, he said
that the ghetto can not be offered a program if there is no
one from the ghetto on the committee. He indicated that it should
be dominated by Negroes if it is
for their benefit.
One of the programs in which
Mr. Austin is interested calls for
an increase in the number of
black students and black faculty
on campus. He also is concerned
with establishing courses that are
relevant to a black person.
Mr. Austin believes that the
“University should open its facilities to the black community.
Although it is open to the community at large, the activities
that take place on the University
are not of great interest to black
people
ghetto resident or black
student.”
—

Eliminate stereotype
In addition, he remarked that
the main thing is to “try to eliminate the black stereotype that
pervades the white mind on this
campus. The white student should
be exposed to the ups and downs
of Negro history and the role
played by the white in that his-

tory.”
When asked what would happen eventually, Mr .Austin replied: “The University can't work
on the premise of eventuality.
Eventually doesn’t leave much
hope for anybody. The University
should start making guarantees.”
It should be guaranteed “that
this University will accept black
leadership on its Committee on
Equal Opportunity and that it
will guarantee the black people
of the local community a stake
in the function of this institution
of education.”

is concerned?” he said. "Why ion is ascertained. If the motion
is passed, “the expressed wishes
should the U.S. worry about curtailing communism? Aren’t the of recognized student organizamore
tions” would be considered by
Negroes just as valuable or
so than saving Vietnam from the Faculty Senate.
Vietnamese and saving the world
Winter substitute
from communism? Americans proProfessor Step Winter, at the
vide special privileges and status
April 25 meeting of the Faculty
to white Americans and foreigners, why not to the black men? Senate, moved that the original
Is she afraid to play the same Executive Committee resolution
game at home that she plays in “to admit military recruiters to
the international field? It's not campus” be substituted by a rescommunism that America should olution postponing military rebe afraid of, but it should be cruiting. This “Winter” substitute
America itself that should, be resolution will be on the agenda
feared. I’m not questioning the of the next meeting.
The resolution describes the
performpotential of the U.S.
“conflict with the pronounceance is the letdown.”
—

Dateline news. May 7

Sweatshirt
SALE

3610 Main

833-7131

candidates announced

Thomas E. Connelly, Edgar Z. Frledenberg and
are candidates for vice chairman
of the Faculty Senate.
Both Jacob D. Hyman and David R. Kochery
have declined the nomination for this position.
The election will take place through written
ballot. Faculty members of the Senate will elect
at the same time the secretary, parliamentarian
and member of the State-wide University Senate.
Ballots must be returned May 15. Announcements of the new officers will be made public
May 16.
Jack D. Klingman

WASHINGTON—Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield says
Johnson and his top peace advisers be given “as much leeway as possible” in the upcoming talks with North Vietnam in Paris.

He specifically rejected suggestions that he lead a congressional
delegation to the talks due to begin this Friday.
“We should give the administration as much leeway as possible,”
Mansfield said in an interview Sunday. “These talks are not going to
be easy.”

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Mr. Meyerson said there was
“no tangible evidence of individuals” being punished by draft
boards. He indicated that it might
be wise for the Senate to table
the resolution and determine if
there was a single individual
whose liberties have been violated
by an application of the Hershey
directive.

president

-

BUFFALO

faced.” He indicated that discussion concerned an “exclusion
principle” which, if applied to
the military, might also be applied by those with great power
against other groups, political in
nature, student or faculty,

Diplomatic sources said one may be selected for the talks exPresident de Gaulle’s host regime publicly said nothing about the

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Yielding the chair, President
Meyerson said at the last meeting
that he believed the Senate was
dealing “with as perilous an issue
as a university senate has ever

Faculty Senate officer

PARIS —Picking a spot for U.S.-North Vietnamese preliminary
peace talks centered near the arch of triumph and sites made famous
by Marie Antoinette, Madame de Pompadour and Charles de Gaulle.

may we suggest

and

ice,”

“Whereas, the faculty at the
State University of New York at
Buffalo desires to protect its students from falling victim to existing differences of opinion between
independent branches of government and to the resulting confusion about the effect and consequences of protest activities . . .
“Now therefore be it resolved,
that the faculty recommends postponement of all military recruiting on campus until a clear and
uniform policy has been established which guarantees to the
members of the academic community the constitutional right to
dissent without jeopardizing their
deferment status and until adherence to that policy by the
Selective Service director is assured.”

But the fact Hanoi has indicated publicly for the first time its
also “other problems of interest to the two sides” is widely interpreted
here as meaning North Vietnam is prepared for negotiations over a
much broader field than originally assumed.

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“Be it further resolved, that
those students who chose to emigrate and/or go to jail rather
than participate in military service, shall maintain all credits,
status and privileges at the State
University of New York at Buffalo equal to those entering upon
and returning from military serv-

tice Department and the White
House,” concerning the status of
students who engage in protests
and
demonstrate.
The
two
branches of government are "at
cross-purposes with respect to
fundamental policies governing
the administration of the Selective Service Law.”

LONDON —The Vietnam “preliminary talks” scheduled to open
in Paris Friday or soon after may develop into a full-scale peace conference, many informed western diplomats said today.

spot.

Lachman resolution

ments of the Selective Service
director, spokesman for the Jus-

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�Tuesday, May 7, 1968

The Spectrum

Page Four

Table it
The discussion in next week’s scheduled Faculty Sen-

ate meeting will begin by opening debate on a crucial amendment to the proposed resolution, calling for the delay of a
decision concerning military recruiters until “total student
opinion is ascertained.”
Passage of the amendment is an absolute prerequisite
to a decision on the larger question of military recruitment.

However, it is readily apparent that it will be impossible to
adequately ascertain the “total student opinion . . . pursuant to the expressed wishes of recognized student organizations” at such a late date in the school year.

We therefore urge the Faculty Senate to pass the amend-

ment and appropriately table the entire question until
September.

How to combat the SSS
In several respects today’s special University convocation
is the most important single event of the year.
The decision reached at the “town meeting” this afternoon will be at least extremely influential in guiding the policies of this University in regards to its compliance or noncompliance with the Selective Service Bureau.
Because today’s discussions may well determine the fate
of this University, and more importantly of every student at
this University, we urge all students and faculty to cancel all
meetings and classes and meet in the Fillmore Room at 3 p.m.
Some important questions will have to be discussed, concerning the position the University should take in response to
the Selective Service System’s halt-hearted and ill-disguised
attempt to co-opt and appease a threatened educational systm, as well as the more important larger role the University
may take in defining its stance against its real threat—the
War.
Should the University request occupational deferments
for teaching and research assistants?
Should departments assign teaching positions to all those
most vulnerable?

Should the University increase teaching duties of grad-

uate students to meet more certainly the vagueness of the

criterion of “full-time”?

Should the policy be one of entirely local option for de-

partments and programs to take those steps that lead to
maximum possible II-A deferments?

Full compliance with the SSS proposal would probably result in some deferments. Probably most non-TAs
would be classified I-A and perhaps some TAs as well. The
University would find itself sometimes “granting” deferments when it granted TAs and “guaranteeing” induction
when it turned down candidates for TAs.
•

•

The various alternatives of non-cooperation would

turn the selection problem back to the SSS.

A blanket refusal to supply any statement would probably result in a higher proportion of non-science TAs,
though much reclassification would probably be on a random basis.
A position like that taken by Harvard would probably result in a variety of classifications according to the statements
made by individual departments and faculty, with a result
being very similar to that of full-cooperation.
Another alternative is the tactic of sending uniform
“John Doe” letters to the draft boards of all draftable students, outlining in detailed rhetoric the role of every graduate student in the University, while providing no detailed
information. The local boards might grant some deferments,
though it is likely that at the appeal level such statements
would not carry much weight. And, while it is possible that
this tactic could result in more refusals to defer than that of
full cooperation, it might also slow and complicate the decisions of SSS, and would constitute a kind of non-cooperation
difficult for the SSS to combat.
Because of the necessity to combat the real causes of the
situation we strongly urge that participants at today’s meeting adopt a resolution calling for the University to refuse to
cooperate with the Selective Service System in its choice of
graduate students, and provide no information to them concerning graduate students, other than a uniform assertion of
their teaching and research role in the University.

More editorials on
page 6
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"Student been giving you some heat again?"

Readers

The Sham

writings

by Martin Guggenheim

There are a number of thoughts in my mind
as I begin the process of thinking about and writing
my last column. The most natural thing to do is
remember many of the columns of the past year.
When you write a column which has as its aim
to change things, you must also evaluate your
column accordingly. In the American way of evaluating success, the proper thing to do is count
the credits and debits and decide accordingly.
It occurs to me, however, that since September
this country has gone from a terrible place to
almost an uninhabitable place. I’d prefer not to
use change as my criteria for judgment. In September, my friends still talked about reform; by midyear, they talked about revolution; now nothing
seems to be worth the effort.

I will be able to rationalize the value in this
column by simply arguing that I’ve made some people conscious of what is happening and I’ve made
other people angry.
Things continue to disturb me, however. There
were a number of problems I mentioned on this
campus which not only were not changed, but
were not even defended.
The one conclusion most people seem to reach
these days is that a lot of things need to be changed;
the hassle begins when we discuss how? and, to
what? Precisely what we should change to is still
a mystery, but there are a few conclusions I have
come to after this year, in the area of how.
If charity begins in the home, then life begins
there, too. Many millions of things need to be
changed in, say, this country. But most of those
things exist as they do because of our over all
system or, really, philosophy. It does not make
sense to condemn others, or to try to get others to
change what they are doing, when we are committing the same wrongs ourselves. This does hot
but rather
mean that we should do nothing
that we should first change our own faults.
The faculty on this campus is particularly guilty
of what 1 am talking about. Parents are often guilty
of this same thing. It we are ever to experience a
revolution that will work, it will have to come from
within. It is difficult, not to mention deceitful, to
chastise others for only doing what we do. Psychologists have recognized man’s need to do this
and call it projection. We often hate others because they force us to see ourselves. Perhaps the
only reason we don’t wage war on Vietnam is because we have no power to do so. Perhaps the
only reason we don’t murder others is because we
can’t get away with it.
It is not meaningful to condemn our national
policies when we don’t try to change our own
lives. If we don’t live beautiful lives, if we don’t
strive to become beautiful people, there will be no
revolution. But it is much easier to talk than to
act. And very few people are willing to admit their
own faults. This was probably my greatest fault
this year
but if there is any knowledge to be
gained at all in this institution, I have learned that.
We should never forget what it means to be black
in this country. We should never forget what it
means to be yellow or red either. I am not suggesting that all is suddenly well. If there was a quick
solution to any of these problems this column
would not be written today. But there is not.
Given this, the method we choose to revolt is as
important as the goals we seek. We need a revolution. When the guns are fired this summer by our
black brothers, where will we white liberals be?
Many of us will be drafted this summer; if we
go to War we will be murderers, I say that unequivocally. If we do not individually decide
whether or not to murder, we are nothing.
gmom
nBtff
frniyy,
—

—

?

’

Call him irresponsible
To the Editor:
Military recruitment should be suspended on
this campus until General Hershey rescinds his
directive that protesters of the war and the draft
be reclassified 1-A.
Some members of the Executive Committee of
the Faculty Senate and some speakers at the Senate
Meeting of 25 April seemed mollified that no certain evidence exists that any young man is actually,
at present, reclassified as a result of exercising his
civil liberties. President Meyerson suggested that
it would be irresponsible to suspend military recruitment on this campus unless firm evidence of
such an infringement of civil liberties develops, especially in view of the ACLU position that recruitment on campus must either be open to all organizations or closed to all.

But General Hershey has been irresponsible.
And President Johnson has been irresponsible for
condoning Hershey’s actions by keeping him in office. More important, there can be no doubt whatsoever that the threat of reclassification will continue to hang over the bared necks of militant protesters until the Hershey directive is cancelled.
The mere presence of such an intolerable threat
constitutes so grave a breach in the bulwark of civil
liberties that I, for one, will vote to suspend military
recruitment at the next meeting of the Senate. I
do not believe that for the Senate to ban military
recruitment on this campus will violate the principles of academic freedom to anywhere near the
extent that Hershey’s maling directive does. The
Senate must weigh the loss of liberty in each case—and choose.
Robert Rogers,
Assoc. Prof, of English

every
The Spectrum is published twice-weekly
Tuesday and Friday
during the regular academic
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3435 Main Street, Buffalo, New York 14214. Offices
are located at 355 Norton Hall. Average Circulation:
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Angeles Times Syndicate.
Represented for national advertising by National Educational Advertising Service, Inc., 18 E. 50th Street,
New York. N. Y. 10022.
Republication of all news dispatches is forbidden witnout the express consent of the editor-in-chief. Rights or
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-

•

Editorial
Business

�Tuesday, May 7, 1968

The Spectrum

Pag* Fiv*

Criticizes dorm policy

BELOW OLYMPUS

To the Editor:

By Interlandi

In my two years at Buffalo, I have found organization and foresight to be lacking in the administration’s policies. This

has

been manifested

quarters and roommates at this late date. If the

University is sincerely concerned with the welfare
and happiness of its students, once again it has
failed to show it. Certainly upperclassmen already
settled in the dorms should have priority over

freshmen who aren’t yet here.
Overcrowding and lack of consideration for its
students is no way for a University to build a re-

putation.

160 dissatisfied students

Editor's note: At latest word, our information is
that none of the girls will be forced out. Instead,
you may be sharing your room with two other girls.
Tripling, of course, can be considered by some to be
the same as "farced out."

Dismay over wall posters
To the Editor;
We are students who wish to express our ex"It all sounds kind of familiar, doesn't it?"
treme concern and dismay over the recent “poster
campaign” in Norton Union and all the connotations it brings to mind. We contend that the group
that is gluing the posters to the walls has absolutely
no right to deface the property of this University.
Norton Hall has been turned into a campus eyesore.
However, we are even more concerned over the
nearly total lack of student reaction to this. Are we,
the vast majority of students, going to sit apathetby Mark Schneider
ically by while this group moves in on our campus?
They most certainly do have the right to a free
voice, this cannot be denied. But—do they represent
During the State University of Buffalo spring vacation
the student majority? The student government that
democratic, yet potentially dangerous arrangement. three bombshell news events occurred in quick succession,
Any activist groufi will be able to control our funds which, several years hence, will undoubtedly provide material
and our policies just by maintaining a quorum at for an “A Week That
Changed History” TV show, or for
Polity meetings. We hereby issue a plea to fellow
several paragraphs in a Cold War history textbook. One has
students: become active participants in the campus
community! Be sure to know who is running our discussed the assassination of Dr. King, but what of the
University— and make sure that it is we, the major- resignation of Lyndon Johnson, and the lifting of the siege
ity, not a vocal minority.
of Khe Sanh. Do they signify, somehow, an end to the war

the gadfly

in Vietnam?

A reading of just the media’s
headlines assures us that the
questions are rhetorical. In Vietnam, and in the many future
Vietnam’s around the Third
World, the solutions to the problems of wealth, its distribution
and political freedom proposed
by the forces of the “Free World”
remain much the same. Essentially, there is to be no distribution
To the Editor:
of wealth for the world’s hungry,
The leter from C. A. Yeracarais, in answer to no political freedom for those
mine, was very interesting. The writer sees what who demand that distribution.
I see and then does a quick
will be an obscuration of
twist to argue why we Therereality
should enter Greece.
that
behind such terms
It is true the tanks and training we gave to help as “pacification,” “War on PovGreece defend herself were used against her peo- erty,” “Alliance for Progress.”
I am not sure. I do
know, however, that everytime
we interfere in another country—even with the
The case of Truong Dinh Dzu
est intentions— bad will and the
a minor example of what has
destruction
of a is
culture seem to follow.
“changed” since LBJ began the
?°
ar we agree. But, I ask you, if we enter latest “peace offensive.” Dzu, you
gam ,fto fix” the present
situation and we don’t, may recall, ran as peace candior 1 ®. next generation
doesn’t like the results—- date in last fall’s South Vietnam
V
Iiow many times do we adjust and re-v ..elections. Hardly a radical, he
,1
m v
mane.
did surprisingly well, and since
In how many countries will we
have to enour mistakes? No, it is clear and the then he has been in and out of
•
was re18 on the wall—stay out
even if it is our jail. Last Thursday he
faniw r
nothln g but sorrow will come of it. Stay arrested for calling for a coalimit o
n
Cally
and Poetically as well as militar- tion government with the NLF.
.
ilv
that , ls a " we can do with any assurance As Dzu’s wife pointed out, Bobby
tha’t
W n 1
cause a more despotic and chaotic Kennedy would similarly be arrested in this outpost of the Free
situation
World. “It’s not the smartest public relations move,” a U.S. offiD. Lefebure
cial commented.
Ext. 3761
The difference between the
next President of the United
States, probably that same Bobby
The Spectrum's pages for
Kennedy, and the present one, is
that he won’t make the same public
relations mistakes LBJ does.
&amp;
The anti-Establishment Dzus and
Spocfcs will be silenced, not by
It is the policy of The
Spectrum to report the
news fully and impartially in the news pages,
the always boomeranging tool of
repression, but by being ignored.
o express the opinions of the newspaper
only
in the editorial pages
When Bobby decides to comproand to publish all sides
oi important
mise with actual revolutionaries,
controversial issues.
he will be more deft at avoiding
Without expression, freedom of expression is meaningless."
the gross frauds of LBJ. “U.S.
Bombing Heavier Than Before”

US must stay out' of Greece

,

,

,

°

a^ ?w
°

Editorials

Opinions

.

.

.

by STEESE

once

again by a recent decision by the Housing Office
and IRC to force 160 girls out of the dorms in order
to make room for incoming freshmen. The girls
who are affected by this policy all have been living
in the dorms this second semester and have participated in the lottery for room and roommate preferences. We have been told to leave on the premise
that we were not living on campus during the first
semester, (each for our personal reasons).
We are now faced with the task of finding living

Eileen Haslach
Jane Herbrand
Robert L. Stober
David J. Potter
J. Theodore Nichol

grump

reads a Newsweek headline. North
Vietnam, it seems it just being
blasted in a different zone this
constitutes a “bombing pause.”
Dean Rusk, Mr. “Anywhere,
Anytime,” continues to play somewhat the same role in 1968 as
the Ministry of Truth in 1984.
“Rarely in history have so few
men been made to appear so
stupid,” writes liberal war critic
John Kenneth Galbraith.
The McKennedys will not appear stupid, and they will be
dangerous to the people of the
world because they will side, finally, with the enemies of the
poor: American business. It is no
accident that the U.S. helped to
train Duvalier’s secret police in
Haiti. Reynolds Metals and the
Haitian-American Sugar Company
dominate the economy there, and
they are reaping lush profits at
the expense of the people of this
ugliest nation on earth.
These firms are the same that
McKennedy looks to for a solution to America’s ghetto uprisings, If Rockefeller gets elected,
what attitude will he take toward
the Venezualan government’s appeals for aid against the guerrillas? The man owns oil wells
and ranches down there; he has
capital to protect. Does McKennedy challenge the capitalists
who stand behind the government of South Africa? What will
they dlo when the millions of
blacks can stand their oppression
no longer? They will side, inevitably, with Dow Chemical.
For Americans who realize that
their own fate is inescapably tied
to that of others, who realize
that national security is identical
with the security of slaves in
northern Brazil, McKennedy is
not the answer
the action of
Buffalo’s Dow demonstrators and
Columbia’s aotivots is.
—

—

who has allowed me to usurp the spot he generally
fills on Tuesdays.
It is difficult to find the words capable of adequately describing the very mixed emotions I have
as I sit to the task of writing this column. It is the
last one. And after three years one would miss
anything, good, bad, or indifferent. (Which I suppose is the one hope I have of my absence being
noted next year.)
I have frequently muttered in my beard about
how hard it is to write on a weekly basis. I have
also frequently muttered about the problem of
having too much to say. In all honesty, therefore,
I am forced to conclude that if I did that much
bitching about it and still came back for more, I
must have enjoyed it. Which may be fallacious but
makes me feel better.
Even if I did not enjoy it, which question I
will answer after a decent interval of not doing it,
it was most therapeutic. It has given me a chance
to snarl in public instead of in private, to snarl at
volunteers instead of those hapless acquaintances
who happened across my path when I was wrathful
at some sort of silly stupidity or another. I was
able to displace my wrath among many without
bothering anyone, i.e., I am unable to think of a
single thing which this column “accomplished” in
its history.
There are no Steese memorial libraries, fountains, hanging gardens, postal pagodas or crabapple
trees. And to be perfectly honest, somehow I really
never thought there would be. What then did this
column accomplish in its murky and fogbound
past? (It being after all a principle of this culture
that one has to accomplish something before one
has done anything—that is one of the most beautifully enigmatic statements that I have ever had the
pleasure to write.)
Way back in the mists of time when I started
this thing I had this idea that a great many students
on this,,as on every campus, had been locked into
a box by the society we live in. They had been
taught that there were things to say, and they said
them; they had been taught the right things to do,
and they did them, and so forth ad nauseum, BUT
some of these people knew that something was
wrong. They did what they were supposed to do,
but back in some dark little corner something kept
muttering: “Something is drastically wrong” everytime they examined the world around them.
I felt then that society manages to control such
peonle best bv instilling a great fear of being notnormal, of being (horrors!) different, even in those
peopie wno are different. The result being an unwillingness to expose yourself as being different in
any way that matters.
At present I see no great reasons for changing
any of the above. It is quite apparent if you look
around you that almost everybody still has the
fear of being different. If you want to be different,
you have to join a sub-group which specializes in a
specific difference so that you have company. In
a world which is full of a number of fascinating
activities and people, this, to me, is senseless.
I strongly suspect that because I can see the
questionableness of this situation, other people
should be able to also. Further I would suspect
that while many activists may understand what I am
talking about, it is not to them that this is directed.
They have found a god in whose name to post banners and exalt the multitudes to causes.
The people I am specifically trying to reach are
standing back there in the shadows watching from
where it is safe. Which is the wisest place to be
when people who KNOW what is RIGHT are clashing. They look perfectly normal, they act perfectly
normal, but as noted before they have this strange
idea that this is not the world they were told about
in Sunday School, or wherever moral ideologies
were handed out. (Watch it, there might be one
sitting next to you now!)
The little man with the big computer who sits
and programs the limits of “normality,” the outermost bounds of what is permitted in polite society,
has the good sense to fear these people. The harsh
repressive measures taken by most parents against
any sign of social deviation in their offspring is
quite understandable. Formidable as they may seem
in many instances, Black Power, Student Power, and
damned near every other power and ideology we
have pales sharply before the concept of a society
in which the thing to be valued is the individual,
where what is to be enjoyed are the combinations
of different perspectives, where the gravest crime
is the effort to control another human being who
in no \yay is menacing anyone else in a search for
himself.
So much of dreaming. I will not force more
upon you. Practically I would make a suggestion.
Stick your neck out. Take a human being to lunch
this week, and make some faltering effort
none
of us really know how
to talk to him. To that
tremendously elusive, shy, and cautious hairless ape
that dwells somewhere behind the eyes but is rarely,
—

—

if ever, seen.
Enough, quite likely too much space-wise. Thank
you for bearing with me for three years, and 1 may
be here by mail for a while yet. If not
well
goodby, good luck, and for all our sakes read the
previous paragraph again, and try it, at least once.
—

—

�Pag*

Asks fight against 'public's ignorance'

Editorial

In reply to Dr. E. Neil Murray’s commentary

nurses for leadership roles in establishing a therapeutic environment and in establishing group therapy programs. These workshops have been conducted

Spectrum, 1 wish to congratulate him on his inlerest in the conditions at the Buffalo State Hospital,
and I wish to comment on spme of his stated ob-

ment at the State University of Buffalo; and some

To th* Editor:

which

appeared

Tuesday, May 7, 1968

The Spectrum

Six

in the

April

16 edition of The

servations.

Granted, the Continued Treatment Service is
housed in an “antiquated” building; granted, there
are 1500 mentally ill men and women in this structure; granted, the hospital staff is a “skeleton” one,
and granted, the patients do receive tranquilizers,
do have access to TV sets, do have opportunities for
unit meetings, and do have limited contact with
“outside agitating influences.”
However, I wish to put further emphasis on a
point made by Dr. Murray, that is: facilities and
staff are available only to the extent that the state
has provided funds for them.
Bearing this reality factor in mind, I would
suggest to Dr. Murray that if he wishes to marshal
an army of volunteers, he should do so and then
march against public enemy number one—ignorance! Hopefully, a fight against the public’s ignorance and misconceptions regarding mental illness would result in the development of an actionoriented society which would demand that the
state provide opportunities for state hospitals to

develop as therapeutic centers.
As one of many graduate students in the Psychiatric Nursing Program who spends a great deal
of time at the Buffalo State Hospital, I have seen
numerous and encouraging trends. In direct oppositlbn to Dr. Murray’s statement that the existing
staff is unable to provide a therapeutic milieu, I
wish to call attention to the fact that recently two
workshops have been conducted with an emphasis
having been placed on preparing the registered

of these same faculty continue to be resource agents

and consultants for the hospital.

The building housing the Continued Treatment
Service is slated for some significant renovations in
the very near future. Also, credit seems to be due
to the personnel who, in spite of the deficiencies in
facilities, are able to provide care for the patients.
They would be the first to acknowledge that given
nurse personnel and improved facilities, they could
provide even better care. Things are changing and
will continue to do so, but the invasion of Dr. Murray’s suggested army could be a truly devastating
attack if it were not preceded by some diplomatic
and thoughtful maneuvers.
Finally, I cannot help speculating about Dr.
Murray's comment concerning a rekindling of the
patient’s desire to leave the hospital. I find myself
asking the question of whether or not the society
which in part contributed to the development of
these patients’ illnesses is ready to accept them
back? And, if they can’t accept them back at this
time, is that “antiquated building” at Buffalo State
Hospital such a dreadful place? After all, the society which exists in that structure will not easily
point an accusing finger, tack on a label of “crazy,”
or ostracize a member who is unable to control his
hallucinatory and acting-out behavior.
I say “Hurrah!” for Dr. Murray’s concern and
anger about this situation, but I say let’s get the
public to beat the drum that counts
the one that
can be heard in Albany!
Nancy K. Nally, R.N
Graduate Program
Psychiatric Nursing
—

Misconception of military professionalism
To the Editor;

This is in response to a letter written by Mr.
Louis Schwartz concerning the “danger” of a professional military service, which appeared in the
April 30th edition of The Spectrum.
Mr. Schwartz bases his argument on a complete
misconception of military professionalism. It has
been recognized by Western military writers, at
least since the Napoleonic era, that war is not an
end in itself, but merely one tool of policy. It has
further been generally recognized that the duty of
the military professional is, at the highest level, to
advise the government leaders of potential military
threats to, and the military capabilities of the state.
Policy, as regards to size of the military forces, that
is the amount of national resources alloted national defense and their employment, how and where
such forces shall be used, is left up to the civil
leader. To use Mr. Schwartz’s example, when MacArthur disobeyed orders given by the President, he
was behaving in a highly unprofessional manner,
for he was trying to influence policy after it had

been made.
As for Mr. Schwartz’s contention that it is the
enlisted men, “civilians looking forward to a civilion world,” which I suppose means draftees, who
have kept the officers in check, I can only suggest
that he examine the facts. A form of conscription
was first introduced in this nation in 1863 and was
in effect tor only two years. A Selective Service

system was re-introduced in 1917, abolished after
the First World War, re-established in 1940 and
has been used to a greater or lesser degree since
then. For most of the years since 1789, the United
States has operated with a volunteer, at least semiprofessional military force, fighting three wars and
one prolonged military operation in the process.
One may also point to the examples of Great Britain, which used conscription only during the World
Wars but has never had a coup threatened by her
military; and France, which suffered a military coup
in 1958 when her army was primarily composed of
conscripted enlisted personnel, to further show the
irrelevence of this factor in civil-military relations.
Finally there is Mr. Schwartz's statement: “The
draftee is dying as he guards the base where the
professional lives and doesn’t pay taxes." A statement, like most of Mr. Schwart’s letter, based more
on anti-military and anti-Vietnamese War dogma
and prejudice than on fact. The very organization
of the Army or Marines (almost entirely volunteers
anyway) means that command and leadership in battle comes from N.C.O.’s, the professional core of
any military force, and junior officers who, under
present circumstances, also tend to be professionals,
either from West Point or O.C.S, If Mr. Schwartz
would trouble to read some professional military
literature he would learn just how involved in
fighting and dying the professionals are in Vietnam.
Edward J. Hynes

Significance of wall posters is unclear
To the Editor

It seems that the Student Strike Committee has
managed to draw scorn and abuse from the entire
apolitical spectrum of this campus. From the elite
left to the rowdy "yahoos,” all have managed to
find something offensive to their sensibilities in
the wall posters. Our position, that this campus, far
from being an “open one” in which the pursuit of
learning goes on unencumbered by vested interests,
was very intelligently refuted by the “yahoo" element in ther recent position paper circulated around
the campus Friday—“If your heart ain’t in America,
you had better get your ass out.” The circulation of
such an assinine statement is its own sufficient reply; I will ignore the “yahoos.”
But there is the more serious criticism of the
“in-betweeners,” sometimes known as liberals or
moderates, and in some circles known as the “donothings,” a characteristic which seems to intensify
in direct proportion to their assumption that they
know “everything." These modern sophists, those
who can find the exception to the rule and thus
satisfy themselves that the rule is refuted, have
claimed either “so-what” or "we know that—so
what,” or “that’s true, but it’s one of a seemingly
infinite number of factors,” etc., etc., (you know the
liberal rhetoric!)
What they have pointed out is that our posters
don’t prove anything. And perhaps this is true. Per-

haps we greatly overestimated the political consciousness of the people on this campus. We assumed that the long list of corporate and financial

connections of the administrators of this campus
would serve to underline the argument of the Left
that the University is not an open campus, that .indeed this is a myth which covers the reality of our
everyday life and the true function of the University in this society—to provide the spare parts for
the social machine—that machine which is being
controlled precisely by those men that control the
University—in effect it is the corporate leaders that
run the University and it is the corporate structure
that the Univesity serves.
So then, the “so-what” criticism is accurate, but
for the wrong reasons. It’s not that what we have
said is not true, nor that what we have said is not
in its truthfulness lacking significance. It’s just that
we have failed to make this significance clear. So
the posters will continue to appear, but the content
will change. We will try to make the relation between “fact” and “significance” more intelligible.
I would say that the ultimate significance of
these facts manifests itself in poverty, the ghetto,
the barbarious war in Vietnam, and the continuing
misery and despair of two-thirds of the world’s
population, who do not have the fortunate luxury
to have their sensibilities offended by mere words,
but rather by misery, oppression, and death.
Alexander Delfini

A vote for activities
fate of student activities on this campus next year. The
referendum is being held to poll student opinion on the
issue of mandatory fees.
Experience this past year has shown rather conclusively
that the voluntary fee structure will not support a fullblown schedule of student activities. Virtually every club
and organization suffered budget cuts, and several programs never got off the ground.
Listing the numerous and various programs that are
financed by student fees will not suffice to convey the need
for the mandatory fee. It is only when these programs are
gone that students become fully aware of what their fees
provide.
The State directive last year that ended mandatory
fees was unquestionably a grave error. Reversal of that
directive now indicates that, after a year of observation,
State University officials also believe that the mandatory
fee snould be reinstated.
Tomorrow’s referendum is in two parts: One pertaining to student activities and the other considering the athletic fee. We are certain that nearly every student benefits
from the activities fee, and there is no doubt that students,
and students alone, determine how the activity fee is to
be allocated. The athletic fee, of course, is a different
question.
We urge students to vote for the mandatory student
activities fee primarily because the activities that they support are a very worthwhile, and a very important part of
university life. Don’t destroy those activities with a negative
vote. Vote, instead, to help those activities grow and flourish.

Inextricably bound
This edition is the last of the 1967-1968 Spectrum.
Throughout the academic year, we have tried to discuss
some of the more important issues facing the nation and
the campus.
One point we have tried to make repeatedly, although
subtly, is that the nation and the campus are inextricably
bound to one another. Students cannot escape from a world
of realities by getting lost among walls of ivy. Nor can the
non-academic community refuse to recognize the role of the
university.
In the past two or three years, students have begun to
not on the food in their
speak out and speak out loudly
but on the very
cafeterias or the price of their books
issues that confront all human beings. That is the right of
students; in many ways, it is also their duty.
But the question now is: Can the university survive,
and can it continue to grow as an influential voice in the
affairs of men and nations?
The course is by no means certain, but the prospects
are by no means dim.
This newspaper, like the University it serves, has sought
controversy. But controversy for the sake of controversy is
worthless. On the other hand, controversy tempered with
responsibility and purpose is a wiser approach.
The university is only one segment of an extremely
large, complex society. But the impact that the university
can make on that society can be great. Those who leave the
campus this year should remember the role of the university and never look askance at its undertakings. Those who
will return next year should remember it is their obligation
to assure the continued growth, the continued vitality and
the continued sense of purpose and direction that has made
the university more than an institution of higher education.
—

—

Thanks to many
A word of thanks is appropriate in this last edition
To the many persons who cooperated with the staff
of The Spectrum during the year in this newspaper’s quest
for information,
To the readers, on and off campus, who support
us merely by their faithful reading of our editions, and
Especially to those students who took the time
comment, personally or by letter to the editor, helping us
gain a wider range of opinion.
•

•

•

to
As editor, I would also like to express my gratitude
se
two
past
worked
and
for
the
long
diligently
staff which
esters. It has been my pleasure to work with that staff, an
wish each of them and The Spectrum well
—

MLD

�The Spectrum

Tuesday, May 7, 1968

Meyerson: State of the University

Spend

President Martin B. Meyerson issued the following special statement to The Spectrum Sunday outlining his views on some of the progress and problems at this University:

summer
iearnmg
at Hofstra.
ir

lishing year, I should like to review a few ol our
accomplishments duting the year, and discuss some
of the challenges and prospects we shall face in

the fall.

Educational reforms

virtually a
As day students you can complete up to 14 credits
during Hofstra’s two five-week summer
full semester’s work
sessions. Evening students can complete up to 8 credits.
Almost 400 undergraduate and graduate courses to choose from.
Classes are taught by regular Hofstra faculty supplemented by
-

-

outstanding visiting professors.

These courses are also available at Hofstra's Extension in Commack.
First Session: June 18-July 23
Second Session: July 25-August 28

Registration information and catalogues may be obtained by
writing or calling Director of Summer Sessions, (516) 560-3511
learning.
Spend your summer at this exciting university

Hofstra University
•t'*IV£R5H*

Hempstead, N.Y. 11550

*Pi»irl«i

&lt;1

ihe

ixdemtrk o&gt; international Piaylei

Corp

.

Oo»er. Oel &lt;£)I968 InternationalPl*i&gt;&gt;ei

Corp

In September, we will inaugurate a program of
Freshman Seminars. A large part of the entering
freshman class will have the chance to work closely with a professor in the intellectual intimacy of
seminar dialogues, with no more than 20 other
students. By the fall of 1969, every freshman who
wishes to participate in such a learning experience
should have the chance to do so.
By next fall, I hope the Faculty Senate will have
made major reforms of our grading system, stimulated by the work of the faculty and students on
the Ad Hoc Committee on Grading and Ranking
established a year ago. In addition, there should
by next year be an opportunity for honors work
and independent study in every undergraduate
program within the University.
The reorganization of the University into seven
faculties has already produced important new educational dimensions and directions. Among the
highest priorities for the coming year is the development of cross-disciplinary work—for example,
through the new programs in American studies and
the policy sciences. With the opportunity for further planning and formulation which next year
will afford, there should be other stimulating new
progams and a series of general education options
ready for September 1969.
The academic year 1969-70 should also inaugurate major calendar reforms which will provide
greater flexibility for students and faculty—for
example, through options of a reduced course load,
the relaxation of heretofore rigid prerequisites,
and by facilitating year-round study for those who
wish it.

New campus

1968 is out, ground will be broken for
the University’s new campus. The new facilities
will make possible the integration of the seven
faculties, and the intermingling of the Faculties
and the Colleges, Until these facilities are ready
for occupancy, we must bear as best we can with
the terrible crowding of our presently overtaxed
facilities—in the residence halls, the classrooms,
Norton Hall, our laboratories and office space.
I can only regret the conditions that exist, and
ask your forbearance during the months ahead.
For most graduate and professional students,
the educational progress and the new options
within the University have been overshadowed
by the imminence of a threat from without the
institution—the draft of graduate students. We
have joined with representatives of many other
universities and professional societies to urge a
more equitable application of the selective service
laws. We are making whatever efforts are within
our power to bring about a change of policy or
practice in this areas. Yet we recognize that as
long as the unfortunate war in Vietnam continues,
the universities will continue to suffer in many
Before

ways.

In addition to these specific areas of concern,
there are two general subjects to which I should
like to focus the attention of the University community: student participation in the affairs of the
University, and University participation in the
affairs of the community.

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Student involvement
During the past year, there has been substantially greater student involvement in University affairs
than ever before. Students have attended recent
meetings of the Faculty Senate. Various departings,

and

have

involved

students

in

central

as-

peets of departmental planning, on curricular and
other issues. Students have played a major role
on the University College Curriculum Committee;
and the adoption of the Bulletin Board as a way
of developing new courses- at the initiative of
teachers and students, together with the Student
Course on Teacher Evaluation, have provided new
opportunities for student participation in curricular
reform and revision. Student membership on presidential committees, and student representation on
the Cabinet, have made major contributions to the
work of these groups.
But 1 consider these avenues of student involvement only a modest beginning. In the fall term,
I hope that every one of our Faculties and academic
units will have formulated plans with students for
more extensive student participation in educational
affairs. There are certain actions in which students could not meaningfully or appropriately take
part, or would not wish to be involved. But there
is vastly piore that we can do to enhance the contribution and the relevance of that group within
our community who should, after all, be as much
concerned as any other group with the academic
direction of the institution.
Nor should this contribution be confined to
purely educatioanl affairs. For example, I expect
we can add new channels for student involvement
in the planning of our new campus facilities.
During the months ahead, I urge students and
their organizations to focus critically upon the
challenge of meaningful student participation. In
the fall, we should examine the proposals that have
been developed. If we mean what we say—if we
are truly a community of scholars sharing a cooperative mission—then we should act upon and
implement the most effective proposals.

Involvement in the community

The other matter which should be at the top

of our University agenda between now and the fall
is that of student participation in the community.

With the creation of the Select Committee for
Equal Opportunity, and the University Office for
Equal Opportunity, we are expanding our involvement in the problems of the disadvantaged and minority groups. I expect that Committee will shortly
have a number of specific proposals we can begin
to implement—in the areas of employment, opportunities for minority group students, and other aspects of our relations with both the white and
non-white communities.
On the campus this summer, there will be various activities designed to bring minority group
members to our University, many perhaps for the
first time. I urge those students who will be in
Buffalo during the summer to come to the campus
when and as they can to participate in these programs which will be coordinated (through the
Office for Equal Opportunity. For those students who
will be away from Buffalo during the
summer, I
would urge every effort to identify, and become
involved in, whatever comparable opportunities
exist there—whether through tutoring of disadvantaged students, work on recreational programs
or other community action efforts. Not only
will
such work be individually satisfying; not only will
it make a tangible contribution to bridging
the
tragic gap that exists between the advantaged and
the deprived; in addition, such experience will
provide a resource upon which we can build
more
relevant programs.
—Martin B, Meyerson

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It is the first book to examine
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$1.65, paperbound,
now at your bookstore
THE WESTMINSTER PRESS*
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Philadelphia. Pa. 19107

Tuesday, May 7, 1968

Spectrum

Protesters may be denied
to evict students from the occu-

pied buildings “demonstrated his
inability to meet the challenges
demanded of today’s institutions
of higher learning.

lence that erupted, the assemblyman said students were acting
“out of desperation to prove that
some portion of Columbia University did care about Harlem.”
In a separate statement, Assemblyman Robert Abrams, vice
president of Columbia’s alumni
class of 1960, said Dr. Kirk should
resign “not because of the way

1*47'

he handled the demonstration...
but because he represents an
administration which tor years
has been indifferent to community
and student needs and demands.”

Scholarly

behavior

"Wrongheaded" approach
Harlem Senator Basil Paterson,
a Democrat, initiated the Senate
debate by chastising Columbia
for its “wrongheaded” approach
toward construction of the gym.
Mr. Paterson said that the City
of New York made a contract
with Columbia in 1960 turning
over two acres of the 30-acre
Morningside Park to the University for construction of a gymnasium to be shared by Columbia students and youngsters
from the adjoining community.
Plans for the new building
for which construction began Feb.
28
showed that only a small
portion was set aside for community use, that the community
section would be walled-off from
the student portion, and that the
neighborhood youngsters could

This photograph, taken recently
during demonstrations at Columbia University, dramatizes
situation which led to an extreme response in the State Senate last week. More pictures,
stories on page 24.

enter only through a door at the
foot of the hill, Sen. Paterson
said.

plan.

—

Favorable WNY reaction

—

Democratic Senators Manfred
Ohernstein of Manhattan, William
Thompson of Queens, Harrison J,
Goldin of New York and Paul
Bookson of New York made sim-

Study group of 21 students, several research advisors will go on
campin gtour in Nepalese Himalayas for 90 days starting midJanuary 1969, aiming to do research in Earth Science, Biological
and Meteorological fields.
For full information write to organizer, R. Rendle Leathern of
Huckleberry Hill, R.F.D. #1, Lincoln, Mass., or Special Tours and
Travel, Inc., 6 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60602.

ft

ilar protests about Columbia’s
handling of the situation.
Assemblyman John B. Lis,

The senator, who lives only a
block away from the disputed
site, said that his neighbors
could not understand how highly
respected members of Columbia’s
Board of Trustees could approve
such a favorable but unequal

Scientific Study Group To Himalayas

*

Continued from Page 1

bill, and said he will “support it
all the way,” He said he feels that
“95 per cent of the legislators
feel the same way that I do.
Assemblyman Stephan R. Greco,
a Buffalo Democrat, said he will

vote for the bill when it reaches
the Assembly floor. He, too, feels

it has an “excellent” chance of
passing.
Sen. Frank J. Glinski, another
Buffalo Democrat, “completely
agrees” with the provisions of the
bill and that “it will pass the
Senate.”
Other area legislators told The
Spectrum they have not yet committed themselves for or against

the bill.

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SHIPWRECKED SAILOR FROM LISLE
SWAM ASHORE TO A TROPICAL ISLE
BUT HE FATHERED HIS WITS
AND SALVAGED SOME SCHLITZ
SO HE WON'T SEND FOR HELP FOR AWHILE*

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Democrat who represents Cheektowaga and East Buffalo, senses
a great need for Sen. Brydge’s

�Tuesday, May 7, 1968

The

Drafters may

Pag*

Spectrum

Nin*

•

compromise

•

•

Continued from Page 1

•

the amount of teaching that may
be carried.
“It is unclear how many or
which graduate students (if any)

“Harvard has declared its intention not to request such deferments, but has also left its up to
individual departments and fac-

'Dear Sirs; Mr. John Doe has
asked that a letter be forwarded
to your office describing his
status at this University, in sup-

No replacements are available
in the course of the academic
year, because of the nature of recruiting and admission in the

lar proportion of required courses,
and thereby the disruption of the
entire University’s educational
program, a consequence which

some would.

will be furnished to SSS about
the duties of specific TAs. A general statement about the nature
of TAs has been supplied to Harvard department heads, and gives
emphasis to the fact that they are
considered full-time resident
graduate students.

classification

Mr. Doe’s situation are not able
to continue their work, a large
proportion of both undergraduate
and graduate study at the University will be affected.
The graduate student staff performs approximately 45% of all
undergraduate instruction, and a
much higher percentage of all instruction in required courses.
Thus the loss of only a few
such teachers would result in the
necessary cancellation of a simi-

the national interest. Such a loss
would also seriously hamper the
important research work carried
on by faculty and graduate students in various team and cooperative laboratory arrangements.
‘As has been stated, Mr. Doe's
duties as a teacher and researcher vary considerably from semester to semester. However, he
is at present regarded as an essential member of the Univer-

would not.

Certainly

some

Decisions

“University administrators who
decided on teaching asslstantship
applications and awards may be
put in the position of making decisions that affect the draft status
of their studetns if the University complies with the new SSS
policies, unclear as they are.
“On the other hand, the University has already been indirectly involved in such decisions,
since until now mere acceptance
as a graduate student guaranteed
H-S deferment.
“It is possible that some Buffalo
graduate students who are eligible for the draft might be deferred on occupational grounds.
It is certain that not all will be
deferred.
“If departments attempted to
shift vulnerable graduate students
to TA positions, not all could be
protected, and it is also likely
that some of these ‘protected’
would be drafted anyway.
“At present about 60% of all
supported graduate students are
teaching or graduate assistants.
While it might be possible to get
the figure up to 100%, this seems
unlikely in view of the variety of
support, some of which have restrictions on teaching functions.
“In any case, compliance with
SSS policies would have the effect of using the University to
help decide which students should
be drafted. It would also almost
certainly result in a new and alien
factor influencing what essentially ought to be a purely educational decision—about who should

Alternatives
“The alternatives seem to be:
Compliance with SSS. Individual departments would, no
doubt, make some effort to grant
TAs (or other duties that might
constitute grounds for deferment)
to as many vulnerable students as
possible, but not all students
could be covered, and even some
TAs might be classified I-A.
Non-cooperation. This might
consist of refusal to supply any
statement to SSS regarding the
duties of TAs;
Or, it might consist of an official statement that all graduate
students should be deferred (IIS) and that the university will not
claim that any of its graduate students fulfill the “full-time teaching” requirement. Essentially this
is the Harvard position, which
also includes the departments
“indirectly” supporting student
requests for H-A deferments by
supplying SSS with a statement
of the nature of teaching fellowships, as well as individual letters written by faculty about particular students;
Or, it might consist of a uniform statement, to be sent to the
draft boards of all draftable graduate students, at their request, by
all departments, as follows:
•

•

•

•

on
occupational
grounds.
‘As a degree candidate, Mr. Doe
engages in a long-established end
essential program of teaching
and study. At times he participates in the teaching of undergraduates, as instructor, section
assistant, grader, tutor, and lecturer. Just as in the case of any
faculty member, these duties vary
from semester to semester. Again
like any faculty member, Mr. Doe
is expected to spend a part of
his time in original research, and
will regularly teach in the areas
of his research to more advanced

students in seminars or other
groups which are part of his apprenticeship as well as part of
the studies of ail graduate students.
‘There are a number of graduate students at the University undertaking courses of teaching and
research; in no case is the program of two students indentical,
and we are dependent on the
special competence of each individual. Every year a number of
these people are awarded degrees
and enter into work as teachers,
research scholars, and other professions of importance to the national welfare.
‘Each year new degree candidates are accepted into graduate
school to take their places. Once
decisions are made (ordinarily in
April) about replacements are renewals, each graduate student/
teacher becomes an essential and
irreplaceable part of the educational process, until the following
year adn the next set of entering

sity’s teaching programs.’"

Nursing Society meets Friday
A Nursing Honor Society has
been founded here recently. The
purposes of the society are manyfaceted, foremost to recognize the
achievement of scholarship of superior quality.
The society also wishes to recognize the development of leadership qualities; to foster high
professional standards; to encourage creative work, and to
strengthen commitment on the

part of individuals to the ideals
and purposes of the profession of
nursing.

A total of 34 undergraduates,
11 alumna and 30 faculty members have been chosen as charter
members.
Induction of members will be
held at 8 p.m. Friday in the F'aculaty Club, Harriman Library. Dr.
Richard A. Siggelkow will be the
guest speaker.

Summer Spectrum
Today's Spectrum it the last edition of the
semester.
The Summer Spectrum will begin weekly publication June 7. Persons willing to join the staff of
The Summer Spectrum should contact: the managing editor. The Spectrum, Room 355 Norton Hall;
telephone 831-2210.

candidates.

explosive!

get TAs,

etc.
“Nonetheless, some universities, for instance Cornell, plan to

comply with SSS.
“If, on the other hand, the University refuses to furnish information or to request II-A classifications for TAs, it is equally cer-

tain that some graduate students
will be drafted.
“Those students holding TAs
might request deferment on their
own, but unless the university
supports their claims, they will
be drafted anyway.

I Chevrolet’s special savings bonus

now adds more value to cars already giving you the most.
■

Anyone can offer you just about
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5. Buy any Chevrolet or Chevelle
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covers and appearance guard items.

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�Tuesday, May 7,

The Spectrum

Pag* T*n

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1968

�Tuesday, May 7, 1968

Someday

The Spectrum

Undergrad education re examined

6

.

.

Page Eleven

.

An unidentified University student stopped at
The Spectrum office this past week and handed
a copy of a poem written by a grammar school

The present structure of under-

day Dean Welch conceded it. was
“a huge undertaking that could
not be implemented “till 196970."

graduate education is undergoing

intensive re-examination. Various
have been made, not-

proposals

Committee, that would bring reforms to existing academic policy.
The review, being directed by
University College Dean Claude
Entitled "Someday The Time Will Come," the E. Welch, is the first here since
1957.
poem is remarkable, perhaps more for the sensibilities of its young author, than for the haunting
One of the primary areas of
vision its presents.
attack is basic distribution re-

of any of these reforms into effective law faces a possible roadblock in the Faculty Senate.
Dean Welch explained that “we
have to know the implications of
change. We know what we want;
let’s make sure the faculty and
students know it.”
No proposal on revising B-D
requirements will go before the
Faculty Senate at the present

The poem, by John Allen Minick, 12 years old,
was written in the class of one of the University's
student practice teachers, at Public School No. 62.

The poem reads:

0

"Someday the time will come.
When the bomb falls out of the sky.
And you look around for people—there are none.
Then you look at your house and cry.
You look at the city and choke.
At the ruins and terrible smell.

You look at the big black smoke.
And it looks as if it were Hell.
Then you think of the Vietnam War,
It must have been the cause of this.
And you hope there is no more
Of any of this foolishness/'

quirements. Undergraduate students are generally obligated to
take at least one course in seven
different areas of study.
The Curriculum Planning Committee suggests the seven areas
be narrowed to three
Humanities, Social Sciences, and Science
and Technology, cutting down the
number of B-D requirements for

time.

—

each student.

Four course load
Dr. Welch, a member of the
committee, combined this idea
with his own suggestion to make
the University into a four course
load; all courses would be given
four times a week for four credits. Thus, incoming freshmen

Claude Welch
favors 4-course load
would 'take one course in the
three required areas pjus one
elective. Sophomores would then

have a free choice of courses.
There are no immediate pros
pots for this large revision. Thurs-

Olds Cutlass S
The'S’standsfor...

any suggested changes.

Student proposals
Harry Klein, one of two student members on the committee,
disclosed that he proposed the
number of hours a student must
fulfill for his major should be
cut to a definite maximum limit.
“It would be more liberal, less
restrictive on the student’s choice
of courses and more restrictive
on the department,” he said.
“Another proposal I put forth
would be to eliminate students
from having to major in any one
field. After four years the student would receive a B.A. University College degree. Other members of the committee were
against this idea, though, because
they feared students would take
only 100 level courses.”
It was noted by Dean Welch
that presently students could petition for a dual major, as long
as they had a 1,0 index. Thus a
person could coordinate courses
in the Political Science and Sociology Departments to form a major in Urban Affairs.
Meanwhile, negligent of all this
background planning, students
have already registered for the
fall term. Some advisors have told
their students to “wait and see,”
as far as fulfilling B-D requirements. Others have told students
to get the B-D requirements fin-

ished.
Dean Welch said: “There are

many people who stall feel there
is something to be said for satisfying all your B-D requirements
quickly. They believe it provides
an introduction to all courses and
helps the student realize the possibilities that exist.”

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Dean Welch expressed the desire to work out a detailed program over the summer that would
be convincing to all of the faculty. There is a general feeling
that some faculty, out of fear of
job jeapordization, would oppose

-

GM

�Page

Tuesday, May 7, 1968

The Spectrum

Twelve

Forum to study ranking and grading

$2500 short?

Braun foresees deficit.
Student Association Treasurer
Douglas G. Braun said he expects
a $2500 deficit in this year’s budget. The deficit results from a
projection of $10,000 more than
the amount collected by student
fees minus $7500 which he ex-

pects will not be spent.
Regarding travel subsidies,
which the Student Association
currently provides, Mr. Braun
feels that "members of various
clubs and organizations should
seek funds through the academiic
department to which the club is
affiliated.” He said that since students represent this University
outside the community, and this
“benefits and enhances the reputation of the University,” it is the
consequent responsibility of the
University to provide the necessary funds. As an alternative solution to this same problem, he
suggests that fund-raising projects should be used.
Mr, Braun proposes the establishment of a convocations committee which will attempt to inform the University community
of a speaker’s appearance. It will
also formulate each program.
Mr. Braun also added: “This
procedure will eliminate the in-

The new Ranking and Grading
proposals will be the subject of

an

open forum from

3 to 6 p.m.

tomorrow in the Dorothy Haas
Lounge.
comments of students and faculty
regarding the proposal made earlier this year recommending
changes in the current University
grading system will be heard.

adequacies of present policy by
preventing two or more speakers
from appearing at the same time.”
He feels that the Academic de-

partments should also provide
funds for this phase of student
involvement.
He said that he would like to
see many clubs and organizations
consolidated with other programs.
“Clubs like Rugby, Karate, and
Judo should be sponsored and
therefore funded by the Athletic
Department.”

“The establishment of a separate UUAB fee is also imperative,” he said.
Mr. Braun feels it is “unreasonable” to expect undergraduates to
pay for programs in which all
graduate and MFC students participate. He foresees an “equitable solution” to this problem to
be arranged by Sub-Board I of
the FSA.
Acceptance of these proposals,
Mr. Braun said, would make a
student government with better
financed, well-coordinated programs.
As a key

to this potential success, he hopes that “all student
governments” will work together
in “establishing an excellent student activities program.”

Positive tool
At the time the Ad Hoc Committee recommended the proposal, they termed the present University grading system “a hindrance to learning, whereas it
should prove a positive, creative
tool for intellectual achievement.”
Under the new proposal, which
is “flexible enough to meet the
needs of different course situations, professors and students,”
according to committee chairman
Alan R. Andreasen, there would
be three alternatives comprising
the evaluation system.
Included in the proposed grading system would be letter grading (A=outstanding, B=above average, C=average, D=below average or marginal, F=failure), written descriptions of student performance, and satisfactory/unsatisfactory grading (the grade of S
would earn credit; the grade of
U would not).

Requirements

According to the proposal:
the approval of the appropriate
academic committees any professor in any course in any semester

With Mohawk’s
Weekends Unlimited
it’ h per to go home
this weekend
than to stay
at school!

(

Go-home costs

Stay-at-School costs

Eat on Mom and Dad
No Charge
(They'll be glad to see you)

Borrow $5 from Dad
Use Dad’s car

+

$5.00

No Charge

(There’s gas in it)

$8.25

Saturday movie

2.00

Gas for the car

2.00

Beer and pizza

2.10

(With the fellows)

See your best girl
(This must be worth something)

Weekends Unlimited airfare $25.00
(Fly all you want for $25)

YOUR TOTAL COST

Meals

$20.00

HERE'S HOW TO TAKE OFF;
1. Pick your weekend. Fare applies from
12:01 a.m. Saturday to 5 p.m. Sunday.*
2. Check Mohawk’s passenger schedule for
weekend flights from your city. Then
phone Mohawk or your travel agent for

specific flight reservations desired. (Except Canada.)

Miscellaneous

6.00

Loss at gin rummy

6.00

YOUR TOTAL COST

3. Ask for positive space reservations on the
flights of your choice.
4. Reservations must be made on the Wednesday, Thursday or Friday preceding your
departure. The fi(st leg of your journey
must begin on Saturday and your return
trip must begin before 6 p.m. Sunday.

Fly All You Want
Sat. Sun. Mon,
Add Monday to your weekend for only $20 more. It works exactly like Weekends
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,m. Monday (our regular business
—

—

its).

where staff is

dent body, and

available, there exist at least one
other section of the cousre evalof this fact at the time of regisuated on other schemes.”
In courses where the professor
does not mandate the form of
evaluation, the standard evaluation system of letter grading will
be used, as in cases where grade
point averages are required.
Concerning the Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory provision, the propos-

al recommends that “the student
be permitted to choose S/U in

course, including those he
requires for a major or distribument.” For undergraduate stuany

dents, both full and part time,
total “satisfactory” credit hours

:en ai
lours
University toward the baccelaureate degree. There is no limit for
post-baccalaureate students.

Dr. Andreasen said the proposal would go before the Faculty
Senate for a vote either this
spring or in the fall.
Wednesday’s forum is co-sponsored by the President’s Ad-Hoc
Committee on Ranking and Grading, the Educational Planning
and Policy Committee of the Faculty Senate and the Graduate and
Undergraduate Student Associations.

Bona students hold sit-in
by Jan Fritz

Special to the Spectrum

OLEAN
A sit-in, calling for academic freedom and an “open
speaker” policy, was staged Saturday for the second straight day
on the St, Bonaventure University campus.
The protest, triggered by the decision of Rev. Reginald Redlon,
OEM, president of the University, to ban poet Allen Ginsberg from
a scheduled speaking engagement on May 13, was declared “peaceful” by those participating.
At least three faculty members and 50 students initiated a
sit-in Friday with the support of the University’s Student Senate.
Protestors were refused admittance to the administration building by campus policemen. Administrators, secretaries and friars were
allowed in, however.
Later in the afternoon, Father Redlon discussed the controversy
with the senators. During the three-hour session, the president indicated “very clearly” that he would not retract his decision to ban
Mr. Ginsberg:
After the meeting with the president, 'an emergency Senate
meeting, open to all, was called
The Senate, subtituted the word “sanction” for “support,” regarding its official attitude toward the sit-in. Individual senators
said they would continue to protest.
Senators passed a motion that we will initiate an open speaker
policy using University channeling and a sit-in at the administration
building until we reach a positive decision.”
It was decided to picket a planned Gutenberg Celebration yesterday and also Thursday’s annual Press Day for high school “until
the goals of the Student Senate in the realm of censorship are
achieved.”
Father Redlon was asked to meet with faculty and students at
the earliest possible date to discuss the issue.
Support by students appeared to be growing, “We will be alumni
in a few years,” said one co-ed protester. “I myself could not contribute to a school without academic freedom, where the students
can’t think for themselves.”
The entire issue was settled Saturday evening. Ginsberg will
not appear. But the status of future speakers will be decided by a
not by Fr. Redlon alone.
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�The SpECTRUM
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The Spectrum is a newspaper born
in the drama of stormy conflict
conflict between fraternity and antifrat forces 21 years ago.
The University then was poor, proud
—independent—and provincial.
And there were two campus newspapers. The Buffalo Bee, older of the

A professor; "Is UB a degree fac
tory?”
A student: "There's no place to
park.”
After printing four editions, The
Argus was awarded recognition, and
like The Bee, a budget.
The Argus prepared its readers for

that year to which the present-day
Spectrum traces its history.)
The Bee ran like a fat girls' gabtest: Trivia.
It once printed a hoax engagement
between two popular students: "People all over the campus fell for the
story when they saw Donna kiss Don
farewell as the latter left Norton for
class Monday,” bragged The Bee, apparently as proud of its purile gag as
it was uninhibited about its journalistic nakedness.
In the fall of 1941, pages of The
Bee were not splashed bloodily with
news of the war. A page-one story
lamented the students’ harsh fate:
“Back to the old grind again . . ■'
The war was distant.
There was an editorial urging students to buy bonds; a story about a
dance in Norton Hall, recently transformed into an air raid shelter.
Homecoming queens were big news,
though, and The Bee printed the full
story —complete with measurements.
The Argus competes
Then The Bee ran into opposition.
In 1947 a group of liberal students
banded together to form a "progressive newspaper” funded at first solely
by raffles and contributions.
And so The Argus was born.
Perhaps its founding revealed an
awakened feeling of world responsibility among students after the war.
Because The Argus commented cn
international affairs, reviewed foreign
films and attempted to break the enforced isolation of the University.
Its greatest campaign, however, was
against The Bee and its allied fraternaties and sororities.
Problems the same
Interestingly enough, letters to the
editor of The Argus are starkly similar
to those received today by The Spectrum- The problems and gripes are
the same:

pointed.
Jibes, barbs and insults continued

.

.

.

.

until 1950, when competition really
swung into high gear.
Both papers admitted irregularities
in the 1950 student senate elections.
But The Argus carried further, charging the fraternity-sorority block with
subversively misleading “unsuspecting student voters to the kill.”
The Bee launched its own veritable
napalm barrage.
“The Argus is a mudslinging student liability. It made appalling, insidious attacks. It has no dignity of journalism," cried the Bee editorially.
Staffs merged
Open battle was too much. The
board of managers withheld funds
from both papers. A lopsided merger
of “the journalistic quality of The Argus with the efficient business staff
of The Bee” was arranged.
It is difficult to determine whether
the action of the board was a result
of the bitter rivalry, or because of an
anti-Catholic article printed by The
Argus.

But few old Argus staffers would

join the new, and as yet unnamed,
merged newspaper.

The Bull Pen?
A contest was sponsored to name
the new paper. The editorial board
couldn't choose between The Spectrum and The Bull Pen. So the first
edition was labeled “The Official Student Publication of The University of
Buffalo.”
The Spectrum finally won-out. And
the baby publication was given a budget of $1000 (about 1% of the 196869 Spectrum budget).
It was weekly until 1966, when the
paper shifted into semi-weekly production.
Spectrum editors plan to begin
printing three days a week in January
1969. And eventually, they hope, the
paper will become a daily.

�ti\um

I

As one reads an edition of The

Spectrum, the next is in the process
of being assembled. The staff barely
has time to marvel over the paper,
and then it's back to work.
Those who have never worked on
a newspaper may tend to romanticize

and believe everyone to be a Brenda
Starr.
Everyone knows that Brenda Starr,
woman reporter, always encounters
mysterious personalities that send her
on adventures to distant parts of the
world.
She never has to do campus releases or rewrite a story. Neither is
she connected with the less publicized, but equally important staffs
copy and layout—nor with the circulation of the paper nor with the business office.
Alas, Brenda's story is somewhat
incomplete. Therefore, The Spectrum
would like to complete it.
First—The Assignment.
Unsuspecting, you walk into the office to relax. A foolhardy notion. Before you have the chance to put down
your books, an editor with a gleam in
his eyes approaches. Oh, no, it’s assignment time.
You are handed a piece of paper
on which is written three names, two
phone numbers, "call" on top, and a
big question mark beneath it all. As
an explanation is—to begin, the phone
rings, the editor answers, and there
you are left—with a big question
mark.
Finally, he hangs up and asks:
“Now that you've had a chance to
look over the assignment, is there
anything you don’t understand about
it?”
—

The SpECTiyJIM

)

A deadline to meet
"Yes. What am I supposed to do?”
After a brief explanation and a few
suggestions, he says: "This is Wednesday, so have it in by Friday. O.K.?”
Whether it’s O.K. or not, you’ve got
to have it in by Friday. So now you
must set up an appointment.
To do this, you must dial one of
the numbers on the list and wait for
a secretary. Usually, she transfers
you to another secretary, who in turn
transfers you to the right secretary.
By this time, the person you want to
see has gone out of town for a week.
The article is due before he will return, so you must go to the next
name on the list.
Once again, you dial and are connected with a secretary. This time
you are in luck and she sets up an
appointment which is changed when
she calls back half an hour later. If
nothing else, you are gathering data
for an expose on the University’s secretaries. Eventually you reach the
next stage

.

.

time.

When will it be in the paper?
Usually you have an idea of what
you are going to ask him. Once the
questions (and you) are exhausted,
you ask if there is anything he would
care to add and terminate the interview.
“I’ve enjoyed this interview. When
will it be in the paper?” is the usual
response.
Explaining that the article is due
Friday and will appear in Tuesday's
issue, you leave. The next step is to
prepare it for publication —writing the
article. After it is written and then
typed, it is out of your hands and into
those of the editor (either campus,
city, sports, or feature, depending on
your interest).

Jay Schreiber

Campus News Reporter

.

The Interview.
You must arrive on time, have a
neat appearance, and have plenty of
paper. After a brief wait, the subject
is ready to see you. One of the most
important things to remember is to
be attentive, look at the person, and
write down everything you hear.
Above all, pretend to be interested
—even if he is talking about the computer wiring mechanism and its operation. If you don't understand any
of the terms he uses, don’t hesitate
to ask for clarification; although you
may hesitate after the third or fourth

(

Michael L. D'Amico
Editor-in-Chief

Then, editing
The editor, pencil in hand, reads
the article and then proceeds to decorate your handiwork with all sorts
of notations and crossings out. After
he is finished destroying your confidence, he puts it into the little wooden copy box.
A few minutes later, it comes out
of the copy box and is in the hands
of the copy staff. They too read it
over and check for mistakes. Finally,
it goes into the hands of the managing editors who make the last checks.
Next, your interview is put with
other interviews, news stories, sports
stories, feature articles and reviews,
letters to the editor, cartoons, columns, and various other stories, as
well as the advertising copy. These
are all taken to the printer who makes
up the galleys.
Galleys are then sent to the office.
One set is given to the copy staff who
Linda Laufer
make sure there are no mistakes,
Campus News Reporter
such as typographical errors or omissions. Another set is given to the layout staff who plan the location of
each ad and article. These are then
returned to the printer.
business manager has to obtain funds
To press
bill
The paper is now in the hands of for the printing costs and has to
the printer and ready to go to press. the advertisers.
And you, the reporter, anxiously
After this is completed and the papers
of
are ready, the circulation manager leaf through the paper in search
been
has
not
creation,
hoping
it
picks them up and takes them to the yo.
cut. After a frantic search, you have
University. Bundles are placed in varfound
what you seek—your reward"
ious locations on campus. The paper
ve
is at last in the hands of the readers. a by-line. Romantic, or not, you
at
made
it
last.
wait,
But
it's not all over yet. The

�The Spectrum O The SpEC

(L-R)David Sheedy, Layout Editor; Daniel Edelman, Asst. Sports Editor; Lori

Pendrys, Entertainment Coordinator.

Barry C. Holtzclaw
Feature Editor and Editor-elect

All the day-to-day problems of the
Spectrum staff roll straight into the
lap of the managing editor.
From his vantage point, in his

private office or out among the common folks, Dick Haynes must decide
and solve anything that can’t wait for

the editor—where a story should be
cut, what type of headline should be
used, where an ad should go.
Like a factory supervisor, he
watches over every operation of the
paper, making sure it is well-oiled and
functioning. It is a six-day-a-week job
that totals 40 hours, and the easy
moments are rare.
Forty busy hours—and sometimes it is really not an enjoyable job

cost of color or screened photographs
and how to get the best bargain.
Actually, there’s a little bit of
talent scout work, too, placing newcomers to the paper on the staff on
which he feels they belong.
But probably his toughest problem is dealing with the individual department editors. The managing editor
has to rush them enough to get copy
in on time each deadline day, yet not
push them so far that they’ll quit.
Mr. Haynes commented: "You can't
be lax, but if you’re too strong, you’ll
lose good people. You have to keep a
good balance.”

either.

He is the sole recipient of the
blame for anything that goes wrong.
Reporters complain to him if there is
a by-line omitted; the advertising department complains if an ad is left
out; the people from U.U.A.B. complain of insufficient coverage; the editor complains if the paper is not the
way he wants it;
When the galleys come back, he
must supervise the general layout of
the paper, selecting the front page
stories.

He is the man who wears the hats
of many jobs.

The managing editor journeys to
the printer to supervise makeup of
the next edition. Before he goes, he
must literally read over every word of
copy, checking especially for libel and

Samuel A. Powazek
Business Manager

journalistic content.
The job requires more than knowing how to write a good story. The,
managing editor must know the techniques of printing. He must know the

Richard R. Haynes
Managing Editor

�|)
Combined efforts and frustrations,
some successes and the inevitable
failures, missed deadlines and the
last minute rushes —all of these, and
much more, are part of the experience
that is The Spectrum.
Publishing 15,000 copies of The
Spectrum twice every week requires
a combination of the skills and talents
of a large and diversified staff. To
keep the melange of student journalists operating smoothly together, delineation of operations and organization is essential.
The organization of the current
Spectrum staff consists of an editorin-chief, managing editor, assistant
managing editor, seven editors, each
with an assistant and a staff, a business manager, an advertising manager, and a circulation-promotion director.

Each one of these persons, although important in themselves, could
not function without the efforts and

work of the “underlings” on the staff
—the reporters. They are the heart of
The Spectrum, as in any other newspaper.

Concern for reporters
Recognizing the importance and indispensability of reporters, editors
make use of them to the utmost advantage. The four news editors
campus, city, feature and sports
are most concerned with the life and
times of reporters.
The campus staff, as its name implies, is directly involved with news
events that occur on campus. These
events can range from visiting lecturers, to dormitory activities, to student government happenings, to the
restructuring of the University. Any
and all newsworthy events are the
proper concern of the campus staff.
In the field of city news, the city
editor and his staff concentrate on all
events that are of interest occurring
in the city of Buffalo, statewide, or
even of national and international
scope. In addition to regular reporting, this staff also has the task of
editing the news that is received in
The Spectrum office over the UPI
wire and the paper’s three other news
services. The wire is used to put together the World in Focus, which appears on the back page of each
edition.
The feature staff
Any story that is not strictly news
—

—

fJ

The

but is of relevance and interest to
the University community may be
handled by the feature staff.
This diversified staff may indulge
the creativity of budding writers.
Movie, theater, book and record reviews,'Tiuman interest stories, in-depth
interviews all fall under the category
of feature stories. In addition, DimenThe Spectrum's
sion magazine
also includes
monthly supplement
the writings of members of this staff.
For those interested in the athletic
side of University life, the sports staff
provides Spectrum readers with coverage of sports events. All University
sports, from football to crew, are the
domain of the sports staff.
A very essential part of the total
newspaper organization is the Photography staff. Students interested in
photography are needed to add the
immediacy of pictures to the news
stories, and to accompany reporters
on assignments.
—

—

Marge Anderson
Campus Editor

Little known
The two least known, but equally
important staffs are copy and layout.
The copy staff reads all the copy that
eventually appears in The Spectrum,
including news copy, ads, editorials
and columns. In addition to reading
copy before it goes to the printer, the
staff also checks proofs returned from
the printer for possible mistakes.
While the copy staff is reading the
proofs, the layout staff is performing
its job—placing copy in its position
in the paper. Artistic ability is helpful here, as well as expertise with
scissors and glue.
The managing editors
Overlooking the entire operations
of these staffs is the managing editor
and his assistant. The responsibility
of seeing that the whole machine functions smoothly rests with them. They
must also correlate the actions of the
business office with the editorial staff.
The business office handles the financial aspect of The Spectrum, from
the budget to billing advertisers.
Finally, the ultimate responsibility
for the operation of the entire newspaper is in the hands of the editorin-chief. He determines editorial policy
and is the image of The Spectrum to
the outside world.
His paper is the voice of the students. It is his responsibility to make
it a respected and articulate one.

Marlene Kozuchowski (R)
Asst. Campus Editor

James Brennan
Feature Reporter

Daniel
City

Lasser
Editor

�Tuesday, May 7, 1968

The Spectrum

Page Thirteen

UB false alarms create a unique dilemma
by Donna Van Schoonhoven
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

Imagine how you’d look with third degree burns
your body, vour face charred and hlistered, grotesquely distorted, your body writhing
with unbearable pain.
Unreal? Hardly!!
A once beautiful young woman now lies in a
Buffalo hospital
the ravaged product of a hotel
fire. Her face is a massive scar, even after having
numerous skin grafts.
About one-sixth of the city is left unprotected
when fire department apparatus responds to a fire
alarm at the State University of Buffalo, whether
it’s false or real. Even a few minutes delay of that
apparatus to another part of the city during a real
alarm could result in tragedy.

over 90% of

—

Many unprotected
Buffalo Fire Commissioner Robert B. Howard,
said that “some of the same equipment that serves
the University also proceeds to Jefferson and Utica
on a first alarm. An alarm at the University leaves
hospitals, nursing homes, businesses and private
homes unprotected. The University doesn’t have
all its students in one building, but in a hospital the
life hazard is more serious because many patients

—Hershfeld

C!

nremen

are not ambulatory."

“Whether a large number or a small number of
persons is involved in pulling false alarms it’s a
problem we don’t like,” he continued. “The students
still think pulling alarms is a big joke, like they
did four years ago when the feud between the fire
department and the University began.”
Since then the number of false alarms from the
University has mounted, including seven since January of this year.

Phone 876-2284

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Student pressure asked
Commissioner Howard and Dr. Siggelkow have
discussed alternative solutions. “Alarms could go
to the security police office and then be checked
out," suggested Mr, Howard. “We wouldn't like to
do that unless we have to. We hope that the
responsible students will put enough pressure on
those who are pulling the alarms and report them
to the proper officials.”
Dr. Siggelkow said: “We are still investigating
various possibilities, honing to come to a resolution
of the problem without jeopardizing the safety and
welfare of students at the University. Any kind
of delay during a real fire might prove too late. We
can’t take the chance.”
Chances for arriving at a concrete solution seem
minimal. Such factors as fire protection for onesixth of the city, the lives of firemen and pedestrians, and the money spent for equipment must be
weighed against the possibility of an alarm not being false. And in that possibility lies the safety
of University property, and more important, the
lives of the members of the University community.

Undue attention drawn
Dr. Anthony Lorenzetti, Dean of Students, said:
“There seems to be a higher rate of false alarms
during controversial issues. The pulling of these
alarms jeopardizes the rest of the city and tends to
draw attention to the University."
Under the new penal code, the pulling of a
false alarm is a Class B misdemeanor which includes a jail term of not more than 3 months.
Under the old penal code, it was a misdemeanor
with possible jail sentences running up to one year,

load; non-credit course which
would be less formal than a
credit course; a seminar similar
to the Experimental College. Content of the courses and recruitment of faculty will be discussed.
All students who want to take
these courses, whether they are
signed up or not, are asked to
attend. Any faculty member or
teaching assistant interested in
teaching either of these courses
is also invited.

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its former status.
“A temporary solution,” said Dr. Richard Siggelkow, vice president for student affairs, “has been
the use of students stationed at alarm boxes. But
this is intended only as a temporary stop-gap measure to finish out the semester.”

added.

THE SPECTRUM
printed

Partners' Press, Inc.

with a maximum fine of $1000. The fire depart-

ment is attempting to have punishment restored to

equipment. It’s absolutely impossible to give an
accurate estimate.”
The University is not the only place in the city
from which false alarms are reported. False alarms
are called in from all parts of the city every day.
But the University is unique in that it is the only
college in the area with such a problem.
“The fact that this doesn’t happen at any other
colleges proves that there is a degree of laxity out
there. There has to be some reason for it. With a
large body like the State University of Buffalo,
you’re going to find some nuts,” the Commissioner

Students to decide
on bulletin board course

-

Firefighters thrash-out their differences with Norton Hall's night managers after answering a false
alarm. There have been seven on campus since
January.

“When I was a fireman in 1943, the cost of a
false alarm was $50. Today, you also have to weigh
such things as the possibility of an accident. If
you are going to allow for $50, you also have to
allow for the intangibles. Things such as the possibility of injuries, people being killed, wrecked

Evacuation policy is a major controversy. Students continually refuse to evacuate buildings
where alarms have been pulled. They refused to
leave the Millard Fillmore Room March 1 when
firemen responded to a false alarm pulled as
comedian Dick Gregory was about to speak.
“A number of times students have told firemen
that the alarm was false, but we don’t assume it’s
a false alarm,” said the Commissioner. “We must,
in fact, assume that there is a real fire until we
check it out.”
He continued: “I’ve received a couple letters
from University students complaining about evacuation policy, complaining about being forced out
of bed, and complaining that their exams suffered
and they didn’t get enough sleep. But what can we
do? If students refuse to leave, we’ll have to cut
University fire alarm boxes off from the rest of the
city. To do this will endanger every student. We
already have cut down on the amount of apparatus
being sent. If we do have to, the campus will suffer
and it will be your loss rather than ours.

Norton Hail.
Students at these meetings will
decide whether or not to have
courses of one or more of the
following types: Credit granting
course which meets certain University requirement sand carried
as part of the student’s semester

S

More than money

Should buildings be evacuated?

“Photography for non-art majors," a bulletin board course,
will meet at 4 p.m. tomorrow in
room 339, Norton Hall. “Drawing
for non-art majors” will meet at
4 p.m, Thursday in room 334,

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�Page Fourteen

Tuesday, May 7, 1968

The Spectrum

Innovations in freshman chemistry
aimed at gaining students' interest
Based on the findings of a
Committee of the University
Chemistry Department, Gordon
M. Harris, chairman of the Department of Chemistry, has announced a series of changes in
freshman chemistry courses.
These changes result from the
finding that only a small minority
of the students who register for
Chemistry 101 and 102 have not
had high school chemistry. The
planned changes are aimed at interesting the students in chemistry rather than continuing the
training in the language of chemistry which the student has begun
in high school.

Innovations
In line with this aim, the fol-

lowing changes will be instituted:
Chemistry 103, 104 will be
eliminated after summer 1968.
Chemistry 101, 102 will be
organized on a system of two lectures and a small group discussion session in place of the current three lectures a week.
•

•

Effective September 1968,
admission to Chemistry 108 and
113 will be based on a placement
•

campus releases...

Ralph Nader, consumer crusader, will be the featured guest
State of the University nn WKR Radio at 8:45 p m tonight In
a
High school chemistry will his interview with Dave Trippe, he outlines his arguments against
examination. By summer, 1969,
these courses will become an opnot be a prerequisite for Chemiscurrent trends of the auto industry, including overpricing, low
tional lab sequence for first year try 101, 102. However, an evalu- safety standards and, the unyielding attitude of the auto giants to
chemistry students. This new seation test will be given to stuimprove the situation.
quence will be called Chemistry
dents to enable them to decide if
The program will be re-broadcast at 8 a.m. Sunday on WMMJ,
a
to
they need
attend additional 8:45 a.m. on WADY, 8 p.m. on WWOL-FM and at 2:15 p.m. Saturday
151L, 152L and will be requirement for chemistry majors.
sessions in the basic concepts of on WBFO.
chemistry.
A direct action program for Negroes in the agricultural Deep
A reorganization of ChemSouth is being planned. All interested persons are asked to volunistry 101L, 102L will continue
Chemistry 101, 102 will teer.
this year. This will continue to be make greater use of closed-cirTo volunteer, or for further information, contact Donald A.
the normal laboratory course for cuit television, films, and other
Jelinek, Southern Rural Research Project, 802 First Ave., Box 956,
students taking Chemistry 101, instructional aids as funds beSelma, Ala, 36701,
102.
come available.
"The Concept of Character in Fiction" will be the subject of
a public lecture by author and critic William H. Gass at 8 p.m,
tonight in Butler Auditorium, Capen Hall.
A Computer Colloquium will be held at 4 p.m. Monday at 4250
Ridge Lea Rd. Dr. D. Bobrow, from Bolt, Beranek and Newman of
Boston, Mass., will speak.
Last week’s questions and results were:
The Women's Recreation Association holds open house from 7-9
Yes
p.m., Tuesday evenings in Clark Gym. Swimming, gymnastics, paddle1—Are you satisfied with this year’s
ball, volleyball, archery and badminton will be available for all
Spectrum?
53% 47% women.
29%
2—Was it better than last year?
71%
The Newman Association will present “The Significance of Toll3—Was coverage adequate and obhard de Chardin: An Appraisal” in a lecture by H. James Birx, philjective?
58% 42% osophy teaching assistant, at 8 p.m. tomorrow in room 339, Norton
4—Were the editorials thOught-proHall.
voking?
60% 40%
Opportunities are available for rooming with a foreign exchange
5—Did you take note of the advertisstudent or assisting with foreign student orientation. Anyone intering and avail yourself of the
ested should contact Paul Hollander in the Student Association Office,
services offered?
76% 24% room 203, Norton Hall.
Student sponsors applications for Fall Freshman Orientation are
Number of ballots, 498.
available in room 205, Norton Hall until tomorrow, when all applications are due.
"A Research Approach to Individualized Instruction in the Elementary School” will be the topic of Dr. Joseph D, Novak, professor
and chairman of the Division of Science Education at Cornell University, at 3:45 p.m., Thursday in the Fillmore Room, Norton Hall.
The colloquium is sponsored) by the University’s Faculty of Educational Studies.
"Impact of the New University on the Amherst Community" will
be the topic of Dr. Robert L. Ketter in the University Report series
at 9 am. today in the Conference Theater, Norton Hall.
WBFO, 88.7 me, which has previously programmed only classical, folk and jazz, will begin a new series on the contemporary rock
scene called Alleyway. Every Saturday at 4 p.m., Joe Ferrandino,
English instructor at the University, will present a survey of the
contemporary scene, tracing its historical roots from folk, jazz and
early “pop.”
Donald Kolberg, lecturer in geography at this University, will
be heard on Research in Review at 9:05 p.m. tomorrow on WEBR
(970 kc.). He was recently named field director for climatology re•

•

Question of

the week

Most girls stuff

is just a“Covcr-Up”„

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before your period. (It’s that extra water-weight causing pressure on
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PAMPRIN does what aspirin doesn’t. It alleviates the “bloating.” So it
gets at the cause of the pain. Instead of just covering it up. PAMPRIN
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�Tuesday, May 7, 1968

The Spectrum

strike-out

the spectrum of

sports

by Danny Edelman
Assistant Sports Editor

Tomorrow the student body will have the chance to vote on

once again. There are various issues surrounding the question of
athletic fees that deserve to be illuminated in order to give a better
picture of the implications of tomorrow’s vote and the effect that it
will have on the University community.
The position of the athletic department is very clear and easily

explainable.
They want a big-time athletic program comparable to any in
the nation. Under the leadership of athletic director Jim Peele, they
have moved in that direction slowly but surely even before the University was merged into the state system, and despite obstacles
thrown up by the State they have continued to move in that direction
with the approval of high University officials including President
Meyerson.
Unfortunately, their dreams have far exceeded the reality of
constructing such a program. The most obvious problem, visible to

anyone who walks around the campus, is the present athletic facilities. The combination of Rotary Field and Clark Gym may be the
worst in the country for a school of this size. This has been noted
for many years, but nothing will be done about it because the new
campus, the future panacea for all the University problems will take
care of this one also. The most important problem, and one that no
one would 'have dreamed possible just a few years ago, concerns

the students.
A basic requirement of any athletic program—big-time, smalltime or no-time—is that the students pay some form of mandatory
fees that are put at the disposal of the athletic department.
When the bombshell of voluntary fees was instituted, the athletic department was coping with something for which they really
had no precedent.
I think the basic reason for this is that the athletic department
can’t conceive a student body not wanting a big-time athletic program, one that will bring the State University of Buffalo fame and
fortune throughout the land. They have tried to divorce themselves,
to a large extent, from the large vocal body of student activists on
campus as not being representative of the University. This is especially true when they are appealing to the community at large for
athletic funds. I am not saying that this is done at Buffalo alone,
rather I think it is the rule throughout the' country that athletic
departments deliberately minimize student activities that are unpopular to the community at large in order not to damage their monetary
returns from loyal alumni. This is only natural.
But the question still reverts back to the students. Many of
them simply either don’t care about the athletic program. Or if
there has to be an athletic program at all, let it be basically intramural in nature.
Persons adopting the attitude of “I don’t care” form that part
of the community, which for one reason or another, never gets
involved in the American syndrome known as organized sport, ie.
Little League, Midget Football, etc., or never had any inclination
toward sports.

The intramuralists would like to see an athletic program that
basically intramural in nature have some convincing arguments
in their corner.
They argue that an intramural program would involve more
of the students in athletic activities whereas a big-time
athletic
program is geared for those who are excellent athletes—good
enough
in fact that they command a four year scholarship at a university
for the sole purpose of participating in a sport.
There are misconceptions that are used in defense of this intramural position that needs to be exposed.
ear
S
this school does go big-time in sports
the athletes will get a lot of extra privileges that ordinary
students
not
do
receive. This has happened at other schools that do have
big-time programs and are thus forced to recruit all
over the country for the best athletes. But this doesn't necessarily mean that
if
will happen here if the proper precautions are taken.
A first step is the establishment of an athletic board composed
of student and representative of the athletic department to
oversee
all aspects of the athletic program in all its phases,
both
collegiate and intramural, ft’s a damn shame when legitimateinterathletic clubs are formed such as rowing and soccer, composed
of students who are anxious to learn and compete, and are refused money
and even more importantly, refused help for
whatever reason.
is

*

’

Thus is absolutely inexcusable.
TCie formation of an athletic board would
set standards by which
a club could receive recognition.
important item should be brought to mind.
Athletic
t
pa ? f0r equipment and instruction and what
have you
that
a
n n
re gUlar
g^m daSS AtMetie fees do P3 *■» costs
ttat
a« n.a H h
th are representing the State University
of Buffalo to
AS -SUch they represent an extra-cur
P
UcuIar activity
activUv of the °,'?'
ncuiar
University. With this in the background
1
1 support »ig time
g
ds that must be instituted to prevent the
,?’
h?" d- However, I realize that others
M
the ,mP°rt ance of an athletic program
■*
and
nd being
hPina that it is
‘

fre

?

'

,
‘

■

o? thi

f

grvenTmtornt'satgu^V
thTcImpusl don"f s°ep t°h
t
an

Es

’

extra-curricular

afScs

activity

I resnect their

b

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Contact Off-Campus Housing,
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*

Pag* Fifteen

irammed

takes second
in

regatta

The State University of Buffalo
crew—picked to finish dead last
—surprised everyone by placing
second in the Buffalo State Invitational Regatta held in St. Catherines, Ont. The participants,
Buffalo State, Canisius and the
State University of Buffalo raced
over a 2000 meter Olympic course
in their quest for the regatta trophy.

At the start of the race, the
Bulls were left sitting at the gate
as the two other teams got off to
good starts. The Blue and White
began to move at the 500 meter
mark and at the half way mark
they were two lengths ahead of
Canisius, but they were still trailing State by the same amount.
The second half of the race saw
the Bulls try valiantly to cut down
the lead, but State’s overall experience was just too much, and
they came over the finish line
three-fourths of a length ahead of
the Bulls shell. Canisius finished
last, four lengths behind the win-

Womens ennis earn
is victor in first match
The newly organized State University of Buffalo Women's Tennis Team won its first match last
week by defeating Park School of
Buffalo 5-0. Ann Wrzesien, playing in the No. 1 singles spot, lost
an exhibition match to Mrs. Judy
Glenn, coach of the Park School
team. Sue Sausner downed her

in the
second singles match, 3-6, 6-4, 6-4.
Karen Golibersuch, the No. 3
singles player, defeated Lolly
Olena 7-5, 6-1.

feating Susan Nesbitt and Nance
Teach 6-2, 6-2.
Kay Richard

hen and Tina Ball after going
three sets 8-6, 1-6, and 6-1.
The No. 3 doubles team, Pat
Berry and Shirley Goldin, defeated Sue Jacobs and Jenny

opponent Lorna Walker

In doubles competition Kathie
Lumberg and Marlene Samuelson
won their match .easily by de-

ners.

and Diana Zont

won their match with Kathy Co-

Wood 7-5, 6-1.

The next match for the women
will be with Brockport today at 4
p.m. Tomorrow Buffalo Seminary
will play host to the State University of Buffalo team.

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�Pig* Sixteen

Tuesday, May 7, 1968

The Spectrum

Action line
831-5000
.

CONSIDER A

CIVILIAN
AIR FORCE CAREER
AIR FORCE LOGISTICS COMMAND
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base
near
Dayton, Ohio

There are excellent opportunities in
INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING
(All engineering degrees

considered)

for those interested in the Air Force Logistics Command Staff Positions. The Industrial Engineer applies his skill in the areas of management systems design, significant
problem solving using his knowledge of the mathematical and physical sciences
together with methods and principles of engineering analysis and design. He is a
consultant to management in the application of proven management techniques to
increase the effectiveness, efficiency, and economy of Air Force operations. He also
administers and operates in methods improvement and processing engineering. He
receives on-the-job training in all the foregoing areas and within a minimum of
training time. The Industrial Engineer is given specific assignments relating to the
above areas of activity pertaining to the particular organization to which he is assigned. Throughout his career, he continues to be given increased responsibility
commenusrate with his ability.
For further information regarding these challenging and rewarding career opportunities see your:

COLLEGE PLACEMENT DIRECTOR

complete the attached and send
College Relations Representative
Civilian Personnel Division
Air Force Logistics Command
EWACEH
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base

Ohio 45433
An Equal Opportunity Employer

to:

Name.
Address
Degree

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Date Available.

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Ohio

EWACEH (Ind. Engineer)

.

.

Q. If I submit an application for financial assistance to the University, and receive noTielp from my parents, do they still have to provide information about their income?
A. Because of the many angles surrounding this question and because it is significant to a very targe number of students we are
answering it in great detail:
The Financial Aid Office has advised us that the basic premise
of the federally supported student assistance programs, which represent the great bulk of funds administered by that office, is that a student and his parents have the primary obligation to pay for his education. The family of a student is expected to make a maximum effort
to assist him with his college expenses. It is the Federal Government’s intent to supplement that family contribution where the family is unable to meet the full cost. Funds are not intended to be used
as a substitution for the obligation of the family in this matter.
The determination of a family’s responsibility in the case of a
student who considers himself independent is a matter which must
be resolved on the basis of the facts in each case. For purposes of financial assistance, independence cannot be left to the option of the
student—it is rather a matter of circumstance. If he wishes to receive
financial help, he cannot choose to forego the assistance which his
family would normally be expected to extend to him. This can take
many forms—for example, room, board and clothing—as well as actual payments in money. Generally speaking, if a student is living at
home, there is an assumption that he is receiving assistance from his
parents, and is not an independent student.
For some federal programs, even though the student is independent, the ability of the parents to contribute to his education must still
be taken into consideration. The College Work-Study Program is an
example of this. It was initiated by the Federal Government to stimulate and promote the part-time employment of students who are from
low income families and are in need of the earnings from such employment in order to pursue their courses of study. The important factor
in the determination of eligibility to participate in this program is the
ability of the parents to finance educational costs, and decisions are
based upon their statements in regard to family income, assets and resources as set forth on the Parents’ Confidential Statement of the College Scholarship Service.
One key to the determination of independent status is whether
or not a student is declared by his parents as a dependent for income
tax purposes. His dependency is self-evident if he is so declared. How-

ever, for financial assistance purposes, the fact that the parents do
not include him among their exemptions is not in itself evidence that
dependency does not exist.

In determining eligibility for financial assistance, the important
consideration in the review of all applications is the responsibility of
the family to contribute toward the student’s educational expenses,
and the actual circumstances in each case.
Q. When is the fountain by Norton Hall going to be cleaned and

put into service?
A. Thank you for bringing this to our attention. Our inquiry
brought immediate action. The fountain was put into operation the

following day.
Q. Why is it that the inter-campus bus sometimes appears late or,
on other occasions, does not appear?
A. Of late we have been having increasing problems with the bus
schedule, and have been working steadily with the bus company to
maintain their assigned schedule. We are ever hopeful.
Q. Can a student have his eyes examined, for glases, in the Infirmary?

A. No. The University Health Service does not have either the facilities or equipment necessary for such examinations. However, if you
wish, they can give you the names of opthalmologists, with whom you
can arrange an appointment for such an examination.
Q. Why doesn't the Language Lab open as scheduled on Saturday

mornings?

A. This particular problem was recently brought to the attention of
the Director of the Language Lab, and he has already taken steps to
rectify this.

STATE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE PRESENTS

The EVENT of the DECADE

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with

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�Pag* Seventeen

The Spectrum

Tuesday, May 7, 1968

Wood Coli

Foresees 'radical alternative' as third force
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

Whatever happened to Woody Cole, the
“Peace candidate” for Buffalo Councilman-at-large in last November’s election?
For one thing, he has not returned to
the Ivy Tower of Academia (if ever he
was there). As a matter of fact, the old
Ivy Tower has even closed its doors on
Buffalo State College has
Mr. Cole
refused to grant him tenure.
—

The immediate nasty that pops to mind
is that this was some sort of political
action, but Mr. Cole says: “not fundamentally so. The decision was made last
spring, and it’s the same old question of
should one grant tenure to an instructor
without his Ph.D, Of course, publishing
is a factor in this also.” He added that
in his opinion the criteria for granting
tenure were not nearly broad enough, and
I would agree with Mm. An hour’s conversation with Woody Cole was worth
30 hours of the wit and wisdom of some
venerable Ph.D’s.

Remains in Buffalo
But Woody Cole is not leaving Buffalo.
“My academic wares: philosophy of religion and existentialism can be peddled
anywhere,” and since political action is
still uppermost in hds mind: “Why move
to another urban center whose' problemsI don’t even know?”
Seemingly then, he is undaunted by
the ousting. But then again Woody Cole’s
existence does not seem to be rooted in
The Hallowed Halls. One could more
aptly place him in City Hall, where he
continues to press for the things he

ieves in, electoral mandate or no. His
major concerns are poverty, racism, and,

of

course,

Vietnam.

methods.” Some of the agencies he sug
gests ate:
Urban Action Association

To achieve the progress called for in
these areas, Woody Cole sees the need
for a third political force, “a radical
alternative” as he calls it, for “the old
two-party political system is suffering
from a disease of epidemic proportions.”

“Politics has become an arena of the
statemansMp of manipulation, and not the
pursuit of what is right, morally or politically.” This third political force he
hopes will serve as a means to make problems and issues embarassingly clear to a
great number of people. In this sense,
he feels his candidacy to have been a
success, although he would have liked to
have seen a larger vote in his support.
But it provided a rallying point for those
against the war, for dissent and the peace
issue.
It tackled “head-on the horror of the
old Joe McCarthy era and helped, perhaps, to weaken it. We learned a great
deal about the city and issues affecting
it, and the campaign resulted in new
forms of valuable political action and
’

organization.”

What students can do
Woody Cole also has some suggestions
for what students who share his views
can do, for he feels that there is “too
much ideological self-indulgence on campus. Too many students are more concerned with maintaining their own opinions and confuting those of their friends
verbally, instead of through activist

An organization wMch grew out of Ms
political campaign, it serves as a veMde
of information and has assisted in multi-

ple ways to bring issues to public attention, for example it helped organize the
King Memorial on Niagara Square, and
calling draft resistance to the attention
of citizens, “General Hershey’s version of
1984,” in the words of Mr. Cole.

Freedom Peace Committee:

A collection of concerned people in the
academic community and the community
at large 'trying to implement and direct
attention to the problems of racism and
injustice.

Build Us Toot

An orgamzation of the white community, its purpose being to confront people
with their racism, apathy, inequity, and
indifference.

In addition students might attend the
regular meetings of the Community Action Organization, or participate in the
local Poor People’s Campaign.

“The whole problem with getting students involved politically is to get the
romance out of their eyes involving national elections. It is far more advantageous for them to become involved in
local organizing.” And speaking of the
community at large he says that “the
real evil we have to deal with is the
banality of evil .that grows out of indifference."

Politics of patronage
Mr. Cole professes a “subjective sympathy” for both Eugene McCarthy and
Dick Gregory, but he adds: “At this point
in lime, the old politics of patronage and
back-slapping have to be overthrown first,
before the political system becomes demo-

cratic.”
After a disappointing defeat in November and his ouster from Buffalo State,

one would almost expect Woody Cole to
be a very disheartened person, but tMs
is far from the case.
In fact, in many Ways he is encouraged
though much remains to be done. There
is a third political force which people
are beginning to recognize, and he proudly pointed to the fact that, the morning
I interviewed him, at least eight or nine
secretaries in City Hall greeted him with,
“Oh, so you’re Mr. Cole.”
“I’m not by nature a bitter person,” he
says, “because history teaches us that
things have been so much worse, and
even though our society is abusing its

institutions and laws which enable it to
be an open society, at this point, at least,
it is still strong enough to succeed In
the future. In spite of the Establishment,
bureaucracy, racism and indifference,
censorship and unconstitutional laws, I
still think this country is open enough
that it can adjust enough and change. ‘We
shall overcome’.”

It is a shame that the voting populace
of Buffalo could not have had the experience I had of talking with Mr. Cole. But
then again, how much could one man
sway reactionary minds?

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�Pag* Eighteen

Tuesday, May 7, 1968

The Spectrum

Magazine revie

'Riots... and Other
Mental Exercises'

Grabbing the Bull by the horns
Irary

Staff

Spectrum

who carry the card in their left
hand are automatically classified
1-A, whether they be men, women or children. 1-A is more specialized, however. A 65-year-old
World War I veteran would probably get a 1-ACP—1-A checker

Reporter

Some argued it had phallic connotations, but to me it looked like
a bloodied Ku Klux Klansman
standing atop a pile of hay. A
glance at the back cover of BULL,
the sometime student humor magazine, proved it to be but a
bloodied BULL-horn, acquired at
the expense of a reckless mata-

player.

And likewise, under the pro-

posed system, a 22-year-old strong,
handsome, college graduate who

dor—Ole!

is Polish and from Buffalo would

probably get a 1-ASS—1-A snow

Dedicated to Gen. Hershey (the
one-cent general), the new BULL
is probably much the same as the
old BULL. But few know for certain—published BULL hasn’t hit
the streets much lately.

shoveler.
Also found in the BULL are
“The Amazing Adventures of
Super Co-ed,” a revealing tale of
a woman’s search for a date on
the college campus (“Very Clement Hall,” says one co-ed); a few
bad poems; some cleverly-captioned pics and a scratch pad from
the desk of UUAB President Jane
Cohen.

In one short selection written
by A1 Pinchoff, Gen. Hershey announces a new Selective Service
system (after proposing a threeday bank holiday because “all
good plans start that way”). Un-

:r’s "Down Amon;
the Dead Men” is perhaps the
highlight of the BULL. Call it a
modern fractured fairy tale, a
look into scientific probability,
or a piece of trash—the arguments therein are inescapable and
overwhelming: “Something, anything, may be highly unlikely,
highly improbable, but there is
nothing, I repeat, nothing, that
we can categorically claim to be
absolutely and inflexibly impossible. While it is true that, generally speaking, dead men don’t
eat, yet, speaking in truly scientific terms this is only a statement of probability. The vast
majority of dead men don’t eat.
Some dead men eat.”
Aside from these highlights,
and “The Wonderful World of
Paul Lentz,” the BULL is just
that. But they’re selling fast.

Spectrum

. and
“Riots .
Other Mental
Exercises” is an appropriate description of what the audience
is called upon to do. Besides being subjected to interwoven humor, tragedy and message, we
must project our thoughts into
different realms and states. In
Prayer Before Birth, Dead Girl
of Hiroshima, and Johnny Got His
Gun, we are asked to empathize
with the unborn child, the young
girl whose life was snatched by
war and who now prays for peace,
and the dead and dying soldier.
From the womb we hear an infant cry, “I am not yet born;
console me.”

Even the most detached viewer

cannot remain passive during this
evening
the mental functions
are engaged actively, dramatically in the workings of the pres—

entation.
The success of the program is
credited to director-producer Neil
Hoos for his ingenious organization and editing of the selections
so that they relate powerfully to
one another; each selection underlining the others; all the diverse parts becoming amalgamated into a thought-provoking
meaningful, touching whole.

Two BIG Bands
Wed. and Thurs.

Fri.

THE
BLUES
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Commentary on life

MHHMMtHtltlUtM

“Perhaps the most beautiful movie in history.”
-

Brendan

(.ill.

The New Yorker.

Elwira

s
•

|
•

•

madi^an

•

?

I

"ONE OF THE
YEAR'S 10 I
BEST FILMS!” |
Crowihsr, Times Gelmls, Newsday
Well, Cue Winsten, Post
Newsweek

|

•

•

{Morgenstern.

ter

1

NOW PLAYING!

•
*

Alpert &amp; Knight, Saturday Review

S

i

■m

rctroa

NOW
PLAYING!

Reporter

.

Powerfully successful

4 Big Groovin’ Nights

Staff

When in the course of events I was called upon to review
another campus production, I was struck with the anticipation of a mediocre production. And thus was I encouraged
when before mine eyes unfolded the most profound and
moving student production I have seen to date.

“Riots” is a unique commentary by Mr. Hoos on life, death,
draft, time, Negro, state of man,
society. These themes are handled sometimes deftly, delicately,
sometimes bluntly and obtusely,
but they are always designed to
impart maximum impact on the
viewer. There is some significance
to every line
more than can
be reaped from seeing “Riots”
—

just

once.

Time and youth are discussed
in several sections including a
gravely deep, melodic interpretation of “Where Are You Going” by a folksinging Carol Forman.

Mr. Hoos’s work is pleading
with people to examine the ultimate values of existence, not just
superficially to examine words
like death and dishonor. Lanny
Lerner relates this message especially well in “Johnny Got His
Gun:” “I want to live.”

Impressive talent
Mr. Hoos also deserves a great
deal of credit for his job of casting the production. Probably the
single most impressive facet of
the presentation was the unveiling of an impressive amount of
genuine student acting ability.
Several actors truly distinguished
themselves. Corinne Broskett was
sensual and sincere in her delivery of Molly Bloom’s soliloquy.
She exhibited a clear, pleasing
singing voice when she combined
with Carol Forman in a rather
unique duet. Joy Peskin is an uninhibited actress whose impressive physical presence and heavy
use of dialect make her roles
most effective. Duffy Magesis relates a strong message in Gutter
Rats: “to keep me in that gutter,
you have to be in it too.”
The best over-all section was
“If We Must Die” in which Maury
Chaykin’s superb characterization
of the southern hypocrite brought
to mind a sharp resemblance to
Rod Steiger and “In the Heat of
the Night,”
Ron Martenbro was convincing
as a black man being humiliated,
as was Carol Forman who was a
very good

Sam.

Bruce Kaiden topped off the
evening with an endearing interpretation of “Alice’s Restaurant,”
a satirically funny approach to
a very serious problem.

Bjack/white

Mr. Hoos is experimenting with
new ideas, forms and media. The
black man is a recurrent character in the skits; yet there is
true integration; w h it e actors
played Negroes and vice-versa.
Interjected between several
skits were aphorisms and witticisms. For example, if Shirley
Temple Black should marry Tyrone Power, her name would be
Shirley Black Power.
By the end of the program the
viewer must feel emotionally
drained yet strangely refreshed
after having been exposed to
laughing at the most serious and
profound aspects of being.
“Riots” will be staged again
this afternoon and Wednesday at
4 p.m.

1CLOSELY
•WATCHED;

•

WHAT? YOU'VE ONLY
SFFN“THE GRADUATE” ONCE?
ACADEMY AWARD

WINNER
for

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Saturday Night
THE SWEET INSPIRATIONS

Friday and Saturday
THE RISING SONS

"o 5
9:45

S

2:3o'

LIVE MUSIC NIGHTLY

Z

RECORD
WEEK!

From The Novella by D. H. Lawrence

GOLDY and the GINGERBREADS

JOSEPH E LEVINE

12th

8

SuMHIMOHIUMHIi

BEST DIRECTOR (Kike Nichols)
mike NICHOLS
LAWRENCE TURMAN

*

*,

-

N

�Concert review.

'Mustache' and Dionne Warwick
Clad dn a gold and silver sequined jacket with yellow pants,
Miss Warwick opened her concert with none other than “Up
Up and Away.” Backed up by a
four-piece combo lad by Lee
Valentino, she did her first big

by James Brennan
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

Ah, yes, My Little Chickadees!
The old songs are the best songs.
Give me ragtime, and dixieland,
and bluegrass banjo music, and
I’ll be happy the whole night long.
Well, friends and neighbors, to
kick off Kaleidoscope ’68 the University’s Spring Weekend, that’s
exactly the kind of music the
audience was treated to. The Millard Fillmore Room was transformed into a Gay Nineties atmosphere complete with red and
white checkered
tableclothes,
foaming brew (it’s legal because
the campus is wet now), handlebar mustaches and happy people.
The impetus to all this frivolity
is a banjo playing, red striped
shirted, mustached, sing-along
band called
“Your Father’s
Mustache,”

Hand-clappin'
The audience reaction to this
“old-timer” group: foot stompin’,
hand clappin’, swaying, dancing,
and all kinds of foolish carryingson. Why, there was one guy there
with a broken foot, who was so
involved with the festivities that
he went hopping along in the
snake dance around the tables
waving his cane.
During the intermissions (that’s
when the boys with banjos went
over to the bar to sip a little
brew) they showed actual black
and white motion pictures of that
flicker star Charlie Chaplin.

Beer-can pyramids
Another activity at this here
goings-on that developed a spirit
of table rivalry was the building
of beer-can pyramids.
Some of the structures contained what appeared to be
enough cans to quench the thirst

of the Chinese army.
As one effervescent architect
bubbled to another in boast: “Our
pile has 344 beer cans.” To which
the reply was heard: “Yea, but

ours are

hit from back in 1962 called
“Don’t Make Me Over.”
A rhythm and blues singer,
she was number one in that category in 1967. Her gospel singing
background is noticed by the
power and feeling she puts into
her delivery. In “Coin’ Out of My
Head” and “Who Can I Turn To,”
she exhibited her strong voice
with a few very long, very effective notes.

—Brennan

Your Father's Mustache
audience gets into swing
sence of a certain “Sweet Sue.”

Her orange mini-shimmy fringed
dress wasn’t the eye-catcher in
her act; it was the lacy garter
she had way up on her leg.
All of these songs were accompanied by assorted mirthful shouts
and Hee Haa’s as the audience
and performers blended into one
banjo-based songfest. Along with
the two banjos, “Your Father’s
Mustache” uses a slide trombone,
a tuba, and a wash board.
All who attended this portion
of Spring Weekend undoubtedly
enjoyed themselves, their neighbors, their beer, and the banjos.

Dionne Warwick

“The Bourgeois Gentleman”
(The Would-be Gentleman) by
Moliere will be presented by
Casting Hall, the student theater
organization at the Buffalo State
University College, in Upton Hall
on the Elmwood campus.
The play was first performed
before Louis XIV, King of France,
in 1670. It is often regarded as
consisting of three acts of the
finest comedy Moliere ever wrote,
and two acts of sheer buffoonery.
It was written during a period in
which the dramatist was experimenting with the comic-ballet
form, seeking the union of acting, music and dancing. Tradition has it that the story line was

cert.

r—

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Crest
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IN INURWKJNAl TEMPORARY

Mailer

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is

star

Shown in his many roles—writer, actor, film director and
active protester—Norman Mailer
is the subject for Channel 17’s
N.E.T. Festival program, “Will
The Real Norman Mailer Please
Stand Up,” May 15 at 9 p.m.

Eminent author of The Naked
Park,
and Why Are We in Vietnam?
By.”
next
(with his
novel Barbary
Her last few numbers, “AnyShore, dealing with radical politiWho
a
one
Had Heart” and Say a cal ideologies), Mailer is shown at
Little Prayer for Me,” were quite his home in Brooklyn Heights,
popular with the onlookers, and N.Y.; acting with his wife in a
her closing number, “Alfie,” drew film; directing his own film; and
a standing ovation.
addressing a peace rally with poet
and the Dead, The Deer

'

For those in the crowd at “Your
Father’s Mustache” who kept requesting “Up Up and Away,” your
plea was answered on Friday
night at the Dionne Warwick con-

empty!”

sss.ssu

Her style also has a quiet reto it. When she did
“One Hand One Heart” and
“Theme From Valley of the
Dolls,” she sensitively molded
each note in creating a tender
work that transformed Clark
Gym into a hushed chamber of
poetic stillness.
The evening was not all tranquility though, as the audience
clapped with her on “Reach Out.”
The patrons became the participants again as Miss Warwick teasingly chided the audience into
grooving with her in “Walk On

Buffalo State to present
the visit of a Turkish envoy to the French court. In
the original production both
Moliere and his wife appeared in
the cast, with the author starring
in the role of Jourdain.
The all-student cast of the presentation features Don Michael
Reilly as Jourdain, Mary Brown as
Madame Jordain and John Bulger
as Cleonte. Dr. Thomas B. Herthel, associate profesor of Speech
and Theater Arts, is the director
of the production and James
Stockman, also of the faculty, is
the scenic designer and technical
director.
The play will be performed
May 8 and 10-12 .
suggested by

fined touch

Some of the big numbers of
the evening were Dixie, Have
Nagila, Charlie and the MTA,
and Bonnie and Clyde.
The group had a little audiovisual aid in their productions
thanks to the shimmering es-

BUFFALO

Pag* Nin*t**n

The Spectrum

Tuesday, May 7, 1968

'VWi»4

of TV special
Robert Lowell.
Mailer is also seen in an interview about his recent book on
Vietaran expresing his opinions
on many issues including American involvement in the Vietnam
War, and what is happening to
the American people.
A major part of the film was
shot in Washington during the
October 1967 peace march, at
which Mailer was arrested. He
later wrote accounts of the march
that were published in Harper’s
and Commentary and will be part
of Mr. Mailer’s forthcoming book
Armies of the Night.

�P»g« Twenty

Th

•

Tuesday, May 7, 1968

Sptclrum

If these kids don’t make it,
neither do we.

These are big city school children. They are partners
of all who try to build and keep our cities alive with hope
and promise of personal dignity. If we fail these partners,
they will fail, as finally will we all.
To the Beil System, they also are customers and,
prospectively, many are fellow employees. Those we hire
will bring with them attitudes and skills produced by city
life and city schools. Their qualities will help shape the
quality of our service. And service is our product.
Bell System companies and people are increasingly
engaged to help meet the problems of the cities, especially
those concerning education and employability. In these
areas our skills and other business resources may hatfe
extra value. We shall try to keep our deeds outrunning
our words.

A) AT&amp;T
»•&lt;

AimoIM C—»&gt;»«■« i

�The

Tuesday, May 7, 1968

Page Twenty-One

Spectrum

Study of University Stores aims at
locating problems, seeking solutions
cooperative

University Stores, designed to
produce a report which will be
a basis for present improvement
and present planning, will be undertaken this summer.

This project “appears to be
one of the first attempts to survey the role of the bookstore
and its relationship to the University community and its future,” according to Mr. George
Bielan, general manager of the
University Bookstore. As part of
this undertaking, a questionnaire
has been developed by the Supervisory Staff of the Bookstore and

the Student Administrative Assistant, David Cornberg.

The purpose of the questionnaire is to provide an opportunity
whereby customers of the bookstore,' including students, faculty,
staff and members of the Buffalo
community, can document what
they want instead of “merely
criticizing verbally the operations
of the University Bookstore.” According to Mr. Comberg, the questionnaire will serve in helping
“first to define and resolve present problems and secondly to
project and prepare for future
problems.”

Created to develop more meaningful lines of communication at
the Student level, the Student Administrative Assistant also “allows us to gauge more accurately
student thinking in terms of bookstore operations and source smade
available,” said Mr. Bielan.

Purposes
The questionnaire has a twofold purpose. Specific suggestions
from customers interested in the
current operation of the book-

in order to locate problems and
seek solutions will be elicited.
Also, it aims to make people in
the University and communityat-large aware of some of the
difficulties facing the University
stores and especially the Bookstore and to clear up misconceptions concerning the operation of
the University stores.
“Research so far indicates that

many of our problems are national in scope and are not re-

stricted to this University,” said
Mr. Bielan,

Counter service?
He cited a “serious shortage of
space” as one of the key problems currently facing the Bookstore, “which will probably get
worse before it gets better.” Conceivably, due to this lack of space,
he noted, within six months to
a year the bookstore may be
faced with a change to a clerkserviced operation, wherein customers would not be allowed in
the store and all business would
be transacted over a counter at
the front door.

Society,

who

TO DOUG
Happiness and
Love Always
“little one”
—

com-

ADMINISTRATIVE TRAINEE
Positions in PROJECT RESEARCH involving

mented that they are eagerly
awaiting the results of the project.

MARKETING

Student help wanted

•

To help Mr. Cornberg research
the problems of the University
stores, student help is being recruited for specific projects. According to Mr. Bielan: “There
are urgent problems in the following area: architecture, books,
finance, law, marketing and management.”

•

LAW

•

MANAGEMENT

•

•

FINANCE
ARCHITECTURE

Fast-expanding University Bookstore has challenging parttime positions for qualified graduate and undergraduate
students researching systems, making recommendations,
becoming a working part of the University Bookstore.
Findings may be useful in college projects. Exciting

“We hope the results of our
survey will not only benefit the
State University of Buffalo community but will also supply helpful information to other college
stores,” added Mr. Bielan.

opportunity.

Call or see Mr. Cornberg, University Bookstore,
on Campus. 831-2444 or 831-2445

Bible Truth

ETERNAL LIFE IS IN CHRIST
"I am the resurrection, and the
life; he that believeth in me, though
he were dead, yet shall he live."
"Because I live, ye shall live also.”
—John 11:25, 14:19

“on Campiia

“Given tih situation and the
fact that we occasionally have
lines waiting to get into the bookstore, it’s not difficult to imagine
lines from the lobby of Norton
Hall extending to Clark Gym.”

At the annual meeting of the
National Association of College
Stores held in New York in April,
the idea of this study was greeted
with great interest, especially by
John Worthington, manager of
the Co-op Bookstore at Princeton,
and A1 Zavelle, general merchandising manager of the Harvard

Students in Europe to take part
in peace research conference
research. The conference will be
held in Hesbjerg, Denmark, from
July 14 util Aug. 18.
The Summer School hopes to
draw on 35 competent, serious
students from around the world.
They must be familiar with peace
literature and willing to try to
write an introductory text book
on peace research.
This book is intended to serve
the needs of university teachers
and students, to persuade the

public and governmental authorities that peace research is an established discipline and to show
the possibilities of integration in
this emerging field.
Although participants are expected to pay for their own
traveling expenses, their stay in
Hesbjerg will be paid for by the

school. It may be necessary, however, to charge a small enrollment fee.

Anyone interested in obtaining
further information should contact Mrs. Marvin Opler at extension 3717.

Relations Director

.

c/o Sheraton-Park

Hotel, Washington, D.C. 20008

Please send me
j a Sheraton Student

|

l.D. so I can save up
1 to 20% on
[ Sheraton rooms.

|

i

Name
J Address

■

,

J
|
|

I

J

1
I

j

Reservations with the

special low rate are

confirmed in advance
(based on availability) for Fri., Sat.,
Sun. nights plus Thanks
giving (Nov. 22-26), Christmas (Dec,
15-Jan. ?)
july
through Labor Day! Many Sheraton Hotels and Motor and
Inns offer
student rates during other periods
subject to availability at time
of check-m and may
be requested.

Don’t just stand around
like a no account
Open a checking account now.
There are two M&amp;.T Banks near the campus.
With banking hours that make sense.
Look below.

Wm6T BANK

1

■

I
I

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MCMBIR F. o. I. c.

MAIN WINSPEAR OFFICE
3184 Main Street
Mon. thru Thurs.: 9:00 a.m.
4:30 p.m,
3:00 p.m. and
6:00 p.m.
—

Friday: 9:00 a.m.
4:00 p.m.

—

—

UNIVERSITY PLAZA OFFICE
3500 Main Street

Mon. thru Thurs.: 9:00 a.m. —4:30 p.m.
Friday; 9:00 a.m. 3:00 p.m. and
4:00 p.m. —8:00 p.m.
—

Drive-In
Mon. thru

9d» a,m.—4-30 p. m
Thurs.:
a.m.—8KX) p.m

.

Students planning to be in
Europe this summer may have
the opportunity to participate in
a five week conference on peace

Friday: 9KX)

�Th

Pag* Tw»nty-Two

•

Tuesday, May 7, 1968

Spectrum

BSA goal: 'We've been overlooked
before; we won't be in the future'
“We’ve been

overlooked

be-

aims to

presence of

make the

Negroes relevant to this campus; and secondly, it aims to “give
the black people a center of
organization on this campus.”
Activities of the new organization will not have only a campus
focus. Mr. Austin indicated that
he “hopes to coordinate activities
throughout the city, not acting
as the center, but as a pool for

information, ideas and assistance.

a

youth

organization

blacks that would come up with
ideas that are different from
those of our parents.”
Looking at his organization
in the context of the larger
world, Mr. Austin noted: "With a
unified black group on this campus, we can better attack the
inadequacies of the University
and of the Negro situation in
America.”

i

Students participate in model U.N.
According to Ian McMillan,
U.S. delegation chairman: “The

Western bloc, of which the United
States was a big part, scored a
great victory by defeating, for the
first time in the history of the
Model U.N, a resolution to admit Communist China submitted
by an over represented Communist bloc.”
Discussion at the Model U.N.
centered on issues ranging from

South African apartheid and the
Vietnam war to world food problems and the peaceful uses of
outer space.
Mr. McMillan termed the conference “extremely valuable in
terms of the education it afforded

—

&lt;r\lUln
\t"WO
1

-The Handsome Eight-

pro-tennis
TOURNAMENT
MAY 10,11,12
INDOORS AT

ALO TENNIS CENTER
AVE.
2050 ELMWOOD

between Kenmore and Hertel
opposite WBEN-TV Tower

Competing for $6,000 Prizes
John Newcombe Nicki Pilic
Tony Roche
Pierre Barthes
Roger Taylor
Dennis Ralston
Butch Buchholz
Cliff Drysdale
May 10 at 7:30 P.M.
ry 11 at 2 P.M. &amp; 7:30 P.M.
•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

May 12 at 2 P.M.

served Sections $5-$3-$2
For best choice of
send self addressed stamped envelope
ieck or money order to Buffalo Festival
ter Hilton Hotel, Buffalo. N.Y. 14202.
Specify which tournament you wish to attend.
on
Buffalo
Tickets
sale at
Festival Ticket Office, Hotel Statler-Hilton;
Buffalo Tennis Center, 2050 Elmwood Avenue; U. of B. Norton Hall;
Sample Store, Hertel Ave.; Dick Fischer Stores. 699 Main Street, and
Thruway Plaza.
JRDERS NOW

ct

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/&gt;

°&lt;

"SPRING HAS SPRUNG"

and Tower storage time is here

why bother to take your winter clothes home?
—Follow the "In Crowd"—
and join
"The Free Tower Storage Happening

"

Our gal, Etta, will be waiting
to store your winter clothes today.
SO DON'T DELAY!

&amp; &amp;
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WEISBERG
JEWELERS

m'4

396 MAIN STREET

among

UB r presented
Seven students from this University represented the United
States April 25 to 28 in the fourth
annual Midcontinental United Nations at Milwaukee.
Approximately 50countries
were represented in the conference by students from generally
mid-wstern colleges and universites. The realistic model U.N.
included General Assembly sessions, Security Council, BCOSOC
and three political committee
meetings.
In addition to these sessions,
there were bloc meetings conducted with the countries of the
various blocs
Western, Communist, Latin American, Arab
and African.

PERFECT KEEPSAKE DIAMONDS

The formation of the BSA is

Mr. Austin explained the goals

ture.” Referring to the black
student on campus, William Austin, president of the Black Student Association revealed one
of the basic goals of his organization.
The BSA, organized in January,
“will be playing a more powerful part in the University in the
future,” Mr. Austin feels. He
aims to give black students a
more active voice in student life.

SEE BUFFALO’S LARGEST COLLECTION OF

its participants. The lessons
learned regarding the workings
of the U.N and the actual practices of diplomacy add a great
edal to the education of the individual students.”
Other students from this University who participated in the
Model U.N. were: Lori Pendrys,
Margaret Anderson, A1 DeBenedetti, Larry Raskin, Ben Pieczynski and Kenneth Biggie.

14K GOLD POST

$2.00 and $3.00

Pierced EARRINGS 77t

LET'S GO

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HORSEBACK RIDING
at

Colonial Ridge Stables
9065 Chestnut Ridge Rd., Middleport, N.Y.
ROUTE 77

—

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Phone Lockport
•

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—

735-7127

Supervised by Real Cowboys and Cowgirls
300 Acres of Wooded Country Trails
Moonlight Rides
Horse-drawn Wagon For Hay Rrides
Horses For Any Occasion

There’s a better way.
Fly there for half fare

�Tuesday, May 7, 1968

The Spectrum

P«B«

CLASSIFIED
WISH

FOR SALE

1966 VOLKSWAGEN 1300, sunroof,
cellent condition, 882-2733.
836-2060.
1963 VW with

ex

Call

833-8239.

Call

LAW STUDENTS have furniture bought
this year for sale: 2 beds, 2 night

tables, 2 dressers, TV. 837-7196.
T.V., 19" console, good condition, best
offer. Call Mark, 832-3865.
FURNITURE: couch, chairs, dressers,
desks, tables, lamps, television. Call
Carl, Ira, 884-1013.
FURNITURE: Completely furnished twoKensington

Village

Apart-

ment, must sell everything, reasonable.
sale

—

bedroom

entire

set, desk, dresser, bed night table,
$45. Call Len, 837-7712.
HOUSE for sale, town of Tona., 3 bedrtKm*,
1 1/2 bath, 2 car garage,

basement. Call 873-1463.
300 stereo tape recorder, good

finished

condition,
nings,

sell,

must

837-8461.

call

late

eve-

17 ft., Cape Cod Sloop,
good condition, new sails, auxiliary
motor life preservers. Call 838-2286.

SAILBOAT

1966

CORVAIR, 500 model, white,
miles, A-l condition. 831-2936.

19000

1965 MUSTANG

driven, engion Sabbatical, $1000. 831-5336 or 634-4348 after
6 PM.
Gently
neering professor going

ground.

swimming

837-4633.
3-BEDROOM

pool

apartment,

nearby.

4 blocks from

-

furnished and
comfortable, call 831-2884 or 831-2863.
WILL sublet large 3 bedroom apartment 1 block from campus for June
Aug. for best offer. 833-3150.
SUMMER sublet, 4 bedroom house, furnished for 5, 10 minute walk to campus, $140/mo. 883-7770.
SUBLEASE: 2 bedrooms; beautifully
furnished, available June 1 - August
31, Hertel Ave. Call 877-7354.
SUBLET: furnished apartment, 2 bedrooms, living room, kitchen, 5 minute walk from campus, available June
Sept. 1. Call Don, 833-8119
1
after
3 PM
2 BEDROOM modern apartment avail
able June 1, suitable for 2, 3 or 4,
Call 831-3650 or 831-3652.
FURNISHED apartment to sublet for
summer for 3-4, 10 min. walk to
campus. Call 831-2995.
LUXURY apt .to sublet from June-Aug.,
furnished,
wall to wall carpeting,
automatic dishwasher, swimming pool,
within walking distance to UB, for 3
or 4 people. Call 837-9806.
FURNISHED apt. to sublet, June 1 Aug. 30, 4 bedrooms, $40/mo. each
person. 832-0681.
[T H(
Sublet 2 bedrooms unfurnished apartment, with
stove and refrigerator. Same apt. available for fall, 1968. $185 per month,
all
utilities included. Call after 5 PM,
634-5978.
•

FOR

RENT

4-BEDROOM house

for rent for months
May-August, or any of these months,
10 minutes from UB, completely fur-

nished. Call 837-5160,

BROOKLYN
COLLEGE of
PHARMACY

1966 HONDA 160, luggage rack, 2 helmets, 6000 miles, excellent condition,
$325. Call 632-8669.
cc. Bob Davis,

■URNITURE for 3-room apartment,
price. Call Pat or Sue, 836-4514
•;00.

837-

GRADUATE PROGRAMS

good
after

leading to

MASTER of SCIENCE DEGREE
with specialization

USED TEXTS

and HOSPITAL

BUFFALO

TEXTBOOK

ADMINISTRATION

3610 Main

833-7131
paperbacks

Gifts—Posters—Supplies

LIQUOR

STORE

3192 BAILEY AVE.
corner of
Stockbridge

Discounts on liquors (only)
to students and faculty
upon

presentation

of I.D.’s
Fraternities, Sororities and
all Social Groups
OPEN DAILY 9 A M.-10 PM
10:30 ON SATURDAYS

FREE fast delivery

832-0585
***

""Si

roommate for summer, 8 wks or
6 wks., share 3 bedroom apartment
Call Toni, 831-2086 or Amy, 831-2151

PERSONAL
SIGMA

TWO rooms for male

students with or
with kitchen privi833-7520.
LIVE NEAR CAMPUS House on Winspear Ave. terrace, garage, porch, 5
bedrooms, June
Sept. 837-7712.
BED-SITTING room, kitchen, bath, utilities. furnished. Hertel Ave., convenient location. Call Danny, 831-2210,
837-5646.
without

meals or

leges. Call

-

-

BRAND
new modern apartment for
summer, wall to wall carpeting, two
bedrooms, rully furnished. 634-8013.
HOUSE, 8 rooms, fully furnished, yard,
one block from Main campus, July
15

-

Sept.

SUMMER,
or

6. 837-5424.

4

bedrooms,

campus, 1, 2. 3 or 4
831-2786.

1

block from
831-2681

people,

TWO bedrooms, furnished, June Sept.,
rent open. Call 837-9652,
-

five minute,
6-9 PM.

PARK area, 2 bedrooms furnished, excellent condition, available
June 1. Call 876-9150, prefer faculty.
FOREST GREEN apartments, luxury
apartments, two bedrooms, furnished
NORTH

unfurnished. Sept, occupancy,
$165 up. Call 10-5 PM. 632-2535.
GARAGE apt., available June 15
Sept.
1. furnished, $100/mo. plus util., 2
BR, 884-6627.
and

-

5

ROOM apartment,

nicely

furnished,

available May 25 to Sept. 1, suitable
for 2 or 3, reasonable rent. 837-9652

evenings.

S UMMER students; 3 bed-study rooms,
available near campus. Call days,
877-1600. ext 790, evenings, 832-5491,

•

•

•

Advanced
educational preparation for
positions of leadership in:
management, marketing,
selling and research in
pharmaceutical, wholesale
and retail drug, cosmetic
and retail industries,
teaching of pharmacy

administration.

blocks from campus. 837-8819.
2 ROOMMATES for summer and fall,
new apartment, $40 per month with
utilities, contact Wally, 831-4604 day

-

versity, Sheffield, England.

WANTED
Men's 3-speed bicycle, for
WANTED
immediate or summer use. Call Gary,
833-2824.
Girl to live in for summer
WANTED
job, babysit and help care for 4- and
6-year-old,
driver's license preferred,
good wages. Call TR 3-7672 between 5
and 7.
AMBITIOUS men looking for summer
—

—

work with moving and storage firm.
Applications now being accepted. Excellent pay. Located next to UB Interim Campus. Phone Williams-Bekins,

835-5414 for interview.

MALE college student, summer work
available, no experience necessary.
We will train, car is necessary, must be
neat, 19 years or older, could develop
into future permanent job, following
your college career. Phone 684-8383.

WANTED:
leaving
834-4962.

1 or 2 riders

about June 12.

SAN FRANCISCO,
rider to share
833-3348.

to California,
Contact Bill,

leaving May 29, seeks
the driving with, call

WANTED,

singer for blues band, ex
cellent opportunity, call 822-8109.
PLAYER for jazz group. Call Walt
at 837-5590 or Ron. 838-1036.
JLKSWAGEN in any condition running
or not. Call 694-4854.
FEMALE undergrad, or grad student, to
live in private home, in exchange for
some baby sitting, do dinner dishes.
836 6785
PART TIME or full time babysitter,
tousehold helper wanted for sumr. Room and board available. For
ails call 632-7645.
BASS

FEBRUARY
Write or phone for:
Bulletin of Information
•

Application Form

BROOKLYN COLLEGE

OF PHARMACY
OF LONG ISLAND

UNIVERSITY

600 Lafayette Ave., Brooklyn. N.Y. 11216
Founded 1886 MAin 2-4040

PHI

pledges:

sorry.

W.K.

At least forgive. C.
don't call me Willie.

the "MERAH." Tower 11th floor:
Thanks for a great year. Donna.
WE bet you forgot!
Bulletin Board
courses meet; Photography for nonmajors,

May 8, 4 PM, 399 Norton;
Drawing for non-art majors, May 9
PM, 335 Norton

art

Si•CHNUG,

Keep

Kudos on the great grades
up the good work. Great Sch

nuggly Bare.

GIRL to share driving and expenses to
Florida after exams. Ask for Lena,
693-0537.
GRADUATE student wanting to Increase
the efficiency of his work here, Is
looking for attractive, intelligent girl
with a mature mind that
would be
Interested to move In with him. Write
P.O.B. 98, Hiler Branch, Buffalo 14223.
LOST
SILVER leprechaun on chain, possibly
in
Tower basement. Sentimental
value. Call 831-3180.
BONAVENTURE ring, class of '68, white
gold, white zircon. $25
reward. Call
Dana, 834-6095.
MISCELLANEOUS
Is your MICROSCOPE working properly?
If not, contact Microscope Repair
Service, all makes repaired. Call
8225053.

6 seats available on Schussmeister's charter to Europe. June 10-Aug.
Niagara Falls-London. $196
round
trip. Call Mr. Dale, 831-3602.
LOST
Man's ring In Acheson's wornon’s lavatory. April 23. Black with
chip stone. Sentimental value. Reward
Call 822-6142.
ANNOUNCING: $265 Pan Am Jet to
Brussels with 5 day stopover in London, Leaving New York July 3 and
returning New York Sept.
16. Call
Dean Smith's secretary, 852-4372. Open
only to faculty, students and employees of SUNY at Buffalo.
DlIRIVING LESSONS needed, one
hour
every day, call 837-3786,
baby
IN
LIVE
alter, board and small
salary In exchange for
occasional
evening baby sitting. Call 877 2039.
THESIS and term papers typed, 40c
a page, call 873-5203.
HORSEBACK RIDING, hayrides, Waver
Stables, Service Road No. 18, Niagai
Parkway. Canada. 8 miles north
froi
Peace Bridge. 416-295-3925.
16.

—

ROOMMATES WANTED
2 GIRLS to share furnished apartment
for summer, 15 seconds from campus.

A|

Ho

831-2575.

2 FEMALE roommates wanted to share
lovely apartment, 6 min. walk from
campus, call Idelle, 831-3788, 831-3782.

STUDENTS
and
TEACHERS

TRIPLE-AAA QUALITY

PART-TIME

DIAMONDS

If you can work two nights
and Saturday, or three evenings, we will guarantee you
$55.00 per week if you meet
our requirements. Must have
car, and be over 18.

Classic
Solitaire
34

c

FULL-TIME
Summer Employment

POINTS

s21588

MALL, Amherst, N.Y.

Main, Mil-Pine Plaza, Niagara Falls

Earn up to 1500. Call between 10 and 4 at 856-3129

for interview.

administration.

BE GIN
«.JESSI0NS
SEPTEMBER
AND

and

L.M.H.

or evenings.
TWO MALE roommates wanted to live
with third at completely furnished 3
bedroom apartment, from June 2
Aug. 31, $60/month per person, utilities included. Call Sig at 836-2679.

APARTMENTS WANTED
RELIABLE couple require apartment
July 1, willing to do cleaning for rent
arrangement. Call 874-0618.
APARTMENT needed
Summer Faculty,
June 24 ■ August 2. Write directly
Empson
(2
adults) Departto William
ment of England Literature, The Uni-

I'm

S.

T.P.

hospital pharmacy

(internal program)

KAPPA

,

PHARMACY

STORES, INC.

KENSINGTON

in

PHARMACY
ADMINISTRATION

BUY AND SELL

General Fiction
and Non-Fiction

Call

campus, June to Sept.,

—

1966 YAMAHA 80
9539.

833-9234.

FURNISHED, 4 bedroom apartment to
sublet for summer, 5 minutes from
campus, will bargain for rent. 836-8683
or 831-3375.
3 ROOM furnished apt for rent, June Aug., Bailey-Kensington area, $85/
month and electric. Write Spectrum,
Box 3 or call 835-7885.
FURNISHED 2 bedroom modern apartment for summer, 2 blocks from UB.
inexpensive. 838-1125.

3 bedroom,
831-0475.

ROOMMATES wanted, sublet big house
near campus, 3 bedrooms, kitchens
and TV’s, cheap, call 837-9650.
SUBLET big house near campus, 3 bedrooms, garage, kitchens, TVs, call
837-6638.
SUBLET for summer: 2 bedroom, furnished duplex, 10 minute walk from
UB, residential
neighborhood,
play-

APARTMENTS

EXCELLENT 1966 TRIUMPH Spitfire.
Must sell, poverty stricken student.
Discount. Bob, 875-5929.

Andy,

BEAUTIFUL 3 room unfurnished apartment available from June 1 to Faculty member. In Allentown. 882-1786.
Keep trying
may be out of town for
a few days.

June

furnished, bargain price.

833-3348.

E. Steese, 831-3147.
GRADUATING seniors wishing to sell
furniture in excellent condition.
836-1138.

SUBLET:

SUBLET June, July, August.

CYCLI

have sales receipt, will sell to best
Call after 6 PM, 836-5678.
- KING SIZE BED (with purchase
of Dylan poster for a low, low $150).

flat for three
summer occupancy, electric
four bedroom

call 831-3610

—

HONDA, 50 cc, red &amp; white, contact 862-6157.
1966 HONDA, 50 cc. automatic, great
for school or summer job, $125. Call

offer.
FREE

Call

4 bedroom

1965

1965 HONDA, S90, driven one summer,
2000 miles, also available, 1 helmet.
Call 832-3274.
FURNITURE for sale cheap, must sell,
call 836-5678 between 11 PM and
12 PM only.
QUEEN size bed. bought new in Sept.

months

UB

kitchen, sunporch, fully furnished, ten
minute walk to campus, unbelievable.

1 - Sept. 1, furnished.
apartment, 1 block from
campus. Call 837-7485 evenings.
TO

1965 HONDA, 50 cc, tools, manual,
luggage rack, $95. 837-6529.

Jon. 632-5512.
498 cc, INDIAN

SPACIOUS

opposite

834-9569.

For quick action

girl

~An

inexpensive,

campus. Call

CUSTER’S next to the last stand; furnished In "early poverty.” but quite
a thrill to live in. For 2 or 3 over
summer: near campus; reasonable
rent! Call 837-6141 anytime.

1962 VOLKSWAGEN. $350. 833-9432.
1966 SUNBEAM ALPINE, forest green
with wire wheels and radio, condition
excellent. Call after 5 PM, 834-4193.

SONY

6434, Mike, Tony.

SUBLET

1967 BUICK, "GS,” completely automatic and fully equipped, gray, black
vinyl top. must sell. 839-2876, open for
bids.

Call 837-3773.
FURNITURE for

FURNISHED apartment across from
campus, summer, 4 bedrooms, $50
monthly per person, less for 5-6. 832-

good

837-9340.

bedrooms,

1963 VW, radio, heater, good condition,

bedroom

furniture,

LIKE NEW. Bed, chest, sofa, end tables,
book case. 836-3337, 6-8 PM.

836-4916.

$650. Call

apartment
reasonable.

GUITAR AND AMPLIFIER: $90, former

sunroof, rebuilt engine,
new clutch, battery and brakes, best

offer.

sell

or best offer.

com

good

to

condition,

Tw«nty-Thr**

£s

Summer Board Contracts Available
ONLY $79.50 FOR EACH SIX-WEEK SESSION
For Details Call 831-4339 or Contact the
Food Service Office in Clement Hall

�Th

Pag* Twenty-Four

•

Tuesday, May 7, 1968

Spectrum

Kirk and Columbia: The story
Columbia University
NEW YORK
President Grayson Kirk’s house fronts on
a wide bluff overlooking the 30-acre, cityowned Morningside Heights, long a place
of broken bottles and benches, crumbling
cement stairs and violent crime. Beyond
the park lies Harlem.
—

one oi
ghettoes and looks back at the events of
the past two weeks—events symbolic of
movement, symbolic of the spector of disorder in blighted urban areas of which the
Negro ghetto of Harlem is an archetype.
A student rebellion against the school
administration has virtually paralyzed the
17,500-student, 214-year-old University for
for thse two weeks.
over!

Gym and IDA ties
The main immediate issues that ground
the University to a halt have a long history. Over the past several years, Students
for a Democratic Society (SDS), the Student Afro-American Society and various
community groups have conducted a continous campaign against plans for the
construction of a University gymnasium in
Morningside Heights.
This past year SDS and other groups
also protested the University’s institution-

Clean
te

limC

up

Workmen remove desks and chairs used
as a barricade in a Columbia demonstrator-occupied building. They are cleaning
Up after riot police dispersed students.

•

•

new yorK
Mississippi

al affilitations with the Institute for Defense Analyses (IDA). Sit-ins, demonstrations, petitions with thousands of names,
formal requests from the Columbia Citizenship Council (an arm of the student
government) were used.
To all these legitimate protests the
University turned a deaf ear. Its answer to
the Citizenship Council early last fall was
that construction of the gym could not be
halted and that “it was as good as built.”
The gym, once approved as an earnest
gesture of racial goodwill, is now reviled
as a racist device, with separate doors for
students and Harlemites. The Afro-American Society marched through Harlem last
week chanting: “Gym goes up, Columbia
goes down.”

"Painful" decision

•

paris

:o mpiled from our wire services by Duane Champion

Poor learn protest techniques
MARKS, Miss.—Workshops on demonstrations tactics were on the agenda for
recruits for the Poor People’s March,
tarrying in the Mississippi Delta while organizers search for volunteers.
For the second night since their arrival
by bus from Memphis, the marchers
abandoned their campground and took
shelter with Negro families in the improverished area.

The marchers are to leave Marks in a

mule and wagon train bound for Wash-

ington by way of Alabama, Georgia, the
Carolinas and Virginia.
Mayor Howard Langford met for a half
hour with leaders of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), sponsors of the march discussing the group’s
plans, white in the northeast Mississippi
town of 3000.
“They don’t want any violence and I
can agree with anybody that’s trying to

Paris prepares

do something right,” Mr. Langford said.
“I think the town will be a lot less tense
when I have a chance to get out and explain to people,”
SCLC organizers have gone out into
Quitman County, one of the nation’s poorest with a per capita annual income of
$1517, on recruiting drives.
Workshops have been schduled to teach
the recruits abotu the tactics and purposes of the march on Washington. March,
ers from various points around the country are to arrive in the nation’s capital
May 12-19 and live in a tent shantytown.

area Friday.
Speculation was mounting in Paris
diplomatic circles that the preliminary
talks between Hanoi and Washington
would lead to all-inclusive peace negotiations, also to be held in France.
The Paris preparation coincided with a
Soviet statement applauding the agreement to hold the preliminary talks in
Paris, Diplomatic sources in London saw

North Vietnam’s move toward the confer-

ence table as a victory for the Soviet Union
over Communist China in a struggle for

influence with Hanoi.
Mai Van Bo, chief of the North Vietnamese Mission in Paris and Hanoi’s top
diplomat in the West, called at the French
Foreign Ministry on the Qua D’Orsay last
weekend. He conferred with Etienne Manach, chief of the Foreign Ministry's

brass knuckles. Students and faculty who
remained on the steps were smashed and
blooded in full view of reporters. They
were grabbed by the shoulders and thrown
down the cement steps or into the stone
pillars.

Hundreds of bystanders and members
of the Majority Coalition, an anti-demonstration group, stood in shock trying to
disperse the crowd, Police attacked them
and many more arrests and beatings took

place.

Issue becomes student involvement

Trustees, following the recommendation
Two days later, the University Board of
of a faculty committee, agreed to consider
possible changes in the structure of the
University and to consult with Harlem
leaders on the future of the gym.
But now the issue has gone far be
yond the Harlem gym and the IDA, The
overriding question is that of the role of
students in the decision-making appara
tus of the University. Many students are
calling for the resignation of President
Kirk, his vice president, and some members of the Board of Trustees.
The College Council—Columbia’s main
undergraduate government organizationvoted to endorse the demand for President
Kirk’s resignation. The campus newspaper,
the Spectator, has taken a similar position.
However, some student leaders—notably SDS President Mark Rudd, the unofficial head of the take-over of the five
campus buildings—said that students
should concentrate on setting up their
own classes and on controlling the University.

Meanwhile, the National Student Association has announced that 61 student
body presidents around the country have
signed a statement pledging their SU PP
called
of the Columbia strike, which was
after the police overran the campus. Pro
tests of support have been stagedand tk
at
State University of Stony Brook
Princeton University.
As the University resumes its classes
strike
this week, plans call for the student
pickc
to continue. “We plan to organize
but there won t
lines outside the buildings,
who
be forcible obstruction of students
want to enter,” said Eric Lerner, a member of the strike steering committee.

President Johnson said federal officials

are “concerned” about the camp-in and
“are making extensive preparations” for
it. He said the cause of the poor would be

better served if the marchers would leave
after a demonstration in Washington and
let Congress and the administration plan
help for the poor.”

for peace

PARIS—French Foreign Ministry officials conferred separately with American
and North Vietnamese diplomats to work
out details of preliminary Vietnam negotiations scheduled to start in the Paris

By the end of last week, the Greciangowned heroic statue of Columbia facing
Butler Library wore black cloth arm bands
on both arms—a student sign of sympathy
that blossomed generally last Tuesday after 1000 policemen swarmed onto the campus at 2:30 a.m. to clear about 700 sit-in
strikers from five University buildings
they had held for a week. 720 persons
were arrested and 148 injured as a result of what many called police brutality.
President Kirk had finally decided to
call the police in, calling the decision “the
most painful one I ever made.” He found
his office in wreckage, furniture smashed,

files rifled. Damage to the five buildings
has been estimated at several hundred
thousand dollars.
The first police violence came at Avery
Hall. Faculty members and groups of supporting demonstrators stood on the front
step when thse police charged. Only a few

talks

Southeast Asia section.
Ministry sources said that the Quai

had also been “in contact with” officials
from the American Embassy, Presumably
this meant Charge d’Affaires Woodruff
Wallner or one of his aides. Ambassador
R. Sargent Shriver, due to take up his
duties in about two weeks, is not yet in
Paris.
It was understood from ministry sources
that the talks touched only on suggestions
for the actual site of the negotiations. Several possibilities have been mentioned, including the famous Chateau de Versailles.
French diplomats were generally unwilling to make comments on the scale
f the talks or their possible outcome,
he French government has made it
tiear it has no intention of attempting to
mediate or act in any capacity beyond
conference host, at least for the time
being.

However, there was independent speculation that the preliminary conference
would be extended into broader talks.

—UPI
■

Awakening
.

After spending the night asleep on the
Columbia University lawn, a student
awakens to the sight of fresh police
reinforcements. It was a wild week at
Columbia.

at.

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                    <text>The Spectrum
*ECE3V£o
State University of New York at Buffah

T uesdayj

1968

Meyerson plans to involve
University in black ghetto

President Meyerson announced Monday the establishment of a select committee of
University students, faculty and administrators designed to “enhance and expand educational, economic and environmental opportunity for minority and disadvantaged groups in
the Buffalo community.”
Monday’s announcement explained in preliminary detail the broad program of Unicommunity involvement hinted at by President Meyerson in a press conference three weeks
ago, following the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

Dr. James A. Moss, professor of sociology, has been
appointed chairman of the
Committee on Equal Opportunity, the new group’s official name.
The committee will consist of
the University vice presidents for
Student Affairs and Business Affairs, Dr, Richard A. Siggelkow
and Dr. Claude E. Puffer, the director of the Office of Urban
Affairs, Gordon Edwards; three
faculty members and four students, one from the Graduate
Student Association, one from the
Millard Fillmore College Student
Association, and two from the
undergraduate Student Association.
The committee appointments
are scheduled to be announced
by the President’s office this
week.
The following University programs are in “immediate pros-

pect,” according to a University
spokesman:
•

community appointments

Interested students and faculty
to work
in the ghetto, providing tutoring
or advice on health, welfare, and
legal problems. Each individual
project will be approved and reviewed by the committee.
members are encouraged

experimental teacher fellowship
Fifteen graduate fellowships,
broadly entiled “Civil Liberties
•

in

WBFO satellite studio

A studio of the University radio
station will be set up in the
Buffalo ghetto to communicate
black culture and thought to the

community.

e small business marketing assistance program
Under this program, the faculty

of the school of business administration will advise beginning
and prospective small businessmen of the ghetto community.
Nine businessmen have already
been contacted.

America,”

will

be

enced

teachers

selected

from

Defends his
resolution

curriculum will include law and
law-related subjects.
college-bound program

Ten students “of minority and
oppressed groups” will be selected in cooperation with the
College-bound Corporation of
New York City to receive full
scholarships to the University in
September. The program, similar
in operation to the local Upward
Bound Program, will involve underprivileged students from across the nation.

Dr. Harold L. Segal at the Faculty Senate meeting Thursday.
He defended his anti-Viet resolution passed March 8.

Vote 143-98

Faculty Senate upholds
Vietnam war resolution
by Joel Kleinman

ghetto areas across the state. The

•

•

Urban

granted in September to experi-

*•**»&gt;

■

Vol. 18, No. 51

Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

The March 8 Faculty Senate resolution that condemned
the war in Vietnam as “illegal, immoral, and contrary to
American principles” was reaffirmed Tuesday at a special
meeting of the Senate in Butler Auditorium.

By refusing to adopt a resolution that would have declared the March 8 Senate action “null and void due to procedural irregularities,” the Senate body chose, by a vote of
143 to 98 to retain the controversial war resolution.
In the regular meeting that followed, a vote on a resolution
that would have temporarily banned military recruiters from campus was postponed until the next

Defends Segal-Snell

After a Senate member noted
a quorum was present at
the March 8 meeting and theresummer employment
fore attendance could not be
meeting.
50 positions for summer emtermed “sparse,” Prof. Harold L.
ployment at the University for
Forty-two members petitioned Segal of the Biology Department
for Tuesday’s special meeting on rose to defend the war resolution
teenagers from “minority groups"
will be provided this summer. the grounds that the anti-war ache co-authored. The Segal-Snell
tion taken March 8 was “clearly Resolution did not overstep the
The jobs will be “closely related
beyond the call of the meeting.” bounds of the call to the last
to academic and research activiIt purported ito discuss recent meeting he noted, as it was stated
ties of the University, and emchanges in the draft laws applicployees will work with Univerbefore March 8 that “the draft
sity people, and have project able to graduate students, they and its implications” would be disclaimed, and not the general war cussed.
responsibility.”
issue.
“If you can’t see that the war
discussion courses
in Vietnam is an implication of
Postponement proposed
Speaking for the petitioners, the draft, that’s your hang-up, not
“Topical courses,” described as
extensions of the experimental Prof. David R. Kochery of the mine,” Dr. Segal told an adversary.
Law School said that the “null
college, available to anyone, will
be arranged for both on and off and void” resolution had “nothThe vote on the “null and void”
ing to do with the merits” of the resolution ended the two hour
campus locations.
war resolution. He charged that special meeting.
model cities program
the conditions under which the
anti-war resolution was passed Two resolutions
In addition to the three faculty
mandated a postponement of the
members already involved in the
Two separate resolutions, one
calling for the postponement of
Buffalo urban renewal project, vote.
Kochery
Dr.
proposed that in military recruitment on campus
other faculty from a variety of
future special meetings when a and the other proposing continudepartments are to become inmotion is arguable beyond the call ance of such activity were introvolved with Model Cities planof the meeting, its discussion duced and debated during the
ning, and the new Policy Scishould be postponed.
regular meeting without reaching
ences graduate program will work
Professor Albert Somit of the
a vote.
with them.
Political Science Department
The resolution recommending
The existing University pronoted that although he has no continuation of recruitment was
grams in the storefront edumaintention of preventing the Senpassed by the Faculty Senate
tion centers, the Upward Bound
ate from voting on the war issue, executive committee for submisprogram, the secretary-training
only 91 members approved the sion to the Senate
body. Chairprogram, the Community Aid
March 8 resolution. Thus, a vast man Adolf Homberger of
the Law
Corps, and computer education
majority of the Senators were
School
introduced the measure
also are slated for expansion ununable
to express themselves on
der the proposal.
this important issue, he stated.
� Please turn to Page 3
•

that

•

•

Next to last issue
Today's Spectrum it the next to last edition this semester. No paper
will
be published Friday
Moving Up Day. The next scheduled issue is May 7,
our last.
—

—Walluk

Burn baby

Bruce L. Beyer planned to burn
n/s induction notice Friday
in
ront of the Main St.
induction
center. However, he was forced
to
tear it up after repeated at-

tempts to light the document.

Summer Spectrum
The first edition of The Summer Spectrum will be published June 7.
The
Summer Spectrum is published weekly except during Summer Session
examination periods, from June through August.

�Th

Pag* Two

•

Tuesday, April 30, 1968

Spectrum

Three girls compete for
Left must relate to ghetto problems Spring Weekend Queen

Oglesby gives warning

Carl Oglesby, a former SDS
president, said Wednesday that

world is nothing but an empire,”
according to Mr. Oglesby. He

unless it addresses itself to the
problems of the ghetto.”

the 417 who die of starvation each
day in India while seeing “in the
current offerings a way out.”
World hunger means billions for
American farmers.
He charged that Standard Oil,
a company “has much to do with
how this country is run” and furthered American economic interests in India. “India is doomed
to be an underdeveloped nation”
because Standard Oil, backed by

If the New Left does not relate
itself to this problem “we might
as well go work for McCarthy and
Kennedy,” he said.
“We see an apocalyptic situation” similar to what the New
Left has been talking about, in
the challenge of war in Vietnam
and the black ghetto, he said.

In politics, “a revealing development has been that people
called radicals have found themselves tempted by the McKennedy
campaign.”

He said that the presence of liberals in the present anti-war
movement makes the issue not
what it used to be. However,
therefore in his estimation, the
New Left must have a “positive
relation” with liberals who want
an end to the war.
The concept of imperialism has
changed to “a viable idea among
young intellectuals that the free

American military and political

power, is pursuing ends opposed

gional economic power, he adaed

the Student Publications Board.
Responsibility includes financial
allocations, recognition of new
publications and appointment of
editor if desired by the publication.

Positions available include:
Five undergraduate seats on

•

Blessings

of

three of the fairest maids in all
the realm of the University’s

Mr. Oglesby foresees the day sunny
acres.
when “a strange Brazilian much
The candidates are Susan
like you” could no longer tolerate
and
the colossus to the North would Strauss, Patricia Hatmaker,
Elissa Longo.
shoot some American executives
Susan Strauss, a junior English
and destroy some American facmajor, is Chi Omega’s candidate
tories.
A revolutionary Latin
for Queen. She is 20 years old
America is a thousands times
and serves as the Active Social
more menacing than Vietnam,” Chairman of her sorority. For two
he stated.
years she has been on the executive board of the University
Women’s Chorale. Her hobbies
include surfing, singing and sewing, and Susan hopes to attend
graduate school in Hawaii, having lived there previously for six

Positions in government
opened to undergrads
Becoming involved at the University includes direct involvement in the new polity government. Several positions arc now
open to undergraduates.

boasts the beauteous

years.

Candidate's themes

Theta Chi’s candidate for Spring
Weekend Queen is ElissaLongo.
Elissa is 19 and a sophomore
nursing major from Valley
Stream, New York. She plans to

Susan Strauss
specialize in psychiatric nursing
and hopes to join the Peace
Corps.
Elissa is serving as the sophomore representative to the Nursing Council and as Treasurer of
the Pan-Hellenic Council. She has
also been selected to serve as a

Resident Adviser next year.
Her theme for the fashion show

Four undergraduates and one
law student to the Student Judiciary. This body handles most
cases of student discipline.
•

One student to serve as parliamentarian to deal with procedural rules for Polity meetings.
One position on the Secretariat to keep records of each
meeting of the polity and the
Student Coordinating Council.
Students interested in obtaining one of these positions should
•

•

report today or Wednesday to
the Student Association offices,

Room 205, Norton Hall.

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CO-FEATURE

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(IBSi
HELD OVER 4th WEEK

Patricia Hatmaker
a community youth group, tutoring children in the underprivileged areas of the city. Patricia
was a candidate in the Miss Niagara contest last spring and currently holds the office of President of Sigma Delta Tau.

The theme for Patricia’s presentation is “The Sounds of
Silents.”
A coffee hour will be held on
April 29 for the candidates and
their campaign managers at 7:30
p.m. in the Charles Room. A fashion show in the Fillmore Room at
3:30 p.m. on April 30 will highlight the second day of competition.
The candidates will depict their
campaign themes in skits present
ed in the Fillmore Room at 3:30
on May 1. Voting will take place
ini the Center Lounge on May 1-2
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Presentation of the winning
candidate will occur at the Spring
Weekend Dance at 9 p.m. on May
4 at Leisureland in Hamburg,
New York.
Barry Snydtr eats at Barry's

r*

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&gt;

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I"

Millersport Hwy. at Maple Rd

PLAZA SHOE REPAIR
ONE STOP SERVICE
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Shoes Repaired While-U-Wait
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�Th

Tuesday, April 30, 1968

•

Faculty upholds war resolution
Continued from Page 1

...

Students speak
Two student

Martin Guggenheim of the Student Association chastized the entire body for its neglect of student
opinion in forming University
policies. Recruitment “affects
students more than any other
segment of this University,” he
said, and thus should have more
than a “token public speaking
voice.”
“It is far more radical and
meaningful,” he contiuned, “If
you were to open this meeting
to everyone rather than condemn
a war when your decision is ultimately unheard anyway.”
Carl Murphy of the Graduate
Association reported that his organization had recommended discontinuance of campus recruitment by the military.

At this juncture, Prof. Roy
Lachman of the Psychology Dept,
introduced an amendment that
would give “those students who
choose to emigrate and/or go to
jail rather than participate in military service all credits, status,
and privileges at the State University of Buffalo equal to those
entering upon and returning from
military status.”
This amendment was subsequently added to the resolution

that recommends postponement
of recruiting until a “clear and
uniform policy has been established” concerning “unlawful interference with the Selectiwe
Service law” by students. This
resolution had been defeated by
the executive committee before
the meeting.

'Perilous' debate
President Meyerson,

chairman of the Senate, revealed his
support of the other resolution,
terming the debate “as perilous

week.

CAC volunteers, who collected
$300 from students alone, plan to
hold either a benefit poetry reading or concert in two weeks.

Financial assistance will be
used to support the poor persons
participating in the campaign
during their anticipated threemonth stay in Washington. It will
take at least $200 to support one
poor person during the entire
campaign. Donations of tents,
sleeping bags, blankets and nonperishable foods are also needed.

Mr, Alan S. Rosenbaum of the

SUMMER

Philosophy Department is organizing faculty support in a drive
entitled “Buffalo Support for the
Poor People’s Campaign,”

EMPLOYMENT

The campaign was originally
by the late Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr. as a massive, nonviolent attempt to exert sufficient
pressure on our national government to address themselves immediately to the needs of the dis-

Full or part time, car necessary. Ekco Home Products Co.
will be taking applications on
main floor of Norton Union,
Wednesday, May 1st, between
11:00 &amp; 3:00.

conceived

seventh president of the State University College at Buffalo May 10,
a school spokesman announced Saturday.
He succeeds Acting President Houston T. Robison who has served
since the resignation of Dr. Paul T. Bulger last year.
WASHINGTON
Vice-President Hubert H. Humphrey said today
the “search for peace in Vietnam" should not be an issue of conflict
in the 1968 presidential campaign.
“We must cooperate with the president to permit him to use
whatever diplomacy we have to obtain negotiations," Humphrey said.
“Some of this argument has not been very helpful.”
Humphrey conceded the Johnson administration “may have overspoken ourselves when we said we would go anytime, anywhere”
to talk peace with the Communists.
WASHINGTON
The last campaign Martin Luther King Jr.,
mapped for his followers began today with about a hundred poor
people petitioning federal officials for massive assistance programs.
The Rev. Ralph Abernathy, who succeeded the late Dr. King as
head of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, led delegates
from around the country in opening three days of talks with Cabinet
members and other government leaders.
The conferences are the initial phase of next month’s poor people’s
march on Washington, organized by King, to demand “mammoth"
new federal efforts to provide jobs, housing and guaranteed incomes
to the needy.
SAIGON
American troops today gripped “key terrain” in the
A Shau Valley in an attempt to cut off perhaps the greatest Communist supply line into South Vietnam.
U.S. spokesmen disclosed the drive, called Operation Delaware,
Sunday but kept most details shrouded with secrecy for security
—

—

—Tanzman

Prof. David R. Kochery

as

CAC supports campaign
Community Aid Corps continues
its efforts to raise money for the
“Poor People’s Campaign” scheduled to begin May 2 in Washington, D.C. A table will be set up on
the main floor of Norton Hall all

Dateline news, Apr. 30

representatives

orgam

the members of the academic

community the constitutional
night to dissent without jeopardizing their deferment status.”

Pat* Thrm

Spectrum

before the Faculty Senate Thursday.

an issue that the Faculty Senate
has ever faced. We are talking
about an exclusion principle,” he
continued, “that may be later
used against any group with a
political or social purpose,” as

their activities include recruit-

ment.
“I would urge this body not
to hurry the issue” until proof
of a single case in which a student was reclassified for interfering with the Selective Service is
unearthed, Mr. Meyerson counseled.

—

reasons.

But they said the U.S. Army 1st Air Cavalry Division battalions
that launched the push into the 25-mile-long valley 10 days ago
suffered “some heavy casualties” before securing footholds in the
“heart" of the area.

KALEIDOSCOPE

.

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featuring

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SATURDAY, MAY 4th

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RISHWHIWCHAM

Group Prices and Arrangements Available
Tickets Now On Sale at Norton Hall Ticket Office

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Now you can
tell your parents
where to go.
You know how it is when your folks
come to visit. They want to take you out
to dinner. So where do you suggest?
They want a good place to spend the
night. So where do you send them?
Wonder no more. Just send them
to us. The Charter House.
They'll love the food in our Rib Room
restaurant. (Our chef doesn’t even
know how to make meatloaf or chiqken
croquetts.) They'll love the guest rooms.
(They're so comfortable they won't
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in the community...
Involvement
Committee
offers

on Equal Opportunity
exciting
The
possibilities for the black community, as well as for this
University. President Meyerson’s proposal announced Monday includes several items which are creative diversions
from the established archaic liberal formulas for helping

which must be begun on a massive scale by all colleges an
universities, as well as the notoriously sluggish and oppressive local governments, in order to avoid guerilla warfare
in this nation’s ghettos.
Some preliminary suggestions:
The WBFO “satellite studio” will only be viewed
as an organ of propaganda, unless it is used to broadcast
the mood of the black community to the entire community,
and unless significant training programs are established to
incorporate blacks into the operation. To be effective, it
must develop into a black voice, free from the advertising
compromises popular “soul” stations must make.
Hopefully the “small business marketing assistance
program” is to have the main purpose of building up black
power in the economic sphere. White-owned businesses
in the ghetto milk the desire and,„wealth of the black community and are major symbols of frustration and oppression.
The involvement of University faculty in the Model
Cities Program, as well as the proposed involvement of the
entire Policy Sciences graduate program in other areas,
must serve as an example of the kind of orientation every
segment of the University must have, especially in the
physical and health sciences, in addition to the social
sciences.
The 4:4:3 ratio on the committee of students, faculty, and administrators is an example of the type of community decision-making that must become standard for all segments of the University. A grave error could be made in
the appointment stage if the four student representatives
are not black. Failure to appoint black students could mean
that the program will lose its most valuable asset in the
black community-respect, and it may, in fact, be viewed
as merely another token gesture of white paternalism.
•

•

Promises,

promises

•

the
lighter
side

•

by Dick West

Earlier this year four congressmen paid a visit

to Vietnam while the Tet offensive was in progress.
In an interview at the time, the lawgivers ex-

pressed themselves as extremely optimistic about
the favorable outcome of the fighting and said the
damage did not appear as bad as reports had in-

dicated.

Although the impact of the Viet Cong attack
is still being evaluated, and debated, there is no
doubt that the congressmen made a remarkable
The Faculty Senate is to be applauded for its solid on-the-spot analysis of the situation.
What made it so remarkable is the fact that
rejection of the attempt by some to declare the anti-Vietnam
visit to Vietnam consisted entirely of a threeWar resolution invalid. Thus the resolution has received their stopover
at the Saigon airport. And the quoted
hour
a well-deserved endorsement.
impressions were based on what they had observed
A more important consideration, however, remains from the air.
This proves that congressmen can see things
something quite apart from whether or not the Faculty
from the air that may not be apparent to ordinary
Senate happens to pass something that we agree with,
Or to people on the ground.
and that is the process of decision-making itself. Despite its passengers.
A lot of people who were on the ground in Saigrowth and maturity this year from a small group of sogon during the offensive saw less cause optimism.
My reason for bringing this up is to show the
called representatives into a full-blown assembly of the entire faculty, the Faculty Senate, as the “official” voice of importance of the action recently taken by 20 other
congressmen concerning free drinks and movies
this University, remains a revolting sham.
on airlines.
The faculty feels compelled to pass a resolution on a
These congressmen persuaded the Civil Aerowar because it feels its collective impotence. The War is nautics Board to suspend an order under which all
an all-too obvious example of the kind of behind-the-scenes passengers would have been charged $1 for drinks
$2 for a movie.
decision-making that is all too prevalent in this supposed and They
complained that the charge amounted to
a
sense
of
the
democracy, yielding predominance
growing
a fare increase for first class passengers, who cusof frustration and alienation among even the most respontomarily get those services thrown in with their
.

.

.

Readers
writings

’

and in the nation

—

Y/ake up Unde Sam
To the Editor:
How does it look for this summer? Will our
government meet the rightful demands of impoverished Americans? The Poor People’s Campaign
is a last pre-summer effort to avoid destruction and
death.
Congress is afraid to call for a tax increase in
an election year. Richard Nixon has said that our
country’s economic situation “rules out any vast
new outpouring of federal funds into the cities this
year,” Admiral Rickover is convincing Congress
that the U.S. needs faster, more powerful nuclear
weasubmarines. The U.S. is still testing nuclear spent
pons out west. Millions of dollars are being
on new “riot control” training and equipment. And
we’re still racing Russia to the moon. The war,
contrary to popular delusion, is still costing lives
and money, and will continue to do so.
Our government needs a new list of priorities.
takes more
But Uncle Sam’s a heavy sleeper
than a slap to wake him up. I don’t want violence,
do you? Write your Congressman, give to SCLC,
join local non violent groups, join the campaign
—

in Washington—and pray

Dave A. Shapiro

'

sible adult citizens.
Certainly the faculty is justified in wanting to add the
influence of the name of this University to its views on
national politics, but in being concerned about democracy
on the national level, they are being hypocritical. They ignore the oligarchic nature of the government at this University, and in most cases doggedly resist attempts to institute
the reforms right here at home that they want for the nation
at large.
This, of course, is not too surprising It even has a
name; the liberal syndrome.
Just as liberal politics in this country have for years
advocated the institution of broad social reforms while
maintaining a racist society, university professors have been
able to advocate democracy while maintaining an authoritative classroom.
It seems that student participation in the decisionmaking process at this University is as hard for some people
to accept as a black family moving in next door.
Students are not asking to “take-over” the University,
as some faculty members apparently fear. They are merely asking for a responsible, effective, and equal voice in the
affairs of this community. Significant breakthroughs have
already occurred in the curriculum planning of several departments, but until the “official” voice of this University
includes undergraduate and graduate students as well as
faculty, a large segment of the community will remain disenfranchised.
Granted, it will be a long and difficult path to a genuine
University polity, but the time to begin is now.
And there is perhaps no better issue to begin with
than the question of military recruiters. This is a matter
which directly affects every male student at this University,
and one which should not be decided without significant
student participation in making a decision.

tickets.

The congressmen, all of whom

live in either
California or Hawaii, noted that they do quite a
bit of air traveling themselves.
If congressmen are able to appraise the situation in Vietnam by flying over Saigon, we may assume they can do the same thing at home.
Cross-country flights help them determine what
is going on in America, and to pass laws accordingly.

Therefore, it is very much to the nation's advantage to keep them occupied with free drinks and
movies en route.
Most airline passengers agree that a couple of
drinks are a great aid in aerial observation. Properly stoked, they can see things they might otherwise miss.
And with movies to help sharpen his eyesight
a congressman can go fact-finding at 35,000 feet

Quotes

in the news

LONDON—David Ennals, Britain’s undersecretary of the Home Office, speaking of the widespread support of Conservative party member
Enoch Powell’s “Keep Britain white” speech:
“He took the lid off and we have seen what
cam out. Nothing will be the same again.”
GREENVILLE, S.C.—Georgia Gov, Lester Maddox commenting on Sen, Robert F. Kennedy (D.,
N. Y.) as a presidential candidate:
“He stinks.”
WASHINGTON—U.S. Education Commissioner
Harold Howe II, explaining why he believes America’s college students are disgruntled:
“They cannot understand why university professors who are responsible for the reach into space,
for splitting the atom and for the interpretation
of man’s journey on earth seem unable to find
the way to make the university pertinent to their

Praises Anonym
To the Editor;

Indeed much praise to the Anonym, which more
than deserves any and all acclaim that can be given
it. One can only add that it is refreshing upon assiduous inspection of both this periodical and the
New Student Review, to find that someone on this
campus is finally aware that what goes between the
covers is vastly more interesting and enjoyable
than a beautifully designed cover and professional
printing. Need more be said?
Deirdre V. Lovecky
every
The Spectrum is published twice-weekly
during the regular academic
Tuesday and Friday
year at the State University of New York at Buffalo,
3435 Main Street, Buffalo, New York 14214. Offices
are located at 355 Norton Hall. Average Circulation:
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�TuM*r, ApHI

»,

Joe McCarthy again?
To tho Editor:

The news is sweeping the campus! There is at
least one card carrying C.I.A. agent in the Psychology Department. And one in the History Department, too. Joe McCarthy must be doing headstands in his grave! If you change a word or two.
and say “Communist,” instead of “CIA,” it sounds
like the hunts of the early 1950s. But then I suppose that all groups sound the same when they
spout this kind of talk.
Personally, I resent the assault on my senses
that happens each time I 'enter Norton these days.
My ears are violated by the loud squawking, my
eyes by the unslightly strips of butcher paper, and
my intelligence is offended by the literature that
people who LOOK intelligent try to stuff in my
hands.
The ugly girl that lives across the street walked
by this morning mumbling “Double, double, toil and
trouble, fire burn ...” Do you suppose she could
be trying to recruit me for the CIA?
86110

BELOW OLYMPUS

By Interlandi

T» the Editor:
The D. L. signer of the letter appearing in the
April 26, 1968 issue of The Spectrum is either misguided or deliberately distorting the message of
The Spectrum’s editorial of April 19, 1968 and in effect the tragedy in Greece.
Few will disagree with the principles of self-

The leftist credibility gap
To the Editor:

Planet of the Apes

the gadfly
by Mark Schneider

“Convinced of the purity of their own motives and the

rottenness of ‘the system’ today’s campus militants seek to

impose their views upon the universities they attend and the
societies in which they live, even if this means ignoring or
violating the rights of others or preventing universities from
going about their normal educational and research activities.
In some countries and some situations such tactics and anger
are understandable. Faced by totalitarian regimes whose
power rests on coerced obedience, students in such countries
as Germany and Spain can point to the lack of avenues for
peaceful, democratic change as justifications for revolutionary violence.”

Upon our arrival at Norton Hall last Thursday
“But in the United States,” this
morning, we were very much impressed by the typical
New York Times editorial
beautiful and artistic example of the Credibility continues, there are avenues
for
Gap. It seems that those same persons who
have peaceful change. Instead of sitbeen complaining about “The Credibility Gap” have ting in
at Columbia University,
fallen headfirst into the very thing they
would the Times sternly advises, stu6
d us to avo d - We now see that it is not dent activists should explore
all
i
only
the Great Society
peaceful possibilities for remakwhich can be
as the Abominable Snow Job. It wouldcharacterized
seem more ing America: they should all supapp ent tha t
McCarthy (Joe-not Eugene) port Gene McCarthy’s campaign,
witchhunt continues to this day, but perpetrated by and lo,
America will be delivered.
of People-only at the
opposite end
McCarthy will correct the “accirum .(no P un intended).
\! P
dent” of our short-sighted VietS
t the Pr £ iS n the pudding
so
’ nam policy, will, with the help of
pvutinp
P tlng your Puddi ng where
your Big Business, clean up the ghetto,
mouth is!
and like a religious leader of two
’

f

t?

l

°°

*

Tom Collingwood
Bob Joss

thousand

years ago,

dirty clean.

W.A,

make the

Last week Carl Oglesby, with

the Editor:

whcwe'minlmum^ecornmlishmem^b

Poster

6

several walls of the Union
Building
Craig M. Ransom

*

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defaC

Editorials

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to report the

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controversial issues.
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The Spectrum's pages for
&amp;

lucidity and humanity,
spelled out in detail the general
criticism of this position begun
by Robert Scheer. 413 Southeast
Asians die hourly of hunger, he
reminded us, and he then showed
how this is largely the responsibility of the U.S., specifically of
its commercial interests {which
are one with the government’s ingreat

The wall poster media
To

by Martin

GvhmMo

last column. After some recent experiences I’ve had
on this campus, I am rapidly discovering that either
I am extremely bad at making myself understood, or
I am very wrong.
Because of the energies I have put into things in
the past, I will try again. So, as a beginning, let us
go to the Faculty Senate meeting held last Thursday. The Faculty Senate met first to discuss whether
or not to rescind the condemnation of the Vietnam
War made at the previous meeting. They then were
to discuss whether or not to allow military recruitment “to continue” on this campus, in light of, or
rather, in spite of, Lewis B. Hershey.
The first part of the day ended by a decision
of the Senate not to rescind its previous decision.
Then the second part of the day began. Meyerson
called the meeting to order add asked Horaberger
to read the executive council’s recommendation.
The floor was then opened for discussion. It was apparent to me at that point that Meyerson was not
going to ask students to speak at the meeting—at
least not without being pushed. I had prepared a
speech and had secured Rick Schwab's permission
to represent the students if Meyerson would recognize such a representative.
So I spoke with my friends Friedenberg and
Jackson and after some deliberation, Meyerson magnanimously gave the representative of the undergraduates and the representative of the graduate
students five minutes each.
So in five minutes, I was to speak for and represent some nine or ten thousand students. Well,
naturally, I didn’t feel much like representing that
many people in five minutes or in five years, so I
just spoke about what I felt was important.
Perhaps, some of you are unsure as to why
students either should speak or should have a right
to speak at a Faculty Senate meeting. The reason
is simple, or at least I thought it was until Thursday. When the Faculty Senate makes decisions about
the University, it makes them for the University.
The faculty, either through default or through some
deviously conceived plan, is the only body on campus which the President of this University listens to.
No one on this campus has yet questioned precisely why the faculty makes such decisions. It is
certainly time to do so now. Mr. Meyerson never
attends Student Senate meetings. If the Faculty
Senate tells the U.S. Army not to come on campus,
they will not. If the Student Senate does the same
thing, no one listens. Thus if students are not allowed to speak at the meetings of the Faculty Senate, they are not allowed to speak at the only meeting in which decisions are reached that mean any-

,

determination and non-interference in the internal
affairs of other nations from the U.S.A., U.S.S.R.,
U.N. or any other country. But many contemporary
world problems are, in fact, consequences of such
direct or indirect interferences. The editorial’s appeal is an appeal made also by a heroic people who
were enslaved on April 21, 1967 by a group of colonels because of the U.S. government’s interference
in the affairs of the Greek people. The tanks they
used to grab the political power and abolish sacred
traditions of democracy and freedom were tanks
given to Greece by the U.S. government.
The coup was successful because they used a
blueprint of counterinsurgency developed and made
available to them by the U.S. government. Their
ability to sustain an unprecedented terror and
police state is due only to our government’s continued support—economic, military and political.
Does D. L. mean that once we have meddled into
the internal affairs of other countries and have
achieved our objectives we must not change our
minds? If yes, let it be so stated.
Although I will respect D. L.’s political views,
I
will disagree and so will all other free American
citizens who cherish political freedom and human
dignity and who will not tolerate their violation by
anyone let alone our own elected political officials.
Minimum decency as responsible citizens compels us
to at least undo the wrongs we do to other people.
C. A. Yeracaris

The Sham
I am a very angry man at this moment. In many

Supports editorial on Greece

*if

Ptm Rm

Th* Sptctram

IMS

There is no community of interest between the haves and the
have nots. America has 6% of
the world’s population and controls 60% of the world’s resources. “The rest of the world
wants what we 200,000,000 Americans have got, and we’re not
going to give it to them,” LBJ has
said. But he is factually wrong
on two counts. 200,000,000 Ameri-

thing.

The faculty run this campus. Students are totally
and utterly powerless. I tried to explain all this to
the faculty last Thursday. I tried to explain to them
if they want the right to speak for the University,
at least they ought to accept the responsibility that
goes with that right. If they wish to speak for everyone, they ought to listen to everyone. This is a
minimum.
Really more should have been said. Really, what
cans don’t have it good. Certain I meant was that the faculty should not have so
classes in America are affluent much power. But there are still a few members of
and certain are destitute. Thus, the faculty who don’t even like students to attend
their meetings. And when I left the meeting Thursthere is no such thing as "Ameriday, one faculty member told me not to be angry.
ca’s national interest.” One’s interest can be identified not with
The point is that things must be cleaned up on
America, but with the class for this campus first, before anyone goes off complainwhich you empathize. Too, LBJ ing about practices in other areas. The faculty right
is correct when he says that poor now is on top of a most bigoted power structure. If
nations envy our prosperity, but they are not willing to recognize this and change
he is incorrect if he means that this, why do they expect any other group in power
the people of the world favor our to relinquish anything. Why, indeed, do they even
inequitable distribtuion of it.
care if someone else relinquishes power.
Our good liberal faculty gets upset about not
Bobby Kennedy promises to having real access to national policy making decistransform Bedford-Stuyvesant by ions, but sees nothing wrong with keeping students
asking Big Business, out of the powerless on this campus. This sickness, this libkidness of its heart, to put up the eralism, this bigotry and this shit is the reason for
money. Graciously, Tom Watson my anger today. I am losing all faith in everyone.
of IBM has thrown a little When Kings are radical, it means something. When
branch office into the area. To niggers are radical, so what!
Right after I spoke that day, some really dumb
whose benefit? For the profit of
IBM, or for the use of the com- person named Carl Murphy from the Graduate Student
Association got up to speak. Right after I said
munity? Oglesby discussed Am
erica’s “aid” to India, in the form that a token five minutes isn’t nearly enough for
of India’s selling fertilizer facstudents, Murphy ignored me completely and gractories to India. The plants were iously took his five minutes and spoke about militdesigned to meet Standard’s need ai T recruitment. He completely prevented any posfor a market, not India’s need for sibility of the faculty reacting to my speech. That’s
food, and the effect was to re- t° 0 bad.
tard India’s economic growth and
But the first order of business of the Faculty
increase Standard Oil’s. “Stand- Senate’s next meeting should be whether or not
ard Oil of New Jersey,” said a the present structure is fair, and if it is not fair,
State Department official to a what should be done about it. Meyerson will never
Time magazine reporter, “has the understand. But, hopefully, some members of the
power to topple governments of faculty will.
I am willing to meet with the Executive CommitThird World nations'
tee of the Faculty Senate at any time to discuss
This is what the courageous stu- what could be done to change the present inequities,
dents sitting in at Columbia un- But I hope, whether they give me that chance
or
derstand, and their fight against not, that the faculty who agree with my point of
corporate liberalism should be ap- view in substance, demand a change. Until they do
plauded.
so, they will remain very dangerous liberals.

�Th

p»9» Six

•

Hopes to arouse the apathetic mass
To Hio Editor:
This is an open letter to Phil Henry, chairman
of the Union house committee.
This letter is to express my dismay at the events
that took place in Norton Hall on April 25, 1968.
Being with you several times during the morning
and up until the time your decision was made, I
know what a difficult situation you were in. I can
not, however, state that 1 agree with the action
that was taken. In my estimation, the signs displayed in the lobby of Norton Hall were in complete
violation of the Norton House rules and should
have been removed immediately. I realize the implications of possible violence that might have resulted from such a decision, but I feel strongly that
some line must be drawn that no student, no faculty, and no administrator should be allowed to cross.
Without an established system of rules and conduct,
the threat of anarchy would loom large over our
campus.

Tuesday, April 30, 1968

Sptctrum

I know that this letter by itself will not be
enough to reverse the action taken on this matter,
but I wanted to express my feelings to you as a
student of this University. Your personal actions in
the midst of a very tense situation were very commendable. Mr. Jack Baier also proved himself a

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tempted to handle the circumstances.
It is my hope that out of the events of Thursday the 25, the so-called apathetic student might
realize exactly the strength on this campus of a few
voices. It is a disaster to this University that a fraction of the total student population be allowed to
tread on the rights of the majority. It is with the
hope of arousing the apathetic mass that I will attempt to do everything in my power to see that the
true majority voice of the students is returned once
again to this campus. I hope that in the course of
my actions I will be able to count on your support.
S. James Chiswell

GSA opposed to mandatory fees
To Hi* Editor:
I am responding to your editorial “Still Some
Problems” (26 April 1968) and clarifying some
information contined in a front page report of
that same issue, viz-a-viz mandatory student activity
fees.
First the clarification. The Graduate Student
Association is unconditionally opposed to mandatory
student activity fees. It is an economically painful
position to take and has meant a severe reduction
of incoming revenue for the GSA this year, and
maybe for some years to come. Nevertheless, the
preservation of libertarian principles—violently contravened by an enforced taxation such as a mandatory activity fee—is well worth the dollars and
cents loss. Moreover, our constituency will either
vountarily support us because of our proven usefulness to them, or we will disappear because we
deserve to or because the graduate students deserve
to lose their political arm due to their own apathy.
Hie graduate students have the intellectual
capacity to decide this and ought to have the freedom of choice to do so. Enforced taxation denies
them this freedom. On behalf of the graduate stu-

Sees professional military as

a

to
dents at this University, the GSA will continue
will
represent this policy to Chancellor Gould, President
Meyerson and all other interested parties.
The above remarks suggest the nature of my
response to your editorial. Let me be explicit.
Your praise of the University Trustees’ decision to
reinstate the mechanism of mandatory student
activity fees is wrongheaded. Undergraduates ought
to have the same freedom of choice that the GSA
will insist on preserving for graduate students.
Finally, your suggestion that the GSA be incorporated into the polity is gratuitous. Our present
status allows us the political mobility necessary to
our function of serving graduate students. It
provides us every kind of opportunity to work in
concert with the Student Association and we never
miss these opportunities. This arrangement may
decrease our financial resources, but it in no way
diminishes our human resources. In the end this
is our most important asset.
Carl Murphy
Chairman,
Graduate Student Association
oppose mandatory student activity fees and

threat

To the Editor:

Now that the issue of Vietnam is beginning to
take a back seat to civil rights, it is time to talk
about an issue that is threatening the life-line of
democracy in the United States. Draft resistance
has long been connected with the crisis in Vietnam.
Perhaps at the time it should have been, but today
we are facing the infancy of its product—The Professional Military.
Since 1945, the military has been attempting to
make itself professional. It has attempted this
because it does not desire to be sensitive to civilian
or political fluctuations of interest and apathy. In
the last four years, it has made tremendous strides
to divorce itself due to draft resistance. The most
important advance has been in giving the enlisted
man the pay and benefits equivalent to any civilian
counterpart.
Let me take, an example, the minimal grade,
enlisted professional (an E-4). He is now earning
(with recent Congressional approval) a total of
$7000 to $8000, not all of which is taxable; he has
been provided with his own home, with all utilities
and maintenance necessary provided; and he has
virtually free medical care (his next child will cost

$50 in hospital expenses with the best civilian professional care provided).
The picture I am painting looks like this: Our
officers, as all military officers, are aggressive men.
In the past, the safeguard on our society has always
been that we could keep the generals in check
merely by the fact that the enliSted men were
civilians looking forward to a civilian world. MacArlhur told Truman he was going to bomb China;
Truman removed MacArthur. I strongly suggest
been replaced
that President Truman would have
by a President MacArthur if the Professional Military had existed in maturity. After all, why should
a man care about civilian rights if from birth to
death everything is provided for him?
As to Victnams, the professional is not now
dying there. The draftee is dying as he guards the
base where the professional lives and doesn’t pay
taxes. In the future, a professional military could
use nuclear weapons without concern for civilian
reservations, for if draft resistance continues,
Congress will surely appropriate to it a hard core
strength it has never known in this country before.

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Disapproves of actions by 'kiddies'
To tho Editor:
On walking through Norton

Hall, I was struck
by the fact of being surrounded by a gross perversion of the democratic theme. The kiddies had resorted to classic right wing methods (i.e., fascist):
name-calling, accusation without substantive evidence of charges, etc. It occurred to me that the University is a marvelously tolerant place, despite its
many, many shotrcomings.
Kiddies, only in a university with an open campus policy could you level such gross tactics without
suffering consequences. Out there in the real world,
of which you have no cognizance, you would be sued
for libel and slander.
If your charges are true, prove them.
Kiddies, you perpetuate hatred; in the name of
justice and decency, you subvert the privacy and
rights of others.
And, down the Union corridor, was a quiet reminder of that which is right, and pleads for morality and justice: the SCLC table, asking for your
monetary and spiritual support of the only tactic
that will ultimately set our country right—non-violent protest against a violent society.

Dr. Martin Luther King had a relevant theme
and a relevant strategy to support that theme—it
was simple, basic and above all, honest and courageous.
You, kiddies, are neither honest, courageous nor
relevant—you scream at people who will cajole you
and cuddle you from the reality of the world. So
keep screaming at invisible shadows, if it boosts
your egos.

Let SCLC members and others fight the real battle that persists in our society, people who are willing to confront society at grass-roots level and possibly get their skulls flattened in the process.
To all people, black, white and any other color
in the spectrum of human pigmentation, I say this:
as an administrator (however lowly-stationed in the
power structure), a graduate student and above all,
as a human being, I pledge any and all support
within my capabilities to the cause of SCLC and
nonviolent protest to end injustice in our country.
You may call me on that pledge at any time, at
831-3724.

Gary Blumberg

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The Spectrum

Tuesday, April 30, 1968

Maharishi to appear in Buffalo

IRC candidates state views; voting
to take place today and tomorrow

by Joseph Fernbaeher
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

Buffalo will have an opportunity to see and hear the
world celebrated Maharishi
Mahesh Yogi in a special concert at Memorial Auditorium
at 8 p.m., May 9, with five
of his well-known disciples,
the Beach Boys.
In what might be the most un-

presidency of the Inter-Residence Council in elections scheduled today and tomorrow.

Resident students will cast paper ballots for
the four officer positions of the Council.
Voting is scheduled from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. and
4 to 6:30 p.m. both days.
Election booths are located on the first floor
of Tower and Goodyear Halls and in the Allenhurst
Bus Lounge in Goodyear.
Only undergraduates living in the dormitories
and Allenhurst are eligible to vote. This includes
students anticipating to move off campus next year.
A validated I.D. card must be presented to the election official.
Three candidates are competing for the vicepresidency; Mark Jacobson, Philip Leaf and Lynn
Watson.

Positions of secretary and treasurer have only
one contender each. Marian Hoffman, candidate for
secretary, and Michael Clark, candidate for treasurer, will run unopposed.

Presidential candidates

Mr. Gamba had served as an IRC representative
his sophomore year, and IRC vice-president this
year. He was a member of the Institute of electronic engineers, Phi Theta Kappa—the national
honor society, the Student Association ad-hoc committee for the development of residential college
and the IRC constitutional revision committee.
He said;
“The future of life in the residence halls depends on the constant development of their potential as programming facilitators toward the goal of
a total residential community.
“With this in mind, next year’s activities should
include extensive social, cultural and academic
events on a regular basis.
“As president, I perceive my role as one of total
responsibility to the total residence population. This
commitment includes working closely with the administration to solve any problems pertaining to this
community before they start to effect it.
“I will do my best to develop an exciting residential community for all.”
Jay Haberman, also running for president proposes:

More publicity for IRC-sponsored events;
Better planned events;

•

•

A committee to investigate housing shortages;

•

Close work with
Mr. Haberman was
recreation committee
committee. He was a
Tower house council.
•

house councils.

a member of the Allenhurst

and secretary of the sports
floor representative on the

VEEP candidates

Mark Jacobson, vice-presidential hopeful, said:
“As an active member of the resident community.

activities.

“My aim is to promote a wider interest in IRC
itself and to work to fulfill the needs and wishes
of my fellow resident students,” he said.
He has been secretary and information officer of the Tower Hall judiciary, a member of the
UUAB recreation committee, Treasurer of Tower
house council, and a member of the Tower CulturalScholastic committee.
Philip Leaf, another candidate for vice-president
issued the following statement:
“This year I have been very active in the IRC in
particular, and student government in general.
“This year I was an IRC representative from
Tower Hall, a non-voting member of Tower House
Council, chairman of the IRC alcohol study group,
member of IRC food committee, member of IRC
constitutional revision committee, member of Student Association constitutional revision committee,
member of Student Association president’s brainstorming group, member of the Faculty Student
Association land use committee, and chairman of
the fraternity’s constitutional committee.
“The knowledge gained through participating in
these activities will be put to good use if I am
elected Vice President. For example, the IRC
must set up a way to better communicate with the
residents. The re-establishment of the IRC newsletter would be an excellent idea. Many and varied
social, cultural and academic activities should be
set up on a regular basis.
“Students must be informed that there is ample
funds available to finance worthwhile projects.
Students and the residence Hall Councils should
be encouraged to take a more active role in governing their respective residence halls and in organizing activities.”

Lynn Watson
The
Watson.
Michael
ber of

third candidate in the VP field is Lynn
She has been; An IRC representative of
Hall, IRC publicity chairman, and a memthe Michael Hall house council and the
committee for the abolishment of Freshman women
curfews.
tier statement said:
The Inter-Residence Council was originally established to promote “cooperation and closer relations among resident students and their governing
bodies.” I’d like to see a more meaningful relationship between the resident students and the IRC.
“I feel that this communication can be best
attained through the vice-presidency. I see the office of vice-president as one of a coordinator of all
committees as well as the main link between the
House Councils and the Inter-Residence Council.
I’d like the opportunity to be the person to strengthen this vital link.

usual concerts in the history of
show biz, the Maharishi and his
disciples for the evening, the
Beach Boys, plan to reach audiences all over the nation with
their movement based on theories
of love and peace.
The Maharishi says that if he
can reach one-tenth of the world’s
population, wars will be an impossibility for centuries to come.
The Maharishi first gained the
attention of the world by becoming the teacher or guru of the
Beatles. His philosophy of transcendental meditation has spread
across the world like wildfire.
It is a philosophy based on eternal
love and internal peace of mind.
His first appearances have been
acclaimed in more than 25 countries throughout the free world,
and his appearance in New York’s
Madison Square Garden (in which
he lost over $2000, so some
sources have said that are trying
to refute the claims that the
Maharishi is out for a quick
buck) has resulted in more than
2500 letters a week urging him
to visit other American cities.

Maharishi Mahesh Yogi
Blessings of peace and love
will be brought to Buffalo.
The Beach Boys were first introduced to the Maharishi after a
December UNICEF concert in
Paris by their friends, John Lennon and George Harrison, Soon
after this, they were initiated
into his Spiritual Regeneration
Movement. Mike Love, senior
member of the group, then went
on to join the Maharishi at his
retreat in India for a five-week
period.

Tickets may be purchased at
Buffalo Festival Ticket Office,
Hotel Statler-Hilton lobby; Norton Hall, and Brundo Music, Niagara Falls.

Open housing rally scheduled
An open housing rally will be
held in Kleinhans Music Hall
Thursday at 8:30 p.m. to launch
Buffalo’s Project Good Neighbor

25 minute play entitled “Dialogue

The aim of the project is to
obtain written pledges from Buffalo residents in support of open

At the State University of Buffalo, students will be given an
opportunity to sign the pledges
this week at a table in Norton
Hall or in the Student Association
office. Sunday at 10 a.m., interested students will meet in that
office to go into the city to help
collect signatures.

campaign.

housing.

Robert L. Carter, General Counof the National Association
for the Advancement of Colored
People, will speak at the rally.
The program will also include a
sel

of the Four Doors,” and the State
University College Band will perform.

Puss cat SCATE

What SCATE dared not print: Juicyness!
by Linda Hanley

Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

Here, friends, for the first time
in print is the story SCATE didn’t
tell.
Yes, all those curses and comments too bold for public sale (?),
too shocking for words (?), and
often, too unbelievably inane to
be6n Written by allege
students

fiirt r^ i
e

he ess in an
find out what ’is wrongattempt to
with the
offered in this
(got a few
hundred years''!
Misses Penny Bergman
and Geri
Goldstein undertook this mammoth task, and here The Spectrum presents a sampling
of what
you won’t find
in the SCATE
collected under some loose categories which
are my own.
Pity The Poor Student
Depart
ment: “Mr. Moscov (Spanish)
US ty Ur first names

school

~

“h
so'thl'oft tbe

°

he, meeting

a classmate
l
out
ut nf ih classroom
we can talk
to them. . . , “The
language lab
°

,,

P 0r; the
set-up
P00r; the mainten
aLlth?'fftihe e^u
m
ent
*P
is poor;
the suondproofing
is poor; the

of

1 K

15

°

tapes are poorly designed.” .
th course u "less
your’re
y
!f (Soc. 371)
r ,f* a masochist”
nature of material
d
dlscussion on vital
u
5
irth
M I?
contr°l. imPossihel or
minimal” (this comment on a Geography
class)
• • it was announced that no

i® ,‘e.

.

■

.

.

.

attendance would be taken or required, yet in Geography 102, the
assistants sneakily sit in the back
and take it.” . . “Should rename
the course ‘Advanced Sleep Therapy’” (Geog. 102) . . , “Geography is not the stuff for people
with poetic souls.” . . "The doctor (Geology Dept.) is an intelli.

.

gent

individual, obviously

an ex-

pert in his field. However as a
teacher, he is an insult to the
profession. Sick, sadistic . . . Lab

instructors

are worse
no help,
no teaching ability, sarcastic and
...

vicious” .
“I also felt that Dr. Calkin suffers from a slight Napoleonic
complex. Could it be that there
are more than 200 dumb students
taking Geology this year, or
could it be the instructor?” . . .
“Got on the average of one hour,
20 minutes extra sleep every
.

.

Tuesday

and Thursday.” . . .
“(German) lab assistants flippant and nasty . . . appear to be
doing you a favor by helping you.

Always listening to tapes of ‘Wilmer and the Dukes’ so the Ger-

man

can’t be heard” . . .
“She (Mrs. Goldstein, History
121) made too much fun of pa-

triotism and manifest destiny in
which I firmly believe.” . . .
“This seems to be a particularly
worthless course for me. I know
that I shall never be in circumstances where the derivatives of
a function will be of any use to
me. I think it’s a shame that

students should be subjected to
this type of course just to get a
B/D.” . . .
“The authors of the text were
paid by the word.” . . .
“Having done extremely well
in 141-142, I couldn’t believe that
I had lost all my intelligence in
Math in one summer.”
“I
didn’t answer No, 18 because the
choice, T wasted my time and
lowered my other marks wasn’t
given” . . . “You practically have
to BE a computer to pass the
...

course (Computer Science)” . . .
“The premise of this course
(Poli. Sci. 151) was to find the
toleration point of each student
.
for the pure bull thrown.”
“From this course (Poli. Sci. 201)
I learned that I should change
my major” . . .
Pity The Poor Teacher Department: “His teaching matches
his notes: Aged, cracked, and
yellow. But I resolve Dr. Pegrum
of any blame for he knows not
that he has become a creature of
.

.

miserable habit.” . . .
“Dr. Calkin (Geology) is an excellent photographer, but he
should have stayed in Antarctica
studying glaciers instead o f
teaching at U.B.” . . . “Dr. Ganyard’s notes are remnants of the
stone age. I think he took (them)
in his college days. (History 121)”
"... he
has all the infectious
enthusiasm of a dead horse.”
“He made Math seem like a
.

.

.

mystical happening in that he was
stunned everytime an answer re. “Give
sulted. (Mr. Sharpe)”
Mr. Sharpe another job, like an
audio-visual repair man.” .
“Poor g u y—he trie s.” (Mr.
Sharpe) , . .
“Nice guy, crummy jokes.” (Dr.
.
Borst—Physics) .
A Little Pettiness In The Ranks
Department: “If I spend 25 hours
a week on a project, and get
10/10, no slob should get 7/10
for handing in a non-executable
program which he has spent twothree hours on.” (Computer
Science 245) , . .
.

.

.

.

“Please shut up those idiots in
the back of the room.” (Math
241) . . . “Students from all fields,
not only science, should be in
each section to facilitate conversations, speeches, etc. in German,
When much of the class is culturally illiterate and unable to
speak English well, conversation
in another language is impossible.”
“AU essay question exams favor English majors, fast writers,
and girls, because broads generally write more intelligible.”
...

(History 121) .
“There was a hell of a lot of
cheating in the back rows.” (Hath
.
.
117)
"Course could have
.

.

.

been better if the class weren't
composed of such draggy people
—probably English majors who
need H for a requirement.” (English 202)
.

.

.

.

And At For Thlt Questionnaire: “This questionnaire has
some of the most ridiculous questions in it that could ever be
thunk up.”
. . “This is about
the fourth time today that I’ve
filled out this shit and still refuse to answer No. 18.”
“Why must you ask such stupid
questions?” . . “No man is the
measure of all things.” (from a
Philosophy 327 student) .
“This questionnaire is picayune
and irrelevant like most of the
.

.

.

.

.

.

courses

you want us to

.

comment

about.”
“I refuse to fill out
this questionnaire, because this
occurred at the University of
Michigan, and the results were
published!” . . “Your lousy IBM
machines will never find out anything for you about anything related to teachers, students, or
knowledge . . only evaluation of
your evaluation sheet is that they
are vile ahd harmful to any wellmeaning attempt at course evaluation and an insult to those of
us who are constantly required
to fill in your miserable rec...

.

.

tangles.”

.

.

.

For the published SCATE, students can go to Room 205 in Norton Hall from 10 a.m. to 4 pjn.
Price is 75c for fee payers and
$1.00 for non-fee payers, faculty,
an dstaff. The information might
not be as amusing as what wasn't
published, but perhaps a bit more
helpful.

�Tuesday, April 30, 1966

The Spectrum

Pag* Eight

Placement Office has
Lightfoot, Rush, Nyro: 2 folk and? job listings available

Record review

and on this, her first album, I
Game,” Elektra (fiKS-74018) is
by ceil heron
think that she has tried to paint—mucheasierto discuss. Rush has
Spectrum Staff Reporter
a quality of quiet competence no
a musical picture of what one
hears, and feels, and sees in that matter what he is doing. In the
Are you having trouble finding
age of many overpowering highcity.
level groups, Rush simply goes a job for the summer?
I could list several bales of lyhis own gentle way. The result in
The University Placement Ofrics at this point, but none of
this case is a fine, fine album. It
fice has many available job listthem would prove a thing. You
includes three Joni Mitchell ings
and contacts.
cannot review this album except
songs, Urge for Going, “The
as whole. It shifts constantly. Circle Game and Tin Angel—a
Mr. E. J. Martel, assistant di“Luckie,” which opens the alcouple of his own, “No Regrets” rector of the part-time placement
bum, sounds like a Detroit sound being an excellent vocal and division, estimates that by the end
single, the next cut “Lu” is the
“Rockport Sunday,” being a guiof the semester approximately
Supremes, and so it goes. All
tar specialty, and once again 4000 students will have registered
on
are
hers,
voices
the album
some resurrected 50’s rock and at the placement office for partand it must have taken considerroll. Having lived through that time jobs during the school year
able skill to produce this album
era, I am amazed at the differor the summer.
on that basis alone.
ence that presenting these as
This year the staff at the placestraight
music
makes.
I can’t say if I like Laura Nyro
ment office is serving more stuThere is not a weak cut on the
or not, because there are approxdents than ever before, and more
imately 13 different people on
album as far as I am concerned.
students have obtained jobs
this album. Some of the cuts are
If your taste runs to the higher through the placement office than
excellent—Timer, Lonely Women
years.
and Women’s Blues are easy to powered pscyh. groups, forget in previous
you
one.
an
this
Should
be
old
to
immediately. A number
listen
Mr. Arthur Burke, administraof others have that discomfiting anarchism like me who still likes tive assistant, attributes part of
quality that Dylan and Simon to listen, this, like the Lightfoot this success to the job board that
and Garfunkel have too, of sudwas installed in Norton Hall for
album, would be an excellent addenly penetrating your consciousthe first time this year.
dition.
ness with a line that you had
been successful in fitlering out

By St*«se

In alphabetical order, Gordon
Lightfoot, Laura Nyro, and Tom
Rush. So you can leave if nothing sounds interesting.
The first album is Gordon
LLghltfoot’s new one, “Did She
Mention My Name?” United Artists 6649 or 3649. 1 understand
that Gordon Lightfoot is in the
cover of one of the latest Go
magazines as distributed by
WKBW. This is fascinating because Lightfoot has not changed
that much. Could it be that pop
music tastes are swinging again?
(Note that Simon and Garfunkel
and the Irish Rovers are hardly
psychedelic.)

Effective strings
The album is excelelnt. But
then this reviewer has been a
confirmed Lightfoot fan since before the first album came out.
The tightrope walk between folk
and country and western still
goes on, and to confuse the issue still further, he has added
strings in significant and higly
effective spots. I found “Black
Day in July” and “Does Your
Mother Know” to be the two
songs I liked best. “Day” is a
song about the Detroit riots. He
is the first person I know to do
anything at all on the subject
and the result is a notable success. “Does Your Mother Know”
is another of his drifter songs,
this time about a girl, and it
ranks with "Early Morning Rain.”
The other ten songs on the album are probably equally as
strong. For social and psychological reasons I liked these best.
Excellent record.

up to now.

As I said, I am not totally sure
that you should buy it, but it
should be listened to, and carefully. Something lurks within
this album which I personally do
not yet fully comprehend. This
may be part of its attraction, but
as is not unusual in the Steese
house, this one has not yet been
off the stack since we brought it
home, and everylime I hear it
something else appears. This is
not an album for everybody.
Some are going to dislike it; for
myself I think it is good now.
In a month I could well think it
either mediocre, or great. I tend
to suspect the latter.

Murky, enigmatic
The second selection is an album entitled “Eli and the Thirteenth Confession” by Laura
Nyro on Columbia (CS 9626). I
can not in good conscience urge
you to rush right out and buy
this record. It is a strange,
somewhat murky and enigmatic
album. She is a New York girl,

BUFFALO
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THE SPECTRUM

way to eat

ELLICOTT SQ. BLDG.
MEN'S SALON

Discounts on liquors (only)
to students and faculty
upon presentation of I.D.’s
Fraternities, Sororities and
all Social Groups

In the future, the placement office hopes to solicit student employment through the various deparements on campus.

A Board Contract is the cheapest

Tom Rush’s new “The Circle

3192 BAILEY AVE.

BUY AND SELL

This fall, and in February,
the placement office solicited by
mail approximately 1100 concerns
that hire students for the summer. A 33% response resulted in
about 700 jobs for students.

What to efo next year?

Quiet competence

USED TEXTS

The job board listed general”
descriptions of available jobs.
Sufficient information was given
for interested students to inquire
at the placement office. Information was limited enough to keep
students from inquiring directly
and plaguing the company with
endless telephone calls.

•

854-3504

GiRLsr^r
X
Be
a

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Bunny.

When you set aside your
books, don a pair of ears!
Top earnings, fun and
glamor are yours at
Playboy. Find out how
you can become a Summer Bunny at any of our
Playboy locations (providing you meet age
requirements indicated
below). Make an appointment with the Bunny
Mother at the Playboy
nearest you.

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HILLEL, THE AMERICAN-ISRAELI STUDENTS' CLUB,
and THE ISRAELI STUDENT ORGANIZATION
cordially invite you to an

ISRAELI KUMZITZ
SUNDAY, MAY

5th, at 7:30

at CAMP CENTERLAND
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT and REFRESHMENTS

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•18 is minimum age.

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21 minimum in all other Clubs.

�Th

Tuesday, April 30, 1968

•

Pig* Nln*

Spectrum

Students to make own
films in summer course

afternoon session from 1:30 to
4;30"p.m. Classes will be held five
days a week. It will be held during the first summer session.

Students will have the opportunity to make their own films as
the result of a summer session

course that will be made available for the first time this sum-

Mr. Blunberg indicated that
“primary emphasis will be. on
making films.”

mer.

A film production workshop for
six credits will be open to a maximum of 15 students. Donald
Blunberg of the Art Department
urges anyone interested to register immediately since there is
such a limit to the number of
students who may take the course.

r—

The class will be conducted as
a lecture demonstration in the
morning from 9:30 to 12:30 p.ra.,
and a workshop will comprise the

Dance
Workshop

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

Under the direction of Miss Billie Kirpich, the

University Dance Workshop will perform May 3
and 4 in Baird Hall. The dance concert is inspired
by the works of Shakespeare and Ferlinghetti.

Special to the Spectrum
A program of Shakespeare,
Sean O’Casey and Lawrence Ferlinghetti will provide the inspiration for the dance concert to be
given at State University of Buffalo May 3 and 4 at 8:30 p.m. in
Baird Hall.
The University Dance Workshop, under the direction of Miss
Billie Kirpich, will perform numbers based on works by O’Casey
and Ferlinghetti.
And, in a
special guest appearance, the New
Dance Group of Canada will per-

form a work called “Momentum,”
based on Shakespeare’s MaeBeth.
The concert, produced by Zella
Caple, dance instructor at D’Youvilel College, is sponsored by the
Women’s Physical Education Department and the Faculty of Arts
and Letters at the University.
“The literary flavor of the evening was really coincidental,” explained Miss Kirpich, who choreographed the numbers to be performed by the workshop. “The
Workshop’s pieces are the result

of my own long-time interest in
the dance possibilities of the two
works (“Star Jazzer,” an O’Casey
short story, and “The Soldiers of

No Country,” a Ferlinghetti play.”

RIVERSIDE MEN'S SHOP

Tonawanda Street, corner Ontario
Buffalo, New York 14207

-The Handsome Eight—

PRO-TENNIS
Itlllflo TOURNAMENT
*

MAY 10,11,12

And when the New Dance Group
of Canada accepted our invitation
to perform, quite by coincidence,
we had a concert based on the
work of other artists from a totally different medium. The program is a good illustration of just
one of the many approaches available to choreographers it&gt; their
search for sources.”

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Tickets on sale at Buffalo Festival Ticket Office, Hotel Statler-Hilton;
Buffalo Tennis Center, 2050 Elmwood Avenue; U. of B. Norton Hall;
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Tickets on sale now at Buffalo Festival Ticket Office, Hotel Statler Hilton
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�Tuesday, April 30, 1968

The Spictrum

Pag* T*n

Entertainment
Calendar

Theatre review

The Knight of the Burning Pestle'
ulous (especially for Baird!) Gothic set make this play a good deal
better drama than it deserves.

by Robin Harniman
th»

Special fo

Spectrum

In Baird Hall this past weekend
there took place a dramatic work
which I call Elizabethan Pirandello; Instead of characters coming
into the theater looking for a
play in which to live, you get
“real people” who stick themselves into a real play. It’s all
very darling and Romantic.

Ingenuously filthy

As for the acting, Edward Blair
is ingenuously filthy as the
Knight who vows to aid defenseless women “as long as life and
pestle last.” Helene Friedman and
Piero Hadjikakou (the peasants,
George and Nell) excell in their
roles, although this reviewer
would like to see them be allowed
to diversify their talents into
more hefty roles than the play
offers.
Joyce Laffell and James Bron
are endearing and contemporary
in the roles of the young lovers,
even if they don’t reach any great
heights or depths of character.

The play, “The Knight of the
Burning Pestle,” is not “great
art,” but a little good dirty fun
never hurt anybody.
Yeah, the play is dirty. Three

guesses what the knight’s burning

pestle is.

Guest director Eli Ask has updated the tone of this dear farce,
and his intent is clear; he definitely avoids profundity and
leans toward fun and life. This
outlook, enhanced by Esther
Kling’s period-pop costumes and
Robert Winkler’s literally mirac-

Hazel Cohen, as the Prologue,
handles her part pleasantly and
deserved the applause she received at the performance I attended. The Merrythought family
(Graham Marchant, Mary Riles
and Rosalind Jarrett) were an enjoyable and well-knit group.

OFF-CAMPUS
HOUSING

Paul

Mr. Marchant had a tricky part,

Saturday;

Today

which may account for a slight
loss of spirit when compared to
his other performances on campus. Miss Riles played Mistress
Merrythought in rather a dark
key, a good foil to Miss Jarret’s
Merrylee (a 12 year old, very
sweet, little brat).

Orient,” Capen 140, Freshman
Council, Peter Sellers flick.
DEMONSTRATION:
LECTURE
On electronic music by Ramon
Conference Theater,
Fuller,
8:30 p. m. Off-beat oscillation.

Elizabethan

a.m.-4 p.m.

Steven Meltzer (Venturewell)
was the most “Elizabethan” of the
characters in his voice and gestures and (this may seem picky)
his modern fedora just didn’t fit
his sort of evil elan. This reviewer especially enjoyed Julian Meltzer’s performance as the evil
Barbaroso. He roared so the audience shouted, “let him roar again”
at least with their laughter.
...

The rest of the cast is to be
commended for its skill in tumbling and fencing about the set,
making quick and well-done makeup changes, in lugging a life-size
coffin, and in ability to capsulize
a character into a few lines.

-

Wednesday
VOTING for Mr. Faculty and
Spring Queen, Center Lounge, 9

Thursday:
MOVIE: "The Knack,” Conference Theater, how to get it

Leisureland, with C. Q. Price
Orchestra, a versatile orchestra
of the big-band era.

CONTEST: Watermelon Eating
Type, Tower Lawn, a rather
seedy affair.
MODEL U. N.: 85 high schools
and area colleges attending at
Rosary Hill College, 9-5 p.m.
Sunday:

University
CONCERT:
Band,
Baird Lawn, 3 p.m., groove to
the greenery sound.
CONCERT: Recital
Sonata De
Camera, Baird Hall, 8:30 p.m.
CONCERT: The Temptations,
Kleinhans Music Hall, 7 p.m,
and 9:45 p.m., toooo tempting
to miss!
FIREWORKS: Sponsored by the
IRC, a “bomb”—blastic display
of peaceful napalm.
—

before it gets you.
CONCERT: “Your Father’s
Mustache,” Fillmore Room, 9
p.m., banjos and beer at the
bistro.
Friday:

CONCERT: Dionne
Warwick,
Clark Gym, 8:30 p.m., a fine
spring eve’s worth of entertainment.
CARNIVAL; Parking Field, Main
and Bailey, including “Car
Whack,” 2-11 p.m., to relieve
all your sublimational frustrations.

Monday;
CONCERT:

Creative Associates
Recital, Baird Hall, 8:30 p.m.
Appearing all week, April 29May 4, is Bert Mason at the
Coffeehouse in the Allenhurst
Bus Lounge.

Weyer tats at Barry's

WANTED:
Apartments and houses
summer and

for

fall rental.

Contact Off-Campus Housing,
Goodyear Hall

831-3613

—

or

—

831-3303

Millersport Hwy. at Mapla Rd.

f

•

ft

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Give your
contact lenses
a bath
tonight
In order to keep your contact lenses as
comfortable and convenient as they were
meant to be, you have to take care of
them. But until now you needed two or
more separate solutions to properly
prepare and maintain your contacts. Not
with Lensine. Lensine is the one lens
solution for complete contact lens care.

Cleaning your contacts with Lensine
retards the buildup of foreign deposits on
the lenses. And soaking your contacts in
Lensine overnight assures you of proper
lens hygiene. You get a free soaking case
on the bottom of every bottle of Lensine.

It has been demonstrated that

improper

storage between wearlngs may result in
the growth of bacteria on the lenses.
This is a sure cause of eye irritation and
in some cases can endanger your vision.
Bacteria cannot grow in Lensine which is
sterile, self-sanitizing, and antiseptic.
Just a drop or two of Lensine, before you
insert your lens, coats and lubricates it
allowing the lens to float more freely in
the eye's fluids. That’s because
Lensine is an "isotonic" solution,
which means that it blends with
the natural fluids of the eye.

Ujyjji

5
rUBiHl

Let your contacts be the
convenience they were

meant to be. Get

some Lensine, from the
Murine Company, Inc.

�Tuesday, April

Pa* E (avail

The Spectrum

30, 1968

Visiting theater lecturer to discuss
problems involved in play production
How does a play get from the

page to the stage? This problem,
a crucial one in the understanding theater, will be treated in a
workshop this week by Mr. Gene
Lasko, a visiting professional lecturer in theater.

“La Stanza”
1030 niagara falls blvd.
just north of sheridan dr.

������������������������������������■a*

“all new adventure in Italian dining

The

two-session
is
primarily to provide students in
the Introduction to Theater course
with an experience of applied theatrical art or work-in-progress to
augment their readings and class-

”

may we suggest

"chef's ziti special"

room

ziti macaroni, baked with muzzarella cheese
ricotta, meatballs and sausage

$2.40

TONY

.

.

WADE

��������������������������������������
—

of the

open

to

anyone

—

assignments, according to

Professor Ward Williamson, chairman of the Program in Theater.

||

.

at the piano bar
LUNCHEON SPECIALS

—

||

entertainment nightly
featuring

aim

workshop

OPEN 11:30 A.M.

“It is not a question of busywork,” he commented, “but of essentials: how do the actors and
director confront the text? The
only way to find out is to try it,
so Mr. Lasko will use brief portions of “Oedipus” and “The
Cherry Orchard” and work with
those present, explaining as he
goes.”

Any interested persons may attend the two sessions Wednesday
and Friday afternoons this week
from 4 to 6 p.m. in room 339 Norton Hall.

In addition, Mr. Lasko and
members of the theatre faculty
will offer a colloquium on the
problem of achieving theatrical
style Wednesday evening at 8 p.m.
in room 332 Norton Hall.

Gene
perienced

Lasko is

a widely

ex-

director who during
the second semester has been
teaching courses in acting end directing in the Program in Theater. In addition to numerous assignments in films and television,
Mr. Lasko was for some years associated with Arthur Penn in New
York, had directed several offBroadway productions, is one oi
the directors of the National Theater of the Deaf, and has staged
Mr. Gene Lasko
plays for new playwrights under
the auspices of the Eugene ONeill to teach a theater workshop this
week.
Foundation.

Duchesne College to close
(ACP)
The fate of the small private college may well have been spelled
out in recent action by Duchesne College in Omaha, Neb., comments the Midland
of Midland Lutheran College, Fremont.
Duchesne's president. Sister Jeanette Kimball, announced the closure of the
college as of August 15.
The increased cost of operation and the decreased number of students proved
to be the disastrous combination. Duchesne could not hire the faculty, expand the
curriculum and construct the buildings necessary to increase enrollment to the
minimum required for operation.
"Duchesne College fell victim to the financial crisis that is facing every private indepedent college in the nation," said Sister Kimball. "Private colleges with
fewer than six hundred students are too costly to operate."
—

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Th*mI«y, April M,

Spectrum

NM

Record review
Sunday Night

Simon and Garfunkels
latest albun
by Joseph Fernbacher
StaW

Spectrum

Reporter

Well, it seems that S.&amp;G. have
done it again. Their latest album, “Bookends,” will no doubt
reach the heights of popularity
that their two previous Ip’s
“Sounds of Silence” and “Parsley,
Sage, Rosemary
acquired.

&amp;

Thyme,” have

Though not as great or poetic

as “Parsley, Sage, Rosemary
Thyme,” this album is another ala

&amp;

Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel.
As with many of the albums being
injected into the musical markets,
“Bookends" comes complete with
lyrics on the back and a “special
bonus full-color poster included”
inside. S.&amp;G. appeal to genuine
folk enthusiasts with their poetic
lyrics and the rock or folkrock
fans with their use of extremely
catchy background music. This
has proven to be the surefire combination as far as the monetary
aspects of their art go.

Psychedelic-folk
To launch this musical journey,
S.4G. give us a “cute” little instrumental entitled “Bookends
Theme.” It’s a good tune but
can’t even begin to compare with
Paul Simon’s instrumental version of “Anji” on “Sounds of Silence.” From here the first stop
is a tune called “Save the Life
of my Child” which is a successful marriage of “psychedelic” and
“folk” music. It is a tune that attempts to show how the people of
this society are blood-thirsty and
cold towards another’s anguish
and death. It tells of a boy who
is out on the ledge of a building
ready to jump. A crowd gathers
in hopes of seeing him jump.
Night falls and “excitement kissed
the erowd/And made them wild/
. . . When the spotlight hit the
boy/The crowd began to cheer/
He flew away .
.

.

it is to become old and unwanted.
The other cut is the song called
“Old Friends" which is a sad
song about how fast time flies
and one becomes old, and in most
cases, an unwanted member of
society.

Also on the Ip is a groovy tune
from that fabulous movie “The
Graduate” which received less
recognition than it should have
at the Academy Award ceremonies—“Mrs. Robinson."

THE SPECTRUM
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Of particular interest arc the

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Old age, loneliness

'THE

BOBBY

“Punkey’s Dilemma" is a light
witty tune also on the album.
In this song S.&amp;G. ever so gently
take up the topic of draft evasion. The satire comes at the end
of the tune with, “Old Rodger
draft-dodger leavin’ by the basement door/Everybody knows what
he’s tippy-toeing down there for.”

Orange

Continuing on the journey, we
go to the next tune called “America” which tells of a youth setting
out to find himself and the true
America. Paul Simon sings this
tune in a soft melodic manner
as if it were just a converation
between two people.

STATE UNIVERSITY

two cuts which poetically and
poignantly itell the story of old
age and loneliness that accompanies it. On the one cut, Art
Garfunkel has taken and recorded the voices of old people. This
is a particularly effective cut, for
in it we are told by the old themselves how lonely and pathetic

—

Incorpoioted

to

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The Honda Super 90, tor instance, combines big bike looks
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�110,

TiwMtar,

strike-out

the spectrum of

by Danny Edalman
Assistant Sports

Editor

Traditionally, the end of the school year is marked by a time of

assessment, a time to contemplate the occurrences of the past eight
months, to assay the accomplishments, the failures and the problems

that need to be solved in the future. It is altogether fitting and proper,
therefore, to look at the situation that faces the athletic department
at the State University of Buffalo.

fit, hustleand heads m

Future hopes look good as spring
football campaign draws to close
by Marie Antonucci
Spectrum

Staff

catching (439). Drankoski was filling in for Ashley last fall. Drankokski will be backed up by

Reporter

In spring a young man’s fancy turns to thoughts
of springtime. However, for a certain group of
young men, their thoughts turn to “Hit, Hustle
and Heads-up,” the slogan for State University of

Buffalo head football coach “Doc” Urich in his
spring football practice.
For the past several weeks these athletes have
been working and sweating behind Clark Gym in
hopes of attaining a starting position on the 19681969 Bull football team.

Injuries take toll
Injuries have already taken their toll on several key men on next year’s squad.
Among the walking wounded are: Gary Grubbs,
1967’s starting defensive halfback, suffering
strained ligaments in his knee; Barney Woodward,
a possible reserve fullback, hospitalized with a
cracked breastbone, and All-East linebacker Mike
Luzny and defensive end Prentis Henley have stood
on the sidelines with knee injuries.

Other players excused from practice this spring
are Ed Lowe, Mick Murtha, and Ken Rutkowski.
All three are playing on head coach Bill Monkarsh’s
baseball team.

However, Murtha has been put on the disabled
list. He sustained a shoulder (passing arm) injury during one of the practice sessions just prior

to

the

season opener.

The 1968-1969 version of the football Bulls looks
strong in most departments. An outlook on next
year’s team might look like this:
Offensive ends: This position has outstanding
depth. Split end Dick Ashley returns to the lineup after a year’s layoff due to an injury suffered
last fall in the last scrimmage game before the season started.

learn physician Dr. Edmund Gicewic performed surgery on Ashley’s knee and the knee has
responded quite well.
Spring scrimmages have
proved that Dick has made a complete
recovery as
he has returned to his record-breaking form of the
1966-67 season.
Also back again are the first two tight ends
Paul Lang and Eerry Endress. Ed Lowe returns
m the fall to back up the split end position.

Quarterbacks: For the past two seasons Dennis
Mason has been Mick Murtha’s back-up
man. Since
Murtha has been on the baseball team,
Mason has
been running the show
Clark Gym in scrimmages and intra-squad behind
games. With Murtha pickU
11/ 1 lnjUry to his
£
Passin S arm, it looks as
son
h M
m‘S ht get the call for the
No. 1
p
quarterbacking
job.

th8

I

™

,

t

pois^dlmrt

5

8en
.h

Pi

king up vital experience and

°

S Ssions as shown by
accurate® passing
p smg and good
ball handling He
a big teSt wmbeT
• that Murtha bad and
f103 ,ntra squad
game of the
spring this

hU
lacks

!

„

freshman Joe Zelmanski.

The fullback slot could be a problem for Urich
a new replacement for Lee Jones will be difficult to find. Jones was not only a good running
back for those short yards up the middle, but also
an excellent blocking back. This spring practice
should bring up a good starting fullback.

as

The prospects are not as dim as they seem to
be, however. Leading the pack is Gary Chapp, a
strong runner and good blocker. Freshman Joe
Hudson, a powerful runner with surprising quickness and speed for his size, returns after a short
leave of absence. Freshmen Barney Woodward and
John Zeek could help the Bulls out in this position.
Defensive line: Veteran ends John Przybcien,
Bob Kovey and Tom Murphy return and should
continue to improve, Prentis Henley and freshman
Tom Vigreau are also in the running for starting
berths.
The tackle slots are capably filled by Joe Ricelli
and Danny Walgate. Walgate is a strong contender
for AM-East honors next season. Russ Beck and
Chuck Forness should provide depth here.
Linebackers: Linebacking should be excellent.
All-East as a sophomore last season, Mike Luzny
will be bidding for All-American honors next season. Luzny blocked four punts, intercepted one
pass, and recovered several vital fumbles by the
opponents last season. Lettenmen Don Sabo, Jim
Mosher, Dave Riehner and John Lupienski return
and are joined by outstanding freshman Ed Kershaw.

Defensive backs: This is probably the Bulls’
weakest spot on the whole team. Returning to the
halfback slot will be lettermen Gary Grubbs and
Dan Martin. Also returning will be safetyman Dick
Horn.

The merger of the University into the State system in 1962 had
ramifications that are stall being felt and most likely will continue
to be felt in this academic community for an untold number of years.
One of the departments affected of course was the athletic department.

Before the merger, the athletic department had
going big-time in sports, especially in football. Being
the State University system immediately led to fears
would sabotage through various devices the intentions
department to go big-time.

intentions of
absorbed into
that the State
of the athletic

The problem, to put it in a very elementary form, was that the
State University of Buffalo had an established athletic program with
definite aims for the future, whereas the other State University
centers at Albany, Binghamton, and Stony Brook didn't have any
athletic programs to speak of and were consequently just starting
to develop them. The question was whether the State would deemphasize the athletic program at Buffalo in order that it would
be on an equal level with the other university centers which were
just starting out with their athletic departments or would the State
allow Buffalo to leave the other university centers behind and go
big-time as an independent.
The State give its tacit approval for the latter course of action,
but it has erected roadblocks from time to time to give the athletic
department fits, and cause it to take corrective action to overcome
the problems.
A case in point was a recent decision this year in which the
Trustees of the State University of New York stated that “no agency
of the University shall provide or honor subsidies based primarily on
a student’s athletic ability.” This was a direct slap in the face in the
State University of Buffalo’s grant-in-aid practice. To overcome this
obstacle, an Intercollegiate Athletics Campaign drive has started to
raise $150,000 to be used primarly as a source for grants-in-add for
athletes.

But by far the most pressing problem facing the athletic department is the situation concerning voluntary athletic fees. This year
was the first time that this was put into effect and the result was
what was expected. The athletic department wasn’t sure how much it
would receive, so an economy squeeze was placed on its activities,
especially those that accrued little or no profit.
Chancellor Gould, in a recent statement, said that he will ask
the University Trustees to reinstate mandatory fees. This seems to
be the answer to the athletic department’s prayers. However, it will
be left to the individual campus student governments to decide what
fees, if any, are to be made mandatory. This means that there could
be a combination of mandatory student activities fees and voluntary
athletic fees, a prospect that very possiibly could be adopted on this

campus.

Needless to say the athletic department wants mandatory athletic
will examine the case for mandatory vs. voluntary
athletic fees and all the problems directly related to this question.
fees, Next week we

However, defensive backfield coach Bob Deming
has been wokring on freshmen Tom Elliot, Len
Nixon, Karl Zalor and transfer student (from Syracuse) Nick Kish for replacements.
Kish was tried out with the offensive backfield
but was switched to defense because of his experience.

If the defensive secondary can come through for
the Bulls, Buffalo could be the team to watch next
year as they pile on win after win.
Offensive line: Returning tackles Scott Clark
and Chris Wolf should continue to improve after
good sophomore years. Pushing behind them will
be Barry Atkinson, John Rio and Frank Reid.
Guards Mike Maser and Tom Kowalewski also

return, meeting competition from freshmen Dave
Beinen and Bill Everett.' Two year veteran John
Wesolowski returns to the center position with Bob
Moler his backup man. When some of the newcomers prove themselves, the offensive line should

be very strong.

'

weekend.

ha nd d SS6r E I Perry
has shown
much improveme nt
in ,spnng dr*Hs and has exln
hibited more note*.
dlrecting the second offensive unit p e m-

f

ma"
“»s-rfS,s;

•"

“«

a

""*

The taiIback Position is well
taken care of t
vKenny
Rutkowski returns in the
fail. la,. fa ,:
t
I
every time h» had &gt;WSki was a breakaway threat
the bal1 m Ws hands,
Pal p,., 0
returns quicker than ever and is
constantly
PaUerson set a new BuI1
season
ark for most yards gained
ing with
in rushj
3 d SC
°j ed seven touchdowns last
season Harryy n86n and
frehman
John
Faller will
add
T
a
0t
lled
f
by
Chuck
oski
Dranka
s ason s record in number of
passes
os caught
caueht (37) and?
total yards gained in pass

r„

h?? lu

single

fm*

"

dept?

who1r tf

‘

Kicking; Paul Jack returns to do the punting
as he did last season. Jack did quite well under
the new kicking rule as he kicked for an average
of 34.6 yards. In this new rule, the punter kicks
for coverage and not for as much distance as before.
Bob Embow will again handle the placekicking
chores. Embow already holds State University of
Buffalo records for most field goals in a season (6)
and most field goals in a career (7).
With Mason and possibly Murtha throwing and
Ashley back in the Bulls’ starting line-up to take
some of the pressure off Drankoski, the State University of Buffalo Bulls should be able to score
from any angle on the field. The running attack
will again be excellent if the offensive line is stabilized and a blocking fullback is found.
The defensive front four appears tough while
linebacking should be outstanding. If the defensive
backfield can jell, the Bulls should have a 7-3
season or even better.

Up, up and away

One of our photographers
caught the action as this Univer-

sity trackman made an attempt
to

clear the bar during

practice.

�Pag*

Th

Fourteen

•

campus releases...
Student
cations and

Tuesday, April 30, 1968

Spectrum

CHALK UP ANOTHER
/
RECORD

Sponsors are needed for fall freshman orientation. Applijob descriptions are available this week in room 209,

...

Tho 1969-70 Fulbright-Hays announcement of lecturing opportunities abroad for American scholars is now available in the office of
the faculty Fulbright advidsor, Mr. James A. Michielli, 210 Winspear
Ave. More than 300 awards are listed. Application before June 1,
1968, is recommended. Screening will begin shortly afterwards and
available lectureships will decrease in number during the summer
and fall.
Opon Swimming Hours during exam week, May 13-24, will be:
Monday through Friday, 2 to 5 p.m. and
Co-ed recreational hours
7 to 9 p.m.; Saturday, 1 to 3 p.m., and Sunday, 2 to 5 p.m.

I

$
CHOOSE

—

Tho School of Business Student Council and the Industrial Relations dub are sponsoring a B.Y.O.B. picnic at Ellicott Creek Park at
1 am. next Sunday. There will be free hot dogs, potato chips, pretzels
and pop available.
A gymnastics demonstration sponsored by the University gymnastics club •will be held 7 to 9 pm. Tuesday in Clark Gym. AH are
welcome and encouraged to participate in the clinic which will be held
following the demonstration.

"Wither Culture and Personality Studies," a symposium presented
by the Graduate Anthropology Club, will be held 8:15 p.m. Thursday
iin room A-70, Aoheson Hall. The guest speaker will be Dr, Anthony
F. C. Wallace of the University of Pennsylvania. Dr. Raoul Naroll,
Dr. Marvin K. Oper, Dr. Daviid B. Stout, and Dr Harold Hickerson
will make up the rest of the panel
Hillel will dedicate the Friday Evening Sabbath Service to the
20th anniversity of Israel. Aaron Peller, a junior in University College,
wil speak on: “Why I Plan to Spend Next Year in Israel.”

W.R.A. and the Department of Physical Education for Women
(not the main gym)
for women students during exam weeks will be available at the
following hours; Monday, Wednesday, Fridiay, 3 to 5 p.m., Tuesday,
Thursday, 7 to 9 p.m. (Apparatus Room included). Equipment will
be available for archery, softball, golf, badminton, volleyball and
paddeball. I.D. cards will be necessary to check out equipment.

announce recreational equipment and facilities

"Cardiology and Its Development" will be the topic of Dr. Fal-

setto, cardiologist from Buffalo General Hospital, at a meeting of the

Undergraduate Medical Society at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in room 334,

Norton Hall.

Elections will also be held to fill all executive positions after
which a coffee hour will follow. The presentation is open to all interested persons. For further information call 831-3609.
The Newman Association will present Teillard de Chardin’s
The Phenomenon of Man, a lecture by H. James Birx, teaching assistant in philosophy. The lecture, second in a series of three, will be
given at 8 p.m. Tuesday in room 233, Norton Hall.
The Student Coordinatiing Council will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday in room 233, Norton Hall.
Student research projects will be discussed at a seminar scheduled for 7 p.m. tomorrow in Room 232, Norton Hall. The eight studies
were financed through grants by the Undergraduate Research Committee of the Student Association. Discussion of new aspects of the
program will follow.
Psychology students and faculty will have a chance to gel
together outside the classroom for a change. A picnic, planned by
the Undergraduate Psychology Club at Ellicott Creek Park will be
held from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. May 5. All psyhcology majors, faculty
and staff members are invited.
A sofeball game and barbeque with beer served, are planned.
Tickets on sale in the basement lounge of Townsend Hall, cost $1
per person and $1.50 per student couple, and faculty members and
their family, and non-fee payers. Students can take a NFT bus to
the picnic site.

ALL MONO RECORDS
NARRATIVE RECORDS

PRICE
PROSE

-

ON SALE
Reg. $3.69 —NOW

POETRY
Reg. $4.69 —NOW

DOWNSTAIRS IN
BOOK DEPARTMENT

$099

SJ99

CHOOSE FROM
OVER 1000 RECORDS

“on Campus”

�Tuesday, April

CLASSIFIED
FOR SALE
sonable price, $400
884-6982 evenings.

for ,ui “ oc" on
call 831-3610

ROOMMATES WANTED

or best offer. Call

1959 FORD V8, excellent running
dition. $100. Call 831-3019.

con-

1966

CORVAIR, 500 model, white, 19000
miles, A-l condition. 831-2936.

SHALOM!

15 seconds from cam
831-2575.
FEMALE transfer student wants to share

EXCELLENT 1966 TRIUMPH Spitfire.
Must sell, poverty stricken student.
Discount. Bob, 875-5929.
1965 MUSTANG
Gently driven, engineering professor going on Sabbati—

1966 DUCATI 160 cc, 4000 miles,
cellent condition, asking $300.
832-5002.

exCall

1966 HONDA 160, luggage rack, 2 helmets, 6000 miles, excellent condition,
$325. Call 632-8669.
cc. Bob Davis,

837-

9539.

FURNITURE for 3-room apartment, good
price. Call Pat or Sue, 836-4514 after
6:00.

or at least that's
what they always say. I saw. But I
cannot belieive. C.J.N.
SAY IT with a Spectrum personal classified ad. So cheap, you won't even
believe it! 831-3610.
who doesn’t know?
HO, HO. HO
Joe doesn’t know.
Yo, ho, ho
happens
every May. Will
PIGNESS. It
it happen again?
SEEING is believing;

SUBLET

DUPLEX APARTMENT to sublet. 3 bedrooms, close to campus. June 1-Sept.
1, $150/month. Call Nancy. 836-5625.

FURNISHED house to sublet for summer, 10-min. walk to campus. 831-

2255, 831-2274.

SUBLET, summer, furnished for five,
5-minute ride, will bargain rent. 8313950.
SUBLET apartment June 1st to Aug. 31,
furnished, utilities included, $120/

month. Fernhill St. Call 831-2456.
SUMMER sublet, 3 bedrooms for 3 or 4
people, close to campus, completely
furnished, wall-to-wall carpeting, modern, $175/month. 831-4150.

for three-bedroom

pus.

GUBBA CREASE and Greasy are coming

FOREVER

too.

I

Hall.

Last week’s question was:
Which accomplishment of this year’s Student
Association do you feel is the greatest?
The results were:
25.6% 1. SCATE
10.4% 2. Bulletin Board Courses
06.8% 3. CAC Activities
12.4% 4. The Polity
15.6% 5. The ranking and grading proposal
12.4% 6. Commuter Council
16.8% 7. Other
Number of responses: 250

and forever and yet never,
can hope, though; and I do.

to town.

apartment wanted to
near campus. Please

Welcome

edly.

them wholeheart-

HAPPY birthday, Joan. Cary.
BEST wishes to Murray and Gail. The
Guys.
NOT AGAIN? It happened again! I tell
the world: Love is lovelier the fourteenth time around. Jan Studdy.

MALE graduate student seeks furnished,
one-bedroom apt. starting June 1.
Call 831-3691 evenings.
OR 2 bedrooms, furnished,
utilities, near campus. Call

offered?
You can answer The Spectrum Question Of The
Week every Wednesday and Thursday at the Information Desk on the first floor of Norton Hall
and the University College Lobby in Diefendorf

can take it no longer. Help

Johnathan.

1

sell apartment furniture, good
condition, reasonable. 837-9340.
GUITAR AND AMPLIFIER: $90, former
owner Eric Andersen. TF 9-0744 after
5, ask for Drew.
1963 YAMAHA 80 cc, tools, manual and
two helmets, $140. 831-3200 after six.

WISH to

I

apartment for next year. Call 8312210, ask for Judy or Susan.
3 GIRLS want apartment, 68-69. Will
sublet summer, preferably near cam-

831-2884.
2 OR 3 bedroom
rent for Sept,
call 836-8710.

5. Did you take note of the advertisements and
avail yourself of the services and products

financed.

me, Sue. Ira.

APARTMENT WANTED
looking

the Jewish

CYCLE INSURANCE,

OH, GOD!

to campus. 836-7546.
1 or 2 GIRLS needed to share apartment. Whole summer. Own room. 4
blocks from campus. 837-8819.

3 GIRLS

from

including

884-6982.

WANTED

Airfreight

MISCELLANEOUS

WANTED
Men's 3-speed bicycle, for
immediate or summer use. Call Gary,
833-2824.
ALCOA subsidiary needs 3 men for
full-time or part-time work. Can earn
—

$100 to $300 this summer. Car necessary. Aplly, 832-7509.
WANTED
Girl to live in for summer
Job, babysit and help care for 4- and
6-year-old, driver’s license preferred,
good wages. Call TR 3-7672 between 5
and 7.
—

PERSONAL

Your Trunks and Personal Items Home by Calling

leather dryfree pickup and delivery,
one-week service, student discount. Call
Robert Snyder, 837-8427.
PROFESSIONAL suede and

AMERICAN AIRLINES AIRFREIGHT
NF 2-6007

cleaning,

Is your MICROSCOPE working properly?
If not, contact Microscope Repair
Service, all makes repaired. Call 8225053.
LAST 6 seats available on

Only $6.00* per 100 lb. —BUFFALO TO NEW YORK
Airfreight Air Waybills and Shipping Tags are Available
in Residence Hall Offices.

Schussmeis-

ter’s charter to Europe. June 10-Aug.
16. Niagara Falls-London. $196 round
trip. Call Mr. Dale, 831-3602.

Airport to Airport

LOST
Man’s ring in Acheson's women's lavatory. April 23. Black with
chip stone. Sentimental value. Reward
—

Mucho happiness of April 30th on thee. Twenty!
Judith.

FRANCES-MY-FRANCES:
Babee, Bear and

Call

'p*

822-6142.

FUN WORKING IN EUROPE

large, two bedroom, good for 3 or 4
Niagara Falls Blvd., electric stove and refrigerator, heated. 836-

students near

GUARANTEED JOBS ABROAD! Get paid, travel, meet people.
Summer and year ’round jobs for young people 17 to 40. For
illustrated magazine with complete details and applications
send $1.00 to The International Student Information Service (ISIS).
133, rue Hotel des Monnaies, Brussels 6, Belgium.

THE FRESHMAN
presents

The World of Henry Orient
with

CAPEN 140

—

3419 BAILEY AVENUE
opposite Highgate

'personal'

|F~i POSTERS
18V 24
—

*

*

0075 each

VO

L

plus

postage

9 |n al (give

Or,n,nti 5

Sen d your black and
white or color
Photo Drawing
Negative Document
Magazine Pic
GREAT FOR GIFTS!

|

Originoi win
be returned.

*

7

Tl

All

posters

b8w
2 week delivery

one keep one)S6 00
9'°«V Pnnl of your

W h 6aCh
50C (or
o each return
address
"

posters

Add

Angela Lansbury

7:00 and 9:30 P.M.

SPECIALTY
Student Bundles
Shirts
Expert Cleaning

SO DON'T DELAY!

0

&amp; &amp;
&lt;&lt;

OUR

If

CLASS

TONIGHT! APRIL 30th

Laundry

Our gal, Etta, will be waiting
to store your winter clothes today.
&lt;?

Peter Sellers

University
Half Hour

\

—Follow the "In Crowd"—
and join
"The Free Tower Storage Happening"

—

Tony,

"SPRING HAS SPRUNG"

why bother to take your winter clothes home?

SHERIDAN DRIVE, unfurnished, modern,

3 BEDROOM apartment for Summer
School Students, available June 1stAug. 28, within walking
distance. Cali
837-6362.
ELMWOOD at Summer, unfurnished, 2bedroom apartment, fully carpeted,
new refrigerator, $110/month, includes
heat. Grad Students. Call after 6 PM.
885-7928.
APARTMENT for rent for summer,
bedrooms, inexpensive, opposite Ul
campus. Call 834-9569.

*°+

and Tower storage time is here

APARTMENTS FOR RENT

8322
ElLMWOOD
Block from Park, Albright,
steps from laundromat, shops, 4
rooms, heat included, corner apt. Call
833-8011 mornings.
4-BEDROOM house for rent for months
May-August, or any of these months,
10 minutes from UB, completely
furnished. Call 837-5160.
FURNISHED apartment across from
campus, summer, 4 bedrooms, $50
monthly per person, less for 5-6.
8326434, Mike,

week

1. Are you satisfied with this year’s Spectrum?
2. Was it better than last year?
3. Was coverage adequate and objective?

695-3044.
WHEN it happens, It happens. That's
the way it’s always been, child. So
swallow your pride, and beat it. Johnny.
UPSTATE

apartment with senior or graduate
girl(s). Fall semester. Contact all summer LINDA HAAS, 1741 Flatbush Ave.,
Brooklyn. N.Y. 11210, 212-ES7-1214.
WANTED 2 girls to share modern
apartment for summer. 10 min. walk

cal. $1000. 831-5336 or 634-4348 after
6 PM.

For

gems

Question of the

immediate FS-1, premiums

for summer,

pus.

—

1966 YAMAHA 80

Pag* Fifteen

The Spectrum

30, 1968

\cr

CO

Try

�Th

Pagt Slxtoan

•

Tuesday, April 30, 1968

Spectrum

News analysii
*

Recognition

new yorK

of Biafra

ditofs note: While the attention of most

worl

•

*

focus

co/um us
bla fra

:o mpiled from our wire services by Duane Champion

in Southeast Asia, a conflict in the large
VPesf African state of Nigeria still rages.
Two powerful capitals, Lagos in the north
and Biafra in the south, have been engaged
in a bitter civil war for nearly a year.
Mr. Okolo, a senior economics major at
the University, gives an impassioned view
of that war in his homeland. A frustrated,
despite
but determined scholar who
the fact that Biafrans are not granted
studied in Euschloarships by Nigeria
—

—

Demonstrators beaten 9 arrested
NEW YORK—Police using only their
fists battled militant anti-war demonstrators in Greenwich Village and broke up
fights between pro- and anti-war elements
in Central Park where an estimated 60,000
persons gathered to protest the Vietnam
War.

nam rally in Central Park’s Sheep Meadow.
Mrs. Caretto King, garbed in black, was
applauded when she read “Ten Commandments on Vietnam” that were found among
her husband’s notes after he was shot to
death in Memphis, Tenn., April 4.

"commandments” were
in a military victory” and “Thou shall not believe in a
political victory” in Vietnam.
Mrs, King also urged those participating
in the rally to join the “Poor People’s
March” to AVashington this week.
Among

Scores were beaten or arrested in the
Greenwich Village disturbance, which
erupted near the Washington Square arch
when demonstrators tried to stage an illegal march uptown to Central Park. At
least 94 persons were arested, including
89 in the village melee.

the

“Thou shall not believe

Lindsay was denounced as a “hypocrite”
for attending both the pro and antiware

Scores of police kept reasonable order
in and around Central Park. Some fighting erupted when about 200 young supporters of U. S. Vietnam policy hurled
eggs and shouted obscenities at demonstrators marching into the park on upper
Fifth Avenue. About a dozen fights broke
out and one youth sustained a bad cut
when struck in the face by a rock.

Mrs. Martin Luther King, Jr., widow
of the slain civil rights leader, flew in
from Atlanta and addressed the anti-Viet-

Lindsay spent a half-hour at the rally
and addressed the crowds not far from
a banner reading, “U. S. Get Out of Vietnam, Lindsay Gel Out of New York.”

Thousands of others marched up Fifth
Avenue earlier in the day in the city’s
annual Loyalty Day parade staged by veteran groups and other organizations supporting U. S. military forces. The loyalty
parade was peaceful but Mayor John V.

rallies.

Trustees demand discipline
NEW YORK—Trustees at protest-wracked Columbia University ordered President
Grayson Kirk to maintain “ultimate disciplinary power” over rebellious students.
In a statement, the trustees also opposed the granting of amnesty to demonstrators—one of the chief demands of
students in their five-day-old sit-in.
William E. Petersen, chairman of the
trustees, issued the statement, saying the
board members told Kirk they “wholeheartedly support” the administration position that no amnesty should be given
the student protestors.
The demontsrators have taken over five
university buildings to dramatize their demands that Columbia halt construction of
a gymnasium in Harlem’s Morningside
Park and end lies with the Institute for
Defense Analysis.
The trustees’ statement may conflict
with faculty proposals that a permanent
faculty-student-administration panel be
established on discipline.
The trustees authorized Kirk “to lake
all further steps which he may deem

or advisable to enable the university to resume its normal activities.”
Negro and Puerto Rican demonstrators
marched to the Columbia campus Saturday in support of the students.

necessary

The marchers rallied in front of Hamil-

ton Hall, one of the buildings taken over
by rebellious students last Tuesday, before
continuing to Central Park to participate
in an antiwar demonstration.
William Epton of the Harlem Progressive Labor Movement, told the group the

university followed a “racist policy.” He

said Harlem residents "salute all those
black and white students who have stood
in solidarity with the community in Harlem.”
The Columbia rebels, about 500 in number. took over the building of the school
gymnasium in the park. They charged it
would deprive neighborhood residents of
a recreation area.
Construction of the building has been
halted because of the dispute. Columbia
officials said the gymnasium will have faciltes for use by Harlem resdents.

Australia, and Capetown, before settling in Buffalo, Mr. Okolo explains that
one of the reasons his people are hated
in their own land is simply because “we
work hard."
by Oqbujuakpa J.J. Okolo
During the Kano riot of 1945 and the
election disorders of 1963, many Biafran
civilians in the North were either killed,
crippled or imprisoned. In 1966, more than
30,000 innocent Biafran citiens lost their
lives in a series of massacres. They were
slaughtered in parks, airports, marketplaces, schools, churches, and hospitals.
Despite this, the Biafran leaders warned
their people to refrain from retaliating.
The Biafrans had always been a kind
of political stabilizer in the country. Prior
to 1960, when Northern Nigeria threatened
to secede from the Federation, Dr. Azikiwe, a Biafran, had managed to keep
the country together without bloodshed.
Face extermination
Despite increased terrorism, especially
in northern Nigeria, Biafrans remained
in their own area in southern Nigeria,
where they faced extermination.
At Aburi, Ghana, the Nigerian government reluctantly agreed to the demands of
Odumegwu Chukwuemeka Ojukwu, the
Biafran leader, to rehabilitate the thousands of refugees who had fled from all
parts of Nigeria and to pay compensation
to those who lost their property.
Outside Ghana the agreement was never
honored.
Nigeria was divided into 12 states.
Northern Nigeria, comprising three-fourths
of Nigerian territory and 29 million people, was split into six states. Biafra, which
occupies about one-tenth of the land of
Nigeria, with population of 8 million, was
split into three states.
led
This effectively split up Biafra and
to her decision on May 30, 1967, to declare
her independence from the Nigerian state.
In a recent letter to the New York
Times, a Nigerian described Tanzania’s
recognition of Biafra as “unfortunate, illtimed, and divisive, because Biafra no
longer exists as a country , . . and it
will stiffen Biafra’s suicidal resolve.”
This statement reveals the feelings that
contributed, more than anything else, to
rope,

the present social hemorrhage that bed
Biafra was regarded as a foreign country
within the framework of Nigeria. Biafrans
were foreigners in their own country
born to be free but everywhere in chains.
They were discriminated against in civil
appointment and scholarship awards.
Nigeria had contributed to the stability
of Tanganyika before its union with
Zanzibar, and had played a part in the
peace-keeping force against secessionist
Katanga in the Congo, because they had
been invited by a people who were wise
enough to avoid genocide.
Lagos never invited any country or
diplomatic source to resolve her differences with wounded anr rejected Biafra,
Instead, politics was mixed, with gunpowder and peacemakers were urged to
stay aloof.
Despite warnings at the outset from
Tanzania’s Nyerere, the Pope, world journalists, and some well-meaning African
leaders that “the use of force will never
solve the crisis, but will rather make the
country more divided,” Lagos pushed herself with expensive propaganda into a
genocidal resolve.

—

Destruction planned

Nigeria had hoped to crush Biafra
“within 48 hours,” but failed.
The next date for Biafran “destruction"
was set for March 31, 1968, but reports
from Biafra may still be heard in shortwave radio.
Despite the fact that Britain contributed
to the present situation by arming Lagos,
there is no one to blame for the Balkanization of the late Nigeria but Lagos. Lagos

wants a single Nigeria by destroying an
entire people, the Biafrans.
Tanzania’s recognition of Biafra is humanitarian diplomacy aimed at bringing
Lagos back to her senses. The Organization of African Unity has not yet resolved to maintain the territorial integrity
of Nigeria Tanzania’s recognition is a

well-timed shot, which could drive
countries to the conference table.

will be able to resolve their differences, by finding a possible relationship
where both sides can still forge ahead
economically and politically, with an
agreement of opinion and a unanimity of
they

mind and purpose.
The Biafrans are fighting because their
very existence, and 'hat of every individual in Biafra, is threatened. They will
continue to fight until the last drop of
Biafran blood is shed.
Biafra fights not for expansion, but for
survival.
This is more of a moral issue than a
political principle.
Every head of state should be urged
to reconsider his conscience, and recognize
the state of Biafra.

Negroes protest at Ohio State
About 75 Negro employe of the department of business and
COLUMBUS, Ohio
students, protesting a lack of Negro finance.
Corbally was permitted to leave after
courses and faculty members, seized the
Ohio State University administration buildabout an hour and a half to discuss the
ing and held two vice presidents and four situation with Community Relations Dischool employes prisoner for eight hours. rector Clifford Tyree and Walter Tarpley
The take-over ended when university of the United Community Council, Carofficials agreed to a five-point plan to son then was permitted to attend the negotiations under guard.
resolve Negro grievances.
A spokesman for the demonstrators said
About 75 members of the university
Committee to End the War in Vietnam parin addition to wanting Negro history
ticipated in a Vietnam teach-in on the
courses taught and more Negro faculty
members the Negroes also demanded more
ground floor of the building while the
Negro counselors, a Negro department of
Negroes had control.
The take-over started when the students, students affairs, strict enforcement of open
part of a group called the Black Student housing and more emphasis on Negro muUnion, entered the second-floor office of sic.
The spokesman said the incident was
Gordon B. Carson, vice president of busitriggered by the complaint of four Negro
ness and finance at the school and degirls, who said they were removed from
tained him in his office.
They also held John D. Corbally, vice an intra-dormitory bus after the driver obpresident for academic affairs, a campus jected to their discussion of a black power meeting.
security officer, two secretaries and an
—

UPI i*i*pho.o

r

'°

«%

Waff

both
Then

Sidewalk hecklers jeer Fifth Ave. peace
marchers Saturday in New York, as the
group headed for a mass ra//y in Centrdl
Park.

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&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>ECE1VED

17

The Spectrum

UNIVERSITY
fit- CHIVES

Friday, April 26, 1968

State University of New York at Buffalo

Vol. 18, No. 50

APR 2 196B

Gould proposal

Mandatory student fees
may be re-established
by Richard R. Haynes
Managing Editor

Voluntary student activity lees may soon be a thing of
the past.
Samul B. Gould. State University chancellor, will ask
University Trustees to re instate mandatory fees.
It is considered virtually certain that they will do so.
But it will bo up to individual
campus student governments to
decide what foes, if any, will bo
mandatory at their schools. Student governments, as in the past,
will set the foe level on each
campus.
Chancellor Gould, in his resolution to the Trustees, says mandatory fees arc in lino with "the
expressed desires of representa-

The

new

tive student leaders and administrative officers concerned with

Wall posters "to inform of the reality of this
University" appeared yesterday in Norton Hall.
Many posters implicated administrators' and faculty members' complicity with the War.

media'

student affairs.”

"The University," he says, “desires to give its sanction and support to student activities and (lie
fees necessary to support them.”
How it works
This is how the proposed mandatory fee structure will oper-

Housing shortage results in tripling
and evictions for students next year

ate:

Students at each campus—either through the student gov•

by Linda Hanley
Spectrum

Staff Reporter

An expanding University admissions policy may force

104 men to find off-campus housing and 525 women to live
in triple rooms beginning in September.
The number of evictions of men from Tower may be
less, depending upon the number of men currently guaranteed housing, who may decide to move off-campus.

175 rooms in the women’s dormitories will have to be
tripled to accommodate the increased number of freshman
women.

First word of the situation

students whose numbers were
were almost assured of eviction. Many of these
students were not permitted by
parents to move off campus, had
no desire to move off campus, or
found it impossible to move off
campus due to financial reasons,
lack of car, etc. Many were forced
to consider transferring.

came in a letter from the Housing
Office, outlining the projected
shortage of 200 spaces, the proposed lottery sytem to allot space,
and the encouraging thought:
“Either a substantial number of
students will have to be tripled',
or many will not be able to be ac-

high enough who

The letter was dated March 29,
1968, the official date for the
close of classes for Spring recess.
It reached most
resident students
upon their return.

By the next evening, April 19,
the possibility of any female resident student actually being forced
to move out was eliminated. The
University Housing Office stated
in a letter that women’s residence
halls would be tripled to ca-

commodated.”

Most were not particularly perturbed since a lottery has been
used in each of the past six years
for various purposes.

IRC proposal

However, by the date of the
lottery, April 17-18, students had
received a letter from the InterResidence Council making it fairly certain that people would
tripled and eliminated from be
the
residence halls according to the
results.
th
meeting the night
of Aprilf Is, this was
made certain by the proposal passed:
Lottery numbers would be used to
determine first of all who was to
be accommodated;
secondly, hall
preference; and thirdly, who was
to be tripled.
rhe decision caused havoc in
1J
we
residence halls. There were

pacity.

Too late
The prospects for the male res-

ident students were a little dimmer: Those who drew number

756 and above still will not know
until after May 31 (when the first
housing payment is due and the
official number of those permitted
to return is known) whether or
not they’ll be forced to leave.
One student outlined the problems he encountered in this situation

•

located across the street, rent almost exclusively to graduate students. They do permit two undergrads to share a furnished apartment, but this at a rather high
rent of $115 a month, an apartment out of walking distance requires a car, and in many cases,
an apartment will wind up costing much more than a student is
paying in the dorm.

Lindsa

ma

tion;

The fee shall not exceed $60
annually;
Students unable to pay—“hardship case’’—will be allowed
to register and referred to the
•

•

local student government for possible waiver privileges;
The administration on each
campus may collect fees, but may
not control their expenditures.
•

Sludents refusing to pay activity fees may not be allovyed to
participate in student activities,
and (heir grades, transcripts and

credits may be withheld.
Dr. Gould’s resolution, if passed, will rescind the Trustees’ ruling of Nov. 8, 1967, which made
fees voluntary.

Fees paid voluntarily have
caused havoc at many State colleges and universities. Student
organizations here faced 50%
budget cuts and publications cuts
of up to 15% this semester.

GSA fees voluntary
Chancellor Gould’s proposal apparently affects full-time undergraduates, and possibly, part-time
undergraduates. But it is understood that graduate student fees
must remain voluntary.
Student governments will not
have two exclusive choices: Fees
mandatory or voluntary.
They could opt for a combination: Mandatory student activity
fees and voluntary athletic fees,
for example.
Or new fees could be established: A mandatory publications fee;
voluntary organization and ath-

letic fees.

Summer fees in question
It is unclear whether or not
the resolution mandates Summer

Session

fees.

Chancellor Gould will present
his plan to the Trustees, meeting
May 9 at Cortland, N.Y,

eak

Anti-war groups plan giant rally
in connection with student strike
by Dorie Klein
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

Negative

Dying,

Against War and

and Youth
Fascism.

Marches against the war in Vietnam will take place in
New York and at least 16 other cities tomorrow.
Diverse sponsors
The New York Fifth Ave. Peace Parade Committee
Sponsors for the march include
and other anti-war groups have organized a coalition march such diverse groups, as the West
and giant rally for Central Park, as the climax of two days Side Reform Democrats and the
U.S. Committee to Add the NLF.
of peace activity connected with the International Student David
Dellinger, of the Fifth Ave.
Strike.
Committee, commented: “We all

Two main marches, on Fifth
Ave. and Central Park West, will
take place in the morning. Draft
resisters, adult peace groups and
high school students, among
others, will meet at 11 a.m. at
Fifth Ave. and 95th St. At the
same time, college students, the
black community and teachers
will gather at Central Park West
and 104th St. The rally will begin in the afternoon in the Sheep
Meadow,

Mrs. King to speak

Folk singers Pete Seeger and
landlords will not rent
to college students, many will not Phil Ochs are to provide enterrent to any one under the age of tainment. Speakers will include
21, many of the really “desirable” Mrs. Martin Luther King, Yale
apartments are only available to University Chaplain William
married couples, some, including Sloane Coffin, Negro comedian
Princeton Courts, conveniently Dick Gregory, Harvard 1 graduate
Many

ernment or by referendum—may
assess themselves an annual fee
for educational, cultural, recreational or social programs;
Every student at a campus
where fees arc mandatory will
be required to pay at registra-

Non-payers penalized

student Michael Ferber and actress Viveca Lindfors.
Mayor
Lindsay and Borough President
Percy Sutton have also planned
to make appearances.
(Another parade, a traditional
Loyalty Day march, will be held.
Trouble between the two groups
is feared; in an editorial the New
York Times called for the Mayor
to revoke the permits for both
parades.)
Two feeder parades will be
held earlier: one from Harlem
including the newly organized

National Black Anti-war Antidraft Union and the Puerto Rican
Independence Movement, the
other from Washington Square
called the Anti-Imperialist March
organized by such groups as the
SDS Free School, Blacks Against

get a lift out of seeing thousands
of people come together to show
they are against the war, even
though they don’t agree on every
detail of a program to end the
war . . , We let each group do
its own thing, so long as it is

willing to work against the war.”
Real unity may be illusory,
however; the Washington Square
group has objected to the appearance of Mayor Lindsay, a socalled member of the “imperial
establishment,”
Mr, Dellinger, responding

to

the feeling that marches are no
longer effective in the peace
movement, said; “It would be a
mistake to think that the fight
against the war can be won In
the ballot box. It still has to be
won on the streets.”

�Th

Pag* Two

•

Friday, April 26, 1968

Spectrum

Report compares university bookstores Student Strike Committee
for “over 90% of gross annual
sales of $2,000,000 made in Un-

by Jo*l Kleinman
Spactrum

Staff

In an “attempt

R»port»r

iversity stores.

to show where

David Cornberg,
student administrative assistant
for the University Bookstore, has
issued an informative sheet comparing the Norton Hall bookstore
with others across the nation.
nationally,”

“The statistics are not a rebuttal and do not solve any problems,” Mr. Cornberg commented.
“Rather, they are meant to bring
to light some problems facing the
bookstore.”
“Two motivations for this informative sheet are to highlight
the problem of space and the prolem of the University community’s attitude toward the problems
of the University stores. This attitude tends to be a combination
of ignorance and apathy,” he
said.
Although only one of six campus stores, the Norton Bookstore

is exclusively the document’s focus. Mr. Cornberg observed that
“most of the criticism directed
by University faculty, students,
and administrators at the University stores is directed at the Norton store.” In addition, it accounts

J

Fhedocument

Lack of space: The Norton
Bookstore has a total area of
12.000 square feet, while the national average for large stores is
29.000 square feet.
•

Sale of low-profit items:
The Norton store sells 65% books
and only 35% higher profit items,
such as school supplies, clothing,
sundries, and special services.
The highest profit stores sell only
56% books and devote 44% of
their sales to higher profit items.
•

Sale of books: The Norton
store allocates 70% of its store
area to books, while the national
average is only 29%.
Sale of low-profit paperbacks: The Norton store has on
display and in stock 14,000 nonrequired paperbound titles, while
the national average is 10,350. In
addition, the national average
number of such titles is 6,500 for
stores which average 16,000
square feet of space to our 12,000.
•

•

dsT}

Zavelle, general merchandise
manager of the Harvard Cooperative Society. It states in part: “I
do not believe you could establish
a coop such as the Harvard Coop”
at the State University of Buffalo
because:

the current Internal Revenue Service regulations governing
co-ops make capital accumulation
•

difficut;
the State of New York imposes restrictions on the type of
merchandise your store can car•

ry;

large coops sell $3.00 of
high profit items for every $1.00
•

of textbooks. Your store’s sales
are 51% low profit textbooks, and
space limitations on campus restrict sales of high profit
items.”

BANQUET

COMPLETE MEAL
OR A SNACK

EAST, EFFICIENT

TAKE-OUT SERVICE

a

1551 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.
N«xt to Twin Fair
Call 837 4300
Opon 11 a.m. to 2 a.m.
Weekend* Until 4 a.m.

FACILITIES

BRIDAL SHOWERS

WEDDING RECEPTIONS
643 MAIN STREET
In Buffalo'a Tknnlrn

Dittrict

Call 852-0008
Open Daily

II a.m. to 4 a.m.

For Charcoal Broiled CHICKEN at Its Finest

fogus of activities today sponsored
by the Student Strike Committee
as this University participates in
the International Student Strike.
Posters will be placed around
£ampus “exposing some administration and faculty members
whose political and financial connections are more than questionable.” Various local figures will
also come under attack.
Alex Delfini, spokesman for the
Committee, explained the reason
for the poster campaign: “We
demand that our University wall

space be used to educate the students as to what’s going on both
on campus and in the world.
The group presented a list of
demands Tuesday to President

veal by Thursday afternoon all
classified research projects that
are allegedly being conducted on
this campus. The statement presented to Mr. Meyerson says: “We
will no longer tolerate the campus as a service and research
station for America’s imperialistic empire.”
The day of protest today will
begin with a demonstration at the
Federal Building in support of
Bruce Beyer, who will refuse induction.
Also scheduled is a boycott of
classes for the day.
However, Mr. Delfini explained
that most of the activities will
center around the poster cam-

paign.

•

Mr. Zavelle concluded: “It is
best to try to run a service-oriented, efficient college store on
your campus designed to function
within the limitations imposed by
local conditions.”
“The above information can be
documented by a n y o n e,” Mr.
Cornberg commented.
HOT BIG 13"8 Slice

PI77/V
Delivered FREE By

DiROSE
$1.05
POP

A

campaign

sponsors poster

com]

University Bookstore with others
having gross annual sales of $1,500,000 or more. It emphasizes the
following areas of concern:

"$•*«»

Regarding the issue of a college cooperative bookstore, Mr.
Cornberg cited a study made during last spring’s protest against

Pt

5c

TR 3-1330

COMPUTER
DATING WORKS
It Can Work For You.
Write MATCH MAKER, 520 Genesee
Building, Buffalo, for FREE application
and information.

Informing community is
aim of Peace Committee
A new group on campus, the
Student Committee for Peace,
has been formed in the wake of
the recent Strike for Knowledge.

It is interested in taking the
protest against the war in Vietnam into the larger community.
A campaign of demonstrations
and leafletting is planned for tomorrow morning, in conjunction
with nation-wide anti-war activities that day.
Information to be circulated
will focus on the Administration’s

delay in starting negotiations and
on action in the community to oppose the war.

A circular from the Buffalo
Draft Resistance Union will also
be distributed, announcing the
opening of the Draft Information
Center, 937 W. Ferry St.
All interested should report to
Norton Hall between 9 and 9:30
a.m. tomorrow, a spokesman for
the committee announced. The
place is to be announced.

Beatles-EyeView
ofthe Guru.
The Maharishi Mahesh Yogi-spiritual adviser to the
Beatles and Mia Farrow, architect of Transcendental
Meditation, leader of the Spiritual Regeneration Movement. A frail man who sits cross-legged among cushions
high in his own ashram-a Himalayan retreat where
believers practice meditating and exist on boiled rice and
vegetables. The Beatles were there, and Mia, and a score
of celebrated and not-so-cclcbrated believers from around
the world. Why To find out. Post writer Lewis Lapham
talked to.the Guru's followers in the U.S.. then went to
India. You can see the Maharishi A CURTIS MAGAZINE
his retreat and his message as the
I
Beatles see them in the May 4 issue I
of The Saturday Evening Post. Get
ON sale now
yourcopy today. On newsstands now.
’

•

CONGRATULATIONS GRADUATES
MOVING?

Williams Bekins
-

A flagpole sitter named Brown
Sat to set a new record in town:
“I'll reach my ambition,
But for one small condition;
When I'm out of Schfitz, I'll come down

Call In The Professionals
Local and Long-Distance Moving
and Storage
PHONE 835-5414
After 5 p.m. NF 2-0130 or 693-9268
—

C I960 Jos Schhu Brewing Co Milwaukee and other cities

�Friday, April

Pat* Thrw

The Spectrum

26, 1968

Regan to

Academic awards to be presented
the State University of Buffalo will be held at 7 p.m. Monday
in the Millard Fillmore Room.
Guest speaker will be City Councilman-at-Large Edward
V. Regan. R. Curtiss Montgomery, a graduate student in the
School of Business Administration, will be master of ceremonies. He shared the 1967 T. R. McConnell Award with
former Student Senate President Clinton Deveaux,
annually by the
Honors and Awards Committee
of the Student Senate, this ceremony recognizes outstanding stuSponsored

dents who have made contributions to the student government
and to the University on social
and academic levels.
The ceremony will be a forum
for the University’s most important awards- David B. Stout A-

ward,

Also presented at this time will
be: School of Nursing Awards,
including the Anne Walker Sengbush Leadership Award, Dr, S.
Mouchly Small Award, the Hone
Marcucci and Barbara Vordon
Award; Union Board Award, to
that person in UUAB who has
contributed most to the University; Student Association Gold
Keys (10), to graduating seniors

campus releases...
The International Teaching Alphabet (I.T.A.) will be discussed at
7:30 p.m. Monday at the Windermere Boulevard School. Dr. John
Downing, director of Reading Research at the University of London,

tributions to the University.

discussion will follow,

In addition to these awards,
Student Association Silver Keys
(12), will be given to undergraduates who have contributed greatly
to the University.

Freshman Fall Orientation will be different next year. Students
interested in planning the events should attend a meeting with Nancy
Coleman, New Student Affairs Coordinator, at 4 p.m. today in room
332, Norton Hall.

Cap and Gown Tapping will
also take place. Approximately
20 junior women will be chosen
for membership in the senior

women’s honorary society.
Approximately 12 junior men
will be chosen for membership

in Bisonhead, the senior men’s

honorary society. Finally the T.
R. McConnell Award will be presented to the graduating student

who has contributed the most to
the University community in
leadership, service, character, and
scholarship.

"Functions of the District Branches" will be the topic of Dr.
Henry W. Brosin, president of the American Psychiatric Association,
at the annual Dinner-Dance of the Western New York District Branch
of that organization in the Park Lane Restaurant tomorrow.
"What Do We Know About Marijuana" will be answered by Dr.
Henry Brill, M.D., at 8 p.m. Sunday in the Student Union Social Hall,
State University College, 1300 Elmwood Ave. Dr. Brill is vice chairman of the New York State Narcotic Addiction Control Commission.
There is no admission charge.

A photography exhibit by Russell Drisch will be open every day
from 1 to 5 p.m. and 6 to 10 p.m. in room 231, Norton Hall. The exhibit is sponsored by the UUAB Art Exhibit Committee.
The composer of the opera, “Votre Faust,” Henri Pousseur will
speak at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in room 233, Norton Hall. He will lecture
in French on “The Convergence of New Trends in Music and Literature.” Admission is 25£ for members of Les Amies de la France and
50£ for non-members.

''

annual

test; 7

Book
standi
ternit;
ward,
ate; i
the hi
haters

King,

freshi
Alumi
the mi
womar

%&gt;y

'

close, fast, comfortable electric shave.
®ISM North American Philips Company.
Inc.. 100 Cast 42nd Slr*«(. N«w

Vorft.

H. V.

10017

�Pag* Four

Friday, April

The Spectrum

BW3B
POOL RLfLEE

Thanks, Mr. Edelstein

Only on rare occasions in the life of a university does
any one student emerge as a leader possessing high ideals
tempered with pragmatism that allows for progress. Rarely
is there such a leader who has put the welfare of his fellow
student at the top of his priority list while working daily
Stewart Edelstein, this year’s Student Association President, has done a remarkable job in that office. The academic community is indebted to him for his service.
Sparked by its president, the Student Association has
entered upon several innovative courses, and success in most
cases has been attained. Success has been the hallmark of
Mr. Edelstein’s administration.
But there is another side to Stew Edelstein. Apart from
the successful administrator, there exists a warm, understanding person. After Wednesday evening’s ceremonies,
at which he passed the gavel to next year’s Student Association President, Stew said:
“It wasn’t the accomplishment of various goals that
was most important; it was the people I worked with.
SwtrwDMUtRtt-w.
Talking, planning and doing things with them was the best
part. There were so many people.”
We will remember him for the programs he has begun.
We will remember him for the friends he has made. We will
larnj lollzclau)
certainly remember him as a most outstanding Student
Association President. But Stewart will also go on to better
things, and the State University of Buffalo will be proud to
call him an alumnus.
We owe Stew a great deal. The Student Association will
be different without him, but the impact of his contribution
The picture below is of Ponni, a beautiful 14year-old
endure.
Vietnamese girl trying very hard to smile.
will
picture
The
was taken in her new home in Goetwish
well
Edelstein,
you
Stewart
we thank you and

in

State University Chancellor Gould’s announcement
Tuesday of a mechanism to allow for the rcinstitution of
mandatory fees brought elated sighs of relief from the State
University’s student leaders. Both the Stale’s final recognition of the severity of the fees problem and its ingenious
solution to it deserve to be praised.
If the State University Trustees give their expected
approval to the new mandatory fee arrangement, the problem of finding available funds for activities will have been
solved.
In their meetings to discuss the allocation of fees money,
to be held during the next few weeks, we urge the Student
Association Coordinating Council lo consider the following
proposals:

ticular individuals.

One of these “particular individuals” in Goettingen is Frau Heide
Friedrich. Dr, George G.
Iggers of the State University of Buffalo’s History
Department, who spent 16
months at the University
of Goettingen in 1961-62,
‘$X
described Frau Friedrich
as “an old-time pacifist.”
Both she and her husband
spent part of the Nazi era in jail, and Herr Friedrich lost his life during the war years. In recent
years, Frau Fiedrich has been active in a warresistance league in Goettingen, and in the Society
for Christian Jewish Cooperation, a civil liberties

the allocation of funds to the Athletic Department
only on the stipulation that students have an integral role in
the determination of how the money is to he spent. The
time has come to end the no-strings arrangement for athletic
group.
fee money, and, with student input, to re-examine the pri1964, and
I spent a summer in Goettingen in
orities which seem to prevail in Clark Gym. Perhaps intraTonkin
of
the
first
accounts
rcading*the
remember
1
mural athletics are more important than big-time football.
Bay incident in the local German newspapers. Since
university city —a
the possibilities of incorporating .the (Iraduale Stuthen, the lovely 1000-ycar-old
dent Association into the polity as a result of the fact that city of 100,000 nestled in the foothills of the Harz
mountains, a mere 15 kilometers from the barbed
graduate students still may not he assessed a mandatory acof the East German border untivities fee. Convocations will undoubtedly he pai'd for in wire and mines ravages
bv the
of World War 11, has, like
touched
the future by the undergraduate fees, and the (ISA. having to other cities in West Germany, become a center of
depend on voluntary fees, must realize that the price to be anti-war activity.
Dr. Iggers notes that two summers ago, in tvoa,
paid for “independence” from the undergraduate Student
1500 students (of a university population of about
Association will be high.
Marktplatz on
12.000) amassed in the Goellinger
July 4 to decrv the increasing American escalation
•

•

Lame-duck campus

The envisioned on-campus housing overflow and pile
up is deplorable

More than a hundred men are faced with the "choice"
of finding an apartment now or wailing until September.
The situation was first made known to students the third
week of April, no lime to he looking for an apartment.
Those who hesitate will not know until June, when the
actual number of those permitted to return will be known,
whether or not to leave Tower Given the fact that residence
men live somewhere beyond fifty , miles from Buffalo, this
summer will provide no opportunity to find a place to live
next vear.
The women are no belter off. even though they are
not being tossed out into the void Instead, they are being
crammed into the closet Because of the greater difficulty
women have finding an apartment. I Diversity officials expect to have to "expand" the women's dormitories to a
capacity limit of 175 triple rooms The living conditions
in such tripling range from poor to intolerable.
Housing this year would not even permit a resident
woman to obtain a cot for a weekend guest in a double
room. Cramming an extra bed. desk, dresser, and belongings of a third girl into these rooms could hardly make it
more comfortable.
More deplorable than the situation itself is the Russian
Roulette administrative nightmare which spawned it. It is
as hard for us to point a finger, as it is for administrators to
give reasons. What we are experiencing this spring is the
first in a series of crises of a lame-duck campus.

In Vietnam. Dr. Iggers added that anti war activism
Germany
and sentiment is "much stronger in West
Germany."
East
than in
Last year a group of people in Goettingen began
and
negotiations with several of the city's hospitals
injured
and
severely
burned
six
for
places
found
Vietnamese children. Thus far I’onni is the first of
six to arrive in the city.
••Torro (ios Homines" is the name' of the parent
organization for the project in Switzerland. The organization was founded in lOliO. to help "the chil"Terre dcs
dren of the world." Up until 1964,
Homines" concentrated on bringing severely wounded children, from Alpena and other African states
receive
to Switzerland. France, and Germany to
(he group s
medical assistance, but in May, 1967.
program
director. Edmond Kaiser, has initialed a
which lias brought 32 burned and injured children,
and fragmost of them a result of U S. napalm
mentation bombs, from South Vietnam to Europe.
A specific statement from Hanoi prohibits a similar
program for the North.
Naturally. 32 may seem a small number when
compared to the estimates of upwards of two million total civilian casualties in the War, but one
look into I’onni's eyes will discount the numerical,
being
and emphasize the human reality of what is
done. And perhaps most provocative is the ironic
twist of history that has occurred, whereby groups
of German citizens are treating victims of American

militarism.
Contributions are welcome and needed. Checks
Viet
should be made out to "Frau H. Friedrich
namkindcr" and sent to Prof. Iggers, Diefendorf 219.
Goettingen,
or directly to Frau Heide Fiedrich, 34
—

Rascnwcg

11.

Germany.

I'*.*/; 1Think

~~~Z 3m

StAHCf

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Readers
writings

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from linen rags

tingen, Germany, where she is one of the first
war-injured orphans of the Vietnamese War to receive first-class medical treatment in connection
with a Swiss-based program to treat the innocent
victims of that brutal war
Newspaper articles in Goettingen and Frankfurt
attributed the beginning of the program in many
areas to student activity and the initiative of par-

•s

:-S%V

Marines are blue
To the Editor:
We are Marines that are presently stationed in
Vietnam. We are pulling duty on an outpost, and
we get mail every two weeks, and then we don’t get
very much mail anyway.

We would be grateful if there could be anyway
that you could have some girls at the college correspond with us.
We have been stationed in Vietnam for four
months, and we haven’t seen an American girl for
four and a half months. It would help out morale a
lot if you could get some girls from the college to
write to us and send us, if possible, an enclosed
picture. It does get depressing when you don’t hear
from anyone.
We are both 20 years of age, and one of us is
from North Tonawanda. I am from Boston, Mass.
,
Our address is:
L/cpl
P.F.C. Steven J. Kelley 2289223 or
Terry Joyce 2357232
1st Shore Party Bn.
“B” Co. (5th Shore Party Bn.)
F.P.O. San Francisco, Calif. 96602
We would be grateful for anything you could
do for us.

Steve Kelley
Terry Joyce

Indecent rooftop eyesores
To the Editor:

I would like to express my extreme concern
a matter which I feel is both indecent and in
terribly bad taste. I am speaking of that traditional
eyesore which comes regularly with the warm weather. Yes of course, I mean the half-clad women sunning themselves on the dormitory roofs.
These vicious harlots not only steal my attention,
but are causing my grades to fall distressingly fast.
Therefore, as head of The Committee for Abolishment Of Rooftop Eyesores, I demand action on this
frustrating situation.
Freddie PowazeK
Harry Richman
Morris Murray

over

every
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�BELOW OLYMPUS

A plea from Duke

By Interlandi

To the Editor:

We would like to call to your attention recent
of collective 'bargaining for non-academic employees
of Duke University, many of whom are Negro.
At the present time, non-academic employees
receive an average wage of $1.25 per hour, or $2,600
per year if they work a 40-hour week. Although they
have formed a local union, the University administration refuses to recognize it or its right of collective bargaining.
Following the death of Dr, Martin Luther King
Jr., several hundred Duke students decided that the
University must lead the Durham community toward
racial and economic justice. To support their demands for a minimum wage of $1.60 per hour and
collective bargaining, they held a continuous silent
vigil on the campus for five days. Encouraged by the
support of the students, the union, mostly Negro
in membership, called a strike for the $1.60 minimum wage and collective bargaining.
The Academic Council of the Faculty has voted
unanimously to support the demands of the students and the non-academic employees, and has
specifically recommended that collective bargaining be instituted as soon as possible. The Board of
Trustees has conceded the institution of the $1.60
minimum wage by July 1, 1969, but it has refused
to consider the issue of collective bargaining.
What started as a University endeavor has developed regional significance, since most industry
in the South has failed to recognize collective bargaining principles. Several of the Duke trustees
hold directorships in these Southern industries and
would sooner destroy the quality of the University
than allow such a significant change in labor relations to occur.
About 300 workers

are on strike at Duke University. The strike cannot continue without at least
minimal financial support for the strikers. To supply
even $10 per week per striker requires support at
the rate of $3000 per week, a rate which cannot be
maintained by Duke students and faculty alone.
This money is being collected by the Duke Vigil
Community Fund.
We have little hope of any constructive action
by the Board of Trustees, and we are concerned
about the possibility of reprisals against the striking
workers. We must appeal outside the University
and the region for support of the strikers and our
quest for collective bargaining. Those of us who
believe that non-academic employees at one of the
nation’s major universities should neither be paid
less than nationally recognized poverty level wages
nor denied their right of collective bargaining
welcome your support.
BARBARA M. DENNISTON
Member, Committee of Concerned
Students
Duke University

Greeks' problem, not ours
To the Editor;
Your attitude toward Greece is very democratic,
moral, good and most of all idealistic. The United
States isn’t guardian of the world. Or does it make
a difference that we feel close to Greece and not to

Vietnam?
This is a Greek internal problem and indeed it is
a hard one, but it is none of our business. As for
arrest and torture, it is terrible, but not new. After
all isn’t that what our country claimed against Stalin, Mao and other communist or totalitarian countries? Totalitarian states no matter what their official name resort to coercive force. There are many
t
causes but we are only one country,
ctfrti teaid
?i andstarts
active help, and ends up in war.
the U,nited Nations—it is an extremely
re
e
enter
a country’s internal nmhiom S The UN can into
'
onl y be used in its pre;.
8
edlator between two countries,
To
Whe [" u enters internal situations
he a
P S!! bIe SUm? and on &gt;y "leans its
v. a hard
oestructmn. That body
has
enough
B time trying to prevent a
world war.
0U
k that America-espedally in the
present sltu
s
ation would
,
thority is usually resented.have learned that our auWe are also well known

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by STEESE

W-w and I are laboring this semester. It has bethe calendar and drive oneself back to the world
of academics. The usual spring letdown plus a departure from Buffalo dated 3 June or so has made
us extremely vulnerable to a general malaise. Thus
if this column should be somewhat more lackluster
than usual, why assume that my sap is not running
properly yet.

Spring also seems to have brought out my testiness. Have a couple of minor suggestions that I
would like to make. If the sweet young things in the
bursar’s office are going to call me by my first
name in the interests of bettering interpersonal relations, why can’t I do the same thing? I mean fair
is fair. Let us add, therefore, the first name of the
bearer onto those little tags they wear, so that we
can return the kindness
it is supposed to be a
kindness isn’t it?
...

jjSTBRLAhlty

s msk£s Times

Jl, fjp
by Linda Laufar

After last week’s reflection, I decided to return to the
peace and quiet of home
Arriving at my castle, I soon discovered that Sir Notchmin’s forces had been infiltrating Mistyview Castle in an
attempt to recover their lost fortress. Lord Beekjoy, Grand
High Chancellor until Sir Starstir’s inauguration, feared the
effects of this development and sent reinforcements to
prevent further inroads. These knights were ordered out
on seek and destroy missions; unfortunately, however, they
were more proficient in the latter.
....

Enraged by the destruction of would be more appropriate, I am
his valuable swamplands, Sir
still open to suggestions.”
Hotchmin and his followers
Sir Hotchmin was annoyed at
swooped down from the north.
the refusal, but he decided on
They besieged the castle from
another city. His message read,
the outside, while their infiltra“I have reconsidered my offer
tors caused chaos on the inside. and feel that West Gloomington
At the end of three days of is a suitable location.”
Once again Lord Beekjoy was
intense combat, neither side had
the advantage. Lord Beekjoy horrified at Sir Hotchmin’s suggestion; West Gloomington was
realized it was a stalemate and
another “unfriendly” city. After
sent a message to Sir Hotchmin.
deliberating for three hours, he
It read, “In the interest of peace,
I will meet with you at whatever answered, “Although you have
time and place you designate. I showed willingness to choose a
shall suspend all seek and destroy location, I feel that there are
several more logical choices. Permissions that extend into the
haps you would consider the
northernmost swamp area. Howfollowing: East Swamalia, East
ever, these missions will be continued in the areas surrounding Haporin, and South Kamalcar,"
Meanwhile, tension was buildthe castle.”
ing between the two halted
This action was hailed as a
forces at the castle. Sir Hotchmin
great deed of benevolence. Lord
was becoming increasingly irriBeekjoy had secured the admiratated with both the seek and detion of his people and enjoyed stroy
missions and the delays. He
the praise that was reigned upon
also resented Lord Beekjoy’s rehim.
jections and subsequent proposals. Finally, while the negotiaIn reply, Sir Hotchmin wrote,
“I have considered your message tions continued, hostilities eruptand believe North Murklon to ed again.
be a suitable location.”
Lord Beekjoy, with his usual
Receiving this notice, Lord
aptness, evaluated the situation
in a speech to his fellow knights,
Beekjoy was alarmed. North
“We are well on the road to
Murklon was an “unfriendly” city.
peace.”
He replied, “Perhaps another site

an-

internal problems-civil war
or other-

Editorials

Pag* Flv*

The Spectrum

1968

Friday, April 26,

Quotes

in the news

SACRAMENTO, Calif.—Gov. Ronald Reagan outlining his position
on whether he will be Republican presidential candidate:
"I didn’t say I was going to make a final decision about being a
candidate at all. I just said I was interested in it.”
LONDON—Conservative party home affairs spokesman Quintin
Hogg, blasting Conservative member Enoch Powell for his “keep Brit,
ain white” speech last weekend :
“It was not as if he did not know the effect his words might
have had.”
DALTON, Ga.—Raymond Curtis, a former prison mate of fugitive
James Earl Ray, who is charged with the murder of Dr. Martin Luther
King Jr., quoting Ray:
“If there's a million dollars out on King, I believe if I ever eet
out I’U collect it.”

I would like to offer somewhat of an apology to
an unnamed young lady in admissions and records,
while we are commenting on various departments.
I don’t really know her name, and at the risk of
embarrassing her, she is identified easily by a fine
head of dark red hair, and a set of simply classic
brown eyes. Anyway, said charmer blew up at me
the other day. Really at some stupid who was already walking away, but what the hell, I was a
handy and relatively large target.
We roared at each other briefly through her
protective plastic shield—a contest she was bound
to lose since she had to remain somewhat of a lady
—and after obtaining what I wished—the requisite
rubber stamp on my transcript request— I turned
away still growling, to find most of the students in
the longish lines which seem standard equipment
to the A &amp; R office grinning. It seems to me that
there is herein a moral of sorts. Students, oh most
high administrators, can, and do with amazing frequency, behave like human beings.

Like, they can be sort of apprentice people if
one gives them a chance. Now maybe that many students have gotten so carried away that they tried
to crawl through the counter openings and destroy
offending—in their minds only of course—clerks
that it was necessary to protect all University personnel with those plastic shields. Pardon me, if I
have certain grave doubts about same however. I
think those plastic shields are more of a psychic
necessity than a physical one.
As in so many other places in this society status
has to be acquired somehow, if only by being on
the right side of a plastic shield. Or by being democratic and calling a student, who happens to be several years older than yourself, by his first name. It
is a rather ghastly situation really.
On one hand you have great hordes of students—who if they stop to think (a practice hardly necessary for the majority of courses they are taking)
have very real questions about what they are doing
and why; and on the other the beleagured civil servants caught in a mechanical, endless, unimaginative, regulation dominated existence. It is noticeable
that there is not much affection one for the other,
and even less respect.
What does one do about it? I report problems,

not solutions. Maybe next year a solution specialist
can be found to fill this space. The solution—such
as it is—will probably be very similar to the problem of breaking down the ghettos. As soon as someone settles that one all we will have to do is adapt
it a little.

There is a solution of course, but it is not practical. Which means that it is a) too much bother or
b) too expensive. The simple fact is that
the ghetto
has to be destroyed. Students, unfortunately, are
necessary to the economy. Now it may be that the
most “simple” and “cheapest” way of removing the
ghetto is to arm all major police departments with
clean atomic “devices” for use in case of riots or
other gatherings of hostile®.
Students have to be treated differently. Here the
most “efficient” methods seem to be depersonalization and mass-processing.
It is just possible that both groups could be
added to the human race again by treating them
like members, instead of sub-species. The Negro
obviously has a bitch of much greater magnitude.
Having been dumped on for a couple of centuries
now, I do not personally find it amazing that there
are certain radicals who feel that violence is the
only way out. Indeed the fear that this might spread
to students may be the cause of the plastic
shields.
There will be casualties in trying to
rehabilitate
either group. I suggest that one of the major
ones
will be the ability to feel superior just because of
the existence of either of them. It hat to be. Which
is one of the reasons it will come late, perhaps too
late for the ghetto. It would be easier to begin with
students, but then, we all have to learn our place
Anyway, I’m sorry I yelled at you Red. But than*
you for being able to consider me enough of a human being to yell at. Maybe you ought to
get the
student thespians to stage one every day. It might
improve everybody’s morale. '■

�Pag*

Friday, April 26,

The Spectrum

Six

1968

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Hat fell

�Friday, April 26, 1968

Pag* Seven

The Spectrum

International Studies conference

explores foreign-U.S. student relations

Princeton group
discusses revolution

BROOKLYN
COLLEGE of
PHARMACY

PRINCETON (CPS)—The United States should “recognize revolution not only as inevitable

leading 10

New York’s International Studies and World Affairs Center,
Oyster Bay, April 19 to 21.

The two day discussion was attended by Paul Hollender,
International Affairs Coordinator, and Nabil Aland, president
of the International Club.
Mr. Hollender commented that
the basic theme of the conference
and the programs suggested there
by the participants related to
searching under the skin to discover the inner worth of a person.

Dr. Glenn A. Olds, the University dean for this field, in a keynote address, expressed his faith
in the generation preparing to inherit this world. He focused on
three problems which he believes
today’s youth are fighting to over-

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come. First is the “intimate problem” of the integrity of the person being more important than
posessions; second, the ultimate
search for meaning; lastly, the inclusive hunger for global connect-

iveness.

Dr. Olds pointed out that we
should not hide ourselves behind
cultural masks and we should not
let our own worlds blind us from
other people. “Man must be more
than himself to be himself.”
Mr. Hollander explained his reaction to the Conference: “Everyone wants someone he can talk
to, someone who will really listen.
Yet everyone is not aware, sensitive and responsive to the feelings of others. This was brought
to the attention of the participants in the conference, who
quickly took it to heart.

American responsibility
“Americans, as hosts, have the
responsibility to take the initiative first. We must show the foreign student that we really are

REVIEWS
FOR ALL
COLLEGE
COURSES

friend. Meeting and talking on a
personal basis is the most rewarding type of relationship, foi
both American and foreign students have a great deal to offer
each other.”
William Carr of the National
Association for Foreign Student
Affairs, in addressing the conference, traced development
along the International Understanding Continuum. The steps
along this continuum are ethnocentrism, awareness, learning
about other countries, appreciation of differences, cross-cultural
involvement and over-identification.

Mr. Alami took part in a group
discussion that emphasized a political orientation. One of the
main findings of that session was
that foreign students do not like
to take part in political activity
in the U.S. because “as guests in
the U.S., we have more privileges
than rights. It is not safe to participate in U.S. politics since we
are often watched by our own
governments.”

“If American students can understand foreign students, and
visa versa, then potential conflicts can be avoided,” he said.
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Friends Service Committee conference last week.

MASTER Of SCIENCE DEGREE

History professor Cyril E. Black
said: “The United States should
again become revolutionary and

PHARMACY
ADMINISTRATION
and HOSPITAL
PHARMACY
ADMINISTRATION

with specialization in

support the radical revolutions
that are needed.” Dr. Black was
one of some 50 academics and
radical activists who participated
in the conference on “The United
States in a Revolutionary World.”

The three day conference was
held at Princeton’s Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, which joined the
Friends as sponsors.
As the discussion ranged across
the various international and domestic issues confronting the United States, most of the participants in the conference pushed
for the notion that the U.S. had
become a reactionary force in the
world.
Professor Edgar Z. Friedenberg, of the State University of
Buffalo, said: “Starting from our
cultural roots, I don’t think the
democratic process in this country can lead to treating other
people, especially colored people,
with any respect.”
The defense of the United
States was led, ironically, by two
foreigners, Sir Dennis W. Borgan
of Cambridge University and Leo
Mates of the Institute for International Politics in Belgrade.
Professor Friedenberg attacked
the “absurdity of discussing revolutions in a place like Prince-

ton.”

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Partners' Press, Inc.
ABGOTT &amp; SMITH PRINTING
1881 Kenmore Ave. (at Military)

Phone 876-2284

Kaleidoscope... Spring Weekend ’68
presents

YOUR FATHER'S MUSTACHE
the knee-slappin', banjo-pickin', mustached candy-striped
Happening in concert in the FILLMORE ROOM next THURSDAY
evening, MAY 2, at 9:00 p.m.

Thrill to those memorable tunes that made Mom 'n Dad's
hearts go "pitter-patter, pitter-patter."

ATTENTION;

Refreshments will be served
and over, ONLY!! I!!

—

18 years of age

Tickets to this all-around good time, plus those to the DIONNE WARWICK CONCERT and the SPRING WEEKEND DANCE, are available in the Norton Hall
Ticket
Office NOW! I I

Buy Now

.

.

.

PLAY LATER!!

�Friday, April 26, 1968

The Spectrum

Pag* Eight

Play review

'The Lover' and 'The Collection'
mutter
Spectrum

Theater Reviewer

The Studio Two at Lafayette
and Hovt sometimes produces
more stimulating fare than its
counterpart downtown, and the
current presentations of “The
Lover” and “The Collection” are
evidence of this. These two short
works are relatively simple and
understandable, and furthermore,
most enjoyable.

The theme of both works is infidelity; and this theme becomes
thoroughly enveloped in a Pirandello-labyrinth of reality conflicts. First comes “The Lover,”
a rather unique little play about
a rather unique, vaguely comic
situation. Pinter has employed
two characters, husband Richard
and wife Sarah, played most capably by Frank T. Wells and Betty
Lures. Husband is a businessman,
wife is a housewife. Richard and
Sarah seem to enjoy their marriage and keep no secrets. They
are so frank that they speak
openly of Sarah’s lover who
comes to visit her at home several
times a week. But Richard does
not mind (at first) because he has
his own diversion.

Who's a whore?
At one point Sarah
asks

Richard,

casually

“How’s

your

acquaintance.,®ill (John Costopoulos). Wife says: "I did;” Bill says:
‘‘We didn’t.” Now husband must
wonder: did she, or didn’t she?
Only Harold Pinter knows for

whore?” One member of the odd
couple sums up their strange relationship and remarks: “I think
things are beautifully balanced,”
Just as the audience is beginning to enjoy the humor of the
situation, Pinter lets us view an
afternoon rendezvous of Sarah
with lover, who happens to be
no other than hubby Richard.
The characters change character
repeatedly; hubby becomes lover,
wife is perceived as whore. Richard is jealous of himself as the
lover. Hubby resents the bongos
symbols of lust which sexually
arouse Sarah. Richard would like
to he the object of this lust and
scolds: “The constant image of
your lust is a milk jug and a
teapot.”

sure. Or does he?

Director Maurice Breslow has

certainly done justice to Pinter’s
work. His actors work well together even though the somelimes cramped stage makes them
self-conscious. In “The Loved,”
Frank T. Wells’ intonations and
nonchalance are very good and
are essential for the humor to
emerge. Through John Costopou-

—

los in “The Collection," Breslow
had made sure that the homosexuality of the character is per-

ceived.

The frequent transitions from
side to side
are made smoothly, which is indeed fortunate in selections containing so many breaks.

Are they playing one big identity game or trying to devise an
original solution to the rising

scene to scene and

divorce rate? Who knows, but in
any case the result is an interesting sketch of the problems of
objective reality. Or is it?

The modern settings and seen
cry by Harold Head is appropri
ate and convincing.

Does she or doesn't she?
“The Collection” is a similar
absurdity except that the reality
problem is not who is who; but
who did what. Husband James
(Russell Driseh) believes that wife
(Sheila Browne) slept with new

Counseling for

transfer students

Foreign and American
students to hold Fiesta
The annual International Club's
"Fiesta” will be held tomorrow in
the Millard Fillmore Room from
7 p in. lo I a.m. The evening of

entertainment by foreign and
American students will include a
buffet with selections from 22
countries A band, songs, and

Group counseling sessions for
transfer students will be conducted each Monday until the
end of the semester.

Transfer students will be provided with the opportunity to discuss their problems in adjusting

A limited number of tickets is
available, ’according to International Club President Nabil Alami. and may be obtained for $2
per person at the Foreign Student
Office, 212 llarriman; the International Club, .140 Norton: and at
the “Fiesta" table in Norton Hall.

to the University or any other
personal problems at these open
meetings. It is the hope of the
Coun cling Center that by sharing their difficulties, the stu-

dents will be able to find ways
of coping with them.

dances will be featured.

Dancers from Columbia. Israel,
Cuba, the Arab nations. Dithuama, the Ukraine, the
Balkan countries, Indonesia, Sal
vadore, and the United Stales will
present homeland dance slops.
Malaysia.

The next session will be' at 4
pm. Monday in room 233, Norton
Hall. Additional information may
be obtained by calling the Student Counseling Center at 831 -

Beginning today there will he
an international exhibit in the
Norton center lounge. Native
items and student crafts repre■enling l(&gt; countries will be dis-

3717,

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�Friday, April

Entertainment

An interview

Studio Arena publicity director
asks support for repertory theatre

Calendar
Friday, April 26;

Jim," Conference Theatre, continuous show-

MOVIE; “Jules and

CONCERT: Ustad Gulam Hussein Kahan, sitarist, Fillmore
Room, 8:30 p.m.
PLAY; “Knight of the Burning
Pestle”, Baird Hall, 8:30 p.m.
PLAY: “Charley’s Aunt”, Studio

ings

Sunday, April 28:

Chorus, Fillmore
Room, 8:30 p.m.
CONCERT; “Best of Broadway,”
Kleinhans, 2:30 and 7 p.m.
CONCERT;

Arena, 8:30 p.m.
EXHIBIT: Photography Exhibit,
Norton 231, 6-10 p.m.
MOVIE: “Jules and Jim,” Conference Theatre, 4-11 p.m. (contin-

Monday, April 29:
CONCERT: Recital, Kroll Quartet,
Baird, 8:30 p.m.
TV SPECIAL: “Still A Brother:
Inside the Negro Middle Class,”
Channel 17, 9 p.m.
MOVIE; “The 39 Steps,” Madeline
Carroll, one of the earliest

uous showings), Jeanne Moreau
and Oskar Werner in Truffant
great.
CONCERT: Spring Rock Music
Festival (a contemporary experience), Workshop Repertory
Theater, Elmwood Ave., 8 p.m.1 a.m. Sun. 2-5 p.m.
TV SPECIAL: “The Changling,”

Hitchcock films, “Notorious,”
Capen 140, 8 p.m.

Tuesday, April 30:
DEMONSTRATION;
LECTURE
Lecture-Demonstration on electronic music by Ramon Fuller,
Conference Theater, 8:30 p.m.
Thursday, May 2:
MOVIE: “The Knack,” Norton
Conference Theater
CONCERT: “Your Father’s Mustache”, Fillmore Room, 9 p.m,
Friday, May 3:
CONCERT: Dionne Warwick,
Clark Gym, 8:30 p.m.
CARNIVAL: Parking Field, Main
and Bailey, including “Car-

Channel 17, 8:30 pm., excellent
drama
CIRCUS: Shrine Circus, Memorial
Auditorium
CONCERT: The Beacon Street
Union, Royal Arms
CONCERT: UB Men’s Glee Club
and Women’s Chorale, Clark
Gym, 8:30 p.m.

-

Saturday, April 27:

CONCERT:

Evenings For New
Music, Albright-Knox, 8:30 p.m.
Creative Associates

whack,” 2-11 p.m.

A! Kooper's "Blood,
Sweat and
by James Albarella
Many
people were shocked
when A1 Ko.oper left the Blues
Project last summer for undisclosed reasons. Rumors were then
heard that Kooper was forming
a new band, but with a new approach. Kooper built his new
sound around a horn section
staffed by four accomplished
young jazz musicians on trumpet,
sax, and trombone; Steve Katz
joined Kooper, and the results of
the eight-piece band are now
available in their first album,
Child is Father to the Man.

cute.

Kooper's magic touch

The second side of the album
continues to reveal A1 Kooper’s
magic touch. There is so much
going on in “Just One Smile,”
with bassist Jim Fiedler and
fleugelhorn player Randy Becker
stealing the spotlight from a fine
vocal by Kooper.

“Meagans Gypsy Eyes” builds
on a fine acoustical guitar opening to a solo by Kooper on an
ondoline, a french keyboard instrument which sounds like an
electronic calliope.

Child is Father to the Man
brings out the talents of the
multi-talented Kooper. He sings,
arranges, and plays various key-

instruments with

“Somethin’ Coin’ On” is the
track of the album. The best I
have ever heard any band.
Kooper, Katz, and alto sax Fred
Lipsius really put forth standout
performances. This track is worn
out of my album from being
played again and again.

great

feeling. One feels that A1 Kooper

is this album.

The opening track “Overture,”
makes the listener feel that perhaps he has bought the wrong
album. A string section plays
excerpts from the album.
It’s impossible
to pick them out though,
until one is familiar with
the
album.

Uses "soul chorus"
“I Love You More Than You’ll

Ever Know” is very solid blues
material, with an excellent job of
vocalizing and arranging done by
Kooper, who uses a female “soul
chorus to back him up, a very
good track.

“Morning Glory” is a tastefully
done work of Tim Buckley.
Steve
Katz sings lead and backup
due
th mira le of overdubbing.
The style andf
texture
of the song
is reminiscent of the
old Blues
/° ject
The Horns do a great
;
f Ug? e nting and fit in
weB
M in
in this

T°h» f

,

nf

style of song.
.

My Days
tnro

sonl
L
,o

Numbered” fea-

in the bea t
the
to a raore mel
n ' Aa reverse track solo
bvy Ztak
Evets and a strong vocal
y K
°°P er are noteworthy.
R
W do some °f Harry
Nilhson s material in a track
en-

JV'™
7tltp
.

W
.

6S

'

"

titled “Without Her.” The song
features the horns and a' bossa
nova beat—Judie likes it. Very

Spectrum Music Reviewer

by Joseph Fernbacher
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

It takes many behind-the-scenes people to put
on a production at Buffalo Studio Arena Theatre.
One such person is Blossem Cohan, publicity director.

No newcomer to the theatre scene, Mrs, Cohan
has a long history of outstanding accomplishments
in almost every aspect of theatre. She has acted on
television, directed, served as production manager,
and even has been a plain old stage hand.
She came to Buffalo in 1960, from Indiana, where
she had been directing and acting in the local theatres. When she came to Buffalo she was an active
member of the now defunct Grand Island Theatre.
Later, she went on to work as an actress at the Buf.
falo Studio Arena when it first began. The theatre,
then on Lafayette St., is now the home of the Studio Arena School and the Studio Two productions.

Then she taught at the Studio School, In 1962-63
she worked backstage at Melody Fair; in May 1963
she also starred as Mama Rose in “Gypsy."
Then she was asked by Neal du Brock, executive
producer at Studio Arena, to come and be the publicity coordinator for the entire Studio Arena complex.
Being such an experienced hand in the theatrical
world, Mrs. Cohan has some very definite feelings
about her job and theatre in general.
Q. “What exactly does your job entail?”
A. “Well, I have to get more than 5P0 press
releases to more than 100 or 200 publications all
over the country to keep them informed as to what
we are doing here at Studio Arena, I must arrange
all interviews both with television and newspapers;
I must arrange all pictures that are to be taken of
the current production. Also I have to write all the
biographies for the programs, and many more jobs
too numerous to mention.”

Record review

board

P«9* Nina

The Spectrum

26, 1968

“House in the Country” is
weird. It seems to have been inspired by “Good Morning, Good
Morning” by the Beatles. One
hears various animal noises, and
Donald Duck introducing a stupid
song which goes on at a hectic
pace about peace and quiet. Obviously, this reviewer does not

Q. “What were your preparations before the
opening of the current production, “Charley’s Aunt?”
A. “Well, as I said before, I must lay out all
ads that were to be sent to the papers. I have to
get a copy of the posters to the designer, then send
it to the printer and order the appropriate number
of posters that are to be distributed all over the
aea. Then I have to write notes on the play and send
them to our Speakers Bureau—this means that I
also have to read the play and write all the news
releases that go out. Then I have to arrange for a
number of picture sessions in which pictures of the
production with the actors in full costume were
made and sent to the local papers, and then arrange
another picture session for the cover of the program. After this, I have to write all the biographies
of the performers for the program and set up all
ads that pertain to the theatre which appear in the
program.
“As I said before, I also have to arrange all the
special interviews between the actors and the local
media. This includes television. Although many of
the television interviews fall through because before the opening of the play, the actors are going
through grinding 10 hours a day rehearsal sessions
and don’t really feel like being interviewed. Also I
must get color slides taken of the production during rehearsal so we have a complete pictorial his-

Blossom Cohan

Studio Arena Theater publicity director
tory of the play being presented.”
All this she does every three week period. I
guess it might keep her a little busy.
Q. “Do you feel that the calibre of plays has
increased at the Studio Arena over the years it has

been in Buffalo?”
A. “Yes, definitely. This year we have had
some excellent talent and have even started Studio
Two which is trying to give to the area people another type of play that can’t be put on downtown.
The productions have steadily increased in their
excellence over the years and are still getting better all the time.”
0. “Do you feel that regional theatre in Buffalo has its foot firmly implanted?”
A. “I have believed in this type of theatre
since I was 19 years old, this is even before they
called it regional or repertory theatre. I feel that
this type of theatre should exist all over the nation,
for if it doesn’t flourish, we won’t have any real
theatre to speak of. I also feel that the people of
Buffalo should support this kind of theatre, for it is
fastly becoming a leading art form all over the
nation. As to the firmness of repertory theatre in
Buffalo, I feel that it has definitely set its roots as
much as any other theatre of its kind. As for the
reports of having poor finances, it is true that we
have had money shortages and will probably have
more, but I feel that the people of Buffalo will respond and support our theatre and keep it very
much alive.”

humor magazine,
comprised solely of student works

Bull

new campus

Bull will go on sale Monday.

like it.
Buy, listen, enjoy

The humor magazine of the State University of Buffalo
“Modern Adventures of Plato, will be sold in the lobby of Norton Hall and at the recreation
Diogenes, and Freud” is a Kooper desk at the Interim Campus for $ .50 per copy. The sale
composition about a head shrinkwill continue until May 10.
er.
a string background
It has

and lyric composition similar

the Beatles.

to

It’s good, but not

Kooper’s bag.
“So Much Love

is a good way
to end the album and this review.
Kooper sounds at his best in this
blues composition. His organ
playing reminds one of Procol
Harem. Kooper has done a truly
in Ws firSt a tempt
at becoming a major influence
in the music world. Reader, this
is a great album. Buy, listen, and

L

eni°y-

’

i

According to
Penn,

Editor Robert

the Bull will be twice

as

large as any other magazine that
has been printed on campus. The
full-size, 40-page publication contains exclusively student contri-

butions.

Variety is the keynote in the
format of the Bull. Included in
.
.
the magaane wl11 1)6 stones, photos, light poetry, cartoons, oaricatures and social satire.
.

“The photo section is especially good, many of the photos ore

candid,” Mr. Penn commented.
“We added our own calculated
captions.”

The magazine is dedicated to
General Lewis B. Hershey, with
whom most students are very
familiar. Included in the selections is the story of “Super Coed" by Linda Hanley.
Besides this year’s edition,
there have been only three other

editions of a humor magazine on
this campus, and at no time have
there been two consecutive editions. This situation Mr. Penn
hopes to see alleviated, since
there is currently a staff willing
to work on next year’s Bull. The
other three issues of a humor
magazine were published in 1913,
1942 and 1965.
Mr. Penn emphasized that the
Bull contains light reading
“just the type you need when
you take a break from studying
for finals.”
A total of 20 persons, staff and
contributors, worked on the Bull.
The office is in room 324, Norton
Hall and Mr. Penn urges anyone
interested in working on the staff
to come to the office.

�Pag*

Friday, April

The Spectrum

T*n

26, 1968

Film review

'Closely Watched Trains'
Film Reviewer

similarities between
“Closely Watched Trains” (which
opened up recently at the Circle
Art) and “The Graduate” (appearing ad nauseum at the Center
Theater) are apparent throughout
the films. Both are at times very
funny movies. But in both the
humor is tinged with sadness.
In “Trains,” as in “The Graduate,” there is an undercurrent of
tragedy throughout the film. Both
films also concern themselves
with what has become the Holden
Caulfield Syndrome—the struggle
of a young man to achieve maturity. In “Trains” the search for
manhood is almost purely a quest
by the hero to lose his virginity.
In “The Graduate” the search is
more for true love than for sexual fulfillment. Of course both
films, particularly “The Graduate,” concern themselves with a
great deal besides the search for
manhood, but the search is vital
to both films.
The

larities. The characters in “The
Graduate” tend to become mere
caricatures. The characters in
“Trains” are on the whole more
likeable and eralistic. Milos, the
young hero of the film, is a disarmingly naive and likeable character. The other workers at the
train station where Milos is employed are

all

nearly perfect

characterizations. The lecherous
dispatcher and bumbling station
master are brilliantly portrayed
and thoroughly sympathetic.

“Trains” is more realistic than
“The Graduate,” in the sense that

Ben emerges almost immediately

from his insecurity when he falls
in love with Elaine while Milos
remains true to his character till
I he end of the film. There is no
sudden aquisilion of self-confidence after he goes to bed with
a girl for the first time—he is
still Milos.

Effectively anti-war
It is important to note that
while “Trains” is an anti war

film, it avoids villifying the
Nazis. The Germans in the film
are as human as the other characters. There is no spoken or
even implicit condemnation of
Nazi atrocities during the war.
The Resistance members don’t
seem to be acting out of any real
hatred of Nazis, but out of some
undefined love of country. Because both the Nazis and the Resistance members are presented
as human beings and not stock
characters, it is effective as an
anti-war movie. The death in the
film is much more powerful because of this.

BOCCE

JULES and JIM

i

—directed by FRANCOIS TRUFFANT
—starring JEANNE MOREAU, OSCAR WEINET

PIZZA

TF 3-1345

—

presented by Fine Arts

Film

fyML

co#r\a.

■«««"««

leading Indian sitarist
to give concert tonight

of festivals and celebrations and
is presently touring the European
and Western countries at the invitation of the Pan-Orient Arts
Foundation of the United States.

ItT,
|

-

336

7411

2:50
7:25

i&gt;f"'

-

-

M

5:05
9:45

r

“Perhaps ihe most beautiful movie in history.”
-

Ilwira

madi^an

Brendan

(,ill.

The !Nrw Yorker.

dfc'
t

NOW
PLAYING!

f

r

concert

s

a

Comedy

by Francis Beaumont

directed by Eli Ask
April 25-26-27-28

Student Tickets SO?

8:30 P.M

Norton Union Box Office

Baird Hall

831-3704

Restauranl

%

Hoagys

in Town

Across from Hayes Halt
3248 MAIN ST. at Heath

THE BUFFALONIANS
ARE HERE!
&lt;r ■

C(

*v-

Siogel. Ir

Kleinhans Music Hall
All Seats Reserved;
$4.50 $4 $3
Tickets on sale now at Buttafo
Fcsival Ticket OtFicc, Hotel Statler.
Hilton Lobby; U. of B. Norton Hall;
Bmndo Music, Niagara Falls.

of the Burning Pestle

%

U.B. SPECIAL

Sunday, April 28—2:30 P.M.

PROGRAM IN THEATRE

#
Best

-

Knight

Tickets are on sale at the Nor-

ton Ticket Office.

1 ill

SAT., SUN.

,

&lt;»■

He belongs to the school of
Indian music known as “gharana”.
The most notable feature of his
art is his blending of sitar techniques with those of the been, an
instrument much like the
in the recognized forms of Indian
classical music. Accompanying
Khan will be Ustad Nizamuddin
Khan on the tabla (Indian drums)
and Srimati Pratima Parekh on
tambura (string drone).

A

Cold by OilUXE

From The Novella by D. H. Lawrence
WEEK DAYS
7:25 9:45

tinue through Sunday.

sponsored by the Association of
Graduate English Students.
Khan was born in 1927 in Indore, India. He has played before
selected audiences on occasions

S.WDY I )KNNIS • KKIH DUIJilA
(jm

*1

|&gt;

Room. The program is being

Committee

'QaJbuuw*^
and

.

burning restle

one

1,3, 5, 7, 9 P.M.
APRIL 25, 26, 27
(No Late Show on Thursday)

i

James Bron and Graham Marchant are shown in a scene
from the comedy by Frgncis
Beaumont, which opened last
night in Baird Hall. It will con-

U s t a d Gulam Hussein Khan,
of India’s leading classical
sitarists, will perform here tonight at 8;30 in the Fillmore

CONFERENCE THEATER

ROSARY Hill COLLEGE
presents

/%( ilia
Ifninkt
ivnigni ox me

|

u

V

The film that results from this

mixing of tragedy and comedy is
enjoyable, thought-provoking, and
eminently worth seeing.

rf

i'.

*

J

The film also avoids a tendency
which is prevalent among Americans to make what purports to be
an anti-war film and ends up as
a glorification of the carnage of
war. Cornel Wilde’s “Beach Red”
and Carl Foreman’s “The Victors”
are two examples of anti-war
films that become tributes to war.

Characters

But it is the differences be

V&lt;

i

tween the two films which are
more interesting than the simi-

by John Landes
Spectrum

-

YOU MAY PICK UP

YOUR COPY ON MONDAY
in

Norton 356
from
10 A.M.-4 P.M.

�Friday, April

Pag* El*v*n

The Spectrum

26, 1968

Rosary Hill College to present
Judy Collins in Kleinhans conci
by James Brennan
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

Judy Collins, popular folk singer, will appear in concert
at Kleinhans Music Hall April 27 at 8:30 p.m.

Presented under the auspices of Rosary Hill College,
Miss Collins will be the highlight of the school’s Moving Up
Day Weekend. Appearing with her on the program is
comedian Richard Pryor.

Judy Collins has a voice of extensive range and a solid rapport with her material, whether
it is the Beetle’s “In My Life” or
Bob Dylan’s “Tom Thumb Blues.”
Two of her numbers, “Since You
Asked” and “Albatross” a song
dedicated to Joan Baez, reveal
her to be not only a versatile
contemporary singer, but a talented composer. Her success is
evident in her albums, “In My
Life,” “Golden Apples of the
Sun,” and her newest “Wildfolwer,” which features three of
Leonard Cohen’s songs, Sisters of
Mercy, priests and Hey That’s No

Russia.

Jefferson

formers who know her well,
vouch that she is a girl who
believes in things, especially the
limitless possibilities of man.

She has a breadth of vision, a
remarkable drive that tends to
involve the audience in her ideas
and to contemplate that which
the future holds. As she says:
“When I sing, I expose myself.
I want the audience to take the
trip with me; to expand and think
about their experiences.”

world around her.

She was trained as a concert
pianist and years afterward took
up the guitar and began her career as a folksinger. In her performances she accompanies herself on six and 12 string guitar
and piano.

A leader in promoting the folk

Poland, and

Kaye of WKBW and other per-

Judy Collins feels deeply, reacts passionately, and expresses
herself with conviction. Everything she has done has been the
journey toward greater awareness both of herself and the

Way To Say Goodbye.

Involves the audience

idiom, Judy has played throughout this country and in England,

Richard Pryor, one of the top
young Negro comedians on the

Judy Collins

Highlight of Rosary Hill's Moving Up Day.

American entertainment scene,
has appeared on the Tonight
Show, Ed Sullivan, and the John
Davidson Summer Show. His
humor deals with kids, frogs, and
a variety of topics which appeal
to a young thinking audience.

Bert Mason

Folk artist will be smilin' and
sin 9/n nightly, beginning Monday, at the Coffeehouse in
'

Goodyear Lounge.

Ex erience preview

Riots

a juxtaposition of arts

by Lori Pendrys
are coming! Audi“Riots . .
ences will experience joy, sadness, laughter, pain, confusion or
any other emotion they are capable of feeling.

“Riots
. . and Other Mental
Exercises” is an evening of oral
interpretations. But this is a highly Inadequate term for a program
that is indescribable. Neil Hoos,
a graduate student in philosophy,
is the creator of this juxtaposition of the arts. Literature, pho.

tography and music will all be
used as stimuli to the audience
to undergo a spectrum of feelings.
The program is mainly a reading-acting one where different

excerpts from novels, poetry and
short stories are either read literally or in dialogue fashion. “I’ve
selected forms of literature that
have emotional content,” said Mr.
Hoos, who is also the director
and producer, “and am either
reading them straight or revised.

Best of Broadway' troup
to stage program Sunday
“The Best of Broadway,” Broad-

way theatrical extravaganza and

nationally known concert group
from New York City, will appear
at Kleinhans Music Hall Sunday,
The Concert will turn over all
proceeds to the
Martin Luther
King Memorial Fund.

Best of Broadway,” touring the
United States for the 14th
ive year, is again

audiences the latest

consec-

bringing to

of the New
York concert and stage
presenta-

The program will
include pro-

ductions
those

and

given at

concerts

such as

Lincoln Center in

New York and presenting excerpts from some of the most
famous, such as “Around the
World in 80 Tunes,” featuring
folk dances, folk melodies and
operatic songs. It will also present tributes to Gilbert and Sulivan, “My Pair Lady,” and highlights of Cole Porter and Irving
Berlin.
The troupe includes names and
personalities direct from
Broadway, and will be headed and directed by Mr. Clyde Turner, a veteran of the concert stage.
There will be two performances starting at 2:30 and 7 p.m.

A

A wirid §«e wad!

MAI*

JOTH CENTWf-fOX PRESENT*

“flim-fum

JBBI duRboN Ibidn
AR1HURC JACOBS fntalaa

I’m trying to heighten the emotion by means of other forms of
expression. I hope the audience
undergoes a variety of emotional
experiences.”
Three segments entitled Complication, The Negro, and Resolution!?), which is about the absurdity of different situations like

the draft, and the decadence of

WHISPERERS"

ductions this year and newcomers
are members of the cast. Included

EDITH EVANS
ERIC PORTMAN

society compose the presentation.
Many performers of previous pro-

and Ingmar Bergman's

in the cast are Carol Stefan, Corinne Broskett, Maury Chaykin,
Carol Forman, Duffy Magesiis,
Lanny Lerner, Bruce Kaiden, Ron
Mardenbro and Joy Peskin, who
is also the stage director.
Original, unusual, and unique
are the only words in the English
language that can even attempt
to describe this program and even
these are insufficient.
“Riots , .
will be presented
this Sunday at 6 and 8:30 p.m.
and Monday at 8:30 p.m. in the
Conference Theater.

"PERSONA”
with Bibi Anderson

Starts Ionite!

lAmhmt (Cinema I

I 5300MAIH6T.8J4 7faS5| «5MAINSt853 S&amp;S
|

| -«—-»■«-«._

WHAT? YOU'VE ONLY
SEEN “THE GRADUATE" ONCE?
ACADEMY AWARD

WINNER

The story
of a girl
called Sara and
the key she
gave to a
different man
each month.

for

BEST DIRECTOR (Mike Nichols)
JOSE PH E LEVINE

MIKE NICHOLS
LAWRENCE TURMAN

''
,

■ •»

/

12th
RECORO
WEEK!

'

V

THE
GRADUATE
TECHNC010R*
PANAVISKW,

HELD OVER 4th WEEK

|

NOW! BOTH THEATRES!

s

flovember
»JERRY GERSHWIN ELLIOTT KASTNER PRODUCTION
RtCIyRtS

«ow!|33iii33|

XUSH

“THE GRADUATE” Starts it:

12-2-4-6-8-10 P.M.

SANDVOENNIS
ANTHONYNEWLEY

�Friday, April 26,

The Spectrum

Page Twelve

Action line
831-5000
.

.

•

'69 juniors

Do you often think it impossible to untangle the State University of Buffalo
bureaucracy? In cooperation with the Dean of Students' Office, The Spectrum is
sponsoring pw ACTION LINE.—Htwwyll ACTION LINE individual students can get

are made, and get ACTION when change is indicated.
ACTION LINE will answer all questions of general interest which appear to
be pertinent to the student body.
The Spectrum will include them in its special
ACTION LINE weekly column. Each inquiry will be thoroughly investigated and
The name of the individual originating the inquiry will
answered individually.
not be published.

Why does the University Bookstore levy a 50% surcharge on the
New York Times it sells? Are there plans to extend it to other newspapers?

The Times is presently sold in the Bookstore at the prevailing
price, that is, 1 Op per copy, A few months ago, the Wall Street Journal
went up in price and through a clerical error, both the Times and the
Joural were marked the same. There is no contemplated price incease for any newspapers at this time. Any future price increase, not
now known, will reflect only a cost increase set by the publisher,
Why does the University Bookstore not sell the New York Times
on Saturdays?
To date the demand has been so minute that it would not be
practical to stock the Times on Saturday. Should there be an in.
creased request for this issue, however, the Bookstore would be glad
to stock it at that time.
Why does the University Bookstore collect Erie County Sales Tax
on periodicals sold downstairs in the text department, but not upstairs?
Periodicals carried upstairs are current and the ones downstairs
are sold as required textbooks. Therefore, the Erie County Sales Tax
is collected, as it is on all required texts.
Why weren't catalogues, or even lists of course offerings, available to students during the pre-registration period?
Everyone concerned has been unhappy about this. The catalogues,
however, were not available because of a combination of unusual circumstances in different departments that kept causing delays. There
were staff problems, printing hangups, and an overwhelming number
of changes in curriculum (18 pages of corrections). In fact, the originally scheduled registration period was postponed for two weeks in
the hope that catalogues would be available. When it was realized
a firm delivery date for the catalogues could not be secured, registration was scheduled and advisors and students worked from the
two master schedules posted on a bulletin board.
A partial supply of catalogues became available on March 27
and were distributed. The balance were delivered on April 2 and
anyone interested in securing a copy now may do so by contacting
the receptionist in University College.
Is it possible to pre-register for summer session courses?
Advanced registration may be completed, in person, on week days
from April 15-May 17. All materials, including catalogues, arc available in the Office of Admissions and Records.
LINE,
For specific answers to your questions and for direct service, call IfACTION prefer,
Wednesday, and Friday, from 4-5 p.m.
you
every Monday,
phrase your question in writing and address it to ACTION LINE, c/o The Spectrum,
355 Norton Hall, or the Office of the Dean of Students, 201 Harriman library.
831-5000,

CHARLIE'S

TONSORIAL CENTER

YEARBOOK PROOFS

For the Finest in
HAIR STYLING, RAZOR CUTTING
and BEARD TRIMMING

3584 MAIN ST.

Next to University

TF 6-9080
Plaia

TO ROOM 356, NORTON

Bible Truth

APRIL 15-26

RESURRECTION PROOF
Jesus said: "Behold my hands
and my feet, that It is
myself."

I

FROM 9:30

—Luke 24:39
"After that. He was seen of above
five hundred brethren at once."
—I Cor. 15:6 Only Believe

-

5:30

CONSIDER A

CIVILIAN
AIR FORCE CAREER
with the

AIR FORCE LOGISTICS COMMAND
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base
near
Dayton, Ohio

There

are

excellent opportunities in
INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING
(All engineering degrees

considered)

for those interested in the Air Force Logistics Command Staff Positions. The Industrial Engineer applies his skill in the areas of management systems design, significant
problem solving using his knowledge of the mathematical and physical sciences
together with methods and principles of engineering analysis and design. He is a
consultant to management in the application of proven management techniques to
increase the effectiveness, efficiency, and economy of Air Force operations. He also
administers and operates in methods improvement and processing engineering. He
receives on-the-job training in all the foregoing areas and within a minimum of
training time. The Industrial Engineer is given specific assignments relating to the
above areas of activity pertaining to the particular organization to which he is assigned. Throughout his career, he continues to be given increased responsibility
commenusrate with his ability.
For further information regarding these challenging and rewarding career opportunities see your:

COLLEGE PLACEMENT DIRECTOR

A natural setting
for summer study.

complete the attached and send
College Relations Representative
Civilian Personnel Division
Air Force Logistics Command

EWACEH
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base
Ohio

45433

to:

Name.
Address.
Degree

School
Date Available

Air Force Logistics Command
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base
Ohio

An Equal Opportunity Employer

Study with us this summer. Our 300 acres of green shaded campus
provide a perfect summer study atmosphere. During off hours ehjoy
on-campus tennis, riding or bowling.
We're just minutes from parks, beaches, golf courses, several fine
theatres and museums and just an hour from Manhattan and the

EWACEH (Ind. Engineer)

Hamptons.

Modern residence halls are available on the campus for undergradu-

ate men and women.

UNDERGRADUATE COURSE OFFERINGS

Liberal Arts and Sciences, PreProfessional,
Pre Engineering, Business and Education
GRADUATE COURSE OFFERINGS in the Graduate Schools
of Long Island University: Biological Sciences, Business
Administration, Chemistry, Education and Certification,

Management Engineering, English, Foreign Languages,
Guidance and Counseling. History, Library Science, Marine
Science, Mathematics, Music Education, Physics, Political

Science, Sociology, Speech.

Apply now for TWO 5-WEEK SUMMER SESSIONS
June 24-July 26 and July 29-August 30 Day and Evening
Admission open to visiting students from accredited colleges.
•

4

For additional information, summer bulletin and application,
phone (5161626-1200 or mail coupon

WC.W.P0ST COLLEGE
‘■«w dimensions
In LtARNINC

I

I
I

1
I

|

OF LONG ISLAND UNIVERSITY
MERRIWEATHER CAMPUS

Dean of Summer School, C.W. Post College, Merrlweather Campus,
P.0. Greenvale. L. I.. N Y. 11548
Please send me Summer Sessions information bulletin.
□ Women's Residence Hall [ J Men’s Residence Hall
□ Undergraduate □ Graduate □ Day □ Evening

I

Name

|

Address

1
CP

A chemistry student
was about to complete the
final step to a highly explosive
experiment.To calm himself,
he reached for a Genesee Beer.
But his lab partner
had drunk the last one.

Then he really blew up.

State

I

If visiting student, from

which

OEN. BREW. CO., ROCH.. N.Y

college?
!

1968

�Friday, April

The Spectrum

26, 1968

Pege Thirteen

the spectrum of

sports

Dearlove honored

Everything turned up roses for
the State University ot Buffalo
track team as they avenged their
two opening losses in trouncing
Erie Tech and Canisius by the
score of 108-55-18. It was no contest as the Bulls swept every
event except three.
The victors had numerous outstanding individual performances.
Art Dearlove was named the
trackman of the week for wining
the 220-yard dash in 22.1, the
440-yard dash in 52.8 and running on the victorious 440 and
mile relay teams. Larry Naukam
for the second straight week
picked up a double win in the
hurdles as did Tony Nicotera in
the 880-yard run and the mile
relay. Mel Spelman and Mike
Rissel remained undefeated in

the shot-put and javelin, respectively. Quarter-miler Mike Alspaugh, last year’s MVP, moved
up to the magic mile and came
up a winner.
This Saturday, the Blue and
White play host to Cortland. The
action starts at 1:30 p.m. at Rotary Field.
The freshman track team did
all right for themselves in defeating Canisius, 82-18. Billy Barnes
turned in the best individual performance in winning the 220 and
440-yard dashes and running the
anchor leg of the mile relay team
which set new record of 3:40,1.
The results:
440-yard

relay— (UB —Minkoff,

Col-

Federico (ET) Jacubowski, (Can.) Nevner 52.8
100-yard dash
(UB) Minkoff. (ET)
Gagliati, (ET) Blake, (UB) Colston 10.5
880-yard run
(UB) Nicotera (UB)
Matthews, (Can.) Nevner, (UB) Federico
2:03.8
440-yard intermediate hurdles
(UB)
Naukam, (UB) Mills, (UB) Schirrmacher,
(ET) Dunn 1:01.4
220-yard dash —(UB) Dearlove, (UB)
Minkoff, (ET) Gagliati, (ET) Heary 22.1
Two-mile run
(Can.) Malican, (Can.)
Robinson, (UB) Alspaugh, (UB) Ernst
10:52
Mile relay —(UB), (ET)
Shot-put
(UB)Spelman, (UB) Hunter. (ET) Bayley, (Can.) Petramela 43' 10”
Long jump
(ET) Boekman, (ET)
Dunn, (UB) Hoffman, (ET) Monfuletho
20’ 2”
Pole vault—(UB) Watson. (ET) Baker,
(UB) Hoffman, (ET) Vigrass 12’6”
(UB) Williams, (ET) Dunn,
Discus
(Can.) Rideout 127'2”
High jump
(UB) Hunter. (UB) Spel
man, (ET) Scott, (Can.) Petramela 5'6''
Javelin —(UB) Rissel. (ET) Eller, (ET)
Monfuleto, (ET) Bayley 160'
Triple jump
(ET) Boecman, (UB)
Harris. (ET) Dunn. (UB) Williams 41' 3&gt;/2

In

■

Bulls trounce Erie Tech, Canisius
—

—

—

—

—

—upi Telephoto

Ambrose Burfool of Wesleyan
Univ., in Connecticut, receives
the victor's wreath after winning the 72nd Boston Marathon,
becoming the first American to
win the event since 1957.

Liahtfoot

—

»

n

f

.

DUriOOI

—

ston, Dearlove, Greene), 46.2

(UB) Alspaugh, (Can.) RobinMile
son, (ET) Murray, (UB) Ernst 4:50.4
120-yard high hurdles—(UB) Naukam,
(UB) Banrett,
(ET&gt; Vanrysdan, (UB)
Schirrmacher 16.1
440-yard run
(UB) Dearlove, (UB)
—

—

—

"

—

Coaches present awards
for women's athletics

Last Thursday the coaches presented awards to various members of the State University of
Buffalo’s women’s intercollegiate
athletic teams. The awards were
given for their participation on
this year’s basketball, swimming
and volleyball teams.
The recipient for each award
was chosen for her individual
contribution to her team based
on attendance at practices and
participation in games, meets or
matches. “First Year Awards”
were given to a team member
who has shown the most improvement and/or potential as decided

Art Dearlove

performs against Canisius

BUFFALO FESTIVAL PRESENTS

THE

Recording Artists

-

LIVE AND

at KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL
PERFORMANCES

SUNDAY, MAY 5

All Seats Reserved: Main
Floor
Lobby; AM Audrey
Music, Niagara Fa

I it,

$5.50

&amp;

FeS ‘ iVa
*

' TiCke

*

S, r6S: U '
°

THE

$4.50

0f,iCe
°’

B

SCARECROWS

Miss

7 P.M
9 45 P.M.
&amp;

mores Terri Dernier

°'

. . .

$3.50
°

Wednesday

-

Sunday

SUNET andSat.

BURGNDY

and

\Mellow Brick Rode
WITH

The Mo-Town

WED.—FRI—SAT. EVENINGS
T

J
*

*

dhe Cafe fjio Coffeehouse
presents

well known folksinger

B"l W.O„n
—direct from the BITTER END COFFEEHOUSE

APRIL 29th

-

THIS IS THE WEEK OF
Coffeehouse
8:30

Fri.

Opens at

first show at 9:00

LIVE MUSIC NIGHTLY
WILMER
THE DUKES
Wed. and Sun.
&amp;

liVesf Coast Sound

&amp;

Cam

Pawlaczyk and freshmen Misses
Goldin, Horery and Richard for
their team efforts. Miss Richard
was elected the ‘‘Most Valuable
Player.” No “First Year Award”
was given since all players were
first year players.

e ' S,atler HMt n
Norton Hall; Brundo

' H

Hall, coach of women’s

volleyball, acknowledged sopho-

and

Balcony $4.50

-

“Most Valuable Player (SwimAwards” were presented to
those individuals selected by a
vote of their representative team.
Mrs. Spaeth, basketball coach,
recognized the following players
for their team contributions:
Seniors Elaine Gordon and Carol
Lazzaro; sophomores Polly Ryan
and Marlene Samuelson; and
freshmen Shirley Goldin, Mary
Ann Horey, Sharon Pleasant, Kay
Richard and Leda Young.
Miss Gordon and Miss Lazzaro
were voted by their teammates as
“Best Offensive Player” and
“Best Defensive Player” respectively. Miss Pleasant received the
“First Year Award.”
Miss Witt, coach of the swimming team, lauded sophomore
Jayne Baird and junior Bonnie
Sommer for their individual contributions to their team. Sophomore Nancy Dahlstrom was selected as the “Most Valuable
Swimmer” and Judy Midlik was
presented with the “First Year
mer)

Award.”

PERSON

IN

by the coach.

SATURDAY NIGHT

THE UNION GAP

MAY 4th

SPRING-WEEKEND
CAFE NIO

COFFEEHOUSE
Goodyear Basement

Admission is FREE

�Friday, April 24, 1948

The Spectrum

Page Fourteen

Greek graphs

Sigma Kappa Phi victor in Ninth Greek Olympiad
by Vin Pavit and Judy Powell
Spectrum

Staff

R»porf»r»

Trophy as announced at the last
IFC meeting are as follows:
Points
Fraternity
Alpha Pi Omega
Alpha Epsilon Pi
Tau Delta Epsilon
271.5
Gamma Phi
Sigma Alpha Mu
264.5
Sigma Phi Epsilon
239
Theta Chi

236.5
217

Pi Lamba Tau
Phi Kappa Psi
Phi Epsilon Pi
Alpha Sigma Phi
Alpha Phi Delta
...

187

186.5
90

Paddle ball, track and volley

ball have not been included.
The Ninth Annual Greek Olympiad results are: Men’s Winner—
Alpha Sigma Phi, 36; Women’s
Winner Sigma Kappa Phi—36%.
Overall Winner —Sigma Kappa
Phi.
The sisters of Sigma Kappa Phi

scored a stunning upset victory

Sunday when they defeated the
brothers of Alpha Sigma Phi in
the Ninth Annual Greek Olympiad sponsored by Gamma Phi. Alpha Sigma Phi had won the overall trophy for the past four years.
Alpha Sig did win the men’s di-

SUMMER

We

Keypunch
weeks

have requests
and Office

o

rail

The brothers of Gamma Phi expressed their thanks to all participants for their support in
making this year’s Olympiad a
tremendous success and look forward to the same response next
year.

Fraternities

The brothers of Alpha Sigma
Phi are sponsoring a pizza sale
tomorrow. Congratulations are
extended to all the brothers who
participated in our victorious ef-

fort at the Greek Olympiad
The pledge class of Phi Kapp Psi
will hold their party for the
brotherhood tomorrow night . . .
The brothers of Tau Epsilon Phi
are pleased to announce the results of the election of next year’s
officers: Chancellor, Alan Slurtz;
V. Chan., Phil Fraterrigo; Scribe,
Fred Sacks; Bursar, Mark Jacobson; Pledgemaster, Alan Hans;
Warden, Tony Cerone; Historian,
Don Weinberg; Social Chair,,. Ed
Levine; and Chaplain, Dolph
Baker. TEP extends its best
wishes to all for an enjoyable
Spring Weekend . . . Theta Chi
Fraternity will sponsor the fourth
annual Spring Weekend Trike
Race May 4 in the Tower Parking

paying

pouting in

Club. The social science award

The entry fee is $1.50 per
and trophies will be

will be given to a senior girl exin one of the social

Clothing Fashion Center for Men

celling

of the three divisions. Entry
blanks and fees may be submitted to any member of Theta Chi
or taken to the table in the Millard Fillmore Room. We would
appreciate having all applications
turned in by Wednesday. For
further information contact the
house at 836-9895.

Kappa Phi are going horseback
riding and having a picnic Sunday. Congratulations to Carolyn
Dollman, the new Miss Amherst.
The pledges’ excursion Monday
was a great success . . . The sisters of Theta Chi will have a social with Theta Chi Fraternity tonight. The Big-Little sister party
will take place this Sunday. Good
luck to Elissa Longo, our Spring-

Weekend candidate.

Sororities

Buffalo, New York 14215
Dial 832-1200
FREE PARKING
COME TO MOREY'S
A short distance from
Campus and get your

10% DISCOUNT
by showing ID Card

Fair traded items not included

The
hold
Youi

The sisters of Alpha Gamma

Delta and their parents will have
a picnic at Ellicott Creek Park
and a dinner at the Syracuse
Restaurant tomorrow as part of
their Parents’ Weekend activities.
A pancake breakfast at IHOP will
follow Sunday. New sister Barb
Zciger was initiated Monday . . .
The sisters of Chi Omega held
their annua! April Showers at the
Charter House. Tomorrow the
sisters and alumnae are celebrating Eleusinia at Park Country

SAAB
tion on any

CHECKPOINT foreign

car

sales

&amp;

service

487 KENMORE AVE.—a few blocks from Campus

office work dining the summer period
now tor experienced Stenos. typists.

Machine operators
No fee Mease.

summer

lot.

person

AVAILABLE

WORK

for choice summer jobs Good
ahead

vision with 36 points but in the
final tally Sig Kap had scored

&gt;

to woik
sign

.1

up at

week or two

several

part lime and summer

placement office, basement Schoelkopt

MANPOWER
43 COURT ST.
853 7638

o' '1

\\0*

&lt;*&gt;

"SPRING HAS SPRUNG"
and Tower storage time is here

to

why bother to take your winter clothes home?

—Follow the "In Crowd"—
and join
"The Free Tower Storage Happening

&lt;&gt;T&gt;ed

"»"

'

aC6

U&lt;&gt;

'°

"

Cover up those bare
walls with big
colorful BSA posters.
Four groovy 22" x
34" posters in full
color for just S2
a set. See your
local dealer.

Our gal, Etta, will be waiting
to store your winter clothes today.

*0°+

SO DON'T DELAY!

*

9&gt;qV'

&lt;c \CT

,

TO

Check the Yellow Pages for your

local BSA

dealer,

over 700 coast to coast

�Friday, April 24, 1968

Th® Spectrum

Pag* Fifteen

CLASSIFIED itr
FOR SALE

1968 442

yellow,
equipped, 8000

black vinyl top, fully
miles. Call 837-9484

1963 S
steering, power brakes,

—

power

r

new battery,

new brakes. $400. 836-7164, Rich.
1961 CHRYSLER NEWPORT—full power,
new shocks and brakes, best offer.
Call 886-2256.
1966 HONDA S-90, only 2000 miles, excellent condition, 2 helmets, $225.
Call 837-5763.
HONDA. S-90 MOTORCYCLE, white, 8
months old. 1000 miles, 2 helmets,
shield, luggage rack, $300. 837-8406.
MOTORCYCLE HELMET—Bell &gt;/ 4 . Excellent condition. Could use paint
$15. 873-8889, Joe.

ELECTRIC GUITAR, single
pickup, one year old, excellent condition, $55. Ampeg. Amplifier, excellent
condition, $150. Shure microphone, one
HARMONY

month old. $25, used once. TF 4-9909.
MARTIN FOLK GUITAR, model 00-18
with case. Excellent condition. Price
negotiable, 897-2793.
12-string folk, inexpensive,
GUITAR
good for beginner, case included. 8758720.
EUROPE
For sale, one way, jet ticket,
&gt;

HARMONY sovereign
Grover Machines,

with inlay work.
$75. 886-

asking

0817.

$50. 894-4498.

35” Single Pedestal, also
chair, $15. 873-0450 evenings.

DESK 41” x

Completely furnished
Kensington Village
Must sell everything. Rea-

FURNITURE
two bedroom
Apartment.
sonable. Call

—

837-3773.

MOTORCYCLE HELMET, Bell, full size,
brand new. 875-7287.
1965 MUSTANG GT. 4 speed, disc
brakes, limited slip, modified suspension, many extras, handles like a road
racer. 876-5089.
LAW STUDENTS have furniture bought
this year for sale: 2 beds, 2 nighttables. 2 dressers, TV. 837-7196.
GRADUATING seniors wishing to sell
furniture in excellent condition. Call
836-1138.
1965 MUSTANG, 8 cylinder, 4 speed,
convertible, $100, must sell. Call Paul,

832-3378 after

—

London/Brussels,

2-1109

early

after 6 PM.

July, $132.

1961 MERCEDES, 190 S.L. enginer completely rebuilt, two tops, AM/FM
radio.
or 831-3019.

836-3660
1966

VOLKSWAGEN

—excellent

condi

tion, $1195 or best offer, 838-1961.

SUZUKI X-6 Hustler 250 c.c., like
new, $500 or best offer. 834-6064
after 3 PM.
MINOLTA S.R.T. 101. 35MM. single lens
reflex camera, 1.7 lens with thru-thelens viewfinder, light meter, etc. Perfect
condition, like new. must sacrifice.
$150. Joe at 833-7691 or 836-7680.
1966

son.

832-0681

sublet for summer. For
2 or 3. Call 885-1975.

APARTMENT to
LUXURY apt.

to sublet from June-Aug.,
furnished, wall-to-wall carpeting, automatic dishwasher, swimming pool, within walking distance to UB, for 3 or 4
people. Call 837-9806.
sublet for 4, large modem
furnished, across street from campus.

SUMMER
Call

831-2053.

APARTMENT to sublet for June, July,
Aug.; 2 bedrooms, fully furnished, all
utilities, $120. Campus Manor Apts.

Call

839 4289.

SUBLET an apartment for summer. 10
min. from campus, furnished, 4 bed-

831-2153.
APARTMENTS FOR RENT

rooms. Call

six.

—

TT

CHEAP, nice, completely furnished apt.
for summer. Across street from campus. Call Penny, Gerl at 831-4816.

SUBLET

LUXURIOUSLY furnished 3-bedroom
apartment, TV, wall/wall carpeting,
near campus, $99 a month. Call 8359795 evenings.

APARTMENT FOR SUMMER —fully furnished for three, 5 blocks from campus, $130 inc. utilities, call 837-5763
after 11.
SUMMER SUBLET: 7 rooms. Fillmore &amp;
Wakefield, completely furnished.
Available June 1. Call 836-3685.
FURNISHED house to sublet for summer. 10 min. walk to campus. 8312255. 831-2274.
5-ROOM apartment, nicely furnished.
available May 25-Sept. 1. Suitable for
2 or 3. Reasonable rent. 837-9652, evenings.

4 ROOMS, funished, 2 bedrooms, 10min. walk, perfect for 2. $70. 8374359 evenings.

APARTMENT
nished,

Call

2

for

summer,

fully furnear campus.

bedrooms,

Mo. 836-3967.

3 bedroom house, fully furnished,
4-minute walk to campus, June-Au837-9319.

2 OR

gust. Call

for rent for summer, 2
bedrooms, furnished, close to campus.
Call 838-2993.
APARTMENT

SUMMER apartment, June 1-Aug. 30,
two or three people, 10 min. from
campus. 831-3483.
3-BEDROOM apartment,
campus, available in
Larry, 837-7397.

2 blocks fron
Cal

September.

SAVE BETWEEN $20
$40 by not Shipping
Your Clothes Home!
0Q
—

p*'

FREE STORAGE

Y%&gt;
V*«»

FOR YOUR WINTER CLOTHES

FOREST GREEN apartments, luxury
apartments, two bedrooms, furnished
and unfurnished. Sept, occupancy, $165
up. Call 10 A.M.-5 P.M., 632-2535.

1 block off Main St. $125. Call 8367121.
SHERIDAN DRIVE, modern, large, twobedroom. good for 3 or 4 students
near Niagara Falls Blvd. 836-8322.
NORTH PARK area, 2 bedrooms furnished. excellent condition. Available
June 1. Call TR 6-9150. Prefer faculty.
■MATES Wi
FRIENDLY female looking for 3 or 4
girls
other
to share apartment for
next year. Call 831-4088.
ROOMMATES wanted for summer, to
share house, near campus, three bedrooms, kitchen, garage. Call 837-6638.
ONE or two female roommates to share
apt. in NYC this summer .Call Judl,
831-3968 or Geri, 831-3973.
APARTMENTS WANTED
HOUSES .apartments needed for Mathematicians attending UB summer conference. Aug. 11-30. Call Mr. Coleman,
831-1101.

OFF-CAMPUS HOUSING—Wanted apart
ments and houses for summer and
fall rental. Contact Off-Campus Housing. Goodyear Hall,
831-3613 or 8313303.

SUMMER employment, excellent opportunity for college men. above average
earnings, part-time work available during college term, car necessary. Call
WONDERFUL opportunity for healthy.
mature man and wife to live with
group of boys. Salary, fringe benefits
include room, board, Blue Cross, Blue
Sield. Mr. Baker, 883-4531.
WAITRESS wanted, Thurs., Frl., Sat.,
Sunday nights, apply in person. Nugget Inn, 2046 Fillmore (Kensington).
MISCELLANEOUS
FREE white male kitten. 886-2376.
CAMP JOB: Great Pay
one of America’s oldest, finest camps; for boys
9-16. Counselors needed for swimming,
—

field sports, tennis, archery, riflery, gymnastics. No experience necessary. Call
Jerry any evening at 837-7058.

ANNOUNCING: $265

Pan Am Jet to
Brussels with 5-day stopover in London. Leaving New York July 3 and
returning New York Sept. 16. Call Dean
Smith’s secretary, 852-4372. Open only
to faculty, students and employees of
SUNY at Buffalo
DEAiL on a Car? Am going to Europa
for summer .can buy foreign car and

bring back to US at great savings.
(Example: Brand new VW or MG for
under $1500.) Call Dave or Irv, 831-

3610

to discuss details. We will share
In return for 12 weeks' use of

expenses

car.

3-BEDROOM apartment

wanted for Sept.
Preferably near Campus. Please call

836-8710.
2-BEOROOM

apartment wanted near
campus. To occupy June or September. Call Carol, 831-2060.

3-4 GIRLS

seeking apartment for September, 1968, in UB area. Call 8313788 or 831-3897.
college students, summer work
available, no experience necessary.
We will train, car is necessary, must be
very neat. 19 years or older. Could
develop into future permanent job,
following your college career. Phone 684-8383.
MALE

PERSONAL

SUBSIDOARY needs 3 men for
work. Can earn $1000
to $300 this summer. Car necessary.
Apply 832-7509.
ALCOA

full or part-time

LOST
GOLD bracelet watch in Diefendorf 148
on Friday, April 12. Reward. Call 8312264.
LOST Sunday on tennis courts: sunglasses with great sentimental value.
Please call Tom, 836-9257.

RIGHT-HANDED baseball glove, around
Clark Gym, name Amering on inside.
Reward. TF 3-3255.

0

Why go through the BOTHER and EXPENSE of dragging your winter clothes home and back again?

*

You can have all your clothes cleaned and stored for
die PRICE OF THE CLEANING ALONE.
Big 4 will pick up your clothes at your dorm, clean and
store them in our vault and deliver them when you
want in the fall.

BIG
Free

4 CLEANERS

Campus Pickup and Delivery

Every Day Just Call TR

5-5360

THE

EXPERT
THERE’S 01
IN EVERY FAMILY
Everybody has an Uncle George.
He’s the orie who knows which car is a piece of
junk. And where you can get practically anything

wholesale.

I’ve G
m a V

"417’

And at any time during your lifetime, if you
ever want to trade your ring in for a more
expensive
ArtCarved ring, we’ll take it back. At it’s full
value.
Can Uncle George give you that kind of

guarantee?

one with

washes
scrubbing
down col 1
turned-oi
'

can’

I don’t w;

do about diamonds.
Every ArtCarved diamond is inspected by a
gemologist and backed by a written PVPSM
guarantee. He evaluates it for carat weight,
color cut

and clarity.

And wh,
I like! Ri
look
Van Hew.

just

Uncle George is a real expert with other
people’s money.
But when it comes to your diamond, we’re
going
to suggest that you ignore him.
Because unless Uncle George is a trained
gemologist, he probably knows little more than you

p

SI

ArtCarved
-

A beautiful 200 page wadding guide
and free
brochures are available at the ArtCarved
dealers listed. Just try on an
ArtCarved
diamond ring and ask for details.

] style

SJ

See ArtCarved Diamond Rings at

GAMLER'S JEWELERS
522 MAIN STREET
BUFFALO, N. Y.

9

�Th

Pag* Sixteen

•

Bruce
•

Friday, April 26, 1968

Spictrum

ackson

An Experiment in Politics

nev v yorK

round humble-looking man with glasses
like bad sinuses. He is an influential politi

by Corydon Ireland
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

Bruce Jackson, in an article in the Atlantic Monthly, announced that he would
campaign to win the Democratic nomination in the 39th Congressional District from
the incumbent, Rep, Richard D. (“Max”)
McCarthy. A week ago, with the primary
Sor

•

focus

buffalo

:o mpilod from our wiro sorvicot by Duano Champion

Columbia Dean held in sit-in
Demonstrating CoNEW YORK
lumbia University students held three
academic officials, including an acting
dean, hostage Wednesday and took possesion of president Grayson Kirk’s office
suite, endangering valuable art works,
among them a Rembrandt.
The students released Dean Henry S.
Coleman and two 'aides Wednesday afternoon after holding them for nearly 24
hours. Coleman said they were not
harmed or threatened and passed the time
by eating, drinking and playing cards.
He said they were given “more food than
we could eat.”
Several state and city officials rushed
to the campus to persuade some 110 students to give up their sit-ins in Hamilton
Hall, an eight-story Columbia College
class building, and stately Low Memorial
Building, the hub of the campus, nearby.
The 16,000-student University apparently
refused to deal with protest leaders until
the sit-ins were ended.
Although the students sent several demands to Kirk, who was not in his office
when it was seized early this morning,
the main issues centered on civil rights.
Some 80 Negro students who held
Hamilton Hall protested the erection of a
—

South

Africa

Most students fled Kirk’s office when
school authorities threatened them with
arrest, but about 30 remained locked in
the five-room suite in the Low Memorial.
They smashed a vase in Kirk’s private
shower and broke the showerhead, pulled
out desk drawers and threw them on the
floor, scattered papers, ripped off lampshades and dumped 'ashtrays.
One of the protestors in Kirk’s office
was Linda LeClair, the 20-year-old New
Hampshire girl who dropped out of Columbia’s Barnard college last week after a
student-faculty board reprimanded her for
living with her boy friend off-campus.
A photographer who witnessed the vandalism said Rembrandt’s “Portrait of a
Man with a Beret,” a $1 million gift of
grocery heir Huntington Hartford, a 16th
century Spanish tapestry, and several portraits of historical value, were intact.
The faculty called an emergency meeting to discuss the demonstration late in
the afternoon. Dean Coleman attended.

out

The InterLAUSANNE, Switzerland
national Olympic Committee (IOC) early
this week made official what has been
a certainty for the past three days—South
Africa is out of the summer games in
Mexico.
It is alrdeay known that a majority of
the 71 IOC members approved an executive board recommendation to withdraw
the invitation to South Africa to take part
in the games.
Although IOC President Avery Bundage
ordered complete secrecy to surround the
vote, sources disclosed that more than
the required number of members (36) has
approved the board's recommendation.
—

University gymnasium on prime Harlem
recreational park land, while some 150
whites at Low Memorial protested both
the gym and the school’s participation in
the Institute of Defense Analysis’ work to
aid the Vietnam war.

of Olympics
It is understood about 50 telegrams
have been received at IOC headquarters in
Lausanne and that at least 32 of them
favored withdrawing the South African
invitation.
Bundage, however, was said to be determined to make nothing official until
all the answers are in or at least as many
as can be expected.
In Johannesburg, South African Olympic Games Association chief Frank Braun
Tuesday night re-affirmed his country’s
determination to carry on as a member
of the world Olympic movement despite
the move to block its participation in the
1968 games.

4I&gt;

two months away, Dr. Jackson decided to
withdraw from the race in favor of Rep.
McCarthy. Spectrum reporter Corydon Ireland interviewed Dr. Jackson, and reports
on the circumstances surrounding an English
professor’s entry, and exit, from the world

of politics.
It was so simple in 1928. Calvin Coolidge, then President of the United States,
stood by a horse on a farm somewhere
and, honing a sentence out of ice, monotoned: “I do not choose to run in 1928.”

True to the twentieth century proportions it illustrated, the October march by
peace demonstrators to Washington, D.C.,
swollen to violence at the doors of the Pentagon, denied Coolidgian coolness and brevity in political issues to many men: one
of these was Bruce Jackson, professor of
folklore here at Buffalo.
Typically, Bruce Jackson reacted with
his pen, head first, and in January of this
year published an article in Atlantic
Monthly (it was impressionism with muscles) about the “Battle of the Pentagon.”
“Battle” was a good example of good journalism. It drew th3 truth of the issues involved there from the experiences the 31
year old Dr. Jackson had, from the people
he met, and from the impressions, sad or
funny, he himself felt. The descriptions
which he created were clear, strong and
pertinent and the stories which he collected were well told.
But nothing was written without an
undercurrent of torment: he was intolerant of the concessionaires and hangers-on;
was rankled from disappointment to horror
at the viciousness of the suited, helmeted,
billy-sticked U.S. Marshalls; was critical
from
of a national press that hardly peered
coming
behind its style sheets for fear of
across facts and incidents which did not
tally with precedent or which might offinally,
fend commuter standards, and,
a
Bruce Jackson was disillusioned with
repeace movement which either had to
sort to violence or disappear altogether,
the bena peace movement corrupted by
'evolent anarchy” of the “do your own
thing” mystique, which frustrated conin the name of peace, and
solidated gains
which only encouraged the press toathrow
all serious advocates of peace into comand
mon bag with the pinkos, Maoists,
noisy social freaks.

Into the cookies
“Battle” could have been one of many
such articles cranked off the hot presses
march. For
of emotion at the time of the
the sake of one paragraph at the end,
exwhich was buried tinder in a great,
citing sparkler of prose, this one article
was unique. Hidden there, on the last
page, an idea quietly exploded:
Bruce Jackson, writer and educator by
profession, his hand rested flat on the
and honBible of academia, a clean, quiet
orable man, sohelpmegod, was to run for
Congress in the fall. Sohelpmegod.
“Martha, that damn kid is into the
cookies again.”
Bruce
For the first time in his life,
for a
Jackson was into the cookies. And
would
while, at least, it looked as if it
spoil his dinner. He dutifully set aside
two boks that were begging to be written,
slackened Jiis pace on a couple of area
projects, and did not prepare one class,
at least, (as a result of this interview). He
dewas into the cookie jar at arms lengthother
spite the crumbs, bugs and assorted
inevitably
academic no-nos that were
found within.
i
Setting his sights for the seat of incumbent Rep. “Max” McCarthy, Jackson began
to establish new political ties in this area
and in Washington, and renew old ones
which were set in the stone of the old
days at Harvard. With the aid of college
students hip to his political code and with
the aid (potential) of local revenue sources
(many the same as McCarthy) Jackson,
to
book learner and innovator, threatened
become King of the political Cookie jar.
_

™

m

—UPI

Tolophoto

Victory smile?

Despite the lone dissenter in the background, Senator Eugene McCarthy
smiles as he opens his campaign headquarters in Manhattan Tuesday. A few
hours later the first word of his victory
in the Pennsylvania primary reached
him.

McCarthy: spoiled by LBJ

Richard “Max” McCarthy is a short,

least well-intentioned. His consistent streak
of liberalism has been dulled, or hidden, in
the past because of his terribly close association with Lyndon Johnson. It was this
influence which Jackson sought to destroy; even though he had always held at
least mild admiration for Max, he thought
the Texan’s influence was crippling the
man politically. Max, for example, wants
to get out of Vietnam in a bad way, yet
continued to compromise with L.B.J. Jack
son, like Adlai Stevenson or Eugene Me
Carthy, saw no room for compromise.
He compromised only with Max—and
only then because he saw hope for his pol
ieies with the older man.
Bruce Jackson is out of the running—for the present. The Barbecue Man’s recent political reverse took some of the air
—in fact most of it—out of his case
against Max, which was originally that of
Johnson’s negative influence on the. congressman.
The university educator now feels that
a campaign against “a man like Max"
would be “arrogant, or quixotic, and certainly irresponsible,” since it would now
draw money from the old liberal with no
good cause, Johnson effectively removed,
and because McCarthy has a better chance
of defeating Bob Weber, a tough ex-policeman recently nominated for Max’s post by
area Republicans, and who is the anti
thesis of all the two old opponents stand
for. Should Weber win the post, however,
Bruce promises to be back on the slate
with a polished, studied campaign ready.

Conservative acceptance,
'liberal' cynicism
During the few months in which Jackson’s hand was in the Cookie jar, static
came not from the conservative ranks,
his idea seriously
who always at least took
outright, but
support
him
not
they
did
if
from the liberals, who were always ready
but who were
with a pretty phrase or two,
rarely there when the fire was hot.
to Dr.
The most disturbing interference
events came
Jackson in this course of
and
from the ranks of his own colleagues any
from a student body largely cynical to
suggestion that obstacles can be overcome
from within the political structure. As he
stressed in one section of “Battle,” Jackson
firmly believes that it is not the system of
government which is at fault, but the poor
elitism” is
men at the controls. “Hideous
his name for the great mythical belief
academic
that the “clean”— suggesting the
people and the intelligencia—should not
meddle in the Great Forbidden Cookie jar
of political affairs.
This, he contends, has usually been the
case, leaving the spoils and spoiling to pro
cynfessional political manipulators. This they
icism which makes people think that
governare politically effete merits “thethey
dement (in the verbal sense) thatmachinery
serve.” Again, the government
it is those
is, in itself, morally neutral:
who control it that ruin it.

Jackson on youth
Hit it Bruce; “I get very sick and tired
telling me
of people who are very young
change
that there is no point in trying to
1 te
the system because it can’t be done. meanthem; ‘Maybe if you have tried m
ingful ways, then you can say that - .
nu
just with a gesture that lasts for one
.
ute on three separate occasions.’
1
“There is a fashion in cyme 1
a
as there is one in political selfishness
stupidity. Conformity in, the Preae
in .
than
icism I find more disturbing many
ertia that characterized so
students five or six years ago.may be
-’"'-

.

,

®

“Self-fulfilling prophesies

don t
and symmetrical but I
anybody benefits from them.
ment
peace movemen
As to the student
sleepier since o
a
lot
“Their talk is
re jus
son’s message, but they

(

th

sault on the Sacred
Mc .
months in duration, and though aacco
womoCarthy as the principal,
dating, villain, Bruce
make this announcement,
o e P er
course, keeping a cookie or two
**
who
(senousiy)
ience: All students
e
reelection,
P
McCarthy
his
in
aid Rep.
corn
the
Folklore
see Dr. Jackson in
English annex “A”. Sohelpmegod.
’

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                    <text>People's march to
The Sptcreiirr Poor
take place as planned
“

State University of New York at Buffalo

“

UNIVERSITY
ARCHIVES

Special to the Spectrum

r. was
take place as planned.
The Rev. Ralph D. Abernathy, successor to Dr. King as
head of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, said
that the campaign against poverty and racism will begin
April 29, and consist of two phases.
ton that Dr. Martin Lu

Tuesday, April 23, 1968

Vol. 18, No. 49

The urban crisis in America is topic
of speech presented by Tom Hayden
by Jay Schreiber
Spectrum Staff

Reporter

“We can describe American policy as having one single
thrust —; to look upon all non-white people as backward. We
only pay attention when these people come out of apathy and
begin to challenge white America’s domination.”
These were among the thoughts
presented by Tom Hayden in a
speech on the urban crisis in
America Tuesday.
“What is new today is the
growth of opposition to the bad
side of America, slavery, capitalism, imperialism. We’re living in
a time where the opposition is

greatest, where the survival of
the people in the world therefore
depends on resolution of these
questions. Newark, Vietnam, underscore that the American crisis
is of a single pattern and thread,
moving towards a decisive climax,” he said.
In the first of six lectures sponsored by the Graduate Student
Association, the founder and first
president of SDS decried U.S.
arrogance. “It says that our white
civilization’s security is at stake,
that it must be preserved. This
pattern is bankrupt, it is meeting
increased opposition,” he said.
Calm and soft-spoken, Mr. Hayden said that government aid policies only deflect, but do not
put off crisis. Having worked
in
Newark with the Newark Community Union for three years,

Mr. Hayden cited situations in
that city which display what he
termed “the absence of mechanism to let people solve their

grievances peacefully.”
According to Mr. Hayden, Negro leaders in Newark are chosen
by the white Mayor, and they are
all basically out of touch with the
Negro community.
“He’s fooling himself, it’s contenting oneself by surrounding

oneself with favorable advisors.
When this fails, when humanitarian gestures fail, there is a
demand for law and order.”
Mr. Hayden said that stores in
Newark committed legalized looting by selling poisoned meat and
paying off the inspectors.
Jadd
“A Custer’s last stand philosTom Hayden
ophy is at work among the people
in the cities. The political methfounder and first president of
ods can’t be used to solve housSDS.
ing problems; the outbreak of
rebellion is the only other alternative. The means that white
America uses to satisfy the Negro only raise the latter’s frustration, in the end it will destroy
America,” he said.

John Gerassi speaks
on Vietnam and America
by Stephen Pray

Spectrum

according to Mr.

Staff Reporter

John Gerassi said Wednesday
in the second lecture of the “A
New American Revolution” series
that the only way to confront imperialistic America is through
armed struggle.

said.

Speaking on “The Victimization of Latin
America,” Mr. Gerassi predicted
that a “conscious-

new internationality of

mutual cooperation”

the United States.

will defeat

The United States “like
all imcountries, must be defeated.” There is a solidarity
among the exploited peasants
of
Latin America he
said, and the
peasant in
Cuba fought not only
151 bUt f r 311 exPl°ited
'
perialistic

people"

°

The black
liberation
understands this. Mr.movement
Gerassi
The Latin American

Ramparts Magazine, he, editor of
attacked
American

liberals for their
in

era.:StrUCtUre

grained interest”
St

The !ib

“ta-

ln
he S St
do „ot want
.

the

f n
al
to chan^
he
We have been led to
believe
the greatest nation
on e j,r h nd we have a great
hert
bage
of democracy, yet
we have

ar“

° "

‘arth 1Th

neen

‘

*

consistently imperialistic,

way of life as “paternalistic and

superior.”

Our imperialistic policies toward Latin America have not
changed since 1933, Mr. Gerassi
claimed. Today 85% of the natural resources of Latin America
are owned by the United States,
60% of manufacturing and we
directly control 40% of the GNP.
Increasing

March from Memphis
The second and most dramatic
part of the campaign will begin
May 2. Mr. Abernathy will lead
a march of thousands from the
Lorraine Hotel in Memphis, where
Dr. King was assassinated, to
Washington. The poor will also
mass in Mississippi, Chiicago, and
Boston, where similar marches to
the nation’s capital will begin.
It is not clear whether the
the marchers will walk the entire distances involved.
In Washington, the demonstrators will set up a shanty town in
“some conspicuous place” until
their demands are answered.
Mr. Abernathy said the campaign will be the “most militant

and nonviolent war ever engaged
by the human and civil rights
movements in this country.”

"Militant nonviolent action"
“We will stay there, engaging
in militant nonviolent action, until the Congress deals with the
issue of poverty and racism in
the United States,” he said.
Mr. Abernathy did not outline
the specific demands that will be
made of the Congress. However,
he has said in the past that the
government should provide jobs
for everyone able to work and a
guaranteed annual income for
those who are too lazy to work.
Many critics of the demonstrations feel that they may take a
violent turn, but Mr. Abernathy
insisted that while there will be
acts of civil disobedience, they
will be nonviolent.
“We cannot afford to compromise,” he said.

Editorial Board names
Barry Holtzclaw editor
Barry C.

arship. Supported by The Wall
Street Journal, these scholar55
try

low-

Imper-

ialism is “inbred into the structure of the American way of life.”
Our heritage of democracy has
systemically created genocide and
resorted to importing slave labor.
He characterized the American

“The faith in the American
system has to be destroyed,” he

,

Gerassi.

The first will take place on
that date when a delegation of
100 poor people, including black
and white, will present a list of
grievances to various government
leaders.

industrialization led

to a surplus of American goods
and so the United States found
markets in the underdeveloped
countries. Here capitalism created a sharp division between the
“high urban centers and the boon
docks.”

Mr, Gerassi charged that we

have modernized not the peasant
in Vietnam, but Saigon. We have
created a strange country—Saigon—within South Vietnam.

In Latin America we have created urban centers with American
national bourgeois, he contended.
“We have gone to great lengths”
to preserve control of Latin America even to use military intervention. The only way to break
America’s “stranglehold” on Latin American economy is by insurrection, Mr. Gerassi said.

,iar-

'eeks
ark

�Tuesday, April 23, 1968

The Spectrum

Page Two

Choice '68 asks students'preferences
Choice ’68, a National Collegiate Presidential Primary is being conducted tomorrow on more
than 1500 college campuses ineluding the State University of
Buffalo.

ship and direction. Time Magazine is financing Choice ’68 as a
“public service.”
A major non partisan student
organization on each campus will
coordinate the voting on its par-

referendum questions,
dealing with the course of U.S.
military action, in Vietnam. U.S.

dents

sible for ensuring maximum stu-

bombing of North Vietnam, and

ancial support, and regulating the
election in accordance with national standards determined by
the board of directors.
The ballots for Choice ’68 consist of printed IBM cards on
which students will punch perforated holes to indicate their
choices, with additional space provided for write-in candidates.

ment spending, will also appear
on the ballot.

have the opportunity to
speak as a body on their preferences for Presidential candidates
and selected issues.
Eleven student leaders representing all types of campuses and
geographic regions are administering the poll. The Board of directors established basic guidelines for the Presidential Primary, designed the national ballot and provided overall leader-

dent participation, providing fin-

Need faculty to teach
bulletin board courses
The problem of finding faculty
members to teach the 60 proposed
courses listed on the Norton Hall
bulletin board was the main topic
discussed at an organizational

meeting Thursday.
Unlike the experimental college, which will continue, these
courses will be incorporated into
the University structure. Many of
the proposed courses will be
given for credit.
Dean Claude E. Welch has already met with provosts and
deans to ask various departments
to find faculty members for the
courses of more than 20 stu-

dents. President Martin Meyerson has promised to find faculty
members if all else fails.
Non-credit c ourses can be
taught by anyone who feels qualified as an instructor. Credit
courses will have to be approved

by the University.
Faculty members have signed
up for the courses in photography, creative writing, drawing
for non-art majors, journalism
and guerrilla warfare.
To find other faculty members
in the meantime, Nancy Coleman
and Stewart Edelstcin will begin
contacting people who signed up
for courses in an effort to arrange a meeting of the class to
decide on the content of the
course. At the same time, students interested in arranging a
meeting of the class should call
Miss Coleman or Mr. Edelstein in
the Student Association Office—-

3446.

The bulletin board will continue in Norton Hall. Anyone interested in working on the bulletin board committee should call
3446.

Thirteen candidates—from far
left to far right, are included.
Three

the “urban crisis” and

On this campus, Choice ’68 is

being conducted by the Student
Association Elections Committee,
under the coordination of George
Heymann and Robert Knott, Voting will take place in the Norton
Hall Center Lounge and in Goodyear Lobby.

All undergraduates, graduate
students, and Millard Fillmore
College students, are eligible to
vote—ID cards will be checked.
According

to

Robert Harris,

its originator,
former student

body president at Michigan
State University, “IVz million
Americans ought to be able to
have some impact on the policy
of the country.”

Think about Viet Nam. a brutal conflict mat
tears the nation. A new Kind of war against a new kind
of enemy, that requires new concepts of concerted military. political, and diplomatic effort. This is a time when
we must explore every avenue toward settlement-but
keep up our guard against the temptations of a camouflaged surrender.

Think about your dollar. Weakened and
shrunk by buy-now-pay-later politics, eaten by taxes,
threatened by the balance of payments and the gold
drain. It’s going to take skill and understanding to get
an $800 billion economyback on the track-and keep
it there.

Think about your children. About their
schools. Their college. Will there be a place for them?
And the world they inherit. Will it be worth inheriting?
Will they have a world to inherit?

Think about the cities.

About the civil war

ripping our nation apart. About violence and crimeand
despair. About the need for both the ruleof lawand the
light of hope. About the new statesmanship needed to

Pd.

tor by

youth For

Nixon.

‘Latin America is going
Dominican Ambassador to the United States and OAS Wednesday
evening.

"The question is whether that
revolution will be peaceful.”
In April of 1965 that process
of revolution in the . Dominican
Republic was not peaceful. Mr.
Godoy, who was given the task of
Provisional President following

the 1965 crisis outlined what he
feels was a real cause of that revolution. After 32 years of a
“very tight dictatorship,” the
country finally held “free, honest
elections” in 1962, only to have
the military, “who held power,”
seize control of the government
seven months later. “This mockery of their right caused the
people frustration and tensions,”
which were to erupt in April,
1965, he said.
The three lessons of the Dominican Crisis, according to Mr.
Garcia-Godoy, are:

•

it is necessary to “give at

tors ot

me

country,” The military

revolt in 1963 had alienated many
groups from the government, but
they still desired “essential participation,

it is necessary to find political—not military—solutions to
•

political problems.

it ish necessary to find a
Dominican solution.
A lengthy question-and-answer
session followed the Ambassador’s talk.
After the meeting had ended, a
group of pickets arrived, chanting in Spanish: “Santo Domingo,
Vietnam, together they will win!”
The demonstrators, whose purpose was to “embarass and humilate” Mr. Garcia-Godoy, called
him such names as “fascist pig.”
Thursday afternoon the Politics
Club sponsored an informal, “offthe-record,” question session with
the Ambassador, who is also appearing on the University Rountable.
•

New freshman seminars instituted
Beginning in the fall, for the
first time, freshmen will have the
opportunity to take seminar
courses taught by full professors.
The innovation of freshman seminars aimed exclusively at the
“forgotten fresnman” has a threefold purpose according to Dean
of University College Claude E.
Welch,

Aid adjustment

Dean Welch expressed the im-

portance of the freshman, who
has just graduated from high
school. He has learned how to
learn in the high school environment and must now adjust to the
college setting. “But in large lectures there is little chance to
learn to challenge, debate, and
discuss,” he said.
As a second purpose, freshman
seminars will function to help
students increase their skills in

discussing and debating.
Finally, these new courses will
serve as a chance to explore new
areas that are not covered in the
regular curriculum. For example,
Professor Edgar Friedenberg of
the Sociology Department will be
offering a freshman seminar en-

titled “Folk-Rock Music.”
Urban problems will be the
focus of concentration of a number of professors from several
faculties.
Robert Heller and Troy McKelvey will teach “Urban School Administration.” Dr, Robert Paaswell of the School of Engineering
will teach a non-mechanical
course called “Reducing Poverty.”

make our nation whole again by making our people
one again.

Think about the world, its complexity and
its challenge. Russia. China. NATO, SEATO, the OAS,
the UN. Europe.The Middle East. Africa.Latin America.
Asia. Nuclear arms and diplomatic maneuvers, A world
entering the most dangerous period in its history, and
looking to the United States for leadership that can
takeit safely through.
■

Think about the Presidency, its awesome
powers and its lonely responsibilities. The range of
things a Presidenthas to think about, know about. The
great decisions that he alone can make, and that may
determine the fate of freedom for generations to come
-and even the survival of civilization,
Think about the one man who is best qualified for that office. With the sure hand, the balanced
judgment, the combination of seasoned experience
and youthful vigor. The one man whohas gained a perspective on the Presidency unique in our time-from
20 years in public life, eight of them at the very center
of power-followed by a rare opportunity to reflect and
re-study,and to measure the pressing needs of America
and me world in this final third of the 20th Century. The
one man prepared by history for me world’s toughest
job-the one man who can really make a difference in
these troubled, dangerous times.

NIXON'S THE ONE!
Auth. A

revolution in Latin America

Limited enrollment

THE
THINKING
MAN’S
CHOICE...
You can't just wish your way
out of the kind of problems we've
got today. You've got to think
them through-and that takes
a lifetime of getting ready.

govern-

Garcia-Godoy speaks on

1726 Pennaylvania Ava., N.W., Washington, D.C.

Professors to teach

Also of interest is the fact that

many of the freshman seminars

will be taught by distinguished
professors on campus. Robert
O’Neil, professor at the law
school, along with Drs. Jack Nesson and Perry Hicks will offer
a course entitled “Social Issues
and the American School.”
Dr .Ralph Lumb, director of the
nuclear reactor center, will teach
a course in engineering and the
applied sciences called “Safeguarding Special Nuclear Materials.”
History professor Milton Plesur will teach “The Mass Media

and Modern America,” and Dr.
Warren Bennis, provost of the
Faculty of Social Sciences and
Administration, will teach “Critiques of American Society.”
There will be limited enrollment for the seminar courses,
with an approximate capacity of
one third of the incoming freshman class. Each seminar will allow for a maximum of between
ten and 20 students. Freshmen
will sign in advance for seminar
courses.

JMEjtHST

CORAL

�Tuesday, April

Pag*

The Spectrum

23, 1968

Students to take
part in strike

campus releases...
Dept, is scheduled at 4 p.m. Thursday in room 339, Norton Hall. Discussion includes the possible formation of a steering committee to
act as a liaison between students and faculty in decision-making.
The Honors and Awards Ceremonies will be held at 7 p.m. April
29 in the Millard Fillmore Room. Tickets for interested students and
faculty members are on sale at the Norton Ticket Office until April
26 at the price of $1.00 each.
Women's Recreation Association elections are scheduled for 4
p.m. Wednesday in room 246, Norton Hall. W.R.A, participants are
encouraged to attend to elect next year’s officers and indicate their

interest in next year’s activities.
"Literature of Resistance" will be analyzed by Dr. Robert Hass
at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Conference Theater. The program is
presented by the Literature and Drama Committee of UUAB.
Applications to serve as chairman or member of the UUAB
Coffee House Committee may be obtained from Mrs. Toni Pulvino in
room 261, Norton Hall. The committee will review entertainment
and manage the coffee house staff. People are needed to work.
Any student interested in working on the Fall Orientation Committee should contact Nancy Coleman in room 205, Norton Hall, or
call 831-3446.
The State University of Buffalo Crew (rowing team) will hold a
recruiting meeting at 5:30 p.m. tomorrow in room 333, Norton Hall.
All interested students are invited to attend. For further information
call Gabe Ferber at 831-3676.
The Undergraduate Research Committee of the Student Senate
is conducting a seminar at which all students who have received a

Faculty Senate will meet to
reconsider anti-war resolution
The Faculty Senate will reconsider its strong anti-Viet resolution Thursday.
Opposition to the decision
which condemned the war as
“illegal, contrary to American
principles . . . and genocidal”
resulted in a petition signed by
42 faculty members. A special
meeting has been called for 2:30
p.m, Thursday in Butler Auditorium, Capen Hall.
The March 8 action, taken by
slightly more than one-tenth of
senate membership, could be
determined “null and void due to

procedural

irregularities.”

Faculty will also reconsider what
action they should take “relevant
to the present policies” in Viet-

nam.
A regular meeting of the Faculty Senate has been scheduled,
following completition of the antiwar business. The agenda includes
discussion of military recruiting
and the preliminary report of

the University Master Plan.
Faculty will react to a resolution recommending the continuation of “military recruiters to the

campus.”

Budget Dinner

$

.99

Students here will take part in

resume of the progress of their research. The conferences will be
held beginning at 7 p.m. April 24 and May 1 in the Conference
Theater, Norton Hall.
Public Information's role at the University will be explained at
9 a.m. today in the Conference Theater during the continuing series
of University Reports.

Charles Dick, director of Information Services, will discuss the

Information Services: You and the Community. James DdSantis, director of the News Bureau, will, explain the operations of his staff.
"September's Children" will appear at the Coffeehouse Friday
and Saturday night. They will entertain with songs made famous by

Donovan, Simon and Garfunkle, and Peter, Paul and Mary.
Varsity Cheerleading tryouts for 1968-69 will start April 30,
Practices will be held between 3 and 5 p.m. today, Wednesday and
Thursday in room 339, Norton Hall. Anyone interested in trying
out must attend a minimum of one practice. For further information call 876-7341.
The SEEK Program

(Search for Education, Elevation and
Knowledge) at the State University College at Buffalo is now acceptthe
ing applications for
Fall Semester.
SEEK is an equal opportunity program financed by the State
of New York. Its purpose is to provide high school graduates from
poverty areas the opportunity to attend college.
Application forms may be obtained at the SEEK office, room
108, Bacon Hall at the State College. The deadline for applications
is May 1.
Applications to work as chairmen or members of Fall Week-end
committees have been available for three weeks. Narly 300 applications have been distributed, but only five have been returned.
Applications will be available in the Union Board Office, room
261, Norton Hall.
The Peace Corps is looking for liberal arts graduates, education
majors, teachers or persons with backgrounds or interest in Arabic,
Islamic studies, or Middle East Studies to teach in Libya in a
teacher training school or primary school, often in remote villages
under difficult living conditions.
Peace Corps training for Libya begins in July, and volunteers
will depart for Libya in October. The length of service will be 24
months, which includes training.
For further information or an application, write to Robert Pearson or David Benson, Libya Desk, Peace Corps, Washington, D.C.
20525 or call them at (202) 382-1531. Peace Corps applications are
also available at Post Offices.
Advance registration for the 1968 summer session continues
until May 17, The Sessions will be held in three six-week terms;
June 3 to July 12, June 24 to Aug. 2, and July 15 to Aug. 23.
A faculty-student picnic and softball game, sponsored by
the
Undergraduate Psychology Association, Will be held May 5
in Ellicott
Creek Park to raise money for the National Institute of

Mental
Health.
The picnic, starting at 11 a.m., will include a barbecue.
For further information contact Hank Chaikin at 832-3247 or
Steve Imber at 838-1911. The picnic is open to all students, faculty
and staff.
"Current Research on the Inquiry Process" will be discussed at
4:15 p.m. Thursday in the Fillmore Room by Lee S. Shulman associate professor of Educational Psychology and Medical
Education at
Michigan State University. A coffee hour will be held at 3 45 before
the lecture.

Being Served Between 4 and 9 P.M. Daily

against American

impen

ism

starting April 26.
Spokesman Alex Delfini of the
Student Strike Committee said
that students at this University
would participate in at least one
day of the strike.

“We call for the liberation of

our campus from domination of

bankers, businessmen and militarists,” he said.

“We will point the accusing
finger at those men in the University who are in complicity
with American military and cor-

porate interests. We will also
demonstrate our support for
Bruce Beyer’s intended induction
refusal at the Federal Building
at 7:15 a.m. Friday.”
Activities include a demonstration, but further decisions as to
definite events and actions have
not been made. Mr. Delfinl said
that those involved in planning
the strike were working on a
more creative form of student

protest.

Council will
hold election
The Commuter Council is holding elections for the offices of
president, vice-president, secretary and treasurer for 1968-69.
All commuters who show ID
cards are eligible to vote in the
elections, held in Lobby A and
the Ground Lobby of Norton Hall,
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

William Mueller and Terrence
Weaver are candidates for the office of President. The duties of
the president include representing the Commuter Council in the
University and appointing chairmen of the various committees
with the approval of the other
executives.
The candidates for the position
of vice-president are Greg Gubala
and Ralph Majchrowicz. The vicepresident is in charge of all committees and assumes the duties
of the president in the event that
the president resigns or vacates
the position for some reason.

BUFFALO FESTIVAL PRESENTS

THE

at the

Thr**

Colonial House Restaurant
3362 MAIN STREET
opposite the campus
Recording Artiste

-

LIVE AND IN PERSON

KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL

TWO

PERFORMANCES

SUNDAY, MAY S

7 P.M and
9 45 P.M.

Seats Reserved: Main Floor $5.50
$4.50
Balcony $4.50
$3.50
Tickets on sale now at Buffalo Festival Ticket Office, Hotel Statler Hilton
Lobby; All Audrey
Del's Record Stores; U. of B. Norton Hall; Brundo
All

&amp;

&amp;

—

Our Last Issue,

May 7

&amp;

Music, Niagara Falls.

Catch Our Classifieds
(lose your lease)

THE

FRESHMAN

CLASS

presents

l&gt;AD| IMS?
MMRLiRVJ

Use Our Display Ads

with LAURE NCE HARVEY
and JULIE CHRISTIE

SPECTRUM

TONIGHT! APRIL 23rd

ADVERTISING

DEP'T

7:00 and 9:30 P.M.
CAPEN 140

355-C

75c

NORTON

�Tuesday, April 23, 1968

The Spectrum

Page Four

After the bust
The State University of New York at Stony Brook will
not develop as other State University centers will. The invasion of that campus by Suffolk County police last December has had a significant impact on all that happens at Stony

t-J-fcS

•

•

Watch the faculty
The Faculty Senate is meeting Thursday at 2:30 p.m, in
Capen’s Butler Auditorium to reconsider its resolution condemning the war in Vietnam. The entire academic community
should attend this meeting for it may prove very interesting
and very revealing.
The question is whether or not the Faculty Senate will
yield to the pressure of some of its body as well as outside
groups to recind its resolution of condemnation.
Much of the faculty pressure ensues from the fact that
attendance at the last meeting was very low. How strange
that those who seek to reverse the vote did not think it important enough to attend the first meeting.
We are more concerned, however, with those who may
change their vote because of the apparently greater numbers
disfavoring the resolution.
By condemning the war, the senate took a bold step.
Taking a stand on a most pressing issue is something that
too many faculties at too many universities have failed to do.
Negating that move would surely be an irresponsible
act by the senate. The passage of the anti-war resolution was
one of the few significant things done by the faculty senate
this year. The undoing of that action will forever be to the
faculty’s discredit.
We will watch Thursday’s meeting closely. Hopefully,
the entire University community will watch with comparable
interest.

UAAX

■ICEO.TA'IS.

ai«c»
'No need to rush into this peace thing

the
lighter
side
by Dick West
Congressional criticism of the proposed questionnaire for the 1970 Census is growing almost as fast
as the population.
The protesting lawgivers contend the detailed
information people will be required to impart,
particularly about their living quarters, is both
burdensome and an invasion of privacy.
They may nave a point there. One question, for
instance, asks if your dwelling is a cooperative or

condominum.
That is obviously burdensome. Among other
things, it involves going to the dictionary to see
what a “condominium” is.
Another asks whether your dwelling is “occupied without payment of cash rent? Skip' to
page 4,” That could be an invasion of privacy.
People who are not paying the rent may have
to skip not only to page 4 but clear to the next
town.
I do believe, however, that the complaints are
largely based on a misconception. Most people
don’t really object to telling personal things about

themselves.

In fact, 9 out of 10 will bend your ear for
hour if you give them half a chance.
The trouble is, the census questions are badly

phrased.

“How many rooms do you have?” “Do you have
hot piped water?” And so forth.
With that approach, the questionnaire sounds
like the sheriff making an inventory before throwing you out on the sidewalk.
Since the data sought by the Census Bureau
presumably will be useful, it should revise the
form to provide a questionnaire everyone would
love. Something on this order:
1. What kind of dump are you stuck with? a.
A beatup house, b. A crummy duplex, c. A stinking
apartment, d. A lousy trailer.
2. Did that crook: a. Rent it to you? b. Lease
it to you? c. Sell it to you? d. Pay you to take it
off his hands?
3. What do you hate most about it, bathroomwise? a. No tub. b. No shower, c. No lavatory, d. No
cotton-picking hot water, e. Somebody is always in
there ahead of me.

Militarily we're in a very strong position'

Readers
writings
Appraises Spectrum coverage
To the Editor;

At a time when feature reporting generally
consists of put-on/put-down opinionated pap, Miss
Linda Hanley’s coverage of Krishna Consciousness
was a genuine delight. Her Krishna Consciousness
Index was high, Krishna appeared at least 32
times in print, and that is the ultimate point. To
my knowledge, there has never been such an accurate and informative account of Krishna Consciousness Philosophy in any news media. She is
heading for Krishna, burning desire for cigarettes and a sleepy leg nonwithstanding, simply because she has a good ear tor the Truth.

Re her being hooked on air pollution (cigarettes), one of the minor by-products of chanting
Hare-Krishna is that such habits fall away naturally. None of those so-called rules she mentioned
can be understood without chanting, e.g., you give
up cigarettes because the desire for them goes for
Krishna instead, same for drugs, etc. Because
Krishna Consciousness tastes better. Otherwise,
giving up cigarettes etc. requires a material substitute or sublimation, as all negative renunciation
does.
As for the materialistic ads, once someone asked
Swamiji why if he was spiritual was he using a
tape recorder, record player, etc. He answered
that it was not object used that counted, but the
consciousness behind its use, i.e., spreading this
Krishna Consciousness is beyond the motives of
material advertising and profit. The only “profit”
we get is Krishna and the things we advertise help
people to remember Krishna. We made a record,
just like a lot of other publicity seekers, but it’s
the Sound of Krishna. (Incidentally if she would
like a record wholesale, she can gejt same at Kirtan
after recess is over).
I would like to thank her again for a fair and
honest report, and wishing her well, HARE
KRISHNA!
Your servant,

Rupanuga Das
The

Spectrum

year

at the

3435 Main
are located
15,000.

Quotes

in the news

United Press International

WASHINGTON
Former Defense Secretary
Robert S. McNamara, speaking to Congress in secret testimony Feb. 1 but made public only Tues—

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is published twice-weekly
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"We do not have the means today of preventing
a recurrence of this kind of incident (North Korea's seizure of the USS Pueblo in January) in
many of the situations in which we find it necessary and to our advantage to carry on similar

collection efforts.”
SEOUL
South Vietnamese President Park
Chung Hee, enroute to discuss Vietnam peace talk
plans with President Johnson in Honolulu Tuesday: “Our own concessions and patience have their
own limits.”
—

SACRAMENTO, Calif.
Gov. Ronald Reagan,
telling a news conference Tuesday of reports he
has “grass roots" backing for the GOP presidential
nomination:
“I’m certainly not going to run away and pre
—

tend it isn’t happening, “Obviously I’m going to
try to make an assessment”

Clty

‘

&amp;

,

•

w

i

M

not accept.

A self-imposed set of rules involving dormitory and
parking restrictions is one thing. But the Stony Brook rules
go beyond anything a university need impose.
Among the more obvious:
Physical assault is forbidden
Willful destruction of University or personal property of others is forbidden
Theft is forbidden
Of course these are violations—and they need not be
included in a code of student conduct. Society makes those
restrictions clear.
The interesting matter, however, is not the rules themselves, but why students chose to define them. At virtually
every other university, students would balk at the listing of
obvious moral wrongs. At Stony Brook, they demand it.
It is indeed a strange development that, in part, may be
explained by a student desire to placate a hostile community
and Council—the type of placation that says; “See the rules
we’ve made for ourselves.”
But all of this indicates something more. It points out
that Stony Brook students have lost their perspective of what
a university is all about. It reveals a strong feeling of insecurity, of uncertainty. They were once, perhaps, overly unconcerned. Now they have swung too far in the other direction.
What these students are doing today may take years to
undo.
It should be recognized, however, that the students are
not totally to blame. They have succumbed to the pressures
exerted by the town and a handful of legislators.
The students of Stony Brook are relatively unaware of
the implications of their actions. They know that the rules
help them to feel more secure, and security is a pressing
need. To the observer, however, the whole situation is upsetting and one which causes great concern.

VC'

-e-

,

suits could be far-reaching.
The rural campus, with its college-oriented life, conveys the picture of liberalism. In many ways, it is liberal. But
there is one overriding factor that reveals itself once the
free-loving facade is penetrated—the students of Stony Brook
are scared.
They are scared of a largely hostile community which
will employ any means to keep the University “in check.”
They are scared of a University Council that feels obligated
to play a role far out of proportion to its purpose. They fear
an administration which they can no longer totally trust.
Perhaps more importantly, they fear another raid. They
are never certain that a night’s sleep will not be interrupted
by a policeman at the door.
All this has led to a compulsion by the Stony Brook
student to have the rules and regulations clearly defined. “I
want to know just what I can and cannot do. If I step over
that line, I want to know if I’m going to get shot.”
One symptom of this compulsion is the frequent redefinition of rules—redefinition, not by administrators, but by
students. They have written and approved by referendum a
series of rules that students in different circumstances would

o-»'

b jdd&lt;
ltb;
Repudiation of all news dispatches is
of
out the express consent of the editor-in-chief. Rights rerepublication of all other matter herein are also

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rates upon request.
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Business

�Pag* Five

The Spectrum

Tuesday, April 23, 1968

Fall Weekend needs workers
To the Editor

BELOW OLYMPUS

The Sham

By Interlandi

Applications to work as chairmen or members
of Fall Week-end committees have been available for three weeks. Nearly three hundred applications have been distributed, but only five have
been returned.

by Martin Guggenheim

This column is

available

in

the Union

“But a government in which the majority rules,
in all cases cannot be based on justice, even as far
as men understand it. Can there not be a government in which majorities do not virtually decide
right and wrong, but conscience?—in which majorities decide only those questions to which the rule
of expediency is applicable?

(Norton 261).

Personnel Committee
Union University
Activities Board

Norton's liquor rules explained
To the Editor:

The legalization of alcohol on campus repre-

sents a step forward for members of the University student community. However, because of the
pending application for a liquor license, a number

of necessary limitations have been placed on the
of alcoholic beverages in Norton
Union.
consumption

The rules are needed to minimize the possibility
of incidents involving alcohol on campus, since such
an incident could severely jeopardize any future
liquor license.
As the rules are currently established, only organizations may use alcohol in Norton Union.
Those organizations must demonstrate to the Norton House Council; (1) that no alcoholic beverages
are being sold, (2) that no under age
individuals
are served alcoholic beverages, and (3) that nonalcoholic beverages are also served. They must
also specify type of alcohol served and method

of service.

"You see, now you can live wherever you want to!"

the gadfly
by Mark Schneider

Should any participant become unruly, or should
the Norton staff determine that some illegal act,
such as consumption by a minor, is taking place,
they may call the campus police, if necessitated and
refer the case to the Norton House Council for
disposition to the appropriate Student or Faculty

Tonight begins the second series of talks by New Leftists
on the central issues of our day, and if this group is as inspiring, challenging and informative as the first three speakers, they will be very welcome indeed.

11 is hoped that if the transition
from “Dry” to
Wet goes smoothly, the
use of alcohol in Norton
be
will
extended before a license is finally obtained.
It is not expected that such
a license, which would
allow food service to sell beer and liqour, can
be
obtained before November of this year.

Hopefully, the talks will be somewhat complementary,
in that, for example, while Tom Hayden and Robert Scheer
gave analyses of the failure of liberalism, the replacement
for Eldridge Cleaver and Carl Oglesby may project a vision
of the much-discussed New Left “program.”
The scheduling of the speakers was well ordered

Judiciary.

Norton Hall House Council

Before talking about Robert wrong war at the wrong time,”
Scheer’s speech, a note on the
implying that there is a “right
campus is in order. Last year the
war at the right time.”
Fillmore Room was overflowing
for Scheer and the other RamIn other words, should Bobby
parts speakers, and the atmosget elected and find the Venephere
was
electric. People rezuela Cong blowing up Standard
To the Editor:
through a lengthy quesOil fields, he will have to say
There has been a lot of words spoken of late on mained
tioning period and walked out
“we’re fighting for Standard Oil’s
the subject of a Grading System Revision. In the
aroused. In the time right to clear high profits, not for
Administration’s slinger The Gazette (March 15, debating,
since, political discussion has bethe ‘freedom’ of the Venezuelans
1968), President Meyerson thought the
Satisfactory/
to enjoy American style democUnsatisfactory and/or written course evaluation of- come somewhat more passe perhaps, or somehow “irrelevent.”
racy.” In other words, Bobby
fered “exciting possibilities” and referred
it to the Maybe it's the weather or exams, must be at once a more explicit,
Executive Committee of the Faculty Senate for but
the turnout has been disapyet more subtle, in short, more
prompt action.” Neat. Without active, vociferous
pointing, considering the gains
efficient imperialist.
support from the students, faculty and administraradicals around the world have
tion the ridiculous inertia of tradition (especially
made since then.
Green Berets will be favored
from the faculty—the supposed exponents of “toover B-52’s.
ta! education) will surround
it with a fog of words.
A final statement of Scheer’s
n
y wil1 cloud Education in the total sense
.u
“controlling” large corporabout
One wonders whether or not
Se wh
it
want
like the Bethlehem smoke ations
keen. th
needs much explaining but to share Scheer’s optimism.
ey nd the reach of the eo le
P P
in that, as he said, is another speech.
ur /? tudent “officers”
Concurrent with this analysis
really want to
Considering the thrust of his is his feeling that the change in
do
3 of education instead of
thro wine armmH
talk, which was concerned with “packaging” Bobby and Gene
r by the
thousands '
don’t the idea that Bobby Kennedy is represent, reflects the strength
on a
e ttive
ac
Promotional
campaign
really LBJ in movie star’s clothNOW cn
so ini
of the Left. Their desire to co-opt
interest� will be shown. The
best
for this promition lie
ing, it was a surprising comment.
the Left shows their fear of it,
with them, and with the eoa
The “some sort of socialism” he and because the Left is too smart
w
,or ubmi
referred to was remarkably vague. to be co opted, their new rhetoric
e B Urgl er meet the
is a healthy sign.
Challenge?
Will The R
What Scheer did do was to
burgher meet the
Challenge’'
w
grow back the beards on clean
But, it is also a tremendous
6 FaCU ‘ ,y and S,udents
"&gt;eet the Chal- Gene’s boys.
danger in that: 1, they may be
successful in coopting the Left:
Prithee, I hope so.
The Old Liiberalism of Hubert
and 2, they will pave the way for
Robert Buettgens
Humphrey and Lyndon is dead, rigiht-wing successes.
not just because they’re ugly, but
The Spectrum's pages for
because no one can repeat with
When the Vietnamese people
a straight face their lies about a drive out the Creighton Abramses
and
and
Devil Theory of Communism
the Kys, Reagan will be able
&amp;
an FDR New Deal to save Amerto argus with more compelling
ica.
logic than Bobby
{
that America
The Spectrum to report the
news
sold out to Communism.
lmpar t‘a Hy &gt;n
the news pages,
to exnress .J
Bobby’s distortions can be rethe opinions of the
Liberalism, then, is falling vicnewspaper only
in the
peated without laughing. Instead
lal PaEes and t0 pub
tim to the Left and the Right,
all sides
Of important
ot
of
believing in the rightness of
controversial issues.
that is, society is polarizing, and
"Wnhouf expression, freedom of express,on
America “fighting for freedom" no simplistic self-righteous tacmeenmgle.s,around the world, the New Libtics by the Left will allow it to
emerge victorious.
erals condemn Vietnam “as the
Philip Henry,

Chairman of House Council

An appeal for an education

fr^

°

Lackawanna™

°

somethin!
th!y cafrv
n°
°

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Editorials
*fn 1 u°a

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Sties

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°

ai

“The practical reason why, when the power
is once in the hands of the people, a majority is
permitted, and for a long period continue to rule,
is not because they are most likely to be in the
right, nor because this seems fairest to the minority, but because they are physically the strongest.

year.

Applications will be

President and' Richard

A, Siggelkow, vice-president for stui lent

This letter is not intended to “scold” the student
body for its typical apathy, but merely to alert
them to the present situation. Fall Week-end is
not a necessity. It can only be produced by a response to work which implies some desire to see
the tradition of Fall Week-end continued next

Board Office

particularly dedicated to Robert

O’Neil, assistant to the

Opinions

—

“Must the citizen ever for a moment, or in the
least degree, resign his conscience to the legislator? Why has very man a conscience, then? I
think that we should be men first and subjects
afterwards. It is not desirable to cultivate a respect for the law, so much as for the right.
“The only obligation which I have a right to
assume is to do at any time what I think right. A
common and natural result of an undue respect
for law is, that you may see a file of soldiers,
marching in admirable order over hill and dale to
the wars, against their wills, ay, against their
common sense and consciences, which makes it
very steep marching indeed, and produces a palpitation of the heart.
“They have no doubt that it is a damnable
business in which they are concerned; they are
all peaceably inclined. Now, what are they? Men
at all? or small moveable forts and magazines,
at the service of some unscrupulous man in power?
“The mass of men serve the state thus, not as
men mainly, but as machines, with their bodies.
In most cases there is no free exercise whatever
of the judgment or of the moral sense; but they
put themselves on a level with wood and earth
and stones; and wooden men can perhaps be manufactured that will serve the purpose at well.
“Such command no more respect than men of
straw or a lump of dirt. They have the same sort
of worth only a shorses and digs. Yet such as
these even are commonly esteemed good citizens.
“All men recognize the right of revolution; that
is, the right to refuse allegiance to, and to resist,
the government, when its tyranny or its inefficiency
are great an dunendurable. But almost all say that
such is not the case now. But such was the case,
they think, in the Revolution of ’76.
If one were to tell me that this was a bad government because it taxed certain foreign commodities brought to its ports, it is most probable that I
should not make an ado about it, for I can do
without them.
“But. when a sixth of the population of a nation which has undertaken to be the refuge of
liberty, are slaves, and a whole country is
unjustly
overrun and conquered by a foreign army, and
subjected to military law, I think that it is no too
soon for honest men to rebel and
revolutionize.
What makes this duty the more urgent is the fact
that the country so overrun is not our own, but
ours is the invading army.
“There are thousands who are in opinion
opposed to slavery and to the war, who yet
in effect do nothing to put an end to them; who,
esteeming themselves children of Washington and
Franklin, sit down with their hands in their
pockets, and say that they know not what
to do,
and do nothing; who even postpone the question
of freedom to the question of free trade, and
quietly read the prices current along with
the
latest advices from (Vietnam), after dinner, and,
it may be, fall asleep over them both.
“At most they will only give a cheap vote, and a
feeble countenance and God-speed, to the right,
as it goes by them. All voting is a sort of gaming’
like checkers, with a moral tinge
to it, playing
with right and wrong, with moral questions; and
betting naturally accompanies it. The
characters of
the voters is not staked. least my vote, perchance,
as I think right; but I am not vitally
concerned
that right should prevail. I am willing to leave
to
it
the majority.
“A wise man will not leave the right to the
mercy of chance, nor wish it to prevail
through
the power of the majority. A minority
is powerless while it conforms to the majority; it is not
even a minority then. If the
alternative is to
keep all just men in prison, or give up war and
slavery, the state will not hesitate
which to choose
Seen from a lower point of view, the
Constitution and the laws, with all its faults,
are very
good: but seen
from a point of view a little
higher they are what I
have described
seen from a higher still, and the highest,themwho
shall say what they are, or that they
are worth
looking at or thinking of at all?”
—Henry David Thoreau

u.w

s

Not much has changed

»- *

�Tuesday, April 23, 1968

The Spectrum

Page Six

What happens to people
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Nobody hires alcoholics. Or kids. Or a blind man who
can't get around, let alone work. Or the 80 year old who
sits on the stoop m the summer and stares at the floor in
the winter. Nobody wants them. Nobody needs them. There
are half a million of them. In our fair city.
It is not an economic problem. You can't buy off poverty.
People have to go into the tenements. People who are
revolted by tenements. People who insist that "helping" is
not giving at the office and paying taxes.
Case workers are funny people. In an age when it's strictly
high button shoes to do anything but make a buck...they
knock themselves out for other people. And then they turn
around and tell you that they’re doing it for themselves.
Be a Case Worker if you're funny that way.
Good salary. $7,200 after 6 months. And all the benefits
the city can give you. Any college graduate can apply.
Listen... if we can beat this thing in New York City, we can
&gt;"

1"ample ,or

Help Thy Neighbor

Call (212) 566-8700, request brochure or see your Placement Office for campus interviews on APRIL 25

New York City Department of Social Services
200 Church St., New York 10013 An

equal opportunity employer

�Tuesday, April

23, 1968

Page Sevan

The Spectrum

'Knight of the Burning Choral Ensemble will give concert
Pestle'to open Thursday
Clark Gym will be the site of
the University Choral Ensemble
annual Spring Concert, April 26

at 8:30 p.m.

The

Program

in Theatre’s
final performance of the year by
the Men’s Glee Club and Women’s
Chorale, which, although separate
entities, join forces for this annual event in a combined chorus
of 150 voices.
The concert will be under the
baton of conductors Peter Van
Dyck and Frederic Ford.
This year’s Spring Concert will
feature the Byrd "Mass for Four
Voices" and Paul Hindemith’s
"Six Chansons." Also included in
the program are works by Charles
Ives, William Walton, Orlando
Gibbons, Brahms, and a group of

the Burning

Pestle,” a comedy by
Francis Beaumont, will open April 25 at 8:30 in Baird Hall.
Directing the production is Mr.
Eli Ask, a visiting professional
director from New York City. Mr.
Ask was Mike Nichols assistant
for the New York production
“The Knack” and directed thi
Australian company of that play.
The versatile Mr. Ask also appeared in the Elia Kazan film
“America, America.”

of

“Doing a play at a University”

Mr. Ask said, “seems to call for
an erudite kind of approach, if
done by someone at a University,
since it is an educational process.
I feel lucky that I don’t have to
approach The Knight of the Burning Pestle in this way. I don’t
feel obligated to be a teacher.
But, by my approaching the play
in human terms, if anybody who
is involved gets an inkling of
learning, I would be satisfied.”
“Plays to me are made up not
of actors, but of people and how
they react to each other under
certain situations,” he said, “It
makes no difference what era a
person lives in since the basic
human emotions never change.
The stimulants of emotions naturally vary depending upon the age
in which we live. The reaction to
that stimulus varies, but the basic
emotions remain the same. But
all this is very erudite and bor-

WBFO show
airs Arts' news

English madrigals.
As a special highlight of the
evening, the UB Blues and the
Baby Blues will perform several
numbers, ranging from current
hits to old favorites. The two

—Robt. Winkler

ing. What I want most of all is

that the people who come to see
the play will have a ball. I am.
I think the actors are, and if we
can share this feeling I think you
will too,”

Question of

groups have become well known
for their appearances on campus, such as Friday’s “Spring Sing
Out,’ as well as in the Buffalo
area, and in such diverse places
as Montreal, where the Baby
Blues sang at Expo ’67, and Flor-

P--

—Tanzman

University

choral ensemble

The combined Men's Glee Club
and Women's Chorale rehearse
for Frida y' s concert in clark
Gym.

ida, where the UB Blues were recently a big hit.

Spring Tour from May 25 to June
2.
Tickets are available at the

The Chorus will culminate the
1967-68 season with its annual

Norton Hall and Baird Hall ticket offices.

SAM JAFARI
formerly associated with
Norton Hall, proudly
announces the opening
of the

the week

.

Which accomplishment of this year’s Student
Association do you feel is the greatest?
X. SCATE
2. Bulletin Board courses
3. C A C activities
4. The Polity
5. The ranking and grading propsal
6. Commuter Council
7. Other
You can answer the Question Of The Week
every Wednesday and Thursday at the Information
Desk on the first floor of Norton Hall and the
University College Lobby in Diefendorf Hall.

.

.

ELLICOTT SQ. BLDG.
MEN'S SALON
854-3504

by Lori Pendrys
Spectrum

-

Entertainment Coordinator

Every Tuesday evening from
10 p.m. to 10:10 p.m. WBFO airs

the program “The Arts Around
Buffalo.” It is a show designed
to inform the community of cultural events talcing place in the
area.
Occasionally people involved

with dance troupes, art exhibits,
concerts, plays and the like are
interviewed. The other shows are
devoted to broadcasting a list of

THE

upcoming events.
Anyone with information concerning such events and would

EXPERT.

like it included on the program,
it can either be taken to room
323 Norton Hall during business
hours or mailed to WBFO, “the
Arts Around Buffalo,” 323 Norton Hall, State University of Buffalo.

THERE’S O
IN EVERY FAMILY
Everybody has an Uncle George,
He’s the one who knows which car is a piece of
junk. And where you can get practically anything

wholesale.

Now you can
tell your parents
where to go.
You know how it is when your folks’

come to visit. They want to take you out
to dinner. So where do you suggest?
They want a good place to spend the
night. So where do you send them?
Wonder no more. Just send them
to us. The Charter House.
They'll love the food in our Rib Room
restaurant. (Our chef doesn't even
know how to make meatloaf or chicken
croquetts.) They'll love the guest rooms.
(They're so comfortable they won't
want to leave. Even to see you.)
So the next time your family comes
to visit, remember you can really
score. Just by telling them
where to go. For reservations
phone 634-2700.

CHARTER HOUSE MOTOR HOTEL
HOTEL CORPORATION OF AMERICA
6643 Transit Road

Uncle George is a real expert with other
people’s money.
But when it comes to your diamond, we’re going
to suggest that you ignore him.
Because unless Uncle George is a trained
gemologist, he probably knows little more than you

do about diamonds.
Every ArtCarved diamond is inspected by a
gemologist and backed by a written PVPSM
guarantee. He evaluates it for carat weight, color, cut

and clarity.

And at any time during your lifetime, if you
ever want to trade your ring in for a more expensive
ArtCarved ring, we’ll take it back. At it’s full
value.
Can Uncle George give you that kind of
guarantee?

Art Curved
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beautiful 200 page wedding guide and free
brochures are available at the ArtCarved
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SOUTHGATE PLAZA
BUFFALO, N. Y.

0

�Tuesday, April 23, 1968

The Spectrum

Page Eight

IRC resolutio

SEE BUFFALO’S LARGEST COLLECTION OF

Lottery system determines residency
In an attempt to solve the impending problem caused by an
on- campus housing shortage, the

Inter-Residence Council

adopted

Thursday

a

resolution outlining
for the use of the results of a lottery held last week.

procedures

According to Joel Fein man,
IRC president, there will be a

shortage of 110 male and 117 female dormitory spaces in the fall.
These figures were arrived at by
maximizing current residency by
such methods as eliminating Allenhurst TV lounges and by placing Tower Hall RA’s in single
rooms.

The resolution proposes that
lottery be used to determine
two things: “first, which students
will be housed in residence and
second, hall preference.”

the

"To insure maximum equality,”
the resolution proposes that all
students who wish to remain in
residence will draw a lottery
number when room deposits are
made. In the case of an excess
of applicants for University housing, those drawing the lowest
numbers will be given priority.
“After the lottery sytem has
been used to determine residency, it will be used for hall
preferences.”

All Requests for Allenhupst Apwill be formed by the method of
tripling freshmen in proportion

to the size of the resident freshman class, and tripling upper-

classmen according to the results
of the lottery.
Added to the resolution were
several amendments. Any student
participating in the lottery and
forced off campus will be able
to try again the following year.
Any student living within a 35
mile radius from the University
will be denied space until it is

avilable. Two exceptions were in-

PERFECT KEEPSAKE DIAMONDS
at

ft
r

The

final production of

the

of the Studio Arena consists of
the two Harold Pinter one-acts,
“The Lover” and “The Collection.”

Pinter, who recently enjoyed
such Broadway successes as .“The
Caretaker,” “The Homecoming”
and “The Birthday Party,’ is rcand the Birthday Party,” is regarded by many as the leading

396 MAIN STREET

14K GOLD POST

$2.00 and $3.00

Pierced EARRINGS 77*

Those forced off campus who
have loans or scholarships will

be

"In The Main Place”

'

dents and any individual with a
medical excuse from Dr. Hoffman, School Physician.

guaranteed housing so they

will be able to keep the financial

Headquarters for Good

assistance.

It was further stipulated that
if these students had high numbers, they would be the first
group to be placed in residence

College Clothing

triples.

Studio Arena presents
one-act plays by Pinter
season for .the Studio Two series

JEWELERS

RIVERSIDE MEN'S SHOP

Tonawanda Street, corner Ontario
Buffalo, New York 14207

playwright today. His plays combine the mysterious with the comic, a wide variety of characters
who range from the straight and
sedate to the raffish, and plots
which are as bizarre and unlikely
as anyone could hope for.

The plays are being directed
by Maurice Breslow whose casts
for both plays include Sheila
Browne, John Costopoulos, Russell Drisch, Betty Lutes and
Frank T. Wells.

BUY AND SELL

USED TEXTS
BUFFALO
TEXTBOOK

STORES, INC.

3610 Main

833-7131

PAPERBACKS

Gifts—Posters—Supplies
General Fiction

and Non-Fiction

Playing dates for the produc-

BUFFALO FESTIVAL PRESENTS

BENEFIT PERFORMANCES

ALL NET PROCEEDS DONATED TO THE

mar™ iuther

mm

tion, which plays weekends only,
are May 3, 4, 5 and 10, 11, 12.

vir- pizza
Delivered FREE By

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$1.05 P.t.

MEMORIAL FUND

POP 5c

TR 3-1330

THE BEST OF
Broadway Theatrical Extravaganza
LIVE AND IN PERSON

at KLEIMMANS
PERFORMANCES

EVENING 1 P.M. Seats $5 00

Tickets on sale now at Buffalo Fesfiva! Ticket Office, Hofei SfatlcrHilton Lobby; All Audrey &amp; Dc.'s Record Stores; U. cf B. 2-k rfon HaP.
For mai* orders scn.1 self-addressed sfarmed envelope and check or
money orders
to Buffalo Festival, Inc., Hotel Statler-Hilton, Buffalo,
N
Y. 14202

KTR

18“* 24

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Original will
be returned.

*.

white or color
Photo. Drawing.
”

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Pic

GREAT FOR GIFTS1

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90 PlUS Postage

All
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Send your black and

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P.O.Box 3071 SI. Louis. Missouri

HORSEBACK RIDING

-

POSTERS

A free 5x7 glossy print of your
original sent with each order Add
50C for each return address

LET'S GO

Williams Bekins

PERSONAL

HALL

SHfJDAY, APRIL 28

MATINEE 2:30 F.K. Scats $3.50

CONGRATULATIONS GRADUATES

1

PHONE 835-5414
After 5 p.m. —NF 2-0130 or 693-9268

63130

PROGRAM IN THEATRE

night of the Burning Pestle

Colonial Ridge Stables
9065 Chestnut Ridge Rd., Middleport, N.Y
ROUTE 77

—

EAST OF LOCKPORT

Phone Lockport
•

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735-7127

Supervised by Real Cowboys and Cowgirls
300 Acres of Wooded Country Trails
Moonlight Rides
Horse-drawn Wagon For Hay Rrides
Horses For Any Occasion

PLAZA SHOE REPAIR
ONE STOP SERVICE
CENTER

Shoes Repaired While-U-Wait
Laundry &amp; Drycleaning
ONE DAY SERVICE

University Plaza

836-4041

a

Comedy

by Francis Beaumont

directed by Eli Ask
April 25-26-27-28

Student Tickets 50^

8:30 P.M.

Norton Union Box Office

Baird Hall

831-3704

�Tuesday, April 23, 1968

The Spectrum

Pag* Nin*

At Broa wort

the spectrum of

Trackmen lose No. 2;

sports

Baseball Bulls crush ECU in opener;
sluggers' record now stands at 9-2-1
by Rich Baumgarten
Spectrum Staff Reporter

Opening day

baseball

just

wouldn’t be opening day without
ECTI. For the third straight
year, the State University of Buffalo baseball team opened its
home season by taking the measure of the Katsmen, this time
10-2 before close to 400 fans last
Tuesday at Clark Field. The previous two seasons, the Diamondmen scored 5-2 and 8-1 triumphs
over the hapless ECTIers.
Senior outfielder Rick Wells led
the Bulls’ 15 hit assault on three
ECTI pitchers by belting a home
run, double and single in his
three trips to the plate. Wells
scored three runs, and was credited with six RBI’s, Catcher Brian
Hansen and second sacker Stan
Odachowski also starred in the
hitting department cracking three
singles each while Ken Rutkowski
further aided the Bulls’ cause
with a double and a single.

ECTI jumped off to a quick
1-0 first inning lead when shortstop Larry Barreca led off with a
double and came home on Bob
Bobbin’s single.

Tied in first
The Bulls tied the score at one
apiece in the bottom of the first
on Rutkowski’s double and Hansen’s single. The Bulls then added
two more in the second for a
3-1 lead, and actually iced the
game in the third stanza when
Wells connected for a three run
homer, a 370 foot job over the
left field fence.

The Buffalo hardballers added
another run in the sixth, and
three more in the seventh, but for
all intents and purposes the out-

come was already a foregone conclusion. ECTI never did manage
to muster much of a scoring at-

tack.

Buffalo received good pitching
from its trio of right-handers as

UB loses two straight to
Hobart, Colgate netmen
by W. Scott Behrens
Sports

Editor

The competition in college tennis this year is much better than
expected and the varsity
tennis
Bulls are now discovering that
team

victories are difficult to obtain these days.
After getting head coach Bill
Sanford’s 200th victory as a nineteen year head coach last Tuesday
afternoon over ECTI, the Bulls
have lost two straight matches.
The Bulls played host to Colgate
and got smothered in a 9-0 defeat and then took to the road
and were defeated 6-3 by Hobart
College.
Coach

Sanford said that it was
good for the
Bulls to meet up
with a team such as Colgate, “a
team which really hits the ball
hard.” Even though the Bulls lost
to the Red Raiders it
was the experience which
counted much
more than the defeat.
The Bulls faired a little
better
, b?rt as the match lasted
b U
ve
Steve Imber
was the only victor in singles
competition and -it
took Imber
three sets to win that point.
The
hulls second and third
conquered their opponentsdoubles
for the
other two Blue and White points,
it was an enjoyable
trip, for
Part ’ 38 Hobart treate &lt;I
the Bulls as royal
guests in the
true meaning of the
word. Both
coaches knew each other
well as
both are swimming
mentors of

ft

“

J‘

their -respective institutions.
Among the spectators were 30
well wishers from the University
of Buffalo, a greater crowd than
the Bulls get -in thei-r home
matches. Also eyeing the contest
was the president of host Hobart.
It was an excellent match played in hot 75 degree weather
with no wind blowing across the
green lacol courts.
All nine
matches consisted of long volleys
as each match took three sets
for
the final decision.
After -hosting the University of
Rochester yesterday afternoon,
the Canisius Griffins this afternoon at 3:30 p.m. in the Clark
Gym courts. Tomorrow afternoon
will be another home contest
against the Purple Eagles of
Niagara.

of Hot Dogs

Across from

3248 "MAIN

Hayes Hall
ST. at Heath

The State University of Buffalo
lost its second meet of the early
season Saturday afternoon to a
host Brockport team by a 101-44

shellacking.
The only bright spot

u

MAY 10,11,12
INDOORS

AT

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opposite WBEN-TV Tower

Competing for $6,000 Prizes
John Newcombe Nicki Pilic
Pierre Barthes
Tony Roche
Roger Taylor
Dennis Ralston
Butch Buchholz
Cliff Drysdale
May 10 at 7:30 P.M.
lay 11 at 2 P.M. &amp; 7:30 P.M.
ly, May 12 at 2 P.M.
'eserved Sections $5-$3-$2
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For best choice of
send self addressed stamped envelope
ji check or money
order to Buffalo Festival
Statler Hilton Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y. 14202.
Specify which tournament you wish to attend.
s?,e at Buff
Festival Ticket Office, Hotel Statler-Hilton:
nms
2050 Elmwood Avenue; U. of B.
Norton Hall;
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in the
whole afternoon for the Bulls
was the fact that Larry Naukam
was a double winner, taking a
Paul Lang, Tom Rectenwald and first place in the 440-yard interRich Barbara combined to hold mediate hurdles and the 120-yard
ECTI to only five hits. The hard high hurdles.
throwing Lang was overpowering
Speedster A1 Brown of UB took
in his four inning stint, giving a first place in the 220-yard run.
up but three hits while striking Mel Spellman took first place
in
out six. Lang also contributed the shot put with a hurl of 44
a 400 foot triple which hit the
feet 3 inches. Mike Watson, the
base of the fence in dead center Bulls’ pole vaulter, won in that
field.
event with a leap of 12 feet.
The only first place for the
Win for Rectenwald
visiting Blue and White came in
Rectenwald came on in the the Javelin throw when former
fifth inning to pitch three hit- footballer Mike Rissell hurled the
Iss innings of relief and chalked spear 166 feet 6% inches.
The Bull track team holds its
up tjie win. The victory was RecArnold Minkoff
tenwald's third in his two year home opener this afternoon in a named captain of the 1968
track
varsity career. He has yet to lose. tri-conference meet against the team.
For ECTI, shortstop Larry BarCanisius Griffins and the Erie
County Technical Institute
reca and centerfielder Bob RobDearlove, Phil Fed erica, last
Knights in the Rotary Field track.
bins were the individual standyear’s Most Valuable
Trackman
outs. Barreca played a good deAccording to head coach EmMike Alspaugh, Neal Mills, 880fensive game and chipped in ery Fisher, this year’s team looks yard
record holder Tony Nicowith a double. Robbins also lookto be the strongest in many a
tera and Bill Matthews represent
year. The Sprinters consist of
ed good as he singled home a run
the Bulls in the distant runs.
and made a spectacular over the team captain Arnie Minkoff, reshoulder catch in the seventh cord holder Al Brown, and Indoor
Record holder Larry Naukam
inning to rob Ken Rutkowski of Track's Most Valuable Trackman
heads a fine hurdling corps as
extra bases. The Bulls win over Hugh Green. Artie Dearlove
does senior shotputter Mel Spelthe Kats gives the team a 5-2-1 teams up with these three sprintman in the field events. The
overall record while ECTI’s mark ers in the 440-yard relay and
freshman team is also very proforms what seems to be the
dropped to 0-2.
mising and there are high hopes
state’s fastest relay team, a team
for a good season.
which has already broken the
Baseball notes
For a
University relay team record in is sport’s spectator, a track meet
Tuesday’s game against ECTI practice.
answer to a three ring
was probably the last the Bulls
circus. Something is always hapThe
middle
distance
and
dispening and the price is just right
will play with the Kats. “I don’t
think we’ll schedule ECTI next tance runners are in good shape.
—its free.
season,” said Head coach Bill
Monfcarsh after the game. The
reason is simple, ECTI is not in
the Bulls’ class, and the contests
and
between th two clubs are neither
competitive nor beneficial to the
MUSICAL
State University of Buffalo baseball program. Although the Bulls
finished with a 16-1 record last
998 BROADWAY•&amp;
season, their failure to get an
BOULEVARD MALL
NCAA major tournament bid was
attributed largely to the fact that
the Bulls scored many of their
wins over the lesser teams . .
Our Lowest Prices! Department-Wide Sale!
The Bulls took a doubleheader from Canisius Thursday
afternoon, 4-0 and 9-1—-they also
look a sweep of Niagara Community College in two games Saturday afternoon on identical 7-2
scores to raise their regular record to 6-0 and their overall
record to 9-2-1.

-The Handsome Eight-—

Rolf

■

ii

'

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I 1

ft-f

f|PP Annual Clearance!
SHEET MUSIC

/0 Ur t

MUSIC BOOKS

�Pag* Tan

The Spectrum

Tuesday, April 23, 1968

�Tuesday, April

CLASS
with case. Excellent
negotiable. 897-2793.

FOR SALE

1968

442 yellow,

Pag* Eleven

The Spectrum

23, 1968

black vinyl top, fully

5:00 and 7:00.
1960 AUSTIN MEALY SPRINTE —good

between

shape, clean, two new tires, new battery. 884-5357.
1963 SUPER 88 OLDSMOBILE
power
steering, power brakes, new battery,
new brakes. $400. 836-7164, Rich.
1961 CHRYSLER NEWPORT—full power,
new shocks and brakes, best offer.
Call 886-2256.
1966 HONDA S-90, only 2000 miles, excellent condition, 2 helmets. $225.
Call 837-5763.
HONDA. S-90 MOTORCYCLE, white. 8
months old, 1000 miles, 2 helmets,
shieitd, luggage rack, $300. 837-8406.
MOTORCYCLE HELMET —Bell 3/4 . Ex
cellent condition. Could use paint.
873-8889, Joe.
HARMONY ELECTRIC GUITAR, single
pickup, one year old, excellent condition, $55. Ampeg. Amplifier, excellent
condition, $150. Shure microphone, one
month old, $25, used once. TF 4-9909.
MARTIN FOLK GUITAR, model 00-18
.

—

Bible Truth
CHRIST'S ATONEING BLOOD
“Unto him that loved us, and
washed us from our sins In His
own blood.”
—Rev. 1:5
"For it is the blood that maketh
an atonement for the soul.”
Lev. 17:11
—

GUITAR

condition. Price

12-string folk, inexpensive,
good for beginner, case included.
—

EUROPE—for sale,

London/Brussels,

one way. jet ticket,
early July, $132.

2^1109 after 6 PM.
1964 CORVAIR MONZA.
tires, battery, brakes.

f

sell this week. 837-6529.
SUBLET
SUBLET 4-bedroom house, June-August,
10-minute ride from campus. Cheap.

831-3950.

[
on

APT.

7-ROOM

il

Minnesota

available

available near campus. Call days,
877-1600 Ext. 790, evenings, 832-5491.

fur-

nished for three, 5 blocks from caminc. utilities, call 837-5763
after 11.
SUMMER SUBLET: 7 rooms, Fillmore &amp;
completely furnished.
Wakefield,
Available June 1. Call 836-3685.
FURNISHED house to sublet for summer. 10 min. walk to campus. 831pus, $130

2255. 831-2274.

apartment, nicely furnished,
available May 25-Sept. 1. Suitable for
2 or 3. Reasonable rent. 837-9652, evenings.
TWO-bedroom apartment, furnished, to
sub let for June, July, August. 3 minutes from campus. 838-2274 anytime.
5-ROOM

APARTMENTS FOR RENT
SPACIOUS 4-bedroom flat for 3 months
summer occupancy. Quiet, residential
area. Electric kitchen, sunporch. Fully
furnished. 10-minute walk to U.B. campus. Unbelievable! Call Andy, 833-9234.

call 831-3610

Craft. Shorts, Waterfront, Handcraft

dance, drama). Women age 21
or over: for general cabin counselors,
women 19 or over, and registered nurse.

(music,

Franklin

St., Buffalo.

NY 14202.

Boy Scout Executive positions will be
held on April! 25 and 26 in Norton Hall,
Main Floor. Full-time challenging worthwhile work with variety and purpose.
Recent college graduate. Scouting experience helpful. Good salary and benefits. Additional information can be obtained by contacting Mr. Edwin Tyler
(831-4414), University Placement and

WANTED, roommates for the summer.
Apt. on Delaware-Avery Ave. Call 874-

1976.

roommate for summer. Own
large furnished apartment. 7room
min. walk from campus. Patti. 831-3193,
Barbara, 831-3175.
TWO OR THREE pleasant female electees looking for shelter from the
streets next year, call 831-4095 to share
apt.
FEMALE

APARTMENTS WANTED
2-3 BEDROOM apartment for 9/68. Willing to rent for summer too. Within
walking distance to campus. 831-2575.

3 GIRLS looking for three-Ledroom apartment for next year. Call 831-2210,
ask for Judy or Susan.

Service.

Career Guidance

2-BEDROOM
campus.

apartment wanted near
June or Septem-

To occupy

3-4 GIRLS seeking apartment for September, 1968, in UB area. Call 8313788 or 831-3897.
WANTED
WESTERN

NEW YORK Y.W.C.A. Camp
has openings for program coordinators. Rll camp programs, Nature, Camp

684-8383.

STEPHEN

U.W.)

249-8182.
C.T.

—

worry in French!

Pam (from
New York Area Code 212
Friends please relay message.
GREENE —Call

In

—

Haven’t I seen you some place
Welcome home again. M E.

before?

MISCELLANEOUS
TYPING—25c

Five

per page; dittos,
mcampus.

minutes fro

35c each.
Call 834-

8922.
JOB: Great Pay

—

one of Amer-

ica's oldest, finest camps; for boys
(9-10) counselors needed for swimming,

live in Williamsville home as
mother's helper. 634-2965.

field sports, tennis, archery, riflery, gymnastics. No experience necessary. Call
Jerry any evening at 837-7058.
Cigarette lighter, Harriman liLOST
brary, Tuesday. April 2. Sentimental
value. Reward. Please call Barb, NF 42998.

COLLEGE students, summer work available, no experience necessary. We
will train
must be very neat. 19
years or older. Could develop, into fu-

CRUISE
7 days on S.S.
Independence. Cruises leave July 5,
Aug. 2, 23. $198. Applications in 320
Norton Tues. or Wed. 2-4 pm.

—

GIRL to

CARIBBEAN

—

Legal action taken by student
gov't at University of California
BERKELEY, Calif. (CPS)— Association and allowed them to
The University of California vote in a campus election.
student government has
The ASUC Senate voted to bevoted to begin legal action gin legal proceedings after three
months of negotiations with the
against the Berkeley adminisASUC President
tration in an effort to regain administration.complained
Dick Beahrs
that the
control of student funds.
administration, “is not taking our

WED., APRIL 24th

SAVE BETWEEN $20 $40 by not Shipping
Your Clothes Home!
a
CQ
—

free STORAGE

Chancellor Roger Heyns stripped the Student Senate of the
Associated students, University of
California (ASUC) of financial
authoritiy last fall after a student

election was held in violation of
administration rules barring graduate students from ASUC elections. The ASUC recognized graduate students as members of the

KENSINGTON
STORE

FOR YOUR WINTER CLOTHES

LIQUOR

Why go through the BOTHER and EXPENSE of drag-

winter clothes home and back again?
y° ur clothes cleaned and stored for
die PRICE OF THE CLEANING ALONE.
Big 4 will pick up your clothes at your dorm, clean and
store them in our vault and deliver them when you
want in the fall.
ging yrvar

4 CLEANERS

3192 BAILEY AVE.
corner of Stockbridge

Discounts on liquors (only)

efforts at negotiation seriously.
The law suit will make them take
them seriously.”

Administration officials say

they need more time to study the
ASUC’s demand that financial authority be reinstated.

Since last fall, authority and
supervision over the Student Union Complex has been in the
hands of the Union Program and
Facilities Board (UPFB), a body

where students are outnumbered

by faculty members and adminis-

trators. The students have refused to particpate in UPFB pax
ceedings.

to students and faculty

upon presentation of I.D.’s

Fraternities, Sororities and
all Social Groups
OPEN DAILY
10:30 ON

9 A M. 10 P.M.
SATURDAYS
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Crest

FREE FAST DELIVERY

832-0585

UNIVERSITY PLA7A

Free Campus Pickup and Delivery

Every Day Just Call

.col

PERSONAL

CAMP

men looking for summer
work with moving and storage firm.
Applications now being accepted. Excellent pay. Located next to U.B. Interim
Campus. Phone Williams-Bekins,
8355414, for interviews.
AMBITIOUS

—

ber. Call Carol, 831-2061.

ture permanent ob, following your
lege career. Phone

CC Now you’ll learn to
avec moi . . . S.F.L.

BOY SCOUT EXECUTIVE Interviews for

Eugene McCarthy
CHOICE '68

U

female roommates to
share apt. in NYC this summer. Call
Judi, 831-3968 or Gerri, 831-3973.
OR TWO

—

APARTMENT FOR SUMMER —fully

For quick action

ROOMMATES WANTED
ONE

A Constructive Vote Against Poverty and the War

BIG

VI

June 1-Sept. 1. Call Laura, 831-3066,
Jane, 831-2166.
IMMER STUDENTS. 3 bed-study room;

TT

4 speed, new
$350.00. Must

I

TR 5-5360

OCs,
lege
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Mil-Pine Plaza, N, Falls, N. Y

�Tuesday, April 23, 1968

Th* Spectrum

Pag* Tw*lv*

Defense spokesman fired
LONDON (UPD—Conservative party lead-

er Edward Heath fired the party’s defense
spokesman, Enoch Powell, less than 36
hours after Powell made a “keep Britain

Heath said he told Powell “he should

no longer be invited to attend the shadow

cabinet.”
“I consider the speech he made . . .
yesterday to have been racialist in tone
and liable to exacerbate racial tensions,”
Heath said. “The Conservative party is
utterly opposed to racialism and discrimination of a racial or religious kind. The
words and actions of the party and its
leaders must be directed to this end.”
Powell had been one of Heath’s closest
advisors. As defense spokesman, he was
virtually certain of a cabinet post should
the Conservatives win the next general
elections. His removal from the shadow
cabinet relegates him to a low status in
the party hierarchy.
Heath said deputy opposition leader
Reginald Maudling will take over Powell’s
post as shadow defense minister. In British politics, the opposition parly names a

shadow cabinet to better organize criticism of the party in power.

End to immigration

In his peech, Powell called for an end to

subjects and attacked the Labor governmen’s civil rights bill which comes up for
debate in the House of Commons early
this week.

Powell suggested colored persons already living in Britain chould be encouraged by financial grants to go back to

their home countries.
He said allowing an annual inflow of
about 50,000 colored edpendents is like
“watching a nation busily engaged in
heaping up its own funeral pyre.”
Powell’s speech brought a wave of re-

action from immigrant associations and
both major parties and threatened a
further split in the Conservative party
on the race issue.
Britain now has slightly more than 1
million colored residents, about two per
cent of the population. Most of them
have come into Britain during the past
15 years.

r
•

•

•

Ion don
Washington

—UPI Telephoto

Two more

refuoees

seoul

*

compiled

from our wire services by Madeline Levine

A South Vietnamese paratrooper leads

two blind Montagnard children to an
evacuation helicopter south of Khe Sanh
during "Operation Pegasus" earlier this
month.

U.S. optimistic about talks
WASHINGTON (UPD—Under Secretary of

State Nicholas DeB. Katzenbach expressed

confidence early this week that the impasse over a site for preliminary Vietnam peace talks “will be solved.” Other
State Department officials however questioned Hanoi’s sincerity.
Speaking on the record, State Department officials said the failure of Hanoi
recently to use private diplomatic channels, rather than public broadcasts, to
communicate its responses to American
proposals on a site for talks cast doubt
on the Communists’ claim they are willing
to establish contact.
Katzenbach, in an interview broadcast
by the student radio station at Harvard
University, said of the impasse; “I think
it will be solved; I can’t predict on the
time, I suppose it really depends on how
much one wants to talk as to how many
different places one can put forward in
suggesting sites.”

Secret diplomacy

—UPI

Cablephoto

A crew member of the USS Pueblo, ap-

Dear

Mr. President

or injured, lies on a bed
as he allegedly signs his captain's open
letter to President Johnson, confessing

parently sick
.

spy activities.

The Under Secretary also strongly
hinted that more than a year ago the administration, in secret diplomacy, offered
the partial bombing pause that President
Johnson announced March 31, and that
was followed by Hanoi’s first public expression of a willingness to meet American representatives to talk over the conditions of peace negotiations.
“Proposals of this kind have been made
by various third parties from time to
time to Hanoi and there’s never been a
positive response on any of them until
this last response, which sounded positive
and I hope it is,” Katzenbach said.

Defense Secretary Clark M. Clifford
shared Katzenbach’s optimism that talks
could begin once propaganda campaigns
about selecting a site had run their course.
Nobel Peace Prize winner Lester Pearson urged the United States and its allies to avoid “putting obstacles in the
path of peace talks” but he blamed NoAV
Vietnam as much as the United States
for the haggling over a site.
Pearson also said in an interview that
Canada would be willing to provide
troops to police a Vietnam peace settlement.

Hanoi speaks

In its latest broadcast of an editorial
in the official Hanoi government newspaper, North Vietnam raised the same
charge, a lack of seriousness in expressed
willingness to meet, that State Department
officials raised against North Vietnam
The editorial said the American public
“now demands that the U.S. government
show its goodwill by stopping hindering
the contacts and accepting either Phnom
Penh or Warsaw as a place for contacts."
Those were the two sites earlier suggested
by the North Vietnamese.
A new objection was raised here to
Warsaw as a site. The issue of antiSemitism in Poland is said to be growing
in the dispute between Communist f ac'
tions for the leadership of Poland,
Anti-Semitism in Poland could fore 6
the United States to exclude from
military and diplomatic team to the miss
any aide of Jewish background, it was
said here.

TV. Korean attacks to continue
SEOUL (UPD—A leading expert on North
Korean affairs said early this week that
Communist armies will continue to stage
provocations along the truce lines in coming months and their main target will be
American troops.

The prediction came from Han Jae-duk,
who had served as the editor of the Minju
Chosun, the official newspaper of the
North Korean government. He defected to
South Korea by way of Japan in 1959.
The official newspaper of the North
Korean Communist aprty, Rodong Shinmoon, charged that the summit meeting
between President Johnson and President
Park Chung Hee were “talks for war from
beginning to end.”
Rodong Shinmoon said the JohnsonPark meeting in Hawaii “revealed to the
world the fact that the U.S. imperialists
are rushing headlong on the road to provocation of a new war in our conutry.”

States motives

Han said the North Koreans have several motives for staging such attacks on
American troops. Han said the main North
Korean purpose was to test U.S. reactions
and see how firm the United States would
stand against the Communists.
“The U.S. restraint shown in the case of
the Pueblo might have led the North Koreans to commit more provocations,” Han
said. He said the North Koreans believe
that only if the United States withdraws
from South Korea can the Communists
achieve military conquest of the South.
“The North Koreans believe that they
have military superiority over the South
and that they can take over the southern
half militarily if the United States does
not stand in their way,” Han said.
“Accordingly, they want to test the
United States with more provocations so
that they can be sure of what the Americans would do in case of their fullscale
thrust.”

-UPI

T«l«pnoto

0
I
Retirement pidnsr

U

-•

*

President Johnson and former President
Eisenhower walk towards private conference in California last week.

*«

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                    <text>The Spectrum 0:
,'#ol.

rf

&lt;!

f

T

W

r

-

-

-v

1' 1968

UNIVERSITY
ARCmW£9Vpril

State University of New York at Buffalo

18, No. 48

r*

Cm

19. 1968

eyerson finally approves 'wet campus
Drinking allowed in Norton, dorms
Alcoholic beverages are now permitted in Norton Hall,
the resident halls and the Faculty Club.
Announcement of the ‘wet campus’ policy has been
anticipated since the Council of the State University of Buffalo unanimously approved it in November.
President Martin Meyerson has delayed since March his
approval of the regulations presented by the Committee on
Alcoholic Beverages.

w-

Immediate action was not
possible until FSA lawyers
confirmed that the new policy would not “jeopardize application for a liquor license,”
Presidential Assistant Robert
O’Neil explained. It was a
“busy time of the year” when
many administrators were involved in next year’s budget
planning, he said.

Jubilant students receive results
of election Tuesday night in the
foreground are, left to right,
Tracy Cottone, Rick Schwab and
Penny Bergman of the Burgher

.

VICIOry

Party.

2200 turn

ou

Burgher Party elected;
voters cross party lines
The Burgher Party was swept into office by 2242 students who voted in the Student Association elections Monday
and Tuesday. Richard Schwab, Penny Bergman and Tracy
Cottone were elected president, first vice president and second vice president respectively.
Jairo Estrada, a Student New
Action Party candidate, was elected treasurer of the polity.

In addition to the officer positions, seven coordinator positions
were also filled by the election.
There was no sweep by any
of the parties that offered candidates for these positions, resulting in a mixed Coordinating
Council.

The new Student Services Coordinator is Barbara Emils on who
ran with the Initiative Party.
Miss Emilson will be joined on
the Coordinating Council by fellow successful IN Party
oandidates Nancy Coleman and
Paul
Hollander. Miss Coleman is the
New Student Affairs Coordinator
and Mr. Hollander will assume
the post of International
Affairs
Coordinator,

The Academic Affairs Coordinator is Harry Klein, the SNAP

candidate.
Another successful
candidate from that party was
Ellen Price, who is the new NSA
Coordinator.
The position of Public Relations Coordinator was won by Ted
Beringer of the Progressive-Action party. The final coordinator
position, Student Rights, will be
assumed by Fred Hollander, also
of Pro-Act.
The Elections Committee of the
Student Senate was chaired by
George Heymann and Robert
Kott. According to Mr. Kott, the
turnout for this year’s election
was below that of the previous
year. “Over 3000 students voted
in the elections last year, compared with slightly over 2200 this
year,” he said.

1968, but he is expected to maintain the representation of students, faculty and student personnel.
The Review Board will meet at
the end of April to consider extension of the liquor policy to
other areas of the campus. Pres-

ently, the campus buildings other

than the union and residence
halls are “dry.”
Faculty Student Association
lawyers are presently researching
the possibility of applying for a
liquor license to the State Liquor
Authority.
Possibilities include purchasing
a license which allows the sale

of beer in the rathskeller and

liquor in the Tiffin Room and the
Faculty Club,
Dr. Anthony Lorrenzetti, Dean

of Students, said that attorneys

predict it may take “six months
w" Please turn to Page 6

Editorship
Applications for the editorship of The Spectrum
will be taken until April 20.

Alcoholic beverages will be allowed only in “Norton Hall and
in the residence halls,” Dr. Richard A. Siggelkow, vice-president
for student affairs, announced.
Regulations were determined
by the Norton Hall House Committee and the individual residence house councils.

Application forms are available at The Spectrum
office. Forms should be accompanied by a letter
stating qualifications, previous experience and reasons for desiring the position.

The Spectrum editorial board will interview
candidates at a later date.

Rules for Norton

Address letters of application tos. The Editor,
The Spectrum, 355 Norton Hall, SUNY at Buffalo,
14220.

The rules for the dormitories
outline the areas where alcohol
may be consumed. Violations will
be referred to the Inter-Residence

Judiciary.

In Norton Hall, individual students will not be allowed to
“bring their own” and drink anywhere within the student union.
Requests to serve alcoholic beverages at any function must be
made one week in advance. The
organization requests this permission of the House Committee.
These rules will be altered
when the Faculty Student Association purchases a license to
sell alcoholic beverages in Norton Hall.
Violators in Norton will be referred to the “appropriate authorities by the House Committee,”
chairman Philip Henry said. All
state and local laws concerning
alcoholic beverages will be in
effect at all times.
Directors of the Faculty Club
will set their own rules.

Review Board
The Committee on Alcoholic
Beverages, which drafted the regulations for liquor on campus,
will now serve as an Alcoholic
Review Board “pro tem.” President Meyerson will appoint a
new board before December,

Election returns
president

M?*
435

!?) ck

Sehwab
Burgher Parly
Steve Rappoport
SNAP
329 Richard Miller
Pro-Act
206 Bruce Marsh
New Campus All.

FIRST VICE-PRESIDENT
!231 Penny Bergman
Burgher Parly
d/5 Ken Becker
snap
269 Daryl Rosenfeld
Pro-Act
145 Richard Klyczek. New Campus
All.
SECOND VICE-PRESIDENT
Cotlone
Burgher Party
teue “"stein
SNAP
210 | U
S Beck
New
Campus
Alliance
!
isn
n
180 Robert
Slkorski
Pro-Act

*2}! I™*

TREASURER
924 Jairo Estrada
650 Randall Eng
153 C. Wesley Sloan, New

SNAP
Pro-Act

ACADEMIC AFFAIRS

1019 Harry Klein
617 Ron Buccelli

SNAP
Pro-Act

Campus All.

STUDENT SERVICES
910 Barbara Emllson
IN Party
501 Stephie Sacks
SNAP
Louis
472
Post
Pro-Act

NEW STUDENT AFFAIRS
807 Nancy Coleman
IN Party
696 Steve Halpern .
SNAP
308 Terry Weaver
Pro-Act
INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS
935 Paul Hollander
IN Party
430 Dave Wachtel
SNAP
313 Jan Guertsen
Pro-Act
167 Gwendy Bernhardt. New Cam. All.

PUBLIC RELATIONS
726 Ted Beringer
Pro-Act
SNAP
637 Leslie Green
330 Randy Brinson New Campus All.

958

STUDENT RIGHTS

Fred Hollander
466 Dave Clowes
187 Lloyd Sokolow

774

Pro-Act
SNAP

Independent

NSA

Ellen Price
478 Steve Sickler
401 Larry Plvnlck

314 Jori Sherman

SNAP
New Campus All.
Independent

Pro-Act

—Tanzman

Educated
mouse

"Send a mouse to college for 27
cents" is the theme of Alpha
Epsilon Pi's "Drive Out Cancer"
campaign. The Fraternity col-

lected from students Monday
and Tuesday, and are downtown today. Story on page 15.

�Th

P»9» Two

•

Friday, April 19, 1968

Spectrum

Experts see Kennedy
Cleaver to speak on black liberation as victor in primary

GSA lecture

Tin

by Jack W. Germond

da&gt;

Gannett News Service

Clea
ard

INDIANAPOLIS
Sen. Robert
F. Kennedy is trying to make the
May 7 Indiana primary do for
him what the West Virginia primary did for his brother eight
years ago. And the odds are better than even that he will succeed.
—

the
speei

mer
our

In 1960 John F. Kennedy decisively defeated Hubert H. Humphrey in West Virginia, thereby
establishing that a Roman Catho-

will
Po\
can

lic Presidential candidate could
indeed win in a predominately
Protestant state.

Tui

full-'

struggle for black
America,” will speak
..

on “The
Black Liberation Movement in
America.” Mr, Cleaver is a staff
writer for Ramparts and Minister
of Information for the Black
Panther Party of California.
“What the New Left Wants”
will be the topic of Carl Oglesby’s
lecture Wednesday.
Mr. Oglesby, a past president
of Students for a Democratic So-

Howard Zinn

Carl Oglesby

to speak at

ciety, has been a resident scholar
at Antioch and a resident fellow
at Dartmouth. He has authored

Dr. Zinn recently returned from
North Vietnam where he was instrumental in securing the release of several American prisoners of war.

April 24

articles that

several

have ap-

peared in The Nation, Saturday

Review and Commonweal, and is
the co-author of Containment and

The author of many articles,
books and esays, Dr. Zinn was a
Fellow at the Harvard University Center for East Asian Studies and the director of the NonWestern Studies Program at Atlanta University.

Change.

The Killing
Conference Theater

GSA Forum April 25

addresses University community

Professor Howard Zinn, professor of government at Boston
University, will speak Thursday
on “American Foreign Policy and
Vietnam.”

VISIT

NEWEST

METRO

Thurt., Fri., Sat.
12:00, 1:45, 3:30
5:15, 7:00, 8:45
and 10:30 on Fri. &amp; Sat.

BUFFALO'S

“theatre

10

oipsorrs

opening

TOWNE

IONITE!

Today Robert Kennedy is trying to prove that he can win in
a relatively conservative state
and, jimultaneously, deal a fatal
blow to tbe Presidential aspirations of Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy,
the only other announced candi-

date for the Democratic nomination.
The situation here is somewhat
complicated, however, by the fact
that the ballot also will carry the
name of the state’s popular governor, Roger D. Branigin, who is
running as a favorite son in the
hope of holding Indiana’s 63 votes
uncommitted until the nominating convention.
The official line here, and one

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that Sen. Kennedy and his managers are peddling vigorously, is
that Gov. Branigin is a clear
favorite to win and that Kennedy
will have done well if he manages to outpoll Sen. McCarthy.
In fact, however, Democratic
professionals here have been telling Sen. Kennedy privately that
he has every reason to expect to
win a clear victory himself.
The last public opinion poll to
leak out here showed Gov. Branigin with 44%, Sen. Kennedy
with 42% and Sen. McCarthy a
poor third with 14%. But that
was taken while Gov. Branigin
was running as a stand-in candidate for President Johnson, who
has since withdrawn. And it was
taken before Sen. Kennedy began
his intensive campaigning here.
New surveys are under way
now, and the word being passed
privately to Sen. Kennedy is that
they will show him well ahead
of both the Governor and Sen.
McCarthy.
The New York senator already
has spent four or five days campaigning in the state, and plans
perhaps a dozen more in the less
than a month remaining until the
primary. In addition, he will
flood the state with television
advertising over the last two
weeks.
Sen. McCarthy obviously recognizes Kennedy’s strong (position
here. The Minnesota Democrat
has been deprecating the importance of the Indiana result, while
simultaneously stepping up his
own schedule here in the hope
of making at least a respectable

showing.
The one major, imponderable

I

ROSARY HILL COLLEGE

November

in the situation is Vice President
Humphrey, who is expected to
emerge soon as the principal
opposition to Kennedy for the
nomination. Mr. Humphrey plans
to avoid entering any primaries
himself, but, once he declares
himself, Gov. Branigin may identify his candidacy as a stand-in
for Humphrey.
But the view of the professionals here—at the moment, at least
—is that Sen. Kennedy is likely
to win anyway.

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�Friday, April 19, 1968

The Spectrum

P«fe Three

bargaining topic of meetings
Collective
Dateline news, Apr. 19
The faculty and professional
staff of the State Univer«'tv nf
Buffalo will have the opportunity

WASHINGTON
The racial unrest smouldering in the nation’s
cities could be dangerously escalated if police are allowed to shoot
to kill or maim arsonists and looters, Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark has
warned.
In an indirect clash with Mayor Richard J. Daley of Chicago over
his controversial order to his police force to shoot looters and
arsonists, Clark said that if police “overact” with excessive violence
during civil disorders, it would force more blacks to adopt “terrorist
and guerrilla tactics.”
Although Mayor Daley did not retreat from his hard line, his
statement to the city council was couched in milder terms than
his bitter off-the-cuff criticism of his own police Monday for not
using tougher tactics against rioters.
—

PANMUNJOM, Korea
An American admiral accused North
Korea in an icy confrontation yesterday of committing vicious and
savage acts by staging ambushes that left seven allied soldiers dead
during the past five days.
Stony-faced Maj. Gen. Pak Chung-kuk, a North Korean known
as “frog face” to the Americans, absorbed the brow-beating with his
usual lack'of emotion at a meeting at this Korean truce village.
Navy Rear Adm. John V, Smith made the accusations. Facing
Pak across a table, he protested an Easter Sunday ambush that took
the lives of two American and two South Korean soldiers only 1,000
yards from Panmunjom, the village where the Korean war armistice
was arranged 15 years ago.
BIRMINGHAM, Ala.
Nationwide murder and conspiracy
warrants have been issued for Eric Starve Galt, a mysterious riverboat cook, merchant seaman and bartender accused in the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr..
The FBI charged Galt and his “alleged brother” in a warrant
Wednesday with conspiring to injure King, shot to death by a white
sniper in Memphis, Tenn., April 4. Memphis police later filed a
murder charge against Galt.
The FBI also released a photograph of Galt, 36, described as a
“loner" with a “rural quality" in his voice.
—

—

like to be represented for collective bargaining with the State.
Mr. Richard Lipsitz, vice-president of the Niagara Frontier
Chapter of the American Civil
Liberties Union, will be one of
several speakers who will discuss
collective bargaining outlined in
the Taylor Act, at a special series
of meetings of faculty and staff
today.
Opportunities and alternatives
for collective bargaining will be
discussed at this time.
He will also discuss what he
feels constitutes an appropriate
unit for organizing under the provisions of the Taylor Act. The

function of the N. Y. State Public

Employee Relations Board, which
is obligated under law to make
sure that such decisions are pos-

sible, will be outlinccL
The various bargaining agents
which the staff may choose are:
University Senate, Civil Service
Employee’s Association, (CSEA),
Faculty Association of the State
University of New York (FAS’UNY), American Federation of
Teachers (AFT) and the American
Association of University Professors (AAUP).

Events listed
The meeting, sponsored by the
Executive Committee of the University Faculty Senate, will feature the following events:
An address by Mr. Richard Lipsitz on the “Legal Aspects of the
Taylor Act” at 1 p.m. in Butler

Auditorium, Capen Hail. His address will be followed by remarks
by Francis J. Higgins, counsel to
the Public Employee Relations
Board.

Small discussion groups led by
local neutral resource people,
such as attorneys and industrial
relations specialists will be held
from 2:30-3:30 p.m. in rooms 233,
234, 266, 330, 332, 334, 337 and
344, Norton Hall.
A Coffee Break will be held in
the Fillmore Room of Norton
Hall from 4-5 p.m.
Immediately following the coffee break, a panel discussion with
representatives from the University Senate, CSEA, FASUNY, AFT
and AAUP dealing with the philosophies of their respective organizations, will be held in the
Fillmore Room.

Cross-registration awaits approval
A cross-registration scheme, in the blueprint stage, may
soon give undergraduates at the State University of Buffalo
and the State University College at Buffalo an opportunity
to broaden their educations.

Pending approval by President
Martin Meyerson of this University, and President of State University College, E. K. Fretwell,
the program will be initiated next
semester.

President Meyerson said that
he encourages the program with
State College as well as with other campuses, but participation in
it should be left “to the discretion
of the instructor.”
He added that the matter may
have to be brought up before the

Faculty-Senate.
Six procedural guidelines have
been set up:
During the initial trial period,
a maximum of 200 students from
•

each institution should be permitted in the program. Bach stu-

dent should cross-register in only
one course per semester; no more
than two students could crossregister in any one course.
Students of the campus on
which the course is offered should
have precedence in enrollment.
On this campus, cross-registration
for the fall semester could be
accomplished in late April after
the close of pre-registration,
o Ample information concerning
course, prerequisites, instructors
and schedules should be available
at both institutions well in advance of the start of cross-registration. It is recommended that
a liaison officer on each campus
should be designated to assume
general responsibility over the
•

cross-registration program.

Seniors barred
Because of the contrasting calendars, seniors in their final semester should not be permitted to
•

cross-register.

Instructors should assign regular letter grades to cross-registered students. Students should,
however, have the option to elect
course on a pass-fail basis.
In that case, administrative procedures should be developed to
transform letter grades into their
•

pass-fail equivalents.

Formal statements should be
available for transmittal to draft
boards and to the Board of Regents, should questions arise
about the full-time status of
cross-registered students. (Questions might, for example, be
raised about a cross-registered
student’s continuing eligil ibility
for a Scholar Incentive Awa ard).
•

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���Friday, April 19, 1968

The Spectrum

Page Pour

Despotism in Greece

■mm4Ckf AHUVMT

i&amp;d
am**.

ten u

Sunday will mark the first anniversary of the military
junta that has brought the little Mediterranean country to

the height of totalitarianism. Frequent arrests with indefinite detention without charges or trial, exile and deportation, total press censorship and the maltreatment of political
prisoners are all symptoms of the sickness that has permeated
the nation.

«r. t

The regime reacted by arresting hundreds of students
and closing the University of Salonica. A communique, issued
by a group of students who call themselves the Antidictatorial
Student Organization in Greece, states: “No official confirmation of the arrests was made, and the government is trying
to keep the whole matter as secret as possible.”
The arrested students have disappeared. It is known
that torture is being used on political prisoners, and since
there is no official recognition of the arrests, the government feels no responsibility for the physical disappearance
of prisoners.
The people of Greece are in desperate need of aid.
American students should express their concern about the
despotic conditions that plague the Greek citizenry. The
United States should no longer do business in any way with
the military regime, and the United Nations should begin
to apply international pressure to regain a democratic state
in Greece.

History has shown that it is no easy task to replace a
military regime with a democratic government. The people
of Greece are making a valiant and determined effort. No
freedom-loving man can ignore that effort.

'/

will go anywhere, at any time
’

from linen rags

sugar
harry loltzclatO

The dizzying pace of national politics the past
two weeks has resulted in an apocryphal sigh from
a sagacious observer last Friday. And no one was
sure whether the full eclipse of the moon visible
to North America April 12 was a wink of understanding, or a wince; of pain.
A medieval myth calls the orange-shadowed
moon in a full eclipse a “bloody moon,” a symbol
of foreboding and death. Legend has it that the
last time a full lunar eclipse occurred in the Western world on Good Friday the Black Plague descended upon Europe. This time the mystics of the
world are having a heyday.
Once again, the eclipse occurred on Good (also
known as “Black”) Friday. Its fullness was visible
only to a country ravaged the preceding week by
the fires of civil disorders, in the wake of assasination and funeral of the country’s foremost black
leader.

Whatever the death-dealing plague is that
threatens us is a question for presidential candidates and other mystics to debate. But first, let us
get some facts straight:
LBJ’s abdication increased the possibility for
Newly elected officers and coordinators will take office escalation,
as well as de-escalation. It was not denext week, and the event will mark the beginning of a new cided, upon a year ago, as White House sources have
replaced
is
being
era in student government. The Senate
tried to hint, but was clearly decided upon after
the McCarthy showlhg in New Hampshire and the
by a Coordinating Council and a Polity.
entrance of Kennedy into the race; it was also
Perhaps the greatest problem the new officers will face made before the predicted McCarthy landslide in
will be a procedural one. There exists no model for the Wisconsin.
LBJ’s “peace bid” is clearly, for the time
polity system; we must rely on sound interpretation and the being, a ruse and a time-killer. It has killed some
discretion of the Council.
time, but it also continues to kill North Vietnamese,
and fools no one. Three hours after the announced
We firmly believe that those elected are equal to the “cessation” of bombing, there was a significant
increase in bombing levels in the North below the
task. Only time, however, can confirm those beliefs.
not to
20th parallel, and that has continued
Some of the major problems that will face students next mention the strikes all along the Laotian border
above the Pentagon’s new line of demarcation.
year are carry-overs from this year. Financial matters, acaHow can Lyndon be taken seriously when his oftdemic affairs, student right and student involvement will all quoted line about meeting “at any time, anyplace”
be items high on the Agenda.
to talk peace is followed by a rejection of Hanoi’s
offer of a site in neutral Cambodia, and coupled
One thing is certain; Four officers and eight coordinators witih the absurd offer of a site in Indonesia, where
can not solve all of the problems alone. They will need a more than a million “communists” have been murdered?
great deal of student support and student help.
The attitude of the Saigon regime, the most
powerful since Diem thanks to US, is against a
We look forward to a successful year. Increased particicoalition government, against substantive peace
pation by all students can help assure that success.
talks, and against even the most peripheral aspects
of the “democracy” we are supposed to be figihting
to save. The Vietnam War is clearly an instance
of a pawn directing the move? of its king in a
losing game of chess.
The nation’s first eruption of a hot spring
of the one
After five months in the bureaucratic workings, the in the cities, following the assassination
have accomplished a nonblack
man
who
could
formulated
the
by
rules for drinking on campus have been
violent revolution, signaled the doom of so-called
Committee on Alcoholic Beverages. The rules, accepted by Negro leadership groups like the NAACP and the
President Meyerson, allow drinking in the residence halls Urban League. Even members of these groups were
saying so. As a dejected silk-suited Roy Wilkins
and the Union only.
said in a television panel discussion after the King
Of course it is good to see the fruits of the Committee’s murder: “There is nothing that we Negro leaders
to stop young blacks from being
labors. Many students, however, are more interested in the can say or do
violent. The only people who can do something to
of
the
tasting aspects
liquor situation.
stop the violence are the white leaders of this
country.” Or as an equally conservative and frusNow that the Committee has completed the first phase trated Whitney Young said: “It’s about time that
of its work, we assume that efforts will be made to obtain white middle class America got up off their duffs
the liquor licenses at the earliest possible date. We expect an did something, before it is too late.”
Lastly, do not be fooled by the new so-called
that phase to be completed by early 1969.
civil rights bill. It will take three years for the
to go into full effect, but
That drink may be a long time coming, but at least open-housing provisions
the massive police-state anti-riot amendments of
students have enough time to become thoroughly familiar the same bill go into effect fiscal 1968. That is
with the rules.
the wrong kind of action.

New officers, old problems

•

•

—

•

A toast to progress

Readers
writings

•

•

Corrects misconception
To the Editor:
Charles E. Brown, in his letter to the Editor
March 22, is amazed al the sex misconceptions of
his fellow students. I am amazed at his, especially
with regard to the topic of syphilis.
Syphilis may be acquired in two ways, through
intercourse, or congenitally, through invasion of the
placenta to the fetus, during pregnancy.
Congenital syphilis occurs only if the pregnant
mother contracts the disease after the fourth
month of pregnancy. The infant is born with a
generalized rash, saddle deformity of the nose,
sabre shin, liver damage, and there may also be
cardiovascular and neurologic damage. However
this form is treatable by penecillin. This affliction
of the infant is not transmittable genetically and
if the infant lives, his progeny will be normal, not
the six generations of disease as Mr. Brown would
like us to believe. If Mr. Brown doesn’t believe me
on these facts I refer him to Bobbin’s Pathology,
Third Ed. published by Saunders, where he may
read it for himself.
I cannot comment on the remainder of his article for I would not have references to back my
statements. True contraceptives are not infallable,
as Mr. Brown states, but the “pill” has a failure
rate of only 0.2 pregnancies per 100 woman-years
(for a reference point—no contraception 115 pregnancies per 100 woman-years). One might say that’s
a pretty good protection rate. This is from notes
from the State University of Buffalo Pharmacology
Department.

Mr, Brown’s letter reminded me of two frauds
■that occurred last winter—one was about students
taking LSD and staring at the sun causing them

to go blind; the other about girls wearing miniskirts and developing fat thighs. If you’re against
discussing sex openly and publicly, say so. Don’t
throw around incorrect information or unbacked
statistics to scare people into believing your personal beliefs.
Elliott Brender
Sophomore Medical Student
School of Medicine

t

every
The Spectrum is published twice-weekly
Tuesday and Friday
during the regular academic
year at the State University of New York at Buffalo,
3435 Main Street. Buffalo, New York 14214. Offices
are located at 355 Norton Hall. Average Circulation:
—

—

15,000.

Editor-in Chief—MICHAEL L. D’AMICO
Managing Editor—RICHARD R. HAYNES
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The Spectrum is a member of the United
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n

The lastest episode of which we are aware occurred
March 22, when hundreds of Greek students from the
Universities of Athens and Salonica initiated a demonstration protesting the junta and denouncing the “constitution”
proposed by the military regime.

cntmr

JsgSSl

When an American thinks of international problems
today, he is primarily concerned with the war in Vietnam.
This concern, however, has led us to virtually ignore the
deplorable events that, have been going on in another part

»w&lt;w SV-MtfcPP*

of all news dispatches is forbidden
Republication
the express consent of the editor-in-chief. Rights

out

republicaticn of all

other matter herein are

also

of
re-

Second class postage paid at Buffalo. New York.
Editorial policy is determined by the Editor-in-Chier.
Basic advertising rate: $2.75 per column inch. Contract
rates upon request.
.
Telephone: Area Code 716, 831-2210 Editorial
831-3610 Business
,

_

-

-

�Friday, April 19, 1968

Pag* Fiv*

The Sptcfrum

Are you

BELOW OLYMPUS

To the Editor:

By Interlandi

The

In America, the, Bible is the best known, most
read, and highest authority of all literary works.
It is even employed in court to insure truth. This
destroyed by water.

Observing

me worm

The

Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. said: “And I tell

If man decided he values money, power or blind
pride more than the welfare of his fellow man,
there is no meaning in his existence.
People usually “cop out-” saying: “What I do

is insignificant.” Not so. Do you realize the sit-ins
in this country were started by a palmful of frustrated students? What is begun on this campus
could effect this nation’s history as did the sit-ins.

This nation’s illness is aggravated by a lack of
understanding of people as people. We need a
trans-racial-social-economic class enlightenment of
people by people. You start in your own family,
your school, your community, your enviornment.

If you wish to fight, I am ready
I am ready
—er—to begin healing and solving the enigma
facing us. At least, we must try.
Question me.
...

Bruce A. Brice (B2)

Strike makes news
To the Editor:
I just received the following news clipping from
some friends in Switzerland:
Rund 1000 Studenten der staatlichen Universitat
Buffalo traten in einen zweitagigen Streik, der
gegen den Vietnamkrieg gerichtet ist. Am Ausstand
beteiligen sich auch Professoren.
It recently appeared in the Burgdorfer Tagblatt, a small local newspaper in Burgdorf, Switzerland. (Circulation ca. 5000)
(Translation: Approximately 1000 students
of the
State University of New York at Buffalo
held a two
day strike against the war in Vietnam. Professors
also took part in the demonstration.)

The strike may not have ended the war and it
certainly wasn’t given excessive publicity
at home

but this article would

indicate that it did receive

substantial coverage abroad.
th
shot
T ‘f
auer all! Let’s
hope
“

was heard ‘round the world’
so!

”

Alan Zwerner

Aid through education
To the Editor:

The Negro is not asking for much.
He is asking only for equal
opportunity

0 P rt nity
been ffered to relatively
few Negro
Negroes
« in
lew
in th
the past. Higher education can do
°

much to change this situation by educating
the de
N"'° You

Eg".'

“»

«

“SrXS*A

Y? U who agree that closing the
“educational
ga
ls
Way towards
Peaceable settlement of
racial problems, send $10 or
more to the college
or university of
yqur choice. Label your contri
,J
in Uther King Scholarship Fund”
The school
administration will see that it is used
3 Negro obtain
1S Vocational
status —in
iw
1' d mUch to stimulate
subsequent
Mail m your
dollars today!
.,

f.

,

°m

fa^

tSnine

-

•

’

fo^i^ct^^

cSl^S

°

Paul A. Hartman, Professor
Department of Bacteriology
Iowa State University
of Science and Technology

by STEESE

beginnings of these gropings
a pre-LBJ withdrawal conversation in
which it was submitted that if I were really a liberal I should immediately cut my hair, shave, and
go out and start ringing doorbells for the candidate
of my choice—as long as I chose Kennedy or
McCarthy of course.
To do this, a certain great amount of faith is
needed. For example, to say that “The Vietnam
War is a bad thing” would probably be a statement
many people could agree with, for various reasons.
If you rephrase this somewhat to “The Vietnam
War is an evil and criminally stupid act which
could only be perpetrated by a society with the
same characteristics,” you are no longer involved
in responsible dissent, your are now a radical
fringe lunatic.
To me the Kennedy-McCarthy-Johnson-NixonRockefeller-Wallace froo-frah can be viewed as a
fascinating tribal rite. Who gets to wear the ostrich plume, so to speak. A rite which may go far
in deciding the current state of aberration in this
society, and how long it stands, to be sure. But to
assume that the coming election will result in
great and final changes requires a faith I do not
have. It is beyond me to see how a leader can do
more than superficially change the society unless
he changes the people, or gives them what they
want while changing.
I give an alternative explanation of the fervor
of the anti-war groups for your consideration. It
is all right to worry about big problems in this society—The War, The Ghetto Problem, as long as
you do not attempt to suggest that these are but
symptoms of a greater, deeper problem which
may not even be soluable. I would argue that
almost all of us are aware of the enormity of the
problems facing this culture, but fear and impotence force us to deal with something that we
might possibly be able to do something about, for
example the War.
Having come this far I have to discuss the problem I guess. T'.ore are words which give you a

you if this country does not see its poor—if it
lets them remain in their poverty and misery—it will surely go to belli"

Nationally, and finally, we (people living in the
United States of America) have allowed our government to stray away from its basic premise—“for the people.”

.

mundane

came from

To insure the procession of mankind, we must
act now because “later” may not be ours to bargain with.

We’ll have to start “pulling coats.” Run it up
your parents, relatives and friends, instead of
letting them run it down to you. “It” is action.

.

Warning—following column is very murky and
It may be dangerous to

today,

to

.

difficult to understand.

with its Vietnam, racial trouble, African coups
d’etat, Arab-Israeli conflicts, and a numberless
starving population; a superior force (God or gods)
would again question man’s existence. Remember!!!
The fire next time.

A challenge: The formation of a White Student
Association to direct the white student in the fulfillment of his role. To cure the disease a spectrum of ideas from radical to conservative must
be utilized. The greatest difficulty this group will
face is keeping the campus folk “out of their separate bags.” Everyone’s a doctor.

grump

%f&gt;&amp;, ws *06K£i limes

J| f)p
by Linda

Laufer

What woe has befallen me. I’ve been in this strange
country for several weeks and I’m almost as confused as I
was when I first arrived. As a matter of fact, I think I’m
having a nervous breakdown
at least that’s what my psychiatrist says. We’ve been having daily analysis sessions
during which we try to understand each other’s country. It
was at yesterday’s meeting that he decided I was on the
verge of a collapse . . .

taste; estrangement, anonomie, alienation. But as
so frequently seems to happen in an effort to de-

fine these terms they have become depersonalized
to such an extent that they mean nothing. It is
fascinating to consider how many terms concerning
interpersonal relationships are used to which we
can assign only very hazy meanings at best. Love,
hate, affection are used by people as a label for
their own idiosyncratic definitions of these con-

—

cepts.
My personal candidate for ridiculous concept in
offer to help Senator Eugene Mcthis culture is Truth. Or any of the other absolutes
Carthy gain more strength. This
didn’t make too much sense —good, bad, right, wrong. Truth is easier to get
either, since Senator McCarthy a nold of though. Because it becomes evident at a
was ahead in the polls.”
certain point in some people’s adolescence that
“Then, one Sunday evening there is one whole hell of a lot of lying going on
President Johnson pre-empted a around you, and especially to you.
And in the midst of all this it suddenly comes
show to make a speech. He said
that he wouldn’t seek re-election home to you that all these silly damned people are
and that he would stop some of talking about the same set of datum. Which is
enough, quite understandably, to simply drive some
the bombing in North Vietnam.
people back to the fetal stage. Most of us
The rest of the week they kept
are
interrupting all the shows to telebetter prepared though. We realize that the problem
is of enormous magnitude,
vise bulletins concerning develand we have had
it brought home in many clever
opments in Washington and Hanlittle ways what
oi. Why couldn’t they wait for the penalties are for minor deviations from the
the news broadcasts? It didn’t theoretic norm. Being somewhat rational
creatures
make sense.”
it is not too hard to forsee the problems
involved
in radical
As I paused to reflect, my psydeviations or, heroic idea, attacking the
chiatrist shook his head and diagnorms themselves.
nosed: “From your agitated conIn addition to which you know
that you are
dition, I would say your nerves the only one who doesn’t believe in the system
in
are shattered. Television has dis- ,its entirety. I mean the system keeps telling you
turbed your nerve networks.” He so, and even though you have
established that
chuckled at his pun, but I ignored there are no truths, only interpretations, you
are
and
finished
still
a
him
my story.
social being and need people. So you nor“Finally, on the evening of malize yourself as best you can and set
up a fanApril 4, I was enjoying a program
tastically complex filing system inside your
fat
until another of those bulletins
little head to keep truths for the various people
you have to associate with straight.
came on the screen. It said that
Martin Luther King had been asCommunication thus becomes more difficult
as the number of sets of interpretations
sassinated. It didn’t make sense
increases
to me that someone would shoot Two ways of limiting the total exist: have
only
an advocate of non-violence.”
hink
alike
or
limit the number of
’
‘.
different people you try to communicate with.
A pause to reflect.
Reat y&lt; U d n t really have t0
communicate
with
with most! people—just smile and
mumble a lot
That few people seem willing to live with
chaos further complicates the issue. Many people
HONOLULU
President Johnson speaking to several thousand
insist not only that there is truth, good,
Honolulu residents:
and right,
“I hope that the next president of our country will be able to but that it is what they believe, and that only'
Making
them
even less able to bridge interpersonal
come to Hawaii during his term of office solely to discuss the peacecommunication gaps than those who can accept
ful development of Asia and the South Pacific.”
differential interpretation of objective data.
CHICAGO
Comedian Dick Gregory, announcing that he had
called off planned student demonstrations to disrupt te Democratic
Seem to be several answers to the problem
National Convention in Chicago;
Hermitage. Suicide. Or if the
voluntary aspects
“If the mayor Richard C. Daly were as honest as I am, he of those bother you, publicly challenge
the estabwould tell the delegates
the same thing I am telling those who lished moral, ethical or social
order and be expathave planned to come to Chicago to demonstrate against the convennated or murdered. Or forget (if you can)
that
tion ‘Please stay home.’ The city is not safe.”
the problem exists and keep
yourself normalized
RALEIGH, N. C.
State Correction Commissioner V. Lee Bounds
i.e. smile and mumble a lot, and for
God’s sake
after guards at the North Carolina Central Prison killed five
and don t say anything.
wounded 80 prisoners who rioted when a list of their grievances
Comprehendable material will hopefully grace
was
turned down; “I do not yield to inmate demands that I do anything.” this corner next
week.
“Well H.P., what would you
like to know about this nation?”
he asked halfway through our
session.
I had just finished explaining
my country’s political system, so
it was natural that I should inquire: “In this land, everyone
wants to be elected but they keep
refusing the nomination. Can’t
they make up their minds?”
Dodging the question, he asked:
“How did you arrive at such an
observation?”
I explained, “When I first landed here, I became fascinated by
a picture box called a T.V. set.
Originally I attacked it, thinking
it was a one-eyed monster. I was
soon informed of my mistake and
since then, I have watched it day
and night for almost three
weeks.”
I paused to reflect and then
continued: “The first show I saw
was interrupted when Governor
Rockefeller flashed on the screen
to say that he would not run. He
then added that he would run
if he were truly drafted at the
convention. That didn’t make
much sense to me, but I didn’t
bother about it. Then a little
later, Senator Robert Kennedy
declared his candidacy with an

Quotes in

»

5

the news

°

—

—

...

—

*

...

�Pag*

Th

Six

Friday, April 19,

Spectrum

•

Meyerson approves 'wet campus'...
&amp;

Continued from Page 1

1.

to receive such a license.” “Hopefully, the license will go into
year,’

Responsibility is the key word
during the interim period in applying for the license. Dr. Lorrenzetti said that “any abuse of
the rules can jeopardize its at-

tainment.”

d.

Individuals under

18 years

of

erages.

Special authorization for use of al-*

coholic

beverages shall be granted
by Norton House Committee under
the following conditions:

_

available,

3.

a. Alcoholic beverages shall not be
sold.
b.

Methods
beverages
specified.

of

service and alcoholic
to be served must be

„

5

age

cannot be served alcoholiic bev_

2.

Responsibility is vital

c. Supervisor(s) and methods of control must be specified.

Alcoholic beverages shall not be allowed in Norton Hall without special
authorization of Norton House Committee. Such requests must be in

The organization and/or individual
requesting permission for use of alcoholic beverages shall be held responsibile for any damage, breakage
or violation of regulations.
A|coho|ie beV erages other than those
initially specified to Norton House
Committee shall not be brought into

6

Watch out for

the specified area.
Alcoholic beverages shall not be
taken out of the specified area,
The Norton Hall Staff may at any
time confirm that regulations are

Scientific Study Group To Himalayas

SATELLITE TRACKING SYSTEMS
EARTH STATIONS FOR COMSAT
RARE EARTH PHOSPHORS
VIDEO TELEPHONES
MICROWAVE CARRIER SYSTEMS
COLOR TELEVISION
LASER RESEARCH
CABLE TELEVISION
ELECTRONIC SWITCHING EQUIPMENT
FLASHCUBES
MISSILE TRACKING SYSTEMS

Clement Hall
The consumption of
beverages will be permitted in
the individual rooms, in floor lounges,
and in the basement television room. It
will not be permitted in the main floor
public lounges.
—

alcoholic

The consumption of alCooke Hall
coholic beverages will be permitted in
the individual rooms, in the television
lounge, and in the main lounge.
—

Goodyear Hall
The consumption of
alcoholic beverages will be permitted in
the individual rooms, in the upstairs
lounges, in the kitchenettes, in the Chat—

terbox (basement snack bar), and in
the South television lounge when it is
closed to male guests. Consumption
will not be allowed in the downstairs
lounges, except in the preceding case.
Alcoholic beverages will be permitted
in the Goodyear South Conference
Room only if the proposed use is so
indicated when the room is reserved,
the event is approved by the Goodyear
House Council, and the event is registered with the Inter-Residence Council's

Activities

Council.

The consumption of
Macdonald
coholic beverages will be permitted

alin
individual
in
the
television
rooms,
the
room, and in the kitchen. Consumption
will not be permitted in the main
lounge, except upon decision of the
Macdonald
House Council, and will
never be permitted in the study area.
—

ENERGY STORAGE
BLACKBOARD BY WIRE TEACHING SYSTEMS
INTEGRATED CIRCUITS
INCANDESCENT AND FLUORESCENT LAMPS

SEMICONDUCTORS
ELECTROLUMINESCENT DEVICES
TELEVISION PICTURE TUBES
RECEIVING TUBES

The consumption of
Michael Hall
alcoholic beverages will be permitted
in the individual rooms, the third floor
lounge, and in the kitchen. Consumption will not be permitted in the hallways, fourth floor lounge, entrance ways
or on the roof.
—

ELECTRONIC SHIELDS
MISSILE LAUNCH CONTROL SYSTEMS
INDUSTRIAL CONTROL SYSTEMS
DATA TRANSMISSION SYSTEMS

Schoellkopf Hail
The consumption
of alcoholic beverages will be permitted
in the individual rooms and in the
lower area. Consumption will not be
permitted in the main lounge except
on special occasions specified by the
Schoellkopf House Council.
—

AIRPORT LIGHTING

Allenhurst
The consumption of alcoholic beverages will be allowed in the
apartment complexes and in all lounges
except the stereo lounge and the bus
lounge. All alcoholic beverages carried
—

on the bus must be in a bag and unopened.

Tower Hall
The consumption of albeverages will be permitted
coholic
above the main floor only. The consumption of alcoholic beverages will
be permitted in the Tower Private Dining Room only if the proposed use is
so indicated when the room is reserved,
the event is approved by the Tower
House Council, and the event is registered with the Inter-Residence Council's
—

Activities Council.

The regulations governing alcoholic consumption in the Norton Union are:

And you still call us a phone company?
We really don't mind
After all, it wasn’t that long ago that we were just in the telephone business. But
now, because we’re involved in so much more, we need bright college graduates
with practically any kind of degree, whether it’s in Engineering or Commerce.
Ask your placement director about us. The misunderstood phone company at
730 3rd Avenue, N.Y. 10017.

General Telephone &amp; Electronics

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IN

Restauran

U.B. SPECIAL
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of Hot Dogs
Across from Hoyos Hall
3248 MAIN ST. at Heath

the Other Guy.

Study group of 21 students, several research advisors will go on
campln gtour in Nepalese Himalayas for 90 days starting midJanuary 1969, aiming to do research in Earth Science, Biological
and Meteorological fields.
For full information write to organizer, R. Rendle Leathern of
Huckleberry Hill, R.F.D. #1, Lincoln, Mass., or Special Tours and
Travel, Inc., 6 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60602.

Dr. Siggelkow said: “Some people have expressed fear that liberalization on the policy concerning alcoholic beverages could be
construed as an endorsement of
their use by the University. The
change, which is in concert with
other public and private educational institutions, is not to be
considered an official endorsement, approval or encouragement
of drinking by the University.”

The regulations governing alcoholic consumption in the residence halls are:

19M

�Friday, April 19,

Pag* Seven

The Spectrum

1968

SAVE BETWEEN $20 —$40 by not Shipping
Your Clothes Home
N

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BAD YARD VAflilTED CLOTHES

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Why go through the BOTHER and EXPENSE of dragging your winter clothes home and back again?
You can have all your clothes cleaned and stored for
the PRICE OF THE CLEANING ALONE.
Big 4 will pick up your clothes at your dorm, clean and
store them in our vault and deliver them when you
want in the fall.

BIG

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Free Campus Pickup and Delivery

Every Day Just Call

TR 5-5360

Ralph Nader to speak
at convention in Buffalo
controversial book Unsafe at
Any Speed, and dubbed by Newsweek “Everyman’s Self-Appointed
Lobbyist,” will be the guest
speaker at the American Society
of Mechanical Engineers’ (ASME)
Regional Convention held here
today and tomorrow. Mr. Nader
will speak at 8 p.m. tonight in
the Fillmore Room on the topic,
“Engineering the Engineer.”
Free tickets are available at
the Norton Ticket Office.
Working for consumer protection, Mr. Nader was the inspiration for the auto safety legislation passed by Congress last year
over objections from Detroit car
manufacturers. Now acknowledged as a modern-day muckraker, he continues his campaign
for what he calls “the qualitative
reform of the industrial revolution.”

The “lobbyist” has drawn public attention to various consumer
problems ranging from the toohigh price of automobiles to toolow meat content in hot dogs.

A graduate of Harvard Law
School, he denies that his work
is an attempt to threaten private
enterprise or big business. He
says: “It’s just the opposite. It’s

enterprise

economy by

making

the market work better; an attempt to preserve democratic
control of technology by giving
government a role in the decision-making process.”
The two-day conference of
ASwiri members will be hosted
by the State University of Buffalo student chapter. Colleges and
universities will be represented
at the sessions which are scheduled to begin this morning.
Besides Mr. Nader’s address,
the program for the conference
will include presentation of papers, business meetings, a trip
to the Robert Moses Power Plant
in Niagara Falls, and an awards
luncheon.
Dr. F. Karl Wiillenbrock, provost of the Faculty of Engineering and Applied Sciences, will

welcome the group at its opening
session.

MIT is asking

for deferments
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (CPS)
Massachusetts Institute of Technology is asking for occupational
deferments for 800 draft-eligible
graduate teaching and research
assistants.
Dean Irwin Sizer of the MIT
graduate school said the school
will in a few days be sending
letters to the local draft boards
of the 800 men. These 800 are
about half of MIT’s 1600 teaching and research assistants. The
—

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rest are women, foreigners or
already in the second year of
graduate school and thus not

eligible for the draft.
All graduating seniors and
first-year graduate students will

become available for the draft
in June, under a February order
eliminating most student deferments for graduate students.

MIT is the first school to ask
for occupational deferments for
teaching assistants. At a House
subcommittee hearing in March,
Selective Service Director Lewis
B. Hershey did imply that such
deferments are available to teaching assistants.

COMPUTER
DATING WORKS

It Can Work For You.
Write MATCH MAKER, 520 Genesee
Building, Buffalo, for FREE application
and information.

Open a checking account now.
There are two M&amp;T Banks near the campus.
With banking hours that make sense.

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Friday; MO a.m.—300 p,in. and
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Pierced EARRINGS 77*

�To

Friday, April 19, 1968

The Spectrum

Page Eight

comj

LET'S GO

..

.

Socialist Worker Party comes to campus
munity” and to “bring the GI’s

Campaigning for the Socialist
Buch, congressional candidate in Manhattan, speaks today
at 4 p.m. in room 246, Norton
Hall.
Peter

Fred Halstead is a principle
organizer of anti-war demonstrations. Recently he helped plan
the October demonstration at the
Pentagon in Washington.

The party which supports Fred
Halstead for president aims for
“black control of the black com-

Peter Buch served as editor of

Counselling is available

for all transfer students

the Mobilizer, the bulletin of the

IACK RIDING

to End the War in Vietnam. In
heading the news service, he kept
anti-war groups around the country informed of pre-march plans.

Colonial Ridge Stables
9065 Chestnut Ridge Rd., Middleport, N.Y.

The Socialist Workers Party is
“an anti-war alternative to both
the Republican and Democratic
parties,” Mr. Buch said. He predicted that the party will be
placed on the ballot of nearly 30
states, including New York.
Presidential candidate Fred
Halstead is on the ballot of Choice

ROUTE 77

Transfer students who are having trouble adjusting to larger
classes, longer, more difficult
assignments, complex exams, new
dating situations, increased responsibility, changing vocational
plans, or other personal problems
are invited to attend one of these
sessions. The Counseling Center
is planning four sessions, but
mofe can be held if there is interest.

•

•

•

•

’68.

Norton Hall. Additional information can be obtained from the
Counseling Center at 831-3717.

Clothing Fashion Center for Men
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at E. Amherst

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tion.

FREE PARKING
COME TO MOREY'S

The Counseling Center hopes
that the sharing of these discomforts in group counseling can be
helpful in facilitating better ways
of coping with this large University environment.
Mr. Gerald Thorner, social

735-7127

You know how it is when your folks
come to visit. They want to take you out
to dinner. So where do you suggest?
They want a good place to spend the
night. So where do you send them?
Wonder no more. Just send them
to us. The Charter House,
They'll love the food in our Rib Room
restaurant. (Out chef doesn't even
know how to make meatloaf or chicken

The Center has found that
being a transfer student, as evidenced by the high dropout rate,

Yet there is a commonality in
the problem of transfer students
—the adjustment to a new situa-

LOCKPORT

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tell your parents
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The next session will be held
at 4 p.m. Monday, in room 233,

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EAST OF

Phone Lockport
•

worker and counselor at the Center feels that the first session was
successful. He explained there is
a need for group counseling for
transfer students and that the
students could use it in their

Group counseling for all interested transfer students is currently being undertaken by the Student Counseling Center.

—

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CONSIDER A

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If you are between 18 and 30, Israel offers you a challenging experience in its new and vibrant society.

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Volunteer Service

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Corps

Program

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nurse,

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upon arrival in Israel.

Assignments in Agriculture
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AMERICA

�Friday, April 19, 1968

The Spectrum

Peg* Nin*

This is the Spring Weekend Fashion Show of 1967. The opportu-

Sprin

local

weeken

stores, is April 30.

Kaleidoscope '68
by Lori Pendys
Spectrum Staff Reporter

Kaliedoscope ’68! A potpourri of fun,
games, laughs, and all-around good tiimes
for three days.
That is the aim of Spring Weekend,
May 3 to 5.
The array of events is very diversified.
It includes a concert by Dionne Warwick,
a semi-formal dance, a concert by “Your
Father’s Mustache,” showings of “The
Knack . . . and How To Get It,” elections
for Queen and Mr, Faculty, a carnival
and assorted other contests and activities.

m.
»

Dionne Warwick

will be featured here during up-coming
Spring Weekend.
Dionne Warwick, famous rhythm-andblues vocalist, will grace Clark Gym Friday evening at 8:30. She reached her
present peak of poularity with hits such
as “Don’t Make Me Over,” “Anyone Who
Had A Heart,” “Alfie,” “Say A Little
Prayer for Me,” and the “Theme from
Valley of the Dolls.”

In 1967 Miss Warwick was voted number one rhythm-and-blues singer and number two pop singer by the Annual Cash
Box Best Recording Artist poll and also
was number six on the Playboy Jazz
Poll. “The Magnificent Men,” a new soul
group, are also included on the concert’s
program.

“Your Father’s Mustache,” a banjo-playing, barber-garbed, mustached (naturally),
sing-along band, fresh from the nightclub
of the same name in New York, will perform May 2 in the Fillmore Room. “The
Mustache” sings the latest hits of the

1920s and ’30s and makes the audience
music, stamp their feet and
clap their hands. It is the type of concert
one can have fun at and then write home
about to bring memories back to sweet
old Mom and Dad.
Starting Thursday of the weekend, showings of “The Knack . . . and How To Get
It” will be presented in the Conference
Theater. The zany, British comedy stars
Rita Tushingham and describes the problems and determination involved in achieving the Knack.
Leisureland in Hamburg, New York,
will be the location of the Spring Weekend Dance. C. Q. Price and his twelvepiece band will be featured.
C. Q. spent 15 years with Count Basie
and his orchestra as did some of the
other members of the Price band.
There will be a faculty reception at
8 p.m. preceding the dance at 9 p.m.
The campaign for Queen will begin on
April 29 at a coffee hour in the Charles
A fashion show and skits preRoom.
sented by the candidates, will be held on
30
April
and May 1, respectively, at 3:30
p.m., in the Fillmore Room. The Mr.
Faculty campaigns begins on April 21.
Winners will be announced at the Spring
sway to the

Dance.

Many other more casual festivities are
also sprinkled over the weekend.
A carnival, with ferris wheel, merrygo-round, twisting airplanes and other
stiimulating or pacifying (depending on
one’s normal state) amusements will be
offered.
It will take place at the parking field
at Main and Bailey, so if you drive, get
to school early.

Wild English Comedy, "The Knack
and how to get it" will be
shown in Conference Theatre, starting Thursday
of Spring Week-

The Freshman Council is sponsoring a
“Carwhaek.” What’s a Carwhack? It is the
opportunity to release anxieties, frustrations, sexual build-ups and other assorted
emotions by whacking (with a hammer to
avoid blistered palms) an old, beat-up
car.

The chance to take part in this merry-

making will offer itself on the carnival
grounds.
Various sporting events will also avail

themselves.
The 16th Annual Invitational University
of Buffalo Track Meet will take place
Saturday afternoon at 2 p.m. at Rotary

Field.

Less legitimate sports events include
the Commuter Council tug-of-war, an intermural football game and a tricycle

race.

The tug-o-war will be Friday at 2 p.m.
on the Tower lawn, and the Trike race

will be Saturday in the Tower parking
lot at 1:30 p.m.
Sunday there will be an outdoor band
concert, on Baird lawn at 3 p.m,, for
those who are more culturally inclined
or like rolling in the grass.
For those who are pre-occupied with
satiating their appetites, an outdoor barbeque lunch and dinner will be held on
the Tower lawn Friday. For those who
are looking for new and different ways
to attain nourishment a watermelon eati. g contest will take place Saturday at
noon on the Tower lawn.
The weekend will be highlighted by
fireworks on Sunday evening. Sponsored
by the Inter-residence Council the fireworks will be held at dusk on the lawn
in front of Clark Gym.
Over-all Spring Weekend sounds like
it could be a lot of fun but one wonders
how the gardeners will feel on Monday.

...

The Soring Weekend Trike Race, which has become
annual event, will be held Saturday
afternoon.

a

traditional

�Entertainment
Calendar
Friday, April 19;

New Breed Room, Royal Arms,

PLAY: ‘‘Charley’s Aunt,” Studio
Arena, 8:30 p.m. Gay, Victorian
comedy
PLAYS: “The Lover” and “The
Collection,” Studio Two, Lafayette and Hoyt, through April 21
also May 3-5 and 10-12; two
popular Pinter plays
MOVIE: “The Killing,” Norton
Conference Theater
SING-OUT: “UB Blues,” Annual
Spring Sing Out, Goodyear
-

Cafeteria, 8:30 p.m.
TV SPECIAL: “1984,” Channel 17,
only 16 years to go
8:30 p.m.
MOVIES: “Testing Intelligence
with the Stanford-Binet” and
—

“Testing Multiple Handicapped
Children,” Dief. 303, 4 p.m.
CONCERT: The Free Design, The

through April 21
Saturday, April 20:

PLAY: ‘‘The Honourable Estate,”
Upton Hall, Buff. State, 8:15
p.m.
CONCERT: Concert by members
of Buffalo Philharmonic featuring Aaron Copland, Bflo. and
Erie County Library, Lafayette
Square, 3 p.m.
Sunday, April 21:
RECITAL: Student Recital, Norton Conference Theater, 8:30
p.m.

CONCERT: Aaron Copland and
Buffalo Philharmonic, Kleinhans, 2:30 p.m.; also Tuesday,
April 23 at 8:30 p.m.
Monday, April 22:
CONCERT: The Beacon Street

campus releases...
"Current Research in the Inquiry Process" will be the topic of
Dr, Lee S. Shulman at the Colloquium presented by the Faculty
of Educational Studies at 3:45 p.m. Thursday. Dr. Shulman is cur-

Union, New Breed Room, Royal

Arms
MOVIES; “Shadow of a

Doubt,”

Joseph Cotton and Macdonald
Carey and .“Spellbound,” Ingrid
Bergman and Gregory Peck,
Capen 140, 8 p.m., a festival of
Hitchcockery
Tuesday, April 23:
MOVIE: “Darling,” Julie Christie
and Laurence Harvey, Capen
140, 7 and 9:30 p.m.
Wednesday, April 24:
CONCERT: Concert by Boris
Kroyt, Ruth and Jaime Laredo
and Roya Garbousova, Bflo. and
Erie County Library, 8:30 p.m,
Thursday, April 25:
PLAY: “Knights of the Burning

Pestle,” Baird Hall, 8:30 p.m.
through April 28

Anonym, new lit magazine, makes debut
Today marks the first day of

Mr. Robison’s first book, Poems: The Ritual of Life, is scheduled to be published early this
summer.
Both he and Mr. Creeley are
contributors to the magazine.

area writers. This
first edition of the new quarterly
may be purchased in the University Bookstore and at various
shops in the Allentown district
of downtown Buffalo.
The editor of this recent anthology is Mark Robison, an undergraduate English major at the
State University of Buffalo.
Robert Creeley, noted poet and
Professor of English, is the magazine’s adviser.

Some other contributors include
such notables as Ginsberg, MacAdams and John Logan.
“The primary function of the
magazine though,” says Mark
Robinson, “is to provide a catalyst or means of media for the
good literary people on the Buffalo scene.”
He emphasized that its primary
reason for existence is to bring to
light unknown talent in the area.
“We have a general focus of
subject matter included in the
work,” he said, “in order to in-

by James Brennan
Staff Reporter
Rejoice all ye lovers of literature
the University’s got a
brand new mag.
Spectrum

—

sales for Anonym, a Buffalo literary magazine featuring the cur-

rent work of

Updated version of 1984'
to appear on Channel 17
by Lori Pendrys

teeter constantly on the brink
of war; an age of “newspeak,”

Special to the Spectrum

Just sixteen years to go!

“Will it be the year when the
last spark of human dignity is
extinguished and Big Brother
watches over everyone as George
Orwell predicted.
N.E.T. Playhouse presents the
television dramatization of his
novel 1984 (updated to bring the
narrative more into line with our
Friday at 8;30 p.m.
Channel 17.
times)

on

One of the most influential
works of political satire in this
century, 1984 presents a dim
look at a future that could even-

"double-think,” and “brainwashing,” but, most of all, an age
that has outlawed love.

In this oppressive atmosphere,
Britain’s one remaining rebel
dares to fall in love with another
would-be free spirit. Together
they go in search of “the Brotherhood,” a shadowy underground
resistance group. The consequence of their impious rebellion
is a horror of torture and total

betrayal.

Jane Merrow and David Buck

star as Julia and Winston.
•••••

come into being.

tually

Orwell sees it as an age in
which privacy has eroded; an
age in which three great powers

JULIE

ANDREWS is
"Thoroughly Modem

MILLIE!
TECHNICOLOR*

»

Friday, April 19, 1968

The Spectrum

Pag* Ten

UNIVERSAL PICTURE

(DIRECT

MOM
ROAD SHOWS

IONITE
Ml Ml.

I

rOfULAI

I H. J.Tr“ ..v.d

3165 BaiUy Ave.

QRSiua
J, 4, 4. I, 1* F.M.

,J

corporate different types of liter-

ature from as many people as
we can.”
“We are looking for all kinds
of literary pieces, such as poetry,
plays, radio scripts, critiques and
even related works of art from

other media.
“Contributors may submit material to Mr. Creeley or myself
in care of the English Department, Annex B, Trailer Complex,”
continued Mr. Robinson.
The second reason for the inception of thi- collection of writings is to familiarize the citizenry
of Buffalo with the various genre
of expressions and attitudes in
today’s literary works.

“Through Anonym," explained
Robinson, “we hope to promote a better understanding of

Mr,

these individual writers in the
Buffalo community and provide
and avenue of expression for area
writers, instead of having them
seek other opportunities to publish their works outside the city.”
The revenue collected from
Anonym will be used to publish
one or two books a year that
focus entirely on the talents of
one individual writer. Also, poets
Creeley and Robert Duncan will
give readings in the early part
of the summer to help finance
the project.
Anonym will have a summer
issue in July, since there are no
literary media in the summer
months to encompass the latest
creations of area authors.

rently Associate Professor of Educational Psychology and Medical
Education at Michigan State University.

Charter flights to Europe, discounts in renting and buying cars
abroad information may be obtained by contacting' the NSA Travel
Office in room 213, Norton Hall.
Varsity Cheerleading tryouts for 1968-69 will be held April 30.
Practices will be held between 3 and 5 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday and
Thursday in room 339, Norton Hall. Anyone interested in trying out
must attend a minimum of one practice. For further information
call 876-7341.

A Spring Sing-Out, presented by the “UB Blues,” recently returned from a week-long engagement in Fort Lauderdale, will be
held at 8:30 p.m. tonight in Goodyear Cafeteria.
Highlighting the program will be the Blues’ own adaptations of
popular arrangements by contemporary groups such as the Lettermen, the Association, the Beach Boys, the Sandpipers, and Peter,
Paul, and Mary.
The free concert, under sponsorship of the Inter-Residence Council, will also feature guest appearances by the Baby Blues and the
New Establishment.
Vincent Copeland, editor of Workers World and author of Expanding Empire will speak on “Revolutionary Terrorism: its role in
social progress,” at 8 p.m. Monday in the Fillmore Room.
Robert Hass, member of the English Department an an organizer
of the Strike for Knowledge will speak on “Literature of the Resistance” at 4 p.m. Wednesday in the Norton Conference Theater. The
speaker will be sponsored by the Literature and Drama Committee
of UUAB.
Paperbacks, texts, cookbooks, dictionaries, fiction, children’s
books, posters, art works, records and maps will be sold in the subbasement of the Ellicott Square Building next week from 10 a.m.
to 4:30 p.m.
This is the 14th annual sale sponsored by Buffalo Branch American Association of University Women to raise funds for research and
study for women scholars at the doctoral and post-doctoral level.

The Faculty of Educational Studies presents Lee S. Shulman,
Associate Professor of Educational Psychology and Medical Education, Michigan State University. He will speak on Current Research
on the Inquiry Process in the Millard Fillmore Room, at 4:15 p.m,

Thursday.
Coffee will be served at 3:45 p.m.

The Buffalo Scate, Volume 2, is in need of an editor and staff.
Anyone interested in joining the Course and Teacher Evaluation
Committee may leave his name in room 205, Norton Hall.
The University Hiking and Climbing Club will hold a meeting
at 4 p.m. today in room 334, Norton Hall. Another trip to Rattlesnake Point is planned for Sunday.
All interested students are welcome.

From The Novella by D. H. Lawrence

WEEK DAYS
7:25 9:45
-

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V- 3 6 ,'m411
h~8ih a~&gt; ■
,

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SAT., SUN.

2:50
7:25

-

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5:05
9:45

�Friday, April 19, 1968

Th

strike-out

•

Spectrum

Rape Eleven

the spectrum of

or ts

by Danny Edelman
Assistant Sports Editor

All good things have to come to an end and unfortunately that
includes Easter vacations.
One returns to the hallowed halls of this megaversity to make an
amazing and earth-shattering discovery that grass can and does grow
in Buffalo.
This one fact alone is enough for me to end this feeble attempt
at a column and go out and enjoy the grass. Unhappily for me (and
maybe for you) I can’t.
This time of the year is a very busy one in the sports world. One
needs only to walk over in the vicinity of Clark Gym to find out.
The baseball team, under new head coach Bill Monkarsh, opened
its 1968 season this week.
Doc Urioh’s boys are huffing and puffing as spring football practice enters its second week.
The trackmen and the tennis squads are getting ready for their
seasons. And last but not least, the rowing team opened its season
Saturday at Cornell.
Whoa there! You mean to say that the State University of Buffalo
has a rowing team? I don’t believe it.
Neither did this writer until he was duly informed last week.
Here for the first time in print is the complete and unabridged story
about the State University of Buffalo rowing team.
It started with an announcement from the athletic department
asking for all those interested in collegiate rowing to meet at such
and such a time at such and such a place.
A few curious people got together and the rowing team was
formed.
Under Coach John Benett’s direction, practice was begun and
fundamentals were learned. With the exception of one person, none
of the boys had ever been associated with a crew.
In their first race or regatta, as they are called, in the Spring
’67 the team was victorious over Buffalo State, winning the Buffalo
State Invitational Trophy. Later in the fall, the Blue-and-White faced
the same team but this time they lost.
The crew has faced numerous difficulties since its inception.
Since it has the status of a club, the obvious problem is one of money.
The team is forced to be satisfied with make-shift equipment and
uniforms. We may have the only crew team in the country which
competes in worn-out wrestling jerseys.
The crew members must drive to the rowing clubhouse near the
Peace Bridge at their own expense. (After all, you need water to
practice on.) Practice is held six days a week from five to eight in
the evening. With all these problems its no wonder that the turnover
on the squad is so high.
Only Gabe Ferber and Bill Kapa remain from the original group.
This spring the crew is undertaking its most ambitious schedule
in this, its second season.
Included on the schedule are the Cornell and Syracuse frosh as
well as traditional local foes, Buffalo State and Oanisius.
■Rungs are looking up for the team as a little money has started
to trickle down to them. A great deal of credit must be given
to the
Wes'lside Rowing Club under whose auspices the club is sponsored
and who has provided the team with shells and oars.
But the fact remains that no team or club that is representing
this University should have to undergo the hassles that the crew team
has had to undergo. They have existed in complete obscurity since
the
beginning. No publicity and just the minimal of help.
But as one of the members said to me, “If you win you really
don’t care that nobody knows it; you know it and that’s enough.”
Best of luck, Gabe and to the entire team for a successful
second

Baseball Bulls start regular season
by Rich Baumgarten

The 1968 Baseball Bulls, returning from their first Southern tour,
played host Monday to ECTT in
their Clark Field opener. Weather permitting, the Bulls visit
EXITI in the return match of a
home-and-home series.
The “Hardballers,” who were
originally scheduled to play 14
games, saw their road trip end
abruptly due to a combination of

inclement weather and Martin Luther King's assassination.

However, the team did manage
to get in 6 games, posting a
respectable 3-2-1 record. Included
in the Bulls’ three wins were two
thumpings of Huntington College
of Montgomery, Alabama by
scores of 8-1 and 6-4, and a 4-3
win over Burlington Southern.
Buffalo suffered defeats by
Troy, Alabama (6-4) and Tennesee A&amp;I (8-7).
In the opening game of the
week-long trip the Bulls battled
the same Tennessee team to a
ten inning 13-all tie, in a real
slugfest called because of darkness.

Rick Wells, senior from Ithaca,
led the Bulls in batting down
South.
The three-sport athlete (football, basketball, and baseball) hit
a sizzling .465 for the six games,
a streak which included several
key triples. Seniors Ken Rutkowski and Brian Hansen also found

season.

THE SPECTRUM
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—*

Saturday*

For the baseballers

who lost

only one game last season en
route to a 16-1 mark, the two
Dixie defeats were a bit dismaying.

But new head coach Bill Monkarsh took the Bulls’ two southern losses in stride. “We made
some mental errors, which comes
from not being ready,” said Monkarsh. “As soon as we gain a
little more confidence from playing together as a team, we’ll
really start to jell,” he said.
Monkarsh then listed his probable starting lineup for this
week’s slate of games.
Hansen, the senior catcher from
Detroit, who has batted over .500
the last two seasons, will again
be behind the plate.

REVIEWS
FOR ALL
COLLEGE
COURSES

The second-sacker’s job belongs
to Sophomore Stan Odachowski,
based on his strong spring showing.
At shortstop, the first

from Eden Central, or
Mick Murtha from Endicott, who
has been football coach Doc
Urich’s first string signal caller
for the last two fall seasons.
The third-baseman’s job has
been won by Paul DiRosa, former
Canisius High School star.
Finger

The outfield will be patrolled
by Wells in centerfield, Ed Lowe

in left, and former Hutch-Tech
standout Stan Jok in right field.
Rutkowski drew the opening
day pitching assignment, with
senior hurlers Dick Pirrozolo and
George Hofheins cheduled for relief appearances.
The Hardballers return home

Thursday for an afternoon contest against the Canisius Griffins

scheduled for 3:30 p.m.

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TEXTS

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'69 juniors
YEARBOOK PROOFS
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draft beer

Rutkowski’s best performance
in the 13-all tie against
Tennessee A&amp;I when the former
Kenmore product hit two long
home-runs, while Hansen came
up with three big hits in the win
over Burlington Southern.
came

Jim May, a Junior with plenty
of potential, gets the nod at first
base.

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Sprh

88

�The

P»g* Twelv*

from

swimming team braved sharkinfested waters and six-foot seas
.April 7 to pay a visit to the
U.S.S, Independence anchored off

Fort Lauderdale, Florida.
Gregory Ulrich and Gary Helffenstein left the beach in front
of the Elbow Room on their twohour swim about 9:30 p.m. and
were greeted by a less-than-receptive Marine Security Guard at

about

11:20, They

were promptly

put under armed guard while a
check was run.
Discovering that neither of the
ill-clad swimmers had any devious intentions, the two were released to Ft. Lauderdale police.
The ship had been anchored a
little more than two miles off
shore.

The two reported that the only
difficulty that they encountered
was the salt in their eyes!

THE SPECTRUM
printed by

Partners' Press, Inc.
ABGOTT &amp; SMITH PRINTING
1881 Kenmore Ave. (at Military)
Phone 876-2284

1968

Fencers end season as they place
niii fourteenth at NCAA championships

UB swimmers
visit Navy ship
Two varsity swimimers

Friday, April 19,

Spectrum

•

Ipectrum

�*

,

3)
Al Brown

in each weapon to
the grueling three-day event,
George Wirth in foil, Steve Morris in epee, and Jon Rand in
his top man

saber.

Morris finished up the tourney
with a 21-15 slate that included
a triumph over All-American Jim
Davidson of Navy.
Wirth embellished his 20-19
slate with stunning victories over
All-Americans Jeff Kestler of Columbia and Ted Segia of Prince-

Sprinter At Brown was named
the trackman of the week for
his outstanding performance in ton.
the State University of BuffaloRand’s 15-18 record was highCleveland State meet. He established two new track marks in lighted by a tally over All-AmerSwanson of the Air
finishing second in the 100-yard ican John
Academy.
dash in 10.0 and first in the Force
220 in 21.3. To cap-off the day,
The Bulls amassed 56 points,
the sophomore speedster an- good enough for fourteenth place
chored the 440-yard relay and in a field of 40.
ran the first leg in the mile reCoach Schwartz expressed his
lay. In spite of these herculean
efforts, the Bulls ended up on satisfaction with the result; “I
the short end of the score as feel that this was one of our top
efforts at the NCAA ChampionCleveland State won, 80-65.

fought hard from start to finish,
and never let up. Considering the
quality of competition at the
tournament, we can be really
proud of our showing.”
The Swashbucklers, already
looking ahead to next year, face
another demanding schedule, highlighted by three of the nation’s
Cornell, Notre
top ten teams
Dame, and Army.
—

foilmen George Wirth and Pierre
chanteau, epee man Tony Walluk
and team captain Jon Rand in
saber.
The outlook is far from bleak,
however, as Steve Morris, captain-elect, heads a crew of returning lettermen including Bruce
Renner, Ed Share and Jim Ellenbogen.

In addition, the undefeated
frosh squad will greatly bolster
the varsity with undefeated Bill
Razor, frosh captain Mike Bardossi, and promising Bill Vallianos, Don Ball, and Dave Frenay.

Sanford wins 200th

Tennis team begins season
by W. Scott Behrens
Sports Editor

What a difference a

day

makes!

Monday afternoon head tennis
coach Bill Sanford was going for
his 200th coaching win against
Erie County Technical Institute,
but much to his dismay his team

lost a heart-breaker to the visiting Knights, 5-4.

Our Space Department
Big. This year even bigger. Some Chevrolet TriLevels are longer. Some wider. Some with more
cargo room. Size up Impala. Nothing .in its field
comes as big. For instance, in many others you
wouldn’t dare try laying a 4 x 8-foot mirror flat in the
main cargo level. (Especially if you’re superstitious.)
In Impala, no problem. The hidden storage compartment on the lower level also takes more of your gear
than any of them. The roof rack you order should
take care of the rest. For your comfort, there’s extra
hip and shoulder room.
We make our Tri-Levels lots more attractive in other

j,

The fencing Bulls completed their season on a note of
national recognition, placing fourteenth at the NCAA Championships held at Detroit’s Wayne State University March
28-30
ships over the years. The boys
Head coach Sid Schwartz took

ways, too. With such exclusives in Chevrolet’s field
as an ignition warning system. You’ll get a buzz out
of it if you ever leave your key in the switch. There
are rocker panels that clean themselves with every
shower you go through. Inner fenders that protect
the outer ones from rust. And hidden windshield

wipers on many models. Even with all these advantages, Impala and Chevelle Concours are the lowest
priced luxury wagons in their fields. And if that’s
what you like to hear, hear this. Unprecedented
savings are yours now at your Chevrolet dealer’s
'68 Savings Explo. See the details below.

The following day the Bull netmen finally came up with that
magic number for their coach as
they handily defeated ECTI on
the Clarence courts, 7-2.
Monday afternoon the Bulls
had to go without first singles
man Jim Ripley because the was
taking a departmental exam that
afternoon. It was a clear day, but
a chilly wind blew lightly across
the Clark Gym courts.

First doubles
The teams had split the singles

at three points and second and

third doubles had walked off the

court all even. The match depended on the first doubles. Dave
Chiarolanza and Harold Schnitzer
of Buffalo were playing Mike
Wagner and Craig Jakel. Buffalo
took the first set, 7-5, dropped
the second by the same score
and couldn’t come back as they
dropped the third set, 6-3.
Tuesday’s match was another
story as Ripley returned to the
lineup and the temperature
warmed up to beautiful tennis
weather.
Ripley, Schnitzer, Steve Imber,
John Nyce and Bill Goldstein all
won their singles matches for
the Blue-and-White while doubles
teams of Nyce and Larry Brown
and Goldstein and Wayne Silverman captured another two points
for the winning Bulls.

Our Last issue.

May 7
Catch Our Classifieds
(lose your lease)

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NORTON

�Friday, April 19,

1968

The Spectrum

Page Thirteen

Wells, Hansen take major
Cleveland defeats UB track team honors at annual banquet

Al I Brown

erforms bes

fered its first loss of the season
being downed by a strong Cleveland State team, 80-65. The Bulls
were within striking distance until the final two events.
Sophomore speedster Al Brown
was the standout performer for
the Blue-and-White. Brown set
two new Bull track marks in finishing second in the 100-yard
dash in 10.0 and first in the 220

in 21.3. To finish the afternoon

Brown anchored the 440-yard relay and ran the first leg in the

mile relay.

won the shot-put with a toss of
46’ 1%”, placed second in the
discus and third in the javelin.
Sophomore Jerry Hunter won the
discus with a throw of 119’ 2”
and placed third in the shot-put.

Coach Emery Fisher praised
the team on their over-all performance an dlooks for a possible
state championship. The Bulls
travel to Brockport tomorrow and
have their home opener next
Tuesday against Canisius and Erie
County Tech.

Barnes, (UB) Nicotera 1:57.6
220-yard run —(UB) Brown, (CSU)
Lee, (CSU) Forkins 21.3 (new Bull record)
Two-mile run—(UB) Menzenski, (CSU)
(CSU) Senlck 10:26

Curtis.

(CSU) Colo440-yard int. hurdles
simo, (UB) Cook, (UB) Naukam 58.6
—

One-mile relay

—

(CSU)

3:24.5

Pole vault— (CSU) Pudlock, (UB) Wat
son. (CSU) Fletrich IT 6”
High Jump
(CSU) Flores,
O’Mahen, (UB) Speigeiman 6’ 3”
—

(CSU)

(UB) Hunter, (UB) Spelman,
Discus
(CSU) Furlong 119'2"
—

A1 was named the “runner-ofby his teammates.

the-week”

Other excellent performances

were turned in by junior Bill Mathews who von the mile in a

4:35.2 clocking,. Larry Naukam
who tied the 120-yard high hurdles record in 15.9, and Bobby

Williams who finished first in
the triple jump and took second
in the broad jump.

Results:

(UB) Spelman, (CSU) FurShot-put
long, (UB) Hunter 46’ 1V 2
—

440-yard

Mile

(CSU)

relay

—

C. S. U. 43.6

(UB) Mathews.
Barnes 4:35.2
—

(CSU),

"

Curtis,

Broad Jump

—

(CSU)

Morgan,

(UB)

Williams, (CSU) Novak 20'3”

440-yard dash
(CSU) Porter,
Deariove, (UB) Federico 50.8
—

(UB)

Triple

Jump

—

(UB)

Williams.

(UB)

Harris, (CSU) Morgan 42’ 7"

100-yard dash
(CSU) Robinson
(UB) Brown, (CSU) Lee 9.8
—

(CSU) Morgan, (UB)
Javelin
ero, (UB) Spelman 175’3"

Carri

Final Score: Cleveland State 80,
University of Buffalo 65.

State

—

120-yard high hurdles
(UB) Naukam, (CSU) Colosimo, (CSU) Eiseman
15.9 (tied Bull record)
—

ture of intercollegiate athletics at
the State University of Buffalo
was the prevailing sentiment at

the 61st annual athletic awards
dinner.

Dr. Claude E. Puffer, University vice-president and a member
of the faculty committee on athletics, said that the State University of Buffalo has “the greatest,
most complex problems in the
area of intercollegiate athletics
of any school in the country.”

is named after a former Blue-andWhite athlete who died in action
during World War II. Brian Hansen, star catcher of the baseball
team, won the Alumni ScholarAthlete trophy.
The awards:
Cross Country
MVP, Jim H ughes;
Frosh MVP, Edward Lenhardt
Track —MVP, Mike Alspaugh; Indoor
track MVP, Hubie Green
Basketball
Honorary co-captains,
Jon Culbert, Doug Bernhard; MVP, Ed
-

—

—

He likened the present athletic
situation to the odyssey of Ulysees, facing many hazards and
travails along the way but ultimately overcoming them. He paid
tribute to the high proportion of
students who paid athletic fees,
to the various alumni groups, to
the athletic staff and, of course,
the participants.
Guest speaker for the event was
Vernon (Lefty) Gomez, the former
New York Yankee pitching great.
Rick Wells and Brian Hansen
won two of the most prestigious
awards. Wells, winner of six let-

Whatls a 1967Olds

doing in this
1968 Olds advertisement?
It's making the point that you
can own an Oldsmobile. If not
a new one, then certainly a
used one.
Like the nifty 1967 Olds 4-4-2
you see here. Or a sporty used
Cutlass convertible maybe.

his varsity career,
won the Dom GrOssi Award which

ketball during

Eberle; Frosh Honorary co-captain, Roger Kremblas; MVP, Steve Waxman
Golf—MVP, Tony Santelli

Fencing
M.VP, Steve Morris; Frosh
Bill Kazer
Swimming —MVP, Frank Nochajski;
Captain Rick Rebo
Wrestling —MVP, Mike Watson; Most
Improved, Brian Vandenberg; High Point,
Harry Bell; Frosh MVP, Phil Burton
Hockey —MVP, Jim Hamilton; High
Scorer, Loren Rombough; Most Improved, Darrel Pugh
Baseball
MVP, Brian Hansen. Ken
—

MVP.

—

Rutkowski
ECAC Medal
Rick Wells
Rick Wells
Dom Gross! Award
Alumni Scholar-Athlete—Brian Hansen
High Scholastic Average—Jon Culbert
—

—

Your Memorial Gift is a
fitting tribute to a loved
one. This remembrance
helps support the research, education and
service programs of the
American CancerSociety.
Memorial gift funds may
be sent to your local Unit
of the Society.

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CANCER
SOCIETY i

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CHRIST'S VOLUNTARY DEATH
"Therefore doth my Father love me,
because I lay down my life, that I
might fake it again. No man takefh it
from me, but I lay it down of myself."
-John 10:17, 18

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�Pag* Fourteen

official bulletin
OFFICIAL BULLETIN
The Official Bulletin is an authorhed publication of the State

current
May 8
sophomores, juniors and seniors
may pick up registration mater-

tage to register during the week
reserved for them, but they may
register through May 8.

‘ pec trum
asfor wJ
sumes no editorial responsibility.
Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to 114 Hayes
Hall, attention Mrs. Fischer, before 2:00 p.m. the Friday prior
to the week of publication. Student organization notices are not
accepted for publication.

Sophomores may sign their own
registration cards, but must see
a University College adviser to
discuss election of major and to
make application to a department,
if appropriate. Students who do
not comply with this request will
not have records forwarded to the
department of their choice in

Upper division students who
have been rejected by a department or are undecided as to major, will see a University College
adviser to complete registration.
April 15-May 8
Freshmen
will register. These students must
have registration cards signed by
their University College adviser
before registering. They may see
their advisers as follows:

Placement interviews
Please call 831-3311 for additional information on the following interviews.
Appointments
should be made at least one week
in advance of the interviewing
date if possible.
April 23
Hallmark Cards
The Diocesan Vocation Office
April 24

Warsaw Central Schools

April 25

Lakeland Public Schools
N.Y. City Dept, of Social Services

General notices

University College, Advance
Registration—At the request of
Dean Welch, students will register in order of class, priority being given to upper classmen. In
addition, the University College
advisement staff has elected to
allow students on strict probation
to preregister, but these students

must see their adviser before registering.
The following

observed:

Friday, April 19,

The Spectrum

schedule will be

March 13

-

—

June.
Current juniors and continuing
seniors will register after securing the signature of their faculty adviser. It is to their advanLast Day
to Register

College Level Exam
Program
Apr.
College Proficiency Test... Apr.
College Proficiency Test... Apr.
Med. College Admissions. Apr.
Pre-Nursing Exam
Apr.
State Univ. Adm. Exam.. .Apr.

27
19
19

19
20
22

April 22-26—H through Q
April 29-May 3—A through G

Test
Date

Applications

Available

....May 18
316 Hardman
(Th.) May 23
316 Harriman
(Fr.) May 24
316 Harriman
May 4
316 Harriman
May 4
Sch. of Nursing
. May 11
Admissions Office

Job opportunities seminar to be held
A job opportunities seminar for
junior and senior women, scheduled for March, will take place
Wednesday.

Joan Bishop, Director of
Placement at Wellesley College,
will conduct the seminar.
The program is sponsored by
Cap and Gown. Senior Women’s
Mrs,

On Campus A™
(By the author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys!",
"Dobie Gillis," etc.)

WAS KEATS THE BOB DYLAN
OF HIS DAY?

—

Student Testing Center registration schedule
Test

fa?
yS

Honor Society, in conjunction
with Miss JeanetteScudder, Dean
of Women, and the Office of
University Placement and Career
Guidance.
To make a reservation, call
University Placement and Career Guidance Service at 831-3311
and ask for Mrs. Farewell.

Who was the greatest of the English Romantic Poets—
or Keats? This question has given rise to
many lively campus discussions and not a few stabbings.
Let us today try to find an answer.
First, Keats (or The Louisville Slugger, as he is commonly called.) Keats’ talent bloomed early. While still a
schoolboy at St. Swithin’s he wrote his epic lines:
If I am good I get an apple,
So I don’t whistle in the chapel.
From this distinguished beginning he went on to write
another 40 million poems, an achievement all the more remarkable when you consider that he was only five feet
tall! I mention this fact only to show that physical problems never keep the true artist from creating. Byron, for
example, was lame. Shelley suffered from prickly heat all
winter long. Nonetheless, these three titans of literature
never stopped writing poetry for one day.
Nor did they neglect their personal lives. Byron, a devil
with the ladies, was expelled from Oxford for dipping
Nell Gwynne’s pigtails in an inkwell. (This later became
known as Guy Fawkes Day.) He left England to fight in
the Greek war of independence. He fought bravely and
well, but women were never far from his mind, as evidenced by these immortal lines:
How splendid it is to fight for the Greek,
But I don’t enjoy it half as much as dancing cheek to
Byron, Shelley

cheek.

While Byron fought in Greece, Shelley stayed in England, where he became razor sharpener to the Duke of
Gloucester. Shelley was happy in his work, as we know
from his classic poem, Hail to thee, blithe strop, but no
matter how he tried he was never able to get a proper edge
on the Duke’s razor, and he was soon banished to
Coventry. (This later became known as The Industrial

Revolution.)
One wonders how Shelley’s life-and the course of English poetry-would have differed if Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades had been invented 200 years earlier. For
Personna is a blade that needs no stropping, honing or
whetting. It’s sharp when you get it, and sharp it stays
through shave after luxury shave. Here truly is a blade
fit for a Duke or a freshman. Moreover, this Personna,
this jewel of the blade-maker’s art, this boon to the cheek
and bounty to the dewlap, comes to you both in doubleedge style and Injector style. Get some now during “Be
Kind to Your Kisser Week.”
But I digress. Byron, I say, was in Greece and Shelley
in England. Meanwhile Keats went to Rome to try to
grow. Who does not remember his wistful lyric;
Although I am only five feet high,
Some day I will look in an elephant's eye.
But Keats did not grow. His friends, Shelley and Byron,
touched to the heart, rushed to Rome to stretch him. This
tod failed. Then Byron, ever the ladies man, took up with
Lucrezia Borgia, Catherine of Aragon, and Annie Oakley.
Shelley, a more domestic type, stayed home with his wife
Mary and wrote his famous poem:
I love to stay home with the missus and write,
And hug her and kiss her and give her a bite.

Mary Shelley finally got so tired of being bitten that
room and wrote Frankenstein.
Upon reading the manuscript, Shelley and Byron got so
scared they immediately booked passage home to England. Keats tried to go too, but he was so small that the
clerk at the steamship office couldn’t see him over the top
of the counter. So Keats remained in Rome and died of

she went into another

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'e

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shortness.
Byron and Shelley cried a lot and then together composed this immortal epitaph:
Good old Keats, he might have been short,
But he was a great American and a heck of a good sport.
*

*

*

©1968.

Max Sholman

Truth, not poetry, is the concern of Personna, and u&gt;e
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�</text>
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                    <text>rfFCEl V E$n/y private

I HE bpECTI\UMm
UNlVEKSrM'
1968

State University of New York at Buffalo

Vol. 18, No. 47

ARCHIVES

Director Joseph Vetter, a

controversial figure in area

Dr. Adler criticizes U.S. foreign
policy, urges 'more prudent' course
Dr. Selig Adler recently told a University of North
“a
dangerous mood of isolationism” in the United States.
Addressing a University-wide

lecture at Chapel Hill, N.C. earlier this month, the State University of Buffalo professor said:
“The threat today is that the
pendulum against global meddling could swing so far in the
opposite direction that in the
future we may refrain from intervention in situations where
such action would be fully warranted by a clear and present
danger to our vital interests.”
The “stem demand for overhaul,” he said, stems from “domestic turmoi 1,” the “shrill
abuse” wrought by our “erstwhile
allies,” and from the Vietnam
War.
Dr. Adler called the war “the
most egregious blunder of modem times.”

Outmoded policy
Probing factors that have “outmoded our policy of containment,” Dr. Adler said that “all
knowledgeable men realize that
the Communist threat is not the
grand plot it appeared” in the
late ’40s.
“We have learned in country
after country, beginning with
Tito’s defection of 1948, that
when a piece of real estate goes
Communist, that does not mean
necessarily a threat to the security of the United States or the
end of all hopes of betterment
for the people involved,” he said.
Dr. Adler compared the current situation with that of 1914,
“when no -power really wanted
war, yet no one knew how to
prevent it”
“Our best hope for peace today,
perhaps our only hope, is a
genuine detente with Russia . .
he said.

Lists examples
He listed many signs pointing
resurgence of isolationism,
including the “explosion in the
Senate” last July when President
Johnson sent three transport
planes to the aid of Congolese
President Mobutu; Sen. Fulbright’s resolution
demanding
congressional approval for a
deeper overseas commitment: the
recent reduction of foreign aid
to its lowest level in two decades,
and the “prevailing intellectual
ferment” among revisionist historians.
Urging that the United States
“reduce her perimeter of defense,
plus curb the habit of policing
the world,” Dr. Adler said that
“our present frustrations have led
to some very reckless proposals.

to a

Dr. Selig Adler
condemned Vietnam War in
speech before University of
North Carolina audience.

Suicide Prevention
Center is reo ned

Buffalo’s Suicide Prevention Center, closed down last
October for lack of funds, opened a new office Friday at
2248 Main St.

Tuesday, April 16, 1968

Carolina audience that the Vietnam War is triggering

support

social welfare circles, told
The Spectrum last week that
telephone operation was being completed so that the
center could resume its 24hour-a-day operation.

“The country is filling up with
cranks and zanies who want, at
one and the same time, to abolish
the income tax and stand up to
the Communists. Such mountebanks argue that the real danger is internal rather than external and all that we need really
do is ‘.to drive the rates out of

In the past, the center has come
under a great deal of criticism
from professional social welfare
agencies for its “unorthodox”
methods of dealing with the people it serves. Up to 60% of its
staff is made up of volunteers
who at one time bad come to the
center for help themselves. Mr.
Vetter, a former alcoholic, feels
that this fact has made it easier
for the center to talk with people
who have called in for help.

Washington.”
He later added: “Believing as
I do in the common sense of the
American people, I do not think
that there is a future for such
Neanderthal thought.”

Before its eviction, the center
was reportedly handling over
10,000 calls per year. The center
did not only deal with persons
who were attempting to commit
suicide; these constituted only

Urges new policy
The Samuel P. Capen professor
of American History felt that
“regardless of the outcome in
Vietnam, eventually we will formulate a new policy” which will be
“much more cautious and discriminating in the granting of
foreign aid” and “more prudent”
in our foreign commitments.

Dr. Adler urged a policy which
would be “a choice between isolationism and universalism, an option between concerning ourselves with nothing that happens
beyond this hemisphere and butting our noses into all quarrels
no matter how remote.”

10% of its calls. Its volunteers
also talked! with homosexuals,
drug addicts, alcoholics, unwed
mothers, students who were finding it too hard to keep up with
school and anyone else who was
looking for someone to talk to.

United Fund aid refused

The center was deeply in debt
when it was evicted from its former location at 1361 Main St. Mr.

Vetter turned to the United Fund
for aid, but his application was
turned down. Consequently he
sought out private contributors,
and eventually was able to pay
off his $1100 phone bill.
According to Mr. Vetter, the
center will remain open without
the help of any professional agencies “even if we have to halfstarve ourselves. If the Good Lord
wills it, we will continue our
work.” The center will now stand
only on private contributions.
Mr. Vetter told The Spectrum
that while the center was closed,
he received many phone calls at
his home from people who were
in need of someone to talk to. In
addition, he has received many
requests from other locations asking for information on suicide

prevention.

With the reopening of the cenVetter will put his highly-seleotive force of volunteers
back into operation. The center
screens 50 applications for every
one it accepts. All volunteers
must undergo two interviews and
60 hours of training. Professional
agencies have called the volunteers “the blind leading the
blind,” but Mr. Vetter has measured his success in the large
numbers of people who turn to
the center for help .
The center, now in full operation, may be reached by calling
835-3222 at any time .

ter, Mr.

Editorship

The United States, he said,
“should and will withdraw from
our present exposed position to
a defense perimeter which will
nearly mirror our military potential and authentic interests.”
“All efforts should be made to
minimize a direct contfrontation
with either of the major Communist powers until the elementary fact is grasped in all foreign
offices that in this latter part of
the 20th Century, thermonuclear
war is a game of Russian roulette, played with all the chambers loaded.”

Applications for the editorship of The Spectrum
will be taken until April 20.
Application forms are available at The Spectrum
office. Forms should be accompanied by a letter
stating qualifications, previous experience and reasons for desiring the position.

The Spectrum editorial board will
interview
candidates at a later date.
Address letters of application to: The Editor,
The Spectrum, 355 Norton Hall, SUNY at Buffalo
14220.

400 Colgate students bar
administrators from offices
Special to

the

Spectrum

HAMILTON, N. Y.

Negotiations reached a
stalemate at Colgate University late
last week as
—

about

400 demonstrators coma second day and night
sitting in the school’s
administration building.

pleted

University officiais
were bar
red from their
offices by students and faculty
members who
were demanding that the school
close down a fraternity
house
which had never admitted a
Negro student and this year did
not accept Jewish students.
.

The sit-in was organized by the

approximately 35 black Univer-

sity students who formed the Asi0n
f BlaCk Collegians
(ABC)
°

Earlier in the week, the organiation had forcibly entered the
oigma Nu fraternity
house after
a member fired shots from a
blank pistol at two Negro students walking past the building.

In reaction, the University revoked the fraternity’s charter,
and the faculty voted that a completely open selective policy be
followed by each of the Universit’s 15 fraternities by fall 1969.
The ABC claimed a “moral victory,” but announced that it
would continue to sit-in in the
administration building until a
second fraternity, Phi Delta Theta, which accepted no Negro or
Jewish members, was closed down
completely.

Only the University president,
the Dean of Students, the Dean’s
secretary, and a switchboard operator were allowed to enter the
building. The Dean of Admissions, Guy V. Martin, reportedly
closed his office in sympathy with
the protest, and planned to keep
it closed until the building was
reopened by the demonstrators.

Several

fraternity

members

were reported to be leaving their

houses voluntarily; although Phi
Delta Theta’s charter has been revoked, its house one block from
the campus was still operating.

-UPI Telephoto

UpSy

First Air Cavalryman pulls a wounded Viet
Cong out of a bunker last week near Khe Sanli,

daisy1

U S is holding up peace negotiations. Story
on
page 12.

■ I

#

Meanwhile, the North Viets charged that the

■

�Th

Page Two

campus releases...
Freshmen who are now registering for courses can buy the
Buffalo Scale in the University College reception area in Diefendorf
Hall every day from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Prices are $ .75 for fee-payers
Newman Association will hold a general meeting at 8, p.m.,
Wednesday in room 244, Norton Hall.
Passover meals, served by the Young Israel of Buffalo, will be
held at 6 p.m. .tonight and tomorrow night and at 11;30 a.m. to 1:30
p.m. Thursday. The location is 85 Saranac Ave.
Professional library work career opportunities are being provided
by New York State through a series of training grants in the Library
Sciences. These opportunities are for college seniors and graduates.
For further information and the necessary application blanks,
contact the Placement Office or call Mrs. Farewell at 831-3311,
"Macbeth," starring Maurice Evans and Judith Anderson, will be
shown at 7 and 9:30 p.m. tonight in Capen 140. The Freshman Class
Council is sponsoring the presentation.
"Heart Transplants" will be the topic of Dr. David Greene of
Buffalo General Hospital at a meeting of the Undergraduate Medical
Society at 7:45 p.m. Thursday in room 333, Norton Hall.
A film from the Heart Association, “Open Heart Operation,” will
also be shown.
For further information, contact the Society at 831-3609.
Returned Peace Corps and VISTA workers, working at the
University, are asked to contact University Placement and Career
Guidance.
Students having books from Lockwood Library, which they no
longer need, are requested to return them now. This will help to
avoid a flood of books at the end of the semester.
"The Jew and Medicine" will be discussed at the Hillel Sabbath
Service at 7:45 p.m. Friday. Arthur L. Frank, a senior in Anthropology, will speak. An Oneg Shabbat will follow.
The Westminster Companion Program will meet at 7:30 p.m,
tomorrow in room 240, Norton Hall.
The Pop Music Course of Experimental College will meet in room
344, Norton Hall at 7:30 p.m,: April 18—Th Slax-Volt Sound; April 25
—Jefferson Kaye of WKBW radio will conduct a question-and-answer
discussion; May 2—Prof. Edgar Friedenberg of the Sociology Dept,
will speak.
Transfer students have problems adjusting to new situations
in the University environment or who have personal problems are
invited to attend a group counseling session at 4 p.m. Monday in
room 233, Norton Hall, Call the Student Counseling Center at
831-3717 for additional information.
Self-education will be evaluated by Dr. Donald R. Brutvan at
3 p.m. today in the Conference Theater.
A New Dimension?” This
His topic is “Continuing Education
is another lecture in the continuing University Report series.
—

f}

RECORDS and
MUSICAL
INSTRUMENTS

•

Tuesday, April 16, 1968

Spectrum

David Cornberg named new student
administrative assistant forbookstore
the community will cooperate so

David Cornberg, a gradubeen appointed to the newly
created position of student
administrative assistant for
the University Bookstore.
The position was created by
George Bielan, general manager
of the University stores. The job
was established with the approval
and encouragement of Dr. Claude
Puffer, University vice president
for Business Affairs.

Mr. Cornberg expressed the
goal of the position as “researching and articulating the problems of the University stores
without creating a fruitless controversy.”

Position's functions
Cited as the functions of the
position are public relations, planning and trouble-shooting. Indicating the bookstore is trying to

“establish communication with
its most persistent critics,” Mr.
Cornberg said it wants to “change
the posture of communications
from taking sides to articulating
shared problems and searching
together for solutions.”
The bookstore is currently investigating the planning of both
the interim and Amherst campuses. This investigation will discover whether the planning that
is a source of problems for the
Imiversity stores is being repeated on the new campuses.
As a trouble-shooter, the student administrator will be posing questions for the community
at large. A specific problem in
this area cited by Mr. Cornberg
is the relation between campus
authors and the University Book-

store.

*3

C
-Yates

David Cornberg
University Bookstore Student
Administrative Assistant
The problem arose, firstly, because there is not enough space
to display and stock books required and demanded by all the
store’s customers, he explained.
Customers include students and
faculty from CanisiUs, Rosary
Hill, D’Youville, Buffalo high

schools and other Buffalo citizens.
A second reason involves the
requests from University departments for the bookstore to display the works of more campus
authors, without considering the
problem of space.

Questionnaire
To elicit suggestions from the
customers, a questionnaire will

be distributed in the bookstore

and also printed in The Spectrum.
Commenting on the questionnaire,
Mr. Cornberg said: “We hope that

Headquarters for Good

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The return from the work is better University store facilities for
the whole University community.”
Mr. Cornberg completed his
undergraduate studies at Stanford University. He is currently
on medical leave from graduate
study.

He became interested in problems of the University stores
after he offered to aid the bookstore in obtaining books written

in foreign languages. Finding
intriguing and curious situations
in the problems of administration,
he worked with Mr. Bielan to
set up a position that would deal
with problems taking into account administrative, faculty and

store.

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Buffalo, New York 14207

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JULY 9—LONDON TO BRUSSELS
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“In short, a new administrative
position has been created which
can be filled only by a student,
but one student is not enough.

RIVERSIDE MEN'S SHOP

Every *1.98 to *3.50 Label

NOW AT
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Need students

student views.
Students who have time and
feel qualified to fill this position
are welcome to apply. They
should contact David Cornberg
through the Norton Hall Book-

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RECORD
SALE!

and resolve present problems
and secondly to project and prepare for future problems.
“If the results of the questionnaire show that we need to
change things, a discussion department will be opened. This
department will be operated by
the student administrative assistant in a location to he announced and will be open from
8:30 a.m. until 8:30 p.m.
The student position will soon
be open, since Mr. Cornberg has
received orders to report for induction April 26. Presently, he
is looking for people to replace
him. “The more research I do,
the more I discover that this
position needs at least two people working full time. However,
presently I am working full time
without pay. But if people want
to get paid, then there will probably be little problem getting
them on the payroll.

SEPT.

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�Tuesday, April 16, 1968

GSA to kold political lecture series

“A New American Revolution” will begin tonight.
It’s a lecture series presented by the Graduate Student Association featuring

at the University of California,
Berkeley.

Black liberation
Eldridge Cleaver will discuss
“The Black Liberation Movement

array of political commenta-

Mr. Cleaver, who describes himself as “a full-time revolutionary
in the struggle for black liberation in America,” is currently
Minister of Information for the
Black Panther Party of California, which recently joined forces
with the Student Non-Violent Co-

tors.
Lectures will take place at 8
p.m, in the Millard Fillmore Room

tonight, tomorrow, Thursday, and
April 23-25.
Tonight Thomas Hayden, founder and first president of Students for a Democratic Society,
will speak on “The Urban Crisis.”
Author of Rebellion in Newark

ordinating Committee.
He is a staff writer for Ramparts and author of Soul on Ice,
which was recently reviewed by
Time magazine.

and co-author of The Other Side,
he worked with the Newark Community Union for three years in
that city. Mr, Hayden has taught
at the University of Michigan and

“What the New Left Wants”
will be the topic of Carl Oglesby

April 24.
A past president of Students
for a Democratic Society, Mr. Oglesby has been a resident scholar
at Antioch and Dartmouth Colleges.

Rutgers University.

Gerassi to speak

John Gerassd, current Latin
American editor of Ramparts
magazine will discuss the “Vietnamization of Latin America” tomorrow night. Mr. Gerassd has
been the Latin American editor
of both Time and Newsweek, and
was also a New York Times correspondent in Latin America.
He is a former professor of
journalism at New York University and of International Relations
at San Franesico State College.
Among his publications are:
The Great Fear in Latin America,
North Vietnam: a Documentary
and The Dynamics of Revolution
in Latin America.
The current Managing Editor
of Ramparts, Robert Sheer, will
speak on “The Death of American Liberalism” Thursday.

Mr. Scheer is coauthor of
Cuba: Tragedy in Our Hemisphere and author of
How We Got
Involved in Vietnam. He has travelled extensively as editor of
Ramparts and has been active
the New Politics movement. in
A member of the Board of the
National Committee for New Politics, Mr. Sohr

He is co-author of “Contain-

ment and Change,” an analysis of
American society and foreign policy, and his articles have appeared in The Nation, Saturday Review and Commonweal.

Foreign policy
Howard Zinn, professor of gov-

ernment at Boston University,
will speak on “American Foreign
Policy and Vietnam,” April 25.

Dr. Zinn is former chairman of
the Dept, of History at Spellman
College and director of the NonWestem Studies Program at Atlanta University. He has also been
a fellow at the Center for East
Asian Studies at Harvard University.
LaGuardia in Congress, The
Southern Mystique, Vietnam; The
Logic of Withdrawal, and SNCC:
The New Abolutionists are among
the books written by Dr. Zinn. He

has written articles on Asian Affairs and civil rights for numerous magazines.

Students beginning campaign
to gain support for Kennedy
Students from area colleges
will begin a door-to-door campaign April 20 urging Buffalo
residents to support the Presidential candidacy of Senator
Kennedy. This will be the first
such undertaking for the newlyformed Students for Kennedy organization in the Western New
York area.

a.m. with a short talk by
County Democratic chairman Joseph Crangle.
Transportation to the Kennedy
headquarters can be provided by
calling Nick Sargent at 873-2898.
10:30

Erie

The events will begin at the
Students for Kennedy headquarters at 1035 Kensington Ave. at

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—

West Berlin leftwing students Monday asked 150,000

lame in the shooting of their leader, Rudi “Red
Rudi” Dutschke.
Police here and throughout West Germany canceled all leaves,
massed around the publishing plants of Axel Springer and set up
steel anti-riot barricades and barbed wire.
The leftwing youth group, demonstrating and rioting since an
admirer of Adolf Hitler shot Dutschke Thursday, told the marchers
to start crippling Springer plants in six cities after their Easter
marches ended late today.
BUFFALO
An 84-year-old eastside Buffalo man faced first
degree manslaughter charges in city court Monday in the shotgun
slaying of his neighborhood friend.
Police said George Bobo shot Moseley McRae, 56, in the chest
with a 16 gauge shotgun, while McRae was in the doorway of Bobo’s
home. Police said the two men had been friends for a number of
—

years.

NEW YORK
The head of the state’s Narcotics Addiction Control Commission predicts the compulsory care program, now a year
old, is cutting down on the crime rate.
“Already there have been several hundred fewer arrests of
people for violation of narcotics laws,” chairman Lawrence Pierce
said Sunday.
“If we are able to equal, during this current fiscal year, the number of people placed under care up to this point, then I think we
will see an equivalent reduction of crime on the streets."
SEOUL
President Park Chung Hee will refuse to send any
more Korean troops to South Vietnam even at the request of President Johnson, the Kyunghyang Shinmun newspaper said today.
Pres. Johnson and Park are scheduled to meet in Honolulu on
Thursday. The Vietnam War is expected to be discussed by the two
—

—

presidents.
South Korea has 45,000 troops in South Vietnam.
MOSCOW
Two unmanned Soviet spaceships accomplished
history’s second automatic link-up in orbit today, according to the
Soviet news agency Tass,
—

SHIRT

PLAZA SHOE REPAIR

i

Dateline news, Apr. 16

■

BOCCE
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Pag* Thr**

The Spectrum

JR 5-5360

*

�Page Four

Tuesday, April 16, 1968

The Spectrum

f

National preoccupation: Violence
Events surrounding the assassination of Dr. Martin
Luther King, Jr. have, by this time, been well publicized in
both the commercial and collegiate press. A range of
opinions has also been expressed, and the vast prepondera mournful nation.

Stewart Edelstein, president of the Student Association,

sent the following telegram to Mrs. King in Atlanta:

iW

III1

iiUhf rsi

rmm&amp;fcr-V™

tttM&amp;usr,A*\ tfwwt

Americans will continue to employ violence to attain
their objectives until they understand that violence will meet
its own response. That is a sad prospect, but one that has
never seemed so close.

IftSlWES

"Oh, and another thing—'Nei either snow, nor rain, nor heat, nor

The telegram expresses our sentiments well. Bound
in that concise statement are two things: Sorrow resulting
from the untimely death of Dr. King, and a determination
to continue toward the goals he espoused.
The violence that plagued scores of American cities after
the assassination came as an angered response to the wasteful murder. But that violence was also a repudiation of the
course which Dr. King advocated. The destruction that
occurred, the deaths that resulted and the losses that were
sustained must also bb seen as wasteful.

I LOST

HOW'S THE
IRWBfteS7 Him

1

“We will continue to hope and strive for the
better America that your husband foresaw. We
realize full well that our quest would have been
far easier had fate permitted Dr. King to labor
longer at the unfinished agenda of the civil rights
program. We, and all Americans share your great
loss.”

was

!

“On behalf of the Student Association of the
State University of New York at Buffalo I extend
to you our deepest sympathies. Today we mourn for
Dr. King. Tomorrow we shall miss him and the
great effort he made for so just a cause.

by Dick West
figures from the FBI show there were
650,000 cases of car theft in 1967, a 17% increase
over the previous year.
FBI studies also indicate that 42%, or 273,000,
of those cars were stolen because the keys were in

them.

Many car thieves undoubtedly are brazen enough

We pray that there will be more Martin Luther Kings, to steal cars e,en with the owners in them. Neverand that the American people will wake up and begin anew theless, it appears that auto larceny would be substantially reduced if all car owners removed the
in their traditional quest for liberty, equality and justice. keys
when they parked.

end, some new models have buzzers
that sound when keys are left in the ignition switches. In addition, several public service campaigns
aimed at educating motorists against leaving their
keys behind have been undertaken.
One campaign uses spot announcements on radio
to point out that a motorist who leaves his keys in
his car may be tempting an innocent lad to commit
a crime.
Any crime prevention campaign in whifch the
blame falls on the victims rather than the offenders
should be highly effective, particularly among people who admire “Alice in Wonderland.”
So how come so many drivers still fail to remove their keys?
Well, I had lunch the other day with an old
friend, Stan Allen, who is associated with the Disabled American Veterans. He may have provided
Toward that

Be sure to vote
On this, the second day of balloting in student elections,
there are still thousands of students who have not been
to the polls.
Throughout this year, students have shown an increased
interest in the affairs of the University. A large turnout for
these elections can be the highlight of a year of participation.

*

It is difficult to convey just how important it is to vote.
We are now electing four officer candidates and seven
coordinator candidates to take office late this month. The
old problems coupled with the new polity system demand the answer
Motorists leave their keys in their cars because
that we elect qualified students. The Spectrum list of enit’s the only way they can keep from losing them.
dorsed and qualified candidates is a good guide.
as you
out

.

Readers 9

the
lighter
side
Latest

gloom of night .

writings
Criticizes Spectrum coverage
To the Editor:

Although we are very appreciative of The Spectrum’s endorsement of ourselves and our party, I
am very disappointed with your coverage of the
Student Association elections.

The Spectrum has been both objective and fair
this year in presenting news and issues facing
students. Unfortunately, these journalistic qualities
were absent in Friday’s issue. The Spectrum permitted itself to sacrifice “good journalism” by
extending its editorial power to endorse candidates

to extreme proportions.
The Spectrum was unfair. It was unfair because: All candidates were not introduced (some
were omitted entirely, others received little coverage in pictures or personal statements); the layout
obviously reflected “The Spectrum Executive Editors” preferences from pages X through 10; and
the entire paper was so seemingly designed to
ruin the parties and candidates not endorsed by

those editors. It was slanted and biased where it
should have been serving its function as the only
newspaper on campus.

.

Voting is going on all day today until 5 p.m. Voting
machines are located in the center lounge in Norton Hall,
as well as in Tower and Goodyear.
Your vote today can determine a year of student policy.
You don’t have to wait until the Polity convenes to make
your opinions known. You can begin to exert your influence
today. Be sure to vote now.

Series recalls Ramparts Week
A lecture series that brings to mind last year’s Ramparts
Week has been planned by the Graduate Student Association,
The series, which begins tonight and continues through
April 25, is co-sponsored by the GSA and the Student Association.
All of the lectures should be informative and interesting.
The range of topics touches upon many of the crucial issues
that confront the nation: The urban crisis, the black liberation movement, the goals of the New Left, the war in Vietnam and American foreign policy.
Three of the speakers—John Gerassi, Robert Sheer and
Eldridght Cleaver—write or edit for Ramparts. Thomas
Hayden and Carl Oglesby are both past presidents of national
Students for a Democratic Society. Howard Zinn, the final
speaker, is a professor of government at Boston University.
These six men, beginning with Mr. Hayden tonight,
should be heard and listened to. We anticipate stimulating
discussions, and urge students to attend as many of the
lectures as possible. More detailed information about the
lectures and the speakers appears in today’s Spectrum.

The DAV,
miniature licknow, sends
ense tags that fit on key rings. If anyone finds a set
of tagged keys, he can drop it in a mailbox and the
DAV will see that it is returned to the owner.
Allen told me that in 1967 the DAV returned
40.952 sets of lost keys.
The American motorist obviously is in a terrible
dilemma. If he leaves his keys, his car gets stolen
and he starts some good, clean, wholesome teen-age
hoodlum on the road to crime. If he removes the
keys, he loses them.
The

Spectrum is published twice-weekly
Tuesday and Friday
during the regular
—

year at

—

I have just one more comment on Friday’s

paper. My disappointment in The Spectrum increased as the death of Dr. Martin Luther King
appeared so subordinate to student government

elections. The imbalance of the paper and the

pervading editorial policy throughout cannot now

be rectified.
It is too bad The Spectrum was unable to uphold
for its Special Election Issue.

its high standards

Richard Schwab
Penny Bergman

every

academic

the State University of New York at Buffalo,

3435 Main Street, Buffalo, New York 14214. Offices
are located at 355 Norton Hall. Average Circulation:
15.000.

Editor-in Chief—MICHAEL L. D'AMICO
Managing Editor—RICHARD R. HAYNES
Business Manager—SAMUEL A. POWAZEK
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The Spectrum is a member of the United States Student Press Association and the Associated Collegiate
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Press Service, Gannett News Service, and the Los
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Editorial
Business

RFK 'emotional, not intellectual'
To the Editor
It is disappointing to read about students wanting to return to the New Frontier. (Birchers want
to return to the Founding Fathers). But we must
look to the future with imaginative and original
thinking. Sen. Kennedy has emotional, not intellectual, appeal.
He has already established a credibility gap. Not
until after the New Hampshire primary did he see
that “our nation faces the greatest crisis in 100
years,” Before the N.H. primary he feared only a
“personality clash” with LBJ as the main issue.
Sen. Kennedy has done nothing noteworthy on
his own and were he not the brother of a beloved
president he would not be noticed except for favoring “bugs” and “phone taps” while in a position of
power as Attorney General.
Mrs. Lucille Toll

�Tuesday, April 16, 1968

Pag* Fiv*

The Spectrum

Questions hospital conditions
To the Editor:
As a resident of this community and

BELOW OLYMPUS

By Interlandi

as a psy-

The Sham

chologist I am concerned and angered by the oppressive living conditions provided for the patients
on the Continued Treatment Service at the Buffalo

by Martin Guggenheim

housed in an antiquated structure, almost half a
mile long, which is being considered for future
demolition by the state legislature’s Ways and
Means Committee. Some 1500 men and women,
most of them elderly ex-citizens who. have been
deprived of their civil liberties, are for the most
part, confined to their quarters day after day until
eventually they relieive society of its responsibility
for them by dying.,
With proper treatment, stimulation and concern,
many of these patients could leave the constricting
and repressive confines of their present environment and return to the community. Instead, the
state’s funding policy provides for only a few
psychiatrists, a handful of social workers, and a
skeleton staff of nurses and attendants whose main
function has become one of managing an enormous number of human beings as methodically and
as efficiently as possible. In place of a progressive
rehabilitation program, the following procedures
have, of necessity, evolved: 1) the patient is tranquilized to the point where he becomes “manageable,” 2) he is placed on a chair in front of a
television set for hours at a time, 3) the ward attendant conducts an occasional “democratic meeting” during which supplies of fresh socks and
cigarettes are checked, 4) the patient is kept calm
by limiting his contact with outside agitating in-

disease which kept me in the- infirmary for two
days this week. Considering my state of health, the
infirmary was as nice a place to be in as I could
imagine; but I still feel weak from not eating for
a couple of days, so try to understand if this effort
isn’t as flowing as usual.
Today (Friday, when my column is due) is also
my anniversary. Denise and I have been going out
for a year and I’ve promised her some space for
practically that whole time. Today seems as fitting
as ever to write about her not only because of the
calendar but also because the State of the World

is only adding to my already mounting nausea.

There are some practical considerations to be
made however. I am supposed to write a campus
column and I have been asked by quite a few
people to mention the elections on campus even
though this isn’t published until the second day
of the voting.

fluences.

The present staff is not only unable to provide
even allow more
than a bare minimum of activity of any kind to
exist in the building. An army of volunteers, graduate and undergraduate University students, and
interested professionals could be marshaled to rekindle these patients’ interest in their surroundings
and desire to leave the hospital. To make this
possible, however, the Continued Treatment Service
Imust be provided with the resources to support
such a dramatic departure from existing conditions.
E. NEIL MURRAY, PhD
Amherst, New York

"If I'd known peace was so profitable
I would have been for it before!"

a therapeutic milieu, it cannot

the gadfly
by Mark Schneider

Asks disease demonstrations

The death of Martin Luther King shocked all of us and
surprised none of us; the resignation of Lyndon Johnson
surprised almost all of us, but in his cynical eulogy for the
apostle of non-violence, managed to shock us too.

To the Editor:
With regard to protestors I would suggest that
they make less love and more sense. At least if
they are going to protest, let their expostulations
and marches be for something relevant.
Why don’t they march against the greatest
killer of all, heart disease, since it takes 850,000
lives a year" Or how about some concerted action
against our number two killer, cancer, which
itself
accounts for 17% of all deaths or 310,000 deaths
a year. Why don’t they march against the Government, in order to raise the necessary funds to
combat these diseases?
For a country as medically advanced as ours,
our medical men and health services in general
are still embarrassed that we remain 11th in the
world as far as infant mortality is concerned.
Where are the protestations against the other
hideous killers, such as air pollution and water
pollution? There are dangerous quantities of sulphur dioxide, nitrogen oxide and acrolein in the
air, which according to experts are deadly.
How about our children. One in 900 is born
with cancer. One out of every 50 is born with
epilepsy. One out of every 10,000 is born with
P.K.U. One out of every 800 has mongolism (live
births). The greatest single cause of maternal
deaths is from abortion (21%).
After all this, where can any protestor find a
more relevant and justifiable cause?
FRANK J. GIGLIOTTI

Of King’s death there is not
much to say that hasn’t been said
after the violent deaths of all our
Jesuses and Gandhis. The message of American labor leader
Joe Hill and the founders of
Christianity was the same: “Don’t
mourn, organize,” and that burden falls upon black and white
militants and followers of King
equally. It might be pointed out
that there was much substance in
the welcome of King by Stokely
Carmichael after King’s speech in
the Riverside Church denouncing
the war in Vietnam. Undeniably
King was essentially a liberal reformer who did not challenge the
basic economic system of America
as Carmichael has, but the argument that reformers weaken revolutionaries’ goals can hardly be
valid in King’s case. He was one
of the greatest of Americans
who did indeed “have a dream”
for this country, who was motivated by a love for all of us and
an anger at the awful disparity
between what is and what should

Tower Spectrums stolen
To the Editor;
concerned students, we
,fet P"e and your
Centum the lack of
d
mlmhp°rr m? h ? 10us intention of some memher or
or members of tthe
student body

consistf

be?
conie°s

We

=■

"V*

°

of The

ITT*

3

substantial number of

l.sne” 4prt'

U» &lt;P«l.l elections
12. It is important, as you must realize
that each
student should be able to read
this issue of The
Spectrum but the availability of this
issue in
Hall has been greatly diminished.
We ndmit t,hat a certain number
of students
obtain their copies before morning but upon
our
inspection of the distribution boxes
in Tower Hall
at 2: °° a na - on Fri day, we found
that all the copies
off The Spectrum had disappeared. In
the past
be
no apparent tampering with these
t"
stnbution boxes,
but this issue has evidently
1SC nC rtlng t0 some individual or
,° ,^
group of
,nHn, H
3 1 26 that The Spectrum
We
is
;
M
ta “» “&gt;
•«

Towe?

,,

,

S*

m

rf

a?ail-

,

-

PHILIP S. DICKS
DAVID L. BUNCH.

GERALD C. BRODT

be.

King’s historical role was a necessary first step in the move of
black people toward freedom and
self-determination. Revolution is
born of hope, not despair, and
King with his courage and determination provided the spark
for a people who will change the
share of a nation. Civil rights
bills such as last Wednesday’s
housing act do not themselves
“change the shapes of nations,”
but fighting for the political and
social equalities for men of all
classes does not mean that one is
fighting for the maintenance of a

Quotes in

class society.
On the questions of violence
and racism, King and Carmichael
were, when at their best, I think,
very similar. King preached nonviolence, but like Gandhi he knew
that non-violence can be a weapon only of the strong and determined against a rational enemy. Violent resistance to oppression is better than none at all,
King agreed, but in the context
of his liberal struggle, it would
be an ineffective tool. Black
power, Carmichael has explained
all too many times, does not
mean “get you some guns.” It is
an intricate (and often attacked
from the left) position which
stresses black control of the black
community and is somewhat incomplete in dealing with the larger questions of capitalism vs. socialism. Yet after King’s assassination, the media said nothing
of Carmichaers activities other
than that he harangued a crowd
to get “revenge” and to “exterminate” whites. The quotes were
cited alone and are probably out
of context.
Carmichael’s tag ending to any
of his demands is “by any means
necessary,” It doesn’t mean he
advocates violence; it means exactly what it says: if necessary,
we’ll use it. But who is “we?”
Primarily blacks, but like King,
Carmichael, though motivated by
hatred for the many cops who
have beat him and his brothers,
has his eye on an alliance with
poor and working class Americans. He too has a dream for all
of us, and it unites him with King
as a great leader.

the news

United Press International

Eighty-three airline hostesses, protesting in an open
LONDON
letter (that their image had been tarnished by an air steward who
boasted he dated hostesses on overnight stops and “slept with nearly
all of them:”
“Although we like to enjoy life and the advantages of our job,
we are not in the habit of jumping into bed with every steward on
night stops or at any other time.”
TRENTON, N. J.
Rep. Frank Thompson, (D„ N.J.) speaking
of the fatal shooting by Trenton police of a ministerial student who
police said was shot looting a clothing store:
“A shirt is not worth a human life.”
—

—

The only thing I feel quite strongly about is
that the New Campus Alliance Party MUST NOT
win. Mr, Marsh is heading a party and a concept
which is very dangerous to the University. There
are several candidates in that party that also must
be defeated. Of those I know personally, Mr. Sickler
and Mr. Beck are poor, at best.
These are my only strong feeling about the
elections. The student body will not be adversely
affected if Dick Miller or Rick Schwab wins. Both
will make good presidents, and I don’t feel The
Spectrum’s endorsement of Schwab over Miller
reflected closeness of their abilities.

Mr. Miller has grown with his involvement in
government and probably will continue to do so.
He has spoken out on vital issues and often says
intelligent things. Mr. Schwab also is aware of the
University and would do about as good a job. The
real problem with these elections is that the
platforms and the parties and the choosing is crap.
They don’t ever reflect the differences that mean
anything. But that’s another issue.

For the above reasons precisely, I can’t get
excited about Nixon or Rockefeller, or Kennedy
or McCarthy. But now that I have shifted to the
national scene, the thing that profoundly bothers
me about the humble Mr. Johnson is that it takes
so little for a nation to weep for a murderer.
And speaking of murderers, it seems it happened
again. Our greatly advanced and civilized society

has had another brother slain and somehow the
assassin(s) got away with it. Many of us knew Mr.
King wouldn’t live out his “natural” life
what
upsets me so very much though is that we only
get angry about it after it happens.
—

And if the FBI can tap my phone for six months
because I smoke the weed, but can’t be alert enough
to, if not prevent, at least catch, an assassin, I
think old facist Hoover should re-evaluate who his
enemies are.

In New York City, more than 100 people called
the American Broadcasting System the night King
was murdered to protest the network’s cutting the
last several minutes of -the “Bewitched” show to
discuss the murder.
NBC got about 50 calls for the same reason
when “Dragnet” was pre-empted. In all, New York
City TV stations got about 250 calls.

The company which Siggelkow and O’Neil allowed on campus, the Army Material Command,
made the news over the holidays. They killed more
than 6400 sheep at the Dugway Proving Ground in
Utah. They died from an Army nerve gas. They
died a day after the area and hay the sheep eat
were prayed from a plane. Quoting from the New
York Post on April 3, 1968, “the question of whether
the nerve gas killed the sheep still remains unanswered, though we are highly suspect.”
And when I turn on my television set in August
to watch the Democratic Convention in Chicago,
I’ll see all my friendly Democrats singing “Happy
days are here again.” Maybe they’ll even feel
sympathetic and Mr. Johnson will reconsider and
we can all enjoy the benefits of that Great Society,
just like it was in the good old days.
Maybe I’ll feel better next week,

Sholom.

Th* Spectrum's pages for

Editorials

&amp;

Opinions

It is the policy of The Spectrum to
report the
news fully and impartially in the news pages,
to express the opinions of the newspaper only
in the editorial pages and to publish
all sides

of important controversial issues.
Without

expression,

freedom of

expression is meaningless.'*

�Page

Tuesday, April 16, 1968

The Sptctrum

Six

Inter-Residence Judiciary changes

appointment procedure, court structure
The inter-Kesadenoe

Judiciary,

will begin its third year in September with changes in appointment procedure of upper court
judges and in the structure of
the lower courts.
The judicial branch of residence hall government aims to
function as a source which will

provide a “learning experience”
to those students who come under
its jurisdiction.
Formerly, applicants for the
position of IRJ upper-court judge
were appointed: Two members by
the Inter-Residence Council, two
by the Housing Department, and
one by the Dean of Students. Under the new system, applicants
for the position of upper court
judge will be interviewed by the
Executive Committee of the IRC,
current judges on the IRJ and
staff of the Housing Department.
They will be appointed by the
Executive Committee.

Information Officers
At least three Information Officers will also be appointed. The
position of Information Officer
was recently established to eliminate misconceptions about the
court system, providing instead
reliable and helpful information.
Applications for the five uppercourt judges and for the position
of Information Officer are available in the IRC Office and must
be submitted for consideration no
later than April 22. AM applicants
must be residents at the University for a minimum of one semester prior to their term of office, must be residents during
their term of office and also must
BUY AND SELL

USED TEXTS
BUFFALO
TEXTBOOK
STORES, INC.
3610 Main

833-7131

PAPERBACKS

Gifts—Posters —Supplies
General Fiction
and Non-Fiction

have a 1,0 cumualtive average.

The number of lower courts
has been reduced from six to
three. One court will handle
cases from Tower, Macdonald,
Cooke, Michael, and Schoellkopf
Halls; a second court will deal
with cases from Clement and half
of Allenhurst and the third court
will handle cases from Goodyear
and the other half of Allenhurst.

Cases integrated
The Upper Court will continue
to handle cases which do not fall
under the jurisdiction of the lower courts and will be the appellate court for appeal oases.
Basically, IRJ functions to provide a fair hearing and decision,
reflecting student responsibility,
in cases of regulation of resident
student conduct in situations related to residence and to interpret the IRC Constitution when

that a student be expelled from
University housing. The judiciary
views its purpose not as a legal
body of disciplinarians who punish offenders, but as a group of

concerned individuals who desire
to foster the concept of individual responsibility in students who
appear before the court.
Judge Ron Mardenbro feels that
since many of the rules governing students are made by the students themselves, it is “only natural that the judicial branch
should be run by students.”

FRESHMAN

THE

CLASS

presents

MACBET

with MAURICE EVANS
and JUDITH ANDERSON

TUESDAY, APRIL 16th
7:00 P.M. and 9:30 P.M.

CAPEN 140

Old Bomb.

necessary.

The high court of IRJ consists
of five upper court judges and
two faculty advisors: James Ripley, Chief Justice; Sue, Wall, Assistant Chief Justice; and judges
Ann Volpe, Anita Weiss and Ron
Mardenbro.
Raymond Dye of the Housing
Department and Bartley Brennan, Senior Resident Advisor in
Tower, are the two advisors.
Powers of IRJ range from dismissing a case to recommending

NEW ENGLAND

CHILDREN'S CAMP
In the Berkshires at Kent,
Connecticut, requires Men and
Women Counselors for a wellrounded program of land and
water sports, outdoor living and
creative arts. Upper classmen
and graduates are preferred.
Good salaries. Interviews on
campus can be arranged at the
student placement service, for
Wednesday and Thursday, April
17 and 18.

NewH nda.

CAMP LEONARD LEONORE
BOX 186
LAWRENCE, N. Y. 11559

Same Price.
It’s true this sleek new Honda Scrambler 125 would cost
you the same money as the old used bomb, but the low
price isn’t the whole Honda story. Far from it.
When you ride any of Honda’s 23 models, you can forget
high insurance, upkeep, and maintenance costs. Forget
parking problems too.
And look at the Scrambler 125 styling: new candy
colors, chrome fenders, trim new forks, upswept pipes.
And performance: the 125’s dependable 4-stroke parallel
twin OHC engine delivers an impressive 13 hp at 10,000
rpm ; up to 153 mpg.
The hot new Scrambler 125. Can you think of a better
reason to ban the bomb?
j
There are seven Honda Scramblers—from 90cc to 450cc. See them at your Honda dealer
today. For free color brochure and safety pamphlet, write: American Honda Motor Co., Inc.,
Dept. C-ll, Box 50, Gardena, Calif. 90247

75c

�Tuesday, April 16, 1968

Election petitions available
are

now

Election
available for resident students
interested in dormitory governidem

Vice

picaiucm,

,

petitions

Collective bargaining to be examined
at Si ecial meeting by faculty, staff

30. Elections are scheduled for
April 30 and May 1.
Candidates for president must

acvicidij'

and treasurer of the Inter-Residence Council.
Prospective candidates can receive petitions from noon to 6:30
p.m. every day until April 23 in
the IRC office located on the
main floor of Tower Hall. April
24 is the deadline for returning
petitions to the IRC office.
Campaigning will begin April

Collective bargaining, outlined
in the Tayolr Act, will be examined by faculty and professional staff at a special meeting

officer positions must have a 1.0.
All candidates must have at least
one year’s residence on campus.
Two hundred valid resident
signature? are required for the
presidential petition. Other officers need 150 resident signatures. Residents can sign any
number of petitions if they have
validated I.D. cards.

Friday.

The meeting is designed to acquaint the staff with the various
bargaining agents. In May, faculty and professional staff face
the option of deciding if and by
whom they would like to be represented for collective bargaining with the State.
Professors Jacob Hyman, Jack
Nelson and Thomas Connolly, appointed by the Executive Committee of the Faculty Senate,

Bulletin Board courses
A special meeting has been scheduled for 8:15
p.m. Thursday in Butler Auditorium, Capon Hall
for students and faculty who have initiated courses
on the Bulletin Board.

Need 'even

Organizational meetings will be arranged for
the faculty member and students of each class to
plan the semester's work, readings and other activities. The time and place for the class meetings
will be posted on the Bulletin Board for students
who cannot attend Thursday's meeting.

A committee, headed by Student Association
President Stewart Edelstein and Nancy Coleman,
will outline curriculum-planning procedures Thursday night. They will also assist students in finding
faculty members to teach the new courses.

Spectrum

2ND. V.

p.
P,

TREASURER

STUDENT
SERVICES

These programs are designed
to utilize the resources of the
University in aiding the economically and educationally underprivileged in the Buffalo area.
“We would like everybody’s
ideas” as to how new programs
can be instituted and old ones
expanded, Mr. O’Neil told The
Spectrum. Students, faculty and

QUALIFIED

Rick Schwab

Richard Miller

Pro-Act

S

fXENT

Tracy Cottone
Row 'A'

Jairo Estrada

Randy Eng

Jairo Estrada

Pro-Act

Barbara Emilson

Row 'D'

Barbara Emilson
Row 'A'
Louis Post
Row 'B'

Independent
Louis Post

Fred Hollander

No Endorsement

Pro-Act
Coleman

Nancy Coleman
Row 'A'

Independent

Ellen Price
Snap

RELATIONS

™ls

PauTltollendea^
Independent

ACADEMIC

Harry Klein
Snap

AFFAIRS

Row 'A'

Steve Milstein
Snap

PUBLIC

.

Rick Schwab

Tracy Cotitone
Burgher

Nancy

Ted Beringer
Pro-Act

Ellen Price
Row 'D‘

Ted Beringer
Row 'B'

Paul Hollander
Row 'A'
Ron Buccelli

Pro-Act

334, 335, 337 and 344 will be
used.
A coffee break will begin at
3:30 p.m. in the Fillmore Room.
A panel discussion, scheduled
for 4 ito 5 p.m. in the Fillmore
Room, will include representatives of University Senate, Civil
Service Employees Association
(SEA), Faculty Association of the
State University of New York
(FASUNY), American Federation
of Teachers (AFT), and the
American Association of University Professors (AAUP).

administrators

are urged to submit proposals, since a “maximum
input from the University community is needed.”

Economic objectives
Existing programs must be expanded to achieve economic rather than racial objectives, Mr.
O’Neil continued, and “more has
to be done to make these programs work.”
He noted the high

attrition
rate in the Upward Bound program that assists approximately
50 State University of Buffalo
minority! group students in financial and academic affairs.
Mr. O’Neil suggested a corps
of non-white counselors and advisors as well as increased fiancial aid and work programs
to bolster the program.
Under another program, the
New York College Bound Corporation will begin working with
Negro and Spanish-speaking students early in their educational
careers. It will provide finan-

cial and academic assistance. This
University has made a commitment to accept a small number
of students in the program when

they are ready to enter college,
Mr. O’Neil added.
In the area of employment, the
construction of the campus at
Amherst will provide a tremendous opportunity for jobs for unemployed minority group members, according to the presiden-

tial assistant.

Experimental program?
The University can help alleviate a shortage of jobs this
summer that will find an estimated 12,000 ghetto teenagers
out of work, he suggested. A
form of Experimental College
could be implemented to combine academies and employment
for youths from the Buffalo

ghetto.

The University is not currently
perceived as a place of employment, observed Mr. O’Neil.
Increased contact with the

ghetto community is a prime objective of the programs. An expansion of the Community Aid
Corps and a program to aid businessmen in ghetto areas are now
being formulated.
“With two Western New York

counties included in the de-

pressed Appalachian region, two
major non-white ghettos and

three Indian reservations in the
area,” Mr. O’Neil feels that the
University must become involved
in aiding the underprivileged.

Garcia-Godoy to speak
ENDORSED

Penny Bergman
Row 'A'

NSA

mTE
NAL
affairs

LINE

Pro-Act

RIGHTS

AF
AFFAIRS

THIS

Daryl Rosenfeld

Pro-Act

NE

VOTE

Penny Bergman
Burgher

STUDENT

Reporter

Acting swiftly on President Meyerson’s appeal for “renewed dedication and commitment” in the wake of the death
of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Assistants to the President
Robert M. O’Neil and James H. Blackhurst are in the process
of developing long-range programs.

EXCELLENT

Snap

Staff

Two University administrators have taken charge of a
drive to bring minority group members into closer contact
with the University community.

Spectrum editors have done what each individual student cannot do for
himself—we have interviewed the candidates extensively,
and evaluated each on the
basis of his knowledge of student government, the workings of the University, and
his capabilities for the office he seeks.
Some candidates, we found to our horror, lack even elemental knowledge of
student and University affairs!
21 candidates do not appear on this chart. We believe that they simply
cannot adequately fill the offices they seek.
The following Spectrum recommendations cross party lines. (No single party
has a monopoly on talent.)
We strongly urge students, then, to vote for the Spectrum-endorsed
candidates, because far and away, they are simply the best qualified persons running.
Elections are Monday and Tuesday 9 ajn.—5 p.m. in the Norton Center
lounge. Only students with validated I.D. cards may vote.
—The Spectrum Executive Editors

1ST. V.

The schedule includes at 1 to
2:30 p.m. in Butler Auditorium,
Capen an address by Richard
Lipsitz, vice president of the
Niagara Frontier Chapter of the
American Civil Liberties Union,
on the “Legal Aspects of the
Taylor Act.” Remarks by a representative of the Public Employee Relations Board in Albany
will follow.
Local neutral resource people
including attorneys and industrial
relations specialists will lead
small discussion groups at 2:30

rooms 233, 234, 266, 330, 332,

s ideas'

Spectrum ratings and endorsemen

Burgher

meeting.

by Joel Kleinman

Credit, if granted, will become part of the
student's semester load. Similar arrangements may
be made for teaching credit for the faculty member
or teaching assistant.
Courses may also meet as non-credit seminars
similar to the Experimental College.

to 3:30 p.m. In Norton Hall,

have made arrangements for the

Programs planned to aid minorities

Curriculum-planning procedures will be outlined. Every proposed course will have the option
to apply for credit by meeting certain requirements
regarding frequency of meetings and the number
of credit-hours or their equivalents requested.

1IDENT

Pag* Sevan

The Spectrum

Harry Klein
Row 'D'

The man who was instrumental
in establishing stability in the
Dominican Republic immediately
following its 1965 revolution will
visit the State University of Buffalo.
Hector Garcia-Godoy, who rose
to the Provisional Presidency of
that country during the American intervention, will discuss the
circumstances and causes of the
revolt as well as the impact it
has had.
“Lessons of the Dominican
Crisis” will be the topic of his
public address at 8:15 p.m. tomorrow in room 355, Hayes Hall.
The Department of Political
Science is sponsoring the visit
and lecture of Mr. Garcia-Godoy,
who is currently serving as Dominican Ambassador to the United
States. Originally scheduled for
last week, the Ambassador's visit
had to be postponed because of
the “events” in Washington.
Mr. Garcia-Godoy was chosen
president in September 1965, by
the two contending parties in the
revolution, and served until popular elections could be held in
June, 1966. In September 1966,
he was appointed Ambassador to
the United States and to the
Organization of American States.

Since
1959, Mr. Garcia-Godoy
served as Ambassador to Belgium,
Great Britain, Luxembourg, Holland, Turkey, and Lebanon.
In 1963 he was Minister of
Foreign Relations under President Juan Bosch.

Course changes for

history majors
Requirements for junior history majors have been revised according to the Department of
History. All junior history majors, beginning from the 1968-69
academic year, must take and
pass one junior seminar in history each semester of his junior
year (History 383-384)) for a
total of six hours of credit
History majors who are seniors
for the fall and spring semesters
are exempt from any undergraduate seminar or colloquium requirements.

A student who fails to pass
two junior seminars
is barred from graduating as a
history major; a student may only

either of his

repeat

one seminar.

�The

Pag* Eight

Bard president posts bail for 32
students arrested in campus raid
ANNANDALE ON HUDSON
(CPS)—Sheriff’s deputies arrested
32 Bard College students, 14 of
them on narcotics charges, in the
third pre-dawn police raid on a
college campus this year.
Deputies arrived in the Bard
campus at 1 a.m. April 6, setting
up roadblocks at the three en.

-

trances to the campus.

Meanwhile other deputies searched
dorms, arresting 14 on drug
charges and confiscating quantities of marijuana, pep pills, and
heroin.

Some of the

18 arrested on

non-drug charges

were

charged

with interfering with the police

and harrassment of police officers. Some caught in the roadblock
were charged with drunk driving
and other traffic violations. The

students harrassed the officers
extensively, spitting on them and
yelling at them. However, some
students said they were arrested
for simply going up to the deputies and asking for their badge
numbers.
Bard President Reamer Kline

Although

the bill which be-

came law is considerably weaker
than the one first introduced in

the legislature, many observers
say students have achieved a
major victory in their drive to
have more power in running the
colleges and universities.
The bill specifies that each of
the six state-supported institutions will have one non-voting
student member on its governing
board. The bill first introduced
in the legislature provided for
the students to be voting mem-

Their

behind-the-scenes

Bible Truth

PIZZA

CRUCIFIXION PREDICTED
Jesus taught his disciples saying,

"The Son of Man must be delivered
into the hands of sinful men, and

BOCCE

TF 3-1345

be crucified, and the third day rise
again."
—Luke 24:7

posted $28,000 worth of bail personally for the—students. Bails
ranged from $100 to $6250, but
averaged $1-2,000, President Kline
said any action against the students would be determined according to the individual cases.

Dutchess County Sheriff Law-

rence Quinlin said the arrests
were made following a two-month
investigation and that more arrests were coming. Mr. Quinlin

admitted he had information from
inside the campus about drug use.

Students given administrative
powers in Kentucky schools
FRANKFORT, Ky. (CPS)—Gov.
Louie B. Nunn has signed into
law a bill making Kentucky the
first state in the nation to have
students on the governing boards
of public colleges and universities.

Tuesday, April 16, 1968

Spectrum

The students go to trial April
Some students believe Mr.
Quinlin will be unable to win the
cases against most of them. Mr.
Quinlin has arrested LSD advocate Timothy Leary, whose Millbrook Farm is also in Dutchess
County, six times but has been
unable to make the charges stick.

20.

efforts

reportedly influenced legislators
to weaken the original bill.

The real test of the bill’s

strength will come in the future.
For example, the University of
Kentucky Board of Trustees by
law conducts its business in public meetings, but any controversial issue is always decided in
private before the public session
begins. There is some speculation
that the student member will not
be invited to the unofficial, private sessions.
“I’m sure there will be many
situations in which a student has
no business in there,” said Ted

Gilbert, executive director of the

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State Council on Public Higher
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a wait-and-see attitude.”

832-0585

bers.

The legislature also added a
clause requiring the student members at each institution to be
Kentucky residents. The student
body president gets to sit on his
institution’s governing board it
he is a state resident. If he is
not, a special election will be
held to determine the student
representative.
Although the presidents of the
state institutions did not publicly
support or oppose the bill, most
were believed to be against it.

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�T h a Spectrum

Tuesday, April 16, 1968

Papa Nina

The Association to appear in conceit
by James Brennan
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

The
Kleinhans Music Hall at 8 p.m.
tomorrow.

The six young men, made fam-

ous by their recordings of “Cherish” and “Along Comes Mary,”

have scored immense hits with
their lilting melodies and thought

The one In the middle will

provoking lyrics.

;hoh

Dedicated disciples of peace,
they sing of love not as a replacement for war, but as a way of
life. They sing of God and the

You

inner-satisfaction one must find
before he begins to live.
SAAB

•ionon,

CHECKPOINT foreign car sales

&amp;

service

487 KENMORE AVE.—a few blocks from Campus

KLEINHANS
Downtown Buffalo

Thruway Plaza

Boulevard Mall

£port &amp;lpip Ani (Eollpgp fclpip
THE MOST RESPECTED
NAME IN CLASSIC SHIRTS

GANT

Boldly they have become lyrical liberators, speaking on subjects within their melodic structures ’ s?m ? thi g f r w£ ich Don
’l
th8 8631,65 h3V6 been
°

°-

1

criticised

Intellectually, they are students

of life,

and

their effervescent

’“groovy” personalities draw
young people toward them. They
spend hours contemplating the
state the world is getting itself
into and attempting to offer some
solutions through ,their songs.
Their I.Q.’s reach skyward and
their warehouse of knowledge is
expansive, lending depth to each
work they produce.

The Association

"Dedicated disciples of peace''
are aPP earin9 at Kleinhans tomorrow at 8 p.m.

Enchantingly electric entertainers on stage, they present a
musical review uncomparable in
its vocal and instrumental adaptations. The audiences at their
concerts are happy and they
groove with them falling through
the kaleidoscope of quick-silver
melodic movement that is offered

and bettered by each perform
ance.

The Association have described
their sound as extraterrestrial
and to back up this statement,
they eite that a UFO was spotted
near Santa Ana, Calif., on the
same date they were discovered.

VISTA seeks students to
teach piano to needy

Hollands defines
ombudsman plan

A music program that will provide free piano lessons for underprivileged children in the
Hasten St. area may soon become
a reality. VISTA is looking for
advanced piano students who can
donate time at their own conveni-

“You can’t fight city hall,” or
can you? The ombudsman project

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ence to teaching these youths.
The children will have to be
scheduled after 3 p.m. on weekdays due to school. They may be
scheduled at anytime on Saturday
and Sunday.
VISTA is interested in having
the children taught in their area,
therefore interested persons will
have to teach in the Masten
District.
Anyone interested in teaching
or for further information contact Miss Sharon Mosley, VISTA
volunteer, at 885-0018 or 882-2055.

Special to the Spectrum

at the State University of Buffalo School of Law may insure
that someday the common man’s
complaints may be heard loudly
and clearly. Mr. John Hollands,
director of the program, defines
the scope of the ombudsman project and explains why government officials have nothing to
fear on the upcoming “State of
the University” program on WGR550 kc., 8:45 p.m. tonight.
Mr. Hollands explains that experience has shown that more
often than not, the customer is
not always right. The work of
clarification resulting from a
gripe is more often done with
the person who complains than
with the agency or persons he is
complaining about.

Good grief, I wish
he’d never heard
about togetherness

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�The Spectrum

Pag* Ten

Tuesday, April 16, 1968

Play review

Charley's Aunt' at Studio Arena
by Richard Perlmutter
Spectrum Theater

Who says a play h
ing to. be entertaining?

:o

the servant; Melody Greer is a
charming cynic.

Reviewer

be serious

or

mean-

lai len wii

The set and costume designs
help to create an atmosphere of
British Oxford. In the second act
the college wall is painted with
bright green ivy. In the third we
are in a lavish drawing room.

Certainly not I
especially since viewing the Studio
Arena’s current comedy, “Charley’s Aunt.”
—

I Main, Mil-Pine Plaza, N.

Falls, N. Y

The play’s blurb boasts that
since its premier in 1892, Brandon Thomas’ play has been performed somewhere every single
day. Yet the Arena production offers something at least a little
unique in having the director,
Paxton Whitehead, also serve in
the title role.

allow the humor and sentiments
of “Charley’s Aunt” to come
across so strongly. In the acting
area, his antics, expressions and
intonations are superb. His resonating, masculine tones make
him the perfect old aunt .

It is mainly bis efforts which

Mr. Whitehead’s direction is
also admirable as the cast is
synchronized and smooth and
most enjoyable in their foolery.
It is sometimes more difficult
for an actor to distinguish himself in a comedy and thus Paxton
Whitehead and crew deserve a
little extra credit. Kenneth
Wickes is delightfully comic as

r-HSn
$tgle Crest
UNIVERSITY PLAZA

A\EET THE PUSSYCAT
WITH THE JUNGLE

“Charley’s Aunt” is a Victorian
fairy tale complete with happilyever-after ending in which only

those who put love before money
are rewarded. The inanity of the
situation comedy invokes convulsive cackling in many of the audience. There is a more subtle
humor present—as in the catchy
British aphorisms i n t r o d u cing
each act: “While there’s tea,
there’s hope.”

Smooth directing

You will be swept up in the
fun and foolery, the love pentagons, the incredible situations
and the world of Victorian England.

Baird to house musical
program of Creely poetry
A unique presentation of both
music and poetry will be presented this evening in Baird Hall.
The program is a sort of juxtaposition of the two arts that
includes musical scores written
specifically for Robert Creely’s
poetry which Mr. Creely has

among the students presenting
the concert. Also performing are
Jim Kasprowicz, trombonist;
Joseph Kubera, pianist; William
Thiele, percussionist, and Jim
Kurzdorfer on bass.

“Words” is the title shared by
both the music-poetry program
and Mr. Creely’s book of poems.
Among the selections of the concept are Dimensions, The Hole,
Ope Way, Anger, A Tally and, of
course, Words.

with some of his poetry. Creely
supported the idea, and thus the
result this evening.

Mr. Horwood, after being impressed by one of Creely’s readings, decided he wanted to work

agreed to narrate.

“I’m very honored to work with
his (Creely’s) poetry,” said the
composer. “I was very cautious
not to destroy the immaculate
quality in the poems I have
selected. Each poem was different and presented its own problem. Consequently each musical
setting was different.”

Michael S. Horwood, a student
of theory composition at this University, is the composer of the
complete musical presentation.
He will also conduct the program
tonight.

The program is sponsored by
the Music and Literature and
Drama Committees and will take
place at 8:30 p.m. this evening.

A chamber ensemble composed
of music students will present
the concert. Nora Nausbaum, flutist; David Pilecki, oboist; Leonard Lazarus, clarinetist, and Don
Montalto on the trumpet are

Tickets are available in Norton
Hall for non-fee paying students.

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�Pag* El*v*n

The Spectrum

Tuesday, April 16, 1968

CLASS IFIED
FOR

SALE

Seablue, sunroof sedan,
radio, whitewalls, 33,900 miles, eximmaculate, valuable.

1965 V.W.

—

cellent condition,

MORRIS

MINOR

-1-814.

—

Economical,

good
Must

body, new battery and brakes.
sejl this week. $165. Call after 5 P.M.,
835-9184.

1965 MGB—Red

body,
interior, wire
wheels, radio, good condition. Best
offer. Contract Ken, TF 2-8331.
1965 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE
Beautiful
condition, very low mileage, leaving
state. 837-7282.
1959 VOLKSWAGEN convertible, cheap.
Call before 9:30 AM. TF 7-4335.
1961 SUNBEAM ALPINE convertible. 4
on floor, dual carburator, new clipon hard top, extra transmission. $500
or best offer. 886-6886 after 6.
1965 YAMAHA 55 cc—excellent condi
tion, $100, call Richie, 836-0691.
1966 HONDA 160—excellent condition,
—

$375. Call NF 2-8669.
1965 MUSTANG, 8 cylinder, 4 speed
convertible, must sell, $1100.00. Call
Paul 832-3378 after 6.
1962 TRIUMPH, red convertible, excellent condition, snow tires, tool kit,
all accessories included. Call 837-6196.
1964 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE, front end
wrecked, as is $125, worth much
more in parts. 832-4676.
1965 VOLKSWAGEN, good condition,
$975. Do or best offer. 875-9875.
1965 HONDA CB160; 1964 CORVAIR
convertible, 110, 4 speed. Both ex-

cellent condition, reasonable. 833-6843.
1967 TRIUMPH motorcycle. 500 cc,
DAYTONA model. Brand new, never

7-room

licensed. A beautiful bike. $1000. Call
662-7456.

WANTED, 2 bedroom furnished apt. for
June, July and August, within easy

REFRIGERATOR-i-iy 2 cubic feet.
Excellent condition. Excellent for the
dorm! Call 831-3091 or 831-3088.

SMALL furnished

house. Call

SUBLET
bedroom
June-Sept.

summer?

furnished

apt.

Don’t. 2-

to

sublet

5 min. from school. 838-

1585, 8-10 am; lOpm-lam.
SUBLET an apartment, 10 minutes from
campus. Furnished, girls only. Two
bedrooms.

Call

831-2369.

APARTMENT FOR RENT
SUMMER PAD

available,

furnished,

2

kitchen, living room, hifi
Asking $70. Negotiable. 837-

and TV.
9484.
MALE student desires to sub let apartment for summer session. Will share.
Calf 839-4160.
APARTMENTS available, occupancy 91-68. Forest Green Apartments, 1329
North Forest Road, Amherst. 632-2535.
LUXURY apt. for rent May, prefer married or grads, furniture for sale, near
Main St. Call 885-2798.
ROOMMATES
—

2

WANTED

new 2
house, upper. Modern conveniences, 4 blocks from campus.
Whole summer. 837-8819.
MAYBE it's our breath
We’re still
looking for a girl to share a fabulous
ROOMMATES

—

Beautiful

family

—

tables, rugs, etc. Reasonable price. 834

MISCELLANEOUS

apartment for three
people
by visiting
wanted
distinguished professor for month of May,
preferably in walking distance or near
convenient bus line to University. Contact Miss Kathy Kufel. 831-3014 between 8:30-5:30.
WANTED
DRIVER needed to Seattle, Washington,
can leave anytime, arriving on or before May 20th. 675-0072.
GIRL to babysit for family with five

children,
5-14 years at lake
front home, Thunderbay, Ontario. Must
be able to swim. $30 per week. Call
ages

bedrooms,

call 831-3610

886-2833,

APARTMENTS WANTED

G.E.

CAMPING out this

For quick action

886-1566.

8344.

RALLY DAY U.S.A.—Don't miss it. SatApril 20th
urday night,
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PM. First car off 7:01 PM. AH kinds
of cars welcome.
Perfect for beginTrophies, metal dash plaques.
ners.
Sponsored by Towne and Country Mustang Club. More information at 837-

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—7

—

EXPERIENCED typing done
.

$265 Pan Am Jet to
Brussels wtih 5-day stopover in London. Leaving New York July 3 and
returning New York Sept. 16. Call Dean

ALTERATION: coats, dresses

and skirts,

etc. Special price for students, one
day service on hem if desired. Snyder
area.: 839-0283

GRADUATES

wish to sell apartment
furniture: mattresses, dressers, desk,

(

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852-4372. Open only
faculty, students and employees of

SUNY a, Buffalo

on a Car? Am going to Europe
ca bu &gt;[ ,orei * n car and
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For gems from the Jewish
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�Page Twelve

Tha

Tuesday, April 16, 1968

Spectrum

Traced to Atlanta

of Dr. King’s

Path

MEMPHIS, Tenn.
In the dingy flophouse, the bathroom window is still
jammed open, and across the street the
wreaths are wilting on the balcony of
the Lorraine Hotel.
Tourists can see it all, the place where
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. died.
The tears have dried and the eulogies
echoed away, the violence is subsiding
and the flowers are dying, but the man
who killed Dr. King still is free.
Within hours after Dr. King fell dying,
the FBI launched the greatest manhunt
of the century for a shadowy sailor named
Erie Starvo Galt. It searched for Galt in
utter secrecy, and those few police departments asked to look out for him were
asked only to locate him
not to arrest
him. No warrant was issued for him.
Officially the FBI will not even concede that it wants a man named Eric
Starvo Galt, The name became known
only after the FBI issued
and later
hastily withdrew
a “locate and notify"
order for him.
—

—

—

—

killer leaves FBI cold

Does he exist?
—Eric Gall is an enigma. In fact there
is some official suspicion that Eric Galt
may not exist, for it is very hard for a
man to leave so few traces of himself.
As far as can be determined, his trail
grows cold in Atlanta, where agents found
his white Mustang Thursday. It had been
abandoned there the morning of April 5,
one day after the killing.
Where he came from, where he has
gone
they are mysteries. The death of
Martin Luther King Jr. is a hodgepodge
of mysteries.
On Friday, the day after the killing,
and on Sunday and Monday on television
programs, Atty Gen. Ramsey Clark talked
freely and optimistically. The attorney
general now avoids reporters.
Eric Galt once lived in the white stucco
house with a red tile roof at 2608 Highland Ave. in Birmingham.
Room and board at 2608 Highland costs
$27 a week, and most of its guests stay
—

only two or three weeks before they move
—OB.

Peter Cerpes runs the place and he says
he talked to the FBI and won’t alk to anyone else.
Authorities—questioned but not warned
to secrecy by the FBI —say that Galt applied for a driver’s license at Birmingham
on Sept. 6, 1967.
When he requested the license, he said
he was an unemployed merchant mariner.
There is no record of him at the Port of
Mobile.
He bought the white Mustang, which
was so passionately sought for a week,
from William D .Paisley of Birmingham
on Aug. 30, 1967. Mr. Paisely said the FBI
told him not to talk to reporters.
The Alabama State Employment Office
never heard of Eric Galt. The Birmingham
police never heard of him, and the Birmingham Credit Bureau has no file on
him. No one knows, now, where Eric Galt
has been sihce November.

Traced to Atlanta

It is a leisurely eight to ten hour drive

*

•

•

memphis
beriin
toKyo

from Memphis to Atlanta.
Sometime between 7 and 9 a.m., Friday,
a white Mustang drove up to a small parking lot between two apartment buildings
at Capitol Homes, a low-rent, integrated
housing project within sight of Georgia’s

from our

wire services

TOKYO
North Vietnam has accused
the United States of deliberately delaying
talks on peace and has warned Washington to “stop creating problems” over a
site.
The Hanoi regime said it had noted
Washington’s objections to Phnom Penh
and had suggested Warsaw while the
United States had proposed a number of
places which are not acceptable to North

In two separate statements broadcast

by Hanoi Radio it charged that President
Johnson was reneging on his promise to
meet with the Communists anywhere and

at

any time.

In New York, U.N. Secretary General
Thant appealed “fervently” to both sides
to reach a speedy agreement on a site for
the discussions. The appeal came in his
first public statement since returning from
an eight-day visit to Europe during which
he said he was in contact with both Hanoi
and Washington.
Both Hanoi broadcasts, one a Foreign
Ministry statement and the other an editorial in the official newspaper Nhan Dan,
accused the United States of intensifying
air raids on the southern panhandle of
North Vietnam and other “bellicose acts.”
The ministry statement said North Vietnam suggested on April 8 that Phnom
Penh be the site “for preliminary contacts
on the ambassadorial level . . . with a
view to preparing for the formal talks.”

Sad
task

The bullet was recovered from Kings’

body, but the indications are that it was
too severely broken up for ballistics tests.
A fingerprint, or a palmprint, or both,
were found—either in the bathroom or

on the rifle. But indications are that authorities don’t expect much from them.
Ramsey Clark, however, insists the “physical evidence is very substantial.”
The manhunt continues, massive, secret,
for one man, perhaps for several men.
Life in the South goes on. Many still
mourn, few still weep, and some never

Reds say U.S. stalling talks

Vietnam.

-UPI Telephoto

rida.

cared.

gold-domed Capitol.

—

compiled

It was in a white Mustang that a _n
Irive off following Dr. King’s shooting.
Mrs. Ernest Payne was looking out her
window. She remembered the man clearly.
Her description roughly fit the description of Eric Starve Galt. There was no
doubt about the car, when the ladies at
Capitol Homes finally got worried about it
on Thursday, six days later. It was Galt’s.
The FBI refuses comment on the investigation. Rumors, both plausible and extravagant, sweep Memphis concerning every
conceivable organization or person.
Reports flow in to Memphis and Washington from every FBI bureau in the
nation. The search for Galt has gone from
Mississippi to Alabama to Georgia to Flo-

On April 10, it said the United States
“came out with the claim that Phnom
Penh presents difficulties . . . because of
problems arising from the absence of a
U.S. mission at that location.”
“At the same time, they proposed a
number of places which are not adequate
to the Democratic Republic of Vietnam,”
the statement said.
The Hanoi regime took U.S. objection*
to the capital of Cambodia into consideration, it said, and suggested Warsaw. But,
it added;
“On April 12, the U.S. authorities, without giving their opinion on the choice of
Warsaw, raised two conditions of minimum standards for the place of prelimiinary contacts. They demanded that the
contacts should take place at a neutral
country, where both sides should have
representation and adequate communications.”
This was in direct contradiction of Mr.
Johnson’s repeated statements that the
United States desired “prompt talks . . .
and that they are ready to go anywhere,
at any time for talks,” it said.
“It is clear that the U.S. government is
deliberately trying to delay the preliminary talks ...” the Foreign Ministry
charged.

“It the United States government really

wants talks
it must stop creating difficulties in the choice of a place for pre...

liminary contacts, which only delay the
talks between the two sides

A Newark, N.J., Central Ward resident
checks through her burned-out apartment for valuables
a task that was
common for ghetto residents last week.
Hundreds of suspicious fires have been
recorded since the murder of Marlin
Luther King.
—

Students riot in West Berlin
BERLIN—West Berlin police swinging
nightsticks and firing blasts from high
pressure water cannons broke up a mob of
about 1500 youths blocking traffic on the
city’s main street Saturday to protest the
shooting of Rudi Dutschke.
Riot squads arrested about 200 youths,
including Peter Brandt, the 19-year-old son
of West German Foreign Minister Willy

Brandt.
Later the student supporters of the shot
leftwing youth leader massed and blocked
traffic in West Berlin’s main street, the
Kurfuerstendamm, police charged. The
youths scattered but re-formed. Police
brought up their motorized water, cannon.
Dutschke, a 28-year-old leftist youth

leader, was critically wounded Thursday
by Josef Bachmann, a 23-year-old housepainter and admirer of Adolf Hitler. Bachman said the assassination of Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr. gave him the idea of
killing the “Communist" Dutschke,
In the West German post city of Bremenhaven, youths tore down the American
flag from a pole in front of U.S. headquarters and draped a red banner over
the headquarters entrance.
West German Chancellor Kurt Georg
Kiesinger warned the students in a nationwide television and radio speech the
nation would not tolerate violence. He
advised youths to turn their backs on
“radical gang leaders.”

Up a

rung?

Poland's Defense Minister, Marshal
Marian Spychalski (pictured here), was
nominated last week to succeed Edward
Ochab as president of the Communist
government. Ochab, old, ailing and

nearly blind, has announced his resignation.

”

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                    <text>An Editorial

An error by one
There are certain times when a college newspaper must

diverge from the normal types of editorializing to convey a
deeper, more somber message. This is one of those times.

The Spectrum was criticized severely as a result of Friday’s elections issue. The temper of the criticism, however,
was far out of proportion to what some considered an injustice.

Let me first say that some mistakes were made Friday.
It was an error to omit the statements of some candidates.
It was an error to attempt to give parties rather than individual candidates an equal amount of coverage. There is
no question in my mind that these were, indeed, mistakes
and, as editor, I assume full responsibility for them. Today’s
edition is an attempt to correct any injustice that may have
resulted.
On the other hand, those mistakes led to reactions by
some candidates and a few non-candidates that I viewed as
appalling and certainly out of place in a supposedly intellectual University community.

A number of mimeographed slingers appeared Friday
morning which accused The Spectrum and its editors of
intentionally perpetrating a “grave injustice” and misusing
power. I, personally, was charged with making a “deceptive
and underhanded attempt to destroy freedom of thought.”
I find it difficult to believe that even the authors of
these statements actually thought that what they wrote was
true. These statements were, instead, an attempt to discredit
Spectrum endorsements because the complainants did not
receive those endorsements.
After viewing the reactions of these students, I am certain more than ever of one thing: The Spectrum endorsements could not be more correct. The vindictive and revengeful barrage that was leveled against this newspaper
and against me personally speaks only too well of the immaturity of a great many unendorsed candidates. I shudder
to think that these very students are on the ballot for election as student leaders.
One party has even gone so far as to state publicly that
The Spectrum has no business making endorsements. I must
differ with that assumption. It is not only a newspaper’s business to make endorsements; it is its responsibility.
Spectrum editors take the time to interview any candidate who wishes to be interviewed. The interview helps us
to decide just how qualified a student is for the office he
seeks. The interviews break through the smiling facade of
the campaign. I believed the endorsements were accurate.
Now I am certain they are.

The attempt of some to imply that there was a SpectrumBurgher Party coalition strikes me as most disgusting. Rick
Schwab, Penny Bergman and Tracy Cottone received endorsements because they are all extremely well-qualified students.
Those that charge that the Schwab endorsement came as a
result of his former association with this newspaper should
reflect that during the interviews, virtually all of the candidates recognized Rick Schwab’s abilities and qualifications.
The attempt to discredit the endorsement is obviously a
maneuver to deny Rick Schwab’s election.

ELECTION
E X T R % CE1 «o

The bpECTI^UM
apr

State University of New York at Buffalo

Vol

Monday, April 15, 1968

18, No. 46

High-pressure campaigning begins
The -new polity will find its
leaders tomorrow night. That’s
when returns will be in of today
and tomorrow’s general campus
election.
Weeks of hard, expensive campaigning will reach a crecendo
this afternoon, taper-off slightly
tomorrow and end abruptly Tuesbut not until the
day evening
last vote has been cast.
All the action, however, had
not been saved for these two election days. Much of it occurred
through the weekend.
—

Collusion charged

Spectrum’s right to make edi

By Friday afternoon and Saturday
morning,
mimeographed
statements by supporters of candidates not endorsed by The Spectrum were circulating. They
charged collusion between the
newspaper and some endorsed
candidates, and questioned The

torial endorsements.
Voting will take place in the
Norton center lounge, in Tower
and Goodyear Halls from 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m. today and tomorrow.
Full-time undergraduate students with validated ID cards may
vote. Seniors will be permitted
to vote.

Correction
In Friday's Spectrum it was erroneously reported that black youths attending a memorial
service for Dr. Martin Luther King April 9 "rampaged up Main Street, breaking windows and slowing traffic."
Tuesday's service at Niagara Square was attended largely by university students, and was
peaceful. The rampage incident occurred April 8.
It was also reported that Ken Becker is running
for 1st Vice President on the New Campus Alliance
ticket. He is not. He is running on the SNAP slate.

Spectrum copies stolen
Friday morning’s Spectrum
a special Election Edition
con-

—

—

tained endorsements for various
candidates seeking executive officer and coordinator positions.
According to Murray Bichman,
Spectrum circulation and promotion director, all copies of the
newspaper were removed from
Tower Hall about 2 a.m. Friday.
He estimated circulation loss at
more than 1000 copies.

Spectrum ratings and endorsements
Spectrum editors have done what each individual student cannot do for himself—we have interviewed the candidates extensively, and evaluated each on the
basis of his knowledge of student government, the workings of the University, and

his capabilities for the office he seeks.
Some candidates, we found to our horror, lack even elemental knowledge of
student and University affairs!
21 candidates do not appear on this chart. We believe that they simply
cannot adequately fill the offices they seek.
The following Spectrum recommendations cross party lines. (No single party
has a monopoly on talent.)
We strongly urge students, then, to vote for the Spectrum-endorsed candidates, because far and away, they are simply the best qualified persons running.
Elections are Monday and Tuesday 9 am.—5 pm. in the Norton Center
There were several other shocking incidents that oc- lounge. Only students with validated I.D. cards may vote.
—The Spectrum Executive Editors
curred these past few days. All copies of The Spectrum that

were distributed in Tower Dormitory were stolen sometime
before 2 a.m. Friday. I received a number of communications from some candidates that clearly indicate maladjustments in their mental processes.

I have always felt that there were two qualities needed
for a successful leader in student government or anywhere else. The first is a personal moral and ethical code
that a true leader must possess. The second is the intelligence and the ability to discharge the responsibilities of the
office.
I was certain that many of the unendorsed candidates
fell down in the second; I did not realize that so many were
sadly inadequate in the first.

PRESIDENT

MICHAEL L. D’AMICO
Editor-In-Chief

THIS
LINE

QUALIFIED

ENDORSED

Rick Schwab

Richard Miller

Burgher

Pro-Act

Rick Schwab
Row 'A'

Penny Bergman
Burgher

Daryl Rosenfeld

Pro-Act

Penny Bergman
Row 'A'

2ND. V. P,

Tracy Cotton e
Burgher

Steve Milstein
Snap

Tracy Cottone
Row 'A'

TREASURER

Jairo Estrada

Randy Eng

Jairo Estrada

1ST. V. P.

Snap

STUDENT

SERVICES

I sincerely hope that those who felt wronged by in-

because of our error.
My complete disappointment, however, with those who
chose to use that error to create a deceitful, vindictive ploy
will remain unabated. An error by one can sometimes reveal
the true character of so many others.
Sincerely,

VOTE

EXCELLENT

—

sufficient coverage in Friday’s Spectrum are now at ease.
My deepest apologies go to those who may unjustly suffer

rw

Barbara Emilson

AFFAIRS

Row 'A'
Louis Post

Louis Post
Pro-Act

Row 'B'

Fred Hollander
Pro-Act

RIGHTS

Nancy Coleman
Independent

NS A

Snap

Ted Beringer
Pro-Act

INTERNATIONAL
AFFAIRS

Paul Hollander

ACADEMIC

Harry Klein
Snap

AFFAIRS

No Endorsement

Nancy Coleman
Row 'A'

Ellen Price

PUBLIC
RELATIONS

Row 'D'

Barbara Emilton

Independent

STUDENT

NEW STUDENT

Pro-Act

illen Price
Row 'D'
Ted Beringer
Row 'B'
Paul Hollender
Row 'A'

Independent

Ron Buccelli

Pro-Act

Harry Klein
Row 'D'

�The

Page Two

An explanation to our readers
In Friday's Special Election Issue, The

Spectrum attempted to treat each

campus political party equally.

The Burgher Party received 52 column inches of space for statements
and photos; New Campus Alliance also received-column-inches;, the P*~ogressive Action party received 75, and the Students' New Action Party 67
column inches. Independent candidates were alotted a total of 50 column
inches.

'

Unfortunately, in our quest to keep any one party from obtaining dominant coverage in that edition, it was necessary to delete statements and photographs of several party-aligned Coordinator candidates.

These candidates were notified that The Spectrum would print their
and statements in our regularly scheduled eidtion tomorrow.

photos

We have reconsidered that decision. We feel it would be unfair to print
their positions one day after voting had begun
hence today's extra edition.
—

Hollander's student rights proposal
“Despite the varying shades of
political philosophy which exist
among the students at this University, each one of us must live
according to the same legal code.
“Every person, and specifically,
every student at the State University of Buffalo, should be
entitled to enjoy the advantage
of a high standard of legal repre-

sentation when and if it becomes

necessary. The office of Coordinator of Student Rights was created with this concept in mind.

“What, then, should be done in
order to realize the goal of equal
rights and quality legal representation for students?
“The Student Bill of Rights
guarantees, among others, the
right of each student: a) to criticize the pronouncements of faculty members without fear of academic reprisal; b) to be protected
against unjust grading and evaluation due to incompetence, error, or prejudice; c) to prevent
disclosure of any information on
personal views and political asso•

ciations; d) to establish publications without censorship.
“A liaison between such organizations as the Legal Aid Society and the American Civil Liberties Union must be established.
“A system of legal advisement
for students must be arranged
with the School of Law.
“A newsletter, designed to
keep the student body informed
of its rights in matters such as
the draft, drug laws and search
and seizure laws, must be created.
“Action must be taken to lower
the voting age to 18.
A committee of ombudsmen
must be created so that any student with a grievance concerning
any aspect of the University may
avoid the bureaucratic maze, and
have his problem settled easily
and properly.
“No matter what the problem,
be it with the draft or with a
parking- violation, with an automobile accident or with a dispute
involving a department of the
University, I stand pledged to ar-

Monday, April 15, 1968

Spectrum

Dave Clowes, Student Rights:
A call for on-campus frats
Approximately two years ago,
"the State University system abol-

ished national fraternities from
its campuses. This was partly
based upon the feeling that these
organizations discriminated in
their membership.
“As a result, many large, wellknown and beneficial fraternities
were forced to go either local
and relinquish long standing ties
or remain national and relinquish
many of the rights which they
should have been able to retain
merely because they were members of the Student Association.

“In addition, little or nothing
has previously been said about
the great social and athletic contributions which have been made

in accord with what the Administration will allow.

Terry Weaver, Student Affairs

candidate, makes proposals

•

“It is my feeling that the
University should provide for all
of its students the opportunity
and atmosphere in which selfexamination is encouraged; for
without knowing our presupposi-

•

•

I do not feel myself constrained
by the narrow applications of definitions which most others do.
I will interpret the mandate of
my post in its broadest meaning:
It will be a lot of new, radicaltho-in-historical perspective really conservative educational philosophy-into action programs that
will enable students to develop
their own personal, individual
area of concentration program.

This, is, after all, what student
affairs is really all about—making the entire college experience,
not just the classroom academics,
relevant and meaningful to the
student’s life experience.
It means, also, student control
of things they have no say in
now, as well as equal student representation on all faculty or administration committees which by
their very nature are concerned
with student affairs. To allow
this office to be used just to
the advantage of future incoming freshmen, though noble in itself, is to do a serious disservice
to those of us who are already
here and will be gone if things
are allowed to run their natural

New Student Affairs—SNAP
I mean this not, of course, in
the immodest charismatic sense,
but rather in the sense that it’s
high lime the people of this community had an alternative to the

igencies.

discriminatory practices to be
found within the bureaucracy.
“We, in the Student’s New Action Party, now do call upon
each and every member of every
national and local fraternity to
awaken from his complacent sleep
and show the academic and social
world that they are not devoid of
interest in student affairs, that
they are not without knowledge
of the weaknesses in student government and that they are not
without emotional depth concerning the grave problems which beset our nation today,”

Pro-Act hoi hi

•

Steve Halpern

stereotyped “politician”.
Politics at this school have too
long been much too stuffy and
pompous. If one feels the compulsion to categorize, I suppose I
would be designated an existential politician, in the Norman
Mailer sense. This means that my
political career is contemporaneous with the act; no historical
precedents to be consistent with,
no puerile promises to hassle with
in the trivialities of campaign ex-

believe that the University should
spend a larger portion of time
in its own backyard and should
be increasingly aware of the

•

Student rights

•

—

Pro-Act

tions about ourselves and our
fellows, it will be impossible to
relate truly and understand those
who share our community.

“Traditionally Freshman Orienrange for legal counsel for any tation has been an idea' opnorstudent, for any reason, and to tunity to initiate such self-investisee that each student is treated gation and learning. Tramaonalequitably, according to the law.” ly Freshman Orientation has
failed to succeed in this role.

Steve Halpern-New Student Affairs

It would be redundant of me to
note in passing that a lot of things
are in need of change here. What
is new is that someone who has
a lot of far-reaching ideas is finally running for an elective office
that would enable him to implement them; someone who is not
prepared to cop-out to the mindshrinking great-god Bureaucracy,
who refuses to limit his proposals

by n

“At the moment proposals for
changing the Orientation program
are being considered. The outcome of these deliberations will
course.
probably be a pilot project that
This situation is not acceptable incorporates group dynamics into
to me—I want to reap the benethe normal Summer Planning and
fits of all this hassling while it Fall Orientation conferences for
will do me some good, and I hope entering freshmen. Group dyyou feel the same way. I’ll be donamics—small discussion groups
ing a lot with revamping summer —have proven to be an effective
orientation, but perhaps even method of self-discovery and I
more significantly, will be conendorse their use here.
tinuing to work for results for us
“Another innovation that I
in the here and now, above and
beyond the structures of the frac- would like to attempt would be
protionated petty party positions for to extend the Orientation
gram so that it goes into, and
the universal university good.
Is this possible? . . Sure!

“In addition to Freshman
Orientation, it is also important
to have a program which will aid
the transfer student in his goal
attainment. As New Student Affairs Coordinator I will support
such a program. It should include
means by which the transfer student can procure pertinent information about the University, a
system by which his grievances
can be heard, and a general
orientation into this University.

“As New Student Affairs Coordinator I will put my ultimate
efforts and abilities into carrying
through these ideas and any future programs which will benefit
all future incoming students.”

loti Sherman hopes to make NSA
programs more available on campus
into effect the following propos

“Few students know of the
many benefits to which they are
entitled through our affiliation

als:

with the National Student Association.

discount program in Buffalo.

“There are many places through-

out the country where N.S.A.

travel privileges and discounts
are offered. Students should be
better informed as to ways of saving money in Europe, California,
Florida and even throughout New
“Another advantage of our being a member of the National
Student Association is the tre-

mendous resource of information
which is available from the Student Government Information
Service. The N.S.A. maintains a
collection of pamphlets, articles,
newspapers and films on almost
every facet of student life, ranging from personal pressures and
drug addiction to political issues
and legal rights.

Public Relations—NCA

“On the whole, Freshman
Orientation must be changed and
improved. As New Student Affairs Coordinator it will be my
responsibility to see that everything possible is done to reach
this goal.

.

York State.

Randy Brinson

maybe through, the first semester. This would mean that the
benefits gained from a good
Orientation program could contine to be reaped as the year goes
on.

“To increase student benefits
available through affiliation with
the N.S.A., I would like to put

Negotiations must be continued toward obtaining a student
•

A card catalog should be formalized which lists the subjects
available in the N.S.A. library.
Students can then fill-out an order card for the materials desired
and a lending library can be established which would enable any
student to borrow films, pamphlets and articles.
An N.S.A, newsletter should
be published informing students
of the activities of the national,
area and regional groups of N.S.A.
This newsletter will inform the
students of travel benefits available and also acquaint the student with the type of resources
available from the N.S.A. library.
“As N.S.A. coordinator I must
help you become aware of the
programs within the National Student Association and I must facilitate your utilization of these
programs by means of the proposals which I have put forth.
•

By drawing from the resources
available from the N.S.A. we can
better ourselves as individual students and our school as a whole
by learning of the achievements
of students throughout the coun
try.”

•

Jori Sherman
NS

Coordinator

—

Pro-Act

�Monday, April 15, 1968

T h e Spectrum

SNAP's Leslie Green: Public Relations

Ted Beringer
“An objective of our student
government is to provide opportunities of the widest scope pos-

imperative that the student body
be informed of the development
of policies by the Student Asso-

tunities are required to enable
each student to reach his full
potential. TOi ensure that the student can take advantage of these
opportunities he must be aware
of their existence.
“Thus, communication between
the student body and the Student
Co-ordinating Council is essential
for the individual to grow in the

“As well as a monthly newsletter, it is necessary that all
polity meetings, and the legislation to be discussed at those
meetings, be well publicized. Use
of campus radio, The Spectrum
and University bulletin boards
both in the Union and in the
dorms, must be more fully exploited. Only with such publicity can the polity succeed.
“In addition, student government must also maintain good
relations with the community.
People of Buffalo and the surrounding area are loo often misinformed as to the activities of
the University.
“Too often bad incidents have
been blown out of proportion,
while beneficial programs remain
in the background. More utilization of both mass media and personal meetings with the outside
community are needed. With the
move of the campus to Amherst,
University difficulties have materialized.
“These difficulties can only be
resolved by keeping open the
lines of communication between
the University and the commun-

University atmosphere.
“In light of the new polity,

interaction between elected officials and their constituents be-

comes

even more imperative. It

Ted Beringer

Public Relations

-—

Pro-Act

Page Three

“It is my belief that a system
of closer cooperation among the
polity, Student Coordinating
ly advantageous for all involved.
This program should include:
Expansion and greater publicity of the present Continuing Education program which offers
credit-free courses to the members of the community.
Attendance of members of the
Buffalo community at the Experimental College courses in both
•

•

•

ity.”

SNAP's Harry Klein: Academic Affairs
“I propose an expansion of
the undergraduate research program, which would enable creative undergraduate students to
pursue individual research projects beyond the scope of the material covered in their academic
course work. The program of
undergraduate research would
not be restricted to any particular area.
Students should be able to
pursue

independent study

and re-

ceive academic credit for it. An
outline of independent study
should be able to be submitted to
an assigned advisor (who would
be a faculty member) at the outset, and a thesis would be turned
in at the end of the study. Credit
should be assigned by the depth
of the individual study.
“I support the proposal of the
Ranking and Grading Committee
which partially consists of a Satisfactory Unsatisfactory evaluation of 25% of the courses taken
-

towards a degree. In this manner, such grades would not af-

traditional departmental program
or a faculty-wide program, or a
still broader major that may cut
across faculty lines (for example,
the philosophy of science).

fect one’s cumulative average.

“I intend to transform the basic
distribution requirements b y
changing the nature of the “experience” of the first two years.

“It

“We intend to initiate a Cooperative Education program

here.

“This involves a program
whereby a student would be permitted to take off a year or a
semester from school work and
concentrate on his particular
area of interest by actually working within it, outside of the academic community.
“Students must be incorporated
into the policy making structure
of our institution.
“Students should be able to
have the greatest latitudes in
their major. We feel that a student should be able to choose a

is

essential

that

it

be

pointed out, in closing, that these
programs may be initiated by the
few but in order to be successful, must be supported by the
many. Student support is essential in advancing the academic experience on our campus.”

for the purpose of informing various community groups such as
the P.T.A., Girl and Boy Scouts,
high schools, women’s clubs and
fraternal organizations of the University’s role in the community

policies of the Student Coordinating Council. A Newsletter will
be created and distributed to fulfill tihs vital obligation to the
polity, the administration and the
community.”

hours for cultural interaction
“One of the greatest problems
in the world today is the lack
of understanding among its peoples. Thus, one of the most important functions of an educational institution is to create this
understanding. We have here at
the State University of Buffalo a
unique opportunity to accomplish
this.

“This year there are 620 foreign students from more than 50

countries; add to this number
another 190 foreign faculty members, and the possibility for crosscultural interaction is evident.

“One of the first things that
the coordinator must do is to prepare the Foreign Student Orientation Program. The purpose of
this program is to establish initial cross-cultural contact, to provide the foreign student with an
opportunity to learn the fundamentals of American culture and
to provide any help and information concerning academics, housing and the various problems of
a legal nature which may arise.

“If elected, I would see that
there is a coffee hour once every
three weeks to provide an opportunity for cross-cultural interaction. These coffee hours would be
co-sponsored by the Committee,
the International Club and the
various groups on campus. As in

“I belive that one purpose of a
university education is to expose
the student to the widest range
of views possible so that he can
intelligently choose the course
which he wishes to pursue. At
the same time he should be made
aware of contrary views in the

hopes that he will respect them
for their intrinsic merits.
is

“We are living in a world that

increasingly demanding
specialization and professional

competence. But is it the role of
the university to decide if its
students should be specialized
and, if so, in what manner? Our
reply is an unequivocable “NO.”

Antiquated course requirements
are contrary to our belief in

academic freedom.

“We will remove such require

ments.

Student Services: Barbara Emilson (IN Party); Louis Post (Pro-Act)
Stephie Sacks (SNAP).

Student Rights: David Clowes (SNAP); Fred Hollander (Pro-Act). Lloyd
Sokolow (Independent).
New Student Affairs; Nancy
Coleman (IN Party); Steve Halpern (SNAP)

Weaver (Pro-Act).

Pivnick (Independent); Ellen Price (SNAP); Sue Raichilson
Sherman (Pro-Act); Steve Sickler (NCA).

P

ent), Jon

(SNAP^ latl

U

Green

°

nS:

Brinson (NCAk Ted Beringer (Pro-Act), Leslie

Academic Affairs: Ron Buccelli
(Pro-Act). Harry Klein
1
Aptv'plTnT*
aul
’

(SNAP),

Affair$: Gwendy Bernhardt (NCA); Jan Geurtsen
(Pro

Hollender (IN Party); David Wachtel

•

Jan Geurtsen
International Affairs

—

Pro-Act

the past, there will be programs
with the various community
groups, such as the Buffalo World
Hospitality group. These programs are set up to provide the
opportunity for the foreign student to spend time in an American home, and hopefully the
American student will co-operate
in a like venture.
“Another

program

would work for is

which I
a series of

cross-cultural seminars.

“I also hope to be able to set

up opportunities for the foreign

students to visit other parts of
the United States.”

Bucce/li promises academic reform

Coordinator candidates

lerry

It is growing increasingly more
important that the polity be made

Jan Geurtsen promises coffee

•

falo newspapers. I would like the
community to be made more
aware of University activities, especially those which serve the
community, such as the Community Aid Corps.
Students at the University
should be made more aware of
the benefits which the city of
Buffalo has to offer. Bulletins
and better publicity of events
coming up in the community
should be encouraged.
A series of lectures should be
further encouraged which would
bring the Mayor, councilmen and
other public officials to the campus for the purpose of informing
the leaders of tomorrow of their

and one world.

•

•

teaching and learning capacities,
Closer cooperation with Buf-

duties and responsibilities today,
A series of lectures by University students, faculty and admin-

(SNAP).

I call for

forms:

the following re-

takes, we advocate the inception
of a pass-fail grading system. We
feel that this will relieve some of
the undue pressure to which a
student is subjected in the pursuit of his academic career. Admissions standards are high
enough at this time to enable
the formation of such a program,
“I feel that the University
Should present to the student an
exciting range of courses from
which he will eagerly choose.
This calls for radical changes in
the present system. This is my
goal; this is what I will strive to
implement.”

“Students must be represented
on all departmental committees
dealing with curriculum change.
This is an educational community
and it is the right of each student to voice his opinion as to
what courses he should or should
not take and as to what the content of these courses should be.
“A student should be given
credit for work done in the ser-

vice of the community. Students
who pursue such a course should
be considered as pursuing as
equal an academic path as any
other.

“Upper division students
should be allowed, if they so de-

sire, to pursue independent research in their chosen field, under the guidance of a departmental advisor. This independent
research, if properly pursued,
should be counted toward the

academic requirement for the student in his major course of
study.

In all

courses that the student

Ron Bucelli
Academic Affairs

—

Pro-Act

�Page Four

The

Spectrum

Monday, April 15, 1968

rnrta. «-i4

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                    <text>DECEIVED

Special Election Issue

n Editorial

1968

The student elections that will take place on campus
Monday and Tuesday are perhaps the most important of
the decade. The Student Association today does more programming, more policy-making, and more for the student
than most realize, in essence, it has become a vital organization in the operation of this University.
Students can not afford to waste their votes on unqualified candidates. Student Association offices must be
filled with competent and intelligent leaders or every
student, and the University as a whole, will suffer.

State University of New York at Buffalo

Vol. 18, No. 45

r

Rick Schwab *irt#dent

The SpECT^UM
€

APR

Friday, April 12, 1968

For these reasons, The Spectrum has devoted a great
deal of time in studying the candidates and their credentials. Many hours were spent interviewing the candidates,
and careful thought and discussion has led us to make
what we believe are the proper endorsements.
We urge all students to learn about the candidates so
that they can cast ballots in a wise manner. A list of endorsed candidates appears on this page, and we earnestly
believe that those students who take the time to find out
for themselves will concur with our conclusions.
•

•

•

Although there are a number of qualified persons running for the four officer positions, The Spectrum urges
students to vote for the following:
•

•

•

For President—Rick Schwab
For 1st Vice President—Penny Bergman
For 2nd Vice President—Tracy Cottone

For Treasurer—Jairo Estrada
Rick Schwab’s qualifications for the presidential office
must go unquestioned. His knowledge of the workings of
the Student Association, its programs and goals as well as
its problems, has grown steadily over the three years he
has been a student here.
•

•—Tanzman

Crowd gathers in Niagara Square Tuesday for
service in memory of the late Dr. Martin Luther

King Vigil

Without being intricately involved, Rick Schwab has
been able to credit and criticize the Student Association
from the informed arena of the newspaper office. Rick
has shown his abilities as a leader, a clear-thinking student
and a very honest person.

King.

After the demonstration,

a

few hundred black

youths rampaged up Main Street, breaking windows and slowing traffic.

Buffalo Police had their hands full.

Spectrum ratings and endorsements
Spectrum

editors have done what each individual student cannot do
for himself—we have interviewed the candidates
extensively, and evaluated each on the
basis of his knowledge of student government,
the workings of the University, and
his capabilities for the office he seeks.
Some candidates, we found to our horror,
lack even elemental knowledge of

VOTE

student and University affairs!
21 candidates do not appear on this
chart. We believe that they simply
cannot adequately fill the offices they seek.
The following Spectrum
recommendations cross party lines. (No single party
has a monopoly on talent.)
We strongly urge students, then, to vote for the Spectrum-endorsed candidates, because far and away, they are simply the best qualified persons running.
Elections are Monday and Tuesday 9 a.m.—5 p.m. in the Norton Center
lounge. Only students with validated I.D. cards may vote.
—The Spectrum Executive Editors

PRESIDENT

EXCELLENT

QUALIFIED

Rick Schwab

Richard Miller

Burgher

1ST. V. P.

2ND. V.

TREASURER

Penny Bergman
Burgher

Daryl Bosenfeld

Tracy Oottone
Burgher

Steve Milstein
Snap

Jairo Estrada

Randy Eng

Snap

STUDENT
SERVICES
STUDENT
RIGHTS
NEW STUDENT
AFP Arne

Pro-Act
Pro-Act

Pro-Act

THIS
LINE

ENDORSED

Rick Schwab
Row 'A'
Penny Bergman

Row 'A'
Tracy

Cottone

Row 'A'

Jairo Estrada
Row 'D'

Barbara Emdlson

Independent

Barbara Emilton
Row 'A'

Louis Post

Pro-Act

Fred Hollander

Pro-Act

Nancy Coleman

Nancy Coleman

Independent

NSA

No Endorsement

Next year, students will need a dedicated, competent
and well-qualified president, and Rick Schwab meets these
demands.
•

Snap

PUBLIC
RELATIONS

Ted Beringer
Pro-Act

AFFAIRS

PauTlloliender

ACADEMIC
AFFAIRS

Harry Klein
Snap

™™

NAL

Ellen Price
Ted Beringer
Row 'B'
Paul Hollander

Independent

Ron Buooelli

Pro-Act

Harry Klein
Row 'O'

•

These three candidates—Rick Schwab, Penny Bergman
and Tracy Cottone—have formed The Burger Party
and
their individual abilities and concepts have
combined to
torm the party platform, which we also endorse.
Jairo Estrada, Barbara Emilson, Nancy
Coleman Paul
Hollender and Harry Klein have also demonstrated
their
abilities, and The Spectrum recognizes them as excellent

candidates.

It is difficult to convey the tremendous importance
that
this election will have on this campus for
the next year.
In every sense, this election is a time of crisis
for the
Student Association. Danger looms large
if unqualified
candidates take office; opportunity for
continued
of
the Student Association and the
University is also present
P
the
if
excellent candidates are elected.
All the student need do is vote and vote wisely
We
strongly urge all students to vote for The
Spectrum’s list
U!&gt;1
of endorsed candidates
...

Ellen Price

•

Penny Bergman and Tracy Cottone, candidates for 1st
and 2nd vice president respectively, are two students most
qualified and most involved in student affairs. Both have
shown their abilities on countless occasions in the past.
Penny, a member of the Student Senate executive
committee, has played a significant part in many Student
Association programs for the past two years. She was cochairman of the committee which produced the first course
and teacher evaluation at Buffalo, editor of the Student
Association Newsletter last Spring and co-recipient of
the
Freshman Ring Award of Cap and Gown woman’s honor
society. Unquestionably, an excellent candidate.
Tracy Cottone has made her greatest contribution as
director of the Community Aid Corps. The
success that
the program has had this past year
can be attributed to
Tracy s unrelenting efforts. Tracy is also a resident advisor
in Goodyear and a member of the Education
Department’s
ad hoc committee on Student Participation.
Her list of qualifications includes membership on
the
Dean s Advisory Committee for Underprivileged Students
and last year’s Spring Weekend Steering
Committee. We
see Tracy Cottone as a dynamic, hard-working
vice
president.

)

g?owth

�Th

Pag* Two

•

Analysis of the party's
views on the issues

Platform

The Burgher Party
“It would be an understatement to say sity, we are told, is great, or will be someday.
that we live in troubled times. The longAmherst will be beautiful, but we must face
the fact that we are interim students, caught
standing walls that have sheltered the University from the outside world are at last in an interim stage of development.
“There will be more Ridge Leas, unbeginning to crumble. The agonizing war in
Vietnam, the recent draft rulings, the long, doubtedly, and more colossal bureaucratic
hot summers
all these have combined to buglings to hang our heads at, tip our hats
awaken the University from her slumber. to —BUT NOT ACCEPT!
Students, faculty and administrators are be“The Burgher Party is sure that doors
coming painfully aware that the academic can be opened, red tape can be cut and stucommunity cannot much longer survive as a dent input at all levels can be established.
And we will open those doors if it takes
unit set aside from the outside world.
“Our Party
through greater interaction sledge hammers and crowbars. We will see
with the Buffalo community, through a free to it that students’ rights are protected and
that each student will be inconvenienced as
and open campus policy, through action tolittle as possible by the University’s interim
ward stronger interdisciplinary and cooperative education programs
seeks to close the period of construction and growth.
“In the field of academics, we propose
between
what’s
gap
happening out there and
each student’s education at the University. Pass-Fail at the students’ option; cooperative
“Ideas, ideals, hope for a better world education; expanded and improved Experilie with the young. We seek for each student mental College; academic credit for participation in student government, publications
a more flexible education, a more meaningand public service work. Other improvements
ful education, the type of education that will
give each student the tools to deal with and we would work to see implemented are an
urban affairs curriculum, degrees given in
the high ideals so badly needed to begin to
Liberal
Arts
no major; extended underbuild a better world.
graduate research programs and at least one
“But there is more to be said and it has teach-out a
semester, similar to the recently
something to do with this University’s promsuccessful ‘Strike for Knowledge.’
ise and what is, indeed, reality. This Univer“The Burgher Party stands solidly behind
the policy of an open campus and the return
of national fraternities to campus. ImproveThe Spectrum is published twice-weekly
every
Tuesday and Friday
during the regular academic
ments in the operation of the bookstore, Noryear at the State University of New York at Buffalo,
3435 Main Street, Buffalo, New York 14214. Offices
Hall open all night, more participation
ton
are located at 355 Norton Hall. Average Circulation:
15,000.
in the programs of the NSA, and a trial co-ed
Editor-in-Chief—MICHAEL L. D’AMICO
dormitory on campus next year are also some
Managing Editor—RICHARD R. HAYNES
of the programs toward which we will work.”
—

—

—

—

—

—

Business Manager—SAMUEL A. POWAZEK
Advertising Manager—DAVID E. FOX

Campus

Margaret

Asst.

Anderson

Scott Behrens
Dan Edelman
David L. Sheedy

Sports
Asst.
Layout

W.

Marlene Kozuchowski Asst.
VACANT
Daniel Lasser Copy
Judi Riyeff
Asst.
Susan Oestreicher
Peter Simon Asst.
Feature Barry C. Holtzclaw Photography David Yates
Asst.
Carol Goodson
Ronald Ellsworth Asst.
Entertainment
Promotion &amp; Circulation
Lori Pendrys Director Murray Richman
Financial Advisor: Edward Dale
Faculty Advisor William R. Greiner
The Spectrum is a member of the United States Student Press Association and the Associated Collegiate
Press. The Spectrum is served by: United Press International, College Press Service, Associated Collegiate
Press Service, Gannett News Service, and the Los
Angeles Times Syndicate.
Represented for national advertising by
National Educational Advertising Service, Inc., 18 E. 50th Street,
New York. N. Y. 10022.
Repubtication of all news dispatches is forbidden without the express consent of the editor-in-chief. Rights of
republication of all other matter herein are also reCity

served.

Second class postage paid at Buffalo, New York.
Editorial policy is determined by the Editorin-Chief.
Basic advertising rate: $2.75 per column Inch. Contract
rates upon request.
Telephone; Area Code 716, 831-2210
Editorial
831-3610 Business
-

-

Commuter Council

will hold election

Elections for officers of the Commuter Council
will be held April 22 and 23. Voting for president,
vice-president, secretary and treasurer will take
place from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. outside the Bookstore
and Rathskeller in Norton Hall. All commuters may
vote.
Any commuter wishing to run for office must
obtain an application in the Council office, room
215, Norton Hall. Applications must be returned
by Monday. At 3:30 p.m. Wednesday there will be
a general meeting in room 240, Norton Hall, to
meet the candidates.

Further information may be obtained in the
Council office or by calling 831-4214.

Restauranl

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3248 MAIN ST. at Heath

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POWER

THE

Night
THE INTRUDERS

Saturday Night

SAMPSON

Friday, April 12, 1968

Spectrum

&amp;

DELILAH

Sunday Night

THE

DUKES

stand on a few vital issues:
ACADEMICS: The Students’ New Action Party platform gives no
specific suggestions, but merely advocates continuing “certain vital
programs” and creating new ones.

The three other parties all endorse optional pass-fail proposals.
The Burgher Party seeks credit for Vista and Community Aid
Corps workers, and plans to remedy the pains of registration.
The Progressive-Action Party proposes reducing the normal

course load to four instead of five.

COMMUTERS: Three parties propose integrating the commuter
into the mainstream of University life through the establishment of
overnight facilities, support of Commuter Council, or by scheduling
meetings in the afternoon rather than the evening, when commuters
can easily attend.

But the SNAP Party platform states: “The roots of much commuter unhappiness and non-participation lay either with the commuters themselves or are in fact non-existent.”
NATIONAL STUDENT ASSOCIATION: Three parties advocate
using NSA facilities and services more than they have been used in

the past.

New Campus Alliance takes no stand.
FRATERNITIES: All parties favor bringing national fraternities

on campus.

Pro-Act suggests that perhaps FSA land in Amherst could be
leased to them for the construction of fraternity houses.
PUBLICATIONS: Burgherites favor “expansion of The Spectrum

to a three-day-a-week operation”; “the expansion of The New Student
Review to at least four editions a year” and the establishment of new
publications. Funding, they say, would be possible through savings incurred by establishing on-campus printing facilities.
Pro-Act favors a daily Spectrum, an on-campus press, and eventually, a second newspaper.
NCA says nothing.
And the SNAP Party platform says: “We want our ideas published in the school newspaper.”
NORTON: Generally all seek lower Bookstore prices. But the
SNAP Party takes no stand in its platform.

BIG JOHN'S
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Variety of Hot and Cold Sandwiches
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�Tracy Cottone: CAC mastermind

Penny Bergman, candidate
for 1st YP: Her statement
will be on a pass-fail basis.
“Either it will arouse controversy and student interest in sub-

Penny Bergman

1st V.P.

—

The

Pag* Thr**

The Spectrum

Friday, April 12, 1968

Burgher Party

Vietnam to the price of onion
rings in Tower or it will be a
miserable failure; meetings will

be cancelled due to the lack of
a quorum.
“Yes, the same old pitch—it’s
up to you to give the polity its
Pass or Fail rating.
“The system requires responsible leaders as well as the responsible students to make the
passing grade. Rather than give
you the committees and other
organizations I’ve been associated
with (a la high school yearbook
style), I’d prefer to mention just
this: I have worked hard in my
past two years at the University
and, if elected, I will continue.
“The specific duties of the
First Vice-President have not
been outlined in the new constitution.
“The office is pretty much
what the first vice-president
makes of it.
“I see it as a powerful and
efficient ‘room at the top’ where
the vice-presidient serves as a
coordinator of coordinators,”

“Education must be made a
relevant and total experience for
the student.
“The problems in the world to-

edge’ we saw that education could
be made to relate to the larger
world. The U. is not distinct from
the community and the world.

ring, are too big for us to ignore.
In the recent ‘Strike for Knowl-

“I make no claims to you that
I can make education a completely relevant experience, but hopefully, with the help of my fellow
the Student
officers, and you
Government I can continue toward the final goal of education
as a ‘total experience,’

is the STUDENTS who are participating in them, and not juat
STUDENT LEADERS who must
play a significant role in the improvement of the program. If we
take the initiative there are administrators and faculty members
who will be willing to listen and
help us achieve our goals.

—

—

“There are many programs
which you have made work
experimental college, Bulletin
Board, and Community Aid Corps
for example. These programs can
and should be expanded and it

“In my experiences as a student leader in the past three
years I have come into close contact with many administrators,
faculty members, and students.

—

“I would sincerely like to continue to use these experiences
to further improve the university and the larger communiity,"

Editorship

Tracy Cottone

2nd V.P.

—

The Burgher Party

Applications for the editorship of The Spectrum
will be taken until April 20.
Application forms are available at The Spectrum
office. Forms should be accompanied by a letter
stating qualifications, previous experience and reasons for desiring the position.
The Spectrum editorial board will interview
candidates at a later date.
Address letters of application to: The Editor,
The Spectrum, 355 Norton Hall, SUNY at Buffalo,
14220.

The Burgher himself-Schwab:
On the University, Community
“The Burgher Party’s main proposals revolve around two precepts; that our education must be
more meaningful and relevant to
what is going on in the world outside the academic community, and
that the University must begin
to interact with that community.

ating new and relevant courses.
“The problems, I realize, are
great. We are but interim students caught in an interim period
of the University’s development.
But that is only a fact and should
not be used as an excuse for the
University’s failings.

“The ideas presented in the
platform set forth means to do
these things—a co-operative edu-

“The new governmental structure, which sets up the polity,
finally puts decision-making into

cation program, encouragement
of student participation in extracurricular and community affairs,
a cross-town program with Buffalo State, more debate on problems facing America today (Vietnam, urban problems, drugs, poverty) on the ‘Strike for Knowledge’ format, support of the urban affairs curricula proposal, a
vast expansion of the Community
Aid Corps’ programs, more interdisciplinary programs, support of
the Bulletin Board system of ere-

9
Don’t just stand around
like a no account
Open a checking account now,
There are two M&amp;.T Banks near the campus.
With banking hours that make sense.
Look below.

bank
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Friday; WO a.m. —300 p.m. and
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Mon. thru Thura.: 900
am—400 p.m.
Friday; 900 am—800 pm.

the bands of all students. I will
strive to see that the polity system works— that the Coodinating Council does not become another Senate.

“The tragic events of the last
few days have shown again that
the University is not doing
enough. With your support, I will
be able to begin to work for the
kind of education that will prepare us all to build a better
world.”

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5.. STEREO I 47

�Friday, April 12, 1968

The Spectrum

‘age Four

Platfori

Post suggests improvements

The Progressive Action Party
“We as a party embrace an educational
philosophy that once realized will permit
each of us to define ‘education’ as we wish
and allow each of us to have the opportunity
to pursue our personally defined educations.
“This means that there will be pass-fail
grading for those who desire it; independent
study for those who desire it; community
involvement for those who desire it; and
student-initiated courses for those who desire
them.
“We further believe that the University
has a growing stake in the future of our civilization. For almost a decade, American students have shown an honest and active concern for our country. Now the universities
as a whole must follow their example.
“We believe that the Polity is a step
towards a more meaningful and democratic
form of government than that of the past.
It need not be a ‘leap into the dark.’ We hope
to make the Polity a viable form of selfgovernment, a government which provides
each of us with opportunities to better our
education and our University.
“We believe that the Polity will not be
the only problem confronting the next administration. Voluntary student fees have already proven to be the cause of critical
financial shortages. Moreover, we are moving into a period in which our enrollments
will expand while our physical area will
remain stable. Experience has taught us that
these problems can be mitigated, and we will
do so in the future.
“We will apply our efforts towards the

and innovations in services

accomplishment of further University reforms. We advocate expanding the amount
of student representation on departmental
committees. Our academic community should
not be a producer-consumer system that
builds conflict between the faculties and the
students. It should be a joint, cooperative
effort in which all are seen as involved.
“It is our feeling that the Universiity
should provide for all of its students the
opportunity and atmosphere in which selfexamination is encouraged; for without knowing our presuppositions concerning ourselves
and others it is impossible to truly relate and
understand those who share our community.

“At the present time there is

a great deal of room for improvement in every aspect of services
afforded to the students. I would
like too present a number of
ideas as to some of the problems
which I see as present, and possible steps to solve these prob-

lems.

F.S.A. recreational land:
there are 500 acres of land available for recreational purposes approximately 2.5 miles north of
the new campus. I can see a
number of alternatives for the
use of this land: build a 9-hole
golf course, plus a tended nature
area which could contain such
facilities as tennis courts, theater
(indoor and/or outdoor), swim•

“We believe that a student should be ming pool, etc.
Another alternative would
given credit for work done in the service
to eliminate the golf course
of the community. A role of the University be
completely and have a tended nais to make the world equal to the high ideals ture area with recreational fathat the college teaches. Students who purcilities. An investigation should
sue this course should be considered as purbe made into the possibility of
suing an equally academic path as any providing a portion of the land
to various campus organizations.
others.
Services for commuters: The
“It is time that American college stu- commuters at the University have
dents take a stand on issues that vitally special problems which, with the
concern them. Student governments must exception of the commuter counso far received a
speak up about the war, the draft, and what cil, have not attention.
A numgreat deal of
are
and
their
students.
they
doing to colleges
ber of things could be done to
We must speak out about what we believe, alleviate the commuter’s situaor we must suffer the consequences of our tion.
Overnight sleeping facilities
silence.
be provided for those
“We pledge ourselves to these missions. should
wishing to stay on campus beWe will employ all of our resources, our cause of bad weather, studying
experience, and our expertise in working late, or lack of transportation
toward their fulfillment.”
home.
•

•

time, hot breakfast is served in
the dorms from 7-9 a.m. This
could be moved half or one hour
later, so that it’s served from
7:30-9:30 a.m, or 8-10 a.m.
Residents should be given
monthly meal tickets which
would have printed on them 20
squares per week, to be punched
out at meal time.
Weekly meal tickets could
be sold to commuters to give
them the opportunity to eat anywhere at the University.
a Parking facilities; the entrances to the parking lots should
be widened to avoid the slashed
tires and bent fenders, which are
all too common at this time.
The “temporary” parking lot
by Baird Hall should be paved
or cleaned up.
Faculty lots should be open
to students on week nights, and
during the day on weekends.
“I see the positiion of the Student Services Coordinator as one
which serves as a liaison between
the students and the non-academic services, attempts to bring
about improvements in these
services, and institutes new ones
if and when necessary. I hope to
have the opportunity to do so.”
•

•

•

•

•

Efforts should be intensified to obtain lower bus rates for
students going to and from the
•

Miller: Students have great party
“After reading the platform
suggestions made here and elsewhere in this campaign, some students ask, Well it’s all very nice,
but what power do we have to
enact such proposals? What
strength do we have when there
is resistance to be overcome? I
think that we have a great
amount of power; in fact, I think
students are one of the most potent farces not only in this University but in our country as
well.
“The events of the last weeks
have demonstrated this fact. I
doubt if international peace could
have begun to be attained without the current change in Ameri-

can public opinion.

“Your efforts, especially iii the
dark hours of 1965 and 1966, have

been in the greatest factor in the
attainment of a new American
outlook towards the war. Moreover the cry for social change
that culminated in the assassination of Martin Luther King actually began when you sat-in at
lunch counters, rode buses across
the South, and when you tried to
attain equal rights for all.
“In addition, the current success of Eugene McCarthy would
not have been possible if it were
not for your efforts on his be

half.
“The same strentgh and courage that you have demonstrated
on the national level has been,
and can continue to be, shown
in our own University. General
University reforms such as pass-

fail grading, independent study,
faculty

emphasis

on

teaching,

would not be realities if it were
not for our efforts in the past.
“There is more to be done in
the future—our platforms make
this abundantly clear. Certainly
the means are present, for we can
use everything from friendly persuasion to not-so-friendly* demonstrations in our determined efforts to alter the outlook of our

University.”
Thus we have shown our
strength in the past and we will

do so in the future. To this I
am committed for I believe that
we are resolved to make this a
better University and a better
AND WE SHALL
country
—

SUCCEED.

Rosenfeld asks students to take stand
“The

critical problems
facing American universities today are the war in Vietnam and
its inevitable consequence, a
greatly increased draft.
“The war is sapping the strength
of American universities by drafting its vitally needed graduate
students and, if the war continues to escalate, possibly many of
its undergraduates as well. No
one can deny the fact that if the
war continues and our college
students are drafted in ever-increasing numbers, this country
will face disastrous economic
consequences. Aside from this
will be the problem of a greatly
changing social structure.
“If the draft increases, five
years from now the typical graduate student will be a woman and
the only male graduate students
will be those who are ineligible
for the draft or who are veterans.
It is not a very optimistic prospect, indeed.
“The consequences for the individual student are grave also.
He lives with the fear of having
his education suddenly ended and
being sent to fight a war he may
or may not believe in. He works
most

mainly for high grades, feeling
that somehow his chances for a

deferment will be better if he
has a brilliant academic record.
What should be the best years of
his life are usually years of fear
and uncertainty, seeing his plans
for the future being destroyed or,
at best, curtailed for two years
by one letter from his draft

board.

“It is time that American college students took a stand on
what obviously concerns them so
vitally. A matter that so intimately concerns students cannot and

“Moreover, the vice presidents
may undertake programs of their
own or they may try to sell their
ideas to others so that they may

be eventually realized.
Presiednt Gould of the State

•

it difficult to reach the campus
at night, an attempt should be
made to have as many organizations as possible hold their meetings between 3 p.m. and 5 pjm.
Dorm activities that are
open to commuters should be
publicized as such. This would
bring about a greater, and very
necessary, interaction between
commuters and residents.
Food service: at the present
•

•

Louis Post
Student Services

—

Pro-Act

Eng proposes creation of
Assistance Sub-Committee
“The Treasurer’s position is
structure of student government. He must exercise impartiality in the allocation of funds. He must also be
continuously receptivie to the
demands of all student groups.
Although the Treasurer operates
in a largely administrative capacity, he need not remain in a
unique in the

vacuum.

“The introduction of voluntary
student fees has resulted in severe budget cuts for many student
groups. As a result, many worthwhile programs have been curtailed either in whole or in part.
I submit that this need not be
the case. Funds are available
from a multitude of sources.
They may be generated by the
following
received
the
University
student organizations themselves,
statement from this University or obtained from academic and
regarding student involvement:
research budgets.
“In all our efforts, we must
“If elected, I will assume a
acknowledge the emergence vigorous role in the acquisition
among many young people of a of adequate funds for student
new spirit of concern with issues
organizations. I will not content
of our time. We tended to realize myself with the allocation of inthat this concern ultimately repsufficient budgets. In order to
resents a source of intellectual locate auxiliary funds, I propose
and moral strength.
the creation of an Assistance Sub“We have begun to get incommittee. This body will work
volved, as dozens of committees hand-in-hand with the already
have student representation. More functioning Finance Committee.
are required. I stand pledged to With this dual system in operamaking student Involvement in tion, student organizations will
this University a growing and have competent and knowledgegoing concern.”
able assistance in finding suit-

able funds. The new system
fees will not mean the demise
worthwhile student activities
vigorous and decisive action

of
of
if
is

taken.

“If elected, I pledge that the
no longer
be passive. It will be totally committed to the satisfactory funding of student activities.”

Treasurer’s office will

must not be avoided. We must
speak out about what we believe,
or we must suffer the consequences of our silence.”

Sihorski's views
“The Second Vice President,
and the other officer posts, are
primarily positions that call for
leadership and coordinating abilities. Though the Coordinators
carry out programs, it is the job
of the officers to lead the way
for them to find money for the
Coordinators, and to make sure
that the Coordinators are not duplicating each other’s efforts.

University.
Since many commuters find

...

Randall Eng
Treasurer

—

Pro-Act

�Friday, April 12, 1968

The Spectrum

P«H Fiv»

latform

The New Campus Alliance
“Over the past few years, the New York
Educational System has progressed from the
troughs of mediocrity to stage of great advancement. However, this growth has been
largely due to the work and dedication of
administrators, not students.

New Campus Alliance candidates, (l-r): Ken Becker, 1st V.P. C.
Westly Sloan, Treasurer; Russ Beck, 2nd V.P.
:

Sickler airs proposals
“I propose the creation of a
Student Government Information
Library, The Library will consist

organization and supplemental
materials purchased to fill the
gaps not covered by the N.S.A.

The considerable volume of literature that N.S.A. furnishes the
State University of Buffalo by
virtue of our membership in that

Materials will be available for
loan to all students.

of;

literature.

•

•

For quick and easy location of
desired information, publications
will be listed in a cross-indexed
card file system.
•

Regular office hours will be
maintained and publicized.
“Once the organization is up
to strength, I will set to work on
the following problems;
•

Obtain discounts at local stores
for State University of Buffalo
students, especially at the University Plaza.
•

Investigate Polity experiences
at other universities.
•

Maintain the N.S.A. Travel
Service program.
Since 1964 when Robert Kennedy and Kenneth Keating spoke
here, no major political figure
has spoken at this University.
Why? The N.S.A. should find out
the cost involved in having a
major speaker and thee, investigate the availability of funds.”
•

•

Steven Sickler

NSA

Coordinator

—

NCA

Richard Klyczek
dents. In the past we needed men
with experience in old government. Today we need a new open
mind in government. A mind that
is not confused with old ways,
but a mind that is free of tradition, wilHng to learn and work
with the new government.
“The students have become
puppets of the campus politicians. This I want to change. I
want to cut the strings by increasing student power and voice.
“The new campus alliance is
that new organization. The leaders with free open minds. The
leaders that are interested in
you, the student. Vote Row ‘C’ on
April 15th and 16th.”

“Students at this University, like students
throughout the United States, have not used
their voice for those affairs which concern
them. The reason for this is that the present
leaders, not only here but all over the country, have failed to lead the students effectively. It is time for a revolution in student
leadership. It is time for student leadership
to take the many voices of the students and
align them into one clear, articulate voice.

“If elected we will not only bring about
this voice, but we will back it up with actions
and demands necessary for good student government. Students have a voice through the
polity; responsible leadership must let this
voice be heard.
“We of the New Campus Alliance will
not only revolutionize and encourage student
participation, but we will begin by presenting a basic program which we deem necessary for the immediate improvement of our
community.
“The heart of the University is Norton
Hall. For this reason we plan to have Norton
Hall open on a 24-hour basis.
“The problems of additional staffing can
be solved by allocating funds, not only from
the undergraduates, but also from the G.S.A.
and the Millard Fillmore College Student
Association.
“Now that students and faculty alike have
proved that to enforce the archaic law of a
dry campus is impossible, let us throw out
the rule.
“The University Union Activities Board,
with a duty to present activities to the University body, has not reached its full potential. If elected we will reevaluate, reorganize
and revitalize this necessary organ of student
administration.
“Because of the experimentation of many
ideas in college governments, we will immediately set up a Student Association Library
including tapes of coordinating and polity
meetings. Inter-University publications will
also be available to all students, as will all
materials.
VISIT

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“National fraternities and sororities must
be allowed back oh campus, at least with
privileges to Norton Hall.
“The acquisition of more and better
speakers for open addresses is a constructive
idea. We suggest that if Sen. McCarthy or
Richard Nixon were invited to speak, we
could charge a nominal amount and come
out ahead.
“We should plan soon to gain either
monetarily or recreationally or both from
the student land in Amherst. The land has
been idle too long and taxes are high.
“Policy consistency with ID cards is a
necescsity. Pro-rated payment scales must be
provided for the student who wishes to pay
during a semester.
“Something must be done immediately
before students are paying ‘twice the price
of books.’ We suggest a thorough investigation of the finances and an audit made public
for the student body. If the bookstore cannot
maintain itself without outside funding, then
we must investigate the possibility of an outside firm willing to manage it.
“A big-time athletic program complementing an excellent educational institution
at Buffalo will build the much-needed spirit
it seems to lack. Can a school have great athletic programs and a great educational system at one time? We say yes. Most necessary
for such a program is a football stadium.
“Also, in our ideal of an expanded program we cannot forget the immediate necessity of making our Hockey Club a recognized
NCAA team.
“In our desire to make the State University of Buffalo the ideal campus, a vigorous
program must be instituted to improve our
image in the world of education. Only when
we appear as a unified, responsible group
outside the University, will we be able to
enact and follow through on many of the
programs which have failed in the past.
“Experimental College and Cooperative
Education are to be continued
grants in
aid program to be expanded.
“We support the establishment of a revised program of grading, but course distinctions must be made concerning pass-fail and
Seminar vs. Lecture. We also propose to
begin vigorous campaigns to keep the commuter on campus where he can add to the
University community.”

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�Friday, April

The Spectrum

Page Six

Presidential hopefuls voice opinions on the polity
The four Student Association presidential candidates met with the Spectrum Fea-

ture Editor Barry Holtzclaw Tuesday eve-

to candidly and informally discuss
some important issues facing the University
and the Student Association.
The hall-hour discussion between Bruce
Marsh, Richard Miller, Steve Rappoport,
and Rick Schwab centered around next
year’s experiment in direct democracy, the
polity. Following is a partial transcript of
the meeting:
The Spectrum: What is he most important problem facing the Student Association in the coming year?
Mr. Schwab; Originally the biggest
problems were: Where are we going to
get the money to do the things that we
want to do; and what to do in the area of

versity students themselves realize

the
need for it.
This 1 think is the primary purpose of

1J, 1968

t

�

the country. It’s going to take intensive
effort to make it work, and it’s going to
have to work in the first three months;
if it doesn’t work then, then I don’t think
it’s going to work at all.
Mr. Marsh; I voted no on the polity, and
I made my views clear in a letter I wrote
to The Spectrum prior to the referendum.

ning

academics.
But I guess the events of the last few
days have changed our attitude in a lot
of ways.
Students are ready now to channel their
efforts into a program that will really begin to reach out into the community. In
my platform for instance, I support the
Urban Affairs Curricula, so that people
will be working in the ghetto.
Also, Tracy Cottone’s Community Aid
Corps now has 300 people working with
people, children, in the ghetto. Just think
if we could triple that program. There arc
a lot of other things we could do in those
areas.

I think that the money will be available.
I think there will be a change in heart
in Congress, and that the money will be
there through OEO or other federal programs; and that we will begin to do the
things that Dr. King called for when he
was here last November.
Mr. Rappoport: I think that the problems facing the University haven’t
changed. The events of the last few days
have left a temporary, and perhaps too
temporary impression on the student body.
The whole purpose of the Students’
New Action Party (SNAP) is trying to
organize efforts and channel the efforts
of the students outside of the University,
to try and show them in fact that there
is a world beyond the classroom.
You can have the greatest academic reforms in the world, but if you blind the
student body to the fact that when they
get out of the University, they can know
the book cold and not learn to live like
human beings, you’re not going to get
anywhere. You’ve got a Vietnam issue
that has to be discussed openly on campus
by all groups, not to a free-for-all debate
where people lineup speakers who speak
for three or four hours, and not through
parliamentary objections, but by the efforts of people who want to get off their
asses and do something.
You’re not going to accomplish anything
solely in the world of academics or solely
in the world of student government, or
solely in the world of finance, —any true
activity for the betterment of the University is going to happen when the Uni-

the academics and the role outside of the
classroom are important issues. But I
don’t think they’re really a problem if
they’re approached in the manner, in a
responsible student government, which
will involve, more deeply, the polity.
I think that the main problem this year
will be the money to finance the programs that you want to put through in
these areas.
The student has now opened himself
into a new era of involvement. The McCarthy movement has largely been pushed
by students—they’ve become involved in
national politics. 40 or 50 years ago this
wasn’t the case.
I think that money here plays a very
important role.
The national government is facing the

the programs you want.
Mr. Miller; I think that the main problem facing this University and any University—past, present, and future—is primarily education.
This encompasses just about everything.
Not just the knowledge that the University discovers and transfers, but, in particular, the means by which it is transferred. Under this general problem area,
you have all the reasons and all the motivations for having academic reform, for
needing the money to finance programs
that are indeed educational within the
students’ areas of interest and involvement within the University.
And certainly the events of the past

year have demonstrated that the Univer-

sity and the students of the University
have to play a role outside of the University. In this area the extra-Univereity activities have to be shown, and I believe
they are, to be just as educational and
having as much benefit to the student as
anything he might get out of a textbook.
Steve was right on this point.

But I view everything from that one
problem: Education. Even the polity falls
under that, because the responsibility of
student government next year will be to
educate the students as to how to use the
polity. It will be the responsibility of the
student government itself to learn, and
educate itself, as to how the polity can
be used, run, made an efficient means
of governing students.

Education, and eveything that comes
under it is the problem of the future, as
it has always been.

vote?

ilk

A

I

Steve Rappoport

Students' New Action

Party

ber of reservations about the system,
simply because I do not think that a student can vote on an issue that has been
shoved down his throat. I think that senators, I think that students, should have
had a much longer period of time to
think on the issues before launching the
Student Association on a new govern-

n
v

mental journey.

First of all, one of the key issues is
public relations and public affairs. I do
not think they were handled as well as
they could have been last year. For example, if the people who were pushing
the polity were to have made much more

These other areas are very key issues,
within the realm of everything you have
to consider, but I think that money is
going to be the main problem, whether
you’re going to find the money to finance

Mr. Schwab: I voted yes. When I was
working on The Spectrum I supported the
polity editorially. I think publicity is a
key factor in whether the polity succeeds
or fails. I hope The Spectrum can carry
the bulk of it by publicizing the meetings beforehand, by explaining what’s
going to be voted on.
It’s going to have to do a much better
job than in the past. There will be more
going on than merely a weekly Senate
meeting. The new constitution provides a
workable system. With proper leaders it
will work.
Mr. Rappoport; In the beginning I
wasn’t in favor of the polity, or any other
type of government other than a representative type of government, but on this
campus there is no such thing as a representative type of government, where a
person can truly know what the constituency that voted for him actually wants
him to say.

For this reason, it’s not a question of
whether the polity may work, or may not
work, but that it’s got to work, because

in

bringing the problems together in the
writing of the constitution. I have a Am-

same problem.

The Spectrum: You mentioned the polity, and that without a doubt, is either directly or indirectly a key factor in this
election campaign, and it will be a key
factor in the success or failure of next
year’s Student Association. Is the polity
a good thing, will it work? What is needed
to make it work? And which of you personally were in favor of it when the
referendum came up, and how did you

■

upse by the procedure that was taken

thing, to choose leaders that are best
qualified to help them.
Mr. Marsh: I agree with Mr. Schwab
and Mr. Rappaport to this extent: That

Richard Schwab
The Burgher Party

the future of all student government lies
with the finding of something which is
functional.
The polity system as a whole will only
work if the students want it to work.
This is true of any type of idea, any
type of new concept which is brought
to the campus. It can only work if not
only the ctive, extreme left, and extreme
right take an interest, but if the large
number of students in the middle who
are stepped on and walked over, wake up
and decide that they no longer are going
to walk from one class to another and
back to their rooms, but are going to find
out about the world around them. The
polity system may not be the best system
around, but it’s the one we have to work
with next year, and rather than discard
it, I think the best thing we can do is
work as hard as possible to make lit work.
The Spectrum: Mr. Miller, as a member
of this year’s student government, don’t
jiou have a vested interest in the polity?
Mr. Miller; I certainly do. I helped write
the new Constitution, and I’ve been in
favor of it, I’ve spoken in favor of it, and
I voted for it. I think it’s a step forward.
I think, it’s a step towards making a community in this University that is just not
present at this time, if students do get
together, and do discuss the issues which
are important.
There are going to be important problems in the polity that will take efforts
to overcome, and having been involved
in writing the constitution, I have some
idea as to what those problems will be,
because we tried to build into it checks
and balances so that these problems can
be overcome, so I have some expectation
as to what will happen. Certainly the
meetings themselves will require certain
procedural rules to be drawn up, so that
there is no stepping on people in the
meetings, and that parliamentary procedure will not become a hindrance. Parliamentary procedure is supposed to be an
aid to conducting business, not a handicap. That’s why procedural rules are
going to be very important.
I’ve seen the NSA conventions, where
1300 delegates sit and pass legislation,
much like the polity meetings will be,
with nobody stepping on anybody else,
and lots of exchanges going on, and various procedural rules, with the structure
of the room in a certain way, with tables
and microphones, so that people will only
speak in turn. These are some ideas that
I would like to try out in the polity as
we have it here.
I think the chairman (SA President) is
going to be an important person in the
polity: he has to have a working knowledge of parliamentary procedure, he has
to understand the interests of the people
he will have to serve, making sure that
everyone has a chance to air their views.
It’s a step forward, some have said a
leap into the dark, but I don’t think it
has to be that way. There have been many
reforms in student governments across

clear to the students the older constitution, so that the student could truly
compare the two systems, I think this
would have been much fairer. The lole
thing was rushed into too quickly My
strongest argument against the polity was
the wording of the constitution. I think
in principle the whole aspect of the
polity system is fantastic. I have reservations about its practical application.
There is where I think the problem will
be.

The Spectrum: Does this mean that, if
elected, you would be in favor of amending the polity system?
Mr. Marsh: Well, this would be up to
the students who attend the polity meetings. I will certainly make a number of
suggestions of things that I think should
be changed in the constitution. By the
same token, I don’t think we should
launch ourselves on too many changes
either. It’s going to take a period of
time in which we can study the polity
system as it actually is, as it appears now
in the constitution; I think that’s all we
can do, and I think it will not depend on
those people who are administering the
polity. The key issue is whethc stuednts will come to the meetings. W
Mr. Rappoport; I don’t think it’s always
very necessary to show the students what
the old was before they can vote on the
new. The old, in this case, failed, and I
think it’s worth a gamble, when you know
that the old stinks.
The Spectrum: Maybe we could at this
point shift discussion to another aspect
of the polity—and that’s the role of the
president. Will the president be merely
a moderator of discussions at the polity
meetings? Is his role different from the
past?

Mr. Schwab: Presiding over the meetings is only a small part of the president’s
job. I think a really good aspect of the
new system is that the president doesn’t
have to waste a lot of his time doing a
lot of diddly stuff, which are the coordinators jobs, giving him time to devote
himself to the bigger issues.
The Spectrum: Is the President’s role
in the polity weaker than before?

Bruce

Marsh

New Campus Alliance

t

�Friday, April 12, 1968

The Spectrum

Pa9* Sevan

Mr. Schwab: I really don’t think so. He
is still the main policy-maker, but I think
there will have to be an understanding
between the coordinators and the president. I haven’t seen any really bad proposals by the Coordinator candidates; as
a matter of fact, some of them are very
good ideas which I have tried to incorMr. Miller; At times the president next
may find himself in a very awkward posi-

tion. When the polity, for instance, is debating an issue, which he has been working on himself other parts of the University, under parliamentary procedure,
the chairman of the meeting can not enter
into debate, and that may require it to
be incumbent upon the president to express his views, by handing down the
gavel, or by some procedural rules which
will permit him to speak. Ironing out
these problems, however, is going to

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take time.

In referring to something that Bruce
(Marsh) said before, in the case of some
things which are not explicit: Tradition
and interpretation will make these things
explicit. It’s now how explicit it is, but
it’s rather the people who are working
with it, that will decide whether or not
it’s going to work or not.
The president is still going to be a
spokesman, representing the students of
the University. In the polity system, his
contact will be greatly enlarged; people
wall see him because he is going to be at
that polity meeting. He’s going to have
to stand up, and take a lot of crap from
people. And it might mean that we’re
going to have a more political president,
because of the kinds of pressures that will
be on him. He might have to play one
side against the other. I hope this
doesn’t happen.
However, you can see that if the president is in such an exposed position as
might happen in the polity, something like
that could happen. I hope it doesn’t. You
cannot please everybody all the time, you
just please everybody some of the time,
and hope to do your best.
Mr. Marsh; I tend to agree. I think the
president will be able to have a greater
interaction with the students. The two
vice-presidents can take care of the greater portion of the administrative problems
you’re going to run into, and the president will be able to get out, even outside
polity meetings, and meet with students,
and also be able to know more what the
student wants. I don’t think he can do it
by sitting up in an office.
I think bureaucracy and complexity
have to be broken down. If the polity system is to work, it has to work outside
of the polity, it has to work in all aspects.
The president has to become more geratly involved with the student.
Mr. Rappoport; I believe the original
question related to the president’s role
in
relation to the polity. First, let me comment on what Dick (Miller) saiid; Politics

—

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WED.—FRI.—SAT. EVENINGS

Richard Miller

Progressive Action Party

never should have, and never could have,

a place in student government. Of course,
there’s going to be some politics in the
campaign, but there’s no place in the
University for politics when you have to
have the interests of every single student

in mind.

Every president has his own central
area of interest. The good thing about
the polity system is that he will be able
to concentrate in this area, to bring about
the type of reforms, the type of changes
that he feels are needed.
The president in the new polity system
will of necessity have to be more recep-

tive to the needs of the students than
he was in the past. Because then, it was
possible for a president to sit in his office, and write his little memoranda, and
his ideas, and just about garner enough
votes in that Senate to make it binding.
But this year he’s going to have to
realize that he’s not ever, closely associated with that sort of dictatorial policymaker; he of necessity will have to compromise and be aware of the fact that
his policies may be butchered by students, who, even though they are not as
informed as him, may have a better
understanding of what they need, and
this is what the polity has done.
It has shifted responsibility. And the
president has to realize that a lot of his
work, a lot of his effort may be in vain,
but it’s what the student body wants, and
that’s what they’re getting: they will get
what they deserve.

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Pag* Eight

•

Friday, April 12, 1968

Spectrum

Barb Emilson states platform

!

"Why should you vote for me?
"Well, you could pick my name
because its on the top row in the
Student Services column. But,
that’s not exactly the reason I

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area since I have held the following positions this year: Arts and

quantity

Science Senator, Presidential Assistant— Academics and Student
Welfare, student member University Financial Aid Committee,
student member University Calendar Committee, student member project S.A.R.A., student
member MFC-UC Committee, Student Association-Placement Service liaison, Student Association
Reorganization Committee, and
Student Association Committee
to Develop a Residential College.
“But, you and I know that
having held a postion does not
guarantee that any work was
done. My past experience is important only because it indicates
some of the projects that I have
started and would like to complete and that I propose as possible solutions to current problems.
‘Til just briefly list here some
the possibilities that I want
make realities next year:
A Health Service that offers
limited distribution of pharmaceutical supplies and an on-campus student dental clinic.
A Placement Service that
provides a more complete listing
of on-campus jobs, a more exten-

•

and

opportunities

IdF

commuters and residents to eat
together.
“The In Party’s motto of ‘Initiative Now” means that we want
to start as soon as possible to
bring about some necessary and
long-needed changes I personally
would like the opportunity to
make next year a real ‘Happening’ at Buffalo.”

“American foreign student relations is largely an unexplored
area at the State University of
Buffalo. There is much to be
gained by both foreign and American students from a program emphasizing mutual understanding.
“Of primary importance is an

-

American-foreign roommates).

a

Paul Hollander
—

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17 and 18.

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p.

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'»

’

THE GRADUATE

This is Benjamin
He’s a little
worried about

his future.

ONlMBASSV P»cturns MU*SC

iE^WMENTER 1
J

“To provide additional opportunities tor an exchange of views
and ideas, I would promote small
discussions and international human problems seminars for American and foreign students. Encouraging Americans to invite
foreign students to dinner and
home over vacations and a month,
ly opinion-newsletter would also
be undertaken.
“To ‘internationalize’ the campus, I would arrange an International Weekend which would involve the entire campus in discussions of world problems; student anid' cultural exhibits, an International Show, an International
Folk-Sing and an International
Clothing and Festival Day. A program of international sports, international dinners by the Food
Service, an international music
program on WBFO, international
courses taught by native graduate
students and films from a greater
diversity of countries would also
aid in internaitionalizing the cam-

“My purpose in seeking an elective office is to attain a position
which would facilitate my endeavors to make our University a
better place in which to learn.
“

I feel that my desire, knowl-

edge of the administration and
administrators, position as Presidential Aide of the Student Association, and participation on
several committees of this University qualifies me for the posi-

tion of New Student Affairs Coordinator.
“In addition to continuing the
projects I have begun, such as
the Bulletin Board and the Urban
Affairs Proposal, and continuing
to work on the Orientation Committee of University College and
the Dean of Students Office, and

“I am conducting an independent candidacy on the presupposition that most State University of
Buffalo students are concerned
with the future improvement of
their school and their nation. I
hope to represent those con-

which a native speaker could help
the student, and foreigners could
get help from the American student.”

University
Half Hour

DOMAIN ST.

•

T13

S131

war in Vietnam.

“However, I would emphasize
that this proposal was presented
by students Who support their
government, but who think the
government should re-evaluate
its policy for the good of the nation. I would strongly support a
resolution calling for the imple
mentation of the suggestions of
the riot commission report.

of anyone, no matter what his

Larry Pivnick
NSA

Coordinator

—

Independent

cemed and responsible students
who are willing to work within
the legal structure of their society to attain these improvements.

OUR SPECIALTY

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opposite Highgate

ity.”

“I am strongly in favor of a
completely open academic community which stresses the right

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“Perhaps most important, I
would like to participate in the
development of our University
into a living and learning experience of great value to all members of the University commun-

“Concerning issues on campus,
I wild strongly support any efforts
made by the State University of
Buffalo Greeks to challenge the
discriminatory policy of state and
University officials towards Buffalo national fraternities and sororities.

“In representing the State University of Buffalo at the N.S.A.
convention I would favor a resolution calling for an end to the

Laundry

“I would like to organize some
form of orientation for the transfer student which would make
him feel more a part of the University, Also, I would like to implement an orientation program
which would develop a greater
rapport and more interaction between commuters and dorm students.

“The national government must
face reality and take seriously all
responsible criticism. At the same
time, to be taken seriously, students must present their criticism
in a responsible manner.

pus.

I also propose a unique program for language courses, in

the student advisory group to
University College, I would like
to initiate several new projects.

Pivnick gives reasons
for independent stand

CHARLIE'S

—

MIKE NICHOLS-LAWRENCE TURMAN

|

to reciprocate.

orientation, mixed group activities that would participate in
their own programs, an International House on the new campus
(American foreign dorm and

Independent

|'

about them, their country, and
how foreign students view the
U.S. While Americans have much
to offer, we must not forget the
foreign student wants the chance

“I would like to see more people involved in foreign student

International Affairs

*

exchange of views. As visitors
learn about us and our country,
we have the opportunity to learn

provide opportunities through
programming and services for
mutuality to develop between
American and foreign students.

Get and Keep
A Glorious

t4CQ
#w

Barbara Emilson
Student Services—Independent

“The job of the coordinator, I
believe, is to act as a catalyst, to

•

with

Nancy Coleman: Independent

Hollander tells plans for office

•

ALL-YEAR
SUN TANi

The Independents

career guidance opportunities
especially for Liberal Arts majors.
A Food Service that endeav-

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HAIR STYLING,

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policy, to have the right to come
on our campus, and speak his

mind.

“In my position I will work for
improved discount list for
theaters and restaurants in Buffalo. Keeping the State University
of Buffalo student body well informed of actions taking place on
other campuses across the country which relate to Buffalo campus issues would be another of
my functions.
“I am running as an independent candidate in the hope that
my stands are parallel to the
thinking of the majority of Buffalo’s responsible students. I ask
for your vote if you are in agreement, if you want an officer who
owes Ms allegiance to no party,
but to the entire student body.”
an

�Pag* Min*

The Spectrum

Friday, April 12, 1968

Ellen Price: SNAP, NSA Candidate Platform
“It is planned to initiate

a

the problems of the N.S.A. dis-

semi-annual N.S.A. Newsletter,

count to the students of Buffalo.

the purpose of which will be to
inform students of:

We want Buffalo merchants and
students to cooperate for a discount program which would prove

purposes,
Who is in N.S.A., why and
how its membership works,
•

What N.S.A. has to offer college students, and specifically,
•

what it offers students at this
University.

“Another major plan is to distribute a questionnaire, bringing

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“I plan to work on this question with the other three member colleges in the Buffalo vicinity. With the other schools behind us we will have more
strength when we go to the merchants. I also plan on speaking
to other students throughout the
country and asking for suggestions and any help they can give
in bringing the N.S.A. discount
to Buffalo.
“N.S.A. offers an excellent and
inexpensive Life Insurance Poli-

cy. It has made available in the
U.S. and Europe a student discount on food, lodging, traveling

and clothing.

“N.S.A. also helps students to
locate jobs in the U.S. and abroad.
They work with the Community
Aid Corps on a tutorial program
in the economically deprived
areas of Buffalo and have contributed much in this field.”

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The Students' New Action Party
past

believe that prejudice, bigotry, and discrimination are personal defects of the individual,
and to label any organization as such without comprehensive review of the facts, is in
itself discriminatory and unworthy of the
State University system.

“Unlike in the past, it is the present
belief of the Students’ New Action Party,
that the routes of much commuter unhappiness and non-participation lay either with
the commuters themselves or are in fact
non-existent.

“The new polity system gives each and
every student a voice and it places a premium
upon organization and unity. As students, as
human beings, you now have a voice, as fraternities you have unity, and a common understanding of the true meaning of brotherhood and peace. Yes, you now have a voice.

“You now have the Commuter Council
and you now have the Students’ New Action
Party in your corner. You have an agency
to speak for you and you have a group of
students you know are receptive to your
ideas.

“Regarding FSA land, it is the stand of
the Students’ New Action Party that although
it is nice to have a profit-making enterprise
working for the University, it is even more
important that the students derive some form
of tangible, aesthetic benefit from it. We believe that there is no reason to accept one
proposal or another 100% when we are able
to taste the fruits of many different ideas.

“It is the belief of the Students’ New
Action Party, that the goals of the National
Student Association Coordinator are to make
students more cognizant, interested and active in the NSA. It is our desire to make the
State University of Buffalo a stronger member of this organization than it has been in
the past, through a more complete use of its
facilities.

“It has never ceased to amaze us why
some feel that because we have a park we
cannot expand our athletic facilities or why
a golf course presupposes the possibility of
a temporary auditorium for concepts. It is
more our contention that the possible incorporation of all ideas within a park-like
construction is not entirely to be ruled out.
It is to this end that we shall work.

“There are many things, however, that
we don’t want.
“We don’t want a large bureaucratic
structure telling us when to study and what
to study.
“We don’t want restriction upon our
right to disagree with the system, be it local
or national, when we feel that we are being
abused.

“It is the policy of the Students’ New
Action Party that the individual student is
the best judge of what he requires for an
adequate education. We feel that a continuation of certain vital programs as well as
the creation of new and essential ones lies
behind the ability of this University to become more a place for expansion of the
minds and consciences of tomorrow than
a factory
what it is gradually becoming
for the purposes of reproducing the old, the

“We want our ideas to be published in
the school newspaper that we are paying
for and we want a free University Press,
which is run by and for the students. We are
not children. Some of us can vote, many of
us are married and all of us are old ei
to die for our country. When we spe k, let
the rest of the academic and social coi imunitiy listen.”

—

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�Friday, April 12, 1968

The Spectrum

Pag* Ten

Sacks: Student Services
“It has been almost four years
since the FSA purchased approximately 510 acres of land with
Student Association fees. As it
stands now, the lands are lying
fallow. They sap much of our

tempt to emulate New
City’s Central Park.

“The compromise proposal has
been to delegate a portion of the
land for use as a nine hole golf
course, to fund the obvious nnn-

Milstein's
proposal

which the remainder of the land
will be delegated. Further proposals have been made: athletic
and recreational facilities to make
up for a lack of space on our
present campus, a temporary
gymnasium, a baseball field and a
large auditorium for concerts and
lectures. We have almost $100,000 for use in such ventures. The
time is here to either use these
funds or mortgage the lands. To
sell would be financial suicide
considering the future value of
the lands. But whatever we decide, let us make this year the
year the year we do it.

“A change in the present calendar, although not an original
concept, is worthy of further pursuance and concrete action.

away following applications for
Capen loans. These loans are

“Proposals have been made:
the FSA’s plan is to establish a

large profit-making golf complex.
An alternative is the GSA’s proposal to turn the land into an
artificial wildlife park in an at-

would definitely consider
the possibility of having examinations before winter vacation or
after a period that would commence at the end of vacation. In
this way, there would be one vacation and unnecessary traveling
would be eliminated. Or, I would
like to consider a reading period
before any examination period
so that exams would not begin
immediately after the termination
of classes.”
“I

Estrada:
His hopes

York

“Students

have been

turned

basically small, short-term, noninterest bearing loans to aid students during periods of temporary stress. Students who are undergoing such financial crises

need not know the business structure of the school to understand
that they may not be able to buy
their books or make other essential academic payments on lime.
"It is my intention to continue
and enlarge upon this institution

and to make such problems as financial need carry as little weight
as possible on this campus.”

“I want students ti

Wachtel: Foreign
Student

“I advocate greater integration
of the 600 foreign students with
the student body. The foreign
students represent many different
cultures, values and experiences
and could contribute greatly to
the climate of intellectual life on
this campus.
“Foreign students, especially,
must be made aware of the rights
and resources open to them.”

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—

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Flights Office, 265 Madison Avenue,
New York, N. Y. 10016.
Open only to students at NSA member schools.
*

SNAP

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Rappoport's position
“We are here to leam and not

to slit our neighbor’s throat by

would like to step in before a
student-run organization gets too

many

this carppus academically and socially whenever possible. I want
a Pass-Fail system for certain
subjects that we’re afraid to take
because we’re afraid of the curve.
I want to be able to get credit
for courses which we have created ourselves in the Experimental College and to get credit for
projects which we undertake in
our own areas of interest.
“I want the rights of all interest groups to be respected. I
am disgusted when one group
abuses another because they are
weakening the system which gave
them the right to dissent in the
first place.
“I want the Fraternity System
to have a re-birth on this campus. I want them to get involved
with the Polity. It is their right
and they duty.’

Fly to Europe with NSA.
*246 Round Trip.

Steve Milstein

SNAP president

Starring:

RAYMOND THE CONDEMNED
THE OBSERVER

subjects and. not be forced to
fatten ourselves on the berries

of the Basic Distribution Tree.
When we come to this University, we give our first names and
take on new ones. Mine is 120378
and I’m proud of it. I’ve hated
that number for the last three
years and I can’t see myself
learning to like it in the near
future.
“It is the policy of the Students
New Action Party that the work
which was first undertaken last
August toward the founding of
a student-run University Press
shall not have been in vain.
“There are enough worthy man*
uscripts to keep the presses rolling for the next three years,
publishing at a minimal rate of 12
publications per year. But publications cost money, approximately $2000-$3000 each. However, in
the long-run it is expected that a
profit of about $2000 will be realized on each of the publications,
the returns being directed back
into the student body.
“What I would like to see become a reality is a printing press
at a cost of $150,000 for University Press, something that would
allow students, faculty or anyone to publish materials inexpensively, but in a first class
manner.

“At the present time, the administration is lending support
to this praiseworthy venture, but

“In addition I would like to

see works of fiction and poetry
being published without fear of
financial failure. The possibility
of new and different periodicals
is not to be ruled out should they
prove financially efficient and
journalistically worthy.

“SNAP likes what the students

are doing. Those people who are
running the University Press are
people with new ideas who make
things happen, who get action.
So are we.”
“It grows increasingly more
difficult for University students

to turn their faces from textbooks to the ghettos. It grows

increasingly more important to

hear the cries from Viet Nam
and let them resound throughout the campus. And it’s about
time students learned that the
ears of the University Communiity and the world will only turn,
if they scream loud enough and
long enough. I hope to be allowed to lead them in this direction and give their voices
amplitude and clarity. Vote Rappoport and his New Action
Party.”

Bible Truth
CHRISTIANS GUARANTEE
"These things have I written unto you
that believe on the name of the Son
of God that you may know, that ye
have eternal life."
I John 5:13
THE

�Friday, April 12, 1968

The Spectrum

Action line

.

.

Elections will be held by the IRC

.

331-5000

Election petitions for president,
vice president, secretary and
treasurer of the Inter-Residence
&gt;le Monday.

often think it impossible to untangle the SUNYAB bureaucracy? In cooperation
with the Dean of Students' Office, The Spectrum is sponsoring an ACTION LINE. Through
ACTION LINE, individual students can get an answer to a puzzling question, find n..t
-t
HMTMgS i. mrliralrrl
where and why University decisions are i—
i
action l INF answer, all nuaitinn, mi
be pertinent
i it i»rara,t ...e.d.
body.
Spectrum
The
will include them in its special ACTION LINE weekly
to the student
column. Each inquiry will be thoroughly investigated and answered Individually.
is it necessary to take a full year of Freshman English if a
student had previously been granted credit through an advanced
Do

you

|

—

...

Candidates for president must
have a 1.3 grade point average.
Candidates for vice president,
secretary and treasurer must have
a 1.0. All candidates must have
at least one year’s residence on

(Why

placement

Papa E lavan

exam?

Dr. Taylor W. Stoehr, Head of the Freshman English Program,
stated that “Advanced placement courses and examinations, for the
most part, are concerned with literary criticism and analysis. The
emphasis in Freshman English classes at the State University at Buffalo is on writing and it was felt that all freshman students could profit
from an additional year’s training in such. As of September, 1967,
credits earned by advanced placement examinations can be applied
for elective credits but may not satisfy the Freshman English require-

campus.

Petitions will be available until

the main floor of Tower Hall
from noon to 6:30 p.m. every
school day. Petitions can be returned any time. The last day
for handing in petitions is April
24.

taxes?

The treasurer is responsible for
keeping all financial records of
the IRC. He handles allocation of
funds and is chairman of the fi-

April 23 in the IRC office on

ment.”
In the March 15th issue of The Spectrum, wherein the FSA-owned
land in Amherst was described, mention was made that taxes run
about $10,000 a year. How come a non-profit organization has to pay

The vice president is an exofficio member of all standing
and temporary committees. It is
his duty to coordinate and expedate the aotvity of the various
committees.
The secretary to the executive
committee is responsible for
notifying members of meetings.

Dr. Claude Puffer, Treasurer of the Faculty-Student Association,
Campaigning wall begin April
now pays taxes on this land but explained
they were advised, by legal counsel, that until the land is actually
24. Elections are April 30 and
May 1.
used for educational and/or recreational purposes we will have to pay
taxes.
If a student did not pay the activity fee, and his ID card is punched 200 signatures
for non-payment, can he change his mind and pay the fee?
Candidates for president must
Yes. This can be arranged by signing the appropriate waiver,
which is available at the Instructional Communication Center in Room get 200 valid resident signatures.
Other officers require 150 such
21, Foster Hall, every Friday from 12:00 noon to 3:00 p.m. After this
signatures. A student can sign
waiver is signed, authorizing the Activities Fee charge, a new ID card
any number of petitions if he has
is issued, properly punched.
a validated I.D. card.
Why does the maintenance department fail to recognize the stuThe IRC president is respondents' preferred, and more sensible, paths across the quadrangle and
sible for policy making, working
insist upon reseeding the worn areas?
with University officials and facMr. James Sarra, Director of Maintenance, agrees that continued
ulty and members of the comeffort to seed these areas is wasteful, but, in spite of this has been
munity. His other powers and
doing so in an attempt to maintain a desired level of lawn coverage
for aesthetic purposes. He thinks this whole quadrangle area should responsibilities are in line with
be paved and has repeatedly requested funds for this project from the basics of his office.
the Capital Construction Fund of the State University System in
Albany. At this point he does not know whether funds for this plan
will be included in the new budget and until the money is available
will continue all efforts to make the campus as attractive as possible,
even if it means repeated attempts at lawn maintenance.
Are the police doing anything to ascertain and apprehend whoever is turning in false alarms in Norton?
Seablue,
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sunroof sedan.
Fire Commissioner Howard and Dr. Richard A. Siggelkow, Viceradio, whitewalls, 33,900 miles, exPresident for Student Affairs, recently issued a joint statement that
valuable extras. $1,050. Call 838-1814.
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considered, and discussion is centering around how to make current MORRIS MINOR
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stressed that violators
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offer. Contract Ken, TF 2-8331.
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University officials.
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confirmed the fact that FSA

—

“

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886-6886

after 6.

Special to The Spectrum

GROSSINGER, N. Y.
Illegal
drug traffic and other criminal
violations are not tolerated in any
of the 68 colleges and centers of
the State University stated Chancellor Gould.
—

Dr. Gould made the statement
April 2 in an address before the
New York State County Officers
Association.
Although the normal disciplinary procedure is based on “mutual respect, the university can
never be a sanctuary for those

who violate the law,” he said.

His comments followed a re-

after 6.

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1965 YAMAHA 55 cc—excellent condt
tion, $100, call Richie, 836-0691.
1966 HONDA 160—excellent condition,
MOTOR

$375. Call NF 2-8669.
1964 YAMAHA 80 cc—less than 10,000
miles, excellent running condition,
wit hhelmet. Call Lou, TR 7-3663.
AMPLIFIER and 2 GUITARS, folk and
electric. Reasonable, must sell. Best
price takes. 834-2013.

APARTMENT
SUMMER

FOR RENT

PAD

available, furnished, 2
bedrooms, kitchen, living room, hifi
and TV. Asking $70. Negotiable. 837rooms
days,
5491.

STUDENTS
available

__

3

bed-study

near campus.
evenings,

877-1600 Ext. 790;

Call
832-

APARTMENT one block from campus,
Princeton Courts, for school year
1968-69. Furniture included. Call 8359740.
ROOM FOR RENT—kitchen privileges,
$15 week. 10 minutes from campus.
Call Mrs. Bumpus, NF 4-6519.
MALE student desires to sub-let apartment for summer session. Will share.
Call 839-4160.
ROOMMATES WANTED
ROOMMATES
Beautiful new 22
famlly. house, upper. Modern conveniences, 4 blocks from campus.
Whole summer. 837-8819.
APARTMENTS WANTED
APARTMENTS NEEDED
Summer Faculty June 24 - August 2. Write directly to : William Empson (2 adults). Department of Eng. Literature, The University, Sheffield, England or, Brian
Vickers (2 adults, 1 sm. child) 26 Alpha
—

TRADITION

*4-1

I

THAT
v-

MUST
egr

CHANGED

colleges.
“Every person in the university
community has an obligation to

respect the status of the institution, and furthermore, the administration must comply fully
with all appropriate law enforcement agencies whenever a serious
law infraction is discovered,” Dr.
Gould said.
He added that the drug problem, which he attributed to “tensions resulting from changing
attitudes,” has brought this policy
into distinct prominence.

call 831-3610

mint condition,
YAMAHA 80
brand new engine. $200. 886-6886

1964

view of the history and growth
of the University system, which
includes a network of community

For quick action

—

SUMMER

AMERICAN

residents. This year, it has sponsored movies throughout the
year, buses to Toronto, and recently has been working on a
residential college on campus to
provide living space for faculty
and students. All dorm requests
for funds msut go through the
IRC.

a sanctuary for lawbreakers

9484.

THIS

representatives from each dormitory. It is concerned with ail
problems that relate to dorm

Gould: The university is not

CLASSIFIED
—

nance committee.
The IRC is made of resident

—

—

Road, Cambridge, England
W,'ANTED, 2 bedroom furnished
apt. for
June, July and August, within easy
access to campus, 834-4399.

WANTED
DRIVER needed to Seettle, Washington,
can leave anytime, arriving on or before May 20th. 675-0072.
GIRL to babysit for family with five

children,

5-14

ages

at

years

MBQ.

MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
low cost.
immediate F.S.-l, premiums financed,
UPSTATE CYCLE INSURANCE. 695-3044.
SHALOM! For gems from the Jewish
Bible call 875-4265 day or night.
MISCELLANEOUS
RALLY DAY U.S.A.—Don’t miss it. Saturday
night,
April 20th at East
Aurora Shopping Plaza. Registration 6-7
PM. First car off 7:01 PM. All kinds
of cars welcome.
Perfect for begin—

Trophies, metal dash plaques.
ners.
Sponsored by Towne and Country
Mustang Club. More information at 837-

7712.
TYPING work. 30c a page. Telephone
833-6311.
few seats remaining to EUl
June lOth-Aug. 16th. Niagara Falls to
London. $196 round trip—includes 5%
tax. Call 831-3602.
[RATION: coats, dresses and
skirts.
etc. Special price for students, one
day service on hem if desired. Snyder
area. 839-0283.
PUBLISH OR PERISH! Editing, proof
reading for faculty members,
experienced

in

text

books,

works. Phone: 882-3549.

scholarly

SPECTRUM classifieds sell. Low rates.
831-3610.
GOING ON SABBATICAL? Married Doc
torial student willing to maintain your
home and grounds tor rent consideration. Arrangements according to your
schedule. Contact Chas. MacRoy, ext:
4806.
The men
women of
the State University of Buffalo are
cordially invited to:
MEDICAL MIXER
2 bands, room for 2,000 people
Place: International Hotel
&amp;

(Kennedy Airport)

Date: Sunday, April 14th
Time: 8:30 P.M.
Admission: Save 41.50 If you brin*
this Adv.

SEE BUFFALO'S LARGEST COLLECTION OF

JOIN VISTA
(Volunteers In Service To America)
for information and application
contact

LYNNE SCHLOSSER
835-2939
evenings 5

-

9

lake

front home. Thunderbay, Ontario. Must
be able to swim. $30 per week. Call
886-1566
V SI TORS; The Gilded Edge, 3193
Bailey. Hand crafted jewelry and un
usual-gifts. Wed.-Sat.
PERSONAL
UNITE UB1 Always remember RMP as

PERFECT KEEPSAKE DIAMONDS

WEISBERO
JEWELERS
396 MAIN STREET
"In The Main Place”

UK GOLD POST

$2.00 and $3.00

Pierced EARRINGS 77*

�Th

Pag* Tw*lv*

•

Friday, April 13, 1968

Spectrum

Nation in shock

Murder of Dr. King smashes

optimism triggered by LBJ
Twelve days ago, the spirit of a
nation soared as its leader announced
that he would step down from his
office in the interests of peace and
unity.
That night there was dancing in
the park across the street from the
Executive Mansion, and the next
day the stock market gained dramatically as investors, along with
the rest of a tired populace, hopefully looked toward a new future of
prosperity and yes, perhaps peace
and unity.
—

The country’s political future was confused, but everyone felt that whatever
changes were to take place could only
work for the better.

If a limited bombing pause in a far-off
land would finally lead to the end of
killing and bloodshed, then perhaps the
problems at home
problems of hate,
could then take
injustice and poverty
the top priority they had cried out for,
for so long.
—

—

Days of news specials
The next few days were the days of

television news specials, as for the first
time, real prospects for peace were discussed throughout the world. And the
people began to think more and more of
domestic problems, with sighs of relief.
With The Man leaving the Presidency
for good, with hope for peace in Vietnam,
it looked like the prospects for the inevitable “long hot summer” could be
watered down.
Eight days ago, another leader, a symbol of that hope for the future, could be
seen on one of these news programs. He
was telling an audience of striking garbagemen, mostly black, that he would
ignore an unfair court injunction to lead
them in a peaceful march, intended to
demonstrate their plea for better wages.

to spread across the United States.
Many whites were saddened, many found
themselves gripped by a strange sense of
guilt— and only a few were happy to
see him gone.

Most blacks were also saddened, many
felt frustrated, and many could only think
of lashing out at whatever was available.
Most Americans were at first shocked by
the senseless and brutal act, but as the
next morning dawned, the shock gave
way to fear.
The new hope that had been triggered
one man’s action was smashed as a
second man lay dead.

by

Quiet life

Until the age of 26, Dr. King had led a
quiet and scholarly life. Having skipped
three grades, he was graduated from high
school at 15, and completed his undergraduate studies at Morehouse College in
Atlanta. At Crozer Theological Seminary
in Chester, Pa., where he was validictorian of his class, he earned his bachelor
of divinity degree at 22. He went on to
Boston University’s Methodist seminary
to earn his PhD at 26.
Dr. King accepted a pastorate at the
Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery, Ala. It was during his first year
in Montgomery that a young Negress refused to give up her seat on a bus to a
white man.

Dr. King called a mass meeting of Montgomery Negroes, and as a result, a 382
day boycott arose, ending .only when the
U.S. Supreme Court ruled against the constitutionality of such bus segregation laws.

National figure
Across the country, Dr. King became a
a fignational and international figure
ure for change through non-violent civil
disobedience. He fashioned himself after
Mahatma Gandhi, and included that leader’s grave in India as a part of his travels
throughout the world.
—

The leader of millions of persecuted

In 1957, at the invitation of the Prime
Minister, he attended the independence
celebration of Ghana, West Africa.
One of Dr. King’s most dramatic actions
was in Birmingham, Ala., where a demonstration he was leading was met by Police
Commissioner “Bull” Conner, who used
dogs, fire hoses and cattle prods to put
down the demonstrators.

As the body of Rev. Martin Luther King
was still warm in a Memphis hospital, a
/aried and unprecedented reaction began

It was that year that Birmingham saw
the bombing of a Negro church with the
murder of four children. And it was that
summer that he told more than 200,000
at the Lincoln Memorial and millions

One more bulletin

Two hours later, another in the seemingly endless series of news bulletins
came on the air.
This one was different, somber, forebodingly tense, electric.
people across the country lay dead with
a bullet through hiis neck.

-UPI

Telephoto

Somber
J
.

procession

Mule-drawn caisson bears the body of Dr. Martin
Luther King, Jr:, from church enroule to Morehouse College for memorial services.

more watching on television of his dream
of “that day when all God’s chiildren,
black men and white men, Jews and Gen-

tiles, Protestants and Catholics, will be
able to join hands and sing , . . ‘Free at
last, free at last. Thank God Almighty,
we’re free at last.’
The years that followed saw Dr. King
move on to Selma, where he led thousands to the state capitol in a march for
voting rights. He went to other places
to Chicago, to Mississippi, to Rochester,
to Memphis
wherever he felt he could
help Negroes in a non-violent fight for
”

—

—

equality.

Changes, criticism

Recent years saw changes in the civil
rights field —and Dr. King found criticism on all sides.
Young Negro militants arose, who saw
violence as the only way to achieve equality for the black man. The era of urban
riots began, and many criticized Dr. King

were on the decline. Thoughts
of urban America were on the upswing,
and the thoughts of Negroes who wanted
to confront the conscience of an America
turned racist could look to Martin Luther
King for a non-violent method.
Since then, there have been more television news specials. They have shown
troops ringed about the White House,
violence and bloodshed in Chicago, Baltimore, Pittsburgh, and countless other
American cities.
They have shown hate, they have shown
fear, they have shown a fight for equality
in the most vioilent of fashions. They have
shown police armed with shotguns and
tear gas on Buffalo’s East Side as Mayor
Sediita called for a voluntary 7:00 p.m.
curfew.
And Tuesday they showed the funeral
of a dedicated Baptist minister from
Daniel Latsar
Atlanta.
war and LBJ

—

for his non-violent stance.
As the war in Vietnam became the national preoccupation, he found it necessary to speak out against the policies of
America which he felt were poisoning
the minds of her society and confusing
her sense of priorities.
This created more opponents, claiming
that he was only trying to take publicity
from the militants; that he was speaking
out on a subject that didn’t concern him,
that he was being distracted from his
real purpose.
Dr. King’s big project was to be a
massive Poor People’s March on Washington this month. He wanted to bring thousands of poor people to the Capitol, where
they would create and live indefinitely in
a shantytown until the Congress reacted
with improved housing and welfare legislation.

But as he was going through the country recruiting people for his march, he

took time off to try to help the sanitation
workers of Memphis, 98% of whom are
Negroes. He led one march, which erupted
y
in violence.
Then he returned to that city to prove
that he could lead a non-violent demonstration.

New hope?
All that was

eight days ago. Eight days

ago Americans felt, for the first time in
years, a new sense of hope. Thoughts of

Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
. . shown as he arrives in Memphis
to lead march in support of striking

.

sanitation workers, hours before his
death.

WBFO reporter is slashed
covering disturbance* on Buffalo'* E»»*
Jame*
Side Monday afternoon, WBFO New. Director
of
Bala wa. Injured when attacked by a group
youth* who *everely cut him about the face.
Hospital.
He wa* taken by police to Slaters
Mr. Bala, working with WBFO Program Director

While

Manager Edwar
Henry Tenenbaum and Operation*

250 teenBaron, had been following a group of
downtown
in
a
from
demonstration
agers returning

was
Cy Cohen's
This delicatessen
looted several times during Buffalo's
disturbances, which injured a score of
persons. Arrests were heavy, and Dist.
Atty. Dillon promised fast prosecution.
—

i
L00I6rS
.

.

tafQCl

,

—

near Jefferson
The three student* were attacked
Ferry
Streets.
and
to maintain peace,
A few Buffalonians, trying
the hostile
saved Mr. Tenebaum and Mr. Baron from
demonstrator, by pulling them into a nearby office.

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                    <text>The SpECTi^uivi

Men, women; faculty, students
may live together next year

E C E I1 V

«'

'X

State University of New York at Buffalo

R
_

p&gt;

Living with a group of people

Oyou911

be come

unbearble
unless
learn to communicate.
Students and faculty, living fo
gether in a small residential colj eg e nex j year, may confront this
—

:

MAD
IVIHn 9t

IQfifi
’JUG

Tuesday, UMNtVS$&lt;SWY

Vol. 18, No. 44

Harrell: Students should be given
voice in hiring and firing teachers
Sociology professor Bill Harrell
proposed Friday that students be
given a voice in the hiring and

The reason for this is the fact
that “mediocrity is the norm in
the false democracy that is this
University,” observed the speak-

firing of teachers on this campus.
This would ensure that teachers
will be contracted on the basis
of their interest in students, attitudes, and educational philosophy rather than performance on
a “trivial or irrelevant” doctoral
dissertation or book publication,

er.

Losing Harrell
Mr. Harrell, whose contract for
the next semester has not been
renewed, was termed an “exam-

ple of the type of good teaching
that is lost through the bureaucratic entanglements" on this
campus by Daniel Rosenthal of

he asserted.

His remarks were addressed to
about 150 interested students in
the Conference Theater. The forum was a continuation of last
week’s Strike For Knowledge, directly relating to the undergraduate’s educational experience, according to a spokesman for the
All-Academic Union, the sponsor
of the meeting.
Mr. Harrell likened the situation on this campus to an iron
mask utilized in the middle ages
in which a person gets trapped
in a steel structure and is thus
killed by his own vitality, “What
we’re seeing here is a stifling of
the vitality and growth of the
most energetic and creative students,” he charged.

the All-Academic Union.
Mr. Harrell also urged that immediate action be taken on a
proposal that would enable certain students to take their entire
*

course load on an experimental,
no-grading basis. He noted that
his proposal in theory has already been approved by the
President’s Ranking and Grading
Committee for implementation
next fall.

Union for reform
Jeremy Taylor, administrative
assistant in the History Depart-

ment, called for the establishment of a student union to implement needed reform. He noted

past failures of administration

Three teachers dismissed
for their part in silent vigil
Special to

the

Spectrum

GLEN FALLS, N. Y.—Three teachers at Adirondack
Community College have been dismissed from the faculty
following their participation in a silent vigil around a flagpole. A fourth faculty member was also dismissed after he
expressed his disapproval of the firings.
The four involved are: Miss
or resistance to law and order
Jean Perkins of the Mathematics
Department; Mr. Ronald Padgham, art; Mr. Raymond Hengeldberg, history and Mr. James Jarvis, sociology. All four lacked
tenure, and consequently no official reason was given for their

dismisals.

The vigil was held Jan. 15.
Two days later, a memo was
circulated to all members of the
faculty instructing them to refrain from demonstrations on the
campus. In addition, the editor
stu dent newspaper was told
fu
that if he printed any
stories on
the dismisals, he risked suspension from the
school.
Nine faculty at pole

The vigil, which was
held in
reaction to statements by the
administration and the
Board of
Trustees forbidding
demonstrations on the campus, was
attended
3 0f ni e faculty
?
memnf four
f
bers. Of
who did not
tenure, three were dismised- hold
the
fourth teacher has taken a’ maternity leave of absence from the
school.
At least two previous incidents
led up to the silent vigil. Last
October, the student newspaper
printed an article stating that
violence is the answer to the
problems of
the Negro once other
avenues of change have been
closed. In reaction, the Board of
Trustees pased a resolution,
which said in part:
“No organization, group or individual within it (the College) or
connected with it shall advocate,
facilitate or tolerate violation of

herf

applicable to Adirondack Community College or to the community . .”
In early January, 45 students
silently filed out of a lecture
being given by U. S. Army recruiters. The college administration promptly posted a letter
warning that students do not have
the right to demonstrate and that
.

and faculty efforts in this direction.
The issues to which the AllAcademic Union is addressing itself include scheduling conflicts
and reform of Student Union
facilities.
“We want a 16 hour basis of
instruction,” Mr. Halpern urged.
This would relieve conflicts in
scheduling and would remove
the stigma of attending “Night
School,” he claimed.
Possible reforms suggested by
the Union include the establishment of a cooperative bookstore
and food service, he added.

problem.
An ad hoc committee of the
Student Association to Develop a
Residential College is working on
a proposal to create the experimental residential college. The
committee, chaired by Student
Association president Stewart
Edelstein, hopes to implement the
plan in the academic year of
1968-69;
Designed as a Communications
College, it would incorporate
many aspects of the collegiate
system envisioned for the Am-

herst campus.

People-oriented
The theme of communications
would broaden the “sphere of
learning far beyond the normal
classroom experience.” The proposal states that “its peopleoriented activities will induce
greater understanding of interpersonal relationships, communication and creative proceses.”
A group of approximately 200
students, both male and female,

and commuter, undergraduate and graduate, will develop the Communications College. The criteria of selection has
not been determined but may include an interview and an essay.

resident

A committed group of associated faculty and staff members
would assume an active role in
all “dimensions of the College including teaching,
advisement,
counselling and other relevant
areas,” Other interested faculty
will be encouraged to affiliate as
a resource group and be involved
on a more occasional basis than
the core College faculty.
The development of the College's government, administration
and policies will be guided by a
master who exemplifies “an understanding of young people and
their strivings.”
In planning stages
Copies of the proposal and philosophy are avilable in the Student
Association offices. Students interested in living in the College
should contact any member of the
committee through Mrs. Mary
Palisano in room 205, Norton

Hall.
The proposal is still in its plan

ning stages.

Administrators to be educated
A program designed to
educate administrators outside their own fields has been
undertaken the Dean of Students Office announced.
A week-long pilot project,
completed Friday, featured
speakers on varied subjects
from this campus.
Mrs. Anilia Bhatt hopes that
eventually an in-service training

program will be established “to
bridge communication with students and faculty by exposing
their areas of work to each side.”
Other schools which have attempted a program of this type
have approached it from a purely
academic viewpoint. But the program here will be developed Mrs.
Bhatt explained, so that the administration will be exposed to
individuals outside their area.
The format will include speakers
on the same theme frrom various
disciplines.
Dr. Clyde Parker from the University of Minnesota is credited
with originating the program,
which is currently in operation

Varied topics

Administrative

“Student Personnel Work
A
New Approach,” and Dr. Bahl
Bhatt, Industrial Relations, “Indi—

The pilot program presented
here included such varied topics
and campus individuals as Dr.
John Anton, Dept, of Philosophy,
“Ethics in Decision Making—A
Look at ‘On Campus’ Incidents;”
Dr. James Belasco, Business Management, “Importance of Management—in Student Personnel
Structure,”

and

Mr. Robert O’Neill, assistant to
the President, "Legal Implications in Policy Making.”
Others participating were Dr.
William Stein, Dept, of Anthropology, “Observe and Study Student Groups and Activities for Effective Personnel Work;” Dr. Robert Rosberg, Education Studies,

Happy days

.

vidual Aspirations and Organiza-

Understanding
tional Goals
Areas of Conflict.”
The format of each session is
highly informal, so that each person can add to the productivity.
Attendance is limited to two
people from each of eight departments. The innovators would
rather see fewer people at each
session, eight to ten, for more in
depth discussion.
The idea behind the project
was explained by Mrs. Russell:
“We feel that a great deal can be
learned from others, not necessarily those that are heads of departments.”
—

.

.

Spring recess begins Monday, and today's
Spectrum is last regularly scheduled edition until
April 16.
A special Student Association Election Issue will
be published April 12.

there.

corrective action would be taken
those who do.
One student was singled out by
the administration as the leader
of the walkout, and was threatened with dismissal from the
aginst

school.

Suit filed
The four teachers have filed
suit aginst the school asking re-

instatement, $100,000 in dam-

ages and a retraction of the resolution pased by the Board of
Trustees.
In addition, at least one of the
other faculty members who was

at the flagpole vigil has said that
he will resign from the school if
the teachers are not reinstated.
Reaction of the 950-strong student body has been generally in
favor of the teachers, and as otie
member of the faculty has put it,
sch o1 is fighting for its
[•£
°

»

The College, which was founded seven years ago, spent its
first
years on a

temporary campus,
and just moved to a new complex

six

of buildings. A two-year junior
college, located south of Lake
George, it draws its commuting
student population from a wide
area in north-central New York
State.

—G.

Khan

Things go better with

.

.

.

Korean composer of electronic music, Nam June
Paik (left), who destroys his violin, and the
renowned "Topless Cellist," Charlotte Moorman,
were featured performers during Spring Arts
'68. They appeared in Baird Hail last Tuesday

evening.

�in Haas Lorn

Meeting

Effect of the Strike is evaluated

of level of protest has to be

by Jay Schreiber
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

The Dorothy Haas Lounge overflowed with humanity
Thursday afternoon for the third consecutive day as the
organizers and participants in the Strike for Knowledge tried
to judge the effectiveness of the just-completed strike.
In what was fast becoming a normal scene, students
occupied chairs, tables, window sills and the floor, while
others were crammed in tight subway formation at the rear,
spilling out into Norton lobby.
A show of hands gave two of can then challenge their princi-

the Strike’s organizers, who led
the meeting, James Hansen and
Max Wickert, the first oportunitics to assess the faculty response
to the events of the prior two
days.

Many students had arms in the
air when asked if one or two of
their classes had been cancelled,
but less than 10% kept them up
when the number was increased
to four.

The general agreement was
that many of the faculty who held
classes did cooperate by discussing the Vietnam War. However,
several students took the floor to
make specific complaints.

Some ignored Strike

One freshman said that the
Chemistry Department had completely ignored the strike. A graduate student in the Political
Science Department said that
only seven out of 30 professors in
that department discussed the
war or cancelled classes.
The Elementary Education and
Physical Education Departments
also came under attack for not
recognizing the strike.
Joe Wolberg, a member of the
Strike’s sponsoring group, The
University Community for Rational Alternatives, asked for a distinction between those professors
who took principled and those
who took a practical stand against
the strike. “We want to know the
professors who took a principled
stand on the strike,” he said. “We
#

Tuesday, March 26,

The Spectrum

Page Two

ples rationally.”
Students filed into lines behind

the two audience microphones to

continue their evaluation. One
asked why no one from the military or political circles was there
to defend the system—to discuss
it from their viewpoint.
The question helped initiate a
debate on which methods would
help in communicating ideas with
those outside the University.
The Spectrum feature editor,
Barry HoltzClaw, said: “I’m sick
of teach-ins, of reinforcing each
other. One thing that was made
clear by this strike is the tremendous potentiality we’re missing. We’re missing it by staying
on campus. We should go into the
community and show our concern
for 16, 17, 18 and 19 year olds
who aren’t going to college.
Heavier criticism came from

another student who remarked he
was tired of “everyone congratulating themselves on this University being the first to have
such a strike. There are 18,000 to
20,000 students here,” how many
would go downtown, 50? 500?
We’ve got to change the rhetoric
—instead of serving the world,
to getting the hell out of the
war.”
Tone down protest
“Nobody’s mother is going to

stand behind a banner that says
‘We Support the NLF.’ The tone

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Spectrum

Staff

DRU

spokesman, Larry

as to whether the Army Material

strating,”

Job Board to advertise

job opportunities
WANTED: College students who
need a job tomorrow or over the
weekend. Temporary positions or
specialized work advertised. See
Job Board, near the Conference
Theater in Norton Hall.
A Job Board, advertising employment positions which “need
someone in a big hurrj%” is now
posted near the Conference Theater.
Listed on the bulletin board
will be 3x5 cards outlining the
type of job, requirements and
qualifications needed, salary, general location in the Buffalo area,
means of transportation, and sex

of person. Interested students can
receive the name and addres of
the employer from the University
Placement
Office located in
Schoellkopf Hall. A letter of recommendation will then be forwarded from the office.
Working in the area of student
services, Student Senator Barbara
Emilson encouraged the Senate
to purchase the Job Board.

The Placement Service’s summer and part-time division has
neither “the staff nor capeity to
check their files for qualified students

to fill these temporary

places,” Miss Emilson said.
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Reporter

It was disclosed Wednesday at a panel discussion during
the Strike for Knowledge, that recruiting March 11 on campus by representatives of the Army Material Command (AMC)
was kept secret from the University community.
Further investigation revealed that only Tom Hurley,
assistant director for student personnel; Richard A. Siggelkow, vice-president for Student Affairs; several representatives from the President’s Office, and the interviewers, knew
of the March 11 interviews.
The interviews were officially
Is AMC 'military'?
scheduled for March 12.
There had been some question

Faulkner, said draft counseling
would be used “as a means, not Lafkiotes not informed
an end.” He expressed the desire
Dr. Siggelkow made the final
to consult as many high school decision to allow the recruiter
boys susceptible to the draft as to come one day early. However
possible.
he did emphasize that “recruitThe UCRA announced that de- ment did take place March 12
being
programs
were
planfinite
as publicized.”
ned for the near future, and that
More than half of the interthe Steering Committee was still views took place on the unanparto
open to people who wish
nounced date.
ticipate in the planning.
The Director of Placement, Dr.
No final consensus was reached C. James Lafkiotes, was never inon the Strike’s overall success, formed that the interviews were
but one UCRA spokesman mento be held early. He first learned
tioned: p,“It was unfortunate we of the decision at Wednesday’s
didn’t close down classroom ac- panel discussions.
tivity. We’ll do that in the next
There was no demonstration
strike, to bring it to the apathetic March 12, when the interviews
students.”
were scheduled.

BUFFALO
TEXTBOOK

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Secret interviews held by
Army Material Command

The discussion of future tactics continued for an hour. Youth
against War and Fascism member, Gerald Gross, asked for everyone present to “help bring the
moral outrage of the war into the
streets,” and to “demonstrate solidarity with the peoples of Vietnam.” Other speakers were less
positive, asking others to present
alternatives to draft resistance.
Meanwhile petitions continually
It was reported that the Admincircled the lounge from hand to istration was anticipating some
hand. One of these asked people sort of demonstration against the
to volunteer to be draft counsel- recruiters. The placement office
ors for the Draft Resistance Unreceived at least one call from
ion.
a person “interested in demonThe

Outside communication

x

II

brotight—down—to—human —com
seiousness or else we’re not going
anywhere.”

1968

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Command should be excluded
from the campus in accordance
with the resolution of the Faculty
Senate of Dec. 14 which stated
“that the use of University facilities for military recruitment be
withheld.”

According to Robert O’Neill,
assistant to the President, there
had been “unanimous consent”
among those that made the decision that the AMC did not fall
into the category of “military
recruitment.”
He further said that since the
“company” was run by civilians,
and since it did not recruit people into the armed forces, it was
not in violation of the resolution.
A National Science Foundatiion
report of January 1966 describes
the AMC as follows:
“The U.S. Army Material
Command (AMC), with headquarters in Building T-7, Washington,
D.C., was established in May 1962
to consolidate and coordinate the
material development and logistics functions of the Army. It
was created from components of
six former Army Technical Services: the Chemical Ordinance
Quartermaster, Signal, Engineer,
and Transportation Corps; and
from various laboratories, test
boards, and other activities of
Department of the Army staff
agencies, and the U.S. Continental Army Command.”
A division of the AMC is
the Army Weapons Command
with headquarters at Rock Island
Arsenal, Rock Island, 111. Its mission is the “integrated commodity
management of combat vehicles,
field weapons, artillery, Army
aircraft weapon systems, fire control equipment, and related
items.”
A second division is the
Army Munitions Command, whose
•

•

•

headquarters are

at

Picatinny

Arsenal, Dover, N.J. Its function
is to design and maintain “nuclear and non-nuclear ammunition; rocket and missile warhead
sections; demolition munitions,
mines, bombs, grenades, pyrotechnics, boosters, jet-assist takeoff devices, and gas generators;
chemical, and biological material;
and propellant-actuated devices.”

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�Tuesday, March

The

26, 1968

Page

Spectrum

Demonstrators claim victory
WASHINGTON (UPI)
A four-day studenf sit-in at Howard University
ended Saturday with demonstrators claiming a compromise agreement with
—

The**

dateline news. Mar. 26

the

clear*cut victory.
However, Chairman Lorimer Milton of the school's board of trustees, who
arrived here Saturday from his Atlanta home, said no final settlement had

National Guardsmen supporting President
PANAMA CITY
Marcos A. Robles’ refusal to accept ouster by the National Assembly
yesterday raided his chief opponent’s headquarters with tear gas
The hundreds of undergraduates who had camped in the school's administration building and provoked a suspension of classes vacated the premises and made many arrests,
Maj. Ramiro Silvera said three of his platoons found a quantity
during the day.
by Dr.
The student protestors voted to accept the compromise worked out by the of arms at the headquarters of the National Union headed
Arias, the opposition leader who called for “civil resistance”
college board of trustees early Saturday on the treatment of 39 student leaders Arnulfo
throughout Panama until Robles leaves office,
who were threatened with discipline for leading an earlier campus rally.
A still secret 1967 study showed that the joint
WASHINGTON
One demonstrator who declined to give his name said as he left the adU.S.-South Vietnamese pacification program was in deep trouble
ministration building; "Nobody told us to leave. We won. They gave in and so more
than a year ago before the Communist Tet offensive disrupted
we just decided to pack up and leave."
it, a GOP congressman said yesterday.
The resolution adopted by the trustees promised immediate negotiations
Rep. Richard S. Schweiker, (R., Pa.) suggested that the Pentagon
with both students and faculty to set up a judicial tribune to deal with charges put the highly critical report under wraps because its conclusions embarrassed the Johnson administration at a time when officials here
against the 39 who were under disciplinary action.
The university had been shut down for three days as a result of the were telling Congress and the public that pacification was doing well.
student protest called by black militants on a wide variety of student grievances.
PARIS
President Charles de Gaulle’s renewed demand that the
international monetary system be overhauled will put new pressure
on the Paris gold market experts said.
They said they expected normally sluggish prices of the first day
of the week to rise on the strength of De Gaulle’s Sunday speech in
which he said gold is the only acceptable basis of world currency.
De Gaulle refrained from openly attacking the U.S. dollar and
you
go
“If
to Cuba, it is true
anti-dictatorial uprisings in the the British pound in a speech to an International Trade Fair in
past 15 years, said that the overthat they have done a great deal
Lyon. But he made it clear France is hostile to attempt to refloat the
throw of Batista in Cuba was gold exchange system.
to redistribute the poverty.”
catastrophic because the wrong
Dr. Jose Figueres, the former
WASHINGTON
Adam Clayton PoweJl, fresh front a whirlwind
revolutionary group get to Hapresident of Costa Rica, spoke of
homecoming that bolstered his agging political image, headed for
vana first.
Washington Monday to map the legal strategy he hopes will return
the economic problems of Latin
He said that one of the worst
America in his keynote address
him to Congress as Harlem’s representative.
results
of Cuba’s loss to Communto the “Conference on Political
The irrepressible Powell planned to stop in Washington on his
ism was that it led to the United way back
Parties and the Search for Instito Bimini, the Bahamian isle which has substituted for home
States’ supporting dictators in ever since
tutional Stability in Twentieth
March 1, 1967. On that date, the House excluded him for
Latin America rather than riskCentury Latin America.”
allegedly misusing travel and payroll funds and for bringing discredit
ing other Communist takeovers
upon Congres as the result of a long-standing defamation suit.
in the continent.
The conference, which was
WASHINGTON
The long breach between moderates and consponsored by the Buffalo Council
Speaking of the Alliance for servatives in the Republican party has widened again with the surfacon World Affairs, the Council on
Progress, Dr. Figueres contends ing of a new stop-Nixon drive and the announcement by a leading
International Studies and World
that it has not been economically GOP dove that he would vote for a Democrat before he would support
Affairs, and the Center for Resuccessful because of the drop in Richard M. Nixon.
search and International Developworld prices of such products as
ment, was held Thursday and Fricoffee and sugar.
day.
—

been reached.

—

—

Figueres calls Alliance great success

—

—

Dr. Figueres spoke principally
about economic and political
problems. He said that the problems of economic development
are closely linked to political development.

He indicated that the economic
and political problems of Latin
America can not be solved with-

out political parties.

He said it is unfortunate that
the Communists have taken the
same name as his party in their
struggles for power The Party
of National Liberation in Costa
Rica.
—

Create middle class
He said that one of the chief
economic goals is to create a

Dr. Jose Figueres

keynote speaker

at

on Latin America

conference

large middle class, but that to do
so is, in a way, self-defeating.

As the middle class grows, im-

ports and

inflation

also tend to

occur, making further development difficult, he said.
Dr. Figueres, who has been involved in many of the popular

18-year old vote needs support
Supporters of the

18-year-old

vote will have the opportunity to

show their support April 8. For
a week, starting that date, a table
will be set up in Norton Hall to
receive signatures on petitions
urging extension of the vote.
A committee is currently be
mg organized to work on
the pro
ject.
Sk* 1 Fredericks, head of the
committee, explained that “if 18
year olds are old
enough to be
responsible
under the
they
should have some say law,
in what
®

they’re supposed to be respon-

sible for.”
The completed petitions will be
presented to the NSA and, Miss
Fredericks plans, to the state senate.

OF

The major economic problem
in Latin America, he explained,
involves not only redistribution
of wealth and income, but also
the increasing of production.
Redistribution leads to the distributing of poverty, not wealth.
He recommended

that to de-

velop economies, capital must be
developed either privately or
publicly. Economic reform has
been a failure because political

leaders have been led rather
than being leaders, he contended.
Freedom, Dr. Figueres claimed,
is to be chosen over social progress. “Democracy can and must
do the job,” he said.

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thou confess wtih thy
Lord Jesus, and believe in mouth the
thine heart
GoS hath raised bm from
dead, thou shaft be saved."

.ha,

Redistribution problem

To volunteer for the committee

or for information concerning the
petition call Miss Fredericks at
831-2584.

Bible Truth
CONFESSION
If

He said that it has been a
“tremendous success politically.”
He called the Alliance a success
because it shows a 180 degree
change in U.S. policy regarding
agrarian and other reforms. He
said: “We were literally persecuted under the Eisenhower Administration. Probably it wasn’t
his fault. I don’t think he knew
we existed.”

',hi

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Air Society will
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"The pint of blood you give may save a life."

Students, faculty and staff have a chance to
the familiar slogan during the Arnold
Air Society blood drive Thursday. The one-day
drive is scheduled for 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. in Tower

respond to

Hall basement.

v

Appointments can be made at the sign-up table
in Norton Hall. Donors should schedule an hour
for the appointment. Students under 21 must have
a permission slip signed by their parent or guardian. Questions concerning meals, activities and
other details of the blood donation will be answered at the table.

The drive is part of the Buffalo Chapter of
the American Red Cross program which supplies
blood needed for routine operations, open heart
surgery, accidents and blood transfusions to RH
babies .
The donor's family will receive a free blood
transfusion when needed during the 12 months
following the donation.

�Page Four

The

Tuesday, March 26, IMS

Spectrum

Is LBJ playing with fire?

General Westmoreland is finally pulling out of Vietnam.

Why is this, the lastest of America’s “Great Generals,” the

-

man who has been following the war policies of the Johnson
Administration to the letter, the General who has requested

&lt;3.

:ensr
Because he deserves a promotion? That is a possibility,
but it is not entirely credible.
It looks as though Lyndon Johnson, the master political
strategist, has something up his sleeve. He realizes that he
better put something up his sleeve if he wants to be re-elected. With mounting anti-war pressure, and with dissention
within the Democratic Party accented by a strong drive for
the nomination by Robert Kennedy, Johnson knows he needs
an ace.
Some political analysts have said this is an attempt by
the President to show the nation that he is re-evaluating the
direction of the war. Once everyone realizes that he is giving
his war policy careful thought, he can return to his objective
of victory at any cost.
Others believe that Westmoreland’s removal is the first
step in ending the war. If everything is done on a carefully
planned timetable—so that negotiations begin before the voting begins in this country—Johnson can sweep the election
in November.

Ending the war is such a joyous prospect that all Lyndon
Johnson has done these past five years would be forgotten by
most voters. Analysis: The easiest way for Johnson to stay
in the White House is to make everybody happy, even if just
for a while.
The greatest problem with all this, of course, is that
while the President is playing politics, he is also playing with
the lives of thousands of Americans and Vietnamese.
If he could begin negotiations today, but is instead waiting until a politically favorable moment to do so the President is, without question a morally bankrupt individual.
If Lyndon Johnson gambles thousands of lives for the
President jackpot, we will never forgive him.
Nor will the survivors.

Nixon vs. Johnson: Worthless
to
a bid for

make
Governor Rockefeller’s decision not
the Republican nomination came as a surprise to most political observers. The reasons for his withdrawal, however,
should not be too difficult to figure out.
It appears as though the governor could not get the
support he anticipated from Republican leaders across the
nation. But it seems even more apparent that the Republicans
are making an effort to keep the Party closely united. With
a split looming in the Democratic Party, the GOP may well
win the White House.
That may be good politics, but it is anything but good
for the voters. With no primary opposition, Richard Nixon
should easily get the nomination. A Nixon-Johnson election
is a worthless election.
It is at least fortunate that there will be some contest in
the Democratic Party. Robert Kennedy and Eugene McCarthy
have a long way to go before the Democratic Convention.
The debate on the issues will go on within the Democratic
Party, and, hopefully, Lyndon Johnson will not be renominated.
Only by stopping Johnson is there a chance for any real
election in November. Lyndon Johnson opposing Richard
Nixon for President of the United States speaks poorly for
the American political situation.

The new Publication Board
The Publications Board met Monday evening for the
first time in nearly a year. This is the first Pub Board
organized under the new charter that was adopted last fall.
It is obviously too late in the semester for the Board to
perform all the functions for which it was designed, but this
is at least a beginning.
A major contribution of the recently appointed, if shortlived, Board could be the setting up of guidelines for next
year. With the Polity system in effect, and with a shift of
financial responsibility to the Publications Board, next year’s
Board could be the most effective this University has ever
seen.
We would caution, however, that there is no room for
student politics on a Publications Board. The purposes of
the Board are to encourage student publications, promote
their quality and offer aid and advice.
A good Pub Board should be the good friend of student
publications. We hope that the new Board and its successor
in the fall will be just that.

1
ot

m
NO.. ly&amp;U ANTONS

ADJUST NOT R3IN6
NOW? SHARE/

7A* leu AioJtur -nuts SHMWWir

'If

you

knew

more

about pacification,

we wouldn't have to fight here in

the first place!'

Readers

the burgher
by Sehw;b

’Tis with a tear in mine eye that the Burgher
hits at his typewriter and begins his final column.
Springing quickly into action last fall, as the fearless, mild-mannered reporter for The Spectrum,
The Burgher pointed out countless injustices that
have occurred upon the sacred soil of this very
campus.

If ye need reminding, I first spoke of the tragic
history of the campus—the blacktop plague of ’66,
paste) TBs just for kicks; the Tiffin Room polevault championships (featuring the deans), parking
lot plunder, vandal machines; Mothers against
Meyerson, Fathers against Furnas, cries ringing out
for firings in earnest; pickets, pickets everywhere
yet not a drop to drink, then there was the Feinberg Oath to weed out Commie Finks; fraternities
banished with the bat of an eye, Yes! SUNY’s
existed under a threatening sky!

Then there was The Burger’s first venture into
01’ Hayes Hall upon Administration Stretch, where
he encountered 500 VPs, HGV2 goodly Deans and
was grilled by meely-mouthed and burly secretaries
who put me in mine place.
But Ho! Which of you could forget the Vivarium, home of BURSAR the terrible, where The
Burgher was tried and guiltied for fee paying refusal? Where, indeed, he was turned downside up
and shaken vehemently by BURSAR as his final
coins tingled upon the floor?

And Prithee! Campus squirrels are still grateful
and kind to me since their plight was put to the
public eye. The Committee Concerned about
Squirrels (CCS) and the Square Deal for Squirrels
(SDS) groups continue to vie for the four-footed,
furry creatures.

How about those trips to Albany to
the Governor and his non-candidacy?
And Rocky finally announced again that he is not
running, but did not say whether he’d accept a
genuine draft.
The Burgher has even pointed out how the Amherst Campus development will be delayed even
longer by militant groundhogs bent on undermining the present Administration’s loose con-

N’Faith!

hear out

struction policies.
There were even times when The Burgher
realized that no type of humor could be utilized
to express a certain sentiment—like getting to the
truth about Vietnam.
I had hope that the things written here would

be read other than superficially, for within the
column I tried to weave a common thread. Perhaps it failed.
All the columns-and editorials printed in all the
world’s newspapers have not led to a very sane
world. Words pass on by or are distilled somehow by every reader. Meaning is lost and few can
even come close to reconstructing the author’s actual intention.
Oft-times The Burgher did not even know what
he wanted to say when he began, and of-times he
later learned that either the point was lost or
distorted.
Haply, ye think that an advocate of truth,
justice and the American Way could easily churn
out a weekly column. ’Tis wrong to so believe.
For ’tis not a world of fair damsels and keen
deans—Nay! ’Tis indeed a teeming sphere of men
and women too hungry and without hope too long.
’Tis oppressive, impressive, progressive and retrosometimes too. And full of hope and fear and
love and hate.
To quote The Burgher: “I am oft-times daunted
by the perceptive realization that all is not right
in the world, or in this country, or even on
campus.”

writings
Army service was involuntary
To the Editor;

Clause One of the Thirteenth Amendment to
the Constitution of the United States reads as
follows:

“Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for a crime whereof the
party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist
within the United States, or any place subject
to their jurisdiction.”

If the Constitution is the supreme law of the
land, would someone please explain why the draft
is legal?
I have just finished a two-year hitch in the
United States Army, and let me make the following points clear:
1—I did not want to go
2—I did not want to stay, and

3—I am very happy that I’m still alive and
free to do as I wish once again.

If those two years weren’t “involuntary servitude,” what the hell is? Pfc,=slave, in my book.
Freedman

every
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Editorial
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�Tuesday,

Viets speak out

Pag* Fiv*

The Spectrum

March 26, 1968

BELOW OLYMPUS

on war

By

Interlandi

The Sham

To the Editor:
We, Vietnamese

in North America, speaking as

MSS

ih*im

or religious organization, together voice our an
guished concern over the war in our, country.
At the moment, in the name of the highestsounding principles, the parties of the conflict in
our country are fast reducing our villages and cities
to ashes and rubble; in the process, tearing apart
the whole fabric of our society.

W

To our widows and orphans, to our civilians
mangled and burned beyond recognition, to our
dead rotting unburied in the sun and rain, we owe
nothing less than the truth: this is not a struggle
for freedom and democracy; it has become a war
of genocide.
By now, it is clear that there are limits to what
American power can do in Vietnam; on the other

hand, there are no limits to what American power
can do to Vietnam. Unleashing on a small country
the most destructive firepower ever known to mankind, the United States has brought our nation to
the brink of annihilation. The words of the American commander, that “To save Bentre it became
necessary to destroy it,” plainly reflect the moral,
political and military bankruptcy of American policy in Vietnam. Both self-interest and moral responsibility, then, make it imperative that the
people and government of the United States take
the lead in ending this conflict.
To end the war before it is too late, we call
upon the American government to heed SecretaryGeneral U Thant’s appeal to stop all bombing of
North Vietnam. We call upon the United States

government, the government of South Vietnam,
the government of North Vietnam and the National
Liberation Front to promptly reach a peaceful
settlement. A lasting peace for Vietnam should be
based upon a total withdrawal of foreign troops
that will allow us, Vietnamese, to shape our future
free from all foreign interference.
We urgently appeal to the world community,
through the United Nations, to condemn, in view
of their devastating effects on our people, the use
of chemical warfare, napalm, and anti-personnel
bombs. Finally, to prevent the ultimate crime
against mankind, we ask the General Assembly
to forbid the use of nuclear weapons by any party
in this conflict.

It
“Wow! What

THE ONLY MAN
WHO CAN BEAT

Johnson

a

1

campaign slogan!"

the gadfly
by Mark Schneider

The cliche has it that “it’s a rapidly changing world”
and the Strike for Knowledge last week reinforced the truism.
The atmosphere of the campus approximated that of the
In this dark hour of history, we appeal to all
student power uprising two years ago. This time, however,
men of good will in the world, particularly in the
though
only discussion was at hand, though there was no
United States, to join us in denouncing this war
confrontation
at Hayes Hall, underlying the issues
and in working for an immediate return to peace angry
to Vietnam.
there was for many students a more felt urgency, an intenser
mood of expectancy. The world had changed since 1966
Ngo Vinh-Long, Harvard University
now more is at stake.
—

Le thi Mai-Van, Yale

University

The battle lines around the
world are more clearly drawn for
the average student, despite the
and 21 other Vietnamese students repeated lies of press and state.
in the United States and Canada Now the American student knows
that his country is demanding
from the Vietnamese people a
surrender of their right to political and economic self determination. The student knows about
President Johnson’s San Antonio
To the Editor:
formula, which calls for a lessening of American military activity
The Student Association’s new Bulletin Board only when “productive” negotiaprogram is just great.
tions will follow; the student has
I’ve noticed that quite a few students have heard Katzenbach or Rusk or
already signed up for courses they would like to some other functionary declare
see offered. This is the type of program that has that coalitions or concessions to
been needed for some time at this University, It the NLF will not be considered,
gives the student a greater latitude in the courses that as Ky says: “No negotiations
they take.
with Communists, never,” that as
I’m happy to see that such a program has been LBJ says: “We’ll quit when the
started. I hope students will keep the “Bulletin enemy goes home.” And the stuBoard” going.
dent knows that soon the task
of implementing the nightmarish
Susan Brandt
1984 lie of that last statement
will devolve upon him perhaps
at the cost of his life, that finally
LBJ’s insanity will be delivered
upon him in the form of an inTo the Editor:
duction order which says with
the mocking smirk of Catch 22
or the grimness of The Trial:
Just thought I’d drop a
line to let the people “Come student. There is no truth.
the Sp rin g Ar‘s Festival
know they Put on the uniform and admit
h
d
1 shudder to
think that they that anything is possible. Reality
s pentVh.HpnlV°H
d t fU dS n SUCh 3
worthless schedule is in the need of the rulers, and
of events
the rulers need you.”
Disappointed
It takes only a personal threat
before the individual will attempt to save his own skin, and
Writers: Please be brief. Letters
should not exceed only a severe threat before the
300 words. All letters must be signed and the
individual will band together
and telephone number of the writer must be address
includwith his brothers in the realizaed. Positive verification of authorship will
be made tion that his salvation lies in the
before a letter is printed.
merging of his fate with that
otters will be kept in strict confidence.
of others. And history since 1966
The Spectrum will use initials
has become severely threatening
or pen name, if
requested. But anonymous
to the American student. He has
letters are never used.
working class soldiers
reserves the right to edit or delete seen inthe
at Khe Sanh, perhaps for
dug
mater,al submdted for
publication, but the intent of an instant imagined himself
in
letters will not be changed.
their place, certainly realized
Nguyen Quang-Hoc, University of Montreal

'Bulletin Board' long overdue

Spring Arts: 'Worthless'

did°

,

"

°

what the nature of next year’s
draft will be. So he listened to
the panelists this year with a
keener ear, a broader respect for
new possibilities.

The possibility, out in the open
at last in 1968, is that, of course,
the NLF is right and must be
supported; that Americans must
study their Marxism and come
to grips with it. At a summer
1965 teach-in at this campus one
of the speakers described himself
as a Marxist—“there are still
some of us left” and the audience
giggled or jumped in distrust.
Last week Ralph Schoenman terminated a fiery, articulate speech
with a plea for a rebuilding of
the tarnished image of communism and the entire Haas lounge
exploded into prolonged applause.
Throughout the Strike speakers
attacked the contradictions in the
capitalist system, spoke of “transforming” or “overthrowing” that
system, and were rewarded with
positiv, if not always enthusiastic, receptions.

More and more the idea of wars
of national liberation against
American tin, tungsten, oil interests is capturing the student’s
imagination and no efforts of sincere, but conciliatory McCarthys

or blatantly opportunist Kennedys will recapture it. Earnest
and moral as McCarthy himself
may be, his liberal vision is incomplete, temporizing, perhaps
dangerous. He will not be able
to end the war in Vietnam, president or not, unless he calls for
an immediate withdrawal of our
troops and exploitative economic

interests from the throats of the
world’s people. For they will accept no less, and the response of
students to the Strike indicates
that they will accept no less
either.

I owe the Sociology Department this column;
whether I owed them this or not, however, I would
write it. Hopefully, the events in sociology could
serve as a model for the other departments on
campus.
For the past few months I have been criticizing
the faculty of my department for having given
students only token power with which to make
decisions relevant to such things as curriculum
planning. I said that although students were allowed to sit on the Undergraduate Committee, it
really did not mean anything and we still had no
real voice. I criticized the faculty for being verbally liberal and actually conservative. From my
point of view all that I said was true. But then
I decided to try something really radical.
I went to see Lew Gross, the Chairman of the
Department, who by then had, of course, heard
of me. When I went to make an appointment with
his secretary and I informed her that I was an
undergraduate, she informed me that “Dr. Gross
doesn’t usually see undergraduates.” But that was
the last disappointing thing that I was to hear for
the next few days. I went to see him and I was
the first person in the department to actually ask
the Chairman for something. I was the first person to physically try to change things. And it
worked. I told Dr. Gross that students should and
must be allowed to attend the all-faculty meetings
held once a month during which all the decisions
take place. I said that as a member of the Undergraduate Committee, I deserved the right to address the group that would make the final decisions
about things I had worked on.
Dr. Gross agreed. He promised to address the
faculty that was meeting that same afternoon and
request that Debby Wagner, the other representative, and myself be allowed to attend the meeting.
After waiting outside the room for a few minutes,
the door was opened and we were allowed in. For
the first time in the history of the department and,
to my knowledge, the University students were
allowed to attend a meeting of all tenured faculty
to discuss departmental policies.
The faculty then proceeded to ask us a number
of questions about what we thought was wrong with
the department and what we wanted to see done.
I told them that students must be able to be involved in the recruitment and maintenance and
promotion of faculty. I told them that each of the
components, the undergraduates, graduates and
faculty must meet together in council on all matters in which that particular group is involved. I
told them that it isn’t enough to allow students on
a recommending committee when they have no
access to the real decision-making process. They
listened, and most of them liked what they heard.
After months of writing about the character and
make-up of faculty, I had a chance to see them
personally, and I was pleased.
We then had a discussion about student-faculty
participation and what we could do to substantively
change the present structure. Dr. Yeracaris made a
proposal which set up a committee made up of
two tenured faculty, two non-tenured faculty, two
graduate students and two undergraduates to revise
the department the way they deem best. This to
me is revolutionary changes being brought about
within the present structure, I have no answers for
what caused this sudden change. But this resolution passed unamimously, 17-0. Then a second resolution was passed which allowed students to
attend the faculty meetings until the new committee makes its recommendations.
What all this goes to show is that the best way
to change things is to try to change things. The
best way to get what you want, is to ask for it.
We make assumptions about people that we rarely
confront. I know of very few students who have
even even gone to their chairmen to ask for changes.
I was as skeptical of the faculty, as anyone could
have been. In fact, I went to them, not expecting
to get what I wanted so much as to officially get
refused. Not only was I not refused, I was unamimously endorsed
I hope the Sociology Department can become a
model for all the departments on campus. Perhaps
the faculty aren’t as evil as their action or inaction
shows them to be; perhaps they are simply lazy or
lack innovation. Why don’t you go to see your
chairman
ask for what you desire. When the
committee established to make changes is through,
I hope other departments will take notice of what
we are going to do. Good luck to you . . . and have
a nice vacation.
—

The Spectrum's pages for

Editorials

&amp;

Opinions

It is the policy of The Spectrum to report the
news fully and impartially in the news pages,
to express the opinions of the newspaper only
in the editorial pages and to publish all sides
of important controversial issues.
Without

expression,

freedom of expression

is

mcenmgless

"

�Tuesday, March 26, 1968

The Spectrum

Page Six

i

S, pe drum interview

McCarthy represents rebirth of Progressivism'
Jeffrey Lynford is benefiting from a unique opportunity in
education: To receive college credit for “field world’ outside the
classroom. Jeff, a junior honors history major, currently spending
a semester serving on the administrative staff at Senator Eugene
McCarthy’s Washington campaign headquarters. Prior to accepting the job offer in January, he arranged with the history department and University College to take two six-week credit history
courses of his own design, related to his experiences in working for
the Minnesota Senator.
Back in Buffalo for a day to disesus the first of three planned
papers with his advisors, Jeff took time out to give his fellow students some inside observations on the surprising success of the peace
candidacy of Senator McCarthy.
Following are excerpts from an hour-long conversation with
Feature Editor Barry Holtzclaws

Is it at all possible to characterize McCarthy supporters as predominantly newcomers to the political scene, such as students and professors and
enchanted liberals?

groups of dis-

Originally we had a relatively small
number of party professionals, but the
ones we did have were excellent. Since
our victory in New Hampshire, we have
had calls, constantly, from party professionals who want to resign their positions
to become involved here and work
for us.
I would say that Senator McCarthy represents a rebirth of Progressivism. There
is a lot of grass-roots support that normally does not become involved in a political campaign. In other words, there
were a lot of people who were not party
professionals who came out to support the
...

Senator.

There were some professors, there were
some students, but there were also a lot
of professional people, a lot of blue-collar
people, all representing a large segment
of one part of the old FDR Democratic
Party coalition.
Of course, the South was not in it, and
the Negro is not yet in it, but the middle
class, and lower middle class have up to
now been the mainstay of the enthusiasm
for Senator McCarthy.
Were the McCarthy people really surprised at the New Hampshire results?
We expected over 30%. We said that
if we got over 30% we would consider it
a victory, and that if we got 15% we’d
close up shop. We got 42% of the Democratic vote, and if you put the Republican
votes together with this, we only polled
200 votes less than Johnson, which was
more than we expected. In a hawkish,
conservative state like New Hampshire,
it was very good showing for us, a magnificent showing.
Once the Senator moves into the more
populous states, requiring more sophisticated campaign techniques, many have
said that the inexperience of the McCarthy campaign machinery will hurt.
What changes in tactics are you planning,
for example, in Wisconsin?
As the campaign becomes more and
more complex, we become more and more
sophisticated in our physical communication, in the amount of literature, in the
sophistication of the literature. We order
. . . millions of buttons, bumperstickers,
brochures, tax pieces, labor pieces, and
farm pieces. We are hiring more and
more staff all the time, and we’re getting
large numbers of professional volunteers.
. . . Right now we have 50 phone lines,
and they’re constantly busy with calls
from all across the country.
What about money? The initial boost
for the McCarthy campaign came from
private fund raising.
Has the source of
income expanded to include, for example,
large segments of the business community?

We have had sizable contributions from
the business community, and the money
has increased ten-fold since the victory
in New Hampshire.
What about the “intellectual" image of
Senator McCarthy—will it hurt him, as
some have said it hurt Adlti Stevenson

in the past?
The image that has been portrayed of
Senator McCarthy is one that the press

has put together. Senator McCarthy has
been in the Congress of the United States
for 20 years. He served 10 years in the
House, and was elected to the Senate form
Minnesota in 1958
He is on two of
the top three most powerful Senate committees, Finance and Foreign Relations
. . . Now, for a Senator to be in those positions in his second term shows that he
is well-respected by his colleagues, that
he is willing to look at issues and . . .
...

work on them.

Therefore, the image of an intellectual,
and purely an intellectual, is a figment of
the imagination. He has worked extensively in the party structure. He is lowkeyed, and he is rational.
Now, this
might be labeled intellectual, but this is
the alternative he is presenting to the
emotionalism of the sixties.
Much has been said in liberal circles
of the contribution the Senator has made
for the youth of this country. From your
experience, has the candidacy of
Senator McCarthy increased the possibility of successful change within the American political system?
There are many young people who were
upset about the urban crises, about the
financial crises, about the crises in Far
Eastern involvement before the Senator
came along. We looked for people to
say something about it, people who were
in positions to do something about it.
own

Alternative methods of dealing with
frustrating problems were discussed. Some
people advocated revolution in the
streets . . . Speaking for myself, I never
say that the ends justify the means . . .
I was always a little skeptical of revoluI was looking
tion as an alternative
around for some way to correct the situation, all the while living my life style,
so that, as a member of society, I could
do my little bit, my thing.
Once McCarthy came on the scene, I
decided I’d try it and see what happened.
I think that the evidence is clear from
election returns, from the legitimacy now
of dissent in time of war, that Senator
McCarthy has done a great thing, and this
country is working toward correcting
those problems, or at least toward creating a viable alternative which can correct
the problems.
Even before New Hampshire, I was convinced that Senator McCarthy was a good
man, an honest man, I didn’t know how
the public would react, but I was working
all-out for him. The public has reacted
very well in my opinion. My faith in humanity is restored, somewhat and I have
the feeling that there will be change, and
that, as the younger generation, my generation, becomes older, the change will
come more rapidly.
...

What did Senator McCarthy mean when

he said that he was glad that Senator
Kennedy had entered the race, in the
sense that it would "open up" the Democratic convention in Chicago?
Senator Kennedy has a definite following. Senator McCarthy has a definite following. Together, these followings make
up a large segment of the party. There’s
another segment of the party which will
not make a commitment until it sees
which way the wind is blowing.
By these two candidates coming out towards the same ends, it will bring a lot
more people into the situation who will
not be committed to Johnson by the time
the convention comes.
The President has been intimately involved with the infra-structure of the

Democratic Party since the Thirties, when
he fancied himself FDR's protege, and
many observers feel that his control of
the congressional party, and now, since

becoming president, of the party operatives and state committees, is a powerful
factor in an election year.
Other than organized labor, who always are looking for the side on which

their bread is buttered, President John-

son has not kept control. The coalition of
FDR was the South, the minority groups,

labor, and the intellectuals. LBJ has
alienated the intellectuals, he has frustrated the Negroes, he has upset the
South, he has watched the cities disinte-

grate.

He was a politician in the most expert
sense, in the Congress, when he had to
deal with a certain number of the most
politically powerful men, but since coming to office, he has, in fact, disdained
the states . . . His power is in old lOUs,
but he has not been checking up on them

It used to be that the Democratic
national committee maintained the “muscle tone” of the party . . but since LBJ
put his own puppets in there, it has not
managed to keep the Democrats together.
What sort of long-range planning beyond
the convention has been discussed in the
...

McCarthy headquarters?
The long-range planning does go beyond the convention . . . We are seeking
to elect other officials in government—from Assemblymen right here in Buffalo,
to new Senators, and new Congressmen—so that beyond the convention, there will
be other people elected to offices, and
this will be the first leg of a new progressive politics.
From your vantage point, has there
been a heightening of activity in the
Johnson camp?
Definitely . . . Johnson is not going to
let the New Hampshire thing happen again
and he’s not going to let the Massachusetts
thing happen again . . . Humphrey will
probably make a swing through Wiscon-

sin.
Johnson, for the first time, came out
of his house, out of his routine of speaking to troops leaving for Vietnam, at Air
Force bases watching planes, to speak to
1000 Minnesota farmers—and, of course,
none of them clapped.

He will get out more and more.
He realizes that he cannot, in this day
of mass media, run a fireside, backporch
campaign . . . and expect to win.

�Tuesday,

Pag* Seven

The Spectrum

March 26, 1968

RFK speaks on Indian Problems
Presidential candidate Robert
F. Kennedy (D„ N. Y.) will speak
on the plight of the American

dian Affairs and also has his own
subcommittee on Indian education.

and Thursday evening at 10 p.m.

hard on the heels of the President’s Message to Congress on
“The Forgotten American,” a proposal which calls for sweeping
government s
changes in the
methods of aiding Indians.

“The Indians of this country

are in a deplorable condition,”
says the senator. “It’s a national
disgrace how we’ve treated the
Indians, and there’s no question
that something must be done.”
\

x

The 30-minute program may be
heard in Buffalo on radio WBFO,
State University of Buffalo, 88.7

Sen. Kennedy is a member of
the Senate Subcommittee on In-

y

mcs.

RALLY SATURDAY in NIAGARA SQUARE

for

I

ROBERT
MARCH 30

12:00 NOON

JUNIORS

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NoDoz
Who knows? You may become the oracle

Friday in room 356, Norton Union. Pictures

1

JM

of the

—

'69

Tomorrow at your
8 A.M. class, don't just
sit there.

W

KENNEDY

will be taken March 25-29.

early birds.

The Bill Dana Comedy Theater Presents

JOEY FORMAN as

THE MASHUGANISHI YOGI
•AN AFFECTIONATE AND TRANSCENDENTAL TRIBUTE TO THE GOOD HUMOR OF THE MAHARISHI MAHESH YOGI

#. %
Restauranl

&gt;

U.B. SPECIAL
TRY OUR NEW HOAGY
Across from Hayes Hall
3248 MAIN ST. at Heath

TIES have never heard
MIA FARROW nor
SHIRLEY MACLAINE and DONOVAN. FRANK
SINATRA couldn't care less and, unless the CIA
got hold of a copy,
PRESIDENT JOHNSON and
MRS. HUMPHREY probably haven't heard it. we

at this moment

this album, neither has

would have loved to audition this album for

PRINCESS GRACE, LEE RADZIWILL

and

HUGH HEFFNER, but we couldn't get them on
the phone. MAO TSE TUNG and SHIRLEY
TEMPLE BLACK have nothing to do with the
album, neither does CHARLES DE GAULLE and
ELIZABETH TAYLOR, FIDEL CASTRO and
PETULA CLARK, HOWARD HUGHES, DR.

SPOCK, EDDIE FISHER or JOHNNY CARSON

JOEY BISHOP . no, none of these people have
heard THE MASHUGANISHI YOGI at this time,
if YOU should decide to BUY this album, these
liner notes will self-destruct in three seconds
and

good

luck.

BILL DANA-JOEY FORMAN/THE MASHUGANISHI YOGI I A&amp;M RECORDS/A&amp;M SP4144

KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL
MONDAY, APRIL 1st

2 Performances: 7 P.M. ( 9:30 P.M.
All Seats Reserved J5,50-$4.50-$3.50
Tickets on sale now at Buffalo
Festival Ticket Office, Hotel StotlerHilton Lobby; U. of B. Norton Hall;
all Audrey A Del's Record Shops,
Brando's, Niagara Falls.

�The Spectrum

Pag* Eight

THE
vanilia
.

THE
C M

ONE PERFORMANCE ONLY!

Tickets: $4.25, 3.75, 3.25, 2.25

EASTMAN

ROCHESTER, N. Y.

•

JOSEPH F LEVINE

BEST ACTOR
BEST DIRECTOR

MIKE NICHOLS- LAWRENCE TURMAN

-

*

I

!

This is Benjamin
He’s a little
worried about
his future.

THE GRADUATE ie^ ?c l r p^avision
NOW
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y
ic

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“Nobody comes here by accident. The
mere fact that you are here at all shows that
you have in you one of the basic qualities
needed for Krishna Consciousness
the
desire to learn. Krishna has selected you,
perhaps through the means of The Spectrum,
to find him and help spread his word.”
With that elevating thought, spoken by
the instructor, I began my adventure into
Krishna Consciousness and transcendental
meditation, an Experimental College course
taught by M.L. Goel and currently being
guest lectured by Rupanuga das Adhikary,
a former Department of Welfare Supervisor
who became involved in Krishna Consciousness when he heard Swami A.C. Bhaktivedanta chanting in a park in the East Village
some 17 months ago.
“I knew beforehand a spiritual leader
would appear to me, but I knew I couldn’t
look for him. The minute I saw the Swami,
I knew he was from outer space. I knew this
was him.”
Embarassment
Somehow I couldn’t quite share his enthusiasm that I, too, was destined for Krishna
Consciousness. During the first Kirtan I
attended (Kirtan is the name of the service
which includes chanting and a lecture on
transcendental subject matter, followed by
more chanting) my most burning desire was
not for Krishna, but for a cigarette. During
the second, my leg fell asleep sitting crosslegged on the floor. Undaunted and everdedicated to the cause of journalism (if Life
reporter, Jane Howard, could do it, so could
I), and seeing as I was already facing “formidable” competition (“The Buffalo Evening
News already scooped you,” I was informed
at the first meeting; “their reporter entitled
the article ‘Swing and Sway the Meditation
Way’) I vowed to stick with it, despite my
apparent shortcomings.
I even tried chanting “Hare Krishna” (the
best way to reach Krishna Consciousness as
it breaks the knot of material contamination
and purifies the senses), but wound up feeling just off-key and slightly embarrassed by
the throngs of curious observers, their noses
pressed up against the glass panes of Norton
Conference Room, undoubtedly drawn by the
smell of incense and sound of tinkling cymbals drifiting down Norton’s staid halls.
'Teloh' and a tuft
Mr. das Adhikary turned out not to be
the sheet-bedecked Swami I was picturing
after reading through Back to Godhead, the
magazine of the International Society for
Krishna Consciousness. He was dressed in
a maroon sweater and corduroy jeans, and
the only really unusual thing about him was
a streak of white paint he had on his forehead and nose (it is called the “teloh” and
is the natural mark of the soul, it means
Krishna Consciousness) and his haircut,
which verged on baldness except for a small
tuft of hair at the back which signifies him
as a devotee.
In a matter of minutes he had transformed the room into a small temple, complete with an altar resting on an oriental rug
and displaying pictures of three Swamis,
candles and an incense burner. He passed
out some small musical instruments and
launched into two solo chants before “Hare
Krishna” on which the whole assembly joined
in. After about ten minutes he got up and
danced around the altar for a while. I was
curious as to how long the chants generally
last, as it seemed like everyone knew just
when he would stop. I found out there is no
set ritual at all.
“I’ve gone eight hours at a time,” Mr. das
Adhikary said. “I once saw it go on for four
hours in a park on the Lower East Side.”

ns na

—

ACADEMY AWARD
m
| NOMINATIONS

BEST PICTURE
BEST ACTRESS

March 26, 1968

Are you destiu

™

-

SUNDAY, APRIL 7, at 8:00 P.M.

miirimpr
WINNER

Tuesday,

Zip Code
•••••••«#•••

I was rather thankful that this was not
one of the marathon sessions for, instead of
emerging with purified senses, their condition bordered on numb, and I could feel the
start of Excedrin Headache No. 83: The Spec-

trum assignment.
Lecture worthwhile
However, I did find the lecture well worth
the preliminaries. Krishna Consciousness
dates from time eternal. It was delivered to
Earth several million years ago from outside
the universe, where it originated, and since
that time has been passed down from Spiritual Master.
Swami Bhaktivedanta brought it to the
West in 1965, and since that time five temples
have been founded in the U.S. and one in
Montreal.
Krishna Consciousness devotees consider
it a science rather than a religion. Its basic
precept is founded on Hinduism, in that God
can be found in every creature and object,
and that the purpose of human life is to
realize the godliness in oneself, but it is more
than that. The achievement of Krishna Consciousness brings with it a wealth of pleasure and bliss in the vast store of knowledge
to be uncovered when we regain our natural
energy through Krishna.
We are all more or less hopelessly stuck
in the quagmire of materialism; we t.Ak of
ourselves as matter and hence miss the spiritwe miss the chance for self-realization,
ual
which is the aim of Krishna Consciousness.
"Hare Krishing"
Chanting “Hare Krishna” is the first step
in achieving this consciousness, because as
mentioned before, it purifies the senses and
—

—Grimmer

attending the "Kirtan," which is the
of the service, appears entranced by chant-

Devotee
name
ing.

�Tuesday, March 26, 1968

Pag* Nin*

The Spectrum

stined for
onsciousness;
by Linda

this was not
)r, instead of
their condiould feel the
83: The Spec-

re well worth
lonscif fsness

i

delivered to
from outside
id, and since
from Spirit-

i

;ht it to the
five temples
and one in

)f

knowledge

i

i

,

;ees consider
on. Its basic
in that God
and object,
m life is to
mt it is more
Krishna Conalth of plea-

our natural

elesslv stuck
we tiAk of
iss the spiritIf-realization,
msciousness.
;he first

step

because as
3 senses and

Hanley

a

(hence the importance placed on participation
by all at the Kirtan).

“What we feel when chanting the Maha
(Great) Mantra is a taste of the highest pleasure eternal. That taste gradually develops
to infinite proportions, expands in endless
sweet varieties of concentrated ecstasy. You
don’t have to change anything
just chant.
What is necessary to adopt will become evident. What is bad will automatically drop
away,” Mr. das Adhikary explained.
Swami Bhaktiedanta has called the dancing
and singing accompanying the Kirtan “a
spiritual call for the Lord and his Energy.”
At the Kirtan all five senses are incorporated into the highest form of yoga one can
engage in (yoga means connection
the connection to Krishna)
the chant for hearing,
incense for smell, beads for touch, pictures
of Krishna and the Spiritual Masters for sight,
and spiritual food for taste.
Transmigration
Another aspect of Krishna Consicousness
is the concept of transmigration. If we attain
self-realization in this life, wo go to Krishna
Loca in the next, a planet where we are in
close communion with Krishna. If, however,
self-realization is not accomplished, the form
we assume rests on a composite of our actions
in past lives and this life. It is possible to
change not only species and sex, but even
planets from life to life. At the moment of
death, we pass immediately into the womb
where our next form lies. Seven months pass
before we attain consciousness in our next
form, though we don’t remember past lives.
In order to achieve Krishna Consciousness, one must give up intoxicants of all
kinds, especially cigarettes, alcohol and
drugs (“Intoxicants only take you further
away from yourself. You can’t get any further in, either. With Krishna you can “stay
high forever”), fantasy, mental speculation,
and “endless sex pursuits” (“We don’t say
‘No sex’,” Mr. das Adhikary goes on to say.
‘Just no promiscuity.’ It takes up too much
of our time. Besides which, the pleasures to
be derived from sex are all to be found in
the relationship we have with Krishna, only
to a greater degree.”)
Maharishi's fraud
Krishna Consciousness has, of course,
been around for a long time. Mr. das Adhikary mentioned in one of his lectures that
Krishna comes down to Earth every eight
trillion four hundred billion years, and that’s
only his appearances!
Yet its current popularity can undoubtedly be laid, in part, at the feet of none other
than the perpetual mark of instant success
itself, the Beatles. They, along with Shirley
MacLaine and Mia Farrow, are disciples of
the most famous guru of them all
the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, whom Mr. das Adhikary
considereds an out and out fraud. “He had
to come to America. The people in his own
country wouldn’t accept him.” He doesn’t
consider the Maharishi’s method of assigning nonsense syllables to repeat in order to
reach subtler levels of consciousness true
transcendental meditation (that is the discussion of subject matter of a transcendental
nature as he is doing in the Experimental
College course). And as one critic put it after
the Maharishi’s famous lecture in New York:

V

—

/,

Su

—

—

“

—

which is the
iced by chant-

xM

cuts the knot of materialism. There is no
need even to know the meaning of the words

—Grimmer

Spectrum columnist is not enchanted by Experimental College
course, "Krishna Consciousness and Transcendental Meditation."

“Jesus never sold ten dollar tickets to the
Sermon on the Mount.” However, the Maharishi’s influence can scarcely be scoffed at
in terms of dollars and cents. Indian clothes
are now the rage at boutiques; actress Rita
Tushingham is in the process of filming “The
Guru” and Marlon Brando plays one in the
upcoming movie “Candy.” Even popular music has cashed in on the fad
the most notable example being the Strawberry Alarm
Clock’s “Sit with Guru” (a sampling of the
immortal lyrics;
• • full potential, transcendental
Sit with guru, Meditation
High, high wear eagles fly,
Leave today untouched in the sky,
Stretch out your mind to humanity,
How amny tomorrows can you see?”)
Materialism
Sadly enough, even the Krishna Consciousness magazine Back to Godhead spends
53 pages slamming materialism as no way to
reach Krishna, and then presents five consecutive pages of advertisements which, pardon the expression, reek of materialism. For
example, the 1968 transcendental life calendar can be yours for only one dollar, and
for a mere three and a quarter you can thrill
to Swami Bhativedanta explaining “the true
meaning and glory of the Hare Krishna Mantra.” Even Mr. das Adhikary himself seems
slightly tinged by this nasty materialistic
world, hawking day-glo posters of the Hare
Krishna chant, “so you can build your own
temple at home” or boxes of incense just
in from New York.
—

—

Beyond acid

Nevertheless, Krishna Consciousness is at
trading devotees in ever-increasing numbers.
“Some come from curiosity, some from genuine interest, and some even from despair,”
Mr. das Adhikary says.
Perhaps the reaction of one student I
talked to best expresses the faction that
comes from genuine interest: “The first time
I ever heard of Krishna Consciousness was
about two years ago in the Village Voice,”
he said. “A short time after that I met them
durig a peace parade. I mean, there comes
a point when you just grow out of the acid
scene. I don’t know if this is really it yet,
as I’m not fully realized, but I’ll tell you this
it’s the nearest I’ve come with anything
—

I’ve ever tried.”
Unfortunately

not all of the motives for
trying Krishna Consciousness are so exemplary.
“I thought it would be a jazzy, kicksy
thing to do,” one girl at the New York temple said, “but the incense made me sick and
the people weren’t «iy sort at all. It’s all just
a fad like psychiatry
all my friends who
went to shrinkers five years ago are going to
Swamis now.”
Another young lady, when asked during
the Kirtan whether she’d rather have a
banana or a date, sighed: “I wish I did have
a date.”
However, in the end, Krishna Consciousness is a personal thing, and if you are at
all interested, it is well worth the trip to
the second floor of Norton any Tuesday or
Thursday evening at 8 p.m.
—

�Pag* Ten

Tuesday, March 26, 1968

The Spectrum

i

Record revie

m

Vi

by English rock group

■ ■■

LIM

by Joseph Fernbacher
Spectrum Staff Reporter

Let it be known that this country is being Creamed.
One of the latest rock groups to come out of England, The
Cream, is spreading, and seems to have homogenized a great
number of rock enthusiasts from the Atlantic to Pacific
Coasts.
This is being done by their two
very successful albums, “Cream,

Fresh Cream,” and “Disraeli
Gears.” This trio is composed of
three young musicians who have
become giants in the musical
world individually as well as in
a group. When one listens to
Cream pouring out of a record
player, he is listening to the
wailing of Eric Clapton’s guitar;
the furious drumming of Ginger
Baker, and the intense moaning
of Jack Bruce’s bass and harmonica.

Long solos
Eric Clapton, 22, has been the
driving force behind a number
of highly successful groups, these
being “The Yardbirds,” and
“John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers.”
He is the spokesman for the

group and says that he used to
get fired from different groups
because of his strong desire to
engage in long solos. When he
broke ties with the Yardbirds, he
decided to form his own group
and knew that he had to get Ginger Baker and Jack Bruce.
Jack Bruce, 23, the bass player, has been vocalist and bass
player with such groups as Manfred Mann, while Ginger Baker,
28, is perhaps the most outstanding drum soloist in the entire
rock scene. His intricate stickwork and complex rhythms give
Cream a beat that very few rock
groups can equal. Baker has been
known literally to break up the
places he is staying at, for he has
the habit of pounding on anything that happens to be near, be
it furniture or otherwise.
Blue Cream
In Cream’s first album, “Cream,
Fresh Cream,” we are given a
number of cuts which show the
group’s intense blues and improvisational style. “Sleepy TimeTime” is a number which has a
very delicate interlacing of the
hard rock sound and deep southern blues. In one of the best cuts
on the album, we are given a
number which is intense in its

traditional blues style. This number, “Rollin’ and a Tumblin,” is
an old Muddy Waters tune updated into the style of the Cream,
It goes well longer than five
minutes in length.
Another number that also goes
way over the five minute mark
is an original composition by
drummer Ginger Baker called
“Toad.” In it is one of the best
drum solos that has ever been
put into a rock number. The
listener is taken on a musical
journey into the wastelands of
emotions by a drum solo that
reminds one of riding on a bumpy
train at a high rate of speed.
One of the reasons for the
slow rise of Cream into the mainstream of musical attention has
been attributed to the length of
their solos and improvisations.
It was difficult for radio stations
to play their compositions because it is hard to squeeze a six
or seven minute song between
commercials.
Cream to the top
The next album they came out
with is also an excellent example
of the predominance of blues
that inhabits the group. It is entitled “Disraeli Gears” and promises to be the one that will shoot
the Cream all the way to the top.
In number like “We’re Going
Wrong” or “Outside

Woman

Blues,” the emotion is expressed
in the wailing of the instruments.
One of the best, if not the best,
cuts on this album is a little
number called “Tales of Brave
Ulysses.” This song is a rarity
for the Cream, for in it we find
some very interesting lyrical patterns. It is also typical Cream
with its delicate balance between
the strong blues and the extremely hard rock.
Also on this album is the song
they decided to release as their
first single, “Sunshine For Your
Love’"which is just a plain hard
rock number a la creme.
All that remains to be said is
that America is about to be hit
with a barrage of Cream-pies.

—Grimmer

The Electric Prunes were, according to many, one
of the most successful events of Spring Arts. Too
bad the acoustics and the sound system in general, of the Millard Fillmore Room, didn't match
them.

Prunes

Electric Prunes give impressive
show despite poor sound system
by Joseph Fernbacher
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

they immediately went into a
series of numbers which literally

shook the whole of Norton Hall.

Despite the general drawbacks
of having any kind of musical
event in the Millard Fillmore
Room, the Electric Prunes and a
unique light show that accompanied them gave a performance
which showed not only their

great technical skill, but also
their great patience with a sound
system that would have insulted
even Abe Lincoln.

This event proved to be the
most successful program of the
entire Spring Arts Festival. After
waiting in line for an hour we
were finally let into a room that,
when filled with as many people
that were present, could have
passed as the Black Hole of Calcutta. After this the fun began.
The Prunes were introduced by
a towering figure, presumably
their manager, clad from head
foot in white with a starstudded cape draped over his
shoulders that a first glance
looked like an American flag.
After the group got on stage,

to

Force and desire
Judging from their albums,
however, “Underground” and
“The Mass in F Minor,” the
Prunes seemed to be a bit disappointing. But then after getting caught up in their music,
the audience was swept away
into worlds of unreality and confusion by the intense force and
desire with which the group was
experiencing their music.
Some of the songs that could
be heard, as far as some of the
lyrics go, were “Get Me To the
World On Time” and their first
hit, “I Had Too Much to Dream
Last Night.” I was also told that
they did a version of “Tobacco
Road” and “A Long Days Flight
Into Tomorrow,” a song which is
featured on their second album.

Express emotions
It is said that when musicians
play, they play to express their
emotions. From what I gathered

at the concert last Thursday, the
Electric Prunes were a pretty
mad bunch of musicians. And
believe me, they had every right
to be, for the sound system in
the Millard Fillmore Room is so
bad that even with the aid of four
mikes, the lead singer couldn’t
be heard, and when he was heard
it was unintelligible. If the next
committee to get a group decides
to have it in the Fillmore Room,
they’d better expect a poor showing, for people are getting sick
and tired of having to listen to
music which has no lyrics to go
with it. First it was the Left
Banke Concert, if you all remember that fiasco, and now it’s the
Electric Prune Concert. What,
next?
Generally speaking though, I
feel that the Electric Prunes
were very impressive in their
showmanship and musical talent.
To put it bluntly, their music
was damn good but the sound
system was, to again put it mildly, crappy. A fact that should be
rectified soon or else we simply
will not get any more ‘name’
groups.

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�Circle Art: Bedazzled'
Theater

who is on the verge of committing
suicide for unrequited love when
Cook enters the scene as Lucifer.

Reviewer

What makes people laugh?
It would be easier to predict
when the war in Vietnam will
end than to try to fortell what
will strike people as funny. That
is why I’d normally be very reluctant to recommend a comedy
as a “must-see” film. But “Bedazzled,” now appearing at the Circle
Art Theater, is not a normal
film. It is the brashest, wittiest,
most irreverent and satiric film
to come along in many years.
The men most responsible for
making “Bedazzled” a super film
comedy are Peter Cook and Dudley Moore. They first achieved
fame as half of the “Beyond the
Fringe” group that was such a

success in London and New York.

Their only other film appearance
before “Bedazzled” was an alltoo-brief part in “The Wrong
Box” (probably the last intentionally funny film I’ye seen before
“Bedazzled”).

When Cook and Moore combine
their talents with producer-director Stanley Donen, the result is
not only a film that is incredibly
funny, but also cinematically exciting.
Funny and exciting
“Bedazzled” is a much-updated

Faust tale set in modern London.

The rest of the film concerns
how Moore spends the seven

wishes he receives in return for
his soul.
One of the more interesting aspects of the movie is its view of
Lucifer and his relationship to
God. The problem of temptation
resolves itself into a game or
contest, with the prize going to
whoever gains one hundred billion souls first.
Cook’s Lucifer is a rather sympathetic individual who spends
his time tearing out the last page
of an Agatha Cristie novel,
scratching records, and promising
sweet old ladies dates with Alif they have ten
fred Hitchcock
bottles of Green Pruny Eyewash
in their home.
—

The film’s humor runs the
gamut from incisive social commentary and religious irreverance
to atrocious puns. It also contains some of the funniest oneliners I have ever heard.
Perhaps “Bedazzled” will never
be acclaimed as a classic comedy
like “Day at the Races,” “The
Bank Dick,” “Modern Times,” etc.)
but it is undoubtedly the funniest
film in several years and eminently worth seeing.

Entertainment
Calendar
Events of special interest dur-

ing vacation:

Wednesday, April 3;

ART EXHIBIT: Buffalo State;
Art Education, Upton Gallery,
Buff. State through April 26.

they

come on like Popeye.

Tuesday, April 9:
MOVIE: “Longest Day,” Capen
7:30 p.m., possibly your longest
evening.

and The Cream, Eastman Theater, Rochester, 8 p.m., delicious sound.
Monday, April 8:
SPECIAL ENTERTAINMENT:
The Ultimate Spinach, Royal
Arms, New Breed Room, shows
nightly, through April 14

Wednesday, April 17:
CONCERT: The Association,
Kleinhans, 8:30 p.m.—get tickets quick if you want a great
evening.

—

The life force behind such
characters as Old Weird Harold,

do your thing. I know who I am.
I know what I am. And I go where

Kleinhans Music Hall on April 1

In his college days Bill Cosby
was noted as an athlete at
Temple University. Even today he
says that if he had been offered
$14,000 a year to play football he
wouldn’t be Bill Cosby “entertainer” today.

This man is of course, Bill Cosby (alias Silver Throat, Cos, and
Alexander Scott.) Cosby a man of
many talents has a total of five
comedy albums and two singing
albums, he also has contracts for
two upcoming movies, a highly

ranked television program called
“I Spy,” and another T.V. special
which was just aired over the networks last week.
Cosby has been the originator
of such comedy classics as
Noah,” “A Monster Chicken
Heart,” “Greasy Kids Stuff” and
“Karate.” The greatness of his
comedy is due to the warmth,
honesty and humanity it exhibits.
Allan Sherman, another great
comedian, has said, “Bill Cosby
has a wonderful, cockeyed, fresh,
sense of humor. He is so good
that what he has is more than
talent; he has the gift of comedy.
He has something that makes you
feel delight when you’re with
him
in an office, in a nightclub, or standing on a street corner. He has joy in being alive,
and he communicates it to you,
so that when you see or hear him
you are glad to be alive.”
...

Bill Cosby, the comedian, began
his career, as have so many
others, in the bistros of Greenwich Village, where he was discovered by a New York Times reporter. Farthest from Cosbys
mind at this time was his becoming a serious actor. Yet when he
met with Sheldon Leonard, a one
time comedian turned producer,
he was convinced to take the role
of Alexander Scott in the television series “I Spy.” The proof
of Leonard’s faith came when
Cosby

Thursday, April 11:
MOVIE: “The Gospel According
to Saint Matthew,” Norton
Conf.—you can criticize the
film, but what can you say
about the book?

Sunday, April 7:
CONCERT: The Vanilla Fudge

Eleven

Silver Throat Cos comes to Buffalo

Theatre review

Spectrum

Page

The Spectrum

Tuesday, March 26, 1968

was presented

On his comedy albums Cosby
excells. If anyone can listen to
“Noah” and his conversation with
the Lord before the great flood as
put forth by Cosby and not be
rolling on the floor I say that this
person is not human. His best
routine is that of the giant Chicken Heart. This bit of comedy may
well be the best bit of humor to
come out of any man in the past
decade. The thing that makes this
so true is the fact that Cosby
doesn’t tell jokes like a regular
stand-up comedian he uses his instant recall to conjure up pictures
of a boyhood that almost everyone can identify with. Except
girls that is.

Besides comedy and acting
Cosby has branched out into the

music world with his rock-androll album “Silver Throat” and a
hit single from the album called
“Little Old Man.” What’s in the
future for this versatile human
being only Cos himself knows. It
has been said that when Cosby
makes a million dollars he said

'j'
Bill Cosby
comes to Kleinhans April I
he is going to quit show business
and become a teacher. Just think
that show businesses loss would
be the gain of some lucky class
in a schol somewhere in the U.S.
Tickets to the concert are currently available at Buffalo Festival Ticket Office, Hotel StatlerHilton Lobby; U.B. Norton Hall;
All Audrey &amp; Del’s Record Shops;
Brundo’s, Niagara Falls.

Emmy

awards for two years in a row, as
best actor in a television series.

a week or more...

Cosby is the target of much interest in regards to his position
and the Negro problem in America. In a recent Life article
Cosby said, “If I help any black

people or black group, its because
I want to help. And I do-in my
own way. Not for the benefit of
Bill Cosby; publicity is zero on
this. I lay out a certain number
of dollars, but I don’t want anybody talking about it. Its not,
“Hey man, here’s a cat who’s still
one of us;” because that means
you are afraid to go ahead and

You're trained and work on routes where people have
bought Good Humor Ice Cream for years
no in...

vestment

. . .

everything supplied.

HOW YOU QUALIFY FOR INTERVIEW

"4

1. Minimum age 18.
2. Need a valid driver’s license ,

and must be able

to drive a clutch transmission
3. Be in good physical condition.

Sign Up Now For Our Campus Visit
Ask your Summer Placement Director or Student Aid
Officer to schedule you for our campus visit or write to:

GOOD HUMOR, Dept. A.
800 Sylvan Avenue
Englewood Cliffs, N. J. 07632
INTERVIEW
DATE:
maHniiu

£SW

April 16

�Page

The

Twelve

Tuesday, March 26, 1968

Spectrum

Book revie

campus releases...

'Where The Fun Is' in Europe
Spectrum

Book

of the veracity of the book, but
then, what does truth matter now-

Reviewer

Where The Fun Is,
Simon and Schuster, 448 pgs.

If anyone was expecting a review of say, The Complete Works
of Shakespeare this week, forget
it. My choice of material is limited in that I review what the

publishing companies are kind
enough to send me. This week
Simon and Schuster sent me a
copy of Where The Fun Is, Pan

American’s guide to Europe, the
Carribean and Hawaii,
last

book, published
This
month, is based on the reports of
college students who have visited
those parts of the world which
my non-affluence has not allowed
me to visit. This drawback only

KENSINGTON
LIQUOR STORE
3192 BAILEY AVE.
corner of Stockbridge

Discounts on liquors (only)

to students and faculty

upon presentation of I.D.’s
Fraternities, Sororities and
all Social Groups
OPEN DAILY 9 AM ■ 10 P.M.
10:30 ON SATURDAYS

FREE FAST DELIVERY

832-0585

a days?

A publicity release accompanying my copy of this guide says:
. . . the first guidebook aimed
directly at swinging singles under
“

30 who want to know and go
WHERE THE FUN IS . . . detailed reports on the IN places to
enjoy . .
They tell it like it
is . . .
.

”

Valuable information

My trepidation after reading

this almost caused me to ignore
the book. I was pleasantly surprised to find that the book in
reality does contain much valuable information for anyone contemplating a European vacation,
Even if one does not go to Europe, he can read about “Dicke

Wirtin” in Berlin, “the dirtiest

Hus Guest House,” where guests
help themselves to drinks on the
honor system.
The novice traveller may find it

helpful to avoid such places as
“Robert’s Harbour Club” in the
Bahamas with “the atmosphere
as uninhibited as the frat house.”
Anyway, I would avoid it.

Where The Fun Is does cover
Poland and Yugoslavia but contains nothing on European Russia. Of course I cannot conceive
of anyone visiting that godless
land, but someone might like to,
strictly for educational purposes,
On updated, revised edition of
Where The Fun Is will be issued
once a year, and students wishing
to be an official correspondent
for the guide will also find this
information on the inside cover
of the book. Or non-book.

Folk-jazz concert to be held
The Buffalo Chapter, Tuskegee
Institute Alumni Association will
present a folk-jazz concert “An
Evening with Milton Williams.”
Mr. Williams is currently on tour
from Bermuda. The concert will
be held Friday in the Woodlawn
Junior High School Auditorium
at 8 p.m.
Mr. Williams is an exceptional

ly well-rounded musician. His
training has included study of the
violin, piano, trombone, string
bass and classical guitar and 15
years of vocal instruction.

In a recent concert in Syracuse, The Syracuse Post Standard wrote that “if you haven’t
heard the name Milton Williams,
you will
He has the kind of
voice that makes you become involved in the music by clapping,
stamping your feet, or just smiling along with him.
Proceeds from the concert will
be used by the Alumni Club for
its annual scholarship awards.
...

Scientific Study Group To Himalayas

Study group of 21 students, several research advisors will go on
campin gtour in Nepalese Himalayas for 90 days starting midJanuary 1969, aiming to do research in Earth Science, Biological

and Meteorological fields.
For full information write to organizer, R, Rendle Leathern of
Huckleberry Hill. R.F.D. #1, Lincoln, Mass., or Special Tours and
Travel, Inc.. 6 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60602.

TO

ine

UI11LCU

owuca,

Will

ut

UU

v«uui#uu

_

A public lecture is scheduled at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Conference Theater, Norton Hall.
Informal conversation with graduate students and faculty of
the Department of Political Science will be held at 9:30 to 11:30 a.m.
Thursday in Room 10, 4238 Ridge Lea.
Informal conversation with undergraduate students will be sponsored by the Political Science Club at 2 to 4 p.m. in Room 339, Norton Hall.
The world's "burgeoning population and the lack of food to maintain it” will be discussed; by Dr. Raymond Ewell on Research in Review at 9:05 p.m. on WEBR. Dr. Ewell, vice president for Research at the University, serves as an agricultural consultant to the
government of India.
Girls interested in being contestants for the Miss Southern Erie
Counity Pageant should contact Tom Butler, 549-4220 (call collect).
The pageant will be held at 7:30 p.m., April 27 at Lake Shore
Central High School in Angola, N. Y. It is sponosred by the Evans
JAYCEES.

at Clark Gym is 7 to 9 p.m. every TuesActivities include badminton, archery, gymnastics, paddleball

Women's sports night

day.

and swimming.
Softball tryouts for girls team for spring will be held at 4 p.m.
Wednesday in Clark Gym.
The gym will be open for indoor archery 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday
and 4 to 5 p.m. Wednesday.
Creative Craft Center's hours for Ukranian egg decorating sessions: 1 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 10 p.m. on April 8, 9, and 10.
The Craft Center is located in Room 9, Norton Hall.
"Techniques of Large Scale Social Research Organiiations" will
be the topic of Dr. David C. Leege at a colloquium sponsored by the
Faculty of Social Sciences and Administration from 10 a.m. to noon
Friday, in room 237, Norton Hall.
Dr, Leege is the current director of the Opinion Survey Program
at the University of Missouri and the newly appointed director of the
Survey Research Center at the State University of Buffalo.
"The Heuristics of Linguistics Discovery" will be discussed by
Dr. Paul Garvin at 8 p.m. Friday in room 234, Norton Hall. Dr. Garvin
is the manager of the Linguistics Projects at the Bunker-Ramo Corporation in California.
"Underwater Speech Communication" is the topic of Dr. Harry
Hollien’s lecture at 8 p.m. April 8 in room 70 Acheson Hall. Dr.
Hollien is the associate director of Communication Sciences Laboratory at the University of Florida.
A Chinese film, with English sub-titles, “Beautiful Ducking,” will
be shown at 8:30 p.m. Friday in room 339, Norton Hall. The Chinese
Student Association will also sponsor a coffee hour at 8 p.m. that
evening.
Community Aid Corps needs volunteers to work at Meyer Memorial Hospital in the psychiatric ward. These people will be given
special training at the hospital.
Hours are flexible. Contact Eddie Arbeitraan at 831-3991 or 8313446.
Student tutors are needed to tutor secretaries for Civil Service
jobs in English skills at the Buffalo Urban League. Hours are 7 p.m.
to 8:30 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday nights.
Contact Tracy Cottone at 831-3446
Candidates for the Mr. Faculty contest held during Spring Weekend can be sponsored by any recognized campus organization. Appli-

cations may be obtained in the UUAB office, room 261, Norton Hall.
"Dilthey and Historically" will be the lecture presented by Professor Peter Krausser of the University of Pennsylvania at 8 p.m.
Thursday in room 233, Norton Hall. All philosophy and history students should attend.
The Student-Faculty Film Club will meet at 8 p.m. Thursday in
room 330, Norton Hall.

.88
f, N.Y.
ra Falls

PIS

�Tuesday, March 26, 1968

The Spectrum

strike-out
by Danny Edelman
Assistant

Sports

Editor

Today’s column is on one of-those-l’d-better-write-it-now-while
Or it can
be more accurately retitled what do Morio Shlgematsu, Aurele Vandendriessche and Stan McKenzie have in common.
hinking-abouMi-or-l'll-fOt-fiet-all-abouI-it-tyDe-siibiccts.

Actually, the story of the Boston Marathon is very dear to my
heart and to the hearts of all other amateur runners (for those over
40, substitute the word jogger for runner).

We would never forget this event.
The date is circled in red months beforehand as runners from
all over the world get ready for this annual race. Unfortunately,
most people don’t share this impending excitement for the simple
fact that they couldn’t care less.
How do people get involved with the Marathon in the first place?
Why do people make a pilgrimage every April to the Athens of
America for the privilege of standing out in the rain (it always
seems to rain on the day of the Marathon), watching a few hundred
hardy souls run, walk, or crawl, 26 miles and 385 yards for the fun
of it and wishing that they can be out there running also?

A person becomes an amateur runner when he gets stung by
the “running bug.” It can strike anytime, anyplace, and anywhere.
It feeds on male or female, young or old, athlete or nonatblete alike.
The only recognizable symptom is the compulsive urge to do some

Kazer sets recor

Fencing team has undefeated season
The University’s freshman feneing team completed an unbeaten
season a couple of weeks ago.
'

There are

many categories of

amateur runners.

biggest category and the one that I am in consists of those
people who, for the heck of it, like to put on a pair of sweat togs
and take a couple of laps around the block. No attempt is made at
setting any records of lasting value and after three quarters of an
hour, people are satisfied and go home feeling fit.

The most extreme example of amateur runners are the marathan addicts. These extremists think it’s nothing at all to go out
and have a 20-mile workout over the worst set of terrain that they
can find. Wherever a marathon is held, the same small group gathers together and just delights in running among friends.
This last statement reveals a very important aspect of an ama-

teur runner’s life, one which I have neglected to tell you so far, but
one that must be brought out into the open. It is the attitudes that

&gt;

other people (ie. the non-runners) attach to us. To be frank, most
people believe that anyone who likes to run just for the sake of
running must be nuts.
Of course this is true.
The best way to describe the plight of the amateur runner is
to use my own experience this summer.
Every weekday I would come home from my job at about 10
p.m., change into some grubby clothes and go out and do some running, Whenever I passed some normal people, they would look at
me with mixed emotions. They wondered what could possibly
make me run at this time at night. Some people, to assay their
consciences, would actually stop and ask me if I was a member of
the track team.
I knew that I couldn’t possibly convince them that I was running for the fun of it, so I would say yes. The other emotion which
they registered was the pathetic look of sedate people. It was as
if they were young again, they would be out running and having
a good time, too.
Now that you know something about the life of an amateur
runner, you might have some notion as to how we feel about the
Boston Marathon. Deep down in every amateur runner’s heart, there
is this great dream to run one day in the Marathon.
Each year many people do. On Patriot’s Day (April 19 which
is a state holiday in Massachusetts), hundreds of males (no women
are allowed although some do sneak in) gather in suburban Hopkintoin for the start of the race. They come from all over the world
in every size and shape imaginable. The Marathon is open to anyone who shows up. For one day Boston forgets about the Red Sox
and focuses its attention on the Marathon. Along the route, people
line the streets and local radio-television networks cover it quite
extensively. The only thing that can possibly be critcized about the
entire proceedings is the fact that it is un-American for an Ameriean to win the race. The last American to win \yas Johnny Kelley
m 1957. Since then the foreign entries have dominated the proceedings. In recent years, for example, first the Belgians and then
the Japanese have huled supreme. But do not fear; there is hope.
Last year Mr. McKenzie, a gent from New Zealand, surprised
everyone including the favored Japanese by coming in first. Guess
who came in second and fourth? Would you believe two Americans
by the names of Tom Laris and Louis Castagnola.
Holy smoke, maybe this year the mayor of Boston can give his
presentation speech
in English.

Women’s basketball stats
1967-1968 SEASON
Date
Dec. 18
Feb. 5
Feb. 9

Feb.

18

Feb. 24
Mar.
1
Mar.

4

Mar.

_

8

RECORD:

Opponent
Buffalo St. 28
Fredonia St. 29

U. B.

WON-4 LOST-4

Scoring
Leader

D'Youville 29

D. Goldsmith (8)
K. Richard (18)
K. Richard (17)

39

55

Buffalo St. 32
Niagara 34
Fredonia St. 24

E.
K.
E.

36

D'Youville

K. Richard (13)

35

Brockport St. 50

24
47

32
30

Co-captains
Carol Lazzaro.

of

45

Gordon (16)
Richard (21)
Gordon (27)

Rebounding
Leaders

C. Lazzaro
C. Lazzaro
C. Lazzaro

L. Young

C. Lazzaro

P. Ryan
C. Lazzaro
P. Ryan
C. Lazzaro
S. Pleasant

K. Richard (11)
S. Pleasant
the team this season were Elaine Gordon and

his

season with

an

An individual freshman record
was set by Bill Kazer, who completed his season at 33-0. An excellent fencer in high school, Bill
has improved greatly, adding a
spark to the team which was instrumental in helping the squad
gain its perfect record.

were Mike “Sarge” Kaye with 1611; Dave Frenay 14-11; Steve Bell
with 11-10; Larry Singer 12-8;

Other bright spots on the team
were provided by Bill Villianos, a

testified by his first year’s team
record of 11-2 and this year’s record of 10-0

impressive

record of 28 victories and six
defeats

It is unfortunate for the Bulls
that Willert will be leaving the
Buffalo area to pursue graduate
studies in history at another university and his loss as coach
will be deeply regretted.

The other members of the team

Fred Vezina, 9-10; Michael Morganstern, 7-13, and yours truly,
finishing with a 13-12 record.

Tennis meeting

Dick Willert completed his second season as the freshman coach
this year. His superb coaching
ability is quite evident, as can be

There will be a meeting of all
propective members of the freshman and varsity tennis teams in
Coach Sanford’s office in Clark
Gym on Monday, April 8th.

1968 Baseball Schedule
April

20
23
26

27

30

The

'

brilliant new fencer with an 18-9
mark, and captain of the team
Mike Bardozzi, who completed

This is the first team in freshman history that had an unbeaten
record of 10-0

running.

Since most people have to earn their living during the daylight
hours, amateur runners, to enjoy their hobby, are forced either to
waking up before the rooster or starting out when many people are
preparing to go to bed.

Thirteen

Pag*

May

VARSITY
E.C.T.I. (H)
E.C.T.I. (A)
Canisius (H)
Niagara (A) (2 games)
Syracuse (A)
R.I.T. (A)
Rochester (A) (2 games)
St. Bonnies (H) (2 games)
State (H)
Colgate (A)
Canisius (A)
R.I.T. (H)
Pittsburgh (H)
Niagara (A) (2 games)
State (A)

UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
FROM

March 29, 30,

31

SOUTHERN BASEBALL TRIP

MARCH 27»h to
A

&amp;

APRIL 8th, 1968

I

(3 games)

Nashville, Tenn.
April 1

Troy State College
Troy, Alabama

(1 game)

April 2

Huntington State College
Montgomery, Alabama

(2 games)

April 3

Athens State

(2 games)

College

Athens, Alabama
April 4

Western Kentucky University
Bowling Oreen, Ky.

(2 games)

April 5

Eastern Kentucky University
Richmond, Ky.

(1 game)

April 6

University

of Toledo

(2 games)

Toledo, Ohio

The Noreleo Rechargeable
Tripleheader. So groovy,
e

Just getting 3 weeks of shaves per charge
(nearly twice as many as any other rechargeable) is good reason for going with
this Norelco Powerhouse. An even better one;
our paper-thin Microgroove™'floating heads’
and rotary blades that shave so close we dare
any blade to match a Norelco. Proof: independent laboratory tests showed that, in the
majority of shaves, the Norelco Rechargeable
45CT rated as close or even closer than a
leading stainless steel blade. And this baby
won’t cut, nick or scrape.
Comes with a pop-up trimmer
Works with or without a cord.

Even a 115/220 voltage selector. Altogether,
more features than any other shaver...And
for strictly cord shaving: The new Norelco
Tripleheader Speedshaver® 35T, A cord version of the Rechargeable with a more powerful motor than ever before.
,

Same close-shaving Microheads. Try either.
with anything less
is practically dullsville.

Avre/co’

the close, fast, comfortable electric shave.

©1968 North American Philips Company, Inc., 100 East 42nd Street, New York, N, Y. 10017

�Page Fourteen

Tuesday, March 26, 1968

The Spectrum

New York's delegates Leege is director of Research Center
are subject of struggle
BINGHAMTON, N. Y.

(UPD

—

Supporters of President

struggle last week for New York’s bloc of 190 delegates to
the Democratic national convention.
Upstate leaders were sharply divided in their choice as
more than 1000 persons including many county chairmen
gathered for a testimonial dinner for State Chairman John
J. Burns, a Kennedy supporter.
County

Oneida

Chairman G.

Carl Morse called for a boycott
of the dinner to protest Mr. Burns

endorsement of Sen. Kennedy.

In New York City, Council President Frank O’Connor, the first
elected official in the state to
back Kennedy in 1964, was named
to head a statewide committee in
support of President Johnson. National Committeeman Edwin
Weisl said the President was not
consulted about the choice.
New York Democrats will send
188 delegates to the convention
plus two at-large, for a total of
190. Under the selection system
123 will be picked in the primaries, and 65 will be named by the
300-member state committee.
Upstate leaders were irked because Sen. Kennedy failed to consult them before making his announcement, Since then Mr.
Burns has been holding conferences with county chairmen to
cool their irritated nerves.

Rep. Samuel Stratton of Amsterdam says he will cast a Republican vote in the next election if
the party nominates Sen. Kennedy.
Rep. Joseph Y. Resnick of Ellenville, a Johnson supporter, has
vowed to spend “any amount of
money” to defeat primary candidates supporting Sen. Kennedy.
Recently 17 rural county chairmen in western and central New
York went on record in support

of Johnson.

Dr. David C. Leege, current director of the Opinion Survey
Program at the University of
Missouri, has been appointed director of a newly established

State University of Buffalo.
The Center will be a basic
research facility which may be
used by faculty members of the
University. It will also be available to agencies outside the University with research interests
which may result in the development of knowledge.
The Center will be equipped
to conduct interviews encompassing a wide area, either with a
cross section of the population
(as in typical public opinion
polls) or with specialized populations designed specifically for
particular queries. It will also
have facilities for conferences
concerning research design and
for the processing and analysis
of data.

Aids research
The establishment of such a

center stems from the

survey re-

search which has become an integral part of scholarly investigation. Numerous scholars at this
University are involved in survey
research which encompasses the
interests that could be expedited

by survey

methods.

Until now, whenever a researcher wanted to engage in a
community survey he was compelled to staff his own task force
and, upon completion of his investigations, liquidate the organization.
The practical disadvantages of
such a method are both economic
and academic, according to the
Faculty of Social Sciences and
Administration. From an economic standpoint, a “one-shot”
organization is costly and profuse. From an academic one, a
transient organization is totally
incapable of meeting the needs
of even routine instruction in
survey desigh, sampling, questionnaire construction, interviewing, coding and data analysis.

Avoids problems

A permanent survey organization, such as the Center, avoids
these problems. A regular staff

personnel can service research
needs competently and economically.

In addition to directing the
new Survey Center, he will be
an associate professor of Political Science. He is Currently a
member of the Executive Council
of the Inter-University Consortium for Political Research and
a member of the Program Committee of the Council of Social
Science Data Archives.
Dr. Leege will assume his position as director of the Center
about July 15.

A Colloquium, sponsored by the
Faculty of Social Sciences and
Administration, will be held Friday at which Dr. Leege will speak
on “Techniques of Large Scale
Social Research Organizations.”

Upstate opposition
Sen. Kennedy is meeting with
stubborn opposition from some
upstate county chairmen.
The Monroe County Committee
is unanimously behind Johnson.

applications for editor of

the

NEW STUDENT
REVIEW
campus literary magazine,

are now being taken.

Interested candidates
please submit a letter

of qualifications to

Box 40
Norton Hail

Summer
Language
Institute
FRENCH
GERMAN
RUSSIAN
SPANISH
June 24

-

August 10. 1968

University ol California
Santa Cruz

Living learning language
programs for beginning and
-

intermediate students. Intensive
seven week summer sessions
in residence at Cowell College,
UCSC. Audio-lingual method.
Native speaker informants. 10
units University credit.
Application deadline: April 22.

Cost: $535 All-inclusive.
For further information,
please write:
The Secretary,
Summer Language Institute;
UCSC; Santa Cruz,
California 95060

Every one of our aquaspace systems
whether nuclear fleet submarine or
deep-diving research vehicle —is a
“world" unto itself. Capable of virtually
independent existence in environments more hostile than outer space;
utilizing almost every known technology to provide for and protect its
human inhabitants. Life-support, propulsion, steering and diving systems
to sustain the vessel itself; ASW equipment for detection and avoidance;
launch and guidance systems for
weaponry.
Creating such "worlds” requires an
—

unprecedented degree of integration
and interrelation. In the design area
alone it is not unusual for a Design
Engineer to confer with R&amp;D, data
processing, quality control, procurement, reliability, test, the yard tradesmen—and the men who man the subs,
The sophisticated systems that resuit require an equally advanced management technique. We call it Marine
Systems Management:

a systems-ori-

ented concept incorporating life-cycle

costing, logistics integration, assurance engineering, procuring and production—all oriented towards the

future via EDP, PERT and CPM. Not
just in terms of years, but decades,
You can see that this total systems
approach—to hardware integration as
well as to planning and management—can provide breadth to a career, and a
continual updating of techniques in
the fast-moving, technological world of

today. There are opportunities here
now in the Design Engineering Department for people earning degrees in
ME, EE, CE, AE and Naval Architecture/Marine Engineering,
Send your resume in confidence to
Donald K. Whyqott, College Relations.

GENERAL DYNAMICS
Electric Boat Division
98 Eastern Point Road, Groton, Connecticut 06340
An Equal Opportunity Employer
u.s. citizenship is required

�The Spectrum

Tuesday, March 26, 1968

CLASSIFIED
PART TIME SALES HELP: hours at your
convenience, salary, plus commission, call 874-3399, 9-11 daily.

FOR SALE

886-5044.
1962

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—

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1963 CHEVY IMPALA Convertible
rally-red with black top and deluxe
interior, like new condition. Main-Winspear Sinclair, 3211 Main St. at Winspear. Open from 10 AM-10 PM daily.
Sat, 10 AM-4 PM.

—

1965 SUNBEAM—2-door, bucket seats,
4 speed, original throughout, make
offer. Phone 433-2417 eves or weekends.
1963 AUSTIN HEALY 3000—roll-up windows, metalic blue, excellent condifirm. Call TF 2-1074.
1967 OPEL FASTBACK
high perf. engine. disc brakes, radio, whitewalls,
perfect condition. 837-3688.

tion. $1200

—

SPRING COAT,

YELLOW

lovely,

size

plain lines,
12-14, worn twice. $23.

Call Sharon, 831-3501.
GIBSON Acoustic guitar, $75;
1960
KHARMANN GHIA, good running condition, $100. Call Lynne, 884-0165.
HAGSTROM
ELECTRIC BASS—excepTtional fine action, solid sound, cabineted, pair 15” Jensen Lifetime speakers. 837-8953.

APARTMENTS WANTED

THREE
for
9806.

PERSONAL

KHARMANN GHIA —2-door hard-

CHEVY

For quick action

call 831-3610

- bedroom apartment,-furnished,
1968-69 school year. Call 837-

HOUSES, apartments needed for Mathematicians attending U.B. Summer
Conference, Aug. 11-30. Call Mr. Coleman, 8311101.

UNFURNISHED or furnished, 1 or 2
bedroom apartment, near campus,

beginning Sept., ’68. Call 831-3083.

WANTED

I

VOT

and Helene.
could get to
is ready for
pledge class

LEZAM to Sandy
(This is the closest we
Hebrew.) We hope Israel
you. Love, from the Spring
of SDT.

dresses and skirts.
etc. Special price for students, one
service on hem if desired. Snyder

ALTERATION: coats,

day

would like to borrow as many WAR
COMICS as possible for a few weeks
in order to gather material for a term
paper. I will return them intact about
April 15. Edward Devine, 835-3010.

I

6’3" Highpockets, extremely uryou contact Editor-in-Chief of

TOBEY

gent

Spectrum at once!

SHERRIE:
on

couldn’t

I

your brother.

family, baby. John.

believe those ears
Good luck to the

doesn’t someone do something
about Lyndon? Vote for Bobbie, work
for Bobbie, pray for Bobbie.

WHY

EVERYBODY knows who you are, Sarah.
Ashamed? You should be.

BABY, pretty baby
"drive me bannas.” Joey.

PRETTY

.

.

.

—

$259.

THE

FLIGHTS. B.O.A.C. June
SOLD OUT. PAN AM: June

POPULAR

13-Aug. 28,
12-Aug. 26
7 SEATS LEFT. We must be doing
something right. Call us and find out.
Don Mathison, 837-9157, 4-8 p m.
AIR FRANCE jet to Europe, June
New York to London or Paris. August 20, Paris to New York. $254 round
trip. Call 831-2080.
TYPING

term papers, 25c per page;
dittos, 35c; envelopes,
$2.00 per

hundred. Call TF5-6897.
MOTORCYCLE INSURAivCt low cost,
immediate F.S.-l, premiums financed,
UPSTATE CYCLE INSURANCE 695-3044.
SEND $1 for authoritative
"Handbook
for Conscientious Objectors.”
Nationally recognized.
American Friends
Service Committee, Box 181, University
Station, Syracuse, N.Y.
HALL for rent. Suitable
fraternity parties, parking lot
able. Call Mr. Marcus, 837-5521.

LARGE

rant to buy one full-length
own, size 9. 825-6673.

a

formal

A

PRAGUE (UPI)
Antonin Novotny, 64, Stalinist president of
Czechoslovakia for 11 years, has
resigned under public pressure,

of our socialist society.”
The once-powerful Stalinist ruler was fired in January after 15
years as leader of the Communist

Mr. Novotny’s downfall marked
the first time in history that
public opinion ever imposed its
will to oust a leader of any Communist regime.
In a farewell letter to the nation’s parliament Mr. Novotny
said he was stepping down “in
view of the present situation in
this country and with the aim
to help the further development

by the Soviet Union and an alleged military plot to keep him
in power. He was replaced as
party chief by Alexander Dubcek,
46, in a virtual coup that triggered a ware of liberalization
throughout Czechoslovakia and
the most marked change in
Eastern Europe since the mid50’s uprisings in Hungary and

SPECTRUM classifieds sell. Low
831-3610.

rates,

later. Most EUROPEAN FLIGHTS are or should be
booked by now. If you are on a flight
that is only half filled and the refund
deadline is drawing near, you have reason to worry. Many chartered flights
are cancelled at the last minute because the minimum number of people
is not met. Don’t go
down with a sinking ship. Sign up for a flight that is
nearly

filled or put your name on a
flight. Your

waiting list for a reputable
chances are much better.

Question of

post, despite political intervention

Poland.

the week

Last week’s question was:
Considering the National Security Council’s recent decision of grad student deferments, I intend

GOING

ON SABBATICAL? Married Doctorial student willing to maintain your

home and grounds for rent consideration. Arrangements according to your
schedule. Contact Chas. MacRoy, ext:
4806.

The results were:
25.9% move to another country, e.g. Canada
(B) 15.4% join some kind of resistance orangization
(C) 11.8% enlist
(D) 25.0% wait until I get drafted
(E) 21.9% other
Number of ballots: 355
(A)

LOST

you

MISCELLANEOUS
EUROPE

PERISH! Editing, proof
reading for faculty members, experienced
in
text
books, scholarly
works. Phone: 882-3549.

IT is getting later and

Ice Cream Man REALLY become
a legend in his own time?

WILL

Czech president resigns
—

PUBLISH OR

trying.

top, red with white bucket seats,
like new condition. Main Winspear Sinclair, 3211 Main St., 10 AM-10PM.

1962

Page Fifteen

IN D.A., English school scarf, black
background with lengthwise blue, red,
yellow stripes. Reward for return. Kathy
Winzer, 42 Crosby.

do your
contact lenses lead
a dean life?

f
because Lensine is an
"isotonic" solution,
which means that it
blends with the natural
fluids of the eye.
Cleaning your contacts
with Lensine retards the
buildup of foreign deposits on the lenses. And
soaking your contacts in

Study with us this summer. Our 300 acres of green shaded campus
provide a perfect summer study atmosphere.
During off hours enjoy
on-campus tennis, riding or bowling.
We’re just minutes from parks, beaches, golf courses, several
fine

and mUSeUms and iust an hour ,rom Manhattan and the

Ham tons

Modern residence halls are available on the campus for undergraduwomen.
UNDERGRADUATE COURSE OFFERINGS
ate men and

Liberal Arts and Sciences, Pre-Professional,
rre-Engmeering, Business and Education
C 0 RSE FFERINGS in the Graduate
Schools
H U versity: Biological
"!
Sciences, Business
em '? try Educat,0n and Certification,
Management
V
nee

ofToD n^I|L iV
Adminfstratu?

°

Engli$h foreign Languages,
GuidancTanriFno^ ngg ' Hlstor
y. Library Science, Marine
EdUCati n ' PhySiCS P NtiCal
p-i
g
y*
gpeach*'
i
rm,

Science Mathemat- 88
Science,’ Sew o

'

r

,

'? '

°

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SESSIONS

Dayand Evening
AdmlMi^Vopento^siHniit^^*
pen visiting students 3
from accredited colleges.
®

to

Er
°

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*

' nfor mation, summer bulletin and application,
hone (516) 626-1200 or mail coupon

ip-(!W.P0ST COLLEGE
P.0

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&lt;

Sessions information bulletin

Name
Address

I

If Visiting

State
student, from which

college?

es can be

...

or hell. They

may be a wonder of
modern science but just
the slightest bit of dirt
under the lens can make
them unbearable. In
order to keep your con-

tact lenses as comfortable and convenient as
they were designed to be,
you have to take care of

°

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Apply now for TWO 5-WEEK SUMMER

heaven

CP

them.
Until now you needed

or more separate
solutions to properly prepare and maintain your
contacts. You would
think that caring for contacts should be as convenient as wearing them.
It can be with Lensine.
Lensine is the one lens
solution for complete
contact lens care. Just a
drop or two, before you
insert your lens.coats and
two

lubricates it allowing the
lens to float more freely
in the eye's fluids. That's

Lensine between wearing periods assures you
of proper lens hygiene.
You get a free soaking
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every bottle of Lensine.
It has been demonstrated

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This is a sure cause of
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Let your contacts be the
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�Page

The

Sixteen

Tuesday, March 26, 1968

Spectrum

•

•

•

new yorK
Washington

Jordan

compiled

from our wire services

by

Madeline Levine

baby’
with the Supreme Court order to surrender to authorities. Powell had asked to
appear before Markewich, who had signed
the criminal contempt order that was the
outgrowth of a defamation of character
suit against Powell brought by a Harlem
widow. He had defied seven court orders
to appear in connection with the case.
Powell was re-elected last April 11 to
the House seat from which he was excluded. He never appeared to claim the seat.
Powell is reportedly roping to win his
seat back through the courts, where his
action is still pending, and retain the seniority of his 22 years in the House.

s

reassigned
Picks Westmoreland

shouted.

Peace campaigns
Sen. Robert Kennedy (above) speaks to
a crowd of nearly 15,000 at the Kansas
State University field house; the next
day, Sen. Eugene McCarthy (at left,
with Dr. Herbert Reid, professor of law
at Howard University) announced in an
address to Howard students that he
would support Kennedy over Johnson
for the Democratic presidential nomination if he failed to win it himself.

Powell, living on the Bahama Isle of
Bimini since the contempt citation against
him in November 1966, told newsmen;
‘‘These are my people, baby, my people!”

Powell's return
The surprising series of events that
marked the former congressman’s return
home began late last week when Powell’s
attorney, Henry Williams, called Judge
Arthur Markewich of the New York Supreme Court and New York Sheriff John
McCloskey to tell them Powell wished to

Senate ethics code passed
For the first time,
WASHINGTON
U. S. senators are being subject to a code
spelling out unethical campaign fund practices and requiring public disclosure of
the source and us of private contributions.
After a week of agonizing over a twoyear study of needed reforms, the Senate
voted 67 to 1 to adopt the Code of Ethics,
Sen. George D. Aiken (R., Vt.) cast the
lone dissenting vote as a matter of principle, caying: “We are bringing a fraud
on the public by making it appear we’re
trying to purify ourselves when we are
only making it worse.”
The code was drafted by the Sepate
Ethics Committee, formed after the Bobby Baker scandal that came to light in
late 1963, and was carried to the floor
after the Senate censured Sen. Thomas
J. Dodd (D„ Conn.) for financial miscon—

duct.

Dodd proposal

rejected, 65 to 5.
“I don’t know whether it’s very important to me now, but you ought to be
protected,” Dodd said before the vote.
The Senate refused to heed Dodd's emotional plea, and an expected attempt bySen. Joseph Clark (D., Pa.) to strengthen
provisions for public disclosure of senators’ finances failed to materialize.

Show income

As finally approved, the Ethics Code
would require that senators, senatorial
candidates and Senate aides earning more
than $15,000 a year file in a sealed envelope with the comptroller general a
copy of their federal tax returns, showing
all income.

Shortly before the final vote, the Senate
overwhelmingly defeated a proposed
amendment by Dodd dealing with use of
proceeds from fund-raising affairs, the
very issue that got

Dodd suggested permitting senators to
pay off old political campaign debts with
such funds, but establishing elabtorate
safeguards to prohibit their use for nonpolitical purposes. His amendment was

him into trouble.

This information concerning any senator would be available only to the Ethics
Committee on a majority votes of its members, but could be made public during the
course of any committee hearings.

tory’s toughest military

jwo,

-

ig

U. S, and allied forces in Vietnam, came
as no surprise to Pentagon insiders.
For more than a year top officials and
observers have looked for Westmoreland
to return to take over one of the several
top military jobs becoming vacant this
summer.

The exact timing, however, was a closely held secret until President Johnson announced it at a news conference late last
week. There was no intimation in Johnson’s announcement that Westmoreland
was being reassigned because of any dissatisfaction with his performance.

Although the general has come under
particularly for his
Congress
“search and destroy” missions against the
enemy—Johnson has repeatedly declared
tire in

full and

—

unstiting

confidence in him.

An extensive search and destroy mission, the largest of the war, is going on
under Westmoreland’s personal direction

in an area near Saigon.
At one point in recent weeks, Johnson
said if he himself had to follow someone
into combat, he would pick Westmoreland.
reJohnson said that
assignment foreshadowed no particular
change in Vietnam strategy, and that no
decisions have been made on troop buildups or other matters concerned with the
war. He said war policy was still under

intensive review.
Johnson said Westmoreland, after confirmation of the Senate, will replace Gen.
July
Harold K. Johnson when he retires
2 as Army Chief of Staff.
Pentagon observers assumed Westmoreland has long wanted the post of
Army Chief of Staff, which becomes vacant every two years. The post could be
a stepping-stone to that of Chairman of
the Joint Chiefs.

Hussein blasts Israeli raids
JORDAN—King Hussein of Jordan said
that Arab commandos will increase their
attacks inside Israel until there is a just
and lasting peace. Israel reported a new
raid late last week near the Dead Sea,
and said Jordan was supporting the attacks.
In the attack Israel said A1 Fatah commandos struck near the Gesher settlements nine miles south of the Dead Sea
and that Israel drove them off without
casualties. It said the Jordanian army
covered their activities with mortar fire.
Hussein, speaking at a news conference
at his royal palace in Amman, said Israel’s 15,000-man attack, also last week,
with troops, armor and jets had "furiously jeopardized” chances for achieving
peace, and he said the raid had failed.

"A little cocky"

the
He said the Jordanians repulsed
Israelis were “just a little cocky and sure
Israelis in the all-day' battle becaues the
of themselves —victory has gone to their
heads.”
In his statement Hussein again called
unify
for an Arab summit conference to
strategy against Israel threatened inIsrael
creased Arab commando attacks on
unless there is peace, and said if Uin his
peace envoy Gunnar Jarring fails
efforts the blame will be Israel s.
s
In Jerusalem, Information Minister
ruel Galilee told a public meeting the Ai
Fatah commandos had planned to attac
of t is
Israeli civilian centers “at the end
tne
month, sowing terror throughout
country.”
,

"■

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RECEIVED

The Spectrum 0

UNIVERSITY
ARCHIVES
Friday, March 22, 1968

State University of New York at Buffalo

Vol. 18, No. 43

1968

MAR 2

nel

i

Riot Re,

Patton and Schwartz
clash over revolution

If

by Jay Schreiber
Spectrum

Staff Reporter

An analysis of the President’s Riot Commission Report
erupted into angry words late Tuesday afternoon in the
Fillmore Room.
Black and white militants, led by panelist Gwen Patton,
had denounced the U.S. social system at one event on the
first day of the ‘Strike for Knowledge.’ Some militants advocated a revolution to destroy the system and its “oppression
of the Negro people.”
v
Their charges provoked
panelist Herman Schwartz,
a member of the Law School
faculty. He also served on the
President’s Riot Commission,
where recently released report has attracted attention
for putting the blame on
white racism for race problems.
Visibly angry, Mr. Schwartz
said: “There is a real powerful
political force now working for
the Negro. Carl Stokes of Cleveland is an example. We’re really
at the beginning of what may be
a significant transformation.”

is simply not geared for oppressed people.”
A New York City school teacher
and member of both SNCC and
CORE, Miss Patton charged that
the Negroes could not become an
effective political bloc.
“Ethnic politics goes out the
window once racism is interjected
into the system.” She said that

all the white votes are combined
into one powerful anti-Negro
force: “There’s simply no room
for the Negroes inside the structure.”
Mr. Schwartz responded angrily. “If you don’t want my
and I feel you
paternalism
don’t, then go build your own
society
leave mine alone," he
said.
Bruce Jackson of the English
Dept, discussed and compared the
Riot Commission and the Crime
Commission Reports. Mr. Jackson served as a member of the
latter group.
—

—

Answer: revolution
Miss Patton challenged Mr.
Schwartz, alleging that existing
society made transformation impossible, that revolution was the
only answer.

Schwartz snapped back: “It’s
my society; don’t tear it apart.”
The remark set off a chain reaction as more and more tempers
flared.
Miss Patton again challenged
Mr. Schwartz’s conception of the
race situation. “If we (Negroes)
had 20% of the political representation, there would have been
a revolution already. The system

Crime Report dishonest
Mr. Jackson feels that the
Crime Commission Report is basically dishonest.
“It asked for things like nicer
police and better community relations. They were unwilling to
combat the basic problems,” he
said.

•"'-W

Three of the panelists who discussed the President's Riot Commission Report on Tuesday afternoon are, from left to right, Herman Schwartz,
Bruce Jackson, and Robert Cohen.

Riot report
discussed
“The Riot Commission decided
you can’t cure cancer with aspirin. It asks for a great deal of
money, but the Administration is
not willing to fight two wars at

once.”

Mr. Schwartz, speaking for the
first time, said that the Riot Commission fell short on its treat-

ment of Vietnam. "Treating riots

without looking at Vietnam is
performing Hamlet with no Claudius. Trying to wipe out racism
is inevitably going to flounder.
Nobody will give money to it.
There's only money for Vietnam.”

'Psychological genocide'
This was the most polite and
considerate treatment the Riot
Commission was to receive. Miss
Patton was quick to level it “a

Viet student: U.S. is enemy, not VC
by Joel Kleinman
Spectrum

Staff

In a passionate plea for peace in his home country, Ngo

at Harvard,
vowed that his people would “fight to the end” to combat
the “jise of force by America in Vietnam.”
Mr. Long spoke at a forum, “Vietnam: What’s Happening,” before a crushed audience in the Dorothy Haas Lounge

Tuesday.

Graveyards bombed
An important aspect of the war
often overlooked by Americans
is the indiscriminate bombing of
graveyards by American planes.
worshippers, the
As ancestor
Vietnamese people consider
graves sacred and are abhorred
by their destruction, he stated.
-

A large majority of South Viet-

namese regard the Americans as

the enemy, not the Viet Cong, Mr.
Long claimed. “Vietnamese want
to be masters of their own destiny,” he said.
Another eyewitness to the war,

author, Jonathan Schell was critical of most accounts of the
fighting, stating: “The situation
is immeasurably worse than the
way it’s been reported.”
No clear targets
Although Vietnam has received more bombs than Nazi
Germany during World War II,
entire villages have been methodically, but indiscriminately, destroyed. Because there are no
clear targets in the South, American pilots unload their bombs
on hamlets merely suspected of
harboring Viet Cong, claimed the
speaker.

Mr. Schell, who was in Vietnam
last summer, related the confession of a pilot who told him that
he demolished an entire hamlet
because its huts were under the
cdver of trees, and were thus ostensibly serving to screen enemy
forces.
Another pilot informed Mr.

pacification program for black
people, psychological genocide.”
She said the black militants in
the country were not interested
in integrating society; “It’s irrelevant, we want self-determination in our own black commun-

ities.”

Sideny Willhelm of the Sociology Dept, followed Miss Pat-

Assistant managing editor
Richard Schwab Thursday announced his resignation from
his post with The Spectrum,
effective today. Mr. Schwab
says he plans to run for the
Student Association presidency, “so that the students
can have some kind of
choice.”

for participation.

Ngo Linh Long
a South Vietnamese student at
Harvard, speaks at a forum
Tuesday in Haas Lounge, as

part of Strike for Knowledge
program.
Schell that the bombing of South
Vietnamese hamlets was merely
a “side effect” of hunting the
enemy efficiently.

'Monstrous' thought
The speaker expressed incredulity at the attitude of Ameri-

■fr Please turn to

Page 6

ton’s lead and dwelled solely on
criticism of “White America.”
He accused American society of
building myths to cover up her
racism. The most notable myth
to Dr. Willhelm was the one that
said 'all men are created equal.’
“This makes the white man
feel he’s unresponsible for Negro
sufferings,” said Dr. Willhelm.

Spectrum assistant managing editor
resigns to run for SA presidency

A staff member for three years
and presently a regular columnist, Mr. Schwab said in his letter of resignation: “Over the last
three years I’ve watched with dismay the trend of student government. I was happy to see the approval of the polity concept; it
represents a long-needed change
and a new dimension in student
government. The present structure was dragging its heels and
gave students no real incentive

Reporter

T.inh Long, a South Vietnamese student studying

Intimately aware of the horrors
of war, the speaker asked his audience to evaluate the results of
the American campaign of mass
destruction in his country. He
said that democracy is today no
more a reality in the South than
it was in 1955 at the start of the
American “pacification" program.

IT

i r\

“The polity will die like its
forerunning structure unless
someone who really cares about
instituting the concept is elected.
I don’t want to see the polity die.
There’s too much at stake
to
simply sit on the sidelines and
...

chronicle this new age in student
self-government."

(

Mr. Schwab indicated that he
would not run with a complete
slate of coordinators, but would
run with a slate of officers.
"I know some students will
point and say 'Ho Ho the Burgher’s running’ and consider the
whole thing a joke,” he said.
“But during the campaign I will
try to buck that image and speak
out meaningfully on the issues
confronting students.”

Richard Schwab
former Asst. Managing Editor
of The Spectrum is a candidate
for President of the Student
Association.
Spectrum Editor Michael L.
D’Amico, commenting on the resignation, said: “Rick’s done an excellent job for The Spectrum the
past three years, and The Spectrum will miss him. He’s a fine
journalist and one of the few experienced persons we have on
the staff. I feel, however, that
Rick Schwab knows a great deal
about this campus and its problems. He’ll be an excellent candidate, and should he win, he’ll be
an excellent president.”
Mr. Schwab, a junior, has written professionally for the Olean
(N.Y.)

Times Herald.

�Pag*

Two

Friday, March 22, 1968

The Spwctrwm

Urban affairs program would
combine study and experience
A student-proposed interdisciplinary program in urban affairs
has received the approval of several Provosts and University College officials.
The program would allow interested faculty and students “to
undertake a study of urban life”
and “to arrange a flexible pattern
of scholarly work and field ex-

m

Hm
•Vf&gt;.

A'

perience.”
Tracy Cottone, director of Community Aid Corps, and Nancy
Coleman, Student Association
Presidential assistant, organizers
of the program, are now looking
for faculty members interested in
teaching the courses under the
proposed curricula.

'

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Free fun

Three plans

Hershey eyeing undergraduates
—

Gen. Hershey said if a decision is made to enlarge the
war, the President will have
to decide whether to call up
the reserves or to enlarge the
draft calls. If the reserves are
not called up, Gen. Hershey
said, “we would have to contrive some way” to draft undergraduates in order to
meet the increased draft
calls.
Recent press reports have indicated the Administration is considering a major new escalation
of the Vietnam war .The Washington Post reported that one recommendation before the President calls for 206,000 additional
troops in Vietnam. The current
authorized number of troops for
the war is 525,000. The White
House has said that no decision
to enlarge the war has been made.

Depend on tinning
Gen. Hershey’s remarks about
drafting undergraduates were
made during a question-and-answer session following a speech

to the National Press
Club. He said the number of
students drafted “would depend
up on whether they’re going to
send them this year, next year,
or some other time. And the
quicker they’d have to send them,
the larger the calls would have
to be.”
he delivered

President Johnson is authorized

by law to declare “that we’ve got
to have some of those boys that
are candidates for baccalaureates,” Hershey said. He emphasized the Selective Service System presently has no plans to
determine which undergraduates

would be drafted.
“We’ve abolished this old-fashioned idea of thinking that people
who pass high examinations know
any more than people who can’t
pass them at all,” Gen. Hershey
said, referring to the new draft
law which defers all undergraduates doing satisfactory work.
Previously, local draft boards
could examine students’ college
grades and their scores on a special examination in deciding
which ones to defer.

Would train all

somebody to

At one point in a discussion
about training young people for
the military, Gen. Hershey said:
“I wish we could take everybody,
but I haven’t much hope that
we’ll ever sell Congress that we’ll
train people when we don’t know
what we’re training them for.”

Gen. Hershey also said he does
not think President Johnson’s decision to end deferments for some
graduate students will have a
drastic effect on graduate schools.
“I have heard these cries of ‘wolf
many times,” he said. “I have a
firm faith that the graduate
schools are going to live.”

Asked if a declaration of war
by Congress would make his job
easier, Gen. Hershey replied:
“Pm not so sure in the future
we’re going to declare any war.
We’ve been able to be flexible
enough to kill people very handily without war. We don’t even
have to have enemies; we kill
our friends when we run out of

kill."

The Selective Service director
said he has “every sympathy
with the president of an institution that has gone into the graduate school business in order to
get cheap teachers or some other
reason, and therefore doesn’t like
to have this come along and take
away his graduate students.”

Kennedy drive started
A drive for volunteers for Sen.
Robert F. Kennedy has been initiated on this campus under the
direction of the senator’s New
York office. Two Law School students, Nick Sargent and Paul
Friedman, are coordinating the
organization’s efforts.
In an interview with Mr. Sargent and Mr. Friedman, they

.

.

stated: “Our goal is primarily to
alter the present policies of the
Administration. This is not in oppostion to Sen. McCarthy’s campaing, rather it is to prevent the
re-election of President Johnson.
“Since Sen. Kennedy’s announcement of his candidacy Saturday, there has been a spontaneous outpouring of support for
him among students at the State
University of Buffalo. We welcome any future commitments

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A third plan is essentially a
combination of the first or second, plus a summer program in
field work. During the summer
program, a dialogue would be
required between students and
faculty members. The end result
would be a major paper based
upon the student’s area of interest, drawn from his experience.

The proposal sets forth no particular course offerings, but includes, as reference, listings from
the “Appalachian Studies” program at Ohio University.
The Ohio program includes such
courses as “Introduction to Community Organization” through the
Social Welfare Department; “Historical survey of the geographical area,” History Department;
“Economics of poverty and current problems of regional development,” Economics Department,
and studies of government, religion, housing, health and legal
services.
The Urban Affairs proposal also
suggests courses in literature, art
and muic under the Faculty of
Arts and Letters.
Field work would be modeled
upon the City Course of the Uni-

versity of Michigan.

“Educational gains for the student must rest upon the student’s
own scholarly and field activities,
upon the interdisciplinary seminars and faculty supervision, and
upon the good will, cooperation,
and informal teaching activities
of the residents of the city itself,” the proposal says.

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The second plan consists of obtaining a general background of
the area under study during the
first semester. The amount of
field work would depend on the
study area and the faculty member. Seminars and field work under the guidance of a faculty
member would occur during the

Anyone who is interested may
contact Mr. Sargent at 873-2898
or Mr. Friedman at 838-2165.

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weeks would consist of field work
in the area of concern plus seminars arranged at the discretion
of the faculty member.

The Urban Affairs Curricula
will hopefully be implemented in
the fall. Faculty ana students interested in the program should
contact Miss Cottone or Miss
Coleman through the Student
Association office.

from other interested students.”

THE TURTLE
IS TOPS

Classroom activity would center
on the background of the urban
area to be studied. The nine

second semester.

Three alternative plans have
been presented. The first would

7 wish we could take everybody'

WASHINGTON (CPS)
Selective Service Director Lewis
B. Hershey has said that some undergraduate college students
may be drafted if President Johnson decides to send 200,000
more troops to Vietnam.

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The Spectrum

Friday, March 22, 1968

Taylor,
Harrell to
y

All Academic Union

'Poor People's Campaign' planning
D.C. protest lor negative income tax
“We’ve got to get

Students must “get together
and act now if there is to be any
hope in getting a decent education that can lead to some creativity in life,” urges Daniel Rosenthal.

Mr. Rosenthal is one of the organizers of All Academic Union,
which aims to gain support for
its ideas and “force the administration to do something.”

A meeting of the Union will
be held at 3:30 p.m. today in the
Fillmore Room. Jeremy Taylor
and William Harrell will speak.

Mr. Taylor, an administrative
assistant in the History Department, will discuss the' necessity
of having a student union.

Professor Harrell of the Sociology Department will talk
about the “bureaucratic mess-up
of faculty” being fired* Mr. Rosenthal explained.
Specific programs for reforming the educational structure include:
-co-operative education;
—experimental college as a daytime degree-bearing program;
—redefinition of “full-time undergraduate student”;
—co-operative bookstore and food

services.
“We don’t want to alienate the
faculty,” Mr. Rosenthal said. He
encourages them to work closely
with the All Academic Union in
achieving Its goals.

:ess to

teed annual income for the poor
of this nation.” The wish to see
this end fulfilled demands most
of the energies of Rev. Frederick
D. Kirkpatrick. He is a field secretary for the Southern Christian
Leadership Conference (SCLC)
and head of the New York project of the “Poor People’s Campaign.” However, Rev. Kirkpatrick consented to come to Buffalo in order to take part in the
“Strike for Knowledge
Stop
the War.”
In an interview here Tuesday,
Rev. Kirkpatrick explained the
nature of his project for the
poor.
The idea of the “Poor People’s
Campaign” originated at the desk
of Dr. Martin Luther King, head
of the SCLC. Rev. Kirkpatrick is
—

currently organizing in New York

of “getting people to march from

climax with a march on Wash-

Mississippi.”
The Negro minister is also , an
advocate of open housing. He
said that "if Chicago did not pass
an open housing bill the (Democratic National) convention should
not be held there.”
Poetry and folksongs were in
eluded at the meeting at the
Church. Rev. Kirkpatrick himself sang several original songs
about the plight of the poor and
the struggle for freedom. The
New Order, a local folk group,
also performed, singing such
songs as “Don’t You Want Somebody to Love” and “For What It’s

ington April 22. According to
plan, the participants of the
march are supposed to “pitch
camp” in the city of Washington
all summer, if necessary
until Congress takes positive
action on a bill which guarantees
an annual income to every U.S.
—

—

citizen.

D.C. shanty-town
Rev. Kirkpatrick spoke of
“building a shanty-town in Washington with hundreds of thousands of people there.” He called
the march “the last desperate
stand before the revolution oc
curs.” The march will have a
national scope; Rev. Kirkpatrick,
speaking at the University Presbyterian Church Tuesday, spoke

Worth.”
One of the poets reading his
works was William Little, who
read from the volume Book of
Days, to be published sooq.

NSA: How to appeal re-classification Students, faculty have chance
WASHINGTON (CPS)—Following is the text of a one-page
sheet on how to appeal draft
classifications being circulated to
campuses by the Natioinal Stu-

dent Association.

In June 1968, the Government will say to graduating seniors and first-year grad students:
“You are now 1A, you must serve
in the armed forces.” In doing
so, the government has defied
the entire educational community, which urged a continuation
of the graduate deferment and
•

a lottery of all eligible men, from
19 to 26.

Will you appeal this decision? The National Student Association urges you and all other
men eligible for induction, whether you plan ultimately to serve
or to resist, to appeal your 1A
•

reclassification.
•

take:

These are the steps you can

1. You can apply in writing for
a continuation of “2S” from your

dateline news. Mar. 22

local board in writing, then

through a personal appearance.
2. If your local board rejects
you, you can ask for reconsideration in writing, which the board
may ignore, then through a second personal appearance, which
they may not grant.
3. If you lose twice, you can
appeal to your state board, first
meeting with the Government
Appeals Agent, who will explain
your appeal rights, then appeal
in writing.
4. If you lost at the state board
level, and if there are any dissenting votes, you can appeal to
the Presidential Board of Appeals.
If you lose a “2S” on appeal
you can reapply for a “2A”, or
occupational deferment, on the
grounds that your research in
graduate school is in the nation-

al interest.

JERUSALEM—Israeli troops and tanks smashed into Jordan and
clashed with Jordanian forces early yesterday in reprisal for Arab
sabotage attacks, a government communique said.
It said the Israeli forces drove at “saboteurs concentrations”
clustered near the Jordan-Israel ceasefire line reached in the June
5-10 Middle East war.
At Amman, a Jordanian communique broadcast by Amman Radio
said Jordanian forces were fighting back. The broadcast said four
Israeli tanks and several halftrack vehicles had been destroyed. It
also said helicopters were supporting the Israeli attack.
ALBANY—An “open campus” recruitment policy will be the rule
at State University installations no matter how much students protest,
Samuel B. Gould, chancellor of the university, said Wednesday.
Any change in the policy allowing open recruitment by organizations ranging from the military to the Dow Chemical Co. would come
only if the safety of individuals were menaced, Gould said.
By the same token, he said, the right of students to protest recruitment in connection with the Vietnam war will continue.
SAIGON—President Nguyen Van Thieu announced South Vietnam
will draft 135,000 men by the end of the year, necessitating the induction of 18-year-olds previously exempted.
STOCKHOLM—The Swedish government yesterday blamed the
United States for failing to end the Vietnam War.
Neither the Viet Cong nor Hanoi was criticized in the 22-page
nt read t0 the Riksda Parliament by Foreign Minister
Torstpn
misson The occasion was the annual foreign policy debate.
United States can only hold out the prospect of a war pror years and years, which
must entail additional sacrifice
of human rlives,
the foreign minister said.

t!rf

,

(

L

§

5. Appeal for occupational deferment to your local board in
writing, or through a personal

appearance.
6. If denied, ask for a personal
appearance and reconsideration.
7. Appeal to your state board
—if you attend school in a state
other than your home state, ask
that this appeal be transfered to
the state board having jurisdiction where you attend school.
8. If there are any dissenting
votes, appeal to the Presidential
Board.
For further information, buy
How to Stay Out of the Army, by
Conrad Lynn (Grove Press) or
•

to design, develop new courses

A creative experiment in curriculum-planning will soon begin.
Students and faculty will have
the “unique opportunity” to initiate courses they feel are "important and relevant to their
learning interests.”
The pilot project was designed
by Student Association President
Stewart Edelstein and Nancy
Coleman, presidential aide.

A bulletin board will be centrally located in Norton Hall.
Any student and faculty member can post a name and description of a course which is not
presently being taught.
With “an enrollment” of only
10 to 20 students and a faculty
member or teaching assistant, the
class will meet this semester to
plan their curriculum for the
fall semester 1968. The semester’s work could include readings, field trips and other activities relevant to the course
topic.

Apply for credit
Every proposed course will
have the option to apply for
credit by submitting a proposal
■M pew

UL v
la B

■!

1

I

■

Elections In W.N.Y.
in Poetry, Drama, Film,
Avant Fiction, Original
Prints, Raproduetlawa.

contact;

1. Americans Friends Service
Committee; 2. U. S. National
Student Association.

MAfria JiTOtATyi li t M lilJ

to the College Curriculum Planning Committee before the end
of April. Such courses will have
to meet certain requirements as
to the frequency of meetings and

the number of credit hours re-

quested.

The credit will become part
of the student’s semester load.
A similar arrangement with the
departments will be made for
teaching credit for the faculty
member or teaching assistant.
Classes may also meet as noncredit seminars similar to Experimental College courses. For class
topics not having the sufficient
number of persons, arrangements
will be made for the interested
student to work independently
with a faculty advisor on research projects.

The Bulletin Board proposal
has been endorsed by University
College and the Council of Provosts and University-Wide Deans.
Mr. Edelstein would like to see
it become a permanent part of
the academic institution for “students and faculty to directly affect and influence their academic
experiences at the University.”

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The Spectrum

Page Four

The simple goal: Honesty
Students, more than any other class of individuals, talk
about morals, ethics and honesty. Students are tired of
listening to crooked politicians and self-interested businessmen; they generally abhor the rabble that rises from a

These same students, however, are products of that
society, and for all their questings, they have done so little
to make themselves different.
The university is a microcosm of a larger existence. Students rebel against a government that lies and misinforms,
and, at the same time, they cheat on exams or plagerize a
term paper. They call politicians opportunists, while, at the
same time, they seek a degree primarily because it means
more money for them when they get out.
Students espouse “love not war,” but they have no love
for those who disagree with them. They condemn their
parents because parents are narrow-minded, but they are
so much like their parents.
The motivating force for so much of what the student
does is self-interest. In this sense, there is little that differentiates the student from any other person.
But, given all these similarities, there is one over-riding
factor which sets the student apart: He knows something is
wrong. He knows something is wrong with his world and
his role in it. He knows it, but he lives it just the same.
At least this is an indication that there is a chance for
a more honest world—someday. As long as men are dishonest, there will be war, prejudice, poverty and civil unrest.
To seek the elimination of all these in a lifetime is, perhaps,
too idealistic, just as it is too idealistic to believe that the
student is more honest than his fellow man.
Let us hope, at least, that the student will be continually
hunted by an ideal life, because within him there is a
possibility of it.

Strike is over; war goes on
This week’s Strike for Knowledge—Stop the War program effectively pre-empted the routine activities at this
University.

Discussion reigned supreme as countless classes shifted
guns to talk about the war, and panel after panel probed
the American involvement in South East Asia—the powergrabbing kind of involvement that has cost so many lives,
and wasted the resources of rich and poor alike. Most of
the focus was on the history of the United States-Vietnamese
relationship and how that history has been distorted.
The Strike for Knowledge was a worthwhile program, but
we fear that many will forget its message too soon.
For three days hundreds of students participated, directly or indirectly, in a protest of United States foreign policy. But now its over.
We’re afraid that about the only persons who will surely
remember these days are the maintenance men. (The litter
was terrific.)
The rest of us can go back to being ordinary students.
Teachers can go back to teaching the material they’re being
paid to cover. The University can now continue “business as
usual.”
The Strike for Knowledge is over. But the war goes on.
Let’s hope many have learned something these three days,
and that some at least will continue the protest.
If even that much is accomplished, then the Strike for
Knowledge is a success.

Spring Festival—period
It’s a good thing we had some spring, for the Spring
Arts Festival—at least we can say the week was 50% successful. If anything was sorely missed during the Festival,
it was art.
It is difficult to believe that a committee, which repeatedly claims to have worked very hard, could come up with
nothing better than mediocre exhibits and performers who
failed to do any worthwhile performing.
There is little doubt that this year’s Festival was a tremendous come-down from Festivals of previous years. Supposedly taking a “comprehensive look at the use of contemporary media,” the Festival has been hard-put to take a
comprehensive look at anything.
The Festival continues through Sunday, but there is little
indication that the remainder of the program can redeem
a shallow week. Let’s hope the weather remains fair and
sunny. It has been, by far, the most enjoyable part of the
Spring Arts Festival.

0

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The five horsemen

Readers
writings

’

sugar

from linen rags

Larry Loltzclau)
The nearly 1000 students who attended Wednesday’s forum, “The Draft and Its Alternatives,”
were given a poignant reminder that university
students and ghetto blacks are not the only niggers
of the Great Society, and above all, that there is
indeed hope for a qualitative change of attitude,
especially among the youth, in this country.
A former Bryant and Stratton busines student,
“discovered” by guest speaker Mitchell Goodman
earlier in the day, told of his experiences in turning
in his draft card last October and refusing induction
into the armed forces last February.
Gordon Rhodes, who left Bryant and Stratton because the business world “had no ethics. is at first
superficial glance, one of the apparent irretrievables, who, because of family condition and/or education, appears to be typical of a segment of the
population which provides the bodies for the military-industrial machine.
Mr. Rhodes told a remarkable tale of how he—the son of a truckdriver—from a small town in
northern Niagara County, came to exemplify quite
unconsciously and modestly the epitome of what it
means to be a responsible citizen in a political de”

mocracy.

And he put us all to shame.
Intellectual snobbery il a prevailing tendency in
the university community, and Mr. Rhodes made it
clear to cynics and campus activists alike that all
too often there is a forgotten, but important segment of this society that is not automatically lost
to the whim of the authoritarian machine, merely
because it represents a less educated minority.
Far too often the cynic claims that all is lost because people fail to become aware of the realities
of their oppressed condition; there is no hope for
democracy because people want to be ruled, people
don’t want to think.
Campus activists have a tendency to concentrate
ail too often on two things: The black community,
and the university community—as both the most
oppressed segment of society, and, following from
that, the ones most ripe for the development of a
revolutionary consciousness.
That is where talk of “guerrilla warfare” comes
in.

It is a result of a lack of realization—or at least
the need to explore the possibility—that perhaps
the real reason this country is so immune to democratic social change is because of communication; People simply don’t know where anything is
at—they live in their dream world existence of
suburbia not by choice, but because to them it is
the real world.
It is easy to charge co-option with the system, or
call for an extereme radicalization of tactics (i.e.,
violence) because of a lack of genuine faith in the
human psyche—not the American psyche, but the
human psyche—to respond positively to situations.
Because of the communication vacuum where most
of us live our lives, we are not given a chance to
respond as humans, we are channeled into being
breathing automatons.

The draft resistance of Mr. Rhodes is a dramatic
example of the innate infallibility of the ‘subtle’
systems of oppression that have been developed
in this country. There is hope for the country.
If consciousness can awaken on an individual
level, it can awaken on a collective level. What is
needed is a stimulus.
Mr, Rhodes noted that since he refused induction, people in his hometown have gradually begun
to question the War, and more importanly the system that has somehow forced this clean-cut ‘average’ product of their. community, to face a jail
term on the basis of his own democratic conscience.

LBJ planning 'force' election?
To the Editor:

While most observers describe the results from

the recent appearance of Sec. of State Rusk before
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee as a “stalemate” since neither hawks nor doves could claim
victory, a more accurate assessment reveals the
launching of an offensive move by the Johnson
Administration. Sec. Rusk promised the Nation a

sustained military expansion of the Vietnam War.
This means, then, the casualties will go well beyond the present pace of 2000 American deaths
per month.
But while the Nation debates the merit of an
American takeover in Vietnam regardless of the
costs, little attention Is being given to the possibility of President Johnson taking over the Nation.
The President shows increasing contempt for congressional and Constitutional restraints, insisting
he alone will do what he wishes in conducting his
war upon Vietnam. Now that the Bay of Tonkin
Resolution has been revealed as a lie to the American people, President Johnson may very well be
preparing an equal lie to the Nation to justify his
assuming complete military control over America
just as he has attempted a military takeover of
Vietnam.
It seems plausible to suggest the distinct possibility that just as the President is responding to
his defeats abroad by expanding his military war
in Vietnam, he will be strongly tempted to respond
to his political defeats at home by a military takeover of the Nation. Could it be possible that Lyndon Johnson now plans to forego a “normal” November election in order to remain in office
through force rather than by the choice of the
American people?
Sincerely,
Sidney M. Willhelm

Associate Professor
Elwin H. Powell
Associate Professor
Bill J. Harrell
Lecturer
every
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The Spectrum

Friday, March 22, 1968

Wants dorm privacy respected

By Interlandi

BELOW OLYMPUS

To the Editor:
When we first heard of the ‘Strike for Knowledge,’ we felt that it would be a good educational
experience for the students of this campus. The
intelligent discussion of vital contemporary issues
is a basic tenet of our educational system. However,
while eating lunch in the Tower Cafeteria March
19, we were exposed to a display by a group of
so-called students which can be termed at best as
raw emotionalism contributing nothing to the interchange of ideas.
As resident students, the dormitory is our home
away from home. We therefore feel that we should
be allowed the same courtesies in the dormitory
that we are allowed in our own homes. Consequently, we feel that this invasion of the Tower Cafeteria was an invasion of what might be referred to
as our “dining room.” We are not trying to say
that these people should not be allowed to express
their views; we are merely saying that they should
have the courtesy and intelligence to use discretion
before invading the privacy of others.
Too many people have the' notion that the
residence halls are just some buildings on campus
and that they should have the run of them. We
feel that it is time that these people were reminded
that the residence halls are exactly what the name
implies, that is, places to live for many students
during the academic year. We only ask that we be
allowed the privileges that any person is allowed
in his own home.
Joseph A. Fontanella
Sam J. D’Agostino

The

grUmp

by STEESE

-

I have been informed by letter that some dim
and befuddled soul managed to read last week’s
le German restaurant
column abou
service because of my over-hairy appearance and
see it as being anti-German. This is an idiotic interif any
pretation, as I would hope most of you
who read this with regularity should know.
What I apparently failed to communicate last
week was the irony that this type of incident should
occur in a situation where either this individual
who may even not have been German or the owner, should have been able to see the danger involved
in any type of behavior which restricts and constrains another’s behavior to some sort of group
norm or standard as flimsily based as the present
prejudice against beards and hair in general seems
to be.
I mean I have this funny feeling that any night
now various and sundry patriotic groups are going
to fan out across the land and stealthily defuzz all
statues of such notorious beard-wearers as Lincoln,
Grant, Lee, and all the rest of the historic figures
you can think of. I will tread lightly around the
list of religious figures who might also come under
—

—

—

—

fire.

impoliteness and refusal
I said such behavior
to serve people who offend you only by their physical appearance, not involving dress, amount of b.o.
—

smacked of totalitarianism. It
does, damn it. But the point is that I was not slamthe one that you
ming Germans, but this society
or anything else

Growing groundswell for a peace

candidate!

—

—

is the
and I have been forcibly culterized into
totalitarian offender. As I said, I don’t wish to call
the gentlemen who bounced me, correction, threatened to bounce me next time, a Fascist. In his own
system he was probably trying to help me, not hurt
me. He wants, as so many people seem to, me to
grow up and become a man and take my rightful
place in this society. Which I can only do by agreeinig to behave and regulate my appearance within
certain rather rigid limits.
This is a form of Fascism I suppose, the desire
to stamp out the different, the upsetting, the
troublesome reminders that there are ways of life
other than your own. Couple I knew moved recently because of difficulty with the landlord.,
Seems he wasn’t sure they were married in the
first place, and that secondaly anyone female
who stayed overnight was there only to participate
in an orgy.
Did he throw them out because he disapproved
of their behavior? No, I would be more inclined to
think, after hearing him bellowing about downstairs, that he threw them out because he wasn’t
getting in on the fun. That it existed only in his
own mind is beside the point. The point is that
being different in appearance seems to give most
people a target at which to project all the crappy
images and desires that this frustrating and dehumanizing society causes to ferment and grow in
perhaps I should
an amazing number of heads
say minds.
The culture is filled with these folk myths now,
it probably always has been. Long-haired girls are
promiscuous, everybody with beards smokes marijuana, etc., etc., etc. This culture is stupid in many
ways, but it is not alone. Stupidity and fear seem,
after all, to be relatively permanent components of
the human race. Ignoring skin, religion, and virtually all other variables that one could use, is
using, and has used, allow me to promulgate
Steese’s First Law Concerning the Distribution of
People In Any Given Population: The good ones
are good, the bad ones are bad, and almost everybody fits somewhere in between.
If anyone is daft enough to think I am going
to waste my time in hating anyone on the basis
of artificial barriers such as religion or nationality
I can only sympathize with them, for I assume they
do find it necessary to use these labels.
The number of people that I am personally able
to get along with on my sort of extended basis is
so low that I simply can not afford to start making
arbitrary cuts on the basis of artificial nomenclatures. That I tend to include nationalism under
the head of artificial is an indication of my political bias. Or perhaps an ideological bias, tending
to be apolitical. The “Any Given Population” referred to in the above law refers to any country,
or any race, or any continent, or the whole, silly,
screwed-up, confused ball of wax.
I discussed at some length a while back what
I saw as being the more obvious stupidities involved in telling me, or anyone else, that they owe
anything to their country per se. The major point
was this; being different in any way and having
to grow up in this culture at this time one earns
his citizenship. Someplace along the line I stopped
Please turn to Page 6
—

'Scale' not quite accurate
To the Editor:

This is not meant to denigrate the monumental
amount of work that went into the Student Course
and Teacher Evaluation; you should still buy yourself a copy. But in fairness to those who read it
summarily, the following point should be made.
Percentages, as we all know, can be misleading;
but so can the “representative” comments. If, as in
the case with many large lectures, only 50 out of
160 people go to the lecture, it doesn’t take a
mathematical genius to figure out they probably
like it more than many who aren’t attending. So
what happens is that you have representative comments of a truncated survey group; divergent comments of people who did not like the course and
did not go, but who did take the time to write out
an evaluation on their own time are hence in the
minority, hence not ‘representative’
hence not included in the listings in the book. This built-in bias
is unfortunate
there is more to the conclusions
than meets the eye in black and white, and this
should be kept in mind.
—

—

Steve Halpern

Amazed at

sex misconceptions

To the Editor:
I was astonished by the misconceptions which
the students at this University display with regard
to premarital sex. Factors which were overlooked
during the forum of March 11, included the fact
that, exclusive of heart disease and cancer, venereal disease is one of the major health problems
of our country. Also conveniently overlooked was
the fact that syphilis causes blindness, mental retardation, and several other defects in the progeny
of those afflicted for up to six generations; and
there is no known cure for this desease.

With regard to lasting human relationships,
of every three marriages ends in divorce. One
out of every eight children has only one parent as
a result of divorce or
illegitimate birth, and one
of every fifteen children
has no parents and is
forced to live on funds from
the state.
Also, contraceptives are not infallible. Last year
approximately 500,000 illegitimate births
occurred
in this country alone.
This is supposed to be an
utl
of hl Sher Earning, a college
not a

one

“

0

°u

,

we “intelligent” people
to add to the suffering and
stupidity of this
world instead of helping the oppressed and comforting the homeless.
going

"J

Charles E. Brown
Class of ’68

Writers: Please be brief. Letters should not exceed
300 words. All letters must be signed and the address
and telephone number of the writer must be included. Positive verification of authorship will be made
before a letter is printed.
Letters will be kept in strict confidence.
The Spectrum will use initials or pen name,
if
requested. Bui anonymous
letters are never used.
The Spectrum reserves the right to edit or delete
material submitted for publication, bat the intent of
tetters will not be changed.

H. r&gt;P
by

Linda Laufer

Today I went on my first journey to a different era and
country (a sneaky device my creator can use because I’m a
spirit as well as a knight). I didn’t really want to go, but
she insisted, so . . .
Arriving in this strange place, I gave my usual greeting,
“Hi ho. ‘Tis I.” However, no one answered my call and I
decided to ask a bearded gentleman wearing a plumed hat
where I was.
“Sir, could you tell me in what
land I have arrived?”
“Prithee, do you mind not interrupting,” he replied. “I’m addressing a meeting of groundhogs and squirrels on the virtues
of being a burgher and a SAP.”
Realizing I would receive no
help from him, I ventured into
a building—a castle owned by
someone called Norton Hail. Before I could greet anyone, I spied
a group of odd-looking creatures
with smoke pouring from their
mouths. I had never seen any
humans such as this, so I deduced
they must be a new type of dragon. Fearing they would harm
someone, I charged into their
midst, swinging my sword . . .
When I awoke, I was in a
small room with soft padded
walls. My arms were pinned down
and I struggled to free them
from the white jacket.
Then a voice said, “I see you’re
conscious. Perhaps now we can
discuss your problem. How long
have you hated your mother?”
“What?”
“It’s quite obvious from your
aggressive behavior that you
deeply resent someone, quite obviously your mother who suppressed you. Tell me about her.”
I thought I’d better humor him

Quotes in

and answered, “Before meeting
my father, she was a princess
who moonlighted as a maiden in
distress.”
Interrupting, he said, “Your
problem seems to be much deeper than I originally believed. You
have visions of being a medieval
knight. I should have guessed it
by your unusual apparel. You’re
protesting the draft, right? This
is your way of saying you won’t
go.”
“Won’t go where?” I innocently asked.
He then started talking about
some place called Vietnam where
people are fighting about who
owns which rice paddy. Then he
said something about Hawks and
Doves having a fight in a Birdcage. All this reminded me of
home. Believing he was the country’s storyteller, I thought he
might like to hear some of my
experiences. I told him about
Mistyview Castle, the election,
and the subsequent rioting.
I noticed that while I was recounting my adventures, he kept
mumbling something about a
strange case and wrote down everything I said. Finally, he rose
to leave and remarked, “You’re
quite an unusual fellow—different from Napolean and Lincoln
for a change. Very refreshing.”

the news

WASHINGTON—President Johnson, stepping up his attack on
critics of his Vietnam policy with a plea to stand fast in Vietnam:
“Let no American mistake the enemy’stmajor offensive now. It
is aimed squarely at the citizens of America. It is an assault designed
to crack America’s will.”
NEW YORK—Mayor John V. Lindsay when asked by a student
whether he could support Richard Nixon, the leading Republican
presidential candidate:
“There is a very simple answer to that. Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller will run and win.”
WASHINGTON—Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy, D-Minn., in answer
to a question of whether he would support Sen. Robert F. Kennedy,
D-N.Y., if the first ballot of the Democratic National Convention
shows he cannot himself'defeat President Johnson:
“I think there is' no question that I would have to support Sen.
Kennedy whose position has been the same as mine along the way.”

—

—

It is the policy of Th» Spectrum to report the
news fully and impartially in the news pages,
to express the opinions of the newspaper only
in the editorial pages and to publish all sides

of

important

controversial issues.

'Without expression,

freedom of expression is meeomgless.'

—

�Pag*

Friday, March 22, 1968

The Spectrum

Six

Liberal arts placement series planned
tunities. Specific job leads which
these women may act upon will
be offered. Mrs. Bishop will also
discuss some of the qualifications
for particular jobs.

“Job Opportunities for Liberal
will be discussed
today by Mrs. Joan Bishop, direetor of Placement at Wellesley
Arts Graduates”

College.

note speaker at a series of vocational group meetings for junior
and senior liberal arts women at
1, 2 and 3 p.m. in room 232, Nor-

sored by Cap and Gown, Senior
Women’s Honor Society in conjunction with Miss Jeannette
Scudder, Dean of Women, and
the Office of University Placement and Career Guidance Serv-

The emphasis of the program
will be on how to obtain a job
and practical information in job
seeking. The meetings will not
stress what a job involves, but
how to find employment oppor-

ices.

ton Hall.

Mrs. Bishop is a graduate of
Wellesley College and received a

certificate in personnel administration given by the Harvard

until

May

31.

One of the outstanding inorganic chemists in the world, Dr.

from 11 a.m. to noon in room 7,
Acheson Hall Annex.
The lectures are open to the
public although they are specifically geared to the level of the
graduate chemistry student. The
development of the coordination
theory, hydrolysis and alcoholysis, and coordination characteristics of the various metal
cations are among the topics to
be discussed.

Schwarzenbach will lecture each
Monday, Wednesday and Friday

U.S.

Dr.

enemy...

is

can officials who attempt to rationalize our position in terms of
the future. “I think there’s something fundamentally monstrous”
in the thought that one can ever
hope to rebuild after the “dayto-day tragedy” that is Vietnam,

I have no overwhelming desire
to convert the rest of the world
to the American experiment. I
A reception for Mrs. Bishop at am content to remain a citizen
4 p.m, in the Charles Room will
of this country because it probfollow the meetings. All inter- ably has the greatest potential
ested students, both male and for individual freedom. Note the
female, are invited to attend.
word potential, please.
a reservation, call
Mrs. Farewell, University PlaceTo make

ment and Career Guidance Service, at 831-3311.

the region that is rich with vital

unchangeable,
Citing our historic interest in

COMPUTER
DATING WORKS
Write

Can Work

For

carboxylic

acids.

Kennedy.”

years.

Mr. Schoenman praised the
North Vietnamese display of
“heroism unparalled in history”
and advocated the “justifiable defeat” of American “oppression”
in Vietnam.

'Ideological motivations'
Marvin Gettleman, editor of
The Vietnam Reader, a documentary study of the conflict,
described United States “imperialism” as part of a world wide
revolution. Our involvement in
Southeast Asia is, he said, “motivated primarily by ideological
motivations” and is “based profoundly on American liberal values.”

We are opearting on the notion

that the “yellow dwarfs” of Asia
(citing a term allegedly used by
Lyndon Johnson in a 1948 Senate
speech) are incapable of generating revolutionary movements
without the support of Moscow or
China, but their capability has
been proven in Vietnam, he
claimed.

Mr. Gettleman concluded with
the observation that the root of
the revolutionary conflict sweeping the globe is our supposition
that the “white man’s way to economic stability is the only way
and we must supply it.”

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LIVELY SET

I earned my citizenship by existing for nigh onto thirty years
in this culture and fulfilling all
the legal demands made on me.
Having done this it is my peculiar feeling that I have the right
to live in peace and solitude if
I so desire, and further that my
rights of citizenship should be
protected by some sort of intelligent and reasonable leadership
which is capable of recognizing
its non-divine origin and protecting me without destroying others,
or driving my country bankrupt,
or being so unable to recognize
internal storm signals that it becomes demostically unsafe to live
in.
I do not like being a target for
other nationalists the world over,
and not being able to say a word
since their fears of my country

are probably justified.

is not one “that changes with a
Gene McCarthy or Robert
. . .

Schell recently wrote a
series of articles describing his

Ralph Schoenman, director of
the Bertrand Russell Peace
Foundation, labelled our Southeast Asian policy deep-seated and

Dr. Schwarzenbach is particularly well known for his work
on metal complexes and equilibria studies with metal-amino-poly-

He enumerated the key episodes in our involvement, tracing the events of a war continuously fought for more than 20

Mr,

observations in Vietnam for the
New Yorker magazine.

his undergraduate and graduate
studies at ETH and was awarded
the PhD degree in 1928. From
1929 to 1955, with the exception
of 1951, he was at the University
of Zurich, becoming a Full Professor of Chemistry in 1948. In
1955, he returned to ETH and assumed his present position.

Continued from Page 1

resources, he said that our policy

he said.

It

Schwarzenbach completed

grump

ciations.

Chemistry lecture series to be held
Dr. Gerold Schwarzenbach, director of the Laboratories for
Inorganic and Analytical Chemistry at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) is
currently a Distinguished Visiting Professor here. He was appointed by the Department of
Chemistry and will remain here

The

Graduate School of Business and
Radcliffe College. She has been a
president of the American PerContinued from Page 5
sonnel and Guidance Association
and has been active in the East- being an
American and became
ern Personnel and Guidance Asso-

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Does this mean that I want this
country to stop being an international power? Do I particularly
want to stop breathing? No,
thank you kindly. But what you
are telling me is that there is
only one way to be an international power and that is to
fight, and fight, and fight, and
fight. Is it true then that the
only way this country can be
important internationally is to
build a stockpile of military issue caskets wherever something
occurs with which we do not

agree?

Bullshit.
For openers try considering us
as part of the planet for a change.
The strongest and richest member of the family, remember?
Would it cost any less to turn
all those farmers who have been
controlled and soil banked to the
nth degree loose, and ship the
food around the world to those
who need it than it does to run

the Vietnam war? Would it hurt
if Detroit came up with 8.5 million cars and .5 million cheap
tractors to he sent around the
world every yeat? I know, politically and economically naive
—

right?

And the Vietnam war is a safe,
sane, conservative, historically
precedented way of doing the job

in international relations, which
will probably be adapted for use
in certain large domestic urban
areas this summer.
I suppose it is greedy, but it
would be very nice to be an
American again, and be able to
have an unfashionable and justified pride in a country that is
able to help as well as destroy.

A wish that seems to recede
further every year in some ways
it is true, but being an outsider
in this culture teaches one how
to hope if nothing else. But even
forced optimism gets a little
dry sometimes, especially in the
face of insanity. And as foi 1 this
country’s stupidity, may I close
by suggesting that there seems
to be a most interesting possible
correlation between those who
feel that the Negroes should be
strongly condemned for any use
of violence to get what they
want, and those who feel most
strongly that the only right and
honorable thing for the United
States to do is stay in the war
until the last Vietnamese is dead.
People as groups I can’t dislike, there are certain leaders in
this country at this time that I
can come quite close to hating

though.

Threshold
A Meditation
Midnight. Sat.,

March

23rd

to dawn. Sun., March 24th

electronic music

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The Spectrum

Friday, March 22, 1968

in photos

On Campus MaxShuIman The strike

iNv

(By the author of “Rally Round the Flag, Boys!”,
“Dobie Gillis,” etc.)

MONEY: THE STORY OF AN ENGINEER
We all know,, of course, that in this age of technology
engineering senior is receiving fabulous offers of
employment, but do we realize just how fabulous these
offers are? Do we comprehend just how keenly industry
is competing? To illustrate, let me cite the true and typical case of E. Pluribus Ewbank, a true and typical senior.
One day last week while strolling across the M.I.X
campus, E. Pluribus was hailed by a portly and prosperous man who sat in a yellow convertible studded with
precious gem stones. “Hello,” said the portly and prosperous man, “I am Portly Prosperous, president of
American Xerographic Data Processing and Birth Control, Incorporated. Are you a senior?”
“Yes, sir,” said E. Pluribus.
“Do you like this car?” said Portly.
“Yes, sir,” said E. Pluribus.
“It’s yours,” said Portly.
“Thanks, hey,” said E. Pluribus.
“Do you like Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades?”
said Portly.
“What clean living, clean shaven American does not?”
said E. Pluribus.
“Here is a pack,” said Portly. “And a new pack will
be delivered to you every twelve minutes as long as you
live.”
“Thanks, hey,” said E. Pluribus.
“Would your wife like a mink coat?” said Portly.
“I feel sure she would,” said E. Pluribus, “but I am
not married.”
“Do you want to be ?” said Portly.
“What clean living, clean shaven American does not?”
said E. Pluribus.
Portly pressed a button on the dashboard of the convertible and the trunk opened up and out came a nubile
maiden with golden hair, rosy knees, a perfect disposition, and the appendix already removed. “This is Svetlana O’Toole,” said Portly. “Would you like to marry her?”
“Is her appendix out ?” said E. Pluribus.
“Yes,” said Portly.
“Okay, hey,” said E. Pluribus.
"Congratulations,” said Portly. “And for the happy
bride, a set of 300 monogrammed prawn forks.”
“Thanks, hey,” said Svetlana.
every

—Y«l»t

The Guerrilla Theatre attracts large crowd in Norton Fountain area Tuesday. The group performed
anti-Viet skits, after having marched through the
Union

Wow's
em

—Bina

—Tanzman

Mitchell Goodman

Dr. Mark Ross
a High Energy

“Now then,” said Portly to E. Pluribus, “let us get
down to business. My company will start you at $75,000
a year. You will retire at full salary upon reaching the
age of 26. We will give you an eleven-story house made of
lapis lazuli, each room to be stocked with edible furniture.
Xour children will receive a pack of Personna Super
a ?Bs Steel Blades every twelve minutes as long as they
;P
snail live. We will keep your teeth in good repair and
also
tne teeth of your wife and children
unto the third generayour dentist a pack of Personna Super
g*.
® la
Steel
des every twelve minutes as long as
an ttlereafter to his heirs and assigns...
nt ou to think carefully about this offer.
m
r
thousand dollars in smaI1 marked Ml, whi £ p aces you
under no obligation whatsoever

Physicist

from the Uni-

versity of Michigan, spoke Wednesday
at noon, in Hochstetter Hall, on the role
of the scientist in the atmosphere of
war politics.

novelist indicted simultaneously with
with Dr. Benjamin Spock for his active
draft resistance, speaks to a 9.00 a.m.
group of strikers.

a

\t

-lf,f,

,

r

*

f°

”

1
seems pe
“rib*
%SS**
But there
something
not

;
pi
rlunbus.

a fair offer,” said E.
you should know T an
am
eo tn M r
t

tis

In fact I don’t
J
walked over here to admire the
at
H
Joyce
majoring in
Kilmer.”
"Oh,” said Portly.
!
“I guess don’t get to keep the money
and the convertible and the Personnas and the broad do I’” ..ain w
saia
Pluribus.
"Of course you do,” said Portly. “And if you’d
u a like the
job, my offer still stands.”
an

engineer.

Tot"n

Tret.ftHarVard
*

-

©

*

*

1968. U&gt;, Shulnum

*

Speaking of wealth, if you want a truly rich, truly
luxurious shave, try Personna Blades, regular
or injector, with Burma-Shave, regular or menthol. There’s a

champagne shave on a beer budget!

—Walluk

In
church

The New Order perform at Folk-Rock Poetry
Service, held Tuesday evening at the University
Presbyterian Church.

�Friday, March 22, 1968

The Spectrum

Page Eight

official bulletin
The Official Bulletin is an au-

are undecided

ment or who

as to

Action line

March 26
—Ernst &amp; Ernst
Pittsburgh Public Schools
City School District of Cohoes
Norwich City Schools
—

Hall, attention Mrs. Fischer, before 2:00 p.m. the Friday prior
to the week of publication. Student organization notices are not

accepted for publication.

University College
Advance
Registration, March 18 May 8,
-

-

1968
At the request of Dean
Welch, students will register in
order of class, priority being given to upper classmen. In addition the University College advisement staff has elected to allow
students on strict probation to
preregister, but these students
must see their adviser before
—

registering.
The following schedule will be

observed:
March 13 May 8
Current
juniors and continuing seniors
may pick up registration materials in Room 114, Diefendorf
-

—

Hall.
March

18

•

May

8

—

Current

juniors and continuing seniors
will register after securing signature of faculty adviser. It is to
your advantage to register during the week reserved for you,
but you may register through
May 8.
Upper division students who
have been rejected by a depart-

lege adviser to complete regis-

tration.
sophoMarch 25 April 12
mores will register. Sophomores
may sign their own registration
cards, but must see a University
College adviser to discuss selection of major and to make application to a department, if appropriate. Students who do not
comply with this request will not
have records forwarded to the
department of their choice in
June. Sophomores may see advisers as follows. Appointments can
be made beginning March 25.
March 25-29
G through Q
April 8-12
A through F
April 15 May 8
Freshmen
will register. These students must
have cards signed by a University College adviser before registering. They may see their advisers as follows:
April 15-19
R through Z
H through Q
April 22-26
April 29-May 3 A through G
Of interest to all undergraduate
please consult your adviser for
information regarding procedures
for resigning with the new W/P
and W/F.

March 25-29
The Department of Statistics
presents Dr. Herman Chernoff,
Visiting Distinguished Professor.
Dr. Chernoff is a professor of
statistics at Stanford University
and president of the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics. He will
lecture according to the following schedule:

Placement interviews

March 25

-

-

—

—

—

Appointments should be made
at least one week in advance of
the interviewing date if possible;
March 25
Whitehall Central Schools
West Hill School District

Student Testing Center Registration Schedule
Last Day
to Register

Application

Test
Date

Available

Admissions Test for Graduate
Study in Business (ATGSB)

Mar. 23

Apr.

College Level Exam
Graduate Record Exam
Graduate School Foreign
Language Proficiency

Mar. 30

Apr. 20
Apr. 27

Mar. 29

Apr.

National Teacher’s Exam

Mar. 22
Mar. 23

Apr. 6 316 Harriman
Apr. 6 School of Nursing

Pre-Nursing Exam

Apr.

2

6

316 Harriman &amp;
121 Crosby Hall
316 Harriman
316 Harriman

20 316 Harriman

March 27
The Torrington Co.
Spencerport Central Schools
Smithtown Central Schools
March 28
Erie County Dept, of Personnel
Pennsylvania Railroad
Medina Central Schools
Camden Central Schools
March 29
American Optical Co.
Industrial Division
District of Columbia
Public Schools

—

Scoring Multiple Choice

Questionnaires
March 26

Optimal Stochastic Control
and the Heat Equation

March 27

Optimal Stochastic Control

and the Two-Armed Bandit

March 29
Sequential Design of
Experiments
All lectures are 4 p.m., Room
14, 4244 Ridge Lea Road. In addition, an informal reception will
be held at 3:30 p.m. each day in
Room 51, 4244 Ridge Lea Road.
All who are interested are invited

to attend.

University Report
presents
Dr. Benjamin H. Lyndon, dean,
school of social welfare, whose
topic is “The School of Social
Welfare: Education of Relevant
Practitioners for the Future.” 9
a.m., Conference Theater, Norton
Hall.
—

HILLEL
Friday Eve. Service 7:40 P.M.
Sunday Supper $:30 P.M., by reservation

836-4540

CHOICE
ROAST BEEF

Do you often think it impossible to untangle the State University of Buffalo
bureaucracy? In cooperation with the Dean of Students 1 Office. The Spectrum is
sponsoring an ACTION LINE. Through ACTION LINE, individual students can get
an answer to a puzzling question, find out where and why .University decisions
are made, and get ACTION when change is indicated.

ACTION LINE will answer all questions of general interest which appear to
be pertinent to the student body. The Spectrum will include them in its special
ACTION LINE weekly column. Each inquiry will be thoroughly investigated and
answered individually. The name of the individual originating the inquiry will
not be published.

Q. Will there be any action taken at a result of the findings of
the Teacher Evaluation Questionnaire?
A. Mr. Stewart Edelstein, president of the Student Senate, stated
that the purpose of the Teacher Evaluation Questionnaire was to
effect change in both curriculum and faculty where the need was
seen to exist. From this point on, now that the findings are available,
further action will be dependent upon the interest, participation,
and push of students, faculty, and individual departments to make
whatever changes are recommended.
Q. Who services the Postal Pagoda? Stamps are not always available and even after a complaint is phoned in, the supply is not
replenished for a while. The instructions on how to operate the
change machine are not explicit. Could they be clarified? Also, why
no 6 cents stamps? And, who chose that particular location for the

A. The Pagoda was built and is being serviced wholly by the
U.S. Post Office Department, and the building and equipment belong
to them. The University supplies only the power to operate the
installation. The site selection was made after an exhaustive study,
by both University and postal personnel, of a/ variety of locations and
chosen because it was considered the most convenient access for the
total academic community.
Mr. James Braun, director of the Campus Mail Department, is
our liason with the postal authorities and has already notified them
of our complaints and suggestions. He explained, however, that
servicing” the Pagoda and mail pick-up are handled by different
postal departments. This is one of the reasons immediate adjustments
and service to the Pagoda are not made even though mail routeman
are seen at the Pagoda shortly after a complaint has been registered.
Q. Why mutt students supply their own equipment when using
the squash or handball courts during informal play time, i.e., exclusive of a formal physical education program?
A. Mr. E. Muto, instructor in Intramural Programs, informed us
that equipment frequently disappears, and it is too difficult to set
up a central system.
Q. I had two "incompletes" on my transcript last semester. I am
applying to graduate schools and the "incomplete" is equivalent to a
"D" credit. Is this fair?
A. Transcripts detail factual data of semester hours carried, hours
completed, and the grade earned at the end of the semester and an
“incomplete” reflects the exact nature of your earned status at the
time grade cards were completed. The only way to circumvent this,
in the event you have to submit transcripts by a certain date, is to
send a letter along with your application to the graduate school and
explain the circumstances under which you received the “incomplete”
grades and the date on which the corrected transcript will be forwarded. An alternative plan is to put a note on your formal request
for a transcript, indicating that the transcript should not be sent
until all grades are finalized:
Q. Why is it necessary for a student enrolled in the Arts and
Sciences program to graduate with 128 credits instead of 120 credits
which would be the usual college course load of taking five three
credit courses per semester?
A. Our requirement of 128 hours for the BA degree is a result
of historical circumstance and need to meet individual department’s
requirements. It should be pointed out that the requirement for the
BA degree in terms of hours varies dramatically across the country.
The minimum legal necessity for the degree granted by a college or
university in New York State, however, as set by the State Education
Department, is 120 hours.
You may be interested in knowing that University College is
currently examining the total structure of the undergraduate curriculum, and is giving particular attention to the possibility of a fourcourse normal load for undergraduates, under which courses Might
carry credits of four hours. Were this the case, a student would
graduate after completing four courses each semester for eight
semesters.
For specific answers to your questions and for direct service, call ACTION LINE,
If you prefer,
every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, from 4-5 p.m.
phrase your question in writing and address it to ACTION LINE, c/o The Spectrum,
355 Norton Hall, or the Office of the Dean of Students, 201 Harriman Library.

631-5000,

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General announcements

40 Capen Blvd.

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Q31-SOOO
.

University of New York at Buffalo, for which The Spectrum assumes no editorial responsibility.
Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to 114 Hayes

.

»nd SrtunUyi

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�The Spectrum

Friday, March 22, 1968

Pag* Nin*

UCRA to evaluate strike/ plan future Council
“We are very pleased that the

turnout has been overwhelming

both in terms of number of persons attending and the thorough
interest displayed in all our pro-

grams.”

James Hansen, graduate philosophy student and member of
the University Community for
Rational
Alternatives steering
committee, Tuesday expressed the
reaction of the committee to the
success of the first day of activities.
“These last two weeks have

clearly demonstrated that a greatly increasing number are repulsed by the genocidal Vietnam war
and are prepared to engage in
serious activity to stop this war

and the social and economic system which has brought it about.”

Commenting on the proposed

future actions of the UCRA, Mr.
explained: “We will
spend the forthcoming days in
organizing all those who have
shown such great interest in order to develop future concrete
activities to contribute to, if not
lead, the growing anti-imperialist
sentiment in the U.S.”
Hansen

The mass meeting scheduled
for Thursday was described by
Mr. Hansen as a meeting “during
which the specifics of present and
future activities will be discussed.
It will be an evaluation, and out
of the evaluation will come a
program for the future. We will

learn both from our
and our mistakes.”

The

successes

discussions and
panels held during the “Strike
for Knowledge—Stop the War”
were better attended than the
committee had anticipated. “The
planned

unforeseen problem has
turned out to be an unforeseen
advantage, and benefit. Such vast
numbers of
showed interest that we had to get more
space. We apologize for this but
are glad of it.”
only

Entertainment
Calendar
Friday, March 22;

CONCERT: Jimi Hendrix

PLAY: “Box Mao Box,” Studio
Arena, 8:30 p.m.
CONCERT: Sammy Davis Jr.,
O’Keefe Center, Toronto, 8:30
-

-

p.m.

ART EXHIBIT; Les Levine, “Photon; Strangeness,” room 233,
Norton, 6:30 p.m. and 9 p.m.
FILM: “Les Carbiniers,” Capen
140, three showings
POETRY READING: Pedro Xisto,
Haas Lounge, 8 p.m.
MUSIC: Terry Riley, Haas Lounge,
following Mr. Xisto
FILMS: “Do You Know How To
Make A Statement of Fact?”
and “Why Do People Misunderstand Each Other?” Dief.
303, 4 p.m., which way is up?
TV SPECIAL: “Case of Colonel
Petrov,” Channel 17, 8:30 p.m.
Saturday, March 23:
DANCE-LECTURE: Eleo Pomare
Dance Company, Baird, after-

noon

Experi-

ence,

Memorial Auditorium,
8:15 p.m., hard hittin’ rock.
CONCERT: “Threshold—A Meditation,” Victor Graver, Workshop Repertory Theater, electronic music, 12 midnight till
Sunday dawn!
Sunday, March 24:

CONCERT: Jose Greco, Kleinhans,
8:30 p.m., the flamenco flame.
CONCERT: University Concert
Band, Amherst Senior High
School, 8:30 p.m,
DANCE-LECTURE: Eleo Pomare
Dance Company, Woodlawn
Junior High School, 2:30 p.m.
Monday, March 25:

“Kiss Me Kate," starring
Patrice Munsel, O’Keefe Center, Toronto

PLAY;

Tuesday, March 26:
FILM: “Becket,” Capen 140, 7:30
p.m., O’Toole and Burton at

their best.
Wednesday, March 27:
TV SPECIAL: “William Steinberg
Conducts,” Channel 17, 9 p.m.
Friday, March 29;

TV SPECIAL: “Dr. Knock,” NET
Playhouse, Channel 17, 8:30
p.m.

gives full support to

emergency

curfew resolution

by Peter Simon
Attitfahf City Editor

The Common Council Tuesday
passed unanimously a resolution
directing Corporation Counsel
Anthony Manguso to prepare a
law which would give the mayor
the power to put curfews into effect during emergencies.

Meanwhile, the Council sent
back to its Legislation Committee
the controversial bill which would
set a year-round curfew of 11
p.m. to 6 a.m. on all persons under 17.
Democratic Councilmen Stanley Makowski and Delmar Mitchell presented their emergency
curfew bill because of some confusion over whether the mayor
now has the power to impose
curfews d u ri n g emergencies.

While some councilmen felt that
he does have this power, Assistant Corporation Counsel Joseph
Casey said that he does not.
The final bill will probably
leave the age of persons affected
and the hours during which a
curfew can be imposed up to the
mayor.

Little opposition
Unlike the year-round curfew
proposal, the emergency measure
has run into little opposition and
is expected to be passed.
Mr. Manguso was directed by a
9-6 Council vote on March 5 to
draw up the year-round proposal.
He reluctantly did so, but said
that it was illegal.

Councilman William Lyman,
who has been pressing for a cur-

few for the past three years, and
who sponsored the bill, sensed
that even if the Council passed
the bill, the mayor would veto it.

The Council could then overveto with ten favorable
votes, but this is doubtful.

ride the

In other Council action, an 112 vote reqeusted the federal government to supply one teacher’s

aide for every ten students bused
from one neighborhood to a
school in another. At present, one
teacher’s aide is provided for
each bus-load of students. The
bill was sponsored by Councilman
Raymond Lewandowski.

Hot debate
The vote was preceded by a
heated debate over alledged “behavorial problems” at public
school 69, 1725 Clinton St., caused
by bused-in students. At Mr. Lewandowski’s request, a letter from
parents of school 69 students was
read. Its charges ranged from
“area students being beat-up by
busesd-in students’ to students
roaming the halls.

Mr. Lewandowski said that this
“chaos” is resulting in a worse
education for all students con-

cerned.

Councilman Mitchell said that
the charges had been “trumped
up.”
Councilman Makoski said that
the issue should be thoroughly
discused, and by a 14-0 vote the
Council ordered investigations
from its Legislation Committee
and Buffalo’s Human Relations
Committee.

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�Pag* Tan

The

Friday, March 22, 1968

Spectrum

Spring Art's the thing
by Jim Brennan
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

John Chamberlain and his boobies did their thing
and it failed.
His troupe of environmental reactors, consisting of
Taylor Meade, Lilo, Lampman, and Ultra Violet, bombed out.
As one disappointed member of the audience commented:
“This whole evening was an U-U-Ultra-drag!”
fertility rite from the lost mountain passes of Yugoslavia.
In the course of his ritual he
stripped down to a brief pair of
blue jockey shorts. As he wrangled and gyrated, he cast a huge
shadow against the inside wall.
The shadow, thanks to the uniqueness of the lighting, magnified his every move.
One move, which prdduced the
greatest shock effect on viewers,
was a pulsating buldge of the erection his shadow was having.

The presentation—or whatever

you want to call their thing— opened with Taylor Meade. “It”
bills himself as “Queen of the

Underground,” and by his effeminate actions one would tend
to believe this appellation.
To begin his act, he read a list
of 20-odd things that he would
like to do. His list consisted of
such choice goodies as: Cutting
his toe nails, putting a curse on
Johnson, kissing a man, chewing
his jockey shorts, putting on a
“Clyde Suit” and singing “My

Bonnie Lies Under the Ocean,”

playing the harmonica, and wearing a wig and a dress.

Violet ideas
Ultra Violet, his cohort in
this exhibition, proceeded to
read a few of her sunny suggestions for the evening. She felt the
desire to kiss Taylor Meade’s
feet, to hibernate, to French kiss
a lion, to paint New York City
violet, and do a love scene on
the hearth before the blazing fire.
As these two figures carried on
a dialogue, they were bathed in
an aura of various luminous colors. The drapes on the front windows of Haas Lounge were open,
presenting the audience with a cobalt blue sky overhanging the
foggy cauldron of the fountain

Black Dracula
As Lampman appeared on the
scene, Taylor Meade ran up to
him and kissed him, yelling:
“Well every happening should
have an integration scene.” Clad

lOW

in a white cap with a bush haircut, Lampman looked like a
black Dracula.
He wandered through the

The reflected green images of
the two players waned in and out
of the mist, haunting the lounge
as if to say: “Let our presence be
felt throughout the whole room.”
This lighting effect was the
best part of the program.
The illusive imagery of the

Taylor Meade
performs an all-but-complefe
strip for a generally turned-off
audience.

...

■

area.

—Yates

or "Lilo's Thing" saw the
good lady spring to life from
a ping pong table. After awhile
everything stopped.

I vinn
Lylliy

crowd chanting, mumbling and
half-preaching a cadence of jum-

bled pseudo-religious garble.

As he reached the peak of his
sermon, with “sweet talkin’ baby
Jesus walkin’ in the briar patch,”
he cast what appeared to be a
prayer book into the blazing fire.
Continuing in his frenzy, he
walked out onto the terrace of
Norton, and let his cries sing out
to all men and the universe it-

lighting was again highlighted
when Taylor Meade performed
what appeared to be a Serbian

self.

—Yates

Sweet-talkin' Lampman
threw a Bible into the fire

:
*

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At this same moment that he
was ranting and raving on the
terrace, some poor soul had just
stepped out there for a bit of
fresh air. As soon as he saw
Lampman in his cape doing his
oration, he quickly turned around
and exitted the scene post-haste.

Go-Go Girls

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In the middle of the lounge
stood a ping-pong table with a
dormant body prostrated upon it.
At Lampman’s touch the body
sprung alive. It was Lilo’s time

to do her thing.
John Chambeflain invited all
with cameras to photograph Lilo.
So there she lay, a writhing sensuous figure of a woman, contorting her body into the erotic me-

chanics of her various poses for
the photographers.
As the cameramen got closer,
Lilo began to toy with them by
sticking out her tongue and
reaching out to grab them.
There was no formal ending to
this environmental display— it
just stopped.
They had done their thing and
it was time.
Not a good time, just a time,
to this viewer and many others
a wasted bit of time. But alas is

this not art? Hmmm?

THE RUE

For that specia’ date
When a beer just won’t do

Rue Franklin-West
Coffee House

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341 rue Franklin
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134 Dewey

Lilo's thing

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emerges as a rival of
Julie Christie and Faye Dunaway
A STAR IS BORN!”
—Wanda Hale, New York

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�Friday, March 22, 1968

yw
'S.M

'

.

iwnpt
!&gt;««•

Pedro Xisto will demonstrate
his theories on poetry tonight

Iail

»

p-fy*

;i

Swiri

«(P 3k,

--

,

■an

P«9» EIwm

The Spectrum

irofessor of Hisof Toronto, will demonstrate an
experimental application of his
theories on poetry this evening
in Haas Lounge.
“Theoretically there isn’t a distinction between the producer of
a work of art, an author, and the
consumer, the audience.”
Mr.
Xisto feels the division between
the author and the passive audience is outdated.

He insists there is not such a
thing as a passive consumer: “We
are always contributing and interfering in a work of art.”
A recent poem of his was writ-

ten as homage to two great
writers, two avant-gardists, the

French poet Arthur Rimbaud and
a Brazilian novelist.
To create a response, says Xis-

—Bina

Guerrilla
Theatre

This sub-division of the University Community
for Rational Alternatives has been "flogged into
shape to parody the military.''

Guerrilla Theatre begins with strike,
plans to give future performances
by Charles Zeldner
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

Members of the academic com-

munity are warned to be on the
lookout for a band of guerrillas.

The group began offensive operations Tuesday in conjunction
with the first day of the “Strike
for Knowledge.”

Several'

unexpected

appear-

ances among unwary students in
various places on campus, including the Rathskeller and the
fountain area behind Norton Hall
were staged by the group, formally known as the Guerrilla Theater.

Eventually, the group “plans to
wail ROTC on a yet undetermined date.”

The group plans to extend the
parody effect.
Its purpose is not only to parody the military, but a parody
within is also evidenced by the
cliches which are tossed by both
sides in the Vietnam skit. In this
performance, a movie was being
shot on location in Vietnam to
show how peace, prosperity and

liberty were being brought to the
people with the hydrogen bomb.”
The characters are nameless, except for Charlie, who forgot to
feed the Cobras before they
feasted on another participant.

The Theater plans to continue
unscheduled performances on
campus as well as appearances in
the Buffalo community. They also
plan to participate in “Ten Days
to Shake the Empire,” a national
SDS strike similar to the “Strike
for Knowledge

to, as these artists prophesized
and practiced, one must go back
to the basic elements of language,
the vowels, a,e,i,o,u. What Xisto
has created in his poem is a
mathematical analysis of vowel
groups that have more than 3000
combinations.
His reading will begin at 8

p.m.

Following Mr, Xisto, musician
Terry Riley will perform. Terry
Riley has been credited with
starting a whole new form of
jazz through the use of a pulse
rate to set up a rhythm for an
electric organ while weaving in
shifts of drone emphasis to produce new ranges of strobe patterns.
This summer Mr, Riley was
commissioned by Swedish Radio
to compose and conduct a work

for teen-age orchestras, and later

toured Scandinavia. He has reStreams.”

“Photon: Strangeness 4,” created by Les Levine, is an environment of quivering wires strung
from floor to ceiling through
which robot-like fish-eye mirrors,
topped by quivering fluorescent
antennas, move at random “energizing the entire space.” Television cameras scan the area to
clarify the difference between
image and experience.

Mr. Levine, previously scheduled for the card room, will give
two performances today in room
233, Norton Hall at 6:30 and 9
p.m.

Band to perform
The University Concert Band
will present a concert Sunday
8:30 p.m. at Amherst Central
Senior High School. This concert
precedes the Annual Spring Tour
of the Band which this year will
center around several performances in the New York City area.
The Concert Band is a select
group of 70 performers chosen
from the approximately 175 students taking part in the total
University band program, A special feature of each concert will
be Professor Allen Sigel, vice
chairman of the Music Department, as clarinet soloist performing the concertino of C.M. von
Weber. Mr. Frank J. Cipolla is
the director of the band with
Michael Sandgarten as his assistant.

10

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Under the direction of graduate
students James Hart and Gray
MacArthur, the group has been
rehearsing for two weeks before
its initial performance.

The group consists of approximately 20 people and is a committee of the University Community for Rational Alternatives.

GUESS WHO STOLE ALL
THE NOMINATIONS ?
BARROW GANG!
THE
C.W.,

According to one committee
member the purpose of the theater is to “present things to
people on an emotional level.”

BUCK, BLANCHE and

M.W BOMMIE
STUDENT
RATES!

The conception and philosophy
behind the Guerrilla Theater was
devised by Mr. MacArthur. According to spokesmen for the
group, who wish to remain anonymous, their original ideas, at
least, have been fulfilled. A group
of non-military students have
been “flogged into shape to
parody the military.”
That’s the close-order drill
which was executed Tuesday.

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This is Benjamin,
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THE GRADUATE

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PicIURES Htu

�Friday, March 22, 1968

The Spectrum

Twelve

Page

The Jimi Hendrix Experience

campus releases...

by Joieph Fernbacher
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

described as a man who breaks
the world into interesting fragments. Then reassembles it. You
hear with new ears, see with new
eyes and feel with new senses,
after being Experienced. Those
who’ve seen him perform know
only part of this Experience.
They rave about a young man
who can play the electric guitar
in more positions than believed
possible. Hendrix has been known
to play his guitar upside down,
behind his back, and between his
legs. He also can make a guitar
look like something he uses to
pick his teeth. Actually, he does
use his teeth, his tongue, feet,
and elbows to play his guitar.
It seems also that Hendrix has
borrowed a page from the book
used by “The Who,” another rock
group/ At one concert he covered
his guitar with a concealed can
of lighter fluid and then set it
ablaze.
The popularity which Hendrix
is now experiencing comes as a
results of his two albums. His
first “Are You Experienced,”
received little attention because
of its complete uniqueness. While
his other album “Axis: Bold as
Love,” has risen from 140 on
pop charts to 24 within the span
of a week and is still moving up
to the number one position.
Jimi Hendrix is backed by two
suberb young musical giants from
England. Mitch Mitchell is a
driving forceful drummer in the
tradition of Ginger Baker of the
“Cream” and Gene Krupa of the
Jazz Era. Noel Redding, who began his musical journey as a
sedate violinist, has been the
lead guitarist with several top
English groups, and headed “The

The Annual University Honors and Awards Ceremony will be
All organizations wishing to

-«e
'WV

Wk

The Jimi Hendrix Experience, a
truly unique group, will be appearing at the Buffalo Memorial
Auditorium March 23, at 8:15

Unique

Experience'

One of the major parts Hendrix
has played in the musical world

is the development of the wa-wa
pedal. This device coupled with a
fuzz-box gives the Experience a
sound which is both exciting and
stimulating to the ear of the
listener.

cert at Buffalo Memorial Auditorium on Saturday, March 23 at
8:15 p.m. Appearing with The
Jimi Hendrix Experience are The
Soft Machine, The Mark Boyle
Sense Laboratory and Jesse’s
First Carnival. Tickets are avail-

DENIM JEANS
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hip-huggors

blue, wheat, brown,
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loden, black
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be the topic of Robert Deigler

HOPSACK
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(Assumption College) at 10;30
a.m. At 11 a.m. a discussion on
conducting math clubs will be
held followed by lunch at noon
in the Norton Hall cafeteria.

yellow, blue, tan,
green A

orange

$4.95

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Any interested student may at-

University College at Buffalo)
will speak on the “Applications
of Linear Algebra to Calculus”
at 10 a.m.
“Upsilon Mu Alpha
Undergraduate Math Association” will

Look here,

&amp;

Hendrix is appearing in con-

tend Saturday’s regional meeting.

this lime

able at Buffalo Festival Ticket
Office, Hotel Statler-Hilton; U. of
B. Norton Hall; all Audrey
Del’s Record Shops; Brundo’s,
Niagara Falls.

Math club hosts meeting
The University Math Club will
hold the first Western New York
regional meeting of Undergraduate Math Clubs tomorrow in room
147, Diefendorf Hall.
The events of the day begin
with registration at 9 a.m., followed by Stephen Gagola of this
University speaking on “Bounded Subsets of Metric Spaces” at
9:30 a.m. Sam Bisignano (State

,

—

p.m.

Lovin’ Kind, before Hendrix persuaded him to switch from lead
to bass.
The loudness of the group has
been compared to the automated
miracle by which three men can
operate an entire steel mill.

present awards at

1086 ELMWOOD AVENUE

—

THE

COLLEGE
TEACHING

if

i

A representative will be on this campus

COOPERATIVE
*

COLLEGE
REGISTRY

APRIL 9, 1968
to interview prospective

graduates interested in career
opportunities on the University staff in a wide variety
of fields including:

accounting
biology and chemistry research
Recruiting college teachers for
over 200 four-year accredited
liberal arts colleges throughout
the United States. Service is
free to all registrants. Administrative and faculty positions in
all areas of the curriculum.
Master's Degree is minimum
requirement, Ph D. degree or
near preferred. Salaries $6500$22,000. Make appointments
for interviews through: University Placement Office, Room
132, Hayes Hall
April 10,
1968.
—

business administration
clinical lab. technology
data processing
dietetics

early childhood education

electronics

library science
medical photography

nursing
occupational therapy
personnel
physical therapy
physics research
radiation biology
radiology

rehabilitation counselor
secretarial
social work

medical research
medical technology

There are many attractive job openings
for women graduates!
The excellent benefits program includes a liberal tuition remission plan which enables full-time staff members to continue
their education. For an appointment or further details contact
your Placement Office.

AN

EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

must

submit information sheets to Box No. 55, Norton Hall by March 25.
All nominations for Student Association Gold and Silver Keys must
be returned by Monday. For further information contact Judi Mack,
937-9390 or 831-3541.
Former Peace Corps members are asked to contact the Placement Office in Schoellkopf Hall. There have been a number of
requests for former volunteers of the Peace Corps to appear before
various civic and social groups as well as to instruct foreign students.
In many cases, these services will be compensated. To register,
call 831-3311 and ask for Mrs. Farewell.
WRA will hold indoor archery at Clark Gym Wednesday afternoons, 4-5 p.m. and Tuesdays, 7-9 p.m. for all interested girls.
Badminton, .basketball, gymnastics, paddleball, swimming and
volleyball will be held every Tuesday, 7-9 p.m. at Clark Gym exclusively for girls.
"Homosexuality" will be the topic of Dr. Bernard F. Riess PhD of
the Post Graduate Center for Mental Health in New York City at
3 p.m. today in room 344, Norton Hall. He is being sponsored by the
Psychology Club. All interested students are welcome.
Dr. Bruce Miller will speak to all sophomores planning to enter
the English Education Program in September 1968, at 1 p.m. Thursday
in room 335, Norton Hall.
An ice skating party sponsored by the WRA will take place
tomorrow at the Amherst Recreation Center. Free bus transportation
will leave Norton Hall at 7 p.m. and return at 9:30 p.m.
Girls’ ID cards will be checked for payment of Student Activity
boys must be accompanied by a girl.
Fees. Stag or drag
Sign-up sheets are located in Clark Gym and the girls’ dorms.
Costs are 50 cents admission, 75 cents rentals. There will be a
50 cents transportation fee for non-fee payers.

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�Pag* Thirteen

The Spectrum

Friday, March 22. 1968

the spectrum of

look good

Baseball hi

Success may depend on pitching
a nucleus of
talent. Catcher Brian
Hansen heads the list of returnees. The senior from Detroit
has led the Bulls in batting the
last two seasons with sizzling
averages of .508 and .521, re-

giving Monkarsh

“Spring has sprung

veteran

The grass has riz
I wonder where
The baseball team is."

It’s baseball time and from
all appearances Head Coach
Bill Monkarsh has the ingredients to make the “hardballers” a top power in the
East.

spectively.
Backing-up Hansen behind the
plate is another veteran, Gary
Dean, a transfered from ECTI.
If Dean, a fine defensive backstop, can swing the bat, he could
see plenty of action this season.

There are 12 lettermen returning from last year’s 16-1 squad,

The outfield is another bright
spot for the ’68 Diamondmen. Ken
Rutkowski, Rick Wells, and Ken
Razka give the Bulls three solid
performers to fill the three outfield slots.
Rutkowski last season connected for a big .380, socked three
home runs, and stole nine bases
in ten attempts. Wells, who has
also won varsity letters in football and basketball, clubbed a
healthy .389 last season, and gave
the Bulls a tremendous defensive pickup in left field.

Where to play Jok is looked

upon as a pleasant decision for

Coach Monkarsh.

Vacancy at 2nd
The only question mark on the
’68 baseball club seems to be in
the infield where Buffalo must
replace the graduated tandem
of 2nd baseman Doug Long and
shortstop Ron Leiser. A couple of
newcomers to the varsity may
solve the Bulls’ infield problems.

Odachowski batter .290 with
the frosh last season, and a repeat performance could help nail
down the 2nd sacker’s job. Veteran Brian Hubbard is another
challenger for the 2nd base spot.
A fine competitor, Hubbard has

Pohl won the trophy for his
performance in the Fraternity
League championship basketball game.

A strong comeback by Fran
could be an important part of
the Bulls’ season.
Both the 3rd and 1st sackers’
seem pretty well fortified.
Buchta, Jok and Paul DiRosa, all
have the ability to fill the role
of 3rd sackers, while veteran Jim
May has the inside tract tor 1st
jobs

base.

The Bulls’ pitching at this
point appears to be strong.
Right handers Tim Uraskevitch,
George Hofheinz, Tom Recton-

After finishing a Southern tour,
the Bulls will return north for
their remaining 18 games including 12 home contests at Clark
field. The Bulls home opposition
will include such teams as St.
Bonaventure, Buffalo State and a
strong University of Pittsburgh
team.

It’s tough to improve on a 16-1
record, but keep your eyes On
this year’s ball club. 1968 will
be another exciting year both for
the State University of Buffalo
baseball team and their fans.

wald, Ken Rutkowski, Dick Pirrozolo and Brian Laud were all
important cogs in a pitching machine which made it rough on
opposing batters last season. Joining this veteran crew will be Stan
Jok, Paul Lang, and Rich Barbara who are expected to add
depth to a veteran staff.
Les Grvitch, a southpaw, gives
the Bulls needed left-handed

The outfield is complemented
by sophomore Stan Jok, former
Hutch Tech star, who will be
in the lineup somewhere. Jok, up
from last year’s winning freshman club, has showing potential
in the outfield, third base and
on the pitching mound.

Ken Rutkowski

MVP

Spectrum Promotion Director
Murray Richman (r) presents
MVP Trophy to Most Valuable
Player, Larry Pohl of AEPi. Mr.

May at 1st

Razka, a veteran senior, could
be the “sleeper” on this year’s
ball club. Used sparingly last season, Razka has a chance to nail
down a right field berth with a
strong spring showing.

good-looking outfielder

—Schwab

Sophomore Stan Odachowski, a
product of Bishop Turner, has
looked sharp so far at 2nd base.

■

Competition is tough as
frats end winter sports
by Karl Schnitzler
Staff

Reporter

In the basketball fraternity finals, the yellow-shirted AEPi’s defeated the “rebels” of Tau Delta
in overtime, 53-49. AEPi was led
by Larry Pohl’s 27 points.
This effort earned Pohl the
MVP trophy donated by The

vailed.

This years’ bowling climax was
as exciting as ever. Throughout

the season Gamma Phi maintain-

ed a one game lead over Sigma
Alpha Mu, but on the final night

Spectrum.

Richie Schwartz, Barry Spielvogel, Steve Davidson and Jeff
Sofefr, along with Pohl helped
AEPi to retain their basketball
crown.
Tau Belt made a strong bid in
its quest for the fraternity championship by rolling over
opposthe w.ay to the final.
w-th Tv,

wun

i5

shooting

the

of “Fuzzy”

Janoff and Pete Shultnan, the rebounding of Richie Kantor, and
tne all-around hustling of
Steve
Gmsberg, Barry Aisen and “Mumbles .they almost made
it.
In the campus championship
he Brooklyns, a team of
Med
and Dent students along with a
bearded philosophy grad, defeated AEPi 60-54.
I he Brooklyns got 17 points
rom Barry Cohen in their winmng effort. A strong game was
a so played by Ron
Salmonson,
arry Brotman, A1 Shapiro and

T e TTT 61

."'

“

*■

in a

.

was . again Larry
,

of the year SAMMY bombed them
off the alleys.
Alex Ringleheim and Bob Spaner rolled 600s while Gerry Whitcomb, Bruce Zabinsky and Larry
Hennig bowled high 500 series to
enable them to capture all four
Points and first place.
The squash finals this year pitted two SAMMY men against each
other.
Playing the best three out of
five series Carl Friedman defeated Gerry Whitcomb, 15-11,
7-15, 15-11, 11-15 and 15-8. Friedman played a fine all-around
game and was able to overcome
Whitcomb’s knowledge of the
game.
To gain a berth in the finals
Whitcomb defeated Davidson of
AEPi while Friedman in turn defeated Vesneske of APO. The
SAMMY forces were strengthened
by the the strong play of Bob
Sroka and Bob Kalish, coupled
with Friedman and Whitcomb
ablfi to take the team

aCTP

’

T
:

Spectrum

Sophomore A1 Ratner threw in
15 points, but the tougher and
more aggressive Brooklyns pre-

Fran Buchta
good bet for 3rd base
impressed

with

hustle.

his

continual

At shortstop, Tom Finger, a
junior from Eden, and Ed Lowe,

a sophomore speedster, are vying

for a starting assignment.

pitching strength.
The key to this season’s success will undoubtedly be how
well the Bulls’ pitching stands up

under the terrific pressure of 31
games over a six week season.

Kentucky State contest
The baseballers will begin their
most ambitious schedule in the
team’s history by swinging South
next Wednesday for 13 away
games in eight days during spring
vacation. High-lighting the tour

which will include stops in the
Carolinas and Kentucky will be
a contest against Kentucky State,
Buchta at short. Buchta, who walloped an amazing .402 in 1966, rated as one of the nation’s finest
slumped to a .265 last season.
teams.
Coach Monkarsh is also experimenting with veteran Fran

George Hofheins
veteran

eighty is back

NCAA-bound fencers are shaken,
place 6th in Rochester championships
by Paul Maxwell
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

The NCAA bound Fencing
Bulls received a severe jolt along
the tournament trail placing no
better than a lackluster sixth in
a field of 12 in Saturday’s North
Atlantic Intercollegiate Fencing
Championships held at Rochester.
The event was won by Newark
College of Engineering who won
44 out of 66 bouts followed by
Pace College with 41. Syracuse
placed third with 38 bouts.
During the early stages of the
tournament, the BqUs stayed
‘right with the leaders, but fal-

tered badly. All six men fenced
evenly as the Bulls won 34 bouts
while dropping 32. Steve Morris,
Bruce Renner, George Wirth,
and Ed Share won six of 11 bouts
with Jon Rand and Pierre Chanteau each taking five.
Quizzed about the unimpressive
showing by his squad, head coach
Sid Schwartz commented: “I’m
very disappointed. We sent six
solid men to this tournament and
should’ve been right near the
top. We lost 18 bouts by 5-4
scores, and there’s no excuse for
that. The competition at the
NCAA Championships will be

much tougher and we’ll have to
fence much better if we want to
avoid really getting clobbered.”
Coach Schwartz and his three
top men will leave for Detroit
Wednesday for what promises to
be a very tough, hotly contested
NCAA Championship tourney. He
will take senior Rand in saber,
junior Morris in epee, and either
senior Wirth or Chanteau in foil.
Columbia, N.Y.U., and Navy
are expected to vie for the top
spots with C.C.N.Y., Pennsylvania,
Temple, Cornell, Notre Dame and
Princeton in not too distant pursuit.

�Pag* Fourteen

The Spectrum

Friday, March 22, 1968

Strength needed for Baseball Bulls success
by W. Scott Behrens
Sports Editor

The varsity baseball squad will
have to come up with an exhave to

imtMvMlS

Hailing

their batting eyes shaped up and
are waiting eagerly for that first
day of long ball practice (weather
an(i fields permitting).

who has been drafted by the
National League New York Mets,
will be another returnee to this
years squad. Ted has come up

The outfield has two returnees
and both are solid hitters with
strong arms. Rutkowski, who
batted .444 last season, will be in

The Bulls are strong again in
the hurling department as they
were last season. Ken Rutkowski
will be returning to the varsity
line-up for the third straight season as a hurler. This strong senior
is an all-league and professional
prospect as a pitcher. He will
also be used in centerfield when
he is not hurling. Rutkowski
batted well over .400 last season.
Senior hurler Ted Uraskiewicz,

over before returning to his
mound chores.
Joining the varsity this year to
help the mound crew will be Stan
Stok, a sophomore fresh off the
1967 freshman squad. Jok is not
only a fine prospect as a pitcher
but is also an excellent hitter and
will most likely be used in the

will probably be shifted to right son for the varsity baseballers
field this season.
and is hoping for a starting berth
Either Jok or sophomore Dom at the shortstop position. Eddie
DeMarco will fill in the left field Lowe will also be looking toward
slot. DeMarco throws right-handed that position.
and bats left-handed. Senior John
Grace will be used as a utility
The only other returning letteroutfielder and probably will see man to the infield will be Fran
some pinch hitting duties as he Butka who had a fine season last
is known to have a strong bat. year at the 3rd base spot and can
close the gap in the weak hitting
Weak infield
infield.

powur

at 1st base if it plans to come
close to last years 16-1 record.

With a little less than a month
away from the season opener, the
Bulls have been hard at work
inside waiting for the frozen turf
to soften and to became playable. The pitchers have been
loosening up their unused arms
for a couple of weeks already.
The hitters have been getting

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outfield when Rutkowski is on the
mound.

Hoffheins returning
Another varsity returnee is
senior George Hoffheins who has
been the mainstay of the pitching staff for the last three seasons. George is a fine competitor
and a great pitcher in pressure
situations.
Senior Dick Pirozolo returns
this season to his usual relief role.
Dick has great speed and good
control and is looking forward
to a great season. Backing Dick
as a relief specialist will be junior
hurler Brian Laud.

The Bulls infield is the weakest
it has been for several seasons.
Junior Jim May will take over the
1st base chores. May is improving
defensively as 1st sacker but must
come through with some power
at the plate if the Bulls are to
stay in contention for a post-season berth.
The other infield spots aren’t
settled up to now, and there
seems to be a great question as
to who will end up where.
Sophomore Stan Odachowski
shows great promise at the 2nd

Cut
in a
Cutlass.
We'd invite you to check our specs
against competition (we'd fare quite
nicely, thank you), but that's loo much
like homework. And you've got
enough of that. Instead, slip into

base spot and might acquire himself a starting position at that
position.

The catching position is in good
hand with senior Small College
All-American Brian Handen. This
strong batsman has hit well over
.500 in the last two seasons as a
varsity member and is a tremendous professional prospect.
Hansen’s back-up man will be
junior receiver Gary Dean who is
a fine defensive catcher.

'Outfield looks good'
Assistant varsity coach Bill
Monkarsh has given an overall
evaluation of the 1968 prospects:
“We should have fine pitching,
our two stoppers being Rutkowski and Uraskiewicz. The outfield
looks in very good shape.
“There is only one problem for
the 1968 Bulls and that is in the
infield with its inexperience.
They must gain confidence under
game fire. They will tell how far
this Buffalo team will go.”
The freshman baseball coach,
Robert Miske, is still looking for
players at all positions. They practice every day in Clark Gym from
5:15-6:45 p.m. All freshman students who have some baseball
experience please
see coach Miske.

come out

and

KITES!!!
Do Wo Havo Kltoo...

tJL

SIO KITES—LITTLE KITES
ROUND AND PAT AND

I

KITES.
KITES, CLOTH

SQUARE

PAPER
KITES

This one handles like it had handles,
And the best part is the Cutlass S price
It's as streamlined as its styling. Hideaway wipers, louvered hood, side
marker lights, all the new GM safety

ALL PRK TESTED

PLIGHT KITES
JOIN THE

.

I
*

.

7K
4

yfA

.

PLIGHT LINE TO

TSUJIMOTO

ORIENTAL

ARTS

-

GIFTS

-

FOODS

Doily 10 to 0; Erl. ‘til 9; Sun. 1 to 0
4590 Sonora St., (Routo 14) Elmo, N T
2 Milos East of Transit (U S SO)

2-9955

THE UNIVERSITY
OF ROCHESTER
HAS EXCITING

CAREER
OPPORTUNITIES
IN A TEACHING
HOSPITAL FOR

OCCUPATIONAL
PHYSICAL
and

SPEECH
THERAPISTS
STARTING SALARY $6800
4 WEEKS VACATION
FREE UNIVERSITY TUITION
MEDICAL BENEFITS PROGRAM
OUR REPRESENTATIVE
WILL BE ON THIS
CAMPUS

APRIL 9, 1968

Drive a youngmobile from Oldsmobile

QM

CONTACT YOUR
PLACEMENT OFFICE
FOR

APPOINTMENT

�Greek

ira

Page FiftMn

The Spectrum

Friday, March 22, 1968

CLASSIFIED

hs

Fraternities, sororities defended
by Elliot Stephan Rose
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

In recent years, the fraternity
and sorority systems on this campus have come under scrutiny by
the University administration in
Albany.

Many charges have been made
by the administration, but the
most prominent are discrimination and the non-activity of
Greeks in campus activities.
Greeks counter-charge however,
there has never been any concrete evidence presented that an
organization denied membership
to a student because of color or
religion.
The charge that Greeks are apathetic is easily denied, for there
are Greeks holding position in
almost every facet of campus life,

they claim.

The entire Buffalonian staff includes members of various fraternities and sororities.
Steve Ray, a member of Sigma

Phi Epsilon, is treasurer of the
Commuter Council and a representative of University Union Activities Board. Greg Ulrich of
Phi Kappa Psi is special events
chairman of Spring Weekend.
Steve Rappaport, Sigma Phi Epsilon, is a candidate for president
of the Student Association. Joe
Orsini of the same fraternity is
currently a student senator.

Besides these specific positions,
there are numerous Greeks hold-

will crown the 1968 Sweetheart,
elected by the Alumni . . . Tau

and participating in varsity at

the Beer Blast tonight, so they
urge you to wear your sneakers
for a unique experience

letics.

...

New I.F.C. officers
President—Joe Cardarelli, Gam
Phi
Vice President —Steve Ray, Sigma Phi Epsilon
Treasurer—Tyler Gass, Tau
Delta Rho
Recording Secretary—Jerry
Lamhut, Alpha Epsilon Phi
Corresponding Secretary—Dan
Schoenborn, Theta Chi
Sergeant-at-Arms—Alan Friedman, Sigma Alpha Mu

News items

Hall

.

.

Alpha Phi Omega will sell
mixed nuts at Grant City, Main

and Transit, tomorrow to raise
money for the University Foundation’s Athletic Fund.
The
money will be used to help support all the athletic programs
here .
Gamma Phi's annual Sweetheart Dinner Dance will take
place tomorrow night at the
Three Coins. Chairman Scot Moss
.

Baum, Richard Cohen, Edward
Entmacher, Howard Rosenhoch,
Richard Rothstein, Alan West,
Roger Weiner, Henry Leppo, Richard Lewis, Kenneth Lipstock,
Barry Kaplan, Robert Klein, Edward Feldman, Sandy Family,
Wayne
Schiffeuli
and
Dave
Simon. The final total for the
‘'Bounce for Beats” Heart Fund
drive was $1400.

.

WfSt
jLwII
a week or more...

Brother Karl Friedman has
won the intramural squash championship, and Gerry Whitcomb
finished a strong second . . .
Newly elected officers of Theta
Chi Fraternity are: President,
Elliot Stephan Rose and Vice
President, Paul Granger. Congratulations to Ken Arena and his
committee for a successfui pizza
sale. Robert Kuga has been appointed Editor-in-Chief, Rick Lewis, Assistant Editor-in-Chief, and
Jeffrey Brent, Business Manager
of the Buffalonian.

Sororities
Thanks to the efforts of four
sororities, the military ball was
a success. A total of 1800 votes
were cast by the student body.
Reigning at the Cordon Bleu
was Jeanne Piquet of Chi Omega.
First runner up was Jo Ann Montante of Theta Chi Sorority, Cris
Scappator of Sigma Kappa Phi
captured campaign, and Mimi
Blits of Alpha Gamma Delta was
named Miss Congeniality.

The sisters of Alpha Gamma
Delta will be Bunny Hopping tomorrow to collect money for Easter Seals. The Bunny Hop is the
sorority’s annual altruistic proj. The sisters of Chi Omega
ect
wish to thank the brothers of Tau
Kappa Epsilon for a pleasant eve..

1964 RAMBLER —Station
cellent transportation,
886-5044. Keep trying.

Wagon

$400.

-

exJoe,

1960 FALCON—good running. Call Bob,
834-2557. Best offer.
1962 VOLKSWAGEN —Excellent running
condition, just inspected, must sell,

$525. 837-3945 after 6 P.M.
1952 PLYMOUTH—$75, good condition.
836-4942 after 6 p.m.
1961 SUNBEAM ALPINE—convertible. 4
on floor, dual carburater, new clipon hard top, extra transmission. $500
or best offer. 886-6886 after 6.
1964 YAMAHA 80—mint condition.
brand new engine, $200, 886-6886
after 6.
150 cc. VESPA MOTORSCOOTER—low
insurance rates, little upkeep; excellent runnning condition. 62 Win-

Ave. Phone: 834-4304.
1964 80 cc. YAMAHA—less than 10,000

spear

excellent

running condition;
TR7-3663.

with helmet. Call Lou,
1962 RENAULT—body

excellent con-

dition, engine just tuned, all new
tires, $350. Call Paul. 684-6413.
guitar, $75; 1960
GIBSON Acoustic
KHARMANN GHIA, good running condition, $100. Call iLynne, 884-0165.

HAGSTROM ELECTRIC BASS—exceptional fine action, solid sound, cabineted, pair 15” Jensen Lifetime speakers. 837-8953.
TYPEWRITER—Royalite
Portable, case
included. $25. Call Ron, TR3-1758 af7
p.m.
ter
BRAND new sewing machine, $300
value, will sell for $150. Ski boots,
size 8V2, skis, pants, ski rack fit medium size cars, $65 complete. 836-5760.
GOLF CLUBS (left - handed)—seldom
used, Originally $100, $60 with bag.
885-5388.
CHRONOGRAPH —Sportsman’s precision
timing, Swiss, 17 jewel, incabloc, 18
month guarantee, $45. 877-6016 after 7.

ROOMATES WANTED
WE THREE are still looking for a liberal
girl who is willing to share the responsibilities of an incredible 7 room
house. 886-2833 evenings.
APARTMENTS WANTED

THREE

bedroom apartment,-furnished,
1968-69 school year. Call 837-

You re trained and work on routes where people have
bought Good Humor Ice Cream for years
no investment . . everything supplied.
HOW YOU QUALIFY FOR INTERVIEW
1. Minimum age 18,
2. Need a valid driver's license
must be able
to drive a clutch transmission and
3. Be in good physical condition.
...

.

...

Sign Up Now For Our Campus Visit

Ask your Summer Placement Director or Student
Aid
Officer to schedule you for our campus visit or write to:

GOOD HUMOR, Dept. A.
800 Sylvan Avenue
Englewood Cliffs, N. J. 07632

INTERVIEW

DATE:

c-anged

has

her

me the same next year. SLG.

little BROTHER.

Congratulations

For gems from the Jewish
Bible call 875-4265 day or night.
Quick, Charles, grab that girl for yourself while you still can. She'd be
good for you.—Best Friend.
Hey, Baby Doll: Not everyone can be a
dancer. But you're O.K., anyway.
I will not be responsible for debts incurred by anyone but myself. Ronald
Sequora III, Ridgeway, Ont.
SHALOM!

MISCELLANEOUS
EUROPE fgor $196 round trip, June 10

August 16, Niagara Falls to London.
Call 831-3602.

$259.

[UROPE

THE

POPULAI

FLIGHTS B.O.A.C. June 13-Aug. 28.
SOLD OUT. PAN AM: June 12-Aug. 26
7 SEATS LEFT. We must be doing
something right. Call us and find out.
Don Mathison,

837-9157, 4-8 p.m.

AIR FRANCE jet to Europe, Jun$ 11,
New York to London or Paris. August 20, Paris to New York. $254 round
trip. Call 831-2080.
TYPING term papers, 25c per page;

dittos. 35c;

envelopes,

$2.00

per

hundred. Call TF5-6897.

cost.
financed.
695-3044.
SEND $1 for authoritative "Handbook
for Conscientious Objectors.”
NaAmerican Friends
tionally recognized.
Service Committee, Box 181, University
MOTORCYCLE

low

INSURANCE

immediate F.S.-l, premiums

UPSTATE CYCLE INSURANCE

Station, Syracuse,

N.Y.

LARGE HALL for rent.

Suitable for
fraternity parties, parking lot availMr. Marcus. 837-5521.
ALTERATION: coats, dresses and skirts,
etc. Special price for students, one
day service on hem if desired. Snyder
area. 839-0283.
PUBLISH OR PERISH! Editing, proof
reading for faculty members, experienced
In
books, scholarly
text
works. Phone: 882-3549.
DRUMMER, vocalist available for employment; 3 years steady experience
with top local groups. Lou Michaels,
able. Call

TL2-5234.

NURSES—This is no time to stop learning! Come to Cook County and you

PART TIME SALES HELP: hours at your
salary, plus commisconvenience,
sion, call 874-3399, 9-11 daily.
DRIVE IN RESTAURANT, day help wanted, full and part time for mature,
clean cut individuals only. Apply McDonalds Drive In, 1385 Niagara Falls

new everyday. If
we can offer you tutoward your masters
have 11 paid holidays,
a generous vacation, and salary ranging from $600 to $784 per month plus
differential. ($75 for P.M.’s and $60 for
NIGHTS) All of this and more, in a
city that has everything but you. For
information, write: Employment Supervisor, COOK COUNTY SCHOOL OF
NURSING, 1900 West Polk Street. Chicago, Illinois, 60612, TA9-8400.
CONGRATULATIONS: to STEWART ED
ELSTEIN on his success in
the
OLYMPIC TRIALS for the DISCUS
throw* Donna.

TO: the Soc.

LOST in Capen Hall—Men’s prescription sunglasses, black frames. Return to Norton Information Desk.
COLT 45 is coming to Banat, March 22.
Everybody reads Spectrum claiissified.
Low rates. Quick results. 831-311610.

for
9806.

HOUSES, apartments needed for Math
ematicians attending U.B. Summer
Conference, Aug. 11-30. Call Mr. Coleman, 831 1101.
WANTED

ning Friday night.
Sunday is the Big-Little Sister
Dinner at the Coachman’s Inn ..,
Sigma Kappa Phi's annual dinner Blvd.
COLLEGE MEN, need five. Part time
dance will be held tomorrow at
now, summer full time. Can earn $75
the Cordon Bleu.
per week part time. Car necessary.
Phone
832-7509.
A very successful pizza sale
was held Saturday . . . The sisters
PERSONAL
of Theta Chi will hold a pizza

sale tomorrow.

Jennifer

Road.

miles,

The brothers of Alpha Sigma
Phi are co-sponsoring the Colt
45 beer blast tonight at Banat
.

Sigma Alpha Mu would like to
congratulate their bowling team
for an exciting first place finish.
The spring pledge class is: Larry

For quick action call 831-3610

major at 500

Allenhurst

will

see

something

you want more,

ition

assistance
degree. You will

LOST

Coeds at a famous university
here in the East were told
that they had to give up
either mini-dresses
or Genesee Beer

They skirted the issue.

April 16
Q€N

BREW

CO.

ROC M

N

V

�Page Sixteen

Friday, March 22, 1968

The Spectrum

4-'P

•

world

Washington

*

•

focus

new yorK

paris

compiled

from our wire

services by Duane Champion

deGaulle ‘dooms’ dollar pound
,

PARIS
President Charles de Gaulle
said that efforts to safeguard the U.S.
dollar and British pound as the world’s
key currencies were doomed. He demanded they be replaced by a full gold standard as the cornerstone of world trade.
De Gaulle, in one of his strongest warnings yet, said a continued monetary
system based on the American and British
currencies would plunge the world into
a grave economic crisis.
Despite the French leader’s statement,
the dollar and pound surged to new
strength on European markets and the
price of gold continued to drop in free
market trading.
But financial experts voiced fears it
might touch off a new stampede to ui
load dollars and pounds and grab up
gold in markets still jittery after last
week’s international gold and dollar
—

-

crisis.

Creates furor
De Gaulle’s new attack created a furor

in London where the labor government

had just introduced

a severe austerity
budget, putting about 10 per cent more
in taxes on Britons in an effort to shore
up Britain’s ailing economy.
“The General Tries to Rock the Boat,”
headlined the London Evening Standard.
“Now De Gaulle Steps In, Piling on the
Agony,” bannered the Evening News.
He offered France’s cooperation in
drafting a new monetary plan but warned
Washington and London that France might
oppose any decision delaying establishment of a renovated international financial

system.
The 77-year-old De Gaulle, who has
been gradually stepping up his war on
the Anglo-Saxon currencies, declared:
“The crisis of the dollar and pound
sterling which is currently developing
shows that the present system, based on
the privilege of reserve currencies, is not
only unfair, but also henceforth inappli-

—

U.S. dollar.

The President’s request to the House
and Senate came as Senate Democratic
leader Mike Mansfield promised that
Johnson would “cooperate” with Congress
in cutting spending as its price for approving his requested 10 per cent income
tax surcharge.

Johnson asked that Congress allocate
$500 million of the Export-Import bank’s
existing $13.5 billion authority as a special
fund to help finance a broad program
for selling U.S, goods overseas.
The money would be used to assist U.S.
firms who now sell only within the United
States to expand their markets to foreign
countries, and supply .export financing to
make U.S. firms more competitive with
foreign exporters.

.

Slli

cable.”

LBJasks $500 million to aid dollar
President Johnson,
WASHINGTON
repeating his call for a tax increase, asked
Congress to mark $500 million to help
increase U.S. exports and strengthen the

'v£-

—UPI

Johnson, whose plan is aimed at reducing the balance of payments deficit, also
asked for prompt approval of the $2.4
million appropriation he submitted March
1 to enable the commerce department “to
launch a five-year program to promote
American exports.”

Mansfield said Johnson would cooperate
with congressional demands that spending be reduced before taxes are increased,
but avoided confirming reports that the
President was ready to recommend cutting
$10 billion from his fiscal 1969 appropriation requests.
“I do know the President is very anxious for his 10 per cent surtax,” Mansfield
told newsmen. “He would, like to see
Congress take the initiative and reduce
whatever appropriations and expenditures
it thinks advisable and in the amounts it
thinks advisable. The President will cooperate. The amount would be left to

—

Congress.”

la/*Robert F. Kennedy walks toward the Capitol from his office for a

Telephoto

Sen.

Eye of
new storm

vote in the Senate Chamber. Kennedy's
disclosure last week that he might run
for President after all sent a shudder
through Administration ranks and left
Sen. Eugene McCarthy's backers spoiling for a fight against Kennedy in the

primaries.

Rocky boosts riot report
NEW YORK
Governor Rockefeller,
in his first major speech bn national issues, day* before yesterday leveled criticism at those who greeted the report of
the President’s riot commission “with rejection and suspicion in some quarters and
almost total silence in others.
—

“We’ve got to unravel the tangled knot
of poverty, of welfare, of decaying cities,
and desparing people and the racism that
runs through it all,” Rockefeller said in
remarks prepared for delivery at a speech
before the convocation on racial justice at
Manhattan College in the Bronx.
“What is called for first is an expression
of national will, a great national commitment to attack the problem and to end
it,” Rockefeller said.
The speech, the governor’s first in many
months on national issues, put the New
York Republican governor a step closer to
entering the race for his party’s presidential nomination.
Rockefeller compared the civil rights

Negro

TUSKEGEE, Ala.

Triaphoto

ruillls

Points

pointed the way early this week,
calling for a "national austerity pro-

.1
me way

strengthen the dollar.

gram."

He

wants

$500

million

to

alogy between labor peace and racial
peace,” Rockefeller said “Let me make
one more point—Labor’s modern responsibility is a duty to remove the barrier of
race in the nation as in any other American institution.
The governor oulined his proposed State
legislation that would use $5 billion of
private capital and $1 billion in state bond
funds to build housing and new industry
in city ghettoes.

But he left little doubt that the program

was scaled for conversion to the national

level when he added “this program calls
for taking the know-how, the resources
and the imagination that helped make this
country great and applying them to this
country’s greatest domestic challenge.”
“A people who built the world’s freest,
strongest, greatest nation can overcome
the ugly legacy of racism, “Rockefeller
said.

sheriff arrests
—

Alabama’s first Ne-

gro sheriff since Reconstruction arrested
a white police chief and a state trooper
earlier this week on charges of threatening and beating a Negro man.
Sheriff Lucius Amerson said Police
Chief Bobby Singleton of nearby Notasulga was arrested by his Chief Deputy,
Eddie Ivory, a Negro, and Trooper James
H. Bass surrendered voluntarily at the
Macon County Jail in the company of

-UP)

movement with the labor movement
earlier in the century.
“While I am drawing an historical an-

several fellow officers.
Both Singleton and Bass immediately
posted $300 bonds and were not jailed.
Their cases are scheduled for April 1.
Amerson, who became sheriff of this
county with an 80 per cent Negro population in January, 1967, said the two white
officers were arrested on a complaint
signed by Oscar Lee Devance, about 22,

white cop

in connection with an incident at Notasul
ga.

Two charges

Sheriff Singleton was charged with
drawing and threatening to use a danger
uos weapon and Trooper Bass was charged
with assault and battery, Amerson said.
Bass shot and killed a Negro last T&gt;ec
9 near Auburn when he said the wan
attacked him with a knife and tried to escape after being arrested for driving
while intoxicated. Bass was treated at a
hospital for slash wounds.
Amerson said Devance filed the

com-

plaint against the two white men, saying
he had been arrested.
Devance told Amerson he was in his car
outside a nightclub near Notasulga when

Singleton approached him and
him with disorderly conduct.

charged

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                    <text>The

2
u

SSI
i

o

State University of New York at Buffalo

Id
Vol. 18, No. 42

?&lt;

Tuesday, March 19, 1968

W
Knowledge'
today;
begins
'Strike for
f

*

—Jodd

forums scheduled, many classes cut
“In a self-educating operation,” as one professor describes it, students and
teachers will “Strike for

Knowledge,” begining today.
The teach-out will mobilze
the University community to
participate in an intensive
three day seminar on the
Vietnam war.
It essentially reverses the scene
of the popular teach ins where
everyone went to one place to dis-

cuss the “issues at stake.” By leaving the classroom, students can
learn about the war—or, according to one organizer, “confront
the war” —through lectures, discussions, workshops, films, angry

arts and anti-war recreatiorn.

Outstanding speakers
“Strike for Knowledge

—

End

Schedule of events, pp. 8, 9.
Anti-War poems, pp. 8, 9.

Editorial, p. 4.

■

the War” will be highlighted by

Law students offer alternative
to Moot Court' requirement
A petition terming the recent decision of Law School
administrators to begin Moot Court proceedings later this
month “arbitrary, unruly burdensome and prejudicial to an
effective program of study” has been filed by 168 freshmen
law students.
Normally,

a

required course

for all freshmen, Moot Court was
dropped temporarily at the start
of the second semester due to

budgetary problems.
The course’s implementation at
this time, states the petition,
would “defeat the goal of the
entire program” by interfering

with the normal class work load.
It criticizes the scheduling of
Moot Court, noting that it Would
interfere with Spring Vacation,
normally devoted to review for
final examinations.
Law School Dean Wiljiam D.
Hawkland affirmed his support
of the petition. He predicted that
the curriculum committee will
rcommend passage of the petition
at a faculty meeting this week.
If so honored, the Moot Court
requirement would be abandoned
for this semester.
The course, which usually begins at the start of the semester,
involves the hearing of cases under courtroom conditions. Four
students are selected to argue
each case.
They are required to research
precedents and other pertinent

details of the situation presented
them by a faculty member who
hears the case.

Four alternatives

The petition suggests four alternatives to holding the Court
this semester:
e “Moot Court requirement be
suspended for this class, or
e Moot Court be made an
elective in the second or third
year, or

The Moot Court requirement
be fulfilled at either the commencement of the second year or
three-year program in as much as
the work load at that time is
relatively light and students
would receive the total benefit
for which the program was de-

Resistance

numerous guest speakers including Stanley Faulkner, attorney for

the famous “Fort Hood Three"
and participant in the Bertrand
Russel War Crimes Tribunnal.
Another outstanding speaker
will be Go Long, who organized
a statement issued by South Vietnamese students studying in the
United States strongly condemning the war and asking for a negotiated settlement. By this action, he made himself guilty of

William Yates (left) indicts
American universities for their
large role in all wars, since they
produce the intellect necessary
to the military-industrial complex.

McCarthy success yields

a division of sentiment'
by Jay Schreiber
Spectrum

Staff

day; Richard Neustadt Jr., an
early and persistent anti-war organizer, and Ralph Schoenman,

Four speeches were delivered
that castigated the war, the draft
director of the Bertrand Russel and involvement by various colleges in contracting research for
Peace Foundation.
Reverend Herman “Woody” the' Defense Department. The
meeting also publicized the
Cole, Dr, Selig Adler, and Barbara Solomon will be three of ‘Strike for Knowledge’ that is
scheduled to begin today.
the local participants.
Rev. Cole is a professor of philThe audience of about 150 did
osophy at Buffalo State Universenthusiastically
not

ity College.

Dr. Adler is the well known
author and historian on the Un-

respond

to

what they first heard, quiet and
restless they began to file out by
the third speech.

iversity faculty.
Barbara Solomon in the 1950’s
The entire proceeding seemed
established the only expatriate to be overshadowed by Senator
liberal political journal in Spain McCarthy’s strong showing in the
and now writes political essays primary Tuesday and the imminently awaited decision by Senfor commentary and dissent.
Please turn to Page 10 ator Robert F. Kennedy that he

Facult

fable

would challenge President
Johnson.
New Hampshire encouraging
Dean Fred Snell of the Graduate School was one of those more
anxious to discuss the chances of
the Minnesota senator. Speaking
from the floor after the four
speeches had been concluded, he
cited “the encouragement from
New Hampshire. McCarthy has
gotten through the message
through quiet, rational approaches. He has confronted the
people to the alternative, not by
using personality, not by degradation, but by the issues.” Dean
Snell attributed Sen. McCarthy’s
success to students who cam� Please turn to Page 6

Senate

signed, or
• An
expansion of the Appellate Advocacy Course would offer a competent, if not superior,
method of gaining experience in
this regard.”
Dean Hawkland commented on
the alternatives: “There are a
lot of ways to bee-up" the pro-

gram of the present freshman
class, including the expansion of
the Appellate Advocacy Course.

Opposition aired against resolution
by Caryl Schwartz
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

Opposition by some Faculty may cause the Faculty
Senate to withdraw its strong anti-Viet resolution.
The University Faculty
Senate passed March 8 what
is perhaps the strongest denunciation of the Vietnam
war ever passed by a major
American University.
The resolution, passed by a
vote of 91-37 stated that the

war was “immoral, illegal, contrary to American principles and
to the best interests of the United
States, and genocidal to the Vietnamese people.”

The resolution stated a position “opposed to military conscription in any form,” and urged
that President Johnson “take all
immediate steps to seek immediate negotiations for an immediate cessation of armed conflict
and destruction in Vietnam, immediate de-escalation of the military forces present and immediate relief of human suffering.

tary service.” This resolution
a tie vote of 45-45, at
which time President Meyerson
broke the tie with a negative
vote. Dr. Nicholls stated he was
in favor of the Segal-Snell resolution, but said he would have
liked to have seen some positive
action come out of it. Dr. Nicholls
also said he considered his draft

came to

Food

too

•

At the same meeting Biochemistry Professor Peter Nicholls proposed a draft counseling committee which would “advise the
academic community of their constitutional rights and of all conceivable legal alternatives to mili-

—O. Kahn

Reporter

The recent success of Senator Eugene McCarthy in the
treason.
New Hampshire primary is producing apparent dissension
Also heading the list are Jonathan Schell, who is considered among those students and faculty who are actively opposed
by many to be the most brilliant to the Vietnam War. This division of sentiment became evifront-line writer in Viet Nam todent at a Draft Resistance Union meeting Wednesday night.

In an apparent protest over Tower Food Service
operations last week, one enterprising female
student changed the cafeteria sign to read what
she thought to be a more descriptive menu of
what was being served. Needless to say, Food
Service personnel were irate.

counseling proposal as a “posi-

tive action.”

Small attendance
Much of the controversy which

has ensued since the passage of
the resolution concerns the feeling of many faculty members that
it represents “a false picture of
faculty opinion.” This arises from
the fact that about 130 members
of the Faculty Senate were present at the time the resolution
was passed, out of a general membership of approximately 1100.
Dr,

William

Baumer

of the

Philosophy Department told The
Spectrum that it was a "mistake
for the Senate to pass it” and considers it “grossly inappropriate
for the Faculty Senate to take
such matters up.” He stated that
the call for the meeting did not
indicate the topic of a resolution
would be raised. The special
meeting was called with the intention of discussing the recent

draft law revision that eliminated most deferments for graduate students.

Dr. Baumer also indicated that
he is interested in seeing the
resolution rescinded and that a
petition requiring 25 faculty signatures is being started, and another Faculty Senate meeting
will be called at which time the
petition will be presented.

System is affected
Contrary to Dr. Baumer’s opinthat of Dr. John Milligan
History Department, who
the Segal-Snell resolution

ion is
of the
called
“the

greatest

passed by

the

� Please

resolution

ever

Faculty Senate.”

turn to Page 6

�Pag* Two

Th

•

Tuesday, March 19, 1968

Spectrum

Dean of Students Office gives Syracuse, 5
help to re-classified students accept state
by Carol R. Richards

by Gail Barotx

What happens to the many stu.
dents who will be reclassified under the new draft law? Can anything be done by the University
to help them regain their 2-S classification? Assistant Dean of Men
Ronald H. Stein says that the
majority of the University’s attempts to aid students have been
successful.
Formerly, the fact that a student was enrolled as a full-time
student in a university was
enough to insure him a deferment. Under the July, 1967 draft
law, a student has four years to
earn his degree.

If he is in a four-year program he must satisfactorily complete 25% of his credits by the
end of his freshman year, 50%
by the end of his sophomore year,
etc., until his senior year. A student in a five-year pharmacy or

engineering program must
plete 20% each year.

com-

Reclassification danger
Under this law there are many
reasons for loss of the 2-S deferment and subsequent reclassification. Often a student decides
to change his major and hence,
does not have all the required
hours toward a degree within the
specified time. Some students
transfer from non-liberal arts colleges, a terminal two-year program or a technical program,
They may be enrolled as juniors
but still lack enough transfer
credits to graduate in four years.
Students may simply fall behind
academically or fail to notify the
draft board of their status.

Mr. James Schwender, Assis-

SPEEDY GONZALEZ
will be here next week!

Mr. Stein explained that the
Dean of Students Office often
attempts to aid students who have
been rclassified.

Dean's office advises
Each student is given information on how to write to the local
board and are told the appeal
procedure. Letters are also written to the student’s local board
by the University, explaining the
case and requesting the return
of the 2-S classification or a 1-SC
classification, which is a temporary deferment until the end of
the academic year or graduation,
whichever is first.
University stresses the
importance of the students completing his education. The Dean’s
Office will call the local draft

The

state’s six most prestigious
private universities are so
sorely in need of financial
help that they would be willing to accept some state control in return for direct state
aid.
That’s the view of Syracuse
University Chancellor William P.
Tolley, who said he was also
speaking for Columbia, Cornell,

Fordham, Rochester
York Universities.
Testifying before

and

New

the

Joint

Legislative Committee on Higher
Education, Dr. Tolley said the big

six universities support “almost
without qualification” the recent
recommendations made by the
Commission on the Future of Private Higher Education headed by
McGeorge Bundy, president of the
Ford Foundation.
The Bundy Report recom-

The results of a psychology
questionnaire, designed by the
Faculty-Student Advisory Com-

mittee to determine weaknesses
the undergraduate department,
board and find out if there are in
any unnecessary difficulties or will soon be made public.
Psychology majors will be sent
missing forms that might keep
a newsletter listing the results.
the student from getting a deAn open meeting of the Facferment. Students are also given
ulty-Student Advisory Committee
advice on legal counseling.
is scheduled for 4 p.m. Friday in
Room 313, Townsend Hall. It will
Any student who has been rebe open to all interested underclassified has 30 days to appeal graduates and faculty members.
his case. Mr. Stein urges reclasThe purpose of the meeting is to
sified students to come to the discuss the results of the quesDean of Students Office as soon tionnaire and to make plans for
future actions, according to Paula
as possible. The staff handles Silverman,
a member of the Fafive to seven cases per week. In culty-Student Advisory Commitonly two cases have the reclassitee.
The questionnaire, covering
fied students been drafted.
seven areas of concern, pointed
to several general trends.
The curriculum received

the

most criticism and suggestions

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For Charcoal Broiled CHICKEN at Its Finest

Dr. Tolley if the big Six universities would be willing to accept

that would total $33 million by

ures as admissions po

to

1970,

At the same hearing, State University Chancellor Samuel B.
Gould put his stamp of approval
on the Bundy Report.

Aid needed immediately
Dr. Tolley said the need for
aid was so urgent that he hoped
the legislature would approve
the Bundy recommendations immediately so that aid—which
would total $1.8 million a year
for Syracuse—would be available
in 1969.
He said the choices confronting the state are to let the private institutions die; to take them
over completely; to accept the
middle ground recommended by
the Bundy Commission.
Committee Chairman Joseph
Kottler, a Democratic assemblyman from New York City, asked

“If we offer you money and
we say you can’t have it unless
you uphold the public functions
of a university, what then?”
asked Rep. Kottler.
“We know we can’t have it
both ways,” Dr. Tolley replied.
“The minute the state gives
money to a university the relationship changes.”

Mr. Kottler persisted: “Are the
private universities willing to accept this?”
“As far as the universities are
concerned,” said the Syracuse
Chancellor, “I’m afraid we have
no choice. “It’s the only middle
ground.”

“But,” Dr. Tolley added, “the
state would be ill-advised to try
to operate the private universities.”

Psych students rap curriculum,
class size, "dry" Statistics

Curriculum complaints

*

mended that the state begin a

program of direct state aid

Gannett News Service

tant Director of Admissions, explained that the new draft law
is based on a 12-month academic
year, instead of the previous 9month year. This provides the
student with more leeway. For
example, in an academic year
from September to September,
the student who wishes to change
his major or make up credits,
has the summer before and the
summer following to do so. But
often this is not possible since
many students must work during
the summer months.

other universities would
control in return for aid

from the students. The large size
of psychology 101-102 sections
was criticized, along with the lack
of interesting content in the
course. Suggestions for changes
included separate sections for
future psych majors, and greater
concentration on specific areas.
Psych 208-208 (Statistics) was
considered too demanding and
“too dry” for non-psych majors.

It was suggested that the course
not be a pre-requisite for upper
division courses and that the
course be worth four credits or
be taught in one semester.
Students complained of over-

crowded classrooms and teachers
who are “more interested in research than in their classes” in
the upper division courses. A
greater selection of courses, especially with a cilnical orientation, was called for. It was also
suggested that the course “Systems and Theories” be required.

Advisement scored
Students felt that advisors are
difficult to find and are not
aware of requirements. It was
suggested that students pick their
advisors and that advisors be selected in the interest areas of
students. Graduate advisement
was considered poor and too late.
A specific group of teachers just
to advise was called for.
Many students considered comprehensives to be unnecessary for
those not bound for graduate
school and that they should not
be a requirement for graduation.
The exam should either be eliminated, or made optional or voluntary.
The honors program was found
to be quite satisfactory, though
not well publicized. Students hope
that it be started in the junior

year and that it be extended to
those with an idea for a project,

but lacking the grades.
Senior seminar was criticized
mainly for the lack of enough sections. It was suggested that they
be open to juniors and offered at
more reasonable hours.
On the issue of faculty-student
interaction, the problem centers
around the lack of opportunity
to get to know the professors.
More faculty-student functions—coffee hours, student sponsored
colloquia—were asked for.
Students also suggested that
psych majors be allowed to take
education courses and that there
be a computer science course for
majors.

Miss Silverman mentioned that
the same questionnaire has been
recently distributed to faculty
members, although the results are
not yet compiled.

Supports strike
The Physics Graduate Student
Association has voted support for
a policy of general education on
the War and draft during the
Strike for Knowledge, this week.
They also voted support for the
Segal-Snell resolution passed by
the Faculty Senate March 8.
The organization has also
passed a resolution affirming an
individual’s right “to participate
in activities concerning the war
to the extent of his own conscience without fear of unjustifiable reprisal from the University.”

In conjunction with its policy
the PGSA is sponsoring Dr. M.
Ross, a High Energy Physicist
from the University of Michigan,
who will speak Wednesday at
noon, Room 114 Hochstetter, on
the role of the scientist in the
atmosphere of war politics.

PLAZA SHOE REPAIR
ONE STOP SERVICE
CENTER
Shoes Repaired While-U-Wait
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University Plaza

836-4041

�the

Tuesday, March 19, 1968

Pag*

Spectrum

Thr**

dateline news. Mar. 19

»mm

WASHINGTON—The “moderate" troop buildup in Vietnam ex
u

««

■ »• ■ •

u

—- - -

-r

duty.
possibility that some Reserve forces will be called to active
The anticipated troop buildup also could mean that some Air Nato
tional Guard units will be sent to Vietnam or Thailand, according
highly informed sources.
Although the increase in manpower is now virtually certain, it
for a
does not appear, at least at present, that Johnson will call
general mobilization of Reserve forces.
The President was reliably reported over the weekend ready to
order a moderate increase in the number of American troops in
possible
Vietnam, but they quoted him as calling some reports of a
200,000 man increase as “dove scare tactics.”
WASHINGTON— Sen. Robert F. Kennedy offered to stay out of the
Democratic presidential race if President Johnson agreed to appoint
a commision of leading “doves” to ease the nation out of Vietnam.
Johnson rejected the offer. So Kennedy decided to run.
Those are the bare bones of an astonishing story that added an
explosive new element yesterday to an already bitter political campaign.
Both Kennedy partisans and Johnson adherents denied leaking
the story to the press and each accused the other of distorting what
really happened. But leak it most certainly did, like a sieve.
The disclosure Sunday of the proposed deal brought immediate
“clarifying”—and sharply contradictory—statements from Kennedy,
who announced his candidacy only Saturday, and from a top administration official who was in on it.
WASHINGTON—The United Stales hoped yesterday to maintain
the purchasing power of the dollar at a stable level at home and
abroad although its ties to gold were partially cut.
Shifting to the defensive against those who have attacked the
dollar, America and her six European financial allies have locked
their vaults to further sales of gold to speculators or other private
interests and, in effect, switched to a two-price system for gold.
By agreement, the price will remain at $35 an ounce in transactions among cooperating governments. But gold will be permitted to
seek its own price in the private markets of Europe, Asia, and elsewhere. Speculators bid the price up to more than $44 an ounce last
Friday in Paris
LONDON— Jails yesterday held about 300 persons and hospitals
another 50 involved in an anti-Vietnam War battle between 20,000
demonstrators and 2,000 bobbies at the U S. Embassy in what police
called London’s most vicious rioting within memory.
NEW YORK— Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, pledged to give “most
earnest and careful consideration” to pleas from Oregon Republicans
to enter their state’s presidential primary, gets another nudge toward
active candidacy in Washington today.
Meeting with 15 pro-Rockefeller Oregonians in his Fifth Avenue
aprtment Sunday, the New York governor listened to their appeals
but remained noncommital for the moment. He has promised to
make a decision on the race by Friday, the deadline for striking his
name from the Oregon ballot. It was entered without his approval.
SALISBURY, Rhodesia—Rhodesian Security forces are battling
African nationalist guerrillas in the bush country along the Rhodesiaambia border, the government of Premier Ian Smith said yesterday.
A government statement said nine guerrillas have been killed so
far plus one wounded and “others” captured.
One Rhodesian was reported killed and two wounded in the fighti

.

,

1

fjeeivu

—Bino

VISTA
drive

A panel of VISTA volunteers discuss the question, "Is VISTA an effective, anti-poverty program?", during their recruiting visit here. Black
nationalism became one of the major topics of
discussion.

'One of the best ways of learning'
VISTA discussed and examined
—

Is VISTA an effective anti-

poverty program?

That question was considered Thursday by a panel
composed of VISTA volunteers as part of the current
VISTA recruiting drive here.
Dr. Jerome Fink, director of

Placement Services, moderated a

panel which included VISTA vol-

unteers

Howard Finklestein and

William Lorsung, senior James
Schwinger, and VISTA field representative Nick Ingram.
Mr. Finkelstein, a New Jersian
who now works on Buffalo’s Lower West Side said the program “is
based on the education thing.”
Special insight needed
“You hope that volunteers get
a special insight into the community and become able to talk
to people. The first few months
you put into becoming alienated
yourself may put you through
some changes,” he said.
A former VISTA volunteer in
the audience re-emphasized the
point when he said: “VISTA is
one way of going down and seeing
things. Some persons in the black
community told me: ‘Go back and
tell the white man what you saw.’
There are other ways of finding
out what is going on in the ghetto. VISTA is one of the best ways
of learning.”
Mr. Finkelstein made these
comments about the Lower West
Side project: “It’s a middle class
program. We had two black fellows—one quit and one got arrested for starting a riot. However, I wish it could be more balanced. People get hung up on
style. The human element comes
HOT BIG 13"
8 Slice

-

nt-TT

If the ghetto people don’t
trust you, you’re lost. If you can
last six months in VISTA, you can
in.

last the whole time.”

Superficiality?
VISTA is one of the poverty
programs under the direction of
the Office of Economic Opportunity. Unlike Head Start, Job
Corps or Neighborhood Youth
Corps, it is intended to organize
community action by people living in depresed areas. Volunteers uually sign up for one year,
or two at the most.
Does the short period in VISTA
foster superficiality among volunteers? Mr. Orson, another volunteer now working on the Lower
West Side, said: “It depends on
the individual: What I have done
on the west side could be continued by people within the community. A period longer than a
year might foser dependence on
the VISTA worker. There are
mothers and kids who can take
care of programs. The diletante
aspect is possible in some cases,
but not usual.”
The issue of Black Nationalism,
and its connection with VISTA,
arose. The VISTA workers said
that a white worker approaching
the Negro community with a feeling of hostility can be in a lot of
trouble, but they hadn’t met with
any great hostility. “As I say,”
Mr. Finklestein commented,
’’when you first go into the ghetto, you go through a lot of
changes.”

economic sytem with the race
problem, Mr. Schwinger, a Community Aid Corps worker, said:
“The system can mechanically
handle the problem of poverty.
The people implementing the system have not demonstrated social
conscience. We could wipe out
the problem, but we haven’t dealt
with it.”
VISTA’s relation to the recent
rioting in cities was discussed by
a member of the audience: There
was a general recognition that
young rioters spoke for the community. The riots unified the
ghetto in a way that VISTA could
not.” Mr. Kinklestein added: “Nobody in VISTA could do anything

that the riots didn’t do,”

Some speakers expressed the
opinion that basic changes are

needed in the system, over-reaching VISTA to eliminate poverty.
A speaker from the audience
said: “If we could convince the
businessman that he can make a
profit with a guaranteed annual
income because people will be
able to buy more products; if we
can put improvements in a technological guise, we could convince
the busines man to eliminate poverty.”

Wipe out problem

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Rev. 3:20

Asked about the relation of the

By

KENSINGTON

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hear my voice, and open the door,
I will come unto him.”

A

TR 3-1330

I

WHOSOEVER WILL MAN COME
Jesus Christ says: “Behold I stand
at the door and knock: if any man

DiROSE
$1.05

on the Paris bullion market yesterfor the first time since speculators launched their buying spree
that threatened the world’s money system and the American dollar.
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Big John's Steak Special

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771 Niagara Falls Blvd.

Appointments for senior pictures for next

22

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25-29.

�Tuesday,

The Spectrum

Page Four

March 19, 1968

The makings of a President: RFK
Throw the precidents out. Robert F. Kennedy is making
a bid for the Presidency even though it means bucking the
incumbent for the nomination. It’s simply beautiful.
Until now, the prospects for any kind of election in
November seemed bleak. Lyndon Johnson opposing any one
would consider a significant election
But all that is changed.
The efforts of Sen. Eugene McCarthy are admirable.
The job he has done to bring anti-Johnsonian sentiment to
the surface has been excellent. Few political analysts, however, could conclude a successful drive for the nomination
by McCarthy. Johnson still had it all wrapped up.
But now Lyndon Johnson is worried. Robert Kennedy is
a much more substantial threat. He has greater support in
the Democratic Party and, more importantly, among the
voters. Kennedy can get the nomination; and the Democrats
know he can win in November.
Sen. Kennedy has been called an opportunist. All Presidential candidates are opportunists. Since when has opportuism become a dirty word? The difference is simply this:
Robert Kennedy has the ability, the fortitude and the proper
perspective of the issues to be an excellent President.
a change that
This nation is in dire need of a change
will restore the programs, the policies and the ideals of the
New Frontier. It needs a man who can undo all the blunders
and absurdities that the Johnson Administration has been
prone to.
No “me too” candidate will do that. No uncommitted,
evasive candidate will do that. No hawkish, flag-waving conservative will do that. Robert Kennedy will.
Why Robert Kennedy?
Chiefly because he is a man with the right ideas on our
foreign and domestic policies. He is a man who can act and
will act to further those ends. He, unlike McCarthy, is a man
who can win. He was all the makings of the President, 1968.
Look around, and try to find another.
Robert Kennedy’s bid for the Presidency is the most
promising event of the past five years. We trust that he will
be successful.
Why Robert Kennedy?
Why not?

CU

.vier.
•rv
'Pardon me, sir

.

.

.

could I speak

to you

for

the burgher

writings

When first written upon the banks of the Gen-

esee River, The Burgher called this simply “White
Woman of the Genesee.” Later, and for no discernable reason it became “Ode to Mary Jameson.”

Still later, after much revision, it became the following:

Who are you Mary Jameson? No more than
1742-1833? Only “White Woman of the Genesee?”
Could you walk these waters? Scale these falls? Did
the Senecas treat you well? Like a goddess?
Gazing at these falls, Mary Jameson, I can’t be-

lieve you scaled them. But you wouldn’t believe
what we’ve done to your land. Land is not valuable
any more. Here it is filled with neon signs and
coke machines. Picnic tables, garbage barrels. No
part unscathed. In another country our bombs
chum the soil. Tons of bombs. Every day.
Your land though, these immediate lands, have
fared better, than others’. Broken promises, broken
treaties. The land left to other Senecas by the
Father of Our Country is beneath a hundred feet
of water, backed up behind Kinzua Dam. The Senecas have relocated again however, until Uncle
Sam or Howard Johnson plan a new highway or

find the path of righteousness?

It says that, before you died, you “expressed a
hope of pardon through Jesus Christ?” Pardon for
what, DEH-GE-WA NUS.” Did you commit atrocities? Did you burn enemies? Did you not like life
among the Senecas? Did you know Jesus?

I stood before a council house near the bands
of the Genesee. It says that war parties met here
before they “devastated the frontiers.” The building is small, rectangular, no pentagon, I looked

around and asked, “WHO devastated the frontiers?
How many ‘savages’ could gather in this small
hovel? Fifty? Five hundred thousand?”

Women's coaches say 'thanks'
To the Editor:

The coaches of the women’s intercollegiate
basketball, swimming and tennis teams would like

our appreciation

to take this opportunity to express

for the various articles throughout the year in the
Spectrum. This was the first time that any women’s

in this

intercollegiate events have been printed

college’s newspaper. The various team mmbers also
would like to thank you for the write-ups. The girls

can
nice
to
be
have
said
it’s
read them. Other students
enjoy sending them home so that their parents

able to read about the women’s sports and not just
the men’s. Thanks again for the fine job and I am
looking forward to next year.

Miss D. Hale,
Tennis Adviser
Ree

K. Spaeth,

Basketball Advisor
Verla Witt,
Swim Team Advisor

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during the regular
Tuesday and Friday
—

every
academic

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The Buffalo Scate—Student Course and Teacher Evaulation—is now available in the Union. The books went on
sale Monday for $1 each and 75/ for fee payers.
The immediate goals of the committee which produced
the evaluation were to aid the student in registration and
to avoid a reshuffling of schedules after the first week of
classes. In the committee’s words: “The evaluation will
‘fortunate the grapevine’ which previously was the sole
method of choosing a course and/or teacher.”
In the long range, a yearly evaluation will inevitably
raise academic standards. The finished produce represents
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Our- thanks go to the co-chairmen of the committee,
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We look forward to the continued publication of the valuable
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alone?'

by Schwab

There is a reason to support the Strike for knowledge.
There is a great deal to be learned.
The war in Vietnam has emerged as the most crucial
issue of this decade, and it has been going on for so long
restaurant.
that a whole generation of college students is unfamiliar
I stood beside the cabin you built, Mary Jamewith the early stages of United States involvement in South
son, at least that’s what the plaque said.' It says
East Asia.
you lived for more than 70 years as a “capOnly recently has the Tonkin Gulf incident been brought that
tive and adopted member of the Senecas.” That
into its true perspective. But that is just one story of so many you became the wife of Chief Hiokatoo and gained
that need to be told and retold. Once Americans begin to great influence in the councils. You and the Senunderstand why we are involved in Vietnam, they will underecas didn’t know about racism. The Senecas must
have loved and respected you.
stand why we should get out.
The range of activities and events scheduled for these
At your monument the statue shows you with
three days is tremendous. So much will be going on that long bronze hair and a bronze child strapped to
it will be impossible to see and hear everything. It is im- your back. You look very beautiful. “DEH-GE-WA
you. What does it mean? (I’m
portant, however, that everyone see and hear something. NUS” they called
sorry but a spider’s crawling over your feet!)
The Strike is also an attempt to put the University back
into its proper role. It cannot go on feeding industry and
After your capture, I’m told, you were rethe military in their drive to continue this inane war. The moved to the Genesee River in 1759. Did you go
willingly, Mary Jameson? Were they fearful, feUniversity must be committed to the pursuit of wisdom not rocious?
Did they wear war paint and dance uncerthe pursuit of war. The war has obscured that commitment. emonious dances? Did they have talons? Green saFor these reasons the Strike for Knowledge is a good liva? Were you scared?
strike, a strike that hopefully will illuminate this mess in
And it says that you had two husbands and five
which we now find ourselves.
children. Were your husbands gentle? Were your
Unquestionably, there is a reason to support the Strike:
children? Was there discrimination? Did your
There is so much to be learned.
wisdom keep them off the war path? And did you

Grapevine formalized

—

Readers

...

Support the strike

a moment

We fail to understand you, DEH-GE-WA NUS.
We fail to understand at all. We drift further from

understanding.
Even as I stood there, a small girl, tugging at her
mother’s dress asks, “Why don’t they destroy it?”
Could it be on her conscience too? Does she
understand more than her parent?
Does anyone understand you? I want to. But
you haven’t spoken.
I’ll return someday to the banks of the Genesee,
DEH-GE-WA NUS, and we shall hold council.

...

...

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Second class postage paid at Buffalo, New YorK.
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Telephone: Area Code 716,

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•

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Editorial
Business
,

�Tuesday, March 19, 1968

Pag* Fiva

The Spectrum

Psych students crying wolf?

By Interlandi

BELOW OLYMPUS

To the Editor:

It appears as though the Psychology Department
has a majority undergraduate element that is hypocritical. The same students who cry out for a democratic society and power for the student body, and
16

be crying woit. And,

by Martin Guggenheim

strike being
I have pledged to comply with the
u
rl

like the boy who cried wolf,

tration.

The Association of Undergraduate Psychology
Students has worked very hard for the past three
weeks in consulting with Dr. Silverman and contriving all possibile channels for the undergraduate
psych student to take an active role in making possible improvements in the Psychology Department;
all possible ways for him to have a say in his
future as a psych major. The Association of Undergraduate Psychology Students distributed 500 questionnaires in the psych classes; only 60 were returned. Alas, it appears as though the undergrad
psych majors desire a dictatorial representative
board, who will plan what courses they will take,
the texts they will use, and say 20 years from now,
what they will say and how they will say it.

y .-?■ &amp;

Don’t cry wolf, if you want a say in your education. Do your part! Hand in the questionnaire and
any suggestions you may have, to the suggestion
box in Townsend Hall, or call any of your representatives. And if you can spare the energy, make
it to the open meetings, the first of which will be
held at 4 p.m. Friday in Townsend.

SB.'

Uf. miBTUK*

Member-at-large,

the gadfly

Assoc, of Undergrad. Psych, Students

Army has 'Food Service/ too
I have just finished reading your article on the
Food Service. I must admit it brought to mind
some very colorful moments in my immediate past.
However, my recollections were not over this food
service. I was thinking of a very past, but happy
moment while I was on active duty.
We also had a food problem. State-side, not
much money is spent on food, and it is of a very
poor quality. The point is we had a great deal less
freedom to protest, but we got better food.
Bluntly, what we did was to stop eating at the
Mess Hall for about a couple of days. Of course in
our case it meant a little starvation till we could
get off base, but students aren’t restricted like this.
What’s more, there are people in sufficient number
living off campus who can invite one or two people
from the dorms over on one or two nights for

dinner.
This University is pretty good at organizing
things. What about it? Aren’t we capable of striking the “Food Service” and causing a loss they
can’t afford?
Louis Schwartz

Replies to Festival Committee
To the Editor:

The letter in Friday’s Spectrum, signed by the
Spring Arts Festival Committee contained many
mistruths.
(1) I did attend a meeting of the Spring Arts
Festival Committee. Doane Hollins, Jane Spitalnik
and Sara Schrom sat at the other end of the table,
but perhaps they cannot see that far.
(2) The entire article was read and re-read by
the S. A. F. Publicity Chairmen, Joan Connell and
Sandee Lippman. Mistakes in the schedule are due
to the Committee’s oversight.
(3) The adjective “irresponsible” is one added
by the committee heads themselves to themselves.
(4) The “misquotes” mentioned, but not referred
to, are verbatim statements. If the committee is
disturbed about the interview, it is disturbed about
its replies.
As to the argument for additional information
on the artists, I agree. For reasons of its own The
Spectrum delayed printing my other articles.
I sincerely hope the Committee’s lack of courtesy
both in aiding the write-up, and in its subsequent
unfounded attack, does not leave the Festival with
a royal pain in the nose.
Elaine F. Rosenberg
Writers: Please be brief. Letters should not exceed
300 words. All letters must be signed and the address
and telephone number of the writer must be included. Positive verification of authorship will be made
before a letter is printed.
Letters will be kept in strict confidence.
The Spectrum will use initials or pen name, if
requested. But anonymous letters are never used.

The

Spectrum reserves the right to edit or delete
material submitted for publication, but the intent of
letters will not be changed.

onrl

tnmnrcmu—Tlsttr—‘

*

In i

i

nnOc

og

iiciiqI”

tins, of course, for me is a
topic for this space is the
Vietnam war, and it I am to comply with abstaining from my normal actions, I should either praise
our efforts in Southeast Asia, talk about a completely new topic, or not write anything.
When I go to jail or when I leave the country,
when, finally, my efforts to change the direction
in which my country is headed, are ended, I must,
in order to live at peace with myself, be able to
look back on these days and know that I tried all
I could. If I leave this space empty today, it might
make a point, but I’m afraid that it couldn't do as
much as my writing more about what I feel. So
if only to appease my conscience several years from
now when I sit in a prison contemplating my past—
I shall continuei
Attending the Faculty Senate meeting last week
was a most enjoyable experience. 1 am convinced
that there are some truly dedicated people on the
faculty of this campus and even the efforts of Adolf
Homburger, chairman of the Executive Council,
couldn’t negate that fact. There were still, faculty
members at that meeting not willing to recognize
that the Vietnam war is inevitably and ultimately
involved with every aspect of American universities; these people would not even agree that
Vietnam had anything to do with the drafting of
graduate students.
It’s damped hard to ever know what you are
and what morals are and what is the “best” or the
“right” things to do in any situation. I am particularly confused about how I should live my life. But
I play a game which makes it a little easier to
decide things. I pretend that we lost the War and
the Enemy was holding the Washington Tribunal
to determine which Americans are guilty of War
Crimes and which should be acquitted. Then I
pretend I’m on the witness stand and forced to
defend my actions during the 1960s when my nation attempted systematically to take-over the
world.
I have no answers for anybody else; I have few
answers for myself. This column has been an experience for me which has forced me to think
—

"Suppose they don’t give a damn about
his place in history?"

Jeffrey M. Cohen

tnrlnir

should nut gu on.
problem. A normal

6«euf!

will soon lose the attention of those who have the
most influence over their education—the adminis-

To the Editor:

The Sham

by Mark Schneider

Seemingly the National Security Council has opened a
Pandora’s Box by eliminating graduate student deferments.
General Hershey hints now and then about dipping into 2-S
pool next, which if General Westmoreland gets his extra
200,000 soldiers to finish mopping up his Tet victory, he
about issues and make certain decisions. It has
(Hershey) may very well do. Senator Fulbright (who demon- been,
and is, an educational experience. But, if you
strated the efficacy of our wonderful system of checks and go to your classes today and pretend that nothing
balances) notwithstanding, Westy will be allowed to get his different is happening and if you make sure that
victims, many of them would-be grad students.
the War and its implications remain removed from
The grad students, headed for
comfortable jobs, will of course
not go without a squabble; faculty senates will pass virulent resolutions, students will strike and
even university presidents will
routinely send polite, formalized
expresions of concern. But what
is esential for people who really
don’t want to go to Vietnam and
don’t want their sons to go to
Guatemala or Bolivia, is that they
talk to the working class and poor
kids who have been going so far.
Today’s student strike is hopeless
and senseles if it doesn’t point
people in this direction.
The newly formed Draft Hesis-

tance Union will be an organiza-

tion which provides the manand knowledge to help
change cannon fodder into aware
men who want to stay alive. The
Union is composed of people who
Won’t Go, and want to see that
Nobody Goes, for they recognize
that literally no man is safe in a
world of Vietnam wars, ghettoes,
false Alliances for Progres, Bays
of Pigs. What the Union can help
you do is Beat the Draft—hopefully without winding up in jail
or Canada. There are legal ways.
But what it can really do is help
individuals realize that with intelligent collective action there is
hope for a world without drafts

own freedom to lead lives unscarred by 2-S, 1-Y, 4-F hassles is
dependent upon reaching people
who don’t hassle, but obey, we’ve
gained something significant. It’s
the first step away from the
narrow self-interestism which is
inevitably suicidal, which leads to
Nazism.
Specifically what the Union
plans is to develop draft counsellors among university students
who will then be willing to counsel kids in high schools and will
help them to understand the
forces that shape the war and
their lives. Simply, us college
kids need them, and them needs
us.
The speakers in today and tomorrow’s strike promise a challenging alternative to the stale

your life, you will be found guilty by the Washington Tribunal. There will be no record of your disgust; there will be no proof of your dissatisfaction.
Perhaps it is wrong to discuss one’s actions on
the basis of morality. The problem with all of us
is precisely that we do accede so often. Few of us
feel very proud of Ourselves; few of us think highly
of what we are and what we do. We know, better
than anyone else, what liars and weaklings we are.
Compounding that problem, we are eternally keeping a facade so that no one else is ever sure that
we are as bad as we know we are.
All this is first grade psychology and in one
sense doesn’t need to be said. But I don’t think it
is said enough, and I don’t think it is heard enough.
There are days when I play no games. There are
days when I put up no facade; I don’t bother lying.
But I regress. Sometimes I forget how childish I
am; sometimes I’m chicken and back down. This
column isn’t simply self-confession; it’s truth. Maybe people will relate to truth on the most personal

level of truth.
In one sense it isn’t the War we are fighting; it
fare offered in those Cold War isn’t the Estabishment or racism or the Adminishistory texts which dutifully retration, it’s ourselves. We are fighting inside ourport that “the Geneva Agreeselves for the strength to be honest and gauge our
ments divided the country,” or lives according to our own barometer. This struggle
those weary insights about Mackie is the most difficult, but we must begin at some
the Cat in Math 117. Tomorrow’s point. The first time we do something for ourdraft panel composed of two lawselves, our inner selves, will be the first time we
years, Mitchell Goodman and Robare heading in the right direction. So much of our
ert O’Neill, will be of immediate lives is irrelevant; so much is superfluous; so much
importance to everybody with a is for our image about which no one cares at all.
pending draft problem. The turnIf we were able to sit on a cloud and watch ourout here in Buffalo should be
selves, we’d laugh. When we started crying, we
larger than at Columbia’s one day would change. Maybe that’s what drugs are all
strike, where 3500 students and about. Maybe that’s why so many people are so
100 faculty members refused to
against their use. In any case, it’s necessary to
attend clases, thus cancelling begin to live, at some point. Question yourself beand wars. When we see that our
75% of the day sessions.
fore you go to your class today. Ask yourself why
you are going. Ask yourself what you want from
life and what you owe yourself.
Then remember that there is a War being fought
in Vietnam. Then remember that black babies get
WASHINGTON—Sen. Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y., commenting on
eaten by rats in your very own country.
President Johnspn’s proposed tax increase:
a
“It’s
war tax. The President should say it is a war tax and
then I think it will get a better reception in Congress.”
The Spectrum's pages for
WATERVILLE VALLEY, N.H.—Hans Rey, author and resident
of this community, commenting on the fact that Sen. Eugene Mc&amp;
Carthy, D-Minn., received eight presidential votes and President
Johnson none:
It is the policy of The Spectrum to report the
“It’s an indication the people are vitally concerned about the
news fully and impartially in the news pages,
Vietnam War.”
to express the opinions of the newspaper only
SACRAMENTO, Calif.—A source close to the Republican party
in the editorial pages and to publish all sides
declaring
Reagan
being
that
California’s
Gov.
Ronald
was
leaders,
of important controversial issues.
pressured by some top party members to run for vice president;
"Without expression, freedom of expression is meaningless."
“It seems the governor is everybody’s candidate for vice president.”
power

Quotes in the

news

Editorials

Opinions

�Tuesday,

The Spectrum

Page Six

March 19, 1968

McCarthy success...
■&amp;

Continued from Page 1

paigned for him and urged those
present to do the same.

“I will lend my support and
work as hard and I hope you will
lend your support to work for
an alternative to Lyndon Johnson, the genocide man in Southeast Asia,”
Dean Snell’s remarks drew the
loudest response of the night, producing a lively debate that lasted
two hours.

Only personality change
One student immediately disputed the dean’s view, claiming
Sen. McCarthy was no more than
a different form of Pres. Johnson. He said a change in personality would not change the imperialist policy in Vietnam.
As

members of the audience

continued to take turns at the
microphone, a division in opinion
formed. One, student reminded
the audience that “in changing
society the political thrust must
be primary. A lot of students’ interest lies in ending the war.
There’s a large base of support
around which we can mobilize for
McCarthy and Kennedy.”
Robert Cohen, a graduate student in the Philosophy Department took the side of those expressing discontent with working
within the political system.

He accused Sens. Kennedy and
McCarthy of taking the anti-war
movement that was built “on our
tears and sweat” and using it for
their own political advantage.
“They won’t bring us the changes
in the society that we want,” said
Mr. Cohen.

Reptilian war
“Because the war in Vietnam is
so reptilian, we jump at the first
man who says he is going to stop

the war.” Mr. Cohen cried; “We
forced ourselves on people, we developed new concepts, we were
the ones who brought the issue to

the people.”

Mr. Cohen noted there was a
dilemma between the immediacy
of ending the war and “achieving
the type of society that we really
want.” His choice was clear, but
his distaste for accepting “slow,
methodical gains” brought complaints from others present, ,
Professor Sidney Wilhelm had
begun the evening by drawing an
analogy between Nazi Germany
and South Vietnam. He predicted
that President Johnson would resort to sheer autocratic power
should this facade finally collapse. “Johnson would prevent
any possibility of himself being

removed,” warned Prof. Wilhelm.

William Yates, a member of
the English Department at State
University College, declared that
the American university plays a
large role in any war, including
Vietnam. “The U. S. military industrial complex requires the intellect produced in the university.” Mr. Yates accused this University of “participating in the
Pentagon bureaucracy.”

The last two speakers, Assistant
Professor of English Robert Hass
and DRU leader Carl Ratner,
both called for students to make
draft resistance a political movement. Mr. Haas said: “You are
being trained to run the machinery; they need manpower.
We must refuse to spend our
lives on their war.”
The panel members stayed free
from the ensuing discussion except for one statement by Bill
Mayrl, who said: “It’s amazing
that we take such a fatalistic approach towards organizing a real
movement in America.”

Opposition aired...
Continued from Page 1

Dr. Milligan told The Spectrum: “I’m very much opposed
to the war and was happy to see
such a strong resolution passed.”
Indicating his opinion as to
why the resolution was passed at
this time, he said that previously

the draft didn’t affect the university system as strongly as it
does now.
“The draft is breathing down
the neck of the middle class,”
Dr. Milligan said.
“I have every reason to believe that every member of the
Faculty Senate doesn’t share this
view,” said Dr. Marvin Zimmerman of the Philosophy Depart-

ment.

Dr. Zimmerman also said he

felt the faculty had a right to
take a stand.
“I see nothing wrong with
that,” he said, “as long as academic freedom is not violated.
They had a right to pass it as
long as they don’t bar anyone,”
Dr. Zimmerman continued. He
described academic freedom as
the protection of any view “no
matter how reprehensible or immoral one thinks the views is.”

Dr. Zimmerman said he had

“a lot of criticism on what we’re
doing in Vietnam,” but felt we
had a right to be there. He also

indicated that he would like to
“call upon President Meyerson
to ask for a mail ballot of the
total Faculty Senate on the question of the resolution to guarantee a fair representation of faculty opinion,” which he felt was
not represented at the meeting.

If you don't agree that
business destroys individuality,
maybe it's because you're an
individual.
There’s certain campus talk that claims
individuality is dead in the business world.
That big business is a big brother destroying initiative.
But freedom of thought and action, when
backed with reason and conviction’s courage, will keep and nurture individuality
whatever the scene: in the arts, the sciences,
and in business.
Scoffers to the contrary, the red corpuscles of individuality pay off. No mistake.
Encouraging individuality rather than
suppressing it is policy in a business like
Western Electric—where we make and pro-

vide things Bell telephone companies need.
Because communications are changing fast,
these needs are great and diverse.
Being involved with a system that helps
keep people in touch, lets doctors send cardiograms across country for quick analysis,
helps transmit news instantly, is demand-

ing. Demanding of individuals.

If your ambition is strong and your abilities commensurate, you’ll never be truly
happy with the status quo. You'll seek
ways to change it and—wonderful feeling!—
some of them will work.
Could be at Western Electric.

0

WesternElectric

MANUFACTURING &amp; SUPPLY UNIT OF THE BELL SYSTEM

»

r'jjJ

&gt;

�Pag* S*v*n

The Spectrum

Tuesday, March 19, 1968

campus releases...

U.S.

tohave ‘most educated Army’
Special to tho Spoctrum

cut
The number of males entering graduates school next fall may be
of 122
back by 70% due to the draft, according to a nationwide survey
graduate schools. —Total enrollment tn the first year will be only half of
last year's, with physics and engineering hardest hit.
The survey was conducted by the Scientific Manpower Commission and
the Council of Graduate Schools, which is sponsored by national scientific
societies and includes most graduate schools. About 40% of the nation's
first-year male students were included in the survey.
The commission reported: "The number of men involved in these
losses to the graduate population is not large in comparison to the number
of men available for military service only about 171,000 potential graduate
students out of an available draft pool of about 1.2 million men. However,
the 'oldest first' order of call insures the induction of virtually all of this
group and its consequent loss to the graduate schools next year." Almost
all those between 22 and 25 are expected to be called, except students past
the second year of graduate school or those in medicine, dentistry and
divinity schools.
"A few years later," the report warned, "the same loss wilt be felt by
industry, educational institutions, government and other users of graduate
level manpower." Universities dependent on graduate students to teach basic
undergraduate courses are expected to curtail their freshman enrollments
by 20% of last year's total.
Mrs. Betty Vetter, executive secretary of the commission, told reporters
at a news conference: "We will certainly have the most educated Army in

Enjoy Trancendental Meditation, Krishna Consciousness, Chanting and Philosophy oMHare Tfrlshna. Hare Krishna classes meet
every Tuesday and Thursday in Norton 232, 8 p.m. Interested persons
are welcome.
Free Folic Concert, Haas Lounge, Thursday, from 8:15 to 8:45 p.m.
sponsored by the New Establishment. Any folk enthusiasts are welcome.
The Student Faculty Film Club will meet at 8 p.m. Thursday in
Norton 231. Persons interested in joining the film production club

on camfius and members with scenarios to present should attend.

Former Peace Corps members are asked to contact the Placement Office in Schoellkopf Hall. Requests have been received from
various civic and social groups to hear these people speak, as well as
requests from foreign student for instruction. In many cases, these
services will be compensated. To register, call Mrs. Farewell at

831-3311.

Pop Music Class, Experimental College, will meet at 11 ajn.
Thursday in Diefendorf 206. Topic for this meeting will be the music

of protest.

Ice Skating sponsored by the W.R.A. at the Amherst Recreation
Center will take place Saturday. Free bus transportation will leave
Norton at 7 p.m. and will leave the center at 9:30 p.m. ID cards of

girls will be checked for payment of activities fees. Sign-up sheets
are located in Clark Gym and the girls’ dorms. Costs are 50c admission, 7b-: rentals and an additional 50c for non-fee payers.
The Annual University Honors and Awards Ceremony will be
held April 29 in the Fillmore Room. All organizations wishing to
present awards at this time must submit information sheets to Box
55, Norton Hall by Monday. All nominations for Student Association
Gold and Silver Keys must be returned by that day. For further information contact Judi Mack at 937-9390 or 831-3541.
"Psychotherapy and the Hippie Movement" will be discussed by
Allen Yasser at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in Room 333, Norton Hall. Mr.
Yasser, a graduate student in the clinical program, sponsored by the
Psychology Club. The lecture is open to all interested students.
"The Mission or Israel," an idea of S. R. Hirsch, will be discussed by Dr. Justin Hoffman at Hillel’s Sabbath Service and Oneg
Shabbat at 7:45 p.m. Friday in the Hillel House.
Reservations are necessary for the Hillel Supper, Sunday at 5:30
p.m. Martha Levine wiil lead a session of Israeli singing and dancing.
The Underground Medical Society will present a speaker, Dr.
Edward Holyoke, and a film from the American Cancer Society entitled “Investment in Life,” at 8 p.m. Thursday in Room 333, Norton
Hall. Dr. Holyoke is'a cancer research surgeon at Roswell Park Memorial Institute. For more information contact the UMS at 831-3609.
The University Dance Club will sponsor Shirley Clarke at 8:30
p.m. tonight in the Fillmore Hoom. Her topic will be “Film and the
Dance.” Films will also be shown during the lecture. Admission is
free to fee payers, 50c to faculty and non-fee payers, and $1.00 to the
public.
A coffee hour to meet Miss Clarke will be held at 5 p.m. today
Room 232, Norton Hall. The coffee hour is open to members of Dance
Club, Dance Committee, and Film Club.
Fall Weekend applications for next semester are now available
in Norton, Goodyear, Tower and Clement Halls. Return these to
Room 261, Norton Hall, UUAB office, by March 29.
A "Shout-In" will be held at noon today in the Conference Theater. All students are invited to attend. The purpose is to record
the noises of a student demonstration similar to that when Dow
last visited. The recording will be used as background for a play,
“Interview 362,” written by Rev. James Brewster, which will be performed April 21. The “Shout-In” is sponsored by the Wesley Founda-

tion.

A scholarship reception at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow is open to all
junior women with a cumulative average of 1.8 or better. The event,
sponsored jointly by Cap and Gown, the Dean of Wodnen, and the
Graduate School will be held in the Haas Lounge. Dean Fred Snell
will speak on opportunities for graduate study.
New members of Cap and Gown, the senior women’s honor society, will be selected during the weeks following the reception. Results will be announced April 29 at the University Honors and Awards
ceremony.

history."

Critical Language Pn

Students learn non-Western tongues
by Gail Barotz
Spectrum Staff Reporter

Have you ever thought that you
would like to learn Chinese or
Arabic or another non-Western
language? At the present time
approximately 47 State University
of Buffalo students are enrolled
in the Critical Language Program,
learning such languages as Arabic, Chinese, Hindi, Hungarian.
Japanese, Swahili, Tagalog and
Vietnamese.
The Critical Language Program
is open to carefully selected students who have a strong motivation and a serious reason for
learning an African or Asian
language. Peter Boyd-Bowman,
the director of the program, admits students on the basis of a
personal interview and their performance on the Modern Language Aptitude Test, the same
test used by the Peace Corps
training program.
Selected students are generally not language majors; they include majors in political science,
history, sociology, economics, and
anthropology. Students must
have plans for work in a country
—perhaps through the Foreign
Service—where knowing the language will be an important tool.
The Critical Language Program
is a self-instruction program;
there are no teachers involved.
Students work on their own with
tapes for a minimum of seven to
ten hours a week. A text supple-

Dialogue with foreign students needed
by Gustavo Rojas
Sptdrum

Sfoff

Reporter

There are almost 600 foreign students on campus.
The number is large indeed. How many foreign students have you seen, heard or met? Do you know what they
do, what they are like, where they go?
Today, communication represents a major weakness of
mankind. Regardless of cultural backgrounds, we are constantly faced with our inability to express ourselves in a
meaningful manner to others. The purpose: mutual understanding. To listen and to be heard in order to attain the dialogue we often miss.
The communication gap may, in
part, explain why some people
are so isolated on our campus,
despite their nationalities. It may
well prevent some of us from
getting acquainted with different
ways of doing things; perhaps
with more efficient methods of
coping with certain daily situations.
Some concerned North Americans on campus talk about socioeconomic and political systems
which exist throughout the world.
Some go ahead to speculate on
the possible impact of U.S. policies abroad. However, a few ac-

tually try to associate these topics
with the foreign student.
What he has to say about his
own country.
Maybe in our attempt to be
scientific, we miss the human
perspective.

I guess without attempting to
be normative or dogmatic, I am
concerned with the lack of international interaction and understanding on the campus: our inability to communicate meaningfully, beyond our fears, preju-

dices. and inhibitions. Effective
communication may bring about

a deeper insight into the current
world picture.

Last semester, on the International Club’s main bulletin
board a sign read: “Students of
the world unite for a better life.”
Just below it somebody wrote:
“You have nothing to lose but
your grades.”

I suppose everyone has his ob-

jectives in going through college;
some limit themselves to the
classroom and book reading experience; nevertheless I think it
is possible to combine the strictly
academic training with the human

and ever present aspects of life.

By a month ago, a bunch of

merits each course, and students
may work at their own speed—covering two years work in one

if they are able.

Foreign students tutor
Ip addition, each student meets

with a private tutor for two to
four hours a week. These tutors

are native-speaking foreign students at the University and their
purpose is to aid the student with
pronunciation and with whatever
problems he might have. The
student must take the initiative
and let the tutor know what material is to be covered and on
what he wishes to be drilled.
Every student enrolled in the
Critical Language Program must
come to the Language Lab in
Crosby Hall once a week and
take a weekly proficiency test.
The test includes samples from
the units he has covered. A student must be able to answer immediately, to show he has mastered the material. These responses are recorded and kept on
tapes.
At the end of each semester
specialists from different universities, such as Cornell or the University of Michigan, come to the
University to administer an exam.
The visiting examiner alone determines the grade the student
will receive in the course. Most

of these examiners are distin-

guished people of national repu-

tation, often the author of the
course itself. These examiners
may recommend students for fellowships or graduate work.

Indonesian to be added
Japanese, Swahili, Hindi and
Chinese, respectively, have the
largest enrollments. Next year
plans are being made to drop
Arabic and Chinese from the selfinstruction program and have
them taught on a regular basis.
They will be replaced by Indonesian and probably Turkish.
The Critical Language Program
was beguh at the University in

.

Carnegie grant
The Carnegie Foundation
awarded a $167,750 grant to the
New York State Education Department in Albany to develop
programs at private and public
institutions all over New York
State over a five-year period. Professor Boyd-Bowman was appointed general consultant and
coordinator for the statewide program. Under his aid and supervision, self-instruction programs
have been established all over
the

state.

Pleasing success

Professor Boyd-Bowman is very
pleased with the success of the
program. He cited the example
of a University sophomore, Marie
Doring, who was granted a Carnegie fellowship to spend her
junior year studying Japanese at
Princeton after one year in the
Critical Language Program. The
fellowship also included two summers of Japanese study, first at
Columbia and then at Harvard.
Professor Boyd-Bowman teaches
Spanish linguistics and directs
this program “as a service to the
University.” He hopes to see the
Critical Language Program continue to expand in the future.

Jr. history seminar required
Under a new requirement of
the History Department, all junior-level history majors must pass
one junior seminar in history
each semester of the junior year.

This new ruling will go into efcussing their role in the U.S. fect starting the 1968-69 academic
year.
society. Someone said very strongly he wanted to influence the
The course that will be reState University of Buffalo comquired is History 383-384, for a
munity. He stated he would like total of six units of credit.
to see active foreign students to
show certain local people other
Any student receiving a failing
ways of thinking. “The age of grade in either of the seminars
the passive, ‘naive’ foreign stuwill be barred from graduating as
dent has ended.”
a history major. Students will not

international students were dis-

1965 under the direction of Professor Boyd-Bowman. Chinese and
Japanese were offered.
Professor Boyd-Bowman was
chairman of the Department of
Foreign Languages at Kalamazoo
College in Michigan for two years
prior to coming here in 1965.
There he developed a similar program under contract with the
U.S. Office of Education. The aim
of the program was to find a way
to offer these non-Western languages on campuses that could
not afford the expense of an instructor for a limited number of
interested students. The program
is not unduly expensive, as there
are no instructors to be paid, only
tutors and visiting examiners.

be allowed to repeat any junior
seminar for any reason.
History majors who will be
seniors in 1968-69 are exempt
from this requirement. All senior
level seminars will be offered on
a voluntary basis.

Problems relating to the junior
seminars may be taken to Dr. L.
Schneider, director of Junior
Seminars (Room 321, Diefendorf
Hall) or Mr. J. Taylor, administrative assistant of the History Department (Room 231, Diefendorf
Hall).

�A Villanelle for Contingencies
0 what will you do when the blinding flash
Scatters the seed of a million suns?
0 what will you do in the rain of ash?
I’ll draw the blinds, and pull down the sash,
And hide from the light of so many noons.
How will you go when the blinding flash
Disturbs your body’s close-knit mesh,
Bringing to light your lovely bones?
What will you wear in the rain of ash?
1 will go bare without my flesh,
My vertebrae will click like stones.
Ah. But where will you dance when the blinding flash
Settles the City in a holy hush?
I will dance alone among the ruins.
Ah. And what will you say to the rain of ash?
I will be lovely. My subtle speech
Will win forgiveness for my sins.
Yes. What will you do when the blinding flash
Is followed by the reign of ash?
Charles Martin

Already in the inner mind
the yearning of an air-raid siren springs,
the riot of shell holes burgeon,
and empty human streets begin.
Only the inevitable black out sings,
and only waiting’s blind.
How can a flower's rage
fading already in the blanching sun,
defeat such possibility?
Thoughts outstrip what eyes can see.
The eye intrudes, circles, and bunkers down
Pistils turn camouflage.
Jerome Mazzaro

4

Schedule of anti-war events

Only

.

Copyright, 1968, by Robert Hue

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

Poetry Reading
John Logan

I

p.m.

—

-

Ethic"

Clancy Sigal

/Vflh/i

Sklar
Michael Klare
3 p.m. 4~ Conference
Pip test and the
Doi Blumberg
Robert Kraemer
Gerie Larue

1

I

—

—

three species of tree in
all these hills: blue oak,
the buckeyes, and patches
of leafy, fragrant laurel.
In the quiet the Indians
could have heard bells
.
at Mission Santa Clara .
They manufacture napalm
in the fog where Redwood
City Sprawls into the bay.
I think of the village
of Ben Hoa, the early spring
death in the buckeyes
and up the long valley
my eyes flash like another
knife, clean as malice.

Robert Hass

-

Fred Snell
Lionel Abel
Bob Cohen
5 p.m.
University Church
Religious Service: "Witness Against
the War"
Robert Hoag
Daniel Murray
8 p.m.
Conference Theater
Program of individual speakers
George Novack
Ross Flannigan
Richard Neustadt Jr.
10 p.m.
Conference Theater

334 Norton
University:
ditionlng"
les Hansen
Ratner
&gt;rt Cook
ng Massey
2-5 p.m
Conference
Pr »gram of ant
filr
339 Norton
2 p.m.
1

Denise Levertov
Robert Creeley
All Day
231 Norton
Angry Arts
Student art exhibit
WEDNESDAY
9 a.m.
339 Norton
"The University as Warmaker"
—

—

Edgar Friedenberg
Bill Yates
Michael Klare
Robert O'Neil
339 Norton
11 a.m.
"Marxism and the American Intel
lectual"
Dale Riepe
Mitchell Franklin
Barbara Solomon
George Novack
James Hansen
337 Norton
11 a.m. 3 p.m.
Draft Counselling
Fountain
12 p.m.
Master demonstration and rally
major speakers
—

-

—

—

(all welcome)

12

147 Hochstetter
"The Final Solution for Guerilla Warfare"
Mark Ross (professor of physics,
University of Michigan)

p.m.

—

3

Jerimy Taylor
Leopard Zweig
229 Hayes
p.m.
-

Anti-War
vlext?"
Cohen
Dawson
Ross
339 Norton
4 p.m.
Draft: Alter
ley Faulkner
nen Petrino
irt O'Neil
Goodmar
73:0 p- m - Fillmore
Program of indivi
Stanley Faulkner
Mitchell Goodmai
Haas Loui
Open poetry read
231 Norton
all day
All Day 231 Norton
Angry Arts
student art exhibit
ie

—

I

—

Clumps of ghostly buckeye
bleached bones
weirdly gray in the run-off
between ridges, the flats
in fog. Five deer grazing
on a far hill. The soft
whirr of mourning doves,
creeks running. I feel
furry as sage here
after an hour's walk
in the clear midmorning air.

lution?"
George Norvack

—

-

a.m.

'

TUESDAY
339 Norton
"The Draft: Resistance"
Mitchell Goodman
Michael Ferber
Larry Faulkner
339 Norton
11 a.m.
"Vietnam: What's Happening?"
Jonathan Schell
Ralph Schoenman
Marvin Getteiman
Go Long
332 Norton
11 a.m. 3 p.m.
Draft Counselling
334 Norton
12 p.m.
"Clergy and the Draft"
Reverend Ken Sherman
Newton Garber
others to be announced
1 p.m. 333 Norton
"Vietnam and the Resurgence of
of American Isolationism"
Selig Adler
337 Norton
1 p.m.
"The Worm: Aesthetics and Anarchism"
Reverend Herman Cole
339 Norton
2 p.m.
"American Imperialism and World
Revolution"
Clancy Segal
Russell Smith
Douglas Dowd
Ralph Schoenman
2-5 pm.
Conference Theater
Program of anti-war and protest
•
3 p.m.
"The Riot Commission Report: An
Analysis"
Herman Schwartz
Sidney Wilhelm
Bruce Jackson
4 p.m.
Slide Show: Napalm Victims
Jeff Clark
"Huberalles: the LBJ Cantata"
Bruce Jackson tape
5 p.m.
339 Norton
"America's Future: Reform or Revo-

9

—

—

■

1968, by Jeopardy

Black Mountain, Los Altos

W
v

the
tragic

Interval

Copyright,

*7"

-

2 p.m-

i

THUI

Conference
meeting;

"\

�To Every American
Today is a beautiful day.

It is the first

And there is a freshness. Underskin. Undertoes,
Underway. Underwalk. Things are creeping.
Somehow it is. The wonder. The feeling.
The smell. Everywhere. Everywhere. Life is.

I write this
are man.

to you american. Because you
A man who must live with his I,
and me. Before what society calls role.
A president. A senator. A mother. A father,

A businessman.

iSi

m' vs&amp;St

In the present. Moments which men call day,
month, year: the future of many moments may
very well be.
But not since the Greeks, could each
‘free’ man open to sound. But you Mr. Big
Congressman: who is. Who represents, many
people. But not neutral symbols. Little
children. Big children. In between children.
Mothers. Fathers. Lovers. People-people.
those things that some view
as numbers, are people. Who laugh, cry,
hate. shit, and die.

All of us.

This is a critical time, for all men.
Not just our republic. Our republic is
part of something Bigger. Of all people,
Of man.
There is politics too. Under-dealingwheeling-mealing. All that is. But the
men of power are of you: american. There
are times that try men’s souls. War seems to
always be.

%

But it is springs And men are only men.
And men are of the stuff of mud. And can
make mistakes, differences between men and
children are more of clothes. Socrates too
died: a little older boy.

events
1

334 Norton

p.m.

In the next few months our people will be
But it is more. With country
divided: in the gutters of big cities trinkling
through suburbia: asian marsh-lands flooded.
facing election.

University: Education as Conditioning"

Hansen
Ratner
ert Cook
ng Massey
Conference Theater
2-5 p.m
Pr •gram of anti-war and protest
filr
339 Norton
2 p.m.
"A Mi-Communism: An American
Ethic"

I

les

—

-

—

Clajicy

Sigal

Skiar
Michael Klare
3 p.m. -t- Conference Theater
"Fittest and the Film"

Doi Blumberg
Robert Kraemer
Gerte Larue

3

Jerimy Taylor
Leopard Zweig
229 Hayes
p.m.
-

4 p.m-

e Anti-War Movement: What
vJext?"
Cohen
• Dawson
: Ross
■ 339 Norton
Draft: Alternatives"

Stanley Faulkner

Ca.jnen

Petrlno
O'Neil
Goodman
73.0 p- m - Fillmore Room
Program of individual speakers
Stanley Faulkner
—

Mitchell Goodman
Haas Lounge
Open poetry reading
all day 231 Norton
231 Norton
All Day
Angry Arts
student art exhibit

10 p nl

—

—

—

2 p.m.

THURSDAY
i Conference
Theater
~

meeting: ''Where to go now?"

And it whispers ‘Why’
It is the job of the Big-Little men of Congress
and the Little-Big american to stand and face sky
and then ground
and then look Lyndon Johnson
between the eyes.
....

Before there is further escalation of war

But as all people need. So too our country.
Our society. Our world. Home. It is ours.

v

splitter-splatter is underskin

The streets are windy
the air is paved
A child soothes
his mother’s cries
Oh negligent night!
What is your claim
Why take light
to give again?

Houses are restless
the sky is built
on current waves
of long lost hope
Oh lovely day
What is your claim
Why give us light
to take again?
Autos churning
Thoughts that drive
Hopes give way
to memories
Oh bleekest day!
Oh brightest night!
But shades away
and never met

the Big-Littles and the Little-Bigs of this
nation must have their say. Lyndon Johnson

must face the nation.

But sounds smell everywhere. Some say Doves.
Some say Hawks. Some Black. Some White.
But to me there is only one: Americans.
And more than Americans. People.

A boy. A girl, from New York. Chicago.
Pittsburgh. Boston. Cleveland. Kansas.
St. Louis. Little Rock. New Orleans.
Los Angeles. An unbounded river. It
trinkles. differences, prejudice,
tinkle tinkle. The mighty mississippi.
But in the days to come, the perspective
we the American People, and our representatives,
the men of the Congress take; will be turned and
stretched with change, that is everywhere.
With relativism of dimension: to live.
But somehow I just feel. I intuit,
that if each of us puts on a pair of
dungarees. And returns. And smells.
In the cities. In the towns. Of the mud
Somehow I just know, our world,
and people, will live. Together.
But it will take courage. And fear of
ourselves. To look. To feel. To see.
To touch. To smell.
To hear a baby cry. And the roar of the
distance. An ambivalence: of machine guns
and adriatic.
It will take courage,

to smell

David Slive
Copyright Ponding

�The

Page Ten

Tuesday, March 19, 1968

Spectrum

Strike.

Finally...

.

.

Authors, essayists
Several other authors will be

The BUFFALO SCATE

Clancy Sigal is

student’s evaluations of 375 courses in
21 departments,
sale in Norton Lobbies, starting Mon., March 18

covers

on

author and pol-

jails.

Dr. Fred Snell, dean of the Un-

Let the Scate make registration easier
75c to fee payers

an

itical essayist and Lionel Abel of
the English faculty is a playwright and contributing editor to
“Dissent.”
Bruce Jackson, also of the English faculty, is known for his
study of folk music in Southern
iversity Graduate School and Reverend Kenneth Sherman, both active in the McCarthy for President
movement, will also speak.
Herman Schwartz of the University Law School, author of a

$1.00 to non-fee payers

in

Continued from Page 1

large part of the riot commission
report, is also scheduled to speak.
Events in the “Strike for Knowreadings.
John Logan of the English Department was asked by Robert
Bligh to read the National Book
Award in his place. Mr. Bligh

was the winner of the 1968 Na-

tional Book Award for Poetry
and delivered a blistering denunciation of the war at the
ceremony. Readings, scheduled
at 3 p.m. and in the evening Wenesday are open and anyone may
read his works.
Another highlight of the
“Strike for Knowledge” will be a
“Guerrilla Theater.” This will include a mobile acting company
doing various anti-war skits and
spontaneous performances about
campus.

In cooperation with the “Strike
for Knowledge” effort, many faculty members have agreed to discuss war-related topics during regular class hours. The following
schedule includes some of the
highlights:

TODAY

10 a.m.—“Science and Morality”: Dr. Lyle Borst, professor of
physics and astronomy; room 114,

Hochstetter Hall.
10 a.m.—Discussion of the war:
Dr. Edgar Friendenberg, Sociology of Communications class;
Noon—“Should we be in Vietroom 333, Hayes Hall,
nam?”; Dr. Morvin Resnikoff;
room 315, Hochstetter Hall.
Noon—“How to analyze such
a conflict”: Dr. Charles Planck,
International Politics class; room
7, Diefendorf Hall.
1 p.m. —Discussion of the war;
Dr. Friedenberg, the School as a
Communications System class;
room 220D Foster Hall.
2 p.m. —“Defoliation in Vietnam”: Plant Physiology, class discussion, Dr. Walter Rosen; room
2, Health Sciences.
WEDNESDAY

Noon—Relation of the war to
Robert Weiner, laboratory; Hochstetter Hall.

physics:

4 p.m. —Discussion on Vietnam:
Dr. George Hochfield, Modem
American Literature class; room
29A, Dieferndorf.

—

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�Tuesday, March 19, 1968

The Spectrum

Page

Eleven

Movie review

Guess Who's Coming to Dinner

■

&lt;T;-v
V

.

at the end Kramer completely

by J. G. Landes

By now everyone in the United
States must know that it is Sidney Poitier and his parents who
are “coming to dinner.” This film,
now appearing at Cinema I, is
Stanley Kramer’s latest attempt
at directing and is as pretentious
and melodramatic as his earlier
efforts.

estate

We'rfiiiCffBffiC

3*

This is the cover of one of the
Electric Prunes' most famous albums. The Prunes will be appearing on campus as part of
the Spring Arts Festival.

Prunes

In “Judgment at Nuremburg”
Kramer simplified the problem
of collective German guilt for the
atrocities of World War II, and
made, what turned out to be a
“daring” condemnation of Nazis.
Now in “Dinner” he comes to
grips with the problem of racial
discrimination in the same superficial and simplified way. Instead
of dealing realistically with what
is a fascinating situation, Kramer
pulls a classic cop-out.

Not only is Sidney Poitier’s
character so sterling and upright
that George Wallace would welcome him into the family, but
Kramer also presents the audience with one of the few liberal
Catholic bishops in the U. S.
and Irish yet.
This film is an excellent representation of all that is best
Dream (Last Night)” and “Get Me and worst in Hollywood movies.
to the World on Time.” The usual It is superby photographed, exguitars and drums are used, but cellently acted by all concerned,
they also employ the piano and and very professionally put toorgan to produce their unique gether. On the other hand, it
fails to deal realistically with a
sound.
problem, and
The Electric Prunes will be ap- valid contemporary

Electric Prunes to appear
as part of Arts Festival
Black light, flashing thoughts,
aggressiveness, colored lights, five
multi-faceted, weirdly connected,
ten legs, twelve arms, one eye,
one mind, one direction, prunes,
pits, steins, shocking, electric.
This is about the most accurate
of the Electric

—

description
Prunes.

old ladies

across the country in

tears, Kramer abandons any pretense of artistic integrity in favor
of a heart warming finale
Stanley Kramer, with this film,

proves he can combine soap-opera sentimentality and a “sensational" topic as well as that
past master of the trite film, Otto

Preminger. Both of them make

what they purport to be adult
ments of

issues

no longer sensational

I, for one, am

getting quite

bored of watching Sidney Poitier
portray Mr. Wonderful in all
films. In his most recent films
he has done everything but walk
on water. If they ever remake
“The Greatest Story Ever Told,"
Sidney's a natural.

Shirley Clark to give lecture
Shirley Clarke is

a

filmmaker,

but this is a highly incomplete
description of her activities.
She started studying modern
dance with Martha Graham and
eventually used this knowledge in
making her first dance films.
Later her interest turned to features. and in 1960 she won the
Critics Prize at Cannes for her
screen adaptation of Jack Gelber’s play “The Connection.”
Her recent activities have in
eluded the founding of the FilmMakers’ Distribution Center with
the underground great, Jonas
Mekas, and making a film about
the young Soviet poet, Andrei

Voznesensky.

She has been trying in films
to reveal what’s happening on the
scene in the lives of young Americans. She will be giving a dancelecture this evening in the Millard Fillmore Room at 8:30 p.m.
Also appearing on campus tonight is Korean composer Nam
June Paik, He has worked on an
international level in electronic

constructions, intermedia presentations, television, music, etc.
He has given performances all
over the world and works in close
collaboration with topless cellist
who will
Charlotte Moorman
also be appearing with him. He
will perform at Baird Hall at
8:30 p.m.

$1

00

dVh

This group has invaded the
music world with their weird and
psychedelic innovations and
sounds and they are coming to
this campus.

—

a week or more...

Their album titles reveal their

distinctiveness. “The Electric

Prunes Travel Up To The Underground” and “Mass in F Minor.”
Probably their most well-known
singles are “I Had Too Much To
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�Pag*

The

Twelve

CSEA wage agreement
reached; strike averted
state legislature, a $100 mil-

lion wage package for 140,000 state employees will go
into effect April 1.

tion of the proper bargaining
agent for the state employees,
after six employee organizations
had challenged Gov. Rockefeller’s
recognition of CSEA.

The package is the result of
the settlement reached last
Thursday by representatives of
the Civil Service Employees Association and Gov. Rockefeller’s
administration. It is an increase
over the governor’s February reallocation proposal for an 8%
salary rise, while less than the
CSEA’s original request for 20%.
It provides for a $600 minimum
increase and a maximum raise of
$2500, Pay now ranges from a
starting salary of $3325 for clerks
in Grade 1 to a maximum of
$26,310 for commissioners and
department heads.

CSEA President Theodore C.
Wenzl, in recommending approval of the agreement, told the
1000 CSEA delegates Thursday
that the agreement “constitutes
a major forward step.”

The agreement also includes $7
million in improved retirement
benefits and $10 million to cover
upgrading of job titles, geographic wage differentials and
overtime payments during the
fiscal year beginning April 1.

The CSEA had threatened two
weeks ago to conduct some sort
of state-wide “strike,” if some
wage accord were not reached.
The CSEA had originally asked
for a 20% wage increase, with a
minimum of $1000 per year.

The State Court of Appeals up
held a lower-court decision March
8, opening the way for resumption of negotiations.

'Bargaining works'
“It proves,” he said, “that collective bargaining can work in

public employment.”

1

Tuesday, March 19, 1968

Spectrum

Chamber

irou

Beaux Art Trio will hold recital
provided a suitable entry

Spectrum Music Reviewer
_

,

The University Department of
Music presented The Beaux Arts
Trio in recital at Baird Hall Wed.

..

.

,

nesday evening.

This renowned chamber group
comprised of Menachem Pressi erj jhe brilliant Israeli pianist;
Daniel Guilet, violinist, and Bernard Greenhouse, cellist.
js

on the

cello.

Ravel highlight
The Ravel “Trio in A Minor”
was next on the program.
This piece was definitely the
exquisite highlight of the program. It opens with Modere movement, followed by a Pantuom and
Passacaille.
The finale
Animie provided
the Trio with an opportunity to
display its virtuosity. It’s a very
demanding piece, especially for
the violinist. Mr, Guilet overcame
the technicalities in an acceptable
manner, but lacked interpretation
and insight.
—

The program opened with Beethoven’s “Trio in C Minor.” Although the piece was beautifully
balanced, it didn’t seem to have
the temperament so necessary in
this work. It was interpretively
sound, yet technically lacking on
the part of the violinist, Mr,
Guilet. He simply failed to convey
the message in this particular
work.

The inferiority on the part of
the violinist was offset by the
sensitivity of Mr. Pressler. He
played extremely delicately, yet
with a balanced tone and with

manner in which he held the instrument, although a matter of individual taste, seemed to me extremely awkward, and it definitely detracted from his tone. His
spicatto was not crisp and biting,
but was soft.

He had opportunity to display
Ricochee Stolleto bowing which
was mediocre. Although the performance was sound, Mr. Guilet
greatly detracted from it.
The program concluded with
Mendlesohn’s “Trio in C Minor.”
The over-all interpretation and
balance was good. Mr. Greenhouse, cellist, shone in his passage
by providing a large tone.

I was not at all impressed with
his bowing, which greatly reflected the fanaticism of Georges Enesco, his teacher.

spiring performance.

It. is clear that Mr. Guilet is a
descendant of the Belgian School
of Violin. His tone was extremely
small, but his intonation is quite

The performance as a whole
was indeed sound, but it was by
no means a truly brilliant work of
art.

The piece left nothing to be desired, and over-all, it was an in-

Negotiations between the state
and the association were resumed
March 11, after a four-month hiatus resulting from an order of
the Public Employment Relations
Board prohibiting exclusive negotiations.

The board had stayed the neBiC Medium

0iC Fine Pom!

*(ms
Despite

fiendish torture
dynamic BiC Duo

writes first time,
every time!
Die’s rugged pair of

stick pens wins

again

in unending war
against bail-point
ikip. clog and smear.
Despite horrible
punishment by mad
scientists, bic

uic’s “Dyamite” Ball
is the hardest metal
made, encased in a
solid brass nose cone.
Will not skip, clog
or smear no

matter

what devilish abuse
is devised for them
by sadistic students.
Get the dynamic
Die

I

still

writes first time, every
time. And no wonder,

Duo at your

j

s:

|

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U-

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You are the only person who can answer
that question.
To do it, you should know as much as possible about
the 150 new plant units Du Pont has built since
the end of World War II. You’d then choose from one of
the many lively fields of interest at Du Pont;
design, construction, production, marketing, research
and process improvement (to name just a few).
Involvement starts the day you join. There is no
training period. You go into responsible work right away.
Your professional development is stimulated by
real problems and by opportunities to continue your
academic studies under a tuition refund program.
You work in small groups where individual
contributions Me quickly noted and appreciated.
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You’re pMt of the most exciting technical environment
available today and tomorrow, and facilities and

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How could you fit in? Why not sign up for a chat with
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City.

�Tuesday, March 19, 1968

The

Pag* Thirteen

Spectrum

strike-out

the spectrum of

by Danm

Winds u

season

Buffalo mermen take eighth place
Head swimming coach Bill Sanford and his swimming squad
wound up the season with a four
to six dual swimming meet record and finished in eighth place
in the Upper New York State

Championships.
The mermen were hampered
all season by illness and injury,
finishing up with no less than
seven on the available list for the
final two weeks of the season.
Sophomore sprinter Bob Lindberg was elected Captain for the
1968-69 season. He finished this
season as the team’s highest point
man, compiling a total of 56
points swimming in the 50-yard
freestyle and the 100-yard freestyle. In addition, Lindberg swam
a leg on the 400-yard freestyle
relay team.
Runnerup to Lindberg was another sophomore sprinter, Ed
Sargent, who entered the sprints
and the 400-yard medley relay
team. Sargent finished with 54
points for the ten meets.
Frank Nochajski was chosen as

the team’s most valuable swim-

mer and finished third in the
point scoring. The senior breaststroker finished with 53 points
entering in the 200-yard breaststroke, the 100-yard breaststroke
and the 400-yard medley relay
team.

Coach Sanford was also on the
sick list before the season even
started and had to rely on Assistant Coach Bob Bedell to keep
the boys in shape for the rest of
the practice sessions.

When John Serfustini enlisted
in the Marines during the sum-

Rebo success
Captain Rick Rebo had another
fine season in the one and three
meter diving events. Senior Rebo
had four firsts, four seconds and
one third place in nine events
before suffering an injury to his
back which eliminated him from
the State Championships. He
broke the school record twice
in the dive and was an inspirational leader throughout the season.

The problem didn’t stop with
injuries and illneses. One meet
was “rained out” when the fans
failed and condensation turned
the Clark Gym pool into a shower bath. Another meet had to be
cancelled when the bus never
showed up to take the team on
the road to Niagara University.

mer, Coach Sanford lost what
could have been an All-American
sprinter, had he remained in
school. Serfustini, as a freshman
last season, set a pool record in
the 50-yard freestyle event and
was improving as the season

ended.
The swimming season in retro
spect:
Buffalo 45
Syracuse 59
Buffalo 28
Buffalo State 76
Niagara 36
Buffalo 67
Colgate 71
Buffalo 25
Brockport 65
Buffalo 39
Buffalo 65
Geneseo 38
McMasters 33
Rochester 69

Buffalo 71
Buffalo 34

Buffalo 58
Buffalo 37

...

Cortland 45
St. Bona 67

Wrestling team places seventh in the
intercollegiate Invitational Tournament
The State University of
Buffalo’s wrestling team finihed the season by placing
seventh in a field of 22 in
the Interstate Intercollegiate
Invitational Tournament held
at Miami of Ohio.
Paul Lang’s second-place finish in the 191-pound class and

teammate Dan “Wally” Walgate’s
fourth in the heavies were the

best individual performances.
For the season, Coach Gerry
Gergley’s grapplers wrestled
their way to a fine eight to three
record. They opened the campaign in high fashion by winning
five in a row before losing a
match to Oswego, the defending

state champions.
The other two losses, one to

Cortland and the other to Brockport, were each decided by three
points.
Sophomore Harry Bell, who in
the fall plays football for Doc
Urich, was the top scorer of the
year. A real crowd pleaser who
wrestles with a flair, 177-pound
Bell won nine of 11 matches with
five pins for 37 points.
Mike Watson, a very consistent wrestler throughout the season, was a valuable point-getter
in the 123-pound class. He won
nine and lost only one, and tied
one with three pins for 35 points.
The heavyweight duo of Paul
Lang and Dan Walgate, two more
refugees from the football wars,
made their presence felt on the
mats also. Lang won five of seven
matches with the real big boys

Edelman

me last lew days have seen the start of the big awakening. Spring
,
is beginning Jo show it benevolent face in Buffalo.
For those interested in sports, spring has two important, but
highly related, connotations.
First, spring means liberation from a winter of staring at the
boob tube.
All those memories of Sunday afternoons watching football
doubleheaders, plus an over exposure of college and professional
basketball, ice hockey, and the special attraction of the quadrennial
Winter Olympics have left their mark on the true sports fan (or
should that be sports sitter) in the form of a highly noticeable paunch

around the mid-section.

When spring rolls around, sports sitters are placed in a very
difficult position.
Either they move from that very special chair in front of the
pleasure machine to engage in some physical exercise to remove
that pot-belly or they can remain seated, grab a beer and watch their
favorite baseball team go into action, all the time repeating to himself in the time honored tradition of sports sitters: “Some girls really
go for that pot-belly look. It makes me feel a whole lot older, just
like my old man.”
Spring training
The mention of baseball brings us to the second of spring’s eon
notations to the sports enthusiast.
Most fans really believe spring starts when the baseball teams
open up their training camps in Florida, Arizona and California in
preparation for the long season ahead.
It never ceases to amaze me that each spring, baseball makes
suckers out of all of us.
Spring training is the nearest thing to eternal hope. It is a delightful show that never varies in content.
It starts with the sports writers. Delighted to the point of ectasy,
in escaping from the hectic atmosphere of the office to the sunny
environment of Florida, the writers file reams upon reams of glowing progress reports on the home team. These optimistic reports
lead to the unmistakable conclusion that 19 teams (excluding the
Metsies) expect to finish in first place come October.
The loyal home town fans, anxious to sec their heroes perform
again, and hoping that they won’t be as bad as they were last year
when they finished in the second division for the umpteenth time
this century, devour the reports in expectation.
When you hear the same propaganda everyday and you really
want to believe that it’s true, you believe it.

Home team bets

As a result of this Hind faith, people actually go out and place
bets that their teams will finish first. This happens to be an acceptable
idea if your team happens to be the St. Louis Cardinals or any of
the other recognized contenders that do have a decent shot at the flag.
However, there are a large group of irrational people who insist
on placing a bet on the home team regardless of the fact that the
team has absolutely no chance of finishing first in a women’s softbefore moving down to the 191- ball league, let alone the American or National Leagues. Year after
pound class. He had three pins year, these people blow their 100 bucks and that’s that.
End of ritual.
and finished with 21 points.
Once in a blue moon something goes right, and their team gets
pounder,
a
fast
Walgate,
250
into contention for a few days, maybe even a few weeks.
was
possibly
did everything that
Everyone is surprised except you know who, who now goes
expected of him. He wrestled in around boasting that he knew it all along. He saw the team jelling
them
all
four matches and won
in spring training and as proof of his convictions laid out 100 clams.
by pins. In team totals, the This brief moment of glory lasts a few days, and then the team
wrestlers won 61 individual plays
down to its real ability.
matches, lost 34, scoring 27 pins,
Once in a purple moon (which occurs every millionth blue moon
while being pinned only seven if anyone is counting blue moons), the team with no chance at all wins.
times.
100 to 1 on Red Sox
The season’s scores
Consider; Last year you could have taken a package of the WashBuffalo Stata 11
Buffalo 24
ington Senators, the Kansas City (now Oakland) Athletics, and the
Buffalo 36
McMatter 2
Boston Red Sox at 100-1 odds.
Buffalo 36
Buffalo Stata 2
In July and August when the Red Sox still remained in contenIthaca 12
Buffalo 21
Colgata 11
Buffalo 21
tion, the bookies started to get a little worried. Come September
Oswego 25
Buffalo 10
with the Red Sox still very much alive in the dogfight, the bookies
Cortland 17
Buffalo 14
started to pray actively for the Twins, the Tigers, the White Sox,
Buffalo 21
RIT 12
Gualph 11
Buffalo 26
the Angels or anyone else to beat the Red Sox. At the same time
Brockport
Buffalo 12
they frantically tired to cover their bets.
Buffalo 30
Rochester
The Red Sox weren’t to be denied, and the result was that the
bookies lost a lot of loot.
Another aspect of spring training worth commenting on is the
process known as rookie touting. At each camp there is at least one
rookie who can do it all, according to the press releases who will lead
the team out of the wilderness.
A prime example of this is the Yankees who each year find a
rookie who is the new Mickey Mantle, A couple of years ago it was
Joe Pepitone (who has enough problems just being Joe Pepitone).
This year the super star of the future is Ronnie Blumberg. This
makes good news copy, but words don't make a player (isn’t that
right Don Bosch?).
To leave on an optimistic note appropriate with the advent of
spring, the Mets, believe it or not, will finish in the top ten.

Basketball team beaten
The University intercollegiate
basketball team was defeated 5035 in their final contest against
host Brockport State Teachers
College Friday evening. The women cagers evened their season
series at tour wins and four

--

losses.

Kay Richard led

William Sanford
The Swimming coach's team finished
with a 4-6 record and took eighth place
in the Upper New York State Champion■ships this season.

Gerald Gergley

The head Wrestling coach's team finWed 8-3 in dual match competition,
an(
i seventh in the Interstate Intercollegiatie tournament this season.
-

the visiting
Buffalo team with 11 points. Cocaptain Elaine Gordon tallied
eight points, Shirley Golden had
five, and Marlene Samuelsen and
Dobie Goldsmith each contributed
four points to the losing cause.
Sharon Pleasant led the team in
rebounding.

The Blue and White team started the game by scoring two points
to open the scoring but then fell
behind and trailed 15-9 after the
first eight minutes of play. Brockport widened its margin to nine
points (30-21) at the halfway
mark.

The visiting club was able ta
move within six points of the
Staters’ lead three times during

the third quarter but finished
that stanza ten points behind (3929). Broekport State continued to
widen its margin and finished the
game with its- 15-point spread.

�Tuesday, March 19, 1968

The Spectrum

Page Fourteen

Madrid University

Editor’s Note: There is a student movement in Spain, and though
it has received scant attention in the American press, it has led to a
series of outbreaks between students and the police. Unlike movements
here, in Japan and in Germany, the Spanish student movement is not
concerned with Vietnam, but rather with the control exercised by the
police over Spanish universities. The center of student unrest is the City
University of Madrid, Spain’s largest public university.

by David Saltman
College Press Service

MADRID (CPS) —A first visit to the City University of
Madrid is a startling experience.
When I went there, a 35-day shut-down which was imposed by the police as a result of student demonstrations,
had ended and classes were in session.
Nevertheless, the Guardias Civiles, government security
policemen, were much in evidence.
In front of the building that houses the Medical faculty,
for example, there were three armored jeeps with four policemen in each, a small bus filled with about 20 more policemen,
and two helmeted Guardias in front of every door.
I couldn’t get inside, because
to do so requires a special identification card and proof of business, but I’m told that there are
more uniformed police inside patrolling the halls, and sometimes
dropping in on classes where they
suspect anti-government activity
might be going on.
In addition, there are plainclothes detectives who pose as
students at the university, as well
as genuine students who act as
police informants (mostly members of the Fascist youth movement).

Increasing repression
Although the government has
always exercised strict control
over the university, the recent
increase in repressive measures

Freshmen

'

stem from last semester, when

students became fed up with the
official government student asso-

ciation.
They formed the Democratic

Union of Spanish Students (DUSS)

to represent them in demands for
educational r ef o r m . DUSS did
nothing more than print memos,
but in a fascist state publishing
can be dangerous.
Midway through last semester
the police raided one of the of-

fices of the Democratic Union.

They smashed the printing press,
burned the books and destroyed
all the office equipment. In retali-

ation, several hundred students
burned a city bus (empty) in front
of a platoon of policemen. Instead
of arresting the students, the po-

Sophomores

*

lice photographed the burning
bus and passed out the pictures
to the newspapers.
Early this year the police closed

down the Faculty of Sciences—one of the centers of student protest—with no explanation. After
dozens of demonstrations by students in other faculties (marked
by bloody and prolonged battles
with federal, local and University
policemen) they shut down one
after another. For a week the
entire University was closed, and
resembled an army garrison.
Toward the end of February,
all the Faculties were gradually
re opened, while the police quietly arrested as ■many DUSS delegates as they could find.

Spies
“Our problem,” says Pio Moa,
a second-year journalism student
who has close tics with DUSS, “is
that we can't get anything started.
The police have spies among the
students —especially fascists—who
tell everything. We’ve never had
a meeting that the police didn’t
know about.” At one demonstration, says Moa, the police arrested
some people before it took place.
They had a list of everyone
scheduled to participate and everything that was scheduled to
happen, he says.
“There are about 600 students
who don’t sleep at home any more
because they’re afraid of being

arrested,” he adds.
This police advance knowledge
makes peaceful protest impossible, says Moa. “At our biggest

The universities are only too
glad to expel contentious students, branding them “revolutionaries" or “communists

‘demonstration’ we had about five
to eight hundred students, with
the same number of policemen!”
he says. “They didn’t do anything
as long as you walked around, but
anyone who stopped was arrested

”

The blatant police repression
still goes on: Recently the papers
reported with evident glee, that
the police had “crushed” a proChinese student association, confiscating all its office materials
and books and destroying its
printing press.

”

The main obstacle to building
a radical movement, in the opinion of many student activists, is
the lack of a free press. There is
no way to pass information (posters are immediately ripped down,
leafleting is illegal) so there have
been no really big demopstrations. “It even took us a month
to find out that there had been

As it is now, even radical students are afraid. After a particularly revealing interview, one student lowered his voice. “I must
leave now. Too many people are
looking at us.” He stood up,
smiled quickly, and disappeared
into the crowd.

demonstrations in Barcelona,”
adds one student.

All frightened
“Everyone is afraid of arrest,”
explains Moa. “If a policeman
walked in here right now (into
the student dining hall) and saw
us talking and arrested me, no
one would help out.” There were
over 1,000 students in the hall.

uValldDIC
I KKClSf awallakln

T!_x
«

i

.»

lllTII

ff\r

The Jimi Hendrix Experience,
who appear in concert at Memorial Auditorium Saturday at 8:15
p ra seems to be the latest ree0 rd setting-import from England,

There is also no money. All the
dues paid by students to DUSS
have been confiscated by the gov-

,

ernment.

„

Hendrix is backed by Mitch
Mitchell on drums and Noel Redding, lead guitarist. Appearing
with the Jimi Hendrix Experience
are The Soft Machine, The Mark
Boyle Sense Laboratory and
Jesse’s Carnival.

So it goes,
People are swallowed up into
the police network and never
heard from again.
Old-guard Catholic families
pressure their University children

to keep their

Tickets are available at the
Norton Ticket Office.

noses clean.

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247
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�Pag* Fifteen

The S pectru m

Tuesday, March 19, 1968

——

CLASSIFIED

For quick action

call 831-3610

Question of

the tveek

Considering the Nations Security Co

icil’s re-

cent decision on grad student deferments I intend
MISCELLANEOUS

'60 FORD—new battery, new generator. $40.
876-1606.
SPRING FEVER? America's Prestige Sports
Car, Dodge Lancer, 1962. Maneuverable,
fast and economical. Particularly for the
girl who knows where she's been and
knows whre she's going. Overdrive, Rally,
lights and Racing Stripe not included.
$275. Chris, 834-3358.
1959 CHEVY—good

834-4962.

running shape, call Bi

1962 RENAULT—body
engine just tuned,

Call Paul, 684-6413.

excellent condition,
all new tires, $350.

ILE, Super 88—four
sedan, power windows, seat and aerial,
selectomatic radio; cruise control; excellent
condition. Please phone owner before
5 p.m. 853-4255 or 874-3166.
1961 CHEVROLET IMPALA—good condition,
automatic transmission,
r
h, p.s.,
&amp;

reasonable. Call Stan 835-9795.
HALLICRAFTERS S-120 shortwave and broadcast receiver, like new. Call 883-4019
after 6.
value,
BRAND NEW sewing
will sell for $150. Ski boots, size
Skis, pants, ski rack fit medium size cars,
$65 complete. 836.5760.
TYPEWRITER for sale-Royalite Portable,

8-1/2.

case included, $25. Call Ron,

after 7

TR 3-1758

p.m.

GOOD BOOKS for sale, good prices (Philosophy, Literature, Sociology, etc.) 882-

1051,

HOUSES, APARTMENTS needed for Mathematicians attending U.B. Summer Conference, August 11-30. Call Mr. Coleman,

831-1101.

VISITORS-The Gilded Edge, 3193 Bailey.
Hand-crafted jewelry and unusual gifts.
Wed.

Sat.

RIDERS TO FLORIDA (1 or 2)-Leaving Buf.
falo Sunday, March 31 (arrive Miami Beach
night of April 1). Leave Miami April 11
(arrive Buffalo April 12). One-way or round-

trip to Miami Beach or vicinity. Call Norm,
mornings or all day Sunday, 835-1626.
TIME

SALES

HELP-hours at your
convenience, salary plus commission. Call
874-3399, 9-11 daily.
DRIVE-IN RESTAURANT-day help want
full and part time for mature, clean cut
individuals only. Apply McDonald's Drive
In, 1385 Niagara Falls Blvd.
MALE OR FEMALE to teach English conversation in Japan. Need not be college
graduate. Write Miss Eileen Nieman, Yakushiyama Jutaku A401, 537, Yamahapa, Shinden, Hineji-Shi, Hyogo.Ken, Japan or call
IF 8-1614 evenings.
PART

PERSONAL
WANTED-One good-looking, able Masseuse who can relax active male; rates to
be arranged. Bruce, 833-7229.
For gems from the Jewish Bible
call 875-4265 day or night.

SHALOM)

164-1/2 Allen Street.

nity parties. Parking
Mr. Marcus, 837-5521.

COLT 45:

WANTED

-

LARGE HALL for rent.

When

Suitable tor trafer-

b) Join some kind ot resist
c) Enlist.
d) Wait until I get drafted.
e) Other.

lot available. Call

better

are had,

blasts

ALPHA SIG will have them.
for authoritative "Handbook for

TEKE and

SEND $1

You can answer The Spectrum Question of the
Week every Wednesday and Thursday at the Information Desk on the first floor of Norton Hall
and the University College Library in Diefendorf
Hall.

Objectors." Nationally rec-

Conscientious

ognized. American Friends Service Committee, Box 181, University Station, Syracuse, N.Y.

TYPING:

25c per page; dittos-35c each.
Five minutes from campus. Call 834-8922.
AIR FRANCE Jet to Europe-June 11: New
York to London or Paris; August 20: Paris
to New York. $254 round trip. Call 831 2080.
EUROPE for $196 round trip. June 10August 16. Niagara Falls to London. Call

Last week’s question was:
Which would you like to attend during Spring
Weekend?

831-3602.
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
low cost,
immediate F.S.-l, premiums financed,
UPSTATE CYCLE INSURANCE, 695-3044.

The results were:
a) 26% carnival
b) 11% fireworks show
c) 7% sing-a-long in the Rathskeliar
d) 17% outdoor band concert
e) 5% talent show
f) Other

-

NURSES—This is no time to stop
irningl
Come to Cook County and you will see
something new everyday.
If you want

more, we can offer you tuition assistance
toward your master's degree. You will have
11 paid holidays, a generous vacation, and
salary ranging from $600 to $784 per month
plus differential. ($75 for P.AA.'s and $60
for NIGHTS). All of this and more, in a
city that has everything but you. For
information, write: Employment Supervisor,
COOK

COUNTY

SCHOOL

1900 West Polk Street,
60612 (TA 9-8400).

OF

1) 12% trike race
1% strip show
1% folk concert
20% various

2)
3)
4)

NURSING.
Illinois

Chicago,

Number of respondents; 414.

Humphrey warns universities to accept
government military research contracts
In a
WASHINGTON (CPS)
recent statement before a panel
of Congressional advisors Vice
President Hubert H. Humphrey
—

has warned universities that if
they don’t accept money from
the government for research projects, the funds may be used to
set up government research facilities and the universities will
find themselves “living a rather
barren life.”
Speaking before a panel of
science advisors to the House
Committee on Science and Astro-

nautics, Mr, Humphrey addressed
his warning to “some of our university friends here.”
He told the panel that “many
times I have read in the press
there is a little rebellion on some
campuses about government research projects, projects in universities."

“I feel if you don’t want the
money,” Mr. Humphrey said,
“there is another place for it. I
sort of feel that if the university
wants to exclude itself from the
life of the nation, then it will

The brothers of

Teke and Alpha Sig
invite you to enjoy

COLT 45
served exclusively

MARCH 22nd at BANAT HALL
BE THERE

most likely find itself living a
rather barren life.”

Civilian applications
He said research sponsored by
the Defense Department has been
more useful “by far” in its civilian rather than its military applications.
“I hope that our universities
and our government can work together,” the Vice President continued. "I hope that there will
not be a breach because if there
is it will not be the government
that suffers, because the government can set up its own laboratories.
“I don’t think that is very
smart. I think the government
ought to work with the private
sector. I think it ought to work
through the great universities. I
think it ought to use the contract system. But if a nation is
denied that, then it has to have
some way to protect itself,” he
said.

Mr. Humphrey’s warning, whica
came in late January, was apparently in response to efforts by
faculty members and students at
some universities to combat military research projects on their
campuses.

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your first day. Your worst day!
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KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL
MONDAY, APRIL 1st

2 Performances: 1 PM. I 9:30 P.H
All Seats Reserved $5.50$4.50-$3.50
Tickets on sole now at Ouffjlo
Festival Ticket Office. Hotel SlatlerHilton Lobby; U, of 0. Norton Hall;
all Audrey A Del's Record Shops;
Orundo’s, Niagara Falls.
-

�Pag* Sixteen

offers

RFK

Tuesday, March 19, 1968

The Spectrum

aid to McCarthy

GREEN BAY, Wis.
Sen. Eugene
McCarthy has accepted Sen. Robert F.
Kennedy’s offer of aid in the Wisconsin
Democratic presidential primary but he
noted that when he really needed help

a bit but two can run against the Johnson
policies in Vietnam.”
Sen. McCarthy said he even saw a
“slight plus” for the Minnesota senator’s
own presidential hopes in Kennedy jpin-

stayed out and threw messages over the

dent Johnson’s Vietnam policy.”
Earlier, he had rejected any idea of
coalition with Kennedy until at least “a
day or two after the California primary,”
in which Kennedy and McCarthy will col-

—

fence.”
“I walked alone,” McCarthy said in a
news conference following Kennedy’s announcement that the New York senator
was entering the race for the Democratic
presidential nomination.
Although he said he wasn’t turning
down Kennedy’s offer of aid in states
where Kennedy is not on the Democratic
presidential primary ballot, McCarthy told
the Green Bay news conference: “I think
I can still win in Wisconsin without help.
I’m still the best potential candidate in
the field. I can win,” McCarthy said.

lide.
An earlier confrontation looms
braska and the two may also meet

in Nein the

Indiana primary.
Sen. McCarthy told a St. Norbert’s College audience in suburban West De Pere,
Wis., that he did not completely share
Kennedy’s notion that the two could work
in harmony as rivals for the Democratic
presidential nomination.
“I don’t think one Irishman can challenge another on the day before St. Patrick’s Day and tell him it’s going to be a
peaceful relationship. One Irishman can’t
challenge another and say they’re going to
fight for fun.”

He rejected any “deal” with Sen. Kennedy. “I’m not prepared to deal with anybody,” he said.
i
Sen. McCarthy said Kennedy’s entry
into the race “may clutter up the track

*

*

'

It’s your am

Nelson Rockefeller!
■
—UPI

Telephoto

Getting on the
Rocky Wagon

Washington

~±:-r

Stewart R. Mott, chairman of the Rockefeller Now! Committee, holds a copy of

the advertisement he recently placed in
the New York Times, urging New York
Gov. Nelson Rockefeller to declare his
candidacy for the Republican presidential nomination.

•

•

Ion don
green bay

KKK leader to appeal case
Defense atHATTIESBURG, Miss.
torneys said they “definitely” plan to appeal the historic conviction of an alleged
Ku Klux Klan leader on murder charges
stemming from the 1966 firebomb death
of Negro leader Vernon Dahmer.
—

•

mlsslsslppl

compiled

from our

wire tervicet

Londoners stage anti-Viet protest
LONDON

—

Thousands of anti-Vietnam

War demonstrators battled riot police outside the U. S. Embassy Sunday in a mas-

sive protest that bloodied heads, smashed
windows and littered Grosvernor Square
with debris.
It was one of the most violent riots in
London history, and the worst in recent
years.
Rocks tossed by the demonstrators shattered 13 windows in the embassy building,
but authorities said no one was hurt inside. There was heavy bloodshed in the
street outside.
Police reported 86 persons treated for
injuries and said 50 of these, including
about 25 policemen, were admitted to hospitals. Two policemen were seriously hurt.
At least seven busloads of bleeding dem-

instrators were hauled off by police.
The anti-American rally was sponsored
by the leftist “Vietnam Solidarity Campaign” and was attended by an estimated
20,000 members of various organizations including American students and black
power advocates.
From the rally in Trafalgar Square, the
demonstrators marched on the U.S. Bmbasy. Police reinforcements had been
moved in despite repeated protestations
from the rally leaders there would be flo
violence.

The battle erupted as soon as the vanguard of the mearchers reached the square
outside the American embassy.
Linking arms, the demonstrators
smashed through double cordons of police
onto the grassy center of the square across
from the embassy building.

An all-white circuit court jury returned
a guilty verdict last week against Cecil

Victor Sessum, 31.
The jury was unable to agree on the
punishment, and Judge Stanton Hall imposed a mandatory life sentence against
Sessum to start immediately. Persons convicted of lesser crimes usually are allowed to remain free on bond pending
an appeal, but bond is not permitted in
capital offenses.

Attorneys said Sessum would not become eligible for parole until he had
served at least ten years.
Sessum, a tenth grade dropout who
was identified by the FBI as a high-ranking official in the militant White Knights
of the KKK, stood chewing gum as the
judge imposed sentence. He showed no
outward emotion, but his wife, Mary, burst
into tears.
Sessum was the first of 12 alleged
klansmen and a klan attorney facing trial
on either murder and/or arson charges
in the Dahmer slaying. Dahmer, a leader
of a Negro voter registration drive, was
killed Jan. 10, 1966, when nigbtriders

hurled firebombs into
here.

In case you haven H heard

his home near

...

WASHINGTON
Sen. Robert F. Kennedy jumped into the presidential race
last weekend with a vow to work in harmony with the peace candidacy of Sen.
Eugene McCarthy against the policies of
—

President Johnson.
Sen. Kennedy said he would enter
primaries in at least California, Nebraska
and Oregon and urge his backers to vote
for McCarthy in Wisconsin, Pennsylvania
and Massachusetts preferential races.
Sen. Kennedy said he told both the
President and McCarthy of his decision.
As for Johnson, the New York senator
said the issue was “not personal; it is
our profound differences over where we
are heading.”
Asked if he would campaign for the
Minnesota senator’s peace candidacy in
Wisconsin and other primary states where
not competing, Mr. Kennedy said: “Yes, 1

will.”

Kennedy and McCarthy will compete
in primaries in California, Oregon and

Nebraska.

Asked if he would support the nominee
of the Democratic National Convention in
Chicago if he failed to win, Kennedy said
he would decide that at convention time.
As for the cities, Kennedy said jobs
were the most pressing problem.

Would stop bombing
As for the war
which he has said is
—

-UN T*l*photo

Wired
for a fight

by barbed wire, a lone Marine
stands guard with a machinegun in a
bunker on the perimeter of this fortress.
North Vietnamese artillerymen exploded
American tear gas supplies at Khe Sanh,
sending acrid fumes throughout the
bunkers where Marines are seeking refuge from the heaviest artillery attack on
the base in two weeks.

Framed

the over-riding issue in the nation because of its broad influence on other areas
—Kennedy said he basically favored deescalation. He said he believed the South
Vietnamese should assume a greater role.
The senator said that he also believed
that negotiations could be held with the
National Liberation Front, the political
arm of the Viet Cong in South Vietnam.
If he were elected, he would stop the
bombing in an effort to get negotiations
started and that the United States could
always take retaliatory action if good
faith talks did not result, he said.

Aim is open convention
Kennedy said that before McCarthy’s
strong showing in the New Hampshire
primary 1, he felt that any race between

himself and the President would be one
of personalities. But McCarthy’s show' ’g
in the nation’s first preferential prinwy,
he said, convinced him he could oppose
the Chief Executive on issues.
Both he and McCarthy are aiming to
cause an “open Democratic convention
at Chicago,” Kennedy said.
He will let his name go into the June
California primary “in the belief . • that
Sen. McCarthy’s forces and mine will be
able to work together in one form or
another,” Kennedy said.
“My desire is not to divide the strength
of those forces seeking a change, but to
increase it.”
.

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                    <text>RECEIVED

The Spectrum

(

WAR 1

UNIVERSITY
fs

iCHlVES

Friday, March 15, 1968

State University of New York at Buffalo

Vol. 18, No. 41

1968

SEEK seeks funds
to enlarge program
crease.

by Carol R. Richards
Gannett News

SEEK

Service

“These are
ALBANY
boys and girls who could be
articulators of the ‘burn baby
burn’ philosophy,” said the
educator gesturing at the
roomful of young Negroes
and Puerto Ricans. “Instead
they are in the SEEK program.”
—

-schw.b

Drummina
VIUII II I y

UD
up

Neo-Conqueroos performed in Norton Center
Lounge Wednesday, drumming up financial support for the 'Strike for Knowledge Stop the War'
-

,

Support

activities.

Strike for Knowledge—Stop the War
offer analysis
business,;
to stop usual
by Linda Laufar
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

Stop
“Strike for Knowledge
the War” will attempt to suspend
“business as usual” Tuesday and
Wednesday. During the two days,
intensified discussion and analysis of the draft and the war in
Vietnam is scheduled.
Panel discussions with faculty
members, graduate students, professors and scholar from other
univerities, and journalists, are
planned. Consideration of possible action programs will be discussed at an evaluation session,
sometime Thursday.
One panel will discuss the
draft and its alternatives. Scheduled at 8 p.m. Tuesday, it will
be composed of Mitichell Goodman, the novelist and one of the
organizers of Resist, who was indicted with Dr. Benjamin Spock
for counselling students to resist
the draft; Michael Ferber, a graduate student at Harvard and a
native Buffalonian who also was
indicted with Dr. Spock; and Robert O’Neil, assistant to President
Meyerson, who will discuss the
constitutional aspects of the draft.
Another panel will include Ross
Flanagan, one of the persons involved in bringing medical supplies to North and South Vietnamese suffering the effects of
napalm. He will speak on proper
tactics in opposing the Vietnam
war. Other panels will discuss
topics such as the university as
a warmaker, electoral politics as
ah alternative to the war, and
the clergy and the war.
—

Guerrilla theater
A Vietnam Witness Service will
be conducted by Reverend Kenneth Sherman at 5 p.m. Tuesday.
It will be a folk rock service and
Will include witness against the
war and a poetry reading. Following the service will be an agape
dinner, a meal of reconciliation.
Other activities during the
two-day strike include draft counselling and the selling of antiwar books. Also, there will be a
guerrilla theater group which
will go to various locations on
campus and perform skits relevant to the war.
Faculty members are being
asked to cancel their classes to
free students to go to the dis-

cussion. According to Robert Hass,
assistant professor of English and
one of the organizers of the Strike
for Knowledge, many more faculty members will talk about the
war in their classes. He indicated
that those who do not feel competent to discuss the war should
discuss their discipline in relation to the war. Mr. Hass also
said that students should attend
their classes if their faculty members ask them to and if they will
be dealing with the war.

"Moral necessity"
When asked the reason for hava Strike for Knowledge, Mr.
Hass replied: “Because of the
changes in the draft law which
has rightly brought the war home
to the university, because of the
possibility of a massive escalation of the war in the near future, because of the recent Faculty Senate statement on the war,
and finally because of the kind
of anguish and wholesale reevaluation going on throughout
the conutry and especially in
Congress, it becomes a moral
necessity for the University as
a community of intellectuals to
come together and talk about the
future of the students and the
future of the country. At this
point, not to do that would be
a denial of our responsibilities
as human being.”
Support has been given by the
Graduate Student Association,
Student Senate, Graduate Philosophical Association, the Association of Graduate English Students, the Graduate Student Association of the Department of Political Science, and other groups.
ing

University not isolated
One organization working for
the strike is the University Community for Rational Alternatives,
composed of graduate students.
Explaining the position Of this

group,

Joseph Wolberg, a mem-

cannot be, and is not in fact,
isolated from the machinery that
is carrying out the war.

The speaker was Professor Julius C. Edelstein of the City University of New York. Prof. Edelstein testified before the joint
legislative committee on higher
education on the need for more
state funds in the SEEK (Search
for Elevation, Education and
Knowledge) program.
The program seeks out collegemotivated underprivileged youths
in the Western New York areas
and in New York City and sends
them to college. Schools connected with SEEK include the
State University College of New
York' at Buffalo, Erie County
Technical Institute and Niagara
County Community College, and
City University of New York,
Queens College, Brooklyn College, Hunter College in the Bronx
and York College.

Budget increases
The hearing, which

was

at-

tended by more than 50 SEEK
For these reasons, we demand students, was patterned after a
that the University be opened as similar hearing which last year
an institution to the realities that resulted in an increased approstudents as individuals will have priation of $4 for SEEK —$3.5
to face in June. We demand the million for New York City and
University educate us on the most $500,000 for the Niagara Frontier
crucial issue facing our lives to- program.
day. We have taken all steps posThis year, Governor Rockefeller
sible to provide the University has budgeted $1.9 million for the
with the educational material and Buffalo-Niagara Falls program—expertise necessary for intelli- an increase of $1.4 million—and
gent discourse and decision re$2.25 million for the New York
garding our personal fates."
City project, a significant de-

spokesmen from

both

ends of the state joined forces
to ask the committee to see that
the New York appropriation be
increased to $7.5 million and that

the Niagara Frontier project at
least be protected from a cut-

conscious legislature.
Slate University College at Buffalo President E. .K.-Fretwell Jr.,

said that cuts in the Niagara
Frontier SEEK budget could have
“great implications” for Negro
groups in Buffalo, Lackawanna
and Niagara Falls.

First real hope

“SEEK,” Fretwell said, "offers
the first real hope for higher
education, for a future, for some
of the thousands of disadvantaged
youth who reside in the slum
areas of our inner cities.”
Assemblyman Joseph Kottler,
chairman of the Joint Legislative
committee, said SEEK would be
in “grave danger,” if any cutbacks were made.
The dean of the SEEK program
in New York City, Leslie Berger,
said that of the 113 students who
enrolled when the program was
new, more than half are still attending college and 50% of these
have a “C” average or better.
These are students, he said,
who graduated from high school
with “general” or “vocational”
diplomas. Some only hold high
school equivalency certificates.
There are about 1800 SEEK
students in the New York City
program, and 251 in the Buffalo
project.

Prof. Edelstein said: “This program takes kids who are loose
gunpowder and turns some of

them into dynamite—but capped
dynamite—a powerful force for
good—armed with the power of
knowledge and the skill of professionalism.”

New structure in effect

Senate OKs Pub Board appointees
by Marian* Kozuchowski
Assistant Campus Editor

The Student • Senate Wednesday gave its “rubber
stamp approval” to the Executive Committee’s appointment of four members to the
remodeled 11-man Publications Board. One undergraduate position remains open.
The four members representing the Student Association are Marion Michaels,
Robert Young, Ira Lee Falk
and Carl Levine. They will
sit on the Board until the end
of this semester.
Two members of the Graduate
Student Asociation and four representatives of publications
either editors or their representatives—will be selected soon.
A new structure for the Publications Board was adopted last
semester. Unlike previous years,
the Board will have power over
financial allocations to publications in its domain.
—

ber of the steering committee
and an NDEA teaching fellow in
the Philosophy Department, said:
It has the responsibility to rec“We do not ask for a return of ognize new student publications
our protection from the draft and
and ratify the appointment of edifrom the war. We realize that tors (or appoint an editor if dewhile we have been protected in sired by the publication).
the past, others have gone to
The Board will guard against
fight the war. We now realize,
“flagrant violations of the United
if not before, that the University States Student Press Association

Codes of Ethics for College Ediitors, or any misappropriation or
mismanagement of finances
which is unreasonable.” The Pub-

Gould against

lications Board does not have the
editors, but can
withdraw funds from a publicalion at any time.
power to remove

interference

NEW YORK (CPS) —Samuel Gould, chancellor
of the State University of New York, recently
warned against outside interference in universities.
The head of the nation's largest state higher
education system was speaking particularly about
the recent raid on the university's Stony Brook
campus in which 30 students were arrested on
charges of marijuana possession in the middle of
the night.
"If the University is to speak honestly it most
remain politically unencumbered," Gould said.
"Thoughtful people everywhere have become disturbed of late over the possibility that universities
may increasingly be subject to pressures that have
nothing to do with education, but have much to do
with the momentary surges of public passion."

�Pag* Two

The

Friday, March 15, 1968

Spectrum

Panel discusses premarital sex,
once tions and misconceptions

The Humanis

Constructive alternative

by Dabble Price
Spectrum Staff Reporter

"Archaic practices"

Dr. Norman Solkoff, a psychologist, opened the forum by stating
that the topic of sex has been
shrouded over hundreds of years
by "archaic practices that have
produced hypocrisy and guilt

by Ian McMillan
Spectrum

99

"Immature adjustment"

T

jority of questions were raised by
men.
Does pre-marital sex help build
an understanding between people?
Dr. Clark briefly replied, “Practice makes perfect.” He added
that most people can make a
happy adjustment without experiencing sex before marriage, but
for some people, it “could enhance their adjustment.”

Individual basis
Dr. Solkoff, responding to this

idea cited a specific study that
showed that the frequency of pre-

ip

“There are those who have lived
together,” observed Rabbi Sher,
“who probably have a better marriage than those who have not,
but marriage is important in
my mind.”
The responsibility of the University in dispensing birth control information and implements?
Dr. Bayonet commented on the
legal aspects. He said that in
many states birth control advice
is still illegal. In New York State,
it is a felony for a doctor to give
contraceptives or pelvic exams to
minors without parental consent.
If the Student Health Service
concerned itself with birth con-

trol information and contraception, Dr. Clark explained that the
Service would be occupied “24
hours of every day, seven days a
week.” Giving out contraceptives
should be a matter of individual
attention, he continued. “The University Health Service can’t be
accessibly tied down by a few
areas that may be particularly de-

manding.”
Dr. Solkoff agreed that information must be individual and
can’t be given “a la gumball

machine."
The forum ended with no new
ideas being brought into play,
the stress being placed on individual relationships.

if*

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*

*

*

*

*
*
*
*
*

HAPPY BIRTHDAY

*

*
*
*
*
*

The cities, which “should be

Constructive alternative
Noting a statement in the article that “Saigon has suffered remarkably few terrorist attacks,”
The Spectrum asked Dr. Kurtz if
the recent Tet offensive had
changed any of the assumptions
on which the Plan rests, especially that the free city enclaves
would be “more defensible." He
said no, that if anything, the attacks underscore the need to alter the present military course,
while the incredible destruction
makes a constructive, productive
alternative even more appealing.

nam, while at the same time al-

lowing for defense, growth, farmland and par kspace, would be
developed by South Vietnam with
the help of the international community,” according to Read and
Salstrom. Modeled somewhat after Hong Kong, the cities would

be demilitarized, modern industrial and manufacturing centers.
Provided with good ports, the cities would become world trade
and tourist centers. Read and
Salstrom cite the relationship,
particularly the economic one, between Honk Kong and Red China
as a very suitable example for
the free cities and the local Viet-

Bead and Salstrom argue that
to those convinced that the “sacrifice required is no longer equivalent to the end to be achieved,”
the Free Cities Plan is “an hon-

countryside.

orable and realistic solution to
the war in Vietnam. The solution
is neither a defeat nor a compromise; it is a planned peace in
the U.S. interest.”

—

The March/April issue of the
Humanist will feature a discussion of “The Negro in America”
and a confrontation between Henry L. Giordano, U.S. Commissioner of Narcotics, and Michael
R. Aldrich, student leader of the
Society for Legalization of Mari-

'In best interest'
The

plan,

which calls for an

juana.

*
*

*
*

*

*

*

*

“From such a position,” says
Dr. Kurtz, “the United States
could remain as it does now in
Guantanamo in Cuba, and it
could eventually negotiate a withdrawal after tempers have cooled
and reason again prevails.”

*

*

*

*

and Vietnamese lives.”

large enough to accommodate the
entire population of South Viet-

The authors propose that for
the first five years, the cities
should be controlled by international assistance teams. American and Vietnamese military personnel would not be allowed inside
an international police
force would serve as local police.
American troops would defend
the perimeters. After five years,
a permanent system could be
chosen and instituted.

Kurtz,

*

*

*

*

Humanist Editor Paul

professor of philosophy at State
University at Buffalo, endorsed
the “Free Cities Plan,” stating
that “it would offer the possibility of withdrawing to more defensible free city enclaves that
would also be a viable economic
unit. The terror bombing of the
North and the jungle warfare of
the South could be ended, minimizing losses in both American

Free cities

nam

immediate cease fire, is in the
best interest of the United States,
according to Read and Salstrom,
for it “allows for a speedy military disengagment, while creating a situation in which the United States can constructively confront communism in Southeast
Asia.”
Jon Read is a former member
of the Vietnam Day Committee.
Paul Salstrom, an anti-draft activist, is a coordinator of Pen-Pals
for Prisoners.

would be for “all who wish to
live free, productive lives in a
democratic society,” and would
be “free of control by either the
National Liberation Front (NLF)
or the present Saigon military
government, and protected by international forces.”

*

*
*

,

In an article advocating the
plan, Mr. Jon J. Read and Mr.
Paul Calstrom describe it as a
“means of turning the conflict
to a constructive direction.” Essentially the plan is “a proposal
for the United States to halt all
offensive military opeartions and
to create three neutral cities in
South Vietnam.” These cities

Dr. Clark, a psychiatrist with marital sex is not important in
the Student Health Service, was making a better marriage. It
basically concerned with emotionwas demonstrated that “the greatal problems sometimes resulting er the number of sexual confrom pre-marital sex. He labeled tacs for women, the poorer the
a too liberal indulgence as a mark marriage partners they’ll make.”
of “immature adjustment.”
Dr. Clark reiterated the belief
The medical side of the issue that all the problems concerning
was mentioned by the fourth pan- pre marital sex are on an indivelist, Dr. Italio Bayonet, obstet- jdual basis,
rician and gynecologist with the
The myth of “that wonderful
University Medical School. He
first night?”
pointed out the necessity for inAccording to Dr. Clark, many
creasing sex education in public girls look forward to the first
schools. Concerning human phy- night but are “pressed into sersiology and the use of contracept- vice before this.”
ives he added, “There is a lot of
Is sex related to marriage any
misconception.”
more or is this an outdated quesAt this point, questions were
tion?
called for from the predominately
Rabbi Sher responded that marfemale audience, though the ma- riage and sex can’t be divided.
T 'T* *T* 'T* T

Reporter

Some of the softest and least
heard voices at the Vietnam lectern are those which neither completely condemn nor completely
favor the American Vietnam policy, but rather those which proposes a well thought out alternalive. The January/February issue of the Humanist, whose editorial offices are at State University of New York, at Buffalo, offers such an alternative: the
“Free Cities Plan.”

feelings.”
As a psychologist, he is interested in motives of those engaged
in pre-marital sex. He found of
particular importance that some
use sex falsely "to break down

communication barriers” that often exist during dating. Dr. Solkoff mentioned other motives including a desire for security and
the need for immedate response.
With these complex motives all
working, he felt that “to answer
whether pre-marital sex is desirable is impossible.”
Pre-marital sex is a controversy
between “freedom and authority”
said reform Rabbi Sher of Temple
Beth Zion. Taking a liberal stand,
he commented that “I can’t find
myself able to condemn (premarital sex) all the time.” Rabbi
Sher contended that individuals
must determine the nature of
their relationships, but to the unusual few who can build a lasting relationship through pre-marital sex, “They have my blessing.”

Staff

*

KEN!

*
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*
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*

*

*

*

*

*
*

*

*

*

*
*
*
*
*
*

Love
Linda
,

*
*
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*
*

*

*

«

*

*************************1 (*********************$
.*

U—

,

»

ti

I

„„„

J

(

“Pre-marital sex at 3:30” was
the title of a forum Monday. It
attracted many curious students
and parents to the Fillmore Room.
The presiding all-male panel of
four specialists began the discussion with short presentations of
their views on pre-marital sex.

�Friday, March 15, 1968

Pag* Thr**

The Spectrum

not have a draft/
'We
should
Snell:
dateline news. Mar. 15
rts Faculty Senate resolution
WASHINGTON—Public support of the Vietnam War was boosted
by Secretary of State Dean Rusk’s testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, according to a House- group backing the
administration’s war policies
Declaring Rusk the clear winner of the two-day confrontation,
the bipartisan group also lambasted Senate critics of the war for
what one House member called "incredible goading” of Rusk,
WASHINGTON—House Democratic leaders yesterday were preparing for a critical “up or down” vote on the Senate’s sweeping
open housing bill. But there were signs of serious Republican opposition to the move.

ALBANY, N.Y.—Seven Negro state legislators, including Assemblyman Arthur 0. Eve of Buffalo, have warned Governor Rockefeller that his state programs are leading toward more racial unrest,

rather than away from it.

Action line

.

.

.

Q. Is Diefendorf a fire trap? When classes change the stairs are
mobbed. Windows are blocked by the architecture and offer no escape.
A. Mr. Robert E. Hunt, Environmental Health Officer, carefully
observed the building’s traffic patterns and checked its architectural
details, with particular question about potential fire hazards. He concluded that the building is safe and has a sufficient number of fire
exits. As a result of this study, however, brought about by this Action
Line question, he has recommended that, “Consideration should be
given to establishing one way traffic on the stairways to the second
and third floor. In emergency situations, each stairway would be used
as a down stairway.” This recommendation and a detailed analysis
of his observations have been forwarded to the proper administrative
Library have

issues

to submit them to the' ACE and
CGS, who each presented a statement to the White House. Thus
only two documents announcing
the positions of American universities were received by the Pres-

night.

ident.

Dr. Fred Snell applauded the
anti war resolution adopted a
week ago by the Faculty Senate.

Hershey in turn made the draft
decision on the basis of this information. Said Dr. Snell: “We
should have voiced a little more
at the time; some universities

-

He urged that copies of the resolution be sent to all Universities and professional societies so
that they might adopt similar pos-

did.”

itions.

Dean Snell was optimistic about
changes in draft legislation “if
voices continue to be heard
throughout the country. He
would like to see the draft laws
become as equitable as possible.
Another area of change would
be the enlargement of grounds
for conscientious objection as a
mans of draft deferment.

However Dean Snell believes
that there is little hope of “affecting a change in the draft or deescalation of the war.”

331-5000

offices for their review.
Q. Why doesn't Lockwood

“We should not have a draft,”
the Dean of the Graduate School
declared at an open meeting of
the Microbiology Club Monday

of Playboy

magazine?

A. It does. Current issues are available in the Periodicals Read11:00 p.m. Monday
ing Room, Harriman Library, open 7:30 am.
11:00
through Friday; 9:00 a.m. 5:00 p.m. Saturday; and 1:00 p.m.
p.m. Sunday.
A complete set of Playboy (except for vol. 1. no. 1, which is very
scarce) is available in Special Collections in Lockwood. These volumes
contain the first appearance of many poems, essays, and stories by
modern American authors.
Q. Why do students need 16 credits instead of 15 to make "Dean's
-

-

-

List"?
A. Dr. H. Eisenstein, Assistant Dean of University College, informed us that “Although 12 hours is technically considered a full
time academic load, it was recognized that some distinction should
be made between those students carrying 12 15 credit hours and
those carrying 16 or more credit hours. “Honors” and “Dean’s List”
are merely identification symbols, to help recognize the special de-

He feels that by spring, the
potential “wave of action may
lead to changes in this country’s
involvement in Southeast Asia.”

Throughout the meeting Dr.
Snell referred to “getting at the
source of the draft.” He compared changes in the draft law to
treating a disease with aspirin.
The root of the problem is not the

draft, but the system which allows
for it, he contended.

Wasted talents
The

Feb.

16

announcement

which ended most graduate student deferments was,done, Dean
Snell said, “on a political basis.”
“President Johnson felt this
was the time to draft graduate
students,” he said. “The army
doesn’t want them merely because they are draftable. The
graduate students will be wasted
since they will not be allowed to
use their talents in the right

areas.”

-

mands of the different academic loads.”
Q. What time are Commencement exercises scheduled to start?
When is rehearsal? I would like this information now, to help my
parents schedule their arrival.
A. Commencement will be held 3 p.m. Friday, May 31, 1968, at
Memorial Auditorium. Rehearsal for Commencement will be at 9 a.m.
the same day. Additional and more specific information concerning
commencement, i.e„ guests, ordering and wearing of the academic
costume, etc., will be available shortly.
Q. Why does it take four to five days for an airmail letter to
reach me in Tower? The letters are dispatched from Long Island, properly addressed.
A. Without the specific evidence in hand we could only get a better understanding of the procedures involved. Mail that has a specific
address on it, i.e., building and post office box number, is handled
only by the Federal postman and delivered directly to the postal
station of the building addressed. Immediate sorting of the building’s
mail is then handled by the postal clerk and placed in your own post
office box. Barring any unforseen delivery problems, your letters
should reach you well within a 2 day period. The next time you have
this problem, check immediately with Mrs. T. Falk, in the Tower post
office station and show her the time-dated envelope. She should then
be able to track down, specifically, the holdup spot.

Not enough people are upset

about the war,” Dean Snell argued. A large number of people
need to be persuaded and “all
means of communication should

Fred Snell

Graduate School dean says "not
enough people are upset about
the war."

even though they are technically
autonomous. A major problem is
representation
minority groups
and academic interests are underrepresented, he claimed.
—

be utilized for this end

Commenting specifically on the
“Strike for Knowledge Stop the
War" planned for Tuesday
through Thursday, he said: “This
is one of the greatest things the
students have thought of yet. It
should be used to alleviate apathy
in the community and among too
many students. If we can take
three days to learn the issues
country will be further
the
-

ahead.”

Election dates
are changed
The schedule for the Student
Association election has been
changed by the Executive Committee of the Student Senate.
The schedule is:
Obtain petitions: Mar. 13 to
•

22
Mandatory meeting of all
candidates; 7 p.m. Mar. 22
Campaigning: Mar. 26 to
Apr. 16
Voting: April 15 to 16.
Petitions can be obtained from
Mrs. Marko in room 225, Norton
Hall. Five hundred signatures
will be needed to place a candidate on the ballot.
•

The American Council on Education (ACE), spokesman for
2400 universities, and the Council
of Graduate Schools &lt;CGS), representing 240 graduate schools,
he said, asked its members not
to make individual announcements of their opinion on the

•

•

STREEGI5 INVITES YOU TO THEIR

St. Patrick’s Day

SALE

For

specific answers to your questions and for direct service, call ACTION LINE,
831-5000, every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, from 4-5 p.m.
If you prefer,
phrase your question in writing and address it to ACTION LINE, c/o The Spectrum,
355 Norton Hall, or the Office of the Dean of Students, 201 Harriman Library.

The problem of local draft
boards was also discussed. Dean
Snell stressed their general adherence to Hershey’s directive,

—G. Khan

Saturday, March 16 ONLY
BUY ONE ITEM AT REGULAR PRICE AND GET ONE

ITEM FOR 990

Selected Items

All Sales Final

Ifi

Today s Fashions for the Now Girl'

577 FOREST AVE., near Elmwood
10 a.m.
6 p.m. on Saturday
—

�Paj« Four

Th

•

Friday, March 15, 1968

Spectrum

Opposition mounts

&amp;

sugar

Larry Loltzclau)

It was educational television at its best.
This week’s interrogation of the Secretary of
State by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee
made several important facts about the current
political climate dramatically clear to millions of
Americans.
Television managed to do what the other news
media failed, perhaps not so innocently, to do: it is
peculiar nature of the medium that makes a ‘live’
performance captivating in itself—there was no
running commentary, no commercials, only the absorbing drama of the courtroom-like hearing. There
could be no clever cover-up, no selective summations; the censors and opinion-molders could only
sit and watch and listen.
Televised Senate hearings are nothing new,
but ever since McCarthy sent shivers through the
spines of Establishment liberals in his demagogic
witch-trials of the early 50’s, Senate hearings have
been a potentially potent force in mobilizing elements of public opinion.
Maybe that is why Dean Rusk was so uptight
appearing before the committee; maybe he
The Republican side of the New Hampshire primary about
thought that Senator Fulbright was some sort of
did
provided no startling results, although Richard Nixon
reincarnated McCarthy to send a new scare into
manage to roll up a larger vote than was expected. Governor the still-punchdrunk State Department. Not likely.
Rockefeller received only 11%, which was low even for a
The Secretary was, and still is uptight, because
he realizes that the Administration is riding a thin
largely unorganized campaign.
The low vote for Rockefeller could be explained by two line of credulity in the Vietnam caper. Perhaps
he senses that unanswered charges in public hearfactors: his still unannounced candidacy, and his non-comings may somehow help the Average American
mital statements on virtually all issues.
make the connection between the “to-be-continued”
The Governor will try for the nomination, and he will technicolor maiming on the 6:30 news and the Admake an announcement to that effect during the next week. ministration double-talk, and decide maybe this
The low vote in New Hampshire will force the Governor to show should lose its sponsor.
Morse’s brilliant Senatorial muckraking
do some active campaigning if he plans to win the nomination on Senator
the Tonkin affair has shown the American pubin August.
lic, finally, just how great a chasm the “credibilIf the New Hampshire primary brings about this result, ity gap” really is.
it was well worthwhile. Mr. Nixon has never been an excepThe hearings also vividly showed the extent to
tionally good candidate, and his nomination would be un- which opinion has become divided on the War
issue. “Dove” sentiments on the Fulbright comfortunate.
have increased fourfold in the last two years,
The Republicans would do well to nominate Nelson mitteenow
until
there is the incongruous line-up of SouthRockefeller, but first the Governor must make his opinions ern Senators, university professors, a general in the
and policies known. The time is ripe for just that developAir Force Reserve, and others, all developing cases
ment.
of incurable, progressive dovism.
Dean Rusk is not the only one in Washington
who is uptight. As was apparent in this week’s
hearing, the Senators, hawks as well as doves as
Next week this campus will slow down and take a long well as chickens, are sick and tired of being pawns
hard look at the war in Vietnam. This “strike for knowledge” in a losing game of chess.
will begin Tuesday.
The reasons for the rising antagonism of the
Support for the program has been significant. Student Senate has found expression in the Vietnam issue,
organizations, some faculty and some administrators have but that is not its source.
Senator Fulbright is very serious when he tells
indicated their willingness to participate in and encourage
the Administration that he wants the Senate to be
discussion on all phases of United States involvement in
consulted before there is a further (200,000 troops?)
South East Asia,
escalation. Secretary Rusk is just as serious when
The University Community for Rational Alternatives, he says the President will do as he has done in
the group that is sponsoring the program, has provided for the past, in regard to the role of Senate in foreign

Vote will spur Rockefeller

Strike aim: Information

discussions, teach-ins, speakers, performing artists and
many other activities which will serve to inform students

panel

about the war.
Many of the faculty have agreed to discuss the war and
related subjects during their classes Tuesday and Wednesday.
Some classes will be open to the public. The Spectrum will
include in Tuesday’s edition a full schedule of events.
It is clear that the term “strike” is a misnomer. The
activities are not aimed at stopping or obstructing anything.
Their purpose is to inform, and there is every indication that
the strike will do just that.

Readers
writings

from linen rags

policy.

Two things have been done in the past: the
Senate has either been ignored (as in the Bay of
Pigs), or else been duped (as in the Dominican
Crisis, and the Gulf of Tonkin) into support.
Senator Fulbright admits that the executive
must make rapid decisions on pressing problems.
Realizing the fundamental necessity for popular
control in a democratic state, he is only asking,
a la J, S. Mill, for a role as a popular representative
in formulating and reviewing the general policies
which shall guide the executive.
Apparently, that’s asking too much.

Appeals for student strike
To the Editor;
The Johnson Administration has for the first
time brought the Vietnam War in its domestic form
to our doorstep demanding our support and approval. The suspension of advance degree deferments has shown that it is no longer possible for
anyone to shield himself from the realities of this
War. We have been enjoying the privileges of the
society from which others have been excluded: we
are now asked to equally share the burden previously carried by the blacks and poor whites. The
war contract in which we have all been implicitly
bound has been explicitly brought home to us.
Our opposition is not a plea for special privilege.
We recognize that all our lives are trampled upon
by this War. The question for us, then, as members
of the human community, and only secondarily as
members of the academic community is: Are we to
give aid to a morally and politically detestable war?
The University is an integral part of the system
which is carrying out the War. In its research and
in its training, the University serves the government and private industry. By so avoiding its responsibility to the pursuit of wisdom and its relation to pacified and rational society, the University
becomes just another institution which preserves
the status quo and the war. Because of this we will
withdraw our services in order to demonstrate our
refusal to be a partner in our down destruction.
Our withdrawal is a positive act of education,
an education which the University, by its very
nature, has failed to provide. These days of education will be used to develop and further our efforts
to establish societal alternatives which do not require warmaking for their extension and preservation. We ask not to close the University, but
rather to open it.
We therefore ask you to join, us ir these days
of education and the suspension of “business as
usual.”
University Community for Rational Alternatives
every
The Spectrum is published twice-weekly
Tuesday and Friday
during the regular academic
year at the State University of New York at Buffalo,
—

—

3435 Main Street.

are located
15,000.

at 355

Buffalo, New York 14214. Offices
Norton Hall. Average Circulation:

Editor-inChief—MICHAEL L. D’AMICO
Managing Editor—RICHARD R. HAYNES
Asst. Managing Editor—RICHARD SCHWAB
Business Manager—SAMUEL A. POWAZEK
Advertising Manager—DAVID E. FOX
Campus
Margaret

Anderson

Asst.

Marlene Kozuchowskl

City
Daniel Lasser
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Peter Simon
Feature Barry C. Holtzclaw
Asst.
Ronald Ellsworth
Entertainment.
Lori Pendrys

Sports
Asst.
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Copy

Asst.

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Sheedy

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Photography

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Promotion
Director
Financial Advisor; Edward

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Goodson
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Carol
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Faculty Advisor: William R. Greiner
The Spectrum is a member of the United States Student Press Association and the Associated Collegiate
Press. The Spectrum is served by; United Press International, College Press Service, Associated Collegiate
Press Service, Gannett News Service, and the Los
Angeles Times Syndicate.
Represented for national advertising by National Educational Advertising Service/ Inc., 18 E. 50th Street,
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Republication of all news dispatches is forbidden without the express consent of the editor-in-chief. Rights of
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Editorial policy is dete
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Basic advertising rate
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I

The New Hampshire primary has dealt another blow to
Lyndon Johnson. Sen. Eugene McCarthy’s poll of 42% of
the vote is, in essence, an anti-war war vote.
More important, however, than McCarthy’s total was
Johnson’s, only 49%. This should make it abundantly clear
that neither Lyndon Johnson nor the war enjoy the mandate
many had claimed.
It is interesting also that Sen. McCarthy managed to do
so well against the President in the face of an organized
write-in campaign by pro-Johnson forces, strong statements
by the President supporting Rusk and denouncing anti-war
advocates Tuesday and Wednesday, and a commercial press
generally unsympathetic to the Senator. The news media
frequently hinted that a strong McCarthy showing would
give some sore of “aid and comfort to the enemy in Hanoi.”
We are looking forward to the next Primary with the
expectation that Sen. McCarthy will roll up an even greater
vote. Lyndon Johnson and his supporters are beginning to
worry. After all, how could the history books write the story
of a great President if he can’t even get his own party’s
nomination for another term?

wrsvi I COULD
ETWWEUJI

I

The pressure against President Johnson’s war policies
is mounting. Events of the past week have placed the war
in Vietnam on trial to a degree greater than ever before.
The attack has come from two fronts- The Senate Foreign
Relations Committee and the voters oi New Hampshiie.
Sen. Fulbright and his committee members have managed to raise serious questions about our policies that Secretary of State Dean Rusk answered inadequately, or not at
all. Mr. Rusk repeatedly said that he would be glad to discuss
some of these issues with the Committee, but that he could
not do so “in public.”
The simple fact is that the Vietnamese war has been
a “private” affair from the beginning. Decisions made behind
closed doors led to “retaliation” after the Gulf of Tonkin
incident in August, 1964, and since then, have led to increased involvement in a fight in which the United States
has no business and, indeed, may have created.
The Foreign Relations Committee, like many Americans,
wants to get at the truth aboui Vietnam. They are tired of
taking matters “on faith” from an Administration that has
been shown to err all too frequently.
Sen, Fulbright has been seeking a commitment by the
Administration that would insure consultation with his Committee before any new escalation, but so far he has been unsuccessful. It seems as though the Administration is intent
on keeping the war a private affair.

rates upon request
Telephone; Area Code

.6, 831-2210

831-3610

-

■

Editorial
Business

�Friday, March 15, 1968

Knocks Spectrum

Th

•

By Interlandi

BELOW OLYMPUS

coverage

Pag* Fiv*

Sptctrum

Th«

To tha Editor:

The Spring Arts Festival Committee would like
to react to the irresponsibility that was displayed
in The Spectrum article of March 12 on the festival.
It was irresponsible in the sense that it was factually
infnrrprt

Jane Spitalnik,
Sara Schrom,
Spring Arts Festival Committee
Editor's note; In spite of what you say, we still
love you, and wish you the best. It was our understanding that the publicity schedule, which was
arranged only after consultation with a Spring
Arts
Committee representative, was satisfactory. Two
pages in The Spectrum centerfold of a 12-page
edition the day before tickets are released is anything but minimal preview coverage. We regret
to report that any factual errors which might have
been in the article were due to your oversight,

not

te MMES
I;

ours.

Glad sex removes apathy
To the Editor:

Well, I’m glad to see that some students here
have finally been able to see past their noses to
attend something!
Monday’s Pre-marital Sex Forum, though really
a symposium, brought faculty and students out of
their holes long enough to participate in what
proved to be a fruitful and fertilie period of discussion. I observed the audience to be as large
as 800 at one point, with standing room only.
Although some of the forum was a re hash of
old questions and answers, it was informative
in some aspects.
The panelists, only one of which was particularly impressive, brought discussion and disagreement from overwrought mothers to naive girls to
angry young men.
One question which I feel should be investigated
further is the role of the Student Health Service
in dispensing birth control information and devices.
Those students who organized the forum deserve a great deal of credit. It certainly showed
that there is, if only a little, misconception about
campus apathy.
Maybe there should be more forums of this
type.
Rachel Robbins

iSifel
AaswaTwcs

"According fo the commission report we're subtle white racists.
Nonsense, I don't think we're so subtle!"

J| ftp
by Linda Laufer
.

Confusion and rioting have spread to all parts of the
country because of yesterday’s election. Balloting was interrupted by outbreaks several times, until finally it was impossible to restore order. No candidate had a majority
J
J and
VninMe
knights
from each of the parties were fighting. The peasants,
who had no power in the government, saw an opportunity to
demand equality and they too began demonstrating.
,

rodeInto

flaming

ner by putting a

in

county

sword
their yards The peasants how

everfailedTo w.pond, .nd't£e«

was nothing else for the knights
to do but subdue them. During
the first day of subduing the
peasants, 2692 were put in a
dungeon; 3612 were killed; and
458 were fatally burned while
attempting to extinguish flaming
swords.
.

c

g

,u

Z ,°f,

r

n
E

,

y
ree

/

th s

...

ln

‘

Zl

dates suggested a solution. They
assumed that the one quelling the
d Grand Hlgh
W UW be d
,

™ln

n
Chancellor.

Sir Clawstone of the Loyal
Knights of the Opposition was the
first to put forth a formula. He
said: “The Knights of the White
Armor have the right idea, but
they are not efficient enough,
With more organization they
could subdue three times as many
peasants. Instead of splitting into

small groups, the entire band
should enter a peasant settlement
If the demonstrating does not
stop within ten minutes, then riot
tactics must be used,”
Outlining the “riot tactics,” Sir
Clawstone said; “Each man should
take out his sword and charge
into the crowd. This first charge
is only to scare the mob, not to

•

by STEESE

harm anyone. However, if the
peasants do not disperse, the
knights then may charge without
restraint.”
This plan appealed to
knight supremacists, and
Clawstone led a force of
Knights of the White Armor

the
Sir
the
into

a nearby peasant village. Meanwhile, Lord eBekjoy of the United
Knights and Grand High Chancellor, until either re-elected or
replaced, was contemplating the
situation. Taking a firm stand, he
said: Tb e problem is under con
tro1 - Order will be restored within 24 hours.” He added: ‘ I’m glad
to see ‘his country can solve its
“

difficulties without violence.”
F i n a y Sir Starstir of the
nK ‘ghts of the Central Order of
fered his solution. Realizing the
needs of the peasants, he said:
“Once the rioting stops, I promise

II

.

to pass legislation which will pro-

vlde for improved peasant conditions. You will be allowed to vote
in the election if you can read
and write - You can own a castle
If il is approved by the Board of
Knights.” He made various other
promises to placate the peasants
which angered the knights. Knowing he needed the knights’ support, he made several concessions

to them including the privilege
t he)p the Deasants cho
the
right candidate and the pri v i| ege
to insure that the peasants move
into the proper neighborhood.
„

Even with these

In the yellow pages the ad for same says “SpecializSauerbrauten
Wienering in German Dishes
schnitzel—Duck &amp; Kraut—Banquets." It is sort of
a quiet little place and the food is good to excellent
in some respects.
But they seem to have left one thing off the
menu, I don’t particularly care to apply the word
Fascist to anyone. It is overworked in the first
place, and since the gentleman’s heart is probably
filled with good works of one kind or another,
I won’t. However, last Saturday night on leaving
Troidl’s, a rather short stocky gentleman came up
to me and asked me if I liked the food, then if I
liked the service. On receiving affirmative replies
to both questions, he then told me I should have
a shave and haircut before I came back.
Which I must consider some form of totalitarian,
ism. No question was raised of dress, behavior
or any other variable. Merely the fact that in this
gentleman’s view I was hauling around too much
hair on head and chin. I have been going to this
restaurant for ten years or more, I think, off and
on. And I have had a beard for the last three,
commencing to grow it on completion of my two
years of involuntary servitude in the United States
Army, The bulk of which was spent in Germany
where I acquired a mild taste for German food.
To have the issue thus come up suddenly and
without warning leaves me surprised and confused.
What does one do in a case like this? I
I haven't been refused service, just warned that I
may be refused it in the future. Should I return
with a lawyer at my side in an effort to litigate
my way to an order of potato pancakes? Should
I walk through Norton drafting hairy and hungry
students and bundle them off en masse to fill up
all the empty chairs at Troidl’s? Does one simply
allow himself to be barred from a public restaurant
for a reason like this or do I attempt to fight it.
not on the basis of changing his mind, but at least
on the basis of changing his behavior?
1 don,t even know if what he is doin 8 is legal,
“
Probab ly is, since the property owner is god in
this country. I noted with some interest the article
i n one of the papers the other day which talked of
the developments to be built around the new camPus (proposed)—when and if—which will bar students. Having a beard seems to be a lot like being
a student. You are immediately unwelcome in any
number of places, and the ones that do tolerate you
are nervous about it.
I mean, what the hell, if I opened a restaurant,
or a housing project, to cater to only bearded peopie, and only to students, respectively; and they
turned out to be in convenient locations and good
values, wouldn’t we just hear the heavens ring with
agonized cries of discrimination? If I were to
try and make an issue over the ease in question,
what happens then? How much assistance can I
expect from the courts or the police? I have hair
on m y face
Ergo if the proprietor of a tavern
ealls the police and says that I did something, I
must have done it.
1 had a friend on the faculty, who just turned
30 - he refused -service because he did not have
aa Erie County Identification Card to prove he was
18 ast year- He was dressed unsatisfactorily it
*eems
So they dumped on him for being different,
—

'//

Peasant Power” became their
in the battle for Serfs’ Rights,
By this morning, peasants
throughout the country had taken
up the cause. Dissatisfied with
their condition of servitude, many
burned their houses and fields in
protest. Others tried to force
their way into their master’s
castle. Since many castle-owners
were away to participate in the
election, the peasants entered and
looted several manors.
Out raged by this display, the
knights answered with the cry for
“knight supremacy” To counter
the peasants, many knights and
castle-owners banded together in
the Kniehts of the White Armor
Thisgroup
the
side in full armor and warned
peasant leaders in a tactful man

•

—

////

cry

•

The Land of the Free and the Home of the Brave.

OWN YOUR OWNHOME

RESTRICTED

at certain points and mentioned issues

purposes of the festival. The points made about last
year’s festival, in their relation to this year’s festival, are one-sided. Specifically, no presentation resembling the music of the Fugs is being given this
year, nor is the theme of this festival social
criticism in the arts, so that an act of the nature
of the Fugs would not be a propos; therefore,
such a comparison is extraneous. It was not then,
nor moreover is it presently our purpose to cause
sensationalism. Nor do we intend to jeopardize the
positions of responsible leaders of this University
by virtue of the events that we present.
Next, there were numerous misquotes. Doane
Hollins did not state: “We have no definite idea of
thoughts, but criteria of freedom and honesty;”
nor did he say that he joined the committee to
“do something to get better facilities and more
tickets for performances he wanted to see;” finally,
Doane did not state that the Eleo Pomare (spelled
Pomare, not Pomares) Dance Company “tries to
appeal to the Negro audience.”
Furthermore, there were a myriad of false statements. Contrary to Miss Rosenberg’s contention,
a meeting of the Festival Committee always has a
certain direction to it. It is unfortunate that the
above reporter never attended a meeting of the
committee to verify this. Again contrary to the
article, there are no irresponsible last minute jugglings of the schedule: we rearrange events only
if artists are unable to meet their commitments
to the festival, as was the case with the Grateful
Dead. In addition to all this, several pointless
comments were made about the committee members and publicity materials (e.g. about the committee chairman’s enjoyment of hero sandwiches
and the ressemblance of publicity materials to
Betsy Wetsy dolls) which almost are not worth
the time involved to comment on them because of
their complete lack of relevance to the festival.
Finally, Carolee Schneemann will be appearing at
8 p.m. on March 18, rather than the time printed.
In place of these irresponsible comments criticized above, we wish to suggest that The Spectrum
should have been more energetic in reporting the
nature of the Festival, and less energetic in its
distorted report of previous festivals, of the supposed idiosyncrasies of the Festival Committee members and the nature of their planning for the
Festival. This year’s festival presents a rich
variety of artists whose performances would have
been enhanced by having had a thorough and interesting prospectus of them in The Spectrum. This
year’s Festival Committee has worked for months
to bring the University a stimulating and successful festival. Certainly, by virtue of this article,
The Spectrum has made a minimal effort to aid us
in the realization of this aim. The Spring Arts
Festival Committee sincerely hopes, in spite of the
impression conveyed by this article, that the University community will enjoy and benefit from the
pending festival.
Doane Hollins,

cm inmu

\_

grUmp

solutions, the

rioting continued. The knights
were fighting amongst themselves
about who should become Grand
High Chancellor, as well as fighting against the peasants. “Peasant Power” was not diminished
by the riot tactics. However, within two weeks both the knights
and the peasants approved of Sir
Starstir’s plan. Satisfied with the
scheme, the peasants happily returned to the fields to await
the benefits which they assumed
would soon come to them. The
knights finally agreed on Sir Star-

stir and he was elected almost

unanimously. The country was
back to normal again.

,

*

What kind of massive fear pervades this country
w en
cannot tolerate even minor deviations from
«■ norms of dress and behavior? How does one
aet on sucb occasions, seeing someone’s entire value
threatened by a beard’ What sort of
tottering edifice have we constructed in this country if a whisker can cause it to sway?
Is it not in some ways even pettier to fight than
to lgnore a situation like this. Obviously, for the
man in question here, the United States is—or
sbould ba reserved for hairless (can one refuse
to serve bald men, or can one refuse to serve those
who are n(d ba d . 1 ct ean shaven whites. The battle
or this mans mind was lost a long time ago. To
;
try f r ng bIlnd men to see is somewhat out of
y f,eld - As frequently noted in this corner,
I
have a large aversibn to hassles,
But do I, by letting this pass by without making
any ? ffort to foree the issae , not stand as guilty
of
collaboration as he is of stupid base prejudice?
Haw , does one sor t out hassles from matters of
nne |P‘e? Is there not any accurate test to disp.tlngulsb
cowardice from battle fatigue? Is there
any sens fighti .ng a rear guard action when you
f
are . slm Ply wasting the effort—your main column
bav ng Joined the enemy and forgotten to tell
you?
Confusion. Confusion. Confusion. Out of which
ther®. seems to come no answers and only greater
"

future

°

™

f‘

‘

c,uestlons

HELP STAMP OUT HAIR—BE A REAL

AMERICAN

It is the policy ol The Spectrum to report the
news fully and impartially in the news pages,
to express the opinions of the newspaper only
in the editorial pages and to publish all sides
of important controversial issues.
'Without

expression,

freedom of expression is meaningless.

�Page Six

The

Spectrum

Friday, March 15, 1968

on
MARCH 19-20
Faculty and TA's: Talk about the war in classes or
dismiss them
Students: Talk about the war in classes or leave

STRIKE hrKNOWLEDGE
STOP THE WAR
A program of lectures, panels, and angry arts

speakers include:

MITCHELL GOODMAN
author indicted draft resister
,

STANLEY FAULKNER
lawyer War Crimes Tribunal
,

DENISE LEVERTOV
poet

Supported by: Student Association, Graduate Student
Association, Faculty Committee for Peace in
Vietnam, SDS, Graduate Philosophy Association, Association of Graduate English Students, Graduate Political Science Association.
paid advertisement, sponsored by
Faculty Committee for Peace in Vietnam

�Friday,

March IS, 1968

Page Seven

The Spectrum

Johnson Administration's big lie: Tonkin Bay
[O.

inde

one of the first to attempt to penetrate
the murky factual situation surrounding
the Tonkin Bay incidents of early
August, 1964, and suggest that the
American public (and the U.S. Senate)
had been told only half the story.
Now, thanks to the diligence of the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee, we

realize that Senators Morse and Gruening were right when they
the only
Senators to do so
voted against the
Tonkin Bay resolution, from which the
President has taken his "implied powers" to escalate the War.
—

—

Following is a summary of the re-

marks made last month in

a Senate

reiterated
speech by Senator Morse
Monday before a national television
audience in a ten-minute 'question' that
Secretary of State Rusk found unanswerable
and in the March 4th edition of
I. F. Stone's Weekly.
—

—

The story of American military involvement in Vietnam is the story of
one lie built upon another, ad nauseam.
This is the story of The Big Lie.
McNamara’s new version of the attack
contradicts the melodramatic account he
gave four years ago, two days after the
incident, behind the closed doors of a
joint executive session of the Senate’s
Foreign Relations and Armed Services
Committees. It was this graphic, but untrue, version which helped stampede the
Senate into voting the Tonkin Gulf resolution.
“The attack,” McNamara told the Sen-

ate committee four years ago, “occurred
at night. It appeared to be a deliberate
attack in the nature of an ambush. Torpedoes were launched, automatic weapons
fire was directed against the vessels (the
Maddox and the Turner Joy). They re-

turned the fire.”
Secretary McNamara said it was a “premeditated attack, a pre-planned attack.
It was described as an ambush in the
reports from the commanders, but because it was night, it is very difficult
to estimate the total amount of fire.”
The Secretary emphasized that: “The
shots were initiated by the North Vietnamese.”

from Maddox when the radar tracking

to open in range. Torpedo
noises were then heard by the Maddox’s
sonar, A report of the torpedo noise was
immediately passed to the Turner Joy by
inter-ship radio, and both ships took evasive action to avoid the torpedo. A torpedo wake was then sighted passing
abeam Turner Joy from aft to forward.”
away and begun

_

If the transcript of the two hearings
and text of McNamara’s prepared statement are placed side by side, it is quite
clear that he and Secretary Rusk and
General Wheeler lied—there is no other
word for it—to the Senate committees
four years ago. He withheld from the
committees then
and in his prepared

%wr“
Morse code

—

statement tried to withhold from the pub-

lic now—many crucial facts which cast
doubt on the whole story of the Aug, 4

attack.

Three or four hours after the supposed
attack, the task force commander on the
Maddox cabled a warning that “freak
weather,” an “overeager sonarman” and
the absence of any “visual sightings” cast
doubt on the attack stories and called for
“complete evaluation before any further
action.”
No one would know from his accounts
then or now that no debris had been
found, though. We claimed to have sunk
two and possibly three enemy vessels.
We ordered our retaliatory attack without
waiting to learn the outcome of a belated
order to search for debris.
McNamara urged “a decisive commitment” in Vietnam on Johnson a few days
after the Kennedy assassination.

South attacked North
Both the bombing of the North and
the commitment of combat troops to Vietnam were planned at the Pentagon several months before the Tonkin Gulf incidents.
The Tonkin Gulf resolution was prepared beforehand, and the course pursued
beginning in July 1964, was calculated

"Mr. President, eventually they will try us. Remember what
the senior Senator from Oregon says on the floor of the Senate
today when, in the years ahead, we get tried in an international
tribunal for our course of action in Vietnam. We will be found
guilty for that course of action in bombing those PT bases without ever attempting to get the incidents settled by way of international law." Sen. Wayne Morse, in the Senate, Feb. 21.
—

Thus was drawn a picture of “unprovoked aggression.” It was magnified and
emotionalized by President Johnson when
he went on television after the attack
and declared: “This new act of aggression,
aimed directly at our own forces, again
brings home to all of us in the United
States the importance of the struggle for
peace and security in Southeast Asia.”
This was echoed in the same high dramatic vein by Adlai Stevenson at the U.N.
Security Council the next day: “Without
any shadow of doubt . , . planned military
aggression against vessels lawfully present
in international waters” was Stevenson’s
decription.

The rhetoric made it sound like a new
Pearl Harbor.
When McNamara appeared before the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee a few
days ago on Feb. 20, he gave a very
different picture from that drawn four
years ago:
“At about

9:39 p.m., McNamara now related, “both Maddox and Turner opened
fire on the approaching craft when it was
evident from the maneuvers (not shots,
but maneuvers) that they were pressing
in for attack positions. At about this time,
the boats were at a range of 6000 yards

—
*

Even this scaled-down version was still
a deceptive picture of what actually had
transpired. McNamara released his statement during the noon recess of the Feb.
20 hearing, which was held behind closed
doors. He thus jumped the gun on the
committee by getting his version out first.

this kind
Sen, Gore: The Administration was
hasty, acted precipitately, inadvisably, unwisely, out of proportion to the provocation in launching 64 bombing attacks on
North Vietnam out of a confused, uncertain situation on a murky night, which
one of the sailors described as dark as
the knob of hell; and particularly, five
hours after the task force commander had
cabled that he doubted that there were
any attacks, and recommended that no
further action be taken until it was thoroughly canvassed

only well aware of the fact that those
boats were going up to bomb those two
islands three to six miles from the coast
of North Vietnam, but our Navy was in
constant contact with the operation and
knew what was taking place step by step.
The Maddox was not on a routine patrol
mission, but was acting as a spy ship.
As Sen. Morse observed, in his Feb. 21
speech: "Here you are, with islands three
to six miles away, being bombarded by
the South Vietnamese, and then you look
out and you see the U.S. destroyers not
too far away, stimulating the electronic
instruments of North Vietnam, causing
great alarm and concern on their part,
moving to the east and north away from
the area of bombardment,
“If one were North Vietnamese, what
would he think? He would not think that
those boats were on a pleasure tour. This
was a provocative patrol, and the North
Vietnamese knew it.”

No damage done

Picking

disproportionate to the offense? . . . Why
did we not protest to the International
Control Commission as the North Vietnamese did on July 31, two days before the
first incident, when Hanoi formally protested attack on its islands?”
Sec. McNamara: Because the International Control Commission has a record
of failure in investigating incidents of
....

....

to create some kind of incident sooner
or later, to justify the expansion of the
conflict already decided upon.
A Rostow Plan No. 6 for “PT-boat raids
on North Vietnamese coastal installations
and then by strategic bombing raids flown
by U.S. pilots under either the U.S. or
South Vietnamese flags" was disclosed in
Newsweek as early as March 9, 1964.
The coastal raids began in July 1964
by vessels we supplied the South Vietnamese, with crews we trained, backstopped by intelligence our planes and ships
provided.

The collection of such information was
the business of those “routine patrols”
on which we sent our destroyers.
McNamara, in his prepared statement,
fell back on the superficial argument that
we had no “official documentary" evidence of this 12-mile limit. Even the
Geographer’s Office at the State Department admitted to I.F. Stone in a telephone
inquiry that it had always been assumed
that North Vietnam’s limit, like China’s
and North Korea’s, was 12 miles.
This is the testimony in the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee, (Feb. 20:
Chairman Fulbright: “Why didthe U.S.
consider it necessary to retaliate against
North Vietnam in a manner so completely

a

fight

Under the circumstances, with the shellSen. J. William Fulbright raised these
questions on television Feb. 20: Why did ing taking place on North Vietnamese iswe have to act immediately without taking lands, with this kind of activity on the
part of our destroyer, which was not on
time to evaluate it? We were in no dana routine patrol, that constituted an act
ger. No damage was being done.
of constructive aggression on the part of
Sec. McNamara: Well
the crime was
not measured by the amount of damage the United States. It constituted picking
done. It was measured by the violation a fight.
of our right to navigate freely on the
That was really the beginning of the
high seas.
escalation into North Vietnam.
Any infiltration of North Vietnamese
The then South Vietnamese Air Commotroops into South Vietnam began after
dore Nguyen Cao Ky made a statement at
a Saigon news conference July 22, in
the Gulf of Tonkin incident.
The patrol of the Maddox and Turner
which he said his air force was ready to
launch bombing attacks against North Joy was coordinated with operations of
Vietnam immediately. Ky also said that the South Vietnamese against North Vietnam. These operations took place on
for the past three years South Vietnamese
“combat teams” had carried out combat
the night of Aug. 3-4. The operation inraids inside North Vietnam by “air, sea
cluded the bombardment of North Vietnamese radar sites and a security post.
and land,” Ky asserted that more VietThe U.S. commanders knew, moreover,
namese pilots and infiltration teams were
that the North Vietnamese considered the
being trained for combat missions against
North Vietnam.
patrol of the two ships as a part of this
General Maxwell Taylor was said to South Vietnamese operation. Nevertheless, despite this knowledge that North
have expressed “displeasure” at this an
nouncement.
Vietnamese considered the U.S. patrol a
part
thereafter
of an attack on North Vietnam, the
Ky soon
became the new
premier in the South, following a coup, patrol continued.
reported engineered by the CIA, exploiting Buddhists’ demonstrations in the capWho is right?
ital, which overthrew General Khanh, who
When Sec. McNamara brought the acto
is said
have reprimanded Ky on this count of the second
incident to the commatter.
mittee, he gave no indication that there
Sec. McNamara in his statement Aug.
were second thoughts as to what really
6, 1964, said that the Maddox was not happened in the Gulf of
Tonkin. He was
informed of, was not aware of, had no
positive and unequivocal.
evidence of, and had no knowledge of
The operational commander aboard the
any South Vietnamese actions in connecMaddox reported that the Maddox itself
tion with two islands attacked in Tonkin
had scored no known hits and never posiGulf.
tively identified a boat as such. He reWith respect to the Navy’s knowledge
of South Vietnam’s operation against ported that “the first boat to close the
Maddox probably fired a torpedo at the
North Vietnam, first, on July 15, 1964, in
Maddox which was heard but not seen.
approving the patrol of the Maddox, the
All subsequent Maddox torpedo reports
Joint Chiefs cautioned the Naval Comare doubtful in that it is suspected that
mander-in-Chief of the Pacific Fleet that
the sonar man was hearing the ship’s own
“activity in 34-A operations has increased.”
propeller beat,”
After receiving the message of the
U.S. spy
commander of the Pacific Fleet, Admiral
Keep in mind that “34-A operations" is Moorer, urgently asking for the informathe identification marks for the South tion on the incident, the President appearVietnamese bombing boats fully equipped ed on television to announce that
64 bombby the United States, with a staff trained ing strikes against North Vietnam
had
by the U.S. Navy. Our Navy was not
commenced
-Barry Hclticlaw
...

Another Pearl Harbor?

ub3

Mctcchiavellian maneuvers

1

'ears ai

I

Fout

ships

�Friday, March 15, 1968

The Spectrum

Pag* Eight

campus releases...
TheUniversity

Union Activities Board will be holding an election

student who has paid his student activities tee is engiDlfe l(J Hold tills
Elections will be held at 4 p.m. Wednesday in Room 261
Norton Hall.
All interested students may contact the U.U.A.B. secretary, Mrs.
Pulvino, in Room 261 Norton before 4 p.m. Monday.
Th* Hiking and Climbing Club will meet at 4 p.m. today in
Room 334 Norton Hall. Mountaineering knots will be demonstrated
and practiced and equipment will be shown and explained.' A climbing trip to the Adirondacks during Spring recess will be discussed.
The club will meet in the apparatus room of Clark Gym at 5
p.m. Mondays beginning March 18 for exercises, prusiking and
position.

belaying practice.

Haight-Ashbury: What is it lor,
the present and the future
Co//«g« Press

Service

ation.

SAN FRANCISCO
Like most of the trouble in the
streets of the United States, the recent explosion in San
Francisco’s Haight-Ashbury district was a long time brewing.
It took only a young man and his friends, angry because a
passing car had narrowly missed hitting a dog, to start a sitdown and bring cops with nightsticks and mace.

“The policy of the city is clear,”
he said after the Haight incident.
“Persons have the right to use
the street to say anything, no
matter how unpopular. But the
minute anyone blocks streets or
throws bottle or interferes with
the Constitutional rights of others by storm trooper tactics,
then the city is going to get

—

Last summer the Haight was
the happy home of the Love Generation and the darling of the
American press. It was, for many,
the place to be. The weather was
gorgeous, food was free, and
there was little hassle for anyone
under 30 to get a pad to crash in
for a night. There was music in
Golden Gate Park, plenty of

cars, 15 motorcycle officers, and five riot command units
ended the four-hour disruption.
Ninety people, many of them
tourists attracted by the unseasonably good weather, were arrested and others were injured
from clubbings, gas and flying
squad

A rid* board for Buffalo and the surrounding area will be posted
outside the Commuter Council office, room 215, Norton Hall.
Tobogganing sponsored by the W.R.A. to Chestnut Ridge will
take place tomorrow. Buses will leave Norton at 6:30 and Chestnut
Ridge at 9:30. Sign up at Clark Gym. There will be a 50c charge
for non-fee payers.
bottles.
The American Israeli Club will have a Purim Carnival at 8 p.m.
healthy young people walking
One young mother said she
Sunday in Room 335 Norton Hall. Costumes and masks are welcome.
around the streets, and with a was dragged off to a paddy wagThe Student Theatre Guild will present the Nickel Theater at
little help from friends, getting on with her child left on the
high was a simple matter.
8:30 p.m. Sunday and Monday in the Conference Theater. , The prostreet.
gram will include three one-act plays.
Admission is 5c for fee
But when the summer ended
payers and 10c for non-fee payers.
and it began to get cold on Haight New S.F. mayor
The man who called out the
St., the college vacationers and
Westminster companion program will hold an important meeting
at 7:30 p.m. Monday. The room number will be posted on Senate dedicated travelers went home or police was the new San Franmoved on. Only those who found
cisco mayor Joseph Alioto, a
bulletin outside 205.
tough and articulate Democrat
their thing in San Francisco and
Richard "Doe" Urich, associate director of athletics, will discuss
those who had no place else to go
who had been through the whole
“Intercollegiate Athletic Programs in Higher Education” 3 p.m.
stayed on for the winter in
thing before when the police met
Tuesday in room 339, Norton Hall.
Haight.
some of the Bay Area left wing
Clark Gym facilities for swimming, gymnastics, paddleball, tramAnd the street scene began to at a San Francisco appearance of
polining, volleyball, badminton, and exercises will be open at 7 p.m.
change. Marijana and acid were
Dean Rusk. The results were the
Tuesday night for faculty, staff and student women. The co-ed replaced by methedrine; social
also
meet.
Gymnastics Club will
diseases become a problem for
Commuter Council will sponsor a coffee hour every 3 p.m. everyone, and it was too cold for
Wednesday in room 215, Norton Hall, Commuters will have the
music in the park.
chance to gripe, discuss University policies and become involved in
From the Drugstore Cafe on
activities.
the edge of the Haight a longA Folk-In featuring the New Establishment will be held from
time local was saying: “The peo8:15 to 8:45 p.m. Thursday in the Haas Lounge. It will be free for ple you see out there are punks.
The annual regional debate
fee payers. The Folk-In is sponsored-by the UUAB Music Committee. Things started to change in Octofinals for the New England region
are being held here today and toA series of vocational seminars on “how to find a job” will ber.” The nice people were said
morrow. Thirty-five universities
begin March 22.
Mrs. Joan Bishop, Director of Placement at to be inside.
from New York, Vermont, New
Wellesley College, will conduct the seminars. For reservations call A dangerous place
Hampshire, Massachusetts, ConFor the first time, Haight-AshUniversity Placement and Career Guidance Service at 831-3311 and
ask for Mrs. Farewell.
necticut, Rhode Island and Maine
bury become a dangerous place.
will be represented.
Junkies pulled burglaries and
The Annual Honors and Awards Ceremony will be held Monday, rapes,
the panhandlers began
Each team of two people from
and
present
29.
that
to
conAll organizations
April
wish
awards must
to get more aggressive. Dealers
schools including Harvard, Darttact Judi Mack at 937-9390 before March 25.
mouth, University of Vermont,
came to be feared as news spread
The Arnold Air Society will hold a blood drive from 9 a m. to that the Haight was no place to Brown and C.C.N.Y. will debate
3 p.m. March 28 in Tower Hall basement. All students, faculty and
with eight other schools. Sixteen
score. And Haight Street was bestaff over 18 years of age are urged to sign up at the table on ginning to look like a psychedebates will be going on simulMarch 21, Permission slips for those under 21 will be available.
taneously. From the 70 particidelic skid row.
pants four winners will be chosen
Dr. Robert M. Marsh of Brown University, Rhode Island, will
Then the police began to tightspeak at 3 p.m. today in 302 Dietendorf, on “A Strategy for Cross- en up.
to compete in the national debate
tournament to be held this year
Societal Comparative Analysis.”
When the disturbance broke
The Center for Comparative European Studies of the Council for out on a balmy February Sunday, at Brooklyn College.
International Studies and World Affairs will sponsor Dr. Marsh’s the city’s response was quick and
Debates will be held in various
appearance.
rooms in Norton Hall, and any ineventually brutal. Police in 20

tough.”

He said that the police moved
on the people in the street only
after repeated warnings that the
street be cleared. The mayor added that those who stayed were
“neo-fascist punks.”
And all over San Francisco
everybody has their own version
of the Haight. “The bums finally
got what they had coming.” “Nobody is safe in the police state.”

The armchair observers around
the country have by now probably made their own sweeping
conclusions.
But for the people in the
Haight, what is now in the middle
of their community is a question
mark. Nobody really knows what
it all means and, most of all,
what lies in the future.

Debate finals here today;
35 schools to participate

SINGLES

Finally...

20-35, Swingle Parties
This Friday and Sunday
REFRESHMENTS
BAND
&amp;

LIVELY SET

The results of last semester’s evaluation project

839-1309

The BUFFALO SCATE

THE TURTLE
IS TOPS

covers student’s

on

terested students may attend. A
schedule of schools debating and
the times can be obtained in the
Debate Club office, Room 357,
Norton Hall.
Members of the State University of Buffalo team are Robert
Dragone, senior, and Theodore
Beringer, junior, both members
of the Debate Club.
All teams will debate the national topic: Resolve: that the federal government should guarantee a minimum annual cash income to citiens.
According to Dr. Dennis
Smith, faculty advisor to the Debate Club: “This is a rather relevant topic. President Johnson
has urged the U.S. Crime Commission to look into guaranteed national income as part of the war
on poverty.” Could his team come
up with a' winner? Dr. Smith
said: “I wouldn’t predict.”

evaluations of 375 courses in
21 departments,
sale in Norton Lobbies, starting Mon., March 18

.

.

Bible Truth

CHRIST THE ONLY SAVIOR
"Neither is there salvation in
anyother; for there is none
other name under heaven given
among men, whereby we must
be saved,”
Acts 4:12

.

SPEEDY GONZALEZ
will be here next week!

Let the Scate make registration easier
75c to fee

$1.00 to non-fee payers

payers

THE RUE

For that special date
When a beer just won’t do

Rue Franklin-West

also

featuring

RISNG SONS
THE

Coffee House

THE YOUNG SAVAGES
MALCOLM and THE YOUNGER BROTHERS

fWFERNO
THE MONTICELLOS

Saturday Night

THE MYRETTES
Sunday Night

LIVE

MUSIC

NIGHTLY

EXTRA-ORDINARY
341 rue Franklin
Sophisticated Entertainment
Friday and Saturday

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*

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�Friday,

March 15, 1968

The

Page

Spectrum

Nine

Economics De

On Wall Street

Honors program to be established
■sent

Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

After witnessing a 90-point drop in the Dow Jones industrial average in the last two months, many observers
would be inclined to feel that the stock market should next
undergo some sort of consolidation.
However, there are others who would not be surprised
if the market dipped an additional 50 points. Their pessimism
can be attributed to one word—Vietnam.
Rumors that North Vietnam

might be willing to talk peace
were last heard Jap. 8. On that
day the DJI rose nearly eight
points. When those rumors proved false, prices began to drop,
falling sharply with the news of
the massive Vietcong attacks in
cities throughout South Vietnam,
Although a minor recovery followed (starting Feb. 14), prices
soon started a second decline

when i' was learned that the
Administration was considering
sending an additional 100,000
troops to Vietnam.

Wage and price controls?
It is the effect of Vietnam on
the economy that worries most
investors. Escalation in Vietnam
is aggravating such economic ills
as inflation and the balance of
payments deficit; but more important is the threat of Government wageprice controls. There
have been hints that controls
might be needed to combat inflationary pressures, especially if
Congress refuses to pass Johnson’s 10% income tax surcharge.

The war in Vietnam has increased the drain of dollars out
of the U.S. The balance of pay-

ments deficit is now at a seasonally adjusted $1.8 billion, the
worst in the last 20 years. The
result is that the position of the
dollar is now weaker than at any
time since WW n. Johnson’s
plans to stop the dollar drain,
which include curbing business
investments overseas, seem to
foreshadow future economic con-

trols. Thus, the action of the
stock market in the past two
months should not be viewed as
surprising.

Peace in Vietnam would almost
eliminate all the market fears.
The threat of inflation would be
greatly decreased; in fact, not
only would the threat of a tax
increase be removed, but a tax
decrease might soon occur. The
balance of payments problem
would be eased and the threat of
economic controls eliminated.

Stay on sidelines
The gold stocks have been just
about the only major group to
withstand the recent market drop.
The reason for their rise can be
attributed to speculation that the
government might soon have to
abandon the $35 per ounce price
of gold.
The airlines have been depressed and should remain in the doldrums for quite some time. Most
analysts feel that earnings in 1968
will be either equal to or lower
than earnings in 1967, There is
also doubt as to how well the
airlines will be able to finance
their huge jet orders. The only
way this year’s earnings might
increase would be if the CAB
(Civil Aeronautics Board) approv-

FISH BUFFET
5:30-7:30 p.m. Today

University Methodist
Church

cor. Bailey &amp; Minnesota
Adults $1.75
Free Delivery to dorms and
Allenhurst

831-3773

632-7844

sponsored by
Wesley Foundation

ed a general fare increase, which
many feel unlikely.
The conglomerate section has
a sharp decline,
mainly because of a poor earnings
report by Litton Industries. However, one stock which I feel is
experienced

definitely underpriced is Gulf &amp;
Western Industries. Earnings this
year should be near five dollars
per share. The stock is now selling at 40. However, there have
been rumors (which have been
vigorously denied by the management) that this quarter’s earnings might be lower. This will
remain to be seen.
I am still quite high on Tool

Research and Engineering. This
stock was extensively reviewed
in a previous article. It is now
selling at 44, Research Cottrell
is also a good buy. Earnings for
1966 were $,d7 per share. In
1967 RC earned $1.29 per share,
and predictions for fiscal 1968
range as high as $3.00 per share.
In addition, one should remember
that Research Cottrell manufactures

air pollution equipment.
The air pollution industry has

great potential and should definitely develop into one of the
leading industries in the U.S,

27, I don’t see how you can
go wrong with Columbia Pictures.
The motion picture industry is
At

becoming quite profitable. One
reason is due to the leasing of
films to television. Prices for old
feature movies licensed to television networks is constantly rising, and the average price is
$800,000 to $1 million a film,
Columbia has nearly a two year
supply of old features that have
not been released to television.

The movie, “Guess Who’s Coming To Dinner” is expected to
gross $20,000,000 for this confttry,
making it Columbia’s highest
grossing film ever. Couple all of
this with the fact that Columbia
expects 1968 earnings to jump
50% to more than two dollars
a share, this investment looks
very good.

In general, however, I would
abstain from investing at this
time and would wait to see what
actions are taken in regard to
Vietnam and the proposed tax
increase.
I have received many letters
as to my opinion of H.P. Limited,
This presents a very perplexing
situation. The old H.P. Ltd. was
a very popular issue. But recently, due to certain unexplainable
decisions and actions on the part
of the company, a loss of confidence has occured among the
bigger investors. Therefore I
urge a complete abstension from
investing in this issue (especially
those who attach great importance to future growth prospects),
until H.P. is able to return to its

old form.

the best students in the University,” a special Economics honors

program is being established by
the Economics Department for
the fall semester. Dr. Thomas Romans, associate professor and director of Undergraduate Studies
in Economics described the new
program,
y

It is designed for economics
majors and also for those with
majors in other fields. The program is a high level, accelerated
series of courses for exceptional
students and will lead to a single
or dual degree in economics with
honors.

Twelve hours beyond Economics 181-182 in a two-year sequence is required for the program, but applications will be
considered from students who
wish or need to complete the
program in one year. The content will cover material taught
in the 200 through 400 level
courses normally required of
economics majors, but in a highly rigid and quantative manner.

2.0 required
Other general reqirements are
Mathematics 141-142 (or 121-122),
a 2.0 overall average in econo-

mise, and acceptance by the de-

partment. A 2.0 average must be
maintained in the program for
continuance.
This special program is recom

who have a wide range of interests and who would like a disciplined, in-dgpth, accelerated
curriculum. In subsequent years
sophomores will be considered.
students will be
considered for admission to the
program without completion of
Economics 181-182. SupplemenExceptional

tary reading may
however.

be required,

In the fall, the first of four
courses will be offered to 15 students, One course per semester

will be added until the third
year. At that point, students will

course but with a total program
which will cover the undergraduate program more richly, paniculaly for dual majors."

Students with minors even
widely divorced from economics
are welcome as are students
whose goal is graduate school in
economics. This program may be
combined with the one in Mathematical Economics.

Interested students may obtain

applications in Room 314, Crosby
Hall “as soon as possible," urges
Dr. Romans.

be permitted to complete the
program in one year, since all
courses will then be offered.

Also in '68-'69
The existing honors course for
seniors will still be offered in
1968-69 to enable seniors to complete their education It will then
be dropped for the new program.
“This is an attempt to offer
students a program which isn’t
offered at other schools in this
area. A similar program is offered
at Purdue which has been very
successful,” said Dr. Romans.
are demanding a lot, but
there is a lot of interest. Quite
a number of people who turn
away from subjects do so because
of the large lectures and stale
content.

Drive

Defensively.
THE SPECTRUM

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Now you can
tell your parents
where to go.
You know how it is when your folks
come to visit. They want to take you out
to dinner. So where do you suggest?
They want a good place to spend the
night. So where do you send them?
Wonder no more. Just send them
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They'll love the food in our Rib Room
restaurant. (Our chef doesn't even
know how to make meatloaf or chicken
croquetts.) They'll love the guest rooms.
(They're so comfortable they won't
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to visit, remember you can really
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«

phone 634-2700.
CHARTER HOUSE MOTOR HOTEL

HOTEL CORPORATION OF AMERICA
6643 Transit Road

�Does anyone care about that land
The GSA proposal had three main parts
the Amherst campus site, that spends most
of its time brooding; "Nobody cares about
me. They just don't care. If I were a golden
beach on the lake, then they'd care. They'd
come out with the sun and talk to me with
their flat feet, and Td be happy. Or if I were
a snow-covered mountainside, they'd care.
But me
I know, they just don't care."
This sad report raises the question: What
good is 510 acres of flat land if it is not
needed for the purely educational aspect of
the University.? And more specifically: What
is the Faculty Student Association going to
do with 510 acres of land which they purchased (for $7 50,000) four years ago and have

posal on grounds that it was not in the best
interests of students, and was irresponsible
regarding the University's committment or the
urban community,
GSA proposed means to bring about
•

some contact between students and the FSA.
GSA proposed an alternate plan for development in which the land would be primarily
made into an “artificially wild" area (patterned after Central Park in New York City)
•

....

since neglected.
"Benevolent" purposes
If we go back to four years ago we can
see why the land was bought originally. The
FSA Board of Directors found they had a
considerable surplus of funds after the budget
had been balanced. And since the FSA is
a non-profit organization, the money would
be used to advance the "benevolent" purposes
of the FSA.
At this time, the 510 acres of land were
available, and the administration-dominated
board of directors
aware that land values
in the vicinity of the proposed campus site
would soon be soaring
purchased the land

including recreational facilities.
The GSA maintains that its proposal would
required the entire acreage, excluding the
golf complex.
brief as it was
In its proposal
the
GSA did not feel obligated to judge the economic feasibility of its plan.
The FSA can't afford to play a Ford Founda—

—

tion for students. In its present form, the GSA
proposal would appear to be a non-incomeproducing venture. Although requiring an initial
investment for development and further funds
for maintenance, none of its components would
produce any income. Thus, the plan would
represent a continual drain on FSA funds.
Some admission charges appear to be possible
means by which the GSA "nature park" idea

—

—

for roughly $750,000.

They realized that it was a sound investment of FSA funds, and were hopeful the
FSA could put the land to good use according
to the needs
community.

and desires of the academic

Present issue
Now, four years later, the FSA is scrambling
to find some use for the land.
After a scratching of heads, FSA subboard 1
in charge of educational and recreaset-up a committee
tional development funds
to study the situation in detail.
This Land Use Committee includes representatives of undergraduate and graduate students, faculty and the administration.
After a period of research and discussion,
the committee handed in its recommendations: 50% of the land be devoted to a golf
complex (18 hole course, driving range, putting
greens, etc.); 50% to various recreational
facilities such as picnic areas, sports fields,
park area, and others as the land developes.
The golf complex was the most obvious use
of the land; however, sub-board 1, a studentdominated body, advised that the committee
return to their labors and study the matter
further.
This brings us, in a nutshell, to the present
stage of events.
Student interest lacking
So far, there has been no student interest
in the FSA land, in spite of the fact that it
—

—

was almost entirely student fees which paid
for the land, and which will pay for the development; and in spite of the fact that the
FSA (according to their own guidelines) will
plan ahead with the interests of the student
in mind.
The absence of students is quite likely
the cause for the muddled efforts to date.
With no definite reference for planning, the
FSA is forced into a guessing game: They must
base all their decisions on what they imagine
student opinion to be.
They do not have any real idea what the
"needs and desires" of the student are since
no one seems willing to tell them.
If nothing else, it has become apparent to
all involved that there are no clear choices, no
black and white alternatives. No one has yet
come up with any plans which have gained
overwhelming support. But the land is there,
taxes run about $ 1 0,000 a year, and there is
a general feeling that
after four years —•
some decision ought to be made on the land.
—

GSA objects
Within the FSA, two conflicting groups have
come up with formal proposals for use of the
(and. First, the Land Use Committee made
its recommendation-golf complex and recreato sub-board 1. Then the Gradtion facilities
uate Student Association came out in opposition to the committee's proposal. Using their
representation and influence on sub-board 1,
—

they gained additional time before a decision
would be made. Then they authored a counter
proposal.

*

would become practical.

Golf plan

Even though student interest in golf appears
lukewarm, the Land Use Committee
believes that the "golf plan" is financially
strong. Its success would be contigent upon
both "University people" and
common use
to be only

—

outsider
The GSA objects to this element of the
"golf plan," since FSA projects are supposed

to be primarily student-oriented. Backers ofthe

golf plan feel that the golf complex would
judging from the
return a healthy profit
success of near-by golf courses and the. huge
rise in population expected as the new campus
develops.
They point out that profits from the golf
complex could be used to develop the other
half of the land, which would contain largely
non-income-producing facilities.
These two major plans
the golf plan and
the GSA proposal
are the only ones being
seriously considered at the time. No one has
come up with major alternatives. One compromise plan has arisen, but has not received
much attention.
This compromise would include a compact
—

—

—

nine-hold course. The remainder of the land
would follow a slightly modified GSA plan.
This plan might provide a means for funding
the "nature park."
If no satisfactory plan for development can
be formulated, the FSA can resort to a different kind of alternative: Either let the land
stand unimproved until a plan with wide student support evolves; rent the land out with
an eye to using it later if some need arises,
or simply sell it, collect a profit, and let
everyone find his own recreation.
FSA bogged down

The FSA bureaucracy has bogged down in
one of its few endeavors at development.
The reasons behind the swampy turn of
events are many and difficult to tack down.
Lack of student involvement, basic organizational flaws in the FSA, and scant flow of
new ideas at the committee level appear to
be major causes. Of course, the one obvious—but often overlooked
reason for the lifeless
character of planning may be that there is no
need for the land, as originally believed, and
swept
that the FSA is beating a dead horse
along on the tide- of progressivism and the
compulsion to build and-grow which currently
enthralls much of the administration.
The next few weeks will probably determine
the fate of the land, and FSA members involved are hoping for some voicing of student
opinion which could clear-up some of the confusion which has set in and get planning back
on the right track.
—

—

!*

/

f

�d north of Amherst?

If you

that land,

care about

fill out the

following questionnaire

and return it to the table in Lobby C, Norton Hall (in front of Conference Theater) between 9 a.m. and S p.m. today. Or drop the ques-

y Randy Ewell

tionnaire in any campus mail box
PLEASE CHECK ONE APPROPRIATE BLOCK IN EACH SET

Grad Student ( ) Faculty ( ) Staff ( ) Other (
Family ( )
Married ( )
)
Resident ( )
C. Residence (Miles from New Campus)
1-3 ( )
4-6 ( )
11 or more ( )
6-10 ( )
)
D. Residence area: Urban ( )
Suburban
Rural
A. Undergrad (
Single ( )
B. Commuter (

)

(

1.

(

)

2.

(

)

3.

(

)

hctos by Tony Walluk

POSTED
NO

trespassing

)

Check Your Preference
18 hole Golf complex and recreational facilities.
9 hole Golf course, small nature area, and recreational
facilities.
No golf course, large nature park, and recreational
facilities.

(Upper left) Road signs telling
location of FSA land, with the

1*

'

Pmi\c

Recreational Facilities Preferences

Barge Canal in the background.

Check one block to indicate
your probable personal use

of a

tver

(Lower left)

(

)

One of the three

)

barns housing farming equipment and a flock of thirty
geese, which are used for
weed control.

Check

Seldom
(

)

the follow-

Frequent
(

)

one block to indicate

your reaction to
ing partial land uses;

given facility:

for

Lawn sports (croquet,

Neulri ra!

Disfavor

)

(

)

badminton, volleyball)
Boating

Basketball
Cycling

Children’s Play Area
Swimm’g Pool (heated)
Handball
Horseback riding
Ice Skating

Amphitheatre

Picnic Areas
Tennis Courts
Horseshoe Courts
ShufReboard Courts
Football Fields
Softball Diamonds
Golf Course
Nature Park
Driving Range
Recreation Hall

'Mm;

d

IfsaI

DriuIM$

RaM6C

*“G*EE»0-S

Vv

Tree
Nursery

■OUAWAUOA CRCRa

R 0«p

Air Photos raph

Overlay

StoWlNQ F S A Laud
Proposed Golf

CTypicau)
o

wo
Affnox

too

9oo

Sou*

©

J
North

Property
or

Line

F5A Lrwd

(

and

Course
900
Ft

iooo

�Page

Twelve

Friday, March 15, 1968

The Spectrum

AIbee interview

'Graduate'

an

Advice to Box bound Buffalonians go see the damned flick'
Spectrum

Brennah
Staff Reporter

"Box-Quotations

by E. Steese
Spectrum Staff Reporter

from

Chairman Mao Tse-tung-Box (quotations from Box within Quotations
from Mao Tse-tung)" is the official title of Edward Albee’s new
play, “It’s a little large for the
marquee, so thus we shortened
it to Box-Mao-Box and now we
have two plays made into one,"
author Albee said at a recent
press conference before his work's
world premiere at Studio Arena.

First things first. I very strong-

recommend that everybody
should go see this film. Having
said that, I am strongly tempted
to stop. I have a deep-rooted suspicion of reviewers in general
and my own reviews in particular,
and for this film such suspicions
ly

V.

'•

■«-

are in full blossom.
There are two major sets of
problems that I face in attempting to review “The Graduate."
One is an identification problem.
As in “Morgan,” and to a lesser
degree in “Georgy Girl,” it is all
too easy to become wrapped up
in Dustin Hoffman’s portrayal of

Now, one may ask, why Buffalo for the world premiere of
this newest creation of the renowned playwright? Mr. Albee’s
answer: “I thought it would be
nice to have the world premiere
done in Buffalo in an atmosphere
of absolute peace and quiet and
tranquility.”
Sitting in the State Left Bar
sipping ginger ale and nervously
smoking a cigarette, Mr. Albee
appeared fidgety and sensitive
to the questions posed to him by
newsmen. Some of Mr. Albee’s
replies were clever and amusing,
but many of his answers were

evasive and non-committal.

It struck me as rather paradoxical that an author who stresses
the breakdown in communication
between people as one of the
main themes in his works can
be so non-communicative himself.

An intuitive respouse

ment.”

In discussing his latest plays, he
commented: “They are more to
be apprehended circuitously. The
intention of the plays is to make
a more direct contact through
the unconscious, but if anyone
wants to examine them only su-

perficially, only intellectually, or
only didactically, then they will

be

•

M

AID66

playwright was interviewed by The Spectrum during his visit to Buffalo for the
world premiere of his work,
amous

Box-MaoBox.

When asked about making a
definite, consisten statement, Mr.
Albee replied, “According to a
majority of the theater critics,
I never make a consistent state-

_

EHwarrl

LUWd U

The

terribly confused.”

Alan Schneider, Box-Mao-Box
director, added: “The response
has to be more intuitive than intellectual to these plays.”
To playgoers who are Boxbound, Mr, Albee advised: “First
go to it, but go to it without having determined the nature of
the theatrical experience which
you might have. Go to it completely open intellectually and
willing to listen.”
Albee wrote a play last fall
called “Box” that was 12 minutes
long. About a month later, he
wrote another play “Quotations
from Chairman Mao Tse-tung,”
which ran about an hour and a
half. As he read over these two
plays, he began to see in each
a relationship to the other.
He felt they should both be
performed in the same evening.
And, as he thought further, he
saw “Box” a sort of “sensible
parenthesis around Quotations
from Chairman Mao Tse-tung;—
so indeed, why not do Box, Mao,
and then Box again?”
Mr. Albe«, can you give us a
remark or two about the source
of your ideas?" I don like to
think too much about my ideas—ideas in quotation marks
because I find it gets in the way
of my thinking.”
T think the majority of serious
plays that arc written . .
are
written with the hope perhaps
that they won’t have to be written again. If you present the
human condition as it is as you
see it, unless you write an escapist comedy, you are, I think,
suggesting to people that these
are conditions that if they don’t
like them, they might be able
—

.,

to change them. And therefore,

that same kind of play won’t
have to be written again.”
Mr.
Albee have you ever
though of writing not so serious,
more comedic plays? “I think
my plays are pretty funny, I
mean a lot of people do laugh
for a while during them—then
they stop, which is exactly the
way I want it.”
“I find that humor is awfully
close to crying, and I find that
you have to work hard to separate the two. Some people don’t
have that problem at all—Neil
Simon doesn’t have that problem
for a second—and I don’t think
he’s any happier than me.”
Did you ever think of being
a novelist or a poet?" “I tried
writing novels when I was a kid
and they were pretty terrible. I
wrote poetry starting when I was
six and stopping when I was 26,
it got a little better, but not terribly much. I don’t think very
clearly, so I can’t write essays,
1 made up my mind when I was
six to be a writer, so there is
very little else to do but write
plays.”

In his experimenting with new
forms of expression for his
works, Mr. Albee revealed a desire to try other medias such as
films and television.
“I would sort of like to investigate films,” he declared, “but
on TV when they do a two-hour
program without interruptions or
without requesting changes, then
it might be time to work on television.”
“I did have a nice time once
with a television producer a
couple of years ago. He asked
me if I’d like to write about anything 1 wanted to write about
for an hour on television in any
form that I wanted to write it.”
“He said: ‘Of course there are
one or two rules we have to follow for this particular program.

There must be three acts in this
hour and they must be a certain
number of minutes and seconds
long. We would like one of them
to take place out of doors. We
would like the male lead to be

between 35 and 40 and two of the
other characters to be certain
ages. And we know that you are
a very depressing playwright, Mr.
Albee, but we would like you to
leave us with a message with just
a slight uplifting in the end.’
”

Why do you tend to present
your female characters in an unfavorable light? “This is a big
bugaboo, that theoretically my

plays have unfavorable protraits
of women; but I don’t think that
they have unfavorable portraits
of men either. And no woman
can
seem
unpleasant unless
there’s a man behind her pushing
her there. So I think it’s the
women who are more noticable
in plays, because we have a theater that is curiously enough female oriented in its stars. The
women in our plays usually have
larger roles than the men do and
so they are just a lot more noticeable, that’s all.”

Perhaps then, these new plays
of yours are an extension of ideas
you've had before?" “I don’t
know if they’re extensions of anything, really. I hope they are an
extension of my craft. I hope that
they are in their own way something a little better than I’ve
done before. And I hope maybe
they can make a few interesting
experiments in trying to expand
theatrical form a little bit.”
“I write plays because that’s
what I do. I enjoy it, I get some
fun out of it, and I find it interesting. I’m not a didactic playwright, I don’t set out consciously to write a thesis play to change
people. Perhaps I write plays
to change me.”
“I write about situations that
I hope will not exist in the future. I find that if you pose questions that you can only answer
during the course of the play,
you’re asking less interesting
questions and you don’t necessarily have the answers to all
the questions you pose,”
“So, I’d much rather pose interesting questions and interesting dilemmas, then only limit
myself to one to which I have
specific answers.”

the title character—at least for
some of those maladjusted types
like myself.
The second major group of
problems developed from committing a cardinal sin in writing
almost anything. Due to a certain
lack of communication I wasn’t
sure if I was to write this review or not, and I went out and
argued about the silly movie. The
result is that what I am about to
present may or may not be my
ideas as they were after I first
came out of the theater. While
basically mine they have been
altered here and there in the process of arguing and new nuances
have been noted in certain areas.
I am not sure this is fair to
the film.
Wide range of responses
“The Graduate” manages to
send many of its viewers out
feeling very good and very happy.
Your gut reaction is that this is
one of the best things that the
“film capital of the world” has
managed to get off its bottom and
do in quite some time. This feeling of euphoria is not universal,
however, and it is at this point
that I begin to have uncritical
qualms.

As mentioned before, I am not
overly sympathetic to critics in
general. As a group we are always trying to tell people what
is good and what is bad, “The
Graduate” produces a wide range
of responses—who am I to say
that mine—euphoria— is the only
valid one? Perhaps the problem

should prefer to see it as
for a number of people
as bright as myself with
erably different views
film in question.

respect

equally

considof the

Insipid euphoria?
‘Insipid”—and “depressing’
are two summations of other people’s viewpoints, both of which
are grounded very basically in

the film’s structure and content.
It is very hard to make a movie
about the “upper middle” of this
country’s social structure without
its being insipid. It is equally
difficult to do a film whose major
plot consists of a young man
trying to get society to leave
him alone long enough to catch
his breath, but instead being constantly dumped on, without it
being depressing.
Therefore we have a depressingly insipid flick which causes
euphoria.
Visually it is a pleasure. Nichols is probably the best we have
to offer in the directional field
in the country now, and he is

inventive and fresh in both his

camera work and his use of color.
I thought that all seven of the
basic characters turned in excellent performances.

Where was Uncle Sam?
There is one interesting omission, I think. And while it may

not have been in the book, I am
surprised that something about
it was not written into the movie.
Is there not something slightly
jarring about a male who has
recently graduated from college,
is in excellent physical health,
and spends several months sitting
around
or trying to find someplace to sit down quietly—doing
nothing except trying to puzzle
out his future, and in the course
of all this soul-searching has no
occasion to worry about or mention the draft????? If you work
on that, it becomes a puzzle. Is
Nichols that unsensitive, or was
it that he saw it and ignored it,
or was it that his frabbit was
zapped by tillieut with
.
At last I have become a critic.
Go see the damned flick and
write your own reviews. I QUIT!!
—

..

.

Lou Rawls to perform
in concert at Kleinhans
by Lori Pendrys

Spectrum

Entertainment Coordinator

He has been a jazz, pop, gospel and even folk singer, but Lou
Rawls describes himself as a
singer of popular songs with a
touch of blues. Whatever it is
called, though, it still comes out
the same—great.
Rawls is trying to reach everyone, from teeny-booppers to the
more mature audience, and judging by the sales of his three
latest albums Soulin,’ Carryin’ On
and Lou Rawls Live, he is accomplishing what he set out to
do. He remembers one of the
first bistros he worked at when

he stood on a box behind the

bar and sang while looking over
the cash register. “Every time
they’d ring up a sale, I’d go off
key. I finally solved the problem by stuffing cotton in my ears.
I couldn’t hear my pianist, but
we made up hand signals . . , and
I managed to blot out that con-

stant ring-a-ding-ding!
he doesn’t have these
He

”
—

Today

problems.

mingles his songs with
monologues and quips which
into his act. An atmosphere of
seem to bring the audience right
intimacy is created which
in turn
helps him to transmit his own
particular feeling of the blues.

Lou Rawls
appearing this Sunday at Klein

hans Music Hall.

The Theater Series has scheduled Lou Rawls for a one-night
concert at Kleinhans Music Hall
this Sunday at 8:30 p.m.

�Pay* Thirt**n

The Spectrum

Friday, March IS, 1968

Entertainment
Calendar

Theatre review

UB's version of 'Ubu Roi'
by Corydon Ireland
Spttrum

Staff

Reporter

Even in the last tremors of my adolescence, I am convinced that all the powers of the world and weather have
been calucuated precisely to embarrass me. I’ve always been
absolutely certain that the seat of my pants is torn asunder
and smiling sideways underwear all over the place. Or that
my fly is perpetually at half-mast.
tation.
All this is exactly why I never

made it as a student actor. It has
occurred to me after neck-straining and ear-aching through dozens
and millions of student productions over the past fifteen years,
the most recent being “Ubu Roi,”
that student performers are the
least likely people to be embarrassed by anything. Even by having to perform in “Ubu Roi.”

Actors in the audience

First of all, least of all, it would

mortify me to be running around
like a berserk Jewel Box Reviewer with my silly little ass, betighted and burlaped and netted,
jouncing all about. Most of all "it
would embarrass me profoundly
to have to skip and dance and
freak around the place doing absolutely nothing and saying even
less even less well, as most of the
peon-role actors did. They sat in

the audience, ushered some latecomers into their places, had
innane sideline conversations,
watched TV, and at one point
made a rush for a guy who had
just gotten up to leave. Probably
just to the bathroom, poor fellow.
All of them were faced with a
play which was, at least on stage,
faultlessly ridiculous. There occurred wide swaths of action in
which the dialogue was either
incomprehensible (the electronic
music was not calculated to help
in this respect) or foolish anyway, and these had to be filled
out with horseplay, most of which
was forced, awkward, and (I secretly Walter Mitty bet) embarrassed, too. Insanity was in the
script, like the word order or
setting, and the nonsense of it all,
refreshing at first, soon weighed
on the nerves. Evidently, I
thought, I wasn’t invited to this
party; I only paid for it.
The play itself, as I read it
later, is an excellent piece of zany
satire and well illustrates Alfred
Jarry’s “contempt for the cruelty
and stupidity of the universe” in
the bumbling, brutal, stupid character of Fere Ubu. Though written in a shockingly realistic new
style for the time (1896), I saw in
some of the mad freewheeling,
striking parallels with the Macbeth, Julius Caesar, Hamlet, and
Tempest of Shakespeare and parts
of Rabelais’ Uninhibited Adven-

As presented, “Ubu Roi” was
an experiment in “total mixed
media environmental theatre,” As
it was, it was totally mixed up,
mediocre and mental theatre.
When I first walked into the
Baird Hall theatre, I was occupied with the idea of total environment theatre, or, as it turned
out to be, the propaganda of it.
The facilities seemed to be ideal
for that kind of experimenting;
the hall is very high-ceilinged and
the seats sweep around the tilted
circular stage in a modest, soft
horseshoe shape. The far wall,
which forms the background for
the stage, reaches impressively
for the ceiling and is pasted up
and down with brown, paintsmeared paper. This is criscrossed with netting of thick rope.
Both the stage and audience are
beset and surrounded by thrillers
and planes and shaky levels of
steel tubing, scaffolding, lights,
and wires. Ten televisions stare
ahead through colored plastic
eyes and surround the stage
broodingly, bulkily. There are
five movie screens high above
the stage, one central. Sitting
there, close together, not a ticket
left to be sold, we are 200 innocent people in a bathtub together,
nervously fingering our washcloth programs, waiting. We are
surrounded, menaced by the geometric nimbus of unsure carpentry and the calculus of a thousand mystifying electronic gadgets. The Blue-up of it all, we
collectively think. We are 200 expectant people.
We are 200 disenchanted people.

Excellent film
The performance did, however,
begin with an excellent and funny
film and slide sequence by Rob-

ert Mitchell Lieberman, which

portrayed the ups and downs, ins

—

IN

PERSON!

THE

Doors

SATURDAY, MARCH 16

8:15 P.M.
Reserved Seets Nowl

$4.25, 3.75, 3.25, 2.25

EASTMAN THEATRE
60 GIBBS STREET
ROCHESTER, N. Y.
454-2620

itable chain reaction of sound,”
the music set off a chain reaction
of Excedrin headaches.

Headaches
The images on the ceiling
screens showed an array of movie
cuts and slides which changed
continuously. If any at all, these
cuts had little to do with what
was going on down on the stage,
except to express generalized
emotions about general things—love, death, struggle, quest. Often
these same screens were filled
with intricate designs meant, I’m
sure, for contemplation and not
casual glancing. When not full of
scratches or static or patterned
nothingness, the television screens
were glass mouthfuls of waving
hands, or chalk board words, or
rolling, clothed male bodies in

silent orgy.
At intervals during the play,
the audience had been dusted
with newspaper shreds, ping pong
balls and other harmless garbage.
But at the near-end of the performance, the audience was literally swamped with bags and huge
bags of paper shreds by the players. There were fields of it, seas
of it, cartfuls of these paper cat
hairs, and it got down your
clothes and up your nose and you
left that way. Though they were
expected to, the audience did not
fight back much. They were not
really invited to that party.

Mam
Ii THEATRE
series Stre t
'i

ATTRACTION

674

JL

KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL
Sunday—March 17—8:30 P.M.
Tickets available at
Norton Union Ticket Office

IEHHII
IlKIliHK
Buffalo Memorial Auditorium
Sat, March 23rd at 8:15 p.m.
OTHER GREAT

ENTERTAINMENT

THE SOFT MACHINE

England's Underground Sensation

The Mark Boyle Sense Laboratory
Jesse’sFirst Carnival
Seats
Reserved $3 $4 $5
All
-

-

Tickets on sole now at Buffalo
Festival Ticket Office, Hotel SlallerHilton Lobby; U, of B. Norton Hall;
Shops;
all Audrey * Del's Record
Brundo's, Niagara Falls.

TV SPECIAL: “The Actor,” Channel 7, check listing for time
FILM: Jonas Mekas films, Albright-Knox, 4:30 and 8:30
p.m. underground greats
PLAY: “Box . Mao . Box,” Studio
Arena, 8:30 p.m. Albee’s latest
Saturday, March 16:
"LECTURE: Jean-Luc Godard,
Fillmore Room, 8 p.m.
"FILM; “La Chinoise,” Conference Theater, 4 p.m., first time
in this area.
"INTERMEDIA ’68; Kenneth
Dewey, Upton Hall, Buff. State
CONCERT: The Doors and The
Stone Poneys, Eastman Theater, Rochester, 8:15 p.m., blastout in Eastman.
CONCERT: Dorian Quintet, Buffalo and Erie County Library,
3 p.m.
Sunday, March 17:

INTERMEDIA ’68: Trisha
Brown, Upton Hall, Buff. State
"READING: Michael McClure,
Fillmore Room, 8 p.m., banned
in Boston.
Chamberlain,
"ARTIST: John
*

Haas Lounge, 10 p.m.
CONCERT: Lou Rawls, Kleinhans,
8:30 p.m., he’s a soul man

“Votre

OPERA:

Faust,’’

Albright-Knox,

Pousser,
p.m.

democ-

by

8:30

CONCERT: UB’s Women’s Chor,ale, Trinity Episcopal Church,
8 p.m.

CONCERT: Jacob Lateiner, pian-

ist, Kleinhans, 2:30 p.m. also
Tuesday, March 19, 8:30 p.m.
"READING; John Chamberlain,
Haas Lounge, 10 p.m.
PLAYS: Nickel Theater, three
one-act plays, Conf. Theater,

8:30 p.m.
Monday, March 18:
TV SPECIAL: “A New England
Town Meeting,” Channel 17,

"EXHIBIT: Environmental plastic
exhibit, Center Lounge,
—throughout the week
Schneeman, Fillmore Room, 3
p.m,, gooey toilet paper and
all.
Tuesday, March

19:

"POETRY READING: John Weiners, Conference Theater, 4 p.m
"DANCE LECTURE: “Dance and
Film,” Shirley Clarke, Fillmore

8 p.m.
Nam
Baird, 8:30 p.m.

Room,

June

"CONCERT:

Paik,

FILM: “Judgment at Nuremberg,"
Capen 140. 7:30 p.m. “truth,
justice and the
way”
Wednesday, March 20;
"FILM: “Let Petit Soldat,” Capen
140, 4 p.m.
"ART LECTURE: Willoughby
Sharpe, Conf. Theater, 8 p.m,
RECITAL: David Fuller, harpsichord, Baird, 8:30 p.m.
TV SPECIAL: “Boston Pops III,”
Stan Getz, guest soloist, Channel 17, 9 p.m.
Thursday, March 21:
MUSICOLOGY LECTURE: “An
Anonymous Motet on The
Death Of The Emperor Maxi■

millian I,” Baird, Room 101, 4

p.m.

"ELECTRONIC POETRY WORKSHOP: Poetry and Jazz Concert,
Haas Lounge, 3:30 p.m.
TV SPECIAL: “The Dumb Waiter,” by Harold Pinter, Channel 17, 9 p.m.
Friday, March 22;
"FILM: “Les Carbinires,” Capen
140, three showings
"POETRY READING: Pedro Xisto, Millard Fillmore Room, 8
p.m,, following Terry Reilly,
composer and musician
FILMS: “Do You Know How to
Make A Statement Of Fact?”
and “Why Do People Misunderstand Each Other?” Dief.
303, 4 p.m. sounds confusing
"Spring Arts Festival events

•***����������****��**���*�*������*����*���******£

It

Go-Go Girls

*

SWINGING NIGHTLY, MON. thru THURS.

Chalet Lounge
�

("C" LOUNGE)

836-9567

134 Dewey
i

MUSIC and DANCING Fri. and Sat.

I

LOU R AWLS

Mixed-up theater

Davis Jr.,
O’Keefe Center, Toronto, 8:30

The music, which was to be “interwoven around, over, through,
and behind the audience” was a
computerized failure, offered
little support to a fast-disappearing plot, and was generally distracting. Created to set off a “ver-

“grassroots”

racy (polity?)

Friday, March 15:
CONCERT: Sammy

comprehensible.

ANOTHER

7 p.m.

compiled by Lori Pendrys

drowned-out lines; it suffered
from highly stylized dance sequences, especially in the fight
scenes; and even the plot, which
was vaguely understandable to
the newcomer at the beginning,
seemed to drift away as the audience lost hold on where the
scene of action was and as the
dialogue became increasingly in-

I

tures.

The play—at least the version
done by the Wicke-Rosenbloom
company—did not work out on
stage. Perhaps just a simple dramatic reading of the original
script would have been more successful—and effective. Or perhaps
if the author’s stage directions
had been use d—setting placename placards, character masks,
less choreography
“Ubu Roi”
might have gained in direction
what it so obviously lost through
aimless and amateur experimen-

an clouts, of the Pear heroes. Delightful, wacky nonsense. The
stage play itself, however, while
it is, again, perfectly delightful
satire Jn print, degenerated into

CAR?STUCK ON CAMPUS?

NO

A special party bus has been chartered by THE LIVELY SET (Western New lorks
largest club for singles, 20-35 years of age) to bring SCUB and SUNYAB to one
of TLS's "swingle" parties.
at the WilliamsThe party will be held Friday, March 15th, 9:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m.,
&amp;
Ties-Refreshments).
vide Inn, 5447 Main St., Williamsville. (Live Music-Heels
9
in
front
State Teachers
p.m.
of
at
SUCB students can board the charier bus
College The bus will pick up SUNYAB students at 9:45 p.m. at University Plaza
the
Inn.
students
Williasmville
and
SUNYAB
to
and afterwards take both SUCB
.
Return via same route before curfew.
Cost of $3.00 per student includes round trip transportation, admission to the
night membership).
party and one mixed drink (plus honorary one

Call 839-1309
after

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for reservation.

at

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Pag* Fourteen

•

Friday, March 15, 1968

Spectrum

The 'friendly Food Service
in a word: Bieah I
'

...

by Linda Hanley
Spectrum

Staff

service

Reporter

With the war in Vietnam, the near war
in Korea and God knows where else, it is
easy to overlook the minor war going on
each and every day between paying board
students, and your friendly, fun-loving
food service. One of the highlights of
every dorm student’s meal hour is the observance of this public service in action.
One of my more vivid personal memories occurred last year during finals week.
Having pulled an all-nighter for an exam,
I inadvertently slept through that evening’s dinner hour (supper is served from
4:30 to 6:30 p.m., those who wish to partake of the main dish are advised to come
early). However, as it happened to be an
exam day, supper was served till around 7
p.m. to accommodate those with exams
ending that hour. I rushed down to the
cafeteria and was giving the checker my
number when I spied my roommate just
leaving. We exchanged a few choice words
as to why she didn’t bother waking me
up, and I proceeded onto the line. “Excuse
me," said our ever-alert food service representative, “did you say you were sleeping?”

A fatal mistake
Thinking she was about to offer some
condolences on the rigors of going to college and taking final exams, or perhaps
that she was taking some kind of sociological survey, I stupidly answered: “Yes.”
“Well then", she said, throwing her
arm between me and food, “you can’t eat
if you’ve been asleep. This is only for
those students who’ve had exams."
Overwhelmed by this clear logic, I stammered something about not seeing the difference—if I had paid my bill, and food
was being served, why I couldn’t eat. This
bit of smart aleck college kid rebuttal
brought forth the apparent Miss Sergeantat-Arms of food service Who popped up
from somewhere screaming: “What do you
mean coming down here when you’ve been
asleep? etc.”
Being only a lowly freshman and not
wishing (at that moment anyway) to cause
the early demise from heart failure of this
upholder of justice, I obediently slinked
off and bought my own dinner.
-

Battery of harrassments
This is only one of a battery of harassmcnts facing the student trying to obtain
his rightful meal. The I.D. card is supposedly all that is required to gain admittance to the dining halls (student numbers
are checked off against a master IBM
sheet), yet in some instances birth certificates, passports, or a notarized list of
distinguishing scars or birthmarks might
be advisable lest the student wish to play
the game of “This Isn’t You.”
“This Isn’t You” requires two players,

represeni

The student leads off in all cases by presenting his or her I.D. card and reciting
student number. The next move is the
food service’s who grabs card, looks up at
the student and down at the card four or
five times, before pronouncing solemnly
“This Isn’t You.” The play returns to the
student on whom the burden of proof of
identity rests. Standard evidence includes:
growth of beard or moustache since picture was taken, dying of hair, cutting of
hair, loss of fifty pounds or more, gain of
fifty pounds or more, removal of eye glasses,

etc.

"This Isn't You"
At this point, student may become irritable and hence produce added credentials to facilitate hasty end to game. In
certain cases an optional play may rest

with the food service representative to
follow opponent into dining hall and de-

i

mand his I.D. card for final check. Food
Service scores three additional points for
each student it, interrogates before finding
one in question. Object of the game: for
student to eat his meal; for food service
to instill in opponent feeling he is getting
an undeserved handout on the Salvation
Army Line. However the credit for this
frequent meal time diversion and other
pleasantries of the dining halls, really lies

KSS

—Bina

not with the food service employees, but
rather with their higher-ups, as even the
cafeteria ladies themselves have on occasion been observed being berated by
some authority for taking an extra portion,
etc.
The food service is also extremely cordial when it comes to time considerations.
I doubt if Fort Knox closes up so tight or
so fast as does the food service come the
appointed minute. Last year, upon returning from a Chemistry hourly at approximately 6:35 p.m. my friend and I were
told that we couldn’t be served. Previously, the Chemistry Department had always
called on hourly days to keep the dining
halls open till 7, but that day apparently
somebody goofed. This was rather annoying as it wasn’t a question of lack of food,

The name game

"this isn't you" is sometimes the reaction of
I.D. checkers of the food service.
or

rather throw out food than give it to a
paying student, even if she is three minutes late?
Yet this philosophy is rather in keeping with some of their other ideas on
food. For example, nothing can be removed from the dining halls, not even
cookies or doughnuts. The reasons for this
are rather hazy, amounting to something
about fear of food spoilage in the rooms.
One would think that college students
would know enough not to munch on stale
rather
all
around
little
but
of lime, for
us,
This policy is
cakes, etc., however
food service personnel were scurrying rather inconsistent with the fact that duraround, their trays loaded with food.
ing finals week, the food service provides for Survival Kits which include
Word to the wise
many of the same items otherwise forIn this instance, surprisingly, food ser- bidden out of the cafeteria during the
vice later relented and let us in. However, rest of the year.
a similar occurrence last semester did not
meet with such success. A friend of mine What goes on here
ruhcd down to breakfast at 9.33 a.m. (line
There seems no apparent logic in this,
colses at 9:30), raced through the line, and unless of course, the food service picks
reached for the last piece of toast. “Uh- up uneaten items from used trays and
Uh-Uh”, the food service lady said as she reserves them, consequently they don’t
withdrew the plate from her waiting want them removed, which is undoubtedly
hands, and proceeded to dump its con- forbidden by the Board of Health. Of
tents into the garbage. This raises an in- course, an extensive study could undoubtteresting point: Why should food service edly be conducted as to the probability
of getting sick from the food served inside the dining halls as opposed to the
....

fragments carried out.
In fact, the most infamous of all food

service incidents

stems from the food

poisoning issue, I am referring, of course,
to the notorious shrimp caper of ’66 in
which more than 300 students became
quite ill with food poisoning from a
shrimp dinner served in the cafeteria.
Since that time, though, numerous precautions have been taken to insure against
a similar occurrence.

Precautions since the shrimp
Aside from a sizeable changeover in
food temperatures are now
taken upon arrival and three times during service. Hot foods must be at least
150° and cold items 45° or under. In
addition, plastic gloves are now used by
personnel when handling food. Also, samples of all food served are kept in refrigeration for 72 hours afterwards, so that
should another epidemic ever occur again,
it will be possible to pinpoint its exact
cause. Currently, the food service is trying to institute a preventive program with
the University Health Service in which

personnel,

—lilM

-

Last

tlinner?
«U|I|ICI.

Unfinished victuals indicate apathetic
connoisseurs. Shrimp disaster made
students wary.

food would be checked before service to
stop an epidemic rather than detect the
cause of one.
Never let it be said that the food
service is without a sense of humor either.
Last year, some jovial board students
switched the menu sign above the seconds
table in Goodyear Cafeteria to read “Shit,"
a description considered synonymous to
the actual by many. Soon after some
girls approached the lady serving seconds.
“May we have some shit, please?” they

asked nicely enough. Like the good sports
they are, food service hauled in the two
for questioning. One of the brighter moments of last year’s dining season.

The wrong line
Goodyear Cafeteria, with which I am
most familiar, is composed of three main
classes of board students: boys from Allenhurst, girls from Clement, and the
Goodyear Hall girls. These three all have
different lines, a separation which closely
parallels the Indian caste system with
respect to inter-class mobility. For example, the Clement line can be backed up
onto Bailey Ave, before the Allenhurst
line personnel will permit its sanctity to
be invaded by the maurauding girls from
Clement Hall. On these rare occasions,
one must be sure to obtain the permission
of the food service representative to par-

take of Allenhurst food. Earlier this year,
I and a few of my friends made the fatal
blunder of taking things into our own
hands, and leaving the tail end of the
Clement line (where, from our vantage
point, it looked like we might not make
it to the kitchen before closing) and stepping onto the Allenhurst line, where
there was not a boy in sight as the time
was between buses.
About half way
through the line, it dawned on one of
the ladies that we were not Allenhurst
boys at all but those filthy poachers from
Clement Hall out to “take food away from
their boys.”
“You have no right to be on this line,”
she began. “This is for Allenhurst boys.
You have no right to take food away from
our boys,” I thought it expedient at that
point to mention that the Clement line
was by this time inching up on Williamsville and there was not a boy in sight
here, so why couldn’t we eat. This bit of
reasoning did not sway the food service
lady, ever-loyal to “her boys.” It didn’t
matter that the food was just being distributed in different places, that is, no
matter where we got it, we weren’t taking
anything away from Allenhurst. “I don’t
ever want to see your faces on this line
again,” the food service lady persisted.

“Well, don’t you think it’s a pretty
stupid system?” I asked
by this time
having accumulated a little more gump—

tion since the run-in in my freshman year.

“Many things in life are stupid,” she
said gravely. “You have to learn to live

with that.”
Philosophy lesson for the day.
It was about this time I decided I
would break my board contract. If food
service didn’t want “to see my face around
ever again,” I could certainly live without seeing theirs. Not surprisingly, I have
survived rather well minus the friendly
atmosphere and good food, generously provided by your local neighborhood food
service.

�P»** Fiftoon

The Spectrum

Friday. March 15, 1968

Book review

'Critics of Society' by Bottomore
by Joseph G. Ball III
Book

Spectrum

Reviewer

Critics of Society
T. B. Bottomore, Pantheon,
145 ppgs.
“I shall be concerned with social criticism as the work of
thinkers who elaborate critical
theories of society, and not as the
mere expression, in any form
whatsoever, of opposition to the
established order.”
Thus begins Critics of Society,
subtitled “Radical Thought in
North America,” by T, B. Bottomore, head of the Department of
Political Science, Sociology and
Anthropology at Simon Fraser

by

—Yates

-

University, Canada.

Contestants for queen of forth-

Queen

The, reader should not expect

coming Cadet Ball are pictured
here: (left to right) Jeanne Pi-

candidates

to find a record
march

quet, Mimi Blits, JoAnn Montante and Chris Scappator.

on

of

the

peace

Washington, Father

Groppi’s crusade in Milwaukee,
or campus disturbances in this

book. Prof. Bottomore has rather
made an attempt to analyze our
society, and to propose possible
alternatives to the problems that
are a part of it.
This volume published a week
ago today, could be more aptly
subtitled “radical thought in the
United States and Even a Little
in Canada.” Chapter VIII, “SocialHer
acing in health education.
ism and Nationalism in Canada”
tivities include sorority treasurer, does deal superficially with Queskiing and sewing.
bec nationalism and the New DeJeanne Piguet, a 20-year-old mocratic Party, but aside from
sociology major, is Chi Omega’s these two specifics, I am led to
representative. Her theme is “I believes that there has been no
social criticism in North America
Dream of Jeannie.”
with the exception of the United
Jeanne is a member of the UniStates, and there only since 1879.
versity Band as well as sorority
and in her spare time she en- Selective history
joys knitting, sewing and sports,
The first chapter, “The Growth
especially skiing.
of Criticism”, is an attempt to
discuss the beginnings of social
Chris Scappator, Sigma Kappa
criticism in North America. In
Phi’s candidate, is a junior in
this short 13-page chapter, Prof.
Medical Technology. Chris has Bottomore has
limited his disserved as chairman of the Queen’s
cussion solely to European critics
Committee for Fall-Parent Weeksuch as Voltaire, Hegel and Marx.
nd.
This would be pertinent to a
such
as
She is active in sports
book o fthis type but for the fact
and
tennis
and
skiing, swimming
that Mr. Bottomore jumps imlast summer won the Western mediately to the Progressive Era
New York Tennis Championship, in
the United States. I got the
Chris is currently a fashion model feeling
that nothing happened in
in the Buffalo area.
this country between 1770 and
Her theme is “Christine &amp; 1870. Where are the first hundred years'’
Camelot.”

Queen will be chosen
at ROIC Cadet Ball
A Queen pageant will highlight
the annual AFROTC Cadet Ball
Saturday at the Cordon Bleu Restaurant. Jay Moran’s orchestra
will provide music from 8 p.m.
until 1 a.m. Cocktails will be
served beginning at 7:30 p.m.
The $10 admission charge includes a full course dinner; drinks
will be served at reduced prices.
Tickets may be obtained at the
table in Norton Hall or from any
Arnold Air Society cadet.
Climaxing the formal dance
will be the crowning of the Cadet Ball Queen. Student voting
will partly determine the winner
from among the four candidates.
Ballots may be cast in the Norton Hall Center Lounge from 10
a.m. until 4 p.m. today.
In addition to the voting, the
queen will be chosen on the basis
of a fashion show held Tuesday,
a speech given Monday and the
campaign. The panel of judges
for the fashion show and speech
consisted of Col. and Mrs. John
Herbert, Dr. John Huddleston,
and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Henderson.

Building, Buffalo, for

and

information.

WINNER OP

10 NOMINATIONS!
OSCAR

INCLUDING

BEST

PICTURI
ACTOR

ACTRESS

eGmoE

IBCNNIE)

tailed.

Of these social movements Bottomore has this to say: “In all this
they undoubtedly perform a useful function as critics of modern
society. Vet this may not be
enough. There may still be a need
for a criticism of a more general

Muckraker appraised
In this chapter Prof, Bottomore
also gives an adequate appraisal
of the muckrakers and details
the works of such writers as Lin-

kind, which would examine and
question the ruling orthodoxies,
the fundamental ideas and institutions of a society, in the manner of the liberal and socialist
thinkers of the nineteenth century.” With this statement I

coln Steffens, Robert Tressell and
Upton Sinclair.
In mentioning Sinclair’s The
Jungle. Bottomore notes that “. . .
The book had one immediate effect, the passage by Congress of
the Pure Food and Drug Act, perhaps
only
indisputable
the
achievement of the muckrakers.”
“From the Ja7.z Age to the
Great Crash” chronicles the literary and cultural criticism of a
business world which was seen as
impregnable by the critics.
Writer like H. 1.. Mencken used
a satirical tone when criticising

uiimmfr
WINNER

wholeheartedly agree.

Prof. Bottomore has written a
book which does not detail all
social criticism in North America
—what he does mention, however, is explained simply and
clearly. The book is valuable for
anyone who wishes to gain a fundamental understanding of radical social criticism in the United
States today.

ACADEMY award
"W
| NOMINATIONS

BEST PICTURE
BEST ACTRESS

BEST ACTOR

BEST DIRECTOR

JOSEPH E. LEVINE
«•»tSf MS

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He’s a little
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stein Veblen, Justice Holmes,
Charles A. Beard and others.
It is interesting to note what
Bottomore says of the economist
Thorstein Veblen: “One of his
ideals was always the log cabin
remote from the world. But then
again he finds hope in the engineers, the practical makers of
things, who are intelligent, peaceful and industrious, and he
sketches the outlines of a society
ruled by technologists, which is
scarcely a Utopia for us today.”

C.W., BUCK, BLANCHE and

SEE US TONITE
AT 7:30 or 9:40!

—Crowther,
N.Y. Times

9:35

The author shows how the resurgence of radicalism in the
1930’s was brought about by the
economic repercussions of the
depression and by the rise of German national socialism.
The last five chapters of Critics
of Society, with the exception of
the chapter on Canada, deal with
modern radicalism, left and right.
Mr. Bottomore clearly shows
the origins and composition of the
Negro revolt and the student
movements for both peace and
for democratic universities. The
anti-intellectual reformers of the
McCarthy 50s’ is also neatly de-

THE BARROW GANG!

COMPUTER
DATING WORKS
You.
520 Genesee
FREE application

Radicals in the 30's

George’s Progress and Poverty
(1879), Edward Bellamy’s Utopian
novel Looking Backward (1888)
and H. D. Lloyd’s Wealth Against
Commonwealth (1894). We are
drawn into a discussion of such
chief representatives of social
thinking as John Dewey, Thor-

GUESS WHO STOLE ALL
THE NOMINATIONS?

The candidates are Mimi Blits,
Joanne Monante, Jeanne Piquet
and Christine Scappator.
Mimi Blits, Alpha Gamma Delta Sorority’s candidate, is a 20year-old transfer student from
SUATO at Farmingdale, where
for four semesters she was a
member of the junior college
honor society. She was also one
of six art students chosen by the
Art Director’s Club to participate
with advertisement artists in seminars which they sponsored.
Mimi’s activities are travel, art
and water-skiing.
Theta Chi’s candidate for Cadet
Ball Queen is Joanne Monante,
whose theme is “At Ease With
Jo.” Joanne, 22 years old, is a
senior from Williamsville majbr-

It Can Work For
Write MATCH MAKER,

the “Establishment,” and Greenwich Village became the haven
of those radicals who ehg5e~to
remain in the United States,

Prof. Bottomore does take note
of populism and agrarian socialism after the Civil war and does
mention such' works as Henry

Showings at 12,2:45,5:30,8:15, 11:00*
Friday only
*

Technicolor*

a NATIONAL GENERAL PICTURE tgj

�Page

Sixteen

The

Spectrum

Friday, March 15, 1968

�The

Friday, March 15, 1968

Fencers finish season
with a triangular win
Spectrum

Staff

the spectrum of

sports

compete in the North Atlantic

Reporter

The tournament-bound fencing
Bulls finished the season with a
flourish, first trouncing Hobart
19-8 at Geneva Wednesday. The
Bulls Saturday punished Culver
Military Academy by the same
margin and Brock University 18-9,
in a triangular meet at Clark
Gym.

Senior captain Jon Rand made
his regular season finale an impressive one, winning all six of
his saber bouts. Ed Share also
tok six saber bouts as the Bulls
rolled over Brock in that weapon 7-2 and Culver 6-3,

The epee trio rocked Brock 8-1
and whipped Culver 7-2 as Steve
Morris, Tony Walluk, and Bruce
Renner each copped five of their
six bouts.
The foil three some beat Culver
6-3, but bowed to Brock 5-4 as
George Wirth and Pierre Chanteau went unblemished against
Culver. Chanteau took two of his
three bouts against Brock.

Sweet victory
The victory over Hobart was

a
particularly sweet one for the
Bull?, as it avenged a 14-13 de-

feat suffered earlier in the season. Rand, Morris, Renner, Walluk and Wirth each won all three
of their bouts in the rout. Ed
Share took two with Jim Ellenbogen and Herb Sanford each adding a tally. The frosh whipped
Hobart 16-9.

The Bulls,

finishing the regular
season with a 12-6 log, will journey to Rochester tomorrow to

Intercollegiate Fencing Championships, seeking the Swashbucklers’ eighth team championship
since the tournament was first
held in 1951. Head Coach Sid
Schwart will enter two men in
each weapon: Rand and Share in

13-4 record

Frosh cagers have great season;
set many records along the route

saber, Morris and either Walluk
or Renner in epee, and George

Wirth and Pierre Chanteau in
foil.
The Bulls’ opposition will consist of Cornell, Syracuse, RIT,
Drew, Jersey City State, St. Peters, Pace, Patterson State, Johns
Hopkins and Seton Hall. The
competition is expected to be
stiff, requiring a big effort if the
Swashbucklers are to improve
considerably over last year’s lackluster ninth place finish.
Quizzed about his team's
chances, coach Schwartz replied:
“We’re sending six really solid
men and will be a definite threat
in the tournament. If we’re on,
we have a real good shot at taking it all.”
The competition will become
even more rigorous as the fencing Bulls will travel to Detroit
for the NCAA Championships
March 28-30.
The fencing season in retro
spect:
Buffalo 34
Buffalo 18
Buffalo 15
Buffalo 15
Buffalo 16
Buffalo 13

Buffalo 15
Buffalo 13
Buffalo 6

Buffalo 12
8
Buffalo 19
Buffalo 14
Buffalo 6
Buffalo 19
Buffalo 18
Buffalo 18

Buffalo

UB

Alumni 19

R.l.T.

9

-.McAAaster 12

Cornell 12

11
14
12
14
21
.Cleveland St. 15
Oberlin 19
McAAaster
.Hobart
R.l.T.
Penn State
Army

_

Case Tech 8

Syracuse
Notre Dame
Hobart
Culver AA. A.
_Brock Univ.

13

21
8
9
9

by W.

Scott Behrens

Spectrum Sports Editor

Coach Kd Muto’s freshman basketball squad has enjoyed a ter
rific season.
The Baby Bulls finished with an
amazing 13-4 record while facing
the toughest seventeen game
schedule in the University’s history, And the Mutomen set several individual and team records
along the route.
Included among the victories
were two over the Canisius yearlings, two wins over Niagara and
two wins over rival Buffalo State.
The Baby Bulls sustained two
of their four losses to St. Bonaventure. They lost once to Niagara Community College, who
eventually became league champions of State community colleges,
and took a loss at Syracuse early
in the season.
The Baby Bulls went over the
100-point mark three times in
scoring an average of 83.6 points
per game, a new record. They hit
their high mark of 109 in beating Buffalo State in the last
game of the season. The Bulls
had racked up 101 points against
the State frosh earlier this season.

As a team the Bulls shot 46%
from the field for the season and

ed up second best

66% mark from the free throw
line. They outrebounded their opposition by a wide margin, 45.1
per game to 31.0, and scored 1422
points to the opposition’s 1296.

Timon High School graduate
Roger Kremblas was the most
consistent player on the squad.
Kremblas, at 6-2, averaged 12.5
points per game, shot 46% from
the field and finished with nearly seven rebounds a game. He
scored more consistently in the
double figures than anyone on
the team and was the steadying
influence when things got a little tight.
Phil Knapp, another strong 6-2
ution to Male's squad. He always
player, atte'juqiie a big contribdrew the tanjph defensive assignment in thg games. He averaged
around ten points per contest,
while hitting on 49% of his shots

Steve Waxman, a six-foot, fiveinch center and forward from
Kenmore West, set several records. His 348 points and 20.4 per
game average were both high
marks as was his rebound average of 13 per game. In addition
he averaged four assists per contest.

-

/

Waxman also 6ft51te the single
game frosh record when he

pumped-in 43 points against Bryant and Stratton in Clark Gym
this season. The former mark
was set by the varsity Bulls’ Ed
Eberle two years ago. Eberle had
scored 41 points that night.

frobi the

field.
Guards Kenny Palen (8.5 average) and Terry Johnson (6.0 average) will be among the other four
vying for a berth on next year’s

varsity squad under Serfustini’s
coaching.
The season’s scores

Waxman also set the single
game rebound mark with 18 in
both the Buffalo State and Ithaca games. Steve hit a brilliant

Buffalo
77
66
94
83
82
101
108
80
109
86

51% from the field and 76%
from the charity toss mark.

Despite all Waxman’s efforts,
he did have some help.

Bob Moog, a slender six-foot
two-inch forward from Long Island, New York, too, had a great

year. Moog, averaging 14.7 points
a game, shot even better than
Waxman, hitting for a 53% average from the field.

Moog’s rebound average was
around eight per game and end-

©

1968 Jos

Srtrtiu Brewing Co.

Milwaukee and

other cities.

in that depart

ment.

65
78
60

’

84
73
96
80

Canisius
Niagara Comm.
.Niagara Univ.

.

by Paul Maxwell

Page Seventeen

Spectrum

Syracuse

...St. Bonnies
Buffalo State

63

71

78
113
92
64

Bryant &amp; Str. 73
Niagara Comm. 79
Buffalo State 92
Gannon J.V. 72
Broekport 64

Rochester 71
St. Bonnies 83
Canisius 70
Niagara 57
Colgate 92
Ithaca 62

�Greek graphs

IFC gives to Olympic fund
. . . Tau Kappa Epsilon will
hold a Colt 45 beer bjast March
22 . . . Theta Chi Fraternity will
hold a pizza sale tomorrow

by Elliot Stephan Rose
Spectrum

In a close

berg

Staff Reporter

vote after much

heated discussion, the Interfraternity Council decided to donate
$100 to the U.S. Olympic fund.

Judy Powell of Sigma Kappa
Phi sorority will handle sorority
news for The Spectrum,
She is a Junior majoring in English and a member of the Buff-

Many fraternity members feel
that Greek interest will spur the
campus and the community to a
more active role in supporting
the U.S. team’s chances this summer.

In return for the donation, the
I.F.C. will receive a plaque that
will be on display in their Norton Hall office
The donation is the second step
in the Greek plan to support athletics on the college level.
As a result of the Finger Lakes
Hockey Tournament, Jim Hamilton was awarded the I.F.C. trophy
for the outstanding defenseman.
More athletic support will ensue
as the semester progresses and
a “Boost the Bulls” football campaign is planned for the fall.
News items
The new pledges of Phi Epsilon
Pi are: Robert Blackman, Alan
Wolf, Elliot Angel, Paul Rubin,
Steve Rice, Gary Goldstein, Raymond Brenner, Andrew Breiman,
Larry Brink, Craig Sander, Keith
Gilman, Harvey Sander, Richard
Greene (Pres.), Albert Hattem,
Harold Brown, Sanford Robeck,
Neal Friedman and Jeffrey Skier.
Douglas Goodemote is this
semester’s pledgemaster and Phil
Fdwards is his assistant . . . New
officers of Sigma Phi Epsilon are:
President, James Harvey; Vice
Pres., Steve Ray: Controller, Bob
Stober; Historian, Sy Zielinski;
Rec Secy., Chuck Hare; Chaplain, Joe Passiment; Corres. Secy.,
Dan McGioughlin; Guard, Joe Rutkowski; Sr. Marshall, Jerry Solomon; Jr. Marshall, Brian Vanden-

alonian staff.

Congress now considering drug bill
of the Senate Juvenile Delinquen-

by Phil Semes

College Press

Service

WASHINGTON—Under an Administration proposal now being
considered by Congress, a student
who loans his roommate a pep
pill to stay awake during finals
will be a federal criminal subject
t o 10 years in prison and a $15,000 fine.

The bill, which embodies pro-

posals made, by President Johnson in his State of the Union

and crime messages, would make

SORORITIES

Saturday afternoon the sisters
and pledges of Chi Omega are
sponsoring a tea to honor a Chi
Omega alumna, Evely Hawes,
author of The Happy Land and
The Madras-type Jacket, two
books about young people. Jeanne
Piquet is our candidate for Mil-

itary Ball Queen. Her theme is
“I Dream of Jeanne.” We encourage everyone to vote. The
sisters and pledges are supporting a physical fitness drive by
sponsoring a night of swim at
Clark Gym Tuesday . . . The sisters of Sigma Delta Tau are going
to the Westminister House tomorrow to help paint and clean.
The new officers of the pledge
class are: Julie Ziegler, President; Carol Crisci, Vice-Pres.;
Myrna Wolff, Sec.; Susan Levine,
Treas.; . . . Sigma Kappa Phi will
be holding a pizza sale tomorrow.
Good luck to “That Girl,” Chris
Scappator, our Military Ball

Queen candidate. The officers of

the spring pledge class are: President, Carole Willert; Treas,, Mady
Schutzman; Sec., Micki Zalewski;
Social, Candy Cannizzaro; Scholarship, Linda Luccioni. The annual dinner dance will be held
March 23 at the Cordon Bleau . . .
The sisters of Theta Chi Sorority
are holding a Pizza sale March
23. Best of luck to Joanne Mon-

tante—our Military

Ball

possession of “hallucinogenic
drugs (including LSD) and other
depressant and stimulant drugs"
a misdemeanor and “illegal man-

ufacture and traffic” and “possession for sale” of such drugs a
felony.

The House Subcommittee on
Public Health and Welfare completed hearings on the bill in
early March. Although the sub
committee had not yet scheduled
action on the bill, it is almost
certain to be passed, and possibly in an even stronger form.
All but one of the subcommittee
members have said they favor
the bill.

Rough going in

Senate

It may face slightly rougher
going in the Senate. At a series
of hearings this week, members

cy Subcommittee appeared sympathetic to arguments that laws

for possession of drugs, especially
marjiuana, are unenforceable and
that the penalties ought to be
lessened or completely eliminated.

Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (Dquestioned how effective
the government’s “education program” on drugs could be when
the laws on marijuana and LSD
are so inequitable,
Dr. James Goddard, commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration, described an extensive “education program” in
drugs being run by his department. Sen. Kennedy responded:
“I think we need more study before we can develop an effective
educational program. LSD is 100
times more dangerous than marijuana, yet we have a lesser penalty for it. In light of those inequities, do you think young
people will pay any attention to
an educational program?”
“I don’t believe they will,” replied Dr. Goddard, who has often
expressed doubts about penalties
for the possession of marijuana.
Mass.)

Laws unenforceable
Two educators who appeared
before the subcommittee argued

that the present laws against
marijuana arc unenforceable
Dean Helen Nowlis, director of
the drug education project of the
National Association of Student
Personnel Administrators, told
the committee that criminal penalties for possession of marijuana
should be removed.

She said, however, that she was
against legalization of marijuana
until more research could be
done on it.

Afraid
She also expressed the fears
of many deans and administrators
about the tactics used by law
enforcement officials in cases
such as the police raid on the
State University of Stony Brook:
“The great majority of students,
teachers, and administrators find
many widely used enforcement
techniques both repulsive and
disruptive. Undercover agents, informers, invasion of privacy, tap-

ped telephones are an anomoly
in a situation where we are desperately trying to substitute inner
controls for outside control, to
foster individual and group responsibility, to encourage mature
behavior by expecting mature be-

havior.”

Most girls stuff
is just a“Cover-Up”..

Queen

candidate. Remember our theme
“At Ease with Jo,” when voting
today between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m.
H0T

HILLEL

:°

r- pizza

(

Delivered FREE

By

DiROSE

Friday Eve. Service 7:40 P.M.
Sunday Supper 5:30 P.M., by reservation

40 Capen Blvd.

Friday, March 15, 1968

The Spectrum

Page Eighteen

$1.05

836-4540

p.t.

POP 5c

TR 3-1330

REVIEWS
FOR

ALL

COLLEGE
COURSES

BUY AND SEU

BUFFALO
TEXTBOOK

USED
TEXTS

STORES, INC.

Paperbacks

3610 MAIN
(across

from

833-7131

UB)

Girts

-

Posters

-

Supplies

but not Pamprin
Not all girl’s stuff “covers up.” Here’s one product that does more
PAMPRIN.

PAMPRIN makes a woman look and feel better . . . without relying on
“camouflage.” PAMPRIN is specifically designed to get at a basic
cause of pre-menstrual problems. Problems of temporary water-weight
gain. That puffy feeling that can make you feel miserable the week
before your period. (It’s that extra water-weight causing pressure on
tissues that makes for headaches and pre-menstrual tension.)

Sheffield's

0 £pcrt
60-minute timer
Sweep second hand
Luminous dial and hands
Shock resistant
Automatic calendar
Anti-magnetic

PAMPRIN does what aspirin doesn’t. It alleviates the “bloating.” So it
gets at the cause of the pain. Instead of justcovering it up. PAMPRIN
makes a woman feel more like a woman. Every day of. the month. So
every coed can live life a little bit better. Now that PAMPRIN is going
to college.
PAMPRIN. It's definitely girl’s stuff

'“'Wing

PanipRih.

'ARD MALL, Amherst, NY.
Jin, Mil-Pine Plaza, Niagara Falls

PAMPRIN... products for a woman’s won

�Friday,

March 15, 1968

The

CLASSIFIED
SALE
4 speed, posi
1965 CORVAIR MONZA
h, all black,
traction, fast steering, r
of con.
diagnosis
45 000 miles, electronic
FOR

-

&amp;

$995. 882-2090 evenings.
:
IMPALA good condit.on,
h, p.s., reaautomatic transmission, r
sonable, Call Stan 835-9795
- Super
88, 4 door se1964 OLDSMOBILE
dan, power windows, seat and aerial,
selectromatic radio, cruise control, excellent
condition. Please phone owner before 5
PM. 853-4255 or 874-3166.
1952 PLYMOUTH—$75, good condition. Call
836-4942 after six.
body excellent condition,
1962 RENAULT
engine just tuned, all new tires. $350.
Call Paul, 684-6413.
1959 CHEVY good running shape, cal
Bill, 834-4962.
good condition, new
FORD ECONOLINE
fires, complete stereo tape system. Call
Marty 877-1215 after 3:00.
STUDIO COUCH, steel desk, drapes, pillows, lamps, blankets, etc. Call Sunday
morning, 833-2155.
GIRL'S ENGLISH RACER with tote baskets.
Practically brand new. Call 832-3346.
dition

—

mi CHEVROLCT

.

&amp;

—

—

—

HALLICRAFTERS S-120
cast

receiver;

like

shortwave and broadnew. Call 883-4019

after 6:00Brand new, SEWING MACHINE, $300 value,

will sell for $150. Ski boots size 8V2,
skiis, pants, ski rack, fit medium-size cars.
$65 complete. 836-5760.
GRETSCH GUITAR 2 pickups, adjustable
bridge, hollow, like new, and Fender
'amp.
Best offer. Call 831-3281.
"Tremolux'
APARTMENTS FOR RENT

ROOM for

rent, for male, within walking
distance, board or KP optional. Call 833-

7520.

WANTED
FEMALE wanted

ROOMMATES

NOT-SO.RADICAL
room house. Call Diantha,

for 7886-2833.

WANTED
Edge, 3)93 Bailey.
and unusual gifts.

VISITORS The Gilded
Hand-crafted jewelry
Wed.-Sat.
-

—

-

-

—

-

.

part time now,
need five
time.. Can earn $75 per
necessary.
Car
Phone 832part
week
time.
7509.
BABYSITTER wanted evenings, occasionally
couple hours days. Phone Mr. Michielli
_
on campus, 831-4247.

COLLEGE MEN,
summer, full

-

PERSONAL
gems from the Jewish Bible

SHALOM! For

call 875-4265

day or night.

MISCELLANEOUS
One rotten applie with pin in it.
If lost contact HLSSS.
LOST; One gas-operated cigarette lighter in
Norton, March 6. Return to Spectrum office, please.
FOUND:

COLT 45 BEER BLAST: You can't talk about
it if you don't go.
CONNIE'S CURIOS Imports from Mexico,
panchos, paintings, onyx, leather goods,
glassware, knights in armor, maces, wooden
Christs and statues and more. 3246 Bailey
Ave., near Dartmouth.
SEND $1 for authoritative ''Handbook for
—

Conscientious Objectors.'' Nationally recognized. American Friends Service Committee, Box 181, University Station, Syracuse,
N. Y.
TYPING term papers 25c per page, ditto's
35c, envelopes $2.00 per hundred. Call

official bulletin
The Official Bulletin is an authorized publication of the State
University of New York at Buf
falo, for which The Spectrum assumes no editorial responsibility.
Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to 114 Hayes
Hall, attention Mrs. Fischer, before 2:00 p.m. the Friday prior
to the week of publication. Student organization notices are not
accepted for publication.

General notices
University College

Advance

-

May 8,
18
1968
At the request of Dean
Welch, students will register in
order of class, priority being given to upper classmen. In addition
the University College advisement staff has elected to allow
students on strict probation to
preregister, but these students
must see their adviser before registering.
The following schedule will be
Registration, March

-

—

observed:
March 13

Available for dances
THE ALIENS rock
and roll group NR 4-1320.
EUROPE for $196 round trip; June 10-Aug.
16; Niagara Falls to London. Call 831—

in 114
Diefendorf.
Upper division students who
have been rejected by a department or who are undecided as to
major will see a University College adviser to complete regisup registration materials

tration.
March 25
April 12—Sophomores will register. Sophomores
may sign their own registration
cards, but must see a University
College adviser to discuss selection of major and to make application to a department, if appropriate. Students who do not comply with this request will not have
records forwarded to the depart-

ment of their choice in Junefl
Sophomores may see advisers as
follows.

15—and thereafter
8, current Juniors

through May
and continuing Seniors may pick

March 18 22—Current Juniors
and continuing Seniors will register after securing signature of
faculty adviser.

—

3602.

$259 regularly scheduled jet
flight. New York to London. June 13August 28. 20 seats left. Call Don, 837.9157,
4-8 PM.
low cost,
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
immediate F.S.-l, premiums financed.
UPSTATE CYCLE INSURANCE 695-3044.
—

-

LOST
LOST

—

Glasses in vicinity of

Norton.

Please

call

Sam

at

Diefendorf or
831-3610.

Apr.

G through Q
A through F

April 8-12

April 15 May 8—Freshmen
will register. These students must
have cards signed by a University
College adviser before registering. They may see their advisers
-

as follows:

R through Z
H through Q
A through G

April 15-19
April 22-26
April 29-May 3

Of interest to all undergradu-

ates—please consult your

adviser

for information regarding pro-

6

316 Harriman
121 Crosby Hall

&amp;

Graduate School Foreign
Language Proficiency
Law School Admissions

Mar. 29

Apr. 20

316 Harriman

Mar. 16

Apr.

6

316 Harriman

National Teacher’s Exam

Mar. 22

Apr.

6

316 Harriman

Practical Nursing Exam
(Pre-Admission)

Mar. 15

Mar. 30

School of Nursing

Pre-Nursing Exam

Mar. 23

Apr.

6

School of Nursing

Drive one of these
dressed-up Chevrolets
instead of a stripped-down

GM

new W/P and W/F.

Placement interviews
Please call 831-3311 for additional information on the follow-

ing interviews.
Appointments
should be made at least one week
in advance of the interviewing
dale if possible.

Gannet Newspaper Group

Applications
Available

Test
Date

—

Admissions Test for Graduate Mar. 23
Study in Business (ATGSB)

March 25-29

March 18

Student Testing Center Registration Schedule
Last Day
to Register

Appointments can be made be
ginning March 18.

cedures for resigning with the

It is your advantage to register
during the week reserved for you,
but you may register through
May 8.
-

-

835-6897.

EUROPE

small cycle, cheap. Call 839-3263
after 6 P.M .
leaving
RIDERS TO FLORIDA (1 or 2)
Buffalo Sunday, March 31 (arrive Miami
Beach night of April 1). Leave Miami Beach
April 11 arrive Buffalo April 12). One-way
or round-trip to Miami Beach or vicinity.
Call Norm, mornings or all day Sunday.
835-1626.

American - Standard Industrial
Division
Wallkill Central Schools
Valhalla Public Schools
March 19
Aetna Insurance Co.
Campbel Sales Co.

([Campbell

Soup Co.)
1
Skaneateles Central Schools

March 20

American Sterilizer Co.
Sodus Central Schools
Dept, of Mental Hygiene
March 21
Univae, Div. of Sperry Rand
Household Finance Corp.
De Leu Cather &amp; Assoc.

Weber

Knapp Co.

-

FOODS

•

SPICES

•

RELISHES

D'RECT FROM

something else.

INDIA
•

Chic

Pea Flower

i

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i

i

(

i

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ORIFKJTAI
ORIENTAL

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to 6; Fri. 'til 9; Sun. 1 to 6
6530 Seneca St (Route 16) Elmo N T
2 Miles East of Transit (U S 20)
NL 2-33S5

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HONDA

HELP
hours at your
convenience, salary plus commission. Call
874.3399, 9-11 daily.
.
day help wanted,
DRIVE-IN RESTAURANT
full and part time for mature clean-cut
individuals only.Y Apply McDonalds Drive| ,
N,
B vd
MALE or FEMALE to teach English conversation in Japan. Need not be college
graduate. Write Miss Eileen Nieman, Yakushiyama Jutaku A401, 537, Yamahapa, Shinden, Hineji-shi, Hyogo-ken, Japan or Call
838-1614 evenings.

PART-TIME SALES

Pag* Nineteen

Spectrum

CHOICE

ROAST BEEF

PREMIUM
SIRLOIN STEAKS
only
draft beer
neground:

Chevrolet

’68 CHEVROLET
prices start lower than any other
full-size models. Look at It. Chev-

rolet’s 4-door sedan is roomier than
any other American car except one
luxury sedan. Drive it. You tell by its
smooth and silent ride that Chevrolet
quality runs deep. Buy it! Get a Chevrolet instead of a medium-priced name
and you can have, say, power steering,
power brakes and a radio besides!

Impale Sport Sedan; right background: Cheve

’68 CHEVELLE
prices start lower than any other
mid-size models. Obviously nothing's
newer in mid-size cars than Chevelle.
There's fresh styling, the long-hood,
short-deck look. There are fwo nimblefooted wheelbases now—both on a
wider, steadier tread. You get big-car
power, big-car ride in a quick-size
package. No wonder Chevelle outsells
everything in its field.

ipe;

lei

backg&gt; 'ound: Ci

fa Coi

68 CHEVY II NOVA
prices start lower than any other
economy car so generously sized.
Nova is big enough for a family on vacation, yet it slips into parking spaces
others pass by. With its new wide
stance and computer-tuned chassis,
Nova rides as silent and steady as cars
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�Friday, March 15, 1968

The Spectrum

Page Twenty

Congress resists troop buildup
WASHINGTON
President Johnson,
engaged in a wide-ranging review of Vietnam policy and strategy, finds that he
faces mounting congressional resistance

before making any major decisions. But
virtually all members emphasized serious

levels in the war zone.
During their more than

bers were demanding a reassessment of
U.S. policy in Southeast Asia before any
major escalation is undertaken. Rep. Paul
Findley (R.-Ill.) said he had obtained 120
co-sponsors
about one-quarter of the
House’s 433 membership for his resolution
calling for a reappraisal of the 1964 Gulf
of Tonkin Resolution
A resolution introduced by Rep. William Moorhead, (D.-Pa„) opposing the sending of any additional troops to Vietnam,
picked up a score of co-sponsors.
Just how much effect the nationally
televised and broadcast display of frustration and discontent evident in the Senate hearings would have on Johnson’s
ultimate decisions probably depended to
some extent on the President’s assessment
of how accuratsly it represented general

—

doubts about any escalation.
Some of their war doubts spilled over
_

11 hours of

questioning of Secretary of State Dean
Rusk, members of the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee underlined the anguish and uncertainty of many Americans
regarding the wisdom of becoming more
heavily involved in the inconclusive
struggle.
The President’s initial answer to the
committee’s challenge was to condemn

the highest price of all and, ultimately,
it is unpayable.”
Committee members had no positive
policy suggestions to offer beyond urging
the administration to consult with them

•

•

•

Washington
Warsaw

f
,

Arch

Mississippi

rivals

from our

win services by Duono Champion

Students restless in Poland

McCarthy, RFK in spotlight

“Warsaw students are not alone,” burned
newspapers and ripped down posters

New Hampshire
NEW HAMPSHIRE
put the spotlight on Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy, but the shadow was being cast
by Sen. Robert F, Kennedy.
“I’m reassessing the possibility of whether I will run against President Johnson,”
Kennedy said after a hard look at McCarthy’s 42% share of the New Hampshire
Democratic vote.
Although Johnson scoffed at the interpretation of a 40% vote as a victory, the
Minnesota Senator’s showing obviously
impressed more than his partisans. Kennedy’s statement was ample evidence of
that.
McCarthy took the news of Kennedy’s
statement with aplomb. He said “a lot
of politicians are reassessing in view of
last night’s vote.”

witnesses said.

Johnson and McCarthy meet next as
officially listed candidates in the Wisconsin primary April 2. McCarthy was on
the New Hampshire ballot, but Johnson
was a write-in, a situation that gave some

—

Fighting rages
There was no immediate official report
on the rioting in Krakow, about 155 miles
south-southwest of Warsaw. But informed
western sources said the center of the
city was sealed off and police and students were fighting at mid-afternoon.
Witnesses said about 3,000 students
from the University of Krakow, founded
in 1364 by Pope Urban V, massed in a

park and

then formed ranks for the?
march in sympathy with their colleagues
in Warsaw.
The students carrieid posters saying

carrying press reports of the riots in the
Polish capital.
Hundreds of police and plainclothesmen
intercepted the marchers, using batons to
beat them back and the fight was on, the

jr

A pensive Sen. William Fulbright (left)
chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, rests his chin on his
hands as his committee listened to Secretary of State Dean Rusk for the second
straight day. Secretary Rusk (right)
takes a drink of water during the
committee interrogation which featured
sometimes heated exchanges between
Rusk and committee members

-UPI Telephoto

new Hampshire

:ompiled

—

-4

public opinion.

*

WARSAW
A wave of student unrest
swept over more Polish cities this week
with thousands of youths battling riot
police in the streets of the ancient university city of Krakow in southern Poland.
The Krakow clash erupted during a
march in support of fellow students in
Warsaw, scene of similar violence during
the past few days. Sympathy demonstrations also were reported in Poznan,
Gdansk and Lublin.
Steel-helmeted police patrolled the
streets of Warsaw during the day while
about 8,000 students met with university
authorities to press their demands for
more student freedoms and civil liberties.
Informants said the battle began when
police tried to stop students marching
on the university and spread to the old
section of the city where fighting lasted
several hours.
Reports said peaceful meetings were
held in sympathy with the Warsaw students in Glicice, Lodz and Wroclaw.

*

—

what he called the “new-fashioned kind”
of isolationism “that grows from weariness and, impatience.” Whatever its kind,
he told a Veterans of Foreign Wars dinner Tuesday night, “isolationism exacts

■“

/

_

Wisconsin next

solace to his backers.

Kennedy’s announcement took some of
the edge off the impending confrontation
in Wisconsin. It is too late for the New
York Democratic Senator to get on the
Wisconsin ballot, but if he decides to
oppose Johnson, the gathering of Vietnam
War critics around McCarthy obviously
would be shaken.
The next ballot on which Kennedy’s
name could appear would be for the
Nebraska “all star” test May 14. Kennedy
earlier asked state officials to keep him

off that ballot, blit the secretary of state
has until March 15 to arbitrarily list the
Senator as a candidate. That is also the
last date on which Kennedy could formally
disclaim his candidacy in Nebraska.
In Lincoln, officials said Kennedy’s aides
in Washington had informed them that the
Senator did not want to be placed on the
Nebraska ballot. Secretary of State Frank
Marsh said he would honor Kennedy’s
wish.
He is in a somewhat different position
in the May 28 Oregon primary., As of
now, Kennedy is listed as a candidate
and has until March 22 to file a disclaimer removing it.
As McCarthy’s New Hampshire feat introduced a new ferment into the Demo
cratic presidential situation, Richard M.
Nixon got a tighter grip on the leadership for the Republican nomination.
As a formal and active candidate, he
ran up an 8-to-l margin over Gov. Nelson
A. Rockefeller of New York, a write-in
candidate whose supporters had hoped
their man’s name would make up in part
for a tardy, sketchy campaign.
Pressure on Rocky
The GOP outcome put more pressure
on Rockefeller to decide whether he will
continue to rely on a draft to beat Nixon
or enter full force into the campaign.
Rockefeller’s most crucial decision falls
due on the same date as Kennedy’s
whether to let his name remain on the
Oregon ballot. Rockefeller already has
withdrawn from Nebraska.

—

Evers loses in Ole Miss
JACKSON, Miss.
A staunchly conservative Democrat, Charles Griffin, easily
defeated Negro leader Charles Evers in a
runoff for Congress that featured balloting almost strictly along racial lines.
It was the strongest showing this century by a Negro candidate for major
political office in Mississippi, and Evers
called it “a history-making occasion.”
Griffin, 41, was named to succeed his
boss of 18 years, now Gov. John Bell
Williams, as representative -of Mississippi’s Third Congressional District, where
white voter outnumber Negro voters 125,000 to 70,000.
Almost complete returns in the 12county district gave Griffin, Williams’
former congressional aide, 85,039 votes
to 42,684 for Evers, Mississippi’s foremost
Negro civil rights leader.
Evers, on leave of absence as state field
—

-UPI Telephoto

Near thing in
New Hampshire

A smiling Sen. Eugene McCarthy greets
his campaign workers atMcCarthy headquarters Tuesday after he stunned the
Democratic parly with his narrow loss
to President Johnson in the New Hampshire primary fhaf challenged the administration's Vietnam policy.

secretary for the National Association for
the Advancement of Colored People.
(NAACP), had led Griffin and five other
white candidates in a primary. But observers correctly predicted Griffin would
pick up the votes cast for the other can
didates in the followup voting.
Griffin, in his victory statement, pledged
to “provide all the people of our district
with dignified, honorable representation
at the national level.”
Evers saw encouragement in his defeat
and indicated he might try again for the
seat in the November general election.
Griffin will serve the remaining nine and
one-half months of Williams’ term.
“The mere fact that we were able to
get Negroes involved is a victory for us,"
Evers said. “The mere fact that we
stopped our opponent from running a
racist campaign shows a victory for us.”

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                    <text>University threatened as strike deadline nears
ognition of the CSEA as the representative for the state’s employees, excluding state Police
and the SUNY faculty.

by Barry Holtzclaw
Soartrum Fenturfi

\

Editor

Thursday looms as the showdown date in the wage dispute between the 155,000member Civil Service Employees Association and the State of New York. Unless a settlement can be reached on the upgrading of salaries of 28,000 clerical-employees in the state
and in local school districts, a state-wide strike is threatened.
If it occurs, the strike would be a “disruptive action” unprecedented in the Civil
Service organization’s 57-year history, and would effectively shutdown the entire State University system.
There are approximately 1500 members of CSEA at this University, and, according
to Edward Dudek, president of the local chapter, most would be willing to comply with the
strike tactic.
“The fever is rather high,” ations bogged down. He emphaclaim as the sole representative
sized, “that like any union group, agent for Civil Service employees
he noted
A 'virus' walkout?
One employee, who chose to
withhold his name, said the
“strike” would most probably
take the form of a massive
“virus” epidemic, and would be
“symbolic”-—that is, for a specific
length of time, probably two days
to a week.
Mr. Dudek, a mechanic/technician in the Materials Lab,, Parker Engineering, added that if a
strike were to occur, it “would
not be a total shutdown.”
What he termed “certain necessary things,” such as the heating
plant, would not be involved in
the work halt, because of the
danger involved.
He did add, however, that a
walkout’s effect on other important but perhaps not absolutely
necessary aspects of the University,—the Hayes Annexes, for example—would be “very disruptive.”

Mr. Dudek said he could not
comment on the probabaliity of a
strike action, even if the negoti-

Negotiations in progress

Friday, the New York State
Court of Appeals
the highest ployees Relations Board, whose
court in the state—upheld Gov- responsibility it is to hear comernor Rockefeller’s Sept. 14 rec- plaints of this nature, held

Negotiations on wage proposals

had begun earlier this year, but
were halted on court order. The
court ruled that there could be
no negotiations as long as CSEA’s

Friday's court ruling

o

Vol

Staff Reporter

bers to a new Student Coordinating Council (SCO: A president,
two vice-presidents, a treasurer

and nine coordinators. The President will preside over all meetings of the SCC and the Student
Polity.

Staff

Reporter

The significance of using waiver cards to facilitate the new voluntary fee system has been explained by Mr. William H. Calhoun, State University of Buffalo

Bursar.
To alleviate

the problem of
misunderstanding a student’s intentions, he said, authorization in
the form of a voluntary fees card
is necessary before money can
be alotted to athletics or student

activities.
Mr. Calhoun explained that as
an

accounting

procedure,

stu-

dents are charged at the beginning of the semester only for
basic fees. If the student decides
not to pay the voluntary fees, his
account remains the same. If he
agrees to pay either fee, the
charge is then added to his account, Students who do not return the voluntary fees card are
sent cards a second time by the
bursar’s office in hopes that they
will be returned at this time.
Sometimes a student sends in
money intended for activities or
athletics, but does not sign the
voluntary fees card. That money

is credited to the student’s account; the various student activities do not receive the money
in this situation. In this way, the
accounting department is assured
against allotting money without
specific authorization by a student, according to the Bursar.
Mr. Calhoun further explained
that the advantages of fees are
given to the Student Association
as often

as possible.

If a student

first decides not to pay the voluntary fees and then changes his
mind, the fee may be paid and
alotted.
On the other hand,
agrees to pay the

if a 'student
fees and
changes his mind, this request
will not be honored by the Bursar’s Office, for the student has
possibly taken advantage of the
various activities. This latter
change can be made, however,
by a request to the Student Association.
All students who haven’t sent
in the voluntary fees card are
urged by Mr. Calhoun to do so.
Cards are available at the Bursar’s Office in Hayes Annex, and
on Fridays in the basement of
Foster Hall where I.D. cards are
validated.

1968

Tuesdiym/ffiR$IT#8

18, No. 40

New era in student gov't to begin

Thus when elections are held
March 26 and 27, a new era in
student government will begin.
Students will be electing 12 mem

by Debbie Price

RECEIVED

Constitution approved

Polity.

Spectrum

the right of public employer Please turn to Page 10

WAR

ing the much discussed Student

Some fees never reach activities

•

State University of New York at Buffalo

The Student Senate is nearing
the end of its existence. By a
vote of 1136 to 913 the referendum for a new Student Association constitution was approved
Thursday and Friday, establish-

down the University.

The Taylor Law provides for;

The SpECTI^UM
by Jay Schreiber

Strike?

Taylor Law

—

Spectrum

Edward Dudek heads a union
that—if it strikes—couId shut

The State Supreme Court ruled
5-0 in favor of Governor Rockefeller. But on the basis of the
apparent strength of the complaints, the Relations Board appealed the decision. This led to
last week’s ruling
The major “contender” for representational status with CSEA is
the New York State Public Employees Council of the AFL-CIO.
with a state wide membership between 10,00 and 15,000.

posedly guaranteed in the Taylor
Law.
The CSEA had been challenged
in its role of “unchallenged representation” by several smaller
organizations. The Public Em-

was unresolved.

vice pay increases of 8%.
The increase would only affect
11,500 of the 28,000 lower-grade
Civil Service employees. The
other 16,500, mostly clerk-typists,
stenographers, and secretaries
who have been seeking an upgrading for two years, are, in the
words of Mr. Dudek, “being discriminated against.”
Most of these workers operate
at “poverty-level wage s,” he
charged. Many of them earn as
little as $3325 a year.

recommendeed that the issue be

The CSEA, which for 57 yearshas been offering proposals on
behalf of state employees, gained
new significance when the Taylor
Law went into effect Sept. 1.
The selection of organizations
to represent employees in collective negotiations is a fundamental
principle behind the rights sup-

this one will have to make a decision.”

Negotiations, now under way
between CSEA representatives
and representatives from the Civil
Service Commission, the Department of Budget, and the Division of Classification and Compensation, center around disagreement over Governor Rockefeller’s
February proposals for Civil Ser-

lengthy hearings last fall, with
all interested parties being heard.
After the hearings, the Board

The coordinators will each represent particular areas of student interest: National Student
Association, Academic Affairs,
Student Services, Public Affairs,
International Affairs and Student
Rights. Two new Student Coordinators
one upperclassman and
one freshman
will also be
elected.
Polity has final say
Consisting of all daytime undergraduate students, the polity
will meet at least once each
month. A petition of 2% of the
student body mandates the president to call a polity meeting
—

—

within one week.
The SCC can pass legislation by
a three quarters vote (10 out of
13), However, the polity will have
the right to final review on whatever legislation is formulated by

the SCC. The Polity can also initiate new programs of its own. In
both cases a simple majority of
the Polity is needed for decision,
though 40 members must be present for a quorum.
If students object to the legislation passed by the SCC or the
Polity they can acquire a peti-

tion of objection. Submitted with
signatures of 2% of the student
body, it will require the President to call a meeting within two
weeks to re-examine the question
or submit the issue to a referendum. The SCC by a majority vote
and the Polity by a petition of
2%, can also bring legislation to
a student referendum.
Some students loudly objected
to the formation of a Polity. They

felt it would create mob rule by
various activist groups on campus, During the referendum days,
the heaviest electioneering of the
year was experienced, “Vote Yes”
and “Vote No” flyers hit students wherever they turned.
Infractions noted
According to Bob Sikorski of
the Student Senate Elections
Committee, much of the literature

ond day of voting, March 27.
Students interested in forming
a party should register with the
Elections Committee in Norton
205 and present the name of their
chairman. This is necessary if

(he party wants to reserve a room

in Norton during the day as a
recognized student group.
The parties will be place on
the ballot in order according to
the number of signatures on the
petition
the presidential can-

passed out was unsigned. He said
both sides were guilty of this

didate of the

infraction of election rules.
Those

students interested in
running for one of the new offices should obtain a petition

parly.

All students interested in learning more about how the new student government will operate will
have the opportunity to learn at
two open meetings in the Millard
Fillmore Room from 3 to 5 p.m.
tomorrow, and from 7 to 9 p.m,
Thursday. Under special discussion will be the new Student

from Mrs. Marko in Room 225
Hall, March 13 thru 18.
Five hundred signatures will be
needed to place a candidate on
the ballot.
Campaigning will start March
21 and continue through the secNorton

Polity.

Faculty-Senate approves
resolution of denunciation
by

Joel Kleinman

Spectrum Staff Reporter

A resolution condemning the war in Vietnam as “illegal,
contrary to American principles . . . and genocidal
was
...”

adopted Friday by the University Faculty Senate.
The action highlighted a special meeting of the Faculty
Senate called to discuss the recent draft law revision that
eliminated most graduate student deferments.

Perhaps the strongest denunciation of the war by a
major American University,
the resolution “strongly urges
the . . . Administration to . .
seek immediate negotiations
for an immediate cessation
of armed conflict and destruction in Vietnam, immediate
de-escalation of the military
forces present and immediate
relief of human suffer
ing

mediately to relieve the stress

ancl indignation existent among
deprived pcople of this na

{**

Consolidated

.

Pointing to the “severity of the
crisis that exists in our nation
between the affluent and the
economically, socially, and politically deprived,’” the resolution
“urgently recommends that , . .
action programs be instituted im-

'

A consolidation of two separate resolutions introduced by
Biology Professor Harold L. Segal and Dean of the Graduate
School Fred M. Snell, the evolution passed by a vote of 91 to 37
after heated debate concerning
the relevancy of such unilateral
action on the war issue.
The Segal-Snell approach to the
issue was termed irrelevant by
several Senate members who implored the body to consider edu-

#

cational rather than international
concerns.

Please turn to Page 10

�Page Two

The Spectrum

Tuesday, March 12, 1968

Booklet to be released Supi sought
givingcourse information Draft Resistance Union holds forum
)tf

by

In an effort to make the academic curriculum “more
responsive and relevant to today’s students,” a Student
Course and Teacher Evaluation (to be called the “Buffalo
Scate”) has been completed here by a Student Association
committee.
Based on the results of last
semester’s questionnaires, the
study will go on sale in booklet
form Monday in Norton Hall.

365 courses reviewed
The 196-page study of 365
courses was conducted for undergraduate daytime students in
three Faculties. The first part of
the study was completed by the

professors in these Faculties
Social Seienes, Mathematics and

—

Natural Sciences, and Arts and
Letters in the form of a fact
—

sheet.
The fact sheet contains information about the number and
type of exams given during the
semester, the system for deriving
grades and the content of the
course.
The

part is concerned
with the response that students
made to the IBM questionnaire
Dec. 14 and 15. The percentage
of studertts that responded to
each question on the form is indicated. As a general indication

seflond

of the attendance pattern, the
number of students registered
in the course and those present
at the time the evaluation was
conducted is also recorded.

Representative comments
Geri

Goldstein conducted

the

study along with co-chairmen
Penny Bergman and Harvel Organck. Miss Goldstein considers
the third section of the course
evaluation the most important.
This part is a reproduction of
students comments on courses

and instructors. Those responses
that were the most representative
were selected.
All comments
made by students have been

sent to the appropriate profes-

This is the first time a study
of this kind has been successfully

conducted at the University. Miss
Goldstein hopes that through ad-

vertising revenue from businesses
in the Buffalo area enough funds
will be obtained to make The
Scafe a self-sufficient, bi-annual
publication. After obtaining Administration approval, $4000 was
contributed to the project by the
Master
University
Subvention
Fund in addition to $2500 from

the Student Association.
Miss Goldstein mentioned that

when presented with the idea
of a student course evaluation,
the Administration reacted enthusiastically. She expressed particular gratitude to the Provosts
for their cooperation.

Help is needed

Aside from financial obstacles,
encountered difficulties within the University itself.
She noted that more people were
needed to help organize the information taken from the thousands of completed questionThe Scate

naires.

Students didn't seem to take
the evaluation too seriously, she
commented, because “they didn’t
know where it was going, perhaps fearing it was for the faculty member; also, IBM antagonizes
people.”

Miss Bergman commented on
the advantages of the booklet:
’’Before The Scate, the only way
a student could know about a
course before he registered for
it was through the grapevine.
Often he would sign up for a
course in ignorance and then be
disappointed. The Scate formalizes the grapevine by presenting
the opinions of students regard
ing their courses and teachers,
“Although it is not a cure-all,
the chaos of Drop and Add day

and the confusion of pre-registration will be lessened. Although
the evaluations can be greatly re-

fined and sophisticated, the book
is valuable in that it is a giant
step toward academic reform.”

Campus security funds needed
ALBANY (GNS)
Additional
funds to beef up campus security
forces to cope with student demonstrations, drugs and general
unrest is the Slate University’s
"most urgent need,” Chancellor
Samuel B. Gould told the Senate
Finance and Assembly Ways and
Means Committee hearings on
the University's budget.
—

He said that “the real need”
was for additional personnel and
that he was planning to make a
specific request for funds totalling $975,000 in the supplemental
budget.

“When something serious occurs on a campus, the blame falls
on us,” the Chancellor said in
pointing out he had been requesting additional help since 1965 but
that his requests had annually
been refused.
He also said that he had been
pressing in vain to upgrade col
lege security and safety forces
whose salaries range from $4725
for a patrolman to roughly $6000
for a security chief in a large
campus center.

Contrasts Buffalo, Cornell
He contrasted the force at privately operated Cornell University numbering 82 at salaries
ranging from $5000 for a watchman to $17,600 for a director to
the State University of Buffalo
which has comparable personnel
of 44 earning from $3645 to
$7980.

He noted that Buffalo’s problems in an urban area with 20,795

full or part
time students are
much greater than Cornell’s with
14.752 students and on a more
-

compact campus in a much smaller city.

Questioned about funds for an
expanded central Administration,
the Chancellor cited as one of his
major needs an associate dean
who would be responsible for dir
ecling the force of resident asmostly graduate stusistants
dents
who hold supervisory
responsibilities in dormitories.
—

—

"This whole field needs exploring.” Hr, Gould explained. “The
host students don't always want
to take this type of work. You’re
always in trouble when someone
lias to serve as in informer.”

“Perhaps the trouble' is that
problems today are more
complex and 20-year-olds aren’t
equipped to deal with them,” added Dr. Harry W. Porter, Provost.
the

Asked about the expected impact on the draft, Dr. Gould said
there was little to go on but that
he foresaw the possibility that
among males 407: of the graduate students, from 70 to 80 r; of
the agricultural and technical institute students and 50 r,r of the
community college students might

be called.
He pleaded with the committees

not to make budget cuts in faculty and staff for w'hat might be
a very temporary situation and
was sure to be followed by increased enrollment pressures once
the Asian conflict subsided.

Marlene Kozuchowski

Assistant Campus

Editor

An open meeting to gain support for the Buffalo Draft Resist-

ance Union will be held in the
Fillmore Room.
A group of graduate students
hopes to bolster membership in
a Union which takes a political
stand against the war and the
draft. The formation of a draft
also
counselling
service
is
planned.

faculty-graduate
A
student
panel, moderated by Bill Maryl,
will assess the current political

situation in Vietnam and discuss
the campus-wide strike called
for March 19 to 21.
The agenda for the 7:30 p.m.
meeting includes four presentations:
•

“American Genocide” by So-

ciology Professor

helm;

Sidney Will-

“University of Buffalo and
the War in Vietnam,” by Bill
Yates, graduate student in Edu•

cation;

“Strike for Knowledge—Stop
the War” by English Professor
Robert Hass, and
“The Buffalo Draft Resistance Union” by Robert Cohen,
•

•

graduate student in Philosophy,
The open discussion following
the panel will focus on crucial issues. Intellegent political action
is initiated through “understanding of the various political forces
at play,” Mr. Cohen said.

Trained corps
The Draft Desistance Union
was organized in the Buffalo

area about

a month ago as a
movement “not to restore the 2-S
but to see that no American is
drafted,” he said.

A trained corps of about 20
counsellors are prepared to offer all types of alternatives to induction: including conscientious
objection, problems of migration
to Canada, medical and psychological excuses and explain the
intricasies of the Selective Service System.
Mr. Cohen believes that the
Union will “substitute collective
rational and well-thought action
for individual groping around.”

Graduate students became in-

volved, he explained, because the

recent Selective Service decision
“brought th war to the ooorsteps
of the University.”

Through information services,
it is hoped that smaller versions
of the draft union will be established in dormitories, fraternities and other living units. A
statement distributed by Draft
Union members called for “complete draft information, frequent
discussions and soul sessions to
plan appropriate small-scale actions.”

"Future mortgaged"
The statement included this
“Until recently, we
could still be students, safe in
our educational retreat preparing for careers in the Sheltered
Society. We can no longer think
in these terms . . . Our lives are
no longer our own, our future
mortgaged to the needs of Amercomment:

ica’s militai
During the campus-wide “Strike
for Knowledge-Stop the War”
scheduled for March 19 to 21, the
Union will hold a number of
panel discussions with University
and guest speakers on the draft,
the military situation in Vietnam,
the Report of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders, black power, and the antiwar movement.

Expansion planned
The

Draft Resistance

Union

will eventually expand into the
Buffalo community, establishing

similar informational centers.
Anti-draft and war protests among
high school students will be supported.

Mr. Cohen explained that the
Union will not take a “middle
class position,” but encourage all
classes to resist participation “in
the reptilian war in Vietnam.”

Similar resistance unions have
been organized throughout the
country and involve thousands of
students. Mr. Cohen previously
worked with a state-wide organization in Wisconsin which had
branches in nine colleges and
universities.

Members of the Draft Resist-

ance Union are currently circulating a petition which explains its
activities of counselling and draft
resistance “as an affirmative of
loyalty (to the country) because
they aim at redeeming rather
than smothering human potentiality here in the United States
and around the world.”

VISTA to hold recruiting drive in
Norton; panel discussion to be held
Volunteers in Service to America (VISTA) will hold a recruiting drive March 18 through 22.
Tables will be set up in Norton
Hall where students may obtain
applications and ask questions
of the VISTA volunteers.
A panel on the VISTA program
will be held at 3 p.m. tomorrow.
Panelists will include Dr. Frank
P. Besag, moderator, VISTA vol-

become part of the community
where they work. Volunteers go
into already existing organizations, working on specific issues
and immediate problems of their
community. These issues usually
center around housing, education
and legal services as a major
means to eliminating poverty.

VISTA’s goal is to get organ

izational structures set up in order for people to become better

able, better qualified to work
the social machinery to end pov
erty.”

Teachers in courses

relating

to social sciences and social work
interested in having a VISTA
worker speak to their class should
call Dr Fink.

unteers from the Buffalo

and
New York City area, Randy Porter of the GSA, and Nick Ingram,
VISTA representative. The forum
will deal with various aspects of
working in VISTA, the experiences of veteran workers and application information.
A film. “Gadfly in the Ghetto”
or “While 1 Run This Race,"
with Charlton Heston will be
shown in the Conference Theater
at 11 a m. each day during the
week.

Interviews for applicants will
be held March 21 and 22, Students may obtain applications
beforehand from Dr. Jerome Fink
in the Placement Office (3311).

Eligibility requirements
Students 18 years or older are
eligible to apply. Couples without
dependents under 18 may serve
together. Volunteers are given
allowances for food, housing, personal expenses, plus a stipend of
$50

for each month served.

Volunteers serve in any of the
U. S. and urban areas, migrant
camps, Indian reservations, Job
Corps training centers and in
the field of community and mental health. The volunteer works
one year following a six week
training program.
Said
Mr. Ingram, former
VISTA volunteer. "VISTA volunteers live in the Community and

Among the
j
impoverished
*

.

.

-

VISTA volunteers work among
the poor in America. Here, two
volunteers consul Southern
Negro. Recruiters will be on
campus March 18-22.

�Tuesday, March 12, 1968

The

Spectrum

Page Three

Academic reform being sought by campus groups
by Jay Schreiber
Staff

to compromise in what would be
a more agreeable position to the

Reporter

A number of student-based groups are attempting to im- left.” So far the union has lacked
plement various academic reforms at the State University of both the organization and opBuffalo. Three groups presently involved in reform have met portunity to demonstrate that
force.
with varied success; apparently the greatest determining facSome objectives are being
tor is a group’s relation to the University’s formal structure. sought by all three groups. They
The Academic Affairs Committee and the Ranking and Grading
Committee are two groups which
work within the accepted and recognized framework. Both are hoping to bring about measures that
will eliminate many of the existing rules and guidelines affecting the student.
Giving students a larger voice
within each department is the

concern of the Academic Affairs

Its
co-chairmen,
Committee.
Henry Chaikin and Daryl Rosenfeld, have been trying to stimulate students to meet with the
faculty and gain representation
on various planning committees
within each department.
The Ranking and Grading Committee consists of 10 members,

three of whom, Robert Woodruff.
Robert Weiner and Neil Slatkin,
are students. They recently completed a comprehensive report on
proposed revisions in the grading system. They expect that
many of the proposals will be
put into effect by the fall term,
notably the new Pass-Fail system.

Independent Union
The third and most recentlyformed group is the All Academic
Union. Completely independent
and somewhat informal in nature, its organizers, Steve Halpern
and Danny Rosenthal, are trying
to establish a powerful radical
force. In Mr. Halpern’s words, it
“will force the existing structure

all know it. Yet there seems to be
no desire to try to coordinate
efforts.
Mr, Chaikin's goal is to open
channels of communication between faculty and students. His
committee has achieved success

in the Anthropology, Philosophy,
Geography and Psychology Departments. Students have already
formed a faculty-recognized advisory committee in the Psychology Department. Mr. Chaikin is
still faced with the problem of
negative student response; “Nobody from the Math or Engineering Departments has contacted
me. We can’t mobilize students
without knowing who they are.
You can’t be a watchdog. If students are stimulated then they

will take interest.”

Two points of attack

dateline news. Mar. 12
Secretary of State Dean Rusk has flatly
WASHINGTON
rejected charges the administration lied about some details of the
1964 Tonkin Gulf incident that preceded the massive U.S. comitment
—

in Vietnam.
“I am convinced,” he said Monday, that North Vietnam torpedo
boats on American destroyers in- the gulf. Two days after the
second of two reported Communist attacks, U.S. planes raided North
Vietnamfor the first time.
Rusk and some of the administration’s bitterest Vietnam War
critics clashed in an atmosphere of high drama at a hearing of the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee, headed by Sen. J. William Ful-

bright (D„ Ark.)

An anticipated clash between Rusk and Fulbright came quickly
after Fulbright accused administration officials of giving the Senate
an “untrue” version of the Aug. 2 and 4, 1964, Tonkin incidents in
order to get approval of wider war authority for President Johnson,
Fulbright said the North Vietnamese, knowing the administration story was false, may well have concluded to carry out more
attacks no matter what the United States did.
Rusk rejected this line of argument. He also took strong issue
with a Fulbright statement that the administration had incited the
Communists to further adventures in Southeast Asia.

WASHINGTON
The Supreme Court has upheld an order
requiring desegregation of all prisons and jails in Alabama.
—

The state had urged a modification to assure wardens that
they had reasonable discretion to separate Negroes and whites when
safety demanded it.
The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) argued that this
a special three
discretion was provided already by a lower court
—

—

judge panel in Montgomery which issued the desegregation order
Dec. 12, 1966.
The over all order required immediate desegregation of honor
farms, youth centers, hospitals and educational programs. It allowed
six months for integration of jails and minimum security institutions
and a year for maximum security prisons.

Mr. Chaikin respects the All
Academic Union. In referring to
them he said: “The difference between us is that they oppose the
Administration from outside the
structure. It makes for two different points of attack. It’s hard
for me to disassociate myself. I
can’t work with the administrators and then attack them.”
Mr. Halpern agrees: “A lot of
good stuff is going on in the system. It takes years though. They
are an advisory group, nothing
is done about what they recom-

mend.

“The purpose of education is

to stimulate and guide our self-

development, not hinder or mold
it to other’s preconceptions. The
interested students want an equal
voice. If the rest of the students
don't care, forget them, ignore
them.”

Diverse issues
The Union’s demands now focus
on a number of issues. One is
the pending dismissal of William
Harrell, a professor in the Sociology Department. Mr. Halpern
and others in the Union feel his
firing was unjust and that Mr.
Harrell is indeed one of the best

ATTENTION

Seniors or Grad Students
in Social Sciences and/or
those with group work experience. Volunteers are needed to work with adolescent
psychiatric patients on a 1 to
basis.
Contact Larry Shohet at
886-5600 ext. 327 Mon., Wed.,
Thurs. 1:30-4:30

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"Bureaucratic holdups"

Steve Halpern

Co-organizer of All Academic
Union says group "will force
the existing structure to compromise in what would be a
more agreeable position to the
left."
teachers in the Department. “We
would like to set a precedent of
having the University offer him
back,” said Mr. Halpern.
Mr. Harrell has reportedly
signed to teach next semester at
the University of Colorado.
A second topic of Union concern is the proposed accreditation
of any experimental courses that
attract 10 to 15 students and a
professor, Mr. Halpern wants to
see this idea implemented by the
fall term. “Bureaucracy and red
tape is no excuse for not having things working by September.”

“We don’t want the tokenism of
one student on one committee,”
said Mr. Halpern. “We’re going
to ask for equal student representation on every committee that
has any functional relation to
the student. It’s important. Too
many faculty are up tight about
tenure: they don’t want to sit
with students—that’s nigger.”

2 Performances: 7 P.M. &amp; 9:30 P.M.
All Seats Reserved $5.50 $4.50-$3.50
Tickets on sale now at Buffalo
Festival Ticket Office, Hotel StatlerHilton Lobby; U. of B. Norton Hall;
all Audrey &amp; Del’s Record Shops;
Brundo’s, Niagara Falls.
*

much “busy work” for the
student to experience "other good
things offered.”
However, their, first meeting
held March 4 did not attract the
numbers or the unification that
Mr. Halpern admits is necessary
for his Union to be effective.
About 100 students attended the
meeting. The dialogue between
students was open but without
any clear direction. Many presented their own gripes and left.
The only question discussed comprehensively was whether the
Union should center itself on one
issue at a time. No decision was
made. The only action taken was
the formation of a Steering Committee.
on too

■

Spectrum

The Vietnam war and the draft
are also subjects under fire from
the Union. Mr. Halpern feels that
both of these hamper the learning process in the intellectual climate of the University. He sees
the four year concept as piling

Speedy Gonzalez
IS COMING TO CAMPUS!

Meanwhile,
University
the
Ranking and Grading Committee
is awaiting approval of their mandate for a new grading system
from the Faculty Senate, ft has
been called by President Martin
Meyerson, "the best proposed
grading program I’ve seen for a
large university.”
If the Faculty Senate approves
the system, it will be up to Admissions and Records to administer the revisions. One proposal
to have whole class sections graded completely pass-fail will probably not go into effect until the
spring semester, 1969. The reason for this is that pre-registration will start before the faculty can vote on the new formula.
The

All Academic Union has
stated they are against this and
“other types of administrative
and bureaucratic holdups.” Mr.
Halpern feels, “You have to demand. You have to say this is
right, that if you can’t handle
it, then we’ve got to come in and
take it." What form of direct
action they intend using is unclear. “Mill-in” and student strike
are the most commonly heard
terms.

PIZZA
BOCCE

TF 3-1345

�Tuesday, March 12, 1968

The Spectrum

Page Four

A faculty awakened

Before the Faculty Senate of this University took their
unprecedented stand against the Vietnam War Friday, most
students had pretty well given up the idea of looking to the
in the face America’s most blind stnrggterfaculty
Indeed, before the votes were cast, representatives of
the Graduate Student Association and Student Association
condemned the faculty and administration “for their silence
in the face of the moral and political bankruptcy of the war.”
A silence, so it was said, that had continued unbroken until
the latest National Security Council decision threatened the
very existence of the university.
There are some faculty members who have spoken out
against the war since its inception; there are others who have
been complacent to look on from the confines of their ivory
towers and sparkling labs, saying nothing. Both groups were
heard at Friday’s meeting; there was great division. For
some, the truth of America’s misordered priorities, the truth
of her moral bankruptcy, the truth of the horror that is Vietnam, has been slow to reach home.
What seems important now is that we, not as just students, or as just faculty members or administrators—but we
'. . . and. voila, we haul out a dove
as a University Community—are awakening and beginning
this is a dove!'
to respond to the crises which threaten the nation’s soul.
And it seems that we, as educated and rational beings,
can and should now begin—as a community—to work toward
burgher
those goals the faculty has called for: “immediate negotiaby Schwab
tions for an immediate cessation of armed conflict and destruction in Vietnam, immediate de-escalation of the military
forces present and immediate relief of human suffering;”
‘Twas only yesterday that The Burgher, wanderto relieve the stress and indignaand “action programs
ing aimlessly about the campus, came upon a sign
tion existent among the deprived people of this nation.”
announcing the upcoming Military Ball. Not at all
Faculty Senate, your long-silent voice is welcome in the taken aback by such an occurrence, I simply added
fight to “restore confidence in this, our United States of the fact to my vast store of knowledge about camAmerica.” If you are truly serious in your resolve, if you are pus affairs.
The Military Ball did not forget about me, howready to accept that “business as usual” cannot much longer ever.
After an evening of typical burghering at a
go on, if you are now ready to face these crises—we welcome local pub,
I returned home and fell asleep. What
your support.
followed was a ghastly nightmare, perhaps a prem...

a dove . .

.

I'll have

to

ask you to imagine

Readers
writings

’

the

...

The effort must continue

onition, which I will now relate.
It all began, impossible as it may seem, with the
dashing Burgher picking up his lovely fiance, Agnes
Goodwitch, at lovely Goodwitch Hall. This was followed by a quick trip to the very site of the Mil-

Now that students have approved the Student Association restructuring proposal, every effort should be made to itary Ball.
insure a smooth transition from the present structure.
As we entered—me in my ruffled shirt, her in
With elections slated for the end of this month, it is her miniskirt —heads twisted for a gooder gander
the each of us. Once osmosed, I began to notice
important that students learn all they can about the candi- at
division in the ballroom, a dichotomy of the crowd.
dates so that we can elect a capable Coordinating Council.
On one side stood overbearing colonels with stale
Two open meetings will be held this week so that inter- onion breath; on the other, the unmilitary persons
ested students can become more familiar with the new system of simpler formality and dress.
Thinking this to be a bit odd, I questioned one
and how it will operate. Representatives of the Student Assoof the less irascible of the colonels.
ciation will be in the Millard Fillmore Room from 3 to 5 p.m.
“I prithee, mister colonel sir,” I boldly began,
tomorrow and from 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday to discuss the Polity, “could you tell me why ’tis that you and your group
the Council and their respective functions. Everyone should are doing here?”
“We’re advisors,” he said, putting the matter in
try to attend at least one of these meetings.
a kernel; amending, however, with this: “We
There are two items worth noting about last week’s refwere asked here to quell any threat of a takeover
erendum. First is the fact that the new system passed by by the Neighborhood Leaflet Flingers (NLF); an
the relatively narrow margin of 221 votes. There was no overarea radical group.”
whelming mandate.
“Why would anyone want to take over during
the midst of a Military Ball?” queried I,* quite
We must also note, however, that more than 2000 studubious of the whole matter.
dents voted. If that many students are interested in the re“Whaaa!” screamed he, apparently quite exstructuring, the promise for well-attended and effective
cited. “You question the advisability of such an
Polity meetings is good.
effort? Are you some kind of leftist fink? Do you
As we have said before, the Polity system is an experirealize that if the NFL takes over here they’ll not
ment—an experiment that can work if enough of an effort be satisfied? They’ll go on to take over one ball
after the next! Where can it end?”
is made.
“The Inferno?” I ventured.
Students have begun to make that effort; we can only
“You catch on quick kid,” he kerneled again.
hope that they continue.
“Gads! How many advisors do you think you’ll

Write your congressman
To the

Editor;

Recently I wrote my congressman and he asked
for encouragement for those Congressional members directing a peaceful achievement. Please print
this letter. May anyone who reads it and truly believes he is against our present policy, write his
congressman, or at least mine.
Support our men on capital hill, not Westmoreland’s. The text of the letter follows:
Thank you for your recent letter expressing your views concerning the Vietnam situation, and urging a halt to the
bombing. I have advocated policies aimed
at ending our unnecessary, unjustified
military involvement in Vietnam, and
have repeatedly stated that we must continue every effort to end the needless sacrifice of our fine young Americans and
the slaughter of Vietnamese, at the staggering costs which seriously impair our
vital domestic projects.
The continuing escalation has consistantly failed to produce the results its

advocates in the Administration have
claimed it would bring about and only
gets us in deeper and deeper,
I intend to continue to speak out until
there is peaceful negotiation for the conclusion of the war, and I hope that you
will continue to lend support and encouragement to those members of Congress who have advocated a Vietnam policy directed at achieving a peaceful
settlement of this war.
I appreciate your taking the time to
write and share your thoughts with me.
With every good wish,
Sincerely,

Daniel E. Button. M.C.
29th District, New York

need?”

Legal aid through JudiCorps
Richard “Max” McCarthy, congressman from the 39th
District, has introduced a resolution in the House of Representatives which could go a long way to provide needed legal
aid to indigent citizens. He terms the program the JudiCorps,
The basic concept of the JudiCorps lies in the employment of law school students, under the direction of faculty
and interested lawyers, to provide legal services for the
underprivileged and poor.
Mr. McCarthy’s proposal, while giving law students practical experience, will enable the poor to stand trial with the
benefit of counsel in criminal cases, and allow them to prossecute civil suits which they normally would have to forego
because of inadequate funds.
We believe that law students will provide this legal service, as Mr. McCarthy said, “with the same vigorous spirit
and high motivation as the Peace Corps.” Since no student
could represent more than one client at a time, it is very
likely that the legal aid given would surpass any aid that
those with insufficient funds could otherwise obtain.
We commend Mr. McCarthy for an excellent proposal
and hope that Congress will approve the JudiCorps. Every
citizen must have access to legal aid. The JudiCorps can give
the poor and indigent a reassurance of the effectiveness of
our legal and juridical processes in providing redress of
grievances.

“Well,” said he, lighting a cigar, “we started
with a handful at an early hour this evening, but
I’ve had to request more. 1 suspect that all those
weirdos on the other side of the room are NLF, you
see. We have to meet this threat!”
“I prithee! Will there be fighting?”
"Not unless they start something,” said the
Colonel.
"What will we use to defend the Military Ballroom?” asked I.
"Tactical nuclear weapons is what I’ve suggested,” he said matter-of-faetly. “My higherups in the
Pentupgon (sic. real sic) have previously said no
to that, but when we reach that cliff, we’ll jump
over."
“That's terrible!" I gasped. "Do you mean you
really want to use nuclear weapons? Won’t you
destroy the whole building?"
“Sometimes you have to wreck a whole ballroom
to save it,” was his frank reply.
Later in the evening I noticed some signs of
strain. The suspected Leaflet Flingers were beginning to cut in on the Angel Flight women. The
Colonel I'd spoken with earlier was visibly angry
when it happened to him.
“9c s *x$i”s !” he muttered.
“Don’t you think it would be wise to leave be-

fore tempers flare,” suggested I, in a mediating
manner.
, “We’re going to stick this out," said he, or my
name's not Wesley Moreland!” He then reached for
the phone.
“Hello, Angelbird?

Thank you,

Navy Vet
every
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Editorial

Business

�The Spectrum

Tuesday, March 12, 1968

BELOW OLYMPUS

Supports new constitution
To the Editor:

Hogwash! Balderdash! Great gobs of gelatinous
goo! What stronger words could I use to express
my indignation at those who question the spread
„f

(trace

rnntc

democracy

to

student

By

Pag* Fiv*

Interlandi

(KEfo) A K RACIST?

3^2

government?

What stronger words you ask? Poppycock! Horsefeathers! Fiddlesticks!
Today we have at least a few people who are
willing to brave the shocks and shells of controversay and evoke their opinions in strong and
forceful language. 0 where are you hiding, you
factions of uninformed irresponsible dissent? Are
you cowering in your caves of cowardice, fearful
of the awesome power—the righteous who interpret God’s word here on earth?
Or are you hiding behind the cloak of apathy,
from behind which you sally forth to place impediments in the path of those who spread truth,
justice and the American way?
By the time this missive is published, I pray
that the new constitution shall have been passed,
and that those who have championed the rights
of the responsible student shall have been vindicated. To those who would destroy this idyllic
system I can only say: Phooey!

Km
'mW.

UKETUIS

?mWs
pmm
nsr?

&lt;■

Peter G. Hart

Questions advisability of strike
To the Editor;

A

»*

i(W6RSfln«

"Teat me? Are you kidding? I'm 100% American —the Mayflower, D.A.R., pioneer ancestors and all that!"

How beneficent of Mr. Bill Maryl and his
cronies to disclose that no picket lines or other
barriers will be used to disrupt University operations during the proposed Student Strike.
As a non-affiliated adversary of Chairman Lyndon’s folly who has participated in various freedom demonstrations, I sincerely question the mean,
ingfulness of this strike. Once again I see the Uniby Mark Schneider
versity being used as a vehicle by some to maneuver us into the spotlight of radicalism which so
abysmally burned out during our abortive quasi
“Our colleges and universities must be regarded as basfree speech movement.
Why should faculty members be urged to cantions of our defense, as essential to the preservation of our
cel classes? Perhaps more socially relevant topics country and our way of life as supersonic bombers, nuclearshould be considered in the classrooms (in addition
powered submarines and intercontinental ballistic missiles.”
to the one Sociology of War course now being offered). But, are we not capable of independently This equasion of an institution traditionally defined as a place
for the gathering and dissemination of knowledge might have
studying this war, (and all war) and its nefarious
effects on the system? There is certainly not a been made by Curtis Lemay, but it wasn’t.
dearth of literature to preclude Intensive study by
those students who are interested in more than
John A. Hannah, President of and universities, obviously, do
much of the researching. The
Michigan State, said it in 1961,
their immediate draft status.
University of Pennsylvania is the
If interest on the campus is so intense, why and little did the average student
can’t these educational excursions occur on the
most notorious institution inknow then, he wasn’t kidding.
weekends, when interested students may have to For MSU was then in its eighth volved in chemical and biological
research for Vietnam, but it is
give up something more valuable than classtime.
year of supporting a fascist dicnot the biggest government conIs it perhaps that morality interferes with other tatorship by means of its Viettractor. That’s Johns Hopkins,
nam Project; this use of the
weekend studies and pursuits?
academy as a tool of the state is
which does $50,000,000 worth of
Marc Rosenbaum
the clearest,, example of univerwork for the Defense Department.
sitiy complicity in the U.S.’s cold
This Universitiy has contracted
and hot war against the world’s only $384,595 worth of defense
people.
work, but it cooperates in other
In “How the U.S. Got Involved
ways.
in Vietnam" Robert Scheer reIn 1948 the University asked
To tho Editor:
the Department of Defense to
counts MSU’s involvement from
Cries of student apathy are often heard coming the discovery of Diem to his overestablish Army, Navy and Air
from the musty confines of Clark Gym. The fact throw. It was an MSU political Force ROTC programs on campus.
thdt student attendance at sporting events and that science professor, Wesley Fishel,
Only the Air Force was interless and less people are paying athletic fees are who met the disillusioned Diem
ested, and it set up a department
some of Jim Peelle’s biggest worries. But at the in Japan, convinced him to come
here after insisting that the sturoot of student apathy lies that Athletic Departdent body approve their coming,
to the U.S. where by meeting the
ment itself with its infatuation with scholarshipright people, he became influenwhich was done in 1951 by a 3-1
collecting athletes and their total disregard for tial and was returned to his counvote. The program was compulthe “ordinary student.”
sory for freshmen through 1965,
try as premier of the fictional
The facilities at the University, poor as they nation South Vietnam. Fishel took
and now it has dwindled to 260
may be, were meant for use by all students; there- up residence in the palance and
cadets, of whom 98 were comfore, it seems ludicrous that the Athletic Depart- along with him went a team of
missioned as officers last year.
ment demands more and more of the students “advisors” paid by the federal
Only three universities commiswhile conceding less and less. A recent visit to government. Among the advisiors sioned more officers than did the
Clark Gym one night last week found no teams was the head of MSU’s School of
State University of Buffalo. So
practicing, no concerts, and no examinations. It Police Administration, who proclearly, this University cooperseemed a perfect opportunity for a few students cured weapons for the paramiliates with the same military used
to get some exercise on the basketball court. After tary police, which was engaged to oppress Dominicans, Guatema20 minutes a janitor came and turned out the in executing Diem’s political oplans and Vietnamese. As was
lights, thereby forcing everyone to leave. For once position. This introduction of pointed out in a C. Wright
Millthe gym was vacant, yet no was allowed to use it. American arms was a clear viosish article in the Buffalo InThere could be no cries of lack of facilities as an lation of the 1954 Geneva Agreesighter, this school is adminisexcuse, for the facilities were there, yet idle.
tered b ya business power elite.
ments. The 54-man team was genWhy doesn’t the State University of Buffalo erally involved in oiling the Diem
The military-industrial complex
allow students to use their facilities? A well- bureaucracy’s wheels and writing should be renamed “the militaryrounded education implies physical as well as menindustrial-university complex.”
reports. “I saw the job in Viettal fitness. If the Athletic Department expects nam primarily from the standsupport for its activities, it should offer something point of my own
Want to save a few bucks a
career developin return! Let the crying from the Athletic Depart- ment” a typical good German month? Don’t pay your federal
ment cease; there are 20,000 students at this Uni- MSUer told Scheer.
phone tax. Internal Rev doesn't
versity, not just the football and basketball teams.
President Hannah’s estimation
have the troops to track down
Frank Berger
of the university’s place in sociyour lousy $1.39 which goes diMai Dobrow
ety is probably correct, 90% of
rectly to support the war, and the
the government’s research outlay phone company is on your side.
Writers: Please be brief. Letters should not exceed is in military areas, according to If this doesn’t cripple the U.S.
300 words. All letters must be signed and the address Seymour Melman of Columbia,
economy, it might boost yours.
and telephone number of the writer must be included- Positive verification of authorship will be made
before a letter is printed.

the gadfly

Athletic Dept must play fair

Letters

will be kept in strict confidence.
he Spectrum will use initials or pen
name, if
requested. Bui anonymous
letters are never used.

The

Spectrum reserves the right to edit or delete
material submitted for publication, but the intent of
letters will not be changed.

The Sham

Quotes in

the news

WASHINGTON
Senator Robert F, Kennedy, questioning a
buildup of troops in Vietnam in a Senate speech: "Are we like the
God in the Old Testament that we can decide, in Washington, D. C.,
what cities, what towns, what hamlets in Vietnam are going to be
destroyed?"
—

by Martin Guggenheim

This column is an attempt to give a clear reason
for joining the Strike For Knowledge on March
17. 18, and 19. This is not a statement from the
organizers; it is my viewpoint.
The present structure of the University system
in the United Slates and the present role of the
University, as carried out by the faculty and students, is maintenance of American society. One
must, in order to be a good educator, question what
he should be teaching students, given the historical
period in which we live. What responsibility does
the teacher owe to himself and, finally, his students? Clearly, at present, the academic community and “academics" as a concept is divorced from
the heart of what America is. I asked a professor
of a law course here last week to comply with the
Strike and his response was that he owed his 114
students not only his attendance, but also a rather
strict interpretation of what they expected would be
the subject matter for the course.
He could not, in fact, find a way to bring the
domestic implications of the Vietnam war into a
discussion of law, without overbounding what he
thought the subject matter for the course should
be. It is precisely this logic that, has led the
United States to where it is and it is this logic
which, I contend, will lead to other destruction. The
University every year puts out “good”, citizens
as its contribution to society. For that, the University is rewarded handsomely. This “good” citizen
is of the mentality, of course, to accept the law as
the law, right or wrong. This “good” citizen is of
the mentality to kill for his country even though
he believes that death is an act of murder. It is
this University which produces these citizens. This
country needs, probably more critically than any
other country in the world, to change. It needs
its citizens to become morally conscious.

For a University to know this and not do anything about it is immoral and, incidentally, suicidal.
We are a nation of crazy men, and part of our
mania is our ability to sit in a sinking ship, watch
the water fill gradually, getting fuller, faster
each day, having a chance to reach out for a
branch, and smile as we pretend that it really isn’t
happening. It is happening! We must recognize
that. If the University continues to function in its
traditional role, it will be, analogously, smiling and
pretending.
Does a professor have the right to teach his students to think about the things their society is
doing before they accept them? Does he have
the right? What kind of a person is he if he
teaches anything less? Must he consider what the
student had in mind about subject matter before
deviating from the curriculum? There are different obligations which must be met before any of
us have a right to be called a man. One of them is
not doing your “job” in lieu of acting upon your
conscience. We should now let all the world know,
we can no longer sleep well.
It gets harder and harder to write this each
1 am trying to change the consciousness of
people who don’t care. I don’t know what to do.
Someone the other day told me that he doesn’t
know a single person FOR the war, but “some are
more practical than others.” Of course, in the
next sentence, he told me that he’ll fight when
called. The immoral people are those that go, and
know better. If you believe that the policy being
pursued by the United States is anything less than
just, if not genocidal, and you aid that war, you
don’t deserve much. You are, as defined by Nuremberg, but far more importantly, as defined by
reason, a murderer—nothing less!
week.

Imagine the injustice the Chemistry Department

is committing when they produce simply “good"
citizens. All the other departments are equally

guilty of this insanity if they do not attempt to
produce morally conscious graduates. Try to picture the murder and blood and bombs in a small
country which you, to a certain extent, condone
and aid. So, we should not in any sense allow
business to go on as usual. We cannot afford to;
if we do, it means that we don’t want, in any way,
to change things. There is a myth floating around
in most of our minds that to act righteously when
the “important” things happen is sufficient. Not
only is this not true, but “important” things just
don’t ever really happen. We must make things
important.

Everyday we are being used, everyday it surrounds us. Precisely because it is so big—many of
us miss it. But big things don’t happen—little ones
do. All the time. We forget, and besides, “if 1 did
that one, why not do this one—it really doesn’t
mean much, and no one will know.”

But it does hurt, it hurts you, your country,
There is nothing wrong with admitting previous errors; there is nothing inconsistent with doing something wrong one day and
right the following day. We only commit wrong
when we are conscious that we are committing
wrong. Get conscious!

your children.

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�Tuesday, March 12, 1968

The Spectrum

Page Eight

An evening with Allen Ginsberg:
A change of pace? Oh wow!

Theatre review

Albee's Box-Mao-Box
by Richard Perlmutter

.

Spectrum

Theater

Reviewer

by Corydon Ireland

but his newest creation “Box*Mao»Box” is a large step in the
sour direction.
The highly publicized Studio Arena production, which
had its world premier here Wednesday evening, is not a total
waste of time
Albee’s innovation in creating a new media, a new form
of the art of drama, is commendable
But his first usage of this
“Box” we learn of 700 milart form is a disappointing lionIn dead
babies (note the antifailure
war tone). In “Mao” both women

Tuesday nights, week after week, are just a matter of

After a while the no-meter mesmerized me into counting sheep
instead of swear words. When my
head wasn’t lolling and bucking
to the tune of my own z’s and, I
imagined, a chorus of others, I
had time to notice the pertinent
details. The curtain that stretched
across the poet’s back was tall
and wide, like corrugated velvet
faded grey at the arch and, to
my estimation, divided into approximately 247 folds, depending
on the breeze. Seated on the floor
in front of the stage were six
mustaches, eight sets of beads,
three cheap cameras, several
cramps, and a full lotus.

long, very long, shimmering silk
scarf, bright orange, hung around
his thick shoulders and pointed
two unsure fingers at his Farmerin-the-Dell dungarees. Just a modest lip of belly hilled over his
black belt, and a wide, blue patterned ’30s tie shot up to the
sudden bush of his beard like the
stick to a flesh-and-cloth tootsie
roll pop. Just like the posters
really, I thought. More toothy,
perhaps.
To set the mood for his monologue, Ginsberg led off with a tenminute Buddhist chant, honing a
breathy squeezebox in tune with
his own, quite adequate voice.
The cameras whirred and clicked

all around him, tape recorders
rolled, and the students and
professor-types stooped, sat, and
stood about, slack-mouthed and
attentive. At one point a movie
cameraman, bent and humblebacked under the weight of his
machine, crept slowly forward
and knelt in remembering homage.

The endless message
Somewhere in the fast-slow,
streamy, dreamy, whispered, gestured scrabble of his poems, he
made statements. The reading began when he was still tense with
the weight of reputation and
when the audience was tense with
poster-fed anticipation. Tense and
slow at first. Two bad, burbling
mistakes no pause—then off!

The Poet
Fashions "Frozen somewhere
between the Grapes of Wrath
and the Tel Aviv Library" briefly
illuminate Rockwell Auditorium.
But then Ginsberg. Allowing
for the nearly anatomic error of
a 40-minute poem, which was occasionally and mercifully brilliant, the rest of the poetry was
diverse, colorful, and spaced with
masterful poetic change-up.

Just like his posters
Allen Ginsberg made his entrance quickly and neatly, when
the brief, lauding introduction
afforded him was barely an echo.
“He is a poet that never enlarges,
never distorts, never mistakes,”
As I was to discover in the course
of the reading, this is certainly
true of his poetry. His clothing,
however, was another matter. His
fashions were frozen somewhere
between the Grapes of Wrath and
the Tel Aviv Public Library. A

“Sunset SS Azamour” was a
good introduction to the program, despite the mistakes, In
it Ginsberg perhaps defined his
own verse when he said: “It is
the endless message from myself
to my own hand.” The next selection, focused on the Near East,
carried another though perhaps
basic to him as an artist: “Art
is just a shadow, like cows or

tea."

The long poem, twelfth in the
program, lasted 40 minutes and
so deserved to be a virtual camel’s hump of aphorisms: he pleaded that people should come back
. . that hopeful
to the heart
meat"; “Standard Oil is just a big
fairy that lords it over all matter
that happens to be oil , . . it is
an egotistic cancer.”; “United
Fruits have Central America by
the balls.”; "Turn the teacher
on.”; “Who invented what’s
dirty? The Pope? Bernard Baruch?”; “Assholes are basic to
democracy.”

The program was filled out by
a few poems about New York
City, a Hell’s Angels’ party,
gracefully quiet, with the cops
outside and ready to pounce, two

Two students win award
Gerald Masker and Keith Durfee, senior electrical engineering
students at the State University of
Buffalo, were awarded first prize
Thursday for the winning research study in a contest sponsored by the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers.

The winning paper, “The Design of a Turing Machine,” was
presented at a joint meeting
of

the Buffalo and student sections
of the IEEE. The meetings of
this organization concern various
technical aspects of electrical engineering.

.

A Turing machine, the subject
of the paper, is a mathematical
machine with theoretically infinite memory capacity that is theoretically capable of solving any
mathematical problem.

I

mediocrity at Rockwell Hall Auditorium. Buffalo State College has seen to it. Sometimes the night crew of custodians
will give the place a buff in its wooden parts. Occasionally
someone will change a lightbulb or two. Last Tuesday was
different. Allen Ginsberg read a 40-minute poem.

f

Thick symbolism

Allen Ginsberg

breaks the calm at Buff State

politically critical pieces, and,
what was especially touching, two
verse eulogies
one to Frank
—

O’Hara and the other

to William

Carlos Williams. He pictured “the
chattering Frank stopped forever
. . . (40’s only half a life)
he
was a common ear for our deep
gossip.” The death of Williams in
1957 moved the poet to say: “He
is not dead. Light moves out
through his pages.” Most of the
poems were from a recent volume of his verse entitled, Planet
Blues.
...

Let me say at this point that
what I saw of Allen Ginsberg
Tuesday evening convinced me
that his occasional and calculated —erotic imagery and his use
of four-letter words is no more
than everyday language in essense, but is infinitely more clever. He is no smut monger.
—

Allen Ginsberg’s poetry was
alive last Tuesday night, except
for intervals in the marathon
poem, and meant so much more
because it warmed and toned at
my ear drums rather than slipping coldly from cold eye to uninspired mind. The pointing, look,
•ng, jiggling, orchestrated shirt-

ful of Sabbaths th
Ginsberg made it li

Allen

Just before ten u clock that
night, the end, Ginsberg chanted
another Buddhist hymn
“verse
—

of consciousness.” He folded his
hands along the ridge of his nose
and briefly, humbly nodded in
“shantih”.

I saw him last when he was
pressed to the mouth of a head-

thick swell of audience, which
talking, adoring, pressing

closer. The head force of the
crowd tapered quickly at the neck
and thinned to a brindled stream,
curious against the snow.

If you ’re

•

The symbolism is thick; much
too thick for my liking. Ideas and
themes become entangled and
submerged in this sticky layer.
In “Box” we have one symbol,
the frame of a box, a hollow cube.
In “Mao” we have an allegory;
Mao Tse-tung obviously repre-

sents the East; the long-winded
lady, not so obviously, is the U.S.;
the old woman is Europe, and the
speechless minister is institutionalized Christianity.

Yama memorable

Shirtful of Sabbaths

was

has much to say in
Mao •'Box.” The delicate
interweaving of the two plays
(“'Box" ard “Quotations from
Chairman Mao Tse-tung") is permeated with familiar themes of
illusions and reality, the pathos
of human apathy, lack of understanding, and many others. It may
be viewed as a political play, but
is more of a philosophical exercise in the abstract.
Albee

“Box

Mao is played by Conrad Yama
whose striking physical likeness
to the Chinese leader helps him
succeed with his memorable portrayal. The fact that he confuses
several of his lines is almost petty
in this play.

The lady (U.S.) rambles on and
on about her husband, her daughter, her life: “There is no death;
only life and dying.” The old
woman (Europe) recites a poem
superficially inane, yet like everything else in the work, full of
significance which is kept well
hidden for the entire evening.
Maybe the box or the stage
symbolize the West. The lady
(U.S.) is in the box, rocking in
her rocking chair and as rocking
chairs go, she is moving but not
going anywhere (Albee’s comment
on the plight of the U.S.).

Chairman Mao, on the other
hand, reciting his Marxist platitudes is moving; he moves continuously about the stage, he wanders through the t h e a t er and

makes himself felt around the
world that the theater stands for.
This is the threat of Maoism if I
am reading Albee correctly.
Children is an oft repeated
theme.

headed

for

talk about their offspring and
there are countless other references. Albee seems to crave repe-

tition.

“Box” is played through twice
and many lines are reiterated to
form a labyrinth of superimposed
patterns. “The beauty of art is
order”
an aphorism insisted
upon.
—

Too much
The dialogue is so laden with
relations and meaning that little
seeps through.

In “Box” we listen to the voice
of Ruth White and some of the
words don’t even come through.
Many phrases are muffed and

aggravatingly indistinguishable.

But the technical aspects are
not all bad. William Ritman’s simple set and David Zierk’s lighting
is most effective as the beams
glow ominously in the dark theater.
The work is sardonically antiMaoist; in fact, it is bitterly antistatus quo. Albee has discovered
the potential of a new art form
but is far from unleashing its
power.

“Box

•

Mao

•

Box” is not a good

play.

Albee has employed wholesale
symbolism, depth and meaning.
His over-use of them ruins his
work. He tries to say so much
that he ends up saying nothing
to most folks. He leaves everyone
with a particularly gnawing sense
of malaise and uneasiness that
something was missed.
The work is much more suited
to the printed page where it may
be pored over, than to the stage
where it is skimmed over.

Albean themes
In “The Delicate Balance” Albee demonstrated his prowess to
write a good play on his themes.
In “Box

•

Mao

•

Box” he demon-

strates how bad a pi ay based on
Albean themes can be. His newly
conceived art form is not effective.

About the middle of the play
the audience begins shifting in
their seats, shuffling their feet,
as many blank, sleepy faces indicate that the emotion most dreaded by the playwright has invaded
the theater: Boredom.
“We cannot listen anymore, because we cry” (to quote Albee).

Florida

.

.

.

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla.—Mixing warm welcome with stern warning,
a memorandum from R.H. Bubier, the city manager here, has been directed
to all students planning to visit the city during the spring holidays.
Several "suggestions and policies" were included in the bulletin. Mr.
Bubier said all persons planning to vacation here should have housing
reservations; campers and trailers must be registered in licensed parks; and
all laws that govern individual conduct will be enforced, including excessive
noise, intoxication, the use of narcotics, violation of traffic codes, and
"disorderly conduct" in general will not be tolerated. Mr. Bubier said
parents and school officials will be notified of any violation by individual
students.

City Manager Bubier also warned that ignoring the law will result in
"permanent and sometimes criminal" records. He urged visiting students
to follow personal guidelines, as they would on campus, when vacationing

here.

�Tuesday, March 12, 1968

Page Nine

The Spectrum

Heartache of heartaches:
Champ hockey club falls
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

In what had to be the most heartbreaking loss in the
club’s six year history. The League Champs—the State University of Buffalo Hockey leers saw their hopes for the
Finger Lakes Hockey Tournament trophy shattered Sunday
as Oswego State beat the Bulls 5-4 in overtime before a
crowd of 1100 screaming fans in the Amherst Recreational
Center.
Buffalo, suffering its first wego’s Ed Ames stole the puck,
league loss after sixteen faked a Buffalo defenseman, and
the goal that gave Oswestraight wins, apparently had scored
go the trophy.
the game won when Billy
Until Ames’ winning drive, the
Tape put the puck in the OsBulls had held the Lakers even.
Led by their captain, Pierre Bewego nets after three minutes of sudden death over- langer, a flying Frenchman who
scored the first four Oswego
time play.
goals, the Oswegoans three times
Both the Bull leers and their
fans were ecstatic, and bedlam
reigned in Amherst Recreation
Center. But the red goal light,
which signifies an official score,
never went on.

Goal disallowed
Instead Referee Johnny Barnes
disallowed the goal, saying that
a whistle to stop play had been
blown five seconds earlier. In
the interest of honest reporting,
the whistle to stop action had indeed been blown before the puck
went into the nets. But why play
was stopped, this reporter will
never know.
Just two minutes later, Os-

leads, only to have
the fired-up Bulls come back to

held one-goal
tie.

Belanger opened the scoring at
8:24 of the first period when he
drilled a blue darter into the
lower corner of the Buffalo goal.
The Bulls tied it up at one apiece
when captain Lome Rombough
clicked on a blazing slap shot at

9:51 of the second stanza. Belanger put Oswego on top again
2-1 when he tallied on a rare
penalty shot, called when a Buffalo player fell on the puck in
the Bulls’ goal crease. Rombough
then knotted the score at 2 all
with a clutch goal at the 15:11
mark.

This first meeting will be held
to organize the team and to ar-

range

practice hours for the
spring season. Since this is the
first year such a team has been

organized, the schedule of matches will be somewhat limited.
Those women who have had
some tennis experience and who
would like to join the team,
please try to attend this first
meeting. Those women who cannot attend the meeting but who
would still be interested in joining with the team, contact Miss
Hall in the Women’s Physical Education Department, 2941.
■

With only 54 setonds left in the
second period, Buffalo’s Johnny
Watson gave the Bulls their only
lead of the night 3-2, when he
stole the puck and cruised in all
alone to cleanly beat Oswego’s
goalee Dave Kubissa.
Belanger opened up the third

period with two quick goals giving Oswego a 4-3 advantage but
Daryl Pugh connected for Buffalo
with only five minutes left in the
game, to set the stage for overtime and Oswego’s winning goal.
Though it was a hitter pill to
swallow, the Culls showed their
class. Every placer on the Buffalo squad shook hands with the
victorious Lakers. For the Oswego players, it was their third
straight tournament championship. As was expected, Belanger
was named the tourney’s most
valuable player. The trophy for
the best defensive player was no
surprise either. It went to Buffalo’s all-league goalee Jim Ham-

ilton, who was tremendous in the
nets. Big Jim made 42 saves
against Oswego, many of them
bordering on the impossible.

Magnificent season!

The Buffalo dressing room, following the game was quiet. There
was more than one pair of misty

w.

For many of the Bulls,

Plans
are underway for
Women's Tennis Team
D’Youville College avenged its
earlier loss to the State University of Buffalo Intercollegiate
women's basketball team last

Monday evening at Holy Angels
Academy with a 45-36 win. The
Buffalo cagers had a 4-3 record
going into their final game at
Brockport State Friday evening.

The scoring leaders for the
Buffalo contingent were; Kay
Richard with 13 points, Mary Ann
Horey with nine and co-captain
Elaine Gordon with six. Carol Lazzaro and Sharon Pleasant led the
team in rebounds.
The Blue and White trailed
9-6 going into the second quarter
but led by one point, 15-14, at
the halfway mark. D’Youville
continuously banked shots off
the board to hold a 33-25 edge before the final quarter. Buffalo
rallied in the last five minutes of
thq contest to close the gap, but
D’Youville finished the game
with their strong nine-point lead.

next year seemed a long distance
away.

The Hockeymen never let up
this season. From the first game
to the last, the club provided its
fans with championship caliber
hockey as it swept to the League
championship. Led by the
League’s top scorer Lome Rombough, the Bulls roared to fifteen straight wins including a 3-2
upset victory earlier this season
over the same Oswego Staters.
Sunday night, the Bulls gave
it their best. Coach Trey Coley,
General Manager Howard Flaster
and a jam packed crowd at Amherst Recreation Center couldn’t
have been any prouder of this
team, even if they had won the

Two days before the third loss

of

their campaign the Buffalo
squad won their fourth game of
the season, This was the Blue
and White’s second victory in

succession before meeting D’Youville for the second time this
season.

Winning form
The Blue and White demonstrated its winning form again as
they trounced their opponents in
a 55-24 victory over visiting State
College at Fredonia.
Co-captain Gordon was Buffalo’s
offensive leader as she scored 27
points in the contest. Other commendable performances in the
scoring department were: Miss
Richards with ten points, Samuelson with nine and Coleman with
four. Miss Lazzaro shared the
command in the rebound department with Ryan.

The Blue and White held a slim

one-point margin after the first
quarter but led 23-14 at halftime.
Miss Gordon was responsible for
17 of the 23 points. She continued
to make her shots count as Buffalo increased its lead over Fredonia to 18-points (39-21) going
into the final period of play. The
home team sunk 16 more points
for its best effort of the campaign thus far while holding the
visitors to only three points.

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Women cagers downed
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Plans are now underway for
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for anyone interested in playing
tennis will be held in Clark Gym,
7 p.m. tomorrow evening.

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�Page Ten

Strike threatens
■i&gt;

Tuesday, March 12,

The Spectrum

Continued from Page 1

ees to join or refrain from joining any employee organization;

tary” status of state public employee organizations maintains a
kind of “open shop” here at the
University, and at other state in-

stitutions. All the workers, however, regardless of their membership, benefit from the reallocations achieved by the recognized

employee organization.)
• the right
of public employees to be represented by employee organizations of their own
choosing and to negotiate collectively with their public employers;
(The phrase “negotiate collectively” is a new one for state
Civil Service employees, yet it
is also a deceptive one. The Taylor Law also prohibits strikes,
and thus removes a powerful
‘trump card’ which most unions
enjoy at the negotiating table.)
•
a provision which prohibits
strikes by public employees.
The penalty the Board may impose under the Taylor Law is

that it may order forfeiture of
the employee organization’s right
to dues c h e c k-o f f—deductions
from paychecks—for up to 18
months. This does not include

any contempt-of-court charges

which may be laid against the

.

.

.

leaders of the employee organizations in the event of a continued strike in the face of a
court injunction.)

Escape clause?
CSEA might be able to conduct a work stoppage within the
confines of the Taylor Law. The
law provides an “escape clause,”
apparently to be decided by a
court ruling, which says that an
employee organization may, in
the event of a strike against a
public employer, attempt to show
that the employer engaged in
“such acts of extreme provocation as to detract from the responsibility of the employee organization.”

The “acts of extreme provoca-

tion” in this

instance, according

to CSEA representative Dudek,
would be the fact that Civil Service employees here are “under-

Faculty-Senate

e

tion similar to that of the Student Senate which “condemned
the war and the conscription of

his position in this statement to
The Spectrum:

tire University feels the same.”
He proposed a milder censure
of the graduate student draft that
had been passed by the Faculty
Senate executive committee, of
which he is president.

while demanding a ban on military recruiting and Defense Department contracts on campus.

special meeting called through a
petition by a group of faculty
members to discuss the graduate

Other resolution rejected
An additional resolution call-

ing for the immediate resumption
of graduate and professional student deferments was rejected by
the Senate by a vote of 57 to 31.

Miller urges condemnation
Before the voting, Student Association Vice President Richard
Miller chastised the Faculty Senate for its “silence” on the war
while “faced with its escalation.”
He urged adoption of a posi-

that would have
draft counseling
committee to “advise
the
academic community
of
their constitutional rights and of
all conceivable legal alternatives
to military service” was defeated,
after a 45 to 45 vote.
A proposal
established a

...

...

President Meyerson broke the
tie by casting a negative vote.
The proposal was introduced by
associate professor of Biochemistry Peter Nicholls.
President

paid.”

The local University administration, and in a sense, the entire
State University, has been forced
to adopt a wait-and-see attitude.

Wait-and-see

Text of Segal-Snell resolution
The following is the text of the Segal-Snell
Resolution passed by the Faculty Senate March 8.
It is perhaps the strongest denunciation of the
war by a major American University:

Presidential Assistant Robert
O’Neil put it this way: “The most
we can do here (at the University)
“Whereas the War in Vietnam is immoral, ilis provide whatever fringe benelegal, contrary to American principles and to the
fits are available, provide as best interests of the United States, and genocidal
pleasant a working environment
to the Vietnamese people;
as possible, and encourage emWhereas, the violent forces of armed conflict
ployees to take higher grade that lead to destruction and deplorable human
Civil Service exams.”
suffering are not the effective forces of progress
While agreeing that the salarand development, and the need for these in Vieties are “veryf low,” Mr. O’Neil exnam is questionable at best;
pressed the administration’s frusWhereas, all evidence points to the severity of
tration, when he agreed that the the crisis that exists in our nation between the
University does not have much affluent and the economically, educationally, socontrol over the situation; “You
cially, and politically deprived;
take wage control out and you
And whereas, these factors, representing Che
don’t have much else to go on.” result of a misordering of priorities in our national interests, are responsible for a continuing
HOT BIG 13
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Meyerson explained

“The relatively small number
of Senate members who attended
chose to interpret that call broadly. The motion for a draft counselling committee as proposed by
Professor Nicholls as a substitution for the Borst-Hubbard Resolution on graduate student deferments seemed to me a diversion
of many constructive efforts to
help graduate students in their
careers. Therefore, when the Faculty Senate' voted 45 to 45 on
the Nicholls substitution, I as
chairman, broke the tie by voting against the substitution.”

staffed, undermanned, and under-

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“Thp mooting of tho iTn..,orcity

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Draft counseling defeated

DiROSE

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Therefore, be it resolved that the Faculty-Senate
stands opposed to military conscription in any form
or to any individual for the purposes of pursuing
that war;
Be it further resolved that the Faculty Senate
of the State University of New York at Buffalo
strongly urges the President of the United States
and his Administration to take all immediate steps
to seek immediate negotiations for an immediate
cessatation of armed conflict and destruction in
Vietnam, immediate de-escalation of the military
forces present and immediate relief of human suf-

fering.

“Furthermore, the Faculty Senate urgently recommends that all necessary action programs be
instituted immediately to relieve the stress and
indignation existent among the deprived people of
this nation and thereby, hopefully, avoid further
violent domestic confrontation. We submit that such
bold action is necessary to restore confidence in
this, our United States of America.”

The Rathskeller

2 Norton Cafeterias
Interim Campus
Tiffin Room
Snack Bars in Dorms
3 Express Lines
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�Page

The Spectrum

Tuesday, March 12, 1968

CLASS1F I E D
belated
-

-

-

-

condition. 831-3656.
1965 CORVAIR MONZA four
ration, fast steering, r. and h.,
45,000 miles, electronic diagnosis
tion. $995. 882-2090 evenings.

posit-

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all black,
of condi-

ECONOLINE
good condition, new
tires, complete stereo tape system. Call
-

877.1215 after 3:00.
1926 CLASSIC BACON TENOR BANJO with
hardshell case, classical guitar. Find Kim
in the Rathskeller or phone 832-6898.
Marty,

APARTMENT FOR

RENT

near

APARTMENT WANTED
APARTMENT needed for Sept.; furnished
one or two bedrooms; near campus. Call
Carol, 652-7934 or leave message Spectrum.
WANTED

TO RENT on long-term basis: BASS GUITAR
and amplifier (preferably Fenders). Call
Mark, 693-1192; Elliot, 833-1414 anytime.
GO GO GIRLS (twenty needed immediately)
weekends, good wages, phone 884-1748.
Call mornings.
PART TIME SALES HELP
hours at your
convenience, salary, plus commission. Call
-

874-3399, 9-11 daily.

VISITORS “The Gilded Edge," 3193 Bailey.
Hand-crafted jewelry and unusual gifts.
Wed.-Sat.
I will pay top price for CHILDREN'S
PHONOGRAPH Records (15.20 years old).
-

Space Cadets, Mother Goose, Bible Stories
for Children are especially prized. I'll be
in Buffalo April 1-8. Write Spectrum, box

17.

without

you.

distance,

833-7520.

for male, with walking
or KP optional. Call

rent

board

PERSONAL
SHALOM! For gems from the Jewish Bible,
call 875-4265 day or night.

STUDENTS
three bed-study
rooms, available near campus. Call days 832-5491.
evenings
790,
Ext.
877-1600
SUMMER

Jackie, mama said she would forgive us
for our mistake if you will merry me.
I'll forgive too. Please? Sonya.
Best wishes Judy on your nineteenth birth-

I love you, honey.* Barry.
Theodore Bear walked in the Black Forest
until he was twenty. He came out
day.

yesterday.
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$185 complete with: jet, apartments and cottages with kitchenettes,
cruise, lunches and barbeques, cab transfers, all gratuities, bargains galore. We
invite comparison. Filling up rapidly. Call
after 2:00 P.M. Andy 833-9234.
$295, regularly scheduled jet
EUROPE
flight. New York to London, June 13
Aug. 28. 20 seats left. Call Don, 837-9157,
4-8 P.M.
Available for dances
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received Him, to them
become the sons of
tothem
that believe on his
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name."
"But as many as

gave

and roll group, 674-1320.
TYPING: 25c per page; dittos, 35c
Five minutes from campus. Call 83^

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Marc Grossman, 837-4948.
1966 British racing green MUSTANG • 289,
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University.

Hillel will hold a Sabbath Service at 7:45 Friday. Dr. Justin
Hofmann will speak on “The Vocation of Man,” based on the writings
of S. R. Hirsch. Reverend John Burek will be the guest of Hillel for
supper at 5:30 p.m. Sunday. He will speak on “Recent Developments
in Jewish-Christine Relations.”
Hillel is sponsoring a Model Seder for all interested students
at 7 p.m. March 21 in the Hillel House. Admission is free, but reservations must be made by calling 836-4540 no later than March 19.
The Full Reality of Sexuality, David Gardoner’s Experimental
College course, will meet this week, at a new location, posted on
the Bulletin Board of the Student Senate Office.
Harvard Univraity has a number of job opportunities available
to women who have majored in liberal arts. Some positions are at
the beginning entry level, where others require some experience.
For example, the Widener Library is looking for a library assistant who possesses typing skills and some knowledge of foreign
languages. For further information, contact Mrs. Farewell at 831-3311,
for an appointment, or write the Personnel Office at Harvard, 1350
Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge.

The American Israeli Haddash Club will have a Purim Carnival
at 8 p.m. Sunday in Room 335, Norton Hall. Costumes and masks are
welcome.

Free Toboganning, sponsored by the WRA, will be offered Saturday at Chestnut Ridge. Buses will leave Norton at 6:30 p.m. and
leave Chestnut Ridge at 9:30 p.m. Women’s ID cards will be checked
for payment of activities fee; non-fee payers must pay 50 cents.
Tuesday nights the gym is open to women from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
for swimming, gymnastics, paddleball, volleyball, basketball and bad.

minton. ID cards will be checked for payment of activities fee.
The All-Academic Union's Steering Committee will circulate a
position statement of grievances, proposals and demands starting
today at the table in Norton Hall. The second general meeting will
be convened shortly.

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3:45 p.m. Thursday in the Millard Fillmore Room. The speaker will
be Dr. David Krathwohl, Dean of the School of Education, Syracuse

FEDERAL SCHOOL REPORT says: The Philadelphia public schools are engaged in “the most dramatic
revolution in a city school system in the post-war period.”
Reform in Philadelphia is "more widespread and far-reaching
than in any large school system in the country.”

DR. MARK R. SHEDD, new Superintendent of Schools, says:
“I will continue to support teachers who are able to examine, in a
mature way, the gut issues of our day—war, sex, race, drugs, poverty.
If we divorce school subjects from the guts and hopes of human beings,
we can expect students to find them gutless and hopeless."

RICHARDSON DILWORTH, President of the Board of Education,
says: “The city is where the action is. It’s where the challenge is. It’s where
we are facing the great moral and social issues of our day. If you want action,
come teach in Philadelphia. If you don’t, go teach in the suburbs/’

WE SAY: Come join our school revolution as a teacher. Get in on the action.
Teacher salaries are rising rapidly. So is our school system. Come on up the up staircase. For further information, see our Representative who will be at State Univ. of

N. Y. at Buffalo on WEDNESDAY, MARCH 27, 1968.

SIGN UP AT YOUR PLACEMENT OFFICE FOR AN INTERVIEW NOW.

THE SCHOOL DISTRICT OF PHILADELPHIA, PA.

�Page Twelve

The

Defection brings

Czech shakeup

High ranking Czech army
VIENNA
officers have joined the growing clamor
that Czechoslovakian President Antonin
Novotny be purged because of his con-

nificant was the fact that army generals
had spoken out against a political leader
the first known incident in Eastern
Europe where the army acted withoutljemg
in7 ordered to by the party.
Radio Prague said district party organizations all over the country were holding
talks on the situation “in a free, frank
and unrestricted way.”
“They will discuss all current political
and ideological questions,” the broadcast

—

with

defected

Maj.

(Jen.

—

Jan

Segna. Two other cabinet ministers were

also under attack.
The defection of Sejna to the United
Stales jolted the Communist party heirarchy in Czechoslovakia and brought
sharp criticism of Justice Minister Bohumir Lomsky and Interior Minister Josef
Kudrna.
The criticisms took on additional significance because they were reported by
official Czech and party government or-

said.

The demand for Novotny’s resignation
was made in a letter to Czech Communist
Party Secretary Alexander Dubcel. The
letter was given prominent display in the
Czech press.
"Those who remained silent on Gen.
Sejna’s faults should carry fully responsibility for his activities,” the open letter

gans.

Resignation imminent
The generals’ demands for Novotny’s
resignation obviously scaled his fate and
his formal ouster seemed only a matter
of time, informed observers said. Also sig-

said.
“This also concerns directly the presi
dent of the republic.”

*

•

•

•

Trench
warfare

Vienna

albany

AF captain

new mex/co

CANON AFB, N. M.
An eight-member Court Martial Board found Air Force
Capt. Dale Noyd, a self-proclaimed conscientious objector to the Vietnam War,
guilty of disobeying a lawful order.
Noyd, 34, a former psychology professor, fighter pilot and career officer with
12 years service, was charged with refusing to fly a training mission with a Vietnam-bound student pilot last Dec. 5. He
said he would rather go to prison than
help with the Vietnam War effort.
The vote on the verdict was by a twothirds majority but the exact vote was not
released.
Noyd took the stand in his own defense
Friday, along with three character witnesses, including a California theologian
who flew from Bombay, India, to testify
Noyd was a man with a “uniquely deep
religious conviction."

Madeline Levine

Anti-draft professor fired

Never legally hired
Dr. Webb S. Fiser, the university’s vice
president for academic affairs, said Whitney was not fired because he was never
legally hired.
"We have to drop Professor Whitney
from the payroll because he did not sign
the mandatory oath of office," Fiser said.
Whitney, one of 10 person arrested
Feb. 21 at the campus during a demonstration against Dow Chemical recruiting,
said he never received a copy of the oath.
He said if he had received it he probably
would have signed it then because “the
Constitution of the United States is a

pretty good document.”
In taking the oath of office, mandated
by slate law and affirmed by the U. S.
Supreme Court, a person pledges to support the federal and state constitutions
and to perform his duties to the best of
his ability.
Whitney said he would not sign the
oath now because it was “being used by
outsiders to put pressure on what activities were to take place on campus, which
is something only the university should
control.”

Check records
A check of the university’s records was
instigated when attacks were made in the
stale legislature on a draft-counseling
committee formed by faculty members at
the university.
One assemblyman said he wanted to inspect the signed oaths of the
27 faculty
members on the committee and the university then began checking its records.
Although Whitney said he was never
a member of the committee, he said he
did attend some of its meetings and counseled students privately on the draft,
Whitney, a Brandeis graduate, was described by the university spokesman as
"a fine teacher" with “excellent academic
credentials" but said he did not know if
the university might rehire Whitney if he
agreed to sign the oath.

Noyd sets limit
“We all owe loyalty to the government,”
said Noyd “We owe it to them on their
decisions of policy. When a government
is involved in actions, not just political
differences, a citizen must participate.
But there are limits, no matter what a
government asks.” That limit, he said, was
the Vietnam War.
Marvin Karpatkin, a defense attorney
helping represent Noyd at the request of
the American Civil Liberties Union, said
in his summation he considered the case
“the most profound in the consideration
of religious liberty in the United States.”
“This is a straightforward and honorable case. He has said ‘recognize me for
what I am. Find a way for me to serve
the Air Force without fatally wounding
my conscience.’
Maj. Royal Smith, the military prosecutor, said the government did not deny
Noyd was a man of good character and
deep religious beliefs.
“But which is going to take prece”

ft „i

H ere, teachers meet with Sen. Wayne
Morse who expressed sympathy for
their cause.

dence,” he asked, “the religious beliefs of
a man of high character or a command

of a commissioned officer over a subordiin the balance.”
nte? There the case hangs

Deep religious convictions
Dr. Robert Kimble, of Berkeley, Calif.,
who agreed to fly from India for his one
morning of testimony, said he met Noyd
in Denver last year while Noyd was an
instructor at the Air Force Academy at
Colorado Springs.
“He had a uniquely deep religious conviction and the sign of that conviction is
the depth of his courage,” said Kimble.
Noyd's attorneys have said Noyd became a conscientious objector to the Viet-

namese War because of a “religious experience,” but testimony regarding that
experience has not been allowed by the
nine-member court martial board.
Before Noyd was transferred from the
Air Force Academy to Canon on training
duty, he fled a series of suits in the civil
courts seeking to get out of the Air Force
or be given duty which did not involve the
war.
The U. S. Supreme Court ruled Noyd
must exhaust military legal channels

first.

Noyd, who could get by with a small
fine and reprimand or be ordered to serve
up to five years at hard labor, will be sentenced later.
Under military procedure, the Court
Martial Board will continue its session after returning the verdict. During the postverdict session the board will hear testimony not allowed during the earlier session before setting its sentence.
Col. Harold Vague, legal spokesman for
the board, said earlier detailed testimony
about Noyd’s religious beliefs could not

be brought out during the pre-verdict
session. However, presumably it could be
dealt with during the pre-sentencing session.

revision ruled out

Despite pleas from
WASHINGTON
more than 70 congressmen, a key House
committee chairman has ruled out congressional revision of the draft system
this year.
L. Mendel Rivers, D-S.C., chairman of
the House Armed Services Committee,
said late lagt week that his panel would
not reopen the draft issue because President Johnson already has authority to
deal with what draft critics believe are inequities in the system.
"We don’t intend to hold any hearings
on the draft this session,” Rivers said.
"All they need to do is administer the
way the Congress intended.” Without
hearings, there can be no change in the
law.
Johnson's failure to follow through on
his intention, announced one year ago, to
reverse the order in which men are drafted, and start taking first the youngest instead of the oldest, has generated many
of the congressional calls for action.
Rivers himself has questioned the President’s plan to continue taking the oldest
men first. The result of this decision,
—

Schools were closed in Washington, D.C.
last week while teachers called on Congressmen to build support for a pending
pay raise bill.

found guilty

—

Draft

ScnOOl S

In Khe Sanh, trench wars of an earlier
day are recalled by this well dug-in
bunker complex. Marines here are under constant Communist bombardment.
Reds, not too far away, are digging their
own trenches.

Washington

compiled from our wire services by

ALBANY, N. Y, - ■ An anti-draft counselor at the State University at Albany
has been discharged from his job as assistant professor of mathematics.
A university spokesman said late last
week that Dr. James N. Whitney had nol
signed a mandatory loyalty oath when he
was hired last summer. The spokesman
said when Whitney was asked recently to
sign (he oath he refused.
Whitney, 32, of Cambridge, Mass., said
he was affiliated with the Boston Draft
Reistance Group and had offered to counsel students on the draft.
Whitney said he had been commuting
to Albany to teach two days a week and
had a three year contract. He said he was
"fired.”

Tuesday, March 12, 1968

Spectrum

the President’s decision to
eliminate deferments for college graduate
students, means a draft in the year starting in June composed almost entirely of

along with

college graduates.

Kennedy longtime critic

The latest proposals for revision were
submitted by 25 lawmakers who introduced in the House a measure written by
Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., a longtime
critic of the draft. Its chief feature would
require the President to institute a random selection system with young men
called first.
'Congress left open to the President the
option to reverse the order of call. In his
message to Congress on March 6, 1967, the
President said he would exercise that option.
The lack of uniform standards in the
nation on who qualifies for occupational
deferment also led to the calls for reform. Forty-two Republicans have introduced a bill that would create uniform
standards of the nation's 4,084 local draft
boards.

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ST,,

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'--TiVES

The Spectrum 0

Vol. 18, No.

Friday, March 8, 1968

State University of New York at Buffalo

Senate debates future;
drafts Vietnam resoultion
A lively debate centering
around the future of student
government contingent upon
results of the constitution referendum highlighted Wednesday’s Student Senate

It was felt by some senators
that the fate of the Senate should
not solely be contingent on the
result of the referendum, but
should rest on a decision by the
students.

meeting.

A motion proposed by Vice
President Richard Miller to table
all discussion on amending the
constitution until the results of

The method of electing the
senate for next year in case the
proposed polity sytcm is not approved was discussed.
Election of senators by division as done in the past is now
impossible, since University College has become a four year program without divisions. An unsuccessful motion was proposed
by Daryl Rosenfeld “to elect the
senate on the basis of open representation.”

A serious issue arose concerning the fate of student government if the referendum does not
get the required 960 votes to be
effective

—

10% of the student

population.

Die naturally

Senator Neil Slatkin said that
if students are so apathetic about
an issue of great relevance to the
entire student body that 10% of
the students to the polls, can not
be attracted, the Student Senate
should be allowed “to die a natural death.”
An argument ensued between
Mr. Slatkin and President Stewart Edelstein when Mr. Slatkin
contended that the Senate has
been ineffective this year and is
dying.
Mr. Slatkin walked out of the
meeting.
He said: “I don’t think the
Senate should be a gavel and
Robert’s Rules of Procedures.
There should be respect among
the members. Reactions between
people have been dismissed and
actions have been too formalized.”

VP's proposal

the referendum are known was
passed. If the new constitution is
not passed election dates will
have to be changed.
A statement giving the Senate’s
position on the Vietnam war and
the draft was read by Neil Slatkin. The statement, approved by
the body, contains a strong stand
against “direct and forced compliance with the draft and thereby the War.” It continues: “We
will resist such complicity and
we urge the other segments of
the university to do the same.”
A statement by the Graduate
Student Association which “unconditionally condemns the war
in Vietnam” was added to the

Draft forum
rawiAuic lau/
reviews
law

Grad student plight reviewed

Moral issue of war more
important, says draft forum

Senate resolution.

The GSA statement also condemns silence on the impending
issue on the part of faculty, administration and students. The
combined resolution forming “a
strong and decisive stand on the
part of the Student Senate” was
passed.

Other action
In other action by the Senate,
the University Community for
Rational Alternatives was allotted
$250 through the Convocations
Committee to cover expenses for
a planned guerrilla theater on
anti-war themes, and anti-war

speakers.
A final decision was made by
the Senate to change election
dates to April 15 and 16 in case
the polity system is not passed.

Pane/ members participating in Wednesday's
open forum on the draft were, left to right,
Robert O'Neil, Neil Slatkin, Norman Effman, Fred
sne//, Todd Mj, jer gn j&gt; Cgr/ Rafner ,

by Joel Kieinman
Spectrum Staff Reporter

Nine panel members representing the AdminGraduate Student Association, and the
Student Association agreed Wednesday that the
moral issue of the war in Vietnam should take
precedence over concern about the drafting of
graduate students in the University community.
The panel met at an open forum in the Fillmore
istration,

Room.
A resolution to be introduced at Friday’s Fa
cuity-Senate meeting would urge the President of
the United States and his Administration to “take
all positive steps to seek immediate negotiations

Businessmen asked to aid inner-city' youth
by Peter Simon

American people.

Meyerson scored
Richard Miller of the Student Association termed
any draft system “biased, unfair and undemocratic”

because it is selective. The immorality of the war
pervades the draft issue, he added.
Calling for the cessation of all militaristic acts
on this campus, Carl Ratner, a graduate Psychology
student and a member of the Buffalo Draft Resistance urged that all Defense Department contracts
with the University be terminated and ROTC be

barred from campus.
President Mcyerson came under attack for his
“silence" on the war issue and his "sudden concern” over the change in the draft law that would
remove most graduate deferments by Joseph Burgess of the GSA Executive Council. He expressed
dismay at the recent measures taken by university

Assistant City Editor

Howard Samuels, United States Undersecretary of Commerce, appealed to the business community Tuesday for
assistance in solving the nation’s deep racial problems.

Mr. Samuels spoke before a crowd of about 200 people,
predominantly businessmen, during the first day of Buffalo
Mayor Frank A. Sedita’s three-day Conference on Youth
Opportunity. It was held at the Hotel Statler-Hilton.

presidents. Early last week the four University
center presidents sent a telegram “deploring the
decision” of the National Security Council.

Future effects

He appealed to the business community to “give the inner-city
youngsters an opportunity they haven’t had in the past, a chance to
have a meaningful working experience. We ask American business to
take a new task, a new responsibility, a new opportunity; to get into
the depths of the inner-city and help those who are unemployable,
who somehow need education and motivation.”
“American business knows how to get things done,” Mr. Samuels
said. “The time has come in this country when we need to get more
things done.”
Citing the recently released report of the National Advisory Com-

mission on Civil Disorders, Mr. Samuels stated that “America is on
trial for its very life,”

Time to act
He said that “the destruction and bitterness of racial disorder,
the harshness of the Black revolt and the White repression had been
seen and heard before in this country. It is now time to end this destruction and violence, not only in our streets, not only in our ghettoes, but in the minds of our people.”
Citing the difficulties facing President Johnson’s tax increase
needed to “support the social programs of our time,” and the “great
difficulty that the Senate had in coming to the grips of open housing,”
Mr. Samuels said that “the job cannot be done in Washington.”
Commenting that the most important action the State Legislature
has taken in two months is “expanding the lottery system,” the unsuccessful candidate for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination in
1966 added that “it isn’t going to be done in Albany” either,
“It isn’t going to be done any place but right here. New commitments must come from within the cities themselves.”
Prior to the undersecretary’s speech, Mayor Sedita and County
Executive Edward Rath spoke briefly.
Mayor Sedita said that “we talk about youth opportunity and in
pure and simple non-technical language, that means jobs.”

immediate cessation of armed conflict and
destruction in Vietnam.”
Dean Fred Snell of the Graduate School explained that the measure would “restore confidence” in the nation that has misordered its priorities by not dealing sufficiently with the “crisis
between the affluent and the economically,
. . .
educationally, socially and politically deprived”
(or an

—McFaul

Youth Opportunity
Howard Samuels, U.S. Undersecretary of Commerce, is shown speaking at Mayor Sedita's Conference on Youth Opportunity, held at the Hotel
Slaller Hilton.

The Director of Graduate Studies in the English Department, Irving Massey, was apprehensive
about the effects of the new draft law. The loss
of teaching fellows will leave "hundreds and hundreds of freshmen without instruction” next year,
he claimed. The response of the University to this
impending “confrontation with the government”
will have an important effect on the future of this
institution, he predicted.
Other panel members included Assistant to the
President Robert O’Neil, Student Association Senator Neil Slatkin, John Marciano of the GSA, and
Norman Effman, a Law School representative.
Additional resolutions dealing with the war and
the draft issues and their relation to the University will be debated at Friday’s Faculty-Senate
meeting. One proposal would have the body call
for the modification of the Selective Service Act
of 1967 to the extent that “draft eligibilty would
occur only at natural times of transistion in the
educational process, i.e., completion of high school,
completion of a baccalaureate degree program or
completion of a higher degree program.”
Another proposal, to be submitted by Professor
of Physics and Astronomy Lyle B. Borst and Assistant Professor of Pathology John C. Hubbard
would resume deferments for graduate and professional students immediately. It states in part:
“Upon entering a post baccalaureate professional
or academic degree program, a student would be
assigned to a special draft pool. Members of this
pool would be liable for induction into the Armed
Forces after completion of or withdrawal from,
their programs.

�Pagt Two

Tha Spoctrum

Friday, March 8, 1968

CLASSIF1 ED
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�Friday, March 8, 1968

Th

•

Spectrum

Pag* Thr**

dateline news. Mar. 8 Dr. Moore emphasizes need for
so

BUFFALO The Buffalo City Common Council passed a resolution to draft a law making it illegal for any youth under the age of 17
to be on the streets or in a public building after 11 p.m. The proposals,
sponsored by University District Councilman Lyman, had bipartisan
support, and was passed by a vote of 9 to 6.
Already, police officials have come out against the curfew. Police
Commissioner Felictta is against the curfew because it represents a
negative approach to fighting juvenile delinquency, In a conversation
last week on the curfew, he said that it posed several problems of
enforcement.
Last week, City Corporation Counsel Anthony Manguso said that
legislation of this type would be illegal. He reiterated this belief on
Tuesday when he said that he would not draft the law.
Councilman Makowski, speaking against the curfew, said, “We
can’t expect the police to become stepparents for children whose parents just don’t care.”
CONDAY, N. H—Richard M. Nixon, calling for a get-tough policy
for rioters and criticizing the courts for handcuffing the police, is
making a major campaign out of crime and lawlessness.
Nixon, winding up a three-a-day get-out-the-vote tour of New
Hampshire yesterday, is drawing his loudest cheers with his jibes at
the courts.
“Some of our courts have gone too far in weakening the peace
forces against the criminal forces,” Nixon said Wednesday night in
—

•

bv Steven Pray

Specfrum

Staff

Reporter

Dr. Gilbert D. Moore, Acting
Provost of the Faculty of • Educational Studies, said this week
that “our whole political fabric
needs mending by educated citizens who understand its construction.”
Dr. Moore stressed the import
ance of educated people in re
solving difficult problems.
Our educational structure must
prepare “all young to live in
the future” and not just those
who can fit the stereotype of a
local community, he said. As our
society becomes increasingly complex, we cannot afford the “luxury of under educated or poorly
educated teachers,” Dr. Moore
claimed.
“Education is one of the basic
values of our society,” Dr. Moore
Keene.
said, yet we are guilty of “an
“If criminals think they can get away with it, and if the courts ambivalent attitude” towards it.
We stress the importance of
are lenient with them, they will grow and grow and become stronger
and stronger.”
education for all children while
at the same time “according very
SALISBURY, Rhodesia Prime Minister Ian Smith’s Rhodesian little occupational status" to the
regime remained unmoved by British threats and world protests over
vocation of teaching.
the hangings of three Africans who had won the queen’s mercy.
Dr. Moore said he hopes that
The breakway government’s only public comment on the hangings
the Faculty of Educational Stuwas to accuse Britain of making political use of the royal reprieve and
with
thereby “irresponsibly and cruelly” raising false hopes in the doomed dies would concern itself
a “philosophical orientation to
men.
the roles, values and necessities
In London the British cabinet faced a decision on what action to of education in American life.”
take aginst the regime, which it still considers illegal. The strongest
This orientation, he said, would
move expected would be a charge of murder against Smith, the hangask questions as: “What is the
man and other officials.
relationship of education to the
WASHINGTON
U.S. intelligence experts are believed to be condominant and necessary values in
ducting an intensive interrogation of a Czech general whose defection
our society?” and “How can eduto the West has caused “considerable uneasiness” in Prague.
cation provide the
necessary
No one was saying where Maj. Gen. Jan Sejna, top political officer knowledges and experiences for
in Communist Czechoslovakia’s army, was staying, but if past practice effectively coping with rapid
was any guide he was probably at a safe location in nearby Maryland social change?”
or Virginia.
Our “educational philosophy of
GENEVA
The United States, the Soviet Union and Britain yesthe future” must be more" enterday announced joint agreement to protect all countries renouncing compassing, profound and reletheir own nuclear weapons.
The three-power protective nuclear “umbrella” will be made available through the U.N. Security Council, officials said at the U.S.sponsored disarmament conference.
Under the agreement, all non-nuclear countries signing the U.S.Soviet nuclear non-profliferation treaty could apply to the Security
Council for aid if they feel threatened by nuclear attack or nuclear
blackmail.
Assembly Speaker Anthony J. Travia today
ALBANY, N. Y.
angrily denied reports that he has lost any of his power as leader of
the Democratic majority in the larger house.
“I defy any member of this house, or any county chairman, to
come in here and tell me that he’s going to take one thing away from
me,” Travia said.
“Until I leave. I’m the speaker, and my powers will be the same
as they always have been. There’s no change and there’s not going to
be. When I want the votes, I’ll get the votes,” Travia said.
WASHINGTON
Powerless to stop a surging demand for a federal crackdown on ghetto violence, a bipartisan coalition in the
Senate Thursday found itself backing a compromise civil rights bill
laden with antiriot amendments.
Despite serious misgivings about the antiriot measures, the
managers of the bill compensated for their setbacks by keeping intact their main goal—a broad ban on housing discrimination.
Sen. Philip A. Hart, (D., Mich.), floor manager for the bill, said
that it was “regrettable we added more riot stuff to it. I’m glad
—

—

—

—

—

some

was rejected.”

"He may live without books
What is knowledge but grieving?
—

He may live without hope
is hope but deceiving?
He may live without love
is passion but pining?

—

—

What
What

But where Is the man, Who Can
Live Without Dining?"
We call

him

my

SPECIALIZING IN
POETRY h
DRAMA
FILM
CURRENT FICTION
VISIT OUR MINI-GALLERY!
ORIGINAL PRINTS BY

PICASSO, BRAQUE, ROUAULT,
DEGAS, DALI, Etc.

2-10 PM
ST., WtU.IAMSVU.LE
Glen Art Theatre

Open Deity

5608 MAIN
Newt to

CAMPUS FOOD SERVICE

#

•

vant” than previous philosophy,
he said.
He claims that educators need
to develop a “thorough science
of instruction" so they will know
what teaching techniques, aids
and in struction methods are the
most effective. Dr. Moore called
for research into learning disability and programs “designed
to test the efficiency of various
educational approaches.” He also
described the role of technology
and the importance of education
keeping par with technology.
Dr.

Moore pointed out

some

specific developments within the
Faculty. Students have come to
play an ever-increasing role in
the Faculty. The Faculty has been

involved in urban education and
conducts a teachers education
program at the Woodlawn Junior
High

School.

It should also play an active
role in the University's Center
for Urban Education, he said.
In conclusion, Dr. Moore called
the Facull yof Educational Studies “one of the most exciting
and enviable positions in the
United States.”

Last day to

vote!

Today is the final day to vote on the newly-proposed Student Association constitution. The document calls for sweeping changes in student government structure.
Voting stations are located in the Center Lounge,
Norton Hall and in Goodyear Hall. Polls will be
open until 6 p.m. today.

Labeled by some a copy of the Faculty Senate
structure, the proposed ocnstitution would, if accepted, replace

the Senate with a Student Coor-

dinating Council. The Council would be elected by
"regularly enrolled daytime undergraduates" (the
Polity) and would "program" specific areas, recommending specific pioposals to the Polity.
The Polity would have final say on all but fin-

ancial matters and could also initiate legislation at
monthly meetings of the entire student body.
A majority of at least 960 votes are required to
pass the referendum. Regardless of whether the
constitution is approved, elections will be held to
fill existing student offices March 26 and 27.

�Friday, March 8,1968

Tha Spactrum

P*g* Four

Faculty stand urged

ft*r-

The Faculty Senate will meet today to discuss the im-

plications of the recent draft decision which will affect
sented, and if any passes, it will urge t
to modify its decision on reclassification

.ervice

It would be of greater significance, however, if the

Faculty Senate adopted a resolution which took a stand

against the war in Vietnam. The Graduate Student Association has urged such action, and it will do so again at today’s
meeting.

The GSA points out that educational leaders show signs
of distress “only when the newly released Selective Service
regulations threaten to take from this institution those
graduate students needed to run the machine.”
How long can the faculty and administration refuse to
take a stand? If they are opposed to the disgusting situation
that has developed in Vietnam they should say so, and do it
publicly. It will long be remembered how American universities remained silent while the Johnson Administration
pursued a destructive foreign policy.
We must agree with the GSA when it “urges members
of the faculty and the administration to join those , of their
student, faculty and administrative colleagues who have been
working for the past four years to end the misery that is
Vietnam.”

Vote yes

.

.

.

today

aacma
)

'

'Don't ask questions, sleeping beauty

—

J JUs

Readers
writings

from linen rags

sugar
Larnj holtzclati

Today is the last day of referendum on the newly-pro-

The same day Vice President Humphrey said
there were signs contrary to the Kerner Commission’s findings of growing hostility and alienation
posal can be likened to the present Faculty Senate structure between whites and blacks in this country, and that
—a structure that allows for participation by all concerned. the Administration had been moving in a meanThe very idea of placing the decision-making power in ingful way to attack racial injustices, riots broke
out in Omaha; and a cloture compromise in the
the hands of whomever shows up at a polity meeting has been Senate gave
Southern sheriffs the right to beat up
viewed by some as insanity. Hog wash! Those who call the not just anybody, just blacks.
proposal unworkable should only visit a Senate meeting and
Humphrey’s statesmen!—the first comment by
ask “How effective is this system?”
a high-level administration official on the report
At this time last year the faculty was in the midst of released last Friday outlining racism in this couna basic thesis of the voluminous
revising their governmental structure. Diehards were saying try—challenged
700-page report: that unless something radical is
“It’s too large and cumbersome to work.” Evidence shows done, the nation will continue to move on
a path
that the faculty system is quite capable of operating effectoward two separate societies—one white, one
black.
tively.
President Johnson arrived home in Washington
As we have pointed out, the restructure is indeed an
and made a major speech, nWdine for passage of
experiment—a very bold experiment.
increased health benefits, without making a single
The experiment boils down to this: Will students be reference
to the now controversial report.
concerned enough to take part in the decisions that affect
Mouthpiece HHH must have a sore arm because
them? If given a direct voice in their own affairs, will of trying to pat himself on the back. Some excerpts
(and appropriate comments):
students accept it?
“We have known about those needs (of urban
The answers to those questions are unresolved. The
blacks) for some time. Why haven’t we done
proposal is, in essence, a challenge for each student to accept something?
is that we have been doing
his responsibility as a member of this academic community. something.” The answer
Come now, Hubert, the ineffective
If you are willing to accept that challenge—vote Yes “monumental” Civil Rights Act of 1964 couldn’t
today.
stop the Orangeburg Massacre. And what about
the racist dumping of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party in 1964? Things really haven’t
changed; if one realizes the power of white supremacists like Stennis or Russell in the present administration, one can see that both the Wars—in
and at home, are being controlled by
The Buffalo Common Council has reached new levels of Vietnam
these men.
inane action. Tuesday’s 9 to 6 vote approving preparation
He said, “because of the progress, the sufferof a law which will provide a City curfew for all youths ings that remain are going to continue to become
under 17 years old points out all too clearly that at least all the more tolerable.”
“This need not and must not mean violence
nine members of that body do not have an adequate mentality
. . . but it does mean that it may be some years
to maintain themselves as legislators.
before the intensity of the urban crisis will subThose councilmen who voted for the resolution—William side.” Now, that’s really interesting. They can
Lyman, William Buyers, John Elfvin, Alfreda Slominski, Ed predict the end of the absurd War in Vietnam
Regan, Gus Franczyk, Raymond Lewandowski, Carl Perla to occur “within ten years,” but the vice-president
won’t even venture a guess as to when the wars
and Gerald Whalen—certainly need a course in good governin the cities will even begin to subside, let alone

Council mentality questioned

end.

mJi

you're lucky a handsome prince kissed you awake in the
first place!"

posed (and long-needed) restructure of the Student Association, As we have pointed out in previous articles, the pro-

ment.

jium

It is obvious that the curfew reeks of police-state tactics.
Meanwhile, Orangeburg and Omaha only portend
These councilmen seek to combat juvenile delinquency by what the future looks like: a racial heat wave to
taking punitive action against all the youth of the City. You hit cities and colleges in the winter, as well as
can’t legislate those problems away, councilmen; you have to the summer. The Commission’s report has already
been dismissed by the Southern Senators, and distake positive steps to alleviate the conditions that produce credited, at least, by the President’s silence. It
can only be disproven by continuing to play a
delinquents.
It is heartening to see that Corporation Counsel Anthony dangerous game of Russian roulette with the
are
Manguso has refused to draft the law because he considers fate of our nation. Their somber predictions
it illegal. We should also note that Police Commissioner augmented by some important “ifs.” Black Secretary of Urban Affairs Warren Weaver has testified
Frank Felicetta; the Erie Club, a policemen’s organization; as
to the dismal impossibilities of achieving a perthe City Youth Board, and the heads of Buffalo's public and centage of the Commissions’ necessary “if” recommendations.
parochial school systems are opposed to the measure.
Mr. Humphrey hinted that the responsibility of
Any thinking citizen should also be opposed to the
curfew. Mrs. Slominski has said that if the idea were voted solving the urban and racial crisis rests more
with the private citizen than with the government.
on in a referendum, “it would pass overwhelmingly.” If He is passing the buck. The task before this nathat is true, she represents her ignorant constituency well. tion is one which will involve an entire rearrangThe question now is whether the Council will pass the ing of our values and an assumption by white libcurfew as a law. We doubt that those councilmen who favor erals of a tremendous guilt and a concomitant reto act, in every sphere.
the curfew will be able to see the stupidity of their action sponsibility
But, sadly, the trends are in the opposite direcand reverse their votes. We can only hope that Mayor Sedita tion: One of the amendments agreed upon in the
will exercise his veto power to insure us that there is some new (nothing new, really) Civil Rights bill, prevents
common sense left in City government. There is little left police from being prosecuted under the section
“protecting” blacks and civil rights workers.
in the Common Council.

Mother Goose is dead?
To the Editor:
We have recently come upon a most informative,
stimulating, and practical series of lectures entitled

“Towards A Christian Ethic of Sex” given by
seminarian Stanley Krempa, a knowledgeable and
creative speaker. In view of the current attihide
of “Let it all hang out,” it would perhaps be well
worth while for the majority, as Christians, to involve themselves in these discussions wi'h someone
who knows; rather than gain attitudes from “the
boys” in the Rathskeller.
For those of you who can tear yourselves away
from playing Old Maid and struggle up those steps
to the International Room on Tuesdays at 2 p.m.,
you may find that Mother Goose is dead.
Michael Legan
Robert Wegrzynowski

Joyce could so sing!
To the Editor;

Somebody’s got to be kidding about this hooking Leonard Cohen onto James Joyce’s coattails,
but reviewer Rick Schwab goes far too far when he
says “Joyce couldn’t even sing.” This honorary

citizen of Buffalo deserves be'ter of you.
Joyce possessed an exquisite tenor which he
employed in a large repertory of arias and songs.
At the age of 22, he shared a concert with John
McCormack. In 1939, at the age of 57, joining 200
or 300 French and British soldiers in a crowded
restaurant in singing the “Marseillaise,” his voice
so attracted attention that he was hoisted onto
a table so he might sing it all over again.
A witness recalled later: “You never saw such
an exhibition of one man dominating and thrilling
a whole audience. He stood there and sang the
‘Marsellaise’ and they sang it again afterwards
with him. . . . Oh, Joyce and his voice dominated
them all.” Leonard Cohen should sing so good.
Jack P. Dalton

every
The Spectrum is published twice-weekly
Tuesday and Friday
during the regular academic
year at the State University of New York at Buffalo,
3435 Main Street, Buffalo, New York 14214. Offices
are located at 355 Norton Hall. Average Circulation:
—

—

15,500.

Editor-in-chief—MICHAEL L. D’AMICO
Managing Editor—RICHARD R. HAYNES
Asst. Managing Editor—RICHARD SCHWAB
Business Manager—SAMUEL A. POWAZEK
Advertising Manager—DAVID E. FOX
Campus
Margaret

Anderson

Sports
Asst.
Layout

Robert Woodruff
W. Scott Behrens
David L. Sheedy
John Trigg
Judi Riyeff

Marlene Kozuchowski
Asst.
Copy
City
Daniel Lasser
Asst.
Peter Simon Asst.
VACANT
David Yates
Photography
Feature Barry C. Holtzclaw
Asst.
Carol Goodson
Ronald Ellsworth Asst.
Entertainment
Promotion &amp; Circulation
Lori Pendrys Director Murray Richman
Financial Advisor: Edward Dale
Faculty Advisor: William R. Greiner

The

Spectrum is a member of the United States Student Press Association and the Associated Collegiate
Press. The Spectrum is served by: United Press International, Collegiate Press Service, Associated Collegiate
Press Service, Gannett News Service, and the Los
Angeles Times Syndicate.
Represented for national advertising by National Educational Advertising Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave.,
New York. N. Y.
Republication of all news dispatches is forbidden without the express consent of the editor-in-chief. Rights of
republication of all other matter herein are also reserved.
Second class postage paid at Buffalo, New York.
Editorial policy is determined by the Editor-in-Chief.

�Friday,

March ,8, 1988

Schneider's opinions unreal
To th» Editor:
As an avid reader of The Spectrum’s editorial
pages, I have often been exposed to anti-Vietnam
war sentiment; sometimes well defended, sometimes
less well. Never before, however, have I encounThe Gadfly of 27 February.
Mr. Schneider contends (how mournfully, one
wonders?) that U. S. policy is pushing the few apathetic Vietnamese who are left into the camp of
the NLF, and in support of this he lists several incidents, including the government arrest of Thich
Tri Quang, “the popular Bhuddist leader,” and the
requirement of identification on South Vietnamese
streets after 5 p.m. I would submit that not only are
actions of this sort necessary, but also that they
do not necessarily have the effect with which Mr.
Schneider wishes to charge them. Tri Quang is an
admitted insurrectionist (“Would you toss a hand
grenade into a restaurant full of Americans?”
“Yes.” “What if there were Vietnamese there,
too?” “Sometimes it is necessary to die for your
country.”
Ramparts, Dec. 1967, p. 36) popular
only with the militant Bhuddists, who do not constitute a majority of the Bhuddists in Vietnam;
and, considering the condition in the Vietnamese
cities at the time, his arrest is understandable, if
not forgivable. As for the idenfication checks, to
choose an unpopular example, one might look to
Germany in the period 1939-45. Throughout this
period identification cheeks were required regardless of hour or location, and yet the government
retained the support of its people, regardless of

Th

•

Pag* Five

Spectrum

BELOW OLYMPUS

By InteHandi

by STEESE

remote as

possi

ilmy

familiar with this

a

'

Os

L

i

yfaLb

fighting a losing war.
Mr. Schneidler asks a question which I find
horrifying for anyone writing about war in a news"Let's just say I can't stand the heat, so i'm staying out of the
paper to ask: “How did 19 soldiers enter the
kitchen!"
U. S. Emabssy without being stopped?” The answer is that the NLF has an excellent Intelligence
System and had successfully infiltrated the embassy long before the past few weeks’ invasion of
the cities. If any more questions on guerilla warfare occurs to Mr. Schneider, I would refer him
to Mao Tse-Tung or Ho Chi Minh, both of whom
have written excellent books on that topic.
One example of Mr. Schneider’s bigotry (or
perhaps merely ignorance, again) is his comparison of the Republic of Vietnam-U. S. pacification program to the destruction of Lidice by the
by Linda Laufer
Nazis. The avowed purpose of the pacification plan
Politics is one of the major amusements amongst castleis to win support for the South Vietnamese government, and, while probably corrupt and certainly owners and knights in my country. Since elections are held
ineffective, I doubt if it rates comparison with
only every four years, it would appear that this pursuit
Hitler’s SS. If, however, one is looking for Lidices,
would not inspire continual interest. On the contrary, the
I submit the case of Dak Son, where, armed with
flame throwers (i.e. napalm for infantry) NLF lapse between elections is what makes it so amusing.
troops killed more than 170 Vietnamese men,
Banquets and feasts fill the
own party—Loyal Knights of the
women and children, knowing full well that their
victims were civilians. The reason for Lidice was interval, and the party members, Opposition. Since he had founded
quite well. Of course, speeches the party and was its foremost
revenge and example for the killing of Heinrich
also waste a good deal of time.
member, Sir Clawstone was unanHeydrich, Nazi “protector” of Czechoslovakia. Dak
Whatever time can be spared is imously nominated. He ran on a
Son was a “New Life” refugee hamlet (or “concenused to decide on a candidate for platform which stated: “I optration camp,” as members of the New Left are Grand High Chancellor.
pose the platforms of the other
wont to call them), and its destruction was also an
My party, Knights of the Centwo parties.” Unfortunately, he
example, an object lesson for any Vietnamese who
tral Order (also a knight organcouldn’t be more specific because
chose to side with the government.
ization), has chosen Sir Starstir he wasn’t too sure what the other
There is a good deal more to criticize in Mr. as its candidate. Sir Starstir was two platforms were (the parties
Schneider’s lamentable column, but time does not elected Knight of Highest Disweren’t too sure themselves).
tinction in May and according to
permit a truly proper examination. I hope that
Attacks and insults marked the
the
party’s
those subjects which I have commented on will
usual policy, was entire campaign. Referring to
chosen
to
run
Grand
High Sir Starstir, the United Knights
for
serve as a spur to Mr. Schneider, and that in the
future he will try to base his opinions in a slightly Chancellor. It is very rare when claimed: “Sir Starstir was sent
the
Knight of Highest Distinction
more real reality.
to siege Mistyview Castle beJames Boex is passed over in favor of one of
cause he wasn’t fit for anything
the lesser knights,
else.” We retaliated with: “Send
Chosen because of his particiLord Beekjoy to Mistyview Castle
pation in the Battle of Misty view and put Sir Starstir where he can
Castle, Sir Starstir proved a genuse his talents.” Sir Clawstone
To the Editor
eral can be successful despite the felt that both Sir Starstir and
The new intensive flare-up in the Vietnam war handicap of being cross-eyed and
Lord Beekjoy should be sent to
Mistyview Castle.
is producing greatly distressful consequences for subject to hallucinations. Sir StarFinally, election day arrived.
the whole Vietnamese people. It is so far reported stir estimated his popularity to
that more than a half million civilians were made be overwhelming and planned to All the castle-owners and knights
in the country assembled to cast
homeless. All their real property and personal win by a landslide.
Meanwhile, our opposition, the
effects were thoroughly destroyed by bombs, rocktheir ballots. Throughout the
Knights,
preparUnited
was
also
meeting hall, knights were disets and resulting blazes during fighting. Some areas
ing
for
the
upcoming
are still under strife of the belligerent sides. In
December cussing the nominees and making
last efforts to secure more votes
the safer areas, there is arising a great number of election. Based on a similar principle as the Knights of the Cenfor their candidate. It was quite
pitiable aftermaths: hundreds of thousands of refugees are thronging the temporary, narrow and tral Order, they too were both noisy since some of the discusdirty newly-built camps. Diseases and epidemics a knight organization and a posions became arguments. The ofare imminent. Food is lacking everywhere. Prices litical party and usually nominficial in charge of balloting called
of indispensible necessities have soared. No one ated their top knight. This year
for order; however, no one paid
they chose Lord Beekjoy, a rathcan surmise how far this will reach.
attention. After ten minutes of
Aiming at relieving partly those miserable vic- er meek and colorless knight
threats, he succeeded in quieting
tims, the Vietnamese Students’ Association in Japan whose greatest adventure was the assemblage.
your
earnestly solicits
donation in any currency marrying Lady Beekjoy. HowTh first round of votes was
ever, the United Knights felt he
negotiable in Japan. On the other side, all concounted, but no candidate had a
of
tributions in other forms such as foodstuff, fabric, was capable
defeating Sir Starmajority. Discussion began again
clothing, medicine, etc.
are also highly apprecistir since he had won four years between the voters, but the ofago.
ated by the association. All contributions will be
ficial brought them to order. Anduly welcomed, recorded and distributed directly
Vigorous campaigning began other vote was taken with the
to the sufferers by the Relief Committee set up by immediately. We depicted Sir
same result—no winner.
Once
our association for that purpose. The total amount Starstir as the courageous hero
again arguments and bargaining
sent will be published and the amounts of donathat he was, while condemning interrupted the voting. Disgruntions will be open for inspection to any accredited Lord Beekjoy. As for the United
tled knights accused each other
party at the association’s office (address below). Knights, they praised Lord Beekof stuffing the ballot box and
The association, on behalf of the victims, is joy’s courage in the one venture bribing party members. Several
deeply obliged to donors for their priceless charity. he undertook, while degrading fights broke out. The official in
Sir Starstir. At this point, Sir charge was trying to restore orLe Van Phong
Chairman, Vietnamese Students’ Clawstone, came into the scene
der.
Association in Japan,
and began condemning both Sir
“Quiet, quiet! Order—or else
4-5-29 Komaba, Meguro-kn,
Starstir and Lord Beekjoy.
we won’t be able to elect anyone.”
Tokyo
Sir Clawstone had begun his
The noise continued.

fl.

...

grump

There is every possibility that this column may

—

Vietnamese relief sought

T he

F)p

corner of the Friday Spectrum.
This week the column is being brought to you
in gloriously drab black white direct from the set
of “Ubu Roi,” production resident in the Baird
Hall bandbox tonight through Sunday. The set,
oh best beloveds, is worth the price of admission in
and of itself.
The “by steese" is not altogether accurate eithBy request might be considerably more ac
curate.
Item: Number 1 Editor inferred that I should
mention that the Blues Project is coming to the
Royal Arms soon, direct from the West Coast with
Danny Kalb—who must, I think, be a returnee.
Item; Michael Aldrich requested that it appear
in print that Allen Ginsberg, the poet of some
fame, or notoriety, depending on your view of that
sort of thing, has tentatively agreed to read tonight
(Friday) in the Millard Fillmore Room —or somewhere in Norton. Knowing Herr Aldrich, there
may or may not be posters to guide you on your
way—dependent on his whim.
Item: The wife of the couple who contributed
Jenifer Dog to the Steese household likes to see
her (Jenifer's, not the wife’s) name in print; therefore: Jenifer. Said dog, by the way, appears to
be almost as coordinated as her master. She fell,
with a splash most glorious, into the Black Rock
Canal last Sunday. Have you ever suddenly found
yourself in possession of a 95 pound bundle of
soggy dog which is rapidly freezing? Fun.
I think that just about sums up the requests for
this week. The rest of the space is mine,'all mine.
My remarks about letters resulted in an
whelming and heartwarming flood of mail
he asked me not to use his name.

over-

but

Certain news reports about how the Air Force
is defending me by bombing within a mile and a
half of the' center of Hanoi—hi there, ROTCites
—piqued my interest. I pulled out a somewhat
battered map of the City of Buffalo and fell to
measuring. My friends, it is very nearly % of a
mile from the corner of Winspear and Bailey to
the corner of Main and Bailey. I don’t really
know how you feel about it, but I would be awfully
goddamned nervous if somebody was dropping 500
pound Johnson Diplomatic Feelers only twice that
distance away from me.
While on this subject, another picky little
question occurs to me. Just where the hell is
the center of Hanoi? I mean, wouldn’t it be just
a trifle mealy mouthed to say, for example, that
the center of New York City was the Empire State
Building, and until we, bombed said cross on the
map, we hadn’t bombed the center of the city yet?
I wonder how the people in, say, Rockefeller Center
would like knowing they could be hit without the
center of N.Y.C. being bombed?
The clock is working. Just when I had a nice
steady space filler all worked up, some fink has
to take a whole paragraph away from me. As a
substitute for the clock tower, I will now proceed
to crab about that stupid little bridge in the rear
of Norton which is supposed to provide a foot
passage over the bottomless chasm of the Norton
Hall Driveway. You know, the one that has been
padlocked since we’ve had advisors in Vietnam,
or so. Maybe they could tear this one down if it
is unserviceable and build the third one on the
same site.

1 do not know all the facts, but it is my distinct
impression that way, way back before New Norton
opened its doors, I walked over a sort of
attractive
little arching bridge that was in almost exactly
the same place but several feet lower. It disappeared to 1 know not whence, never a cry of
pilferage to be heard, to be replaced by current
structure. There were mumbles at the time of a
crane which was unable to get out of the hole
at the bottom of the driveway with the old bridge
at its height. The crane being worth more than
the bridge—crunch! But surely we know that such
planning blunders could never have been tolerated
by classy Cliff, much less marvelous Martin.
Keen new way to beat the draft if you will turn
25 before November—get elected to the House
of
Representatives.
Speaking of useless deferments, who in their
right mind would draft a federal legislator?
I have a new salutation to replace Pax—it is
simply this: Plague.

The Spectrum's pages for

Editorials

&amp;

Opinions

It is the policy of Th* Spectrum to report the
news fully and impartially in the news pages,
to express the opinions of the newspaper only
in the editorial pages and to publish all sides

of important controversial issues.
"Without

expression,

freedom of expression

is

meaningless

"

*

�Th

Pag* Six

Readers

’

•

Friday, March 8, 1968

Spectrum

writings

KLEINHANS
Buffalo

I would like to address a few remarks to the
“Viet Vet” who registered his approval of the decision of the Selective Service to eliminate grad-

uate deferments.
Dear Viet Vet
We are of the same generation, possibly we
are the same age. A few years ago 1 went to school
and you went to war. Now you are back and condemning me as a member of the student body for
my “indifference.” You say that you approve of
the law which will prevent me from going to graduate school. This smells of hypocrisy. If this war
is as terrible as you now' believe, what is more
my supposed indifference or your
culpable
...

actual participation in it?
I am not attacking your participation in the
war
I am instead attacking your idea that the
majority of students arc cowardly and apathetic.
You are wrong. I have been here for over three
years. I have seen the war protest germinate and
flourish as a result of student involvement. No
other segment of our society has been more dedicated to this cause than have the students. Perhaps
the people who can be termed “activists” are in
the minority. They are, nonetheless, a relatively
large minority and the rest of the student body
...

Plaza

Boulevard Mali

And (Enllege IWynp

&amp;pnrt

Rejects 'Viet Vets' ideas: Students are not apathetic

Thruway

You will find apathy on the campus, but far less
than in other areas.
Neither are students cowardly. They have not
“hidden behind their draft cards.” I myself had a
2-S deferment for three years and now, as an Advanced Cadet in the ROTC program I have a 1-D
deferment. I, like most students, received it as a
result of a desire to become educated rather than
to avoid “the terrible reality of this war.”

But what is wrong with desiring to avoid this
“terrible reality?” Believe it or not, it is not the
only reality in the world. I don’t have to participate
in it to realize that it exists. I prefer to remain in
the reality I live in now. I will receive an Air
Force commission upon graduating and I hope that
there will be no wars for me to fight. I believe I
feel the same way about war, especially wars like
Vietnam, that most students do.
And this is the tragedy of the new draft decision that you apparently miss. It will force the
most dedicated and sincere segment of our society
to either go on to exile or jail or to take part in a
war in which they simply do not believe. Apathy
won’t be the only casualty of this decision.
Peabody

Man has failed in his paradoxical world
To the Editor:

be a farce until those who

We live in a world of paradox where men arc
both wise and foolish, powerful and weak. Man is
wise enough to photograph distant planets, yet he
does not understand his own environment adequately enough to make it fruitful for all mankind.

Incongruity is present and discord will follow in
any situation in which some people should know
only deprivation while others know abundance. It
is that kind of imbalance in the distribution of
“well-being” that makes Vietnam possible.

There can be no lasting peace until men may
utilize their intelligence to make the whole world
a “Great Society” without ignorance or poverty.
Therefore, “The United Nations,” will continue to

are powerful become
meekly willing to negotiate a means by which that
organization can enforce authoritively the proposition that in war all are wrong and none are
right.

If You Dig The Classics,

Today man has succeeded in harnessing the
atom and he has failed to restore the life of one
dead soldier. He has not proved true Shakespeare’s
exclamations, “What a piece of work is man! How
noble in reason!
in action, how like an angel!”

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Appointments for senior pictures for next

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Union lobby. Pictures will be taken March 18-

22.

�Friday, March 8, 1968

The Spectrum

Pag* Seven

Faculty Senate to hold Book review
special meeting on draft How to Stay Out of the Army
culty Senate will laRe

place

at 3

p.m. today in Room 140, Capen
Hall. Called by a petitioning membership the meeting will be assembled so that a resolution on
the draft can be presented by the
executive committee of the Senate. The resolution, which considers graduate student draft
status, asks that students be allowed to finish degree work before being eligible for the draft.
The first question at today’s
meeting will be to decide whether

academic community. Should the
Senate decide to open the meeting, audio-visual crews have already planned’ closed-circuit television coverage to Room 139

by Richard Anthony
College Press Service

This slim paperback is not what its title suggests—a guidebook
will enable the reader to keep from being drafted. If anything,
its contents are better described by its subtitle, “A Guide to Your
Rights Under the Draft Law.” Nevertheless, it’s probably a good
place for potential draftees to begin if they’re interested in remaining civilians. It clarifies some of the complexities of the Selective
Service System, and it does offer some tips for those who don’t want
to be drafted.
that

Capen Hall, which seats about

200 persons. Room for spectators
has also been provided for an additional 100 persons in Capen
140.

Formal invitations have already
been given to The Graduate Student Asociation, the Student Senate, and the Millard Fillmore Student Association.

Premarital sex forum
to be conducted Monday
Everyone talks about premari-

tal sex—but anyway there will be
a forum on the subject at 3:30
p.m. Monday in the Millard Fillmore Room.
Panel members at the forum
will be: Dr. Norman Solkoff, University Psychology Dept.; Rabbi
Sher, Temple Beth Zion; Dr.
Lloyd Clarke, psychiatrist from
the mental health section of the
University health service, and Dr.

The book can be divided into
two major sections, the first covering certain aspects of the Selective Service System, and the second explaining various ways potential draftees can try to avoid

panel.

Preregistration information
Complete information on preregistration can be
found in the Official Bulletin on page 12 of today's
Spectrum. Sophomores will again be permitted to
sign their own registration cards. However, any
student who will have completed 58 semester hours
in June 1968 must see his University College advisor to discuss selection of major and to make
application to a department, if applicable.
Any student wishing to see his advisor without
pressure of time schedules should visit the University College reception desk now and make an
appointment.

ROUND TRIP $265.00 TO STUDENTS, FACULTY, STAFF
AND IMMEDIATE FAMILIES

Call 831-4070 Evenings

the first

In

section, besides

explaining what all the classifications are, from 1-A to V-A,
Lynn offers a few interesting
notes about classification procedures. He points out, for example,
that membership in a left-wing
group sometimes is good for I-Y
classification (which means that
the individual so classified is “not
currently qualified” for service).
He also describes the current
fight over the ministerial, or IV-D,

which revolves
classification,
around Muhammed Ali’s attempts
to gain recognition as a Muslim
minister.
On the other hand, Lynn does

j

'

[

r

!

is that on conscientious objection.
Lynn devotes most of it to discussion of the Seeger case, a Supreme Court case in which the
court decided that belief in a
supreme being was not required
for a man to be granted C.O. sta-

!

the Three I

r rclip

tus.

Madonna

J

He points out that as a result

|

DIAMONDS
I
|

Jeffersonville, Vermont

"Selective C.O.s."
This chapter, too, has its shortcomings, however. Lynn doesn’t
take up the question of what happens to men who conscientiously
object to Vietnam rather than
wars in general
the “selective
C.O.’s,” There are no provisions
for this sort of objection under
the current draft law.
—

He also fails to emphasize that

C.O. is supposed to have
reached his convictions as a result of “religious training and belief,” In practice, this means that
a C.O. applicant has a far better
chance of getting non-combatant
or alternative service if he can
prove to his board, by means of
statements from his minister, lists
of pacifist organizations he belongs to, or whatever, that he is
a sincere and religiously-motivated pacifist.
a

The last major chapter of the
book tells how a potential draftee
should proceed if his case goes to
court. Much of the advice here

comes from Lynn’s long experience with draft cases in court,
and seems excellent.

Publicity helps
He suggests, for example, that
a defendant in a draft case always asks for a jury trial, because
one or more jurors are likely to
be impressed by a defendant’s sin.
eerity even if none of them cares
for his politics. He recommends
bringing large numbers of supporters to court, and getting as
much publicity for individual
court cases as possible. He also
describes the differences in the
way the various federal appeals
courts react to draft cases.
All in all, then, Lynn’s book has
some very helpful information.
It should be useful to some who
are faced with the draft, particularly those who plan either to go
to Canada or to apply for C.O.
status. It is not, however, a book
that offers a sure-fire method for
avoiding the draft, its title notwithstanding.

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The longest chapter in the book

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The brief chapter on going to
Canada explains how an American can become a “landed immigrant" there without giving up

etc.

SPRING

[
at

The second section is the meat
of the book, and it is likely to
be of real help to those who plan
to leave the country or to apply
for conscientious objector status.

his U.S. citizenship, and tells how
immigration can be arranged by
mail. Lacking from the chapter,
however, is an explanation of
Canada’s new point system for
immigrants, which awards points
on the basis of a potential immigrant’s skills, education, resources,

|

SKI YOUR

I

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Delightfully
Different

Lynn does offer some sensible
advice in the first section, however, particularly when he recommends that potential draftees
who are not non-cooperators be
careful to follow the rules set
for them at the time of registration.

Classifications explained

““I

Jet June 8th, N.Y. to London
Return Sept. 7th from Amsterdam

Sensible advice

conscription.

Let's Go

in

Another short coming of the
first section is Lynn’s failure to
emphasize that a unanimous vote
by a state appeal board means
the appellant can’t take his case
to the Presidential appeal board.
This part of the law has caught
some who have wanted to appeal
all the way up.

draft.)

Italio Bayonet, gynecologist at the
Buffalo birth control clinic. Jeffery Cohen will moderate the
Each panel member will make
a five minute presentation, followed by an open question and
answer period.
This open forum will afford
students the opportunity to ask
questions and discuss premarital
sex and related' topics.

not really explain how to keep
from being classified 1-A. Oddly
enough, he includes only two
paragraphs on the kinds of physical disabilities that result in exemptions. This kind of information usually passes by word-ofmouth, and some definitive guidelines would be helpful.

the author, is a black
lawyer from New York who has
been specializing in draft cases
for more than 20 years. He hates
the war in Vietnam, and sees his
boo kas a emans of combatting
the war. It’s clear that he knows
what he’s writing about, and his
information is pretty much up-todate (he covers the 1967 draft
law, but not, of course, the recent
Administration rulings on the
Lynn,

boards and state appeals boards
are given the job of distinguishing a religious objection to war
from one that is moral or ethical.
Lynn believes that boards will be
reluctant to draft C.O. applicants
because of the ambiguities created
by the Seeger decision, and that
the courts are likely to rule in
favor of many of those whose

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campus releases
Dr. Fred Snell, dean of the Graduate School, will speak on
graduate deferment and graduate student education at 8 p.m. Mons are invitei

grao

R. Buckminster Fuller will be the guest of honor at-a coffee
hour at 3 p.m. Monday in Room 232 Norton Hall, Sponsored by the
undergraduate and graduate sociology groups, the coffee hour is
open to all.
Them will appear in concert at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Clark Gym.
A mixer featuring the Maniacs will follow the concert. Tickets are
on sale at Norton Ticket Office—$2.00 tor fee-payers, $3.00 for non
fee-payers and general admission. This event is sponsored by the
UUAB Concert Committee.
Deadlines for the Browsing Library Contest have been changed
to promote more entries in the 6th annual contest. Students who have
submitted contest applications by Wednesday will be able to submit
their essays and book collections after spring vacation. Applications
and further information are available at the Norton Hall information counter and at the Browsing Library, Room 255, Norton Hall.
A "Read-In," a unique religious service, will be held in place
of the usual Friday night service at 7:45 p.m. tonight at the Hillel
House.v

Students are invited to read their own poetry, or other authors’
poetry or short stories, on any subject. Rabbi Hoffman assures a
“unique service.”
Assistant varsity baseball coach William Monkarsh announces
that there will be a meeting for all freshman baseball candidates at
4:30 p.m. Monday in the basement of Clark Gym. Report to Room
G5A and see Mr. Monkarsh at that time.
Thirty prospective initiates attended a Tea given Sunday by
Alpha Lambda Delta, the Freshmen’s Women’s Honor Society. Freshmen women who achieve a 2.5 average in the first semester or a
2.5 cumulative average at the end of the first year are eligible for
membership. Induction is planned April 21. Officers presiding at
the meeting were Susan Krauss, President; Joan Weiss, Vice President;
Priscilla Van Nest, Secretary; Louise Stomierowski, Treasurer and
Linda Hanson, Historian.
A series of vocational seminars March 15 for junior and senior
women are being sponsored by Cap and Gown Women’s Honorary

Service Organization in conjunction with its faculty advisor Miss
Jeannette Scudder of the Office of Student Affairs, and the Office
of

Placement and Career Guidance Service.
Mrs. Joan Bishop, Director of Placement at Wellesley College
will conduct the series for liberal arts women placing emphasis on
how to get a job and some of the practical implications in job seeking.
Undergraduates arc also welcome,.
To make a reservation call the University Placement and Career
Guidance Service at 831 3311 and ask for Mrs. Farewell.
University

•

Friday, March

Spectrum

8, 1968

Suit filed against Gen. Hershe

j

Page Eight

NSA asks students to utilize all
appea anne IS I reel lassi le
WASHINGTON (CPS)—The National Student Association has urged all students to use
all appeal procedures available within the
Selective Service System if they are reclassified I-A.
Most first-year graduate students and graduating
seniors will be reclassified I-A this summer under
a recent order eliminating student deferments for
all graduate students, except those already beyond
their first year of study and those in medical
fields.
NSA President Ed Schwartz said a student
should appeal “whether he plans ultimately to serve
or to resist.”
A reclassified draft registrant is
allowed a personal appearance before his local
board and an appeal to a state board. If there are
one or more dissenting votes on the state board
he may appeal to the Presidential level.

"Educational campaign"
Schwartz said the idea was primarily intended
as an “educational campaign.” Thus, he especially
urged students to make personal appearances before their local boards “to convey to those who sit
on them pur growing frustration with the current
dangerous directions which foreign and domestic
policies have taken.” If students follow Schwartz’s
advice, they may also throw a monkey wrench into
the Selective Service System. Although state appeal boards can deal with a group of appellants
at once, local boards would face long hours of
hearing personal appeals from dozens of students.
Schwartz said NSA would soon be making available to all college campuses a one-page description

of appeal procedures, NSA is also working with
several Washington lawyers to publish a newsletter
legal aspects of the draft and has put together
Tobogganning sponsored by W.R.A. will lake place March 15 on
a speakers program, including especially students
at Chestnut Ridge. Busses will leave Norton Hall at 6:30 p.m. and
who have refused induction to show that draft
will leave Chestnut Ridge at 9:30 p.m. Interested persons must sign resisters “are young men of considerable convicup by Thursday.
tion and enormous courage.”
The School of Business Administration Sludent Council will spon19
1139
Restaurant,
Niagara
sor a Dinner-Dance April
at the Cavalier
Falls Blvd. Tickets, eosling $8 per couple, will be on sale March 18
Crosby
in
Hall.

Schwartz said NSA was counseling the use of
appeal procedures because he doubts draft reforms,
such as those advocated by Sen. Edward Kennedy
and several education associations, are forthcoming.

Suit pending
NSA has filed a suit against Selective Service
Director Lewis Hershey asking for an injunction
stopping local boards from enforcing his order
last fall to reclassify and draft anti-draft demonstrators. Oral arguments on the case will be heard
March 7.
At the same press conference at which he an
nounced NSA’s draft plans Schwartz also:
Said that: “The current climate of the
American university can only be compared to that
of a ghetto before a summer riot.” He added that
“a wave of anti-intelleotualism is building in this
country, nurtured by frightening elements of the
population, and translated into retaliation against
colleges and universities at every level.”
•

Schwartz said the draft policy, “public hysteria
on student use of marijuana and LSD,” speaker
bans, the shooting of three black students in South

Carolina, and threatened cuts in state finances for

higher education are manifestations of this feeling, He said he fears that this pattern “threatens
to grow to a point where anti-youth crusades may
appear too attractive for politicians to ignore” during the Presidential campaign.

Urged an education campaign by students
and faculty on drugs, particularly on the fact that
“marijuana is no more dangerous to the system
than alcohol or tobacco.”
•

Urged that the travel tax proposed by President Johnson not be applied to students traveling
to Europe, He said that students spend a greater
daily average than the maximum $7 a day on which
there is no tax. He also said Educational Travel,
Inc., the NSA subsidiary that arranges student
tours of Europe, had a 65% drop in applications.
•

Fifteen upperclass and beginning graduate students will be se-

lected to study at the University of Mysore in southern India for the
academic year 1968 89 under I he sponsorship of the State University
College at Buffalo.
They will participate in a series of intensive seminars designed
o give integrated and focused attention to the study of Indian education, religion, art, history, philosophy, government and economics.
Any State University student is eligible.
The deadline for applications is March 24. For further information and applications phone 862-4311 for the International Office of
State University College or write that office in Rockwell Hall, room
204.
The Hiking and Climbing Club will meet at 4 p.m. today in room

334 Norton Hall. A talk on rock climbing is scheduled. All interested
students are welcome.
Allen Ginsberg will attend a LEMAR meeting tonight at 8 p.m.
in the Millard Fillmore Room. He will lead the group in chanting
Mantras

SEEK to aid high school grads
Project SEEK, an equal oppor.
tunity program financed by the
State of New York, has been ex
panded to include the State
University of Buffalo. Erie Coun-

ty Technical Institute and Niag
ara County Community College
Previously, the State University
College at Buffalo was the only
are college at which the pro
gram existed.
SEEK, the Search for Education, Elevation and Knowledge,
implemented through the Stale
University, offers a chance for
high school graduates from poverty areas to get a college edu,

cation.

Requirements set
The State Legislature, in setting up the SEEK program, sot
up certain requirements that the
applicants must meet. There are
no restrictions whatsoever regarding age, sex, race, religion,
national origin, or marital status
as long as the following qualifications are met;
Be a N.Y.S. high school
graduate within the last ten years.
Live in a defined poverty
area within Eric or Niagara
•

•

County.

Be a citizen of the U S. or
have filed a Declaration of Intent.
•

•

Be entering college for the

first time.
Possess the potential to sue
eeed in college.
He highly motivated to at
•

•

Be willing to make ncccssacrifices.
Students may he nominated for
the SEEK program by community
agencies or by individuals, or may
•

sary

apply personally for admission.
Nomination forms are screened
by SEEK to eliminate those who
do not meet the qualifications set

the’ Slate.
The deadline date for appli
cations for the 1969 SEEK pro
gram is May 1.
In 1968, SEEK will enroll 450
full time students, and 60 part
time students. These students
will receive, in addition to their
special courses, free textbooks,
and in some cases financial assistance based on minimum
needs. They will pay no tuition
or fees at the State University
units where they attend classes.

fj/vmri/y /whSs/w$//?/'///J
If the house treasury is low and the drapes
on tin- liont window are a drag, here’s a

roommate

object

to vour

using her sheet

(she shouldn’t but she may), simply collect

by

old sheet (perhaps vour room
last beer party. Punch holes in the cans and
cut it to lit the window.
string them on wires across the window.
Now set your work aside for a moment, and
You’ll not only have a very ' in window,
have a Sehlitz. Sehlitz is pure beer, carebut you’ll be pleasantly surprised at
hilly brewed to eliminate "beer bite."
Hthe number of guys who'll offer to
Back to the window. Should your
help make some more drapes,
lake

male s)

an

and

/ten

ysH( 're wt/

of

ee

ayew/ie/ 6^f/re//feA.

�Friday,

The Spectrum

March 8, 1968

Pag* Nine

Ted Kennedy proposes bill to rectify draft system
WASHINGTON —Sen. Edward Kennedy’s new draft bill,
which he introduced in the Senate, would go a long way
toward straightening out the mess that is the present Selective Service System.

chance of

It would, for example, take the
power over people’s lives away
from" local boards and give it to
area offices that would be less
capricious than the boards; it
would set up a random selection

Congress when it passed its amendments to the Universal Military Training and Service Act last

system for choosing draftees; it
would give the courts the power
to review decisions made within
the draft system; and so on.
•
These are desirable reforms,
as are all of the 18 changes pro-

the bill, many of these reforms

were specifically outlawed by

June,

The new bill probably will fade
from sight before long; but while
it’s news, it at least should serve
as a reminder of how the Con-

gress not only managed to stave
off draft reform, but even managed to take some steps backward

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_______

Last spring, when the President
set up his draft commission under
former Assistant Attorney General Burke Marshall, there was a
lot of hoopla in the media about
major reforms in the draft system. There was even speculation
that the time had come to do
something about local draft

boards, many of which had been
functioning with a kind of medieval disregard for individual
rights.

The Commission’s report was a
strong one. It even included a recommendation that the power to
draft be taken away from the
local boards. President Johnson

defends

18

NEW YORK (CPS)—The American Civil Liberties Union has gone to court on behalf of 18 young
men who were reclassified by their local draft
boards after turning in their draft cards as an
expression of opposition to U. S. policy in Vietnam.
The reclassifications came in the wake of last
November's letter to local draft boards from Selective Service Director Lewis Hershey in which
he recommended that persons who turn in draft
cards and block recruiters be reclassified and drafted as soon as possible.
Plaintiffs in the suits, filed in New York and
New Jersey, included Staughton Lynd, the Yale
professor who has been to North Vietnam. Lynd,
a 38-year-old veteran with three children, was declared delinquent by his local draft board.
Draft boards have restored deferments to three
students who participated in anti-war demonstrations. Two of the three had passed out anti-war
leaflets at an army induction center in Seattle,
Wash. The third, John D. Love, a student at
Obertin College in Ohio, was reclassified after
participating in a demonstration against Navy recruiters. He was given back his deferment after
Oberlin's faculty council approved a temporary
ban on military recruiters.

*

_______

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“The House . . . Committee,
however, greatly changed the Senate-passed bill, adopting many
punitive and restrictive provisions
not in the Senate bill. The House
adopted its Committee's bill with
little change. Virtually all of
these provisions were adopted in
the Senate-House Conference, and
this conference bill was accepted
by the Senate on June 14 by a
vote of 72-23. It was signed by the
President in this form on June
30 1967.”

Lottery prohibited
Among the restrictive provis-

ions introduced by the House
Committee, perhaps the most significant was the one prohibiting
random selection, although giving
the President power to designate
a “prime age-group” for the
draft.

President

Johnson said

-

last

spring he would draft 19-year-olds
first, but he hasn't designated
them as the prime age-group and
evidently isn’t going to. Presumably his excuse is that Congress
wouldn't come through on a ran-

dom selection method of induction, so that he doesn’t feel obliged

to stick with his intention of taking the youngest first.

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vices Committee, however, look
a different tack. As Sen. Kennedy
described it:

For the Finest in
HAIR STYLING, RAZOR CUTTING,
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TO WOLFIE

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The Senate Armed Services
Committee, as Sen. K en n e d y
points out, came up with a bill
that would have left much of the
reform to the discretion of the
President, The House Armed Ser-

TONSORIAL CENTER

GOLDFINGER IS PINNED

All You Need Is.Love

question of college deferments up
for “public discussion.’’

CHARLIE'S

Sorry Girls!!

—

ask Congrfess to institute a random selection system, and told
the nation he would draft the
youngest first. He also threw the

pizza

Delivered FREE
—

Joel

A Drama Club actress at
the Shakespeare Festival
put Genesee Beer in Hamlet’s
wine goblet. When asked
about it, she said: "I thought
this was As You Like It!”

By

�Th

Pag* T*n

•

Friday, March 8,

Spectrum

1968

Economist Kenneth Boulding: in U.S.
peace is threatening and unpopular'
by the Council of International
Studies and World Affairs, econBoulding
E.
omist Kenneth

that “civilization” has
been “a rather deplorable interlude , . —based on agriculture
and expolitation—”A mere 6000
years in the evolutionary story, it
will hardly be noticed a million
years from now.”
claimed

Civilization has existed in four
“phases:” Stable war, unstable
war (in which violence is the
norm, interrupted by periods of
peace), unstable peace, and stable
peace, according to Br. Boulding.
Although very rare and infrequent, stable peace

Author of "Giles Goatboy“ will
read from his new work, "Menelaid" tomorrow at the Albright-

Special to the Spectrum

WBFO will rebroadcast the recent talk by Dick Gregory next
Monday, at 10 p.m. Henry Tenenbaum, program director, explained that the Gregory talk generated more interest from listeners than any talk broadcast by
the University station.

Knox Art Gallery.

Barth to give 'unusual'
reading of new work
John Barth, one of the most
stimulating contemporary novelists, and faculty member at the
University will give an unusual
reading tomorrow at the AlbrightKnox Art gallery.
Mr. Barth will read his new
work “Menelaid” called by the
author “a very long short story
or'very short short novel.” Three
things will characterize the reading. It will be presented in a
musical-recital fashion, without
introductions. Also there will be
something of a dramatic effect
with the use of limited visual
aids. Finally the reading will be
divided in two parts, because of
its length, with an intermission.
“Giles Goatboy” and “The Sot
Weed Factor” are other Barth
works. The reading will start at

•

Extra at Amhrrat
JAZZ FESTIVAL!
Aker Bilk
Pete Fountain

Studio Arena, 4:30 p.m.

THEATER PANEL: “Stage Design,” Jo Mielziner, Ming Cho
Lee, Eugene Lee, Studio Arena,

rim Fxtra
Nrlfclrd
Shorts at
Cinema

I

OTHER GREAT ENTERTAINMENT

THE SOFT MACHINE

England's Underground

Sensation

The Mark Boyle Sense Laboratory
Jesse’s First Carnival
All Seats Reserved $3 $4 $5
-

-

Tickets on sale now at Buffalo
Festival Ticket Office, Hotel StatlerHilton Lobby; U. of B. Norton Hall;
all Audrey I. Del's Record Shops;
Brundo't, Niagara Falls.

$45 MAIN

Complete Shows!
Tonight At
7:0f A 9:20

I
■

San.

«

TUSK*

to Thors.

I

At 1:15. 3:25. ■
7:45. !);55|

1 5:35,

•

Morgan, O’Keefe
CONCERT:
Center, Toronto, 8:30 p.m., for
middle-age hipsters.
FILM: “First Aid Now, Before the
Doctor Comes,” Diet. 303, 4
p.m., propaganda.
TV SPECIAL: “The Rise and Fall
of the Third Reich,” Channel
17, 10 p.m. also March 9, 9:30
p.m., what makes sheep out of
people.
MUSIC PANEL DISCUSSION:
“Playwriting,” Edward Albee,
Richard Barr, Alan Schneider,

Amhmt IClnem
5»OMAIHST.TM7d55 ■

Buffalo Memorial Auditorium
Sat., March 23rd at 8:15 p.m.

so, Mr.

Boulding

be effective—it
ined.”

can be “imag-

Presently the international sysis “very unstable,” Mr.
Boulding warned, as the U.S.,
“with an emotional maturity of
the age of eight, . . . requires the
burning of children” to satisfy its
“paronic fear of impotence or

tem

con-

tinued, peace is “threatening and
unpopular” in the United States,
“the only major country that is
not war weary,” He observed
that “peacenik” is a term of
abuse and expressed surprise that
“peace” is not a four-letter word,
America has been extremely
successful, he said (“there are
only 11 countries larger than
G.M.”), but that is “dangerous.”
“Nothing fails like success—-you

defeat." Furthermore, nuclear deferents are “bound to break down
eventually.”

The present generation of Americans “traumatised by the great
depression,” seems “incapable of
learning anything,” Mr. Boulding concluded.

community and because it ran
over two hours has not been reported fully in any medium. We
believe it is necessary to hear Mr.
Gregory’s talk in its entirety to
fully understand Mr. Gregory’s
message.”
He also pointed out that the
President’s Commission on Civil
Disorders criticized the mass
media for failing to communicate
the feelings and culture of the

black community. “WBFO has,
with its limitations, broadcast
more programs designed to bring
about better racial understanding
than any other Buffalo station.
Mr. Gregory is an effective
spokesman for a significant portion of the Negro community.”
WBFO can be heard at 88.7 mcs
on FM and at 780 kcs on Am to

Residence Halls.

Entertainment
Calendar

GAYLE HUNNICUTT-RAYMOND BURk

EXPERIENCE

He went on to say: “The talk
has been widely misquoted in the

2:30 p.m.
The following week two of the
world’s best-known architects will
discuss the latest trends in architecture and .city planning as part
of the Festival of the Arts.
Mr. R. Buckminster Fuller, designer of the U.S. pavilion at
Expo 67, will lecture on March
11 at 8:30 at Kleinhans Music
Hall. Fuller is famous for his deCompiled by Lori Pendrys
velopment of the geodesic dome.
Constantine Doxiadis, Greek de- Friday, March 8:
signer and urban planner, has designed urban renewal projects, in- MUSICAL COMEDY: “Ubi Roi,”
Baird, 8:30 p.m. through March
dustrial complexes and communi10, the year’s best.
ties throughout the world. He
has also developed the concept of MOVIE: “Kwaidan,” Norton Conf.
Theater, freaky ghost tale.
“ekistics,” the inter-relationship
“Box Mao Box,” Studio
of man and his environment. His PLAY:
Arena, 8 p.m., Buffalo loves Allecture is scheduled for March
bee.
13 in Upton Hall, Buffalo State.
Jane

GEORGE PEPPARDis'PJ:

HENDRIX

Even

disaster.” But dis-

aster need not be experienced to

WBFO to rebroadcast Gregory talk

—Goodson

John
Barth

has existed

comes from

sible.” Moreover, peace “pays
and pays enormously.” In terms
of resources withdrawn from civilian use, a nation’s own war industry does more damage to its
economy than does the enemy’s.

4:30 p.m.

CONCERT: Merce Cunningham
Dance Co.. Upton Auditorium,
Buff State, 8:30 p.m. also being
broadcast on Channel 17, live;
see it live.

WED.

FRANKLIN SHEPHERD

&amp;

-

Saturday, March 9:
BALLET: American Folk Ballet,
Eastman Theater, Rochester,
8:15 p.m.
READING: John Barth, AlbrightKnox, 2:30 p.m., a sneak preview of his new novel.

JAZZ CONCERT: Jazz Concert by
Ayler Brothers, Rockwell Hall,
Buff. State, 5 p.m.
CONCERT: Merce Cunningham
Dance Co. Upton Hall, Buff.
State, 8:30 p.m. also Sun.,
March 10, 8:30 p.m.
RADIO SPECIAL: Allan Ginsberg
and Charles Olson readings,
Playwriting Panel, WBFO, 10
p.m.

Sunday, March 10:
CONCERT: University Band, Fillmore Room, 8:30 p.m.
CONCERT: The Association, Eastman Theater, Rochester, 7:30
p.m., worth the trip.
CONCERT: Buffalo Philharmonic,

Kleinhans, 2:30 p.m.

CONCERT: “Evenings for New
Music,” Creative Associates, Albright-Knox, 8:30 p.m.; way out,
but important.

Monday, March

cities and all.

Saturday Night

8:30 p.m.

LECTURE: Yannis Xenakis, “Music and Architecture,” Albright-

Knox, 4:30 p.m.

Tuesday, March 12:
MOVIE; “Carpetbaggers,” Capen
140, 7:30 p.m., flashy smut: bad
book, worse movie.
LECTURE; “A Saga of the Creative Imagination,” Len Lye,
Upton Auditorium, 8:30 p.m.
CONCERT: Buffalo Philharmonic,

Kieinhans, 8:30 p.m.

Wednesday, March 13:
ART LECTURE: Constantine Doxiadis, Upton Hall, Buff. State,

8:30 p.m.

CONCERT: Beaux Arts Trio, music by Beethoven, Ravel, Mendelssohn, Baird, 8:30 p.m.
FILM: “New York Dairies,” by
Jonas

Mekas, 4:30 p.m., Al-

bright-Knox, through March 16,
world premiere by the underground genius.
Thursday, March 14:
CONCERT: Jazz Concert by
Charles Lloyd, Kieinhans, 8:30
p.m,, jazz even hippies can dig.
Friday, March 15:
TV SPECIAL: “The Actor,” Channel 7, hour special, great interviews; check local listing.

SUN.

THE GOOD SHEPHERDS

rNFEto*
The SHERILLES

11:

ART LECTURE: R. Buckminster
Fuller, Mary Seaton Room,
Kleinhans, 8:30 p.m., ‘bubble’

CONCERT: Dorian Quintet, Baird,

The ESQUIRES
Sunday Night

;Ctt.(M-APMUMOttNT

I

nCJWE

7:30-8:30 STUDENT RATES

IGRSMI!
•

/TMfiaet

�Friday, March 8, 1968

Tht Spectrum

Pag* Elavsn

Movie: Circle Ar

The Stranger'
Spectrum

Theater Reviewer

It is understandable to be wary of a film version of
“The Stranger,” but Luchino Visconti’s adaption of Albert
Camus’ novel, now playing at the Circle Art Theatre, demonstrates that the screen as well as the page can substantially
relate the existential and literary essences of the author.
With the character of Mersault, Camus has created an
example of the absurd man; the man in revolt. He has
observed the horrors, failures and futilities of existence but
does not despair. Even in the midst of the absurdities of life
a man must realize the intrinsic value of life.

Appearing at the Allenhurst
Lounge Coffee House in the
basement of Goodyear Dorm,
this trio offers a wide variety of
singing, strumming, and choreography. Dick Seale, Erica

Sounds

Schmitz, and Jon Adelson come

from diversified musical backgrounds. Their versatile interpretations of all kinds of music
provide their audiences with a

unlimited

fine evening's entertainment.

The Sounds Unlimited are here
for a limited engagement
through March 9.

Accepts existence

Life's absurdities

is.

for such overt acts as sending his
mother to a home, not crying at

After Mersault recognizes the
frustrations and meaninglessness
of his existence, he revolts against
them; and accepts life for what it

The movie succeeds surprisingly well at developing the character of the stranger. Marcello Mastroianni’s characterization of the

protagonist paints a portrait very
similar to the one perceived in
the mind’s eye when reading the
novel. A slight difficulty, however, is overcoming Mastroianni’s
image of the passionate Italian
lover in favor of the totally alienated, distant being of Mer-

sault.

Record review

Mersault can sit back and objectively observe his life as it is
spent. The present, the things of
the senses—these are the meaningful aspects of existence. He
asks nothing of life but to live.

.

Spirit
by James Albarella
Spectrum Music Reviewer

Lou Adler, responsible for
producing the Mamas and
Papas, brings about the marriage of rock and jazz in his
production of the first album
of a West Coast group, Spirit.
Pianist John Locke and drummer “Cass” Cassidy (another
Cass?) supply the jazz feel to this

sound. Mark Andes (bass) and
lead guitar Randy California are
very rock-oriented. Forget about
the lead singer Jay Ferguson
though.

The album starts off with a latin beat sound entitled “Fresh
Garbage.” This song sets the pace
of the rest of the album; Very
strong guitar work, solid bass and
piano backgrounds, but an extremely weak vocal. Perhaps too
much echo was added to the vocal track at the studio. The group
has something to say too, but the
singer does not have the “power"
to bring it through.
“Uncle Jack” is a nice strong
cut, with good harmony. It has
the group “style,” but the vocal
and guitar solo remind one of the
early Yardbirds.

weakly but picks up a blues feel.
The cellos are similar to those
used on George Harrison’s “Within You, Without You.”
“Water Woman” and “The
Great Canyon Fire in General”
are conventional and dull.

T rend-setters
The best tracks on the album
are “Straight Arrow,” a folk jazz
track; “Gramaphone Man” (an interesting arrangement), and “Elijah,” a very free number. Although one should not try to describe “sound” with labels, one
will find jazz and rock merged
tastefully. These tracks will be
trend setters.
In short, Spirit is one noteworthy LP. Although the sound is
very tight, one feels that the
group has not yet reached its full
potential. The band must improve
its vocals before it can hope to
experiment successfully with its
new sound. But this initial offering has enough to offer for both
the rock musicians and jazz heads.

KENSINGTON
faSky-

*lSL
Hg||

Jazz, rock merge
“Mechanical World” reminds
one of “Alabama Song" by the
Doors, only this time with horns.
A “Hendrix” guitar solo, Adler string arrangement and another sub-par vocal performance.
“Taurus" is simply beautiful.
Harpsichord, acoustical guitar and
strings blend well and “float.”
“A Girl In Your Eye” is another sitar song and very ordinary. “Topanga Windows” starts

CHRISTIE
TERENCE

Camera sets mood
Then one day the stranger kills
a man. He blames it on the sun.

Due to some adept camera work
the audience has actually experienced along with Mersault, the
blinding delerium of its rays
which precede the homicide.
There is little music in “The
Stranger.” Director Visconti relies on the camera to set the

V

While the movie does not capture much of the stranger’s psychological reactions as narrated
in the novel, it does a superb job
of dramatizing Mersault’s trial to
savor every ounce of disgust and
repulsion for the inordinate hypocrisy permeating the French
colonial courtroom.

m

XU
w
“’

6

p.m.

2nd WEEK!

|

by THE LIVELY SET (Western New York's
age) to bring SCUB and SUNYAB to one

Leave

name

and phone

—

THE SPECTRUM
printed hy

Partners' Press, Inc.
ABGOTT &amp; SMITH PRINTING
1881 Kenmore Ave. (at Military)

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Camus concludes his

Myth of Sisyphus" with: “One
must imagine Sisyphus happy."
And so must we with Mersault.
The camera zeros in on Mersault's
face. After a single tear is shed,
all regrets and trepidations are
wiped from his face as a self-assured, truly satisfied expression
takes over
now Mersault is
ready to meet his fate.

academy award
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BEST PICTURE
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meaning.

BATES

parties.
held Friday, March 15th, 9:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m., at the Williamsville Inn, 5447 Main St., Williamsville. (Live Music—Heels &amp; Ties—Refreshments).
SUCB students can board the charter bus at 9 p.m. in front of State Teachers
College. The bus will pick up SUNYAB students at 9:45 p.m. at University Plaza
snd afterwards take both SUCB and SUNYAB students to the Williasmville Inn.
Return via same route before curfew.
Cost of $3.00 per student includes round trip transportation, admission to the
Party and one mixed drink (plus honorary one night membership).

after

uuimmer
winner

WINNER OF

FINCH

NO CAR? STUCK ON CAMPUS?
of TLS'i "swingle"
The party will be

The last scene is striking. Mersault awaits the guillotine. A
priest vainly tries to convince him
of a belief in God. Mersault soliloquizes his existence. He wapts
very much to live life over and

How strongly the analogy of
Mersault with Sisyphus comes
across here. Sisyphus is doomed
for eternity to roll his rock up a
mountainside. Mersault vainly
pushes his head against the stone
wall of his prison cell (symbolizing the prison of life we are all
in). Both Mersault and Sisyphus
are conscious beings, void of all
hope yet driven by the absurd revolt which alone gives life its

The photography succeeds admirably as the camera repeatedly
focuses on the blazing, glaring
sun and gives this symbol the
same emphasis and cosmic proportions it received in the novel.

Ji2L HEKTtl *V€. ■ NEAP-tY

A special party bus has been chartered
largest club for singles, 20-35 years of

her funeral, and not believing in
God, than for killing the Arab.
The idiocies of the trial and the
society it represents are used to
show that the world which Mer
sault is revolting against is truly
absurd and revolting. At the trial
Mersault just observes, as his
convictions about life’s absurdities are confirmed. Mastroianni’s
expression in the courtroom is
one of bewilderment, not fear.

The fate of Sisyphus

mood.

STAMP

...

In reality Mersault is not on
trial for murder, but for noncomformity. He is convicted more

life: “I knew I was happy and was
happy still.”

Admission $1.50
Proper Dress

—

Tickets at Norton Union Ticket Office

Couples Only

16-0z. Schmidt's 25*

�Th

Pag* Tw*lv*

'Intensified' war forces
Quakers to suspend aid
American Friends Service Committee (AFSC) has suspended its
programs in Vietnam.
“The intensified military operations throughout the country
have resulted in a disruption of
transportation, communications,
supplies, and all phases of normal
civilian life,” said Stephen G.
Cary, AFSC associate executive
secretary. “Under these conditions it is impossible for us to
continue.”
The Quakers, who have been
operating a child day-care center
and a rehabilitation service in
Quang Ngai, have announced the
temporary removal of their staff
to Hong Kong to await developments. They hope to go back as

soon as possible.
Voluntary International Service
Assignments, or VISA, a second

its personnel, young men and
women who have been serving in

The Spectrum
ALBANY—The New York Stale

College Young Democrats, the official student adjunct of the Dem-

ocratic State Committee, will hold
a Mock Senatorial Convention in
Albany on the weekend of March
22 to 24. Students from throughout the state will serve as delegates from each of the 150 Assembly Districts of New York State,
They will have the opportunity to
make their choice for the Democratic candidate for United States
Senator, and to write a platform
for the 1968 Senatorial election.

What is Intermedia ’68? Well,
it is a group of artists who manipulate the environment in order
to achieve unique creative effects. Such devices as happenings, electromedia theater, spacetime, process ecumenical technology, kinetic environment, mixed media dance and sound construction are employed. The
group is designed to reach an
audience lacking the opportunity
to experience new work on the
frontiers of the arts; provide the
artists with the opportunity to
create new work and revive exposure and present
different
viewpoints by selecting artists
work
whose
differs both in con-

"The

rue

For that special dale
When a beer just won’t do

;

j Rue Franklin-West
Coffee House
j

|

I

official bulletin
The Official Bulletin is an authorized publication of the State
University nt Near York at Rtlflalo, for which The Spectrum assumes no editorial responsibility.
Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to 114 Hayes
Hall, attention Mrs. Fischer, before 2:00 p.m. the Friday prior
to the week of publication. Student organization notices are not
accepted for publication.

University College
Registration, March

—

Advance

18-May

8,

1968 At the request of Dean
The convention will run from
students will register in
afternoon to Sunday Welch,
Friday
order of class, priority being
morning, in the Ten Eyck Hotel.
given to upper classmen. In adPlatform Committee hearings will
dition the University College adbe held Friday evening. The main
visement
staff has elected to althe
session
of
convention,
plenary
on strict probation
low
students
including balloting for candidates t
preregister, but these students
to
will take place on Saturday. Leadmust see their adviser before reging Democrats will speak at the
istering.
convention before the delegates
make their choice.
The following schedule will be
Interested students are urged
observed:
to contact Convention Chairman
Paul Bessel, at 140-14 28th Rd,,
March 13-15
and thereafter
Flushing, N.Y. 11354 for further
through May 8, current Juniors
information.
and continuing Seniors may pick
up registration materials in 114
Diefendorf.
—

—

Intermedia '68 to come
to Spring Arts Festival
tent and process.

The artists represent varied
institutions such as the State University of Stony Brook, Albany,
New Paltz and Buffalo; Museum
of Modern Art, Brooklyn Academy of Music and the Nazareth
College of Rochester.
Intermedia ’68 will be part of
the Spring Arts Festival this

March 18-22 Current Juniors
and continuing Seniors will register after securing signature of
faculty adviser.
—

lege adviser to complete registration,
Sopholarch 24 Ai •il 12

YMCA of Buffalo
Dept, of Health, Ed. &amp; Welfare
Bureau of Federal Credit
Unions
Ossing Public Schools
Phelps Central Schools
Wappingers Falls Central
School Dist. No. 1
March 14
The Upjohn Co.
First National City Bank
Agway, Inc.
Commodity Exchange
Authority
Factory Insurance Association
March 15
Lord Corp.
Merck &amp; Co., Inc.
Brevard Co. Bd. of Public
Instruction (Fla.)
Chittenango Central School
Dist.
Fairport Central Schools

‘

■

mores will register. Sophomores
may sign thor own registration
cars, but must see a University
College adviser to discuss selection of major and to make application to a department, if appropriate. Students who do not comply with this request will not

have records forwarded to the
department of their choice in
June. Sophomores may see advisers as follows. Appointments
can be made beginning March 18.
March 19-22
...R through Z
G through Q
March 25-29
April 8-12
A through F
April 15-May 8—Freshmen will
register. These students must
have cards signed by a University College adviser before registering. They may see their advisers as follows:
April 1519
R through Z
April 22-26
H through Q
April 29-May 3 ....A through G

General announcements
March 8
Statistics Colloquium—presents
W. H. Williams, Bell Telephone
Laboratories. The topic is “A
Statistical Analysis of Time
Usage and Bell System Business
Offices,” 4:00 p.m., Room 15,
4244 Ridge Lea Road. Open to
the public.
March 12

Placement interviews
Please call 831-3311 for additional information on the following interviews.
Appointments
should be made at least one week
in advance of the interviewing
date if possible.

University Report
presents
Dr. J. Warren Perry, dean, school
of health related professions,
whose topic is “Health Related
—

March 11
Bureau of Census
Federal Reserve Bank of N.Y.
Curtice-Burns, Inc.

Professions
Members of the
Health Team,” 9:00 a.m., Conference Theatre, Norton Hall,
March 13
—

Stromberg-Carlson Corp.

March 12

Corning Glass Co,
Consolidated Freightways
Bankers Life Co.

The Department of Music—presents the Beaux Arts Trio. Music
by Beethoven, Ravel and Mendels-

Varian Associates
U.S. Army Material Command
West Irondequoit Cen. Schools
March 13
Eastman Kodak Co.

sohn. Admission: $2.50, $1.50 and
50c for general public, faculty
and staff, and students respectively. 8:30 p.m. Baird Music Hall.

Student Testing Center Registration Schedule
Law School Admissions

Upper division students who
have been rejected by a deparraent or who are undecided as to
major will see a University Col-

Mar.

M.L.A. Foreign Language

8

Mar.

30

316 Harriman

6

Mar. 22 Apr.
316 Harriman
Mar. 16 Mar. 30 Sch of Nursing
Mar. 16 Apr. 6 316 Harriman

Proficiency Test

National Teacher’s Exam
Practical Nursing

month.

IN

PERSON!

THE

Doors
SATURDAY, MARCH 16

j

8:15 P.M.
Reserved Seats Now!

I

2.25
EASTMAN THEATRE

$4.25, 3.75, 3.25,

(

I
EXTRA-ORDINARY
341 rue Franklin
I
Sophisticated Entertainment j
Friday and Saturday-

60 GIBBS STREET
ROCHESTER, N. Y.

454-2620

|

"GLORIA"

Bf®

A

'

M

Ilf ||
g
I

"MYSTIC EYES"

"ONE OF THE MOST BRILLIANT FILMS
THIS YEAR! EXQUISITE!
PERFECTION!"
-Crowther, N.Y. Times
Wetter

8, 1966

Fridi

Spectrum

individual assignments under indigenous agencies in Hue, Danang, Vung Tau, Pleiku, and Saigon itself. The volunteers are
gathering in Singapore to reassess the situation and the program’s relation to it.
The Quang Ngai program will
be resumed as soon as conditions General notices
may permit, according to Charles
The Admission Test for GradRead of the AFSC.
uate Study in Business (ATGSB)
AFSC has been attempting for
is required of all candidates apthe past two and a half years to plying
for Graduate Programs in
extend aid to North as well as Business Administration and will
South Vietnam. This is part of a be given Saturday, April 6, 1968.
long Quaker tradition of giving
Applications must be filed with
aid on both sides in war situathe Educational Testing Service
an
outspoken two weeks
tions. The AFSC is
prior to the test date.
critic of the U.S. military interApplication forms are available
vention in Vietnam, calling for in
the Graduate Business Prospeedy withdrawal.
grams Office, 121 Crosby Hall,
831-3401.

Young Dems to hold convention
Special to

•

nte

on

Continental#

.

COMES

THE NIGHT"
PLEASE

APPEARING AT

THE STATE UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO

Reede Stert.nj

f

•

CLARK GYM

SATURDAY, MARCH 9th at 8:00 P.M.
also featuring

THE MANIACS
currently appearing at "The Mug"

CONFERENCE
THURSDAY

■

FRIDAY

THEATER
-

SATURDAY

Program includes a special student made newsreel.
Showings at 12, 2:45, 5:30, 8:15, 11:00

The Concert will be followed by a Mixer at which the Maniacs will perform—Clark Gym
Tickets Available through Norton Union Ticket Office and at the Door
Advance Sale: $2.00 for Fee Payers, $3.00 for Non-Fee Payers
$3.00 at the Gate

Sponsored by: UUAB Concert

Committee

�Friday, March 8,

196b

The Spectrum

Pag*

Thirteen

Hockey Club to face RIT in championship tourney
The greatest tournament in the
Hockey League will take place
in the Amherst Recreation Center
Saturday and Sunday night as
the State University of Buffalo
hosts the FLHL invitational tournament.
League Champs Buffalo will

face the Technicians from Rochester Tech in the first contest.
The Bulls have beaten the RIT
squad twice this season by
scores of 5-2 at Amherst and 9-5
in Rochester.
Both games were thrillers right
down to the last buzzer, so don’t
think this game is going to be a
push over by any stretch of the
imagination. To beat the team

from Rochester the Bulls will
have to fui'eclieck ami stay witlr
the opposition for 60 minutes. It
is a do or die situation for both
teams since the losers will be
eliminated from the championship. The game will start at
7:30 p.m.

The second game will see last
champs, Oswego, face
Brockport State. Canton A&amp;T,
who were scheduled to play,
could not make the tournament
because of financial difficulties.
The Flyers from Brockport will
get a second chance as they face
years

Oswego

immediately

following

first game, Oswego is favored in this game, but don’t
count the Brockport boys out too
the

who miss out on the Finger
Lakes tournament will be missing
out on the greatest athletic accomplishment in the school’s history.
The tickets are still $1.50 for
students. The Inter-Resident
Council will arrange bus transportation from Norton Hall both
evenings.

Jim Hamilton

Lome Rombough

Leading the Hockey Bulls into the Finger Lakes Hockey League
championships, is top goal-getter Lome Rombough, whose 35
goals was tops in the league and a new dub record. Also
pictured is standout goalie Jim Hamilton, whose superb play
in the nets is one of the most important reasons why the club
enters the tournament in first place with a perfect record of 15
straight wins.

the spectrum of

sports

Eberle top
—Grimmer

Poor
Hobart!

The rampaging State University
of Buffalo Hockey Club closed
out the regular season on top

they shellacked defenseless
Hobart 10-0, The action took
place at the Amherst Recreation

B-Ball records reflect team efforts

as

Arena.

Jon Culbert is chosen
player of the week
Senior forward Jon Culbert has
been selected as the last Spectrum Basketball Player of the
Week.

The selection took longer than
usual this week as the Bulls
dropped two out of three games
last week.
There are two main reasons
why he was selected: His fine
play in the game against Ithaca
College at Ithaca a week ago
Tuesday and the superb effort
which he came through with in
the game against Philadelphia
Textile.
Culbert started the second half
at Ithaca in place of Bobby Nowak. Nowak was asked by head
coach Len Serfustini just before
the start of the second half
whether he was ready to start.
Nowak replied that he was having
an “off” night and didn’t think
that he coul4 help the team any
by playing in the next half.
Culbert was chosen by “Serf”
to replace forward Nowak in the
second stanza and he finished the
half with an excellent defensive
and offensive show, Jon picked
up nine crucial points in that
period of play and more important he pulled down nine rebounds off the backboards to aid
the Bulls in making up their
three point deficit at the halfway mark.
In the vital overtime period

the Bulls scored 12
points and the losers’ eight, Jon
sank two pressure-packed free
throws in the one-and-one situation after Ed Eberle had set the
Bulls ahead with a long jump
shot. Had Culbert not made the
first free throw the Bulls could
have lost possession and eventual-

in which

ly might have lost the game.

With forward Doug Bernard
out with a separated shoulder
which he suffered in the game
aginst Ithaca in the overtime
period, Culbert was selected to
start the game against Philadelphia Textile in Bernard’s usual spot. This was Culbert’s last
game in Clark Gym and he
finished in fine style as he led
the Bulls in the scoring department with 11 points.
Jon will receive his degree
this June in Physical Education
and is not only a stellar performer on the court but also
is an excellent student with a
tremendous personality. He is
carrying an overall 2.0 quality
point ratio, Jon is now doing his
student teaching at Woodlawn
Junior High School in the Buffalo
school system.
Culbert hopes to do graduate
work at his alma mater and has
applied for a teaching fellowship
in the Department of Physical
Education which has its headquarters in Clark Gym.

scorer

by W. Scott Behrens

Bulls’ basketball history and with
a good year next year he could

Sports Editor

finish among the top four. Eberle
has scored 604 points in two years
of varsity ball and needs 396
points to hit the magic number
of 1000. He should finish his career as the best offensive scorer
Serfustini has ever coached at
the State University of Buffalo,

Varsity basketball manager Fran Welk has just completed the season’s official statistics. The following is a rundown of the team leaders in each of the categories:
Junior forwards Ed Eberle and
Bob Nowak and center John Jekielek participated in ail 21 games
for the Bulls.
Eberle took the title in six
other departments: most field
goals attempted (274), most field
goals scored (112), most free
throws made (63), best shooting
percentage from the free throw
line (85.1), most points scored
(287) and the team’s highest average (13.67 points per game).
Senior forward Doug Bernard

turned out to be the team’s best
shooter making exactly 50% of
his shots from the field. He attempted 142 shots at the basket
and made 71 of them.
Jekielek finished as the team
leader in most free throws attempted (75), most rebounds (139;
and the highest rebound per
game average (5.6).
Bernard finished his career
with 520 points in three years of

varsity play, making him 22nd
among the all-time scoring lead-

ers in the Bulls’ basketball history. He finished with a very respectable 44.7% career average
from the field, making 199 field
goals out of 443 attempted.
Bernard put in 121 free throws
through the hoop. He attempted

186 shots from the 15-foot line
giving him a
65.1%,

very respectable

Senior forward Jon Culbert finished his career with 341 points,
scored on 42% of his shots from
the field (124 of 295) and had a
69.9% shooting average from the
free throw line (93 of 133).

Eberle’s 25 points against MacMurray College Jan. 2 was the
best offensive performance of the
season while Jekielek’s 23 rebounds in the same encounter
was the Bulls’ highest output in
that department.

Bernard led Culbert in the re
bound department, 269 to 256.
Eberle is now 12th among the
scoring leaders in the

all-time

Year-end standings
Player

FTA

FT

REB

RAV.

Eberle

jekielek

21
19
21

Peeler*
Rutkowski

19

Nowak
Bernard

Culberf

Wells
Scherrer

Williams
Vaughan

Barbera
Foster
Buffalo totals 21

41.3

605

totals 21

41.7

626

Opp.

Legend: FGS-field goals shot; FO-field goals made; PCT-percentage;
FTA free throws
attempted; FT--free throws made; REB—rebounds; R.AV. —rebound average per game;
PF-personal fouls; D—number of disqualifications; PTS-total points; AVER.-points
per game average,

Drafted

into U.S. Army Feb.

6.

�Friday, March 8, 1968

The Spectrum

Page Fourteen

Fencers nip Syracuse 14-13 Women are 10th
in swim meet
after bowing to Notre Dame

The fourth annual Invitational

by

Paul Maxwell

University

Bouncing back from a severe
21-6 thrashing at the hands of
Notre Dame, the Fencing Bulls
edged Syracuse 14-13 in a triangular meet Saturday at Clark
Gym.

Foilman George Wirth led the
Swashbucklers to their second
conquest of the Orange this season winning all three of his bouts.
Pierre Chanteau copped two
bouts to give the Bulls’ foil trio
a 5-4 advantage.
The Bulls took the epee 5-4
as All American prospect Steve
Morris and Tony Walluk each
copped a pair of bouts with
Bruce Renner scoring a lone
tally.
The Swashbucklers were nipped
5-4 in saber as senior captain Jon
Rand scored a dual triumph with
Ed Share and A1 Demsky each
winning a bout.

The

lone bright spot in the

and

Culver Military

ter a 17-8 pasting of Syracuse will
attempt to give coach Dick Willert
a perfect season as they oppose

the Hobart frosh.
In concluding a regular season

that has been somewhat disappointing, the fencing Bulls are
looking forward to stiff postseason competition in the North
Atlantic Intercollegiate Fencing
Championships at Rochester on
March 16 and in the NCAA
Championships to be held in Detroit March 28-30.
Coach Sid Schwartz expressed
the sentiments of his squad as
he said: “We’ve had some tough
breaks this season, and the tournaments will give us a chance to
make up for some losses that
were really hard to take. I think
we’ve got a chance to take the
North Atlantics this year. As for
the NCAA Championships, the
competition is awfully rugged
there and I wouldn’t want to
make any predictions just yet.”

Swimming Meet for women was
held at Cornell University Sat-

urday^
Among

Urn

fourteen colleges

entered the State University of
Buffalo came in tenth with an aggregate of 7 points. First place
went to Marymount College with
77 points, second place to Ithaca
College with 62.5 points and third
place went to to the State University college of New York at
Brockport with 32 points,
Buffalo’s Nancy Dahlstrom
came from behind to win a gold
medal and first place honors in
the 100
yard breaststroke in
-

1:26.8.
Buffalo’s Jane Baird entered
the Medley Relay, the 100-yard
Individual Medley, and the 100yard freestroke events.
Bonnie Sommer also entered
the Medley Relay, the 100-yard
breaststroke and the diving
events. Sue Petrie was entered in
the Medley Relay and the 50-yard
backstroke. Judy Midlik entered
the 50-yard breaststroke and the
100-yard backstroke. Mary Anne
Burkard competed in the 50-yard
freestyle and the 50-yard backstroke.

L—Grimmer

Champion
swimmer

Pictured is State University at
Buffalo's Nancy Dahlstrom, who
became the 1968 State Champion last Saturday at Cornell in
the Women's Intercollegiate
100-yard breaststroke.

Notre Dame encounter was the
saber fencing of Rand who won
two of his three bouts.

The Swashbucklers, 9-6 after
the split, journeyed to Hobart
Wednesday

night

seeking

avenge an early season

to

loss, and

will close out their regular season tomorrow with a triangular
meeat Clark Gym against Brock

REMEMBER
THOSE
YOU LOVED
WITH A
MEMORIAL GIFT
TO THE

AMERICAN
CANCER
SOCIETY
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leading to

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PHARMACY
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and anything else that you might think of.

Advanced

educational
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for

positions of leadership in:
management, marketing,
selling and research in

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teaching of pharmacy

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(internal program)
SESSIONS BEGIN
SEPTEMBER ANtT FEBRUARY
Write or phone for:
Bulletin of Information
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•

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Sign up today for an interview with the Du Pont
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�Friday,

March 8, 1968

The Spectrum

Pag* Fifteen

Greek graph

IFC will award hockey trophy
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

The Interfraternity Council, in
conjunction with their campaign
to support the Hockey Bulls, will
award a trophy to the outstanding defensive player in the Finger Lakes Hockey Tournament.
Inspiration for the award stems
from the come-from-behind performance of the Bulls Feb, 17 at
Oswego. Selection of the winner
will be made by a panel of judges
consisting of Howard Piaster, Referee John Barnes, A1 Hamilton,
and Jack Schafer, a sports writer
for the Courier Express.
be presented

The trophy will
after the completion of the four
games by I.F.C. Representative
John Anderson of Gamma Phi
Fraternity. The Greeks express
their support to “the best club
hockey team in the United
States.”

Maxson, Frank Maraschiello, Ed

Parisi, Lou Rosa, and Jack Storton
. , . New pledges of Tau Kappa
Epsilon are, Wayne Terry, Keith
Campbell, Pete Szolnoky, Dave
Neary, Bob Danheim, and Chuck

Heck . , . Robert Allen of Theta
Chi Fraternity has been awarded
a $200 scholarship for outstanding

work

in the Business School.
Money raising projects are being
put into effect to make ready for
the purchase of a new house at
the campus.

Sororities
The newly elected officers of
the College Panhellenic Association of Buffalo are: President,
Marty Goldberg; V.P., Anne Recore; Secy., Flo Pelliccia; Treasurer, Marilyn Rutstein. A Greek
Sing will be sponsored April 19
at Rosary Hill College. The groups
participating will be Alpha Gamma Delta, Chi Omega, Sigma Delta Tau, Sigma Kappa Phi, Theta
Chi Sorority, Sigma Phi Epsilon,
Phi Ep and Teke.
The Fall, 1967 Pledge Class
will be hostess to the sisters of
Alpha Gamma Delta at a party
this evening at the home of Cindy
Littlefield. Mimi Blits is our candidate for Military Ball Queen.
Voting will be held Thursday and
. . New pledges of Chi
Friday
Omega are: Barb Brickell, Barb
O’Connell, Emily Casamassino,
Sharon Biegon, Carolyn Dachs,
Kathy Buens, Carol Smith, Sue
Kipping, and Kay McArthur,
Pledge officers are: President,
,

I.F.C. Trophy

Will be presented to outstanding defensive player.

B

Dachs, V.P., Emily Casamassino; Secy., Barb O’Connell;
Sue
Kipping . . . New sisTreas.,
ters of Sigma Delta Tau are:
Jackie Scheiffle, Sue Raichilson,
Sue Goldstone, Rita Talcott, Lorraine Reich. New pledges from
open rush are Leslie Hallowitz,
Shelley Bloomenfeld, Carm Lachiusa. Myrna Wolff was initiated
last week . . . Sigma Kappa Phi
announces that Charlene Bauer
was elected Pan Hel president.
Carolyn

Alpha Sigma Phi will be cosponsoring a Colt 45 beer blast
March 22 . . . Alpha Phi Omega,
the service fraternity, will be
manning the tables in Goodyear
and Norton during voting on the
Student Association Constitution
referendum . . . New pledges of
Phi Kappa Psi are, Scott Herlan,
Chip Hiller, Phil Knapp, Tim

junior Year
in

New York
Three undergraduate colleges offer students
from all parts of the country an opportunity

to broaden their educational experience
by spending their
Junior Year in New York
New York University is an integral part of
the exciting metropolitan community of
business, cultural,
New York
artistic, and financial center of the nation.
The city's extraordinary resources greatly
enrich both the academic program and the
experience of living at New York University
with the most cosmopolitan student body in
the world.
This program is open to students
recommended by the deans of the colleges
to which they will return for their degrees,
Courses may be taken in the
School of Commerce
School of Education
Washington Square College of Arts
and Science
Write for brochure to Director, Junior Year
in New York

NEW YORK UNIVERSITY
New York, N.Y 10003

Dyan Petrella was ejected Second
Vice President. Carol Johnston
took Secretary and Paula Agos-

CLASSIFIED
FOR

1961

fer.

PERSONAL

SALE

CHRYSLER,—Newport—

good condi-

qon.

886-2256.

1965 CORVAIR MONZA
traction, fast steering,

four speed, posir. and h. all
black, 45,000 miles, electronic diagnosis
of condition, $995. 882.2090 evenings.
■

Bacon tenor BANJO with
hardshell case, classical guitar. Find Kim
in the Rathskeller or phone 832-6898.
STUDIO COUCH, steel desk, drapes, pillows, lamps, blankets, etc. Call Sunday morning IF 3-2155.
1926

Classic

APARTMENTS

WANTED

APARTMENT needed for September
fur.
nished.
one or two bedrooms, near
campus. Call Carol, 652-7934 or leave
message—Spectrum.
-

tino Pan Hel Alternate. Anne Mc-

WANTED

Nulty has been elected Sophomore rep. to the executive council. A pizza sale will be held
March 16 . . . New pledges of
Theta Chi Sorority are: Jan Bellefeuille, Mary Ann Cameron, Colleen Crotty, Susan Greiss, Mirta
Franovich, Kathy Hoffman,
Yvonne Lazcano, Sue Needleman,
Gerry Schliefer, Michele Shev-

(twenty needed immediately) weekends, good wages, telephone
TT 4.1748. Call mornings.
COLLEGE MEN start part time now - full
time for summer. Can earn up to $4.25
hour. Car necessary. Call 832-7509
per
for interview,

chik, Barbara Szlachton, Janis
Violon and Gayle Whittaker. Our
Queen candidate for Military Ball
is Joanne Montonte. Pledge* officers are: President, Yvonne Lazcano, V.P., Michelle Shevchik,
Treasurer, Jan Bellefeuille.

GO GO

PART

GIRLS

TIME

HELP: hours at your
salary
plus
commission.
convenience,
Call 874-3388, 9-11 daily.
SALES

The Gilded Edge, 3193 Bailey
Hand-crafted jewelry and unusual gifts.
Wed. - Sat.
VISITORS:

Wanted to

buy; USED AUTOHARP, willing
to haggle. Call Ed at 835-3010.
WANTED: PEOPLE to attend COLT 45
Beer Blast. Qualifications; good drinker.
ORGAN PLAYER needed, must have groovy

beat.

BIG WOO

Call Galuch: 836-9280.

P.S.-I
rox

oha

"rpx

•

tal"

MT.

ailiooic

b.c.

love

even if you do, have
Big Woo.

ybu

in your hear.

from the Jewish Bible
day or night.

SHALOM! For gems

call

875.4265

MISCELLANEOUS

BERMUDA - $185 complete with: jet, apartmerits and cottages with kitchenettes,
cruise, lunches, and barbecues, cab transfers, all gratuities, bargains galore. We
invite comparison. Filling up rapidly. Call
after 2:00 p.m. Andy 033-9234.
5259 reguLHy scheduled i«l
EUR0PE
flight. New York to London. June 13August 28. 20 seat* left. Call Don 837-9157,
4-8 p.m.
BEER BLAST tonight, March 8, 9 p.m. at
Island Park, Union and Clinton. Sponsored by Corvettes, Inc. Admission $ 1.50.
Available for

and roll

dances

•

NR

group.

THE ALIENS

.

4-1320.

Rock

PURSE containing identification and contact lenses lost at Hadi's party. Contact
Rachael
1-772-2095 Reward.
GIVE term papers

Will type at
9928.

25c

and reports perfection!
per page. Linda TR 4-

per page; dittos,
$2.00 per hundred. Call

TYPING term papers, 25c

35c; envelopes,
TF 5-6897.
MOTOR CYCLE

INSURANCE

-

low cost imUP.

mediate F.S.-l. Premiums financed.
STATE CYCLE INSURANCE 695-3044.

''Bill.

Evans is
How much of me can I put into words? How much
of your own reality can I remind you of?
What would happen in the world if newspapers were
full of life instead of death? If people who wanted to
read had to read about life? If they actually had to see
something from another person to tjiem?
That’s what we’ve got to try to do. People don’t
need to read about old happenings, dead news, that
other newspapers and televisions and sidewalks are
full of. They don’t even want it. There’s just nothing
else. I want to give them something. I don’t know

what, but I’m trying.
Can we be real while writing a newspaper article?
David (Libra)

reprinted from AVATAR, issue

no. 16, p. 9

ON SALE AT
U.B. BOOKSTORE
CRICKET TICKET, 3586 Main
3 OF US, 496 Franklin
GREEN LANTERN, 56 Elmwood
GALLERY ARCANUM, 180 Allen SOLE SOURCE, 820 Elmwood
CHRISTMAS STUDIO, 512 Elmwood

one of the very liny group of
real poets we have: a sensitive,
intuitive and imaginative genius
in his medium.” Jazz Magazine
"The delicate probing fingers
are like tendrils of sound that
curl around the melodies with
a wispy ethereal quality...Such
music wears well. The more one
listens, the more there is to
hear."
Down Beat Magazine
That’s what the jazz critics say
about him. But even people who
don’t like jazz respond to Bill
Evans.
His music is tender, lyrical, passionate. It's
A SIMPLE MATTER
OF CONVICTION.
and that's the title of his newest album, with Shelly Manne
and Eddie Gomez (V/V6-8675)
Treat yourself also to these two
recent releases
INTERMODULATION
with Jim Hall, guitar
(V/ V6-8655)

The sustained interplay of the
two musicians is of a quality
rarely found in jazz
John S. Wilson
BILL EVANS TRIO WITH
SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
(V/V6-8640)

"So

it's hard to distinguish between Bach, Chopin
and Evans." Leonard Feather
Exclusively on
perfect

©Verve

Records is
a division ol MeUoGoldwyn-Mayer Inc

�Th

Page Sixteen

•

Friday, March 8, 1968

Spectrum

Fear ‘compromise 9 Civil Rights bill
new Hampshire

washin&amp;ton
-.ompiled from our wire services by Madeline Levine

of draft after

End

Former Vice
LITTLETON, N. H.
President Richard M. Nixon has called
for abolition of the draft and creation of
a professional army after the Vietnam
war is ended.
Nixon said the nation’s young people
should “be able to plan their lives rather
than living as they are today with the
draft hanging over them.
“Once we end this war, we can remove the draft from hanging over our
young people,” Nixon said.
“I believe we should have a volunteer armed services,” he said, Nixon said
the United States could have “a highly
trained, professional army” by boosting
the pay of servicemen.
Earlier, Nixon, who was stung in the
1960 presidential election by John F.
—

the war?

Kennedy’s charges of a “missile gap,”
turned the labels by accusing President
Johnson of allowing Russia to overtake
the United States in military power.
Campaigning in the final week before
New Hampshire’s first-in-the-nation primary, he repeatedly has charged the Johnson administration with allowing “the superior power of the United States to be

WASHINGTON
A bipartisan coalition fought to keep intact an unprecedented ban on housing discrimination but
feared that the Senate might load the
compromise civil ri
amendments
After days of voting it has become clear
that Senate sentiment favored the open
housing provision, which would outlaw
discrimination in 44.6 million units, or
68% of the nation’s housing.
But it is also apparent that Senators,
spearheaded by anxious southerners, were
willing to add to the compromise stiff
provisions to deal with civil disorders.
As the third day of voting on amendments began, the compromise included a
three-part package: the open housing provision, a mild anti-riot section, and legislation to protect Negroes and civil rights
workers from racial violence.
The civil rights coalition was confident of turning back another effort to cut
coverage of the fair housing provision.
Early this week an amendment which
would have exempted 29 million of the
—

44.6 million dwelling units was defeated,
On a 48-43 vote, the Senate rejected
the proposal by Sen. Howard H. Baker
Jr. (R., Tenn.), which would have ex-

homes, unelss the owner instructed the
real estate agent to discriminate.
Under the compromise bill, open
housing coverage would extend to all
single family, owner-occupied homes sold
through a broker. Such homes sold privately would not be covered.
Sen. Jack R. Miller (R., Iowa) planned
to offer an amendment similar to Baker’s,
but it had the inducement to liberals of
a flat ban on discrimination against veterans and servicemen which would extend to all housing.
The Senate indicated its willingness to
adopt anti-riot legislation in a series of
votes Tuesday. Even the coalition fell
apart when the Senate approved 82 to 13
an amendment which would make it a
federal crime to cross state lines to Incite,
promote, organize or take part in a civil
disorder.

eroded,”

“When President Eisenhower left office, the power balance was seven to one,”
he told an audience of about 300 persons
in Littleton. “Today, it’s down to two to
one.”
“Unless we get some new leadership,
the Soviet Union will catch us and pass
us in terms of military power in the next
two years,” he said.

Peaceable pilot court martialed
CANNON AFB, N. M.
An Air Force
court martial board refused to dismiss
charges against Capl. Hale Noyd, sidestepping a ruling on whether he was unconstitutionally denied classification as a
conscientious objector to the war in Vietnam.
Noyd, 34, a fighter pilot, 12-yeaf career Air Force officer and former Air
Force Academy professor, is accused of
willfully disobeying an order to fly a
training mission with a Vietnam-bound
student pitot Dec. 5.
Noyd was transferred from the academy to training duty after protracted attempts in the civil courts to get out of
the Air Force or be classified as a conscientious objector.
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled he must
exhaust the remedies of military courts
before taking the matter to civil courts.
Marvin Karpatin, a civilian lawyer
named by the American Civil Liberties
Llnion to help defend Noyd, asked the
board to dismiss the charges.
—

Illegal order
He said

Noyd was

the regulation under which
refused conscientious objector

status was unconstitutional
“The processing of applications was
absolutely devoid of the barest requirements of the due process of law,” Karpatkin said. “There is no interview, no
hearing, no available counsel, no witnesses and no procedure whereby the accused can be appraised of his case. It is
no less than an abomination.”
He also said the order to fly the mission was illegal because Noyd had already said he was opposed to the war.
Col, Harold R. Vague, law officer for
the board, said a ruling on the constitutionality of the regulation was premature.
“I find it unnecessary for me at this
time to decide the constitutionality of the
regulation covering conscientious objector
applications and 1 do not find that the
order was illegal on a matter of law. The
motion is therefore denied,” Vague said.
The board first denied, then granted,
request to permit three theologians to
testify in Noyd’s behalf.
Defense attorneys said the theologians’
testimony was needed to show Noyd’s
frame of mind at the lime he was given
the order.

—UPI

Telephoto

Actor's son
refuses induction

Half

Actor Sterling Hayden's 19-year-old son,
Christian Hayden (center, glasses), displayed his burning induction papers in
Los Angeles Tuesday after he openly
defied U.S. Selective Service laws by refusing induction into the armed forces.

billion asked

WASHINGTON
President Johnson
asked Congress for what amounted to a
$500 million civil rights-welfare program
for American Indians. The White House
said their plight “dwarfs the situation
of any other Americans in the worst
—

ghettos . .
In a special message Johnson asked
for funds to give Indians improved economic, social and educational opportunities, a greater voice in their own affairs,
and tribal rights to determine whether
state criminal and civil laws shall apply
on their reservations.
But without waiting for Congress to
act, Johnson issued an executive order
creating a National Council on Indian Opportunity, headed by Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey and including six cabinet members, to seek improved living
conditions among the nation’s 600,000 Indians.

The message—the first one a President
ever sent Congress on Indian problems—was the result of a special task force study

for

Indians

begun two years ago. Johnson said it had
disclosed a “shocking situation” existed
among the Indian population, which includes 400,000 on or near reservations in
25 states.
The President, who said his proposal
would cost about $500 million, asked that
Congress take action to provide “a standard of living for the Indians equal to that
of the country as whole.”
He also asked that they be given “an
opportunity to remain in their homelands,
if they choose, without surrendering their
dignity; an opportunity to move to the
towns and cities of America, if they
choose, without surrendering their dignity, an opportunity to move to the
and cities of America, if they
choose, equipped with the skills to live

towns

in equality and dignity.”
Johnson said Indians should have “full
participation in the life of modern Am
erica, with a full share of economic op
portunity and social justice.”

Goldwater boosts Nixon, unity
WASHINGTON Barry M. Goldwater is
tempering his anti-Rockefeller talk under
a smothering barrage of Republican unity
appeals led by his chosen front-running
presidential candidate, Richard M. Nixon.
Goldwater eased off on his stance against
Rockefeller Tuesday, asserting that although he favors Nixon, he does not “rule
out others” for the Republican presiden—

Playwright Arthur Miller
chaplain William Sloan

—UPI Telephoto

Connecticut
peace march

(left) and Yale
Coffin Jr. led

some 5,000 persons through

the streets
of New Haven last weekend in the
"Connecticut March for Peace." The Rev.
Mr. Coffin is under indictment for his
activities in protesting against the Vietnam War.

tial nomination.
But the softened position falied to erase
the impact of his earlier declaration, and
to most Republicans it seemed there is
party division ahead if New York Gov,
Nelson A. Rockefeller becomes an open
candidate for the nomination.
The disunity threat was aired and repaired publicly at a $500-a-plate fundraising dinner Tuesday at which more
than $800,000 was taken in tor House

and Senate candidates.

Goldwater who had said in Phoenix
that he could not support Rockefeller as
a presidential candidate, told the more
than 2000 assembled Republicans:
“Let’s not spend our time downgrading
Republicans. I know that sounds funny
for a fellow who made the statement I
made yesterday.
“But I’ve never voted for a Democratic
and if people want to
President yet
convince me they can change their spots.
I can be convinced.
I may be partisan
t
in that I back Dick Nixon, but I don
rule out others,”
Nixon himself promised to support the
—

...

party’s nominee and said he hoped Gold
canwater, its defeated 1964 presidential tak
didate, and all Republicans would

that stand.

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                    <text>Demonstrators march
in protest of induction

The Spectrum
&gt;w

York at

1968
MAR 5 March

Tuesday,

Vol. 18, No. 38

5, 1968

1VERSITY

ARCHIVES

Votin Thursda and Friday

Constitution will face referendum
The newly proposed Student Association constitution,
calling for sweeping changes
in student government structure, will be submitted to
referendum Thursday and
Friday.
Voting will take place in the
Center Lounge of Norton Hall and
in Goodyear Hall from 9 a.m. to
6 p.m.
Only those students who have
validated I.D. cards will be permitted to vote. Anyone with an

See related story, p. 3

unvalidated I.D. card can amend
the situation in Foster Basement
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. either
Thursday or Friday.

If the constitution is passed
the new Student Coordinating
Council that comes into existence

will consist of a President, two
Vice-Presidents and nine coordinators, each of whom will represent a particular area of student
interest.

By three-quarters vote

the Council can approve proposals and subject them to final approval of the student polity. This
group would consist of all interested students who attend the
once-a-month meetings. These
students would have final say on
all matters except those of financial nature.

Regardless of whether the constitution is approved, elections
will be held to fill existing student offices, March 26 and 27.
Anyone interested in running
should obtain a petition from
Mrs, Marko in Room 225, March
13 through 18, Five hundred undergarduate signatures for an executive position, 150 undergrad-

by Mark Schneider

Buf82JE C E B V E D

uate signatures for a coordinator
or senatorial position, will probably be required. Petitions should
be returned by March 18.
On that day all candidates are
required to attend a meeting in
Room 205 Norton Hall to discuss
rules for the elections. Campaigning will take place from
March 20 to 27.

Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

tors marched in front of the Main

St. Army Induction

Center last

week to protest the planned induction of three draft resisters.
Karl Baker, 21, and David
Straks, 20, of the University of
Rochester, and George Rhodes,
20, of Lockport, refused to cooperate with the induction processes
and were sent home.
Last October, Mr. Baker and
Mr. Rhodes handed in their draft
cards, refusing their 2-S deferments and any association with
the Selective Service System.
They were subsequently reclassified, declared delinquent, and ordered to report for induction.
At the induction center, Mr.
Baker issued a two-page statement denouncing the war in Vietnam and urging men who disagreed with it to refuse indue-

tion. Attempting to voice his
opinions inside the center, he
Lt. Dennis Johnson.
In Rochester, 210 demonstrators saw Jtfr. Baker and Mr.
Starks off on a bus load of area
inductees bound for the Buffalo
center. About 30 of them followed the bus and joined the
local demonstration, which began
at 7:30

a.m.

The Buffalo demonstrators carried signs calling for the immediate withdrawal of troops from
Vietnam. One sign read: “Support the Pope—Oppose the War.”
The State University of Buffalo
branch of Students for a Democratic Society, organizers of the
protest, have planned to stage
another demonstration March 12,
when Mike Nevin, graduate student in education here, plans to
refuse his scheduled induction.

Students interested in forming
a party should register with the

Elections Committee in Norton
205 and present the name of
their chairman. This is necessary
if the party wants to reserve a
room in Norton during the day
as a student recognized group.
The Elections Committee,
headed by Robert Sikorsky, is in
need of volunteers to help administer the balloting in Norton
and Goodyear during the referendum and the student elections.

Repression of protest can lead to
violence, says Civil Liberties speaker
by Ian McMillan and Steven Pray
Spectrum

Staff

Reporters

Discussions last week centering on law enforcement
and protest, and controlling the police were part of a threeday symposium on “Civil Liberties and Law Enforcement.”

In the Tuesday evening address, Aryeh Neier, executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union, said
that it is “possible to be deluded” by the current climate
for dissent.
He described the signifi- prosecuted. Other prosecutions of
various forms of anti-war activicance of the pending Suties would also follow.
preme Court decision conThe climate for dissent would
cerning the legality of draft change, Mr. Neier predicted. Some
card burnings as a protest people would be silenced, but at
against the war in Vietnam. the same time others would turn
If the Supreme Court upholds
the law, several thousand people
who have burned their draft
cards would be immediately

to violence.

Just as the civil rights movement has become justifiably more
militant, he claimed, so the peace

movement might turn to violent
acts which would incur a lesser
penalty than burning a draft
card. The repression of peaceful

protest actions would encourage
people to resort to violence, Mr.
Neier said.

Loosing sight
“We are losing sight of the notion of free speech”—the notion
that dissent should be allowed as
long as there exists opportunities
for other views to counteract it.
There is no need for protest to
justify itself,’ Mr. Neier said. He
said that those who seek to curb
protest must demonstrate imminent threat of danger or violence
� Please turn to Page 6

campus-wide “Strike for
Stop the War” is
threatened for March 19 to 21.
A group calling itself University
Community for Rational Alternatives (UCRA) has urged faculty
and graduate teaching assistants
to cancel classes on those dates.
A

—

The strike would bring three
days of education about the war
and suspend business as usual,

according to the organization’s
official statement.
“We ask not to close the University but to open it,” the state-

ment added.

Khan

Jerome Skolnick

—Bina

Aryen Neier

Dr. Jerome Skolnick, Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Chicago (left) and Aryeh Neier, execuf/ve director of
the New York Civil Liberties Union (right), were speakers here
during lecture series last week.

protest

sistors, who were recently delinquent after turning in their

Selective Service cards.

Student strike planned as war protest
Knowledge

—G-

Another

The Main St. Army Induction
Center was the scene of last
week's demonstration to protest
the induction of two draft re-

It termed this University “an
integral part of the system which
is carrying out the war." The
strike ostensibly is being called
to “demonstrate our refusal to
be a partner in our own destruction . , . our withdrawal is a positive act of education . . . which
the University, by its very nature,
has failed to provide. These days
of education will be used to develop and further our efforts to
establish moral and political alternatives which do not require

war-making for their extension
and preservation.”
Bill Maryl, one of the group’s
coordinators, disclosed that no

picket lines or olher types of barriers would be used to force a

physical suspension of University operations. Instead, he said,
UCRA proposed to “replace an

educational system which has abrogated its responsibility to teach
us about the war with one that
will."
Other strike plans include a
series of panel discussions and
lectures by guest speakers to be
announced shortly, as well as
local experts, workshops, films,
poetry readings and “antiwar

recreation.”

It was also announced that an
impromptu bookstore would be
established on campus during the
strike, where a large selection of

anti-war and radical literature
would be placed on sale.
*

In addition, UCRA is organiz-

ing a “guerrilla theater”; A mo-

bile company trained in close
order drill, the players will march

about the campus using formations, and stopping periodically
to present a series of original
short plays dealing with the war.
A UCRA spokesman stressed
that the “strike is aimed at the
war itself
not at the suspension of graduate student defer—

ments.”
According to the group’s state-

ment, the “Johnson administration has for the first time brought
the Vietnam War in its domestic
form to our doorstep demanding
support and approval" ((i.e., by
abolishing most graduate deferments). However, “our opposition
is not a plea for special privilege. We recognize that all our
lives are trampled on by this
war. The question for us then, as
members of the human community, and only secondarily as
members of the academic community, is: Are we to give aid to
a morally and politically detestable war?
UCRA is being coordinated by

four graduate teaching assistants:
Bill Maryl of the Sociology Department, Jim Hart (English),
and Jim Hansen and Joe Wolberg
(Philosophy).

�y
Tuesday, March 5, 1968

Th« Spietrum

P»g* Two

Selective Service forum banned
Charging that the faculty of the University Law School
attempted to suppress freedom of expression, the Student
-Bar Association Wednesday afternoon shifted the location
of a forum by a Selective" Service state field officer from
college property to the Buffalo Athletic Club, located next
door to the L3w v Schpol.
Dean Hawkland said opinions
At a meeting earlier fw cdncsfaculty
day of Law School faculty it was
decided to refuse Major Byron
H. Meader permission to speak
on University property.
The Faculty Senate Dec. 14,
1967, received a resolution stating that until S. S. Director Gen.
Hershey recinded his recommeninterfering
dation that

with recruitment loose their deferments, “the use of University
facilities for military recruitment
be withheld.”

In line
The Law School decision appears to be in line with the Faculty Senate resolution.
Dean William D. Hawkland, provost of the Faculty of Law and
Jurisprudence cited it in answer
to student protest that “faculty
action deprived us of freedom of
speech and our freedom to
listen.”
The Student Bar Association,
headed by Herb Siegel, decided to
go ahead with the meeting and
changed the location to the Buffalo Athletic Club.
Major Meader spoke to about
400 students on “How Selective
Service Affects You.”
The Student Bar Association
said the forum was intended
mainly as a question and answer
period and “the fact that a representative of the Selective Service
should be barred from answering
student questions certainly does
not speak well for the legal abilities or the good sense of the law
school faculty who voted to prohibit the use of school facilities.

members
of individual
differed on the Senate action last
December, some feeling it was
“unwise” because it infringed on
“the free flow of information.”

The Senate ban, which is still
“pending further study and action
by the Senate” and fear of demonstrations precluded prohibiting
Major Meader from speaking on
campus. There were no signs of

demonstrations, however, while

Major Meader spoke at the Buf-

falo Athletic Club.

In a statement released Friday, Dean Hawkland said that:

“While .the Senate motion does
not define the words ‘military
recruiting’ the faculty felt that
Major Meader’s address should
be construed as ‘military recruit-

ing’ within the meaning of the
motion, because it, by its own
terms, was aimed at preventing
the kind of confrontation that al-

legedly could result in students
being reclassified on account of
‘interfering’ with the administra-

tion of the draft laws.”
“The representative of the Selective Service is not coming to
recruit,” it was stated in the
press release from the Student
Bar Association.

To answer questions
“He is coming to answer the

questions of the students concerning the draft. This information is vital to the vast majority
of students and the faculty should
have sanctioned this meeting. We
believe that this action is clearly

unconstitutional . . . violates the
right of free speech of the Student Bar Association and its members .
. law school faculty has
redefined the limits of academic
freedom and this action is inconsistent with the traditional
university policy of an open
campus.”

The faculty of the Law School
by

the Senate action,

guards

false alarm,
which disrupted Dick Gregory's
speech, students were hired to
watch over each fire alarm, for
the duration of the ACLU Sym-

posium.

Comm. Howard proposes
new fire alarm system

about $350.

A member of the Norton Hall
staff suggested that the bomb
scare Friday may have been a result of the guarding of the fire
alarms. He speculated that the
person wishing to pull the alarm
was discouraged when he saw
a guard and called in a bomb
threat instead.

Professor Louis Swartz said
that some students would feel
compelled to protest the meeting
If it had been held as scheduled

felt “bound”
he said.

Student

After Monday's

In response to the false alarm
which was triggered Feb. 26, Norton Hall officials had a staff of
workers guarding all fire alarms
in the building last week. The
total cost of the project, which
was in effect during all meetings
of the ACLU symposium and during Fire Commissioner Robert B.
Howard’s visit here Friday, was

Some would protest

on campus, and the faculty feared
their acts of protest would endanger student determent classifications.

—Bina

—Bina

rnnctrnrtiwP
V.OIIMTUII V

concern

Fire Commissioner Robert B
Howard (left) discusses poss /b/e methods for curtailing the

high incidence of false alarms
in Norton, with Dean Siggel-

koW.

Barry Snyder eats at

The result of the bomb scare

was a change in procedure in
handling such situations. In the
event of a bomb threat, security
officers will be called to investigate first. Only if a real danger
is perceived will the building be

evacuated. Prior to this time, the

building was evacuated immediately upon receiving a threat.

false alarms from the University
discussed. One method,
which Commissioner Howard proposed was a new fire alarm system, which would require University security officials to investigate all alarms before the
fire department is called. Also
mentioned was placing cameras
at all fire box locations, which
would photograph any person
turning in an alarm. Mr. Howard
emphasized that whenever the
fire department is called out, the
were

building must be evacuated.

University officials were curious about the possibility that most
of the alarms might be the result of actions by high school
and elementary school students
who come onto the campus when
their schools are not in session.
Commissioner Howard agreed that
this was a real possibility since
many of the alarms have been
turned in Saturdays.

Commissioner Howard stressed
that the danger of false alarms
on this campus cannot be over
emphasized. Whenever a false
alarm occurs here, four fire companies must come to the campus
and leave a large portion of Buffalo without adequate protection.
Turning in a false alarm is a
misdemeanor punishable by up
to three months imprisonment,
and up to a $500 fine.

Bible Truth
"For

Salvation by Grace

ye saved through
not of yourselves:
God: not of works,
man should boast."

Grace

are

and that
it is the gift of

Faith;

lest

any

Eph 2: 8, 9

—muCrest
faVfyM...

—

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

BUY AND SELL

USED TEXTS
BUFFALO
TEXTBOOK

STORES, INC.

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PAPERBACKS

Gifts—Posters—Supplies
General Fiction
and Non-Fiction

�Tuesday,

March 5, 1968

The Spectrum

Pag* Three

What is this new student government?
Some questions, some answers
Direct

]

principle

&gt;

democracy—town meet

of the proposed new

Student Association.

Student representation by Sen.
ators is abolished in the proposed
constitution, written by the Senate Committee on Reorganization.
The legislative body is expanded into the Polity—all regularly
enrolled day-time undergraduates.
In a “put up or shut up” atmosphere, students involved in issues
will determine new policies and
programs.
—Yates

Senators form the main tegislative body of student governmerit. But that will change if
the new constitution is adopted.

Anri
ADU tkou
incy

all
..

,

...

dateline news. Mar. 5
Communist forces yesterday attacked 12 American
SAIGON
bases and four provincial capitals in the third coordinated nationwide attack in 33 days, according to military reports.
Military reports said the predawn attacks packed less punch than
the Jan. 31 and Feb. 18 urban offensives but included the destruction
of a village; the harassing of U.S. bases from the northern border to
the Mekong Delta in the south and the shelling of the American Navy
hospital near Da Nang, where five patients were injured.
Crude oil oozed from a broken Liberian tankSAN JUAN, P.R.
er into San Juan Harbor today, threatening the beaches of the Puerto
Rican capital’s resort gold coast. U.S. officials planned to attack the
slime with a cordon of chemicals.
Teams of specialists gathered to try to lay the chemicals around
the doomed halves of the 579-foot Ocean Eagle. The vessel, loaded
with 5.7 million gallons of crude oil split in two Sunday in pounding
seas at the reef-ridged entrance to the harbor, a historic graveyard
for ships. All 35 crewmen were rescued without injury,
CAPE KENNEDY
A space lab carrying a record 25 experiments was to be fired into a far-reaching orbit around earth Monday
to examine radiation and other cosmic wonders.
The satellite, a 1,347-pound Orbiting Geophysical Observatory
(OGO), is designed to examine in detail the hazards and mysteries of
earth’s space environs at a time when radiation-producing flares on
the sun are intensifying.
The mayors of several U.S. cities which have
WASHINGTON
experienced racial turmoil see little evidence that the nation is ready
to make the “compassionate, massive and sustained" effort called for
by President Johnson’s antiriot commission.
“Everyone is sympathetic,” said Mayor Hugh J. Addonizio of
Newark, where 26 persons were killed in last summer’s rioting. “But
no one does anything and they haven’t done anything since the riots.’’
Supporters of open housing had the backing
WASHINGTON
of 14 prominent business leaders yesterday as the Senate headed into
a fourth “go for broke” vote on whether to end a civil rights fillibuster.
The businessmen, most of them heads of large corporations and
banks, called for enactment of an open housing law Sunday, declaring
in a statement that it would mean “lifting the barrier that has deprived moinority groups of housing for generations.”
ALBANY
Gov. Nelson A, Rockefeller, holding to his “wait and
see” strategy, is receiving conflicting advice from fellow New York
Republican leaders on how he should attempt to win the GOP presidential nomination.
New York Mayor John V. Lindsay, who has differences with
Rockefeller but still backs him for the presidency, says the governor
should formally declare his candidacy and enter this spring’s prima—-

—

—

—

—

—

ries.

Students will elect 13 members
to the Student Coordinating
Council (SCC); Four officers and
nine Coordinators.
The president will preside over
meetings of both the SCC and the
Polity and be their representative
to the University community. Two
vice presidents will share the
responsibility o £ coordinating
committee work and developing
new programs. The treasurer, as
chairman of the Finance Committee, is responsible for disbursing student activity funds.
The nine Student Coordinators
will serve primarily as a programming group for specific areas
of student affairs. The Coordinators are: National Student As-

Majority vote of the Polity

The Polity is responsible for

Majority of students voting in
a referendum.
Q—How can students object to
legislation passed by the SCC or
the Polity?
A—Legislation must be posted
for seven days immediately following action. A petition of objection of 2% submitted to the
president mandates him to call
a meeting within two weeks to
re-examine the question or submit the issue to referendum.
Q—Who rules on financial mat-

P—Who submits legislation for
referendum?

•

•

ters?

A—T h e Finance Committee,
subject to review by the SCC, allocates Polity monies to recognized organizations for operating
expenses and programs.

A—The SCC by majority vote
or a petition of 2% of the Polity.
Referendum covers all types of
legislation except the financial
allocations to clubs.
Q—Who appoints members of
the Judiciary and the Publications Board?
A—The SCC, subject to review
by the Polity.
Q—How can the new constitution be amended?
A—An amendment may be proposed by % of entire membership
of SCC or petition of 10%. It is
adopted by affirmative majority
vote of at least 10% of student
body.

sociation, Academic Affairs, Student Services, Public Affairs,
International Affairs, Student
Rights, and two New Student Affairs, one upperclassman and one

freshman.
At all times, the SCC is subject
to review by the Polity, a new
pressure never felt by the present Senate system. Coordinators,

having “expertise,” must educate
and gain support of students for

their programs.
Both the SCC and the Polity
have the power to legislate new
programs, but polity decisions
supercede those of the SCC.
The new system calls for active

.

The new constitution provides
for the whole student body to
meet and legislate. Senators
will be gone.

came

tumbling down

participation in a committee system which carries-through all
programs.
These are some of the

ques-

tions asked most frequently about
the new constitution and the
Polity system:
Q—When are polity meetings
held?
A—Constitutionally, at least
once a month. A petition of 2%
mandates the president to call a
meeting within one week.
Q—Who sets the agenda?
A—Both students and Coordin.
ators suggest items to the SCC,
A petition of 2% can also place
a proposal on it. The agenda must

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be posted for five school days
before each meeting.

Q—How is legislation passed?
A—There are three methods:
e % vote of the SCC (10 of 13
members);

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vote

Tuesday, March 5, 1968

The Spectrum

Page Four

for restructions

-T'*f«SS*UK&gt;/C*rK

©(06«TwertwEK post-

&lt;W0~

relationships between the Student Coordinal

'

The product of the Student Senate Reorganization Committee will meet the test of referendum Thursday and
Friday of this week.
Most students, if they have any interest at all in the
affairs of their student government, are aware of the basic
changes that the new structure involves. Today’s Spectrum
also includes an
new structure, outlining the

fjjf'k'

'w

4

'

:ouncii

the Polity, and discussing the roles of each
There are two very basic questions which must be
considered before any student casts his ballot in a knowledgable manner:
Is the present structure a sufficient one?
If not, is the proposed structure an adequate revision?
Few would disagree with the contention that the present
Student Association structure is unable to cope with all
the problems and all the issues that confront students at
this University. Although there are always a few in the
Senate who are willing to assume responsibilities proportionate to these problems, there are too many who either
do not care enough, or who feel the Senate has no authority
to act on certain issues. We have all witnessed, at one time
or another, a failure of the Senate to act sufficiently.
The proposed structure thrusts upon all of the students
a responsibility to act. If there is insufficient interest, there
will be no action. But if the interest is there, the Polity can
act, and that action will more closely reflect student desires
than anything done by elected representatives.
Will the new system work?
There should be little doubt that the Polity system will
radically change the student decision-making process at this
University. The system operates, and, indeed, thrives on
the existence of pressures.
The Coordinating Council will pressure the Polity, and
the Polity, in turn, can pressure the Council. The Polity
itself will consist of various pressure groups, and perhaps
that’s the way it should be. Those who have been crying
for a voice in their affairs will have it.
The new constitution is an experiment. It is an experiment that we should embark upon because more students
must be given an opportunity to assume this greater responsibility in the determination of the issues, and resolution of
the problems that face us all.
If you think students should become more involved,
if you agree that the present Senate has been too ineffective,
if you are willing to experiment in a system that could place
this University outside the realm of cumbersome university
governmental structures while providing a means to achieve
a greater democracy, then you should vote for the proposed
•

•

/

change.

We think the experiment is well worthwhile, and therefore urge you to vote yes on Thursday and Friday.

call for positive action
A America
now faces a
decision which

will deterpainful
mine whether we are truly the “Great Society” or whether
we are to cause the destruction of that society.
The National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders,
which released its report last week, has finally put on
paper, for the first time: We are living in a racist society, and
racism, if left unchecked, will polarize the country into two
“separate and unequal” societies “in a garrison state.”
The first reaction of many to the report was shock
pernaps they didn’t realize the truth: perhaps they were
afraid to see it on paper. But what is more frightening is
the reaction of others who skipped over the bulk of the
report to look only at the commission’s criticisms of local
police departments, who are now stockpiling such weapons
as tanks and machine guns in anticipation of another hot
—

summer.

The same sort of mentality which claims that bombing
the hell out of the North Vietnamese will bring them to the
conference table also claims that keeping Negroes in their
place with tanks and machine guns will put an end to racism

in America.
The only answer to the report must be action
quick,
concerted and expensive. If we can spend $32 billion a year
to “bring freedom to the South Vietnamese,” surely our
commitment is Just as great to spend the billions necessary
to bring freedom to black Americans.
But in order to do this, Americans must first make a
complete about-face and admit their guilt—they have in—

deed created a racist society, and it is their obligation to
reverse the trend. This is not an easy admission to make;
and unfortunately chances are that Americans will not be
strong enough to face up to the truth. If not, we can only
look forward to continued suffering and more violence,
growing until we have created two armed camps.
Just as the answers to the political problems of Vietnam do not lie in bombs and napalm, the answers to the
social problems of America do not lie in tanks and antiriot machine guns.
The call for positive action has never been so loud,

OF
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ilBi

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’

wn i be:

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tiT

‘
‘

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'If you lost

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Readers

the bu
chwab
But a fortnight ago The Burgher—truth seeking,
freedom-fighting and indeed mild-mannered reporter and cynical columnist for The Spectrum—announced his non-candidacy for the office of Student
Association President (SAP). Since that time, I have
been attempting to counter a large and growing
groundswell.

Campus squirrels have been trying to toss this
nut in the ring, the Apathetic Student Society (But
Ho! No abbreviation, prithee!) has reportedly drunk
to The Burgher’s success, and one barren rascal has
already asked to be my campaign manager.

troth, ye swines, I want it understood
The Burgher is not a candidate: if
nominated he will not run and if elected he will
not serve! If drafted he will fight it all the way.
Be my

right

now;

Haply, ye that believe that being a non-candidate
is easy—’tis wrong to so think. ’Twasn’t but last
weekend that The Burgher again traveled to fair
Albany along the scenic Erie Canal to visit Gov.
Rockefeller. Knowing the Governor is also a noncandidate for President of the United States (PUS)
and the only real contender to LBJ (sour-PUS), I
fell that two famous and reknowned non-candidates
could console each other since we share a common
plight. What follows is, indeed, what is remembered
of our conversation:
“Marry, good Governor and non-candidate,” said
I, “’Tis The Burgher who’s journeyed from Buffalo
to console you, for I too am not a candidate.”
’Zat so,” the governor beamed, thrusting out his
hand faster than a speeding bullet, more powerful
than a locomotive. “Glad ta meet cha again, Burg“

her!”

“Being a non-candidate is sure a rough life, eh
Governor?” I began hesitantly.
I’d accept a genuine draft,” the Governor re-

plied.

“How's your wife?” queried I, thinking small
talk would ease the Governor’s mind. A non-candidate is always on the defensive.

’

writings
Asks support of constitution
To the Editor:

I am quite surprised at the mixed reaction by
students to the new constitution proposed by the
Student Senate. After many laboring hours the
Committee for Reorganization has finally come up
with a plan that, I feel, is second to none. I’m speaking, of course, about student government by polity.
Students are always complaining about the Senate as a do-nothing organization which serves no
purpose. As a senator, I must disagree, somewhat,
on the basis that the Senate, which meets every
Wednesday evening, does discuss and/or pass legislation on topics concerning the welfare of the student populous, much of which is of immediate im-

portance. The trouble is that you, the students,
don’t care enough to find out how this legislation
affects you. You just assume it’s more insignificant
garbage being piled up week after week in room
205. It is, if you make it so. The unfortunate part
of it all is that the only excitement ignited among
students concerning the Senate is over Such trivial
events as the “drinking” incident which was publicized way out of proportion.
On the other hand, however, I must concede
that the Senate has its faults, for no system is infallible. I don’t think the Senate can last much
longer under its existing conditions, especially with
your lack of confidence and support.
If you are so dissatisfied with us, now is your
chance to show it. This Thursday and Friday you
are being given the opportunity to vote in a referendum concerning the new constitution. This is
your one and only chance to ABOLISH the structure that you hate so much!
No one, including its formulators, can guarantee that this new system will work, but by the
same token, it is wrong for any one of us to condemn something until we have given it the chance
to prove itself. Therefore, I urge all of you to vote
YES on March 7 and 8.
George M. Heymann

She’s happy,” he replied.

"But I asked how’s your wife, not who’s your
wife," 1 protested.
"Happy! Happy! Happy!” the Governor yelled.
"Happy's my wife, Burgher! And she’s happy.”
"Sure is a strain being a non-candidate,” I replied quietly, in an attempt to humor the man. He
was obviously under a great deal of pressure.
At that point Mrs. Rockefeller did saunter into
the room. Rocky introduced us.
Marry,” I said. "I am pleased to meet you.”
'But she’s Happy!” the Governor protested loud-

“I know,” said I. "You told me, remember. How
do you feel about your husband’s non-candidacy,
Mrs. Rockefeller?"
“He’d accept a genuine draft,” she replied.
“I prithee, is that true, Governor?”
“Yes,” said he. “I’d accept a genuine draft.”
“Alas!” I alassed. Reaching into my Burgher
traveling bag, I pulled out a couple of cold ones
and said: “For you I have a genuine draft, Governor.”
“Thanks, Burgher,” said he,
“You might say it’s a-PIEL-ing,” I punned, “genuine draft beer in cans.”
‘Makes you feel like running,” the Governor
sighed.

every
Spectrum is published twice-weekly
during the regular academic
Tuesday and Friday
State University of New York at Buffalo,
3435 Main Street, Buffalo. New York 14214. Offices
are located at 355 Norton Hall. Average Circulation:

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�Pag* Five

The Spectrum

Tuesday, March 5, 1968

BELOW OLYMPUS

Are professors our equals?

By Interlandi

To the Editor:
Aren’t we becoming victims of ego to even dare
that our professors are our equals? Philip Segal,
who are you trying to kid? Certainly rules must

by Martin Guggenheim

be aggregately obeyed, but it is obvious that the
incident in Norton is not so much a question of
illegal imbibing than it is of asserting yourself to

be on the same “echelon” as bur educators. Quit
the false attacks and come to the real issue. Regardless of the incident, our professors should be
accredited with some social superiority as a mere
token of their academic achievement. If liquor to
you is symbolic of status, and thus you are using
the bottle as media to achieve equality with the
profs, what the hell are you at State University of
Buffalo for?
Karen Bruyn

New constitution

—

activist power

Student politics at this University is governed
by two cardinal rules. First, most students don’t
caTe about student politics. Second, those who do
care are intent on obtaining more power and using
it. Activism is an integral part of one’s university
experience (or so we are told by the activists). Indeed, whether a student participates or not, he
cannot escape contact with activists easily (though
it has been done).
Now it seems to be the nature of things for
power to gravitate toward those who are willing to
use it and away from those who are not. Years of
activism and apathy on this campus have produced
a group of power-mad zealots who dominate what
power in student government is given to them
while decrying the fact that they haven’t been
given enough. Since this Activist Tong is the only
group on campus which has any desire to exercise
student power, the present structure of the student
government frustrates many of its visionary
schemes, Hense the constitution putsch.
Student elections are usually supported by a
very small fraction of the student body. Freshmen
vote in large numbers because they don’t know
what’s going on. Sometimes a few hundred other
students notice the ballot box, decide to use their
I.D. cards for something and vote. The effect of
these groups can usually be fairly evenly dis-

"It's scary. We talk about the riots we're going to have this
summer as if there's nohing we can do about it!"

the gadfly
by Mark Schneider

“To judge an intellectual it is not enough to examine
his ideas; it is the relation between his ideas and his acts
which counts.” This sentiment of Regis Debray’s applies not
to the revolutionary context in which it was probably
just
tributed among the candidates. Thus when the
used
but to any human situation in which the intellectual is
Tong brings its voting-strength to bear for one of
involved. The quotation is so handy, it might indeed have
its own, he seldom loses.
been extracted from Poor Regis’ Almanac.
The Student Senate, however, has many mem
It is perhaps the most relevant

The new constitution provides for a Student
Coordinating Council which will effectively replace
the Student Senate. Each of the “Coordinators” is
to be elected at large. This will enable each member of the activist club to cast a vote for each office in the SCC. Thus the recalcitrant Senators
from the “outer provinces” are removed and the
Tong will control all the seats in the SCC.
But the new constitution invests legislative
powers with the “Polity.” This body consists of
each regularly enrolled day-time student. Will
meetings be held in War Memorial Stadium? No. It
seems that a quorum of the Polity is 40 (count ’em
40) students. This means that about one quarter
of 1% of the student body can have a meeting and
make student law that will be legal and binding!
One has visions of some rable-rouser stampeding
the patrons of the Ratskeller into excommunicating President Meyerson, or a few dozen gung-ho
engineering students calling a meeting to invite
Dow Chemical to build a napalm exhibit on campus, or some crazed health science students voting
to will the bodies of the sophomore class to science.
The proposed system is obviously geared to the
convenience of a group such as the Tong which
thrives on instability and chaos. The Polity can
kick legislative responsibility upstairs to the SCC
so tbe activists will control the student government
from top to bottom.
To reverse laws of the Polity or the SCC by
referendum, 10% of the student body must participate. Thus 1400 students must take action to reverse the action of 40. Even this 10% in no way
reflects the actual attitudes of the students. The
proposed constitution prepares the way for minority domination of the student government and removes all checks on the self-righteous crusade of
the Activist Tong.

In the activist mentality it is impossible for an
individual to deserve a share of the power structure
if he does not choose to use it. Consequently apathetic students have no rights and deserve everything the activist minority precipitates upon them.
It will be argued that those students who don’t
care about politics should be denied their freedom
of lethargy and that power should go to the strong
and active. It is anti-democratic to construct a system wherein those constituents who do not stampede before the activist drovers
are deprived of
their right to be indifferent.
David E. Sauer

I remember getting a kind of sadistic pleasure
oilt of watching all mv Senior friends and first
year graduate students getting so very upset over
the recent directive from the National Security
Council, I saw horror on people’s faces which never
was there before. AH of a sudden the words which
had been spoken for years were becoming real
the War was reaching even them.
No longer could they look at the War from the
safe distance of a university campus. Their mysterious concept of some future event saving them
from a confrontation with the draft was gone forever. They too have to confront the Vietnam War,
and I’m damned pleased about it. There should
not be an American living who has not felt, to
some extent, the evils of the American policy in
Vietnam. All these people who preached about the
evils of the War are now going to have to decide
whether they will participate in that War, or make
other sacrifices.
Perhaps the directive hasn’t bothered me because I expected it; perhaps it’s because for me
there no longer is any choice. I’m perfectly willing
and happy to make 1968 the year which will decide
the future. We should not be allowed to linger.
Too many people have died; too many will die
this year. At this point you are either willing to
allow the War to continue or you are not. If the
dying Vietnamese cannot be indecisive neither can
■'"we. We may now all make clear whether we approve of the continuation of the War or not.
It could very well be that the National Security
Council made a very grave mistake. Any student
of logic or any student of Machiavelli could tell
you that people in power, who wish to remain in
power, should give the populace all that can be
afforded without losing any strength. Then we
dumb people will think we owe the hierarchy something. As long as the rich people have their money,
and Iheir status, and their children, they will never
complain. But take away their kids and see what
happens. The same thing is true with their chil
dren. It’s lovely to watch how radical all my parent’s
friends arc becoming now that they loo realize a
War is being fought.
The War cannot remain an intellectual endeavor
when you realize even you may die fighting. Sure
I'm pleased. I’m pleased to see my friends come
to me and ask “What are you going to do next
year?” I see the sweat on Iheir hands and 1 know
they are hoping 1 can tell them what to do also.
They deserve to sweat; we all do. Sometimes I
wonder what right we have to evfen smile. How
many 20 year olds in Vietnam don’t sweat? How
many even still breathe? I am not a brave man;
the thought of silling in prison for a few years is
not very nice. The thought of starting over in
another country even bothers me. But I’m damned
well ready to make that choice. As long as we
benefit from this War, and can smile, it will go on.
I do not know what makes us draw the lines that
we do; I do not even know where the line belongs.
But the thought of seeing all my middle class
friends having to feel the Vietnam War for the
first time makes me very happy. The thing that
profoundly worries me is thinking about the people
that will acquiesce and join the army. What 1 cannot understand any longer is what we are so
afraid of. It’s not so easy to get hurt for standing
up for what you believe. It seems to me much more
difficult to lie and deceive yourself. You are the
—

To the Editor:

hers who do not represent the Tong. They represent sectors of the student body which are indifferent to the alleged oppressions of the administration so feared by the Tong. Reapportionment limited the influence of these Senators in the past,
but now they must be removed.

The Sham

criterion to which the American
academic community might refer for self appraisal. For ,his

community has been confronted
with one of the oldest of ethical
dilemmas: In a violent world of
ignorance and oppression, what
role befits the man of learning,
objectivity, or “tranquil passion?”
Put another way, is it the intellectual’s role to “talk to people, or
about them?” Obviously the answer is both, but the American
community, including this one in
Buffalo, seems to have put an
unfortunate emphasis on the latter. Not through fear, but by
the seductions of comfort, posi-

tion, esteem, the need to “publish or perish,” the academic

community seems to retreat into
an all-knowing, all-powerless vacuum of professionalism.
One has attempted to avoid
personalizing issues in this space,
but perhaps an example or two is
in order. Supposedly, plenty of
teachers in this school are PO’ed
enough about the war in Vietnam to have admitted, now and
then, that the U.S. should get out.
Especially since next year they
are going to have third rate grad
students to help them research
their scholarly masterpieces rather than the hotshots of ’67-’68,
bound next year for khaki, Can-

ada

(or

various other alterna-

tives). But even among the sensitive of the faculty, there is a woe-

ful lack of action—more probably,
lack of faith in action. The first
category, best represented by

Martin Meyerson, reveal themselves increasingly as moral bank-

rupts and cowards. One ddesn’t
doubt the sincerity of a Meyerson
in his desire for academic reform,
but on the most vital issue of the

Quotes

day he cops out. Marly—if you
and your presidential counterparts told Dow Chemical where to
stick their napalm, if you had the
guts to say: “this war is hell, and
as a human being I won’t stand
for my institution being complicit
in it,” you wouldn’t have to “deplore” losing all your while
middle class graduate students in
that disgusting telegram calling
for “cooperation” with the U.S.
military. Your atcions weren’t
deplorable! they were inhuman.

The tragedy of the academic
community is not in the Mcyersons, from whom not much is expected, but in the numerous professors who want us out, and are
paralyzed with hopelessness, or
feel politics irrelevant. I once
thought that demands of family
and job just don’t allow faculty
time to commit themselves to
their views, but that is nonsense.
If biophysicist Don Mikulecky has
lime to gel up at 7 a.m. to join
a picket line with base, lowly
students, music professors and
psychologists can too. The question of commitment is finally one
of personal integrity: Do you
value your ideals, your very self,
enough to suffer for them, or are
your ideals ideals at all? Does a
humanitarian position lose its
value when you might lose ten
ure, Ford grant, or the other

academic

goodies?

sight of this abomination in Vietnam because it was too busy. Was
it not the fate of all pedagogues
who took hemlock rather

students,

than
his

in the news

Rep. Mendel Rivers, chairman of the House
WASHINGTON
Armed Services Committee, arguing that the United States should
either pull the outnumbered garrison out of Khe Sanh or let it use
nuclear weapons: “It’s unmoral, un-warlike, un-Christian and uneverything else not to permit 5,000 men to use tactical nuclear weapons and advance and destroy the forces around them.”
—

Well, maybe the Government did make a mistake. Maybe nobody will give in. Dylan says that
“everybody must get stoned,” but how many of
us really believe that? At least, how many of us
feel that. Now many more of us must. We no longer
have the choice or the opportunity of putting the
Vietnam War out of our minds. Forever and ever
we will know that a War is going on; it will be
much more than a classroom discussion; it will be
much more than a front page story in the New
York Times; it will forevermore be reality. Hopefully we will all question it seriously before we
agree to aid it or fight for it.
So many people on campus are trying to put
their energies toward changing this law. But that
gives tacit support for the structure from which
that law was made. That implies that the War is

acceptable. Don’t waste energy. Direct it against

the War
that’s what caused the new law anyway.
What the National Security Council did is a logical
extension of a foreign policy that needs 750,000
—

Surely, it would be a disgrace
to say that a generation of intellectuals buried its nose at the

compromise his
faith, his vision?

only one listening anyway.

men to fight.
Let 1968 be the year which will decide whether
we favor or oppose this War. Let it be the year
for decision; it must be. Long live the World, and
integrity.

The Spectrum's pages for

Editorials

&amp;

Opinions

It is the policy of The Spectrum to report the
news fully ami impartially in the news pages,
to express the opinions of the newspaper only
in the editorial pages and to publish all sides
of important controversial issues.
"Without

expression,

freedom ol

expression

is

meaningless

"

�Page Six

Th

•

Tuesday, March 5, 1968

Spectrum

Repression of protest...
Continued from Page 1

in the protest actions.
Mr. Neier deplored the stiff
penalty for burning a draft card
as a “rather enormous punishment for destroying a piece of

ceptible to pressures” but are still
subject to some wartime pressures, After the war ends, perhaps the Supreme Court would
throw out convictions but there
is little hope for this now, he
said.

paper.”

Mr. Neier described the “marketplace” concept of speech.
Those who have unpopular ideas
find that in order to compete in
the marketplace they must engage in dramatic forms of protest. Without new and dramatic
protest, it would be impossible to
attract attention from the mass
media and reach the public audience, he said.
Mr. Neier doubts that the Supreme Court will rule the draft

card burning penalty unconstitutional.

Final speaker
In the final and keynote speech
of th symposium, Dr. Jerome H.
Skolnick, Associate Professor of
Sociology at the University of
Chicago, suggested an alternative
interpretation to the “popular
illusion” of American justice.

Rather than an “adversary sys.
tern”
in which “fighting (defense) attorneys, acquital oriented,” battle with prosecuting attorneys—Dr. Skolnick argued that
criminal procedure is more an
“administrative system.”
—

Statistically,

one-half

to one

third of all arrests end in dis-

The courts are the “least su

See the LADY WRANGLER'S at

missal, and in up to 90% of all
cases that reach trial, the defendant pleads guilty.
Thus, he said, the

most important decisions are being
reached in the prosecutor’s office
—not the jury room.
Police behavior is more influenced by informal occupational
norms than by court decisions.
Dr. Skolnick claimed. Under pressure to be “alert and vigilant”
and to “get results,” policemen
often employ a “suspicion standard,” rather than hesitate until
they have “probable cause” for
arrest.

5 ways to guard
Dr. Skolnick presented five
ways to safeguard civil liberties
from overly zealous law enforcement:

•
“Understand reality:" The
Supreme Court still “envisions an
adversary system,” and thus “generates ideals, not actual police

behavior.”
.

.

•

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Wrangler-phile.

“Reshape

police

Khan

At

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organiza-

•

tions.” In 1940, 50% of the police
recruits in New York City were
college graduates, Compared to
only 8% last year. Dr. Skolnick
agreed with Monday’s symposia
speaker, Dick Gregory, that police
salaries must be raised.
“Fight for external review
boards over all urban administrators, including the police.”
•

In keynote speech of symposium, Dr. Jerome Skotnick proposes five ways to safeguard
civil liberties from overly zealous law enforcement.

.

(AW

symposia

“Constrict the reach of substantive criminal law:” Change
the mandate of the police by not
requiring them to control the social order. Prohibition and the
present narcotic laws not only invite graft, but also necessitate un-

constitutional police methods.

•

• Politics:
“The police will
move as the country moves . . .
the police are good representatives of the American people at

this time.”

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Tickets Available through Norton Union Ticket Office and at the Door
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�Pag* S*v*n

The Spectrum

Tuesday, March S, 1968

Effects ofdraftsystem
Committee on Grading and Ranking will be topic of forum
recommends more flexible' system

Offers three alternative

by Joel Kleinman
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

A change in the University’s grading system, to begin
September 1968, would in some cases offer students a choice
of three evaluation procedures. The proposal has been recommended by the Ad Hoc Committee on Grading and
Ranking.
It is “flexible enough to meet
the needs of different course situations, professors and students,”
according to Committee Chairman
Alan R. Andreasen of the School
of Business.
The recommended
system
would have the following three
alternatives comprise the evaluation system:
Letter grading (A=outstanding, B=above average, C=average, D=below average or mar•

ginal, F=failure).
Written descriptions of student performance.
Satisfactory / unsatisfactory
grading (the grade of S would
earn credit; a grade of U would
•

•

not).

Open hearings on the proposed
changes will be held soon to elicit comments and criticisms from
students and faculty members.
The committee will subsequently
discuss possible revisions, according to Student Association representative Neil Slatkin.

Committee proposal
In its present form, the pro-

posal states:

“With the approval of the appropriate academic committees
any professor in any course in
any semester may designate tjiat
course as having only one of the

above alternative evaluation
schemes; provided that students
are apprised of this fact at the
time of registration for the
course; and provided that, if it
is a required course for any
portion of the student body, and
where staff is available, there
exist at least at one other
section of the course evaluated
on other schemes.
“For all other courses where
professors do not mandate the
form of evaluation, the standard
evaluation system should be letter grading.
“In any course where an option
is available and when agreed to
by the professor, a student may
choose to be evaluated in the
written form. No limit is to be

set on the number of courses to
be taken with written evaluations

for undergraduate or post-baccalaureate students.
For written
options, the letter “W” shall appear on the transcript and the
written evaluation shall be placed
in the student’s personal file at
the end of the semester. For student protection, a letter grade

shall also be filed separately at
Admissions and Records. The
written evaluation option may be
elected at any time up to submitting the final grade. The written evaluation, except under extreme circumstances, may not be
converted to a letter grade..

Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory
“In any course where such an
option is available, a student may
choose to be evaluated by the

satisfactory/unsatisfactory option.

For undergraduate students,
both full and part time, total
“satisfactory” credit hours should
not exceed 25% of the total credit hours taken at this institution
towards the baccalaureate degree.
There should be no limit for
post-baccalaureate students.

“In cases where grade point
averages are required, they shall
be computed on letter graded
courses only, with note being
taken of the number of credit
hours represented. Users of
GPA’s should be strongly urged
to consult written evaluations
where they exist.
“No University wide rankings
of students should be computed.
“University Honors and prizes
on this campus should consider
both GPA and written evaluations.
“This three part evaluation system should be adopted for a
period of five years at which time
it should be assessed for educational effectiveness.
“To provide further information for.future evaluations of the
system, an experimental group of
undergraduate students chosen by
criteria established by University
College should be allowed to take
all credits toward the baccalaureate degree bn S/U credit.
“The Office of Institutional Research should be requested to
undertake formal evaluation of
the system and experiments under it over its five year life.”

Present system hindrance
In a commentary following
their recommendations, the Committee termed the present grading system a “hindrance to learnNotification of the student’s ing, whereas it should prove a
choice is to be made to Admispositive, creative tool for intelsions and Records before the belectual achievement.
ginning of the fourth week of
“We consider written evaluathe semester. Professors may retion the most desirable alternaquest information on the proportive although we realize that in
tion of his class on S/U grading many cases its use will
be impracbut not the grading choice of tical,” continued the commentary.
individual students.
Concerning the Satisfactory/The letter “U” shall be placed Unsatisfactory provision, the proon the student’s record for coursposal recommends that “the stues in Which he receives a letter
dent be permitted to choose S/U
grade of “F”: the letter “S” shall
in any course, including those
be recorded for all grades A to he requires for a major or distriD. The letter grades shall be kept bution requirement.
on permanent file by Admissions
University-wide ranking of stuand Records.
dents was termed a “highly abAt any time ,for valid reasons,
stract, falsely precise index of'
a student may request University
performance,” and thus “should
College or the Graduate School be abolished.”
to release his letter grade in a
The Executive Committee of
S/U course to specific departthe Faculty Senate has referred
ments, other undergraduate the recommendations to its Comschools, graduate schools or emmittee on Educational Policy and
ployers.
Planning for debate.
‘PAID ADVERTISEMENT-

WHEN SOMETHING SOUNDS FISHY

-

YOU DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT
The Proposed Student Association
Constitution sounds FISHY! Why?
■

•

IT WILL COST MORE MONEY FOR A NEW GOVERNMENT
WHEN MONEY IS SO LIMITED
POLITY MEETINGS WILL BE CUMBERSOME
COORDINATORS WILL NOT BE REPRESENTATIVES,
JUST TECHNOCRATS REPRESENTING AREAS
STUDENT LEADERS WILL HAVE POWER, BUT
LITTLE RESPONSIBILITY.

Do Something About It Vote "NO"
The Polity cannot return honor and respect to our campus.

A forum sponsored by the Student Association will discuss the
draft and its effects on students
and faculty Wednesday in the
Fillmore Room at 3 p.m.
Six panel members representing the administration, the G.S.A.
and the Student Association will
present their views on the revised
draft regulations.
Dialogue between the audience
and the speakers will give students and faculty a chance to confront the administration on their
positions on the new deferment
policy. Suggestions for possible
administration action on the draft
will be heard.
Two resolutions pertaining to
the draft, directed to the Faculty
Senate and the G.S.A. will be discussed at the forum.
Ellen Price of the Student Sen.

ate commented: “Students want
to find out exactly what the administration is doing. The draft
will affect nearly all graduate students next year. Now is the time
for student to meet with the administration to find out what can

be done about the draft.”

St

#

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�Festival of the Arts Toda;
a cultural landmark ton B

It would be absurd to suggest that the
tremendous assemblage of talent in The Second Buffalo Festival of the Arts Today has a
single focal point, a single unifying symbol.
Indeed, the importance of the next two weeks
of almost non-stop entertainment—some of it
seen and heard for the first time anywhere
lies in its great diversity. Its theme, if it
can be said to have one, is one that diverges.
Yet one of the most impressive (and likewise, expressive) highlights of the Festival is
also the most obvious: The Albright-Knox Art
Gallery; and more especially, the Festival exhibit—“Plus by Minus.”
Its impressive exterior dominating the Scajaquada landscape, its interior providing the
stage and backdrop for many of the Festival
performances, the “old” Albright wing of the
Gallery hosts one of the most impressive exhibitions of its kind since World War Two.
92 artists from 20 countries, represented
by more than 350 works are assembled in an
important collection of a half-century of abstract art that is a staggering visual experience.
From eight countries
The artwork, most of it lent for special
exhibit by museums and private collections in
eight countries, occupies the entire Albright
building of the Gallery plus the surrounding
—

parkland.

The exhibit excludes all forms of reportage
and expressionistic interpretation, ruling out
most orphism, cubism, and futurism. It attempts ‘‘to place current concerns about certain types of abstract art in useful focus.”
As recently as 1967,
exhibition” on a pre-

dominantly ab s t r a c t
theme “was in sight six
years ago, (when he
began his book, Constructivism) and still is
not.”

Two interesting examples of Gabo’s own
version of kinetic art are worth noting.
“Blue Construction in Space" (1953) is a
circular painting, where horizontal and vertical
planes have been eliminated. Probi5ly to save
the viewer a neckache. a switch on the wall
sets the entire painting in motion; it sloWly
revolves on a three-minute cycle, and the convolving embryonic patterns of shades of blue
with multiple depth dimensions, presents an
infinite variety of configurations.
“Turquoise Kinetic Painting" (1945) is another circular painting, this time attached to
a revolving black square. A turquoise “egg"
placed slightly off-center in a sea of overlapping brown shading gives one the impression
of an ellipse; Gabo is not playing any silly opart games, he is merely making the active involvement of the viewer in the work of art
a little easier.

Art/science
Most of the pieces of sculpture and also
in
the tradition of Leonardo daVinci. interesting
attempts at erasing the popular distinctions
between “science” and “art,” aonieving in
some instances a genuine architecture.
Kenneth Snelson, represented in the show
by a modular “stress diagram” holds a U. S.
Patent on an aspect of atomic structure. He
did not apply for the patent in the interest
of personal gain, but because he believes the
archive is the best place to preserve an idea
in ultimate public domain.
many of the subjects of the sketches, are,

"To most of us the wo ird either brings to mind the bare
denotes one and q juits at its sight,
concept of a square
visible context, is what begins to
The actual sight, in
count here."
—Douglas MacAgy, Albright-Knox Art Gallery

i

George Rickey wrote
that “no comprehensive

Kinetic art

Work on the present
show began in January of that year. It is the first exhibition to
take the most recent developments of abstract
art, especially Constructivism, and present

Two views from the main sculpture gallery in the Albright building: Looking soufh into the Gabo exhibit (top photo), the viewer gazes through "Light Lines" (1966), while standing in a nailswirled "Zero Garden" (1966), both constructed by Guenther
Decker. The "linear Construction" (opposite page) is visible
sixty feel in the distance. Richter's "Aluminum Core" (opposite
page) is suspended between an Ionian frame, as one looks into
the north wing of the building (bottom photo).

them as a whole.
Gabo exhibit
The sage of the Constructivist school, Russian-born Naum Gabo, is well represented.
105 works of sculpture, painting, sketches,
and photography are literally crammed into
three full rooms of the building, offering a
panorama of the life’s work of one of the
century's most influential artists.
Many paintings and sketches show how
his ideas of sculpture were intended to be
used (or perhaps found their origin) in costumes for dancers. Just as revolving, twirling
dancers move, the viewer must revolve and
rotate his field of vision when viewing Gabo’s
“constructions.”
Gabo uses cold materials —stone, glass,
marble, steel —yet his sculpture is very much
alive, Using primitive, curved forms that flow
into one another, his continuous forms seem
suspended. Both in his paintings and in his
sculpture he emphasizes the round and the
primitive: many of his pieces are primeval,
embryonic gastrulas of stone.

Asked how he related such sdpntific ac“I doq’t see any
difference.”
In Jesus Raphael Sozo's ‘‘Untitled”
(1967), art ceases to be an object within a
room, and becomes the room itself. An entire
room, shaped like a large apostrophe, has a
“wall” of double rows of thin aluminum rods,
with indirect lighting behind. The linear patterns remain static only as long as the viewer
does; when one moves, the walls begin to
shimmer with the jumping black lines and
the rounded walls ripple with polarized illusions. The title of the exhibit id meant to
suggest a positive outcome after discarding
irrevelant considerations.
Basic rules of mathematics sa&gt; mat multiplying a plus by a minus equals a minus, thus
the “4- x
publicity is perhaps misleading.
The point is, however, that this art defies all
rules, reverses all "certain” equations of art,
and steps, like a picture out of its f ame, out
into space, suspended, weightless and in a
sense, timeless.
The new equation should read: -f x
tivity to his art, he replied:

—"

r

—

_

—

yields

+

yields infinity.

�4
oday

—

Ion Buffalo

s

lies of Gabo's own
irth noting.
Space” (1953) is a
irizontal and vertical
ed. ProbiSly to save
switch on the wall
in motion; it slovvly
cycle, and the conis of shades of blue
nsions, presents an
ations.
mting” (1945) is anlis time attached to
A turquoise “egg"
in a sea of overlapone the impression
playing any silly opaaking the active inin the work of art

Naum Gabo's "Quartz Stone" marble sculpture
create a primitive

(1963-64) vividly shows the artist's ability to reembryonic world using abstract forms. (Jrom the collection of Miriam Gabo)

:

sculpture and also
he sketches, are, in

daVinci, interesting
popular distinctions

“art,”

a*ieving in

architecture,
esented in the show

;ram” holds a U. S.
tomic structure. He

tent in the interest

suse he believes

the

to preserve an idea

mind the bare
uits at its sight,
what begins to
nox Art

Double vision? Almost—as two different views of this painting
by Yaacov Agam yield two entirely different images. Described
by the artist as "Tableau Polyphonique 'Cycle'," (1962/63) the
oil painting on riged wood changes its colors and geometric
patterns continuously as the viewer walks by. (from the Marlborough-Gerson Gallery, N.Y.)

Gallery

such siipntific ac"I doi’t see any

Sozo’s “Untitled”
an object within a
)om itself. An entire
apostrophe, has a
thin aluminum rods,
ind. The linear pats long as the viewer
the walls begin to
ng black lines and
with polarized ilexhibit isj meant to
Tie after discarding

a

&gt;

"Linear Construction in Space No. 2" (1949-53)' stands in the
center of the vast Gabo exhibit. The construction of perspex and
nylon thread is an example of a recurring style in Gabo's work,
and similar pieces—in steel, aluminum, bronze, and plastic —are
also exhibited at the Gallery. (From the collection of Miriam

latics

Gabo)

say *nat multi-

jquals a minus, thus

perhaps misleading,
at this art defies all
of art,
n” equations
aut of its frame, out
veightless and in a
ild read:

+

x

—

=

Standing to the left of his extra-terrestial "Aluminum Core"
(1965), Yugoslavian sculptor V/ences/av Richter goes over the
architectural plans for his "sinturbanistic city." Finding a solution to the population problem in Aztec pyramidal forms, the
"city" is composed of buildings which house, feed, and provide
jobs for 10,000 inhabitants. If enacted, a city of population of
1,000,000 would only be two miles in diameter.

story by Barry

photos

by

Holtzclaw

Jim Hendrich

�Th

Page Tan

Book revie

New American Review #2
Book

Spectrum

Reviewer

Tuesday, March S, 1968

Spectrum

Albee's plays to premiere tomorrow
performance on March 6 and
with this produtcion,-and—play through March 30, playing
for two weeks after the close of
William Hitman has designed several of Albee’s plays for Broadthe festival. The theater manage,
way.
ment wishes the public to be ad“Box Mao Box” is being prevised that because the presentasented as the theater event of
tion has not intermission, latethe second Buffalo Arts Festival
comers will not be admitted to

by Lori Pendrys
Spectrum

G. Ball III

by Joseph

•

be directing his seventh Albee

Entertainment Coordinator

play

Tomorrow evening the world

New American Review #2, The New American Library, 2 55 pages
It was a real pleasure reading New American Review

premiere of Edward Albee’s new#2 est plays will take place at the
which was better in total content than was New American Studio Arena Theater. “Box
Review #1. This new edition of a continuing series includes Mao Box” is a combination of
the fiction, articles and poetry of 26 writers, most of whom two plays “The Box” and “Quotations from Chairman Mao Tseare under 40 years of age.
Tung.”

.

•

•

•

Alan Friedman has written an
hilarious story, “Willy-Nilly,”
which will form part of his first
novel. It may not be fun being an
hermaphrodite, but it was certainly funny reading about one.
I think this story alone is worth
the price of New American Re-

view also contains an article on
Black Power by Nat Hentoff, two
anti-McLuhan essays by Neil

Several exceptional actors have
been cast by director Alan
proCompton and Milton Klonsky, and Schneider to perform in the
to play the
an article discussing the Tolkien duction. Selected
sole performer in “Box” is an
Cult by Mary Ellman.
actress of, to quote New York
critics, “unfailing distinction”—
Stanley Kauffman, the film critic for the New Republic, is also Ruth White. Miss White is well
known to devotees of the Albeethe regular critic for New AmeriPinter-Beckett school of theater.
can Review. In this issue he reacviews a number of recent films, She most recently received
claim as the sleazy landlady in
among them are; Ulysses, PerYork production of Pinsona, How I Won the War and the New
Birthday Party.”
Bonnie and Clyde, I generally ter’s “The
Performers in' “Quotations
agree with Mr, Kauffman’s opinions, but I must take exception from Chairman Mao Tse-Tung”
with his analysis of “Bonnie and are Lucille Paton as tHe longwinded lady; Conrad Yama as
says:
Clyde.” Mr, Kauffman
Chairman Mao; Jenny Egan as
. . there is no tragedy” in this
movie, and I sincerely hope that the old lady, and the performer
“Bonnie and Clyde” enthusiasts to play the minister is still to be
announced.
will not refuse to buy New AmerDirector Allan Schneider will
ican Review #2 because of this

view #2.
Two o t

h&lt;e r stories which deserve mention are “The Songs of

Billy Bathgate” by E. L. Dpctorow
and “The Accident” by Joseph
McElroy. The first tale relates the
love story of two folksingers,
Lovegirl and Billy Bathgate, without being saccharin or sentimental.

I also like “The Accident” except for the fact that I thought it
was a murder-mystery until I got
to the last page of the story. Perhaps I deserved this for prejudging Mr. McElroy’s story.

I would like to be able to review every article in this book,
but that would take all the fun
out of reading it. New American
Review really does have something for everyone
and I hope
that the series gains many new
readers because of this fine edition. I am lookign forward to
reading and reviewing a New
American Review #3.

year-old Harpur College graduate

named Robert David Cohen. (New
American Review could serve as
a vehicle for presenting more
young poets as promising as Mr.
Cohen to the American public.)
This isue of New American Re-

—

'Kwaidan to be shown
“Kwaidan,” directed by Kobayashi, will be shown at Norton
Conference Theater starting this
Thursday. It is a collection of
three ghost stories written by
Lafcadie Hearn, an American
writer who spent most of his
creative life in Japan.

cinematography. The stories themselves are slight; the first and
last no more than anecdotes. The

scenes, however,

vary from

Schussmeister's
*

..

Charter

Since its establishment nearly
20 years ago as quartet-in-residence at the Juilliard School of
Music in New York City, the Juilliard String Quartet has come
to be considered the interpretive
group without peer for the classics of the twentieth-century.
They will be appearing this evening in the Mary Seaton Room
in Kleinhans Music Hall.
The group, composed of Rob-

ert Mann and Earl Carlyss, violinists; Raphael Hillyer, viola, and
Claus Adam, cellist, has planned
a program combining classic and

contemporary pieces. Quartet in
G major, opus 18, no. 2 by Beethoven will be their first selection. Following will be three
short pieces by Puccini, Toshiro
Mayuzumi and Schubert. The
final presentation will be Schubert’s Quartet in G major, D 887
(opus 161).
The Smothers Brothers recently played host to the quartet
which gave a very unique and enjoyable performance. The Buffalo
Chamber Music Society is sponsoring the concert which will begin at 8:30 p.m.

to

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juxtaposing of natural earth with
weird, painted skies, to the slow
motion diving off the prow of
a ship into a boiling orange sea.
Normal film editing practice is
ignored and the director allows
the viewer a few extra precious
seconds with which to enjoy the
fantastic photography of the film.

Seizing eagerly upon this fantasy material, Kobayashi extends
the range of his imagination far
beyond the usual limits of color

A

of Today. It will have its special

statement.

This anthology contains some
fine poetry by Gurtter Grass, John
Logan and William Stafford, but
the best poem, “Beef,” was written by a relatively unknown 22-

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�Tuesday, March 5, 1968

The Spectrum

Pag* El*v*n

Nepalese Visiting Asian Professor:
by Donna Van Schoonhoven
Spectrum

Staff

“The Vietnam war is the
most disgusting topic of mod'
ern time,” says Mr. Surendra
Bahadur Shrestha, a Visiting
Asian Professor at the State
University of Buffalo.

Perspective.

archy.
He finds no primary difference

in the attitudes and basic goals
of his people and Americans. He
says that while there are different opinions on different subjects, the major difference is in
the living standard of the people,
"The United Slates is highly advanced where my country is backward.”
One university
Commenting on the educational
system of Nepal, he added that
the government has instituted a
policy of free and compulsory
education through the primary
level. In the last year of high
school, all students must take a
compulsory examination given by
a government controlled board to
enter college. This exam is uniform throughout the country and
only about 45% of the students
pass it. High school lasts for six

Surenda Shrestha

W Si

U.S. foreign policy criticized

dition which exists since we border both Red China and India.”
Nepal is a constitutional mon-

Reporter

Mr. Shrestha, a lecturer in political science at Patan College, Nepal, expressed both his and his
government’s views on Vietnam
and other topics in an interview
with The Spectrum.
“The attitude of the government of Nepal and its people is
very explicit,” he said. “We are
against war of any kind. We are
not in favor of war in Vietnam.
We believe in the principle of
self-determination, and every nation has the right to determine
its own destiny without any inter,
ference from the outside.
“We feel that the United States
must modify its policy so as to
bring about peace as soon as
possible. This can only happen by
suspending the bombing there on
the part of the United States. The
United States must learn not to
get involved militarily.”
Mr. Shrestha is an expert in
the fields of Nepalese government, history and current affairs,
on which he will lecture during
his eight week stay in the U.S.
In addition to his position at Patan College, he is also the acting
principal of Sarawati College. He
has published one book, How
Nepal is Governed, and several
articles in the magazine Nepalese

Schlesini

the world today,” said historian and former Kennedy assistant, Dr. Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. in an address Wednesday at
Kleinhans Music Hall.
Conflicts of national interests
have “overwhelmed and dissolved” the supremacy of ideology which prevailed in the ’20s
and ’30s. Today it is no longer
possible to predict that countries
with similar ideological commitments will act in unison; nor can
one assert that every communist
revolution anywhere is an automatic extension of Russian or
Chinese power, Dr. Schlesinger
claimed.
But illusions of the supremacy
of ideology and of centralized
communist conspiracy are still to
be found in America. In 1951, the
assistant Secretary of Far Eastern
Affairs claimed that “Peking is a
colonial Russian government . . .
it is not Chinese.”

ment because of the delicate con-

Moreover, that same official,
who is now Secretary of State,
“hasn’t given up the habit of making predictions about China.”
years.
Even after the “re-invigoration
Nepal has one university and
of nationalism,” America has perabout 40 colleges. Students atsisted in an “illusion of supertend one of the colleges for undergraduate study and then go powership." However, even if both
Russia and the United States
to the university for their masters degree. They are charged “agreed on every detail, they
could not by themselves settle afonly a nominal fee for both.
Mr. Shrestha, here under the fairs in the Middle East or South
East Asia.”
Visiting Asian Professors program sponsored by the State DeThus American foreign policy is
“based on two perilous illusions:”
partment and the Fulbright ProAmerican omnipotence and omnigram, will lecture at Illinois College after leaving Buffalo. Until science. “Experience tells us we
then, he will be available to clubs can’t control events in places so
and organizations for speaking close as Alabama or Mississippi,”
nevertheless we act as if “never
engagements.

DIGNITY

IDEALS

a

lecturer in political science

from Nepal.

Need concrete system
Mr. Shrestha talked about the
great differences between the
American and Nepalese govern-

ments. “Nepal has adopted its

own system of government, called
the Panchayat Democracy,” he
said. “After experience with other
systems, Nepal is convinced that
what is needed is a concrete system which is understandable to
the people.
“These people can’t fully understand the complicated system
of the United States. We also
adopted our own form of govern-

•

a sparrow can fall without clearance from the CIA.”
Our own infallibility, he said,
has driven us to become “judges,
jury and executioner, and inter

national

bully.”

Such cruel deceptions, said Dr.
Schlesinger, led to our involvement in that “ghastly war” in
Vietam. The bombing has been a
manifestly spectacular and predictable failure.” It has not
stopped the infiltration, but only
made it more costly and necessary. There were only 400 North
Vietnamese regulars in the South
in February 1965, Today there
are 60,000.
Rather than leading to negotiations, the bombing is an “insuperable obstacle” and has hardened the will of the Viet Cong,
according to the historian. Yet in
an “orgy of destruction, “we have
ropped 12 tons of bombs for every
square mile of North and South
Vietnam. Nor is the North “scraping the bottom of the barrel.”
200,000 men come of military age
every year and

90% of their pres-

ent army is not even committed
to the war.
In answer to a question following his speech, Dr. Schlesinger
elaimcd that President Kennedy,
who had visited Vietnam during
the French war, was “misled by
American officials in South Vietnam” into accepting the “false
hope of one more step (increasing the number of military advisors from 700 to 15,000).”

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Tw*lv*

Pag*

•

Tuesday, March 5, 1968

Spectrum

Negro colleges ask for White students to shield Negroes from police
ATLANTA (CPS)—Several

are organizing “white alert
teams” which will be mobilby Walter Grant
ized to stand between black
College Press Service
students and police when conThe presidents of five black colleges
ATLANTA (CPS)
occur on Negro
frontations
here sent a joint letter last week to President Johnson and campuses.
law enforcement officials appealing for protection of college
The theory behind the “alert
campuses from invasion by the “American version of storm
teams” is that black students
troopers
way police have reacted to riots stand a better chance of not beThe letter was sent in reaction
on Negro campuses. “I haven’t
if police have to shoot
—

make damn sure that whether we

-get

,

shot

by

the

police

the line and the blacks will be

or by the—the quarterbacks.”

fault.”
Mr. Morris said, the success of
the system will depend on cooperation between the whites and
the blacks. “They will have to
let us know when trouble is about
to occur.” He emphasized that
the “white students will be on

Several black students said they
thought the system is worth a
try, although they did not appear
overly enthusiastic. They agreed,
however, that police are less likely to shoot black students if
they have to shoot white students
first.

”

to the fatal shootings of three
black students at South Carolina
State College in Orangeburg, S.C.
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., earlier sent a similar letter to U. S.
Attorney General Ramsey Clark
asking for immediate federal action on the Orangeburg slayings,
which he called “the largest
armed assault undertaken under
color of law in recent Southern
history.”

At the same time, students in
Atlanta have reacted to the Orangeburg incident by forming a
Black Student Alliance which will
be composed of students from all
five colleges.
Walter Dancy, a student leader,
said the Alliance was formed because of the “anger and frustration of the powerlessness of black
people. The most direct example
is that of the killing of students
at black college campuses like
Texas Southern University and
South Carolina State.”
Letter cites Nazi Germany
The letter said America seems
“to have adopted a ‘get tough’
national policy based on the use
of armored and armed police and
guardsmen in killing American
citizens at the slightest provoca-

known of anybody going onto a
white college campus, as much
hell as they raise, and start shooting at students.”
Dr. Henderson said police “didn’t kill students at Berkeley, and
they don’t shoot at all the white
students raising hell in Florida
every spring.”
In addition

to Dr. Henderson,
the letter was signed by Thomas
D. Jarrett, chairman of the interim administrative committee of
Atlanta University; Harry V. Richardson, president of the Interdenominational Theological Center; Hugh M. Gloster, president of
Morehouse College; John A. Middleton, president of Morris Brown
College, and Albert E. Manley,
president of Spelman College.

ing killed

white students to get to them.

The “alert teams” are a direct
reaction to the killing of three
black students by police on the
campus of South Carolina State
College in Orangeburg, S. C. They
started organizing the “alert
teams” after an emotional discussion of the Orangeburg incident at a meeting of the Southern
Region of the National Student

Association.
Several black students at the
meeting warned the white organizers of the “alert teams” that
they should not be surprised “if
you get hit from both sides.”
James Yeager, a student at the
University of St. Thomas in Houston, replied: “We’re going to

campus releases...
Hillel will sponsor a Sabbath Service and Oneg Shabbat at 7:45
in Hillel House. A Purim Service and reading of the
Megillah (Scroll of Esther) will be at 4:30 p.m., March 13. Hamantashen will be served following the service.
Physics and Reality will be the topic when the Physics Graduate
Association presents Dr, Joseph Agassi from the Philosophy Dept, of
Boston University at 8 p.m., March 11 in Room 111 Hochstetter Hall.
Refreshments will be served.
"Last of the Singing Cowboys," Glenn Ohrlin, will be presented
by the Literature and Drama Committee and the English Dept, at 4
p.m. tomorrow in the Conference Theatre. Mr. Ohrlin is a Montana
cowboy who sings and tells tall tales in the oral folklore tradition.
The Office of International Education Services of the Council on
International Studies and World Affairs is prepared to assist and
advise students interetsed in study opportunities abroad. Interested
students should contact Mr. James A. Michielli at extension 4941.
The office is located at 210 Winspear Ave.
p.m., Friday

tion.”

i

(

Dr. Vivian W. Henderson, pres
dent of Clark College and one
the signers of the letter, said
an interview Thursday that he
particularly concerned about th

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NEW MAGAZINE

00U your father has enough money to send you off to college,
will not die in Vietnam this year. If you are a priest,
a minister or a rabbi, you will not be shot at by Asian strangers.
If you are a farmer, a homosexual, an ex-convict, an illiterate,
a tool-and-die maker, a married father or a scientist, do not fear:
You will never fight across a rice paddy on any murderous
midnight. No one in these categories is ever told that it is fitting and noble to die for one’s country. There is only oneg|g|
safer category in American life. You could be a woman. *s y
you

So opens "Draft Women Now." in March eye.
Must reading. Also "Donovan: Pop Visionary."
And "Warren Beatty Raps." "$8 Suit for Men."
"Hitchhiking by Air." Much more.
Plus-big fat poster.
In psychedelic color for your wall.

First edition.

Collector's item.
50i at your newsdealer.
See him today.
While he still has a copy.

�Tuesday, March 5, 1968

T h

•

Pag* Thirfaan

Spectrum

the spectrum of

r t

Buffalo finishes with 12-12 overall

7

Bulls drop the final two games
Asst. Sports

Editor

The University varsity basketball team finished
its season on a sour note, dropping its last two
games of the season. After playing good basketball
in its four previous encounters the Bulls seemed
to run out of gas against Philadelphia Textile in
Clark Gym Thursday night and Northern Illinois
in Memorial Auditorium Saturday night.
Saturday, the Bulls pulled farther ahead of the
Huskies with a seven point lead midway in the second stanza after a three-point lead at the halfway
mark. But an eight minute cold spell hit the Bulls
and the visitors finished the game with a ninepoint margin, 66-57.

New line up
Head coach Len Serfustini started juniors Joe
Rutkowski and John Fieri at the guard positions,
sophomore Jack Scherrer at center, and juniors Ed
Eberle and Bobby Nowak at the forward positions
in the contest with the Huskies. Two of these starters, Nowak and Rutkowski, went scoreless in the

contest.

and finished the game with ten points. He was the
Bulls’ most accurate shooter for the night, hitting
on 50% of his shots, four out of eight from the
field.
Senior guard Wells, playing his last game for
the Bulls, was called on to replace Rutkowski in
the line-up and finished in the double figures at
13. Wells was eventually eliminated from the game

via the foul route.
Buffalo had a very poor shooting night, making
20 of 65’for 30.7% from the field, but the Bulls finished ahead of their opponents at the 15-foot line,
making 17 of 24. Northern Illinois made only 14 of
25 from the free throw line but hit on 41.9% of its
shots from the field, 26 of 62.
The game was held up by fans who threw a raw
egg on the floor in the second half and a combination lock which hit the scoring clock high above the
playing floor.

Philadelphia holds command
In the contest with Philadelphia Textile, which
had a 19-5 record going into the game and were
tournament bound, the Bulls could only keep up
-

Because of injuries and sickness during the
campaign, Serfustini has had to come up with a different line-up practically every game. Senior forward Doug Bernard is recuperating at the Millard
Fillmore Hospital after surgery for the correction
of a right shoulder separation suffered in Tuesday’s
game at Ithaca.
Fieri has been sloped by an ankle injury just
prior to the game against Colgate, Rutkowski was
down with the flu for a couple of weeks. Rick Wells
was out for the same reason.
Nowak had shoulder problems and Eberle was
slowed at the end of the first semester with an ankle
problem.
Add to this the loss of starting guard Joe Peeler
to the Army, and fans can see why the Bulls only
had a .500 season overall. They had an overall 12-12
record, but were 11-10 against four year colleges
and 10-9 against NCAA competition.
Northern Illinois is now 10-13,

Eberle leads Bulls
The Bulls’ scoring leader was Eberle who finished the game with 20 points after having meshed
12 in the first stanza. He had seven of 18 from the
field and six of seven from the free-throw line.
Sophomore substitute center 6 foot 9 inch John
Vaughan was the Bulls’ best rebounder with ten

Hockey

Center McKowne Faces

-

off

against Hobart. Wayne Fraser
is in the background.

Hockey club wins again: 10-0
by Richard Baumgarten
Spectrum Staff Reporter

The undefeated champions of the Finger Lake Hockey
League, the State University of Buffalo hockey club, made
it 15 league wins in succession as they closed out the regular
season by shutting-out visiting Hobart 10-0 Saturday night
at the Amherst Recreation Center,
The men from Hobart support from I he hard-checking
never had a chance as the defense which stopped Hobart
cold.
Bulls’ scoring machine went
For the Buffalo Hockey Club
into high gear early
defeating Hobart marked the end

with the visitors for the first five minutes.
It was the Textiles’ game the rest of the way as
they pulled to an 11 point lead, 40-29, at halftime.
The Rams widened the margin in the second
half as Buffalo turned over the ball more often than
necessary. The final score of the game was 77-57 in
favor of the Rams. The Bulls had 20 turnovers comBuffalo’s Lome Rombough, the
pared to seven for the visitors.
league’s leading scorer, capped
The Rams outshot the Bulls from the field, makoff a fabulous year by racking up
ing 28 of 64 for 43.8% while the Bulls made 23 of five goals to raise his season total
54 for 42.6%. The Bulls made only 11 of 26 from
to 35 tallies. This is an all-time
the free throw line while Philadelphia was hitting Buffalo scoring record. The preon 21 of 29.
vious scoring mark by a Buffalo
The Bulls did have the edge in the rebound deicer was set by Dan Gourney durpartment. The Blue and White picked 52 off the ing the 1965-1966 season.
boards while the visitors could only grab 37.
Billy Newman added the threeSenior forward Jon Culbert, playing his last goal hat trick to the Blue and
game in Clark Gym, finished the game as the Bulls White cause, giving him 22 niarkleading scorer with 11 points. Sophomore Jack ers for the season, while Len DeScherrer was next in line with ten.
Prima and Darrell Pugh rounded
out the Buffalo scoring with a
Five sophomores finish
goal each,
Coach Serfustini decided to give the starters a
Buffalo all-league goalie Jimrest before the game against Northern Illinois, so my Hamilton turned in another
he had an all-sophomore line-up in the game for the stellar performance in the nets.
last seven minutes of play. Finishing the game were Hamilton, in registering his first
Scherrer, Vaughan (who had 7 rebounds), Bobby shutout of the season, in league
Williams, Rich Barbera, and Joe Foster.
competition, received tremendous

'

by W. Scott Behrens

/

of the greatest season in the
club’s young six year history and
sets the stage for the all important Finger Lakes Hockey Tournament to be held this weekend at
the Amherst Recreation Center.
Bulls Faca R.l.T.
The Bulls are paired-off with
Rochester Institute of Technol-

ogy in Saturday night's second
game. Should the Bulls win the
game, they would then have the

opportunity to play the winner
of the first game between

doesn’t believe
can’t take the
phy.

that

the Bulls

tournament

Frosh end season beating
Buffalo State, 109-92
The State University of Buffalo
freshman basketball team ended
its season on a winning note

Thursday night as they came
from behind to outlast a hot Buffalo State frosh squad, 109-92.
This was the Baby Bulls 13th win
in 17 contests, their 11th victory
in their last 12 starts and their
fifth consecutive win.
The Buffalo yearlings, coached
by Ed Muto, were down six points
at the halfway point. A full court
press during the second half
helped the Baby Bulls overcome
their deficit and they pulled
ahead to stay midway through
the final stanza.
Both teams were hitting consistently well, with Buffalo State
shooting nearly 60% in the first
stanza. The Blue and White hit
for 51% in the same period. The
Baby Bulls finished with 44 twopointers out of 80 attempts from
the field for 55% while the State
frosh fell to a 53%, hitting on

35 of 66.
The Buffalo yearlings meshed
21 of 32 shots from the free
throw line while State made 22
of 41.
The Baby Bulls’ leading scorer
for the night was Bob Moog with

He was the team’s
shooter, making 11 field
goals of 16 attempted. Steve Waxman, the Bulls’ high average man,
finished with 18 for the night.
The Buffalo yearlings pulled
down 46 rebounds to Buffalo
State’s 32. Waxman led in that department with 18.
Freshmen who will most likely
make the varsity next season are
29 points.

best

Waxman, Moog and Roger Krem-

bias. Four others will be vying
for a berth on the varsity. They
are Phil Knapp, Kenny Palen,
Jim Bruneneaus and Terry Johnson.
Team manager this year was
Carlos Olivencia. He was also the
Baby Bulls’ official statistician.
The box score follows:
BUFFALO STATE (92)

BUFFALO (109)

Kremblas

Waxman
Moog
Knapp
Palen
Brun'eaus
Johnson
Landergren
Boss
Kiriloff
Kiernan

Prorok
Totals

FG FT TP

FG

7
9
11
5
5

16
8

2

6
0

20 Smith

7
3
3
0
0
0
1
0
0

29 Duna
13 Galluch

18

Bienko

13 DiVita
4 Walker

4 Prerino
2 McMullen
1 Levine
2 Tribula
0
0 Marston
1 1
3 D'Alphonso
Totals
44 21 109
2

1

0
1

1

4
3
2

0

FT TP
9 41
0 16
0
2

1

9

0

6
5

1

1

0 2
0 4
0 1
13
0 0
35 22

de-

fending champion Oswego State
and Brqckport State for “all the
marbles” Sunday night. To a
man, there is not one player on
the Buffalo Hockey Club who

1
2
4
1
5
0
92

T no woric

.tn.t*

1 1 oi\

tro-

�Personnel being sought for southern schools
Staff

Reporter

cipating

Colleges, a faculty group on campus, is seeking interested persons
to fill staff openings at some
Southern educational institutions.
Dr. George Iggers of the Department of History heads the

Committee, which operates with
the Southern Educational Project (SEP) and Philander Smith
College, a small Methodist school
near Little Rock, Arkansas. The
SEP is a recruitment agency for
over 100 small developing institutions who have united their
efforts to obtain staff.
Philander Smith College, participating in the project, has a
special cooperative arrangement
in relation to staff with both the
State University of Buffalo and
Baldwin-Wallace College at Be-

rea, Ohio.

Uses Title III grant
This university has participated through a Title III grant by
making special arrangements for
consultation and for graduate
and summer school study by members of the Philander College
staff.

Phone

Smith College and
Teaching Fellowships.

Philander Smith, however, is
not typical of the schools parti-

by Caryl Schwartz
Spectrum

Tuesday, March 5, 1968

The Spectrum

P«!I9« Fourteen

One fellowship

in the project.

Question of

Which would you prefer to attend during Spring
A)
B)

Carnival
Fireworks Show
C) Sing-A-Long in The Rathskellar
D) Outdoor Band Concert
E) Talent Show

Additional funds requested
Additional funds

have been

requested for other staff positions whose salaries are dependent upon the amount of funds

the institution.

If the college’s application for
a Title III grant is funded, the
teaching positions which will be
available for the 1968-69 aca-

You can answer the Spectrum Question of the
Week every Wednesday and Thursday at the information desk on the first floor of Norton Hall,
and the University College lobby on Diefendorf

obtained from the federal gov-

ernment.

Hall.

Those positions for which
funds have been requested in-

demic year at Philander Smith
will include six National Teaching Fellowships, which carried
a salary of $6500 this year plus
modest allowances.
Two of these fellowships will
be offered in English, one in
sociology and one in mathemat-

Please submit only one ballot answering the

Question of the Week.

clude:

Last weeks question was:
505 acres of land in North Amherst are being

mathematics
Developmental
with an emphasis on computer
techniques with an anticipated
salary of $7500.
A preschool education instructorship for the lab school
and an audio-tutorial coordinator
with salaries of $6500 each.
A director of development at
a salary of $15,000.
A professional librarian in
cataloging and a director of admissions and counselors at salaries of $7500 each.
A project coordinator who
would be in charge of all Title
III projects at a salary of $10,•

considered for development for the University
community by an FSA committee. Please comment
on your response to the partial uses of the land.

•

The Title III grant, federally
subsidized under the U, S. Higher Education Act of 1965, provides funds for cooperative relationships between developing
colleges and established schools.
The $100,000 grant that the
Slate University of Buffalo received this year will provide for
consultants, graduate study by
faculty members at Philander

the week

will also be of-

guages and education,. primarily
preschool curriculum.

to upgrade its faculty
through continuing education and
a generous use of consultants to
give the students the benefits of
new and better techniques and
to break down the isolation of

made

832-0585

National

The results

were;

•

3. Recreation Area for students
4. Conference Area
5. Conservation Preserve

•

24%

No
76%

36%
67%
16%
33%

64%
33%
84%
67%

Yes

1, Golf Course
2. Recreation Area for underpriviledged children

6. Other
Pool 9%

•

Rent Land 2%
Theater 2%
Picnic Area 1%
Stadium 1%
Various 4%
Number of respondents: 317.

000.

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GIORDANO: Andrea Chenier

LEONCAVALLA:

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Daughter of the Regiment
•

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VERDI: Un Ballo In Maschera
CILEA; L' Aresiana
La Cenerentela
Petite Messe Selennelle*
Marriage by a Promissory Note*
BIZET: The Pearl Fishers*
MASSENET: Don Quichotte*
OFFENBACH; Orpheus in the Underworld*

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Simon Boccanagra
DONIZETTI: La Favorita
L' Etisir D'Amora
MOZART; Don Giovanni
Tha Marriage of Figaro
La Finta Giardiniera*
BOITO: Mefistofele
ROSSINI; Barber of Savllia
PONCHIELLI: La Giocenda*
PUCCINI; Madame Butterfly
Turandof
CIMAROSA: II Matrimonio Sagrato
BELLINI: Norma
La Sonnambula
MASSENET: Warther
CHERUBINI: Media*
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�Tuesday, March 5, 1968

The Spectrum

Pag*

Resigning prof, blasts Reagan

protesters
#

!

SAN FRANCISCO (CPS)
Dr.
John Summerskill, the embattled

that proposed cuts in the University of California budget would

College, has resigned with a blast
at the state administration of Governor Ronald Reagan.

Dr. Murphy’s boss, President
Clark Kerr, was fired by the UC
Regents.

Dr. Summerskill said higher
education in California is “being
eroded by political interference
and financial starvation” and called on Gov. Reagan to “give higher education the constructive leadership it requires and deserves.”

San Francisco State has been
a center of controversy this fall.
After Dr. Summerskill suspended
several black students and two
editors of a weekly student newspaper, there was a large campus
demonstration and some damage
to college property. Several trustees of the California state college system were critical of Dr.
Summerskill for not calling the
police to halt the demonstration
and the trustees put him on a
two-month “probation.”

—

He added he didn’t blame Gov.
Reagan for all of California’s
higher education problems, although “so far as I can see the
Governor is not particularly interested in strengthening higher
education.”

Students, faculty, and San Francisco police officials defended Dr.
Summerskill, however, and the
trustees voted unanimously to
keep him as president, but he
decided right after that to resign,
he said.

Second to resign

Dr. Summerskill is the second

higher education executive to resign in California in the last week.
Six days earlier Franklin Murphy,
chancellor of the University of
California at Los Angeles, resigned to become chairman of the
company that publishes the Los
Angeles Times. Dr. Murphy said
little about the Reagan administration, outside of a statement

His resignation takes effect in
September. HV said he expected
to remain in California higher
education but would not say in
what capacity.
-4

&lt;?;&lt;&gt;

as Dow is the manufacturer of
napalm and other chemical war-

by Vic Looper
Spectrum

Albany Correspondent

Ten Albany State University students who
ALBANY
were recently arrested while protesting Dow Chemical’s presence on the Albany campus will be tried in civil court before
the University takes any action.
—

University President Collins
made this clear at a President’s
Conference with students last

week.
The ten are included in a
group of 57 who will eventually
be given hearings before the Living Area Affairs Commission Ju-

dicial Committee (LAAC). The
committee is composed of nine
students and two non-voting faculty members. The students will
be charged with disorderly conduct and violation of the University Council policy of obstruction.

Petition states views

The students stated the basis
for the Feb. 21 protest in a petition submitted to President Collins which stated in part:

“We submit that the Dow
Chemical Corporation, manufacturer of napalm, which is being
used daily in Vietnam, is in
violation of the most moral and
human principles to which this
University subscribes.
“We submit that the Dow Chemical Corporation should not have
the right to interview or hire on
this campus employes who may
be assisting in the production of
murderous and illegal weapons.
We feel that only a debate or discussion on the use of napalm
would be acceptable as an exercise in free speech.
“We further submit that should
the University permit this representative to hold interviews now
or anytime in the future so long

©

i.i.i.i’-"'''

..

•

by University, says Pres. Collins

&gt;

O

Fifteen

fare weapons, that

we will

pro-

test the University’s complicity

with this immoral and inhuman
enterprise.”

Administration comment
At the President’s Press Con19, Dr. Clifton C.
Thorne, vice-president of Student
Affairs, commented upon the petition. He stated that “President
Collins said that such an action
(barring recruiters) would interfere with the intellectual freedom
of and impose a censorship on
.
.
the University community
The University has always maintained a free and open campus
where ail views are respected. To
deny the request of the 14 students who have arranged interviews with Dow would be in violation of this principle.”
ference, Feb.

.

The petition, signed by 90 students, requested the invitation to
Dow be withdrawn or in compliance with their statement of beliefs they would have to protest.
Dr. Thorne answered by endorsing the statement adopted by The
University Council on Dec, 14,
1967, which stated in part:
“Students, like other members
of (he University, are free within
the law to manifest, protest and
dissent or support and assent in
a peaceful, orderly manner that
docs not seek to restrain the freedom of expression, inquiry or

movement of others.”
Central Council passed a position statement on protest and

SHERIDAN

demonstration Dec. 7, 1967, which
is similar to the one passed by
the University Council. Central
Council is the highest governing
body of the Student Association
at the University.

CLASSIFIED
FOR SALE

V'
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hardshell case, classical guitar. Find
Kim in the Rathskeller or phone 832-6896.
APARTMENT FOR RENT

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THE OTHER superhighways shown are
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you want to go from east to west, north to
south or even circle the city, there's an

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REGARDLESS of where you
live in the Buffalo area,
chances are that you have
easy access to one of
the five major expressways
which can whisk you to
near your destination.
Buffalo Is
circled with

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rooms, available

ill

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ROOMMATES WANTED
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State University of
New York

Study Program in
ISRAEL
1968-1969

4

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Hebrew University of
If

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Earn 36 credit

hours, courses
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Next time you make that crossfown trip
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For information and
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hour. Car necessary. Call 832-7509 for

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SAVE FOR FUTURE REFERENCE

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State University College
Onaonta, New York 13820

V

■ry
*.
•

�Sixteen

Th

world

Tuesday, March 5, 1968

Spectrum

budapest

.

•

focus

•

Washington

—

Why reversed
He said he expected Spock and others
to accept the ACLU’s offer of “direct representation to any of the defendants in
this case who wish it
The ACLU announcement said its reversal was based on a decision that a

“free speech” issue was involved in cases
similar to Spock’s. It said the new stance
did not affect the ACLU’s decision not to
challenge the constitutionality of the draft
itself or the Vietnam War.
Last Jan, 12 the board had stated it
would not undertake to defend those indicted, and that decision plunged the
ACLU into bitter controversy with several
of its local affiliates, including the chapters in New York and Massachusetts.
The Massachusetts chapter, which said
at the time it would not abide by the January decision, has already'agreed to represent two of the defendants in the Spock
case, author Mitchell Goodman, 44, and
Harvard graduate student Michael Ferber,

—

*•&amp;.

&amp;

i

'
'*'

-UPI Telephoto

Exit, stage

left

'Mf

/ /
/

y

Gov. Romney walks past an 'exit"
sign after announcing his withdrawal

candidate for the Republican Presidential nomination. He said he had
failed to win sufficient support.
as a

Spock, contacted

Romanian walk-out attacked
BUDAPEST
The Romanians went
home late last week and their Communist
brethren from 66 nations immediately
began attacking them behind their backs.
The Romanian delegation walked out
of the world Communist conference accusing the Soviet Union of using steamroller tactics to get their own way about
a larger world Communist summit later
this year.
No sooner had the independent-minded
Romanians left for home then they came
under sharp criticism from the Czechoslovakian and Canadian Communist leaders.
Several other Communist parties criticized
the walkout in less harsh terms.
Czech party Secretary Vladmir Koucky
reportedly told the conference that his
delegation deplored the Romanian action

■

23.

at his New York
residence, said he had already retained
cept” any financial assistance offered.”
private legal counsel but “will surely ac“I hope the decision means also that
they are interested in supporting the
young men who first in the hundreds and
now in the thousands are resisting the
draft as illegal as these young men need
both the financial and moral support more
than we oldsters do,” Spock said.

I®

5

\

defend protesters

The National Board
NEW YORK
of the American Civil Liberties Union
(ACLU), in a reversal of policy, voted to
defend persons arrested for encouraging
resistance to the draft and offered assitance to Dr. Benjamin Spock and others
indicted on such charges.
Executive ACLU Director John DeJ.
Pemberton Jr., announced the decision
had been taken by a 26-20 vote of the
national board convened at the Park
Sheraton Hotel.
Spock, 64, the famous baby doctor and
author, said he was happy with the board’s
reversal and thought the action would
lend emphasis to the anti-draft movement
in the nation’s colleges and universities.
Spock, Yale University Chaplain William Sloane, Coffin, 43, and three other
persons are under federal indictment for
allegedly conspiring to encourage and assist draft resistors.

%'

p V
W

compiled from our wire services by Madeline Levine

ACLU to

,^'A

V

i,

Pag*

and said the proposed summit could not
ignore Red Chinese subversion.
William Kashtan, the Canadian party
secretary, told newsmen he sUapecieu me
Romanians deliberately provoked a situation to provide a pretext for a staged walkout.

Not unanimous
One Communist delegate, whose country sides with Moscow, said, “It’s good
they have left. They were stinking up the
conference.”

However, the Romanian walkout did

not leave the conference in a chorus of
agreement and unanimity. Not all of the
delegates were ready to condemn Romani-

ans and several took

up the Romanians’

cause, insisting that the Sino-Soviet feud
be kept off any summit agenda.

Riot commission calls
WASHINGTON
President Johnson
has been challenged by his top-level antiriot commission to return to Congress and
ask for laws and more money to save
America from “large scale and continuing”
race warfare in the streets of its cities.
Since the hot July when Newark and
Detroit erupted at a cost of 69 lives, not
much has been done to prevent it from
happening again, the President was told.
Instead, the President’s Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders said, “our nation is moving toward two societies, one
separate and unblack, one white
—

—

equal.”

Little basic change in the conditions
underlying the outbreak of disorder has
taken place,” the commission said in its
report, the result of a seven-month, $1
million study of the cause of the 164 ra-

cial outbursts in American communities
during the spring and summer of 1967.

Recommendations made
The commission, headed by retiring
Democratic Gov. Otto Kerner of Illinois,
included new York’s Republican Mayor
John V. Lindsay, the vice chairman, and
four members of Congress, one represen-

tv

for

action

tative each of labor, business, state government, city police and the civil rights
movement. Two members were Negroes,
one was a woman and one a southerner.
They said their recommendations may
not be enough to prevent more bloodshed
in America in 1968 but it said “a commitment so so clear that Negro citizens
will know its truth and accept its goal”
might be enough so that “the likelihood
of disorder can be markedly lessened.”

The commission asked for “national

action-compassionate, massive and sustained.” It asked for a guaranteed income
as high as the $3,335 poverty level for a
family of four; the creation of 2 million
jobs in the next 24 months and 6 million
housing units in the next five years; federal disaster aid to cities hit by riots
similar to that offered places hurt by
floods or hurricanes; and year-round federal schooling programs for slum children.

Cost equal to Vietnam

The commission did not say what this
would cost. But Sen. Fred K. Harris
(D-Okla.), one of its members, suggested
its recommendations could be as expensive
as the Vietnam War
$32 billion a year.
“The feeling was that if the war in
Vietnam stopped tomorrow the people
would not want to spend that $32 billion
to prevent riots,” he said in an interview. “Our goal was to show the country
that this sort of thing must be done.”
Turning to its investigation of the
riots, the commission found that they did
not result from “conspiracy” but blamed
both “white racism” and black extremism.
—

Police scored

The commission

gave low marks to

police departments in riot cities.
“The abrasive relationship between the
police and the ghetto community has been
a major
source of
and explosive
grievance, tension and disorders,” it said.
The report said arms will not prevent
—

—

riots.
“In several

cities," it said, “the principle official response has been to train
and equip the police with more sophisticated weapons. The commission condemns
moves to equip police departments with
mass destruction weapons, such as automatic rifles, machine guns and tanks.
Weapons which are designed to destroy,
not to control, have no place in densely
populated urban communities. The harmful effects of overreaction are incalculable.”

—UPI Telephoto

For riot
control

A retired Army general and two other
volunteers wade through snow-like Foam during a demonstration showing new anti-riot weapons.
The demonstration came on the eve of the release of
the President's riot commission report. The report
warned against mass-destruction weapons.

The commission reported that the top
three grievances in the Negro ghetto are
police practices, unemployment and under
employment, and inadequate housing.
It warned that if present policies are
continued without alteration, “large scale
and continuing violence could result, followed by white retaliation, and ultimately,
the separation of the two communities in a
garrison state.”

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                    <text>0

The

Fire Department fa Is to cool Di ck Gregory
Negro comic blasts Viet War;
gives views on Black America
by Jay Schreibar
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

After being delayed temporarily by a false fire alarm
Monday night, Dick Gregory delivered a non-stop, two hour
attack on two controversies raging within the U.S.—the
Black American and the War in Vietnam.
Mr. Gregory, the Negro comedian whose use of race
problems as joke material has gained him nationwide fame
and a role as a spokesman for his people, appealed to the
1500 students present to stop moral pollution that “has
made our nation insane.”
Recently completing a 40 ised not to get a haircut,
day fast in protest against shave or wear anything but
work clothes until the war
the Vietnam War, Mr. Gregory came attired in blue work is over.
clothes and a white tie. He
“I just got back to this counsported a beard and prom- try,” he said. “I’m tempted to go
to South Africa and get me

my

white heart. Baby, we ain’t going
to be your spare parts.”
Mr. Gregory was still the satirist when he described Black
Power as having “Ralph Bunche
move into a poor white neighborhood and depreciating the values.”
The audience laughed repeated-

ly when Gregory expressed amazement “that so many dumb white,
folks think that if we took over
the country, all white people

would be slaves. Know what that
means? Seven more jobs to feed
your twelve white slaves. The
white folks could pick all the
cotton in two days and then sit
around and learn them songs.
You got to learn them songs.
I could see it now, calling to my

slave, ‘Come here,

white

Boy.’

—Bina

Dick Gregory
"I'm tempted to go to South
Africa and get me a white
heart."

Mr.

”

When he switched for a brief
mention of President Johnson he
received his first of numerous
ovations. “I’d send LBJ to Vietnam and bring all the boys home.
Then I’d have Eartha Kitt call

it Please

turn to Page 7

—

Hendrichs

This engine responded to the false alarm pulled
as Dick Gregory was about to speak. Firemen
vainly attempted to evacuate the Union. Most
students refused to budge. For Fire Comm.
Howard it was a case of adding insult to injury.

Another
false

AucJience din

is

to seat

Reaction is slow to false alarm
Much of the drama that surrounded Dick Gregory’s speech
Monday was precipitated in an
hour-long confrontation with the
Buffalo Fire Department.
At 8 p.m, that night in an overflowing Millard Fillmore room,
a fire alarm was sounded which a
large majority of the audience
failed to hear. Three subsequent
and unexplained requests over
the loudspeaker for the students

"Not concerned about it”: Dr. Drotnin

Faculty viewed drinking in Norton
Apparently, much more
than just students violate
campus regulations against
drinking.
Alcoholic beverages were
served at a meeting Monday
evening to seven members of
the faculty, a Buffalo city
councilman, and a visiting
high State official from Albany.
It was called by Dr. John E.
Drotning in Room 232, Norton
Hall.

Several students called The
Spectrum office and the Student
Association offices to complain
about “faculty drinking illegally

in the student union.”

Liquor bottles were plainly vis-

ible from the hall outside the
meeting room, and when a Spectrum photographer entered to
take pictures, one faculty mem-

ber said: “I know what you’re doing. Sure we’re drinking booze—big deal. Get out.”
The photographer was escorted
to the door by Dr. Drotning.

Initial confusion was cleared
Richard Miller, vice president of the Student Association
who explained, that the Fire Department was responding to an
alarm, and under fire laws, had
to clear the building. Many in
the audience became vocally hostile and Mr. Miller had to yell
“Shut up” in order to be heard.

The initial "game” atmosphere
suddenly grew angry and indignant. In a spontaneous open forum a number of students took the
stage to charge harrassment of
Mr. Gregory by city officials.
One Negro student implied that
Gregory was being discriminated
against for his “black power”
views.
Another yelled: “Let’s
show them where we stand by
sitting here.”

not asking anything"

Suddenly attention became focused on the front door where
Gregory was entering the room

amidst a dividing sea of human
bodies.
When the audience
quieted, Gregory began calmly:

“There is no State law against
liquor on campus,” he said. “When
I sit down to have a drink before
dinner, I don’t think about the

“Let me say as loud as I can,
I don’t believe that anybody over
26 should be trusted. I’m 36.
I’m not asking anything, one way
or the other. Understand what’s
going on. By law they’re right;
if the alarm goes out, the build-

law,"

He admitted that students might
be upset that faculty appear to
“get dual status.” But he said:
“At some stage in life you get
treated differently than at others.”

Social Sciences and Administration.

a

by

"I'm

Dr. Drotning said that he “must
have been partly aware” of the
ban on liquor, but that he “was
not concerned about it.”

Dr. Drotning refused to reveal
the names of other faculty members at the meeting, but he said
that all were from the faculty of

to clear the room received
totally negative response.

ing

liquor Cllriaht
This bo ttlewas disposed after

use

a f Gregory's

lecture. But

liquor was in use at the same
time elsewhere in Norton.

has to be cleared.

“We do know that if the American Legion or the Shriners were
here they wouldn’t have to leave.
Or if they were having some
meeting for the policemen, the
firemen wouldn’t clear them out.
They’ve asked me to ask you to
leave. I’m not telling you what to
do. I know what decisions I’d

like you to make. Let me say
before I go, there’s a lot of folks
standing outside. The most I can
do is stand in the cold with
them.”

About 100 students followed
Mr. Gregory as he left the room
and the crowd filled Norton's
hallway and outside steps.

However, about 90% of the audience stayed and cheered Larry
Faulkner and others, who compared the situation to the March

on Washington.

audience yelled its apwhen Mr. Faulkner said:
“If any arrests are made tonight
for speaking, they’ll be made for
all 2000 people here.” Gregory’s
second entrance a minute later
brought that possibility to an end.
The

proval

False alarm problem
There seem to be a number of
available reasons for the adamant
refusal that students expressed
towards leaving. The audience itself contained a large number of
left wing activists and sympath-

izers.

Even normally non-committal
students showed support for opposition to “establishment interference" from the City. But some
students, after standing in line
for one hour and a half seemed
merely irritated and tired.
Throughout the dispute no
University or Administration official made himself known or attempted to control the situation.

Fire Commissioner Robert B.
Howard Jr. explained that the
Fire Dept, has a problem with
false alarms sounded from campus. Some firefighters attributed
the alarms to a short circuit in a
second-floor elevator outlet.

�Pag* Two

Via

The Spectrum

Friday, March 1, 196a

Grad school dean cites

luestionnaire

ch studen aske
Students in phychology courses
from 207 to the 400 level will
receive questionnaires Monday
and Tuesday designed to tap student criticisms. A direct result
of the second Bitch-In held Wednesday, the questionnaire also
will elicit suggestions of the faculty and administration of the
undergraduate Psychology Department,

The questionnaire will be divided into two columns—one side
for suggestions and one for criticisms. These will fall under

seven topics to correspond to
seven standing faculty committees; honors, advisement—graduate and undergraduate, ‘senior’

seminars, comprehensives, curriculum (subdivided into 101-102,
207-208, and the rest of the 300400 level courses), faculty-student
interaction and miscellaneous.
After students fill-in questionnaires, they will be tallied and
organized by the Faculty-Student
Advisory Committee, elected at
the Feb. 21 Bitch-In.

Students will be asked to re-

turn questionnaires Wednesday
or Thursday.

There will also be an open
meeting of the psychology committee every three weeks. Faculty and studnts are invited to attend. A suggestion box will be

by Debbie Price

put in the first floor of Townsend Hall for students wishing to
write their criticisms and sug-

Spectrum

Staff

criticisms and
to the
administrations. We arg very optimistic. The whole point of the
last meeting was that we elected
people who were willing to work.

Dr. Snell said that this year
U.S. universities will graduate
about 21,000 doctoral candidates.
By 1972 this figure could have
increased to 26,000.

“We have met with Dr. Silverman, and we have been getting
a lot of support from the faculty.

But with the new no-deferment

ruling the number of doctorates
is predicted to drop to 16,000
a ten year setback.

They’re willing to make improvements and listen to the students.”

—

Long range effects
Of those receiving a baccalaureate degree here this spring, 774
males would normally be expected to enter graduate school.

Nursing dean says profession not
able to meet needs of the people'
Interrelated factors explaining
the “present inability of nursing
to meet the needs of the people
of the nation and the region”
were cited by Dr. Ruth T. McGrorey in a University Report
Tuesday. Dr. McGrorey is the
dean of the School of Nursing at
the State University of Buffalo.

as one of these factors.

Other factors include the assignment of too small a share of
the educational dollar to nursing
and the insufficiency of research
in the nursing field, according to
Dr. McGrorey.

“Past and current patterns in
and nursing
service have not, do not and can
not meet the needs of the vast
complex of health care already in
action and clearly foreseen,” the
nursing education

The relatively large number of
nurses prepared in vocational
and technical programs compared

to the number in baccalaureate
and graduate programs was cited

dean asserted.

HILLEL
Friday Eva. Sarvica 7:40 P.M.
Sunday Suppar 5:30 P.M., by rasarvation

40 Capan Blvd. 836-4540

Watch for
Speedy Gonzalez

However, only 250 will now actually matriculate. A depletion of
males now in their first year of
graduate school from 431 to 289
is also expected to result from the

Several new approaches to
nursing education now being
considered by the School of Nursing were listed by Dr. McGrorey.
Among them is the ‘‘development
of an experimental curriculum
which recognizes the basic unity
of nursing care in the various

new ruling.

Concerned about what national
security consists of, Dr. Snell declared: “To me the Security
Council ruling is based upon an
erroneous set of priorities regarding national safety and interest.”
There may be an exodus of
graduate students to Canada, the
extent of which is “hard to estimate”, said Dr. Snell. It is the
graduate students “who feel most
deeply concerned over the present course of our involvement in

stages of the life cycle.”
The development of a graduate program stressing nursing
theory and the preparation of
teachers, administrators and consultants is also being considered.

Vietnam,” he said.
Canada, at the same time, may
suffer a loss of its graduate students who will rush to the U.S.
to fill the gap in our graduate
schools. The result may be an
even
the
exchange between
United States and Canada, he
said.

REMEMBER
THOSE
YOU LOVED
WITH A
MEMORIAL GIFT
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AMERICAN
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If the current draft policy is
carried out, the make-up of graduate schools will be altered
greatly. In part, places will be
available for more women. There

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also may be a tendency to bring
in more aliens to occupy places in
graduate schools, Dr. Snell said
He doesn’t believe that “the im
mediate problems are as serious
as the long range ones generated
by the new draft policy.
The greatest long-range probconcerns the depletion of
educated manpower to “fill the
demands and needs of industry,
government, and educational institutions.”

lem

A vacuum in the supply and
demand of manpower will be
created because of the new policy.

Dean Snell feels that the bal-

ance of manpower is an equally
important part of our national

defense.

Fewer assistants
Another long range effect involves the loss of teaching assistants in the universities.
Though teaching assistants
have done “a very good job,” the
university could manage without
them, according to Dr. Snell,
Professors might be forced to
develop closer relations with
their students.
The results of their loss for the
University would be a necessary
increase in class sizes.
Dr. Snell is in general agreement with the proposal of the
Council of Graduate Schools to
remedy the situation which would
be caused by the existng drat
law. It is felt that eligibility
should not occur during periods
that would disrupt a student s education.
What is advocated by the Council is eligibility “only at natural
times of transition in the educational process.”

THE SPECTRUM
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Reporter

Denying draft deferments to graduate students will have
gestions.
“serious deleterious effects, both immediate and long-range,”
according to Dr. Fred Snell, dean of the University graduate
Paula Silverman, member-atlarge of the committee said: “We school.
are trying to make it as easy as
Deferments are now being granted only to students in
possible for students to make health related fields.
suggestions

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�Friday, March 1, 1968

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Pag* The**

Spectrum

Constitution okayed; plan referendum dateline news, March 1
At Wednesday night’s student.

Tuesday in the Millard Fillmore

Wednesday, March 26 and 27. All

tion was accepted as a committee
report by a vote of 14-1-1. During
the meeting, some minor changes
were made in the proposed Constitution, and, a new provision
was added about the recall of the
Student Coordinating Committee.

tution. Next Thursday and Friday,
there will be a referendum of all
students on the issue of the Constitution.

any student wishing to run for
office may pick up a petition in
PITTSBURGH—About one-third o£ Pittsburgh’s 3.100 public
the Student Association office, school teachers went on strike yesterday to back demands for a
collective bargaining election. It was the first such strike in the
room 205, Norton Hall.

Upcoming elections

Other topics discussed included
graduate draft deferments and
getting the Education Department
to offer Education 321-322 and
Education 421-422 in the summer
session.

The procedure and dates for
the upcoming election of officers
was announced and discussed at
the meeting. Candidates for office
must turn in signed petitions with
500 student signatures by Mon
day, March 18. Campaigning will
be from Wednesday, March 20, to
Wednesday, March 27. Elections
for officers will be Tuesday and

One of the major provisions of
the Constitution, the polity, drew
this comment from Stewart Edelstein, “I think there’ll be much
more leadership under the polity
system than the senator system.”

:

The Student Senate will sponsor another bitch-in 3:30 p.m. on

Reaction fo Califano letter

city’s history.

Pr«*«

Service

The three colleges who banned military recruiters last
fall have lifted the bans and several other schools which were
considering such bans have decided to drop the idea.
The bans were originally put into effect at Amherst College and Columbia and George Washington Universities after
Selective Service Director Lewis B. Hershey sent a letter to
local draft boards rcommending that they reclassify and draft
anti-war and anti-draft demonstrators as soon as possible.
The apparent reason for the
dropping of the recruiter ban
idea is a letter which Presidential assistant Joseph Califano

sent to the presidents of the Ivy
League schools last December,
Mr. Califano said draft boards
will not be used to “repress un-

Protest held at Kenmore West
A group of about 25 demonstrators Tuesday converged on
Kenmore West High School to
march in opposition to a meeting
of parents, students, guidance
counselors and military recruiters.
The demonstrators were repeatedly heckled by a group of
about 50 boys, identified as members of high school fraternities.

Police were on hand to avert
violence between demonstrators
and hecklers. One officer said
they had been called by the principal because of the disorderly
and rowdy behavior of counter-

Both groups disbursed at about
7:30 p.m., just as the meeting was
starting.

The meeting, “Military Information Night” featured several
representatives of all branhces
of the armed forces. ITiey repeat-

emphasized the necessity
importance of staying in
school. The representatives were
not recruiting, but informing the
parents about the requirements
for admission to the armed
edly

and

forces, and what guarantees of
job placement can be made. Also
mentioned were the draft and
the

new

ruling

on

school deferments.

demonstrators.

graduate

RA positions are open
The University is now looking
for qualified students to be resident advisors for the 1968-69 academic year.
The position is open to all students who will have at least
Junior status by September, 1968.
Selection of these students will
be based on their academic record, references, and an inter-

view.

Appointments are for the academic year, and salary, in the
form of room and board ranges
from half board and full room, to
full room and board.
The responsibility of an RA include living and working with

resident students. Resident advisors serve an important role in

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living situations and making the
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Applications are available now
a*- the Housing Office in Goody® ar Hall.
They should be returned by March 8. Announcement of appointments will be
made during the week of April

popular views” or judge the legality of demonstrations.
Although Gen. Hershey tersely

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The striking teachers, member of the Pittsburgh Federation of
Teachers PFT, walked out despite a last minute plea from the governor’s office and a court injunction issued Wednesday night.

But he left the door open to persuasion by fellow Republicans
attending a National Governors Conference here, indicating further
comment could be expected “after our group meets.”

EGYPT—Rioting in the streets by thousands of workers and students has seriously undermined the authority of President Gamal
Abdel Nasser of the United Arab Republic, travelers from Cairo
said today.
The immediate cause was the relatively light sentences and acquittals for the former Air Force commanders accused of permitting defeat in the war. Rioting burst out in Cairo and other key

commented that he knew what
was in the letter “but I didn’t points.
write it” and the White House
has not formally disavowed HerLONDON—The Labor government yesterday eased the terms
shey’s letter, administrators at
Columbia, Amherst, and George of a law to curb the flood of Pakistanis and Indians from East
Africa pouring into Britain in an effort to get a balky Parliament to
Washington all subsequently repass it.
admitted recruiters.
Prospects for the controversial bill’s passage before a scheduled
midnight deadline appeared dim because of amendments and a
Recruit at Columbia
planned filibuster when the proposal gets to the House of Lords.
The Army and Marines reThe bill passed its second reading in the House of Commons
cruited without incident at CoTuesday with a massive majority of 310 votes.
lumbia, the first campus to ban
recruiters. In fact, the campus
WASHINGTON—The Defense Department has ordered the draft
chapter of Students for a Demoof 1,070 physicians and 56 osteopaths for the Army this year.
cratic Society voted not to obThe draft call for doctors, issued Wednesday, was the lowest in
struct the recruiters. However, five years. The Pentagon asked for 2,118 physicians and 111 osteothere was some student criticism
paths at this time last year. Low early quotas have frequently been
of University officials.
followed by additional calls later in the year, however.
Student criticism of George
Washington President Lloyd ElSAIGON—American spokesmen Thursday said U.S. bombers
liott was even stronger when he have been hitting a North Vietnamese base that military
sources
lifted GW’s ban almost as soon as say is being built up
possibly to launch the first Communist air
Califano’s letter was released. attacks against allied forces in South Vietnam.
The student senate passed a resoThe spokesmen announced fresh attacks Wednesday against
lution opposing President Elliott’s North
Vietnam’s Southern Panhandle where a prime target the past
action, but he has not reinstated
several weeks has been the air base near the coastal city of Vinh.
the ban. Amherst’s college counThe souces said the North Vietnamese have been trying to
cil voted to re admit recruiters,
lengthen the base’s runway to accomodate the Russian-built MIG
while restricting where they could jets
which could launch air attacks against the allies in South Vietrecruit, after filing a long report nam.
which quoted Mr. Califano’s letter as a demonstration that draft
boards would not be used to punish legal violations.
v
Military recruiters voluntarily

T

’

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"

—

'

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agreed to suspend recruiting at

Dartmouth until students and faculty could work out a policy. The
student government asked for a

ban, but the faculty voted to let
recruiters on campus, provided
they will talk to any one, including opponents of the war.
Faculty groups at Stanford and
Cornell Universities both voted
that recruiters should be banned.

8 TRACK STEREO
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THE SPECTRUM

personnel.

In relation to the graduate deWASHINGTON—With Michigan Gov. George Romney out of the
ferment issue, there will be an Republican presidential contest, attention centered yesterday on the
Forum
the
Fillmore
in
Open
intentions of New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller.
Room on Wednesday at 3 p.m. All
members of the University are inRockefeller, the presidential choice of many moderate and
liberal Republicans, reaffirmed he was “not a candidate” Wednesvited to attend.
day shortly after Romney withdrew from the race.

Ban on military recruiters is lifted
Co/f«0«

Officials hoped to keep the city’s 112 public elementary and high
schools open with the help of substitute teachers and supervisory

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Norton 235

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�Tha Spactrum

Page Four

Friday, March 1, 1968

Groovy country, or black night

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There were also a couple of unfortunate events that
were connected with Gregory’s visit Monday evening.
The first, which occurred before the comedian arrived
in the Fillmore room, was the sounding of a false alarm.
Although we question the need for the Fire Department to
order the evacuation of the entire Union, we also question
the motives of those who considered the evacuation order
an attempt by civic authorities to abort Gregory’s talk.
Those who screamed “harrassment” should stop seeking
confrontations over inane issues. Save it for the real issues.
The display Monday was immature and foolish.
The second unfortunate event was the failure of either
of the large Buffalo newspapers to adequately report what
happened here. Gregory did not ask everyone to leave the
Union; he told them to “do what you feel you oughta do.”
Both papers also chose not to report on the content of
Gregory’s speech. Perhaps they considered his talk unsuitable for their readers.

Symposium well planned
The symposium on “Civil Liberties and Law Enforcement” was one of the finest programs scheduled at the
University this year. The series of talks which began Monday and ended Thursday were successful in meeting the
aims of the program: To give the student body a greater
insight on the problems of civil liberties, specifically those
which directly affect them, such as the draft, passive resistance and civil disobedience.
Although Dick Gregory drew the largest crowd and
the greatest publicity Monday evening, the other speakers
provided the range of topics to give the symposium the
breadth it needed. That range was adequately provided
by Aryeh Neier, Marvin Karpatkin, Herman Schwartz and
Dr. Jerome Skolnick.
We commend the Student Association, the Politics
Club and the Niagara Chapter of the New York Civil Liberties Union for sponsoring the symposium. We must also
recognize the efforts of Robert Weiner, organizer and
chairman of the program, and Lawrence Smith, assistant
vice president, and thank them for a well planned and informative symposium.

m CO! AMiSktST/ufi S'lupicvr

Open

Gov. George Romney’s decision Wednesday to pull out
of the race for the GOP Presidential nomination can only
be viewed as a blow to Richard Nixon and a boost to the
possible nomination of Gov. Nelson Rockefeller.
Nixon, whether he likes it or not, is looking more and
more like the conservative Republican, and Romney’s withdrawal from the race helps to unify the liberal Republicans behind Rockefeller.
Rockefeller’s recent statement that he will accept the
nomination if he is drafted at the convention certainly puts
him in the running. At this point, there appears to be no
better candidate for the Republicans if they want to defeat
Lyndon Johnson in November.
Because of these developments, Gov. Rockefeller must
begin to ennunciate his policies on the vital issues that
confront the nation. He can play the politics game for just
so long—now is the time for the Governor to tell us clearly
where he stands.

Sesame/

Readers
writings

from linen rags

Sitting on the edge of his chair playing with
a plate of assorted cold vegetables, Dick Gregory
Monday night described 1968 as a year of crisis
for America’s blacks, a year that will establish
the patterns of the black revolution, if they have
not been established already.
/is Gregory aptly pointed out, the crisis in the
black revolution is a crisis of leadership.

The Urban League and the NAACP may have
become successful in that they have won over
the white community, or rather, they have been
absorbed by the white power structure, but, as
evidenced by the growing restlessnes of young
blacks across the country, they have failed in a
much more fundamentally important role; the
leadership of the black community.
“The black bourgeoisie is today’s group of
Uncle Toms,” Gregory said. “They are psychologi. . They’re nocally split from the community
where, man.”
Color, although the most obvious and assuredly
fundamental basis of our apartheid folkways, (Joes
not adequately describe the social split in America,
nor is it in any sense a cure-all solution.
For blacks, using James Baldwin’s title, do live
in "another country;” the black ghettoes of our
cities, both in the North and the South, are, in a
very real sense, communities which are sociologically, economically and, perhaps most important,
psychologically different from the rest of society.
“A kid in the ghetto lives in a black world.
For him, the country is 90% black and 10% white,
instead of the other way around,” Gregory noted.
“In this sense, the only power that has any
democratic meaning at all for the kid is black
power,” Gregory concluded, noting that “black
power” is not a separatist dogma, so much as it
is the only means to aeheve a political voice in a
spstem that is fundamentally a separatist one.
Black power, according to Stokely Carmichael,
is the last chance to integrate America’s blacks
into fundamental areas of political decision making;
unless the political power configurations in the
hearts of the nation’s cities are radically changed,
to allow for an end to the colonial, and a return
to the democratic principles, they are going to

"

Suggests reading Commager
To the Editor

The position I took, in letters previously and
graciously printed in The Spectrum, on the Dow
and CIA recruitment tangle was neither the popular
nor victorious one. Nevertheless, I am gratified
that such a position and some of its attendant
arguments are shared (in the Feb. 24 number of
The New Republic) by Henry Steele Commager,

Indeed, Mr. Commager does much better than I
did with my position, so I earnestly hope that his
article gets the widespread reading it deserves.
May I suggest to your readers that they do so?
Gray MacArthur

.

Siggelkow could help Dems
To the Editor:

It appears likely that the Democratic Convention in Chicago next summei will be disrupted by
protesting groups. Officials are frantically calling
in consultants in an effort to devise ways of
preventing this shocking violation of open democratic process. May we suggest that among our
renowned scholars at the State University of Buffalo we have a leading authority in the field of
Strategic Defense of Openness
Dr, Siggelkow.
The Democratic Party would do well to seek his
advice. Dr. Siggelkow’s prevention of disruption
of Dow recruitment by holding the interviews at
5:30 a.m. at an undisclosed location was widely
praised, and we see no reason why Dr. Siggelkow
could not devise a similar plan for the Democratic
Convention.
—

Jonathan Slow, President
Faculty for

an Open Democratic Proces

explode, violently and disastrously.

What the American liberal tradition has tried
to do to “help the Negroes” is to try to make
them’white. The failute of this method is all too
clean.

Romney aids Rockefeller

4

«

all the wrongs that are so infused in American society today.
“The burden is on young folks,” Gregory said. “You’re
the most moral and ethical force in America.”
Acknowledging the fact that some of the “older folks”
are moral and ethical too, we have to agree with Mr. Gregory when he places the burden on the youth of America.
How many of America’s youth, however, are willing to take
up that burden?
This University, like large universities across the nation, is a center for the progressive thought that can eventually obliterate racism, poverty and even war. But those
who are willing to work toward these ends are a minority.
The attitudes and drives of these few must permeate HWfkirSHNV
the entire country if we are to be successful in this quest to 401 M'S mwD
make America all that it should be. Dick Gregory said that H£KE,HAVFVOU?\
we need radicals to make this change, and he’s right.
We need the radical who is the reformer as well as the
dissenter, We need the radical who is clear-thinking, not
paranoid. We need the radical who understands a situation,
not one who makes it.
If we can get enough of these people, Mr. Gregory, we
can take up the burdens of building a better world. The
choice remains with the thousands of uncommitted American youths. They must decide, as Dick Gregory put it,
whether they want “a groovy country for all, or a black
Larry Loltzclau)
night.”

•

The message that comedian Dick Gregory brought with
him Monday night was simple; People—not just Negroes,

What leaders like Malcolm X, among others,
have done for the blacks in this country is to give
them a pride in their blackness.
Obviously powerful leadership is needed. And
that leadership, like all leadership requirements in
a revolutionary setting, requires a unique com-

bination of moral and political power: moral for
the souls and hearts, and political for the minds
and bellies.
Of any man around today, Martin Luther King
is the one who has the potential for both these
capacities.
But, so far, as Gregory said, “He is the preacher
what we need desperately is a general."
Unlike Gandhi, King has not shown the power
structure or his people that he has power, and to
be successful he must do both.
“He has to prove to the Man that he can shut
down a city,” Gregory said. “King can bring about
a revolutionary change in this country without
if he shows that he has the
using any guns
unifying power.”
“We don’t need someone to help the niggers in
what we do need is someone to be sassy
Harlem
to white folks.”
—

—

—

every
The Spectrum is published twice-weekly
Tuesday and Friday
during the regular academic
University of New York at Buffalo,
3435 Main Street, Buffalo, New York 14214. Offices
are located at 355 Norton Hall. Average. Circulation:
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Editor-in Chief—MICHAEL L D’AMICO

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Spectrum is a member of the United States Stu
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The

_

�Th

Friday, March 1, 1968

Praises hockey team

•

grump

By Interlandi

BELOW OLYMPUS

To tha Editor;

Pay* Fiva

Spactrum

.

.

by STEESE

.

The State University of Buffalo hockey Bulls
“brought to this University its greatest aiuietkglory since the football Bulls copped the little
Lambert Trophy in the late ’50s.”
To the members of the team, to the coach,
Trey Coley, to the trainer, Steve Newman, go our
heartiest congratulations!
Our highest praise must go, however, to the
man who has worked the hardest, unnoticed
except by those affiliated with the team and the
most loyal supporters of hockey at Buffalo. Mr.
Howard Plaster, manager of the hockey Bulls, has
devoted several years to this team. His name is
not printed very often in The Spectrum and, no
doubt, the tremendous amount of work he does
for the team is not noticed fully except by the
team itself. We are sure Howie wants it to be
this way, for he is, above all, a gentleman. He is
probably the man most responsible for making
hockey at Buffalo as successful as it is right now
and for making it possible for the State University
of Buffalo to become the best hockey school in
the country. The University, the team, the coaches,
and the fans are deeply indebted to Howie.
Gary R. Owen
Kristine Owen
Daniel J. Gasparrini
Virginia O’Rorke
Brad Langdon

Tells how to climb those

steps

00U.
f SMB
Sols/

W Trie Mr

draft

of editors.
Gee.

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—'

To the Editor:
On the evening of Feb, 26, a meeting of certain
members of the faculty and their guests was held
on the second floor of Norton Hall. At that meeting, various alcoholic beverages were served, with
the knowledge of the night manager of the Union,
several students, and various other members of
the Union staff;
I myself witnessed the imbibing of liquor, and
informed Norton officials of what was happening
at the meeting. Previously, the Student Senate was
acquitted of drinking in the Union, because no one
could prove that the contents of their bottles was
alcoholic in nature. To offset this problem, I entered the meeting room after the people there had
left, and personally removed a glass which contained at least three ounces of a mixed alcoholic
drink.
Why were the people at this meeting permitted
to drink after the proper officials were informed
of this gross violation of University rules? Why can
a faculty member drink in the Union while a
student cannot? Why has this school continued to
operate under a gross double standard that drinking is all right for the upper echelons, but not for
the poor common student? If my RA were to catch
me drinking in my room tomorrow, you can bet
that there would be hell to pay. Either the rules
should be enforced equally, or all delay should
be avoided in changing these rules.

Philip R. Segal

The difficulty is not so much this week as having
nothing to say. No, it is more of a malaise stemming from having said the same things again, and
again, and again. Wheeler wants more troops for
the rat-hole, so that Westmoreland can hold the
country that four months ago he saw the boys
starling home from shortly. Will he get them? Of
course he will.
Monday’s Buffalo Evening News carried

■

($€&gt; I9fi, UK M&amp;R

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Jl

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sign?"

Jf p
by Linda Laufer

April 17, 953

I was a clerk-typist, through very little effort
on my part, and thus am probably not very high
on the recall list. But veterans who do not turn
into professional patriots; American Legion, VF-W,
and the rest; seem to recall that the army is just
about the most fallible institution in the entire
universe, and some clutz is just as liable to accidently pull my name as the next guys. Wheeeeee.
Does one go back on the basis that he is not
likely to have to shoot or be shot at, ergo is
morally as well as physically safe? Does one go
to Canada and cut himself off from the land of
his birth and life for the forseeable future? Does
oiie say no, and stay and help overcrowd the federal
prison system? Pleasantness, pleasantness, all futures are golden.

Today we began laying siege to Mistyview Castle located
in the north. After a three-day march through the swamps,
I wonder if the Butler Family knows that the
we had reached our objective. Muddy and tired, we sur- nice clock Mrs. Butler gave the University way
rounded the castle and ordered Sir Hotchmin to surrender back when is broken and the University is too
poor to fix it - or is it too lazy? Or is the case
or face the consequences. He chose to face the consequences. of
saving football or the Hayes Hall clock? Obvi-

This is my first experience as a
a page to a Knight of No Distinction (Apprentice Knight) last
knight since I was promoted from
week. We have been sieging for
about three hours. Sieges aren’t
really too bad. When you’re not
on duty, you can play cards, sleep,
or go for long walks (not too long
or you may decide to desert).

were going to launch a frontal
assault. He prepared for this by
leaving the rear of his castle virtually unfortified. As the battle
in front continued, we sneaked
around to the back and overpowered Sir Hotchmin’s meagre
forces.
Having gained entrance to the
castle, we were able to scatter the

ously football is the more important, right? But
perhaps all is not lost yet. If the athletic fund
drive falls short and Doc retires maybe we can
use his salary appropriation to fix our poor neglected time piece. Heavens, what a horrible choice.
Doc Urioh or the Clock. Tsk.
I should never altempl humour while depressed.

I has been six month since I received a letter
addressed to this weekly froofrah. Which doesn’t
Sir Hotchmin, however, interdefending forces and take control surprise me much. Just thought I would mention
rupted the idyllic state by dropof it. Sir Hotchmin and part of it and then I can really feel bad when none comes
ping the drawbridge and ordering
his forces escaped, but we had in.
Nothing else going on to depress me after all,
half his men to attack. Just when won. Enemy losses were estimated have
to think of something to keep me in a manicwe were enjoying ourselves.
to be 637 by Sir Starstir, a comdepressive cycle. (No, that is not like a Honda.)
They charged into the middle petent general despite his being
of our forces. Both sides battled cross-eyed and subject to halluOh, coffeehouse? Mentioned the on-campus coffuriously for more than two cinations, Our losses were reportfeehouse last week but it wound up on the cutting
hours. At one point, a section of ed as follows: 7-dead, 45 wounded, room floor as we in the writing trade say. It
our men rushed the castle; howand 12 lost in the swamps.
struck me as being an interesting experiment the
ever, they were driven back. With
evening wife and I were there. Would have been
Our leaders sent another mesone last effort, our opponents sage indicating their success and a trifle more interesting if I could have purchased
made a penetration into the heart asking the high command about hot chocolate or tea, and if the toasted danish and
of our lines and we were forced the future. While awaiting advice, bagel had been just a trifle warmer than tepid.
to retreat to the southeast corner there was a great deal of debate (Speaking of tepid, does the fire go out under the
soup in the Rathskeller every day at five or what?)
of the swamp. We regrouped and concerning the type of governmade plans for a surprise massive ment to be used. Some felt the
Bodies from off, as well as on campus however
captives should be allowed to rule
attack.
obviously needed to help keep said establishOur four leaders conferred and
themselves with the advice of are
their captors. Others wanted to ment alive. Realizing that I may be tried for
sent a message to the high comI still might suggest that upon occasion
mand. I later discovered the conkeep control of the castle without heresy
it might even be worth coming back to campus
allowing the household to have
tents of this message. It read:
in the evening for. No guarantees. Talent for such
“We have suffered a slight setany voice in their affairs.
an operation is a chancy thing at best. But they
Sir
back. Nothing to be concerned
Hotchmin’s capMeanwhile,
have lots of coffees if no tea. And the prices are
about. The castle is on the tured servants and knights were quite reasonable.
Which helps.
verge of surrender.”
undermine
trying to
our power.
A letter in Tuesday's (last) Spectrum by “A
In late afternoon, after tea, we
They attempted to bribe us and
Viet Vet” pointed out an interesting side light on
refused to do anything we asked.
began our surprise attack. Unforthe Selective Service decision that only MD's and
tunately, Sir Hotchmin was exThere also were rumors that Sir
DDS’s are needed to run the country. The issue
pecting us. Some of the men
Hotchmin was reorganizing h i s
has indeed been directly dumped on the universealed the walls in an effort to men. Things were becoming chasities and seniors in those institutions. Not that I
gain control on the inside. A foolotic. Finally, we received a di- think it is going to make a whole hell of a lot of
hardy notion because all were rective from the high command:
difference. MMM’s (Marvelous Martin Meyerson)
thrown into the moat below.
“Glad to hear we’ve won. No
first reaction was as usual to send a telegram.
We then used diversionary tacdecision about the future has I wonder how much
AT&amp;T stock he owns? I sustics. By concentrating most of our
been made yet. Keep everypect strongly that the telegram sent by those
men in front of the castle, we
thing under control. This is four heads of liberal institutions - might as
well
made Sir Hotchmin believe we
an election year.”
follow the party line part of the way will have
just about as much effect on the Secctive Service
System as say, my complaining about the tower
clock is going to have. Virtually none. Such are
the vagrancies of life. We of the powerless should
be forced to adjust to our station early in life
United Press International
LONDON
Soviet Ambassador Mikhail Smirnovsky, commenting I am told. Certainly do get a lot of practice around
here don't we?
on Prince Philip quoting Karl Marx at a banquet of the Muscovite SoHmmmmm. Having done my best to ruin your
citly:
my blue funk off and growl at my
“Quite frankly, it did not occur to me to quote Marx. I assure day I will take and
keep smiling.
wife. Chin up
you, the next time I will b| better prepared.”
-

■

more

readers' writings

-

■

on page 6

Quotes in

Writers; Please be brief. Letters should not exceed 300 words,

*Sould be signed and contain the address and telephone
of the writer.
Pen names or initials may be used, if requested,

number

but annever used. The Spectrum reserves the right
to edit or delete, but the intent of letters
will not be changed.

onyomus letters are

front

page speculation about the call up of the reserves.
Is this a sugar pill for escalation “See, it isn’t so
bad as you think, we haven’t had to call up the
reserves yet!”
or do they mean it this time?
A very nasty proposition if you happen to be, like
myself, someone who did his two years as a
draftee back when Vietnam was still a vague
irritation to JFK and not an obsession to LBJ.

"Oh, goodie—where do

Double standard?

One paragraph done.

-

To the Editor:

I have a helpful hint to all the members of the
student body and other people involved with the
campus. It involves the weird stairs leading to
Hayes Hall, and also the stairs near Baird Music
Hall. Numerous people of my acquaintance and, I
imagine, others have expressed disgust at these
stairs, complaining that it is imposible to walk up
or down them without appearing to be extremely
uncoordinated. Until now, the only known solution
has been running up or down, which involves the
danger of collision with pedestrians and acute
fatigue among the less physically fit.
After intensive study( I would like to announce
that a solution has been found! If one alternates
two steps on one stair, one on the next, two on
the next, and so on—making sure that the single
step is in the middle of the stair, and that the
following two steps are at the extreme edges of
the succeeding stair—one can successfully ascend
or descend in a most dignified manner. I hope that
these findings will be helpful to those who have
been plagued in the past by this problem.
Robin Herniman

at his typewriter with several obscenely blank white
sheets of paper which have to be covered with
. . . something . . . before tonight. This column is
occasionally typed on Monday, when I have something clear and bright in my head which I feel
I have to rush onto paper, and even less occasionally
on Wednesdays, since this results in any number
of hassles and hurt looks from a whole battery

—

the news

�P»g*

T h

Six

•

Friday, March 1, 1968

Spictrum

Readers’ writings
Sees the polity as

a

dangerous embarkation

No doubt, there will be favorable discussion on
the proposals for a new student government based
on a polity. However, I would like to warn those
students who have not made up their minds already
that a hasty decision can be perilous.
I am quite concerned that students will equate
the new system with increased power for students,
better representation, and increased action by the
government. This, indeed, is not the case.

First,

is the fallacy in the observation that

increased numbers, represented in the polity, will be
effective (HARK! ancient Greece revisited!) Imagine a monthly forum—groups split on issues—and the game becomes one of numbers. Those
who yell the loudest will be heard the best. Then
imagine the cumbersome debate which can only
result in more confusion. At this point, a student
calls a quorum count. If there are 200 people in
the room—think of the time spent in counting heads
and checking I.D.s. With roll call votes on all
legislation, more time is wasted. Yet to provide

action

Secondly, in the matter of representation, who
would be representing whom? Not the planning
board, no! They represent “areas!,” not students!
(HARK! the Russian Commissars). It would be
embarrassing to mention that their areas overlap,
and when the decision comes as to which committee gets what, the fireworks will begin.
Decreased spending will ensue, says Mr. Edelstein. Show me a government which has not suffered financially in its infancy. But let’s forget we
don’t have much money. It is dangerous for us
to embark on a new governmental journey when
we can’t solve our present financial, judicial and
legislative problems. Democracy does not fail; only
those in power fail. I change that this move can
only be construed as an attempt to cover-up the
mistakes of senators, and the rest in on the system. Hopefully, the proposal will be defeated. The
polity cannot return the honor and respect that has
been depleted from our student government (HARK!
the first four French republics). Vote no on Mar, 1.
Bruce J. Marsh

Refutes Shapiro's 'Patriot of the World'
To the Editor;

In reply to the “Patriot of the World” by David

A, Shapiro;
You are not a citizen of the world . . . but of a
land. For you cannot be a citizen of the world when
you haven’t lived in it. You have not lived in the
war-torn, hunger-stricken countries and felt the heat
of the bomb and watched the blood of the people
flow in your garden. You live free so you don’t know

what it’s like to want freedom. You haven’t seen the
look in the eyes of the horror-stricken children. You
haven’t seen them look up to a GI for a crust of
bread.

You admit you

are confused.

You

think for

maybe that’s why you are confused.
You haven’t seen any Communist aggressors or
Viet Cong who have read Karl Marx, only lovers of
their land. Can you justify this by saying you have
actually seen Communist aggressors or Viet Cong?
yourself

,

.

.

You say you are an American by label. You say
you reject all labels other than “man.” Do you

reject America?
Despite your confusion and fears of life, you
say you have hope. I too have hope
for you.
Lawrence B. Lyon
...

Reaction to Psych crab-in: We can do it'
To the Editor:

Two weeks ago a

“crab-in” was held for all
psychology majors. The purpose of it was to air
student gripes about existing problems in the
department. Some problems were aired. Comps
were discussed, independent study and research
were suggested ,and curriculum revision was also
discussed. But more important than any of these
issues was that students and faculty were brought
together to resolve departmental problems. There
were at least nine faculty members present—most
of them actively participating in the discussion and,
I’m certain, most of them supporting the ideas of

reform and revision.

Many students were active participants in that
meeting. Anyone present would have realized that
the faculty members who were there were behind
the movement. We called for another “crab-in”
to set up an elected committee and to air more
complaints. Since it was well publicized, and

because we had faculty support, the logical assumption was to expect a larger turn-out.
Last week 30 students of the 400 majors showed
up. True, some had class, some were ill, and some
had other important plans—but what of those who
did not? What of the hundreds that might have
come? It is one thing to say: "What’s the use of
complaining when there’s no one to listen,” but it’s
quite another situation when there is someone to
listen and no one to complain. Those 30 who came
accomplished a lot; the ones who didn’t probably
figured that someone else might have finally done

WASHINGTON
The chances
that Congress will fight the Johnson Administration’s recently announced policy on the draft can
be described in a word—slim.
—

The Administration let it be
known Feb. 16 that almost all
graduate deferments were being
eliminated, and that the longstanding policy of drafting the
oldest draft-eligible males first
would be retained.

Since then there have been
public statements by individual
members of Congress opposing
the policy. Sen. Edward Kennedy, for example, told a Boston
audience that he plans to submit
a bill that would bring about
basic changes in draft procedures, and two New York Congressmen said in the House that day
that the new policy would severely retard the nation’s educational
progress.

These men, however, are not
in positions to get Congress moving on the draft. The real power
in questions connected with the
military rests with legislators like

—

6-piece Band

The
L Mellow Brick Rode
WITH

The Mo-Town

&amp;

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WED.—FRI.—SAT. EVENINGS

3o£ouifi&lt;L Hmkl
maA\wpo&gt;ifajr
OwWfeS...
Come meet Miss Cozzi,
Revlon Beauty Consultant
at University Bookstore
on

Campus, Thursday and Friday,
Feb. 29 and Mar. 1

I have a message to communicate to those
apathetic diehards —we now have representation.
Yes, we’ve finally done it. Some would say it was
a tough battle; I would say it will be a tougher
one to get the students to react. Now is our chance.
It’s our day. We can do it. Everyone is capable
of contribution—don’t screw it up.
Steve Imber

'Slim' hope seen for change in draft policy
College Press Service

featuring

something.

News anal sis

by Richard Anthony

1180 HERTEL AVE.

Rep, Mendel Rivers (D., S.C.) and
Sen. Richard Russell (D., Ga.),

chairmen of the armed services

committees in their respective
branches of Congress.
No plans to reconsider
Neither has referred publicly
to the Administration’s new polAnother crucial figure in the
matter of possible Congressional

uates would not be taken in disproportionate numbers. The statistics, however, are misleading
for several reasons.

Draft increase likely
The Administration has said
240,000 draftees
during Fiscal Year 1969. But if
the Vietnam war continues to escalate, the number of needed
draftees is likely to grow subthat it will need

action on the draft is Rep. Edward Hebert (D,, La.), who chairs
a House subcommittee
that
studied the draft last year. Rep,
Hebert, according to one of his
aides, has been deluged with mail
from critics of the Administration’s draft policy.

stantially.

Nevertheless, the Congressman
has come out publicly in favor of
the new draft measures.

In spite of the fact that the Defense Department’s statistics are
misleading, however, members of
Congress can be expected to fall
back on the Defense Department’s
figures to put off angry constituents. During a shooting war, with
elections only months away, most
of them will try to stay away
from controversial questions like
the draft.

Rep. Hebert cited some Defense Department statistics suggesting that only one-quarter of
the draft-age men who have graduated from college would be
taken. He concluded from the
statistics that graduate schools
would not be as badly hurt as
they think, and that college grad-

Further, if local
decide to continue
tional deferments
now a local-board
the burden will fall

draft boards

most occupa(which are
option), then
more heavily
on college graduates than present estimates suggest.

She’ll show you how any girl with a brain in
her head can become a beauty now. Come,
let her show you the real right way to apply
'Private Eyelashes’ in 3 wiggy lengths. (It’s
simple!) See all the new eye-makeups (no
more jaded eyes). A full curriculum of lipsticks and nail enamels. 'Natural Wonder’
treatment and prettyface makeups (the first
absolutely oil-free makeups ever!) As well as

�Friday,

Th

March I, 1968

•

Pag* S*v*n

Spectrum

Gregory blasts war...
could solve it. When will we-bc-

Imied from Pai

come

him every morning and say
‘Working on those peace feelers,

baby.’

”

lonesl

here?”
“We have'to admit we’re the
number one racist country on the
face of the earth. I didn say
American white folks. I said
America. That means black folks,
too. That scares me. White folks
won’t admit black folks are racist
—why not? We’ve watched you
400 years; we’ve got the same
right to hate back.”
His remark that northern white
liberals are obsolete and that
white radicals are what is needed drew loud applause. “Go to
an Indian Reservation; go to he
Mexican Americans. If you do as
good a job with them as you did
with us, you’ll become obsolete
with them, too.”
Mr. Gregory took time to defend the two most famous exponents of Black Power—Stokely
Carmichael and Rap Brown. “Anytime a whole country can hate
two cats for telling the truth,
ain’t nothing wrong with the two
cats, something’s wrong with the
country.” He accused the nation
of not listening to the two when
for “six years they had faith in
America. You bad mouthed us,
they’re going to bad mouth you.
They’re going to say shut up,
we’ve got news for you.”
Mr. Gregory was skeptical of
riots actually hurting the Negro
cause. “Do you know that Henry
Ford just hired 6000 black folks
in Detroit? You know why? Cause
*

Jesting
Using words like ‘nigger’ and
‘coon’ and jesting at all the racial
taboos, Mr. Gregory seemed to
win over any doubters that were
present. Once established on
open terms with the audience,
he was in control.
Mr. Gregory, admitting he was
committed to non-violence, explained it as a “psychological
hang up of mine. I don’t promote
it.” He criticized Martin Luther
King for preaching only to black
people and not “to the masses.”
Mr, Gregory was still getting
laughs, but his humor had turned
bitter. Discussing crime in the
streets, Mr. Gregory showed his
disdain for the term by calling
it “America’s new way of saying
‘Nigger.’ I’m not saying that black
crime shouldn’t be dealt with,
but what day will the President
get on the T.V. and say ‘I’ll wipe
out the crime syndicate in this
country.’?”

Solve race problem
Making the first mention of
what became an oft-repeated
theme, Mr. Gregory appealed to
youngsters to solve the race
problem plaguing America. “What
scares me,” he said, “is that if

the social conditions that exist
here existed anywhere else, we

—Bin*

Jests at
..

rdCial taboos
|

the riots hurt our cause. If the
Indians shot at people in Arizona
or burned down Detroit, Henry
Ford would hire six thousand of
them.”

An insult
“Civil Rights legislation is an
insult to us. We’re tired of hearing it’s going to take time. We’re
tired. If we treated white folks

for ten hours like you’ve treated
us for one hundred years, they’d
burn the country down.”
Comparing the U.S. to an in-

Comedian-candidate Dick Gregory won the
hearts of many during his two-hour address to
1500 in the Fillmore Room.
you’ll burn to death."

communicable machine, Mr. Gregory remarked with feeling that
“We don’t hate white folks, we
hate your white system. And when
you don’t like the system, that’s
revolt, baby.”

Near the end of the speech the
room temperature had become oppressively hot. Mr. Gregory, sweat
pouring down his face, delivered
one last challenge to the audience.

Not all solutions

Mr. Gregory admitted he didn’t

“First it was the Irish’s turn,
then the Jew’s turn, then the
Italian’s,” he said. “Instead of
the Nigger’s turn, let it be the
turn of people. This can be a
groovy country for all or a black
night for everybody."

have all the solutions. “The burden is on young folks. You’re
the most moral and ethical force
in America. You’ve got to get
to work now to save your hide.

The first time you go to sleep,

—Handricha

COLT 45

CHOICE

JOINT

ROAST BEEF

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TEKE and Alpha Sig
Colt 45 Blast

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BANAT, MARCH 22

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Hundreds of students waited outside the Fill-

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to leave when a false alarm was sounded.
Many who left again look chairs along (above).

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�Th

Pag* Eight

Action lino

.

.

•

Spectrum

Friday, March 1, 1968

Pi

.

331-5000

i'

Do you often think it impossible to untangle the State University of Buffalo
bureaucracy?- Iru-cooperation—with the Dean of Students' Office, The Spectrum is
sponsoring an ACTION LINE. Through ACTION LINE, individual students can get
an answer to a puzzling question, find out where and why University decisions
are made, and get ACTION when change is indicated.

f T

•

4

&gt;&lt;g

J

questions of general interest which appear to
be pertinent to the student body. The Spectrum will include them in its special
ACTION LINE weekly column. Each inquiry will be thoroughly investigated and
answered individually. The name of the individual originating the inquiry will
not be published.
ACTION LINE will answer all

Q. I Parked my car in an unrestricted spot in a student parking
lot and yet it was moved 20 feet away. Why? Who and under whose
jurisdiction was the car moved? How was it moved?
A, A brochure detailing the University’s “Parking and Traffic
Regulations” is given to each faculty and staff member when he
applies for a parking permit, to acquaint him with all such questions.
As therein stated, “Campus police may tow away vehicles parked in
violation of these regulations . . .” As far as can be determined
now, your car was moved because it was probably blocking a roadway or entrance, or to facilitate snow removal. Although cars are
generally tagged for the former two infractions, it is possible your
car was not tagged because it was recognized that the heavily laden
snowbanks obstructed pathways. Generally, cars are towed, by truck,
to the new parking spot.
Q. Where and when is the best time to look for and secure a
summer job?

A. The Part-Time and Summer Placement Office, located in the
basement of Schoellkopf Hall, is currently establishing a file for
summer job possibilities. Students desiring summer jobs should register with the office as soon as possible. The bulk of summer listings
will be on file the end of March and throughout the month of April.
By appointment, students can secure employment information via
the interview held in the Placement Office.
The Summer Placement Office has a large selection of summer
camp positions on file. Students desiring summer camp jobs should
contact the office at their earliest convenience. Upon occasion, oncampus interviews are held for camp positions. Interested students
should contact the office regarding time and location of the interviews.
Q. Are National Defense Loans for this semester due soon?
A. The Bursar’s Office says the National Defense Loan Semester
II checks are arriving from Albany on schedule. The individual
letters of notification are being sent out as soon as possible after
receipt of a group of these checks, If you have any questions about
such a check, stop by the Bursar’s Office during business hours and

inquire.
Q. I must have supplementary transcripts sent to graduate
schools immediately, but the Bursar's Office refuses to forward them
until I pay the balance of this semester's tuition and fee charges. I
cannot do this right away but of course will pay my bill before I
graduate, in May. I paid for the original transcripts sent last semester, why the holdup?
A. The Bursar’s Office cannot comply with your request because
it must follow regulations as established by the State University
System of New York. The policy followed is that “no student will
receive a degree, certificate of accomplishment, transcript, or honorable dismissal until all charges due to the University or to any of its
related divisions are paid in full and all University property has
been returned in acceptable condition.” (This is a direct quote from
a college bulletin.)
Q. How much student money paid for the advertisement entitled ''Union—A Movement to Free the Student" in the Feb. 23, 1968
issue of The Spectrum?
A. The basic advertising rate of The Spectrum is $2.75 per
column inch. Student groups get the special rate of $2.25 per column
inch, but because of the large number of ads the Student Association
plans to run, The Spectrum business manager agreed to reduce the
rate even further.
The Student Association paid $2.00 per column inch for the

“Union” ad

—

Them'

'Them' is a group of 'progressive' musicians who
will be appearing at 2:30 p.m. March 9 in concert at Clark Gym. Their first effort, "Baby
Please Don't Go," was almost an instant hit.
A mixer will follow, sponsored by UUAB.

U.S. suspends B-52 flights
WASHINGTON (UPII
The United States has suspended all nuclear armed airborne alert flights by B52s following the crash of one of the bombers carrying four
H-bombs near Thule, Greenland, it was learned Wednesday.
—

Informed sources said Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamaa ordered the
nuclear weapons taken off the flights a day or two after the Jan. 22 crash on the
ice of North Star Bay.
The Strategic Air Command continues to conduct airborne alert training flights
bombers, but nuclear weapons are no longer carried oh these
missions.
with the eight-jet

$150.00 for the full page.

For specific answers to your questions and for
every Monday, Wednesday,
and Friday,
phrase your question in writing and address it to
355 Norton Hall, or the Office of the Dean of

831-5000,

***

V5

direct service, call ACTION LINE,
from 4-5 p.m.
If you prefer,
ACTION LINE, c/o The Spectrum,

Students,

201

Harriman

Library.

"

In todays ivy
if you don't stay with it, the competition
will eat you alive.
_

*»•&amp;**

I1

*&amp;$&gt;**
se^'06

Let's face it. You can't afford to be drowsy. Not in class
Not in your room. Not ever.
So when you feel the grip of drowsiness pulling you
down, fight it off.
Get out the NoDoz. It'll help you spring back— your
recall, your perception, your ability to
solve problems —without being habit
/
forming. So you can pad through the
jungle. Alert. And ready to strike.
After all, you’re the lion, not the lamb.
@

mfNoDoz

�Th

Friday, March 1, 1968

•

Pas*

Spectrum

Entertainment

campus releases...

en ar
Friday, March 1:
MOVIE: “Through A Glass Dark
ly,” Norton Conference Theater
MOVIE: “Supervisor as a Leader,” “Overcoming Resistant To
Change,” Dief. 303, 4 p.m. edu-

cational.
“A Delicate Balance,”
Studio Arena, 8:30 p.m, through
Mar. 2, Pulitizer prize-winning

PLAY;

(what field?)

TV SPECIAL: "Young Elizabeth,”
Channel 17, 8:30 p.m.

through March

Tuesday, March 5:

MOVIE: “Exxodus,” Capen 140,
7:30 p.m, the book was good
RECITAL: Julliard String Quartet, Mary Seaton Room, Kleinhans 8:30 p.m. very good, if
you like that sort of thing
READING: Allan Ginsberg, Upton Hall, Buffalo State, 8:30
p m.—you don’t know what to
expect?

Saturday, March 2:
CONCERT: John Gary, Kleinhans,
8:30 p.m. pleasant, conventional

voice
Sunday, March 3:
CONCERT; Jazz Concert by Cecil
Taylor, Upton HallV Buffalo

State, 8:15 p.m.

Monday, March 4;
CONCERT: Jane Morgan and the
Doodletown Pipers, O’Keefe

Center,

Toronto,

8:30

p.m.

9—take your

parents

Wednesday, March 6:
PLAY PREMIERE: “Box” and
Quotations From Chairman Mao
Tse-Tung,” Studio Arena, 8:30

p.m. through Mar. 10
CONCERT; Valery Klimov, violinist, Mary Seaton Room,
Kleinhans, 8:30 p.m.
TV SPECIAL: “The Rise and the
Fall of the Third Reich,” Channel 17 10 p.m. also Mar. 9, 9:30
p.m.
POETRY READING: Charles Olson, Albright-Knox, 4:30 p.m.

Thursday, March 7;

“Kwaidan,” Norton Conf.
Theater
MUSICAL COMEDY: “Ubu Roi,”
Baird, 8:30 p.m.
PANEL DISCUSSION: “Discussing Playwriting,” Edward Albee, Alan Scheider, Richard
Barr, Studio Arena, 4:30 p.m.
Friday, March 8:
DANCE: Performance I of the
MOVIE:

Merce Cunningham Dance Co.
Upton Hall, Buffalo State, 8:30
p.m,

Saturday, March

9:

CONCERT: Them, Clark Gym,
8:30 p.m. mixer following
CONCERT: Jazz Concert by the
Ayler Brothers, Rockwell Aud.,
Buffalo State, 5 p.m.
BALLET: American Folk Ballet,
Eastman Theater, Rochester,

8:15 p.m.

Sunday, March 10:
CONCERT: “The Association,”

Eastman

7:30 p.m.

Nina

Theater,

Rochester,

"Last of the singing Cowboys," Glenn Ohrlln, Will be presented by
the Literature and Drama Committee and the English Dept, at 4 p.m.
Tuesday in the Conference Theatre. Mr. Ohrlin is a Montana cowboy
who sings and tells tall tales in the oral folklore tradition.
The UUAB Film Committee will hold a coffee hour for all
interested new members at 4:30 p.m. Monday in Room 240 Norton
Hall.

Physics and Reality will be the topic when the Physics Graduate
Association presents Dr. Joseph Agafsi from the Philosophy Dept, of
Boston University at 8 p.m., March 11 in Room 111 Hochstetter Hall.
Refreshments will be served.
The Council of International Studies and World Affairs will
sponsor a lecture by the distinguished economist, Kenneth E. Boulding at 3:30 p.m. today in Room 148 Diefendorf Hall on the topic,
“The Possibility and Unpopularity of Peace.” The lecture is open
to the public.
The Office of International Educational Services of the Council
on International Studies and World Affairs is prepared to assist and
advise students interested in study opportunities abroad. Interested
students should contact Mr. James A, Michielli at extension 4941.
The office is located at 270 Winspear Avenue.
Those interested in applying for Fulbright graduate fellowships
should read their departmental bulletin board or contact Mr. Andrew
W, Holt in the Graduate School,
The Women's Recreation Association will sponsor buses from
Norton Hall to the Amherst Recreation Center for ice skating
tomorrow evening. Buses will leave at 7 p.m. and return at 10 p.m.
This is a coed activity for fee payers and there will be a 50tf- admission charge and a 75ft skate rental fee.
The Theology of Rabbi S. R. Hirseh will be the topic of a series
of sermon lectures by Rabbi Justin Hoffman at Hillel's Friday night
services. The first subject will be “The Relevancy of Hirsch's
Thought.” Services will begin at 7:45 tonight in the Hillel House.
Tomorrow night, Hillel is sponsoring a mixer in the Millard
Fillmore Room from 9 p.m. ’til midnight. There will be a nominal
fee.

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Premarital Sex will be the main topic of a forum to be presented
at 3:30 p.m. March 11 in the Millard Fillmore Room. The forum is
open to all interested persons.
Browsing Library Contest has new headlines:
April 10: Essay on book collection; April 12: Book Collection;
April 16: Judging in Browsing Library,
Applications and information can be obtained at the Norton
Information desk or the Browsing Library, 255 Norton Hall.
"Modern Cosmology and Genesis I: Space Science Addresses The
Christian Scriptures," will be the subject of a talk by Herman J.
Eckelmann, research associate at the Center for Radiophysics and
Space Research at Cornell University.
The talk, sponsored by The Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship
will be given at 7 p.m. March 1 in room 140, Capen Hall. Mr.
Eckelmann will discuss the most recent findings in lunar probes
and quasar studies with the use of visual aids such as slides of

The

nebulae, lunar surfaces, and Mariner Mars shots.

The Record Lending Library goes into operation today at the
Norton Hall music room. The fee for borrowing a record is 10?
for one night, 25? for three nights, and 25? for each additional night
after three nights. A 50? deposit will be required for all records

borrowed.

Community Aid Corps is recruiting students to work on its
patterning program with brain injured children.
Volunteers are
needed to work one hour a week directly with the families and

children.
Interested students contact Cindy Jones at 831-3446. An organizational meeting will be held at 3 p.m. Tuesday in room 333 Norton
Hall.

An executive committee meeting of the Undergraduate Psychology Association will be held at 3 p.m. today in room 344 Norton
Hall. Calendar events will be planned at this time.

two or more separate solutions to take care of
your contact lenses, we

Lensine the all-purpose

Richard Uipsitz, ACLU lawyer and state co-chairman of the
Coalition for a Democratic Alternative, will speak on “Why McCarthy?” at 4 p.m. today in Room 231, Norton Hall. The meeting
is sponsored by the University Coalition for McCarthy, All are

that improper storage
between wearings may
result in the growth of
bacteria on the lenses.
This is a sure cause of eye
irritation and could seriously endanger vision.

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�Page Ten

Th

•

WBFO to air excerpts

Record
Schwab
Reporter
It was less than a year ago that Leonard Cohen, novelist,
poet, and songwriter, read and sang in a crowded Fillmore
Room. It was then that I first heard him sing. He promised
that he would someday cut a record.
by Rick

Spectrum

Staff

“Songs of Leonard Cohen” was
recently released by Columbia
and it’s about the most exciting
thing since Bob Dylan.

other times they obliterate it. We
can’t help but believe that the
Montrealer played an active part
in the album’s production.

Cohen the poet

which is perhaps
song, leads
off the album. Noel Harrison cut
a version that sold well last summer and it is now in the Judy
Collins’ bag, among others.
“Suzanne,”

Cohen’s best-known

Can Cohen sing? Not really, but
it matters little. Leonard Cohen
is first a poet. His own words
reveal his relation to the album:
“The songs and the arrangements
were introduced. They felt some
affection for one another but because of a blood feud, they were
forbidden to marry. Nevertheless,
the arrangements wished to throw
a party. The songs preferred to
retreat behind a veil of satire.”

Veil of satire
“Master Song” is not unlike
“Suzanne” in its simplicity. It is
the reflection of a man who has
lent out his lady (with his guarantee) to “the master”—a mutual
friend, We suppose. The master
takes her traveling (at least that’s
what she said), but she comes
back to her first love “sometime
too soon.” This is Cohen the poet,

One can easily imagine Cohen’s
retreat. Chorus and strings at

times blend effectively with Cohen’s weak, monotonic voice. At

/I

WBFO, the campus radio station, will present coverage of
Buffalo Festival of the Arts Today. Their program will not only
include as many of the actual
events as possible but also previews, reviews and interviews
with some of the participants.

—

Naturally it is impossible to
schedule many programs until
they have taken place, so spontaneity will be the key word in
The second side kicks off with programming during the course
a rollicking “So Long, Marianne” of the festival. Many of the
—complete with full chorus and events will be broadcast live from
Albright-Knox Art Gallery.
five-part harmony. Cohen is buried the
Others will be taped for broadin the chorus, but manages to cast on Saturday evenings.
squeak through in the solos. It’s
In addition to the Festival protoo bad that Marianne has left,
WBFO has also scheduled
Cohen satirizes, “just when I grams,
several noteworthy programs. The
climbed this whole mountainside; entire Dick Gregory address will
to wash my eyelids in the rain.” be broadcast Saturday at 6 p.m.
The series, “The Problem In
“Stories of the Street” again Black and White,” continues this
projects a feeling of desolation; month with a discussion on the
this time it is more intense. The topic: “Must the Concept of Sodesolation comes from the cities cial Welfare Change?” The main
that "are broke in half,” where speaker will be Dr. Scott Greer,
parents “ask the nurse to tell professor of Political Science at
them fairy tales on both sides of Northwestern University. Followthe glass.”
ing his address there will be a
panel discussion with particiResult is genius
pants William Robinson, director
“One Of Us Cannot Be Wrong,” of the Cooke County Department
the final selection, is brilliant. of Public Aid; Mrs. Carol Cates,
Satire reigns in both lyric and member of BUILD; Marvin
arrangement. Cohen seems to Bloom, professor of Social Welfare at the State University of
make no attempt to grasp the melody. Sick voices la-la-la the final Buffalo, and moderator, Dr. Alan
J. Drinnan.
chorus. One voice cracks completely. The result is more than
Also in the spectrum of public
effective—it’s genius.
affairs, the proceedings of the
Those of you who have read Seven College Conference on the
Beautiful Losers or any of Leonard Cohen’s poetry collections
(“Flowers for Hitler” or “Parasites of Heaven” for example) will
not have to rely on my testimony
of Cohen’s greatness.
geiV

Two promNEW YORK (UPD
inent nuclear scientists said Wed.
the $5 billion antiballistic missile
system the United States is considering as a defense against a
Red Chinese nuclear attack will
not work.
hen.”
This conclusion was reached in
This album shouldn’t change an article in the March issue of
anyone’s mind about that convic- Scientific American by Hans A.
tion—and James Joyce couldn’t Bethe, Nobel prize-winning physicist at Cornell University, and
■ven sing,
Richard L. Garwin, director of
applied research at the IBM research center in Yorktown
Back by Popular Demand!
Heights, N. Y.

and Novelist Leonard
performs his poetic
works on new Columbia reCohen
lease.

GUESS WHO STOLE ALL
THE NOMINATIONS?
THE BARROW GANG!
C.W., BUCK, BLANCHE and

:

“The Stranger Song,” which has
been recorded by Judy Collins, is
poetically the most beautiful. The
stranger has left with the. words
“I told you when I came I was a
stranger.” The reflection: loneliness, desolation “He was just
some Joseph looking for a raan-

When Leonard Cohen was introduced to an enthusiastic Buffalo audience last year, part of
t h e introduction read: “James
Joyce is not dead; he lives in
Montreal under the name of Co-

Poet

sings

MJB?

The

KCNMIE

STUDENT
RATES!

i

and his veil of satire.
topic: “R Metro-Buffalo?” will be
broadcast. Participants will include Eric Larrabee, provost,
Faculty of Arts and Letters,
State University of Buffalo;
George G. Sipprell, commissioner
of Health and Welfare for Erie
County; Edward Reagan, councilman-at-large, Buffalo, and Max
Wolff, from the Center for Urban
Education, New York City.
Friday, March 1: 10 p.m. Douglas
MacAgy, organizer of the Gallery
Exhibit, “Plus X Minus: Today’s
%
Century,” discusses the ex-

hibit.

Saturday, March 2: 6 p.m. Dick
Gregory Address. 8:30 p.m. Address by Thomas Hoving, director
of the Metropolitan Museum of
Art, New York City. 10 p.m. Interviews with the Merce Cunningham Dance Group, preview of Edward Albee’s premierre plays.
Sunday, March 4; 2 p.m. “The
Problem In Black and White”.
10 p.m. Preview of Albee’s plays,
Wednesday, March 6: 2 p.m. RX

Metro-Buffalo? 12 midnight Review of Albee’s premier
Thursday, March 7: 10 p.m. Review of Albee’s plays
Friday, March 8: 2:30 p.m. Music
Panel, including Lukas Foss, John
Cage and Alfred Frankenstein
6:30 p.m. Review of Art Gallery
Exhibit. 12 midnight Roundtable
Review of Merce Cunningham
Dance Concert
Saturday, March 9: 10 p.m. Allan
Ginsberg Reading; Robert Duncan
Reading; Playwriting Panel, including Albee, Barr Scheider

Two scientists blast proposed
ABM system; say it won't work

Cohen

|

Friday, March 1, 1968

Spectrum

■*«

ma

banks

, ,

Association
Sunday, March 10
7:30 PM.
Reserved Seats Now!
$4.00, 3.50, 3.00, 2.00

WINNER

7 NOMINATIONS

ACADEMY AWARD

BEST PICTURE
BEST ACTRESS

JOSEPH E LEVINE

BEST ACTOR
BEST DIRECTOR

EASTMAN THEATER
60 Gibbs Street
Rochester, N.Y.
454-2620

—

ORTH PAR
At

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Mp Carman In maiam nniraaa"
■

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The authors said an ABM system depends on radar to detect
incoming enemy missies and rockets. An enemy can confuse radar
with decoys of various types and
blind, it altogether with highaltitude nuclear explosions.
Furthermore, they said, offensive weapons can be shielded
against all three known methods
of destruction x-rays, neutrons
or nuclear blasts. Defense commanders also would have no way
of knowing whether the method
ussed was successful in disarming the incoming rocket.
The principal restraining influence on the Red Chinese will
continue to be the enemy’s knowledge that the United States has
“the power not only to destroy
completely her entire nuclear of■

fensive forces but to devastate

her society as well.” he said.

BabV
i
vw
Tlie
Animatl
Idtai7thFemale
WEEK

Tonita: 7:40, 9:45. Sat

&amp;

Sun.:

Garwin and Bethe said the
greatest danger from a decision
to build a $5 billion ABM system
is that it wil lead the public to
believe such a defense is possible and insist on a more elaborate system that would cost
from $40 to $50 billion.

MIKE NICHOLS- LAWRENCE TURMAN

his future.

THE GRADUATE

TECHNICOLOR* PANAVISION*
AN EMBASSY

Pictures ntUAK

im^CENTER
|

»

■!.

•

113 '.131

(Conference Oheater
February 29th, March 1st, 2nd
Showing at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 and at 11 on Fri. and Sat.

"FAR FROM IMF
MAPPING CROWD
PAN* VI StOW* . MCTWOCOSOW

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Friday, March 1, 1968

•

Raff* Eleven

Spectrum

Play

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by Richard Perlmutter

,*»&gt;

Spectrum Theater Reviewer

Those of us who associate quality with ‘name’ brands or
‘big’ names were given a lesson at the Williamsville Circle
Theatre last weekend.
Three plays were presented music. The movie is a candid
one about an average man in an
by Edward Albee, Harold Pinaverage
and is shown conter and Merlin Chase, a local currentlysetting
with the dramatic vigteacher. Mr. Chase’s original nettes. The whole play is about
work, entitled “Stop, Look, this man who decides to sit down
Listen, and Touch,” was the and examine life and all those
most rewarding of the three aspects of it which really matter.

*

V

events.

'1

—

In following the modern vogue
he is concerned with the meaninglessness of life as we live it,
and the hollowness of the relation of one man with another.

f

This crucial lack of communication has submerged our existence; we are not really living

until we can learn to understand
and love our fellow man.
-D°n Glenna

»i|||

Shadowy symbols

Things may look rather confusing at the moment, but indications point to a "well rounded'
cast for "Ubi Roi," which will be presented
March 7-10.

»n

Ubi Roi
cast set
•

The theme appears trite when
considering modern literary and
philosophic trends, but the techniques which Mr. Chase has
adopted certainly are not. His
actors perform behind a black

New music to start 'chain reaction
of sound' in 'Ubu Roi' production
Special fo The Spectrum

David Rosenbloom, of the Center for the Creative and
Performing Arts, is composing the new music for the forthcoming production of “Ubi Roi” by Alfred Jarry, March 7 to
10, at 8:30 in Baird Music Hall.
Mr. Rosenbloom, a member of the “John Cage school”
of electronic music, has sketched some of his very exciting
plans for this music.
What he plans to do is “integrate electronic sounds in a live
performance.” By use of “triggering devices” and photocell relay,
the actors’ movements will start a
veritable chain reaction of sound.
In this way, the music will relate
to the performances and be an
integral part of it.

Cones of sound
He considers the electronic medium as the “vehicle of message.”

With his instruments, he plans to
“create an environment which
will surround the actors as well
as the audience. The instruments
voice, to computers. By swinging
range from percussion, human
“cones of sound” over the heads
of the audience, he will fully involve them in sound. The musif
will be interwoven around, over,
through and behind the audience.
One of Mr. Rosenboom’s favorite pieces was originally written
for 32 pairs of claves and a conductor. Not satisfied with it, he
added two other elements which
he’d been considering.
'Total' environment

esting method he utilizes in composing: “I consider my tape recorder as a photographer would
his camera. With it I collect all
the interesting pictures of sound
that I come acros.”
Because not everyone’s sense of

marvelous happened when he was
in Illinois. It seems that a woman
in the audience reacted so violently, that she ran up on the
stage and began to throw music
stands around, completely disrupting the concert.
The musical plans by the tall,
shaggy-haired, bespectacled composer will be a total environmental experiment: the music setting
the stage for and acting with the
actors as one complete unit.

the harmonious is similar, Mr. Rosenboom was asked what reaction
he wanted most from the audience. Although he said that he
didn’t desire any particular reaction, one occasion he considered

W6

'

COLOR A PAfUMOUNTPICTURE
-

imurDiive

7:30-8:30 STUDENT RATES

“

"•B SAILC V AVI I TPA

WED.

FRANKLIN SHEPHERD

Doors
SATURDAY. MARCH 16
8:15 P.M.
Reserved Seats

Now)

$4.25, 3.75, 3.25, 2.25
EASTMAN THEATRE
60 GIBBS STREET

ROCHESTER, N. Y.

454-2620

Technically creative

The impact of this work was
strong, mainly because it was
technically creative. The combination of movie, music and
modern dance appears to have
overshadowed the sometimes
weak drama. While several skits
were powerful, others such as
a word association game (lifedeath etc.) are not original, are
overdone, and can be annoying.
But the play was memorable
too bad the Circle Theatre could not have ended the
evening there instead of continuing with Albee’s one-acter:
“The American Dream.” Despite
some commendable acting the
play tended to drag endlessly
as many Americans began to
dream of getting home.
The evening then concluded
with six revue sketches by Harold
Pinter which may not have been
and it is

intensely moving or meaningful,

Mixed media
We are also exposed to a series
of movies and slides which are a
most effective media for emphasizing what is being said
through the play and in the

SOCIETY

ICRSMUj

PERSON!

THE

‘

OF

NOMINATIONS!

The following relates an inter-

IN

3EU|

.iKuSare

OSCAR

PICTURE
ACTOR
ACTRESS

Mr. Chase also relies heavily
on music to set the mood, and
who else but Simon and Garfunkel could handle this task. They
express in their music what Mr.
Chase is trying to express through
his drama and motion picture.

THOSE
YOU LOVED
WITH A
MEMORIAL GIFT
TO THE
AMERICAN I
CANCER

*1

WUMOtMT

gSCEMDE
I

opaque curtain; the audience
views the semblances of shadows
rather than people enacting the
scenes, perhaps symbolizing the
nebulousness of existence and our
inabilities to clearly perceive and
reach one another.

By the end of the play he has
carefully examined his existence;
he has stopped, looked, listened,
and now he knows that he can
touch (“For Emily, Wherever I
May Find Her”).

but at least they were fast, funny
and short.

REMEMBER

JBCHNIl

10 WINNER
fx BEST

He must learn to love, to touch
and to do them now. He must
not continue “postponing living
until touched by death.”

&amp;

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9

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Spectrum

Friday, March 1,

194a

�Friday,

Pag* Thirtaan

The Spectrum

March 1, 1968

Sportin' Life

the spectrum of

by

Bob Woodruff

Sports is most definitely an escape from anything whith
on reality.

borders

Sports editors don’t think much, and sports writers don’t think
at all.

Varsity Bulls upset Ithaca 70-66;
freshmen thump Ithaca frosh 80-62
by W. Scott Behrens
Asst.

Sports

Editor

The State University of
Buffalo varsity basketball
squad came home Tuesday
night with an upset overtime
victory, 70-66, over tournament-b o u n d Ithaca College
and assured head coach Len
Serfustini of a better than
.500 season with two games
remaining on the schedule.
The Bulls are now 10-7
against NCAA competition.
The setback for Ithaca College
dimmed its small college tournament hopes as their record fell to
15-7. The Ithacans had previously
defeated Buffalo State 81-59 and
Colgate 89-87.
The home team led through
most of the contest but never by
more than five points. The visitors kept pace and were down by
only three points at the halfway

mark.
Buffalo closed in on the Ithacans shortly after the start of the
second half but could never grab
the lead.

With 2:25 left to go in the
game, senior forward Doug Bernard hit on a baseline jumper to
put the Bulls ahead 56-55. The
Bulls’ junior forward Ed Eberle
connected on the one-and-one situation at the free throw line making the score 58-55 with approximately one minute remaining.

Ithaca ties game
Ithaca’s Greg Albano put in the
first shot of a one-and-one situation but missed on the second.
Buffalo’s Jon Culbert missed the
rebound and Ithaca’s Russ Macron
picked up the ball and tied the
game on a jump shot with about
35 seconds remaining.
Buffalo missed the tie-breaking
shot and Ithaca rebounded. The
home team called a time out with
25 seconds left in the game. They
were looking for one good shot
and Buffalo was trying desperately not to give it to them. The
Ithacans got the shot off with
two seconds remaining but the

ball bounced off the rim and the
game remained tied to force the
game into a five-mintue overtime
period. The score was 58-58 at
the end of regulation time.
With four minutes remaining in
the extra period of play, Eberle
hit on a 20-foot jump shot to put
the Bulls in the lead 60-58. Ithaca’s Michael Steele missed the
game-tying shot and sophomore
Jack Scherrer got the rebound.
Ithaca was forced to foul as they
tried in vain to get their hands
on the ball.

Culbert hits

on

free throws

Culbert was fouled and connected on both ends of the oneand-one, giving the Bulls a four
point advantage, 62-58. Eberle
then stole the ball, passed to
Bernard who was fouled. Ithaca’s
Steele, upset with the call,
bounced the ball high in the air.
The Bulls were then awarded a
technical foul.
Bernard made one of his shots
and Eberle meshed the technical
foul, making the score 64-58.
Steele scored for the home team
and Bernard was fouled again.
Doug hit on both shots, putting
the Bulls six points ahead, 66-60.
Ithaca’s Mark Rowley scored a
basket to close the gap to 66-62.
Bernard was then intentionally
fouled and went to the floor extremely hard. Doug was carried
off the floor and the game continued. Nowak replaced Bernard
and made both free throws, the
Bulls taking a six point advantage again.
Rowley scored for Ithaca but
then John Fieri was fouled and
given the one-and-one. Fieri made
both shots to ice the victory for
the Bulls. Marron finished the
scoring for the game and netted a
two-pointer for the home team
with only a few seconds remaining.

Bulls have good bench

It was coach Serfustini’s bench

strength that proved the deciding
factor again, as Scherrer replaced Jake Jekielek and did a
superb job. Scherrer led the
Bulls in the rebound department.
Senior forward Jon Culbert

came into the second half and

replaced forward

Bob Nowak.

3-letter Wells honored
as Player of the Week

Senior guard Rick Weils remade six of six free throws in
ceived a unanimous vote to bethe last three minutes of the
game which were necessary to
come player of the week.
Wells, though he had a couple keep the Bulls ahead in the conof balls stolen underneath him
test. Rick finished the game hitin the game at Niagara, was able ting the double figures at 11 total
to shake off these errors and
points.
helped keep the Bulls in the
Wells, co-captain of Doc Urieh’s
game with some fine passing unfootball team, is the only player
derneath the basket.
this year who will receive three
With the Bulls’ junior guard varsity letters. Rick is also a star
John Fieri coming up with a in coach Jim Peelle’s baseball
sprained ankle the day of the
team where he plays the outfield
game against Colgate, Coach Len
and is a strong hitter.
Serfustini called on Rick to start
Rick turned out for the basketat one of the guard positions.
ball team late in the warm-up
Wells picked up where he left
season and it took Rick a couple
off Wednesday night against the
of months to work into Serf’s type
Purple Eagles and started to find
of playing basketball, but Rick
the holes in the Colgate defense.
has turned in some fine supportHe fired a couple of strong ing roles since the start of the
passes underneath the bucket at
new year.
This is Rick’s first season as a
teammate Doug Bernard who in
turn laid the ball up and in for Bull basketball player and he
two points. Rick finished with has proved his usefulness to the
seven assists that night.
team as a determined player on
Under extreme pressure, Wells the court.

Not quite true.
The inverse value system which dominates every other part of
our existence has found its way into athletics and has poisoned it also.

Culbert picked up ten rebounds
during that period and finished
the game with nine points.
Buffalo’s senior guard Rick
Wells kept the Bulls in the game
during its early stages by hitting
on 25-foot one-handers from the

outside.
Buffalo made 23 shots good of
66 attempted from the field for
a 34.8% shooting night. Ithaca

outscored Buffalo from the floor,

making 26 of 69 for 37.7%. The

Blue and White outscored the
Ithacans from the charity toss
line, making 24 of 33 (ten of 13
in the overtime period) while
Ithaca made 14 of 21.
Eberle led the Bulls in scoring
with 17 points and Bernard finished the game wth 14. Ithaca’s
Bob Modliszewski was the home
team’s leader with 15.

Bernard taken to hospital
Bernard was taken to Tompkins
County Hospital in Ithaca. He
suffered a separated shoulder and
received a two-inch cut on the

back of his head when he hit the
floor. He remained in the hospital Tuesday night and was flown
back to Buffalo Wednesday.
The Bulls’ freshmen won their
12th game in 16 contests as they
handily defeated the Ithaca frosh
80-62. Buffalo was in command
the entire game and never lost
their poise, Steve Waxman led
the Baby Bulls with 20 points;
Roger Kremblas was next with
17; Bob Moog had 14, and Kenny
Palen had 13.
The varsity Bulls finish their
season with a contest against
Northern Illinois University tomorrow night in Memorial Auditorium. Game time is 7:15 p.m.
This will be the last time that
seniors Jon Culbert and Rick
Wells will be donning the Blue
and White uniform.
The box score
games follow:
BUFFALO

Nowak
Bernard

Jekielek

Eberle
Wells

Fieri
Rutkowski
Shea

Culbert

Scherrer

Totals

(70)

OFT
2 2 6
4 6 14
0 0 0
6 5 17
4 0 8
14 6
3 0 6
000
2 5 9
1 2 4

23

24 70

of the Ithaca

The legislature of this county has just passed a letter of intent
to construct a multimillion dollar stadium to house a professional
baseball team. Doesn’t anyone realize what good such a staggering
amount of money would do if it were purposefully directed toward
.
ghetto problems,

In Rome they gave the masses circuses instead of bread, but
even in Buffalo times have changed.
Riots in Buffalo last summer didn’t provide the impetus for even
a small fraction of the fund raising efforts which began when the
prospects for a baseball franchise were introduced this fall.
This city can’t even afford to pay its policemen a decent wage,
but 50 million for a baseball stadium? Hell, that’s easy.
Somebody’s values

are showing.

How many people wonder what becomes of graduating seniors
who are going on to play professional football? If one reads between the lines of the new selective service act, it can be deduced
that future doctors, dentists and football players are exempt from

combat.
Oh sure, all the 250-pound athletes with the bronzed Grecian

builds slip unnoticed into the reserves or National Guard units, while
philosophy and English masters candidates get new permanent jobs
for the next two years.
On the level, right? Do you have any idea how difficult it is to
get into a reserve unit? Ask any guy in his fourth year of college
how easy it is if you’re not 270 pounds or can run the hundred in
under 9.5. Money and pull get these athletes in the back door, and
with weekend passes for the entire 14-week season yet.
Values, Pretty stinking values.
•

OFT

5

Kowalski
Rowley

2
5
3
7
4
0

Steele

Mod'aewski
Marron

Shields

Totals

Rick Wells

26

4
0
3
4
1
2
0

14
4
13
10
IS

10
0

14 66

•

•

There will be a shakeup in this staff next week, because the
sports editor has decided to take an indefinitely long vacation from
his forte.
The escape has been a most pleasurable one, but alas, reality
beckons I return to the real nitty gritty. But if I may, let me leave
my readers with one word, just one word upon which I hope all
will'dwell.
Plastics.

leers near season's end,
to play Hobart Saturday
The undefeated State University of Buffalo Hockey Glub,
Finger Lakes Hockey League
champs, will finish the regular
season schedule this weekend as
they face Hobart College Saturday at 10 p.m. in the Amherst
Recreation Center.

ITHACA (66)
Alb.,no

even

This will be the last game of
the season before the Finger
Lakes Hockey Tournament next
weekend.
Tickets are now on sale for the
tournament in the gym ticket office and special student rates are
available. The games will start

at 7 p.m. Saturday and 6 p.m.
Sunday. The probable schedule
will see Oswego play Canton A&amp;T

Jon Culbert

in the first contest on Saturday
and the Bulls face RIT to complete the semi-finals. The winners of each game will face each
other for the tournament title on
Sunday right after the losers
from Saturday night’s contests go
at it for third place.
The State University of Buffalo
has the best college club team in

the East if not in the country, and
if you have not been out to see
the Bulls this season the Finger
Lakes Hockey Tournament has
got to be the best time to see
them in action. There are a limited amount of student tickets
and it will be on a strictly first
come first serve basis.

Doug Bernard

These seniors are climaxing their varsity basketball campaigns with this weekend's action. Wells,
the converted football flanker has done an outstanding job in the injury riddled Bulls badccourf.
Culbert has been a mainstay at forward for three campaigns, as has Bernard, who will miss the
finale due to the shoulder separation he sustained at Ithaca.

�Th

P»9« Fourteen

Athletes at

spur Big Ten probe
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (CPS)
Charges that University of Michigan athletes have been given discounts, and even some gifts, by
Ann Arbor businessmen are being
investigated by the Big Ten here.
—

John D. Dewey, assistant commissioner of the Big Ten, is
questioning athletes, coaches and
the businessmen involved to find
out if Big Ten or National Collegiate Athletic Association rules
have been violated.
Mr. Dewey’s investigation began after the Michigan Daily, in
a copyrighted story, reported that

stores, along

with a restaurant and a movie
theater, had given athletes discounts.

by Milton Richman
United Press

charge long distance phone calls
to the number of one of the footcoaches and were given
“grill passes” for use at campus
snack bars. It also reported that
Duffy Daugherty, head football
coach at M.S.U., had paid for a
trip to the school by the parents
of a football prospect. Under
Big Ten rules it is illegal for
member schools to pay for stich
trips.
ball

After hearing about the Daily’s
report, Daugherty first said he
might sue for libel. Since then,
however, he has not indicated
whether or not he intends to go
ahead with the suit.
Daugherty and other coaches at
two schools could be subject
to discipline by the Big Ten if
the investigation shows the discounts and other benefits were
used to help recruiting. Howard
Cohen, who wrote one of the
Daily stories, said several athletes told him that they were informed of the discounts during
the

In a story two days later the
reported that Michigan
State University athletes were
getting benefits like those given
to Michigan athletes. Mr. Dewey
has said he will go to M.S.U. to
investigate the situation there
after finishing his probe in Ann
Daily

Arbor.

recruitment.

In its M.S.U, report the Daily
said that, in addition to discounts,
athletes there were allowed to

Bible Truth

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For the Finest in
HAIR STYLING, RAZOR CUTTING,
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REVIEWS
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International

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla.—If
Babe Ruth were alive today, he’d
figure he missed connections
somewhere and landed in the
wrong camp.

Those fellows out there on the
field in the gray uniforms could
not be the Yankees. Not the old
New York Yankees.
Ruth would be so right. They’re
not old. And they’re not the Yankees he knew. Far from it.
He’d do a double take when
he saw the club’s new phenom.
The kid’s name is Robert Elliott
and he’s got to have the longest
hair of anybody in baseball.
Elliott is an 18-year-old righthanded pitcher from Massapeaqua, N. Y., who stood all his
high school competition on its
ear with a 35-5 record.
The Yankees made him their
first draft choice last fall, then
gave him $35,000 to sign. None
of that went for a haircut. The
kid wears his hair nearly as long
in the back as Beethoven.
“A little too long,” says Joe
Pepitone, the perfect judge. “But
only a little.”

Bronx fashionplate

Pepitone would have made
Babe Ruth’s eyes pop too with
the get-up he wore for his opening appearance here.
Five days early (the Yankees’
regulars weren’t due to report
until yesterday) Pepitone walked
up to the front door here Wednesday and then made his way
BUY AND SELL

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Friday, March 1,

Spectrum

Paperbacks

3610 MAIN

(across from UB)
833-7131

Gifts

-

Posters

-

Supplies

A natural setting
for summer study.

to the diigouf where he quietly
poked his head out the entrance.

It didn’t matter that he did it

quietly. His teammates playing
soft toss in front of the dugout
would recognie that unmistakable artistically teased head of
hair anywhere.
Ralph Houk, the Yankees’ tobacco-chewing manager, asked El-

liott if he chewed tobacco.
"No,” answered the six-foot
three-inch, 215-pound youth who
looks like he might be able to
take out both Joe Fraier or Buster
Mathis. “Not yet, anyway.”
Houk had some nice things to
say about the long-haired rookie
who probably will pitch for Fort
Lauderdale of the Florida State
League this year.
“I’m very impressed with his
size and delivery,” said Houk.
What about his hair?
“No comment.”
Mike Burke, the Yankee president who wears his hair rather
long, in the Leonard Bernstein
style, has no objection to the way
Elliott wears his.

Burke's law
“I think he’s a typical 18-yearold, and the way he wears his
hair is merely a reflection of the
times,” said Burke, “It’s the vogue
now.”

The Yankee players were split

on the issue.

Fritz Peterson doesn’t go for

long hair. Bill Monbouquette does
not care one way or the other, and
Jim Bouton likes long hair even
though he wears his crew cut.
“Anyone who doesn’t like the

wears his hair is
narrow-minded and near-sighted,”
said Bouton. “I have a four-yearold little boy. He goes to nursery
school now and wears his hair
long. You know, English cut.
Robert Elliott spent his first
day in a big league camp last
week and most of the Yankees
feel he’ll have his hair cut soon.
They may be wrong.
Joe Pepitone
didn’t hang
around long, but long enough for
Robert Elliott to see him.
“He looked pretty cool,” said
the Massapeaqua rookie.
“No sock, either.”
way Elliott

Bulls place 2 and 3 in
Rochester track meet

Saturday afternoon the University Indoor track team went to

the Rochester Invitational Indoor
Track Meet in which 15 colleges
and universities from the United
States and Canada participated.
The Bulls came home with
second and third places in the
50-yard dash. Speedsters Hubie
Greene and A1 Brown were the
pace-setters in that event.
The Bulls’ Cliff Speigleman
finished fourth in the high jump
event.

The freshman medley relay
team of Terry Ginsberg, Harvey

Schaeffer, Bill Barnes and Ed
Fuchs came in third among the
yearling team entered. Frosh Don
Argus took a fourth place in the

high jump event.
The varsity squad travels to
Toronto, Ont. for the Maple Leaf
games today. According to head
coach Emery Fisher, potential
scorers for the Bulls will probably be sprinters Greene and
Brown and high hurdler Larry

Naukam.

Let's Go

nniEin

Jet June 8th, N.Y. to London
Return Sept. 7th from Amsterdam
ROUND TRIP $265.00 TO STUDENTS, FACULTY, STAFF

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AND IMMEDIATE FAMILIES

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We're just minutes from parks, beaches, golf courses, several fine
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Study with us

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Call 831-4070 Evenings

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Modern residence halls are available on the campus for undergradu-

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UNDERGRADUATE COURSE OFFERINGS

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•

THE

CHARBURGER
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For additional information, summer bulletin and application,
phone (516) 626-1200 or mail coupon

"new

dimensions
IN LEARNING"

I
I
|

Dean of Summer School, C.W. Post College, Merriweather Campus,
P.O. Greenvale. L.I., N.Y. 11548
Please send me Summer Sessions information bulletin.
□ Women’s Residence Hall □ Men's Residence Hall
□ Undergraduate □ Graduate □ Day □ Evening
Name
Address

Open daily

11 A.M. —1:30 PM.
Sheridan at Sweet Home

OF LONG ISLAND UNIVERSITY
MERRIWEATHER CAMPUS

State

I

If visiting student, from which college?

CP

25 POINTS

s sj39 88
Falls, N.V
Mall, Amherst, N.Y.

[il-Pine Plaza, N.

i

WC.W.POST COLLEGE
ChanfSteak
House

1943

New Yankee look: First draft choice

Michigan

Ann Arbor clothing

•

�Friday,

March 1, 1968

Th

CLA SSIF I E D

G reek graph

P/edi

e

classes listed

New pledges of
Phi are: Emil Cappelli, Dan Carpienello, Joe Gautille, Jack Janese, Jim Notter, Bill Ruby, Dan

Alpha Sigma

Santola, Vitold Sieradzan, Fred

Steinberg, Wayne Stotts, Tom

Townsend, John Walker and Jack
Weslowski . . . Gamma Phi's bowling team is currently in first
place. The brotherhood will support the State University of Buffalo Hockey Bulls tomorrow
against Hobart . . . The brothers
of Pi Lambda Tau were recently
visited by a representative of The.
ta Tau, a national professional
engineering fraternity. A committee was formed to investigate the
pros and cons of going national.
An interfraternity pool tournament is being held for the first
time this semester. Last day to
register

is March 4.

New pledges are; Joe Farell,
A1 Marks, and Saeed Nourmand
. . . New pledges of Sigma Phi
Epsilon are: Anthony Barone, William Gates, Donald Hooper, James
Hubert, Joseph Imbasiani, Richard
Joyce, Daniel Kubarych, Thomas
Literski, George Roche, James
Seward, Charles Stanton, John
Studenka, Larry Vandenberg, Lou

Schifano, and Paul Yakapovich.

will be entering Greek Sing this year.
The Colt 45 beer blast will take
place March 22.
Tau Kappa Epsilon

New

Pledges

of Theta Chi Fra-

ternity are: John Ast, Dave Civilette, Pat Deptula, Neil Flaum,
Steve Herman, Dave Kash, A1
Kendall, Joe Nolly, Jim Opten-

brow, Vin Pavis, Pete Richardson, Doug Simpson, Marv Smith,
Bruce Yorio.

Ted Pierce has taken over the
duties of Pledgemaster. Paul
Schwiegerling has been awarded

the Alcoa Aluminum Scholarship
award for outstanding work in

engineering.

Sororities
New officers of Alpha Gamma
Delta are: President, Melody Weiler; First V.P., Marijo Pelham;
Second V.P., Cheryl Putnam;
Treasurer, Sally Kelderhouse;
Rec. Secy., Janice Bleile; Corres.

Pag* FifTaan

Spactrum

•

AKO ( last December.

er r i
Chairman, Gail Reineman; AltruWESTINGHOUSE MONO, four-soeed phonograph. Plays well;' $13; 837-3688.
istic chairman, Kathy Anderson;
Thomas;
Editor,
Chaplain, Cindy
HOUSE: Three bedrooms, IV2 baths, complete
panelled living room and recreation room,
Carolyn Virgili; Guard, Pat Schafwood-burnlarge separate dining room,
fer; House Com., Wendy Bannis- ing fireplaces, teraced yard, two
newly re-decoter; Membership, Sue Sickelco; rated and wall-to-wall carpeting, many extas,
Senior Pan Hel., Anne eRcore; Jr. high 20's, excellent faxes, 10 minutes to
campus. 876-9466.
aPn Hel., aKthy Lake; Third Pan
SWEATERS, skirts, dresse, men's suits,
Hel., Kim Seege; Rush, Joan
sweaters and slacks. Dry cleaned and in
Groucaski; Scribe, Claudia Grala; style, for sale at a fraction of original cost.
Spring and Summer consignment now being
Social, Sandy Thayer.
Secy

Barbara Zeiger is the pledge
class/ A dipner-dance will be held
at the Hearthstone

.

.

accepted from your wardrobe, for resale.
B.J.'s, 269 Kenmore Ave. Open daily 11:30

and

to 4:30. Thursday
Monday.

Friday

BLACK-RIMMED
.

.

Cresci, Janet Dole, Jayne Jacobs,
Barb Kaplan, Karen Lapidus, Sue
Levine, Ellen Rich, Merril Schlender, Carole Schneider, Nancy
Swartz, Joan Weis, Julie Ziegler.
Newly elected are: Senior Pan
Hel, Marilyn Rutstein; Jr. Pan
Hel, Robyn Aaronson.

New

Pledges of Sigma Kappa
Phi are: Joan Bolig, Michele Zalewski, Debby Denneville, Sue Kis-

towski, Carole Willert, Karen LoBuglio, Linda Lorefice, Linda
Luceioni, Diane McMahon, Maureen Schumacher, Marcy Vichot,
Candy Cannizzaro, Sheila Palmer,
Marilyn Schutzman, Kathy Homa,

Lucee Celestino.

WANTED
does embeidding in clear
plastic. Would like 4" by 6'' invitation
embedded and made into paperweight. Call
835-6713.
SILVER DOLLARS wanted. Will play $1.25
for any date, any condition, any quantify.
Call Sam 836-5582.
CRAFTSMAN who

STAMP COLLECTIONS wanted. U.S. or foreign;

large

836-5582.

or small;

high price

paid.

VISITORS-The Gilded Edge, 3193 Bailey.
Hand-crafted jewelry and unusual gifts.

EUROPE

N.Y. to London.

Re-

TALENT badly needed for charity event,
March 9 Coffee House Effect
Call Brian
876-6948 or Alvin 835-4629.
PART-TIME SALES HELP
hours at your convenience, weekly car expense paid, plus
commission. Call 874-3399, 9-11 daily.
CLEANING man or woman needed
five
days a week, hours; 8 A.M.-2 P.M. Apply
at 1083 Tonawanda St., Buffalo. Ask for
Frank or Lou, apply between 2-5 or 8-10.
EVENING'S BABY-SITTER in Langfleld area.
Call during the day 836-0467.
—

The Official Bulletin is an au-

thorized publication of the State
University of New York at Buffalo, for which The Spectrum assumes no editorial responsibility.
Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to 114 Hayes
Hall, attention Mrs. Fischer, before 2:00 p.m. the Friday prior
to the week of publication. Student organization notices are not
accepted for publication.

Placement announcements

—

—

PERSONAL
my

from the Jewish

LOST

with Greek initials

-

12, 8:15 a.m., Fillmore Room,
Norton Hall, Over 200 kinds of
positions are filled through this
one examination. Those candi-

835-6897.
Forming

Blues-Rock group: need RmYIHM
GUITARIST with some vocal ability. Call
Pete 875-6169 evenings.
What's COLT 45 at Banal? Find out with the
brothers of TEKE and ALPHA SIG March
MOTOR CYCLE INSURANCE low cost immediafe F.S.-1. Premiums financed. UPSTATE
CYCLE INSURANCE 695-3044.

dates who qualify will be considered for a wide variety of
career fields in over 50 Federal
agencies and in various geographical locations. A limited
number of overseas positions are
also filled from this examination.
Please call the Placement Office,
831-3311 if you are interested in
taking this exam.
General

notices

A REMINDER

APPLICATIONS FOR MAKE-UP EXAMINATIONS for the removal of
INCOMPLETE GRADES (recorded for absence from final exams)
will be accepted no late than
MARCH 4, 1968. Make-up examinations will be given the week
of April 8. 1968.
—

Student Testing Center Registration Schedule
Law School Admissions

Mar. 16

M.L.A. Foreign Language

Mar.

Practical Nursing

Mar. 16

Horv the first seeds

dinner-dance will take place at
the Charter House tomorrow.

©

1968 Jos Schlm Brewing Co, Milwaukee and other cities

N.Y.

25c per page; dittos,
35c; envelopes, $2.00 per hundred. Call

8

Applications

Test
Date

Available

6

316 Harriman

Mar. 30

316 Harriman

Apr.

Mar, 30

Sch. of Nursing

Let the truth about Bounty he knozvn-

erick.
The Sisters collected $33.90 for
the Heart Fund Sunday. Their

to

TYPING term papers,

to Register
Last Day
Bible

call 875-4265 day or night.

Gold little-finger RING

Federal Service Entrance Examination will be given on Mar.

love Tony.

To SYLVIA with all
SHALOMI For gems

Amsterdam

Official bulletin

Wed.-Sat.

—

New committee chairmen are:
House, Carol Becker; Activities,
Midge Buck; Philanthrophy, Carol
Roberts; Historian, Nancy Mayne;
Pan Hel Rep, Linda Nihart; Social, Judy Kozel; Sing, Judy Tesnow; Dinner, Kathy Walters; publicity, Barbara Gilfoyle. . .
Theta Chi Sorority would like
to welcome new pledges and congratulate Lillian Karides for receiving a scholarship award.
New representatives for Pan
Hellenic Council are: 1st VicePresident, Danny Fragiacomo;
Treasurer, Elissa Longo; Representative, Pat Sibley; and Alternate Representative, Chris Brod-

839-

MISCELLANEOUS

Fly June 8,

APARTMENT FOR RENT

atmosphere. 877-5991, 876-2754 or 873-7780.

glass

4289.
Anyone having information regarding theft
of maroon 1966 CORVETTE convertible
from lot of "The Mug," Friday, Feb. 23,
contact Spectrum office. Reward for info
leading to return.

-

turn September 7,

evenings.

.

until 9. Cldsed

PLEASANT ROOM available, Delaware and
Stratford Road; kitchen privileges; home

Re

Prescription sun glasses

reward . . . 036-1474.
$50 REWARD-Men's gold ring, yellow
setting. Lost in Norton Union. Call
in case

.

New Pledges of Sigma Delta
Tau are; Jeri Acker, Linda Bloom,
Janet Cohen, Yvette Cohen, Carol

Call 693-9641.

of mutin'

were sown.

�Page Sixteen

Th

•

Friday,

Spectrum

March 1, 1968

Viet smuggling ring uncovered

world
*

Ottawa

tor' 'ices

by Duane Champion

Kennedy calls for draft reform
Kennedy’s measure also would draft
youngest eligibles first, end college defer-

ments when combat casualties exceeded
certain limits, create &lt; uniform induction
guidelines, and forbid drafting men for
punishment.
“The law now in effect is a patchwork
of piecemeal additions and alterations,”
Kennedy said. "It satisfies no one. We
must rewrite it
if we are to have a
law. which fairly reflects the spirit of a
free society.”
Kennedy’s proposal for a lottery-like
...

“random” selection system and his call

See related story, p. 6

for a network of regional and area draft
offices to administer uniform guidelines
were among draft reform proposals re
jected by Congress last year.
They were opposed by such key lawmakers as Sen. Richard B. Russell, (D.,
Ga.) chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, and Rep. L. Mendel

Romney

no

—

r

v

portant contraband smuggling operations
and was promoting the day-to-day system
of payoffs in certain areas of customs activities.”
The report cited by Gruening said Loc,
by placing trusted personnel in key positions, had fostered “a system of tolls and
payoffs” from smugglers.
“In this area we were satisfied that Director Loc was more than merely derelict
in his duty,” the report said:
Gruening said 114 kilos of gold were
seized last September and 200 kilos of
opium were smuggled into Vietnam in
December.

Gov't agency reports

The Alaska Democrat said he had received a report on the smuggling ring
from a U.S. government agency which has
a substantial number of officials assigned
to Vietnam as an advisory team to the

Rivers (D., S.C.) chairman of the House
Armed Services Committee. Both were
exepcted to oppose the measure this year.
Congress not only rejected a draft lottery, but specified in the 1967 draft law
that should the President wish to create
such a selection system by executive order, he would have to get congressional
permission first.

Case co-sponsor
Sen. Clifford P. Case (R., N.J.) who
joined Kennedy as a sponsor of the bill,
urged reconsideration of random selec-

tion.
Kennedy’s proposal to legislate against
drafting men for punishment followed his
earlier criticism of Selective Service Director Lewis B, Hershey for ordering the
induction of registrants who violate draft
laws or interfere with armed forces recruiters or troop movements.
Kennedy did not specify how a draft
lottery would work, but suggested it
might be based on a random system of
changing birthday requirements or an alphabetical system under which a registrant would be picked on the basis of the
first letter of his last name.
In any event, the lottery would be composed of the youngest eligibles in the
draft pool.

longer

WASHINGTON
Gov. George Romney
of Michigan withdrew Wednesday as a
candidate for the Republican presidential
nomination. He said he had failed to win
the acceptance he expected.
The governor said he was withdrawing
before the New Hampshire primary because “time is growing short” tor Republicans to draft a sound party platform and
select a candidate who will offer sound
solutions.
Romeney laid heavy emphasis on his
hope that by withdrawing new he could
give Republican governors the largest
amount of influence in both the selection
of a Republican presidential candidate
and in the drafting of a platform that
would “offer some solutions” to the nation’s problems.
Romney said Gov. Nelson Rockefeller

Gruening, in a speech prepared for the
Senate, said the alleged operation concentrated on illicit gold and opium imports.
He said it was directed by Nguyen Van
Loe, South Vietnam’s director of general
Gruening said Loc apparently was acting “in the interest of certain high government Vietnam officials.

:ompiled from our wire

approve last year.

government of Vietnam.
Gruening said the American official in
charge of the investigation reported to
him, “It has become obvious that Director

customs.

focus

WASHINGTON—Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D,, Mass.) introduced a draft reform
bill Wednesday, including the lottery selection plan which Congress refused to

WASHINGTON—Sen. Ernest Gruening
(D., Alaska) said Wednesday U. S. investigators had uncovered a smuggling ring in
Vietnam involving high Saigon officials of

a

candidate

of New York had “asked nothing of me
and had given more than I asked.” He
said the New York governor had supported

him “without reservation.”
But Romney did not offer Rockefeller
his endorsement if the New Yorker should
decide to seek the nomination. Rockefeller, arriving at Washington’s National
Airport just about the time Romney finished his brief statement, said that he was
not a candidate for the GOP nomination
despite the withdrawal of Romney. But
Rockefeller reaffirmed that he would accept a draft if one really developed at the
Reepublican Convntion in Miami Beach
Aug. 5.

Rockefeller said he tried to talk Romney out of withdrawing. “He was my candidate. I don’t have one now," Rockefeller
said.

—UPI

Representatives

Telephoto

PrOtCSt immigration
...

gUota

**

laW

of some 5000 Asian

demonstrators arrived at Prime Minister
Harold Wilson’s residence Sunday to
deliver a letter attacking immigration
legislation. The law would establish an
annual quota of 1500 for Commonwealth citizens seeking entry into Brit-

Congressional check
WASHINGTON
Sen. Mark Hatfield
(R., Ore.) introduced legislation Wednesday designed to force President Johnson
to seek congressional approval before any
move to extend the ground war beyond
South Vietnam.
Hatfield suggested that the administration was giving serious consideration to
an extension of the ground war to other
parts of Southeast Asia.
The resolution would express “the sense
of the Congress that if the President determines that it is vital to the interests
of the United States to extend the Vietnam ground war beyond the limits of
of South Vietnam, the President should
first obtain full participation in this decision by the United States Senate and
House of Representatives . . .
—

on

LBJ?

Stennis calls for escalation
Sen. John C. Stennis (D., Miss.) meanwhile called for reconsideration of what
he called the present “restricted warfare
formula.”
Stennis, chairman of the Senate preparedness subcommittee, said the choice
is between “a hard hitting war or no war
at all.”
“Under our present policies, we are contained by the boundaries of Laos, Cambodia, and North Vietnam,” Stennis said.
“Under these conditions our fighting
men cannot effectively carry out their
missions. Under these conditions, I am
fully convinced, it will take a long, long
time and many more men to force an

honorable and effective solution.

Pearson gov’t survives crisis
OTTAWA
Prime Minister Lester B.
Pearson’s Liberal government won a vote
of confidence in the House of Commons
Wednesday, ending Canada’s nine-day-old
government crisis.
The Pearson government, itself a minority in the House, won the crucial confidence test when eight members of the
splinter Creditiste party joined 129 Liberals for a 138-119 tally.
It took only ten minutes for the House
to end the gravest threat to Pearson’s government in his past five years in office.
Wednesday’s vote came oh the eve of the
70-year-old Prime Minister’s retirement in
April.” The results of the vote represents a
vindication of the position we took,” a
smiling Pearson said.
“We submitted our fate to the House of
Commons, and it decided,” Pearson said.
He said his government would introduce
essential new tax legislation as soon as
—

possible, clearing the way for early adjournment.

It was the narrow defeat of the government’s tax bill Feb. 19 which sparked the

crisis which threatened for nine days to
topple Pearson’s party and cause Canada’s
fifth general election in ten years.

Work resumed
When the confidence vote was over, the
Commons veered immediately into debate
on a labor bill to amend the Unemployment Insurance Act, quashing rumors that
the Liberal government would adjourn
Commons immediately after the Liberal
leadership convention April 4-6.
Voting for the government confidence
motion were 129 Liberals, eight members
of the Creditiste party and one independent, Voting against Pearson were 93 Conservatives, 20 New Democrats, three Social
Creditors and three Independents.
The Parliamentary crisis had threatened
the stability of the Canadian dollar, which
had been under heavy strains for the past
two months. Canada was forced to bolster
its dollar Monday by withdrawing $426
million—its entire credit in the International Monetary Fund—as the crisis
dragged on for nine days.

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                    <text>The Spectrum

State Education Comm,
opposes draft decision
state

McGovern, a New York lawyer.
was elected chancellor.

drafting of graduate students will
deplete teaching resources on all

is unfortunate,”

The
ALBANY, N. Y. (UPI)
education commissioner
—

iversit'

of New York at Buffalo

Vol. 18, No. 36

Tuesday,

itf&amp;ary

levels.

and industry which depend upon
an increasing supply of skilled

professional personnel with grad-

The decision of Gen. Lewis B
Hershey to lift the earlier deferments is inconsistent with President Johnson’s education message Commissioner Allen added.
Comm. Allen made the statements to newsmen following the
monthly meeting of the Board

Early in December the four
presidents sent Mr. Johnson another telegram concerning “the
implications of General Lewis
Hershey’s recent statements for
peaceful protest on campuses.”
They stated that Gen. Hershey’s statements “failed to give
assurance that reclassification or

withdrawal of student deferments
for alleged violations of the Selective Service Act would not be
employed against protestors on
college and university campuses.”

study by academically qualified

students. We urge the Defense
Department to request the Se-

the draft question.

“We are in a period of history
where the whole level of education is being pushed up." Dr. Allen said. “The graduate schools
are one place where we get the
leadership for the nation,’”

of Regents at which Joseph W.

Athletic fund drive is
only one-sixth completed

Because, of the crippling effects and tragic inequities of
these recently announced deferment policies, we also urge a
thorough review of the entire
Selective Service System by the
Congress as soon as possible. The
The city-wide campaign for the
need, at this critical time, in our
nation’s experience, is for coop- support of intercollegiate athleeration, not conflict, between the tics at the Stale University of
Buffalo is about one-sixth comacademic community and the Federal Government, including its pleted. A total of 28,000 of the
$150,000 goal has been pledged,
military branches.”
according to vice president for

Earlier telegram

Y’ork’s congressional delegation
March 20 in Washington to discuss federal aid programs and

undergraduates.

lective Service System to regulate
the rates and timing of induction
of graduate students so as to minimize the damage to graduate
and professional programs, and
to the educational and scientific
resources of the nation.

The telegram was co-signed by University Presidents
Evan Collins, Albany; Bruce Bearing, Binghamton, and John
Toll, Stony Brook.
uate training and degrees. The
Copies were also sent to Secrealmost inevitable decimation of
tary Robert McNamara and White
our graduate programs will also
House Assistant Douglas Cater.
impair the quality of undergraduThe telegram states:
ate education, since it will sharply reduce the number of teaching
Statement
assistants available for small
group instruction. Finally, the
“We, the undersigned Presidents of the four University Ceneffect upon the individual graduters of the State University of
ate student of an untimely interruption of his professional edNew York, deplore the recent
decision of the National Security ucation may well be the most
harmful consequence of all; many
Council and the Selective Service System to deny deferments
students will simply never be
for graduate study in fields other
able to reenter the graduate program if they are drafted before
than medicine and dentistry and
they can complete degree reallied specialties. The policies
announced on February 16 serve, quirements.
we feel, to compound the existCritical need
ing inequities of the draft system. In addition, the denial of
most graduate deferments jeop“So long as these policies reardizes not only the nation’s
main in effect, we urge the Deuniversities and graduate schools, partment of Defense to recogbut threatens irreparable damage nize the critical national need
to those sectors of government for continuation
of graduate

The board may have to revise
its long term master plan for
higher education because of the
changes, but he said he did not
think there would be a surplus
of empty graduate class rooms.
The board will meet with New

The elimination of graduate
deferments will "affect the production of teachers for the state's
colleges, universities and public
schools.” Dr. James E. Allen
said. There are 135,012 graduate
students in the state to 509,745

Meyerson telegrams Johnson:
'Critical need for grad students'
President Johnson received a telegram Friday from
Martin Meyerson and three other State University presidents
“deploring the recent decision” denying draft deferments for
graduate students in fields other than medicine and dentistry.

weaken national education level
Dr. Allen said.

university relations, Dr, A. Westley Rowland, the campaign chair
man.
The drive is an outgrowth of
Stale University policy changes

that will terminate .support for

to athletes (while
supporting more than three-quarters of all athletic expenses) and
that have placed the student alh
letic activities fee on a voluntary
basis. When mandatory, this fee
was the primary source of funds
grants-in-aid

for the athletic program, and the
loss of income is expected to
cause a severe operating deficit

in this year’s intercollegiate athletic program.
The $150,000 sought by the
University of Buffalo Foundation
will be used to make up the deficit and provide support in the future. especially for scholarships
to qualified athletes.
All intercollegiate teams will
benefit from the funds, although
basketball and football are considered the mainstays of the program. according to the Founda-

tion.
The University “stands the risk
of having to abandon a major intercollegiate sports program, particularly in football,” if the goal
is not met. the Foundation reports, while depriving the citizens of Buffalo an expanded athletic program on the college
level.

Computer may bring punch-card renown
by Charles Zeldner
Spectrum Staff Reporter

The installation of a new computer complex here may
well rank this center among the top 12 to 20 in the United
States, according to Mr. John Hale, associate director of the
University’s Computing Center.

A $2 million Control Data Corporation (CDC) 6400 computer system is being installed this week
on the Ridge Lea campus.
When completed, the 6400 will
greatly increase storage capa-

city.

The

present computer in
Goodyear Hall has a retention
capacity of 21 million characters. This capacity will be increased to 42 million when it is

moved to Ridge Lea. The 6400
computer is capable of an initial
75 million character capacity.
The new computer setup will
be the focus of a two-part operation. As a computing center, the
machine will be used by faculty
and students for courses and research. For the user, the new
equipment will mean better performance and faster results. The
6400 will be used to facilitate
record keeping by faculty and administration as a data processor.
A program, among the first in
the country, will be initiated as
soon as the installation is complete. Eight State University of
New York institutions will then
be able to dial and converse with
the 6400. The project is planned
as a one year experiment. At the
end of a year, it will be determined whether the system will be
maintained or if an individual
computer for each school is pre-

ferable.

Late Spring service
According to Mr. William

J

Vasiliou, project director of the
Regional
Computing
Center
(RCC), full service to all eight
institutions is expected by late
spring.

Computer service is planned for
Brockport, Fredonia, Geneseo,
State College at Buffalo, Erie
County Technical Institute, Jamestown, Monroe and Niagara Community College.
In addition, two remote batch
terminals have already been installed in Goodyear and Karr
Parker. A third is planned for
Harriman. Thus, those wishing to
use the 6400 need not travel to
the Ridge Lea campus.
The participating schools will
use the computer for computa
tional and educational, as well as

administrative, purposes. “At the
same time the RCC will monitor, analyze and evaluate the performance of this service,” said
Mr. Vasiliou.
“Technical and economic feasibility are not adequate criteria
of the network,” he said. “The
system must also fit the needs
of each institution, since each
will have different requirements.
We want to provide the best and
most efficient service,”

Workshops available

He added that the flexibility
of the CDC 6400 is such that as
the study progresses and individual needs become more specifically determined, service can be

—

Yates

The
6400

modified. Mr, Hale feels that the
capacity of the computer will
probably be reached within five

years.
A use chart in his office illustrates that computer use on this
campus has doubled almost every

I nstallation of Control Data 6400 computer dt
Interim cdmpus. Machine to be operational in
May, may make the University one of the
top
computing centers in the nation.
year. He expects to expand the
6400 to four times its present
capacity over the next two years.
To ensure that network parti
cipants get the most efficient
use of the computer system, the
"University is making available

a series of workshops designed
to provide all RCC participants
with the advantages resulting
from close psysical contact with
the central site," said Mr. Vasi-

liou

Please turn to Page 6

�Page Two

The Spectrum

Tuesday, February 27, 1968

Common Council to ask legislature
for power to impose city income tax
have

Ast'utanl City Editor

After hearing Mayor Frank A.
Sedita outline the cities “grave
fiscal crisis." the Common Council Friday evening aligned itself
behind the Mayor's request for
the power to impose some sort
of city income tax.
In an unusual appearance before the Council, Mayor Sedita
cited increasing

costs, including

mandated costs and insufficient
sources of revenue.
The Democratic administration
had hoped for bipartisan Council
support, but had to settle for a
straight party line 10 to 5 vote.
The act is, in effect, a request
to the state legislature to give
Buffalo the authority to impose
an income fax. If the legislature

to formally approve the
tax before it could become law.
Two years ago the legislature
gave New York City similar taxing powers.
The fate of the bill, to be announced by John Doerr, Buffalo’s
legislative representative in Albany, is doubtful. It will certainly
need a large degree of Republican support to pass the legislature, support which it totally
lacked in the Council.

Tax suburbanites
One plan would have city residents pay a tax on all income,
while persons who work in Buffalo but. live outside the city,
would pay a smaller tax on all
earnings from jobs in Buffalo.

tax on job earnings of all city
residents, as well as non-residents who work in Buffalo.
Blither plan would be designed
to raise approximately $6 million
for each of the next two fiscal
years.

At present, Buffalo has a legislative program before the legislature which would provide additional revenue for the city in
various ways. If this program
was passed, the city would not
have to use the proposed taxing
power, according to Mayor Sedita.
The special meeting was held
Friday in order that the appropriate bills could be filed by
today, the last possible day for
tiling legislation.

National Council of Churches issues
statement asking for halt to bombing
by Doric Klein

Eastern Europe, the U.S.S.R, and

Spectrum Staff Reporter

The

Cuba;

National Council
of
Churches has called on the U. S.
government to
make radical
changes in its foreign policy. A
statement on “Imperatives of
Peace and Responsibility of Power,” was issued last week by the
organization, which is a federation of most major Protestant
and East Orthodox church groups
in the country.
The statement urged the United States to:
Stop the bombing of North
Vietnam as a prelude to negotia-

and free;
An “arrogant” sense of mission in the world to repel aggres-

tions;

sion;

Avoid military provocations
against mainland China;

Reliance on military might to
keep the peace, thereby submerging social and economic development at home and abroad;

•

•

•

Press for admission of China

to the U. N.;
•

Increase

cooperation

with

Recognize the governments of
Cuba and East Germany.
•

Mistaken assumptions

America,

These conditions were set forth
as “imperatives” for peace. The
council also listed what it considers to be mistaken assumptions behind present American

foreign policy:
An oversimplified view of the
world as two camps: Communist
•

•

•

•

The

making

cisions concerning the use of
power abroad to preserve the
status quo, discouraging social
change in Asia, Africa and Latin

of unilateral de-

Headquarters for Good
College Clothing

The document charged that the
U. S. has “stressed its own role
as peace keeper to too great a degree, and contributed to the fragmentation of the international
community.”
In a second statement, the
council warns against “Americanization” of the war in Vietnam
and the uncertain loyalties of the
South Vietnamese people to the
Saigon government.
“Pacification programs appear to be in disarray," the statement reads, and
“there are many statements calling for intensification of the U. S.
military effort.”
The resolution urges against
such a “hardening of attitudes”
and asks for a rededication to the
search for peace. It calls on the
administration to negotiate with
the National Liberation Front and

all other interested parties.
The council also announced a
pooling of denominational funds
for an “emergency” attack on the
ghettos to include dialogues between ghetto dwellers and religious leaders, employment of
Negroes, an the initiation of specific programs to avoid outbreaks
of racial strife this summer.

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Mark Morris, the instructor for
the "Silence" course of the
Free University at the University of Pennsylvania, plans to
conduct his class in the nude,
he says. "Nudism is the com-

Naked
knowledge?

ing thing," Morris says.

Education strips down to
heighten contemplation'
was held with or without the
knowledge of Dr. Friedberg, who
has refused to confirm or deny
his involvement in the episode.
Although no action has been
taken to discontinue Political Science 48, administrative officials
have encouraged all those students who took part in the experiment to drop the course.

Special to the Spectrum

Don’t be surprised if in
the next class you walk into,
your instructor drops his
pants.
Nudity in the classroom
seems to be a new college
trend that has bared itself
on at least two college campuses.

The bare essentials

In Philadelphia, Mark Morris,
the instructor for the “Silence”
course of the Free University at
the University of Pennsylvania,
has announced that i;e plans to
conduct his class in the nude,
“Nudism,” according to Mr.
Morris, “is the coming thing,”
University of Pennsylvania Chaplain Stanley Johnson suggests;
“With all the recent concern for
increasing bureaucratic red tape,
it appears that this group has
found a way to strip education
down to its barest essentials.”
Despite this trend toward nudity in the classroom, it is doubtful that the Buffalo climate is
conducive to overexposure. Zero
temperatures, drafty classrooms,
and ten-minute breaks between
classes act as a barrier to achieving our own “height of contem-

Twelve to 15 students, enrolled
in an experimental course in Political Science at the University
of California at Davis, disrobed
and sat in a semi-circle holding
hands
and as far as anyone
knows that was all that was held.
The discussion group took place
off-campus in a private home, the
purpose of which was to “heighten contemplation of the subject,”
according to Campus Public Affairs Officer Robert Bunam.
The course, entitled “Education and Community,” is taught
by Dr. Jerry Friedberg, who divided the class, which has a
large enrollment of 100 students,
into two sections —one headed by
Dr. Friedberg and the other left
to student management.
Some questions have arisen as
to whether the class-in-the-nude
—

plation.”

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�Tuesday, February 27, 1968

Th

•

Page

Spectrum

Thrat

Universif Qolky

Dr. Siggelkow; Once i drop-out, dateline news, Feb. 27
t.' hel is available
SAIGON

by Gail Barotz
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

What happens to the student
who drops out of the University
either voluntarily or because he
is forced to? Are his records immediately taken from the files
and either discarded or filed
away in a dusty cabinet because
he no longer attend the University?
Fortunately, no.

Richard

A,

Siggelkow,

vice-

president for student affairs believes in the idea: “Once a dropout, always a student.”

This has become the policy of
the Dean of Students Office. Under the leadership of Dr. An-

Lorenzetti, acting dean of
students and his staff, much is
being done to help avoid the potential drop-out and also to help
the student that has already
dropped out of school.
thony

Miss Mildred Blake, assistant to
the vice president of Student Affairs said that every student who
resigns from the University receives what is known as a “terminal interview,” at which he is
able to discuss his reasons for
dropping out of school.
Often there are extenuating
circumstances which may be overcome.

Job ideas

Students are referred to the
Placement Office. If they are in
need of financial aid there may
be opportunities or loans that
they are unaware of that will

enable them to stay in school. If
they are forced to drop out and
look for a job, they are given
ideas as to whom they can contact in the industries in which
they are interested.
The Dean of Students committee on drop outs believes that if
the student was admitted in the
first place he does have the ability to succeed. Therefore, every
effort is being made to help the
student overcome his problems
and continue his education. For
the most part, efforts to keep
students in school have been
successful, according to the committee.

If the student is forced to
leave, the committee does not
end its work there. Attempts are
made to keep in contact with the
student after he leaves. Dr. Lorenzetti meets with many former
students, talks to them, and
learns what they are doing.
In this way, the student does
not lose contact with the University. Often circumstances may
change and he will be able to
be readmitted.

Two examples
Miss Blake cited two examples
of students helped by the committee. The first is the case of
an excellent student who was
forced to drop out due to an illness in the family. Although she
is technically a drop-out she still
is in contact with her professors
and is keeping up with some assignments. She hopes to re enter
the University as soon as she is

able
The second example is, a student who made up his mind to
leave school. He was advised

to keep the necessary forms overnight and consider his decision
once more. Given the extra time,
the student discussed it again
with his parents and the people
on the staff and decided to try
and work out his problems.

committee at the second Psychology Crab-In. They were elected

to represent psychology majors
in joint meetings with the faculty
advisory committee and to hear
student complaints and suggestions for department improvement.

The representatives are: David
Lowenthal, Steve Silverman and
Hank Chaikin. Members-at-large
are: Paula Silverman, Jeff Cohen, Barry Soloff and Andy Rose.

Since only thirty students attended the Crab-In the problem
of the lack of a representative
electorate was brought up. How-

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ever, elections were held at that
time because it was claimed that
due notice had been given to all
psychology majors.

The group will hold an open
meeting of all psychology students every third week and meet
with the faculty every fourth

Bertha

also a
points out how im-

Kutcher,

staff member,
portant it is to try to recapture
these students that have dropped
out of school. When a student
reapplies for admission, not only
is his academic curriculum reviewed but also all that he has
done since leaving school. Studies
show that in the majority of
eases students who have dropped
out and are readmitted do complete their education.

Group therapy
A new group program to aid
potential drop-outs will be in effect by March 1. Mrs. Edith Rus-

sell says that the purpose of this
program is to help possible dropouts before they are forced to
leave school.
The staff is now selecting the
records of those students who
might be forced to drop out because of academic reasons. These
students will be able to meet
with an advisor and discuss their
problems in a group. Hopefully,
they will realize that there are
others in similar situations with
problems that may be solved.

The

issue of comprehensive
exams for seniors was also discussed. Many feel they are unfair, especially for those not going to graduate school.
President

of the Undergraduate Psychology Association, Stev

week.

en Imber, acted as chairman.

It was also decided to distribute questionnaire sheets to psychology majors. This will enable

“I’m really dissatisfied with
this Crab-In,” said Mr, Imber,

students to register complaints
or suggestions on ways to improve the department.
A suggestion box will be placed
in Townsend Hall on the first
floor to receive questionnaires.

“because usually its the excuse
that the faculty are not involved
so students see no need to attend these things. But anyone
who was at the first Crab-In
should have realized that the faculty was fully behind it. The
whole thing was fully publicized.”

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Monday.
They said the heavier attacks will be the allied reply to the
guerrilla invasion of South Vietnamese cities and for North Vietnam's
refusal to recognize as a peace feeler the halt in bombing around
Hanoi and Haiphong in late December and early January.
The Senate reached a critical point yesterday
WASHINGTON
in its election year battle over civil rights. It got a second chance
to stop talking and start voting on administration measures.
Shortly before mid-day, the Senate voted on whether to impose
on the civil rights debate that
the so-called gag rule
cloture
began when Congress convened Jan. 15.
BRAZAVILLE, Congo
The African Supreme Sports Council
representing 32 African nations unanimously approved Monday a
boycott of the 1968 Mexico City Olympics because a racially mixed
South African team was granted permission to participate.
—

—

—

—

Mrs.

7 elected to represent Psych majors
Seven students were elected
Wednesday to a student advisory

The United States will accelerate bombing North
said
next two-months, American military

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Sen. J. William Fulbright believes a full-scale
WASHINGTON
inquiry by Congress is needed into the validity of U.S. commitments
in Vietnam because of “doubts” surrounding the 1964 Tonkin Gulf
—

incident.

“I think the country deserves it,” the chairman of the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee said Sunday, adding that sending more
U.S. troops to Vietnam would be “a disastrous course to the country
and to our people . . .”
BUDAPEST
Delegates of most of the world’s Communist
parties gathered Monday for a conference that Moscow wishes would
denounce Red China but is more likely only to attack U.S. policy
in Vietnam.
Florida’s dissident teachers, vowing not
JACKSONVILLE, Fla.
to return to classrooms until the state satisfies their demands for
education reform, take their case to court today.
Labor Mediator Theodore Kheel said Sunday
NEW YORK
that, under his proposed Taylor Law revisions, Governor Rockefeller
would “probably" have power to decide what public employe strikes
are dangerous enough to demand binding arbitration.
—

—

—

Philosophy committee:
'grades are irrelevant'
Changing the grading system
for undergraduate philosophy
courses was one of the issues
discussed Thursday evening at a
meeting of the Graduate Philos-

ophy Association,
Don Sullivan, representing a
committee designed to examine
the present grading system described the problem as one of

“passing judgments affecting others’ lives.”

After studying the issue, it was
concluded by the committee that
grades arc an irrelevant part of
the educational process, and “an
arbitrary attempt to impose objective criteria.” In part, it was
felt that the matter of political
beliefs can stand in the way of

students would receive a grade of
either satisfactory or incomplete.
Mr. Sullivan said that this would

be superior to a pass-fail or satisfactory-unsatisfactory system because "to say work is unsatisfactory is to establish an arbitrary
point."

It was mentioned that other
departments have shown similar
interest in changing the present
grading system.
No definite decisions have been
made as yet in the Philosophy

Department concerning the grading system. Another meeting will
be called to discuss in more detail the possibilities of changing

the system.

objective grading.

Several types of grading systems were discussed as alternatives. The best possibility found
by the committee is one in which

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�Page

Th

Pour

•

Tuesday, February 27, 1968

Spectrum

The test: Find 40 who care
The Student Senate is holding an open meeting tomorrow to discuss with interested students the proposed reorganization of student government.
Judging from attendance at two Senate Bitch-ins during
the past two weeks, we would be surprised if more than
.
a couple' dozen students show up.

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students who will comprise the law-making assembly if the
new government structure is adopted. The proposed constitution requires that 40 students be present in order for
the Polity to carry on business. Perhaps someone should
require that 40 students be present at tomorrow’s meeting
so that we can try out the new system.
One would think that 40 is a small number in a University that boasts an undergraduate enrollment of nearly
20,000, and indeed it is. Still we’re willing to bet that fewer
than 40 show. After all, it’s almost impossible to get that
many at a Student Senate meeting, and that’s including

I

J Ttr/

S&gt;'

iHthe

'

'SUgSTlTOTC

Iy

senators.

The simple truth is that too few students are concerned
with what goes on at this University. If you’re one of the
few, you’ll be there tomorrow at 3:30 p.m. in the Fillmore
Room.

mriosM

'Scab'

Does Council (ear ombudsman?
Last Tuesday the Common Council passed a resolution
opposing the Office of Economic Opportunity’s experimental
ombudsman program in Buffalo.
In protesting the ombudsman, which is intended to serve
as a liaison between the citizens of Buffalo and their government, the Council raised a very serious question: What do
Buffalo lawmakers have to hide?
Raymond Lewandowski, Lovejoy District Councilman
who originated the resolution, based his opposition on the
premise that the ombudsman would become a police review
board. His argument was butressed largely by his contention
that John H. Hollands, the program director, had sought out
information regarding the City’s disorderly conduct ordinance.
Although Mr. Lewandowski’s accusation may be true, he
has badly missed the point. Mr. Hollands, and anyone else
for that matter, should be able to look into any and all City
laws without raising suspicions among our elected officials.
Councilman Lewandowski also cited a recently printed
article by two State University of Buffalo Law School professors who are supervising the ombudsman. The councilman
somehow concluded that the article showed that the basic
purposes of the program are to create a type of police review
board and to punish policemen.
This is in spite of a portion of the article which reads:
“It should be clearly understood that the function of the
ombudsman would not be to supercede the police authorities
in preferring or trying charges against police personnel.”
A very interesting point is that during its Jan. 9 meeting, the Council voted 9 to 6 to defeat Mr. Lewandowski’s
resolution. At that time the persistent Lovejoy representative spoke not of the danger of a police review board, but
of a federal plot to take over City Hall.
Even more startling is the fact that five of the councilmen, who in January voted against the Lewandowski resolution, evidently were sufficiently convinced by his new evidence (?) to vote differently last Tuesday. With those five
votes those of Couficil President Gorski, Majority Leader
Makowski, and Councilmen Franczyk, Perla and Morrisey
the resolution passed by a comfortable ll-to-4 margin.
—

—

■.

There have been no indications that the ombudsman
program would become a police review board. The fact is, it
has had very little dealings with the Buffalo police, even
indirectly.

It would seem that the Council is using the alibi of support for our police force, and in this way using the police
force, to attempt to suppress the potentially annoying ombudsman.
Certainly the citizens of a city, which is being milked
for more than $300,000 in its Broadway Market dealings
while it considers a tax increase, should support any lawful
method for improving that city’s government.
Any city government which takes nearly a decade to
move an urban renewal project into the second phase should
welcome any assistance it can receive
assistance which the
ombudsman can provide if given the chance.
Back to the original question: Is the Council afraid that
while the ombudsman does his job he may come across some
rather unpleasant facts about how our City is run?
—

The Council will now officially protest the OEO project

to the appropriate federal officials. It is only hoped that the

feds have the sense to realize what the protest comes down
to
a destructive, irresponsible act based on Mr. Lewandowski’s fear of an imaginary police review board
and treat
is as such.
—

—

Readers

the burgher
by Schwab

Rested and relieved, yet bruised physically and
mentally, The Burgher returns to Buffalo after an
eventful trip to the home of my boyhood years—
Friendship, N. Y.—you’ve probably never heard
of it.
‘Tis an interesting fact, me thinks, that not
only did The Burgher spring from a small ignoble
Southern Tier town, but that The Grump, The
Spectrum’s senior spokesman of the columnist ilk,
suffered a similar fate. One would think that such
a dashing figure as Steese would have indeed
sprung from a large and thriving metropolis where
liberal attitudes proposer. But Ho! Not so!
Small towns are the hotbeds of liberal thinking. Think on this, honorable and esteemed students: There is more to a small town than meets
the eye. Life is not as peaceful and serene and
uneventful as it might seem.

Take Buffalo, for example. (’N faith! I wish
The Stadium issue now looms
before Buffalo’s legislators. The people are not
caught up in the storm, however. Oh sure, everyone has his top of the hat opinion, but the opinions
are not charged with emotion.
someone would!)

In Friendship it’s different. People there are
all caught up in the sewer controversy; they’re
up to their necks in it. And people are excited
emotionally. Sewage can be a sticky issue.

’

writings
Meyerson's silence condemned
To the Editor;

The “high priest” of our University has spoken.
President Meyerson (Spectrum, Feb. 20, 1968) is
concerned with “the effects on the lives of a
great number of young people” of the new draft
regulations Concerning graduate students.
In early December 1967, I had the experience
of talking with Mr. Meyerson. At that time he
refused to issue a statement, either as an individual
or as University President, in opposition to the
war being waged against the Vietnamese people.
While he avoided the question of his personal
views upon the subject, he did say that should
he issue such a statement he might find it difficult to remain as President of the University.
Why? Pressure from Albany was the answer.

At the same time, Mr. Meyerson was asked about
University silence in the face of the reclassification and orders for induction being issued to members of the draft resistance program. He was also
asked to discontinue the use of University facilities
for armed forces recruiting. On both of these issues
he chose to remain silent.

I walked into our friendly local barber shop
Saturday afternoon (cuts cost a buck and a quarter)
and the cape had hardly been flung over me when
the barber, sharpening his implements of destruction, did say to me: “How do you stand on the

In all of these cases our President showed
precious little concern for “young people” and the
effects of the war upon them. But NOW he is
concerned! But not for all young people! Did the

Thinking the question was to be a joke of
ethnic ramifications, I replied, “I give up. How

deferment?

sewer?”

do I stand on a sewer?”

The bafber chuckled and then began to outline
the proposal for the town’s Sewage Disposal Ssytem
(SDS), waving his scalpel dangerously close to my
dislodged adam’s apple.
Reflecting upon the matter of the sewer, I did
reply: “Methinks ’tis a fine idea, for prithee, 'tis
a fact that on a hot summer afternoon, one can
tell which neighbor has been eating spicy food!”
“You talk kind of weird,” he replied. We agreed
on the deplorable state of affairs and bid adieu.
I left thinking that my great negotiating ability
could be used in the crisis, since two factions—the
Committee Concerned about a Sewer (CCS) and the
Senior Citizens Concerned about the Cost of a
Sewer System (SS) —were at bitter odds.
I walked to peaceful Island Park (which is no
longer an island, though some old timers remember when it was), where I knew the SCCCS would
be meeting. Even before I reached the park I
could hear angry voices. The air was charged with
emotion. Someone was speaking:
“The time for action is now! We must stop
this insane sewer proposal! It’s a Communist plot
to drain away our precious Social Security dollars!
A man’s home is his castle! A man’s sewer is at
the base of that castle and it’s his own business!
The whole sewer proposal reeks!”
Now amidst the angry crown, I found an open-

ing and began to speak:
“Elderly folk, listen to me, for I am your
sewer savior. Think not on the expense, nay, think
on the young. Think of our poor children with
sunken nostrils. But Ho! Listen when I say to
you ‘Flush the toilets of your heart in unity!’
Back the sewer before it backs up on you!”
The reply was straightforward ind prompt:
They ripped me to shreds. And so The Burgher

has learned yet another lesson of the great wheel
of life; "Nothing is ever sewer.”

illustrious student of urban affairs concern himself with the effects of the draft upon the “young
people” of our cities not covered by the old II-S

The isue appears clear. If you support this
war, then enlist; don’t expect others to do your
dirty work. If you are against it, then become active
in some form of opposition to the war and work
those of others. And Mr. Meyerson, stop lamenting
the loss of your “cheap labor.” Either proudly op
pose the war and the use of any youth as cannon
fodder or support it.
Larry Faulkner
The Spectrum is published twice-weekly
every
Tuesday and Friday
during the regular academic
the State University of New York at Buffalo,
3435 Main Street, Buffalo, New York 14214. Offices
are located at 355 Norton Hall. Average Circulation:
—

—

year at
15,500.

Editorin-Chief—MICHAEL L. D’AMICO
Managing Editor—RICHARD R. HAYNES
Asst. Managing Editor—RICHARD SCHWAB
Business Manager—SAMUEL A. POWAZEK
Advertising Manager—DAVID E. FOX
Sports
Robert Woodruff
Asst.
W. Scott Behrens
Layout
David L. Sheedy
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John Trigg
City
Daniel Lasser Copy
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Promotion &amp; Circulation
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Financial Advisor: Edward Dale
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Margaret

Asst.

Anderson

The Spectrum is a member of the United States Student Press Association and the Associated Collegiate
Press. The Spectrum is served by: United Press International, Collegiate Press Service, Associated Collegiate
Press Service. Gannett News Service, and the Los
.
Angeles Times Syndicate.
Represented for national advertising by National Educational Advertising Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave,
New York, N. Y.
Republication of all news dispatches is forbidden wnnout the express consent of the editor-in-chief. R'g h 5
republication of all other matter herein are also re
served.
Second class postage paid at Buffalo. New York.
Editorial policy is determined by the Edltor-m-m
*

�Tuesday, February

Th

27, 1968

•

BELOW OLYMPUS

Supports Judiciary

Page

Spactrum

By Interlandi

To the Editor:

During the past few weeks, various letters have
appeared in The Spectrum criticizing the conduct of
the Student Judiciary. As a participant in the trial
and an officer of that court, a few comments on the

1

issues involved are in order.
The Student Judiciary is patterned after the
legal tribunals in this country. The American sys.
tem of justice is without doubt the finest in the
world albeit not perfect. No system founded on
human judgment and reason can exist in a utopian
form. However, until those who would criticize it
can construct one which safeguards the rights of
the indiivdual accused while affording society the
maximum protection, we are bound by it —and to
inherent faults.
The very same Constitutional guarantees granted
to a defendant in a felony trial downtown have been
granted to a student at the University, charged
with taping decorations on the walls of Norton
Hall—a violation of the University’s regulations.
Those who consider the plea of not guilty to
be unethical or dishonest fail to realize that it is
a basic tenet of our Constitution that an accused has
a right to a trial.
The plea of not guilty is not the statement:
“I am innocent of the act charged.” It is the exercising of a Constitutional regent to say: “Your
obligation is to prove me guilty at a fair and impartial test.”
Criticism based on the evidence presented at
the trial is similarly unwarranted. I have discussed
the facts of this case with members of the District
Attorney’s staff as well as defense attorneys in
the community. Their opinion was cirtually unanimous—that based on the evidence produced at the
trial any American tribunal would be well-founded
in returning a verdict of not guilty.
One can always pick out isolated examples of
where justice has errored. However, the same system that allows these mistakes to occur protects
each of us from the possibility of being railroaded

The academic power structures at this institution are such that, in order to effect any serious

changes, one must be prepared for many

There is, in short, a very complex hierarchial
system in existence. Without considering the committees beyond the departmental level (e.g., the
Provosts, Albany) most departments are structured
on the assumption that they are homogeneous.
That is, each department has various committees
to investigate particular areas of concern, and each
acts as advisor to some superior body, or man, which
ultimately is the chairman.

%
I* ST
•

«t1

2 i&amp;
I,

c

the gadfly
by Mark Schneider

Slowly, steadily, (one hesitates to say inevitably) the
people of the United States are learning the historical lessons
that their leaders, for intense psychological reasons, cannot
dare not comprehend. That the United States will be forced
to withdraw from Vietnam, whether or not its government
sees that it should, is becoming increasingly apparent to
anyone who does not have a personal stake in an American
victory.
The simple, profound lesson of
the last several years, particularly of the last month, is that we

stand alone against the people,
and the nature of our support
for a puppet dictatorship will con
tinue to sway the apathetic of the
Vietnamese toward the NLF. A
Washington official stated, acTo the Editor:
cording to Newsweek, that the
last
month has been “A Bay of
Before the Christmas recess, we, the members
Pigs” for the NLF, because the
of the Allenhurst House Council, passed a resolution requesting the legalization of alcohol in the people did not rise up to revolt.
Allenhurst dormitory. As did the other dormitories What this statement concedes is
on campnus, we set up our own rules to regulate that the NLF has popular passive
support, of which we have none,
alcoholic consumption within our dormitory.
To date, the Student Senate, the IRC, and all but at least it isn’t active sup
the house councils have passed similar resolutions port. Not yet. On Wednesday
last, the Thieu dictatorship began
in favor of a “wet campus.”
The legislative powers of the students are now to arrest all its significant polibeing questioned. It is an obvious fact that the tical opposition including Thich
students on this campus are in agreement with us Tri Quang, the popular Bhuddist
leader, Truong Dinh Ozu, who talon this issue. Could it be that student responsibility is being questioned? We feel that there has lied second in the election as a
been an unnecessary slowdown on the passage of peace candidate, Au Trong Thanh,
this bill. We hope we can gain recognition of prominent intellectual, and 12
student opinion and overcome the disgraceful others. (Though our embassy ofbureaucratic holdups in passing student legislation. ficials decry the action, it is
vaguely reminiscent of political
The Allenhurst House Council
arrests in another country which

Protests legislation holdups

I would like to register my approval of the
recent decision concerning the draft. For too long
have most college students hid behind their draft
cards and avoided the terrible reality of this war.
Indifference and apathy have surrounded the
issue. Even among the protesters this has been true.
The march on Washington was a farce because the
demonstrators were not committed enough to risk
jail for their beliefs. “Good times” or concern for
future monitary success have kept the “sickening”
war from the minds of many. Most have been
quite willing to go along as long as they weren’t the
ones being mutilated or killed. Since man’s history
began, the concern for one’s own welfare has, in
most cases, outweighed his moral dictates. So be it.
The issue has now been thrown, in the most
personal manner, to the most intelligent and moral
segment of our society.
Let them not talk about the graduate teacher
shortage or the loss of intellectuals in the academic
community when the death of thousands is the
question, START working to stop the war.
A Viet Vet

o

"I wish they wouldn't show pictures of the war on the
6 o'clock newsl"

Nicky Segal

To the Editor:

.

iiiA,to,,

has

an

unpopular war policy).

These men have powerful follow-

ings which obviously are now further alienated, perhaps soon to

active

collaboration

with

com-

mittees and people to analyze and scrutinize and
add to and delete from, and in various other ways,
change, before anything can ever become fact.

')U

into prison by a kangaroo court, solely because a
judge has a feeling that we may be guilty. The

Favors draft decision

The Sham
by Martin Guggenheim

pertinent

“courts” during the Salem witch trials “knew”
that the defendants were possessed of evil spirits.
The present system, which some would belittle, assures us that that period will not reoccur.
The personal attack on the individuals of the
Student Judiciary and Senate cannot be answered.
One either believes in the integrity of the representatives he elects or he does not. No amount
of discussion can meet moral criticism of individuals. I firmly believe that the people involved
acted properly and commendably. Perhaps if those
who would disput this statement were concerned
enough to take an active part in the affairs of
their school, they might form a different opinion
about the students who serve them.

Five

the

NLF.

Saigon is under a martial law
whose effect, again, will be to move
the apathetic to anti-government
action. Police check citizens’
passes after 5 p.m. and search
homes. Eighty thousand civilians
in the Mekong Delta need food,
2000 are dead, thousands more
wounded, and in villages like Can
Tho, thejc-all blame their condition on the United States, whose
blessed “superior firepower” supposedly directed at the NLF,
wound up directed at them. A
Marine officer in Hue, before his
men fired upon a building, told
the TV cameras that he didn’t
know who was inside, but they
were “considered" VC, whether
they were or not. In others words,
we regard the whole population

as hostile, and rightly so. They
arc.
How else could 2500 NLF soldiers enter Saigon without anyone

informing? How did 19 soldiers
enter the U. S. Embassy without
being stopped? The answer to
the last is that two Vietnamese
truck drivers who had top security clearance with the embassy
willingly drove them. Why has
“pacification," the sine qua non
of our war, been a dismal failure?
Because it treats the people, civilians, as the enemy. In the past,
excuses were offered for the dcs-

So that, in psychology, in the area of undergraduates, there is an undergraduate advisory committee which advises to the assistant chairman, who
then further advises to the chairman; at any level
a recommendation may be denied. In sociology,
there is an undergraduate committee which recommends to the faculty as a whole, who then by
a majority of 80 per cent must approve any recommendation. As long as departments remain
homogeneous, there is no problem.
Obviously, these systems make it quite difficult
to make mistakes, but at the same time it is quite
difficult to change already-made mistakes, or to
effect any radical change whatsoever. The Sociology
Department has allowed two students to sit on its
undergraduate committee, the ratio of that committee is seven faculty to two students, and even
with that, the committee only recommends to the
entire faculty. If a department is headed by men
as Dr. Horton, it is doomed to atavism.
There are very few professors in sociology talking about real changes. Most are given a structure,
and accept it happily—structures make it easy to
think, you’re told where to stop. How seriously, I
wonder, can professors be about adding student
input in decision-making when they do nothing to
change the power structure.
At our last meeting of the Undergraduate Committee, we (the students) mentioned that we cannot
tolerate losing such fine teachers as Bill Harrell
for non-teaching abilities. (Bill's contract was not
renewed, not because he is a poor teacher—he is
one of the very best—but because he hadn’t completed his PhD requirements within the required
time period.)
If we are to be involved in decisions to improve our education, we must be integrally involved in recruitment and promotion decisions of
faculty. Most, if not all, of the faculty at the meeting were in sympathy with our problem, but their
response was “see the tenure committee, we have
nothing to do with that.” Of course, that’s the very
point—have something to do with that.
They are so structured in their thinking that
it is impossible to combine the tenure and undergraduate committee—or at least to talk to the
tenure committee, even though you’re not a member. We lost two very fine teachers for next year
in sociology for what finally are bureaucratic rules.
Many of the faculty didn’t like doing what they did.
but they felt they “must.” If they didn’t, it would
have happened “upstairs.”
Now really, gentlemen, no one really gets
screwed by any rules. People get screwed by people
enacting rules. To put it simply, they didn't lose
anybody they didn’t want to ; they think they did,
they talk as if they did. But if they considered
what was happening as unfair, they could have protested. Of course, that may have required sacrifice.

truction of Northern cities such
as Vinh and Phu Li, or Ben Sue
in the South. Now we are reaching bottom. "It became necessary
to destroy the town to save it,”
said an Army major about Ben
Tre Feb. 7. That, as the world’s
most renowned philosophers Jean
What also has bothered me for quite a while
Paul Sartre and Bertand Russell is understanding how the most radical political
have indicated, is no different
activists can sometimes be the most conservative
from the Nazis’ policy and pracacademicians. This paradox has always frightened
tice in Lidice. Systematic destrucme and made me think that there is little hope.
tion of towns, crops, hospitals, For instance, there are many teachers in the department at this time who are poor, at best. There
and churches is genocide. “Anything that contributes to the will is no way to determine who the bad and good
of the enemy to resist is a valid are, without some evaluating procedure. The stutarget” reads a U. S. Air Force
dents especially are hurt if they get bad teachers.
bombing manual, according to This, obviously, is a primary problem for a curriculum planning committee.
Felix Greene.

This is written on Thursday
night and by today the situation
may have changed. As I write, reports from Khesanh look ugly for
the Americans. Five thousand
American Marines are surrounded
by 20,000 Vietnamese. Because of
topography it is difficult to fly
in supplies and reinforcements;
the latter is hardly available anyway. From our own perspective
there is no rationale, no justification fdr the deaths of 18,000
Americans, the wounding of 110,000. Ten thousand miles away in
a hostile land, can the hollow
rhetoric of “stopping aggression"
make sense to those 5000 Marines, or have we thoroughly dehumanized them so that “making
sense” no longer matters?

But when the course evaluating sheets offered
by the Student Senate were handed out to all
the teachers on campus, the Sociology Department
had the second poorest sincerity. When the students
hold a meeting for curriculum planning, we ask all
the professors to announce the time and place. I
We have so very far to go, one would think everybody would try his best.

The Spectrum's pages for

Editorials

&amp;

Opinions

It is the policy of The Spectrum to report the
news fully and impartially in the news pages,
to express the opinions of the newspaper only
in the editorial pages and to publish all sides

of important controversial issues.
Without

expression,

freedom of

expression

it

meemne lets."

�Th

Page Six

•

Computer may bring renown
Continued from Page 1
University staff will be available to remote users for technical

consultation and for discussion

puling Center is able to use the
Goodyear Computer via typewriter terminals connected by
telephone.
The terminal basically resem-

in the operation of the RCC
The program grew out of an
expressed need of other Sjate
University of New York schools.
“It’s a problem being faced by
most colleges in the system,” he
said. “They are in need of larger
and broader computing facilities
than currently exist for them, but
adequate expansion of these facilities tends to become economically prohibitive.”
The solution, he feels ,is to be
found at Buffalo. “Being a university center we have both the

computing resources and a large
staff to cope with this problem.”
Presently, the Ridge Lea Com-

any part has to be changed, all
the material must be re-pro-

grammed.

With the 6400, Mr. Hale said:
“The user will be able to monitor, observe, and change his program at any time. Presently he
has to come back two hours or
so later to pick up his results.”

Mr. Hale feels that the other
State University of New York
schools will use a relatively
small amount of computer time,
less than 10% of all available
time in the next few years. The
reason for this, he added, is that
most of them are smaller and
have less experience with computers.

‘&gt;98 BROADWAY

...

Wide use
Far -from having restricted
use, Mr. II le emphasized that
“people that (have a legitimate
for the &gt;1 machine for acanee(j
les are free ~ta rise
it.” This type of use would be
unsponsored, of no cost to the
academic community.
He also envisions wider use of
the computer than just for computer courses. For example, certain psychology courses, he feels,
will find it invaluable.

The Goodyear center is currently loaded with 550 hours per
month. The main limitation is its
ability to handle only one job
at a time. The 6400 will handle
200 requests at a time involving
seven different jobs. The computer can be expanded so that in

run

Question of

Capacity will be further increased by the use of data migra-

&amp;

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tion: Less used material would
be taken out of the machine and
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Democratic nomination. Of the two candidates whom
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The results were:
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2—30.2% Eugene McCarthy
Number of respondents: 711.

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•

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the week

Five hundred and five acres of land in North
Amherst are being considered for development for
the University community by an FSA committee.
Please comment on your response to these partial
uses of the land:
No
Yes

Greater capacity

BOULEVARD MALL

Barbara Thirtle, data processing
consultant, inspects test run at
remote input/output terminal
in Engineering Building.

Test

effect there will be two compu-

ters working simultaneously. This
would yield a multi-programmed

machine with double the capacity of the 6400.

RECORDS and
MUSICAL
INSTRUMENTS

fj

Tuesday, February 27, 1968

Spectrum

j

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8

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CENTER
Shoes Repaired While-U-Wait
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�*

i

lead to confusion and division.
2—Confusion and division will lead to INJUSTICE.
3—Have we not had enough injustice?
jj
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THE STUDENT POLITY
VOTE "NO” ON MARCH 1

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�campus releases...
Friday is the last day to resign from a course and receive a R
(resignation) on the transcript. Students may drop a course any
time prior to the final three weeks and receive a WP (withdrawal
but passing) or WF -(Wilharnwni hut failing! nn the transcript.
Geography majors will hold a Crab-In at 4 p.m. Thursday in Room
231, Norton Hall. A steering committee will be elected.
Anthropology majors will hold a general orientation meeting
4 to 6 p.m. Thursday in Room 335, Norton Hall. Discussion includes
lack of courses and quality of instruction.
"The Possibility and Unpopularity of Peace" will be the topic
of Kenneth E. Boulding, professor of economics at the University
of Michigan and president of the American Economics Association at
3:30 p.m. Friday in Room 148, Diefendorf Hall.
"Lucretius: Madness or Mission?" will be the topic of Professor
C. J. Classen of the Department of Classics, Technische Universitat
Berlin (Germany) at 5 p.m. tomorrow in Room 335, Norton Hall,
"Sterility, Fertility and Contraception" will be the topic of the
Continuing Medical Education Program tomorrow and Thursday.
For details and registration information, contact the associate dean
for Continuing Medical Education at 833-2729.
Irrelevance of Democracy, an Experimental College course taught
by Mr. John P. Jones, has moved to Room 266 Norton Hall. The course
is held at 8 p.m. Tuesdays
"Controlling the Police: The Courts, the Police, the Community"
will be the topic of an address by Dr. Jerome Skolnick at 8 p.m.
Thursday in the Millard Fillmore Room, Dr. Skolnick is associate
professor of Sociology at the University of Chicago and a consultant on the President’s Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders
and the Commission on Law Enforcement and the Administration of
Justice. The address is part of the symposium on “Civil Liberties and
Law Enforcement.”
Mr. Marvin M. Karpatkin will speak on “The War and Dissenting
Conscience” at 3 p.m. tomorrow in Room 231 Norton Hall. As part
of the symposium on “Civil Liberties and Law Enforcement,” Mr,
Karpatkin will answer questions pertaining to the new draft law.
At 8 p.m. tomorrow Mr. Herman Schwartz, professor of law at
the State University of Buffalo, will speak on “The Police and

Privacy.” His address will be given in the Millard Fillmore Room,
"Law Enforcement and Protest: the Right to Dissent" will be
the topic of an address at 8 p.m. tonight by Mr. Aryeh Neier as part
of the symposium on “Civil Liberties and Law Enforcement.” Mr,
Neier is currently the executive director of the New York Civil
Liberties Union. The address will take place in the Millard Fillmore
Room.

"Communications and the Mass Media" will be the topic of an
address by Mr. Leonard Zweig at 8 p.m. tomorrow. Mr. Zweig is
director of Special Communications Projects and lecturer in communications in the Faculty of Social Sciences and Administration.
The colloquium, sponsored by the speech Communications Department, will be held in Room 335 Norton Hall.
The American Israeli Club will sponsor a film, “Marriage in
Jewish Art,” at 8:30 p.m. Sunday. A Purim Carnival Evening at 8:30
p.m. March 17 will also be held. Both activities will take place in
Room 335 Norton Hall.
The Woman's Recreation Association will sponsor a Co-ed Volleyball Tournament at 7:30 p.m. tonight in Clark Gym. Saturday the
WRA will sponsor Co-ed Ice Skating at the Amherst Recreation Center. Buses will be provided and will leave at 7 p.m. and return at
10 p.m. There is a 50c admission charge and 75c charge for rental
of skates. Sign-up sheets are posted in the dorms and in Norton Hall.
All activities are for fee payers only.
Mr. Paul Goergen, physical therapist, Will speak on “Physical
Therapy and Its Practices,” at a meeting of the Undergraduate
Medical Society at 8 p.m. Thursday in Room 333 Norton Hall.
"Human Growth and Development at Home and Abroad" will
be the topic of Dr. Martin Hamberger at 4:15 p.m. Thursday in the

'Brain Patterning' needs volunteers
said Miss Jones, “you teach
An ambitious program that has greatly improved the child,”
other brain cells to take over the
needs
number
of
children
stubrain-injured
condition of a
function.”
dent volunteers.
The process, whose make up
The program, sponsored by the Community Aid Corps,
must double the fifty volunteers that are now working one—varies according- to the age of
the child, is repeated every day
hour a week in order to function as planned.
of the week
Titled “Brain Patterning," the

program was originated by the
Institute of Achievement of Human Potential. This clinic directs
parents of brain-injured children
on a therapy curriculum that
often proves beneficial to the
child’s ability to function normally.
Started 10 years ago, it was
initiated locally by CAC project
head Cindy Jones in September.
Three families provided one child

Opinions derived from a recent Washington anti-war mobilization will be the subject on the

National Educational Radio Wash
ington Forum.

The two-day rally was sponsored by a national group, Clergy
and Laymen Concerned About
Vietnam.

Dr. Seymour Melman of Columbia University will be featured
on the half-hour program.

—

FU

Self Defense Instruction

—

classes held every Thurs,
night 8-10 p.m. in
Norton

Union, room 231

“The U. S. is guilty,” Dr, Melman charges, “of gross and continual violations of the laws of
warfare.” He will discuss these
charge and attempt to support

/

854-1850

dissent.
The program will be braodcast
10:30 p.m. tonight and rebroadcast at 2 p.m. Friday on
WBFO, 88.7 me on the FM dial.

$t£le®rest
UNIVERSITY PLAZA

CAC's first attempt has fared
One child worked with
would hardly speak in the beginning. The CAG volunteers, through
the techniques of brain patterning, had the child communicating
with a far larger vocabulary and
recently he was placed in school.
To Miss Jones it was a good example of “what we’re trying to
take the strain off the famdo
ily and the neighbors.”
well.

—

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The CAC has enrolled two more
children for this semester and a
problem will arise if new volunteers aren’t available to handle
the extra burden of exercises.
Students are asked to work just
one hour a week and can choose
the day and the time (10 a.m., 12
and 3 p.m.). The program is conducted in the child’s home, the
CAC providing bus fare both

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Success of the treatment also
fluctuates. “In some cases,” said
Miss Jones, “the child becomes
completely normal. In others, the
program doesn’t work; too many
brain cells are injured.

them with evidence.

PROFESSOR WONG, Imlrgttor

852-9830

Also featured on the program
will be Yale University Chaplain
William Sloan Coffin, recently indicted with Dr. Benjamin Spock
and others for counseling men
to evade the draft. Rev. Coffin
will discuss his up coming trial,
his opposition to the war and the
role of the church in relation to

at

Aruthur Schlesinger Jr., famed historian and former presidential
assistant, will speak Feb. 28 at Kleinhans Music Hall at 7 p.m.
Mr. Schlesinger will speak on “Illusion and Reality in Foreign
Affairs.” His talk is being sponsored by the D’Youville Student Government, and will be open to the public at a charge of $2,00.
Mr. Schlesinger, presently an Albert Schweitzer professor of
humanities at City University of New York, won his second Pulitzer
Prize for A Thousand Days, a book about the late President Kennedy.

-

each for separate individual daily
help sessions.
According to Miss Jones, each
session requires three to five people. “There’s a lot of physical
therapy involved. We’re bringing
the child back to his childhood
stages by making him crawl, creep
or walk. Most problems you find
with brain-injured children is
that they missed part of their
childhood. “By retraining the

WBFO to air protest program

Millard Fillmore Room.

Karate Rung

Page Seven

The Spectrum

Tuesday, February 27, 1968

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�Th

Page Eight

•

Tuesday, February 27, 1968

Spectrum

Albee and Olson among notables participating in festival
by Lori Pendryi

Music,”

Spectrum Entertainment Coordinator

Albright Knox,
-

8:30

p.m.

Culture is coming to Buffalo , . . or at least making an MARCH 12: Buffalo Philharmonic
Orchestra, Kleinhans Music
appearance. The second Buffalo Festival of the Arts Today,
p.m.
Hall,
featuring a major art exhibition and nearly 50 special events MARCH8:30
14: Jazz groups headed
arts,
the
latest
trends
the
be
held
March
in
will
2
surveying
by Charles Lloyd, time and
through 17.

Other events of the festival range from jazz concerts
to the premiere of two one-act plays by Edward Albee; from
lectures on architecture to poetry readings; from dance exhibitions to the premiere of a major “underground” film.
The aim of the Festival is to
provide a broad survey of current developments in all the arts
painting, music, sculpture,

—

drama, films, dance, poetry and
literature. In 1965 the . first
festival was held and drew worldwide attention for its pioneering
in showing the latest avant-garde
trends.

Sponsorship is under The Buffalo Fine Arts Academy, the governing body of the AlbrightKnox, the Buffalo Philharmonic
Orchestra, the Studio Arena Theater, The State University of Buffalo, the State University College
at Buffalo and the New York
State Council on the Arts.

Art

"Plus by Minus: Today’s HalfCentury,” a comprehensive art
exhibition, will include over 300
works and will occupy 14 interior
galleries plus park areas surrounding the Albright-Knox gallery.
Highlighted by over 100 works
by Naum Gabo, the collection
will include works by two important contemporaries of his—Kasimir Malevich and El Lissitzyk.
The show will mark Gabo’s first
retrospective in the U. S. in 20
years.
Over 90 artists

will be represented and it will provide the
largest comprehensive representation of revolutionary Russian art.
It will also mark the first time
the interconnection of the Constructivists, the De Stijo and the
Bauhas groups has been shown in
the country.
Construction of several huge
environments commissioned for
the exhibition bean several
weeks ago. Members of the
French Groupe de Recherche
d’Art Visuel, the Yugoslav artists
Picelj and Richter, and the
Venezuelan Jesus Raphael Soto
all took part in the designing.
A number of large “minimal”
sculptures by Tony Smith, Ken-

neth Snelsno, Antoni Milkowski
and George Rickey will also be
on display.
Among contemporary U. S.
painters whose work will be on
exhibition are Larry Poons, Kenneth Noland, Ellsworth Kelly and
John Goodyear.
The art exhibition will be the
focal point.

Hall, Buff. State, 8:30 p.m.
MARCH 6: Charles Olson, A1
bright-Knox, 4:30 p.m.
MARCH 9: John Barth, “Menelaid,” Albright-Knox, 2:30 p.m.
Film;
MARCH 7: “The New York Diaries,” Premiere, AlbrightKnox, 8:30 p.m.

MARCH 3: Jazz Group headed by
Cecil Taylor, time and place to
be announced later.

MARCH 9: Jazz group headed by
the Ayler Brothers, time and
place to be announced later.
MARCH 10: Buffalo Philharmonic
Orchestra, Kleinhans Music
Hall.

MARCH 10: “Evenings For New

place to be announced later.
MARCH 17: Opera, by Pousseur,
Albright-Knox, 8:30 p.m.
Panel Discussions:
MARCH 7: Discussionon playwriting, Edward Albee, Alan
Schneider and Richard Barr
participating, Studio Arena,
4:30 p.m.

MARCH 8: “Stage Design,” Jo
Mielziner and Eugene Lee, participating, Studio Arena, 4:30
p.m.

Two

new plays by Pulitzer
Prize-winning playwright Edward

Albee will have their world premieres as part of the Festival.
Albee’s newest one-act plays,
“Box” and “Quotations from
Chairman Mao Tse-tung” will
open March 6 in the Studio
Arena Theater. The plays will be
performed daily except Monday,
throughout the Festival.
Selected to direct the Albee

Depends on the giant. Actually, some giants are just regular
kinds of guys. Except bigger.
And that can be an advantage.
How? Well, for one thing, you’ve got more going for
you. Take Ford Motor Company. A giant in an exciting
and vital business. Thinking giant thoughts. About the
profit opportunities in Mustang. Cougar. A city car for
the future.
Come to work for this giant and you’ll begin to think
like

one,

Because you’re dealing with bigger problems, the
consequences, of course, will be greater. Your responsibilities
heavier. That means your experience must be better—more
complete. And so, you’ll get the kind of opportunities only a

plays is Alan Schneider, who has
staged all the Albee plays thus
Virginia Woolf?” and “A Delicate

Balance.”
Albee, Schneider and Producer
Richard Barr will join in a panel
discussion on playwriting at the
Studio Arena March 7.

The following day “Stage Design” will be discussed by famed
designer Jo Mielziner and Eugene
Lee, designer for the Theater.

Readings
Three leading U. S. poets and
best-selling novelists will present
readings from their work.
Novelist John Barth, a member
of the faculty at this university,

will read “Menelaid.” It will be
the first reading of his new short
novel.
He is the author of “Giles Goat
Boy” and “The Sot-Weed Factor.” The reading will be held
March 9 in the Albright-Knox Art
Gallery.

Ginsberg coming
Poets

Louis Zukofsky, Allen
Ginsberg and Charles Olson will
also read from their works. Zukofsky, the leader of the objecti-

vist movement in U. S. poetry,
has exerted a continuing influence on young poets. Ginsberg,
perhaps the most well-known
among college circles, is the most
widely read controversial poet
since Whitman. Olson is the author of “Call Me Ishmael,” a
critical study of Melville.
Jonas Mekas, one of the leaders of the so-called “underground” cinema, will show his
latest film “The New York
Diaries.”

Mekas is a pioneer in the cinema movement and is best known
for “Guns of the Trees,” “The
Brig” and “Dog Star Man.” Of
the new film he said, “The New
York Diaries were shot during
the last three years
from summer 1965 to summer 1967. Almost every day I kept shooting
scenes close to my own life, the
surroundings, the weather, the
changing seasons.”
—

Concerts
A total of eight different musiranging from jazz
cal events
concerts to U. S. premiere of an
opera by Henri Pousseur, will
also be featured.

Because there's more to do, you’ll learn more. In more
areas. You may handle as many as three different assignments
in your first two years.
You’ll develop a talent for making hard-nosed, imagina-

tive decisions. And you’ll know how these decisions affect
the guts of the operation. At the grass roots. Because you’ll
have been there.
If you’d like to be a giant yourself, and you've got
better ideas in financial management, see the man from Ford
when he visits your campus. Or send your resume to Ford
Motor Company, College Recruiting Department
You and

giant can give.

Giants just naturally seem to attract top professionals.
Men that you'll be working with, and for. Financial management pros working hard to accelerate your advancement.

What’s it like
to manage money
for a giant?

New plays

Musical events scheduled are
three jazz concerts, two concerts
by the Philharmonic and three
"Evenings for New Music" presented by the State University of
Buffalo Center of the Creative
and Performing Arts.
The “Evenings for New Music”
include the Pousseur opera, a
concert of works by Harry Somers, Tadeusz Baird, Brock McElheran, Lukas Foss and Lejaren
and a concert of works by Carlos
Alsina and Jon Hassell among
others.
Jazz groups headed by Cecil
Taylor, the Ayler Brothers and
Charles Lloyd are scheduled for
performances.
The following schedule gives
all dates, places and starting

times.

Plays:

MARCH 6: “Box” and “Quotations from Chairman Mao Tsetung" premiere, Studio Arena
Theater, 8:30 p.m. daily except
Monday throughout Festival.
Readings;
MARCH 4: Louis Zukofsky, Albright-Knox Gallery, 8:30 p.m.
MARCH 5: Allen Ginsberg, Upton

—

1

think I'd manage quite well

�Th

Tuesday, February 27, 1968

•

Pag* Nina

Spectrum

the spectrum of

sports

Nowak nets 2

Bulls defeat Red Raiders, 76-73;
fresh trip Raider fresh, 96-92
by W. Scott Behrens
At%t.-Sports

Editor

It was a combination of individual efforts which brought
the University varsity basketball team their ninth victory
in 16 outings in NCAA competition. Saturday night the
Bulls conquered Colgate 76-73 in a game in which the Bulls
led most of the way.
The game was played in Memorial Auditorium,
The Red Raiders, now 9-14 for
the year, came back after a tenpoint deficit in the first half to
tie the game at 63-all with seven
minutes remaining. But a fine effort by football co-captain Rick
Wells broke open the game with
a beautiful feed into Doug Bernard who was under the basket for
an easy layup.

Wells scores
Wells also scored seven of his
last nine points in these last few
minutes of the game. He finished
the game making seven of seven
free throws and had seven assists
in the contest.
Buffalo forward Bob Nowak
led the Bulls’ offensive attack in
the first half as he scored all his
21 points in that period.
He finished the night with 9
for 21 from the field and made
all three of his free throws. Nowak stoll finished as the game’s
leading scorer.

Buffalo received the one-andone situation with only eight
minutes gone in the first half and
this proved to be where the Blue
and White beat the visitors.
Buffalo finished the game with
one less field goal than Colgate
but finished five ahead of them
at the 15-foot line.
Junior guard Joe Rutkowski
came off the bench and played a
fine game. He scored three of
five baskets attempted, but all
three were tallied when the Raiders were closing in on the Bulls.

Jekielek sparkles

Junior center John Jekielek
had a great defensive game. He
picked off 17 rebounds and held

his counterpart scoreless
Hhis two baskets came in the
first half on nifty tap-ins. "Jake”
jlayed the entire last 20 minutes.
“I’ve been feeling my oats for the
last couple of games and I feel
like I’m coming into my own,”
Jekielek said following the game.
When Nowak couldn’t hit in
the second half, senior forward
Doug Bernard took over for him
and scored 12 of his 17 points
during that 20-minute stanza.
Doug finished the night making
five of seven shots from the field
and seven of eight free throws.
Colgate played a man-for-man
defense most of the first half,
but with two and a half minutes
remaining they finished the half
with a zone. Buffalo led at the
half, 46-36.

UB uses zone

Brockport.
The Brockport contest was even
going into the final heavyweight
match. In this match, Paul Lang
lost by a decision and with it
Buffalo went down to defeat 15-

12.

Finish varsity careers
Saturday’s match against Rochester marked the final appearances of Gary Fowler and John

Misener.
Fowler (130) finished his varsity career by pinning his opponent, Misener (145) scored a
whopping 24 points in winning
his last match in a 24-9 decision.
Dale Wettlaufer (152) and Dan

The Baby Bulls, trailing at the
half 48-42, put a three quarter
court press on the visitors and
with three minutes remaining
pulled ahead to stay. Buffalo’s
Bob Moog kept pressure off in the
last couple of minutes by sinking
some one-and-one foul shots.
Buffalo had five players in the
double figures. Roger Kremblas
led the Bulls' attack with 22.
Mook finished the game with
19 points, 11 of those from the
15-foot line.
Phil Knapp had 17, Kenny Palen 13 and Terry Johnson 11.
The game’s scoring honors went BUFFALO
to Colgate, however. Nock ScacWell,
cia had 32 points for the contest. Eberle

Both squads travel

Jekielek
Nowak
Bernard
Rutkowski

Jump

ball

The Bulls registered their ninth
victory over a strong Colgate
team. An aggressive team effort in the second half turned
the tide for the Bulls.
BUFFALO

COLGATE
FG FT TP

2 7
3 0
2 2
9 3
5 7
3 1
1 1
0 4
0 0

11
6
6
21
17
7
4
4
0

FG FT TP

Giles
Caputo
Gee

Reid
Greenlaw

6 5 17
8 1 17
0 0 0
5 3 13
4 8 16
3 2 8
1 0 2
0 0 0
0 0 0

The Bulls’ freshman and varSchaefer
Culbart
Theit
sity squads will face highly favCoach Len Serfustini had the
Scherrer
Barrett
Bulls go into a 1-3-1 zone to atored Ithaca College tonight in a Shea
Franklin
doubleheader.
tempt to cut down on the numTotal.
25 26 76
Total.
26 21 73
ber of fouls being called. The
The box scores follow:
Scoro at halftime; Buffalo 46, Colgata 36.
zone was effective in one way
but ineffective in another.
It cut down the number of fouls
but couldn’t keep the Red Raiders from hitting on their outside
shots which enabled the visitors
to catch up.
More than 100 students Thursday witnessed one of the
Buffalo out-rebounded the Red
Raiders 60-42 and outshot them most exciting intramural basketball games ever played.
40.3%, making 25 of 62 from the
Alpha Sig Phi defeated Alpha Phi Omega, 4643, in overfield while Colgate made 26 of time.
This win by Alpha Sig placed them in a three-way tie
67 for 38.8%.
According to manager Francis with APO and AEPi for the lead in the Thursday 9:30 basketWelk, who is the Bulls’ chief ball league.
statistician, Bernard tied Nowak
All three teams posted 5-1 rec
could grab most of the rebounds.
with 11 rebounds for second place ords.
As big as the game was Tuesin that department.
The 8:30 league on Thursday day night, the Thursday night
was won by Tau Delta Rho. The
game was a giant.
“Rebels" had a relatively easy
While the rest of the teams in
time in winning their league since the league were finishing out
no other team could match their
their schedule Alpha Sig was
poised attack. Led by Pete Shulbattling APO to gain a tie for
man and Fuzzy Janoff they prothe league lead.
ceeded to roll over Phi Psi, Theta
Bulls’ basketballer Joe RutkowChi, and Sigma Alpha Mu.
ski was in a new role as referee
Walgate (Heavyweight) also
The SAMMY game proved to and found it almost as hard as
turned in stellar performances be
the sternest test for the blackPlaying.
in gaining pins in their matches. shirted Tau Delts. Although they
Most of the followers of the
Mike Watson (123), Brian Vanwon by 18 points, this was by no
other fraternities deserted their
denberg (137), Jerry Meissner means an indication of how close
respective teams to watch this
(160) and Harry Bell (177)
roundthe game was.
crucial match-up.
edout the scoring for the Bulls
Up until last week it appeared APO builds lead
as they won their matches by dethat AEPi would win still anAt the half Alpha Sig held a
cisions.
other fraternity league championslim one-point lead, 15-14.
Rochester’s lone points came ship. They had defeated Alpha Sig
However, at the beginning of
as Lee Mitchell pinned Buffalo’s
early in the season in a rugged
the second half APO jumped out
Gordie Alexander in their (167) contest that wasn’t decided
until to an eight-point lead as Rasey,
match. In the preliminary conthe last few minutes of the game.
Vesneske, Busch, Raden and Gitest the Baby Bulls trounced
Then Tuesday night a scrappy. achhi
displayed the same type of
Rochester’s frosh 31-3, 20 of APO team upset
year’s
last
ball that they had played earlier
these points came by way of champs,
38-29.
The difference in in the week against
forfeits.
AEPi. But
the game was at the foul line
with Wilbur and Naprokowski
where
APO
converted
20
25
of
4-1 tourney next
clearing the boards for Banach,
while AEPi made only 5 of 18.
Morelli and Kris, Alpha Sig was
Next on the agenda for the Giachhi stops Pohl
able to cut into the lead.
matmen is the 4-1 Intercollegiate
Both teams went into the game
With about ten seconds to go
Wrestling Tournament, being
sporting identical 4-0 records but
in the game, substitute John Koheld at Miami of Ohio March 8 APO
outhustled and outplayed vak threw in a ten-foot jumper
and 9.
AEPi in their bid to win the
from the side and Alpha Sig
Teams from New York, Penleague and the right to meet Tau
forced the game into overtime.
sylvania and Ohio are included
Belt, The APO forces were led
The three-minute overtime segin the competition.
by Jim Rasey, John Busch and A1 ment was unbelievable. Alpha Sig
Coach Gergley expressed “gratGiachhi.
controlled the tap and they were
itude for the fine student supGiachhi appeared to be key
content to work for the good shot.
port throughout the
season.” in this game as he kept AEPi’s
The ball was worked to Joe
More than 600 students attended
big center, Larry Pohl, off the
Morelli who drove for the basket
the Brockport match.
boards so that Rasey and Busch and was rewarded for his ef-

Matmen have good season
with better things to come
“It’s been a real good season
with better things to come.” This
is how coach Gerry Gergley
summed up his team’s efforts
this year, after posting a 30-5
victory over the University of
Rochester in the season’s finale.
“Considering our two close
losses, our 8-3 record after last
year’s record of 5-6 is a good
one.” One of the “close losses"
the coach was talking about occurred Wednesday as the matmen were defeated by favorite

The Bulls’ freshmen squad upended the Colgate frosh 96-92
Saturday afternoon in Clark Gym.
This was the Baby Bulls’ 11th victory against only four defeats.
Colgate’s frosh had only dropped
two games before meeting the
Bulls, one to Syracuse and the
other to Cornell.

Kremblat
Waxman
Moog
Knapp
Brunenaaui
Landargran
Pa Ian

Johnson
Totals

COLGATE

FROSH
FG FT TP

10 2 22
3 I 7
4 11 19
7 3 17
1 3 5
1 0 2
5 3 13
4 3 II

Ward
Scaccia

Ooapal
Conlay
Dziajma
Inbush

FROSH
FG FT TP

7
12
3
3
5
1
1
1

4
8
4
3
4
1
0
0

If

32
10
9

14
3

2
Pritchard
Sum'haltar
2
Krauthaar ,002

35 26 96

Total.

Scoro at halftimo; Colgate 40,

33 26 ?2

U.B. 42

Three frets tied for first in B-Ball

forts with a three-point play. The
lead went up to four points as
APO was forced into fouling
John Kovak, whose earlier heroics had kept Alpha Sig in the

contest.
He now converted the free
throw which applied the pressure
to APO.

Alpha Sig freezes
APO couldn’t score and they
committed another foul which
Len Banach was able to cash in

on.
With little time remaining and
down by five points, APO worked
the ball to reliable John Busch
who responded with a big twopointer. Busch was fouled in the
act of shooting but was not able
to make the free throw.
With less than 25 seconds left
in the contest, Alpha Sig’s Curt
Wilbur put in another free-throw
to increase the lead to five. Alpha
Sig was willing to give up another basket and then proceeded
to cat up the remaining ten seconds by freezing the ball.
For Alpha Sig and AEPi there
was second life; for APO there
was dejection. The playoffs between these three teams will be
something to watch, if they are
anything like the last two grueling league clashes.

Tickets on sale

Tickets are now on sale for the
Finger Lakes Hockey League
playoffs to be held at the Amherst Recreation Arena.
Tickets «re $1.50 and can be
purchased at the ticket office in
Clark Gym anytime between 9
and 5 p.m.

�Pag* Tan

Th

•

Spectrum

Tuesday, February 27,

1968

Choice '68 presidential primary to poll student opinion
Choice ’68, a collegiate presidential primary sponsored by
Time magazine, will come to Buffalo April 24. The poll will involve 2500 colleges and approxi-matcly five million students.
Sponsored on this campus by
the Elections Committee of the
Student Senate, campaigns will
be opened to any organizations
that want to support a candidate.
Campaign procedures will be according to regular campus election rules. Campaigners will be
allowed to hang posters, hold
rallies and disseminate information to popularize their candidate,
Ballots will be given out by
Choice ’68. They will be written
by the Board of Directors who
met in Washington Feb. 10 to 13
to make final preparations. Eleven representatives from different
regions of the country will decide which candidates and which

referenda will be placed on the
ballot.

native solutions,” and indicated
that a simple “yes or no” vote
The students have already in- would fail to register accurately
dicated that not only self-declared the profundity of pro- and anticandidates may be on the ballot, war sentiments on campus.
Currently-there is one political
but also, many in addition whom
the board feels students would group on campus supporting a
consider for the presidency. The presidential candidate.
poll has received endorsement
from Robert Kennedy, Edward
Brooke, Charles H. Percy, Eugene
McCarthy, former Vice President
Richard Nixon and others.

The University Coalition for
McCarthy considers gaining sup-

Other candidate
supporting
groups have not become active on
-

campus yet.
port for the anti-Johnson candidate to be “one of the more conAll registered students showing
structive ways that we can op- a validated I.D. card will hi alpose the. war and provide some—lowed to vote. Results of tfre pott
impetus for a change in governwill be reported by
and
ment policy.”
made available to aIf media.

Discrimation charged at CSU
FORT COLLINS, Colo. (CPS)—In the wake of complaints by Negro
students at Colorado State University here about discrimination at the school
and in the city, the Colorado Civil Rights Commission has announced it will
hold a fact-finding hearing in Fort Collins to investigate the charges.

Issues of students concern
the Vietnam war, urban problems, civil rights and the draft—are expected to appear on the
ballot.
—

Last week, when the decision to hold the hearing was announced, the
editor of the CSU Collegian was twice hanged in effigy for his support of
the black students and criticism of the administration's failure to act on their

Seeking alternatives
Strobe Talbott, from Yale University and a member of the
Choice ’68 board, feels that the
Vietnam referendum must be

complaints.

The editor of the paper, Evan Green, called for the resignation of CSU
President William E. Morgan last week. In a signed editorial, he said: "The
President's unwillingness to provide effective channels of communication with
his students, particularly in the case of the Afro-Americans, leads me to
believe that the problems of running this University have outgrown Dr.
Morgan's ability to recognize them and deal with them."

“properly phrased towards alter-

Most of the complaints of black students at CSU have been about
discrimination in off-campus housing. According to Mr. Green, they have
asked the University for help in ending discrimination, but have been given
no cooperation.

$&gt;£Ccuifit

Dave Williams, a senior and co-chairman of the CSU Commission on
Racial and Ethnic Equality, said: "President Morgan is turning a deaf ear
to the problems of racial discriminations at CSU."

Oth

QM.
oh

kwhs...

Come meet Miss Cozzi,
Revlon Beauty Consultant
at University Bookstore
on

(!aiii|&gt;iis, Thursday and Friday,
Fch. 29 and Mar. 1

She’ll show you how any girl with a brain in
her head can become a beauty now. Come,
let her show you the real right way to apply
'Private Eyelashes’ in 3 wiggy lengths. (It’s
simple!) See all the new eye-makeups (no
more jaded eyes). A full curriculum of lipsticks and nail enamels. 'Natural Wonder’
treatment and prettyface makeups (the first
absolutely oil-free makeups ever!) As well as

Pre-period tablet helps relieve that 2 to 7 pound
monthly “water weight” gain that can cause
pain, nervousness, irritability.
Discover Pamprin* the medical formula that helps
relieve your normal periodic weight gain. You see,
in those 4 to 7 days before your period, your body
begins to retain extra water weight. You look puffy,
feel stuffy. The extra Weight puts pressure on
delicate tissue causing simple headaches, irritability,

Pippin
24 tac'et.

nervousness.

Pamprin gently relieves your body of the extra
water.., puffy look ... stuffy feeling. Works before
and during your period.
Get Pamprin now and be ready to break your
&lt;•
date with monthly water build-up!

Pamprih
Now at the drug section of your store

�Tuesday, February

27, 1968

Th

•

Spectrum

Pag*

Taylor Law to be tested if state employes strike
I

/

The new
ALBANY, N. Y. (DPI)
Taylor Law, which bans strikes
by public employee)?, faces a
work stoppage March 14 by some
—

1

teW
130^)0(1
The Civil Service Employees
Association (CSEA) has threatened that only “the prospect of
favorable action by the state legislature on a more equitable pay
increase" could halt a “work stoppage by the state employees.”
The CSEA, claiming to represent

about 90% of the state work
force, has demanded a 20%
across-the-board hike, with a
minimum of a $1000 raise for all
employees. Governor Rockefeller’soffered an 8% pay boost.
Strikes by New York City sanitationmen and teachers since the
Taylor Law replaced CondonWadlin Act Sept. 1 have forced
state leaders to appoint a total
of four committees to study

ened labor mediator Theodore
Kheel has taken almost the same
position as Sen. Jacob K. Javits
in recommending the state makearbitration mandatory as a last
resort in public employe disputes.

Injunction proposed
Mr. Kheel, who has asked to
study the law by Assembly Speaker Anthony Travia, proposed
strike injunctions similar to those

CLASSIFIED

/

changing the law. Battle-tough-

in the federal Taft-Hartley Law.
Gov, Rockefeller, speaking at
New York University, said he
would wait until his committee
ommendation on amending Taylor to include mandatory arbitration.
The Taylor Law leaves employes with “no redress but to
violate the law,” Mr. Kheel said,
and CSEA indicated it had
reached that point.

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WANTED
PART TIME SALES HELP, hours at your convenience, weekly car expense paid. Plus
commission. Call 874-3399, 9-11 daily.
TALENT badly needed for chanty event,
March 9
Coffee House Effect
Call
Brian 876-6948 or Alvin 835-4629.
VISITORS - The Gilded Edge, 3193 Bailey.
Handcrafted jewelry and unusual gifts.
—

Wed.-Sat.

PHARMACY

SENIOR

apprentice

or

time, top pay, apply in person. Colvin
Eggerf Pharmacy, Colvin Eggerf Plaza or
Park Plaza Pharmacy, 2754 Harlem Road.

SIAM' 5 COLLECTIONS wanted
U
foreign; large or small; high prices
836-5582.
SILVER DOLLARS wanted - Will pay
for any date, any condition, any
tity. Call Sam 836-5582.

S. or

paid.
$1.25

quan-

PERSONAL

PAUL

G. would

like to go out with Robin
next 17 months

S. sometime within the
if she can fit it in.

L°t rcaSusMar.5.
d

FOR

PLEASANT ROOM available, Delaware and
Stratford Road, kitchen privileges, home
atmosphere. 877-5991, 876-2754, or 873-

SHALOM! For

from the Jewish Bible
day or night.

gems

call 875-4265

MISCELLANEOUS
VACATION
In the sunny paradise of the
VIRGIN ISLANDS. One week of camping

adventure with plenty of son, sand, water
and peace, for $165 (all inclusive). If at
all interested call Dave 837-9186 or Seth
836-1173.

Call 831-2979.
45 is coming to Banat, March 22.
professional work
PORTRAITS by Thom
at student rates, call 832-3505 after 4 p.m.
N A T I O N A L OPEN RUSH: February 26March I.
NATIONAL OPEN RUSH

-

COLT

the Standard Oil Company (New Jersey) people and look into wide-scope careers
in oils, chemicals, plastics, cryogenics, minerals. With our 300 worldwide affiliates
we're uniquely decentralized permitting prompt recognition of your work. Advancement can be intercompany and intracompany, worldwide and domestic, with
opportunity enough to last a lifetime Make an appointment with your placement
officer now to see a representative of these operating affiliates.
S«e

—

1

Would you like to start with No. 1? Humble Oil &amp; Refining Company supplies
more
petroleum energy than any other U. S. oil company.
We're literally No. 1
America s Leading Energy Company
with wide-scope career opportunities for
people in every discipline, at every degree level. All phases of oil and gas exploration, production, refining, transportation, marketing and management
as
well as oil and chemical research.

LOST

Man's gold ring, yellow
$50 REWARD
glass setting. Lost in Norton Union. Call
839 4289.
BLACK-RIMMED prescription sun glasses
. reward. 836-1474.
in case .
—

...

THE SPECTRUM
printed by

Partners' Press, Inc.

—

—

—

.

4

levels)
degree

El*v*n

ABGOTT &amp; SMITH PRINTING
1881 Kenmore Ave. (at Military)
Phone 876-2284

Humble Oil &amp; Refining Compnny
Would you like to start with one of the leading chemical companies in the U.S.? In
Enjay Chemical Company's decentralized manufacturing, marketing and business
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resources and the environment of a small company. You will have a chance to develop a management as
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in
the international operations of our affiliate, Esso Chemical, worldwide.

Enjoy Chemical Company

Would

BOCCE
PIZZA

TF 3-1345

Whatsit like
to work
for a giant?

you like to

start with one of the world's largest research companies? Esso
Research and Engineering solves worldwide problems for all
affiliates of Standard
Oil Company (New Jersey). Wide opportunities for basic and exploratory
research

and development of products and processes, engineering
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Esso Production Research Company does analysis and design for the worldwide
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Equal opportunity employers.

Depends on the giant. If the
giant happens to be Ford Motor
Company, it can be a distinct
advantage. See your placement
director and make an appointment to see the man from Ford
when he is here on:
March S

I'd

lifcf

•*

�Page

The Spectrum

Twelve

Tuesday, February 27, 1968

April draft is second highest
WASHINGTON (UPD—The Defense Department issued a draft call last week for
48,000 men in April, the second highest
in the Vietnam war and the first involving Marines in two years.
At the same time, it was disclosed that

visit is to discuss the entire question of
military manpower with Gen. William C.
Westmoreland.
The Joint Chiefs’ mobilization plan,
-which they have submitted to Defense
&gt;ecrel

the Joint Chiefs of Staff have proposed
ordering nearly 50.000 National Guardsmen and Reservists to active duty if
President Johnson decides to increase the
authorized troop level of 525,000 men in

informed sources said had not been recommended to the White House, would—if
approved—mean the first callup of reserve ground troops since the war began.
The heavy draft call for April was
necessitated, Pentagon officials said, by
the need to replace soldiers and Marines
who were inducted during the big manpower buildup for Vietnam in late 1964
and early 1965 and who are now returning
to civilian life.
The proposal by the Joint Chiefs for
an “across the board” mobilzation of
reserves included National Guardsmen as
well as Army, Marine, Navy and Air Force
reservists, informed sources said.

Vietnam.
The Texas White House said President
Johnson had not received a formal mobilization plan and that “certainly no decision has been reached."

Awaits report
The President presumably is awaiting
from Gen. Earle G. Wheeler,
chairman of the Joint Chiefs who is in
Vietnam. One purpose of Gen. Wheeler’s
a report

Washington

*

•

*

•

Law to

tallahassee

curb LSD

richmond

Kheel asks Taylor revisions
—

Kheel said in making public the report
at a news conference.
Under Mr. Kheel's plan, strikes would
be prevented by an injunction "where the
public health and safety arc imperiled.”
In other cases, the mediator said, “a strike
might well take place, as strikes, in fact,
have taken place.”

—UPI Telephoto

new yorK

compiled from our wire service s by Madeline Levine

Labor Mediator
NEW YORK (UPI)
Theodore W. Kheel proposed a revision of
I he Taylor Law to prevent strikes by
public employees by providing for arbitration in cases where collective bargaining failed to reach an agreement.
In a report submitted to Assembly
Speaker Anthony J. Travia, Mr. Kheel
said bargaining under the present law was
unfair to workers. Mr. Travia had asked
him to suggest revisions in the law which
went into effect last September.
“The Taylor Law is no different from
the Cond.on-Wadlin Law because final authority rests with the employer," Mr.

—i

lamara

Present weakness
A weakness of the present law, Mr.
Kheel said, was in its attempt to provide
something akin to collective bargaining
while putting all the power in the hands
of the employers.
Mr. Kheel proposed a three-stage system
of bargaining which would not favor either
party but still would help prevent strikes
by public employees.
The first stage would be normal collective bragaining. If negotiations broke
down, an injunction could be issued to
prevent a strike. If collective bargaining
still failed to produce an agreement during the cooling-off period, “arbitration
can be imposed by the legislature within
limited bounds reflecting . . , the stage
reached in the bargaining period.”
Mr. Kheel emphasized that arbitration
should be resorted to only “when all
other attempts have failed.”

Asst. Attorney General Fred M. Vinson
(R) told a House Health Subcommittee
that a taw punishing the young hippie
possessing or using LSD would help the
government get at the dealer.
George Silver, Deputy Asst. Secretary,
Health Education and Welfare, also endorsed the legislation.

Tonkin incident rages on
WASHINGTON (UPI)—The Senate Foreign Relations Committee claims it has
a secret Navy message suggesting that the
two U.S. destroyers involved in the 1964
Tonkin Gulf incident were trying to decoy
Communist patrol boats away from a South

Vietnamese bombardment mission when
attacked.
A spokesman for the committee said
that its staff report on the incident included a classified Navy cable imploying
that the mission of the destroyers, the
Maddox and the Turner Joy, was to lure
Red vessels away electronically while
South Vietnamese torpedo boats shelled
radar stations on two North Vietnamese
islands in the Gulf,
Sen. Wayne L. Morse (D., Ore.) told
the Senate that the Madox was a “spy
ship” that provoked a North Vietnamese
attack on it and its sister ship on the
night of Aug. 4, 1964. He disputed Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara’s
contention that the ships were on a
routine, non-hostile patrol.

Fulbright heads investigation

The Foreign Relations Committee, headed by Sen. J. William Fulbright (D., Ark.),
is investigating the circumstances surrounding the Tonkin incident. It was this
attack which led President Johnson to

request

and receive overwhelming congressional approval of a resolution authorizing him to take any measures he deemed
necessary to pursue the Vietnam war effort. One administration spokesman has
called the resolution a “functional declaration of war.”

Sen. Fulbright says there is serious
doubt whether the Maddox and Turner
Joy actually were attacked by North Vietnamese torpedo boats the night of Aug.
4, and that Secretary McNamara has with
held secret information supporting this

possibility.

"Monstrous" says McNamara

Mr. McNamara says Sen. Fulbright’s
position is totally wrong, and called it
“monstrous” for anyone to suggest the
incident was provoked by the administration as an excuse to start bombing.
Sen. Wayne Morse (D., Ore.) believes
the two destroyers probably were attacked, But he says the United States
was at fault in the incident because it
was a “provocateur” in the Gulf.
The commander of the two U. S. do
stroyers, Capt. John J. Herrick, however,
said he has no doubt whatever that his
ships were attacked by North Vietnamese
patrol boats and that his mission was

routine.

Floridians protest at capital
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (UPI)—An integrated crowd of more than 1000 students
and professors paraded a “veto Kirk” banner to the state Capitol late last week to
support striking teachers in their battle
against the Florida governor.

Gov. Claude Kirk was 100 miles away
dedicating a new courthouse when the
1000 to 1200 persons converged on the
statehouse to demand another special session of the legislature to resolve the school
crisis that is now in its second week.

Phil Constans, executive secretary of

the Florida Education Association (FEA).
admitted that he had misinformed teach
ers about the amount of money that was

budgeted for education.
Mr. Constans said that the budget con
tained $158.8 million for public schools and
that he had earlier told striking teachers
that only $126 million had been appropri-

ated.
FEA officials said the announcement
would not lead teachers to return to work,
but state officials said many of those wlw

walked out in the nation’s first statewide
teacher strike were returning to their jobs.

11. Rap Brown calls
RICHMOND, Va. (UPI) —A federal judge
ruled in a heavily guarded courtroom late
last week that the black power leader
H. Rap Brown had violated the conditions of his $10,000 bond and ordered him
to pay the bond “forthwith.”
"I will not alter my ruling one iota,"
said Federal Judge Robert R. Merhige Jr.
in response to a defense request. “He
may have fooled me once, but he won't
fool me twice.”
The ruling didn’t seem to bother Brown,
who is chairman of the Student NonViolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC).

Souvenir

A souvenir doll with the slogan "cheer
up" adorns the helmet of this fighting
U.S. Marine in Hue.

He immediately issued a statement calling
for a Negro revolution so “our race shall

live.”

Riots urged
'For every Orangeburg there must be

for

riots

10 Detroits,” Brown said, referring
riots of last summer and the deaths ot
three Negro students in a recent clash
with police at Orangeburg, S. C.
"There must be 10 dead racist cops
for every Negro slain by a white policeman, Brown declared.

Brown has vowed not to eat or drink
until released from his “political prisoner
status, or until he is dead.

Judge Merhige ordered Brown returne
to New Orleans in federal custody an
&lt;■
he rejected a request- that a detainer
placed on Brown for Virginia in caae
posted bond in Louisiana. Brown mus P
$100,000 bond in New Orleans or rema
in jail pending the outcome of two

federal

charges.

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                    <text>by Marlene Koiuchowski
Assistant

Action on

constitution
delayed by

Campus

Editor

Senators postponed for one week their
decision to submit to general referendum
a proposed constitution and by-laws which
would nullify the present system of student representation.
The postponement was made at a Wednesday night Student Senate meeting
which was delayed until 8 p.m. when the
required quorum of 13 senators was
reached. When the Senate moved to a
committee of the wl
cuss reorganization,

only eight senators

remained.
Miss Geri Goldstein felt that the delay
was necessary “for the sake of having a
thinking quorum. It is impossible to act
under the total tension of being tied to

Senate

our

chairs,” she said.

Regulations for the Student Association

general election scheduled tentatively for
March 26 and 27 were adopted,
Mr. Stewart Edelstein, speaking for the

fee r 1&lt;56?
ur."

o. C'3

Student Senate Committee on Reorganthe
ization, submitted their proposal of
new constitution and by-laws. He recomto
mended that “this proposal be brought
referendum next Thursday and Friday.’

Under the new structure, Mr. Edelstein
exxplained, all legislation of tlie polity
supercedes that of the Coordinating Council except on matters of financial allocations to student organizations.

"Major

over-reaction"

Mr Barry Tellman challenged that the
proposal is “a major over-reaction to lack

of interest this year." He questioned if
students will realize the new responsibility. “Put the system in a framework of
reality—which is that students do not care
about student government,” he said.
“Students need, in essence, a big
shock,” Mr. Edelstein said. "This University is going to be great only when faculty and students take the initiative and
accept responsibility.”

out that
student polity. She pointed
the
idea of
to
objected
Miss Goldstein
As an
“most students have no interest.
example there are only two committee
members working on Course and Teacher
Evaluation and we practically had to drag
them in.”
Miss Diane Cohen stressed that reorganization has "to start somewhere.” She
more “faith
felt that there was a need for
in the student body.”
“Every student can’t be expected to
When an
have a position on each issue.

comes up tor legislation, ine
involved will vote,” Mr. Edelstein said.

issue

people

the
One observer, Diane Levy, found
new system to be “good.”
“It may not start out very big,” she said,
counts,
“but once students see their vote
they’ll be at the polity meetings.”
At the close of the meeting the Senate
The
made no decision on the referendum.
issue will be on the agenda at next Wednesday’s meeting.

The Spectrum 0

-UPI Telephoto

Orangeburg Tragedy
Truth about events which culminated in the fatal shootings
of three students Feb. 3 is revealed.

Friday, February 23, 1968

State University of New York at Buffalo

Vol. 18, No.

ed with the heavy shot used by
deer-hunters, as well as carbine
rifles, told the press the wind
was blowing away from the students so that they couldn’t use
tear-gas.

Lazay says

he can't remember

‘Big Brother.’ I’m against having
to give out any information that
the University does not need to

conduct administrative business.”
Mr, Nevin included among these
ethnic gackground, sex, religion
and political activities.
“The University needs certain

to the Selective Service System.
He said

that anyone who may
have burnt or destroyed his draft

card would subsequently not be

able to provide his registration

“Why should the University enforce the Selective
Service System 9 he asked.

number

”

student
space.

data

to save

machine

“Remember, men under 18 and
over 45 don’t have draft cards.
In order to include a question
draft card numbers they
on
Please turn to

Page 3

�THa Spectrum

Page Two

Friday, February 23, 1968

Priceless art treasures
destroyed in Vietnam

Dick Gregor\ to speak

SA plans Civil Liberties seminar
by Michael Lebhar

Staff Reporter
A symposium on “Civil LiberSpectrum

ated

by the Student Association, American Civil Liberties Union. and assistant, vice-president
Lawrence Smith, will be conducted next week
According to Robert Weiner, organizer and chairman of the program, the various lectures are intended "to give the student body
a greater insight on the problems
of civil liberties, specifically those
which directly affect them, such
as the draft, passive resistance,
and civil disobedience.”

evening Mr. Arych
Neier will speak on the topic:
Tuesday

“Law Enforcement and Protest:
The Right to Dissent." Mr. Neier,
a graduate of Cornell University,
is presently Executive Director
of the New York Civil Liberties
Union. He previously worked for

the American Civil Liberties Un
ion as a Field Development Officer.
Monday night, Dick Gregory,
comedian and black power advocate will speak in the Fillmore

Room on “The Negro and Civil
Rights,” Admission is free. Stu
dents wishing to speak with Mr.
Gregory will have an opportunity

Civil Liberties Union.
Mr, Herman Schwartz, a graduate of Harvard University Law

WASHINGTON (&lt;UPI&gt;)
Priceless cultural treasures have
been destroyed in the fierce battle in Hue, says an American
art ex
tnam
10 recem ly visi
at the State University of Buffalo, will be featured speaker
The expert, Werner Knop, spent two months last fall
Wednesday night.
in the ancient imperial city as representative of an interThe topic of Mr. Schwartz’s national commission established by U.S., French and West
speech will be “The Police and German museums and cultural organizations to protect Hue’s
Privacy,” an area with which Mr.
temples and palaces.
Schwartz is very familiar,
Since North Vietnamese forces
Emotional impact
Mr. Schwartz has been spokes"

to meet him in the Dorothy Haas
Lounge from 3:30 p.m. Monday
afternoon

Mr. Gregory, a Negro comedian,
has become increasingly active
in civil rights work and anti-war
protests. He ran as a write-in
candidate in Chicago s mayoral
elections in April. Later in 1967,
he and other Negro leaders led
the Louisville, Kentucky open
housing strike. In November of
last year he went on a hunger
strike to protest the Vietnam war.

ble
A collection of books is defined by the library as no less
than 15 or no more than 25 books
on a single topic or limited field.
They may be hard or soft cov
ered.
All entries must be accompanied by a paper of no more than
1500 words explaining when, how
and why these books were col-

FOR ALL

COLLEGE
COURSES

’

~

'

‘At 3 p.m. Wednesday, room
231, Norton Hall, Mr. Marvin M.
Karpatkin will speak on “The
War and Dissenting Conscience.”
Mr. Karpatkin will then answer

any questions pertaining to the
new draft law.
Currently in private law prac
lice in New York City, Mr. Karpatkin is a member of the board
of both the New York and American Civil Liberties Unions and
is chairman of the equality com
mittce of the National American

Skolnick’s
ture there will be a panel discussion concerning Dr. Skolnick’s
toijic. The participants will be:
Mr. Richard Lipsitz, a member of
the ACLU, now practicing law in
Buffalo; Mr. Thomas Blair, Deputy Commissioner of Police in
Buffalo; and Mr. Robert O’Neil,
assistant to President Martin

March 29.

Meyerson.

Judging will lake place April
9. All applicants are invited to
Applieations are available at
the candy counter or Browsing

All lectures, except Mr. Karpatkin’s, will be held in the Fillmore Room, Norton Hall and will
begin at 8 p.m. A question and
answer period will follow each

Library, room 255 Norton Hall.

lecture.

attend.

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the destruction of Hue was “a
tragic military and politaical mis-

take.”
“It wasn’t necessary

to blow

week.
Five of the soldiers who had
come to attend the vigil were
arrested by military police on the

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“And the Vietnamese will know
that American bombs and shells
did the job. I fear this is going
to be a major liability to the
United States.”
Knop said that in addition to
the architectural treasures of its
ancient palaces and temples, the
or was
a
imperial city is
storehouse of invaluable Chinese
and Vietnamese statues, vases,
wood carvings, mosaic tiles, jade
objects, bronzes, porcelains, carved furniture, sculptured altars
and Buddhas.
—

—

Will he despair of the preservation project in light of what
has happened in the past three
weeks?
“Of course not,” he replied.
“It is more important than ever
that the international commission
proceed with plans for restoring
the imperial city when peace
comes and when men can get
back to building instead of de-

stroying.”

scene. Two of those arrested—
Pvt. Steven Kline and Pfc. Robert
Tatar—had knelt down in front
of the chapel. They were arrested after they refused to obey a
direct order to get up. According
to an army spokesman, the cases

of the five are now being inves-

tigated.

The withdrawal of permission

to hold the vigil was apparently

a result of the fact that some of
the organizers of it handed out
leaflets in nearby Columbia, S.C.,
inviting civilians to attend the
chapel session.
According to a friend of some

of the soldiers, the leaflets said,
“We are soldiers who—like millions of other Americans
have
doubts about the war in Vietnam.
It’s time we made those doubts
known. We’d like to invite those
who share our concern to join us
in chapel one at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday for an hour of meditation.'
Tuesday’s incident was not the
first time that peace activities
have become an issue at Fort
Jackson. Capt, Howard Levy was
convicted there last year for refusing to train paramedical
troops who were being prepared
for service in Vietnam, and is
—

now serving a three-year sentence
at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.

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FORT JACKSON, S.C. (CPS)—
Soldiers who were barred from
holding a peace vigil in one of
the chapels at this large army
training camp last week have
said they will try to hold one
next week instead.
A civilian acquaintance of some
of the soldiers involved said
“they intended this to be a continuing thing.”
Between 20 and 30 of the soldiers gathered at Fort Jackson’s
chapel one Tuesday evening with
the intention of spending an hour
inside in meditation as a means
of expressing their doubts about

told them that Fort
authorities had withdrawn permission for the session. The group

P .t.

“Destruction of the imperial
city will have the same emotional
impact on the Vietnamese that

GIs barred from peace vigil

DiROSE

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"Tragic mistakes"
Knop said in an interview that

They were met at the chapel
door by Martin Blumsack, a 25year-old Chicagoan who was one
of the organizers of the vigil.

—

Different

to drive out the Communists.

the war.

Student Bundles
Shirts
Expert Cleaning

Delightfully

seized Hue’s Citadel three weeks

ago, Knop has seen his hopes
literally go up in smoke. U.S.
planes, artillery, tanks and warships have been blasting the imperial city to rubble in an effort

nick, Associate Professor of So- the place apart,” he said. Knop
ciology at the University of Chisaid the decision to recapture the
cago. Dr Skolnick’s topic is Citadel by frontal assault ap“Controlling the Police: The parently was based on a “political
Courts, the Police and the Comjudgement” that it was bad for
munity.”
South Vietnamese morale and
Dr, Skolnick is a consultant on U.S. prestige to allow the Viet
both the President’s Advisory Cong flag to jcontinue flying over
Commission on Civil Disorders the city dupng a long siege.
and the Commission on Law EnBut whoever made that decision
forcement and Administration of
gravely miscalculated the feelings
Justice.
of the Vietnamese people, Knop
He is the author of the book,
said.
“Justice without Trial: Law Enforcement in a Democratic So“The Vietnamese are very emociety,” for which he was awarded
tional about Hue, which was the
the C. Wright Mills Prize.
seat of their monarchs when VietFollowing Dr,
lec-

lected. The applicant must list
10 books which he hopes to add
to the collection, of which fivt;
must be annotated.
A bibliography of the collection, including the cost of each
book must accompany the essay.
The essay, the list of 10 other
books aqd the bibliography must
be handed in by March 27.
Applications, which can be ob
tained in Room 255, are due in
the Browsing Library March 13.
The book collection itself is
due in the Browsing Library

BUFFALO
TEXTBOOK

—

.

--

1

REVIEWS

'

man for the ACLU before Congressional and New York State
Legislative committees on “Wire
Tapping and Eavesdropping.”
He is a member of the Board
of Directors of the New York
Civil Liberties Union and is a special consultant on Police-Community Relations to the President’s National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders.
The concluding lecture of the
program will be presented Thursday evening by Dr. Jerome Skol-

Library to hold contest
Student book collectors will
have the opportunity to display
their collections during the
Browsing Library’s sixth annual
contest. The contest is sponsored
to encourage those who have col
lections to participate and share
the pleasurable aspects of read
ing and collecting books.
All full time undergraduates
under 25 years of age are eligi-

'

773 Niagara Falls Blvd.
south of Sheridan Dr.
largest selection in W.N.Y.

40 Capen Blvd. 836-4540

Karate Kung

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classes held every Thurs.
night 8-10 p.m. in
—

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PROFESSOR WONO, liwtnictor

852-9830

/

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�a i,

0-r

Friday, February 23, 1968

Charges

Th

•

Pig&lt; Thre*

Spictrum

CIA implication

Lane: Garrison is only protection
mencan

again?

in

Special to the Spectrum

Mark Lane, critic of the Warren Report and author of
Rush to Judgement, charged last week that “this country is
moving toward a totalitarian society.”
In speeches at the Universities
of Wisconsin and Washington,
Lane, who is working with New
Orleans attorney Jim Garrison to
uncover a conspiracy involved in

the

assassination

of President

Kennedy, pointed to governmental suppression of all evidence indicating that Lee Harvey Oswald
was not the assassin.
He proposed that the CIA
planned and carried out the as-

sassination because of their opposition to President Kennedy’s
moderate policies on Cuba and
Vietnam. “Any American President who attempts a sane foreign policy is in an excellent position to get himself shot at on a
clear, sunny afternoon,” Lane
said “President Johnson has made
no attempt to establish such a

policy , . . Jim Garrison is the
only man in America today standing between the American people and a totalitarian state.”

Oswald: FBI informer?
Lane’s theory is that Lee Harvey Oswald was a paid informer
for the FBI and took no part in
the assassination itself. He contends that Oswald had informed
the FBI that there would be an
attempt made on the President’s
life in Dallas, but the FBI in turn
never informed President Kennedy,
According to Lane, this
view is heavily supported by evidence collected by Jim Garrison's
office.

Continued from Page 1
about which any competent journalist would try to collect as
much evidence as he could before
filing a story. They are not unimportant, as shown by the controversy they have aroused. Yet,
even if resolved one way or
the other, do they explain what
has been going on in Orangeburg?
are other questions that
the Orangeburg shootthey are of a kind that
readily researched in a
two or three-day visit to a town
that looks and feels like an armed
camp. Some of them:

There
bear on
ings, but
can’t be

To what extent is Orangeburg a segregated community?
•

Several residents said that the
bowling alley, which was the target of student integration efforts
early last week, was really a symbol of a widespread pattern of
discrimination i n Orangeburg.
They cited the city hospital, the
movie theaters, the schools and
the news media as the most discriminatory institutions. '
•

Were “black power mili-

tants” responsible for the student demonstrations? One report,
unconfirmed, is that the Orange-

burg SNCC representative, Cleveland Sellers, opposed both the
demonstration at the bowling alley Thursday and the demonstration on campus Thursday
night. (At this writing Sellers
is still in the state penitentiary
in Columbia, S.C. on $50,000
bond).

Educator) quality questioned
What part was played by
the dissatisfaction of students
with the kind of education offered at S.C. State in contributing to their frustration? Last year
they held large demonstrations
and were about to march on the
state capitoi to protest the fact
that some young members of the
•

Oswald case, citing television
specials on the asassination and
the difficulty he had in publishing his book, which attacked the
conclusions of the Warren Commission. One of his chief criticisms of the report was that the
commission was set up to find
evidence to support a preconceived notion of the assassination. For example, he pointed out
that there were six panels, five
of which concentrated on the
backgrounds and activities of Oswald and Jack Ruby and one
which dealt with Presidential security. “I woud have created a

seventh panel,” Lane said. “Its
job would have been to find out
who killed the President.”

Single bullet theory hit

Lane attacked the mass media
for covering up the facts in the

South College riots...
&amp;

faculty weren’t being rehired.

These are all important questions, and deserve the kind of
research that hasn’t been made.
But most important of all is a
question that defies a pat answer: how will Orangeburg affect
the* thinking of people in this
country?

There is little doubt Orangeburg will convince many black

people who have been

opposed

to violent methods that, at the
very least, they should arm them-

selves for self portection, A coed at the University of South
Carolina who is a friend of several students at S.C. State said

after Thursday’s shootings: They
(the S.C. State students) are coming back armed.”

What about white Americans?
Presumbaly most of them will
see Orangeburg as another black
riot. That’s how most of the early
press reports described it.

Also, under fire was the conclusion reached by the commission
on the number and source of the
bullets fired. To Lane, the theory that a single bullet killed the
President and wounded Governor

John Connolly, accepted by the
commission, would have to be a
“magic bullet theory” if supported by films taken by Abraham
Zapruder. Describing the course
of this bullet, Lane jeered at the
impossibilty of such an occur-

ence. Furthermore, he said that
of the 90 witnesses called before
the commission (although 500
claimed to have seen the shots),
58 felt that the shots did hot
come from the Texas Book Depository at all, but from behind
“the grassy knoll.” Lane attacked Johnson’s order to have
the autopsy reports locked up
until the year 2039 and the commission’s inclusion in the report
of such irrelevant items as data
on Ruby’s mother’s teeth.
Lane promised to continue
working to uncover evidence, despite the threats on his life that

he has received.

Continued from Page 1

would have to specially program
the computer

The Task Force is due to present its final system in detail by
the end of March. Pre-registra
tion would take place in May and
registration by telephone and in
person in Sept. On this matter
Nevin expressed objeptions over
the data form requiring the local
address of the student. “Come
early September you might not
know where you’re living.”
The two student representatives
have also been successful in having a user’s manual made up for
students to explain the new regisThe

purpose is

"When

Ken

nedy died, a lot of things died
with him. The United States government is now marked by con-

tinuous lies.”

Complaints roll

tration system.

ns

in

...

to prevent little confusion in using the new methods.
In the checks and balance system that now exists, Mr. Nevin
realizes he is expressing one half
of the University’s student voice
on the final registration formula
that is implemented. He is aware
that his recommendations might
not be truly representative of the
student body. Mr. Nevin favored
some sort of referendum or open
forum to get more student opinion.

dateline news, Feb.
WASHINGTON—Sen. J. William Fulbright doubts that two U. S.
destroyers were attacked in the Gulf of Tonkin on the night of Aug.
4, 1964, but he acknowledges he will never be able to prove it.
After two days of bitter public exchanges with Defense SecWednesday the
retary Robert S. McNamara, Fulbright made
Senate Foreign Relations Committee intends td pursue its investiga
tion of the fateful naval incident.

SYRACUSE, N. Y.—Syracuse University Chancellor William P,
Tolley called Wednesday night for the resignation of Gen. Lewis B.
Hershey, director of Selective Service.
Declaring that Hershey was “living in the world of Henry
Ford and Thomas Edison,” Talley said "There are times when the
seeds of the nation
the graduate students
should be sacrificed,
but this is not one of those times.”
Tolley especially criticized Hershey’s proposed revamping of
graduate student deferments from serving in the armed forces.
—

—

MIAMI—Gov. Claude Kirk, in a face-to-face confrontation in
chilly Marina Stadium, Wednesday night urged 6,000 of Florida's
striking teachers to return to their classes.
They refused.
The meeting climaxed the third day of a walkout by some
24,057 teachers in 66 counties in protest against a “totally inadequate"

education

budget passed by

the

legislature.

ALBANY, N. Y.—The riot training of the New York Stale police
has advanced to the point where they can have 100 troopers “on any
street in the state in an hour,” according to Superintendent William E. Kirwan.
Kirwan, testifying at a hearing of legislative fiscal committees
said the force’s riot trained “troops" are "very well prepared (or
any civil disorders.”
A number of troopers have received special training “and are
as good at being snipers as the rioters are,” KirWan said.
“We have also trained a number of scuba divers for riot control, you never know when we’ll be called on to combat infiltration through the sewers," he said.
WASHINGTON —Youthful

anti-war

demonstrators twice inter-

rupted a mock trial of world Communism with protests against bombing of North Vietnamese cities and destruction of South Vietnamese
villages.
An unshaven man leaped from his seat at the rear of the Hall
of Nations at Georgetown University, forced his way 20 (eel to a
college coed and lore from her hand a placard protesting bombing
of the cities.

“And how many people have the Viet

killed?” he yelled

campus releases...
The Graduate Student Association has been forced to freeze the
Emergency Loan Fund account due to bad debts. This account
will remain frozen until further notice.
Merce Cunningham will instruct tomorrow's Master Class (Intermediate) in Clark Gym from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. It is limited to 40
dance students.
Anyone interested should contact Billie Kirpich
at 831 2941.
Dr. J.H.B. Kempertnan will speak “On the Optimal Transmisson
of Information through a Semicontinuous Noisy Channel” at 4 p.m.
today in Room 15, 4244 Ridgelea Hd. This Statistics Colloquium is
open to the public.
Anonym, the new literary magazine, invites poetry, fiction,
criticism, and other original literary works, as well as students for
staff positions.
Students should address all correspondence to Anonym, care of
the Department of English, Annex B. Staff meetings are
held every
Tuesday at 11 a.m. in Trailer 9.
The Hiking and Climbing Club will explore Zoar Valley Sunday.
Members going on the trip should meet in front of Norton Hall at 8
p.m. There will be no meeting tonight
The Coalition for McCarthy will meet in Room 231, Norton Hall,
March 1. Richard Lipsitz will be the speaker.

THE SPECTRUM
printed by

Partners' Press, Inc.
ABGOTT &amp; SMITH PRINTING
Kenmore Ave. Cat Military)
Phone 876-2284

1881

WE NEED
an aggressive, imaginative, OnCampus

He noted that the Placement
Office was willing to discuss the
situation with interested student
groups. “The administration isn’t
trying to snow-plow the students
—they’re willing to listen.”

Cong

making threatening gestures.

God's Love Revealed
“God so loved the world, that He
Kave His only begotten son, that
whosoever believelh in Him should
rtol perish, hut have everlasting
life*”
—John 3:16

Airline Sales

Repre-

sentative desiring part lime
employment during the sessions and full-employment during the summer.
REQUIRED; Good class standing, and minimum of two years
remaining of matriculation. If
you are willing to work the
benefits are salary plus commissions; and full summer

employment.
Please Call

Mr. Cass

Between 10 AM and 5 PM

632-3000

�Friday, February 23, 1968

Tht Spectrum

P»9« Four

Present and-or accounted for?
Apathy has always been a problem on large university
campuses, and the State University of Buffalo has had more
than its share. The latest chapter of this apathetic narrative was written Wednesday night when members of the
Student Senate gathered for their weekly meeting at 7 p.m.
There was no quorum until 8 p.m. when a thirteenth senator
appeared.
The injury is compounded when we consider the issues
on the agenda: election rules, student government reorganization, and the question of draft deferments.

£
T-'~.

By 7:30 p.m., 11 senators were present. Five had previously asked to be excused from Wednesday’s meeting,
one of which has asked repeatedly in the past. Seven others
decided not to show. A series of telephone calls were unsuccessful in bringing in more senators, but two wandered in
by 8 p.m. providing the necessary quorum.
Two more appeared by 9 p.m., but by 9:30 another
left to play pinochle. By 10 p.m. enough had departed so
that the previously held quorum no longer existed.
One senator, contacted by phone, said he wasn’t coming because he didn’t like the proposed reorganization and
in addition, he was “too tired.”
We’re all tired, senator. Tired of seeing too few students willing to take an active part in their own affairs.
Tired of watching senators spend hours on insignificant matters and then failing to show up when important issues arise.
It’s beginning to look as though the proposed reorganization for student government is the only alternative. If
enough students are interested, they’ll show up. If not, then
nothing need be done, for no one will care anyway.
Congratulations to those senators who couldn’t come
Wednesday night. You’re doing a wonderful job as representatives of your student constituency. You represent
them well, for they are just as apathetic.
Interested persons observing Wednesday’s meeting, or
fiasco, if you like, could be counted on one hand. Included
in that counting are Miss Dorothy Haas, student coordinator,
who takes the time to find out what students are doing, and
a Spectrum reporter.
Rest well, senators. You will need all your energy to
bring out an insoucient student body to vote for you in the
coming elections.

Wallace mirrors too many
“Can a former truck driver who is married to a former
dimestore clerk and who is the son of a dirt farmer be
elected President of the United States?”
That’s the line former Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace has used to boast that he sprang from the common folk,
and that’s the way he has launched his campaign for President on the American Independent Party ticket.
Gov. Wallace, and everything he stands for, should be
repugnant to all Americans, even the “common folk.”
Virtually all political observers agree that Mr. Wallace will never occupy the White House, but they are not
agreed on the effects that the Wallace candidacy will have
on the Presidential campaign picture.
Some analysts believe that Wallace could precipitate
an electoral deadlock, giving him a unique bargaining position. More observers, however, believe that Wallace will
draw votes from the Republican candidate especially if
Nixon or Reagai receive the nomiantion—and clear the way
for four more 'ears of Lyndon Johnson.
One columnist summed it up well when he said: “Mr.
Wallace’s candidacy will simply split the anti-Johnson vote
and enable him to win, even though only a minority of
the electorate votes for him.”
Prospects for any kind of a viable choice in this Presi
dential election are exceptionally grim. Wallace is a “spoil
er” in more ways than one.
But what is most incredible about the Wallace candi
dacy is that he may well chalk up as much as a third of
the votes in November. This points only too clearly to the
fact that too many Americans favor segregation, the return
of the poll tax, and use of “all the military ability we have,
including air and naval power" (but excluding nuclear weapons) to win in Vietnam.
Mr. Wallace, in his bid for the Presidency, may do
more damage to this country than even the race riots
which, incidentally, he would quell with “30,000 troops
standing on the streets, two feet apart and with two-foot
—

—

long bayonets.”

The Alabama Journal, which opposes Mr

Wallace,

wrote an excellent summary of the campaign:
“This is not the kind of campaign that wins national
elections. But unhappily, it is the kind of campaign which
sets class against class, race against race, people against government, working man against intellectual, the deprived
against the middle class—and blurs our vision of the common goals which all men of goodwill seek.”

t

m
sugar

from

Readers
writings

’

men

rags

iany lollzclaij
As hundreds of young Americans flee the country or are illegally drafted because of their political
beliefs, we are reminded of the tactics of the dictatorship in Greece.
Reprinted below are excerpts from a report on
political prisoners in Greece submitted by Amnesty
International to the Council of Europe last month,
based on the reports of an investigating team sent

to Greece early in January.
The Council, a kind of parliament of ‘free’ (both
NATO and non-NATO) Western countries, voted—as a result of this report—Jan, 3 to exclude Greece
from membership in the Council unless it restored
parliamentary democracy in one year.
Except for an essay in I.F. Stone’s Weekly, both
the report and Council decision have been virtually
unreported in the U.S. press.
284 prisoners were supposed to have been released under the special Christmas amnesty, but
the report indicates that many were simply transferred to the prison islands of Deros and Yaros.
The report also says there were 2777 prisoners
detained without trial on these bleak islands at the
end of January, in addition to numerous others
held without trial in prisons and police stations
throughout Greece.
“It is believed that of these detained some 500
may have been active or potentially active Communists. The remainder cannot be described as
‘Communists’ in any accepted European sense of
the word, and large numbers of them are old and
infirm, having been arretsed on security files prepared in many cases 20 years ago, . . . The prisoners
come from all walks of life and include parliamentarians, professional people, intellectuals, and artists,”

The

Widespread use of torture was reported.
International delegation took testimony
from 16 persons who had been tortured and received
evidence about more than 30 others still in prison.
The standard method is ‘falanga’; “The prisoner
is tied to a bench and the soles of his feet are
beaten with a stick or pipe. Between beatings the
prisoner is made to run around a bench under a
heavy rain of blows. . . . Common methods accompanying ‘falanga’ are: pouring water down the
mouth and nose while the prisoner is screaming
with pain: putting Tide soap in his eyes, nose and
Amensty

mouth. . ,
"Numerous incidents of sexually-oriented torture were reported.”
Other techniques reported include: rubbing pepper on sensitive areas, putting out live cigarettes on
various parts of the body, and the use of electric

shock.

"Many informants who have undergone torture
consider that the non-physical methods were more
difficult to bear. . . . One informant (intentionally
moved to a cell within earshot of other prisoners
being tortured) said that listening to the cries of
others was worse than undergoing the torture—one wanted to run in and be beaten rather than
listen to the sufferings of another. It is reported
that Mikis Theodorakis, the composer, who was
never physically tortured, suffered a nervous collapse under this method. . .
"The Security Police and the Military Police
are unrestricted today in Greece. Since, in Mr.
Pattakos’ words, 'the law sleeps,' the police may
arrest anyone, in any place, at any time, with no
obligation to charge him or inform anyone of his
arrest. . . . Those who have particularly suffered
at the hands of the security forces are the young
people, those who are not known abroad, and those
believed to be of the left.”
This is the same country where, 20 years ago,
the Truman Doctrine launched the U.S. on a policy
of policing and maintaining a “free world,"

Criticizes 'one day' morality
To the Editor

Why does the “Bounce for Beats" and other similar charitable activities of fraternities and sororities bother me? Don't I want to cure Heart Disease,

Birth Defects, Cancer, Psoriasis, and other plagues?
Am I some kind of moral low life?
It’s the hypocrisy that bugs me; the self-righteous one day a year morality that grates my sensibility; the stupidity of private charity when sufficient government research subsidies could eradicate disease overnight; the selfishness of curing
America’s sick and to hell with the rest of the

world; the blindness to the other far greater suffering in the world (starvation, napalm) or around
the corner in the black ghetto of Buffalo.
Donald Blank.

John Stewart Mills

on war

To the Editor:
John Stewart Mills once said this about war:
“War is an ugly thing, but not the ugliest thing.
The decayed and degraded state of moral and
patriotic feeling which thinks nothing worth a war
A man who has nothing which he
is worse.
cares about more than his personal safety is a
miserable creature who has no chance of being free,
unless made and kept so by the exertions of better
men than himself.”
...

C. C. S.
every
The Spectrum is published twice-weekly
Tuesday and Friday
during the regular academic
the State University of New York at Buffalo,
3435 Main Street, Buffalo. New York 14214. Offices
are located at 355 Norton Hall. Average Circulation:
—

—

year at
15,500.

Editor-in Chief—MICHAEL L. D'AMICO
Managing Editor—RICHARD R. HAYNES
Asst. Managing Editor—RICHARD SCHWAB
Business Manager—SAMUEL A, POWAZEK
Advertising Manager—DAVID E. FOX
Robert Woodruff
Campus
Sports
Margaret Anderson
Asst.
W. Scott Behrens
...

Asst.

City

Marlene Kozuchowski

Daniel Lasser
Peter Simon
Feature Barry C. Holtzclaw

Asst.
Asst.

Ronald Ellsworth

Layout
David L. Sheedy
Asst.
John Trigg
Copy
Judi Riveff
VACANT
Asst
Photography
David Yates

Asst.

.Carol

Goodson

Promotion l« Circulation
Lori Pendrys
Director Murray Richman
Financial Advisor Edward Dale
Faculty Advisor William R. Greiner

Entertainment

The Spectrum is a member of the United States Student Press Association and the Associated Collegiate
Press. The Spectrum is served by: United Press Inter
national. Collegiate Press Service. Associated Collegiate
Press Service, Gannett News Service, and the Los
Angeles Times Syndicate.
Represented for national advertising by National Educational Advertising Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave.,
New York. N. Y.
Republication of all news dispatches is forbidden without the express consent of the editor in-chief. Rights of
republication of all other matter herein are also reserved.
Second class postage paid at Buffalo, New Yortc.
Editorial policy is determined by the EdItor-in-Chief.

�Th

Friday, February 23, 1968

A time 'to stand for freedom'

Pa«« Fiv«

Sptcfrum

•

By Interlandi

BELOW OLYMPUS

T he

To the Editor:

gfURIp

by steese

When a nation commits her human and material

resources to a war, contradictions inherent in its
basic institutions, which go unnoticed in peacetime, come to the surface. Thus, poor whites and
ghetto blacks are shipped off to do the fighting,
while corporations reap unusual profits by produc
ing weapons of genocide. Working people are the
hardest hit by a regressive 10% surtax, housewives
cannot cope with soaring prices, aiid even token
poverty programs are emasculated. A government
which was thought to be generously honest, tells
us that “if you expect a government official to
tell you the truth then you’re stupid” (Arthur
Sylvester, Asistant Secretary of Defense for Public
Affairs). Words that had a distinct meaning are
redefined so that “escalation” becomes a means
to peace, and the North Vietnamese’s moderate
support of the revolutionary struggle in the south
is termed “aggression.” A nation that considers
itself free and attempts to export “freedom" to all
reaches of the globe, itself turns out to be unfree
as its exploits and represses the blacks, the workers, the students, and the dissenters who are
struggling to establish a free, rational, and just

aatrrZ!*

K IWfrTPt'NCE.NT

FAR 7

~lf

Since bounding Barry Holtzclaw, one of the
other so called columnists in this newspaper, had

/(-5

scene win
leave
le pol
weel
what limited competence shows Some sparkle
I
faint and twinkling though it usually is
thought 1 would return the “compliment” and
trod merrily forward into his ground.
(Grammatic Censor: You can't use trod. It is
past tense.)
(Speling Specalast; Yes, of tred.)
—

—

WRATH (Wildly Rebelloius Artistic Temperament Headquarters): Fools, it matters not what
Paltry words are used, down with tenses, up with
ART!
COPS (Conservative, Old, Pragmatic Steese):
Shut the hell up. (If I listened to you damn people,
this column would never get done.)
I am convinced that the United States political
system is unworkable and doomed. Perhaps not
a new theory; but I, I have proof. Our system is
(supposedly) based on the ability of the individual
to make sensible effective judgements about things,
right? Have you ever, O best beloved, attempted to
park in a parking lot on this campus when the
snow has covered up the lines? Babble, Babble,

■x

society.

What are the results of this attempted exporta
tion?
In Vietnam, “democracy” is a process wherein
a man who claims Hitler is his hero is maintained
by rigged elections. “Political freedom” is in fact
a tiny group of absentee landlords, supported by
military personnel, who comprise the 5% of the
population which controls the remaining 95%. “Economic stability” is displayed by the tripling of food
prices in the last week, and the dependence of
what was previously a major world exporter of rice
upon the U.S. for its food supply. “Pacification”
is a term covering the most ruthless subjugation
of the Vietnamese people in strategic hamlets and
concentration camps, after they have endured such
horrors as napalm, fragmentation bombs, defolia-

tion, and destruction of their crops. The Benedict
Arnolds who have fought against the Vietnamese
people with the Japansese, the French, and now the
Americans, are said to be the patriots. “Victory”
in Vietnam is revealed by the resignation of the
head of the pacification program following its
admitted failure, as well as the “demoralization”
and “frustration” of the National Liberation Front
which is demonstrated in its attacks on most of
the provincial capitals and large cities.
What are the effects of this?
The last two weeks have demonstrated beyond
a doubt that the people of Vietnam are not only
committed to struggling against American control
of their land, but also that they possess the strength
and courage to do just that. We should not deceive
ourselves in this: the Vietnamese people will repel
the Americans, and justly so. The suffering they
endure and the sacrifices they make in order to
gain their true freedom are the direct result of
their commitment against the Americanization of
Vietnam, Similarly, the hatred, antagonism, and
repression which is directed against those of us
at home who oppose the war, is inflicted for precisely the same reason: we are also fighting the
system which makes the genocidal Vietnam war
necessary. This system is not about to change
itself. In short, there is no avoiding the conclusion
that *11 of us are suffering at the hands of America
for the same reasons. It is time for us to stand for
freedom together, including the American troops
who more explicitly are compelled to live this
very same horror.
As heroic Vietnam moves to
victory, we are inspired to extend the struggle.
Jim Hanson
William Simons
Robert Cohen
Carl Radner

Regrets inattention to exhibit
To th*

Editor;

Our compliments on the well-guarded photography exhibit, (boasting no less than three armed
security police at any one time) and its fine
portrayal of America and Americans, as only the
eye of a camera can see it.
Our only regret is that the photographs did
not receive as much attention as does the typically
underdeveloped, overexposed, miniskirted co-ed at
the State University of Buffalo. Can we face the
black and white of our lives or de we prefer a
“. .
. lighter shade of pale .
.?”
.

Babble.

'j}ffBRlM]ToiQ,n&amp;,ur&gt;

me s

"That's what they say about a third

party—it attracts

weirdos!"

—

HP

£

gentle reader?)

by Linda Laufer

In medieval times, when witches cast spells, there was
a handsome prince who traveled the world in search of
adventure. This prince was known as H.P. among the
Knights of the Central Order, a group of knight errant.
This organization met whenever three or more knights
happened to wander into the same neighborhood. Although
their meetings were rather sporadic, they did have a summer
convention every four years. Each member made certain
that he attended the convention since it was costly to miss it.
At these conventions, the group

compared experiences, told stories
and feasted for a week. The next
most important business was the

election of officials

—

from the

Knight of Highest Distinction to
the Apprentice Knights or
Knights of No Distinction. Other
activities included banishing unworthy knights and if necessary,
amending their constitution.
provided
Their constitution
that they:
1. uphold chivalry;
2. write down all their adventures and observations;
3. keep damsels in distress;
4. and various other activities.
Excluding the other activities
and the damsels, their most important task was to write down
their opinions or comments
about

the

world.

Of

all

the

Knights of the Central Order,
H.P, became the most famous for
upholding all the traditions of
the order.
H P. was the son of a Knight
of High Distinction, who never
was elected to the top position.
Following in the footsteps of his
father, H P. became a Knight of
High

Distinction. However.

HP,

soon surpassed his father, who
had long since died from zealously upholding section III of the
constitution. HP. was elected

Quotes

Knight of Highest Distinction, a
position which he kept for the
prescribed 12 years and then relinquished to another deserving
fellow. He then was given back
his previous title.
But who cares about this medie
val character? Aren't there more
significant and pressing prob
lems in the world than a hand
some prince and his commentaries?
It’s not that H P. himself is
so important, but his spirit
the spirit of keeping records and
opinions and bringing to the people a viewpoint. Perhaps H P's
adventures are not important it
taken at face value, but there is
something beneath his armor.
Since H P. is a spirit, he can
also see the present, so not all
which comes from his writings
are ancient tales. As a spirit he
exists now and can offer opinions
about the modern world.
So, exactly what is H P ? He’s
a knight, a spirit, an opinion, an
idea. HP. is intangible. He’s
anything he wants to be; he
can do anything he wants to do
and can do it whenever he wants.
He’s not restricted by any bounds
to write about current events be
cause as a spirit he can write
—

about anything.

in the news

BIRMINGHAM, Ala.
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr„ telling a
cheering crowd that its members must march with him to Washington
to “save America.”
“I America doesn’t use its riches to bridge the gulf between the
rich and the poor, America is going to hell.”
—

Michigan Gov. George Romney, attack
MANCHESTER, N. H.
ing the campaign statements of former Vice President Richard M
Nixon of his opponent in the New Hampshire presidential primary.
“Sadly, he evades suggesting what to do about our present dilemma in Vietnam. He only offers more of the same. It is truly ironic
that Mr. Nixon has become a me-too candidate on Vietnam."
—

not
Having created my own credibility gap
I will sec it I can’t make some
even sideways?
sense about something. I can’t understand what is
wrong with me. 1 was my usual grouchy, nasty self
when I got up this morning. I guess I should never
chase Excedrin
(we are using them up before
switching back to plain aspirin on orders of Nurse
Steese)
with straight tea while reading the
Burgher.
I took the Exeedrin, right? And was going to
chase it with the tea. But the tea is too hot to
drink! Picture coming along nicely? I am sitting
there with these two exeedrin in the back of my
throat and a cup of fresh tea in front of me and
I have this choice between third degree burns of
the throat of gagging on slowly melting Exeedrin.
Or at least that is what I originally thought. It
occurs to me now that perhaps the Exeedrin went
down and the Burgher stuck in my throat. Hmmm,
Happy 11:20 to everybody. (Research is unable
to identify it as AM or PM. Sorry.)
Required reading for all students suffering
from paranois because of political, drug or other
reasons is an article, in Playboy no less, entitled
well about that subject at
“Spies on Campus”
least. It is in the last issue and the school in
question is
Brockport State.
brace yourself
As the article points out, Brockport doesn’t really
have much of a reputation as a really wild radical
swinging school.
On the other foot if one examines the situation
at our own campus, i.c. our friendly relationships
I will
with the local police, the common council
not capitalize it, thank you
and various other
similarly sympathetic individuals and groups
one
has to wonder at the fact that no one has ever
admitted to or named, anybody on this campus,
as representing any of the obvious agencies. Without wishing to attract undue attention to myself
(I do so hate hassles) it occurs to me that if those
with suspicions would come forward, quietly, it
might be possible in someway to get confirmation
and positively identify some of the people who are
drawing down cash for keeping tabs on all us
poor peons.
Of course there may be none at all, and we
may very possibly safely conclude that the probability is very low. As low perhaps as something
as ridiculous as (Quick, what’s the world record
for as’s [don't miss that apostrophe Mr. Abgolt]
in one sentence?) claiming that it is necessary to
destroy a town to save it from the enemy???? And
a Hue we go.
We now have a coffeehouse on campus in the
basement of Goodyear, which is open until 11:30,
I think. My wife and I,went down last week to hear
a young lady named Sandy Rhodes and generally
look things over. We rather enjoyed her. We did
not enjoy the lack of lea or hot chocolate on the
menu nor the fact that both toasted bagel and
toasted danish arrived at the same temperature
that the soup in the Rathskeller usually seems to
tepid at best, and cooling rapidly.
be
Enough of this lexical nightmare Watch out
for surance agents! (as or in).
—

Bob and Mike

Writers: Please be brief. Letters should not exceed
300 words. All letters must be signed and the address
and telephone number of the writer must be included. Positive verification of authorship will be made
before a letter is printed.
Letters wifi be kept in strict confidence.
The Spectrum will use initials or pen name, if
requested. But anonymous letters are never used.
The Spectrum reserves the right to edit or delete
material submitted for publication, but the intent of
letters will not be changed.

People lose all control. They lose all perspective.
I can understand the fear of having the other guy
open his door into the side of your car, but damn,
does everybody have to leave just enough room so
that the doors can’t possible hit each other when
opened completely?
which turns out to be just
enuogh space to allow one of the old MG's or a
Volkswagen to fit in the resulting gap, but nothing
larger. Everybody knows that it, is possible for
certain types of clods to take up two parking spaces
through sheer boorishness, but this ”ability”(?)
truly blossoms only when the lines are covered
with snow. There is one dirty little light brown
Nash in the Hochstctter Faculty lot that was taking
up four spaces the other way! (Would 1 lie to you

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

�P«l». Six,

Th

"all regularly enrolled ddy-time undergraduates."
The organizational set-up is similar in principle to that of the Faculty
Senate: An elected Coordinating Council would serve as a programming
body, and a fluid committee system of volunteers would develop programs
in specific areas including student welfare, academic affairs and student

University of New York at Buffalo, in order to:
Promote the general welfare of the university com
munity,

Articles of Organization

Article I. Name and Composition
The name of this organization shall be the Student
Association of the State University of New York at
Buffalo It shall consist of the following coordinate
bodies: the Student Coordinating Council, the Student
Polity, the Student Judiciary, the University Union
Activities Board, and the Student Publications Board,
and shall operate in accordance with the respective
parts of this Constitution which govern the five coordinate bodies'
Article II. Membership
All regularly enrolled day-time undergraduates shall
be members of the Student Polity and members of the
Student Association.
Article IV. Amendments
The preamble and Articles or Organization may be
amended in the same manner provided for amendment
of Parts I and II of this Constitution,
Article V. Enactment
Section 1.
Adoption of this Constitution, according to procedures
provided in Article V, Section 2, immediately following,
shall nullify and supplant the 1968 Constitution of the
Student Association: Preamble, Articles of Organization and Part I, Student Senate, Constitution and ByLaws, retaining Parts 11, III and IV, the Student Judiciary, the University Union Activities Board and the
Student Publications Board, except that: the Student
Senate of the Student Association shall, upon adoption
of this Constitution, continue to act with full authority
until after the election of officers of the Student Association and election of the Student Coordinating
Council as provided in this Constitution, and that the
Senate Elections Committee shall conduct said election.
Section 2.
This Constitution shall be adopted and shall be in effect
upon favorable action in the following manner:
1. By affirmative vote of a majority of the fully
enrolled undergraduate student body voting in general
referendum, provided the total number of students
voting shall exceed 10% of the day-time student body.
Section 3.
It is the proviso of this Constitution that the President
of the Student Asociation shall upon its adoption, appoint an Evaluation Committee which shall have the
following function: It shall, during the two-year period
following adoption of this Constitution, observe and
study the functioning of the Student Association and
its component parts on or before February 15, 1970,
the Evaluation Committee shall deliver to the President of the Student Association an evaluation of the
form and functioning of the student government, with
recommendations for changes, if any, and for the
method of achieving such change. The evaluative process during the tvo-year period shall not be so constituted as to interfere with the proceses for amendment set forth in this Constitution.
Par* I. The Constitution

The Student Coordinating Council
Article I. Organizational Structure
The Student Coordinating Council shall be composed
of the following members:
1. The officers of the Student Polity
a) the President
b) 1st Vice President
c) 2nd Vice President
d) Treasurer

Friday, February 23, 1968

Spectrum

The Student Senate Committee on Reorganization has completed the
final draft of a proposed constitution and by-laws for an entirely new Student Association.
The proposed constitution abolishes the postion of Student Senator, and

Preamble

Provide for the proper and adequate management
of student affairs,
Maintain the necessary and proper obligations and
responsibilities of the students to the University,
the community, and the world,
Exercise the fundamental responsibilities and rights
of a democratic society,
Provide for a broader intellectual and cultural development of students, do hereby create the Student Association of the State University of New
York at Buffalo, and enact this Constitution for
its government.

•

rights.

2. Coordinators

a) NSA Coordinator
b) Academic Affairs Coordinator
c) Student Services Coordinator
d) Public Affairs Coordinator
e) International Student Affairs Coordinator
f) New Student Affairs Coordinators
1) upper class coordinator
2) freshman class coordinator

g) Student Rights Coordinator

3. Ex-officio, voting member:
a) Chairman, University Union Activities Board
4. Ex-officio, non-voting member:
a) President of the University, or his representative
b) Presidents of the Graduate Student Association, Medical Dental Student Council, Millard
Fillmore College Student Asociation, Student
Bar Association, Inter-Residence Council and
the Commuter Council, or their representatives.
Articles II. Powers
1. The Polity and/or the Student Coordinating Council shall have the power to discuss and legislate policies concerning their general welfare and interest.
Legislation of the Polity supercedes legislation of the
Student Coordinating Council, All legislation of the
Student Coordinating Council, with the exception of
the allocation of funds to student organizations, is
subject to review by the Polity.
2. The Polity and/or Student Coordinating Council
shall have the power to recognize all student organizations.
3. The Polity and/or the Student Coordinating Council shall have the power to assess an annual student
activities fee
4. The Student Coordinating Council shall have the
power to withdraw surplus student activities funds
from any organization, subject to review by the Polity.
Article III. Membership
All regularly enrolled undergraduate students are
members of the Student Polity, and shall elect the
members of the Student Coordinating Council as set
forth in the By-Laws.
Article IV. Officers
Section 1. Number of Officers
The officers of the Student Coordinating Council
shall be the officers of the Student Association,
namely: President, 1st Vice President, 2nd Vice President, Treasurer.
Section 2. Election of Officers
They shall be elected by and from the entire daytime undergraduate student body as provided in
the By-Laws.
Section 3, Duties and Powers
The duties and powers shall be set forth in the
By-Laws

Article

V. Meetings
Meetings of the Polity and Student Coordinating Council shall be open. Meetings of the Student Coordinat-

ing Council and Polity shall be held regularly and
otherwise provided in the By-Laws.
Article VI. Amendments
The Constitution may be amended by either the Student Coordinating Council or the Student Polity.
Section 1. The Coordinating Council
1. Any member of the Coordinating Council may
propose an amendment
2. It must be approved by the entire membership
of the Student Coordinating Council eligible to vote.
It must follow the same procedure for enaction and
is subject to the same review by the Polity as all
legislative of the Council, as provided in the By-

Laws, except that:

The new constitution:
Senators out.
town meetings in

a) No amendments may be voted upon by the
Polity. All petitions for amendment must be submitted to general referendum, as provided in
Article VI, Section 2.
Section 2. The Student Body
An amendment shall be proposed by petition of at
least 10% of the day-time undergraduate student
body to the Student Coordinating Council.
Upon receipt of such a petition the Student Coordinating Council shall be mandated to hold a gene-

ral referendum within three weeks of the date of
presentation of the petition. A proposed amendment
shall be adopted by affirmative vote of a majority
of those voting in said general referendum, provided the total number of students voting shall
exceed 10% of the day-time student body.
Article VII. Student Referendum
The right of referendum shall be extended to cover
all types of regular legislation, with the exception
of financial allocations to student organizations, and
may be proposed in the following manner:
X. By majority vote of the Student Coordinating
Council
2. By action of the Polity
3. By petition of 1% of the undergraduate student
body submitted to the Student Coordinating
Council.

The by-laws
Part I. The Student Coordinating Council

Article I. Duties of the Coordinating Council
1. To prepare the agenda for each meeting of the
2

Polity
To enact legislation in accordance with the provision of the By-Laws Article V, Legislation
To supervise the execution of legislation except
when the responsibility lies with the other
agencies
legislation for the
To prepare programs
Student Polity
To meet at least once during each school month.
All Coordinating Council meetings shall be
open to all members of the Polity
Shall appoint the members of the Student Judiciary as provided in its constitution
Shall appoint the undergraduate members of the
Student Publications Board as provided in its

and''

constitution
Shall appoint representatives to all University
committees subject to review by the Polity
Shall be solely responsible for the disbursement of student monies to all student organizations
May present special items for referendum, by
majority vote.

The by-laws

Article II.

Membership
All regularly enrolled undergraduate students are eligible to be members of the Student Coordinating Coun
cil and shall elect its members as provided in Part I,
the Student Coordinating Council Constitution, Article
I, organization structure.
Section 1. Eligibility
Any member of the Polity is eligible to become a
candidate for a seat on the Student Coordinating
Council.
Section 2. Term of Office
The term of office for the Student Coordinating
Council shall begin immediately following the annual election, to take place no later than April 15th.
Section 3. Elections
A. Elections for the Student Coordinating Council
shall take place no later than April 15th, the time
to be approved by the Student Coordinating Council
B. Procedures for candidacy shall be established by
the Eelections Committee
C. Elections shall be by secret ballot operated and
supervised by the Elections Committee and an
elections court, appointed by the Student Judiciary
D. The plurality of votes cast for any position will

constitute election
E. The Freshman Class shall elect its coordinator for
New Student Affairs during an election by all
Freshman students in the Fall semester, on or
before October 15th.
Section 4. Replacement of Members to the Student
Coordinating Council

A. In the event of forfeiture of office or resignation
of the President, the vacant office shall be filled
temporarily by the 1st Vice President and permanently by an election to be held not later than four
weeks after the vacancy occurs.
B. In the event of forfeiture of office or resignation
of any other office, the vacancy shall be filled permanently by an election to be held not later than
four weeks after the vacancy occurs or appoint-

�ment by 2/3 vote of the Student Coordinating
Council.
Section 5. Members
Members of the Student Coordinating Council arc ex
pected to attend all meetings.
Section 6. Overlapping membership

deni Cuuidinallng Council al a time, and no memoer
of the Student Judiciary shall sit on the Student Coordinating Council in a voting capacity.
Article III.

Officers

The officers of the Student Coordinating Council shall
be the officers of the Student Asociation. They shall

be voting members of the Student Coordinating Council and shall meet the same eligibility requirements
as set forth in Article I, the By-Laws, Section 1.
Section 1. Officers

A. Duties of the Officers
1. The President
a)

b)
c)

d)
e)

f)

2.

Shall preside over all meetings of the Polity
Shall be the chairman and a voting member of the Student Coordinating Council
Shall appoint a parlimentarian who shall be
present at all Polity meetings
Shall be representative of the Student Coordinating Council to the University community
HI
Shall make all committee appointments with
the approval of the Student Coordinating
Council
Shall have the power to postpone for one
Polity meeting all original items for legislation not placed on the agenda by the Student Coordinating Council

1st Vice President
In absence of tl}e President, the 1st Vice
President shall assume full presidential responsibilities in addition to his own
b) He shall represent the President on occasions designated by the President
c) He shall be a voting member of the Student
a)

Coordinating Council

with the 2nd Vice President, he shall
coordinate and expedite the activities of the
council committees and coordinators

d) Along

3. 2nd Vice President
a) In absence of the 1st Vice President, the 2nd
Vice President shall assume the responsibilities of the 1st Vice President in addition
to his own
b) He shall be a voting member of the Student

Coordinating Council
with the 1st Vice President, he shall
coordinate and expedite the activities of the

c) Along

council committees and coordinators
4. Treasurer
a) Shall be responsible for Polity monies
b) Shall be chairman of the Finance Committee
c) Shall be responsible for disbursing student
student activities funds with approval of the
Council and Polity
d) Shall be prepared to audit student organization accounts
e) Shall be a voting member of the Student Coordinating Council
Article IV. Secretariat
Shall be appointed by the Student Coordinating Council to keep accurate and concise records of the minutes
of each meeting of the Polity and Student Coordinating
Council.

Article V. Meetings

A. Student Polity
1) Meetings of the Polity shall be called by the
President

At least once a month during the school year
b) Whenever he deems necessary, and he must
notify the Polity at least 24 hours in advance
of meeting
c) Within two weeks after he is directed to
do so by a majority of the Student Coordinating Council
d) Within two weeks, in compliance with a petition signed by 10% of the Polity and submitted to the President
2) All Polity meetings at which voting will take
place must be publicly announced at least one
week in advance
B. The Student Coordinating Council
The Student Coordinating Council shall meet at
least once during every full month of the school
year. Special meetings be called by the President,
or by request of 25% of the members of the Student Coordinating Council
C. Rules of Order
Meetings of the Polity and Student Coordinating
Council shall be guided by Roberts Rules of Order
a)

Article V.

Quorum and Legislation

1. A quorum of the Polity shall consist of 40 of its

members

2. Legislation may be enacted in the following manners:

a) By a majority

vote of the

Pag* Sevan

T h• Spictrum

Friday, February 23, 1968

2) For 7 days immediately following action by
the Council copies of the legislation shall
be publicly posted
3. If during the following 7 days a petition of objection is signed by 1% of the Polity and submitted
to the President, the President must call a meeting
of the Polity within 2 weeks to re-examine the
time,

4. Normally all legislation shall go into effect seven
school days after notification of the legislation
passed

Article VI.

Budget

1. An annual budget and recommendation for the
Student Activities Fee shall be prepared each
spring by the Finance Committee and submitted to
the Student Coordinating Council.
2. The Student Coordinating Council shall have the
power to review all budget allocations approved
by the Finance Committee

Article VII.

Consultants
Coordinating Council may appoint con
Student
The
sultants to any of its committees or programs
Article VIII.

Duties of the Coordinetors

1. Each coordinator shall be responsible for safeguarding the interests of the Polity in his respective area
2. He shall present programs and legislation to the
Student Coordinating Council for approval and

enactment
3. He shall represent the Polity in his respective area
4. Each coordinator may appoint special committees
to carry out these duties.
Section 1. National Student Association Coordinator
A. Functions
1) He shall maintain communications with the National Student Association on matters such as
education, academic freedom, democratic student government, student welfare, civil rights
2) He shall take effective action in the above
areas of concern, when other committees fail
to do so
3) He shall make NSA resources available to the
Student Coordinating Council and council committees
4) He and the President shall act as delegates to
the NSA Congress. All other delegates shall be
elected by the Polity in a special election to
be held on or after April I5th and before the
close of the Spring semester

Section 2. Academic Affairs Coordinator
A. Functions
1) He shall serve as a channel of communication
between the Student Coordinating Council and
the various Faculties and University administration for academic matters
2) He shall study and report to the Polity on any
academic matters
Section 3. Student Services
A. Functions
He shall investigate, report, and recommend in
areas of student concern not within the areas of
responsibility of other coordinators or committees
of the Student Coordinating Council
Section 4. International Student Affairs

A. Functions
He shall establish and carry out programs designed
to integrate the foreign student with the university and community life
Section 5. New Student Affairs
1. There shall be two New Student Affairs Coordinators.
a) One to be elected in the spring election
b) One to be elected on or before Oct. 15th by the
Freshman Class as provided in the By-Laws,
Election,

A. Functions
They shall establish and enact programs designed
to integrate new students into university life
Section 6. Public Affairs Coordinator
1) He shall be available and make available resources
to the Student Coordinating Council and all Student Coordinating Council activities for the purpose of publicity
2. He shall maintain relations with the university
and outside local and national communities
3. He shall establish a monthly report and/or con-

cerning activities of the Student Coordinating
Council newsletter and make this available to the
Polity, university and outside communities.
Section 7. Student Rights
1. Shall be responsible for the establishment and
maintenance of legal assistance to keep the Student Polity
2) Shall keep the Polity informed on issues relating
to Student rights and responsibilities

Article X.
1)

A) Membership

1. Shall include the Treasurer of the Student Co-

2)

Functions
Allocations. The Finance Committee shall approve, subject to review by the Student Coordinating Council, the allocation of Student
Activities Funds to recognized organizations and
activities.
2. The Finance Committee shall receive proposed
1)

monies. It shall then prepare a unified
budget for the next academic year and present
the proposal to the Student Coordinating CounCouncil.
Polity

3. The Finance Committee shall audit the financial records of all recognized student organizations at any time it deems necessary. The financial records must be audited at least once
a semester.
4. Financial Rules.
a) It shall act in accord with and enforce the
Financial rules of the Student Coordinating
Council, which are set forth in Appendix A
of these by laws of the Student Coordinating
b)

Council.
The Finance Committee, at the first meeting
of the full academic year, shall recommend
procedural rules for finances to the Student Coordinating Council, These rules shall
be ratified by a two-thirds vote of the StuSenate.

Section 2. Student Activities Committee
A. Function
1) To help stimulate all extra-curricular activities.
2. To execute the supervisory power of the Student Coordinating Council, except as otherwise
provided by University policy and regulations,
over all student organizations and activities.
a) To recommend to the Student Coordinating
Council the sponsorship of new activities,
the development of new functions for existing activities, or abolition of any student
activity.
b) To recommend to the Student Coordinating
Council recognition of all student organizations and activities, upon petition for recognition.
c) To keep records of all student organizations
and activities.
d) To act as the liaison group between recognized student organizations and activities
and the Student Coordinating Council.
e) To call meetings of any individual organization or activity for the purpose of investigation and advice.
3. To serve as a consultant to the Finance Committee.
B, Membership
the members shall be:
...

1) Interested students
2) A chairman to be appointed by
ordinating Council

the Student Co-

Section 3. Elections Committee
A. Functions
1) To supervise and conduct the election of the
officers of the Student Association.
2) To supervise and conduct the election of the
Student Coordinating Council.
3) To supervise Student Council elections.
4) To supervise or conduct any other elections
when duly requested to do so by any club or
organization.
5) To proceed as follows in:
a) The election of the Student Coordinating
Council and the officers of the Student Association:
1) Verify the qualifications of candidates.
2) Outline and have approved by the Student
Coordinating Council previous to coming election, rules and procedures of said
election.
b) The election of Student Councils:
1) Have the members of the committee serve
as commisioners of all Student Council
elections.
2) When duly requested to do so, conduct
the election.
6) All election inequities shall be directed
to the
Student Judiciary.
7) To conduct all student referendums.
B. Membership
1) Interested students,
2) A chairman appointed by

nating Council.

the Student Coordi-

Section 4. Academic Affairs Committee
A. Functions
1) To advise and report to the Student Polity
on
matters relating to curricular reform and innovation, student participation in academic
affairs and the establishment of new educational programs and academic policies.
B. Membership
1) Students appointed by the Student
Coordinating Council
2) A chairman who shall be the
Academic Affairs
Coordinator

Standing Committees

Finance Committee

quorum

b) By the Student Coordinating Council subject
to the following conditions
I) 3/4 of the Student Coordinating Council
must approve

ion si

effect

B)

ordinating Council and seven students appointed
by majority vote of the Student Coordinating
Council upon recommendation of the President.

The Treasurer shall be chairman of the finance
committee

Article V.

Special Committees

The Student Senate shall have the power to appoint
any special committee(s) that it deems necessary.
Article VI.

Amendments

These By-Laws shall be amended in the same manner
as the Constitution, as set forth in Part I.

�Th

Pag* Eight

•PAID ADVERTISEMENT*

•

•PAID ADVERTISEMENT*

UNION
A nigger is a human being who is not
a human being. He does what he doesn't
want to do and pretends that he likes it.

He listens to his masters and obeys unquestioningly without reflecting on his own
thoughts, feelings and needs.
Students are niggers. When you get that
straight, our schools begin to make sense.
It's more important, though to understand
why they're niggers. If we follow that ques
tion seriously enough, it will lead us past
the zone of academic irrelevance to the place

where dedicated teachers pass their know
ledge on to a new generation and into the
nitty
gritty of human needs and hang ups.
And from there we can go on to consider
whether it might even be possible for students to come up from slavery.
First let's see what's happening now.
Let's look at the role students play in what
we like to call education.
Students are politically disenfranchised.
They are in an academic totalitarianism. Many
of them can vote in national elections, but
they have no voice in the decisions which
affect their academic lives. The students are,
it is true, allowed to have a toy government
of their own. It is a government run for the
most part by Uncle Toms and concerned
principally with trivia. The faculty and the
administrators decide what courses will be
offered; the students get to choose their
own homecoming queen. Occasionally, when
student leaders get uppity and rebellious
they're put off with trivial concessions, ma
neuvered expertly out of position or simply
-

ignored.

Obvious examples of this at UB, have
been the administration's outrageous handling
of the Dow fiasco to avoid a honest con
frontation and the fact that hardly anyone
can tell us of a Student Senate decision
that really affected their life.
Smiles and shuffles
A student is expected to know his place.
He calls a faculty member "Sir" or "Doc
tor" or "Professor"
and he smiles and
shuffles some as he stands outside the
professor's office waiting for permission to
enter. The faculty tells him what coures to
take, they tell him what to read, what to
write, and frequently where to set the mar
gins on his typewriter. They tell him what's
true and what isn't. Some teachers insist
that they encourage dissent, but they're al
most always jiving and every student knows
it. Tell the man what he wants to hear or
he'll fail you out of the course. When a
teacher says "jump" students jump.
A member of the sociology dept, at UB
spent almost two hours belittling his Criminology students in response to the Course
and Teacher Evaluation, telling them over
and over they they were incompetent to
evaluate him or his course, furthermore they
didn't even have the right to do so. Such
insecurity doesn't say much for his compe
tency.

Other teachers are guilty more of talking
down to, or purposely talking way over
the heads of their students, to show off
their newly memorized bombast; others are
troubled by foreign anguage difficulties, but
this doesn't change* the fact that their stu
dents can't understand, literally, half of what
they are saying.
Follow orders
Even more discouraging than this 1984
like approach to education is the fact that
the students take it. They haven't gone
through twelve years of public school for
nothing. They've learned one thing and one
thing only during those twelve years. They've
forgotten their algebra; they're hopelessly
vague about chemistry and physics; —they've
grown to fear and resent literature; they
write like they've been lobotomized;. But, Je
sus, can they follow orders! Freshmen come
up to teachers with an essay and ask if they
want if folded and whether their names should
be in the upper right-hand corner.
Students don't ask that orders make sense.
They give up expediting things to make sense,
long before they leave elementary school.
Things are true because the teachers say
they're true. At a very early age we all learn
to accept "two truths" as did certain medieval churchmen; outside of class, things are
true to your tongue, your finger, your stomach,
your heart; inside class things are true by
reason of authority. And that's just fine be
cause you don't care anyway. Miss Widemey
er tells you a noun is a person, place or
thing. So let it be, you don't give a damn;
she doesn't give a damn. The thing is to
please her. Back in kindergarten you found
out that teachers only love children who
stand in nice straight lines. And that's where

Friday, February 23, 1968

Spectrum

a movement
to free
the student
it's been at ever since. Nothing changes except to get worse; school becomes more
and more obviously a prison.
Even within the structure of U.B., things
have gotten worse. Bill Harrell a beautiful
teacher who is still wanted and needed by
his students but refused to contow to administrative orders was fired; the abolition of
the modified F, and the matter of withdrawal
from courses has been hopelessly beauracratized; the sociology department, for one,
hires only the most rigid and conservative
people. All this proves that it is getting
worse with only occasional goodies like Ex
perimental College to keep the restless and
inquisitive pacified.

What school amounts to, then, for white
and black kids alike, is a 12-year course on
how to be slaves. What else could explain
what we see in a freshmen class? They've
got that slave mentality: obliging and ingratiating on the surface, hostile and resentful underneath.
The concept of the grading system is the
most blatant manifestation of this. Real learning does not occur when one is forced to
read this or that in order to stay alive in
this particular academic community, or in
order to stay alive at all, by keeping out of
the army. Students must be allowed freedom
to follow their heads and hearts to find out
about themselves and the world about them.
How is this compatible with "required cours
es" and the entire notion of grades?
As did black slaves, students vary in their
awareness of what's going on. Some recog
nize their own put on for what is and even
let their rebellion breakthrough now and
then, pthers including most of the "good
Students" have been more deeply brainwashed. They swallow the meaningless, menial menu with greedy mouths. They honest to
God believe in grades and busy work and
General Education requirements; they're pa
thetically eager to be pushed around. College
entrance requirements tend to favor the Toms
and screen out the rebels. Not entirely, of
course. Some students are expert con-artists
who know perfectly well what's happening.
They want the degree or the 2 S deferment
and spend their years on the old plantation
alternately laughing and cursing as they play
the game. If their egos are strong enough,
they cheat a lot, and, of course, even the
Toms are angry deep down somewhere. But
it comes out in passive rather than active
aggression. They're unexplainably thick witt
ed and subject to frequent spells of laziness.
They misread simple questions. They spend
their nights mechanically outlining history
chapters while meticulously failing to compre
hend a word of what's in front of them.
Inward anger
The saddest cases among black slaves
and student slaves are the ones who have so
thoroughly introjected their masters' values
that their anger is all turned inward. These
are the kids for whom every low grade is
torture, who stammer and shake when they
speak to a professor, who go through an
emotional crisis every time they're called
upon during class. You can recognize them
easily at finals time. Their faces are festooned
with fresh pimples; their bowels boil audibly
across the room. If there really is a Last
Judgement, then the parents and teachers of
these wrecks are going to burn in hell.
At Buffalo, we can cry when we walk
through Norton Hall. As critics we are up
against an invisible enemy; and it's always
more difficult to fight something that doesn't
happen than something that daps. Nobody
else cries because there is nothing to be
upset about, no one is excited or laughs.
Classes have nothing to do with life.! When
one' questions most students as to their
opinion of this'University, most reply, simply,
sadly with a shrugged "It's OK. "my God,
we're so beaten into submission that we
can't even hale the place.
The professors

So students are niggers. It's time to find
out why, and to do this, we have to take
a long look at Mr. Charlie.
The teachers we know best are college
professors. Outside the classroom and taken
as a group, their most striking characteristic
is timidly.

They're short on guts!
Just look at their working conditions. At
a time when even migrant workers have
begun to fight and win, college professors
are still afraid to make more than a token
effort to improve their pitiful economic status.
In the State Universities after the recent
bust on the Stonybrook campus; the legislature threatened to cut the budget of the universities for no other reason that the suppos-

ed non-cooperation of University officials with
law enforcement agencies that only serves to
hurt kids and not help these kids with deep
emotional problems. One hears them mumbling catch phrases like "professional -dignity" and "meaningful dialogue", but sees
no solid resistance.
Professors were no different durini

ly serious. Students don't get emancipated
when they graduate. As a matter of fact,
we don't let them graduate until they've
demonstrated their willingness—over 16
ye^rs— to remain slaves. And for more important jobs, like teaching, we make them
go through more years, just to make sure.
What we’re getting at. is that we'rp all

as they rushed to cop out. And in more
recent years those being arrested in sitdns
brought from their colleagues not so much
approval or condemnation, as open-mouthed
astonishment: "You could lose your job!”
Now, of course, there's the Vietnamese
war. It gets some opposition from a few
teachers. Some support it. But a vast number
of professors, who know perfectly well what’s
happening are copping out again.

students, alike. That we are slaves is evidenced in our allowing ourselves to be put
in substandard on-campus housing like Allenhurst and Goodyear, and our willingness to
pay exhorbitant rents for off-campus slums.
We don't even demand that we run the very
places we live in by ourselves for ourselves;
we've allowed rules, curfews, and our leaders' to be imposed on us. We allow, still,
separate bathrooms for faculty and studentsthat's niggers for you!! We allow ourselves
to be told by one professor in Psychology
102 that if you learn anything in the course,
it is only secondary to the main purpose of
having the students as a subject pool for
the extraordinarily boring experiments of the

Forces split
We're not sure why teachers are scared.
It could be academic training itself that forces
a split between thought and action. It might
also be that the tenured security of a teaching job attracts timid persons and, furthermore, that teaching, like police work, pulls
in persons who are unsure of themselves
and need weapons and other external trappings of authority.
At any rate, teachers ARE short on guts.
And the classroom offers an artificial and
protected environment in which they can exercise their will to power. Your neighbors
may drive a better car; gas station attendants
intimidate you; your wife may dominate you;
the State Legislature may step on you; but
in the classroom, by God, students do what
you say—or else. The grade is a hell of a
weapon. It may not rest on your hip, potent
and rigid like a cop’s gun, but in the long
run it's more powerful. At your personal
whim, any time you choose, you can keep
35 students up for nights and have the
pleasure of seeing them walk into the classroom pasty-faced and red-eyed carrying a
sheaf of typewritten pages, with title page,
MLA footnotes and margins set at 1 5 and 71.
White supremacy

The teacher's fear is mixed with an understandable need to be admired and to feel

need which also makes him
cling to his "white supremacy." Ideally a
superior, a

teacher should minimize the distance between
himself and his students. He should encourage them not to need him—eventually or
even immediately. But this is rarely the case.
Teachers make themselves high priests of
arcan mysteries. They become masters of

mumbo-jumbo.
Finally, there is the darkest reason of all
for the master-slave approach to education.
The-less-trained and the less-socialized a
person is, the more he constitutes a sexual
threat and the more his will will be subjugated by institutions, such as penitentiaries
and schools. Many of us are aware by now
of the sexual neurosis which makes white
men so fearful of integrated schools and
neighborhoods, and which makes the castration of the Negroes a deeply entrenched
Southern folkway. We should recognize a
similar pattern in education.
How does sex show up in school? First
of all, there's the sado-masochistic relationship between teachers and students. That's
plenty sexual, although the price of enjoying
it is to be unaware of what's happening. In
walks the student in his Ivy-League equivalent of a motorcycle jacket. In walks the
teacher- a kind of intellectual rough tradeand he flogs his students with grades, tests,
sarcasm and snotty superiority until theirvery
brains are bleeding.
Once a nigger
So you can add sexual repression to the
list of causes along with vanity, fear and
will to power, that turn teacher into Mr.
Charlie. You might also want to keep in
mind that he was a nigger once himself and
he has never really gotten over it.
There are more causes, some of which
are better described in sociological than in
psychological terms. Work them out, it's not
hard. But in the meantime, what we've got
on our hands is a whole lot of niggers. And
what make this particularly grim is that
the student has less chance than the black
man of getting out of his bag; because THE
STUDENT DOESN'T EVEN KNOW HE'S IN
IT. That, more or less, is what's happening
in higher education. And the results are

staggering.
For one thing, damn little education takes
place in the schools. How could it? You can't
EDUCATE SLAVES; YOU CAN ONLY TRAIN
THEM! Or to use an even uglier and more
timely word, you can only PROGRAM them!
Slavery

Here,, we grade people on how they
CREATE art and poetry, which places objective standards on an ultimate subjectivity.
That's like grading people on how they make
love. But we do it. Even to discuss a good
poem in that environment is potentially dangerous, because the very classroom is contaminated.
Another result of student slavery is equal

psych department.
Intimidate or kill

Educational oppression is trickier to fight
than racial oppression. Sound familiar? If
you're a black rebel, they can't exile you;
they either have to intimidate you or kill
you. But in high school or college, they can
lust bounce you out of the fold. And they
do. Rebel students and renegade faculty members get smothered or shot down with devastating accuracy. In high school, it's usually
the student who gets it; in college, it's more
often the teacher. Case in point: Salter,
Harrell, Jones in Poli Sci. Ohters get tired
of fighting and voluntarily leave the system.
This may be a mistake, though. Dropping
out of college, for a rebel, is a little like
going North for a Negro. You can't really
get away from it so you might as well stay

and raise hell!
How do you raise hell? But for a start,
why not stay with the analogy? What have
black people done? They have, first of all,
faced the tact of their slavery. They've stopped
kidding themselves about an eventual reward
in that Great Watermelon Patch in the sky,
while we persist in believing that everything
will be fine once we've graduated into the
'Real' world. They have organized; they decided to get Freedom NOW, and they've
started taking it. We too, can come together;
we must seek Union, analogous in many ways
to the immensely creative aspects of meaningful sexual intercourse—we'll be more of
a person after the experience of mutual giving
of oneself. This is why we are establishing
a viable STUDENT UNION.
Why student union?
Why Student Union? Read on!
To demand that we run our own fives
again, and that the teaching and the classes
have something to do with our lives; to make
such things as Experimental College and the
"Bulletin Board" idea, we are sponsoring
more widespread and an integral part of the
University, not just an interesting sidelight,
a goody to pacify the restless minority: to
abolish the mandatory grade system and put it
on a voluntary basis, that would allow the
structure to those who need or want it, while
giving others the freedom to pursue the most
creative educational programs available: to
fight for-co-operative education that would include "work" as undergraduate teaching as
sistants and research assistants rather than
just an irrelevant 9 to 5 job; to end the
ridiculous list of inflexible "requirements"
that we have now: to have a truly democratic
university, one that involves some risk, as in
any democracy; but one in which there is
real ilFE, so that when a student commenc
es, he will commence into the outer world
as a real, full, integral person, not as a nig

get!

A beautiful vision

STUDENTS, LIKE BLACK PEOPLE, HAVE
IMMENSE UNUSED POWER. They could,
theoretically, insist on participating in their
own education. They could make academic
freedom bilateral. They could teach their
teachers to thrive on love and admiration

rather than fear and respect, and to lay down
their weapons. Students could discover com
munity. And they could lean to dance by
dancing on the IBM cards. They could make
coloring books out of the catalogs and they
could put the grading systems into a museum.
They could raze one set of walls and let
life come blowing into the classroom. They
could raze another set of walls and let edu
cation flow out and flood the streets. They
could turn the classroom into where it's at
a "field of action" as Peter Marin describee
it. And believe it or not, they could study
eagerly and learn prodigiously for the best
of all possible reasons- their own reasons.
They could.—Theoretically. They have the
power. But only in a very few places, like
Autioch, have they begun to use it. For stu
dents, as for black people, the hardest bat_
tie isn't with Mr. Charlie. It's WITH WHAI
MR. CHARLIE HAS DONE TO YOUR MIND
adaptation from
Jerry Farber's "Students as Niggers"
Printed in the UCLA Fteepress
Adopted by Steve Halpern and Daniel Rosenthal
Ad sponsored by Student Senate Academic Affairs

An

Com

�Friday, February 23, 1968

The

Spectrum

Pag* Nine

»

f

ews

Genesee Beer Distributor
enrolled as a freshman at
a famous Eastern University
last Fall
She's a cinch to be elected
Queen of the Hops!

Commentar

students vote

Code

ie

m c

oice

primary

by Phil Stmas
Collegiatt Press Service

In any election year there are always numerous
WASHINGTON
mock primaries and elections on college campuses.
In 1968 these individual local primaries will be pushed into the
background by Choice '68, a national primary to be held April 24
on more than 1,000 college campuses, including the State University
of Buffalo. The organizers of the primary say they already have 1,100
schools with four-and-a-half million students signed up to participate,
including almost all of the large schools. They hope to have at least
1500, which would give them a potential electorate of five-and-a-half
million. That would make it the second largest primary in the nation
(after California’s). Some have predicted that they will get close to
2000 schools, which would be nearly every college in the country.
Choice ’68 is the idea of Bob Harris, a former Michigan State
University student body president. It occurred to him last summer
that, instead of a haphazard group of local pimaries, college students
ought to vote at the same time in one national primary.
—

Funded by Time

He then started going to various companies to see if he could
get money to finance the program. The first place he went was
Time magazine mainly “because I could get in to see the publisher.”
Time Publisher James Shepley decided in about 10 minutes that it
was a good idea, so Time sent Harris to 30 campuses to talk to
students and see if the idea was feasible.
After that trip, Time decided it could be done and gave Harris
$100,000 for the project “as a public service.” He picked 11 student
leaders to fnake policy and determine the ballot.
But being funded by Time is a problem for Choice '68. Time’s
editorial treatment of students, education, and Vietnam has not
exactly made it credible to many college students and some of that
lack of credibility may rub off on Choice ’68.
Given complete freedom
Even so, Harris says Time has given him and his board of
directors complete control over policy. "They do exercise quality
control over how things are written and so forth,” he says, “but they
let us decide on basic approaches and policies.” Harris also points
out that there has been no coverage of Choice '68 in Time, except in
Shepley’s “publisher’s letter” on the table-of-contents page. The
project wasn’t announced in Time and neither will the results of
the election be announced there. Harris is trying to set up a “30 or
60-minute television special” to announce the results.
The student body presidents and college editors who make up
the board were skeptical of Time when they first met last October,
but they say that they have been given complete freedom to determine
which candidates and issues go on the ballot, as well as other policies.
That does seem to be the way it is working. When the board
of directors met last week in the Washington Hilton, there was no
one from Time at the meeting as they wrangled over the final candidates and issues which will go on the ballot.
The directors were in for four days. In between meetings with
everyone from President Johnson (“He looked like a ghost,” said one)
to leaders of the Young Republicans, they spent long hours picking
the candidates, chosing which questions would go on the ballot, and
wording the questions.

"Hawk" alternatives hard

to

write

With mostly liberals on the board, they faced special problems
in trying to make sure that conservatives were treated fairly on the
ballot. For example, they had their hardest time working the “hawk”
alternatives in Vietnam, which most of them oppose (although they
generally refuse to give their personal positions on the war and are
obligated not to endorse or work for any candidate).
They wound up with only two conservatives on the ballot
Gov. Reagan and George Wallance, plus Richard Nixon and President
Johnson, who will draw many conservative votes. The rest of the 14
candidates are “moderate to liberal.” Having fewer candidates may
work to the right wing’s advantage, however, since moderate and
liberal votes will probably be more fragmented.
At one point, when there were about 20 people still on the
ballot, only three of them hard-line conservatives, Harris told the
board, “Sometimes I wish I hadn’t picked all student leaders and
had just picked some students out of the middle of a big lecture hall.
That list is balanced much too heavily to the left.”
—

Several candidates dropped

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Friday: WXJ un.-M0 pjn.

The directors wound up dropping several other candidates,
including J. William Fulbright, Texas’ conservative Sen. John Tower,
Dr. Benjamin Spock, and Gen. James Gavin. They decided not to
pare the list too sharply, however, because they wanted to give
students a wide variety. "The question,” said Wisconsin student
body president Mike Fullwood, “is whose choice is Choice, our choice
or the students’ choice?”
They also spend a good deal of time trying to avoid a boycott
of the election by campus radicals. Harris said he found radicals
cool to the idea in his visits to campuses. Most radicals reject electoral
politics as a means of changing policy. They are also likely to be
skeptical of an election involving large number of college students,
most of whom are moderate and unlikely to vote radical.

Holstead included

So, although a number of doves made the ballot almost automatically, the directors decided that might not be enough involved
radicals. As an answer they added Fred Halstead, who is running for
President from the Socialist Workers Party on a platform of black
power and immediate withdrawal from Vietnam.

Dick Beahrs, student body president at Berkeley, gives another
reason why the ballot may interest radicals: the two referenda
questions on Vietnam. He points out that radicals have worked hard
to put Vietnam referenda on the ballot in the Bay Area and other
places and radicals may decide to push this referendum hard.
One of Harris’ answers to radicals is that “two-and-a-half million
Americans ought to be able to have some impact on the policy of
the country.” That, then, is the'key question about Choice ’68: will
it have any impact on American policy and on the election? If it
doesn’t (and it is so far been ignored at least by most of the press),
then radicals will have additional proof of their view that students
must take direct action to influence policy.

�Page

T h

Ten

•

Friday, February 23, 1968

Spectrum

i

Viewpoints
by

Yates

m

�Friday, February

23, 196*

T h

•

Pag*

Spectrum

Eleven

by Linda Hanley
Spccfrvm Staff Reporter

When Dick Gregory was in high school he sandbagged levees on the Mississippi and worked in a
stand-up comic to achieve real success, he can get
$2500 a week appearing in nightclubs. Yet Gregory
is not a financial success. Since 1962 he estimates
he spent $250,000 on the civil rights movement and
more than $60,000 on airline fares alone. In June
of last year, American Airlines sued him for $7,747

worth of those expenses.
Gregory was born in St. Louis, Mo., the second
of six children in 1932. His father deserted the
family when Gregory was five, forcing them to
spend the next 13 years on relief. In-between takingodd jobs to help out the family (he remembers
being a shoe-shine boy in a pool hall when he was
seven: The white men used to rub his head for
good luck), Gregory became a first rate track star
(he was the Missouri State Champion in 1951 and
one of his records still stands).

Shoe-shine boy to track star

In his senior year he was offered 12 athletic
scholarships to colleges and universities. He chose
Southern Illinois University at Carbondale because:
“They didn’t want me to study, they wanted me to
run.” He left after two years to join the Army,
practicing comedy routines in G.I. shows as a
member of the Special Services.
He returned to college for a while, majored in
business administration, but in 1956 left because
of grades. From there he went out to Chicago
where for a time he worked in the U.S. Post Office.
He was eventually fired for impersonating his colleagues and flipping letters destined for the state
of Mississippi to the “overseas” bag. He then
worked briefly as an inspector of jet engines (for
which he had no qualifications whatsoever), and
again was fired.

A success

—

almost

In 1958, he slipped the master of ceremonies
of a small Negro nightclub, the Esquire Club on
Chicago’s South Side, $5 to let him take over in his
place and thus began his entertainment career. His
real breakthough, though, came in 1960 when John
Daly in Chicago for the Republican Convention,
filmed Gregory’s act and showed it to on an ABC
special documentary on Negroes, “Cast the First
Stone.” A year later when he substituted for Irwin
Corey at the Chicago Playboy Club he was really
on his way.
Time magazine published a profile of Gregory
and the national attention has scarcely subsided
since. Later that year he returned to St. Louis
where he was given the key to the city by the
Mayor and subsequently was refused accommodations at a leading St. Louis hotel. Commented
Gregory; “They gave me the key to the city and
then they changed all the locks.”

Marches and arrests

Since that time, Gregory has marched in scores
of cities North and South for civil rights, including

Father Groppi’s campaign last September against
housing discrimination in Milwaukee, Wis. He has
also been jailed numerous times in conjunction

with his civil rights activities. "I decided the Negro
movement was the only hope for us
I mean all
of us
so I had to risk everything for it,” he says.
sincere
when
he
Gregory is
says that progress in
the area of civil rights is not only progress for
the Negro. “This revolution is not black against
white. It’s right against wrong,” he has said.
But it’s Gregory’s recent activities that have
brought his attention of a different sort. On
Thanksgiving Day, 1967, he began a fast lasting
until Christmas in protest “against the war and
the government’s position in Vietnam.” During
that time he took only distilled water and lost at
least 50 pounds.
This hunger strike was not entirely spontaneous
though. He had researched it for months before
and entered into it gradually. Gregory is normally
—

—

a vegetarian.

No pot, please
Recently he announced a strike of a different
kind. He vowed not to shave or get a haircut until
the war was ended. He also called upon students
to abstain from smoking pot until that time.
Washington has remainded curiously silent on his
threat.

Yet this needn’t disturb Gregory, as his future
plans also include Washington. In October of last
year he announced that he would run for President
in 1968 on the Independent ticket. His platform
will center around civil rights. No running mate

has been mentioned.
On first glance the thought of Dick Gregory as
Chief Executive doesn’t seem too likely, yet in
reality Gregory has clearly defined stands on many

important issues, for example:
On the space program; “Thing that amused me
most was when that man reached a state of weightlessness. He floated out of his chair and he was able
to write, but he had to hold on to the pad. I get
like that every Saturday night and it don’t cost
this country no $2 billion.”
On social problems; “When you read an article
about Negro women with illegitimate children, do
you know who wrote it? Some chick living in a
neighborhood where they got abortion credit cards
. . . It’s not Negro women with illegitimate kids.
It’s American

women.”

On FBI Director, J. Edgar Hoover
One
of the lousiest dogs that ever lived."
On the incumbant, Lyndon B. Johnson: “You
look at Lyndon Johnson in those suits with wide
lapels and it’s like seeing the late, late, late show—live.” And “Lyndon Johnson: Big Daddy with the
barbecue sauce dripping down his chin.”
On liberals: “(They ask) what can we do for
you tomorrow? But the people who are hung up
on this minorities struggle want something today.
Northern and Southern liberals represent to me
the third fan in a fistfight.”
On religion: “I can take you back to Chicago on
a Sunday and take you into twenty churches that
wouldn’t let me in, but (only) a few taverns. Kind
of makes you wonder which building the cross
should be on ’
On elderly Negroes:
too lazy or seared to
do anything about the civil rights movement. The
civil rights movement cannot progress until elderly
Negroes die. Lord knows, I hope it’s soon.”
“

—

Sp**iks Monday

Dark horse in '68?

On education: “My mother taught me about the
System. She warned about the kind of education
they’d give me. They want to educate you up tight
so that you just get your little old job and do what
you’re supposed to do and that’s it. It’s the dumb
ones who got a chance.”
On the ghettos: “The only way to make Harlem
safe for Negroes is to let folks think we’re killing

whiles.”
On race riots: “I’ll tell you what a race riot is.
It’s when one of us kills one of them. They’ve
been killing us for a hundred years, but its not a
race riot until we kill one of them.” •
On the state of Maryland: “Maryland is just like
Mississippi, except instead of sheets they wear

gray-flannel suits.”

On the Negro poor: “They are so poor they
think The Man is doing them a favor just letting
them live. They aren’t aware enough to know
there’s any other way to live.”
On his influence in the civil rights movement;
“They listen to me. And when I speak, I can feel
this monster growing inside of me. It’s power, man.
I’ve said there are only two people in this country
who can stop a real race riot. Malcom X and Dick
Gregory. I mean that. Washington knows. Now
I’m the one holding things together.”
On foreign policy: “I don’t know why everybody
wants to ask me questions about the Congo. I’ve
never been out of the country. People ask me how
come they don’t send white troops? Only way I can

figure it out is they don’t want ’em coming home
with those war brides.”
On economics: “Why do so many Negroes own
Cadillacs? He saves $500 on the country club he
can’t join, and $1500 by not taking his family to
Florida for the winter. If he gets hit by a bus,
he won’t be taken to the ‘best hospital’ where
they’re going to charge him $2500, so he goes to
the city hopsital free. $2500 plus $4500, General
Motors will sell me anything.”
On the race problem; “Shouldn’t be any race
problem. Everybody I meet some of their best
'
friends are colored.”
On his part in the integration movement: “I sat
at a lunch counter for nine months. They finally
integrated and didn’t have what I wanted.”
On the internal revenue service: “I wouldn’t
mind paying my income tax if I knew it was going
to a friendly country.”
Though Gregory has gathered support for his
candidacy from such emminent vote-swayers as
Dr.
Timothy Leary, his prospects of being elected
in
November are indeed slim. About the best he can
hope for is to draw more attention and support
to the civil rights struggle, by means of his
candidacy.
Gregory is a first-rate comic and an admirable
leader in the movement for Negro rights
but
after all, Ralph Buncbe he isn’t.

�Friday, February 23, 1968

The Spectrum

Page Twelve

Chamber music recital Paxton with the Pops
by Steese

by Robert Feldman
Specfrum Music Reviewer
was presented Friday at Baird
Hall by Jaime Laredo, the internationally acclaimed violin virtuoso, Boris Kroyt, violist of the
Budapest String Quartet, Robert
Martin, cellist and member of the
Philosophy Department at the
State University of Buffalo, and
Ruth Laredo, wife of Jaime Laredo and well-known pianist.
The program opened with
Bach's “Sonata in G Major for

Viola and Piano,” with Boris
as featured soloist. This

Kroyt

work is a very demanding one
on the violist because it requires
a keen interpretation in the Bach
style which must be met with
technical perfection.
An aristocratic air
Mr. Kroyt most certainly did
the piece' justice. He played it
with an aristocratic air, yet never
beyond the composer’s style. The
tone was not large; indeed it
was very small, and there were
some technical difficulties, both
in intonation and bowing. But
overall, it was a beautifully preformed work. Especially noticeable was the sweetness of tone
and the delicate vibrato, Mrs.
Laredo provided a suitable accompaniment.
A “Duo in B Flat for Violin
and Viola,” by Mozart, was also
performed with Jaime Laredo and
Boris Kroyt soloists. It was a
technically sound performance.
The balance was excellent in that
the tone was always kept equal
between the two artists. The bowwas very
ing and intonation
sound on the part of both players
and Mr. Laredo especially excelled in the spicalto bowing,
While Mr. Kroyt excelled in the
legato passages.

Beautifully balanced
The program closed with the
Faure "Quartet in C Minor.” This
is a piece in which the violinist
and violist have the most op-

Spectrum

portunity to shine. It was a beau

tifullv balanced

performance

Staff

Reporter

somethings new nr his career in Buffalo Friday niglit He split a bill with the Buffalo Philharmonk Orchestra. This being his first attempt at such a
performance, there were a few problems but none of these
managed to mask the capabilities and talent of the featured

and

piano entry

However, in this piece, I gave
my special attention to Mr. Robert Martin. He didn’t have the
opportunity to project in this
piece, but there were moments

performer.
Ten out of his 12 numbers were
no trouble. He did six songs alone
on the first part of the program:

when “he put that bow to the
string, and made the cello sing.”
I was amazed at his fabulous
bowing, and his warm, but subtle
vibrato. 1 am certain that Mr.
Martin has a brilliant career
ahead of him and will someday
be more fully recognized as the
fine cellist that he is.

“Morning Again,” a topical on
a
Cocktail Parties; “Victoria”
fine, fine song which I suspect
might eventually become a semipop standard; "The Marvelous
a mere children’s song
Toy”
which I loved; “So Much for
Winning and Talking Marijuana
in Vietnam.”
—

Rich sound
He did three songs with the
Philharmonic at the end of the
program. The first: “The Last
Thing on My Mind” was excellent.
It had a nice rich sound which

neatly

complimented

Paxtons’

vocal. The second was an attempt
at a newer song, “Now That I’ve
Taken My Life.” It did not fare
too well. Paxton has lowered the
key and changed the tempo on
this same song when he does it
in concert by himself.
The result was an unfamiliarity
with the song as he was trying
to do it. The reason why he has
changed the key downward was
also apparent. He is not the possessor of the world’s greatest
range; he is an excellent singer
with full awareness of his vocal
limitations, but he was trapped
by time or lack of it, to change
the arrangement. Next time you
see him, and you should see him
again, if you haven’t already, note
that he will be comfortable with
that song if he does it. He was
so uncomfortable with it Friday
last that he forgot the second
verse and had to start over again.
Good song, but it definitely did

while.

A masterful highlight
The piece opens with a Pastorale in which Laredo used a muted
violin. This movement requires
great sensitivity of bowing and
a slow to medium fast left hand
vibrato. It is not technically dif-

ficult, but requires much musical
interpretation and understanding.
The Presto movement gave Laredo an opportunity to display his
technical ability. His lone was
clear and responsive; his spicatto
was very crisp. He had a magnificent instrument which was extremely brilliant in the lower
registers, and very mellow with
a keen resonance in the upper
register. His tone wasn’t the
biggest that I’ve heard, but it
was more than adequate. His
cords were extremely biting, and
the arm level with regard to his
bowing was virtually flawless.
Jaime Laredo proved himself a
master violinist in his performance here.

comprised the first, and he closed
the evening with another topical
on Molly Bloom, referring to the
august maiden of Ulysses.

These went down well and the
evening closed on this happy
note. I do not like to speak
heresay but it should be noted
that friends more knowlegable
about light classical and pops
than I report that the Orchestra
itself was not what it might have
been. A number of substitutes
were apparently in use and even
to me the conducting seemed
rather stiff and uninspired. Perhaps it should be arranged that

He closed his Philharmonic set
with a version of “This Land Is
Your Land.” Suffice it to say that
in my prejudiced opinion this version did little honor to either
Woody Guthrie or Tom Paxton.
The evening closed on a much
happier note, however, because
the program was very intelligently arranged to allow for an
encore by the featured performer
an innovation which should
definitely be retained.

Somethma

Applause
legitimately
brought Paxton out for two
—

new

Philharmonic Orchestra.

—

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fo/k singer Tom Paxton makes
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COMING FEB. 26th

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greatest contribution. It should
be an excellent album, or so he
claimed, and I would tend to believe him. Well worth the money,
even if you were not previously
a fan
even.

an

—

19 West Utica

Call 837 4300

His style is getting a little older
perhaps and perhaps a little mellower, but I do not think so. It
seems to be more in the vein of
subtler attacks on the same targets in his topical material, and
deepening of quality of the folkballads which will perhaps be his

Legitimate applause

ROYAL ARMS

Weekends Until 4 a.m.

Paxton will finish cutting an
album this week and it will be
released sometime next month.
It will probably reflect what
Paxton said to someone backstage
after the performance: “I don’t
write sermons anymore.”

have.

concert.

Open 11 a.m. fo 2 a.m.

—

not work as well as it should

It is sad that the acoustics at
Baird are not what they should
be. The front row of the balcony
seemed to be best, and the center
seemed fair also. The hall was
definitely too small for Mr. Laredo’s magnificent instrument. However, it still was a magnificent

Next to Twin Fair

lineup to assure a representative
performance
even at Pop Concerts.

A new album

song
written for his daughter, and another of his better songs, “I
Followed Her Into the West,”

encores. “Jennifers Rabbit,”

—

The highlight of the program
was, in my opinion, the “Tartiniana Seconda (Divertimento for
Violin and Piano,” by Dallapiccola. In comparison with Mozart
or Bach, it represents a very
minor contribution to music literature, and indeed, ranks as one
of the less important pieces in a
violinist’s repertoire. Frankly, it
is rarely played. However, Jamie
Laredo decided to perform it
here, and did it in such a masterful way that this “little” piece
alone made the evening worth

there be at least one assistant
conductor with somewhat more
catholic tastes in music to handle
assignments like these, and that
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Friday, February 23, 1968

P&gt;9* Thirteen

Spectrum

•

Philharmonic and Opera Dept, Baird Hall: Percussion Ensemble
will present fully-staged opera
by Leonard Lazarus
Specfrum Music Reviewer

by Lori Pandrys

Allan Leicht is associati

The Opera Department of the
State University of Buffalo and
the Buffalo Philharmonic have
combined their efforts and facilities to bring fully-staged opera
to the Kleinhans stage.
The two performances of Rossini’s “Barber of Seville,” fully
staged in English, are scheduled
for February 25 at 2:30 and Bebruary 27 at 8:30. Melvin Strauss
conducts the Philharmonic and
Allen Leicht is stage director for
the event.
Mr. Strauss has an impressive
background in the operatic field.
He was assistant conductor of
the NBC-TV Opera Company,
Music Director of the Turnau
Opera Players and also had experience in many off-Broadway
shows and summer stock presentations.

tor ~of the Studio Arena Theater.

Among the productions he has
guided on the Arena stage are
“The Mikado," “Antigone,” "The
Lesson” and most recently “Luv.”
He was recently appointed acting director of the Studio Arena
School.

It. is not often that one gels
the chance in Buffalo to hear

chamber music composed for
brass and percussion groups.
Such music demands a great
deal of technical and musical
skill to be performed well.
was presented with such a
I
Heinz Rehfuss, in the role of
Feb. 18 at Baird Hall.
concert
Don Basilio, heads the talented
array of performers. He is cur-

The program was divided into
of the University’s
two sections. The first half feavocal music department. In addition to a musical history which tured the University Student
Brass Ensembles; the.second half
includes twelve years as the leading baritone of the Zurich Opera featured the Student Percussion
Company, he is also familiar to Ensemble. Because of these ena
American audiences through his sembles, the program reflected
well-balanced sampling of modrecordings.
Other members of the cast are: ern and baroque music.
Laurence Bogue also on the faThe i program opened with a
culty) as Figaro, Suze Leal as
performing pieces
Rosina, Samuel Herr and Warren brass quintetHovhaness,
and Suby Gabrieli,
Hoffer.
rently head

Entertainment Calendar
Friday, February

23:

LECTURE / DEMONSTRATION:
Merce Cunningham and Dance
Co., Buffalo State, Rockwell
Hall, 12 p.m.

MOVIE: “Toyko Olympiad,” Conference Theater, fancy photography.
THEATER: “Stop, Look, Listen
and Touch,” Williamsville Circle Theater, also February 24,
probably blow your mind.
CONCERT; Choral Concert, Dowell Multer and William Kothe,

Baird, 8:30 p.m.
MOVIE: “Patient Is A Person”
and “A Message To No One,”
Dief. 303, 4 p.m.
PLAY: “A Delicate Balance,”
Studio Arena, 8:30 p.m.
MOVIE: “The Fearless Vampire
Killers; Or Pardon Me But
Your Teeth Are In My Neck,”

Circle Art, stars Sharon Tate,
biting humor.
MOVIE: “Guess Who’s Coming
To Dinner?”
Cinema I, Spencer Tracy, Katherine Hepburn,
Sidney Poitier. “Would you
believe a Nobel Prize winning
biologist?”

FILMS: “The New American Se-

duction,” “Dionysis,” “Be Filled
With The Spirit,” “P.S. 32,”

CONCERT: Miriam Makeba and
Oscar Peterson, Eastman Theater, Rochester, 8:15 p.m.

“Have You Been To Hamburg
hour program of
short student films, 12 and 3
p.m., Conf. Theater.

Lately?”

Sunday, February 25:

“Barber Of Seville,”
Kleinhans, 2:30 p.m, also Feb.

OPERA:

27, 8:30 p.m.

CONCERT: Four Seasons, Kleinhans, 8:30 p.m.. three and a
half males.

Monday, February 26;
LECTURE: Gordon Rogoff, “The

Fourth and Endless Theater,”
Baird, 8:30 p.m.
Tuesday, February

27:

EXHIBITION: Design Area Stu
dent Exhibition, Buffalo State,
Upton Gallery; jewelry, furniture, ceramics.

■

CONCERT: Creative Associates
Recital VII, Baird, 8:30 p.m.
Thursday, February 29:
A
“Through
MOVIE:
Glass
Darkly,” Norton Conference
Theater.

Friday, March 1
CONCERT: Krzysztof

Jakowicz,

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second brass quintet appeared performing two sonatas of Daniel
Speer and the third movement of
a Quintet by Victor Ewald. The
main problem in these pieces
seemed to be a lack of correct
balance. The tuba played much
too loudly to achieve a healthy
balance. Otherwise, these pieces
received a good performance.

To close the first half, a Brass
Choir performed the “Symphony
from the Fairy Queen”, by. Pur-

cell, and “Theme and Four Variations” by Merriman. The Purcell is a lovely piece filled with
antiphonal sections, but this an-

of the stage. This would
have achieved the antiphona) ef-

sides

The second half on the program provided three unusual
pieces tor percussion. The “Can-

ticle No. 1” by Lou Harrison
seemed to me more like a rhythmic experiment. As a piece of
music it seemed to lack the dramatic qualities which were present in the other pieces.

The, .piece, however, was notable for the different textures
pitted against each other.

Third-stream percussion
The "Symphony for Percussion" by Parehman was a much
more interesting'ffork, Here the
composer was working with jazz
and serious musical elements, a
sort of third-stream percussion
music. Jan Williams, conductor,
was very successful in achieving
the style of the piece. Especially
interesting were Bill Thiele’s solos on drums, pitted against the
more traditional xylophone, vi-

braphone and tympani. The piece
also featured some interesting
rhythmic conflicts.
The third
piece, “Tocatta for Percussion Instruments” by Chavez was to my
mind, only partially successful.
The piece was well performed
but the first movement lacked
interest. A promising beginning
with a tom tom answered by a
snare drum, finally developed
into the dull tinkling of xylophone and vibes. The second and
third movements were much
more interesting with their lively
rhythms.

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THE FRESHEST, FUNNIEST AND
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this quintet, a

Another troublesome fact was
that the balances between trombones and trumpets were not always clear, so that it was difficult at times to distinguish the
Occasionally,
various
voices.
when the group reached a cadence the trumpets would emphasize the top notes. This was a
mistake in the style of the piece;
they should certainly have been
played more within the dynamic
markings of the piece.

—NEW YORK TIMES

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The quintet would do well to
work out their interpretations
more solidly. The players were
very unsure of how their pieces
should sound.

Problems with antiphony

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fect which Purcell obviously had
in mind.

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The most remarkable piece performed was Suzzane Eigen’s “Chaconne a Son Gout.” The piece
made interesting use of harsh,
My main
brass dissonances.
quarrel with the selection was
that it was too brief. Consisting
of five sections, the piece hardly
lasted more than five minutes.
It was very difficult to see relationships between these short
movements.
Perhaps if Miss
Eigen had tried for a lengthier
work, the music could have been

TV SPECIAL: “The Young Eliza
beth,” Channel 17, 8:30 p.m.

8:30 p.m.

24:

LIVELY SET

Brief, but remarkable

CONCERT: John Gary, Kleinhans,

Philharmonic Orchestra,
Kleinhans, 8:30 p.m.

CONCERT: Carlos Montoya, Mary
Seaton Room, Kleinhans,
p.m. Flashing Fingers.

The Hovhaness
did not seem to differ much from
the style of the Gabrielli selection. It was interesting in its use
of modal harmonies.
fuzzy.

tiphonal quality was missing from
the performance. The two choirs
of cornets and trumpets should
have been placed on opposite

Bflo.

-

Saturday, February

somewhat

Following

Wednesday, February 28:

TV SPECIAL: Villanova Jazz Festival, Channel 17, 8 p.m.

zanne Eigen, The Gabrielli rea well-spirited performance although the attacks were

cevied

steamed in BEER
with sherry flavored
Saurkraut.

Sun.-Thurs, 11

a.m.

Screamin' Freeman Williams

till Midnii |ht, Fri
&amp;

&amp;

Sat till 1:00

a.m

The Showstoppers

This is Benjamin.
He’s a little worried about his future

to

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THE GRADUATE
Live Music

Wednesday thru Sunday

ANNE BANCROFT DUSTIN HOFFMAN KATHARINE ROSS
CALDER WILLINGHAM BUCK HENRY PAUL SIMON
SIMON-GARFUNKEL LAWRENCE TURMAN
MIKE NICHOLS TECHNICOLOR PANAVISION"
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SATURDAY NIGHT!

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"Green Tamborine”

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•

1L3 5131

�Page Fourteen

Th

Book:

•

Friday, February 23, 1968

Spectrum

Drama: Scenes from Shakespeare'

'One Very Hot Day'

by Richard Garson
Special to tho Spectrum

by J. B. Ill

“An Evening of Scenes from Shakespeare” proved to be
"One Very Hot Day by David Halberstam, Houghton Mitflen, 1967 an excellent example of what is fight and what is wrong with
dramatic productions at the University. On the one hand,
David Halberstam, who won the 1964 Pulitzer Prize there was a group of fine student actors interested in serious
for his Vietnam coverage, has written a novel about the war drama—and on the other hand, there were an uninterested
at a time when American military men were only advisors
English department and an indifferent Drama department.
. each VC was a step toward promotion, .
and yet,
Spectrum

Book Reviewer

”

.

One Very

.

Hot Day revolves

around overweight Captain Beaupre, who found himself sent to
Vietnam because of his distinguished career behind the lines in
Korea. Unfortunately for himself, Beaupre is 10 years older
and many pounds heavier than
he was at the time of his guerrilla exploits.

Beaupre’s morale was not
helped by his lieutenant, a fresh
West-Pointer who spoke Vietnamese and felt that he was conforming to the best ideals of
"duty and honor and country and

the Point.”
Mr. Halberstam has clearly
shown the differences between
American thinking and Vietnamese thinking. In one incident
involving Beaupre and Lieutenant Thuong, the American is worried that the Vietnamese troops
are bunched together and therefore present a better target to the
Viet Cong.

When asking Thuong if it did
not bother him that men could
be killed easier this way Beaupre
said: “They are your people.”
“So are the Vietcong,” said
Thuong. There are many such incidents in the story showing the
close ties among the Vietnamese.

The only faculty member who
Mr. Halberstam has not neglected
making reference to the moral showed any enthusiasm at all for
dilemma facing some of the South the production was Hal Wicke,
Vietnamese; to defect or not to Jr. who performed as Sir Toby
Belch.
defect?
Most of the novel tells of BeauOn the part of the University,
pre and his men marching on a regarding setting and financial
mission with hopes of making support, the lighting for the
contact with the enemy. The scenes was typically amateurish;
worst part of these marches for the portable stage employed in
Beaupre is the terrible heat, heat the Fillmore Room the first night
which made him sweat and drink was exceptionally noisy and the
all the water in his canteen beConference theater the second
fore the day was half gone, Beau- night hardly suitable for drama,
pre drank water the way alcowith a non-existant backstage.
holics drink liquor.
Eventually Beaupre is surprised Good show, small crowd
The Baird hall boiler-room conby an enemy ambush and after
initial uncertainty he performs cert hall rightly belonds to the
like a good soldier. Even Lieutenmusic department, and so this
ant Thuong acts properly, if only leaves the University with no
out of a sense of duty.
theater or even a stage. As for
One Very Hot Day does not the audience, Student Theater
have the humor or the violence of Guild members (co-sponsor of the
Catch 22, but it does capture the evening with the absent English
ugliness and absurdity of war. department turned out in goodly
Mr. Halberstam has concentrated numbers as did friends of the
on the bitchy little aspects of performers, but the remainder of
war, the personal grudges bethe student body stayed at home.
tween men, and all the other
Aside from poor setting, abannoying incidents which culsence of props and proper cosminate in the tragedy of men
tumes, (especially jarring in the
murdering each other. War is
“Macbeth”
and almost
hell, and won’t we be surprised total lack of scene),
support on the part
if hell is war?
of the University, the evening
Finally, one sentence which
was a great success. The scenes
might best show the theme of were
well-done with competent
this novel caught my attention:
narration by John Reeves and the
“A man wanted to live, that was
the truth and he would lie to do
it; anything he said was designed
not for honor but simply to gain
the next day.”

ORTH
PAR
AVE NEAR -BY

K2fi HtRItl

PAKKINO

•

"The

eye-catcher is Uta Levka, the
hip Carmen in modem undress"

-W.Y. Tim—-

Only

IV. ji

Hie Total Female Animal!
Tonite: 7:40, 9:45. Sat

&amp;

Sun.:

2:30. 4:30. 6:30. 8:30. 10:10

actors were in fine form with few
from the-man-whoexceptions
hath-no Peer Hadjikakou’s opening fanfare, to his closing funfare: “Now to ’scape the serpent’s
tongue.”
—

Nathan Morton played a fine
swaggering Petrucchio born to
tame the excellently shrewish Sue
Kaplan as Kate. If Miss Kaplan’s
lines lacked the crispness of the
true shrew, her fighting was more
than convincing. The original
blocking and pacing of the scene
made it quite vivid.

Macbeth disappointing
The second scene, a composite
from Macbeth, was disappointing.
In a play in which atmosphere is
so important, beginning the
scene with Macbeth’s soliloquy,
“If it were done when ’tis done
. .” is likely to prove a mistake.
Frank Dwyer’s portrayal of
Macbeth never reached the essential intensity of the thane
who was to be king; he played
the Scottish lord more like a toremnted Hamlet. Helene Friedman’s portrayel of Lady Macbeth
emphasied the hard, aggressive
quality of the poisonous lady
without a real feeling for her
character.
The lighting in the scene was

Dionne Warwick will
appear Spring Weekend

The steering committee for
Spring Wekend has released an
outline of activities scheduled to
take place. Though many events
are still to be planned for the
weeknd May 3 through 5, the
committee has already arranged
the concert and dance that highlight the festivities.
The Friday night concert will

THE RUE

For that special date
When a beer just won’t do

Rue Franklin-West
Coffee House

EXTRA-ORDINARY
341 rue Franklin
Sophisticated Entertainment
Friday

and

Saturday

feature Dionne Warwick and the
dance Saturday night will be held
at Leisureland in Hamburg.
What is needed now are ideas
for the various committees to
develop, and students available
to do this developing. Six committees: Bus and Tickets, DanceReception, Publicity, Queens, Brochure and Special Events, all
need volunteers willing to work
in planning and formulating the
other events.
Interested students should pick
up applications in the Union
Board Office, Norton Hall room
261. A mailbox, located in the
Union Board Office, is available
to all those who wish to communicate any ideas concerning
Spring Weekend.

inappropriate as was the stiff
blocking. At times the scene

worked
when Miss Friedman
and Mr. Dwyer projected the horror of their deed (the audience
fell into a silence that was
frightening), but both actors
found it difficult to play characters who had no trace of humor
—

in them.

The third scene, taken from
Twelfth Night, was fresh and funny. Hal Wicke’s Sir Toby was
too leering to be fun and at times
he struggled with his lines, but
this was more than off-set by fine
performances given by Carole
Forman as Maria and Frank
Dwyer as Sir Andrew.

Carole Forman superb

Miss Forman, one of the
school’s finest instinctive ac■tresses, has a natural bent for
character, and her movement on
stage is just right. Mr. Dwyer,
though he could not be physically more removed from the role,
played the scene well. The sweetness of the character, as the innoecnt foppish gull, was delivered
masterfully, from his opening apeparance whistling “The Foggy
Foggy Dew,” to his exit, leaping

offstage.
Piero Hadjikakou played a humorous Father Lawrence, though
he could have used more work
on the content of the lines, opposite a thoroughly convincing
Nathan Morton as Romeo. Mr.
Morton’s Romeo was just light
enough, just romantic enough,
and a fine foil to his Petrucchio.
Continuing the program, pretty Geraldine Vogt stole the spot
light the second night as Juliet.
Her opening soliloquy went slowly, but it is by far Juliet’s most
difficult scene. It is not easy to
pick up the sense of the play out
of context. Miss Vogt’s emotional
intensity was poignantly projected, and though the high range

of her voice could have used
some work, her Juliet excelled.
Again, Carole Forman’s portrayal
as the nurse showed an understanding of character. Her wide,
well-controlled voice range is
also noteworthy.

Fine direction, energy

The most exciting scene the
first night was certainly the
Glendower scene from I Henry
IV. Mr. Hadjikakou’s Glendower
showed flair and Mr. Dwyer’s Hotspur was hot, yet restrained and
always in control. The energy of
the scene was well sustained. Mr.
Dwyer’s versatility—first as Mac-

beth, then as Sir Andrew, and
then as Hotspur—was remarkable, even more so considering
his fine direction.
Both nights were fun and entertaining, and this critic would
certainly enjoy seeing more of
them.

Drive Defensively.
eoiutiE
•WE ROB BANKS'

nominated for

10 Academy Awards

including best picture,

best actor, best actress
NOW SHOWING

The Mo-Town

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WED—FRI.—SAT. EVENINGS

iTiHEATiRE
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I7J-I44#
A (OWN*

�Friday, February 23) 1968

Th

•

Spectrum

Pag* Fifteen

Director Rogoff will Bonnie and Clyde is in top running
lecture on the theater with 10 Academy Award nominations
Special to the Spectrum

Spectrum

Gordon Rogoff, theatre critic
and head of the program for stage
directors at Yale University’s
School of Drama, will be presented by the State University of
Buffalo’s Program in Theatre in
a public lecture Monday at 8:30
p.m. in, Baird Hall.
“The evening will consist of a
prepared talk by Rogoff, followed
by a discussion, debate, public
riot, or whatever seems appropriate,” according to Ward Williamson, Chairman of the Program in
Theatre. Mr. Rogoff’s talk is entitled “The Fourth and Endless
Theatre.” Professor Williamson
reports, “I asked him for a more
academic title I might use to announce the talk and he suggested
‘A Study in the War between Process and Theatrical Production.’
I then pointed out that we now
had two titles, both of them incomprehensible, and he seemed
quite pleased.”

The

The title in fact appears to refer to a piece written a year or
so ago by Mr. Rogoff’s associate
Robert Brustein, in which' Brustein called for a “third theatre”
of youth, vitality, arrogance and
joy, in preference to the existing
theatres of commercial musical
comedy (no. 1) and self-conscious,
serious, realistic drama (no. 2).
Rogoff plans to go on from Brustein’s position and discuss the
debilitating effect of standard
production methods upon modern
theatre. A further aspect of the
talk is suggested by another of its
rejected titles; “What the Beatles
Mean for the Theatre.”

Reporter

Academy of Motion Pic-

ture Arts and Science Monday

listed its nominations for the
coveted Oscar to be presented in
April.

Gordon Rogoff
to

A 'third theatre'

Staff

lecture Monday

Critic and director
Gordon Rogoff brings to his
work in theatre a wide range of
experience as author, actor and
director. Formerly Associate Editor of the Tulane Drama Review,
he has written often and with
great insight on the complexities
of modern drama and modern the-

“Bonnie &amp; Clyde” and “Guess
Who’s Coming to Dinner” both
secured 10 nominations apiece
from the Academy.
The nominations ceremony had
sentimental overtones when it
was announced that Spencer
Tracey, who died last year, was
named as one of the nominees
for Best Actor honors for his
performance in “Guess Who’s
Coming To Dinner.” Others nominated for the award were: Warren Beatty for “Bonnie &amp; Clyde,”
Dustin Hoffamn for “The Graduate.” Also named were Paul Newman for “Cool Hand Luke” and
Rod Steiger for “In the Heat of
the Night.”
Nominated for Best Actress
honors were: Anne Bancroft for
“The Graduate,” Audrey Hepburn for “Wait Until Dark” and
Katherine Hepburn for “Guess
Who’s Coming to Dinner.” Others
nominated were Faye Dunaway
as Bonnie Parker in “Bonnie
Clyde,” and veteran actress Dame
Edith Evans for “The Whisperers.”
Securing nominations for the
coveted Best Picture
awards
Clyde,” the tale
were: “Bonnie
of bank robbers in the late thirties; “Doctor Doolittle,” a children’s fantasy with Rex Harrison;
“The Graduate,” a sex-charged
&amp;

atrical production. He has also
written for The Reporter, The
New Republic, Commonweal, Theatre Arts, and Encore. Currently,
in addition to his work at the
Yale Drama School, he is also di- account of a college graduate’s
recting a workshop at The Open search for identity; “Guess Who’s
Coming to Dinner,” a tale of inTheatre in New York.
&amp;

Heat of the Night.”

Other nominations included
Supporting Actor: John Cassavetes, “The Dirty Dozen;” Gene
Hackman, “Bonnie &amp; Clyde;” Cecil Kellaway, “Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner:” George Kennedy,
"Cool Hand Luke;” Michael

Pollard, “Bonnie

&amp;

J.

Clyde.”

Supporting Actress: Carol
Channing, “Thoroughly Modern
Millie;” Mildred Natwick, “Barefoot in the Park;” Estelle Parsons, "Bonnie &amp; Clyde;" Beah
Richards, “Guess Who’s Coming
to Dinner;” Katherine Ross, “The

Graduate.”
Best Director;

Arthur Penn,
Clyde;” Mike Nichols,
“Bonnie
“The Graduate;” Stanley Kramer,
"Guess Who's Codling to Dinner;”
Richard Brooks, “In Cold Blood;’’
Norman Jewison, “In the Heat of
the Night."
&amp;

Best Foreign-Language Film;
“Closely Watched Trains,” Czech.;
“El Amor Brujo," Spain; “I Even
Met Happy Gypsies,” Yugoslavia;

“Live

for Life,” France; and
“Potrait of Chieko,” Japan.
Best Song: “The Bare Neces-

sities,” from the “Jungle Book;”
"The Eyes of Love” from “Banning;” “The Look Of Love;” from
“Casino Royale;” "Talk to the
Animals" from “Doctor Doolittle;” and the title song from the
film "Thoroughly Modern Millie.”
Of course there will be many
more awarded in some other
areas such as cinematography,
special effects, sound recording,
etc. But the above are the most
important and prestigious.

wny is the Oscar so important?
questions and more are asked
What exactly is the Oscar? These
each April.
The Oscar is important for the
simple fact that in the past the
movies that have won them have

become great box-office successes.
It is estimated that an Oscar
will increase the gross earnings
of a film over a million dollars.
It also important because it represents the amount of achievement which is used in putting
together a good film.
The Oscar
legend has it that
it was named after one of Betty
Davis’ hubands
is a stylized
figure of a man, muscular arms
pressed in close clutching the
hilt of an upright sword, heels
firmly together resting on a roll
of motion picture film.
Ever since the first Oscar given
to the picture “Wings” in 1942
the motion picture industry has
developed from a silly toy into
one of the biggest art forms as
well as the biggest businesses in
—

—

the world.
As for this year’s Oscar, this

reporter predicts: Best Picture
Oscar will go to “Bonnie &amp; Clyde”
with Spencer Tracey receiving,
posthumously, the Best Actor
award and Katherine Hepburn as
Best Actress.
Winning awards for Best Supporting Actor and Actress will
be, I predict, Gene Hackman for
Clyde,” and Estelle
“Bonnie
Parsons for the same.
Best Director award should go
to Norman Jewison, “In the Heat
of the Night.” And the Best Song
should be “Talk to Animals,”
from “Doctor Doolittle.”
&amp;

“Each man can make a difference and Every man should do his part.”
John F. Kennedy

COMMUNITY AID CORPS
presents

Social Service Projects Spring 1968
,

,

Calvary Church Tutorial

Akron Indian Reservation

Lincoln Memorial Tutorial

St. Vincent's Recreation

Fruitbelt Tutorial

Friendship Settlement House

Woodlawn Tutorial

Teen Center

Lackawanna Tutorial

Companion Program

Covenant-Lebanon Tutorial

Children's Aid Companion Program

Civil Service Exams Tutorial

Roswell Park

Akron Reservation Tutorial

Patterning Program

St. Rita's Home

College Counselling Committee

Hospital

Cantalicean Center

NEW VOLUNTEERS SIGN-UP
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Feb. 26, Feb. 27, Feb. 28
Lobby, Norton Hall
9 a.m.-5 p.m.
or call the Student Senate office, 831-3446
—

�Rage Sixteen

T h

•

Friday, February 23, 1961

Spectrum

'Star Trek' is a catalyst to the imagination
Spectrum

Staff

television.
Presently there has been much
speculation as to the future of
this series. It seems that some of
the viewers can't stand to have
their minds taxed with new ideas.
The possibility of the show’s cancellation has resulted in a deluge
of mail to the presidents of the
networks involved. But only time

will tell.

miles of wire were used.
Besides this, there are also a

handled, can render a person unconcious without any serious affects to the person’s body. The

graphed from close-up angles.
The numerous lights and gadgets
which stud the outer surface of
the model look so realistic on the
screen simply because they all
are actual working lights on the

this program outstanding. Special
effects are the most important
of all for without them the show
Avould be severely hampered.
To give the appearance of glid-

the radio which consists of a
transmitter and receiver. The
“Phaser’s” operation is depicted
by a superimposed line of blue
electricity and the “transporter’s”
effects are superimposed orange
flicks of electrical sparks, seen
over a fade-in matte of materializing crew members.

Reporter

a shining star in the murky waters of present day television
is the program “Star Trek”—a program which has proven
to be a catalyst to the imagination through its use of sophisticated science fiction themes.
Tht presence of psychological
as well as biological tensions
among crew, recurring love
themes, the presence of such racial harmony and the numerousphilosophical dialogues is a refreshing change from such kiddy
programs as “Lost in Space,”
which are not only assinine but
insulting to the intelligence of
the American public. “Star Trek”
is a science fiction program which
is aimed at viewers concerned
about what they see and like on

in wiring this bridge and literally

It was made large to give the

the Desilu Studios in Hollywood,

by Joseph Fernbacher

Studies alien cultures
“Star Trek” is the story of the
starship “Enterprise” and her
crew. Their five-year mission is
to seek out and make contact
with alien cultures and learn

about them.

The “Enterprise” is larger than
any known naval vessel. It has a
gross weight of 190,000 tons, containing 14 decks, all within the
250-foot thick operational body
of the ship. Within these decks
thereis a crew complement of
some 430 highly trained people.
It is a self-sustaining craft with
a travel range of 18 years; huge
distances can be travelled within the 18 year limit because of
the faster-than-light warp drives
which propel the ship.
In actuality, the “Enterprise”
is a 14-foot model sitting quietly
on the floor of a sound studio at

miniature.

Special effects
Jimmy Rugg, the special effects
man for the show, is most proud
of his original design for the intricate nerve center of the ship.
He had his set built in eight sections, which when pulled together by hydraulic lifts, form a complete circle. During the filming
of certain scenes the sections are
moved individually to accomodate a camera-boom. Hundreds
of operational instruments are
present, and all of these can be
operated from a master panel
off-stage or by the actors themselves as they sit in their various

stations.

Each

section

of the

bridge has an independent powersupply mounted in its own seperate sound proof booth. Hundreds of hours were put in just

ing through

space or crossing
great distances in a flash, a process of superimposure is used.
Inside the “Enterprise” there are

number of imaginative devices
used which could pass for actual
working instruments.

Unusual instruments
all
Phasers, transporter, etc.
these make up the balance of the
devices which are commonplace
on the “U.S.S. Enterprise.”
The device called the “transporter," is used to teleport men
and machines from the ship,
which cannot land because it was
built for speed, to the surface of
—

the planets being explored.
The “phaser,” is a multipurpose
little weapon. The weapon segment of this instrument is used
to either totally destroy any-

thing it is aimed at or, if expertly

dJnobi
e:
Great,spot for
□ sit-in.

Uses top writers
The other instruments used are

too numerous to mention. Another major distinction of the
shows quality is the fact that it
has had some of the top writers
in the science fiction field writing
its scripts. These include Robert

Bloch, Richard Matheson, and
Theodore Sturgeon.

Rusk calls bomb
halt obscene'
WASHINGTON (CPS)
Secretary of State Dean Rusk told a
group of college editors that stopping the bombing of North Vietnam as a step toward peace
negotiations is “almost an ob—

scene proposal.”

But Sec. Rusk went back and
edited the remark out of the
approved text of the Feb, 2 interview with three college editors
and the College Press Service.
Three of the four writers stuck
to their agreement to use only
comments in the prepared text,
but the fourth, Dan Okrent of
the Michigan Daily, released the
statement in an editorial page
column about the interview.
Walter Grant of CPS wrote a
letter to Sec. Rusk on behalf of
the four editors, objecting to the

deletion.
In releasing

the censored remark, Okrent questioned in an
editorial page column whether
Rusk’s statement would affect the
national security. “I suppose . . ,
it isn’t stretching the imagination
too far to concede that if the
Secretary of State of our country
actually thinks a suggestion to
stop the bombing is ‘obscene,’
then this in itself exposes a
dire threat to effective State Department operations and, thus, to
national security,” he said.

Why Are You
Ignored When

You Talk?
A noted publisher in Chicago
reports a simple technique of
everyday conversation which can
poy you real dividends in social

and

business advancement

works like magic

poise,

to

give

and

you

self-confidence and greater

popularity.

According to this publisher,
many people do not realize how
much they could influence others
simply 'by what they say and how
they say it. Whether in business,
at social functions, or even in
casual conversations with new acquaintenances there are ways to
make a good impression every
time you talk.
You're looking at the

year’s sweetest place for
a sit-in Olds 4-4-2.
This is the scene:
—

Louvered hood up front.
Crisp sculpturing in

the rear. Rally Stripe and
Custom Sport Wheels

available in between.

And what gleams beneath

that rakish afterdeck?
Two telltale flared exhausts
that give voice to a
400-cube, 4-barrel, 350-hp
Rocket V-8.
And look where you
live: in foam-padded,
bucket-seat comfort.

The center console is
also available, as is the
clock tach engine gauge
Rally Pac.

And with all the new

GM safety features, including
energy-absorbing steering
column, 4-4-2 is the greatest
sit-in you ever sat in.

Olds 4-4-2—one of the youngmobiles from Oldsmobile—named "Top Performance Car of the Year" by CARS Magazine.

GM

To acquaint the readers of
this paper with the easy-to-follo"
rules for developing skill in everyday conversation, the publishers
have printed full, details of their
interesting self-training method in
“Adventures in
a, new booklet.
Conversation,” which will be mailed free to anyone who requests it.
No obligation. Send your name,
address, and zip code to: Conversation. 835 Diversey Pkwy.. Dept.
172-412, Chicago, 111. 60614. A
postcard will do.

�Friday, February 23, 1968

Page Seventeen

The Spectrum

Sportin' Life

the spectrum of

“Back in November, people were calling me crazy when I said
we’d be undefeated and make a shambles of this league. I don’t
want any apologies now, just a little recognition and support for an

Murph nets 50

Niagara outshoots Bulls 99-82;
Buffalo freshmen romp 73-57
Baby Bulls cop 10th

by W. Scott Behrens
Asst. Sports Editor

Niagara’s Calvin Murphy, Manny Leaks, and Mike Brown
made their presence felt in the Niagara Student Center
Wednesday night as the State University of Buffalo Bulls
were defeated by the host team, 99-82.
The Bulls’ freshman squad
came through with a comefrom-behind victory over the
Niagara yearlings in the preliminary game, 73-57.
The loss for the varsity Bulls
gave them a 9-8 for the season
and put them one more behind
in the Niagara series as the -Purple Eagles now have a 29-15 commanding lead. Niagara is now
11-10 in season play.

Bulls "in" the game
The Buffalo unit was well “in”
the game in the first five minutes
of play as the Bulls moved the
ball well and looked for the good
shot. The blue-clad Bulls had as
much as a ten-point lead with only
seven minutes gone in the first
half, but saw their lead- dwindle
as Brown turned the game around
with three steals and Murphy
started to hit his deadly long
shots.

Murphy missed six straight
buckets in the opening moments
of the game before he started on
his spree. At the same time Buffalo’s Ed Eberle, John Fieri, John
Jekielek and Bob Nowak were
keeping the Bulls ahead in the
contest with some timely and accurate shooting as well as controlling the backboards.
Once little Calvin started to hit
the bucket, there was no one who
was able to stop him. Murphy
finished the first half with 23
points and wound up the game
with an even 50.
Leaks was held to just four
points in the first stanza but his
height started to work for him
in the second half. He scored 19

points in that second half, giving
him 23 for the night.
But the Bulls are not to be denied of a good ball game despite
the loss. Each Buffalo man gave
out that little extra effort needed
and the men really played their

hearts this game.

Eberle leads Bulls
Eberle was Buffalo’s scoring
leader with 24 points, Fieri

chimed in with 17 and Nowak
finished with 15.
Buffalo made good 33 of 69
shots taken from the field for a
very respestable 47.8%. Niagara
hit on 43 of 92 for 46.7%. However, the Bulls led at the free
throw line, making 16 of 21, while
the Purple Eagles only made 13
of 24.
Murphy took an

amazing

55

shots from the field and put 23 of
these shots through the hoop.
Leaks finished the game making
nine of 15 from the field.
Buffalo’s best shooters were
Eberle, who cashed in on ten twopointers out of 19, Fieri, who
made six out of nine, and Nowak,
who made six of 12,
The Bulls were out-rebounded
50-34 with Leaks pulling in 18
and Greg Hudecki taking 12 off
the boards. The Bulls’ rebound
leader was Eberle with seven.
Close behind him was Fieri with

six.
A Niagara official asked the
Bulls’ head coach Dr. Len Serfustini what he thought of Murphy
and the head mentor replied: “It’s
just as I have said before. He’s
the greatest basketball player I
have ever seen play in college
ball.”

The Baby Bulls won their
tenth game of the season against
only four defeats. It was the
Eagles yearlings’ 13th loss in 16
ball games and marked the second
time this season the Baby Eagles
fell short of the Buffalo frosh.
The Baby Bulls were down seven points at the half. In the second stanza they started to press
full court and chopped Niagara’s
lead down to nothing and went
ahead to stay with hardly any
trouble. But it was also the 15foot line which assisted the young
Bulls in attaining their victory.

The Baby Blue and White
scored on 25 of 31 shots attempted from the charity toss line in
the second half. Steve Waxman
was Buffalo’s leading scorer with
20 points while Bob Moog hit for
17. The other Baby Bull in the
double figures was Roger Kremblas with ten.

Both teams meet Colgate

outstanding hockey team
The Bulls had just wrapped-up the Finger Lakes Hockey crown
by dumping Oswego 3-2 in a sudden death thriller across the state,
and nobody was taking more pride in the club’s outstanding season
than Genera! Manager Howie Flaster,
“We came down here (Oswego) two years ago, and they took us
apart, 24-0. I vowed then that when we came back things were
going to be a lot different.”
Things were very different Saturday evening when the Bulls
handed Oswego their first league defeat in four years,
“Oswego is a State University also. But they’ve got their own
rink and scholarships for their skaters. All we’ve got is a rented
arena for 11:00 p.m. practices a few nights a week. These kids really have to be dedicated to produce the kind of effort they have all
year."

In the Finger Lakes Hockey Tournament to be played at the
Amherst Arena, March 9 and .10, we will be the only school represented by a club, rather than a varsity team.
When asked when the Bulls could expect to reach varsity status,
Piaster was cautiously optimistic. “I hope that when we start the
1969-70 season that we’ll have reached the varsity level. What we
need most is an arena. The state has been discussing the possibility of
purchasing the Amherst rink for the last nine months. Once the
deal is closed, nothing can stop us from stepping up.”
The . Bulls have not fared
poorly as a “club” this season,
however. Buffalo has the top six
scorers in the Finger Lakes
League, led by Lome Rombough
who has 30 goals and is third in
the East in scoring. Fort Erie’s
Franky Lewis is the legaues top
playmaker with 27 assists, and
the Fort Erie sharpshooter is
second in the league scoring race,
Billy Newman, from Chippewa, Ont., has thirteen goals to
place him third in point production. Since joining the club this
semester, Billy Tape is averaging
an immodest goal per game.
That’s a lot of firepower.
But the Bulls aren’t all offense. Jim Miller from Fort
Erie, All League Frank Bougmeister, Billy Defoe, a Niagara —Don Glona
Falls native, and Kenmore’s own
Franky Lewis
Jim Murdock (yes Virginia, Americans do play hockey) bolster
a solid defensive backline. To complement such an array of talent,
Buffalo naturally is blessed with the number one netminder in the

The freshman basketball team
will take on the Colgate freshman tomorrow afternoon in Clark
Gym following the wrestling
matches. According to head coach
Ed Muto, game time should be
about 4:15 p.m.
The varsity*squad will shift to
Memorial Auditorium to play
against Colgate’s varsity outfit.
Game time for that contest is
7:15 p.m. Canisius will face Dayleague, Jimmy Hamilton.
ton in the second contest. Tickets
“While this club is great this year, watch out next year. We’ve
for the doubleheader are on sale
got nine boys coming here in September who are playing Junior B
this afternoon until 5 p.m. The
or better now,” remarked Piaster enthusiastically.
cost to students will be one dolHow can the Bulls compete with the Cornells and the Oswegos
lar.
support?
The Niagara game statistics when we have such limited facilities and financial
“It’s not too difficult to understand really,” answered Plaster—follow:
“Rombough was Cornell bound, and Darryl Pugh who tied up the
Oswego game in the last seconds was headed for Oswego before I
UB
OFT NIAGARA
G F T
6 3 IS Malletti I
0
1
Nowak I
got a hold of him. When the Fort Erie and Niagara Falls boys come
4
Bernard f
3 2 8 Hudecki f
12
9 5 23
they can live at home and commute. They’ve got girlfriends,
here,
Jekielek c
2 2 6 Leaks c
23 4 50
Pieri g
6 5 17 Murphy g
jobs etc. and many want to play near home. Also, even with $1500
7 n 14
Eberleg
10 4 24 Brown g
1 0 2 Schafer
0 00
Scherrer
scholarships at some schools its more expensive to go there than to
1 0 2
1 0 2 Carno
Wells
come to Buffalo.”
0 0 0
Culerf
7 0 4 Zeifs
Williams
2 0 4 Schuq
2 0 4
When asked to summarize the season, Plaster had a quick answer
Vaughn
0 0 0 Spremulll
0 0 0
33 16 82 Totals
43 13 99
Totals
We’re the best hockey club in the United States.”
Halffime-Niagara 45, UB 36.
Anybody think he’s still crazy?
?

UB indoor track team
fares well at Rochester
Saturday afternoon the State
University of Buffalo indoor track
team went to the Rochester relays
and placed sixth. Twelve teams
were represented.
Cliff Spiegleman received first
place honors in the high jump
event. Hubie Greene came in
second in the 50-yard dash and
the Bulls’ 800-yard relay team
came in fifth place. The relay
team consisted of Arnie Minkoff,

Artie Dearlove, Greene and A1

Varsity
Team

Point*

Univ. of Rochester
Alfred
Hamilton
Brockport
LeMoyne

Buffalo
Roberts V/esleyan
Ithaca
Buffalo State
Rochester Inst, of Tech.

17Vi
17H

Hobart

Brown.
Frashman

The

Bulls’ freshman contingent turned in second place in
their 880-yard event. Running for
this yearling relay team were
Jim Valkwitch, Harvey Lustig,
Tom Literski and Bob Barnes.
The yearling Medley Relay outfit copped fourth place among
ten teams entered. The Baby Bulls
finished in a tie for fourth place.
Here is how the team scoring

went:

Taam

Points

Rochester Inst, of Tech,
Univ, of Rochester
Brockport

Buffalo
Buffalo State
Alfred
St, Bonaventure
Ithaca
Roberts Wesleyan
LeMoyne

—Don Glena

Champs

The 1967-68 Finger Lakes Hockey League Cham,a,e University of Buffalo Hockey
pl ons
C/ub.
'

�Th

Page Eighteen

Story of victory on ice:

•

Friday, February 23, 1968

Spectrum

apsule analysi

by Len Serfustini
'Editor s tNate: The author of this article
rlub
Below he relates what it's like to

is

a

reserve goalie for the Bulls hockey
league championship.)

clinch a

by Tony DePaolo
Spectrum Staff Reporter

University

Basketball

Coach

To date, I would consider the 1967-68 basketball season one of the most challenging in my coaching career.

“We’re no. 1 we’re no. 1,” and the chant goes on, as
The schedule has proven to be the best in the annals of
the champion St ;ate University of Buffalo Hockey Club State University of Buffalo basketball history. The reason
reminisces about their weekend victory over Oswego.
I can make this statement is, virtually every team we’ve met
The Bulls are Champs now, but
with a minute left to play. Out has been a tournament contender or conference leader, and
as I think back to last weekend I
of the blue comes speedy Franky in our five remaining ball games there is no let up in sight.
can see all those agoniing pracLewis who aimed for the lower I’m sure the team would agree with me in saying we wouldn’t
tices at ten and eleven at night right hand corner of the nets and
way.
in the Amherst Arena, cold show, put a blistering sizzler right want it any other
,

ers, starts and stops, broken prac
tice sticks, and long bus rides.
But Saturday's victory and the
league championship made all
these things worth it.
A week to remember started
last Tuesday night when we
walked into a locker covered with
signs which questioned, “On Monday will we still be No. 1?” or,
“Where is your pride?” The psychological battle against Oswego

had started.
The bus was ten minutes late
on Thursday (as usual), but that
was all right, since half the team
was late too. After a five and a
half hour bus ride that included
the invasion of a road side diner
at 11:30, the leers arrived at the
University Treadway Inn at 12:30
a m. and everyone hit the sack
early to rest for the game against
Canton A&amp;T the next afternoon
at 2 p.m.

Friday morning came rather
quickly. Most of the team was
up with the sun as it glimmed
brightly through the motel win
clows.

hranky Lewis was still making
like the French-Canadian hockey
player when he came to the
breakfast table mumbling something that sounded like “Prenezwho, Prenez-who,” but he finally
downed his organge juice with
the rest of the team. Then everyone was ready for Canton.
After leaving the motel the
Team, lead by our fearless bus
driver George, drove down into
the bustling metropolis of Canton, N, Y„ to pick up some last
minute details—hockey sticks,
shoe laces and Alka Seltzer. The
only problem we had was parking
the bus, which George did in fine
style. We had to put nickles in
four meters.
The
joviality ended there,
from the time we got into the
locker room until the time the
final buzzer went, it was all
hockey. After blowing a 2-0 lead
the Bulls fell behind 5-2 before
Johnny Watson popped in a loose
puck from a scramble in front
of the Canton net.
It was 5-3 at the start of the
second period, bat Billy Tape
netted two and Bill Defoe one,
blasting the Bull; into a 6-5 lead

through the Canton goalie’s pads.
So on that note the Buffalo
leers realized that everything depended on this game as they
boarded the bus for Oswego last
Saturday afternoon. With the un.

daunted courage of their Busdriver George, the State University of Buffalo leers braved the

worst storm in up state New York
as they traveled 90 miles over
roads they could not see, passing
close to 30 cars that had gone
off the road. At 6:20 they arrived (to the great amazement of
the Oswego coach) and were
ready as the ref dropped the
puck at 7:30.
The Bulls played their best
hockey of the season. They
stayed with the Lakers from one
minute to the next. Bill Dcvoe
was de-iced by a tripping penalty
at 7:10 of the first period. Billy
Tape put away a backhand and

the Bulls led 10.
The game remained in the
Bulls favor until 12:02 of the
second period when Bruce Boisson jammed in a loose puck to
tie the score. The Bulls held the

line until 4:28 of the third period
when Bill Devoe cut in front of
the Buffalo net and beat Jimmy
Hamilton on his short side.
The stage was then set for the
Bulls comeback. After being up
two men—only to see Oswego
kill both penalties, the Bulls won
a face off in the Lakers zone.

■ The greatest problem we
have faced to date, other
than the overall schedule,
has been the necessity of
making continual adjustments in the lineup to overcome injuries, illness and the
draft.
The ultimate success of a basketball team against the kind of
competition we are now in, depends upon fine timing and devoted team play. To achieve this
takes a great deal of time and
patience. Eventually the team
“jells” into a smooth working
unit, each player posessing a complete knowledge of his responsibilities, but most important of
all, he has the ability to “read”
the movements of his teammates.
We have not been able to achieve
this end in its entirety as this
team has never been at full
strength in two consecutive contests. This constant adjustment
in personnel, while still trying
to maintain offensive and defensive unity has made life extremely interesting tor the coach (to
say the least!).

As an example, the weekend
we went against Wayne and Windsor Universities—both on the road
—the greatest adjustments of all
had to be made. Just before these
games we lost the service of Joe
Peeler to the U.S. Army. Rick
Wells, our other starting guard,
was unable to make the trip because of the unfortunate death of

Darryl Pugh sent the puck back
to Fred Borgemister at the left
point, while Borgemister wound
up and let go with a terrific shot.
Pugh got his stick on it and pul
it by the startled Oswego netminder. The clock read :57.
Things were tied. As the buzzer went the NCAA rule went
into effect. First goal before ten
minutes wins, or a tie if time runs
out.
Oswego got on the bulls right
away as Jimmy Hamilton made
Doug Bernard was selected this
at least 6 saves in the first three
week for varsity basketball player
minutes, but as Oswego pres- of the week.
sured, Billy Tape fed Lome Rombough with a perfect pass. RomDespite the Bulls’ loss to Bufbough then faked the Goalie out
falo State Saturday, Bernard was
of his shorts for the game-winner.
the only Bull who could shoot
As Jim Hamilton went into the
effectively against the Staters and
shower, every one realized it had
wound up as the Bulls’ leading
been worth every minute they scorer
with 17 points, Doug mesh-

Co-captain

his father. On the night of the
Wayne game, Joe Rutkowski came
down with the flu and was unable
to play. A ball club that was outstanding just the week before
against Hofstra, became a “disaster area” in one short week.
John Fieri and Bob Williams
took up the slack and did a good
job in both the games, handling
the chores of the guard position.
Both games were decided in the
last two minutes of play and it
is ironical that in each game
Fieri had fouled out with more
than four minutes to go in each
game.

Saturday we took on our cross
town rivals, Buffalo State University College. The State team prevailed to the tune of 94 to 76.
Probably the easiest way to sum-

marize this ball game would be
to look at one vital statistic. Buffalo State shot 52% for the ballgame to 34% for the Bulls, We
had fifteen more shot opportunities than State (including 10 layup shots) but we couldn’t take
advantage of it.

We took a calculated risk in
this ball game by going to a
zone defense. On the basis of
our scouting reports, we felt we
had to stop the fast break of
State, neutralize their second efforts around the basket and make
their outside shots come through
around a 45% shooting area of
the basket.
We wanted our opponents, if

they were going to get shots, to

have these shots from-the corner.
This was the strategy and did
it ever backfire! Buffalo State
made 14 out of 17 shots from
and this shooting
the corner
percentage I’ll put against any
team in the country. We had a
“tiger by the tail” and we couldn't
contain them. Our shift to a zone
was also made in the light of
our necessary switch of Ed Eber
le from forward to guard. Until
Ed learns the rudiments of defensive guard position, he is better protected in the zone defense.
—

In a capsule analysis of our

team, to date: Doug Bernard

and

Bob Nowak are finally at full
strength and have been doing
an outstanding job; Ed Eberle
still “easy Ed” in every sense
of the word, has been our most
consistent performer, along with
accepting his new responsibility;
John Jekielek is making life generally miserable for our opposing
centers, and John Vaughn is showing vast improvement in backing
him up; a tremendous burden has
fallen on the shoulders of John
Fieri and Bob Williams and they
have accepted the challenge; Rick
Wells has returned to the squad
with Joe Rutkowski, slowly regaining his strength, we may once
again establish depth at the guard
position.

Barring

further

unforeseen

events, I sincerely hope we can
stabilize our lineup for the remaining encounters on the schedule.

Tomorrow night—Colgate University—Memorial Auditorium—7:15 p.m. By this time you’ll have
a good chance to evaluate our
team with Ed Eberle handling
the guard position. It should prove
to be an outstanding game, and
let’s hope Colgate does not act
as if they own the baskets, as
Buffalo State University College
did.

and best shootei

Bernard makes Player of Week

had devoted.

five out of ten shots from
the field and was flawless at the
free throw line, making all seven
charity tosses awarded him.
Bernard has been hampered by
back pain most of the season.
This had slowed him considerably
and had forced him to play the
supporting role in the Bulls’ line,
ed

up.

Saturday’s game against State
was the fifth contest in which
the senior forward received a
starting berth from head coach
Serfustini. Bernard was selected
as one of the co-captains of the
game.

The best shooter
Bernard has proved to be the
best shooter among the regulars
with a season average of 48.4%,
hitting on 59 of 122 shots taken
from the floor. His perfect night
at the free throw line has increased in foul shooting percentage to 67.4, netting 29 of 43
from the 15-foot line.
Doug is fourth on the team in
the rebound department with 81
to date, with a game average of
5.06 rebounds. Bernard's 17 points
raised his season total to 147
and placed him third among the
Bulls' scoring leaders.
UPI

Telephoto

«

jeaQren
l

aflfl

.1

tne Stars
,

It's not the stars that pole vauller Bob Seagren is
surrounded by but the bright lights of the
domed ceiling of the new Madison Square
Garden. Bob cleared I6'6" to win the event.

Bernard has a fine outside shot,
is an excellent driver and when
he is healthy he is a great asset
to the Bulls' offensive and defensive units.

Doug Bernard
Player of the week
But with basketball the bod&gt;

contact sport that it is, Doug consistently comes in close contact
with the opposing players and
invariably, from time to time,
ends up on the floor two or three
times during a game. He reinjures his back and he is back

where he started from

—

taking

physical therapy treatments for
several days, sometimes missing
those vital practice sessions.
Doug is a History major and
plans to teach near his home
town in Ilion, New York after
graduation

this June.

�Page Nineteen

The Spectrum

Friday, February 23, 1968

Fraternities boast rush class of 215
by Elliot Stephan Rose
Spectrum

With

the

Staff

Reporter

active support

of

success for the fraternity system.
Boasting a rush registration list
of 215, equivalent to any proceeding year, the Interfraternity
Council has led the way for
drawing interested people to meet
and become part of fraternity

life.

News items
Newly appointed officers of
Alpha Sigma Phi are: Social
Chairman, Curt Wilbur; Senior
advisor, Sandy Finkelstein; Asst.
Senior advisor, Bill Potskowski;
Pledgemaster, Carl Letson; Asst.
Pledgemaster, Jim Redmond; Ac-

Action line

tivities and Rush, Larry Lehner
. . , The
brothers of Gamma Phi

Sean Monaghan, Tom Romalew-

journeyed to Oswego State to
see a road performance of the

Agoglia of Theta Chi Fraternity
was awarded the greater New

the entire student body to
support the finest hockey team in
Western New York , . . New officers of PI Lambda Tau are
President, Ron Boiler; First V.P.,
A1 O’Hara; Second V.P., ' Bob
Krenz; Treasurer, Jim Presant;
Rec. Secy., Jerry Selinger; Corres.
Secy., Steve Knapik; Senior IFC
Rep., Gary Schineller; Chaplain,
Frank Coppa; Historian, Tom
Texeria; Alumni Secy., Larry

ski, and Ed Throm

to urge

Weingarten; Appointments were:
Junior IFC Rep., Steve Knapik;

Chm., Tom Saleh; Dry
Goods, John Hoeplinger; Rush,
Gary Schineller. New brothers
are, Mitch Drucker, Phil Ferber,
Sports

.

.

.

Robert

Sororities
New officers of Chi Omega are:
President, Karen Brekke; V.P.,
Carolyn Arnold; Secy., Jane Moir;
Treas., Sue Hawrylczak; Pledge
Mistress, Eileen Haslach; Corres.
Secy., Barb Evans; Herald, Jan
Grace. Eileen Haslach is campaign chairman for Military Ball
queen candidate Jeanne Piquet
. . . New sisters of Sigma Kappa
Phi are Paula Agostino, Pat
Becker, Joy Buchnowski, Marla
Goerse, Marge Guerra, Linda MeDougal,

Chris

Scappator

and

Linda Stevanatto. Paula Agostino
was named best pledge . . .

official bulletin
The Official Bulletin it an authorized
publication of the State University of
Buffalo, for which The Spectrum assumes
no editorial responsibility. Notices should
be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to 114
Hayes Hall, attention Mrs. Fischer, before
2 p.m. the Friday prior to the weak of
publication. Student organization notices
are not accepted for publication.

General notices

The Office of Financial Aid to
Students has requested that ap-

financial assistance
for the 1968-69 academic year be
submitted before March 1, 1968.

plications for

The required forms have been
sent to students who are presently receiving aid through that
office. They may also be ob-

tained by contacting the Financial
Aid Office, 216 Harriman Library.

A REMINDER

APPLICA-

—

TIONS FOR MAKE-UP EXAMINATIONS for the removal of INCOMPLETE GRADES (recorded

for absence from final exams)
will be accepted no later than
March 4, 1968. Make-up examinations will be given the week
of April 8, 1968.

General announcements
February 23
The Department of Music

•

pre-

8:30 p.m., Baird Music Hall. Ad-

Student testing center registration schedule
College Level Exam Program

Feb. 24

M.L.A. Foreign Language

Mar. 8

Pre-Nursing Exam

Feb. 24

Applications
Available

Test
Date

Mar. 16 316 Harriman
Mar. 30 316 Harriman
Mar. 9 Sch. of Nursing

CLASSIFIED
APARTMENT FOR

RENTS

U.B., one block; three graduate male students; two bedrooms, bath, kitchen;

complete privacy; weekly cleaning; utilities
provided; ready now. 832-5058 or 833-9261.
SUMMER
STUDENTS - three bed-study
rooms, available near campus. Call days,
877-1600, ext. 790; evenings, 832-5491.
ROOMMATES WANTED
FEMALES - $125 for remainder of the semester, near Allenhurst. 836-6505 after 9:30 p.m.
MALE to share apartment; on edge of

ONE

OR TWO

campus; two
Rich, 837-7803.

bedrooms; $65 month; Call

MALE to share apartment, three blocks
from campus; $50 a month. Telephone
833-8039. Call between 5:30 and 6:30 or
after 11:00 P.M. Graduate student preferred.

FOR SALE
BOA CONSTRICTOR for sale

safe,

inconspicuous

and

-

clean, quiet,

affectionate.

Call Randy 831-3387.

1965 MUSTANG V-8 - stick shift, four
speed, four carburetor, dark blue, white
interior. 694-1466.
ROLLEICORD

V-a-fwin-len$

close-up
lens, lens-hood;
874-3490 evenings.

reflex, filters,
cases, $50.

FUN WORKING
IN EUROPE

WANTED
SILVER DOLLARS wanted. Will pay $1.25
for any date, any condition, any quantify.
Call Sam, 836-5582.
COLLECTIONS wanted. U.S. or
foreign. Large or small. High prices paid.

STAMP

836-5582.

SENIOR or apprentice • full
time, top pay, apply in person. Colvin
Eggert Pharmacy, Colvin Eggert Plaza or
Park Plaza Pharmacy, 2754 Harlem Road.
VISITORS , THE GILDED EDGE, 3193 Bailey
Avenue. Hand-crafted jewelry and unusual gifts. Wed. Sat.
PHARMACY

-

PERSONAL
SHALOM! For gems from the Jewish Bible.
Call 875-4265 day or night.
LOST

REWARD - Men's gold ring, yellow
glass setting. Lost in Norton Union. Call
839-4289.
LADIES GLASSES in brown case. Reward.
$50

Call 831-3056.

MISCELLANEOUS

PORTRAITS

by Thom professional work at
student rates. Call 832-3505 after 4 P.M.
NATIONAL OPEN RUSH ■ Monday, Feb. 26
Friday, Mar. 1.

TYPING term

papers, 25c per page; dittos,
35c; envelopes, $2.00 per hundred. Call

835-6897.

■ Fly June 8, New York to London.
Return September 7, Amsterdam to New
York. Round trip $265. Open to students,
faculty, staff and immediate families. Call
831-4070 evenings.

EUROPt

February 27
University Report
presents
Dr. Ruth T. McGrorey, Dean,
School of Nursing, “Remedy for
a House Divided
Dilemma,
Decision, and New Commitment
in Nursing,” 9:00 a.m., Conference Theatre, Norton Hall.
February 28
Creative Associates Recital VII
-

—

The New Percussion Quartet,
8:30 p.m., Baird Music Hall. Ad
mission free.
-

sents a Choral Concert with Dowell Multer and William Kothe,

Last Day
to Register

mission: $1,50, $1.00 and 50p for
general public, faculty and staff,
and student respectively

Jobs Abroad Guaranteed

BRUSSELS: The IntT Student
Information Service, non profit,
today announced that 1,000
GUARANTEED JOBS
ABROAD are available to
young people 17&gt;/2 to 40, YearRound and Summer. The new
34 page JOBS ABROAD magazine is packed with on-the-spotphotos, stories and information
about your JOB ABROAD.
Applications are enclosed.
LANGUAGE-CULTURE-FUNPAY-TRAVEL. For your copy
send $1.00 AIRMAIL to: ISIS,
133 Rue Hotel des Monnaies,
Brussels 6, Belgium.

February 29
Pharmacy Seminar - presents
Dr. T. W. Clarkson, Department
of Radiation Biology and Biophysics, University of Rochester
School of Medicine, “The Meta-

bolism and Mode of Action of
Mercurial Diuretics.”

.

.

.

831-5000
LINE will answer all questions of general interest which appear to
be pertinent to the student body. The Spectrum will include them in its special
ACTION LINE weekly column. Each inquiry will be thoroughly investigated and
answered individually. The name of the individual originating the inquiry will

ACTION

Q. Why does it take so long for grade reports to reach the
students?
A. Dr. A. Kaiser, Director of Admissions and Records, stated:
“This has been of real concern to me. As of Change of Registration
Day, Friday, Jan. 26, approximately 6,000 student grade reports had
not been mailed. The reason for this inordinate delay is very simple:
instructors had not turned in grades. Since the grade reports are
produced by Data Processing, the grade report for a given student
is not printed if the grade for any one of his courses is missing.
Our instructions to.faculty make very clear our request that grades
are due three days after the date of the examination. If no examination is given, they are due three days after the last day of
instruction in the semester. Thus, the small group of instructors
who obviously did not meet the deadline held up thousands of student
grade reports.
Q. Is there any way the faculty lot in front of Goodyear could
be open to students? It is almost always empty!
A. This is a special purpose lot, not generally used by faculty,
and accommodates only 24 cars. Mr. E. Murray, Chief of Institution
Safety, was quick to remind us that last year ground was prepared
to provide a new student parking lot which would have added 125
parking spaces in that general area. The students, however, voted
overwhelmingly to reject the additional parking lot in favor of
retaining 1 the lawn.
Q. When, how, and on what basis are students selected for
membership in Alpha Lambda Delta and Phi Eta Sigma?
A. Invitations to membership in Alpha Lambda Delta and Phi Eta
Sigma, national scholastic honor societies for freshman women and
freshman men, respectively, are extended to students who attain an
average of 2.5 or above on the basis of at least 15 hours of work
during their first semester, or on a cumulative average of 2.5 or above
on at least 30 hours during their freshman year. Invitations are
issued by both organizations after grade lists are compiled, which
for the first semester will be sometime in Feb.
Q. Why haven't the Tower clock chimes of Hayes Hall been ringthe Hayes classroom clocks improperly set?

ing? Also, why are

A. There is something wrong mechanically with the Tower
clock which also affects the chimes. As soon as weather permits,
a repairman will restore the clock and chimes. All class clocks are
checked regularly and the maintenance department was not aware
that some were not working properly. By this lime, they should all

be set correctly.

For specific answers to your questions and for direct service, call ACTION LINE,
every Monday, Wednesday,
and Friday, from 4-5 p.m.
If you prefer]
phrase your question in writing and address it to ACTION LINE,
c/o The Spectrum'
355 Norton Hall, or Ihe Office of the Dean of Students, 201 Hatriman library.

031-5000,

�Page Twanty

T h

•

Spectrum

Friday, February

W1

Tonkin incident questioned
WASHINGTON
Despite a marathon
briefing by Defense Secretary Robert S.
McNamara, some Senate administration
critics still voiced suspicions that the

ig the committee virtually unlimited authority to conduct the war.
Sec. McNamara, due to leave the Pentagon at the end of the month to become

—

president

toman

Senate

IN

of the World Bank, admitted for

tnciaen

North Vietnam
Chairman J. William Fulbright of the

and Turner

Joy were intelligencergath-

vessels equipped with electronic
surveilance gear. The administration had
claimed in 1964 that the two ships were
ering

Foreign Relations Committee said

the portions of the testimony Sec. McNamara released publicly do not “tell the

on a “routine mission,"

whole story.”
But he said no decision has been made
whether to continue the committee’s probe
into the incident.
Sen. Wayne Morse (D,, Ore.), said nothing Sec. McNamara told the committee had
changed the view he has held for three
years that the Tonkin incident resulted
from an act of “constructive aggression”
by the United States.
Sec. McNamara, in his last and perhaps
toughest appearance on Capitol Hill, spent
seven hours behind closed doors with the
committee early this week trying to convince dissident members that North Vietnam, without provocation, attacked the
U S. destroyers Maddox and Turner Joy
on Aug. 2 and Aug. 4, 1964.
The circumstances surrounding the at
tack are crucial since it led to the retalia

23, 1968

“mi

The secretary also startled some members of the committee by declaring that
the two ships were authorized to come as
close as eight miles to North Vietnam’s

coastline.
But the secretary insisted that the two
vessels were in international waters at all

times during and prior to the attack. He
said North Vietnam’s present 12-mile territorial limit was not in effect in 1964.
Sen, Fulbright told newsmen that was
only a “contention” of the administration
and said he was not certain whether it

was true.
Sen. Morse said he told Sec. McNamara
he completely disagreed with everything
he said.
“Having the Maddox and Turner Joy
there was an act of constructive aggression on our part,” he said, “North Vietnam had every reason to fear what we
were doing.”

tory bombing of North Vietnam and im
pelled Congress to pass a resoultion giv

*

•

•

f

V

\

x\
V

***

\

:

Washington
UPI Telephoto

mia mi

Says goodbye
to Marines

Ottawa

President Lyndon Johnson stops to
shake hands with a Marine here during
his recent cross country trip to bid farewell to Vietnam bound fighting men.
Earlier in the day, the President paid a
surprise visit to paratroopers at Fort
Bragg, N. C.

:ompiled from our wire services by Duane Champion

Bomb damages Soviet embassy

Teacher strike: Kirk takes charge
MIAMI
Gov. Claude Kirk took personal command of Florida's school crisis
setting up a confrontation with striking
teachers and making clear he had no
intention of meeting their money demands.

protesting teachers, although

Gov. Kirk called the walkout, the first
statewide strike by teachers in I he na
lion’s history, a "pilot” project on the
part of unionists.

mously attacking a “unionist” movement
by the Florida Education Association
(FEA), called upon the governor to provide the leadership in solving the state’s

—

local teachers arc not participating in the statewide
protest. Deputies said the mob grew unruly and started throwing stones. Ten students were arrested.
•

He said the National Education Association (NEA) already has announced
plans for “350 teacher strikes this year”
and that Florida is just being used as a
testing ground.

Gov. Kirk, an unannounced but active
candidate for the Republican vice presidential nomination, address teachers at
Miami’s huge Marina Stadium on Biscayne Bay. He was under fire in some
quarters because he had been out of the
state in recent days on a political trip
through the west.

Seeks

dialogue

The Republican governor said he wanted
lo establish a "governor-teachers'' dialogue, and that if he succeeded here
where most of the states population is
concentrated
he would take his campaign into other areas.
—

Gov, Kirk said that although he considers the statewide
"resignation" of
teachers a strike, his role is not as a
“strike-breaker,” but as the chief executive. He is concerned that each child has
a chance for a proper education.
The three-day-old walkout has resulted
in a forced vacation for thousands of
Florida children and has aroused students
and adults alike.

There were these late developments
At Fort Lauderdale, sherff’s deputies
arrested ten high school students when a
"sympathy walkout” turned into a rockthrowing, car-rocking melee. Deputies said
about 200 students gathered at a football field to protest “deplorable conditions" and to indicate sympathy with
•

Florida

newspapers, almost unani-

massive teacher walkout.

Touch-and-go
Schools opened in most of the state,
but in I he hard-hit major population centers of Duval, Hillsborough, Pinellas, Volusia and Dade Counties, it was touch-and-go.
Manatee, Escambia and a few smaller
counties did not even try to open. State
school superintendent Floyd Christian, who
met with Gov. Kirk but said no specific
solution was discussed, said the walkout
appears to have settled down to a figure
of about 25,000 of the state’s 58,000
•

teachers.

FEA executive Phil Constans flew
around the state in a rented jet telling
teachers that "no one will ever break the
back of the teachers of the state of
Florida. They are holding strong in every
area of this state and we are gaining
•

ground.”

Gov. Kirk made it clear at a Tallahassee news conference that he intends
lo try to solve the school crisis by dealing
personally with the teachers
rather
than working through the legislature or
leadership.
FEA
Mr. Constans said the
only solution is for parents to persuade
the legislature to go into session to vote
more funds than the $128 million to $140
million the last session provided and
enact a professional negotiations law letting teachers help decide how it shall be
•

—

spent.

Gov. Kirk said he hopes selective
service boards will look at the draft
status of teachers who are not following
their profession though exempt for edu•

cational reasons.

WASHINGTON
A bomb damaged the
Soviet Embassy earlier this week while
Ambassador Anatoly F. Dobrynin was apparently asleep on the third floor.
—

There were no injuries in the predawn explosion in midtown Washington
less than five blocks from the White
House. But windows on the embassy and
adjacent buildings were shattered and a
ground-floor embassy office left in smoky
disarray.

The bomb apparently was placed on a
window sill of the ground-level office.
Chunks of stone were blown from the
sill and the iron grillwork covering the
window was torn and twisted.
A passing truckdriver told UPI that the

size of the blast shook his panel delivery
truck.
President Johnson, in a statement issued at the White House, said he was
"relieved that no one was injured . . .
even though considerable damage was
done."
The White House statement said “a

vigorous investigation is being conducted
law enforcement agencies and the

by

President asked that every effort be made
to apprehend those responsible.”
Police were reported looking for two
suspects in connection with the bombing

The State Department promptly ex
pressed regrets to Soviet Ambasador Ana
toly F. Dobrynin and offered any assist
ance that might be required.
An. Soviet Embassy source speculated
that the bombing might have been the
work of fanatics inflamed by the mock
trial of international Communism which
recently concludes in Washington.
In Moscow, Tass said the explosion
“could have been committed only with

the connivance of the American author
ties” and that U.S, authorities, despite
warnings, “had not taken proper mea
sures to protect the Embassy.”
The official Soviet protest note, deli
vered to the State Department later,
charged that “protection of the Embassy
was inadequate” and demanded stronger
measures.

Pearson government
OTTAWA—Prime Minister Lester Pearson went to Parliament earlier this week
to ask for the crucial vote of confidence
that could make or break his Liberal
party government but the opposition insisted the test be put off until today.
If the motion of confidence in the go
eminent is defeated, and I believe it will
not be,” Pearson told newsmen, “then of
course the government resigns.”

Passage uncertain

Passage appeared far from certain. The
leaders of all the opposition parties agreed
to vote against Pearson’s Liberal government. The opposition parties had a combined total of 129 votes
the same number as Pearson's Liberals,
The crisis was created by the defeat
earlier this week of a bill to increase Canada’s income tax to 5%. Pearson, insisting
that the unexpected tax bill reversal was
“not formally a vote of confidence,” announced his determination to seek a showdown. He pledged his government to
—

“stand or fall” on it.
Pearson, gambling on winning an im

faces

test

mediate confidence vote to keep the fl
feat of the tax measure from toppling 1
government, sought a waiver of the ci
tomary 48-hour notice for such a test.

Opposition objection
But opposition leader Robert Stanfield
angrily refused the necessary unanimous
consent, delaying the vote until today
“This governemnt has no right to pul
any business before this house,” the lead
er of the Conservatives declared.
"It was defeated on a bill to raise taxes
a bill clearly indicating the loss of cents
dence of the government with the House,
he said. “It is fundamental to our constitution that such a vote lead to the resig
nation of the government or dissolution of
Parliament.” Although four opposition par
ties said that they would vote against a
government motion of confidence if Pearson brought one forward, he and his cam
inet ministers are relying on the belie*
that some opposition members of Parha
ment do not want a general
present.

election

at

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                    <text>The Sdectrum
RECEIVE®

h

L^J

FEP
Vol. 18, No. 34

T

FebruaryTift, 1968

3

Dr. Greer talks on urban problems,
calls for system of guaranteed income
Dr. Scott Greer, the author of many works on urban
problems, said Saturday that our present social welfare
system is failing to draw recipients into society, and called
for the establishment of a system of guaranteed income.
“Instead of getting people (welfare recipients) back into society,
we build vicious circles which effectively keep them out of the
society through minimal charity,
through the stigma and degradation of the welfare system.”
“The much more sensible approach is the one that the Norwegians have worked out . .
Which is simply in effect, the
guaranteed income,” suggests Dr.
Greer, professor of political science at Northwestern University.
Dr. Greer was the keynote
speaker of the Urban Affairs
seminar concering social welfare
at the Buffalo and Erie County
Public Library.
Dr. Greer added that “in Norway this does not produce dependency, it does not produce
people who prefer to not work.
It does allow for the fluidity of
the labor force which is necessary in a growing society.”
Central cities were labeled by
Dr. Greer as “holes in which we
stack up the losers of the society, black and white alike, in
such a way that we can route
the freeways that we don’t have
to see them.”
Touching upon riots, the political scientist said that our society “is so rigid and unresponsive that one must go outside
civility in order to gain any attention of the dominant major.

ity

.

.

He feels that we must “extend the organization of our society” to those who are presently
excluded from it.

Sipprell disagrees
George Sipprell, the Commissioner of Social Services in Erie
County took strong exception to
Dr. Greer’s suggestion for a guaranteed income.

Although Mr. Sipprell realizes
that “there are many drawbacks
to the present program” and
“many, many things we are doing
that are not right,” he dismissed
Dr. Greer’s suggestion as “a pretty easy way of taking care of
things and feeling pretty good
about getting everybody a guar-

fare agency in the United States,

“manipulated by politicians” and
that “we live essentially in a racist society.”

Mrs, Carol Cates, a member of
BUILD, who said she is a former
welfare recipient, urged greater
participation of recipients in the
welfare program.

She said that she could be given $1000, but questioned what
good it would be if “I had a
child who has a particular handicap and I don't know where to

—Bino

anteed annual income. As if all
The young son of dead Road
our problems, or even 50% of
take this child.”
Vulture Charlie Phohl is picour problems are going to distured here with a friend of his
appear.”
She also questioned why wellate
father. The child is often
“We will succeed to a greater
fare offices are open only during
brought on campus, and photo
degree than we have,” Mr. Sipthe day and expressed a desire
was taken in Norton Hall.
prell continued, “if we bring into
for case workers who are more
planning and the policy determidedicated.
nation, the people we think
we’re trying to serve,” instead
of “people with great educations
who seem to have all the answers,” but do not.
Mr. Sipprell called the idea
that “money could solve it (the
welfare problem)” the largest
mistake of the past. “We know
University officials have expressed great concern over invasion of our graduate resources will be equally unsatisfacit can’t,” he added.
the new Selective Service regulation which denies draft detory. We must either fill their
He cited the real problems as ferments to most graduate students.
places with inferior substitutes
medical, educational, a need of
The National Security
or reduce the scope of our opersome type of specialized skill and
Council moved Friday to deny a year from the present 21,000 a ations.”
production.
year if a 40% drop in enrollment
Associate Dean of the GraduAccording to Mr. Sipprell, the deferments to all graduate occurs.
ate School, Dr. John P. Anton
only way to approach the probstudents except those in the
a
Mr. Meyerson favors
lotteryexpects that all departments will
lem is with a “practical” approach medical or dental fields and
type arrangement in which stube “seriously affected” since gradand a large degree of common
dents would only be subject to uate
those in at least their secsense.
students staff the science
after completion of high
ond year of graduate studies. the draftundergraduate
laboratories and other assistant
Mr. William Robinson, the dior
school,
studies
positions.
rector of the Cook County (111.) Final decisions on draft degraduate school. He called this
Before the new Selective ServDepartment of Public Aid, pointferments still remain in the “staging” of
the
Selective
Service
ice policy was announced, the
ed out that “the public welfare hands of local Selective Serva variation on what the State
English Department unanimously
systems as we know them in this
University Presidents have propassed a statement on the effect
country only care for 40% of the ice Boards, however.
posed.
President reacts
such a policy would have.
so-called poor,” according to fedThe
four
PresUnversity
State
Reacting to the new policy,
eral guidelines on poverty.
the
Dr. Massey, who
are meeting in Syracuse
idents
statement along with Dr. George
Therefore, that social welfare President Martin Meyerson said today to discuss the new
decision,
Hochfield and Dr. Thomas E.
is serving only “the poorest poor” that he was more concerned with
among other things.
Connolly, Sunday termed it “a
“the effect on the lives of a
of our country, he said.
lost, wasted argument."
great number of young people” "Discriminatory"
"Rascist society"
Dr. Irving Massey, director of
country”
The statement was called
Mr. Robinson, Director of the and the “effect on the
implications. Graduate Studies, considers the “meaningless” by Dr. Hochfield,
second largest local social wel- than with the local
Citing figures of the Council of new decision a “discriminatory
local president of the American
act which will have serious conAssociation of University ProGraduate Schools, the President
sequences on the Humanities. Any
fessors. “It was an attempt to
predicted that the nation’s output of PhD’s could drop to 16,000 solution we find to remedy this
� Please turn to Page 3

Doyle and

Little Charlie

Meyerson concerned with lives of young'

Grad students denied deferments

Anti-anti-protest held downtown
by Joel Kleinman
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

Despite frigid temperatures, a small congregate of
marchers staged a demonstration in downtown Buffalo Saturday to “protest repressions against the antiwar and the black liberation
movements.”
Twenty demonstrators chanted
slogans and carried signs denouncing the war in Vietnam,

ceded to Niagara Square, where
it was met my smiles of sympathy
and hostile comments by onlookers. One elderly gentleman told
The Spectrum that “it is a terrible thing the way the young
boys are dying in Vietnam, but
he could not agree that demonstrations are the best means of
achieving peace.
Another passer by handed one
of the marchers a bag of doughnuts and disappeared into a
crowd of shoppers.
After a brief demonstration at
the Federal Court Building, the
march was disbanded at Lafayette

the recent indictments of antiwar leaders for “conspiring to
Square.
counsel against the draft,” and
the detainment of Martin Sostre,
rch ers
an “outspoken anti war critic and
n
ts 0r
Black liberation fighter,” who *^"
owned the Afro-Asian Bookstore
u„.n h.... i.«n»
™

J

—Wolluk

Dedicated

demonstrators

Protest inspired by government
indictment of Dr. Spock and
Michael Ferber is held at Erie
Counfy Jail in spi,e of cold
'

temperature.

*

lnc lu&lt; ¥

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t

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.*

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mittee in support of Martin Sos-

Sympathy, hostile comments

tre.

The demonstration began at
the Erie County Jail and pro-

Prompted by indictment
The UN. S. Government’s in-

dictment of Dr. Benjamin Spook,
Michael Ferber (of Buffalo), a
graduate student at Harvard, and
others for counselling against the
draft, prompted the demonstration. It protested “this attempt to
deprive leaders of the anti-war
movement of their constitutional
rights of protest” as a move to
“cover the war crimes of the
U. S. Government,”

In addition, the appeals of “the
most outspoken leaders
of
the Afro-American people .
for social justice have been met
with terror, lynch mobs, frame...

.

ups.

and sadistic killings,
group charged.

In Buffalo, Martin Sostre

.

the

.

.

.

was brutally beaten, framed and

hisstore smashed

...

He is still

being held prisoner in Erie Coun-

ty Jail. The anti-war movement
must support these brave liberation fighters for Black self-de-

termination without reservation.”

'

�Th

Pag* Two

•

Tuesday, Fabruary 20, 1968

Spectrum

NSC abolishes most
Amherst and University officials qrad school deferments

Ask transportation study

Amherst, and University

offi-

ties needed to serve a large Uni-

cials engaged in another meeting
of the minds Friday and reported
that there “seems no basic area
of disagreement” in the planning
proposals of each.
It was the second meeting of
the Advisory Committee for the
State Office of Planning Coordination which includes representatives from the Town of Amherst,
City of Buffalo, Erie County, Niagara County, Grie-Niagara Regional Planning Board, Niagara
Frontier Transportation Authority, Greater Buffalo Development
Foundation, Greater Buffalo
Chamber of Commerce, New York
State Department of Transportation, New York Department of
Mental Hygiene and the State
University and State University
Construction Fund.

versity community.
The agenda Friday included a
report of the status of the Town
of Amherst Comprehensive Plan
by Kenneth King, consultant to
the Town Planning Board, and a
report on the planning studies
underway by the State University of Buffalo by Dr, Robert L.

Study impact area

provement which are elements
in each plan. An in-depth study
of the potential for improved public transportation serving the
"Buffalo-Amherst Corridor” was
recommended and the Committee

The task of the committee is
to study the impact area of the
University and come up with a
master plan, which would include
plans for development of facili-

Ketter, Vice President for Facilities Planning.
Vincent J. Moore, Assistant Director of the New York State Office of Planning Coordination reported that “the assumptions
forming the basis of the Town’s
planning proposals, and the University's planning concepts are
generally consistent with each
other.”
The committee discussed at
length some of the key issues
relating

to

transportation

im-

agreed to request the consideration of such a study at a forthcoming meeting of the Niagara
Frontier Transportation Study
Planning Committee.

WASHINGTON (UPI) —The Selective Service system
Friday abolished draft deferments for men in critical jobs
and for most male graduate students, freeing more than
800,000 previously deferred men for immediate callups.
Only graduate students in medicine, dentistry and other medical
professions and those who entered at least their second year
of graduate study last fall would
countinue to be deferred until
they receive degrees.
Local draft boards would continue to have discretion to grant
individual occupational exemptions “on a showing of essential
community need,” draft Director
Lewis B. Hershey said.
Friday’s order will cover 339,474 full-time workers and 41,161
apprentices who had occupational
deferments, Selective Service
headquarters said.
It will also make eligible for
the draft about 433,000 students,
the Scientific Manpower Commission, a non-govemment agency
created by scientific organizations, reported.

September ground-breaking
Mr, Moore said: “Substantial
progress has been made in articulating the impact of the University’s expansion on the region
and immediate Amherst vicinity
and the representatives attending the meeting undoubtedly
have a better understanding of
the potentials and problems related to these state investments.
“The continuing dialogue between state, regional and local
interests—both public and private—is essential to bring these

proposals to reality.”
Following the meeting Dr. Robert L. Ketter reported that ground

would be broken tor two clusters
of three colleges each by the end
of September. Earlier reports indicated that construction would
begin on only three colleges this

Tremendous impact

year.

The impact on college campuses
was certain to be tremendous. The
Council of Graduate Schools estimated recently that graduate
classes next year could be cut by
as much as 50% if graduate student deferements were ended.
The Selective Service order
will apply to students graduating from college this year and
those who entered the first year
muters are urged to attend. Committees are now in the process of of graduate school last Septembeing formed and new ideas are ber.
The action was taken on the
needed. Information is available
in Room 215, Norton Hall. Office recommendation of the National
hours are from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Security Council (NSC, composed
Monday, Wednesday and Friday of the nation’s highest military
and from 2 to 4 p.m. Tuesday and and civilian officials concered
with defense.
Thursday.

Commuter Council open meeting points
out students' transportation difficulties
Transportation, housing, eating

and other problems the commuter
student faces were discussed Wednesday at the Commuter Council’s
first open meeting of the year.
It was stressed that commuters
have limited time for extra-curricular activities and student
functions due to poor transportation to and from campus.
Following the discussion of the
dangers of hitchhiking it was decided to put a ride board plans

PIZZA
BOCCE

TF 3-1345

into effect immediately. The ride
board will be used by those needing or offering rides to and from
campus. Commuters may fill out
letin board outside Room 215,
cards and post them on the bulNorton Hall. The Council hopes
that all interested will take part
to make this a success.
Another aim of the Council is
to make the commuter body
aware of the many facilities
available to them. It was felt that
only a few students were aware
of the fact that commuters may
purchase lunch at one of the dormitory cafeterias for $1.00. The
price includes all one can eat at
the seconds table.
Open meetings will be held
weekly and all interested com-

Another chance to gripe

.

The NSC noted many graduate
students holding deferments
could be fairly certain of never
having to don a uniform by staying in school or going into deferred occupations.
“This is unfair—particularly in
time of armed conflict—to all the
young men who do not have the
opportunity or the finances to attend graduate school,” the Council said.
The NSC said neither the armed
forces, the civilian economy nor
the national interest require continuation of the deferments.

Buffalo student

wins competition
Miss Linda Ludwig, a junior at
the State University of Buffalo,
has won a place on Mademoiselle
magazine’s College Board.
The College Board enables students to gain experience in publishing by participating in some
of the magazine’s activities.
It is composed of 1000 winners
of the magazine’s annual nationwide College Board Competition.
The contest is designed to recognize young women with talent in
the various areas of magazine
publishing.

Each girl will remain on the
College Board until she graduates.

.

.

more are scheduled
The idea of the Bitch-in and Crab-in has caught fire at three
Association and
for this week. The Student Senate, the Undergraduate Psychology
to question
the Anthropology Department will provide opportunities for students
present policies and also offer new alternatives.
the Fillmore
The Student Senate Biteh-in will return at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow in
on Senete
Room so that students may again air their gripes and become informed
Emilson,
w.|j con$itt 0f Stewart Edelstein, Neil Slatkin, Barbara
Harris
Joel
Feinman.
Marilyn
and
Mattia,
J.
Markowitz,
A.
Meryl
A third Bitch-in it scheduled for next Wednesday at the tame time and place.
Crab-in
The Undergraduate Psychology Association will sponsor its second
tomorrow at 3 p.m. in Room 231, Norton Hall.
an
The purpose will be to air complaints and elect student representatives to
problems.
advisory committee of students and faculty for discussing and solving
Thursday in Room 231, Norton
An Anthropology Crab-in will be held at 4 p.m.
representatives to meet with the
Hall "to establish a steering committee and elect
cofaculty to convey the wishes of the students," according to Mr. Henry Chaikin,
Committee. 'We hope to facilitate
chairman of Academic Affairs, a Student Senate
communication between them, discuss mutual problems and find their solutions
attempt the
"We hope that people in other departments will be stimulated to
same kind of program."

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�Tuesday, February 20, 1968

Meyerson concerned

� Continued from Page 1
persuade the federal government
not to make the decision they did
make,” he said.
—The English Department stateThe State University of Buffalo
English Department has issued a

statement to President Martin
Meyerson

and

all

department
chairmen regarding conscription
of graduate students studying
Humanities and Social Sciences.

This statement received

mous approval.

unani-

“The Department of English at
the State University of Buffalo

regards the National Security
Council’s plan to conscript grad-

uate students in Humanities and

Social Sciences, while exempting
students in the exact sciences, as

ate assistants cannot be replaced, nor can class size be in-

functioning of the University.
Besides doing long-range harm
to our society, and creating acute
antagonism between the two sides
of the University, the plan would
demoralize our graduate student
body and disrupt our graduate
and undergraduate programs.
What will happen if there is an
attempt to implement this plan
can be clearly foreseen.

freshman program. Five hundred
1000 freshmen may remain
without instruction. Large lecture courses which lose their
graduate assistant will have to
be cancelled or taught without
consultations, papers or examinations, so that hundreds of sophomores and upper-classmen will
also be affected. Key staff in our
department can be expected to
resign their administrative posts
rather than cooperate with a discriminatory draft policy.
to

Similar disorders can be foreseen in other departments affected by the new manpower
plan. We urge the administration
to realize the immediate, practical, and far-reaching consequences
which would follow from the implementation of the NSC’s policy,
and to inform the appropriate
government body that these consequences should be reckoned
with if a discriminatory draft
plan is introduced.

PANMUNJOM —The United Nations Command (UNO and North
Korea met at the truce village Monday to discuss Communist allegations of violations in the armistice.

U. S. Navy Rear Adm. John V. Smith and North Korean army
Maj. Gen. Pak Shung-Kuk opened the talks while American and
South Korean troops patrolled the tense border outside the truce
village.
The meeting was the third since armed North Koreans captured
the U. S. intelligence ship Pueblo and forced it and its crew of 83
into Wonsan Harbor and the abortive Communist attempt to assassinate President Park Chung Hee of South Korea.
North Korea had requested Monday’s session.

BUFFALO, N. Y. (DPI)
A biracial student advisory committee
was formed last week at Lackawanna Senior High School in an
effort to ease racial tensions
among students.
The announcement of the formation of the committee came
from school and state officials.
It followed a series of meetings
between officials and parents at
the school in the wake of student
brawls. The disturbances resulted
in four students injured and six
—

Arab terrorists who attack from Jordan.

SAIGON —Communist guerrillas Monday blasted
Gen. William C
Westmoreland’s headquarters, exploded a four-inch-thick rocket
amid
Gls waiting to board a homebound airliner and cut
the rail line linking Saigon to America’s largest
warbase in South Vietnam, Bien Hoa.
Military officers called the fighting around the capital the
second
battle of Saigon.

Two weeks ago in the Spectrum Poll, Nelson Rockefeller won the Republican nomination and last
week Eugene McCarthy won the Democratic nomiation. Of the two candidates whom would you vote
for:
1. Nelson Rockefeller

discrimination

Alto elected were; Miss Gail Cooper, 1st. vicepresident; Miss Laura Barwicke, 2nd vice-presldent;
Elliott Schulman, 3rd vice-president; Morris Horwitz, secretary; and Richard Weinstein, treasurer.
Expressing her hopes for the coming year. Miss
Cohen said; "The basic need of the Union Board is
re-evaluation. We are presenting activities which
arc obviously not satisfying many students.
"I'd like to see the Union Board reflect the
desires of the University community."
Miss Cooper stated: "The office of 1st vicepresident is concerned with public affairs. A sore
spot with Union Board has been

in the field of

publicity and public relations. If the board is to
function effectively we must reach the student and
the academic community and for certain functions
the people of the City of Buffalo.
"We hope through improved methods and cooperation with University relations we can achieve

this goal."
The new officers will begin their terms et the
regular meeting next week.

Mr. Nordos said the committee

of six white and six

Negro students is confident it can solve
school problems through personal

communication and understanding
of student relationships.

Lackawanna school Superintendent James B. Downey said
school attendance Thursday following a two-day student boycott
was “pretty much back to nor-

mal."

against Negro stu-

THE SPECTRUM
printed by

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ABGOTT &amp; SMITH PRINTING
1881 Kenmore Ave. (at Military)

Phone 876-2284

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Those seniors failing to pick up their pictures
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for

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dents.
Wilbur Nordos of the intercultural relations division of the
State Education Department said
the formation of the student advisory panel came after a special
student meeting Thursday attended bv 100 student leaders.

2. Eugene McCarthy

9-5.

Miss Jan* Cohan is the new prasidant of the
University Union Activities Board, succeeding Errol
-Sull. She was elertixt Wednesday at the yearly

authorities with harassment and

You can answer the Spectrum question of the week
every Wednesday and Thursday at the Information
Desk on the first floor of Norton Hall. Please submit only one ballot answering the question of the
week.
Last week s question was: From the following
choices whom would you nominate for the Democratic nomination?
The results were:
1. Eugene McCarthy 24%
2. Lyndon Johnson 18%
3. Robert F. Kennedy 13%
4. George Wallace 13%
5. Other
a. Pat Paulson 12%
b. Eartha Kitt 4%
c. Various write in candidates 16%
Number of respondents: 405

Senior Picture orders must be picked up this
Thurs., Feb. 22 in room 220 Norton Union.
Glick Studio will be here on Thurs. ONLY from

officers

suspended.
The fights led to a two-day boycott of the Steel City school system urged by Negro leaders to
emphasize demands for a state
investigation. The leaders charged

the week

SENIORS!

elected

Lackawanna organizes advisory
group to help calm racial tension

MIDEAST—Arab guerrillas have been encouraged in their raids
on Israeli territory by what they consider successful Viet Cong
attacks
on Saigon and other South Vietnamese cities, Jordanian sources
said
today.
They said the guerrilla movement still grows rapidly despite
King Hussein’s renewal of his opposition to such attacks.
U. N. envoy Gunnar Jarring was in Jerusalem Monday for a meeting with Foreign Minister Abba Eban to discuss the Mideast situation
Among the topics under discussion was Hussein’s denunciation of the

packaging.

Activities Board

...

Freshman sections whose teachers are drafted will have to remain untaught, since our gradu-

dateline news, Feb. 20

Question of

Page Three

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�Th« Spictrum

Pag* Four

Tuesday, February 20, 1968

Nation's preoccupation: Conscription

■

IW'O'CM*

The most significant event of the weekend, as far as
most college students are concerned, was the decision of
the National Security Council to end all deferments for

A
*.

graduate students except those in the medical fields outlined by the Selective Service Act.. This will make available
The decision sparked
trom University aaministrators across the country, and rightly so. Should the
draft boards decide to zero-in on graduate students, the
effects—long run and short—can be nothing but deleterious
for the nation’s universities and the nation as a whole.
Most graduate schools can anticipate anywhere from a
30 to 50% reduction in enrollment. This will severely
affect university programs, especially large universities
where needed instructors, assistants and students working
in research will be unavailable.
The English Department here pointed to some of the
problems the State University of Buffalo will face in a
statement to President Meyerson. The statement is printed
in full in today’s Spectrum.
Just how severely this new edict will affect graduate
schools depends primarily on local boards. Any board may
still defer if it so desires. This, of course, places still greater
power into the hands of local board members, allowing
them to conscript graduate students whom they may consider “dissenters.” They will no longer need to go through
the formalities of classifying anyone “delinquent” before
draftinf him.
A wholesale graduate call-up will inevitably present
problems for the military also. Dean Colin S. Pittendrigh
of the Princeton University graduate school put it adequately when he told reporters: “The Defense Department
may be dissatisfied with its new group of recruits. They’re
going to have a group of older men, primarily intellectuals,
who are not the most useful kind of troops.”
Because of the many problems that this type of conscription would present, it seems as though there will be
pressure to avoid it. The aversion will manifest itself in
one of two ways—by decision of local boards to continue
graduate deferments, or by Congressional action adopting
a lottery-type system.
What should be most evident, however, as a result of
the decision of the NSC, is the fact that the United States
is willing to throw still more men into the bloody and
non-sensical war in South East Asia. Of one thing Lyndon
Johnson is certain: We will continue to fight, we will continue
to bomb, we will continue to sacrifice American and Asian
lives until we win—no matter what the cost.

The issue is student involvement
The Senate Committee on Reorganization is presently
writing the final draft of a proposed new constitution. It
plans to present its handiwork to the Student Senate tomorrow and to a general referendum by next week’s end.
The constitution will provide for a vast (and long-needed) restructuring of student government,, placing the burden
where it belongs—with the general student populous, or
“polity.”
The new plan calls for an elected Student Coordinating
Council, which will be responsible for legislation and programs in specific areas—NSA, academic affairs, student
services, student rights, etc.—and whose actions will be
subject to review by the polity.
The polity then, or all regularly enrolled undergraduates, will have final say on all matters except financial allocations to clubs and organizations, a provision which is a
safeguard to clubs.
The new plan will seem drastic to some, but the reorganization committee has worked hard to provide proper
checks and balances.
The beauty of the new constitution is that it places each
student in a “show up or shut up” situation., A policy
meeting wjll be held at least once a month and it is up to
each student to show up and be heard.
Since 40 persons constitutes a quorum, there is always
the danger that a small pressure group can control any polity
meeting. If student apathy prevails, we can look forward
to takeover by the more vocal elements of the University
community. This possibility is inherent in the plan, but not
the plan’s intent.
The intent is to get more students involved in the
decisions that affect them. If students fail to accept this
new responsibility, they have only themselves to blame.
The Spectrum will publish Friday the constitution in
whole. Next Tuesday and Wednesday, students will have
an opportunity to discuss the plan at some type of open
forum. A general referendum will be held Thursday and
Friday of next week. The Spectrum urges all students
and Senators to study the proposed constitution; to question
at the open forum; and to vote at the referendum—and

vote “Yes,”

jhJ\

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'

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&amp;

w"

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Hfar
Followed by the United States

Readers
writings

the burgher
by Schwab

Great pressure has been brought to bear on
The Burgher to run for Student Association President (SAP), and I have for weeks been announcing
—in an attempt , to clip this ground swell in the
burgher bud—that I am indeed not a candidate.
A hard time. I’ve had indeed drumming up
groups to spread the word that I do not seek the
nomination. It’s terribly hard to dissuade honest
and truthful students from supporting such a hearty
advocate of truth, justice and the American Hue
on a campus such as this.
Last night I spoke at a rally of some 300 Burgherites, at which I outlined a program which I would
want anyone who intends to run to support. At
the rally The Burgher lashed out at the present
administration for “complicity with war-mongering
Fascists,” whatever that means.
My speech-writer is kind of a fanatic, you see,
but the speeches seem to be effective as they angrily lash out, bitterly score, sarcastically speak
against and ruthlessly rip the War, LBJ, and the
local administration lackies who are “leading us
down the road of destruction by their loose construction of the Domino Theory and Academic Freedom.”
The main point of the speech (which even my
all-knowing mind failed to understand) was that
“the present University administration spends great
funds in their cold war with Buffalo’s news media
while students on campus fail.”
I called this “a tragic, grave and, indeed, unhealthy reverse of priorities."
•

•

•

Hecklers are always a great problem at rallies
such as the one last night. One of them yelled: “Do
you think you think you are qualified for the presidency?”

“Makes no difference,” snapped I. “I am not a
candidate; if nominated I will not run, if elected I
will not serve.”
At that point a large burst of boos arose, culminating with a tomato which did strike me in the
face.
“’N faith!” I gasped. As my head and face cleared
again, the realization struck me that perhaps I was
qualified and should run. After all, I liked booze
as well as the next Senior and felt certain I could
easily engage in inane and senseless arguments as
they presently do. In addition, as you might have
guessed, The Burgher possesses a great faculty for
rhetoric and is oft-times carried away by his own
arguments and the sound of his own voice. Mine
“quaint and peppy way” would be a great asset as
a student administrator, I thought.
’Twas at that point that I turned to the crowd
(some of whom were in laughing convulsions, presumably because the site of a tomato-faced Burgher
is a rare one indeed) and said:
“Fellow Burgherites: Tis true that I am perhaps
the best qualified candidate on the scene today. Nay,
’tis not only true but fact.”
The crowd went wild
“Yet, prithee,” I continued, “we must remember
that we are all students! We are all fighting for the
same things! We did not raise up in arms crying
“Remember the Main” Street parking lot for nought!
We did not march against old Hayes Hall and noble
Lockwood Library with nothing in mind! We have
nothing to fear except fear itself and statewide drug
-

investigations!”
The crowd went wilder.
“So let me sum it all up by re emphasising that
I am indeed not a candidate!”
And as I walked away amid great cheers, I felt
that the crowd and I had put one over on each other.

Credibility gap in Buffalo?
To the Editor:

I am writing in reference to this statement by
SA President Stewart Edelstein in The Spectrum,
Feb. 16: "I did break the rule of consumption of
alcohol. I pleaded not guilty. Was I guilty? No. After four and one-half years work on resolving the
alcohol question, everyone was very happy when the
University Council decision was made. Perhaps it
was inappropriate, but I do not think we were
guilty. There is a moral question involved,”

Yes, Mr. Edelstein, it is a moral question, and
that is the responsibility to be honest. The ambivalence of your statement does not cover-up the implications of the case.
It is obvious from Mr. Edelstein’s Spectrum

statement that the question is not whether or not
alcohol was consumed, i.e., whether or not a rule
was broken; but, rather, given that the Senate did
booze it up, to what extent this constituted any sort
of impropriety on their part.

I do not think that the act of drinking, of itself,
was such a tremendous booboo. I think many will

agree that it could be excused under the the circumstances.

But the Senators’ defense and subsequent dismissal was not based on the extenuating circumstances described above by Mr. Edelstein, but on
insufficient evidence. It seems that the former
might have provided a more satisfactory alternative.
The gross impropriety in the case lies in the
Senators’ unwillingness to accept the responsibility
of their actions, and in their making such an absurd mockery of the new Student Judiciary, with
such post-trial “slips” as the one by Mr. Udelstein.
Assuming the quote to be accurate, I am amazed
at the tremendously evasive mumbo-jumbo indulged in by our esteemed President on such a controversial question.
It appears as if we have our own “credibility
gap.”
Barry Holtzclaw
The Spectrum is published twice-weekly
every
Tuesday and Friday
during the regular academic
the State University of New York at Buffalo,
3435 Main Street, Buffalo. New York 14214. Offices
are located at 355 Norton Hall. Average Circulation:
—

—

year at
15,500.

Editor-in Chief—MICHAEL L D'AMICO
Managing Editor—RICHARD R. HAYNES
Asst. Managing Editor—RICHARD SCHWAB
Business Manager—SAMUEL A. POWAZEK
Advertising Manager—DAVID E, FOX
Campus
Margaret

Asst.

Anderson

Marlene Kozuchowski
Daniel Lasser
Peter Simon
Barry C. Holtzclaw
Asst.
Ronald Ellsworth

City

Asst.
Feature

Sports
Asst.
Layout
Asst.
Copy
Asst.

Robert Woodruff
Scott Behrens
David L. Sheedy

W.

Photography

John Trigg

Judl Riyeff

VACANT

David

Yates
Asst.
Carol Goodson
Entertainment
Promotion &amp; Circulation
Lori Pendrys Director Murray Richman
Financial Advisor: Edward Dale
Faculty Advisor: William R. Greiner
The Spectrum is a member of the United States Student Press Association and the Associated Collegiate
Press. The Spectrum is served by: United Press International, Collegiate Press Service, Associated Collegiate
Press Service, Gannett News Service, and the Los
Angeles Times Syndicate.
Represented for national advertising by National Educational Advertising Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave.,
New York. N. Y.
Republication of all news dispatches is forbidden without the express consent of the editor-in-chief. Rights of
republication of all other matter herein are also reserved.
Second class postage paid at Buffalo, New York.
Editorial policy is determined by the Editor-in-Chief.

�T h

Tuesday, February 20, 1968

•

BELOW OLYMPUS

On the drinking 'incident'

Pag* Fiva

Spectrum

By Interlandi

To the Editor:

sssg

If lessons are to be gained from the incident
of the imbibing senators, it is that if you are a
simple ordinary student and want to get caught
drinking, do it with 16 student senators. But in
the aftermath other lessons are to be learned as

The Sham
by Martin

Guggenheim

Last Wednesday about 50 undergraduates of
the Psychology Department and nine faculty members met for the first time to discuss departmental
and tn make possible a permanent struc

The most educational aspect was your eauonai
of Feb. 9. Forgetting for the moment the fact that
the editor of The Specfrum was one of the defense
attorneys, there are other lessons to be gained
from the editorial.
,

For example, there is the ease of the apology.
Shortly after the incident of drinking, or alleged
drinking, occurred, the executive council published
an apology for the Senate’s actions. We can only
speculate as to what they were apologizing for—perhaps their general misconduct, but that is a
weekly occurrence and certainly not extraordinary
enough to elicit an apology. However, that particular piece of evidence was suppressed, or in
this case not allowed by the judges.

r«

As for the famed chemical analysis, one is
reminded of little children playing at being grown
up. The Judiciary were obviously in a bind. They
could not find the Senate guilty of misconduct,
but at the same time they could not subvert their
desire to be accepted as objective purveyors of
justice—so instead of choosing the easy route of
finding them guilty and suspending sentence they
resorted to sophistry.

limet

If I am caught with a girl in my room, I do
not ask for a biological survey to determine her
sex, the label is enough. The uncorking of a bottle
and the smelling of alcohol (which, I am told, has
a unique smell) is surely enough evidence to convict. It is enough evidence to close a bar that serves
to minors. I have not heard of any court that dismisses charges for serving minors because the
police forgot to obtain chemical proof.
The Spectrum forgets is that justice
serves not only to protect the accused, but the
society as a whole. That is why there are laws
against bribery and conflict of interest. A judge
would not hear the case of a close friend or relative nor should he. The law must assure society
that everyone is treated in an equal manner and
that no one will receive special treatment. This
is the half of “equal protection under the law”
that is often forgotten. I can find no such protection under the student judiciary system.
Nor do I view this letter as a deplorable attempt to “so readily distort a sound judicial system.” What I find regretable, not deplorable, is
your unfortunate use of language that serves to
only submerge the issue.
Daniel Jandorf

"Why not? All the others are just ridiculous."

the gadfly
by Mark Schneider

What

Worthy cause

—

bad tactics

To tho Editor;

Well, another Heart Fund Drive has come and
once again the fraternity that sponsors it
has used their righteous cause as an excuse for
screaming at, bullying and making themselves generally obnoxious to the student body. The Heart
Fund is as worthy a cause as the many others for
which appeals are made on campus and we should
give it our full support. We should also have the
right to give or not to give without being exposed
to the sort of tactics which makes it a pain to walk
through Norton Hall.
gone and

Peabody,

Questions polling methods
To the Editor:

I would like to express my agreement with the
reader’s letter in Tuesday’s Spectrum which dealt
with the Question of the Week.
I am shocked every time I pick up your newspaper to find that the Spectrum Question of the
Week has again omitted reporting the number of
responses received to that question.
As you well know, 67% of 100 people is far
different from 67% of 1000. In your survey, the
larger the number of people responding, the more
representative it becomes. Inclusion of the number
of people responding is the only way to enable
your readers to assess the significance of the given
percentages. If the number of replies to your question is so small as to be embarrassing to you, I
suggest that you remove the column from your
paper.

Either your paper is deliberately trying to misrepresent student opinion or you have failed to
master one of the most elementary journalistic
rules. I hope the latter is the case. It is much
easier to correct.

Mary Erickson

EDITOR'S NOTE: You win! Due to the great interest in our Question of the Week, The Spectrum
will print the number of respondents with each
column, beginning today. Also, a second box will
be stationed in Diefendorf Hall to provide us with
a larger sampling.

\\

oj

Left-wingers who pride themselves on being hardheaded realists enjoy portraying the power elite of America as a monolithic Machiavellian agglomeration which never
errs in its cold calculations for producting cannon fodder.
But are the “tragic flaws” in such contemporary heroes
as Mendel Rivers and Richard Russell beginning to show?
Will lust for revenge spoil the framers of draft policy and
. S?
the executors of the SS
.

and students in all matters pertaining to an undergraduate education. The next evening, undergraduates of the Philosophy Department met, essentially
for the same purposes.
Things are moving and probably in the right
direction. When 60 sincere people meet together in
the same room to discuss seriously common problems—only good can follow. At this point, I have
no reason to believe otherwise than that most of
the faculty of psychology, especially and impor
tantly, Dr. Silverman, the assistant chairman, want
to see real student participation in curriculum decisions.
One of the most powerful hurdles in the way
of obtaining changes in present policies in departments is the conceptualizations that both faculty
and students have about "how far we can go.”
Rarely does the discussion ever get to the point of
“how far we should go.” In many cases the only
obstacle in beginning discussions is a lack of impetus. Probably this must come from the students.
Faculty members often sit on committees dealing
with curriculum planning because they are required to do something and they chose that.
Many lack a real desire to work hard. But this
does not mean that they are unwilling to work
hard, or that they are unwilling to try new things.
Often they simply never think of new things—partly out of laziness, partly out of incompetence. They
feel that the student isn’t vitally concerned with
curricula, why should they be? Thus, a problem,
probably, the problem, is how to get students involved.

Two columns back I mentioned what I thought
were some of the assumptions students have about
their relationships to the University. If it takes
education to change these assumptions and it is
education which we want students to change, we are
in trouble. This University is beginning over in
many ways. Now is the time to begin making good
changes. Previously rigid policies have been abandoned by the new administration and the recently
aquired Provost Offices.

.

Not likely, but the July 1 draft
law backed by the conservatives
will probably have the effect of
radicalizing a-political college stu-

dents who will be effected. As
everyone knows, the law abolished all graduate deferments ex-

cept those determined by the National Security Council to be in
the national interest. The law
also provides that men nearest
but under age 26 be drafted before 19 year olds who have done
most of the fighting so far. Consequently one half, to two thirds
of next year’s draftees will be
college grads. The actual reason
why college grads will be drafted first is that Congress, sick of
demonstrations and “treason”
brewed in the academic havens,
wants to punish dissenters
Academic response to this law
and the NSC’s decision to draft
social science and humanities
students has, as politics does,
put strange fellows in bed. For
the Army has protested the move
as vigorously as the universities.
College graduates, obviously, will
not be as susceptible to army
“discipline” as working class high
school students and drop outs.
In The Naked and The Dead,
fascistic General Cummings says
that Southerners, because they
are poor and oppressed, make
better soldiers than comfortable
Yankees, and his convincing ar-

gument applies similarly to poor
high school and middle class col-

lege kids.

The universities have fought
this ruling because its effects
upon them will be catastrophic.
Universities, especially large
ones like State University of Buffalo, need graduate students to
teach freshman courses, grade
papers, and assist professors with
research. Since only 5% of today’s draftees are college grads,
the Council of Graduate Schools
estimates that graduate school
population in affected areas may
be cut as high as 40-50%. In a

department such as this school’s
English Department, which employs 130 primarily male graduate

teachers, whole classes of fresh-

men would be bearded into massive lecture halls, papers could
not be assigned for want of readers, and the calibre of students
would suffer enormously. The
English Department has unanimously passed a resolution to
this effect, asking that their graduate students be protected.

The teachers in that department, which is a professionally
excellent and highly regarded
group, have earned a campus
reputation as one of the more
radical departments in the university. Yet one senses in this
body an air of political helplessness and despair, a feeling of impotency which can be redeemed
only in professional pursuits. The
professors had the most noble of
intents in passing their draft resolutions, nevertheless it is painfully disappointing when such
pressing matters of life and death
are upon us. Of course the universities will be hurt by the war
in Vietnam—isn’t it about time?
Can literature, music and philosophy professors expect to remain
innocent and above our American
tragedy forever, safeguarded from
the anguish experienced by 18year-old draftees by their totally
absorptive concerns of analyzing
tone rows or counting words in
Ulysses? Sociologists and novelits have written at length about
alienated youths who drop out of
society, but one fears the attention has been misdirected. Holden
Caulfield and Hamlet are alive
and well. They have grown to
middle age, and teach literature
at an American university.

Back at the ranch in Saigon,
sanity prevails. The Saigon legislature voted to keep the draft
age at 21. “Why should our 19
year olds die for the Americans?”
one legislator asked.

The University is, in fact, far more flexible than
most of us imagine; certainly it is far more flexible than any of us take advantage of. In a few
years thism ay not be true any longer. At least it
is possible to assume that proposed changes now
will be more likely to be accepted and enacted
when they are replacing an old system, than will
changes in a few years when the atmosphere of
youth and vitality will have aged.
Faculty members come here for a variety of
reasons. Teaching certainly is one of them, but research is another. Even those who come solely to
teach do not feel that they must begin a crusade
to restructure things when they have complete
automony in the six or nine hours they teach each
semester. Students on the other hand ostensibly
come for only one reason. With all the myths of
what a university is, surely there is not a student
at this institution who hasn’t been somewhat disillusioned with his education. Why not try and
change it? Why not tell at least your own instructor, what it is that displeases you? What the hell
are you doing here anyway?

Three departments working in this area is a
good start when a year ago there were none. But
three is still minute. It is surprising to find out
what one student can do if he has some time to invest and if he is seriously interested. Not that much
occurs; very little work within a department will
start something. Come see me if you want to begin,
or go to see your Chairman—that’s what he’s there
for. Next week Psychology will meet again to elect
some students as their voices to the department;
snow up if you’re a psych, major.
Last semester University College issued a statement which no longer requires the Comprehensive
Examinations for graduation; this gav each department the right to decide for itself whether to give
the exam or not. Many departments have aban
doned it, many have not. You have the choice of
allowing your faculty to make this decision with or
without you, How many new professors were hired
next year by your department 7 Are all the courses
you are interested in being offered
in your department? After fourten or fifteen years of school
perhaps you should be entitled to think Certainly if
you are not now, another year or two won t
qualify you.
Next week we will definitely look at the assump
lions held by professors particularly in Sociology.

�Pag*

Tuesday, February 20, 1968

T h• Sptctrurn

Six

Schlesinger
attacks
Westmoreland,
Chicago posse plan to
'reality
gap'
of
existence
contends
control
is opposed

riots

rights groups and the commander
of the Illinois National Guard last
week expressed opposition to the
plan of a sheriff to form a 1000man volunteer posse for Chicago
summer riot control.
Maj. Gen. Francis P. Kane of
the National Guard said the plan
not only was “hazardous” but may

end up with members of the posse
shooting at each other in the confusion.

The plan of Cook County Sheriff Joe Woods to form the posse
to augment his 250-man force,
has been attacked by various
groups and persons since he made
it public early last week.
Sheriff Woods said the posse
would be formed to help deal
with any disturbances which
might break out at the Democratic National Convention in
August. He cited figures ranging
from 50,000 to three million demonstrators planning to gather for
the event.

by David H. Beetle
Gannett News

leadership in South Vietnam has not been matched since
the days of General Custer,” according to Arthur M. Schlesthe situation.
inger Jr., Pulitzer Prize-winning historian and one-time speThe National Association for
cial assistant to Presidents Kennedy and Johnson.
the Advancement of Colored Peo-

plan was unnecessary and that the
police department could handle

He added: “Abraham Lincoln,
who was ruthless in getting rid
of incompetent generals, would
not have kept Westmoreland
after two months.”
Mr. Schlesinger’s observations
He cited instances where trouble came as he answered questions
was started by “some foolish acput to him by members of the
tion on the part of trained police Capital district chapter of The
officials” and added: “if trained American Society for Public Admen can make such mistakes, you ministration following a talk on
can’t expect much from volunthe evolution of the office of
teers.”
the Presidency.
The speaker, who currently
The NAACP said the plan has
latent ramifications. Both groups holds a Schweitzer chair profeswere on lists Sheriff Woods said sorship with the City University
of New York, also affirmed that
he would solicit for volunteers.
those who were denied access
Sheriff Woods said he wanted “to top secret cables” at the
40
hours
the group, scheduled for
White House could get a better
of training beginning March 1, to idea of what is going on in South
be composed of 50% of Negroes. Vietnam by reading the newsple and the Chicago Urban
League also attacked the plan.
Alvin J. Prejean, deputy director of the Urban League, said
professional police matters are
best left to professional people.

Depends on the giant. Actually, some giants are just regular
kinds of guys. Except bigger.
And that can he an advantage.
How? Well, for one thing, you’ve got more going for
you. Take Ford Motor Company. A giant in an exciting
and vital business. Thinking giant thoughts. About marketing Mustang. Cougar. A city car for the future.
Come to work for this giant and you’ll begin to think
like one.
Because you’re dealing with bigger problems, the
consequences, of course, will he greater. Your responsibilities
heavier. That means your experience must he better—more
complete. And so, you'll get the kind of opportunities only a

papers.
“I know because I read those

cables from 1961 to 1964, and it
was essentially like reading about
an entirely different country,”
he said. “The Diems were benign
and popular rulers; they had an
able and efficient South Vietnamese army; the programs of rehabilitation were going ahead
with tremendous success, and the
terrorists were people who were
only fighting because someone
had a machine gun at their
backs,”

Newspapers better sources
He asserted that today newspapers were a much better source
of information than Gen. Westmoreland’s speeches and especially recommended
that anyone

areas. You may handle as many as three
in your first two years.
You'll develop a talentfor making

different assignments

hard-nosed, imaginative decisions. And you'll know how these decisions affect
the guts of the operation. At the grass roots. Because you'll
have been there.
If you’d like to he a giant yourself, and you’ve got
better ideas in marketing and sales, see the man from Ford
when he visits your campus. Or send your resume to Ford
Motor Company, College Recruiting Department.
You and Ford can grow bigger together.

giant can give.

Giants just naturally seem to attract top professionals.
Men that you'll be working with, and for. Marketing and
sales pros working hard to accelerate your advancement.
Because there’s more to do, you'll learn more. In more

doubting

Service

AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER.

What’s it like
to sell
for a giant?

it,

compare

tragic

before the National Press Club.
Earlier, in discussing the “credibility gap,” the historian said
that this is “usually thought of
as some clever manipulation of
the news.
“But it’s more serious than
than,” he contented. “There is
a reality gap. The government
itself doesn’t know the facts. Few
of our representatives on the
scene can speak Vietnamese, and
most of them don’t know anything about the Vietnamese culture.”

He contented that the government got in much of its trouble
because its spokesmen “had a
tremendous passion for precision
even when they knew that the
precision was spurious.”

“We aretold that 17,615 Viet

Cong are killed, 1236 South Vietnamese, and 826 Americans,” he
said. “Such figures are absolutely
ridiculous. They pretend to an
exactitude that is impossible in
this turbulent country.”

Pueblo location confused
As a recent sample he noted
that Arthur Goldberg was told to
tell the United Nations that the
Pueblo was in international waters when several days later both
the Secretary of State and the
Secretary of Defense stated publicly that they had no real idea
where the Pueblo was.
Admitting that a majority of
the people now to be supporting
President Johnson in the Vietnam effort, he advised those who
differed to speak up and bring
over the majority.
“I would feel more concerned
if I thought President Johnson
was going ahead without majority
support than I do in feeling that
he is following a mistaken policy,” Mr. Schlesinger said.
“After three years of bombing
North Vietnam, after sending
combat units numbering half a
million, after getting almost total
command of the sea and the air
against 280,000 characters in
black pajamas, we find ourselves
no better off than when we began,” he said. “By every pragmatic test, this policy had been
tried and resulted in disaster.”

No curbs on President
Discussing the Presidency, the
historian found that if anything,
the Executive lacked power to
be effective on the domestic
scene, but that in toe light of a
nuclear age there seemed no
structural way in which his foreign policy actions could be
curbed.
‘ I think you
have to depend
on the American people electing
to office men who have creative
iniative, clarity of mind in advancing policies which people
will respect as rational, and inner restraint.
Asked which of the current
Presidential candidates possessed
these three qualities, Schlesinger
said: “None of the avowed candidates.”

Actually I'm quite hi;

While he described the Executive Departments as a force that
often negates a President’s will,
he explained that “the State Department was a special case,”
He called the Johnson policy
“the greatest boon to isolationism in a generation” since by unilateral action he had opened the
widest gap in 30 years between
this country and its allies.

BOCCE
TF 3-1345

�Tuesday, February

Th*

20, 1968

Pag* S*v*n

Sp«etrum

The Bull, new humor magazine, aims
for well-done. unconventional writing
come. The Bull is interested in
new writers and ‘with-it’ ideas,
Thprp is no theme for this issue,

by Nora Gamer

Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

magazine, The Bull, will dedicate its first issue to General
Lewis B. Hershey, “about the
funniest person around this
year,” says Robert Penn, editor-in-chief.
“He affects so many people on
campus. You can’t walk through
Norton Hall without coming faceup with the draft.”
Through admittedly, the overlap between satire and cynicism
often produces things more bitter
than funny, the magazine will not
take a political stand or deal with
the war as such.
The magazine will feature
prose, poetry, photography, cartoons, essays and photographic
essays. Any subjejcts on which
students have opinions are wel-

x

cupit

VT

v

“““—V

who have something funny to say
should feel free to submit articl es

The magazine is not necessarily trying to be constructive.
According to Mr. Penn, “Mark
Twain wasn’t always constructive.
We are looking for absolutely
anything that students would not
feel right about submitting to the
New Student Review. Humor is
not of primary importance. Any
material concerning what’s happening now, and anything worth
commenting on in an unconventional way is welcome.”

~

Outlet for lighter writing
The New Student Review is
the only other magazine on campus specifically for the Univer-

sity community as a whole. Stories
and articles in it must be of high
literary quality and in the area
..

intended as an outlet for welldone, but lighter writing that
would not be published in the
New Student Review.
“The Bull is not meant to be
like Mad Magazine or Dell Comics,” says the editor. “All forms
of writing are welcome. Students
shouldn’t say they can’t write.
The main thing about writing for
this magazine is to have fun with
your mind.”

•

The deadline for submitting
material is tentatively between
March 15 and Easter recess. Articles and photographs can be
sent to Box 19 in Norton through
the Main Floor Information Desk,
or slipped under the door at the
office, Room 324, Norton Hall.

Auditions being held for Beaumonts
'The Knight of the Burning Pestle'
by Rosalind Jarret
Spectrum

Staff

The Program

Reporter

in Theater is

holding tryouts for its spring
production, Beaumont’s The
Knight of the Burning Pestle, in
Norton Hall, Room 339, Thursday,
from 7-11 p.m., and Friday, from
2-5 p.m. and 7-11 p.m.

Professor Ward Williamson,
chairman of the program, emphasized that all students, graduate
students, faculty, and staff members are welcome to audition. The

play has an extremely large cast,
so that actors with different talents and varying degrees of experience will be given the opportunity to appear in the production. As with An Italian Straw
Hat, which was produced last
year, the Program in Theater
hopes to involve actors from all
parts of the University.
The

Knight

of

the

Burning

Pestle has been termed an “Elizabethan Burlesque.” Beaumont, a
contemporary of Shakespeare, develops his humor from the complications which arise from a play
within the play, when a grocer’s
wife who is watching the performance insists that her apprentice could perform as well as the
actors and inserts him into the
cast. Beaumont’s work is marked
by the skillful construction of a
highly complex series of events
and has been called a “spirited

SINGLES

20-35, Swingle Parties
This Friday and Sunday
BAND &amp; REFRESHMENTS

LIVELY SET
839-1309

satire on plays, players and public of the Jacobean Theatre.”

Eli Ask to direct
Directing The Knight of the
Burning Pestle, will be a visiting

director, Eli Ask. The versatile
Mr. Ask has been an actor, director and manager. He was Mike
Nichols’ assistant on the New
York production of The Knack
and directed the Australian company of that play. Mr. Ask appeared in Elia Kaan’s film America, America, and worked with
Jean-Louis Barrault on a recent
film.

Designing the production is Mr.
Robert Winkler, visiting lecturer
in scene design. Theatre goers on
campus should remember Mr.
Winkler’s delicate sets for The
Rivals last year, and his sets for
this year’s opera The Rape of
Lucretia. Both Mr. Wrinkler and
Mr. Ask are part of the Program

performances of The
Knight of the Burning Pestle will
be on April 25-28. Rehearsals will
begin around March 18. Copies
of the play are on reserve in
Harriman Library.

&amp;t£le®rest
UNIVERSITY PLAZA

BOCCE
&lt;0^

OLYMPIAD
it stars real people...
experiencing real emotions,
with genuine laughs.. heart
warming romance
'OU'II
talk about for weeks
and remember always

LENarTTl in Maxing Volor and CinemaSrope
by the Organising Comm.ttee for the Game* of the 18th OLYMPIAD
• Directed by KON ICHIKAWA■ A JACK DOUGLAS Presentation

\
UNIVERSITY PLAZA

Open Evenings

Thursday, Friday, Saturday

•

opening

thony Newley and his wife,
Joan Collins. This musical is
due f0 open soon at Buffalo
theaters

KLEIN HANS
Paemtawn Buffalo

fcport

Ttiruway Plaza

BouUvjrd

Mall

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productions. For example, the
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�Th

Pag* Eight

•

Tuesday, February 20,

Spectrum

1968

Theater workshop will Israeli, British study programs available
discover and train talent
Suppose you’re a creative
youngster in the Buffalo area in-

tempt to discover interested and
creative youngsters and provide

out

arts.
Criteria for selection are broadly defined and focus on nonverbal measures of “native talent,” thus seeking to minimize

money
how lo you pur
sue this interest?
Soon there may be an answer.
Next summer, 50 Buffalo area students (ages seven to 20) will have
an opportunity to attend a theater workshop at the Campus
School of the State University
College at Buffalo under a $17,790 grant from the N. Y. State
Council on the Arts.
To be jointly sponsored by the
Cooperative Urban Extension Center and the Campus School, the
experimental program is an at—

rael and a summer program jointly sponsored by four British universities are being offered.
The State University of New
York, in cooperation with the
differences in cultural backHebrew University in Jerusalem,
grounds and financial resources.
is offering both an eight week
1968 summer session course on
CUEC is a consortium of eight “Modern Israel," and a year-long
area colleges and universities, study abroad program beginning
and the resources of these instiAugust 1968.
tutions will be available for the
The summer session course (six
support of the program. For insemester credits) will be conformation contact CUEC, 243 ducted from June 29 to Aug. 27
Hayes Hall.
with formal study to be at the
modern campus of the Hebrew
University, Students will concentrate on lectures given by the
instructor of the course and Hebrew University faculty. Participants will also have the opportunity to meet with Israeli leaders in varied walks of life, live
with Israeli families and visit or
January 1968. His work with Mr. explore on their own.
The year abroad study proCunningham’s company marks
his professional debut in dance. gram, also to be held on the HeHe is a native of Richmond, Va., brew University campus, will
where he studied both ballet and carry up to 36 semester hours of
modern dance. For the last year credit. Although the study of Heand a half he has studied dance brew will be an integral part of
the program, no prior knowledge
at Adelphi University.
of the language is required for
acceptance.
Frank Borman, the last member of the panel, is currently Full time students
from the faculty of the Buffalo
From August through October
Ballet Arts Center. Prior to comthe participating students
1968,
ing to Buffalo, he had his own take an intensive Hebrew lanschool for five years in New Jerguage course, each at an approsey. Before this he was conpriate level. From November 1968
nected with The Ballet Ensemble to
June 1969, the regular acawhich toured the U. S. and Candemic year of Hebrew University,
ada and was produced by Sol
are enrolled as full
Hurok. Mr. Bourman has also participants
time students in individuality sebeen linked with the Australian
lected programs. Among the proBallet and the Los Angeles City grams
offered are: elective
Ballet.
courses taught in English in many
disciplines, special courses in Judaic studies taught in simple Hebrew, and regular courses in Hebrew in all disciplines.
Both programs are under the
supervision of Dr. Yonah Alexander, Associate Professor of Poli-

The Male Dancer' to be
topic of panel tomorrow
There will be an open discussion on “The Status Of the Male
Dancer in the U. S.” tomorrow
at 7;30 p.m. in Room 335, Norton
Hall.

Mr. Lewis Lloyd will lead the
discussion. Administrator o fthe
Cunningham Dance Foundation
Inc., Mr. Lloyd owns and operates the Pocket Theatre, an offBroadway in New '"York City,
presently housing “America Hurrah.”

Another member of the panel
will be Gus Solomons Jr., who
joined Merce Cunningham’s company in 1965. Before that time
he had performing experience
as a soloist with The Martha
Graham Dance Co, and on Broadway in “Kicks anl Co.”
Jeff Slayton joined the Merce
Cunningham Dance Company in

DON!
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836-4041

Room 231, Norton Hall.

Education (HE) is now accepting
applications of upper undergraduate and graduate students for
1968 summer study in a program
offered jointly at Oxford, Stratford-upon-Avon, London and Edinburgh.

A limited number of scholar-

ships are being offered for this
program. The IIE must receive
scholarship applications by March
1 and applications for regular ad
mission by March 30.

For application packets and further information contact Mr
James A. Michielli, 831-4941 or
831-4247. Mr. Michielli may be
contacted at the Office of International Educational Services, 210
Winspear Ave.

campus releases...
Undergraduate sociology majors will hold a meeting at 4 p.m.
Thusrday in Room 342, Norton Hall. The meeting will include a discussion of curriculum planning. Anyone having questions may call
836-8775,
A represertative of the Israel Aliyah Center, Mr. Yehudah Weissberger, will be at the Hillel House, 40 Capen Blvd. at 7 p.m. Thursday. Mr. Weissberger will discuss with interested students and facul-

ty members any aspects of the various Israel programs.
A bowling party sponsored by the Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship will be held Friday. All interested students meet at 7 p.m. Friday
in room 334, Norton Hall.
The Experimental College class in Pop Music will not meet
Thursday but will meet as usual Feb. 29 to discuss “Acid Rock.”
Professor Burton Raffel will read from two collections of his
poetry, Mia Poems and Some Songs of Solomon at 4 p.m. tomorrow in
the Conference Theater.
Professor Raffel, primarily known as a translator, has translated
two volumes of Old English works, as well as two books of Indonesian
translations and another of Vietnamese poetry. He has also had one
of his short stories published in the collection, Publishers' Choice.
The reading is sponsored by the Literature and Drama Committee
of the UUAB.
Dr. Seymour Wapner will speak at the Psychology Department
colloquia Thursday at 3:45 p.m. in the Millard Fillmore Room. His
topic will be “Organismic Developmental Theory: Some applications
to cognition," Coffee will be served prior to the colloquia.
The State University of Buffalo Orchestra, with Pamela Geahart
conducting, will perform works of Wagner, Vivaldi, Rachmaninoff and
Brubeck from 7 to 10 p.m. Thursday in Baird Hall. Visitors are
welcome.

Applications for the UUAB Personnel Committee are now available to interested students. They may be picked up in Norton, Goodyear, Tower or Clement Halls and must be returned by Friday to
Room 261, Norton Hall.
A special program to give undergraduates interested in the mathematical sciences (math, computer science, statistics) information on
these programs will be held at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Room 231,
Norton Hall. A question and answer period will follow. Refreshments
will be served and everyone is welcome.

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�Th

Tuesday, February 20, 1968

Pag* Nm*

Spectrum

•

ih sudden death score

Osweg* io beaten on Rom

Bulls capture Finger Lakes hockey crown
by Bob Woodruff
Spectrum

Sports Editor

Lome Rombough’s overtime goal gave the State University of Buffalo a heart
stopping 3-2 victory over Oswego State Saturday night
and earned the Bulls their
first Finger Lakes Hockey
League Championship.
Darryl Pugh scored a sizzling 15 foot slap shot with
57 seconds remaining in regulation time to send the game
into sudden death.
The Bulls pinned the first

loss of the league season on
defending champion Oswego
and kept their own record
unblemished at 15-0.
This victory, coupled with Friday night’s 7-5 come from behind
victory over tournament bound
Canton Tech, brought to this University its greatest athletic glory
since the football Bulls copped
the little Lambert Trophy in the

’50s, and earmarked Buffalo
for a prominent place in future

late

intercollegiate hockey competition at the varsity level.

The Bulls started their weekend assault on the FLHL crown
Friday against a Canton Tech

club that was primed sky-high for
revenge. Earlier this season, the
Buffalo Wrs had beaten Tech
5-4 after a highly disputed Canton goal was disallowed. In a
game that was greeted by a standing room only crowd, the Canton
club Friday night had the Bulls
down 5-3 after two periods, but
the Buffalo club stormed back in
a fashion befitting champions.

Tape nets two

The Bulls scored four times in
the last stanza, including a pair
by Billy Tape, to avert their
first 67-68 setback. Tape had
three goals on the night, Captain
Lome Rombough had two and
Franky Lewis and Billy Defoe

the spectrum of

each scored once. All-league
goalie Jimmy Hamilton got in
the way of 41 Canton shots, turning in perhaps his most incredible
performance in a brilliant career.
The stage was thus set for
the Bulls showdown at Oswego,
in a battle of the unbeatens. In

fact, the Oswego skaters had not
been defeated in four years when
they confidently took the ice
against the bull-dozing herd Saturday night. Their last league
defeat was at the hands of these
very same Bulls’ eons ago in
1964.

SRO for 6 weeks

This pivotal battle had been
sold-out for six weeks, as the
hockey-happy Oswego fans
wanted to see the Buffalo myth
shattered.
The Bulls surpprised a lot of
people.

sports

The game was marked by tough
back checking and boarding as
Franky Lewis, John Watson, Billy
Ttefne and Frank Boureemeister
body checked brilliantly to the
delight of coach Coley.
Hamilton was his usually outstanding self in the nets. The
Bulls’ greatest defensive weapon
was beaten twice, once on a break
away and again on a screen shot,
while stopping better than two
dozen shots.
But with only Billy Tape denting the nets for the Bulls, the
visitors trailed 2-1 before Pugh
scored with less than a minute
left to send the game into a tiebreaking fourth period. It was
fitting that the Bulls leading
scorer, Lome Rombough was responsible for crowning the new
FLHL hockey kings with his third
goal of the glorious weekend.

Orangemen out-gun Bulls 94-76 as

Piorkowski and Davis bomb zone
by W. Scott Behrens
Asst.

*&gt;orfs Editor

Bad shooting Saturday for the

State University of Buffalo Bulls
was the story of the Bulls’ demise
at the hands of the Orangemen
of Buffalo State University College. The final score read 94-76.

This was the Bulls’ seventh setback of the campaign against

nine victories and the third consecutive loss to Buffalo State in
as many years. The Bulls still
lead in the long series, 26-7.
The Bulls hit on only 34.7% of
their shots from the field as they
had their worst shooting night of

the season in the Aud, The Blue
and White hit on only 26 shots
from the field out of 75 taken.
Buffalo State, on the other hand,
hit over 50% of its shots as they
tallied on 35 out of 67 shots taken
from the field.
Both teams were even at the
free throw line, Buffalo State
making 24 of 30, while the Bulls
made 24 of 34.

Bulls'

zone ineffective
The Bulls used a 1-3-1 zone to
try to stop the highly-favored

Statesmen but the
outside shooting was too good
to make the zone effective. Al-

Orangemen’s

though State’s junior forward,
Len Piortowski, was only held to
two points in the first half, he
personially ripped the game wideopen in the second half with 11

Buffalo State’s Charlie Davis
killed the Bulls on the boards as
he pulled down 19 rebounds. He
was the game's second leading
scorer with 20 points, one behind Piorkowski who finished
with 21.
Scoring leader for the Bulls
was Doug Bernard with 17 points.

Bernard was the Bulls’ best
shooter, making five buckets out
of ten shots taken from the field
and hitting the cords from the
free throw line with seven out of

The varsity and freshman basketball teams take a bus trip to
Niagara Falls tomorrow evening
to face one of their toughest foes
of the campaign. The Niagara
Purple Eagles will host the Bulls
in a doubleheader.
The game has been a sellout
since the season started all due
to the fact that a little guard
named Calvin Murphy is on their
team. Murphy is averaging a little
over the 39 point-per-game mark
and has set five arena records in
scoring.

Murphy’s most recent recordsetting performance was Saturday night at the Jersey City
Armory as the Eagles upset St.
Peter’s 100-88 and Murphy netted
50. The Eagles will have an even
ten-ten won-lost record going into
tomorrow’s contest.

No sets will be offered to Bull
fans, much to the dismay of the
many onlookers who would have
wanted to see this game.
The box score for the Buffalo
State game follows:
BUFFALO

STATE
U. BUFFALO
OFT
OFT

Plorkowski, f
SawMBn, f

Da&lt;l», c
Nowcryfa,

7

Salola

WlanWwakl

ST
1
Totals

-'

Pul

7 »t Now*, I
5 9 IS Bernard, f
1 X Jeklefe*. «

*

a 11 Pi«rl, o
111 Etwrla,
1 IS Walla
1 1 a Vaughan
til Williams

■ a
Koslowikl, |T

Bonchal
Bennatt

Jim Hamilton (left) Bulls goalie
and Lome Rombough, clubs
leading scorer, were instrumental in bringing Buffalo its

first Finger Lakes Hockey Championship.

on the bench
by Billy Martin
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

In need of a change, this reporter has moved from the bench
to the arena to bring you the thrill by thrill escapades of those giants
from the wild kingdom. These are those behemoths who filled your
television screens on any number of nights during the week. Whether
it be on Thursday, Friday, or Saturday, you always knew you had
a two hour performance that warranted the Oscar of the tube, the
Bmmy.

Face Niagara tomorrow

Bernard
Banks

Ice
stars

straight points.

seven.

Buffalo State's Mike Bennet
(45) watches helplessly as Buffalo forward clumps two
pointer. Bulls Jon Culberl (32)
is in foreground. The Orangemen rolled the Bulls despite
Bernard's 17 points, 94-76.

—Gleno

I

|

•

0 Bade

j laB f»0 BehSf'r'ar

IB

B

•

B

Totals

1)1]
9 7 IT
5 J I
Jin

111
ail
oil

BIO
Bit

in
Bi

la 71

For best performance in a dramatic series, best actor in a supporting role, or even best actress, some favorites that never seemed
to get the nod were Eicki Starr, Marvin Mercer, and June Grable,
Without a doubt, these were some of the all-time greats from
Washington, D.C., Sunnyside Gardens or Boston, Mass. The shows
which made them famous were Bedlam from Boston and Wrestling
from Capitol Arena.
Many of you remember how the Sheik pronounced his vows to
Allah and then proceeded to take his merciless cruelty out on a

meek opponent.
The crowd loved the claw hold of the Killer from Detroit, Harold
Kowalski, especially when he was thrust into the ring against everybody’s favorite from White Plains, Golden Boy Arnold Skoland.
It seemed the villians always faced the pushovers, the rolypoly crowd pleaser that had the match won until it was time for
a commercial when the villain would then bounce off the ropes
with a knee to the mid-section, a rope across the eyes and 1-2-3 it
was all over, except for the intermission interviews with Ray Morgan, a man who looked more like a Sunday school teacher than a
wrestling commentator.

The wayward home for old, overweight wrestlers opened at the
Concord Hotel. Here the devastating Antonino Rocca and the daz
zling Ricki Starr entertain the thousands-of guests with their expert
methods of conditioning.
Who said there’s no future in professional wrestling? Word has
it that some of these all-time greats are now fully employed. Chief
Big Heart is the Indian who runs like crazy for the Atlanta Braves
in the outfield when they get a rally going. Eduard Carpentier is
in France getting DeGaulle in shape for the summer Olympics.
At one time the fabulous Kangaroos with their big mouthed
manager Wild Red Berry threw a boomerang out of the ring and
hit an innocent bystander. Haystacks Calhoun. The 601-pound Ken
tuckian who for breakfast ate a pound of bacon, a dozen eggs, a
loaf of bread and a gallon of milk, jumped into the ring, made a
Kangaroo sandwich with Red Berry the filling, and then very quietly hit them with the “big splash.” There no longer is Bedlam from
Boston; there’s no ring.
Pepper Gomez was famous for a cast iron stomach. Wrestlers
would jump on his stomach from the ring as he laid prostrate on
the floor. Killer Kowalski once did this. He jumped on Pepper’s
stomach, then beat the daylights out of him. Gomez spent the next
three months in a hospital.
Why did wrestling die?
Perhaps all this bone jarring action looks tame today next to
the newsreels that can be seen on Huntley Brinkley.

�T h

Pag* Ten

UB women cagers
win 2nd straight
The State University of Buffalo women’s intercollegiate basketball team downed visiting D’Youville College 32-39 at Clark Gym
last Friday evening. This was the
second straight win for the State
University of Buffalo women
after dropping their season opener to Buffalo State 28-24.
Kay Richard

was high scorer

for the Buffalo contingent with
17 points. Co-captain Elaine Gor-

•

Tuesday, February 20, 1968

Spectrum

Matmen beat Guelph, to face Brockport tomorrow
by David Bash
SpecOum

staff

R.port.r

The State University at Buffalo matmen tuned up Saturday
for its big match
Guelph 26-11. The Bulls stormed
to an 18-0 lead as they won the
first four events and finished
winning six out of the nine. The
Bulls now stand at 7-2. Earlier
last week Buffalo rolled over
RIT 21-12.
Gary Fowler got the ball roll-

ing for the Bulls as he pinned
Gary Grosling in the initial contest. Following a decision vietory by Mike Watson, Brian Vandenberg came up with a pin of

the Bulls ran into two roadblocks. Gordie Alexander was
pinned in his match (167); followed by Harry Bell’s decision
lost (177). Harry was hampered

“great effort, and the boys were
looking forward to Wednesday
night’s encounter with Brockport
State.”

The match was stopped
twice for “repairs.”

effort against Brockport who has
already defeated Oswego, a state
powerhouse who earlier victim
ized our Blue and White. The
match starts at 7:30 tomorrow
evening in Clark Gym. Student
support is greatly needed for this

nose.

Guelph finally got on the scoreboard as Adam Alfsen won a
close decision (10-8) over Dayle

Wettlaufer.
After Jerry Meissner copped a
decision victory for the grapplers,

Dan Walgate came up with a
pin in his heavyweight match
after falling behind 7-2.
After the contest Coach Gergley commented that it was a

crucial match.

don followed in the scoring leadership with 12. Carol Lazzaro and
Leda Young led the team in re-

bounds.

At the end of the first half the
Blue and White held a slim four
point lead but widened the gap
to 11 points (27-16) going into the
fourth quarter. D’Youville cut the
margin to one point with approximately two minutes remaining.
At that point the score was 29-28
in favor of the home team.

Miss Richard converted a
missed foul shot for two points
while D’Youville countered with
one point. Buffalo’s Shirley Goldin sunk a vital free throw to
raise the slim margin to three.
Regaining possession of the ball
with just 34 seconds left, the
girls in the blue and while uniforms were content with just
freezing the ball.
The women played host to
Buffalo State Sunday evening.
Their next scheduled game is at

5300

co»P«

uOC

Niagara University Saturday.

Smith states views
on Olympic boycott
Special to The Spectrum

NEW YORK—Sprint star Tommie Smith of San Jose College,
one of the most vocal and outspoken athletes supporting a Negro boycott of the 1968 Olympic

games, has admitted that he will

participate if a majority of the
outstanding Negro Olympic prospects do.

Stating his views in an article
in the current issue of SPORT
Magazine, Smith says: “I believe
that total agreement, or something close to total agreement,
is necessary for success in this.
If my brothers and the majority
of the outstanding Negro Olympic prospects can not concur in
in this resolution and are not prepared to accept such action, then
I will go on to fulfill my ambition to become an Olympian.”
Among the abuses Smith would
see corrected before he
whether or not to try
the U. S. Olympic team,
opening of the all-white
membership roles of the New
York Athletic Club to Negroes,
the barring of Southern Rhodesia and South Africa from Olympic competition, the appointing
of an additional Negro coach to
the Olympic coaching staff and
the appointing of at least one
Negro to the United States Olympic Committee.

like to
decides
out for
are the

Continues Smith in the state
mcnt of his position:

“I am not entirely sure of my
actions. No one could be. But I
have searched my conscience and
I am acting as I believe I should
act. I would be less than a man
if I did not act for what I believe.
“Black comes first. I say it
flatly and simply, if there is a
Negro boycott of the Olympics,
I will participate in it willingly.
If there is not, I will go to the
Olympics and I will go to win,”
he said.

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�Tuesday, February

20, 1968

Tht Spictrum

National Guard preparing

Pag* Elavan

CL ASSIF IED

to handle summer riots

ONE

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after 9:30 p.m.

WASHINGTON OWL
Seven
A National Guard spokesman 1941 Chrysler newport-Gom) condition,
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MERCURY
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Gen, Ralph E. Haines Jr.,
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au omatic, mus ,,n. 836-8775,
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gas dispensers are also being last Sept. 19 that “there are cerne blo k ,hree sraduat
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dents; two bedrooms, bath, kitchen; comdepots for use by National Guard as not control munitions,’ .tear p]ete
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troops, it was revealed.
gas, armored vests, searchlights provided, ready now. tf 2-5058 or if 3Gen. Harold K. Johnson, Army and perhaps additional coramuni- 9261
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tral localities
prefered.
after 11 p.m. Graduate
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—

any revelant data concerning
DUSTIN
HOFFMAN, please call &lt;*37-8569.
SHALOMI For gems from the Jewish Bible
call 8775-4265 day or night.

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Pag*

Twelve

The Spectrum

Tuesday, February 20,

1968

Strike intervention

Rockefeller

is widely criticized

by Vic Looper

Spectrum

Albany

privileges, a stiff fine and imprisonment of

Correspondent

their president, John DeLury.

The sanitation strike that New York—

—Assemblyman

City has just endured has caused quite a
stir at the Capital. Most legislators were
quite distressed at the way Governor

Buffalo)

Albert .1

JHaushpek

(TV

was somewhat critical of the Gov-

ernor’s handling of the strike. Assemblyman Arthur 0. Eve (D-Buffalo) said that
he would “wait and see” what developed
before stating a definite opinion. The mail
of most legislators is highly critical of the
Governor. One secretary of a senator stated that she has received only one letter
that wasn’t against the Governor.

Rockefeller intervened in the strike.
The Governor asked to meet the Legislature in joint session Feb. 12, but this
was rejected by the Assembly Democrats.
This marks one of the few times and
possibly the first time that a Governor
has been refused an appearance at a joint
session.
Rockefller then switched tactics and
made an appearance on television to try
and muster popular support of his method
of handling the strike. He also appealed
to the populace to support a bill which
he presented to the Legislature.

Rockefeller has also received the wrath
of nearly all the newspapers in the state.
Republican leaders out of state have also
criticized the Governor. Governor Ronald
Reagon of California said that the Governor has destroyed the principle of home
rule by his actions in the strike. Others
have accused him of creating disrespect
for law and order. The charge of playing
politics for the Presidential nomination
was also levied against Rockefeller.
The Assembly and Senate have both
refused to take action on the Governor’s
bill. The bill would allow the state to step
in when a health hazard got out of hand,
would employ people; usually those that
were already employed by the city to alleviate the hazard at the same wage and
with all benefits that they would normally
enjoy and charge the cost to the city. If
the city could not pay the cost in the
present fiscal year, the state would advance the money and then deduct it from
the next year’s grant from the state. The
bill has been opposed by those on both
sides of the aisle.

Most of the opposition came from up-

state Republicans who abhor strikes by

public employees. Sen. Majority Leader
Earl W. Brydges considers these strikes
as insurrections. Rockefeller has been in
conference with the legislative leaders
constantly to round up support for his

program.

Sen. Brydges attacked Mayor John
Lindsay's handling of the strike on the
floor of the Senate and stated’that Lindsay was trying to take credit for its ending when Rockefeller really deserved it.
Brydges stated that the Sanitation Union
broke the Taylor Law, which forbids
strikes by public employees, but that they
were paying for it due to loss of checkoff

*

•

•

*

albany
Washington
salgon

_

Georgia
.

demonstrators

Georgia state troopers move-in on demonstrators
mostly children protesting school conditions in Social
Ga
,
,. ,
Children were hauled in busses to the
Prison
Farm.
County
—

S

WASHINGTON
The three American
pilots freed by North Vietnam flew home
Saturday for a reunion with their families.
—

Hanoi’s peace talks statement that accom-

panied their release left Johnson administration officials unimpressed.
The pilots, Air Force Maj. Norris M.
Overly and Capt. Jon D. Black and Navy
Lt. j.g. David P. Matheny, were expected
to arrive at Andrews Air Force Base, Md.
Newsmen were not allowed to speak
with the pilots, who dined on steak and
eggs at the base officer’s club while the
four-engined transport was being refueled.
A military spokesman said the men
appeared to be in good physical condition.
He said they joked with a waitress during

,

ing bombing raids last fall, were released
last week by North Vietnam in a previously announced goodwill gesture marking

Tet, the Lunar New Year.
Two representatives of American peace
groups arranged details of their release
and escorted them.by air from Hanoi to
Vientiane, Laos, reported that North
Vietnamese Prime Minister Pham Van
Dong had spoken to them about peace
talks before their departure.
One of the pacifists, the Rev. Daniel
Berrigan of Cornell University, quoted
Prime Minitser Dong as skying that President Johnson’s San Antonio formula for
peace talks was unacceptable but that
Hanoi
will talk peace seriously” if the
United States halts its bombing uncondi“

tionally.

Viet Cong open new phase
SAIGON
North Vietnamese and
Viet Cong armies opened a second phase
of their 1968 offensive Sunday with heavy
attacks throughout three-quarters of South
Vietnam. They raided five major U. S.
bases in the Saigon area, several allied
outposts on the central highlands and the
biggest towns in the Mekong Delta rice
bowl.
In Hue, 400 miles north of Saigon
near the threatened northern frontier,
diehard North Vietnamese regulars battled American Marines and South Vietnamese infantrymen! to a near standstill
on the 19th day of combat that started
when the Communists began their lunar
new year offensive on Jan. 29.
Casualties on both sides mounted in
the old walled Citadel of Hue while the
new outbreak of fighting erupted over
wide areas of the countryside and rekindled the battle of Saigon. U. S. and
South Vietnamese troops counterattacked
quickly in a move to stop the second wave
of attacks before they could gain momen—

compiled

,

Captured pilots return home

the meal.
The fliers, who had been captured dur-

seoul

—

from our

wirm tmrvicmt

tum.

Heaviest fighting at Hue

The heaviest fighting early Sunday was

at Hue, where more than 70 Americans
and 3000 Communists have been killed,
and around the Tan Son Nhut Air Base on
Saigon’s northwest outskirts where Viet
Cong mortar and rocket fire early Sunday
touched off a thunderous explosion and
huge fires.

Hit provincial capital
The U. S. Command said Communist
forces were attacking Kontum, an im
portant provincial capital on the highlands
260 miles northeast of Saigon. It was hit
during the first phase of the lunar new
push which ranged the
year
or Tet
length and breadth of South Vietnam,
—

—

American bombers applied heavy pres
sure on North Vietnamese strongholds in
and around the DMZ and U. S. planes
knifed into North Vietnam proper for
more raids.
The Hanoi radio reported North Viet
a U. S. pl ane
attacking targets Saturday in Phu The
Province northwest of the Communis
capital. There was no confirmation of thi
from Saigon headquarters.

namese defenders shot down

Allies in agreement on Pueblo
SEOUL
South Korean Foreign
Minister Choi Kyu-han has said the United
States and South Korea have agreed to
view as “acts of aggression” the recent
Communist terrorist raid into Seoul and
North Korea’s seizure of the U. S. intelligence ship Pueblo.
The foreign minister spoke at a news
Hee said the South Korean government
conference after President Park Chung
would arm one million reservists by the
end of this year as part of its efforts to
strengthen defenses against Communist
—

bout
AC

«

as

fir

uip fan
WC
tdil

speaking to a group of
college students, throws-up his hands.
He said the U.S. has "gone just about
as ar as honorable, decent people can
go i n trying to arrange Viet peace

Pres. Johnson,

nn
yu

"

talks.

provocations.
In a speech reported in Moscow, Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin said the
Kremlin was “taking all necessary measures” to keep the Pueblo crisis from escalating into a new Korean war.
Premier Kosygin’s statement was the
first indication that the Soviet Union was
playing any kind of a direct role in the
Pueblo affair. Earlier, it appeared the
United States had failed in efforts to
persuade the Soviets to help win release

of the Pueblo’s crew.

Choi called the news conference to
elaborate on the recent Seoul talks between South Korean leaders and special
U. S, presidential envoy Cyrus R. Vance
agreed
the recent meeting in

“We
at
Seoul that such Communist provocations
in the future will be regarded as acts ot
aggression and in such cases we will im '
mediately have consultations and determine what action should be taken under
our mutual defense pact,” Choi said.
the
Choi said South Korea agrees with
United States that the 83-man crew of the
USS Pueblo, held captive in North Korea
as
since Jan. 23, should be freed as soon
release
their
stressed
possible. But he
should be obtained in “an honorable wa&gt;
Choi said that during the meeting wi
ban
Vance, the South Korean government
®
never proposed revision of the U.
mutual defense pact. Nor, he said, had
government sought to transfer operation
control to South Korea of ROK forces n
under United Nations Command.

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                    <text>The Spectrum 0
Vol. 18, No. 33

nr
r

.

..1%

-n

-

L_

i—.,

-

FEE

-

1968

U Mi'.

TY

ARCHIVES

State University of New York at Buffalo

rFriday, February 16, 1966

N.Y. Dems support LBJ

Declining to support President Johnson’s policies in

Vietnam, the New York State Democratic Committee Wed-

nesday overwhelmingly passed a relatively lukewarm resolution of support for the President’s re-election in November.

Objections to the Gorman resolution had been raised by backers of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy
and Sen. Eugene McCarthy. Mr.
Palmer said that any resolution
of support for the President
should be broad enough so that
people of all views could back
the President’s reflection.
—

Hsiang

Student
questions

.

.

.

.

and members of the Student Senate and

loyalty and support..

finally passed
by the committee, proposed by
Erie County chairman Joseph

Judiciary listen attentiveI during Wednesday's
'Bitch-In' in the Fillmore room.

read:
"We particularly hail the far
of
reaching accomplishments
President Lyndon B. Johnson,
Vice President Hubert H, Humphrey, Sen, Robert F. Kennedy
and our 26 New York State ConCrangle,

Judiciary decision, comprehensive
exams are topics in two open forums
by Linda Laufar and
Jay Schraibar

.

The resolution

gressmen

.

,

.

We

extend to

Johnson, Vice Prcsirent Humphrey and all other
President

Democratic candidates our con-

tiuned loyalty and vigorous support in the forthcoming election.”
The upset of the Gorman resolution was seen as a setback for
Rep. Joseph Y. Resnick, one of
two declared candidates for the
Democratic senatorial
nomination. Earlier in the week, Rep,

Resnick had urged support for
the stronger statement, comparing that anti-Johnson Democrats
had been operating in the state
without contradiction from the
state committee.
The committee ealier defeated
an attempt by representatives of
the Coalition for a Democratic
Alternative (CDA) to table all
resolutions. Supporters of Sen.
McCarthy’s Presidential campaign,
the members argued that the committee should wait for registered
Democrats to voice their opinions
in the primaries before voting
support of any one candidate.
Outside the hotel, approximately 80 members of CDA picketed
in protest of any move to support
President Johnson. They also protested against the committee’s
right to pass a resolution ignoring
the Vietnam issue altogether.

gruntled students. “We had to
prove that a somebody consumed

Sp*&lt;irum Staff Rtportmrs
We know bottles were
Two open forums held Wednesday afternoon presented alcohol.
opened, that liquor was poured.
students with a dual opportunity to question academic and We failed in our prosecution, bestudent government affairs. The Crab-In and Bitch-In were cause we didn’t prove ‘X’ drank
both successful in raising some issues, but the latter was alcohol.”
The Bitch-In disclosed that a
notably deficient in attracting interest.
to move final exams
The Crab-In was held to discuss existing problems in referendum
back a week after Christmas vathe Psychology Dept. Organized by three psychology majors, cation may be conducted. Also,
Neil Slatkin, Stewart Edelstein and Steve Imber, it sucMeryl Markowitz indicated that
ceeded in bringing together faculty and students in an she is attempting to get Buffalo
merchants to recognize NSA disexchange of opinions and ideas
counts, which would save money
The meeting, at which
for most students.
looking
ers
were
out
over
a
about 60 persons were presCommenting on the Senate
sparsely populated Fillmore Room
ent, dealt chiefly with the during the Student Senate Bitch- sponsored event at Wednesday’s
Student Senate meeting, Mr. Edelissue of comprehensive exIn. Prompted by student senator
stein said: “I think it was very
the
a
two
members
of
ams and the formation of
Ellen Price,
successful.” He noted that there
challenged
smaH
the
audience
student advisory group
was a “good cross-section of com-

Conflicting views were presented on the value of the comprehensive exam that is now administered to all psychology majors
at the end of their senior year.
Speaking in support of the exam,
a faculty member said that it provides feedback on how effectively the students are doing. It also
forces the student to integrate

the concepts he has learned, he
added.
Several students indicated that
students who are not going to
graduate school should not have
to take this exam. Another point
made was that students do not
lake courses in every field of

psychology, yet the comprehensives require knowledge of all
these different areas.

Discussion then moved toward
the idea of forming a group to
serve as an advisory committee.
Although nothing was decided,
there were two possible structures presented. One calls for
the adding of students to the
existing faculty advisory committee.

The alternate suggestion would
have a separate student group
which would meet jointly with
the faculty group. The groups
would also vote together, but the
student committee would have
its own identity. Elections for the
committee will be held during a
meeting at 3 p.m. tomorrow in
Room 231 Norton Hall.
Meanwhile, eight student lead-

acquittal of 15 student senators,
who had been charged with drinking alcohol on campus.

It became apparent that the
students’ biggest complaint was
that the trial involved a “conflict of interest.” One student,
pointing out that the Student
Judiciary is appointed by the
Student Senate, charged that
favoritism was involved. Nicky
Segal, a law student who defended the 15 at the trial, conceded
that “I had doubts the Student
Judiciary could reach an unbiased
decision either way. I think they
did, though. They cast off everything, and talked about the evidence involved.”
This stirred some bitter debate
concerning the character of evidence presented at the trial.

Questioned

repeatedly,

Senate

President Stewart Edelstein admitted: “I did break the rule
of consumption of alcohol . I

pleaded not guilty. Was I guilty?
No. After 4V4 years work on resolving the alcohol question, everyone was very happy when the
University Council decision was
made. Perhaps it was inappropriate, but I do not think we were
guilty. There is a moral question
involved,”
Some students were upset that
trial transcripts could not be re-

leased to interested public, under
present Student Judiciary laws.
Only Thomas Frank, who aided
the prosecution at the trial, was
able to satisfy some of the dis-

ment,” and recommended the
continued sponsoring of BitchIns by the Senate.
Another Bitch-ln is scheduled
for 3:30 p.m. Wednesday in the
Fillmore Room.

Senate

refuses

—w»m»n

Protest support
,

0i

D
LuJ
.

-

About 80 members of the Coalition for Democratic Allern
alive picketed a meeting of
Stale Democratic leaders

to investigate Judiciary

Tht Student Senate Wednesday voted down a proposal to investigate "the ethi
cal conduct of the Student Judiciary."
The proposal, introduced by Senator Randall Eng, said "there is a question as
to the conduct of the Student Judiciary" during the recent trial in which alleged
drinking charges against 15 senators were dismissed.
Mr. Eng also presented a petition, signed by 37 students, which called for
"removal" of the Student

Judiciary.

Debate focused on the practicality of investigating "ethical conduct," and many
senators agreed that only the Judiciary's rules of procedure could be reviewed.
Senator Daryl Rosenfeld said that any such investigation would "undermine" the
body.

A substitute motion presented by Senator Joseph Orsini, which would have
empowered a "separate but equal" court to try any case involving Senate members,
also failed.
In other action, the Senate voted to recognise the "Anonym," a publication
designed to set forth the works of student writers. Poet and Faculty member Robert
Creeley is the group's advisor, it was announced.

Senate

briefs

Treasurer Douglas Braun announced that budget cuts of 50% for most clubs and
15% for publications had been effected.
e The Senate enacted new policy for the Book Exchange. Students now must claim
checks and unsold books within two months after the close of the exchange, or
forfeit them. The Book Exchange chairman will rule on all cases that extend past
the two month deadline.
e Another Senate-sponsored "Biteh-ln" is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. Wednesday in the
Fillmore Room.
e

■

George Palmer, Schenectady
County chairman, moved to table
a resolution introduced by Dr.
Gerald P. Gorman, Ulster County chairman, which specifically
praised the President's handling
of the war. All but about six of
the 100 committeemen in attendance at Buffalo's Statler-Hilton
voted to do so.

s

�Friday, February 16, 1968

The Spectrum

Pav* Two

Educational woe

Migrating students pose problems
for New York as a 'debtor state'
by Lind

.aufer

Spectrum Staff

Reports

New York has always been a debtor state. More students go out of state for a college education than come to
the state.
The most recent report on this subject was made in
1963 by the U.S. Office of Education.
In that year, the out-migration exceeded the in-migration
by 36,232. Of those non-residents of New York State attending New York institutions, more than 95% went to private
colleges and universities.
A recent article in the Buffalo
morning newspaper stated that
“6,248 fulltime graduate and undergraduate students who do not
live in New York State are being
educated by the state’s taxpayers.”

higher education. Although these
figures have not yet been compiled, based on the 1963 statistics
there are many more students
leaving the state than entering it.
Mr. James C. Schwender, As-

He also explained that it would

cost the taxpayer more if those
going out of state chose to remain here. It would cost money

to expand both private and public institutions to provide enough

facilities. Additional money would
be needed to pay for scholar incentives which would be claimed
by more students.
The recommended cost of educating each full-time equivalent
student at the State University
of Buffalo in the 1968-69 academic year is $1431. This figure
excludes those students in Health
Sciences and evening and summer sessions.

A constitutional problem also
is involved in this question. A
clause in the Constitution guarantees to the citizens of one
state “all the privileges and immunities of citizens in the several
states,” This clause applies to
commerce, but it is not clear
that it applies to college education.

sonableness of the differential.
Non-residents cannot be discriminated against because they are
non-residents.

However, it was not said how

Cost high

Constitutional question

Tuition differentials are set
arbitrarily and are not attempts
to reflect additional economic
burdens of the people of the
state. As yet, there has been no
attempt to determine the rea-

many students from New York
State are going elsewhere for

sistant Director of Admissions,
indicated that it does cost New
York’s taxpayers money and that
they are subsidizing out-of-state
students. On the other hand, he
said, the other states are reciprocating and subsidizing students
from New York State.

growth of the Student population
to have this kind of mixture.”

Mr. Robert O’Neill, assistant to
the president, suggested two formulas for determining the reasonableness of the differential.

The first formula is to affix the

Charles Fogel
"We should have students from
all areas . .
According to Mr. Charles Fogel,
assistant executive vice-president,

the cost of educating any student
is more than the student pays in
his tuition and fees. The tuition
for out of state residents is more
than that for New York State
residents. Thus, people from out
of state are paying a greater
share towards the total cost.
Mr. Fogel said: “We do have
people in this institution and
other SUNY institutions from out
of state and it is desirable to

have such students. We should
have students from all areas because it helps the intellectual

cost for New York residents and
then determine the cost for the
non resident by adding to the
base the amount from taxes that
goes to support SONY. The other
way is to have the non-residents
pay the actual cost.

Mr, O’Neill indicated that this
may be said to be unreasonable
because residents are not required to pay the actual cost less
the amount paid in taxes. In the
first case, the differential is
small and in the second, it is
large. Unless the differential is
small, there is a plausible argument for the privileges and immunities clause, he said.

O’Neill said that -the difference between fees fairly reflects the burden which the nonresident is spared but from which
he benefits, then the differential
is proper. If the amount of the
differential exceeds the value
of the benefits, it may be invalid,
he said.
Mr,

N.Y.S.

In-

College

Out-

migrating

students

migrating

students

students*

from

N.Y.S.

(residents)*

(All N.Y.S.
residents)

(all non-

residents
of N.Y.S.)*

Attending
Public
Institutions

28,355

2,388

Attending
Private
Institutions

63,830

53,565

92,185

55,953

—Sloan

than one-thousand received degrees at graduation
More

Commencement

exercises Monday.

British economist talks at
mid-year commencement
by Joel Kleinman

Spectrum

Dr. Clifford C. Furnas, president emeritus of the Uni-

nually to “an individual who personifies civic patriotism
and vivifies public service in the eyes of Buffalo.”
As Chancellor of the University from 1954 to 1962, first president of the State University of
Buffalo

and

research

various

capacities, Dr. Furnas “has done
Buffalo, the University, and the
nation
a series of great
things,” lauded President Meyerson in bestowing the award. Dr.
Furnas was recently appointed
...

vice chairman of the National
Research Council of the National
Academy of Sciences.
Miss Ward’s address was a
passionate plea for world unity
to solve the problems that stem
from a widening technological
gap between industrialized and
underdeveloped nations. The eminent author warned of “ghetto
continents by 1980
if we
continue in our present way.”
To prevent such a catastrophe
“we must now add loyalty to the
planet
to loyalty to our cities,
in the
states, and countries
creation of a single universe.”
One implementation of this
...

...

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and first prof, students.

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concept would have each nation
contribute 1% of its gross national product toward the development of the technologically backward nations in a form of inter-

national taxation.

Miss Ward implored the U.S.

to remain in Southeast Asia to
prevent an upset in the balance
of power that would lead to a

recurrence of the problems we
currently face there. To avoid

other Vietnams, there must be
a “continuing concert between
the large powers,” the speaker
added.
In addition to her position as
editor of the British weekly,
The Economist,
Miss Ward
was recently appointed to one
of New York’s $100,000-a-year
Albert Schweitzer chairs as pro-

fessor of international economic
Columbia Uni-

development at
versity.

The first woman to address a
University commencement received prolonged applause from
the students, parents and relatives.

Advance degrees were confer
red on 480 students and 540 re
ceived associate or baccalau
reate degrees at the ceremony

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versity, was awarded the Chancellor’s Medal, presented an-

...

351,155

Staff

British economist Barbara Ward’s analysis of the world
situation highlighted mid year commencement exercises at
Kleinhans Music Hall Monday. Degrees were conferred on
mor than 1000 students, including an unprecedented 81
doctoral candidates.

DATING WORKS

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Building, Buffalo,

The one in the middle will
Yo

�Friday, February 16, 1968

The Spectrum

Pag* Thrs*

WBFO receives national award
by Charles Zeldner
Spectrum sioH Reporter

WBFO Tuesday received a nationally-recognized award for experimental programming,

The presentation by the Institute fhr Education by RadioTelevision was made for a spring
1967 program, “City-Links WBFO
Buffalo.”
The Institute, as explained by
Mr. William Siemering, General
Manager of WBFO, is designed to
recognize excellence of programming in various categories. The
award is available to any radio
or television station, including
commercial broadcasters.
The program for which WBFO
has been cited was aired May 26
and ran for 27 consecutive hours.
Maryanne Amacher, a visiting
composer at the Center for the
Creative and Performing Arts of
this University, was the motivating force behind the unique program.

“City-Links WBFO Buffalo”

was

a live broadcast which allowed the
listener to “see” various places
in the city by identifying their
unique sounds. Miss Amacher
traveled about the city listening
for sounds with the proper rhythm, timbre, frequencies and

variations ' which she felt could
be successfully printed into a
contemporary composition.
Telephone lines were used to

bring the various sounds to the by unwritten means.
studio where they were mixed
Some WBFO programs have
and altered to present a pleasing
musical composition reflecting the been usec * *’-v other stations. “The
changing-tempo of the city. The— Only Way to Fly, originated by

be an exciting medium and has
a new dimension which has not
yet been realized.

tional
work

Educational

City-Links

Radio

Net

was

discussed on
Monitor and over
the Voice of America.

NBC Radio’s

Several innovations
Although City-Links was the
only item submitted this year for
judgement, it is only one example
of “experimental, creative programming which our station has

done and which radio program-

ming should do,” Mr. Siemering

said.

WBFO has broadcast other uni-

que programs, “Talking Painting,”
a program a few years ago, allowed the listener to “see” the
canvas through the eyes of an
artist, “People to People” was an

experiment in the area of ghetto
communications. Mr. Siemering

said: “There have been many
different forms of experimentation which we have been willing
to try, even to risk failure.”
Programs innovated by WBFO
are by no means restricted to
this area. “Nation Within a Nation,” a history of the Iroquois
Confederacy, was picked up by
several stations around the country for rebroadcast. The Iroquois
have an oral culture which can
be most effectively transmitted

First of many

As a result of Miss Amacher’s
ingenuity, Channel 17 has planned a half hour telecast of modern environmental music com-

bined with aspects in Buffalo and
the Niagara Frontier, The sights
and sounds of downtown redevelopment, local industry, a Thruway interchange, Buffalo Airport,
and family life are being used.

The Ohio State Award is one
of the more highly regarded
honors in the communications
business, and has a long history.
Mr. Siemering, who accepted the
award last night told The Spectrum: “We are extremely gratified by this award naturally to

Miss Amacher who conceived the
idea and to the Music Department
for their support. We hope that
this is the first of what we
expect to be many examples of
national recognition for the work
being done at WBFO. Chief Engineer Fred Winters and his staff
played a key role in making the
program possible.”

Leary favors Gregory for President;
asks temporary abandonment of LSD
United

Pregs

International

Dr. Timothy Leary, with a follower in a stove pipe hat
looking on, and Dick Gregory spent Lincoln’s birthday in
upstate New York talking about the presidency.
Negro comedian Gregory, who received endorsement
to run for president from former Harvard professor Leary
earlier in the day, called policemen and firemen “the number
one and number two men in the country” and supported
pay raises for both groups. Gregory spoke in Amsterdam,
at the invitation of Fulton-Montgomery Community College.
When lights were turned down
at Lynch High School, Gregory
told 900 high school and college
students he “didn’t mind talking

in the dark, because it’s Abraham Lincoln’s birthday.”
He criticized

President Johnson’s foreign travel restrictions,
saying he would not shave or get
a haircut until the Vietnam war
was ended, and challenged students “to stop smoking until the
war’s over.”

Leary: abandon LSD
In

Poughkeepsie, Dr.

Leary
said he would support Gregory

for President, and asked his followers to abandon temporarily
the hallucinogenic drug LSD.
Dr. Leary said the temporary
ban would remain in effect until
after the presidential campaigning and election so they can
“struggle for civil rights, peace
and love.”
In a news conference called
in the office of his attorney,

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Dr. Leary said he
“possibly” could support Sen.
Eugene McCarthy or Sen. Robert
F. Kennedy.
Dr. Leary said he based his
possible support of Sen. Kennedy
on a recent remark which the
senator made to the effect that
“pot is less dangerous than nicotone.”
Dr. Leary also disclosed he
might establish a free university
in Dutchess County or in the city
of Poughkeepsie.
He held the news conference
after he was refused permission
to visit one of his followers in

the Dutchess County jail. Dr.
Leary appeared at the jail with
—

Bible Truth

Sin Enters the World

”

—

coat and a third carrying an
equally large and yellow flower.

The sheriff’s office said that

at the moment it did not recognize Dr. Leary as a minister of a
bona fide religion. His attorney
said an application would have
to be made in court to obtain
permission for Dr. Leary to visit
inmates at the jail.

il&gt;WEEK|
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LUTHERAN MINISTRY
TO THE UNIVERSITY
SUNDAY AFTERNOONS, 4:00

—

one man sin entered into the
world, and death by sin; and so
death passed upon ail men, for
that all have sinned
—Rom, 5:12

“By

about a half dozen other followers
one sporting a stove pipe hat,
another wearing a large yellow
flower in the button hole of his

Calvary Lutheran
Church
4110 North Bailey

(Four Blocks from Campus)

dateline news, Feb. 16
h Korea

ai greed

Thursda'

of further North Korean attacks or incursions into South Korea
The two countries also reaffirmed in a communique “to undertake immediate consultations whenever the security of the Republic
of Korea is thereatened.”
The communique came at the close of consultations between
Cyrus R. Vance, President Johnson's personal envoy, and South
Korean leaders.
WASHINGTON
Concerned over the continuing Soviet arms
buildup in Arab nations, the United States has finally decided to
resume military shipments to Jordan and Hfes begun negotiations on
specific deliveries.
Communist diplomats in Washington profess that the Soviet
Union also is concerned that the Middle East could once again become a hot spot but they say it is unrealistic to think the Kremlin
would agree to a formal arms ceiling until Israel withdraws from
occupied Arab territory.
PARIS
Secretary General Thant of the United Nations left
today for New York, carrying a message from Hanoi. But diplomatic
sources indicated North Vietnam’s altitude had not changed enough
to give hopes tor peace talks.
There were reports Thant would immediately convey to President Johnson his findings in his search for a peaceful solution to
—

—

Vietnam.

Before leaving, Thant conferred with the Indian ambassador to
France.
ATLANTA
Third party presidential candidate George Wal
lace, citing election filing deadlines in some states, Wednesday
named former Georgia Gov, Marvin Griffin as his temporary running
mate until a “far more qualified” candidate could be named.
“I have ageed to lend my name to former Alabama Gov. George
Wallace as a vice presidential candidate in order to help him in
meeting some of the procedural requirements in several states,”
said Griffin.
WASHINGTON
The U.S. government is seeking information
on the fate of the pilot of an American plane shot down by a Red
Chinese jet near Chinese territory.
The pilot of a companion plane which landed safely in South
Vietnam saw a parachute, a State Department source said. But the
Pentagon could not say if the pilot of the downed plane bailed out.
The unarmed, propeller driven A1 Skyraider was shot down
Tuesday over the Gulf of Tonkin five miles off China’s Hainan Island
by a MIG jet interceptor after it inadvertently violated China’s proclaimed 12-mile territorial limit, defense officials said Wednesday,
A sharp increase in the delected use of mariWASHINGTON
juana by U.S. troops in Vietnam was disclosed today as the Defense Department took steps to unify anti drug policies in the armed
forces. Frank Bartimo, assistant Defense Department counsel who
has been heading a task force to war on drugs, said final figures
for 1967 will show a rate of 2.5 men per thousand troops involved
in marijuana investigations in Vietnam during the year.
This compares with a rate of just under one man per thousand
for 1966.
—

—

—

�Tbt

Pa«a N«r

14 MM

FrWay, Mrvary

Sp««*r«M

Points well taken

John Lindsay, Mayor of New York City, was in Buffalo
this week at the invitation of the New York State Publishers
Association. His comments, of course, were confined to the
recent sanitation strike in the State’s largest city.
The Mayor made several key points which apparently

was
with Governor Rockefeller. The
for home rule. Mr. Lindsay said: “This legslation—however
well intended—will not solve any of New York City’s problems, but may create fresh problems for every other city
in the state.”
It is this type of reasoning that has ted to an unusual
turn of .events in the New York State political picture. More
frequently than not, the metropolitan centers of up-state
New York are at odds wjth New York City’s Mayor. We
have watched with interest as Buffalo’s Mayor Sedita and
many other upstate mayors have rallied to support John
•
Lindsay.
II as -heartening to see this cooperation for * -change.
Those who criticize policies and actions of New York City’s
jgjtemwwint pmalty fafl to reahre that top City
to the Mats us a whole, and it is the'type «f ;
mamrmf that Mayor lisdsay has demonstrated this past
SM)k that can help to sotohfy those ties.

/

//

•mtmw,
kuae flw..

....

-•

sugar

from knen mgs

Another heartening aspect of Mayer Lradeay’s position
t* his desire to see the Motional Guard eaqdoyed in metropa&amp;tan •ernes ether than race riots. We ooaWn’t agree with
lorry
Mm aote than when he said: “I think ft mM have helped
Thore'e ■ little game that oil columnists play
Now York City and possibly the nation, M the people ha
catted Fill That Space.
the «1mrb could have seen the men of the National Guard
Everyone has his own reasons Cor having to
—their National Guard, by the way—working constructively rfesort to it, and everyone has bis own variation to
with their hands rather than patrolling the streets with fit the situation. It’s not used any less by so-called
professionals than by us amateurs (sic.)
its use
ready rifles and bayonets.”

Readers’
writings

Loltzclati

—

Two
coordinators
This

University could use two NSA Coordinators.
It appears as though NSA—the National Student Association—-doesn’t do much for Buffalo students.
Until last year’s CIA gimmickry was exposed, many had
never known that the organization even existed.
But the simple facts are that membership in the NSA
is truly beneficial. And if the average student does not
feel the advantages of NSA membership directly, he is at
least affected indirectly by the services NSA provides his
student government.
'It sponsors a national film festival for student moviemakers,/ and the Alliance for Campus Talent program designed to £ive young performers a chance in the entertainment business.
The organization has a legal resources bureau available
to student governments caught-up in campus disputes.
The advantages of NSA membership apparently are
recognized by student leaders, because even the harrangue
following the CIA disclosures caused only three college
govrnments to withdraw membership.
Later, Michigan and Amherst College also withdrew,
but at both these schools, the local NSA Coordinators had
lost in their bids for high positions in the National NSA.
At small colleges, NSA often plays the single most
important role in student government and politics. If Buffalo’s NSA seems ineffective, it is perhaps because at an
institution this size one NSA representative is not enough.

More harassment?

Two incidents during the past eight days involving
Spectrum photographers and Buffalo police have been viewed
here as nothing less than vexatiousness. In both cases,
the photographers were not permitted to take pictures—after they had displayed press cards—while photographers
of other newspapers and news media snapped to their hearts’

content.

The first occurred during a demonstration downtown
when a policemen told our photographer that he had to
march with the protestors or move along. The officer chose
to disregard the press card and the photographer had little
choice but to march, move or face arrest. (He marched,
and with good cause.)
The latest incident occurred during the State Democratic Convention in the Statler-Hilton. After admitting
photographers from an assortment of other news media, The
Spectrum representative was turned away. On this occasion
a press card was also displayed.
The photographer in the second instance carried with
him a working press card issued by the County—the same
card carried by representatives of any other newspaper.
If the County accepts its responsibility of treating the campus
newspaper fairly, why shouldn’t the Buffalo Police Department?
It’s just this type of irrational action by certain Buffalo
policemen that leads members of the academic community
to believe that we are being harassed. We think it’s about
time the Buffalo Police Department, as well as many Buffalo
citizens, put an end to their discriminatory and illogical
behavior.

f

-

varies only in quality (or subtlety), not quality.
As is apparent from the name of the game,
it is concerned with filling a space, with words,
generally
although pseudo-words may often work
just as well
which in my case is 100 lines; and
filling it exactly, every time. This doesn’t have to
be too difficult, if one is not really concerned with
content
The Burgher, for example, gets away
with the most meaningless digressions
and The
Grump, his excellency, despite his recognized literary genius and his cute red whiskers, excels in
—

—

—

—

shoveling.
For us (meaning myself, The Gadfly, and The
Sham) politicos, the task is exceedingly more dif-

ficult We can’t turn heads with funnies, although
we try at times; instead we have to make sense;
we have to sound like we’re saying something, not
just anything. Just compare styles
we have to
rely solely on logic, rhetoric, maybe a little innuendo here and there
but they, those guys (as
you can see, I’m exercising great restraint in holding back my bitterness) the good humor men, they
have an entire bag of tricks at their disposal: satire,
mimicry, characterization, story line, punnery, the
works
As you can see, I’ve given up the old humble of
"Uh . . . perhaps, er, or, perhaps, it’s uh . . like
this . .
and decided to be honest and say just
how frustrating a catharsis a political column can
why yes
be
about as easy as making (you
guessed it) sugar from linen rags. (Thanks be to
Henry David Thoreau).
We have to stick to this neo-Lippmannese,
pseudo-Rampartian prose that, plainly, can not
compete. It's like Eric Sevareid trying to get
higher Nielsen ratings than Batman.
that’s our bag, and
But, how do they say?
I guess we’re stuck with it. While I’m having fun,
I’ll stop the digression and get back to my discussion of that game I play.
Many times I wish I just had half the space;
many times I wish I had twice as much. But, since
the lay-out (that’s newspaper lingo for “Freudian
slip”) of our editorial pages is a static one, the
columns have to be the same length every time.
When I write too much, there’s really no problem,
I merely hand it over Chief D’Ajnico of The
Spectrum Vice Squad and he goes to work with
reputedly the fastest in the East.
his red pencil
When I have said what I want to say in 20 lines
or so, I have to play the game of Fill In. The
variation I use is an adaptation of an old infantily
infamous drinking (sorry about that, all you Heads
out there) song; as far as I know, no one else uses
it. I have heard, however, that Red-nosed Sam,
The Spectrum’s own CPA (crocked publishing accountant) sings his own version at the adding
machine. It goes something like this; “99 lines of
if one of
type on the page, 99 lines of type .
those lines I happen to write, 98 lines of type on
the page, etc.”
As is apparent, I got tired of the same old
game. My shoulders were getting tired from all
the shoveling I’d been doing last semester. I
changed the title last week, but it was still the
same old crap, according to my most trusted critics.
Last week’s topic gave me the idea; why not
try garbage for a change? Well, I have, and it has
been more than a catharsis (because, after all,
that’s crap all over again)
it’s been a genuine
intellectual orgasm!
Next week I’ll be back at the old political
axe, grinding away. At least I've given those couple
of smilies something to write about for a while.
—

—

.

.

.

.

—

—

—

—

.

—

.

;

Abortion is not a solution
To Hw Editor:
Many of us complain loudly when the apparent
rights of an individual are being violated. These
rights usually take the form of the ri$it to “life,
liberty and the pursuit of happiness.” Yet a very
crucial right is being tampered with by some State
Legislatures and is currently being studied by New
York State, yet all remain peculiarly silent. This
is the right to be born
the right to life. I am
referring to the study of “liberalised abortion law."
I suppose many are confused.as to the exact nature
of the individual from conception through birth.
It certainly is living at conception, bat is it a person? If not, at what stage in its development does
it acquire the attributes of a person, since there is
no question that it is at birth. No one normally
considers killing babies, even very premature ones,
because they can't sing or dance or think. Certainly
the grouping of cells after conception is as much
a potential thinking person as a new-born. We
would be shocked to learn of one purposely killing
a deformed baby at birth, yet for some reason,
killing a baby in the womb seems acceptable.
—

Aren’t we ignoring the real problem? The problem is not the child-. The real problem seems to be
one of self satisfaction and convenience. The drug
companies who release to the public improperly
or poorly tested drugs; the mother who takes one
of these drugs to tranqualize herself; the criminal
who satisfies his sexual appetite through rape; the
parents who feel that they can legally get rid of
an unwanted pregnancy through a fabricated story
why is the child executed
of drug taking or rape
for these crimes?
—

Let’s forget killing people, either in the womb
or outside the womb. Let’s concentrate o.i the real
problems. Only then can we claim a progressive
society.
Francis L. Bellino

every
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during the regular academic
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3435 Main Street. Buffalo. New York 14214. Offices
are located at 355 Norton Hall. Average Circulation:

The

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Tuesday and Friday

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year at the

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Editor-in Chief—MICHAEL L D'AMICO
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Press Service. Gannett News Service, and the Los
Angeles Times Syndicate.
Represented for national advertising by National Educational Advertising Service, lnc„ 420 Madison Ave.,
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Republication of all news dispatches Is forbidden with-

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rapubllcation of all other matter herein are also reserved.

Second class postage paid at Buffalo, New York.
Editorial policy Is determined by the Editor-in-Chlef.

�*'

•.

■-«J
•

•WByf

V
MM

|&lt;

The IpcttroM

IVf IfVI

Rejects Slums advise

BELOW OLYMPUS
+■ t

To Mm Editor;

Prnm Fiw

By Interlaid

Tkgrump

-

Scr The Sham has uncovered another sham again
in his most recent attack on the Establishment. It
seems that bis fellow Sociology majors are "blow-

.

.

by SlfiBS

.

Lovers ot order depart or fear for their sanity.

at the fact that those few
who regularly attend the meetings could “accept
the ‘natural’ superiority of faculty.” Yes, how
indeed can juniors with no real conception of how
the Department operates consider such trivia as
administrative procedures or faculty experience.?
presses bewilderment

paper from which to reap a harvest of topical notions to fake it. You are, dear and unfortunate
reader, stuck with absolute unadulterated Steese
this week. Tsk.

,'ftU

1?

Of course, we students Will be able to break
through the complex status quo without the aid of
the Establishment. Or will we? I am afrofch Mr.
Guggaaheim, that you with your high and seifrighteous ideal* win continue to be perplexed and
frustrated, Areas of the six majors who pom adviaed to stay tteme, 1 choose to sacrifice the right
of demind fir order to work with the administration
for suggesting practical changes. Student power
rah, rah, rah!
U. Most

Leonard Cohen, Canadian poet and author
Beautiful Loser* —has an LP out which might please
many. Very quiet and gentle, album consisting mostly of poetry—his—set—sort at—to some very simple
and quite charming arrange ntents. AMkwgfe 'fte
t«» very
seem to have
iB
omb it (Mm make a very pleasant atb*B. The
wonbaa one of «b neoeat
ffwut
tat
literature. Something called a rhyiqing pattern
whatever that might be.

SaV

—

—

Dylan is ateo-out of coarse. Witt so. album that
trows stronger as you listen to it. Hut (ha Dytaw
very specialized taste so most of ye* tuw«
is
probably already made up your mind about whether
•*■■■**- hr i» worth listening to. Che those'WStoe with, more eeetorto taste t wftt net#- tint Wti
•fd fngs aHmm has appeared And on It
Btf
»

fntpm*

Ilf

eat

of Adkp*a

■
To fRa (Mm
,

Advice to the Rev. Martin Lather Kin# and bis
Interfaith group of Vietnam war protestors: Stay
the belt out of Arlington National Cemetery; that
sacred soil is for brave men that fought our enemies, not empty-headed collaborators that defend
our enemies!
Jack Casey

(t hope&gt; sings portions of
Aphrodite
in Qreeh no less.

Artaa Tuxes

: .

.'*

•

‘

:■•:■ •

*"■

‘ ■■'

'V
&gt;-

,

4

s ■
u wm
•

■

_. .

”

*

the

J

•

lighter

&lt;

&gt;

precaution.

side

f

arays ' Somdtlmeff

psychologists ««4 others who UnROT

tieis Setevioral
sciences ktog have
of

recognition
one
man’s strongest motivating forces
We
seek
in one way or aiiother. If we
recognition
Alton: Gfitaberg, in his “Wichita Vortex Sutnr
asks, “Have we seen but paper faces. Life Maga- cannot achieve it by constructive means, frequently we re*lne? Are screaming faces made of dots, electric sort to destructive measures.
dots on television
A lot of the kooky goings-on, the subcommittee chairman, cited
t»rea.

...”

Thte which is presented by the media should
not be accepted W*reeT or “true for inherent in
its preseatottoar am distortions
Seth Hobntan
“

*

■

Those people who have upon occasion been
j"K Hochstetter Hall and had their ears assaulted by outraged bellows of “Jenniler,” or
-Jenny” are entitled to explanations.
1 was
this dog see. which is now up to ninety poundiapd
kww, snow and coW. H you thinks eqinoinrtoOT astnarrf awdmt- untU
Pass

glv4

by Dick West

ttot

.

v

I

IdonttMnfcyou

ber .°j.

*^

-

,

“lover» of their land.” Unlesa I am
jfW bwaeen but dote on a piece of
Mree ?

,

'

vS

To Mm feMor

have aeeo

The Steese Efficiency Awards for the Month
go ta the Committee for the Rehabilitation and
Renovation of the Hayes. Hail Ctocfe, and a happy
11:20 to you too, and to that am wig hero from
Maintenance who has so carefully gone around
the campus marking all the bad spate in the sidewaftat with yellow smwrthftuH»r*tha»
&lt;*«tef
anything about them of course but doing *w‘ absolutely superb job of marking them Next time
you trip on a sidewalk take a
look. I’ll bet the
offending hole is marked in yellow as a safety

"I know our society is going through a sick, fearful, revolutionary period, but it's not so bed if you're on diet pUtsI"
'

only lower* of tbetr land

«y en

"“"T criminal acts,
8ro struggles for rec-

80 tmt and bellow at her. and she hsaarHy shown op
ten or fifteen minutes. So If something
s a
shambles out of Hochstetter Hall
?e
"

police .
,

.

,

f8V

I

tost contact

«

.

...

.

,

.

&gt;

,

-

'wife

—

Nixon sets down cold, hard facts'
To tho Editor:
The word now on the political scene is Nixon
vs. Johnson in November. Although not definite
(it seems most likely) the Liberal sector of our
country is crying that there will be no choice. They
would love to have Senator McCarthy run so they
could vote for the hero of their cause, whatever
that cause may be.

It is said that Sen. McCarthy attacks issues;
this may be true, but his solutions are hazy, usually
improbable, and generally never really stated.
Nixon, aware that he can win, shies away from
making dangerous promises (lies) that would be difficult to keep, once in the White House.
The problem here is that unless someone can
up with nice, easy solutions to very difficult
problems, the Liberals will have no “choice.” Yet
in ’64 Barry Goldwater presented his solutions for
Vietnam, and he was termed a “hawk.” His solutions were not those used today by Johnson, although there are similarities. The point is he told
the truth; he didn’t try to deceive Americans, and
for this he was laughed at; while Johnson's cureall solutions (i.e. The Great Society, War on Poverty, Settlement in Vietnam) were just empty words.
The Americans, in 1964, chose a Southern Democrat, whose civil rights beliefs are questionable to
this day and whose Vietnam solutions were obviously thought out long before the election.
Now in 1968, the Liberal is again looking for
someone who can fill their ears with sweet, empty
words, while they shy away from the hard cold
facts set down by Nixon.
Nixon, who was only Number 2 for 8 years
of American peace, will run against Johnson a short
nine months from now, and if Johnson starts painting a pretty picture, filling the air with nice words,
he will, in the end, sway the weak minds of the
McCarthy team.
This could be the saddest part: They might vote
Johnson back into office once more. How blind
can they be!
Jerome George Leonard!

come

C

wlU^aUfv

P

the document as evidence of gov- er some significantly
useful substitute thereforeernmental intrusion on individual ye t.
otprftlon.
privacy. He can afford to fed
disagreement of sorts is develop!** between
.
that way.
Keeping this In mind, let us
and myself of late over-the Steese mem
Being a senator, he doesn’t my
no *.
how ra ch Jun *
now down to a more or less manageable
have to grope around for recog- ageric
*?" e t0 Promote mental
nitron the way most of us do. three Siamese and one St. Bernard. R seems smiley
health in this country.
Senatorial recognition is guaran- wifely-wife thinks it would be fun to take not only
the St. B. but two of the three cats with us on
Often maligned as a nuisance,
teed by the constitution.
our
junk mall actually has a powerI, however, found the docu- camping trek to the west coast this summer. At
ful stabilizing influence on our
ment immensely soothing and which I am balking. I have little trouble seeing
society. It provides a sense of gratifying. Learning that my the monsters sharpening their claws on the tent
being recognized to those of us
name appears in government rec- assaulting maurauding skunks, taking porcupines’
who are starving for attention.
ords almost three billion times on in paw to paw combat and a multitude of other
As long as we keep getting was like giving my ego a warm little escapades. I can see it now, I stand on a
junk mail, we are aware that bath.
majestic mountain top in the
Canadian Rockies
somebody knows we exist. This
And when I discovered that drinking in the fresh air and turn around to find
keeps us from doing something my age is recorded more than one cheerful friendly St. Bernard retrieving a
outlandish, such as running for two billion times, my dental his- grizzly bear cub for me. Some distance behind
Congress, in a desperate bid for
tory 183,882,000 times and my her, but closing rapidly, is the mother of said
recognition.
religious affiliation
150,914,000 cub. It should be a fun summer.
If you accept this premise, you times, I had a feeling akin to
It occurred to me the other day while cleaning
will immediately appreciate the basking in the limelight,
up a bunch of old papers which included some
value of a document recently pubAs a recognition symbol, this things
from my notable period in the U.S. Army
lished by a Senate subcommittee document even beats junk mail,
that one of the reasons we are having trouble in
under the title: “Government DosTo have my mortgage delinvarious parts of the world is that the Military essier, Survey of Information Con- quency history filed in 53,610,000 tablishment
of this country does not understand inplaces is recognition beyond my
tained in Government Files.”
ternal motivation, in enforced discipline. Confront
It shows that information about
wildest dreams,
a single citizen may be recorded
So buoyed am I, I may stop them however with an individual who wants to do
the right thing, but for the wrong reason, by definiin as many as 43 categories as setting fire to myself whenever tion a
reason other than one of theirs, arid they bemany as 27,270,136,000 times.
I miss winning the Pulitzer
come uneasy.
Sen, Edward V. Long, D-Mo.,
Prize.
Considerably worse yet is somebody who wants
to do the right thing
in the sense of right in
militarily efficient—and further complicates it by
using those vague and upsetting
terms such as
liberty, freedom, democracy, humanity and all
that.
By United Press International
It is much worse to keep telling them why you
are
WASHINGTON
Harvard President Nathan Pusey, deploring doing it in language that they can not understand.
before a special House subcommittee on education, the present draft Witness the total lack of communication between
the US. and a number of Norths—Vietnam,
law which he said would limit the availability of new teachers;
Korea
“Under the present draft situation we would be stopping the —while the Executive, State Department, and Pentaflow of teachers at a time that undergraduates need more teachers.” gon understand each other perfectly. The latter
since I doubt muchly that the PentaRoy Wilkins, head of the NAACP, call- situation
ORANGEBURG, SC.
ing on Gov. Robert McNair of South Carolina, to investigate the vi- gon has changed.
olence at two Negro colleges during which three students were
Will close on a couple of interestng notes reffatally shot:
erence North Korea.
Did you know that the
“We request emphatically that the reason for their being shot Pueblo is almost twice as large
as the biggest ship
be ascertained through a prompt and thorough investigation.”
in the North Korean Navy? And that this terrible
WASHINGTON—President Johnson, when asked by a Negro stu- offensive the N.K.’s keep- threatening
across the
dent how another troubled summer could be avoided;
DMZ—if that phrase is applicable to Korea too—“We’ll have a bad summer. We’ll have several bad summers would be carried out by troops outnumbered by
before we can avert the deficiencies of centuries
all we can do the South Koreans alone by almost a third? Make
the world safe for Democracy! Support
is the best we can.”
Dictators!
“

*

Hymn to

—

, Uk

Don't trust modia distortions
In reply to Ik* Feb. 2 letter of David A. Shapiro:
Vou state nsttU haven’t seen any communist

»

&lt;

Quotes in

the news

—

—

—

—

...

—

'

�-&lt;SSS’.'.C

rr

Pag* Six

LBJ consulted on S.C. violence
this farming town of 13,000, that
“conditions are improving" in
Orangeburg “but the situation
still is tense and we will assess

ORANGEBURG, S.C. (IUPII)
Gov. Robert McNair said early
this week he has been in contact
with the White House regarding

—

racial

Friday, February 16, 1968

Th* Spectrum

violence that killed

three

it

Negro college students last week.

further

from

day

to day,"

Professor says U.S. objective
for war in Vietnam has failed
WASHINGTON (UPI)—A lead

no proof that

the Communists

“

e governor said it may bc
M
before the 600-man National Guard force is removed.
He shortened a dusk-to-dawn curfew imposed last weekend to the
™

He said the National Guard would
remain in town indefinitely.
Gov. McNair tofd newsmen in
Columbia, 35 miles northwest of

“

new hours of 5:30 p.m. until 6
a.m. EST.
Gov. McNair said he had talked
by telephone with U.S. Atty, Gen.
Ramsey —Clark
and the White

week

i

f

he refused to discuss any of the
conversations.
Negroes began a boycott of
white businesses Monday in an
effort to apply economic pressure on the community.

Action iine
Q31SOOO
.

.

.

Do you often think it impossible to untangle the State University of Buffalo
bureaucracy? In cooperation with the Dean of Students' Office, The Spectrum is
sponsoring an ACTION LINE. Through ACTION LINE, individual students can get
an answer to a puzzling question, find out where and why University decisions
are made, and get ACTION when change is indicated.
LINE will answer all questions of general interest which appear to
be pertinent to the student body. The Spectrum will include them in its special
ACTION LINE weekly column. Each inquiry will be thoroughly investigated and
answered individually.
The name, of the individual originating the inquiry will
not be published.
ACTION

Q. Who it eligible for Phi Beta Kappa and how are they elected
to membership?
A. The University’s chapter of Phi Beta Kappa holds one election
meeting each semester, normally in September or October and in
March or April. Actually these meetings have had to be held at the
very end of the semester the last few years because with the growth
of the University it has taken more and more time to obtain the
necessary lists of students with high academic records. (The University does not calculate students’ cumulative averages each semester or
establish any listing of rank. Therefore the identification of students
eligible for election to Phi Beta Kappa has to be based on calculating
the averages of those on the Dean’s List, those recommended for
honors programs, and those reported by their major departments as
having a very high index.)
Students can be considered for election on the basis of their
records as of their sixth semester or as of their eighth semester.
Eligible for consideration are (1) students who have completed between 80 and 96 semester hours with a cumulative average of 2,600
or above and (2) students who have completed 112 or more semester
hours with a cumulative average of 2.400 or above. The United Chapters of Phi Beta Kappa stipulate that individual chapters may not
elect more than ten per cent of a given class to membership. ,
Traditionally one does not apply for membership in Phi Beta
Kappa or similar honorary societies, but in view of the University’s
present inability to supply a completely reliable list of high standing
students with their cumulative averages a student who thinks that he
meets the above requirements may properly inform the SecretaryTreasurer of the Chapter to that effect and his record will be verified
for inclusion on the list of eligible students submitted at the next
election meeting.
The offices of the Chapter just elected to serve for the coming
year are Professors John C. Lana (Political Science), President, Evelyn
Lord Smithson (Classics), Vice-President, and W. Leslie Barnette (Psychology), Secretary-Treasurer.
Q&gt; What was the total number of students who responded to
The Spectrum Question of the Week concerning students' use of

Meanwhile, student leaders demanded that officials keep the
two Negro colleges in the city
closed until their demands are
met.

Leon Love, state president of

the NAACP youth chapter and a

student at South Carolina State
College and other young Negro
leaders from across the state met
and drew up a list of demands
calling for desegregation of a
bowling alley where last week's
violence began, creation of a fair
employment commission and an
end to “police brutality,”
"We want these demands to be
carried out,” Mr. Love said. “Unless they are, we can’t expect
Orangeburg to remain as quiet
as it has been the last few days.”

United States has already lost the
war in, Vietnam in terms of trying to prove that “Communist
wars of national liberation” can
be stopped.
Harvard Prof. Edwin 0. Reischauer, former U. S. ambassador
to Japan, said this week that
while it is in America’s national
interest to stop aggression and
the use of force and violence
in countries such as South Vietnam “the cost goes far beyond
what we can achieve .
.

He said it was time for U. S.
policymakers to “realize that we
have lost this war in terms of
what was our original objective,
and that was to prove that socalled wars of national liberation
do not pay and that we can stop
them. We obviously cannot.”

But Sen. Gale McGee, (D., Wyo.)
disagreed. He said that Viet Cong
penetration of 28 of South Vietnam’s 44 provincial capitals was

In an allied development, Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield (Mont.) told a University of
Maine convocation at Orono Sunday that “peace talks among the
South Vietnamese themselves”
may be a necessary prelude to
negotiations for ending the war.

The Montana lawmaker envisioned preliminary talks involving government leaders and other
“political, religious and sectarian
groups” in South Vietnam, and
later with the National Liberation Front.

“The government in Saigon, as
it is presently constituted, continues to be run by a faction of
military officers
indeed, most
of them are northerners
and
they are by no means the whole
political coin. There are other
groups of Southern Vietnamese
who must be taken into consideration if there is to be an end
to the bloodshed in the foreseeable future,” Sen. Mansfield
said.
—

—

drugs?

A. Mr. Michael L. D’Amico, Editor-in-Chief of The Spectrum,
stated: ”We usually do not disclose the number of responses to any
Question of the Week. In view of the many inquiries we have had
concerning this question, however, we are glad to share this information. 260 ballots were submitted.”
Q. Is there any scholarship or grant money still available for
students for this second semester?
A. The Office of Financial Aid informed us that some National
Defense Student Loans were still available at the beginning of the
semester. A considerable number of applications for these have been
received and loan authorizations will be made to the extent possible.
Applications can still be accepted for Health Profession loans in the
Schools of Medicine and Pharmacy, and for Nursing student loans.
Scholarship grants are given on a yearly basis, and these have
all been made. The Financial Aid Office has requested that applications for financial assistance for next year be forwarded prior to
Mar. 1, 1968.
Q. When and under what circumstances will courses be available under a P-F grade system?
A. Recommendations concerning such provisions will be presented to the Faculty-Senate shortly, and when available, they will
be released to The Spectrum.
For specific answers to your questions and for direct service, call ACTION LINE,
If you prefer,
and Friday, from 4-5 p.m.
every Monday, Wednesday,
phrase your question in writing and address it to ACTION LINE, c/o The Spectrum,
355 Norton Hall, or the Office of the Dean of Students, 201 Harriman Library.

831-5000,

Don’t just stand around
like a no account
Open a checking account now.
There are two M&amp;T Banks near the campus,
With banking hours that make sense.
Look below.

Stelley's
Open Kitchen, Inc,
3171 MAIN STREET near Highgate
formerly Andy’s Open Kitchen
Open 6:00 a.m.
6:30 p.m.

BANK

—

BREAKFAST—LUNCHEON—DINNERS
Clip this Coupon

STELLEY'S OPEN KITCHEN
Good tor

25ft on any purchase of 75t
or more (per person)
offer good between 3:00 p.m. and 6:30 p.m.
valid until February 29th

(MtMMKR

F. O. I. C.

MAIN WlNSPEAR OFFICE
3184 Main Street
Mon. thru Thura.: 9:00 a.m.—4:30 p.ra.
Friday: 9£0 a.m.—3KX) p.m. and
4:00 p.m.—6£0 p.m.

UNIVERSITY PLAZA OFFICE
3500 Main Street
Mon. thru Thurs.: 9:00 a.ra.—4:30 p.m.
Friday; 9KX) a.m. 3KX) p.m. and
—

4:00 p.m.—8:00 p.m.
Drive-In
Mon. thru Thurs.: 9KX) a.m. —4:30 p.m.
Friday: 9:C0 a.m. 8:00 p.m.
—

�Friday, February 16, 1968

X

The Spectrum

Pag*

Seven

On Campus JfeSWnian Nash: U.S., 'not Negro, must change'

the suburbs the sacred territory
of the whites. Whatever progress
has been made has been limited
bv the “white’s flight to the

by Steven Pray

{By theauthor 0} “Rally Round the Flag, Boys!",
“Dobie Gillis,” etc.)

MORNINGS AT SEVEN...AND
THERE’S NOTHING YOU CAN DO
ABOUT IT
Any man who says morning is the best time of day is
either a liar or a meadow lark.
There is only one way to make morning enjoyable:
sleep till noon. Failing that, the very best you can do is to
make morning tolerable. This, I am pleased to report, is
possible if you will follow three simple rules:

1. Shave properly.
By shaving properly I mean shaving quietly. Don’t use

a blade that whines and complains. Morning being a time
of clanger and anger, use a blade that neither clangs nor
angs. Use a blade that makes no din on your chin, no
squeak on your cheek, no howl on your jowl, no rip on
your lip, no waves while it shaves. Use, in short, Personna
Super Stainless Steel Blades.
I have been shaving for 71 years (not too impressive
until one considers that I am 49 years old) and I am here

to tell you that the quietest blade I know is Personna. I not
only shave with Personna, but I also admire it. Old virtues reappear in Personna; old values are reborn. Personna is a modest blade, an undemanding blade. Personna
does not rasp and tug, yelling, “Hey, lookit me!” No, sir,
not Personna! Silently, respectfully, unobtrusively, Per-

sonna whisks your whiskers with nary a whisper. It
shucks your soil and stubble without toil and trouble.

Why, you hardly know it’s there, this well-bred Personna
blade, this paragon of punctilio.
Moreover, this crown of the blade-maker’s art, this
epitome of epidermal efficacy, is available both in Doubleedge style and Injector style. Do your kisser a favor: get

some.
2. Breakfast properly.

I assert that a Personna shave is the best of all possible
shaves. But I do not assert that a Personna shave, bracing though it may be, is enough to prepare you for the
hideous forenoon ahead. After shaving you must eat an
ample breakfast.
Take, for example, the case of Basil Metabolism, a sophomore at YM.I. Basil, knowing there was to be an inspection by the Commandant one morning, prepared by storing up energy. He recognized that coffee and juice would
not sustain him, so he had a flitch of bacon, a clutch of
eggs, a batch of bagels, a notch of ham, a bunch of butter,
a swatch of grits, a hutch of honey, a patch of jelly, a
thatch of jam, a twitch of pepper, and a pinch of salt.

The idea was right; the quantities, alas, were not.When
the Commandant arrived, Basil, alas, was so torpid that
he could not raise his bloated arm in a proper salute. He
was, of course, immediately shot by a firing squad. Today,
a perforated man, he earns a meagre living as a collander
in Cleveland.
Read properly.
Always read the paper at breakfast. It inhibits bolting.
But do not read the front page. That is full of bad, acidmaking news. Read a more pleasant part of the paper—the Home and Garden section, for example.
For instance, in my local paper, The Westport Peasant,
there is a delightful column called “Ask Harry Homespun” which fairly bristles with bucolic wisdom and
many an earthy chuckle. I quote some questions and
.?.

answers:
Q: I am thinking

of buying some power tools. What
should I get first ?
A: Hospitalization.
Q: How do you get rid of moles ?
A: Pave the lawn.
Q: What is the best way to put a wide car in a narrow
garage?

A: Butter it
Q: What do you do for elm blight ?
A: Salt water gargle and bed rest.
Q: What can I do for dry hair?
A: Get a wet hat.
*

*

*

©

1968, Max Shulman

Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

Jesse Nash, director of Bufand America are inextricably
woven.” The answer to the cities’
problems is not the Negro’s sole
responsibility, but the dilemma
confronts all America, Mr. Nash
stated, in an appearance on campus sponsored by the Community
Aid Corps.
What kind of society we want
will determine the social processes we use to get there, Mr.
Nash said. Plans can only make
sense when they are related to
the society we want to create, but
today “the anti-integrationists’
way seems

to prevail.”

We should not act for the
Negro, but for America, not for
civil rights, but for the human
dignity of all people, Mr. Nash
asserted. Emphasis must be
placed on correcting the system

that causes evil social conditions,
not on the Negro who is the
victim of that system. American
society, not the Negro, must
change.

Because the Negro is socially

—Goodson

(?)

Jesse Nash

To forsake the city is to for-

sake the Negro."
immobile, he is giving vent to
his anger by rioting, and this is
called the crisis in our cities, Mr.
Nash said.

Cleavage exists

“To forsake the city is to forsake the Negro,” Mr. Nash contended. A sharp cleavage exists
between the urban and suburban
areas because the city is becoming the reservoir of Negroes and

demonstrated to the Negro that
he is an outsider, to be excluded
and forsaken.
Mr, Nash charged that the
federal government has failed to
create a housing program that
Negroes can afford. Urban renewal must relate to human need
and is not solved by tearing down
old buildings.
Trapped in the city, the Negro
must become relevant to himself. “He must become a self,”
not a thing manipulated by the
white power structure in a thingoriented society, Mr. Nash said.
The recent riots demonstrated
that the Negro too can lose patience and turn to violence. This
past summer’s urban drama, according to Mr. Nash, saw the
Negro act out of character because he has historically gone
along with the system. Part of
the crisis today is that the young
Negro reacts overtly and seeks
revitalization. “He wants to live,"
Mr. Nash said.

Commission report cites police brutality
NEWARK, N.J. (UPI)
A
blue ribbon commission appointed by the governor has
charged that some police and
National Guardsmen used
“excessive and unjustified”
force against Newark Negroes in the north’s first big
city race riots of last summer.
—

Twenty-six persons were killed,
more than 1,000 injured and ijjare
than 1,400 arrested during the
July 12-17 rioting. Property losses
were placed at more than $10

dence of a conspiracy behind the
riot.
The commission's 478 page
“Report for Action” handed up
to Gov. Richard J. Hughes listed
■

scores of recommendations for
sweeping reforms
including a
—

call for a special grand jury investigation of alleged “corruption” in Newark and an extraordinary plea for the state takeover of the city’s public school
system until the “educational
crisis” is over.

'Christian Ethics of Sex'
will be topic of seminar

million.
“To inform, not to convert” will
In a scathing assessment of
be the purpose of an eight week
law enforcement conduct during
seminar entitled “The Christian
the five-day outbreak in the
Ethics of Sex.”
predominantly Negro Central
The seminar, beginning Tuesthe governor’s select
Ward,
day, will start with a Biblical
Commission on Civil Disorders approach, and aided by insights
said evidence showed that police
of psychology and anthropology,
and National Guardsmen shot up
will attempt to clarify the general
Negro-owned stores without justconfusion on sex.
ification, physically mishandled
According to
Mr. Stanley
and verbally abused some NeKrempa, a second year theology
groes and at times mistakenly
student who will conduct the
shot at each other in panic.
seminar, college students need
'Trigger-happy'
this type of program because “the
Police were depicted as grossly modern renewal of theology
ill-prepared; National Guardsmen among the Christian people has
were pictured as “trigger-happy,” caused us to re-evaluate and reand high local police and civilian turn again to the basic documents
authorities were shown as late
of the Christian tradition so as
and confused with decisions.
to arrive at some knowledge of
The commission found no evithe basic Christian principles of

morality.”
Mr. Krempa will give 15 to 20
minute presentations followed by
a question and answer period.

The seminar will be held from

2 to 3 p.m. Tuesdays in the International Club room, Norton
Hall. It is being co-sponsored by
the Neumann Student Association and the Protestant Campus
Ministry. Two additional lectures
on the topic are being planned
for March and April.
Immediately following, Chaplain Burke of the University
Presbyterian Church will present
general information about the
Christian religion. It will be held
from 3 to 3:30 p.m. in the same
room.
Both seminars are open to all
interested students

Boycott causes high absenteeism
United Press

International

Nearly half the 1100 high school pupils in suburban Lackawanna
stayed home from classes Tuesday in the first day of a classroom boycott
called by a group of Negro parents.
Absenteeism was also very high at several other schools in the city,
school department spokesmen said.
The boycott was called by a group of ISO parents who have demanded
a state investigation into recent violence at the high school. The group it
also protesting alleged harassment and discrimination of Negroes.
The parents urged all Negroes to boycott classes but figures indicated
many whites also stayed home.
A spokesman for the school department said 49% of the student body
was absent from the high school Tuesday. The school is about 11% Negro.
James B. Downey, superintendent of schools, said 63% of the youngsters
at the Lincoln Junior High School were absent while more than 50% stayed
home from classes at two elementary schools. The absenteeism rats was also
above normal at the city's eight other schools.
No violence was reported Tuesday. Four policemen were stationed
at the high school all day.
Four students were injured and six were suspended from the high
school last Friday following a series of fights that ended in a lunchroom

melee.
Personna’s partner in shaving comfort is BurmaShave, regular or menthol. Together, Personna and
Burma-Shave make a considerable contribution toward

forenoon survival.

Mrs. Loretta Barnett, a spokesman for the parents' group, said they
were not satisfied with the handling of the investigation by local authorities.
She charged police with using undue force in quelling the disturbances.
Mrs. Barnett said she understood Friday's trouble began when white
youths scribbled anti-Negro remarks on posters depicting Negro History

Week.

�T h

Pag* Eight

•

Friday, February 16, 1968

Spectrum

Presidential commission's report on
summer riots is unacceptable to LBJ

Setts student's

re&lt;las$HI(ation

Registrar apologizes
ITHACA.

studying last summer's riots will deliver its final report sevtinue beyond the date of the
eral months ahead of its original deadline, with much of its, Commission’s initial report, the
research incomplete, because its researchers’ findings didn’t members agreed to the President’s request.
jibe with the kind of report the Administration wanted.
Report*
rewritten
“As Is,” a newsletter on civil
“There would be too few kind
and

community action
edited by Dave Steinberg of the
National Student Association,
rights

words for local police, or for local
political leaders,” the newsletter

reported.

commission’s administrative staff supressed much of
what the researchers had found.
As an example, "As Is” says the
researchers found in one city that
“there was no question that the
not Negroes
were the
police
rioters, bringing a bloodbath to
an innocent Negro community.”
“As Is” says that, faced with
these reports, the administrative staff of the commission, in
consultation with the White
House, decided that this information had to be suppressed be-

The report “could only support
an outcry for radically increased
federal expenditure," while the
President is cutting domestic programs to meet the expenses of the
Vietnam war.
So the final deadline for the
commission report was moved up.
This is what happened, according
to “As Is:”

says the

—

—

“The executive director

(of

the

Commission), presumably in consultation with Gov. Otto Keener
of Illinois, chairman of the Commission, informed Commission
members that they were to reach
their conclusions sooner than expected, to meet the President’s

cause:

It “would embarass too many
people in an election year.”

Johnson asked to make known
draft policy for grad students
WASHINGTON (UPI)
A
House education panel has asked
President Johnson to make clear
whether he will allow enough
graduate-level draft deferments
this year to avert what educators
predict would be a “disastrous”
drop in graduate school enroll—

ment,

In a bipartisan letter to Johnson, six members of a special
House subcommitte on education
said they were “deeply concerned” with the delay in setting
deferment regulations and with
the prospect that graduate school
ranks will be depicted by the
draft.
Under draft law written last
year, Pres. Johnson has authority
to determine what portion of the
nation’s graduate students will
be subject to the draft. He has
not yet announced his policy.

Policy intolerable

Rep. Edith Green (D., Ore.)
panel chairman, said after hearing testimony: “There is unanimity among those of us here
that the present draft policy is

intolerable."
Harvard President Nathan Pu-

sey told the subcommittee the
new draft regulations threatened
a “devastating cutoff” of teaching and laboratory assistants,
“Under the present draft situation we would be stopping the
flow of teachers at a time that
undergraduates need more teachers,” Pres. Pusey said.

Many affected

John Morse, of the American
Council on Education, estimated
226.000 college seniors who graduate this year and first year
graduate students would be affected.
moratorium on drafting
A
graduate students until a policy
is worked out was suggested by
Merriam H. Trytten of the Nat-

ional Academy of Sciences.

William G. Shannon, of the American Association of Junior Colleges, said draft officials notified
the junior and technical colleges
that their students could no
longer be deferred.
The subcommittee sent letters
to Johnson, Hershey, and to
Chairman Mendel Rivers of the
House Armed Services Committee, which wrote the draft law.

VTI

“The administrative staff immediately requested a final document from the researchers in a
matter of a few days. They produced a document of nearly 200
pages, only to be told that it was
totally unacceptable. A new version was to be written around
the President’s specific requests
for information on fourteen
points. When the modified report
of the research staff still proved
unacceptable, all documents were
channeled through the administrative staff lawyers who were to
describe the research findings in
a politically acceptable document which would then be presented to the Commission members.”
“As Is” also said that New
York Mayor John Lindsay “was
reportedly more than a little upset when he discovered that the
Commission’s work had been
throttled behind the backs of its
members.”

Other organizations, such as a
group at Johns Hopkins University, which had been doing some
of the work for the Commission
on contract, have taken over
larger portions of the study on
their own. And Robert Conot,
author of a detailed and critical
account ofthc Watts riot, has
been asked to analyze the riots
for the Commission.

The

formal apology from school officials for the action of an assistant registrar who asked the student’s draft board to reclassify
him 1-A.

ped his authority.

C. Edward Maynard, the assistant registrar, alleged in a Nov,
30 letter to Michael N. Singer’s

draft status of students.
Dr. Perkins said Mr. Maynard’s
action was “totally unauthorized.”
Maynard himself asked the
board to disregard his earlier
letter. He said it was “contrary

draft board in Mount Vernon that

Mr. Singer burned his draft card
and said he should be denied a

student deferment.

University President James A.
Perkins wrote to the board say-

Special lo f.ie Spectrum

BUENOS AIRES
Long hair
and guitar playing are the latest
targets of the repressive military
regime in Argentina.
—

Since the newest law, banning
long hair, “outlandish clothing
and buttons,” was enacted Jan. 6,
more than 200 Buenos Aires
youths have been forced to get
haircuts and 108 others have been

arrested.
Police have systematically raided avant-garde coffeeshops and
student hangouts in Buenos Aires

address

state

Money enclosed. Send questionnaire. I have career decisions
to make and not too much time to waste before the army,
or the school, or my family, or someone tries to make them
for me. Let’s get started right away. I need the information
and $4.00 is little enough to pay.

draft status of students.”

and other major cities throughout Argentina. Youths arrested
for playing guitars and singing in
streets have been charged with
“creating public scandal.”
“In Argentine eyes,” a government official said, “there is a
connection between hippies and
such evils as Che Guevera, degeneration of religious faith and
the family, Communism, sexual
immorality, and riots of the
kind now common in the United
States. We want to nip that kind
of thing in the bud before it
goes too far.”

question is

to selected researchers. The Com-

mission staff may make information available to some other
groups, such as the American Sociological Association, but observers have speculated that this
merely means there will be two
sets of reports.

SATIRE

•

HUMOR

cartoons

SSToSSSS
lots more

the magazine
..

ith ■" **
the college scene
*

ENGINEERING OPPORTUNITIES
mechanical, aeronautical,

ELECTRICAL, CHEMICAL,
CIVIL, MARINE,
INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING,
PHYSICS, CHEMISTRY,
METALLURGY, CERAMICS,
MATHEMATICS, STATISTICS,
COMPUTER SCIENCE,
ENGINEERING SCIENCE,
ENGINEERING MECHANICS

CAMPUS INTERVIEWS

Free!

To: Educational Systems, Inc.; P.0. Box 68,
Princeton Junction, N. J. 08550
□ Please send complete, FREE information about VTI to:
name

express

opinion or make
recommendations regarding the
personal

how
will be available to other researchers. “As Is”
says some of the most damning
information may go into the National Archives tor five years,
where it will be available only
major

—

Free!

my

much information

•—

Free!

to University policy to

Argentina persecutes hippies

for Seniors and Graduates in

VII stands for Vocational Temperament Inventory. It’s a sophisticated psychological questionnaire a tool, a device, an instrument—a ‘mirror’ to help you see yourself as you make important
decisions about your future career.
You can fill out the VTI questionnaire in just a short time
and in privacy. Your answers will be scored and compared, by
an electronic computer, with a composite vocational temperament
profile obtained from your classmates in schools throughout the
country. Then the computer will ’write’ in words, not numbers
or code —its analysis and discussion of your individual vocational temperament, comparing you with those of your classmates
who have similar vocational goals.
The complete VTI service costs just $4.00 —but don't decide
now! Send, instead, for more information about VTI, what it means
and how it can help you. Use the coupon below.

Dr. Perkins said it was University policy to make no recommendations to draft boards or
other agencies in regard to the

TUESDAY, FEB. 20
Appointments should be made
in advance through your
College Placement Office

Pratt &amp;

Whitney
Rircraft
|

DIVISION OF

CORP,

°

An Equal Opportunity Employer

SPECIALISTS IN POWER . . POWER FOR PROPULSION-POWER FOR AUXILIARY SYSTEMS.
CURRENT UTILIZATIONS INCLUDE AIRCRAFT, MISSILES, SPACE VEHICLES,
MARINE AND INDUSTRIAL APPLICATIONS,

�Friday, February 16, 1968

Th* Spectrum

Pap* Nin*

Winter Weekend: twas a fine thing, begorrah!
by James Brennan
Spectrum Music

Truth in the lyrics

Reviewer

songs,"

dipped into their pot of gold and came up
with an evenin’s entertainment that would stir the verdant
blood of any man in the audience—be he Irish or not.
Tommy Makem

The Clancy Brothers and Tommy Makem are the entertainers
of whom I “blarneriously” boast.
These internationally famous folk
singers led off the fine line of
performers who appeared at the
1968 Winer Weekend.

Opening the show was a local
folk group called “The New Order,” who recently won the University’s Amateur Folk Show,
Their first song was “Rockin’ in
Jerusalem,” which featured the
dramatic haunting voice of Miss
Carole Forman. The next number
they did was “Hey, That’s No
Way To Say Goodbye,” by Leonard Cohen, the rapidly rising
young Canadian poet, novelist,

and song writer.

In a Gracie Slick-like style, the

talents

of Miss Forman

were

again highlighted in “Want Somebody To Love.” To close out their
portion of the show, The New
Order rambled into “Keep On

Truckin’ Mama.”

Flip Wilson's shaggy dog
Flip Wilson opened his segment of the show with what he
called his worst material. His
first joke was a long, draggedout “shaggy-dog” story. It was
about a Roman named Herman,
who found a phenomenally huge

berry, and was done in what he
called “My Butterfly McQueen,
a la Gone With the Wind style.”
After the mixture of laughing
and groans died down, Flip commented: “Listen man, this is a
lot easier than parkin’ cars.” He
continued along this raciallyoriented line of humor with a
discourse on the American In-

says

firmly,

“No Never Will I Play the Wild
Rover,” the Clancys left the audi-

ence conjuring up a picture Of
a wooden-floor pub, where ya
could curse and spit, over a pint

be commemorated in the ditty
“Johnson’s Motor Car.”

of brew.

Wenching and drinking
Being Irish lads and somewhat
roguish by nature, they could
ne’er forget to praise some of

the sinful endeavors of the Irish
male, these rightfully being
wenching and drinking. In “The
Holy Ground," a district of illrepute, the sailors bid farewell
to their maids with a hearty "And
A Fine Girl You Are!” And in

In closing the concert, The
Clancy Brothers and Tommy Makem put poor Michael Finnegan
to his rest with a bacchanalian

burial, the likes of which made
wake history. This last bit of
broguish banter was called “Finnegan’s Wake” and was sure to
have driven the strongest-willed
banshee from the rafters of
Kleinhans.

dians. One of the bits of this

piece was: “Now listen here, you
Indians gotta organize. Why not
join the NAACP and then we
can have civil rights for colored
people immediately and on a
gradual basis for you Indians.”

Humor first concern
In commenting about his role
in civil rights activities, he said:
“I guess I’m involved in the civil
rights movement because I’m a
Negro—but if you mean in the
manner Dick Gregory is, I’d have
to say no. If you are a comic,
your first obligation is to be
funny. The message has to be
secondary to the humor.
Tommy Makem and the Brothers Clancy, wearing husky thickknit white Irish seamen’s sweaters, roared onto stage and broke
into an enthusiastic folksong
called “Brennan On the Moor.”
It’s a narrative about Willie Brennan, who was a Robin Hood type
rascal of a bandit from the County Cort (Willie was also a distant relation of this reviewer.)

Tom, Liam and Pat Clancy with
Makem on the penny
whistle continued their lighthearted line of songs with “A Wedding in the Morning.” This was
followed by one of their most
famous numbers “The Gypsy
Rover,” a love ballad which featured the talents of Mr. Makem.
Tommy

Moving on to a more spirited
tune, the boys blended their
voices in “Whiskey Oh.” This
song was preceded with the comment, “Paddy, you know one of
me favorite names for whiskey
is holy water or the water of

Flip Wilson

Tom ~Ctancy

“But if what we sing is caustic
or sorrowful we do it only because it’s the truth we find in
the lyrics.” Most of all, they are
recalling the conscience of their
people who fought Mother England for 700 years.
The “troubled times” and the
deeds of the Irish Republic Army
are a favorite topic of their laments. They touched on this
subject in a lighter manner with
a frolicking song about the adventures of a band of Irish re-

—Grimmer

The Clancy Brothers and Makem

A lighthearted trio

-Grimmer

bels of the IRA, who commandeer,
ed the vehicle of a certain Dr.

—sentimental

life.”
“The Mountain Tea,” another
song on the saucy side, dealt
with the troubles the Irish moonshiners had with the Internal Revenue Agents or Excise men.
As a change of pace, the Clancys and Makem offered a sea
chanty called “The Shoals of
Herring.” It left one with the
impression of a lone sailor on
a stormy sea a callin’ for his
girl.

NOW
PLAYING

•

'•the peariEss

•

VaMPIRE

_4 Wo,I

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OR,: Pardon mE,But

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sandwich served on
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Sun

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Freeman Williams

till Midnight, Fri

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Sat till 1:00 a.m.

The Showstoppers

Wandilmer Malcom

Sat.
Suns Fri.

Tho

Risng Thurt.,

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Live Music

Wednesday thru Sunday

Mellow Brick Rode
WITH
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The Mo-Town

&amp;

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Sound

WED.—FRI.—SAT. EVENINGS

Younger Pius!
A

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SAT. NIGHT!

SUN. NIGHT!

The DIXIE CUPS

JACKIE
WILSON

"C ha pel of Love"
—

Now accepting applications for Bartender

—

�Friday, February

Thi Sputrum

Paga T«i

16, 1968

Dept, announces
Music
audience
captivates'
Shepherd
Jean
final cast of 'Ubu Roi'
by

Shepherd,
warrior of 1968.” “Eventually,” mused
“man will be buried in his Mustang, in the Drive

Schraiber

Jay

cows” of American life underwent
heavy treatment Friday night at Kleinhans providing_a colorful opening to Winter Weekend. At
times they were raucously whipped, on occasion
gently caressed, but always these institutions were
discussed with rare insight and orginmality by
Jean Shepherd, humorist and N.Y.C. radio personThe “sacred

a l&gt;ty-

, .

. .

. .

Mr. Shepherd explains himself fairly well when
,,

,

..

Shepherd’s performance
centered on boy gets girl,’ that grand cliche, and
g
th minor ones contained within it. Braces,
sed down hair popping pimples, the nervous
apprehension as Charley attempts to put his arm
around ciorice at the Drive-In. The stark failure
having lhe dramatjc first kiss interrupted by
the stick shift stabbing Charley in the ribs.
part of Mr.

fhan

fon

ki

SiSSs
SsSfffS
h”7l.X."S

if

In "Ne.

verbal

»-'”&gt;■

«

techniques.

■

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—

-

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,.

(

°

„

fromjndmn

;

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„„

“s

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fessor from the Umve

a
a
is Show biz. And as we all
Because
0 lyPeS
Sh W
p P
d
people, the audience

Wh"

B°ob
kn0W, t°h audiete'td^Tpeopir
eS

"articles,

Playboy
Vietnam and
tbc Beatles, Shepherd’s honest cynicism about these
topics was noticeably less well-received.

Nothin' but Texas Tommies

In exteremely versatile fashion, Shepherd carefully sided among the miseries, the little tragedies
that befall the “poor American.” First it was sarcasm, then mock seriousness.
“You get in your ’53 Dodge with your electric
blue suit from Robert Hall. You get on the Jersey
Turnpike and you’re under the delusion that you
are going somewhere. And what do you end up
af Howard Johnson’s. “That’s what people do.”
Get on the highway and plan whether they’ll eat
Texas Tommies at Howard Johnson’s.
The futility of separating dreams from reality
is all part of Shepherd’s American Way. Discussing
funeral parlors, Shepherd said: “Only in America
do you have drive-in funeral parlors. Guys are
their golf clubs. The
buried with their weapons

c
lea Hv commercial
ti
commercial
R
clearly
Beatles
“Everybody has an idea the Beatles are four
hobbits. Actually, they’re a clever commercial act;
they know when to latch on to the newest fad.”
Shepherd declared disdain for the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi
’’the Indian Norman Vincent Peale,
and said he didn’t buy Dick Gregory or Joan Baez.
“I don’t believe in people who make a career of
suffering, I’m not a cynic, but I hate magic words.”
Two and one half hours after being greeted
by good-natured boos, Shepherd had aptly demonstrated why he fares so well in communicating
on the most difficult medium of all, radio. A
turned-on audience with no gimmicks, eleletnc
rock groups or flashing lights—just Jean Shepherd.
,

—

-

1 ll

1

i 1 I ’J‘1 a l

A STORY TELLER

'*

FROM

WJ
rLEM

VI

"The eye-catcher is Ufa Levka, the
hip Carmen In modern undress"

R “T

MM
Ikt,.

Q l\l

Hie,
T1

m -

*T

1

IT'S AN EXPERIENCE

Total Female Animal!.1

WORKSHOP THEATER

t

Tonite: 7:40,

elmwOOD
B

ztxrz

t0 shy g jr i to Jean Shepherd talking about
whatever's on his mind. Always he maintained
smo oth flow of moods,
He success fu uy won over the audience, keeping it
captivity by seizing and creatively capitalizing
situation,
Qn the humor in all too realistic
Descr ibing the drive-in, Shepherd said: “Charlton
on the screen. The King of the driveHeston js «
?
best re|igious figure 0 0ur times. On
top of the mountoin you hear music. It’s God music.
Clouds rolling by, slaves with leopard bikinis
(
drums
God, I love religion. It’s great.”
b
0r tbe lament of the fat chicks who wish they
york women t#u and thjn and in the
Truman Capote circle of friends. “They would
love me for my sensitivity,” coos Shepherd,
[)o yQu want tQ know what the New York woman
really is?” Shepherd asked. “She’s the old lady
the groin ...
subway who kicks yQu
About 300 people were present to hear this
native of Hammond, Ind., tear down the illusions
deception which we thrive. Though relegated
sma| ,er rooms
K ie inhans. more than
f
seats remained empty
A g00 d number of people seemed familiar with
Shepherd’s background, and near the end he con-

swaggering escape
It was in this theme that Mr. Shepherd conducted
his performance. Swaggering on stage in a crumpled green sports jacket and looking woefully in
esneed of sleep, he presented hmself as an
Hciple.ssly lamcn ng t
capee from Studioland
situation he Was thrust into, Shepherd said. Buf
falo is a non-existant city. There are certain
to, like Medicine H ,
places nobody
or Buffalo
Wy. .
When someone yelled out Why did you come
®
Shepherd answered: It s alwaysi a p ,® u
out among the people, the proletariat. It s where it
happening
.
h
Shepherd proceeded
?
£“
American
of
considers one of the valuable jewels n Ar
mp
w ‘^ 1/
society
the
'^w f
lndian
can you imagine the Tonight Show
y p
e
apolis said Shepherd.
t
come from is New
Hfe
show
Biz is so
Show Biz
believes that* where rea life
important When a total M like Bob Dylan
talks about so«ology everyone
-

.1 ■»(," Shepherd mak.a u., .1

—

A

°

Face,

n

,

s

™

9:45. Sat
Sun.:
2:30. 4:30. 6:30. 8:30. 10:10
&amp;

..

F r..

*

ave

iz

——

HAPPINESS is.

.

■■ESOJU^EO
MMiacwm.in-Hw
I

TOM W
2p.m.

MATINEE

.Aw

■-

.

Live Concert!

Bartenders
NEEDED

Part Time

—

J

,.c

u
\

S

Jaime, Ruth Laredo
to give recital in Baird

A fine team of artists, Jaime
and Ruth Laredo, will appear
with members of the Creative Associates, State University Music
Dept., in a recital at 8:30 p.m.
today in Baird Hall.
Ruth Laredo has performed everything from solo piano works
to myriad chamber music combinations with Pablo Casals, Rudolf
Serkin and Peter Serkin. Her tour
in Europe resulted in her first
recording for Columbia Records.
Jaime Laredo is one of the

three violinists to win the Queen
Elizabeth of Belgium Competition. He has performed with numerous orchestras in countries
throughout the world. He also
has several recordings to his credits.
Performing with the Laredos
will be Boris Kroyt on viola and
Robert Martin, cellist. The program will include “Sonata in G
Major” by Bach; “Tartiniana Seeonda,” a piece for violin and piano; Mozart’s “Duo in B flat,” and
“Quartet in C Minor, Opus 15.”

Entertainment
Calendar

Friday, February 16:
CONCERT: Tom Paxton, Buffalo
Philharmonic Orchestra, “Pops”

concert, Kleinhans, 8:30

p.m.

RECITAL: Chamber Music Recital,
Boris Kroyt, viola, Jamie Laredo, violin, Ruth Laredo, piano,
Robert Martin, cello, Baird,

8:30 p.m.

PLAY: “A Delicate Balance,”

Studio Arena, 8:30 p.m. Albee’s
Pulitzer prize winning play.
PLAY: “Cabaret," O’Keefe Center,

Toronto, 8:30 p.m.
MOVIE: “Four Hundred Blows,”
Norton Conf. Theater.

EXHIBIT: Photography Exhibit,
Center Lounge, Norton
MOVIES: “What Is A Good Observer?” and “Control Your
Emotions” Dief, 303, 4 p.m.
Sponsored by the Occupational
Therapy Dept.
ALLENHURST COFFEEHOUSE:
Sandy Rhodes, folk-rock singer
MOVIE: “Guess Who’s Coming To
Dinner?" Cinema I, Spencer
Tracy, Katherine Hepburn, Sidney Poitier, go see it.
Saturday, February 17:
CONCERT: Carlos Montoya, flamenco guitarist, Eastman Theater, Rochester, 8:15 p.m.
Sunday, February 18;
CONCERT: State University of
Buffalo Percussion Ensemble,
Ed Burnham and Jan Williams,

Baird, 8:30 p.m.

CONCERT: Ira Weller, violinist,
Amherst Central Junior High
School, 3 p.m.
Monday, February 19;
LECTURE DEMONSTRATION
Sound-Lighting demonstration
by members of the Merce Cun-

ningham Dance Co., Baird, 8

p.m.

Tuesday, February 20;
TV SPECIAL; “In Depth: Kingman Brewster,” Channel 17,
9 p.m. President of Yale in-

terviewed.
CONCERT: The Dorian Woodwind
Quintet, Mary Seaton Room,

Kieinhans, 8:30 p.m.
Wednesday, February 21:
PLAY: “The Impossible Years,”

Tom Ewell, Kieinhans, 8:30 p.m.
good comedy about psychoanalyst coping with adolescents
or adolescents coping with parents or vice-versa.
RECITAL: Jacob Berb, Conference
Theater, 8:30 p.m.
Thursday, February 22;
CONCERT: Eugent Isotomin, pianist, Mary Seaton Room, Kleinbans, 8:30 p.m.
RECITAL: Creative Associates
Recital, live electronic, Baird,
8:30 p.m.
Friday, February 23:
CONCERT: Choral Concert, Do-

well Multer and William Kothe,
Baird, 8:30 p.m.

Saturday, February 24;
TV SPECIAL: Villanova Jazz Festival, Channel 17, 8 p.m. Stan
Kenton, master of ceremonies,
top collegiate jazz bands, com-

bos and vocal.
CONCERT: Carlos Montoya, flamenco
p.m.

guitarist, Kleinhans, 8:30

CONCERT: Miriam Makeba and
Oscar Peterson, Eastman Theater, Rochester, 8:15 p.m.
Sunday, February 25:
CONCERT: Four Seasons, Klein-

hans, 8:30 p.m.

DM

lb

M

9
IM

PARLOR
PIZZA
i ye Public house
1089 Niagara Fails Blvd.
N Y 14226
’

83A9000

Peterson
Trio
__

..

SAr

IVIAKEBA

seen in “Private Life of the
Master Race,” as Madame Rose-

been

of Mere Ubu is dancer Bruce Kaiden.
The rest of the cast, playing
double and triple roles, in a chorus fashion are: Corrine Broskett,
Frank Elmer, Kathy Gasdick,
Richard Garson, Robin Herniman,
Peter Madison, Joe O’Bryan, Marc
Pomerantz, Vicki Robbins, Richard Steinitz and Barbara Thirtle.

Age 20 or over
c
Call

A

miriam

Heading the list as Pere Ubu
is Maury Chaykin, a relative new
comer to the scene here in Buffalo. But as Mere Ubu, or rather
half of Mere Ubu, we will be
treated to another performance
by Margot Fein, who has recently

petal in “Oh Dad, Poor Dad,” and
in an unforgettable role as Susan
B. Anthony in “Chamber Music.”
Playing the less feminine side

and the

NO EXPERIENCE

/7T

p!

JRU
m Ttowaw Slli8*l
J«l&gt;.

SHAKEY'S
Cooks

m I

flHPw S
ijv uhnaiu

WORKING AT

—

/

/

Special to The Spectrum

The final cast list of “Ubu Roi"
whs announced Tuesday by the
Music Dept,

-

Saturday, Feb. 24, 8:15 P.M.
c
$4so

$4

s
$3 5o.$2so

Eastman Theatre
ROCHESTER

Conference Theater
Thursday, Friday, Saturda'

����*

**

*4.

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.

Spectrum

(Ut

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Friday, Fabniary 14, Ml

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to

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w|rk for a

mm

Emi&amp;P compm It may

-am

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E soorid crazy, pit that’s

1 why I went with IBM!’

‘‘When t was in school, I Reacted the thought
Jfc of .working for some builljijwmpany where I’d

2
v

I

HamUr.'4|

'

2.

"t

1‘
#

number,IBM’s Jim
Engineering,'
ton. (Jim, who has a B.S.
is a
Engineering|pmager in Marketing. &gt; v
same
time, I tajjjnv there were definite^Wk.
the
vantagesin working for a &amp;rge firm. So as I interviewed
eaefy company, I checked if&amp;&gt; the degree of individually
I co«l$I expect there.
‘?‘A
Which

lu Me nuMir

.
atmosphere.”
IBM’i small team concept*
"A’eusrffr. there’s plenty

with

.1

if

.m.dI-rtHBp'an v

.
,

,

*

cver?;$fthin each

locatiohVPor instance, msfejencc and engineering*4|iey use a
no matter how larg^|^pw&gt;ject,
of a small team -tdWftWfotir
or five people.
C.
s#-.'
!

”I» marketing, I was pftpitty much my own
even
before I became a manapt*. As a systems engineer It’s
up to you to find the solution to a customer’s problem,
and then see it’s carried out in the optimum way. You
work, with the customer «j0Sry step of the way.”
Tr ha*e&gt;a lot more to t||p-IBM story than Jim hasmentioned. For more information, visit your campus'
placement office or send an outline of your interests and educational background to P. J. Koslovv,
IBM Corporation, Dept. C, 425 Park Avenue,
New York, New York
10022. We’re an equal j | 1
opportunity employer. l.jl D tJVi_j

ljM]|

I

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•

.Mr:

�Friday, February li, IMS

i

Papa TMrtMfi

Th« lM&lt;tr»n

Sportin' Life

the spectrum of

sports

by Bob Woodruff
Sp*clrum Spoiit

Just a note to all Bulls’ basketball followers who are ad
anticipating seeing Sari's club contend with Calvin Murphy

Varsity, fresh cafers are vktais
the court. Bucci
14 points.

The State University p£ Buffalo Bulls averted *,Vk«t
weekend” Monday night hy defeating the UnhoftMh~Sf
Baltimore 71-58 at Clark fig*, the State University «f|dtale fresh took the fiiilhnaaii ) contest, tundag lock (he

Wtth the Bull's

letic
NU

This situation 4Uhft always exist up the river. The Kf
previously been **bb tickets
such generosity safe existed

athsell

fcaMjlt

with

tetic depart meat

*

at1

m wtaaara
aiaya

«

tickets for the «*cira
tide it dear ttf/t ihay Wonh
lot of schools trite

le and Bob Nowak MH tp
for nine of the tempo jjjMR 11
1*
point*, lengthening
to 17 point*,

J

'

scoring

taedjHPftr

opponents.

-

'

*sm»

games, last waalMl. Berfustini sent in Mi dMhfert
MUrwI to win this &lt;MWt Hr U Bherle. E*, wjpv||»d
la Mar to stay in contesotlMgJB*
edHtet in the two
rfKMA college division MM'***
awnt bid. Buffalo’s reaanl dH&gt;
SIMMs at 0-6, while the MMn
Bees we 6-11.
With Cutbert in the Mg
Buffalo led throughont Om Mils ran off nine Baaighl
gaam oMept for a brief mnaopaf Mots. Culbert (niiiiMliij six
•Baa Baltimore went out sa tap of these on a bank shat, layup,
■t 1614 with 8:40 left in the and a 20 foot jumper, aU in saceassion. From the time Culbert
came in until Eberlc replaced
1dm Buffalo outscored Belthnere
164.

Mile

ten points wQMft' M
minutes left in the

elim

lend
(Mr

It seems that
considerate Niagaaa University
department has angript to sell some 3300 ancon ticket!
followers without wefj&amp;e slightest regard far t&gt;» tridre.sts
the Niagara student oeorir ft moM
ing fans. Every
Eagle supporters, and opponents’
a capacity crowd of
don’t even get standing room.

1

Baltimore downed 71-58

W» Ms, who lost

Editor

'W:'

JMriwa

USSTplayer.

saaP^W*

•

Walls returns

Doug Bernard
Buffalo forward gets off a tenfoot jump shot for a pair of his
team-high

15-point

Bulls' triumph.

effort

in

Rick Wells, playing his first
game in over a week hit for a
bucket right at the burner, giving
the Bulls a 40-23 lead at intermission. Jack Jekielek picked off
11 rebounds, more than a third
of the State University of Buffalo’s total of 32 in the first half.
Baltimore managed only 15 rebounds.
Buffalo came out of the locker
room with a cold hand, giving
Baltimore an opportunity to slice
into tiie Bull's 17 point lead. The
Bees cot the lead down to 11 and
from there the teams traded baskets.
Andre Billups, Baltimore’s
leading scorer with an average
over 16 points a game, was held
scoreless by Bob Nowak until the
14:40 mark of the second half.
While the Bulls had Billups handcuffed, teammate Felix Bueci
kept the Bees in the game by
hitting jump shots from all over

Had bad break

Bulls lose at Cortland,
will host Guelph next
“We should have won. We just
sharp as we have
been at times this season, and
it's a shame we were flat in such
a big match." These were coach
Gerry Gergley's sentiments after
his matmen lost their second
match of the season to highly
touted Cortland.

weren’t as

“We got a real bad break when
was injured in
his 137 match. He was leading
at the time he was dazed, but
was pinned only a few seconds
after the mishap. A three point
victory there would have given
us the match.”
Henry (Gullia)

The Bulls started out strong
in their 17-14 setback ... Michael
Watson rolled up 11 points de-

Scheinbaum. Cortland knotted the score up in the
130 pound event as their Billy
Desario decisioned the Bulls’
Gary Fowler 9-1. It was a valiant
effort by Fowler, who avoided
being pinned by the nation’s sixth
ranked Desario.
cisioning Glen

lost their

refusing to be

whole game, broke ktnMotVHh

the aid of Earl

TViHMMflfiMte

the score 5848, with
«tcs left.
Now it was

***

'

y

ince he Wat
mior
mmi was-dRy a
Jior at BufMo, he 4|t not

mm**

•

turn to lead a Buffalo iNulHi

reeled off seven potats 8M vuluaHy iced the game at tMti'daiw

Fieri added a these ps|Sg -&amp;V
with eight seconds Mt 4b efeoe
the scoring for Bwffaio.
The Bulls shot a bHstejfe* 48%
in the second half on tf of 23
from the field and IlnbMng at
a very respectable 47%. Baltimore, on the other hand, shot
37%, 13 of 38, in Ur second
half and finished at a frigid
32% on the game. Batttanore
fared better at the tout line hitting on 14 of 24 for 88%, while
Buffalo converted 15 of BB for
51%.

laking satisfactory

Hockey club general manager Howard Plaster joyously announced
that preparations are being made for the March 8-9 finger Lakes
The victory was definitely a Hockey playoffs to be held in the Amherst Arena. The undefeated
to cop their first Finger
team effort with Culbert, sewing Buffalo icers should be the odds on choice attract
Lakes crown in a tournament which should
viewers from the
eight points, Eberle, three, Nowak ten, Bernard IS and Jekiel- farthest regions of the state.
Look for the Bulls’ hockey team to receive some national recogek eight points and 12 rebounds.
nition in the New York Times in the not too distant future. Sports
Illustrated has also shown an interest in following up a story they did
Waxman nets 26
on club hockey at this institution four years ago. There is also a
The preliminary game saw the rumor to
the effect that the Bulls might tangle with Notre Dame
Baby Bulls up their record to
for a mythical national club championship, if the former wins the
9-4 with a convincing MSS win FLHL tourney next month.
over Canisius. Steve Worn led
Did you hear that, Doc? Notre Dame!
all scorers with 26 points. This
marked the second time this year
Finally, note must be made of the Interfraternity Council’s action
that the Bulls have defeated the
Griffins. This time it was a little in donating $100 to support intercollegiate athletics at the State
easier since the Griffs have been University of Buffalo. Or. A. Westley Rowland and the Bulls'
hurt by the loss of a few players Boosters are leading a fund drive to raise the money necessary to
at the semester break. One of the support a wide ranging program of intercollegiate competition. Dr.
missing was Gene Roberson, a Rowland noted that within ten years, the State University of Buffalo
real standout for the team. The will be one of the ten great universities of the world, and it would
be more than unfortunate if we were not represented adequately in
Baby Bulls next take on the Niagara University fresh at Niagara. every phase of collegiate life.
•

•

After Gullia was pinned, Brian
Vandenburg brought the Bulla
within two points by decisioning
Stan Duda 12-3.
The visitors stumbled at 193
and 160 however, as Dale Wettlaufer- and Gk&gt;rdie Alexander
dropped decisions to John Mulada
and Dave Sherman respectively.
Cortland’s 167 pounder Mike
Tully put the match out of reach

a convincing victory over
Jerry Meissner.
The Bulls salvaged eight points
in the final two matches of the
long afternoon. Harry Bell scored a 6-0 decision but was unable
to score his accustomed pin over
Billy Martin. Heavyweight Paul
Lang earned five points on a for

with

Oswego.

to-

Scratch one backcourt star.
ActuaHy, the athletic -depart
mt admits that Peeler was
;Iigent in acting immediately
ir his reclassification to IA,
1 if he had acted expediently
might still be throwing in 20
iters in Clark Gym. Boh Nowak, also an ECTI transfer, acted
with haste after being notified of
Joe Peeler
his change in status, and as a
result he is still wearing the Bulls’ Blue and White instead o( that
vomitous shade of Green.

Vandnnburg triumphs

felt.
The Grapplers tomoqow face
Guelph in a 2 p.m. Clark Gym
tussel. Wednesday night the biggest home match of the season
pits the Bulls against Brockport,
early season conquerors of mighty

protfibs

'ards a degree.

LlOnS
W
(law

Bulls

Toiler George Wirth (left) scores a touch against
Penn State opponent in Clark Gym action last
Saturday. Wirth scored three points, but buffalo
iosf its second straight 14-13 match to the
Nitanny Lions. The Swashbucklers are now 7-2,

�Th

Page Fourteen

Bulls lose to

Wayne

•

official bulletin

Stat

Junior forward, Ed Eber/e chosen
nf Week for 2nd time
by W.

Scott Behrens

Ais t. Sporfi

Friday, February 16, 1968

Spietrum

Editor

Junior forward Ed Eberlc has
been selected as this week's Player of the Week. This is the second time this season Eberle has
been so honored.
The selection committee had
a rough time this week because
the Bulls lost two out of three
ball games in a span of four days.
It is always more difficult to
single out a player when the
team loses.

The selection of Eberle was
based on his nevcr-say-die performances in the two losses last
weekend and real good effort
in Monday's basketball game
against the University of Baltimore.

Friday evening in Detroit
against Wayne State University
the Bulls were down by 13 points

Bulls in the lead in the first
stanza, as they went into the
dressing room with a four point
lead.

The Official Bulletin is an authorized publication of the State
University of New York at Bufalo, for which the Spectrum assumes no
editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN
form to 114 Hayes Hall, attention Mrs. Fischer, before 2:00 p.m. the
Friday prior to the week of publication. Student organization notices
are not accepted for publication.
Last Day
Test

to Register

Feb. 24

Pre-Nursing Exam

General notices

In the last three games Ed
has picked off 21 rebounds, has
had five assists and has made
eight recoveries. He has shot
over 50% from the field and has
made eight free throws count out
of 11 that he attempted.

MAKE UP EXAMINATIONS

Thus far this season Eberle
has put 80 shots through the
Placement interviews
basket from the field out of 198
Please call 831-3311 to make apattempted for a 40.4% shooting
pointments and obtain additional
average. In this 15-game total
information concerning the folhe has dropped 44 free throws lowing interviews:
into the hoop out of 53 tried for
83%. He is the team’s leading Feb. 19
Leheigh Portland Cement Co.
rebounder with 94 and a reboundCo.
Burroughs Wellcome
ing average of 6.27 per game.
Mount Sinai Hospital
California State Personnel Bd.
lie Works
iblic

March 9

,

Available
School of Nursing

Newark Valley Central Schools
Dunkirk Public Schools

ations for the removal of INCOMPLETE GRADES (recorded for absence from final exams) must be
filed in the Office of Admissions
and Records, Hayes “B” no later
than March 4, 1968. Make-up
examinations will be given the
week of April 8, 1968.

IConn.)

Applications

—

Applications for make-up examin-

&amp;

Test
Date

Feb. 21

Dun &amp; Bradstreet, Inc.
Kenmore Social Security Office

Roadway Express, Inc.
F. W. Woolworth Co.
Lincoln Rochester Trust Co.
Kurt Salmon Associates, Inc.

Susquehanna Valley High Sch.
Rome Central School District
Saratoga Springs City Schools

Feb. 22
Moog Servo Control
U.S. Public Health Service
National Steel
American Hospital Supply Corp.
McFarland-Johnson, Consulting
Engineers
Rush-Henrietta Central Schools
Los Angeles City Schools (Cal.)

Feb. 23
Dow Corning
Associates Hospital Service of
N.Y.
Continental Can Company, Inc.
The N.Y. Air Brake Co.
Aberdeen Proving Ground
Raytheon Co.
The Trane Co.
Jefferson Elementary School
District (Calif.)
Clark County School Dist. (Nev.)

General Announcements
Feb. 16
Professor John A. Bailey—University of Michigan, will speak on
“The Sound of One Hand Clapping— Zen Buddhism,” 4 p.m.,
Room 231, Norton Hall.
Pharmacy Seminar
presents
Dr. R. A. Coburn, Harvard University and U.S. Army Natick
Laboratories, “Cyanogenetic Gylcosides,” 4 p.m., Room 244, Health
—

Sciences Building.
Feb. 18

State University of Buffalo Percussion Ensemble
8:30 p.m.,
Baird Music Hall. Ed Burnham
and Jan Williams conducting.
Feb. 21
—

The Department of Music
presents a Recital featuring Jacob
Berg, 8:30 p.m., Conference Theater. Admission is $1.50, $1.00
and 50f? for general public, faculty and staff, and students respec—

tively.

Feb. 22

Creative Associates Recital
8:30 p.m., Baird Music Hall.
Feb, 23
features
Pharmacy Seminar
Mr. W Ranus, Graduate Student,
Department of Medical Chemistry, State University of Buffalo,
speaking on “Chemical Design of
Coronary Dilators,” 4 p.m., Room
244, Health Sciences Building.
—

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�Friday, February 16, 1968

Th

Canton is next to face
undefeated hockey Bulls
The undefeated State University of Buffalo leers tomorrow face
Canton A&amp;T, a team which last
tention for first or. second place
in the Finger Lakes Hockey Tournament.
The Bulls have already beaten
Canton once this season, 5-4, in
one of the toughest game of the
season. Missing from the Canton
line up will be their All-Star defenseman, Ernie Huff, a very
powerful shooter who scored
against the Bulls in the earlier
contest. It will be a close contest
all the way. If the Bulls can recapture, some of the fire they had
last semester, they should come
out on top.

hii

*«
Ic

t^

if

nn

II

Elliot

by

ho

minds of the Bulls will be the
24-0 trouncing that they suffered
two seasons ago, and if the Bulls
win this one they should really
be ready for the FLHL Tourney
here March 8 and 9.

Stephan Rose

Mr. Robert Henderson, Assistant Coordinator of Student Activities, called a meeting Friday
of all Greek organziations to conduct an important experiment.

The meeting was called to determine the reaction to a movie
just released by the New York
fice that the Captain of the OsState Drug Commission. The
be
suspended Greeks were chosen to view the
wego team should
for three games because he crossmovie, not because they reprechecked a referee in the game sent a valid cross-section of the
against Ithaca.
campus community, but because
they could be assembled at short
The next home game pits the notice.
State University of Buffalo leers
against Hobart College March 2.
The movie, about narcotics,
presented the personal experiences and observations of users
and former users. The participants were at the very least unattractive and at the very best
uninteresting. They had their
separate hangups and turned to
drugs to escape their problems.

The Bulls may get a break as
it was decided at the league of-

RAYTHEON COMPANY
...involved
in sophisticated
electronic systems
utilizing state-of-the-art
techniques...will have
CAMPUS INTERVIEWS
FEBRUARY 23

Product lines include: Communications,
Radar, Missiles, Space, Ocean Systems,
Advanced Components.

The post-movie criticism, coordinated by Mr. Henderson and
a representative of the drug
commission, was very sharp, and
on the whole, derogatory. It was
felt that the movie would be
better suited for an audience of
pre- or early high school age.
Lee Zeltzer, a member of Theta
Chi Fraternity, said the movie
missed its mark; “The movie was
deficient in scientific information,
and for this reason, failed to stimulate the fact-oriented college
mind.”

pledge.
An additional note, the fraternity system looks forward to

BROOKLYN
COLLEGE of
PHARMACY

GRADUATE'
PROGRAMS
leading to

MASTER of SCIENCE DEGREE
with specialization in

PHARMACY
ADMINISTRATION
and HOSPITAL
PHARMACY

tomorrow night. Anyone wishing
to attend call Bill or Jay at 8743601.

News items
New officers of Alpha Sigma
Phi are: President, Joe Falcone;
Vice Pres., Mick Murtha; Treas.,
Ralph Tardugno; Rec. Secy., Neal
Brown; Corres. Secy,, Artie Wiegold; Custodian, Dave Hickey;
Marshall, Steve Svec; Tomahawk
Rep., John Klara; and Senior
I.F.C. Rep., Tom Miranda . . .
New officers of Gamma Phi are:
President, Bob Russell; V.P., Scot
Moss; Treas., Roger Zessis; Rec.
Secy., Mike Alspaugh; Corres.
Secy., Dave Becker; Sergeant-atarms, Gary Stephenson; Pledge-

Sororities
New sisters of Alpha Gamma
Delta are: Julie Ruszczyk, Marcia Miller, Maryruth Morris, Pat
Buchinsky, Cindy Thomas, Gail
Dener, Carlotta Rudgers, Harriet
Mador, Lonnie Hecht, Cindy
Littlefield, Debbie Brown, Beverly
Kirsits, Kim Seege, Kathy Lake,
Cathy Dias, and Mimi Blits.

The final rushing festivity will

be a formal dessert to be held

at the Three Coins Restaurant
Sunday.

master, Dave Potter.

The formal rush dinner will be
held tonight at the Claredon. Tomorrow, the brothers will travel
to Oswego State for the hockey
game , . .
Theta Chi Fraternity officers
will hold a summit conference
with their regional counselor,
Fred Holl. Financial stability and
a new house will be among the
topics discussed. Tonight there
will be a Valentine’s Day social
with the sisters of Alpha Gam at
the house . . .

Julie Ruszczyk was honored as
best pledge . . . New sisters of
Theta Chi Sorority are: Jackie
Benard, Laurie Green, Judy Holler, Lynne Kasky, Stephie Sacks,
Sue Walczak, and Louise Tedeschi.
All rushees are welcome to
our table in the Fillmore Room
Monday through Friday from 11
a.m. to 1 p.m. Our formal rush
dessert will take place Wednesday at the Calavier.
The dinner dance is March 2 at
the Charter House.

CLASSIFIED
FOR SALE

COLLEGE

transportation, four
recent overhaul, dependable,

FALCON-Good

new tires,

economical.

two
-

law stuAvery and

WANTED
Circle Art Theatre, four
nights weekly. Contact
Theatre Sunday afternoon or Monday evenings.

CANDY GIRL

—

TO RENT car for weekend
23. Call Dick, 033-1324.

for

February

Park Plaza

Pharmacy,

2754

five; part-time now,

necessary.

Call 032-7509.

PERSONAL

For
from the Jewish
gems
Bible call 875-4265 day or nighf.

SHALOM!

LOST
TWO RINGS-Wedding and
Great sentimental value.

U.B.

return

of

Clast
call

.

Mod

sunglasses;

MISCELLANEOUS

Anyone interested in MARDI GRAS
Thursday, 22 Feb.
Leave
'68, return
27 Feb. '68. Contact Dave Wachtel or
Dave Clowes, telephone 874-0286.
EUROPE - Fly June 8, N.Y. to London; return September 7, Amsterdam to N.Y.
Round trip $265. Open to students, faculty, staff and immediate families. Cali
831-4070 evenings.

(189
RESTAURANT
Delaware
Ave.) Dining in a Mediterranean atmosphere at popular prices.

Harlem Road.

in English Composition; to assist in
editing book;
speed and spelling efficiency important.
Phone 634-6881.

Will

do

papers,

EDITOR-TYPIST —Proficient

at my
home
etc. Telephone 825-8887.

TYPING

TYPING term

papers

25c

per page; ditper hundred.

tos, 35C; envelopes, $2.00

Call

TF 5-6897.

•

Advanced

educational preparation for
positions of leadership in:
management, marketing,
selling and research in
pharmaceutical, wholesale
and retail drug, cosmetic
and retail industries.
teaching of pharmacy
administration.

•

hospital pharmacy
administration,

(internal program)
SESSIONS BEGIN
SEPTEMBER AND FEBRUARY
Write or phone for:
•

•

Bulletin of Information
Application Form

BROOKLYN COLLEGE
OF PHARMACY
OF LONG ISLAND UNIVERSITY
600 Lafayette Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y. 11216

Founded

1886 MAin 2-4040

-

Reward;

896-7203.

EMBASSY

SENIOR or
time, top pay apply in person. Colvin
Eggert Pharmacy, Colvin Eggert Plaza or

apprentice-full

PHARMACY

hour; car

REWARD for
875 8335.

ROOMMATES WANTED

ROOMMATE to share with
dents; five-room apartment
Delaware. Call 874-1976.

MEN-Need

full-time thi* summer. Can earn $4.25

per

ADMINISTRATION

•

An Equal Opportunity Employer

students) seems to assure con
tinual vitality for fraternal life

200

$150. Call 835-8510.
1961 CHRYSLER Newport-Good condition,
four new fires; best offer. 686-2256.
1964 MERCURY Montclair—Radio, heater
automatic; must sell. 836-8775.
MUNARI Ski Boots-Size 7, $15; call 8355662 after 4 P.M.
EGGERTSVILLE-3 B.R. Ranch, large corner
lot, finished rec room and office, I '/£
baths, garage, close to U.B and bus,
lovely home and area; 834-1613.

ENGINEERING WRITING

EXCELLENCE IN ELECTRONICS

The new Beta Sigma Rho So-

Feb. 19 and 20 are the days
designated by the I.F.C. for bidding. It will take place in the
I.F.C. office, Norton Hall room
346, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. A reminder
to all students: You will not be
allowed to bid unless you have
registered, and you must bid to

RESEARCH and DEVELOPMENT
DESIGN
MANUFACTURING
VALUE ENGINEERING
FIELD ENGINEERING
RELIABILITY ENGINEERING

Lexington, Massachusetts 02173.

another good spring. The large

Bidding next week

For work in:

Sign up for interviews through your Placement
Office, or write Manager of College Relations,
Raytheon Company, 141 Spring Street,

4

I960

Openings for:

BS, MS, and PhD Candidates in
ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING
INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING
MATHEMATICS
PHYSICS

I

Fraternities asked to view Drug
Commission film; call it immature

"

HmmnrtA

Page Fifteen

Sptcfrum

reek Graph

Saturday they will play against
their old foes, Oswego State. If
was
er a time ,'vhe ““
h

‘

•

Earn $100 at week or more
this summer with

Jewel

Home Shopping Service
Explain Our Shopping Service to
Homemakers and Arrange For
First Regular Delivery

OPENINGS IN BUFFALO AND ROCHESTER

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
AFTER GRADUATION
On Campus Interviews
See the Placement Office
Feb. 20th
—

�i

Friday, February 16, 1968

Th* 5p«etr»m

Pag* Sixteen

9
6
Peace talks: write the agenda

i

Despite the fierce
WASHINGTON
Communist offensive in Vietnam, President Johnson says the United States still
is ready for peace talks and will even let
Hanoi “write the agenda.”
Speaking to a group of student leaders
during a 75-minute question-and-answer
session at the White House Monday night,
—

•

•

*

focus

aibany

new york

geneva
compiled

from

our wiro

Garbage sparks smoldering
smoldThe long
ering feud between Gov. Nelson A.
Rockefeller and Mayor John V. Lindsay,
New' York’s top Republican leaders, is
out in the open.
ALBANY, N.Y,

-

—

Rockefeller and Lindsay broke over a
dispute involving labor negotiations with
New York City garbage collectors.
The mayor feels Rockefeller pulled the
rug from under him in the negogiations
with the sanitation workers by “capitulating" to the union’s demands. By taking
the action, under which the state assures the union an added pay increase,
the governor put Lindsay on the spot
with the sanitation workers by “capitulating" to the union’s demands. By taking
the action, under which the state assures
the added pay increase, the governor not
only put Lindsay on the spot with the
garbage collectors, but in future dealings
with other city employes.

sorvicoi

feud

and he was reported to have contributed
generosuly to the mayor’s drive.
The governor was ready to take the
stump, too. Running with Republican and
Liberal Party backing, Lindsay flatly rejected personal participation in the campaign by Rockefeller.
He said he

wanted no outside help.

this may have been the
beginning of the gap between the two
Some

feel

leaders.

Tempers flared
Following his election, the

mayor

came

to Albany for additional state financial
help to balance the city’s budget. At a
night-long session in the executive mansion, a plan was worked out but not until
tempers flared.

The conference came up with a big
package for the city and all smiles again.

"We negotiate with the police and firea City Hall aide said.
“How can we effectively negotiate if the
unions know they have a higher court—
Rockefeller."

During Rockefeller’s tough campaign
for re-election in 1966 the mayor helped
but since the GOP presidential race
started, the governor’s aides figure Lindsay has been anything but helpful.

Publicly friendly

Rockefeller is supporting Gov. George
Romney of Michigan. Lindsay, however,
did not follow the lead.

men this spring,”

Publicly Rockefeller and Lindsay are
friendly. Whenever in range of photographers they smile and pump hands.

It is "John” and “Nelson." But what goes
on behind the scenes prompts observers to
comment “no love lost.”
Lindsay was occupying a comfortable
seat in Congress in 1965 and he was almost
certain of re-election as long as he wanted
to serve in Washington. Then along came
the New York City mayorality election
and Lindsay was mentioned as a possible
Republican candidate. GOP leaders asked
Rockefeller to use whatever influence he
had with Lindsay.

The governor called the congressman
and urged him to make the race. Rockefeller promised all the help he could
liet.
He sent several of his top political
advisers to work in the Lindsay campaign

Some of the mayor’s friends started a
Rockefeller-for-President boom, but the
governor’s adivsors took this as an attempt to embarrass their man. Rockefeller asked the mayor to call his men off.

In a report from Washington recently,
Lindsay was quoted as saying he favored
a candidate more like Sen. Charles Percy
of Illinois.
Lindsay, himself, is being mentioned
as a potential candidate for the GOP national ticket. He is frequently linked with
Gov. Ronald Reagan of California.
Lindsay, however, says he has no intention of entering the national race.
Nevertheless he is staying in the overall
picture. He is scheduled to address an
Oregon Lincoln Day dinner later this

Executive said:
. . We would meet them tomorrow.
But we are not going to surrender. We are
willing to reason. We are willing to let
them write the agenda and say, ‘here are
the first subjects you talk about.’
But, Johnson said, the United States
had “gone just as far as we thought honorable people could,” and the series of
Communist attacks launched on “a sacred
the start of the Buddhist Tet lunar
day”
was the answer from Hanoi
new year
”

—

—

Test peace offer

The President apparently was referring
to the bombing lull in the vicinity of Hanoi
and Haiphong last month while the United
States sought to test the sincereity of
North Vietnam’s statement that peace
talks “will” begin when the bombing
stopped.
In addition, an informed congressional
source disclosed Monday night that an
American emissary had gone to Hanoi
during the period of the bombing lull to
explore North Vietnam’s terms for peace

talks.
The source, who declined to identify the
origin of his information except to say it
came from “high-level civilians in the government,” said the emissary had been an
American and had gone to Hanoi at the
request of the President.
Rep. Roman C. Pucinski, D-Ill., had similar information, but he indicated the representative was not an American.

Not** bombing lull

Pusinski said the United States “had to
stop bombing Hanoi to insure safe passage
for the emissary.”
The Illinois Democrat said the Communist answer “to President Johnson’s personal effort toward negotiations was the
terrorist attack on our unarmed American
Johnson sounded a similar theme when
he told the students: “We laid it out on
a table and the answer we got was that
on a sacred day they hit 44 cities and 24
of our airports simultaneously, believing
that the population would rose up and
join them and that the police would come
over to them and they could take by force
what they could not get by vote . . that
was their answer to the San Antonio formula.”

Ready for talks

Despite this, Johnson said, the United
States would still enter into peace talks
with Hanoi. Directing his words at the
Communists, the President added:
“You don’t have to change the words
all of that stuff.
‘will, would’ or ‘should’
All you have to do is say ‘Geneva is the
place and tomorrow is the time.’ We will
talk about your four points, our fourteen
points, cease fire
whatever you want
to talk about."
But, the President added, “we want to
tell you that we are assuming that while
we are doing that you will not take advantage like you did in the Tet to mass
great supplies
Johnson emphasized, however, that America would not “walk out on our allies,
or on an area of the world.” Recalling
Munich, the President said the current
struggle in Vietnam was “just as important for the brown man in Asia as it was
for the white man in Europe.”
—

—

.

.

Soviets warn against overflights
GENEVA
The Soviet Union said Tuesday that safety devices on U.S. nucleararmed aircraft do not guarantee against
the explosion of an H-bomb in a crash
which could trigger a world holocaust.
Soviet negotiator Alexei A. Roshchin
—

took to the floor of the U.N. disarmament
conference to aroplfy even more harshly a
Soviet memorandum protesting overflights
of U.S. nuclear bombers Which was delivered to the State Department Saturday.
Washington said Monday the memoran-

dum was mainly “propaganda” and replied
that necessary safeguards were taken to
insure that H-bombs never could explode
in an accident such as the crash of a nuclear bomber in Greenland in January.
Roshchin said “the safety devices, which
according to the U.S. Defense Department
lock the triggering mechanism of Hbombs, provide no guarantees at all.”
One safety lock
‘The Western press reported that at the

moment an American bomber crashed in
Jaunary, 1961, near Greensboro, N.C. four

fuses were activated and everything depended on the last safety lock, which, had

it failed, could have caused, an H-bomb
explosion,” he said.
“Who can guarantee that a next crash
involving a U.S. aircraft armed with nuclear bombs will not occur over a densely
populated region?”
Roshchin said radioactivity was released

in both the 1961 and 1968 crashes. The
Greenland incident was “in flagrant violation” of the 1963 test ban treaty and the
crash of an American nuclear bomber in
the sea off the coast of Spain in 1966 violated the convention of the high seas, he
said.
“We understand the protests made by
a number of countries against the flights
we fully support their just demands
to put an end to these flights.”
...

month.

Senator asks Toll's resignation
State Sen. Abraham
NEW YORK
Bernstein said Wednesday that he will
call for the resignation of the president
and dean of State University at Stony
Brook for failing “to meet the drug problem head on.”

arrest of 30 students on charges of sale
and possession of narcotics.
Bernstein said he possibly would ask for
the resignation of other persons in connection with the investigation but would
not reveal their names.

The Bronx Democrat, a member of the
Joint Legislative Committee on Crime
which has been investigating the use of
narcotics on the Stony Brook campus, said
the president, John S. Toll, was aware of
the use of narcotics by students from
the time he took office.

Asks ouster of nine

—

There was “a complete failure on his
part to cope with the drug problem and
meet it head on,” Bernstein said.
The senator said offers by the State
Narcotics Commission and Suffolk County
police to instruct dormitory heads to
recognize drugs and educate students to
the dangers of drugs were met with silence
from the school administration.

“I am calling for their resignations for
the simple reason they were derelict in
their duties after being aware of the drug
problem on campus,” Bernstein said.
He said questions put to the two men
during the last two weeks of hearings by
the committee showed Toll had begun to
act on the narcotics problem only after
the Suffolk County police raided the
campus Jan. 17. The raid resulted in the

Assembly minority whip John Kingston
called for the ouster of nine State Univer-

sity at Stony Brook faculty members who
refused to testify before a legislative committee investigating the use of narcotics
on the campus.

In a letter to Samuel B. Gould, chancellor of State University, the Westbury
Republican said refusal by certain instructors to cooperate with the Joint Legislative Committee on Crime was “most detrimental to the university.”

“Nine faculty members from the cam-

pus refused to testify and I ask that they

be fired immediately from their jobs at
the school for deliberately obstructing the
committee’s investigation into this scandal," he said.

“I believe in academic freedom, but
the use of drugs by students is beyond

the realm of freedom and is giving the
State University a black eye,” Kingston
said. “By refusing to testify, these faculty
members are endouraging students and
the faculty, too, to spread the use of
drugs as a way of life on the campus.”

-UN Telephoto

At the
Korean IM17
UMl

United States troops man a trench overlooking the Demilitarized Zone separat/ng North and South Korea.

�v

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s

V '.V

wkl
’K 3

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W&amp;

Friday, February IB, 7968

�Feature Magazine
Of The Spectrum

table of contents
In this issue:
"Larry Faulkner and the S.S.
Barry Holtzclaw

"Shrinks and Acid'
Michael Aldrich
"The Burgher Goes a Countin'
Rick Schwab
'Jefferson Kaye Inside Out'
James Brennan
'Pieces"
Robert Creeley
Editors: Barry Holtzclaw and
Ronald Ellsworth
Cover Photo: "for love'

Page 2

by Yates

�—Y«t»«

larry faulkner and the

s.s.

ities for a month, Larry heard from
FBI investigators in four days.
It might be that this was because
One bleak day Lost October, twelve
lar characteristics. What the story of Larry his particular draft board. Local Board
young men met with state and local SelecFaulkner does show is the cruelly arbitrary #3, is exceptionally efficient, or sintive Service officials at the Ellicolt Square
and unjust nature of the nation's conscrip- ister; but more probable is the fact
tion machine, some of the legal and burthat Larry had been singled out beBuilding in downtown Buffalo, to turn in
their draft cords. These men, who were eaucratic pitfalls that one may encounter, cause of his father.
to form the nucleus of the Resistance in
Stanley Faulkner, a successful
and, perhaps most important, the frustratthis area, immediately became subject to ing moral quandary which thousands of New York lawyer, has received concarrying
arrest for violation of draft laws
young Americans must face every month,
siderable publicity lately in his defense of cases involving war prptests.
with it a possible 5-year jail term and as the Vietnam War goes on, and on.
He was the defense counsel for the
$10,000 fine.
They were expressing, dramatically and
Ft. Hood three, and also defended
It might be suggested that the Pfc. Ronald Lochman; both cases
illegally, their opposition to a system of
case of Larry Faulkner is indeed a involved a refusal to serve in Viet
conscription for an inhumane war, one in
special one, in the sense that it has nam. He also has been involved in
which they refused to participate.
This is the story of one of these men,
been dealt with faster than most several civil rights cases, and more
Larry Faulkner, a graduate student in the other Resistance cases. Whereas the recently, attended the Bertrand Rushistory department at the State University others who turned in their cards in sell War Crimes Tribunal in Sweden.
of Buffalo. The article by no means wishes this area did not hear from authorAt the time he turned in his draft
to suggest that his is a "typical'' case, for
as is true with all cases involving a legal
confrontation, each case has its own singu-

by Barry Holtzclaw

—

•

•

•

Page 3

�certificate, Larry Faulkner's classification was 2A, an occupational deferment. He came to the
University in 1965, a graduate of
Cornell. After one year, he took a
leave of absence to work as an administrator for the Office of Economic
Opportunity in New York City. At
that time, he had his 2S (college
student) deferment changed to the
2A. He returned to Buffalo this September as a full-time graduate student; he also assumed full-time
teaching duties at one of the Cooperative University Urban Extension
Centers. In September he wrote his
local board, requesting a continuation
of his occupational deferment, because of his teaching duties. He received no reply. Shortly thereafter
he wrote again, requesting that his
classification be changed to 2 S, since
he was now a full-time student.
Once again he heard nothing from
Local Board #3.
The case of a "Delinquent"
In a letter dated Oct. 24, Colonel
Brokaw, the State Selective Service
Director, directed members of Local
Board #3 "in view of the demonstration" to classify Larry Faulkner
"1A Delinquent," meaning ripe for
induction. Interestingly enough, the
board voted thusly the very same
registration

day.

In the Delinquency Notice sent to
Larry, the board gave two reasons
for the reclassification:
1) "Any person who violates the
Selective Service regulations" (i.e.,
"any duty or duties required of him
be declared 1A
.
.
.") can thus
Delinquent. The receipt of such an
order can not be appealed, under
normal circumstances.
2) He violated the Universal

Mil-

itary Training and Selective Service
Act, punishable up to five years imprisonment and $10,000 fine. It
must be noted here that Larry has

never received a formal indictment
for the latter charge. The reclassification has been the only punitive
measure taken.
Keeping within the 30-day limit
set for pleas for appeal, Larry sent
his draft board a letter, dated Nov.
1 8, requesting a personal appeal in

p«a«4

the company of his father

—

acting

as a parent, not a lawyer.
Nearly one month later, after hearing no word from Local Board #3,
Larry sent another letter, asking information about the status of his
case.
Apparently his case was delayed
at this time, oddly enough, because
of the support generated for his position. The University Student Association set a resolution of support for
Larry Faulkner to Local Board #3
Nov. 15, and also a copy to Sen.
Robert Kennedy. Sen. Kennedy in
turn saw Selective Service Director
Gen. Lewis B. Hershey about the
case, and the General wrote to the
state board, requesting a report on
the Faulkner case. Gil Klajman sent
a letter supporting the action of
Larry to the local board Dec. 12, on
behalf of the University Graduate
Student Association. The Selective
Service bureaucracy had to take care
of these minorinconveniences before
dealing with the Resistor, but eventually granted a hearing for the evening of Dec. 20.
The hearing that never was
The mustached young Faulkner
went to the Local Board with his
father and another lawyer, Moe Tandler. He carried with him a copy of
the ten-page statement of his position, the statement of student government support, a petition of support
with 600 signatures, and a letter
of support from Dr. Benjamin Spock.
He had sent copies of his statement
to Sen. Kennedy and Gen. Hershey.
In the waiting room there were
several nervous young men, each
awaiting his appeal, each of which
had been conveniently scheduled at
five-minute intervals; on, the bulletin
board, in the place announcing recent actions by the board, there were
a half-dozen cases of draft-card turnins and 30 or 40 cases of failure
to report for induction.
"I was informed that no one but
I was allowed to be in the hearing
room,” Larry Said. They had never
indicated this fact to him in previous
correspondence.

"When I asked for the reason,
they replied that it was the policy

of Local Board #3," he added. The

boy whose appeal preceded Larry's
was accompanied by his father into
the hearing; needless to say, his
father was not asked to leave. The
board would not however let Mr.
Faulkner in.
Standing in the doorway, Larry
asked the names of the people sitting
on the board that night. They said
they would release the names if the
three of them, Larry, his father, and

Mr. Tandler, left the room.
At this time, one of the apparent
board members left the room and the
office.
When asked who he was by Mr.
Faulkner, he replied: "I am from the
State Selective Service, sent forthis
case." The man, later identified as
Edward Markey, apparently serves in
a trouble-shooting capacity for the
State Board, and dramatically exposes the rhetoric of the system of "autnonmous" local boards.
The three appellants left. The
hearing was never called to order.
Local Boards rarely keep detailed
minutes of their proceedings, usually
keeping record only of the decisions
and issues of a particular, case, but
Larry noted: "There were two secretaries writing like mad through the
whole thing, but when we asked them
if minutes were being taken, they
said, 'There are no minutes.'
The next day Larry sent a letter
to Local Board #3, Sen. Kennedy,
and Gen. Hershey, telling them his
description of the hearing that never
was, and requested an appeal once
again, since no one had occurred.
"

The following day he received a
letter from the local board, dated
Dec. 21, indicating, 1) that the hearing of Dec. 20 did in fact take place,

and 2) that they were automatically
forwarding his appeal of the case to
the state board.
The efficiency of the State S.S.
Selective Service procedure provides 30 days to appeal reclassification. That means 30 days for each
of the possible appeal channels: the
local board, the state board, and the
Presidential appeal board.
Following a reminder from him on
this matter, the local board granted

�Larry

a 30-day period to prepare an

appeal to the state board. They did
not respond to his question about
the actual existence of the first appeal
proceedings; as far as they were
concerned, it occurred, and the appeal was turned down.
Jan. 11, Larry wrote the state

board, requesting a 30-day extension
of the appeal date. The state answered that the decision on such a
matter "rests entirely with the local
an interestingly timely
board,"
abdication of their very primary role
in earlier facets of the Faulkner case,
The request for an extension was
sUbsequently turned down. As of this
writing (Feb. 1), Larry Faulkner is
awaiting, pessimistically, the decision of the state board in his case.
He requested a personal hearing, accompanied by counsel, but added:
"The State Board has never had a
counsel before them in an appeal
—

case." More than likely, by the time
this article appears in TheSpectrum,
the State Board will have rejected
Larry's appeal, in a closed-door meeting. If their vote is unanimous, as
is most likely, he can not appeal to
the Presidential Appeals Board.
The alternatives narrow

"When the

state turns

me down,

go to court and ask an injunction to injoin Local Board #3
from issuing the induction order,"
Larry said.
His legal defense is based on
three general poihts:
i) The Fifth Amendment, allow| ng f or right
and personal
appearance in the due process, has
we'll

been violated by the decision-making
process of the Selective Service
system.
2) The First Amendment, safeguarding freedom of speech, has
been violated, because the "Delin-

SOME HELPFUL HINTS:
1) All correspondence with the Selective Service system
should be sent Registered Mail, or Certified, With Return

Requested.
' 2)
Keep carbon or Xerox copies of all correspondences.
3) If you have ,any problems, or questions, contact a
lawyer.

If you have no family lawyer, or are lacking funds, you
may try:

quent" classification was aimed specifically as a punitive measure against
the fact thdt Larry participated in a
protest demonstration.
3) The entire proceeding is illegal, because the Vietnam War is
illegal.
"I don't expect them to grant an
injunction,” he said, mater-of-factly," and even while this thing is
pending, the local board will probably issue the induction notice."
Up until this point, Larry Faulkner
has not been formally charged, in
the courts, with breaking any law.
He was reclassified because of his
failure to comply with Selective Service regulations, but that was clearly
an extra-legal device clearly aimed
at keeping the Selective Service appeal proceedings out of the courts,
and within the arbitrary administrative hierarchy of the system.
The Selective Service has effectively backed Larry into a corner,
forcing him either to comply with
the induction notice, or else to refuse
induction, thereby breaking another
federal statute, resulting in an indictment from the Justice Department.
Larry does not know yet what he
will do when the frustrating battle
reaches this impasse. His choices
have been cut to two: Canada; or
the breaking of another law, and a
court fight again, this time against
the Justice Department.
When asked: "What made you get
involved in all this?”
Larry was
quick to respond with two words:
"The War."
"There is no question that the
Vietnam War is immoral, illegal, and
unjust," he said. "You picket, you
demonstrate, you go to Washington
all these things
but ultimately
you begin to come to question the
responsibilities you, as an individual,
have."
"The time has come when people
as individuals have to say no. At
this point, what is essentially an
individual, moral question, becomes
a political movement," he emphasized.
"I guess I'd rather be identified
with the Danish Resistance, than
—

—

Carmen Patrino, Buffalo lawyer

Richard Lipsitz, Buffalo ACLU lawyer
The American Civil Liberties Union
The National Lawyers' Guild, New York City

—

with the German Jews."

Page 5

�by

Michael Aldrich

include friends, family, emergency
In December, I967, Michael Aldrich,
personnel of the general phyroom
graduate teaching assistant at State Unisician
of psychiatrist variety. Even
of
Buffalo
and
of
SUNYAB
versity
head
the treatment personnel, as analogLEMAR, conducted an interview with Dr.
ous emotional states are induced in
David Israelstam, who is doing research
them by the bad tripper, begin to
psychotherapy at Berkeley. Dr. Israelstam
feel quite uncomfortable. But bepublicly admitted that he has taken LSD.
cause of the inability of even wellRecently he published the results of a very
psychiatrists to tolerate such
trained
careful experiment done on the question intense emotional
states themselves,
of LSD chromosome damage.
they often prefer to turn off the
Michael Aldrich: What's this latest source of the discomfort the bad
report of yours?
rather than work through
tripper
Dr. Israelstam: It's in Science, Octothe unique or threatening personal
ber 27th. We
Loughman, Sargent
situation.
and I, at the University of California
I believe bad trips are really good
Berkeley's Donner Lab of Biophysics
trips in disguise and contain central
did chromoand Medical Physics
symbolic statements of who we are;
some cultures of leukocytes (white and as such are critical to work
blood cells) of LSD users and found through, if significant life alteration
no difference of chromosome break-, is to proceed in a direction desired
age rates between those cultures
by the person involved, i.e. the bad
and the control cultures, thus protripper or person in an analogous nonviding the first published study disdrug "bad trip" life situation. The
agreeing with earlier findings that magnitude of the ecstasy when bad
LSD causes abnormally high rates trips are resolved is equal and opof chromosome breakage. We startposite to the agony of the bad trip
ed with 12 subjects, but only eight preceding the breakthrough.
cultures provided test material, so
It's difficult for the bad tripper
that's our base. The currentunofficial
to have faith that the above trans(unpublished) "box score" is: five formation will occur. . . namely that
studies in favor of LSD chromosome by "letting go" and accepting the
damage, and four against such a posithreatening situation, the threat will
tive correlation. Additional corraboradisappear. When bad trips start to
tive studies by other groups will be
occur, if you fight them, they get
published in the near future.
worse.
Michael Aldrich; What about bad Michael Aldrich; I know that your
trips?
medical background has been, until
Dr. Israelstam; They're actually fairly recently, doing metabolic studgood trips in disguise, if one knows
ies in schizophrenia. And now you're
how to work with and through them. doing psychology, student counsellBad trips, in a way I don't begin ing. Yet during your speech you said
to understand, radiate their panic,
something about doctors being more
terror and anxiety (as the case may
afraid of death and psychiatrists being
be) to those around them. This can
more afraid of insanity, than most
—

—

—

—

people.
idea?

Care

to

elaborate on that

Dr. Israelstam; Sure. It's a question

of the people you want working with

LSD, both with medical and sociological research. I agree with Grot, the
research doctor in Prague who says
especially psychothat anyone
therapists
who want to do LSD
research, should have taken at least
five trips himself. It's for the doctors
not the patients. And as for "guides,"
I'd rather have almost any caring,
—

—

experienced

Haight-Asbury

hippie

around as a guide for a trip, than
any randomly selected doctor or psychiatrist.
Michael Aldrich: Why?
Dr. Israelstam: Many psychosocial
psychiatrists, psycholoworkers
are in gengists, social workers
eral to me a very sick group. Frequently they straddle the uncomfortsanity and
able border between
insanity. Pathologically, however, as
a way of controlling their own incipient insaity ("insanity," at bestto
me, is a continuous transition period
between sanity and greater sanity),
they project their own problem to
the external world and expand their
efforts suppressing incipient insanity
in those with whom they come in
contact. If it weren't for the fact
that insanity
called "enlightenment" in the Orient, I'm told
is
to mean important life-learning stage,
the above would seem desireable,
what they do would seem reasonable.
R. D. Laing, in the Politics of Experience, says: "The current treatment of psychotics by psychiatrists
is like the blind leading the half—

—

—

—

blind."

As a general statement, those in
our society most threatened by various thoughts, behaviors and actions,
for their own vested psychologic interests, wind up in the control posii.e. police are most "threattions
ened" by violent behavior, physicians
are most "threatened" by death situations (often leading them to do
—

extraordinary things, including polarizing pain and suffering, in their battle to 'fight off' death), and psy-

chiatrists are the ones most threat
ened" by bizarre thoughts.

Page 6

�—Hershfeld

Page 7

�, the tale which I'm about to tell.
Before I begin, it seems only
reasonable that something should be
said about The Burgher's characteristics, or of what some have referred
to as "mine quaint and peppy way."
'Tis a bit odd, think ye not, that
The Burgher's manner of speaking
seems rather detached from this day
and age? For this, as for all things
in the universe, there is a reason:
Namely that The Burgher did exist
at another time
a time when
knights of old were bought and
sold; when bubonic plague was all
the rage; of Kings and Queens and
guillotines; of maidens fair and men
gallant. Sir Isaac Newton, Immanuel
Kant; of Holy Wars to spread the
word, no LBJ, no Ladybird; of armor, armor flashing bright, o'er exposed parts of the Knight; of witchcraft trials, mass beheadings, rape
and plunder, shotgun weddings
this, ye swines, and much, much
more was put to The Burgher's early
.

.

—

—

exposure!
In short, I am indeed a reincarnated being, schooled and taught

once the ways of another age. And
this, in brief, is the source
nay
the root!
of my plight in the 20th
—

—

Century.

Page 8

ment.

myself: "Mehinks the li
it!" and I followed her
The young maiden dji

i

however, outdistancing
Hall by an easy
Reaching the buildkj, I
the corridor and started
when an old weather-be
take me by the arm to
Where in hell do you

I

i

year

going?"
Pulling away I replied
who'd queried me: "To m
arms I flee, so release
and let me go thither,

come between me and
for you Madam
you
mouth, for fine ladies &lt;
such words!"
"Horsefeathers!" sai
struck me for the secon&lt;
day upon the noggin.
"Hark!" I replied, '
bells and must therefore I:

i

Buffalo seems totally disinclined
to take part in the festivities however, and that is relevant to this
tale, the tale of how The Burgher
went a courtin' one Valentine's Day

'Twas but two years ago on St.
Valentine's Day that I first learned
courtin' isn't at all what it once was.
I'd been sitting 'neath a hickory tree
near ol' Hayes Hall, attempting to
mediate a long dispute between red
and grey nationalist squirrels, when
(lo and behold!) a delightful damsel
did pass me by, dropping in passing
what I took to be her handkerchief
near my feet, which I immediately
sprang to, sweeping up the lost object with a deft and graceful move"But Ho, sweet damsel and fair
beauty bright," said I, pressing the
intimate object into her hand, "me-

thinks you have lost your handker-

chief."

"Veech!" she replied, throwing
the retrieved object again to the
ground and explaining unreservedly
that it was indeed not a handkerchief
but a Kleenex which she had by no
mistake thrown upon the pavement
before me.
Not yet taken aback or understand-

ing the full implications of either of
our acts, I did proceed with a formal

introduction:

"I am The Burgher, mild mannered reporter and fighter for truth,
justice and

the. ..."
"You are a nut!!" she screamed.
"So it's said!" I agreed, "but
heed mine words for methinks I
have never come upon a maiden as
fair as thee."
"You're out of your tree!" she
hollared aloud as she struck me
down with her book-laden bag.
I screamed. She ran. I said to

i

February day.

the burgher
goes a courtin'

—

•

•

•

When I awoke (for I'd
it seems) I found n-vself
Dean, the wise
gelfritz. He eyed me
spoke: "You're in a mess
lad."

\

by The Burgher
St. Valentine's Day 'tis one of
those days which occurrs but once
a year and 'tis a good day but for
a few.
All over the world the day is
celebrated in sundry subtle ways:
in the North Country noses are rubbed, so it's said; in South Africa hearts
are given and taken freely; in Stockbridge, Mass., you can get anything
you want, and in Chicago everyone
gets a big bang out of that particular

"That's bad,"

I

said,

tell, what have I done?"

"You have violated a fu

University rule," he sai
"you have violated the sa
tuary of our University wo

"God no!" I

screamed,

into a pillar of salt!" I
"You repent your transc

"I'll sign a confession.
Dean, if thou willst have tn
my soul,"
"I shall,” he

a

�ik» the lady hath spir-

r

1

wed her best I could,
naiden did escape me
stancing me to Goodan easy 90 cubits.
&gt;uild kj, I ran through
started up the stairs
eather-beaten RA did
e arm to say: “Hey!
do you think you're

I

replied to the lady

"To my true love's
release me, I beg,
thither, nothing can
me and my love! As
you have a bad
ladies do not use

&gt;

ie;

&gt;

i

—

iers!'' said she and
the second time that
&gt;ggin.
replied,

"I do hear

therefore be in love."
a

ke

(for

a

I'd passed

5

I

I said, "but pray
done?"
iolatsd a fundamental
he said gravely,
ated the sacred sanciversity women."
screamed. "Turn me
alt!” I

t

your transgression?"

;onfession, oh goodly
Mist hive mercy upon

ie

—from a painting by Frani Halt

out

nd rrvself before the
anclkeen Dean Sigyed me wisely and
in a mess of trouble,

and we left

The Burgher
it at that and as I left, he bid me
adieu.
On the evening of that fateful St.
Valentine's Day I was troubled with
visions of my one true love. My only
thought was to court her in style,
so I dusted off my mandolin and
started again toward Goodyear Dorm,
tuning the instrument and singing
aloud: "Black, black is the colour of
my true love's hair."
The moon was shining bright that

particular night and I found a soft
clot of grass upon which I sat to
serenade my true love. 'Twasn’tlong
after my arrival and the serenade had

that someone mistook my
mournful voice as a call for silk.
Indeed, they mistook my serenade for
a parity raid!
When the air cleared I was surrounded by campus police and German Shepherd dogs. And as they
dragged me away I realized that the
old days of courtin', with all their
gallantry and splendor, were forever
gone.
So if you are a fair maiden and
you should ever be walking by ol'
Hayes Hall and someone should say
to you 'Hiya sexy!' just remember—it might be The Burgher.

begun

Pag* 9

�Jefferson

kaye inside out

By James Brennan

"Folk music is a very personal
thing. It means to you what it means
to you, and is very easy to enjoy,"
says Jefferson Kaye, program director of radio station WKBW.
Mr. Kaye hosts the radio program

"Inside-Out," which can be heard
on WKBW on Sunday from 7 to 8
p.m. The show is part of the awardwinning Panorama series, which features outstanding presentations concerning recent matters of public interest from politics, science, business and the arts.
Inside-Out is a fresh topical commentary on a wide range of various
types of music. It highlights a myriad
of cultures, pages of history, musical
stylings, and well-known artists.
For the past few weeks, Mr. Kaye
has focused his attention mainly on
folk music, but in the future, he
hopes to incorporate some of the
new underground rock groups into the
program format.
In one of the programs to come,
Mr. Kaye will gather all the WKBW
dis-jockeys together in the studioand
open up the station phone lines to
questions on pop music from the
listening audiences. Another program in the planning deals with the
Canadian folk artists and songwriters.
"We kind of wing the Inside-Out,"
says Mr. Kaye, "It goes from week
to week, depending on what each
week's mail brings. We try to keep
it as recent and topical as possible."
"The impression we try to create
with the Inside-Out,” he continued,
"is that there is just someone sitting

Pag*

10

in your living room, who happens to
have a good record library and happens to be fairly hip to the subject,"
"When I'm doing the show, I try
to anticipate at that time what the
listeners' question would be regarding that particular record or song."
Jefferson Kaye was born in Baltimore, Maryland, Dec. 12, 1936. He
attended the Baltimore City College,
The University of Maryland, Armed
Forces Extension Services, and the
University of Rhode Island. Academically, his main interest was centered
around Political Science and English
Literature.

Jefferson Kaye

�He enlisted in the Air Force in
1955 and took basic training in
Geneva, N.Y. He studied at the Air
Force of Meteorology graduating with
"Observer" status. Continuing his
studies in Meteorology, he rose from
Observer to Qualified Analyst; he
also successfully completed a course
in Air Traffic Control.
His first experience in broadcasting came at a small ten-watt Air
Force radio station in North Africa.

He began his first commercial radio
employment at WRIB in Rhode Island and later moved to WBZ in Boston. At WBZ he hosted the WBZ
Hootenanny on Sunday nights. This
program was rated by critics and musical periodicals as one of the finest
folk shows in the country.
During his stay in Boston, Mr,
Kaye also was an MC at the Unicorn
Coffee House. There he became
acquainted with all the big names
in folk and pop music. He has also
appeared before 13,000 people as
one of the MC's at the Newport
Folk Festival.
Moving to Buffalo, Mr. Kaye took
on the seven to midnight radio show
on WKBW. Before becoming program
director he did a show called "New
Folks In Town" on Sunday evenings
for WBFO. This was a two hour program of folkmusic and commentary
on folk artists that was carried by
other collegiate radio stations around
the country.
He attributes his knowledge of
folk music and acquaintance witt)
top performers with the comment:
"Well that comes, like anything else,
when you adopt a speciality in any

field. Your eye automatically begins
to search out printed material about
them and vyhen you find out something about it, you begin to store up
vast amounts of trivial information in

your head. Your mind becomes like
a card file. And you just rack through
it when called upon."
"Once you get involved in a specialty, which you take upon yourself,
you begin to build up vast amounts
of knowledge rather quickly, and the
contacts with these people come as

a matter of a course of events. Being
in Bostpn for such a long time,
working in this special field, and
doing a great many performances and
acting as a master of ceremonies,
one comes into contact with those
performers and develops friendships
simply because of a common tie,"
he said.

•

•

•

Can you give a definition of folk
music?
"There's a funny thing about folk
music, you can ask someone for a
definition of folk music and some will
say it has to be over 100 years
old or it has to be about pathos or
about some maiden untying her hair
from the turret of a castle and a
minstrel boy climbing up, but from
ten people you will get ten different
opinions of what constitutes folk
music.
"But folk music is something
that is an expression of the individual
and I just don't think that you can

Page 11

�mass produce it. You couldn't take
the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and do
a folk tune like the 'Cuckoo' or
anything and have it come off with
any validity. They would do a magnificent job, there's no doubt about
it, but it wouldn't have the simple
pathos or the poignancy or the feeling
or the maturity that it would as being
rendered by a singler performer.
"That's a pretty shakey analogy,
but the drift of it is that folk music
basically, and its popularity and whole
form, is based upon an individual's
feelings. You can hear a folk tune
and sit back and it may be a complete departure from your own emotional feeling.
"You may see something entirely
removed from what the performer
tried to portray, and I think this is
part and parcel of folk music. And
that's really not a valid definition of
folk music because it's just too broad
in scope and too broad in meaning
and intent."
•

"The texture, taste, feel, and the
aura of American pop music has
changed as a result of the folk boom,
and directly to the result of the folk
boom, laid directly to that doorstep,
lyrical content has changed.
"People have discovered that you
no longer have to sing about a moon
in June in order to make yourself
understood or in order to create a

beautiful ballad. You can go on and
virtually sing about any topic and it
comes off.”

people like the Doors or the Jefferson
Airplane—it's the folk music of our times and
just cannot say that it's going down the

you

drain

or

that it's had it."

•

What is the role of folk music
is it the conscience of
today
society or is it's purpose to entertain?
"No, I can't regard folk music
anymore as a conscience of society,
I frankly don't think I ever have. I
think folk music is playing a diminishing role in the American entertainment industry and in the American
social conscience.
"If it ever has portrayed a role
in that area, I feel what folk music
is doing or has already done, is it
has contributed to the American popular music scene vast amounts of
musical knowledge and musical color.
-

Pago 12

Is folk music's popularity
out?

dying

"You can not say that folk music
is dead or is dying or is going into
retirement or obscurity or is taking
a reduction in the limelight because
basically people like Judy Collins,
Tim Hardin, Tom Rush, the Doors,
and the Jefferson Airplane are very
very close to being the folk music
of our times.
"That's why on my show, I can't
afford to ignore people like the Doors
or the Jefferson Airplane because
what they're doing is it. They are

�expressing themselves in a very similar fashion to the way musicians
did perhaps a 100 years ago, or
even 50 or 30 years ago. It's the
folk music of our times and you just
cannot say that it's going down the
drain or that it's had it. The forms
have changed, the means of communication has changed, and the
method of instrumentation has changed, but the basic quality is stillthere."
•

a

Do you remember why Bob Dylan
was booed off stage at Newport?
"It wasn't so much Dylan's
change of music, it was a total
disregard for the people that had
come to see him. Complete and utter
disregard. People had paid a good
deal of money to get in there and
see Bob Dylan and he just turned
his back on them—literally and figuratively. He turned his back on
those people and they didn't appreciate it; those were the people that
had primarily made him what he was
at that time point. Those were the
ones who were buying his records
and allowing him the artistic freedom
to do whatever he pleased, or whatever he chose to do on records or
in personal appearances.”
"You just don't turn your back
on an audience like that. Any seasoned performer can tell you that
unless you are a supreme ego-maniac, you better be one of the finest
talents going because otherwise people won't respect you for it and as
is the case with most people oriented
toward folk music they tend to be
a little uppity toward the establishment and the conformity anyhow.
"The only way they had of protesting at that precise moment was
vocally. And so they did. And he
should have expected it."

Paga 13

�Do you feel today's folk artists
offer a solution or just criticism?
"It's very easy to sit back and to
criticize, but to criticize and then
offer a critique on a subject and offer up a solution is another story
entirely.

"Criticism we have in abundance;
it flows around you all day long,
but useful suggestions as to how to
arrive at a solution to any one given
problem, we have very few of.
"The solutions of what we are
looking for I think is what many of
the young artists today are doing.
They are offering solutions, some
valid, some not; some are artistic
solutions and some are not what you
would call a commercial success."
•

•

What comments do you have about
changes in music styles in groups
like the Beatles?
"Only because they are maturing,
that's all. They were maturing up to
a point; now they have reached the
point where the maturing process
has slowed. It's still happening, but
now they.are. ip a position where
they are corfifOrtable enough and they
have allegiance enough from their
followers that they can afford to experiment and I think this is what they
are doing.
"The amazing thing about the
Beatles is that they took a concept
they had about music and they started
with it and then they began to change.
It was a vast difference and now

they have established a format; now

the changes are less and less be-

What do you mean by commercial
success?
"By that I mean that artistically
they may offer a solution from an
idealistic viewpoint, but so far as its
practical values are concerned they
may not have a great deal of merit
and there is an expression in our
business that goes 'It's better to be
a commercial Success than an artistic
failure,' I think many of our artists
are artistic failures to a certain exvery few commercial suctent
cesses come out of the music industry, so far as valid ideas and
valid solutions toward mankind's
—

problems."

•

•

•

What did you think of Peter, Paul,
and Mary's "I Dig Rock and Roll
Music?"

"That was a put-away on rock and
roll music for the most part. It was
a very subtle put down line; it's
the kind of reaction you would extend
to a heckler in the audience, something extremely subtle that everyone
else would grasp except the idiot
that's making all the noise.
"Peter, Paul, and Mary are perfectionists, each in their own way
and the way they approach their product. They really are a very fine group.
There is a group that I have a great
deal of respect and admiration for.”

Page 14

cause they have basically adopted
a format and the changes that they
are putting in now are small and
subtle, and although meaningful, they
are really not that obvious."
•

•

•

Why would you say the Beatles
are turning to the East?
"I think that they have achieved
such a following and have amassed,
from all reports, great personal fortunes that now they can afford to
experiment. What do they care if
records sell or not. Why should they

concern themselves about whether a
record sells if they're getting their
kicks doing what they are doing. But
even in getting their kicks and doing
what they are doing now it's a valid
material. You cannot listen to a
Beatle's tune anymore and accept it
at face value immediately. You've got
to sit there and listen to the thing
because there is so much in it.
And you can accept it for face value,
but it won't increase your enjoyment
or pleasure of it anymore. Because
the more you dig into it, it's like
anything else
the more you dig
into any given subject the more you
find out about it and the more you
enjoy it."
—

�</text>
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                  <text>Spectrum, the University at Buffalo's Student Newspaper</text>
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                  <text>&lt;div&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>The Spectrum
State University of New York at Buffalo

N

'Crab-in' scheduled for
discontent Psych majors

&lt;5&gt;

Discontented

Psychology

stu-

dents will have a chance to air

most of these classes have 30 or
40 students. Most psychology
iere

15^1

Vol. 18, No. 32

You can still di

968

UC eases policy on T penalty
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

Under new University College policy, students may drop
a course any time during a semester prior to the final three
weeks.
Under the previous policy a student risked an “F” grade
for dropping a course after the final drop date. The new
policy, however, states that “students .resigning from a
course, after the final drop period, and prior to the last
three weeks of the term, will not have their academic records influenced by such resignations.”

In addition,” a designation of
WP or WF will appear on the
student’s transcript, indicating
that withdrawal took place and
the student’s status in the course
at the time of resignation.”
These designations will not be
computed in the semester average nor appear on a student’s
permanent record.

However, the F penalty will
be issued to those students who
resign from courses (for reasons
other than health) during the
three weeks before the end of
the semester.
Dr. Claude E. Welch, dean of
University College, indicated that
the institution of the WP or WF
designations will allow some idea
of how the student was doing
prior to resignation from the
course.

Thus, at the end of the semes-

ter the instructor will not just
be marking those students who
have remained in the course, but

he will also take into consideration those who resigned and
thereby affected the overall class
curve.

In this sense, the new policy
“is designed to protect those students who stay in the course,”
The dean added that the new
policy will allow students who
are doing poorly or “who find
that they have made a bad choice,
to get out” without being penalized.

Paarfaii
Dr. Welch is also concerned
with the issue of pass-fail grades.
He has been working closely with
the president’s committee on
ranking and grading, which he

The trio has drawn up a list
general complaints that center
on conditions they feel are “rigid,
stale and antiquated.” Said Mr.
Slatkin, a senior in Psychology:
“There have been changes in the
last few years but nothing in the
direction of reform.”
of

that course

by Robert Sacks

The meeting is being called by
three students: Stewart Edelstein,
Neal Slatkin and Stewart Imber.

said, will soon conclude its deliberations and forward its recommendations to the Faculty Senate. The University College Curriculum Committee is also examining pass-fail grading as well as
other types such as written evaluations.
As Dr. Welch sees it, the problem with pass-fail grades is that
there is nothing to be gained by
a student. A penalty is risked,
since a P does not provide any
quality points while an F is
figured into a student’s semester

Departmental reform
The group has a number of tarin mind. Psychology is the
only department which requires
gets

majors
exams.

to

take

comprehensive

"To most students this is an
unavoidable pain in the neck,”
said Mr. Slatkin. “They have little relevance to what students
have done while majoring in psy-

-

-

chology.”

Another area of attention is
the curriculum offered in the
He mentioned that it might be undergraduate department. Mr.
more valuable to examine the Slatkin said: "In the Psychology
possibilities of a “satisfactory—- 101 course the teacher just repeats the book. Furthermore
unsatisfactory” grading system.
many teachers are not at all acUnder such a system “an S quainted with the material in
grade would give you the hours that course. We’ve also got to
credit and if you don’t pass the make the textbook more relevant
course you don’t get any credit to every-day problems in our sotowards a degree.” The purpose ciety. There have to be more inbehind this proposal is to “en- formal discussion groups, not
courage students to sample other just large lecture classes.” Mr.
areas” and “to recognize that Slatkin proposed that good graduate students teach the pregrading is at times not as precise in some fields as in others.” requisite courses like 101-102,
In examining the grading sys- freeing professors to upper-level
tems of other universities, Dr. courses.
Welch stated that he has encounAccording to Mr. Slatkin, this
tered many extremes and that it
is necessary to find some middle might cure the over-crowding
problem that exists in most 300road between them.
Please turn to Page 3 400 level courses. “As of now,
average.

is

very

ion.”

Drop pre-requisite*
Another proposal would allow
students to receive credit for independent study. “The curriculum
should allow students to engage
in creative problem solving, such
as applying what they have
learned from social psychology to
social conditions in the Buffalo
community.”

Other complaints include a desire to see pre-requisites for
upper level courses dropped. Students from other departments are
often discouraged from taking an
upper-level psychology course.
Mr. Slatkin also sees a need for
new courses.

The three organizers claim to
have derived their proposal from
the present situation here. They
denied they are trying to mold
the Psychology Department into
the style of one at another university.
Discussing the prospects
of
success, Mr. Slatkin admitted that
"some students may be terribly
hesitant about rocking the boat.
A certain inertia effect builds up
in the junior and senior year and
it’s hard for students to change
velocity.”

The organizers of the “CrabIn” have invited Martin Guggenheim, a participating member of
the Sociology Curriculum Planning Committee, to discuss student problems. They have also
urged faculty members from the
Psychology Department to attend.
The “Crab-In” will be held at 3
p.m. tomorrow in room 231, Norton Hall.

Have any complaints or questions?
Come to the Senate-sponsored forum
Students unhappy with the Student Senate and University policies, curious about liquor on campus or confused about pass-fail
will have a chance to voice their
opinions at the Student Senate
“Bitch In.”
Tomorrow at 3;30 p.m. in the
Millard Fillmore Room, students
will have the “chance to talk, ask

questions, and air grievances” according to Ellen Price, Student
Senator, There will be a panel
of approximately ten people, including representatives from the
Student Senate, UUAB, and the

SDS calls

Student Judiciary, Miss Price indicated that there will be enough
representatives “so they can talk
about problems with knowledge
and understanding.”
The “Bitch In” is the result of
a number of conditions and
events such as student apathy and
complaints about the recent trial
of some senators.
Miss Price said that she would
like to start the session discussing
the Student Senate trial and the
desire of some students to impeach the judges. She explained
that it would provide the oppor-

tunity for the judges “to explain, not defend, their position.”
After discussing this problem,
those attending the session will
be able to initiate discussion on
any topic they want including:
liquor on campus, the parking
situation, new registration process and reorganization of the Senate.
“I am hoping this forum can
be the beginning of a few more
forums," Miss Price said. She
also hopes it will “enlighten many
students and promote student

terest.”

in

for anti-LBJ protest
Mike Nevin, spokesman for the local chapter of Students for a Democratic Society, called for an "anti-Johnson, anti-war" demonstration at 7 p.m.
tomorrow outside the Statler Hilton Hotel, Delaware Ave. The New York
State Democratic Committee will meet in the hotel tomorrow.
Preliminary press releases indicate that the committee, headed by
John J. Burns, a friend of Senator Robert Kennedy, will announce its support

of the Johnson-Humphrey ticket for the 1968 presidential election.
The University Coalition for McCarthy has endorsed the demonstration
and urges attendance. A petition is being circulated to protest the endorsement of the Johnson-Humphrey ticket and urging the committee to reconsider
in the light of "the intolerable Vietnamese war and the domestic crises wo
face."

-Yo«m

You can tell the world too,

ufill

C- m
Will
•JUIIIC
,

I

*

t^e s engfe sponsored 'bitchin' tomorrow at 3:30 in Norton
Hall's Fillmore Room.
gt

«

always Ditch

Mr. Nevin stressed that the demonstration would be "a non-violent,
peaceful protest," aimed at including all anti-Johnson sympathizers from
"dissenting Democrats to resistance people."
Commenting on the committee's expected announcement of support
for Johnson-Humphrey, Mr. Nevin said: "They have chosen Valentine's Day
to reveal their sordid love affair with a war-mongering, out-dated, 'democratic'
mis-ltadership. We want to show these fools where it's at."
SDS and Student Mob have announced their support of the demonstration. Mr. Nevin added: "It will be a bring-your-own-sign thing."

�Pag* Two

Need

a

Th

•

lift?

Commuter Council plans ride board
by Donna Van Schoonhoven
Sptirum

In

an

staff

Reports

attempt to “integrate

cil is setting up a ride board out
side its office in room 215, Norton Hall. Those needing or offer-

comi

Elaine Balot, chairman, the Commuter Council was organized last
semester. “We organized because
we found that there are basic
differences between the attitudes
of commuter students and resident students towards the University community.”

With this idea in mind, the
Council has attempted to make
commuters more aware and wellinformed of campus events and
activities.
A major problem of commuter
students is transportation to and
from University events. Many
times these students must leave
immediately after classes and they
have no way back for evening activities. Also, many have no way
of getting here on days they don’t
have classes.

Ride board
To solve this problem, the Coun.

lem

on

The city will be divided into
sections and according to the response, students should be able
to receive rides during both the
day and evening. All NFT bus
schedules are available in the
office.
Another problem is involving
commuters more in campus activities. The Council is hoping to give
the commuter an identity so that
he can find a place in the University and meet both resident and
other commuter students.
In an attempt to achieve this,
the Council is opening a lounge
in its office. Commuters having
specific problems may stop at the
office where members will try to
solve them or refer the person to
someone who can. Of special interest are problems relating to
on and off campus housing.

Tuesday, February 13, 1968

Spictrum

Service for commuters
This service organization is also
probing the problem of traffic

to do something to better campus
parking conditions and clarify
traffic regulations. The establishment of a special campus number
to call if a student has trouble
with his car is another goal.
This semester a newsletter will
be sent to each commuter once a
month. In addition, a program,
called Reference Groups, is currently being started so that students can discuss campus news
and problems.
The Council is also working on
a plan to enable commuters to
eat inexpensively in the dormitories, Last semester they arranged for commuters to eat there
for $1. It also hopes to hold another campus event such as the
Hollies Concert it sponsored on

campus releases...
Spring Weekend Committee (May 3 to 5) needs students to plan
publicity for the dance reception, Mr. Faculty Contest, the Queen’s

formal dance.

Applications for positions on them may be obtained in the front
The

New bsrablisnmenr

win

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a

iree

conceit rl'UlIl

nil"

lu

8:45 p.m. Thursday in the Dorothy Haas Lounge.
Dr. Russ Markello of Meyer Memorial Hospital will speak on
“The Problem of Pain” to explain “How can a loving God allow people to suffer?” at 7:30 p.m. Friday in room 334, Norton Hall.
The lecture is being presented by the Inter-Varsity Christian
Fellowship.
The Dept, of Music will present Dr. Barry Brook, City University
of New York, speaking on “Classicism and Romanticism: The Sturm
Und Drang.” 4 p.m. Thursday in Baird Hall.
Professor Chadwick F. Alger, co-ordinator of the International
Relations program at Northwestern University, will speak on “Politics in International Organizations” at 3:30 p.m. Thursday in room

233, Norton Hall.
The Center for International Security and Conflict Studies is
sponsoring him.
The Center for Comparative European Studies will present Professor Kenneth Janda, Dept, of Political Science, Northwestern University, speaking on the “Comparative Study of Political Parties” at
3 p.m, Friday in room 25, 4242 Ridge Lea Road.
'The Sound of One Hand Clapping—Zen Buddhism" will be the
topic of Professor John A. Bailey, University of Michigan at 4 p.m.
Dec. 9.
Office hours are from 11 a.m. Friday in room 231, Norton Hall. The Dept, of Philosophy is sponto 4 p.m. Mon., Wed., and Fri. and soring his lecture.
from 2 to 4 p.m. Tues. and Thurs.
"The Medical Indications for Hypnosis" will be the topic of Dr.
Harold Rosen, associate professor of psychiatry at Johns Hopkins
University, at 8 p.m. tomorrow in room 246, Norton Hall.
"The Physician, Abortion and the Law" will be his topic at 8:30
p.m. Thursday in room 140 Capen Hall in the current series of
Psychiatric Guest Lectures.
The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics will present Dr. Melvin H. Rudov, head of Cornell Aeronautics Laboratories,
Life Sciences section, speaking on “The Design of the Man-Made Machine Interface” at 4 p.m. tomorrow in room 104, Parker Engineering.
Angel Flight will hold a lea for interested girls at 8:30 p.m. tothis semester, including revision morrow in room 234 Norton Hall.
of the Tower House Constitution.
To become a member a girl must be a full time student at this
University or other accredited universities or colleges in the Buffalo
The constitution must be uparea.
dated to meet new demands, he
She must also pass a short period of pledging in which she
said. Since in the past freshmen learns the fundamentals of the Air Force and the Arnold Air Society.
did not reside in Tower, there
are no provisions for freshmen
on the House Council, Also, there
are no provisions made for a student’s eligibility to serve on the
House Council and the IRC simul.

Tower House Council to inaugurate
penal code, write new constitution
The policy of regular open
houses, a recent innovation of
Tower House Council, “has proved
to be quite successful.” Douglas
Paradis, Tower House Council
vice president, said that the system has not been abused by those
participating.

hours

is

“appropriate

dress.”

Hours for open house are: Friday
from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m., Saturday
from 1 to 6 p.m., and 9 p.m. to
2 a.m., and Sunday from 2 to 8
p.m.

Because of the need for priinhabitants, the
hours will not be extended in
the near future.
vacy of Tower

The Council, Tower Hall’s
government independent of the
IRC, consists of two representatives elected from each floor.
One of the most important innovations of the Council was the
establishment of open houses in
September.

This allows women into the
living quarters of Tower Hall. In
previous years, there were special open houses arranged periodically with the restriction of an
“open-door" policy wherever women would be.
Now, open houses have been
established on a permanent ba-

sis, and the “open-door” policy
has been abolished. The only requirement during open house

New penal code
Another accomplishment of the

Tower House Council is the writing of a new penal code for those
living in the dormitory only. In
the past, there was no code to

define behavioral offenses. The

new code is a broad one to set
guidelines, but not to govern pun-

ishment.
The code covers such areas as
disorderly conduct, drinking alcoholic beverages in the dormitory,
and rules concerning open houses.
Any misdemeanors will be referred to the IRC courts.
Mr. Paradis outlined plans for

Documentary photography will
be displayed in Norton Lounge

taneously.

The new constitution is designed to alleviate these and other ambiguities. The Council hopes
to present the new constitution
to the Tower residents in the
near future.
The Council is also asking for
increased floor funds for dorm
events. An increase from $20 to
$30 per floor will be requested to
provide for more extensive activities by the dormitory.

An exhibtion of 60 photographs
by three leading representatives
of a new generation of documentary photographers—Diane Arbus,
Lee Friedlander and Garry Winograd
will be on view in the
Center Lounge of Norton Hall
until Feb, 23. A circulating exhi—

bition of The Museum of Modern
Art, New York, it was selected
from an exhibtion presented at
the Museum in the spring of

-

PIZZA

Delivered FREE

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DiROSE
$1.05
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TR 3-1330

form.
“In the past

decade, a new generation of photographers has directed the documentary approach
toward more personal ends. Their
aim has not been to reform life,
but to know it.” This is how Mr,
John Szarkowski, director of the
Department of Photography at
the Museum, describes the exhibitors.
Garry Winograd’s subjects

1967.

Their approach differs radically
from that of documentary photogThe planned social activities for raphers
of the thirties and forties,
the semester include five mixers
when the term was relatively
and a toboggan party.
new. Then, photographers used
HOT BIG 13"
8 Slice

their art as a tool for social re-

USED
TEXTS

range from a group of

bathers at

Easthampton, Long Island, to a

group of tourists at Forest Lawn
Angeles and
refer to much of contemporary
life.
Lee Friedlander, whose work
has appeared in many magazines,
frequently uses reflections in
plate-glass windows or televised
images as subjects. Diane Arbus
specializes in portrait photoCemetery in Los

graphs.

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I iiiiniiii

1931 Main, Mil-Pine PtS*a, N. Falls, N.Y.
RIVERSIDE MEN'S SHOP

Tomwandi Street, corner Ontario
Buffalo, New York 14207

�Tuesday, February

13, 1968

P*9* Thraa

The Spectrum

Dr. Willhelm calls racism a basic
characteristic of White America
by Stavan Pray
Spectrum slaw

Dr. Sidney

H.

.

separation let whites get rid of

K.porter

Willhelm of the

,

,

the Indians, so it will allow the

dateline news, Feb. 13

even more crowded areas.
Economic

MIDEAST

Ic —r

b&gt;

racism

an

—

Gunfire blazed between Israeli and Jordanian troops

minulnu Mnnrinv

in

thf

third

dav

MrnifM

nf

violrnrp

alnng

'

nesaay

that tneNegro

in

tne

ghettos of America is ripe for

guerrilla warfare because he can
no longer endure the “conscious
realization of his uselessness.”

“America has been a racist sofrom its beginning,” he said,
with racism one of the fundamental characteristics of America.
ciety

Today the Negro is a misfit,
subjugated and “made useless by
the new technology,” Dr. Willhelm contends.

The question facing white
America today is what to do with
the Negro. Since whites have relegated the Negro to a position of
uselessness, Dr. Willhelm asserts
that the “Negro must have a country and nation of his own.”
Dr. Willhelm drew sharp parallells between the Indian situation
of the past and the present Negro
situation. He said that just as

,the troubled River Jordan, Amman radio said,
V"
,
,
.
. .
the ghetto where he is exploited
A broadcast charged that Israeli machine guns opened up on a
hv hioh rents hieh food oriees
Jordanian observation post near the A1 Mahameh Bridge. The
and high interest rates
Jordanian troops returned the fire, it said. No casualties were
Willhelm
described
what
he
Dr.
repor te( j
A
S
I.ate Saturday and most of the daylight hours Sunday artillery
ho ritanf wnnHHe
and
machine gun fuels raged along 60 miles of the river. Jordan and
and
Indians,
Negroes
trated on
the clash
can be- lsrael blamed onc another for
.

"Economic racism"

:

,

.

,

.

The whites have now eliminated all possibilities except separation, Dr. Willhelm argues. The
whites want to banish the Negro
the ghetto
to his reservation
—to be ignored and isolated. Dr,
Willhelm said that segregation of
the two races is more rigid and
widespread today than ever before in history. Whites want
“equal but separate” facilities.
—

,

.,

,

,

by Ian McMillan
The

Spectrum

Peter J. Crotty, former Buffalo

Common Council president and

Erie

County Democratic Party
chairman, stressed the importance
of politics at the “grass roots”

level in an address

Thursday

night to the Politics Club.
“There are 1600 district com-

mitteemen elected in Buffalo, but

Buffalo’s Model Cities Program,
will speak at 8 p.m. this evening
in the Dorothy Has Lounge, Norton Hall. His topic will be “Crisis
in Our Cities.”
Mr. Nash was appointed local
head of the Federal program by
Mayor Frank A. Sedita. Nationally, the program encompasess 63
cities.
A native of Buffalo, Mr. Nash
has instructed at McMaster, University of Canada, State College
at Buffalo and Canisius College.
He has also taught sociology at
this University.
Mr. Nash addresses various
groups in Buffalo to get ideas
and support for his program, “We
need imagination in places where
it should be.”
The son of a minister, some of
his varied talents lie in the fields
of music and medical photography.

—

The Negro is submerged in the
ghetto by invisible boundaries
similar to the hpsical boundaries
on an Indian reservation, Dr.
Willhelm said.

In his reservation the Negro is
restrained by “police brutality
under the cloak of law and
order.” At the same time, however, white economic interests
will push Negroes out for urban
renewal and force Negroes into

—

sources report.

ghetto.

of 3 to 4%. “This is a social,
economic—a n d even religious—cancer.”
The main barrier to progress
political parties.”
in these areas, according to Mr.
The two greatest problems facCrotty, is in the middle class
ing local politics are radical prejneighborhood. “These problems
udice and poverty, said Mr. Crotty. Negroes in Buffalo are living
of the central city are just not
considered important by suburban
in “hovels” and their unemployment rate has been 15 to 25%, residents, many of whom have
‘divorced’ themselves from these
compared to the national average
problems by ‘isolating’ themselves
in the suburbs.”
Erie County residents must
realize that the local “community” is now “coterminous" with
the county. “Buffalo is no longer
it is an
a viable political unit
anachronism.” Although this
“oneness” is not reflected in
He has been involved in many
either attitudes or politics, “the
county is moving in that direcresearch and training projects astion,” observed Mr. Crotty, citing
sociated with urban re-education.
the establishment of a county
Mr. Nash’s latest post was as a
But to
consultant for the Center for executive and legislature.
the many
Urban Education in New York expect unification of
local governments within 20 years
City.
is “optimistic,” he admitted.
Urging his audience to become
Mr. Nash recently wrote an arinvolved in local polites, Mr.
ticle for Perspective, a publicaCrotty declared that the existence
tion of Cornell Aeronautical Labof “such a fine University" here
oratory, Inc. In this article, he
in Western New York can have a
stresses some of his most imgood.”
portant ideas. He feels that rather “tremendous effect for the
A delegate to the Slate Constithan seeking the cause of a riot,
tutional Convention, Mr. Crotty
it is better to help poverty-strickconcluded that local politics usuen people to a better life. He
ally lags two generations behind
also feels that we can build the
social change. “We need to do
which
we
desire.
society
of
type
much more to keep pace with
matching
The program, sponsored by the metropolitan growth,
as
power with responsioility
Community Aid Corps, is open to
long as the people have a voice.”
the University community.
few citizens realize how important
these men are—they are the only
link between the voters and their

...

Official spokesmen said talks centered around the seizure of
the U.S, intelligence ship Pueblo and recent North Korean infiltration
into South Korea, The U.S. handling of the Korean crisis has sparked
angry criticism from a number of South Korean leaders.
The government sources said Park presented Vance with a list
of demands that included a plan for stringent U.S.-Korean countermeasures against future provocations by Communist North Korea.
MOSCOW
UN. Secretary General Thant discussed Vietnam
with Premier Alexei N. Kosygin in the Kremlin Monday and the
official Soviet press called on the United States to start peace talks
on Hanoi’s terms.
—

Thant was expected to meet North Vietnam’s Moscow representative, Dang Quang Minh, before leaving. He was reported to have the
Middle East as well as Vietnam on his talk agenda with Kosygin,
diplomatic sources said.
In the streets, the Communist parly newspaper Pravda said in
a front page editorial, “There are no obstacles whatever for the United
States to negotiate if it seriously wants talks.”

UC eases policy
Dr. Welch noted that people
are constantly being graded on
one thing or another throughout
their lives and that “those of us
involved in education feel that
some form of assessment is necessary and that a student wants
an evaluation of how he is doing.”
He feels that a student’s creativity and originality should be
rewarded and “we use grades as
a

-

Spring Vacation
in

MEXICO CITY
Art and

SUN., FEB. 18
One Show

Buffalo, N. Y.

8 PM.

Tickets: $3.50, $3.00, $2.50, $2.00

APRIL 6

Round Trip, Buffalo to Mexico City
by American Airlines Astrojet
Inexpensive Hotel Accommodations Arranged
VISIT

Native Markets at Taxco Oaxaca
e Ruins at Mitla - Teotihuacan - Cuicuilco
TOUR
e The Palace of Fine Arts
e Ballet Fplklorico
University of Mexico
e Olympic Stadium
■

•

—

•

Plentyof Free Time

—

Tour Not Required

Sponsored by

ARTS 4 CRAFTS COMMITTEE
UNION BOARD

SATURDAY
EASTMAN THEATRE

-

—

must be heard to be believed."

FEBRUARY 17, 8:15 P.M.

Archaeology Tour

MARCH 29

In Concert

KLEINHANS
MUSIC HALL

.

Student publications should be
used to intensify contact between
the administration and the student body, Dr. Welch said. This,
he foresees, could prove to be a
valuable link of communication
between the two as well as a
source of useful criticism.

shorthand that is sometimes

—

Theatr'
A Jazz
PRESENTS

.

.

good, sometimes rather poor.” A
problem he sees is that students,
who throughout their academic
lives have been intensly motivated by grades as a means to an
end, miss a great deal that the
educational system has to offer.

■£- Continued from Page 1

Reward creativity

*
'..,

..

—

$217

Carlos
Montoya

,

Vietnamese. The Negro
come a “ward of white generosiSAIGON
About 500 US. Marines under heavy fire surged
ty” or physically resist white in- across Hue’s Perfume River in a surprise assault Monday, spearheadternment. Americans have used ing an allied drive to retake the ancient imperial “forbidden city”
welfare and social services like from Communist hands.
to
the Romms used circuses
Using a pickup flotilla of patrols, a mine sweeper and one
keep the poor happy, Dr, Will landing craft, the Leathernecks smashed through machine gun and
helm maintained
rifle fire, hit the north bank of the river and charged the guerrillas
who have nestled for 12 days behind the 12-foot-thick walls of Hue’s
Despair characteristic
historic Citadel.
He described the fatalism that
Hundreds of Vietnamese civilians, surprise by the dramatic dash
besets the Negro mases today. across the wide river, watched the U.S, Navy steer the Marines to
People made useless, have noththe far shore.
ing to lose by rioting, he asSEOUL
South Korean leaders meeting with Presidential envoy
serted, and no constructive actions are possible. Despair, not Cyrus R. Vance Monday demanded that the United States give them
hope, is characteristic of the more control of United Nations forces in their country, government

Internationally Famed Artists
THE INCREDIBLE

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'Crisis in Our Cities'
Mr. Jesse Nash Jr., director of

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Grotty stresses grass roots' politics
Special to

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And His Quintet

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BUFFALO;
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AMERICAN AIRLINES

�Tuesday, February 13, 1968

Tha Spactrum

Pig* Four

Time to reorganize
Everybody bitches about student government, but nobody does anything about it. Students will have an opportunity to air their complaints Wednesday at a University-wide
“Bitch-In” sponsored by the Student Senate.
The “Bitch-In” could be viewed as a feature of a new
Senate reorganization plan which would give students-at-

ft

issues confronting the University. Included in the plan is a
provision for a monthly meeting of the student polity, or
all members of the student community.
The plan is, in essence, a copy of the Faculty Senate.
The major work would be done through committees, and an
elected -“council of commissioners”—each responsible for a
specific area—would serve as a programming group.
While this new reorganization plan is, at present, in
only rough draft form, there are indications that a new
ITS the tofts
y%;
constitution can be drafted and presented to students before
i*,
another round of Senate elections. If another round of elections are held before reorganization, students will be stuck
A
another year with another group of 24 senators and the
same antiquated system. For once another group is elected,
they will not be willing to relinquish their power to the t (5*e^-ntRNMC!ter-ar/
student community.
'Suppose we could nominate Vince Lombardi and send Nixon to Green Bay?'
Most of us realize that student government needs much
more than the “new blood” that can sometimes be injected
’
at the polls. Representative government at this University
burgher
community often stifles rather than encourages student partiby Schwab
cipation; the formation of special interest groups outside the
“legitimate” power structure, is testimony enough.
The Spectrum will, in the coming weeks, attempt to
It was hard to believe: seeing Ben after all
keep students fully informed of developments in this greatly these years. Ben left school before the rest of us.
Note
encouragement
needed restructuring.
All his life he’d vowed to become a Marine. And a
years
ago.
was
Marine
he
became.
That
three
Tomorrow you will have your chance to bitch about
To the Editor;
How many times did we tell him he was crazy?
student government, but the coming weeks are the critical
and
upped
he
was
he
left
school
Who says the University has become impersonal?
17
The day
period in which you can do something about it.
I just checked into Organic Chem. Lab, desk numand no one could stop him.
'

’

.JK
L,

TUT/PONT/
‘GORtfiT/^

%

%

_

i^rrl

Readers
writings

the

of

Alternative: Richard Nixon?
Recently joining the ranks of Presidential hopefuls,
Richard Nixon has begun his campaign in New Hampshire,
where the first primary will be held. Striving for a new
image, he has done little more than make superficial changes.
Nixon will inevitably attempt to paint himself as the
GOP cure-all candidate. He will try to portray the liberal,
forward-looking candidate, while simultaneously attempting
to maintain the support of the more conservative, more
traditional wing of the Republican Party. This will probably be enough, however, for Nixon to wrest the nomination from the ineffectual Gov. Romney.
Like all serious presidential candidates to date, with
the possible exception of Sen. McCarthy, Richard Nixon
avoids and even dodges the real issues. He continues to
generalize when this nation is in dire need of specific proposals.
If Gov. Rockefeller is sincere in his inslstance that he
will not be a candidate, Nixon will probably receive the
nomination, and we can look forward to a Presidential campaign that reverses the familiar Goldwater motto of four
years ago: “A choice, not an echo.”
It is precisely for this reason that George Wallace has
tossed his hat in the ring as a third party candidate. If he
is terribly misguided in all his other opinions, we must
agree with Wallace when he say that neither the Democrats
nor the Republicans can offer any true opitions.
Wallace certainly offers options, but they are totally
unacceptable to any thinking person. Fortunately, his
chances for success on a third party ticket are virtually nil.
The efforts of others within the Democratic Party—notably Eugene McCarthy—will fall by the wayside. No
serious political thinker could even speculate about any
other Democratic candidate than Lyndon Johnson. And Lyndon Johnson will win in November.
Those who are totally discouraged by this prospect can
look only to some Congressional and local elections for any
hope of a change in the present power structure. Continued
disillusionment with Johnsonian foreign and domestic policies can best be expressed by supporting anti-Johnson, antiwar (if those are not synonimous) candidates. Congressional
and local candidates are fully aware that this will not be
another “coattail” election.
It is indeed unfortunate that the American people will
not have an opportunity to vote for a Presidential candidate
that sounds alternatives. This, of course, is a reflection of
the disability of the national political parties to differ substantially in their outlooks.
But the national parties will not change until change
has permeated the lower echelons of both parties. That work
must be started now so that in 1972, if we endure that long,
there will be some real choices.
It is indeed unfortunate that the Democratic Party will
renominate Lyndon Johnson. But it is perhaps even more
unfortunate that the Republican Party does not realize that
its task as an opposition party is to provide opposition. The
American voter should at least have a choice, not an echo,
not Richard Nixon.

Last time I saw Ben was about a year ago. He’d
served his first hitch in Vietnam. I told him it was
an immoral war and he said yeah, it was, but you
forget that when someone is shooting at you or
your buddy drops beside you in a rice paddy. And
he said the war could be over in six months if
someone would get rid of all the crooked politicians who make a living off the war, who make a
profit on anything they can get their damned hands
on.

I believed Ben because I knew he was a better
observer than most. Ben was always the scout
when we were on some camping expedition, always the first to find the trail or evidence of
some damned rodent doing its dirty work. He was
a keen observer of nature and a keen observer of
people. I wasn’t worried about Ben in Vietnam.
Nobody would ever stick him in the back.

I looked forward to seeing him again after his
second Vietnam tour. (He’d told me he had to go
back). I knew he’d have many a story to tell and
Ben had a knack for story telling. And I knew any
listener would get a much clearer picture of the
war and what we’re doing there. So I’d planned
to sit down with Ben over many a short draught
and have a long discussion.
Never got the chance.

I stood in the funeral parlor and stared at
Ben, it’s not right that you’re here, I said
to myself, how are we going to learn the truth
now? C’mon Ben let’s go down to the hotel and
down a few rounds like we used to! Nothing. And
I had to leave because my stomach wretched from
the stench of 600 withering flowers and small talk.
(What do you say?)
Ben.

He wasn’t killed in the paddies. It was on a
Pennsylvania highway. And maybe (just maybe)
there’s a moral in all this.
But I can’t seem to hit upon it unless I use a
perverted kind of reasoning. Like let’s end this
war with a technological revolution!! A Ho Chi
Minh Freeway built with interchanges and cloverleafs all over S. E. Asia! Then send in the Detroit
Monsters of the 400 hp ilk! By the shipload!
Right? Get it? We could have our best years of
knocking off the gooks, it would cost less and our
hands would be clean. Don’t give them seat belts!
Make pavement slippery when wet! Proclaim three
day weekend holidays! And watch, my friends, the
Cong casualties climb to 700 for a good weekend,
to over 50,000 a year! It’s my perverted idea but
you can go ahead and sell it to the hombres in
D.C. I’ll even let you call it The Burgher Plan!

And try this one: build some factories (steel
plants, Con Edisons, iron works, refineries): give
them a taste of the air we breathe! (They don’t have
the resistance we have).

Yes, for long-range warfare we’ll pollute their
Give them our TV programs: pollute their
minds. Give them chemicals: pollute their lakes
and rivers! Call a garbage strike! Best of all: give
them LBJ. fN faith! Perhaps that’s a bit more than
anyone deserves).
Maybe you think I’ve been a little disrespectful
of Ben writing in this fashion. Believe me, Ben
would have wanted it this way.
lungs!

ber 240. In addition to the immaculate apparatus
I found the enclosed note:
Dear 240,
You are now well on your way to a semester
of misery. I have done my best to aid you by
leaving extra equipment such as rubber hoses,
bent tubing and a bottle of acetone—just waiting to try and clean up the mess accumulated
each week.
I hope you appreciate the fact that most
of the equipment has been replaced as of

checking-out due to breakage. I also hope you
appreciate the fact that the fire extinguisher
is to your immediate left.

Good luck in a lousy course.
240

Thanks from another 240!

Alan Zwemer

Questions drafting of Peeler
To the Editor:

For those on campus who do not know, we wish
to inform them that Joe Peeler, starting guard of
Buffalo’s basketball team, was inducted into the
U. S. Army Feb. 6, 1968.
To our knowledge, Joe was a full-time student
in good academic standing, and according to Selective Service rules, he should have been ineligible
for the draft.
We would like the administration to inform
us how it is possible for a full-time student in good
academic standing to be drafted.

Barbara Jones
Bob Jackson

The

every
Spectrum Is published twice-weekly
Tuesday and Friday
during the regular academic
State University of New York at Buffalo,
3435 Main Street. Buffalo, New York 14214. Offices
are located at 355 Norton Hall. Average Circulation:
—

—

year at the

15,500.

Editor-In-Chief—MICHAEL L. D’AMICO
Managing Editor—RICHARD R. HAYNES
Managing Editor—RICHARD SCHWAB
Business Manager—SAMUEL A. POWAZEK
Advertising Manager—DAVID E. FOX

Asst,

Campus

Margaret

Anderson

Asst.

Sports
Asst.
Layout

Woodruff
Behrens
David L. Sheedy
John Trigg
Judi Riyeff

Robert
W. Scott

Marlene Kozuchowski Asst.
Daniel Lasser Copy
VACANT
Peter Simon Asst.
Feature Barry C. Holtzclaw Photography David Yates
Carol Goodson
Asst.
Ronald Ellsworth Asst.
Entertainment
Promotion &amp; Circulation
Director Murray Richman
Lori Pendrys
Financial Advisor Edward Dale
Faculty Advisor: William R. Greiner
The Spectrum is a member of the United States Student Press Association and the Associated Collegiate
Press. The Spectrum is served by: United Press International, Collegiate Press Service. Associated Collegiate
Press Service, Gannett News Service, and the Los
City
Asst.

Angeles Times Syndicate.
Represented for national advertising by National Educational Advertising Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave.,

New York, N. Y.
Republication of all news dispatches is forbidden without the express consent #f the editor-in-chief. Rights of
republication
served.

of all other

matter herein are also
w

re-

.

Second class postage paid at Buffalo, New York.
Editorial policy is determined by the Editor-in-Chief.

�Tuesday, February 13, 1968

Th

Annoyed with Senators' smugness
To the Editor;
I have always taken a special and prime interest
in the events of this and other campuses, although
I must admit student leaders make it quite difficult sometimes. I find, however, that nothing
occupies my mind more in these recent days than
the inefficiency of our student government to operate on behalf of the student.

uSB

ft®

To the Editor:
I could not help being disturbed at the jovial
atmosphere which prevailed at the Student Judiciary hearing Jan. 30, as the Senators made a
mockery of their own integrity.
The transgression of the Senators had been indiscreet, but hardly felonious, Had they submitted
to the mild reprimand which they deserved, the
matter could have been judiciously closed. But
personal feelings had been involved in the events
leading up to the complaint, and regretable lapses
of maturity were shown on both sides. And so the
Senators decided to be proud, to be smug, to seek
aquittal (on grounds of lack of evidence). In so
doing they chose to discard their ideals.
Instead of taking their medicine, which would
hardly have been bitter, they decided to take advantage of the Judiciary’s limitations in summoning evidence and hence beat the system. They
chose to twist the laws as our twisted society
manipulates laws while turning its collectively
self-satisfied face the other way, as those they
condemn in their words and their resolutions twist
our country’s laws. They shamed themselves as
“leaders” of a new generation, which would “tell
it like it is”. They thoughtlessly imitated the lessons
in moral decadence of a warped society.
As their vehicle they used the Student Judiciary,
sibling branch of the Student Association. The
Student Government must enjoy the respect of the
student body, the Administration and the Community if it is to maintain and constructively utilize
the power which it has taken years to achieve.
This whim of our myopic Senators has further
reaching implications than they apparently could
realize. In choosing to disrespect the Judiciary
they degraded their own offices in a way that
would be humorously ironic were it not so stupid.
Possibly the defendents would have been criticized
no matter what course they had taken, but it is
far happied to be criticized when an organization’s
own principles stand behind it.
The hearing was for the attorneys a fine exercise; for the audience a fine entertainment. But
it was for a few there a painful grating, and for
the University a small but unhappy blow. The
Senators chose smugness over integrity. It would
be nice to think they would never repeat such a
choice.
Annoyed

'More Readers' Writings on page

6

Pag* Flv*

By Interlandi

mm
whm.

UNIVERSIT
CAMPUS
OPINION
WU,

P2?
r/j.

"We're tired of giving opinions. We think it's time for action!"

the gadfly
by Mark Schneider

Recently, news reporters asked the Detroit Police Commissioner to discuss the new anti-riot apparatus his department had bought. “In a war, you do not show the enemy
what you are doing,” he replied.
In another city with a ghetto problem, BUILD workers
asked the principal of a vocational high school for permission to visit and talk to teachers and students. It was denied.
At another vocational high school in the same city, the
principal told investigators that most of the students were
reading at a second or third grade level. The city is Buffalo,
and the schools are Burgard and Boys.
What these incidents in two
is that
civil service organizations such as
police and public schools often
define the black poor as “the enemy.” When Stokely Carmichael
says that poor blacks in America
are a colonized people, victims of
imperialism, he has a sound case.
The condition of the Buffalo
ghetto children is a prime exnorthern cities indicate

ample.
Though the average New York
State school system spends $715
a year per student, Buffalo spends
only $510, So even the middle

class white student receives less
in the way of textbooks, building
conditions, etc., than his counterpart in Syracuse or Rochester.
However, BUILD, a congress of
150 ghetto groups, claims that
money is not so much Buffalo’s
problem as the attitude of those
who control the money. “They
just don’t know how to deal with
us down here,” a BUILD organizer declared. What he meant was
that “they"—the white power
structure which runs "garbage
cans” like Boys Vocational—know
only too well.
Last April BUILD published a
report on the ghetto schools in
Buffalo called “Black Paper Number One.” It might have been

titled, like Johnathon Kozol’s
book about Boston, “The Destruction of the Hearts and Minds of
Negro Children in the Public
Schools.” A description and analysis of 35 public schools—26 black,
2 integrated, and 7 white, it
reads like a horror story of bumbling, terrified white teachers
trying to work in a foreign country where the students speak another language.
The black paper points to many
specific problems. In most black
schools less than one-third of the

The Sham
by Martin Guggenheim

tt

HtU'HOj

In past months, since I left the Quadrangle,
and then became a delinquent, yes, useless, member of the Spectrum, I have found that I truly
could not stomach the student governmental system where all channels of fair and just means
of resistance and reform are confused and blocked.

Dangerous precedents being set?

Spectrum

BELOW OLYMPUS

see now, as I have not seen before, that this is not
the student’s-at-large problem, but rather must
rest squarely on the shoulders of our student lead
ers, A leader must lead, and that is why he is
chosen a leader. They must take the initiative to
create and provide a simple, basic, and unincumbered governmental framework which serves the
needs of the student. To create a larger, more
complex government is not to provide unity. It
rationally must not become bound up in its own
machinery.

My concern recently has been with the field of
the student newspaper—not so much as a newspaper as a working, democratic and meaningful—archaic if you prefer, organization for the student.
It failed because of the system.
Now I feel we are about to lose another vital
organ. It would not mean so much to me, should
it not have indicated what decay is about to come.
The Publications Board—a product of campus editors, and a dedicated project of Mike D’Amico, and
others (not in the student government)—is about
to become bound-up in that machinery, I feel, because it has no alternative.
It was created under deadline, and drafted
after long discussion and careful wording, and
has since been ratified by the Student Association
only to come to nothing. A call for applications
came over two months ago. It could have come
long before that. Now, it still has failed to get
started. And think back to the things it might
have done, to those who might have been aided
when its strength could have been tested. It
seems to me that Mr, Miller, a $750 employee of
our association, could find time to devote to such
a worthwhile project, rather than supplying Vietnam peacenik resolutions. Have these deadened,
inappropriate, and, time-consuming bureaucratic
ideals blinded the sincere efforts to expand and
grow mature? I hope not, for such ideas and
idea-makers are setting dangerous precedents. Too
much is at stake.
Bruce J. Marsh

•

black, usually much
less. The city makes no attempt
to hire more black teachers. Since
very few white teachers like their
jobs, they take days off to a greater extent than teachers 'in white
schools. When kids have a substitute teacher twice a week, they
begin to see the teacher’s function as military, not educative.
Faculty
ghetto
turnover in
schools is phenomenal, and low
morale, the cause, is a result
in a vicious cycle.
faculty is

Administrators, all while, insist on pushing students through
the grades without their learning the material. Guidance counselors have too many cases and
are ill-informed. Libraries are
woeful; Negro history is unknown; buildings are dilapidated;
field trips are inadequate; track
systems are “a treadmill to oblivion," ad infitum.
Though the paper stresses upgrading ghetto schools, it also
calls for integration, and that is
still unacceptable to Buffalo

whites. The documentation of
what the paper calls "mass murder” is extensive and it should
be mandatory reading for administrators, teachers and Mrs.

Slominsky.

The paper concludes with an
indictment of the power structure
and the ironic demand: “Blame
the victim. For that is immeasurably easier than facing with cold
clarity what this country has done
to black people since the mid17th century . . . Facing that
reality clearly might be fairly
painful for some Buffalo whites
—almost as painful as it is for
us to see our children brutalized
daily in schools which guarantee
dead end lives.”

For all those anxiously awaiting my comments
about the faculty and structure of the Sociology
Department, I apologize for not presenting that
now. Within the next week or two 1 will, however.

Instead, let’s concentrate on another area of
academic concern on this campus. Every semester
I try to take one course in the Millard Fillmore
College. I do this for several reasons: one is that
this spreads out my class load and allows me to
do more things during the sunlight hours, and
another is I enjoy participating with and observing the students in my classes; they naturally
appeal to me more. They probably have made more
sacrifices to be in those classes than their daytime
counterparts.

But, at the same time, I often get quite annoyed at the professors and instructors of these
courses. Let me emphasize, before I go any further, that these observations come from a very
limited experience in Millard Fillmore. They may
apply to many cases, but perhaps I just have bad
luck. I do hope this may cause some professors
to re-evaluate their methods and attitudes in the
classroom.

This criticism delves into the very mind of the
academician and professor. Part of the problem, I
imagine, stems from the hierarchia] structure of
the academic world and the implicit striving and
competing with others which leads to a very selfsatisfied and self-glorified state when the game is
over. At any rate, these Millard Fillmore students
are being treated even lower than the already
deprived day students.
To gve an example: I took Abnormal Psychology
at night last semester. The professor, Dr. Cohen,
taught the same course in the day. However, my
course was worth two credits while the day’s course
was worth three. The requirements for successfully
completing the course were exactly the same; we
both had a mid-term and a final; both tests were
of the same length and both classes were responsible for the same amount of reading material.
It seems to me that if we are to play the game of
credits and continue to prove that one is educated,
then we ought to be consistent.
Those most hung up about keeping things the
same should truly strive to make credits mean
something. To my mind either the night students
were cheated out of a credit which they rightfully
earned, or the day students were given a credit
day school. Perhaps Dr. Cohen isn't aware of the
discrimination which he perpetrates. Perhaps he
feels one cannot learn about abnormal psychology
without learning all that was required last semester.
Then the solution should be to eliminate the two
credit course, not to simply say "too bad” and set
up the unfair system in effect.
I think all the students in that course should
petition for another credit and I hope Dr. Cohen

will endorse the request.
Many of the students are making a difficult
effort to go to school at night. That’s why I like
meeting them. They actually chose to go to college
—it’s refreshing to think about that. But they have
few friends. Many courses are for two credits in
Millard Fillmore —I wonder how many of these
are less demanding than their day-school counterparts, Shouldn’t there be a structure established to
guarantee academic equality for all?

A second example is my philosophy course this
semester. I walked in the first night and the instructor, Mr. Spencer, made the comment that “if
you are more than five minutes late for my class,
don’t bother coming.” I only wish I could quote
the intonation in his condescending, obnoxious
voice. This poor intellectual has to lower himself
and teach old people. Indeed! Of course the students
accept all this, but that’s hardly their fault. They’ve
been taught for years that they are inferior by
virtue of the fact that they aren’t college educated.
The Spencers reinforce this quite powerfully.
We have known for years that the student is
a nigger. But the analogy can be extended even
further: the day students are Uncle Tom's because some day they may become whitey, but the
night students are truly niggers and, as so often is
the case, they have no idea.

The Spectrum's peges for

Editorials

&amp;

Opinions

It is the policy of The Spectrum to report the
news fully and impartially in the news pages,
to express the opinions of the newspaper only

in the editorial pages and to publish all sides
of important controversial issues.
"Without

expression,

freedom

of

expression

is

meaningless"

�Pag*

Th

Six

•

Tuesday, February 13, 1968

Spectrum

New frontiers for the Great Society
To the Editor:

Next year at this time, the Great Society may
no longer exist. You may question this statement,
but a number of things may happen. Red China
may explode one of its test bombs over the United
States to see if the bomb is powerful enough;
Mexico may not like the outcome of the summer
Olympics

and

try

to

recapture

is supporting people without money to support
themselves. These people are not getting rich,
but neither is anyone else. It nothing else, the
war on poverty is an attempt to make everyone
equally poor. As the expression goes, “It doesn’t
pay to work anymore, you can ‘earn’ more mojiey
in the poverty areas.”

Texas: or there

ing the entire North American Continent beneath

its waters. Or perhaps, the Great Society’s creator
may be quietly barbecuing in his backyard, relieved

of his responsibilities.

There is much dissatisfaction with the Great
ever existed. Presently there
is dissention between Hawks and Doves, Republicans and Democrats, Republicans and Republicans,
and Democrats and Democrats. The President,
however, is attempting to create an atmosphere of
peace; unfortunately, it is a rarified atmosphere.
Society, if indeed it

Since this year is an election year, Mr. Johnson
is attempting to appease everyone. He is making
efforts to secure peace while continuing to escalate
the war in Vietnam. The President is also trying
to smooth over his increased budget. Another
project is the war on poverty.

The war on poverty, a significant undertaking
of the Great Society, is being waged with as much
success as the one in Vietnam. The government

worthwhile. However, the funds for this program
are insufficient and don’t seem to help those who
need it. It appears that a program such as this
would never have sufficient funds. The government gives people money for no other reason than
their being poor. Without the incentive to look
for a job to earn money, these people would rather
live off the government’s, or rather the people’s
money. As long as these people don’t have jobs,
they must be supported. Thus, a continuous circle
of giving funds.
Perhaps the war on poverty would be won if
given enough funds, and perhaps the war in Vietnam would be won if given enough leadership.
Since neither exists now, maybe a change in policy
would be best. Winning on both fronts would be
a boon to the Great Society. But who needs this
Great Society? Maybe it would be better off if
given a New Deal.

Linda Laufer

Sample challenged in 'Question of the Week
To the Editor:

The results of your feature “Question of the
Week” in Feb. 6 issue might cause some alarm or
at least wonder among your readers.

I personally do not believe that 67% of the
students here use the “dangerous drugs,” or even
that 4% now use the “hard” drugs. I realize
that it is possible that the students that I know
are, by coincidence, all members of a drug-abstaining minority. However, 1 wish to point out to
you that the manner in which your “Question of
the Week” survey is conducted renders the conclusions highly suspect.

'

For one thing, it would help a little if you
stated, each time, how many students responded.
Even then, these would not be a representative
section of the students. If you lack the facilities
to run a properly-designed survey, you should forget it althogether.
D. Britz
Editor's note: Your point is well taken, and we
are the first to admit that the survey may not
be an accurate representation of the student body.
We are, however, interested in getting a response,
in some cases any response, from an all too apathetic community. Thanks for your comments; we
were glad to hear from you.

Calls for impeachment of Judiciary
To the Editor:

1 am writing in response to your editorial of
Feb. 9, in which you criticize student dissatisfaction with the recent decision, on the part of the
Student Judiciary, to dismiss drinking charges
against 17 members of the Student Senate. You
state that, “the decision of the judges in this case
is unimpeachable.” In direct contradiction to your
assertion, I have learned that a motion will be
brought before the Student Senate, next week, to
bring impeachment proceedings against the Judiciary.. The decision is impeachable because, according
to Part I, Article I, Section 2, B, of the constitution
of the Student Association of the State University
of Buffalo,
. . all other student organizations

shall be subordinate ‘to the Student Senate.”
Those who would seek justice, as you chose
!

to entitle your editorial, will strongly back the enactment of impeachment proceedings against the
Judiciary. Such proceedings are, at this time, crucial
to the well being of the University. An investigation of the decision would inform the student body
if the actions of the Judiciary were desirable, and
if the proceedings were proper, and, if so, would
uphold the reputation of that body. If, however, the
case was, in fact, mishandled, an investigation
would bring out the facts and allow the necessary
action to be taken.
I sincerely hope, though I strongly doubt, that
the Student Senate will decide to go ahead with
the impeachment of the Student Judiciary. The
student body must know if its elected officials,
and their appointees, are doing their jobs properly and ethically.

All You Need Is Love
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Fred Hollander

Hippie' culture used and abused

To tho Editor:
I would like to mention a double standard, the
opposite ends of which never seem to be juxtaposed.
One of the partners of this phenomenon is apparent enough and needs no elaboration: i.e., the
mass ridicule and denunciation of the “hippie”
movement. The other partner is Madison Ave. psychedelia, along with misdirected emphasis of most
people on “hippie" values.

Madison Ave psychedelia runs rampant: The
Coca Cola people implore customers to “turn on”
to and “flip out” on their soft drink. In a baseball
game, a pitcher in a commercial becomes blinded
by kaleidoscope flashes of light and runs off the
field to buy a Dodge car. This is a fine thing according to the Dodge people, and the man is
euphorically happy with his new purchase, bought
because of an attack of “Dodge Fever.” The readyto-wear industry is obsessed with flamboyant paisley
and flourescent colors.
Some “hippies,” if I can group various people
together for convenience, admittedly want to permeate America with their world. But I doubt if
they would consider what has happened a success
to this end. Instead of examining the sanity of
marijuana laws, people amuse themselves with pot
and LSD jokes. Parents of college students, informed that mafiy college students are on “dope”
(another convenient term), act perhaps the most
unfairly, because they deal with their children
directly.

Instead of educating themselves on the matter,
instead of regarding their children as little more

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than misled incompetents, and discussing these
issues in an intelligent and liberal atmosphere,
they regret they have ever let their offspring out
into the world, become self-made detectives, and
enforce Gestapo-like methods in the home, in order
to keep their children “All-American kids” (i.e., in
the tradition of Audie Murphy and Doris Day).
The dichotomy in this double standard becomes
more intense and the connection more abscure.
Billboards with “Support Americanism—Oppose
Extremism” and “Keep America Beautiful—Get a
Haircut” share the highways with advertisements
employing psychedelic lettering and fish-eye lens

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photography.
I do not say that everyone involved in “hippie”
ism has a sound and admirable philosophy, but
those who do are being exploited on one hand and
ignored on the other. If a popular Madison Ave.
movement can adopt and nurture the visual and
audial aspects of psychedelics, I should think that
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If people are going to let Time Magazine goad
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their complaints about draft laws, examining their
argument with the hypocrisy of America, and giv-'
ing physicians and psychologists of stature the
chance to extricate victims of the liquor lobbyists
and ignorance from the “drug” myths.
Linda Walliman
’69 on Leave of Absence

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�Tuesday, February 13, 1968

PStVIfl

The Spectrum

Director reverses Brecht

Auditions to be held for
Maurice Breslow:
in Buffalo second Nickel Theater
theater could die any minute'
..

The Student Theater Guild will
hold auditions—foi—the second
Nickel Theater February 14 and
15 from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. in Norton 332.
The production consists of
three short, one act plays: “The
Gas Heart” by Tristan Tzara,
“One Way or Another” by Jean
Tiardieu, “Purgatory” by Yates,
and a scene from Shaw’s “Saint
Joan” to be presented in midMarch.
The main purpose of such a

presentation is to give new and
less experienced ctnrii»nte nppurl
(unities in acting and directing.
Last semester the Guild successfully produced its first Nickel
Theater and two one-act plays,
“Chamber Music” and "The Col-

-

by Joseph Fernbacher
Spectrum

tion.”

Studio Arena Theater. They
would just die. Here we can afford it with small audiences; this
is something we can’t do at the
downtown theater.”
“I think that the movies have
been a much greater success than
theater because they can show
realism in the theater.
“I think that some of the stuff
you see in movies is used to get
the point across. This may be fair,
however, for a lower average of
intelligence makes up the audience, whereas the theater audience is average or above average
in Intelligence usually—and therefore more can be left to the
imagination. The one thing that
the movies can’t do is give that
feeling of the event of acting that
is actually taking place 30 or 40
feet in front of you, whereas in
a movie all you are given is the
image. You can’t communicate
between yourself and the screen,”
he continued.

Bertolt Brecht

Future of theater

Staff

Reporter

Recently, Studio Two Theater put on outstanding productions of Beckett’s “Endgame,” “The Queen and the Rebel”
by Beatte, and most recently, “Brecht on Brecht.”
The principal force behind these excellent productions
has been a vibrant young man called Maurice Breslow. A
very busy man, Mr. Breslow is also the driving force behind
the Studio Arena School and project Curtain Call.
A graduate of Cornell University with a BA in English, Mr.
Breslow is now in the process of
completing his work for a doctorate in directing from the Yale
School of Drama. He also holds
an MA in Drama from Tufts University.

Project curtain call
One of his main concerns is
project Curtain Call, A federally
sponsored program, project Curtain Call brings to disadvantaged
grammar school children the joy
of the theater.

The plays are either staged in
the schools themselves or at the
Studio Arena Theater. The pro-

ductions have included “Androcles and the Lion" and “The
Wind of the Willows,” both of
which have been very successful.
“As an audience the kids are
great,” said Mr. Breslow. “They
give of themselves and this is
the perfect type of audience to
play to. They come in and are
not skeptical like most adult
although this isn’t
audiences
exactly bad. Some audiences
should be skeptical because of
the amount of trash that’s being
passed off as theater today. The
kids know when they are getting
something bad and they just turn
off, but in general they are very
responsive and throw a certain
life into a production. Even their
silence has a certain noise about
it.”
—

Studio Arena School
Another branch of theater
which Mr. Breslow is very much
a part of is the Studio Arena
School. “The School plays a very
important part in the community
because it is the only place in
Buffalo, outside the universities,
where the average person can get
good dramatic training,” commented Mr. Breslow.

“I think that it fulfills an important function, but I think that
it’s not nearly what it should be.
It should be a much more professional school than it is now,
although it is now more professional than it has ever been.
‘acting’ faculty are all
professional members of the Stu-

“The

dio Arena thesbian and directorial company.

“One woman, for instance, has
taught for 12 years at the Carnegie Drama School, which is
one of the best in the country,”

he continued.
As a director he finds the
main difference between putting
on a production on a proscenium
stage and an arena stage is “the
way you make the play appear
physically. The opportunites on
the arena stage are much greater
because of the close contact between the audience and the ac-

Perhaps his favorite playwright
is Bertolt Brecht. He had at first

lost

interest

in and

Brecht’s work. It then

shunned

came back
to him and he literally fell in
love with the playwright. He even
has a framed picture of Brecht
hanging in his house. He has done
a vast amount of research on
Brecht and feels that “a play
is the reflection of an author’s
life,” and when putting on one of
his plays he should know the
author. He feels that Brecht was,
“a very individual thinker,” and
proved his absolute honesty during the investigation of his works
by the HUAC group. Brecht was
told to admit he was a card
carrying member of the Communist Party, but he wouldn’t.
Mr. Breslow noted that Brecht
was a Marxist, although “he was
never a card-carrying Communist.”

Studio Two
Besides the school and project
Curtain Call, this versatile man
is also the director of all productions presented at Studio Two.
About the work he is doing
there he said: “I feel that the

plays we are doing are really
good and are good for our company, and wouldn’t get a chance
to run for many weeks at the

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The future of theater?
“I think that in Buffalo, theater
could die any minute, but in
some places like San Francisco
and Seattle it can't. I think that
if the American theater doesn't
do something quick about training its actors in all styles and
periods that its going to die,”
he said.
must be
. “I think that there
terrific training programs in all
styles. That's why I am concerned
about the school here, and that’s
why I think the British and European actors are so far ahead
of us. No one there asks the ques‘Do you think that retion
begional theater will last?’
cause they are so well established
and firm. I feel that it will and
must be remedied fast because
people know that an audience is
not going to put up with an actor
that is crippled in a way."
—

—

The next two productions that
will be presented by Mr. Breslow
and his company might prove to
be the most ambitious and interesting. He plans to do works by
both Ionesco and Pinter. Mr. Breslow made a plea to stress the
importance of support of Studio
Two and Studio Arena, for without aid, Buffalo might lose them
both.

CAMP LAKELAND

lection.”

All students, regardless of experience, interested in either
technical theater or acting are
invited to come to the Student
Theater Guild office at Norton
312 at any time or call 831-5116.

Tom Paxton to perform
in concert at Kleinhans
Tom Paxton, folk and topical
singer, will display his writing
and musical abilities Friday at
8:30 p.m. at Kleinhans Music Hall.

Also featured will be the Buffalo
Philharmonic Orchestra with a
“Pops” program.
Since his 1967 Carnegie Hall
recital much national attention
has been brought to Mr. Paxton
whose songs have been often-recorded by others who work in the

music idiom. He accompanies himself on the guitar while his lyrics
speak out about everything from
narcotics to freeways and from
foreign policy to air pollution.
Ronald Stoffel, assistant conductor, will direct the Philharmonic for the Pops event. They
will perform Rossini's overture to
“Semiramide", Milhaud's “Suite
Francaise” and “The Moldau" by
Smetana.

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�Pag* Eight

Th* Spectrum

Tuesday, February 13, 1968

Cam us nite&gt;s

Frank Dwyer to direct
Coffee House opens in Goodyear scenes from Shakespeare
by Jim Hendrich
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

Walking along the barren labyrinthian depths of Goodoptimistic about my up-coming evening at the “UB Coffee

House.” My only hint of its existence having been a cryptic

anouncement jover the Norton Hall PA system, I feared it

could have been a joke; but a good joke is always worth a
quarter, and so I paid up and strolled in.

For those who took the chance,
it was a gratifying and promising
experience
gratifiyng because
they heard one of the finest
groups to appear on campus this
year, in a very friendly, personal
performance, and promising because the Coffee House is good
now, even in its developing
stages.

open

past

10:30, but actually
worth going to, is exciting in itself, but more exciting was the
entertainment provided by an unknown (but soon to be big) group
called the Steve Baron Quartet.
Only a half-year old, the group is
led by Baron, a phenomenally
good-looking, friendly, and relaxing lead singer who strums
rhythm guitar and composes most
of the songs. He’s backed up by
Bill Davidson, lead guitar with a
Scotch flavor; Jack Block on bass
(saxophone for jazz numbers);
and Tom Winer, lean and dry, on
electric organ.

—

Intimate surroundings
Upon entering, one is immedi-

ately struck by the intimacy of
the surroundings: about 25 tables

for four with checkered cloths
scarlet candle glasses; the
low, pillard ceiling and subdued
light effused from the stage area
despite the stark, unfinished
concrete block walls (seemingly
ubiquitous at U.B.) and the absence of modifed lighting effects,
which will be forthcoming.
and

Magnetic entertainment
They hail most recently from

—

New York City and extended engagements at The Bitter End, The

Gaslight Cafe, and Basin Street
East. This week they will cut
their first album for RCA. The

The prospect of a relaxed nightspot on campus which is not only

easy humor and smooth sound of

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Baron

Steve

Quartet will be back for another

engagement later this year. Other

professional groups will be
booked through a “coffee house

circuit” agency. Entertainment
for the next two weekends will
be by local talent that is presently being auditioned.

Inexpensive menu
The Coffee House offers an inexpensive menu that includes succulent toasted bagels with cider,
grill items, and seven exotic

blends of coffee (ex: —Hot Mocha
Java and Turkish Coffee
that
taste of Honey—). Draft beer will
be added when the campus finally goes officially “wet.”
—

are being made

When physical improvements
are completed, the State University of Buffalo Coffee House will
be a truly first-class nightspot.
The first week set a standard that
will be difficult to uphold, but
what the Coffee House now needs
most is well-deserved student support.

lUfel

—

§t\)le Crest

•

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VANGUARD
Operas Symphonies A Concertos
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•

Spectrum

“An actor who does not perform Shakespeare is as ludicrous
as a gourmet who fasts”
Frank
Dwyer, director, “An Evening of
Scenes From Shakespeare.”
—

Perceiving the collegiate actor’s
need for this crucial aspect of his
training, Frank Dwyer, a graduate assistant in English, has
found a solution to this problem
in the production of several
scenes from the Bard which require a minimum of technical
staging.

“An Evening of Scenes from
Shakespeare” will be presented
by the Student Theatre Guild in
cooperation with the English Department, February 17-18, at 8:30
p.m., in the Fillmore Room Saturday and the Conference Theatre
Sunday.
Inherent in this type of program is the opportunity for the
actors not only to taste of Shakespeare’s art but to expand their

own capabilties by undertaking
multiple roles.
Nathan Morton (P e t r u c h i o,
Romeo and Claudius) explains the
difference in his three roles; “Petruchio is aggressive, flamboyant
and strong. He is clever and de-

finitive.”
In Romeo, Nathan finds Petruchio’s opposite: “Romeo is
young and idyllic; he needs to
be conveyed with simplicity.” The
role of Claudius falls somewhere
between the two. He is not as
strong as Petruchio; he is worried, frightened, but he has some
of Romeo’s foolishness. Above all
he is a smooth negotiator, a poll-

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

I

tician.”
The series of short scenes develops the actors ability to convey
the meanihg of a single

scene

without the aid of the structural
sequence of the play as a whole.
Carole Forman discusses this
problem in relation to Juliet’s
Nurse: “I have to build up dramatic tension. The Nurse has to enter with the knowledge of Tybalt’s death and Romeo’s banishment. In doing this scene out of
context it is very difficult to capture the Nurse’s emotion.”
For Susan Kaplan, who plays
Kate to Nathan’s Petruchio, the
challenge of Shakespeare is personally thrilling: “Kate is so exciting, she is one of the roles I
hope to do in full length productions because there is so much
going on inside her.”
Shakespeare’s characters place
requirements on developing actors which often they have not

been called up to fulfill in their

previous training. Helene Friedman’s experience ranges from
playwrights as modern as Harold
Pinter to the studied stylization
of Mrs. Malaprop in Sheridan’s

“The Rivals.” Helene is undertaking one of Shakespeare’s
strongest and perhaps most difficult female roles, Lady Macbeth:
“The difficulty of playing Lady
Macbeth is that she is as clever
and dynamic as need be to manipulate her husband so that he
will commit the murder, but she
has not the strength of character
to bear the guilt of this ‘great
quell.’ The concentrated energy
that the actors must give forth is,
when released, a very diffcult
quantity to wield, requiring much
discipline.”

Coffeehouse bills folk singer
Sandy Rhodes, a young folk
singer, is now appearing at the
Allenhurst Coffeehouse.

Miss Rhodes, born in the Mid-

west, started off as a traditional
folk singer, alone on stage with

her guitar. Since then she has

changed her style. According to
her: “People don’t want to watch
one performer sit and sing any-

A STORY TELLER

FROM

FLEA
STREET
IS NOT
A PLAY

—

IT'S AN EXPERIENCE

WORKSHOP THEATER

1685 ELMWOOD AVE.
8:30 P.M.
877-9023
THURS., FRI. &amp; SAT.

Live Concert!
IN PERSON

MIRIAM

MAKEBA

more.
They want action, movement,
a full sound, something to watch
and listen to with big eyes and

ears.” Now she has fused her
musical background with the
sound of today and conformed
to the present day movement-electrical type performance.
“I was doing folk things on
stage and writing jazz and rock
things into material 1 never did
before in my act," she says. “Now
great people are becoming very
successful doing this kird of material.”
Her first single, “Tomorrow
Means Goodbye,” has just been
released on the Senate label.
She will be appearing at the
Coffeehouse through Feb. 17.
BIBLE TRUTH
Creation of Man
"So God created man His own
image, in the image of God He
him; male and female created He
them." Gen. 1:27

EDUCATION, SOCIAL WORK,

PSYCHOLOGY MAJORS I

CAMP

and the

Oscar
Peterson
Trio
Saturday, Feb. 24, 8:15 P.M.

While They Last!
•

The

•

Famous Artists Include
•

popular young

strobe and colored lights. The
Coffee House is co-sponsored by
the Inter-Residence Council and
the Union Board, under the direction of Woody Graber, Chairman
of the Recreational Committee.

REPEAT OF A SELL-OUT!

•

from light humor
and performed with
the group that did “Wild Thing—
With Senator Bobby”) to poignant
commentary on urban life such
as “Bertha Was the Mother of
Us All” and “City of Glass.” If
they are able to communicate
their personal magnetism through
their recordings, they will be very

to psychedelicize the surroundings with couches, wall posters,

RECORDS and
MUSICAL
INSTRUMENTS

•

They range

(Steve wrote

Arrangements

D

•

these four magnetic young men
puts the audience immediately at
ease and draws them into the
music, an indefinable blend of

CENTERLAND
a country

day camp, is

now accept-

ing applications for counselor and
specialist positions.
Salary $200

-

$600 for season

depends on experience, education,

and personal qualifications.

98

Gatal«( Prim $4-79 ti M.79
Record
S eater'i KtcorJs, ”99S” 9 Melt

$4.50

-

Tickets:
$4 $3*50
$3.50
-

-

$2.50
$2.5

Eastman Theatre
ROCHESTER

Transportation and lunches provided.

Call ARNOLD GROSS

886-3145

�Tuesday, February

13, 1968

Th

•

Psf* Nina

Spectrum

the spectrum of

sp or ts
Newman scores the hat trick'

Bull icemen win 12th straight
game in Finger Lakes league
by Rich Baumgarten
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

“You’re playing like women! Now, get out there and
play hockey,” yelled Coach Steve Newman after a sluggish
first period.
The charged-up State University of Buffalo leers needed
no more incentive than that, and went on to thrash Buffalo
State 9-1 Saturday before a crowd of 250 in the Amherst
Recreational Center.

Billy Newman led the Bulls in
scoring with three goals. The
6 foot 3 inch forward from Chippewa, Ont., was closely followed
by Captain Lome Rombaugh and
“Whipper” John Watson who
countered two apiece, while Fred
Bourgemeister and Franky Lewis
rounded out the Herd’s scoring
by notching a goal each.

The high flying “Hockeyman,”
averaging almost ten goals a
game, are now 12-0 in Finger

Lakes Hockey League Competition, and are far ahead of the
pack in first place.
Although it was a frigid five
degrees outside, the Bulls put
plenty of “heat” on Buffalo State
goaltender

Roger

Rigby,

yet

couldn’t dent the nets until the
9:30 mark of the first stanza when
Newman deflected a long Bourgemeister slap shot into the State
goal. After Buffalo State’s Pete
Simonik knotted the count at one
all, for the Orangemen’s only

Bulls drop double header'
to WSU and Windsor
by W. Scott Behrens
Asst.

Sports

Editor

The free-throw line was the determinent factor in both
varsity Bulls’ losses over the weekend as the Bulls dropped
decisions to Wayne State University Friday night 78-64, and
to Windsor University 79-71. Both contests were played
away. The Bulls’ record is now 8-6 against four year colleges
and universities.
The loss of guards Joe Peeler and Rick Wells to the
starting lineups proved detrimental in the Bulls’ attempt
to keep their post-season tournament hopes alive. Peeler
was drafted Tuesday and a death in Wells’ family kept him
away from the entire trip.
Head coach Len Serfustini had Rochester and their win over
to come with a “new” lineup in Hofstra in the Aud a week ago

a hurry. He started junior John
Fieri and sophomore Bobby Williams and with the inexperience
at hand the Bulls suffered greatly.
However, it was not all inexperience which lost the games
for the Bulls. In the game against
USU of Detroit, Wayne State
scored 24 points from the free
throw line out of its last 28
points to win the game. At one
time during the second half, the
Staters made 18 straight charity
tosses. They put 32 of 42 through
the hoop for the entire game.

Buffalo scored the same number
of field goals (23) but only attempted 28 free throws, making
18 of them count.
Junior forward Ed Eberle was
high man for the Bulls with
Fieri coming in one point behind
him at 14.
Two
technical fouls were
awarded the Staters. Buffalo forward Bob Nowak walked off the
court too slowly to suit the reout
feree when Nowak was called
of the game on personal fouls.
The other technical was awarded
when the referee “heard something from the bench.”

Drop second in row away
Saturday night the Bulls went
across the bridge to Windsor,
Ont. and lost another game at

the free throw line to Windsor
University. This was the fourth
game in succession the Blue and
White played in which decisions
of the games were at the 15-foot
mark.
The Bulls’ loss to Rochester in

Saturday were the other contests

involved.
The Bulls never got a chance
for the one-and-one situation at
the free throw line during the
entire 40 minutes of play. Windsor had only five personal fouls
called on them in the second
half while the out-of-towners had
15 called on them.
Windsor had a 13 point lead
cut to a slim two-point margin
by the resurgent Bulls but held
on to the lead as the Bulls’ Fieri
and Nowak fouled out of the
game.

Buffalo outshot its opponents
from the field by one field goal,
28-27, but the Canadians’ 25-15
edge at the charity toss line told
the story again. The home team
was awarded 39 free throws while
the visitors could only attempt
25.

Buffalo’s Eberle led all players
in scoring as he score 22 points
for the losers. Fieri was next in
line with 15.
Twenty-five personal fouls and
three technical fouls were called
against the Bulls while only 13
personals were charged to the
host club.
After hosting the University of
Baltimore last night, the next
game for the varsity basketball
squad will be this Saturday evening at the Aud against crosstown rival Buffalo State. The
Orangemen have already clinched
the SUNYAC Conference championship and are now sporting
a 13-5 records. The two intra-city
rivals will clash at 7:15 p.m.

goal of the night, Newman scored
at 19:11 and again at 19:52 to
send t.:e Blue and White into a
3-1 first period edge.
Gnmm«r
,

Bulls take advantage
The Bulls got their skating
legs back in the second period,
and held a wide territorial advantage through most of the middle frame. For minutes on end,
the Bulls kept up a steady barrage of shots on the State goal,
testing Rigby from all angles.
With Blue and White uniforms
buzzing all around the State
nets, Rombough took a pass from
Bill DeFoe and whistled home a
ten-footer past the startled State
netminder. Rombough then made
it 5-1 for the Bulls as he clicked
on a 30-foot sizzler that just
caught the lower left hand corner of the Orange goal.

Lewis, the speedster from the
Ft. Erie area, turned in the
prettiest goal of the night early
in the third stanza. He stole the
puck from two Buffalo State defensemen and scored quickly
thereafter. Watson scored two
late third period goals and Bourgemeister added one more, but
for all intents and purposes State
was a beaten team the moment
the Bulls decided to skate.
This game marked the third
time this season our hockeymen
have demolished State. Earlier
this season the Bulls smashed
the Staters 14-3 and 13-1. In
general the players were glad to
be finished with State. Buffalo
defenseman Jim Miller put it
this way, “When you play a team
like State, you tend to play the
same loose type of game that
they play."

.

swimming

fiick fiebo does half-twist dive
in pike position.

Varsity mermen take
2 victories in 4 days
Wednesday the varsity swimming team suddenly came into its
own.
Succinctly, the team is now at
the point where expectations are
high and its young blood looks

Among the most exciting events
of the evening was the 1000 yard
freestyle, a very close 40 length
duel betwen the Bulls' junior
distance swimmer, Mark Clarcq,
and Geneseo’s Dave McGilvray.
McGilvray became the eventual

season optimistically.
Observed by deans and high
school stars, the varsity showed
great promise in nearly every
event, as Geneseo succumbed in

winner, however.

forward to the remainder of the

the Bulls' mid week effort. The
score, 65-38 in favor of the Bulls,
shows that the victory was truly

a team effort.
Exemplary in their efforts were
the Bulls’ outstanding sprinters
(distances up to 200 yards) who
demonstrated their abilities by
winning every freestyle sprint.
Likewise, Captain Rick Rebo outdived his adversaries, while the
Bulls took first places in the
Backstroke, Butterfly, and the
Breaststroke events.
Though none of the first places
showed record times, almost every
swimmer showed improvement
over his past performances.
The team’s depth was also adequately demonstrated by such
second place finishers as; Ed
Sargent, Terry Keegan, and Craig

Hoffman.

Saturday afternoon the Bulls
played host to McMaster University and swamped the visitors
with a 71-33 victory.
Highlighting the swimming
meet at the Clark Gym pool was
Buffalo’s Mark Clarcq, who set a
school record in the 1000-yard
freestyle event. The junior freestyler clipped 46 seconds off the
old mark with a time of 13 minutes, 28 seconds.
Keith Stewart, regarded as Canada’s best diver, just nosed out
Captain Rick Rebo in the fancy
diving event with a score of 200
San-Dell points to Rebo's 196.
It might be well to note that

the team’s coaches, Bob Bedell
and Mr. William Sanford, have
been working overtime in an attempt to bring the University
squad to a sharpened point for
the Upper New York State Championships to be held March 1-2

in the recently completed pool
of Hobart College.

Baby Bulls lose to Bonnies, 83-60
A combination of bad shooting
Saturday for the Baby Bulls and
several “gift” baskets given to

the host St. Bonaventure yearwas the story of the Baby
Bulls’ fourth loss of the season.
The final score read 83-60 in the
huge red numbers on the scoreboard in the new field house at
St. Bonaventure in Glean, New
York, The Baby Bulls are now 84
on the season.
lings

The blue-shirted Baby Bulls
couldn’t find the range in the
first half and were down by 16
points at the halftime, 44-28. With
two former Buffalo All-High
outside
players hitting as well
as they did around the bucket,
the Baby Bulls never had a
chance to get moving.
—

Bid Klimkowski, the Bonnies’
scoring leader with 27
points, had an equally good night
defensively as he picked off
several of the Bulls’ errant passes.
game

Paul Grys (Timon High) and
Dale Tepas (St, Joe’s) also hit the
double figure mark as Grys hit
for 24 points and Tepas for 16.

Kremlas leads Baby Bulls

Buffalo’s Timon High graduate, Roger Kremblas, tried to

match scoring wits with his for- tered the new large arena and
mer teammates and finished the heard crowd of more than 5000
game as Buffalo’s scoring leader Bonnie fans cheering their varsitywith 18 points. Kremblas hit on team to victory over Providence.
seven of 12 field goals attempted
As the Baby Bulls marched on
and made the only four free
throws he attempted. Phil Knapp to the court for their warmups,
led the Bulls at the charity toss the crowd was disappearing raline, making good seven out of pidly and dwindled down to a
mere few hundred interested onten attempted.
lookers as the freshman game
The Baby Bulls hit a paltry got under way at 4:30 p.m. This
32.9% on only 24 field goals out lack of interest in the game
of 73 taken from the field as could have been one of the
the Bonnies yearlings played a factors which led to Buffalo's
zone defense the entire game. downfall from the very start of
The Bonnies, meanwhile, hit on the game.
53.1% of their shots from the
The Baby Bulls’ next encounter
field, making 34 of 64. A good
number of the Bonnies’ baskets will be against the Niagara year
lings at the Niagara field house
were via the layup route.
a week from Wednesday.
Steve Waxman, the Baby Bulls’
The box score follows:
scoring leader who was averaging
BUFFALO FtOJM
close to 24 points per game, was
ST. BONA FROSH
FO FT TP
held to only eight points but
FO FT TP
7 4
18
9 6 24 Krembla*
Gryt
picked off 14 rebounds in the Hand
4 0
8
3 2 8 Wi*mm
toy

game.

Knapp was the only other Bull
yearlying who hit the double
figures with 13 points.

The team watched part of the
first game which was being televised all over the East and were
in complete awe when they en-

Gary
Tapai
Klim’aki

3
6

12

1

0

6
4 16
3 27
0
2
0
0
0 0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

Moog
Raton

Bron'naavn

2
3
3
3

0
0
0

4

6
6
I)
3

7
I
0
2
0 0
0
0 0
0
Jordan
0 0
0
Jobnaon
Brix
0 0
0
Halloran
Prorok
0
0 0
Bom
0 0
KiriloH
0
TOTALS 24 12 60
TOTALS 34 15 83
HeIf time: S». Booeventvee 44, UB 28

Bonnet
Shuba
Ryan
Kelly

0
0
0
0
0
0

Knapp

Hatonbrook

Ktoman
Landargren
Patti

1

1

�Th

Pag* Tan

•

Veterans oppose U.S. Vietnam policy
by Harvey Wasserman
College Press Service

A growing pheCHICApO
nomenon of the Vietnam war has
been the opposition of former
military men to U. S. policy.
Gen. David Shoup, former Marine Corps commandant, has
called some arguments in favor of
the war "unadulterated poppy—

cock.” Gen. James Gavin has been
mentioned as a possible Presidential candidate because of his oppositon to the war. Brigadier Gen.
Samuel Griffith Jr., an authority
on Communist China, has opposed the war, too, as have Adm.
Arnold E. True, Gens. Robert
Huges, William Ford and Hugh
B, Hester.
But anti war feeling among veterans is not confined to generals.
About 30 groups called Veterans
for Peace have been formed in
towns and cities from Sloatsburg,
N. Y. to Hacienda Heights, Calif.
These groups have several thousand members.
They provide military speakers
against the war, participate in

rallies and demonstrations, and
often put anti war advertisements
in local papers.

Publish paper
The Chicago chapter shares a
building with the national office
of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) and publishes “Veterans Stars and Stripes for Peace,”
which is sent free to servicemen
and can be bought for $5 for “the
duration of the war” by civilians.
Despite the central location
and publishng function of the

Grant available in
Political Science
The Pennsylvania Federation of
Business and Professional Women's Clubs, Inc, is granting a
fellowiship in Political Science.
The Fellowship runs from Aug.

1 to July 31 of the following

year, and is for use at the Maxwell School of Political Sciences
at Syracuse University.
A full tuition is granted by
Syracuse University with the
Pennsylvania Federation subsidizing $1500.
An application and supporting

for admission to the
August 1968 to 1969 term should
be filed by Feb. 15, 1968.
Applications and information
may be obtained from the Office
of the Dean of Women, Room
201 Harriman Library.
material

Chicago group, one of its mem-

bers, Robert Trinka, says: “There
is no central organization and no
central philosophy other than
ending the war.” He says 30 to
40 —veterans—regularly attend
Vets for Peace meetings in Chicago and about 200 feel an affiliation. “They join for their
own reasons,” says Trinka. “Some
want an immediate pullout; others talk of negotiations. We don’t
we
promote any philosophies
just want to end the killing.”
—

One of the organization’s tasks
is to counteract the impression
given by groups like the American Legion and the Veterans of
Foreign Wars that veterans are
all for the war. There are other
differences, too. “The Legion
isn’t serious in its approach to
things,” says one Vet for Peace.
“They

sponsor wedding recep-

tions, parties and dances. We are
a one-issue organization working
toward the day when can disband
and live normal lives again. We
are trying to do something really
constructive.”

One year old
The first Vets for Peace chap-

Tuesday, February 13, 1968

Spectrum

ter started

about a year ago and
since then the scope of activities
has broadened as well as the

membership. In

East

Lansing,

Mich., the group participated in
a drive to get ROTC ofrthe Michigan State University campus. In
Madison, Wis., a Korean War veteran contributed a front-page article on the horrors of napalm to
the Capital Times, while in Detroit the chapter drew some 600
people to hear Adm. True condemn the war.
On Oct. 21, anti-war demonstrators cheered a delegation of
about 2000 veterans who participated in the march on the Pentagon.

One of the strengths of the
organization is
that, having
slogged in the mud themselves,
they can empathize with the
plight of U. S. servicemen as other aniti-war organizations cannot.
A recent Stars and Stripes for

Peace editorial reads: “America’s

vets want you all home safe in
a country at peace when next
year’s holidays roll around, and

we’ll break our backs to make
sure that’s how it will be. Meanwhile, good luck, men!”

Depends on the giant. Actually, some giants are just regular
kinds of guys. Except bigger.
And that can be an advantage
How? Well, for one thing, you’ve got more going for
you. Take Ford Motor Company. A giant in an exciting
and vital business. Thinking giant thoughts. About developing Mustang. Cougar. A city car for the future.
Come to work for this giant and you’ll begin to think
like one.
Because you're dealing with bigger problems, the
consequences, of course, will be greater. Your responsibilities
heavier. That means your experience must be better-—more
complete. And so, you’ll get the kind of opportunities only a

Question of

the week

From the following choices, whom would you
support for the Democratic presidential nomination?
1—Lyndon Johnson

2—Eugene McCarthy

4— George Wallace
5—Other
You can answer The Spectrum Question of the
Week every Wednesday and Thursday at the information desk on the first floor of Norton Hall.
Please submit only one ballot answering the
Question of the Week.
Last week’s question was:
From the following choices, whom would you
nominate for the Republican nomination?
The results were:
1—58% Nelson Rockefeller
2— 4% George Romney
3— 9% Richard Nixon
4— 3% Ronald Reagan
Surprisingly, write-in candidate William F. Buckley Jr. received more votes than Ronald Reagan
and George Romney. Furthermore, write-in candidate Charles Percy received more votes than Ronald Reagan.
5—Other:
a—William F. Buckley 7%
b—Harold, Stassen 2%
e—Pat Paulson 2%
d—Mark Hatfield 2%
e—Charles Percy 4%
f—Various write-ins 9%

You'll develop a talentfor making hard-nosed, imagina-

tive decisions. And you’ll know how these decisions affect
the guts of the operation. At the grass roots. Because you'll

have been there.
If you’d like to be a giant yourself, and your better
ideas are in finance, product engineering, manufacturing,
marketing and sales, personnel administration or systems
research, see the man from Ford when he visits your campus.
Or send your resume to Ford Motor Company, College
Recruiting Department.
You and Ford can grow bigger together.

giant can give.
Giants just naturally seem to attract top professionals.
Men that you’ll be working with and for. And some of that
talent is bound to rub off.

Because there’s

more areas.

more to

do, you’ll learn

more. In
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER.

What’s it like
to work
for a giant?

Terry Turner [above] of San Jose,
Calif., working in a castle

Jobs in Europe
Luxembourg—American Student Information Service is celebrating its
10th year of successful operation
placing students in jobs and arranging tours. Any student may now

choose from thousands of jobs such
as resort, office, sales, factory, hospital, etc. in 15 countries with wages
up to $400 a month. ASIS maintains
placement offices throughout Europe
insuring you of on the spot help at
all times. For a booklet listing all
jobs with application forms and discount tours send $2 (job application,
overseas handling air mail reply) to;
Dept. O, American Student Information Service, 22 Ave. de la Liberte,
Luxembourg City, Grand Duchy of
&amp;

Luxembourg.

1 d like a big job please

�Tuesday, February 13, 1968

Th

•

Spectrum

P*9* lltVM

LBi

requests Congress to enact
bills to provide maximum education
WASHINGTON
asked Can amount of federal funds for congress last week to pass a new Educational Opportunity Act struction grants to colleges.
designed to eliminate economic and racial barriers to higher Grad school aid
education.
President Johnson also recomThe President said the proposed legislation would set a mended three new measures to
new and sweeping national goal: that every qualified young strengthen graduate education in
person, regardless of race or economic well-being, must have the United States. First, he said,
Congress should increase the fedall the education he wants and can absorb.
eral payment available to help
The proposed Educational Opportunity Act of 1968 was graduate schools meet the cost
outlined in the President’s annual message to Congress about of educating a student who has
earned a federal fellowship.
education.

In his special message, President Johnson also said he was
directing the Secretary of Health,
Education, and Welfare to begin
preparing a long-range plan for
the support of higher education.
He said the plan, or “strategy,”
would include “a comprehensive
set of goals and a precise plan of

action.”

Resource pool urged
In addition, the President recommended that Congress pass a
Networks for Knowledge Act of
1968. “This pilot program will
provide new financial incentives
to encourage colleges and universities to pool their resources by
sharing faculties, facilities, equipment, library, and educational televison services,” he said.
The

proposed Networks for
Knowledge Act would supplement
the effort launched last year by
the National Science Foundation
to explore the potential of com-

puters in education. President
Johnson added.
The

President said the proposed Educational Opportunity
Act would:

Expert on political
parties to lecture
Professor Kenneth Janda of the
Political Science Department at
Northwestern University will be
speaking on “The Comparative
Study of Political Parties” at 3
p.m. Feb. 16 in Building 4242,
Room 25 at the Interim Campus.

An expert on the study of political parties around the world,
Professor Janda is composing a
new type of electronic index
which will contain data about
these parties. This index will
make it simple for political scientists to compare numerous characteristics of political parties in
approximately 100 countries.
Professor Raoul Naroll, chair-

man of the Center for Compara-

tive European Studies, is negotiating with Professor Janda to
make this data available to interested faculty and students on this
camous.

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to work

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Second, President Johnson

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WILL

—

•

Fifth freedom
President Johnson said in his
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to declare a fifth freedom—freedom from ignorance. “Last fall,
more than,50% of our high school
graduates went on to college. It

is our goal by 1976 to increase
that number to two-thirds.”
To help guarantee this freedom, the President said Congress
must continue existing federal
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Specifcally, he urged Congress to
extend and strengthen the National Defense Education Act of 1958,
the Higher Education Facilities
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The President, however, already has recommended a decrease of $82 million in the

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•

•

•

�Pag*

Twalv*

Tuesday, February 13, 1968

The Spectrum

Islature faces
*

*

Washington
sa/j

bij

issue:

Anti-draftees

on

Th»

albany

*

•

ALBANY, N. Y.

from our

wiro

sorvicoa

Korea upset; Johnson sends Vance
Presidential troubleWASHINGTON
shooter Cyrus R. Vance has gone to Seoul
for talks with President Park Chung Hee
on recent provocative North Korean acts
against South Korea and the United
States.
In a terse announcement of Vance’s
mission, the White House said the talks
would "deal with the grave threats to the
Republic of Korea caused by the recent
North Korean hostile acts against the
Republic of Korea and the United States.”
U. S. Relations with South Korea have
become increasingly strained since Jan.
23 when North Korea seized the U. S. intelligence ship Pueblo and its 83 crewmen
in the Sea of Japan.
—

South Korea annoyed
South Korea objected to the United
States holding private talks with North

Korea about the incident. Park’s government also was miffed that the United
States appeared to put return of the ship
and crew ahead of South Korea’s own
grievances against the Communists, which
include hundreds of border incidents and
an attempt last month of President Park’s
life.
Besides the Pueblo incident and North
Korean border violations, Vance also will
discuss with South Korea leaders John-

Pacification

PITTSBURGH
Sen. Joseph S. Clark
(D., Pa.) said Viet Cong invasions of South
Vietnam’s cities demonstrated the U. S.conceived pacification program was a failure. He said, he doubted there was “any
prospect” for any American military victory in Southeast Asia.
Clark, a member of the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, said peace negotia—

Diplomacy stressed
Meanwhile in Washington, State Department officials said that diplomatic
dickering with North Korea remains the
only apparent avenue for getting the
Pueblo crew back alive.
Washington officials confirmed the
latest U.S.-North Korean meeting on the
Pueblo incident. But they discouraged reports from South Korean sources that the
session had dealt directly with arrangements for the return of the one dead crewman and three injured men.
The State Department sought to keep
information about the Panmunjom meetings to a minimum, apparently for fear
that disclosure of substantive details
would hinder the delicate discussions and
further stall the release of the crew.
The officials indicated that considerable thought had been given to the possibility that a military reprisal against
North Korea might endanger the lives of
the 82 men who survived the capture of
their intelligence ship.
Thus, the U. S. approach appeared to
be to talk softly at Panmunjom while exerting distinct pressures on the North
Korean regime.

This battle may be the bloodiest
The battle of Khe Sanh,
SAIGON
if it comes, will be far tougher than the
battle of Con Thien fought and won five
months ago by American Marines, Geography and terrain favored the Americans
at Con Thien; it favors the Communists at
Khe Sanh.
The U. S. tactics that won the battle
of Con Thien may not work at the Khe
Sanh. The two fortresses are 27 miles
from each other along the American defense lines between the two Vietnams.
Con Thien, a much smaller base than
Khe Sanh, was a bull’s eye.
Khe Sanh has all the trappings of a
place for a classic battle which could become the biggest, and perhaps decisive,
engagement of the war.
—

Hill of Angels
Con Thien, Vietnamese for “Hill of
the Angels,” was a bloody battleground
beginning last September when North
Vietnamese artillerymen subjected to the
as
heaviest bombardment of the war
many as 1000 shells per day at times.
The barrages killed or wounded more
than 1000 American . Marines defending
a 500-foot knoll rising out
Con Thien
of the grassy flatlands of the eastern part
of the narrow neck between the two
Vietnams. It was a perfect target for
Communist gunners taking aim from miles
—

—

away.

The Marines dug in at Con Thien and
took the pounding. The North Vietnamese
ground assault that had been predicted
by U. S. generals never came.
U. S. air power and artillery lifted the
siege of Con Thien in early October,
knocking out the North Vietnamese gun

Causes

stir

The Joint Legislative Committees on Higher Education and Crime,
which has been investigating the narcotics problem on campus, has
caused quite a stir at the Capitol and at State Universities.
There has been talk of cutting budgets at schools which will not
allow • undercover agents on campus or which do not cooperate
completely with law enforcement agencies.
The Committee on Higher Education is planning to recommend
an authorative study of marijuana and its effects by the Department
of Health.
In a separate development, Assemblyman Clarence D. Lane (R.,
Greene County) has accused 27 Albany State University professors
committing “acts of treason” the accused professors are associated
with “Teachers Draft Counseling,” a group which advises students
on legal methods of avoiding the draft.
Assemblyman Neil W. Kelleher of Troy and Edwin E. Mason of
Delaware County, both Republicans, joined with Lane’s charges.
Kelleher said that academic freedom does not include acts of treason
and termed the behavior of the teachers as nothing less than treason.
Mason denounced the University for allowing "subversive activities
to appear and remain on campus.”

Contalari' statement

The draft counselers “recognizes that many of our men question
whether or not they can, as a matter of conscience, serve as soldiers
in the Vietnam war and, further, that under conditions imposed by
the draft law, the choice of service, alternative service or non-service
represents for many a serious choice about life goals and for others
a far-reaching personal crisis.”

failure?

tions were unlikely until the cities have
been re-pacified and embattled Khe Sanh
secured by U. S. forces.
The senator said he was not sure U. S.
forces could win the battle at the U. S.
Marine stronghold at Khe Sanh without
use of tactical nuclear weapons, although
he said he did not suggest President Johnson was considering such a move,

—

The bill was introduced in the Assembly by Albert Blumenthal
(D., N.Y.) and in the Senate by D. Clinton Dominick (R., Newburgh).
Although the bill is sponsored by 45 legislators, it has virtually no
chance of being passed in the Assembly or Senate due to strong
Catholic opposition.
Sen. William E. Adams (B., Amherst) is one of the co-sponsors
of the bill. There will probably be no action taken by the Assembly
until the Governors’ select committee to review the abortion law
has made its recommendations.

son’s request to Congress for $100 million
in special military aid to South Korea
during the current fiscal year.

program a

Spectrum Albany Corretpondenf

The State Legislature this week faces a number
of important measures, the most important being the new abortion bill.
The Assembly Codes Committee has sent the abortion bill to
the floor of the Assembly without recommending passage or defeat.
The bill would allow for abortions under the following conditions:
If the continuation of the pregnancy would endanger life, physical
or mental health of the mother; if the fetus which is born will be
permantely impaired either physically or mentally; if the pregnancy
is the result of forcible rape or incest; if the girl is 13 years old or
less, or if the pregnant women is mentally disabled or incompetent.

Pittsburgh
compiled

cause stir

Albany President Evan R. Collins has pointed out that the
committee is not composed solely of faculty and is not an official

The University does not provide facilities for the organization
but any group of faculty and students may meet at the University
to discuss any matter fhich interest them. Collins also spoke about
the concept of an “open campus” where ideas may be freely
exchanged. Dr. Collins was asked by one State Legislator to give the
names of the faculty members on the committee and the dates which
they took the oath affirming support for the State and Federal
Constitutions. He replied that all professors took the oath but refused
to give any further information.

positions and the supply lines leading to
them.

Khe Sanh is a plateau surrounded by
jungle mountains. The thick triple-canopy
jungle hides two division of North Vietnamese troops
about 16,000 men. It
conceals their tanks, guns and supply
—

lines.
Little open space
U. S. forces had an open field of fire
at Con Thien. There is little open space
at Khe Sanh, a place “up in the clouds”
1500 feet above sea level where gray
mist lingers every morning, preventing
supply planes and supporting bombers
from flying until the sun burns it off.
Con Thien was difficult to keep supplied. Khe Sanh is even more difficult.
When the weather closes in or the Khe
Sanh runway is closed, planes drop supplies to the Marine defenders by parachute.

The roads into Khe Sanh are bad, and
lined with Communists waiting in ambush
in thick foliage.
Khe Sanh’s proximity to Laos
about
nine miles
is a plus for the North
Vietnamese. A branch of the Ho Chi Mfnh
infiltration and supply trail leads into the
area serving as an avenue for tanks, men,
guns, food and ammunition.
At Con Thien, the North Vietnamese
supply and troop columns had to move
directly south through the panhandle area
of North Vietnam, a relatively open place
where U. S. planes could hit them.
The Marines said they could hold Con
Thien last year, and they did. They say
they can hold Khe Sanh.
—

—

—UPI 7•••photo

Every litter

bit hurts

NYC ended its sanitation strike this
week, with raises of about $425 for
sanitation workers.

Mayor Lindsay was unhappy because
he said Gov. Rockefeller gave in to the

strikers' demands.
The Governor proposes State take-over
of the City garbage collection service.

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                    <text>The Spectrum

U

UEii

v-iTY
HIVES

Stats University of New York at Buffalo

'orn,

1968

iry

"/

i

voo

Chicago officials forsee
violence at convention
Special to Tho Spocirum

CHICAGO—City officials here are worried about potential violence that could disrupt the Democratic National
Convention this summer.
Racial tensions have manifested themselves in a recent
wave of protest demonstrations and counterdemonstrations.
Crowds of white adults around a newly integrated school
chanted “Kill the niggers” at seven Negro eighth-graders,
400 students protested cancellation of a shop course in a
South Side vocational high school that disrupted class, and
hearings were reopened by the Board of Education forced
by segregationists to reconsider busing.

—Jadd

Fusion of books
and computers

Computer system

Federal poverty funds have
been slashed and gains for Negro
poor in housing and education,
according to Edwin Berry, director of the Chicago Urban League,
have been “miniscule."
A Labor Department report
puts Negro unemployment at
three times the rate for whites.
Dr. Martin Luther King’s voter
registration drive against Mayor
Daley’s political machine a year
ago proved unsuccessful.

soon to pool library facilities

of four universities,

Computerization planned for Lockwood;
"instant bibliographies" may be reality
by Donna Van Schoonhovan
Spectrum

Staff

Raportf

“Instant bibliographies” may become a reality in the
future, according to Mr. Michael R. Zackheim, an assistant
librarian at Lockwood Library.
The system was first proposed by Mr. Gerald J. Lazorick
of the Technical Information Dissemination Bureau, in July,
1966. Mr. William B. Ernst Jr., associate director of libraries
here, gave the go-ahead signal. The conversion project is
the first in a series of steps designed to computerize the University libraries.
Traditionally, a collection of three by five cards has
been used to catalogue information about each book in the
library.
During the past few years, the volume of books in the
University libraries has increased at the rate of 60,000 titles
(70,000 volumes) per year.
This rate of acquisition requires a sizable clerical staff for
the production of catalogue cards
since four to 30 cards are required per title.
Lockwood Library currently
uses 8000 man-hours a year to
maintain card catalogues.
$150,000 per year is needed for
its upkeep. This amount could be
expected to increase with the rising rate of book acquisitions.

Magnetic tapes
The conversion will change the
method of entry from three by
five cards to machine readable
material in the form of magnetic
tapes.
This task is being accomplished

be maintained as a supplement
to already published editions.
Mr. Michael Coffey is in charge
of programming the computers
and analyzing information for the

set-up.

The University is also making
plans to share its books by com-

puter with four other universities
through the newly formed Five
Associated University Libraries.
Dr. Peter F. Regan, executive
vice president, and Dr. Oscar A.
Silverman, director of libraries,
will represent the Statg University of Buffalo on the board of
directors.

tions terminal connected via telephone lines to an IBM computer

Mr. Louis Martin, associate director of libraries at the University of Rochester, is chairman.
Other universities represented
are Syracuse, Cornell and the
State University at Binghamton.

After this step is completed,
printed listings will be produced:
Author, title, subject, and call
number listings. These listings

and share a combined operating
budget of $10 million, including
approximately $4 million for
books and periodicals.

by a product called DATATEXT,
a magnetic tape converter. The
system consists of a communicasystem.

will then be transferred into
bound editions for distribution to
libraries, academic and administrative offices, student resident
halls, and other libraries in the
State University system.
A weekly cumulative listing of
all additions to the initial file
will be printed and made available to the library staff and patrons. An annual listing will also

The libraries will combine
collections of six million books

This electronic hook-up will
make available research materials
of any one library to anyone in
any of the others.
Mr. Martin termed the new
group “the first of its kind” to
attempt a university library project of such scope.

Advantages
“The general goals of the library automation program are to

Demonstrations planned
Massive demonstrations are
planned against the Democratic
convention by anti-war and New
Left groups, including National

improve services to the library Mobilization to End the War and
the National Conference on New
patrons, and to streamline the internal operations,” explained Mr. Politics.
Negroes may or may not join
Frederick Balfour, assistant to
the director for systems analysis these groups.
Dr. King said that “the Demoand research.
cratic party should "he demonMr. Balfour acts as staff consultant for questions about the strated against for its Vietnam
project and performs research on

policy and “its failure to respond
to economic problems in the urban areas that are causing riots.”
Black organization leaders warn
of the potential threat if no positive action is taken against these
problems.
The Rev. C.T. Vivian, former
aide to Dr. King, said: “Chicago
is as racist and segregated as ever
A decade after Little Rock,
we still have Little Rock in Chicago.” Chester Robinson, director
of the West Side organization,
said: “Some people in Chicago
want to see violence. This summer would be an ideal time for
somebody who wanted to start
a riot, with all the police tied
up trying to control the students
at the convention.”
...

Rennie Davis, director of the
Center for Radical Research, said
that "all the significant anti-war
and black liberation groups” were
invited to join the demonstrations
it Please turn to Page 7

library problems.
After the new system is operative, patrons will be able to find
out if a book is in the library’s
collection without having to make
a trip to the library. Also, indexes
will be easier to use than the
conventional card catalogues.
In addition, users in other libraries of the State system will
be able to request items on inter-library loan more quickly,
thus reducing the time required
to obtain needed library materials.

This system also holds advantages for the library. It will be

able

to give more services
through cataloging, reference
desks, ordering section, circulation, cooperating libraries,
branches, university schools and
departments, resident halls, and

offices of researchers. Staff time
will be reduced considerably and
with the elimination of producing
catalogue cards, it will save a
substantial amount of money.
Eventually, library officials
hope that patrons will be able to
sit down at one of the IBM typewriters and receive the information they want almost instantaneously.

—Y«Us

Pre-adolescent
,

orientation
,

Prospective student discuss facilities
of Norton Union with member of

custodial staff.

Mob calls student strike
CHICAGO (CPS)—Mora than 900 studant activists from tha Unitad Statas
and Latin Amarica hava callad for a world-wida studant strika "against tha
war In Viatnaih and racism."
Th» itotUnt. announced plant for tha ttrlka during a confaranca Kara
last weekend tpontorad by tha Student Mobilization Committee, a Now York

bated organization which halpad plan larga-tcale damonttratlont in New York
and California lait April 15 and tha mattlva damonttratlon at tha Pentagon
latt Oct. 21.
Th* strike will be held Friday, April 26, In the midst of 10 days of
concentrated anti-war activity scheduled from April 20 to April 30. Tho 10day period coincide* with tho 'Ton Days to Shako the Empire" propram
announced at a national moating of Student* for a Democratic Society last
Dae amber.
Th* black caucus at tha contaranca last waakand called Its strike against
srlallsm, racism, and the draft,"

�Th

Pag* Two

•

Spectrum

Friday, February 9,

1968

Educational reforms to be implemented Freshman admission
in Graduate School reorganization requirements are rising
educational matters tn the hands
of the separate program areas
and their associated faculty enabling them to act as relatively

Dr, Frederick Snell, Dean of
the Graduate School, observed
last week that one of the basic
problems of education is the
regimentation of learning that is
not “the native way to learn.”
His remarks came in one weekly

autonomous units,

as free as pos-

sible from central academic bu-

reaucracy, he said.

“University Report.”

In the Academic Plan it is
stated that “each program area
should accept full responsibility
for the administration of its program,” having the authority to
select its own students according to its own criteria, determine
appropriate courses of study taking and judge when a student has
satisfactorily completed the requirements for the degree.

He spoke about an academic
plan for the Graduate School,
submitted in December
a series
of proposals representing an assessment of the current state of
affairs in the Graduate School.
—

Proposals in the academic plan
together with the “Academic Organization of the University” proposed by President Meyerson and
approved by the Faculty Senate
Jan. 31, 1967 comprise the basis
for the contemplated pattern of
reorganization.

“Only with this approach,” the
Academic Plan states, “may we
expect to see the emergence of
the high level of excellence to
which this University aspires."

Dr. Fred M. Snell

The Academic Plan states: “We
plan to implement during the
course of the next several months
the changes suggested in the
President’s plan of academic organization.’’

Looks for

approaches

new

to

learning.
quences

hour

Under the plan all post-baccalaureate degree programs, both
professional and academic, would
be coordinated by a graduate
dean who would work with the
provosts of the seven faculties
to "assure standards of excellence
on the graduate level . .

.

and

the

fifty-minute

.

sure this is the way
the natural learning process occurs,” Dr. Snell said, describing
the Graduate School as a “con-

Federal participation
Dr. Snell suggested, as stated
in the Academic Plan, that University-wide requirements such
as course grades, credit hours,
and language requirements for
the Ph.D. be eliminated.

“I’m not

tinuation of undergraduate
school.”
The “see how much you know”
a student must
“learn all these bloody facts
before he can be worthy of discussing anything" has the effect
of making the student's mind
conform with what is in the images of his teachers instead of
“expanding it to motivation, truly

“We need more valid and relevant measures of student’s creative research or professional ta-

Dr. Snell noted that reorganization should be not only at the
graduate but at the undergraduate level as well, beginning with
the Graduate School. It would
be designated the School of
Graduate Studies under the proposed changes listed in the Academic Plan.

new knowledge

. .

As a remedy for the situation
Dr. Snell feels a fundamental altitudinal change is needed but
he is not sure “how one gets an
altitudinal change.”

Elaborating on what he considers a basic problem, Dr. Snell
noted that in the elementary
schools there exists defined
courses of what must be learned,
resulting in a gradual loss of
interest on the student’s part, at
which time grades and exams are
imposed to effect learning. The
pattern becomes ingrained as the
child’s education progresses, reinforced in college by what Dr.
Snell termed, “prescribed se-

Quoting John Gardner, Dr.
Snell said reforms must have a
“barracuda-like bite rather than
a minupw-like nibble."

Reforms should principally put
responsibility and authority for

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Big John's Steak Special

An imbalance presently exists,
he noted, wherein scientific and
technical areas are given more
support than social and humanitarian areas.
agreement with Alan Pifer,

In
President of the Carnegie Corporation of New York, Dr. Snell
advocated a “coordinated high
level policy or advisory body in
the Federal government to search
for the best ways of Federal participation in graduate education in
a balanced way and not in the
sort of patchwork way it’s done
now.”

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Dr. Snell told The Spectrum
that he foresees a trend toward
“much greater Federal participation in graduate work and we
must guide this participation in
a much more coordinated fasion
than we have in the past.”

.”

Attitudinal change

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Leaving New York July 3
Return New York Sept. 16

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*U.B. Law School it participating in a lummar study program.
Thaaa students have arranged for low priced group transportation and can offor this low rato to 10 mora mom bars
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“This price is for air faro and may bo obtainod by mom bars
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course.

Call 852-4372
and ask for Dean Smith's secretary

Staff

curriculum because all freshmen are in the

Reporter

The whittling of 9600 applithe
cants to 1866 freshmen
requires many declass of ’72
cisions by the Office of Admissions. How these decisions are
made was explained by Mr.
James C. Schwender, Assistant
Director of Admissions.
Many things are considered.
The over-all high school academic average, rank in the graduating class and New York State
Regents Scholarship Examination
(RSE) scores are examined.
Grades in subjects such as
business, music, and physical education are not included in the
computation of the average made
by the admissions staff.
Anyone having a high school
average of 78% and in the upper
two-fifths of the graduating class
is eligible for admission. A few
years ago this ddd not pose a
serious problem to the student;
however, people with higher
grades than this are being re—

—

jected.

After calculating the average,
rank and RSE score, the predicted grade point average in the
freshman year is calculated.
He said that a student’s performance cannot be predicted
100%, but can be reasonably
close.

lents,” the Academic Plan states,
“than that which is embodied in
the performance in formal course
Same program
work with formal grades.”

approach where

Reorganization

not specify their

by Linda Laufer

Spectrum

BUFFALO
TEXTBOOK
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Mr. Gary Cooley, assistant director of Admissions and Rec-

ords, said that the size of the
graduating class is a marginal
variable. It does not carry much
weight in the decision, but it is
considered.

more opportunity

for freshmen to explore curriculum areas without having to commit themselves,” said Mr.
Schwender.

Many accepted
From 9600 applicants for the
class of ’67 approximately 4300

were accepted.
He explained that several students must be accepted to make
sure one place is filled. Students
have a choice of schools and “just
as the University is selective in
who it admits,' it recognizes the

fact that the students admitted

possess outstanding credentials.”
Thus, five students with a 95%
average, in the upper 2% of the
graduating class, and having an
RSE score of 250, may be accepted to fill one place. Students with
a lower average have less flexi
bility in choosing a college and

there is greater chance that he
will matriculate here.

Requirements increase
Admissions requirements have
been increasing steadily. The size
of the freshman class is being
purposely reduced, because of the
limitation of physical facilities
and because the undergraduate
population is scheduled to remain
stationary.

Freshmen and sophomores will
40% of enrollment and
upperclassmen 60%. As quality
improves, so docs the retention
rate. Fewer students are transferring out or being asked to
leave because of poor grades.
compose

The probability of a student’s
succeeding in college increases
if he comes from a larger class.
Required recommendations are
also examined.

The cost of attending private
is going up and public
institutions are becoming more
appealing and get more applications from highly qualified students.

Participation in secondary
school activities are considered in
part. Scholastic aptitude test
scores are required for out of

Mr. Cooley said that standards
are forced up because of the
number of students applying.

state applicants.

Until this year, students applied for the curriculum they
wanted to enter and this had to
be considered. Two other considerations were the sex of the applicant and the availability of
housing. But now, applicants can-

colleges

According to Mr. Schwender,
the University is cutting back the
number of students being admitted, but it still has a large pool
from which to choose.
He added that the Unversity is
increasing the quality of freshmen.

West Side Tutorial Project
looking for volunteers
The West Side Tutorial Proj-

ect, which sent over a hundred
State University of Buffalo stu-

dents to neighborhood centers
weekly last semester, is seeking
tutors for the coming semester.

THE RUE

For that special date
When a beer just won’t do

Rue Franklin-West
Coffee House

EXTRA-ORDINARY
341 rue Franklin
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Friday and Saturday

Who needs The Rathskeller?
You do! While you're at the INTERIM CAMPUS
you'll want to take advantage of our complete

food service. Snacks and Full Meals
daily 8:30-6:30

same program.
“This gives

Bldg. G, Interim Campus

Each night cars leave from Norton Hall to go to the centers at
the Lakeview Housing Project,
381 Niagara St., and the Immaculate Conception School. Tutors
spend Ihi hours per week with
their tutees, helping in reading,

mathematics and science.
The majority of children are in
grade and junior high school.
According to Larry Drill, project
coordinator, their success has
been largely due to the fact that
“it made learning fun.” Flash
cards, bingo games and other
devices are used in instruction.
The project is one of several
community activities run in con
junction with the Community Ac
tion Organization. Twenty to thirty additional volunteers are needed. Anyone interested in tutor
ing can contact Larry Drill at
837-4710.

CONGRATULATIONS
STEVE
SHB, ETB

&amp;

JUDY

�Friday, February 9,

19&amp;

Th

•

Spectrum

Paga

Proposed Senate reorganization
allows student vote on major issues
by

Yvonne Laicano

Students may be given the opportunity to vote on all
major issues of student government if proposed changes in
the structure of the Student Senate are effected.
A student gripe session is
scheduled Wednesday at 2 p.m.
in the Dorothy Haas Lounge to
give students the opportunity to
exercise rights they might acquire under a proposed Senate

student polity, consisting of all
members of the student body.
The student polity would vote on
all major issues before the University. Under the present system Student Senators vote on all
major issues unless a special stureorganization plan.
dent referendum for a particular
Reapportionment possible
issue is called.
Meryl Markowitz, NSA Co-orAccording to Student Associadinator and secretary of the Sention President Stewart Edelstein,
ate Reorganization Committee
presented the committee’s two the present system for represenalternate proposals for changing tation is meaningless for such a
the Senate structure at a Senate large student body, for the Senate does not serve to educate anymeeting Wednesday,
One proposal involved merely one other than the Student Senate members. Miss Markowitz
reorganizing the Senate’s strucadded that under the present systure under the present Constitutem the Senators cannot adetion. This proposal deals with
quately act for their student
elimination of the grade-point avgroups, particularly the Arts and
erage required of Senators, reSciences Senators who represent
apportionment of Senators, a minor change of Student Senate ofsuch a large number of students.
ficers, and elimination of Student Finance committee
Senate advisors.
The Treasurer of the Student
An alternate proposal of the Senate under the proposed reorStudent Reorganization Commitganization would be the head of
tee would provide for a President,
the Senate Finance Committee.
two Vice-Presidents, a Treasurer
This committee would determine
and a board of commissioners, all all allocations for student activielected by the student body.
ties. Ultimate authority for apStudent polity
proving budgets allocated from
The more radical feature of the the student fees would rest with
the Student Polity. Each club
proposal is the provision for a

Dr. Furnas is appointed VP
of National Research Council
Dr. Clifford C. Furnas, president emeritus of the State University of Buffalo, has been appointed vice chairman of the
National Research Council by Dr.
Frank Seitz, president of the National Academy of Sciences.
The National Research Council
is an agency organized by the
National Academy of Sciences. A
major portion of their work is to
provide advice and assistance,
upon request, to private and federal agencies on matters of science and technology.
The two Academies and the
Council are supported by private
and public gifts, grants and con-

tracts. In addition, several thous-

and of the nation’s leading scientists and engineers voluntarily

President of the University
from 1954 to 1966, Dr. Furnas
has also been director and executive vice president of Cornell
Aeronautical Laboratories. As a
research scientist, he has conducted research in the fields of pro-

(Protestant)
For Students, By Students
Sponsored by the

Sum

LUTHERAN MINISTRY
TO THE UNIVERSITY

SUNDAY AFTERNOONS, 4:00

A

Guidelines for the "possession,
consumption and sale of alcoholic beverages” on campus were
adopted Tuesday by the studentfaculty Committee on Alcoholic
Beverages,
The Committee’s resolutions
are concerned with residence
,

halls, Norton Union and the Faculty Club and recommend that
procedures be established to set

Blocks from Campus)

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Guidelines for liquor use adopted

COMPLETE MEAL
OR A SHACK

In

North Vietnamese troops occupied the American

—

Phone 876-2284

TAKE-OUT

—

—

FAST, EFFICIENT

Calvary Lutheran
Church

SAIGON

led camp at Lang Vei in a first round border victory that gave them
control
the route over which they bring tanks from Laos for the
expected assault on the Khe Sanh.

A spokesman said the North Vietnamese also were pouring reinforeements into Hue, the ancient imperial capital, despite the loss
°f a record 15,515 troops,
Military offiicals said a record 416 Americans also died last week
I* 16 heaviest losses since the Communists’ Khe Sanh offensive of
MaV 20' I 967 George C. Wallace, Alabama’s segregationist
WASHINGTON
former Governor, declared his candidacy for president Thursday
with an appeal to ‘‘the man in the street" who is fed up with riots
a nd lawlessness.
“The typical American of all races is tired of riots, of crime
running rampant in every city of our nation," Wallace told reporters,
the militant
‘‘The man in the street knows that it is the activist
who is responsible.”
The former Alabama governor, a Democrat running at the head
of his ‘‘American Independent Party,” said he did not plan to enter
any Democratic primaries and would not seek support at the Democratie national convention in Chicago,
WASHINGTON
President Johnson proposed to Congress
Thursday a $2.9 billion foreign aid program for next fiscal year
Council.
but asked for an additional $100 million now in increased military
assistance to South Korea to meet a new threat from the Communist
Monthly meeting
The reorganization plan also North.
The Chief Executive also asked for $480 millon in economic
suggested a meeting of the student polity once a month at which
assistance to South Vietnam to restore and reconstruct cities and
all members of the student body
towns ravaged by Viet Cong attacks of the past two weeks.
NEW YORK
Mayor John V. Lindsay Thursday declared a
would be encouraged to air their
health emergency in New York City because of the garbage colconcerns over University affairs.
lectors’ strike. He ordered the transfer of some 3000 city employes
Mr. Edelstein said there might
not be enough time to effectively to emergency duty in the Sanitation Department and asked for state
create the change in the Student
aid in the form of “the possible use” of the National Guard.
Senate structure before the Sen“The condition of New York City is desperate,” he said. "Firm,
decisive action is needed to prevent desperation from degenerating
ate elections for the coming year,
which will take place the last into disaster.”
Shotgun pellets wounded three Negro
ORANGEBURG, S. C.
week in March.
There was some doubt among youth Wednesday night at a college campus where students hurled
the Senators whether the Sturocks and bottles at shotgun and carbine-armed state troopers. Officers
dent Polity system would be efsealed off two Negro college campuses until after daylight today.
A force of about 100 troopers, also carrying gas masks, withdrew
fective as a system for voting on
Senate issues. Mr. Edelstein and
before classes opened today at South Carolina State and Clafin
Ellen Price, a freshman Senator, colleges.
A 200-man National Guard unit also was expected to retire from
pointed out the lack of student
interest in campus government a shopping center, where violence erupted Tuesday night at a
segregated bowling alley.
issues.

cess metallurgy.

WORSHIP

hp

cations for any further funds
would be made to the Finance
Committee
The Council of commissioners
provided for in the proposed reorganization would serve as a programming group for the student
body. There would possibly be 12
commissioners, each responsible
for a specific area
such as
NASA Coordination,
Academic
Affairs, Student Affairs, Public
Affairs or Student Aetivties.
As outlined by the proposal,
each commissioner would be
elected for a specific program,
Under the present system Senators are elected to represent the
University’s various
divisions,
Each commissioner would have to
present a program for activities
in his area for approval to the

contribute their time and effort.

Dr. Furnas is a member of the
Committee on Science, Engineering and Regional Development
of the NAS. He is also a member
of the NAE and the NAE Committee on Public Engineering
Policy. He is now serving as a
member of the Panel on Science
and Technology under the auspices of the Committee on Science
and Astronautics of the U.S.
House of Representatives.

dateline news, Feb. 9

giupn a mavimnm nf
$100 operating expenses. AppliwmilH

Spectrum Staff Reporter

Thraa

Wplcnmpf
Whale Steaks
Western Buffalo
e Whitetail Vansion
e Mountain Goat
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guidelines for
campus.

other areas on

Upon President Martin Meyerson’s approval, the guidelines become University policy.
The
Committee’s statement
“open the doors for the con-

sumption and possession of alcoholic beverages” explained Dr.
Anthony Lorrenzetti, Acting Dean
of Students, He emphasized that

until the President approves the
new policies, the present rules
which prohibit alcohol are still
in effect.
Procedures for the application
of a liquor license are being

discussed in the Faculty Student

Association. The possibility of attaining a restaurant license is

being considered. According to
Raymond Becker, Director of

food service, this type of license

permits service of alcoholic beverages in a specified area. It also
allows for the application of a
caterer’s permit to serve liquor
at special events outside the area.
Discussion of the guidelines
and license began immediately
after the University Council unanimously passed a resolution
Nov. 17 permitting controlled use
of alcoholic beverages on campus.

�Page Four

Friday, February 9, 1968

The Spectrum

■^IV-

Cooperative education needed
With the realization that undergraduate education at
this University is far from adequate, we should begin looking
for ways to augment and refine what is already available.
More colleges and universities each year have been adopting
a cooperative education program, and a similar program
should be available here.

tic

Cooperative education gives students an opportunity to
have educationally valuable experience in full-time jobs in
business, industry, and government. Students would alternate campus study with full-time employment.

4 IN

This “work-study” approach to higher education will
give students a chance to learn from “on the job training”
as well as from the text book and classroom. Universities
that have already adopted cooperative education are presently sending their students out to work in virtually all
fields. Some colleges, like Antioch, have arrangements for
students to study or work abroad.
But there are other benefits that such a program would
also provide. Colleges that have a large enough program are
able to admit and graduate more students without expanding
facilities. In effect, the college has two student bodies.
It is also clear that students will be able to earn money
while they are enrolled in school and thereby help finance
their education.

110 colleges and universities are now sending out more
than 56,000 students in cooperative programs. These students are earning more than $95,000,000 toward the cost
of their education this year.
The coop program provides greater variety for the
college student. Many schools that have adopted the program grant a bachelor’s degree after five years, rather than
four, and the student is in school or on the job most of
the time.
Students who are not involved in the program could
also benefit from the experience of others as working students return to campus alternate semesters. Close working
relationships between the student in the field and several
students or instructors on campus can provide added benefits.
Cooperative education can be instituted here by next

semester. Even if only a small number a students could
participate initially, it would be a step in the right direction.
The undergraduate needs this type of option, and his education can be qualitatively superior in many respects if it is
given to him.

Those who would seek justice
During the past week and a half, there has been a
great deal of discussion about the Student Judiciary. Since
the trial last week which resulted in the dismissal of drinking charges against 17 defendants, many have felt that the
Judiciary has lost its respectability. It has been said that
the judges are no longer fair and impartial adjucators.
The truth is just the opposite. The decision of the Judiciary was very much to its credit.
One of the greatest safeguards for an accused person
lies in the basic American tenet that a man is innocent until
proven guilty. Those who criticize the decision of the Judges
apparently believe the opposite.
Another consideration which too many are all too ready

to disallow is the fact that the judicial system in this country

is an adversary one. Juries, and judges in this case, must
make their decision only in light of the evidence that is
presented in the courtroom. To decide on other bases could
easily lead to a type of inquisition.
It’s clear that the prosecution in last week’s trial failed
to prove that alcohol was in fact possessed at the alleged
time. It is also clear that because of that lack of sustantial
proof, the judges virtually had to dismiss the charges, if
they were to act in a responsible manner.

V.
OUO~

"

,

-es»

;WM

/

;

©I^STDEl

m/anjuie

Cfttr-

Readers
writings

from linen rags

*

sugar
Larry IwllzcIatO

To one who habitually endeavors to contemplate the true state of things, the political state can hardly be said to have any
significance whatever. It is unreal, incredible, and insignificant to him. and
for him to endeavor to extract the truth
from such lean material is like making
sugar from linen rags, when sugar cane
may be had.
—Henry David Thoreau,
A Week on the Concord
and Merrimac Rivers
This week’s serious, and now infamous, “garbage” strike in New York City dramatically portrays the repulsive mess that our greatest city
(and thus, eventually, all our cities) finds itself
in.
The stinking, rat-infested refuse, piling up at
the rate of 10,000 tons per day, is a striking monument to the inability of the city government to
deal with the new-found labor-consciousness of socalled “public” employees.
Although New York City has borne the brunt
of the rash of strikes by civil service, transportathe phenomenon
tion, and utilities employees
of rapidly developing strong union organizations in
such occupations is by no means a local one. Closer
to home, the bus drivers conducted a “successful”
strike recently in Rochester, a teachers’ strike
occurred in the Sweet Home school district last fall,
and the Buffalo fire department conducted a slowdown until pay increase demands were met.
The organizers’ logic, is of course obvious: for
years, the so-called “public service” occupations
have lagged miserably in wage increases and job
benefits which most industrial unions won decades
ago; therefore, it seemed only natural that collective bargaining, using strike threats as a trump
card, would provide the solution.
But city governments, unlike large corporations, do not have an equally sound bargaining
position. They are limited by a rigid fiscal policy,
and the purse-strings of county and state legislatures. In many eases, even what they agree to at
the mediation table can not be passed in the
ensuing legislative session, and another strike
—

occurs.
Legislative efforts to curb strikes by public
employees have failed. New York’s Taylor Law,
providing for large fines and jail terms for uppity
public service personnel and their unions, flunked
its first test in the teachers’ strike, and was unable
to do anything to prevent the sanitation workers’

strike, except make martyrs of unions leaders with
meager 15-day jail terms. This is precisely because it is primarily a punishment procedure, and,
obviously, the punishments are small enough so
that the union organizations are able to withstand
Legal processes have evolved to afford the defendant them. Their main consideration is to show the
every possible safeguard. Those who would make excep- cities that they can expect trouble under just
tions because they believe they can accurately determine about any circumstances, as long as wage demands
unheeded.
guilt or innocence, serve only as a detriment to the system remain
The difficult thing is that the power of the
as a whole, and undermine the rights of any accused unions’
trump card in the public services eliminates
individual.
the one factor necessary to effective mediation
compromise. And the city governments don’t
It is difficult to believe that these very persons who have the bread to help, even if they wanted to.
have criticized the Judiciary would waive any privilege that
The way to avoid a general spiraling of wage
is rightfully theirs should they be charged with an offense, demands must not be strike-limiting laws; if they
either by the Dean of Students Office or the police de- could be strong enough to be effective, they would
destroy any participation the workers might have
partment.
in pushing for better wages. However, the situaof the grave fiscal
The decision of the judges in this case is unimpeachable. tion is exacerbated because
of the cities. State legislators are notoriously
Their action is to be commended. On the other hand, the crises
bade-woodsy; they'U continue half-heartfed atactions of those who would so readily distort a sound judicial tempts at post-facto legislation
until the stench
system can be viewed only as deplorable.
of garbage reaches the suburbs.
—

—

Education 'doesn't make it!'
To the Editor:

Damn little real education is taking place in

this school. The whole system is a shuck, a monumental fraud perpetrated on us, the worst part
being that it has so corrupted our minds that we
don’t even realize that we are caught up in it.

O.K. you say that has been said before—so
what? The answer lies in awakening the dormant
consciousness in each student to care about, not
perhaps involvement in resisting oppression to
others, but in resisting oppression to HIMSELF!
Educational oppression is trickier to fight than
racial oppression. The analogy to the plight of the
Negro—nigger—in America has been drawn by
Goodman, Farber, and others, pointing out that
the only way to start to change the situation is for
us to insist upon participation in our own education. This is not really that radical a proposal.

The vehicle towards achieving this end is to
organize now, to take power, now. To form a
student Union as a viable power bloc, not just a
building. This is the answer to your recent editorial on this subject. We have ideas and statements already drafted, er, rather, drawn up, though
by no means inflexibly so. We are demanding
more and better courses, and more competent,
responsive teachers, who can guide the onus of a
stricturing grading system. We don’t want the
situations as it now exists, that one must get an
education in spite of his schoolwork, to continue.

Specifically, then, what we want in response to
this letter is feedback from those of you who
have been digging the same thing, and want to
lend at least tacit support. Come speak to us
at our table, or address responses to Box 62
Norton. This should be OUR school; let’s make
the motto of this university mean something at last!
Steve Halpern
Daniel Rosenthal
The

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published twice-weekly
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during the regular academic
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Press Service, Gannett News Service, and the Los
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�Friday, February 9, 1968

The Spectrum

Questions Lyon's manhood

Pag* Fiv*

By Interlandi

BELOW OLYMPUS

grump

To the Editor:
My I take advantage of your column

to reply
to Lawrence B, Lyon (Readers’ Writings, Jan. 30,
1968),

Well,

Dear Larry,

The content

and

:he lie to its

/
//

I

&amp;

I

Larry, you are not a man. You are a minor.
When you reach your majority (age 21 as you seem
to understand) then you can call yourself a man.
Legally, that is.
But there is more to manliness than a legal
definition can encompass. Even were you 21, the
puerile pronouncements of your letter would disqualify you from the ranks of manhood. Morally,
intellectually, and emotionally you are still a boy.
That is one of the reasons why you are at the
University (hiding behind a 2-S deferment as
some nasty people would have it): to grow up,
A grown-up and mature person recognizes, and
then acts upon this recognition, that it is morally
reprehensible to give one’s life for base and
criminal causes. Also he recognizes that to call
military aggression 8000 miles from home “defense
of my country” is a sham and a guise for immoral action. You do not recognize this: morally

mature person learns his
history and profits by it. He knows, for example,
that this country was originally settled by English
dissenters and that, in subsequent centuries, it
was populated by Irish Fenians, the Irish equivalent of the Viet Cong, fleeing the queen; German
radicals, the German equivalent of the Viet Cong,
fleeing the Kaiser and his draft, and Eastern
Europeans and Russian revolutionaries, all equivalents of the Viet Cong, fleeing the Czar and his
draft. He knows, in short, that the “courage and
faith” of America about which you speak so foolishly is the heritage bequeathed to the U. S. A. by

not a man.
Finally, a grown-up and mature person does
not become hysterical. Talking about taking “arms
against Communist aggression,” such as you have
done, is a form of hysteria. Calling people whom
you do not understand “cowards,” such as you have
done, is a form of hysteria. Passing off mindless
ravings on topics about which one is patently ignorant as a substitution for considered reflection,
such as you have done, is a form of hysteria. Your
letter is hysterical: emotionally, therefore, you
are not a man.
Larry, you said one true thing and it was your
first statement. You are indeed a type of the
“American Fighting Soldier”: immature, underaged, and unlearned.
Carl Murphy
Chairman

Graduate Students Association

Armed guards in Bookstore
To the Editor:
I was very hiappy to see that the Pinkertons
guarding the bookstore are armed with guns. Perhaps now that they will be able to eliminate
those students responsible for causing" the excessive prices for books and materials we will have

reasonable rates at long last. If that is not their
function maybe someone could please explain exactly what the purpose of their firearms is.

.

.

by STEESE

Another week has crept by
Perhaps
has not come.

Armageddon still

old wooden rowboat one might even be optimistic,
but then mustn’t get carried away. Suppose the
baddies seize the ship of state—then where would
we be? Of course compared to our ship of state
the Pueblo was a gold mine but we will ignore
that in the interest of concensus, right?

Spent last weekend in and around and riding
to and from New York City. It is now glaringly
apparent to me that if they graded New Yorkers
on a pass-fail basis I would have been shipped to
Moose Jaw a long time ago.
I do fairly well
below ground, didn’t get lost once on the subway,
but trying to figure out which way to turn in
midtown Manhattan to go to various avenues is
completely beyond me. I just make a choice and
walk. After I can confirm that I have made the
wrong choice I turn around and walk back again.
A simple system but it works.

you are not a man.
A grown-up and

dissenters, draft-dodgers, revolutionaries, seventh
sons, and the sons of every kind of slavery imaginable. He knows this, Larry, and he is so
proud of it that he attempts to emulate these
ancestral virtues in his own life. He says no to
foulness and, if need be, he risks his public reputation, goes to jail, and even leaves his beloved
homeland to preserve these virtues just as his
ancestors had done generations ago. Sad to say
you have not learned this: intellectually you are

well, well.

.

6i

"There's nothing underneath!"

the
lighter
side
by Dick West

While in the city I had occasion to see “A Man
For All Seasons.” I can now understand why I
have been getting conflicting reports on said film.
I am fairly well convinced that the subject matter
bothers a larger number of people than are willing
to admit it. All the vague little comments like
“weak plot” and such may bespeak a much deeper
discomfort. For those of you who know neither
play or film—I for example had it confused with
“Beckett” and kept waiting for Thomas More to
be made Archbishop of Canterbury—allow me to
briefly outline it.
It is a relatively simple play about one Thomas
More and that gentleman’s refusal to acknowledge
Henry the VIITs last marriage as being legal. The
play is rather heavily weighted towards More, and
the movie follows this. The play, based on these
historical personalities, then becoriie an exploration
in morality. Most specifically of the meaning of
oaths. Although all the other prominent nobles and
statesmen of England signed a recognition of
legality, More refused to because of his conscience.

Just in time for the Valentine and leap year market,
Bear in mind that we are not talking of a
a young woman named Jani Gardner has written a book
parallel case of modern draft opposition. Reflect
titled “365 Ways to Say ahem ‘I Love You’.”
on the differences in power between the president
a king of England in the 16th Century—(which
That “ahem” you see above is not part of the title. That and
may cause you to thank whatever god(s) you favor
was me clearing my throat.
for some small kindnesses)—and the fact that More
To quote the publisher’s blurb,
what we have here is “an offbeat
little love manual” designed to
help you “tell that man in your
life how much he means to you
every day of the year.”
It seems to have been written
primarily for married women.
Or if they aren’t married, they
should be. Some of the entries
are a bit on the intimate side.

Instant Don Juan

Ladies, has your husband bea lackadaisical lothario?
Would you like to revalitize rocome

mance?

Well, if you take this book and
follow its instructions faithfully
for 365 days, I will practically
guarantee that by the end of the
year you will be divorced.
In fact, I doubt that the mar
riage will last past April.

walk with him in your local
woods,”

was the only prominent figure to stand before
Henry. To the point where he eventually has his
head chopped off for a matter of conscience.

In most courts, these will be
This idea of stubborn adherence to principle
accepted, individually or colleceven to the point of death I suspect is a little
tively, as evidence of incompatiunsettling to modern audiences. Expediency is all
bility.
to most of the people who sit in the theaters and
watch this film. Which is hard to condemn outright
Flower power
—or even underhandedly. The conditioning is toAssuming your marriage has wards individualism and individual economic sucthe
bananas,
survived the fried
cess. Given those two albatrosses to hang around
advice for May 22 is: “Put a lily your neck, one has to believe in expediency or
of the valley in his toothbrush he may never own a sports car or a balance
portfolio.
rack.”
But it is not really fair only to dump on
I submit a more appropriate businessmen.
We all cut corners, either legally
love token would be a bottle of or
morally. The idea being that it is easier to
calamine lotion. He is going to do so or that the law is
archaic and should be
need something to put on the changed (i.e. New York
State’s laws on marijuana
picked
during
up
he
poison ivy
and legal speeds on highways could both do with
the walk in the woods.
a little revision here and there). 1 mean there are
It isn’t until August that Miss all sorts of highly effective rationalizations for
Gardner comes up with what I doing things that our initial training or legal
regard as a truly effective means codes say are wrong. And most of us use them.
Which is why the sight of More turning gray
of abbeting romance.

and weak in the Tower of London because he will
“Get him a goldfish not be expedient, because he is being classically
Here are some of the recomand name it after him.”
Concerned
stubborn about his conscience and his belief in
mended love gestures for that
law, I think may get under even the rather tough
Aug. 10: “. . . Present him with hides of most modern Americans.
month
He gains no end
a karate jacket you made your- by being intransigent. He
places himself and his
April 9—“Learn to make fried self."
family in danger for the sake of a principle of
To the Editor:
bananas.”
defender. He must be mad
If he is like most husbands I which he is the only
The Jan. 30 issue of The Spectrum brought
. . . what
April 14—“Paint red hearts on
are we?
know, he wiil need karate to For if he is not
to us a warning from SDS and LEMAR that the
Which I fear is a frightfully loaded question.
defend himself against the goldcampus was to be invaded by the local constabulary his golf or tennis balls.”
So loaded in fact that I have absolutely,
fish, '
“within about 10 days.” The statement by Miss
April 19—“Go for an -evening
no intention of trying to pursue my own halting
Bromberg was substantiated by no evidence whatanswers to it in print. 1 will merely trip lightly
soever.
on to something gay and trivial. Like the 21,230
It would seem that the authors of this “warning"
baddies the Monday morning paper says we have
could do far better things with their time than
killed in Vietnam since Saigon became almost
invite difficulties and challenge the police to visit
as nasty a place to live in as Hanoi. Interesting
campus.
to note that since Mac admitted we were estimating
Like Miss Ziegler and Mr. Petersen (The Specenemy dead they at least have the decency to put
trum, 30 Jan. 1968, p, 1), perhaps Miss Bromberg
tell
WASHINGTON—Assistant Postmaster Gen. Richard Murphy
a zero at the end of the—now admitted—estimate.
should visit the Harriman-Norton Tunnel where
hippie in
ing why new regulations were necessary to cope with the
One thing does puzzle me a little. Much of
she could sing out to her heart’s content without
of the postal service.
vasion
the
news from Vietnam from Mr. Alsop and various
creating further embarrassment for the University
other dignitaries assured me that the bads were
community.
“Some of the men had hair down to their shoulders. They were scraping
the bottom of their manpower barrel,
wearing everything from bearskin coats to dungarees. Some wore
J.Z. Friedman
conscripting everything on two legs. Rather strange
sandals, and some simply went barefoot.”
Faculty of Law, Class of 1969
that all these unwilling conscripts don't simply
throw down their arms and rush to the side of
professor
a
FARM,
Ark.—Thomas
0.
Murton,
CUMMINS PRISON
their true benefatcors in places like Hue and Saigon
antiquated
prison
revamp
to
the
Arkansas
brought in this month
where their absence would hardly be noticed—•
Wrif«r«; Plaasa ba briaf. tiffin should
quit:
system, commenting on his decision to
nol axcaad 300 words.
until our allies started short range target practice
*AouW be signed and contain the address and telephone number
in front of photographers again. "The Vietcong
of Iho writor.
job
handing
this
wait
a
month
before
I
will
anyone
have
will
“If
Pon nomas or initials may bo usod, if roquastod, but ando it so we have to tool” Right, Sir Thomas
blowing
my
would
I
up
stayed
my
here
end
If
I
resignation.
in
onyomus letters are never used. The Spectrum reserves the right
More?????
*o edit or delete, but the intent of
out.”
changed.
brains
letters will not be

Attacks raid

Aug. 7:

rumor creator

Quotes in

the news

�The Spectrum

Pag* Six

High school students sheared on order
Concord, N. H.— "The kids at school laughed when we got pulled out
of class and laughed even harder when we got back," said Tom Savard.
Mr. Savard, a 17 year old junior from Bishop Brady High School here,
was one of 18 students who were taken from class and delivered in a school
cut.
The school administrator, Rev. Nuiniaii Limoges, warned the boys last
Friday that this would happen unless they got their hair cut Saturday.
He had been "threatening to bust for two weeks," Mr. Savard said.
"Now we know he wasn't fooling around," he added. "The next time
he says 'Get a haircut,' I will get a haircut."
Father Limoges said that he had "been after them about this all year.
But in the last few weeks I have let things slide a little, and something had
to be done."
The students also lost financially. They paid for their own haircuts.
tn

Drug hearing

»

dnuiMt.i.m h.rhar.hnp

ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI)—The possibility of a repetition
of a raid like the one at Stony Brook was brought out at
a legislative hearing on drugs early this week.
Dr. Clifton Thorne, vice president of student affairs
at the State University at Albany, made the comment in
answer to a reporter’s question.
“But I would be very surprised and disappointed because of our liaison with local authorities” in Albany, Dr.
Thorne said.
Dr. Thorne was careful to point out that Albany has
made every effort to establish a close working relationship
with state and local police.

He said he would recommend

tee on Higher Education that the
state undertake marijuana research, But

because of federal
of the
restrictions
drug for any purpose, he said
he would consult Sens. Jacob K.
Javits, (R-N.Y.), and Robert F.
Kennedy, (D-N.Y), for advice.
The committee now has completed a round of hearings into
drug abuse on the campus.
on the use

Study needed

Lack of concrete knowledge
about marijuana was one of the

major points emphasized at the
hearing.
John R. Heilman, Dutchess
County

district attorney, said the

ALBANY, N.Y.

scare tactics and false information used by some authorities are
having an adverse effect in the
fight against drugs.
“I believe thorough research
is needed to arrest conflicting
statements about the dangers of
marijuana,” he said. “There is a
great deal of scare tactics and information out about marijuana."

Opposes undercover men

Dr. Thorne said he opposes the
use of undercover agents on campus without the knowledge of
the faculty.
“At Albany, the institution
doesn’t believe that the campus,
here or anywhere else, should
be used as a sanctuary for those

who violate the law,” he said.
But Dr. Thorne said campus intrusion by undercover agents operating without the knowledge of
the university would “inhibit the
atmosphere of academic freedom
needed for learning.”
“If I had to make a decision

today, I wouldn’t permit undercover agents on campus at this
time to enroll in classes or live

in residential halls without informing the entire academic community,” he said.
Dr. Thorne did not have an
answer, however, when he was
asked what authorities should do
if the university failed to cooperate in an investigation.
Only one other witness appeared at the hearing. Sam Kirschenbaum, senior pharmacy inspector for the Department of
Health, said one college official
told him that there was a link
between drug abuse and a sharp
decline in grades.
The official told him that in
many cases when the college
looked into why a student’s
grades suddenly fell, they found
drugs were involved, Mr. Kirschenbaum said.

Dr. Thorne said he advocated

retaining present narcotics laws
until it is proven marijuana is
not harmful.

floor in the next two weeks, allows an abortion where the physical
health of the mother or unborn child is endangered.
The present 94 year old abortion law provides for an abortion
only when the mother’s life is in danger.
The measure, sponsored by Manhattan Democrat Albert Blumenthal, is basically the same measure killed a year ago in the Codes
or mental

Committee,

Assembly Speaker Anthony J. Travia, who was given credit for
bottling the measure up in committee last year, was said to have
given the word this year that he wanted the matter debated on
Senate Majority Leader Earl W. Brydges has maintained throughvery slowly” on the

out that he wants the smaller house “to move

subject.

Sen. Brydges has indicated however that he might allow the
issue to reach the Senate floor after a special committee appointed
by Governor Rockefeller makes its report on the issue.
Assemblyman Alexander Chanau, D-New York, chairman of the
Codes Committee, said the bill was “reported out without recommendation.”
He refused to identify the four committee members who voted
against the bill or the three who were absent from the meeting.

Question for house
“The tremendous social questions that have been raised on this
subject have made us decide that the final decision should be left to
the whole house,” Rep. Chananau said. “It will get a very thorough
airing when it reaches the floor.”
The bill reported out allows an abortion when:
The life of the mother would be “substantially risked” if the
•

pregnancy continued.
There is medical evidence that the physical health of the
mother would be impaired or she would become mentally ill.
There is medical evidence that the fetus would be permanent•

•

ly impaired physically

America has another

•

aspirant

to the Democratic Presidential
nomination, according to releases

•

•

•

•

•

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BUFFALO

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"«ron from U.B."

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Cut federal taxes in half
Organize a three-year food

reserve in order that the
nation will survive an a-

End the Vietnam War in

USED
TEXTS

72 hours
Eliminate the draft
Eliminate organized crime
within 30 days
Give retired couples $300

monthly pensions

•

tomic war
•

ide

or mentally.

The pregnancy is the result of rape or incest.
The mother is 13 years old or younger.
Abortions under the legislation would have to be approved
by a hospital committee composed of three to five members one
of whom must be in obstetrics, one a specialist in internal medicine
and one a psychiatrist.
The committee will determine if the grounds for abortion are
justified. Consent must be given by the pregnant woman, her
husband if she is married, or her parents or guardians if she is a
minor or mentally incompetent.
•

lowing proopsals:

&amp;

Codes Committee this week

Crusader against public wrong seeks
Democratic Presidential nomination
received by The Spectrum. He is
a 47-year-old Worcester, Mass.,
businessman.
Jacob J. Gordon’s unprecedented platform includes the fol-

The Mo-Town

(UPII —The Assembly

iroved 12-4 a bill to liberalize New York State’s abortion law.

the floor.

Thorne opposes undercover agents

to his Joint Legislative Commit-

Assembly to take action on
bill to liberalize abortion law

tn have their hair

in Alban

Assemblyman Joseph Kottler,
(D-New York), who heads the
committee, said the state may
have to enlist the help of congress if it decides to conduct
research into the dangers of marijuana.

Friday, February 9, 1968

Eliminate Communist infiltration in the government
and in the rocket program.

Mr. Gordon also promises to
bring to trial “all conspirators
now in high government positions
who participated in the assassination of John F. Kennedy” and
claims knowledge of “how Lee
Harvey Oswald was assassinated

|l2&gt;hWEEK|
•

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.

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A World War II winner of
three medals, Mr. Gordon blames
the “hell of a beating” that the
U.S. is getting in Vietnam on defective equipment and training.
He is not sure whether he would
transform every soldier into a
“shock unit” and win the war, or
just put “LBJ and Ho Chi Minh
in an open field to fight their
own war.”
Mr. Gordon reportedly has a
unique plan for foreign aid which
would also pay off the national
debt in ten years: “Each week
the factories of America utilize
their machinery for 48 hours and
they remain idle for 128 hours.
I will utilize a small portion of
this idle time using workers and
materials supplied by foreign
countries to produce $30 billion
annually.”
Describing himself as a “crusader against public wrong,” Mr.
Gordon is optimistic about his
chances of capturing the Demo-

cratic nomination if he wins the
New Hampshire primary, for
which he is conducting a write-in

SLIDE RULES
COLLEGE SUPPLIES

PAPERBACKS

by the injection of air in the
veins, not by a bullet from Jack
Ruby.”

«WIUIAMWILlf——»

campaign.

s°cl
Delivered

H0T Bl
8

3

"

PIZZA
FREE By

DiROSE
$1.05

p.i

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TR 3-1330

—Bible Truth

—

Creation of Universe
"In the beginning God created the
Gen 111
heaven and the earth"
"By Him were all things created,
by Him all things consist.”
—Col. 1:16,1/

�Friday, February 9, 1968

Th

campus releases...

•

Spectrum

Pag* S*v*n

Pharmacy School Dean sees need
in combating
for "health
team ills
"

Representatives from the rehabilitation counseling program will
have a table in Norton Hall Wednesday. Students interested in
counselling physically and emotionally handicapped people may talk

Mr. Jessie Nash, Jr., director of Buffalo’s Model Cities Program,
will speak at 8 p.m. Feb. 13 in the Dorothy Haas Lounge on “Crisis in
the Cities.” He is sponsored by the Community Aid Corps.
February graduates are reminded to attend rehearsal at Kleinbans Music Hall 9:30 a.m. Saturday.
Students are expected to arrive at the same time Monday for
graduation. Since there will be no tickets this year, anyone may
come, but seating will be on a first come first served basis.
Anyone who has not yet arranged for a cap and gown should do
so immediately at the bookstore.

The Concert Committee of The University Union Activities Board
would like suggestions from the student body concerning future
concerts. A table will be set up in Norton Hall Monday and Tuesday
to receive suggestions and general opinions.
Anyone having ideas concerning future concert appearances is
invited to stop at the table.
Auditions for performers for the new Allenhurst Coffeehouse
will be held Tuesday in the Conference Theater in Norton Hall.
All interested groups and individuals, preferably those specialiing
in folk and jazz, are asked to register in Room 261, Norton Hall.
The coffeehouse, which opened last weekend, is presently featuring the Northfields, a group from Buffalo State.
The coffeehouse is located in the basement of Goodyear Hall.

by Steven Prey

as the Medical
became

tne

School. In the

firs!

occupant

of

Dr. Daniel H. Murray, Dean of
the School of Pharmacy, pre.
dieted that the future of pharmacy and other related professions depends on the “successful
operation of a health sciences

this campus. The School moved
to the Health Sciences Building
in 1960. Dr. Murray cited this
move as an important factor in
the development of a Health Sci-

came during a
University Report on the topic
“Developments in the School of
Pharmacy.”
Dr. Murray said the fields of
medicii, e, dentistry. nursing,
pharmacy and health sciences
must form an effective “health
team” to combat disease gnd sickness. Since the population trend
of the future is increasingly shifting to urban areas, the dean envisioned large health centers,

Dr. Murray reported some of
the unique achievements of the
School of Pharmacy. Approximately one-fourth of the publications in the field of pharmacy
originate in Buffalo. About onethird of all money spent in research is spent in this city.

team.”
His remarks

away from the cities but accessible by car.

In describing the development
of the School of Pharmacy, Dr.
Murray noted that in 1886 the
School of Pharmacy was created
and housed in the same building

ences Faculty.

*

For the past six years, members of the faculty or students
have won national awards.

Dr. Murray explained that the

—Ghatan

reasons for the School’s success

are its geographical location and
the major concentration of Health

Sciences in
York area.

the Western New

Dr. Murray sketched a few research areas. He said that research is being conducted in the
anti-cancer field in cooperation
with Roswell Park Institute. Antibiotics and the effect on people
of the absorption of drugs are
also being studied.

Dr. Murray

Pharmacy Schol Dean at University Reports lecture Tuesday.
pointed out the need for a massive network of communications
between the variety of different
specialists.

Looking to the future, Dr. Murray said that increasing emphasis
will be placed on helping the
very young and the very old.

The School of Pharmacy is currently developing a Drug Information Center to serve all of Western New York. Other projects
related to the problem of handling information are the Poison
Control Center in Children’s Hospital and a Hospital Information
Center.

The increasing specialization of
medical students will lead to
large health centers and the need
for “health teams.” Dr. Murray

Dr. Murray predicted mounting emphasis on hospital pharmacy and further development in
the pharmaceutical sciences.

Two AFROTC cadets
receive top appointments
Colonel John J. Herbert, Jr.,
professor of Aerospace Studies
has announced the appointment
of Cadet Colonels Michael JStahl and Robert A. Drewitt as
wing commander and vice-wing
commander, respectively, of this
University’s 575th Cadet Wing,
AFROTC program.

Their appointments, which are
he two highest cadet positions
)f the 575th Cadet Wing, are effective for the Spring semester.
The cadets were chosen on the
basis of their outstanding aca
demic and military abilities and
achievements.

Don’t just stand around
like a no account
Open a checking account now.
are two M&amp;T Banks near the campus.
With banking hours that make sense.

There

Look below.

BANK
MCMBCR P.

O. I.

c.

MAIN WlNSPEAR OFFICE
3184 Main Street
Mon. thru Thors.: 900 a.m.—4JO p.m.
Friday: 900 a.m.—300 p.m. and
4s00 p.m.—600 p.m.

PLAZA OFFICE
3500 Main Street
Mon. thru Thurs.: 900 a.m. —4:30 p.m.
Friday: 900 a.m. 3KX) p.m. and
400 p.m. —8.00 p.m.
Drive-In
Mon. thru Thurs.: 900 a.m.—4:30 p.m.
Friday: 90d a.m.—8.00 p.m.
—

“I want to try to get freshmen and sophomores to more actively participate in Cadet Corps
activities,” explained Cadet
Stahl. “I am also pushing for
more leadership by personal ex-

ample from juniors and seniors.”
Cadet Stahl is a senior majoring in electrical engineering. He
served as king operations staff
officer this past fall semester.
A member of the Arnold Air
Society, he was formerly special
assistant to the commander of the
Society.
After his commissioning in
February, 1969, he plans to attend
graduate school in the field of
Systems Management through the
Air Force Institute of Technology.

Cadet Drewitt is a senior majoring in sociology. He has served
as a supply staff officer and as
a group executive officer in the
575th Wing. He hopes to enter
the field of Air Force Intelligence
after receiving his commission in

May.

Chicago officials foresee...
■&amp;

Continued from Page 1

planned at the
Feb. 24.

conference on

The expected rebuff of the
Mississippi Freedom Democratic
Party in its request to be seated
and the expected renomination
of Lyndon Johnson were mentioned as potentially explosive. Comedian Dick Gregory and James

Rollins, co-chairman of the NCNP,
have threatened disruption of the
convention.

Police prepared
Meanwhile, Chicago police are
preparing against such threats.

Riot control drills have been in-

stituted in training programs,
and the chemical gas mace is to
be issued to all police officers,
according to Captain Frost, director of planning. Liaison with the
armed forces, the National Guard
and the FBI has been established
to prevent rioting.
Saul Alinsky, in Chicago to
seek negotiations with Mayor
Daley on the needs of the poor,
said that if the Mayor continues
to respond to legitimate protest
with plans for repression, Chicago will explode, and that conditions must be desperate if the
President will have to fly to the
conventional hall roof to avoid
the public.

�Pag* Eight

Th

•

Friday, February 9, 1968

Spectrum

Protesters thwarted

Peace Corps faces test

Appeal by mterfaith group overruled jue t0 recruitment woes
.

...

.

,

,..

WASHINGTON (CPS)
Originally, the gathering was
to have included addresses by
the Rev. Martin Luther King and
Methodist Bishop John Lord. The
Army contended this could not
be separated from the partisan
nature of the rest of the peace
group’s meeting here.
Secretary Stanley Resort of the
Army, which has jurisdiction
over the cemetery, said gatherings at national cemeteries must
be nonpartisan and patriotic in
nature.

Ithaca College survey
shows extent of drug use

thew, F. McGuire ruled Monday
that the group could not hold

,

WASHINGTON (UPI)—An decision banning the gatherinterfaith group of Vietnam ing at the cemetery on
war protesters was thwarted grounds it would be political.
However, the group calling itTuesday in an effort to force
the Army to allow them to self “Clergy and Laymen Concerned about Vietnam”
went
conduct a memorial service to the cemetery acrossstill
the Poat Arlington National Cemetomac River and held a silent
tery.
vigil at the Tomb of the UnThe U.S. Court of Appeals knowns.
14 persons from Buffalo were
upheld a ruling by a federal included
in the group of apdistrict judge who refused proximately 3000 dissenters from
Monday to overrule an Army around the nation.

U.S. District Court Judge Mat-

ITHACA, N.Y. IUPII—A

survey of the Ithaca
College student body showed that 22% of the
students had tried marijuana but the extent of
illegal drugs use may be over estimated.

The survey was conducted last month by the
student faculty "Illegal Drug Control Committee,"
formed last spring to prevent drug usage by educating students to the dangers involved.
Or. J, David Hammond, administrative director
of the college's health center, and Martin Rand,
assistant professor of psychology, estimated 8%
of the 3,300 member student body currently uses
illegal drugs on a regular basis. More than 2,000
replies were received.

The survey showed that 22% of the students
had tried marijuana, but only 3% admitted to using
hallucinogens such as LSD.
Ten per cent of those replying said they had
used amphetamines without a doctor's prescription,
and 2% said they had used barbiturates or opiates.
Drt. Hammond and Rand said they believed the
survey to be the most extensive of its kind on an
American college campus.

the memorial service because
it would be poltical rather than
patriotic.

Buffalo contingent
The Buffalo contingent includes 11 clergymen, plus Professor
James Finnegan of Canisius College, Mrs. Vivian Kreiger of Temple Sinai and Buffalo City Councilman Charles Black.
While the group was in Washington, Senator Jacob Javits and
Reps. Thaddeus Dulski, Richard
McCarthy and Henry Smith met
with the Buffalo group, and gave
their views on the war.
Rep. Dulski said that he “must
disagree with those who would
have our country deny its honorable commitments to the people of South Vietnam and leave
15 million human beings to be
enslaved under a Communist dominated regime."
Rev. Mr. Kenneth E. Sherman
of Emmanuel Church, the group’s
spokesman, said that Rep. Dulski
possesses
an
“anti-Communist

hysteria.”

Some of the users said they took the drugs to
"belong." Drs. Hammond and Rand said drug users
associate with other drug users and tend to believe
"most other students use drugs too."

Councilman Black, who will oppose Rep. Dulski for the Demo-

cratic endorsement for the 41st
congressional district election,
said that the congressman’s
speech reinforced that decision.

ENGINEERING OPPORTUNITIES
for Seniors and Graduates in

mechanical, aeronautical,
ELECTRICAL, CHEMICAL,
CIVIL, MARINE,
INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING,
PHYSICS, CHEMISTRY,
METALLURGY, CERAMICS,
MATHEMATICS, STATISTICS,
COMPUTER SCIENCE,
ENGINEERING SCIENCE,
ENGINEERING MECHANICS

Few will deny that the Peace Corps has been one of the

most successful and popular of the New Frontier programs
initiated during the Kennedy Administration.
But the Peace Corps now faces
many new and delicate problems,

most of them a direct result of
the war in Vietnam. The tactful-

ness with which these problems
are solved within the next few
years may well determine whether or not the Peace Corps can
survive on a large scale, and if it
can, how effective it will be in
accomplishing its original mis-

sion.

Recruitment problems
Peace Corps officials—who in
the past have had little trouble
convincing young people to give
up two years of their life to
work in an underdeveloped counnow find themselves on
try
the defensive for the first time.
The major problem is the Peace
Corps’ close association with the
federal government at a time
when the government is unpop—

ular among young people.

Peace Corps officials, including Agency Director Jack Vaughn,
are not ready to admit the Corps
has problems. But some other
high ranking government officials have confirmed privately
that the Corps may be in trouble.
Recruiting figures alone indicate the Peace Corps has less appeal now than it had a year ago.
In November 1966, the Peace
Corps received 7,097 applications
from college seniors. Last November, applications were filed by
only 3,768 seniors, nearly a 50%
reduction.
-

Applications down

Overall, the Peace Corps received 9,661 applications last November, compared with 12,411 in
November of 1966. Recruiting
also was down in December, with
the Corps receiving 7,095 last
December, compared with 8,288
in 1966.
Peace Corps officials, however,
claim these figures should not be
interpreted as meaning the Corps
is losing its appeal to students.
“The decrease is attributable to
the style of recruiting in the fall
of 1966 compared to that in
1967,” one official explained. “In
late 1966, we put on a major
recruiting drive which hit its
peak in November. In 1967, how-

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TUESDAY, FEB. 20
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CURRENT UTILIZATIONS INCLUDE AIRCRAFT, MISSILES, SPACE VEHICLES, MARINE AND INDUSTRIAL APPLICATIONS,

The Peace Corps, once the
the threshold of

history.

CAMPUS INTERVIEWS
Appointments should be made
in advance through your

—

ra- of many student ida-alistg, is
what could
le most crucial

QP

Up-date your reference shelf

we visited 25% fewer
schools in the fall. During the
current academic year, we will
have our major recruiting effort
in the spring.”
Since most Peace Corps volunteers come directly from the campus, the Corps’ recruiting figures
are based on the academic year.
So far, applications this year are
running about 4000 behind last
year. “But with our major recruiting drive still ahead of us,
we expect to at least equal last
year’s figures,” Director Vaughn

ever,

says.

Despite efforts by Corps officials to convince the public that
it is not losing its appeal, officials admit the Corps is more
controversial on the campus today than at any other time in its
history.

The main reason for this, Mr.
Vaughn said, “is a feeling that
we are an official part of the
Establishment.” One government
official explained: “Before the
United States became deeply involved in Vietnam, young peo-

ple did not mind so much being

associated with the government,

but now they do.”

However, Mr. Vaughn says the
expanding group of student radicals who want to be completely

disassociated with the government
is not affecting the Peace Corps.
“We don’t in any sense, or never
have, tried to tailor a message for
the activist. Our message is more
to the concerned, and the concerned can be of almost any political stripe,” he said in an interview.

No confrontations
But Mr. Vaughn admits Peace
on campuses is
more difficult now than it was
several years ago. “Most campuses
are boiling,” he said. “There is
more noise and more turmoil
which makes it much harder for
us to get our message through.”
A few years ago it was easy for
a recruiter to talk with students,
he said. “But now there’s a lot of
rivalry, and it’s harder to get that
conversation for a half hour.”
Although the Peace Corps is associated with the “Establishment,” there have been no problems between recruiters and student radicals, Mr. Vaughn said.
“Words have been exchanged on
occasion, but nothing to consider
a confrontation.”
The major problem for Corps
recruiters comes when a college
■or university gives them space in
their placement office rather
than in a prominent open area on
campus, such as in the Student
Union Building, Mr. Vaughn said.
“We don’t seek respectability.
All we seek is a chance to talk,
and if nobody knows where you
are, your exposure is so limited
you don’t have a chance to talk.”
When Mr. Vaughn talks about
the present status of the Peace
Corps, he emphasizes that the
total number of volunteers overseas—now about 15,000—is higher than ever before, and the
Corps is expanding at the rate of
about eight new countries a year.
Whether this expansion can
continue or not, however, is uncertain. “In the past,” Mr. Vaughn
admits, “the only thing holding
us back has been the lack of
enough candidates to serve as
volunteers. “Since the Corps now
must appeal to young people who
Corps recruiting

as a group are becoming more
and more anti-government, this
problem may be just beginning.

�Friday, Fabruary 9, 1968

The Spectrum

"The Servant" to be
shown in Norton Hall
“The Servant,” directed by JoNorton Conference Theater.
The movie spins a simple yet
unusual story—how a spoiled,
selfish, snobbish young English
gentleman of today is morally
devoured by the cunningly evil
manservant he employs.
This servant, played by Dirk
Bogarde, is clearly a liar and a

leinhans concert

Simon antl Garfunkcl: Buffalo bound
by Lori Pondrys

Spectrum

fraud. Yet when he answers the
he convinces him that he is an
experienced servant. Thus hired,
he continues to so corrupt and
ruin his employer that eventually
their roles are reversed.
James Fox plays the master and
Wendy Craig and Sarah Miles are
co-stars in this movie which is
based on Maugham’s novel.

official bulletin
The Official Bulletin is an authorised publication of the State
University of New York at Buffalo, for which The Spectrum assumes no editorial responsibility.
Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to 114 Hayes
Halt, attention Mrs. Fischer, before 2:00 pan. the Friday prior
to the week of publication. Student organization notices are not
accepted for publication.

Placement interviews
Please call 831-3311 to make

appointments and obtain additional information concerning the
following interviews:

Feb. 12
National Biscuit Co.
Curtice-Burns, Inc.
Lord Corp.
Campbell Sales Co. (Campbell
Soup Co.)
Griffis Air Force Base
American Standard Industrial
Division

Feb. 13

Acme

Markets, Inc.

Mobil Oil Co.
Price-W aterhouse
U. S. General Accounting Office
U. S. Navy-Naval Ship Systems
Command
New York University Medical
Center
Gulf Research Development Co.
Niskayuna Public Schools.
Albion Central Schools
Feb. 14
J. J. Newberry
Stromberg-Carlson Corp.

Erdman &amp; Anthony
The Boeing Co.
Little Lake Central Sch. Dist.
(Calif.)
Cazenovia Central Schools
Chardon Local Schools (Ohio)

NEW...

Feb. 15
Hercules Inc.
Dept, of Agriculture-U. S. Forest Service
Niagara Machine Tool Co.
Clark Bros. (Dresser Clark)
Mesa Public Schools (Arizona)
East Greenbush Central Schools
Herricks Public Schools
Mayville Central Schools
&amp;

Feb. 15-16
Burroughs Corp.

Feb. 16
The Carborundum Co.
City of Los Angeles—Bureau of
Engineering
Frankfort-Schuyler Central
Schools
El Monte School Dist. (Calif.)

—

Feb. 1i

(Professor John A. Bailey)
University of Michigan, will speak
on “The Sound of One Hand Clapping—Zen Buddhism,” 4 p.m., 231
—

GOLDEN

ume

and Garfunkel

team in the United States today,
will be appearing at Kleinhans
Music Hall Sunday at 8:30 p.m.
This remarkably gifted team
came up via the typical route of
Greenwich Village coffeehouses
and moved on to perform at the
Edinburgh Folk Festival and numerous other spots in England.
Their first single, “The Sounds
of Silence,” carried them to fame
when it oecame one of the country’s best-selling records and subsequently won a gold record for
sales of more than one million
copies.

Other singles. “Homeward
Bound,” “I Am a Rock,” “The
n

1.,-

Hazy Shade of Winter” have

arrangements by Art Garfunkel.
Words can hardly describe the
pure excitement when listening

like-

wise been hit?.
They also have recorded three
best-selling albums, Wednesday
Morning—3 a.m., Sounds of Silence and Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme; the latter is
currently among the top five

L.P.s in the nation.

Though this data does speak
for itself, it can hardly describe
the first-rate quality of their performance and material: music and
lyrics by Paul Simon and vocal

Loosely described, their songs
are in the mold of traditional

folk with rock overtures, and at
the centers are preoccupations
with loneliness, illusory existence, the pain of time passing
and the lack of communication.
These are matters of serious
concern and Simon and Garfunkel interpret them sometimes gently, sometimes with muted intensity and sometimes with unrelenting drive—but always with
sincerity.

Entertainment
Calendar
CONCERT; Smokey Robinson and

the Miracles, Niagara Univer-

sity, 8 p.m.

MOVIE: “The Servant,” Norton
Conference Theater,

hans,

General announcements

I

Reporter

LECTURE: Jean Shepherd, Klein-

Feb. 9
(Medical Seminar)
Dr. Robert Izant, chief of pediatrics service, Western Reserve University.
The topic is “Head and Neck
Problems," 1 p.m., Kinch Auditorium, Children’s Hospital.
Feb. 13—See Page 4
(Musicology Lecture)
Sponsored by the Department of Music features Professor Barry
Brook, 4 p.m., Baird Music Hall.
Feb. 13
(University Report)—With Dr.
D. MacN. Surgenor, Provost, Faculty of Health Sciences, whose
topic is “Health Sciences and National Crisis in Health Manpower,” 9 a.m., Conference Theater,
Norton Hall.

JADE EAST-

Simon

Staff

Friday, Fab. 9:

National Security Agency

Norton Hall.

Pay* Nina

8 p.m.

PLAY: “Storyteller From Flea
Street,” Workshop Repertory
Theater, 1685 Elmwood Ave.,
8:30 p.m., through Feb. 10.
PLAY: “A Delicate Balance,”
Studio Arena, 8:30 p.m.
MOVIE: “No Two Alike” and
“Chemistry of Behavior,” Dief.
303, 4 p.m

CONCERT/DANCE: Flip Wilson.
Clancy Bros, and Tommy Mak-

em, C. Q. Price and his orchestra, The Shady Grove Boys,
Kleinhans, 8 p.m.
CONCERT: Creative Associates,
Evenings for New Music, AIbright-Knox, 8:30 p.m.
Sunday, Feb. 1):
CONCERT: Christian Ferras, vio-

linist, Buffalo Philharmonic,
Kleinhans, 2:30 p.m., also Feb.
13, 8:30 p.m.
CONCERT: Simon and Garfunkel,
Kleinhans, 8:30 p.m.

Monday, Feb. 12:

PLAY: “Cabaret,” O’Keefe Center, Toronto, 8:30 p.m.
Tuesday, Feb. 13;
LECTURE
DEMONSTRATION:
Merce Cunningham and Dance
Co., Baird, 8:30 p.m.
-

Wednesday, Feb. 13:

CONCERT: Recital, Carlo Pinto,
piano, David Cowley, cello, and
Frank
p.m.

Preuss, violin, Baird, 8:30

Thursday, Fab. 15:
LECTURE: Musicology Lecture,
Prof. Henry Brook, Baird. 4
p.m.

MOVIE: “Four Hundred Blows,’
Norton Conference Theater,
Friday, Feb. 1i:
RECITAL: Chamber Music Recital, Boris Kroyt, viola; Jaime
Laredo, violin; Ruth Laredo,
piano, and Robert Martin, Baird
8:30 p.m.

CONCERT: Tom Paxton,

bans, 8:30 p.m.

Klein-

�The Spectrum

Pag* T*n

Friday, February 9, 1968

ueen'

M ,ovie: The African

Film described as intentionally sad
by Joel Genhowiti
Sptfrvm Movi» R»vi»wr

of "The African Queen,” which
John Huston made in 1951, is, intentionally sad. Following so
closely on the heels of “Reflections in a Golden Eye,” unforgettable in the worst sense, it reveals the extent of Huston’s artistic decline. Huston sold-out
years ago when he cast Gregory
Peck, who is said to warp when
it rains, as Captain Ahab (to
think that Orson Welles was
available!), but that can’t account
for an abomination like “Reflections,” Integrity is one thing and
talent is another
and in “Reflections” Huston’s is a talent
gone rotten. “Reflections” was
one of last year’s worst American films; “The African Queen,”
on the other hand, ranks with the
best of them.
—

The African Queen is the name
of a riverboat; her captain, Mr.
Allnut (Humphrey Bogart), has
to give her a kick in her motor
every now and then to keep her
from exploding. The place is
German East Africa; the time is
the early part of World War I.
With the help of Rosie (Katherine Hepburn), the sister of an
Anglican missionary, and at her
prompting, Allnut steers a course
down one of Africa’s least navigable rivers. Their objective is to
sink the German gunboat that
patrols the lake; at the mouth
of the river; they devise a pair
of homemade torpedoes to do it
with. Of course, Allnut and Rosie
fall in love, an unlikely romance

he being dissolute, unkempt
and American, in the crassest
—

teel, neat and English, in the
most decorous sense of that word.

Part of the success of the
movie stems from its refusal to
compromise its integrity. This is
no prettified Hollywood product

one serious flaw. Just as Allnut
is about to be hanged as a spy
rams itself into the homemade
torpedoes. We have accepted the
implausibility of the romance
atop the implausibility of the
journey, which covers a lot of
implausibilities
certainly this
last one is taking our naivete for

in which Miss Hepburn would
appear just as glamorous and
well-groomed at the conclusion
of her down-river journey as she granted.
was at its start. The fact is she
The mingling of the genres
isn’t very glamorous to begin
and the leisurely pace put quite
with and she looks just disheva burden on the actors. Bogart’s
elled enough at the end to have
actually been through what she performance
surprisingly, conhas been through. Some of “The sidering
that Allnut is a far
African Queen’s” best moments
cry from the existential heroes
are when it’s at its most realistic
we Identify him with
is the
and uncompromising. Rosie panicking on being attacked by a
finest of his career. Allnut has
swarm of mosquitoes and Allnut compassion and humanity not
emerging from the sludge to find
familiar to the Bogart prototype.
himself covered with leeches
He is shy, embarrassed and easily
come particularly to mind. Huscajoled into taking on the exton doesn’t cut the sequence short
—he makes us watch until every pedition against his better judglast leech has been removed. It
ment. Quite a departure from,
is this mingling of genres, of
say, Sam Spade, who turns the
romance
realism and
and comedy
woman he loves over to the cops.
and drama (there is even a touch
of mysticism a la Hitchcock’s Rosie hasn't the tomboyish sex“The Wrong Man,” that makes uality of the usual Hepburn hero“The African Queen” different ine, but she has
the same resoluteand exciting). Not every director
ness and obstinacy that Hepburn
could have pulled it off. Huston
does so well.
keep the story rolling at a very
leisurely pace so that the shifts
I don’t want to conclude witharen’t too abrupt and apparent
out making mention of James
—things are just incongruous Agee, the great film critic and
enough for us to take delight in novelist, who wrote the screenplay, based, of course, on the
their incongruity.
C. S. Forester novel. His dialogue
But the preposterous ending is among the most convincing
I
doesn’t come off. It is the movie’s have ever
heard in an American
movie. Agee died prematurely at
the age of 45 without ever having gotten the opportunity to
direct—one of his greatest ambitions. The revival of “The African Queen” is unintentionally sad
in more ways than one.
—

—Miller

Joan Sellers

Kirman Taylor

—

—

Pictured here are student performers of the Rochester Dance
Company, a truly professional organization which will perform
here Saturday.

Rochester dance company
will perform tomorrow
Special to

The

Spectrum

The University of Rochester
Dance Company under the direction of Joan Sellers will perform
at Baird Hall tomorrow at 8:30
p.m.

The touring company which
has newly formed this year is
unique in the respect that it is
composed entirely of students,
who, aside from the usual academic training, have perfected
dance to a point where they can
now perform professionally.
One of their most interesting
works, which they will perform
Saturday is “Randance.” The entire work was programmed on a
computer and has created a new
experience for dance. In every in-

go, and how to get there. It Is
the dancer, however, who interprets these commands and gives
the movement its human quality.
Also to be performed are “Duet,” “Quartet for Five,” and
“Structures” which is an experiment in body shape and dance
form. All four of the evening’s
pieces are original works choreographed and danced by Joan Sellers, the company’s director.
The company will also conduct

a master dance class tomorrow
at 2 p.m. in the Dance Studio
at Clark Gym. The admission
is free to all interested students.

Tickets for the evening constance, the computer tells the
cert are on sale at the Norton
dancer how to move, where to
Hall Box Office. The concert is
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•

Spectrum

Pap* El*v*n

Book^review

Analysis by Dr. Besag studies Buffalo riots
by

Phil Cook

‘Well, there is a possibility it

Anatomy of a Riot, by Frank P. Besag, University Press ot Buffalo,
1967, 210 pages, with appendices.

the

The University, located in the
northeast corner of Buffalo and
soon to move even further away
from the central city, is well insulated from its realities.
When the Buffalo ghetto was
hit by riots last June only a few
men at the University had contacts in the area. One of them
was Dr. Frank Besag of the
School of Education who operates the University’s storefront
extension centers on behalf of a
local consortium of colleges.
Two of these centers where in
the riot area, and this provided
him with a unique vantage point
from which to observe the riots.
His observations, broadened by
nearly 140 field interviews made
in the weeks following the disturbances, are published in his
recently released book, The Anatomy of a Riot: Buffalo 1967.
Although the book suffers
from a poor printing and binding job and shows too few signs
of editing, the strength of its
data and the novelty of its perspectives are not to be denied by
such technical deficiencies.

In its original conception the
book was to have been an investigation of the causes of the Buffalo riot. However, early in his
investigation it became clear that
even the history of the events
had become clouded and that his
data was not capable of yielding the objective causes of the
riot.

disturbances

from various
police blotters and
sources
newspaper accounts as well as
interviews with participants. This
history incidentally for the first
time in print shows that the riot
began on the 26th of June in the
Lakeview housing project on the
lower West Side rather than the
following day on the East Side as
the press had reported. The history is only a prelude to the meat
of the book, the study of the conflicting perspectives of the Negro and white communities. The
history once developed becomes
a standard by which to analyze
the comments of the interviews.
—

ten

ou

side agitators, but if it was, even
if they hadn’t come to Buffalo
and started this thing up, it was
eventually coming anyway and
I am not too sure—I doubt if it
is over yet.”
While a white voice echoes a
heard not so long ago
with somewhat different adjectives:

refrain

Interviews were conducted not
the Negro community
but also among its white neighbors, businessmen and police.
Their words provide a striking
documentation of the gulf between Negroes and whites in the
City of Buffalo. As citizens, Negro and white, speak for themselves on the events and their
probable causes, we see this gulf
and the attendant mutual misconceptions and fears graphically illustrated.
only in

Insofar as the book makes any
attempt at judging the historicity
or quality of events on the basis

of interview material alone—and
there is some—valid objections
may be raised about the methodology of the study. But such
attempts are rare and the sweep
of the argument and its main
thrust are towards a delineation
of the disparity in perspectives.

“I have worked with niggers
all my life and ne 'er found fault
with them nohow until they startI have never
ed this riot
hated them. But there is some
god damned fool, some Communist that has come in here and got
them to do it . . . Ask if any of
these niggers that’s been arrested, that’s been in these riots.
Were they born in the North?
Not a damn one of them. They
are all Southern niggers. . . .”
...

This dichotomy of perspectives
often takes a backseat in other
studies of this sort. They tend to
obscure this problem in the unending tale of bad housing, poor

BOGART

«

schools, lew and poor jobs, de
crime

and welfare
These points are also raised

hnqueney,

rates.
in Dr. Besag’s book, but from the
point of view of the citizen.

Without an understanding of
the gulf in attitudes between
black and white—without this
kind of street-level view of what
is happening—it is difficult to
understand the impotence of local
government to deal with the problems of the ghetto.
The book consists of two parts:
the introduction of background
material and analysis, and a selection of the interviews themselves. This latter section makes
most compelling reading and was
included at least in part in recognition of the fact that much
of the vitality and flavor of the
street language and of its inhabitants’ message is lost in neutral analysis. The reader may
not safely skip these appendices
and feel that he has read the
book. For much of its strength
lies in its precise capture of that
ellusive creature—the man in the

HEPBURN

Quee|1

GBILfl

of the quiet suspicion that they
are at the root of the local press’
opposition to the book. One can
not after all shrug off either the
white or the Negro problem in
this city when out of the mouths
of its citizens one hears such
unmistakable words of fear, hostility, hate and mutual distrust.
These words carry another indictment, especially for the press.
For these arc the voices of the
people and they are voices never
heard in the columns of the newspapers or on the air.
Strangely enough, it is not the
black hats with which we are unfamiliar. Filtered, excerpted, distorted and misquoted—it has after years of civil rights agitation
begun to sink in, in a kind of unreal way. No, listen to the white
voices. Let them talk to you about
the white hate of your neighbors and how it plays a role in
riot..

14

?

fl HtBlfcL AVF

—N.Y. Times

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(Phil Cook it a senior honors political science major.
A former Spectrum feature
editor, he has been active in political organizing, in labor, the East Side, and more
recently, in Woody Cole's campaign, and the formation of the Urban Action Party.)

speaks:

The book refines a history of

feat

street—a
many 01

directed by John Huston, screenplay by James Agee

From the data, a Negro voice

He had, however, in the interviews of scores of citizens the
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The Spectrum

Action line
331-5000
.

.

Friday, February 9, 1968

.

Do you often think it impossible to untangle the State University of Buffalo
bureaucracy?
In cooperation with the Dean of Students' Office, The Spectrum it
sponsoring an ACTION LINE. Through ACTION LINE, individual students can get
an answer to a puzzling question, find out where and why University decisions
are made, and get ACTION when change is indicated.
all questions of genefal interest which appear to
be pertinent to the student body.
The Spectrum wifi include them in its special
weekly column. Each inquiry will be thoroughly investigated and
answered individually. The namp of the individual originating the inquiry will
not be published.
ACTION LINE will answer
ACTION LINE

Q. Whet happened to the senior pictures this year? They were
promised before Christmas. Where are they?
A. Midge Buck, editor-in-chief of the Buffalonian, tells us they
too have had many problems with the photographer this year and
definitely will not renew any contract with them in the future.
All arrangements for individual pictures, however, were handled by
the student on a personal basis with the studio, and the student’s
only resource now is to write them directly. Their address is:
Glick Studios, 1107 Walnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. 19107.
Q. Why do journals have to be out of circulation for three to
five months while they are being bound?
A. The Heckman Bindery, binders for the University Libraries,
picks up material to be bound from the library twice a month,
and returns the finished, bound volumes one month after they were
picked up. A week must be allowed to prepare material for binding,
and another week to prepare newly bound volumes for the shelves.
Six weeks is, therefore, the average time that a journal is out of
circulation for binding. Any questions concerning journals at the
bindery should be taken up with the Reference Librarians.
Q. It there any way graduate students may become involved
In the discussions of the proposed academic plan of the School of
Graduate Studies?
A. Dr. Fred M. Snell, Dean of the Graduate School, welcomes
this interest and suggested three different avenues for student participation in sqch discussions. (1) Work with the Graduate School
Association with which he has close contact, (2) Form a separate
group and invite Dr. Snell to participate and, (3) See Dr. Snell
individually,
Q. What are the qualifications for election to the Dean's List?
A. There are three classifications: Honor's List includes students

who had carried 12-15 credit hours and earned, for that semester,
a cumulative point average of 2.0 or above. Dean's List includes
students who carried 16 or more credit hours and earned a cumulative
point average of 2,0-2.4. Students who earned a cumulative point
average of 2.5 and higher and carried 16 or more credit hours,
are identified on the Dean's List with Distinction. These lists are
made available both to our local newspaper and the individual’s
home town newspaper.
For specific answers to your questions and for direct service, call ACTION LINE,
every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, from 4-5 p.m.
If you prefer,
phrase your question in writing and address it to ACTION LINE, c/o The Spectrum,
355 Norton Hall, or the Office of the Dean of Students, 201 Harriman Library.

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�Friday, February 9, 1968

Tha Spectrum

Pag* Thirteen

Sportin' Life

the spectrum of

sports

by Bob Woodruff
Spocirum

Sporft Editor

A majority of the American public believes that international
athletic competition is divorced from social apd-political reality:
It is indeed unfortunate that they are so right

Non-league games are Bull nemisls;
Cornell defeats leers by 2 points
by Tony DePaolo
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

The exhibition game “jinx” that plagued the State University of Buffalo Hockey Club earlier this season struck
again, as the leers dropped their third non-league game
to the Cornell Junior Varsity 8-6 in the Lynah Arena at

Cornell.

The winning streak that the Bulls carry in the Finger
Lakes Hockey League, however, was extended to 11 games
in a row, as the Bulls downed Ithaca College 4-3 Saturday
afternoon in the Cornell Rink.
There can be no remorse for
the Cornell victory. Both teams
played excellent hockey, checking closely and playing great
positional hockey. As a Cornell
player commented after the
game: “This was our finest team
effort all season, it was the best
game we played so far.”

and the Nichols Alumni Sunday.

Ithaca no exception
It is a known fact that every
team the Bulls have faced this
season was “up” for them and the
Ithaca College leers were no exception as they rose to the occasion and really gave the Bulls
a battle right down to the closing
seconds.
After testing the Ithaca netminder from all angles, only to
see him make several unbelievable saves, Daryl Pugh finally
dented the nets and Billy Tape
complemented him with a second
tally as the Bulls led 2-0 at the
end of the first frame.
The second period, which is
the tell-tale period for the Bulls,
saw them with a 3-1 edge and
another rout semed in the making, but Ithaca came out of the
lockers an inspired team and
tied the score with 10 minutes
left to play. The winning goal
was scored by big Jim Miller

While a war rages on in Southeast Asia, and politicians fail even
to meet to negotiate a truce which will end a conflict that has involved
most of the world, some 38 nations have gotten together in a spirit
of peace and friendship to take part in the Tenth Winter Olympic
Games.

H
lo«p|

member to the hockey team.
Third star goes to Wayne Fraser.
After missing the Cornell
game because of cracked ribs,
Wayne came back Sunday night
to play his best game all season.
Put on defense for the injured
Fred Borgemeister, Wayne killed
penalties and moved the team as
Well as any member of the club.

State tomorrow
This weekend the Bulls play
Buffalo State.—our crosstown rivals—who are in the midst of
celebrating their Winter Weekend, which may be spoiled if the
Bulls match their previous victories of 13-3 and 14-2.
Sunday night State University
of Buffalo plays another exhibi-

tion game with the Nichols Alumni. Beaten earlier this season by
the Alumni 4-2, the Bulls will
really be out to win this one.
Both games start at 10 p.m.
at the Amherst Recreation Center on Millersport Highway. The
State University of Buffalo has
one of the finest club hockey
teams in the nation and the
student body is invited to come
out and watch the Bulls in action.

•

This leaves the Bulls with an
0-3 record against non-league
clubs, (Nichols Alumni, Mohawk
College, Cornell J.V.), and an unbeaten Finger Lakes Hockey
league record of 11-0, with 5
games left in the regular season
schedule. The Bulls will try to
improve on their records, both
non-league and league, as they
face Buffalo State Saturday night

Russia will undoubtedly cop at least ten of the 36 first place
honors and broadcast to the rest of the world of their athletic su-

premacy.

France figures to make a good showing with Jean-Claude Killy,
but anticipating the worst, DeGaulle has already announced that
this year’s gold medals aren’t worth as much as they were in 1964
anyway.

Under President Johnson’s new directive curtailing tourist spending, and with the price of ski lifts these days, American athletes have
taken to walking up the French Alps. If LBJ is thinking of cutting
America’s balance of payments deficit with the amount of gold that
U.S. athletes bring home he can forget it. If Uncle Sam’s boys and
girls double their 1964 harvest of one, it will be a shining achievement.
The picture really isn’t all that glum for the United States competitors. Petite Peggy Fleming is a favorite to take a gold in the
ladies’ figure skating, as is Diane Holum in the 500 meter speed
skating event.

Billy Kidd is this country’s biggest hope to dump Killy in the
downhill or the slalom. The French ace would probably have to be
tripped, however if Kidd is to better his 1964 second place showing.
•

With seven seconds left in the
game, Ithaca College caught the
Bulls in a line change and gave
Buffalo goaltender Jim Hamilton
a three on one, but Hamilton
showed the all-star form he has
exhibited all season as he made
the save at the buzzer. This was
Hamilton’s best weekend this season as he made brilliant saves
Friday and Saturday. A definite
candidate for all-star honors again
this season, he is this weekend’s
first star.
Second star honors this weekend go to Jimmy McKowne, Jimmy is one of the guys who plays
any position on the ice with all
the hustle he can. Definitely another candidate for the FLHL
All Star Team, Jim is a vital

Cagers

Varsity goes to Detroit;
hosts Baltimore Monday
by W. Scott Behrens
Asst. Sports

Wayne Fraser
Plays his best game
season.

of

the

Editor

The State University of Buffalo varsity basketball team will
play three games in four days
with a two day trip this weekend.

They will be carrying an 8-4 rec-

ord into the first of these three

Bulls' football coach is appointed
Associate Director of Athletics
s c h e d u 1 i ng,

personnel

and

budget.

commenting upon Mr.
appointment, President
Meyerson said: “From the time of
his appointment, “Doc” Urich has
demonstrated his leadership and
stature on this campus. He has
proved to be an outstanding
teacher of young men. In a very
real sense, he is the prototype of
In

Urich’s

the ideal leader in the field of

intercollegiate athletics. His
teams are well-coached and play
a rewarding
exciting football
—

•

record: 8

tilts.

“Doc” Uhrich, head football
coach, has been named Associate
Director of Athletics.
In addition to serving as head
football coach, “Doc” Uhrich will
serve as deputy to athletic director Jim Peelle who has been a
member of the University staff
for 34 years.
According to Mr. Peelle, “Doc”
will be responsible for developing broad opportunities for all
students in the fields of recreation, intramural and intercollegiate athletics. On a policy
level, he will be involved in

•

Politics of course creeps into even the world of sports at such
international regalas.

Goalie stars

Goalie made brilliant saves over
weekend.

slopes at Grenoble.

•

On the men’s side, Neil Blatchford should be a gold medalist
in the 500 meters. Tim Wood and Gary Visconti are silver and
bronze candidates in figures.

who picked up a loose puck at
the Ithaca blue line and put it
behind a startled Ithaca goalie.

Jim Hamilton

A half globe away from Vietsome 2,300 athletes will
decide victory not with M-16
rifles, but with skis, bobsleds,
hockey sticks and figure skates.
Now that makes a lot of sense.
While the United States will
finish somewhere near its accustomed eighth or ninth position
in the final winter Olympic
standings, it won’t hurt nearly
as much as the hardship of a
military victory in Asia.
The Olympic insignia of five
interlocking circles symbolizes
peace and friendship binding the
five continents of the world.
Somehow these words seem pitifully hollow once you leave the
nam,

Tonight the Bulls will face
Wayne State University in Detroit, WSU was defeated by Canisius 103-81 last Saturday evening in Memorial Auditorium.

The Bulls will stay all night
in Detroit and then go across the
bridge to Windsor, Ont. tomorexperience for both players and
row night to oppose
Universpectators. His appointment at sity of Windsor. They the
will return
this time is a reflection of the home early Sunday morning by
contribution he has made to this plane.
University, and the tremendous
potential that his leadership
The Blue and White will then
offers for the future.”
host the University of Baltimore
Mr. Urich became head football in Clark Gym Monday night.
The
coach in 1966.
contest will begin at 8:30 p.m.
He came to Buffalo from Notre
Dame, where he was Ara ParFroth go to Olean
seghian’s top
offensive aide.
The Bull freshman squad will
Prior to that assignment, “Doc”
travel to Olean to face the Bonserved with Parseghian at Northwestern and Miami (Ohio), his nies’ yearlings in a game scheduled to follow the nationally
Alma Mater.

televised game of the week. The
Blue and White frosh then return to Clark Gym to host the
Baby Griffins of Canisius for the
second time this season. The
Baby Bulls defeated the Canisius
yearlings in each of the clubs'
first contest of the.season. Game
time is scheduled to be 6:30

p.m.

Ticket manager

Jack Sharpe

reports that the tickets for the
Buffalo State vs. State University of Buffalo game to be held
at Memorial Auditorium are now

being sold at the Clark Gym ticket office. All seats will be sold
for one dollar. The second game
of the twin bill will be Canisius
vs. LaSalle.
OFF THE BOARDS

Joe Peeler.
State University of Buffalo's junior guard, was drafted into the
U.S, Army Tuesday morning. This
will be a great loss to the varsity
basketball squad
Hick Wells,
the Bulls’ senior guard, and John
Vaughan, the Bulls' 6-9 center,
will be out of action for about a
week due to severe cases of the
flu
this cuts the squad down
to 13 men for the games over the
weekend.
—

—

—

�Serf

says:

Coach pays tribute to Joe Peeler
by Dr. L. T. Serfustini

In athletic competition it is always a pleasure to watch

a ballclub pick itself up by the bootstraps and .against odds,
strive for victory. February 2nd, the U.B. Bulls suffered
a disappointing defeat against the University of Rochester,
after a hard fought game, 77-71.

The following night, highly favored Hofstra (fresh from
victories over the University of Akron and the Citadel)
invaded Memorial Auditorium.
As with all teams from the New York City area, Hofstra
was loaded with talent and excelled at a brand of basketball
designed to beat you one-on-one.
The offensive play of Hofstra
closely simulated the action of
the professional teams. Their entire offense was predicated on
moving, under the control of
their floor leader, Fred Grasso,

to their offensive set, a 1:3:1.

With quick cuts and clever ball
handling they maneuver the ball
to the man who is designated at
the partciular time; 67” Barry
White in the low post; 6’4” Ron
Miles in the wing position or 6’2”
Wady Williams in the high post.
These men would then on individual talent and finesse, attempt to
annihilate you one-on-one.
With Joe Peeler again assuming the role of team leader, our
boys hung in there tough against

these tactics and worked their
offensive patterns to perfection.
We were within reach at the
half, behind by two points, 37
to 35.
We floundered at the start of
the second half and after 8 min-

utes, we found ourselves in the
hole by 9 points.

At this point two adjustments
were made
we switched to a
zone defense to counteract the
—

offensive tactics of Hofstra and
John Fieri entered the game.
John ignited the attack and the
zone defense disrupted the Hofstra game. We came back strong
and set up a finish as exciting
as any fan could ask for (no

consideration for the emotional
condition of the coach).
Talk about being exposed to
pressure, on 5 separate occasions
with us ahead by one, Hofstra
fouled in trying to regain quick
possession of the ball before time
ran out.

These fouls had to be made if
victory was to be assured.

John Fieri on three separate
occasions cashed in on the bonus
end of a 1 on 1 foul shot. Joe
Rutkowski was called upon to
execute the same and came
through with both shots. It was
Ed Eberle who finally iced the
game by sinking both ends of the
one-on-one.
To me it was basketball at its
best with the outcome resting on
the ability of the athlete to come
through in real pressure situa-

tions. The final score: Buffalo 81,
Hofstra 74.
In victory, our team also suffered a great loss. Joe Peeler,
who assumed the role of team
leader, was inducted into the
Armed Service Feb, 6. The filling
of this responsible position will
present a real challenge at this
late stage of the season.
Joe in his short period on

campus was a true gentleman and
an outstanding athlete
the
qualities so vital to assume the
role of leader in our society.
—

I would like to mention the role
that Joe played in making our
team jell up to this point of the
season.

Throughout his entire basketJoe ulayed center
and was a very efficient operator

The Spectrum Sports Editor,
Bob Woodruff, announced Tuesday that The Spectrum would
donate a trophy to the most
valuable player in the Feb. 29
fraternity basketball championgame.

t he

participants

have yet to be decided,” said
“the expected
Mr. Woodruff,
matchup between Alpha Epsilon
Pi and Tau Delta Rho has created
more campus interest than any

'Chips' Fieri selected
as player of the week

This week’s selection for Playaround the basket. At 6’3” Joe er of the Week is John (Chips)
would give us height in the guard Fieri
position along with defensive
1 The basis of his selection was
strength.
his excellent performance in Saturday’s victory over Hofstra in
On the basis of this along with
Memorial Auditorium.
his ability to lead, he was moved
The victory was one the team
out on the floor to direct trafneeded to stay in contention for
fic. This is not an easy adjust- a post-season berth in the NCAA
ment to make but in a short persmall college tournament.
iod of time, Joe proved he could
job.
the
The team was down by nine
do
points with five minutes gone
The team and I would like to into the second half when the
wish Joe well and may he enjoy head mentor looked down tocontinued success as he faces ward the end of the bench and
new challenges. We will look for- called on “Little John” to help
ward to the resumption of his the Bulls get out of the hole they
college career: our society needs were in.
men of his caliber.
Fieri, taking the words from
the coach onto the court, then
Today and tomorrow we jourput on a spectacular show of
ney to Detorit to take on Wayne
offense in the last 15 minutes
State University and Windsor of play and actually carried the
University.
weight for the Bulls the rest of
Wayne gave Ganisus quite a the game.
The 5 foot 10 inch junior guard
battle in Memorial Auditorium in
the second game to the Buffalo- from Bishop Fallon High School
Hofstra thriller. Suffice it to say made three buckets underneath
at this time that Windsor beat the basket on tremendous drives.
Wayne in their last outing. This He also placed nine free throws
out of 11 atempted.
is the nature of our next two encounters. We will be tested to
This tremendous display of ofour utmost and we have a very fensive outburst after sitting on
short time to come up with the the bench for the first 35 minutes
answer of how to fill the shoes really took the pressure off the
of Private Joe Peeler.
rest of the Bulls’ players which

John Fieri
5' 10" Junior hits on nine of
11 at the foul line takes pressure off Bulls.
;

enabled them to finish the game
in the win column.
It takes tremendous poise in a
situation like the one the Bulls
had Saturday night, but when the
chips are down, this “Chips” is
up!

Fencing Bulls retain unbeaten record,
nick RIT by narrow margin, 15-12
by Paul Maxwell
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

The Fencing Bulls remain unbeaten. They defeated a hapless
Rochester Institute of Technology
team 15-12 Saturday.
The epee team led the way,
copping eight of nine bouts as
Steve Morris, Bruce Renner and
Tony Walluk won all of their

contests.

The saber team bowed 5-4 as
senior captain Jon Rand won a
bout with Ed Share, A1 Demsky
and Herb Sanford capitalizing on
other intrascholastic athletic R.I.T. forfeits.
The foil team bowed 6-3 in a
event in recent memory.”
dismal effort as the consistently
Assistant Managing Editor Rick classy
Pierre Chanteau copped
Schwab praised the school’s intwo bouts, with George Wirth
tramural athletic activities.
picking up the other tally.
Far from pleased, head coach
“The Spectrum is proud to
honor athletic excellence in such
a vital area of the University
program,” he said. Promotion Director Murray Richman is in
charge of the selection commit-

Spectrum to donate trophy
“Although

Friday, February 9, 1968

The Spectrum

Pag* Fourteen

Sid Schwartz said: “If we don’t
snap out of this slump, we’re in
real trouble. We’ve got a lot of
really tough meets coming up,
and if we keep fencing the way
we did today, we’re in line for
some bad beatings. But I know
that we’re a lot better than we’ve
shown lately. Guys like Rand,
Wirth and Renner are much too
good to keep slumping the way
they’ve been. But there’s nothing wrong with us that a win
over Penn State can’t cure.”

The frosh winning 15-10 continued to roll along to their fifth
consecutive triumph.
Bill Vallianos led the way, winning five bouts without a loss,
complemented by the dual triumphs of stylish Bill Kazer, frosh

captain Mike

Ball.

Bardossi and Don

The Bulls are now 7-1, and must

cope with a powerful Penn State

squad Saturday at

Clark Gym.
The Swashbucklers will require
little added incentive getting up
for tomorrow’s meet as they are
out to avenge last year’s heartbreaking 14-13 loss at the hands
of the Nittany Lions at University Park.
Penn State coach Dick Klima
invades Clark Gym with a rangy,
well drilled squad, much improved over last year as is evidenced by last Saturday’s 18-9

romp over Syracuse.

According to coach Schwartz:
“It will take a top effort, like
the one we produced in the Cornell meet to stop Penn State.”

tee.

UB women's basketball team
defeats Fredonia State 47-29
The State University of Buffalo
intercollegiate basketball team
defeated Fredonia State 47-29 at
Fredonia Monday night. The scoring leaders for the Buffalo contingent were: Kay Richard with
18 points, Co-Captain Elaine Gordon with 15 and Marlene Samuelson with 8.
The women’s basketball team
will play host to D’Youville
tonight. Starting time is at 7:00
p.m.

The next home contest to folwill be Feb.

low tonight’s game
18 at 6:00 p.m.

The University Whales (women's swimming team) also met
Fredonia State and came home
with a 60-31 victory.
First places were recorded by

the

Whales

in

the

following

events:

200 yard medley relay—(Bonnie Sommer, Nancy Dahlstrom,
Jackie Hawkins, Jayne Baird)
Time: 2:28.0.
50 yd.
0:40.5.

breaststroke—Dahlstrom,

100 yard Individual Medley

—

Baird, 1:24.4.

100 yd. freestyle—Baird, 1:15.9.
50 yd. Butterfly
Hawkins,
0:38.7.

100 yd. Backstroke—Judy Mid
1:36.9.
100 yd. Breaststroke
Dahl
strom, 1:29.3.
200 yd. Freestyle Relay—(Hawkins, Sue Petrie, Midlik, Mary
Ann Burkard), 2:31.8.
lik,

Fencing foes
bow to Rand

top sabreur Jon Rand (left) shows his
classic form in winning effort against R.I.T.
Bulls

�Friday, February 9, 1968

The Spectrum

Pegs Fifteen

Greek Graphs

Informal rush period draws to close, many open functions
Staff

R»port»r

Prospective pledges must go
to the I.F.C. office, Room 346
Norton, Feb. 19 and 20 to fill

out a bid slip.
The I.F.C. will then match the

students’ choice with the fraternity lists given to them. The
fraternities will then notify each
member of their duties for the
following pledge period.

News items
New officers of Alpha Phi
Omega are: President, Ed Ostrowski; Service Chairman, Rich
Gorsky; Pledge Master, Terry
Vesneske; Social Chairman, Jack
Schirmer; Treasurer, Doug Gersten; Rec. Secy., Alan Sturtz;
Corres. Secy., Gil Williams; Historian, A1 Giacchi; Sports Chairman, Jim Rasey; Sergeant-at-arms,
Larry Joyce; Senior U.C. Rep.,

Psi are: Rich Dunne, Ron Cataldi, Ken Stejbach, John Jekieiek,
Rich Landergren, Dave Neeson,
Dan Ricigliano, Dave Scruggs, Ed
Sargent, A1 Stone, Darryl Pugh,
and Rex Seitz. There will be a
stag tonight at the V.F.W. Post
(1021 Main).

Tomorrow night is an open
dated party at the Masonic TemSteve Milliman; Junior I.F.C. Rep ple on Sweet Home Rd. For info
Alan Ward and Rush Chairman,
call, 882-4398 or 632-5189 . . .
Gary Hepfner.
Sigma Alpha Mu is holding a
There will be a rush liquor dated party tonight. The “Bounceparty tomorrow night . New for-Beats” charity drive is comBrothers of Alpha Sigma Phi are: ing soon
New brothers of
Don Bain, Dick Bronson, Neil Sigma Phi Epsilon are: Dick
Katz, Dan McLaughlin, Joe RutBrown, Pat Carney, Bill Faulkner, John Kovack, Larry Lehncr, kowski, Bill Brantley, Bill FelPaul Uatys, Steve McCulloch, Jim lows, Chuck Concordia, Brian
Redmond, Dan Santangelo, Chuck Vandenberg, Steve Salerno, Chet
Shumway and Chris Wolf.
Provorse, and Mike Nelson . .
The rush calendar for this
week is; Stag tonight at Sheraton
Tau Kappa Epsilon announces
Lanes beginning at 4 p.m.; tobbogthat a dated rush party will be
gan party tomorrow night; rush
held tomorrow night at the Wingbreakfast Sunday at 11 a.m. For ler Hilton. For info call 837-9568.
Officers for the Spring semesmore info call 838-1659 .
Gamma Phi is holding a dated liquor ter are: President, John Cunningparty tomorrow night at Artie’s ham; Vice-Pres., Art Jackson;
Potomac Palace by invitation Treasurer, Ralph Foscolo; Histoonly. For info call, 835-3732 or rian, Jim Gawlas; Rush Chairman, Dick Carmen; Secy., Jerry
837-5733 .
.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

enbach; Chaplain, Marc Menchin;
and Sergeant-at-arms, Jim Jensen. New brothers are, Steve Bennett, Mark Kamholz, Gary Amandoia, John Boyke, and Paul Sabo

ner

will

be new at me «ea

Secy., Diane Chromik; Registrar,

Theta Chi Fraternity announces
a stag tonight at the house by
invitation only, and a dated liquor party tomorrow night by
invitation. George St. George has
been named volleyball coach and
Dan Schoenborn and Dave Florentine wrestling co-chairmen.

Marie Antonucci; Rush Chairman,
Dyan Petrella; Asst. Rush Chairman, Chris Kable; Treasurer,
Charlene Bauer; and Asst. Treas.

Bob Curns has been elected Treasurer of the State University of
Buffalo pharmacy club.

Judy Powell,
Sig Rap’s charity project for
the near future is the acquisition
of rides for needy females to Ft.
Lauderdale this spring. Cindy
Wolcott and Charlene Bauer are
chairing the comm'ttee.

Sororities
Alpha Gamma Delta's Feast of
Roses and the initiation of the
Fall 1967 pledge class will take
place Sunday at the Williamsville

Book Exchange to close;
reimbursements paid

Inn.
They will also be holding an
informal party Tuesday and a
formal dessert Feb. 18 at the
Three Coins Restaurant . . . Sigma Kappa Phi announces that all
rushees are welcome to come

The chairman of the Student
Book Exchange announced at the
meeting that today is the last
day to pick up checks and unsold
books. Students who have lost
books at the Exchange will be
reimbursed the amount that the
to the lunch table in the Fillmore Book Store would pay for the
Room from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. used book. Reimbursements will
daily. Initiation for the pledges not be made beyond 4 p.m. today.

CLASSIFIED
FOR SALE
SPORTS CAR—1962 Porsche. Super Sport,
best offer. Convertible. 892-2521 after
five o'clock.
1961 CHRYSLER Newport, V-8, good condition, new tires, 4-door; best offer. Call
886-2256.
1963 RAMBLER Classic—4-door sedan, low
mileage, radio. $450. Call 634-8135 or
831-4707.

EGGERTSVILLE—3 B.R. Ranch, large corner
lot, finished rec room and office, V/i
baths, garage, close to U.B. and bus, lovely

TO whom it may concern: Ypatingai Lietuviamsl If you are interested in Lithuanian
culture, customs and language, please contact the Lithuanian Student Association, c/o
Audrey Masiulionis, 876-8776.
HIKING and Ctijnbing Club—First meeting
1968, Friday, February 9. 4:00 Norton 334.
New members welcome.
TYPING term papers, 25c per page; dittos,
35c; envelopes, $2.00 per hundred. Call
835-6897.

home and area. 334-1613.

ROOMMATES WANTED
FEMALE roommate wanted for
semester. Reasonable rent.

remainder of
near

Right

Call 836-3761.
FURNISHED apartment, 5 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 5 minute walk to campus. Available immediately, call Jim, 836-3780.
campus.

WANTED
COLLEGE MEN—Five needed. Part time now,
toll time this summer. Cen earn $4.25
per hour. Call 832-7509.
EDITOR-TYPIST—Proficient in English Composition. To assist in editing book. Speed
and spelling efficiency Important. Phone:
634-6881.
PHARMACY SENIOR or apprentice
full
time, top pay, apply in person. Colvin
Eggert Pharmacy, Colvin Eggert Plaza or
Park Plaza Pharmacy, 2754 Harlem Road.
GARAGE to rent for car—near Englewood
and Cornell. Please call 836-2398.
—

iHALOMI For gems from
call 875-4265 day or

the Jewish Bible,
night.

LOST
pair wire rimmed glasses in hard
blue case. Reward $5. Call 1-282-1918.
TWO RINGS—Wedding and UB Class—great
sentimental value. Reward. Call 896-7203.

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Visit your Placement Of-

fice NOW for brochures
and SIGN UP to hear the
full story.
New York State Dept, of
Transportation, Bureau of
Recruitment and Training,
State Campus Building 5,
Albany, New York 12226

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Pres., Marti Ehorn; 2nd. Vice
Pres., Janet Donnelly; Recording Secy., Linda Dorr; Corres.

i

Spectrum

As the last weekend of the informal rush is upon us
with its many open functions, the I.F.C. invites all male
students who have rush registered to consider seriously
their choice of fraternity.
The week of Feb. 12 is formal rush and a last chance
for a look at the different organizations. Each group will
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«

�The

Page Sixteen

Friday, February 9, 1968

Spectrum

Nixon heralds private enterprise
CONCORD, N. H —Richard M. Nixon
unveiled the major theme of his campaign for the GOP presidential nominalot privatP enterprise solve the
-tien

world
•

In the first major speech of his preprimary swing through New Hampshire,
Nixon told a kickoff dinner audience that
the United States cannot afford four more
years of Lyndon B. Johnson in the White
House and further travel down “a road
that leads to big government and little
people.”

concord

focus
compiled

from our

wiro torvieot

Pueblo seized in Korean waters?
Secretary of State
WASHINGTON
Dean Rusk and Defense Secretary Robert
S. McNamara conceded early this week
that the USS Pueblo may have violated
North Korea’s territorial waters before
its seizure. Both said, however, they
doubted it had.
“We cannot be one thousand per cent
sure until we get our officers and men
back” and question them, Rusk said. “We
have not a single scrap of information
from any source whatsoever that this ship
was within the 12-mile limit at any time
in its voyage.”
McNamara said he could not say “that
at no time beyond the shadow of a doubt”
the ship did not stray into North Korean
waters before it was boarded and seized.
—

Defend* response
McNamara defended the lack of military
in the one hour and 45 minutes
between when the intelligence-gathering
vessel was approached and when it was
boarded.
“Any reaction force that would have
moved into the area . . . almost surely
any reaction force that we could have
mounted . . . would have faced a bloody
battle at the time,” he said.
He said the North Koreans had 500
planes able to engage an American air
response

response.

Appearing with Rusk
McNamara

said

on television
would not predict

he

what would happen if it develops that
the ship had violated North Korean

“Or do we take a new road—one that
taps the energies of the greatest engine
of productivity the world has ever seen,
the engine of American industry and
American private enterprise?” Nixon
asked. “I say we take this new road. This
means providing tax credit and other incentives for business to go where the

need is, and to do efficiently what government now does so inefficiently.”
“There are those who say that there’s
new about relying on private

nothing

new is both tl te capaci
of private enterprise to do the job .' . .
its leaders have developed a social conscience far beyond anything the leaders
of the ’20s and the ’30s would have recognized. And at the same time, technology
has thrown wide the windows of the pos-

sible.”
Nixon touched only briefly on international affairs, noting that “the great
test” of the American spirit was taking
place at home. He charged that the Johnson approach to every problem is to begin
with government and the approach has
failed because it has not taken into account that America’s greatness lies in what
people have done for themselves.”

waters.

But “we would always discipline a
commander" who violated his orders and
“presumably those men would have to
face the fact that there was a violation of
their stringent orders on that point,” he
said.
Rusk said he was unable to confirm
a rumor in Seoul that the Communists had
returned the body of the one crewman
among the 83 seized who died of his
wounds. “I have no information they’re
prepared to do so,” he said.
He insisted “there’s been no moderation” of American demands, adding: “The
only satisfactory answer is the prompt
release of the ship and the crew.”
Rusk speculated than an attempt “to
create a sense of insecurity in South
Korea” motivated the seizure, an act “almost literally without precedent.”

Reds mistaken
“If the people in North Korea think
they're going to take over South Korea
by force, they can’t make a worse mis-

take,” he said.
Despite America’s commitments in
South Vietnam, “we have the wherewithal
to do what is necessary in Korea,” Rusk
said.

“They will be well advised to abandon
such hopes.”

Bombing tapers off, says Rusk
Secretary of State
WASHINGTON
disclosed that the United
States recently tapered off its bombing
of North Vietnam as a gesture toward
getting peace talks started.
The Communist response, he said, was
last week’s Viet Cong attack which carried the war onto the streets of South
Vietnam’s cities and the lawn of the
U.S. Embassy in the bloodiest offensive
of the war.
"We have limited the bombing to
certain points," Rusk said, and “and have
exercised some restraint.
And Hanoi
knows this.”
“I think we have to assume that these
recent offenses in the South are an answer," he added.
—

Dean Rusk

Break explorations
Without saying so directly Rusk im-

plied that direct “explorations” with the
Communists of differences between their
conditions for a start of peace talk and
America’s conditions broke off following last week’s attacks.

—UPI

Telephoto

“Explorations were in progress” before
the Tet offensive started, he said, and
conditions “may reach the point where
such explorations can be picked up

A determined

sole

again.”

“The North Vietnamese and the Viet
Cong have not accomplished either one
of their major objectives-either to ignite
an uprising or to force te diversion of
American troops,” Secretary of Defense
McNamara said. “They have suffered very
heavy penalties.”
“They have, of course, dealt a very
heavy blow to the cities of South Vietnam,” he acknowledged.

A pro-integration demonstrator in Chicago carries his sign, apparently unaware that he's about to get a boot
from a woman with opposing views.
At issue was the admission to an elementary school of seven Negro youngsters. The school was previously all
white.

Helping those who help themselves
Sen. Edward M.
WASHINGTON
Kennedy said early this week, that the
time has come for the United States to
tell the South Vietnamese that it cannot continue to help unless Saigon does
more to help itself.
After events of recent days in South
Vietnam, Kennedy said there should be
a “serious confrontation" between Washington and Saigon. U.S. officials should
tell the South Vietnamese “that unless
they have sufficient interest in the survival of their own country,” America
cannot be expected to, he said.
—

The Vietnamese should be told that
they fail to be an ally worthy of
our efforts and our lives, we cannot, we
will not, continue to be the only people
in Vietnam that fully support the present
government of South Vietnam,” he said.
Otherwise, the American people, “with
great justification, may well consider their
responsibilities fulfilled.”

Seek way out

Visited Vietnam

Moscow would then call for a bombing
halt and negotiations, he said, and the U.S.
would enter a new stage of “fighting and
negotiating” that, while frustrating, might
signal “a beginning of the end.”
In a speech in Louisville, Ky., Sen.
Thruston B. Morton (R, Ky.), charged that
atthe administration “is now desperately
tempting to hide the gravity of the situation in Vietnam by hoodwinking the
American people.”

“should

—UPI Radiophoto

by Kyoichi

Sawada

OH HU6
_,

ran
can

tao)

you see.
unn

Sen. Kennedy (D-Mass.), returned last
month from a trip to Vietnam to study
the treatment of the war’s two million
refugees. He. made his remarks in a
speech before the American Advertising

A marine machinegun position overlooks
a part of the old imperial capitol of Hue
during house-to-house battles with the
vc ear(y this week

A refusal in Washington to recognize
that may produce a reaction here that
is “inappropriate, wasteful and perhaps
dangerous,” Kennedy said.
He suggested it was time for another
summit conference between American and
South Vietnamese leaders.
In response to a question, Sen. Mike
Mansfield (Mont.), the Democratic leader,
endorsed Kennedy’s view. “I imagine it
13 time for" very serious talks with the
Saigon government. A most serious development has occurred,” he said.

Federation.

He said the Viet Cong gained “an
political victory” in last
week’s attacks on more than 20 provincial capital and scores of district towns.
outstanding

Sen. Jacob K. Javits (R, N. Y.), in a
Senate speech, called on the United States
to turn to Russia for a way out of Vietnam.
He said the U.S. should make it clear
to the Soviets that it recognizes the war
has turned into a stalemate and that it
wants a “political and diplomatic com-

promise.”

�</text>
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                    <text>co-op education
program gains momentum

Interest

The

ED

by Nora Gamer
Spectrum

TV
Vol. 18, No. 30

by Jay Schreiber

Tuesday -,

dling the whole load.

Reporter

A cure for the multiple probof registering 20,000 students twice a year has been proposed by the Student Academic
Registration Association (SARA).
A task force of eight persons
from Data Processing and Admission and Records, SARA is attempting a tentaive re-designing
of the registration system to
make it as simple, straightforlems

ward and modern as possible.
The new system is expected to

be implemented in time for the
fall 1969 semester.
The basis for this project is a
revised computerial system that
will totally transform the manner in which the University now
collects required data on students.
According to Ray Chamberlain
of Data Processing: “We have
compiled an up-to-date method in
which we are going to do away
with the fieldhouse method of
registration. Instead of six cards
to fill out, students can provide
all the necessary information on
one sheet, the first time they
register as freshmen.
“Traditionally under the old
mechanized computer system,
more cards were added every
year as more information was
required. No

thought was even

given to those
who actually collected the added information.”
SARA has studied this now
antiquated system and has set up
four student files that will keep
statistics on students,
enrollment
and course offerings.
These computerized files provide the basis for the operation
of 30 terminals in the
Admissions
and Records Office. Each terminal, which resembles a typewriter with a television screen
grafted on top,
will enable students either to register in advance or in a two week period
prior to the beginning of the
term. In both instances students
can register in person or
by
Phone, with the terminals han-

Februaj^/£L^W68

Take effect, April '69
As described by Mr. Gary CooAdmissions and Records, this new computer system
would be put into effect in April
1969 and students would pre-register for the fall term in May.
During the summer the one required data form sheet would be
sent out to all students. Mr. Cooley warned that any student who
pre-registered but failed to send
back his data form would have
his registration cancelled.
Subsequently, in September inperson registration would take
place as usual. With the new
terminals in use each student
would not be expected to spend
more than three minutes actually
ley from

numerous amount of drop and
adding done after students had
originally registered, he said:
“I’m not sure we have the capacity in our computer system to
allow students to constantly
change and re-change courses in
a two-week period.”

SARA hopes to have the proposed process worked out in final
detail in about ten weeks. It
would then be up to the University Policy Committee and the
Student Senate to approve it.

Entirely flexible
Mr.

disagrees with
critics of the newly proposed system who charge it will be more
rigid than the one in existence.
“This system is entirely flexible,”
he said. “We will cut out the leg
work of registration. We will be
able to provide the student with
all the information he needs to
register at any moment.” The
question of possible “foul-ups”
was thrown out by Mr. Cooley,
who noted that a similar system
Cooley

nence

The approved resolution proposed by Barbara Emilson, senator from Arts and Sciences,
stated: “Cooperative education, a
relatively new approach to education, combines on the job experience with classroom instruction. Opportunities for personal
development, national and international travel, and financial independence are gained during the
work period in addition to vocational experience. This program
offers an effective means for students to interact with the community. Therefore be it resolved:
The Student Senate accepts in
principle a cooperative education
program.”
Miss Emilson and others are exploring the various approaches
to co-op education and attempting to get University and community support to establish a pro-

gram here.
Co-op is explained by the Na

by Daniel Lasser
City

News Editor

NEW YORK CITY—Charges of non-cooperation by University administrations and “Gestapo-like” police tactics were

President Toll testified that the
incident was an attempt to frame
an associate dean, who found a

packet containing marijuana
placed under his door.

tion Association is attempting to
r-u

°Z 'T„ h T'
computer, fo be
a

tr.

u

plemented by Fall 1969.

*

im-

;es

a regu

Direct experience
The system is based on two
observations. First, there are
facts of every profession for
which students are preparing
which can only be learned
through direct on the job experience, working with professionals who are already successful in
the field. Second, most college
students must find employment
on a part-time basis while they
are in school in order to pay
part of the cost of their education.

Under a cooperative program,
the school assumes the responsibility (or finding jobs for a student during the academic year.
The jobs are regular-paying, fulltime positions.
� Please turn to Page 3

Charges fly in State drug hearings

"Pot party" disputed
Especially at issue was an incident that took place in March
when the police received an
anonymous tip that a “pot party”
was taking place on the campus.

The Student Academic Registra-

consl

essentiai element in the educative process and some minimum
amount of work experience . . .
are included in the requirements
of the institution for a degree.”

on me

aired here last week as two State legislative committees began investigating the use of drugs on campus.
The investigations grew out of a Jan. 17 raid at the State
University of New York at Stony Brook in which 21 students
were arrested on various drug charges
The Joint Legislative Comat Indiana University has resulted
testimony step by step, Dr. Toll
mittee
on Crime heard Sufin only a single mistake.
claimed that “I know I can never
folk
Police
CommisCounty
However, when asked about the
catch up with the impression that
complaint that the computers sioner John Barry testify that was given” by the claims against
would not be able to handle the school officials at Stony the University.
Brook had not been informed
The committee came under
of the impending raid becriticism for hearing defamatory
cause they had refused to cotestimony publicly without first
operate with the police in the determining its validity in pripast
vate. Senator John H. Hughes,

—ionn«au

Commission for Co-op Eduas “that educational plan
integrates classroom expeand practical work expein industry, business, gov-

—

lice officials.

,

of Buffalo

tional
cation
which
rience
rience

You could put your gripe in the student govNEWTON, Kan. (ACP)
ernment's suggestion box or write a letter to the editor of the college paper.
Or you could tell it to the world on a soapbox. But at Bethel College in
Newton, Kan., the Collegian reports, you go to an old storage room in the
southeast corner of the student union.
IPs a "hostility room," where students release their hostilities (and
entertain themselves and others)
.writing on the paper-covered walls.
Lighted with red and blue lights, the room is even furnished with a step
ladder so every bit of available space can be used. And by the end of the day
the walls are filled with student complaints and witticisms.
It was the first step in a student government project to improve communication with the student body.

registering.
The problem of signing up for
courses that are unknowingly
closed would be solved by the
terminal. Mr. Cooley expects it
would provide immediate messages to the student on what
courses are actually open and

closed while he is in the process
of filling out his schedule.
The computers would also have
an exact list of how many students were closed out for a particular course. “In this way,” said
Mr. Cooley, “we can help departments re-construct their program
schedule to meet student needs.”

University

Just don't take it out

Stony Brook President
John Toll denied the charges,
and explained how each example of non-cooperation
was in fact an example of attempts to work with the po-

Vision for
the future

Reporter

dent Senate meeting.

SARA proposes cure for registration
ills; system may be ready in 1969
Staff

Staff

Approval in principal of a cooperative education program for
the State

Spectrum

in

Commissmncr Barry claimed
the administration
had
warned students at the alleged
party that the raid was to take
place. Refuting Comm. Barry’s
that

chairman, admitted that the committee had permitted hearsay evidence to be aired.

The committee was accused of
“smear" tactics by a lawyer representing 12 Stony Brook faculty
members. The men, who have
figured in a grand jury inquiry
into drug use by the Stony Brook
faculty, obtained a court order
to prevent them from being subpoenaed by the committee.

Police critical
At the other hearing, the Joint
Legislative Committee on Education heard criticisms of police
tactics used in the Stony Brook
raid.

American Civil Liberties Union
representative Hyman Herman
said that police had violated a
section of the new Penal Code
by disclosing secret indictments
against the students to the press
before they had been taken into

custody.
Mr. Herman also critcized the
police for allowing the press to
accompany them on the raid and
to take pictures of the arrests on
the grounds that most of the students qualified for youthful offender status.
Assemblyman Joseph Kottler
questioned Comm. Barry on the
contents of a 107-page mimeographed tactical plan for the raid
entitled “Operation Stony
Brook.”

The plan contained-personal information on each of the subjects and was made available to
members of the press at a briefing before the pre dawn raid.
Commissioner Barry explained

that the document had only been
circulated to police officials, but
that one copy had been carried
away by a reporter. An unnamed
newspaper has since published a
"book” review of the report. Mr.
Kottler claimed that Time and
Newsweek Magazines had also
been furnished copies of the document.
The

committee

then

heard

testimony by President Toll, who
once again defended his administration's relations with the police
in a lengthy statement.
Mr. Kottler expressed fear that
university’s budget might
come under fire in the Legislature due to the publicity caused
by the “irresponsible acts of
some officials.” He said that if
people would look at the postive
aspects of the university system,
they would increase the budget
instead of cutting it.

the

Both committees will resume

hearing testimony this week.

�25 women from disadvantaged area
participate in new work-study program
by Charles Zeldner
Spectrum

Staff

Marcello,

Reporter

Twenty-five women ai;e helping
themselves and the campus in a
new educational media.
The new program is designed
to upgrade employment capabilities of economically disadvan
taged inner-city residents and
supply the University with need-

ed secretaries and office staff.
Dr. Frank P. Besag, assistant pro
fessor of education, was appointed director of the pilot project
by President Martin Meyerson.
In early January, the parlici-.
paling women were selected from

a larger group of applicants. Under the direction of Dr. Besag
and his assistant, Mr. Anthony

MU

the

laRHI

the form of a work-study project.
Beginning Jan. 22, the candidates
underwent a week of intensive
orientation designed to familiarize them with the campus and
the program. During this period
the women were also taught basic
office skills.
Classes and training
Each student was assigned to a
cooperating University office under the supervision of a regular
secretary. Each day is divided between on-the-job training and
formal classes. In the morning the
women receive practical experience in campus offices as well as
at the Ridge Lea campus and in
the Elmwood facilities. Typing
instruction is provided in Hayes
Hall in the late afternoon.
The mid-day sessions are held
in Diefendorf Hall. There, the
women receive some general instruction, but mainly work in
small groups of six or seven persons. Mrs. Lillian Giuliano, Karen
O’Neil, Ann Schaeffer and Lois
Brown are the instructors.
Each group is involved in a

different learning situation. For
example, one group may discuss
a business letter written for
homework. In the other corners
of the room, groups learn spelling, grammar and vocabulary.
Mr. Marcello stressed the fact
that the 25 women were not the
(op group from all the applicants,
but represented a cross-section of
the total. Many of the students
were previously on welfare. Education levels range from seventh
grade through high school.
“Other institutions using this
type of program have had guaranteed success by demanding criteria which we would not use,”
Mr. Marcello noted. He and Dr.
Besag stressed the importance of

Walluk

work-study

New

Tuesday, February 6, 1968

Tht Spectrum

Page Two

program
Participants learn

their program’s experimental na-

secretarial skills

ture.
*

8 TRACK STEREO
TAPE CARTRIDGES
for Students
this month only

*

—

Mill

1

1»1II M

I

une

oi

me

students

was asxea

several questions and said that
before starting this program, she
had been working. She had finished the ninth grade and now
has children. The Friendship
House had been her means for
getting information about the program. She would like to apply
for a Civil Service job when the
necessary knowledge has been
gained and would not mind working at this campus, “because they
need good secretaries,”

Pleased with program
At an open meeting held each

all problems are discussed. Dr. Besag commented
about the first such meeting, that
“all concerned seemed pleased
with the program.”

Friday,

At any time during the three
month program participants will

have the opportunity to obtain
jobs by taking the Civil Service
examination for Typist SG-3.
Those who pass will go through

the normal placement procedure
for positions on this campus as
well as other state units.

At the end of three months,
any who have not passed the Civil
Service exam may remain in the
course for an additional period
of the same length. No participation can be offered beyond six
months, and new applicants are
waiting to replace those who have
“graduated.”

Dr. Besag is pleased that the
University has shown the concern necessary for this project.
He also emphasized that “the University should have this type of
concern.” Dr, Besag noted that
this program has set no formal
requirements beyond a minimum
age of 18. An entrance test given
to all applicants was used only
to help prepare them for the
course.

campus releases...
An orientation meeting for all tutors and potential tutors of
the Community Aid Corps will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. tonight in
Room 233. Norton Hall. Each will be assigned a child to tutor at this

The Westminster Companion Program will hold a meeting at
7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Room 333, Norton Hall.
The Polities Club will hold its first meeting of the semester at
8 p.m. Thursday in Room 335, Norton Hall. Mr. Peter Crotty, former
chairman of the Democratic Party for Erie County, will speak on
“The Importance of Local Politics.” The lecture-discussion will be
preceded by a coffee social and a brief discussion of the club’s
activities for this semester.

The USAVETS, which held a free raffle for activity fee payers,
has announced the winners: First prize of $25 to Harvey Cohen;
second prize of $10 to Joe Ferrandino; and third prize of $6, in lieu
of a bottle of Seagrams, to Janet Tennant.
The University's Office of Urban Affairs will show two films
at 8 p.m. today in the Conference Theater, Norton Hall. “Urban
Development in Scandinavia” will be the topic of the films, presented with the cooperation of the Finnish Embassy, Washington,
D. C. The first of the two films is “Housing and Nature.” The second
“Tapiola-Garden City,” shows the newest suburb of Helsinki. It is
free and open to the public.
The poetry series sponsored by the State University of Buffalo,
the friends of Lockwood Library and the University’s Department
of English will continue with a reading by distinguished poet Isabella
Gardner. Miss Gardner, author of three volumes of poetry, will read
selections of her work at 8:15 p.m, tomorrow in the Conference
Theater, Norton Hall.
The Undergraduate Medical Society will hold a business and
elections meeting at 8 p.m. today in Room 333 Norton Hall. It will
be followed by an informal discussion with Mr. Albert Wachtel,
faculty advisor to the organization. The meeting is open to the
general public.

The first meeting of the Experimental College course on the
Stock Market, taught by Mr. Douglas Braun, will be held at 7 p.m,
today in Room 5, Diefendorf Annex.
Dr. Ezra Stotland from the University of Washington at Seattle
will speak on the topic: “Exploratory Investigation of Empathy.”
His talk will be at 3:45 p.m. Thursday in the Millard Fillmore Room,
Norton Hall. Coffee will be served before the talk.
The Woman's Recreation Association will sponsor a dated ski
trip to Glenwood Acres Friday. Buses will leave Norton Hall at 5:30
p.m. and return at 11 p.m. Prices are: rentals $5.00 and lift $4.05.
You must sign up today in Clark Gym.
The Climbing and Hiking Club will hold its first 1968 meeting
at 4 p.m. Friday in Room 334, Norton Hall. Slides will be shown
and all interested new members are welcome.
The Commuter Council has moved to Room 215, Norton Hall.
Elaine Bolot, chairman, invites all interested commuters willing to
help the Commuter Council to stop in.

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�The Spectrum

Tuesday, February 6, 1968

Interest in co-op education
Continued from Page 1
Co op education first started at
the University of Cincinnati in
1906 for engineering students.
time co-op program

arts students since 1931. Students
alternate between 12 week periods of work and study for five
years. Northwestern University,
Georgia Tech and the University
of Detroit are a few of many
schools offering such programs.
At Buffalo, Dr. Jerome Fink of
the Placement Service has been
working with the administration
and in the community to set up
a program at Buffalo.

Involvement important
The program is now in the

planning

stages. According to
Barbara Emilson: “Setting up the
program and getting people in-

volyed
are

—

trying to get people aware as

the program develops. I would be
willing to talk with anyone who
cares to participate in what we’re
doing. Interest and support are
needed from the administration
and community. Without that support, the program could die.”
Work on such a co-op program

has been started. In December,
Wooldridge, president of
Northwestern University, came to
discuss finding jobs for students
Roy

to make jobs available, since they
are providing full-time employees.
Several types of co-op programs have been suggested. The

Senate resolution stressed that
cooperative education was approved in principle, since it was
too early to decide on a definite
program.

Question of the

week

From the following choices, whom would you
support for the Republican Presidential nomina-

tion?

Roth resigns as
Senate secretary

1. Nelson Rockefeller
2. George Romney
3. Richard Nixon
4. Ronald Reagan
5. Other
You can answer The Spectrum Question of the
Week every Wednesday at the Information Desk
on the first floor of Norton Hall.
Please submit only one ballot answering the

For “personal reasons” Andrea
Roth announced her resignation
as secretary of the Student Association Wednesday night.
Judy Mann was elected to replace Miss Roth by a majority
vote of the Senate membership.
She will serve as secretary and
will sit on the executive committee until the senatorial elections
in March. Miss Mann is the cochairman of the Commuter Council.
At Wednesday’s meeting the
Senate approved Treasurer Douglas Braun’s resolution to cut all
organization budgets 50%. Budgets of the Student Senate, University Union Activities Board
and all publications including
The Spectrum will be cut 15%.
The Senate also adopted the
principle of cooperative education. According to Barbara Emilson, this program “combines
work experience with classroom

Question of the Week.

Last week’s question was:
There has been a great deal of controversy,

especially since the great marijuana raid at Stony
Brook, about the use of drugs on campus.
1—Have you ever used one of the so-called
dangerous drugs, such as marijuana, benzedrine,
or amphetemine?
Yes 67%
No 33%

2—Do you presently, (within the last month)
use one of the so-called dangerous drugs?
Yes 59%
No 41%
3—If the answer to No. 2 is yes, is it marijuana?
Yes 69%
No 31%
4—Have you ever used the “hard” drugs, such
as heroin or cocaine?
Yes 20%
No 80%

instruction.”

5—Do you presently use one of the “hard

Under the provisions of this
program, a student could take
off a semester or even a year
from school to work. Males
would
maintain their 2-S deferment.
The program is expected to start
on a small scale because the Uni-

versity must go through a long
procedure of setting up job opportunities.

faculty, administration,

...

drugs?

.

Yes

4%

No

96%

if the 83 crewmen of the captured USS Pueblo
Monday.

Munhwa radio said three U.S. Army ambulances plus a team
of doctors took up positions at Panmunjom where American and
North Korean delegates met for a third session on the seized
intelligence ship.

WASHINGTON—In the face of the bloodiest offensive of the
Vietnam war, the United States apparently has broken off diplomatic “explorations" with Hanoi over conditions for possible peace
talks.
Secretary of State Dean Rusk disclosed Sunday that the United
States, in a gesture toward getting such talks started, recently
tapred off its bombing of North Vietnam.
But the Communist response was the Viet Cong terror attack
which carried the war into the streets of South Vietnam’s major
cities and the compound of the U.S. Embassy itself, Rusk said.
SAIGON—North Vietnamese troops in human waves Monday
smashed into a Marine outpost of the U.S, border fort of Khe Sanh
while Leathernecks called down artillery fire on their positions
and shattered the attack.
The Communists also rained down rocket, mortar and artillery
fire on the main fortress, eastern anchor of the Allied defense line
below the North-South Vietnam border, in what may have been the
opening gun of the predicted largest North Vietnamese invasion
of the war.

WASHINGTON —Clergymen and laymen of various faiths launched a “Washington mobilization” to protest the Vietnam war Monday
but the Army balked at their plans to hold a memorial service
at Arlington National Cemetery.
The Rev. Richard R. Fernandez, executive secretary of the
organization known as “Clergy and Laymen Concerned About Vietnam,” said the group would go to court to try to get permission
to use the cemetery.
The memorial service for Vietnam war deadl was to have been
the highlight of the demonstration. Dr, Martin Luther King Jr. was
to lead the service.

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�Tuesday, February 6, 1968

The Spectrum

Witch hunt or whitewash?
that

opened in New York
Two joint legislative hearings
City last week are approaching the problem of drug usage

m

on State University campuses from opposite viewpoints.
One borders on the ridiculous, while the other is innocuous;
if hnth continue on the courses they have chosen, neither

The Joint Committee oh Crime has embarked on a witch
hunt, attempting to paint the University system as a sanctuary for hard-core dope addicts, University officials as non-

cooperative enemies of the police, and faculty members as
active advocates of drug use by students. The committee, in
the words of State Senator John H. Hughes, sees “heroic”
efforts by the police such as the 5 a.m. Gestapo-like raid at
Stony Brook as the answer to these issues. It took a court
order to prevent the committee from questioning 12 faculty
members from Stony Brook, who claimed to be targets of a
Suffolk County Grand Jury investigation of that campus.
There is no telling whom the committee will subpoena next
in its smear of the University.
The committee has admittedly allowed hearsay testimony
to color its hearings. Its call for increased police efforts
in the face of University “non-cooperation” may result in
a greater police state atmosphere. This tactic can only result
in an amplification of the real problem that exists.
The Committee on Higher Education has done well in
exonerating officials of charges of non-cooperation with
police and in condemning Suffolk County Police Commissioner John Barry’s clandestine Stony Brook raid. However
the committee has done little by recognizing the already
well-kpown fact that drugs do exist on the campus.
It seems at this point that the only result of this committee’s hearings will be a whitewash of the whole problem
with, as one Senator proposed, a possible call for some increased University supervision of students. This is a step
in no real direction.
Both committees are overlooking the causes of the
“problem” as they see it, and what corrective measures
they could take. We see a cold sober look at our federal
drug laws, specifically laws governing the use of marijuana
(by far the chief drug in use on the campus today), as a
start. At the same time, the state could look at the unrealistic
penalties it has set up for the used of that drug. A new
attitude toward marijuana would erase most of ' the issue
these committees are concerned with.
The problem, of course, lies deeper. If the legislators
really wanted to know why more and more students are turning on, while turning off their society, they just might take a
close look at that society which they as legislators have
helped to create. Neither a witch hunt nor a whitewash can
solve the real problems confronting us today.

The year of the monkey
Recent Viet Cong attacks within South Vietnamese cities
have pointed out that American forces there are not as
secure as they had thought. In five years of intense involvement, American troops have been unable to definitively
secure Saigon, let alone the rest of South Vietnam.
Newspaper accounts of these Cong attacks suggest that
the price was high for communists. More than 13,000 were
killed, as compared to little more than 1000 allied forces.
What we may be overlooking is the simple fact that the Viet
Cong are apparently willing to pay that price and more to
drive Americans from the country.
However successful the Viet Cong were militarily this
past week, they were certainly successful in raising doubts
in the minds of thousands of Americans at home about the
effectiveness of our policies, military and non-military, in
the little South East Asian country.
Viet Cong intrusions into previously untouched sanctuaries has been embarrasing for American fighting forces
and diplomats. Uncle Sam has come out as the monkey to
which the Tet new year has been dedicated.
But for those Americans who have faith in the good
judgment and competent leadership of the politicians and
generals that run this country, Gen. Westmoreland is always
at hand to assure all that the Viet Cong pulled a dirty trick,
planning this big affront while we were anticipating a truce.
Rumor has it that Gen. Westmoreland actually knows
little of what’s going on in Vietnam. Some have said that
the general lives comfortably in a fine old house on the
outskirts of Saigon. It has also been said that he was a
tunnel which leads from his house directly to an airplane
that is ready to take off at any time.
The way things have been going in this war, it might
be a fine idea for the general to use his tunnel and his plane,
and once he is safely winging his way home, he and President
Johnson might realize that we are wasting our time, our
energy and thousands of lives by remaining in Vietnam.
The general should leave, but he should not leave alone
—he should take all American forces with him.
It doesn’t seem too likely that Westmoreland is ready
to leave just yet, but if the time ever comes when he must
depart, let’s hope he doesn’t pull a General MacArthur and
utter those infamous words: “1 shall return.”

S3!

iWEHT!

MR

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WHEN
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ISMlXAM.

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1

Pag* Four

%

'That's another thing I like about you, Cliff!'

Readers
writings

the burgher
by

Schwab

This fearless reporter’s acute understanding of
animals and their plight has oft-time moved him
to champion the cause of downtrodden low order
animals. Last Friday morning I woke from a fitful
dream concerning dislocated squirrels, polluted
fish and squished insects.

Noticing that the day was indeed Ground Hog
Day, I decided to celebrate the day the same way
I’ve celebrated it since I was but a bit of the
Burgher I am today—namely to have a long talk

with the cute little devils.
Recalling that the Gound Hogs at the Plains of
Amherst (site of the New Campus) were in a deplorable psychological state at this time last year
I journeyed there in hopes of consoling the lot
of them.
'Twasn’t long after my arrival there that I heard
a rumbling in the ground and suddenly found myself surrounded by perhaps a thousands of the furry
critters. Fearless though I am, I fainted at the
sight.

When I awoke I found myself staked to the
ground in a gigantic cave presumably in the subterranean world of Amherst. ’N faith! I quickly
deducted that my carcass was in the presence of
the world’s most militant mammal of the ground—
Ho Chi Hog!
“Gasp!” said I, quite startled.
“Ha!” said Ho. “The aggressor awakeths! What

bringeth ye to the Plains of Amherst!"

I told him that I was The Burgher and explained
that my yearly customary communal with Ground
Hogs was my only mission.

Ho Chi said simply: “Pooh!" and added, “You
are a spy for the capitalist aggressors and their
loose construction policies. We’ll never let you
succeed in building your campus! Never!”
“Comrade!" he yelled, the command bringing
forth a gopher, grenades strapped to his midsection, a knife in his teeth. Ho Hog pointed and the
gopher pulled a cord. This action felled a curtain
and unveiled what I thought to be a military map
with cricles and arrows and 27 footnoes explaining
each mark.

While I strained at the ropes which still bound
me, Ho began to unveil his masterful plan.
“This is a military map,” said Ho, confirming
my initial speculation on the matter. "The map
shows the Amherst Plains in full color. The big
blotch represents a mile-long building, the little
blotches are the planned 32 colleges. The big red
X indicates where construction is to begin, and the
arrows show how we shall attack that point when
the land-greedy aggressors arrive with their implements of destruction.”

“It’s a beautiful map," I said, trying to be
sociable.

“You really think so?” Ho replied. “I drew it
myself.”

‘How do you plan to attack the aggressors?” I
asked
“First we use terror tactics with our Campus
Liberation Front. If that doesn’t work, we'll call in
the woodchucks from North Tonawanda for a
massive attack. The gophers have agreed to capture bulldozers as a diversionary tactic.”
What about me?” I asked
“You," said he, “not unlike your stupid col
umns, are spread too thin." Then he shot me.

Commends decision in recent trial
To the Editor:

I read with interest the description of the
trial of 17 students on drinking charges. Now personally, I have no complaints against users of
alcohol—in fact I drink myself—and I think that
the ban is absurd. I sympathize completely with
those involved and commend the decision of Chief
Justice Effman. How, in fact, could the presence
of alcohol be proved? Did the witness himself
drink from the beverage containers described?
If so, could he prove that the beverage he imbibed from said containers was the very same
imbibed by the defendants? And if so, why couldn’t
he be charged? Again, did the witness obtain a
sample of the concoction purportedly in violation
of the ban? No, but even if he had, he couldn’t
have proved the contents to be the same as imbibed by the defendants. It is apparent that such
ridiculous charges could never stick.
However, it is not certain that any student is
safe from false conviction. Let us take a hypothetical case to reassure ourselves. Let us say that a
student is accucsed by President Meyerson of walking into his office with a six pack of beer and
consuming it. The president admits of having
tasted of the offending libation to discover its
true identity. Fortunately, Chief Justice Effman,
drinking what can be nothing more than water
or soda pop from what must have been a discorded beer can, admonishes the scheming president to refrain from voicing unfounded allegations.
The charges are dropped and upon stipulation of
the prosecutor, the president is remanded into
custody for violating the ban. The diabolical scheme
has been successfully thwarted by Chief Justice
Effman who adjourns the trial in a boisterous

spirit.

Thus, I at least am confident that for once the
rights of the student have been upheld by the
forces of law, reason and sanity. My example serves
only to corroborate my point. My commendation
goes out to Chief Justice Effman for making this
campus a better place to live in.
Peter G. Hart
every
The Spectrum is published twice-weekly
Tuesday and Friday
during the regular academic
the State University of New York at Buffalo,
3435 Main Street. Buffalo. New York 14214. Offices
are located at 355 Norton Hall. Average Circulation;
—

—

year at

15.500.
Editor-in-Chief—MICHAEL L. D'AMICO
Managing Editor—RICHARD R. HAYNES
Asst. Managing Editor—RICHARD SCHWAB
Business Manager—SAMUEL A. POWAZEK
Advertising Manager—DAVID E. FOX
Campus
Margaret

City

Anderson

Marlene Kozuchowski

Sports
Asst.
Layout

Assf.

Robert Woodruff
W. Scott Behrens
David L. Sheedy
John Trigg
Judi Riyeff

Copy
Daniel
VACANT
Peter Simon Asst.
Feature Barry C. Holtzclaw
David Yates
Photography
Asst.
Ronald Ellsworth Asst.
Carol Goodson
Entertainment
Promotion &amp; Circulation
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Financial Advisor; Edward Dale
Faculty Advisor William B. Greiner
The Spectrum is a member of the United States Student Press Association and the Associated Collegiate
Press. The Spectrum is served by: United Press International. Collegiate Press Service. Associated Collegiate
Press Service, Gannett News Service, and the Los
Angeles Times Syndicate.
Represented for national advertising by National Edu
cational Advertising Service. Inc., 420 Madison Ave ,
New York. N. Y.
Republication of all news dispatches is forbidden with
out the express consent of the editor-in-chief. Rights of
republication of all other matter herein are also reserved.
Second class postage paid at Buffalo, New York.
Editorial policy is determined by the Editorin-Chief.

Asst.

�Pag* Five

The Spectrum

Tuesday, February 6, 1968

Action of Dean's office questioned

BELOW OLYMPUS

To the Editor;
I am not about to question the Student Judiciary’s decision as to whether there was possession
and/or use of alcohol on campus by the Senators
and officers of the Student Association as the
court acted on the evidence presented and the

By Interlandi

THetoRDMusr wve
COMMON MAN-THAT'S

by Martin Guggenheim

,

WHY

question is moot. However, I do question certain

Last semester in October at a meeting of
about 40 interested sociology majors, four students were elected to sit on the Undergraduate

H£MAD£SOMNy

OF

It was brought out in the testimony of Bruce
Marsh, former editor of the now defunct Quadrangle, that he was pressed into formally charging
the above mentioned senators and officers by a
member of the Dean of Students office, notably
Ronald Stein, a self-imposed charismatic figure,
who is hungry for power and glory. Stein wanted
to get the Senate, because they are “special people” and this would put a feather in his cap.
After all, the Senate is just a sandbox government and not much harm would accrue from
doing away with it.

the undergraduate; these include curriculum planning. I was one of the students elected. Two of
us are voting members; there are six faculty members on the committee.
The Sociology Department is the first department on campus to recognize legally that students
should be directly involved with decisions about
students. Thus, I am a rather unique animal on
campus, I am one of the only two students who
possess any power at all in the area of curriculum
reform. If it were not for the hard work and
lobbying by Bill Harrell, my department would
not even have given us the very gracious test
period it has.
There'is something very, very wrong about the
power structure at this University. This, of course,
has been noted for years. But after working intimately with this radical program of giving students a voice, I am prepared to make some comments about both the students and the faculty.
This week I will concentrate on the students.
The average attendance at the regular meetings held for students is seven people. This includes the representatives. There are more than
400 sociology majors in the school. Thus, at the
beginning, those elected only represented 10% of
the majors. After that meeting no more than 10
people ever showed up. Things have been written
about apathy around here for years; suffice it to

The office of the Dean of Students has been
known to have dealt fairly with students in the
past. It’s a shame that a costly miscalculation on
the part of one individual should do so much to
tarnish the reputation of this administrative office.
Dave Lockwood

Denies LEMAR role in bust rumor
8, U» man TiMei

To the Editor;
I was most annoyed at your headlining SUNYAB
LEMAR as the source for the bust rumor, even
though in the story itself you correctly attributed
it to Ronnie Bromberg. Although I understand the
exigencies of your printing deadlines, all it would
have taken was calling me to The Spectrum office
via Norton Hall paging to discover that Ronnie
had printed and distributed her warning flyer, and
gone to the administration with it, before consulting me.
The warning I did make, Saturday night at the
Winter Be-In, was that good sense, verified by reports from sources I must not disclose, indicates
that anybody with anything illegal in their possession had better get rid of it. Given the possibility of a raid, and two legislative investigations
of drugs aimed at this campus (and others), anybody who doesn’t get clean and stay that way this
semester is a fool.

My warning stands: this University is next. The
most interesting aspect of the Stony Brook bust
is that neither students nor administration really
believed that the cops were in their midst.
Mike Aldrich

Two deny Lyon-type manhood
To The Editor:

If America were indeed built on faith and
courage, these values were manifested in the
belief in the worth of the human being and his
development, not flag-waving and blind faith. Those
who dissent and demonstrate their feeling that
the war in South East Asia is not in the interests
of humanity, should be commended for demonstrating their COURAGE and CONVICTION in their
beliefs.

Mr. Lyon (Jan. 30) asks if I am a man. If man
is defined as a creature ready to equate courage
and faith with the American uniform alone, then
count me out.

Raimund Goerler
To the Editor:
My initial reaction to your letter titled “The
Proud American Speaks Out,” Mr. Lawrence B.

the gadfly

be brief, tetfera Ok.u M not ucaad 300 worda,
and contain file addreti and tefephone number

Pen nomea or inifioia mojt be uaed, if tequeaied, but onletter a ore never uaed. The Spectrum reaervea the right
to edit or delete, but the intent of lettera will nol be changed.
onjtomua

say

by Mark Schneider

One can’t escape the feeling that the media’s more explicit analyses of the Tet battles throughout South Vietnam are translated from the French version. While recognizing that a military parallel between these battles and
Dien Bein Phu is inappropriate, the optimistic rhetoric of
both imperialists bears substantial likenesses. As General
de Castries at Dien Bein Phu sent a cocky challenge to Giap
in 1954, so today General Westmoreland declares the Tet
battles to be attempts at influencing the 1968 presidential
elections or preludes to peace talks.
This

interpretation

evidences

outdated Cold War logic and a
West Point education. To suppose
that the NLF is waiting for Sen.

McCarthy to deliver them from
an 80 year history of being exploited is ludicrous. The Front
has no illusions about electoral
politics in this country as reflected by gentlemen such as
Robert Kennedy. At a time when
an honest liberal like McCarthy
is risking his political neck by
offering more human tactics to
implement President Johnson’s
barbaric assumptions, Kennedy
declares he will support the very
President he claims to disagree
with. The NLF knows that politics here depend upon expediency and not upon humane considerations, and McCarthy is not
their answer.

To consider, also, that the
NLF will accept some sort of
Lyon, was frankly one of disgust. The obvious concompromise from a determined
tradiction (you realize you have no say in your but weary America is again to
government and yet readily accept dying for it)
misread their history and stated
inept poetic style, insipid language, and ludicrous
intentions. In 1946 and 1954 Ho
position of the letter forced a sadistic grunt from Chi Minh was promised a united
deep in the recesses of my throat. On second independent Vietnam at Fonthought, however, your letter instilled in me a
tainbleu and Geneva by the Westreal sense of fear. I realized that the people in
ern powers and both times was
power in America might very well sympathize with
betrayed. The French betrayal
your position of chauvinistic ignorance, and this
originally made no rhetorical efterrifies me.
forts to mask their colonial intent; only when they sought
You stated in closing, My Lyon, that you con“sell”
sider yourself a man and threw out the profound American aid did they
question of “What are you?” I assume you meant their war as anti-Communism.
me as well as anyone else, and so I would just Just as the historians now accept
like to inform you that I am a flea. Incidentally, the 1946-54 war as imperialistic,
the standard histories of the fuMr. Lyon, one characteristic of a flea is subordination of government and tradition to individual ture will see the present war in
the same terms as the NLF now
conscience. If the vision I have of you is any inhas taught
dication of what constitutes the definition of man, sees- it. Simply, history
that the Amerithen I am very happy to be a flea and will do the Vietnamese
cans are not to be trusted. At a
my best to remain one!
conference in Czechoslovakia last
The Flea

Wrilerat Sm
thou id b« atoned
of tbe writer.

The Sham

August the NLF explained to 40

American radicals that their
strategy is to continue fighting

until America decides that the
of this particular imperialism is too high. Yankee Go
Home. No compromises.

price

LBJ, Rusk, Bunker, Mr. Doan
of Dow, Mr. Watson of IBM etc.
attach a particular importance

to winning in Vietnam because
they feel that this will be the
war to end all revolutions. Mao
Tse Tung has called for wars of
national liberation throughout
the Third World and proclaimed
the U.S. to be a paper tiger. Viet
nam must be held, Johnson reasons, to prove this theory incor
reel. If we kill enough Vietnamese, the Bolivians will know
what's in store for them if they
try any nonsense. Again, this
misreads the oppressed mind.
Mao recognizes that for a short
term period the U.S. can be a
real tiger, but ultimately history
is on his side. If the Bolivian,
South African or Haitian social
realities do not change peacefully
(which they give no evidence of
doing) they will be changed violently no matter how many more
crimes

the

U.S.

perpetrates

against the Vietnamese.

The civilian response to the
battles as reported even in the
Times seems uniform . . . “families were serving meals to guer-

illas who had routed police forces
from the area” reads the second
sentence of the Times lead, and
all the features are filled with
similar instances. Now the notion
of “civil war” makes less and less
sense and simple Yankee aggression makes more sense.

Quotes in the

news

RENO, Nev—California Gov, Ronald Reagan, commenting to
newsmen on the Johnson administration’s handling of the Pueblo
incident.
‘It’s the same old crap of going down diplomatic channels

that with the very small gesture that the

faculty has made towards us, we are blowing it
and probably permanently blowing it. There is not
probably much more to say than that, as most
students either feel incompetent, lazy or disinterested. I have never been able to understand
these feelings, but I have been able to identify and
recognize them.
I cannot speak about these people because I
know they won’t even read this; and I’m too tired
to make futile gestures. Even if they were to read
this, I'm afraid it would never be digested. Instead, I will talk about the five or six students
that do show up. They, too, are blowing it and I
am getting frustrated. Those that show up at the
meetings arc concerned about the type and content of their education. They, indeed, have much
to be concerned about.
The rationale behind allowing the students to
have any voice was to get feedback about faculty
decisions. Constantly, the effort is thrown up as
a faculty suggestion asking student opinion, I contend that anytime this occurs, the results are
doomed. I can expect the faculty to think and
act in these terms, but I get overwhelmingly distressed when students accept it.
When a meeting begins we ask what the
faculty is planning and we respond to this planning. The major changes contemplated are changing the number of credits for the introductory
courses and changing the numbers of the courses.

So the students debate whether the numbers of
the courses should be changed or not. This is absurd! We are vitally concerned about the content
of our education, yet we never even get to discuss
it. Someone always mentions that “they won’t go
along with it."
Because of our conceptions of legitimization
and because of our conceptions of personal inadequacies, we acquiesce to a system we know is
terrible. We play the game of pretending to be
important, and in the process we are worse off
than ever. No doubt when other departments debate whether to allow students more say, they
will look at the Sociology Department. Probably
they will make the change, but not because they
are so liberal or understanding, but because, “why
not?”
When we griped in the past, it sounded stronger. How can we gripe loudly now? It seems as if
we have power, and we even admit we have power.
If there is any power, it does not lie in six people;
and even if it could, it certainly doesn't lie in the
six people that attend the meetings. I am making a
plea for interested students to show up, but only
if you believe in yourself. If you feel too ignorant
or if you accept the “natural” superiority of faculty, stay home, because you are hurting the
cause of better education more than the person
who never comes at all.
Next week we will take a look at the faculty
and administrative procedures in the department.

Tha Spectrum's papas for

Editorials

&amp;

Opinions

It is the policy of The Spectrum to report the
news fully tad impartially in the news pages,
to express the opinions of the newspaper only
in the editorial pages and to publish all sides
of important controversial issues.
"Without

aapfOMtoo,

fr—dosw of

sxpmsw

&gt;a wsiningtui

~

�The Spectrum

Page Six

Tuesday, February 6, 1968

Vietnamese Deputy Chief of Staff
resigns over dissension with Gov't
SAIGON, Vietnam—Major General

Nguyen Dug Thang,

itv nhiof nf staff of the Smith Vietnamese army and head
of their rural pacification program, resigned his post Jlill. 27,

Though Gen. Thang has not publicly stated his reasons for
resigning, the story has been pieced together by well-informed sources.
Before his resignation the The other deficiencies I personrealized but have been ungeneral had won widespread ally
able to correct because of lack of
respect of Americans in Vietnam for his honesty, zeal,
and sensitivity to the need
for social reform.

means of power.”
General Thane is held

yen Van

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Gen. Thang had little faith in

In his last official act, Gen.
Thang awarded 36 decorations
for efficiency to a wide range of
people, from members of the 59man (cams who do the dangerous
work in the hamlets to a few
military officers and province

chiefs.

•
•

•

•
•

In making these awards, the
chose the recipients himself from his knowledge of the
country, instead of going through

THELONIUS MONK
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MARK MURPHY
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LEE MORGAN
SONNY STITT

normal channels.

At the ceremony, wearing the

black cotton pajama-like uniform
of the pacification teams, the
general said that the pacification
p rogram had "many shortcomings and deficiencies." and added: "There are deficiencies which
we have not been able to detect
because of our incompetence.

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men for decoration. ‘He knew
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�Tuesday, February 6, 1968

off as
Camelot
'majestic tear-jerker'

C/anc Brothers to

comes

Frosh sponsor Winter Weekend
by Jim Brennan

by Richard Perlmutter
Spectrum

Spectrum

Theater Reviewer

Everyone knows that an Arab parking area is called

that name knows that it is also a legend which inflicts a
powerful nostalgia for the land where beauty and love
abounded.
The story of King Arthur and
his royal court has been told
many times, sometimes more effectively, but never with such
color and glamour.
The Broadway play “Camelot”
starred Richard Burton, Julie Andrews, Robert Goulet and Roddy
McDowall; and as far as performances go, this cast was superior
to the screen crew. Joshua Logan’s screen version, however,
is an improvement on the play
in that less had to be left to the
imagination. The jousts and battles are made believable. Through
elaborate stage sets, imaginative
photography and striking film
color the screen could at least
convey the ethereal beauty of
the legendary Camelot.
But the movie does not do justice to the music and lyrics of
Lerner and Loewe. Three numbers are eliminated and several
others are murdered. Richard
Harris, who demonstrates a pleasing singing voice for a few bars
refuses to sing and speaks most
of his songs. Even Richard Burton, not famous for his operatic
endeavors, managed to carry a
tune when he played Arthur.

he boasts of the virtues of Camelot, when he excitedly blurts
out his plan to make moral instead of physical courage the inthing around Camelot, and when
he despairs over his tragic failures, we are struck by his sincerity of emotion. When he mourns
the loss of his wife to the heat
of the knight, we are touched
and sympathetic, and it is here
that the pitter-patter of the female tear resounds throughout
the theater.
Vanessa Redgrave as the impetuous Queen Guinevere gives
a slightly less striking performance, but she is aided by an elegantly regal wardrobe. Franco
Nero gives a shallow interpretation of Sir Lancelot, the French
Adonis-like knight convinced of
his moral and physical perfection. David Hemmings plays Mordrid, Arthur’s illegitimate son,
and a bastard in more than one
way .His role, however, is less
well-developed in the movie than
in the play.

Mystical power uncaptured
Director Logan has re-created
the story but has been only moderately successful at capturing
the mystical power of the legend.
Yet the sheer poignancy of the
story and the touching beauty of
the music is enough to allow the
movie to become a majestic tear-

A superb Arthur

Richard Harris plays the king
whose visions of moral courage
and might for right lead to the
establishment of the Round Table. His portrayal of the wise and
humorous Arthur is superb. When

Staff

Reporter

The Clancy Brothers and Tom-

son, WOR (NY) radio performer
Jean Shepherd, and the C. Q,
Price Orchestra will be highlights of the 1968 Winter Weekend at the State University of
Buffalo, Feb. 9-11.
The weekend, which is being
sponsored by the Freshman Class
Council, offers an unusual set of
performers for a college weekend with entertainers of international, national, and local reputation.

Opening the weekend Friday at
8 p.m. will be Mr. Jean Shepherd,
New York radio commentator
and author of several screen
plays, magazine articles, and a
book, In God We Trust, All Others Pay Cash.
Mr. Shepherd, a satirist with a
sharp wit, will present a light
commentary on current issues of
popular interest. A question-andanswer period will follow his
lecture. Free buses will leave
Norton Hall for the lecture at
Kleinhans Music Hall.

Clancy Brothers
Saturday evening a concert and

dance will be held at Kleinhans
Music Hall. The concert will fea-

ture Tommy Makem and the
Clancy Brothers, internationally

known for their Irish folk music.
They have taken the true songs
and music of Ireland and introduced them to the world for what
they are
hale, hearty, and
—

honest.

The authenticity of the group’s
approach to their music is a di-

jerker.

Goat-Boy, and currently professor
of English at the State University of Buffalo, will read some
of his new fiction at the Jewish
Center 8:30 p.m. Thursday.
The reading, titled “Medium Is
the Metaphor: Two Short Narratives,” is part of the Center’s
literary series.
Mr. Barth’s last book, Giles
Goat Boy, or The Revised New
Syllabus, was published in 1966
by Doubleday which called it
“Barth’s magnum opus to date.
It is like no other novel.”
A year earlier, a poll of 200

historic truth and bizarre historinvention, bristling with ideas
and imagination, and structured
by the most intricate clockwork
plot since “Tom Jones.” This
book brought him to his present
American novelists.

In the spring of 1966, John
Barth recived the Citation of the
Creative Arts Commission of
Brandeis University for notable
achievement in fiction.
l

'L:

3

songs are

"The

Gypsy Rover,”

“Jug of Punch,” and

"Moses”
the only Jewish Irish rebel song
in captivity.
They have performed in concerts and on television from the
United State to Australia, includ

—

ing guest appearances on the Ed
Sullivan Show, the Today Show
and the Tonight Show.

the University's Amateur Folk

Show.

Semi-Formal dance
A semi-formal dance will be

held in the Mary

Flip Wilson
Winter Weekend entertainer

Seaton Room

following the concert, from 10-1
p.m. Music will be provided by
the C, Q. Price Orchestra, a 16piece traditional dance band with
Miss Doristine Tydus as the lead
singer.

"The Shady Grove Boys" will
entertain during the orchestra’s
intermission. Tickets for the
dance are on sale separately at
the Norton ticket office.
Free buses will' be available
both nights to take students to
and from Kleinhans and Norton
Hall. Tickets for the weekend,
which are available to the com-

munity as well as University students, may be purchased at the
Norton Hall Ticket Office and
downtown at the Festival Ticket
Olfice in the Statler Hilton

takes the cliches applied to his
race, and transplanted them to
the American Indians, An example of one of his jokes is, “We
have to do something about this
race problem
those Indians
are just getting out of hand.”
His “Columbus" routine, which
he first did on the Ed Sullivan
Show, is still a favorite with its
“Coin to see Ray Charles.” In
his performance, he provides a
sharp and knowing discourse on
racial prejudices.
Also in the concert will be
“The New Order,” a folk rock
group, who are from and per
form in the Buffalo area. This
past December the group won

“A Sexual, Alcoholic Hell!"|
■
-LIFE Mag.

dirkBogarde

5MAH Miles

—

high-ranking place among living

HO

honest and strongly opinionated
individuals and they see no point
in glossing over the deeper meanings of their songs.
Some of their more famous

He has
made many appearances on television and is best known for his
guest appearances on the Tonight
Show.
He has perfected humor that

ic

critics and
editors placed Mr. Barth among
the best American novelists to
emerge in the past 20 years.
John Barth was only 26 years
old when his first novel was
published. Titled The Floating
Opera, it was the runner-up for
the 1956 National Book Award.
His second novel, The End of the

reel reflection of their own personalities. They are all directly

evening’s performance.

The Sot-Weed Factor was published in 1960 and was referred
to by The New York Times Book
Review as “a huge novel, rich in

authors,

Winter Weekend, sponsored by
the Freshman Class Council, will
also offer The Clancy Brothers
and Tommy Makem.

i

•

Flip Wilson, an entertainer
who writes and performs his own
material, will also appear in the

Road, was published in 1958 to
an enthusiastic press.

Novelist John Barth, author of

The Sot-Weed Factor and Giles

■

IllSn
l-lj.

Flip Wilson

Author John Barth to
give reading Thursday

I

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[

Conference
Theater
Thurs., Fri., Sat

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Page Seven

The Spectrum

POP St

TR 3-1330

j

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The

R DO YOU
ESIST?

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de you still have a choice.

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GUARDIAN* covers the

t scene, the student revolt
vital world and national
ews you can't get anywhere

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�The Spectrum

Page Eight

Tuesday, February 6,

1968

ALPHA EPSILON PI
10
Annual Valentine

Saturday, February

Party by invitation

The
Interfraternity Council
sponsors the

ALPHA PHI DELTA
Saturday, February 10
Dated Party
For Information:
Call Bob at 835-4978 or Fran at 832-8666

FRATERNITY
RUSH
YOU MUST REGISTER TO PLEDGE

ALPHA SIGMA PHI

Rush registration:

Friday, February 9
Stag

Wed.

Saturday, February 10
Pajama Party
Sunday, February 11
Breakfast in the Tiffin Room at 10 A.M

Wednesday, February 14
Smoker at 4:00
For Information:

Thurs., Feb. 7, 8

&amp;

10:00-4:00 in Norton

bring $1.25 and proof of 1.00 average
Call 837-7889

Bidding on

Mon. &amp; lues., Feb. 19, 20

GAMMA PHI

in 346 Norton

Saturday, February 10

Dated Liquor Party at Artie's Potomac Palace
by invitation

16

Friday, February

Rush Dinner at the Ciaredon
For Information;
Call Dave at 831-3367 or Joe at 835-3732

PHI EPSILON PI
TAU DELTA RHO
Friday, February 9
Dated Champagne Party
Friday, February 16

Saturday, February 10
Dated, Semi-Formal Champagne Party at the
Three Coins Restaurant
Monday, February 12
Formal Rush Dinner
For Information: Call 836-8048

Invitation Rush Dinner
,

Call Billy

For Information:

at 837-7284 or Warren at 836-2267

PHI KAPPA PSI

TAU KAPPA EPSILON
Tuesday, February 6
Beer Stag at TKE apartment above the
Beef &amp; Ale House at 3199 Main

Saturday, February 10
Dated Toboggan Party at Chestnut Ridge,
party at rented cabin
Tuesday, February 13
Dinner at Lakeview Hotel, by invitation
For Information: contact Dick Ca-men

Saturday, February 10

SIGMA ALPHA MU
Friday, February 9

Invitation Rush Party

Wednesday, February 14
Rush Dinner

Dated Party at Masonic Temple at Sweet Flome
Road

Friday, February 16
Rush Stag, VFW Post, 1021 Main Street

Call

For Information:
John at 882-4398 or Jim at 632-5189

THETA CHI
Friday, February 9
Invitation Stag at Theta Chi House

Saturday, February 10
Invitation Date Party at Theta Chi House

SIGMA PHI EPSILON
Friday, February 9
Winter Weekend Kickoff Stag at Sportsman's
Inn, 2828 Bailey Avenue
Saturday, February 10
Cocktail Parties and After-Concert Party at
Hotel Worth

Monday, February 12

Rush Dinner at the Lakeview Hotel
For Information: Call 877-2502

PI LAMBDA TAU
Wednesday, February 7
Coffee Hour 11-2:00 in Parker Engineering
Lounge

Saturday, February 10
Dated Party at Roman-American Hall, 315 Ni
atjara Street

Thursday, February 15
Brewery Tour to Iroquois Brewery
For Information:
Call Gary at 836-3259 or Mitch at 883-3458

PHI LAMBDA DELTA
Saturday, February 10
Cocktail Party

Tuesday, February 14
Final Bid Dinner at Lakeview Hotel
For Information:
Call Mike at 836-2314 or Russ at

833-4092

�Pag* Nin*

The Spectrum

Tuesday, February 6, 1968

on the bench

the spectrum of

sports

by Billy Martin
Spaatrum

ien si lines in

Bulls down Hofstra 81-74,
lose to U of R 77-71
Rochester downs Bulls

by W. Scott Behrens
Asti. Sports Editor

A surprise second half zone defense and an excellent
showing of good markmanship at the free throw line Saturday
brought the Bulls to victory over Hofstra 81-74.
The travel-weary Hofstra quintet has now won ten and
lost eight. This contest was their sixth in nine days and
they had just come from upsetting Akron the night before.
The Bulls are now eight and four having lost to the
University of Rochester Friday evening, 77-71.
Buffalo’s little John Fieri came
off the bench late in the second
half and gave the Bulls the
punch they needed to outlast
Hofstra, particularly at the free
throw line.

Fieri netted nine of 11 charity
tosses and scored on three drives
underneath the basket to finish
the night with 15 points, one
behind team leader Ed Eberle.
The Bulls were outscored from
the field 26-21, but the whiteshirted Bulls had another good
shooting night at the free throw
line, netting 39 shots out of 49
taken. The last time the Bulls

played at Memorial Auditorium
they had 34 of 38 from the charity
toss line against Gannon early in
the season.
Hofstra and Buffalo were almost equal in their field goal
percentage, with Hofstra getting
the edge hitting on 26 shots of
65 attempted for 40%. Buffalo
hit on 21 of 53 for 39.6%. Buffalo had three other players in
the double figure: Doug Bernard
had 12, and Joe Peeler and John
Jekielek had 11 each. Eberle led

in rebounds with ten, while
Peeler and Bernard led assists
with four.

Frosh defeat Rochester
for sixth win in a row
The State University of Buffalo
freshman squad traveled to Rochester Friday evening to play the
first game of a doubleheader and
came home with their sixth victory in a row, the last two in
succession on the road. The Blueshirted frosh downed the host
club, University of Rochester,
78-71.
The Rochester yearlings had
won nine and lost one up to
Friday evening’s game, losing
only to RPI in overtime at RPI.
The Baby Bulls’ record is now
won 8, lost 3.
With the Baby Bulls trailing
at halftime 36-33, the Blue and
White put on an exquisite offensive show by putting on a
15-point splurge early in the second stanza and then held on to
their strong lead to the finish
of the game.
Buffalo was outshot at the free
throw line by five, but led in the
field goal department by six. Buffalo made 12 of 21 free throws
while Rochester put 17 of 29
charity tosses through the hoop.

Moog leads all players

Buffalo’s Bob Moog led all
scorers with 20 points. Two other
Baby Bulls hit the double figure
bracket. Kenny Palen had 19 and
lanky Steve Waxman had 15.
Waxman led all rebounders with
15.
The Baby Bulls next encounter
will be against the St. Bonaventure freshman in Glean Saturday. The game will follow the
nationally televised game of the
week when the Bonnies host
Providence. This will be the second meeting of the two freshman
clubs, the Bonnies winning the
first game in Clark Gym.
The freshman box score follows:
BUFFALO FROSH
ROCHESTER FROSH
(g
Kremblas
Waxman
Moog
Palen
land'gren
Knapp

2
6
9
9
0

ft

2
3

2
1

0
1
3

fg
6 Ferguson
1
15 Chichester 1
20 Station
2
19 Prilts
8
0 Collins
5
Ip

7 Schmidt
9 Pass
0
2

3
Brune'aus 3
Johnson 0
Helen'ook 1

0
0

Total*

12 71 Total*

33

4
6

27

ft
0
3

2

I

8
0
3

tp

2
5
6

17
18
8
15

17 71

The varsity Bulls played the
second half of the doubleheader
in Rochester and went down to
defeat at the hands of host club
U. of R.
Buffalo’s forward Bob Nowak
was injured early in the contest
with a dislocated left shoulder,
but while he was in there for
the first ten minutes of the game
he scored ten points.
Rick Wells came up with an
injured ankle with five minutes
left to play in the game.
Buffalo was behind as much as
15 points but came back strongly
and led by one point with 11
minutes remaining. Rochester
countered Buffalo's offensive attack with a zone defense and
regained their lead and finished
the game with a six-point victory.
The Yellow Jackets beat the
Bulls at the foul line, as they
put in 37 shots out of 50 attempts.
Buffalo made 15 of the 21 free
throws awarded them. A total of
34 fouls was called on Buffalo.
The Bulls outscored the host
club from the field making 28
to Rochester’s 20, but the Yellow
Jackets led in percentage 42.5%
to 39.4%.
Buffalo again led their opponents in rebounds, 40-38, with
John Vaughan pulling down onefourth of Buffalo’s rebounds.
Peeler led the Bulls’ scoring
attack with 12 and was followed
closely by Wayne Betts with 11.
Peeler picked up six assists and
recovered three loose balls.
Rochester’s Dave Taylor’s 17
free throws tied a record of a
one game output with Buffalo’s
Jim Horne who, ironically, was
playing against Rochester Feb. 4,
1953.
The varsity box scores follow
Buffalo (71)
Eberle
Peeler
Jekielek
Nowak

Bernard
Rutkowski
Culbert
Scherrer

Wells
Vaughan
Williams
Betts

fg

ft

4
5
0
3
4
0
0
0
3
1
3
5

1
2

1

4

1
0
0
0
3

2
0

1

tp

9

Roehostoi (77)
fg

Huddle

12 Vance
1 Askew
10 Theurer
9 Pierce
0 Taylor
0 McIntyre
0 Brown
9 Bennie
4
6
11

1
3
1
1
3
3

2
6
0

Totals
28 15 71 Totals
20
Haltime: Rochester 43, U. B. 30.

ft tp
3
5
5 11
0
2
0
2
2
8

17

23

8

I

5
20

1

1

37

77

painted on them).
Running was a tiresome thing and soon stickball was a game
of hitting for distance. Now boundaries specified the kind of hit you
made. If the infielder caught a grounder in front of a certain mark
it was an out, along with fly balls. And speaking of balls, do you
remember the cheap penny pinkies that would break after a solid
hit? How about a new Spalding? You could hit them five sewers or
onto the next block. Spaldings were only used for fungo, for in
pitching, a good, tennis ball was needed, but it had to be bald of fuzz.
The game of stickball could probably be considered at greater
length but that would take volumes. In these volumes would be the
invention of the floater by "Blooper Ball" Blumenthal, a pitch outlawed by the older kids as “chinky” but used by the kid never quite
good enough to pitch legitimately.
No account of stickball would be accurate if the biggest cheater
on the block wasn’t mentioned. Max and Sol had Jerry Katz. He was
the biggest cheater in the neighborhood, making his own rules as the
game progressed. He was a big kid who played with the little kids
because He was small and the big kids didn’t let him play with them.
“Pussy cats” Katz, as he was known to his friends, moved away,
but so as to never forget him, the only stickball national anthem was
written and sung before any sporting event played by the neighborhood stickballers. This is the stickball National Anthem:
Pussy cats Katz, Pussy cats Katz, Mee Ow, Mee Ow
Pussy cats Katz, Pussy cats Katz, Mee Ow, Mee Ow
Yay (hold over the yay a few seconds)

by Karl Schnitzler

overpower Whitcomb with deva
stating serves and dazzling vol-

should prove to be a very close
and exciting match.

Wasson, a five-year engineering students, will be paired with
Schwartz in an attempt to win

Gamma Phi rolling

lies.
For the fourth consecutive year
Jeff Wasson of Alpha Epsilon Pi
has won the intramural handball
competition.

Wasson defeated Gerry Whitcomb of Sigma Alpha Mu for the
singles crown. He had little trouble in his quest for the finals;
Whitcomb had a tough road to
the finals.

Kramer

honored

Packers received the Most Courageous Athlete Award last
week at the Philadelphia Sports
Writer's Dinner

Raportar

AEPi's Wasson is handball champ
Spectrum Staff Reporter

Jerry Kramer of the Green Bay

Staff

It was not so many years ago that the college crowd of today was
participating in the national pasttime of city streets. No, we’re not
talking about stealing hub-caps, ring-a-Ieave-e-o or potsy, but stiekball.
Yes sir, in any shape, manner or form, this was a game of sheer
perseverance, exceptional skills and masked thievery. You must
remember, not everyone was clever enough to find or steal a broom
stick for a "bat.” Of course this was no longer necessary when Reuben
Rabinowitz got the idea of selling ready-made stiekball bats (clever
way to make a buck). They had different weights but all had the
black taped handles. Was it you who would show off and hit with
the tape up?
The game was developed by Sol Schwartz and Max Rosenblum
many years ago. It seems that they loved baseball and were interested in a way to play the game with just the two of them. They
were small tots, so in their driveway they made bases. The pitcher
threw from the middle of the driveway and the batter hit from the
sidewalk. The backstop was their bicycles. Max only had a tricycle
but Sol already had progressed to trainer wheels on his “two wheeler” so that produced a fairly efficient backstop.
There were times when one of them could coax the little girls to
chase the ball or the spastic little kid on the block to catch for
them. The great thrill was hitting the ball on the porch, a nifty 20foot home run.
As Max and Sol got on in years (they were at least 8 or 9 years
old) the game “driveway baseball,” as they called it, became a bit
more intricate. Now they hit towards the street and a home run was
the across-the-street-neighbor’s porch. When you really tied into
one, you could belt it over the root.
Then the little kid from whom you stole the ball yelled blue
murder because even though he called “chips” on the ball, he just
knew he had little chance of getting it back from the big kids.
Anyway, the little kid whose ball was lost was usually the brother
of one of the players.
But the game had progressed to a point where you had to have
line-ups. Each kid had to be a team and use that team’s line-up. Of
course, being manager, he had the privilege of playing whomever
he wanted. If the batter was righty, you hit righly; if he was lefty,
you swung from the left side. The true die-hard perfectionist went
so far as to pitch lefty if the pitcher in his line-up was a southpaw,
but he himself was a right hander. Max once did this and couldn't
lift his left arm for a week. He was Karl Spooner and pitched a
fine game. In fact he beat Sol 10-1 on a one-hitter. The only hit was
a home run by Pete Whisenant.
The game went from the driveways to the backs of the attached
houses, where the older kids played two on a team and forgot the
idea of line-ups but played hard, At any rate, the pitcher had fun.
The outfielder saw little action except for chasing hits and foul balls.
Once in a while he caught a fly ball, but he always batted first, That
was his consolation.
By this time the game was being played in the streets. They hit
from sewer to sewer to sewer. The first sewer was home plate, then
there was a hump (edge of a curb) for first, a sewer for second and
a hump or crack in the curb for third. (Today streets have bases

Whitcomb faced two tough opponents in Steve Davidson and
Richie Schwartz, both of AEPi.
The semi-final match between
Whitcomb and Schwartz was one
of the most exciting matches of
the tournament. The match went
three games during which some
unbelievable shots were witnessed.
The final match saw Wasson

their second straight doubles title.

They are pitted against Gerry

Whitcomb and Alex Ringelheim
of SAM. Wasson and Schwartz
in their semi-final match defeated Hlastala and Webber.
Jim Webber, a former State
University of Buffalo gridder now
in graduate school, displayed

some fine handball with his part-

ner but they were unable to
overcome the strong tandem of
Schwartz and Wasson.

Whitcomb and Ringelheim also
tough going in their semifinal match against the formidable team of Don Schneider and
Leon Laptook. The doubles finals
had

With five weeks remaining in
the intramural bowling program,
Gamma Phi has a very slim one
game lead over SAM. Bob Drewitt and Stan Philips, both of
Gamma Phi, have the leading averages in the league with 186
and 182 averages respectively.
Rounding out this strong Gamma Phi team are Dave Clark,
John Anderson and Roger Zessis.
Here are the standings in the
basketball intramurals as of last
week.

The next three intramural
sports to be contested will be

squash, wrestling, and volleyball.
Information concerning these
sports is posted outside the intramural office in the basement
of Clark Gym.

�The Spectrum

Page Ten

Buffalo grapplers wrest
victory from Colgate
Varsity wrestlers traveled East
Dver the weekend for a two~eame
road trip against Colgate and
Oswego. The two matches were
regarded as the two toughest to
date.
Oswego is the defending State
champion.
Friday night at Colgate, the
Bulls, as expected, met tough

opposition from the
Red
~

'

Raiders.
~

The score

through

the

six matches was 11-8 in favor
of the Bulls. Victories were recorded by Mike Watson
(123
pounds on a decision), Henry
(137
pounds on a decision),
Gullia
and Jerry Meissner (160 pounds
on a decision).

The final verdict in favor of

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Tutor must be
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Saturday the Bulls journeyed
to Oswego to meet their toughest
competition of the season. The
outcome of the match was hardly
in doubt, with Oswego winning
the first five matches enroute to
a 25-10 victory. The only points
for the undermanned Bulls were
recorded by Jerry Meissner on
a forfeit in the 160-pound class,
and a well-earned pin by Dan
Walgate in the heavyweight div-

address

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The Bulls’ frosh also traveled
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NSA's graduate study program may
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Salaries and Benefits
Starting salaries, depending on
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�Tuesday, February

6, 1968

The

1

Sign up for an interview at your placement office—even if
you’re headed for graduate school or military service.
Maybe you think you need a technical background to work
for us.
Not true
Sure we need engineers and scientists.
But we also need
iberal arts and
business majors. We d like to talk with you even
you re in something
as far aheld as Music. Not that we'd
y u to analyze Bach
fugues. But we might hire you to
ana yze problems as a computer
programmer.
*

What you can do at IBM
The point is. our business isn't
just selling computers.
It s solving problems. So if you have a
logical mind, we need
you ,0 he'P our customers solve problems
areas
in such diverse

Pag* Eleven

Spectrum

If your major
is listed here,
IBM would like
I totalk with you
February 8th.

as government, business, law. education, medicine, science
the humanities.
Whatever your major. \ou can do a lot of wood things at
IBM. Change the world (maybe). Continue your education
(certainly. through plans such as our [ u ition Refund Program
And have a wide choice of places to work (we have over 300
locations throughout the United States)

I

What to do next
We'll be on campus to interview for careers in Marketing.
C omputer Applications, Programming. Research, Design
and
Development. Manufacturing, and Finance and Administration
If you can t make a campus interview, send an outline of
your interests and educational background to P J Koslow.
IBM Corporation. 425 Park Avenue. r-jr vr-v r-y
New York, New York 10022. We re an
1
I I
I
etjual opportunity employer
—

kVi

�Page

*

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hue

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new yori c

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Seoul

Second wave 9 worries

SAIGON—An American official in the
highest level of the U. S. Mission warned
that Communist forces were capable of a
‘second wave of attacks” despite the staggering casualties inflicted by allied armies
during the past week. He said Saigon was
the biggest potential powder keg.
Speaking at a background briefing for
correspondents, the official said the Communist offensive was a failure if it was
intended to rally popular support for a
general revolution.
If the push was designed to create havoc
and chaos for a time, the official said it
could be considered a success. He said
American commanders and diplomats were
surprised at the timing and intensity of
the assaults.
“They have shown they are capable of
presenting a real military challenge,” the

official said of the Communist forces.
“They certainly gave dramatic evidence
of their ability to terrorize and disrupt
things.”
Reporters were told that allied troops
severely mauled a force of about 36,000
Communists who staged attacks on 35
major population centers from one end of
South Vietnam to the other.
"I don’t mean to imply that the VC are
on the verge of collapse because of their

faces

NEW YORK—Presidential candidates of
both parties rounded out a week of
stepped-up political activity with campaign jaunts into major primary states.
Former Vice President Richard M. Nixon, his official campaign three days old,

Washington

4

from our

gress.
The anti-war group calls itself Clergy
and Laymen Concerned About Vietnam,
and claims about 90,000 members around
the nation.
The American Council of Christian
Churches, a small group pf fundamentalist
denominations, picketed the anti war head
quarters at the New York Ave. Presby
tcrian Church,

The Rev. Martin Luther King, who will
lead the April demonstration on behalf
of new civil rights legislation, planned to

lake part in the Arlington Cemetery service along with other phases of the war
protest.
Dr. King and other members of his

Southern Christian Leadership Conference

Gov. George Romney,
toured Wisconsin; and Democratic peace
candidate Sen. Eugene McCarthy opened
his fight in Oregon.
Nixon, who had three television debates
with the late President John F. Kennedy
before losing to Kennedy in the 1960 election, declined to debate Romney. He did
not rule out debates with the Democratic
nominee.
“The only winner of a debate between
Republicans would be President Johnson,” Nixon said. Johnson is almost certain to be the Democratic candidate.
Nixon said in Manchester, N. H., that
he decided to run again “only after I
became convinced I could win a decisive
majority of the primaries.”
can,

wire

servicea

officials

losses,” the official said. “They have the
wave of attacks, es-

ability for a second
pecially in Saigon.”

Second front

He said elements of three Communist
divisions were in the Saigon area “and
could be used in a second effort here if
they want.” The units were identified as
the 7th North Vietnamese Division, the
5th Viet Cong Division and the 9th Viet
Cong Division. These divisions number
about 6,000-7,000 men each.
The officials said the attacks in South
Vietnam from the DMZ to the Mekong
Delta were part of a careful plan prepared
in Hanoi for the purpose of fomenting a
concerted wave of opposition to the South
Vietnamese government and the American

military presence.

“There has been no evidence of significant support for the VC,” the official said.
“My opinion is that both their military and
political objectives will fail, although they
certainly have made some immediate impact and created some problems.”
In a separate briefing, a high-ranking
U. S. Army officer in the Saigon Military
District said the Viet Cong massed more
than 17 battalions—upwards of 5,000 men
—for the attack last week on the South
Vietnamese capital.

new protests

WASHINGTON —The nation’s capital is
facing a new round of anti-war demonstrations this week, along with a possible foretaste of the massive civil rights march
scheduled here in April.
Monday a group of clergymen and laymen from various faiths began two days
of activity protesting escalation of the
Vietnam fighting, highlighted by a memorial for war dead at Arlington National
Cemetery and visits with members of Con-

also are to meet with Stokley Carmichael
the black power advocate who now lives
in Washington, to discus posible coopera-

tion in the spring march.

Mr. Carmichael, recently returned from
a world tour in which he denounced the
United States, currently is engaged in a
drive to organize all of Washington’s Negroes for a concerted civil rights drive.
Dr. King has not yet announced a timetable for the civil rights march, but his
P Ians call for “massive civil disobedience.”
As for the anti-war protest, it began with
a meeting at the church yesterday.
The service at Arlington Cemetery is
scheduled for 10:30 a.m. today and will be
followed by a closing business session at
the church.
The last previous anti war demonstration of any substantial size in Washington came last October, when an officially
estimated 55,000 persons marched on the
Pentagon.
In advance of its demonstration, the
religious group distributed copies of a
420-page book titled “In the Name of
America," based on a study of international law as it bears on the U. S. involvement in Vietnam.

Michigan

However Romney, regarded as trailing
Nixon, said in Wisconsin he felt he was
gaining ground in that state and in New
Hampshire.

“The outlook is more favorable nation
ly," he said. Romney was heartened tm

a report that Gov. Nelson Rockefeller of
New York will go to Michigan Feb. 24 (or
a fund-raising lunch for Romney.

Romney took pot shots at President
Johnson’s Vietnam policy and said the
South Vietnamese “must do more” for
themselves on his two-day, eight-city Wisconsin tour.
Nixon followed Romney to Wisconsin
early this week.
McCarthy told a college audience at
Portland, Ore., Friday that it is more
important “to stop the war and change
our foreign policies than it is to nominate me.”
He said the Johnson administration “over-reacted” to the North Korean hijacking
of the USS Pueblo.

Tension rises on truce line
SEOUL—Four new gunbattles were reported between U. S. and North Korean
soldiers along the Korean truce lines as
tension hightened over efforts by the
United States to obtain the release of the
intelligence ship USS Pueblo and its 83man crew.
U. N. Command spokesmen said that in
one incident a small band of North Ko
rean infiltrators hurled a number of hand
grenades at a United Nations command
guardpost along the western sector of the
truce front.
The other three incidents were gunfire
exchanges between American troops and
Communist soldiers across the border. No
casualties were reported on the American

side.

New meeting

The sporadic firefights were reported
as informed sources in Seoul said another
meeting between U. S. and North Korean
Communist delegates would be held within the next few days in the Panmunjon
truce village on the ease of the hijacked
Pueblo.
It was announced earlier that a secret
session of the Panmunjom Military Armistice Committee had been held late last
week in an attempt to free the ship and
its crew, seized by the North Koreans off
their coast.
U. S. Rear Adm. John V. Smith met
with North Korean army Maj. Gen. Pak
Chung-kuk but what transpired at the
meeting was not disclosed. No newsmen

were present.

Observers believed the secret Pueblo
negotiations, shifted to Panmunjon after
North Koreans made clear they would

refuse to come to the United Nations,
would be long and drawn out.
Powerful voices of discontent rose meanwhile’ in South Korea against U. S. hand
ling of the Pueblo case and the Jan. 21
infiltration of Seoul by a band of 31 North
Koreans bent upon an asassination of
President Park Chung-hee.
ihe chairman of parliament’s foreign
affairs committee, Park Chung-kyu, went
so far as to call for withdrawal of South
Korea’s 50,000 troops in Vietnam if the
United States does not take a firmer
stand.

Demand control

The chairman said the North Korean
“suicide squad” which entered Seoul on
its assassination raid came through the
•lines or the U. S. 2nd Division. He demanded that the United States return operational control of South Korean forces
so they can defend their country independently if necessary.

North Korea’s Central News Agency
transmitted a photo that purported to
show the “spy confession” of an officer
aboard the captured Pueblo.
The ten-page document which the Com
munist agency said was written by Lt.
Stephen Robert Harris, of Melrose, Mass,
was fanned out, with each page overlap
ping like cards held by a poker player.
The word “confession” was written o;i
the top of page one and what appeared to
be a signature was on the last page. It
was dated “Feb. 2, 1968.”
Earlier the North Korean news agency
broadcast the text of what it claimed to
be a statement by Harris in which he
was quoted as saying he committed a
“very dirty crime.”

U.S. fights to regain Hue
HUE. South Vietnam
U. S. Marines
battled North Vietnamese infantrymen in
combat reminiscent of World War II fights
—

through the villages of Normandy. Snipers

blazed away at Leathernecks darting from
house to-house and from doordo-door.
The Marines moved 90-millimctcr guns

into position, lowered their barrels and
fired into buildings used as strongholds
by North Vietnamese regulars and their

Viet Cong allies.
It was a scene of almost incredible destruction in a city famed as a tourist spot
before the war for foreigners who came
to know it as "the Venice of the Orient.”
The battle started last week when North
Vietnamese forces invaded Hue and
clamped control on a big part of the old

By Saturday night, the
crosfire had blown giant holes in ancient
walls, gutted schoolbuses and heavily damaged the Roman Catholic cathedral in the
center of town.
imperial capital.

One of the first buildings taken by the
Communists when they stormed into Hue
was the structure housing the offices of
the provincial government. It is near the
province jail, and military spokesmen reported that the Communists had freed
the 2,000 to 3,000 prisoners held there.
Most of the freed prisoners were described as Viet Cong or Viet Cong suspects.
Marines were crouching in doorways
and inside buildings, firing out the win-

dows at Viet Cong snipers in the second
story of another building across the street.
• U.
S. and South Vietnamese planes
dropped 250-pound and 500-pound bombs
on the southern walls of the citadel, that
part of Hue where the kings and queens
of Vietnam lived when the country was a
monarchy known as Annam. A North
Vietnamese combat team was holed up in
the citadel.

6, 1968

Candidates and primary states

salgon

compiled

D,C.

Tuesday, February

The Spectrum

Twelve

Students
protest

Norwalk, Conn, high
signs last week
after 53 of them were suspended for
wearing long hair. 16 complied and
returned to classes.

Students

at a

school carry picket

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                    <text>SIsAIK
LIS'’:

A

'961
Vol. 18,

The Spectrum 0

Nof 29

Friday, February 2, 1968

State University of New York at Buffalo

bourn demands tirmness

in handling drug problem
ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI)—In for State University policy on stumisconduct.
a strongly worded statement dent
“The regulations on each camSamuel
B. pus shall expressly forbid the ilTuesday, Dr.
Gould, chancellor of the State legal use of narotics and dangerous drugs on campus, and the
University, said that campusregulations further shall make
es in the system “would prothat the institution, through
vide no sanctuary for those clear
cooperation with appropriate
who violate state and federal health and law enforcement agnarcotics laws.”
encies, will provide no sanctuary
In his first statement since for those who violate state and
the beginning of a two part federal narcotics laws,” Gould
investigation into student said.
of the main points brought
misconduct and drug abuse putOne
during Senate discussions of
at State Universities, Dr. the Stony Brook incident was alGould said the individual legations that the school adminiscampuses must deal firmly tration failed to cooperate with
with the problems they face. police authorities investigating
the drug situation.
“The regulations on each campus shall include the manner by
which campus visitations by nonstudents shall be authorized and
supervised,” Dr. Gould said in
the second policy outline.
He said that in accordance with
the state penal law “a person is
guilty of loitering when he loiters
or remains in or about a school,

The investigation by State Sen.
John H. Hughes (R., Syracuse)
officially opened Wednesday with
hearings in New York City. Assemblyman Joseph Kottler (D.,
New York) began hearings on the

same question Thursday.
Both probes are a result of a
drug raid that resulted in the
arrest of 38 persons at the Stony
Brook campus two weeks ago. Although the Stony Brook incident
inspired the probe, Senate Majority Leader Earl W. Brydges
(R., Niagara Falls) directed Sen.
Hughes to investigate the entire
system.

college or university building or
grounds.”
This provision covered a second complaint by the lawmakers
that “hangers on” and non-students were responsible for providing much of the drug traffic
at Stony Brook.

Dr. Gould in his statement laid
down two additional guidelines

—UPI

Telephoto

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nonce

University Coalition for McCarthy
asks student involvement in campaign
by Jay Schreiber
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

Dialogue at the first meeting of
the University Coalition for McCarthy centered on opposition to
President Johnson, and the war
in Vietnam and skepticism over
McCarthy’s candidacy. The announced guest speaker, Mr. Richard Lipsitz, was unable to attend
Monday’s meeting.

"Dismissed" is opinion of Student
Judiciary in 5-hour drinking trial
by Joel Kleinman
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

Despite eyewitness accounts of alleged drinking during
a Student Senate meeting Nov. 30, 1967 the Student Judiciary decided Tuesday to dismiss complaints against 17
students for violating the campus ban on the consumption
of alcohol.
In the opinion of the Student Judiciary, as stated by
Chief Justice Norman Effman, the prosecution failed
to prove that the “possession
of alcoholic beverages was
established beyond all reasonable doubt,” and thus the
complaints were dismissed
against the defendants, 14 of
whom are Student Senators.
The case was tried by five
State University of Buffalo law
students;

Cohen

Nicky

Segal, Gary

and Michael D’Amico
served as defense counsels, while
William Sullivan and Samuel
Tamburino were the prosecuting
attorneys.

violation of school law had occurred.

"Drinking episode"
The

last witness was Bruce
Marsh, who stated that the Senate
“body engaged itself in a drinking episode” after passage of the
“wet campus” resolution by the
University Council was officially
announced.

“I saw wine, champagne and
hard liquor,” testified the former
editor-in-chief of the Quadrangle.
In addition to smelling liquor,
he said that one bottle “popped
when its was opened” and identified brand name labels on
bottles produced during the re
cess.

Consumption not proven
Four hours of heated testimony saw five prosecution witnesses
describe the alleged
drinking incident in some detail,
but fail to convince the Student
Judiciary that alcohol was consumed and that each defendant
possessed and used alcohol.
Led by the tactics of Nicky
Segal, the defense showed that
mere accounts of the consumption of a liquid poured from a
bottle that usually contains an

alcoholic beverage is not sufficient evidence to prove that a

The witness described Senate

activity following the

recess

as

“somewhat boisterous,” as Mr.
Edelstein “busted” his gavel and
a “general feeling of joy” prevailed.

Denies accusation
Cross-examining Mr, Marsh, the
defense counsel revealed that the
Quadrangle was denied further
support by the Student Senate
at its Nov. 30th meeting after

considering allegations against
the Quadrangle that Mr. Marsh

considered false.

Mark Weintraub, a theology student, burns
his induction notice as his father, Nathan,
watches in front of the Armed Forces Whitehall Street induction Center Monday.

In attempting further to relate
this incident to the former editor’s complaint against 15 senate
members (and two others) for

drinking on campus, Mr. Segal
noted that the witness had termed

the Senate “abominable” and added that a “certain amount of
personal dislike” was a factor in
the decision to terminate support for the Quadrangle,

Mr. Marsh denied the accusation, slating that the Quadrangle
incident “has no relation to the
complaints” filed through the
Dean of Students Office by Mr.
Grimmer and himself.

The defense counsel next produce a wine bottle and drank a
cup of its contents. The witness

could not stale that a regulation
had been broken by this act, and
thus proved Mr. Segal’s contention that the witness could not
identify the contents of any bot
tie as containing alcohol.

Prohibition affirmed
The first witness to testify was
an Assistant to the President.
Robert O’Neil, who affirmed the
regulation prohibiting the
use of
alcoholic beverages on campus in
his capacity as a member of the
University Committee on Alcoholic Beverages.

In his closing statement, Mr.
Segal submitted a motion to dismiss all the defendants. Chief

Justice Effman concurred.
Mr. Segal alleged that the prosecution 'in no way proved that
they (the defendants) were drinking alcohol.”

The intention of those who ran
the meeting, Jeffrey Lynford and
Les Simmons, was to establish
various student committees that
would publicize Sen. McCarthy.
They would also according to
Simmons, “be committed to political action in the Democratic
prifharies.” This action would center on helping to elect anti-Johnson delegates in the three districts of Erie County. These delegates to the Democratic Convention in July would be pledged to
vote for Sen. McCarthy.
Quiet and attentive through the
early proceedings, it was not until Dr. Frederick Snell, Dean of
the Graduate School began to
speak that the audience expressed

some doubts about McCarthy.
Dr, Snell opened his remarks
by declaring Coalition for a Democratic Alternative to be opposed
to Johnson, opposed to the war in
Vietnam, and in favor of Sen.
McCarthy.
“We need to show support of
McCarthy, who if not successful
would at least affect change in
Johnson’s policies. With a substantial segment of support from
the Democratic Party, we can at
least affect the platform of the

party.”
He said: “Many of you cannot
cast a ballot, but there is more
than just casting a ballot. We
want to make them ashamed to
pull down the lever that says
LBJ."
Criticize McCarthy
Dr, Snell followed these state
ments with the first criticism of
Sen. McCarthy, He declared the
Minnesota Senator to be lacking
in statements on domestic issues.
Dr. Snell pointed out that Martin
Luther King’s Southern Christian
Leadership Conference was planning demonstrations in Washington, D. C. in April.
“McCarthy has to get in to
act here; he has to lake the dia
logue out of the planned confrontations in Washington, ampli
fy them and make them the central issue. He must bring the issue before the Amercan people;
that should be McCarthy’s plat
form,” he said.

After a student mentioned that
it was hard to work up fervor

over Sen. McCarthy, “when he
focuses no attention on issues at
home,” Dr. Snell commented: "If
he doesn’t do something soon, we
should prod him. At the present
time his campaign is rather
weak.”

'McCarthy only candidate'
Questioned on the underlying
assumption of the CDA Dr. Snell

answered: “We will try to get
McCarthy elected because he is
the only candidate on the scene.
We are also expressing our opposition to the Vietnam War.” Dr.
Snell answered the question that
was raised on whether to forsake
Sen. McCarthy for Sen. Kennedy,
should the latter enter the race.
“1 suspect that if Kennedy came
in, McCarthy would withdraw,”

he said.

Another student questioned
whether working for Sen. McCarthy would indirectly aid a
Nixon or a Reagan. Dr. Snell
answered “No, only a third party
would do that. Working within
the Democratic party is our only
chance of exercizing our democratic process.”
This point had been the recurring theme through the earlier
part of the meeting. Mr. Simmons, a Buffalo man with no previous political background, emphasized the Democratic Presidential primary to be held in the
Stale later this year. “Many people do not pay attention to the
primaries. We must work with
them politically by running Me
Carthy delegates against those
from the Democratic organization.”

Respectable action
Mr. Simmons pointed out that
such political action would have
the advantage of being viewed
"legal and respectable." He appealed for students to aid him in
typing, mailing and door to-door
soliciting so that delegates could

meet the petition requirements
needed to be put on the ballot.
Mr. Simmons also advised students over 21,who live off-campus
to register as Democrats and as
residents of Buffalo, enabling
them to vote in the primary.
Mr. Simmons noted that the
response by registered
Democrats in the area to supporting Sen. McCarthy had been
very favorable. "We've had a lot
of calls from people who are glad
to see something is going to be
done by using responsible political power,” he said.

initial

The meeting ended with an ap
peal for funds and a promise that
the Steering Committee would set
up a detailed organization on
campus in the near future

�Page Two

The Spectrum

Friday, February 2, 19(8

Dr. Rennie to study Eskimos' climatic Publishing difficulties rule out
adaptability in Alaska research project this year's Student Directory
Special to The Spectrum

Dr. Donald W. Rennie, professor of physiology at the
� t

biaie

•

■,

university

.

ot

.

buitalo,

.

..

is

one

of

.

.

thirteen American

researchers who will be in Alaska this summer studying
Eskimos to determine how they have adapted themselves
so successfully under severe climatic conditions with relatively meager resources.
The remarkable success of Eskimos in adapting to difficult
circumstances is reflected in their
geographical distribution. Over
the centuries, they have migrated
around a large sector of the circumpolar world so that with their
close relatives, the Aleuts, they
occupy the longest linear distance
of any group in the world.
The American research is part
of a four-nation study which is
being sponsored by the International Biological Program (IBP),
a fifty-nation study of the biological basis of productivity and
human welfare.
American, Canadian, and Danish-French research sites have
been planned to measure how
genetically similar groups of Ekkimos have adapted to varying
environments.
The U.S. portion of the Eskimo study was developed by the

Human Adaptability Subcommittee of the U.S. National Committee for the IBP. Dr, Frederick A.
Milan, of the University of Wisconsin, has been appointed director of the American study and
coordinator of the international
effort! Dr. William S. Laughlin,

also of the University of Wisconsin, will serve as co-principal investigator with Dr. Milan in the
American project.
The U.S, research effort will be
concentrated near the origins of
the Eskimo wanderings at Wainwright, Alaska, a village of 300
residents on the Artie coast. The
Canadians will work near the center of the circumscribed migration route at Igloolik, a remote
settlement in the Northwestern
Territories, while Danish and
French scientists investigate Eskimo adaptation at Upernavik in
northeastern Greenland, one of
the farthermost points in the Eskimo migratory pattern.

Will begin in July
Dr. Rennie said the group will
be making the first of several
trips to Alaska in July to study
the entire population of Wainwright. He will be investigating
the work capacity and physical
endurance of Eskimos there,
along with the other IBP scientists who will be seeking precise
information about the biological
and social interactions within the
Wain weight community and its
physical environment,

Scientists of various disciplines
from
Universities of Wiscon-

The Student Directory, a list
of students’ names and addresses

the publisher, and they are now
looking for a new publisher.

California (Los Angels), and the not be available this year beWisconsin State Laboratory of cause of troubles with the publisher.
Hygiene, as well as the State University of Buffalo, will participate
in the American effort. Logistic
The Committee for Student
support will be supplied by the Welfare of the Student Senate
Naval Arctic Resarch Laboratory typed cards for each student and
at Point Barrow, Alaska.
sent them to the publisher. However, the book was delayed beData gatherd by the U.S. recause there was not enough adsearchers will be coordinated under a new agreement between the vertising to cover costs. At most
United States, Canada, Denmark, the company could have provided
and France, with those collected 5000 copies instead of the promin the Canadian and Danish- ised 15,000 copies which were to
French studies to give an overall be given out free among the
picture of Eskimo adaptation. In 20,000 University students.
addition, all health-related inBecause of the trouble, the Uniformation gathered in the Ameriversity broke the contract with
can survey will be made available to government agencies in
Alaska so that it may be used to
better understand and treat Eskimo health problems.
Dr. Milan said: “We hope to
gain insight into the general patterns of human adaptability and
evolution since Eskimos illustrate
in the size of their communities, level of economy, and major
occupation as hunters
the way
The Graduate Student Associain which man, the species, spent tion Executive Council resolved
ninety-nine percent of his evoluto adopt the controversial FSA
tionary history. Much of the geneLand Proposal resolution at Montic endowment of modern man day’s meeting.
has been shaped by the mechanisms of natural selection and
As constructed by Joseph Burother evolutionary processes that gess, GSA Council Member, the
still seem to affect the Eskimo GSA resolution would not allow
culture.”
FSA owned land to be used for
any purpose which “may well ignore the desires and interests of
many students, faculty, and staff
of the State University of Buffalo
and the larger urban community.”
The center of controversy is the

other student directory until next
year. Both Barbara Emilson
and
Stewart Edelstein of the Student
Senate expressed annoyance
about the situation.

&lt;%1

n

Pninncfn

InHiann

flrotmn

GSA adopts resolution
limiting FSA land use

—

—

Applied credit rule, general dept,
exams dropped by University College
Two more academic rules have
been abolished by the University
College since the schools of the
College of Arts and Sciences came
under its auspices in September

1967.

The applied credit rule and
the general department examination are no longer in effect, Dean
Claude E. Welch announced re-

cently.

The applied credit restriction
will be abolished in two stages.
Effective next semester, students
in the former Arts and Sciences
areas may take any course in
University College for academic
credit. Under the old rule, a student could receive a maximum of
16 hours credit for courses taken
in such areas as Business Administration, Engineering, Pharmacy

or Nursing. Students entering
University College this semester
will not be subject to the applied
credit regulation.
Dean Welch noted that the

shift in the applied credit rule
was not retroactive. Students who

had completed more

than

16

hours applied credit prior to Sept.
1, 1968 would still receive only
16 hours credit for this work.
Effective Sept. 1, 1967, all undergraduate courses at the University offered for academic
credit may be counted toward the

BA degree.
According to the Dean: “The
rule may have made educational
sense when parts of the University were involved in a narrowly
vocational or technical training:
however, with the expanded academic responsibilities of the University College for all undergraduates, continuation of the rule
seems inappropriate.”
Students graduating in former
Arts and Sciences departments
will not be required to take the
general departmental examination, Dean Welch also announced,
unless this test is mandated by

Grand Jury clears Edin in
slaying of R.V.M.C president
An Erie County grand jury has
cleared a Buffalo, construction
worker of first degree manslaughter in the shooting death
of the president of the Road
Vulture motorcycle club.
Waller J. Edin, 29, who was
accused in the death of Thomas
G. Bell, 24, of Buffalo, was ar-

raigned in county court this week
on a charge of unlawful possession of a dangerous weapon. He
pleaded innocent before Judge
Charles J. Gaughan and $1500
bail was continued. A trial date
was not set.
The grand jury returned no bill
on the police homicide charge in
Mr. Bell's Nov. 9 death

Mr. Bell was shot with a 32caliber pistol in a fight over a
cheap wristwatch at the apartment of Mr. Edin’s brother, Jack,

police said.

the Department. Under previous
rules, the students in these departments had to pass such examinations in their senior year.
To date, only the Psychology Department has announced its intention of retaining such an examination.
The general departmental examination was an outgrowth of a
former tutorial system, established under Chancellor Capen.
Almost all departments in the
former College of Arts and Sciences have developed honors programs, although these apply to
only a minority of graduating
students. Tutorials now are prac-

tically non-existent.

according to police.

All three intruders were shot

The case was expected to be
of the new penal code
which limits the use of deadly
man’s

The subject of bad debts was
aslo discussed at the meeting.
In the past, graduate students
have been able to borrow funds
from a special, interest-free account incorporated as part of the
GSA budget. The council decided
that no action be taken until
more information could be secured.
Two possible solutions were
aired, one proposing the use of
a collection agency, and the other

should be taken to collect $3000
in unpaid notes. According to
Omo Omoruyi, GSA treasurer, the
reason for concern is that these
funds are badly needed for other
facets of the GSA’s program. The
whole budget was accepted with
little other discussion.
In other business, acting Chairman Carl Murphy emphasized the
severe manpower shortage which
the GSA is experiencing. Mr. Murphy advocates a policy of "spreading duties and assignments”
among many graduate students—more than the 30 involved with

the Council.
The Calendar Committee reported that the course drop date
may be extended from four to
six weeks from the start of a
semester. This would be done
mainly for the benefit of freshmen.

Graduate students were also informed that their optional athletic fees would not increase facilities in Clark Gym, but only help
maintain the teams.

The Constitution of the American-Israeli Graduate Students was
unanimously accepted by the
Council,

Glazer to speak in WBFO series
As part of its series on “The
Problem in Black and White,"
WBFO radio will broadcast a seminar on urban housing Feb. 5 at

2 p.m.

The seminar, held Saturday,
features Dr. Nathan Glazer, Professor of Sociology at Berkeley
and author of The Lonely Crowd
and Beyond the Melting Pot, as
In his address, Dr. Glazer notes
that the major objections to ur-

ban

housing programs in this
country are that they don’t give
the people who must live in the
projects any voice in planning
and operation, and that programs
take so long to produce concrete

out, they must take a
great deal of time and effort to
be meaningful, and this would
slow down all planning stages of
a program.
points

Glazer says

Dr.
these objections conflict. If community consultations are to take place, he

plumber, or electrician to maintain a home would be prohibitive
to a government.

In addition to Dr. Glazer, the
consists of other experts
on urban affairs and housing
The Ford Foundation is represent
ed by an executive vice-president,
Mr. Louis Winnick. Mr. James
Hecht and Mr. George Nicholas
represent HOME and BUILD, Mr.
John Daugherty of the Department of Housing and Urban Development, filled out the panel.
The moderator is Dr. Alan J.
Drinnan of the State University
of Buffalo.
panel

Dr. Glazer also notes that many
people clamor for the government
to build a large number of private homes for the poor instead
of high rise apartments. Such a
program would cost many times
as much as a high rise building to
house the same number of peo-

ple.
He adds that

one of the

great

problems among Negroes in the

U S. is broken homes where there
is only one parent, usually the
mother.

results.

a test

force in protection of a
home and property.

FSA proposal to construct a golf
course on the land. Mr. Burgess
pointed out specifically that a
golf course is not feasible and
that it would never pay for itself
in the near future (10-15 years).
The proposal was passed by the
Council by an 8-2-2 vote.

proposing curtailment of the loan
fund. The general feeling of the
executive was that some action

Topic: urban housin

keynote speaker.

Mr. Bell and two other Road
Vulture members entered the unlocked front door of Jack Edin’s
apartment and a fight broke out
in an attempt to get the watch,

Mr. Edelstein, president of the
Student Senate, said he was “extremely annoyed that there is no
Student Directory, but the company has been extremely lax and
the student directories have been
delayed later and later in the
past few years. Even though there
is no directory this year, we are
much better off. We will be able
to make it a more valuable document in the future when we find
a more reliable publisher.”

He said such a family could
not be expected to keep up repairs on a private home, and
the cost of hiring a carpenter,

The program is sponsored by

the University Office of Urban
Affairs and the Cooperative Ur
ban Extension Center.

�Pag# Thr##

The Spectrum

Friday, February 2, 1968

Stony Brook president denies charges

of non-cooperation in drug inquiry

John Toll, president of State Unidenied charges by Suffolk County
Brook,
has
versity at Stony
refused
his
school
to cooperate during a drug
that
police
/investigation on the campus.
Pres. Toll described the charges before the Jan. 17 raid which

NEW YORK (UPI)

—

eventually netted 48 arrests.
Police called David Tilley, dean
of students, who in turn called
Bybee, Toll said.

as either false or misleading during one of two tandem legislative
hearings promopted by a massive
Jan. 17 raid on the Long Island
campus

The

When police who had been
told of the party by an anonymous caller arrived at the college
the room number the caller had
given turned out to be Dean
Bybee’s, Dr. Toll said.
Dean Bybee, who had gotten

charges were brought up

in testimony Wednesday by John
L. Barry, Suffolk County police

commissioner, and detectives who
spent three months on the state
University's showcase campus as
undercover agents.

out of bed. dressed and was leaving. discovered a small envelope
of marijuana which had been
slipped under the door, Toll said.

Dr. Toll called the incident

an “apparent frameup.”
Commissioner Barry charged
Bybee had taken the marijuana
from the students he had warned
of the impending raid.
Pres. Toll called Hr. Barry’s
charge “a very grave accusation”

and said it should

have been

brought to the attention of the
university’s board of trustees or
Governor Rockefeller if there had
been reason to believe it was
true.

Nixon polls ahead

Pres. Toll denied the specific
charges point-by-point at a hearing before the joint legislative

'PRINCETON, NJ.—Richard M. Nixon is still holding a good lead over Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller
of New York and Gov. George Romney of Michigan
for the Republican presidential nomination, a Gallup poll showed Wednesday. The poll said Nixon
has a 3-2 lead over Rockefeller and a 3-1 lead over
Romney. The survey at 320 spots in the United
States also showed that Rockefeller is gaining some
ground on Nixon for the GOP nomination.

committee on crime.

Pres. Toll termed “completely
false” a claim made by Barry
that Donald Bybee, associate dean
of students, warned students at
a “pot” party that police were
about to make a raid.
The incident occurred a year

Center of Immunology to be located
on campus as part of Medical School
H. Beutner, Dr, Almen L. Barron search in Buffalo. Under Dr.
Witebsky and his staff, it will
and Dr. Joseph H. Kite. These
serve as a reference center for
members have contributed to the
the Americas to aid in the represent department of microbiolsearch, teaching and training of
ogy at the University.
this enlarging area of immunolThe new Center grew as a reogy.
sult of the increasing importance
of immunology in the international scope, and the Center will
provide a media of collaboration
in immunology between all departments of the School of Medicine and the medical community
in general,
“In this new Center of Immunology,” stated Dr. Witebsky, “the
by Richard Anthony
emphasis will be on in-depth
College Press Service
study and high quality performWASHINGTON
ance on a teamwork basis. We
will continue to perform our Last fall, education officials
basic studies on the nature and were saying that chaos would
manifestation of immunologic re- result if President Johnson
sponses, to better understand the
didn’t act to clear up the unfactors responsible for the resistance or lack of resistance certainties in the draft situaagainst disease.”
tion by the first of this year.
The first has come and
In co-operation with the World
Health Organization, this center gone, the White House is still
will encourage immunological re- silent on the draft, and graduate schools and potential

A Center of Immunology will
be established at the State University of Buffalo. According to
President Samuel B. Gould, President of the State University of
New York, the new center will
be attached to the School of Medicine under the administration of
the dean.

The department of bacteriology
and immunology represents one
of the few institutions in the
world encompassing the five most
important fields of immunology.
Bacterial and viral immunology,

immunogenetics, iramunopatholo-

gy, and immunological analysis
are included in the areas of study
which are to be conducted. Included among the distinguished
members of the new Center are
Dr. Felix Milgrom, Dr. James F.
Mohn, Dr. Noel R, Rose, Dr. Ernst

Ted Kennedy charges
rampant' Viet corruption
of examples of corruption at the

—

highest levels

VietnamelHfc

He was critical of “the rather
cavalier attitude” of U.S. officials
toward the situation.

“In many instances South Vietnamese officials have never had
it so good,” Sen. Kennedy said.
“The ones that are paying for
this are the American fighting
men who are out chasing the
Viet Cong
and the American
—

taxpayers,”

The Massachusetts Democrat
made the remarks in a television
interview on the Today Show. He
said there have been “a number

WASHINGTON Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara told
Congress Thursday the Soviet Union has more than doubled its in

lercontinenfal balistic missile force in the past year,
McNamara said U.S. plans to modernize this country s long range
missile force and build new strategic bombers are behind schedule,
But he said the United States still has better than a 4 to 1 nuclear
superiority over Russia.
ALBANY—Republican and Democratic Senate leaders teamed up
Wednesday to head a list of sponsors of legislation aimed at encouraging the birth of new summer festivals of arts and sustain existing festivals
Introduced under multi-sponsorship by nine senators, including
Majority Leader Earl Brydges and Minority Leader Joseph Zaretzki,
and six assemblymen, the proposal appropriates $200,000 to the State
Council on the Arts for technical and managerial assistance and grants
to “festivals.”
BATH, N.Y.—Four Buffalo area teen agers were in Stuben County
jail Thursday on charges of possession of dangerous weapons and
hypodermic needles and syringes.
The four were arrested Wednesday when state police stopped
their car during a road check on Route 17 east of Corning
The- four were identified as Paul R. Tipple, 16, of Amherst, Brady
H. Way, 18, of Eden, Steven K. Miles, 18, of Tonawanda, and Michael
J. Stuber, 19, of Snyder.
NEW YORK—Governor Rockefeller said Wednesday “New York
State now has the toughest, most comprehensive air pollution control program in the nation and we’re proud of it.”
He said New York City will receive more than $1 million in state
aid for air pollution control this year.
WASHINGTON—The public health service has found a number
of different model television /els leak excessive radiation, Congress
was told today.
James G. Terrill Jr., director of the service’s National Center
for Radiological Health, said an examination of some 1200 sets “of
a large variety of makes and models belonging to PHS employees”
led to the discovery.
ALBANY—A bill to force school attendance as a step in the War
on poverty was introduced in the legisla ture.
The measure would bar welfare or social service assistance and
care to any adult who has not completed eight years of full-time study
or its equivalent.
UNITED NATIONS—The United States worked on a reply to a
neutralist Afro-Asian proposal aimed at obtaining the release of the
USS Pueblo and its 83-man crew from North Korea.
The price tor the release, according to a proposal made Wednesday by Ambassador Agha Shahi of Pakistan, would be North Korean
participation in Security Council debate on the entire Korean question.

Johnson's silence on draft causes
predicted chaos among grad students

Dr, Ernest Witebsky, distinguished professor and past chairman of the department of bacteriology and immunology, will
serve as the Center’s first director.

WASHINGTON ((UPD)
Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy charged this
week that corruption is so
pant among South
government officials that “there
is a real question whether they
really want to settle the war.”

dateline news, Feb. 2

-

of government.”

1 feel that corruption is ram
r ant
a "d these are American
P
tunas that are being stolen,
n Kennedy said. “The thing
that concerns me the deepest is
the rather cavalier attitude expressed by U.S. officials about
the problem of corruption.
...

»

“They say we need patience
and understanding. I don’t think
that is a satisfactory attitude,”

Sen. Kennedy said.

Sen. Kennedy said the United
States should give South Vietnam a limited amount of time
to clean house, and tell Saigon
leaders:

“Unless you do, we are going
to modify
cantly.”

our

policy signifi-

graduate students are seeing
the first signs of the chaos
that was predicted.

There are two major questions
that still must be decided regarding the draft: the first is,
how are the actual draftees to be
selected from the pool of drafteligible men; the second is, what
academic fields, if any, are to be
designated as providing draft deferments for those doing grad-

uate work in them.
[Under the terms of the 1967
draft law, the National Security

Council actually has the power
to decide the second question.
The Council includes high officials such as the Vice President
and the Secretary of State, as
well as the President, In fact,
though, the President will undoubtedly make the final decision
on both questions concerning the
draft, if any decisions are made ]

this point there’s no way of know :
ing, because the President hasn’t
yet said who he’s going to draft.
Therefore, graduate schools
which arc beginning to make decisions on applications can’t tell
whether or not the students they
accept this spring will be coming
in the fall.
A similar problem exists for
students. College seniors and first
year grad students can’t plan for
future study until the government’s draft policies are cleared
up.

At this point any speculation
about what the White House will
do must be very tentative, be-

cause there really is no way of
knowing. Education officials with
close contacts in government predicted action by the President before Christmas, and nothing came
of it. There are, however, a few

observations that can be made.
It appears that the President
(or, in this case, the President
and other members of the Na-

tional Security Council) will not
grant deferments to all grad students in the natural sciences,
math and engineering.
A special government committee set up to study the deferment
question last year recommended
deferments of this kind. Although
the White House has not said
anything publicly about a decision, education officials have been
told privately that the President
has rejected the committee’s rec
ommendations.

Women and vets
Graduate school deans have
been predicting that their incoming classes next fall would be

Whether he and the Council
will designate certain narrowly
defined fields as draft-deferrable
is at this point unknown.

and women, since they assumed
most graduating male seniors
would be drafted. This prediction
may turn out to be true, but at

Educated army

made up

primarily of veterans

On the question of how draftees
will be chosen, there is only one

thing that can be said with a relative degree of certainty at this
the White House will do
point
-

something.

If it doesn’t, and if

Congress also fails to act, then
the traditional Selective Service
method of drafting the oldest eligible males first will be followed,
meaning that the Army will be
full of college graduates.
To make sure that there is
some diversity in the ages of the
draftees, the President will have
to take action. What he will do,
and when, however, is not clear
at this point.
John Morse, an official of the
American Council on Education
(ACE), believes the President will
set up seven age groups, one for
each year from 19 to 25. and then
order draft boards to choose a

certain percentage of each group
for service. Presumably about a
third of draft-eligible college men
would be taken under such a system, since draft needs for the

coming year are anticipated at
about a third of the total drafteligible pool.
Whether Mr. Morse's prediction
is borne out or not, it is safe to
say that not all draft-eligible college graduates will be drafted.
Unfortunately there is no way of
predicting which of them will be
taken. Priority may be given to
those with birthdays early in the
year, as some have suggested,
but then again it may not.
Mr. Morse and other education
officials in Washington are now
concentrating their efforts on getting Congress to clear up the
draft situation. Although there
is not much an individual student can do to get action from
the White House, students can
assist in pushing for Congressional action by writing to Sen
ators and Representatives.

�Page Four

The Spectrum

Friday, February 2, 19$g

Undergraduate education
Despite the rumors you may have heard and the stories
you may have read, the quality of undergraduate education at the State University of Buffalo has not substantially
improved during the past few years. It is likely, in fact,
that it has been on the decline.
Although it is unquestionably true that the University
has been hiring a~ number of welPKhbwrT professors and
President Meyerson is making progress in the creation of
a more flexible educational system, it is also true that most
of these benefits go to the graduate student. It’s a rare
occurrence when the renowned professor gets to know an
undergraduate.

The undergraduate classrooms are becoming more
crowded and more impersonal. The big-name professors
are teaching either small graduate seminars or large undergraduate sections, both quite ineffective in the eyes of the
undergraduate.

Part of the problem rests in the fact that the University
is apparently willing to risk the quality of undegraduate education, while lifting the prestige of the school as a whole.
An admiral goal; an unfortunate consequence.
There are some indications that efforts are being made
’.o insure as fine an education for the undergraduate as posMiddlile
sible. Dean Claude Welch of the University College has
been working toward these ends, but he has just begun,
and he cannot do it alone. The Student Senate has initiated
a course and teacher evaluation, and that’s a step in the
right direction.
But more is needed. New programs, such as cooperaby Barry Holtzclaw
tive education, must be introduced. A cooperative education program would give undergraduates greater latitude
It appears a sif the pending November elections
and provide an opportunity for them to gain the experience
are already having a significant effect on American
of the business world while they are still students.
foreign policy in a way none of us expected. Our
There are other programs that could be initiated to raise policy
is trapped, for the next nine months at least,
the quality of undegraduate training. The danger is that by the realities of democratic power
politics.
we may fail to look for them while we are attempting to
It seems all too clear that the President is satisfaculty
fied
with
his
political position, and that the war
roster with star-studded names.
fill the
The trouble may be that we are interim students caught will see few changes until after the November elections.
on an interim campus—and, at the same time, caught between the University's promise and the interim reality.
The President is confident that shallow reitera

course

Readers

Or perhaps...

The New Yok State Legislature is presently considering
an amendment to the State Constitution which would lower
the voting age in the state to 18. Passage of this amendment
is long overdue.
The usual arguments presented by advocates of the
lower age are familiar to all. If an 18, 19 or 20-year-old
can own property, pay taxes and march off to war, why
shouldn’t he be able to vote? These are logical arguments,
but there are other things to consider also.
Youthful Americans have a point of view that deserves
to be recognized. An 18-year-old today, in many cases, is
well informed and deeply interested in the affairs of government, whether they are international, national or local.
Opponents of the change claim that a person under 21
is immature. It doesn’t appear as though those over 21
have always voted in a mature manner. If we consider
some of the comments made by students in the 18 to 20
age group, and compare them to some comments made by
older Americans, it is impossible to reach the conclusion
that “with age comes wisdom.”
The New York State Legislature has discussed the issue
for the last five years, and has successfully killed moves
to lower the voting age complaining of a “complete lack
of response from 18 to 20-year-olds.” Recent Gallup polls
show that 64% of the public favors lowering the voting
age, and many legislators still resist the change. That appears to be a more blatant lack of response.
There is little doubt that today’s 18 to 20 generation
is the best educated and most politically concerned that this
nation has ever seen. These young Americans will reap
the benefits or carry the burdens of this nation because of
decisions made today. They are certainly entitled to a voice
in the determination of their future.

False alarms
It appears that another rash of false alarms is beginning
sweep campus.
College students who pull false alarms don’t belong in
Stale Universities . . . they belong in State Hospitals.
Last year false alarms in the city jumped by 1326 to
3477. The 1966 total was 2151 and in 1965, 1772. A Buffalo
fireman was killed recently enroute to a fire, and this week
five Niagara Falls firemen were also injured responding to
a call for help.
Firefighting is always an essential emergency service,
and when equipment is called to this campus, it leaves 1 6
of the city without immediate fire protection.
Calling for aid unnecessarily is not only childish, it is
criminal. An3 students caught in the act of pulling false
alarms should be prosecuted fully in both student and civil
courts.

died in vain.

•

•

•

Well, they have died in vain, and their deaths
constitute one of America’s greatest tragedies.
Taking the very conservative figure of 200 GI
deaths and 750 wounded each week, and extending
that average until November, reveals some grim
realities: 8000 deaths, and 30,000 wounded, in nine
months.
It must be remembered that these figures are
based on a continuation of the type of “holding”
operation we have conducted in the past months.
If the expected “second DienBienPhu” ever takes
place at KheSanh, the toll will be considerably

higher.

For the hawks, nothing will have been “won,”
save a little time. Fcr the doves, nothing will
have been gained, save a restriction of the “escalation.”
If this goes on throughout the summer, American citizens can react in two ways, either with
repulsion and protest, or with indifferent acceptance. The American public is being numbed into
an acceptance of the reality of killing as a part
of the American way of life. If the great public
indifference to the War does not change to public
indignity, it is clear that our “domestic tranquility”
will explode in our faces this summer.
Like the man who has fallen into quicksand, we
are stuck in our own myopic muck. Neither struggling nor sitting tight will help; the sheer weight
and nature of our presence causes us to sink.
What we must do, now, is reach for every
chance of salvation, to grab at every branch, at
every helping hand.
It is hard to tell how fast
we are sinking, or how far we have sunk. Let us
only hope that we have not sunk so deep in the
quagmire of our own perfidy that our hands are
trapped, that we no longer have the means to
save ourselves.

writings

Patriot of the world
To The Editor:

In reply the Jan. 30 letter of Lawrence B,

Lyon

I am an American by label
I am a citizen of the world by birth
I am willing to devote my life to the equality and
freedom of my fellow citizens

There are many countries and many laws,
complexity and conflict
I

am able to admit that

I am confused

I am old enough to think for

myself

I lament my world’s history but have hope for the

future
I deplore the phrase “American Fighting Soldier’
I cannot see in war a way to peace
I still haven’t seen any communist agressors or
Viet Cong who have read Karl Marx, only
lovers of their land
I fear the U.S. reaction to nationalism in Latin

America

I fear the future
I am willing to stand up for my personal beliefs
and reject all labels other than “man”
I say that all men are intrinsically of equal worth
and deserve to live wherever they please as
long as they obey the Golden Rule

America and every other country was built on
courage and faith and mistakes by fallible men
I am afraid—of hate, of irrational nationalism and
chauvinist pride, of blood and death and guns
and missiles and bombs, of amputated limbs
and maimed children, of man’s inability to
communicate just long enough to find out we’re
all on the same side—and maybe it’s because I
have not yet seen the suffering,
But I have hope. I am also a man, a patriot of
the world.
David A. Shapiro
The

Spectrum

is

Tuesday and Friday
year at

published twice-weekly
during the regular
—

—

every

academic

the State University of New York at Buffalo,
3435 Main Street, Buffalo, New York 14214. Offices
are located at 355 Norton Hall. Average Circulation:
15,500.

Editor-in Chief—MICHAEL L. D'AMICO
Managing Editor—RICHARD R. HAYNES
Asst. Managing Editor—RICHARD SCHWAB
Business Manager—SAMUEL A. POWAZEK
Advertising Manager—DAVID E. FOX
Campus
Margaret Anderson
Asst
Marlene Kozuchowski
City
Daniel Lasser
Peter Simon
Asst.
Feature Barry C. Holtzclaw
Asst.
Ronald Ellsworth
-

Lower voting age

tions of unreasonable peace ultimatums will continue to please the doves, and that meaningless military “victories” will satisfy the hawks.
He is sure that the doves will see the military
actions as essentially holding actions, accomplished
without any troop buildup, and necessary, at best.
The hawks, happy with just about everything as
long as it utilizes firepower, will most probably be
appeased by the sort of washroom promises at the
Pentagon which have trapped our policy in the past.
For the President, safe in the White House (safe,
at least, until the riots hit Washington’s ghettos
this summer, this position in the middle is definitely the epitome of a particular political ideal, and
definitely serves his short-term—that is, election—needs very well. He can safely condemn either the
hawk or dove position as too radical; he has fooled
the American public into believing that this war is
the status quo, as American as apple pie.
Well, this apple pie is poison. More than 15,000
Americans have already died in the conflict, many
thousands more critically wounded, and hundreds
of billions of dollars have been pumped into the
area. Indeed, that seems to be the justification
that many offer tor continuing the War, to somehow take revenge so these men will not have

’

4

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�Pag* Five

The Spectrum

Friday, February 2, 1968

Schoenman position attacked

grump

By Interlandi

BELOW OLYMPUS

To the Editor:

.

.

.

by STEESE

Ralph Schoenman, a man of “many moods” who

directs The Bertrand Russel Peace Foundation and

I strongly suspect that this country is approaching, or by the time this appears, has reached, a

who spoke here on campus last week, seems to have
-been without, the one mood necessary anH minimal
for the maintenance and perpetuance of what the
so-called “Peaceniks” so ravenously uphold. I am
referring to all the talk about living in love and
harmony, the basic doctrines of hippieville. How is
this possible?
The Vietcoms don’t love us. They are out to
kill every American alive. Is a one-sided love just
or enough? I say no, but Mr. Schoenman righteously
supports those who feel otherwise. Is it right for
Mr, Schoenman to label (he United States as “the
oppressor, the imperialist,” without consuming equal
breath and energy in denouncing the higher atrocities and more surreptitious, anomalous intents and
actions of the North Vietnamese.
His single-sided sympathy in the matter disgusts me to the point of nausea. He gives the impression that we—the U.S.A.—are actually on cloud
nine by using napalm “to torture and terrorize
the people.” Our military is in the clouds all right,
but number nine is not one of them. What about the
lives lost in executing the Napalm Showers through

going to do internally and externally for the forseeable future. The Pueblo has served to point out
a certain tremendous weakness in this country’s international posture, Johnson has insisted that we
can have guns and butter, that we can fight communism in Southeast Asia and still have a great
society in our country. Both the ghettos and I
seem to find this most unconvincing, but we will
ignore that and point out a certain much more
basic question—How many places around this tired
old world can we defend from ?ism at once? (substitute your own favorite ideological enemy).

necessity?
If I felt demonstrations and protests would end
this war, so that a just conclusion is reached, or
that at least all fighting would terminate and not
merely one country’s militia, then I feel protests
would be considered positive. However, this is not

the case nor can it be, because the North Viet-

namese have consistently and underhandedly refused to lay down their arms. They have repeatedly
affirmed the conclusion they cannot be trusted.
Thus, I ask: “Have any of the anti-war protests
to date been really constructive?” Aside from inciting the hate and violence which they purportedly are against, I have seen no impressive results.
Mr. Schoenman feels a revolution is badly needed in
the populace at large. Surely revolution has proven
itself to be of merit in many cases in history. Life
is one big revolution, you might say. But it is not
a bit asinine to compare the one of 1776 to a present day barrage of aimless rioting, raw animal
in-fighting between the staunchest of
behavior
protesters, the staunchest of non-protesers, and
severe police vs. civilian contests.
Doesn’t all this add up to nil and hasn’t nil
in so many areas of public unrest been achieved?
Revolution without a purposeful direction—without vision—is self-defeating. We can eventually
revolt ourselves out of existence altogether. The
line of philosophy that Mr. Schoenman and disciples wish to adhere to, if activated, would have
us living as captives in a captive world. Something to which I would prefer no life at all. If
Mr.
Schoenman is so repelled by our country and the
fundamental theories on which its government is
run, why doesn’t he and others like him take up
residence in Hanoi, or better yet Siberia, and be
content that at least he or they have it good. I
challenge him to name any other country than the

ran out of cigarettes, girls. I found these funnysmelling things in my son's bureau drawer!"

“Sorry I

the
lighter
side
by Dick West

—

U.S. that has done more for the welfare of the
world without attempting to sieze control of the
reigns of that country’s government by force.
Finally, is it possible for Mr, Schoenman honestly and soundly to compare Ho Chi Minh’s concern (a manifest lack of it in my opinion) for his
people of that of a statesman like Winston Churchill? Ho Chi Minh is ruthlessly herding out boys
of grammar school age to fight and be killed. Mr.
Schoenman is in desperate need of help.
Armen Bagdasarian

Vending cups an inspiration
To The Editor:
In reply to “Guardian” on “Fascist Cup Pollu
tion” (Jan, 30);
I wish to protest your protest against
. . the
Fascist-sloganed drinking cups which pollute campus vending machines.”
Although they may be a
. not-so-subtle propoganda device designed to slowly weaken leftist
student resistance to the evils of capitalism,” they
may also be, for some leftist students, a rare contact with the real working class.
•
Regardless of their disreputable origin in the
slough of bourgeois capitalism, those facsist-sloganed vending machine cups may thus serve as a
valuable source of inspiration and identification
for the leftist student resistance.
Let this be a lesson to you, comrade Guardian,
on the tactical use of the enemy’s propoganda
weapons against himself.
Lenin’s Ghost

Writers: Please be brief. Letters should not exceed
300 words. All letters must be signed and the address
and telephone number of the writer must be included. Positive verification of authorship will be made
before a letter is printed.
Letters will be kept in strict confidence.
The Spectrum will use initials or pen name, it

requested. But anonymous letters are never used.

The Spectrum reserves the right to edit or delete
material submitted for publication, but the intent of
letters will not be changed.

Last November, in connection with the 22nd annual
observance of international cat week, the American Feline
Society under took a campaign to find jobs for unemployed

cats.

Robert Kendell, the society’s president, pointed out that

most big cities have thousands of jobless cats which could
be put to work killing rats in the slums.

He said the most effective
method of rat control was the
so-called “Hong Kong system,”
under which buildings are assigned a certain number of working cats, depending on their size.
I am not clear whether that
means the size of the buildings
or the cats.
“A good cat averages 13 kills
a night,” Kendell said.

I have at hand a statement by
Earl F. Geiger, executive vice
president of the Orkin Exterminating Co. He claims that the
rat-fighting abilities of cats are

vastly overrated.
They’ve gotten too fat, slow,
peaceful pampered and overcivilized,” Geiger says.

Cats defended

Must be taught

Before proceeding further with
this, I would like to note that
most people will accept with equ
animity the disparagement of
public officials, home, motherhood, apple pie and Lawrence

take on a young rat, but even he
is no match for a full-grown one.
Moreover, a cat has to learn how
to fight rats. It’s hardly instinc-

Welk.

But woe betide anyone who
rubs a cat lover the wrong way.
Cat lovers are quicker to write
irate letters than any other segment of the public, except possibly the defenders of and apologists for bagpipes and drum and
bugle corps.
Knowing this, I approach my
task with trepidation. Nevertheless, duty compels me to report
that the entire concept developed
by the American Feline Society
has now been called into question.

“An alley cat occasionally may

tive behavior.

“In one experiment, of 20 kittens raised in isolation, only nine
grew up to kill rats. In another
test, where 18 cats were raised
with rats in their cages, none attacked his cagemate and only
three became rat killers.
“If you’re looking for a ratkilling animal, get a terrier or an
owl instead of a pussycat.”
Geiger’s picture of the cat as
a paper tiger may be accurate,
but I doubt his suggested substitutes will be accepted. That is,
unless somebody can teach an owl
to purr.

Quotes in the

news

WASHINGTON
President Johnson, issuing a strong new plea
for a tax increase in his annual budget message to
Congress.
“I warn the nation that this failure to act on the tax bill
will
sweep us into an accelerating spiral of price increases; a
slump in
homebuilding; and a continued erosion of the American dollar."
WASHINGTON
Sen. John C. Stennis (D-Miss.), chairman of
the Senate Military Preparedness Subcommittee replying to a question
of what the United States would do if diplomatic efforts failed to get
the Pueblo back from North Korea:
“We can’t let it die if diplomacy doesn’t work. I’m not jumping
in and saying we ought to wipe out a city, but I wouldn’t rule out
—

—

anything,”

It is almost incomprehensible to me that there
will be any overt military action on our part in
Korea over the Pueblo. For the very simple reason
that the Pentagon and Lyndon Hawk are confronted
with the grave problem of trying to police the
world with too few cops. We are fighting one major
ground conflict now; where are the troops going to
come from to fight another? Because the troops are
not there to fulfill all the commitments that the
state department and military specialists have
dreamed up to cover all the possible eventualities,
and invade North Korea.
I am not totally unsympathetic to the administration’s problem. The Vietnam War has been
justified by screaming communist aggression at the
highest possible volume for the past three or four
years. Now, lo and behold, we have a real live
piece of aggression to deal with and a rather blatant lack of troops to do anything. The Enterprise
can steam—or is it atomize?—its way around the
principal ports of North Korea looking threatening
all its little heart desires. Resisting the general
tendency to assume the Koreans to be stupid, note
what the North Koreans have on their side.

They know that troop-wise the bottom of the
U S. barrel is showing, if as mentioned before, we
arc to keep the rest of the world safe from nastiness per various treaty obligations, while we keep
Vietnam free to choose to stay on our side. The
reserves can be called up, quite true. Then what?
Am 1 to assume that we are going to get help in
Korea if we do cross the truce line for the Pueblo?
Forgive me if I doubt it. Arc we going to use
atomic weapons?

A cheerfully frightening god-

damned thought. We might get rid of the whole
mess in short order then and whoever or whatever
is left might be able to do better with an object
lesson in stupidity to color the folkways of the

future.

I dc.bt we will use atomics. Probably for no
reason since Lyndon’s pride is at stake. But
if we did, some other people would be hard pressed
to stay out. Poor old Russia wants so badly to get
out of Vietnam that it hurls, and now the problem
of what to do if the U S. actually militarily threatens and acts against North Korea arises. If we
dump on North Korea, Russia has to act, or leave
herself open to grave censure by all her . . , (allies
is dubious but let's use it anyway, since it is almost
as dubious in the case of many of the U.S.’s
“friends”). So the cold war goes back to being much
colder—which conversely seems to mean it is that
much closer to being hot, an interesting application
of thermodynamics to diplomacy. And if to save
face, Russia starts rumbling about Berlin, what are
we going to defend that with, Charles deG? At
which point the Guatamalian bandits get even more
obstreperous and we finally admit it is a revoluto be suppressed of course, aren’t all of
tion
them?
and we have to send the Marines into
action to defend United Fruit again.

Hood

—

—

Beneath the facetious exterior of the foregoing
beats a very tremulous heart. To face this problem
requires bodies. This country has finally been
caught short. It has had its nose rammed into the
harsh fact that one cannot rule the world by technology alone. Confronted with this unpleasant aspect of life, the choices seem to be two. Cool it.
Let the world sort of ease along without our solving
its problems militarily, and work on solving some
possibly more' basic problems like starvation and
disease and other similar minor little social problems. You know, the usual fuzzy headed liberal
garbage about trying to improve the world and
maybe making some friends along the way.
The other choice is equally apparent. To admit
that we cannot have both butter and guns, and to
concentrate on the guns. Wheee. To set up this
country as an armed camp of enlightenment destined to free the world from
ism if we have
to leave two thirds of it in ashes to accomplish that
—•

worthy goal.

We stand at a point in history which may be
the most fateful, and fatal, that the world has yet
known. Will the resources, manpower, and democratic theories and ideas, that have made this
country
at least partially
something of great
value now be sacrificed to a Pax Americana, or can
we look beyond our stung pride to the greater
question of our ultimate destiny as a nation? By
the time this appears, the answer may already be
apparent.
—

—

SEOUL
Radio Peking, accusing the United States of risking
a new Korean war over the Pueblo incident:
“The U S. ruling bloc is making use of the capture of its spy
ship in conducting war alert and war blackmail on a great scale . . .”
—

�The

Page Six

Friday, February 2, 1968

Spectrum

Spock: 'My prospects are not rosy... not tragic'
by Jack V. Fox

United

Prett

committed under that country’s

International

NEW YORK—The man who has counselled millions of
Spock says he sees nothing
mothers on how to burp a baby and raise a happy child
says his own future is “not rosy” but that the mood of incongruous about a pediatrician
America may have changed greatly before he has to face speaking out in the area of injail for encouraging young men to refuse military service. ternational politics.
Dr. Benjamin McLane
Spock is a study in contradictions.
A genial giant whose book,
Baby and Child Cara, still sold
last year second only to the
Bible, Spock grew up believing
Calvin Coolidge the nation’s
greatest president and now parades in high collar and watch
chain at the head of a covey of
flower people in prayer beads.
Spock, 64, was arraigned with
four other men Monday in Boston Federal Court on conspiracy
charges bearing a possible penalty of five years imprisonment.
Last weekend in his 11th floor
apartment on the Upper East
Side, Dr. Spock, tanned and rested from two weeks in the Virgin
Islands, philosophized about his
deep involvement in the antiVietnam War movement.
“My prospects are not rosy but
not tragic,” he says. “My lawyer
tells me the case won’t come to
trial until about October and that
by the time appeals have been
made through the courts and up
to the Supreme Court, it will be
from one and one-half to two and
one-half years.

“I’m certainly not for chaos,”
he says. “I simply feel that this
war is legally and morally wrong
and that this particular law
should not be obeyed. The Nuremberg trials established the
principle that the citizens of a
country are guilty if they go
along with monstrous crimes

“I think everyone who believes
in peace should be willing to
stake every ounce of his reputation in whatever his field to end
this war.”

Doesn’t he ever feel he is being
“used” by elements whose concern is far from a just peace

“Everybody asks me if I’m not
being used. They tell me I am

“The fact is there is nothing I

detest more than
hp

feel so. Henry Wallace belonged
to 1948. This is 1968.”

“T

C9VC

tioiro

a brattish child,”
&lt;i
nlmn...

children must show respect for
their parents. Perhaps I was misunderstood, but I was speaking
out against decades of advice on
strict discipline in every phase
of a child’s upbringing.”

Spock says he has received
hundreds of letters from mothers
who took his baby book as gospel
but now condemn him for what
they consider unpatriotism. He
says he gets twice as many supporting him.

Young people today are displaying an encouraging idealism,
Spock says, although he confesses he would not be distressed if
they would cut their hair, put
on shoes and present an appearance calculated to give th? peace
movement more respectability.

Curiously, Spock becomes most
defensive on this question of
whether he advocated permissiveness.

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“I think a great many things
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the United States, anyway, I am
going to bat and enter a plea of
innocent.”
As a law abiding citizen all
his life, how can Spock justify
his admitted violation of the
draft laws? If every citizen decided which laws he would and
would not obey, would the country not be in chaos?

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Friday, February

•

Arkansas prison superintendent to
auit; decries intolerable conditions
CUMMINS PRISON FARM, Ark.
State police began dig(IUPD)
ging on prison farm grounds for
as many as 200 bodies possibly
buried this century, while the
university professor brought in
this month to revamp Arkansas’
antiquated prison system said he
was quitting to preserve his
sanity.
Thomas O. Murton, 39, a professor from Southern Illinois University angered over intolerable
conditions in the state’s prisons,
said Monday night he was quitting as superintendent of prisons
“as soon as they can find some—

one crazy enough to take the
stupid job." .
“If anyone will have this job
I will wait a month before handing in my resignation,” Prof.
Murton said. “If I stayed here, I
would end up blowing my brains

out.”
Thre human skeletons in crude
wooden coffins were exhumed
Monday by a work crew digging
a new pig sty. Prof. Murton and
the crew were led to the spot by
in inmate who said he helped
bury a man there. The skeletons
were
crammed into separate
boxes. One had been decapitated.

official bulletin
The Official Bulletin is an authorized publication of the State
University of New York at Bufalo, for which the Spectrum assumes no
editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN
form to 114 Hayes Halt, attention Mrs. Fischer, before 2:00 p.m. the
Friday prior to the week of publication. Student organization notices
are not accepted for publication.

Student Testing Center Registration Schedule
Last Day
to Ragittor

Test

Feb. 3

Pre-Nursing Exam

Placement interviews

Please call 831-3311 to make
obtain additional information concerning the
appointments and

following:
February 2
YWCA of Buffalo and Erie
County
The Equitable Life Assurance
Society of the U.S.
H. J. Heinz Co.

National Labor Relations Board
Sinclair Research, Inc.

February 5
Kinberly Clark

Internal Revenue Service
Worthington Corp.

Farrel Corp.

Pittsburgh Plate Glass (Chemical Div.)

National Lead
East Irondequoit Central
Schools
February 6
Xerox
Aluminum Co. of America

Feb. 17

HOT BIG 13
8 Slice

-

Cummins, Arkansas’ oldest and

largest prison farm, has the reputation of being a place where one
inmate could pay to get another
killed, and where prisoners were
sometimes bludgeoned to death
in the fields if they fell behind
picking cotton, the prison phy-

sician said.
Prof. Murton said prison officials had heard rumors for some
time about the graves. He said
he had not acted sooner to investigate the rumors because he
had had other problems since
taking over as head of the state
prisons this month.
Prof. Murton was appointed by
Gov. Winthrop Rockefeller last
year to take over the prison
system after a 1966 state police
report alleging brutality, enforced homosexuality, torture by
electricity and wholesale corruption at Arkansas’ prison farm.

School of Nursing

Speer Carbon Co.
Ramapo Central School Dist. 2
February 9
Sears, Roebuck &amp; Co.

The Penn Mutual Life Insurance Co.
McCurdy
Co.

campus releases...
The first delicatessen supper of the new semester will be held
PTav at 5:30 p.m in Hillel House. Mr. Chaim Dormant, a leadings
Jewish writer from Great Britain, will speak on: “A Litvak Fallen
Among Scots.”
Mr. Bermant will later be the guest speaker at a meeting of the
Hillel Fellowship at 8 p.m. in the Hillel House. “A Tale of Two
Worlds—Jewish Writing in Britain and the United States” will
A social hour will follow and all Jewish faculty
be his topic.
members and their spouses are invited to attend.
The B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation will sponsor a Sabbath Service
this evening at 7:45 p.m. in the Hillel House. Dr. Justin Hofmann
will speak on; “Evaluating Our Motives.” An Oneg Shabbat will
follow.
The Literature and Drama Committee will present a poetry
reading entitled Poetry in Translation Wednesday. Miss Ann London
pf the English Dept, will read Spanish and French verse she has
translated into English,
Mr. Raymond Federman, a member of the Dept, of Modern
Languages visiting from France, will read poems he has written in
both his native tongue and in English,
The reading will be at 4 p.m in the Conference Theater, Norton
Hall,

"The Seduction of Scientists; Dilemmas in the Study of Deviants”
will be Mr. John H. Gagnon’s topic in a lecture sponsored by Faculty
of Social Sciences and Administration.
Mr. Gagnon, senior research sociologist and trustee for sex
research at Indiana University, is the co-author of several recent
reports on sex offensives including “Sexual Deviance a Report.”
The lecture, open to the public, will be at 4 p.m. Monday in
the Millard Fillmore Room, Norton Union.
The American-lsraeli Students Club will show slides taken in
Old Jerusalem, Bethlehem, Hebron, Jericho and the Dead Sea area
at 8 p.m. Sunday, Room 335 Norton Hall,
The International Club is sponsoring an evening with the
Honorable Michael Arnon, Consul General of Israel in New York
at 7:30 p.m., Feb. 8 in the Millard Fillmore room, Norton Hall.
The University Students Association for Veterans is holding
a raffle open to students who have paid their student activities fee
for the current semester. Tickets are available to them at the

Veterans table in Norton Hall.
First prize will be $25; second prize, $10; third prize, one quart
of Seagram’s Seven Crown or cash equivalent. The time of the
drawing will be announced.

IBM

Defensively.

The Women's Recreational Association will sponsor a ski trip
for women to Kissing Bridge tomorrow. Busses will leave Norton
Hall at 8:30 a.m. and will return at 4:30 p.m. The charge for ski
rental is $6.24 and a lift ticket is $5.40.

&amp;

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Nasa Lewis Research Center
Dept, of the Navy—Naval Air
Development Center
Simi Valley School Dist. (Calif.)
Ferris State College (Mich.)
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Dr. Edwin Barron, Jr., state
prison physician, said 213 prisoners were unaccounted
fbr
since the turn of the century, and
anywhere from “100 to 200 bodies
could be buried on the Cummins
grounds.”

February 7
Western Printing &amp; Litho. Co.
Buffalo Forge Co.
Lucidol (Div. of Wallace &amp;
Tiernan)
Syracuse City School Dist.
Board of Education (Conn.)
Scotia-Glenville Central Schools
February 8

(ALCOA)

Ashland Oil &amp; Refining Co.
U.S. Dept, of Interior—Geological Survey
Starpoint Central Schools
Malone Central School Dist.
Nyack Public Schools
Tustin Elem. School Dist. (Cal.)

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Till his coach was apprised of the facts.

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�The Spectrum

Page Eight

Friday, February 2, 1968

News Commenfar

sed
by Tran Van Dinh
Collegiate Press Service

WASHINGTON—Webster’s New World Dictionary (College Edition 1964) defines “terrorism” as “the use of terror and violence to
intimidate, subjugate especially as a political weapon or policy”
and “terror” as a person or thing that causes intense fear. It one
understands “terrorism: under this definition, then the US. has
committed —because of its resources, its wealth, its incredible arsenal of weapons, its power—acts of terrorism which make the Viet
Cong’s killing of headmen insignificant.
Since 1965 (February) some 675,000 tons of bombs (including
anti-personnel bombs) have rained down on North Viet Nam alone—more than the tonnage dropped on Germany during all of World
War II.

The bombings of South Vietnamese villages are even more massive. Just take at random the month of May 1966: 462 sorties against
the North and 10,131 in the South (a sortie is a lone plane making an
attack). The bombings of the South have been intensified since and
this is the reason why there are now two million refugees in South
Vietnam who had to leave their villages which were burned down
or destroyed. Besides, over one million acres of land in the South

were defoliated.
There are Americans who do not look at “terrorism” that way
and they refer to the killings of village headmen and other civilians
by the Viet Cong as the reason why the U.S. sent 500,000 troops to
South Vietnam. In other words, the U.S. has to use mass killing in
order to prevent individual killings. I give these kind of Americans
the benefit of assuming sincerity to them, but I would also like to
make a tew observations to them:

Foreign intervention in ghettos?

•

•

•

ruling oligarchy.”

Cooperate with VC
It has been said that the Vietnamese peasants “are terrorized
into cooperation with the Viet Cong.” One should ask why they did
•

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Beheading VC prisoners
Malcolm W. Browne, a Pulitzer Prize winning journalist, wrote
in the Los Angeles Times of March 5, 1967: “I’ve seen VC prisoners
•

have their hands and even their heads chopped off by their Saigon
captors. Even American troops have gone in for their share of beheading and if anyone doubts it, I can assure him there is abundant
proof in the form of photographs.”
Many TV viewers in this country watched CBS News on the
evening of Oct. 9, 1967, There they could see GIs cutting Viet Cong
ears. Since this disclosure, the TV correspondents in South Vietnam
are closely followed by Army personnel.
The Congressional Record of June 18, 1967, printed a series of
letters written by U.S. officers in Vietnam to Sen. J. William Fulbright. One letter by a Marine Second Lieutenant reads; “I went to
Vietnam a hard charging Marine, sure I had answered the plea of
a victimized people. That belief lasted about two weeks. Instead of
fighting communist aggressors, I found that 90% of the time our
military actions were directed against the people of South Vietnam.
Much has been written about the terror tactics used by the Viet Cong.
The real terrorists in Vietnam are the Americans and their allies.”
There exists in South Vietnam an organization called Biet Rich
(special attackers) known in the “civilized” English language as “Provincial Reconnaissance Units.” Mr, Robert A. Erlandson, Saigon correspondent for the Baltimore Sun, wrote (Dec. 16, 1967) about them:
“These are the provincial units, whose name suggests their main job
but whose former title, counter-terror squads and nickname “Murder,
Inc.” are more appropriate. Trained and financed largely by the CIA,
their mission is to capture or assassinate members of the Viet Cong.”
Sen. Stephen Young (D. Ohio) has also revealed the existence of
the Biet Rich, who often dress themselves like the Viet Cong, come
into a village, terrorize it and accuse the Viet Cong of “terrorism.”
In an interview in the program Meeting of the Minds (NBC,
Oct. 8, 1967) Mr. Grant, deputy AID director, admitted that “the
Viet Cong did not kill the AID personnel for fear of losing popularity
with the villagers.”
Strange enough, while Washington and Saigon accused the
Viet Cong of terrorism and all kinds of crimes, General Thieu’s government named in December 1967 two former Viet Cong, Lt. Colonel
Le Xuan Chuyen and Lt, Colonel Huynh Cu as “special assistant to
the open arms minister” and commandant of the armed propaganda
school” respectively. It is the same as if Goebbels had been captured
in the Second World War and was named Director of the Voice of
•

•

The Viet Cong are Vietnamese and they are in Vietnam. They
are pursuing a political policy, a national program (you may agree
or disagree with it) in the territory of Vietnam. If a country can
intervene in the killing among the people in another country, then
China or the U.S.S.R. may use that pretext to intervene in Detroit,
Walts or Newark, where Americans are killing Americana (unless
one says that a black American is not an American, but then white
men were also killed in the South by white members of the KKK).
The Viet Cong “terrorism” is selective and is aiming at a
political goal. The Viet Cong first warn people whom they have
condemned before they strike. This applies to individuals and not
to communities which are part of the war machine, although the
Viet Cong have persistently asked the Vietnamese not to be near
the Americans. The “Free French” used the same kind of “terrorism” against the French who cooperated with the Germans during
the Second World War. General DeGaulle has been blamed and accused of almost everything but no one in this country calls him a
terrorist during the Second World War.
Terrorism is not the monopoly of communist organizations. It
is used in even larger scale by anti-communist groups. During the
October “revolution” (1965) in Indonesia, half a million suspected
communists were slaughtered by the Indonesian Army. The U.S.
did not protest against the Indonesian military junta and did not
send 500,000 troops to fight the Indonesian terrorists, in this case
Gen, Suharto (present Indonesian chief of state) and his government.
During President Ngo Dinh Diem's regime in South Vietnam terrorist methods were used. According to a document published by the
Saigon Ministry of Information in October 1960, a total of 48,250 had
been jailed between 1954 and 1960. The number of people who were
killed (in the thousands) was not revealed. From 1960 to 1963, this
amount was at least double. After the overthrow of President Diem
in 1963, the then military junta revealed fantastic stories of terrorist
acts which were committed by the Saigon government from 1954
to 1963, Yet the U.S. increased aid to President Diem during these
years. The British anti communist expert on Vietnam, P. J. Honey,
wrote in the China Quarterly (No. 9, January-March 1962): “The repression (by Saigon) was in theory aimed at the communists. In
fact it affected all those—and they were many—who were democrats,
socialists, liberals, adherents to the sects—who were bold enough to
express their disagreement with the line of policy adopted by the
•

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Is Urgently Needed
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not cooperate with the Chinese, with' the French, with the Japanese,
with President Ngo Dinh Diem, with General Thieu, General Ky and
the U.S.? The people all use force and violence against the peasants
and provoke “intense fear,” Mr. George A. Carver, a member of
the CIA, admitted in his article “The faceless Viet Cong” (Foreign
Affairs, April 1966) that “the administrators Diem posted to the countryside were often corrupt and seldom native to the areas to which
they were assigned, a fact which caused them to be considered as
“foreigners” by the intensely clannish and provincial peasantry.
Land policies, often admirable in phraseology, were notably weak
in execution and frequently operated to the benefit of the absentee
landlords rather than those who actually tilled the soil.”
General Nguyen Van Thieu and General Nguyen Cao Ky have
put 10,000 Buddhists in jail, imprisoned hundreds of students, attacked by hand grenades and bombs (with their police, of course)
the Youth School for Social Services of the Buddhist University in
Saigon, killing students.

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America.

Carlyle Theayer, an International Voluntary Service volunteer
in South Vietnam, writes of a conversation with two soldiers: “It
was hard to contrast their manner off the field with the stories
they told. I was shown a gas cannister that they said violated the
Geneva Convention; but they said the Viet Cong also used it. They
spoke of killing captured VC’ because they couldn’t take them along.
And they told me about the apricots they strung through montagnard
neck rings—the ‘apricots’ were the ears of ‘VC’ they had killed.”
My conclusion is this: only those who believe in peace can condemn violence and terrorism, only those who believe in non-violence
can condemn violence. A man who drops a bomb can’t condemn a
man who carries a knife, and if one wishes terrorism to end in Vietnam, one must work for the end of the war there.
•

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�Pag* Nine

The Spectrum

Friday, February 2, 1968

McCarthyites hope to tip "Time" college poll
by Linda Laufer
Soectrum

Staff

Reporter

McCarthy is making plans to
gain support, and its most important goal is the stimulation of
interest for the Time Poll April

24th.
Time Magazine will be polling
students across the country for
their 1968 presidential choice.
Five to seven million students on
2400 college campuses will be
polled. This poll is considered important by the Coalition because
within four years these students
will be voting; “it will bring a
lot of public sentiment to the
campaign; and it will be the focal
point for students to show enthusiasm for McCarthy.”

proposes, that

According to Paul Gandel, actchairman of the University

McCarthy is a coalition of stu
dents and faculty. In the coming

Effective pressuring

Ppll will “make college students

in Norton Hall where information
Will be given out and volunteers
will be able to join.

Mr. Gandel replied: “It’s not a
question of whether he has a
good chance to win, but the
American political system is a

ing

aware that supporting McCarthy
may be one of the more constructive ways that can oppose the war
and provide some of the impetus
for a change in government
policy.”
A convocation may be held
with topical speakers who will
speak on issues to which Sen.
McCarthy supplies alternatives.
Mr. Gandel also expressed the
possibility of bussing people to
the New Hampshire primary,
where they will be coordinating
with the national organization
and electioneering.
The University Coalition for

Mr. Gandel said: “It’s not up
to us to generate the support, it’s
up to the people. The people who
have come together thus far are
all united in at least one aspect,
that of finding an alternative to
the policies of Lyndon Johnson.
These are students who are no
longer content to remain in the
shelter of the university and complain. They want to do something
actively to obtain at least some
of their ends in a way that may

prove effective.”

when asked if he

thought Sen,

system of pressures and this will
be a very effective way of pressuring individuals with power or
individuals who will obtain power
to reassess present policy.”
His answer to whether the
Democratic Party will be hurt
by a split was: “Firstly it is my
belief that it will be Johnson’s
continuation of his present course
of policy that will hurt the party
and only a modification of this
policy, such as Sen. McCarthy

will revitalize the
party. Kven if one does maintain
or political solidarity—political
palatability or a person who will
give them the correct moral decision?”

Meetings of the University
Coalition for McCarthy will be
open to the entire student body,
Mr. Gandel explained that they
“will provide the oppoutrnity to
show support for McCarthy and
to learn what can be done.”

Newspaper informants
safe in Milwaukee
MILWAUKEE, Wis. (CPS)
District Attorney Hugh O'Connell
has decided not to subpoena editors of the UMW Post, the campus newspaper at the University
of Wisconsin, Milwaukee. The
paper ran a 20-page special edition on drug use which included
polls and interviews with drug
users among the University's faculty and students.

Mr. O’Connell originally said
he was considering such action
but has since changed his mind.
He did ask the school’s dean of
student affairs, David Robinson,
to reveal the names of student
drug users known to him, but
Mr. Robinson refused. The DA
was unable to take Mr. Robinson
to court because of a Wisconsin
law which requires college deans
and counselors not to reveal information given them in confidence by students. The law took
effect the day the Post’s drug

supplement appeared.

The supplement included polls
which showed that 20% of the
students and 21% of the faculty
used drugs and 42% of the students favored legalization of marijuana. It also contained interviews with users and historical
and factual articles about drugs.

After the supplement appeared
Milwaukee papers have done several articles on drug use in high
schools.

Can there be this kind of excitement in engineering?
You check your bindings again, adjust your goggles... then push off
in a fast schuss down the first leg, skis hissing against the powdered
snow. This is the excitement of skiing
pitting your experience and
skill against speed and the variables of a new. fast-dropping trail."
—

Try Xerox

and see

Can there be a corresponding excitement in professional terms?
An exhilaration in matching your engineering talent against new
technologies? We think so. And we feel you can experience this type of
professional excitement at Xerox.

working on new concepts in imaging and data handling and
graphic arts and education and many other areas. You’ve seen the
massive impact of past Xerox technical achievements on business anti
industry. You can understand why, in the past three years alone,
we’ve put 8100 million into research and development. And why the
climate for technical people here has to he experienced to be appreciated,
We’re

So if you feel that an engineerin'; career should include a high level of
professional excitement and stimulation, look into what Xerox has to
offer. Your degree in Engineering or Science can qualify you for some
intriguing openings in fundamental and applied research,
engineering, manufacturing and programming.

Placement Director or write to Mr. Roger Vander Ploeg,
Xerox Corporation, P.O. Box 1995, Rochester, New York 14603.
See your

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"Incidentally, we’re near some of the finest skiing in the country
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An Equal Opportunity Employer (M/F)

■
|

|

ADOHKHS

riTY
RTATR

L..——

Ilf (t&gt;0«

�The

Pag* Ten

Action tine
331-5000

.

.

Local and national sororities begin
rm Rush; "Greek Sin
lanned

.

Do you often think it impossible to untangle the State University of Buffalo
bureaucracy? In cooperation with the Dean of Students' Office, The Spectrum is
sponsoring an ACTION LINE. Through ACTION LINE, individual students can get
an onswer to o puzzling question, find out where and why University decisions

by Elliott Stephan Rose

will answer all questions of general interest which appear to
be pertinent to the student body. The Spectrum will include them in its special
ACTION LINE weekly column. Each inquiry will be thoroughly investigated and
answered individually. The name of the individual originating the inquiry will
not be published.
ACTION LINE

0. Is there, and if not

why not, a

Spectrum

Student Directory this year?

A. Sorry, there will be no Student Directory this year. In the
past, the Student Directory has been distributed! through the Office

of the Coordinator of Student Activities at no charge to the students.
Although the detailed student lists were compiled early in October
by that office, as scheduled, a commercial firm developed the Directory as part of their business enterprise and subcontracted the printing. Our contract called for 15,000 copies to be delivered no later
than Dec. 18. After repeated delays and harangues, the offices of
the Coordinator of Student Affairs, The Student Senate, and the
Bursar decided to cancel the contract. It was felt the Directory
would be of little value if it could not be made available to the
students by the originally scheduled date.
use?

Q. What happens to worn and old books the library can no longer

A. The University Library has not as yet reached the point of
having many “old” books it does not need or want. Volumes damaged or worn beyond repair are destroyed. Unneeded duplicates are
exchanged with other universities, or are donated to less fortunate
institutions, both in this country and abroad, which are struggling to
build up their libraries. In some cases, where the volume is of value,
credit is established with a dealer and other titles badly needed for
our library are thereby acquired.

Q. Why were the center doors of the two entrances to Norton
Hall closed during the intercession period?
A. This was a temporary measure. The two center doors were
closed during the severe cold weather, to prevent an onslaught of
frigid air into the halls. The heating units cannot combat oppressively cold and constant drafts brushed in when all four doors are
opened at the same time.

Q. Can liquor now be served on campus? If not, when will liquor
be available?

A. For the present we must continue under the existing regulation which prohibits the possession or use of any alcoholic beverages
by students on campus, inasmuch as we have not secured a liquor
license. A University committee composed of students, faculty, and
staff are now in the process of establishing guidelines for the sale,
service, and consumption of alcoholic beverages. After the committee
finalizes the guidelines, which we hope will be soon, application for a
liquor license will be made to the appropriate state authority.
to your questions and for direct service, call ACTION LINfe,
If you prefer,
Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, from 4-5 p.m.
question in writing and address if to ACTION LINE, c/o The Spectrum,
Hall, or the Office of the Dean of Students, 201 Harriman Library.

For specific

831-5000,

omwerj

every

phrase your
355 Norton

Friday, February 2, 1968

Spectrum

Staff

Spring Rush for the sororities
at the State University of Buffalo
began this week. This year marks
the second attempt at a split
rush by the local and national
factions. The three national sororities were especially successful,
having close to their maximum
number of pledges. For this semester, a “Greek Sing” has been
planned to take place in April in
which any Greek organization
may participate. The national sororities’ rush began with a convocation and registration Thursday.
The local sororities announce
registration that takes place at

the Pan Hel table in Norton Hall
from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. today. All
freshmen and sophomores with
an average of 1.0 or better are
eligible for rush. The registration fee is $1.00 and covers many
activities. Convocation is at 7
p.m. Sunday in the Fillmore
Room. Wednesday there are
coke parties in Norton Hall from
3 to 5 p.m. The following week
are informal parties with formal
desserts in the near future. Bidding takes place Feb. 23. The
theme for Spring Rush is “Be
In, Be On!”
The IFC will hold its last rush
mixer Wednesday from 8 to 11
p.m. in the Fillmore Room. The
mixer will serve as a last reminder to all students who must still
register for rush. Thursday will
be the date of late registration.
Anyone wishing to pledge a fraternity this semester must register. A table will be in Norton
Hall from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

News items
Alpha Phi Omega will hold a
dated party tonight at the Sheridan Lanes
Pi Lambda Tau
...

invites

fellow

and

engineers

brothers of Theta Chi Fraternity
are; Jeff Brent, Rich Howell, Bob
Knupp, George Quintero, George
St. George, Bob Wallace, William
Watson. There will be a stag at
the house tonight at 9. Tomorrow
night there will be a dated party
at 9 also. Elliott Rose has been
appointed Social Chairman for
the ensuing year.

friends to attend a dated party
Boscela’s tomorrow night,
Wednesday from 11 a.ra. to 2
p.m., the brothers are sponsoring
a coffee and donut hour in the
engineering student lounge. For
further information call Gary at
836-3259 or Mitch at 883-3458
Sigma Alpha Mu is holding a
dated party by invitation only
Feb. 9 . . . The new officers of

at

Reporter

...

Tau Delta Rho

Sororities
The sisters of Alpha Gamma
Delta sponsored a Christmas par
ty for the West Seneca School for
retarded children Dee. 17. This
was part of their altruistic project for this semester . . . Sigma
Kappa Phi announces that a
pledge shoeshine will be held today in Norton Hall. Sunday, a
convocation will be held in the
Fillmore Room and a coke party
will be held Wednesday in Room
333 Norton Hall from 3 to 5 p.m.

are: President,

Warren Valencia; Vice President,
Lenny Klaif; Secretary, Scot
Friedman; Treas., Jerry Feldman; IFC Rep., Tyler Gass; Jr.
IF CRep., A1 Jeff; Member-atlarge, Billy Hershkowitz. There
will be a beer stag tonight at
the Hotel Worth for the brothers
and rushees. Tomorrow night
there will be a toboggan party at
Chestnut Ridge. For rides call
Bobby 875-7822 or Barry 8362267
. The newly-initiated
...

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1968

•

Pag* El*v*n

Spectrum

'Brecht on Brecht"

Disappointment for fans; creator of
reading
Two
Studio
macabre cartoons is not a madman
I

¥

(DPI)

—

r

ORK

There’s a

ist Gahan Wilson’s work is smuggled out of a mental institution.
His cartoons portray a macabre

world of bumbling and mad gen-

iuses, uncanny idiots and incom-

petent monsters who stroll in and
out of everyday life and take on
an amazing resemblance to the
man in the street.

They also include Santa Claus
as a skeleton vyho has been plugging a chimney for months, a
hulking ogre who frightens children into obedience and a helpless
old man who discovers his elves
have switched to war toy production.
So it may come as a disappointment to his fans—and critics—to
find that Gahan Wilson is not
only sane, but a 37-year-old introvert who lives the quiet life of
a country gentleman in Kent,
Conn.

Doesn't cackle

He doesn’t cackle when he
laughs and his eyes don’t even
have a mad gleam. Instead there’s

a t a 11, hearty individual

with

ed voice and a way of peering
quizzically at fellow humans.
“What offends me more than
anything else is that people think
I’m sympathetic to sadism,” the
cartoonist said in an interview.
“My monsters are essentially
pathetic, which I think most monsters are—you know, like King
Kong, or Frankenstein’s monster
who was just a great, clumsy ox

who tried to make friends. Monsters are an extension of a human’s fantaasy about himself
how he sees himself. The monster
is a sort of misfit.
“So, if people like to dress like
monsters, then monsters probably
want to dress like people. There’s
no line between horror and
humor. It’s part of the same
thing. When things get too horrible, people laugh.”
—

Collection published
Wilson, who was born and raised in Evanston, HI,, attended the
Chicago Art Institute where he
claims to be the only student

er

who ever admitted he wanted to

time when Playboy Magazine beby Richard ParlmuHer
gan full page spreads of his
Spectrum Staff Reporter
bizarre humor. And now, to the
delight of his fans, the first hardFor Buffalo theater-goers, the name Bertolt Brecht
backed collection of classic Wilshould
have a familiar ring. Earlier in the season the
son has been published.
produced an entertaining version of “The
Studio
Arena
“I’m constantly being compared
and the English Department here at
Opera”
he
Addams,”
with Charles
ex- Threepenny
plained. “I love his work, and State University of Buffalo accomplished an unforgettably
there’s a similarity . . but it’s powerful effect in “The Private Life of the Master Race.”
a different kind of thing. What
kind of cartoonist am I, then?”
for its shortcomings when it
These works did much to bring
He shrugged
and grinned. Brecht and his genius back to concludes with this line: “That
a Charles life; the Studio Two’s exhibition
is all but it is not enough; like
“Well, you know
a man who takes a brick along
Addams sort of a cartoonist.”
of his talents, “Brecht on Brecht”
his
“I don’t really think there’s a helps to put him back in the to show the world what
ground. George Tabori is the house was like.” That is all very
message in my stuff, but somebody is always coming out with culprit who, for an off-Broadway true, but somehow it could have
brought along a sturdier, more
production, pasted together a lita far-out interpretation.”
useful brick.
This is about as far as Wilson tle something from Brecht’s
and (maywill go in explaining such car- poems, lyrics, stories,
My only criticism of the Stutoons as a worried man (fragging be if we’re lucky) from his thedio Two is its choosing “Brecht
a corpse down the street to a ater.
on Brecht” at all. Once the damtrash can marked “Keep Our City
In an attempt to show us Berage was done, however, Director
Clean,” or a little boy out in a tolt Brecht, the man, “Brecht
Maurice Breslow and seven young
snow storm pointing to a dead on Brecht” becomes mainly a
actors produced an admirable and
bird and crying happily: “Look poetry and story reading. The expressive interpretation. They
daddy—the first robin!”
view we finally have of the Gerconveyed most of the bitterness
man writer is one of an antiand humor of Brecht through
Nazi humanitarian with a sense
their intonations and sincerity.
of humor; but this is not the
The vignettes are presented enwhole story. Brecht showed many
thusiastically. The songs, which
sides and characteristics in his are even more effective when
writings and these selections
sung off key, are a welcome dihave subordinated his cold, skepversion.
tical, alienated, Marxist philosoIn the second half we are alphy. The tape recording of an
lowed to see some theater finalinterrogation of Brecht by the
School of Pharmacy," Dr. Danly. Frank -T. Wells delivers a
House Committee on Un-Ameriiel H. Murray, Conf. Theater.
soliloquoy from “Galileo” and
can Activities does much to re3 p.m.
portrays a man in conflict over
veal the satirical humor of the
Thursday, February 8:
his obligations.
MOVIE; “The Servant,” Norton writer.
Conference Theater
“The Jewish Wife” is the longExcuse not good enough
READING: John Barth. “The Medest and also the most impresium Is The Metaphor: Two
sive piece in the production.
Of course the inordinate deShort Narratives,” Jewish CenBrecht’s hatred of war and Nazispair found in his other works
ter, Delaware Ave., 8:30 p.m. may indicate his proclivity toward ism is reflected throughout the
Friday, February 9:
Communism but this could have evening’s readings, but it is
LECTURE: lean Shepard, Kleinbeen related more effectively only when they are shown in his
bans
most effective medium, theater,
through his drama. The presenCONCERT: Smokey Robinson and
that his bitterness can be tasted.
tation attempts to excuse itself
the Miracles, Niagara University, 8 p.m,
...

Entertainment
Calendar
Friday, February 2;
“If I Had A Million,”
W.C. Fields, “The Coconuts,”

MOVIE:

Marx Bros., Norton

ater

Conf. The-

PLAY: “A Story Teller from Flea
Street,” Workshop Repetory
Theater, 1685 Elmwood Ave.,
8:30 p.m.
BALLET: American Ballet Theater, Kleinhans, also Sat., Feb. 3
PLAY; “Brecht on Brecht,” Studio Two, Lafayette Hoyt, also
Feb. 3, 4
READING: Preview reading of
“Ubu Roi,” Haas Lounge, 8
&amp;

p.m.

PLAY: “The Emperor,”

Studio

Arena

MOVIE: “The War Game” and
“Chicamauga,” Circle Art, 2 &amp;
4 p.m., through Feb. 5
EXHIBIT: James Joyce Exhibit,
Lockwood Library
MOVIES: “On The Difference Between Words and Things” and

“Just What Is General Seman
tics?”, Dief. 303, 4 p.m,
CONCERT: Marcel Morceau, Nazareth College Arts Center,
Rochester, 8:15 p.m.
Saturday, February 3:
RECITAL: David Fuller, harpsicord, Auditorium, Main Li-

brary, 3 p.m.
MOVIES: “Horse Feathers,” Marx
Bros.; “The Fatal Glass of
Beer,” W.C. Fields, Capen 140
CONCERT: A1 Hirt, Eastman The-

ater, Rochester, 8:15
4:

OPERA: “Othello,” presented by
U.B. Opera Club, Conf. Theater,

1:30 p.m.
MOVIES: Witold Malcuzynski, pianist, Kleinhans, 2:30 p.m, also
Feb. 6, 8:3 0p.m.

Monday, February 5:

Heinz Rehfuss, bass
baritone, Baird, 8:30 p.m.
Tuesday, February 6:
LECTURE: “Development in the
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RECITAL:

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Saturday, February 10:
CONCERT/DANCE: Flip Wilson.
The Clancy Bros, and Tommy
Makem, The New Order, C.Q.
Price and Orchestra, The Shady
Grove Boys’ Kleinbans

"Respect"

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�Page

Twelve

The Spectrum

Friday, February 2, 1968

ALPHA EPSILON PI
Saturday, February 3
Dated Party at the Fraternity Hall at Elmwood

Saturday, February 10
Annual Valentine Party by invitation
Thursday, February 15

The

Stag Dinner at Parkway Inn

Interfraternity Council

ALPHA PHI DELTA
Friday, February 2
Stag at the Club Bar, 289 Austin St., near

sponsors the

Grant

Saturday, February 3

Social with nurses
Saturday, February 10

at

FRATERNITY

the SPA, 2789 Delaware

Dated Party

RUSH

For Information:
Call Bob at 835-4978 or Fran at 832-8666

ALPHA SIGMA PHI
Saturday, February 3

Fraternity Rush is an elaborate and exciting time.

Dated Party

The Fraternities, under general IFC co-ordination, pre-

Friday, February 9
Stag

sent

Saturday, February 10
Dated Pajama Party
Sunday, February 11
Breakfast in the Tiffin Room at 10 A.M,
Wednesday, February 14
Smoker at 4:00

the interested students with

Rush functions

Each

—

stags, liquor parties, Rush dinners,

event is designed

to

tial pledge will be given ample

opportunity to

make

his fraternity association

GAMMA PHI
Saturday, February 3
Dated Beer Party at the Sheridan Lanes with
live band
Saturday, February 10
Dated Liquor Party at Artie's Potomac Palace
by invitation
Friday, February 16
Rush Dinner at the Claredon
For Information;
Call Dave at 831-3367 or Joe at 835-3732

All male students are invited to participate and
become acquainted with the best in fraternity life.

PHI EPSILON PI
Saturday, February 3
Dated Party

TAU DELTA RHO
Friday, February 2
Stag

bus will

Saturday, February 10
Dated, Semi-Formal Champagne Party at the
Three Coins Restaurant
Monday, February 12
Formal Rush Dinner
For Information: Call 836-8048

Friday, February 16
Invitation Rush

introduce potential

pledges to the fraternity and its brothers. Each poten-

For Information: Call 837-7889

Saturday, February 3
Toboggan Party at Chestnut Ridge
be available
Friday, February 9
Dated Champagne Party

a wide variety of

PHI KAPPA PSI

Dinner

For Information:
Call Billy at 837-7284 or Warren at 836-2267

Friday, February 2
Rush Stag at VFW Post,
Saturday, February 10

Friday, February 16
Rush Stag, VFW Post, 1021 Main Street

Friday, February 9
Invitation Rush Party

Wednesday, February 14

For Information:
Call John at 882-4398 or Jim at 632-5189

Rush Dinner

Saturday, February 3
Dated Rush Party at the Hotel Worth
Tuesday, February 6
Beer Stag at TKE apartment above the
Beef &amp; Ale House at 3199 Main
Saturday, February 10
Dated Toboggan Party at Chestnut Ridge,
party at rented cabin
Tuesday, February 13
Dinner at Lakeview Hotel, by invitation
For Information: contact Dick Carmen

1021 Main St

Dated Party at Masonic Temple at Sweet Home
Road

SIGMA ALPHA MU

TAU KAPPA EPSILON

THETA CHI
Friday, February 2

Beer Stag at Theta Chi House, 2 Niagara

Falls Blvd.
Saturday, February 3
Dated Party at Theta Chi House
Friday, February 9

Invitation Stag at Theta Chi House

SIGMA PHI EPSILON
Friday, February 3

Annual Mad Hatter Liquor

Party at Hotel

PI LAMBDA TAU
Worth

200 Main Street
Friday, February 9

Winter Weekend Kickoff Stag at Sportsman's
Inn, 2828 Bailey Avenue

Saturday, February 10
Cocktail Parties and After-Concert Party
Hotel Worth
Monday, February 12
Rush Dinner at the Lakeview Hotel
For Information: Call 877-2502

at

Saturday, February 3
Dated Party at Boscela's, 1500 Cleveland Drive
Wednesday, February 7
Coffee Hour 11 -2:00 in Parker Engineering
Lounge

Saturday, February 10
Dated Party at Roman-American Hall, 315 Ni
agara Street
Thursday, February 15
Brewery Tour to Iroquois Brewery
For Information:
Call Gary at 836-3259 or Mitch at 883-3458

Saturday, February 10
Invitation Date Party at Theta Chi House

PHI LAMBDA DELTA
Saturday, February 3
Beer

&amp;

Band Party

Saturday, February 10
Cocktail Party

Tuesday, February 14
Final Bid Dinner at Lakeview Hotel
For Information:
Call Mike at 836-2314 or Russ at

833-4092

�Friday, February

2, 1968

The Spectrum

Page Thirteen

3 phases in varsity growth

the spectrum of

sports

by Or. Len Serfustini
Head Coach, SUNYAB Basketball

Due to the school calendar year, as adopted by our University,
a “critical period” arises each year in the development of a varsity
basketball team. We recognize that the calendar year is not established in the light of what constitutes proper development of a
basketball team . . . but a coach can hope!

Bulls' varsity, frosh triumphant in
basketball sweep over Brockport
by W. Scott Behrens
Assl. Sports

Editor

The Bulls travelled Tuesday
night to play a basketball doubleheader and came back a double
winner as the varsity quintet

overpowered the host club 87-62
and the Buffalo freshmen nosed
out the Brockport yearlings 6564.

The Bulls’ varsity and freshman teams now have identical
records at seven wins and three
losses. The Broekport varsity five
is now 2-11 while its freshman
club is 9-3.
The Bulls were slow in getting
off their feet in the first twelve
minutes of the game. The host
club led up to that moment.
The Blue and White pulled
ahead on Joe Rutkowski’s two
free throws, making the score 119. Broekport tied the game once
more but that was as close as
they could come, as the Bulls
really opened up an offense
which gave the Bulls a halftime
lead of 33-25.
Buffalo’s defense stiffened in
the second half and held the opponents to only 29 points the entire second stanza. The Bulls’ offensive showing was practically
double that of Broekport as the
blue-shirted visitors scored 54
points in the same period of play.
And head coach Serfustini cleared
the bench in the process.
Vaughan helps

Buffalo’s

Vaughan

6 9 center John
off the bench and
-

came

put on a superb performance in
all phases of the game. He was
the game’s leading scorer with 15
points, dropped in six out of eight
shots from the field, made three
of four from the free throw line,
and pulled down 13 rebounds off
the backboards.
Guard Joe Peeler had another
fine game, hitting for the double
figure mark at 11, scoring on five
of nine shots from the field.
Peeler led the team in assists
with five. Rutkowski made good
five of seven tries from the free
throw line and sophomore Jack
Scherrer dropped in six of eight

charity tosses.
Buffalo’s 5 ft, 10 1 in. Bobby
Williams came in late in the
game and scored a bucket on a
tap-in when he leaped high above
the basket and just laid the
ball through the hoop just as
easy as if he was a foot taller.

Buffalo hit on 31 shots out of
69 from the field, for a 44,9 per
cent. The home team had a 41
per cent shooting average on 25
of 61, Buffalo dropped in 25 of
37 fre throws and the host club
hit on 12 of 25 charity tosses.
Bull Frosh lead
The Buffalo freshman team led
by as much as 13 points going
into the last ten minutes of play
and looked as if they had the
game wrapped up for them, but
the stubborn Broekport club
would not give up and came
pecking away at Buffalo’s lead.
The lead traded places three

From Oct. 15 to Dec. 1, there are six weeks of concentrated
effort in preparation for the first game (during this period mid-term
exams are also very close to the thoughts of our athletes—and as it
should be.)

times before the final buzzer,
with the visitors finally copping
the game with the one point
margin.
Steve Waxman was the game’s
leading scorer with 23 points,
slightly under his 23.7 point-per-

game average. Waxman also led
in the rebound department with
13.

Buffalo’s freshmen shot 44.1
per cent from the field, making
good 26 field goals out of 59
attempted while the opposition
shot 48 per cent on 24 baskets
out of 50 tried, Buffalo made 13
out of their 19 free throws while
Brockport made 16 of 29.

Both the freshman and varsity

teams will travel to Rochester to

face the University of Rochester
tonight. Then the varsity Bulls
will meet Hofstra University in

Memorial Auditorium, game time
starting at 7.15 p.m.

The

varsity box score

Brockport State
fg ft pts
5
3 13
204
3
0
6
4
3 11
1 1 3
6
1
13
2
2
6
0
0
0
I
0
2

State U. of Buffalo

fg
Eberle
Peeler
Jekielek
Nowak

Wells

Bernard

2
5

1
3
3
3

?utkowski 1
Culbert
1
Scherrer

Vaughan
Betts
Barbera
Totals

2
6
2

follow

ft pts
3 7 Arnold
111 Dealing
1 3 AAarshner
0 6 Scott
0 6 Silverman
1 7 Argets'ger
5 7 Baron
3
5 Foster
6 10 McVean
3
15 Nash
0
4

1

2

31

25

87

Totals

12 62

Hobart upsets Bulls in squeaker;
hopes for unbeaten season ended
A toxic combination of a long
layoff and overconfidence proved
to be the Swashbucklers’ undoing
as their previously unblemished
slate was tarnished by lightly regarded Hobart in a humiliating
14-13 squeaker Saturday at Clark
Gym.

Leading 7-2 after the first
round, the fencing Bulls seemed
well on the way to their seventh
consecutive triumph. They still
led 10-6, but at this juncture their
effort began to crumble. Two epee
losses made the score 10-8. Saberman Eddie Share’s handy 5-1
score gave the Bulls a three bout
edge, but Hobart roared back to
take the next two saber bouts
and trail by one. Pierre Chanteau
seemed to put the Swashbucklers
out of trouble, scoring a stunning
5-4 come from behind tally. The
Bulls, however, dropped the next
four bouts, and gave Hobart its
over the State
of Buffalo in twenty

second triumph
University

encounters.
The only bright spots in an
otherwise dismal day were the
stellar efforts turned-in by foilman Chanteau who copped all
three of his bouts and the dual

triumphs of epee man Steve Morris, also undefeated.

Hobart credited
In the wake of the shocking
upset, a disappointed head coach

Sid

Schwartz

remarked:

“Of

course it hurts to be upset like
this, but you’ve got to give Hobart a lot of credit. They never

gave up and showed me a lot of

spunk, and

deserved
their hard earned win. We’ve
just got to shake this loss off
and start a new wining streak,
which I know we will. Besides,
we get another shot at Hobart
in about a month, and should
really square things then.”
Friday night the Bulls journeyed to Hamilton, Ont. where
they defeated McMaster 16-11 in
their first meet after a month and
a half layoff. The epee team
showed the way, winning seven
out of nine bouts, with Tony
Walluk, Bruce Renner, and Jim
Ellenbogen each copping two
bouts. Steve Morris was also victorious, but his winning streak
certainly

will

4

COO

attempt

to

bounce

back

against the Rochester Institute of
Technology and Toronto in a triangular met at Rochester tomorrow, and attempt to remain unbeaten on the road.

Six games later and participation in a pre-Christmas tournament
and the “critical period” begins. From Oct. 15 to Dec. 23, nine games
are played, each game contributing to the development of confidence,
poise and team unity. In this first phase of the basketball season
the Bulls gave a good account of themselves, winning six and losing
two, against four-year colleges and universities and also bringing
home the consolation trophy from the Naval Amphibious Force
Holiday Basketball tournament in which eight teams participated

The first phase of the “critical period" is the start of Christmas
Vacation and please believe me I am not advocating the Supreme
Court ruling Christmas unconstitutional!
The Second Phase is the 10 day final examination period. This
period, I am sorry to say, places a great deal of strain on our
basketball players (as with all other students). The players have full
knowledge of the high standards imposed by our University and
recognize their college careers are at stake.
During the exam period, to add further frustration—Clark
Gymnasium becomes the beloved examination hall of all students
and the team no longer has a home to practice in. I firmly believe
(I recommend this for all students) that participation in a vigorous
physical sport during any period of extreme tension, will not only
benefit the body but provide an emotional outlet (but this in itself
is a dissertation).
The third phase is the semester break. It is during this period
we regain Clark Gymnasium and practice resumes—nine days to
prepare for the final 14 games on the schedule. These practice sessions become hectic at times as this is a period of apprehension
for all involved—the results of final exams are still unknown.
The “critical period” reduces itself down to virtually 2 xk weeks
of relative inactivity in Basketball and 1M&gt; weeks of practice to prepare for 14 games to be played in 5 weeks. We were fortunate
this year to break this up somewhat by playing MacMurray College
on January 2,
I have the greatest respect for any man who can survive the
rigors of intercollegiate basketball for four years in a university
of our scholastic stature.
The man who has successfully completed the degree program,
participated in basketball, while still fulfilling his role of student
and community leader, is ready to accept a responsible position in
our society. I would recommend them for their desired career interest without reservation!
The basketball team, at this writing, is starting over again after
the lengthy layoff period—the period I have referred to as the “critical period.” We will be tested to our maximum as many of the
teams we will be facing are already being considered for post-season
tournaments.
These teams are: Rochester, Hofstra, Buffalo State, Ithaca and
Philadelphia Textile.
We have already encountered four teams whose overall records
warrant tournament consideration—we bested Gannon and the SUNY
at Albany while losing to St. Michael’s and San Francisco State.
Add to this list Niagara, Colgate and Northern Illinois and you
can see we have a challenging month before us.
Tonight we take on Rochester, a strong contender for an NCAA
berth and Saturday night may I make a date with all of you in
Memorial Auditorium in Buffalo when we play host to Hofstra from
Hempstead, New York, also a tournament aspirant.

was snapped at ten.
The saber team was victorious
6-3 as senior captain Jon Rand
and soph Ed Share each copped
both of their bouts. A1 Demsky
and Herb Sanford each added a
tally.

The foil trio, victimiezd by incompetent officiating, bowed to
their hosts 6-3, as George Wirth
won two bouts.

Frosh triumph
The Baby Bulls remained unbeaten as they whipped the Hobart frosh 1510, notching their
fourth consecutive triumph. Bill
Kazer, Mike Bardossi, Fred Vezina, and Steve Bell went unbeaten in an effort described by
frosh mentor Dick “Granny” Willed as “satisfying, but still not up
to our true potential.”

The Swashbucklers, now

6-1,

—UPI Taltphoto

Walking
on air?

No, but Robert Seagren, University of Southern
California, seems to be as he knocks down the

bar at the 17 SVa mark, which would have
been a new indoor pole vault record. Seagren
did hit the 16' 734" mark at Boston's BAA indoor games this week.

�Friday, February 2,

The Spectrum

Page Fourteen

Sportin' Life

Grapplers win upset over Ithaca;
Bell-Lang combo insures victory
On Saturday night the State
University of Buffalo Bulls wrestling team traveled to Ithaca to
face the grapplers of Ithaca College in what was their Sternest
test to date. Ithaca opened quickly, as expected, to a 12-8 lead with
the tide beihg stemmed by a
brilliant pin in the 130 lb. class

transfer student Mike Watson.

by

Now, with three matches remaining, the hopes for an upset
victory by Buffalo seemed almost
nil.

However,

Gordon Alexander

recorded a thrilling 6-5 victory
in the 167 lb. class, with the
margin of victory being a difference in riding time. The stage
was then set for the last two
matches which would decide the

match. Harry Bell (177 lb. class)
and Paul Lang (heavyweight) responded to the pressure on them
with back-to-back pins in 6:51 and
7:36 respectively. Thus, the Bulls
upset highly regarded Ithaca by
the final score of 21-12,

Last Wednesday night the varsity grapplers met the Orangemen

by Bob Woodruff
Sports

from Buffalo State at Clark Gym.
conclusion,
the final decision was never in
doubt, only the margin of victory.
Big efforts were registered by
Gary Fowler, who pinned his man
in 1:40 at 123 lbs.; Paul Lang, who
pinned his man in 1:37 in the
heavyweight class; and Gullia,
Vandenberg, Wettlaufer, Meissner, who scored easy decisions.
Two matches were won on forfeits, one for no apparent reason
to Harry Bell at 177 lbs. The final
score; Buffalo 36, State 2.
From the outset until

Buffalo’s A1

Brown, the sensa-

tional sophomore sprinter, came
in third in the 60-yard dash while
senior Arnie Minkoff came in
just behind him in the fourth
place position.
Senior MVP Mike Alspaugh
came in fifth in the 600-yard run.

Back court

Cliff Speigleman placed third in
the high jump and Curtis Harris
placed fourth in the long jump.
Larry Naukam also took third
place in the 60-yard hurdles.
The freshman club also made a
fine showing as Herb Tillman
came in second in the 60-yard
dash and Harvey Lustig placed
fourth in the same event. Fuchs

took third place in the one-mile
event. Don Argus took two third
places, one in the 60-yard hurdles

and the other in the High Jump.
Long Jumper Bill Zoeller took
another third place for the Baby
Bulls.

The Bulls’ next meet of the
season will be tomorrow afternoon in Rochester in a five team
match pitting the State University of Buffalo against Hamilton
College, University of Rochester,
Brockport State Teachers College
and Rochester Institute of Technology.

ace

Peeler chosen player of the week
Buffalo Junior guard Joe Peeler has been chosen for this week’s
player of the week.
Despite the Bulls’ two losses
last week, Joe came up with some
real fine plays and hit the double
figure mark at 12 points in the
game Saturday against St, Mi
chael’s in Vermont.
Overall statistics don’t show
the value of what this man had
done for the Bulls.
Since transferring from Erie
County Technical Institute, Peel
er has had to learn to play a
brand new position at guard and
has become very adept in the

short amount of time that he
has had to work with it.
Joe has worked himself into

the team leadership and the other
four men on the court look to
Peeler as the one to call the
plays.
Peeler

is reminiscent

of an

other well known basketball star
who ran the floors of Clark Gym
some 16 years ago

—

Jim Horne.

holder for

four years in total
points scored.
Peeler, a guard, won’t be able
to come close to that mark, as
Joe will only have two years here.
But with the Horne instinct in
Peeler, how can the Bulls lose
now?

In many ways Joe is the same
type of ball player that Jim was
back in those days.
Both players led their respective teams, both could shoot well
from the outside, as well as score
on good drives underneath the
basket.
Horne, a forward, turned out to
be the all-time University record

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why Combustion Engineering looks for people who want

Joe Peeler
calls the shots for the Bulls

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or write to Administrator of Training, Combustion Engineering, Inc., Windsor, Conn. 06095.

CAMPUS INTERVIEWS
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14

The

son success.
It is in the heavier weights that the Bulls have shown the most
improvement. Gordie Alexander at 167, Harry Bell at 177 and Paul
Lang, competing in the heavyweight division, are all undefeated.
It is Bell who has captured the imagination of Buffalo supporters. Doc
Urich’s tailback in the fall has recorded three pins, and was de
prived of a chance at four when his opponent decided not to risk
life and limb against the masterful Bell, and instead forfeited.
Another footballer, Paul Lang, who starred as a grappler in his
Ithaca High School days, has proved a formidable heavyweight in his
sophomore year. Dan Walgate, yet another of Doc’s boys, will make
his heavyweight debut against a behemoth from Oswego tomorrow.
Wrestling is one sport in which size is no factor, as the lightest
of team members must prove as competent as their heavier teammates if a club is going to be victorious.
The Bulls are gifted with a great 123 pounder in Mike Watson
The undefeated transfer from Corning Community finished fourth
among an array of outstanding athletes in this year’s Wilkes tourna
ment.
If the Buffalo wrestling squad had a captain it would be their
elder statesman, Gary Fowler. The 130 pounder from Cleveland Hill
has moved up a class since last season, but is still a top point-getter
for Coach Gergley.
A junior from Rochester, Brian Vandenburg, has been a pleasant
surprise in the Buffalo wrestling picture. Brian has won three out
of four matches at 137, a weight the Bulls figured to be thin at when
the season commenced.
Amherst High School’s Henry Gullia has had to bear the bur
den of moving up from his accustomed 137 class to wrestle 145, and
his efforts have been saluted by Gergley. Last year’s “most improved
wrestler, Dale Wettlaufer, has been outstanding wrestling at 152.
losing only once this season.
Letterman John Misener and Jerry Meisner have shared the
160 pound berth during the season’s opening matches, and the Bulls
have not suffered, winning three of these four bouts.
During the next twp weeks, the Bulls have four tough matches
on the road, Colgate, Oswego, Cortland and R.I.T., before they re
turn home against Guelph on February 17 and Brockport on the
twenty-first. They close out the regular season against Rochester on
Saturday, the twenty-fourth in Clark Gym.
With four victories already tucked away, and a squad which
obviously doesn’t take too well to losing, Coach Gergley seems well
on his way to developing that winning wrestling tradition at Buffalo

presents
-

Folk

-

Soul

-

Rock

PROGRESS FOR INDUSTRY WORLDWIDE

-

Raga

Psychedelic Sound

The DRUIDS
WED., FRI., SAT., SUN

COMBUSTION
ENGINEERING

wrestling

Hideaway

The Blues

Editor

coach Gerry Gergley wouldn’t think nf hniirj
ing a dynasty at this school—for at least two or three years. But
don’t look now, because going into their fifth match of the season
this afternoon against Colgate, the Bulls are undefeated.
As yet, Gergley’s grapplers cannot boast wins over Lehigh or
Oklahoma, but the future of wrestling at this institution has never
been brighter.
“What we’re trying to build at the State University of Buffalo
is a winning tradition,” explained Coach Gergley. “If we can gel
some of the state’s better high school boys and work with them
we will be able to attract the top flight talent of New York.”
The Bulls wrestlers compete against teams such as Cortland.
Oswego and Colgate, colleges which in the past have placed more
emphasis on the sport than Buffalo
“Of course we wotfld like to
become tops in the state,” admit
ted Coach Gergley. “But we’re
not going to be able to do it
with scholarships, only with ath
letes who really love the sport.
These kids really have to want
to wrestle. The only incentive
we can offer then is winning and
team excellence.”
In these days when college
amateurism seems to border on
professionalism, the attitude that
Gergley and his athletes bring to
the sport is quite refreshing.
As for Buffalo’s level of com
petition, Gergley notes that the
Bulls are trying to improve the
quality of their schedule every
year. “We’ve avoided any move
to join the New York State conference. We want the freedom to
schedule anyone we can, and in a
conference we may be too conGerry Gergley
fined.”
The coach, formerly an outstanding wrestler at Buffalo, points
to the Bulls’ team effort, hard work and hustle for their early sea
Buffalo

UB varsity and frosh track teams
win six places in meet at Cornell
The State University of Buffalo
varsity and freshman indoor track
teams came home Saturday from
Cornell University with six very
impressive places.

1968

1006 E. DELAVAN

USED
TEXTS
BUY OR SELL HERE

BUFFALO
TEXTBOOK
"acrou from U.B."

MAIN
3610
Avo.
noar
Bailay

833-7131
SLIDE RULES
COLLEGE SUPPLIES

PAPERBACKS

�Pag* Fift**n

Th» Spectrum

Friday, February 2, 1968

missions treatment to the dis-

leers continue winning streak in
wins over Brockport, Rochester

the college has the right to ban
speakers, and only
20.8% favor de-emphasizing colleg sports.

falo's 9-5 win over Brockport
State in the HIT Arena Saturday,
the ice was pretty soft. Sunday
night it got hard, and so did the

Freshmen voice opinions

national college

An
WASHINGTON (CPS)
overwhelming majority of enter—

ing college freshmen believe faculty members are more compet-

ent to set the curricula, but a
faculty
large group also believe
pay should be based on student
evaluations of their performances.
A study of 185.848 freshmen
who entered 252 colleges and unithis fall shows that

versities

85.3% believe faculty members
should determine the curricula,
while 62.2% believe faculty salaries should be based on student

evaluations.

The study, conducted by the
American Council on Education
(ACE), also shows that 52.2% belax in
lieve colleges are not too
dealing with student demonstrators and that college administrations should be allowed to censor
student publications.
Lower voting age
Other results showed that
64.9% want the voting age lowered to 18, some 56.7% don’t want
colleges to give preferential ad-

in

survey

extremist

Other results of the question
naire are:
Although 56% said the main
benefit of a college education is
increased earning power, 82.9%
rated “developing a meaningful
philosophy of life” as an important objective, 67.8% “helping
others who are in difficulty,” and
50.6% “keeping up to date with
political affairs.” Less than a
majority, 46.4%, said “being successful in a business of my own”
is essential or very important.
Most of the freshmen were
concerned about financing their
education, with 57% expressing
some concern, 8.6% major concern, and 34.4% no concern. Parental and family funds were the
source of money for 54.8%, personal savings and earnings for
27.3, scholarships and grants for
17.5 and loans for 13.2.
•

•

fists saw an awful lot of extracurricular activity all night. The
referees handed out 18 minor

competiUniversity of
through with
of the season,
beating Rochester Tech 9-5.

penalties but

After falling behind 5-1 at the
outset, RIT rallied and tied the
score 5-5 before the Bulls, led
by Captains Lome Rombough
and Billy Newman, swamped all
hopes RIT had of winning by
shelling the Technicians’ net with
four goals in the final frame.

(Whipper) Watson. It seems every time the Bulls need a goal
John comes through as he did
Sunday night, rebounding Fred
Borgemiester’s slapshot to give
the State University of Buffalo a
one goal lead after McKowne’s

hitting, shooting
tion as the State
Buffalo leers came
their tenth victory

and

The winning goal was scored
by Jim McKowne after a scramble around the net. It could not
have come at a better time for
the Bulls, as it took the starch
out of the HIT comeback and
started the third period slaughter.
RIT, whose only loss was to
Buffalo 5-2 earlier tms season,

let most of the
fisticuffs go by the boards in
this wild swinging affair. Also
helping in the scoring was the
State University of Buffalo’s
diminutive right winger John

tie-breaker.

FOR SALE

mustang. Almost
$110 with case. 834-

GUITAR—fender

excellent condition.
6064, ask for Joel.

PREMIER AMPLIFIER-15" heavy
sen speaker. Four months old,
Call 836-3086, or 836-5005.

duty Jen-

reasonable.

NEW SKIS—5'9" and 6'1", wood with bindings, reasonable. Call Leslie, 885-7570.
HOUSE—11 years old; 4 big bedrooms, large

double-vanity bath, upstairs; spacious living room with 12 ft. bookshelf wall, dining
room, carpeting, kitchen
with extra cupboards, dishwasher and disposal, full bath
downstairs; attached garage, large lot,
low taxes; Town of Tonawanda, HooverKenmore West school district; convenient

to both campuses; middle 20's; no agents;

tel. 875-5559

after 6:00

p.m.

APARTMENTS FOR RENT
ONE

BEDROOM furnished

utilities,

apartment

836-9776 after eleven

with

WITH

Call

ticket.

left half of Mobil
Larry, 876-0408.

SENIOR or apprentice,
time, fop pay, apply in person. Colvin
Eggert Pharmacy, Colvin Eggert Plata, or
Park Plaza Pharmacy, 2754 Harlem Rd.
PHARMACY

TALENTED ROCK band to join in promising
business venture. 875-1262.
PERSONAL

THETA CHI fraternity wants youll Stag tofomorew at
night,
dated party
the
house. 836-9895.
SHALOM! For gems from the Jewish Bible
call 875-4265 day or night.
LOST

red,

black and white mittens.
Last Friday in Norton. Great sentimental
value. $5 reward. Call 831-2586.
ONE PAIR

MISCELLANEOUS
TYPING TERM papers, 25c per page; ditto's
35c,• envelopes $2.00 per hundred. Call

835-6897.
BABY SITTER-live in,
salary, in exchange
sitting. 877-2039.

room,
board and
for evening baby

YOUR

FURNISHED ROOM-walking

distance to UB,
Kitchen and phone privileges. Male only.
Call 834-5624.

TYPING—EXPERT typing done at 50c a page.
Call 283-3025.

bed-study rooms
Call days 877832-5491.

ALL FRIENDS of the 515 boys are invited
to our Moon River Bash this Satu'day.
Music provided by the St. John's Cemetery

SUMMER

available
1600,

ext.

STUDENTS

near
790;

-

3

campus.
evenings

WANTED
AND organist to play in established
rock band. Call 833-5636.

BASS

FIVE COLLEGE men needed, well dressed,
can earn $4.25 per hour. Car necessary,
832-7509.
DO YOU go out to the interim campus
in the morning on Tuesday and Friday?
How would you like to earn $6 for an
hour's work? Need a car. Call 831-3610;
ask for Murray Richman or Sam Powazek.

Stone-Throwers.

GRADUATE STUDY AND RESEARCH IN THE
FIELD OF MATERIALS: Graduate research

assistantships available for physicists, chemoutstanding
in
research
ists, engineers
group. Stipend-$2880/12 months (half time)
plus dependency allowances and remission
of all tuition and fees. Postdoctoral positions and fellowships also available. For
information write to: Director,
Materials
Research Laboratory, The Pennsylvania State
University, 1-112 Research Building, University Park, Pa. 16802.

TRIPLE-AAA QUALITY

like a no account

DIAMONDS

Open a checking account now.
There are two M&amp;.T Banks near the campus.
With banking hours that make sense.
Look below.

Delightfully
Different
25 POINTS

Ss

BANK
r. o.

I.

c.‘

MAIN WINSPEABL* OFFICE

3184 Main Street

Mon. thru Thurs.: 9:00 a.m. —4:30 p.m.
a.m. —3:00 p.m, and
4c00 p.m.—6:00 p.m.

3500 Main Street
Mon. thru Thurs.:
Friday: 9:00 a.m.
4:00 p.m.
Drive-In
Mon. thru Thurs.:
Friday: 9:00 a.m.

9:00 a.m. —4:30 p.m.
3:00 p.m. and
8:00 p.m.

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9:00
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a.m.
p.m.

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4:30

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Mil-Pine Plaza, N. Falls, N Y
evard Mall, Amherst, N.Y.

UNIVERSITY PLAZA OFFICE

p.m.

$2500

GARAGE TO rent for car—near Englewood
and Cornell—please call 836-2398.

BEST VACATION bet. AEPi's Spring
Recess in Puerto Rico. Call 634-8013, 8313365.

A.M.

FOR RENT

Friday:

Franky Lewis. The swinging center from Fort Erie Men’s Shop
spent the weekend setting up
Rombough and the “Boomer,”
Billy Tape, and proved to be an
effective penalty killer.
Third Star laurels go to “Golden Boy” Lenny De Prima who
was this weekend’s hustler.

PERSON

1959 PONTIAC, new starter, solenoid, wafer
pump, battery. Good running condition.
$125. Call 894-9190 evenings.
1961 CHRYSLER NEWPORT-V-8, good con
dition, new fires, 4-door. Best offer, call
886-2206.

ELECTRIC

MCMBKR

Star Honors this week.
Second Star goes to old reliable

CLASSIFIED
1963 CHEVY BELAIR-Black, 4-door automatic, hardtop. $650. 833-9266 after 5:30.

Don’t just stand around

Picking up points in the scoring race was the newest Buffalo
player, Billy Tape, Getting two
points Sunday night and an unbelievable six points Saturday,
“Boom Boom” Tape gets First

�The Spectrum

Page Sixteen

Washington

*

*

WO

*

focus

Friday, F«bru«ry 2, 1968

•

'iixik

rujiQ

midleast

Korr

salgon

new yorK
Q

#

compiled

from our wire services by Rod

Gere

Pueblo: bring the men home
WASHINGTON—This country’s overriding interest in getting the captured crewmen of the USS Pueblo back home unharmed appears to have ruled out military
action against North Korea.
While the Johnson administration cannot handcuff itself in diplomatic negotiations by eliminating possibility of military
force no serious consideration is being
given such a step at this time.
Bluntly stated, the primary objective of
the United States is in obtaining the release of the men.
Officially, the United States will continue to demand the return of the intelligence ship as well. But from a strategic
standpoint, the Pueblo is no longer of
much value.

Any secrets that were not destroyed
when the “destruct button” was pressed
have long since fallen into Communist
hands.

But the Americans who were aboard
the ship are another matter. There already are unconfirmed reports that one
of the 83 has died and the government is
anxious to get the others back unharmed,
U, S. officials are hopeful that after
North Korea has gleaned every bit of in-

Push

Count

on soviets
The impression gained in high circles
in Washington is that the United States is
counting on the Soviet Union to play a
key role behind the scenes in convincing
the Pyonyang regime that it would be
wise to release the men—and possibly the

ship.
Despite Russia’s initial formal refusal to
use its "good offices” in the case, U. S.
officials obviously believe the Kremlin
will be prepared to help ease the crisis.

It is considered certain that North Korea will soften its current position only
if Moscow convinces Pyonyang that its
current course is going to do more harm
than good in the long run.

MIDEAST—Despite its efforts to main-

given the Israelis strong leverage in Washington, particularly in light of the Soviet
Union’s failure to respond to President
Johnson's proposal for an arms limitation
agreement in the area.

Request more

Israeli is pressing for 50 more jot war
Johnson has not yet said yes, but
indications are he will eventually. They
are needed to fill the vacuum created by
France’s refusal to continue its military
aid program to Israel.
Such decisions do not come easily. The
planes.

State Department traditionally has sought
to foster good relations with the Arab
states, since they control the oil and com-

munications in the strategic Middle East.
But large-scale Soviet military aid to
the Arabs and Russia’s fleet buildup in the
Mediterranean are making it difficult for
pro-Arab elements in the department to
hold their ground.
The fact that this is a presidential elec-

tion year in the United States also works

to Israel’s advantage in obtaining more
American miliatry aid.
Congressmen
from large cities with heavy Jewish voting
populations are bringing strong pressure
on the administration for more assistance
to Israel,
Rap

knuckles

)

■t't &lt;n

iafh

telligence it can from the crewmen—and
reaped maximum propaganda mileage
from forced confessions—it will free the
men as “unwitting tools of the American
aggresors,”.
But though the threat of force was implicit, U. S. officials have emphasized
throughout that the United States is placing its principal hope of obtaining the return of the crewmen in diplomatic efforts.
There really was no other choice.

for greater Israeli support

tain a neutral posture in the Middle East,
the United States finds itself pushed by
circumstances into a position of greater
support for Isreal.
Russia’s massive reaarmament of the
Arab states following the June war has

&gt;3

Jk?

c—UPI

Talaphoto

Dnintc
rOIMli
■

_

•|u&gt;lll
dUOUi

the rUeblO
,

|

t/.S. Ambassador Arthur Goldberg explains to the U.N. Security Council that
the Pueblo

Suicide attacks hit Saigon
SAIGON—A Viet Cong suicide squad
stormed the U.S. Embassy early this week
and occupied the first five floors for
several hours. The battle at the Embassy
climaxed a heavy Communist assault into
the heart of Saigon.
American troops under Communist gunfire landed in helicopters on the building’s roof to rout the invaders floor by
floor. At the same time U.S. military
police fought the Viet Cong squads around
the eight-story embassy for more than
four hours.
Radio reports from the Embassy said
the building was secure and that 19 Viet
Cong had been killed inside.
American casualties were put at four
killed and 124 wounded at the embassy.

Reds attack

appears impossible under present circum-

NEW YORK—Two detectives testified
at a public hearing Wednesday that , on
one occasion they witnessed some 50 students under the effects of drugs in the
lobby of a dormitory at the State Uni-

that included four American billets, the
Vietnamese “White House,” the Philippine Embassy building and a number of
Vietnamese mililtary installations.

At Tan Son Nhut, the big civilian and
military airfield on the fringes of Saigon, Communist raiders attacked the
headquarters of the South Vietnamese
Armed Forces, but an attempt to crash
into the airport was turned back by allied
defenders using tanks.

The detectives told the Joint Legislative
Committee on Crime that they purchased
drugs more than 50 times during a threemonths period as undercover agents at
the college.

They testified that use of marijuana
was widespread among students and that
some members of the faculty also were
reported to be drug users.

last week

Martial law declared
President Nguyen Van Thieu of South
Vietnam declared martial law throughout
the nation in the wake of the Viet Cong
attacks.
He said the Viet Cong attack on Saigon
itself “has been completely foiled.”
Thieu said the series of attacks on
more than 40 cities and towns throughout
South Vietnam, including the raid on
the capital itself, had been "long and
carefully prepared.” He termed the Viet
Cong announcement of a seven-day Tet
truce as an “act of perfidy.”
The attack into Saigon climaxed a
major Communist offensive throughout
much of the country, in which the Communists stormed into eight major cities
and 30 or 40 smaller ones.
The Viet Cong radio gloated that its
attacks had thrown American and South
Vietnamese officials into “panic.” In Moscow, the Soviet press hailed the raids as
proof that Communist power in Vietnam
was booming.

In Saigon, Gen. Westmoreland, the U.S
military commander, said the nationwide
attacks were “diversionary efforts” to
draw attention from the northern frontier
where up to 50,000 North Vietnamese
troops were reported poised for a massive

invasion.

Stony Brook investigation begins
versity’s Stony Brook, L.I., campus.

Peekaboo

well outside North

was

Korean territorial waters at the time of
her seizure.

The Communists struck in the city
hitting at least a dozen important targets

Andy Love spruces up the air intake of
an F I00. Son of Colorado Gov. John
A. Love, he was called to active duty

«

nr*

The United States has rapped Israel’s
knuckles in a diplomatic sense a couple of
times for annexation of the Old City of
Jerusalem and for sending settlers to
Israeli-occupied Arab territory, but with
no discernible results.
The five principles set forth by Johnson after the June war still stand as U. S.
policy but appear to have little chance of
acceptance within the foreseeable future.
The principles involve recognition of
Israel’s “right of national life” and right
to passagle through the Suez Canal and
the Strait of Tiran.
They also call for
“limits on the wasteful and destructive
arms race” and justice for Arab refugees.
Acceptance of any one of these priciples
inevitably would involve acceptance of the
idea of a broad overall settlement. This
stances.

si9i.fi

The hearing was the first day of a twoday investigation by the committee into
drug use by Stony Brook students. A
total of 47 students were arrested on narcotics charges during a pre dawn raid by
Suffolk County police Jan. 17 and in the
next few days. The raid was based on
reports by the two detectives.
A variety of drugs were mentioned
during the testimony, including opium,
LSD, marijuana and amphetamine pills,
but most of the charges stemmed from
sale or possession of marijuana. Det. John
Colby, who purchased the opium, said it

was very rare and that he had to make
a special request for it.

College officials were scheduled to testify Thursday at the hearings being held
in the New York County Lawyers Associ
ation at 14 Vesey St. They were expected
to dispute many of the allegations made
by the two detectives.
Testimony Wednesday implicating two
faculty members by name brought a sharp
protest as being defamatory and evidence
by hearsay from attorney Jeremiah Gut
ma, representing Stony Brook faculty
members present at the hearings under
subpoena.
Gutma requested the right to crossexamine Patrolman Frank Gennari, one
of the undercover agents. Gennari had
testified

a

mathematics

professor

was

said to be a marijuana smoker and that
another member of the faculty had warn
ed a student that police were looking for
him.

The committee denied Gutma’s

request

but said it would allow him to submit an
affidavit for insertion into the record
It also ordered all other witnesses

avoid giving hearsay evidence.

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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>The

eo
Vol. 18, No. 28

imivcrsvty

t
Tuesdirjf,'

Janu^jry vj3g,&lt;^968

Planned Pub Board will exercise
financial control over publications
The Student Association is taking steps to establish a letter to the Student Association
Publications Board along guidelines adopted last semester. stating their qualifications and
reasons for wishing to serve on
Applications are now being taken in the Student Senthe board.
ate office, Room 205 Norton Hall
Applicants will be interviewed
“The Publications Board
by the Executive Committee of
“need
integration
the
for
of inthe Student Senate and will be
this year will have to act with terest,
The Publications Board appointed by the Student Senate.
a great amount of responsiis that integration.”
Graduate students should apply
bility and foresight. Their deAccording to its constitution, to the GSA. The term of office
cisions on financial matters, the purposes of the board are:
will be one year.
To encourage the establishunlike decisions that have
of student publications of
The four publications to be repbeen made in the past, will menttypes,
all
are
non-permanent
resented
have an effect beyond their
members. They will be appointed
To promote quality in stu
one year,” according to Richby the seven members of the
ard Miller, vice-president of dent publications,
board on a rotating basis.
the Student Association
To offer aid and advice to all
•

•

•

His statement concerns the
new constitution of the Publications Board which states: “The

Publications Board shall have the
power to appropriate funds to
various publications which it has
recognized as student publications of the State University of

student publications within its
jurisdiction, and
To coordinate, and in the
limited ways provide in this
charter, to oversee those publications which identify with the
State University of Buffalo.”
•

The student board members
will represent the student body
as a whole and the editors will
represent their own interests, ac
cording to Mr. Miller. He also
said that on the surface the new
system seems to be an improve-

sess

Tunnel of
love?

ment.

Not only does the board posthe power to appropriate
funds, but also to recognize stuUnder the old system, the Pubto ratify the
lications Board had no financial dent publications,
power. The board is not subject appointment of editors (or apto review by the Student Senate. point the editor if desired by the
guard
the
publication), and
When asked about the new sysagainst “flagrant violations of the
tem, Mr. Miller replied: “It proUnited States Student Press Asvides the opportunity not only sociation Code of Ethics for ColThe Community Aid Corps is
currently recruiting students in
to theorize about how good a publege editors, or any misapproprialication can be, but also to act tion or mismanagement of finan- tcrested in volunteering their
upon that theory, for the money ces which is unreasonable.” It services for tutorial and hospital
projects.
does not have the power to reprovides the means.”
One project which needs volmove editors.
“The important fact to be conunteers is Roswell Park, a 300This board will be composed of bed hospital completely devoted
sidered this year about the Publications Board is that it will have eleven members—all students. to cancer research and special
financial authority over all the There will be five members of cancer care for patients from all
the Student Association who will over the United States.
publications. The power of the
purse strings is an important and be appointed by the Student SenAccording to Project Chairman
most influential type of power to ate; two members of the GraduDeborah Wagner: “We need some
used.”
ate
Student
Association
who
will
be
people to work on it and, work
be appointed by the Executive on
it fast.” Roswell Park, One of
Mr, Miller indicated that all
Student
Council of the Graduate
three hospitals of its kind in
publications have certain similariAssociation; and four representaties. They are directed at the tives of the publications—either America, provides a unique op
same general audience and they editors or their representatives. porlunity for a "fantastic experi
ence" for nursing majors, stuare financed by the same base —
Undergraduate and graduate dents interested in hospital castudent activities fee. Because
of these aspects and the need for
student positions are open to the reers.
Voluntecrs currently participat
communication among publicaentire student body. Interested
tions, Mr. Miller feels there is undergraduates should apply by ing in the project “find it very
satisfying,” she said.
Volunteers at Roswell Park
Buffalo.”

—Yates

UB students Kim Ziegler and
Petersen enjoy the marvelous acoustics of the tunnel be
tween Norton Hall and Harri

r ed

man Library

Host ital needs volunteers

Community Aid Corps recruiting

Administration refutes
LEMAR bust' warning
A joint statement issued by
SDS and Lemar Thursday was
repudiated by University officials
Friday afternoon.
The warning stated that "there
is a possibility of a bust on this
campus within about 10 days.” It
added that “if the administration
in any way collaborates with the
police, we will not be responsible
for what may happen on this

campus,”
“Basically, it’s a warning to
play it cool,” according to Miss
Ronnie Bromberg, a member of
SDS and the author of the statement. “It doesn’t have any basis
in fact, but it is a warning to
the people and the cops and the
administration. There are some
good indications and its better to
be forewarned.”
In reaction to the statement,
President Meyerson said: “All the

information we have is to the
contrary,”
Dean Siggelkow, vice president
for student affairs, also responded: “I hesitate to dignify this type

of unverified, irresponsible, and

anonymous statement with anything other than 'no comment.' It
will more likely tend to encourage outside authorities to visit
the campus. Obviously, it is not
designed to really help

either the
students or the institution.”
Other university officials reacted much the same way. Dr,
Anthony F. Lorenzetti, dean of
students, remarked: “This is clearly a civil matter. It is not a matter of the university co operating
because there are a number of
rights the police have over which
we have no control. The university is not a sanctuary, in this regard, for students who violate
the law.”

18

adult ward, with patients eighteen years old and older, or in
the pediatrics ward, involved in
play therapy, keeping the chil-

dren amused and busy. Although
volunteers may do "mostly spur
of the moment things,” such as
running errands for th(P
their duties depehd maynly
signments from tWsfaff.

Someone to talk to
Among their varied respo
dies, volunteers help plot ti

atures and blood pressu
charts, distribute beverages and
meal trays, feed patients, deliver
mail, write letters, carry blood

from the blood bank and help in

central

supply. Most important
they act as companions to paients
who may not always be allowed
to have visitors. “I talked to a
20-year-old man," said one volun-

"who didn
..vc anyone to
teer, “who
talk to lhal
that /car''cd' to listen to
him.”
Miss Wagm
also emphasized
(hat volunteei
work at Roswell
I’ark is an ( ipcially rewarding
experience foi nursing students
7
who are give more responsible
~

-

■

work in either of the two divisions of the hospital
in the

tics and

spi ;eial attention

from

the ward nu

Volunteer* currently working
Monday, Tuesday and Thursday
mornings and ovnings have found
it ", . . very interesting work and
will learn aylol about how to
'QmlerstamT'-and get along with
older people."
Anyone interested in volunteering or desiring more information
may contact Deborah Wagner
through the Community Aid
Corps office or by calling TF 82465. Transportation is provided
and meals are free in the hospi
tal cafeteria for all volunteers.

face liquor charges
A hearing before the Student Judiciary will be held tonight for 18
students accused of violating the University regulations on drinking.
Accused are 16 Student Senators, including members of the Executive
Committee, a member of The Spectrum staff, and a Student Judiciary member.
The charge of "willfully consuming alcoholic beverages in Norton Union
and thereby violating the University regulation which states 'the possession
or use of alcoholic beverages by students is prohibited,'" has been filed by
the Dean of Student's Office, in response to a complaint by two students.
The infraction allegedly took place at a Student Senate meeting on November
30, at which the passage of the "wet campus" resolution by the University
Council was officially announced.
Specific conditions governing the use of alcoholic beverages on campus
will be set forth by a committee appointed by Dr. Lorenzetti, Acting Dean
of Students. Until these rules are established, the old regulations covering
the presence and consumption of alcohol remain in effect.
Counsel for the defense at the hearing will be conducted by Gary
Cohen, Nicholas Segal, and Michael L. D'Amico. Counseling for the prosecution will be William Sullivan and Samuel Tamburo, representing the Dean
of Students Office. All are law students appointed by the Student Judiciary.
The hearing may be open or closed, consequent to the wishes of the defendants. It will be held at 7:00 p.m. at a place to be designated by posters
in Room 205 Norton.

�Page

Tuesday, January 30, 1968

The Spectrum

Two

ACLU issues statement criticizing
reckless use of police on campuses

c jr
'W

~

NEW

.

has

(CPS)

YORK

sharply

criticized

—

said Prof. Samuel Hendel, chair-

The

"tne

in-

ing a

discriminate use of police force
on college campuses.” The ACLU
said its decision to issue a statement was provoked by the use
of campus police to quell demonstrations at the University of
Wisconsin and Brooklyn College.

He pointed out that universities traditionally “have been selfgoverning institutions which have
settled their internal dissensions
and difficulties through the art
of discussion and persuasion and,
only when unavoidable, by the
use of campus authority and discipline or outside police.”

“Outside police should not be
summoned to a campus to deal
with internal problems unless all
other techniques have clearly
failed and then only on the basis
of rules made in advance with
the participation, consultation
and, prefrably, concurrence of
representatives of students and
faculty who have been selected
in a truly representative fashion,”

British economist and author,
Barbara Ward, will deliver the
main address at Mid-Year Com-

Commencement

mencement, February 12.

1000 to receive diplomas
in mid-year exercises
Mid-year commencement exer-

cises are scheduled for Feb. 12
at 10:30 a.m. in Kleinhans Music
Hall.
In addition to the conferral of
diplomas to approximately 1000
students, the Chancellor’s Medal,
the University’s highest award,
will be presented to "an individual who personifies civic patriotism and vivifies public service
in the eyes of Buffalo.’

The commencement address
will be delivered by British economist and author Barbara Ward,
recently appointed to one of New
York’s $100,000 a-year Albert
Schweitzer chairs as professor of
international economic development

at Columbia University.
Miss Ward, wife of Lord Robert
Jackson, is editor of the British
Weekly The Economist and au
thor of a dozen books, including
India and the West, The Rich
Nations and the Poor Nations,
and Towards a World of Plenty.
In 1960 Miss Ward won the Christopher Award for Five Ideas That
Changed the World. In addition
to these works, Miss Ward has

also written the following books:

The International Share Out, Turkey, The West at Bay, Policy (or

the West, Faith and Freedom, and
Plan Under Pressure.

Among her other accomplish
ments Miss Ward has studied in
England, France and Germany
and holds honorary degrees from

Fordham, Columbia, Harvard,
Smith, Pitt, Brandcis, Kenyon and
Canisius Colleges. She has also
lectured at Cambridge and Harvard Universities.
Dr. Burvil II. Glenn of the Department of Educational Studies
will be Marshall at this year’s
commencement. Invocator for tho
exercises will be Rev. James FJ.
Strong, chaplain to Roman Cath
olic students at the University.
This year a total of 55 doctoral
degrees, the highest number ever
conferred, will be awarded.
A rehearsal for all graduates
will be held at 9:30 a m Feb. ll
at Kilcinhans.
There will be no tickets for
this year's graduation exercises.
Seating will be on a first come,
first serve basis.
This year’s Spring commencement will be held May 31, not
June 2 as previously announced.

Two of the ACLU’s affiliates
had earlier protested police actions at the University of Wisconsin. The school administration
The Wisconsin Civil Liberties
Union charged on Nov. 30 “police
brutality” in the use of “maiming force against passive pro-

Mr. Stein and Mrs. Bertha
Cutcher initiated the program
Monday when they met with the
first ten students chosen. All
freshmen will eventually be sent
invitations to attend one of these
sessions at the dean of students’
office on the second floor of Harriman Library.

ices of the office.
According to Mr. Ronald Stein,
assistant dean of students, the
program was established “to see
if we are effective.” “If not, we
are going to have to revise ourselves to meet the needs of the
students. We are committing our
energies to meet their needs.”

A tentative schedule will include programs Mondays! and
Thursdays from 3:30 p.m. to 5
p.m. throughout the entire semester. If the need arises, times will
be revised accordingly.

The dean of students office offers counselling on all types of

Freshmen are being selected
from resident and commuter student lists obtained from the Data

problems concerning students.

Dr. Tyler to discuss careers in
behavioral science Feb. 15-16
Dr. Ralph Tyler, a leading behavioral scientist, will visit the
State University of Buffalo campus Feb, 15 and 16. The former
director of the Ford Foundation
Center for the Study of the Behavioral Sciences will meet with
interested students to discuss undergraduate and graduate preparation needed to enter the behav-

ioral science field and the career
opportunitis that it offers.
Students who are majoring in
psychology, political science, history, English, philosophy, education, math, biological science, anthropology, socrology, and the
physical sciences will have the
chance to attend a discussion that
could serve as a useful guideline
for the future.

PIZZA

Those who are interested in
what a behavioral scientist does
and where the field is heading

Delivered FREE By

$1.05

should arrange

for an appointment with Dr. Tyler for this career seminar by calling Miss Malady at 831-3311.

P.t.

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dial *35.95,
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sion, five students will be chosen
from each list.

Others involved in the program
include Dr. Anthony Lorenzetti,
dean of students; Miss Jeannette
Scudder, dean of women; Mrs.
F/lith Russell and Mrs. Anita
Bhatt, office personnel.

Oregon editor
held in contempt
Special to

the

Spectrum

PORTLAND, Ore,
A contempt-of-court conviction against
Miss Annette Buchanan, a former
editor of the University of Ore—

gon student newspaper has been

unanimously upheld by the Oregon Supreme Court. The charge

resulted from Miss Buchanan's
refusal to name seven students
who had given her information
for a story on marijuana usage.
Miss Buchanan based her defense on the constitutional right
of a free press to suppress the
origin of confidential news
sources. She was fined $300,
It was ruled by the court that
the right to refuse news sources
“is subordinate to the duty of
every citizen to testify in court,"
It held that shielding reporters
is the province of the Legisla
ture.

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The New York Civil Liberties
Union protested the “unnecessary
police violence” at Brooklyn College when a group of students
staged a peaceful sit-in to oppose
Navy recruitment on campus.

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New freshman program initiated

All freshmen will now have the
opportunity to meet with personnel from the dean of students’
office to discuss their individual
problems and questions and acquaint themselves with the serv-

8 Slice

A

non-violent student demon
stration against the Dow Chemical Co., which manufactures
napalm. While noting that some
demonstrators were interfering
with the rights of others to reach
the Dow interview room for campus employment recruitment, the
Wisconsin Union asserted that
the police behavior was “intolerably violent” for the circum-

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�Tuesday, January

30, 1968

The Spectrum

Draft not to be punitive measure
WASHINGTON (CPS) —The White House has attempted
during the vacation to reassure college presidents that the
draft will not be used as a means of punishing dissenters.
,nd a New York Times surve: said that few loi

against demonstrators have also
been reported in suits filed by
the National Student Association

and draft as soon as possible those who destroy draft cards
or participate in demonstrations aimed at blocking induction
centers or campus military recruiters.

Kimball, a student,at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and
Lawrence Kramer, a student at

In a letter to eight Ivy League
presidents who had protested
Gen. Hershey’s action, Presidential Assistant Joseph A. Califano
Jr., said draft boards will not be
used to “repress unpopular views’’
or to judge the legality of dem-

onstrations.

Although Mr. Califano said Gen.
Hershey agreed with that view,
the 76-year-old general said: “I’m
not commenting on the letter, I
know what’s in it but I didn’t
write it.”
Gen. Hershey’s position is that
demonstrators should be subject
to reclassification and swift induction if they interfere illegally
with the Selective Service System
or military recruiters. The Justice
Department and now the White
House disagree.
“The Selective Service System,”
Mr. Califano wrote, “is not an
instrument to repress and punish unpopular views. Nor does it
vest in draft boards the judicial
role of determining the legality
of individual conduct.”

Letter issued
Meanwhile, a New York Times
check of local draft boards in 45
states and Puerto Rico showed
only three cases of students being

reclassified for having participated in demonstrations. But the
study also showed that many draft
boards are reclassifying many students who burned or turned in
their draft cards during antidraft demonstrations in midOctober.
The three cases the Times mentioned were those of Henry Huey,
a University of Utah student who
had sat in an induction center;
John Ratliff, a University of Oklahoma student who was reclassified because his draft board said
his membership in Students for
a Democratic Society was “not in
the national interest,” and two
men in Washington State were
reclassified I-A and called for
induction after handing out antiwar leaflets at an armed services
induction center.

A few other cases of action

union,

mese

include

John P7

Cornell.

Other cases cited
The ACLU has also filed cases
in behalf of three men who had
ministerial deferments removed
after participating' in anti-draft
demonstrations. One of these, the
Rev. Henry Bucher, has since
had his classification returned
by his board in Camden, N. J,
Two other draft developments
during the vacation period:
The faculty of the Harverd
•

Divinity School unanimously voted to offer assistance to students

who have turned in draft cards
and said it is “unjust to use the
Selective Service System as a
means of punishing conscientious
dissent.”

Draft card burning was outlawed by a 1965 amendment to
the Selective Service Act. Mr.
Karpatkin has asked the Supreme
Court to declare the amendment
unconstitutional
The “symbolic speech” argument was declared valid by the
United States Court of Appeals
for the First Circuit, which declared the draft card burning law
unconstitutional. The decision is
now being appealed in the Supreme Court.
The seven justices who heard
Mr. Karpatkin’s argument reacted
unfavorably.

Conduct, not speech
Justice

Hugo

Black, who usual-

ly takes a very liberal stand on
such issues, disagreed with the
“symbolic speech” argument. He
said that draft card burning is
conduct rather than speech, and
questioned the Supreme Court’s
authority to regulate this conduct.

Chief Justice Earl Warren asked
Mr. Karpatkin if a soldier in
Vietnam who broke his rifle as
an act of protest, was exercising
"symbolic speech.”

Justice Abe Fortas expressed
belief that no act which interfered with a legitimate function
of government was “symbolic
speech.”

Mr. Karpatkin is representing
David P. O’Brien, 21, of Farmingham, Mass. Mr. O’Brien, a Boston

University sophomore, was sentenced to an undetermined jail
term, with a maximum of six
years.

Although the Court of Appeals

Henry Braun, a Temple University English professor who was
reclassified I-A for having turned
•

in his draft card said he would
not appeal the decision. Braun,
37, said he wanted to “share the
jeopardy” with younger demonstrators.

ruled the draft card burning law
unconstitutional, it found Mr.
O’Brien guilty of not possessing
hisMraft card.
Mr. Karpatkin labeled the law
outlining draft card burning the
result of “an act of hysteria” of
Congress.

He also said the law
necessary, since there is
ously passed law which
men to always have draft

was una previrequires

cards in

their possession.

Meeting on registration reform
A task force committee from
the Student Academic Records
Administration will discuss possible reforms in the handling of
student registration tomorrow
night at the Student Senate meeting.
The meeting will be held
at 7 p.m. in Room 240-248 Norton Hall.

bers of the committee that is trying to prevent the unnecessary
duplication and waste of money
and time involved in present reg-

istration policies.
Any student who would like to
present opinions or ideas on the
topic is invited to attend the

TAKE-OUT SERVICE
1551 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.
Naxt to Twin Fair

Cell 837-4300

Open

11 a.m. to 2

i.m.

Weekends Until 4 e.m.

American commanders reported four more North Korean shooting violations of U S. lines on the Korean truce border Sunday and
today and predicted Red raiding would intensify. Military sources
said they doubted North Korea would dare a major invasion.
WASHINGTON
Sen. Russell Long (D-La.), suggested Sunday
that resort to tactical nuclear weapons might be the “wisest” step
if North Korea continues to refuse release of the U.S.S. Pueblo and
the 83 men captured with it.
—

HONG KONG
Communist China accused the United States
of using “military blackmail” to force North Korea to release the
—

U.S.S. Pueblo and its 83 crew members.
It said China was watching developments closely and predicted
that “all the aggressive maneuvers of U.S. imperialism will fail
utterly.”

MOSCOW
The Soviet Union official press, in a violent attack
on American domestic and foreign policy, concluded Sunday that the
Korean crisis was merely part of a “most sinister" U.S. timetable
to fan war throughout the world.
—

WASHINGTON
The crisis over the hijacking of the intelligence
ship U.S.S. Pueblo entered its eight day today with a number of
American military units “alerted for possible movement" to beef up
U.S. strength in South Korea.
The Defense Department, in disclosing the alert, refused to
specify which units were involved or whether they were currently
stationed in the United States or the Far East.
UNITED

NATIONS

—

Council

Security

diplomats

Monday

mustered for a third discussion of the Pueblo crisis with proposals
for U.N. mediation and inviting North Korea to its talks. The Communists indicated opposition to it all.
U.S. Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg said a U N. mediator was
one topic discussed. Canada had made the suggestion Friday when
the council came into session at American request to discuss North
Korea’s Jan. 23 capture of the Pueblo and the 83 men manning the
intelligence ship.

Radio station needs help
Steven Voigt, are holding auditions for newscasters today and

WBFO needs help

tomorrow at the WBFO studios
on the second floor of Baird Hall.

James Bala, WBFO News and
Special Events Director, told The
Spectrum that his department is
the hardest hit by the severe manpower drought this year. He said
that if the news department does
not get more pople, he may have
to curtail some of its activities.
WBFO

For information call the sta-

tion, at R31-3405. and ask for the
news department.
No experience is necessary to
only a
willingness to learn and a bit of
missionary zeal.

work for WBFO news

News

predicted that,
contrary to popular predictions
by the major networks, Senators
McCarthy and Kennedy were not
working together to spoil the

—

President's re-election chances.

Last week Sen. McCarthy announced that he would not allow
Kennedy tp “just walk in and take
all the marbles” in the national
convention.

Bala

and

his assistant,

According to Barbara Emilson,
Student Association representative on the committee, the task
force was designed to make “an
attempt to facilitate registration.

ISJobbler^

Raymond
Chamberlain
and
David Berry from Data Processing and Gary Cooley from Admissions and Records are mem-

THE SPECTRUM
printed by

Partners' Press, Inc.
ABGOTT
SMITH PRINTING
1881 Kenaaore Ave. (at Military)
Phone 876-2284
&amp;

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

Drive Defensively.

USED
TEXTS

A

BUFFALO
TEXTBOOK
FAST, EFFICIENT

stuuL —
itca umna ana iNonn Korea today said the United
States is risking a new Asian war. in the crisis over the seizure of
the U.S.S. Pueblo and its 83-man crew.

Mr.

meeting.

Bur Oft SfU Hfftf

A COMPUTE MEAL
OR A SNACK

dateline news, Jan. 30

—

Court rules against draft card burning
WASHINGTON, D. C.—The Supreme Court last week
ruled that draft card burning cannot be looked upon as an
act of “symbolic speech.”
ACLU Attorney Marvin A. Karpatkin of New York City
last week argued before the court that since the act is
“symbolic speech,” it is protected by the First Amendment
of the Constitution.

Pag* Thr**

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BRIDAL SHOWERS
WEDDING RECEPTIONS
643 MAIN STREET
In Buffalo's

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Call 852-0008
Open Daily
11 a.m. to 4 a.m.

For Charcoal Broiled CHICKEN at Its Finest

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MIUIftSKMT at MAM

UUAB

Music &amp; Concert
Committees
PRESENT

BOBBY HUTCHERSON

QUINTET
IN CONCERT

THURSDAY, FEB. 1, 1968
FILLMORE ROOM
Tickets available at Norton ticket booth
Prices: $1 »2 $2.50
-

-

8:30 P.M.

�Tuesday, January 30, 1968

The Spectrum

Page Four

Threat from the Left, too?
A statement issued by SDS and LEMAR Thursday is
yet another indication of the growing tendency among some
leftist groups on campus to lean toward violence and disruption. The statement warned students of the possibility
wauied-tha
of a Stony Brook-type raid
laborate” with the
t noi

police

We commend their efforts to avoid an invasion of this
campus by police, but we find nothing but total disgust in
their implied threat of disruption: “We will not be responsible for what may happen on this campus.”

If this is an attempt to make students or even administrators apprehensive and fearful, let’s set the record straight
Let’s also make it clear that in any civilized society,
human beings have enough sense to realize that they will
be held responsible for their actions, whatever they may be.
No one will escape responsibility by a mere statement to
the contrary.

If the campus left is losing any of its credibility, it is
primarily due to its utterance of stupid statements, like
the one issued last week. If leaders of the left on campus
had any kind of intelligence, they would return to the
more rational, more logical and more responsible leadership
that was the hallmark of the left two and three years ago.
Today, many leftists are willing to break the law because they are morally committed to resist that which they
cannot accept. They are not willing, however, to be held
responsible for their acts. If they are truly morally committed to a course which involves breaking the law, then
the prospect of punishment by law enforcement agencies
should not be any great concern.
In other words, it’s about time that those who would
willfully and in good conscience practice civil disobedience,
be just as willing to accept all the consequences that flow
from their acts. Immature statements by SDS and LEMAR
can only lead to the conclusion that some among the campus
left are becoming shallow and inane in their thinking.

Korea: belief and rationalization

rWjpcN's Qgp&amp;t

KWUNGWt

When asked if he plans to run next year, the President replied,
'I will cross that bridge when I come to it . .

the burgher
by Schwab
Albany—where the wheels of state government
turn, turn, turn with reasonable progress, despite
the usual bureacratic bungling and gearloose lobby
tactics—was the site of one of The Burgher’s most
recent exploits.
This mild-mannered freedom-fighting reporter
was shocked to learn that the Erie Canal has been
closed and decided to travel to Albany to persuade
the legislators to reopen that great waterway once
again to intrastate commerce. Armed with facts
and figures involving at least two days of hard
labor (i. e., editorials from the 1813 Buffalo CarrierDisease citing the need for such an “effort), 1
knocked on many a Knickerbocker door, and sore
my fist became indeed, looking for some legislator
sympathetic to my view. The search took my finally
to the door of the Governor’s Mansion.
“Governor Rockefeller,” 1 said, “I represent the
CCCS, the Committee Concerned about a Canal
System, formerly the CCS, the Committee Concerned
about Squirrels.”
“Eh,” replied the governor. “No, I am not a
candidate. If nominated, I will not run, if elected I

world are busy in attempts to
another crisis in Korea. Ameriare uncertain about what this
will not serve.”
volatile situation that has arisen.
“But you don’t understand,” said I, rebutressing
my argument. “Your reply seems divorced from the
The range of opinion on the matter is striking. Some issue
at hand.”
“Ah, yes, the divorce issue, I didn’t expect that
would go to war at no cost, even if it involved the loss of
to crop up again. My wife is happy and so am I
an American ship and all 83 crew members, Others would and
I don’t think that much more should be said
go to war readily because of what they consider an injury about it. Besides, I’m not a candidate anyway.”
But I was looking for support to re-open the
to American pride.

Diplomats around the
resolve what is apparently
cans, for the most part,
nation should do about the

Theories about what actually happened range from
those that suggest a CIA plot to get a ship captured so that
much dissent in this country could be squelched, to a
Communist plot to spread United States war efforts thin.
The interesting, and perhaps most significant, fact that
the Korean crisis has brought to light is that Americans
are no longer willing to accept everything their government
says. More and more persons are questioning governmental
explanations and this is only further proof that the “credibility gap" is larger than ever before.
This growing gap could have serious implications for
any type of nationalism that still exists in this country. As
fewer persons rally around the flag, more government leaders may begin to see the need for honest and truthful explanations of our policy goals and expectations. Governments
that lie to their people inevitably fall.
•

•

•

in their uncertainty about what
happened off the Korean coast last week, will probably
support their government as they have in the past. In the
absence of any substantial evidence to the contrary, perhaps
this is all that can be expected at the present time.
There is a very real possibility that we may be fighting
on another front in Asia before the week has ended. If that
is the case, we can look ahead to many more months of
fighting and killing. It’s difficult, indeed, to rationalize
fighting and killing for any reason. We would like to think
that by this point in civilization, men would have been able
to find sane alternatives to warfare. That is obviously not
the case.
But most Americans,

Readers
writings

’

The governor banged his fist on the desk, gritted his teeth at me and said: “I’m not planning to
re-open my campaign, Romney is the man I support.
Romney! Romney! Romney by George!”
"You really don’t understand,” I sighed. “I’ve
come to see you to plead for a concerted effort to
rebuild an Erie System, one that would soon make
the state’s water worth its weight in gold.”
“Ha! They tried the eerie system with Goldwater in 1964. I tried to tell them it wouldn’t work.
I pleaded and pled and all for naught I fought. And
so now I will not run and I’m supporting Gov. Nelson Romney!”
“Listen carefully, governor,” I began cautiously.
“I have journeyed from the Queen City of the Great
Lakes to impress upon the great minds of Albany
the dire need and necessity for a canal stretching
from Albany to Buffalo, linking those two great
centers in a flowing waterway of H2Q, lo bridge
everybody down and I just thought ...”
"That’s interesting,” the governor replied, shuffling through some figures on his desk. “I was looking for some new places to spend money anyway.
There are many holes in my something-for-nothingfor-everybody state-of-the-state message you see,
and that is a very good idea. Would $25 million
be enough, do you think? 50? 75? Speak up, boy!
What’s

name?”
I j'The Burgher,” I replied, trying in vain to match
the gritting grin of the governor. “I fight for truth,
justice, the American way, equal rights for squirrels
and now this last-ditch effort.”
“Gladtameetcha Burgher," the granite-faced governor said, lunging his hand out with the speed of
a karate chop, "My new transportation hond issue
should take care of this little detail. Just imagine,
a new canal! We'll call it the Gov. George Romney
for President Canal and we can dedicate it by
your

washing his brain in it, cleansing the beastly thing
once and for all. George will love it and my wife
will be happy."
“Thanks, governor,” said I, heading for the door.
“Remember," he called, “I'm not a candidate!”
I glanced back and noticed that his fingers were
crossed.

Fascist cup pollution!
To The Editor:
I wish to protest the fascist-sloganed drinking
cups which pollute campus vending machines.

They are a not-so-subtle propaganda device designed to slowly weaken leftist student resistance
to the evils of capitalism.
I find slogans such as: “Conservation” and
“Waste not, want not” and “Be a live wire
don’t touch one,” to be completely innane and
directly opposed to the supposed spirit of the
—

University.

The bottom of these cups is labled; "Industrial
design.”

They are evidently intended for sale to huge
capitalist enterprises, in order that they might
undermine union philosophy among workers. But
there is no place for these hot and cold containers
at a university, and there is no excuse for their
use here!
Guardian

Drop and add day illogical?
To The Editor:

My compliments to those who organized
efficient system on drop and add day. This is
fifth time 1 had to drop or add courses, and I
certainly expecting a greater hassel than I

the
the
was
en

countered.

It’s nice to know
in some areas of the
University. Thanks
schedule a rapid and

that efforts are being made
bureaucratic working of the
for making my change in
uncomplicated procedure.

C.

W,

every
The Spectrum is published twice-weekly
Tuesday and Friday
during the regular academic
the State University of New York at Buffalo,
3435 Main Street, Buffalo, New York 14214. Offices
are located at 355 Norton Hall. Average Circulation:
—

—

year at
15,500.

Editor in Chief—MICHAEL L. D'AMICO
Managing Editor—RICHARD R. HAYNES
Asst. Managing Editor—RICHARD SCHWAB
Business Manager—SAMUEL A. POWAZEK
Advertising Manager—DAVID E. EOX
Campus
Margaret

Anderson

Sports
Robert Woodruff
Asst.
W. Scott Behrens
Layout
David L. Sheedy
Asst.
John Trigg
Copy
Judi Riyeff
VACANT
Asst.
Photography
David Yates
Asst.
Carol Goodson

Marlene Kozuchowski
Daniel Lasser
Peter Simon
Feature Barry C. Holtzclaw
Asst.
Ronald Ellsworth
Entertainment
Promotion &amp; Circulation
Lori Pendrys
Director Murray Richman
Financial Advisor: Edward Dale
Faculty Advisor: William B. Greiner
The Spectrum is a member of the United States Student Press Association and the Associated Collegiate
Press. The Spectrum is served by: United Press International. Collegiate Press Service. Associated Collegiate
Press Service, Gannett News Service, and the Los
Angeles Times Syndicate.
Represented for national advertising by National Edu
cational Advertising Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave
New York, N. Y.
Republication of all news dispatches is forbidden without the express consent of the editor-in-chief. Rights of
republication of all other matter herein are also re,

—no one is intimidated.

served.

Second class postage paid at Buffalo, New York.

Editorial

policy

is

determined

by the

Editor-in-Chief.

�Tuesday, January 30, 1968

The Spectrum

Pag* Fiv*

Drop and Add badly timed

the sham

BELOW OLYMPUS

To The Editor:
I received my transcript the day after change of

By Interlandi

New Years Blues

registration day. Believe it? The day AFTER drop
and add day!

by Martin Guggenheim

Fortunately, I failed nothing, and have no need
to change any courses.- But maybe there are other
students who are not so lucky, and will have to
petition to change courses now.
1 know this place is big and blunderous, but
that is no excuse. Either the administration should
move drop and add day back a few days, or they
should expidite the sending of grades.
P. 0. G.

I have just left Clark Gym where I had to change
my schedule for the eighth and hopefully last time.
It took me an hour and a half just to get inside
and my hands are still numb' It was tough going
for awhile, but it wasn't until 1 saw a girl pass out
from the cold that I understood why my mother
always told me to avoid cold climates (and ad
ministrations that require you to go outside in

January).

Work on The Spectrum?

Since we've last spoken to each other through
this column many things have happened. I realize
as I sit at this typewriter, trying to get warm and
write something interesting, that before you get to
read this, our country may be engaged in another
Johnsonian Crusade. Over the Christmas holidays
1 had some hassels with my friendly local Selective
Service board and right now the paranoia of the
Big Bust is overwhelming. So if this column is
more cynical than usual, please understand.

To The Editor

So The Spectrum needs staffers? No wonder.
Who would want to write for a rag like yours,
anyway?

Quad fan
Editor's note: Any person not completely settled with this newspaper might care to join the
staff in hopes that he could change it internally.
Writing idiotic letters like your own won't help

One of my major pleasures on campus is walk
ing my dog, Raskolnikov. But during finals week,
somebody had neatly printed signs put on the doors
of Norton informing all that "no pets are al
lowed." After seeing so many drab, serious faces
turn to smiles whenever Rascal comes by, I con
aider this new directive an infringement on not
only my rights, but everyone’s.

much.

The Spectrum is holding a meeting tonight at
8 p.m. in room 355 Norton Hall, for anyone interested in joining the staff. If you are sincere, you'll

be there.

Commends change of registration
'There's no doubt about it—movies are getting violent, and
violence breeds violence!''

To the Editor:

Maybe it’s the pressure of finals week or perhaps I’m not terribly clever, but will someone explain the procedure that is used in determining
who enters the gym first on drop and add day?
Pre-registration was carried out according to
alphabetical order this year. Naturally the last letters of the alphabet were last to register. It would
seem to me that persons registering last would be
permitted to enter the gym first on change of
program day. I now see that letters “T-Z” are
scheduled last on drop and add day. What kind
of logic is operating here?
JUDY WEISBERG
P. S. I was told that in the near future registration procedures will be handled through the computers. God, it’s going to be awfully pleasant to
see an IBM machine standing in line for a change.

A proud American speaks out
To the Editor:
I am an American Fighting Soldier
I am willing to give my life in defense of my country
I cannot vote for my leaders because I am not 21
I cannot vote for my decision makers because I am
not 21

In most states,
not 21

!

cannot drink in a bar because I am

But I am old enough to die for my country
I do not polish my shoes every night
1 do not cut my hair short
1 do not agree with every idea set forth by the President, but I anvproud I am an American
1 am proud of my country’s history
I am willing to

defend freedom

I am willing to take arms against communist agres
sion—at any time—anywhere in the world
I am willing to stand up for my country’s beliefs
instead of running it into the ground

sure.

the gadfly
by Mark Schneider

anti-American demonstrators

I am a man

. . .

What are

you?

LAWRENCE B. LYON

Writers: Please be brief. Letters should not exceed
300 words. Ml letters must be signed and the address
and telephone number of the writer must be included. Positive verification of authorship will be made
before a letter is printed.

Letters will be kept in strict confidence.
The Spectrum will use initials or pen name, if
requested. But anonymous letters are never used.

The Spectrum reserves the right to edit or delete
material submitted for publication, but the intent of
letters will not be changed.

As long as everyone is suggesting an investigation of the State Universities, let me add my voice.
It has come to my attention that not all the schools
have yet announced the "new” fact that activities
fees and athletic fees arc not mandatory. This includes our neighbor on the other side of town.
While on the subject of fees, our bursar also is
playing some tricks on us:

As the third year of the massive American escalation in
Vietnam begins, a clear pattern has emerged which spells
There were many students this past semester
disaster for the warmakers and perhaps, as their efforts meet
who neglected to sign the waiver card which, acinevitable frustration, for humanity.
cording to the procedure, would have freed them
More than ever, the contradictions inherent in fighting of the obligation to pay said fees. Consequently,
a war against an entire people 10,000 miles away in thier these students were billed for the full amount.
own country are becoming apparent. From Washington’s Now, it is against the law to require one to pay
point of view, 1968 can only be a most ominous prospect. the fees whether one has signed that card or not.
When the

Wilfred Burchett is perhaps
the only Western newsman to
travel for a long period of time
with NLF fighters. He is fully
sympathetic to their cause, as is
Felix Greene, an Anglo-American
film maker who has just returned
from three months in North Vietnam with a film about the country. For several years their journalistic accounts have predicted
victory for the NLF and, because
of their partisan perspective,
have been received with raised
eyebrows in the West.
However, increasingly the reports from such neutral corre-

spondents as the Times feature
writers Apple and Weintraub and
experienced David Halberstam
seem to corroborate the findings

of Greene and Burchett.
Halberstam describes himself
as neither hawk nor dove. He won
a Pulitzer Prize for his Vietnam
coverage in 1964 and just returned to do a series for Harpers.
He would like to see a non-Com

munist South Vietnam and finds
I say that anyone who attempts to avoid the privilege the American commitment there
and honor of serving their cauntry isn’t worth conductive to Establishing the
opposite. As everyone, even Johnliving in this country
son agrees, the only chance for
“winning” in Vietnam is winning
America was built on courage and faith
the pacification war for “the
cowards

I am not afraid—like so many draft-dodgers and

There are many students on campus (I even
know a few of them personally) who are very
pleased that the other end of the State was busted
first. But what we don't pay for in lawyer's fees
we may give out in psychiatric fees. The poor
Administration is again being put in a very awkward position. At this point I believe that their
hearts are in the right place, but it remains to be
seen whether or not they can withstand the pres-

hearts and minds of the people.”
This war is being disastrously
lost. The U. S. government lists

4.000.

3.000.

people
protected

pacified

and

and this in-

crease since 1965 is offered as
evidence of victory, Halberstam
makes abundantly clear how these
people have been “converted.”
If the NLF moves into a village,
it is shelled and bombed until
the villagers move out.
To where must they move? To
a protected hamlet. And what
do they think of the Americans
who forced them from their ancestral homeland? The significant
figure in the “hearts and minds”

struggle is the “friendly” population: 600,200
or 5 per cent
of the population.
Corruption is the essence, not
the exception, in South Vietnamese society. Vietnamese Army
Corps commanders sell promotions to lesser officers. They min—

imize their killed and deserted
lists to collect salaries of mythi
cal soldiers. Teachers sell exam
questions, province chiefs sell
anything American they can get
their hands on, including guns.
The more material we pour in,
Halberstam argues, the slimmer
our slim chances for success become.
Thus an American Embassy officer said of a region that the
VC are hurting, but “pull the
American bools out of the area
and it would go Red in a week.”
Since there is nothing viable in
South Vietnam except the NLF,
to win its war against the Vietnamese, America must commit
genocide upon them. Greene’s
film documents American destrue.
tion in the North: pellet bombs
dropped on rice farmers and civilian fishing boats. All towns, except Hanoi and Haiphong are

obliterated. Hospitals systematically bombed.
Greene’s camera renders McNamara’s statement
that all
bombing targets are "removed
from urban areas” a simple lie.
In actuality, the U. S. Air Force’s
statement that “anything which
contributes to the will of the
people to resist is a legitimate
target” embodies our real bombing methods.
With the situation so tenuous
in South Vietnam, LBJ can ill
afford to allow the Spocks and
Coffins to talk openly about conscience or higher priorities. If he
can’t win in Asia, he is going to
need a Jew at home to blame.

students challenged their bills and paid
tuition, the first $12.50 went to the athletic
fee and the rest went to the tuition, leaving the
student with a balance of the $12.50 for his tuition.
Confusing? Not nearly as it is successful.
their

My girlfriend also has a few gripes which deserve mention here. She and her roommate requested to transfer to a particular dorm four months
ago. They were placed on a waiting list and lost
out on openings on several occasions to singles
(girls who live alone). They were told to wait until
the end of the semester and they would get first
choice. When they came back to school last week
though, all the openings were filled by some transfers from Genesco State.

And the year goes on. Time magazine did a
typical story (for them) about the State University
system, presenting such a nice picture of my college that I felt vaguely proud albeit a bit confused
about what they were saying. The Fiedler trial is
dragging and having quite a problem deciding
whether or not a girl carrying electronic equipment on her as she enters a home is an invasion
of privacy. It certainly seems like being a judge is
a very difficult job.
The enemy is at it again We've even asked the
USSR to help us persuade North Korea In Orwell's
book it never mattered who the enemy was, but
as the Mothers say, “It can't happen here.” On the
news on television last week the new secretary of
defense, Clifford Clark (Clark Clifford?) was asked
whether this new crisis and all the other problems
facing the United States’ foreign policies made him
apprehensive about his new position; his reply?
“Oh, no. it makes my job all the more enviable."
What happened to the good old days when war was
a debatable topic?

The Spectrum's pages for

Editorials

&amp;

Opinions

It is the policy of The Spectrum to report the
news fully and impartially in the news pages,
to express the opinions of the newspaper only
in the editorial pages and to publish all sides
of important controversial issues.
Without a press on, freedom of expression u mcemrs^less."
*

�Pag*

Six

Tuesday, January 30,

The Spectrum

campus releases...
February graduates are reminded to attend rehearsal at Kleinhans
Music Hall 9:30 a m., Feb. 11. Students are expected to arrive at the
same time on Feb. 12 for graduation. Since there will be no tickets
this year, anyone may come, but seating will be on a first come first
served basis. Anyone who has not yet arranged for a cap and gown
should do,so immediately at the bookstore.
Poet George Montgomery will read from his published and un
published works at 4 p.m., Feb. 1 in Haas Lounge.
The poet is editor of Yawl magazine and is sponsored on campus
by Alan DeLoach, editor of Intrepid magazine.
ANONYM, the new campus literary magazine, now has a perma
nent meeting place. Starting today, meetings will be held at 11 a.m,

in trailer 9.

Community Aid Corps will hold a general orientation meeting
for interested workers Jan. 31 at 3 p.m. in Room 233 Norton Hall.

Buffalo section of The Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE) will meet at 8 p.m. Feb. 1, in the Tiffin Room. A dinner will be served at 6:30 p.m.
Dr. Ralph R. Rumcr, chairman of the civil engineering depart
merit will present a model study of Lake Erie and will speak of pol
lution problems and corrections.
IEEE fellow award certificates will be presented to James P,
Welsh and Ralph B. Immel by Dr. F, Karl Willenbrock, Provost of
Engineering and Applied Science.
Mr. Welsh is head of Applied Electronics Section at Cornell Aeronautical Labs, and Mr. Immel is manager of Products Development
at Westinghouse Electronics. At 5 p.m., a tour of the rotating laboratory in the civil engineering department will be conducted. Students and visitors are welcome.
The Interim Campus Food Service, located in building G, is now
open. The hours arc 8:30 a m. to 6:30 p.m., Monday through Friday.

Mr. Robert Creeley will read his new poems at 4 p.m. tomorrow
in the Conference Theater. The poetry reading is sponsored by the
Literature and Drama Committee of the UUAB.
The Men's Glee Club will hold auditions for the Spring semester
from 1 to 5 p.m. today in room 203, Baird Hall. Academic credit
is available to glee club members.
j.

Labor Dei

\rtment program

Youth needed in poverty battle
WASHINGTON
The Department of Labor is planning to finance a unique new program designed to encourage college students and young people to work
together at fighting poverty and
unemployment in cities.
The program will be unique because the Labor Department
plans to fund projects developed
by students and young people at
—

the local level. The main role of
the government will be to provide
the resources needed for implementing the projects.
Secretary of Labor Willard
Wirtz said the new program will
give young people the opportunity to work on the problems of
cities “without getting too involved with the Establishment.”

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (CPS)—In his State of the Union
Message, President Johnson bragged about the nation’s
abundance, and then asked; “Why, why, then, this restlessness?”

About 30 University of Michigan students who listened

to the speech thought they had the answer. They immediately sent a telegram to the Federal Communications Commission demanding equal air time to present their views
on the State of the Union to the nation

It was the only request for
equal air time in response to the
President’s speech. The FCC said
the students’ demands do not

t

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I

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I

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SUNYAB Freshman Class Council

�

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FRIDAY, FEB. 9th

I

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Jean Shepherd

I

SATURDAY, FEB. 10th

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�
�

CONCERT/DANCE
The New Order Flip Wilson The Clancy Bros, and Tommy Makem
C. Q. Price and His Orchestra The Shady Grove Boys
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BEGINNING JAN 23
FEE-PAYERS ONLY AT NORTON HALL

TICKETS AVAILABLE

TICKET

OFFICE

Pree Buses Both
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AFTER FEB 1 TICKETS ALSO
BUFFALO FESTIVAL TICKET.

AVAILABLE

fall under the legal requirements
of the “equal time” rule because
the rule extends only to political
candidates. The FCC did say, however, that under their doctrine of
fairness of comment, the students’ request might still have
to be satisfied.
The students asked Rep. Marvin L. Esch (R., Mich.) to investigate the FCC regulations and
advise them of their options. Rep.
Esch said he would look into the
matter.

Walter Shapiro, one of the leaders of the 30 students, admitted
that they expected to receive little, if any, response from the
FCC, The students sent copies of
their telegram to the three broadcast networks and the two major
national wire services. “The response from the media has been
fantastic,” Shapiro said.

Denied representation
“We still hope one of the television networks will see fit, on a
moral if not a legal basis, to
give us time to respond to the
President’s speech,” Mr. Shapiro
said. Mr, Shapiro said he felt it
was a moral as well as a legal
question because the students’
perspectives on national and international situations “are very

different from those of either

major political party, and we feel
as voters, that we are being
denied representation in the
American political process,”

The students are seeking influential persons and organizations to encourage the networks
to give them free time.

unteers.
Secretary Wirtz is

-

STATLER HILTON HOTEL

Nights From Norton Hall

I

enthusiastic

about the program because of his
belief that the remaining unemployment in this country is more
the result of personal than economic problems. Many of the
problems of the poor require
case-by-case, person-by-person at-

tention, which is where govern-

ment programs are least effective, according to Secrtary Wirtz.
The new program was devloped
by 25 management interns who
call themselves the Coalition for

Youth Action. The interns have
selected seven areas for initial
concentration. They are Austin,
Boston, Milwauke, the Mississippi
Delta, Philadelphia, San Jose and
Washington, D. C.
“Although we are starting with
only seven areas there may be
many more than seven projects,”
Mr. Kramer said.

Experimental basis
Intern Paul Minkoff, who heads
the Executive Review Board, said
the $300,000 is budgeted for only
six months on an experimental
basis. “If the program is successful, there won’t be enough money,
but when the initial grant runs
out we will go back for more,”
he said.
Mr. Minkoff said the program
could include a wide variety of
projects, such as day care centers, information centers, or tutorial programs. He said one of
the initial proposals calls for students to set up a center to disseminate information in poverty
areas about government programs
designed to serve the poor.
Mr, Kramer conceded that the
Labor Department program may
in some cases overlap with other

existing anti-poverty efforts.
“There will be duplication, but
certainly in any of these areas
where we will be working there
is need for duplication,” he said.
In addition to the new program,
the Coalition for Youth Action is
also exploring several other projects, ranging from experiments
in curricula at colleges and universities to developing new mechanisms for bringing young people’s attitudes and opinions into
the policy making process.
Mr. Kramer said the Coalition
may encourage colleges to give

academic credit to students who
volunteer to work in poverty
areas. The group may also encourage colleges to offer courses
in manpower devlopment.

sv

*

KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL
FOR

The program calls for the development at the local level of
“boards” composed of college stu-

to answer LBJ speech

Sponsored by

'

dents and young community resiThe initial phase of the pro- dentsin poverty areas. These
boards Will develop and operate
gram will be financed by a grant
projects to meet community inof $300,000 in Manpower Develterests and needs through the exopment and Training Act experitensive use of student volunteers.
mental and demonstration funds.
The management interns at the
Secretary Wirtz said the authority for granting funds to specific Labor Department will fund the
projects through the boards, but
projects will be entirely in the
hands of an Executive Review will not direct them.
Managemnt intern Fritz KramBoard composed of seven Labor
Department management interns. er said: “We are keeping the
guidelines for the projects as
All of the interns are young people in their early 20’s just out of broad as possible, but we are interested in manpower primarily,”
college.
Local boards will be encouraged to
“The emphasis will be comdevlop manpower-related projects
pletely on the young people,”
that reach the poor on a one-toSecretary Wirtz said. “We’re goone basis through the use of voling to keep our hands off of it.”

Students ask equal time

1968

LECTURE

Headed by interns

by Walter Grant

Collegiafe Press Service

WINTER WEEKEND
—

1968

��Tuesday, January 30, 1968

Pag* Seven

The Spectrum

Vietnam vets describe Ruling by Supreme Court grants
American war crimes constitutionality of N. Y. loyalty oath
EDITOR'S NOTE:

In early December the War Crimes Tribunal,
which was established by philosopher Bertrand Russell, found the
United States guilty of war crimes in Vietnam. In the following
article, David Saltman, CPS European correspondent and former
staff member of the Michigan Daily, reports on some of the
evidence heard by the Tribunal, which received little publicity in
the American press.

ROSKILDE, Denmark—Three U. S. soldiers recently returned from Vietnam told the War Crimes Tribunal meeting
here of what Tribunal Executive President Jean-Paul Sartre
calls “the accepted practice and use of torture and assassination by the American Army in Vietnam.”
Sartre sent a telegram to U. S. Secretary of State Dean
Rusk telling him of the evidence and inviting him to answer
the charges. As in three previous cases, there was no reply.
He also notified Senator J. William Fulbright (D., Ark.),
chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, that
the information would be sent to him for his use and U. N.
Secretary General U Thant that the information would be
sent to him for “appropriate action
The three soldiers who
shocks. When this didn’t work, he
testified were Peter Martinput the wires on his sex organs.”
Tuck,
both
of
son and Donald
Mr. Martinson said he couldn't
whom are just back from recall one interrogation “where
Vietnam, and Donald Duncan, war crimes weren’t committed."
“It was understood that if you
the former Green Beret who
didn’t
leave marks, you could do
the
war
and
now opposes
anything you wanted,” he said of
writes for Ramparts magainterrogation tactics.
zine. Their testimony was
Mr. Martinson said he knew
of “numerous” cases of prisoners
plainly contradictory to official Washington statements dying from torture. He said the
certificates merely read
on American treatment of death failure.”
“This is logical,”
“heart
prisoners and refugees
he said. “The man had a weak

WASHINGTON (CPS)
The Supreme Court has upheld the constitutionality of
an affirmative state loyalty
oath for teachers in public
schools and in tax-exempt
—

private

schools.

The Court's ruling
its first
came
in favor of such an oath
in the form of a brief order af
firming a Federal District- Court
—

—

decision in New York.

The District Court had upheld
the constitutionality of a New
York law requiring all teachers
in public schools and in private
schools with tax-exmpt status to
swear to uphold the-Federal and
state constitutions.

”

j

“Can you imagine how it feels
to come out of the interrogation
shed with blood on your hands?”
asked Peter Martinson, 23, in an
interview with CPS. He is now a
junior at the University of California at Berkeley.
Mr. Martinson served in Vietnam with the 541st Military Intelligence Detachment from August 1966 to June 1967. He has
several Army decorations.

were

“At Lon Giao, the troops

arresting about everyone in
sight,” he testified before the
Tribunal. “One of the men in the

detachment had been killed, and
the others were mad. We received
eight or nine prisoners. I got one.
He kept saying he wasn’t VC and
didn’t know where they were. I
was certain he was lying about
not knowing where they were. I
started to beat him. This didn’t
do anything but produce strings
of T don’t know.’
”

Used electric shock

“I told my lieutenant I couldn’t
get anything out of him, so the
lieutenant beat him too. It still
didn’t work. The lieutenant had a

field telephone . . . that produced
an electric shock. The prisoner
was tortured with this field
phone. At first, the phone wires
were placed on his hands, and the
lieutenant gave him repeated

HAVE YOUR

daily

room

BY RESERVATION

-

“In October 1966, I personally
saw a North Vietnamese prisoner
thrown out of a med-evac helicopter. I personally had to shoot
a Vietnamese woman, acting under orders from my superior officers.”

-

$16-$18
$20
$11

ON^Y

Sill'

ICuriiAmhrrat
MOTOR HOTEL
5000 Main Street
Af Exit SOW. N.Y. Thruway

TF 9-2204

Crest

Thirty states presently require

their teachers to take an affirmative type of loyalty oath similar
to the one for New York Colo-

rado's loyalty oath, which also
is affirmative, has been upheld
by a Federal District Court and
is now on appeal to the Supreme
Court. After this week's decision,
however, the Court may refuse to
hear the Colorado case.
The New York oath was being
tested for its constitutionality by

27 faculty members at Adelphi
College in Garden City, N. Y
Adelphi is a private institution
whose real properly is tax exempt. Although the New York
oath has been in effect since
1934. Adelphi, through inadvertence, had failed to require its
faculty members to take the oath
until October, 1969
The 27 faculty members who
refused to take the oath claimed
it was a violation of the free

speech guarantees of the First

Amendment. Attorneys for the
teachers argued in their brief to
the Supreme Court that the oath
is a threat to the non conforming
teacher because officials can refuse to hire teachers who they
believe cannot honestly subscribe
to it, Thus, a school administra
lor might feel bound not to hire
a pacifist who once voiced strong
opposition to American foreign

"The oath commands the teach-

er to speak when he has the

right to remain silent." the attorneys argued. They also charged
the New York law prohibits
teachers from being employed
who cannot sign the oath for rea
sons of "intellectual freedom" or
"conscientious inability to ex
press such allegiance," Further,
the attorneys said the oath is so
vague that “few persons of common intelligence will agree upon
the obligations which the oath
imposes.”
In upholding the oath's constitutionality. the Federal District
Court said the oath imposes no
restrictions upon expression by
teachers, and that the state docs
not interfere with teachers by
requiring them to support the
governmental systems which

nourish the institutions in which
they teach.
In his brief to the S u p r e m c
Court, New York Attorney General Louis J Lefkowitz said the

statement which the teachers
sign is an oath of office and not
a loyalty oath “because it is not
directed against subversive activities or membership in groups
sponsoring such activities."
The New York oath was adopted in 1934 during a nationwide
“Americanization P r o g r a m,"
which was started at an American
Legion

convention

in

Miami

More than half of the 30 states
with teachers’ loyalty oaths en
acted their oaths during the same

period.

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$19 $23

2 persons (twin)
1 person, 1 bed

teqchers.

Oath vague

Mr. Tuck said he always had
verbal orders to “Take no prisoners!” This meant that if his unit
was forced to take prisoners, they
had to murder them to follow the
order, he said.

rif* P P

$21

for

the attorneys said

we meant business"
Mr. Tuck gave evidence of the
deliberate execution of prisoners
by Americans:
“On March 23, 1966, we were
in an operation that left several
wounded North Vietnamese on
the ground. Everyone was angry
because we had lost a lot of
men. One guy took a machete
and beheaded one of the wdlinded
soldiers. He threw the head down
the hill as a warning that we
:
meant business.”

[—

STAY WITH US
p»r

subversive

The New York oath is identical

to the oaths of office required of
many state and federal officials.
The oath has previously been upheld for public officials, but not

policy.”

campus life.

GUESTS

No.

or s u p p o r t e rs of
groups.

The New York oath which was
heart, and when we electrocuted upheld reads: “1 do solemnly
swear (or affirm) that I will sup
him he died of heart failure.”
port the Constitution of the
“I personally saw and committed crimes against humanity—war United States of America and the
crimes,” said Mr. Martinson. His Constitution of the State of New
testimony was confirmed and York, and that 1 will faithfully
amplified by David K. Tuck, 25, discharge, according to the best
from Cleveland. He served in of my ability, the duti"' . . to
Vietnam with the Third Brigade, which I am now assigned."
125th Infantry from January 1966
to February 1967.

GRADUATION

4 persons
3 persons
2 persons (dbl.)

The action by the Supreme
Court answers for the first time
the question of whether any type
of loyalty oath for teachers is
constitutional, Since 1961, the
Court has declared loyalty oaths
in five states unconstitutional,
but in each case the decision was
made on technical grounds. The
oaths thrown out by the Court
generally have required teachers
to sign that they are not members

Previously upheld

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

831-3610
355 C Norton

Daily access to an automobile, presentable appearance, a
facility with words

��The Spectrum

Page Eight

Stud Y and job pn

rams

Tueedey, January 30, 1968

available

Opportunities abound both here and abroad
by

Completed scholarship applicaons are due March 1. admission

Doric Klein

Looking for a job? Want to earn college credits by
watching television in your own home? Want to study in
Europe? There are many study, scholarship, and job programs both in the United States ahd in Europe now accepting
applications from qualified students
College through television
The State University College
at Buffalo is offering a spring
semester of the University of the
Air, a series of college courses
designed for television viewing
by the City and State Universities. They will be seen in Buffalo
on WNED-TV on Saturdays.
Established in 1966, the program is aimed at housewives,
working people and other unable
to attend college who wish to
continue their formal education.
Courses may.be taken on a credit
or non-credit basis; those taking
them for credit prepare independent study assignments in
addition to viewing the television

sessions.
Readings, participation in sem-

inars and field trips may also be
required.

Final exams are given at the
end of the semester at the State
Universities.
Credit fees range from $12 to
credit hour, two dollars
for non-credit students, who receive study guides to aid them
in following the courses.
$18 per

semester

are
Calculus and Analytic Geometry
II, History of Latin America II.
Humanities I and II (The Discourse of Western Man), Rise
of the American Nation II, and
Major American Books. The enrollment deadline is Feb. 2 for

Offered

this

credit.

offered with the examination, to
provide special career training
for persons with management po
tential.

concerning reInformation
quirements, salaries and examination dates will be found in FSEE
Announcement No. 410, available
at the Board of U. S. Civil Service Examiners, Room 236, Federal Office Building, 121 Ellicott
St., Buffalo.
The Commission is also seek
ing persons with a bachelors degree in medical technology for
positions in the clinical laboratory at the Veterans’ Administration Hospital. Interested persons
contact
Mr. Edward
should
Bartz, Personnel Division, VA
Hospital, 3495 Bailey Ave.

European summer jobs
Summer jobs in Europe can

be obtained through the American Student Information Service,
which has 20,000 summer jobs
on file for American college students. These include resort, of-

fice, factory, child care, farm
and shipboard work throughout
Europe, many of which require
neither experience or knowledge
of a foreign language.
A booklet containing job descriptions and applications can
be obtained from Dept. V, AS1S
22 Ave de la Liberte, Luxembourg City, Grand Duchy of Luxembourg.

Non credit students may enroll

at any time. Further information
can be obtained at the Office of
Continuing Education, State University College of Buffalo, 1300

Elmwood Ave.

Kennedy Foundation awards
The Joseph P. Kennedy Jr.
Foundation has announced a program of student awards ;n mental retardation for graduate and
undcrgradute students. In each
of eight areas, $500 first prizes,
$300 seconds prizes and $150
third prizes will be awarded for
a completely new research inea

or an original application of existing knowledge which, if developed, cepld radically improve the
prevention, diagnosis, care, employment or understanding of the
mentally retarded.

The idea should be presented

and supported in less than 2000
words and will be judged on ere
ativity, originality and adequate

substantiation.
The eight areas are Physical.
Biological. Behavioral Sciences,
Social Sciences, Education and
Care. Law and Business. Physical

Education and Recreation, and
Religion, the deadline for receipts of papers, which should he
in duplicate, is March 15.
Papers should be sent to: The
Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. Foundation, 719 13th St., N.W., Suite
510, Washington D.S. 20005.

Civil

An optional test for the Management Intern Program will be

Service jobs

College graduates and students
expecting to graduate within the
ne! xt nine months are invited to
apply for the Federal Service

Entrance Examination, which is
used by the U. S. Civil Service
Commission to fill 200 types of
career positions in federal agencies.

Scholarship opportunities
The Institute of International
Education is accepting applications of candidates for 1968 cummer study in a joint program at
Stratford upon Avon,
Oxford,
London and Edinburgh.
-

-

A limited number of scholarships arc being offered to quaiifield Americans between 20 and
35 years of age.

Courses will include Elizabethan drama, history and the arts
of the seventeenth-century Enlightenment and twentieth-century England. Fees, which cover
room, board and tuition, will be
$312 at Stratford and London,
$336 at Oxford, and $300 at the
University of Edinburgh.

Scholarships are available to
qualified students by the Institute for American Universities
for an academic year at Aix-enProvence in Southern France,

Five scholarships of $1000 will
be awarded; in addition an $800

French Government Scholarship
for French majors and 25 tuition
grants will be given. The $1000
scholarships are divided among

Study in Israel

the course and Hebrew Univer-

sity faculty. Two weeks of the
visiting, and supplementary lectures by Israeli authorities

around the country.

The year abroad study program, also to be held on the
Hebrew University campus, is
open to students of the State
University of New York. Although the study of Hebrew will
be an integral part of the program, no prior knowledge of the
language is required for accept-

State University College at
ance.
Oneonta, in cooperation with the
Hebrew University in Jerusalem,
Both programs are under the
is offering both an eight week supervision of Dr. Yonah Alex1968 summer session course on ander, Associate Professor of Po“Modern Israel” and a full year litical Science at State University
study abroad program to begin
College at Oneonta. Persons deApplications should be sent by in August 1968.
siring further information on
air mail to The Director, Instieither program may write Dr.
The summer session course will
tute for American Universities,
be from June 29 to August 27
Alexander at State University
27 Place de 1’Universite, 13 Aixstudy to be at the
College, Oneonta, N. Y. 13820, or
with
formal
en-Provence, France,
Allen E. Caswell, Director of Inmodern campus of the Hebrew
ternational Education at State
University in Jerusalem, where
Language study abroad
University College, Oneonta,
students will concentrate on lecMichigan State
University’s tures given by the instructor of N. Y. 13820.
American Language and Educational Center, an affiliate of the
European Language and Educational Centers, is sponsoring
seven-week summer study pro1968
grams in French at Paris and
Science Business Administration
Engineering
Lausanne, in German at Cologne,
Liberal Arts
in Italian at Florence, and in
Spanish at Madrid! and Barcelona.

Graduates:

•

MSU professors in residence
offer credit courses at Paris, Cologne and Madrid in advanced
composition and conversation and

•

-

-

RESERVE

special projects. These courses
require two years of college
training in the language transcripts from the student’s language department and a letter
from their dean. One year of college language or its equivalent is
required for non-credit courses.

TUB., FEB. 6

Instruction is from the beginning of July to the third week
in August. Non-credit courses are
staffed by EUROCENTRE instructors.

for an in-depth question
and answer session
with Xerox

Drive

Defensively!
Just being in the right isn't
enough. Nearly hall the
drivers in fatal collisions arc
in the right. Drive defensit elv
as if t our life dc
on
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—

That’s the date you can “brainstorm” with our
representative on your campus. Use this interview
to find out what's going on in your field of interest
be it research, engineering, manufacturing, programming, accounting, finance, statistics or mer...

keting/sales.

Ask him how Xerox fits into the entire spectrum
of graphic communications. Probe into the publishing aspects. Inquire about information storage and
retrieval. Put your questions on a global basis and
relate them to the knowledge explosion that's
going on all over the world. And, don’t be surprised
if you begin to form some new ideas about Xerox.
Xerox is that kind of company.

undergraduates in

their junior year may apply to:
Counseling Division. Institute of
International Education. 809
United Nations Plaza, New York,

for the credit program at Paris
to $533 for the non-credit program at Barcelona, which includes tuition, room, board Gwo
meals), and air fare. The enrollment deadline is May 1. For details write AMLEC, Room 107,
Center for International Programs, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan.

students in French, Literature,
Fine Arts, History, Social Sciences and Mediterranean Area
Studies. Information about the
I.A.U. is available in college libraries.

Graduate students, including
teachers in universities
and
schools, and

Two weeks for independent
travel will be allowed for at the

MILIHSTMT at MAPI!

If you want to be a little more specific, question
him about LDX (Long Distance Xerography). Find
out what it is today and what role it will play in
tomorrow’s scientific and business communities.
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�The Spectrum

Tuesday, January 30, 1968

Page Nina

'Good people' participate at Workshop Repertory Theater
by Richard Perlmutter
Spectrum

Staff

Giver,” or “God Is the Baloney
on a Sausage Roll.”

Reporter

Attention all ardent avant-garde theater devotees! Are
you tired of commercial plays, imitations of Broadway, imitations of off-Broadway? Well, now there is something with

t0

attempt to eliminate actors. This play offers them a
opportunity to pour
all traces of boredom in the beautiful
their emotions into their roles.

be the first orgasm adopted for
the theater. Everything on the
set is thrown as emotions flare
when the Good People have their

In an

audience, Joseph Krysiak,
the founder and director of
the theater, has chosen a
work of Dennis Jasudowisz, a
rather frank and uninhibited
Chicago playwright.

Their facial expressions, their
body movements, their outbursts
are enacted for maximum effectiveness. Director Krysiak obviously knows when and how an
action will most affect his audience.

“The Story Teller From Flea

Street” is its name; audience involvement is its game. And don’t
kid yourself, the audience cannot
help but get involved. But there
is another audience to consider
—the one within the play. They
are collectively termed the Good
People and it is to them that the
Story Teller addresses himself.
The Story Teller is played by
no other than the founder and
director of the theater, Joseph
Krysiak. The Story Teller is a
sheet-white character who looks
something like a short Frankenstein. Mr. Krysiak becomes totally absorbed in his role, and his
performance proves that he can
act as well as he directs.

Good people, good actors
The Good People may remind
one of a Greek chorus. They set
the mood by reacting to every
word of the Story Teller. The
effectiveness of the production is
largely due to the laughs, groans,
moans, oohs, aahs, yeahs, etc., of
the Good People.
The Good People are also good

The Good People are depicted
as a distraught mass; groping,
pleading, grasping for something
to hold onto; some belief, some
ideal, some person. They find
their savior in the person of the

Story Teller whose domineering
and commanding character gives
them what they are groping for.

A philosophical cynic
One member of the Good People, however, does not huff and
puff when the Story Teller tells
his story. He is a cynic who becomes known as the Nasty Man.
Stewart Roth is an excellent
Nasty Man; most convincing in
his “philosophical” oratory.

The actors are not satisfied
ay
iC

fh

H-M

i'

»

irnnt

dogmas challenged.

A theatrical orgasm
God cannot be dead or else
some baloney caused a miracle
because there were only two cas-

ualties amidst all that thrown

debris, heaved chairs and flying
actors.

Jasudowisz falls in the Theater
Revolt category since he is
mone
revolting against societ
and Ern t Hemingway. Society
0f

&gt;’’

&gt;’

“

his technique bears a similarity
to “Marat-Sade.”
It is not necessary to go on
about the play itself; the worth
lies in the presentation, not in
the script, Mr. Krysiak and his
company have done Mr. Jasudowisz a great service. The production is uproariously funny, often
explosive. Mr. Krysiak’s directing
appears to have caught every bit

of humor, every expression of
violence, and all the ideas about
society which Mr. Jasudowisz incorporated.

There was only one problem:
there were as many Good People
were there had a great time, in
fact, an unforgettable experience.

The theater is inconspicuously
located at 1685 Elmwood in a
large industrial building. Walk
on Elmwood until you reach an
alley at the beginning of a viaduct. Walk up the alley until
you reach two large blue doors.
Enter there.

Clifford approved Defense Secretary
by Senate Armed Forces Committee
WASHINGTON (UPI)—The Sen-

ate Armed Services Committee

has voted unanimous approval of
Clark Clifford to be secretary of
defense after he testified that he
opposes a Vietnam bombing halt

at this time.

The evening then becomes a
The nomination of the 61-yearmanic-depressive discussion beold attorney will be formally sent
tween the Story Teller, the Nasty to the Senate for confirmation
Man and the Good People. The this week. Swift approval is cermeanings and implications of the tain.
discourses are superfically and
somewhat deceivingly silly. The
Questioned closely about his
Good People are given a chance views on proposals to halt the
to become a different kind of bombing now, Mr, Clifford said
chorus as they chant a series of the the bombing “served an exrefrains such as: “God Is No tremely useful purpose,” but that
Cheapskate,” “God Is No Indian it should be stopped when the

enemy agrees to a reciprocal con
cession.

Such a concession, he said,
no more
could be “minimal”
than a promise that the Communists would not take advantage of

had steadfastly refused to make
even that minimal concession. So,
he said, “in my opinion it (bombing)

—

a bombing pause as they have in
the past with massive resupply
operations.

Mr. Clifford said he would not
expect the enemy to halt military
operations, but would “assume
they would continue to transport
normal amounts of goods, men
and munitions to South Vietnam.” after the bombing is halted and after they agree to negotiate.

But,

Mr,

Clifford said, Hanoi

can’t stop with their present

wholly intransigent attitude.”
The 61-year-old Washington
lawyer, confidant of three presidents, said the United States does
not want to destroy North Vietnam, but must convince the North
Vietnamese that they cannot prevail so that “the day will come
when they will decide that the
game is not worth the candle.”

Clifford, named by President
Johnson to replace outgoing Secretary Robert S. McNamara, was
well received by the “hawkish”
armed services committee.

THE OFFICIAL RING
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�The

Page Ten

Tuesday, January 30, 1968

Spectrum

Berkeley commission asks New Percussion Quintet to feature
for self-governing campus visual effects in concert at Baird
of distrust and

by Lori Pendrys

suspicion exists

Spectrum
'

BERKELEY, Calif. (CPS

recommended

autonomy for the

Berkeley campus of the University of California and sweeping
changes in the way the campus
is run, including a much greater

role for students.
The commission, composed of
six faculty and six student senators, was appointed to study
campus problems after a student
strike which occurred in Decemof 1966. Campus observers
said most of the work, however,
was done by the four or five
most radical members of the
group. Two faculty members, gen-

ber

regarded as more conservative, plan to submit a minority report. The commission was
chaired by Caleb Foote, a liberal
erally

law professor, and Henry Mayer,
a graduate student, in history.
The commission made its profor a more autonomous
campus and a board of regents
and University president which
would primarily act as "defenders” of the University and its
budget in the face of “inroads on
civil liberties and academic freedom" from the state administration of Gov. Ronald Regan.
posal

"Distrust and suspicion"
The report added: “For the
first time in many years we are
faced with a consistently unfriendly state administration
whose theories of educational fi

nancing arc a logical accompaniment to its suspicions of this

campus. At times the main educational purpose of the University

has been obscured by political
controversies; an adverse public
reaction has led to political re-

prisals against higher education
in California and an atmosphere

Gov. Reagan has angered California educators with his call for
tuition or higher fee charges in
the University system. Last week
he added fuel to the fire in his
“state of the state” address when
he attacked campus “trouble makers” and said he would call for
strict new legislation to control
interferences with “the orderly
process of education.”

Staff

Reporter

to a concert merel to listen. How-

go

description is highly inadequate for the type of performances
that will take place tomorrow evening at Baird Hall. There
the audience will see a concert.

The New Percussion Quartet
combines elements of the theater,
lighting, filming, staging and
movement to excite all the senses
through their technique of mixed
media. One of the most obvious
characteristics of the group’s proThe recommendation for campgramming is variety. Through the
made
us autonomy was originally
use of solos, duets and trios as
in a report issued two years ago, well as quartets, the repertoire is
known as the Byrne Report. Sub- enlarged to include every type
mitted to the University regents
but never acted upon, it recommended that the University become a “loose commonwealth” of
nine campuses and that the rigid
central University structure be
eliminated, with the campuses
making most policies and the re-'
gents getting only the broadest
guidelines and acting as university “defenders.”
'

and

degree of composition or
“non-composition,” as the case
may be.

All members of the quartet are
outstanding musicians. Edward
Burham is currently the recipient
of a Rockefeller Foundation grant
to perform contemporary music
with Lukas Foss at the University’s Center for the Creative and
Performing Arts. He has per-

The report is one of the number which have been released at
universities during the past few
years on the subject of studentadministration relations and university governance. However, the
Berkeley report is probably the
most sweeping of any of these,
Mayer said similar studies are
under way at the University of
Michigan and Stanford. Other less
sweeping studies are under way
or completed at such universities
as Chicago, Cornell, Michigan

State, UCLA, Minnesota, Nebraska, Sarah Lawrence, Brown and
the State University of Buffalo.
The American Association of University Professors and the National Association of Student Personnel Administrators are carrying
out similar studies on a national
level.

Daalraknn
rcCKaDOO

New Percussion Quartet uses
technique of mixed media to
obtain their unusual effects.

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WES MONTGOMERY
And His Quintet
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$2 75

-

In Concert

9

Hi
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Jan Williams heads the percussion department at State University of Buffalo. During the summer of 1965 he studied at the
Internationales Musikinstitut in
Darmstadt, Germany. He appeared as a soloist in the New
York Philharmonic’s Stravinsky
Festival in 1966, Both he and Mr,
Burnham hold a Master of Music
degree from the Manhattan School
of Music in New York City.
Lynn Harbold is a graduate of
the Curtis Institute in Philadelphia and is presently percussionist with the Buffalo Philharmonic.
John Rowland is also a percussionist with the Buffalo Philhar
monic and has been a member
since 1941. He studied at the
Eastman School of Music in
Rochester.
The whole spectrum of percussion instruments, including
marimba, tympani, xylophone,
gong and, of course, every type
of drum, is used by the group to
present a thoroughly fascinating
and different performance. Singularity is even expressed in the
titles of the program, such as
“To That Predestined Dancing
Place” (David Rosenboom, 1967)
and “Elegant Journey With Stopping Points of Interest” (Robert
Moran, 1965).
Among the other pieces are:
“The Song of Queztecoatl,” “Inventions on a Motive,” “She Is
Asleep” and “Atlas Eclipticalis.”

The New Percussion Quartet

836-4041

KINGSLEY

"Outstanding musicians"

was formed in August 1966, and
is dedicated to giving performances of the highest caliber of
percussion music. Because of

University Plaza

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High caliber percussion

THE MOTION PICTURE THAT SHOWS WHAT AMERICA'S
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BUFFALO FESTIVAL TICKET OFFICE, STATLER HILTON HOTEL, BUFFALO
NIAGARA FALLS,
ALL AUDREY I. DELLS RECORD SHOPS, BRUNDO MUSIC SHOP
N Y,, UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO, NORTON HAIL.
Slatler
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Office,
Hotel,
Mail orders. Buffalo Festival Ticket

TICKETS

their close association with the
Center of the Creative and Performing Arts and the Buffalo
Philharmonic they are constantly
in contact with the latest developments in the field of contemporary music.
They are continually working
directly with composers as to
matters of notation, interpreta
tion and the latest instrumental
repertoire includes only works
written for percussion instruments.
“There are a lot of groups
around,” says Mr. Burham, “with
pop and commercial transcriptions and arrangements of things
for orchestra, and so on. Not us.”
Although the quartet is comparitively young, it has met with
phenomenal success in its short
career. Audiences have been
unanimous in their approval and
enthusiasm. This group is unique
among professional percussion ensembles in its dedication to the
cause of contemporary music.
The concert will begin at 8:30
p m. in Baird Hall, Jan. 31.

USED /i
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�Tuesday, January

Pag* El*v*n

The Spectrum

30, 1968

4 books published by

UB faculty members

Growth Without Development; Ah Economic Survey of Liberia
By Dr. Mitchell Harwitz, Associate Professor, economics; and
Robert W. Glower, Professor, economics, Northwestern University;
western

diversity

r

of Birmingham, Eng!cine
Illinois, 1966. 385 pages.

*ress,

vanston,

According to Colleague, “the only scholarly survey of the economics of Liberia ever undertaken," Growth Without Development
reveals that despite its rich resource base and its long association with
the technologically advanced United States, Liberia remains one of
Africa’s least developed nations.
The publication of the book was delayed on request of the State
Department while Liberian officials determined if it violated a 1960
agreement between the U. S. and Liberia under which the aufhors
were given access to all but classified government materials. 1
Dr. Harwitz and his colleagues conducted the study over a 14month period in 1961-62, at the behest of the Liberian government and
the U. S. Agency for International Development.
The economists suggest that traditional social and political institutions have impeded the nation’s development and make policy recommendations for improving the Liberian economy based upon their
I

•

findings.

ft*

“Our survey is necessarily critical,” the authors explain, “because
our aim is to suggest policy improvements, and to do this effectively
we must focus attention on existing shortcomings.”

ft

I

•ft

:•

•

•

•

Changing the Windows
By Dr. Jerome L. Mazzaro, Associate Professor, English. The
Ohio University Press, Athens, Ohio, 1966. 64 pages.
The author’s first volume of poetry contains 33 poems, mostly in
a conservative narrative style.
Three memorable characters typify the descriptive capacities
demonstrated by Dr. Mazzaro in the volume: a timid corporal losing
his mind in a sudden onrush of sexual experience; an aging, cynical
ecclesiastic in “Monsignor Nonce”; a maiden aunt in an advanced
state of physical decay.
Earlier volumes of Dr. Mazzaro include The Achievement of
Robert Lowell: 1939-1959 (1960), The Poetic Themes of Robert Lowell
(1965), and Juvenal's Satires (a translation, 1965).
Kinetic Equations of Gases and Plasmas

By Dr. Ta-You Wu, Prolessor, physics, Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, Reading, Massachusetts, 1966. 298 pages.
In this graduate-level text, Dr. Ta-You Wu introduces the student
to some basic aspects of the theory of irreversible processes in gases
and some of the recent developments in the formulation of the kinetic
equation of plasmas. The text deals with the theories of Boltzman,
Bogoliubov, Frieman, Sandri, Hosenbluth, Balescu, Prigogine, and
others.

Formerly a Professor at the National University of Peking, the
author, who is acting chairman of the Department of Physics here,
has also been a visiting professor at the University of Michigan, New
York University, National Taiwan University, and University dc
Lausanne.
•

•

•

Interactions in Electrolyte Solutions
By Dr. George H. Nancollas, Professor, chemistry, Elsevier Publishing Company, New York, 1966. 214 pages.
Dr. Nancollas’ book is the eighth monograph in a series of topics
in inorganic and general chemistry, and is of interest to both the nonspecialist science student and to those more familiar with the field.
The major part of the study is devoted to the free energy, enthalpy
and entropy changes accompanying ion-pair and complex ion formation.

If you don't agree that
business destroys individuality.
maybe it's because you're an
individual.
There’s certain campus talk that claims
individuality is dead in the business world.
That big business is a big brother destroying initiative.
But freedom of thought and action, when
backed with reason and conviction’s cour-

vide things Bell telephone companies need.

Because communications are changing fast,
these needs are great and diverse.
Being involved with a system that helps

keep people in touch, lets doctors send cardiograms across country for quick analysis,
age, will keep and nurture individuality helps transmit news instantly, is demandwhatever the
in the arts, the sciences, ing. Demanding of individuals.
and in business.
If your ambition is strong and your abiliScoffers to the contrary, the red corpus- ties commensurate, you’ll never be truly
cles of individuality pay off. No mistake.
happy with the status quo. You’ll seek
Encouraging individuality rather than ways to change it and—wonderful feeling!
suppressing it is policy in a business like some of them will work.

scene:

—

Western Electric—where we make and pro-

Could be at Western Electric

Western
Electric
SUPPIY UNIT Of THE
manufacturing

&amp;

Buffalo Philharmonic
planning to recordalbum
by Lori Pendrys
Entertainment Coordinator

In a move unprecedented in
the Buffalo Philharmonic’s 42year history, the Orchestra has

to record three LP
albums. A. John MacDonald, president of the Buffalo Philharmonic
Board of Directors, announced
that the recording event will take
place in mid-March with release
scheduled for late summer of this
agred

year.
The first of these LPs will be
Sibelius), “Four Legnds for Or-

chestra” which is not now available on record in suite form. The

second disc will include four
works of the European avant
garde school of contemporary
music. Side A will feature composer Krzstof Penderecki’s “Canon for Strings” and “De Natura
Sonoris.” Neither of these works
is available on an American
label. Side B spotlights two compositions of Yannis Xenakis, “Ak-

rata” and “Pithoprakta.” Again,
Foss has selected pieces that are
unobtainable in record form in
this country.
The final record to be cut in

the March session showcases John
“Concerto for Prepared
Piano and Orchestra” (1952) on
Side A; and Lukas Foss’ own
"Baroque Variations” on Side B.
Of these selections, only “PhoriCage’s

on,” the third movement of
“Baroque Variations," is currently available.

Mr William F. Harvey, vice
president and creative director

of Electra Records, said: "The
Buffalo Philharmonic, under the
astounding Lukas Foss, has
reached a stature that makes
these records a must. We at Electra Records are proud to be work
ing with Mr. Foss and the Buf-

falo Philharmonic in producing
thes albums on our None-Such

Label.”

bell system

WHO LIKES TEACHING?
TEACHERS IN NORWALK, CONN. DO
See Norwalk Recruiter on Wednesday, February 7, 1968
At School of Education Placement Office

�The Spectrum

Pege Twelve

Tuesday, January 30, 1968

1|

©v&gt; s -cxci
'°

r .sc'

s

et ce
'

is listed here,
IBM would like
to talk with you
February 8th.

'&amp;&gt;

W*

.SO"*' 6

'$S£

Sign up for an interview at your placement office—even if
you're headed for graduate school or military service.
Maybe you think you need a technical background to work
for us

Not true
Sure we need engineers and scientists. But we also need
liberal arts and business majors. We’d like to talk with you even
if you're in something as far afield as Music. Not that we’d
hire you to analyze Bach fugues. But we might hire you to
analyze problems as a computer programmer.
What you can do at IBM
The point is. our business isn't just selling computers.
It's solving problems. So if you have a logical mind, we need
you to help our customers solve problems in such diverse areas

as government, business, lavs, education, medicine, science
the humanities
Whatever your major, you can do a lot of good things at
IBM. Change the world (maybe). Continue your education
(certainly, through plans such as our Tuition Refund Program),
And have a wide choice of places to work (we have over 300
locations throughout the United States).

What to do next
We'll be on campus

to

interview for careers in Marketing.

Computer Applications, Programming, Research, Design and
Development. Manufacturing, and Finance and Administration
If you can't make a campus interview, send an outline of
your interests and educational background to R J. Koslow.
IBM Corporation, 425 Park Avenue, nr \r~\ /—j
New York. New York 10022. We're an
(_jC
/l_IVLj«
equal opportunity employer.

1

J |Vj f

�Tuesday, January

Page

The Spectrum

30, 1968

on the bench

the spectrum of

sports

by Billy Martin
Spectrum

Buffalo led at the halftime
38-34 as they did most of the way
through the game, but with two
minutes remaining Knights’ cen-

ter Ralph Coleman dumped in
two free throws to put the hosts
ahead to stay. Coleman’s rebound
and tap-in a minute later made
the score 69-67. Four more charity
tosses were scored by the Knights
in the time remaining while the
visiting Bulls could only muster
a basket at the buzzer during the
same length of time.

Four hit double figures
Coleman led all players with
20 points for the winners. Two
other players for the host quintet
hit the double figure mark. Tom

McKenna hit for 17 while Pete
Cragen netted 14.

The Bulls had four men in the
double figure bracket, including
guards Joe Rutkowski and Joe

only a slight edge, 42-40. Buffalo
outscored St. Michael’s from the
field 25-23 but the Bulls were
beaten at the free throw line,

27-19.

Buffalo led by as much as 11
points with 12 minutes remaining in the second half but fell
into a cold spell at the free throw
line, allowing the host team to
catch up. The Bulls turned over
the ball 14 times to their opposition. Ten violations were called
for travelling. Three of these
walking violations came in the
last two minutes of the game.
This enabled the Knights to overcome the Bulls.

Foul trouble

If you wish to submit any
names or ideas, please put it
in the mailbox of The Spectrum Sports Editor, Your contributions will be greatly appreciated.
Any person or
second half, sophomore replacement Jack Scherrer came through group who can
correctly
with a tough defense and held identify all of the following
one
point in great names
McKenna to only
in sports history
the second half after a 16-point
will be awarded a one year’s
first stanza.
Three of Peeler’s five personal subscription to Sports Illusfouls were called offensive, the trated magazine.
official ruling which made head
coach Serfustini a little bit sad
and somewhat vociferous at
times.

St. Michael'*
McKenna
Cragan

(73)

FO

._3

,_5

Coleman

-6

Gleason
Russell

_2

Joyce

...

Buffalo’s John Jekielek and
Peeler were in early foul trouble
and were finally eliminated from
the game via that route. With
Jekielek sitting out most of the

Do you remember them?
Silky Sullivan; Elvin Tappe;
Sammy White; Harry Chiti; Rabbit Boo Boo; Nashua; Terry Baker; Hobie Landrith; Choo Choo
Coleman; Adios Mumbles; Gallant
Fox; Marv Throneberry; Faye
Throneberry; Frank Torre; Howdy Doody; Del Ennis; Erv Palica;

The Bulls face Brockport State
Teacher’s College in Brockport
tonight and then follow with a
trip to Rochester Friday. Their
next home contest will be played
in Memorial Auditorium Saturday Preacher Roe; Mel Hutchins; Ike
evening against Hofstra.
Delock; Mickey Walker; Sweetwater Clifton; Ray Felix; Whitey
(69)
State Univ. of Buffalo
Bell; Chuck Templeton; Lyle TalFG
FT
-_3
bot; Tom LaSorda; Swede HolEberle
4
._3
Peeler
6
brook; Sid Youngelman; Bobby
._1
0
Jekielek
Gaiters; Sid Gordon; Jim BevilNowak
.9
0
2
Bernard
-0
acqua; Harvey Poe;
Willie
_5
Rutkowski
5
Sheine; Wayne Belardi; Yonah
.2
0
Scherrer
_2
2
Well*
Shimmcl; Billy Console; Rene CalTOTALS
25
19
dez; Rip Repulski; Murray Dick-

Cody
Navin

TOTALS

.3
_3
_1

0
23

.

Editor

Reporter

a list to be continued at a later date here are some 01
famous and not so famous sporting names and events.

.

Assf. Sports

Bull forward Bob Nowak scored 18 points and Ed
Eberle picked off ten rebounds besides scoring ten points,
but these efforts were not enough as the heavily favored
St. Michael’s five put forth some last minute efforts to come
up with a victory over the Bulls at the victors’ court, 73-69.
St. Michael’s record was
with 15 and 12 points,
13-3 going into the game. The Peeler
respectively.
State University of Buffalo’s
varsity record is now 7-5.
The Bulls again outrebounded
the opponents. This time it was

Staff

When you’re sitting “On the Bench,” your mind wand-

St. Michael's mops-up Buffalo 73-69;
varsity record falls lo 7-5 for season
by W. Scott Behrens

Thirteen

FT

11
4
8
1
1
0
0
2
27

son; Jasper Spears; Brian Hextall; Hoe Blocker; Larry Popein;
Moose Vasko; Grover Powell;
Cliff Cook; Ted Schreiber; Jimmy

Demerit; Reno Bertoia; Willie
Miranda; Yama Bahama; Randy
Sandy; Bill O’Connor; John Rudometkin; Dave Sisler; Paul

Herm Wehmeier; Phil
Jordan; Hub Reed; Mailon Kent;
George Shaw; Chuck Essegian;
Lou Cordileone; Whitey Skoog;
Togo Palazzi; Kid Chocolate; Fuzzy Janoff; Bobo Brazil; Happy
Humphreys; Hans Mortier; Tim
Tam; Carlise Indians; John R.
Hogue;

Highpockets;

Tunis;

Schoolboy

Johnson; Whispering Joe Wilson,

Most Overrated sport events
Bowl; Penn Relays;
All-Star
Series; Both
Rose, Cotton, Sugar,
Orange
Computerized
bowls;
Fights; Kentucky Derby; World
Series of Golf; Championsihp Billiards; Box Baseball; Potsy; Stoop
Ball; Hit the Penny; Freeway
Driving; Punch Ball; Miniature
Golf; Home Run Derby; Soccer;
Super

World
Games;

Slapball; Gymnastics; Volleyball;
Ping Pong; Astrodome; Holiday

Festival.

Mott underrated events
Barrel jumping at Grossingers;
Milrose Games; Tangerine Bowl;
Camelia Bowl; Senior Bowl; BlueGrey Game; NBA All-Star Games;

Jail-AIai; Heavyweight Championship; Bedlam from Boston; West
minster Dog Show; Roy Rogers
Rodeo; Stickball; Spin the Bottle;
Punchball; Nok Hockey; Stanley
Cups; Chess; Checkers; Chinese
Checkers; Olympic Games; Pan
Am Games; 100-yd. Swimming
Freestyle; Rugby; Mayor’s Trophy
Game; Senior Lifesaving; Surfing
Championships;
Hockey;
Collegiate Wrestling; Jacks.

Home turn-out to decide Bull schedule
The State University of Buffalo
varsity basketball team will play

four games in Memorial Auditorium this semester. Three of
the contests will take place in
February and one in early March.
The Bulls need a heavy turnout
for each of these games since
the number of Buffalo’s future
games to be scheduled in the Aud
will be determined by number of
fans the State University of Buffalo can draw.
The first game in the neutral
court will be played Feb. 3. The

Bulls will open the doubleheader

against Hofstra University of
Hempstead, New York, The sec-

ond game of the twin bill offers
fans a view of Wayne State Uni-

versity as they oppose the
Canisius Griffins. Wayne State

will be the Bulls’ host Feb. 9 in
Detroit.
The Slate University of Buffalo’s next opponent in the Aud
will be Buffalo Slate University

College. The two intra-city rivals
will clash on Feb. 17 in the first
game of the doubleheadcr. The

Golden Griffins will meet LaSalle
College of Philadelphia, Pa. in

the feature attraction of the
twin bill.
Feb. 24, the Bulls will face
Colgate University in the first
tilt and Canisius will oppose
Dayton University in the second

contest.

The last game in the Aud for

the Bulls this season will be
Mar. 2, That evening they will
oppose Northern Illinois in the
opener while Canisius will face
the University of Detroit,

Tickets on sale

now

Tickets on sale now for the

Hofstra-State University of Buffalo contest at the ticket office
in
Clark Gymnasium, Ticket
manager Jack Sharpe says that
a good choice of seats in the
Browns and corner Blues arc still
available at the extremely low
student price of only one dollar.
Head coach Len Serfustini and
his 16-man squad need an extra

large cheering section for these

games. A sellout crowd of 1500
in Clark Gym would not even be
heard in the huge auditorium,
thus the Blue and White could
use three or four times that many

fans to make the Bulls noticeable.

All of Buffalo’s Aud games are
scheduled to begin at 7:15 p.m.

Track Bulls take part in invitational
meet conducted at Cornell University
Head Coach Emery Fisher
of the State University of
Buffalo indoor track team
has been working hard with
his men to get them in shape
for the upcoming meets within the State of New York this
season.

t

OlymDIC
*

Xj_*'■

Flames

rise

skyward

al

Gre-

noble, France, during the first

lest bf the bowl that is to
contain the Olympic Flame during the Winter Olympics, which
begin next month.

The first meet of the year was
at Cornell and was an invitational meet comprised of 14 colleges
and universities. The meet look
place Saturday afternoon at the
home of the Big Red.
Entered in the meet were:
Alfred University, Bucknell Uni
versity, Colgate University, Cortland State, Hamilton College,

Hobart

College, Lafayette College, Lehigh University, Buffalo
State, LeMoyne College (of Syracuse), Rochester University and
Syracuse University.

’Alspaugh, Mike—senior-440, relays.
Cook, Walter—junior —hurdles.
Dearlove,

Jim- junior—440 yd.

Ernst, Robert—junior—miler.
Federico, Phil—junior—half miler.
Greene, Hugh—sophomore—sprinter.
sophomore
Harris, Curtis
triple
—

All indoor track meets will be
away as the Bulls have no facilities to handle such a meet. The
Bulls use these indoor track
meets as a conditioning process
for their outdoor season coming
up in the spring. Anyone still
interested in trying and/or working out with the team can stop
in and see Coach Fisher any time
in the afternoon in Room G5A in

the basement of Clark

Gym.

The indoor track roster is as
follows:

-

lump

(holds State University of Buffalo and
Rotary Field record in this event).
Hoffman, Ron-junior—pole vault, sprinter.
Hunter, Jerry —sophomore—shot out.
Machmk, Timothy —sophomore- sprinter.
Mathews, William-half miler
'Minkoff,
Arnold
senior
sprinter (Cross
Country manager and three year letter-

man in track).
'Mills, Neil-junior-440 yd., half mile.
'Naukam, larry-semor-high hurdles.
'Rogovich, Paul-junior —2 miler.
Spiegelman, Cliff—sophomore—high jumper.
Talbert, Bernard—sophomore-high jumper
(Holds UB high jump record for indoor
and outdoor track).
'returning letter men

�The Spectrum

Page Fourteen

Tuesday, January 30, 1968

Hockey club racks-up a
win against Brockport
Billy Tape, making his debut
in a Buffalo uniform scored four
goals as the powerful State University of Buffalo hockey club
rolled to its ninth straight league

victory, thumping Brockport State

9-5.
Jim McKowne further helped
the Blue and White cause with
two goals, while Buffalo singletons were notched by Lord Rombough, Bill Defoe and Fred Bourgemeister.

This hard hitting game was
actually won in the first period
as the Buffalo hockey men steam
rolled to a quick 6-2 lead. Tape’s
first goal at the 57 second mark
sent the Bulls on their merry
way. Lord Rombough then scored
his 21st goal of the campaign at
4:16, and just eleven seconds
later, Tape slammed home his
second goal of the night.
McKowne, Borgermeister

and

Defoe all dented the nets for the
Bulls in the first stanza while
Dick O’Shea and Jim Adams
countered for Brockport.
Tape began the second period
festivities by racking up his third
goal at 5:17 on a nifty pass from
Rombough.

Lover or Lever?
Mr. Karl Murphy, new chairman of the GSA Executive Council was quoted as saying, “The
GSA is a lover of power” in the
Friday issue of The Spectrum.
According to Mr. Murphy, the
statement should have read, “the
GSA is a lever of power.”

leers sluggish
After Adams clicked again for
Brockport, Jim McKowne at 8:08
and Tape once more at 16:09
finished Brockport for the night.
Adams and Don McClean scored
meaningless Brockport goals late
in the third period.
The hockey men, due to a five
week layoff for exams, were a
little sluggish in their skating,
but Coach Coley wasn’t too worried. “The players may not have
known it, but they skated themselves into condition

—Don Glena

Varsity

grapplers

tonight.”

The Bulls now 9-0 in Finger
Lakes Hoceky League action, having played RIT Sunday, will hit
the road next week for a Friday
evening game against the Cornell
J.V.’s and a Saturday game
against tough Ithaca. The Bulls
will then return home the following weekend to take on Buffalo Slate Feb. 10, and then host
the powerful Nichols Alumni the
following night. Both games will
be played at the Amherst Recreational Center.

Houston finds UCLA s weakness;
Alcindor, Hayes may meet in tourney
by Gary Kale
UPI Sports Writer

Rombough tops league
Recent FHLH statistics show
Buffalo’s Rombough far ahead
in the individual scoring race.
Rombough has 21 goals and 7
assists for 28 points. The highscoring Bulls are averaging over
ten goals a game in league competition.

Front Row, Left to Right: D. Wettlaufer, P.
Beaugard, J. agow, C. Gautitle, B. Vandenberg,
H. Gullia, S. Kolly, M. Watson, G. Fowler, and
A. Coslanzo.
Back Row, Left to Right: Frosh coach, C.
Adams, J. Misener, G. Alexander, R. Graham,
P. Lang, D. Holser, D. Burr, (unidentified), I,
Von Balinth, J. Troguer, D. Walgate, Flead Coach,
J. Gergley.

Houston discovered a chink in
the UCLA armor and Boston College almost became a member
of the Anvil Chorus that is determined to hammer the Bruins
down to size.

Still smarting from the loss to
Houston which dropped them
Mark Murphy, outstanding from the No. 1 ranking in major
goalie for Norwich College of college basketball, the Bruins had
New England has joined the to exade the Bob Cousy’s Eagles
Bulls for the second semester, to sweep a pair in New York last
weekend. They headed home for
giving the Blue and White excellent depth behind all-league a series of Pacific Eight Conference games that could lead to
goalie Jim Hamilton.

NoDoz
announces

Lew Alcindor’s revenge meeting
with Elvin Hayes in the NCAA

tournament.
Hayes should have no trouble
following Alcindor into Madison
Square Garden, where top-rated
Cougars face Marshall Thursday
night.
Whatever headlines the two

ond half as a matter of his star
being “off form because he’s still
bothered by his eye injury and
hasn’t had much practice time”
since he was hurt in the Jan. 12
California game.

Ties career mark

All-Americas rate will be eased
aside if Kentucky beats Mississippi at Oxford, Miss., tonight.
That would give Adolph Rupp an
All-time coaching record of 772
victories.

Returns home

Rupp, the proud baron of the
blue grass country, tied Phog
Allen’s mark of 771 coaching
career victories Saturday as Kentucky routed Louisiana State
121-95 despite national scoring
leader Pete Maravich’s 52 points.
Rupp has been in business 38
years.

Alcindor, appearing on a New
York basketball court for the
first time since his fabulous high
school days, scored 61 points in
UCLA’s last games of the regular
season against
non-conference
competition. He tallied 33 against
Holy Cross Friday night and 28

against BC Saturday night.
Cousy, who played defense
against some of the top pro stars,
invoked a second half strategy
that had BC closing in fast on
UCLA and giving Alcindor all
sorts of scoring headaches.
A sagging defense limited the
Alcindor to six points after intermission and UCLA escaped with
an 84-77 victory. The Uclans
routed Holy Cross 90-67 Friday
night.
Uclan coach John Wooden excused Alcindor’s lacklustre sec-

No. 9 Kentucky needed the
combined scoring total of Mike
Casey 31 and Thad Jaracz 24 to
top Maravich’s output and pace
the Wildcat triumph.
“Big E” Hayes tallied 38 points
as Houston raised its unbeaten
season record to 18-0 by stomping little Lamar Tech 112-79.
Other top 10 teams scoring
successes were third ranked
North Carolina, which topped
Georgia Tech 82-54 on Larry
Miller’s 28 points; No. 6 Tennessee’s 66-65, which edged Mississippi with the help of Tom Boerwinkle’s 25 points and 10th rated
Vanderbilt’s 90-69 crushing of
Mississippi State as reserve guard
Kenny Campbell netted 19 of his
21 points in the second half.
Utah, ranked eighth, dropped
a 79-77 decision to Seattle.

Question of the week
There has been a great deal of controversy, especially since the great marijuana raid at Stony
Brook, about the use of drugs on campus.
1—Have you

ever used one of the so-called

such as marijuana, benzedrine, or
amphetemines?
2—Do you presently (within the last month) use
one of the so-called Dangerous Drugs?
3—If the answer to No. 2 is yes, is it marijuana’’
4—Have you ever used the “hard” drugs, such
as heroin or cocaine?
5—Do you presently use one of the “hard
drugs?
Dangerous Drugs,

to take when it’s midnight
and you’ve still got another
...

chapter to go.
Midnight. That's NoDoz' finest hour.
But you should know that NoDoz can
do more than help you stay awake
when you're cramming.
For example, if you're tired or
drowsy take a couple before the

exam to help bring your mind back
to its usual keen edge. Or if you've
got a sleepy-type lecture to look forward to, or the monotony of a long
drive home, take NoDoz along for
the ride. It'll help you stay alert.
Yet it's non habitforming. NoDoz. The

scholar's friend.

K NoDoz I

THE ONE TO TAKE WHEN YOU HAVE TO STAY ALERT

The
The
system
should

last question of the week was:
University is going on a 4-point grading
next year. Do you think that provisions
be made to modify a failing grade?

The results were: 91% yes, 9% no.
You can answer the Spectrum Question of the
Week every Wednesday at the Information Desk
on the first floor of Norton Hall.
Please submit only one questionnaire in answering the Question of the Week,
If you have suggestions for future questions,
address them to: Promotion Director, The Spectrum,
355 Norton Hall, State University of Buffalo,

�</text>
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The Spectrum f)

AilSWUAINn
8961

map

03AE393
Vol. 18, No. 27

State University of New York at Buffalo

Friday, January 26, 1968

War Crimes Tribunal leader rips
government policies during UB visit
by Jay Schreiber

Spectrum Staff Reporter

Ralph Schoenman, the controversial director of the Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation, warned Tuesday night that capitalism would soon succumb to worldwide revolution
and urged a struggle within the U.S. to “oust the establishment.”
Schoenman, 32, has received most of his noteriety from meeting 20 different heads
of state, and more recently, conducting a War Crimes Tribunal in Stockholm.
He delivered his views to a receptive audience of about 250 students in Norton Hall’s
Millard Fillmore Room.
Schoenman denounced the U.S.
manufactured goods” and of
The main subject of his
commitment to Vietnam as part
using the gap to “exploit, the
speech was the War in Vietpeople of the world.”
of a “capatalist theme made apnam. Labeling it a “War parent in 1953 and 1954” by
Schoenman decried the accusaof Annihilation,” Schoenman which the U.S. would retain tions of violence thrown at the
Vietcong saying: “A life expectpower in Southeast Asia for its
said: “The Vietnamese revolution is the most dramatic strategic value and its natural ancy of 25 is a very real form
resources. He angrily accused the
of violence. The capitialist sysexample of the struggle beUnited States of controlling the tem is inherently violent, it is
tween oppressors and opin the grain of the wood. Vio“gap between market prices of

pressed.”

natural resources and prices of

Amherst planning continues;
impact area' is under study
Plans for the Amherst Campus

have been moving steadily along
since the basic concept was presented in the Buffalo Evening
News in mid-November.
Dr. Robert L. Ketter, vice
president for facilities planning,
expressed confidence this week
that “within the next month
everything will be firmed up . . .

so we can begin ground-breaking
in the summer.”
Amherst planning is presently
in what is called the “schematic
phase,” which simply illustrates

the

and outward
shape of the planned units, plus
their relationship to each other.
According to Dr. Ketter, the
plan shown in the Buffalo Evening News
a plan which is
“aspresently being modified
sumed that the University would
be a self-entity” and was “too
general

size

—

—

tight.”

Modified

plans

call

for

a

greater degree of interaction be-

tween the colleges and academic

units and also between the campus and surrounding Amherst.
Dr. Ketter emphasized that
planners have become “more conscious that a university town will
grow up” in Amherst and warned
that “the property had better
not become an island.”
Albany, Amherst, University

and other Western New York
officials met at Amherst’s Town
Hall in early January to discuss
problems concerning the impact
area of the University. Such issues

as zoning, transportation,

land use and recreation must be
solved before a total master plan
for the impact area can be formu-

lated.
A second meeting of the group

is slated for Feb. 16.
The University has also requested the assistance of Gov.
Rockefeller’s, Office of Long
Range Planning Coordination to
assist in a study of the impact
area.
Dr. Ketter emphasized that this
is the first time an impact area

has been studied in such fine
detail with such a combined
effort and said: “We think it
will work.” He is planning a number of committees, with student
representation, to advise him on
the impact area problem.

Parking and transportation are
among the major problems looming before campus planners.
Structured parking facilities are
not yet feasible because of the
cost involved and lots take a
great deal of space. NFT has not
committed itself to a rapid transit
system, according to Dr. Ketter,
but the company has indicated
that service will be supplied
when the Amherst population
warrants it.
Since the plan for a mile-long
building was announced, there
has been much excitement and
speculation about the form the
structure will take. Plans now
call for a “free form” structure,
connected on the ground level

and broken above. Grass may be
added at the higher levels to
let the structure fit in more
readily with the Amherst envi-

ronment.
Dr. Ketter contrasted the milelong building with the new interconnected structure at the State
University of Albany, calling the
latter “a very rigid piece of
sculpture,”

“We’re asking for something
different,” he explained.

Albany architecture

Rigid' architecture at Albany
State University differs from

Amherst

plans

The Amherst academic unit
will be built to obtain a “high
degree of flexibility” without altering the outward structure.
This would allow changes in
classroom space and. lab facilities
as needs change over the years.

lence is not just made by the
oppressed. U.S. imperialism
makes clear the impulse that
makes it wage genocidal war.”

Echoes

war critics
Schoenman echoed other antiwar critics when he bitterly denounced the U.S. bombing in

Vietnam. Napalm, he said, is used
to “torture and terrorize the people.” Schoenman, defending
North Vietnam, said; “When Ho
Chi Minh urges people to go on,
it is considered obstinancy, pigheadedness. He is preventing
peace in Vietnam. Compare this
to when Churchill made his “victory” speech during the bombing
of Britain. Everyone understands
Britain’s response, but let Vietnamese after twelve years of
horror talk about driving out
oppressors and
the situation

—Yates

Looks For
1776 again

changes.”

Schoenman accused U.S. imperialism of making prices operPlease turn to Page 2

Ralph Schoenman, director of
the Bertrand Russell Peace
Foundation, denounced U.S.
policy and called for a second
American revolution in a speech
Tuesday.

Growing narcotics problem may result
in cutting of State University budget
ALBANY, N. Y. (UPI)—Rank and file state legislators pus and say ‘sanctuary’ and no
have threatened to cut the State University’s half billion law enforcement official can
dollar budget in the wake of twin investigations into a touch them,” Senator Brydges
growing “narcotics scandal” on campuses across the state. claimed.
He said that lack of administraGovernor Rockefeller, trying to avoid a battle similar
tion cooperation with police could
to Gov. Ronald Reagan’s clash with the California Regents, extend the legislative probe into
was steering clear of the controversy, and repeated statethe state’s private colleges and
ments that it was up to individual university administrations universities as well.
Sen. Leon E. Giuffreda, said
to put their house in order.
reported lack of cooperation
Two legislative committees, meanwhile, were beginning the
by the Stony Brook administrainto
extensiveness
probes
drug
the
of
the
separate
problem in tion “borders on criminal negli
the State University system, and the related dispute over gencc.”
alleged lack of cooperation between university administra“The students that were con-

tions and law enforcement officials.
There were indications the
drug probe would reveal that
“things are much, much worse
than they have appeared to be
so far,” one legislative leader
claimed.

The investigations stemmed
from a raid at the Stony Brook
Campus last week, said to be the
largest campus raid in the country, which resulted in the arrest
of 38 persons. In view of alleged
drug problems at New Paltz,
Buffalo and other state campuses,
Senate Majority Leader Earl W.
Brydges asked for a statewide
probe.

Stale University Vice Chancellor J. Lawrence Murray said
the system would “cooperate in

any way possible with the legislature.”

The first investigation was an-

nounced by Assemblyman Joseph
Kottler, New York head of the
Joint Legislative Committee on
Education. Sen. Brydges then

victed of a felony in earlier drug
incidents have not been dismissed, but have been allowed to
continue and live on the campus,"
c -n. Giuffreda said. “What do
you have to do to get expelled,
commit murder?"
“You would think that adminis(ration at the university docs not
care what happens to the stu
dents,” he said. “They have
adopted an attitude where there
are two sets of laws, one to apply
to students within the university,
and the other to the community
,

ordered Sen. John H. Hughes,
R Syracuse, to have his Joint
Legislative Committee on Crime
conduct a similar probe.
It was speculated that Sen.
Brydges ordered the second com
mittee probe because he was
afraid that Assemblyman Kottler.
a liberal Reform Democrat, would outside exist
"whitewash the situation.”
Sen Giuffreda said two 17 year
As details of the probe were old co-eds picked up in the police
revealed in the Senate, angry raids were in bed with male stulaw-makers talked of cutting the dents and claimed that such in
State University budget if charges cidents were "common practice
of lack of cooperation with lawPointing to several instances of
enforcement officials proved drug abuse, he said one student
\alid.
pusher "would put a sign on his
“Some students think all they door saying 'all sold out’ when
have to do is return to the cam his supply had been exhausted,"
"

"

�Page

Two

The Spectrum

Friday, January 26, 1968

Schoenman condemns Viet War
Continued from Page 1
ate against poor countries, and
perpetuating and increasing the
hunger of the world for its own
profit

‘Racism creates American op
pression, it is the touchstone of
our century, but it is not possible
to impose this agony on the people of the world. The brutality
that imperialism inflicts upon
mankind will turn on itself. As
Malcolm X said, the 'The Chick
ens will come home to Roast’,”

Blasts U.S. situation
After briefly discussing Indonesia and the Arab-Israeli war,
Schoenman turned his wide-based
attack to the existing situation
in the U.S.
Declaring a second American
revolution real and possible, he
said: “As the world struggle
forces U.S. capitilism to lose her
control of sixty percent of the
world’s resources for only six
percent of the world’s population,
then we can no longer acquiesce
the white middle and working
class of America by buying them
off. The white middle class is
already disaffected. The white
working class has a superficial
consciousness of racism and conervatism. This is brought on by
the fact he has never experienced
the oppression of the Negro. You
treat him like a Negro for ten
months he’ll burn the country
down."

Using the recent dairy farmer

and Teamsters struggles against
strikebreakers a example Schoenman said: “The white working
class will reach a point where

they realize

they’ve been

had,

they will react with greater violence to the fact they’ve been
exploited so long. If various revolutions put U.S. capitalism to
the test, there will be an inevit-

ablc transforation in the conciousness of the white worker. As it
advances against the U.S. assault
on the hungry, so will the hungry
and oppressed of the U.S. feel
the steel of imperialism. As Che
Guevera said: ‘The task is to
make the Revolution’.’’

Aimed at activists
Schoenman’s remarks appeared
aimed at the activist left, some
of whom questioned him eagerly
after the speech.
Earlier Schoenman had held an
informal open discussion with

about 15 members of SDS and
the Resistance. Schoenman was

questioned on a variety of political topics, mostly international,
and showed tremendous acquaintance with current affairs in the
opinion of many observers.
Deadly serious at all times,
Schoenman showed a remarkable
capacity for patience in carefully
listening to complaints and ideas
offered by the students. His long,
flowing, though sometimes seem
ingly tague, did seem to successfully communicate with the students.

At one point Schoenman presome recommendations
and thoughts on the current protest movement in the U.S.

sented

“There is no doubt,” he said,
“that white middle class students

have reached unparalleled poli-

tical

conciousness.

Instead

of

mobilizing our black brothers in

I

the ghettos, our concern must be
with our own constituencies, the
white working class. A community level, do-it-yourself help program with more garbage trucks
Ts not the answer, it won't go
very far.
“We must develop a strategy
that will expand and develop the
coneiousness of the people. It is
a tactical question. The problem
is to take large numbers of people through a certain experience,
you can’t graft on revolutionary
experience. They, the people,
must experience it themselves.”

Schoenman favors legal dem-

onstrations; “If you guarantee the

police will be behaved, 10,000 not
500 will show up to protest Dow.
There has to a development of
the mass base, for in the struggle
the enemy is stronger.”
One

student who

•

•

•

•

Many

of the impatience and weariness
of street demonstrations was rebuked by Schoenman and warned
that if militants get too far ahead
of their constituency they will be

defeated.

“Marches and demonstrations,”

said Schoenman, “are designed to
take people through an experience, a development that will permeate all of society.”
Discussing the reform movement and in particular Sen. Mc-

Carthy, Schoenman called electoral politics “an illusory thing.”
“They can embarrass agitate and
serve as an educative device by
which you try and reach people.
However, electoral politics while
producing greater conciousness,
cannot bring a satisfying end.”

Social Work?
Physical Education?
Jewish Community
Service?

A CAMPUS INTERVIEW THIS FALL CAN PROVIDE YOU
WITH INFORMATION ON;
—JOBS FOR COLLEGE GRADUATES IN YM-YWHAs AND
JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTERS

Ralph Schoenmann as he presents his case at a press confer-

moods

complained

..

•

ence.

Urges new party
Mr. Schoenman urged student
radicals to from a revolutionary
party, to develop an organized
movement.
“Brutality and evils of the system can only be dealt with by

revolution,” he said.
Pointing to the Detroit riots
of last summer as an example of
poor whites and blacks rioting together, Schoenman said: “The
next revolution is clearly on the
agenda.”
Schoenman showed little tendency towards personal attack, although he labeled President Johnson as a “scarbelly with barbeque
sauce on his face.” The remark
was delivered so deadpan, that
most observers felt it created the

Sixteen professors from the
University Law School are supporting an appeal of the American Civil liberties Union against
National Selective Services policies.
The ACLU has called upon uni-

versity and college presidents to

urge Gen. Lewis B. Hershey to
rescind his memorandum to draft
boards recommending that stu-

dents engaging in “illegal interference with the draft be reclassified.”

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Sponsored by
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(national association of Jewish Community Centers

&amp;

impression Schoenman felt more
obligated than personally motivated in making the comment.
At all times Schoenman seemed
concerned with political ideologies, not personalities.

Socialism is answer
Oddly enough, it was not till

six

hours

of

discussion

and

speechmaking had elapsed that
Schoenman made clear his own

desired system of government.
Answering a query from the
audience, Schoenman said: “Socialism is the only answer to war.
The evils of our system cannot
be solved without socialist transformation, Peace cannot be based
on the hunger of mankind. We
must get from A to Z through
struggle.”

Professors back ACLU appeal

—CAREERS AS SOCIAL GROUP WORKERS AND PHYSICAL
EDUCATORS IN YM-YWHAs AND JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTERS

—PHYSICAL EDUCATION SCHOLARSHIPS
UNDERGRADUATE YEARS)

•«

Favors demonstrations

ARE YOU INTERESTED IN

•

L-SL

S'

YM-YWHAs)
WED.

More than 300 professors from
32 law schools are backing the
appeal. The appeal states that the
Hershey directive constitutes a
serious threat to freedom of ex
pression on college and university
campuses and is an improper intrusion by an outside agency into
the internal affairs of academicinstitutions.

The ACLU maintains Hershey
or the President never rescinded
the original memorandum.
The professors are; Dean Wil
liam D. Hawkland, Kenneth M
Davidson, Louis A. DelCotto, Rob
ert B. Fleming, Daniel Gifford,
Paul L, Goldstein, William R
Greiner, Kenneth F. Joyce, Milton
Kaplan. W. Howard Mann, Wade
J. Newhouse
Jr., Herman
Schwartz, Louis H. Swartz, Thom
as Buergenthal, Jacob D. Hyman
and James B. Atleson.

�Friday, January

26, 1968

The Spectrum

Pag* Thr**

Murphy becomes new GSA chairman;
dateline news, Jan. 26
to continue work of Gil Klajman
te new d [airman oi
turpi ly is
Karl
dent Association following the resignation of Gil Klajman.
Mr. Klajman, who resigned earlier this month, left
Buffalo to teach sociology at Pierce College in Athens,
Greece. After spending a semester at this recognized American college abroad, he plans to travel to Israel. For six
months he will be writing a dissertation, “Survivors of Concentration Camps in World War II,” for his doctorate in
sociology.
I see the GSA as an organization through which graduate
students can gain an effective
political voice in the running of
the government of the University,” said Mr. Murphy. “The GSA
is a lover of power,” He intends
to follow the same course of action charted by Mr. Klajman last
“

semester.

Increase participation
Last year the GSA revealed the
then year-old state policy on voluntary fees.
Thi syear representatives of the
GSA have attempted to increase
student participation in policymaking bodies of the FacultyStudent Association. The Chairman of the GSA now sits on the
Board of Directors of the FacultyStudent Association.
“The association also won
agreements which leave students
as the only voting members on
those FSA boards which directly
distribute student activity fees,”

according to a forthcoming GSA

Newsletter.
The GSA Executive Council is
also attempting to increase student involvement in the governing of the University and to obtain positions of influence in the
University community.
Stimulating more interest in

clubs and associations under its

auspices is another of its goals.
It is also attempting to encourage graduate studentsto pay student activity fees.
An estimated 48% of full-time
and virtually no part-time graduate students have paid fees.
These fees, totaling $12,800, are
used to support the GSA Norton

Hall, the maintenance of the
campus, and the funding of clubs.
Last semester $8650 was divided among 12 clubs, ranging
from $1650 given the Philosophy
Club to $430 received by the
Social Welfare Club,

Spectrum Feature Editor
wins $500 newspaper award
Barry C. Holtzclaw, feature editor of The Spectrum, has been
selected to receive a $500 Newspaper Fund summer intern schol-

arship.
He

will be awarded the schol-

arship in September after completing ten weeks as a beginning
reporter on a newspaper.
Scholarships from The Newspaper Fund, supported by The
Wall Street Journal, have been
granted to 55 college juniors who
have expressed an interest in
newspaper work as a career.
Young men attending liberal
arts colleges, where little or no

Applications for
UUAB executive
positions sought

journalism education is
taught, are eligible for the internships. Since the first scholarships were awarded eight years
ago, 687 students have received
$500 scholarships. Forty-six re-

formal

ceived grants in 1967.
The program is designed to
give each intern practical knowledge and experience in news re-

porting and editing.
The Newspaper Fund provides
the interns with the names of
newspapers which are cooperating in the program.

THE SPECTRUM
printed by

Partners' Press, Inc.
ABGOTT &amp; SMITH PRINTING
1881 Kenmore Ave. (at Military)

Phone 876-2284

The newly organized IsraeliAmerican Club has joined the
existing Ateneo Las American
Club, the Chinese Club, and the
Rehabilitation Counseling Club as
a recognized organization last

semester.
Other clubs include the Anthropology, Economics, Political
Science, Biochemistry, History,
Physics and Chemistry Clubs.
A club may be recognized when
its constitution is acceptable to
the voting members of the GSA’s

Executive Council.
Supports war resolution

Mr. Murphy is also supporting

the GSA’s resolution on Vietnam
which was passed by a majority
of the Executive Council.
“I am in support of those who
resist the draft system, the anti
war, anti-unqualified campus recruiting, and anti-Dow resolutions
of the Graduate Student Association.”

According to Mr. Klajman, “the
ultimate success of this association of students in improving the
welfare and conditions of intellectual growth of our student
body depends on more than the

active engagement of the organ
izational leadership. It is the support of the student body which
is indispensible,”
Mr. Murphy had been vicechairman under Mr. Klajman.

Random students get
sex questionnaire
The Student Health Committee,
trying to poll opinion on the issue of contraceptives, has sent a
questionnaire to students. Students were selected randomly by
computer, and questionnaires
were sent to their home ad-

Secretary. The applications may

Palvino, Room 261 in Norton.
A sheet listing rules and regu-

lations will be available in Room
261.

WASHINGTON —The American Civil Liberties Union announced
325 professors answered its appeal for support in recession of the
Gen. Lewis B. Hershey draft memorandum to move to the top of
the lists students who participate in anti-war demonstrations.
Professors from Cornell, Syracuse University and the State University of Buffalo were among those answering, the ACLU sai'd.
WASHINGTON —The White House has announced the resigna
tion of Health, Education and Welfare Secretary John W. Gardner,
effective about March 1. No successor was named. Secretary Gardner
was reported to be displeased by cuts in the 1969 fiscal year budget
for his department. There were published reports that he wished to
dissociate himself from the President’s policy on Vietnam.
BUFFALO, N.Y City Judge Ann T. Mikoll reserved a decision
on a motion to supress evidence in the marijuana trial of Hr. Leslie
A. Fiedler, a State University of Buffalo professor.

Dr. Fiedler, 50, and his wife Margaret, 49. are charged with
maintaining a premises where marijuana was used. They were arrested in a raid at their home last April 30.

Herald P. Fahringer, defense attorney, argued that the electronic device placed on the person of a 16-year old girl who visited
the Fiedler home was illegal in the light of recent US. Supreme
Court and New York State Court of Appeals decisions.

Due to an unforeseen delay in
handling the questionnaires, they
did not reach the students’

houses until after intersession.
The Student Health Committee

requests that all students ask
their parents to forward the questionnaire to them as soon as possible.
Once the selected students
have received their questionnaires and answered them, they

are asked to return them to the
Student Association in the addressed, stamped envelopes immediately.

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SEOUL—Eight more members of the North Korean assassin
squad which tried to kill President Park Chung Hee and other
government officials last weekend were killed in a series of gunfights, one in the US. 2nd Infantry Division sector.
The South Korean counterinfiltration center said seven of
the infiltrators were killed by South Koreans and implied that the
eighth was killed by the Americans who man an 18 mile sector in
the western end of the Demilitarized Zone,
The infiltration center said 16 Communists had been killed and
one captured since North Korea sent a 31-man commando squad
into Seoul on Sunday. This left 14 North Koreans at large.

dresses.

The University Union Activities
Board announces that applications
are now available for those students wishing to run for the following offices: President, 1st Vice
President, 2nd Vice President, 3rd
Vice President, Treasurer and
be found in the container attached to a “Union Board” bulletin board on the 1st floor.
Elections will be held Sunday,
February 11th; all applications
must be turned in no later than
4:00 p.m., Tuesday, January 30th,
to the “Boards” Secretary, Mrs,

STOCKHOLM—A 20th American serviceman sought asylum in
Sweden as a Vietnam War protester. The GI's cotnmanders in West
Germany said tie is wanted for breaking out of military stockade.
The soldier, identified as Pvt. (Jre'gory B. Graham, 19, arrived
Wednesday on a flight from Geneva Snd was held overnight in a
Swedish jail. He was without passport or identity papers and said
he fled to Sweden when he learned he was to be transferred to
Vietnam.

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�Page Four

Friday, January 26, 1968

The Spectrum

1968: the issues
Society owes a great deal to students of history for interpretations and anaylses of man’s chronological development. One of the fruits of this historical study has been the
pinpointing of crucial decisions, providing the less historically-minded among us with an enumeration of pivotal
periods.

University Press

The University Press has successfuly published its second book—The Anatomy of a Riot: Buffalo 1967, by Dr.
Frank Besag, assistant professor of educational studies here.
The book is now available in Norton Book Store.
The book may not be terribly impressive, but that is
beside the point. The Press is growing, and that's what
really counts.

In sharp contrast to its feeble predecessor—the Buffalo
Spectrum Press—the new University Press at Buffalo appears to be baby-stepping it on sound financial ground.
We applaud the efforts of this embryonic publishing
company in attempting to establish itself as a legitimate
clearing house for worthwhile books that do not present
large profit possibilities for regular commercial publishers.
And apparently there is reason to continue the applause because a third book is coming. This one is a sociological
study of underdeveloped nations, and it should be out in a
few months.

If

l&gt;.

w//m *

•

�

•

0

sr^DEi^for
TrM&amp; &amp;V&amp;O0*

Readers
writings

’

Or perhaps...
by Barry

Holtzclaw

This week’s announcement of the resumption
of official diplomatic relations with Greece merely
reemphasizes a recognized political reality:

Policies are not based on rhetoric; Uncle Sam
doesn’t give a damn about a country’s internal
politics, as long as that country does not seem a
threat to our particular power interests, or power
aspirations, as the case may be.
The entire so-called “free” West sat by and
watched the fascists overrun Spain, and later on,
Czechoslovakia. The United States did not enter
World War II until it looked like Hitler was going
to win in Europe, and Japan was attacking our
colonial interests in the Pacific. Our initial response
to the Korean conflict was positive yet restrained,
and was enacted clearly as an attempt to “contain”
the growing forces of what we then thought was
a Soviet hegemony, and most likely not so inadvertently, to create stability by creating our
own little counter-hegemony. Even in Vietnam, the
basis of our policy was formulated back before
the French lost DienBienPhu, and was calculated
clearly to maintain a colonial presence in Southeast Asia, based on the false conception that, somehow, a reactionary influence could stem the growing tide of anti-colonial revolution. In Latin America, we have supported dictatorship after dictatorship precisely because they are on our side, that
is, the side of the status quo.

The curious thing about the American situation is that policy is still, at least in a rhetorical
sense, guided by the attitudes of democratic politics. Americans can not be forced to fight for an
empire; but they will fight for an ideal. Governments must form their policies on the basis of
cold, calculating power politics, yet citizens in
states that are to a large degree controlled by the
vagaries of mass politics must go on crusades, or
they won't fight.

The point is this: labels mean nothing to governmental leaders; they use labels to coerce the
electorate into doing their bidding.
The crack in the foundations of this particular
sort of policy-strategy in democratic states, at least
in this country, began with Vietnam. For no matter how hard he tries, and he has tried analogies
with every single one of the past crusades, Mr.
Johnson is having trouble making Vietnam appear
so simple before the American public. These is a
great public reaction for the most part because an
increasingly large number of Americans are finding it hard to buy the worthwhileness of this particular crusade. The means which are being used
to carry out this crusade are not compatible with
the ends of the crusade, and point out the sham in
governmental rhetoric.
The American public is divided on Vietnam
largely because of the effectiveness of the Johnson
Administration’s coverup of South Vietnam’s corrupt military dictatorship. Most people actually
believe that the Thieu regime is a democratically

Continued success of the University Press, however, de- elected leadership.
pends upon continued support by the University communThe situation in Greece is clearer. The birthity. Pick up a copy of the book; it would be worth your
place of democracy, of Western civilization, is
while.
clearly under the thumb of a dictatorship characWhatever the success of its individual books, we sinterized by political immorality and cultural sterility.
cerely wish the University Press itself a very bright future.
US. support for that dictatorship does not
We are certain that with completion of its second book, the constitute a reaction to a threat, but an attempt
Press has made a sound beginning in the publishing field. to consolidate an empire.

Decide recruitment policy by vote
To the Editor

The University Placement Service exists as a
privilege and service to the
and not a
required function of an academic university. It
would appear that some people have an objection
to this service, and therefore, they choose not to
use it. This is their privilege and right. However,
it is not their right to prohibit this privilege from
being extended to others. And indeed is this not
what they are doing?

students

If a majority of students do not wish certain
agencies to hold interviews on this campus, then
simply stated, these agencies should not. However,
to obtain the view of the majority, a system other
than voting in Norton Hall must be used. It is
shown from past statistics that a majority of the
registration, some 20,000 students, do not vote in
Norton elections. Perhaps a better method to reflect the interests of the student body would be
by mail ballot. It is true that there is a general
apathy on the part of most students to participate
in such functions as elections, but to hold a referendum on campus recruitment in Norton Hall
and Goodyear Dormitory lobby is an invalid reflection of the interests registered students maintain. Such a vote caters to those who oppose an
open recruitment policy since they make their
meeting place the Union. I have no doubt that the
vote cast will reflect an open campus recruitment
policy, but it will not demonstrate the magnitude
of this reflection, a larger majority for, unless a
different method of voting is employed.
Is it not the thesis of those people who oppose
an open campus recruitment policy to rebel against
an administration because the administration is
supposedly telling them what to do? Well then, I
ask you, is it not the thesis of these same people,
whatever their grounds may be, to tell us to whom
we can talk and where?

David P. Voss
every
The Spectrum is published twice-weekly
during the regular academic
Tuesday and Friday
the State University of New York at Buffalo,
3435 Main Street. Buffalo. New York 14214. Offices
are located at 355 Norton Hall. Average Circulation:
15.500.
—

—

year at

Editor-in-Chief—MICHAEL I. D'AMICO
Managing Editor—RICHARD R. HAYNES
Asst. Managing Editor —RICHARD SCHWAB
Business Manager —SAMUEL A. POWAZEK
Advertising Manager—DAVID E. FOX
Campus
Sports
Robert Woodruff
Asst.
W. Sco.tt Behrens
Margaret Anderson
Layout
Asst.
David L. Sheedy
John Trigg
Asst.
Marlene Kozuchowski
Judi Riyeff
City
Daniel Lasser Copy
VACANT
Simon
Asst.
Asst.
Peter
Feature Barry C. Holtzclaw Photography
David Yates
Ronald Ellsworth Asst.
Carol Goodson
Asst.
Entertainment
Promotion &amp; Circulation
Director Murray Richman
Lori Pendrys
Financial Advisor: Edward Dale
Faculty Advisor; William B. Greiner
The Spectrum is a member of the United States Student Press Association and the Associated Collegiate
Press. The Spectrum is served by: United Press International. Collegiate Press Service, Associated Collegiate
Press Service. Gannett News Service, and the Los
Angeles Times Syndicate
Represented for national advertising by National tuucational Advertising Service. Inc., 420 Madison Ave .
New York. N Y
Republication of all news dispatches is forbidden wum
o
out the express consent of the editor-in-chief. Rights
republication of all other matter herein are also reserved
YorK
.
Second class postage paid at Buffalo. New
Editorial policy is determined by the Editor-in-Lniei
...

.

-mg in an age of great significance for the development of
civilization, experience has shown that few generations actually measure up to the level of significance they claim.
This generation has its share of spokesmen, and only time
will eventually prove their worth.
There are few today who would not be willing to assert
that 1968 has all the makings of a pivotal year for the development of mankind. We have been buliding toward this
apex on many different levels for years and, in some instances, decades.
But just what trends can be readily distinguished, and
why should 1968 prove any more crucial than 1967? The
answers are by no means simple for the issues are not always clear. We hope, however, to be identifying some of
the trends throughout this semester.
Of primary concern is American foreign policy. We
have watched with growing anxiety the handling of the war
in South East Asia. Since domestic politics plays a dominant role in the formulation of foreign policy, this Presidential-election year may lead to a substantial change in
U. S. war directions. It is still too early to predict with any
certainty which way it will turn. At this point, there apappears to be little hope for a sane rationalization which
will end the tremendous waste, destruction and killing
that is going on there.
Domestically the nation is faced with curbing an increasing crime rate and averting another summer of metropolitan riots. But these are symptoms of greater disease,
those of poverty and inequality, and those problems must
be confronted too.
Students can look ahead to a year of apprehension. College admissions will increase this year but more students
than ever before will be turned away. There will be more
raids on narcotics users this year than last, but there will
also be more users of drugs.
Graduate students will have completed a year study
since the new draft law was passed, and are therefore likely
candidates for military manpower needs.
There will be more peace demonstrations, more draft
card burnings, more involvement by students generally, and
a more militant disposition taken by, more students than
ever before.
At the State University of Buffalo, there will be crises
related to all of ths issues as the rift in student thinking
becomes more apparent. The University faces crucial fiscal
issues that have resulted from a lack of monetary sources
both on campus and in Albany.
1968 will see the completion of many of the introductory
phases of programs initiated by President Meyerson’s administration, and many of those programs will be reviewed.
These issues, and others like them, are matters with
w'hich we shall be concerned this year. They will stimulate
editorial as well as personal opinion.
In some aspects, 1968 will be a year of fanaticism, both
by the left and the right. It will be a year of rebellion and
a year of suppression. Moderation seems to be slipping by
the wayside. Nevertheless, decisions affecting all of us will
be made. Hopefully, in 1969, we will be able to look back
and agree that 1968 was a very good year.

,

_

��Friday, January 26, 1968

The Spectrum

UUAB welcomes transfer students

BELOW OLYMPUS

To the Editor

This letter is being written with transfer students mainly in mind but its message can be applied to all University members.
feree, to Buffalo

on

behalf of the

(™n

Pag* Five

By Interlandi

ua
h rp=

entire University

Union Activities Board. Although not needing an
orientation program geared for an incoming, first
semester freshman, there may be certain questions
and procedures concerning the State University of
Buffalo you might want answered or explained to
you. Since it is rather difficult, entering a school
at mid year, I hope that you might take advantage
of the Board for any enquiries you might have.

M

Although primarily concerned with activities,
we are more importantly concerned about students,
A freshman student, a foreign student, a transfer
student; any student. If we can be of any help,
we hope that you will feel free to stop in room
261 on the second floor of Norton Hall, or call
831-5112 or 831-5113.

■&amp;&gt; ~A
wmtm
five minutes with the First Lady

What
.

.

Terry Keegan

Need new approach to drama
To the Editor:
The Country Wife presentation of Dec. 15, directed by Mr. Henry Wicke, was a true delight and,
1 hope, prophetic. Having long been distressed
about the state of dramatic activity at this University, I would express my pleasure at this venture in hopes that anyone concerned for theater
here would consider the implications it holds.
I have for some time felt that the fun that
theater should be, both to do and to witness, has
been absent from this University. In addition,
the technical aspects of production in the conventional manner turn out to be fantastic headaches due to the inadequate facilities here, and
can end up more often detracting from the presentation that enhancing it as is its proper function.
For the latter reason, it has seemed to me that a
new approach to dramatic presentations is necessary to provide the quantity and variety of enjoyable theater that a university of this size should

be fostering.

In the past three years, I know of only one
other use of dramatic reading. This was Women
of Trachis by Sophocles, directed by Dr. LaRue of
the Classics Department (another untapped source?).
I hope this idea will not be left unused any longer
or picked up only occasionally in a half hearted
manner. The Country Wife convinced me of the
elegance and effectiveness this approach can have.
The University community should consider what is

being missed in theater arts.

John Reeves

Writotn Honoo bo btiof. Lotion thould not ottcood 300 wotat,
■Sou id ho lignod and contain tho oddrots and lolophono number
of tho writor.
Pon noimi or initiate may bo utod, if roguotlod, but antbo right
onyomul lotlott aro noyor utod. T ho Spoctrum roeonrot
to odit or doloto, but tho Inlonl of lotion will not bo changod.

I wouldn't

give for

.!"

the
lighter
side

To the Editor:

What happened lo the “open campus”?
Last month it seems, the Administration chose
to avoid an honest confrontation with the vocal
minority by shuffling the times and locations the
Dow recruiter could meet with our students. It
had to be done in secret. So this is the “open
campus” (where one must go underground in order
to fulfill one’s responsibilities).
After the faculty had voted for the open campus
principle, after President Meyerson had issued an
excellent statement last month supporting it, and
after the students voted more than four to one in
favor of barring none, one would think the University community had made itself clear on this
issue.
Is our “open campus” an empty phrase, mere
lip-service to the establishment? It is understandable for the Administration to have chosen to act
the way it did. On a short range basis, maybe it
was good to have avoided the confrontation. (But
is avoidence of this issue at stake?) In the long
run, like this semester, the probable effects of
that day’s shenanigans will be even more difficult
to face and solve.
Some concerned students are wondering if
there's a credibility gap between President Meyerson and the students like the one between LBJ
and the people.

by Dick West

WASHINGTON—A psychologist who has been making
a study of the matter has found that newspapermen have a
higher anxiety level than any other American occupation
group.
The reason for this may not be apparent to people in
other lines of work, so I will explain it.
Newspapermen live in a perpetual state of anxiety
because somebody is always trying to put something over on
us. A case in point is the Federal Housing Administration’s
miniskirt memo.
This document, ostensibly prepared by the FHA health division,
cautioned female employes of the

agency against wearing miniskirts
in cold weather.

Scare Tactics
It said “The legs of young
women respond quite rapidly to
exposure to cold temperatures.
The Bodily response is a quick
buildup of successive layers of
fatty molecules under the skin
areas of the thighs, knees, calves
and ankles , .
But after the memo had been
duly quoted in the press, it was
disclosed to have been the work
of pranksters.
Although I was not among the
victims of the hoax, just reading
about it gave my anxiety level
an upward twist. Then I got to
thinking that maybe there was an
element of truth in the memo.
If I could prove that the perpetrators of the hoax actually
had stumbled upon an important
physiological discovery, then the
joke would be on them. But how
to test it?
At first I toyed with the idea
of wearing a miniskirt myself to
see how my own legs responded.
I figured I could avoid being

a set of

arrested by carrying
bagpipes.
That plan proved impractical,
however, so I adopted another
approach. I began sleeping at
night with one foot uncovered,
which is cheaper than renting
bagpipes.
Gains Weight
After spending five nights with
one naked foot hanging outside
the blanket, I weighed the exposed member and found it had
gained nearly 1 lk ounces.
There was a distinct buildup
of fatly molecules around the
little piggy that cried all the way
home.

And this happened at room
temperature, mind you If I had
slept with my foot hanging out
the window, I probably would
have had fatty molecules clear
up to my tibiotarsal articulation
Since all the variables were
not strictly controlled, I cannot
cite the experiment as conclusive evidence that miniskirts in
winter will cause chubby limbs.
But here is a corroboratory fac
tor:

While miniskirts are fairly new

kilts have been around for years
And I have never seen a bird
legged Scotsman.

Quotes in the

news

BUFFALO—Herald P. Fahringer, defense attorney in the Fiedler
case, in a statement Thursday on a motion to suppress evidence in
the pre-trial hearing

in Buffalo

.

.

by STEESE

This is going to be one of those great hairy
unreasonable columns which no one, least of all

of feeling concerning the Vietnam Debacle is?
Regardless of which way it is felt, pro or con,
Vietnam seems to be a lightning rod for all the
frustrations that pile up, infinitely it sometimes
seems, in this culture. Not without cause obviously.
Eartha Kill’s outburst at Mrs. Johnson's tete-a-tete
the other day became an idiotic discussion of
manners for godsake.

"Oh-h-h-h-, that lucky Eartha Kitt.

Is there a campus credibility gap?

.

Do you suppose it is ever going to penetrate
the upper levels of Washington just what the depth

Again, best of luck in your matriculation and
I hope that we at “Union Board” get a chance to
help you in any questions you might have.

Errol Craig Sull
President, University
Union Activities Board

gru mp

ly too many things about which to prattle, an
author too verbose, and an editor with a fixation
on neatness, order, and well organized columns.
Oh well, at least it provides the working press
with one of their few spectator sports.

■

tei

The

City Court:

“It seems to me that when a girl equipped with a transmitter
goes into a private home —regardless of how we feel about what
might have been going on there—without any restrictions whatsoever,
it is unreasonable and illegal.”

ALBANY—State Senate Majority Leader Earl W Brydges, in
ordering an investigation of drug use in the State University system:
“The State University is a creature of this legislature . . . an
officials in this system have the duty to account for their stewardship

We have men dying in Southeast Asia in a
rathole. We have poured men, money and supplies
into said rathole for a half a decade and the results seems to be hardly apparent to this observer.
And if they are so damned obvious to the military
why are the requests for men by the commanders
in Vietnam not decreasing? and why, oh why, oh
why does the draft call keep rising if we have
turned the corner in Vietnam? (Docs Mr. Alsop
realize that after you turn your sixth corner you
are going in the opposite direction from that which
you intended?)

While men d(c in Vietnam the scope of the
job needed to do any kind of effective work in
our urban areas seems to be rising exponentially.
And with the failure of the governments, both national and local, to deal realistically with the problems of urban living, we may very soon have
people dying in those cities too. Which wouldn’t
be so bad of course if they were content to die of
various diseases the way the poor—they are not
underprivileged or deprived in any way that
money would not go a long, long way towards alleviating—have historically done. It seems the urban poor of the United States of late have had
the gall to fight back. With blind stupid rage, perhaps, but still with considerable vehemence. I have
my own theory that the reason the riots bother
local governments so much is that there is a
frightening possibility that they might get directed,

and then what would happen, especially to the
local government?
Interesting to note that while we pour money

into Vietnam at a rather prodigious rate—but after
all Lyndon’s self-image is surely worth a lousy
couple of billion a month isn't it?—the only way
to balance the gold flow is for all American tourists
to stay home. How about we reach a consensus
Half the tourists will stay home if half the troops
will stay home? I am of course just being facetious, it being totally useless to be serious. Which
takes us back to the point I started to make originally. The apparent inability to penetrate the
mind of the President, or the Secretary of State,
or etc., etc., etc. Eartha Kitt is symptomatic I
think. She represents a number of people, 1 will
not risk an estimate, who seriously and morally—or practically—oppose involvement in Vietnam.
People who hold these views consciously and with

conviction, but find that in the eyes of the govern-

ment they are stupid, dangerous, un American—whatever the hell that may be—and to be despised
for not agreeing with the great minds of Washington.
1 am quite sure that LBJ's reaction to Eartha
Kitt had very little to do with recognizing that
she was making a valid point. If you do not agree
with him it is automatically invalid. He, like the
good rector of whatever church it is that blesses
Lyndon and his good works every Sunday, found
it far more important that a possible breach of
etiquette had occurcd, or so 1 would guess. Communication apparently is as dangerous as communism—you can sec how similar they are when
they are written out , can't you?r—and therefore
to be stamped out.
Enough of this. The cycle is endless and it
appears rather doubtful that Nixon or Wallace
would dc any better Besides I am going camping
next summer, so I shouldn’t be in any target areas.
Happy fourth of July everybody.
Of lighter weight is the fact that clan Steese
has a new addition. A sweet lovable six month
old St. Bernard puppy named Jennifer. Which is
a misnomer. A St. Bernard is a dog by the time
it is three months old, it just keeps getting more
doggy. It is my dog, or so my wife keeps insisting,
especially when she barfs on the living room rug.
Funny thing. First night she (Jennifer, not Ww)
was in the house my wife invited my dog to sleep
on our bed. I do not really sec why we blew money
on a king sized bed a while back. Half of it is
now occupied by a very comfortable St. Bernard, a
quarter of it by my wife, and an eighth by the five
cats. I leave it to you math majors to figure out
where 1 am supposed to be Besides on the couch
that is. More next week if Jennifer doesn’t get
hungry in the middle of the night.

��Page Six

Friday, January 26, 1968

The Spectrum

Teachers

are

draft counselors

Law-makers attack
anti-war organization
The Teachers Draft Counseling Committee of the State

Faulkner cites moral responsibility
as argument for opposition to draft
In a 'letter addressed to his local draft board, State wholesale slaughter of hundreds
of Vietnamese, any
University of Buffalo student Larry Faulkner denied his
board’s
*.iy lenow young Amerrr—
.
o
•e - rrHe. returned his 0Selective Service
jcans to die eight thousand miles
registration card through the offices of the Buffalo Draft from home . . . The Selective
Service System provides the solBoard Oct. 18, and was reclassified 1-A Oct. 24.
J

*

legisl lators

The committee, composed of faculty members, gives
advice to Albany students on how to avoid the draft within
a legal framework.
State Assemblyman Neil W.
Kelleber said last week that the
committee’s activities are being
carried out in the “gray area of
civil disobedience,” and that the
committee should not be allowed
to use public facilities.
More recently. Assemblyman
Edwyn E. Mason of Hobart suggested that faculty members serving on the committee be fired.
In a telegram to Assemblyman
Kelleher, Mr. Mason said: “Such
a cancer in our state institution
of higher learning should be cut
out
“Such individuals are manifestly disloyal and are unfit and unsafe to teach or counsel our
young people and should be removed from their positions without delay. Their actions are a
discredit to the people of the
state who are paying their salaries.”

He feels that only a “dangerous lack of leadership in our
State University” would allow the
committee to continue.

No action
However, State University of
Albany President Evan R. Collins
has said that the University

“We depend on faculty members and their sense of professional ethics not to abuse their
relationships with students,”
Prof. Collins said. “And we depend on the intelligence and
judgment of students to seek responsible advice
to balance all
points of view
before making
an important decision.”

The letter attempts to justify
his “moral and legal responsibility not to participate in the
armed forces. By refusing to
serve, a growing number of
young men have demonstrated
their belief in world law and humanity,” he wrote, “and I am
proud to be among these fine
Americans.”
Mr. Faulkner cited numerous
precedents for non-participation
in the Vietnam conflict, among
them the Charter and Journal of
the Nuremberg Tribunal that
stated that membership in a
“criminal” organization makes
one liable for punishment.

This reply did not satisfy Assemblyman Kelleher.
“President Collins bases part
of his action, or should I say
inaction, on the hope that ihe
committee will maintain its sense
of professional ethics. Committee
members have already said they
are opposed to the war in Vietnam and will not hide the fact
from the students. Then they is-

of international crimes established by the Nuremberg Tribunal: Crimes Against Peace, War
Crimes, and Crimes Against Humanity
My action in returning my registration card is not
‘delinquency’ but rather my obligation under Nuremberg not to
participate in a ‘criminal’ organization,” he wrote.

would take no action against the
Teachers Committee. He has also
assured Mr. Kelleher that the
University does not provide headquarters for the group.

—

—

sue the hope that they can remain objective,” Mr. Kelleher

stated.

“It seems to me,” he said,
“that there’s an awful lot of hoping going on up there at Albany
State.”

WORSHIP

Mid-Winter

(Protestant)
For Students, By Students
Sponsored by the

LUTHERAN MINISTRY
TO THE UNIVERSITY
SUNDAY AFTERNOONS, 4:00

Calvary Lutheran
Church
4110 North Bailey

(Four Blocks from Campus)

WINTER SPORTSWEAR
&lt; tji

m m

2(h

to

50r»

Poise'n Ivy
Daily

Thfe Southeast Asia Collec-

tive Defense Treaty (SEATO).
The war is unconstitutional,
according to Mr. Faukner, because a declaration of war has
never been announced by Congress.

diers to fight an illegal and immoral war. . .”

Support statements
Copies of statements of support were attached to the letter
from;

The Executive Council of
the Graduate Student Association, State University of New
York at Buffalo.
The Student Government,
State University of Buffalo.
Six hundred signatures of
State University of Buffalo—Students, Faculty and Administra•

letter, he stated
. If
“. .
the war in Vietnam is
illegal, and one's participation in
the armed forces is termed illegal by Nuremberg, what am I
to do? I really have no choice
. .
. I cannot be
‘available for
military service’ in an illegal,
unjust, and immoral war. I will
not, and cannot take part in the
Ending the

•

•

tors.
•

Dr. Benjamin Spock.

“American actions in Vietnam
are crimes under the three sets

...

Actions violate treaties
He further stated that our actions in Southeast Asia are in
violation of the following treaties,
agreements, or assurances:

The Kellogg-Briand Pact.
The Charter of the United
Nations.
The Nuremberg Judgment.
The Geneva Convention of
1949, which prohibited torture of
prisoners of war. He cited eyewitness reports of torture of Viet
Cong prisoners by Americans un•

•

•

SALE

ALL

•

..

•

der orders, as reported in Amer-

ican publications.
The Geneva Convention of
1954, and
•

1086 ELMWOOD AVE.
'til 5 30, Thurs. 'til 9 00

PRO-INDUSTRIES

Faulkner

—

Chemical Division

...

MIUHSPMT

.f MAPLE

UdikS draft

Graduate student Larry Faulkner
has written a letter to his draft

board, refuting their claim that
he is a "delinquentFaulkner
was classified I-A after he
turned in his draft card Oct. 24.

(Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company)

ON CAMPUS

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1968
TO INTERVIEW:
Chemical Engineers
Mechanical Engineers
Electrical Engineers
Industrial Engineers
Civil Engineers

Chemists
POSITIONS AVAILABLE IN;
Production; Development; Engineering Design;

Construction; Research; Sales; Technical and
General Management.
LOCATIONS:
Texas, Ohio, Louisiana, West Virginia and

Pennsylvania
BROCHURES ON FILE AT PLACEMENT OFFICE
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

Some years ago, the
Student Senate introduced

recommending
that the only liquid refreshment

a resolution

on campus be Genesee Beer.

The students have been
putting it down ever since.

�Friday. January

M,

rlil 9mm

Th# Spectrum

!**•

The campus left opens
reading room in Norton

some thin

The Resistance have opened an
office in Room 359 Norton Hall.
Literature is being put on display there, from these organiza
tions as well as from SUNYAB

just can't

LEMAR and Buffalo SNCC, and
a reading room will be set up.
Literature
also includes exchanges from other groups and
publications from the underground press, and will include

be learned

boo k s

Ronnie

in class

.

.

Bromberg, a spokesman

reading room will become an al
ternative source of information
for those who arc fed up with the

existence

of the

truly democratic society and will
be a communications center with
other city peace groups.”
The table on the first floor of
Norton Hall will be
Contributions to the library and
all visitors are welcome.

Action line

.

establishment

and its mass media. The office
will operate as a source of ac
lion for those interested in a

.

.

.

831-5000

like journalism

University of Buffalo
Do you often think it impossible to untangle the Slate
bureaucracy ? fn cooperation with the Dean of Students Office. The Soertrvm is
Through ACTION LINE, individual students ran get
sponsoring an ACTION LINE
and why University derisions
an answer to a puzzling question, find out where
are made, and get ACTION when change is indicated.
appear to
will answer all questions of general interest which
in
its
be pertinent to the student body. The Spectrum will include them
investigated and
ACTION LINE weekly column. Each inquiry will be thoroughly
inquiry will
originating
the
individual
individually
The
of
the
name
answered
not be published.

ACTION LINE

Writing is something you learn by experience. English
writing techniques, but
professors can preach to you all day about proper
you will never
style
a
unless you do it yourself, you will never develop
write well

We carl give you that experience.

And we can give you more

students
The Spectrum offers you a chance to serve your fellow
community.
while becoming an integral part of the University

want to
If you are planning a career in journalism; if you
STAFF
THE
who
do—JOIN
make things happen, or want to know the people
OF THE SPECTRUM.
There are openings on the following staffs:

CAMPUS NEWS
CITY NEWS
FEATURE
SPORTS
PHOTOGRAPHY

Q. Is anything being done to alleviate the madness of registration?
A. The University, via the Student Academic Registration Admin
istralion (SARA) project, is working on a system for remote terminal
registration. The system is in the planning stages and when imple
mented will expedite the registration process.
of eighteen
The SARA Task Force Committee is composed
members that arc meeting weekly. The committee members represent the offices of Data Processing, Admissions and Records, Millard
Fillmore College, Summer Sessions, Student Personnel Services.
Bursar Facilities Planning, Instructional Services, Graduate Student
Association, Student Senate, and Millard Fillmore Student Association.
The Task Force will submit the general design of the new ter
Community
minal registration system for approval to the University
sometime during March, 1968.
again this coming
Q. Will the Speed reading course be available
semester?
A. Yes! A non credit course in Speeded Reading Comprehension
all registered
will begin the week of January 29th and is open to
students. There is no charge for this course but regular attendance
is required to maintain the individual’s enrollment. There will be
Tuesday,
six different classes held each week, available on Monday,
from 12 pjn.
again
p.m.
to
and
11
12
from
a
m.
Thursday,
and
to 1 p.m.
and anyone
This course is under University College auspices
interested in attending should register for such at the Information
Desk in University College, Diefendorf Hall. Further information
regarding the course can be secured by calling 831-3631.

Q, At the Information Desk in Norton Hall there is a box with
in it entitled "Operation Unidentified Variable." What Is it?

a slot

by a
A. This is a computer dating questionnaire designed
as an aid
member of the Arnold Air Society. Originally developed
all inter
for their Military Ball, it has now been made available to
according to Mr. Richard
ested State University of Buffalo students,
Society. Questionnaires can
J. Payne, president of the Arnold Air
There is no charge or
Desk.
at
the
Information
picked
up
be
questionnaire.
the
completing
obligation in

LAYOUT
COPY
MAGAZINE
ADVERTISING
PROMOTION
CIRCULATION

and for direct service, call ACTION LINE.
For specific answers to your questions
It yea pm.
Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, front 4 5 p.m
811 5000
ever*
it to ACTION TINT
and
address
ph
Uhrary.
201
Mammon
Students,
the Dean of
355 Norton Hall, or the Office of

question J'wri.in,

freshmen, transfer students and others
We will hold meetings for all
interested in joining the staff. They are scheduled for:

°r

3 P.M. Sunday and 8 P.M. Tuesday
NORTON HALL, ROOM 355

The Spectrum

f

\

©

s

%

49

c

Re*. Me

"The only full coverage student newspaper on the Niagara Frontier”

Room

355—Norton Hall

Purchase of JUMBO Y

our

5" man-sized Burger

Offer Good—Friday, Jen. 24th thru Tuesday, Jen. MHi

831-2210
UNO

•

3010 MAIN STREET

■HOY

XRVlCl

South of Cayoi

�Friday, January 26, 1968

The Spectrum

Page Eight

A n analysis of the Stony Brook drug raid

On Campus MaxShuIman

198 police break campus calm
knew that G Lounge was the place to go

by Daniel Lasser

STONY BKOOK, N Y.—One’s first impression of
the State University of New York at Stony Brook
is mud—many modern but monotonous buildings
wallowing in a sea of mud.
The school is a comparatively small one; built
in 1962, it has an enrollment of slightly under 5,000.
Most students are residents on the Long Island
campus; of these, most come from the New York
City area. Despite its tender age, the University has
already attracted nationwide attention,
A recent story in Time magazine applauded its
faculty as one studded with “lustrous stars,” including physicist C. N. Yang, biologist H. Bentley Glass,
and literary critic Alfred Kazin.

A growing campus
Stony Brook should gain more prestige in time.
Like most members of the State University of New
York chain, it is in a constant state of rebuilding
and expansion—enrollment figures are expected to
more than triple by 1975.
Presently everything is in a temporary state. Student activities are buried all over the campus. The
newspaper office is in a dormitory bomb shelter.
President John Toll’s temporary office reportedly
lacks a ceiling. And the whole campus is covered
with mud. Bulldozers and construction workers.
Typical of a State University today.
Stony Brook unexpectedly gained extra national
attention last week as 198 Suffolk County policemen
in 72 cars swooped down on the campus at five
o’clock in the morning armed with search warrants,
pass keys and floor plans to the dormitories. By the
time the day was over, they had arrested 33 of 38
persons named in secret indictments handed down
the previous day, all on various narcotics charges.
They were accompanied in their pre dawn raid by
newsmen and photographers, who took pictures of
the arrests. Many of those arrested were pulled
out of bed. Some were awake, studying; Stony Brook
was in the middle of its first semester exams. One
student had handcuffs slapped on him while he
was in the process of taking a final in French.

Administration uninformed

(By the author

if you

'

What is particularly disturbing about the Stony
Brook busts is the manner in which they were conducted. The police kept administration officials completely in the dark ignoring an unofficial understanding that officials would be notified before law
enforcement agents came onto the campus. The
raids were so secret that the police themselves were
not briefed until they had arrived on the campus
that Wednesday morning. It was a spectacular raid,
with Police Chief Barry starring as James Bond.
The police swooped down, grabbed their victims,
and left as quietly as they had come, leaving the
administration dazed and walking in the dark, wondering just what had happened.
The police could have informed University officials of the indictments; the administration, as
public officials, then would be forced to assist the
police in making arrests in a sane and orderly manner. That was the unofficial understanding that had
existed at Stony Brook; it’s the same policy that
exists here at Buffalo. The understanding had worked once in the past: last year during an SDS rally on
Pearl Harbor Day, a campus policeman started to
take down the American flag as it had started to
drizzle.
Construction workers thought the students were
tearing down the flag, and the University called
the police to the campus to break up the fights
that broke out.
Serious reaction possible
The spectacular play by the police at Stony Brook
may have very serious repercussions throughout the
state. Politicians are now calling for full-scale investigations. Police Chief Barry’s distrust of President
Toll may spread across the system. The public is
beginning to wonder .about the State University,
and many new programs, expansion plans and experimental projects may fall under the politician’s
chopping-block. Drugs are

a problem on

Spectrum staff drained; new blood needed
p.m. and Tuesday at 8 p.m. in
The Spectrum office, Room 355

He said that new persons are
needed in almost all phases of
newspaper production, “includ
ing copy, layout and reporting.”

Norton Hall.

Richman, promotion
circulation director, is in
charge of recruitment.
Murray

and

“1 am very much concerned
with our staff shortages,” he
said. “Not only is the general
staff seriously depleted, but there
are vacant positions on the editorial board.”
Meetings for person interested
in joining The Spectrum staff
are scheduled for Sunday at 3

reporting job.”

as you can imagine.)
But I digress. How can we remember to write 1968 on
our papers and letters ? Well sir, the best way is to find
something memorable about 1968, something unique to fix
it firmly in your mind. Happily, this is very simple because, as we all know, 1968 is the first year in history that
is divisible by 2, by 5, and by 7. Take a pencil and try it:
1968 divided by 2 is 984; 1968 divided by 5 is 393%; 1968
divided by 7 is 281W. This mathematical curiosity will not
occur again until the year 2079, but we will all be so busy
then celebrating the Chester A. Arthur bi-centenerary
that we will scarcely have time to be writing papers and

letters and like that.

every

in the country. It would be too bad if one
police commissioner’s play for publicity would disrupt a whole University system.
There is one more disturbing aspect. There have
been many calls recently in the Buffalo area for
investigations into the use of drugs on this campus.
Some publicity has been true; some has been blown
way out of proportion. Ever since the clandestine
raid at Stony Brook, there has been increased pressure on law enforcement agencies. The avenues for
a working relationship between police and University officials at Stony Brook once existed. Such avenues can work. One hopes that respect for university officials, faculty and students can exist on
other campuses across the state.

a variety of drugs: Marijuana, hashish, mescaline, LSD, opium, and amphetamines. Most of those arrested were well-known
drug suppliers for the campus. And they had practically asked to be busted.
They weren’t surprised when Suffolk County
that
Police Commissioner John L. Barry announced
he had had undercover agents posing as “drop in
hippies” for the past three months; one of the
hippies’’ they had sold drugs to was commonly referred to as “John the Fed.” They had been blatant
about their use of drugs. Everyone on the campus

"We have lost a good percentage of our general staff due to
academic pressures and the drain
of other activities,” said Man
aging Editor Richard Haynes.
"Right now we could use at least
a dozen good people to bring the
staff to the full complement necessary to do a really effective

Are you still writing“1967”on your papers and letters?
I’ll bet you are, you scamp! But I am not one to be harsh
with those who forgot we are in a new year, for I myself
have long been guilty of the same lapse. In fact, in my
senior year at college, I wrote 1873 on my papers until
nearly November of 1874! (It turned out, incidentally,
not to be such a serious error because, as we all know, 1874
was later repealed by President Chester A. Arthur in a fit
of pique over the Black Tom Explosion. And, as we all
know, Mr. Arthur later came to regret his hasty action.
Who does not recall that famous meeting between Mr.
Arthur and Louis Napoleon when Mr. Arthur said, “Lou,
I wish I hadn’t of repealed 1874!’ Whereupon the French
emperor made his immortal rejoinder, “Tipi que nous et
tyler tu". Well sir, they had many a good laugh about that,

campus

Raid expected
The police confiscated

The Spectrum is launching a
campaign to gain new staff personnel for the spring semester.

The one in the middle will
holt
You

Another clever little trick to fix the year 1968 in your
mind is to remember that 1968 spelled backwards is 8691.
“Year” spelled backwards is “raey” “Personna” spelled
backwards is “Annosrep” I mention Personna because I
am paid to write this column by the makers of Personna
Super Stainless Steel Blades, and they are inclined to
withhold my check if I omit to mention their product.
Not, mind you, that it is any chore for me to sing the
praises of Personna, for it is p seemly blade that shaves
you cleanly, a gleaming blade that leaves you beaming, a
trouble-free blade that leaves you stubble-free, a matchless blade that leaves you scratchless. If you are tired of
facial slump, if you are fed up with jowl blight, try
Personna today... available both in double-edge style and
Injector style. And if I seem a bit excessive in my admiration for Personna, I ask you to remember that to me
Personna is more than a razor blade; it is also an employer.
But I digress. We were speaking of the memorable aspects of 1968 and high among them, of course, is the fact
that in 1968 the entire House of Representatives st; nds
for election. There will, no doubt, be many lively and interesting contests, but none, I’ll wager, quite so lively and
interesting as the one in my own district where the leading candidate is none other than Chester A. Arthur!
Mr, Arthur, incidentally, is not the first ex-president to
come out of retirement and run for the House of Representatives. John Quincy Adams was the first. Mr. Adams
also holds another distinction: he was the first son of a
president ever to serve as president. It is true that Martin
Van Buren’s son, Walter “Blinky” Van Buren, was at one
time offered the nomination for the presidency, but he,
alas, had already accepted a bid to become Mad Ludwig
of Bavaria. James K. Polk’s son, on the other hand, became Salmon P. Chase. Millard Fillmore’s son went into
aluminum siding. This later became known as the Missouri Compromise.
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�Friday, January 24, 1968

The Spectrum

Pag* Nine

Experiment in media theater
The Emperor' not quite convincing; brings Ubu Roi'to Haas Lounge

Review: Studio Aren

A

Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

Did you know that the true human identity is best defined by play acting? Or that in real life a man’s mask can
become his true face?
In an attempt to demonstrate these aphorisms, the Studio Arena is presenting “The Emperor,” Luigi Pirandello’s
most moving and effective drama.
But the attempt does not quite
succeed. Director Stephen Porter,
famed for his successes with New
York’s A.P.A. Repertory Co., has
allowed the action to drag and
the suspense to linger. It takes
much too long to explain the
circumstances of the plot, and
even then they are not clear.
Once we get past this groundwork, the pace picks up gradually and the story becomes slightly clearer.

Stefan Gierasch convincing

believed that he was the character of Henry IV, After 12 years
of living medieval style as the
Emperor of Germany, Henry begins to regain his senses. Realizing who he is
a kind of modern Rip van Winkle
he refuses to return to the reality of
a life which has deprived him
of his youth.
So Henry decides to continue
his guise and live a dialectical
existence in the ubiquitous Pirandellian belief that life is just
one masquerade after another

sent in rather small quantities.
Whatever is there, however, may

his

Emotion and tension are pre-

be attributed to Stefan Gierasch,
whose acting ability almost carries the play. It is his scenes
which are most convincing, the
others seem artificial; and this
is unfortunate in a play where

reality is the subject at hand.

“Enrico IV,” which becomes
“The Emperor” in the Eric Bentley translation, is another of
Pirandello’s many dramatizations
of his most curious philosophy.

A refusal of reality
Once upon a time there was an
elaborate pageant during which
an Italian nobleman, dressed as
the German Emperor Henry IV,
was thrown from his horse and
landed on his head. Rest assured
no one lived happily, because
ever after this nobleman truly

—

—

anyway.

Twenty years have passed and

former

mistress,

Matilda

(Betty Leighton), and company
determine to “cure” Henry and
make him understand his true
identity (which he already
knows). They have engaged the
services of a bungling, incom-

petent psychiatrist, whose pompous and irresponsible grandiloquence makes him a subject of
Pirandello’s ridicule.

Change of head
Realizing the aims of his former friends, Henry reveals to
his four servants, in a very humorous and entertaining scene,
that he is aware of his identity.
Mr. Gierasch could have conveyed a bit more bitterness and
anger toward a life of illusions

which had stolen the 20 years of
his youth.

Meanwhile the amateur psychiatrists have arranged a bit of
shock' treatment for Henry which
upsets his somewhat confused
mind and causes him to murder
Matilda’s present boyfriend, Belcredi (John Devlin).
Pirandello wishes the viewer to
remain uncertain about Henry's
state of mind at the end of the
play. Is he really not mad as
Belcredi repeatedly cries, and
merely feigning madness when it
suits him? Or has our psychiatrists' foolish trick forced Henry
back to the true madness of
those 12 years again to become
the Emperor?

preview reading of

“Ubu

sented in the Haas Lounge Feb.
2, at 8 p.m.

The play, directed by Henry
A. Wicke Jr,, of the Music Department, will be presented in
March as part of the Buffalo
Festival of the Arts.

The play will be presented as
a significant experiment in total

mixed media environmental theater, The preview reading of the
script will act as the Toot
source” for this production, as
well as serving as a means of
affording the audience an opportunity to begin getting involved

with

the

unique

performance

■'Ubu Roi" was first produced
in 1896. With the utterance of

its opening words, a riot ensued
which was reminiscent of the
chaos during Victor Hugo's pre-

miere of "Ruy

Bias" in

1830.

Mallarmc, Yeats, Copeau, Henri
Rouseau, Edmon Rostand and
Sarcey were among those present.

In many ways, “Ubu Roi" is
the grand-daddy of the contemporary avant-garde today, particu
larly Ionesco. Jarry’s influences
were sufficient for Antonin Ar
taud and Roger Vilrac to form
the Theater Alfred Jarry in
1927.

Maybe the mask can become

the face.

Who is insane?
Pirandello is saying that there
is no absolute truth, no absolute
truth, no absolute human iden
tity. What is true for you is true,
but not necessarily for me. A
man has many identities and
masks, each of them as true as
the other.
The obsession with the mystery of reality, identity and madness is not unusual in the light
of Pirandello’s personal life. His

wife was insane and believed her
husband to be a madman. He
would often ponder whether his
true identity was that of the
honest man he thought he was
or the madman his wife perceived.
Pirandello’s play is a statement of sympathy for a mankind which through deception
does not face the illusions of
life, while Henry does. Hence
his statement at the end. “The
pity is with you who . . . continue to endure the madness
that is yours.”

World famous Polish pianist
to appear at Kleinhans Hall
Witold Malcuzynski, the great
Polish-born pianist who now resides in Switzerland, will perform with the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra Feb, 4 at 2:30
p.m. and Feb. 6 at 8:30 p.m. at
Kleinhans Music Hall.
Witold Malcuzynski is indeed a
ubiquitous “citizen of the world”
as verified by his activities in recent seasons. Recital and orchestral engagements in Switzerland
and Belgium in the fall of 1964
were followed by his second tour

of Russia in November and December of that year. Soviet acclaim was such that he was immediately invited to return for
a series of 12 concerts. In Leningrad he was heard with the city’s

famed Philharmonic as well as
in recitals, and his return to Moscow included a performance in
the great Tschaikovsky
Hall.
WitolcT Malcuzynski has also
toured widely in France, Spain.
Switzerland, his native Poland,
South America and the Far East

1965 he served as a juror
the celebrated Marguerite
Long Piano Competition in Paris
and made his 12th lour of South
America in the spring of 1966
In

al

He has selected Chopin's Piano
Concerto No. 2 for his Buffalo

appearance. Ronald Stoffcl will
conduct the Buffalo Philharmonic
Orchestra for this event.

Entertainment Calendar
Friday, Jan. 26:
“Help!,” Beatles,
Theater,

RECITAL: Prof Seymour Fink
Conf

MOVIE:

“Billy Liar” and “A
Dream of Wild Horses,” Circle Art, 2 and 4 p.m. through
Jan, 29.
MOVIE: “Conscience of a Child”
and “Children Growing Up
With Other People," Dief. 303,
4 p.m.
MOVIE: "Far From The Madding
Crowd,” Julie Christie, Alan
Bates, Century Theater.

MOVIE:

PLAY: “The Emperor,” Studio
Arena, 8:30 p.m. through Feb.

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Saturday, Jan. 27:
PLAY: “Brecht on Brecht,” Stu
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also Jan. 28, Feb, 2, 3, 4,

Monday, Jan. 29

PLAY: “You Know I Can’t Hear
You When The Water's Run
ning," O’Keefe Center, Toron
to, 8:30 p.m. through Feb. 10.
CONCERT: "The Chigiano String
Sextet,” Baird, 8:30 p.m.
Wednesday, Jan. 31;
MOVIE: “The War Game” and
“Chicamauga,” Circle Art, 2
and 4 p.m. through Feb. 5.

RECITAL: Creative Associates VI
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Feb. I

MOVIE: Collection of Films star
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Conference .Theater.

Friday, Feb. 2:

MOVIE: “On The Difference Be
tween Words and Things" and
“Just What Is General Sematics,” Dief. 303, 4 p.m.
BALLET: American Ballet Thea

ter, Kleinhans, 8:30 p.m., also
Feb. 3.
CONCERT: Marcel Marceau. Naz
areth College Arts Center
Rochester, 8:15 p.m.
READING:
“Ubu Roi," Haas
Ixmngc, 8 p.m.
Saturday, Feb. 3

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�Page Ten

The Spectrum

Friday, January 26, 1968

Students for McCarthy form;
meeting scheduled Monday
“The discontent and frustration

over the present policies concerning the urban ghettos, the ecoVictnai
War are obvious. Sen. Eugene
McCarthy offers a legitimate poli-

tical alternative for the nation

and his solutions should be ex-

amined.

We intend to do this.”

The “we” in this case refers to
the Students for McCarthy, a newly formed group on campus. The
group will hold an organizational
meeting at 4 p.m. Monday in
Room 246 Norton Hall.
Mr. Jeffrey Lynford will chair
the meeting and introduce the
main speaker.

The agenda for the meeting includes the setting up of an organizational procedure, the election of a steering committee composed of faculty and students, and
the discussion of fund raising and
petition signing techniques.
Scheduled to speak at the meeting is Richard Lipsitz, a wellknown Buffalo lawyer who is the
New York State Co-Chairman of
the Coalition for Democratic Alternative. He will discuss state

wide strategy to be used for electing proMcCarthy delgates to the
Democratic national convention
and also the latest developments
in the selection of a Democratic
candidate to oppose Sen. Jacob
Javits.
The role of students in these
two areas will also be explored at
the meeting.
Mr. Lynford explained that
there has been widespread faculty interest in the new organization. Faculty members who have
expressed interest include Dr. Harold Segal, Biology Dept.; Bruce
Jackson, English Dept.; Edward
Katkin, Psychology Dept.; Dr.
Georg Igger?, History Dept., and
Dr. William Edwards, Philosophy
Dept.
A major focus of the organiza-

tion

Time
poll.

will be turned toward the
magazine April student
Mr.

Lynford

explained:

“Time will poll five million college students on their choice for
President. This McCarthy group
will actively campaign for the
senator and will work for widespread support for McCarthy at
polling time.”

Bookstore pilfering is problem
Shoplifting at the

University

Bookstore is definitely a problem
according to General Manager
George P. Bielan although the
State University of Buffalo does
not “have the problem they have
at other university bookstores.”
With pilferage estimated at 1%

of gross sales, the bookstore incurred a substantial operating deficit last year. The 1% figure
compares favorably with estimates of three to ten per cent
at other business establishments.
All deficits must be passed on

to the student body in the form
of higher prices or lower discounts, stated Mr. Bielan. Thus,
he claimed, any pilferage is equal
to stealing from other students.
Mr, Bielan noted that the bookstore’s efforts are directed at
the prevention of the act of pil-

ferage rather than apprehension
afterwards. “We can take steps
to discourage it, as we’ve hired
additional personnel’’ who act in
both clerical and security roles.
“The more people we have in
the store, the greater chance to
reduce pilferage,” he observed.
This and other measures are
expected to reduce the deficit
for the coming year, explained
the bookstore

manager.

Once apprehended for shoplifting, a person is turned over
to the Dean of Students and the
student judiciary, where he faces

Five finger discount
Profits are sometimes pocketed
by University

Bookstore

patrons

disciplinary action which may include fines or expulsion, Mr,

Bielan noted.
Price and discount policy is set
each September to keep the bookstore as close as possible to the
break-even point. Thus, any
operating deficits result in higher

prices for students.

ABOUT MIKE
Why The

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Is The Official
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Herman's Hermits
On Tour
Herman knows his

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hear Ins voice and the lyr
ics. naturally, without
howling feedback, without
ip”, without audience

Pretty toug

group

Shure Brothers, Inc
222 Hartrey Ave.
Evanston, III. 60204

If you don't agree that
business destroys Individuality,
maybe it's because you're an 1
individual.
There’s certain campus talk that claims vide things Bell telephone companies need.
individuality is dead in the business world. Because communications arc changing fast,
That big business is a big brother destroy- these needs are great and diverse;
ing initiative.
Being involved with a system that helps
But freedom of thought and action, when keep people in touch, lets doctors send carbacked with reason and conviction’s cour- diograms across country for quick analysis,
age, will keep and nurture individuality helps transmit news instantly, is demandwhatever the scene: in the arts, the sciences, ing. Demanding of individuals.
and in business.
If your ambition is strong and your abiliScoffers to the contrary, the red corpusties commensurate, you’ll never be truly
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Encouraging individuality rather than ways to change it and—wonderful feeling!—
suppressing it is policy in a business like some of them will work.
Western Electric—where we make and proCould be at Western Electric

(m) Western Electric

MANUFACTURING &amp; SUPPO UNIT Of THE BELL SYSTEM

�Friday, January 26, 1968

The Spectrum

Eleven

P*ga

Friends Service Committee notes CO increase
Special to the Spectrum

per cent of these contacts were

There has been a substantial increase in the past three about conscientious objection.
months in the number of draft-age young men inquiring However, the figures from Sepabout conscientious objection, according to the American tember, October, and November
1967 show that the number of
Friends Service Committee.
■
lave j
The Committee, which maintains a nation-wide program about 70 per month. u m p e 5
of draft counseling, has received 27 per cent more inquiries
Mr. Bird explained that his
during September, October and November 1967 over the staffs major activities were answering questions about CO posimonthly average for the preceding year.
,

“The question is often asked
whether the increase in COs is
just a reflection of the larger
number of men of draft age, or
whether it reveals more than a

proportional growth,” commented

Robert Bird, director of the CO
Services program in the national
office of the AFSC.
“According to statistics supplied by Selective Service, the
number of COs has increased in
proportion to the number of men
in military service,” Mr. Bird continued. “In September 1963, there
was one CO doing alternative
service for every 778 men in the
armed forces. As

of November

1967, the ratio stands at one for
every 422.”

War causes increase
In response to the growing
number of inquiries from COs,
the AFSC established a draft
counseling program in 1965 with
a part time staff, Mr, Bird revealed. Since then the staff has
more than doubled. He attributes

the steady increase to the Vietnam War.
From September 1966 to August 1967, a total of 660 people
contacted the national office for
the first time, requesting draft
information, an average of 55
new contacts per month. Eighty

young men seeking draft information is apparent in all of the
AFSC regional offices. For example, the Des Moines regional
office handles four times as many

requests now as they did CT
months ago. In addition the Des
Moines office has helped set up
draft counseling services in five
mid-western cities.
The New York office reported

tions and procedures and helping
COs find acceptable alternative an average of 35 new inquiries a
service, while the rest of the time month about conscientious objec
is spent helping young men intion from October 1966 through
terpret other aspects of the draft August 1967, with an increase in
law, such as deferments and legal the latter months. Since August,
the average per month has
procedures.
The AFSC is the largest single jumped to 58.
In the beginning of 1967, antiorganization in the United States
dealing with draft counseling, and cipating a growing number of rehas regional offices throughout quests for draft information, the
the country involved in this ac- staff in New York began traintivity. Regional offices and the ing draft counselors who have in
turn taken quite a load off the
national office have lists of counselors affiliated with the AFSC or New York office. By February,
the first four volunteer counseother organizations, and refer inlors began work. In addition sesquiries to local counselors scattered throughout the country.
aons have been held at the request of individuals and organi
Requests nationwide
resulting in the training
The increase in the number of zations

of seven college students, 11 social workers, and four clergymen.
The training program in New
York is just one example of how
the national office, and the other

are meeting t
more draft counselors

regions

le

ncei

As a direct result of the increase of COs, the AFSC has
made available more positions
within the organization for alternative duty assignments. In
March 1967, the Service Committee announced a Youth Service
Opportunities Program to provide
one or two years of service
work for young people. This program is designed for youths ranging from about 18 to 23 years of
agg, Many of the applicants- are
conscientious objectors. The
AFSC has several other programs
through which COs may fulfill
their alternative service assign
meats.

Founded in 1917
The AFSC has a history of helping those opposed to war. The organization was founded in 1917
to provide young conscientious
objectors to World War I with
an opportunity to perform alternative service. During world
War II, it cooperated with other
peace organizations in operating
a civilian public service program
for COs. In addition to CO Scrv
ices, the AFSC has a Peace Education Division, whose current
aim is to end the war in Vietnam.

In keeping with its tradition of
aiding the civilian victims of war,
the AFSC is currently running a
Jay-care center and prosthetics
and rehabilitation clinic in South
Vietnam.

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He'll be on campus in a couple of
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�Page

Twelve

Friday, January 26, 1968

The Spectrum

campus releases.••
The Department of Occupational Therapy is sponsoring a series
of films to be shown weekly during the spring semester, from 4 to 5
p.m. every Friday in Room 303 Diefendorf Hall.
Jan. 26, two films on Pediatrics, “Conscience of a Child,” and
“Children Growing Up With Other People,” will be shown.
Films bn writing and grammar, “On the Difference Between
Words and Things” and “Just What Is General Semantics (Talking
Sense),”, will be shown Feb. 2.
Feb. 9, films on Psychological Science, “No Two Alike” and
“Chemistry of Behavior,” will be shown.
These noncredit films are shown by thp School of Health Related
Professions as a supplement to, health knowledge.
The final date for signing waivers and/or election cards for
standard student medical insurance is Feb. 3. The plan, which covers
all full time undergraduate students (day and MFC) may be waived
only by showing proof of equivalent coverage and signing a waiver
in the Bursar’s office.
Those who do not sign a waiver or who cannot show proof
of equivalent coverage will be automatically billed ($18.50) for this
insurance.
Any graduate and hart-time student wishing to be covered by
the insurance plan must sign an election card at the Bursar’s
office. Professional students who elected insurance coverage for
the first semester will automatically be charged for spring semester
coverage.

For further information stop at the Bursar’s office or call 831
4731.

The (JUAB Publication Committee announces that the semester’s
calendar will be available in the Bookstore Monday. The new calendar will be smaller and more personal sized than previous calendars,
measuring 6V2 by 8% inches.

official bulletin
The Official Bulletin is an authorized publication of the State

University of New York at Buffor

le Spectrum as-

wl

sumes no editorial responsibility.
Notices should be sent in TYPE-

WRITTEN form to 114 Hayes
Hall, attention Mrs. Fischer, before 2:00 p.m. the Friday prior
to the week of publication. Student organization notices are not
accepted for publication.

General notices

University College is once
again offering Mrs. Nichols’
course in SPEEDED READING
COMPREHENSION. This will be
a non-credit course, meeting oncea-week for 12 weeks. No cutting
of classes is allowed during the
first 7 weeks. Classes will be
limited in size and interested
students are urged to sign up
early to be sure of having a
place. Sign up now with either
Kathy Junik or Pat Wojcik, receptionists, in 114 Diefendorf
lounge.

The course starts on Monday,
Jan. 29, 1968
the choice of
periods is as follows:
-

The American Israeli Club will hold an organizational meeting
at 9 p.m. Sunday. All persons interested in the planning of the
club’s activities are requested to attend.
The Club will also show slides from recent trips to Israel
at 8 p.m., Feb. 4.
Both meetings will be held in Hoorn 335 Norton Hal|. Coffee
and doughnuts are planned.

Monday
11 a.m.
12 noon or
12 noon 1 p.m.
a.m,

-

-

Placement announcements
All students interests in summer and part-time employment
should register now with the
University Placement &amp; Career
Guidance Service, B-Schoellkopf
Hall.
Part-time jobs are available for
students ranging from general
labor to highly skilled positions
which also vary as to hours
worked, hourly rate paid and location (whether on campus or
off campus). In addition, the
number of summer positions
any
available increases daily
students interested in summer
camp jobs should register as
soon as possible.
—

Placement interviews
Please call 831-3311 to make
and obtain additional information concerning the
appointments
following:

January 29
Byron-Bergen Central Schools
Falconer Central Schools
Canandaigua Central School

Insurance Co.
Globe Woven Belting Co.
(Albany Felt Co.)
Connecticut Mutual Life

12 noon or
1 p.m.
-

Insurance Co.
National Jewish Welfare Board
Connecticut State Highway

_

Department
Iroquois Central Schools
Frontier Central Schools
January 31
Hammermill Paper Mill
State of New York
Department of Health
Hughes Aircraft Co.
Power Authority of the
State of New York
Cooperative College Registry
East Aurora Public Schools
West Seneca Central Schools
January 31 February 1
-

Eastman Kodak
(Technical only)

February 1
New York Telephone, Western

Electric, Long Lines Dept.
Depew High School
February 2
YWCA of Buffalo &amp;
Erie County
The Equitable Life Insurance
Society of the U.S!
H. J. Heinz Co.
National Labor Relations Board
Sinclair Research, Inc.

General announcements
January 31
Creative Associates Recital VI,

30
John Hancock

January

-

12 noon

-

District

■

Tuesday
11

Thursday:
11 a.m.
12 noon or
12 noon 1 p.m.

8:30 p.m., Baird Music Hall. Open
to the public.

THE SPECTRUM
printed by

Student Testing Center Registration Schedule
Last Day
to Register

Applications

Available

Jan. 27 Feb, 17 316 Harriman
Jan. 30 Feb. 24 316 Harriman
Feb. 3 Feb. 17 Sch, of Nursing

College Level Exam Program
Graduate Record Exam
Pre-Nursing Exam
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Date

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�Friday, January 26,

//

1968

The Spectrum

initial presentation comii

SOOl

New Buffalo Theater opens;
’No one will walk out bored'

2800 attend anti-war concert
NEW YORK IUPII
A dozen of America's top entertainers, including
singers Harry Beiafonte and Barbra Streisand, staged an anti-war concert in
New York's Philharmonic Hall Jan. 21 to raise campaign funds for Democratic Congressmen opposed to the administration's policy of escalation in
—

Vietnam.

The concert hall in Lincoln Center was packed with 2800 persons, who
paid from $10 to $250 to show their opposition to the War.
The total amount collected was not disclosed, but organizers of the show
said they expected to raise approximately $100,000.
Senators Ernest Gruening (D„ Alaska) and Wayne Morse (D„ Oregon)

by James Brennan
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

“The purpose of theater is to provoke a reaction from the
audience,” says Joseph Krysiak, founder of the Workshop
Repertory Theatre. “We want to stimulate the people, some
may be shocked, but no one will walk out bored.”
The Workshop Repertory Theatre IS Mr. Joseph Krysiak. He is the soul and driving force that gives life to the
converted sound studio that serves as the physical structure
of his theater. The main room that houses the stage of his
theater lies in the former Pierce-Arrow Building at 1685
Elmwood Ave., on the east side of the street.
To gain entrance to the theater, one must pass between two
buildings and through two rather
large blue doors. Upon entering
the theater, one is impressed by
the contrasting use of white and
black shades of color in the decor.
The hall and lobby are done almost entirely in white, while the
main arena hall is solidly black.

Strange atmosphere
The theater design was created
by Mr, Ben Perrone in conjunction with some of Mr. Krysiak’s
ideas.
Mr. Krysiak comments; “The
black background gives me just

the atmosphere I need—strange
and simple. Black is a very practical color because it does not
reflect. It is neutral and does
not play much of a part in the
play. It lets the play create its
own color and background.”
Mr. Krysiak has designed his
theater so the chairs of the
audience may be moved around
in case he feels a certain play
needs the audience closer to the
actors. At present, the theater

seats about 250 people and is

about

%

around the stage. “Going

to a play should be more of an

intimate experience than a colossal production,” says Mr. Krysiak.
“I want thet audience to get involved in the play.”
As founder of the theater, Mr.
Krysiak has his own ideas about
drama. He feels “a play is what
happens to people . . . with the
people in the play. They’re not
necessarily going to enjoy it . . .
at least not there and now. They
may hate it, they may get mad at
it, they may be confused by it
but awareness that they derive
from drama, if they take that

awareness seriously, will make
them much more receptive to the
world of experiences around
them.”

Buffalo graduate
Mr. Krysiak graduated from

the State University of Buffalo in
1960 with a BFA in dramatic arts
and is a native Buffalonion. Following his graduation, he remained in Buffalo for two years performing at the Off-B roadway

Theatre and at Studio Arena
Theatre. In 1963 Mr. Krysiak
began a three year sabbatical,
which took him to New York and
Toronto.
Returning to Buffalo in 1966,
he began work on the first Workshop Theater in a storefront setting at 719 Elmwood Ave. He also

worked with theater groups at
the Albright-Knox Art Gallery
and the State University of Buffalo.
This storefront setting was not
really large enough to accommodate Mr. Krysiak’s needs. So about
a year ago he came upon this
old recording studio, and with

HELP!

THE BEATLES

Eastroancoior

A

United

Artists

Release

Conference Theater
Thurs., Fri., Sat.
1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11

received standing ovations.
Also in attendance were Representatives George E. Brown Jr., Philip
Burton and Donald Edwards, all of California; John G. Dow and William R.
Ryan, both of New York, and John Conyers of Michigan. They are the Democrats due to benefit from the show's contributions.
Mr. Beiafonte opened the show with a 20-minute selection of folk and
musical ballads.
Miss Streisand sang a song that bemoaned the results of war. The music
was written by Leonard Bernstein and the words by Adolph Green and
Betty

quite a bit of hard work and
energy, he transformed a mass of
vacant unused space into a creative, thinking, working theater.

Initial presentation
The first product of this zealous
young theater is “The Story Teller from Flea Street.” With a cast
of about 15 persons, Mr. Krysiak
is directing and playing the principal role in this production.
The play was written by a
young Chicago born playwright,
Dennis Jasudowicz. Mr. Jasudowicz. asserts: “The problem with
American theater is: How to get
this collective garbage on a higher, more artistically reckless
-

level.

“Some have tried it with founation grants. Some have tried it
with universities. Some have tried
it with love. As you can see,
there is a sickening softness in
the guts of our theater people.
They would like to sit back and
believe things will happen if they
dream long enough about them:
Great things. Big things. All
things.”

Difficulties in universities
Mr. Jasudowicz continues:
“There is nothing they are incapable of dreaming of . . . Universities? That is getting too elective, even for the theater. And
except for the defense budget,
they are cut off from everything.
And too, they demand that everything be connected in some way
with the students or faculty. And
that always works out in some
mess
“And what we need most is a
.

.

.

theater that is for itself. Not the
banks. Not society. Not the
schools. Not the government. But
only for itself. Just as our literature or our painters are in a
sense not for banks, society,
schools, or the government. They
are in a sense something in

themselves.
Theater needs freedom
“An art needs this freedom to
function. It can’t be tied down by
anything—anything that will stop
it from getting at the reality behind things. So then, we need to
get this collective theater to start
doing things for itself, and to
stop dreaming for the gifts from

heaven.”
It is this collective and free
theater that Mr. Krysiak is .striving to develop in his Workshop
Repertory Theater. He wants to
generate in his theater a creativity that takes the works of
young writers like Jasudowioz
and puts form and life to them
on a stage that is not necessarily
catering to the patronizing demand of an audience.

MHBBSrc*

WEEK IBHl

Page Thirteen

Comden.

Paul Newman and his wife, Joanne Woodward, were co-hosts of the affair.
"It's too bad we all weren't gathered here in 1961," Mr. Newman said,
referring to the beginning of the U.S. buildup in Vietnam.

Mixers, movies. more mixers mark
(JUAB Activities Week festivities
“Travel as You Will” is the theme of a week of films,
concerts, mixers, and other activities sponsored by the UUAB.
The Activities Week starts today and will continue through
Feb. 2.
“The primary purpose is to get Psychedelic mixer
students interested in different
activities and to get them to participate in these activities,” according to Art Conduzio, cochairman of Activities Week.
He added: "The secondary purpose is to get students to pay
their activities fees. Other activities were planned for this week,
but there were not enough funds.
By having a week of activities,
we are trying to show students
what can be done if they participate and pay their fees.”

Jan. 26, 8 p.m.—IFC Mixer—see bulletin boards for location,
Jan. 26-Feb. 4
Club tables
set up in Norton to give information on student activities.
Film CommitJan. 26, 27, 28
The Recreation Committee will tee showing “Help” in Confersponsor a psychedelic mixer in ence Theater.
the Fillmore Room from 8 p.m.
Jan. 28
Theta Chi Sorority
until midnight Feb. 2, Admission sponsoring Game Night free to
is 50c for students who have paid all girls, 7 to 9 p.m.
their fees and $1.00 for those
Starting Jan. 29
Coffee Hour
who have not paid. The Lynx in Allenhurst Bus Lounge. Coffee
will perform and there will be a Hour circuit plans to have diflight showing giving psychedelic ferent groups all week every
semester.
effects.
Other a c t i v i t i i e s are also
Jan. 30, 1, 4, 8 p.m.
Dance
planned, including a poetry readCommittee showing movie of the
ing by Robert Creeley, a game Merce Cunningham Company,
night sponsored by Theta Chi “498 Third Ave.”
1 to 5 p in.—FreshSorority, and a coffee hour sponJan. 31
sored by the Freshman Class man Class Council sponsoring
Council for new freshmen, trans
Coffee Hour for new freshman
fer students, and other interested
and transfer students.
students.
—Wesley Foundation showing
During the week, various clubs film in Center Lounge.
and organizations
—Recreation Committee sponwill have
tables set up in Norton Hall. soring a folk group in the Rathskellar.
Students may ask for informaPoetry
Feb: 1
4 p.m
tion or join the clubs at this
time.
reading by Robert Creely
According to Rhona Abrams,
—8:30 to 10:30 p.m.
Music
co-chairman of the Activities Committee presents Bobby HutchWeek, it is run for the students inson Jazz Quartet at Bennett
High School.
and by the students. She added
Feb, 2
that the project is designed to
Fillmore Room Psyshow students what is available
chedelic Mixer sponsored by Ihe
for them so they will pay their Recreation Committee.
activities fees and be interested
in joining activities.
—

—

—

—

—

—

IFC mixer
A mixer, sponsored by the IFC,

will start the week of activities
at 8 p.m. this evening. Starling
today, the Beatle movie Help!

will be shown until Sunday in
the Conference Theater.

the UUAB
is sponsoring a
Night in the
Fillmore Room, There will be 16
games, including roulette, dice,
Black Jack, Beat the Dealer, and
Horse Wheel, The “gamblers”
will buy play money which they
will use for the games, and prizes
may be awarded. Refreshments
will be bought with the play
Tuesday evening,

Committee
Recreation.
Monte Carlo

money.

A Coffee House will open Monday in the Allenhurst Bos
Lounge. A different group will
be featured every week all semester.

—

—

—

Bulletins
Following is a schedule of
events for the week; see bulletin
boards for times and places of
some events.

Join the Sig Ep

RUSH
FIRST STAG FRIDAY, JANUARY 26th—8 P.M.

Hallmark Manor, 2704 Main Street

CALL 877-2502

LAST

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�Pag« Fourteen

Friday, January 24, 1HI

The Spectrum

Student Book Exchange to employ Opening of campus coffee
new procedures for better service house features jazz group
is back

with various

pro-

cedures. The non-profit committee of the Student Senate returned for its sixth semester
Tuesday.

In contrast to other years, the
Exchange will not be responsible
for the loss or theft of books.
Students will suffer these losses.

To stimuate conscientious work,
this year workers will be paid
$1.00 per hour. The committee hopes that this will reduce
losses. Workers will be checking
books to make sure they are paid
for.
A primary criticism of last semester concerned the poor sched-

uling of personnel. The Exchange
was not open continuously during
regular business hours. This semester workers have been scheduled so that someone will be
there at all times.

Book Exchange

changes go into effect Tuesday

Students wishing to sell books
are required to sign a contract
upon surrendering their books
and are being asked to print all

return of checks. The checks will
be given back to students starting Jan. 29. Feb. 2 will be the
last day to sell books and Feb. 9
will be the last day to pick up

checks and books. The Book Exchange will not be responsible
for them after this date.
A ten cents service fee will be
added to the cost of each book.
This pays for the cost of checks,
wages in part, and supplies.

Other operating expenses are
obtained from a floating loan
from the Student Senate amounting to $4500 this semester. This
amount is paid back at the end
of the Exchange from the money
made. An initial $400, obtained
through the last four years from
unclaimed checks and the ten
cents service fee, is also used.

The Exchange is being conducted in Room 231 Norton Hall
through Feb, 9. It will be opening
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday
through Friday,

Beginning Monday the UUAB
will sponsor coffee house style
entertainment in the Allenhurst
Bus Lounge in Goodyear Basement".

Woody Graber, UUAB Recreation Committee Chairman, said
that both professional and local
non-professional groups will perform. Various professional
groups, provided by the College
Coffeehouse Circuit, will perform
nightly for one week, Monday
through Saturday.

Performances through Thursday, will be from 8:30 p.m. to
11:30 p.m, and week-end shows
will be from 8:30 p.m. to 12:30
p.m. For weeks when professional groups are not available,
the coffeehouse will be open
with local groups providing the
entertainment, Friday and Saturday nights only. Mr. Graber plans
to have as many as eight professional groups appear at the coffeehouse during the semester.

Sandwiches and seven types of
coffee will be served at the Cof-

feehouse. Food and waitress gory.
ice will be provided by the University Food Service.

Initiating the entertainment
schedule will be the Steve Baron
Quartet, a New York based, folkrock jazz group.

Formed in July 1967, the SBQ
has already performed several
times at both the Bitter End
and Gaslight Cafes. The group
consists of Steve Baron, leaderguitarist and composer; Jack
Block, bass and alto sax; Bill
Davidson, guitarist and Tom Winner, piano and organ.

Buffalo Festival
of Arts to open
Special to the Spectrum

The second Buffalo Festival of
the Arts Today, a broad survey
of the latest trends in art, music,
drama, dance, films, literature
and architecture, will be held in
Buffalo March 2-17, 1968.
The two-week Festival will include over 30 programs and
events covering a wide range of
subjects and will be centered on
a comprehensive art exhibition at
the Albright-Knox Art Gallery.

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�Friday/ January

26, 1968

The Spectrum

Page Fifteen

Sportin' Life

the spectrum of

sport

by Bob Woodruff
Sports

With only the best interests of the student body in mind the
spoils editor went to Miami over intersession to cover the Super
Bowl for The Spectrum. (Relax. Mr. Braun, the mopey didn't come
out of student fees.) Imagine 'my disillusionment when I found out
that a Spectrum press pass was not the golden key to any sports
palace in the country. The Orange Bowl public relations people
were very considerate Of my position, but a ticket to the "super
shmear” was as difficult to get as a pass to Lynda Bird's wedding
night. ,

Marines invade UB's Clark Gym;
outshoot Bulls in 81-72 disaster
by W. Scott Behrens
Asst. Sports Editor

A combination of a poor shooting half for the Bulls and
a poorly refereed second half aided the rough, tough Quantico Marines in conquering the host State University of Buffalo 81-72 Tuesday evening. This victory for the visitors
raised their season record to won 18, lost 6 with ten games
to finish the end of their schedule.
The Bulls’ record has now dropped to 74 with 13 games
remaining.
enal total of 33 free throw and
made good 22 of them in the
second stanza of the game.

The Blue and White were almost as frigid as the air outside
in the first half. The home team
hit on only 11 of 35 shots from
the field for a paltry 31.4%

This is one game in which the
referees (Norm Konieczny and E,
L. Bednarczyk) let get out of
their hands as it really seemed
more like a football contest in
sneakers! One of the fans could
have done a better job the two
men in black and white stripes
did that night.

while the musclemen from the

Marine Officer’s Candidate School
hit on 18 of 34 baskets for a very

respectable 52.9%. It seemed to

make all the difference in the
game, as the Bulls were never
able to catch them. The halftime
score was 39-26 in favor of the
Marines.

The referees would call “picks”
on the host team and hardly ever
call one for the visitors—until it
was too late and the game was
out of reach for the Bulls.

Bulls never gave up
With this big point spread hovering over the host team it seemed highly improbable for the
Bulls to catch the overpowering

Wells kneed

Quantico outfit.

However, the
Bulls never gave up trying and
made a game of it up to the final
buzzer, pulling to within six
points during the late stages of

There was at least one incident
during the game which exemplified the game’s football tactics.
The ball was rolling freely around
center court. Rick Wells (the
Bulls’ star flankerback on the
varsity football team) fell on the

the contest.

The Bulls were outrebounded
60-47, were outshot from the field
with a 40,6% shooting percentage
to a 42.4% for the visitors, were
outshot at the free throw line
during that “long” second half,
and were out-refereed during the
whole contest.

ball, the ball locked between him
and the floor. It appeared that
one of the Marines charged over
Wells and threw both knees into
Rick’s back.

The Marines took the phenora-

Rick then reeled around very
quickly and a few fists went flying.
After things had settled
down, the referees called a double

intentional foul and both Wells
and his counterpart were expelled
from the game.
Ed Eberle was high scorer for
the game with 17 points while
Doug Bernard hit for 12. Wells,
who started with the Bulls for
the first time in his short varsity
basketball career, was the only
other UB player to hit double
figures, as he scored ten points.
The Marines had four men net-

ting more than a dozen points.

For the entire game the Bulls
put in 20 free throws in 34 attempts for 58.8% while the visitors made good 25 of 46 charity
tosses. A total of 31 fouls was
called on Buffalo while 28 were
called on Quantico.
This was an excellent effort
for the Bulls who had to play
against seven men (five Marines
and two Military Police wearing
black and white striped shirts!).

Bulls

on road
The Bulls will be on the road
for their next three games. They
will fly out of here tomorrow
morning for a game tomorrow
night against St, Michael’s of
Vermont. The Bulls’ next contest
will be in Brockport against the
Staters next Tuesday night and
then travel to Rochester to tangle
with the U. of R. next Friday

night.

The box score follows:
U. OF BUFFALO (72)
FG FT RTS.
6 5 17
Eberle
Peeler
I
I 3
Jekielek
2 I
5
Fieri
2 5
9
Nowak
0 0
0
4
4
12
Bernard
Rutkowski 3 2. 8
4
Culbert
2 0
Scherrer
1 0 2
4 2
Wells
10
Vaughan
1 0 2

QUANTICO (81)

FG FT RTS

Blacksfone
Redd
Willert
Kalinowski
Reid

1

I

5 6
6 0
5 5

O'Connell

2
I

Sheridan

4

Cuttaia

1
1

AAacFarland
Brown

2

4

0
6

2

1

3
16
12
15
8
2
14
4
3

0

Rebuked in his efforts to analyze the game first hand, the
sports editor sulked in the 70 degree Miami warmth, and watched
the tape of the game at midnight. What I saw nine hours after the
rest of the country was the same dismal, over publicized anti-climactic
finale to football's regular season. Cries from every AJFL city
boast of the miniscule statistical margin which the Packers held over
Raiders, and AFL partisans bask in Oakland’s second half Tesurg
ence,

Let’s get serious.

Daryl Lamonica should write on the blackboard 500 limes
“I will not try to run outside sweeps against the Packers
“The Tree” Davidson performed more like Twiggy. Despite some
heroics by Bills’ castoff Bill Miller,, the Raider pass receivers ran
like Sherman Plunkett and cut about as gracefully

There is nothing
“Iceman,” Bart Starr,
(ho hum). "Madman”
the finest linebacker

that hasn’t been said about the Pack
The
was brilliant enough to win another Corvette
Nitschkc deserves every accolade due perhaps
ever to grace a professional football field.

The AFL has done a lot of maturing in eight years—they're
just now feeling the growing pains.

The trip to Miami was not fruitless. The sun city offers a most
extensive array of athletic attractions upon which to wager. More
than nine million patrons visited Florida’s Jai-Alai frontons, horse
tracks and dog tracks last year, and Miami is the hub of the action
Spectators at these events were more than casual onlookers, as
they bet a whopping $515,430,000.
While Hialeah is beautiful, and it’s none too difficult to appreci
ate the speed and beauty of the sleek greyhounds, it is Jai-Alai
which generally captures the imagination of spectators and sports
editors alike. The game is played on a court, or cancha, 176 feet
by 55 feet surrounded by three walls. The pclota, a goat skin
covered ball, is sent hurtling into the front wall at speeds up to
150 miles per hour. Contestants, wielding basket like cestas, must
catch and play the rock-hard dangerous polota off five surfaces,
including the four-story high ceiling.
Handicapping the players is
quite a trick. In one game a
player might be zinging the ball
like Sandy Koufax, and the following game he’s throwing like
Sandy Dennis. This is not to say

4

that Jai-Alai is fixed, for that
would be considered libelous by
some, but just that the players
can’t give 100" every game, and

28 25 81
TOTALS
26 20 72 TOTALS
Score at halftime: Quantico 39, Buffalo 26.

Games reviewed

they occasionally choose to pace
themselves. Strangci though, they
usually take that respite when
they go off at 2 1.

The following is a short summary of what the varsity Bulls
have accomplished since the last
issue of The Spectrum,
STATE UNIVERSITY OF BUFALO 85, BELMONT ABBEY 69
Still feeling the pangs of a cold
spell from the precious loss to
San Francisco State, the Bulls
opened up the game in the same
manner, hitting on only a few of
their shots from the field. As the
first half moved on, however, the
Blue and White warmed up and
led at the half time, 32-38. The
Bulls were led by junior Ed Eberle who scored 19 points, despite
playing on a swollen, left ankle.
After the Bulls soared to a 20point lead, Serf cleared his bench
in this last home game of 1967.
FT. BRAGG 77, STATE UNIVER
SITY OF BUFALO 67
The Bulls flew down to Norfolk, Va. to participate in the
Phiblant Holiday Tournament.
Buffalo met up with, a strong serv-

ice team in Ft. Bragg which had
many former college players on
its roster. The Bulls were only

—vsiimmvr

Blit
|qj|

WC

Backcourt star Joe Rulkowski
prepares to feed Buffalo teammate under the hoop for a Bulls
2-poinler. Rick Wells is shown
trailing the play against the
Quantico

MarinesJ~

down by two points at the halfway mark but were subdued

when Ft. Bragg was able to capi
talize on many of the Bulls’ turnovers. The Blue and White outrebounded their opponents 51 35,
with sophomore Jack Scherrer
&amp;

Edit*

Please turn to Page 17

With the odds and the picks
of the professional handicappers
being of little use in deciding
on whom to bet, strange systems
have arisen for picking the prob
able winner.
One gentleman with whom 1
went used the common "pull itout-of-your pocket" s y s t e m. By
this method, the bettor metieu

V—•

lously rips off the post positions

from the left side of the program
sheet and deposits them in his
pocket. Each race he draws the numbers he will bet with great
precision
Unfortunately, this seemingly flawless system proved
unlucky for my friend, and he went winless that night
Another party used the “ask the girl who takes your bet how old

sheds" method. The origin of this system may be traced back many
years to some lecherous old man. This gentleman merely asks the
“Bet-a maid” (a girl who walks up and down the aisles and takes
your bet in your seat) her age, and plays these numbers backwards
and forwards. This seems to be a profitable system, since it netted
this gentleman $2,500
Me?
I used the “house number" and “motel room number
systems alternately. As its name indicates, one bets according to
his present and permanent addresses. This system did produce
I must
winning quinnella and perfecta tickets netting some $50
admit that I swayed from this pattern once to bet on two names.
Alex and Ralph were competing against fellas like Ondarra and
Egurbi, so I went with the only pair of names 1 could pronounce
They justified my faith $88 worth, but 1 still think the system
has a few kinds which have to be worked out.

�Page Sixteen

Friday, January 26,

The Spectrum

1968

Downed UB varsity swimming team Jekielek chosen UB
attempting to regain winning form Player of the Week
The State University of Buffalo varsity swimming team,
now with a 1-3 record, is trying to find a winning combination as head coach Bill Sanford shuffles his swimmers
around. The Bulls opened the season with two losses, won
the third contest and dropped the fourth quite handily.
The mermen opened the season with a road contest against
Syracuse and looked extremely
well, but lost the contest 59-45.
This was a better showing than
the coach had expected since
Syracuse always comes up with
a strong team and Sanford is rebuilding his forces this season.
Frank Nochajski (200 yd. breaststroke) was the only individual
first placer for the Bulls.

Visiting Colgate defeats Bulls

the crew that he had, as the
semester break took several of
the Bulls’ top performers way
from the campus. Diver Rebo was
taking an exam and his diving
partner Gary Helffentein was in
Florida which meant that there
was no contest in this event.

The Bull mermen then dropped
teir next decision Saturday afternoon in the Clark Gym pool to
a much too powerful Colgate
squad. Colgate has always been
a strong opponent and this year’s
team was no let-down. Coach Sanford had trouble working with

The next meet for the Bulls
will be on the road against
Brockport State a week from
tomorrow. The next home meet
will be Feb. 7 when Geneseo
State comes to town. The contest
will begin at 7:30 p.m.

John (Jake) Jekielek has been
chosen as the State University
of Buffalo’s Player of the Week.
The choice this time was very
difficult for the selection committee, because each of the last
five games has had its individual star. But it was Jekielek
who, in the opinion of the judges,
made the best overall contribution in the combination of the
last five games.
Jekielek has played extremely
well throughout the season. He
has become the Bulls’ top re-

Undefeated Hockey Club seeks to
continue winning ways vs. Brockport

The Blue and White then went
across town to the Buffalo State
campus to oppose the Staters
and made a worse showing. The
University mermen were downed
by the College swimmers.

The highflying State Univer
sity of Buffalo hockey club re
turns to the ice tomorrow night.

The Bulls played host for the
first time this season to Niagara

University last Wednesday night
and came through with an amazingly easy victory. Coach Sanford wasn’t really surprised at
this 67-36 win, as he had figured
that his squad, was mentally
“up” for this meet. Leading the

The powerful “icers” travel to
Brockport State for the beginning
of an important four game road
trip.

Bulls’ strong attack with first
places against the visitors were:
Ed Sargent, Tom Ross, Captain
Rick Rebo, Roger Pawlowski, Bob
Lindberg, Frank Nochajski and
transfer students Terry Keegan
and Chris Hart.

The Bulls, with a perfect 8-0
Finger Lakes Hockey League reccord, would like to cop all four
games to tighten their grip on
first place. In addition to Saturday night’s game at Brockport,
the Bulls in the next two weeks
will take on RIT, Ithaca, and Cor-

y

nell J.V.’s —all away games.
-“Hockeymen” may be a

The
little rusty in their skating after
a five week layoff for exams, but
their scoring punch will be
stronger than ever. The Blue and
White averaging over nine goals
a game, are led in scoring by
flashy Lome Rombough who has
dented the nets twenty times this
season.

But the high scoring winger
may have company this semester.
Billy Tape, a highly touted forward from the Fort Erie area

has joined the hockey herd for
the second semester. Tape, who
has averaged over a goal a game
playing in Canada, is expected to
team up with Rombough and
speedster Franky Lewis to give
the Bulls one of the finest forward lines in the club’s six year
history.

So as the second half of the
hockey season gets under way,
Buffalo fans can look forward
to the same brand of hard hitting,
fast skating, high scoring hockey
which characterized the Bulls 8-0
first half of the season.

Gi O*/f

S

CO

bounder since making his move
in these games in which the
Blue and White have won four
out of five contests. He has outrebounded many of his taller
opponents and has been hitting
his 15-foot jump shots very consistently.

Prior to these last five games,
“Jake” had taken 39 shots from
the field and had made twenty
of them for 51.3fe;
His ten game total shows that
he has dropped slightly in shooting percentage (47.5%) making
good 39 shots of 80 taken. His
free throw percentage has improved tremendously, from 29.5%
to 47.7%, making good a tengame total of 21 out of 44 charity
tosses attempted. He has nearly
doubled his rebound total, jumping from 29 in the first five contests to 77 in ten games.
Jekielek’s offensive efforts have

brought his point per game average up from 9.0 to 9.9 and now
ranks third among the Bulls in
that department.

Jake’s performance in the game
against MacMurray prompted the
selection committee to choose
him this week, as he pulled down
23 rebounds off the board (three
from tying the record) and scored
23 points for the Blue and White.
Congratulations, Jake, for this

well earned award!

LEMON

s?

4?

CC

&amp;

o

�

THE BUCKINGHAMS

w

“e/j

X

H

COMING ATTRACTIONS AT THE

GLEN PARK

�

WILLIAMSV1LLE,

Live Music Nightly

—

N.Y.

Wed. thru Sun.

/

X&amp;

/

s

/

\
\
STRAWBERRY ALARM CLOCK

�Friday, January 26, 1968

The

Spectrum

Page Seventeen

Marines invade Clark...
hitting the boards extremely well
as first-stringer John Jekeliek
was in early foul trouble. High
scorer for the Bulls was Eberle

with 16..
STATE

UNIVERSITY

OF

BUF

FALO 66, OHIO WESLEYAN 52
Coach Serfustini shuffled the
line-up for the first game of the

—Grimmer

Bulls' 152-pound grappler Dale
Wettlaufer is shown in strategic
position on his way to a deci-

WrPStlinQ

sion over McMaster University
opponent last Saturday. Bulls
romped 36 to 2.

*

loser’s consolation round and
started with the second string of
Doug Bernard, Jon Culbert,
Scherrer, Jim Shea, and Joe Rutkowski. When the Bulls fell behind 22-11 midway in the first
stanza, Serf replaced them with
the first string, and the latter
group started hitting for the Bulls
and led them at halftime 28-27.
Buffalo’s second half lead steadily increased and with three quarters of a full game gone, the Bulls
had a 13-point bulge. Scherrer
again led the group with 12 rebounds as the winners narrowly
edged their opponents in that department 56-54. Bernard led the
balanced Buffalo attack with 14
points and guard Joe Peeler hit
for 12.

Continued from Page 15

STATE UNIVERSITY OF BUF

STATE UNIVERSITY OF BUF

FALO 108, WALTER REED HOS

FALO

PITAL 69

LEGE 94.

The Bulls came home with the
good looking consolation trophy
as they had their best shooting

The Bulls were warned in their
pre-game talk with Serf that this
team from Illinoi? was a "shoot
ing team." MacMurray College
came into this game with a 75
point'per game average, yet had
a three and five mark for season.

of the year. Eberle scored
season high of 26 points to lead

night

a

the Bulls in that department. The
Bulls hit for an amazing 55.5'i
from the field, making good 49
of 89 shots taken. The service
unit had practically no chance at
all. as the Bulls had a blazing
first half, hitting on 25 of 39
shots from the field for 64',; and

98,

MacMURRAY

solation round now sits in Serf's

Their 94 points against the Bulls
showed the Blue White that any
kind of a letdown during any
stage of the game could have
meant another defeat for the
Bulls. Bull football Co-Captain
Rick Wells had a hand in this victory as he scored some timely
buckets just as the Bulls were
falling into a rut. The Bulls led
by as much as 15 points at one
stage of the game. Jekeliek had a
season high of 23 rebounds to
lead the Bulls in that department
and Eberle led the Bulls with 25
points, with Jekeliek close behind

office

at 24.

went to the dressing room with a
57-28 halftime lead. The Bulls
again dominated the, boards as
the winners picked off 62 of the
losers 39.

The winner’s trophy of the con
reaching high among

the

other awards his teams have
earned him through the years

&amp;

Varstiy Basketball Statistics up
to and including Jan. 2, 1968.

Bell scores quick pin in
UB win over McMaster
The State University of Buffalo
varsity wrestling team won its
second match in as many starts
this season by walloping a visiting McMaster University squad
from Hamilton, Ont, 36-2 Saturday afternoon at Clark Gym. The
Bulls had previously defeated
Buffalo State 24-11 early in DeHarry Bell, sophomore kickoff
return specialist and an excellent
substitute at the tailback position
in varsity football, is proving
himself just as valuable to Head
Coach Jerry Gergley’s wrestling
squad. Saturday afternoon Bell
pinned his opponent in the

fastest time of the young coach’s

career. His 17-second pin of

the

only two points for McMaster.

The other team points for the
Bulls were by decisionThe Bulls hosted Buffalo State
in the return match of the homeand-home series Wednesday evening and will travel to Ithaca to
face Ithaca College tomorrow
afternoon. The next four matches
will also be on the road as they
meet Colgate, Oswego State,
Cortland State and Rochester Institute of Technology before returning home to host the Ontario
Aggies in an evening contest on
Feb. 17.

first period nearly clipped the
Buffalo record of 12 seconds set
by Don Beitelman about 20 years

BROOKLYN
COLLEGE of

ago.

Other grapplers who pinned
their opponents were: Mike Watson (2:32 of first period), Brian
Vandenberg (2:47 of second
period), Jerry Meissner (4:04 of
second period) and Gordie Alexander (3:58 of second period).

PHARMACY

GRADUATE'
PROGRAMS
leading to

MASTER of SCIENCE DEGREE
with specialization in

PHARMACY
ADMINISTRATION
and HOSPITAL

The Bulls’ Henry Gullia drew
with his opponent, allowing the

PHARMACY

ROSS RUNFOLA
eats at

ADMINISTRATION

Barry's Hamburgers

Advanced

Millersport Hwy. at Maple

•

USED
TEXTS

fcf

BUY OR SELL HERE

BUFFALO
TEXTBOOK
"•cron from U.B."

3610
MAIN
noar
Ava.
Bailay

133-7131
SLIDE RULES
COLLEGE SUPPLIES

PAPERBACKS

•

•

educational preparation for
positions of leadership in:
management, marketing,

selling and research in
pharmaceutical, wholesale
and retail drug, cosmetic
and retail industries.
teaching of pharmacy
administration.
hospital pharmacy
administration,

(internal program)

SESSIONS BEGIN
SEPTEMBER AND FEBRUARY
Write or phone for:
Bulletin of Information
Application Form
•

•

BROOKLYN COLLEGE
OF PHARMACY
OF LONG ISLAND UNIVERSITY
600 Lafayette Ave., Brooklyn. N Y. 11216
Founded 1886 MAin 2-4040

Don’t just stand around
like a no account
Open a checking account now.
There are two M&amp;.T Banks near the campus,
With banking hours that make sense.
Look below.

RRm&amp;t bank
■a
MMIIR W. U. I. C.

MAIN W1NSPEAR OFFICE
3184 Main Street
Mon. thru Thurs.. 9:00 a.m.
4:30 p.m
Friday: 9£0 a.m. 3:00 p.m. and
6KX)
p.m.
p.m.
—

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COL

UNIVERSITY PLAZA OFFICE
3500 Main Street
Mon. thru Thurv; 9:00 a.m. 4:30 p.m.
Friday ; 900 a.m. 300 p.m. and
4:00 p.m. 8.00 p.m.
Drive-In
Mon. thru Thurv: 900 a.m. —4:30 p.m.
Friday; 900 a.m. 800 p.m.
—

—

—

—

�The Spectrum

Page Eighteen

Friday, January 26, 1968

Common Council asks bill for elected
Board of Education for public schools
by Peter Simon
Assistant

Editor

City

The Common Council Tuesday
Voted in favor of a bill which
could provide for an elected
Board of Education for Buffalo
public schools.
The bill, sponsored by Democratic Councilman Delmar
Mitchell and Majority Leader
Stanley Makowski, would create
a nine-member board, with each
present councilmanic district
electing one member.
For the elected board to go
into effect, the New York Stale
Legislature would have to amend
the State Education Act.
Passes

One, submitted by Councilman
Alfreda Slominski, called for a
board consisting of seven members elected at-large.

The other was a compromise
resolution offered by Minority
Leader John Elfvin and Councilman Edward Regan, It proposed
the election of four members
by districts, and three others at-

Opposition voiced
The only councilmen who
voiced opposition to an elective

amendments.

BIG 13”
6 Slit*

—

p, ZZA
rltt

DiROSE
$1.05

Eight of our nation’s major
policy areas will come
up for discussion on “Great Decisions 1968,” a new series of eight
programs beginning Feb. 6, at
10:30 p.m. on Channel 17. New
foreign

York’s Sen. Jacob Javits will discuss the first topic: “The Middle
East;

Is Peace Possible?”

Each

of the

eight

discussion

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-ADVERTISEMENT-

Why Do
You Read
So Slowly?
A noted publisher in Chicago
reports there is a simple tech
nique of rapid reading which
should enable you to double your
reading speed and yet retain
much more. Most people do not
realize how much they could increase their pleasure, success and
income by reading faster and
more accurately.
According to this publisher,
many people, regardless of their
present reading skill, can use

this simple technique to improve
their reading ability to a remark-

able degree. Whether reading
stories, hooks, technical matter,
it becomes (xissible to read sentences at a glance and entire
pages in
seconds with this
method.
To acquaint the readers of
this newspajier with the easy-tofollow rules for developing rapid
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ing self training method in a new
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do.

inson

[orace

Councilman Black said the
main problem confronting Buffalo’s public school system was
financial, and the type of school
board had little effect on this
problem. He said that an elected
board would not be a “panacea”
for Buffalo’s educational woes,
as he said many people feel.
Councilman Johnson said that
the choice should be between an
elected or appointed board, not
between varying elected boards.

Channel 17 series to
explore U.S. policies

Because of this situation, the
bill is actually a request to the
Legislature to make the proper

HOT

were Democrats Charles

large.

11 -4

It was passed by an
11-4 vote, with Republicans Slominski, Regan, Elfvin and Lyman
opposed.
If the Legislature acts favorably, the new school board will
be elected in November, with
members serving four year
terms.
The present board consists of
seven members, each appointed
by the mayor to four year terms.
Two other proposals for an
elected board, both submitted by
Republicans, were defeated.

board

Beatles arrive
in Help at UB
The

Beatles’

second

movie,
“Help!,” is now being featured
in Norton Union’s Conference
Theater.
In

the movie it seems Ringo
(who else?) has come into the
possession of a ring that members of a secret Indian sect will
go any lengths or widths to retrieve. Pursuit of the Beatles by

programs will have as Its major

participants two experts with differing views on the major questions in each area. Besides being
authorities in their fields, they
will be widely-known figures
from diplomacy, government and
The programs will also
include questions from an audience of knowledgeable foreign
affairs students from various
Washington-area colleges and uni-

education.

versities.

Moderator for

Peter Lisagor,

the series is

Washington Bureau Chief of the Chicago Daily
News and a nationally syndicated
columnist. His 25 years in jour-

nalism include coverage of the
evacuation of Britain from Suez,
the Hungarian Revolt and the
Vietnam War. During his 16
years in Washington, Mr. Lisagor, a former Nieman Fellow,

has covered the White House,

Congress and the State Department.

u.s.

presently installing an emergency lighting system throughout
the campus, has squelched any
rumors that the installations are
an extra security measure.
According to Mr. Raymond
Renig, acting Head Stationary
Engineer, the fixtures are nothing more than an emergency
lighting system and have “nothing to do with security.”

The fixtures are located in the
stairwells and in various corners
of the buildings.
At the present time Clark Gym
and Norton Hall are the only
buildings in which the emergency lighting systems have been
installed.
The lights operate on a separate power supply and will be
utilized to aid in the evacuation
of buildings in the event of a
power failure. Thirty-two lighting
systems will eventually be placed
in the student union, according
to the Maintenance Department.

Emergency lighting
for when the lights go out

Chigiano String Sextet
will perform at Baird
The Chigiano String Sextet, a
recent outgrowth from the former Chigiano Quintet, will present a concert at Baird Hall
Monday evening.
The founder of the Academia
Chigiano in Siena created the original quintet composed of the
best elements in the Academy
itself and recognized individually
as outstanding soloists.

Members of the group include
Ricardo Brengola and Giovanni

Gulielmo on violin, Mario Benvenuti and Tito Riccardi on viola
and Adriano Vendramelli and
Alain Meunier cellists. Because
of the transformation to a totally

string sextet, they are able to
perform works with various combinations of string instruments.
Their repetoire includes vvorJcs
by Mozart, Schubert and most

contemporary composers.
The concert is scheduled to begin at 8:30 p.m.

students to strike?
The possibility of holding a nationwide student strike in the spring will
be discussed this weekend at a national anti-war conference in Chicago.
The meeting, organized by the Student Mobilization to End the War in
Vietnam, will hear addresses by James Forman of SNCC and Arthur Kinoy
of the American Civil Liberties Union. Topics covered will include the
strike, campus recruitment, the draft, and the role of black students.
The Student Mobilization is at present an active movement on over 600
college campuses in the United States. The organization sponsored the
massive march on Washington in October, and the national Stop the Draft
week in December.
The State University of Buffalo chapter of Student Mob is tentatively
planning on sending a representative to the conference. They have voiced
their approval of the proposed spring student strike.

these murderous but fortunately
incompetent arch-fiends gives the

director, Richard

Maintenance: new
lights not for security

Lester, the op-

portunity to present his capering
charges in a variety of exotic
settings.

Neither London, the Alps nor
the Bahamas are sacred to the
helter-skelter camera that plays
nearly as many tricks as the
Beatles do, nearly always with

equal success.

Dr. Glazer to speak in SDS, Mob demand action
urban problems seminar

SDS and the Student Mobilization Committee have issued
a statement “putting forth directions” for this semesters
actions.

The role metropolitan govern-

ments play

in providing ade-

quate housing for the poor will
be discussed at the fifth of a
series of urban problems seminars
tomorrow. The seminar will be

held in the auditorium of the
Buffalo Public Library on Lafayette Square.
The

keynote

speaker.

Dr.

Nathan Glazer. is a nationally
known expert on housing. Presa sociology professor at
the University of California at
Berkeley. Dr. Glazer is the author
of many books on the general
topic. The Lonely Crowd (which
he wrote with David Riesman and
Reuel Denney). Faces in the
Crowd (written with David Riesman), Beyond
the Melting Pot
(with Daniel P. Moynihan), and
Studies in Housing and Minority
Groups (which he co edited with
ently

Davis McEntirc) are but examples
of his work.

The panelists who will be responding to Dr. Glazer's paper
will be Louis Winnick, director

of the Ford Foundation's Urban
and Metropolitan Redevelopment
Program: James L. Hecht, a Buf-

falonian who is chairman of the

Board

of

Housing

Opportunity

Made Equal (HOME); and George
Nicholas, the chairman of the
Urban Renewal Committee of
BUILD. The moderator will be
Dr, Alan Drinnan of the State
University of Buffalo.

The meeting, sponsored by the
office of Urban Affairs at the
State University of Buffalo and
the Co operative Urban Extension
Center, will be open to the public free of charge. It will begin at

10 a m.

It is a summation of many of
the activities of last semester
and an orientation for tjiis semester, atcording to Bill Mayrl, a
spokesman for the group.
It states in part:
“The Dow confrontation of Dec.
18 has proven that the concept of
an open campus is inapplicable
to the State University of Buffalo. The administration, through
its supplying of recruitment facilities, has shown itself to be the
willing agent of the Dow Chemical Co., the manufacturer of napalm, herbicides, and the deadly
gas, DOM. This University is
neither open nor closed; it is committed. From its Council and its
highest committees through its
administration to segments of its
faculty, this University is intimately committed to its function

in the military-industrial-academic
complex.

Demands listed
We specifically demand the
following as immediate steps to

be taken:

That war criminals not be
allowed recruitment facilities on
•

this campus,

That the University through
its officials take a clear and post
tive stand in opposition to the
US. war against the Vietnamese
•

people.,”

2-pronged program
Mr. Mayrl explained that there
is a two-pronged program for the
SDS and MOB organization for
the coming year. The first will
be directed against the war in
Vietnam, and the second will attempt to “make the State Univer
sity of Buffalo a real place of humanistic learning, rather than an
arm of the state as it is now.”

�</text>
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                    <text>Dow arrives; peace prevails
HE
/T*

v

■&gt;

.1

pECTI^UM

0#

4exlra

Vol. 18, No. 26
Tuesday, December 19, 1967

State University of New York at Buffalo

Napalm makers lead demonstrators
on merry chase; will not return today
Two recruiters for the Dow Chemical Co.—makers of
appeared on campus Monday. Not many saw
napalm
them. But they were sought by relatively peaceful, determined activist students pledged to obstruct the recruiting
process.
They will not return today.
There was no major outburst of violence, although three
University Security Officers reported minor injuries suffered
during scuffles with demonstrators. One officer claimed
to have received a back injury. The other two reported
chest injuries and minor bruises. They were referred to
private physicians for treatment.
—

According to Vice President for
Student Affairs, Dr. Richard A.
Siggelkow, no more than the
normal complement of security
policemen was on duty.
Dr. Siggelkow and the recruiters were guarded by detectives of the Buffalo City Police,
The Spectrum has learned.
The city police contigent was
led by Inspector Frederick J.

Platek.

Police

are

heroes

Associate Dean of Students, Dr.
Anthony Lorenzetti, said: “The police felt they were pushed very
hard in a difficult situation.
“They are the heroes of the
day, I think, to ‘hold the fort’
as they did.
“There was a University awareness of a complicated problem.
The widespread representation of
the University community acted
very responsibly.
“The student groups wanted to
demonstrate a position. I think
they came out a head taller today, All the issues haven’t been

resolved but in view of the total
political and social spectrum of

-

-

Action begins

Action began shortly before
8 a.m. About fifteen students
were standing huddled behind
behind Schoellkopf Hall, where
the placement office is located.
Campus police arrived and told
them that Dow would not be recruiting in that building.
Within half an hour it had
been announced at an open forum

in the Norton Hall conference
theatre that recruiting would
take place at 250 Winspear Ave.
the University central storage
—

building.

Word reached the demonstra-

tors outside, who by this time
numbered about 75. About ten
were wearing “monitor” armbands and perhaps 15 had hel-

mets with them. Almost everyone
was dressed in dungarees—khaki

green.
At this point most of the demonstrators were students. There
were only about four or five

very area.
Labels worn
There were small knots of peo-

wearing “student observer”
and “faculty observer” lables.
Dr. Siggelkow arrived and said
that recruitment was not held at
Schoellkopf because of the building’s many glass windows, 145
women students, and poor rooms
available for recruiting.
Shortly before 10 a.m. about
30 marchers linked arms, encircling one of the entrances.
Forty minutes later a student
at the front of the building broke
a glass door panel with a motorcycle helmet, reached in, and
opened the door.
A score of students poured in.
They searched the offices, but
did not find the recruiters.
Dr. Siggelkow appeared and
told the crowd: “They (Dow)
were in the building originally.
I don’t know where they are
now."
Marchers regroup
The students regrouped and
marched back toward the Norton
fountain area, with the intent
ple

(Cont’d

on Pg.

*

«

miMnwj
Si ‘

nadaered

Vice president Siggelkow was
pressed for a statement Monday, as marchers sought assur-

ance f^af ow was
cam pos.
Dr. Siggelkow was heckled.

—

faculty members. Students ban-

I.Hi

Siggelkow

—

»

I

-

a very tight situation, everyone
behaved very responsibly and
very well.”

tered with each other. All were
in good spirits.
Demonstrators marched orderly
around the Norton Hall fountain.
By 9 a.m. their numbers had
swelled to about 200.
At 9:15 they marched two
abreast
there were 300 of them
now
to the Winspear facility.
The front of the line was confused, and began to circle back.
They finally formed a marching
circle on the far side of the
building in the large paved deli-

—

,%-*5

4)

Editorial

The Dow "confrontation"
What started out as a demonstration against the Dow
Chemical Company’s presence on campus Monday turned
into a game
of hide and seek, Simon Sez and follow the
leader. Perhaps we are all better for it.
Some felt cheated, some felt frustrated, many claimed
victory. Perhaps we are better for that also.
Dow has come and gone. A confrontation with an invisible (well-concealed) enemy has taken place. The interviews have been carried out. There was little violence
three reported injuries, none serious.
Cat and mouse? Hide and seek? The administration
picked a building far from the center of campus, a building
that had never before been used for interviews. The Service
Building was well fortified and had many entrances (and
exits). This confused the demonstrators. They did not know
how to attack their prey.
When some of the demonstrators did get bold enough
to go into the building, they were met with little resistance.
There were only polite requests to leave
not flying clubs.
The demonstration-confrontation became a good oldfashioned witch hunt and the witches were not to be found.
even destroyed
the action
Even if they had been found
would not have put an end to the hell in Vietnam. They
were protected by the fine strategic planning of administrators. When it was finally made official that Dow had escaped from the Service Building unmolested, the witchhunters found themselves one step behind. And they were
one step behind when they reached Harriman Library.
While the leaders of the demonstration might have reacted another way if the witches had been caught, they must
be commended for handling the crowd as they did. Even
though their decisions seemed hasty, their effort unconcerted and their plans wasted, they did control the crowd
and possibly prevented a very serious and direct confrontation.
The campus police must be commended for their
patience.
The administration must be complimented for its strategies. The plan was masterful, extremely well-engineered
and carried opt with no visible flaws.
All involved should be commended for the restraint
which was displayed.
But while all can claim victory, all might just as well
claim defeat. The administration proved that it could bring
bubonic plague on campus unmolested
a dangerous precedent to set. While the rights of all must be protected, it
becomes a discouraging situation when those rights can be
protected only through cloak-and-dagger tactics.
The SDS-Mob group (along with the nonaffiliated demonstrators) were shown that they are up against a much
smarter administration than we may have witnessed in the
past. The blood-thirsty ones never caught glimpse of the
enemy. The fact that no direct confrontation evolved this
time does not preclude the fact that it might have happened
or that it will happen next time.
So now we can all sit back, smile glibbly, slap each
other on the back, toast to each other’s victory and wait for
the next “confrontation” on the local front.
—

—

—

—

—

—

Out for
_

UOW

Marchers head for 250 Winspear where two
Dow recruiters are interviewing applicants.
The time here is 9:20 a.m., and the demonstration has not yet reached its peak.

�Pita Two

The Spectrum

Tuesday, December 19, 1967

Miller, Marciano discuss recruitment

Faculty Senate opens meeting, allows students to speak
The Faculty Senate meeting of
14 was voted open to stu-

Dec.

A resolution proposed by Dr.
Adolph Homburger, chairman of
the Faculty Senate Executive
Committee, and amended by Dr.
Edgar Friedenberg, professor of
sociology, proposed to allow students and other interested persons “to view the proceedings of
the Senate meeting of Dec. 14
through the medium of closed circuit television or by personal
attendance at the meeting.” After
about a half hour of debate, the
resolution was passed.
Approximately 30 students who
had been awaiting the vote immediately entered the Butler
Auditorium at Capen Hall.
Michael Nevins, member of SDS,
previously stated that there were
no plans to disrupt the meeting.
If the Homburger-Friedenberg resolution had been voted down,
they “would walk away in disgust.”

Dr. Homburger submitted a
motion to permit the three recognized students groups, the Student Senate, the GSA and the
Millard Fillmore College Student
Association, to address the Senate

in a speech not exceeding ten
minutes. The motion was over-

War in an open forum, they did

by Mr. Sidney Wilhelm of the
Sociology Department, allowing

commend policies and advise on
the use of University facilities for

Inalienable right

It's time the Faculty Senate made
some moral decisions of its own.”
The Senate then moved to discuss the three-part Baumer-Hochfield resolution proposed at an
earlier session. These three proposals deal directly with police
on campus and the University’s
recruiting policy.

ment agencies and their representatives to have recruiters on

was tabled considering the lack

Richard Miller, vice president
of the Student Senate and John
Marciano of the GSA addressed
the Senate. Since students had
learned of the proposal a few
hours before, there was not
enough time to contact a representative from the Millard Fillmore College Student Association.
Mr. Miller urged “moral commitment of the Faculty Senate.
We must reply to the war itself.” Citing the student referendum to permit an open campus,
to permit Dow recruiters on
campus, and not to the amend
the policy of the Placement Office, Mr. Miller said: “This decision should not be misread or
misused
the right to dissent is inalienable.” Concerning
having Buffalo police on campus,
he said: “Outside authorities
should be called only as a last
...

resort.”

John

Marciano, speaker

for

GSA also asked for a Senate Resolution against the war. “The

civil liberties of Dow are not
in question. When Dow was invited to state its views on the

Headquarters for Good
College Clothing

not reply. Not everything said

Defines steps
The first part

was passed after
about two hours of debate. This
resolution in its final form defines the steps to be taken to
maintain peace and order on campus. It emphasizes that outside
authorities will be called only
when “use of civil authority is
the only remaining means for
the protection of persons in this

community, such authority to be
used to protect all members of

the University community and
their guests including those exercising their right of dissent.”
During the debate, Professor
Baumer called “for discipline
within the University. It is the
responsibility of the Administration to deal with the disturbance.”
One speaker stated that keeping the police off campus might
be wishful thinking considering
that some groups have stated that
they plan to interfere with re-

cruitment.

Another speaker asserted that
access assumed violating

blocking

open campus.
An amendment was proposed

campus whenever they wanted. It
was found to be in order, and
will be voted on at a later session

The resolution, part I, in its
final form, lists five steps to be
followed when it appears that
“peace and order of the University is endangered or violated.”

Committee proposed
Part II of the Baumer-Hochfield
package proposes to create a
special Committee on Placement

and Recruitment Practices with
representatives from the student
body. This committee would “re-

Tonawanda Street, corner Ontario
Buffalo, New York 14207

spring

Part HI proposes to condemn
Lt. Gen. Hershey’s directive to
reclassify students interfering
with military recruitment or selective service procedures. It
urges that the directive be rescinded, and recommends that
the use of University facilities
for military recruitment be withheld. This part was referred back
to the Executive Committee of
the Senate with directions to report on it at a later time, probably at the next meeting.

Political Science Dept. issues
new curriculum requirements
The Political Science Department has announced a change in
course requirements. Under the
revised cirriculum approved by
the department, beginning next
semester, there will no longer be
a specific departmental requirement for Political Science 151,
152, 201, 221 or 261.
According to Dr. Richard Cornell, Director of Undergraduate
Studies: “Students who have already taken Political Science 151,

STRENGTH FROM THE BIBLE

RIVERSIDE MEN'S SHOP

of time and urgency of discussing
I. There is no military recruitment scheduled until next

Part

The true meaning of Christmas
THE BIBLE SAYS: "For unto you is horn this day in the city of
David A SAVIOR which is CHRIST THE LORD."
Luke 2:11
"He shall save His people from their sins."
Math. 1:21
Believe in JESUS and have a Blessed Christmas.

152, and at least one of the 200
courses may register directly for 300 and 400 level
level

courses.”

The courses that are no longer
required will still be available in
the spring semester, however.

Dr. Cornell announced that
there will be a meeting Jan. 23
to explain the implication of
these developments to freshmen,
sophomores and juniors majoring in Political Science. Any Political Science major having questions about the changes and their

effect is invited to attend the

—

meeting. The time and place will

—

be announced.

Crest
UNIVERSITY PLAZA

THE FRESHMAN CLASS COUNCIL

presents

The Manchurian

Candidate
and

A lecherous fellow called Pops
At wooing the ladies was tops;
They’d love him to bits
When he’d buy them a Schlitz
And give them the kiss of the hops.

Pink
—

C UtaMaa M Mm t««i

CARTOON

TUES., DEC. 19th
7:15

Jaa Scttu

Panther

&amp;

9:15

—

Capen 140
75c

�Tuesday,

December 19, 1967

The Spectrum

Dow representative defends napalm
by Joel Kleinman
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

“We believe in the long term
goals of our country and will
liam Seward of the Dow Chemical Co. at an Open Forum in the
Conference Theater on Monday

morning.
The public relations official
was met with both applause and

abuse from members of the University community as he scored
the “over-exposure given to the
napalm issue.” He claimed that
the morality issue is not really
pertinent, as “you could make a
case that napalm is saving lives,
as it helps speed the war.”
Mr. Seward conceded that student demonstrations against his
company are “a good and healthy
. War is inconvenient
thing .
to everyone.”
In reply to a hostile question
from the floor, Mr. Seward dismissed reports that a large number of civilians are burned by
napalm in Vietnam, observing:
“I don’t see how you can have
a war without having civilians
killed." He pointed out that the
Viet Cong use equally destructive weapons such as flamethrowers against our forces.
When queried as to whether it
was moral for a company to make
a profit from the war, the speaker cited reports that the manufacture of napalm accounted for
“less than one-half of one per
cent” of Dow’s sales and profits.
.

Sigglekow memorandum

At various intervals through-

Dow has released a “Statement
of Position Regarding Napalm”
which states:

ment to the University comma

dozens

nity:

‘The Dow Chemical recruiter
is located in the warehouse building on campus. The warehouse
is bounded by the football field,
Winspear Ave. and the nuclear
reactor. No interviews will be
held at Norton Hall, Schoellkopf
Hall, Hayes Hall, or its annexes.
The entrance to the recruitment
office is located at the rear of
the building adjacent to the receiving area’.”
The meeting was interrupted as
a group of students, led by a
sign-carrying protester marched,
out of the theater to organize
a demonstration at the interview
site.
The forum was sponsored by
the Undergraduate and Graduate
Chemistry Societies.
Napalm has 'terror value'
The Dow representative told
The Spectrum that his company’s
assertions that napalm is a necessary weapon to “kill or disable
the enemy” were valid, as its effectiveness has been confirmed
by the men fighting the war. The
Viet Cong, he asserted, are
“d e a t h 1 y afraid of napalm
bombs,” so they have a “certain
terror value.” A statement by
Dow President Herbert C. Doan
added: “It answers a specific
miiltary need in certain combat
situations peculiar to the type of
warfare practiced by the Viet

“We arc a

supplier

to the Pc.

of firms manufacturing
items of military equipment ranging from aircraft components to
medicines and food. One of the
products we supply is napalm.
The United States is involved
in Vietnam, and as long as we
are involved, we believe in fulfilling our responsibility to this
national commitment of a democratic society. And we do this
because we believe in the longterm goals of our country.

Meyerson statement

Goals are achieved
This morning representatives of the Dow Chemical Compan;

in an nnpn fnrnm anrl pnnrlnrl..rt
il.Ui.imit inf m
viowa on the campus. Last Wl'l'k, at a kneeling of our faculty Senate
and elsewhere, I expressed my concern that the University could, in
a situation which everyone realized was tense, achieve the following
goals: To maintain its commitment to the open campus policy; to
protect the right of dissent and to encourage the full expression of
larticipated

diverse views; and to do both of these peacefully.
These goals have been substantially achieved through the conscientious efforts of all segments of the University community. We
are almost unique among large American universities in having done
so. Under trying circumstances, with important and deeply felt
moral issues at stake, student organizations and student groups
reflecting a broad spectrum of views, displayed a commendable
capacity for self-governance. The Faculty Senate and individual
faculty members took on educational initiative which contributed
measurably to the spirit which prevails on our campus, and which
Production to continue
we all hope will continue.
We respect the right of peoThe campus security officers conducted themselves with a courple to protest peacefully against age and restraint
which merits our appreciation. They proved theman action with which they dis- selves a
responsible part of an educational institution’s ability to
agree. However, our company
govern itself. Most important, in my judgment, has been the role
has made the decision to continue
of Dr. Richard A. Siggelkow, our Vice President for Student Affairs,
to produce napalm and other
who has borne the heavy responsibility not merely of maintaining
materials as long as they are campus
order, but of continuing that deep commitment to students
needed by our government.”
which characterizes his enlightened efforts. He and his staff deserve
Describing the actual recruitour special gratitude.
ment procedure earlier in the
I must, however, view today’s events in a sober perspective.
day, Mr. Seward related: “The
As long as a University remains responsive, as it must, to the vital
interviews were started early this
isues of our society—such as the quest for peace abroad and for
morning about 5:30 a.m. We rejustice at home—it will through its students and faculty,
cruited 19 or 20 students . . . equal
continue to be an intellectual and moral proving ground.
We did interview all of the peoLet me conclude with a special recognition of the role that
ple that we wanted to. The instudents have played on our campus, both individually and through
terview lasted until shortly betheir organizations. Today’s events, and the atmosphere within which
fore noon.”
they occurred, reflect both the constructive and the troubling conAlluding to the secrecy that
accompanied the interviews, he tributions which students are making to American colleges and
added that decisions regarding universities. It is, after all, the students who give a university its
justification and its special character. Their commitment and their
such matters are “in the hands
of the University completely. All restraint, their probing and their questioning, give hope for our
future as well as theirs.
that we ask is that it be on
campus and that we be provided
with a safe place for recruiters
and those being interviewed.”

Siggelkow lauds University,
to quit English Dept post recruiters after visit by Dow

out the forum, a memorandum

was read to the audience by one

Holland

of the moderators, George Bodner. It stated: “I have been asked
by Richard A. Sigglekow, Vice
President for Student Affairs, to

Pag* Thr**

Dr. Norman N. Holland, Chair-

man of the English Department,
intends to resign in June.

Dr. Holland commented: “I just
want to get back to my own work
which includes a series of experimental studies of literary response.”
Steps are being taken to find a

successor to Dr. Holland. Dr. Eric

Larrabee, Provost of the Faculty
of Arts and Letters, said that he
is now talking with members of

ON BARBER
SHOP
hair styling
razor cutting

custom haircuts
appointment
service

available
located in Basement of Norton
open daily 8 a.m. to 5:45 p.m.
831-3545
—Under New Management—

Cong.”

“Students have the right to a
received his BS from MIT in 1947, private interview. It is my conhis LBD in 1950, his MA in 1952 cern to protect the rights of these
and his PhD in 1956, all from students.”
Harvard.
With this statement Dr. RichDr. Holland held a series of
ard A. Siggelkow, vice president
In
at
addition
to
these
MIT.
posts
of student affairs, defended the
he has held various positions with methods used by Dow to recruit
several organizations.
on campus Monday.
Among his many published
He also issued the following
works are: First Modern Come- statement:
dies, The Significance of Eterege,
“The somewhat conflicting obWycherly and Comgreve
In July 1966 Dr. Holland was
1959 jectives to protect simultaneously
chairmanship
Psychoanalysts
to
the
appointed
and
and Shakesthe rights of students wishing to
of the English Department. He peare
1966.
interview, as well as allowing the
broadest possible latitude for
HO,
pizza
peaceful dissent, and the avoidDelivered FREE By
ance of violence were achieved
only through the efforts of the
DiROSE
entire University community.
$1.05 p.i.
“The combination of faculty
POP 5c
and staff willingness to particiTR 3-1330
pate voluntarily, and the excelI’m just sorry that organized lent co-operation of the University police force, combined to
labor isn’t here today.” That was
BUY &amp; SELL
make the day’s events possible
the comment of possibly the
with a minimum of difficulty for
oldest
anti-Dow
demonstrator
those being interviewed. Most
Monday.
important of all was the genand paperbacks
erally responsible attitude of the
He was sitting on a curb, his
at
nearly-lettered sign still strung
students themselves.
around his neck, watching the
“The fact that the company
proceedings.
sent two interviewers afforded an
opportunity to attempt to com“I’m too damn tired to talk to plete the schedule in a shorter
you,” he said when he learned
period. In view of our desire to
3610 Main
he was speaking to a Spectrum insure the safety and welfare of
(across from Clement Hall)
reporter.
those students who wished to interview, it seemed unnecessary
He also refused to give his
and undesirable to prolong an
name. “I’m up for election as
obviously tense situation for any
president of my union,” he exlonger period than necessary.
plained. “The election is coming
off next week, and it culminates
20 years of hard work.”
The Spectrum is published

the English Department as the
initiative step.
A committee within the department, headed by Provost Warren
Bennis, is considering what action to take next. The committee
may find it necessary to look outside the department in order to
find a replacement. Also, it may
be found that a search committee
will be needed.

“We had three basic objectives
in mind today: The interviews
had to be held in a University
facility; it had to be held on
the same day as the forum; it
had to held under the basic direction of the Placement Office.
"We carried out the task with
the protection and well-being of
candidates, students, dcmonstra
tors, faculty and all others involved foremost in mind.
“For example, we did not set

—

—

r"-

Protester finds

demonstration
an inspiration

USED BOOKS
BUFFALO
TEXTBOOK

The unidentified 59-year-old
characterized union leaders as

“almost 100% corrupt, except
for the Retail Clerks." They had
passed an anti-Vietnam war resolution, he explained, “but that
was in New York City.”

Unions in Buffalo?
“Here they’re a pretty crummy
lot. George Meany deserves to go
on trial with the rest of them,”
And what was the life-long
Buffalonian doing on campus?
“I come here about once a
month. It’s an inspiration . . .
about all there is that’s any good
in this city.”

up decoy interviewing stations
or hold interviews on Sunday,
even though the recruiters arrived a day early.
“Nor did we encourage or use
counter 'student-groups’ against

the demonstrators.
"While we respect the demonstrators and their feelings, we
can hardly fail to note the basic
unfairness of any position that
clearly sets up special rules made

by some, without regard to the

of others.
"Few of us would have many
concerns if we knew that those
seeking to obstruct or physically
prevent the interview in the first

rights

place were willing to grant similar freedom of movement and
action to others besides themselves.

“In a situation loaded with
such serious potential danger we
decided to make every effort not
to unduly expose students and

interviewers to possible physical

harm.”

every Tuesday
twice weekly
and Friday during the regular academic year at the State University of New York at Buffalo, 3435 Mam Street, Buffalo. New
York 14214, Offices are located at 355 Norton Hall.
Editor-In-Chief
MICHAEL L D'AMICO
Managing Editor
RICHARD R HAYNES
Asst. Managing Editor
RICHARD PAUL SCHWAB
Business Manager
SAMUEL A POWAZEK
DAVID E EOX
Advertising Manager
Contributors to this extra edition
Margaret Anderson
Daniel Lasser
Edward Joscelyn
Nora Gamer
Joel Kleinman
Donna Van Schoonhoven
Linda Laufer
Barry Hershfeld

Editorial

policy

is determined

—

Marlene Kozuchowski
Judi Riyeff
David Yates
Janette Hand
Jay Schreiber
Ken Lepczyk
Francis Grimmer
Barry C. Holtzclaw
by

the Editor

in

Chief

�Pag* Four

Tuesday, December 19, 1967

The Spectrum

SDS fails to formulate policy for
confrontation at emergency meetin
Jay

Specttum

most people with the impression

Schreiber
Staff

Repprter

An emergency SDS meeting
Sunday night failed to establish
a discipline whereby demonstrators would have followed certain
formulated tactics if city police
had come on campus.
William Mayrl, who ran the
meeting, suggested that if police
were to come in force and “say
move off or you will be arrested,
people should move out and continue demonstrating orderly. We
don’t want 50 or 60 arrests. The
demonstration is larger than a
physical obstruction of Dow.”
Mr. Mayrl’s suggestion was
greeted with little enthusiasm.
There was a variance of opinion
among those present as to whether one should obstruct in the face
of being arrested. Several members of the audience suggested
various mobile tactics to be used
in the event the police used any
violence when they arrived at the
demonstration. The debate continued until Bill Yates, an SDS
leader, interrupted, saying: “Don’t
develop new tactics now. It’s too
late. Explain the tactics we already set up.” However, the meeting ended soon after, leaving

Napalm makers
(Cont’d

from P.

1)

of demonstrating there until the
location of the recruiters could
be determined.
About half way to the fountain
people began shouting that Dow
was in Harriman Library.
Over 100 students poured
through the doors and raced up
the wide curving stairway. They
were met on the second floor by
eight security officers.
Dean Lorenzetti led secretaries
out of the building.
Dr. Siggelkow told the jeering
crowd: “Dow is not on campus
and they will not be returning
in the near future. To the best
of my knowledge Dow has left.”

Siggelkow heckled
He was heckled:

“Siggelkow, whose side are you
“Why are you hiding war erim
inals?”
Shouts of “Hayes Hall!” began

to echo in Harriman.

a stateMeycrson
definitely

Demonstrators wanted

ment from President
that recruiters were

off campus.
So they filed out and marched
to Hayes.
Entering Hayes Hall they were
met by a cordon of police blocking the hallway to the President’s
office. The police told them they
would be violating University
regulations if they attempted to
pass.
Demonstrators demanded

that

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that each demonstrator would
make his own “personal decision”
as to what action to take if confronted by the police.

Open Forum discussed
The meeting had begun at 8:15
p.m.

in Room 339 Norton Hall

with about 150 people in attendance. The first topic discussed
was the Open Forum scheduled
for 8 a.m, Monday morning with
a Dow representative scheduled
to be present. Mr. Mayrl and
other SDS leaders urged a boycott of the forum, saying that it
was an obvious attempt to “diffuse the situation.” One student
seemed to represent the prevailing opinion when he said: “You
can ask a Dow representative two
questions. Does Dow make napalm? Why? Any other questions
would be futile.”
Severe doubts were raised over
the fact that recruitment was
scheduled to be at Schoellkopf.
Mr, Mayrl decided to keep Schoellkopf Hall as the 8 a.m. meeting
place only “because there are
some demonstrators who won’t
be aware of the change.”
Immediately following this, one
student questioned the purpose

Mr. Meyerson make a formal
statement that Dow recruiters
were off campus and would not
return.
A campus police lieutenant told
the demonstartprs to hold their
positions until he could return
with a spokesman for the President.

Meyerson not in
The President, he said, was not
in his office.
Before the lieutenant returned,
however, Dr. Siggelkow was already addressing the crowd. “I
am authorized to speak for the
President,” he said. He spoke
with the aid of a megaphone, and
the crowd strained to hear what
he had to say.
“Dow has left campus. You
have my personal guarantee that
Dow will not return today or
tomorrow or this week.”
Pressed for a more explicit
statement, he added that Dow recruiters would not return until
next semester, if they are invited
at that time. “Dow will not be
on campus in the immediate future,” he said.
“There are a few students who
were scheduled for interviews,
who were not interviewed,” he
said, “but, 1 am sorry, it is too
late. Dow has left the campus.”
Demonstration leaders shouted
that they had won a victory.

Victory

of a sit-down. Mr. Mayrl answered: “Given a political goal,
the most effective means to
achieve it is obstruction, to disrupt the ‘business as usual’ atmosphere on the campus.”
No fear of right wing
Right wing provocation was also dismissed quickly. Most did
not expect serious agitation efforts on the part of the right
wing, SDS did, however, advise
the appointed monitors to watch
for agitators in and out of the

IflMPUi'
NOT FI)R

demonstration.

Throughout the meeting Mr.
Mayrl constantly emphasized that
the prime objective of the demonstration was political, not mili-

tary, He also conceded that if
Dow went underground “little
can be done about it.”
The only dampening note of
the evening came when one stu-

MRPERft

dent noted that “the only civil
liberties being violated are those
of the people who are trying to
be interviewed.” The student said
the American Civil Liberties Union would only be sympathetic if
the police were “over-zealous.”
The meeting broke up with the
warning by several SDS leaders
“to wear heavy clothes and to
bring helmets.”

I

“We are going to continue the
struggle against militant recruit-

Avid

ers.

“Under the circumstances I
feel that the movement was as
well organized as it could have

been.
“We realize that the campus
police had a difficult job insofar
as their duly was to protect Dow
war criminals from 500 determined students. They handled

activist

This determined student wears
a grim look as he marches from
the Norton fountain to the central storage building where
Dow is recruiting.

Course on Constitutional
Law scheduled for spring

themselves admirably.
“Truly, this is a two week culmination of our struggle. The
battle is by no means over. I
think clearly we have won this
A course in Constitutional Law
round.”
concentrating on “three or four
Interviews completed
areas of gnawing Constitutional
Dr. James C. Lafkiotes, direcissues,” according to Assistant to
tor of the placement and career the President Robert M. O’Neil,
guidance service, told The Specwill be offered by the Political
trum that nineteen interviews Science Department next semeswith Dow recruiters had been ter. Mr. O’Neil will teach the
completed.

“At various times

in the morning 19 out of the 20 scheduled
intervievys were held. I am most
pleased that they have taken
place without any major violent
occurrances,” he said.
“The one interview did
not take place because the student was out of town in the morning and was not aware of the
change in the recruiting schedule, or that two recruiters were
here to make it go faster.”

-

course.

Mr. O’Neil will focus on the
legal disabilities of such “secondclass citizens” as prisoners, American Indians, aliens, welfare recipients, and military personnel.
As “forgotten minorities,” these
people are usually unaware of
their legal rights as guaranteed
by the Constitution, Mr. O’Neil
observed.

Military personnel are largely
uninformed about when they can
raise objections to the war in

Vietnam, for example, and he also
intends to explore the often-neglected Constitutional rights of
college students.
“I think it will be an exciting
course,” Mr, O’Neil predicted,
adding: “I will try to make it as
timely as I can.”
The course is designated Political Science 384 and will meet
Tuesdays and Thursdays from 3
p.m. to 4:30 p.m., although Mr.
O’Neil will encourage a flexible

schedule.
Additional

undergraduate
courses sponsored jointly by the
Faculty of Law and Jurisprudence
and an undergraduate department

will be available in the future.
will
explore law-related social welfare

Plans include a course that

problems.

j

by

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The
Vol. 18, No. 25

State University of New York at Buffalo

Friday, December 15, 1967

Campus braced for Dow
Non-violent obstruction pledged
by Mob; 25 schedule interviews

Council

The University Council passed a resolution Monday defining the power of the
University in dealing with picketing and demonstrating on campus. The resolution
is derived from the section of the Student Handbook governing behavior of all enrolled
students who express dissent through picketing and demonstrating, plus a definition
of the power of University authorities to take action against students who violate the

by Linda Laufer
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

Preparations are being made on campus for Monday
and Tuesday when a recruiter from Dow Chemical Co. will
be interviewing students. Interviews will be given from 8:30
a.m. until 4 or 4:30 p.m. in the University Placement Center
in the basement of Schoellkopf Hall.
Approximately 25 students
have been scheduled for interviews. All are students majoring in some technical field and
Dow is recruiting students for
technical positions. Conducting
these interviews will be Mr.
Ronald Houghton.
According to Dr. C. James Lafkiotes, director of University
Placement, the Placement Center will conduct business as usual.
Wililam Mayrl, a member of
SDS and Student MOB, said that
there will be a non-violent obstruction of Dow recruitment. He
said: “Our demonstration will
take place under non-violent discipline; however, we can not,
nor do I think anyone can expect us to, make any guarantees of how we would respond
to a concerted violent attack.”
He added that demonstrators
would fight back only as a last
resort.

Seven spokesmen or monitors

have been chosen to work out the
tactics and to serve as leaders
for the demonstration. The monitors will be placed in various
positions around the building.
People participating in the demonstration will be able to look
to these monitors in an extreme
crisis, but ultimately individuals
will have to make their own decisions.
Mr. Mayrl indicated that nothing definite has been planned
yet. He continued that the spokesmen will be meeting to plan tactics and will then inform par-

ticipants at a meeting Sunday
evening.
Another SDS spokesman said
that the demonstrators have two
objectives—they want to obstruct

rules.

The rules state that:
Picketing or demonstrating must be orderly at all times and should in no way
jeopardise public order or safety or interfere with the University's programs.
e Picketing or demonstrating must not interfere with entrances to buildings or
the normal flow of pedestrian or vehicular traffic.
e Students involved in picketing or demonstrating may not interfere by mingling
with organised meetings or other assemblies for the purpose of harassment or obstruction since this violates the freedom of individuals and invades the rights of others to
assemble and be permitted free expression.
e Picketing or demonstrating may not interfere with the integrity of the classroom, the privacy of the residence halls or the functioning of the physical plant.
e Pickets may not exhort others to join in the picketing, nor harass passersby
nor participants in any other University program.
•

Dow and they don’t want people
to be hurt.
“We take our decision to obstruct Dow very soberly, but we
feel that in light of the genocidal
war that is being waged against
the Vietnamese people and of the
especially repugant role that Dow
is playing in this war, we can
not permit the ‘business as usual’

atmosphere to pervade on this
campus,” Mr. Maryl asserted.
Campus Police Chief Eugene
Murray said that the police are
going to let people demonstrate
and that physical force will not
be used. He hoped that everything would be peaceful. Nothing definite has been planned.
The State University of Buffalo Council reaffirmed the present policy that disciplinary action may be taken against students. This applies to both graduate and undergraduate students.
Undergraduates will be referred
to the Student Judiciary and
graduate students will be referred to the Committee on Student Behavior.
Dr. Richard A. Siggelkow, Vice
President for Student Affairs
said: “The University has an
obligation to protect the right
of those students who wish to
participate in these interviews.
It also has an obligation to avoid
violence if at all possible. However, there is absolutely no
doubt that those who violate previously published regulations,
which include obstructionary
tactics, will be referred to appropriate disciplinary bodies and
they also subject themselves to
possible suspension or expulsion.”

defines power of University

Review of action*

It was further resolved that violations by any students (full time, part time,
undergraduate, or graduate) may also be reviewed by a body (or bodies) designated by
the president and entrusted with the power to establish and impose penalties, including
suspension and dismissal from the University.
Related to the possibility of violent action on campus during Dow Chemical
recruiting, the resolution offers "a mechanism to deal with violence on campus."
According to Ronald Stein, Assistant Dean of Students: "Those people who plan
to demonstrate should be aware of the potential consequences of their actions. The
resolution is an attempt to deal with an unfortunate situation. By making these rules
part of University law, it reaffirms that President Meyerson is ultimately responsible
for what happens on campus."

Calm open forum examines methods
of protest, questions role of police
by Jay Schraiber
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

Criticism and defense of various methods of protest was the
center of student-faculty debate
held Tuesday at an Open Forum.
The issue dominated the informal meeting since Dow Chemical
has been invited to hold interviews on campus Monday and
Tuesday.

The Forum, sponsored by the

Student Senate, GSA, the MFC
Student Association, and the Fac-

ulty Senate Executive Committee
was orderly and calm.
The only new fact to emerge
was revealed late in the proceedings when Prof. George Hoch-

field announced: “There is wide-

spread agreement that Resolution
Three was unfortunate. We have
formed a substitute that puts
many more constraints on the
Administration for calling in civil

authorities.”

"Psychiatry problem"
Earlier, several speakers Had
tried to point out that a resolution which tried to keep city police from campus would be ineffective. Prof. Baumer commented: “It is possible for anyone to pick up the telephone and
call the police. When there was
a bomb-scare police came. The

Buffalo police do have jurisdiction over the campus. They can
come without invitation.”
Michael Nevins, a member of
SDS, charged that the Buffalo

police are a “psychiatric prob-

r ni| |J Ji
1
i

I

happen herer

A campus police officer at one
large university had his hands
full recently with at least one
Dow protestor.

lem” and that it is unfair for the
Faculty Senate to determine
"whether the students get their
heads bashed” without students
having a voice in the decision.
Dr. Baumer replied: “We are trying to set it up so that the police

will not have to come on cam-

pus.”

Terry Keegan, a student, served
a warning to those who planned
to obstruct Dow interviews. “Consider the consequences of our act.
If you say you want to stop the
war, dump Johnson, stop CIA,
look at the best way to do it. You
can take the moral stand and
say: T will do everything in my
power to disrupt it.’ I’m not
against the stand. I’m against
not considering the consequences.
You must get support for your
programs. We forget we have
an image. When we protest Dow
and CIA, make it peaceful and
lawful. We must take the issue
of Dow, not the issue of violence
to the Buffalo people.”

Solidarity
Plans to obstruct Dow recruitments also came under criticism
from Dr. Zimmerman and Professor Hochfield. Dr. Zimmerman

asked: “Are your methods self
defeating? The left has far more
to lose than the right in not preserving academic freedom. There
must be University solidarity in
supporting academic freedom.
The right wing is more powerful
than the left and more apt to
violate

the

left’s

freedom

of

speech.”
Dr. Zimmerman ruled out obstruction saying: “You obstruct
them and they’ll come right back
and clamp down on the liberals
and left-wingers on campus. Do

you think your obstruction will
end the war? It will encourage

it.” Professor Hochfield decried
the use of Dow as a scapegoat.
Dr. Hochfield compared the use
of Dow as an emotional release
with loyalty oaths used against
communism.
Several persons took the floor
to respond to charges that re-

Martin Guggenheim
at the Open Forum
to let Dow on campus
would be a violation of academic freedom. Prof. Donald Mikulecky commented that “the real
issue here is that the University
is part of a big, Ttgly war machine that is killing people all
over the world. Academic freedom smears this point over. This
nation has destroyed a small
country and every university is
as helpful as can be to see this
end and purpose." Other faculty
members and students supported
the contention that the only real
issue was the war.
Open forum
They were warned by Prof.
Baumer about making the “University into a political institution." He urged the University
to remain an open forum and
fusing

(Cont’d on Pg. 9)

�Pag* Two

Friday, December 15, 1967

The Spectrum

GSA resolution urges restraint in
handling of students in Dow protest
The Executive Council of the
Graduate—Student —Association
passed a resolution Monday concerning the issues of recruiters
on campus and the use of University disciplinary measures.
The resolution states:
“Resolved that: In view of the
fact that the issue of a campus
open to any and all recruitment
at the State University of Buffalo
is not decisively resolved because
responsible segments of the academic community, including the
Executive Council of the Graduate Student Association, oppose
the thesis of a campus open to
unqualified recruitment, and,
“In view of the fact that the

Administration of the State Uni-

harm

obliged in the past to mediate
ALL disagreements between

“Employ University disciplinary
measures only in the ease that
physipal harm has been done.”

groups in the Academic

Com-

munity, and is not obliged to do
so in the future, and

The Executive Council of GSA
feels that the proposed peaceful
obstruction of Dow recruiters
will, of itself, in no way inflict
physical harm upon any member
of the Academic Community.
“Therefore the GSA urges the
Administration of the State University of Buffalo
“To exercise restraint by authorizing the use of the University
Police only to prevent physical

The GSA also passed resolutions calling for improvements
in the salary of teaching fellows.
Resolutions were passed urging
$4200 minimum salary for teaching fellows plus dependency allowances and tuition. Also a one
year “work free support” for
University Fellowship winners
was advocated.
The American Israeli Club was
recognized as an official University organization and granted a
$300 budget by GSA.

Book Exchange to have new format;
Senate will not pay for lost books
The Student Book Exchange, a
non-profit committee of the Student Senate, is back for its sixth
semester with a slightly new
format.

As in the past, students will

bring in their books and set their
own selling price. If another student buys the book, the seller
receives the total sum. The
buyer is charged the price of the
book plus a $.10 fee, which pays

THE SPECTRUM
printed by

Partners' Press, Inc.
ABGOTT 8. SMITH PRINTING
1381 Kenmore Ave. (at Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

for the cost of checks and supplies. If the book is not sold,
it is returned to the student.
A major change for next semester will be the Book Exchange’s
policy concerning lost or stolen
books. In the past lost or stolen
books were paid for by the Senate, but this year the Senate will
not be responsible if this happens. Students will suffer the
losses.

Another major change will be
the hiring of students to work
in the book exchange. They will
be paid $1 per hour.
"We

are changing our policy

because we feel that with steady

and better workers we can cut
down theft. We also hope that
students will take the individual
responsibility of honesty because
this is their book exchange,” according to Daryl Rosenfeld, cochairman.
The exchange will run from
23 to Feb. 9. The proposed
schedule will be from 10 a.m.
to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday in Room 231 Norton Hall.
Jan.

Books will be accepted beginning Jan. 23 and the actual selling will begin Jan. 24. The last
week is being set aside for giving books back to students and
returning checks. No books will
be bought or sold that week.

$25 Limit

Bookstore will cash checks
The Check Cashing Service Department of the University Bookstore is now open Monday
through

Friday

from

8:30 a.m.

until 8:30 p.m. and Saturdays
from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m.
The Bookstore, in keeping with
its regular policy, will ca*n personal checks up to the $25 limit.
There is no other place on campus that has cash available for
the student’s immediate use. The
Bursar is not in a position to establish this service, the Financial
Aid Office needs the emergency
funds for loans, and according to
the Office of Financial Aid, the
Dean of Students Office has no
funds available.
Because of a three to five day
delay in cashing out-of-town per-

sonal checks, the Financial Aid
Office advises parents of students to send them money orders,
bank or cashier’s checks. Then
funds can be obtained immediately at the bank of the student’s
choice.
Banks in the local area accept
checking accounts at a fee of
$.15 per check with no minimum
balance. Thus, students can write
their own checks readily from
this. However, even with these
accounts, a family check from an
out-of-town bank needs time to

clear

money orders do not.
According to Mr. George p,
Bielan, general manager of the
—

Bookstore:

“Any

personal

check

payable to the University Bookstore in the amount of $25 which
is drawn on a United States bank,
can be cashed by the Bookstore
Check Cashing Service for a ten
cent fee by a properly identified
student, faculty, or staff member.
This ten cent fee is not applicable in cases where merchandise
purchases are involved.”

Faculty signs
various petitions
In the first of two petitions
printed on page six of Tuesday’s
Spectrum, the third sentence
should have read: “We ask that
no disciplinary action be taken
against students engaged in this
activity, that is not also taken
against participating faculty

members, and that the nature of

any proposed disciplinary action

be made known to both students
and faculty in advance.”
The headline of the article did

not intend to imply that the faculty was at opposites, but only
that various petitions have been
signed.

Students overwhelmingly
affirm open campus
The current “open campus”
policy was supported Wednesday
as some 2250 students cast ballots in a Student Senate referendum.

Intelligence Agency to recruit

campus, 1734-424; and

on

Not to amend the current
policies of the Placement Office,
•

1922-213,

In the primarily undergradu-

ate referendum, students voted:
Not to prohibit any group
from recruiting on campus, 1876•

409;
To permit the Dow Chemical Company and the Central
•

Happy Holidays and Thanks
To All My Friends
and Supporters
SIMON PURE BEER

The student comments on the
ballots will be compiled as soon
as possible, the Chairman of the
Elections Committee, Robert Sikorsky, announced.
Results of the binding referendum will be transmitted to
President Meyerson and to the
Faculty Senate, announced Stewart Edelstein, President of the
Student Association.

Mr. Edelstein issued a statement Thursday which read: “The
voting returns should not be misread, nor mis-used. Though a
majority of students wish to have

Dow recruiters at the University,

this does not imply that the
protest against their
presence should be denied. The
right to dissent is inalienable
and we encourage everyone concerned to recognize that fact.
right to

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“Those who are in favor of
an open campus should realize
that protest against groups on
the campus cannot be prohibited,
from exercising their right to an
interview with recruiters."

In the senatorial election for
the Arts andScience representative, Randall Eng received a plurality of 144 votes. Other election results were Todd Miller, 79,
Stephen Ray, 72, and Richard
Scott, 44. There were nine writein ballots.

BUY

&amp;

SELL

USED BOOKS
and paperbacks

BUFFALO
TEXTBOOK
3610 Main
(across

from Clement

Hall)

�yfihi’

f

f

Friday, December 15, 1967

a

«

n 3

a

a

dT

The Spectrum

Pag*

Thr**

'On the current situation'

President Meyerson issues statement, joins with
Class

acter is

proper

late mversity presi ents in tel egram to
WESTERN UNIONsgt

Service

of

indicated

The niing

Editor's note; The following letter was issued to The Spectrum
Wednesday from the Office of the President. Also presented here
is a copy of a telegram delivered to the White House Wednesday.

by thi

W. P. MARSHALL

symbol.

nson

Chairman Or The Board

time shown in the date line on domestic

TELEGRAM

telegrams is LOCAL

TIME at point of origin. Time of

R. W. McFALL

LT-international
LcR
"

President

receipt

Wednesday,

is LOCAL TIME

at point

December 13, 1967

of destination

Students and Faculty Colleagues:
I am writing this the evening before the reconvened
meeting of the Faculty Senate, aware that whatever I say
To: President Lyndon B. Johnson, The White House
now could, in light of tomorrow’s events, be placed in a
Douglas Cater, The White House
different perspective from the one I intend. Nonetheless,
Lt. Gen. Lewis Hershey, Selective Service System
I
should like to place before our University community
General
Ramsey Clark, Justice Department
Attorney
some thoughts on the current situation.
We, the undersigned Presidents of the four University Centers of the State UniverWithin the past few weeks, extreme passions over acsity of New York, have been increasingly concerned about the implications of General Lewis knowledgedly serious issues have aroused extreme responses
Hershey’s recent statements for peaceful protest on campuses. We were hopeful that the which are dangerous to the intellectual and social wellDecember 9 joint statement of the Justice Department and the Selective Service System being of the University. And here I speak not only of those
would alleviate those concerns. While that statement did go far to ensure that registrants with varying views who have threatened obstruction or
engaged in peaceful demonstrations and other forms of legal protest would not risk crimother rule violations, but also of those who have advocated
inal prosecution for activities that are constitutionally protected, it failed to give assurance precipitous repression. I have tried to steer a moderate
that reclassification or withdrawal of student deferments for alleged violations of the course, for which, I am sure, I have been harshly criticized
Selective Service Act would not be employed against protestors on college and university by these extremes. Moderation is hardly a popular course
campuses.
in a time of war, a domestic turmoil, and moral anguish of
our youth.
Clarification of the position of the Selective Service System on these matters affectInternal threats to the University through disorders can
ing the constitutional rights of students is even more urgent than before issuance of the
result in our losing control of our own affairs. Recent
easily
joint statement. We seek assurance that no sanctions will be imposed against legal protest events
in Wisconsin, California, other parts of New York
or dissent which is constitutionally protected. We also request assurance that criminal
State and elsewhere in the country, indicate that disorder
prosecutions shall constitute the sole governmental sanctions against illegal public protests breeds
further disorder, that the use of force (even “non
or demonstrations by draft registrants. Such assurances are essential to the constitutional
violent”) breeds counterforce. The use of force more often
guarantee of free expression and association.
than not is beyond the control of university authorities.
The fabric of a university, even the strongest, is a fragile
Signed
thing.
The open campus policy, which has the support of the
State University of New York at Albany
State University of New York at Buffalo
Faculty and Student Senates, as well as organizations devotEvan R. Collins, President
Martin Meyerson, President
State University of New York at Binghamton State University of New York at Stony Brook ed to academic freedom and civil libertes, is a policy designed to protect against a tyranny of either majorities or
Bruce Bearing, President
John S. Toll, President
minorities. It is a policy which preserves the opportunity
cc- Senator J. Javitz
for dissent at the university. It is a policy which provides
Senator R. Kennedy
the one best hope that the university can become a bulwark
Chancellor Gould
against repression and coercion. If the universities are not
these bulwarks already, we ought to aspire to that end.
What we must face and fear is that those who break up
meetings today be unable to hold their own meetings tomorrow. Admonitions for peace and order are easy enough
to make. The difficult task is to understand what the
consequences of disorder are likely to be.
To preserve the University, not merely for what it is
but for what it can become, will require from all of us' Underrecommendations
gate
Joel
Kleintnan
and
make
by
standing and respect for others.
Spectrum Staff Reporter
to the faculty
1 have asked
Martin Meyerson
Smith to relinquish the
Students Nicky Segal and Gary Cohen have accused Dean
chairmanship of that committee
ssistant Dean George Smith of “unlawfully and unjustly for the purpose of this investigarestricting freedom of speech,” in a letter addressed to the tion.”
faculty of the State University of Buffalo Law School.
Professor Howard Mann, who
December 13, 1967

;

’

Law students say freedom abridged
in incident involving Navy recruiters
...

The

action stemmed from

events that occurred Friday when
two U. S. Navy representatives
appeared at the Law School to
“discuss . . . Naval Officer Programs with interested students.”
According to Messrs. Segal and
Cohen, “Dean Smith made a
statement as representative of

the faculty, limiting the discussion to matters dealing solely
with recruitment . . .” and subjecting any “embarrassment” of
the School or Placement Office
to “appropriate disciplinary action by the faculty
at the
outset of the discussion.”
...

Question out of order
“During

the question and an-

swer period,” their letter

contin-

ued, “a student well known for
his opposition to the war attempted to direct a question to

the Naval Officer. The student
premised his question by stating,
‘As a person opposed to the war

However, before
in Vietnam .
the question could be completed
Dean Smith, peremptorily ruled
the question out of order and refused to allow the student to
complete his question.”
Pointing out that the issue at
hand was freedom of speech, with
the war considered totally irrelevant, Messrs. Segal and Cohen
further stated:
“It must be recognized by the
,

that the fundamental
guarantees of the First Amendment cannot be restrained merely because the manifestation of
that freedom might result in embarrassment to the school. No
lawful demonstration can be constitutionally limited by threat of
penalty, be it criminal or adminisBy refusing to allow
trative
the student to ask a question, the
faculty

...

faculty representative unlawfully
and unjustly restricted freedom
of speech."
The letter concluded with two
requests:
1. “An official apology

from

the faculty to the entire student

body.

2. An official statement by the
Law School as to the policy in
any future forum or meeting,
granting the student body the
same freedoms available to all

individuals

as guaranteed by the
U. S, Constitution and enforced
by our courts.”

Calls investigation

fn response to the letter, Law
School Dean William D. Hawkland addressed a letter to eight
students involved in the matter,
in which he stated, in part,
", . . . Your statements raise
issues of great importance to the
Law School. I am referring the
matter to the Student Affairs
Committee, asking it to investi-

was appointed pro tern chairman,
asked the involved students to
“come as a group
to meet
.
with the .
committee” next

dateline news, Dec. 15

...

Sunday.

BUFFALO—A panel of local Selective Service Board 82 WednesIn an attempt to clarify Law
School policy in the matter, Dean day night refused to reclassify anyone 1-A at their monthly meeting.
Hawkland issued the following
The refusal was reportedly in reaction to the federal government’s failure to take action against those who have turned in or
statement to The Spectrum:
burned draft cards in recent local protests.
“The Law School adheres to a
policy of open campus, by which
POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y.—A Dutchess County grand jury will hear
we mean that speakers repreevidence today in the latest narcotics charges against LSD advocate
senting all different shades of Dr, Timothy Leary.
opinion are permitted to come to
The cases of his wealthy socialite patron, William Mellon
our facilities to present their
Hitchcock, and six other persons also will be presented to the
viewpoints.
investigating grand jury. One of the six is Leary's son, John 18.
“The Law School also adheres
The prosecution has called 33 witnesses to testify.
to a policy of freedom of speech
Leary, meanwhile, was honeymooning with his new bride followand accordingly, any member of
ing their second marriage ceremony.
the Law School community has
ALBANY, N.Y.—Crime in the streets, organized crime and drug
a right to protest peacefully and
addiction will be among the main areas discussed at Governor
disagree with any viewpoint that
Rockefeller’s conference on crime today in New York.
is expressed by those appearing
The conference is being held in cooperation with the State Crime
on our campus. Any speaker that
Control Council headed by former Assemblyman Richard J. Bartlett
comes to the Law School therefore, must be prepared to answer of Glens Falls. Rockefeller said the nation's crime fighting apparatus
costs $5 billion a year.
relevant questions that are put
“The best answer is to root out the social conditions that favor
to him concerning his point of
view. It is up to the speaker to crime since it is all too clear that poverty is still the most persuasive
recruiting sergeant to the ranks of crime," he said today.
determine whether or not he will
Howard R. Leary, New York City police commissioner, is
answer these questions.
safely on the streets, and Prank
"Any law student or other scheduled to head a discussion of
S. Hogan, New York County district attorney, will lead a panel on
member of the Law School comwiretapping and eavesdropping.
munity that comports himself in
accordance with these policies of
TRENTON, NJ.—Schools were to open as usual here today
course is not subject to any acapossible recurrence of Wednesday's brawling which started in the
demic penalties or disciplinary
with policemen stationed inside Central High School to prevent a
action.”
school playground and spilled over into downtown Trenton.

�•

■&gt; ■'

r

-

•

J

Friday, December 15, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* Pour

Keep the peace

Dow Chemical is going to be recruiting on this campus
Monday and Tuesday of next week. The reception here will
not be the warmest they have received.
We are certain there will be protests, and rightly so.
We are apprehensive, however, at the prospect of violence.

*

necessity.

Rational students and faculty will not tolerate threats
of violence and will not be subjected to illegal actions without recourse to legal institutions. In other words, those who
chose to break the law should be prepared to face the results
of that breach.
This should not be a difficult concept for anyone to
understand. If there is a moral question involved for those
who would obstruct, then they should not object to legal
action that may be taken against them.
A person’s actions remain worthy of respect, even if
they are outside the law, only if he is willing to accept all
the consequences of these actions. Civilly disobedient actions
lose this respect when the perpetrators seek to be excused
from any penalty for their actions.
There are some who make just such an insincere gesture, those who think it a proud boast to have battled it out
with police and to have been involved in the pushing, shoving
and clubbing.
Such persons serve no purpose and are totally undesireable. Confrontation for the sake of confrontation connotes
a despicable motive.
But perhaps our apprehension is unwarranted. We
would like to think so. We would like to think that any
demonstration here will remain peaceful, and we urge all
those who will sit-in'at the Dow recruiting to refrain from
inciting violence.
We don’t want city police on campus next week. But
more importantly, we don’t want violence.

Student-alumni cooperation
We are nearing the end of another semester and the
end of another year. 1967 has been a trying year for the
State University of Buffalo, and it has been another year
of growth.
Pages 14 and 15 in today’s Spectrum contain a number
of pictures that provide a glimpse of our past.
The University today is very different from what it was
a quarter century ago. Enrollment is approaching 22,000
and space requirements have forced us to plan a new campus
in Amherst. We are bigger, richer and better than ever
before.
But we cannot forget our heritage, and, indeed, we
should not want to.
The Alumni Association, under the guidance of President Wells E. Knibloe, and the University of Buffalo Foundation, under the direction of Dr. William J. O’Connor, have,
in recent weeks, been making a real effort to bridge a
communication gap that exists between students and alumni.
Too many students are unaware of the activities of the
Alumni Association, and too many alumni have little or no
knowledge of what is going on at the University today.
Because of the need for stronger ties between the
community and the University, we cannot afford to overlook
this excellent opportunity for a mutual exchange of ideas
and opinions. Plans are now being formulated by members
of the Alunmi Association and some student groups to help
bring about this exchange.
As students, we commend these interested alumni for
the work they are doing.
'

Happy holidays
The most logical thing to do in a Christmas editorial
these days is to point to the war in Vietnam, the poverty in
our ghettos, the racial strife in our cities, the unrest on our
campuses, the starving millions throughout the world and
the inadequacies of the United Nations, and then to tie it
all up with that oft-quoted phrase: “Peace on earth, good
will to men.”
But we’re not going to do that this year.
Instead, we’re going to urge everyone to really get into
the spirit of the season. This is a happy time of year, when
everyone should be willing to give a little part of himself
to help bring about the happiness of others.
It’s a season of love that leaves no room for animosity
in the heart of any man.
It’s a period of peace and tranquility that overrides
the hostility that is too often a part of our lives.
The Spectrum wishes all of you a very happy, very
pleasant and very peaceful holiday.

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obstruct must be aware of the consequences. Those who
chose violence over peaceful protest must be prepared to
accept violence in return, for violehce begets violence.
If the violence grows, Buffalo police will be called on
campus, and that will be regretable. It may, however, be a

fym.

m

T

irnatives

Or perhaps...

Readers
writings

’

by Barry Holtzclaw

Selective Service Director Hershey may be an
old fuddy-duddy, but he is a general.
Thus one cannot be too surprised, given the inclination in Washington to listen to the generals,
that this particular general has decided to set up
his own little subversive squad.
Playing God with flunkouts and underachievers
apparently wasn't enough excitement for him, so
now he’s going to play cop, oh yes, and judge.
Although his Oct. 26 announcement that the
more than 4000 local draft boards across the country were sent a memorandum urging them to
classify all those who would obstruct or preach subversion of the draft “Delinquent”—i.e., top-priority
inductibles—resulted in more than two dozen law
suits in federal courts and castigations from civil
libertarians, Hershey said Tuesday that he has no
intention of rescinding it.
The general still barks that he is right, and
that his memorandum only involves “illegal” protests.

The Johnson Administration, operating through
former psuedo civil libertarian, now Attorney General, Ramsey Clark, has shown its true colors by
thus far not acting significantly to alter the effect
or lessen the bureaucratic impact of the now-infamous Oct. 26 letter.
The Attorney General announced Saturday that
a special unit was being created in the Justice Department to “coordinate prompt prosecution of violations of Selective Service laws and related
statutes.”
Although quite clearly an attempt to give Hershey an easy way to soften his statement, Mr.
Clark’s Saturday statement, while attempting to
reassert the necessity of due process and the powers of the Justice Department, is a clever coverup for pending actions designed to stifle anti war
dissent.
The importance of prosecuting law-breakers by
the legal means of due process cannot be minimized. Gen. Hershey’s position, which he so intransigently reiterated Tuesday, is that the Selective Service, by its totalitarian means, is a much
more effective, and hence better, way to deal with
the protesters. Nearly everyone in Washington
realizes the frightening challenge such a statement
offers to the most basic conceptions of justice in
this country.
But no one in Washington has the guts to follow
through on his secret judgments of Hershey, most
probably because of the remarkable silence in the
situation by that long-time friend of the military,
the President.
Mr. Johnson seems to think that he can keep
Gen. Hershey, as well as the civil libertarian critics
happy. His move Saturday clearly represented an
attempt to squelch criticism and protest of the
draft to please Hershey, and to make all this legal,
that is, to be handled through the courts and due
process.

The catch phrase, “related statutes," in the
Clark statement carries with it the ominous implication that anyone who interferes, by calling for
refusal of the draft or counseling draft dodgers,
is liable to prosecution under the (shades of Alien
and Sedition) federal “conspiracy” statute. Mr.
Clark also left it unclear as to the important question of the exact nature and function of Gen. Hershey’s draft boards, which continue to rule the
future of this nation’s youth with a bigoted, fascists, and hopelesly arbitrary iron hand.
If you disagree with them, more than likely
they will be out to get you. Even if you go along
with them, they will get you when you graduate
(it is predicted that up to two-thirds of the draftees
next year will be college graduates).
Unless, of course, you simply say NO.

Student Senate

earns disrespect

To the Editor:

I have been going to the State University of
Buffalo for two years now, and every time I hear
of an action taken by our Student Senate, I get
more and more distressed. Perhaps college has
made me cynical in my outlooks, or else the S.S.
has earned my disrespect.

The primary function of the S.S. seems to me to
render services to the student body. If, after this
function has been fulfilled, then and only then
should it concern itself with matters foreign to it.
It is in the realm of services that the S.S. has not
only failed, but has acted in a regressive manner.
I have never heard anyone praise the system
by which we all must buy books at the start of each
semester. If the University can enroll a large
number of students, the S.S, should be able to design an efficient system by which students could
buy books before they are two or three assignments
behind per subject.
I believe that we can thank the S.S. for letting
us know that we need not pay our fees. On the
same token, let us thank them for the decrease in
activities which will come, and praise the Activities Fees Committee for their work, which would
not have been necessary if the fees had remained
part of the mandatory fees.

Now that we have to put up with the interim
campus, must we also endure such inefficient bus
service that many of us resort to car pools or private rides? Even it we were to put up with the
present schedule, can’t we at least afford a bus
service whose probability of failure is less than
what seems to be about fifty per-cent?

Is it too much to ask for these things first
Vietnam resolutions later?

Warren P. Royer

The Spectrum is published twice-weekly
every
Tuesday and Friday
during the regular academic
University of New York at Buffalo,
3435 Main Street, Buffalo, New York 14214. Offices
are located at 355 Norton Hall. Circulation: 15,000.
—

—

year at the State

Editor-in-Chief—MICHAEL L. D’AMICO

Managing Editor—RICHARD R. HAYNES

Asst. Managing Editor—RICHARD SCHWAB
Business Manager—SAMUEL A. POWAZEK
Advertising Manager—DAVID E. FOX
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Daniel Lasser
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Feature Barry C. Holtzclaw
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Director Murray Richman

The Spectrum is a member of the United States Student Press Association and the Associated Collegiate
Press. The Spectrum i$ served by: United Press International, Associated Collegiate Press Service, Gannett
News Service, and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate.
Represented for national advertising by National Educational Advertising Service. Inc., 420 Madison Ave..
New York. N. Y. Republication of all news dispatches
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matter herein are also reserved.

Second class postage paid at Buffalo,

Editorial

policy

is

determined

by

New York.

the Editor-in-Chief.

�Friday, December IS, 1967

The Spectrum

CCS reaffirms position

BELOW OLYMPUS

Pag* Fiv*

By Interlandi

The

To the Editor:
Open letter to all members of the University

grump

.

.

.

by STEESE

community:

We reaffirm the right of all legally represented groups to be heard on this University campus.
We also re affirm the right of all who disagree
with anv group to peacefully protest that group.
tion.

Dow Chemical Co.
and 19.

Last Saturday, as many of you may have done,
and as more of you will have to do in the future,
I took the Graduate Record Examinations. I won’t
say

Let me simply say that it may be just as well that
I was planning to go to San Francisco and not
Graduate School next year.

will recruit on campus Dec, 18

The Committee for Concerned Students plans
to be present at the place of recruitment not to
support either Dow or anti-war groups, but to support the rights of all interested parties.
Obstruction, as well as physical violence, constitutes an abrogation of the principles of peaceful protest, just as disrupting peaceful pickets constituees an abrogation of the right to dissent.
Therefore, the CCS urges all those involved,
administration, faculty and students, to act in a

Given the possibility/probability of no notable
success on these tests, I suppose I should accept
with good grace this objective proof of my ignorance and depart. If you will pardon me for not
doing so, there are a few points I would like to
make about the GREs specifically, and the rest of
the world in which we, as students, are forced to
exist generally.

y

Two weeks ago 1 made known my opinion that
most of us discharge any obligation we incur to
our country by being born in it through the process
of having to grow up in it. One of my arguments
was the fact that in most states brainwashing—compulsory public school education, if you prefer
—is usually necessary up to the age of 16 and is
basically designed to socialize us the way somebody else says we should be, not to think.

calm, rational manner.
Dave Wachtel, President, CCS
Dave Clowes, Pub. Rel.

Anti-gun laws: "waste of time"
To the Editor:
A lot of talk has been circulated lately about
the need for anti-gun laws to keep weapons out

of the hands of criminals. I fee) that passing laws
for this purpose is a complete waste of time.
Narcotics are registered, checked, double
checked, legislated, and look at the volume of illegal drug sales. It would seem apparent that the
criminal doesn’t care about the law.
However, I am concerned about the fact that
anyone without any training whatsoever can walk
into a shop and buy a firearm. These are the people
who cause the fatalities and accidents in an otherwise safe sport.
I disagree with the theory of gun registration.
I feel that not only is it a violation of the second
amendment to the United States Constitution, one
of the greatest opportunities for beaurocratic boondoggle, but as our government takes on more of
the aspects of Big Brother, it is dangerous.
David A. X. Hornung

Story ''plainly false"
To the Editor:

Misunderstandings are possible, and no doubt
Mr. Rick Schwab will have his own explanation
for this one. But what he has said about me in the
Spectrum of Dec. 8 is plainly false. The facts of
the matter are:
1. I made no statement at all to The Spectrum
about the Faculty Senate meeting on Dec. 6.
2. I did not say to anyone that “We held open

the doors and said: “C’mon in.”
3.1 did not—and hence “we” did not—hold open
any doors.
4. I did not—and hence “we” did not
say
“C’mon in.”
There may well be a kernel of truth in what
Mr. Schwab has said, and I cannot say where that
seed is. However, once the above points are recognized, it is at least clear where that seed does
not lie.
—

JosephBurgess
Editor's note: The "kernel" lies in words spoken, and directly quoted following the "Open Senate Meeting."

No Australian draft over 20
To the Editor:

Last Saturday there was a question by a State
University of Buffalo student, Harry Wixner, in
the Newspower section of The Buffalo Evening
News. He wanted information about Australia, especially concerning his draft classification, and
the answer he got was a little misleading: There
is conscription in Australia, even for non-naturalized immigrants, and conscriptees are liable to be
sent to Vietnam after a short, six-month training
program.
However, only men 19 and 20 years of age are
selected, and only a proportion of these, determined
by a sort of lottery system. So, Harry, if you’re
over 20, you have no worries: Once you are bypassed or over 20, you won’t be conscripted.
It’s a great country, Mate, I come from there,
and have no ideas of not going back.

D. Britz

Writers: Please be brief. Letters should not exceed
300 words. All letters must be signed and the address
and telephone number of the writer must be included. Positive verification of authorship will be mode
before a letter is printed.
Letters will be kept in strict confidence.
The Spectrum will use initials or pen name, if
requested. But anonymous letters are never used.
The Spectrum reserves the rifht to edit or delete
material submitted for publication, but the intent of
letters will not be changed.

the results were disastrous, because I will not

rimes

"How long and how much do you have to
realize it's better than to receive?"

give before you

The Lighter Side
by Dick West

On completion of the Advanced Psychology section of the GRE, I was left with a great feeling of
weariness which still affects me as I write this. I
was drained mostly because it was one of the most
boring experiences I have ever had in my life.
There seemed to be very little worry about whether
or not I could think. Kindly connect memory banks
to pencil hand by most direct linkage possible and
shut off all other areas. At all costs avoid thinking,
it will simply confuse you. “Who might have written this paragraph?—Who did write that book?—
What did X, Y, and Z’s study of the overextended
flibit indicate?"

It was suddenly brought home to me that creaWASHINGTON—Ready or not, the time has come when
tivity can be a problem in academics. A god damned
to
1967
“man
of
naming the
we must give some thought
PROBLEM! Which is one hell of a way to run a
the year.”
railroad line. The major objective seemed to be to
avoid
between memory cells.
I’m not trying to influence anyone, but perhaps it will Keep cross-contamination
everything neatly stacked in orderly bins
my
mind
list
a
few
of
favorite
make
if I
help you
up your
where it can be retrieved with maximum efficiency.
nominees and briefly review their qualifications.

Turning first to the field of
finance, we find two outstanding
candidates. One, of course, is
Jerry Wolraan, the Philadelphia
builder-sportsman.
A fellow who goes through life
running up a little bill here and
a little bill there, and periodically
consolidating them all with a loan
from the Friendly Finance Co.,
can only stand in awe of Wolman.

Good man

According to reports published
month, he owed about $6,793,711 to some 300 creditors, was
$85,000 overdrawn at the bank,
was $226,000 behind on his insurance premiums, and was $182,000 in arrears on his tax payments.
last

This certainly makes him an
inspiration to all of us who are
struggling to live beyond our
means.
But is Wolman more deserving

of “man, of the year” honors than
the chap in New York who
jumped out of a seventh story
window upon being confronted
with his hotel bill?
Anyone who expressed so vividly the feeling most of us have
when we see the size of a hotel

Quotes

bill truly merits our consideration, And there are others who
should not be overlooked.
Congress

has

a

strong

con-

tender in Rep. Jerry L. Pettis
(R., Calif.) who devised a plan to
reduce mounting crime statistics.
No cops
Quit hiring policemen, see, and

then people won’t be able to find
an officer to report a crime to.
The clergy has given us a good
“man of the year” possibility in
the person of the Rev. Dr. Cotesworth Pinckney Lewis, pastor of
the Burton Parish Church of Williamsburg, Va.

In an era when the utterances
of ministers rarely spread beyond
their own pulpits, Dr. Lewis delivered a sermon that was quoted
on front pages from coast to
coast.
I close this incomplete listing
by mentioning from the indus-

trial

field the unidentified

de-

signer of Communist China’s new
automobile, called Red Flag.
It is said to be comparable to
Western-built cars. The only trouble is that 30 minutes after you
take a ride, you feel like driving
again.

in the news

WASHINGTON —Selective Service Director Lewis B. Hershey,
saying the time consumed in handling draft cases in the courts could
cut into the nation’s manpower, since an individual is ineligible for
the draft when he is in custody of the courts:

“We would have had quite a time at Lexington if someone
said he was going to enjoin Paul Revere from waking him up because
he didn't want to shoot at something red.”
SAIGON—Sen. Charles Percy (R., 111.), talking to newsmen about
a Communist mortar and rifle attack that pinned him and four
others down for about 20 minutes early Tuesday:
“I can assure you I never got lower to the ground in my life.”

MADRID—Edelmiro Garcia, one of seven Spanish repatriates
who spent almost 13 years in North Vietnam, saying there is no such
thing as “thought" among the North Vietnamese people:
“What can they think? They can’t think. All they want is
freedom and they don’t have any. The government has them completely tied up.”

I’m gullible. I did not realize that thinking and
intelligence had nothing to do with synthesis and
judgment—which is, of course, an extreme statement. One needs to make very sound judgments
about which authors arc important enough to appear on the test and which are not. One also needs
to be sensitive and able to synthesize. Sensitive to
the proper set for answering the questions and able
to synthesize it.

I was neither of these last Saturday. I was bored,
petulant and irritated—but then it is obvious that
I never really did grow up anyway. I should have
known more than I did, but somehow the test convinced me less of how stupid 1 am then of how
narrow and static such tests have to be to be "fair.”
Sour grapes? Perhaps. It may well be true that only
those with a great broad collection of facts about
their chosen field can be truly creative. When one
notes the ability of “well-educated” men to shut
out those portions of their environment which they
find fail to agree properly with what they think
is happening, doubts do arise, however.
I suspect
ministration
must be at
cated, but

that those persons who write the adposition papers on Vietnam (there
least one, somewhere) are “well-edunonetheless they seem to miss a few
points now and then which might be considered
embarrassing to their point of view. Only natural,
of course. And I know the military is working hard
at getting more and more well-educated men in its
ranks. Which seems to have some broadening effect. Now they want space as well as every square
inch of the surface on which to maneuver. And
somehow they still seem to think that civilians are
a necessary evil. Not quite good enough to be professionals, but good enough to help maintain the
’’

military.
One wonders what might happen if they simply
held open exams for the various Baccalaureate.
Master’s and Doctor's degrees. If you attain a certain score, you receive the degree. After you have
paid the granting institution a fee equal to 130
hours of tuition of course. We all know what Administration is really here for. It would seem that
an individual could learn facts equally well by himself, would it not?
I propose that a formal committee be organized
of several prominent educators—if that many can
be found on campus—to solemnly and deliberately
weigh the feasibility and desirability of Advanced

Degree Proficiency Testing
Anyone wishing to wager on the outcome
should search me out if you arc seeking to bet for
the establishment of such a system by such a committee. Pick your own odds. If seeking to bet
against. I never saw you, and never intend to.
Oh yes—Christmas. Tone was set by the Peanuts
special knocking commercialism in Christmas which
closed with seasons greetings from Coca-Cola, And
a happy Niagara Mohawk Building to you too.

�Pag*

Six

Th

•

Spectrum

Friday, Dacambar 15, 19(7

Readers’ writings
Hayes "Vigilant Patriot Award mis-placed
"

To the Editor:

In the main lobby of

Hayes

Hall, in the Uni

there is an award certificate entitled “Vigilant
Patriot Award” which reads as follows;
“Be it known that the State University of Buffalo, in cooperation with Buffalo Junior Chamber
of Commerce is awarded this honor certificate recognizing American Strategy Cold War Seminar as
an outstanding contribution to public awareness
and understanding of the communist menace to the
freedoms of our Nation. (May 11, 1963.)”
Since this is the University’s official bulletin
board, does this mean that the official policy of

our Administration is anti-communism? I think not,
Also, since visitors are likely to read this bulle-

wrong impression. Would a school which impartially sponsors intellectual dialogue and reasoned
debate in an effort to foster communication and
understanding among men post an award calling
a certain set of beliefs a menace, a threat to the
freedoms of our nation, or (as implied in the
award’s title) anti-patriotic? I believe the presence
of this certificate to be an oversight, one which
will hopefully be remedied in the near future.
Sincerely,
Glen Martin

WBFO highly praised
To the Editor:
In response to your editorial which spotlighted
the work and frustrations of WBFO: Bravo! In my
few months here at the University, I have been

amazed at the outstanding professional sound of
this student-run station. In spite of their cramped
facilities, they have attracted nation-wide attention
in commercial and educational broadcast circles.
Their creative approach has proven to me beyond
any doubt that worthwhile educational broadcasting
need not be dry and stuffy.
I am taking this opportunity to thank publicly
the gentlemen of Mr. Siemering’s staff for their
outstanding cooperation with this office in producing University radio programs heard throughout
the State of New York and in Washington, D. C.
It is through their assistance that this office has
been able to furnish our “State of the University”
radio series to some 50 stations on a regular schedule. We are particularly grateful in view of the
frustrating conditions under which they must work.
They always find time somewhere in their busy
production schedule to allow as to make use of all

their facilities
grams.

to record and produce these

pro-

Every week as I produce (because of non-existence of our own badly-needed facilities), I can
hardly help noticing that a professional broadcast
engineer must use the control room for an office,
announcers must use the music library as a studio
and an excellent news staff must use a reception
area as a news room.
Let’s hope someone will soon recognize WBFO
as the real asset it is to this University. It’s relevance as a vehicle of continuing education for the
entire metropolitan Buffalo community has immense implication.
It’s about time WBFO gets the recognition it
deserves in the form of equipment and studio space.
This is one great opportunity to eradicate those
walls that too often separate a university from its
community.

James R. De Santis
Director, Radio-TV Programming
Department of Public Information
State University of Buffalo

I.. / don't want your freedom in a lie"
To the Editor:
There are people

in this country today who object to anti-war protesters and demonstrations
against our country’s involvement in Vietnam.
These people have many answers for the war
protesters.
One of the more rational is the statement that
the individual operating within the boundaries of
a democracy has a personal responsibility to maintain and fight for that democracy if it is threatened
I, being a “Peace Creep,” also hold to this statement and that is precisely why 1 am protesting our
involvement in the Vietnam War. I feel that my
country’s presence in Vietnam and the atrocities
committed in my name are direct threats and violations of the democratic ideals I believe in. Therefore, it is my responsibility as an American to let

it be know that I will resist the corruption of my
country.
1 will fight, not on the battlefield, but in my
own land to enable the principles which this country was founded upon to flourish. If I were to
blind my eyes to my country’s sins as did the

German soldier in World War II, I would be living my life in a lie—a lie which is destroying

hundreds and thousands of Vietnamese lives each

year.
Is this country so righteous and perfect that
whatever we do to others has to be just? We can
be wrong, but we are capable of correcting our
errors. It is as Donovan says: “Sea gull I don’t
want your wings, I don't want your freedom in
a lie.”
Robert A, McCage

Joe Pa ffie: "A friend to many people
To the Editor:
On Dec. 3, many of us on this campus and in
the Buffalo area lost a good friend.
Joe Paffie, Director of Recreation, died as a
result of a heart attack.
Having worked with Joe for more than two
years, I saw him in many different lights, as did
those many who worked at Norton’s recreation
area, and those who were customers.
Mr. Paffie was not a hero, nor an idol. He was
a nice guy—and they don't always finisji last. He
was a friend to many people, and he helped them
in many ways. He was not aloof from the students;
he could mix with them, and did. Yet he was respected by the students, as a whole.

"

He had an understanding of people that was
remarkable. This understanding tempered
his decisions regarding descipline. There are many
who will recall how he bent over backward to be

often

fair.
He liked good stories, good arguments and good
times. He enjoyed seeing a pretty girl, as much
as you or I. He w’as, in the best sense of the term,
a “Real Person.”
Having said all this, I wish to say only one
thing more. I think that it would be a mark of
respect for Mr. Paffie if the bowling lane, or a
lounge, were named in memory of him.
Thomas D. Wolff,
Former Assistant Manager

Four-letter words are not part of education
To the Editor

is a letter of protest (being a conscientious student with too little time to march
with a placard before Norton or stage a sit-in at
the English Dept., I choose this less time consuming and hopefully more effective method.)
I came to this University in hopes of receiving
a so-called "higher education,” particularly in the
field of English. It seems, however, that the English Dept, has taken as its area of concentration this
semester the study of four letter words. This is all
well and good for those deficient in this area, but
I contend that there are very few students on this
campus who do not know of the existence of the
lower levels of our language nor do they need
English graduate students to explain them.
For those who are interested in this type of
study, voluntary lectures such as Professor Bruce
Jackson's possibly are the answer. But when one
Thj following

assumes in good faith that he is registering for

a
college level English class, it seems only fair that
such be forthcoming. When, however, one is trapped
in an English class with records blaring forth obscenities and “four-letter-word poetry” being read,

three avenues are open:
(1) Get up and leave;; (2) Stay there and try
to blend into the surroundings; (3) Either of the
above plus a strong letter of protest to your instructor and any or all of the following; Mr. Meyerson; the English Dept.; The Spectrum; your favorite
member of the Faculty or Student Senate.
Hopefully there are a few others on this campus who are equally embarrassed and offended not
only at the obvious insult to our intelligence and
character but also at the terrible waste of time,
energy and money involved, and will signify their
disapproval by letter.
Janice Glor

1

�\

Friday, December 15, 1967

The

Pag* Seven

Spectrum

Free Senate meeting called "emotional banquet"
The Faculty Senate meeting of 6 December
was crashed at a crucial point. The following motion was just ready to be voted upon: that the
meeting be open to students present in the corridors and that it be videotaped so as to be available

expressed the view that the crash was an ill-timed
tactical blunder, and during which the students—even those present at the meeting—admitted they
were not clear as to the motion being considered
at the time they crashed, was followed aby an hourlong catharsis. This was ended eventually by the

ly movei
terminei
lown
le sn le aisl les, t
upon an already tense and excitable faculty was
to intimidate and to anger many of them. A call
for, adjournment was recognized by President Meyerson. Having been in session but twenty minutes,
devoted entirely to the issue of an open or closed

chairman, who proposed that the group discuss concrete next steps. This turned out to be a discussion
of what was considered the main implication of
Resolution Three which the Faculty was to have
debated and voted upon at its aborted meeting. The
implication purportedly consists of a threat by the

To the Editor:

meeting, the Senate adjourned.
Students rushed to the podium urging Faculty
members to stay for a “Free Senate” meeting. I
stayed, as did about twenty other faculty. There
were about 200 students present, comprised of
graduates and undergraduates. I stayed because
I am committed to the need for dissent in any human political or social Structure, because the encouraging of such dissent is especially crucial in
our culture where so many forces impose passive
compliance or callous indifference to the status
quo, because I believe students have too long been
denied the right to play a part in decisions that
directly effect them.
The “Free Senate” meeting was mainly an emotional banquet, the piece de resistance coyly assuming different forms: first it was THE Senate
(a dark, undifferentiated monolith), then THE Sc
nior Faculty members, then THE Dow, then THE
Police. The tendency appeared to be to assign
totemistic status to these entities and, for the moment, to channel .all of one’s hostilities and fru-

trations into them. The group and the sentiment
that seemed to dominate the meeting was anarchistic, a position that seems lo place all existing
structures beyond redemption and holds that logically ordered structures may not in fact be necessary at all; for, it would be argued, such structures invariably become the instrumentality by
which Those-In-Power exercise and preserve that

power.

Perhaps in such an emotionally laden and (by
unstructured setting one would expect cither a miracle or a debacle. What oecured fell in
intent)

between.

An initial period during which several faculty
including the one whose motion was interrupted

Administration that it would call in Buffalo Police

if students “obstructed” entry to the Campus or
to any building on it any authorized persons—such
as Dow Chemical interviewing personnel. By 6
p.m. the Free Senate had decided to meet again
and had instructed certain faculty members present to carry back to the Faculty Senate the wish
of the group: that the Campus Police force alone
be relied upon to maintain order if non-violent
“obstruction” occurs.
The miracle is that over 150 emotionally charged
persons came together and, on the whole, listened
to one another, and came up with a statement,
however limited in scope. The debacle is that all
of the most fundamental issues were not given a
hearing, and could not be in the context of such
a meeting. By “fundamental issues" I mean rule
(and ultimately logically and rationally) governed
behavior versus impulsive (and ultimately irrationally) governed behavior; the relationship of
private right and obligation to collective right and
obligation: the nature of democratic political procedures versus authorization forms of domination;
the distinction between personal morality and institutional (collective) expediency.
The factor which causes the debacle side of the
scale to tip for me is this: A hard core of students
at the Free Senate have so lost perspective that
they fail to sec they have become “true believers"
in the worst possible sense. They have elevated
their personal conviction into universal rules which
they despotically (through the guise of anarchism)
seek to impose on others. “Freedom" does not mean
the prevalence of the view one happens to hold
as true.
George Eastman.
Associate Professor

Clarification of editorial sought
To the Editor:
May we have a clarification of The Spectrum’s
editorial on the last Faculty Senate meeting?
Some discrepancies seem to crop up in it: (1)
the students are progressing (“stepping forward”)

while the faculty is retrogressing (“walking out”),
yet paragraph four declares walking in before the
Senate had a chance to open the meeting was “in
advertent” and resulted from an “unfortunate”
lack of communication; (2) students must play an
“intregal role” (i.e., not unilateral) in making de
cisions affecting their fates, yet it is “the students'
job” (unilateral) to decide his fate, as you put it
(paragraph four); (3) even if the Senate had voted
for an open meeting (given half a chance to do
so), this would have been an act of “benevolent
dictatorship” (i.e., whatever it did, the Senate would
have been wrong).
Does The Spectrum approve or disapprove of

the walk-in? Does it want a genuine intellectual
dialogue between students and faculty or docs it
simply prefer that the students dictate to the faculty and the Administration? And does it really
believe that a vote for an open meeting would have
been an act of dictatorship, an act of “grave in
justice”?
Adding to the confusion

generated by your

editorial is an error of fact, twice repeated—the
Senate voted to adjourn after the walk-in, not before
As one who feels sympathetic to the concerns
of those who waked in, and one who believes the
Executive Committee of the Faculty Senate should
not have proposed Resolution Three, which is both
provocative and gratuitous, I am disturbed at finding myself a member of the group labeled by The
Spectrum as “condescending and arrogant" (faculty members who left the meeting after it adjourned). And I’m confused as to what position
Spectrum

is

taking.

Robert Rogers
of English

Department

Editor's note: The Spectrum's position, as stated
in Tuesday's editorial —which you have by now
already read—is that the walk-in may lead to an
improvement in the University policy-making apparatus. It has already instigated a significant
stimulation of student-faculty dialogue, toward the
creation of a "genuine intellectual dialogue"—with
which both The Spectrum and you seem to agree.
As the editorial's charges of faculty condescension and arrogance, all we can say is: If the shoe
fits, wear it.

Petition signers not 'split'
To the Editor
No, sir! We in the 21 faculty are not ‘split.’
All but one who signed the ‘first’ petition (page
6 of Tuesday’s Spectrum) had initially signed the
‘second.’ They asked me to transfer their names
to the other version because it did not confine itself to the stilted languaged copied from Senate
Resolution Three (“to block access and in other
ways obstruct”) and because it expressed more
clearly their opposition to the war.
The true split is between those who would
urn of the University, and those who would acprotest the war, individually or through the mediquiesce, and have the University acquiesce, in the
prosecution of the war,
Down those dirty steps into that sordid basement in Schoellkopf, go those on Monday and
Tuesday who would feed the military machine.
We shall be there, not to stop them, for they
certainly have enough opportunity, enough flexibility, and in the last resort, enough force, to get
by; but we want to give them pause.
Whose freedoms are being protected by the

University?
Mine, Mr. Editor? Not when the committee
conducting the Health Sciences faculty election of
representatives to the Executive Committee of the
Faculty Senate denies me the right to nominate

candidates.

Those of the students who want to see the recruiters from Dow Chemical? Not w'hen such a
very limited schedule of interviews is set up that
some requests (as I heard personally yesterday)
are refused on the grounds that the recruiters’

time is fully booked.
Whose freedom, then? The freedom of Dow
Chemical to supply, and the U. S, government to

continue, an illegal and unjust war, the present
escalation of which was specifically rejected by
the electorate of this country in 1964.
And what of the freedoms denied to the Vietnamese?
So when we break the University regulations,
and perhaps the law on Monday, please don’t let
them judge us too severely. Who will be the judges
next time? And who will be judged?
We should remember the words of an ex-faculty
member of this University, who left us before we
had realized that this was an open campus’;
Know that the earth will madonna the Bomb
that in the hearts of men to come more bombs
will be born
magisterial bombs wrapped in ermine—all beautiful
and they’ll sit plunk on earth’s grumpy empires
fierce with moustaches of gold.

(Gregory Corso, 1958)
Peter Nicholls

�The Spectrum

Page Eight

To a P ear Tuesda

That other newspaper

Friday, December 15, 1947

§5 On Campus
(By the author

of "Rally Round the Flag,
“Dobie Gillis" etc.)

Boys!",

by Elaine Rosenberg

Yuletide is almost upon us. Let’s stop wasting time in
classes and get on with our Christmas shopping. Following are a number of gift suggestions, all easily obtainable
at your nearest war surplus boutique.
First, a most unusual gift idea, brand new this year
and certain to please everyone on your list—a gift certificate from the American Veterinary Medicine Association! Each certificate is accompanied by this charming
poem:
Merry Christmas, north and south,
Does your cow have hoof and mouth ?

—“Who starred in it?'

—"Yeah

.
It’s a medical fraternity.
All wrong. The Midnight Oil is the official
publication of the Millard Fillmore College Student Association.

It is printed to fit the needs of the average
MFC student, who generally is older, holds a job
and may have a family. He is part of the State
University of Buffalo, a fact which both he and the
University tend to forget.

And your dog, fidele semper,
Here’s a cure for his distemper.

Its new Editorin-Chief this year has been Richard E. Klyscek, who recently resigned. The president of the MFCSA, who has the power to appoint the editor of the Midnight Oil, told The
Spectrum that he has not yet chosen a successor.

Little kitten, cute and squirmy,
Bring her in. I think she’s wormy
To’

He had several ideas as to what the Oil will be
like in the future. “We want to get people to
think,” he sail. “We will present both sides of
the issue so that no one will be able to say ‘that
radical paper’ or ‘that conservative paper.’
’’

A "new" oil
He doesn’t think much of past Midnight Oils.
“It was something the faculty could have put out.”
The Midnight Oil recently held its first organizational meeting and the resulting decisions promise to aid in creating a dynamic paper. The
paper will appear Tuesday for the first time this
semester. The staff plans to publish the paper
once, or perhaps twice a month in the spring

semester.

—Yates
“There are many issues,” comments Mr. Klyseek, “that affect the MFC student, which if he
Richard Klyczek
will organize, he can have a say in.” He referred
New Midnight Oil editor
to the recisions of the English Department regarding accreditation and scheduling, unfavorable to
MFC students. Several students have still not received their parking permits or their ID cards beMargaret Watson’s visual conception of a Presicause the offices are open only in the day when dential solution to the War on Poverty, and the
many MFC students are at work.
results of surveys made by a team of inquiring
The first eight-page issue, will carry an au- reporters.
thoritative open letter on dope addiction and alcohol, a revealing study by a black racist, cartoonist People, not poetry
“We want to fill our paper with people not
poetry,” said Editor Klyscek.

Il

yfo iJCHf Z 6 «ga^fi|te
(

f

Regional Editor Judy Joy, an English major,
stated: “We will try to inform MFC students about
things that concern them. Right now, for example,
there are bills pending in Washington that involve them. Aid to evening-school students, tax
relief, and draft exemption proposals have been
We will publicize our activities.
brought up.
There are many things the day school doesn’t know
about the evening school.”

The Oil’s resources are somewhat limited. Being fully financed by the MFCSA, the paper is in
the enviable position of having no need to solicit
advertising. The paper will be printed by Partner’s
Press, printer of The Spectrum.
Mr Klyscek. in addition to his post as editor,
held a full-time job and is active in the MFCSA.

His penchant for participating in several enterprises at once is carried over from his high school
days. A Buffalo native, he was the editor of his
yearbook and newspaper, vice-president of the
Radio Club and a leader of a Civil Defense Unit.
Upon graduation he joined the Navy and was an
electronics technician and instructor of heavy
equipment on a still-classified project. Though
accepted for the Naval Engineering and Science
Program, he failed the physical due to poor eyesight. During enlistment, he operated a lucrative
interior decorating establishment.
a sp&lt;
h major
majoring in Drama and Speech
He is curreni
and is aiming “tc become a corporation president.”
"Business courses are a hindrance. Those people
that can express themselves fluently and are active in things other than just what is necessary
to get through, will succeed," Mr. Kryscek added.
He believes: “If I can’t get to the top, I don’t
want it. I never worry about tomorrow. I have
too many things to do today.”
The Midnight Oil is attempting to increase its
circulation from 5,000 to 6.500 mailed copies and
to get a distributing table in Norton Hall. Recently having lost their office to the Quadrangle, they
are now located in 311 Norton.
The Oil is a member of the International Association of Evening Schools Councils. Judy Joy,
Regional Director and Director of Internal Publicity, will have her column reprinted in the Canisius Night Owl and the Rochester Institute of Technology Rider.
What does Mr. KlysceTc think of the name, the

Editor
IV»iurjr o
1

A'tto.

,r,,T&gt; *'.

IJ'"’ 5 .
•

Office of the Oil

n.vi
“•*•••

**•«.

III4.U

&lt;.&lt;

„

"We want to fill our paper with people not
poetry

Midnight Oil?

He smiles: “I like it. Once, when I worked for
Bethlehem Steel, that was my job. I oiled the
machines at midnight."

on your list? Stop wondering. Give him that extra-special
shaving combination, Personna Super Stainless Steel
Blades and Burma Shave. Each gift is accompanied by
this charming poem:

Christmas merry, New Year bonny,
From your friendly blade Personny.

You will have the ladies farming,

If you’re shaving with Persawning.
Injector style or double edges,
Both are made by good Persedges.

And Burma-Shave in plain or menthol,
Leaves your face as smooth as renthol.
(NOTE; As everyone knows, renthol is the smoothest
substance ever discovered. You may not know, however,
that renthol is named after its inventor, Ralph Waldo
Renthol, who developed it by crossing a swan with a ball

bearing.)
(Interestingly enough, Mr. Renthol did not start out
to be an inventor. Until age 50 he was a Western Union
boy. Then fate took a hand. One day while delivering a
singing telegram to a girl named Claudia Sigafoos, Ralph
noted to his surprise that the telegram was signed
"Claudia Sigafoos!” She had sent herself a birthday
greeting!
(When pressed to explain, Claudia told Ralph a heartrending tale. It seems that when she was only six weeks
old, her parents were killed in an avalanche. The infant
Claudia was found by a pair of kindly caribou who raised
her as their own. They taught her all they knew-like how
to rub bark off a tree and which lichens are better than
other lichens—but in time they saw that this was not
enough. When Claudia reached age 18, they entered her
in Bennington.
(Unused to people, Claudia lived a lonely life—so lonely,
in fact, that she was reduced to sending herself birthday
greetings, as we have seen.
(Ralph, deeply touched, married Claudia and tried his
best to make her mingle with people. It didn’t work. They
went nowhere, saw no one, except for an annual Christmas
visit to. Claudia’s foster parents, Buck and Doe. To while
away his long, lonely hours, Ralph finally built a work
bench and started to futz around with inventions, as we
have seen.
(It is pleasant to report that the story of Ralph and
Claudia ends happily. After the birth of their two children, Donder and Blitzen, Claudia joined the PTA and
soon overcame her fear of people. Ralph joined the Elks.)
But I digress. Merry Christmas to all and to all a good
© iwr.
shuim»n
night! Ho-ho-ho!
The makert of Pertonna and Burma Shave join Old
Max in extending greetingi of the teuton.

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Cartography

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Application and further information forwarded on request.

WRITE: College Relations (ACPCR)
Hq Aeronautical Chart I Information Center.
8900 S. Broadway. St. Louis. Missouri 63125
An equal opportunity employer

�The Spectrum

Friday, December 15, 1967

Senate opens session
The Faculty Senate voted
Thursday, after about one half
hour of deliberation, to open
their meeting to non-members.

more viewed the proceedings over
closed circuit television in an
adjacent room.
After welcoming remarks by
President Meyerson, Dr. Hom-

Commil

tive Committee, recommended to
the Senate a resolution which
would permit representatives of
the three officially recognized
Graduate Stustudent groups
dent Association, Student Senate
and Millard Fillmore Student Asto submit in person
sociation

of Dr. Friedenbcrg’s
amendment to the original Hornburger resolution. The amendment reads as follows:
“All opportunity be afforded
to non-members to view the proceedings of the Senate meeting
of Dee. 6, 1967 through the medium of closed circuit television or
by personal attendance at the
ceptanee

meeting.”
Thursday’s

was the
third session of the Dec. 6 meeting.
When the doors were opened
about 40 students and interested persons entered. About 20

meeting

—

—

presentation to the Faculty
Senate not to exceed 10 minutes.
The resolution was passed by an
overwhelming majority after brief
a

discussion.

During that discussion faculty
member George Bauer noted: “It
is possible to come before a deliberate body without breaking
down the doors to get there."

History Dept reforms
policy on requirements
The History Department of the

State University of Buffalo has
changed some of its departmental

requirements.
The only requirement for admission to the department is at
least a 1.0 over-all quality point
average and at least a 1.0 quality
point average in history. Students
no longer need to take History
101-102, 121-122, 141-142, Geography, Political Science or Econom-

ics. At the present time there is

no set number of hours to be
taken in history for admission
to the Department.
Policy regarding comprehensive exams has also been
changed. Students not presently
enrolled in a colloquium section
and who plan to graduate in January may either take an average

of their old colloquium final
grades and use that average for
a comprehensive, or take a special comprehensive exam written
by the Department. These students must indicate their choice

by Tuesday.
Students presently registered
in colloquium sections who plan
to graduate in January will use

their final exam in their col-

loquium section as a comprehensive.

To graduate, a student must
complete satisfactorily 39 course
hours in history or courses approved for credit by the History
Department. Classes 211, 212, 213
and 214 presently are approved
for credit and a committee is
considering other courses from
various departments.

Music Room robbed of
equipment, new records
A “major robbery" took place
in the Music Room on the second
floor of Norton Hall sometime

Saturday night or early Sunday
morning.
Mr, James Gruber, business
manager of Norton Hall, said that
the “ransacked music room yielded the burglars 35 new records
valued at approximately $3 to $4
each.” The main record player
that was used to pipe music into
the lounge and the whole Union
was also stolen. The record player is valued at $100.
The robbery was discovered at

1 p.m. Sunday, when the room
was opened for the day.
Calling the robbery “planned
and premeditated,” Mr. Gruber
noted that it included a methodical selection of “rock and roll

and folk music records." No
classical records were taken.
From this Mr. Gruber concludes
that the robbery “was not spur

of the moment."
The records that were taken
constituted “a sizeable portion of
the total repertoire." Mr. Gruber
commented that it “took a long
time to develop the facilities of
the Music Room as they now are."
The missing records and record player will constitute a severe “inconvenience to the students,” Mr. Gruber claimed. The
Music Room will remain open,

however.
As a future security measure,
all locks will be changed. Mr.
Gruber and his staff will inquire
into the facts of the case.

udition Repertory Co

Production of The Wild Duck'
by

from P.

1)

not a political weapon.

against

“Or else,

you make the referee part of the
game.”

William Maryl of SDS took issue with Dr, Baumer’s notion of
the University as a referee on an
open campus. He charged academic freedom is a “loaded question since the University is controlled by a military industrial
complex.” Mr. Maryl asserts that
one of the Administration’s board
of trustees, Mr. Schoellkoepf, indirectly held shares in Dow
Chemical Co. “The University is
controlled lock, stock and barrel
by special interest. Sitting in

Dow is working towards
academic freedom.”
At one point in the meeting
Martin Guggenheim, a student,
asserted the Faculty-Senate meeting Thursday would have to be
voted open or else it would be
disrupted. "We must make it
clear we have the right to demonstrate and the right to protection.”

Arrangements made
Dr. Baumer replied: “I’ll tell
you right now. I’d like to talk to
my faculty colleagues and tell

them not to behave like spoiled
brats because we were disdupted

last week and convince them to
vote for an open meeting. How-

Richard Perlmutter

Spectrum Staff Reporter

One of Ibsen’s most moving dramas, ‘‘The Wild Duck,"
was presented in our infamous Baird Hall last week by the
Audition Repertory Co., formerly housed in the Milkie Way
Theater in Williamsville. The company, under the direction
of Gerard Marchette, did a commendable job of handling
Ibsen’s masterpiece.
The quality of most of Ibsen’s
plays lies in the stark reality
which he is attempting to convey
and which should induce the
viewer to become totally involved in the lives and activities
of the characters. The positioning
of three actresses in the audience,
in conversation with the people
on stage, enhances this empathy

an illusion. Carol Massman
is excellent as Hjalmar’s wife, a
former maid of dubious reputation. David Masman as Hjalmar’s senile, nearly blind father, and Amy Rosenberg as Hedvig, the 14-year-old daughter of
the Ekdal home, are especially

been

capable and delightful in their
roles.

slightly.

But four intermissions, during
the stage scenery and
props must be changed, without even the guise of a curtain,
serves to remind the viewer that
he is watching a play, and thus

which

prevents him from complete involvement.

Emotion and deception

The story of Hjalmar and his
family is one of emotion and deception. Hjalmar is violently
played by the bearded Jack Fix
who cannot cope with the revelation that his happy home has

Director Gerard Marehette gets
into the acting part of the sotty
Dr. Helling from the flat downstairs, Richard Roberts Jr. has
the difficult role of Gregor Werle, the young meddling idealist
determined to awaken Hjalmar
to the truth concerning his own
youthful idealism in the char-

acter of Gregor.

Pathos
Ibsen’s preoccupation with
heredity is demonstrated by Hedvig’s approaching blindness,

which allows Gregor to conclude
that Old Werle is really her

father.’ When this is revealed to
Hjalmar and a letter from Wer1c arrives, Ekdal is enraged. He
shuns Hedvig, a sensitive child
who cherishes Hjalmar and any
sign of affection he shows her.
She is crushed by his scorn and
puts a bullet through her breast.
The pathos of the last scene,
as Hjalmar admits how much he
really loved Hedvig, is effectively

related.

Ibsen has drawn a striking
anology between the Ekdal family and the wild duck. The family, injured by circumstance
and drowning in self-deception,
is paralleled to the wild duck,
wounded by a gunshot and diving to the bottom of the waters
below. The duck is rescued by
a dog. The duck and Ekdal’s famfamily is rescued from deception
by Gregor who plays the part of
a dog. The duck and Ekdals family have both been rescued and
are much the worst for it.
Who knows, maybe the wild
duck also represents the Audition Repertory Co, wandering in
search of a permanent home.

Pres. Edelstein calls for ban of military
recruiters; scores Hershey directive
Student Association President
Edelstein defended a
motion reaffirming the Hochfield-B a u m e r resolution that
would close the campus to military recruiters, at a Student Sen
ate meeting Tuesday.
“We owe the military the reto change its
sponsibility
direction . . . when it goes
astray,” Mr. Edelstein asserted.
Referring to Gen. Hershey and
his recent statement that advocates drafting students who obstruct military recruiters on
Stewart

...

campus,

he

added:

“The

must think he’s God or
close to it.”
Proposed

draft. It was made to protest an
unconstitutional action by the director of the Selective Service,
General Hershey.”
In other Senate activity, Stutend Association Vice President
Richard Miller submitted a directive to Mr. Edelstein that he involve himself in the prevention
of "possible disorders” arising
on campus. Mr. Miller’s “Resolu-

man
very

j,
by

Daryl
Rosenfeld, the motion states:
“The Student Senate heartily

Senator

tion on Campus Demonstrations”
was defeated by the Senate despite his plea that “. . . we have
to be involved in some way, at
least as a peace-keeping body.”
Some Senators expressed the
hope that some Senate action
would be taken before Monday
when the Dow is scheduled to
recruit on campus.

S5'

XI

supports and defends the Hochfield
Baumer resolution number three. We feel that it is a
timely and much needed resolution, and we urge the Faculty
-

Senate to vote in favor of it.”
The motion was passed by the
Senate body over the opposition
of Senators Joe Orsini and Rod
Rishel, who asked the Senate to
consider the rights of those who
want to see the recruiters.

f ftfc—-

Miss Rosenfeld said that her

motion was “not designed to protest the war in Vietnam or the

Open Forum examines protests
(Cont’d

Pag* Nin*

Larry Shohet

..

.

ever, we do not intend to be
blackmailed.”
Mr.
Guggenheim answered:
“What would you say to faculty
colleagues if it was voted to keep
the meeting closed?" “We all lose
once in a while, you must face

that,” Prof. Baumer said.
Near the close of the Forum,
it was announced that specific
arrangements had been made for
students if the Faculty-Senate
voted to open their meeting
Thursday. A seetionedoff area
in Butler Auditorium would provide space for 80 to 100 students and provisions had been
made for closed circuit TV in
other rooms.

JHLUHtr
■k
Richard Miller
’ar

makes a point at
Senate meeting.

asks

involvement

to prevent

disorders

Happy Holidays
This it the final edition of

Tha

Spectrum fhit semester. The next issue is sched-

uled for Jan. 26, 1966.

�Page Ten

The Spectrum

0 Connor resigns Buffalo Foundation
post; Rowland named new director
The Executive Director of
the State University of Buffalo, Foundation, Dr. William
J. O’Connor, has resigned his

faculty positions. “Your alma
mater will miss your creative
contributions directly as a University administrator and member of the faculty but will accept

dent for Instruction at Lake
City College in Florida.
the chairman of the board
of trustees of the Foundation
announced that the resignation will be effective March
31.

loyal alumnus continuing the
University’s cause in Florida,”

Chairman John M. Galvin also
announced that a new Executive
Director has been appointed.
He is Dr. A. Wesley Rowland,
who will also continue his post
as Vice President for University
Affairs.
University President Martin
Meyerson expressed his regret
that Dr. O’Connor decided to
leave both his administrative and

he said.

Dr.

O’Connor commented: “I

am especially pleased to see a
new dimension of creative programs for students emanating
from the developing dialogue
among students and alumni leaders. It is encouraging to see all
members of the University family planning together for the positive growth and development of
the University. The State University of Buffalo is indeed destined
under President Meyerson’s leadership to achieve true greatness.
I will be a proud alumnus in
Florida.”

'The World in Revolution' is
topic of Schoenman convocation
Ralph B. Schoenman will speak
on “The World in Revolution” at
8 p.m. Jan. 23 in the Millard Fillmore Room. The topic will include

the War Crime Tribunal and the
War in Vietnam. The Student Senate Convocations Committee is
sponsoring Mr. Schoenman’s appearance.
Mr. Schoenman is director of
the Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation. In this capacity, he has
been very active in world poli-

tics.

He was Secretary-General of
the International War Crimes Tribunal and was also head of the
Russell Commission of Investigation in Bolivia during the summer and autumn of 1967.
In spring 1967, he had extended
talks with Fidel Castro in Havana.
In Fehruarv and March of this
year, he attended meetings with
Ho Chi Minh in Hanoi. Other
meetings included those with
President Aub Khan in Pakistan
and with Regis Debray, on trial
in Bolivia.

Friday, December 15, 1947

OFFICIAL BULLETIN
OFFICIAL BULLETIN

The OHicial Bulletin is an authorized publication ol the State
University of Buffalo, for which

TYPEWRITTEN form to Room
114 Hayes Hall, attention Mrs.
Fischer, before 2 p.m. tbe Friday
prior to the week of publication.
Student organization notices are
not accepted for publication.

The following departments will
23
through noon, Jan. 25, in the departmental offices as well as in

Signatures
Drop/add forms
must be signed by either the University College adviser or by the
—

hand out class cards from Jan.

student.
Section

changes

—

Aero Space, Anthropology,

University

puter Science, Drama (Theater),
Education, English, Geography,
History, Mathematics, Medical
Technology, Music, Occupational
Therapy, Pharmacy, Philosophy,
Physical Education for Men and
Women, Physics, Secretarial Studies, Speech and U.C. courses.
Geology (for 103 lab cards only)
and Psychology (12 noon to 2 p.m,

and the student.

General notices

Procedures for Changes in RegChanges
istration, Jan. 23-26
made betwegn Jan. 23 and Jan.
25:
—

Freshmen and sophomores only

will have the option of signing
their own drop and add forms
for this January Change of Program day, if they are willing to
assume the responsibility for
knowing requirements and perrequisites and for receiving
special permission from the instructor when needed.
However, University College
advisers will be available to students to verify information, to
assist in making decisions and
plans, to help work out registration problems, and to sign Change
of Program forms for those students who desire it. Advisers will
also be available in the gym,
Jan. 26.
Obtaining Forms
Specially
stamped drop/add forms will be
available for freshmen and sophomores only in the University College reception area between Jan.

Juniors and seniors:

Obtaining Forms
Junior and
senior former Arts and Science
students must obtain Change of
Program forms from the Office
of Admission and Records, All
other juniors and seniors must
obtain forms from their divisional office.
—

only).

Dropping Courses only
Students wishing to drop but not add
courses can process forms at Admissions and Records between
Jan. 23 and Jan. 25. Juniors and
seniors must first obtain the
signature of a faculty adviser.
—

Signatures
of faculty advisers are required on all drop/add
forms processed.
—

MIA Foreign Language Proficiency Testfor Feb. 10, 1968 and
18, 1968 have been cancelled. The
test scheduled for March 30, 1968 will be

the tests scheduled
May

All Undergraduates:

administered.

Placement interviews
Please contact the University
Placement Service, 831-3311, to
make appointments and obtain
further information concerning
the following interviews:
Dec. 18
U.S. Dept, of Agriculture,
Off. of the Inspector General
Regional Administrator of
National Banks
W.T. Grant Co.
Remington Rand Office Systems
Pfizer Diagnostics
General Electro-Mechanical

Information Center up-to-date
information sheets concerning
departmental requirements and
prerequisites will be available in
the University College reception
area.

the
Obtaining Class Cards
following departments will hand
out class cards in the gym on
Change of Program Day ONLY:
—

—

23-25.

Art,

Biology, Chemistry, Classics, Com-

College advisers will sign forms
approving section changes for
medical, religious, and employment reasons only. Other requests for section changes must
be resolved by the department

Political Science, Physical The-

rapy, Economics, Sociology, Business Administration and Social

Corp.

Welfare. The Department of Modern Languages will have cards
distributed as follows: Dr. Livingstone, Spanish, Portugese, and
Italian; Dr. Koekkoek, German
and Slavic; Dr. Silber, French.

Dec. 18-19

Dow Chemical
Dec. 19
Sanders Associates, Inc.
Hooker Chemical
American Oil Co.

Student Testing Center registration schedule
Last Day
to Reg istar
Jan. 20

Adm. Test-Graduate Study, Business
American College Test. Program
College Level Exam Program
College Level Exam Program
Proficiency Test
College
College
Proficiency Test
Graduate Record Exam
Graduate Record Exam
Graduate School Foreign Language _
Law School Admissions
Practical Nursing (Pre-Adm.)
Pre-Nursing Exam
Pre-Nursing Exam •
State

Jan. 17
Dec. 30
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Dec.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Dec.
Jan.

27
1
1
26
30
5
20
30
6.

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Jan. 20
Feb. 24
Feb. 3

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316 Harriman
316 Harriman
316 Harriman
316 Harriman
316 Harriman

316 Harriman

316 Harriman
Feb. 10
.316 Harriman
Jan. 13.-School of Nursing
Jan. 20 .School of Nursing
Feb. 3 . School of Nursing
Feb. 3.-Admissions Office

Jan. 20
Jan. 15

Univ. Admissions Exam

Applications

Test
Data
Feb. 3
Feb. 17
Jan. 20
Feb. 17
Jan. 11
Jan. 12

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The Sptctrum

Peace Corps chief seeks Situation at University of Wisconsin
deferments for volunteers still explosive, reports campus editor
Special to the Spectrum

['stu-

by Phil Sernas
Collegiate Press Service

will intervene on behalf of volunteers seeking draft defermerits for two years of overseas service.

MADISON, Wis.—Although the Army and Marines finally recruited here without violence or arrests, the University of Wisconsin, site of this fall’s first demonstration against
war-related recruiting, may well explode again.

Director Jack may reach the Presidential Appeal Board which makes the final
concerned
by mountVaughn,
decision.
ing induction calls to volunThe appeal process often takes
teers serving overseas, said
months to be resolved and the
he will take an “active role” Peace Corps frequently
sends volin seeking future deferment unteers to their overseas sites
cases before the Presidential while their appeals for deferment
Appeal Board—the court of are pending.
last resort for draft reclassiDirector Vaughn said the Peace
fications.
Corps, having provided upwards
Agency

—

In future appeals, Director
Vaughn will write letters to the
board describing the circumstances in each case and urging
board members to grant a deferment until completion of the volunteer’s overseas tour.

Serious problem
“We have a serious situation,”
he said. “The problem of induction notices to overseas volunteers is becoming a major concern for us. Pulling a volunteer
off a productive job at mid-tour
is unfair to the nation, the host
country, the Peace Corps and the
individual.”
Director Vaughn said Peace
Corps volunteers have lost about
60 deferment appeals before the
three-man board in the last six
and one-half years. While adverse rulings by the national
board. have involved less than
one-half of 1% of the estimated
15,000 draft-eligible men to have
served in the Peace Corps, “virtually all of these have occurred
in the past year,” he said.
Of the approximately 25 volunteers who have already returned
to the United States for draft induction, two were disqualified for
physical reasons and returned to
their overseas assignments.
The vast majority of Peace
Corps volunteers are granted deferments for two years of overseas duty because their service is
deemed by their local boards to
be “in the national interest,” as
recommended by Lt. Gen. Lewis
B. Hershey, the draft director.
However, some local Selective
Service boards refuse deferments
even though the Peace Corps
service does not relieve volunteers of their draft obligations.
If the local board is upheld by
the State Appeal Board, the case

of 400 hours of intensive language training during the 12 to
14 weeks of preparation, often
sends volunteers overseas to begin service “rather than risk the
loss of their newly-earned language fluency during the long
waits for final approval or disapproval of deferment requests.”
",
.

.

He also said induction calls for

volunteers overseas “disrupts the
continuity of carefully planned
projects by host country governments who also have invested a
large amount of time and money
in the program.”

Steed

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Although demonstration leaders had said after the Oct. 18
demonstration that those who had

been clubbed had been “radicalized,” the students appeared unwilling to risk that kind of police
attack again.
They may also have been leery
of violating a court order issued

last week by State Circuit Judge
W. L. Jackman. The order bars
demonstrators from interfering
with recruiting. His order could
be used as one basis for the use
of police force. The injunction
forbids any student from “obstructing the functions of the University,” counseling such obstruction, singing or chanting in
hallways in a “disruptive” man-

The police, whom Brenner
blames for injecting a “battle psychology” into the Madison situation, were out in force Monday,
as were University officials.
University President Fred Har
rington and Madison campus
chancellor William Sewell, along
with 300 police from all over
Wisconsin, were on hand last
week to greet the one protester
who came to sit in the snow in

ner, and speaking loudly. One

student called the injunction “totalitarian” and an appeal of the
ruling's constitutionality is expected.

The issue that is most likely to
new confrontation be-

bring a

Wisconsin President Fred H.

Harrington .recommended
that
Mr. Cohen be fired but that he
be given a hearing first. William
Sewell, chancellor of the Madison campus, argued that Mr. Cohen should be given “due process” and that the case should
be heard by a faculty commitee,
not the regents.

Even such a hearing would be
special treatment. Normally Mr.
Cohen would be fired from his
teaching assistantship by his academic department. The philosophy department has initiated no
action against him, however, and
President Harrington wants him
fired for his part in the protest,
not for any deficiencies as a
teacher.

Already suspended
Mr. Cohen has already been
suspended as a student, despite
a federal court order restraining
the University from disciplining
leaders of the Oct. 18 protest. He
also faces trial by civil courts.
An attempt by some of the regents to fire Mr. Cohen failed
and Curtis McKay, assistant majority leader of the state assem-

bly, growled angrily after the final decision: “1 hope no one will
be injured by the flying marsh
mellows."

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After the recruiters had left,
another 360 students showed up
and marched around briefly carrying picket signs, then left.

One demonstrator shows

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cants.

“Both sides are intransigent,"
he said. The University regents,
in their first meeting since Oct.
18, reaffirmed the University’s
policy of permitting all recruiters
on the campus. Some students,
meanwhile, remain “committed
to bringing this University to a
halt,” in Brenner’s words.

wasting asset"

He said: “So long as the
chances for deferment are good,
this system makes sense, but as
more and more volunteers lose
their appeals, we may have to
reconsider the process and keep
them, a wasting asset, in the United States until their cases are
resolved.”

front of the Camp Randall Memorial Building where Army and
Marine recruiters saw 14 appli-

I

In the past the agency performed a largely informational
advising voluntional function
teers and trainees of Selective
Service laws and procedures and
confirming to local boards the
fact of the volunteer’s service.

Joel Brenner, editor of the
Daily Cardinal, the campus
newspaper, says: “all the elements are still there” for
another demonstration like
the one Oct. 18, when the
University called in police to
disperse demonstrators who
were attempting to disrupt
recruiting by the Dow Chemical Co., manufacturers of
napalm used in Vietnam.

dents is the treatment of Robert
Cohen, a teaching assistant who
was one of the leaders of the
Oct. 18 demonstration.

Students Pre-Register Now

1

�Friday, December 15, 1947

The Spectrum

Pag* Twalve

Cutback in funds to NMSC causes Draft deferment changes
'phase out' of four-year scholarships effect graduate students
by Leah Fox

The
EVANSTON, 111. (CPS)
National Merit Scholarship Cnrporation (NMSC) will phase out
its four-year scholarships next
year, and replace them with a
less-costly program of one-year,
$1000 awards.
—

The change is the result of a
cutback in the amount of funds
granted to the corporation of the
Ford Foundation, according to
Harold Harding, NMSC’s director
of information. The Ford Foundation has suplied funds for all the
national awards in the past.

Some awards unaffected
The industrial, or sponsored
merit scholarships will not be affected by the impending change,
Mr. Harding said. The sponsored
awards make up the bulk of the
financial assistance given out by
the corporation—there were about
1800 sponsored awards made
last year and only 600 national

awards—but the national scholarships have always been regardedas the more prestigious of the two
types of awards.
According to Mr. Harding, the
corporation plans to award about
400 national scholarships next
year, none the following year,
and will phase into the one-year

awards the year after that.
The NMSC official said the
total amount of financial aid given out by the corporation over
the next two years would remain at about the level of last
year’s aid, which he estimated
at $7.8 million. Sponsored awards
will make up a larger percentage
of the total, however. Mr Harding
predicted that 2000 sponsored
awards would be given this year,
and about 2200 next year.
Since 1956, when the corporation was founded, several hundred high school students have

Baseball gets lady umpire
BaseWICHITA, Kan. (UPI)
ball’s “men in blue” have included a member of the fairer sex
among their ranks.
—

She’s a Long Island housewife,
who says she wants to make a
career out of calling balls and
strikes in men’s professional baseball.
Mrs. Bernice Gera joined
more than 6000 males as a full-

time member

of the National

Baseball Congress’ Association of
Umpires,

Mrs. Gera made her baseball
debut in the 33rd annual National Baseball Congress tournament
last August. Officials of the semipro tournament said she made a
favorable impression on both
fans and players.
She was graduated from the
Florida Baseball Umpires School
at West Palm Beach with high
honors.

How to plan
your trip to Europe
with NSA.
Save up to 60% on air fares

and accommodation.

to receive

the national awards
(Last year there were 14,000 finalists). Every state was given
a quota of national awards, with
the winners from each state being
selected by a national board, composed mainly of college admissions officers.
The awards were given for a
four-year period, and ranged in
amount from $100 to $1500 per
year. According to Mr. Harding,
the national board selected recipients more on the basis of factors like their high school performances and extra-curricular
accomplishments than their scores
on the NMSC’s qualifying test.
The test, Mr. Harding said, has
served mainly to decide who the
finalists will be.

Selection criteria

The sponsored awards, most
of them given by corporations or
private donors, usually establish
one or more criteria for the selection of recipients. Mr. Harding
explained that “commonly, the
critierion is that the recipient be
the son or daughter of an employee of the sponsor. There are
some of the
others, however
sponsors want recipients who are
—

going to a particular school, or
come from a particular state, or
even a particular county.

Like the national awards, the
sponsored awards are based

on

need and cover four years of college education.
giving
The new program
$1,000 awards for one year—will
go into effect this year, according to Mr. Harding. He said that
about 500 of the one-year grants
will be made to seniors graduating this spring, and about 1,000
of them the following year.
—

Special to the Spectrum

WASHINGTON —University officials are just beginning
to realize the full impact of changes made in the Selective
Service Act when it was extended by the Congress last June.

According to John Morse, Director of Federal Relations
for the American Council on Education:
“It would appear that, unless changes are made by
amending either the statute or the regulations, enrollments
in the first two years of graduate and professional schools
next fall will be limited to women, veterans, men physically
disqualified and those over the age of 25.”
Deferments eliminated
This question is expected to
When the Act was revised this
summer, it eliminated deferments
for graduate students across the

country except for those pursuing degrees in medicine, dentistry, optometry, veterinary medicine, and osteopathy.
The first to be drafted, in accordance with the 18%-26 year
draft-age pool, are the eldest
members. After the end of this
academic year, the pool will be
swelled with college graduates
and graduate students.
This means the Army will probably have the best-educated draft
pool in its history from which to
choose.
In the June 30 executive order,
President Johnson stated that
students entering their second
year of graduate study this fall
will generally be granted deferments until they have finished
their degree work.
However, students entering
their first year of graduate
school this year have been given
deferments only until the end of
the current academic year.

Changes possible

week, an inter-agency adcommittee recommended
that the National Security Council (NSC) permit broader draft
deferments for students in natural science, mathematics, engineering and health.
Last

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Bryant, Director of the Office of

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The Scientific Manpower Commission, a group comprised of
several major scientific societies,
is one of the associations most

concerned about the issue.
Mrs. Richard Vetter, executive
director of the commission,
roughly estimated that some 274,000 will be eligible for the draft
next spring by graduating from
college, finishing their master’s
degree or completing the first
year of graduate school.

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Friday,

December IS, 1967

The Spectrum

Action line

.

.

Peace Corps seeks recent graduates.
Director Vaughn tells campus editors

.

331-5000
Do you often think it impossible to untangle the State University of Buffalo
bureaucracy? In cooperation with the Dean of Students' Office, The Spectrum is
sponsoring an ACTION LINE. Through ACTION LINE, individual students can get
an answer to a puzzling question, find out where and why University decisions
are made, and get ACTION when change is indicated.
LINE will answer all questions of general interest which, appear to
be pertinent to the student body. The Spectrum will include them in its special
ACTION LINE weekly column. Each inquiry will be thoroughly investigated and
answered individually. The name of the individual originating the inquiry will
not be published.

ACTION

A. Mr. Thomas Schillo, Director of University Housing, stated: “A
similar proposal had been presented to Albany in previous years. A
long lease would have to be arranged, however, to carry through
such a program. It was felt that this kind of commitment would not
be practical in light of the University’s overall plans to construct adequate and sufficient space on the new campus.”

Q. How are diplomas distributed at commencement? How many
guest tickets can each candidate receive?

A. Information and procedures regarding details of commencement are now being prepared by Dr. Burvil Glenn. As soon as these
particulars are developed, an information sheet will be available to all
degree candidates. It has already been established, however, that
diplomas will be obtained from the student’s division and tickets
for guests will not be required. Seats for guests will be available
on an unreserved basis.
What is the federal work-study program and how does one

qualify?
A. This is a program which was initiated by the Federal Government to stimulate and promote the part-time employment of students in institutions of higher education who are from low income
families and are in need of the earnings from such employment in
order to pursue their courses of study.
Jobs may be on campus or in approved off-campus projects and
may not average more than 15 hours per week while classes are in
session. A student may be employed up to 40 hours per week when
his classes are not in session.
In order to qualify, a student must be enrolled in college on a
full-time basis. To determine his need, our Financial Aid Office
utilizes the information submitted by his parents on the Parents’
Confidential Statement of the College Scholarship Service. Eligibility
is based on (1) any income, assets and resources, including other
forms of aid. available to the student; (2) the income, assets and resources o fthe student’s family; and (3) the cost reasonably necessary for him to attend college. Anyone interested in exploring this
program further should contact the Financial Aid Office in room

216 Harriman Hall.

How does one apply for the scholar incentive award and how late
in the semester may one apply for it?

stated that “Students must file

Mr. William H. Calhoun, Bursar,
an application and financial statement annually, at the beginning of
each academic year of study. One application and financial statement
wil serve for the entire academic year.
Applications are mailed in May each year to all college students
currently receiving financial assistance from the State Education Department. Applications will be available in the Bursar’s Office, Hayes
“A”, after fall registration, or may be obtained by writing directly to:
The University of the State of New York
The State Education Department
Regents Examination and Scholarship Center

800 North Pearl St.
Albany, New York 12204

To assure prompt processing of award for the fall term, applications should be filed before July 1. However, applications for the fall
term and summer term will be accepted not later than Dee, 1.
Applications filed after Dec. 1 will be accepted until April 1 for
payment for the spring semester only.”
For specific answers to your questions and for direct service, call ACTION LINE,
If you prefer,
every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, from 4-5 p.m.
phraie your question in writing and address it to ACTION LINE, c/o The Spectrum,
355 Norton Hall, or the Office of the Dean of Students, 201 Harriman Library.)
room 355, Norton Hall, or the Office of the Dean of Students, room 201, Harriman
Library.)

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WASHINGTON
The Peac6
Corps primarily recruits among
recent college graduates, Director
Jack Vaughn says, because they
are “tough, bright, flexible and
rapid learners,”
—

Q. Why doesn't the University lease the remaining complex of Allenhurst apartments? These could be sublet to students who wish offcampus housing but now have to live far from campus and under
substandard conditions?

Q.

Pi9« Thirt«*n

f

“They’re also not yet heavily
in debt,” he told a group of
campus editors in the Washington
area recently, but added that
“we’d like very much” to have
more “mid-career” people
doctors, teachers, farmers, blue collar workers.
—

Mid-career people, he said, are
harder to convince “of the stimulating significance of the Peace
Corps experience.”

The recent college graduate,
he said, is more qualified and
able to take on the challenge.

Emphasis on youth
“In seven of the eight new

countries

we are serving,” Mr.
Vaughn said, “Garhbia, Lesotho,
Dahomey and Upper Volta in
Africa, Ceylon, Western Samoa,
the top staff
Tonga and Fiji
representative is a former volunteer.
—

“He ranges in age from 26 to
29.
“And never in United States
history, to my knowledge, has
the government sent men of this

seas.
“I feel that he has more responsibility than an Ambassador.
He’s a father-confessor to his volunteers and an administrator as
well as a diplomat.

“This may be among the most
significant things the Peace
Corps has done, in putting so
much responsibility on youth.
“We look upon maturity from
another point of view, not so
much chronogieal age,”

One of the campus newspapermen asked Mr. Vaughn about his
recent stand on the draft.
Mr. Vaughn said he would take
a more active part in gaining deferments for volunteers overseas
whose local draft boards had
called them back for induction.

'Desperate waste'
Calling back such a volunteer,
he said, amounted to “a desperate
waste of our resources.”
“I’m doing this,” he said, “because of my growing conviction
that the Peace Corps is the best
thing we're doing abroad.
“If the volunteer is liable for
the draft when he returns, anyway, I can’t see any logic in
bringing him back in mid-tour.
So we’re going to try to strength
en the volunteer’s case.’'

meri asked him to reply
criticism that the Peace Corps was
trying the impose U. S. culture
on underdeveloped nations.
Such criticism was made recently by a volunteer in a letter
to the editor of a newspaper.
Mr. Vaughn smiled and said

he was all for volunteers expressing their opinions. “We’re
sort of a free-speech movement.”
“We also have some compulsive
letter writers among our volun-

teers.”

'American packages'
He said the Peace Corps at
first did have what he called
‘American packages,"
But over the years, he said:
“We have moved relentlessly to
have all our programs under the
host country. And I don’t know
of any volunteer working inde-

pendently.”
Mr. Vaughn said the Peace
Corps would conduct an intensive
recruiting drive on the Washington, D.C. campuses this week.
But,” he said, “we don t want
to twist any arms. We’re not
Madison Avc. These are individu-

al decisions. And if the student
opts for VISTA or teaching in the
slums, then that’s fine with us.”

Conference of Concerned Democrats
plans organizational meeting Sunday
The Western New York chapter of the Conference of Concerned Democrats will hold an
open organizational meeting Sunday

in the Conference Theater.

The group will be addressed

by Harold M. Ickes, coordinator

of the national conference. The
conference is an organization of
Democrats who hope to run a
slate of convention delegates opposed to the party’s renomination
of President Johnson in 1968.

In a letter mailed out this week
to 500 local registered Democrats, 23 area professors, clergy-

men and lawyers explained the
purposes of the group and asked
for support.
The letter said

. . we believe that the political process must be employed
to offer the Democratic voters a
choice in 1968
a choice within
—

(he

“We are a group of Democrats
who are aroused by the United

States’ involvement in Vietnam
. . . Its relentless escalation by
President Johnson, his apparent
inability or reluctance to pursue

peaceful, honorable alternatives,
and the concurrent rapid expan
Sion of critical unresolved domestic problems have convinced us
that he must be opposed in his

bid for renomination.

Democratic Party,

“Therefore we . . . ask you to
attend a general meeting to decide what action should be taken

here to pursue that goal, to elect
delegates to the 1968 Democratic

National Convention pledged to

oppose the renominalion of President Johnson,”
The meeting
p.m.

will begin at 2

�Friday, December 15, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* Fourteen

i
i
a*

h:

.•

c.

4

1926
There was no parking problem when this photo was taken at the
—

Erie County Hospital, before it became

Hayes Hall.

The Old ce
wh; N

wa

0

■i

Sri

*

A

When UB acquired the la
1920
gift from Erie County. But theft was th
919, w
tional use within ten years. B
granted.
id still
With time running out again, 3
1920 (at table right) presidet over
—

:

of Buffalo, depicted by the surrounding
pictures, will soon be recreated.
The University of Buffalo Foundation
Inc., in co-operation with the Alumni
Office, is sponsoring a Heritage Campaign
to obtain mementos of the University’s
past. The campaign, which
originated with Dr. William O’Connor,
executive director of the Foundation, hopes
to obtain these mementos mainly
from alumni.
“We hope to come up with our
past in pictures, not only of the alumni
but also of the University. We are trying
to gather as many of these mementos
as we possibly can,” explained
Mr. David Krajewski, assistant director
of alumni affairs.
The two agencies have planned an open
house to exhibit artifacts which they
will collect. Open house is scheduled
for Feb. 14 from 3 p.m. to 5:30 p.m.
at the Alumni’s new office at
250 Winspear Ave. All interested alumni
and students are invited to attend.
They also hope to feature
a column in the University of Buffalo
Alumni News to help revive the Alumni’s
past in pictures and stories.

�l

Friday, December

K&gt; 1967

The Spectrum

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***

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——

311

the land in 1909 which the present campus is built, it was a
was the stipulation that the land must be developed for educa919, when nothing had been done, a one-year extension was

again, 3 id still no funds available for construction, Chancellor Norton in
over a mock groundbreaking which satisfied the County.
presidei

1922
Dr. Samuel 0. Capen became UB's first full-time chancellor. Here he leads the first academic procession to the dedication of Foster Hall. Behind the fence are al mshouse inmates who
still shared the campus with the struggling University.
—

Pag* Fifteen

�Friday, December 15, 1967

The Spectrum

Page Sixteen

News anal sis

National institutions, war priority
hindering Negro

campus releases...
The Graduate Economic Association will sponsor a seminar at
today in Pnnm Ml Mnrtnn Hall —The gUCSt speaker, Dr. John
Fei, Professor of Economics at Cornell University, will speak on
“Economic Growth in a Historical Perspective.” All students' are
invited to attend.
4 pm

by Robert W. Lucas
Gonneff News Service

WASHINGTON—When the President’s National Advisory Commission on Civil Disodrers makes its report, it
should have a threefold effect.
First, it should surprise and alarm the American people as to how little visible advance has actually been made
in reshaping the country’s institutions to meet the special
problems of poor black people.
Second, it should strongly reinforce the case for vastly
upgraded law enforcement, not only in “systems” and “technology,” but more importantly in high quality uniformed
men.
Witnesses appearing before the instances “to drive husbands out
commission are not pulling their of the home, to deprive children
punches. Their comments add up of their self esteem and to consign mothers to lives of drugery
to a solemn, documented, indisand poverty.”
putable warning that only prompt
Roy Wilkins is no reckless hotand dramatic action can save the
head preaching black racism.
black American’s faith and confiNeither is Dr. Marlin Luther
dence in the American system.
Roy Wilkins, director of the King Jr., who feels impelled at
this point to organize non-violent,
Community Relations Service in
the Department of Justice, says civil disobedience demonstrators
for next year to head off riots in
the American people are “disa last appeal for “jobs and intracted by searching for easy solutions to the problem” of the come” before the “curtain of
poor black people among them.
doom” falls on this nation.
There are dozens of programs
The Johnson government is apunder way or in legislative form
plauded for trying to open opportunities. But although the Negro’s to replace slums, hire the disad"rights’ have been restated and
vantaged (after basic training),
provide sources of employment
are being protected by a host of
within the ghetto areas, reform
new laws, “for the poor black
police-community relations and
American, the advances we have
improve schools.
had are like the wind over the
trees,” Mr. Wilkins said. “They Answers discouraging
don't see any changes.”
But are they adequate? Are
Mr, Wilkins says that not only they too weighted down with red
is the system of institutions and tape to project beneficial results
organizations failing the poor
fast? Is not the growth of the
Negro, but when the system
problem itself racing ahead of
touches such people, it touches the solutions? There is little joy
them "harshly and injuriously,”
to be tound in honest answers to
The schools, for example, are any of these questions.
too slowly closing the gap beThe Vietnam War and its pretween Negroes and whites at the emotion of money, brain power
high
graduation.
of
school
time
and attention, is approaching a
Here, Mr. Wilkins declared, the crisis simultaneously with the dothat
system "teaches Negro kids
mestic crisis facing major centers
. that they
they are failures.
of the U, S. population.
.
.
.
conhave lost the race for
The conflict between the two
structive lives even before they presents a clear and present danhad an opporunity to start.”
ger to the sense of values and the
unity of purpose which, in a
Unions discriminate
rough way, have tied this counThe trade union system, lawfully recognized as a protective try together in emergencies.
It is not helptui to oann, as
right to advance the welfare of
some do, that the United States
workers, excludes black Amercan meet both its foreign comicans from certain kinds of emmitments (as presently conceived)
ployment.
and its local obligations if it will
Welfare institutions, according
to Mr. Wilkins, serve in too many only tap its affluent population
and get on with the job.
Lack of agreement
That is not happening and is
not likely to. The President and
the Congress cannot even agree

lion deficit* under the present
division of military and non-military spending.

Who would believe it to be politically feasible to mount a campaign in behalf of enough federal money to grapple meaningfully with the fantastic housing,
welfare
job, educational and
problems facing the American
cities?
The fact seems to be that the
American people are torn with
doubts about the war and are
ambivalent about the poor—both
black and white.
They will not believe that the
war cannot be “won” and South
Vietnam’s future made secure
if only we would unleash our
awesome power to “finish the
job.”

And although the average
American knows nobody who
lives in the urban ghetto, he continues to think that “if those people would just pull up their socks,
things would be OK.”
And there seems to be nobody
capable or willing to lead the
people from the swamps of such
mushy assumptions.

The Advisory Staff of University College will sponsor a coffee
hour Monday from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m, in the reception area of Diefendorf Hall. The purpose is to provide the faculty and student body
with the opportunity to meet with the Advisory Staff in an informal

atmosphere.

Advisers will be available to answer questions and to discuss
University College rules and regulations.
The Spanish Club will present a variety show, ‘ A Latin American Night,” at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Millard Fillmo
Room. Music
by Los Caribes will follow the performance of a gioup of Latin
American students. Tickets are on sale at the Norton ticket office
and at the door for $.50. Everyone is welcome.
WBFO (88.7 mcs.) will broadcast a talk by Floyd B. McKissick,
National Director of CORE (Congress of Racial Equality) at 9 p.m.
tonight. This talk was recorded at the Human Rights Forum at
Niagara University.

The Course and Teacher Evaluation Committee needs typists.
Intrested persons should come to Room 205 Norton Hall at 12:30
p.m. tomorrow. Typists will be paid $1.25 an hour. The committee
also needs a cover for the Student Course and Teacher Evaluation
Booklet. All entries can be submitted in Room 205 Norton Hall
at any time.
The Seventh Annual Niagara Frontier Civil Liberties Award
will be presented to Norman Goldfarb at the Annual Bill of Rights
Day meeting at 8 p.m. today in Room 140 Capen Hall (Butler
Auditorium).

Dr. Edgar Friedenberg, visiting professor of Sociology at the
State University of Buffalo and a national authority on the sociology
of youth, will speak on “Civil Liberties for Adolescents.”

Dow not abandoning napalm, claims
production is 'matter of principle'
ANN ARBOR, Mich.

(CPS)

—

Dow Chemical Co. has denied re-

ports that it is considering dropping napalm production for use
by the government in the Viet-

nam war.
Napalm is a mixture of polystyrene, gasoline and other organic materials used in incendiary bombs.
Dave Coslett of Dow’s news

and information service in Midland, Mich., said: “We will continue making napalm despite the
fact that it is hurting us. If there
was any profit, it’s gone out the
window. We make it as a matter
of principle.” He said Dow has
already re-bid a new contract to
make napalm.
The Los Angeles Times quoted
Carl A. Gerstacker, a Dow board
member, on Nov. 23 as saying
that Dow had been hurt by a boycott of consumer products, that
recent college demonstrations had
hindered recruiting, and that the
company was dubious about reon an anti-inflation surtax, or
newing its government contract
concur in modest budget cuts, to to
produce napalm.
cope with an estimated $29 bilBut Mr. Coslett denied Mr.

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Gerstacker’s statement, contending it was “twisted by a reporter.” The reporter asked an
opened-end question as to
whether we would continue to
produce napalm in the future. Mr.
Coslett explained: “As far as the
president is concerned we have
no change of policy.”
Mr. Coslett admitted
some
“long-term damage” due to recent demonstrations, but added:
“We have not been able to measure any effect on sales.”
Dow loses money by producing
napalm through lost time that
top executives must give to the
public explaining Dow’s position,
he explained, also admitting that

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NEW YEAR'S EVE
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dict what Dow would do if recent
demonstrations produce a noticeable decline in Dow sales,” he
said.

He added that college recruiting was “slightly up” but that
in the beginning of the year it
“had been very high.” Dow plans
to recruit at over 50 college
campuses in December. Recruiters will be at the State Univer-

sity of Buffalo this Monday and
Tuesday.

Peace Corps fears cynicism
WASHINGTON (GNS)
A
Peace Corps leader who once
—

taught psychology at Wesleyan
University says the average Corps
recruit now is “uninformed and
unsure about the Corps and his

role in it.” Five years ago, the
average volunteer was “thoughtful, committed.”
David Berlew, who directs the
Peace Corps’ program in Ethiopia, declares in the current issue
of the agency’s magazine that it
is time to “revitalize ‘flower
power’ as a central element” of
Corps psychology.

Threatened by cynicism

iNFEfcw

“some stock holders have been
pressured to sell stock” by “letters, pamphlets and protest
groups.”
It “would be very hard to pre-

Mr. Berlew, 35, thinks “cynicism probably is the greatest
threat” to the Corps. Staff members, he contends, never can afford to indulge in cynicism.
“While square volunteers may
be initially embarrassed, Mr. Berlew writes, “it is my experience
that they are eager to accept love
and acceptance as a personal

philosophy and a working strategy. It gives substance to feelings
that they cannot articulate and
which are, as a result, often suppressed.
“Volunteers think of themselves
as highly independent, anti-authoritarian, anti-organization individuals. As staff members we
should not undermine this myth,
but it is not necessary that we

believe it.”

Mr. Berlew says that, in fact,
volunteers as a group are “surprisingly tolerant of organization
constraints and administrative
Mickey Mouse.” He finds it “appalling that so little that is not
misconception is known about the
Peace Corps after six years. Perhaps it is a reflection of how little we know about ourselves.”

Lack of initiative
In Mr. Berlew’s opinion, most
Corps staffers have an oversimplified view of volunteer motivation. Most are “very highly motivated to be just the kind of volunteers we want them to be. This
is particularly true when they
first arrive and are prepared to
live in tree houses and eat bananas if that is what is expected
and/or required of them.”
“We should communicate our
faith in the volunteers,” Mr. Berlew suggests, “until they believe
it themselves.”

�Friday, December 15, 1967

The Spectrum

P*9«

Seventeen

i

T.ape-recorded bach ound use

Variety enlivens Hollies concert
by James Brennan
Spectrum

Staff

est- hit, “Dear Eloise.” They recently did this number on “The

Reporter

The Hollies decked the halls of Clark Gym last Saturday

night at a blanket concert sponsored by the Commuter

Council. Appearing with the Hollies were Wilmer and the
Dukes and the Willijohn.
Wilmer and the Dukes opened the show with the spirit
ed sound of “I’m A Soulman
Wilmer told the audience
that they weren’t using their and presented their version of
"The Times They Are A Changown equipment and to please in’.”
The folk-rock arrangement
difference
in of this number v/as quite acexcuse any
ceptable, with Clarke handling
sound they might notice
”

But one member of the audicommented: “It’s like the
Inferno all over again,” as they
swung into a soulful version of
“Funky Broadway” and “The Letter.”
In his animate sock it to ’em
style, Wilmer continued with
“Ain’t Gonna Eat Out My Heart
Anymore” and “Reach Out.”
ence

Willijohn too slow
After the mtermission, the Wil-

,

lijohn opened the second half of
the show. They were lacking their
lead guitarist and their sound
showed a definite incompleteness
in their presentation.
They began and ended each
song much too slowly for this reviewer’s taste. They prolonged
each note, causing the audience
to break into applause halfway
through the song in an attempt
to end the song. Their version of
“Wake Me Shake Me” was unrecognizable and “The Letter” was
far too slow in tempo to do the
song justice.
Following the second intermission, the Hollies came on stage
and swung into “Stop Stop Stop.”
After the applause for the opening number died down, they proceeded to do another of their
hit singles, “Look Through Any

Window.”

Tape-recorded background
Allan Clarke, the Hollies’ lead

singer, commented that the group
admired the works of Bob Dylan

the vocal lead. He also amused the
audience with a British accented
W. C. Fields imitation and some
semi-funny old jokes.
An unusual effect the Hollies
used in their concert was integrating tape-recorded trumpet
music into their “live” sound.
They did this in a number called
“Games We Play.” This was followed by another of their old
hits, “Carousel.”
Doing a take-off on Herb Alpert and his TJB, the Hollies did
a guitar version of “A Taste of
Honey.” At this point in the concert, a member of the audience
called out for “I’m Alive.” So
the Hollies proceeded to do a
quick four and three quarter bars
of this song and then went on to
perform “Just One Look.”

Series of mini-concerts
They said they liked to please

everyone in their audience, and
in an effort to demonstrate this,

they clowned around in various
odd poses as members of the
audience took pictures.
Intermittently throughout their
concert, the Hollies went off on
tangents of mini-concerts, doing

imitations of their favorite American entertainers. Among them
were imitations of Arlo Guthrie’s
“Alice’s Restaurant” and mimicing an old-style Elvis Presley
rock-and-roll number.
The Hollies, with Graham Nash
singing lead, performed their lat-

lothers

Mothers

television

show.
With a full violin accompaniment via the tape-recorded background technique, Graham Nash
sang a quiet song called “Butterfly.” Allan Clarke again claimed
the spotlight with a folk-rock version;of “Stewball." Both of these
solo performances were quite
good, even though there was a
little feedback on the mikes.
Easily the two most popular
songs of the evening were “Carrie-Ann” and “Bus Stop.” These
were done in the inimitable Hollies’ style, which blends a British rock-and-roll sound with fine
vocal harmony. The Hollies gave
a great live concert and their

—Grimmer

Hollies

tape-recordings and corny jokes
made the evening all the more
enjoyable.

The Hollies decked Clark Gym
Saturday with a wide variety
of sounds and motion.

COIKert

Entertainment
Calendar
Friday, Dec. 15;

PLAY: “The Dragon,” Upton
Hall, Buff. State, 8:15, through
Dec.

17.

READING: “Country Wife,” Haas
Lounge, Norton, 8:30 p.m., also
Dec. 15.
FILM: “Lord Of The

Flies,” and
“A,” Circle Art, 2 and 4 p.m.
through Dec. 16.
FILM: “Great Expectations,” Nor-

ton Conf.
PLAY: “Married Alive!”, O’Keefe

Center, Toronto, 8:30 p.m.
CONCERT: “The Messiah,” State
University of Buffalo Chorus,
Schola Cantorum, Buffalo Philharmonic, Kleinhans, 8:30 p.m.
Saturday, Dec. 16;
CONCERT: Evenings for New
Music, Albright-Knox, 8:30 p.m.

PLAY: "Androcles and the Lion,”
Studio Arena, 2 p.m.
Sunday, Dec. 17:
CONCERT: Symphony Band Concert, Fillmore Room, 8:30 p.m.

CONCERT: “A Ceremony of
Christmas Carols,” P. B. Women's Chorale, Trinity Episcopal
Church, 8 p.m.
Monday, Dec. 18;
LECTURE: Lecture Demonstration, John Harmon, Baird, 4
-

p.m.

RECITAL: Student Recital, Baird,
8:30 p.m., also Dec. 19.
FILM: “Doulos” (The Finger
Man), Capen 140, 8 p.m.
FILM: “Mr. Hulot’s Holiday,”
and “The Smile,” Circle Art, 2
and 4 p.m.
Tuesday, Dec. 19:
FILM:

“Ashes and Diamonds,”

Norton Conference, 7 p.m
JAZ LAB: Jazz Lab Band, Conference Theater, 3-6 p.m.
Wednesday, Dec. 20:

N.E.T. FESTIVAL: “Picassa and
His Sculpture,” Channel 17, 9

p.m.
FILM PREMIERE; “Far From
The Madding Crowd,” Julie
Christie and Alan Bates, Century Theater.

Thursday, Dec. 21:
CONCERT: U. B. Orchestra Concert, Baird, 8:30 p.m.
Friday, Dec. 22:
PREMIERE;
FILM
"Camelot,”
Richard Harris, Vanessa Redgrave, Shea’s Teck.

BALLET: “The Nutcracker,”
O’Keefe Center, Toronto, 11
and 2:30 p.m. through Dec. 30.

Lawyer attacking pot laws invalidates foes' claims
Editors Note: Mr. Aldrich is head of SUNYAB
Lemar, the campus group seeking legalization of
marijuana.

by Mike Aldrich
Special to

the

Spectrum

Mr. Aldrich: What happening with your case?
Mr. Oteri: Judge Tauro’s opinion should be in
within the next week or ten days. But I don’t expect it to be favorable. We’ve already got the appeal brief ready—took the 48-page original brief
and boiled down the most relevant testimony from
the hearings—over 1800 pages of transcript that
will soon be published—we have over 100 pages
of appellant’s brief to take to the final court of
Massachusetts, the Supreme Judiciary Court of Appeals.

Mr. Aldrich: How did the hearing go?
Mr. Oteri; It was a lawyer’s dream. The first
thing we discovered was that most of the “experts”
on marijuana really aren’t. For our defense testimony we grilled each witness several times before
we put him on the stand. The prosecution’s witnesses, though usually only their first testimony
made the papers, were destroyed in cross-examin-

ation.
It was beautiful.
Don Louria, for instance, was supposed to be
one of their stars. His major point was that chronic
use of hashish, according to a study made quite
some time ago in Morocco, was a contribution factor in insanity. He made it sound so positive during
his presentation. Luckily, we’d done some preliminary research on that study, the Benabud Report.
Benabud was supposed to have proved that more
than 25 per cent of the people in Moroccan insane
asylums were there because of chronic hashishsmoking. When we got Louria for cross-examination we fired some questions at him, like this:
.“How many certified psychiatrists were there
in all of Morocco at the time of the survey?”
Louria didn’t know, so we had the correct
answer. None.
“And how many medical doctors in Morocco

at the time?”
Again he didn’t know. There

were three li

censed doctors in the whole country then, one was
the other two general

purely an administrator,
practitioners.

“So who did the actual research reported in
the Benabud study?” It turns out that the report
was arrived at by having two French clerks trans
late the hospital admission cards from Morocco.
“Who filled out the original admission cards?”
There were not even interns there to do prelim
inary entrance diagnoses on all these admissions
to the mental hospital where the study was made.
The cards weren’t prepared by doctors, or even
by clerks; the admitting diagnosis, on the cards,
was the opinion of whatever policeman had brought
the person into the hospital.

And on the basis of that kind of evidence, the
Benabud Report has been plaguing responsible
medical doctors trying to do actual research on
any possible correlations between insanity and pot
ever since. We utterly destroyed that kind of
“proof."
Allen Ginsberg told me
Mr. Aldrich: Wow
last year that the Benabud Report, so dear to a
local judge who argues that pot contributes to
insanity, was probably as fishy as that, but I’ve
simply been arguing that in a country like Morocco where maybe 85 per cent of the population
smokes hashish, it’s not surprising that 30 per cent
of however many in the insane asylums also have
—

smoked it.
Mr. Otari: That wasn’t the worst one. The
prosecution brought in some witnesses that were
they had no actual exeasy enough to destroy
perience with, or research on, marijuana, and were
just offering opinions based on what they’d heard.
And the ones they brought in who supposedly had
done research
the beauty here was the younger
Chopra, Ismir Chopra. He came in talking about
all this research he'd done with his father, telling
about the results he’d supposedly arrived at
we
started questioning during cross-examination more
closely and it turned out that he'd been in London
at medical school, while he was claiming to have
—

—

—

been helping his father with his research project.
That discredits his personal testimony.
Mr. Aldrich: That was a fairly common practice in India
the old man who docs whatever
scientific research or project puts his son’s name
on the report loo. It provides the kid with a kind
of formal or nominal reputation when and if he
goes into the field.
Mr. Oteri: And that’s not all with young Ismir
Chopra. His father’s report is one of the strongest
links, so the younger doctor claimed, in showing
that marijuana causes crime. During cross-examination we discovered more facts about the actual
study his father’d done. There was a 27-question
questionnaire they used. Many of the questions
—

were just personal background stuff, about family
and social status. Then came the questions about
drug use. And there was one question: "Were you
ever convicted of a crime?” No mention of whether
the crime or conviction was before, during, after,
or in any way involved with use of marijuana or
hashish. Didn’t make any connection with pot.
Yet on the basis of the answers to that question,
Chopra and Chopra stated that this “scientific
study” indicated that marijuana was a determining
factor in the commission of crimes.
Mr. Aldrich: Too much! How'd you dig all
this stuff out?
Mr. Oteri; It took us months of research and
a lot of money. Some people have a vested interest
in keeping the real facts about these scientific
studies hidden. I believe it was Todd Mikarea, a
San Francisco psychiatrist, who did the stuff on
the Benabud Report. I think the Chopra stuff just
catbe out during cross-examination.
Mr. Aldrich: Why have you been doing this?
Mr. Otari: Remember your history'’ We once
fought a revolution because we wanted a selfdetermining government to give people the right
to decide for themselves what's right, if their actions didn't hurt anybody: individual freedom;
the right to smoke. If you believe in the right of
human beings to act in certain ways they enjoy
as long as they don't hurt others, then you believe
in the right to be let alone, and you’ll fight for it.

�T5,r»r

The

Pag* Eighteen

?

f

Friday, December 15, 1967

Spectrum

National Student Film Festival to
conduct country-wide film competition
Newsweek, Saturday Review,
Harpers and Glamour.

by Lori Pendrys
Spectrum

Haas Lounge will see reading
of Wycherley's "The Country

Wife" tonight and tomorrow.
In rehearsal, left to right, are
Frank Dwyer, Helene Friedman,
Margot Fein and (seated) Vick-

Well
cast

ie Robbins.

English Dept, presents readings
from comedy. Country Wife'
toyling and
"I have been
moyling, for the pretty’st piece
of China, my dear.” Thus begins
one of the most memorable
scenes in all English literature
when Lady Fidget announces to

the world that she and Master
Horner, a self-'proclaimed eunuch,
have just finished examining his
collection of china.
The double entendre of this
will be examined further when the English
Department presents a reading of
William Wycherley’s “The Country Wife” tonight and tomorrow
night in the Haas Lounge, Norton Union at 8:30 p.m.
and other scenes

The

reading, which Norman
of the State
University of Buffalo English
Department, has called: “One of
Holland, chairman

the greatest comedies of all
times,” is under the direction of
Henry A, Wicke Jr. of the
Dwyer, both graduate students.
Inspiration for the reading

came from Dr. George Levine’s
course on Restoration Drama
given this semester. Dr. Levine
expressed the desire to see a
reading of the play performed
to give his students a first-hand
example of how vital Restoration
theater is for today’s audiences.

Two of his students took the
idea, came to Mr. Wicke and production plans were immediately
set.
Prominent in the company

Raszynski,

Admission is free for the two
performances.

Slip Juauliup
561 FOREST AVE.
presents
•he "soul sounds" of

CHIC

&amp;

are

Vicki Robbins in the title role;
Graham Marchnt as Horner;
Frank Dwyer as Mr. Pinchwife,
the jealous and cuckold husband. In roles which underscore
and counterpoint the comedy are
Margot Fein, Patrick Whitfield,
Richard Garson, Carol Kauderer,
Helen Friedman and Charloe Forman. Production stage manager
is JoAnn Cohen assisted by Andre

Staff

Reporter

The National Student Film Festival is now conducting
a film competition in colleges throughout the country. Films
made by students may be submitted in four categories:
Documentary, dramatic, experimental and animation. Grants
of $500 will be awarded by the Motion Picture Association
of America to films selected as first prize winners in each
of these categories.
The Film Festival was N. S. A. and have been screened
on more
200 college
founded by the United States campuses. than
National Student Association
to showcase the best new stuMany of the films have also
dent films and to encourage been shown on nationwide, local
educational televised proand focus public attention on and
grams. Each year the winning
the work of young film-makstudent film program has been
ers.
presented as a special feature of
This festival, the largest national performing competition for
film-makers, grew last year when
the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts and the Motion Picture Association of America
joined N. S. A. in assuming sponsorship and financing of the
project.
Through funds provided by the
MPAA, prints of the award winning films of previous contests
are being distributed by the

Since receiving awards in the
Festival, past winners have become involved in documentary
and TV film work, have become
active in commercial film production and have received seri-

ous recognition as independent
film-makers.

Last year’s winning student
films .were “Riff ’65” by Eric
Camiel of New York University;
“Metanomen” by Scott Bartlett
of San Francisco State College;
“A Child’s Introduction to the
Cosmos” by Barwood of the University of South California and
“Match Girl” by Andrew Meyer
of Boston University.
The Judges for this year’s competition will be announced shortly. Past judges have included:
King Vidor, producer-director;
Amos Vogel, director of the film
department of Lincoln Center for
the Performing Arts; Ernest Cal-

the West German Short Film
Festival in Oberhausen. Winning
collections of student films have
been presented for audiences at
Lincoln Center’s New York Film
Festival, National Film Study
Conference at Dartmouth and
Expo ’67.

lenbach, editor of “Film Quarterly” and Pauline Kael and Arthur
Knight, critics.

The National Student Film
Festival has received an enthusiastic nationwide response as reported in newspapers and magazines throughout the country,
such as the New York Times,

Copies of contest rules and applications may be obtained from
the Feature Department at the
Spectrum Office.

Music Dept. to hold student recitals
The State University of Buffalo
Music Department will hold two
student recitals on Monday and
Tuesday in Baird Recital Hall.
Louis Pawloski will commence
the concert with “Pavan” by L.
Milon, “Etude in A” by Carcassi
and “Preludium” by Bach.
“Prelude, Op. 9” by Scriabin is
the next selection with Steve
Chikes on piano. Flutist Nora

Nausbaum accompanied by Donna
Kozaorek on the piano will play
“Concert Royal No. 4” by Couperin. The “Second Clarinet Concerto in E Flat,” featuring Leonard Lazarus, will conclude the
first half of Monday’s program.

Monday’s recital.
Beginning Tuesday’s concert
will be pianist Laventa Donley
who will present “Parita in A
Minor” by Logy and Mozart’s
“Sonata in B flat.” Three Christmas songs by Frank Martin will
be performed by sopranoes Susan
Jaefer, Nora Nausbaum and
Kathy Cassidy. Robert Winter,
who will play selections from
Brahms, and Rebecca Hartshorn,
Rhoda Lederman, Judith Herschberger, Sheila Braunstein and
Madelena Marx are also scheduled to present pieces.

Pianist James Kosnik will begin the second series of selections with "Waltz in E flat” by
Chopin. Also included is “Jeux
d’eau” by Ravel, “Piece Concertane” by Salzedo and three
short pieces by Ilbert. Kenneth
Young, James Kaspowitz, Joseph
Kubers, David Pilecki, Steven
Greenwald and Anna Slayden are
other students performing in

Both recitals will start at 8:30.
There is no admission charge.

THE DIPLOMATS

Every Tuesday thru Sunday

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from

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ORDER YOUR TICKETS NOW FOR '
FROM THE MADDING CROWD”

THEATRE

Buffalo, N Y. 14203

Main St.

inclosed it

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Inloratotion on TKootre fartiti lor Crowpt. Clubt Cbw'thet Oll.te and Coneeattoni
obtained h, tolling tbr Con lory Ttieolre el IS)-}40*

Extra Holiday Matlnaax at 2:00 P.M. Dac. 2S
o4 ID card

Starts

FRIDAY

AMHERST A
CINEMA

Dick Van Dyka
"FITZWILLY"

CENTURY THEATRE

may

through

I

b.

Jan.l

~

v

�Friday, December 15, 1967

The

Pag* Nineteen

Spectrum

Best Seller List
\

4.,

Compiled by Publishers' Weekly

Memoirs, 1925-1950
George F. Kennan
Incredible Victory
Walter Lord
Too Strong For Fantasy

Where Eagles Dare
Alistair MacLean
Night Falls On The City
Sarah Gainham
—

Fiction

i -few

T

3

,--

■•

*

%

;

«i

■

■The Confessions of Nat Turner
—William Styron
Topaz
,

—

Leon Uris

—The Gabriel Hounds
Mary Stewart
The Chosen
Chaim Potok
A Night of Watching
Elliott Arnold
Christy
Catherine Marshall
—

—

—

—

Ira Levin
Rosemary’s Baby
The Vale of Laughter
—

Peter Devries
Elia Kazan
The Arrangement
—

-

■A

The Exhibitionist
—

ments

and

ornaments.

—

Dwight D. Eisenhower

—

San Francisco: City On Golden
Hills
Herb Caen with Doug

—

—

Kingman

Rickenbaeker
Eddie Rickenbaeker
Between Parent And Child
Haim G, Ginott

—

—

—

neglected poet-singer
—

"Sleep warm," scribbled

the man whose trademark is lone-

Eleven years ago, the craggy-faced, husky-voiced poet-singer was performing in a
San Francisco nightclub for $35 a week. His world consisted of publishers' rejections,
public indifferences and personal restlessness.
It was a world the 34-year-old troubadour is not likely to experience again.
Almost overnight, McKuen has become one of the best-selling poets in history, a recording artist with 500,000 sold albums to his credit, a sought-after nightclub performer, a man surrounded by fame and fortune.
His two books of blank verse poetry, "Stanyan Street and Other Sorrows" and
"Listen to the Warm," have sold more than 400,000 copies. Several universities are
using them as texts for English courses.
"Success is determined in just one way," said McKuen, who dropped out of high
school in his junior year. "It's how you get along with yourself. If I can sleep at
night, then it's been a good day."
McKuen finds it difficult to explain his meteoric rise after so many years of
neglect. Certainly, Glenn Yarbrough helped by singing many of his songs. But more,
important, perhaps, is that McKuen's artistry cries of unquenchable loneliness and

from Thomas Lockwood’s personal collection. The first of the
literary composition works was
the Atlantic Souvenir dated 1826.
During the 1850s these annuals
fell into the hands of literary
bootleggers. But before this time,
some of the most original works
were turned out in the form of
these little periodicals.

naked sentimentality.
McKuen finds contentment elusive and love untouchable. "It's been wonderful—the public, the success, the excitement," he said. "But I'm tired of crowds. So much
is expected and demanded of you. I miss the anonymity."
The quiet loner has attracted a crowd.

Lockwood has an extensive
store of first editions, manuscripts, and other special materials to fill its balcony display
cases. Some of the material that
they have recently displayed
ranges from Spanish language
books and Polish materials to
the manuscripts of James Joyce.
These first editions can be
seen on display in the balcony
Monday through Friday from
7:30 a.m. to 11 p.m.; Saturday
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sunday
from 1 p.m. to 11 p.m.

rwFEltw

THE MOST

EVER!

Wed. Night

Wed.-Sun.

Thurs.-Sun.

LeRoy Taylor

The Rising Sons

™

MUSICAL
LOVE STORY

GLADYS KNIGHT

&amp;

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&amp;

the Dukes

THE PIPS

The Fantastic JOHNNY “C”
LIONEL

DAVID

FRANCO

VANCSSA

HARRIS REDGRAVE NERO HEMMINGS JEFFRIW
TECHNICOLOR' PROVISION FROM WARNER BROS.-SEVEN ARTS
*

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SCHEDULE OF RESERVED SEATS
PRICES AND PERFORMANCES
MATINEES al 2 P.M. «cep»
New Tear I Day lf,».
Chrhlma.
*

Wed.

B«i Office
Daily
l« A N. U 9:M P.M.
12 M Nnn U 9:M P.M.

I'*. :
M.H-M.ad

Sunday.

EVENINGS

Open

*"

Sal.

*

1

TECK
•

At Ease

—

finds

Leonard C, Lewin

—

—

frightening."

BEAUTIFUL

TOO MAIN STKEKT

Report From Iron Mountain

Nichols and Alexandra
Robert K. Massie
Twenty Minutes to a Friend
Svetlana Alliluyeva
The New Industrial State
John Kenneth Galbraith
A Modern Priest Looks at His
Outdated Church
Father James Kavanaugh
Anyone Can Make a Million
Mortori Shulman

He smiled, handed the autograph to his blonde admirer and waited for the next
knock at his dressing room door.
"It's strange," Rod McKuen said. "I always dreamed of success. But this is a bit

FRI., DEC. 22

SHEA’S

“Our Crowd”

liness.

W.N.Y. PREMIERE

Rif.MARC

—

United Press International

were regularly issued each year
by the major publishing houses.
These annuals are selections

They

—

Non-fiction

SAN FRANCISCO

First editions of Dickens
being shown in Lockwood
An exhibit of the Christmas
Books of Dickens and other Dickensian first editions is on display
on the balcony of the University’s Lockwood Memorial Library.
The exhibition includes handtinted volumes of The Cricket on
the Hearth, The Battle of Life,
and The Haunted Man, as well
as the famous story of old
Scrooge called A Christmas
Carol. It was arranged by Mr.
Edwin A. Sy, who is the curator
of special collections for the
University Libraries.
He commented: “The joyful
impact of A Christmas Carol and
The Cricket On the Hearth, first
published a century ago, is still
felt'each holiday season.”
Along with the Dickens display is an exhibit of Holiday
Gift Annuals which were very
much a part of 19th century seasonal tradition. These annuals
were often given as gifts and are
bountifully illustrated collections
of holiday verse, stories, senti-

Sutton

Success

Currently on display at the Lockwood Library balcony are a
number of first editions by
Charles Dickens.

First
editions

Henry

—

,

S2.M-S2.M
thm Th«rv at I P.M.
*2.23-SMS
Sal. 8:39 P.M
(Matinee and
Dec SI. Un. •
Evcnlnca):—«.M *nd 53.M
al
CHRISTMAS WEEK Ealr. Matinee
29,
2 P.M. December 2«. 27. 2«.

Sun.

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Frl. and
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GIFT CERTIFICATES
AVAILABLE NOW Far Haliday Girin*

NOW 5th DELIGHTFUL MONTH!
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NOW PLAYING

v

TWO ORIGINAL
SCREEN CLASSICS!

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KARLOFF
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Please send me
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14202

tickets for
1st alternate date

BELA
LUGOSI

STREET

STATE

ZIP CODE

Please mail self-addressed envelope with your
check or money order made payable to Theatre

mum

putt

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each

NAME

CITY

IN

“Frankenstein”

SHEA’S TECH THEATRE
760

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dracula”

�The

Pag* Twenty

Friday, December 15, 1967

Spectrum

New studies confiri

Mounting evidence spurs fears of LSD genetic harm
trols, the average chromosomal which are not unlike those seen
breakage was 3.8%, while among after LSD exposure,

LSD, the mind-expanding hallucinogen, has been the subject of
much recent study. There has

,

those people using LSD, the average chromosmal breakage was
13.2%. Of the four children, two,
whose mothers had taken only a
low dose of LSD late in pregnancy, showed no significant abnormalities. The other mother
however took LSD early in pregnancy, and
the chromosomal
breakage present in her two
children was approximately 13%.
Dr, Cohen has pointed out that
chromosomal breakage is a phenomenon not contained to the ingestion of LSD. Similar chromosmal breakage may be attributed
to such diseases as measles and
chicken pox. However breakage
in the case of such common
diseases is relatively short-term.
In the case of LSD, breakage
seems to be of a long-term na-

been mounting evidence that LSD
is not only psychologically dangerous, but physically dangerous
as well.
Dr. Maimon Cohen, a cytogenctecist at Children’s Hospital in
Buffalo, conducted one of the
first studies on LSD last summer.
His findings were at once impressive and frightening.
Dr. Cohen found that if the
hallucinatory drug is added to
cultures of white blood cells, an
abnormally high number of
chromsomes in the cells break.
It is important to note however,
that this was an “in vitro” experiment, that is, the LSD was
not actually ingested by human
beings.

New study
Since Dr. Cohen’s findings
pointed to the grave potentialities
of LSD, many further studies
have been conducted using human
subjects. In conjunction with Dr.
Kurt Hirschhbrn of Mount Sinai
Hospital in New York, Dr. Cohen
conducted a second study on the
effects of LSD on 18 adult users
and four children exposed to the
drug before birth. Once again,
the doctors observed an abnormal amount of
chromosomal

In an article printed in the
New England Journal of Medicine
we are warned “one of the obvious potential dangers, therefore, of exposure to agents such
as LSD is the possible future increae in the incidence of leukemia and other neoplasms in
the persons exposed.”

there is presently no scientific
evidence to support a correlation
between LSD and leukemia.

The greatest problem still
facing researchers is the effect
of the drug on the chromosomal
of germ, or reproductive cells.
For if LSD does have an effect on
the gametes, it would be passed
on from generation to generation.

the dangers of LSD researchers have found that approximately 75% of those subjects exposed to LSD evidence an
abnormally high incidence of
chromosomal breakage. Dr. Cohen
points out that LSD does affect
the gametes, it may well take
several generations before we can
totally assess the psychological
and genetic damages caused by
LSD.
on

ture. In a particular experiment
involving children, breakage was

still evident three years after the
LSD was first ingested.

Other possible causes
Chromosomal aberrations similar to those induced by LSD have
also been noted in various other
diseases. Patients with these syndromes have also shown a high
propensity to leukemia. In this
context, certain cells almost invariably illustrate a variety of

BIG JOHN'S
Pizza

&amp;

Subs

Variety of Hot and Cold Sandwiches
Big John's Steak Special

—UPI

Telephoto

Leafy arrainiiAfJ
dffdignea

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771 Niagara Falls Blvd.

836-4881

ji
on drug charges

OFFER EXPIRES DECEMBER 25th

r ' Timothy L earY ta^s ,0 his wife following his
arraignment on various drug charges this week.
He pleaded not guilty, and was released after
posting $2500 ban.

STRENGTH FROM THE BIBLE
The true meening of Christines
THE BIBLE SAYS: "For unto you is born this day in the city of
David A SAVIOR which is CHRIST THE LORD."
Luke 2:11
"Ha shall save His people from their sins." Math. 1:21
Believe in JESUS and have a Blessed Christmas.
—

YOU MUST PRESENT THIS AD

—

XEROX COPIES

8&lt;
XEROX COPIES

MR. COPY INC.
3400 MAIN STREET
UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO BRANCH ONLY

Phone: 832-6985
WITH THIS AD ONLY!!

the newly created

American-Israeli
Students Club of SUNYAB
presents

David Ariel
Counsel for Political Affairs
Consulate General of Israel
speaking

on the

Possible Ways of Settlement
of the Arab-lsraeli Conflict
TUESDAY, DEC. 19th

8:00 P.M.

The Fillmore Room, Norton Union

�Friday,

December 15, 1967

The Spectrum

Page Tw#n»y-On»

UB given Defense Dept, contract for Conscientious objectors
Project Themis research program receive Texas training
William R. Davis

One of the first “Project Themis” contracts has been

awarded by the Department of Defense to the Department
of Physiology of the State University of Buffalo, according
to a recent announcement by the Office of Naval Research.

The contract involves a
a
"Center of Excellence”
program which is designed
to strengthen the scientific
and engineering capabilities
of selected academic institutions and enable them to
carry out high quality research.
—

The program will receive funds
of approximately $300,000 a year,
and continued assistance over a
number of years is expected.
Dr. Leon E. Farhi, professor of
physiology, who will head the
“Themis” project at Buffalo,
commented;

“The research

program

will

cover problems of abnormal pressures, abnormal temperatures, abnormal gas compositions involved and abnormal gravity. It
will explore the range of both

normal and abnormal

environ-

ments and explore every possibility known today, and it will be
open to those conceived in the

future.”
In conjunction with the project,
a building approximately 13,000
square feet in size will be con-

structed adjacent to Capen Hall.
Dr. Farhi observed: “These
new facilities will include a human centrifuge, a circular submersion tank, and a very highpressure chamber with a capacity
equivalent to 1500 feet of water.”
The human centrifuge, which
will be enclosed in the central
laboratory, will permit experimentation with animal as well as
human subjects.
A circular submergence facility, which will surround the centrifuge pit, will allow the experimental subjects to swim for long
time periods without having to
turn around, which is not possible
in conventional pools.

A monitoring platform with adjustable speed will either impose
a preselected speed on the runner or swimmer or follow the
subjects at a rate they may
select. Valuable measurements

can be obtained from swimmers.
When operating at intermediate
speeds, the monitoring platform
can obtain measurements on subjects running on a track outside
the submergence facility. This
novel design will lead to substantial savings in area and costs,
also bringing scientists working
on different aspects of environmental physiology into closer contact.

Another feature of the new facilities is the central computer
room, which will receive signals
from the various laboratories and
process them immediately. Results will be transmitted to the

experimental laboratory enabling

researchers to determine the need
for additional measurements or
modifications in the setup.
Dr. Douglas M, Surgenor, provost of the Faculty of Health Sciences and Dean of the School of
Medicine, commented; “This is a
very significant project that has
its implications far beyond the
School of Medicine. It will call

for closer relations between the
faculty of the Health Sciences and
the faculty of the School of Engineering."

The central laboratory in the
new complex will enclose the

New
complex

centrifuge, submergence facility

and running track. The centrifuge will permit animal experimentation as well as work with
human subjects.

IF YOU WANT THE TRADITIONAL LOOK

...

Five or six present senior faculty members from the Department of Physiology are expected
to conduct most of the research
in the program, but it is hoped
other specialists will join the
project. It is also anticipated that
several Engineering faculty members and other Health Sciences
faculty will make use of the new
research facilities.
In keeping with a decision to
focus organization in research on
the present location, the program
is expected to remain on the
Main St. campus following the
University move to Amherst.

FORT SAM HOUSTON, Tex:—It is against their religion
to fight, but they may still serve their country. They are
the conscientious objectors for religious reasons, and here
at Fort Sam Houston, training center for such noncombatants, is where they are taught how to serve without shooting.
Many of Fort Sam’s “conchies”
have served and are serving in
the front lines in Vietnam as
medical corpsmen. For such duty

they have to undergo training as
tough in its way as the basic
training given infantrymen.

Classifications
Conscientious objectors willing
to go into battle without having
to fight are classified 1-AO. Those
whose religion forbids wearing of
the military uniform or taking
part in military action, are rated
1-0.

stresses that these men are sin
cere in their religious convictions, “not trying to shirk re
sponsible service to their coun
try."

Prefer jail
He

said the

ifications,

These are men whose objections to fighting, based solely
upon “religious training and belief,” are accepted as bona fide
under a 1967 congressional extension of the Selective Training and
Service Act.
Col. M. S. Schwartz, director of
Selective Service in

Texas,

Jehovah's

Wit-

nesses, for example, prefer jail
to national service of any kind.
Objectors undergo much the
same recruit training as other
draftees at Fort Sam Houston.
They are exempted from 83
hours of individual weapons qual-

four hours of hand-

grenade training, and eight hours
of combat training. Many request permission to participate in
some arms training.
Schwartz said each local Selective Service Board makes the decision as to whether an applicant
qualifies as a conscientious objector under the law.

Christmas music programs slated
Handel’s classic oratorio “The
Messiah” will be presented this
evening at Kleinhans Music Hall.
The University of Buffalo Mixed
Chorus, conducted by Frederic
H. Ford and Peter Van Dyck will
join forces with the Buffalo
Schola Cantorum, led by Robert

S. Beckwith and the Buffalo
Philharmonic Orchestra for the
performance.
Ulrich Meyer, assistant conductor of the Philharmonic, will

conduct this Christmas favorite,
which will also feature guest soloists. The concert will take place
on Friday at 8:30 p.m.

Sunday, at 8 p.m., the State
University of Buffalo Women’s
Chorale with harpist Suzanne
Thomas will present Benjamin
Britten’s “A Ceremony of Christmas Carols” at Buffalo’s Trinity
Episcopal Church on Delaware
Ave.

Presenting The Drinking Song for Sprite:

"ROAR, SOFT-DRINK, ROAR!"
(To the tune of "Barbara Fritchie")

LOOK FOR THE TRADITIONAL LABEL!

Traditionally, a lusty, rousing fight song is
de rjgeur for every worthy cause and institution.
But we wrote a song for Sprite anyway. We'd like you
to sing it while drinking Sprite, though this may
cause some choking and coughing. So what? It's all in
good, clean fun. And speaking of good, clean things,
what about the taste of Sprite? It's good, It'S
clean. However, good clean things may not exactly be
your idea of jollies. In that case, remember that
Sprite is also very refreshing. "Tart and tingling,"
in fact. And very collegiate. And maybe.we'd better
So here it is. The Drinking
quit while we're ahead.
Song For Sprite. And if you can get a group together
to sing it--we'd be very surprised.
Roar, soft drink, roar!
You're the loudest soft drink
we ever sawr!
So tart and tingling, they
couldn't keep you quiet:
The perfect drink, guy,
To sit and think by,
Or to bring instant refreshment
To any campus riot! Ooooooh-Roar, soft drink, roar!
Flip your cap, hiss and bubble,
fizz and gush!
Oh we can't think
Of any drink
That we would rather sit with!
Or (if we feel like loitering)
to hang out in the strit with!
Or sleep through English lit' wi
Roar! Soft drink! Roar!
Yeahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh,

/Sprite}

mjjpj

I

SPRITE!

SPRITE. SO TART AND
TINGLING. WE JUST COULDN'T

�Friday, December 15, 1967

The Spectrum

Page Twenty-Two

To every!
And a

ti

A time

fi

A time ti

A time

t&lt;

A time fi

The Spectrum

©

“The only full coverage student newspaper on the Niagara Frontier”

During this holiday season the editors and staff of The Spectrum wish to extend to all our readers our sincerest and best

wishes for peace and happiness

—

personal and worldwide,

�Friday, December 15, 1967

Tha Spectrum

P»«*

Sportin' Life

the spectrum of

sports

by Bob Woodruff
Sports Editor

The “great one,” Calvin Murphy, has brought national prominence to Niagara University. He is perhaps the best “little man”
to enter the college ranks since Bob Cousy passed behind his
back
and dribbled through his legs for Holy Cross.
skills,, the administration is

Hockey team closes out semester
in contest against Ithaca College
The State University of Buffalo Hockey Club will close out
this semester with their final
contest of an eight game home
stand 10:00 p.m. tomorrow night
in the Amherst arena.
Courtesy of Sattler’s, Inc.
buses will be provided for all
students who wish to see the
herd play Ithaca College this
weekend. Carrying an undefeated
Finger Lakes Hockey League
record into this game, it should
prove to be a good one as the
team would like to take an 8-0
record on the road with them

next semester.
The game, as usual, will be
played at the Amherst Recreation Center on Millersport Highway, just past Maple Rd. Plenty
of free parking is available for
those students who do not wish
to take the buses, but no matter how you are planning to get
there, be there and enjoy the best
college hockey in State University of Buffalo history.
Following their squeaker over
Canton Saturday night, the icers
took their frustration out on
Utica College Sunday by a 15-5
trouncing. The team went out
ahead in the first period by a

score of 4-0 and by the midway
point of the second period led
8-1. Picking up the play and
really hustling was ex-MUNY
leaguer Darryl Pugh. Scoring
three goals and picking up two
assists he led the Bulls in scoring Sunday night.

DePaolo OK in nets

At the ten minute mark of the
second period, Coach Coley re-

placed the ailing Jim Hamilton,
who played so well this weekend,
with first-year man Tony DePaolo in goal. Looking shaky on
the first shot that hopped over
his stick and in for a score for
Utica, he made a total of 11
saves during the 30 minutes he
played and gave up four goals.
Mr, Coley was satisfied with UePaolo’s play and noted that three
of the Utica’s goals were on
breakaways.

Rombough scores three
Also scoring were team leader
Lome Rombough with three,
Johnny Watson, Fred Borgemiester and Jim Miller with singles. An agile defenseman, Miller picked up the puck at the
point, waltzed through the Utica
defense and decked the Utica
goalie into the box seats before
dumping the rubber into the net
for his score. This was a very
satisfying goal for Jimmy, who
coupled with this weeks first
Star, Jim Murdock, has played
the most outstanding defensive
hockey for State University of
Buffalo so far this season.

Three star awards
This week’s Three Stars are:
Jim Murdock . . . Jim played his
best game of the season Saturday
night, playing twice as much
subbing for young Billy Defoe
who is out with the flu. His
consistent play and finesse on
defense are well deserving of
this weeken’s first Star. Darryl

Pugh

picking up seven points
this weekend Darryl is living up
the expectations the coaching
staff had hoped for when he
joined the team. Billy Newman
.
.
.
again playing very well
up the middle. Billy’s goal in the
third period won the game for
the herd Saturday night.

Also coming into his own this
weekend was the left-winger
Bobby Orr. Starting slow, Bobby
will soon approach the calibre
of the other Orr from Boston if
he continues to patrol the wings
and hustle as he did so well this
weekend.

. . .

Buffalo mermen win two first place
honors; Syracuse tough competition
The State University of Buffalo mermen opened their var-

sity competition against a tough
Syracuse team Saturday.

What Syracuse lacked in depth
more than made up in
chalking-up a majority of first
place results. The State University of Buffalo swimmers had
to satisfy themselves with a number of seconds and thirds, but,
nevertheless, the mermen turned
in a good performance.
they

The two first places captured
by the Bulls’ varsity came in the
latter part of the afternoon’s
events when Frank Nochajski captured a five-point first place in
the 200 yard breaststroke event.
The freestyle relay foursome of
Clarcq, Lindberg, Ross and Sargent cluirned their way to a seven-point victory in 3:36.6.
Fine performances were turned
in by Charles Hurd and Ed Sargent of Buffalo in their respective events. Schwartz, of Syra-

cuse University,
believable time
1000

turned in an unof 11:29.3 in the

yard freestyle event.

Coaches Bill

Sanford

and Bob

Bedell feel that the boys put in
a fine performance at Syracuse,
especially since the meet result
of 59-45 was the best that any
State University of Buffalo swim
team has achieved against an always-strong Syracuse team.

Tonight the State University of
Buffalo swimmers travel across
town to Buffalo State University
College to revenge last year's

loss.

400 Yd. Med. Rel.-l (SYR) Prossner,
Comly, Flanagan, Crockenberg; 2 (UB) Hund,
Nochajski, Pawlowski, Sargent. Time: 3:57.9
1000 Yd. Freestyle— 1 (SYR) Schwartz; 2
(UB) Hart; 3 (SYR) Sperry; 4 (UB) Ulrich.
Time: 11:29.3
200 Yd.
(UB) Ross;

Freestyle— 1 (SYR) Gagliardi;
3 (UB) Clarcq. Time: 2:00.5

50 Yd. FreestyleKing; 3 (UB) Hund.
200 Yd.

1 (SYR) Paige;
Time 23.3

2

2 (SYR)

(UB) Conroy;

Med.-l (SYR) Haische; 2
3 (UB) Nochajski. Time: 2:21.2

Diva-1 (SYR) Williams; 2 (UB)
Rebo; 3 (UB) Helfenstein. Time: 187.75
Fancy

200

Yd.

Butterfly— 1

(SYR) Flanagan;

2

Hoffman.

(UB)

Time;

200

Yd. Backstroke- 1

Hund; 3

(UB)

(SYR)

Kaidon.

Prossner;

2

Time: 2:12.8

500 Yd. Freestyle- 1 (SYR) Schacht; 2 (UB)
(UB) Hart; 3 (UB) Moe. Time: 5:37.3

2

(SYR)

Yd.

Breaststroke-

Tice;

3

(UB)

1

Fox.

(UB)

Nochajski;

Time: 2:42.8

400 Yd. Relay- 1 (UB) Ross, Lindeberg.
Clarcq, Sargent; 2 (SYR) Comly, Crockenberg, Curtis, Haische. Time: 3:36.6
TOTAL—UB-45;

SYRACUSE-59

beginning to realize that the nai.ional
attention being focused on Niagara has also brought to light some
less than favorable statistics.
The Vincentian Fathers have had to face the inferences implied
by the fact that the student enrollment of better than 2500 includes
only six Negroes. Murphy is one, and the Eagles six foot seven inch
Manny Leaks is another.
This new wave of attention
being given the rather odd racial
proportion at the institution has
created demands on the Niagara
campus for a less discriminatory
admissions code. Adding fuel to
the flames was the firing of
Calvin’s frosh coach, Ed Donohue,
for what many believe to be his
disregard for skin color in recruiting athletes. The fact that
Al Butler, a Negro and former
backcourt star for Niagara and
the New York Knicks of the
NBA, has been hired as Donohue's replacement is of little solace to the concerend student body.
The battle rages on.
Two weeks ago in Niagara’s student publication, The Index, one
of the Fathers attacked the students for demanding an increased
Negro enrollment so they could field a team of high flying "Black

Eagles.”
Perhaps the Father failed to realize that demands for a liberalization of enrollment policies was not fostered by so mundane a
desire as a national basketball championship.
Maybe, just maybe, the students have been forced to question
the merits of the backward practices of racial discrimination at their
University.

All the hoopla over Murphy has not swayed knowledgeable
basketball men who realize that St, Bonaventurc is Western New
York’s top quintet.
Led by super soph, six foot 11 inch Bob Lanier, the Brown Indians
could scalp evdry one of their remaining foes on a not too challenging schedule. Lanier does have a tendency to relax during the
course of a game, but he should have no trouble going 40 minutes
at full speed against top flight competition.
Bill Butler puts his six feel three inches to great advantage
under the backboards, and is the finest shooter on coach Larry
Weise’s club. John Hayes is over his knee problems and is invaluable at the other forward slot.
Jimmy Satalin is the brains of the club. The senior guard sent
the Bonnie-Toledo game into overtime with a long range jump shot.
Billy Kilbaugh is fast proving to the world that he can’t shoot, but
he manages the floor game quite adequately.
Coach Weise is faced with one great problem—Depth.
The collective worth of Bona’s bench against the better basketball teams is negligible.
But with Lanier and Butler outshooting and outrebounding
all challengers, the Indians appear well on their way to an NIT bid.
•

100 Yd. Freestyle- 1 (SYR) King; 2 (UB)
Sargent; 3 (UB) Lindberg; 4 (SYR) Sperry.
Time: 51.3

200

Ind.

3

(UB) Pawlowski;
2:14.0

(UB)

Twanty-Thrt*

•

•

It seems that the mortality rate among football coaches that
lose to the Bulls is on the rise, and is now second only to slush
fund' exposure as the leading cause of coaches’ demise.
Hal Lahar of Colgate decided to move up to the front office
following the Raiders’ destruction at Rotary Field.
The first time the Eagles of Boston College lost to Buffalo was
enough for Jim Miller, who called it quits after six years at Chestnut
Hill.
Then, there’s Leo Strang at Kent State. The Bulls cost Mr.
Strang his job as they dumped the favored Golden Flashes in
consecutive seasons with what most people considered to be inferior

personnel.

The Bulls realize that any coach who can lead his charges to
upsets like that is certainly avaluable man to a growing football

program.

That’s

funny,

Kent State thinks so too.

Bob Nowak is 'Player of the Week’
Bob Nowak, the State University of Buffalo varsity
junior guard, has been selected as this week’s Basketball
Player of the Week.
The selection was based on his
performances in both the Albany State and Syracuse games

last weekend.
Nowak, one of the Bulls’ two
students
from Erie
County Technical Institute, was
instrumental in his team’s victransfer

tory over Albany State last Friday evening and helped to keep
the Bulls in the game against
Syracuse in Manley Field House.
Bob

tied Ed Eberle for high
scoring honors in the contest
with Albany State. He made good
on seven of the 15 shots he took
from the floor and put one of
two free throw attempts through
the hoop for a 15-pointer effort.

Nowak pulled

down seven rebounds, made two valuable recoveries, and was credited two
assists. His defensive effort
proved to be just as valuable as
he held his man-to-man opponent
well below his seasonal point-pergame average.

21 against Orange
In the Bulls’ contest against
Syracuse, Nowak scored 21
points and was the only Bull to
hit the double figure mark. He
hit on half of the 18 shots he at-

tempted from the field and three
of the four charity tosses awarded him. He picked up five more

rebounds off the boards and aided the Bulls case with a steal and
three more assists. Defensively,
he did an excellent job against
Syracuse’s fabulous George Hicker by holding him to only five
points.

Through the Bulls’ first four

contests, Nowak has averaged 14
points and better than seven re-

bounds. His free throw percentage is a fine 84.2 on 16 of 19
tosses.

In the two months Nowak has
been working with the Bulls, he
has shown Serf and the coaching
staff the makings of a complete
ballplayer.

Bob Nowak
ECTI transfer forward s 2) point
effort against Syracuse earns
him Player-of-lhe-Week honors

�Friday, December 15, 1967

The Spectrum

Page Twenty-Four

"V

'■jgk

Rams' front four, Unitas to decide
lame of the week; L.A. favored
by Alan Jeff
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

In determining the quality of any team, be it professional or amateur, two things must be considered: Tangible
and intangible aspects. The tangibles include individual
talent, strength, size, and speed. The intangibles include
cohesiveness as a team, team pride, and the desire to win.
A winner usually possesses both; a loser usually lacks one
or the other.

—UPI

Telephoto

Wilson, Green Bay fulla rather sudden slop after short gain
against LA last week. Rams'
Irv Cross is applying the flying
Ben

Rams vs.

Packers

back, comes to

tackle.

Swashbucklerspullupset;
down Syracuse, Cornell
by Arnold Strickman
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

Last weekend proved to be perhaps the most memorable in State
University of Buffalo’s fencing
annals as the Swashbucklers toppled mighty Cornell 15-12, and
punished Syracuse 16-11 in a pair
of upset victories that left the
Bulls limp with joy, and drained
both physically and emotionally.
Friday night the Swashbucklers
journeyed to Ithaca seeking their
first victory over a Big Red squad
in the thirteenth renewal of the
previously lopsided rivalry. The
match bore a strong resemblance
to the previous twelve encounters
as the Bulls dropped the first
two saber bouts.
Senior captain Jon Rand proceeded to break the ice with a
convincing 5-1 tally. Though still
behind, the Bulls never let the
Big Red get away as the Ithacans
held early leads of 3-1, 4-3, 6-4,
and 9-8. Undefeated epee man
Steve Morris evened the count
at nine apiece to set the stage
for the climactic final round.

Rand boosts Bulls

After splitting two saber bouts,
Rand put the Swashbucklers
ahead to stay with an easy 5-1
win. Ronnie “Doc" David extended the lead to 12-10, copping a
tension packed 5-4 squeaker.
After the Big Red narrowed the
count to 12-11, George Wirth
scored a dandy 53 tally to put
the Bulls one bout away from a
long awaited victory.
Under immense pressure, Tony
Walluk, always a clutch performer, provided the clincher with a
"S-2 victory that turned Cornell’s
fencing salle into a den of pande
monium.
The final count was 1512 as
Cornell coach Raoul Sudre used
sixteen men in a desperate effort
to stop the surging Bulls who
were not to be denied in one of
their greatest efforts during the
29 year reign of head coach Sid
Schwartz,

Wirth cops three
The

foil team was superb,
trouncing the Big Red 6-3 as wily

veteran George Wirth copped
three bouts. Classy Pierre Chan
teau took two, and Ronnie “Doc”
David accounted for the other

win.
The epee trio topped one of
the nation's best squads, 5A as
Steve Morris won both of his
bouts. Tony Walluk also copped
two, and Phil Henry took one,
Jon Rand led the saber men

were shaded 5-4, winning
two of his three bouts. A1 Demsky and Ed Share took one apiece
against more experienced fencers

who

in bouts which assistant coach
Rick Fitchette termed as “two
really clutch, key wins.”
Intoxicated by their momentum, the Swashbucklers rolled
over Syracuse the following day
after once again falling behind
early. Trailing 5-4 after the first
round, the Bulls rallied determinedly to net eight out of the following nine bouts to open up a
commanding 12-6 bulge. Soph
Bruce Renner proceeded to add
the clincher, thus completing the
victorious weekend,

Epeemen rout Orange
The epee men paced the conquest of the Orange, romping by
a 7-2 margin as Morris, Walluk,
and Renner each took two bouts
with Jim Ellenbogen winning the
other.

Chanteau scored three victories
to lead the foilmen to a 5-4 advantage as Wirth and promising
soph David each chipped in a
win.
Rand copped three saber bouts
without a loss as the Bulls narrowly bowed in that category
5-4, Share added the other tally.
When quizzed about the dual
triumph, an overjoyed head coach
Sid Schwartz remarked: “The
boys really showed me a tremendous team effort. After whipping
Cornell, the team was sky high
and really up for Syracuse. If
we keep fencing the way we did
this weekend, we’ve got a really
good shot to come up to the

Notre Dame match undefeated.”

Frosh still unbeaten

The frosh also maintained an
unblemished slate as they edged
the Little Red, 13-12 and peeled
the Tangerines 15-10. Frosh captain Mike Bardossi and stylish
Bill Kazer each went 5-0 against
the Cornell frosh. Kazer and Bardossi both picked up three wins
against Syracuse as Bill Vallianos
and Mike “Sarge” Kaye each
copped two bouts.
An elated frosh mentor, Dick
‘Granny" Willert quipped: “I'm
very pleased with the way the
kids fenced this week-end. We’ve
still got a lot to work on though,
and I feel that we're, capable of
beating these teams by even bigger scores than we did.”
The Swashbucklers are now 5-0
and will attempt to extend their
skein after a lengthy layoff, on
Jan. 26 against McMaster.

This Sunday all eyes will be
focused on two such teams in the
NFL that possess both of these
winning qualities. This game will
feature the Baltimore Colts, current leaders of the west Coastal
division, against the Los Angeles
Rams, currently in second place
in the same division.
Only one game separates these
teams in the standings, and little
separates them on paper. The
winner of this match could conceivably be the team to represent the NFL in the Super Bowl
game in Miami.
Rams are hot
The Rams are hot off a rousing
victory over the Green Bay Packers and have tremendous momentum going for them. On the other
hand, the old pro Colts have not
played well in their last several
games. This, plus the fact that
the game is being played in titlefanatic Los Angeles, is enough to
rate the Rams as victors.
In the final analysis, the game
will boil down to a battle between

the Rams’ front four and the
Colts’ Johnny Unitas. The winner of this contest will decide
the outcome of the game, and
the champion of the west Coastal
division. In my opinion, the firedup Rams will prevail in the
GAME OF THE WEEK. Final
score: Rams 17, Colts 14.
NFL

Dallas 28, San Francisco 24:
This game means little to either
team. The Cowboys, having
clinched the eastern Capital division crown, are merely playing
out the season and are anticipating their upcoming title match
with the Cleveland Browns for
the overall Eastern Conference
championship. If the 49ers QB
George Mira gets a chance to
play, the score could be reversed.
Otherwise the 49ers will close a
dismal season on a losing note.
Chicago 21, Atlanta 10: The
Bears are one of the up-and-coming young teams in the NFL.
With the strong improvement of
QB Jack Concannon, the Bears
finally have a halfway decent offense to throw at their oppon-

ents. The fledging Falcons, who
last week “held" San Francisco

to 34 points, need a helping hand
from the heavens to look even
respectable against the stronger
NFL teams they play. The Falcons are a living example of the
bad things which expansion produces (the Mets are another).

Cleveland 35, Philadelphia 28:
After culminating a season-long
uphill struggle for the east Century division title, the Browns
are finally in the enviable spot
of playing a game that they do
not need to win. The Eagles are
the possessors of the second
worst defense in pro football
(only the seedy Falcons are below
them). In this game, the Browns’
Leroy Kelley will feint, fake and
run the Eagles dizzy.
Detroit 13, Minnesota 10: The
Lions were very impressive in

their last week’s victory over the
Giants. Mel Farr, running back
for the Lions, has turned into
one of pro football’s most dangerous runners. If Karl Sweetan,
QB for the Lions, can play as
well as he did last week, the
Lions should squeeze by the
young and hardy Vikings.

Washington 34, New Orleans
17: Ole Jelly Belly Jurgensen of
the Redskins, who recently set
an NFL record for the most pass
completions in a single season,
will need at least three tubes of
Ben-Gay for his passing arm after
this encounter with the porous
pass defense of the Saints. Charley Taylor, Bobby Mitchell, and
Jackie Smith, all Redskins ,are
the three top pass receivers in
the NFL. They will say “thank
you” to the Saints for allowing
them to retain their top ranking
among the NFL’s leading pass
receivers. My gratefulness is also
extended to the Saints for giving
me an easy game to pick.
Green Bay 31, Pittsburgh 14:
Losing is a dirty word on the
Green Bay team, and the Packers
will be out for revenge following
last week’s upset by the Rams.
The rugged Green Bay defense

will tell the story in this game,
as it has is so many previous
games. The Steelers, who have
had their troubles this year, need
to rebuild.

St. Louis 24, New York 23:
This game 1 should be billed as
the fight for the second place
spot in the east Century division
behind the champion Cleveland
Browns. Yes. all you Giant fans,
your Giants also made it to second place this year on a team
that has no defense and an unpredictable scrambling QB. Well,
division titles are won with QBs
having rubber arms and no legs
(just ask Frank Ryan of the
Browns).
AFL

Houston 21, San Diego 20: The
defense-minded Oilers, led by
their bruising running backs
Hoyle Granger and Woody Campbell, are in a dogfight with the
Jets for the Eastern Division title
and cannot afford to lose. The
Chargers, on the other hand, have
no chance to upend the Raiders
for the Western Division crown.
The Oilers will win this game on
the strength of their winning desire and the cheers of their titlehungry home crowd.
Miami

28, Boston 27: The rap-

idly improving Dolphins are making their presence fell in the AFL
these days. Miami quarterback
Bob Griese leads a group of inspired and young players to another victory over an established
AFL opponent. Last week, this
bunch of fuzzy-cheeked smart
alecks knocked off the mighty
San Diego Chargers by 17 points.
Who knows?

Oakland 33, New York 28: The
Jets are notoriously bad on the
road and this game will do nothing to shatter this tradition. As
usual, the Jets are fizzling out
in their stretch drive and will
find themselves in second place
in the East at the end of the
day. Unfortunately, injuries have
hurt the Jets greatly this year,
and had they not lost their fine
running back Emerson Boozer
for the season, they would certainly have easily won their division.

Kansas City 31, Denver 21:
The Chiefs, with capable Len
Dawson as their quarterback,
simply have too much muscle for
the young Broncos. With a defensive line anchored by huge
Ernie Ladd and Buck Buchanan,
the Chiefs employ one of the
better defenses in the AFL. The
Broncos are always fired-up for
their ball games, but the Chiefs
will not be added to the list of
Bronco opponents who have beaten themselves.

Physical education annex planned;
basketball, handball courts included
Plans for adding an annex to
the overcrowded facilities at
Clark Gym are presently being
formulated.

The proposal calls for addition-

al basketball and handball courts
and perhaps lockers and showers.
They will be located in a temporary building either opposite
Acheson Hall or on the Ridge Lea
campus.
Present facilities at the gym
are adequate for a student body
of only 3000, according to William Monkarsh, a physical edu-

cation instructor and member of
the committee studying the need
for the annex. The University is

“in dire need of more facilities,”
he said. Furthermore, the State
University is presently considering a change in the physical education requirement for undergraduates from one year to two,
which would necessitate an immediate addition to the gym, Mr.
Monkarsh added.
Plans for the temporary

struc-

ture include a larger floor area

than the present gym that could
be used for such non-athletic activities as movies, concerts, or
“whatever

the

a year to a year and a half, depending on approval from Albany,

Although there is a current
ban on the construction of temporary buildings on campus, Mr.
Monkarsh explained that the present lack of adequate facilities violates another State ruling that
sets standards for physical education equipment based on the
size of the student body. Using
this as a justification for the
annex, he hopes to win approval
from the State University.

student

body
wants,” according to Student Association Treasurer D o u gl a s

Mr. Braun announced that a
petition will be circulated to en-

building would be completed in

body

Braund. He estimated that the

list the support of the student
in the matter.

�Friday, December 15, 1967

Serf

The Spectrum

Pag* Twtnty-Fiv*

says

Baby Bulls beat Niagara, 94-78;
Loss to Orange disappointing
follow with loss to S racuse frosh
by T. P.

Mantis

Spectrum Staff Reporter

by Dr. L. T. Serfustini

What a difference a day can make! Before the basketball team
could truly enjoy its victory over Albany Dec. 8, less than 14 hours
later they were traveling by bus to take on the Orange of Syracuse.
Against Albany our team responded with their finest game to
date. From the opening whistle the Bulls were ready—we took
advantage of every fast break opportunity, we dominated the defensive boards and despite our lack of height came up with the
second efforts on the offensive boards. Add to this an aggressive
effort on defense—a defense that forced our opponents into many
hurried shots and you have the ingredients that spelled victory.
This victory could be truly termed a team effort: EM Eberle
had 8 rebounds, Jon Culbert 8, John Jekielek 7, Bob Nowak 7, Wayne
Betts 7, Doug Bernard 5 and John Fieri 5. Individual scoring showed
the same balance with eight players scoring between 8 and 15
points.
I realize it sounds rather naive to continually refer to the “team
effort,” but this single element must be present if the true potential
of a ball club is to be reached. Many teams have achieved victories with superior talent playing as individuals, but the strict
reliance on individual play has prevented these same teams from
rising to the top of their respective class—to reach the pinnacle of
perfection. It takes talent plus continual play as a cohesive unit to
achieve the objective of becoming the best.

Dec. 9 we came up against the formidable team of Syracuse:
Vaughn Harper, Richie Cornwall, Ernie Austin, George Hicker and
Co. Syracuse has the capability of beating any team in the country
on a given night (with the possible exception of UCLA). A poor
night at the free throw line (9 of 20) and the inability to hold our
own on the backboards contributed a great deal to our defeat.
Syracuse was still within reach at the 12 minute mark of the second half, but we were dealt an extremely cold hand in shooting
and Syracuse took advantage of this lull and put the game out of

Last week proved to be an exciting and partly fruitful
one for the State University of Buffalo freshman basketball
team. On Friday night, at Clark Gym, the Baby Bulls took
on the Niagara frosh. The next evening they traveled to
Manley Field House to battle the powerful Orange of

Syracuse.
In the opener at home, the
Baby Bulls handily defeated Niagara, 94 to 78. The Bulls took
an early lead, and from the start
a Buffalo victory seemed apparent. Fine defensive play and
an excellent performance by center Steve Waxman gave the Bulls
a 52 to 34 lead as the half ended.
The second half began a little
slower with Coach Muto substituting freely. The Niagara freshmen, left with the reputation
built by superstar Galvin Murphy
last season, seemed to lack a potent offensive punch. There was
no man on the court who could
hit on a 20 footer consistently
when it was needed.
Waxman nets 35
Their defensive efforts were
adequate, but the zone could not
contain Waxman’s deadly eye.
Steve could do no wrong. He was
scoring at will while pulling

down many important rebounds
off both the offensive and defensive boards. His valiant efforts
led the team as he compiled a
total of 35 points. Terry Johnson
displayed good ball control and
a fine outside shot for the Bulls
as Roger K r e m b 1 a s added
strength on the boards.
Saturday night was a different
story. The Tangerines, led by sixfoot 11-inch Bill Smith and sixfoot six-inch Bill McDaniels, controlled the game and only gave
the Bulls one clear shot at the
basket. The press, which had been
so effective in the previous
games, was not working. The
first half showed the Bulls’ fine
shooting ability as they remained
even with the fine Syracuse ball
club.

Fouls hurt
The Baby Bulls' big problem
was fouls. At the end of the half

Petti had four, Waxman had
three. Kremblas had three and
Terry Johnson', playing another
fine game, also had three. This
proved to be the main factor in
the Tangerines' wide margin of
victory.

As the second half opened,
Buffalo looked like a ball club
who thought they could win.

Early in the half Waxman committed his fourth foul. Coach
Muto, wanting to save his star for
the key last few minutes, substituted Flipper Knapp in his spot.
Flip was tough but Smith, towering over him, scored many easy
baskets.
Syracuse then started to press.

effectiveness forced many
Buffalo turnovers and with eight
minutes left in the game, the
Bulls trailed by 20. The Tangerines, led by Tom Green and
Bill Finney, outran and outscored
the Bulls for the rest of the game.
The final score was Syracuse 113,
Buffalo 83. The scoring leaders
for Syracuse were McDaniels
with 36 and Finney with 22. For
the Bulls, Kremblas had 23 and
Waxman had 18.
Its

reach.

John Fieri, Joe Rutkowski, Jim Shea and Joe Peeler did an
excellent job against the vaunted full court press of Syracuse.

An interesting sidelight of the game was the full court press
tactics of Syracuse throughout the game and in the face of this pressure the Bulls never reached the point of being awarded the one
and one bonus free throw. (This may have been indicative of Syracuse’s speed and agility.)
We were disappointed over this defeat—we recognized the odds
but we felt we could overcome them. Against a team
of the caliber of Syracuse mistakes must be held to a minimum.
Our opponent took every advantage of every opportunity and regardless of our fine overall play, we experienced our first defeat
of the season.
against us

Before another issue of The Spectrum is printed, we will have

played five

more contests:

Belmont Abbey in Clark Gymnasium, Dec. 18, three games in
the U. S. Naval Tournament at Norfolk, Virginia and Jan. 2 against
MacMurray College in Clark Gymnasium. The game against MacMurray will lessen the long break created by Christmas vacation,
final exams and the semester break. The University is not in session at the time of the game but we sincerely hope you will attend.
(Your response so far for this year has made each played feel 9 feet
tall.)
Include the Jan. 2 game in your New Year’s resolutions and

help to welcome the New Year in, at Clark Gymnasium (or recover from same—whichever the case may be). I know the team will
continue to provide you with fast, aggressive and spirited play.

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Friday, December 15, 1967

The Spectrum

Page Twenty-Six

San Francisco State toi

Buffai

lid' clamped over hoop. Bulls defeated 63- 55
by W. Scott Behrens
Assistant Sports Editor

The “lid” was on the basket for the Bulls during the
second half of the varsity contest at Clark Gym Wednesday
night, and that was all the visiting San Francisco State Gators
needed to topple the Bulls 63-55.
It was the second straight setback for the Bulls against
three opening victories and their first loss on their home
court this season. The West Coast team is now 3-1.

In the preliminary contest the
Baby Bulls played host to their
third Little Three opponent, St.
Bonaventure. With the aid of the
referees the visitors won with a
second half spurt, 92-82.

Bulls lead first half

The first half of the varsity
game went to the Blue and White,
the Bulls picking up a lead of
eight points in the middle of the
first stanza. The Gators were not
upset by this lead and kept gnawing away at the Bulls’ until they
were down by only one point,
29-28, near end of the first half.
But Doug Bernard, senior forward
for the Bulls scored a bucket on
a tie-in at the buzer to end the
period at 31-28.
Buffalo hit on 15 of 38 shots

taken from the field for 39.5%
while San Francisco State kept
pace with a 37.5 shooting percentage on nine of 24 during the
first twenty minutes of play.
Buffalo met their downfall in
the second half. The Bulls were
not able to hit on the shots they
have normally taken in the previous four contests. The shots
were bouncing in and out of the
basket as though someone had
nailed a grabage can lid to hoop.
Some of the attempts were short
of the bucket, and some were
overshot. It was a bad half for
shooting with no one particular
player missing more than the
other.

Height advantage
San Francisco used its height to

great advantage. Their 6-7 center,
Girard Chatman, was the outstanding player of the game as
he tallied 21 points and pulled
down 23 rebounds to aid the
visitors in their winning effort.
Of the five baskets he scored
from the floor, three were tipins. He also connected on 11 of
14 free throws.
The Bulls ended the evening
outscoring the visitors from the
field with 24 baskets to 19 for
the Gators, but the visitors outscored the hosts at the free throw
line 25-7.

Nowak leads scoring
Buffalo forward Bob Nowak
was the leading scorer for the
Bulls with 14 points. The Bulls’
other forward, Ed Eberle, was
the only other Blue and White
player to hit the double figure
mark at 12,
Buffalo had opportunities to
break the game wide open in the
first half but failed to capitalize
on them. There were many
changeovers in favor of the Buffalo squad but the Bulls went on
somewhat of a “cold spell” during

the waning minutes of that opening stanza. This permitted the
yisitors to catch up to them.

Frosh drop third

field house. Monday Bryant and
Stratton will be the guests pf the
Bull yearlings at Clark Gym.
Game time is 6:30 p.m. The Baby
Bulls will host the squad from
Niagara Community College, Jan,

Steve Waxman led the Buffalo
frosh with 23 points but his ef2.
forts didn’t help much as the
BUFFALO
team dropped their first decisions Eberle
of three in playing against Little Fieri
Three competition. It was the Peeler
Jekielek
Baby Bulls’ third setback in five
Nowak
outings. Game scoring honors, Bernard
however, went to Klimowski of Rutkowski
Culbert
the Bonnies with 36.
Shea
The varsity Bulls next take on
TOTALS
a team from Belmont Abbey MonSAN FRANCISCO STATE
day evening at Clark Gym. Game Chatman
time is 8:30 p.m. They then travel Robinson
south to Norfolk the following Paulle
day to ready themselves for the Kemble
Hanway
Naval Tournament starting next Sheehy
TOTALS
playafternoon.
After
Wednesday
Buffalo
ing in three games in the tourSan Francisco Stato
nament, the Bulls will return Buffalo Frosh
Kremblas
home Saturday afternoon to begin their Christmas recess. On Waxman
Moog
Tuesday, Jan, 2 the Bulls will Johnson
Landergren
host MacMurray of Illinois.
The next game for the Buffalo Petti
freshmen will be tomorrow night Knapp
Bruneneaus
against Buffalo State in State’s Helenbrook

5

TOfALS

St. Bonavonturo Frosh

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Gary
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Klimkowski

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MOHA

�CLASSIFIED

WASHINGTON (UPI)—Draft director Lewis B. Hershey
and Atty Pen Ramsey Clark met for two hours late Monday

but were unable to resolve their differences over reclassifying anti-war demonstrators.
Gen. Hershey, in an interview,, said as far as he was
deferconcerned draft boards still have authority to revokeanti-war
during
who
break
the
law
students
ments for

demonstrations

He said the time consumed in
handling draft cases in the courts

He acknowledged that he and
Gen. Clark were still at
odds over the issue despite a
Atty.

could leave the nation's manpower needs unmet, since an individual is ineligible for the draft
when he is in court custody.
"To keep producing the people
we need,” the 74-year-old Selective Service director said, “you’ve
quite a time at Lexington if someone said he was going to enjoin
Paul Revere from waking him up

joint statement issued by the two
men Saturday in an effort to
clarify the government’s policy.
Gen, Hershey said the disagreement was “unfortunate.” But he

that
could not accept arguments
demonstrators should be judged
the courts, not draft boards.

Greek graphs

National Interfraternity Conference

rebukes draft card burners, inciters
by Elliot Stephan Rose
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

The legislative assembly of the National Interfraternity
Conference leveled a stern rebuke to the inciters of civil
disturbances in the form of a special resolution at its 59th
annual meeting, just concluded in New York City.

The Conference singled out
for its censure the current rash
of mass disturbances —such as
picketing Selective Service headquarters and destroying military
records and draft cards.
As proposed by its resolution
committee and adopted by unanimous vote, the Conference
“deplored any act casting aspersions on the United States of
America
or promoting or
otherwise supporting organizations whose stated or implied
purpose is to obstruct, impede, or
...

otherwise bring discredit upon
the United States, its government Imd military activities and,
therefore by directly or indirectly aiding present and potential
enemies of the country.”
Dr. Frederick H. Turner, outgoing president of the Conference and retiring dean of students at the University of Illinois, referred the resolution to
the executive committee of the
Conference and then to each of
its 61 member fraternity organi-

zations for further study and appropriate action.
News items
Alpha Sigma Phi will have a
pledge-brother football game tomorrow afternoon. Tuesday night
their guest lecturers will give
final assessments of this semester’s pledge class . . . Tickets
(or
Phi Lambda Delta's New
Year’s Eve party may be purchased at the table from any
brother . . . New officers of

.

\*ce'

&amp;

Sigma Alpha Mo are: Prior, Ron
Gluck; Vice Prior, Larry Henig;
Exchecquer, Steve Shapiro; Re-

corder,

Stan

Feldman,

because he didn’t want to shoot

at something red.”
—Gen.—Hershey —was known —to
have caused the attorney general
dismay.
Atty. Gen. Clark had no comment on Qen. Hershey’s view of
their joint statement Saturday,
which was intended to patch over
disagreements between them on
how to proceed and what legal
techniques to use against demonstrators.
According to Gen. Hershey, the
statement “let people know with
a thump that we’re going after
.
those over draft age and
otherwise ineligible for military
service whonf he believe are behind the anti-war protests.
The draft director did not iden.

tify these behind-the-scenes-persons by group or name. He referred to them as “those people
who are trying to get our kids
in trouble.”
Gen. Hershey said that “if the
fact could be established to the

satisfaction of local boards” that
a protester’s actions disrupted
the Selective Service System, he
could be reclassified:
Reclassification can mean loss
of deferment and, with a declaration that the act involved made
the individual a “delinquent” in
accordance with draft regulations, place an individual at the
top of the draft pool.

and

Pledgemaster, Steve Blumenkranz.
The bowling team is currently
in first place and the swimming
team finished second overall.
Plans are in the final stages for
their new house . . . Theta Chi
Fraternity congratulates Lee Zeltzer for a fine job as special
projects chairman at their latest
money raising project.

Sororities
The sisters of Alpha Gamma
Delta are giving a Christmas
party at the West Seneca Home
for Retarded Children Sunday.
Rides leave Norton Hall at 1
p.m. . . . Newly elected officers
of Sigma Delta Tau are: President, Pat Hatmaker; first Vice
President, Mary Lou Greco;
second Vice President, Fran

Recording Secretary,
Wartley; Corresponding
.Secretary, Barbara N e s 11 e r;
Treasurer, Gail Frankenstein. Also elected were Lori Sheskan,
Rush Chairman and Carm DeFazio, Pan Hell Alternate. Sisters are collecting old textbooks
to be donated to the Westminister House . . . Sigma Kappa Phi
announces their annual Christmas party Sunday at the apartment with the Reflections as the
philanthropic group. Marie Antonnuci has been elected to play
Stern;

Patti

Santa,

fsVe
«Ch el

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1966 VOLKSWAGEN-no reasonable offer
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TWO BLACK semi-formal dresses. Size 13,
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GRUNDIG 4 track tape recorder. 3Va months

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Call Ann at 831-3197.
PHOTOGRAPHIC EQUIPMENT-Agfa camera,
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Call Mr. Leist, Kenmore Presbyterian Church,
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making new friend*. Make your reservations
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SHALOM! For gems from the Jewish Bible,
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.

Hershey, Clark split over draftpolicy

i

the courts decide?

l et

by

Page Twenty-Seven

The Spectrum

December 15, 1967

1

Friday,

VOTE

4 BARNY,

�Friday, December 15, 1967

The Spectrum

Page Twenty-Eight

Constantine leads army in revolt
ATHENS
King Constantine led army
units in a revolt against the ruling military junta early this week.
Tanks and troops in large numbers
swept into the heart of the city as reports
spread that Constantine had fled the
capital to try to overthrow the govern—

ment.

The

king, in a broadcast from 1st
army headquarters in Larisa, appealed to
the people to “help me restore democracy
and freedom.”

Unconfirmed reports said the king had
given the government an ultimatum to
step down or be driven out by armed
might.

The reports said he had joined troops
in central Greece and was heading south
toward Athens with units of the army
corps.

The military junta seized power from
a disordered civilian government last
April in a coup it said was aimed at preventing a Communist takeover of the
country.

Protesters

Constantine never made any secret of
his dislike of the junta, but the junta was
powerless to do anything about his out-

spoken statements.
The junta’s refusal to accept Constantine’s demand that it resign could lead to
open civil war.

Athens radio, itself in the hands of

pro-junta troops, broke hours of silence
to announce that the king “was misled
by criminal opportunists and turned
against the nation-saving revolution,”
“The Greek armed forces are determined to defend the unity of the nation
or to crush through armed might those
who divide the country,” the radio said.
“The national government calls on the
Greek people to maintain their sang froid
calm and their confidence
ment.”

ROCHESTER, N. Y.
A total of 23
graduate students, suspended from the
University of Rochester for participating
in a sit-in demonstration involving a recruiter for the Dow Chemical Co., face
the possibility of being reclassified by

their local draft boards.
The students were among a group of
about 125 persons who staged an orderly

demonstration at the University’s placement office Nov. 8 to protest the presence
of the recruiting drive on campus.
About 90 undergraduates who took
part in the sit-in were placed on probation several weeks ago.
McCrea Hazlett, vice president and
provost of the University, announced the

Telephoto

Plantation
.

.

battle

in the govern-

the broadcast, reports in
Athens said Constantine had the support
of the 1st army in central Greece. Other
reports said army units in the north and
on Crete were supporting him.

Members of the U.S. First Division pour
heavy fire through a thick rubber planration during action just outside the
Special Forces camp at Bu Dop, 90 miles
north of Saigon.

Despite

face reclassification

—

—UPI

disciplinary action earlier this week. The
suspensions will be in effect from Jan, 30Sept. 19, 1968.
During that period, the graduate students will cease to be students under Selective Service regulations.
A spokesman for the local draft board
said the men would become eligible for
reclassification
not because of the
nature of the protest, but by reason of no
longer being students
as soon as the
suspensions take effect.
Many of the students may be reclassified from 2-S to 1-A, the official said.
The demonstrators blocked access to
the placement office during the sit-in, but
no violence was reported.
—

—

defense plan

NATO views U.S.
BRUSSELS—The western defense ministers considered a U.S.-proposed new
strategy based on a flexible defense without automatic use of nuclear weapons
against Communist attack.
The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) defense chiefs were expected
to approve the policy.
The United States hoped also for approval of a plan to give smaller NATO
members a greater voice in the alliance’s
nuclear planning.
The defense ministers were opening
three days of conferences.
The flexible response policy would replace the massive nuclear retaliation doctrine of the late U. S. Secretary of State
John Foster Dulles. As President Eisenhower’s Secretary of State in the 1950s
Dulles advocated massive nuclear retaliation as the NATO response to any Communist aggression anywhere on NATO’s
2, 500-mile border along the Iron Curtain.

The United States in recent years has
come to believe the Dulles doctrine could
touch off unnecessarily a nuclear holocaust following only minor local aggression at some isolated spot on the frontier.
In its place the United States has called
for a policy of retaliating at first only
with conventional weapons until it became clear that the Communists had
launched all-out war.
The French have strongly opposed the
new U. S. strategy and consistently
blockedits approval by NATO. But President Charles de Gaulle’s military pullout
from the alliance removed that obstacle.
Diplomatic sources were predicting the
flexible policy would be adopted without
difficulty.
The defense ministers’ talks opened
with a meeting of the 12-nation NATO
nuclear defense affairs committee on
which all member nations are represented
except France, Iceland and Luxembourg.

McCarthy: Policy vacuum risky
GROSSINGER, N. Y.
Sen. Eugene
J. McCarthy (D„ Minn.) said the “U. S.
policy vacuum in the Middle East is a
grave risk to American security.”
McCarthy, who will oppose President
Johnson on a peace platform in four Democratic presidential primaries next year,
called for adoption of a five point American foreign policy for the Middle East.
“First we should work to assure that
the right to life and existence of Israel
is recognized by all nations,” McCarthy
—

to see how arming the Arabs is
going to help Israel,” McCarthy said.
“The problem of an enduring peace in
the Middle East can be solved only in the
context of a positive United States foreign policy that aims at the reduction of
tensions with the Soviet Union,” McCarthy
cult

said.

“This we do not have today.”

said.

McCarthy said the U, S. should also
“affirm unequivocally” the international
character of the Gulf of Aqaba and the
Strait of Tiran, seek a solution to the
Arab refugee problem, and support “border adjustments necessary to assure Israel
the security to which that nation has the

right.”
“Finally we must use our influence to
bring about a moratorium or limitation
on the influx of arms into the Middle
East,” he said.

Sen. McCarthy charged that America
means” to properly
attack the Middle East problem.
“Not the physical means with most of
our military might tied up in Southeast
Asia, not the diplomatic means, with
much of our government committed to devising plans for remaking an Asian society in an American image, nor do we
have the moral energy; we are dissipating it in Southeast Asia,” he said.
"We have been distributing arms
throughout the region and justifying this
to the American public as a policy that
is helpful to Israel, although it is diffi“does not have the

—UPI T*l#photo

Percy greeted
rudely

With blood specks on his trousers. Sen.
Charles Percy (R-lll.) holds a press conference at which he described the Communist mortar and small arms fire attack
on him and his parly at Dak Son. Percy,
on an inspection lour of Vietnam, cut
his hand during the twenty-minute attack.

Sen. Eugene McCarthy
"U.S. policy is a grave risk"

�&gt;

Friday, December IS, 1967

�table of contents
In this issue:

.

"Condemnation'
N hot Hanh .
"Millard Fillmore College

its 44th Year'

1

-

Marlene -Kozuchowski

"Another Junior College: Another Site Controversy7'
Randy Ewell
"Father Groppi's Black Christmas"
James Brennan

1

"Robert Creeley: The Social Responsibility of an Artist'
Madeline Levine
"MFC Dean Berner Discusses the Future"
.

Mark Kubik
Cover: David Yates
Editor: Barry Hollzclaw

Page 2

�condemnation
Listen to this:

Yesterday six Vietcong came through my village.
Because of this my village was bombed completely destroyed.
Every soul was killed.
When I come back to the village now, the day after,
—

There is nothing to see but clouds of dust and the river, still flowing
The pagoda has neither roof nor altar.
Only the foundations of houses are left
The bamboo thickets have been burned away.
Here in the presence of the undisturbed stars,
In the invisible presence of all the people still alive on earth,
Let me raise my voice to denounce this filthy war,
This murder of brothers by brothers!

I have a question: Who pushed

us into

this killing of

one

another?

Whoever is listening, be

my witness!
this
war.
I cannot accept
I never could, I never shall.
I must say this a thousand times before I am killed.
1 feel I am like that bird which dies for the sake of its mate
Dripping blood from its broken beak, and cryint out:
Beware! Turn around to face your real enemies
Ambition, violence, hatred, greed.
Men cannot be our enemies even men called 'Vietcong!'
If we kill men, what brothers will we have left?
With whom shall we live then?
—

—

From Viet

Nam Poems by Nhat Hanh,
published by Unicorn Press, Studio
126, El Ptiseo, Santa Barbara, Calif.,
in association

with the Unicorn

Bookshop, 1967.

Page

3

�mi Hard fillmore college
Marlene
its 44th year
by

—

Kozuchowski

A great new movement in popular
education
adult education
became a social phenomena in the
—

—

1920's.

Emphasis was placed on creating
an educational opportunity for adults.
In the early stages, urban universities began to play a major role in
the stimulation and direction of adult
education.
The movement then gained mo
mentum.

The then privately owned Univer
sity of Buffalo inaugurated the Eve
ning Session in 1923.
Clarence S. Marsh, the first dean
of the Evening Session, evaluated
it as "the most conspicuous and
the most useful new service of the
University." The purpose of the Evening Session, he explained, was to
make available for adults all of the

regular offerings of the University
that could be presented under the
limitations imposed by evening study.

The first curriculum serviced three
groups of people: Those whose general training had been interrupted
and who wanted courses leading
towards a B S or B A degree; those
who expected to enter a profession;
and those who wanted to study scientific method in business or technique in journalism.
Early curriculum
Classes covered an exceedingly

—Ycrt**

Page 4

wide range of subjects. Courses were
offered in the sciences and humanities. In the field of business there
were courses in accounting, finance,
sales, and advertising. The curriculum of journalism included classes
in news reporting, editing, the short
story, and the editorial.
Current European problems, radio,
aeronautics, real estate problems,
grain grading and salesmanshipwere
discussed in special seminars which
did not grant University credit.
Evening Session classes were
open to all who were 21 years of
age or older. Under 21, only high
school graduates were admitted.

�During that first year of the Evening Session, people began realizing
that the University had no more enthusiastic or loyal members. Dean
Marsh claimed that their "eager devotion to learning provided a tonic
to the whole

institution."

These students, having more social experience, and many holding
rather responsible positions, enter-

tained a wholesomely critical attitude
toward their instructors. "They were
quick and frank to praise one whose
knowledge and experience was adequate, and equally prompt to express
dissatisfaction if the instructor seemed to lack the necessary qualifications," Dean Marsh reported.
Years of growth
That first year of the Evening
Session, in the Dean's evaluation,
brought large numbers of men and

women who did not fully comprehend
that, while the University opened
classes to all adults, it nevertheless
maintained class work of strictly
University grade.

The enrollment for the second
year, 850 students, increased only
by a small fraction. Only 25% of the
students enrolled during the first year
returned.

Throughout the years, the Evening

Session has changed. An air of sophistication has developed. In the
catalogue, it is referred to as the
Millard Fillmore College, the Evening
and Adult Education Division. Six
thousand students now attend evening classes. The curriculum offers
over 300 classes in all departments.
Somehow, the real image isn't
clear yet.
Even the philosophy of Millard
Fillmore College seems "a bit stiff,"

A philosophy
"For one reason or another, the
desire for knowledge is present in
every individual. We must ourselves
be in a constant state of development. Certainly such a development

can take place under no better conditions than the classroom where one
receives not only the benefits of the
mature judgment of instructors who
have been trained in a particular field,
but also the stimulating exchange
of ideas with one's fellow students."
(The MFC Bulletin)
Classes are "Alive" with heated
debates. Social life is full of meetings, clubs, dances. Student rights,
most recently, in the MFC-English
Department controversy, have been
defended, while petitions were signed and policies protested.
The image now seems a little

clearer.

Page 6

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FOR THE
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BUFFALO,NEW YORK

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Page 6

MOO

�by Randy

Ewell

The two-year college is the fastest growing form of higher education in the United States. Its goals

and programs are more down-to-earth
than its prestigious big brother, the
four-year college.

A late-comer to the education parade, it has grown out of the expanding needs of the country. While
the first colleges were formed to
prepare young men for the ministry,
two-year colleges were created to
teach people how to run complicated machines, beautify (as best they
can) middle-aged women, repair complicated machines, keep up hotels,
and hand the drill to the dentist.
Although ivory-tower scholars and
educators may say these schools give
only a Woolworth version of education
just like Woolworth's, they
are very popular. These colleges
supply the labor market with many
solid workers who fit in somewhere
between the ranks of the common
laborer and the executive. They are
fast replacing apprenticeships and onthe-job training as a means of learning some trade.
A Woolworth Education?
—

While

students at a twoyear college come for vocational
training, others take an academic
program with the aim of transferring
to a four-year institution.
At present, Buffalo has just one
such college
Erie County Technical Institute.
most

—

While any general observer could
probably have stated the problem
roughly ("not enough"), the Erie
County government, specifically
County Executive Ed Rath, ordered

some studies made. These revealed
that ECTI was indeed not enough,
even with its new addition starting in
1968. One more two-year college

would be needed by 1970 and
another, five or six years from then.
As it is, ECU is turning down a
larger number of qualified applicants
each year.

Another site controversy
With the need for some sort of
action established, Mr. Rath appointed a committee in June to study
possible sites for a new college.
This committee, which included men
from the Board of Supervisors, ECTI,

and County Planning, narrowed down
the possibilities to a site in Orchard
Park and one on the now renowned
waterfront area. With money already
appropriated in the budget now winding its way through the county legislature for the initial hiring of architects and planners, the county will
have to decide on which to begin

building.
The waterfront site would use 40
acres below LaSalle Park. Groups
such as BUILD and the NAACP
have endorsed this site as a means
of supplying the young people from
the city core with much-needed vocational training. The site is accessible to city residents and others by

another junior college:
another site controversy9

the West Side Expressway and the
Thruway.
The city has two good reasons
for wanting this site chosen.
To help combat the monster problem of urban deterioration by helping
potential unemployables get training.
City Hall would like to put something
preferably not more factories
and warehouses
in the gaping
hole in the scenery which is the
waterfront. The city even came up
with an architect's design of its own
•

—

—

which they have
county.

submitted

to the

Red-tape delay
With everything pointing to a
waterfront site, the question arises:
Why is there any delay in operations?
The waterfront site is a Federal
Urban Renewal Project. This means
that the federal government put up
three-fourths of the funds with which
the city purchased the land. Under
their contract, the Urban Renewal
Board must first approve any further
activity on this land. And, as Mr.
Ralph Barnes, Buffalo City Planning

Commissioner, observed: "The history of Urban Renewal negotiations
are that they take a long time."
Under the pressure of the time

element, the county may not be able
to secure this land in time. Even
if they plan to build here for the
second college needed, the city does
not want to wait around for ten
years, while everyone whispers "lemon.”
The Orchard Park site seems only
to be a poor alternative in case of
failure to secure the waterfront site
in time. This land can be purchased
quickly since there is no red-tape to
be cut through. However, its location far from the central community
will discourage many of the young
people who need just such training
ghetto residents destined
the most
to stay there without any added training past high school.
Since there does not appear to be
any political problems connected with
this project, and half the new county
legislature is from the city, the outlook is far from bleak. However, if
the red-tape is not cut through efficiently, then the city may well lose
this valuable addition to the urban
—

community.

Page 7

�-un
by James Brennan

The Rev. James E, Groppi, militant Catholic priest and civil rights
leader, will be leading his predominantly Negro parish in a celebration

of a "Black Christmas."
He is organizing an economic boycott of all merchants and is marching
all through downtown Milwaukee in
protest. The idea of a "Black Christmas" is being used to demonstrate
that the black people are buying gifts
from the white people and the whites
are making money on the blacks,
yet the whites refuse to give the
Negro his civil rights.
Father Groppi said in a recent
interview at Niagara University; "I
can not understand how white people
can go to church and listen to the
Christmas story, where Mary and
Joseph, two Jews from Nazareth,
were denied room at the inn and
then turn around and deny housing
to Negroes,"

Open Housing demonstrations
In 1967, Father Groppi organized
the open housing demonstrations in
Milwaukee. Today mark the one hundred tenth day of consecutive marching there. He said: "It is a God-given
right for a man to buy a house
wherever he can afford it, and for
a man to provide a decent dwelling
for his family."
Page 8

He has been working for the passage of an open housing law. He
commented: "The mayor said he is
against the city open occupancy law
because white people will run from
the city. (Mayor Maier of Milwaukee
claims to favor a county open occupancy law.) Good! God bless them.
Let them run and let them take their
white gyp merchants with them. We
are not concerned if the white middle
class people want to move to the
suburbs
let them go to hell
if they want to. What the black people need is territorial expansion."
He was brought up in the second
poorest parish in Milwaukee. His father was an immigrant Italian whose
mother couldn't read English. This
ethnic background made him very
sensitive to racist slurs like "nigger"
and "pollack." He grew up on the
south side of Milwaukee in what
he calls "a white cultural ghetto."
—

'Mass is a gas'
"Mass at St. Boniface is a gas,"
said one of Father Groppi's people.
At his church altar boys assist the
priest in the celebration of the Mass
wearing "Commando" sweatshirts,
with ushers wearing Black Power
buttons, and the Communion hymn
is a freedom chant accompanied
by handclapping.

He said: "there is a cowardice
on the part of some pastors, bishops,
and archbishops in not speaking out
on the social teachings of Jesus
Christ." He felt the church should
throw its weight behind the civil

rights cause.

"Jesus Christ was one of the
world's greatest civil rights workers,"
he continued, "and because he battled against the structure of the
times, he was nailed to the cross."
"Many black people feel Christianity has failed them," he said, "and
they indeed have a case if they

St. Boniface is a stained-glass
Gothic church on the north side of refer to institutionalized ChristianMilwaukee and was once a German ity." But Father Groppi continued:
National parish. It now has a 90% "The teachings of Christ have not
population of Negro parishioners. Of
failed, because they have never been
them Father Groppi said; "The hell
tried.”
with the word
'parishioners'. The

church belongs to the 35,000 black
of violence
people within its boundaries. The The use
In discussing the use ofviolence,
church is packed with people who
Father Groppi said; "The white man
have freedom on their minds and are
has used violence to keep the black
not keeping it a secret."

�fr. groppi's black Christmas
man has been beaten down so often
and psychological violence against
Negroes but get disturbed when we
resort to civil disobedience.The black
man has been beaten down so often,
that he has no other recourse but violence."
He said he would not argue about
the morality of violence and pointed

out that Christ used the whip in
driving the money changers from the
temple. He also said the church had
Joan of Arc, who used a sword
and killed people and is counted as

one of the great saints of the church.
He compared her to the "young
black militant" of today's civil rights
movements.

Commandos
To protect the freedom marchers,
the Milwaukee Youth Council of the
NAACP has formed a group called
the "Commandos" who believe in
self-defense against hecklers or the
police. It is their job to avoid profanity during the demonstrations, be
available at any time of day or night,
and to protect the black marchers
from white violence by whatever
means are necessary.
Two Commandos constantly guard
Father Groppi during public speaking
engagements and excursions. They
say they would die for him. They
can be seen sitting to the right and
left of him on stage wearing sweatshirts with a big "C" on them and
slogans like Think Black, Black and
Beautiful, and Black Power.
Some members of the Commandos and the Youth Council have
been in jail. Though most aren't
Catholics, Father Groppi feels he is
exerting a positive moral influence.
"I don't get up and give lectures.
As far as their association with women is concerned, we talk about this
all the time. They're not afraid to
use terms like 'shacking up' in my
presence. The only way you can
preach morals to guys like this is
to live like they are living."

Freedom Houses
In 1 966, Father Groppi organized
the "Freedom Houses" which were
rented houses in the center of the
Negro ghettos where he worked to
help the people, listen to them, and
take action to try to get results
for these people who came to him.
On one occasion, a Negro serviceman who had just returned from
Vietnam complained to Father Groppi
about a woman who refused to rent
to him. The house was one block
outside the perimeter of the ghetto
area. The serviceman asked if there
were any legal action he could take.
Since there was no occupancy law,
he said he felt helpless. Father Grop-

pi said: "We're not totally helpless,"

and he proceeded to come with his
Youth Council to this woman's house
every night for two weeks and seranade her with beautiful Christmas
carols.

Involvement in the struggle
Father Groppi criticized the

black people, as he lectured at the
"Human Rights Forum” at Niagara
University. Gesturing toward the
audience of about 1000 he said:
'The accusing finger should be pointed that way. Whites are too apathetic and there is a definite lack of
leadership in the white community."
"One must be involved," he said,
"being a priest he accepts the role
of a leader in the community. Attention is focused on the white
priest, not his black community, so
he must be involved because he is
a human being and this is a human
'

struggle."

Father Groppi complained that the
police use brutality and harassment
in dealing with the black community.
He said it is hard for whites to
understand this because they have a
different image of the police. "In
a white community," he said, "the
policeman is the friend of the lost
child, while in the black community
he appears to be the oppressor and
member of an occupation army."

church, middle-class white people,

and the police for holding down

Black Power
He considers the most essential
points in the Black Power Movement
to be the development of young
black masculine leaders and finding
a black identity in the American
culture. "White men," he said,
"must look at black men with more
respect, rather than condescension.
The black man must believe in himself and overcome this inferiority
complex relegated him by the white
man. I don't know a more horrible
thing than to teach man to hate himself. Only after the black man overcomes this identity crisis and believes
in himself will he be able to bargain
with and demand the respect of the
white man."
Father Groppi said: "Every man
has an obligation to get involved in
the struggle for civil rights. The
more a person gets involved in this,
the more he gains for humanity."
Page 9

��robert

creeley

the social responsibility of an artist

by

Modeline Levine

At the first of a series of draft resistance
rallies October 17, Buffalo poeland English
professor Robert Creeley urged students
"to be dictated by conscience."
Mr. Creeley is not an angry man and
he's not a ''protest" poet. He writes positively about love, and life; and it is in this
context which he opposes the war
it
is a direct threat to these two values.
The Spectrum interviewed the gentle,
soft-spoken poet last week and discussed
the artist's involvement in the anti-war
—

movement.

The Spectrum: From a historical
point of view, do you feel that the
writer has always felt a commitment

criticism?
Mr. Creeley; I don't think he's
felt a specifically conscious intent to
be involved with social criticism andor criticism of the society, but I
think that the arts wittingly or unwittingly involve a decisive experience of society's condition, and
therefore both reflect that state of
fact and equally and frequently offer
imindation or implicit criticism of it.
Insofar as the society provides a coherent and cohering experience of
life, either individually or collectively
present, the arts tend to "go along
with it." There are times obviously
to social

when the arts have been very much
of the society and very at home in
it, but when the society tends to
become divisive in the experience
it offers its various citizens, or when
it becomes incoherent or inarticulate
in its expression of the individual circumstance, then I think there is a
very decisive reaction
that the arts
perhaps more than other forms of
conduct reflect immediately and take
—

on as an onus.
The Spectrum; Do you feel that
this commitment has increased or
decreased among contemporary writers?

Mr. Creeley: I think it has perhaps increased. Certainly in the last

five years it has increased very emphatically. Simply that when the
experience of coercion, inhibition and
repression is active in a society, it
affects the content of the arts immediately. In other words, anything
that acts as a prohibition in the
context of experience, that is anything that says "you can't have this
feeling," or that "you should have
that feeling" tends to evoke immediately a response from the arts
which is obviously hostile. So that
when some circumstance comes into
usual life that is in this way restrictive, the arts tend to take it on as
a situation of feeling. In the last five
years in this country we're living what
has really been a very significant
opening up for the situation of writers. The confusion and the density,
the block condition of feeling that
results from an unpopular war is
something I think the arts react to
very immediately. I've noticed that
this is true not only in the situation
of writers, but among a significant
number of painters and sculptors.
There is a great spectrum of people
working in the arts that have been
brought to say something about their
own feeling of injustice, and their
own feeling of a society coerced to
comittments it can't respect.
The Spectrum: Don't you feel
that present society is perhaps less
restrictive than previous societies?
Mr. Creeley: This may be literally
true or historically true but the situation of feeling that any society is
experiencing is that vyhich it is having. Although it may point to prior
times as being more opened or more
closed, I don't think that it really
has much to do with the fact of the
society's own condition at a given
point in time and space. So that we
may feel for example that we are

less inhibited as a society than were
say the Puritans, but our experience
of life is curiously more inhibited
by its displacement, or its awkward
experience of having no place that
is clear to us. For example, the division of generational groups, the modifications that the family unit has experienced, the placelessness that is
so common to America, and the generalization of experience that is appearing in this society. Although it
may on the one hand reflect an
opening condition of experience for
many people who had previously
felt much inhibition, it is curiously
very frustrating.
The fact that everyone may be
eating ice cream cones right now,
and no one's saying they shouldn't,
rather generalizes the experience of
that. I don't mean to argue that
forbidden delights are necessarily
happiest, but they at least intensify

individual experience oT them.
So that we have the paradox, I
think, in this society of a circumstance which proposes an enlarged
range of experience but a curious
generalization of that experience almost by definition.
The complexity of the arts is
simply this, that they look for sourc-

es of energy and sources of occasion
in the experience of the individual
and in the context of the society,
and their use therefore of this occasion will always be complex.
There is the fact that after every
war there is a major literature so to
speak, and it seems to have to do
with the terms of energy or the extraordinary intensification of experience that a war engenders. I'm not
going to qualify war protest in public
writers at all, because each one of
these men and women are just thata man or woman; but the arts as
Cant'd, on Next Page

Page 11

�perience of the relations that exist
in a society.
Thus you are implicitly involved
with "social criticism," But I'm not
able, nor finally interested enough,
to make particular qualifications on
particular present circumstances of
political order or social order. I have
feelings about the society which I
am not at all hesitant to express,
but I do that outside of the usual
practice of a writer. I would do that
as a citizen or as a man living in this
country; I wound't do it in the role
of or guise of writing. Although I
think that often times things that
come of having written particular
poems, or stories would be implicitly
social criticism, if they were read
with attention to the possibilities,
then they would probably be grounds
for saying: "Yes, this is criticism of
the social fact." But I'm not interested in making that a content or a

subject.

The Spectrum; Do you feel that
your commitments are stronger than
they might be ordinarily because of
your status as a popular writer?
Mr. Greeley; I don't feel that I
am a popular writer in the sense
that I haven't had any experience
of a large audience. I mean in contrast with audiences poets like Allen
Ginsberg have had in the range and
reach of his rapport with large audi-

a context, the arts' use of such
societal portions of experience will
always be complex indeed. It's very
awkward to say that the arts are
against something.
The arts are now involved with
the society and its involvement in
a war which it has felt to be extraordinarily vicious, and unjustified.
It's clearly provoking a great source
of energy for many of the writers
involved, some I think brilliantly,
others finding centers in their own
reaction to the society's involvement.
Robert Duncan for example, or Denise Levertov, or Allen Ginsberg equally. Others feel that this is not an

articulation they can manage. I don't
think that they are shying away from
it, I think that their nature as Duncan would say "is not led to participate in the actual vocabulary of this
experience," I would think that very
often as singular men and women

Page 12

they are probably, and often are as
critical of the war as others, but
they don't find a place in their art
for it.

The Spectrum; In what capacity

do you view yourself as a social
critic?
Mr. Greeley; I don't propose myself as a social critic at all in an
intentional sense. I think that what
is in the world is obviously im-

plicitly a criticism of that.

I like

Pound's sense of criticism as the actual practice of something. That is,
if you want to criticize a novel, you
write one, and if you want to criticize what seems to you existing as
a novel you write one. That seems
to be the most active mode of criticism I think there could be. So that
in writing if you're involved with the
society you write from your experience of the society, and your ex-

ences.
I write primarily for my own experience of writing, and that what
then comes of it has been at times
pleasant, and at times very depressing in the sense of isolation it provoked. But I don't think I've had
any experience of being largely in-

volved with people because of writing. It isn't that I want to get away
from people, but I don't think that
writing has been the way that I've
experienced a relationship with large

numbers of people.
I don't consider the kind of reading that one does in college circuits
within the popular range, although at
times one may want it to be so.
I wonder at times what Dylan feels
about his popularity; he's obviously
a very shy man, and I wonder if
he can admit the experience of the
numbers of people that are involved
with him as a reality. I don't think
that any imagination of being popular has anything to do with what
I've written.

�The Spectrum; Do you think that
social criticism through art is generally anti-establishment, or is it
becoming increasingly specific?
Mr. Greeley; Again, social criticism to reflect a reaction to, or dis-

satisfaction with, the status quo
which is felt to be a limit either
rightly or wrongly. The energy derived
from protest is significant; it's a
source of possiblity. The arts tend
to be in opposition to that which
is "establishment." There one finds
writing that derives from particular
occasion wherein the writing is quite
specific. People possibly like Dreiser at various points or say the con-

temporary social criticism of a writer
like Allen Ginsberg fit this category.
I don't think this is always the case.
However, writers such as T. S. Eliot
have found a very useful coherence
in a so-called establishment, and
have articulated it. But I think that
the arts as a wide range of activity
tend to be anti-establishment. It's
hard to make generalities, I don't
know that one can.
With respect to my own feelings,
the war constitutes for me a very
painful limit of a kind of opening
experience that might otherwise be
possible. In other words, I came of
age so to speak at the time of the
Second World War, and then for the
subsequent years have seen one war
after another of varying size and
involvement. It's as though each war
were in some way going to resolve
the situation either economically or

as a condition of people in a given
society, and that thus it has a specific form which may or may not be
modified by other like structures. But
I can't in any sense believe that
this is the way we extend possibilities for the experience of being
American. I'm selfishly involved with
what conditions of life are possible
for me
those I love, and have
and I think that this
relation to
is the most disastrous limit in that
respect that I can imagine.
—

—

The Spectrum; Do you feel that
such mass creative attacks on society
will become increasingly frequent in
the future?
Mr. Greeley: It depends absolutely on what kinds of tension and
what kinds of blockage the society
itself has as condition. Reading from
an article in the December issue of
Ramparts called "The Redress of
Their Greivances" it says: "Every

.

.

as long as these conditions

ing the coherence

of this protest

provok.

.

.

are

literally the case, then the protest will
continue, and I think the arts will be
part of this protesting body.”

socially, or societally more accurately.

But each war seems to have been
somehow less an ostensible reason
for anything at all. It's as though
the United States were committed
either intentionally or otherwise to
making use of the occasion of war
wherever it occurred to realize its
own economic security, and to continue its authority in these spheres
of national and international reality.
I feel that there is an extraordinary
distortion of what I can myself respect as human self-realization and
commitment. I cannot see any reality
that I can respect in the situation
of this war. I realize that the United
States is literally a national context
so to speak, that it is in the world

American must realize that Resist-

ance and militant protest is going to
continue, it will grow as the war
grows, and will not go away until
the war ends. That is the nature of
a moral imperative." I think that this
is the point, that as long as the
conditions provoking the coherence
of this protest, as long as these
conditions are literally the case, then
the protest will continue, and I think
the arts will be part of the protesting

body.

Page 13

�—Yates

by Mark Kubik

The Spectrum: Where will the
new Millard Fillmore College (MFC)
be situated?
Dean Berner; We are very enthusiastic about the development of
a campus for continuing education
on this site (the Main Street campus).
This is our goal.
Pres, Meyerson and the provosts
have supported it and we feel that
this is a very strong commitment to
continue in this area of developing
programs for an adult population. We
will in all probability remain right
here on this campus and develop a
regional campus for continuing education which will be unmatched anywhere.
Now it’s several years ahead of us
but we are beginning to gear up for
this kind of activity. Once we de-

Page 14

velop a campus for continuing education we'll attract people not only
from the immediate community in the
Niagara Frontier but from the whole
state. Perhaps a number of institutions will be developed which will
attract people from the nation and
the world.

We would absorb a number of
the buildings. The majorthrustwould
also be some research activity on
campus. There would be something
like a small research park such that
some of the buildings would be devoted to contract research.
All health sciences including the
Medical and Dental schools will move
to the new campus. MFC will be the
only one remaining here other than
research projects.
The Spectrum; What is the possibility

of MFC

achieving indepen

dence from the State University Sys
tern?
Dean Berner: It is very unlikely
that MFC will become independent
of the State University System. We
are now a part of the University and
I hope that there will be a further

commitment of continuing education
on the part of the State University.
This was stated quite specifically by
a document from Albany, which was
endorsed by Chancellor Gould, which
talks about the societal dimension
and obligation of the state to continue its effort in the whole area of
continuing education. This encompases several component parts in the
area of credit and credit-free kinds
of programs. These are both supported by the state.
The Spectrum: Will MFC become
a degree-granting institution?

�Dean Berner: I really don't feel
that we will be an operating arm
which is divorced from the University of Buffalo. There may be some
independence of operation instead.
We are considered to be a third part
of the University in the sense that
there are three University deans.
The Spectrum: Do you feel that
MFC will become more fully integrated with the University.
Dean Berner: Integrated in what
sense? We are now in the University in one sense. We work very
closely with the departments and the
faculty and we are hopeful that we
will continue to operate in the same
way. You have, in my estimation,
to have some sort of centralized responsibility for developing credit programs and allowing students to identify with some particular group as
in the new college.
Each of the seven faculties will
have to share with us a commitment and responsibility to provide
programs. If we don't have this we
will not be able to operate.
The Spectrum: Will there beany
changes in the selection of faculty
members to meet the increased loads
of entering students?
Dean Berner: We hope that the
departments and faculty will begin to
build into their budgets the dollars
to support faculty who in turn will
be part of the load factor in MFC
college. This will be partly true in
the area of credit programs, but may
also be important in our non-credit
programs. This is a fast-growing
one. The whole area of developing
programs is for people who consider
themselves graduated but find that
their education is kind of obsolete.
That arm of our operation in MFC
is by far the fastest growing arm,
and we hope to see this develop
rather extensively.
What we are hopeful of is that
each of the seven faculties will recognize their responsibility to carry on
an effective program in continuing
education. And to recruit in large
numbers the desired quality teachers
who will have responsibilities to MFC
both in the evening and daytime
sessions.

The Spectrum: Is there anything
being done to improve the method

of recruiting faculty members?
Dean Berner: We have a good
faculty now, and we are exploring
the possibility of recruiting faculty
members who are considered parttime but who have a major responsibility in their field. We have a
number of people employed in the
industries or in public agencies who
bring into the classroom a richness
of experience in an implied sense
that we cannot overlook. I shall encourage all provosts to consider the
possibility of recruiting some of the
faculty in both credit and credit-free
areas from the outside. We have a
number of people from Cornell Laboratories, Bell Aerosystems, and a
number of people in the accounting

and banking professions with degrees coming to us for the evening
division.
The Spectrum; Will admission
policies to any department be changed?
Dean Berner: This whole concept of admissions into the college
and to departments for majors is
under review. We have had a problem in the English department and
1 suspect that is what you were referring to. This is being reviewed
and it is hopeful that work in committies will help us see the appropriate way of providing this kind
of operation to the part-time students
and also insure the departments that
its students are qualified. I think this
is the issue at hand. The English
department has felt that the students
coming up through MFC were not as
qualified to be admitted to their department as a major as their daytime
students.
All I ask is that we proceed in
such a way that they satisfy the
requirements that the student is qualified. We feel that students are willing
to be tested in a variety of ways to
attest to this. We simply want to
work out the appropriate procedure.
The Spectrum: What type of revision do you seek?
Dean Berner; I don't know if
there will be a revision. We feel that
the policy of closely watching the
individual is quite adequateto satisfy
the faculty that these students who
are successful are well qualified to
proceed. We admit, however, that we

have a difference in our admission
policy for the adult student. It is
more liberal in certain respects, but
once admitted they have to show that
they can achieve in the level which
we prescribe. We work with the faculty and we assume that they will
set the

standards for this type of

college experience. In that case we
are different., On the other hand,
if people have had a college experience each one is reviewed carefully to see where they have been
and why they have dropped their
education. We are very careful in

our admissions policy.

The Spectrum: Can the English
department controversy be repeated
in another department?
Dean Berner: Very possibly. If
they feel as the English department
members do, that the evening stududnts are not as qualified as the
day students, they could make this
kind of invasion in programming. We
are hopeful that this committee review will give us the support of the
departments and the English department as well.. This will give us a
complete analysis of the problem, A
lot of this has been hearsay in the
sense that people just feel that be-

cause we have different admission
standards for some groups that we
have a poorer quality of student,
This we would like to test in a variety
of ways because this is not a hue
conclusion.

The Spectrum: Is there anything
being done to improve communication between students, faculty members and administration?

Dean Berner: I would say yes.
The outcome of this has been that
there is greater communication. Although a committee has not been
fully appointed yet, Mr. Larabee, Mr,
Welch make up an ad hoc committee to solve the immediate problem
between the college and the English
department. But there is to be another committee appointed that will
allow us to have a full-scale review
and it is this which we hope will
enable us to have the kind of communication that we desire between
the faculty, the provosts, the University and MFC. From this point of
view it has been beneficial.
—

Page 1 5

�The Norelco Tripleheader.
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                    <text>Referendum

on campus
recruitment to be held

The Spectrum
State University of New York at

'

:

Tuesday,

Vol. 18, No. 24

Student opinion will be polled in a Senate referendum

tomorrow. The issue involves campus recruitment policies.

F"

Polling places in the Goodyear Dormitory lobby and

December 12, 1967

Zimmerman accuses administration
of catering to left wing element
Staff

According to Dr. Zimmerman, professors George
Hochfield and William Baumer, wrote a compromise reso-

—Yatn

Dr. Zimmerman

accuses administration of
catering to radicals

•

lution that “elements of the
Administration are trying to
get the Faculty Senate to

approve.”

The resolution condemns General Hershey tor his directive
to local draft boards that those
who obstruct military recruiting
be reclassified 1-A, and recommends that University facilities
be withheld until Hershey remands his decision.
Dr. Zimmerman claimed: “This
resolution is attempted as a
compromise with SDS. The CCS
was formed to support an open
campus. Here is an attempt to
prevent the open campus with
subterfuge of condemning General Hershey.”
Dr. Zimmerman pointed out
that President Martin Meyerson
had supported an open campus.
“I call upon President Meyerson
—does he support the open campus resolution, or does he support this attempt to destroy it?
If they put this resolution
through, I call for a peaceful
student strike of one day. If
this resolution is jammed
through, a majority of students
will be disenfranchised.”

Fact sheet

The results of the two-part evaluation will be published in a
booklet to be sold to students
for $1.00. It will be modeled on
the Student Guides of the University of Southern California.

catalogue.
Penny Bergman, co-chairman
of the Student Course and Teacher Evaluation Committee, explained: “The purpose of the
survey is to let the students
know in advance what they’re
getting in for before they register. It is a way of formalizing
the grapevine.”

aminations. In addition, students
will be asked to comment freely
on the course. The results of this
questionnaire for a specific
course will be objectively presented through percentages,”

the Dow Chemical
• Should
Company and the Central Intelligence Agency be permitted to
recruit on campus? Why?

Should the current policies
of the Placement Office be
amended to bar all non-academic
groups from recruiting on campus? Why?
•

“Meaningful feedback from
students to faculty has always
been a major problem at large
universities,” according to Steve
Halpern, member of the Student
Senate Course and Teacher Evaluation Committee.
To help alleviate this problem,
a course evaluation project sponsored by the Student Senate will
bestarted for all courses included
in the Faculties of Natural Sciences and Mathematics, Social

Questionnaires will be completed Dec. 14 and 15 during the
first ten minutese of class. Class
time is being requeested to insure the highest return and most
accurate" sampling of student
opinion.
The University Testing Service
facilities will be used to score
the responses from the IBM
sheets. Comments will be sorted
and selected for publication by
at least three editors.
Mr. Halpern commented: “A
questionnaire will tap such topics
as quality of lictures, quality of
professors, assignments and ex-

presented by The Spectrum in an
attempt to give students greater
insight into the issues included

If your answer to question
#1 was “Yes,” which groups
should be prohibited?

Reporter

Course evaluation project
to be Senate sponsored

Sciences and Arts and Letters.

The referendum questions
are:
•

At a meeting held Thursday by the Committee for Concerned Students, Dr. MarZimmerman
of the Philosophy Department responded to an invitation for open disvin
cussion by accusing the administration of trying to placate the left wing element of the
University

Students musi

Should any group be prohibited from recruiting on campus? If so, why?

by Jay Schreiber
Spectrum

from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m
cards when voting.

'-open

The second aspect ofthe course
evaluation will be a fact sheet
to be completed by the individual
faculty member for each course.
This fact sheet will enable students to learn more about the
specifics of the course. Each
peeled of the student in the
course, what the course covers,
and what the faculty member’s
past experience in the course
has been. It will serve as a detailed supplement to the college

Take position

Student Association President

Stewart Edelstein responded by
declaring it was unfair to say

that

the resolution

would

be

jammed through the Faculty
Senate.
“Faculty must say something,
they must make the decision.
There are times when a University must take a position. Perhaps the Selective Service System is wrong. The faculty has to
assume the responsibility on what
position they choose to take,” he

said.

Dr. Zimmerman then clarified
his position. “An open campus
resolution was passed with the
support of President Meyerson.
His assistant Dr. Robert O’Neil
has encouraged all kinds of
meetings. In these meetings he
has taken the position of placating the left and barring the
military because of what it has
done. As far as 1 know, he has
Meyerson’s support in this. 1
want to know what Meyerson's
position is.”
Richard Miller, vice president
of the Student Association, defended the proposed resolution.
He mentioned that there arc
“three resolutions proposed. The
first resolution which the Faculty Senate will definitely approve states that no outside police will be permitted on campus,
in order to preserve the integrity of the campus.
“If military recruiters come on
students violate
campus and
rules they can be persecuted by
the school with due process of
law, Hershey, however, has connected recruitment with the Selective Service System and has
thus denied the integrity of our
school. If one blocks a Navy
table he becomes 1-A.

(Cont’d on Pg. 9)

The campus is open under current policies of the Placement
Office, according to Dr. C. James
Lafkiotes, director of University
Placement.

in tomorrow’s referendum.
The ideas of academic freedom, recruiting and moral conscience are discussed by Paul
Kurtz, Professor of Philosophy:
'Ts the limitation of recruiting
by off campus erouos an issue of
academic freedom? Some have
passionately denied thai academic
freedom is involved, but others
have just as passionately affirmed
that it is.
“This suggests that a simple
definition of the limits of academic freedom on this issue can
not be easily given. The very
fact that it cannot suggests that
it is an open question.
“Where an academic community is divided on an issue and
where an academic group honestly believes that its academic freedom would be violated by any
limitation, then one ought to proceed with caution against prohibiting a form of activity here-

“The word academic refers to
continuing one’s formal education in a graduate or professional
school,” according to a definitofore considered normal in the
tion of Neal Slatkin, student senUniversity.
ator, and Robert Sikorski, acting
Elections Committee Chairman.
“One cannot decide such an
“Non-academic refers to obtain- issue by a priori definition, on
ing employment of any type ingrounds of subjective feeling, or
cluding teaching on all levels, inby threats of violence.
dustry and government service.”
“There are those who have
“Any person who feels this
definition is inadequate or does argued that academic freedom
not apply to the issue should
does not apply to blasphemy,
either amend or redefine the pornography, advocating changes
term ‘non-academic’ on his balin the laws governing marijuana,
treason, or to members of a "conlot,”.Mr. Sikorski said.
The referendum, suggested by spiracy.”
Neal Slatkin and Louis Post,
“Similarly there are those who
third vice president of the University Union Activities Board believe that academic freedom
is not tied up with the invitation
was passed by the Senate Wedof outside groups to campus to
nesday night.
‘recruit.’ Who can claim to have
The purpose of the referendum
is to determine student opinion a monopoly of wisdom such that
he can simply decide when queson campus recruitment, Mr. Post
said. “A decision to reaffirm the tions of academic freedom are
the open campus policy was made not involved, particularly when
there exist so many who strongly
by the Faculty Senate. Many students, as well as the community, affirm that it is?
interpreted this as University decision.
Since this issue might cause
disturbances on campus, it is
important that the student’s views
be known before the crisis occurs,” he emphasized.

For insight

The following statements, representing various viewpoints, are

Double function
“Recruiting has a double func-

tion: (a) it imparts knowledge for
those who want it, and (b) it may
assist in the hiring process.
“To restrict recruiters on campuses is to deny at least the
right to knowledge and the free
(Cont’d on Pg. 12)

Faculty endorsement
So far the program has letters
of endorsement from the provosts of the three faculties involved.
The Committee hopes that faculty and students will cooperate
and take the project seriously,
to make it a success. Other colleges now printing student
guides include Princeton University, Columbia College and New
York University.
According to Mr. Halpern: "We
urge the students to answer with
integrity, honesty and sincerity
—the course he improves may
be his own.”

—UPI

Talaphoto

At Albany

present

Thirty students from the State University of New
York at Albany march in a demonstration typical
those sweeping the nation in recent weeks.
They are members of the Albany University SOS
and Resistance.

�P*9* Two

TH

•

Tuesday, December 12, 1967

Spectrum

•

Student Senate election

..

Four candidates vie for A and S
position left vacant by resignation
une ot tour

juniors

win

Be

elected Student Senator from the
Arts and Sciences division tomorrow to replace Sandra Funt. Miss
Funt resigned in October over a
controversy on senatorial procedure.
Election tables will be set up
in Goodyear lobby and in front
of the first floor cafeteria in Norton Hall from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
The Senate voted to hold a
general election, instead of following the constitutional procedure of replacement by a majority vote of the body.
Following constitutional procedure, the Student Council of a
division presents candidates to
the Executive Committee of the
Senate to be voted upon. In lieu
of such a council in this division,
the Senate adopted a resolution
to hold a general election.
The candidates are Steve Ray,
Randall Eng, Richard Scott, and
Tod Miller. The requirement for
candidacy are a 1.0 over all average including a better than 1.0
average last semester and junior
or senior status in the College of
Arts and Sciences.
Students wishing to, may nominate candidates of their choice
by writing in names in the space
provided on the ballots tomor-

row.

concerning

students

ley

wou

like to see resolved.

Remove anonymity
Randall Eng stated: “My main
objective is to remove the anonymity of the Senate. The Senate
is an anonymous organization on
this campus.
“As evidence of this I asked
over fifty students whether they
knew how people were in the
Senate. Five out of fifty knew
who their Senator was. No one
knew the size, powers, or goals
of the Senate.
“The Senate is being run in an
extremely slovenly fashion. For
example, I learned of this election less than a week ago and I
learned about it in a very haphazard fashion.
“I consider this an extremely
apathetic move on the part of
the Senators.
“It is my position that a representative should be responsible
to the electorate, not only before and during the election but
after.
“I can promise that if elected
I will see that the Senate is no
longer an anonymous organization.
‘I stand for academic freedom
without qualification. I stand in

favor of Dow and the CIA and
other organization which
might want to present its view
being allowed on campus.
“I would strongly urge more
publicity for the Senate. The
any

The candidates were asked
what their main objectives were
in running for this senatorial
seat and what important issue

meetings are generally obscure

and the minutes of the meetings
aren’t readily available for distribution. I also favor the general
distribution of the constitution
and the by laws of the Senate.
“My final point is that I intend
to make myself available after
the elections to the electorate. I
intend to remain available and
have my name, phone and address conspicuously posted about
the campus.”

Effective communication

Tod Miller, an Economics major and president of the Debate
Society, stated: “I intend to establish
between
all the
ways of

effective communication
the Student Senate and
students. Two possible
doing this are more regularly published Newsletter and
a permanent table in Norton
lobby for the Student Senate.
“The reason why I want more
effective communication is that
as long as the students do not
know what the Senate is doing
they will assume that the Senate
is doing nothing. And as long as
they believe that the Senate is
doing nothing, the students will
fail to folow any possible leadership provided by the Senate.
‘I would like to resolve the
fee issue in the following manwhether or not the activities they
are now supporting are an escommunity. If they decide that
these activities are essential they
should use all Constitutional
means open to them to raise

funds for these activities.”

Lack of support

Richard Scott, a Philosophy
major, expressed his views, “My
main objective is to represent
the students. I think there is a
void between the student body
and the Student Senate. And

—Yat«

Randall Eng

Richard Scott
'to represent

the students"

this void has caused not only a
lack of interest, but also a lack
of support from the student body,
“It is my intention to keep in
contact with as many students
as possible and when elected I
will legislate in accordance with
their desires.
“This void has left the Senate
with power to legislate whatever
the Senate wishes to legislate.
A point in fact is their ruling on
the Vietnam war after which
they refused to consult the students to see whether or not the
students were in agreement with
their decision.
“Another point is the refusal
of the Senate to consult the student body in regards to the second student newspaper issue.
“I believe that the most important issue on this campus today
is one of representation. There
forming on campus such as the
Free Forum and the Committee
of Concerned Students which are
interested in University problems. These groups have taken

seeks to remove anonymity of
Senate
it upon themselves to seek out
student sentiments on various issues.

“It is my intention to work

closely with such groups to fill

the void.”

Work with Senate
Steve Ray, an Economics major, is treasurer of the Commuter
Council, U. U. A. B. Publication
Committee chairman, and a member of the Student Traffic Court.

He stated: “This year I’ve been
interested in the Student Senate
and its activities. I sympathize
with the intentions of the Committee of Concerned Students and
feel that many of the problems
can be alleviated by working with
the current Senate structure.
“I’m not interested in trying
to radically alter the Senate, but
work with it.
“Some of the important issues
on campus I would like to see in-

vestigated, but I have no particgrievances with the decisions of the present Senate.”

ular

House Committee announces rules
governing posters in Norton Hall
The UUAB House Committee
reported this week that its rules
on the posting of materials in
Norton Hall have been largely
ignored by the student body.
The House Committee determines policy concerning Norton

Hall for the UUAB.

—Yataa

Todd Miller
for communication
with students

Steve Ray
wants to

'work with Senate'

—

not alter

UUAB offers spring vacation

excursion to Grand Bahamas
The University Union Activities Board Recreation Committee
will sponsor a trip to the Grand
Bahamas during spring vacation,
March 31 to April 7.
Chairman of the Recreation
Committee, Woody Graber explained: “This is the first time
we've attempted this. If this venture is successful, it will lead
to other trips.” Success depends
on the interest of the students.

A total charge of $225 will include round-trip fare via National Airlines direct from Buffalo
to West End in the Grand Bahamas. The price also covers
triple room accommodations at
the Grand Bahama Hotel and
Country Club, including breakfast and dinner each day. The

cost of baggage transfer from the
airport to the hotel and a sightseeing tour around the island are

also included. Access to all the
hotel’s recreational facilities: A
golf-course, a fishing area, a private beach, scuba diving equipment and two Olympic-size swimming pools will be available.

During the trip two cocktail
parties, have been scheduled,
which will be the only activities
planned during this time. This
will leave students and faculty
members free to spend their vacations however they choose.
Anyone wishing to sign up for
the trip must pay a $50 deposit

before Jan. 10 and the balance
by Feb. 10.

Chairman Mr. Philip Henry
said that all posters put up in
Norton Hall in violation of House
Committee rules will be removed
by the Norton Hall staff. Those
organizations or individuals who
continually disregard the rules
will be brought before the student judiciary by the UUAB.

signs, etc. for the bulletin boards
must be submitted to the Operations Office, room 115, for approval, staff signatures, and posting, 24 hours before , they are to
be posted.

Poster making, art work, etc.
is restricted . to room 307. Material posted will be discarded
after event, unless hold is re*

quested.

poster, etc., to be posted in the Union
may exceed the size of 14 by 28
inches for bulletin boards or 22
by 28 inches for poster standards
except by special permission of
House Committee.
•

No

sign announcement,

The committee’s seven rules

are:
•

•

All posters, announcements,

Each

function

and

corres-

ponding event will be allowed a

maximum of two bulletin board
notices and poster stands or a
combination of each.
No signs, slingers or banners
may be hung between light poles
near the Norton Hall stairway
on Tower side.
•

Oilcloths may be used only
on the railings at ‘he west end
of the building with the permis*

sion of the Assistant Business
Manager’s Office, room 115. Oilcloths must not be any longer
than six by ten feet.
Slingers are not allowed in
Norton Hall except by special
permission of the House Committee. Definition of a slinger
will be left up to the discretion
of the House Committee.
*

Bomb scare upsets Lockwood, Crosby
“You just can’t ignore these
bomb scares—one of them might
be real," observed a member of
the campus police force after
searching Lockwood Library Friday in the aftermath of a bomb
scare.

“This is
week.”

the third one this

Two other bomb scares, Tuesday and Thursday were in Crosby Hall.
According to Campus Police
Chief Murray, the chances of an
actual bomb being placed in a

campus building are very small,
but after a call he must close the
building threatened and conduct
a “top-to-bottom search.”

In the Crosby Hall bomb scares,
the caller told Campus Police
that the building would be blown
up between I p.m. and 2 p.m.,
but no such information was given in the Lockwood bomb scare.
The caller said: “There is a bomb
in the library It will go off to-

day.”

The Lockwood bomb scare may
called to clear the

have been

building Chief Murray claimed.
While the building was empty
and being searched, one of the
telephones in the lobby rang;
when Chief Murray answered it,
the caller hung up.

Chief Murray said that his
main concern is not for the building or its contents, but the safety of the people who use the
building. He claims that a bomb
large enough to injure somebody
could be concealed in a hollowedout book, which could replace
any of the 400,000 now in the
library.

�Tuesday,

December 12, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* Thr**

Registration by computer
dateline news, Dec. 12
to be in use by 1969
ir

ties Planning, mam
not in pre-registration itself.

Facili-

The difficulty is that, to make the system workable, the

course offerings must be firm so students will be assured of

receiving the courses they have chosen. He added that, in

the past, courses have been changed after students have
registered for them.
A meeting was called recently
by Dr. Ketter to discuss this
problem and to make future
plans.

All department chairmen, one
other representative from each
department who will be responsible for making the schedule, several provosts, and representatives from Admissions and Records, Data Processing Center,
Bursar’s office, University College, Graduate School, and Facilities Planning attended the
meeting.

Firm schedule
A memorandum distributed to
those at the meeting reads:
“Good planning, as well as the
pre-registration of the students,
will require publication of a firm
schedule for a given academic
year much earlier than we have
previously done.”
Several necessary steps are out
lined, including;

‘‘The development of and adherence to a strict time table in
the preparation and publication
of the schedule.
•

“A firm policy, once it has
published, of preventing
changes or alterations in the
•

been

schedule

except for the

compelling reasons.”

most

Dr. Ketter indicates the problem is that departments do not
know who their faculty members
will be and thus do not know
exactly what courses will be
taught. He said that a depart-

ment cannot predict all its course
offerings, but can predict a large
percentage. In addition, he hopes
there will be no major changes
in the schedule as in the past—that the only changes will be the
addition of a section or course.

Lengthy procedure
Another difficulty of pre-registration is that it is a very
lengthy procedure. In the present

system, which lakes approximate-

pulled manually and students are
notified by mail whether or not
their registration is complete.
In this time there are more
closings and more schedules that
cannot be completed. According
to Mrs. Haensly, assistant director of Admissions and Reeofds,
there is not enough space available for every course that every
student wants.

To facilitate both pre-registration and registration, a computer
system is being planned for use
in either the second semester of
the 1968-69 academic year or the
first semester of the 1969-70 academic year. This will replace the
present system of finding class
cards manually.
This system will consist of at
least 30 visual display terminals
half for in-person registration
and the other half for phone-in
registration. An operator at each
terminal will key the student’s
number and the courses he has
chosen. Then this information
will be shown on the screen.
Once the student is registered,
the information is stored in the
computer. This system eliminates
handling the cards.
—

Option reserved
Working on the design is a
task force composed of persons
from the Data Processing Center,
and representatives from various
offices of the student services department. The task force will report to the advisory portion of
the task force and then will report on their progress to a University-wide

policy-making com-

mittee.
Mr. Raymond Chamberlain, Associate Director of the Data Processing Center, said that there will
be some initial implementation
problems, but as problems develop, the system will be refinde. The system will be used
as a “tool to facilitate the regis-

tration process.”

Registration
WOOS

Since this photograph of fall
registration line a few years
ago, procedures have been

streamlined

somewhat; much
improvement is still necessary.

Mr. Chamberlain indicated that
in other institutions where computer systems are being used,
the student has little choice in
his scheduling. However, he said
that at this university: “Basically,
generally speaking, the student’s
time-honored option to determine
his schedule will be reserved.”
He added: “The system has the
full support of the administration.”

MILLBROOK, N.Y.—Dr. Timothy

Leary,

advocate of the use of

to face charges stemming rom a n;
during the weekend.
Five charges were placed against him: conspiracy to violate the
penal law by use of dangerous drugs; conspiracy to permit the
crime of a criminal nuisance; conspiracy to permit the crime of
solicitation. All are misdemeanors.
BUFFALO—About 300 demonstrators burned a Russian flag—the third in as many weeks—Sunday to protest the presence of a
U.S. State Department-sponsored exhibit on education in the U.S.S.R.
NEW YORK—When the Vietnam war ends, Governor Rockefeller
plans to have the state ready.
Rockefeller announced Saturday he is appointing a “post Vietnam
study group” of experts on business, finance, labor and education
to consider means of keeping the economy in high gear and providing
jobs, homes and education for returning servicemen.
WASHINGTON —The 90th Congress launched “getaway week"
today hoping to wind up the work of the 1967 session in five hectic
days.
Congressional leaders, who talked last summer of being home
by Labor Day, are planning an all-out drive to end the current sessioh
Friday.
SANA —Yemeni republican forces using Soviet tanks and artillery
declared today they have driven off royalist troops that tried to
capture the capital city’s two airports.
Republican radio broadcasts also confirmed that royalists had
surrounded “some parts" of the city and announced that almost every
man in Sana had been armed with an automatic weapon.
Royalist accounts of the fighting differed sharply.

WASHINGTON —The Justice Department’s plan to set up a
special unit to speed prosecution of those who violate draft laws
left it unclear today just who would be affected and how.
Despite a joint weekend statement by Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark
and draft Director Lewis B. Hershey, differences appeared to remain
as to just what violations would bring prosecution and who would
do the prosecuting.

Russians seek rapport
with American students
“Personal contact is the best
means for establishing good relations,” declared Ivan Ivanov,
director

U.S.S.R.

of the Education
exhibit. This personal
—

contact was established at a reception held for the Russian educators currently in Buffalo as
part of the Soviet-American Cultural Exchange Program.

The exhibit is on display in the
Assembly Hal] of Memorial Auditorium until Dec. 24.
Dr Ivanov is Professor of Russian and Soviet history at Lenin
Institute of Pedagogical Studies
in Moscow. Commenting on picketing by Ukranian nationalist
groups, Dr. Ivanov said: “We
shan’t think it representative of
Buffalo. We don’t even like to
speak about it.” He later commented: “We are not going to

hold what the Ukranian extremists have done against the Americans.”
“We’ve had no chance to look
around the University, and we
would like to have more contact with the students.” He
termed the reception the exhibit has received in Buffalo
“very nice and friendly.” The
Russian educators would “like
to meet with State University of
Buffalo students,” but there are
no scheduled activities.
While in Buffalo, Dr. Ivanov
visited “schools, colleges and
the University." He commented:
“The real American people are
just what we’re meeting here.”
After leaving Buffalo, the exhibit will travel to Columbus,
Ohio, and then will return to the
Soviet Union in February.

Opening Union building
Open Forum is organized to discuss on Ridge Lea scheduled
mutual problems of faculty, students
An Open Forum of “interested
students and faculty” to discuss
“all matters of mutual concern”
is scheduled for 3 p.m. today in
the Millard Fillmore Room.
The forum, sponsored by the
Student Senate, Graduate Student
Association, Millard Fillmore Student Association and the Faculty
Senate Executive Committee, is
a result of action taken by the
Executive Committee pro tem of
the Faculty Senate Saturday.
A resolution adopted by that
body Saturday called for “an
open discussion with interested
students and faculty on all matters of mutual concern which are

presently before the University.”

A committee chaired by Alan R.

Andreasen, of the Social Sciences
and Administration faculty, was
charged with making arrangements for the Open Forum and
for Thursday’s Faculty Senate
meeting.
Also named to the committee
were Dr. Thomas Connolly, Eng-

lish Department; Dr. Richard A.
Powell, DDS, Dentistry; Mr.
Howard Strauss, English Department, and Dr. Robert H. Rossberg, Education.
Representatives of the three
student governments met with
the “arrangements committee”

Sunday

to

plan

today’s Open

Forum.
Todd Miller, president of the
Debate Society will co-chair the
forum along with a faculty member, yet to be named.
The decision to hold an open
forum was unanimously approved
by the Executive Committee. According to Dr. Adolph Homburger, the forum was called “to accomplish a better understanding
of the mutual hopes, desires and
expectations of faculty and students.” He also said he was “very
much in favor of continuing contact” between the four representative bodies.

Cafeteria service at the Ridge
Lea Campus Union Building, 4236
Ridge Lea Blvd., is expected to
begin Dec. 15, according to Mr.
William F, Doemland, Director
of the Office of Planning and

Development.

Mr, Doemland described the
cafeteria facilities of the new
building, which consists of a main
dining hall and two adjacent dining rooms, as being very similar
to those of Norton Hall. Menus
were also described as similar.

The recreation
Ridge

now

room of the
Lea Campus building is
open. Offering pool, table

tennis, chess and card playing
facilities, it is open from 9 a.m.
to 8 p.m., Monday through Friday.

The scheduled opening of the

Food

Service

Area

has

been

moved ahead three times, first
from Oct. 15 to Nov. 15, later to

Dec. 1, and finally to Dec.
the present date.

15,

The reason for the late opening
is a delay in the shipping and
installation of kitchen equipment,
according to Mr. Doemland. Since
the beginning of the semester,
students at the Ridge Lea campus had to obtain their food from
vending machines or return to
the Main St. campus to eat.
Additional facilities planned
for the building are an infirmary,
a student lounge and two rooms
which may serve as study areas
or meeting places, in which case
they will be available by reservation.

�P«f* Four

Th

•

Spectrum

Tuesday, December 12, 1947
f

Harmony or discord?

a

Many of the faculty were particularly perturbed about
the students who walked in on their senate meeting last week.
Many students were perturbed about closed senate meetings.
If the action by students displayed a flagrant disregard
for Faculty Senate rules, it also displayed deep concern over
crucial University policies. Many of the faculty are filled
with and motivated by equal concern.
that the otner is interested too. It is time for expression,
dialogue and sound decisions, not by students or faculty
alone, but by both together.
Today’s open discussion, sponsored by the Executive
Committee of the Faculty Senate, in cooperation with the
Student Association, the Graduate Student Association and
the Millard Fillmore College Student Association, is an indication that there can indeed be cooperation between these
two vital groups in the academic community.
But this does not mean that all is well at the University,
for this is only a beginning. It is recognition of the fact
that students and faculty alike must have a voice in the
affairs of our community.
If today’s meeting is successful, if there is a meaningful
exchange and mutual respect, if there is some accomplishment, we will have taken a great stride forward. Last week’s
walk-in at the Faculty Senate meeting will not have been
a wasted effort.
If, on the other hand, the meeting today is an insincere
gesture aimed at appeasing disgruntled groups on this campus, we are no better off than we were before the abortive
faculty meeting.
From the activities and expressions of various faculty
members and students, we think that there is no sham
intended. But the best intentions on the part of some do not
insure the cooperation of all.
There may still be many faculty members who are
unwilling to involve students in what they consider their
sphere of activity. This is unfortunate, for if that attitude
prevails, there is a real possibility of a growing dichotomy
in faculty-student relations.
We must also give some thought to the motives of
students. If students plan to obstruct, they serve neither
their own interests nor those of the University as a whole.
Anarchy on this campus is not a welcome prospect, and it
will not be tolerated by thoughtful persons whether they be
students or faculty.
It remains for us, then, to continue in the spirit of
today’s open discussion to the time when the University is
governed by a body that consists of students and faculty,
when both offer their points of view to the scrutiny of each,
and all contribute to the intelligent and enlightened formulation of University policy.
We would caution all groups involved, however, not to
offer conciliation in place of cooperation, but conciliation
and cooperation. Obstinacy and anarchy must be replaced
by congeniality and synergy.
The choice for the faculty and students is clear; Will
we work together for the betterment of all, or will we fail
to work together to the detriment of many? Will we choose
harmony, or will we have discord?

Evaluation can be asset
The Course and Teacher Evaluation Committee is now
preparing a 250-page undergraduate course evaluation booklet to be distributed early next semester. This first booklet
will include all courses in the Natural Science and Mathematics Faculty, the Social Sciences and Administration Faculty, and the Arts and Letters Faculty.

Although a few of the faculty balked at the idea, most
generally view the evaluation as helpful and informative.
Many faculty members have cooperated in full to aid in the
completion of this initial project.
The course evaluation booklet is a welcome compilation.
It will give students an idea of what to expect from any of
a number of courses. Hopefully, students will be better able
to select courses of their liking and avoid the rush on drop
and add day.

In a university as large as this, it is often difficult for
students and faculty to communicate on matters of education. The evaluation will give students an opportunity to
criticize or praise, comment and make suggestions about the
courses they take. Thoughtful student comments on the
nature of a multitude of courses can aid in an effort to make
courses more valuable and more worthwhile.
We are looking forward to a fair evaluation that is designed to improve academic standards. We congratulate
those on the committee who have undertaken the task and
congratulate faculty members for their aid.
The continued supplementing of the evaluation can
fead to better student-faculty communication with an
eye toward even higher academic standards.
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Arkansas Senator J. William Fulbright spoke for
a lot of us Friday in debate on the Senate floor.
Even if the war is won, he said, “we would still
have fought an immoral and unnecessary war. We
would still have passed up opportunities which, if
taken when they arose, would have spared us and
the Vietnamese the present ordeal.”
Answering a charge by Sen. Thomas Dodd
(D-Conn.) that the administration had yielded an
“extravagant degree of freedom of speech” to war
dissenters, Fulbright countered.
“I am not the slightest bit grateful to the administration for my freedom of speech. That freedom is an inalienable right which the American
people reserved to themselves when they established
a constitutional government.
“When the government abstains from suppressing dissent it is doing nothing more than complying
with one of the explicit conditions of its constitutional trust. That is not a thing for which gratitude
is owed.”
Fulbright further charged that all the U. S. is
demonstrating in Vietnam is its “willingness and
ability to use its B52s, its napalm and all the other
ingenious weapons of counterinsurgency to turn a
small country into a charnel house.”
The war betrayed America’s “own past and its
own promise,” fhe Senator said.
This week’s second award goes to Sen. Eugene
McCarthy (D-Minn.), for blasting the administration’s “deceptive calls for unity.”
In a speech to Concerned Democrats, he said:
“In recent months the postmaster general has
been making speeches asking for party unity while
postal service deteriorates. The secretary of agriculture has been denouncing protest while the
parity index of farm prices has been declining.
“The secretary of interior . . called for unity
in the party while problems of pollution continue to
grow more serious. The secretary of labor has complained about the way the press treats the administration . . . while the copper strike goes into its
fifth month.
“The secretary of state calls for an end to criticism while refusing to appear in public hearings
before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee of
his own party.”
Lt. General Lewis B. Hershey on the one hand
issues a recommendation for local draft boards to
conscript those who interfere with recruiting activities and, on the other hand, complains that
more than 50% of the draft cards turned in are
not really draft cards at all.
Johnson says he will travel anywhere at any
time to bring the war to an end while the State
Department takes pains to reassure the South Vietnamee officials that we will not talk with the Viet
Cong. And while LBJ throws a $60,000 wedding in
the White House.
Robert Strange MacNamara is leaving for the
World Bank, which isn’t so strange after all. UN
Ambassador Arthur Goldberg wants out. Perhaps
he too has had his fill of trying to explain the administration’s incomprehensible policy.
It’s tear gas and clubs and bloody skulls on
America’s streets; napalmed bodies burnt beyond
recognition or use in Vietnamese hamlets.
So while hypocrisy runs rampant and disorder
is the day and nights without sleep creep over
will the nation survive the insanity of napalm, tear
gas, bombs and war will it end with stifled dove
calls the hawks beatnig feathers genocidicy? Peace.
.

*

Morality: individual experience'
To the Editor:

The discussion on the Dow-CIA issue and the
larger problems of Vietnam, napalm, genocide, have
reached the stage where one can, broadly speaking,
distinguish two groups; Those who believe the
issue is Dow recruiting—period—and those who
believe Dow recruiting implies a moral stand on
Vietnam, etc., and, if perhaps only as a symbolic
gesture, ought to be prevented by all possible

means, since Vietnam, etc., is immoral.

Morality is basically an individualistic experiand intelligent people can differ
on issues like death penalties and birth control.
Something that is immoral in an absolute sense—at any place, at any time, under any circumstance
—is difficult to conceive, but the integrity of those
who believe that Vietnam, etc., is precisely such an
issue of absolute immorality cannot be questioned.
What can be questioned is their apparent con-

ence. Reasonable

viction that it cannot be conceived that others may
disagree and not find it absolutely immoral. At
best, this is a lack of imagination; at worst a willful neglect of the evidence and pedantic disregard
for others’ good faith. Indeed, when an issue is
concerned that is not only absolutely immoral, but
that also cannot conceivably be viewed differently
by others, drastic action such as obstruction can
be defended. In the present case, such obstruction
—which by its nature is violent—would show a
blatant disregard for the interests of others and a
blatant denial of their good faith, integrity, and
intelligence.

To insist upon the right of obstruction while at
the same time moving heaven and earth to prevent
effective countermeasures adds an element of
cowardice that I find difficult to swallow. Fortunately, such problems need not arise. I hope that
common sense and tolerance will prevail so that,
in fact, it will not arise.
John C. G. Boot
The Spectrum is published twice-weekly
Tuesday and Friday
during the regular
—

—

every

academic

the State University of New York at Buffalo,
3435 Main Street, Buffalo. New York 14214. Offices
are located at 355 Norton Hall. Circulation: 19,000.
year at

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dent Press Association and the Associated Collegiate
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Represented for national advertising by National Educational Advertising Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave.,
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�ft

t-f

a

Tuesday, December 12, 1967

..

mo 5!

ft X

The Spectrum

the Shadow knows'

BELOW OLYMPUS

To the Editor;

By Interlandi

Paf*

the sham

Irrational left

This letter is to the Cliche-Mongers:
You should have been

Five

by Martin Guggenheim

there, when they busted

Last Tuesday night SDS and the Resistance and

BnoiTgfi pimple-laced Messiahs engulfed the
Wednesday Faculty Meeting to save the whole
universe. Such droves of unshaven, long-haired
paranoids in search of Christships poured in that
you would have thought it was the Apocalypse.
Anyway, once the little formality of squelching
any opposing voices was taken care of, and the

i-affiliated. interested members of the Univer-

sity community met in Norton Hall to discuss tactics for the Faculty-Senate meeting scheduled for
the next day. Strong words and militant plans were
heard during the long meeting. Many were advocating disruption and obstruction of the Faculty
meeting.
Several members of the faculty then appeared
before the group. Among these were George Hochfield, Newton Carver and Bruce Jackson. It was
suggested by these people that to disrupt or in
any other way show contempt for the spirit of
the Faculty-Senate would indeed be a poor tactic,
especially considering the quantity of lobbying
and discussion which had occurred during the
preceding weeks. In essence, these three men were
asking for a chance to prove themselves and the
majority of the faculty—each of these men had put
a considerable effort into the forthcoming meeting
and they did not want to see their work wasted.
A few of the students were not aware of the
many of
work which several people had done
the students, however, were aware of it. Their
point was simply that the Faculty-Senate does not
have the moral right to decide issues germane to

home-grown rudeness of it all had forced President
Meyerson and most of the Faculty to go home, the

Faculty Meeting (minus Faculty) got underway.

You should have been there, it was sublime. The
tenor of things wasn’t just anarchic, mind you, at
least not at the beginning. No, it was organized
bigotry, a conscientious small-mindedness to warm

the cockles of any Klu Klux Klansman’s heart. With
further ado, a pro-tem regime of messianic rudeness was established by the harbingers of “enlightenment."
It was then that the two-bit saviors started getting out of hand. The slogans and sanctimony
flowed like milk and honey, but it was too much of
a good thing. Soon everyone, with his hippyness
at stake, was twitching and fairly foaming at the
mouth to prove he or she was more liberal than
everyone else. The meeting had all the symptoms
of a 100-ring circus, until the most self-imposing
Messiah of them all stood up and told us he was
"going to clarify the issues here.” Nice try. After
Mr, Clarify was done, reductio ad absurdum was
soon to follow. The cameo role of Absurdum was
played by Susan What’s-Her-Name, the anarchist’s
anarchist. She said we are all capable of policing
ourselves. How pleasantly trite, Susan; I guess
Susan would consider her and her comrades’ action
of stopping a Faculty Meeting by force of Egomania
to be a paradigm of self-control.

—

■H-.C.

‘JkfdJtLAtSDt&amp;vM, Ift weetfs Times

the gadfly

by Mark Schneider
Ah, but you really should have been there.
Things got noisier and more rabid: the fully orchestrated epitheting and pre-adolescent philosLet no one misinterpret the goal of activists in whatophising reached a pitch of childishness rarely
achieved before in the long and distinguished ever goes on six days from now when the infamous Dow
history of dictatorial stupidity. Then I left, sort of Chemical Co.
appears on this campus to conduct job intersaddened by the whole thing.

views. Leftists realize that forcing the interviews across the

If you weren’t there you missed something
street to the University Motel will have no effect on the
rather special. You missed hearing ideas calcify
into cliches, opinions harden into weapons, and the conduct of the war. However, militant obstruction of Dow’s
act of outshouting opposing viewpoints called the
dramatize the fact that this nation faces its
“force of enlightenment.” But for those of you who recruiting will
were there, and especially those of you who had greatest moral crisis since the slavery dispute, that the
starring roles in that nervous little psychodrama, institutions of American
democracy have failed abysmally to
let me offer my sincerest congratulations. You
confront this crisis, and that these institutions, i.e., the three
have raised standards of hysteria, ignorance, hypocrisy and sheer bigotry to an all-time high (no pun branches of government, the military, the press, the corporaintended). And just think, all this ignorance was
spawned in spite of a tremendous handicap: all tions and, it seems, even the university, can thus lay only
this took place in an institution of Learning.
scant claims to legitimacy.
youth is unreasonable. The fact
If the war in Vietnam has exLawrence Kearney
posed the American soul in its
is that American democratic
essential amorality, Dow Chemprocess, as represented by such
ical has become the flaming symreasonable men as Martin Meyerbol of all that refuses to recogson. and such reasonable institunize human ethics in that soul.
tions as the faculty senate, are
“It would obviously be impossible
being unreasonable when they
To the Editor:
for me to ring up Bob McNamara agree with IBM’s president that
During the registration period for the spring and say ‘Sorry, fella, we are not
“The way to alter the Vietnam
semester, we of the Business School were faced with going to do any of your dirty
policy is through the election
the problem of too tew electives available for all work,’ said Herbert Doan, Dow process, and not by demonstratthe business students. However, through the conpresident. Obviously because Mr.
ing.” The election process gave
certed efforts of Dean James Schindler and our ad- Doan’s profit is at stake, and that
us a man who speaks of law and
visor Mr. Edward Smith, the problem was quickly is all America has let this poor
order while he violates every inalleviated. As a result of the addition of several man ever see. Doan also said he ternational agreement relevant to
courses and sections, all of us are now registered could not conceive of a time Vietnam. Congressional criticism
for the required number of elective hours.
when Dow would not supply the it is not worth the effort (too
government with weapons. Not
bad the VC don’t quit). The Sunew
of
Business
Administration
School
We, the
preme Court refuses to hear a
Student Council, would like to gratefully thank even, one suspects, if the weapchallenge to the war’s legality,
ons were more explicity genothese two fine men for their help and concern.
cidal than napalm.
Selective Service reclassifies dissenters and universities proclaim
School of Business Administration
In fact, Dow does supply the
“Not for us to judge” which
Student Council
government with weapons whose
translates “Our counrty, right or
wrong.’
intent makes napalm seem innocent. These are herbicides (clean
The university is but a link in
value-free name) such as Esteron
the national institutional chain.
R 245 OS and Formula 40 R
To the Editor:
As
which are dumped on jungle
Ellsworth Bunker knew that
areas from airplanes for defoliahe had personal corporate interI think building a golf course of two-thirds tion and crop
destruction. Both ests to protect in Dominican Reof the new Amherst campus is a great idea. Not chemicals are by Dow’s admispublic 1965, so Martin Meyerson
only will it lessen the nostalgia and homesickness
sion harmful to man, often fatal knows he has research grants to
of the people who will be moving from the present to
beasts and certainly fatal to protect in Buffalo 1967. The peocampus, but also will attract some prominent facany plant. Cases of accidents in
ple in Albany no doubt, are
ulty like Arnold Palmer and Gay Brewer. If ever Vietnam
with these chemicals as counting on him to keep America
beer is served in the rathskeller of the new cam- reported by
Yale biologist Arthur safe for Dow recruiters and cappus, it will become a perfect 19th hole.
Galston are too numerous to reitalism, no matter how base
peat; these accidents invariably these institutions be. I submit
Keep up the good work, planners!
affect most directly the ill, aged, that Dow Chemical, which profits
Nicholas Striach very young and civilian
farmers. by napaiming innocents, is as
base nad morally bankrupt an
P.S. Someone told me Martin Meyerson is really Their effect on the ecology of the
South may be disastrous.
institution as slavery, and its acDoc Urich in disguise. Is this true?
tivities have brought us to face
“Defoliation” is an impersonal an overwhelming conundrum.
Crying "Academic freedom” is
Writers: Please be brief. Letters should not exceed 300 words, killer. It is the techniQUe Of gCII 0
should bo signod and contain ttie address and tolophono number cide, and the valuing of what
like the slave owner’s “freedom
of tho writer.
.
.
remains of democratic process in
of property.” Like Garrison, we
Pen names or initials may bo used, it requested, but anmust accept that the time to say
onyomus letters are never used, the Spectrum reserves tho right America Over the UVCS Of Vietto edit or delete, but the intent of tetters will not be changed.
namese peasants and American “No” to inhumanists is now.

Business School grateful

”

Welcome, golf course!

-

_

.

.

.

students.
The major problem with this philosophy is that
it necessarily shows contempt for all of the faculty
—it necessarily negates the work of those people
sincerely and deeply dedicated to the maintenance
of the rights of students.
Many of the students who entered the Senate
meeting honestly believed that it was already
legally voted open; in any case, that is what happened to me. There should not have been a
single student in this University who would have
allowed that meeting to continue were it voted
closed. In spite of the by-laws of the Faculty
Senate and in spite of the constitutionality of the
vote, students should and must have the right to
equally participate on any issue directly related
to his welfare. If one does not hold this premise,
he will have great difficulty communicating with
most students.
But irrational, obnoxious acts merely to show
a lack of faith for the faculty is a poor way to
change things. The leadership of the Left on this
campus has been traditionally weak, at least for
the past three years. They seem to feel that
everybody and everything are their enemy. They
are so frustrated in their efforts to change what
they do not like, that they are willing to make
noise whenever possible. This should be prevented.
Not all members of the faculty are enemies; not
all people who think slightly different are enemies.
If we allow the Senate to meet at all, then we must
allow them to make their own errors. The moment
they make such errors, we may act in good conscience. What was the ostensible purpose to invade

that meeting? If it was to participate and witness
the meeting, why should we not have given them
the chance to so vote? It seems that the purpose
was just to be obnoxious; it was successful.
The faculty had not yet hanged itself; it may
well have done so; we took away the rope. It’s
time that those desiring change, and not merely
noise, grew up and thought about consequences
before acting.
There was, of course, wrong reaction by the
faculty and administration. About seventy-five
faculty and a very few administrators stayed afterwards to talk with the students. They had the
strength to turn the other cheek. The rest, I fear,
were too quick to find an excuse for leaving,
rather than talking with lowly students.
The quickest man to leave and the one who
should be above such insults was our President,
It’s wonderful to know that we have such a concerned leader that he takes advantage of every
chance to speak with students. Mr. Meyerson's
new role of Campus Parliamentarian is most unfortunate. As with every issue since he came to
this campus, he is vague and unwilling to state his
position. He owes us the respect to say something,
if only to let us know he thinks.
Mr. Meyerson has hid behind the guise of
responsibility to everyone in not making a stand on
anything. More realistically, it seems, he does
not like to make enemies. He is failing. As a human being and a member of the academic community he is obligated to make certain public
commitments. If he doesn't stop playing politician
soon, he should expect more trouble and more

trouble and more trouble

.
.

.

Tha Spectrum's pages for

Editorials

&amp;

Opinions

It is the policy of The Spectrum to report the
news fully and impartially in the news pages,
to express the opinions of the newspaper only
in the editorial pages and to publish all sides

of important controversial issues.
Without

expression,

freedom

of eapress&gt;on is meaningless.

�The Spectrum

Pag* Six

Readers ’writings

Tuesday, December 12,

Dow recruitii

Faculty split over
obstruction policies

Defeat of new faculty by-laws urged
To tho Editor:
This letter might be unnecessary if the head
of the Bison were away from its behind and lookthe buffalo which aspires to be the dinosaur of
American universities
for the undergraduates,
faculty, and administrators of the State University
of Buffalo—what has happened must be stated. If
it is not stated, thought through and acted upon,
we can expect to castrate the whole animal.
—

Last Tuesday, a meeting of faculty members
from the Faculty of Social Sciences and Administration voted to admit six graduate students to be
present at their proceedings. What needs to be
said now is, A) who the students were; B) why
they were there; C) what was and was not accomplished, and D) what all of that bodes for the fu-

ture.

A) We, the students who were present, are the
Executive Committee of the Graduate Philosophy
Association (GPA) and delegates appointed by that
committee.
B) The students were at the meeting in order
to present for ratification five amendments to the
proposed By-Laws of the Faculty of Social Sciences

and Administration.
The amendments are:
(1) Include within the faculty all graduate students either teaching or with a Master’s degree,
in addition to undergraduate representatives
such as, e.g., those elected by upperclassmen to
the Student Senate within the various units involved.

The Provost shall be appointed by the faculty after consultation with the President and the
Policy Committee of the faculty.
(2)

(3) Department chairmen and deans shall be appointed by the faculty of the units concerned
without external political interference (e.g., the
Provost, the President, et al.).
(4) The Policy Committee shall be composed of
one representative from each unit elected by all
tenured faculty members of the unit plus five
members elected by the faculty as a whole and
three members elected by the graduate students
of the faculty. There should also be graduate
student representation on the subcommittee assisting the Policy Committee.

The Grievance Committee shall be composed
of three faculty members and one graduate student elected by the graduate students of the
(5)

faculty.

On Nov. 29, the GPA approved those amendments for presentation to the fore-mentioned faculty meeting. The purpose of the amendments is
two fold: First, to bring both undergraduates and
graduates into the policymaking activity of the
Faculty of Social Sciences and Administration as
policy-forming agents; second, to bring undergraduates, graduates, and faculty together as the primary agents of policy formation. This redefinition
of the agency of policy formation implies redefining the position of the administration from its present primary position to a subordinate position.

Moreover, this redefinition of the administration
reverberates throughout the State University system; for example, the second amendment contradicts the present procedure for appointing any Pro-

vost.

C) What was and

was not accomplished needs to
understood, first, in terms of what was requested
of the faculty and what the faculty granted. On the
one hand, the GPA requested both that Tuesday’s
meeting be open to all graduate students and faculty, and that the Executive Committee of the
GPA, with appointed delegates, be admitted to the
meeting as representatives of the GPA, in order to
present, explain, and defend the five amendments.
On the other band, the faculty present on Tuesday
granted admission to the six students, as observers
and respondents to possible questions about the
amendments. Especially in the light of the reactions in the Faculty Senate meeting of last Wed
nesday, to student presence in traditionally restricted meeUngs, the two stages of the vote to
admit the six students need to be noted: That the
students could observe the meeting was passed
unanimously; that the students could participate
in the meetings by introducing the amendments,
was defeated by a vote of 37 to 33, but a motion
that the students could participate in the meeting
by responding to questions was also passed unanibe

mously.

What was and was not accomplished needs to
be understood, secondly, in terms of the action
taken regarding the amendments, when the stu-

1947

dents had taken seats in the meeting hall and the
amendments were taken up as official business. In
brief, Chairman Warren Bennis suggested that the
deeper issues implied in the five amendments be
considered at length by all of the undergraduates,
graduates, and faculty of the Faculty of Social Sciences and Administration. This suggestion led to
the following motion which, after ample discussion
and confusion of parliamentary and substantive
issues, was unanimously passed by the faculty: The
graduate student amendments shall be referred to
the Policy Committee which shall appoint a subcommittee to deal with the issues raised by the
amendments, in effective consultation with graduate and undergraduate groups representing all
units.

A sign of what was not accomplished is the fact
that the “Policy Committee” mentioned in the
above motion is the very same Policy Committee
which amendment No. 4 is designed to restructure from its structure as proposed in the by-laws.
What was not accomplished, therefore, was the
presentation, explanation, and defense of the
amendments as a formal motion. What was accomplished, however, was that the faculty and administrators demonstrated two facts for themselves:
1) The exclusion of students from the formation of
policy which determintes the lives of those students, is itself an ungrounded policy without the
unanimous consent of those who consciously or unconsciously employ it; and, 2) The exclusion of students, is a practice which actually destroys the
very relationships of “effective consultation” which
that practice is supposed to help engender and preserve. It need be no secret that members of the
meeting expressed verbally and facially, both during the meeting and to the graduate students after
the meeting, shock at the presence of students in
their meeting, embarrassment at the intransigency
and indecision of their own peers and bewilderment
in the flood of problems from a Pandora’s box
opened for them by a handful of tenacious students.
D) Now we can see that what all of that bodes
for the future is a long struggle—through the here
and now of our education—for taxation with representation.

We have already seen that those five amendthe head of the
State University system. Yet that confrontation
will defeat itself unless we—the enthused or resentful student reader of this letter, in common
with Professor Kurtz, Professor Friedenberg, Department Chairmen, Dean Snell, President Meyerson—come to agreement together about what our
purpose is.

ments imply confrontation with

We have already seen that what happened at
Tuesday’s meeting stands both apart from and
together with what happened at Wednesday’s meeting as examples of the revolutionary spirit of education building within our University. Yet that revolutionary spirit will lead to its own ruin unless
we—Faculty Senate, Student Association, GSA, undergraduates, graduates, faculty, administrators—meet, articulate, and realize the communality of
the struggle to be educated human beings, the community which is now diffused into apathetic absence, polemic privacy, blind subservience, resent-

ful silence and intimidated indecision.
Finally, we, the students who were admitted to
the meeting of the Faculty of Social Sciences and
Administration, wish to address ourselves directly
to the topic of the proposed by-laws for that faculty, of which eur department is a member. This
letter is only one phase of our effort to prevent
those by-laws from being ratified. We stand against

those by-laws, even as a one-year temporary experience, because that experience will perpetuate our
past, and still present, experience—that is, the administration will remain the primary agent of policy formation, while the faculty is subordinated and
the students are excluded. We urge the undergraduates, the graduates, the faculty and the administrators of the Faculty of Social Sciences and Administration to work to defeat the proposed bylaws, so that we can, then, re-open the question of
the policy-making structure of that faculty for common consideration by representatives of all of the
affected members, in the light of those deeper issues toward which Provost Bennis is trying to persuade our attention.

Two petitions
one declaring the intention to “disrupt n 0n .
violently,” the other to “block access and in other ways obstruct" recruiting activities of Dow Chemical
have been signed by a total of
21 faculty members.
One petition states.
“We the undersigned faculty members of the State University
of Buffalo declare it to be our intention to disrupt nonviolently the
recruitment process of the Dow Chemical Company. We do not intend to interfere with any public speeches which they might wish to
deliver. We ask that no disciplinary action be taken against participating faculty members and that the nature of any proposed disciplinary action be made known to both students and faculty in ad_i_

—

—

vance.

“We request and expect that no police or other civil authorities
shall be called upon during such a demonstration unless it is clear
that serious bodily injury will occur. We pledge ourselves to the
principles of nonviolent civil disobedience, and urge all participants
to act in accordance with those principles.

Moral issue

“We shall undertake this action even though it is the will of
some of the representative bodies of this campus that the Dow Chemical Company recruit on the campus. We do this for it is apparent
to us that the use of napalm in Vietnam and, more generally, the war
in Vietnam is an issue of such moral and political gravity that it is
imperative to cease passive complicity in the prosecution of the war.

Hare, Associate Professor, Philosophy
Kenneth Barber, Assistant Professor, Philosophy
Charles Pailthorp, Assistant Professor, Philosophy
Andrew McLaughlin, Lecturer, Philosophy
Robert L. Martin, Assistant Professor, Philosophy
Daphne Hare, Instructor, Biophysics
John D. Milligan, Associate Professor, History
Dale Riepe, Professor, Philosophy
Mitchell Harwitz, Associate Profesor, Economics
Peter

Second petition

The second petition states:
“We the undersigned members of the faculty of the State University of Buffalo declare it to be our intention to block access and in
other ways obstruct recruiters from the Dow Chemical Company and
the Central Intelligence Agency should they appear on our campus.
We demand that no disciplinary action be taken against students engaged in this activity that is not also taken against us, and that the
nature of any proposed action be made known to both students and
faculty in advance.
“We request and expect that no police or other civil authorities
shall be called upon during such a demonstration unless it is clear
to us that death or serious bodily injury which he cannot prevent
or deflect will occur. We shall ourselves be the judges of such dangers. We pledge ourselves to the principles of nonviolent civil and
academic disobedience, and urge our student colleagues to act in accordance with those principles.
Donald C. Mikulecky, Assistant Professor, Biophysics
Peter Nichols, Associate Professor, Biochemistry
Rofard Boddy, Lecturer, Economics
Robert Creely, Professor, English
Robert Hass, Instructor, English
Jene LaRue, Assistant Professor, Classics
Elinor Lerner, Lecturer, Mathematics
George R. Levine, Associate Professor, English
Neil Schmitz, Assistant Professor, English
Jeremy Taylor, Administrative Assistant, History Dept.
Elwin H. Powell, Associate Profesor, Sociology
Sidney M. WUlhelm, Associate Professor, Sociology

SDS
andMOB invite
Dow to forum on war
Students for a Democratic Society and the Student Mobilization Committee have invited Dow
Chemical Company representa-

tives to attend an open larum.

In a telegram sent Wednesday
to Mr. James Pearce at the Midland Michigan office of the Dow

David Cornberg

Chemical Company, SDS and Student MOB asked Dow to discuss
Dow’s role In the war in Vietnam. The forum will be arranged
immediately upon hearing from
Dow.
SDS will sponsor a forum on
“The University and the War,”
in the Millard Fillmore Boom,
at 3;30 p.m. Friday.
Discussion will center on the
question of whether this University is “a politically neutral, isolated community, or whether it
is actively involved in the political-military life of the country.”
There will be several outside
speakers, and possibly speakers
from the Administration and faculty, according to an SDS spokes-

Donald Sullivan

Outside speakers include Pro-

Joseph Burgess

James Hansen
James Spencer
Paul Piccone

man.

lessor Douglas Dowd of Cornell.
Professor Dowd is past chairman
of the Cornell Economics Depart
ment. He was active in the Cornell dispute over Cornell’s Aerospace Lab in Buffalo. He attended the war trials in Sweden this
summer. He also took part in the
sit-in at the Pentagon Oct. 21-12
Also from Cornell wiH be lira
Heitiwitt, a graduate student who
has done much research into
chemical-biological warfare.
PePte Henig of New York City
will speak on involvement of universities in general. He is a member of SDS and the North American Congress on Latin America.
He will hold a workshop Satut
day morning on “How to find
out what the involvement of a
university is.”
SDS is presently doing research on State University of
Buffalo defense contracts. Information, plus bibliographies and
guide sheets will be distributed
at the forum so that “people can
verify information for them
selves.”

�.

Tuesday,

December 12, 1967

The Spectrum

-r»

Pape Sevan

Senate asked to bar armed forces recruiting
Hochfield-Baumer resolution
proposes ban until Hershey's
recommendation is rescinded
*

1

m

-

WlUuk

Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

A resolution barring campus recruitments by the armed forces
will be submitted by Dr. George Hochfield of the English Department
and Dr. William Baumer of the Philosophy Department at a Faculty
Senate meeting Thursday.

If passed, the resolution will bar armed forces recruiters until
until Selective Service Director Hershey’s recommendation, that students interfering with recruiting or selective service procedures be
immediately drafted, is rescinded.
Hershey’s statement deprives students of the right to legal dissent and is in opposition to the open campus principles enunciated in
a previous meeting, Dr. Hochfield told The Spectrum.
Opposing this resolution on the grounds that “the selective
service system and military recruiters are not the same,” is Dr.
Marvin Zimmerman of the Philosophy Department, In a pamphlet he
intends to distribute before Thursday’s meeting, he argues that a
protest against military recruiters on campus will violate the rights
of the students who want to see the recruiters. Although he condemns Hershey and his statement, Dr. Zimmerman believes that
protestors are "wrong in engaging in any kind of physical obstruction” of recruiters, as he asks in the pamphlet, “Has General Hershey
threatened students for protesting the recruiters or protesting the
draft system (Selective Service)?
The Hochfield-Baumer resolution states:
Dr. Stanley J. Segal answers a question from the
floor during the free senate meeting which followed adjournment of the Faculty Senate Meeting Wednesday.

Free senate
meeting

Wisconsin expels 3 in protest dispute
He said it was a unanimous recRobert S. Cohen, Levittown,
Robert Weiland, Flushing,
ommendation of the committee
Y., and William G. Simons, which is made up of four faculty
Larchmont, N. Y., had walked out members.
of the hearing earlier Thursday
after accusing Dean Young of Hearing recessed
being a “flunky" for the UW ad“This has obviously created
antiwar protest on the campus.
ministration.
serious legal entanglements,”
The announcement was made
“Whereas, Messers. Cohen,
Dean Young said. He adjourned
by Law School Dean George Weiland and Simons have comthe hearings until Friday.
Young, acting chairman of the
mitted misconduct in the presQuestioned whether the three
administration section of the stuence of the committee, we find could attend classes if they dedent conduct and appeals comthem guilty of misconduct, and cided to appeal the committee’s
mittee. He said the three could
they are hereby expelled from action, Dean Young replied: “Hell
appeal the ruling.
the University,” Dean Young said. no.”
The hearing before the special
committee was called to decide
whether five University students
should be punished for their
roles in the protests against the
Dr. Richard A. Siggelkow, Vice President for Student Dow Chemical Co. Oct. 18. The
Affairs, warned those who violated published regulations demonstration resulted in a clash
concerning picketing and demonstrations, that they are subbetween students and police that
jecting themselves to possible suspension or expulsion left 70 persons injured.
through appropriate campus judicial bodies, as well as taking
One of the defendants, Mana
the consequences of their own actions as individuals before Lee Jennings of Arlington, Va.,
was not present Thursday. Anoththe law.
He also noted that it is to the credit of our academic
er, Carlos Joly of Baltimore, Md.,
community that it has never had to resort to outside police
did not join in the walkout.
authority and that such action should be considered only as
“The three of us pulled out . .
a last resort.
because we don’t recognize this
He emphasized that the dignity of the Faculty Senate tribunal as anything," Mr. Cohen
was recently violated by thoughtless and irresponsible be
said later. “I have my dignity as
havior of some students. “Our informal investigations to a human being. This kind of proceeding is the exact same thing
date also revealed that a number of the students were unaware of the fact that the senate was still in closed session that goes on in a fascist society.”
proceeding to a motion to consider opening the meeting.”
Published rules and regulations are as follows:
Students demonstrate
Picketing or demonstrating must be orderly at all times
More than 200 shouting, stompand should in no way jeopardize public order or safety or ing sutdents had forced the hearinterfere with the University’s programs.
ings to be postponed Tuesday. SePicketing or demonstrating must not interfere with encurity restrictions were tightened
trances to buildings or the normal flow of pedestrian or Thursday, with even some newsvehicular traffic.
men denied access to the hearing
Students involved in picketing or demonstrating may when they arrived late.
not interfere by mingling with organized meetings or other
assemblies for the purpose of harassment, since this invades
Mr. Simons and Mr. Weiland
the rights of others to assemble and the rights of speakers
were allowed to make brief stateto free expression.
ments, and they called the hearPicketing or demonstrating may not interfere with the
ing “undemocratic, held by adintegrity of the classroom, the privacy of the residence halls,
ministration flunkies who would
or the functioning of the physical plant.
be fired if they didn't find us
Pickets may not exhort others to join in the picketing, guilty.”
nor harass passersby nor participants in any other University
program.
Mr. Cohen then got up to speak
“Responsible debate and responsible political action
and called Young a “flunky of the
must still be maintained to change policies within a demoadministration.”
cratic society. Certain current illegal forms of resistance
“I’m not here to listen to your
to
serve only
retard the causes that some individuals seek
tirade,” Dean Young said. “If you
to advance, threatening and irresponsibly distorting the very
continue, you’ll be in contempt
foundations of our traditional freedoms,” he added.
and if you leave, you will be

Three
MADISON, Wis. (UPI)
University of Wisconsin student
leaders were expelled for “misconduct" last week after they
walked out of a stormy hearing
on whether they should be disciplined for their part in a violent

by Joel Klalnman

Whereas, the Faculty recognizes that it is the responsibility of
the entire University community to maintain peace and order on the
campus, that this responsibility rests particularly with the President and other officials of the University, and that the maintenance
of such peace and order is essential to the presence of academic
freedom in all its forms.
Therefore, be it resolved, that when it appears that such peace
and order of the University is endangered or violated, the officials
of the University shall:

—

Pa.;
N.

Protesters warned

.

subject to penalties.”

The three then walked out.

•

endeavor to remove such danger by consutations with the

parties involved;

• consult,
if possible, with the Executive Committees of the
Faculty Senate, the Student Senate, the Graduate Student Association, and the Millard Fillmore College Student Association, or representatives of these bodies, as to the courses of action to be followed;

utilize the University police, members of the University administration, and if it be deemed wise other members of the University Faculty to preserve peace and order;
•

• employ civil authority from beyond the University community
only when all other measures here indicated have failed and when
such use of civil authority is the only remaining means for the protection of persons in this community, such authority to be used to
protect all members of the University community and their guests,
including those exercising their right of dissent;

•

ensure that any disciplinary proceedings arising from such

events shall follow the applicable University procedures and satisfy
the requirements of academic and Constitutional due process.

Whereas, Placement and recruitment activities on a university
campus must be justified by their relation to the academic mission
of the University and their enhancement of the educational opportunities available to students; and
Whereas, it is appropriate and necessary for Faculty and students to play a major role in ensuring the academic orientation and
educational relatedness of these activities.
Now, therefore, be it resolved: that the Faculty Senate directs
its Executive Committee to create a Special Committee on Placement
and Recruitment Practices, the Faculty members of which shall be
nominated by the Executive Committee, and to invite to its membership students nominated by the Student Senate, the Graduate Student Association, and the Millard Fillmore College Student Association, and a representative of the Office of Student Affairs. This committee shall recommend policies and advice on the use of University
facilities for placement and recruitment.
Whereas, the Faculty recoginzes that Selective Service Director
Lt. Gen. L. B. Hershey has recommended to the several local Selective Service Boards of the United States that students interfering
with military recruiting or selective service procedures be deprived
of their deferment and subjected to immediate induction into military service, and
Whereas, the Faculty holds that this is a violation of constitutional guarantees and, insofar as it applies to the student's right to
dissent on campus, is an infringement upon the autonomy of college
and university government; and
Whereas, the "open campus” policy of this University is-thereby
violated by the establishment of arbitrary and unconstitutional constraints on the right to dissent.

Now. therefore, be it resolved: that the Faculty of this university condemns this recommendation by Lt. General Hershey and
urges that it be rescinded and, until it is rescinded, recommends
that the use of University facilities for military recruitment be withheld.

�Tuesday, December 12, 1947

The Spectrum

Pag* Eight

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A few short steps away is the answer to all your Xmas Gift
problems. Attend our big GIVE-IN and have a ball shopping.
Think of it! Everything you want for everybody you want to
remember .
from bubble bath to books
from mittens to
mugs
from cards to ceramics
from souvenirs to sport
coats. What a way to beat the Pre-Xmas Blues! Just take a few
giant steps to your University Bookstore
a few more through
the store and you've got it made. You've saved time, temper
and money. P.S. The larger your feel, the sooner you'll arrive.
.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

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...

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‘on Campus”

�V

Tuesday,

December 12, 1967

ON BARBER
SHOP
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The Spectrum

(Cont’d

from P.

1)

of this resolution is to protect

you bar

our due process.

integrity of the University is to
throw those people off campus
who interfere with judicial process then do it. If you are going

other

outside

who wish to be recruited.”
An unidentified student also
refuted Mr. Miller: “If we want
academic freedom; we have to
pare to accept its consequences.
We have to be ready to face
academic freedom we have to
accept its consequences. We have
to fight the illegality of Hershey, not academic freedom. If

Protect due process
He said; ‘*If I sit in, I’m sitting
against the military. Resolution
1 was intended to keep outside
police off campus. The purpose

'

*

...

aca-

Free Senate

”

‘We do
hold academic freedom very highly but without the court system
we cannot have academic freedom. We must decide what is in
danger. If you destroy total free
speech, you destroy the court
system. If you don’t protect due
process of the University you
won’t have due process for all.”
Mr. Miller denied that any student has been re-classified for
activities on campus but declared’ “the threat is imminent.”

if judicial process is protected by barring recruitment
you are interfering with students

from interfering, you must bar
the Selective Service.”

people you lose

demic freedom

“Even

sources

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Zimmerman accuses administration
to bar

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open daily 8 a.m. to 5:45 p.m.
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Prior to this debate, the openevents of Wednesday’s Faculty
Senate meeting and the issue
of a free senate. David Wachtel
of CCS said: ‘‘I think there was
bad timing by students. The idea
of a free senate is very good—-

it opens needed communication
between the students and faculty.

Dr. Paul Kurtz and Dr. Zim-

merman expressed dismay at the
tactics employed by students.

Dr. Kurtz labeled them “reminiscent of storm troopers," but
when pressed by students both
supported the free senate, endorsing the idea of greater representation.

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Debate centered on whether
the declared free senate should
be recognized.

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Dr, Zimmerman asked:
“On
what grounds does Free Senate
have legitimacy in establishing
itself—does it represent a majority? Complaints were raised
that a free senate should be the
consensus of the student body, a
consensus that couldn't be
formed by a few students.

Proposes Congress
Richard Scott, a graduate student, proposed the formation of
a Student Congress to make the

Student Senate a more representative body. Mr. Edelstein rebutted this by stating “The Student Senators do not know each
other now, bringing in more will
not help.”

Discussing apathy of students,
Mr. Wachtel feels that if you
approached any student he
wouldn’t know the name of two
student senators. “It is the responsibility of students to know
his senators, but Student Senators
tors must also get to know the
students, to find out their views.”

Mr. Miller revealed that reference groups are held to hear student opinion, but that no one
comes to meetings. "We try to
make communication, but no one

communicates,” he claimed.

■ V

■ ■ ■

Iflfllttw
I ■ SIII!■

and wrong.

Ironically, by the time participants agreed that lack of student interest was the greatest
problem facing the Student Senate, no more than ten students
were there to hear the verdict.

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�Pag* Tan

The Spectrum

Buffalo State student theater group
to present Russian play. The Dragon'
“The Dragon,” by Russian play
wright Eugene Swartz, has been
selected as the next production
to be presented by Casting Hall,
the student theater organization
at the State University College
from Dee. 14 through Dec. 17 in
Upton Hall Auditorium at the
Elmwood Ave. campus.

“The Dragon,” a satiric fable
in three acts, was written in 1942.
It was originally thought of as
a funny, though severe attack on
Nazi totalitarianism. After a short

run the Stalin government had
it withdrawn from the stage, as
the play came to be viewed as
a satire on the abuses of governauthority in any form.
It was first performed in the
United States at the Phoenix
Theater in New York City in
1962. Dr. Donald J. Savage, chairman of the college’s Department
of Speech and Theater Arts and

director of the performance, saw
it performed by the East Ber-

lin Ensemble (founded by Bertolt Brecht) in Paris, last summer, The Casting Hall producperformance of the play in this
country.

Eugene Swartz, author of “The
Dragon,” is more well known in
Europe than in the United States.

He is the author of the secnairios for two Soviet film masterpieces “Cindrella” and Don Quixote."

Tuesday, December 12, 1967

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The student cast includes Don

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Reilly as Sir Dragon, James Bron
as Lancelot, Carl J. Walters as
the burgomaster, and James Bulger as Charlesmagne.

James Stockman, instructor of

Speech and Theater Arts, is tech-

nical director of the show and

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Rosemary Barney, an undergraduate, is assistant director.

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Curtain time for all performances will be 8:15 p.m.

BUFFALO TEXTBOOK STORES
(across

•

—

•

■

•

•

•

•

3610

•

from

MAIN

Clement Hall)

The Casting Hall production
of “The Dragon” has been entered in competition with productions from other units of the
State University of New York
for a $2,000 touring grant being
offered for the first time this
year. This grant would be used
to defray the expenses of taking
the show to other units of the
State University.

'Chamber Music' is
series of kinky jokes'
by Graham Merchant
Special

to the

Spectrum

undeniably a fault common among amateur directors that they tend to be so absorbed in the individual moment, the particular line, that the total intention of the author is forgotten or ignored.
It is

The result is Robin Herniman’s production of Arthur
Kopit’s “Chamber Music” is that a taut little play dissolves
into a series of (occasionally funny) kinky jokes.

Kopit uses his “black humor”
portrait of a female lunatics’ convention
whose purpose is to
alleviate their persecution neuroses
to attack his audience’s
complacency in the face of the
violent impulse in man. He first
portrays it at a comfortable distance (“Oh, they’re mad!,” we say
laughing at the ugly jokes).
Then he cuts the ground from
under our feet with an admittedly melodramatic act of ritual sacrifice, whose point is hammered
home by the asylum assistant’s
epilogue about how strange these
poor madwomen are, for he imagines that the dead woman is
asleep.
—

—

—

Since this structure was not
apparent in performance
the
final homicide being committed
by one lunatic while the others,
apparently unconcerned, went
about their own business; the
final speech being delivered by
an assistant whose nervous wringing of his hands plainly indicated
which way he was heading
the
audience had to be content with
some more or less satisfactory
character sketches.
—

—

Margot Fein was much the most
successful: As an actress she knew
what she was doing and as a
character she did it. The degree
of “felt” life visible elsewhere
on stage was negligible, although
Judy Richman as Constance Mozart had an appropriate physical
presence and some nice moments.
Even on the chosen level the
play frequently failed to communicate because the actors’ attempts to convey their obsessions
resulted in constant vocal monotony which somehow did not prevent an unnecessary amount of
inaudibility.

The second half of the Double
Bill, Pinter’s “The Collection,”
represented a more sustained and
successful attempt to do the play
justice. Pinter gives us three men
and a woman involved in an almost endless succession of suggested sexual relationships in an
exploration of the ambiguity of
•‘truth.”

The play operates upon at least
three levels: The comedy of manners, the comedy of menace (a la
Kopit) and the tragedy of menace.

Pinter doesn’t view man’s total
incapacity for Truth any more
optimistically than we do; all his
characters are constantly menaced by their own lies as well as
those of the people that matter
to them. It is this facet of his
work that is often missed, as it
mostly was here.
The production’s chief virtues
lay in its simplicity and honesty,
and in Peter F. Madison’s performance as the repulsive Harry.
But the sort of inhibition that
characterizes all the undergraduate acting I have seen on campus, the inability to face and
portray another man’s reality, had

near-disastrous consequences.
Robert Nigro as Bill refused to
embody the character’s homosexuality thus virtually destroying
the fabric of his relationships
with Harry and James, and by
implication, Stella, At a crucial
moment this prevented the realization of his seduction of James,
via the demand that his elaborate
lie (or was it the truth?) be accepted for what it was (whatever
that might be).
At the opposite pole the director allowed the actress of the
quartet, Geraldine Vogt, to fall
into the trap of playing for
•straight sympathy and thus lost
at least a quarter of the ambiguous possibilities which are the essence of the play. Direct feelings
here is only sensed when the
mask slips, when the fear which
impells these people to their
menacing sexual games with each
other reveals itself: The appropriate dramatic effect only occurred once, with Harry’s masterly denunciation of Bill as a “slum
slug.”

James gives the audience its
“I can see it both ways.
Three ways. All ways.”
In the Millard Fillmore Room
we were hard put to see it even
cue:

two ways.

New
ItS a wahole new
in Shaviry!
—

—

Ipok for the l ime-green can
CIW, Colgotn-Polmoliv# Compony.

"Th* flying

Nun."

Thurtdoy evening*. 8-8 30 NYT, A8C-TV.

LIME, REGULAR
AND MENTHOL

�Tuesday,

December 12, 1967

News anal

The Spectrum

Pag* Eleven

Ad hoc committee plans
Faculty Senate meeting

sis

Draft reform seen as election

issue

by Walter Grant

WASINGTON—Although Congress has extended the
draft for four more years, the Selective Service System still
may become a campaign issue in next year’s Presidential
election.
It is highly doubtful that either the Democratic or Republican candidate will pledge to abolish the draft at this
time. But it appears likely that one or both parties will
propose a number of reforms in the military system which,
among other things, may be aimed at reducing draft calls
to zero.
Such reforms would be designed to encourage more young
people to volunteer for the Army
by making military service appear more attractive. The most
important reform would be to
raise the military pay scale so
that it begins at the minimum
wage level of civilian rates.

House votes raise
The House already has taken
the initial step by passing a 5.6%
increase in basic pay for the na-

tion’s 3.5 million military servicemen. The bill, which would cost
about $636 million in the first
year, is expected to receive positive action in the Senate.

The big question is whether or

not more young people will volunteer for the military if Con-

gress and the Pentagon increase
the benefits for military personnel. Most observers agree that

military reforms will result in

an

increased number of volunteers,
but there is disagreement over
whether there would be enough
new volunteers to end draft calls.
At least five Congressmen think
an all-volunteer army is indeed
possible it the right improvement are made. Their ideas appear in a book entitled, How to
End the Draft, which was pub-

lished this month.

The Congressmen list 31 specific recommendations in what they
say is “the first effort to define
systematically a specific program
of action which can lead to an

all-volunteer service and the elimination of draft calls.” They be-

lieve that if their recommendations are followed, an all-volunteer service is possible within
two to five years. The estimated
total maximum cost is $3.96 billion a year.
Authors of the book are Republicans Robert T. Stafford, Frank
J. Horton, Richard S. Schweiker,
Garner E. Shriver, and Charles
W. Whalen Jr. They emphasize
they are not advocating that the
Selective Service System be abolished, but are merely recommending reforms which “individually and collectively can work
to reduce the size of draft calls,
hopefully down to zero,” even under present circumstances.

Only effective with peace
But, says Douglas F. Bailey, research director for the five Congressmen, “if escalation of the
war continued, resulting in the
need for more servicemen, there
would still have to be some draft.
I don’t think we could get that
many to volunteer. But I think
this plan will be effective in ending the draft under the present
situation and particularly under
real peace-time circumstances.”

of ever getting rid of the draft,”
Rep. Stafford says. "If military
pay scales are not made commensurate with civilian pay scales,
many young men who may wish
to serve may not do so for they
cannot afford to make the financial sacrifice.”

Other changes suggested
In addition to reforming the
pay scale, the five Congressmen
are suggesting a new program of
retirement benefits, expanded educational programs, a higher and
fixed recruitment advertising
budget, and expansion of a program to replace some noncombat
uniform personnel with civilians.
What the regents finally do to
Mr. Cohen remains a major question. The three regents who voted
against the trial all agreed with
Sewell’s proposal. At least one,
Arthur DeBardeleben, a former
University president, is sympathetic to the students who oppose
the war. “It is not enough to say
to these students, ‘you have freedom to dissent, you can carry a
picket sign’," he said after the
meeting, “if nobody will listen to
them.”

A Faculty Senate meeting has
been set for 2 p.m. Thursday in
Butler Auditorium, Capen Hall,
the Senate Executive Committee
pro tern announced Saturday.
The Executive Committee also
announced the formation of an
ad hoc committee to make preparations for the Faculty Senate
meeting and an Open Forum,
which is scheduled today.
The Faculty Senate meeting
will begin at the point at which it

adjourned last Wednesday—with
the consideration of proposals for
opening the meeting to non-

members.

The agenda for the remainder
of the meeting remains the same
as that for the last meeting.
Resolution Three, which calls for
“appropriate disciplinary action”
by University authorities in the
event of an attempt to “obstruct
a group or person invited to the
campus,” will be considered
along with substitute resolutions,
in particular the “HochfieldBaumer” resolution. (See page
seven for full text.)

Final arrangements for the
If Mr. DeBardeleben’s views Senate Session will not be known
until Wednesday night, when the
prevail, Mr. Cohen may well be
Faculty Senate Executive Comacquitted by the regents, saving
mittee pro tern again meets.
the University from possible deChanges and additions to the
monstrations like the one Oct. agenda could possibly be made
18. Some students are plainly at that time.
angry about the different forces
Physical preparations for the
—state courts, federal courts, the
including procedures
meeting
legislature, the regents, the Unifor checking credentials of Senversity
being ate members and arrangements
administration
brought to bear on the leaders of for closed-circuit television
are under the direction of a comthe demonstration.
—

—

—

Many of the recommendations
require no Congressional action
and could be implemented immediately by the Department of De-

mittee headed by Dr. Alan Andnewly elected to the
Executive Council from the Social
Sciences and Administration Faculty, The committee will report
what arrangements have been
made to the Executive Commitreasen,

tee Wednesday.
According to Dr. Andreasen,
his committee will “simply attempt to make sure we have an
orderly meeting.” A Dec. 6 meeting was abruptly adjourned when
students and other non-faculty
members filed into a “closed
session.”

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fense.
The major proposal needing
legislative action involves military pay increases. “As long as
beginning servicemen get paid
less than the minimum wage required by law, there is no hope

The Freshman Class Council
presents

A Thousand Clowns
St

Pink Panther

Cartoon

A lecherous fellow called Pops
At wooing the ladies was tops;
They’d love him to bits
When he’d buy them a Schlitz
And give them the kiss of the hops

.

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Tuesday, December 12, 1967

Spectrum

The Country Wife' will Recruitment Referendum
be presented in Norton
(Cont’d from P. 1)
use thereof.

The State University English
Department will present a reading of William Wycherly’s “The
Country Wife” in Haas Lounge,
Norton Hall on Dec. 15 and 16
at 8:30 p.m.
“The Country Wife,” first produced in 1675, is regarded as
one of the finest examples of
Restoration comedy.
Wycherly satirizes the manner of his age in a surrullous
near-farce whose subject is the
sexual habits of men and women “of the world!” The climax
of the plot is a riotious version
of the French bedroom farce
whose double entente centers on,
of all things, china, The play is

not without some sense of con-

temporary reference in its depiction of a society where what
is right has become “what I
want.”
The collection of prize caricatures assembled for the occasion
by director Henry A. Wicke, Jr.
includes: Vicki Robbins, as the
Country Wife (the pun is intentional); Graham Marchant as
Horner (ditto); Frank Dwyer as
Pinchwife; the Ladies of, and on,
the town include; Margot Fein,
Helen Friedman, and Carol Kauderer.

Young love has its fling in
the persons of Anne Marie
Schemtri and Marc Pomerantz.
Admission is free.

Value of high school
drug education rejected
WASHINGTON (GNS)
Teaching high school students about
drugs and their effects can
bommerang
it can lead the
students to try them, the Federal
—

—

Narcotics Bureau believes.
A spokesman for the Federal

Narcotics Bureau, which is primarily a law-enforcement agency,
said:
“We are not in favor of general
dissemination
of information
about narcotics.” That goes for
courses or special programs
about drugs in high schools,
junior high schools and grade
schools, he said.
But he said the policy is “not
hard and fast. We might make
an exception where there may be
a really critical area
where
there is high-intensity drug use.”
—

Flexible policy

“It is somewhat flexible” the
bureau spokesman cautioned, “If
a certain school board or other
group insists, we will provide
them with some information. We
cooperated with the International
Association of Police Chiefs to

produce a film, ‘fight or flight’.”
He implied that the bureau is
not in agreement with several
states that put out curriculums
for lower grades with information on narcotics, but he did not

list the states.

P. A. Soper, who edits a magazine distributed by Narcotics Education, Inc. of Washington, took
issue with the bureau’s expressed
feeling that some young addicts
received narcotic education in the
schools and tried drugs anyway,
not out of ignorance, but “by
their curiosity to experiment on
themselves in complete disregard
of the consequences.”

Anti-narcotics magazine

Listen magazine, which circu150,000 copies a
month to schools and church
youth groups, is anti-alcohol,
anti-tobacco and, of course, antinarcotics.
Mr, Soper said: “Some young
folks are going to experiment
regardless. It’s important to have
the right type of education, to
approach the problem unemotionally and educationally.”
He said he has talked to numbers of addicts who said they
would never have used drugs had
they known the consequences,
“They did not have the undergirding of factual information
that they needed. You have to
make young folks aware of the
potential problems if they get
mixed up in things like this,”
he said.
lates most of its

“It is to be insensitive to the
students' heeds and interests: Do
not students have the right to
hear whomever they wish and to
judge for themselves the advantages or disadvantages, morality
or immorality of a career position?
“In a sense a form of recruiting
is involved in many other activities in the University! Clubs and
groups, religious and political organizations recruit members, including those on the campus who
oppose the draft and seek financial support for the NFL and
North Vietnam. Even the teaching process itself involves a type
of ‘recruiting!’

Where is line?

“Where do you draw the line
between imparting knowledge
and recruiting for a career, way
‘of life, political or moral position?

“Clearly many who are appalled by the Vietnam War and
the napaiming of innocent women
and children (including me) claim
that their moral conscience requires them to oppose recruiting
by groups such as Dow and the
CIA.
“Yet what of the moral consciences of those who are committed to the principle of academic freedom and an open campus? Are their moral consciences
to be considered inferior and not
to have the protection of the University?
“Those who are offended by
CIA and Dow have every right
to protest, but do they have the
right to suppress the rights or
disrupt those who are likewise
following the dictates of their
consciences?
“There is a conflict of principles here: Commitment to academic freedom versus opposition
to war. The University, while receptive to the expression of dissent in the latter case, cannot
abrogate the former without
undermining its primary purpose.
“Toleration of opposing points
of view and the freedom to hear
and to gain knowledge, is an es-

sential condition of the University.”

Upholds status quo
Dr. C. James Lafkiotes, Director of University Placement, up-

holds the open campus policy:
“As a member of the Faculty
senate I concur with its action
and that of the Student Senate

l

which provide for all legal groups
to recruit on campus.
“Students have participated in

on-campus interviews with agencies and companies for many

years. Interest in recruiting has
grown steadily from year to year
indicating to me that such activity meets an expressed student
need.”

Non-academic recruiters
Insight into the phrase “nonacademic recruiters” is given by
Victor Doyno, Assistant Professor in the English department:
“I have followed this issue since
the beginning. Now the University administration has recognized a point I made at the Open
Forum: Recruiting is not an academic freedom but a convenience.
In these changing circumstances
we should re-examine our attitude
toward this convenience in hopes
of forming a policy that is logical, consistent, and helpful to
society.

“We can begin by remembering that the genuine function of
a university is the preservation,
advancement, and dispersal of
knowledge. Accordingly, it is reasonable to restrict on-campus recruiting to academic institutions
and clubs recognized by the University. These categories would
include primary and secondary
schools and colleges seeking
staff; graduate schools, law, medical, dental schools seeking students; and such university-recognized clubs as Newman, Hillel,
Chemistry Society, etc. Such a
policy would emphasize the University’s role in the individual
student’s educational activity.
“The effect of this policy would
be that the placement office
could advertise and schedule nonacademic recruiters. These recruiters would simply meet the
applicants in a hotel room or

restaurant. The student would
have to go out, symbolically, into
the cold, cruel world seeking his

job. This is admittedly a terrible
inconvenience. Some opponents
of this plan have expressed fear
that our graduates could not get
jobs, a fear which perhaps disguises doubts about the quality
of some graduating departmental
majors. One hopes our students
get jobs because they are better
than other applicants, not simply

because of convenience.
“A very important effect of the
proposed policy would be the reassertion of the genuine function
of a university and the rejection

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...

of the notion that the university
simply manufactures replacement parts for this society.
“In these circumstances the uni versity should help society by reminding it of the fact that principle and convenience are, occasionally, opposed.”

An academic issue?
Terry Keegan, Co-chairman of
the Curriculum Planning Committee of the Student Senate, discusses whether recruiting is an
academic issue:
“To the charge that being recruited is a privilege and not a
right of students one must be
able to see that when one draws
the line between the two and
says, based on his own convictions, that a group is able to come
on campus because we have a
right to have them and another
group is refused because it is a
privilege, one has opened the
door to further restrictions.
“I’d be most wary of any conditions placed on who is allowed to
come to this campus for any reason.

“To the statement that having
approval of a certain group to
come on the campus constitutes
also approval of the actions for
which the group is recruiting
I’d say that one is failing to
make a clear-cut distinction
based on the real situation. Between allowing academic freedom to persist by not placing
restrictions on who can come,
and granting approval of the recruiting group.
“Just because the University
allows the Resistance and Student Mob to recruit doesn’t mean
that the University approves of
their stand in every issue.
“To the statement that recruiting for jobs and the military is not an academic interest,
or is not related closely with
one’s academic pursuits, I’d say
simply ask the majority of students here if having the excellent facilities of the placement
office in order to talk to representatives of these organizations

is not a most important activity
and interest that is very closely

related to their studies.
“Ours is not an ivory tower
university and the people who go
here have every right to listen
to whomever they please.
“Again, if restrictions are
placed on who can come and
what and how they are to be
presented to the academic community, further restrictions can,
based on the same principles, be
imposed such that we of the
left would be the first to suffer
since we are a minority.

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�Tuesday, December 12, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* ThirtMn

Hockey team grabs glory from old
foe by defeating Canton Tech 5-4
by Rich Baumgarten
length, of the ice before slipping

leporfer

Buffalo goalie takes a peek
behind the net as Canton wing
moves in for the kill. We won,

i

....

Where S

the puck?

The sensational State University of Buffalo Hockey a ten-footer into the Buffalo, nets.
icers came through like thoroughbreds in their toughest Tech scored disallowed
The Bulls got off the hook
game to date against the team that took the championship when
referee John Barnes
away from them in last year’s Finger Lakes Tournament. ruled that a Canton player had
In what had to be their finest hour, the Bulls—injury kicked the puck into the Buffalo
ridden and plagued with sickness—outpointed by 5-4 a goal. That set the stage for Newman's winner at 16:02 of the
magnificent Canton Tech team in a thrilling spine-tingling
third period and four hundred
game that left four hundred spectators limp and hoarse.
fans sounded like four thousand.
Amherst Recreation CenThis game was especially gratifying to the Buffalo Hockey club.
ter was shaking on its very and winning goal
Until then, this hardhitting, It not only marked the Bulls’
foundations when Buffalo’s
skating game was no place sixth straight Finger Lakes HockBill Newman took a perfect fast
for the weak at heart. Buffalo ey League win, but the contest
from
Len
e
D p r i m a, had a 2-1 first period edge only itself was a tremendous display
pass
skated in and whistled a blazof great pride and purpose which
to have the well disciplined Caning shot into the Canton Tech ton Tech squad come back to tie Coach Trey Coley has instilled in
count at three all by the end his players.
nets giving Buffalo its fifth the the
Before the game no less than
peirod.
of

second

Buffalo
in the third
frame, but Canton stormed back
to again knot the game at four
then scored early

the spectrum of

apiece. Then came

sports
3-1 record for Buffalo

Bulls tortured with 85-63 defeat
by W. Scott Behrans

Orangemen record their second

Buffalo
SYRACUSE, N.Y.
forward Bob Nowak’s 21 point
effort proved to be of no avail
as the State University of Buffalo
varsity Bulls tasted their first
setback of the early basketball
season at the hands of the Syracuse Orangemen, 85-63.

The Bulls, who are now 3-1,
will face San Francisco State
tomorrow evening in their own

A home crowd of 5560 fans
in the Manley Field here saw the

6:30 p.m.
The Bulls opened up the scor-

Assistant Sports

Editor

ing on a long set shot by Nowak
from the right side of the key.
Syracuse’s Wayne Ward followed
with two free throws, but Nowak
countered with a charity toss and
then followed with a two-pointer
on a long jump shot which gave
the visiting Bulls a 5-2 lead.
Syracuse then went on a nine
point scoring spree before Bulls’
head coach Len Serfustini had
his team call for a time out.

win in three tries.

Clark Gym.
open the

The Baby Bulls will
evening’s doubleheader by hosting the yearlings of St. Bonaventure, game time scheduled for

Bulls narrow gap
The Bulls then narrowed the
gap to one point, 12-11, on a
captain Ed Eberle jump shot, and
layups by Jack Jekielek and John
Fieri. The Blue and White (wearing blue jerseys with white numerals tor the first time this
season) then went ahead on a
Jekielek push shot from about
ten feet to the right side of the
basket.

)

—

The Orangemen’s high scorer
for the game with 23 points,
Richie Cornwall, then hit on one
of his long jump shots which put
the hosts ahead to stay.

—Hsiang

U

j

HaitaS
I
up ball
_

||

Jon Culbert (32) attempts one
from underneath against Albany. Buffalo lost to Syracuse

85-63.

Newman’s

wicked drive and the game belonged to the Bulls.

Bulls

score first
Fred Bourgemeister opened the

State University of Buffalo’s scoring at 12:14 of the first period,
clicking on a forty foot sizzler
that just caught the inside corne rof the Canton Tech goal.
After Canton’s Jim Beane scored on a breakaway, B u f f a 1 o’s
leading scorer, Lome Rombough,
racked up his fifteenth goal of
the season, scoring from in front
of the nets at 18:16 of the first
frame.
Goals by Bill Quenvile and
Johnny Caruso shot Canton Tech
into a 3-2 lead before the Blue
and White’s John Watson tallied
at 19:01 of the second period
on a shot that seemed to trickle
under the outstretched arms of
Canton’s goaltender,
Fred Borgemeister began third
period festivities by scoring his
second goal of the night, cashing
in on a thirty-five footer giving
the Bulls a temporary 4-3 lead.
But Jim Barney, a fine competitor, pulled Canton even on a

three State University of Buffalo
icers became sick from flu. Bill
Defoe, one of Buffalo's star defensemen, was so ill he didn't

even suit up.
So with only three defensemen,
the Bulls took to the ice and
played their hearts out.
Jim Miller played a magnificent defensive game.
Fred Bourgemeister and Jim
Murdock also led a tough defense
that blocked at least fifteen Canton shots and saved the day for
the Bulls. And then there was
Jimmy Hamilton, all-league in
more ways than one. Hamilton,
though down with a virus, insisted on playing and was just tremendous in goal.

After the game, the Buffalo
icers swarmed over Hamilton.
Coach Trey Coley walked over
and shook Hamilton's hand. He
didn’t have to say anything.

Hockey night plonned
The Bulls, now atop the Finger

Lakes

Hockey League, having
played Utica last Sunday, will be
home next Saturday night to take
on a rugged Ithaca team in an
important league contest.

Game time is scheduled for 10
p.m. at the Amherst Recreational
Center.

UB Bulls trounce Albany
by Daniel J. Edelman
Spectrum Staff Reporter
In a battle of State University
centers, the State University of
Buffalo basketball team beat Albany State 92-69 before an appreciative crowd in Clark Gym.

The win marks the Bulls’ tenth
straight win over Albany in a five
year span.

The Blue and White took the
The Bulls stayed close to the
Orange through the remainder of lead at the opening buzzer on a
the first half, coming within four three point play by John Fieri
and were never headed on the
points of the leader once, but
to their third straight vicwent to the dressing room with a way of
the young campaign.
nine-point deficit at the end of tory
Albany, whose record is now
the stanza, 43-34. Buffalo junior
guard Joe Rutkowski kept the even at two apiece, tried to catch
it
Bulls moving by hitting on four up but was like a man trying to
timely jump shots during the last run on a treadmill. They simply
got nowhere because the Bulls
ten minutes of play.
dominated both backboards and
The opening of the second half played tough defense forcing the
to take a lot of bad shots.
saw the Bulls and the Orangenvm visitors
Buffalo, on the other hand, was
trade four buckets, Buffalo co ning to within six points, 50-44, able to bring up the ball against
with three and a half minutes the press and get off a good shot.
This is reflected in the shootgone in the second stanza. It
ing percentages of both teams.
seemed as though - Serfustini’s
The Bulls were 39 for 78 for
talk in the dressing room had
even 50% while Albany was
penetrated, when all of a sudden an
26 for 66 for a 39.4%.
the Bulls when on a “cooling off
Subs star
period, and the Orangemen conThe Bulls excellent bench
tinued to hit from both inside
strength enabled Coach Serfusand outside.
tini to get full mileage out of
his starters who got into early
Couldn't contain Orange
foul trouble.
Buffalo could not maintain this
Guards Jim Shea, Joe Rutkowlong lead which the hosts had
and Bobby Williams handled
built and wound-up on the short ski,
the ball well against Albany’s
end of a long night. Bull guard
pressing defense and set up plays
Joe Peeler, although he scored
equal poise while they were
only one point from the foul with
in there.
(Cont’d on Pg. 14)
Forwards Doug Bernard and

—Hsiang

Off the boards
captain Larry Marcus defends as Buffalos John Jekielek
sinks one. Bulls won 92-69.

Albany

Jon Culbert came off the bench
and did a more adequate job fill-

ing in for starters Ed Eberle

Bob Nowak.
Center
Wayne

and.

Betts mainBuffalo’s rebounding advantage while he spelled starter
John Jekielek. When the substitutes were in the game, there was
no letdown in the quality of play.
Ed Eberle and Bob Nowak had
15 points apiece to lead the Bulls
in scoring. Doug Bernard was
right behind them with 14, Albany’s Scott Price led all scorers
with 19 points.
Big sophomore John Vaughan
didn’t play because he was ill.
tained

�Tuesday, December 12, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* Fourt**n

Lang varsity

debut

UB wrestlers defeat Buffalo State
corded pins in Saturday afterwrestling
noon’s
final
two
matches to seal a 24-11 victory
for the Bulls grapplers over Buffalo State University College in
the loser’s gym.
The first team State has ever
fielded in NCAA competition
proved to be a formidable foe
in the opening match for Coach
Gergley’s club, as the Bulls fell
behind 11-5 before reeling off
five straight victories including the pins by Bell and Lang.
Mike Watson, a transfer student from Corning Community
College, took State’s Bob Thompson into the 2nd period, but was
pinned by the Orangeman. Watson was forced into competition
when John Cunningham was
sidelined at 130, forcing the Bulls

ler to move up a class.
Even at 130, Fowler was able

to show the crowd why he lead
the Bulls in scoring last season.

Lonnie Knowles
with a minute and a half gone
in the final period.
Gary

pinned

Ray Brewer and Jim Cone won
decisions for State at 137 and 145
Brewer
respectively.
shutout
Brian Vanderberg 2-0 on a second period reversal, and Cone
slipped by Henry Gullia 3-1 on
a near pin.

Dale Wettlaufer got the Bulls
back on the right track with his
7-2 victory at 152.
Jerry Meisner nipped Leo Siegel for a three-point triumph at
160.

The only problem Gordon A1

keeping his hair out of his eyes.
The long-locked Alexander held
on in the final thirty seconds to

win 7-2.
The Bulls footballers took over
then.

Third

tailback

string

Bell is probably the

most

Harry
prom-

ising wrestler the Bulls have
ever greeted. Bell seemed a bit
annoyed at the calls made against
him for illegal holds, but the
Bulls fans were not disappointed as the soph pinned Dave
Hagen with 28 seconds left in
the match.

Tight end Paul Lang made his
debut for the varsity grapplers
a sensational one. Paul defeated
an overweight Ted Becker in the
afternoon’s heavyweight match
on a second period pin.

Orangemen dump Bulls, 85-63
(Cont’d from Pg. 13)
line, was the Bulls’ big hustler

of the game. He blocked several

Syracuse shots and came up with
some timely steals and excellent
passing and ball handling.
Nowak, the only Bull to hit
in the double figure range, hit
on better than half of his field
goal shots (nine out of 17) and

Rutkowski ended up with four
out of nine from the floor. Substitute guard Jimmy Shea hit on
the only three shots he took from
the field and played another fine
defensive game as he did in the

previous outing against Albany
State the evening before in Clark
Gym.
t
M
M

The Bull’s hit 27 field goals in
71 attempted for 38%. The
Orangemen hit on 46.9% of their
shots, hitting 30 of 64. The hosts
only missed four of their 25 free
throws, while the usually accurate Bulls hit on only nine of
20 shots from the foul line.

against them some of the time.
Forward Doug Bernard was called
for a deliberate foul on Vaughn
Harper in the second half. Later,
this reporter asked Doug what
had happened and he replied: “I
never even touched him. He
tripped and fell on his own

The Bulls should not be
ashamed of their showing in
Syracuse for they put forth every
effort to contain the favored
Orangemen but were unable to
contain Cornwall. He ruined the
Bulls last year in Memorial Auditorium.

Indoor track
practice begins

The Bulls also had the referees

Headquarters for Good
College Clothing

feet.”

Indoor track coach Emery
Fisher has announced that there
is practice for the indoor track
squad every afternoon. If there
is still anyone interested in joining the team he said, he should
report to Mr. Fisher in the basement of Clark Gym Room G5A
any afternoon this week. Much
support is needed for the team.
Meets will commence in January.
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on the bench
by Billy Martin
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

year’s World Series, a few interesting facts have been
brought to light.
With money being what it is to the ballplayer of today, it is almost incredible to believe that while ticketless
fans panted desperately outside Fenway Park, 392 choice
box and reserved seats went unsold for the opening game
of the 1967 World Series!
Some big league clubs (each

are entitled to buy 100
turned

them

back

late

seats)

that

morning and the Bosox were too
stunned to resell them. It cost
the players’ pool $4,116.
Baseball always has been a
pumpkinhead kind of game when
it comes to money. Perhaps that
is why the Supreme Court concedes that it is a sport and not
a business

For instance, what sensible
businessman would pay Don Drysdale $100,000 to win 13 games
and Ferguson Jenkins $12,500 to
win 20 games? Or pay $60,000
to Elston Howard to bat .178
while Randy Hundley bats .267,
hits homes runs and catches all
for $15,000?
What chairman of the board
would authorize paying $70,000
to Roger Maris to hit nine home

runs?

The Braves pay Tony Cloninger
$40,000 to win 4 games and Pat
Jarvis $12,000 to win 15. Tony
can’t help it. He’d like it another
way but 1967 wasn’t his year
due to injuries. However, consider the injustice of it all.

Juan's resolution
The story that beats all stories
is that of one Juan Marichal. He
balked, kicked, make big noises
and all but practically started
his own revolution before getting
$100,000 from the Giants; then
he wants to call it quits with a
month to go in the season and
wait till next year.
Somebody must have said it.
I can’t say who. But somebody
must have said that if businesses
were run the way baseball people run baseball, “Black Friday”

in 1929 would have looked like
a festival day to the New York
Stock Exchange.

Baseball almost reached

the

funny farm during the years of
the original “bonus baby.”

The “bonus Baby” was a creation of another generation. It
was a gamble. A gamble that a
kid just turned loose from his
mother’s apron strings would
become a major league star because in Little League he hit
.667. This gamble could run as
high as $200,000. It was a wild,
idiotic gamble.

Babies ride bench

breeding at a thoroughbred sale
and at least you have the time to
put him through training. The
“bonus baby” was ordered to
spend his first two seasons under contract on the bench of the
major league club, being trained
in the important aspects of shagging, fetching tobacco, and growing stale.

The first known bonus baby
a big, gawky, character Richard Wakefield. They paid his
mother and young Dick $50,000
for his services. He produced
for a year and a half.

was

The Phillies paid Hugh Ridcliff
$40,000 to sign when $40,000 was
$40,000. He never threw a pitch
in the big leagues.
The list of the bonus kids is
endless. It features names that
were known mostly for their incapabilities in a major league
uniform (if they got that far).
Upwards of $40,000 was paid to
such harlequins of the diamond
as: Frank Leja, Billy Console,
Tom Carroll, Jim Pyburn, J. W.
Porter, Paul Giel, and Don
Kaiser.

New TV show?

If it is any consolement to loyal partisans of the sport there
should be a morning game show
called Baseball Giveaway, players of the likes of Sandy Koufax, A1 Kaline, and Clete Boyer
made it.
It is said the bonus killed off
the minor leagues. When they
tried to vote it down the major
league owners said no. It’s their
money, their game and they’re
the ones who will suffer when
the farm systems fold. Now the
bonus is a common thing but
there are those that never got
it. Players like Mantle, Stottlemeyer, Mays, Felipe Alou never
got the big money to sign.

And so we have a game today
with a peculiar system of paying
its help. Wages are distributed
on what you did last year, not
on your effective production
during the year you are being
paid.

The 20-game winner who be-

comes a five-game winner would
shriek his grievances to the heavens should the man who pays
the bill expect any of his money

back.

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�Tuesday, December 12, 1967

Hershey directive to draft protesters
results in suit from student groups
by Phil hmii

ticipation in anti-draft activity.

and 15 student body presidents tyave filed a suit against
Selective Service Director Lewis B. Hershey.

The suit asks for a court injunction stopping enforcement of
Hershey’s recent letter to local
draft boards telling them to reclassify and draft as soon as possible anyone who destroys or
turns in his draft card or who
participates in demonstrations
aimed at blocking induction centers or military recruiters.

Follow ACLU action
The suit followed a group of
four others filed by the American
Civil Liberties Union in behalf
of individuals who have been
reclassified under Hershey’s order. Ed Schwartz president of
the National Student Association,
the main plaintiff in the student
case, says he had been told by
the ACLU that NSA’s case is
more significant because it “is a
wholesale attack at the source
of the unconstitutional order.”

In addition to NSA, the organizations filing the suit are
Students for a Democratic Society, Campus Americans for
Democratic Action, and the University Christian Movement.
Gen. Hershey said Monday that
he does not consider it punishment to have a deferment removed and be drafted. “It is a
privilege to be called to serve
your country,” he said. His letter to draft boards, sent Oct. 18,
however, referred to reclassification and drafting as punishment for “misguided registrants.”
His letter gave two instructions to local boards:
They could reclassify as eligible for service and draft as
soon as possible anyone who has
destroyed or turned in his draft
card.
They should consider reclassifying and drafting as soon as
possible any person who attempts
to block induction centers or
•

•

military recruiters.

The student suit challenges
both these orders, although Mr.
Schwartz said it will probably
concentrate on the latter.
The suit alleges that these orders are unconstitutional and
violate due process, because they
do not allow for a trial before
a jury, defense counsel, etc.

Violates law
The suit also says that the second of Gen. Hershey’s orders
violates the very law which he is
supposed to be enforcing. It
notes that the act passed by
Congress in June gives certain
deferments, including those for
students, “as a matter of statutory right.” Thus, when Gen. Hershey tells draft boards to take
away student deferments because
of protest activities, he is violating “the express will of Congress.”
Schwartz also questions,
as does the suit, Gen. Hershey’s
right to use the Selective Service
System to punish dissenters. The
suit says such punishments
should be left to the courts, and
Mr. Schwartz added that the Selective Service “has no more
right to punish people than a
public library does.”
Mr,

Local draft boards have already begun to enforce Gen.
Hershey’s order. Mr. Schwartz
says he believes at least 100 students have been reclassified under the order already.
The ACLU is filing suits in behalf of several of those who have
and will continue to do so as they
arise. The ACLU has already announced four suits filed in New
York; Camden, N. J.; Salt Lake
City; and Seattle and says it is
about to file one more. Several
of these involve clergymen who
have been reclassified after par-

the ACLU in those

cases,

Diverse groups

WASHINGTON (CPS)—In the interest of “maintaining a
peaceful academic atmosphere,” the Central Intelligence
Agency has decided not to recruit on campuses that lie near
any of the agency’s regional recruiting offices
A CIA spokesman has confirmed that college and university placement bureaus affected are being notified of the
decision, but did not say where the agency’s recruiting offices
are located. He estimated that there are “ten or 12” of
them, however, presumably in major cities.

The CIA has met with protests,
some of them obstructive and others not, on several campuses this
fall. Among them are the Universities of Colorado, Maryland,
Iowa, and the University of California at Berkeley.
According to the CIA spokesman the agency normally recruits
at 100 campuses around the coun-

try. He added that “at many of
them, we’ve had no trouble.”

Trouble concentrated
He indicated that the disrup-

tion of CIA recruiting has been
concentrated in certain areas of
the country, mainly the East and
West coasts. He said the agency
has had almost no trouble on
campuses in the Kiddle West and
the South.

Placement officials on campuses
in the Washington area have already been notified that the CIA
will do its recruiting in its downtown office. Only one Washington-area university
the University of Maryland
has had a protest against CIA recruiting.
—

—

The CIA spokesman denied
that the agency was succumbing
to pressure from students who
have protested CIA recruiting.
“We don’t view it in that light,”
he said. He added that “one of
the young men (referring to a
student reporter) who called here

campus releases...
The Parking Court announces that applications for petitions for
parking ticket cancellation are available in the Bursar's office, the
Student Senate office, and the Security Office on Winspear Ave.
Those who complete their applications will be notified that the
application was accepted by phone or mail. It must then be presented
either appear in court to present his case or let his petition stai

by itself.

The Student Senate will hold interviews for anyone interested
The groups who filed the stuin working for the Student Book Exchange. They will be held tomorsuit
dent
form an unusual coalrow and Friday from 11 a.m. to noon and from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. and
ition. SDS is much more radiThursday from 10 a.m. to noon and from 3 p.m. to 4 p.m. in Room
cal than the others and has been
205 Norton Hall. Workers approved by the Student Senate will be
the leading organizer of campus paid by
the hour.
protests against military recruiters. Both NSA and CADA have
The International Student Affairs Committee will present Galina
opposed “coercive tactics such
a representative of the USSR Committee of Youth organizaas interfering with students who Tarasoea,
tion in
who will speak on student life in Russia. The meeting
want to see recruiters, though will be Moscow,
held at 7:30 p.m, Thursday in Room 335 Norton Hall.
they have both also opposed the
The topics of discussion will include the education system, the
use of campus police. The Uniforeign student exchange, and student organization in Russia. A quesversity Christian Movement is tion and answer period
and refreshments will follow the talk.
student organization affiliated
with the National Council of
The Student Edueetion Association will present Dr. J. Gizinski
Churches.
who will speak on “Sex Education in Today's Schools,” at 7 p.m. TuesRoom 337 Norton Hall. Dr. Gizinski is currently assistant Disday
NSA, however, has been on trict in
Principal at Cleveland Hill.
record for a
of years as
couple
opposed to the draft, and Mr.
Schwartz says that the groups

“are united in our belief that
the Hershey memorandum . . ,
suggest an illegal and unconstitutional use of Selective Serv-

ice.”

SDS, which has long opposed
student deferments, issued a
statement “to make it clear that
we are entering this case not to
protect the privileged status of
students or the system of manpower channeling, but to resist
this attempted escalation of the
repression of political opposition
in America.”
The student body presidents,
from such schools as the University of California at Berkeley,
Harvard, Oberlin College, Newark State Teachers College, and
Notre Dame University, also represent a broad range of views
and types of campuses.

The Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship will go Christmas caroling Friday at several nursing homes. Those interested should meet
at 7 p.m. in Room 334 Norton Hall. The Fellowship’s Christmas Banquet will be held Saturday. Details are available in Room 217 Nor-

ton Hall, or call Bob Virkler.

Dr. Charles Ross of the State University of Buffalo School of
Medicine will speak to the Student Chapter of the American Pharmaceutical Association on “Chemotherapy of Lung Cancer.” All interested students and faculty are invited to attend the talk. It will take
place at 7:30 v p.m. Thursday in Room G-22 Capen Hall.
"Napalm," a movie concerning the efforts of a small group of
people to affect the consciousness of a town and change the course
of American foreign policy on Vietnam, will be shown at 3 p.m. Tuesday in Room 355 Hayes Hall. “Napalm” was filmed at Redwood City,
California during the course of anti-napalm plant demonstrations.

"Possibilities for the Future" will conclude a series of four presentations in the field of electronic poetry at 4 p.m. Wednesday in the
Conference Theater.
Andrecej Konopacki, First Secretary of the Polish Embassy in
Washington, will speak here in a presentation sponsored by the SDS
and the Buffalo Student Mobilization Committee. Dr. Donald Mikulecky will chair the meeting, at which a film on Mme. Curie will be

shown.
Komorowski, editor of a Polish-American newspaper, will
Still, all the plaintiffs are also Conradat
speak
the meeting, which commemorates the 100th anniversary
basically liberal to radical. Mr.
of the birth of Marie Curie.
attempted
Schwartz said he had
The meeting will be at 8 p.m. today in the Millard Fillmore Room.
to get the conservative Young
to
join
Americans for Freedom
The Community Aid Corps will present a film and panel discusin the suit but that he has been sion at 6 p.m. today in the Conference Theater. The film, “The Way
unable to reach the right people It Is,” will precede the discussion.
in that organization.
Tho Westminster Companion Program will hold a meeting at
7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Room 240 Norton Hall. All those who can
attend may contact Linda Marsa at 831-2857.

CIA revises recruitment policy;
off-campus locations to be used

The spokesman also noted that
in some cases, interviews would
be conducted in a downtown area
of cities that do not have CIA
offices. He mentioned Boston as
an example, explaining that interviews would be conducted in
the federal building there rather
than on campuses in the area.

5&lt;P«9» Fifteen

Tha Spactrum

The Debate Society will hold an open forum at 7 p.m. Thursday
in the Millard Fillmore Room. The topic will be: “Resolved: That
Lyndon Johnson Should Not Be a Candidate in 1968.”
Graduate Students affected by the new Selective Service directives are invited to attend a meeting at 4 p.m. Wednesday in Room
334 Norton Hall.

said SDS was calling it a victory,”
Tha Politics Club will hold a discussion Thursday in Room 234
but denied that the change was
Norton Hall. The discussion will concern the University professor’s
likely to affect the agency's rerole in politics outside the classroom. Coffee will be served.
cruitment efforts.
The SDS national office in Chicago has not commented officially on the CIA’s decision, but one
of the SDS officers there said
that it shuold probably not he regarded as a victory. “We want to
stop CIA r e c r u i t i n g,” he ex-

plained.

Whipperman acquitted in
shooting of Road Vulture

An Erie County grand jury
The CIA may well attempt to
reinstate on-campus recruiting on last week cleared Cheektowaga
the campuses where it is being patrolman Richard B. Whipper
halted, according to the agency’s man in the Oct. 28 slaying of
spokesman. He said that if the Charles Pfohl, 23, a member of
protests die down, 'Tn sure we the Road Vulture* Motorcycle
would look at it again, to see if Club.
we could return to the campus.”
Patrolman WUpperman, a former professional boxer, shot Mr.
Pfohl in the head as the youth
No plans in Buffalo
tried to escape on foot following
According to Dr. Richard Siga traffic violation.
glekow, vice president for StuThe grand jury had been condent Affairs, the CIA had cansidering a charge of murder. It
celled its scheduled interviews at returned a “no bill” after hearthe State University of Buffalo ing two days of testimony.
just prior to the University’s
Patrolman Whipperman, who
withdrawal of its invitations to was suspended from the police
Dow
Chemithat agency and the
force following the shooting,
cal Co. last month.
testifed in his own behalf after
signing a general waiver of imThe CIA has announced no fu- munity.
ture plans to recruit in Buffalo.
According to Cheektowaga po-

lice, Ur. Pfohl and Thomas Murclub,

ray, another member of the
had nut a stop sign and

ware

chased atmtflt
by patrolman WtdpparuMin and another
member of the force, WWiaan
Kauczkowski.
The two, police said, tried to
escape on foot after their car

was overtaken. Hr. Murray was
apprehended afanaat immediately.
The shooting occurred some dis-

tance away.

According to Cbecktowaga Police Chief Benedict L. Kostrzewski, Mr. Whippfarlhan will probably be reinstated in light ol
the grand jury’s ruling. He has
called a meeting of the town’s
three-man Board of Police Commissioners to determine whether
there was any violation of police force rules or regulations.

�9u6 ii-

oqm

Take the responsibility for your own education.
Analyze what's really happening in the world.
Learn whatever is relevant to your immediate needs
Dare to share your mind.
Experimental College assumes fh/'s new approach
Its philosophy, as outlined by Robert

B.

Reich,

chairman of the Dartmouth Experimental College,
governs "informal but carefully planned seminars in
which the desires and interests of all the participants
outweigh the structures and requirements of an
institution."
It insists on no

fees,

grades, no exams, no
no required readings.

credits,

no

It demands experimentation, innovation, a genuine desire to learn.
It promotes an interest, an understanding, an
excitement.

Mr. Taylor will also discuss some philosophical
models which he "feels are inadequate in one
way or another." He hopes to examine some of
these models.
Reference will be made to the essays of Carl
Jung in which the philosophical and psychological considerations are merged. The class will also
read some pieces written by Sigmund Freud
which, Mr. Taylor feels, are significant to the
study of creativity.
jeremy taylor
conscientious objection
The seminar deals with a discussion of alternatives to war, violence and military service.
"Emphasis will be placed on the existential,
ethical, moral and "religious" aspects of pacifist
action and non-violence as well as the legal and
technical considerations of Conscientious Objec—

Ideally, an experimental college is instituted by
students for students. The State University of Buffalo

has developed a broader program.
A definite need for this 'free university' was
felt by Andrea Roth, Chairman of Experimental College and secretary of the Student Association. Miss
Roth said:
"Reform is needed in the curriculum. Students
may be more interested in the seminar topics than
in their regular course subjects. A more valuable
part of the academic spirit is learning what you
want to learn and what you're deficient in."
During the fall semester, careful planning was
begun by a small committee of students with a
great interest in the experimental approach of learning. They invited any student, faculty, or administrator with a good idea for a course to submit a
syllabus of a proposed seminar. Anyone with an
expertise in a subject was qualified to teach.
Experimental College will soon be a reality on
campus.
The seminars, even in the planning stages, have
provoked comment. One student, Richard Gordon,
considers it "intriguing to be able to lead a group
discussion in something I really love."
Jeremy Taylor, an administrative assistant, wants
the curriculum to remain flexible to serve whatever
needs the students present since "a self-directed
study is always more meaningful."
The seminars will bring together people with
special ideas and interests. What each class will
accomplish is rather nebulous since thoughts and
problems will be generated from the group.
"It is important to remember," said Joseph Ferrandino, another student discussion leader, "that its
people will be volunteers. When students get jammed into a regular course it becomes kind of 'draggy.' In experimental college, they'll be genuinely
interested. Maybe this is an ideal way of looking
at it. I hope it works out."
As the philosophy written for the Experimental
College here indicates, "there is no structural form
to the college based on the idea that students are
responsible for their own education. This responsibility takes its form in a number of courses. Each
course starts with a cjuestion and the freedom to
follow that question wherever it leads."
The courses offered are:

where it's at: a view, some feelings
—

john wipf

Some of the philosophies and views of life
based on the experiences of a psychologist will
conbe the topic of discussion. The group
sisting of 11 students and Mr. Wipf will be the
"arena" where these views will be developed.
The material for the course will develop from
the group talking and responding to each other.
Dr. Wipf explains the seminar this way: "Considerations of ways to approach living based on
some ideas about hang-ups presented in the
context of 12 people trying to understand each
other."
He is the Supervising Psychologist associated
with the Student Counselling Center.
—

jeremy taylor
anarchism
A discussion of Anarchism as a political,
religious, existential and cultural phenomenon with
emphasis on the current modern relevance [of
voluntary, libertarian, non-coercive mode of action
—

&gt;

cal and sociological approaches to creativity. Discussion will include primary sources and individual

and thought.

tion appeals," explained Mr. Taylor.
There will also be discussion of non-violent

political and social revolution.
Mr. Taylor, being personally committed to
pacifism, is willing "to talk about my arrival on
this route." He will discuss both the arguments
for and against pacifism.
Mr. Taylor is an administrative assistant to the
Chairman of the Department of History,
stock market
douglas braun
An imaginary portfolio of $10,000 will be
given to each seminar participant. With it, he
will learn "how to play the stock market."
Since each investor has a definite aim in the
stock market, Mr. Braun will explain the different
techniques in buying and selling stock on a long
and short term growth, "fast-buck" speculation,
—

or income basis.

Certain companies will be analyzed to determine why people invest in their stocks.
The seminar will look into the present economic conditions which dictate the market potential
of various industries. It will attempt to determine
why markets function as they do.
Related areas of the bond market, mutual funds
and other investment companies and the com-

—

r

-

.

.

I

ebiTsfanuod
music" and certain
critics
of
'‘rock
Well-known
instructors in the English Department, using this
form of music as part of the basis for their
courses, will become the focal point to initiate
discussion in this examination of pop music.
"Pre-rock rock,” which is early Negro music

that had some of the basic sound carried through
with the current rock groups, will be analyzed
in the seminar.
Songs will become the basis for discussion

criticism," Mr. Ferrandino hopes. "We will be
interested in what the singer says in general."
Students will listen to pop music groups including The Doors, The Who, The Mothers of
Invention, The Byrds, The Miracles and the
Temptations.

Attention will be given to Bob Dylan who,
in Mr. Ferrandino's estimation, has gone through
a definite evolution in music. "He began as a
kind of blues singer, somewhat the style of
Woody Guthrie, then to protest music where
he considered problems in the social structure."
The Beatles, evolving from a "rah rah group
to one that now sings in terms of the war and
the drug scene," will also be included in the
seminar.
Mr. Ferrandino, a two-year PhD candidate, is
a philosophy graduate student,
urban poverty
dr. frank besag
"The entire urban population will be under
surveilance as students go out into various neighborhoods to "see what they are like."
"This is definitely not a textbook course,"
explained Dr. Besag, "but rather a walking around
the world study." The class will follow the direction of whatever the students want to do
"smelling tests", photographic studies, work with
mass media in making overlays involving demographic data and personal interviews.
—

—

The attitudes

of the urban poor, especially

those "that keep the people this way," will be
discussed.
Dr. Besag, who will be "learning along with
the students," will lead the discussions following
the independent "world travelling."
He is an assistant professor in the Social

Foundations of Education and project director of

the store fronts co-operative extention.
otto caudell
current economic problems
The individual's place in the general role of
governmental economy will be investigated.
Specific problems of the United States economy will be discussed. The topic of the poverty
—

Experimental College

.

.

.

from anarchism to yoga
bv Marlene Kozuchowski
modity market of sugar, oil and cattle will be

discussed.

The group will compare the different stock
exchanges including the New York, American,
National and Pacific exchanges.
"When the knowledge becomes more sophisticated, we'll discuss the use of tips in specula-

tion since 'word of mouth' is the best source
of information," Mr. Braun predicted. "Orperhaps
the group will want to sit around a table and
discuss the Wall Street Journal over a couple

of beers.”
Mr. Braun is an undergraduate majoring in
economics. He is president of AIESEC, treasurer
of the Student Association, and editor of The
Barometer, the newspaper of the School of
Business Administration.

a political process

—

phil cook

will be an inquiry into the role
of illegitimate force in political change.
Mr, Cook will discuss what "people broadly
call the revolution as a devise for social and
political change and the problem of legitimizing
The seminar

it'.

"The relatively common forms of revolution
such as coups
that have little military impace
and the nature of less common revolutionary
will be analyzed.
efforts as in Vietnam”
Mr. Cook is a senior majoring in political
—

—

—

Discussion will also concern the relevance of
anarchism to the "New Left" and the "Movement" as well as personal consideration of art,
psychology and life-style,
creative process
jeremy taylor
An analysis of the anthropological, psychologi-

.-v,:

’y.

-

*i.T! it; .«»!!■&gt; yncff

r'! W

—

science.

Joseph ferrandino
pop music
Pop music is a fairly recent phenomenon. It
manifests many problems apparent in society to—

day.

program will be viewed in the light of the first
nation in the history of the world that is wealthy
enough to solve this problem.
A cost-benefit analysis will be made of both
medicare and medicaid. The role of the government in these programs will also be evaluated.
"The whole gambit of government spending
in Vietnam will be anlyzed in terms of the rela-

tionship of business and military expenditures.
It is necessary for people to have an idea of
economics, and especially of the United States
economy, Mr. Caudell feels. But economic problems, he claims, are related to many different
interests. To the political science major he asks,
"How do you implement plans of economy and
government expenditures with political actions?"
To interested economists he raises the problems of planning new programs in the event of
disarmament and the wealth and ability of the
government to handle the poverty problems. He
also challenges them with an analysis of the

economic structure.
The effect of poverty and welfare on an individual can be studied by the sociology and

present

psychology majors.
Bringing these people and their ideas together
in a seminar, Mr. Caudet) feels that the result
will be new insight on current economic problems.

Mr. Caudell is an honors student in the Eco
nomics Department.
the politics of sex, the sexuality of politics
david gardiner
The seminar will be an attempt to understand
what sex means to a human being. A trans—

�disciplinary approach to the topic will dispense
with all the boundaries of specialized subjects
as sociology and psychology.
The theory of sex in history, bodily reality,
communication through sex, and the role of sexuality in relation to contemporary social control
and liberation will be discussed.
Mr. Gardiner hopes to solve the mystery of
the pan-erotic body.
He is a graduate student in sociology,
negro history
ed wolkenstein

strong rule. Or the man who demonstrates through
parades or writing and only supports these avenues of expression.
"People are interested in the end rather than
the means to give them the kind of political
society they want. Their goal is the development
of good politics.
"I am suggesting that perhaps democracy is
not relevant to the kinds of solutions we want
to reach. Perhaps we can talk of ideas on a higher
scale of values than democracy."

"patriarchal paradise." This conception and its
basic intent still remains as the popular thought,
observed Mr. Wolkenstein.
His seminar will attempt to clarify the true
nature and extent of the slave trade, both foreign
and domestic. Development of resistance and
revolts will be analyzed from the Negro's out-

national parties and the national election 1968
dr. e. cataldo
The seminar centers on the analysis of the
role of political parties in national elections
their nature, breadth and organization.
Issues that have been frequently prominent
in party platforms will be reviewed. The students
will become aware of the results of primaries
and announcements of candidacies. From what
is known about American public opinion and voting trends, some inferences will be made about
the outcome of the 1968 election.
By talking about the issues and the candidates in a "layman's manner," Dr. Cataldo predicts that the students will be able to determine

—

look.
The origins of the present Negro crisis will
be traced through:
the abolition movement and its relation to
•

•

•

•

•

•

•

early trade unions,
development of the Civil War in which
400,000 Negros participated in the Union

forces,
the reconstruction era which Mr. Wolkenstein feels involved a disenfranchisement
of the former slave holders,
the Jim Crow laws, segregation acts and
the social legislation which made the Negro "a second class citizen,"
the sharecropping system,
the flight of the Negro from the south,
the emergance of the Black Nationalist in
the 1920's
the "New Negro,"
crisis of the sharecroppers' union in the
—

•

1930's,

the trade union movement
effect of the Negro revolt and the Joe
McCarthy anti-communist movement during
the 1950's, and
'Black power.'
There seems to be a tendency of many people
to avoid the real Controversial issues, Mr. Wolkenstein feels. "Perhaps as an outcome of this
seminar, some students will learn to face certain
issues in the light of the American historical role
he plays and then examine their consciences.
Then they have to come to a decision
either
to alleviate the problem or tacitly approve of
it while ignoring their responsibility.”
Mr. Wolkenstein is a graduate student in Read•

•

•

—

ing Education.

a philosophical inquiry into freud
robert
brincherhoff
Fundamental Freudian principles and their phil—

osophical implications will be critically analyzed.
The book "Errors in Civilization," written by

Herbert Marcuse, will be used during this seminar.
It attempts to connect Freudian theory with western philosophical tradition and show how Freud's
concept of man runs counter to the predominant
conception of human nature, explained Mr. Brincherhoff.
In discussion, the theories of human nature
will be related to values and ethics.
For a different approach, the seminar may
discuss B. F. Skinner's conception of man and
society.

The course will also be concerned with the
theoretical possibilities of a non-repressive civilization.
Mr. Brincherhoff is a part-time instructor in
philosophy. He is limiting his course to ten students.
the irrelevance of democracy
john p. jones
"I contend that as a means of discussion people will always be more interested in the solutions
than in the process itself."
—

With this statement Mr. Jones will raise in
his seminar the question whether another political
"might
other than democracy
philosophy
give us what we want."
The seminar will view the historical concept
of political thought, beginning with the Greeks
and continuing to contemporary problems.
Topics of Dow, draft cards and Vietnam will
be considered as "they are more meaningful
—

-

—

because they are current."
Mr. Jones explains the title of the seminar.
The Irrelevance of Democracy like this: "When
people are seeking some kind of goals, they think
that they have the right solution to the problem.
It's like the man who has much popular support
and claims that 'the people must rule.' Or the
man who has governmental institutions in his
influence demands that the government have the

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—

—

the extent to which political aspirants and parties
"come to grips with the prominant, important
and enduring problems of the 1960and 1970's."
Dr. Cataldo is an assistant professor in the
Political Science Department.

linda swiniuch
dance appreciation
The art of dance will be discovered through
historical perspective.
Primitive dance will provide a basis for the
study. Discussion will then follow a natural
progression to the integration of dancing in the
Greek theater and the roman, medieval, Renaissance, 1 9th and 20th century forms.
The development of Oriental dancing may be
compared with the earlier styles of 200 or 2000
—

years ago.

History of American Jazz may be viewed through
the influences of society on its development.
Dance criticism will be developed through
demonstrations and performances and familiarity
with the critiques in the New York Times and
the Saturday Review.
The class aims to develop a more educated
interest in dance.
Miss Swiniuch is currently teaching in the
Women's Physical Education Department a course
in musical comedy dealing with basic movement
and the integration of popular American dance
forms in the Broadway theater. She has done
some theater work in the summer musical tent
circuit in Buffalo.
cooking
mrs. clara lyndon
"A good pie, 365 ways of preparing hamburger, or inexpensive one-dish dinners" will
be included in the seminar's curriculum.
—

Since cooking cannot be learned by reading
a cookbook, a small group of students will "shift
around my kitchen learning my specialties," explained Mrs. Lyndon, in describing the course.
She may also invite several of her friends to
illustrate their favorite recipes.

Basic cooking techniques will be explained
since "it is only by experience that someone
learns all the valuable little cooking hints."
and eat
Enthusiastic students will cook
whatever their hearts desire.
—

—

the military and society dr. w. a. lucas
The leading question will concern the philosophical approaches of what a military organiza-

tion is.

Following from this, the idea of the citizen
army will be contrasted with professionalism.
Military influences on society will also be evaluated.
Theories of military organizations, including
the idea of the Garrison State as defined by
Harold Lasswell, will be discussed. In the seminar, the specific relation between the officer corps
in modern society and the government's decisionmaking process will be determined.
All these ideas for discussion will climax in
the theme of the analysis "of the type of military

establishment compatible with democracy and/or
utopia. Emphasis will be placed on the successes and failures of the American military,"
explained Dr. Lucas.
Within the format of a small group Dr. Lucas
hopes that some of the students become involved
in his private research which studies the role
of the military in society.
"Given the self-selection of the class, I don't

Student Association Treasurer Douglas Braun
teach a course on the Stock Market.

will

sqe how we can avoid talking about Vietnam,
recruitment, selective service and the type of
officer the United States should have in this
particular time of history. These are topics which
a free University class should want to direct
itself," commented Dr. Lucas.
richard gornorthern Indian classical music
don
Except for a few books, record jackets and
the recent popularity of Ravi Shankar, Mr. Gordon
feels that very few people have the chance to
listen to and understand Indian music.
The distinct northern style of music that will
be studied in the seminar is "a living form of
music that is undergoing constant improvisation."
The basic concepts of Raga, the Indian scale
forms, and Tala, the rhythmic scales, will be
explained.
The Indian sounds will be illustrated by Mr.
Gordon who will play the serod, an unfretted
instrument with 25 strings. A guest lecturer may
teach the technique of the tabla, a set of two
drums, one smaller with a fixed pitch.
Recordings will illustrate other instruments and
the vocal music.
A brief history of Indian music will be given.
Then the students "will be able to do a lot of
listening and learn to appreciate the music."
Mr. Gordon, an honors student in the Music
Department, became enthusiastic about Indian
music during the Festival of Indian Arts held on
campus two years ago.
He spent the summer at the American Society
for Eastern Arts at Berkely, Calif., studying with
Austad Ali Akbar Kahn, the foremost performer
on the sarod today,
meditation and yoga
m. lal goal
The course will involve learning Meditation
and Kirtan.
Meditation is the art of concentrating one's
mind on one object. Kirtan is the chanting of
Mantas with the accompaniment of cymbals,
tablas, harmonium and other instruments.
"Properly done, meditation leads to peace of
mind through discipling of the ever-wandering
thought pattern. Kirtan leads to ecstacy and real
happiness through spiritual enlightment," Mr. Goel
explained.
The Mantra that the seminar participants will
chant consists of 16 words: "Hare Krishna, Hare
Krishna, Krishna, Krishna, Hare Harel Here Rama,
Rama, Rama, Hare, Hare.”
Mr. Goel is a graduate student completing
his Ph.D. in political science. He learned Meditation and Kirtan in India.
Registration for the Experimental College courses
will continue through the months of December and
January. Lists are posted in the Student Senate
Office, Room 205, and at the Experimental College
table in Norton Hall.
Interested students should sign for whatever
—

—

courses they want.
The schedule for seminars will be determined
by the individual teachers and students. The meetings will begin during the first week of second
semester.

�Tuesday, December 12, 1947

The Spectrum

Pag* Eighteen

Nassau Exec discusses Washington self-help leader to resign
city-suburb relationship

slums, inspecting Pride’s work in

Gannett Nevfs Service

WASHINGTON—Rufus “Catfish” Mayfield, a 20-year- rubbish removal and rat ex
old dropout who has served time in jail, emerged here this termination. The reporters and
summer as an example of the kind of imaginative home- television cameras were never

world.”

gene rNicKerson warned supurbaniles Saturday that they must help

He urged

suburbanites

to develop! and maintain an interest in city problems
and
to help solve them.
Dr. Alan J. Campbell of Syracuse University said local communities will have to reorganize
their governmental structures to
keep pace with the times. Unless
action is taken by local leaders,
he warned, the state or federal
government will be forced to intervene.

solve the problems of their urban

—

neighbors.
Nickerson, an unsuccessful candidate for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination last year,
spoke during an urban affairs
seminar sponsored by the State
University of Buffalo.
He said if the core cities are
allowed to decay and die "the

thing is really to be done about the problems of poor people
in city slums.
Now he also seems to have streets and alleys.
become an example of what
The project, aided initially
can happen to such a leader with a $300,000 Labor Departafter his project succeeds bement grant to pay the youths,
was criticized at first as a crude
yond anyone’s hopes.

attempt to buy racial peace in the
Mr. Mayfield announced at a nation’s capital. A more cogent
criticism was that it performed
press conference that he will quit
a good clean-up service but proJan. 1, as chairman of “Pride,
Inc.,” a self-help program that vided its members few longstarted off killing rats and now range benefits.
has a $2 million federal grant to
provide jobs, training and opporIts stock seemed to rise when
tunities for the poor.
Mr. Mayfield began drawing naconference
He called the press
tional attention as a frank but
to explain why. But he didn’t, sympathetic witness before teleexcept to refer vaguely to “probvised Senate Judiciary Committee
lems within the organization” and
hearings on the causes of riots.
verse action.”
to disagreements he would not
Gen. Hershey and Atty. Gen. spell out, involving other, newer
He won praise on Capitol Hill
Clark said the special unit would officials of Pride.
notably from Sen. Edward M."
be directed by John Van de
Kennedy—when he spoke against
Kamp, deputy director of the
Cleaned up slums
violence but said he couldn’t
executive office for U. S. atIt was Mr. Mayfield’s knack for blame young people trapped in
torneys.
sums for resorting to it when
inspiring and organizing other
young Negro men and boys that they saw no way out of their
The unit will be responsible
includmade a striking success of Pride situation, and no one
tor prosecuting those who unlawseemed to be
during the tense summer weeks
ing Congress
fully aid or counsel others to
giving much help.
here. He led gangs of young Neevade the draft or violently ingroes
about 1100 of them
terfere with the Selective ServSenators and congressmen acthrough their neighborhoods, killice system, the statement said.
ing an estimated 25,000 rats and
companied Mr. Mayfield and his
cleaning tons of rubbish out of folowers on tours of the city

Justice Dept, creates division

to prosecute war protest cases
WASHINGTON (UPI)
The
Justice Department Saturday established a special criminal unit
to prosecute anti-war demonstrators who violate Selective Service laws or interfere with military recruiting. The action was
announced in a joint statement
by Draft Director Lewis B. Hershey and Atty. Gen. Ramsey
Clark, who assured Gen. Hershey’s congressional critics that
law-abiding demonstrators would
“incur no penalty or other ad—

Question of

—

—

—

—

Job conference is scheduled in N.Y.C.

the week

Special to the Spectrum

The University is going on a 4 point quality
grading system next year. Do you think provisions
should be made to modify failing grades?
You can answer The Spectrum Question of the
Week every Wednesday at the Information Desk on
the first floor of Norton Hall.
Please submit only one ballot answering the
question of the week.
Last week’s question was:
What do you think should be the attitude of the

University Health Services toward birth control?
The results were:
1.) Make birth control devices available to

72%

all.
Make birth control devices available to

6%

2.)

16%

3.)

married students,
Make birth control

4.)

available.
Play no role in birth control

6%

gt«le®rest

WflB STEAK
$*95
m

1

ALL YOU WANT

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

(Withilt Re „on)

■■■■■■■■■■■■

BUY

&amp;

U.S. CHOICE TOP SIRLOIN

�

SELL

ucrn
UJiall Diinvc
OUUIVD

Room af the

BLACKSMITH
SHOP
“Oldest Steak House in U'.N.Y."

3610 Main

1375 DELAWARE AVE.
TT 6-9281

from Clement Hall)

IN THE DARK ABOUT

INSURANCE?

w&gt;
I

Try Our Staff of Brokers

•

WE REPRESENT YOU—NOT A COMPANY

MAURICE L NAYLON, INC.
856-6200

The objective of the conference
is to bring together students
looking for that important first
full time job with prospective employers at a central location with

a minimum of time, effort and
expense. Some fifty companies
with openings in marketing, retailing, finance, advertising, man-

agement and sales will have personnel executives at the confer-

ence.
Among the companies which
have already made reservations
for New York INTRO ’68 are:
All State Insurance Co., ColgatePalmolive Co., W. T. Grant Co.,
Johnson &amp; Johnson, Liberty Mutual Insurance Co. and Oscar
Mayer

&amp;

Co.

Conference registration and
resume forms may be obtained at
the placement office.

But it seemed to besomething
like this; After the success of
the pilot clean-up program, Pride
was given a longer lease on life,
40 weeks more, and a lot more
money—$2 million.
It also got more staff members, including an executive director and several assistant directors to help administer the
$2 million operation under Mr.
Mayfield’s chairmanship. Pride
moved its headquarters and
broadened its scope to include
job training and after school work

projects.

Felt less needed
Apparently, as the organization became more organized, and
more institutionalized, Mr, May
field found less and less need
for his talents and more need
for the people who are used to
the less spectacular job of handling paper work and policy problems of a government-funded
project.

“I was young and inexperienced,” he said. “I could not
cope with the problem within the
structure.”
The problems of Pride and
Rufus Mayfield may seem limited
to Washington, D.C., but they
raise this question for other communities: When an effective and
imaginative young leader does
emerge, will he, like Mr. Mayfield, face the same dilemma if
he succeeds?

No one can say, least of all
Rufus Mayfield, an unhappy
young man who feels he is no
longer needed and apparently
can’t understand why.

17 COURT STREET

Hank Naylon—Jim Hardie—Dick Naylon

The Buffalo Board of Education
February 1968 teaching assignments on the regular staff of the Buffalo
Public School System are now available in the following areas: K-6,

Mathematics, Science, Physical Education, Automotive, Special Education and Music.

�

The Peaceable Kindom

BUFFALO
TEXTBOOK

•

*

Dine and Relax in

and paperbacks

(across

INFORMATION

NEW YORK
The New York
Chapter Of the American Marketing Association, leading national
marketing organization, will sponsor its third annual conference,
INTRO ’68, bringing together
Feb. 8 and 9 graduating college
seniors and graduate students,
both men and women, with personnel representatives of blue
chip business concerns at the
Park-Sheraton Hotel, New York.
—

At the press conference, Mr,

Mayfield was either unwilling or
unable to tell a crowd of 30 re
porters packed into a basement
social room what it was that made
him decide to resign. Other members of Pride’s board say they
don’t know what is troubling him.

January Graduates

I

r—1

—

Overwhelming bureaucracy

Applicants will be considered in this order of preferences

1. Fully certified in their fields of specialization
2. Liberal Arts graduates; 12 hours in education
3. Liberal Arts graduates with current program leading to teacher
certification.

APPLY NOW FOR COMPLETE DETAILS

Phone 842-2376
or

write

TEACHER RECRUITMENT
BUFFALO BOARD OF EDUCATION
720 City Hall, Buffalo, New York 14202

�Tuesday, December 12, 1967

Crackdown

on

CLASSIFIED

LSD

(CPS) —Many Congressmen

have become concerned about the increased use of drugs on college
campuses and are pushing for stronger laws against drugs,
particularly LSD.
Three bills designed to reduce the use of hallucinogenic
drugs have been introduced in the House. The bills would
make mere possession of LSD illegal except when the drug is
prescribed by a duly licensed practitioner. Under the existing law, it is not illegal for a person to possess LSD for
his own consumption.
The three bills, which are remarkably similar in intent, have
been referred to the Committee
in Interstate and Foreign Commerce. It is a foregone conclusion that the committee will recommend the legislation favorably
since 25 of the 33 committee
members joined in sponsoring
one of the bills. It is unlikely
there will be an significant opposition on the House floor or
in the Senate.

The key LSD bill was introduced by Rep. Paul Rogers (D.
Fla.) and co sponsored by 24 of
his colleagues on the House
Commerce Committee, including
Chairman Harley 0. Staggers (D.
W. Va.). The second bill was submitted by Reps. Florence P. Dwyer (R. N. J.) and Robert Dole (R.
Kans.), and the third by Rep.
J. Irving Whalley (R., Pa.).

Penalties set

a $10,000 fine. The bills, in effect, apply the penalties which
presently exist for illegal manu-

facture and distribution of danof
them.

gerous drugs to possession

Mrs. Dwyer and Rep. Dole go
a step further than. Rep. Rogers.
In addition to cracking down on
possession, their bill significantly increases the penalties for the
manufacture, sale, or distribution of LSD and similar drugs.
The Whalley bill’s primary force
is to make is a federal crime to
possess LSD.
Congressmen supporting these
bills are accepting the theory
that providing severe penalties
for possession will be a deterent
to the use of hallucinogenic
drugs. They believe new laws
are needed to enable the Federal Food and Drug Administration to control drugs more effectively.

The first two bills, which are
viewed as the most significant,
refer to the illegal possession of
depressant, stimulant, and hallucinogenic drugs and set penalties up to $1,000 and one year in
jail for the first offense. Subsequent offenses would be treated
as felonies with maximum penalties of three years in prison and

This theory, however, may not
be endorsed by the FDA’s top administrator, Dr. James Goddard.
Dr. Goddard has testified before
three Congressional committees
recently that he thinks penalties
for possession of marijuna do
not serve as a deterrent to potential users. Although he did

not take

a direct stand

FOR SALE
Volkswagen, 1966. Blue, sunroof, whitewalls, radio. Excellent condition. Call after 5:00. 837-7790.
1962 RAMBLER, 4 door, 30,000 miles. Automatic transmission. $250. 876-3301.

GREAT DEAL!

Reverb, fremelo, cov.er, like new $160.00.
835-706Q.

on penal-

ties for possessing LSD, it would
seem the same theory could be
applied.
A spokesman for the FDA said
Dr. Goddard and other top FDA
officials are studying the LSD
bills, but have not yet formulated
an official position on them.
In his testimony about marijuana, Dr. Goddard said drug
abuse should be controlled by
cutting off the supply rather
than making criminals out of
young people and others who experiment with drugs. He also
recommended a large-scale educational campaign on the dangers
of using drugs.

GRUNDIG

gems from the Jewish Bible
call 875-4265 day or night.

SHALOM! For

track tape recorder. 3Va
attachment.
months old. Phonographic
price.
Sacrifice
Call Ann at 831-3197.
camera,
Agra
PHOTOGRAPHIC EQUIPMENT.
35mm. Veigel enlarger with Schneider
80mm. lens and complete dark room outfit, reasonable 652-6334.
THREE-PIECE set Samsonite luggage. Large,
medium, cosmetic case. Off-while. Nearly
new. 831-3240.
FIND NEW and used paperbacks and hard
bound books at GRANT Books and
Stamps. 3292 Main St.

"WHO

IS Renee

four

APARTMENTS FOR RENT
UNFURNISHED, Guilford St. four blocks
west of Genesee-FHImore. Two bedroom
upper

—

kitchen, living room, bath, space

gas heater. ,$65

month

with heat. 894-2696.

FOR RENT
HALL, for Friday

and

Saturday,

ROOMMATES

LSD more dangerous
Dr. Goddard told Congress LSD
is far more dangerous than marijuana, and it is thus inconsistent
that the penalties for smoking
pot are far more severe than
for taking LSD. He recommended the inconsistency be reduced
by lowering the marijuana penalties to make them similar to
those now applied to LSD.
Many Congressmen, however,
have responded to the suggestion

by saying they plan to eliminate
the inconsistency by increasing
the LSD penalties, not lowering
those for marijuana. Still, however, the LSD bills already introduced would not provide penalties as stiff as those for marijuana, which nearly all experts

agree is less harmful. Persons

possessing pot may receive up to
10 years in prison and a $20,000

fine for the first offense. Therefore, some inconsistency will remain even if the LSD legislation

is passed.

ALL GREEKS tonight ii deadline night!
Please bring all your candid pictures
write-ups to the BUFFALONIAN office
rm. 356 immediately or else!II!.

and

Robbinson?'

'

Legislation is introduced in House
WASHINGTON

Pag* Nineteen

The Spectrum

EXPERT TYPING work, free pick
delivery service. TR 7-3693.

up and

MISCELLANEOUS

TICKETS WANTED for Messiah Concert December 15 at Kleinhans. Will pay any
price, 831-3083 (Roseanna).
We paint house
COLLEGE PAINTERS
...

and apartment interiors. For free estimates call 834-4193.
INTERSESSION in the Virgin Islands! Camp
under palm trees, swim in crystal clear
waters
and
beachcomb
on sugar-while
beaches. All expenses $150. Call immediafely. Dave 837-9186.
VOTE 4 Barny.

GIRLS, SOCIAL whirl dull? Revo return*
to you Dec. 17. Want »ome? Call 873late.
Check
INTERSESSION
IN Puerto Rico.
dormitory or bulletin boards. For full
information and application call Andrew
Feldman, 885-4685.
7198

TX 2-6252.

WANTED

WANTED. 127 Montrose Ave.
10 minute walk to campus. $31 not including utilities. 832-3613.
ROOMMATE

WANTED
Weekends Friday
and Saturday. Ideal working conditions.
p.m.
After
7
6-9194.
Call TX
MALE AND female Xmas jobs. Part time
or full time. Call 853-2134.
SEVERAL POSITIONS will be open for paid
tenors and basses after Jan.
1. Auditions will be arranged during next two
weeks. Call Mr. Leist, Kenmore Presbyterian Church, 875-7600.
TICKETS WANTED for Messiah Concert. December 15th at Kleinhans. Will pay any
price. 831-3083 (Roseanna).
TALENTED ROCK band to join In promising business venture. 875-1262.
COCKTAIL

SITUATIONS WANTED

WAITRESS:

APARTMENTS WANTED
JTENTIONI Graduating senior* and am
one else wanting to rent 2, 3 or 4 bet
jom

apartment

iors. Call

to responsible

college s«

874-4193.

LOST

{flower-shaped charm on gold
chain), probably in Crosby. It's a family
very important to me. Finder
and
heirloom,
call Ellen, 875-8767.
POST SLIDE RULE in or near Chemistry
building. Reward, call after five TR 76483.

NECKLACE

Jay Peak, Vermont

PERSONAL

all this
and Walter too!

NEEDED
female students to soothe
shattered nerves and rebuild the ego of
baby-faced Norm. Call 883-3458.
HELP

-

*

*

*
*
*
*

New 61 passenger
your skiing time

tram triples

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Attractive ski week rates

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�Tuesday,

The Spectrum

Pag* Tw*nty

December 12, 1947

/
*

•

beirut

i

Washington

focus
compiled

from our

wire services by

Lilian Waite

UPt Telephoto
i

■

Longshoreman
ctrilrAC
SIIIKCa

t

A NYC longshoreman took exception to
antidraft demonstrators last week and
pulled down a banner some were carryjn g m downtown Manhattan.

U.S. opposes Cong propaganda
WASHINGTON—The United States delared flatly that it opposes allowing representatives of the Viet Cong to come to
the United Nations “merely to mount a

propaganda campaign.”
In a long, carefully worded declaration,
the State Department also said the United
States is against any effort to impose on
South Vietnam a coalition government
that would be “at variance” with the principle of self determination.
The department’s press officer, Robert
J. McCloskey, said the statement was
being issued because of numerous inquiries received with regard to U. S. policy
concerning the National Liberation Front,
(NLF), political arm of the Viet Cong.

—UPI

Telephoto

San Francisco
protest

Demonstrators protesting alleged "political harrassment" and "racism" at San
Francisco Slate College are shown as
they broke through the front door of the
Administration Building. Scores poured
through the broken glass door.

Heavy fighting in Yemen
BEIRUT, Lebanon

—

Besieging Yemini

Royalist forces extended their “surrender
or be destroyed” ultimatum on Republican troops holding the capital city of
Sanaa. Cairo newspapers reported heavy
fighting around Sanaa Friday as the last
of the Egyptian troops pulled out of

Yemen.
In Cairo, Sudanese Premier Mohamed
Ahmed Mahgoub appealed for a cease-fire
between the warring Republican and Royalist forces. Mahgoub, who helped draw
up the “peace" agreement for Yemen under which Egyptian troops were withdrawn, said the fighting “does not serve
the cause of Yemen and its people—only
the enemy.”
Egypt had been backing the Republican regime in the Arab desert country.
Saudi Arabia supported the Royalists dur-

ing the years-long civil war but agreed
to stop its aid if Egyptian troops were
pulled out.

U. N. action

The United Nation’s Security Council,
in an unusual procedure, endorsed Secretary General Thant’s plans to expand the
U. N. truce supervision force along the
Suez Canal, without holding a meeting.
The Soviet Union sought a council meeting to assert the authority of the 15-nation body above that of Secretary General
Thant in controlling the 90-man force
along the canal. But it abandoned its
plan after private consultations among

The American statement said the United
States, while opposing Viet Cong U. N.
representation for purely proaganda purposes, “would not oppose representatives
of the NLF presenting their views to the
United Nations when they are officially
invited for official business.”
"The question of the NLF coming to
the United Nations under an official invitation is, of course, totally different
from any question of their entering the
United States for propaganda purposes,”
the statement said. “We do oppose their

coming merely to mount a propaganda
campaign.”

"Immoral and unnecessary"
Sen. J. William Fulbright lashed out
at the administration again Friday for
pursuing an “immoral and unnecessary
war” in Vietnam and scoffed at President
Johnson’s avowed restraint in handling
dissenters.
“I am not the

slightest bit grateful

to the administration for

my freedom of

speech,” the Arkansas Democrat said sarcastically as a new round of Vietnam debate erupted on the Senate floor.
Fulbright, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, was challenged
in advance by Sen. Thomas J. Dodd (D.,
Conn.), to say where he would draw the
line against Communist expansion.
Dodd argued against abandoning “a

right moral cause simply because the cost
of defending it runs high.” He added:
“Let us not seek an easy way out, because
there is no easy way out.”

What U. S. demonstrates
But Fulbright retorted that all the
United States is demonstrating in Vietnam is its “willingness and ability to use
its B52s, its napalm and all the other ingenious weapons of ‘counter-insurgency’
to turn a small country into a charnel
house.”
Even if the war is won, he said, “we
would still have little to be proud of
and a great deal to regret.
“We would still have fought an immoral
and unnecessary war. We would still
have passed up opportunities which, if
taken when they arose, would have spared
us and the Vietnamese the present ordeal.”

He called for “an honest and sustained
effort to make a compromise peace
through a new Geneva conference, or
through direct discussions between the
Saigon government and the Viet Cong."

Charges "Hesitation"
Fulbright charged that the administration had “hesitated if not obstructed communication with the enemy.” He cited
the National Liberation Front’s apparent
rejection of U. S. conditions for sending
representatives to the United Nations.
He spoke scathingly of Dodd’s assertion
that the administration had accorded an
“extravagant degree of freedom” to dissenters protesting the war effort.
“I am not the slightest bit grateful to
the administration for my freedom of
speech,” Fulbright said. “That freedom
is an inalienable right which the American people reserved to themselves when
they established a constitutional government.
“When
government abstains from
suppressing dissent, it is do’ng nothing
with one of the explicit conditions of its
constitutional trust,” he added. “That is
not a thing for which gratitude is owed.”

the members.
Chief S. O. Adebo of Nigeria, December council president, announced agreement of the members in a consensus on
Thant’s plans.

Romney defines neutralization
PARIS—Gov. George Romney of Michi-

gan discussed his ideas for neutralizing

Vietnam and Southeast Asia with French
Foreign Minister Maurice Couve de Murville and other members of President
Charles de Gaulle’s cabinet.
Informed sources said Romney, a candidate for the Republican presidential
nomination, found considerable understanding for the neutralization concept
among French political and government
leaders.

Aides said Romney defines neutralization as withdrawal of all foreign military
forces after an agreed deadline and a ban
on political alliances between nations of

the area and East-West power blocs.

Informants said Romney told French
leaders he believes they should expect the
President of the United States to continue
to seek a Vietnam solution and stated he
would do this if elected.
Romney was reliably reported to have
told French officials the tensions between
France and the United States are caused
by the French view of America as a huge
power bigger than the Soviet Union. He
was said to feel that the French resent
being ignored on major policy decisions
and "talked down to” as if they were
children even if this was done unintentionally.

—UW Talephoto

LBJ arrives
for funeral

President Johnson (right) pauses at Francis Cardinal Spellman's casket in St. Pat-

rick's Cathedral on arrival for funeral
services last Thursday.

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>r

The
Vol. 18, No. 23

Referendum to be held
about campus recruiting
•

•

•

•

pus?

The questions, proposed by
Senators Ellen Price, Neal Slatkin
and Richard Miller, were passed

at Wednesday’s meeting.
The Senate voted to hold a
general election Wednesday of
a senator to succeed Sandra Funt
within the Arts and Sciences Division instead of the usual constitutional procedure that a re-

placement shall be elected by a
majority vote of the Student Senate.
Constitutionally, t h e Student
Council of a division presents
nominees to the Executive Committee. In lieu of such a council
in the Arts and Sciences division,
a resolution was adopted to hold

the general election.
The four candidates on the ballot for Wednesday’s election are
Steve Ray, Randall Eng, Richard
Scott and Tod Miller.
A resolution proposed by Mr.
Joe Orsini to hold a referendum
concerning the allocation of Student Association funds to the
Quadrangle failed. By constitution, a binding referendum involving financial allocations is illegal.

Immediate reconsideration by
the Ranking and Grading Commmittee of their decision concerning Modified “F” or “the creation of a new means” was called
for by the Senate.

51 turn in draft cards, letters
as part of Stop the Draft week

Students taunted
As the more than 150 demon-

strators marched on Tuesday, a
group of approximately 100 students formed across the street
in front of the Bryant &amp; Stratton

Business Institute and taunted
the marchers.
Shortly before 1:30 p.m. when
the demonstration officially
began, one demonstrator, Gary

Later in the afternoon, Mr.
Owen sat down in front of the
doors. When he ignored a police
request to move, he was dragged
to a police car and taken to police
headquarters under arrest.
It was around the time of Mr.
Owen’s arrest that the number
of marchers had reached its peak.
Meanwhile, students from the
business school across the street
were gathering, along with bewildered onlookers.
At 2:05 p.m., a protestor who
was passing out literature in front
of the school became involved in

(Cont’d on Page 6)

Friday, December 8, 1967

Managing Editor

to discuss recruiting and related activities

The Senate meeting was
barely under way when some
100 students and other nonfaculty members began to
file quietly into Butler Auditorium, Capen Hall
A motion was on the floor to
open the meeting via closed-cir-

cuit television—which had been
installed in a large adjacent room
—when the students began filing
in.
Professor Jacob D. Hyman of
the Law School, arguing that the
presence of a substantial group
of non-members made it difficult
to conduct the meeting, moved
for adjournment.
“The issues before the Senate
were serious and difficult," and
“numerous new and complex motions weer being proposed without adequate opportunity for
study by Senate members,” according to an administrative
spokesman. The adjournment mo-

was

made to

asked all non-members to leave
and the four, who were sitting
in the third row, got up and

began walking out.

Mr. Marciano said that they
were booed by Senate members
as they filed out of the auditorium. An Administrative official
said he “recalled no such action.”
When the four reached the exit,
according to Mr. Burgess, "we

Telephoto

New Yorkers
protest draft

Policemen climbed over fence
at City Hall Park Wednesday to
haul away anti-draft demonstrators on Broadway.

Thousands

filled the streets of lower Manhattan around the Army Induction Center and then City Hall
and surrounding areas.

doors and said

Following the adjournment,
more than 100 students filed into
the auditorium as faculty members filed out. Dr. Robert Ketter, vice president for facilities
planning, said to a/ group of
students as he left: “You killed
your own cause. You would have

won.”
Professor Bruce Jackson, Department of English, said: "We
were about to vote on admittance,
but before we could, students
stampeded in.” He termed the
action "most unfortunate, most
untactful.”
(Cont’d on Page 6)

the presence of

certain persons who were not
members of the Senate,”
Four non-members present
were John Marciano and Joseph
Burgess, both members of the
GSA Executive Council; and William Yates and William Maryl,
both representing SDS and Student Mob, President Meyerson

—UPI

Telephoto

Dr. Spock

arrested

While a policeman carrying a
nightstick stands behind him,
pediatrician Dr. Benjamin Spock
sits outside the New York
armed forces induction center.

'Stop the Draft' demonstrations held
across country; 264 arrested in NYC
“Stop the Draft Week” began Monday as
scores of protesters across the country demonstrated against the military draft and the
war in Vietnam.
Confrontations between students and police were common, with violence breaking
out at several points and hundreds of protesters carried off to jail.

264 arrested in New York
In New York City police arrested 264 demonstrators at the Armed Forces Induction Center in
Manhattan Tuesday. Pediatrician-author Dr, Benjamin Spock and poet Allen Ginsberg were among the
protesters carried away from a four-hour outburst

—UPI

held open the
‘C’mon in.’
”

A Faculty Senate meeting came to an abrupt adjournment Wednesday as students filed into the “closed session.”
The meeting was a continuation of an earlier meeting called

He was the only demonstrator
who was allowed to enter the

building.

~:ty

n/rr

P

by Rick Schwab

Assistant

Monday’s demonstration at Selective Service headquarters saw

51 persons hand in draft cards
or letters of complicity to the
local board. On Tuesday, nine
persons were arrested in front of
the government’s induction center at 1021 Main St.

1967

&lt;

Faculty Senate meeting adjourns
as students enter closed session

in
Buffalo Monday and Tuesday as
a part of the national “Stop the
Draft Week.”

Spactrum Staff Reporters
Antiwar protesters picketed

."e

Non-facul members iresent

tion was passed “overwhelmingOwen, was allowed into the building. Mr. Owen, a member of the ly,” the spokesman said.
State University College chapter Non-members present
“During discussion of the sevof Students for a Democratic Society, reportedly turned in some eral proposals to open the meetpapers to the induction center ing,” according to a release by
the Administration, “objection
on the second floor.

by Madeline Levine and
Peter Simon

/«

Q;,
State University of New York at Buffalo

The Student Senate will conduct a referendum on campus
recruitment policies Wednesday.
The referendum questions are:
Should any group be prohibited from recruiting on campus?
If your answer to question
#1 was “Yes,” which groups
should be prohibited?
Should the Dow Chemical
Company and the Central Intelligence Agency be permitted to
recruit on campus?
Should the current policies
of the Placement Office be
amended to bar all non-academic
groups from recruiting on cam-

”

at the Whitehall St. center.
Police estimated that more than 1000 demonstrators, most of them of high school and college age,
participated at the height of the protest but there
were no clashes between police and the crowd. No
injuries were reported.
The protest, at one point, jammed three full city
blocks with warmly-wrapped, sign-carrying, shouting demonstrators.
Spock at first marched with the sign-carrying
pickets; then he informed police he was going to
climb the barricade and sit down on the induction
center steps.
After a half-hearted attempt to scale a barricade,
he was informed by police that if he came through

the barricade he would be arrested.
The pediatrician led about a dozen people
through a break in the line of gray saw-horses, and

the group was then arrested.
A fleet of paddy wagons and police buses were
hauling arrested demonstrators away to the courthouse at 110 Centre St., where they were being arraigned on charges of disorderly conduct and in
some cases of resisting arrest.
The demonstrators were throwing themselves
down in the streets or on the sidewalks in an attempt to block the approaches to the induction
center.

Small army
A small army of police had been mobilized to
keep the way to the center open. Bluecoats were
escorting draftees reporting for induction through
the crowd of demonstrators into the building.
As the propsective inductees passed through
their ranks, the demonstrators shouted such remarks as “Don’t go!” or "Don't be in a hurry to die

for Johnson!”
The police perimeter extended anywhere from
one-half block to a block around the center. A second line of policemen was in front of the main entrance to the center.
The bulk of the demonstrators outside the first
police line chanted “peace now” and carried placards reading “stop it now” and “Yankee stay home,”
directed at the inductees, who were being escorted
through the demonstrators by policemen.
Police were standing almost shoulder-to-shoulder
around the induction center and outnumbered demonstrators in the early hours. However, the ranks of
the demonstrators began swelling with dawn.
Club*, Mac* us*d af Iowa
At the University of Iowa an estimated 300 angry
(Cont’d on Page 6)

�Pay*

Friday, December I,

The Spectrum

Two

1967

Wooldridge discusses co-op education University may consider
new admissions policy

Mr. Wooldridge mentioned that
most students have to work on
part-time jobs during the summer, usually on jobs unrelated to
their field of interest. A co-op
institution would be responsible
for finding jobs for students during the year, where they could
earn and gain experience at the
same time.

Engineering and science majors
were cited as those most easily
served by co-op programs.

Since textbooks often cannot
keep up with advances in research and technology, students
working in the field often return
with more specific knowledge of
their subject than is taught in the
classrooms,
Mr. Wool dridge
claimed.

liberal arts majors, job
can cut down on disillusionment with an education that
does not in itself lead to a job.
For

training

No distractions
Mr. Wooldridge said that most
American schools are patterned
on the European model, implying
that the student is removed from
the distractions of the outside
world. He is put in a situation
to ‘search for truth’ with a group
of students and teachers.
Work experience, he explained,
when it is part of a degree requirement, tries to keep in touch
with the outside world. The
theory behind this is that “stu-

dents are best educated when
dipped into the reality of everyday life.”
Describing Buffalo as an ‘untapped area,” Mr. Wooldridge believes that there are businesses
that would hire local co-op students. Seventy percent of the students at Northeastern University
are employed within a 40-mile
radius of Boston, Other students
work in other states and countries all over the world.

As opposed to Antioch College,
Northeastern University and Beloit College in Wisconsin, which
have programs “totally committed" to co-op, education, Buffalo
would probably start an elective
program. Students might study
during their freshman year and
then elect a co-op program. The
program would take five years
to complete.

Alternate
Students would work half a
year, and study the next half.
This insures a job for the student,
as well as full time position in
a company. Two students would
have a seat in the classroom and
a job on alternate halves of the
year.

lective service in a five-year program. It counts as a regular college deferment.

Pragmatic students

Commenting on the possible
reaction of the faculty to workstudy options, Mr. Wooldridge
noted that students returning
from the field “tend to be more
pragmatic, and want to see the application of a subject taught in
the classroom,” Especially in science and engineering, it forces
both student and faculty to keep
up with new advances.
Mr. Wooldridge concluded that
a co-op program “would add a
dimension to education which the
University does not have. There
is a segment of students who
would benefit immensely.”
Dr. Jerome Fink, Associate Director of University Placement
Career Guidance Service, whose
efforts brought Mr. Wooldridge
to campus, feels that cooperative
education must be supported by
the students.

Canada revises
immigration law
WASHINGTON (CPS)
The
factors used by Canadian officials
in judging young Americans migrating to Canada have now been
revised and codified in a point
—

Mr. Wooldridge quoted a study
by Antioch professor, Dr. Ralph
Tyler: “Coordination of work and
study increases the meaning of
study. It enhances vocational
guidance and human relation
skills. It provides an opportunity
for students who need to earn

system.

This system replaces old regulations under which some wouldbe migrants could be turned down
by an immigration officer because
of a single deficiency. Any immigrant scoring 50 out of a possible 100 “assessment units” will
now be admitted to Canada.
According to Canadian Citizenship and Immigration Minister
Jean Marchand: “The new immigration regulations spell out for
the first time the principles involved in the selection of immigrants. Whereas in the past an individual would have been rejected on account of a single
factor, the new regulations use a
combination of factors in such a
way that some of them may comnensate for relatively low qualifications in other factors.”

by Linda Klatsky

Editors note: This is the fifth in a series of interviews with the
deans and provosts of the newly created faculties.

“Admissions policy of the University is a present area
of concern,’ according to Dr. Claude E. Welch, Dean of University College in an interview with The Spectrum. University curriculum and new goals for the University were also
discussed by Dr. Welch.
The questions of the continuation of the policy of basic and
distribution requirements, whether applied credit shall be continued, and what types of grading system will be used, are now
being considered by the University College Curricuulm Committee.
Concerning

admission policy,
Dr. Welch commented: “We have
used high school grades and
scores from regent scholarship
exams to determine acceptance,
but we do not at the moment give
any serious weight to extra-curricular activities.” Consideration
of this aspect of a student’s high
school career would allow a
slightly lower academic average
to merit equal qualification for
entrance to the University.
Another question regarding
University admissions policy is
whether or not acceptance of outof-state students should be encouraged. Presently 90% of the
undergraduates are from New
York State. Also being considered is the question of increasing the number of foreign students at the University.
Since University College is responsible for setting degree regu-

lations, Dr. Welch feels coordination of programs with Millard
Fillmore College needs to be pursued more energetically. He said
the University is presently faced
with the long-range development
of evening grading programs.
Dr. Welch said there are many
questions being considered concerning the new campus and one
of them is the role of colleges.
He mentioned: “They are intend
ed to have their own distinctive
character and will develop their
own particular offerings. The
student will probably take 25%
of his work in those colleges.”
“We would like the University
to encourage and reward good
undergraduate teachers. We want
to make certain that all undergraduates have an adequate opportunity for a liberal education
outside their major. We would
like to reinforce the idea of a
common educational foundation."
Dr. Welch also commented,
“one area in which I would appreciate more communication is
from the students.” Student participation in examining relations
between University Colege and
Millard Fillmore College is welcome, he maintained.

1

Mr. Roy Wooldridge, Ford Foundation Professor and money while they study.”
vice president of Northeastern University, outlined the proAt Northwestern University,
gram of Cooperative Education and its advantages Tuesday
wages average about $87 a week,
ranging from about $bu to »iou.
issibilit'
During his B
interested
students
the
for
at
setting up cooperative options
jobs in education pay least.
tate University of Buffalo. If the program is started, it will
Mr. Wooldridge explained that
be the first in the State University system.
there is no problem with the se-

Community Aid Corps
sponsors clothing drive
The Community Aid Corps of
the State University of Buffalo
will hold a clothing drive Monday through Wednesday.

Clothing and toys in good repair will be accepted at a table
in Norton Hall and in special
boxes in other buildings, including Goodyear and Tower dorms,

Diefendorf

Hall,

Harriman Li-

brary, Capen, Hayes and Parker
Halls, and- 4236 Ridge Lea Rd.

The CAC is collecting clothing
of all sizes for all age groups.
These clothes will be distributed
to needy families by community
organizations in Buffalo.
Discussing the clothing drive,
Carol McCullouch, co-chairman
of the project, said; “The CAC is
aware of the needs of the community. We will see that these
items of clothing will get to those
needy families to whom they
should go.”

Heard about the Senior
who stood at the bottom of
his class until he convinced
the Dean to allow Genesee Beer
in the college store?
Now the whole class is

behind him.
SEN BREW CO.. ROCH

N

�Friday, Dacambar I, 1967

Tha Spectrum

Scholar incentw

Lorenzetti fears new aid program
•

Pag* Thra*

dateline news, Dec. 8

•

WEST
by Jay Schraibar

Spectrum Staff Reporter

Dr. Anthony Lorenzetti, Associate Dean of Students,
seriously questioned Tuesday whether a proposed increased
scholar incentive program might hamper the flexibility of the
financial aid programs that now exist. The program, formulated by the N. Y. State Board of Regents, is expected to be
put into effect in 1969.
satisfy the students needs at the
In the latest of the continuimmediate moment.
ing series of University Reports, Dr. Lorenzetti spoke Opportunity is mandate
Dr. Lorenzetti described how
on the history of financial financial
aid was originally used
aid to students and the as a reward for academic excelchanges it has been underlence. This process continued until the conclusion of World War
going.
II. At that time the recognition
that students must also support
their familities became apparent
in the provisions of the G.I. Bill.
According to Dr. Lorenzetti:
“It removed the scholarship notion as we had previously known
it,” and “created means for taking care of students needs and
providing subsistence money.”
The Korean Bill also recognized
student need, Dr, Lorenzetti
pointed out, and; the Russian
Sputnik launching demonstrated
that “necessary financial support
for a greater number of students
was needed, that economic opportunity for all was now a
mandate. This was the only way
to broaden the base of education,” he claimed.
This led to the rise of many
state and federal programs for
financial aid during the last 20
years. Many of these programs,
according to Dr. Lorenzetti, had
no precedents, and therefore
many of the guidelines established were faulty ones.
The National Defense Student
Loan is the greatest source of
financial aid in Buffalo. In the
fiscal year 1966-67 its loans to
students totaled $1% million.

Although Dr. Lorenzetti welcomes the larger financial allocations in the 1969 program, he
fears it will “be housed in Albany, computerized and too rigid
and impersonal, to deal with the

different aid demands that- stu-

dents represent.”

Mr. Lorenzetti feels this
“strong bureaucratic approach
will not allow for constant flexibility of such problems as missed
deadlines by students and unarrived checks. Simply assuring
students that he has funds and
they will get to the school is
not good enough.” He feels there
must be personal counseling to

"Packaging"

Dr. Lorenzetti also pointed out
that as the number of private
scholarships and federal and state
aid programs increased, a need
for a supervising office was clearly established. “It resulted in a
process called packaging, where

mittee represents the University’s
concept of distribution of funds.”
As financial aid continued on
the upswing, Dr. Lorenzetti noted,
more emphasis began to be place

on

“underprivileged

The State Board of Regents
reviewed their scholar incentive
program in 1965 in the prospect
of making various changes. They
have now recommended that the
maximum received under the program be raised from $500 to
$1000 a year, and that any student who can provide a minimum
base payment of $400 a year will
receive enough aid to attend the
college of his choice in New York
State.

Three considerations
The assistance will be helpful,
Dr. Lorenzetti said, “not only in
tuition but in food, housing and
clothes. In deciding how much

each student would receive, the
State plans to take into consideration the amount of federal assistance the student is receiving
and the aid acquired through the
scholar incentive program. Any
private scholarship the student
received would be considered as
a third priority,”
Dr. Lorenzetti estimates that
$62 milion will be allocated for
the expanded scholar incentive
program in 1969. By 1975 this
should increase to about $92
million.
Dr. Lorenzetti was previously
the University’s director of placement services and is now the director of financial aids and coordinator of the Economic Opportunity Program at the University.

several financial resources would
be combined to get X amount of
money to the student. Buffalo had
to do away with informal meetings, which matched student with
scholarship, and set up a financial aid committee. This com-

Dr. Lorenzetti
Associate Dean of Students
questions flexibility of new
Scholar Incentive Program
Clark

BUFFALO—The trial of State University of Buffalo Professor
Leslie Fiedler was again postponed as a new motion was submitted
by the defense counsel. A hearing on the motion will be heard
Dec. 18 and the new trial is now scheduled for Jan. 22.
NEW YORK—The planned week of antiwar, antidraft demonstrations ran into an unyielding wall of police and no-nonsense university
officials Wednesday. A massive New York City effort fizzled.
An estimated 2,000 protesters tried to shut down the Armed
Forces Induction Center in New York but were thwarted by 4,000
police. There was little violence. Police made 39 arrests.
Across the nation, at induction centers and on college and
university campuses, demonstrators spent the third day of “stop the
draft week” picketing and being heckled and chastized by increasingly more vocal antidemonstrators.

SAN FRANCISCO—Rioting students and off-campus militants
shut down San Francisco State College Wednesday by breaking into
locked buildings, looting a bookstore and assaulting newsmen.
All classes were dismissed in the early afternoon. Administration
building employes were sent home earlier during initial stages of
a campus “mill-in.”
PARIS—High government officials were reported Wednesday to
have intervened with airport police holding Stokely Carmichael
for deportation as an “undesirable" and ordered the American
black power advocate admitted to France for a series of antiAmerican speeches.
Carmichael, 25, was halted at the customs gate Tuesday night
on his arrival at Orly Airport from Stockholm for an anti-Vietnam
war rally in Paris Wednesday night. Police told him he was an
“undesirable character” and would have to take a plane out
Wednesday to a destination of his choice.

ALBANY, N.Y.— A massive plan that would bring Buffalo's
schools back to life, and also nearly double the school budget by
1974 was before the Buffalo Board of Education yesterday.
The plan was recommended to the board Wednesday as part of
State Education Commissioner James E. Allen’s order to get high
quality, integrated education in city schools.
If fully implemented, the plan would jump Buffalo's school
budget to $83.8 million a year by 1974-75, an increase of 46 per cent.

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INFERNO
prepares for

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AT FIRST SOUND
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assisting

children.” “Opportunity grants,
such as the $117,000 Buffalo
awarded to 208 students last
year, has helped the needy who
would not normally attend college.” Besides direct grants, Buffalo has also established a College Work Study Program to
“give students the opportunity to
work for extra funds.”

“western values,” including self-determination in the selection of
governments.
The Pentagon’s Number Two official made the remarks at a
time when Sen. Robert F, Kennedy, D-N. Y., has charged the
administration with “switching" its main goal in Vietnam from
the independence of South Vietnam to shielding the United States
from worse wars.

GUITARS

s*..t v*«t&gt;ory

nv

11590

|

�Pat* Fawr

Th

•

Spectrum

Friday, Dmmktr I, 1947

Tyrants and related subjects?
The implications of the actions involved in Wednesday’s
short-lived meeting of the Faculty Senate were dramatically
clear:
Students were stepping forward; faculty members were
walking out.
tioned the real tactical value of the movement ol stui
waiting outside the meeting in Capen 140 into the closed
session. It was felt that students should have waited until
the Faculty Senate had at least had a chance to vote on
whether or not to admit the students into that meeting
before taking action.
In fact, this was the position of the undergraduate
leaders of the protest. An unfortunate lack of communication apparently sparked the inadvertent and orderly walkThe meeting was going to discuss the now-infamous
Resolution #3, a call for faculty support of administrative
actions in the event of campus disturbances, notably the
impending confrontation with Dow recruiters. The insidious
implication of the resolution was that University officials
should use Buffalo police as a first step in quelling demonstrations, rather than explicitly stating the authorities’
powers to call in city police expressly as a last resort.
It would express a moral commitment of the faculty
to use the escalatory tactics of violence against non-violent
civil disorders.
Students must play an integral role in making decisions
which affect their fates. In this particular instance, when
student skulls are at stake, the Faculty Senate had no right,
tactical or otherwise, to decide, in an undemocratic administrative fiat, the fate of students of this University. That
is the students’ job.
It is in the larger questions, such as the presence of
recruiters, which directly affect all segments of the University community, that all parties affected should take a
part in the decision-making process.
Even if the Faculty Senate had passed a motion allowing students into the meeting, the act would still have
constituted a grave injustice to the students. We have no
need for benevolent dictatorships.
The students, despite the fact that most of them did
not know the Senate meeting had already adjourned when
they began to walk in, would have walked in anyway,
allowed or not. A large group of genuinely concerned
faculty members would merely have been permitted to save
face, if students had waited before entering.
When some leaders of the elected student government
decided to stay away from the meeting because, in the
words of one, “We’ll get the meetings open in a week or
two, anyway,” they abdicated their roles as student leaders.
As in the case of the censorship issue last spring, students
acted independently of their government because of its
failure of leadership.
When a large number of condescending and arrogant
faculty members left the meeting as students were entering,
they merely dramatized their reactionary conceptions of the
University as a family affair, with adults telling the kids
what to do.
When President Meyerson quietly slipped out of the
ad hoc “Free Senate” meeting of concerned faculty members
and persistent students that was to follow, he was merely
putting off the crisis that this Uniersity must inevitably
face: Are we a community of equals, or is this University
in no sense a real community, but rather a hideous microcosm of the world-at-large, of bumbling tyrants and frustrated subjects?

Rough riders
Councilman Gus Franczyk, of the Buffalo Common
Council, has asked the New York Secretary of State’s office
to “investigate the use of obscenities in State University
of Buffalo classrooms.”
Why doesn’t Councilman Franczyk come to investigate
for himself—he just might leam something. He might learn
that universities generally reflect the society which produces
them, only universities are more honest.
There’s a strang double standard that has developed in
our society, Mr. Franczyk, and what one man considers
obscene, another may not.
Mr. Franczyk also said: “It is a pathetic situation when
under the guise of academic freedom, a university is allowed
to run roughshod over the community of which it is very
much a part.”.
No doubt the councilman would much rather see the
community run roughshod over the university. Perhaps
it is a more pathetic situation when under the guise of
upstanding, moralistic community leadership a councilman
asks for an investigation of the University.
If anyone at this University is influenced in a detrimental way because he heard these alleged obscenities,
it can’t be all the University’s fault. Students, just lik$
councilmen, are products of their society.

Readers
writings

’

Or perhaps...
by Barry Holtzclaw

Buffalo Mayor Frank Sedita last week said the
“number-one problem in this country is the growing
crime rates in urban areas.”
Buffalo, like other cities across the nation, has
seen its crime rate grow steadily in the past years.
More importantly, the percentage of crimes against
individuals, rather than property, has greatly increased. Significantly, the largest numbers of felons
come from the under-25 population, and the percentage of crimes committed by non-white citizens
is notably higher than those of whites.
•

•

•

The criminal we are told to fear, against whom
there are shouts for “protection,” in most cases
represents a segment of our society that is severely
diillusioned and completely alienated from the
values of society. Crimes committed by these people
represent expressions of frustration and rebellion
against a rigid society that has given them nothing.
These are the lawbreakers that comprise a significant portion of the statistics which Mayor Sedita is worried about. They commit the types of
crimes for the types of sociological reasons which
represent the most direct threat to the security of
the moneyed middle-class majority.
Thus when the mayor or any other political
leader cries: “Crime in the streets!” he is talking
about a particular kind of crime.
And ignoring another.
•

Organized crime

•

•

the Syndicate, the Mafia, the
is big
Nostra, whatever you want to call it
business in most big cities. According to a report
of the special Presidential Crime Commission, Buffalo is one of the seven cities in the country where
organized crime has its central headquarters.
Buffalo, as the central city of the Niagara Frontier, is one of the major import sites for heroin
in the Northeast. “Businessmen” use millions of
dollars of bookmaking, gambling, and heroin profits
as investments in large “legitimate” business concerns. This white-collar crime bureaucracy owns
a large share of larger businesses in the area, an
activity which to some extent has legitimized its
operation, and organized crime flourishes, virtually
unchecked.
—

Cosa

Doves are fumbly creatures
To the Editor:

The problem with the world situation today is
that there are too many doves and too few hawks.
If I were to classify myself, it would have to be
along the lines of the dove, that beautiful bird
that once, a long time ago, had picked up the olive
branch which was to stand for the everlasting peace
and prosperity of the earth and a new beginning
in the realm of this universe of ours.
But apparently the dove seems to have dropped
the branch somewhere along its flight-path and ha s
never been able to find the branch as yet. This is
why the situation is what it is today. It is unfortunate that we had to put that branch into the
hands of such a bumbling bird as the dove. Perhaps
it would have been more correct and wise to have
given the eagle the task of carrying that branch
which signifies that “peace” or “Nirvana” for which
mankind has been longing al these years.
I think that as a result of this we do, or rather
ought to, complain to the proper authorities about
this flagrant error; in other words we should get
on the back of S.P.C.A. and see that the error is
corrected. In the meantime we should start shooting the bird that has been such a bumbling idiot
for so many years.

Bald Eagle

Extra-legalities work both ways

—

•

•

•

The Spectrum is published twice-weekly
every
Tuesday and Friday
during the regular academic
year at the State University of New York at Buffalo,
—

—

3435 Main Street. Buffalo, New York 14214. Offices
at 355 Norton Hall. Circulation: 15,000.

are located

Editor-in-Chief—MICHAEL L D’AMICO
Managing Editor—RICHARD R. HAYNES

•

Local officials have not failed to use the tactics
of organized crime in building their own power
nests. There have been no felony arrests on Buffalo’s predominantly Italian West Side in recent
years. Police Commissioner Felicetta has said publicly, in contradiction of the federal report, that
Buffalo is not a haven for organized crime.
More important, are the crimes of blindness
and self-interest committed daily against the people
of the city by local politicians and so-called “community leaders.”
•

To tho Editor;
Those who protest the war in Vietnam seem to
think they are entitled to resort to extra-legal
means to achieve their end. Yet they condemn
General Hershey’s re-classification of draft card
burners as extra-legal and unconstitutional. Can
they have it both ways?
John P. Halstead,
Dept, of History

•

The Mayor wants a bigger police force to combat crime. He seems to minimize the fact that
what's needed, and just as immediately, is a significantly better city.
The biggest problem in this city and in others
like it, is not the criminals in the streets, but the
criminals in City Hall.

Asst. Managing Editor—RICHARD SCHWAB
Business Manager—SAMUEL A. POWAZEK
Advertising Manager—DAVID E. FOX
Campus
Margaret

Asst.

Anderson

u
Marlene ..wucnowski
Daniel Lasser
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Lilian Waite
Feature Barry C. Holtzclaw
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Sports
Robert Woodruff
—

City

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Promotion
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John Tri**'

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Murray Richman

The Spectrum is a member of the United States Student Press Association and the Associated Collegiate
Press. The Spectrum is served by: United Press International, Associated Collegiate Press Service, Gannett
News Service, and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate.
for national advertising by National Educational Advertising Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave.,
New York. N. Y. Republication of all news dispatches
is forbidden wihout the express consent of the
editor-in-chief. Rights of republication of all other
matter herein are also reserved.
Second class postage paid at Buffalo. New York.
Editorial policy Is determined by the Edltor-ln-C
Represented

�Friday, Dacambar

»,

1967

Th

Attacks new curfew policy

•

Pay* Fiv*

Spectrum

BELOW OLYMPUS

By Interlandi

Th. grump

To the Editor:

It was with great disdain that I learned of the
Inter-Residence Council’s decision of Nov. 30 to
abolish curfews for first semester freshman women.

.

.

.

by STEESE

corner

Although at first glance this might seem like the
final step towards completing the academic and

Remember the time when this
used to at
least try to be humorous? Maybe next week is go-

observation, it mere!
imes tl te am
As past chairman of this year’s Freshman Orientation, I had a chance to be with the incoming freshmen. In conversations with them, the reasons for
having a curfew for first semester freshmen became increasingly clearer.

rumpus (10 Nov.) which stated my opinion that
recruiting was not germane to education and that
we should reestablish the fact that recruiting was
a privilege.

Taking the view that all women in the State
University of Buffalo residence halls are ready for
a self-ruling check system will be a costly mistake,
costly not for the IRC but rather for the freshman
women.

An aunt responded by sending me a copy of a
piece by Paul Carnes, minister of the UnitarianUniversalis! Church, which also appeared in The
Spectrum as a letter to the editor on 17 Nov., which
she felt spoke for her. I choose to answer here as
best I can because Christmas is coming, and many
of you may be faced with the harrowing experience
of having to talk to your parents over vacation.

\J\

,

N

The reasons upon which I base this statement
culminate in the one simple fact that an incoming
freshman girl is not emotionally or socially mature
enough to accept the responsibility involved in a
non-curfew system.

So

Aunt S. and Uncle M.
Before 1 begin this, I feel I should tell you
that I do not know if I believe what I am going to
say. I am here taking the position of one of those
who you felt denied free speech to the firms involved in the recent furor. I do not by inclination
or nature belong on the radical left. I am a member
of the confused middle. I stand isolated and vulnerable between your generation, which has and

Freshman girls must be allowed a period consisting of the first semester in order to adjust
themselves to a university life which is on a more
both emotionally and socially
mature level
than this incoming student has experienced before.
Without this period of adjustment, I feel that many
of the freshman girls wijl become rather disillusioned with the school, and more important, with
themselves.
—

—

Or has the liberal body known as State University of New York been replaced by a dictatorial

Inter-Residence Council?
Errol
Past-Chairman,
Freshman Orientation ’67
Craig Sul]

The Grump complimented
To tho Editor:
I would like

to compliment Mr. Steese on his
recent (Dec. 1, 1967) column in your newspaper.
I have been reading this column since September,
and in my opinion it is his best. In fact, this masterpiece is the one thing that made The Spectrum
worth reading that day. Mr. Steese may never
write a good column again, but it does not matter,
for this column makes up for all the unpleasant
things that happen every day. I have clipped this
column and intend to frame it so that whenever
graduate school gets me down again, I can look at
it and remember once again what life is really
all about.

Dee Lovecky

Scores Spectrum columnist
To tho Editor
Concerning Martin Guggenheim’s harsh appraisal
of the faculty senate:

I find myself angry and upset that Mr. Guggenheim is ready, willing and unable to resist a chance
to attack the faculty. I suppose that my anger is
the result of frustration, and frustration results
from his unassailable arguments and credentials.
Clearly, Mr. Guggenheim has spent substantial
amounts of time in many countries of the world,
and this background enables him to state, “Probably the most pervasive aspect of American society
today is the class structure.” He also notes that
“The lack of a sense of morality, which is pervasive in this society, is also abundant among the
faculty.”

Clearly, Mr. Guggenheim is an honorable man
with no moral faults, and I find this hard to fault.
Being a member of the faculty, having obvious supremacy and contempt, being stupid or immoral,
pious and aristocratic, and emasculating students
left and right, I stand chastised.

William N. Hayes
Assistant Professor
Department of Psychology,

Writers: Please be brief. Letters should not exceed 300 words,
should be signed and contain the address and telephone number
of the writer.
P«n names or initials may be used, if requested, but anonyomus letters are never used. The Spectrum reserves the right
to edit or delete, but the intent of letters will not be changed.

wants to keep, and another group younger, and
far from being, alien, directly descendant from the
dirty, stubborn idealists who, as a minority far
smaller than that which now appears to be against
the Viet war, forged this country. This latter group
has the uncommonly silly notion that perhaps the
blood and poverty of the rest of the world directly
taint the material goods of this country.

ws«ef*ief

"I'd like a Hawk for secretary of defense!"

One further comment on this matter is the way
in which it was handled by the IRC. I do not believe that a body consisting of senior and junior
girls or even a sophomore representative is a true

representation of the feelings expressed. Although
one can never be a first semester freshman again,
it is the freshmen who now should have the final
decision in a matter such as a non-curfew first
semester. I strongly urge the IRC to reconsider
their decision and to put the matter up on a referendum before the resident Freshman girls.

—

The Lighter Side
by Dick West
The Agriculture Department has brought forth a 30page booklet outlining possible programs to keep small
farmers from leaving the land.
Now if there is anything that is likely to drive a small
farmer off the land, it is a 30-page government booklet.
Nevertheless, I can readily understand why the department
is springing into action.
At the present rate of attrition
—the farm population has been
declining by about 800,000 a year
—it won’t be long before there

I have thrown in this colloquy
with the mythical MeHarrow to
illustrate the point that this is
more than merely an agricultral

problem.

are more agriculture department
employees than there are farmers.

Political ramifications

Down to one

to
Its ramifications extend
virtually all levels of society,
particularly the political level.

That is what is known as “the
point of diminishing returns.”
Indeed, according to my calculations, by the year 1982 there
will be only one small farmer

left. Let’s call him Hiram McHarrow.

Q. McHarrow, how does it feel
to be the last of the small
farmers?
A. Wa’al, my rheumatiz has
been acting up a bit lately. Otherwise, I can’t complain.
Q. How did you happen to remain on the farm after all the
other small farmers had departed?
A. I did it for laughs.
Q. Would you mind explaining

that?

A. Wa’al, if it weren’t for me,
there wouldn’t be any more jokes
about the traveling salesman and
the farmer’s daughter.

Ever since the founding of the
republic, Americans have spent
election nights waiting for the
farm vote to come in.
Whether or not the outcome
of an election actually hinges on
the farm vote is, of course, incidental. The important thing is
the timing.
Some political scientists believe that if by some mischance
the farm vote ever came in first,
it would destroy public confidence

in the American electoral system.
And if there were no farm
vote at all. , ,
Well, I don’t like being an
alarmist, but if small farmers keep
disappearing, democracy
may be in jeopardy.

itself

I know and, in my own stumbling, confused way,
love people in both camps. Although to be honest
I probably love best those people who, like myself,
are unbuttressed by ideology and have, therefore,
only each other on which to (Jepend.
“I am persuaded that the peace movement in
this country is seriously jeopardized by such
(MOB’s) refusal to discriminate between issues. It
is one thing for an individual to burn his draft
card. This is an individual action which one takes
in spite of the consequences. It is another thing
to disrupt orderly procedures which may be un-

popular."

Note that last sentence, Aunt S., and go back
and read Paul’s piece in its entirety. Note that
his fear is directed towards one goal, the maintenance of the democratic system as he knows it.
His fear is well founded. Because the young radical left sees little difference between "My country
right or wrong,” and "My SYSTEM right or wrong."
Paul finds, and you apparently concur, the upsetting of orderly procedures even more frightening
than the results of those orderly procedures, i.e.,
the Viet war.

"What is most disturbing is that while these
students show a strong emotional attachment to
what we might call “democratic goals,” they no
longer have any abiding attachment to "democratic
means.” Democracy is a fragile thing, and it re

quires a certain rationality

.

.

Here there are several frightening gaps between
the respective groups. I do not think that the radical left has any attachment to democratic goals. To
them it is starkly, appallingly clear that “democratic means" in this country have resulted in the
world’s largest and richest democracy being perhaps
the most feared nation in the world among many
millions of people. If you can find it within yourself to believe that this is solely because of the efficiency of Communist propaganda, 1 envy you.

As for rationality . . . What kind of rationality
does democracy require? The computer like efficiency of a McNamara who was willing to trade
lives for real estate in a "rational war” to improve
our position in international strategic and prestige
circles as seen by our “rational” president? Is it
then the height of rationality in democracy to ignore 40% of the population when it cries that a
war is wrong? And as the latest issue of Ramparts
NEW YORK—Dr. Adrian Kantrowitz, announcing the death of asks, what happens to your belief in democracy
a baby six and one-half hours after America’s first heart transplant when the number of those against the war moves
and the war goes on, and on
operation;
past the 50% mark
and on? Speak to me of democracy then.
“We consider this a failure. The baby seemed to be doing
reasonably well following the operation but the heart suddenly
The radical left, by the way, is not irrational
stopped. Resuscitation was attempted without success.”
when you judge them by realistic criteria. It is sort
of a confused, bumbling rationality perhaps, but
WASHINGTON—Sen. Warren G. Magnuson (D-Wash.) introducing look at the world through their eyes for a moment.
a bill in the Senate to provide federal regulation of warranties offered How are they to involve this country in the world
at large on other than a Pax-Amcricana basis,
by manufacturers of ears and other products:
given where the present democratic orderly pro“Too frequently there’s a seemingly endless succession of return cesses have led? Is it not strikingly rational to
trips to a dealer to obtain the repair which should have been arrive at the conclusion that perhaps the orderly
performed on the first visit. Even when a product is properly processes themselves need a few alterations?
repaired, many complain that prices charged to correct minor
Aunt S„ how many policemen are you going to
defects are exorbitant.”
be able to "rationally" support when they have to
stuff democracy down the throats of unwilling rePARIS—Black power advocate Stokely Carmichael, commenting
cipients with M-16s or billy clubs? -See you on the
on the Vietnam war at an antiwar rally at Orly Airport:
barricades
and I wish to a lost and mournful
“We must tell people this war is for the birds—Lyndon Bird, God that I knew which side I would be on.
Lady Bird, and all the other birds—but not for us.”
Love —E—

Quotes

And it could
of burlesque.

kill what is left

in the news

—

—

�Pag*

Six

Faculty Senate
(Cont’d

from P.

Friday, December t, 1967

The Spectrum

1)

Before the meeting got under

way a crowd of about 150 students, administrators and faculty

'Stop the draft' demonstrations held
...

(Cont’d

President reacts

Immediately after the adjournment, President Meyerson directed Dr. Richard Siggelkow, vice
president fo rstudent affairs, “to
meet with representatives of the

student governments to consider

possible courses of action,”
Mr. Meyerson also asked Dr.
Siggelkow to “consider possible
vioaltions of the rules governing
student conduct,” according to a
statement from the President’s
office.
The President Pro Tem of the
Senate Executive Committee, Dr.

(Cont’d from P. 1)

Nation-wide demonstrations

mained in Butler Auditorium for
what came to be termed a “Free
Senate Meeting.” The session was
co-chaired by Dr. Harold L. Segal,
Department of Biology, and William Maryl, a Mob-SDS spokesman. Approximately 150 faculty
members and students debated
the students’ action and the question of Dow Chemical, which has
interviews scheduled Dec. 18 and
19, The group decided to “insist”
that the Faculty Senate Executive Committee meet with all
interested student groups.
The Ad Hoc group adjourned
with the promise of calling another meeting soon. No date was
announced.

Theree or four students became nauseated from
the spray.

were dropped into a vessel filled with human
during a “service of conscience.”

stand trial in a “court of world
opinion” for his complicity in
an illegal war.

the

steps of the school.
The protesters screamed “fascist cops,” and the crowd cheered
as the police hauled both men

Selective Service officials reported that all letters and cards
turned in at the rally would be
turned over to the Justice Department. Failure to retain possession
of a draft card can result in a
sentence of up to five years in
jail and a $10,000 fine.

away.

When the protest began, no
policemen were evident outside
the Federal Office Building. HoweverK as the crowd and tensions
mounted, about 12 officers ar-

Nine Antioch students Monday turned in what
they said were their draft cards to the Selective
Service office. They said the cards were dipped in

protesters stormed police barricades in an attempt
to forcibly evict recruiters from the Dow Chemical
Co. They smashed the barricade in the Memorial
Union building but were turned back by police who

51 turn in draft cards...
a fight with a person on

1)

.

Adolph Homburger, was requested to convent that body by Saturday “to schedule a continuation of the meeting.”

Another maetinn called

corridor. Members of the student
Mob and SDS were armed' with
walkie-talkies.

from P.

..

Police also used clubs to turn back the protes-

ters. The student body president, John T. Pelton,
complained that several coeds
police.

were roughed up by

Police and sheriff’s deputies arrested a number
of the protesters, including a boy and a girl who
tried to break through police line after the crowd
of shouting students marched a mile to the city
police station.
One girl threw a dead rat at a police officer in
front of the police station.
From the station the protesters swarmed back
onto the campus. University President Dr, Howard
Bowen refused to talk with them.

Antioch protest
About 50 students of Wilmington and Antioch
colleges protested at Wilmington, Ohio, against the
scheduled induction of a fellow student.
Police Chief Stanley Irwin said the group “stood
on the sidewalk along the courthouse” for about an
hour and then walked to the post office and bus
station. The student did not show up to board a bus
for Cincinnati, where he was to report at an induction center.

Simon Pure Beer
"easy going down

human blood.

blood

At Madison, Wis., about 100 women anti-war
protesters, some carrying babies and some with
children in strollers, marched from the state capitol to the local draft board office. They attached a
sign to the door: “Closed because of U. S. women.”
Most of the women were students at the University
of Wisconsin.
Rain failed to deter about 320 marchers in Portland, Ore., Monday night. Escorted by police who
wouldn’t allow them to light peace torches, the protesters marched 20 blocks from Portland State College to St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church downtown.
About 135 persons participated in a demonstration in Ann Arbor, Mich., while 100 gathered in Detroit, many to turn in their draft cards.
Nine college students turned in cards to a Catholic priest in Pittsburgh. The priest, Msgr. Charles
Owen Rice, pastor of the Holy Rosary Church in
nearby Homewood, said he would forward the cards
and 75 signed statements from supporters to Washington.

Six draft-age men in St. Louis and six others
at the University of Illinois in Champaign turned
in cards during Monday night demonstrations.

STRENGTH FROM THE BIBLE
IS JESUS CHRIST MESSIAH?
JESUS CHRIST Says: "I that speak unto thee am He." John 4:26
"In the volume of the Book it is written of Me." Psalm 40:7
Free Book —Messiah In Both Testaments
Write—Earl, 36 La Salle, Buffalo, N. Y. 14214

"

rived.

The protesters consisted mainly of students from the Slate
University of Buffalo. Others
were from State University College at Buffalo and Canisius College.
Shouting and jeering occurred
between the two groups, along
with honking horns from cars
which crept along between them
in the Main St. traffic jam.
At 2:20 p.m., police urged those
watching the protest to disperse
and “pay no attention to the protest,” but very few people moved.
By 2:45 p.m., only a few weary
observers and a reduced number

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YOU MUST PRESENT THIS AD

Close to 300 people participated
in the rally on Monday. The demonstrators were allowed into the

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building two at a time to turn

in draft cards and letters. Over
20 women were refused entrance
on the grounds that “women have
no business with a draft board.”

8&lt;

Jeff Steinberg, a member of
the Resistance, issued a “citizen’s
warrant” for the arrest of Edward

Doody, Local Board Auditor. The
subpoena ordered Mr, Doody to

["college Relations Director
J c/o Sheraton-Park Hotel, Washington, D.C. 20008
| Please send me
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USED BOOKS

Univ. Manor Motel (opp. Goodyear), 1-5 p.m.

of protesters remained.
At 2:55 p.m., the protesters
voluntarily broke up, ending
nearly an hour and one-half of

■

BUY

Hall)

�Friday, Dec am bar 8, 1967

Th« Spectrum

campus releases...
Foreign students carrying special foreign insurance coverage
through the Office of Foreign Student Affairs should collect their

insurance identification card claim forms and insurance certificate.

Hofmann wil speak at 7:45 p.m. tonight in the Hillel House. This is
the fifth in a series of sermon lessons on “The Ethics of the Fathers.”
An Oneg Shabbat will follow.

will be held Sunday at 5:30 p.m. in
the Hillel House. Judge Joseph Mattina will speak on “Narcotics—
The Dilemma of the Sixties.” Reservations will be accepted on a
first-come first-serve basis.
Reverend James Groppi's address given Sunday at Niagara
University will be broadcast tonight at 9 p.m. on WBFO.
The new literary magazine. Anonym, will meet at 1 p.m. every
Tuesday in room 2, English Annex B. All interested persons are invited to attend.
The Schussmeisters Ski Club announces that all attending its
first excursion Tuesday must sign up before 1 p.m. Tuesday. Membership cards must be presented, and only those who have paid
their dues in full will be permitted to go.
Lesson badges are available in the club office for those in the
lesson program.
As soon as 25 applications are made, the ski club will get a season pass at Kissing Bridge at a reduced rate.
The Computing Center at the State University of Buffalo is presenting Dr. Joseph L. Bajintfy in a seminar Monday at 4 p.m. in
room 146, Diefendorf Hall. The topic of the talk will be “Menu
Planning and Scheduling by Computer.” Dr. Balintfy is professor of
operations research at the Graduate School of Business Administration, Tulane University.
The Annual Latke Supper

Headquarters for
ARROW SHIRTS

RIVERSIDE MEN'S SHOP
Tonawanda Street, corner Ontario

Buffalo, New York 14207

Pag*

Sevan

College administrators told to deal

"quietly" with student dm users
by David Aiken
Coll*giat0i Press Service

CHICAGO—College administrators were told last weekend that they should adopt a policy of “quiet rationality” in
dealing with student drug users, that legalization of marijuana is more likely to come through the courts than through
legislative action, and that there is wide disagreement over
the dangers of LSD.
Pressure from outside

The administrators heard those
views at a conference on drugs
at the University of Chicago. The
conference was sponsored by the
National Student Association under a grant from the National
Institutes of Health.
of the administrators
were from schools where, according to some of them, there is as
yet little use of drugs. A number
of them acknowledged that they
are perplexed over what they
should do if they found students
turning on with marijuana or
taking LSD trips.
Many

According to Howard S. Becker, professor of sociology at

Northwestern University, administrators tend to take harsh action for two main reasons; they
believe the use of drugs has bad
effects on students and they are
under pressure from alumni, trustees, and the public.

bring a test case on marijuana
to the U. S. Supreme Court said;
"I expect to see federal marijuana laws found unconstitutional
very soon, because they both require paying a tax and make possession illegal, which is self-in-

crimination.”
Judicial decision, such as the
one Mr. Oteri is seeking, appear
to be the main hope for abolition
of marijuana laws. Michigan
State Senator Roger Craig, who
is attempting to get that state’s
marijuana laws repealed, says:
"Nobody is interested in touching
it, and because of my stand on
marijuana, I may not be in the
Michigan legislature much
longer.”

While most of the psychologists and medical researchers at

If drug use were dealt with
more quietly, without creating
widely-publicized incidents, administrators would probably act
differently, Dr. Becker said. “To
create a drug incident on campus,

the conference felt that the danger from smoking the common
type of marijuana is no greater
than from drinking liquor, there
was disagreement on the dangers
of LSD.

press as well as

LSD scare story

The most likely way to avoid
campus drug incidents, Dr. Becker suggested, is to “educate administrators to a calm, rational
position.” Trying to force students to stop drug use entirely,
he said, would require “extreme
totalitarian measures, the equivalent of stop-and-frisk laws, such
as room searches.”

of the department of psychiatry
at the University of Chicago, said

it takes administrators and the
students,” he
said.”

The current laws against possession of marijuana in most
states, which usually carry heavy
penalties, figured in much of the
discussions.
The dilemma of administrators
was voiced, in an interview, by
Jim Reynolds, program director
of the student union at Kansas
State University, Manhattan, Kan.
“Do we protect students from the
civil courts, and handle it as a
matter of education,” he asked, or
should students take the legal
consequences of drug possession?
Many of the delegates were interested in attempts to reduce
penalties for possession.

Court ruling seen
Ralph Oteri, the Boston lawyer
who is currently attempting to

Daniel X. Freedman, chairman

reports of chromosome damage
due to LSD use have all the elements of a scare story. Recently
published research reports on the
question are split, he said.
Dr. J. Thomas Ungerleiter, a
neurologist at the medical center
of the University of California at
Los Angeles, emphasized the risks
of “bad trips” in taking LSD. Several of the patients he has seen
required intensive care after such
experiences, he said.

Helen Nowlis, dean of students
the university of Rochester,
criticized current policy of most
universities on drug use. “The
posture of the University towards
drugs is really a prototype of all
sorts of things which never really
get out in the open,” she said.
at

“Education is trying to meet
today’s problems with elaborations of techniques that may have
been proper 20 or 30 years ago,"
she added. “In loco parentis may
have been all right when all the
students came from the same
background. But you can’t be a
parent to 6000 students whose
families have very different social and economic positions."

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�Pub Board applications
made available by Senate
The Student Senate is now takon the Student Association Publications Board. Applications are
available in the Student Senate
office in Norton Hall. Any student, graduate or undergraduate,
is eligible to join the Publications Board, except those on the
editorial board of a publication
which comes under the jurisdic-

tion of the

sentatives will be editors or their
According to its charter, the

purposes for the existence of
the Publications Board are the

following:

To encourage the establishment of student publications of
all types,
•

Board,

•

Applicants will be interviewed

the executive board of the
Student Senate Dec. 13. The five
Student Association members of
the Publications Board will be
appointed by the Student Senate.
The two Graduate Student Association members will be appointed
by the Executive Council of the
GSA.
by

The

Friday, December 8, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* Eight

four publications repre-

To promote quality

in stu

dent publications,
To offer aid and advice to
all student publications in its
jurisdiction and,
To coordinate and in the
limited ways provided in the
charter, to oversee those publications which identify with the
•

Buffalo.

Senate Executive issues
Statement on Drinking
The Executive Committee of
the Student Senate issued a statement at its Tuesday meeting concerning the drinking at the Nov.
30 Senate meeting. The statement is;

"On Friday, Nov. 17, the Buffalo Council decided to permit
this campus to become wet. The
enactment of this decision, how-

ever, was predicted by a statement that guidelines for driking
on campus would first have to be

The Official Bulletin it an authorized
publication of the State University of Buffalo, for which The Spectrum assumes no

sent in TYPEWITTEN form to room 114,
Hayes Hall, attention Mrs, Fischer, before
2 p.m. the Friday prior to the week of
publication. Student organization notices
are not accepted for publication.

General Notices
An open forum for undergraduates to discuss the University College Academic Plan will be held
Dec. 11, from 12-2 p.m., room 231,
Norton Hall. Copies of the Academic Plan will be available, and
will chair the discussion.

Dean Welch

•

State University of

OFFICIAL BULLETIN

established. The Council’s decision has been long awaited and
long worked for.
“On Thursday, Nov. 30, the
Student Senate in a symbolic gesture “saluted” the Council’s decision. Our action, neither intended to inebriate, nor demonstrate any kind of license on our
part, was premature at best and
we wish to apologize to the Councile and the Academic Community.”

Procedures for Changes in RegChanges
istration, Jan. 23-26
made between Jan. 23 and Jan.
—

25:

Freshmen and sophomores only
will have the option of signing
their own drop and add forms
for this January Change of Program day, if they are willing to
assume the responsibility for
knowing requirements and perrequisites and for receiving
special permission from the instructor when needed.

However, University College
advisers will be available to students to verify information, to
assist in making decisions and
plans, to help work out registration problems, and to sign Change
of Program forms for those students who desire it. Advisers will
also be available in the gym,
Jan. 26.
Obtaining Forms
Specially
stamped drop/add forms will be
available for freshmen and sophomores only in the University College reception area between Jan.
—

23-25.

Signatures

—

Drop/add forms

must be signed by either the Uni-

The following departments will
hand out class cards from Jan. 23
partmental offices as well as in
the gym on Drop/Add Day:

student,

University
Section changes
College advisers will sign forms
approving section changes for
medical, religious, and employment reasons only. Other requests for section changes must
be resolved by the department
—

and the student.

,

Juniors and seniors:

Obtaining Forms
Junior and
senior former Arts and Science
students must obtain Change of
Program forms from the Office
of Admission and Records. All
other juniors and seniors must
obtain forms from their divisional office.
—

Aero Space, Anthropology, Art,
Biology, Chemistry, Classics, Computer Science, Drama (Theater),
Education, English, Geography,
History, Mathematics, Medical
Technology, Music, Occupational
Therapy, Pharmacy, Philosophy,
Physical Education for Men and
Women, Physics, Secretarial Studies, Speech and U.C. courses.
Geology (for 103 lab cards only)
and Psychology (12 noon to 2 p.m,
only).
Students picking up class cards
during this interval are still required to report to the gym on
Jan, 26, to complete change of

program process.

Signatures
of faculty advisers are required on all drop/add
forms processed.
—

Dropping Courses only
Students wishing to drop but not add
courses can process forms at Admissions and Records between
Jan. 23 and Jan. 25. Juniors and
seniors must first obtain the
signature of a faculty adviser.
—

All Undergraduates
Information Center up-to-date
information sheets concerning
departmental requirements and
prerequisites will be available in
the University College reception

General Announcements
Dec. 14

area.

School of Medicine
presents
Dr. Frank H. Westheimer, Chemistry Department, Harvard University. The topic is “Pseudorotation in the Hydrolysis of Phosphate Esters,” 3:30 p.m., room
G-22, Capen.
—

Obtaining Class Cards
the
following departments will hand
gym
out class cards in the
on
Change of Program Day ONLY:
—

Political Science, Physical The-

rapy, Economics, Sociology, Business Administration and Social

Professor John A. Bailey, University of Michigan, will speak
on “The Sound of One Hand
Clapping Zen Buddhism,” 4 p.m.,

Welfare. The Department of Modern Languages will have cards
distributed as follows: Dr. Livingstone, Spanish, Portugese, and
Italian; Dr. Koekkoek, German
and Slavic; Dr. Silber, French.

-

room 231, Norton Hal.

UPI seeks answers

Why did four American sailors go AWOL?
Editors Note.

On Oct. 24 lour young American sailors went AWOL from the carrier Intrepid when
it sailed from Tokyo. On Nov. 22, Michael Lindner, Richard Bailey, John Barilla and
Craig Anderson appeared on Moscow television as detectors from the United States.

The Navy has now declared them deserters.
Why

did they do it?

United Press International sent out four correspondents to try to find some of the
answers. The following team report is the amalgamation of the findings of the four reporters—Charles Aldinger, Larry Hatfield, Robert Strand and Jack V. Fox.
by Jack V. Fox

The four young men who appeared
on Moscow television seemed so typically American, so clean cut, so wellmannered and smiling.
So the propaganda effect was all
the more damning as they told the
Russian people they were sailors who
had turned their backs on their country because they were ashamed of
what it was doing in Vietnam.

on the mountain road to

Scranton,

Another visited the sunny suburban
home in Jacksonville, Fla., where Richard
Bailey, 19, grew up with a family cabin
cruiser for recreation and a business executive father who flew carrier missions

15 years ago.
A third rapped with the brass door
knocker bearing the inscription “God bless
our home” on a one-story squarish house

They had walked off the United States
ship Intrepid in Tokyo, they said, because
they had concluded that helping launch
carrier strike planes in the Tonkin Gulf
was making them accomplices to “mur-

in the Italian section of Catonsville, Md.,
outside Baltimore where John Barilla, 20,
lived and played the accordion so well.
The last made his inquiries in San Jose,
Calif., where Craig Anderson, 21, once
moved with a swinging motorcycle crowd,
played all-league tackle and went through
the wrenching tragedy of the suicide of

der."

his father.

In their home towns, the reaction was
astonishment and bewilderment because
a first glimpse into their backgrounds
seemed to come up with only one thing
they had in common—they were so "normal,” so highly unlikely to become deserters through political beliefs.

Out of this unpleasant poking into their
lives emerged a different picture than
“normality.” There had been one consistent strain of doing badly in school, but
outside of that they were four strikingly
different youths with behavior that began
to explain what they have done.

Reporters investigate

Patterns of rebellion

Last week United Press International
sent four reporters to those home towns
to talk with parents, teachers, ministers,
neighbors, classmates, friends.
One went to Mt. Pocono, Pa., a hamlet
in the deer and ski country where Michael
Lindner, 19, had lived in a white house

None had ever been interested

in politics before they went into the service,
but there had been stresses, rebellion
against parents and authority, a refusal
to take on responsibility.
Michael Lindner had a high IQ, but his
grades were so bad that he did not gradu-

ate with his high school class in the spring
of 1966 because he failed English and a
history course called “Problems of Democracy.”
He went to summer tutoring and finally
got his diploma just before going into the
Navy.
Mr. Bailey says the family never had

any troubles with Richard except for his
failure to study during later grades in
school. “He told me he couldn’t see any
reason for learning,” the father said. At
one time, in an attempt to make him

study, Mr. Bailey sold the family television set.
The Rev. M, McCoy Gibbs, pastor of the
Arlington Methodist Church, is a psychologist as well as a minister. He says young
Bailey was a classic example of “youth
versus parents today.”
“It is a example of rebellion,” says
Gibbs. “The boy is not a Communist any
more than you or I, He simply did something drastic and went in too far before
he could get out.
“This is my personal opinion, understand, but I don’t think he dropped out

of school for any reason other than to
show his parents he could do as he well

If there was an “average” boy among
the four and one whose action seems inexplicable it would be John Barilla in the
Catonsville suburb of Baltimore. A quiet
neat lad, he finished high school with only
fair grades, worked in a supermarket before enlistment, and played the accordion
so well he appeared on the Ted Mack
Amateur Hour among other TV programs.
His father, Nicholas, a mechanic, and
his mother, Mary, feel badly hurt. Thumping his chest with two fingers, Barilla said:
“People ask me about it . . . what can I
say? I can tell them about the pain I have

in here.
“If he were a bum, I could just say so
and not feel so bad or worry so much.
But he wasn’t a bum. He was a good boy.
No one could ask for a better son.”
Mrs. Barilla was crying.

“I’m not ashamed,” she said. “How could
I be ashamed. He’s a wonderful son. I just
want Johnnie home.”
Young Craig Anderson was a good-looking, athletically gifted youth. He was quiet,
not outgoing, but friendly and easy to get
along

with.

pleased.”

All-league tackle

If any of the four young men could be
classified as a leader, Richard Bailey
would be the one. He also has given evidence that he has been against the American intervention in Vietnam for quite a

His nearly exclusive interest in Abraham Lincoln High School was sports and
he was named the All-League defensive
tackle in his senior year. His high school
work was average, and he ran around a
good deal with a beer-drinking crowd.

"The war is a diversion"

After graduation, his teammates went
off to various colleges and the service, and
he moved out of the family home and
moved in with some boys attending West
Valley Junior College. He took courses
indicating he wanted to become a police

while.

In a letter to his parents on Aug. 22,
Richard wrote:

“When I stand back here in the Tonkin
Gulf and take a look at the mess we have
gotten into, I wonder if I want to live
there (the United States) when I get out.
The war is the thing now, and I think Mr.
President Johnson and his cronies are using the war as a diversion from the domestic problems in the States . . .”

officer.

“This young man didn’t know what he
was getting into,” Craig’s mother says.
“I’m as much in the dark as everyone is
.
. I have no idea what happened.”
.

�Friday, December 8, 1967

The Spectrum

Entertainment
Calendar

Repertory troupe to present

Ibsen play. The Wild Duck'
The Audition Repertory Company n will bring its production
f

TU

n«*n

1&lt;rTVin

Wilrl

niinlr’*

in

three evening performances at
8:30 p.m. and two matiness at
3:30 p.m. Dee. 9 and 1:30 p.m.
Dec. 10.

Ronde!”
“The Wild Duck," generally regarded as Ibsen’s masterpiece as
well as his most enduring stage
piece, will be performed with alternate female casts.
Susan
Miler, a University
sophomore, will alternate with
Amy Rosenberg in the focal role
of Hedvig Ekdal. Her father will
be played by Jack Fix, and Lucille Frisa will play her mother,
alternating with Carol Masman.
Other key roles will be filled

!

A bright, gay Christmas present is delivered to Buffalo theatergoers with last night’s opening
of Studio Arena Theater’s holiday
musical, Gilbert and Sullivan’s
comic opera, H.M.S. Pinafore.
At the helm, as director, is

Alan Leicht; the sounds of voice
and orchestra are under the direction of Stuart Hamilton; and
directing the lavish visual beauty
of this Christmas package, is
scene designer Eugene Lee and
costume creator, Mr. Jean Blanchette.
Singing the “right good Captain” Corcoran is baritone David
Smith, of the New York City Center Opera Company. The rich contralto voice of Sally Birckhead
is heard in the role of Buttercup

and that “Monarch of the Sea,”
Sir Joseph Porter, will be essayed
by an Arena favorite, Kenneth
McMillan.
The young lovers, Ralph Rakestarw and Josephine, are Milton
and Ann Bailey, popular acting
duo of the

company.
are Joe

Arena

Rounding out the cast
Servello, as Dick Deadeye; Philip
Polito as Bill Bobstay; Montgomery Davis, as Bob Becket; and
Jean Hebborn, as Cousin Hebe.

All these delightful Gilbert and
Sullivan characters are surrounded by a chorus of 22 singer/

Wednesday, Dec. 13;

Norton Conference Theater.

dio Arena, 9 p.m. through Jan. 6.
Sunday, Dec. 10:
CONCERT: Florence Kapleff,

8:30 p.m.

Saturday, Dec. 9:
CONCERT: The Hollies and Wilmer and the Dukes, Clark Gym,

8:30 p.m,

Wild Duck

CONCERT: Dave Brubeck, and
Quartet, Kleinhans, 8:30 p.m,
CONCERT: Ravi Thankar, East-

Ibsen masterpiece will be
presented by the Audition
Repertory Company beginning tonight in Baird Hall

man Theater, Rochester, 8:15 p.m.
PLAY: “Androcles and the

chette.
Tickets can be obtained in Norton Hall, or by calling 883-7318.

Special to the Spectrum

‘Turn On, Tune

In, Drop Out,”
the original soundtrack recording
of Dr. Timothy Leary’s “psychedelic celebration,” has been released.
The LP, “probably the most
controversial ever to be released
in the history of Mercury Record
Corp.” is based on an imaginary

be staged

Was A Lad, I’m Called Little Buttercup, We Sail The Ocean Blue,
New Give Three Cheers and My

LSD “trip” featuring Dr. Leary
as the “guide.”
Dr. Leary, the former Harvard
University clinical psychologist,
is one of the country’s foremost
proponents of the hallucinogenic
drug. The ex-professor’s lecture,
presented by his League for
Spiritual Discovery, comes off as
excitingly on record as it does in
the color motion picture, pro-

Gallant Crew.
Scheduled performances continue through Jan. 6, nightly, at
8:30, except Mondays, Thursday
Matinees, at 2:30 p.m., and a
Saturday Twilight show, at 5 p.m.
Tickets and: reservations are
available at the Studio Arena
Theatre box office, 681 Main
St., Buffalo, New York.

Circle Art holding film festival
Nothing But a Man and The High
and the Low.

The Circle Art Theater is presently sponsoring a Student Film
Festival which will run through
Feb. 5. Currently showing is Tony

On Jan. 24 “Billy Liar,” a story
about a young man who retreat
into fantasy life is at once hilarously funny and profoundly serious, starring Tom Courtenay and
Julie Christy, will be playing
with “A Dream of Wild Horses.”

Richardson’s film, “Loneliness of
the Long Distance Runner,” starring Tom Courtenay and Michael
Redgrave,

Starting Dec. 11 “Lord of the
Flies,” a film based on William
Golding’s novel concerning a
group of boys forced to create
their own society on a deserted
island, and “A,” an animated cartoon about man’s battle against
the letter A, will be showing.

Concluding the Festival will be
“The War Game,” which has a
cast of non-actors, and “Chicamauga,” a film about a young
boy’s experience in seeing the
ugly sights of the Civil War in
America.

Other scheduled films are “Mr.
Hulot’s Holiday,” which will be
shown with The Smile; The Gospel According to St. Matthew,

Screenings are scheduled for
Monday through Saturday at 2
and 4 p.m.

actors singing the lilting lyrics
of such favorite tunes as When I

“ONE OF THE GREAT
FILMS OF ALL TIME!”
—

Bosley Crowther, New York

Times

“A REMARKABLE ACHIEVEMENT!’’
THE WAITER REAOE JR/JOSEPHSTRlCK PRODUCTION

soz

JOYCE'S

KENSINGTON

WJ-tll*

Mky «t K—rimHa

JULIE ANDREWS MAXVONSYDOW
RICHARD HARRIS
uJSZ!

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POPULAR PRICES

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aw CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCES

DOWNTOWN

MOW

SHOWING!

Jon Crain, Ablert Pratz and the
Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra,
Kleinhans, 2:30 p.m.; aslo Tuesday, Dec. 12 at 8:30 p.m.

Monday, Dec: 11:
FILM: “Lord of the Flies,” Circle Art, 2 and 4 p.m. through
Dec. 16.
FILM: “Public Enemy,” Room
140, Capen Hall, 8 p.m.
JAZZ LAB: Jazz Lab Band,

Fillmore Room, 8-10 p.m.
Tuesday, Dee.

12:

JAZZ LAB: Jazz Lab Band,
Fillmore Room, Norton, 3:30 p.m.6 p.m.
FILM: “Death of a Cyclist," 7
p.m.

,

TV SPECIAL: Concert, Fourth
Symphony of Charles Ives conducted by Leopold Stokowski,
Channel 17, 9 p.m.
Thursday, Dec. 14:
PLAY; "The Dragon,” Upton
Hall, Buffalo State, 8:15 p.m,
LECTURE: Musicology Lecture,
“The Coronation of Poppea," by
Prof. Alan Curtis, Baird, 4 p.m.
FILM: “Great Expectations
Norton Conference.
Friday, Dec. 15:
PLAY “Country Wife Baird
8:30 p.m.
Saturday, Dec. 16:
CONCERT: Evenings for New
Music, Albright-Knox, 8:30 p.m.

PLAY: “Androcles and the
Lion,” Studios Arena, 2 p.m.

Controversial Leary album released

by Richard Roberts Jr., seen here
in “The Italian Straw Hat”; Dorthy Yockey, David Masman,
Gloria Massa and Gerard Mar-

to

Special to the Spectrum

Lion,” Studio Arena, 2 p.m.

p.m.

|

Pinafore

'

Friday, Dee. 8:

CONCERT: Opera performance,
“The Rape of Lucretia,” AlbrightKnox, 8:30 p.m.; also Dec. 9.
FILM: “Loneliness of the Long
Distance Runner,” Circle Art, 2
and 4 p.m. through Dee. 9.
TV PLAY: “The Successor,”
Channel 17, 8:30 p.m.
PLAY: “Married Alive!”,
O’Keefe Center, Toronto, 8:30

The area’s newest repertory
group is an outgrowth of the
lormer Milkie Way Theater. Productions being worked on are
“Wuthering Heights,” from Emily
Bronte’s novel, and “Lady Windermere’s Fin,” by Oscar Wilde,
The Audition Repertory Company has been without a permanent location since the October
production of Schnitzler’s “La

Page Nine

CINEMA

645 Main St.

Student Dieoount, upon preaentaUon oi ID card

853-0805

duced by Benedict Pictures Corp,
with special effects conceived by
UFA Pictures Inc.

Knowledgeable exposure

“In order to define one’s own
values, we have to be exposed to
the changing values from knowledge rather than from a lack of
it,” Irwin H. Steinberg, a record
ing executive, explained. “This
Timothy Leary LP exposes us to
an area of knowledge regarding
the thinking of a segment of our
national community.”

Besides Leary as the “guide,”

the motion picture and the soundtrack features Ralph Metzncr as
the “voyager” and Rosemary
Woodruff as the “divine connection.”

The soundlrack is bolstered by
the sound of the ancient veena, a
stringed instrument found only in
India. Playing the instrument is
Maryvonne Giercarz, an instructor at UCLA who reportedly is
the only artist in the Western
world who can perform on the
veena.

The film, which takes the audienca via visual and audio means
on the trip, has been getting a
lot of play around the country,
particularly on college and university campuses.
The executive producer is Hen
ry G. Saperslein, who was assisted by associate producer S. Rich
ard Krown,

l&amp;msBUFFALO

646 MAIN ST.

•

TL 4-1131

J

1

�Th

Pag* T*n

•

Friday, December 8, 1967

Spectrum

New literary publication, the Alkahest,
looks for talent among undergrads

in concert Saturday

rolled undergraduate student la

Special to the
—Selection

announced

last week that it invites submissions of poems from
undergraduates in American Colleges and universities for inclusion in a new semi annual publication, Alkahest: American College Poetry, to be published next
spring.
Submissions for the Spring,
1968 issue will be accepted until
Feb. 1, 1968: for the Fall 1968

will

be

made

by

a

committee of undergraduates composed of students from the University of Connecticut, .Mount
Holyoke,

Wesleyan, Bennington,
Dartmouth and Middlebury.
Submissions are solicited subject to the following conditions:
1. Poems must be original and
not previously published except
in local, campus publications.
2. The poet must be an en-

Papal election portrayed
in acclaimed T.V. play
The N.E.T. Playhouse repeats
last season’s critically acclaimed
presentation of “The Successor”
Friday on Channel 17 at 8:30
p.m.
It is a fictionalized documentary of backstage events as they
might have occurred during what
is still, though obscured by secrecy and encrusted by ancient
ritual, one of the most exciting
elections in the world: The papal
election. Many viewers saw in
it a parallel to the circumstances
leading to the election of the
late Pope John XXIII.
Action takes place in the Vatican after fourteen days of balloting. The College of Cardinals is

stalemated trying to reconcile the
interests of the Right and Left
wings of the Church. Finally, at
the injunction of a dying Cardinal (played by actor Felix Aylmer) to “choose a simple man,”
the Princes of the Church agreed
on a humble and self-effacing
priest played by Rupert Davies.
The play has been hailed by
critics for its “warm and human
quality.” New York Times critic
Jack Gould called Davies’ performance “immensely human and
quietly eloquent.” He referred to
the play itself as “theater related to the reality of news headlines and all the more absorbing
for it.”

tion in the United States
3. The poet’s name, institution,
and address must appear on each

The Hollies, composed of Allan
Clarke, Tony Hicks, Graham
Nash, Bobby Elliott and Bernie
Calvert, have had a succession of
hit songs. These include: CarrieAnn, Bus Stop, Pay You Back
With Interest, Look Through Any
Window, and their current release that is rising on the record
charts, Dear Eloise. They have
also been successful with albums:
Hollies Greatest Hits, Evolution,
Stop-Stop-Stop and Hear Hear are
just a few that have made the
group one of the most popular
ones in England and the United

page of material submitted.

4. Letters of recommendation
supporting submissions will be
ignored and submissions exceeding five poems will be under a
marked disadvantage.
5. The publisher will pay, on
publication, three dollars for each
poem accepted.
6. The editors cannot, unfortunately, provided evaluative or
critical comments on rejected

poems.

States.

7. Submissions will not be re-

turned unless accompanied by a
self-addressed, stamped envelope.

Appearing with the Hollies are
Wilrner and the Dukes and Willijohn, a new group that employs
a psychedelic sound.

8. Although reasonable care
will be taken, the publisher will
not be responsible for lost manu-

Sponsored by the Commuter
Council, the concert will be informal and casual. Seating is on
blankets around a center stage to
project the sound and view equally throughout the audience.

scripts.

al 1 submissions and
correspondence to Wesleyan Univesrity Press, Middletown, Connecticut 064557,
Address

The exhibition contains 76 entries including paintings, sculp-

Western New York’s Christmas
have been provided
with another “marketplace” by
the Student Art Organization of
the State University College at
Buffalo, The “marketplace” is a
Fine Arts Student Exhibition
and Purchase Show currently underway at the Upton Hall Gallery
on the Elmwood Ave. campus.

Bm

A CorksPonti Production

Antonioni’s

BIOW-UP

1966!^^

Vanessa Redgrave

David Hammings Sarah Milas
•

COLOR
MATINEE SPECIAL!
All Week—2 and 4 p.m.
"LORD OF THE FLIES"

ture, graphics, drawings, photography, ceramics, textiles, and

(7:30)

Starrifif MONICA VITTI
"StUFNlRft'

Prizes were awarded, in conjunction with the exhibition, for
the best representative work submitted by the students. Judges

"A RIP-ROARING SPOOF
OFTHF /920's SPfCBD

GRSILAI

FIRST COLOR FILM!

RED DESERT

furniture. Prices range from $4
to $450 (the latter for a skillfully
crafted piece of furniture).

NOW 5th DELIGHTFUL MONTH!

Students—75c

PLUS

/V
J

/
*

mm Afl/S/C,SONGS
COMBPyf"

1*B lAILlV AVI I TP4 till

Council will stage
and wi/mer and

the Dukes tomorrow night

for the show were Mr. Paul Tarintino, Mr. Robert Brock, and Mr.
Paul Martin of the college’s Art
Faculty and Mr. Wilard Harris
of the State University of Buffalo
Art Faculty. Members of the Art
Faculty at the State University
College at Buffalo donated the
money for the awards.
First prize was awarded to
Robert Senkpiel, a junior from
Rush, New York. Second prize
was presented to Susan Knopka,
a senior from Buffalo, New York.
Third prize went to Larry Barone,
a senior from Rochester, New
York.

'

,

•

Saturday Concert
Commuter

Student art exhibition and sale held
at Upton Hall Gallery through Dec. 21
shoppers

BEST
FILM

dng-the^talented

Tomom

British group, the Hollies, will
appear in concert at Clark Gym
at 8:30 p.m.

Special to the Spectrum

TWO GREAT ANTONIONI HITS!

ANTONIONI'S

Hollies to perform

v

AND NFY37VNF

The exhibition runs through
Dec. 21. Visiting hours for the

*

I

Gallery are: Monday-Friday, 9
a.m. to 5 p.m.; Saturday, 9 a.m.
to 1 p.m.; Sunday, 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.

THOROUGHLY MODERN

wry ryiepMooR*
CAROL O/RW/A/6

*

'

*

-

Tonight it 8:15 P.M.

KSEIfflm TOBfifina
(ENMOti

I. COLVIN

-

*73-5440

HURRY!
Last Days!
7Nm

ORDER YOUR TICKETS NOW FOR
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US 2N “FAR FROM THE MADDING CROWD”

IN)

7 N 775

Matinees

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iBNinf Hii CmIw* Tk*Bif* •• (SI-140*

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Extra Holiday Matinoot at 2:00 P.M. Doc. 25 through Jan.l

CENTURY THEATRE

WED. SUN.

FOR THE

The

Le Roy

Taylor

WEEKEND

)

Rising Sons

SATURDAY NIGHT!!

THE
DRIFTERS

SUNDAY

Freddie
Scott

�Friday, December 8, 1967

the spectrum of

sports

Hardest challen e of

seasoi

Buffalo icers defeat RIT, 5-2
The State University of Buffalo leers passed their
toughest test of the season Sunday night when they defeated the Rochester Institute of Technology 5-2. In a game
marked by slashing, elbowing, hand hitting and sometimes
outright slugfests, the Bulls clearly dominated play in the
first two periods. RIT came alive in the third period but
it was too late for them to stop the high flying herd.

This was not only a game where
the satisfaction of victory was involved, but also the pleasure of
shutting up the Rochester coach,
who publicly stated on Rochester
TV last week that his team was
going to run the team that
knocked him out of the Finger
Lakes Hockey Tournament, namely Buffalo, right out of the Amherst Arena. He was wrong, as
the score indicates, and if it had
not been for the RIT goaltender
he would have really been
wrong.

It seems every goaltender that
comes to visit our Amherst Rink
is hotter than Johnny Bower in
the Stanley Cup Playoffs and
Sunday night was no exception.
The HIT netminder made no less
than 10 brilliant saves and really
saved the visitors from a trouncing.

Defoe rumbles
Ref Johnny Barnes had his
hands full all night as the game

was punctuated with minor penalties. Two majors were also
handed out, one to young Billy
Defoe for a fight behind the
cage in the first period. Billy
landed two real solid punches
before the RIT player could
grab his jersey and hold on for
dear life. Also picking up a penalty was Jim Hamilton for retaliating after being slashed across
the midsection during a scramble
in front of the net. Jim, as usual,
played two fine games this weekend, indicative of the style and
ability that put him on the AllStar team last season.

week’s three stars are
Lome Rombough, Wayne Frazier
and Billy Defoe. Lome picked up
five goals this weekend and really
started things off Sunday night
when he went around two RIT
defensemen and scored on a 25
foot backhander. Things started
out slow for Wayne this season
This

but the veteran right winger really proved to be a great menace
to both Syracuse and BIT as he
hustled every minute he was on
the ice. Young Billy Defoe played
probably his best two games of
the season this weekend. His
crushing body checks and strong
defense play really made him a

standout.

Seven-thirty faceoff
The Bulls take their undefeated Finger Lakes record into two
games this weekend. Saturday
night against a strong veteran
club from Canton and Sunday
night against Utica. The starting
time Saturday is the regular 10
p.m., but the Sunday night game
wil start at 7:30. GM Howard
Plaster noted a rise in attendance but feels that it is not indicative of the type of hockey
we are playing. “You would hope
that with an undefeated team
like ours the fans would realize
the caliber of play we have established in the FLHL and afford
themselves the opportunity to see
such outstanding college hockey.
With the home season nearing
the halfway point we hope more
of the student body will get out
to the Amherst Arena and cheer
us on.”

Niagara superstar, Calvin Murphy,
starts first season as varsity player
by Harry Q. Rooks
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

Never before have so many basketball fans waited so
patiently for an athlete to perform as they have for Calvin
Murphy to play his first varsity basketball game. The time
is nearing when the man Red Auerbach called “the best
high school basketball player I have ever seen,” will have
to prove just how good he is.
All through his unbelievable
career as a player, Calvin has

been able to rise to the occasion
and in many performances, has
completely outdone himself.
While a senior in high school in
Norwalk, Conn., Murphy, together
with the other top high school
cagers in the nation, was invited
to Allentown, Pa., to play in the
Annual All-Star game.
To say he rose to the occasion
would be like asking if David
“got up” for his match with Goliath. Not only did he win the
most valuable player award in the
tourney, but he broke six of the
seven offensive records of the
annual classic. People who witnessed this exhibition simply commented that the school fortunate
enough to have Murphy would
be a national power for three
years.

Takes more than two
Last year as a freshman at Niagara University, Cal, as his
friends nd followers refer to him,

was a one-man army. He averaged
nearly 50 points a game with an
equally incredible percentge from
the floor of 53.4% This came
against all types of defenses, including three men guarding him
at once. Against Canisius at Erie
County Tech last year, Cal was
constantly being guarded by at
least two men and still scored
56 points, including an impossible

Pag* Eleven

Til* Spectrum

Calvin Murphy

averaged 50 points a game
as freshman
three point play to tie the score

with twenty seconds to go.
This year many nonbelievers
contend that there will be a great
difference in Murphy’s performances, since he will be playing
against varsity competition. Three
weeks ago, Niagara scrimmaged
Gannon College (Buffalo’s most
recent opponent). Murphy scored
68 points and completely dominated the game in every respect
except rebounding. When one reporter quite kiddingly asked Jim
Maloney, the Niagara coach, what
wrong with Cal in that he
scored only 68 points, the coach
explained that he had only played
three quarters.

was

As every school does, the Niagara team quite often has intersquad games. In Cal’s first scrimmage after having been confined
to crutches for a week with a bad
knee, he hit 17 of 20 shots from

the floor. Again Malony was
asked to comment on Cal’s performance and his reply was:
He’ll have to work on the three
shots he missed.”
Who needs defense?
What makes this 5 foot 10 inch
human scoring machine as unstoppable as he is? Well, he dribbles the ball like it was attached
to his hand; he is able to run at
full speed and stop to take a
jump shot; he has as much body
control as anyone playing the
game today, and his ability to
pass and find the open man parallels his other qualities. Some
people have questioned Murphy’s
defensive ability. When coach
Maloney was asked this question,
he said he really wasn’t sure how
good it was, but everytime he
looks down his bench, he sees
40 points on the scoreboard.
The next question to consider
is if Murphy can transform Niagara into a national basketball

Sportin' Life
by Bob Woodruff
Sports

Editor

Doc Urich stared disbelievingly out of his Clark Gym

dow.

1

:—

:

office win

:

“The week before the Colgate game we had a winter's quota of
bad weather. Now that the season’s over it’s like spring in Buffalo.”
The weather has not been the major preoccupation of the Bulls’
head football coach since the season ended three weeks ago. Last
Sunday he took a trip to Kent, Ohio, home of what else, but Kent

State University.

The talks at Ohio’s third largest academic institution centered
around Kent’s vacated head coaching position. Urich did not apply
for the job, but Kent officials asked that he come to talk about it.
Like any good businessman (alas, football is a business) Urich went
to investigate the prospects.
“Kent State has better than 20,000 students and a growing athletic
program. Its rapid development is similar to that of the State
University of Buffalo, They’ve got a new stadium already off the
drawing board and they’ll soon be heard from in the national football
picture," chimed Urich.
Not only do head football coaches make excellent strategists
and businessmen, but they undoubtedly would make excellent politicians. When asked what changes had occurred at the University
since his arrival which would make him investigate another offer,
Coach Urich hedged brilliantly:
“Nothing really. This school is in a fine situation, both academically and athletically. Grant-in-aid money is going to be a problem;
we’re going to have to tackle it in the future, but it’s not insurmountable. If someone asked you to come and talk about a new position,
you’d make it your business to find out what he’s got to say. I'm not
even considering any action until I find than an offer is actually
forthcoming.”

What did he say?
The rest of the football staff is out exploring the far reaches of
Pennsylvania, Ohio, New York’s Southern Tier and even Long Island
for high school talent.
The scouts had better check back with the chief regularly
They might be selling the wrong school.
A lot of people don’t like Fred Lewis.
He’s not really a nice guy.
The basketball coach of Syracuse University might not be one
of the most imaginative coaches in the East either, but he’s undoubt
edly one of the most successful
Lewis came to Syracuse in 1962 and on his jaunt north he made
a stop in Washington, D.C., to recruit the finest basketball player
ever to attend the fun school, Dave Bing. Up went Manley Field
House and so soared the basketball fortunes of the Orange.
Before Lewis, Syracuse basketball rivaled Mets baseball as emblematic of the lowest calibre of athletic performance. Down at the

Aud, the Orange quintet played before crowds approaching 500,
In an effort to boost attendance, Lewis' predecessor even inserted the
late All-American football star Ernie Davis in his lineup.
Lewis is not known as a personable or lovable mentor. His
language on the court is often quite colorful, and referees will never
vote him an award for cooperation. Despite all these glaring personality flaws, Lewis’ club has reached the quarter finals of the
NCAA tournament, a feat not beyond the reach of this year’s squad.
Too bad Serf’s such a nice guy.
•

•

•

The calibre and intensity of intramural play on this campus is

a tribute to the fraternities of this University. (Yes, Virginia, there
are national fraternities at SUNYAB.) Unfortunately however, the
IFC is having a little trouble managing the affairs of its annually
awarded athletic trophy. Just leave this paper work to the athletic
department, Greeks, you’re only making a muddle of it.
One more note to Mr. Lipman and his almighty council. The AAU
is currently soliciting support for this country's Olympic teams. If
each fraternity foregoes the purchase of one bottle of liquor, (two
bottles of the rot gut most of the boys guzzle), the IFC could send
a check of upwards of fifty dollars to the AAU.
Your livers will appreciate the donation also.

power. The only possible answer
is to seek analagous situations of
the past. If Jimmy Walker made
Providence into a national power; if John Austin gave Boston

College its national recognition
if Cazzie Russell did likewise
for the University of Michigan,
then Calvin Murphy can put Niagara among this country’s basand

ketball elite.
In conclusion, every true sports
fan in the area owes it to himself
to make plans well in advance
to see Murphy play this year. No
matter what you read in any
other article, nothing will do the
man justice. You just have to see

him to believe him!

—UPt

T«l«photo

UiS
Super-Ref

Referee Charles Marino

(left)

appears to be in the game as
he leaps high off the floor
during Philadelphia 76ers-Seal
lie Sonics game

�Pag* Twtlv*

Th

•

Friday, December i, 19i7

Spectrum

Bull foilmen start season with twin
victories over McMaster and RIT
a

by Richard Grubb
Spectrum Staff Reporter

The fencing Bulls opened their

on a resounding note
Friday at Clark Gym, emerging
doubly victorious from a triangular meet against McMaster and

season

—UPI

Telephoto

Chiefs
n

-j

Kaiders

vs.
‘

Kansas City Chief's Bert Coan
(23) is upended after gaining
9 yards by Oakland's Warren
Powers (20).

Serf says:

Happy with team s play
by L. T. Serfustini
Special to the Spectrum

The first week of State University of Buffalo basketball has
passed and, needless to say, the team and 1 are pleased with the results.
Regardless of the many pre-game predictions; the selections
made by sportswriters and sportscasters; the complete confidence of
Alumni and friends; the overenthusiasm of Sports information services; the only place where the outcome of the game can be determined is on the basketball court!
For the first half against the University of Toronto, we were in
a real dogfight. Toronto had good size and aggressiveness, I felt we
were tense in our initial encounter, and our poor shooting percentage
in the first ten minutes attested to this. With our Center John Jekielek playing his finest varsity contest to date, and the great lift we received from Forward Doug Bernard in a relief role, our team
started to jell at the 12 minute mark. Guard Joe Rutkowski started
us off fast in the second half with two driving layups, and from there
on in the lid was off and our Bulls gave an indication of what their

potential might be.
I was pleased with our initial victory but I was also very pleased
with the fine spirit and response shown by the student body throughout the contest. It was a packed house in Clark Gymnasium with
leadership provided by the “pep” band and the cheerleaders. We
want to establish a great University
interwoven to establish this
greatness are the ingredients that were shown on Friday night:
school spirit, loyalty, pride and tradition.
Saturday night was a long time coming for many members of
our team. Exactly one year ago, Gannon College had beaten us in
Memorial Auditourium. The players who had experienced this defeat
and the rest of the team were not to be denied and we went on to
upset Gannon in a convincing manner
88-73. Each game as it is
played will add to the skill and knowledge of the players. This
game provided our guards
Joe Peeler, John Fieri and Joe Rutkowski
the test of working against multiple defenses. Gannon used a
strict zone at half court, a pressing zone both at full court and half
court, and toward the end of the game went into a pressure man-forman defense. Gannon also fielded a team that stood six feet to six
feet six inches in the backcourt, six feet seven inches to six feet
eight inches in the frontline. Against this size Bob Nowak, at six
feet two inches, went in and controlled the boards. In gaining this
control, we were able to capitalize on many fast breaks.
In the last ten minutes of play, Gannon felt the game getting
away from them, and made a desperate attempt to gain control of
fouls were fiequent. To prevent a counter rally by your
the ball
opponent in a situation where fouls are frequent, you must step to
the foul line and make the shots. This was done to the tune of 34
out of 38 attempts for an 89.5 shooting percentage. It was this accuracy from the foul line that prevented Gannon from making their
bid to close the gap in the score.
—This&gt;eyenine we will play host to tj» State University of Albany,
With four university centers now in existence in the State University System (Buffalo, Albany, Stony Brook and Binghamton), a fine
rivalry is rapidly developing. With the tremendous growth taking
place at these university centers, it may not be too long before an
athletic conference of national reputation can be realized. The Albany team is a well-coached team and a team that in the past has
proven you must be at your best to beat them. Albany will not beat
—

—

—

—

—

itself.

Saturday night we travel to Syracuse University, where we take
on a team of high national ranking. The Syracuse team has all the
ingredients: talent, depth, speed, height, strength, shooting ability,
rebounding power and quick reactions. Because of this mixture, preseason polsters have placed Syracuse in the top ten. With this preseason rating, and the odds given on the game, it seems that our
fate is already established.
The game still must be played and it must be played within the
confines of a SO foot by 94 foot area. It is in this area that we hope
to put Syracuse to the real test.
The Med-Sane Society is presenting Dr. James Upson, surgeon,
at an open meeting at 5:30 p.m. Monday in room G 22, Capen. Dr.
Upson will give a slide lecture on medicine in Vietnam.
"Physical Therapy of the Bilateral Amputee" will be the film
shown at a meeting of the Student Physical Therapy Association at
7:30 p.m. Monday in room 242, Norton Hall.

the Rochester Institute of Technology, taking the measure of
the former 15-12, and thrashing
the latter, 18-9,
The Swashbucklers’ potent epee
squad paced the fine effort,
whipping McMaster 6-3, and
blanking RIT 9-0 behind the flawless fencing of Steve Morris,
Tony Walluk, and Bruce Renner.
Walluk copped four bouts, with
Morris and Renner each winning
three without a loss.
The foil trio also dominated
their rivals, walloping the Canadian invaders 7-2, and the Tigers
6-3. The consistently tough
George Wirth showed the way,
copping five of six bouts while
rapidly improving Ronnie “Doc”
David and stylish Pierre Chanteau each won four.
The Bulls displayed considerable vulnerability in saber however, bowing to McMaster 7-2 and
RIT 6-3. The only bright spot in
this category was the sparkling
swordplay of senior captain Jon
Rand who took three of his four
bouts.

Li'l Tigers routed
The frosh made the afternoon

complete

success,

trouncing

RIT 19-6. FTosh captain Mike
Bardossi, Bill Kazer, Mike “Sarge”
Kaye, Dave Frenay, and Steve
Bell all went unbeaten in a
spirited, impressive rout of the
LiT Tigers. An ecstatic frosh
coach, Dick “Young Fox” Willert
quipped, “I’m very pleased by
the way the kids came through
in their first collegiate competition. They really romped and
fenced well, but we’ve still got
a long way to go. The next few
matches wil be much tougher,
and should show us just how
much progress we’re making.”
The competition stiffens considerably as the Swashbucklers
journey to Cornell tonight and
Syracuse tomorrow. The Bulls
have never defeated the Big Red,
a perennial national power rank-

in the nation last year.
Despite being hit fairly hard by
ed sixth

graduation, Cornell once again
looms as a potent foe. Prominent
among those who are sorely
missed by the Ithacans is Micha

Abeles, sabreur par excellence,
and an All-Ivy selection last year.
This year they are paced by All
American epee man Don Segia,
and will provide the Bulls with
one of the toughest matches on
their schedule.
Syracuse stern test
Arch rival Syracuse will also
be strong, and has become a

formidable foe during the past
few years though the Bulls hold
a
bulge in the series. The
Orange boast a squad composed
almost entirely of returning let-

termen.

Head Coach Sid Schwartz indicated the difficulties that the
Swashbucklers are liable to encounter this weekend, as he said,
“We’ve really got our work cut
out for us this weekend. Cornell
is always tough, and it would be
quite an upset if we beat them.
Syracuse isn’t in quite the same
class, but we can expect a tough
time from them too. But the
team showed me a lot winning
those first two matches, and I’m
pretty sure we’ll give a good
account of ourselves.”

The schedule
8— at Cornell
9—at Syracuse
January
26— at McMaster

27— Hobart

February
3—RIT and Toronto at RIT
10—Penn State
17—Army
23—Oberlin and Cleveland State

at

Cleveland State

24—Western Reserve

and Case at

Case

3—Syracuse and Notre Dame
6—at Hobart
North Atlantic Intercollegiate Fencing
Championships at RIT
NCAA Championships at Wayne State

Pro' describes upcoming NFL contest
between Green Bay and Los Angeles
by Paul Kaplan
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

The essence of sport lies in its culmination. This Saturday at Los Angeles professional football in essence may
reach a culmination. The Green Bay Packers meet the Los
Angeles Rams in a game filled with the meaning of football
and professionalism.
Needless to say, the Rams and
the Packers can be considered
two-thirds of the NFL monopoly.
A loss in this game extinguishes
the L. A. hopes for the championship. Los Angeles has no recourse but to win the game. Assuming that Baltimore wins on
Sunday against lowly New Orleans, a loss by the Rams would
put them two games behind the
Colts with but one to play.
This last game is the head to

head meeting with the Colts, a
game if won by the Rams, as-

the Packers
Division Championship. Both teams
would have identical records at
season’s end but because the
Rams would have scored more
points in their meetings with
the Colts they would assume the
suming they beat

also, would clinch the Coastal

championship.

The winning tradition
the Rams and the
title stand Green Bay and a man
named Vince Lombardi. On paper
the game means little to the
Packers, They have clinched their
league championship and the
game Saturday means relatively
little. Relatively little that is,
unless you are a Packer. Lombardi has instilled a tradition
within his team. The tradition is
to hit harder than the opponent,
to run harder and to win. The
pride of the Packer and the pride
of a man face the Rams.

yet everything to lose. To Green
Bay the game is but a job, something that must be done as only
they know how. The culmination,
the professionalism and the will
to win
here lies the essence
—

of sport.

National Football League
Baltimore 38, New Orleans 17:
This game should prove to be no
contest as Johnny Unitas is enjoying his finest season. The
Colts are in the thick of their divisional race and will not take
this game lightly. The Saints are

simply too inexperienced.

Washington 42, Pittsburgh 27:
Neither team has a defense to
brag about. The Washington offense is tremendous with the best
throwing arm in the league in
'onny Jurgensen and the most
exciting end in Charley Taylor.
Pittsburgh is a young team and
will be a threat in the future,
not today.

Between

In a game fitting of the word
“championsip,” the choice is
Green Bay 24-21. The intangibles
involved are innumerable. Los
Angeles has everything to gain,

Detroit 21, Giants 20: The
Giants winning percentage
against the Western division is
pathetic. They have no incentive
left for this season as they have
been eliminated from their divisional race. Mel Farr is the most
exciting rookie in the league.
Minnesota 14, Chicago 13: The
Vikings are the most underrated
team in the NFL, as avidence in
their fine showing against Green
Bay last week. Gale Sayers is
great, but very injury-prone. The
Vikings should squeeze by.

Cleveland 27, St. Louis 20:
With a victory in this one, the
Browns would become Century

Division champs. Leroy Kelley
cannot be stopped and Jim Hart’s
inexperience will prove victory
for the Browns.
Philadelphia 28, Dallas 24:
the Capital Division
wrapped up, the Cowboys won’t
be trying. The Eagles made a
gallant comeback last week
against the Redskins and will be
out for revenge. Upset of the

With

week.

31, Atlanta 10:
Another no-contest. The 49’ers
offense can be very potent.
Rookie Jacques Rouff (from the
Montreal Alouettes) has excelled
on kick-off returns. Steve Spurrier will be a great one.
San Francisco

American Football League
Boston

14, Buffalo 13: Neither

team is much to talk about. The
game should prove to be quite
dull. I picked Boston because the

coin landed on heads, that's all.

Kansas City 31, Jats 24; The
Jets have a lot of trouble with
Mr. Garrett This game is a must
or else the divisional championship is out of reach for them.
“Good-bye Weeb” will be the new
chant of New York City.
San Diego

38, Miami 24: The

Chargers arc an excellent football team. You can not expect a
young team like the Dolphins to
do too much. Lance Alworth is

the top receiver in pro football.
Oakland 28, Houston 7: The
Raiders are clearly the class of
the league and will penetrate the
enemy’s goalline for four touchdowns. The Raiders, led by AllPro, War N. Valencia, was penalized 35 yards and was sent all
the way back to the Gold Line.
The mad Dash caused by Valencia, was stopped cold by the opposing left end, the Great Fish.

This week’s question: Who will
kick the coffin?

�Friday, December

1947

(,

Th« Sptclrum

Pag*

Intramural action

Thirtaan

Frosh cagers
bow to NCC

AEPi takes swimming honors; basketball begins

The State University of Buffalo
Spoctrum

Staff

Reporter

For the third straight year
Ipha Epsilon Pi has captured
t"h e intramural swimming
meet. With a small nucleus
of fie swimmers, APi was
able to ward off such strong
opposition as Sigma Alpha
Mu and Phi Kappa Psi.
The big success for AEPi came

in the two relay events, the 100yard medley and the 100-yard
freestyle. The latter proved to
be the most exciting event of the
night in which AEPi and Phi Psi
battled stroke for stroke to the
wire with AEPi’s Bloom holding
off Phi Psi’s Frydman at the finish. The meeting produced a
triple winner in Joel Taxel, a
member of both winning relay
teams and a winner in an extremely close race over MacLaughlin of Sig Ep in the 50-yard butterfly. His time for the event
was 28.3 seconds, which overcame
MacLaughlin by a tenth of a second.

Kirshner wins double

The two outstanding swimmers
in the meet were Carl Kirshner
of Phi Epsilon and “Duke Dunigan, who swam independently.
Kirshner took the 50 and 100-yard
freestyles in 25.8 seconds and
60.1 seconds respectively. Dunigan won the 50-yard backstroke
in a close race over Goldfinger
of SAM in 32 seconds. He also
won the 75-yard individual medley in which he outraced Cohn of
AEPi and Simms of SAM in 45.4
seconds. Simms of SAM came
back to win the 50-yard breast
stroke in 33.6 seconds. The dive
was won by A1 Craik who had
stiff
competition from Don
Schneider and Leon Laptook.
The meet was run very well
by Rich Rebo and Mark Clarcq,
two members of the Buffalo swim
team who took over for ailing

tory. Most noticeable was the Tau
Delt Rho contingent which is
looking far ahead to the playoffs.
Many people came to find out
about a young “hotshot” on the
Tau Delt squad by the name of
Richy Kantor and were impressed
not only by Kantor, but his club’s
formidable press that they threw
at a helpless Spectrum team. This
team has good balance with such
players as Jeff Janoff, Pete Shulman, Steve Ginsburg and Barry
Asen.
Tau Delt should

not look too
far ahead because upcoming is a
game with Phi Psi, a team that
is due to win the championship.
Phi Psi possesses two of the best
big men in the league with Bill
Reinig at six feet five inches and

inches. To complete this strong
front line, they have other capable personnel in Roger Fredericks, Jerry Capella and Joe Rich.
Another strong team in the
league could be SAM. This team
has lost a lot of talent but has
two fine sophomores making
their debuts on the courts, Alex
Ringelheim and Bruce Zabinsky.

Apes defend
In the 9:30 league we find the

defending champions of fraternity
basketball, AEPi. Under the reign
of Coach Ira Marcus the team
looks better than ever. The team
seems to be playing tougher defense and showing more allaround hustle. The strong suit
for AEPi is depth. Many mem-

forming in fraternity intramur-

als for three years and have the
the experience needed to win.
Coach Gary Adelman brings
his huge Alpha Sigma Phi forces
from the football field into the
warmth of Clark Gym where he
will let them lose on much smaller teams. To go along with their

great height Alpha Sig has a fine
Other
guard in Len Banach.
strong teams in the league appear to be Sigma Phi Epsilon and
of course Busch, Rasey, Vesneske
and Giacchi, better known as
APO.
Sig Ep could be the dark horse
in this league as it has been rum-

ored

that they practice three
days a week and follow strict
training rules. Unheard of! !

first game of the season Tuesday
night at the hands of Niagara
Community College 71-66.
The Baby Bulls are now 1-1 on
the season.
The box score
Buffalo
FTM FTA Pf$.
2
2
8
4
6
12
2
5
8
3
3 10
4
2
2
0
14
4
6
2
2
5
7
13
4
10
0
2
0
10
2
0
111

FG

3

Kremblos
AAoog g
Waxman g
Johnon f
Petf. f
Palen

g

4

Knapp

Landergren

Helenbrook
Lovello

24

Totals

How much do over
60 leading Rochester
companies want you?

Coach Sanford.

Hotshot Kantor

This year’s fraternity basketball league has gotten off to a
great start. The league opened
up last Thursday with a large
turnout of enthusiastic supporters

OPEN MONDAY!
SHOWTIME 9:00 PM.

The SUPREME
comedian of all time!

Enough to join together to interview you at the

Rochester Chamber of Commerce December 27 and 28!
Think of it! All the largest companies plus many
fast-growing smaller ones will be there. Over 60
industrial and commercial firms gathered in one
spot to interview you! To tell you about the unequaled opportunity that is yours in the Rochester area. Exciting careers with exciting

futures. Look over the list below. Then decide
which you would like to discuss with representatives of these companies in 15 to 20 minute
interviews. Any senior or candidate for an advanced or associate degree is eligible. Permanent employment—not summer work.

PROJECT OPPORTUNITY

Career opportunities
unlimited in:

THE KEY TO YOUR FUTURE
DON’T WAIT
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Register
•

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THE ROYAL ARMS

IS HAVING ITS FIRST OF
A SERIES OF THE CLASSIC
FILMS TO BE SHOWN
PERIODICALLY
.

.

—plus—

"THE VAGABOND"
(1917)

—plus Live Music
"MONTEGO JOE"

—

STUDENTS—$.50

•

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Advertising

Banking
Chemistry
Engineering

Business Administration

•

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Data Processing
Insurance
Journalism
•

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Management Training
Personnel Retailing

•

Marketing

joupon below and mail to: Project
Opportunity, Rochester Chamber of Commerce, 55 SI. Paul St.. Rochester, N. Y. 14604
Name

•

Sales
Secretarial Science
Teaching
Technology... and many others
•

Home Address

•

Phone
College
Major

.

"THE ADVENTURERS"

ADMISSION—$1.00

•

Accounting

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(Your College Officer in charge of Student
Placement has a supply of Brochures describing Project Opportunity.)

Area of

18

29

Halftime score: NCC 39, Buis 35.

Study

Degree

Date of Graduation

I

66

�Pag*

"Easy" Ed Eberle is
player of the week
Editors Note: This is the first
of a weekly selection of the varsity basketball player of the week.

Junior forward Ed Eberle (pronounced “ebb-er-li”) has been
chosen as the season's first basketball player of the week. Although he got off to a slow start

in the game against Toronto last
Friday in Clark Gym, Ed picked
up the momentum he and the
Bulls needed for a revenge victory over the oversized Gannon
club in Memorial Auditorium the
following night.
Friday night Eberle cashed in
four baskets from the field for

eight points, but Saturday evening he hit on eight baskets in 18

Exciting Buffalo wrestling team
predicted; eleven lettermen return
With a highly successful foot-

ball season

recently

completed

the eyes of most fans at the State
University of Buffalo will turn,
for the winter months, to the baskeball courts. However, let the
sports fans take note that deep
wihin the crumbling walls of
Clark Gym, Coach Gerry Gergley
has put together a tough, welldisciplined team of wrestlers that
should prove outstanding.

attempts from the floor and made
good on all eight of his free
throws. Easy Ed also pulled down
nine rebounds in the two games.
Eberle has one of the finest
one-handed shots in cpllege basketball. He is an excellent team
leader and a good hustler on defense.

Ed Eberle
Junior sharpshooter was voted
Bulls' outstanding player of the

Friday, December I, 19(7

The Spectrum

Fourteen

As a soph last season Easy Ed
was chosen as the team’s Most
Valuable Player. Eberle scored
317 points last season to lead the
team in both that department and
point per game average at 15.9.
Ed made good 129 field goals out
of 268 attempted for a very respectable 48.1%. From the free
throw line he tallied 59 charity
tosses out of 73 attempted for an
80.8%. He was the team’s most
accurate shooter in both these deart:

Ur

eleven returning lettermen plus
some fine outstanding sophs and
transfer students add up to what

powerful wrestling area in perhaps the entire country. Yet, few
wrestlers from that area are here
at Buffalo. Perhaps some day
scholarships will also be awarded
to wrestlers at Buffalo encouraging top prospects to further

most coaches and observers believe will be an exciting Buffalo
wrestling season. Coach Gergley
comments: “With the addition
of strength and depth, we have
hopes for a great season.”
Heading the list of returning
veterans is John Cunningham, at
130 pounds, the Bulls’ number
one wrestler of 1966. Also back
is 123-pounder Gary Fowler, who
scored the most points and 152pounder Dale Wettlaufer who was
the most improved. Buffalo is
strong at the lighter weights with
nine of eleven letter-winners at

their education here.

It appears that the coaches have
put together a promising team

for the upcoming season. They
do, however, need the support of
the students. The season opens
on Saturday at Buffalo State,

Dec.

26-30—Wilkes

season

returns for second
at the helm of

(freshman
Tounrey

only)

Jan. 20—AAcMasfer

24—Buff. State
27—Ithaca

Bell tops at 177

Gerry Gergley

State

16—Syracuse

160 and under.

Coach

9—Buff.

Feb. 2-Colgate
3—Oswego

Expected to be of tremendous
assistance at the heavier weights
are 177-pounder Harry Bell and
reavyweight Dan Walgate. Bell
was sensational as a freshman
last year and could be one of the
top performers in the country
this year. Walgate, also a sophomore, did not wrestle last year,
but was runner-up for the Sttfte
high school championship as a
senior. Dan weighs 255 pounds,
is very quick and the coaches expect him to help greatly.
The two outstanding transfer
students are Mike Amigone (160
lbs.) from Cornell and Don Levintovich (177) from Corning Community.

10—Cortland
13-R.I.T.

17—Ontario

21—Brockport

24—Rochester
Mar.

1—N.C.A.A. Tournament

flk*
Gary Fowler

123 pounder

was
most prolific scorer

the Bulls'
last season

OHN'S
&amp;

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nd Cold Sandwiches
Steak Special

TRAMI
d.

836-4881
Seniors

ATTENTION
or Grad Students

in Social Sciences and/or
those with group work experience. Volunteers are needed to work with adolescent
psychiatric patients on a 1 to
1 basis.
Contact Larry Shohet at
886-5600 ext. 327 Mon., Wed.
Thurs.

1:30-4:30

ISPWCK
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�Friday, Decembar 8, 1967

The Spectrum

John Paffie dead at 51,
was recreation director
A Requiem High Mass was of-

Recreation Director of

Action tine

for annual recreational tournaments.
He entered the State University of Buffalo in 1958 as a
freshman and graduated with an
associate degree in traffic and
transportation in 1962. Prior to
this he operated a restaurant in
Bolivar and worked for an insur-

Norton

Mr. Paffie died Sunday
morning in his home at 199 St.
James Place.
Since July, 1962, Mr. Paffie
had been the Recreation Director
at the State University of Buffalo.
He was the advisor to the
Chess Club, the Recreation Committee of the University Union
Activities Board and the Bridge
Club. Mr. Paffie conducted classes for the Women’s Physical Education Department in table
tennis and billiards.
Mr. Paffie was the assistant
recreation coordinator of the Association of College Unions International from 1963 to 1964.
From 1964 to 1967, he was the

ance

company.

A veteran of World War II,
Mr. Paffie was a member of the
Bolivar American Legion and the
Fire Department.
He is survived by four brothers, Francis and Ronald, of Little
Genessee, Lawrence of Vastol,

N. Y., and Robert of Bolivar, N.Y.
Mr. Paffie is also survived by
three sisters, Mrs. Richard Whitney and Mrs. Carl Childs of Little Genessee, and Mrs. Lawrence
DeRock of Lexington, N. C.

Fraternity will teach sports
to mentally retarded children

be

Spectrum Staff Reporter

The members of Alpha Sigma
Phi's pledge class will devote the
day to instructing a group of mentally retarded boys tomorrow.
The group includes boys of all
ages. The topic of instruction will
include the fundamental and practical aspects of indoor athletic
activities. Lunch will be provided
and prepared by the pledges. The

establishing a new

the pledges for the purposes of
instruction will be a welcome addition to the program.
The Catilician Center’s Sister
Raphael Marie, who supervises
the schooling of these boys, finds
her work both “unique and rewarding.” This semester’s pledge
class will try to facilitate her

to the student body. The Spectrum

LINE weekly
answered individually.
published.
be
not

FOR

will include them in Its special
thoroughly investigated and
originating the inquiry will

column. Each inquiry will be
The name of the individual

career passing

Richard Siggelkow, vice president
for Student Affairs, will be
speaking to the sisters Monday
night on hte topic of the “Chang-

Q. Why can't we have an ice skating rink on campus?

A. According to Mrs. Jean Mitchel, Ass’t. to the Director of University Housing, an ice skating rink, adjacent to Goodyear Hall, is
being prepared. It already has a thin layer of ice and, weather cooperating, should be available for use within the next few days.
Q. Can a student who does not live in either of the residence
halls use the facilities of the University Health Services?
A. All students, according to Dr. Paul Hoffman, Director of the
University Health Services, are entitled to the same outpatient services available at the clinic located in the basement of Michael Hall. II
is expected, however, that students living at home, with their families,
will remain at home for minor illnesses requiring bed rest.

our Music Department and the Center

of Performing Arts.

Program and how

AT GREAT SAVINGS

ATTENTION! Graduating seniors and anyone

else wanting to rent 2, 3 or 4 bedroom
ot responsible college seniors.

apartment

Call 674-4193.

PERSONAL

of a

LAMB. Call Kenny

Frost Killei

SITUATIONS WANTED

ditto's
hundred. Call

TYPING TERM papers 25c per page;
$2.00 per

does one

This is a program which was initiated by the Federal Govern
ment to stimulate and promote the part-time employment of students
in institutions of higher education who are from low income families
and are in need of the earnings from such employment in order to
pursue their courses of study.
Jobs may be on campus or in approved off-campus projects
and may not average more than 15 hours per week when classes
are in session. A student may be employed up to 40 hours per week
when his classes are not in session.
In order to qualify, a student must be enrolled in college on a
full-time basis. To determine his need, our Financial Aid Office
utilizes the information submitted by his parents on the Parents'
Confidential Statement of the College Scholarship Service. Eligibility
is based on (1) any income, assets and resources, including other
forms of aid, available to the student; (2) the income, assets and
resources of the student’s family; and (3) the cost reasonably
necessary for him to attend college. Anyone interested in exploring
this program further should contact the Financial Aid Office in
room 216 Hardman Hall.

MISCELLANEOUS

BEGINNING TO ADVANCED skiers, avoid
left lines, ski weekends, some evenings
student memberships available at $40.00
per

season. Slightly higher rales for faculty
Matteshorn Ski Club, Colden,
For details call Lou Flur/y.

and staff.
New York.
674-7410.

KARATE AND KUNGFU. Self defense instructions. Call Prof. Wong, 852-9630
or 854-1650. 124 Chippewa St.
GUITARS: quality, used, flat top guitars
(Martin, etc.) bought, sold, repaired,.
D'Angelico strings. 874-0120.

Your I D. Card
is Worth 10r r

at

GcUimatCs
StfiCA

BOULEVARD MALL
CLARENCE MALL
NAME BRANDS
FOR MEN AND WOMEN

—

Jantien's Casuals
Daxter Loafers

and Brogues
U.S. Ked
Pappagallo
Viners Loafers
Bates Floaters
Florsheim

WIGLETS

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 9

Univ. Manor Motel (opp. Goodyear), 1-5 p.m.

Eskiloo and
Campus Boots

(ask for room number at desk)

WIGGED OUT ENTERPRISES
Y.

and many other brands

For Sangwoo of N.

'Chez D' Etudiants De College'

THE BEEF
3199 Main
837-9144

&amp;

ALE HOUSES

Millersporf Hwy. and Stahl Rd.
634-8036

584 Grant St
883-6887

GALA NEW YEAR’S EVE PARTY
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and Saf. n/ghf

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$19.50 per couple includes the famous BEEF &amp; ALE HOUSE roast
beef dinner complimented by beers and ales from all over the
world.

dancing it RESERVATION ONLY it dancing
call now for a night you will never forget

apart-

APARTMENTS NEEDED

35c; envelopes

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GIRL

WANT TO HAVE A BLAST! The
Is Coming. December 8.

GIRLS!
—

127 MONTROSE AVE.—10 minute walk to
campus.
$31, not including
utilities.

832 3613.

A. Searchlights were placed on the Baird parking lot and downtown at the foot of Niagara St. as part of the overall “In-City Buffalo
1967” program which was held the weekend of Oct, 20. The searchlights crossed each other, creating the illusion of additional lights in
other parking lots. You may recall, this program had been presented

We have dropped the price of being stylish—
Examine our line of 100% Human Hair

FALLS

WANTED

A RAM in search
837-9651.

Sigma Kappa Phi'* new Pan
Hel alternate is Carol Johnson.
The semester philanthropy project will be a Christmas Carol
Sing with the “Reflections” Dec.

The newly initiated sisters of
Chi Omega have made stuffed

boundbooksat
Stamps., 3292 Main St.

Q. What were the searchlights for on the Baird parking lot and
the Health Sciences parking lot?

ing University.”

News items

1963 VW 1500, sunroof, radio, five new
tires. Call 886-6294
1965 BUICK SKYLARK, automatic fransmis• son,
heater, radio. Excellent condition
Call NF 2-7344.

TF 5-6897.

Chi Omega announces that Dr.

job.

SALE

ROOMMATES

What is the Federal Work-Study

Theta Chi Fraternity is in the
midst of its annual Christmas
clothing drive. Clothing will be
distributed to various charitable
institutions in the Buffalo area.

sports equipment purchased by

CLASSIFIED

•

qualify?

The brotherhood of Alpha Sigma Phi extends their congratulations to brother Mick Murtha on
record.

pertinent

ACTION

by

animals and are giving them to
the St. Rita’s Home for Children.

by Elliot Stephan Rose

•

Do you often think it impossible to untangle the State University of Buffalo
bureaucracy? In cooperation with the Dean of Students' Office, The Spectrum is
sponsoring an ACTION LINE. Through ACTION LINE, individual students can get
an answer to a puzzling question, find out where and why University decisions
are made, and get ACTION when change is indicated.

responsible

Hall.

.

331-5000

regional coordinator (New York

Mary's Gothic Church, Bolivar,
N. Y„ for John Charles Paffie, 51,

Pag* Fift**n

°°

ROCK

&amp;

SOUL

every Wed.

and Sat. night

�Pag* Sixteen

Friday, December 8, 1967

The Spectrum

World news feature

Saigon festering as

.

A,

worl

by Steven D'Arazien
Collegiate Press Service

Editor’s note: Mr. D’Arazien is the former managing editor of
the Boston University News. He is presently serving as Vietnam correspondent for the Collegiate Press Service.

SAIGON—This is an ugly city, a nowhere city, a city
without charm or character. It’s pervasive odor of corruption
is recent; it grew here in response to the American market
for corruption.
Saigon is a city of hustlers-of-anything, of draft-dodgers,
and of whores. It features one of the world’s most activeblack markets and they’ll sell you anything, usually after
it has been paid for at least once by the U. S. government.
At a slight mark-up you can buy the free cigarets sent to the
USO, the medicines intended for the hospitals, and, I am told, gasmasks and guns, all snatched off the docks before the vouchers are
collected, And, since the NLF makes a lot of money taxing property
in Saigon, it has enough money to buy much of our good American
merchandise. Weapons captured from the NLF in battle show a keen

competition between America and China.
There are, reportedly, 29,000 whores in Saigon and they aren’t
difficult to locate. In a war-torn country where Vietnamese privates
make $25 a month, someone has to keep the economy going. Meanwhile, the financially well-heeled youths of Saigon, either below the
draft age of 18 or lucky enough to afford the fat bribe that gets you
off, can be seen tooling around town on Suzukis and Hondas, polluting the atmosphere and making the U. S. look healthily undermechanized in comparison.

Dangerous city

Surprisingly the most dangerous aspect of Saigon living is not
NLF terrorism. That accounts for only scattered incidents and only
rarely something as dramatic as the recent demolition of the Nationalist Chinese embassy.
No, undoubtedly the greatest danger in Saigon is the traffic. If
we remember it was the French who taught the Vietnamese to drive,
we understand why they cut each other off indiscriminately from
either the left or right and why there are so few traffic lights and
stop signs.

motorcycles
The unbelievably numerous motorized pedi-cabs
cycles, scooters, and
that propel a wheelchair-mounted passenger
the deadly tri cycle Lambretta buses, make Saigon one of the most
stench-filled, asphyxiated cities in the world. Saigon has gone loony
on wheels.
—

—

Hollywood setting
Yet aside from the nightly harassment fire of the cannons on

the town’s outskirts, there is nothing in Saigon that other than indirectly indicates the presence of war. It could all be a movie set.
What I took for a furious gun battle down the street one night
turned out to be a neighbor’s television set playing an old Robert Taylor picture. It is surrealistic.
The world of the U. S. military establishment is even more bizzare. The enlisted men’s mess, where you can get an excellent hamburger special for 30 cents, provides such niceties as waitresses, a
40 foot bar, a rock group, a vivacious singer, and slot machines.

Crowded stums

Lining the railroad tracks and the inland water-routes, with
scarcely room to breathe, are the tin-roofed jerry-built shacks, each
abutting each, without water or sewage.. As a result Saigon has
severe health problems, education problems, and juvenile delinquincy
problems. Unfortunately the only buildings being constructed are
the lushly landscaped military compounds.
With the exception of a few square blocks known as "downtown,” and comprised of the luxury Caravelle hotel, the Constituent
Assembly, the press center, the Tu Do tea bar district and other
establishments catering to Americans, the streets are in a state of
ruin. They are rarely, if ever, cleaned, and many are actually pressed
dirt and rock
roads when the sun shines, mudholes when it rains.
Power failure is frequent enough that the hotels provide candles.
If I didn’t know better, I’d say the Vietnamese were too busy
fighting the war to keep house.
Americans here are, therefore, living in splendid, air-conditioned
isolation from the Vietnamese and the blindness of our Vietnam
policy seems symbolized in the American embassy’s windowlessness
—

and ten-foot wall. The Americans find it easy to stay isolated. The
army runs buslines, airlines, eating facilities, post offices, stores,
laundries, and a telephone system. And there are services here run
by Vietnamese for Americans. The only Vietnamese who can afford
the prices sem to prefer Paris.
So, the only contact the Americans have with the Vietnamese is
with the servants, the petty clerks, the bar girls, and the whores.

Language barrier

Even if there were more physical contact, few Americans speak
Vietnamese. The army is short of translators. Newsmen rely on Vietnamese nationals to translate for them, but the Vietnamese, knowing
that informers and spys are everywhere, don’t trust them. And translators have been known to translate what they hear into acceptable

statements.

The Vietnamese, for their part, show little desire to learn English. They refuse to acknowledge the possibility of a permanent
American presence. And since they don’t trust Americans, what do
they have to say to them anyway? So, we operate in a vacuum.
I get the feeling that implicit in the contrast between the comparative American opulance and the squaler of the Vietnamese there
is a truth revealed, a clue to the nature of our foreign policy. We
seem to be saying that we are a rich nation and we are fighting this
poor nation to prove that no poor nation will ever be powerful
enough to take what we’ve got. This thesis, that the basic division
in the world today is between rich and poor, the citified and* the
rural countries, has been stated already by Chairman Mao, who has
declared war on the rich. Vietnam seems a part of an American attempt to prevent "the yellow peril” nightmare vision of Dean Rusk
from coming true. By fighting in Vietnam, somehow, it is thought
we are preventing those little yellow men from coming over and
ravaging our homes and taking our electric golfcarts, color TVs, and
our Cutty Sark,

salgon

*

focus

•

•

mideast
geneva

compiled

from our wire

New peace and war
WASHINGTON
The United States is
expected to consent to an invitation to the
Viet Cong to attend a possible United
Nations Security Council session on the
Vietnam war, but American officials said
Wednesday it was not clear whether the
—

Reds would accept.
The Johnson Administration was understood to be examining the problems of getting the Security Council to discuss the
war in the wake of a Senate resolution
last week calling for U. N. involvement.
When Rep. Samuel S. Stratton (D., N. Y.)
and three fellow “hawk” congressmen return from Vietnam Dec. 17, the report
they will give is a foregone conclusion,
according to a House member identified
as a “dove.”
Rep. Stratton, of Amsterdam, left for
Vietnam the day after Thanksgiving along
with three other members of the House
Armed Services Committee, on an undisclosed assignment from Rep. Mendel Rivers (D., S. C.), committee chairman.
A dovish member of the committee said
any report from the three would be a
“foregone conclusion,”—support for the
war.
“It’ll be more ammunition for a
military victory,” he said Tuesday.

'Classified' trip

Although Rep. Rivers said the purpose
of the trip is “classified,” he did disclose that the four-member subcommittee
would determine what, if any, plan existed for achieving military victory in Vietnam; and the ability of the U. S. forces
thtre to fight the war and at the same
time meet the obligaions of treaties elsewhere in the world.
Rep. John G. Dow (D„ Grand View), is
reported to have said that if the United

services

by

Lilian Waite

offensives

States adopted Gen. Dwight Eisenhowers
proposal for an “end run” offensive into
North Vietnam, it probably would bring
Chinese Communist “volunteers” into the
war.
Rep. Dow said the departure of Defense
Secretary Robert S. McNamara from the
cabinet and the Eisenhower proposal had
raised speculation about further escala-

tion, which the congressman said he de-

plored.

“De-escalation should be the order of
the day,” he said.

Danger of expansion
Soviet Premier Alexei I. Kosygin said
last week that American refusal to end
the bombing of North Vietnam risks the
danger the war will spread.
“The temperature in the world is high
and dangerous,” Premier Kosygin said
during a one-hour conversation in the
Kremlin with visiting Swedish Foreign
Minister Thorsten Nilsson.
If the United States does not end the
bombing, the Soviet premier said, then
the war will be prolonged and may spread.
As long as the war goes on, he said,
the chances for international relaxation
are harmed.
But he admitted he saw no sign of an
imminent change in American policy and

indicated the Soviet Union still is unwilling to take any initiative toward peace
talks.
Hanoi must decide its own destiny,
Premier Kosygin said. But he echoed the
North Vietnamese line that bombing must
stop before negotiations can be arranged.
Premier Kosygin’s comments were reported in paraphrase by Nilsson after the
talks.

The Mideast pot boils
MIDEAST—The general credited with
leading Israel to its smashing victory in
the June 5-10 Mideast war with the Arabs
may be the next ambassador to the United
States, government sources in Jerusalem
said Monday.
Israeli military authorities in Jerusalem
announced three sabotage explosions including one that disrupted railroad service between Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. They
blamed the sabotage Sunday on the Rrab
El Fatah terrorist organization.
In Cairo a squadron of TU-16 strategic
bombers flew over in the first expression
of Soviet solidarity with Egypt since the
June war.
A Cairo newspaper said Monday the
Arab League has invited Ahmed Shukeiry,
leader of the Palestine Liberation Organ-

ization that seeks the obliteration of Israel. to tis Dec. 9 foreign ministers planning conference in Cairo preceding an
Arab summit later this month in Rabat.
The Israeli government announced Sunday that Brig. Gen. Chaim Bar-Lev would
become chief of staff of the Israeli army

replacing Maj. Gen. Itzhak Rabin, who prepared Israel’s army of mostly civilion reservists and directed its operations during the war.
Maj. Gen. Moshe Dayan, the Israeli defense minister, took a hand in directing
the war, but the machinery was set up
by Rabin.
Israeli government sources said Rubin's
switch from the military field to diplomacy had been predicted for some time,
especially after the high praise he received for the nation’s state of preparedness, They said Washington ambassadorship would be the most likely post for
Rabin to move into.
The influential Cairo newspaper A1
Abram announced the Arab League invitation to Shukeiry and said the league
planned to submit copies of the summit
draft agenda to its 13 member nations.
The agenda was thought to include discussion of the U. N. Security Council
peace plan for the Mideast as well as
means of “eliminating the traces of im
perialist and Zionist aggression.”

Inspection proposed in Geneva
GENEVA—The United States and Britain said Tuesday they would be willing
to permit international inspection of their
non-railtary nuclear plants but it appeared
the Soviet Union was not willing to make
such concessions.
The American and British acceptance of
international inspection was part of an
attempt to conclude the proposal banning
the spread of nuclear weapons,
U ,S; negotiator William C. Foster submitted a speech by President Johnson
made on Saturday into the disarmament
conference record. In the speech, Johnson announced U. S. acceptance of international safeguards of America’s non-military nuclear plants.

British Minister of State Fred Mulley
entered into the record a similar statement he made to the House of Commons
on Monday
But Soviet negotiator Alexei A. Roshchin made no similar pledge and observers said it was unlikely the Soviets would
accept international controls of even their
non-military nuclear activities.

The United States and the Soviet Union
already have agreed on the treaty and
have presented it to the disarmament
conference.
have balked
ing it helps
the nuclear

But the non-nuclear nations

at the proposed treaty, claiim

perpetuate the supremacy of
powers.

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                    <text>Senate ends Quadrangle allocation; editor resigns

The Spectrum
€

State University of New York at Buffalo

,

The Student Senate has discontinued all financial allocations to the Quadrangle.
A resolution proposed by Senator Neal Slatkin, noting
the failure of the newspaper to “fulfill its journalistic commitment” because of irregularity in publication which “seriously jeopardizes its financial relationships with its current
advertisers,” was passed at Thursday’s meeting
A ruling on the journalistic
which musl represent
content of the newspaper was lication
such an abominable group as the
considered to be outside the Senate.
jurisdiction of the Senate.
That I am supposedly not
TJie question according to capable
of maintaining my posiSecretary Andrea Roth, was: tion as responsible to the read
“Is it worth the amount of ers of the paper.
money we’re putting into it?”
please

|

r-&gt;

eecesvcd
„

Vol. 18, No. 22

1967

UNIVEa

problem

Student land

Paper's irregularity, financial
status questioned in resolution

C\

\

v

ArCHWu^

•

Golf complex is proposed for FSA
Amherst land; GSA opposes plan
The Faculty-Student Association Land Use Committee
plans to build a golf complex on approximately 50% of the
505 acres of FSA land located in Amherst. The committee
which was set up by FSA Sub Board 1 to investigate uses
of the land has explored recreational development of the
site.
The Sub Board recommended that more thought be given to the project. The proposal has not yet been voted on
and has not been presented to the FSA Board of Directors.
The golf complex would consist of an 18-hole championship
golf course, a practice putting
green, a golf driving range, and
a par-three golf course which
would be illuminated for possible
night use.

Since the proposed golf complex would not occupy the entire

area, other uses of the land are

being considered, such as a park
area, picnic area, and areas where
outdoor games could be played.
According to Mr. Robert W.
Henderson, chirman of the FSA
Land Use Committee and Assistant Co-ordinator of Student Activities, the committee approvd
the use of part of the land for a
golf course under certain conditions. The conditions are:
•

That

students

are

given

a

price advantage;

Best use
are various questions
concerning this proposal. One is
whether a golf course is the best
use of the land. Mr. Henderson
said one problem is that nothing
else can be done on the portion
of land proposed for the course.
For example, people can not. picnic on a course.
There

However, Mr. Henderson indicated that with a well-developed
picnic area and recreation area

the remining land colud meet the
needs of other people.

In winter the golf course could
be used for outdoor ice-skting.

land is located about three
north of the future AmCampus. Mr. Handerson
that a system could be arranged to transport students by
The
miles
herst
thinks

bus to the FSA land.

That students are given a time
reservation advantage. As yet,
however, the land has not been
committed to any use.
•

Letters are being written to
other schools to determine what
has been done with similar land.

FSA White Paper
The Faculty Student Association, a corporation
relatively unknown to State University of Buffalo
students, has important functions that affect every
student.
The Graduate Student Association has released
White Paper of facts concerning the PSA—how
it is run and how they feel it should be run. The
a

White Paper is printed in full on pages eight and
nine.

Therefore,

A statement of finances of
the Quadrangle revealed that at
the time of the meeting, the
paper was $977 in the red, and
projecting this figure to the end
of the semester, it would be
$1700 in the red at the end of
the year. Douglas Braun, Student

A questionnaire to assess the opinions of students is being developed.

Provide income

Association

There are various ways to pay
for the golf course or whatever
facilities may be established.
Stewart Edelstein, Student Association president, indicated four
possible methods of financing:
•

•

•

•

Mortgage the land;

Student

assessment;

Sell part of the land;
Use student reserves.

Mr. Edelstein said said that
student assessment does not seem
loo realistic, and that student reserves are used by the bookstore.
He feels that the best alternaive
would be mortgaging the land.
Mr. Edelstein said that the golf
course would be valuable if built
because it provide a source of
money.
Mr. Henderson suggested that
the course is appealing because
it could provide a great deal of
income that would pay for the
development of the golf course
as well as pay for the possible

employment of students in relat-

ed facilities. He also said that
it could provide money to pay for
such things as picnic tables and
playground
equipment
which
would not be revenue producing
items.
The golf course would provide
funds by charging the golfers on
three price levels. Students would
have a preferential rate, faculty
and staff members would pay
more, and members of the community would pay a premium
rate.

treasurer,

said that

Related Stories:
Editorial—page four

Readers’ Writings—page five
there is $9130 remaining in the
Quadrangle account, and the
“question is: Can we put the
money to better use somewhere
else.”

resignation.

accept my

Resolution unnecessary
In other action by the Senate,
a proposal read by Martin Guggenheim calling proposition three,
which will be discussed at the
Faculty Senate meeting today,
unnecessary and dangerous, was
passed by consent.

The proposal to be presented
would authorize “University au-

thorities" to take “appropriate
disciplinary action” in the case
that “members of the University
block access or in other ways obstruct a group or person invited
to the campus by other members
of the University.”

Richard Miller, vice president
of
the Student Association,
Mr. Guggenheim claimed that
claimed that “a second newspathe power granted by the resoluper is a luxury, and the stution “could be used to circumdents see it as a waste of vent
student due process." He
money.”
called the resolution dangerous
in its ambiguity.

Resolution passes

Mr. Slatkin’s resolution, after
a clause referring to the journalistic content of the Quadrangle had been withdrawn, was
passed by a vote of 13-2.
In a letter of resignation after
this action was taken by the
Editorin-Chicf
Senate,
Bruce
Marsh of the Quadrangle, wrote:
I should like to support my
with these few points;

resignation

That the main point of irritation and disagreement was with
the management of the newspaper, and that this responsibility
lies with the Editor-in-Chicf.
•

That a certain amount of personal dislike was a part of the
decision to cancel Senate funds.
•

That 1 can no longer work
in the-capacity of editor of a pub•

Also passed by consent was a
resolution calling for action to be
taken if the next Faculty Senate
meeting is closed to students.
A picket will be called and organized if that meeting is closed.
A committee to discuss the
format of a Senate referendum
that will include the issue of
campus recruitment was formed.
Composed of Senators Slatkin,
Miller and Ellen Price, the committee will present a report at
the next Senate meeting.
Mr. Edelstein announced that
the Council of the Stale University of Buffalo at its Nov. 17
meeting approved a resolution
calling for a wet campus. Following this announcement there
was an adjournment of the meeting, during which the senators
were served wine.

GSA opposed
Opposing the golf complex proposal is the Graduate Student As-

sociation.

Joseph Burgess, GSA Representative to the FSA Land Use
Committee, has prepared a proposal concerning this land.
He explained: “The concern of

OUAPP

Mill It

(Cont’d on Pg. 17)

Curfews eliminated for all women
Curfews for all women at the
State University of Buffalo will
be eliminated as of Dec, 11, as a
result of a resolution passed
Thursday by the Inter-Residence
Council.

The resolution states: “one of
the fundamental goals of a university education involves the
building of individual maturity
and judgment through the assumption of responsibility.

"A system of curfews only delays this process of building the
individual responsibility which is
so vital to the education of the

students involved

«•

ff*f!

further believe that students at
this University can and must be

“Adjustment to this type of
university life may be best realized through the individual involvement, and experimentation in
deciding one's abilities and limitations. In view of the above,
any curfew must be self-imposed
if it is to serve an educational
purpose.”

reaching a decision concerning
the curfews were considered, Mr.
Feinman explained.

In a letter addresed to all
freshman women in residence,
Joel Feinman, president of IRC,
explained that “the council feels
that any decision to limit one’s
activities and/or one’s hours
must be an individual one. We

The possibility of continuing
the no-curfew policy next fall
semester will be discussed by
Jeannette S c u d d e r Dean of
Women and Associate Dean of
Students, and the Inter-Residence
Council during spring semester.

willing to assume the responsibility for their own actions and

i i

inactions.”

All relevant arguments in

,

-

-Htiang

Quadrangle

fails

Student Senator Neil Slatkin
told the Senate Thursday night
that the Quadrangle has failed
to "fulfill its journalistic commitment."

�Pigt Two

Tuesday, December 5, 1967

The Spectrum

Study of policy science' urged Senate moves to increase student
in Senate-sponsored discussion participation in academic matters
by William Mac Blaine
Staff

Reporter

.

Dr. Bennis’ goal is to provide
a new role for social scientists
so that they can be used to make

.&gt;,&lt;-■
'

•T

£?'“;?•
Dr. Bennis proposes that traditional departments be abol
ished, and that students would
retain “anchorage in a basic diseipline,”

science

by

studying

“policy

M

M

W*

”

lie said that the problem areas
such as poverty and urban renewal are not attracting students. The present structure of
education prevents them from ob-

taining expertise in the realm of
• i
, ■
.
social
problem solving
and turns
T areas .to
tnem away from problem
occupations that have more mone-

*

'3*

I

»

*

.

y

V&gt;
■

-

.

,

m

,

he claimed.

Bennis. He
program that would include a one
year

of

because

students

lacked

lem could be attacked.

The provost observed that our
campus is “over-politicized’’ and
that friction between students
and faculty and between students
and administration hinder a common effort to solve problems. He
said that research on college stu
dents should be at least as wide

'Jlifll;'

„.

..

,

'J

,,

“

"

,

f

,

Academic Affairs Committee took

“f-

s,t a,1
s
re dy
ln
September At that time the Commltt e contacted various departments
on the
matter
of. organizing
.
.
. ,
.
.
departmental and divisional student meetings ffor the selection of
studen
to , ba represented on
committees to decide such maters as course curriculum passfa ‘‘
, F. The object
ow
t0 haw
every important com
du ."ts
l UP
u
At these meetings lh
the students

fP

™

“

°"

f

*

,

,

'

MW
M ■■■
■

year

knowledge of what kind of prob-

%

'

M

buA change in the “dull
of obtaining a
Dr.
emphasized

internship. The internship
would acquaint the candidate
with a specific problem area.
Immediate application of social
science research methods to the
State University of Buffalo's fee
problem was suggested.
Richard Miller, vice president
of the Student Senate, pointed
out that student research funds
were not being taken advantage

.

*

_

Mr. Edelste.n feels the problem
the faCt ,‘ hat S de tS
h
they would like,
often know what
and have suggestions, but never
know where to go for results.
Under tbe
uidance of cof
chairman Daryl Rosenfeld
the

‘‘f

#

-i

*

,,

"

f

*

°

-ii,

%
*

..

has decided to tak
involvement in the academic
j

*jjx

a

i_

should be able to decide on the
course of action they want to follow. Mr. Edelstein believes that
if students are not wanted on
committees, they should take effective measures, including, if necessary, a boycott of classes. “I
feel strongly about this,” said
Edelstein. “It's up to the students
to define how far they want to
go if they really have sound demands.” If they do, the Student
Association president is “going to
support them down the line.”

“

V.

JLC*

4*

The StudentxaAssociation
ously the Problem of stut lent
areas of this University.
In a memoran dum released
Thursday and addressed to
ab deans, department chairmen and facult y’ Stewart Ede^e n’ president of the StuAssociation, expressed
b s intention of stimulating
students to organize and have
meaningful communication
with the faculty SO as to have
a greater voice in all departments and
programs.
,
,

Dr. Bennis
. . proposes changes in "the
dull and bureaucratic" method
of obtaining a PhD.
.

spread as research on white rats,
but it isn’t.
Several ways of improving edu
cation in problem areas were dis
cussed by the group, Basic to all
of them was a recognition of the
need to step out of one’s field
and rearrange his conceptual out
look. This new frame of reference could be achieved by living
with specialists from other fields
or by declaring a moratorium on
study in one’s field of expertise
in order to replenish one’s sense
of the general overview.

T

"

,

Spectrum

How to make .social science education more applicable
to the world’s urgent problems was discussed by Dr. Warren Bennis, Provost of the Faculty of Social Sciences and
Administration, and a group of approximately 20 social
science majors
The discussion was organized by the Student Senate to
hear student reaction to Dr. Bennis’ Academic Plan for the
Social Sciences. Participants were recommended by interested students and by Department heads of the various social
science divisions. Discussions are scheduled concerning the
Academic Plans of each curriculum field.

°"

'

,

f

,

.

.

New programs urged
However,

representation

on

committees is only part of the
answer. The memorandum noted:
“Placing students on key committees is only one mechanism for
developing student awareness and
responsibility in the area of educational and curricular reform.
Our University is too large to
argue for one and only one method of student involvement. It is
hoped that students and faculty
will develop new and exciting
programs and projects to increase

this interaction and involvement.”
Here, too, the Academic Affairs Committee has made specific recommendations. They have
proposed the formation of a
Grievance Committee that would
serve as a dialogue between stu-

Curriculum Planning Committee
Wednesday. The two students,
Martin Guggenheim and Deborah
Wagner, were elected to serve as
members at a meeting of under
graduate sociology majors.
Two alternate representatives,
John Andriozzi. who served as
chairman of the meeting, and
John Perry, were also elected.
All the representatives are so-

ciology majors.

The term of office for the representatives was also established
as one

year

students
and representatives, and between
students and the Department.

Also passed was a motion to
establish a procedure for recall
of the student representatives,
should their performance prove
unsatisfactory.

The newly elected representatives urged all concerned under-

graduate sociology majors to attend the next committee meeting
which wil be held at 4:30 p m. today in Room 335. Hayes Hall.

Buffalo Law School is number two
in National Moot Court competition
The State University of Buffalo Law School team finished a
close second to Cornell in region-

al competition of the National
Moot Court competition at Syracuse Nov,

18.

The competition consisted of a
mock trial duplicating Supreme
Court situations, as team members argued their case before a
panel of judges.
Also participating in the com-

The reaction from the actual

departments has varied. Some of
them, notably the Sociology De-

partment, have been enthusiastic,
have called meetings and are setting up committees on their own.
It is expected that the Philosophy
and Psychology Departments will
also take action soon.

However, some department
chairmen and faculty are opposed
to this aspect of student involvement. Mr. Edelstein is confident
this trouble can be solved: “Pres
sure can change minds. Nobody
has ever put any responsibility
on the faculty, any blame. It is
about time they were challenged.”
“What remains as the most important factor is that there must
be cooperation between the students and faculty. If there is no
interaction, there will be no results, a totally separate student
action will just not work. Thus,
while the Student Association will
do its best to encourage the faculty, the real answer will lie
in the students' response
if
they can assume the responsibility to share in decision-making on
all levels.”
—

tier of society, and perhaps some
guidance and direction.”

by Linda Laufer
Spectrum Staff Reporter

Editorial offices of The Humanist, a magazine founded
by the American Humanist Association to provide a forum
for liberal humanists in the country to defend the basic
principle of separation of church and state, are now located
at the Ridge Lea Campus. Dr. Paul Kurtz, State University
of Buffalo professor of philosophy, is editor of the magazine,
which was formerly located in Yellow Springs, Ohio.
Material written by important writers on provocative
questions is hunted out by the editorial board.
This board includes Julian
value to human experience and
Huxley, Corliss Lamont, Harhuman needs.
old Taylor, the former presi“At the present juncture there
dent of Sarah Lawrence Colis particular need of humanists
The 30 students at the meeting
lege, B E. Skinner, a Harvard to have an authentic journal
also voted to set up a standing
which will deal critically with
committee of sociology majors. psychologist, and sociologist the basic moral and social issues
Its main job will be to facilitate Harry Elmer Barnes.
of our time. Humanists are in-

communication between

Varied response

The Humanist philosophical journal,
now at Ridge Lea Campus, Amherst

Sociology Dept, adds students to
Curriculum Planning Committee
The Sociology Department became the first department to have
student representatives on its

“This is what we’ve always had
a lack of,” commented Mr. Edelstein. “Questions have to be
raised now; students have to be
stimulated.”

Correspondence is maintained
with various members of the editorial board
throughout the
country who read and judge
whether articles should be pub-

lished and suggest new topics
and new authors. Printed and
published in San Francisco, The
Humanist is a bi-monthly publication.
Dr. Kurtz became a member of

the State University of Buffalo
faculty in 1965. He is chairman
of the University’s Council on
International Studies and World
Affairs. In addition to being editor of The Humanist, Dr. Kurtz
is also co-editor of the journal
International Humanism.

Naturalistic view
When asked his views about
humanism, Dr. Kurtz replied:
"Humanism is a very old and

petition was Cornell University, distinguished philosophical and
Syracuse University and the State moral position in the history of
University of Albany. The State thought." He indicated that it
University of Buffalo Law can be seen in ancient Greece,
School's defeat at the hands of during the Renaissance, and also
Cornell was preceded by a vic- during the Enlightenment.
tory over Syracuse in the first
Concerning humanism today he
round.
said: "I think today that humanMembers of the University ists take a thoroughly naturalteam were Michael Wolford, Sam istic and secular view of man in
uel Tamburo, Norman Effman, the universe and they reject any
and faculty adviser Professor transcendental explanation. The
Kenneth Joyce.
attempt to relate morality and

terested in the application of
critical intelligence and analysis
to the solution of human prob-

lems.”

Dr. Kurtz said that topics of
the magazine indicate this need
and interest. Topics are concerned
with such issues as civil disobedience,
war and peace, Negro

rights, psychedelics,

ernment. the

Dr, Kurtz remarked: “There is
a moral revolution which we are
now living through, a revolution
in which there are rapid changes
in standards and values,”

After citing several examples,

such as civil disobdeience, student demands for participatory
democracy, and increased use of

marijuana, Dr. Kurtz continued:
“It is important that these issues
be discussed with clarity, hence
the main editorial policy of our
journal.”
Dr. Kurtz also stated: “Humanists have no supernatural illusion
and agree with Sartre that man
is responsible for himself and
therefore that there is great
urgency that he (man) addresses
himself to the problem of creating a new set of values appropriate to the present.”

world gov-

American

Indian,

and the problem of the meaning
that the individual gives to 4ue.
Key writers who. have made
contributions to the magazine are
Sidney Hooke. Allen Ginsberg,
Ernest Nagel, Dr. Spock, James
Farmer, Harold Taylor, Leslie
Fiedler, and others.
The Humanist provides a forum
for distinguished writers.

Clarification of problems
In the current issue of the publication, Dr. Kurtz stated that the
aim of The Humanist “is to turn
its pages to the discussion of the

concrete moral and social issues
which face contemporary mankind. Without an appeal to dogma
or to creed, receptive to the differing points of view which hu-

manists may hold, The Humanist
hopes that out of critical inquiry
will emerge some clarification of
the moral problems of the fron-

"There is
humanists

Dr. Kurtz
particular need for
to have an authentic

journal which will deal critically
with the basic moral and social
issues of our time."

�Tuesday,

December 5, 1967

Pag* Thr**

The Spectrum

Fee payment revealed; tax proposed
dateline news, Dec. 5
Figures showing the amount of money collected in
student fees has been released. A total of $230,137.50 in
fees has been collected.

tion fee collected was $43,869.50.
The intercollegiate fee collected
amounted to $80,875 and the student activities fees collected was
$105,393. Because only 70% of
the activity cards have been processed from an estimated 20,385
students registered, this is not a
final total. Only one-third of Millard Fillmore College students’
cards have been collected from
the day school undergraduate division.
Guidelines will be set up next
year, Douglas

Braun,

Student As-

sociation Treasurer said, to determine exactly which campus
groups should be given monetary allocations.
A minimum working fee would
be given to clubs in order to help
them “get started.”
This semester, up until the
budget

were

figures

exactly

known, it was predicted that club
budgets would have to be cut
50%, but it now appears that
only a 40% cut will be necessary.
A survey of 300 students shows
that 48% will not pay voluntary
activities fees next semester. It
is estimated that only $157,735
will be colleced this year under
the present fee structure.
Propose tax
Mr. Brown presented a resolu

tlon to the student Senate in Nbvember calling for a student tax
to remedy the financial difficulties resulting from voluntary
fees.
The resolution said that the
Student Association has the responsibility to “sustain those
worthwhile and rewarding activities for the benefit of all students who wish to participate in
them. The Student Association
should employ all the forces at
its disposal to ensure the survival of a varied and comprehensive activities program.

After receiving information
from 100 universities about their
fee systems. it was discovered

the activity programs support the
basic organizations, such as the
student newspaper, literary publi.
cations, debating society, intramural athletics
and cultural

WASHINGTON —The United Nations may soon press for United
Nations Security Council action on Vietnam, authoritative sources
said today.
They said chances that the United Slates would ask the council
to take up the Southeast Asian conflict and try to open the path
to a solution have increased considerably because of two recent

Mr. Braun emphasized that a
system of mandatory fees should
be set up to pay for the student

developments:
A unanimously passed Senate resolution urging President
Johnson to take action to get the world organization involved in
trying to find a way out of the conflict.
Disclosure that the United States in October declined to issue
visas for representatives of the National Liberation Front, the Viet
Cong's political arm, who asked U.N. Secretary General Thant if they
could come to New York to lobby their case against Washington.
LONDON —Ranking Communist diplomats said today the Hanoi
regime of President Ho Chi Winh has raised the price for ending
the Vietnam war.
North Vietnam does not want to negotiate any compromise
settlement. It aims at "American defeat” by either political or
military means or a combination of both, they said.
The diplomats said hardliners in Hanoi arc in full control, with
all moderating influences silenced. The regime is taking a steadily
toughening stand.
JERUSALEM—Israeli Brig. Gen Chaim Bariev may be named
next ambassador to the United States, government sources said
today in Jerusalem, it was Bariev who was credited with leading
Israel to its smashing victory in the June 510 Mideast war with the

events.

newspaper, literary magazine, and
intramural athletics. A system of
voluntary fees should exist so that
students wishing to establish or
join a club can do so without

other students feeling they have
to pay for it my mandatory fees.

It was suggested that the Stu
dent eSnate, acting as the legitimate student representative body,
enact a Student Tax to provide
the necessary funds for financing
all student activities and thereby
replace voluntary student fees.
The amount of the tax would
be determined jointly by the Executive Committee of the Student
Senate and the Finance Committee, subject to the approval of a
majority of the Student Senate.

Cl

•

•

Arabs.

BUFFALO—A large group of demonstrators burned a Russian
flag Sunday to protest a Soviet education exhibit at Buffalo’s War

Memorial Auditorium,

The idea that the University
should provide a number of activities giving the student the opportunity to choose what he is interested in is the basis of the pro-

The flag burning was the second within a week by members of
the city’s anti-Bolshevik community, composed primarily of persons
of Ukrainian descent. They burned a Soviet flag last Monday when
the Russian exhibit opened for a month long run.
Sunday’s demonstrators taunted persons entering the auditorium
to view the display of Soviet education, but no violence was reported.

posal.

Breakdown of fee payment cards
Student

Affirm'tve
Classificat'n Cards

Undergraduates
Millard Fillmore

Graduate
Medical-Dental

Negative

Cards

5,635
185

421

140

Law

Total
Percent of Total

Total Cards
Processed

2,901
1,272
3,000

8,536
1,457
3,421

Affirm'tv
Cards

Negative

Cards

6,879

1,657

1,171

2,250

803

532
210

654

89

461
193

601
282

.6,470

7,827

14,297

9,595

4,702

45.3

54.7

100.0

67.1

32.9

69

72

Total Cards

Processed

8,536
1,457
3,421

Doug Braun

601

282
l4,SVi

100.0

outlines new student fee
allocation procedure for next
.

.

.

year

in

Indian professor lectures Grad students
Currently lecturing at the State
University of Buffalo under the
auspices of the Visiting Asian
Professors Project, an agency of
the School of Education, is Dr.
Vishnu A. Narain of India.

Dr. Narain, previous to his arrival in the United States, was
an associate professor specializing in modern Indian history at
Patna University in India.
As a first time visitor to the
United States, Dr. Narain commented: “I like being here. I
like the people and the place.”
Under the Visiting Asian Professors Project Dr. Narain will
lecture at four universities around
the country which are participating in the program. During the
first six weeks of his stay in the
United States, Dr. Narain lectured in modern Indian history
at Monmouth College, Illinois.
While at Monmonth he appeared
on a TV panel discussion on the
East Asian Studies Program. “One
feels lost here,” Dr. Narain commented about this University in
comparison to Monmouth.
“One doesn’t have contact
with other members of the faculty whereas in Monmouth one
could know everybody because
the number of members of the

BUY

&amp;

SELL

USED BOOKS
and paperbacks

BUFFALO

TEXTBOOK
3610 Main
(across

from Clement Hall)

faculty was small.” After his
here, Dr. Narain will lecture
at Farleigh
Dickinson
until
March, at which time he will
leave for Central Michigan University before returning to his
teaching position at Patna University.
stay

At the State University of Buffalo Dr. Narain has been lectur-

ing graduate students in modern
Indian history. He commented
that he felt the students are
“quite nice and they show inter-

est in the study of Indian his
tory and culture.”

Noting the difference between
leaching methods in Ihc United
States and India, Dr, Narain said:
“In India students don’t interrupt the teacher while he is lecturing. They talk about their difficulties in the tutorial classes
but here the system is different.
This is good in some ways . . .”
When American students are attentive to a lecture, they ask
many questions, he added.

Fiedler trial set for Thursday
City Judge Ann T, Mikoll ruled
Friday that attorneys for State
University of Buffalo English
Professor Leslie A. Fiedler failed
to prove marijuana was not a
dangerous drug.
Her decision on a defense motion for a dismissal apparently
removed the final obstacle to the
oft-postponed trial of Dr. Fiedler,
50, and his wife Margaret, 48, on
charges of maintaining a premises where narcotics were used.

They were arrested April 26 in
a raid at Dr. Fiedler’s Buffalo
home. The trial is set for Thurs-

Also arrested in the raid were
Dr. Fiedler's sons Michael, 19, and
Kurt, 26, Kurt’s wife, Emily, 26,

Dennis Francisco,

liam C. Hasley, 18.

D Junior Year

17, and Wil-

Judge Mikoll ruled Friday the

defense was “not convincing” in
its attack on New York State
statutes prohibiting the use or
possession of marijuana.

Erie County Judge Burke I,
Burke, earlier denied defense motions to suppress evidence obtained in the case by means of
electronic eavesdropping.

New York
Three undergraduate colleges offer students
from all parts of the country an opportunity
to broaden their educational experience
by spending their
junior Year in New York
New York University is an integral part of
the exciting metropolitan community of
New York City-—the business, cultural,
artistic, and financial center of the nation.
The city's extraordinary resources greatly
enrich both the academic program and the
experience of living at New York University
with the most cosmopolitan student body in
the world.
This program is open to students
recommended by the deans of the colleges
to which they will return for their degrees
Courses may be taken in the
School of Commerce
School of Education
Washington Square College of Arts
and Science
Write for brochure to Director, )unior Year
in New York

NEW YORK UNIVERSITY
New York, N.Y. 1Q003

�Pag* Four

Tuesday, December 5, 1967

The Spectrum

Proceed with caution
“A second student newspaper is a luxury that we can’t
very well afford at the present time.”
This was the way Richard Miller, Student Association
vice president, justified the Senate’s action of withdrawing
It there is any justification, it must be this, for to pass
judgment on any other consideration is outside the realm
of Student Senate authority and is a dangerous precedent

ov=*

to set.

r°°i

0—

;

:

/.ii®oo6o

Efforts were made by a number of senators to confine
r°
the discussion to financial matters, but those were generally wasted efforts. It is indeed difficult to dissociate
the content and quality of a publication from any discussion
of its value to the students and whether or not it should
be subsidized by student fees. But senators must make
that dissociation.
0*1
jol
If student funds were inadequate to support two student
newspapers, then the Senate should merely have withdrawn
funds for that reason, and it would be very difficult to
challenge the legitimacy and the soundness of the action.
We would like to think that this was the reason for the
Senate action, but it appears as though we are giving some sv'a. ,
senators the benefit of the doubt if we adhere to that
line of thinking.
It is important, however, that we also recognize the
. . . accountants, bookkeepers, computers, electronics, financing, guns, hardware .
duties of the Quadrangle as a student newspaper. That 'now, lessee
newspaper had made a noble effort, but it was also a dismal
failure.
’
The poor quality that generally permeated each edition
burgher
can be attributed mostly to the lack of experience of its
by Schwab
editors and staff members. It is very difficult to produce
a full-grown newspaper overnight, and it is no surprise that
the Quadrangle did not succeed.
It has come to the attention of the Burgher
-

.

Readers
writings

the

Solution Baird

to
seating problem
On the other hand, staff members of the now-defunct four-letter variety) has one of Buffalo’s newspapers
publication were learning and, above all, were interested. —as well as one of the Queen City’s councilmen To theamEditor:
sure that all your readers are by now
I
This is, perhaps, the most unfortunate aspect of the Senate (common-type)—up tight.
aware of the very limited seating capacity of Baird
Last Thursday Councilman Gus Franezyk asked
action.
Recital Hall. The ticket supply is usually exhausted
the New York Secretary of State’s office to “inwithin a few days, especially for concerts of wellIt is because of this interest and ability by members vestigate the use of obscenities in State University known or out-of-town
groups.
of that staff that The Spectrum is inviting, without exception of Buffalo classrooms” according to a UPI report
Since our prices for faculty and students are
received
on The Spectrum’s ticker.
kept very low, some of our friends purchase
and without discrimination, all editors and staff members
Franezyk is quoted thusly: “It is a pathetic sittickets and forget to return them if they find
of the Quadrangle to join our staff.
uation when under the guise of academic freethat a number of shocking “obscenities”

This is not a totally benevolent action on our part
because we are certain that those interested and able
students have a great deal to offer.
The end of a newspaper staff that was failing to produce a newspaper is not a great loss, especially if they can
now become part of a staff that is producing one. The more
crucial issue emerging from last week’s activities is just what
kind of implications the Senate action will have.

Hopefully, it was a responsible act that was the result
of a shortage of available funds. We would shudder to
think that it was a senatorial review of a publication, and
because it did not quite suit their desires or needs it was
permitted to fold.
If the latter is indeed the case, then we must view
the Senate action as distasteful. It would imply that the
Senate has issued a warning to every publication: Proceed
with caution.

The death of 'modified F'
‘Modified F’ will pass-away in June
We mourn its impending death.
Like so many other lovable antiques remaining from the
days when this University was a private institution, it is
being cast aside by a breed of administrators who, in their
quest to do what they believe will raise the standards of
the University, are coldly unconcerned with the plight of
marginal students.
Now, students who fail a course can take it again, and
quality points of both attempts are counted, but the hours
are counted only once.
Beginning June 1, hours will be counted twice. So that
a course once failed, tried a second time and passed with
an ‘A,’ brings a ‘B’ for one generation of students, and ‘C’
for a later generation.
The theory is that the University once tried to keep
marginal students enrolled because it wanted their money.
But now, with the State of New York picking-up the tab
and admission standards raised, there is no longer any
reason to keep these people around.
There is one consoling note.
The body that voted to abolish ‘Modified F,’ the College
of Arts and Sciences, was itself killed—(perhaps an act of
divine retributive justice?)—by President Meyerson, as part
of his academic re-organization.
We don’t mind that at all.
But couldn’t someone quickly revive ‘Modified F’—that
benevolent if anachronistic friend of students, that victim of
an unholy group no longer existent—before it slips away
forever?

(of

the

dom a University is allowed to run roughshod
over the community of which it is very much a

part,”
Councilman Franczyk’s call for an investigation
could have some evciting consequences if the State
Department decided to carry through with his request.
Suppose, tor example, you’re sitting in history class some day. The professor, who has been
looking for a place to park for the last hour and
a half, saunters into the class ten minutes late
and trips over the electric cord of the projector.
!” he
“Oh
hollers. (Substitute your favorite
four-letter obscenity here.)
Immediately four plain-clothes State Obscenity
Investigators (Four Letter Division) swoop down
from their seats, push the disgruntled professor
into the corner, and begin cross-examination:
“Look, professor, we all heard what you just
said. What’s wrong with you? Do you have a sick
mind or something?”
“Huh?” asks the surprised professor. “Hey, who
are you guys anyway?”
“We're investigators from the State Department’s Obscenity office, Four Letter Division, We
are here to protect these young impressionable
students from jokers like you who like to holler
four-letter obscenities in front of their classes.
What’s wrong with you? You got a sick mind or
something?”
“But

. .

,

but

, .

.”

“Never mind the excuses Mac, We’ve seen your
kind. I hope you get five years in solitary confinement so you won’t have a chance to poison
the minds of this state’s fine citizens in the prison.

Squirrel postscript
Just want all my readers to know that since
I made my plea for a Students Concerned about
Squirrels organization, a number of exciting things

have happened:
Received a standing ovation from all the
hearty squirrels on Lexington Avenue.
Got a letter of thanks from the SPCA (Squirrel's Patriot Commendation Association),
Received a full-scale replica of a campus
squirrel from the Copy Cats.
Tied the Grump’s record for number of letters submitted about Spectrum column (one).
•

•

•

•

Campus drinking
The Burgher was taken by surprise when the
local Council decided to end the long prohibition
here. A few temporary bars (TBs) will now have
to be added to the increasing number of temporary
classrooms, trees, trailers, grass and students.
Now that the State University of Buffalo has
decided to end prohibition, we may have a chance
for another claim to fame. In a mile-long building
at Amherst, we could surely construct the World's
Longest Bari

themselves unable to attend the concert. This results in empty seats and unhappy customers who
cannot purchase a ticket. We would appreciate it
very much if you would call us, 831-3408, if you
hold a ticket you cannot use so that someone else
may enjoy the performance.
Another item which causes us a great deal of
annoyance: We try to have attractive posters announcing our events; as soon as they go up in the
different buildings on campus, students remove
them, apparently to decorate their rooms. We
would be grateful indeed if the publicity material
would be left on the bulletin boards until after
the event.
Mrs. Alice Klein,
Music Coordinator

Score Spectrum film reviews
To the Editor:

It is becoming too evident from the number of
times that Mr. Burbank has been writing reviews
that the quality of the Sherman, Lewis, and
Gershowitz days of film reviewing now belongs to
the past. Our complaint with Mr. Burbank is threefold:
1, He thinks that the only theater in Buffalo is
the Circle Art. He is unfortunately limiting himself.
2. He does not like movies. Each one of his reviews further exemplifies his lack of warmth for
the cinema.
3, He is singularly imperceptive about films.
This lack of insight accentuate the blandness of his
criticism.
Stephen Kovnat,
Chairman, Film Committee,
University Union Activities Board
The Spectrum is published twice-weekly
every
Tuesday and Friday
during the regular academic
State University of New York at Buffalo,
3435 Main Street, Buffalo. New York 14214. Offices
are located at 355 Norton Hall. Circulation: 15,000.
—

—

year at the

Editor-In-Chief—MICHAEL L D’AMICO
Managing Editor —RICHARD R. HAYNES
Asst. Managing Editor —RICHARD SCHWAB
Business Manager—SAMUEL A. POWAZEK
Advertising Manager—DAVID E. FOX
Campus
Margaret

Asst.

Anderson

Marlene Kozuchowski
City
Daniel Lasser
Asst.
Lilian Waite
Feature Barry C. Holtzclaw
Asst.
Ronald Ellsworth
Sports
Robert Woodruff

Asst.
Layout

Asst

Copy

Asst.

Photo.
Asst.

W. Scott Behrens
David L. Sheedy
John Trigg
Judi Riyeff
Jocelyne Hailpern
Edward Joscelyn
David Yates

Promotion
Director

.

&amp;

Circulation

Murray

Richman

The Spectrum is a member of the United State* Student Press Association and the Associated Collegiate
Press. The Spectrum is served by: United Press Inter
national. Associated Collegiate Press Service, Gannett
News Service, and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate.
Represented for national advertising by National Educational Advertising Service, Inc.. 420 Madison Ave.,
New York, N. Y. Republication of all news dispatches
is forbidden wihout the express consent of the
editor-in-chief. Rights of republication of all other
matter herein are also reserved.

Second

Editorial

class postage paid at Buffalo, New York.
policy is determined by the Editor-in-Chief.

�Tuesday, December 5, 1967

The Spectrum

Senate questioned, friends thanked

he sham

By Interiandi

BELOW OLYMPUS

To the Editor:

Pag* Fin

impotent students

Letter to the Student Body
Last night the Student Senate pulled the rug
out from under the Quadrangle by stopping all
funds. I would like to relate certain facts to the

Open

*

by Martip Guggenheim

*

me

It is well know to most students that the Quadrangle began publication in direct protest to last
year’s Spectrum, This year the Senate formally
recognized the Quadrangle when it allocated funds
for the semester. When it became clear to Bruce
Marsh, former editor of the Quadrangle, that the
original monies given to the paper were not sufficient, the Senate voted to increase the funds.
At last night’s meeting the approved resolution
stated, in a sense, that the Quadrangle was poorly
managed and the funds given to the paper could
be used for other groups in need of the money.
For one thing, Doug Bruan made it clear that
the Quadrangle was not being poorly managed and.
furthermore was meeting all financial commit-

A\

V

i
*s*

ments.

In the second place, I must ask the Senate and
the students in general the following question:
•‘If the Senate realized that it couldn’t support a
second newspaper, why didn’t they inform us at
the special meeting many weeks ago?”
By giving us additional funds they made us
believe we could continue printing without outside interference. One cannot run a newspaper
with students (even if they are senators) sticking
their fingers into our affairs, especially when a
Pub Board is set up to do those things, if they

‘ft,
,n

I guess that for people in power, it’s nice to
keep things the same. The lack of a sense of
morality, which is pervasive in this society, is
also abundant among the faculty. Their Senate
meeting was closed to all people not in the Senate.
They were discussing an issue directly relevant
to the students, yet the only way to find out what
happened was to attend a necessarily abortive press

!
.

*■

*
,

•»'

j*r
-

-

j

la Weelts Times

duties of the editor-in-chief.

I then had two choices: either close shop or
print a “farewell issue” with the excess advertising funds for the issue which was due to come
out Dec. 7. I chose not to print; I chose to return
whatever monies were left so the Student Senate’s

the gadfly
by Mark Schneider

wish could be fulfilled.

The Quadrangle died while still in the embryonic state. I hope someday this University will
indeed have two newspapers. For this to be pos
sible it will take students who are willing to work
harder than many people will ever realize. They
must have the guts to take the cracks, the guff and
the down-right insults from “lesser people" who
would have wilted under such pressure.
This staff had about 20 hard-working members.
Bruce Marsh and most of these people will join
The Spectrum because they are truly interested
in journalism. The only way one can learn journalism is to work. If the Senate could have only
realized this before giving us the money, it would
have saved much trouble for all involved.
The Quadrangle is a dream of the past now.
It never reached the heights hoped for by the
editors, but it never stepped backwards. This is
what the students who worked for this paper

can be proud of. This is what the students should
be proud of—but they won’t because they can’t
understand what a newspaper is all about, because
a newspaper can only be understood by those who

make it what it is.

If anything can be said about this attempt, one
must say it was not a waste of time; it was an
experience which no one involved will ever forget.
All that is left to say is that I firmly believe the
Senate made a grave mistake in the way it went
about dissolving us. There is no animosity—it
would be for naught. If this University is ever to
reach its goal, it will have to get student leaders
who can handle such cases as ours with respect for
the parties involved. The meeting was a fiasco; it
was an insult I for one will never forget. I only
hope those involved see their acts as all the onlookers saw them; as an insult to a group of
students who were willing to give up their time for
the University.
My first and last official act will be the formal
closing of a newspaper. Newspapers have come and
gone, and the Quadrangle reluctantly joins the list.
Thanks, to all those who helped us these past
months. Their help is appreciated by all the members of the Quadrangle.
Jerome George Leonard!
Editor-in-Chief
The Quadrangle
Writer*: Phase be brief. Letters should not exceed 300 words,
bo signed and contain the address and telephone number
writer.
Pen names or initials may be used, if requested, but anonyomus letters are never used. The Spectrum reserves the right
to edit or delete, but the intent of letters will not be changed.

should
of the

There are several ob

conference.

After the Senate voted to withdraw the funds,
one senator left, and Mr. Marsh handed in his
resignation of which I had no previous knowledge.
In a special meeting of the editors I took over the

I explained to them that we fought a good
fight, and did not lose. What happened last Thursday was not a “victory for the Senate,” as one
senator said to me after the meeting. It should
be noted that the only loser was the student body.

recess.

frightened.

*

be necessary.

The Quadrangle without money is like a man
without blood; the Quadrangle without Bruce
Marsh is like a man without a soul. For these
reasons I informed all staff members that we
would officially close shop.

mamcsgiving

servations which must be mare about that meeting and about the faculty itself. Probably the
most pervasive aspect of American society today
is the class structure. Competition and the hatred
of others on which capitalism seems to thrive is
most abundant in the United States.
It has spread to this campus also. I use the
word “spread” only because I have recently become aware of it, but actually it may well have
existed here all the time. We think in terms of
we, they, black, white, rich, poor, smart, dumb
Ask a faculty member what he is, and he’ll
tell you that he is a faculty member. And he won’t
let you forget it either. It’s bad enough for interested students to realize that they have no
power, but then no attempt is even made to make
us believe that we do, we may truly become

Once upon a time a whole bunch of very frightened
mice huddled in council in a darkened mouse hole. “What
are we to do?” squeaked one. “Every day the Cat eats one of
us for lunch, and our numbers are dwindling! How can
we stop him?”
Someone quite reasonably suggested tying a warning
bell around the cat’s neck, and all agreed that this was a
sound idea. No one, however, was willing to commit his
rodent self to the action, and so Mr. Pussy continued his
luncheons undisturbed. And the moral is

Fable is only rarely applicable
to reality, and in this case, of
course, the analogy is rather imperfect. But young American
mice with doubts about the justice of the war in Vietnam might
do worse than consider tying a
bell about the Cat-Draft’s neck
by resisting it. The July 1 draft
law makes it nearly impossible
for anyone to beat the system
with conventional 2-S, 4-F or CO
tactics. Inevitably, eventually,
the induction notice will come to
all of us.
What is the rationale and strategy of resisting the draft, that

is, dissociating oneself from
it, rather than working within
its framework to avoid induction?
Leftist criticism of resistance has
argued that it has no strategy, is
a masochistic exercise, and ends
up by alienating working people,
who are most oppressed by the

war. This may be valid and

should be examined.
A rationale, or deontological
value, is easy to provide. The
cat-draft is eating people who
don’t want to be eaten; and, empirical evidence to the contrary,
man is civilized and has a higher
law than the jungle law of Mr.
Pussy, More concretely, the complicity of holding a deferment in

Hershey’s scheme accepts
Gen. Hershey’s logic. It accepts
that he has a right to force one
to kill people, or be killed by
people, with whom one has no
argument. Leaving so base a
system is right in itself. (Let me
interpose Thoreau’s belief that
no one Is responsible for all the

Geh.

evil in the world, and if it is

“right” to quit the draft, one
isn’t "wrong" if he does not.)
But will resisting bring undesirable or no results? Surely if
the 2000 or so resisters are quietly imprisoned, they will have
done nothing to stop the war or
draft machines from operating.

Or conversely, will

they have
affected society if the Machine

ignores them?

It emerges logically that the
strategy of resistance is not to
make a symbolic protest, but to

effectively by drawing
enough numbers to its side so
that the Cat has no one to draft,
and the Justice Department has
too many to prosecute. Resistance will not be effective if
people fail to see that, like the
mice, we’re all brothers in the
Draft hole together, and the Cal
will not be appeased forever.
In law, a man is innocent until proven guilty beyond a shadow of a doubt. Has Lyndon John
son convinced you that the NLF
is guilty beyond doubt of opThe
pressive
murder?
onus
should be on him, not you, in
proving the case, since he is telling you to execute the NLF people. If you doubt the guilt of
the NLF, resisting the draft is
logical.
“During the Algerian War,
thousands of French conscripts
opposed the war and helped to
end it. Many demonstrated openly
in the streets; some sat down in
front of troop trains. Some walked out of the Army altogether—wanting no part of the war, despite the risks they took in deserting.” This French anti-Vietnam
war pamphlet provides a historical precedent for the effectiveness of resistance.

“win”

Finally, to some Buffalo ladies
who have cried chauvinism, there
is much women can do, in Buffalo for the Dec. 4 Resistance
day. Letters of support and complicity are needed, and much
harassing of Mr. Doody, board
director, and bis cohorts is
planned in which man, woman
and rodent can participate equally.

My roommates and I decided to "sit-in” outside
the meeting and make some noise so that we
might officially question their decision to close the
meeting. Keeping a meeting closed to outsiders
insures several things. In the first place, it saves
face for many of the stupid or immoral faculty.
In the second place, it shows a great deal of contempt and disrespect for students. When some of
the faculty left during the meeting they walked
past us and showed their hatred for us. As a
friend of mine said, it felt almost as if “they’d be
perfectly happy if all the students left so they
could be alone.”
We are rapidly aproaching a time when we can
stand for this no longer. There arc things with
which we are involved and there are things which
necessitate our observations. Faculty members ex
hibiting such obvious supremacy and contempt

must be recognized, for they can be very dangerous.
Certainly it is more expedient to close a meeting
to non-members but, as with the issue of the Dow
Co., certain considerations should be above expediency.
As far as the content of the meeting, an even
greater danger seems to be approaching. Items
number one and two which passed easily mean
very little and probably should have passed. Item
three, which is going to be considered very soon,
reads: “That if members of the University block
access or in other ways obstruct a group or person invited to the campus by other members of the
University, appropriate disciplinary action should
be taken by University authorities. If any individual or group causes or threatens bodily harm
to another individual or group or damages property, the matter becomes, in addition, one for the
civil authorities to deal with.”—Watch out!!!!
The rights and autonomy of the students are
hurt. No other campus had previously defined the
blocking of recruiters to be illegal. This campus
has not only done that, but has mandated the
proper authorities to do anything “appropriate.”
The complete due process of the student has been
circumvented. A structure has been established
to eliminate all students who act to block recruiters. Who the appropriate authorities are remains undefined, as does the problem of "appropriate action.” A very subtle and apparently
minor resolution is about to be passed and. if it
is, we have been castrated.
I beg the pious and aristocratic faculty member
who opposes student demonstrations, who even
opposes dissent to the war, please to think this one
time and recognize the bait being laid. Perhaps
it is worse if you realize what is happening and
still vote that way, but at least I’ll know what to
call you.
We have a very smart administration at this
school. We have a lazy and atavistic faculty which
is more interested in expediency than rights. But
just once, I pray they will recognize the rights of
students. For if we lose now’, it may be all over.
If it is true, as was argued last week by the

framers, that the intent of the resolution is not
to threaten or injure, but rather to protect the
student, then I am not aware of its necessity.
And furthermore, I am surprised at the writing
ability of the Executive Committee of the Faculty
Senate.

The Spectrum's pages for

Editorials

&amp;

Opinions

It is the policy of The Spectrum to report the
news fully and impartially in the news pages,
to express the opinions of the newspaper only
in the editorial pages and to publish ail sides
of important controversial issues.
"Without

expression,

freedom of

expression

is

meentngless."

�Th

Pag* Six

•

Spectrum

Tuesday, December 5, 1967

f

I
v&gt;*

1-

■

lV

□L_
—

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ZD

7W0RDS\
NOT

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zn

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5

EDL_

�Tuesday, December 5, 1967

The Spectrum

Pa«« Seven

Classes resume at Centra/ State U.; Communists'role in D.C march?
future uncertain as president resigns w^te Houseoffers no comment
WILBERFORCE, Ohio (CPS)
The future course of that his announced resignation
was merely a publicity gimmick
Central State University remained unclear this week as stuto
sympathy and support
dents attended classes for the first time since the school fromwin
the moderates at the school
was closed two weeks ago in the wake of black power demand throughout the state. If this
onstrations.
was his purpose, he has been
Black power advocates, resuccessful.
The resumption of classes
Whether Dr. Groves resigns or
coincided with the surprise sponsible for the riots which
closed the school, considered Dr. not, he must face three important
of
Central
State
resignation
Groves’ resignation a victory for problems in the near future. The
President Harry E. Groves. their cause. Several state officials way thesep roblems are handled
Dr. Groves announced he and many students, however, may well determine whether or
would step down as the top urged Dr. Groves to reconsider not future militant demonstrahis resignation and to continue tions will be held on campus.
administrator of the predomleading the school through this
First, he must decide if the
inately Negro institution in “period of crisis.”
black power advocates will be recmonths.
six
ognized as an official student orOpens quietly
—

No incidents were reported as
the school’s 2600 students re-

turned to the campus which only
two weeks ago had been heavily
guarded by Ohio National Guard
troops,

sheriff’s

officers,

and

highway patrolmen. However, the

size of the campus police force
had been more than doubled.
was
A special convocation

called during the first day of
classes, and Dr. Groves, during his
address, asked all students who
want to destroy the University

up and leave. None of the
students left. Dr. Groves then
asked all students who want to
salvage Central State to stand
and sing the school’s anthem. All
of the students attending the convocation joined in the song.
Black power advocates were
pleased with Dr. Groves’ resignation because they think he is trying to attract more white students to the school. They want
an all-Negro school and consider
Dr. Groves an “Uncle Tom."

to get

Resignation doubted

Dr. Harry E. Groves

reopens Central State

University

Several students and faculty
members think Dr. Groves has
no intention of resigning and

comment on, an allegation by House Minority
Leader Gerald Ford (R,, Mich.) that President Johnson is holding back
an official report that describes the role of Communist governments in the Oct. 21 peace demonstrations.

Rep. Ford made the charge last
week in a brief speech on the
House floor. He said he had first
learned of the report during a
briefing the President held for
Republican Congressional leaders
after the march

The Republican indicated he
would not have mentioned what
was said at the off-the-record
briefing, except that Rep. Carl
(D., Okla.), the House Maganization. Last week he said he Albert
jority Leader, charged in an earwould never recognize them, but lier speech
that Communists were
he later reneged on his statement, directing
the march. Rep. Albert
leaving the question open.
has since said his remarks were
Secondly, the school administrabased on “general observations
tors must decide what disciplinary and knowledge,” not on a report
action will be taken against the prepared for the White House.
94 students who were arrested
during the campus demonstraMobilization denial
tions. According to precedent, stuThe National Mobilization Comdents found guilty in the courts
mittee has emphatically denied
could be expelled.
that officials from Communist
Third, Dr. Groves must decide governments had anything to do
if Michael Warren, a leader of with the march, Robert Greenthe militant Negroes, will be reblatt, a former mathematics inadmitted. Warren was suspended structor who is now working fullbefore the demonstrations, but time for the committee, called the
attempted to attend classes anyreport of Communist direction
way. The initial protest started “an irresponsible and dangerous
when students blocked a class- flight from reality.”
room building to keep police officers from arresting Warren for
Mr. Greenblatt said the march
trespassing.
was “organized and attended by
William Davis, an attorney for Americans, of all shades of politithe National Association for the cal opinion, who are outraged by
Advancement of Colored People,
has said he will fight Warren’s
case for reinstatement through
the federal courts if necessary.
“If we run out of legal remedies,
the GSA about the golf course
we will consider civil disobediproposal and about the FSA land
ence,” he said.
in general has arisen from the
fact that very few students are
aware that the FSA owns such
land .that it was considering the

proposal to build a golf course,
and that inthe final analysis it

would be student fees that would
be used to develop such a golf
course.
Because the students

have

not

been

consulted,

the

GSA in this proposal has outlined

certain procedures to be followed which will insure that all
members of the academic community are made aware of the
above and insure that they will
have a voice in deciding what is
to be done with the land.
“There has to be established a
set of priorities with regard to
the use of the FSA land. In determining such priorities, the
FSA must consider not only the

needs, desires,

and wishes of the
students, but also the obligation
of the academic community to
the society as a whole, of which
the University is only a parf

“The proposal to build a golf
can only be seen as reasonable if one ignores the social
and moral responsibility that the
University and the students have
to society. The question is one of
what can best be done with the
land taking into consideration the
interests of the students and the
contribution they can make to the
urban community."

course

1

-writes Private J. B., no
Fort Sill, Oklahoma.

iime, or NoDoz can wake
up when you have to
im late at night,
fhen driving makes you
/sy, NoDoz can bring you
;k to life. If a long lecture
makes your attention
&lt;der, NoDoz to the rescue.
Get the point? NoDoz
u anywhere, any time,
'ou

with it.”

Actually, our young
warrior is right: NoDoz

can’t work miracles.
But it can help, any time you're
drowsy or tired. For example: A couple of NoDoz can sharpen your mind
and help you remember facts at exam

and it's non habitNoDoz. The
scholar's friend.
THE

ONE TO

TAKE WHEN

critics of the Administration’s discredited policy,” citing the Selective Service System’s new policy
of drafting anti-war protesters as
another phase of the over-all
effort.

Mr. Greenblatt also saw politithe report,
suggesting that President Johnson
wanted to “invoke these programs of intimidation at home”
in order to build his stock with
the electorate.
cal motives behind

Neither Reps. Ford or Albert
has offered any concrete evidence
of Communist direction of the
march. Rep. Ford indicated that
the report he has charged the
President with suppressing contains such evidence.

A report in the Washington
Post says that those who attended the briefing held by the President for Congressional Republicans "came away with the impres-

sion the President believes the
march was planned and directed
from Hanoi.”

Object to golf course

“I LAUGHED WHEN
MY ROOMMATE TOOK NoDoz!’

“No gin can stop you
flunking out,” I scofl
“Well, he’s there. And
here. Take warning fi
my sad case. And l&lt;
NoDoz to help you sta;

continued American aggression in
Vietnam and demand that the
U. S. stop this war.”
He suggested that the report
was part of a broader effort by
the Government to “suppress

JmNoDoi.M

YOU HAVE TO STAY ALERT.

Objection*
This proposal is strongly supported by the GSA Executive
Council.
The

proposed

golf

complex

is viewed by the GSA “as not being in the best interests of the
students of the State University
of New York a Buffalo, and the
academic community as well.”
It is said to be “financially not
feasible” because it would necessitate use of the golf facilities by
non-members of the University
which is against FSA policy and
limiting “use of a large portion of

..

#

(Cont’d

from P.

1)

the land to a few people associated with the University, thus ignoring the desires and interests
of many other students, faculty
and staff.”

This proposal recommends that
the golf complex proposal be re-

considered.

Long range plans
Long-range plans consist of using lang along the northern and
western boundaries for organized activities and setting aside
50 acres of this perimeter area
“for the possible development of
student housing in the event that
the state does not fulfill housing

needs in the construction of the
new campus.”
The second long-range plan is
that the rest of the land "be developed as an artificially wild
area to be blended with the or-

ganized activity areas." Development of this portion as a forested
area would be carried out with
the intention of making it a "wildlife refuge and conservation area”
which would be “open to activities consistent with maintaining
such land in a semi-primitive

state.”

Immediate plans include the
further development of the present picnic area to include the establishment of recreational facili.
ties for children. The construction of a closed shelter which
could be used for meetings "with
the idea that the picnic area if
so developed could be used as a
day camp for underprivileged
children in the urban community,” is also planned.
At present, nothing definite has
been approved concerning the use
of this land. According to Mr.
Henderson. "The committee is
hoping to put the land to use as
soon as possible because the students in school presently have
the right to use it. On the other
hand, we realize if we go ahead
too quickly, we may not have the
best plan. Therefore, we have to
take enough time to do a job that
will be satisfactory.”

�Pat*

The Spectrum

Eight

Tuesday, December 5, 1967

GSA White Paper states history, working
ASSOCIATION IS:

The Faculty-Student Association of
the State University of Buffalo, Inc.,
was organized as a non-profit educational and benevolent membership mthe laws of the State of New York.
The general purposes of this Association are educational within the
meaning of Sec. 501 (c) (3) of the
Internal Revenue Code and its regulations, and within this meaning the
general purposes shall be to establish,
operate, manage, promote and cultivate educational activities and relationships incidental thereto by,
between and among the students and
faculty of State University of Buffalo
and to aid the students, faculty and
administration of the University Center
in the furtherance of their education
and studies, work, living and co-curricular activities incidental thereto, in
collaboration and coordination with
the educational goals of the University

Center.

The Association Is a non-profit educational and benevolent membership
corporation and none of its officers,
members or employees, receives or is
lawfully entitled to receive any part
of the net earnings thereof or any
pecuniary profit from its operations,
except reasonable compensation for
services in effecting one or more of
its purposes, or as a proper beneficiary of its charitable purposes, and
any income, moneys, gifts, devises or
bequests received must be used to
advance and promote the educational
and benevolent purposes of the Asso
elation and University Center.
Surpluses created in operation of
these services have been and will
continue to be used for the benefit
of the students and faculty of the
University Center either directly or
indirectly in accordance with the purposes of the Association as expressed
in its general purpose clause, including
the operation of various educational
activities within the program of the
University Center and those related to
continuing education within the local
community.

(b)

Book and

sui

store,

which

operating the same for the sale
of books, stationery and the
normal academic or academically related supplies and other
articles, items and sundries as
may be required to serve the
needs of the University Center.

maintenance expense, discount

and services have been provided for)
the amount thereof shall be paid into
the State University Income Fund as
soon as practicable after the close of
such fiscal year.
The provisions of this article shall

to faculty and students, provision for equipment replacements and additions).
Food Service Division

require.

The Association operates the fol-

Bookstore Division

lowing services on the campus:

If, at the end of each association
(a) Food services, which shall con
fiscal year, there should be any ag
sist of conductingand operating gregate net income produced from
the kitchens, cooking facilities, the operation of all of the services
dining halls, snack bars, ser and activities authorized pursuant to
vice areas and all other opera
this article (after all of the expenses
tions related to or connected of the Association for such activities

Income:

$1,789,319.80

(net

sales of goods and other in-

come):

Costs; $1,736,869.15 (costofgoods
sold, payroll and benefits, administrative expenses, office
expenses, selling expenses,

Vending Division
Income; $356,434.81 (sales of
merchandise, and miscellaneous income);

Costs: $313,555.31 (cost of
merchandise, payroll and benefits, operating expenses, ad-

The Freshman Class Council

SHOT IN THE DARK

US—I
I &amp;tgle
Crest

Administrative Division

Income: $852.86;

Costs; $70,272.78 (personal services, staff benefits, supplies
and expense, travel, insurance,
miscellaneous).

How the FSA is run
and how it should be run.
—

The information we have summarized underscores the vital interests
that students have in the FacultyStudent Association; first, all the assets at the disposal of the FSA
derive from student funds; the "money-making'' division of the Association
(Bookstore, Food and Vending Services) was originally capitalized with
student funds and periodically borrows
from these funds: the "profits" of
these services (as well as their current inventories) represent return on
student investments. The 510 acres
owned by the GSA in Amherst were
paid for entirely through the Educational and Recreational Fee chargedto

—

FACILITIES

BRIDAL SHOWERS

WEDDING RECEPTIONS

UNIVERSITY PLAZA
Open Evenings

643 MAIN STREET
In Buffalo's Thaatra District
Call 852-0008

Open 11 a.m. to 2 a.m.
Weekends Until 4 a.m.

11

Open Daily
a.m. to 4 a.m.

TON BARBER

For Charcoal Broiled CHICKEN at Its Finest

Pink Panther

SHOP

Juantfor

� hair styling
� razor cutting

561 FOREST AVE.

Cartoon

presents
the "soul sounds" of

CHIC

&amp;

if
if

THE DIPLOMATS

Every Tuesday thru Sunday

lues., Dec. 5th
7:20

&amp;

9:15

Capen 140
$.75

'

A
T
N

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2 BIG BANDS
from 5:00 until 9:00

THE DIPLOMATS
plus THE CARAVANS

CHIC

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uate S

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(§ cobble* 12
BANQUET

counse
these
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of Dir

fact&lt;^"

Thors. 1:30-4:30

ACOMPUTiMEAi

indepe

The members of the Faculty-Stu* lientati
dent Association, as constituted under membe
the present by-laws, include seven in turn
representatives of the Administration, the Stu
two representatives of the faculty and Gradua
three student representatives. This one frc
membership then elects a Board of Studen
Directors, who exercise the real pow faculty
er of the Association. The present Admini
Board is even more lop-sided in favor "resents
of the Administration: of the voting ment v
directors, five are administrators (in- power,
eluding the President of the Univer- of otht
sity), one is a member of the faculty, commu
and one is a student.
on the
to be
business
affairs,
The "property,
to a pc
and concerns of the Association," are ultimat
vested solely in the Board of Directors: their at
in other words, the directors of the allocatt
FSA have ultimate and final authority p est be
over the disbursement of all funds,
all business enterprises and real esg u(
tate. Thus, despite the Faculty-Student l(j own ,
that
the
appelation, despite the fact
ttlat a j
assets of the Association are nearly
the
of
student
exclusively
products
fees and patronage, despite the
nc j rB
that the services provided are pri
t j.
the
student-oriented,
marily
Faculty ,^ e
is
fact
domiin
Student Association
en ,j re |
nated by
it is a creature of
the g enC y
University Administration. Student par
ticipation in its affairs at the highest
levels is characterized by only the
baldest, formal tokenism.
For several reasons, this situation cretion
is intolerable: the Board of Directors versity

ed to work with adolescent
psychiatric patients on a 1 to
1 basis.
Contact Larry Shohet at
886-5600 ext. 327 Mon., Wed.,

fast efhcient
TAKE-OUT service
1551 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.
NmI to Twin fair
Call 837-4300

St

Student Association (Balance as
of Aug. 1, 1966, $43,139.52;
this area now becomes a separate issue entirely as a result
of the advent of voluntary student fees).

Since FSA Is a corporation, its
power resides in its membership and
in the Board of Directors which they
elect.

ATTENTION

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

presents

ministrative prorate and expenses, and maintenance costs).

of the Association denies to students their rightful representation
and its consequent effective power.

Seniors or Grad Students
in Social Sciences and/or
those with group work experience. Volunteers are need-

—

the dir
out co

etc.);

The above information has been
taken directly from the contract of
incorporation between the (state University of New York and the FSA.
The campus divisions of the Faculty-Student Association include the
following: Intercollegiate Athletics, the
Student Associations, Educational and
Recreational Development Funds, the
Auxiliary Service Enterprises, and the
Administrative Division. The income
and expense statements of these divisions (based upon the financial statements for the year ending Aug. 31,
1 966
statements for the year ending
Aug. 31, 1 967 are not yet available)
are as follows;

Auxiliary Service Enterprises

vei

made
studen

Costs: $1,969,149.82 (cost of
food sold, operating costs, personal services, staff benefits,
administrative expenses).

—

otherwise

(sales-

has

and the Union Board are financed Sub-Bt
through the Student Activities Fee, nority
which in turn is held and administered contint
by the FSA. The conclusion is ob-l (heir a
vious: All FSA assets represent stu to alio
dent monies in some form; most FSA
Service Center Division (Linen
services affect students most directly. admlni
Service, Dry Cleaning, etc.)
Simple justice would dictate then that felt thi
Income: $ 1 12,1 77.2 1 (University students should have power
soclatii
to con
fees, sales, and other income);
trol the resources and activities of the either
Costs: $104,338.70 (cost of Faculty-Student
Association. This is weeks
sales, services, payroll and not the case. At this time
students settled
benefits, selling and adminis-. do not have even a significant
voice drawn
trative costs).
in the FSA. The present structure Presidt

ducted by students through duly organized student clubs, groups or
associations and as to which the Association acts only as custodial and
disbursing agent of student funds.

In addition, the chief administrative
officer of the University Center may
request or authorize the Association:
(a) through its own employees, to
furnish auxiliary services for the accommodation of the University Center
in or with designated premises and
facilities of the University Center. Such
auxiliary services may include the operation and maintenance of barber
shops, beauty parlors, parking facilities, film service libraries, campus
radio stations, college camps, bowling
alleys and other recreational facilities,
community service programs and like
services and activities; (b) to furnish Intercollegiate Athletics
Income: $373,277.83 (student fees
auxiliary services and facilities forstuathletic receipts and guarantees,
dents and University Center staff in
and miscellaneous income);
designated premises of the University
Center by means of equipment owned Costs: $377,607.85 (salaries and
benefits, administrative expenses,
or leased by the Association and
office expenses, athletic program).
maintained and operated under arrangements or agreements made by it. Educational and Recreational DeSuch services may include washing velopment Funds
machines, dryers and other similar
Long Range Planning Division
facilities; (cl to present concerts, reIncome; $358,444.95 (FSA fees,
citals, readings, dramatic and musical
vehicle rental, miscellaneous);
productions, speakers and other like
Costs: $ 1 85,624.63 (salaries and
cultural and educational presentations
wages, land improvement, land
of benefit to the University Center in
mortgage, etc ).
appropriate premises or facilities of
Norton
Union Division
the University Center; (d) to render
Income: $226,794.59 (fees, lobservices to persons, firms or corpora
by counter and recreatiortalarea
tions licensed by the University Center
sales, rentals, mimeograph serto collect and deliver laundry and/or
vices);
dry cleaning on University Center pre
Costs: $303,080.41 (payroll and
mises and le) to operate and manage
benefits,
administrative and ofprograms of inter collegiate athletic
fice expenses, maintenance,
competitions participated in by teams
other
- WBFO,
GSA, Student
composed of students enrolled at the
Association, Union Board, etc.).
University Center until such time as
the regulations of the University may

$1.920.743.10

Income:

all students. The Intercollegiate Athletics budget has been funded through
FSA (again, gate receipts and other
''outside'' funds which this program
attracts represent return on student
investments). The operations nf an

|

with the preparation and sale
of food, including the operation of cigarette, tobacco, confectionery candy, food andbeverage vending machines.

WHAT THE FACULTY-STUDENT

custom haircuts
appointment

service
available

Basement of Norton
8 a.m. to 5:45 p.m.
8314545
—Under New Management—

open daily

�Tuesday, December 5, 1967

$s off

3

Ath-

irough

other

ogram

tudent
lanced

s

Fee,

istered
is ob-l

nt stu
5t FSA
irectly,

m

that

of the
his is

idents

I

voice

jeture

ation
•wer.

lip

:h

and

they

iiness
,"

are

3Ctors:

of the
thority
funds,
es .

-

has veto power over recommendations
made by the Sub-Boards, in which
students have larger representation;
the directors may initiate projects without consultation with the Sub-Boards,
independent of effective student pow-

conduct of the affairs of the Associa- sider a compromise substitute for
tion is so detrimental to the best Article IX under which the President
interests of the University, its student would be given authority to suspend
the power of Board of Directors for
body, faculty or administration to war-

Sub-Boards, or in a substantial minority on the Board of Directors, are
continually faced with the fact, that
the way they choose
jfieir actions
to allocate student funds and resourcare subject to an independent
es
administrative veto. Students have not
felt that their participation in the Association under these restrictions was
either meaningful or effective. Some
weeks ago, this committee was presented with proposed amendments,
drawn up by the Administration (Vice
President Claude Puffer) and the legal
counsel to FSA, On the face of it,
these proposals seem to provide for
greater student participation in the
membership of FSA and on the Board
of Directors: eight students (representing the Student Association, Graduate Student Association and Millard
Fillmore College Student Association),
four faculty members, and one representative of the President form the
membership. This membership would,
in turn, elect four students (two from
the Student Association, one from the
Graduate Student Association, and
one from the Millard Fillmore College
Student Association) and two from the
faculty to the Board of Directors. The
Administration would appoint one representative to the Board. This arrangement would give students effective
power, while insuring that the interests
of other elements in the University
community were represented. Again,
on the face of it, students appeared
to be climbing out of the sand-box
to a position where they would have
ultimate authority in determining how
their assets and resources should be
allocated and how their needs could
best be served.

submitted to an Arbitration Board.
Members of this Arbitration Board
would be selected by each of the elements represented on the Board of
Directors (Students would select a
member suitable to them, etc.). These
arbitrators would be from outside the
State University system. The findings
of the Arbitration Board were to be
binding on all parties. Dr. Puffer said
that such a plan would be drawn for
further consideration.

—

—

e

16

t Jcight

—

ntpar

ighest
ly the
uatidn

ectors

Pag* Min*

Faculty Student Association

But the Administration, in handing
rdown this proposal, took care to see
that, although the face of thingsmight
nearly c hange though
student participation
tuaen
increase, the ultimate power
,act
“nd responsibility should still rest
e P n with the Administration. Attached to
acuity the pr0p 0Sec j amendments was an
dorm entirely new article, "Article IX, Enter
the gency By-Law Provisions
tu
a

The Spectrum

It states:
"If at any time in the sole dis
cretion of the President of the University he shall determine that the

rant such action, he shall
the provisions nf Article

. . .

IX

declare

These include: "The President of
the University shall have the authority
to remove with or without cause any
or all of the officers, directors and
members of the Association.” The
President may then appoint members
of his own choosing from the Univer(but not otherwise
meeting the stated requirements for
membership) to serve during the effective period of Article IX "or until
their successors have been duly qualified or elected and qualified.” (Since
student positions in FSA are filled by
sity community

officers of the respective student governments, would this require independent student governments to elect
now officers in-order to have representation on the FSA?) These appointees would have “all the powers
and shall perform all of the duties”
of regular members and directors.

It should be said immediately that
under the present Administration-dominated structure, there are no such

things as "Emergency By-Law Provisions." Evidently the Administration
trusts itself to serve the ends it defines as best. On the other hand, under
both the old and new structures, the
Administration quite clearly does not
trust students to define and serve
the goals they believe to be important
in their interest, H should be obvious
here that if there exists any mistrust
or ill-will between
students, such lack of faith originated
in the Administration; students how
ever, may well feel uneasy when confronted by the authoritarian reflexes
exhibited by the Administration. This,
in turn, increases our dismay over the

IS THERE LIFE AFTER DEATH?
Jesus Christ says: "He that believeth in Me hath
everlasting life." John 6:47.
—

Within a week, a "revised" Article IX was presented by the Administration. This revision did not at all
change the broad powers given the
President to remove "with or without
cause” members and directors of the
Association. No mention is made of
"suspension," but a review board is
created to recommend action to the
President regarding his own action
in removing members or directors. The
limitation of the "Review Board"
to only recommendatory powers
puts no real check on the autocratic powers given to the President
elsewhere in Article IX. It merely
establishes him as a judge in his
own cause.
This is the ''compromise" the Administration has handed down to students. Again we are placed in the
position of saying, No. This new

demonstration of the fact that we are
dealing with an administration that
continually reneges on verbal commitments (the compromise we
"agreed” on bears no relation to the
"compromise" we are presented with)
only underlines again the necessity of
having students sitting as equals at
the highest levels of policy-making
prospect of continued administrative bodies within the University; it makes
of
control the ESA.
unmistakeably clear the need to have
dominant student power (not subject
Student representatives to the comto administration revocation) on those
mittee on restructuring expressed their, bodies, such as FSA Board of Direcopposition to any provision such as tors, where student monies are being
Article IX. Dr, Puffer responded that expended, where student needs are
he was acquainted with the sentiment
being defined, where policies are be
of the present Board of Directors and
ing formulated for "services" to stuthat they would not'accept any indents.
creased student participation in FSA
Administration dominance on the
without a clause giving the President
FSA Board of Directors has led to the
"emergency authority" to restrict student power to administer their own formation of such atrocious policies
(which are then handed down to stufunds in their own interests.
dents at lower levels within FSA to
Faced with this ultimatum, the students said they would agree to con- be ratified or accepted as faits ac-

FREE—Gospel of John with Bible teaching.

Earl, 36 LaSalle, BOffalo, N.Y.

IN THE DARK ABOUT

Association will affect them); (2) other
elements of the University (faculty
and administration) are represented,
The necessary condition for the suecess of such a Board is that it have

a golf course on the student lands in
Amherst. Students, presented with
these plans, which ultimately would
cost over $600,000 in student funds
to develop, were then urged to ratify
them quickly "so we can have nine
holes operational by the summer of
1 968.” Those students who have refused to allow 220 acres of their land
(which itself is valued at about $ f
million) to be expended for such limited and ultimately Immoral uses have
been characterized as obstructionists
and nay sayers. The point is, however,
that students were really only consulted after plans had reached a very
advanced state
a Student Land-Use
Committee of Sub-Board 1 was con
vened only this summer, and it has
so far felt obliged to limit its delibera
tions to the question of what use will
be made of the lands left after the
golf course has been constructed.

fairs of the Faculty-Student Associa
tlon. Only if this Board has such
authority can its discussions and de
cisions take place in a reasonable and
responsible framework. The knowledge that a President (and he will
not forever be Meyersonl may descend, dous ex machina. to rescue
or to squelch the Board of Directors
can only encourage irresponsibility in
the first instance and hostility and
suspicion in the second.
None of these qualities would lead
to a Board or an Association in which
the best interests of the University
could be served.
We continue to believe that the
University is a community of men
and women of reason and good-will,
a community whose members have
diverse and often conflicting interests
but who share common goals. We
believe that this is the essential nature of our community and that the
structures we create within the University should reflect this nature.
In this case, we believe that those
whose interests are most immediately
affected know best how they may be
served, hence we insist that on this
Board, as on many others, students
must play a dominant role. We understand that some aspects of FSA affect Faculty and Administration and
their interests must be represented.
We believe that the Board must at
least have the freedom to be responsible for its actions, and we therefore
reject any notion that the Administration could or should have the power
to suspend or remove the Board of
the FSA. If the Board of Directors
cannot operate as an effective and
responsible body (made up, as it should
be, of representatives from the diverse
elements of the University sitting as
equals, and with weight of numbers
given to those whose interests are
most vitally affected) then the University which it must represent will bear
the cost.
The greater likelihood, however, is
that a Board of Directors composed
of men of reason and good will, and
endowed with final authority and re
sponsibility (or its decisions, will serve
the University in a uniquely responsi
ble, responsive and imaginative way:
this is the great opportunity which
a renewed Faculty-Student Association would present to the University

tn hn af

STRENGTH FROM THE BIBLE

Write

a specifically limited period of time

complis) as an expenditure this year
on Athletics Scholarships and tutoring
of $123,000 from student-fee supported funds. It has allowed the Board
of Directors to allocate $7,000 -

—

Another frightening instance of
what can happen in an Association
whose Board is Administration-controlled is Dr. Puffer's recent proposal
to sell the University Bookstore
an FSA division whose assets are
to a prientirely student-owned
vate corporation which would be
able to structure its policies according to the demands of the market
without, of course, having to take
into account real student needs or
desires as they might be expressed
through a student-dominated FSA
Board of Directors. (His further sug
gestion was that the golf course might
be financed through the proceeds of
such a sale!)
—

—

—

All this, we suppose, makes the

point we had thought was obvious

—

students are not the only ones who
may act irresponsibly or stupidly. Any
member of University community (including the President and not excluding students) may act in these ways
and of course there is wide latitude
for divergent views of principle and
policy which could not be characterized in these ways.
—

The further point Is that these differences can be discussed and equitably resolved only through a Board of
Directors on which: (1) students have
a dominant voice (in recognition both
of their tremendous investment in the
Association and their overwhelming
interest in how the policies of the

IF YOU WANT THE TRADITIONAL LOOK

...

LOOK FOR

community.

HE TRADITIONAL LABELI

�The Spectrum

Pag* T*n

On Wall Sited
by Jay Haber
Spectrum

Staff

Tuesday, December 5, 1967

Dr. Zacharias urges creation of frosh
seminars, closer look at Vietnam War
by Donna van Schoonhoven

Reporter

id of the escala“I would like to see some students who are not afraid to take
on the problem of analyzing the
war
and other problems
do so. And if education has nothing to do with these problems
then I’m a monkey.”

A distinguished physicist from
Alphanumeric, Inc., a so-called “speculative”
the Massachusetts Institute of
stock. In reality it is not really speculative anymore. A year Technology,
Dr. Jerrold Zachariago, yes but at present, definitely not.
as, said Friday at a panel disI have a purpose in mentioning the reactions of readers cussion in the Conference Theato a seemingly speculative over-the-counter stock. Unfortu- ter that “this institution should
freshman seminars. They
nately, far too many investors feel that the only alternatives start
have them at Sarah Lawrence
for investment are the bank or the New York Stock Ex- and Harvard and I would like to
change.
see them started here.”

recommended

-

reasons known only to
. For
themselves, most investors void
completely many worthwhile investment possibilities. I feel that
all too much of this avoidance
is due to ignorance and/or bias
of facts.
Space prohibits me from extensively dealing with all the possibilities, but a mere mention is
oft times sufficient to create an
interest.
The other exchanges
Firstly, I would like to point to
the merits of The American Stock
Exchange and the over-the-counter market. There are many excellent stocks listed on both. A
stock should not be eliminated
from consideration simply because it is listed somewhere other
than the NYSE. After all, IBM,
Polaroid, and Xerox were originally listed as over-the-counter
stocks. You should be careful, as
a stock must be judged on its
merits and future and not on its

listing.

These exchanges also have
listed preferred stocks. These
stocks earn higher dividends,
have preferential dividend schedules, are generally safer, but are
not subject to the high capital
gains of common stock.
One type of preferreds, convertibles, do exhibit these qualities
in addition to possessing the
possibility of large capital gains.
Convertibles are discussed more
fully in the following section.

The safety of bonds

The varied types of bonds are
another excellent investment opportunity. Municipal bonds issued
by cities and states, which in
some cases are tax-free, are by
far the safest. These generally
offer a lower interest rate, but,
for those investors seeking safety
and a respite from taxes, could
prove the ideal investment.
The most common type of bond
available is the corporate bond,
issued by private corporations and
paying regular interest to holders.
These, along with the municipals,
while quite a safe investment, are
not protected against inflation
and tend to go down in value over
the years.

A most attractive type of corporate bond is those that feature
a conversion into stock. These
combine the good points of both
stocks and bonds while eliminating most of their bad points.
While paying an excellent in-

terest rate, they are protected
against inflation for they can be
converted into the company’s
stock which would be rising due
to inflation, thereby pulling the
price of the bond up. Your alter-

natives are many, as you can
either sell the bond at a profit,
convert it into stock, or hold it
and receive the interest.

The commodities

The commodity markets, as
listed on the Commodities Exchange, are basically ones which
deal in mercantile and farm
products at current and future
prices. It is probably the closest
thing to gambling you can find
on Wall Street.
I would advise no one to play
the futures market unless he has
a lot of money to throw away and
a very strong stomach. Only the
shrewdest investors have the
knowledge to do well in the
commodities market.
There are many other groups
of investment possibilities. These
include real estate, paintings,
stamps and coins and should not
be overlooked. These are a stable
and often handsomely rewarding
investment. Good buys in these
areas should be given equal consideration with stocks and bonds
when deciding what investments
can be made.
You can, of course, purchase
mutual funds which invest your

The eight man panel, moderated by Dr. Richard Siggelkow, vice
president for student affairs,
sporadically moved from the proposed topic of “What’s the role
of a University
this University?” to such topics as the war
in Vietnam and the role a student should take in a univer—

—

Not an answer
The next speaker, Dr. Bugelski, maintained: “The University
is a place to gain knowledge, not

a place, per se, a picnic ground
or a revolution ground. I’m not

concerned with student behavior
past educating them and I don’t
think that seminars are the answer to anything.”
On the subject of faculty meetings Dr. Somit said: “We voted

sity.
“My idea of a good seminar is
to announce a variety of topics
and let students, no more than
ten at each, apply to be in them.
They should meet three times a
week with no time limit on them
and with no interruptions.
"I urge students and faculty at
this college to try an experiment
soon with some type of seminar.
For example, attempt to undernam War.”

Renowned scientist Dr. Zacha"My idea of a good seminar is to announce a variety
of topics and let students, no
more than ten at each, apply
to be in them."

ries;

Panel

D'Youville College
Student Government Ann.
—present*

HJ

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University Plaza

“The University,” he added,
“has survived for some 800 years
and it may even survive this
generation. For one big reason—it changes; slowly, but it changes.
“Vietnam is vey important
not only to student', but also to
the faculty. The fact remains
that life must go on and education must go on. Every time the
University Administration says
something it is linked to Vietnam and said that Vietnam is the
most important issue.”

Students on committees

JL I

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CENTER
Shoes Repaired Whlla-U-Walt
Laundry &amp; Drycleaning
ONE DAY SERVICE

our meetings.
"It changes"

at

stand the real issues of the Viet-

He then interjected the thought
that “I am unsympathetic with
demands that students must be
represented on certain committees. Students want to be on one
committee or another as though it
will help any.”
Also included on the panel
were Dr. Richard Bugelski, chairman of the Psychology Department; Dr. Albert Somit, chairman of the Political Science Department; and Jeremy Taylor, administrative assistant in the History Department.
Larry Faulkner, a member of
the Resistance; Richard Miller,
vice-president of the Student Senate; and Joseph Orsini, Senator
from the College of Arts and Sciences, also participated.
Discussing this issue further,
money for you, thereby saving Mr, Faulkner commented: “There
you a lot of trouble. Unfortuis a large divergence on this camnately, deciding which fund to pus as to what the concerns of
choose can be as much of a the students are and what they
are to the Administration. We are
problem.
Because everyone is in a dif- not concerned with the little
ferent situation, with different freshman seminars you propose.”
problems and considerations, it is
Moving to another topic, Dr.
impossible for me in this column Zacharias then spoke on the Vietto say what would be best. By nam War. “Why am I seared?
far the best thing you can and I’m afraid to pull out, but I’m
should do is consult a good
broker who is familiar with your
particular situation and can tell
you what would be best for you.

PLAZA SHOE REPAIR

—

te have closed facull
meetim
because we knew some very stupid things were going to be said.
We say enough foolish things in
public and in the classrooms
without having students hear us

from Clement

Hall)

ODETTA
and RICH LITTLE

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1

�Tuesday, December 5, 1967

Pat* El*van

The Spectrum

on the bench

the spectrum of

sport

What has hapened to professional sports in New York
City in the last 15 years? There was a time when New York
stood on the top rung of the ladder and their teams were
unsi

Cagers open season with successive
victories over Toronto and Gannon
by W. Scoff Behrens
Assistant Sports

Editor

The State University of Buffalo varsity basketball team
opened up the 1967-1968 season with impressive wins Friday
and Saturday nights. After a slow start the Bulls came on
strong in the second half to defeat the Toronto Blues Friday
77-63.
Saturday night the Blue as three points. It was junior
forward Ed Eberle’s turn around
and White defeated the Gannon Knights of Erie, Pa., one hander fifteen feet from the
right side of the key which put
88-73 at Memorial Auditorithe Bulls ahead to stay for the
um.
remainder of the game. Jekielek
A home crowd of 1456 fans in
Clark Gym watched the Bulls give
a heart-stirring performance on
the gym’s new $30,000 wooden
floor against the Canadian club.
It took the Bulls almost the

then followed with two free
throws in the one-and-one situation and with only 30 seconds
left Peeler closed the first half
scoring with a charity toss.
The Bulls led at halftime 38-34.

whole first half to get the ball
moving in their direction,

Bulls connect on offense

Peeler scores first

play the Bulls put an explosive
offense and widened the gap as
much as 27 points. The Bulls
were passing exceptionally well
and put on an excellent show in
ball handling.

Guard Joe Peeler, the Bulls’
junior transfer student from Erie
County Technical Institute, scored
the first bucket for the Blue and
White on a jump one hander five
feet away from the basket. Bull
center John “Jake” Jakielek and
guard John Fieri followed with
one free throw each to give the
Bulls four points, but the Bulls
were not able to score again
until they had fallen behind 7-4
with Toronto scoring their baskets on driving lay ups.

Jekielek closed the gap with a
driving lay-up down the center
of the key but this was the
closest the Bulls could come to
the visitors for the next eight
minutes. The Blue and White
were down as much as six points
during that span but began to
click around the ten-minute mark.
Senior forward Doug Bernard
scored the basket which put the
Bulls ahead 23-22 with about
nine minutes remaining in the

first

stanza.

It

was

a

see-saw

battle for the next eight minutes
of play with the Bulls grabbing
as much as a four point lead and
then falling behind by as much

In the last twenty minutes of

The game turned out to be an
all-team effort, and with five and
a half minutes remaining, head
coach Len Serfustini replaced all
his five starters with a “new”
team. Three of these fresh players

The Bulls, showing a combination of hustle, speed and teamwork, shocked Syracuse early and
held a wide advantage in territorial play throughout most of
the game. Lome Ronbough,
threatening to become the highest scoring player in Buffalo
hockey history, led the Bull attack with a three-goal hat trick,
raising his season total to twelve
goals.

Jimmy McKowne

and

Wayne

The Bulls Saturday went to the
auditorium and surprised the
visiting Gannon Knights by playing slow, deliberate basketball
and making the out-of-towners
make the mistakes.

Then, of course, the expansion

movement took away Brooklyn
and the Giants and brought in the
Mets, Titans, Jets and even the
New York Tuck Tapers.

There was a time for rejoicing
on Flatbush Ave. when Happy
Felton’s knothole gang gave a
chance to young little leaguers
With a height disadvantage,
to learn outfield fundamentals
the Bulls slowed up the game and from Carl Furillo, catching tips
moved the ball well around the from Roy Campanella and pitchcourt. It was Peeler again who ing aids from Carl Erskine. Russ
dropped in the opening bucket Hodges was at his best describing
of the game with a 15 foot ohethe slick fielding double play
hander. But the Bulls weren’t able combination of Alvin Dark and
to muster an offensive outburst
Davey Williams, and then there
until six minutes had gone by in was
the old Redhead and Melvin
the first half, falling behind early
Israel Allen wondering if Charin the game, but never by more lie Silvera would ever get into
than three points.
a game. How about that!
The Bulls called time-out with
only three minutes gone and then
Those were the days when the
started to hit the mark as they Bums had to have clean handerhad done the night before. Peeler chiefs in order to wave them at
put the Bulls ahead to stay at every game at
Ebbets Field. The
6:05 of the first stanza with a 20 Chinese home run
was made famfoot one hander from the right ous by the anemic hitters who had
side of the court.
the strength to clobber the litle
The Knights came as close as white sphere 257 feet to right
one point to the Bulls, but Buffield. And without a doubt you
falo widened that margin and led
could always hate the Yankees!
33-24 at the halfway mark.

Zone press ineffective
The Knights started to zone
press the Bulls in the second half
but the move didn’t seem to affect

Incomplete defensive backs

A change for the worst has certainly transpired throughout the

realm of New York sports.
There’ll be many a day before
you can compare the old New
York Giants defensive backfield
of Patten, Lynch, Barnes and Nolan with today’s Child’s, Eaton,

the Bulls’ playing style at all.
The Bulls had been practicing
against this type of defense all
week, and it paid off in this
guard Rich Barbera scored three
contest. The Bulls helped each
buckets on well-executed driving other out of trouble many times Harris and Freeman (“Walk On
lap ups, John Vaughan, the Bulls
in the game and used the fast By”) White. New York Jet fans
6 foot 9 inch center, dropped in
break effectively whenever the are thrilled over the heroics of
two points on a lay up and opportunity presented itself.
Joe Namath, but how many rewhen the team was hurtsophomore forward Jack Scherrer
The second half show went to member
scored an easy lay up off a pass
the Bulls’ Easy Ed Eberle. After ing under the quarterbacking of
from Barbera.
having scored only five points in A1 Dorow and Johnny Green?
the first stanza, the Junior standLast year the Rangers were a
The Bulls outrebounded their
out scored 19 points for the home
opponents 60-59. The home team
team in the last period of play. big surprise. This year they’re
shot 43.2% from the field and
Eberle scored most of his buckets playing like the Rangers of old.
Pomade good 17 of 29 free throws.
from the field on one handers Remember the days of Larry
Hebenton and the
pein,
Andy
The visitors shot 32.9% from the
15
from
and 20 feet away from
Then there are
field and dropped in 13 of 21
the basket. He made good all amazing Gump?
year was
charity tosses. Jekielek and Berof his eight free throw attempts always the Knicks. Last
the “miracle on 50th St.” as both
nard were the game’s high scorers
and wound up as the game's high
the Knicks and the Rangers made
with 18 and 17 points, respecscorer with 24 points.
tively. The leading scorer for the
Three other Buffalo players hit the playoffs. For the round-bailBlues of Toronto was Bruce
the double figure mark. Bob ers, it marked the second time
Dempster with 15.
Nowak, another transfer student
from ECT1, tallied 15 points; Pieri
had 12, and Peeler ten. The Bulls
made good 27 shots out of 57
from the field for a 47,4% shooting average. Gannon came close
to that with 46.2%, scoring on
30 of the 65 shots they took from
the field.
Determination is the name of
Miss only four free throws
the game, and the State UniverFraber further helped the Blue
It was the accuracy in the free sity of Buffalo freshman basketand White with two goals each,
throw department which made ball team proved this to be true
while John Watson, Lenny Dethe difference in the two scores. as they defeated the Canisius
Prima and Bill Newman notched
The Bulls missed only four out of frosh 77-63. Down by a margin
singletons.
the 38 charity tosses given them as great as 17 points, the team
while Gannon tossed in 13 of 24, never lost hope as they battled
The high scoring Bulls, in regback to victory.
istering ten goals, scored in The Buffalo squad had 25 perdouble figures for the third time sonal fouls called against them
During the first half, the Canithis season, the others coming and the Erie team had 27,
With two starts and two great sius offense excelled. Led by Jim
on 13-1 and 14-3 lashing of Buffalo State. The Bulls, who played victories under their belts, the Roberson, the visitors looked like
a “Red Auerbach product. Their
at Rochester Institute of TechBulls have drawn the concluefforts were aided by many costnology Sunday, have two more sion that the presence of Peeler
and Nowak is felt. A word was ly mistakes and turnovers by the
important games coming up this
weekend on their home ice. The passed on to this reporter after Bulls. At half time the score stood
‘hundering herd” takes on Utica the game from one of the starters. Canisius 40, Buffalo 28.
He said that it feels great to have
this Saturday night and on Sunsomeone like Peeler in there who
Coach Muto’s talk at halftime
day plays host'to a rugged Canton
apparently instilled a new fire in
can score early in the game and
Tech squad.
his ball club. Due to the strong
thereby take the pressure off the
rest of the players.
defensive press led by Bob Moog
Both home games at the AmFollowing the game Peeler was
and Ken Palen, the tide of the
herst Recreation Center are
asked what his thoughts were game shifted. Moog was tremenscheduled for 10 p.m. faceoffs.
after playing two games with the dous as he converted many key
A large turnout is expected, so Bulls. His reply: “It’s a great club steals into clutch baskets. Palen
and Rich Lindengren stopped Rothe advice is to come early.
to be with.”
got into the scoring column and
helped the Bulls keep their
twenty point lead. Sophomore

-

leers skate to easy 10-2
win against Orangemen
The wheels of fortune continue
to spin for the State University
of Buffalo ice hockey club as the
Bulls overpowered the Syracuse
Orangemen 10-2 Saturday night
in the Bulls’ home rink at the
Amherst Recreation Center. The
Buffalo icers, in racking up their
fourth win in five starts, are now
3-0 in the tough Fingerlakes
Hockey League, good enough for
first place position.

Bulls surprise Gannon

less Rangers and Knicks, New York dominated baseball
through the early and mid-fifties with the Dodgers, Giants
and Yankees and football was tops with the Giants of
New York.
in the last ten years they managed to gain a playoff berth.
There was the time when the
great Knick immortals thrilled
us out on the court. Such illustrations men as Jim Palmer, Charlie

Tyra, Whitey Bell, Donnis Butcher and the great Tom Hoover.

Oh those pinstripes
Today the Knieksflay the same
although their personnel is a hundred times better. Reason: When
a player was traded to the

Yankees, although' he might've
been a dud somewhere else, once
he put on those pinstripes he was
great, e.g., Luis Arroyo. With the
Knicks, it’s just the apposite. You
might’ve been a star on a college
team or another pro team, but
once you put on a Hoick uniform,
you immediately play like a Ted
Lepcio. He wasn’t a basketball
player, but it's just a way of saying poor, for his name is synonomous with being the worst at a
professional sport.
Not enough could be said about
New York sports without mentioning the heroics of the New Breed,
the New York Meta. We all remember those Met immortals:
Roadblock Jones, A1 Moran, Elio
Chacon and Cliff Cook not to mention the one and only Marvelous

Marv Throneberry, the only first
baseman who dropped a foul pop
up because he claimed it hit a
pebble!?!!? Yes, the Mets who
played Santa Claus every game
of the season are the pride of
Fun City. Where else could you
see a centerfielder make an unassisted double play: one team
play 32 innings in one day and
lose 2 games: and a pitcher lose
47 games in two years?

Yes, these are the Mets. Today
the names are changed, but the
story’s the same. New York loves
them all, even though they lose.
Remember, love is blind. Times

are changing and teams change
with them, and maybe by some
miracle New York will once again
provide winnefs for their fans.
Bring back Choo Choo Coleman,
Sammy Drake, Ray Daviault, Grover Powell et al.

Baby Bulls come from behind
to hand Canisius 77-63 loss
berson, the Canisius ace, cold in

the meantime. Steve Waxman, the
Bulls’ high scorer with 21, hit with
great accuracy on his jumpers
from the key. Phil Knapp also

showed fine offensive ability with
his “flips” from the outside.

With 4 and a half minutes to
go and a nine point lead, the

Bulls froze the ball. Victory was
now as apparent as Canisius could
no longer move offensively. The
freeze caused the visitors to foul.
Subsequently, many of their key
players were forced from the
game on fouls.
With a come from behind victory in their opener, we should
expect many fine things from the
Baby Bulls. This is a team that

strives for

victory and will fight

hard to get it
Waxman 21
Moog 18
Palen 10
Petti 9

Kremblas 8

Knapp 5
Undengren 4
Johnson 2

�Pag*

Graduate student Philosophers
define function of university
“Graduate Student Responses,”

and

by the Faculty,

The document defines the function of the university student in
two ways: “As a social critic who,
in having to consider society as
a whole, will have to question all
—even the ‘rules of the game’
that the administration is committed to uncritically accept.
Thusly the student and the administration are, in this respect,
in a constant state of conflict.

Student representation in
the Grievance Committee,

• . Election
of the Department
Chairman and Deans by the

Units,
•

Increase teaching and research assistantships to a minimum of $3500,
•

•

Encourage “spontaneous sem-

inars,”
•

Revise the By-Laws of the

Faculty,
•

rotests

rai

Faculty may give administration

Administration,

of the university and listing definite proposals for the State University of Buffalo, has been
approved by the Graduate Philosophy Association.

“As a social critic of the parts
of the whole, the student is committed. along with the administration, to remedy internal shortcomings and contradictions by
implicitly assuming the general
framework. In this respect, students and administration share
the same interests and can cooperate in the carrying out of
such a task.
“Concrete proposals are made
in criticisms or support of Provost Warren Bennis’ Academic
Plan; Vice President of Facilities
Planning Robert Ketter’s Plan,
printed in the Gazette on Sept.
5, 1967; Dean Fred Snell’s Responses, and the Proposed ByLaws for the Faculty of the Social
Sciences and Administration.”
These proposals presented by
the Liaison Committee of the
Graduate Philosophy Association
include:
Students’ representation in
the Faculty of the Social Sciences

Tuesday, December 5, 1967

The Spectrum

Tw*lv#

Reconsider the entire grad-

uate program,

Direct subsidy by the Graduate School of both Telos and
the Catalyst,
•

Extend to all departments
the democratic procedures practiced in the Philosophy Depart•

ment.

by Mike Friedman
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

The Faculty Senate will consider a resolution tomorrow that
could give the Administration increased powers to deal with demonstrations on campus.
The resolution states; “Whereas
the Faculty recognizes that it is
the President’s responsibility to
maintain peace and order on the
campus, therefore be it resolved
that if members of the University
block access or in other ways
obstruct a group or person invited to the campus by other
members of the University, appropriate disciplinary action
should be taken by University
authorities. If any individual or
group causes or threatens bodily
harm to another individual or
group or damages property, the
matter becomes, in addition, one
for the civil authorities to deal
with. A group of administrators,

faculty and students, including
Jeremy Taylor, Bill Harrell,
Thomas Benson, Robert Rossberg,
Thomas Conolly, Bruce Jackson,
students Martin Guggenheim,
Denise Silverman, Morton Gootlerner, and Stewart Edelstein, disagree with the purpose and the

body of this proposal.”

The proposed resolution is said
by the group to be superfluous
and in many places unclear. They
maintain: “All illegal acts, those
included in the last sentence of
the resolution, are already covered by civil law. Including such
acts in a resolution of ours adds
nothing to any functional corpus.
The sentence is superfluous and
should be stricken.”

Another objection to the resolution cited is that for certain
kinds of misbehavior that are
not covered by civil law there
are intra-universities for disci-

pline. Mr. Guggenheim mentioned

the Deans’ offices, the student

court and the Faculty Student
Committee on Student Behavior,
which form a due process for the
student body.

If those disciplinary functions
are assigned to the unspecified
“University Authorities,” due
process would be circumvented,
charges Mr. Guggenheim and if
the offences are those already
covered, the new assignment is
unnecessary. The group submits
that the real question is Whether
the University is willing to grant
due process to students.
Since they feel that the resolution does not contribute anything positive, but “does introduce several troublesome abiguities and subvert several important institutional elements,” they
“urge the Faculty Senate to vote
NO on Resolution 3.”

•

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�Tuesday, December 5, 1967

Pag* Thirt**n

The Spectrum

Visiting Russian educators discuss

educational methods of Soviet Union
Amid protests by the Ukranian

Ad

Hoc

Committee

To

Expose

Russian Deceit, “Education
USSR Exhibit” opened in Memorial Auditorium Monday.
“Education USSR” is mainly an
exhibit of handiwork by Russian
students
from second grade
primers to complex electronic
equipment—with a few hundred
large photographs and art items.
The exhibit finished a month-long
display in Boston last week, and
will continue in Buffalo through
Dec. 24. The next stop is Columbus, Ohio.
Traveling with the exhibit are
a number of Russian teachers and
scholars, who act as guides, answer visitors’ questions and follow a heavy lecture schedule.
—

—

Universities are similar

In an interview with The Spectrum Tuesday, two professors
talked at length about Russian
education and their particular
fields.
Dr. Nikolai V. Sivachev, assistant dean of the History Department, Moscow University and Dr.
Sergei N. Vlasenko, head of the
English Philology Department at
the Institute of Foreign Languages, Pyatigorsk (North Caucasus) agreed that universities
were “much the same” in both

countries.
Dr. Sivachev explained that in
both countries you find the same
the
organizational framework
university system and a network
—

of colleges.

“From the student point of
view,” he said, “in Russia we do
not divide studies into undergraduate and graduate studies. All follow a four or five year program
and all are called students.”
“In the school system—in the
majority of schools —we give nec-

knowled; 'e to our students
irrespective of their future plans.
essai

For instance, every student gets
a complete course in math, and
in addition, as much as he

wishes.”
Once admitted to a university,
a student must follow a strict program including a subject in the
social sciences, according to Dr.
Sivachev. At Moscow University
there are 14 departments, eight
in the field of liberal arts and six
in natural sciences.
Students apply to a university
within a department and their
first year program is stipulated.
The second year of studies is
within a division of the particular
department (each department has
10-15 subdivisions) with half the
time devoted to electives. The last
year is completely devoted to independent study in the student’s
particular field and each is required to write a paper.
The study of foreign languages
is very big in Russia, according to
Dr. Vlasenko. Some 60% now
study English in grade school
while others study French, Spanish and German. Students start
language study in the fifth grade
in “general education schools”
and in grade two, or at the age
of 8 or 9 in “specialized schools.”
“There is much emphasis on
the use of teaching appliances
such as closed circuit TV, tape
recorders and films.” he said.
The Institute of Foreign Languages is one of the largest of
seven such institutions in the
U.S.S.R., with 1000 day students
in English and some 1500 correspondents.

Correspondence learning
Correspondence education is
also very big in Russia today, Dr.

Vlasenko indicated. Cnrrespon.dents come to the institution
twice a year at Pyatigorsk and receive intensive training in pronunciation. During the rest of the
year students “get their tasks” by
mail. “Consultant points” in re-

mote areas give help to corresponding students with problems.
Correspondence education is
"traditional" in Russia, said Dr.

Vlasenko.
Dr. Sivachev criticized the student exchange program between
Russia and the United States as
“ridiculously small.” Only 35 students are exchanged each year
and no undergraduates are included.

Comments on FDR,
the Negro
Dr. Sivachev specializes in American history and has written
much on the subject. Three years
ago he published a review of an
article by Dr. Milton Plesur, associate professor of history at
the State University of Buffalo.
Dr. Plesur’s article dealt with the
Republican party comeback in
1938. Dr. Sivachev was scheduled
to lecture to Dr. Plesur’s class
on the New Deal Thursday.
Commenting on the Negro prob-

lem in the U. S., Dr. Sivachev
said that he had written on the
subject and last year published a
paper on “The Negro and the
Labor Unions." He said that the
Negro in the U. S. “has achieved
much progress” and felt that the
problem was “not only racial, but
economic and cultural,”
Lincoln, FDR, JFK

most respected
Franklin Roosevelt,

Picture here is an exhibit of
Russian toys on display in Memorial Auditorium through Dec.

Exhibit

24.
large.

John Kennedy was popular for
his “intellectual image,” the professor agreed.

“In the future, perhaps Sen.
Fulbright will be remembered as
a great senator,” the Soviet historian remarked, adding: “He’s
quite a statesman.”

Not many sincerely like him,”
remarked the second.

Abraham Lincoln command the
most respect among Soviet his-

Khrushchev is also the object
of varied opinions: “Some like

Lenin,

American relations.

course, is

of

the most popular So-

viet leader.

Both professors agreed that
“there is something wrong with
Chinese leadership today."
“We don’t feel hostile toward
the Chinese, it’s their political
course we disagree with.”
Both professors seemed unconcerned with the Ukranian demonstrations at Memorial Auditorium, A Soviet flag was burned in
a demonstration Monday.
“It’s of no importance,” said
Dr. Sivachev, “we like to see Americans. I never met an American historian or educator with

(

Stalin?
“On Stalin, you’ll see a good
choice of different opinion,” remarked Dr. Sivachev.
“The absolute majority deplores his doings,” said Dr. Vlasenko.
"Some appreciate his role during the war,” tempered the first.

John F.

Kennedy, George Washington and

him, some ridicule him . . . many
people, many minds.”
Dr. Sivachev feels that Khrushchev did much to better Soviet-

torians, as well as the people at

whom 1 would not like to speak.
1 would say intellectuals are the

best people.”

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Everett Records et Mill only. London Retard*

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MUSIC CENTERS.
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998 Broadway
Bouleord Mall

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•

Tuesday, December 5, 1967

Spectrum

Ravi Shankar to appear in Rochester

campus releases...

By Lori Pendrys
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

The Annual Christmas Dance of the School of Pharmacy Student
Association will be held Friday evening, 9 p.m.-l am. The dance will
be held at the Cordon Bleu, 3909 Genesee St. Tickets cost $4 per
couple for undergraduates in pre-pharmacy and $5 per couple for
graduate students and faculty in pharmacy.
An old-clothing drive will be organized by the Community Aid
Corps Dec. 12 and 13. Clothing received in the campus drive will
be distributed among the people being aided through CAC programs.

Virtuoso muhician Ravi Shankar, who introduced the sitar, the
classical stringed instrument, to
Western concert audiences, will
appear at Rochester’s Eastman
Theater Saturday,
Ravi Shankar will be accompanied by Alla Rakha playing the
tabla (the double drums which
The movie "Huelga/1 a historical document depicting the farmworker strike at Delno, Calif., will be shown at 3 p.m. today in provide both percussion and melRoom 33 Hayes Hall. It is sponsored by the Sociology Club.
odic accompaniment) and Kamala
Chakravarty playing the tamboura
Students planning to go abroad this summer under the A1ESEC
(a stringed droning instrument
program should complete their applications by Sunday. The $25
provides hypnotic backfee will be refunded if placement is impossible. The membership that
dues of $5 must be paid by Sunday. Application and fees may be ground for the sitar).
Mr. Shankar has lately become
brought to the Student Senate office. If there are questions concerning the program, call Gail Meyers, 831-2171.
a “pop” idol in Great Britain due
Kappa Psi Pharmaceutical Fraternity and Theta Chi Fraternity
are collecting money for the family of deceased patrolman William
F. Gleisle who was shot while attempting to interrogate a suspect
last week. The brothers of the two fraternities will be making collections, and there will be donation containers in Norton, Tower and
Goodyear Halls, and the School of Pharmacy office throughout

to the interest of the Beatles,
especially George Harrison, in the
sitar. They, along with many other groups; have incorporated the
sitar's new sound in their recordings.
Among his appearances this
season are “Expo ’67,” Lincoln
Center’s “Festival ’67,” the Aspen
Festival and a national tour.

His interest in young people is
great. In order to give students
of the sitar first-hand knowledge,
he agreed to give lessons during
the summer of 1967 in Los Angeles and is also teaching two
courses at City College in New
York City.

Dave Bruheck Quartet
will play at Kleinhans

this week.
The Social Work Club's Westminster Companion Program will
hold a very important meeting at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Norton
Hall. The room will be announced.

All-time favorite jazz pianist
Dave Brubeck has been scheduled
to appear in concert with his

The Hollies, Wilmer and the Dukes, and Willijon will appear
at a “Blanket Concert” sponsored by the Commuter Council. The
concert will be ai 7:30 p.m. Saturday in Clark Gym. Admission
charge will be $3.25 for fee-payers and $3.50 for non fee-payers.

Quartet

Saturday

evening

at

Kleinhans Music Hall.

To celebrate the group’s sixteenth anniversary in jazz they
will include on their program
such selections as I Get A Kick
Out of You, Softly, William,
You’re The Top, Rude Old Man,
Three’s A Crowd and Shim Wha.
The Quartet has sold hundreds
of thousands of albums because
it is a great musical group, each
of its members have the desire

The Exchange Program Delegation from the U.S.S.R. will speak
at 4 p.m. Wednesday in the Millard Fillmore Room. The topic will

be “The Arts in Higher Education in the U.S.S.R.” On the panel
will be Dr. Boris Yusov, the Senior Research Assistant of the Institute of Art Education in Moscow; Mrs. Galina Astrozhnikova, from
the research section of higher education of the exhibit, and Mr.
Vladimir Pcida, a graduate of the College of Arts and Science in
Moscow and Art Director of the Exhibit. After the panel there will
be a discussion.

Give me
what I want

to make it so. Each one is an in-

dividual and each is a talent.
all, however, is
that they function as a whole . . .
making it one of the most success groups in jazz.
Most important of

It seldom happens in the entertainment world that a group
stays together for more than a
few years, but there are exceptions. Dave has had the Quartet
for sixteen years and during that
time there have been very few
changes. The newest member, Eugene Wright, bass, has been with
the group for more than nine
years and Joe Morello, drums, for
over ten. Paul Desmond, alto sax,
an original member of the Quartet, began playing with Dave in
1946 with his octet.
The concert is scheduled to be
gin at 8:30 p.m.

WAR STEAK
$995
■I

Sand
Sandwich

U.S. CHOICE TOP SIRLOIN

�

Dine and Relax

g
attachments. I want a manicure and a facial. I want to stimulate my scalp
and soothe my muscles. I want to be beautiful for you, you fool. Give me
what I want. Give me the Norelco Beauty Sachet.

music not only to the rest of
the world, but to his own people.

Art festival planned
The Festival is under the sponsorship of the Buffalo Fine Arts
Academy, governing body of the
Albright-Knox, the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, the Studio
Arena

Theater, the State Univer-

sity of Buffalo, the State University College at Buffalo and the
New York State Council on the
Arts.
It follows

the first Buffalo
Festival of the Arts Today, which
received worldwide attention
when held in 1965.
The art exhibition, entitled
“Plus x Minus: Today’s Vz Century,” will show over 200 paintings and sculptures, both inside
and outside the museum.
Being especially commissioned
for the Festival is the construction of huge environments by
the French
European groups
Groupe de Recherche d’Art Visual and the Yugoslav artists
Picelj and Richter.
The art exhibition is being organized by Douglas MacAgy, internationally known critic and
author. It wil occupy 14 indoor
—

galeries plus park area surrounding the Albright-Knox.
The exhibition will include a
selection of more than 100 works
by the pioneer constructivist,

Naum Gabo, his first U. S, retrospective in 20 years.

Russian art

In addition to its contemporary
aspects, the exhibition will provide the largest comprehensive
representation of revolutionary
Russian art. It will mark the first
time the interconnection of the
constructivists, the DeStyl and the
Bauhaus have been shown in this
country.
Other features of the Festival
will be the world premiere of two
plays by Edward Albee, “Box,”
and “Quotations from Chairman
Mao Tse-Tung.”

The Festival also will mark the
of a new opera by
Henri Pousseur, “Reponse a
Votre Faust.” The work is being
especially created for the Buffalo
premiere

ALL YOU WANT
(Within Reason)

� �

Recently Ravi Shankar was
awarded the Padna Bhusan by his
country for the real service he

in

The Peaceable Kindom
Room at the

BLACKSMITH
SHOP
“Oldest Steak House in W.N.Y."

1375 DELAWARE AVE.
TT 6-9281

event.

Among contemporary poets who
have accepted invitations to read
from and discuss their works are
Allen Ginsberg and Charles Olsen. A program of new experimental films is being planned.
Scheduled for a repeat performance from the 1965 Festival in
Buffalo is the Merce Cunningham
Dance Company.

Several of the world’s leading
architects are expected to participate in a series of programs discussing urban planning.

Headquarters for Good
College Clothing

;

RIVERSIDE MEN'S SHOP

t V

Tonawanda Street, comar Ontario
Buffalo, Now York 14207

(Yleu)

The new

Norelco Beauty Sachet—a shaver plus

//ore/co

V
£1967 North American Philips Company. Inc..

«M«UJ

100

East

(Or, give me the new
Norelco Classic Beauty
Shaver. It comes in a
tall, gorgeous package.
Just like me.)

42nd Street.

New York, N.

V. 10017

CfarJen of Sheets

Old Fashioned Ice Cream Parlor

—

Candies

SUPER RICH SUNDAES
Incomparably made, flooded with
delightful syrups &amp; fudge sauces lavishly topped with mounds
of real whipped cream and cruelty nuts.
—

open till midnight

3180 Bailey Ave.

�Tuesday,

December 5, 1967

Th» Spectrum

Pag* PiftMii

CLASSIFIED

Provost Moore interne

Faculty of Educational Studies

FOR

1963

WANTED

SALE

V.W. 1500—sunroof, radio,
cell 886-6294.

tires,

five new

BUICK SKYLARK—automatic transmission, heater, radio. Excellent condition.
Call 632-7344.
1965

Editor’s Note: This is the fourth in a series of interviews with the
provosts of the newly-created faculties.
by Linda Klatsky
Staff

Spectrum

Raporiar

“One of the reasons for our reorganizing the School of
Education into the Faculty of Educational Studies is to
make it more relevant to the role of technology in education,”
commented Dr. Gilbert D. Moore, Provost of the Faculty
of Educational Studies in an interview with The Spectrum.
Future program development and research concerning
the public education of the U.S. were also discussed.

The faculty is attempting to
present problems and utilizing
approaches to education which
wil hopefully have a technological
as well as a general impact upon
education.

Dr. Moore said: “A faculty of
this nature has to begin to be
more sensitive to the relevance
of technology in education."
“A question facing us is how to
deal most effectively with technology in education. We need to

know of its effective use and its

relationship to learning.
“The reorganization gives us an
opportunity to develop communication and understanding with the
university itself.
“Another question is how can
we be more involved in more effective educational practices.”

Future development

Given these kinds of problems,
what is in store for program development?
According to Dr.

Moore,

one

move will be

more emphasis

placed in areas of urban education. Also, the research problem
of re-evaluating the historical

structure of education will be car-

ried on.

Secondly, research will be directed toward the efficacy of different kinds of schools of education which would encourage more
homogeneity.

In addition, ways to develop
more interest in research in technology and technique will be
sought.

Dr. Moore commented: "Another direction is a concern with
the philosophy of education, and
more specificaly, public education
for this country.
“Some of the social problems
we are facing are having an effect
on education. The role of public
education in our future has to be
examined more critically from a
philosophical standpoint. Its role

in society has to be

more clearly
demonstrated and more clearly

thought through.”
The faculty will be deeply involved in a proposed center for
the study of urban education. The
specifics of the involvement are
not yet apparent and it will be

months before it is determined
how this will be implemented.

Learning disabilities
Concerning the

programs,

area of new

Dr. Moore said: “We
would like to start a program of
and
experimentation in
research
the areas of learning disabilities
so that we can develop more
knowledge of the reasons why
some people do not seem to be
able to learn as well as others.
“We would also like to find out
why certain subjects are learned
less effectively. The basic skill
of reading is one which presents
this problem quite commonly.
"The concept of pedigogy has
not had an illustrious career in
this country and there tends to
be little research attention paid
to why people learn well under
certain conditions.”
He also said: “A program in
the area of effective learning is
being devised which employs the
study of how non-intellective factors are involved in learning.”

Dr. Moore believes this will be
helpful in finding out more about
learning problems.

WILLIAMSVILLE
GRACIOUSNESS

—

ALL THE CHARM AND
THAT ONLY A TRUE

TWO STORY COLONIAL CAN OFFER. Beau

tifully landscaped grounds, and a setting
of towering trees. Prestige country club
area. Century-old remodeled farmhouse with
spacious living room, elegant muralled
dining room. Huge kitchen with breakfast
area, cozy pine-panelled family room. Three
bedrooms, P/2 baths, 26 foot terrace. A
real story book house, priced in 20's.
South Towns Realty
Inc. 652-9111
for
appointment, Mrs. Desbecker.
FIND NEW and used paperbacks
bound books at GRANT books
3292 Main St.

and
&amp;

TO COMPLETE my major and graduate, I
need class registration cards for Business
collect any day after 6 p.m.-416-935-54B3.
HELP NEEDED in learning driving. Licensed
driver wanted. Contact 832-3671 after
10 p.m. (rate 2.C0 per hour).
SOCIAL WORKER,

MSW, opportunity for
dynamic caseworker service to natural
adoptive parents, full or part time,
salary commensurate with experience and
training. Call Miss Elizabeth Anglim, Children's Aid Society, 854-6586.

and

CASEWORKER, MSW, for service to foster
children and parents, in progressive child
welfare agency. Salary commensurate with
training and experience. Call Miss Marjorie
Foulke, Children's Aid Society, 654-6586.
PERSONAL

hard

stamps.

SHALOM! For

call 875-4265

THREE-PIECE

set Samsonite luggage. Large,
medium, cosmetic case. Off-white. Nearly

new.

831-3240.

ROOMMATES

from the Jewish
day or night.

gems

LOST

PAIR OF EYEGLASSES, at
Sander*
Kupferberg reading. Gold frame*; ovalshaped lenses.
Please return to Charla
Stark, mailbox in graduate English Department, Annex B.
A

WANTED

ROOMMATE FOR spring semester. Campus
Manor apartment. Own bedroom, $50
month. Call 839-3846 after 5.

SITUATIONS

WANTED

per

NEEDED immediately to share apartment. For details call 837-8718.

GIRL

ONE OR

TWO roommates

TYPING

TERM PAPERS 25c per page, ditto's
35c, envelopes $2.00 per hundred. Call
835-6897.
MISCELLANEOUS

to share apart-

with male student. Immediately or
January. Call 885-1975.

HAVE

FREE ROOM, board and compensation for
getting supper, etc. for widow. References. Kenmore bus, tel. 834-7903, 8777553.

INTERSESSION
IN Puerto
Rico.
Check
dormitory or bulletin boards. For full
information and application call Andrew
Feldman, 885-4665.

ment

APARTMENTS

WANTED

ATTENTION I

Graduating seniors and anyone else wanting to rent 2, 3, or 4
bedroom apartment to responsible college

seniors. Call 874-4193.

APARTMENT needed for spring
semester, two bedrooms. Must be within
walking distance. Telephone 837-9460.

FURNISHED

YOU

ever

tried old

Abbey

KARATE AND KUNG-FU. Self defense instructions. Call Prof. Wong. 852-9830 or
854-1850. 124 W. Chippewa St.
GUITARS—quality,
used, flat top guitars
(Martin, etc.) bought, sold, repaired—
D'Angelico Strings. 874-0120 eves.
APARTMENT FOR RENT

$40 month, with utilities, cooking privileges. Leroy Ave. area, furnished. Call
632-3346 after 6 p.m.

ABOUT THE FOOD IN NORTON, THE PRICES IN THE BOOKSTORE, REGISTRATION LINES, INADEQUATE LIBRARY
FACILITITES AND ABSURD FINES
ABOUT THE STUDENT FEE PROBLEM, THE CAMPUS PARKING FACILITIES,
UGLY TEMPORARY BUILDINGS, JUNKY BUSSES TO THE INTERIM CAMPUS, OR THE INEFFICIENT STUDENT BOOK
EXCHANGE
DON'T JOIN THE STUDENT WELFARE COMMITTEE
.

.

.

.

.

BUT IF YOU WANT TO

DO SOMETHING

ABOUT THE FOOD IN NORTON, THE PRICES IN THE BOOKSTORE, REGISTRATION LINES, INADEQUATE LIBRARY
ABOUT THE STUDENT FEE PROBLEM, THE CAMPUS PARKING FACILITIES,
FACILITIES AND ABSURD FINES
UGLY TEMPORARY BUILDINGS, JUNKY BUSSES TO THE INTERIM CAMPUS, ORTHE INEFFICIENT STUDENT BOOK
.

EXCHANGE

.

.

.

.

.

Join the
Student Welfare Committee
MEETING: WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 4
Norton 211

Ale?

Call 836-9895 for information.

IF YOU LIKE TO

.

Bible

�Pag* Sixteen

Th

*

worli
focus

*

*

Sptetrvm

Tuatday, Dacambar 5, 19(7

salgon

n

•

•

or/f

mideast
Chicago

compiled

from our wire services

by

Lilian Waite

Secret meeting with VC denied
SAIGON—Interior Minister Linh Quang

Vien scoffed at reports American diplomats had held a secret Saigon meeting

with Viet Cong representatives.
Vien described the reports, published
in two Saigon newspapers, as “news from
Radio Catinat"—a reference to rumormongering in the coffee shops along Saigon’s once fashionable Rue Catinat.
The reports apparently stemmed from
the arrest of a Viet Cong agent who
claimed he was trying to make contact
with the Americans.
Informed Vietnamese sources said such
an arrest was made, but theprisoner ap-

parently wa» not high-ranking.
“I can tell you that we didn’t get any
big fish,” Brig. Gen. Nguyen Ngoc Loan,
the national police chief, told UPI.
Other police sources said they understood the captured Communist was a
“double agent 1 ’ working for both the
U. S. Central Intelligence Agency and the
Viet Cong.
In the Vietnamese parliament, Deputy
Phan Xuan Huy charged that Ellsworth
Bunker, the American ambassador, conferred recently with a high-ranking Viet
Cong cadre whom the police arrested aft-

erward. Charging that Mr. Bunker deCommunist’s release, Huy
said:
“This is what I call flagrant interference
in the affairs of this nation . .
The U. S. Embassy categorically denied
that any American official had met with
(he Viet Cong.
Reports of a planned meeting between
American officials and a Viet Cong emissary first appeared in a Vietnamese newspaper Thursday. It appeared Friday in
another Saigon paper's “rumor column.”
The U. S. Embassy denied reports that
such a meeting had been held in a neutral embassy in Saigon within the past ten
days. The embassy disputed the report
that said the meeting was attended by
Gen. Creighton Abrams, U. S. deputy
commander and deputy ambassador Eu
gene Looke.
An American official said privately
that if such a meeting were to take place
without the knowledge of the South
Vietnamese government, Saigon would be
the last place to hold it. It would be
thorities from finding out about such a
manded the

virtually impossible to keep Saigon authorities from finding out about such a
meeting in their own capital, he said.

ACLU challenges reclassifloat ion
NEW YORK—The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has challenged, on
constitutional grounds, the reclassification of draft age youths who protest the

government’s Vietnam policy.
Six test cases were filed by the ACLU
Friday in U .S. district courts in New
York City, Camden, N. J„ Salt Lake City,
Utah, and Seattle, Wash.

The ACLU said it will file 21 more
cases later on behalf of young men whose
draft status was changed to A-l by their
local draft boards.
The changes in draft status in all but
the Seattle case followed a memorandum
sent to local draft boards Oct. 6 by Gen.
Lewis B. Hershey, Selective Service director.
Gen. Hershey recommended local boards
review the draft exempt status of young
men who demonstrate against Vietnam
war policy, an action he said was not in
the national interest.
The six test cases were in behalf of:
The Rev. Henry Bucher, 21, reclassified
from 4-D by a Camden, N. J., draft board.
He mailed his draft card to the Rev. William Sloane Coffin, Yale University chaplain, to have it presented to U. S. Atty,
Gen. Ramsey Clark Oct. 21 with several
hundred others as a symbolic protest
•

the war.
The Rev. Paul Gibbons, 34, chaplain
for the United Ministry at Cornell University, also reclassified from 4-D after he
had mailed his wraft card to a White

against
•

Plain, N. Y., draft board Oct. 16,

John P. Kimball, 26, a graduate student at the Massachusetts nstitute of
Technology, who has spent six years in
the Marine Corps Reserve, formerly clas•

sified 4-A.
•

Lawrence F. Kramer ,18, a sophomore

at Cornell.

Henry Lowell Huey, 21, junior at the
University of Utah, reclassified from 2-S
by a Salt Lake City board after an Oct. 12
demonstration before the Salt Lake City
induction center.
•

John Kirkland Peffers, reclassified
from 1-Y by a Seattle board after he
distributed leaflets against the Vietnam
war while awaiting a routine physical
examination at an induction center.
The National Council of Churches cosponsored the suits filed for Bucher, a
Presbyterian, and Gibbons, a member of
the United Church of Christ, It also will
join in another suit to be filed next week
for the Rev. David Connor, 30, associate
Roman Catholic chaplain at Cornell,
against a Geneseo, N. Y„ board.
•

—UPI Telephoto

"Fine American
Boys"

Patrick Mark, head of a group called
"Fine American Boys," mans the "FABGAB" booth at the University of Minnesota. They read the Bible to anyone
on campus who cares to listen. He
says: "We are trying to show that most
of us are using our college experience
to develop as students and as men."

Five-point peace plan proposed
MIDEAST—Israeli Premier Levi Eshkol
has announced a five-poinl peace plan
for the Middle East that includes a new
demand for free passage through the
Suez Canal and a call for regional cooperation to end the refugee program.
It was a tough statement of policy,
made in a speech in Jerusalem at a
luncheon meeting of editors. It covered
a number of points rejected repeatedly
by the Arab nations—including direct
Arab-Israeli negotiations.

Demands terrorism stop

His five point peace plan:
Israel strives for permanent peace
between itself and its neighbors.
Peace will be achieved by direct negotiation and conclusion of peace treaties
between Israel and its neighbors.
Free passage for Israeli ships through
the Suez Canal and the Tiran Strait as a
condition for peace.
Israel regards establishment of agreed
and secure borders between itself and its
•

•

•

•

neighbors as possible only in the frame-

work of peace treaties.
Establishment of Mideast peace and
regional cooperation that will follow will
open prospects for settlement of the ref
ugee problem within a regional and inter
national context.
“We have, repeatedly stated our readiness to cooperate with others in such a
settlement,” he said. The refugees he referred to were tens of thousands of Arabs
displaced from their homes when Israel
became an independent state. For nearly
20 years they have sat in refugee camps
doing nothing while waiting for a settle•

followed a speech Thursday night
by Defense Minister Moshe Dayan toughening Israel’s stand against Arab terrorism. He said Arabs living along the conquered west bank o fthe River Jordan will
be forcibly evacuated unless the terrorism
It

stops.
Premier Eshkol promised cooperation
with U. N. Secretary General Thant’s spe-

cial Mideast envoy, Gunnar Jarring “in
his task of bringing the parties to direct
negotiations between them.”
Premier Eshkol devoted part of his
speech to last Monday’s statements by
French President Charles de Gaulle who
once again branded Israel an aggressor
in the June war. He called President
de Gaulle’s statements a “distortion of
history and a grave offense to the feelings of the Jewish people and the state
of Israel.”

ment.

Premier Eshkol flatly declared Jerusa
lem will never again be divided by barbed
wire or partitioned because “Jerusalem
was the cradle of the nation and has been
the capital of Israel for thousands of
years
its streets shall not be stained
with innocent blood by bombardment
...

from a neighboring state.”

LBJ marks 25 years
CHICAGO President Johnson, speaking on the 25th anniversary of the birth
of the atomic age, promised that the
—

United States would support international safeguards on all nuclear activity
so long as they do not directly affect national security.
The President made the promise via
closed circuit television to 28 of the 42
“Manhattan Project” scientists who, on
Dec. 2, 1942, were present in a squash
court under the west stands of the University of Chicago's Stagg Field when the
first self-sustaining nuclear reaction took
place.

The scientists were part of an international gathering of 250 dignitaries who
met at the University on this cold, wet
day to commemorate he scientific achievement which led directly to the atomic
bomb and to the unleashing of nuclear
power.

Haile promise
President Johnson's promise was hailed
by Italian President Giuseppe Saragat,
who also spoke from Rome to the scientists via communications

satellite, and

by officials who have been calling for
a treaty to prohibit the spread of atomic

wet

Direct negotiations

weapons among the world’s nations.
“I do not have any doubt that men of
good will want to submit to a non-pro-

liferation treaty,” President Saragat said.

of the

atom

“I look with serene confidence to the
future.”
President Johnson spoke from the
White House and his face appeared on a
massive screen erected in Mandel Hall
across thestreet from Stagg Field.
He warned that with nuclear energy
manknid can “remake life on earth or
we can ned it forever.”
Secret diversion of even a small amount
of plutonium could give any nation the
power to destroy civilization if not life
itself, President Johnson said.
“We cannot permit this to happen," he
said. “Nor can mankind be denied the
unlimited benefits of the peaceful atom.
We must find a way to remove the threat
while preserving the promise,”
Major effort
The President pointed out that the
Senate has voted unanimously to support
an effective non-proliferation treaty for
nuclear weapons. He said a major effort is being made to achieve such a
treaty.

President Johnson spoke of the late
Enrico Fermi, the refugee Italian scientist who headed the team which achieved
the first historic atomic reaction in the
Stagg Field squash court and signaled the
historic moment at precisely 3:36 p.m.,
CST 25 years ago when be slammed his
three-inch slide rule shut and announced:
"The reaction is Mitswiataing.”

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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Beer in the Rathskeller?
Vol. 18, No. 21

State University of New York at Buffalo

—

p.

2

Friday, December 1, 1967

Ukranians protest Russian exhibit GSA resolution bans
As the exhibit opened Sunday
evening, it was greeted by protesters from the Buffalo chapter
of the Ukranian Congress Com-

The
exhibit, “Education
U. S. S. R.,” is co-sponsored by
the U. S. State Department and
the Buffalo Council on World
Affairs. A part of the SovietAmerican cultural exchange program, the display recently completed a successful stay in Boston and is scheduled to travel on
to Columbus, Ohio, after closing
here Dec. 24.

outside Memorial Auditorium
where the display is being shown.
Yaroslaw Stetzko, former
Ukraine prime minister, criticized
the exhibit, calling it a subver-

sive propaganda weapon.

Mr. Stetzko, prime minister in
1941, said the exhibit’s purpose
was to “subvert the U. S. A. and
to demoralize and divide the people and its youth.”
Walter Chopyk, founder of the
United Anti-Communist Committee of Western New York, wired-*
the State Department and President Johnson last week demanding the exhibit’s visit be cancelled.
Mayor Frank A. Sedita denied
he “welcomed” Russian officials
and later said the timing of the
display
to coincide with
Ukranian freedom movement observances
was "most unfor—

—

tunate.”

Covers all phases

Looking

Buffalonians view exhibit of
Soviet grade-school handwriting

The Vietnam war and on-campus recruiting were the
issues involved in four resolutions passed by the Executive
Council of the Graduate Student Association Monday.

mittee of America. The demonstrators burned a Russian flag

—

—Lnur

Army campus recruiting

Russian flag burned

A Russian education display
began a month-long stay in Buffalo this week amidst heavy
criticism from local anti-Communist organizations.

The exhibit concerns all phases
of education in the Soviet Union,
from the pre school to the university level. The displays feature
striking photography and work
done by schoolchildren ranging
from dolls to highly technical
computers. Several films are used

to add emphasis.

—Lasser

Learning
Soviet scientist explains
electronic equipment to curious
students
Thirty-one Russian teachers

and professors accompanied the
exhibit to Buffalo. In addition to
answering . questions about the
displays, they are scheduled to
give lectures at the auditorium
on the problems of education.
The Soviet educators will also
be giving talks elsewhere in the
Buffalo area; several noted that
they have been asked to lecture
to classes at the University.
The exhibit is open to the public free of charge from 11 a.m. to

8 p.m. every day except Monday

Complicity statements to be submitted
during Stop the Draft Week protest
by Madeline Levine
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

Stop the Draft Week will begin in Buffalo with a protest
rally at the Selective Services Headquarters in downtown
Buffalo Dec. 4, preceded by a rally on the first floor of
Norton Hall. The purpose of this rally will be to protest
the war in Vietnam and the Selective Service System. Similar
rallies will be held throughout the country during the week
Dec. 4 through 8.
in a supporting demonstration
The Resistance, an organiService headquarters- in
zation formed to oppose the Selective
Buffalo.
war in Vietnam and the draft
As a means toward increasing
for that war, plans to hold participation in the rally, the
the following activities at the Resistance will be soliciting
pledges of participation. These
time of the rally:
Those who wish to will return
their registration certificates.
Some will return their classi•

•

fication cards
Others, particularly women
and non-draftable men, will sub•

mit letters of complicity, stating
that they urge others to break
the law in conscientious protest
and will aid and abet them in
their action. This complicity
statement subjects them to the

same penalties

as returning reg-

istration cards (up to five years
in jail and a $10,000 fine).
Still others will submit statements of support, statements of
protest against the war and the
draft system, and/or will join
•

pledges are conditional commitments to one of the forms of
action planned for the rally.
The individual may revoke his

pledge if he feels that the total
number of pledges does not offer
him adequate protection. The
number of total pledges necessary
to make the pledge morally binding on the individual is left up
to personal discretion.

Confidential pledge
Dan Dorritie, a graduate student
in the Department of English at
the State University of Buffalo,
explains this action as an “attempt to give the protection of
numbers to an illegal act. Many
people are involved in a conflict

between the desire to act and
the fear of repercussions. The
pledges attempt to alleviate this
conflict by the fact that they are
both conditional and confidcn
tial.”

The pledges will be held by a
faculty member until Dec. 4,
when they will be harfded in to
the Selective Service center, or
(Cont’d on Pg. 7)

The first resolution states
that the postponement of
visits of recruiters to the University was not an abridgement of academic freedom,
but is, rather, a service offered to students and prospective employers that is not
an educational service of the

esses. Furthermore, so long as
the war is pursued, be it resolved
that the Executive Council of the
Graduate
Student Association
supports those groups and activities that are intelligently working for an immediate cessation of
the war in Vietnam.”

University.

The fourth and last of the antiwar resolutions, although moved
hy a member of the Council, was
written by. and read to the body
by, Larry Faulkner, who was recently classified 1-A by his local
draft board allegedly for turning
in his draft card. It deals with
student draft resisters:

The resolution proposed establishment of a committee comprised of four representatives of
the GSA, four representatives of
the Student Association, and four
from the Faculty Senate. The
committee would review the
whole issue and form guidelines
for the future.
The Council also passed a resolution banning completely the
armed forces from recruiting on
the grounds of the University.
They feel that the “ideals of the
University are not in any manner advanced by the presence of
military recruiters on campus.”

Government blamed
The third resolution, blaming
the disorders on campuses on the
government rather than on the
students involved, follows:
Resolved: That the Executive
Council of the Graduate Student

Association affirms its belief that
the cause of the disorders on this
and other campuses regarding
opposition to the war in Vietnam
is not student irresponsibility:
rather, the disorders are due to
the stubborn continuation of this
war by a government that is unresponsive to the moral torment
this war inflicts upon us who are
compelled to confront it. The
Executive Council of the Graduate Student Association calls for
an end to the war in Vietnam, by
the immediate withdrawal
of
American forces, both for the
sake of the Vietnamese people,
and as the only way of halting
the disillusionment with, and dc
terioration of, democratic proc-

Oppose reclassification

“That the Executive Council of
the GSA specifically expresses
its support of those students who
have taken a courageous stand
in opposition to the war in Vietnam by returning their classifica-

tion and/or registration cards to
Ihcir draft boards. The Executive Council stands in opposition
to any reclassification or induction of these students because of
their action. Such a response by
the Selective Service System represents repression of dissent and
cannot be tolerated by the academic community.”
This resolution also empowers
the Chairman of the Council to
“convey the above opposition to
reclassification and/or induction
to the local draft board of any
student at the State University
of Buffalo so reclassified or faced
with induction.”

FSA land
Other business at the meeting
centered on land bought by the
Faculty-Student Association. It
was reported by Joel Burgess, a
member of the Executive Council, that the FSA plans to build
a public golf course on the land,
with money from student fees.
He said this might be pushed
Ihrough even though most students would not use it because
not many students know about
the land.

Thieves invade, loot Allenhurst;
improvement in security sought
Television sets, stereos, tape recorders, typewriters and clothes
were among the articles stolen
from the Allenhurst apartments
over the Thanksgiving recess.
Mr. Gary McGuire, administra
live assistant to the area coordinator of Allenhurst, estimated that
25 apartments were broken into.
An electric guitar was also taken.
The nature of the robbery indicates that it was a professional
job, according to Mr. McGuire.
Raymond E. Dye, Allenhurst
Area Coordinator, said that complete information was not yet
available because theft reports

had not been made out by the
victims. He stated that the amount
of merchandise stolen was not as
great as previously .thought because not all apartments that
were broken into were robbed
Early reports had placed the
number of apartments entered as
high as 70.
Campus police were patrolling
the Allenhurst area over the holiday but a shortage of manpower
and Allenhurst’s remote location
hamper security of this sort.
Robberies have been reported
at Allenhurst in previous years,

but nothing of the magnitude of

this year's theft, according to Security Officer Eugene Murray.
Mr Murray warns residents of
Allenhurst to keep their doors
locked any time they are not in
their apartments. He said that a
recent check of Allenhurst revealed that nearly one-half the
apartments were not locked.
The Housing Office is cooperating with campus and Amherst
police in order to find a better
form of security at Allenhurst.
One plan being considered is
moving a branch of the campus
police to Allenhurst on a permanent basis

�Page Two

TH

•

Friday, December 1, 1967

Spectrum

Council approves drinking privileges
A resolution permitting alcoholic beverages to be served students on campus under
supervised and controlled conditions has been passed unanimously by the Council of the
State University of Buffalo.
The action of the meeting on Nov. 17 was taken after an “exhaustive review by the
Council,” reported Anthony F. Lorenzetti, Acting Dean of Students.

A committee of “the widest representation” will be formed within the
issucr^StudentsTfaculty, administration and student personnel concerned with the issue will serve on the committee. “Since
we have the Council’s sanction,” he explained, “now it is only a matter of policy.”
The discussion of liquor on quickly as possible to establish University of Buffalo a "wet camcampus divides into two dis- mutually agreeable guidelines” pus” climaxed a long battle by
Dr, Lorenzetti assured. Their recstudent groups and the Dean of
tinct issues, according to Dr. ommendations
will be reviewed
Students office. As early as 1962
Lorenzetti: Obtaining the liq- by the Office of Student Affairs. the Welfare Committee of the
uor license and the free use
Student Senate made request to
An evaluation of the Council’s the Furnas Administration to
of alcoholic beverages at action
on the “liquor on campus"
look into the matter. In subseschool functions.
issue has been made by Dr. Lorby Dr. Lorenzetti to recommend pqlicies governing the

-

The committee has the responsibility of determining the guidelines which will set forth the
specific and controlled conditions
under which the alcoholic beverages will be served.

enzetti. “This step of the Council
is consistent with the increasing
recognition and acceptance of student responsibility. It now permits an increased number of
major social activities to take
place on campus rather than off-

“The necessary procedures for
the attainment of the liquor license” will also be established by
the committee, announced the
Acting Dean of Studfents.

campus.

Dr. Lorenzelti anticipates that
the Faculty-Student Association
will make application to the State
Liquor Authority for the liquor
license. “It is a legal technicality
that a fiscal entity, which the
FSA is, apply for the license,”

responsibly in

he explained.

The Board of Directors of the
FSA would in this case be responsible for its control and supervision. The type of license will
be determined by the guidelines
of the committee.

'Quickly

as

possible'

The committee “will move as

“It is another vote of confidence to the student body that
it can effectively govern its own
affairs. Now it is necessary to act

formulating the

guidelines."

Present rules hold

until definite rules and decisions
are established by the committee," announced Dr. Lorenietti.

"Resolved that the Council of
the State University of New York
at Buffalo reaffirm, subject to
review at an appropriate iuture

ing the presence and consumption
of alcoholic beverages on campus
arc Still in effect. “Drinking will
not be permitted at any time

Long battle
The decision to make the Slate

Associate Provost of the Faculty of Natural Sciences and
Mathematics, during the University Report Tuesday.

Speaking on “The Future of Science at the University.”
Dr. Rechnitz said that “We want every student to have an
understanding not only of what science does, but also of
what science actually is.”
He described the need for new
programs lo aid non-science majors to achieve a better appreciation of scientific study. Cited
among the possible methods of

Edelstein sees advantages
Recommendations, since the
Council's decision, have been
made by various persons supporting use of alcoholic beverages on
campus.

Stewart Edelstein, President of
the Student Association, sees
many advantages for allowing the
policy to exist. "The level of social activity taking place on campus would certainly increase.

“With many bars and restaurant concerns about the campus
area which sell alcoholic beverages to our students and faculty,
it seems foolish and illogical to
prevent students from enjoying
this opportunity directly on campus. in the comfort of their Stu"1 think the faculty and students are responsible enough and
aware of the necessity for a mature approach to alcoholic consumption, and should certainly be
granted this request.’’

was that the Univer-

moves to Amherst,

date, its present policy of not
permitting alcoholic beverages on
the campus.” The resolution passed unanimously.

dent Union.

accomplishing this aim were imaginative new curricula in the
science departments and a much
wider participation of undergraduates in scientific research.
The second aim presented by

Plans for the new Amherst
campus seemed to indicate to him,
Dr. Rechnitz mentioned, that its
structure wil aid in creating an
environment more conducive to
research and scholarly activity.
Dr. Rechnitz also prosed that,
in the future, University science
departments address themselves
more fully to local, state, national
and international problems, such
as alcoholism, drug addiction, air
pollution and overpopulation. To
aid in achieving this goal, he
suggested the establishment of a
comprehensive science and technology center at the Main St.
campus when the University

leges, although State University
Chancellor Samuel B. Gould had
made it clear that the decision
was under the jurisdiction of
local councils and not a statewide policy matter

license, the present rules govern-

Four major aims for the future of science at the State
University of Buffalo were proposed by Dr. Garry Rechnitz,

sity in the future strive harder
than ever to discover new scientific knowledge through research
and to transmit effectively this
knowledge to the students and
the general public. To do this
Dr Rechnitz suggested, among
other things, increasing the science faculty and establishing a
program to provide funds for unusual science projects on campus.

It wasn't until January 1965
that President Clifford C. Furnas
asked the University Council to
make a decision on the liquor
question. At that time no other
State University of New York
unit had received drinking privi-

No decision was reached in
January although it was discussed
at a University Council meeting.
In May of that year the Council
passed the following resolution
after a “full discussion:”

Although the Council has ap
proved the application for a liquor

Programs for non-scientists,
more research called for

Dr, Rechnitz

quent years other committees of
the Senate continued to pressure
for a “wet campus.”

Alcohol favored
Surveys, in addition to a student referendum taken in 1964
which showed that alcohol was
favored 8:1. formed part of the
basis for Mr. Edelstein’s recom-

mendation
—V«tM

Dr. Rechnitz

at 'University Reports'

The State University of Buffalo
must take the lead in developing new programs in scientific
development. Dr. Rechnitz stressed. “The future of science at this
University is different from that
of other universities because of
the special opportunities which
we possess," he said. Among
these opportunities. Dr. Rechnitz
included those offered by the
establishment of the new campus
and by the proxximity of such
scientific centers as Roswell Park
Memorial Institute and the Nuclear Research Center.

Ronald Stein, former Chairman
of the Graduate Student Association Exxecutive Council, reflected
that "to a very large extent the
social life of a student is the
student's responsibility.”

The GSA Executive Council in

1967 unanimously accepted
a resolution advocating that "the
use of alcohol is not to be prohibited on campus.”

May

At the Cabinet meeting on Oct.
31, 1967, President Mcyerson suggested a resolution that the "possession and consumption of alcoholic beverages be permitted in
the facilities of the State University of New York at Buffalo.”
This resolution passed unanimously.
-

—ttn

Not

Spirited football fans partake in

yet

ned.

—hot chocolate perhaps? Until
guidelines are set, liquor is ban-

Reorganization of FSA
asked in White Paper'
The Graduate Student Associa
tion will present a “White Paper”
on the reorganization of the Faculty-Student Association at its
next meeting, The Spectrum
learned Wednesday. This report
is necessary, noted Dugald McLeod, of the GSA executive council, because “no one knows what
the FSA is or what it does.”
The Association is a non-profit
corporation made up of administrators, faculty and students that
was set up to “promote and cultivate educational and social relations among the students and
faculty of the State University of
New York at Buffalo.”
The Faculty-Student Association controls such non-educational facets of the University as the
University Bookstore, the Univer.
sity Food Service, the University’s
intercollegiate athletic program,
and the multitude of vending
machines that dot the campus.
.

Proposes FSA reorganization

The FSA’s board of directors
has seven members. Two of the
directors are students: Stewart

Edlestein, president of the StuAssociation, and Gilbert

dent

Klajman, chairman of the Graduate Student Association.
According to a New York law,
regulating corporations,, a director must be 21 years of age, and
since Mr. Edlestein is not, he
cannot vote at FSA directors’
meetings.

The "White Paper” includes
proposals to reorganize the Faculty-Student Association, giving
more of a voice to students.
One proposal of the present

board of directors that has raised
the ire of many students has
been called "typical” of the ad-

ministration-weighted board, by
some GSA officials.

The directors announced that

an architect had been contracted
to draw up plans for a golf
course on the FSA land on the

Tonawanda Creek.
This decision is disputed by
Gilbert Klajman, who said that
"any claim that a golf course
can pay for itself is foolish, or
stupid if well-intensioned, and
if designed merely to bring the
student body to come to an agreement regarding the building of
the golf course, is malicious.
However, any notion that utilization of student lands depends
in any way on what will or will
not bring income does not do
justice to the question of what
is best—what is most desirable—for the University community and
the larger community of which,
like it or not, it is a part.”

One of the features of the FSA
as it is to be reorganized is that
it will be predominantly under
student control.
The administration, however,
has retained a veto power in the
presidency.
In the draft of amendments to
the present by-laws of the Faculty Student Association, the
president would have the power
to remove any director of the
FSA for any or no cause. This
provision is contained in Article
IX of the amendments and has
caused a great deal of controversy. '
Dugald McLeod, active in the
GSA, said “it’s a totalitarian padlock on a sandbox democracy.”
He explained this saying: “All
the other proposed amendments
indicate student participation,
but Article IX makes that a participation without responsibility.
If you don’t give the students
responsibility, it invites irrespon
sible action. The University is a
community of responsible persons in which such a rule as
Article IX is unnecessary, and in
fact, would tend to undermine
the community which must be
built on mutual trust,”
-

A questioin of responsibility
GSA chairman Klajman said of
Article IX that it assumed that
students would be irresponsible.
He asked the present board if
directors had been responsible in
giving out over $100,000 in football scholarships.
He indicated that the money
might have been put to better
use.

In addition to the veto power
of the presidency, the administration is trying to limit the scope
of the FSA.
In a memorandum dated Nov.
20, Dr. Claude Puffer, Vice president for Business Affairs, and a
director of the FSA, indicated
this.
His letter said that he wished

to sell the University Bookstore
because the FSA does not make
a profit on it.
“As long as demands for sub-

stantial discounts are honored,
the possibility of significant earnings is very limited,” he wrote,
and “it runs some branches w hich
are not profitable but are offered as a convenience.”
In view of the great lack of
knowledge about the FacultyStudent Association, the Graduate Student Association will present these facts completely in the
“White Paper," the text of which
will appear in Tuesday’s Spectrum.

�Friday, December 1, 1967

The Spectrum

Page Three

Academic Affairs Committee feels
dateline news, Dec. 1 student representation is inadequate
"The Academic Affairs Commit-

CYPRUS—U.S. mediator Cyrus R. Vance said the two-week-old

lee wants reform in the field of

tion of a committee of students
who will elect representatives to
I

over.

“Peace was secured. My job is done and I’m going home,
the presidential troubleshooter told newsmen in Athens after “final
talks.
MIDEAST—Youssef Zayyen, premier of bitterly anti-Israel Syria,
met in Moscow with Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin, seeking
increased military and political support for Arabs in the Middle East.
In Rabat, the Moroccan government rushed preparations for an
Arab summit conference officially scheduled for Dec. 9.
HONG KONG—Britain and Communist China have worked out
an agreement ending months of violence along the Hong Kong-Red
China border, Peking has announced.
A crown colony spokesman said the program, which included
assurances that border residents could “propagate the thoughts of
Mao Tse-tung,” was worked out.
In return the Communists assured colony authorities that the

residents would “behave themselves.”

PARIS—France joined other Western nations Wednesday in
a scheme permitting Britain to draw $1.4 billion from the International Monetary Fund (IMF). The money will be used to help
shore up the British pound.

ADEN—To the cheerful tootling of an English show tune, the
last of the British forces that have ruled Aden for 128 years flew
out Wednesday and left the Red Sea colony to independence and
a risky future.
They departed just 11 hours before Aden, on the heel of the
boot-shaped. Arabian Peninsula, formally became the “People's
Republic of Southern Yemen.” There was none of the street
rioting that occurred in the weeks leading up to independence.

decisions are made on the departmental level and that student representation on the departmental level is essential,”
claimed Hank Chaikin, co-chair
man of the Academic Affairs
Committee of the Student Senate.

Members of this committee
have been interviewing department chairmen to discuss the
prospects of having majors in
a particular department elect representatives to serve on the departmental curriculum planning

committee. The Academic Affairs
Committee is trying to organize
the students to represent themselves so that there is communication between students and the
faculty. “Only in this way can
the University meet the growing
needs of the students,” said Mr.
Chaikin.

The Sociology Department held
a general meeting, Nov. 20, for
all majors to discuss the forma

ho curriculum planning commit

tee of the Sociology Department.
Mr. Chaikin was invited to act
as chairman of this meeting, and
faculty members were also present.
It was decided that another
general meeting should be held
after the Thanksgiving holiday to
discuss the aims and objectives
of a student committee and to
elect two representatives to the
student curriculum planning committee of the Sociology Department.
Members of the Sociology Department had considered calling
such a meeting in the past and
finally decided to invite students
to serve on the committee. This is
the first department to have this
and the Academic Affairs Commitcc is trying to implement the
same in all departments. Mr.
Chaikin described it as the first
breakthrough of students in organizing and participating in departmental decisions.

Mr. Chaikin also expressed hope
that the proceedings in the So-

ciology Department serve as an
example to other departments

and 1 that the initiative be taken

by the students to organize the
same in each department. He

feels that students should have
an active role in the government,
especially in academic affairs because it eventually affects the
students and allows for the fuller
development of the University.
He explained that this is still in
the formative stage and that each
department will determine its
own policy in setting it up and
selecting students.
Mr, Chaikin said: “The function of the departmental curriculum committee is to plan and decide on the curriculum offered

to students;

therefore,

curriculum but of other academic
problems such as course requirements, pass-fail, and basic distribution requirements.”

BEIRUT, Lebanon—President Noureddin Atassi of Syria told
cheering thousands in Damascus Wednesday that victory over Israel
was the only solution to the Middle East crisis. Reports from Algiers
indicated that President Houari Boumedienne also has ruled out any
political solution to the dispute with Israel.

Wooldridge to discuss
cooperative education
sity Placement Service, urges that
all students use this opportunity
to attend conferences in room

Vice president and Ford Foundation Professor of Northeastern
University and expert on cooperative education Roy L. Wooldridge
will be on campus Tuesday and
Wednesday to discuss the possibility of cooperative education options at Buffalo. They would be
similar to those now given at
Antioch and Beliot Colleges and
Northeastern University.
Mr. Wooldridge will discuss the
possibility of cooperative education with interested students, faculty and staff. Dr. Jerome Fink,
associate director at the Univer-

232, Norton Hall. He said that
enthusiasm on the part of students would aid the establishment
of a cooperative education on campus. Cooperative Education programs would range from five to
six years. Students would work
and study alternately in fields
related to their major.

Such a program could be the
first to be set up in the four-year
State Universities,

Peace Corps test will be given
(4) Be

A “walk-in” Peace Corps placement test will be held on Monday, at 3 p.m, in Room 432, Federal Office Building, Swan and
Ellicott Sts., Buffalo. An appli
cant for the Peace Corps must:
(1) Be a U. S. citizen; (2) Be at
least 18 years of age; (3) Have
no dependents under 18 years;

available to enter training

within 15 months.

Complete information may be
obtained at: Information Center.
Board of U. S. Civil Examiners,
Room 236, Federal Office Building, 121 Ellicott St,, Buffalo, New
York. Office hours are from 8:30

a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through
Friday.

THE HAPPHHING

Don’t just stand around

like a no account

Buffalo’s Newest Boutique
located opposite Clement Hall (UB)
on Main St. at the corner of Bailey

Open a checking account now.
There are two M&amp;.T Banks near the campus,
With banking hours that make sense.
Look below.

“where what’s HAPPENING
in fashion can be found”
OPEN 11:00-5:30
Mon. &amp; Thurs. till 9:00

Phone

836-2524

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—Now and Always, Western New
York's largest selection of pierced
and non-pierced earrings—
"find what you need, you'll like
what you find at The Pierced Ear"

located opposite Clement Hall
on Main at the

(UB)
corner of Bailey

BANK
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MAIN W1NSPEAR OFFICE

3184 Main Street
Moo. thru

Thurs.:

9:00 ».m. 4:30 p.m.
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4£0 p.m. 6£0 p.m.

Friday: 9£0

a.m.

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Hours: 11:00-5:30
Mon.

&amp;

Thurs. till 9:00

Phone

832-7579

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UNIVERSITY PLAZA OFFICE
3500 Main Street
Mon. thru Thurs.. 900 a.m. —4:30 p.m.
Friday: 900 a.m. 3:00 p.m. and
400 p.m.—8.00 p.m.
—

Drive-In

Mon- thru

Thurx:

Friday: 900 a.m.

student

involvement allows for essential
feedback of matters not only of

—

900
800

a.m.
p.m.

—4:30 p.m.

�P*9*

Th

Four

•

Friday, D*c*mb#r 1, 1*67

Spectrum

Tune in WBFO
You could tune in campus radio station WBFO today
or any day. You might hear an afternoon concert, or a
discussion on poverty or on the Negro in the ghetto.
You might hear a lecture about Shakespeare, or a summary of the major news events of the day, or any one of
many Of

?

wido rangP nf prngrnirKi-

But tune in today because WBFO may not be able to
offer as much next year, or even next month; WBFO is now
facing a crisis.
That station has the potential and the opportunity to
become one of the finest education broadcasting stations in
the nation.
The crisis has emerged today because there is a great
danger that WBFO will continue to be stifled by the fact
that its expansion plans are given a low priority.
Since 1962 WBFO has been trying to get more space
for its now extremely cramped studios. In 1964 the Music
Department took more than half of the space the station
occupied in Baird Hall. In other words, while the rest of
the University was doubling in size, space allocated to WBFO
was cut in half.
In 1965, plans were formulated to move WBFO into
Norton Hall and give it a new antenna which would increase
its power and give the station stereo and multiplex broadcast capabilities. The plans were approved and funds were
appropriated.
It was then that Elwin Stevens, State University architect, cancelled the project and indicated that the funds
were needed for “more critical projects.”
Meanwhile, WBFO has more than tripled the hours
of operation each week and has gone on the air year ’round
instead of just during the academic year.
Aside from the general cultural and public affairs programming which the station offers, it hopes to provide credit
courses as well as continuing professional education programs such as medical education for doctors and nurses, inservice training programs for teachers and in-school broadcasts for elementary and high school students.
It’s unfortunate that Mr. Stevens hasn’t recognized
these accomplishments. Perhaps it’s about time he re-examined the projects under his jurisdiction and re-evaluated
just what is and is not “critical.”
The office of Planning and Development here has resubmitted the expansion plans to Albany. If Mr. Stevens and
those like him in the State University administration have
any sense of value, not only to the University but to the community it serves, WBFO will get its new facilities now.
There are few projects that offer as much as this radio
station, both to the University and to the community. In
drawing up any list of priorities for the State University,
lets assure a place near the top for WBFO.

A well-red comment
Anti-intellectualism remains alive in Buffalo, and it’s
going to be around for a long time to come. It is alive in
City Hall and over the airwaves.
Public statements by Buffalo’s honorable Mayor and
immature McCarthy-age utterances by one of Buffalo’s leading radio-TV outlets attest to the fact.
Perhaps we can take heart in the knowledge that the
State University of Buffalo was not the major target this
week. Instead it was an exhibit at Memorial Auditorium
sponsored by the U. S. State Department’s cultural exchange
program—‘‘Education—USSR.”

'Pardon me—would YOU have any links with Hanoi

of the Soviet educational system.
But elements in Buffalo, slow to move into the pace of
the 20th Century, fail to see it this way. They can only see
the exhibit as part of the “Communist deceit” or as propaganda bent on poisoning our minds.
It is indeed unfortunate that the Mayor of Buffalo has
chosen to by-pass Buffalo's first opportunity to extend hospitality to our Russian neighbors. Even more unfortunate
was the cold blast delivered over the airwaves by Buffalo’s
shameless name-calling station.
Thinking Buffalonians and students at this University
should welcome the Soviet delegation and their exhibit and
make the most of this opportunity to explore Soviet education.

Or perhaps...

.?'

’

writings

by Barry Holticlaw

Flea goes a-courtin'

It would seem that the Johnson triumphirate
has been shaken to its very foundations with this
week’s announcment of Defense Secretary McNamara’s impending resignation to become head of
the World Bank.
Could it be that the walls are crumbling in the
once-invincible fortress of the LBJ Administration?
No such luck.
McNamara has been politly purged.
And it’s not something to cheer about.
Wire-rimmed Robert S. was the one man in
Washington enough to stand up to the generals.
And then there were none.
The former president of Ford Motor Co. fully
exercised his corporation genius in conducting a

full-scale revision of the U. S. defense establish-

ment.

To the Editor:
A flea is interested in very little and becomes
emotionally disturbed over even less. By definition
I am a flea, and yet after falling victim to the
gross injustice and absolute mockery of the State
University of Buffalo traffic court, I am very

disturbed.
The Story: This flea owns a V.W. He parked it
one rainy night on a roadway in front of Lockwood
Library in order to return some books. Right, in the
interim he got a ticket.
Incidentally—were no visible No Parking signs.
1.
2. A Mack truck had room to pass comfortably.
3. Fleas despise getting wet.
The ticket annoyed the flea, but being just as
naive as the next flea, he rationalized he would
petition his “liberal” court of peers which would

understand the situation and waive his $5 fine

He wanted to make it a clean machine.
He effectively shifted much of the decision
making power from coarse, cussing, war-veteran
generals to smooth-running, humming digital computers. He forced the different armed services,
Army, Navy and Air Force, that is, to quit having
so much fun with their petty rivalries (which extended considerably beyond the gridiron realm) and
concentrate on doing a good job, collectively.
He increased the power and responsibility of his
office and of his entire department tremendously.
This ruffled a lot of military leaders, who used
their new found unity to campaign against the Secretary brain trust.
McNamara became the neutral advocate of the
-

Administration’s now-famous middle-ground policy.

in the “upgrading” of the tactical military, and, because this system of warfare is expressly designed to combat
guerrilla tactics, many have called U. S. involveYet he also was a major figure

Clearly, his rather hesitant

the
tion of the Vietnam War has been based niore on
business sense than on political self-interest or a
yllow-peril ideology. In that senes, he can not be
strictly considered a hawk. A strange bird, he is
frustrated, tired, and upset at the prospect that
perhaps his computers have goofed.

Following his resignation, which will probably
not come until after the approval of the Department's 1969 budget, the influence of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff will be considerable, and frightening.
If Johnson is re-elected, it is most likely, given

the President's increasing personal involvement
with a policy of “victory,” that bombing will be
stepped up, both in the North and in the South,
in preparation for a large-scale invasion of North
Vietnam.

The hope would be that such a campaign would
be carried out until the death of Ho Chi Minh,
whereby new leaders, unsure of their own political
footing, would be willing to surrender.

.

Readers

“Education—USSR” is an attempt to show Americans
some of the work of Soviet students and some of the teaching methods employed today. As part of the cultural exchange program established under the Eisenhower Admin- ment in Vietnam “McNamara's War,"
istration in 1958, the exhibit represents an honest attempt,
It is clear, however, that, given the type man he
in our eyes anti in the eyes of the State Department, to pro- is—that is, an efficient business executive—Mr. McNamara is less concerned with value judgments
mote the exchange of ideas between the two countries. Soviet-American understanding can only be improved by such than with questions of cfficency and expediency.
attitude on
escalaexchange.
People are not propaganda. No one is a living lie. With
this exhibit is a delegation of 31 Russian teachers and educators, including many university professors. All are willing to answer questions, to give us a better understanding

.

(fleas are very poor.) Bad rationalization, flea. The
court orders the flea to stand trial.
The Trial: Four “judges” staring down at the
table at which they are seated. Main judge is in
power bag, other two totally innocuous, and the
last, a girl, might have been a flea. Powerman
breaks silence with “grrrr . . ya case.” Flea scours
room for Collie in which to bury himself, meekly
explains story—Power presents booklet which is
supposed to be studied when receiving parking
permit. Page two—No Parking on roadways. Verdict —guilty—next case.
Flea with renewed courage: “This is an insult,
an outrage, a damn mockery; in a liberal institution one should get a ticket because his action
functionally warrants it—not because it says so on

two—that should be the purpose of this
court.” Tell it to the cops, kid, or maybe the administration—HA.
The flea has only one regret; it was his decision
to paste the flypaper on his window and thus at-

page

tract every copy in sight. He won’t do it again!
The Flea

every
The Spectrum is published twice-weekly
Tuesday and Friday
during the regular academic
year at the State University of New York at Buffalo,
3435 Main Street, Buffalo, New York 14214. Offices
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�FrMay, D«««inb*r 1; 1M7

T h

Readers
writings

’

#

By Intedandi

BELOW OLYMPUS

"Y'all understand!"

Side
The Lighter
Dick
by

West

By far the most encouraging news to emerge from South-

Asia this year was last week’s announcement that 26
South Vietnamese legislators are coming here for a visit in

east

January,

The United States, as you know, has a vital interest in
the establishment of a constitutional democratic government
in South Vietnam.
The framework for this was
created last September and October with the election of a legis-

achieved parity with other demo
cratic legislative bodies.

And now, having been in existence only a few weeks, the
Vietnamese lawgivers have al
ready scheduled a junket.

disturbing is
that the Vietnamese
arranged their first junket to
bring them to Washington in

lative body.

Proof positive

Other factors
Also somewhat

the

fact

January.
Someone in Saigon must have

This is indeed proof positive known that the weather here in
January is atrocious and that the
that they have grasped the fundacustomary parliamentary procemental concepts of how a democratic legislative body operates. dure is to find wintertime business in sunny climes.
I haven’t seen their itinerary
But since South Vietnam has
one
indicator
of
their
yet, but
a warm climate anyway, that
progress will be whether the trip
oversight is understandable. These
to Washington includes a stopare points that can be learned
over in Paris.
from experience.
If they fly straight here, and
During their stay here, they
straight back to Saigon, it will
will be conferring with members
show they are still only in the
of the US. Congress, who unelementary stage of development. doubtedly
will be able to help
One of Parkinson’s laws states:
them avoid similar mistakes in
“There is no matter of interest the future.
in the United States Congress that
At any rate, we should not be
does not require a trip to Paris."
discouraged by early ineptitude.
The important and reassuring
Until the Vietnamese legislathing is that within less than
tors have broadened their horithree months of its creation the
zons to the point where they are
guided by a similar precept, they South Vietnamese legislative body
cannot truly be said to have is already a going concern.

expression.

or can possibly contain.

Bruce Jackson,
Assistant Prof , English
tetters should not exceed 300 words,
contain the address and telephone number

be brief,

Writers: Please
should be signed and
of tho writor.
Pon names or initialt

bo used, if requested, but anright
onyomut lotion aro novor used. Tho Spoctrum reservos tho
tho
intont
of
lottort will not bo c hangod.
doloto,
but
to edit or
may

by STEESE

why?

is no more meaningful (or necessary) than approval
of campus lectures by the Buffalo Common Council.
The entire resolution contributes nothing to anyone’s real authority; I am sure President Meyerson
and his staff are aware they are permitted to

The Resolution adds nothing to the armory, but
it does define the perimeters of discourse, and, as
any social scientist knows, the level of warfare is
set not by the degree of hostility but by the participants’ agreement on usable weaponry; the kind of
weapon you have determines the kind of war you
permit yourself to define, the kind of war you will
fight. This resolution extends our definition of conflict to almost any area of student dissent; since
almost all student activity may be seen as touching
persons “invited to the campus” in some fashion,
the definition is open-ended.
A few months ago someone said to me, with
what I though peculiar pride: “Pretty soon this
place is going to be the Berkeley and Harvard of
the Midwest.” It seemed to me a silly aspiration
then, but I now think, if we pass Resolution 3, we
will have more of a Berkeley image than we want

grump

than mine prevailed.
However, to correct a mistake recently made
in print (but not in The Spectrum) last year’s editor
of The Spectrum, David Edelman, was arrested on
the rather preposterous sounding charge of “loitering with the intent to use marijuana” upon entering
a public art gallery. His bail, which one expects to
reflect at least somewhat the magnitude of the
crime, is $50.
And I will gratefully accept letters telling me
how a former official of anything can abuse responsibility after having left an office, and being
no longer in a position of responsibility.
What 1 would like to approach now, having dispensed with the trivia, is the subject of just what
one owes the nation of his nativity.
Mr. William Buckley Jr. proposes in the Nov.
26 New York Times that dissention should result
in deportation, basing his argument at least in part
on the idea that there are certain debts one owes
the country in which he was born. To which I say,

liberation, the third of its three Dow Chemical-CIA
resolutions, but, as the Nov. 7 meeting revealed
painfully well, our mob gatherings are not suited
to any kind of deliberation, or even serious consideration, unless it be of Robert’s Rules of Order.
Many students and a few faculty members worry
about the dangers in Resolution 3, which reads:
WHEREAS the Faculty recognizes that it is the
President’s responsibility to maintain peace and
order on the campus, therefore be it
RESOLVED that if members of the University
block access or in other ways obstruct a group of
persons invited to the campus by other members
of the University, appropriate disciplinary action
should be taken by University authorities. If any
individual or group causes or threatens bodily harm
to another individual or group or damages property,
the matter becomes, in addition, one for the civil
authorities to deal with.
The last sentence is superfluous: the state legislature emits the criminal code and our approval

of

The

I knew exactly what this column was to be
about when 1 left for vacation, hut cooler heads

To the Editor:
It would be nice if the faculty could, at its Dec.
6 meeting, consider with seriousness and due de-

discipline errant students.
But the resolution accomplishes several other
ends, none of them useful or even desirable.
It contributes to the polarization of students and
faculty so apparent at the Nov. 7 meeting. It says,
in effect: “You kids mess with your political jazz
around here and we’ll get you good.” It introduces
to the discourse two marvelously vague phrases
(“in other ways obstruct” and “appropriate”) that
are innocuous enough now, under a reasonably
enlightened administration, but obviously open to
all sorts of application when the cycle moves on
and we find ourselves in the next McCarthy period,
at which time this could be pur microcosmic equivalent of the U. S. Senate’s Tonkin Gulf resolution
(which permitted, and perhaps even encouraged,
Johnson to take “necessary steps).” And I wonder
how loosely we are to take those vague phrases
even now: Are students who carry “Dow Makes
Napalm” signs around a building in which a Dow
recruiter recruits obstructing “in other ways?” How
about students with signs reading “Scientists in
Universities Are Not Protesting the War Because
to Do So Would Endfinger Their Grants from NIMH,
NIH, NSF and DOD?”
It seems to me we are taking steps to design a
punishment mechanism for acts that are not criminal in the outside world (the criminal acts are already covered by that last sentence, which is unnecessary because there exists in New York a
detailed criminal code, and in Buffalo a police
department not unwilling to apply that code to
University members), a mechanism that can be
applied to any kind of student protest ranging from
Dow manufacture of napalm (or is it Cyklon-B? I
lose track) to the faculty’s refusal to give students
a voice, or even hearing, in matters that vitally
concern them (even things as pedestrian as the
conditions under which they may meet with whatever people who may wish to offer them jobs).
Passage of Resolution 3 would, as one student
pointed out to me, give us the distinction of being
the first university in the country to formalize a
procedure for stifling all unwelcome student dissent, for as soon as dissent is manifested in any
mode stronger than a letter to a university official,
the offending student may be punished. It would,
if “properly” applied, permit us to rid the campus
of all dissident students who are not satisfied with
the luxury of being permitted to think dissident
thoughts, i.e., those who seek effective measures

Pa*t Pi*»

Spectrum

Quotes

in the news

WASHINGTON—A government source, who did not want to be
identified, commenting on reports Defense Secretary Robert S.
McNamara is preparing to step down to accept presidency of the

World Bank.
"There is no breach with Johnson, or mutiny in the Joint Chiefs,
or policy changes, that suddenly makes it incumbent upon McNamara
to get out of the Pentagon.”
WASHINGTON—Rep. John W. Byrnes, R-Wis„ a member of the
House Ways &amp; Means Committee, commenting on testimony Wednesday by three of the President’s top fiscal advisers for a tax increase:
“They just failed to make their case. I'm very disappointed in
this testimony. I feel we have a very serious deficit problem but
to me the matter of a tax increase—the effect it would have—-

is rather minimal.”

WASHINGTON—Betty Furness, the Preident’s special adviser
on consumer affairs, asking for help from housewives to push legislation for a strong meat inspection bill:
“I need the help of every housewife. The bill is now in conference and may be weakened considerably if the women of this
country don’t tell their congressmen.”

To all intents and purposes one is not a free
citizen of this country until he is 21. Only then is
a person permitted to own property in his own
name against his parents’ wishes, drink in most
slates, and a host of other legalistic things like
voting. If a legal minor leaves home, he can be
arrested on the complaint of the parents and returned, Thus, my first point is that young people
are captive in this country until they reach a certain age, at which they are legally free of the
whims of their parents.
During this period the individual is required to
attend school for 12 years or so in most states.
And what is he taught in these schools? His parents' ideas of what he should learn if his parents
are interested (enough to sit on the school board.
If not, the ideas of what a generally conservative
and anti-liberal section of the community thinks
should be taught. He is taught to toe the line, obey
the rules; in general he is socialized instead of
educated. He is taught how to be pleasing to other
people and damn the cost to those who would
rather please themselves, even when this would
inflict no harm on the society.
And to me perhaps most important of all is the
fact that almost without exception the youth of
the United Stales is drafted into being. Like 1 most
certainly did not volunteer to be born and I want
to meet the cat who did. I was somebody else's
idea, in one way or another, and I had absolutely
nothing to say about it. A logically unassailable
position for at least 99% of the population.
So far then, I contend that I am not a volunteer
to life in the first place, adequately supported by
the censure which would approach me if I decided
to opt voluntarily out of the condition in question;
that until I was 21, I was not permitted full citizenship, and that in the process of gaining that citizenship I was forcibly subjugated to a system of education designed to make me into what the society
wanted me to be with no consideration at all of
whether, silly question, I wanted to be that when
I grew up.
And what is my/your/our legacy from the previous generations that have gone through this efficient process? A country wracked by dissention
over a war in Asia and the treatment of 10% of
the population who arc sub human because their
skin is the wrong color. A world where poverty.is
the rule and the poor grow restive and ugly, with
great cause, and where the race of which I am a
member is a target of hatred because of the previous actions of the many people who believed they
owed a debt to their country.
(Docs it say in the Declaration of Independence
that one can only pursue happiness under a capitalistic or other form of government agreeable to the
United States?)
What then do I OWE this country? I don't think
I owe it a damned thing. Or at least I refuse to
acknowledge any debts not incurred in my own
name, and the last 28 years show a balance of payments in my favor in several ways. Because 1 happen to be very fond of this country, if I knew what
love was I might even be able to use that term as
freely as a conservative. But I am in love with what
it can be, with the promises it made to itself and
the rest of the world back when it was young and
idealistic. These I will give my all to see realized,
but I will not pay off a true debt of appreciation
for beauty and promise in the false coin of blind
patriotism. I will not march off a cliff for anybody.
Especially, if you will forgive my anti-Americanism,

for

Lyndon

Baines Johnson and his ilk.

The Spectrum's pages for

Editorials

&amp;

Opinions

It is the policy of The Spectrum to report the
news fully and impartially in the news pages,
to express the opinions of the newspaper only
in the editorial pages and to publish all sides

of important controversial issues.
"Without

tapfosnori,

froodom of

•aprMstoo

is

rnooning

�Pag* Six

The Spectrum

Friday, December 1, 1967

Role of University is topic of panel Rep. McCarthy speaks
discussion; Siggelkow to moderate on 2-week Vietnam tour
“What’s the role of a UnivCrsity—this University?” will be
the topic of a panel discussion
today that will include Professor
Jerrold Zacharias of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
The discussion will be held in
the Conference Theater, Norton
Hall, from 12:30 to 2 p.m.
In addition to Prof, Zacharias,
the panel will also include Dr.
Richard Siggelkow, vice president
for student affairs, as moderator;
Dr. Albert Somit, chairman of the
Political Science Department; Dr.
Richard Bugelski, chairman of
the Psychology Department, and
Jeremy Taylor, administrative assistant in the History Department.

Students who will be participating in the panel are Larry
Faulkner, Richard Miller and
Joseph Orsini.

Professor Zacharias
,

Lhairs todays panel discussion

Prof. Zacarias, on campus as
by invita-

f.tion

of President Meyerson, will
stress the role a student should
take in the University in a 20minute speech.

He met with the University
College Curriculum Committee
and the Council on Higher 'Education Thursday to express some
of his many ideas on education.

He also met this morning with
the provosts, the University-wide
deans, and the presidential assistants.
A reception will be held from
2 to 4 p.m, in Room 232, Norton
Hall, immediately following the
panel. All interested students
and faculty members are urged
to attend in order to speak with
Prof. Zacharias and the panelists.

Prof. Zacharias is one of the
forces in the shakedown of American education. A
decade ago he rewrote the high
school physics program, and now
he intends to initiate his varied
ideas into the American college.
principal

“He has the ability to stimulate
people to think about new ways
to approach old problems and to
innovate the learning process,”
according to Mr. James A. Beckley, according to Provost Bennis.

by Joel Kleinman
Spectrum Staff Reporter

Buffalo Congressman Richard
D. McCarthy claimed that “militarily . . . there is progress being
made” in Vietnam in an address
in the Conference Theater Nov.
19.

If present trends continue, he
said, a gradual “fadeaway” of the
Viet Cong sometime in the near
future “would not be out of the

other Asian nations such as Japan
and the Philippines feel that “if
we withdraw without a lasting
and enduring peace, it would be
inimicable to their survival,” he
claimed.

Although bombing of North
Vietnam “ties up 175,000 skilled

military personnel,” Congressman
McCarthy would “favor a halt
in the strategic bombing . . .
to try to get negotiations.”

question.”
Reporting on a two-week tour
of Southeast Asia that he made
at his own expense last September, Rep. McCarthy made it
known that he ‘found no evi-

dence of fraud in the Presidential
elections in South Vietnam although some observers found irregularities.” The consensus was,
however, that there “weren’t
enough to alter the outcome,” he
added.

He praised the new South
Vietnamese government for its
promise to increase its military
commitment in the war by clamping down on draft dodgers and
for its new plans for land reform
and cleaning up corruption.
In his address, the Congressman defended America’s presence
in Southeast Asia by stating: ..
If the Communists succeed there,
they would be . . . encouraged
in other areas.” The leaders of

Rep. McCarthy told The Spectrum that he favors United Na-

tions intervention in the conflict

although he is pessimistic that
it will intervene. In the meantime, we must offer Southeast
Asia aid in the form of new
roads, methods of rice produc-

tion, and education, he added.

Asked for his predictions on
the course of the war, he replied:
“1 don’t want to mislead anyone
with predictions” of peace, since
a continuation of our present policy is likely.
Rep. McCarthy showed slides
of his tour to the audience, commenting: “If we ever get peace
over there, the sights are just

baffling.”

His appearance was sponsored
by the Buffalo Council on World
Affairs and the Office of International Educational Services of
the State University.

New lecture series to
discuss drug hazards
Psychedelics and hallucinogens,
marijuana and government control of drug abuse are some of
the topics of a series of lectures
and discussions presented as a
part of the course, Drugs and
Biological Systems (Pharmacology
469). The series is open to all

to 4:30 p.m. in Health Sciences
246, Tuesdays and Thursdays.
“Government regulations of development and use of medicinal
agents” is the topic of the next
lecture, scheduled for Tuesday.
Dr, Cedric Smith, chairman of

students and faculty.

will be the lecturer.
Dr. David F. Burkolder, Chief
of Pharmacy Services of the
School of Pharmacy, will present
the lecture: “Drug manufacture
and dispensing—Present and future roles of pharmacist, physician, drug researcher, manufacturer, and social workers.” This
lecture will be presented Thurs-

The series is held from 3 p.m.

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the

Pharmacology

day.

“Government control of drugs
of abuse—Narcotics, cocaine, alcohol, LSD and marijuana” is the
topic of the lecture that will be

12. Mr. Herman
Schwartz, Professor of Law, will
given Dec.

be the lecturer.
The remaining two lectures, to
be presented Dec. 14 and Dec.
19, will cover “Evaluation of potential hazards of chronic drug
techniques of study, and
use
Chemical warfare and drugs used
by police,” respectively. Dr. Jerrold C, Winter, Assistant Professor of Pharmacology, will lecture
Dec. 14, and Dr. Smith wil present the final lecture.
The series is sponsored by the
Department of Pharmacology,
Schools of Medicine and Dentistry, under the auspices of Uni—

versity College.

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�Friday,

December 1, 1967

The Spectrum

Complicity statements...
until the individual decides to
withdraw his pledge. All names

will be kept confidential, but the
tntnl-number of pledges received
will be' disclosed periodically
prior to Dec. 4.
By employing such tactics as
letters of complicity and refusal
to pay one’s telephone tax which
has been increased 300% as a
direct result of the war, groups
such as the Resistance are attempting to widen their bases of
support. There has been a decided attempt to incorporate the
moderate elements of America
into the protest movement.
Fear a factor
The Resistance is now attempting to acknowledge the reality of
tear, for they feel it is often this
reality that makes it difficult to
take a clear stand. By shifting
the emphasis from the individual
to a mass movement, the Resistance is attempting to alleviate
some of this fear. The move by
groups such as the Resistance
has been from martyr resistance,
where the consequences of the
various forms of government reprisal fall on isolated individuals,

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and your size (the Souper Dress
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Large/13-16) with your name and
address (remember your zip code!)
to Dress Offer, Box 615, Maple
Plain, Minn. 55359. Offer expires
March 31, 1968. Good only in the
United States and Puerto Rico.
Campbell’s Souper Dress. On you
it’ll look M’m! M’m! Good!

(Continued from Page

to massive resistance, where the
government must attempt to prosecute all or none. Members of

Jhe Boston Resistance, some 200
strong, have pledged that should

any of their number be arrested,
all others will present themselves
to the proper authorities for similar action.

Phil Beck, a veteran of Vietnam and a member of the Resistance, said: “The Nuremburg War
Crimes Tribunals are morally
binding to the people of the
United States. We not only have
a right, but a responsibility, not
to serve. If you don’t have soldiers, you can’t fight a war.”
Robert Creeley, professor of
English at the State University of
Buffalo, sees the Resistance as
an attempt to challenge the government’s commitment in Vietnam through the draft,
“Like
Thoreau, we must ask: What are
the alternatives? We must use
the content of the law to confront those who embody it. The
draft is the focal point of attack
because it is the transformation
center, the point of public reference. Using the draft as the
point of public reference, protest

1)

against the draft must serve to
affect public opinion. It is ab-

vious that the administration is

of such actions as End the Draft
Week is to keep the fact of dissent clearly in focus in the American

Pig*

eye.

Other members of the faculty
feel, as Prof. Creeley. that it is

time for the faculty to under-

stand and become involved with
those questions about the war
that the student is faced with
daily. At the Nov. 13 Faculty

Senate meeting, Professor George
Hochfield of the English Department stated: “The chief cause of
disorder on this or other campuses is not the irresponsibility of
students. It is the stubborn con
tinuation of an unjust and futile
war by a government unrespon
sive to the moral torment this
war inflicts upon the generation
compelled to fight it.” He later
called for the Faculty Senate to
condemn the war in Vietnam.

Extra-legal means
The Resistance is also concerned with what it considers to be

extralegal means employed by
the administration against the

Depends on the giant. Actually, some giants are just regular
kinds of guys. Except bigger.
And that can be an advantage.
How? Well, for one thing, you've got more going for
you. Take Ford Motor Company. A giant in an exciting
and vital business. Thinking giant thoughts. About developing Mustang. Cougar. A city car for the future.
Cortie to work for this giant and you'll begin to think
like one.
Because you’re dealing with bigger problems, the
consequences, of course, will be greater. Your responsibilities
heavier. That means your experience must be better —more
complete. And so, you'll get the kind of opportunities only a

protesters. Although it has not
yet reached the Supreme Court,
many consider Gen. Hcrshey’s

attempts to n s e the SpIppHvp
Service as a punitiv.e organ both

S*v*n

Art lecture
to be held

“New Dimensions in Sculpand unconstitutional.
There have also been questions ture” will be the topic of a lecraised as to the legality of Presiture by Dr. Udo Kultermann in
dent Johnson’s edict against prothe Albright-Knox Art Gallery
testing on the White House
grounds, and whether or not the Monday, Dee. 4, at 8:30 p.m.
illegality of the letters of comDr. Kultermann, visiting proplicity is in fact a violation of
fessor in the School of Architecfrp;dom of speech. Many challenge the legality of the war ture at Washington University,
itself, but in view of the Supreme St. Louis, will focus on recent
Court's recent denial to consider sculpture and the return to repthe constitutionality of the war, resentation of the human figure
it seems doubtful to many that evident in the work of various
the question will ever reach that artists in Europe and America.
This work is characterized by
court.
its widespread use of other maThe Resistance hopes the Dec. terials, such as actual pieces of
4 rally will serve a dual purpose. furniture and everyday objects,
which arc transformed into eleFirst, it is attempting to confront
the administration with dissent, ments of the sculpture. The
artists include George Segal, Edit is hoped that the administraward Kienholz, Yayoi Kusama
tion will be forced to re-examine
its justification for the situation and Marisol.
in Vietnam. Secondly, through
By way of contrast, Kultermann
publicity, the Resistance is making the American public aware will also discuss the work of
of the large amount of dissent such “minimal” sculptors as Tony
with the war that exists in this Smith, Robert Morris, Donald
,Iii(M and Dan Flavin.
country.

unjust

You'll develop a talent for making hard-nosed, imaginadecisions. And you'll kjow how these decisions alfect
the guts of the operation. At the grass roots. Because you'll
have been there.
If you’d like to be a giant yourself, and your better
ideas are in finance, product engineering, manufacturing,
marketing and sales, personnel administration or systems
research, see the man from Ford when he visits your campus.
Or send your resume to Ford Motor Company, College
Recruiting Department.
You and Ford can grow bigger together.
tive

giant can give.
Giants just

naturally seem to attract top professionals.
Men that you'll be working with and for. And some of that
talent is bound to rub off.
Because there’s more to do, you'll learn more. In
more areas.

What’s it like
to work
for a giant?

I'J Ilk

(o

ui

j

�Studio Two

Friday, December 1, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* Eight

production

Beckett's 'Endgame' successfully
relates
human and mi
by Richard Parlmutter
Spectrum

Staff

“Finished, it’s finished”

—

Reporter

and thus are we introduced

to the beginning of the end, or more properly, the beginning

of “Endgame,” Samuel Beckett’s curiously droll play depicting an afternoon in the lives of the last four survivors on
earth.
“Endgame” is not an imitation
the Beach" or "Alas,
Babylon,” but is a mocking, sardonic study of suffering and
death. The play is permeated

of “On

with puns and Biblical allusions
which are by no means obvious
and are a challenge to analyze.
Each character has a counterpart
in the Bible.
For

instance, Noah may be seen
in the character of Nagg, both
of whom are the fathers of the
remainder of thqjr respective
civilizations. Ham, the son of
Noah, is reflected by Hamm, who
is Nagg’s son in the play.
Of course, subtleties such as
Biblical analogies arc difficult to
convey in any adaption of “Endgame.” But this production succeeded most emphatically in relating the theme of human misery

and

mendable that so much emotion
is generated.

Through

a mosquito net

The

set, designed by Harold
HeajJ, consists of a stone walled
room reminiscent of the Spanish
Inquisition, complete with two
windows, a chair, and two garbage cans. Also present is a
floor-to-ceiling mosquito net
through which the audience views

the survivors and which lends
the play just the right note of
nebulousness.

There are few moving props;
in fact, there are almost no moving actors. Clov, played by John
Costopoulos, is the only survivor
who can walk; Hamm is paralyzed
and Nagg and Noll are legless.
Actors "superb"

cruelty.

Director Stephan Foreman’s interpretation has brought out both
this serious theme and the mocking humor which Beckett intended. Mr. Foreman has little to
work with in terms of action and
movement, and thus it is com-

Hamm (Frank T. Wells) dom
inales the tour survivors and re
mains in the center at all times
"Endgame” is really a series of
games and most of these “end-

games people play” are between
Clov and Hamm and are found
in their dialogues of puns and

pantomimes. Both actors handle
their roles superbly and are moat
convincing in relating the para-

doxes and ironies of their lines.
The supporting roles of Nagg
and Nell are dramatically effective in reemphasizing the human
suffering theme. Nagg (Lawrence
James) and Neil (Betty Lutes)
evoke about as much pathos in
their roles as is possible. They
appear from their garbage cans
looking like the Ghosts of Christmas Past as they wail their pitiable dialogues. The two moribund, sheet-white, tenuated forms
laugh about the time they lost
their legs and Neil states in her
failing voice: “Nothing is funnier
than unhappiness.”

A method to madness
“It’s finished, nearly finished,”
and after a while it appears that
the play never will be; yet there
may be method to Beckett’s madness in the longevity of his oneact play. Toward the end of the
work, the viewer’s empathy is
heightened as he becomes uneasy
in anticipation of the
termination of the play; much as
Beckett’s characters are uneasy
in anticipation of death.
The Studio Two production of
“Endgame” is a challenging and
absorbing experience in the avant
garde, saturated with message,
emotion and humor.
The last performances are to-

night and tomorrow evening at
Studio Two.

ram. NEWMaiV

J

V

v-3
.

V

Si
\'

Nashville
Cats?

*

\

V

No. The Lovin' Spoonful . . .
in concert tonight at Niagara

University

Lovin' Spoonful concert
to be held at Niagara U.
by Lori Pendrys

of the Spoonful and the group’s
prolific composer, earned more
points from the Broadcast Music
Industry than any other solo com

The Lovin’ Spoonful, one of
America’s most popular popgroups, will appear this evening
at Niagara University’s Student

poser

Center.

“She is Still a Mystery,” which
is currently rising on national
record charts, is their latest addition to a string of hits including
Do You Believe in Magic?, You
Didn’t Have to Be So Nice, Daydream, Nashville Cats, Rain on
the Roof and Six O’clock. Another of their songs “Darling Be
Home Soon” comes from their
sound track for the movie “You’re
A Big Boy Now.” They recently
received another gold album for
their “Best of The Lovin’ Spoonful” LP which has been on bestseller lists tor the past seven
months.

Drummer

Joe Butler

scheduled for release sometime
this week.
The concert will begin at 8 p.m.
and tickets will be available at
the Student Center. There will
also be a dance after the concert
featuring music by The Illusions.

AjC iirtcrebiLL
lu*r
$iMri$i'

L*
ec.

wrote

“Only Pretty, What a Pity” with
Jerry Yester and rhythm player
Steve Boone has a promising composing career as well. The Lovin’
Spoonful’s seventh LP, tentatively titled “Everything Playing” is

John Sebastian, the lead singer

X

in the world last year.

Lead guitarist Jerry Yester recently joined the Spoonful when
Zally Yanosky resigned. Before
joining the group, he produced
The Association’s second LP and
the new Tim Buckley album.

co«i|’&lt;&gt;sfr

t/sUs*

9tip,

TicLt*: $4.50, $4.00, $3.50, $2.50

�Friday, December 1, 1967

The Spectrum

-

What do you think should be the attitude of the

University Health Services toward birth control?

able.
4. Play no role

were:

With completion of athletic facilities on the
new campus some five or six years away, do you
feel that now:
34%—There is a need for a new temporary
gymnasium on the present campus.
25%—There is a need for immediate construe
tion of a temporary gym on the new campus site.
41%—There is no need for an additional gymnasium.

Let us rise and kiss the lips of our brothers
—Tuli Kup/erberg

world.” it is hard to know if i
that's what Sanders is really
after. His scene with the hardcore satire of the Fugs certainly
does have “redeeming value," although probably more in a social
sense than in an artistic one.

Thus the plea at Monday’s Resistance poetry reading
concert was not a call to arms, but a call for kissing. One
was struck by the absurdity of killing,

the necessity for

loving.
But there were other absurdities

some intended

some not.

Student Government Assn.
-presents In concert—-

Described as “something
we get too rarely a chance to
hear” by poet Robert Greeley,
the two were awarded generous praise: “It’s difficult to
qualify how much I respect
these men

waukee Repertory Theater, Trin

by Lori Pendrys

Buffalo’s Studio Arena Theater
has signed Stephen Porter, director of the A.P.A. Company, to direct its January production of
Luigi Pirandello’s “Enrico IV.”
Mr. Porter made his professional New York theater debut in

ODETTA
and RICH LITTLE

1956, producing, directing and designing the off-Broadway production of Richard Wilbur’s translation of Moliere’s “The Misanthrope.” Among resident theaters he has worked with since
then are the McCarter Theater
at Princeton, the
Cincinnati
Playhouse in the Park, the Mil-

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1967
8 P.M.
Norton Tcket Office

e Res.; 886-4934

LEISURELAND
HAMBURG, NEW YORK
(Thruway Exit 57)

“ONE OF THE GREAT
FILMS OF ALL TIME!”

ity Square Playhouse in Prove
denee and the Philadelphia Thea
ter of the Living Arts
With

the

A.P.A.

Repertory

Company he directed Pirandello's
"Right You Arc,” Shaw’s “Man
and

Superman

ami

Shako

Lear
“King
"Twelfth Night." Checkov's “The
Wild Duck” and George Kelly’s
"The Show-Off,” which is set for
a New York premiere Dec. 5, arc
two of his most recent produc

speare’s

lions.

Neal Du Brock, Executive Pro
ducer of the Studio Arena, said:
“Stephen Porter definitely belongs with our other famed stage
craftsmen of the season."
NOW-DIPSON'S

NORTH PARK

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*

836 741

,

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“A REMARKABLE ACHIEVEMENT!”

■

CharlesChamp

"

n

L. A. Times

DitMcts with poetry
If the Fugs sing about sickness,
much of Sanders' poetry is about
life, and some of it deserves not

Fuggers Ed Sanders and Tuli Kupferberg. the central
attraction of the anti-draft concert attended by 700 people
in the Fillmore Room, made their respective freaky scenes

Porter to direct Pirandello's
Enrico IV' at Studio Arena

D'Youville College

—

Hoi

-

in birth control

You can answer The Spectrum Question of the
Week every Wednesday at the Information Desk
on the first floor of Norton Hall,
Please submit only one ballot answering the
question of the week.
The results of the last question of the week

$4.50/person

by Barry

control devices available tn alt

riage students.
3. Make only birth control INFORMATION avail

Tickets on Sale at

■

’

THE WALTER READE JR/JOSEPH STRICK PRODUCTION

to be mired in four-letter muck,
so to speak He says, “Come feel,
come feel it, pretty humans . .

Sanders, draped in blue Chi
ncse jacket and red shawl, was

,

1 Make birth

Make love not war' is theme in
Sanders Kupferberg Poetry reading

Tear open the brain valves , .
where you walk, lives.” Sanders'
.

Question of

the week

Pag* Nin*

politely described by the Buffalo
poet as having "a way of stating

dissecting techniques are not limited to brains, however, and he
slashes and gropes at bodies living and dead, and all of their

the world that hasn't been around
for years." It's likely that one
would have a hard time finding
anvbodv who can "stale the

various component parts,

like the obscenely vivacious San
tiers.
The Fuft leader introduced his

ternately itchy, exciting, hurting,

advocating

just what

before

the

He concluded his presentation
with selections from his infamous
"Tillie the Toe Queen,” a satire
(?)
on the phallic joys of toes.
According to Sanders’ story, it
was written "on the backs of

cigarette packs, while working at
a Times Square cigar store . . .

on the perversion (night) shift

he was

Tuli satirical, political

evening

Tuli Kupferberg. the more softspoken (off stage) of the two, arid
author of the East Village anthem, “Kill for Peace.” did not
read some of his more poetic

was over

Asks draft card,
not applause
Sanders, a genuine cgyptologist
and m a s I e r onomatopocician,
poet, and editor of the magazine,
F U, read a few short poems
about cornfield copulation, Denietcr, and Sciinlah (sic) ("the
Egyptian word for earthbang).
lie urged the audience, in keep-

verse,

The first poem was a “neoclassic" piece about the soldier
who broke ranks at the Pentagon
confrontation in October to join
the protesters, "the first victim
of the American Revolution, the
first hero of Eros.”
He then read a long prose selection written “in cooperation
with General Westmoreland," in
which he took a speech by the
Army chief and substituted the
word “kill” for nouns and verbs,
with a gradual escalation of both

of the per
formance: "Rather than applaud
ing, turn in your draft card.”
Take away his mocking four
letterings, and Sanders is a poet,
ing with the theme

good one. In “Seeking some
sign of life,” he warns his listen
ers, you may think this gibberish
to be;” but a line like “1 only
want to feel God shining in the
apertures of the Sun” is certainly
not that.
a

frequency and intensity.
Reading excerpts from his
book 1001 Ways To Beat the
Draft, published by Grove Press,
he gave advice to potential draft
dodgers from “Marry a dralt official” to “Shout that the enemy
is at home, the enemy is at home

Another beautiful short poem,
“So beautiful is the lamb of cosmic rose,” was all but obscured
by several senseless verbal orgasms obviously aimed at making
obscenity absurd, at disturbing

prudish sensibilities with line

—and then go home

(Flip Huanltop

JLLIK ANDRKWS MAX VON SYDOW
Si*”" I

me OS*I

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RICHARD HARRIS

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• mill* t(MK
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JOYCE’S

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the song, “Morn-

viously political.

spurts.”

FOR THE FIRST time at POPULAR

notably

hut preferred rather to be
seriously satirical, and more obing,"

after line of “spurlers spurting

*

and sickening.

frightening,

cacophony of gooshes and spurts
with the .statement: ”1 understand
there's a tree speech controversy
here.” lie expressed mock amaze
nient at some of the attitudes of
ay he
h cn
his more prue
they think we're goin’ to start
screwing in the streets. I don't
know
Yet that’s

nervous,

erogenous, or otherwise. He tugs
at your anatomy, and it is al-

resentaUon

PERFORMANCES

&amp;

State College

presents

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The "SOUL SOUNDS” of

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ol ID card

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EVERY TUESDAY THRU SUNDAY

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LIVE MUSIC TUESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY
THE RED CAPS
featuring
THE SIDEWINDERS
thls
WILMER &amp; the DUKES
week:
THE RISING SONS

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SATURDAY NIGHT

THE INTRUDERS
SUNDAY NIGHT

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STARTING THIS SUNDAY
EVERY SUNDAY

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�Page Tan

The Spectrum

campus releases...
The Christian Science Organization is sponsoring a lecture
entitled “The New Morality” Monday at 7:30 p.tn. in the Conference

Friday, December 1, 1967

Action line

.

.

.

331-5000
Do you often think it impossible to untangle the State University of Buffalo
bureaucracy? In cooperation with the Dean of Students 1 Office, The Spectrum
is sponsoring an ACTION LINE.
Through ACTION LINE, individual student

Pianist Rosen
to appear here

«

in Boston, Mass. Admission to the lecture is free

&gt;cicnl

Graduate students will have an opportunity to register in advance
for the second semester during the three-week period of Dec. 4
through Dec, 22 from 8:30 a m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday at
the Office of Admissions and Records, Hayes Annex B. Registration
for those who do not choose to register early will be held in Clark
Gym Jan. 22 from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.

Dr. Marvin Zimmerman, associate professor of philosophy at the
State University of Buffalo, will participate in an informal discussion
program on WBFO, The topic of the program will be “The War and
God.”

Listeners will be able to call Dr. Zimmerman with questions or
comments during the program at 831-3406. The program will be
broadcast at 10 p.m. tomorrow.
The Winter Weekend Committee under the sponsorship of the
Freshman Class Council has announced a change in the date of
Winter Weekend, Originally scheduled for Feb. 16 through 18, the
weekend will be held Feb. 9 through 11.
Activities fee payers will be able to use the facilities in the
Norton Hall Recreational Basement free of cost today from 3:30
p.m. to 5:30 p.m. This event is sponsored by the UUAB.
The Lynx will be playing at a mixer that will be held today from
9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Entertainment and refreshments are free to all who
paid their activities fee. The mixer is sponsored by IRC Activities
Council and UUAB Recreation Committee.
The basketball varsity cheerleading squad will hold a meeting
for all sophomore, junior and senior women students interested in
trying out for the squad. It will be held Tuesday in Room 344, Norton
Hall, between 3:30 and 5:30 p.m.
A Sabbath Service sponsored by the B'nai B'rilh Hillcl Founda
tion will be given today at 7:45 p.m. Samuel Laubcr, a serviceman,
will conduct the service at the Niagara Falls Air Force Base honoring
the Jewish servicemen in the area. The fourth in a series of sermon
lessons on “The Ethic of The Fathers" will be presented by Dr.
Justin Hofmann.
Hillel will hold a Delicatessan Supper Sunday at 5:30 p.m. in the
Hillel House. Reservations should be made by calling 8364540 The
program will take the form of a musicale. A selection of liturgical
music with running commentary will be presented.

The new films by Jones Mekas will be screened and discussed
at 4 p.m. Monday in Room 231, Norton Hall. The Department of
English is presenting the films, “New York Diaries" and "Circus

decisions are made, and gel ACTION when
ACTION LINE will answer all questions of

change is indicate^.
general interest which appear to
be pertinent to the student 'body.
The Spectrum will include them in its special
weekly
ACTION LINE
column
Each inquiry will' be thoroughly investigated
and answered individually. The name of the individual originating the inquiry
will not be published.
,

What are the results of the survey on drugs administered to
students at the beginning of this semester, at registration time?

Dr. Edward Marra, Chairman of the University Committee on
informed us that the Committee is in the
process of reviewing the questionnaire results along with other
pertinent data. This material will be released at a subsequent date,
although its format has not yet been decided.
Drugs and the Campus,

Is there a Student Directory available on campus this year?

The Student Directory is now in the process of being compiled
but its publication date is not yet known. We hope to have it
available within the next few weeks.
Are different library fines charged at different campus libraries?

(For specific answers to your questions, and for direct service, call ACTION LINE,
831 5000, every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, from 4-5 p.m.
If you prefer,
phrase your question in writing and address it to ACTION LINE, c/o The Spectrum,
355 Norton Hall, or the Office of the Dean of Students, 201 Harriman Library.)

'

Mr. Mekas is the maker of ‘Guns of the Trees,” film critic for
Village Voice, and editor of Film Culture.

Occupational therapists are a iltending a clinical council meeting
in Norton Hall today. The theme is "Supervision and Optimum Util
ization of Occupational Therapy." Occupational therapists from But
falo and throughout the Stale wil I be speaking.

tie

DELTA TAU
presents a

MIXER
featuring the
THE MANIACS
and THE ROGUES

Canisius College
Student Auditorium
FRIDAY, DEC.

1st

9:00-1,00

Refreshments
Proper Attire
TICKETS: $1.00
$1.25 at the door

Clothing Fashion Center for Men

3151 BAILEY AVE.

itw

unlit)
Does it really give
you the freedom you
are looking for?
Hear this probing
lecture by Lenore D.
Hanks, C.S.B., an
authorized teacher
and practitioner of
Christian Science
and a member of
The Christian
Science Board of
Lectureship.

if E. Amherst
Buffalo, New York 14215

MONDAY, DECEMBER 4
CONFERENCE THEATER

Dial 832-1200

7:30 P.M.

FREE PARKING
COME TO MOREY'S
A short distance from
Campus and get your

10% DISCOUNT
by showing ID Card
Fair traded items not included

Sponsored by

CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE

ORGANIZATION

Also featured in the all-Mozart
program will be the Choir of the

State University College at Fredonia under the direction of
Richard Shell. Guest vocalists for
the performance of Mozart’s
Requiem Mass are Helen Boatwright, Merete Bekkelund, Warren Hoffer and Laurence Bogue.
Lukas Foss will conduct both
performances, scheduled for Sunday, Dee. 3 at 2:30 p.m. and
Tuesday, Dec. 5 at 8:30 p.m.

Symphony to
give concert

Mr. John P. Herling, Assistant Director of Libraries, stated:
“No fines are charged at Lockwood. Students are charged a stiff
fee only if they fail to return a book which is needed by another
library patron or if they do not return a book at the end of the
semester. The fee—$20.00—is set high enough to ensure the return
of a book so that another member of the University community
The Amherst Symphony Orwho needs it may have it. The facts are that the library does not chestra, currently in its twentywant the money and rarely must impose the penalty. Our aim is second season, will appear in
to provide the library user with the book he needs when he needs it. concert Sunday.
If, for valid reasons, a student is unable to return a book on time,
Under the direction of Joseph
the penalty is abrogated.
the program will in“Harriman Reserve Library has only 2-hour, overnight and three Wincenc,
clude Mendelssohn's “Overture
day loans. Here a 25f per hour fine is charged to ensure the prompt Athalia,”
Tchaikovsky’s “Capricreturn of these books that are mainly required reading for large
cio Italien,” Verdi’s grand march
classes. The length, of the loan period is clearly stated in the back
from “Aida” and selections from
of all reserve books.
“Of Thee I Sing” by Gershwin.
"Health Sciences and Science and Engineering Library have a Lyric soprano, Marjorie
Gordon,
two and three week loan period, respectively. Both libraries charge
is also featured in the concert.
a fine of five cents a day. All books issued in all libraries are
“She Has Everything" by Dimitri
clearly marked with the date due; so there should be no confusion Mitropoulos
and “Fantastic” by
because of lack of uniformity, which, in itself, is no particular virtue. Thomas Schippers
will also be
“It is important for all library users to remember that in any presented.
heavily used library the chances of a book in great demand being
The concert will be held at
on the shelf at a given time are small. If a book you need is not
Sweet Home Senior High School.
on the shelf ask the librarians to locate it for you,”

Diaries.”

The

falo Philharmonic Orchestra for
at Kleinhans Music
Hall next week.
two

And then?

And then?

And then you unleash it.

SPRITE! It fizzes! It roars! It bubbles with
good cheer!
Heads turn. Whisperings.
"Who's that strangely
fascinating student with the arch smile.And what's
in that curious green bottle that's making such
a racket?"
And you've arrived!
The distinctive taste and
ebullient character of Sprite has set you apart.
You're somebody. uh..,uh, whoever-you-are.
SPRITE. SO TART AND
TINGLING. WE JUST COULDN'T

KEEP IT

QUIET.

�Friday, December 1, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* El*v*n

Sportin' Life

the spectrum of

by Bob Woodruff

oris

Sporti

Praised

football scores!

Bulls to open frosh, varsity basketball
season against Canisius and Toronto
The State University of Buffalo varsity and freshman
basketball teams will open the 1967-1968 season with home
games in Clark Gym tonight. The freshmen will host the
Baby Griffins of Canisius in the preliminary contest, the
game beginning at 6 p.m.
At the center position will be
The Bulls’ varsity squad
freshman, Brian Shaw, who
will host the Toronto Blues in astands
six feet six-inches tall. He
event
of
the
douthe major
was selected as a league all-star
bleheader, the game time and as a Metro-Toronto all-star, in
his 1st season of high school basscheduled for 8:30 p.m.
Those students

wishing entry

to the games will use the girls’
entrance to Clark Gymnasium at
the south side of the building facing Hayes Hall. Those holding
tickets purchased at the ticket
sale office will use the ticket office entrance for their admission
to the contests. This same procedure will be followed throughout the basketball season with all
home games played in Clark Gym.

Tickets for the games at Memorial Auditorium can be obtained by showing an ID card at
the ticket office and by paying
the price of one dollar. All other
tickets will be sold at the regular
S2.25 price. The ticket office advises that if students wish to obtain good seats in the browns and
blues, they should come early and
pick up their order. Tickets for
non-fee paying students for games
in Clark Gym will be sold for one
dollar at the ticket office.

Toronto rebuilds
Coach John McManus of the Toronto Blues will have a rebuilding year in front of him but will
have some promising freshmen
playing for him this year. Canadian basketball rules allow a college team to use freshmen as
well as post graduate students on
the varsity roster.

Bruce Dempster, a six-foot twoinch guard, will be one of the returning lettermen from last season. He averaged 12.5 points per
conference game and was the
third highest scorer for Toronto
last season. Mark White will probably be the other starting guard,
but he bad little experience with
the club last season.

seven sophomores and

ing factor in that game. Last season the Knights had the same advantage and defeated the Bulls by
17 points, 68,-51. The sports information center at Gannon figures
that there is a definite lack of experience and a rigorous schedule

behind them, and these factors
might have an effect on their
game play.

The Knights finished up last
season with an 18-9 record in
what was supposed to be a rebuilding year for them and then
went on to a post-season tournament. Three starters who return
from that squad are: Ron Johnson, a six foot six inch forward;
Don Ruminski, a six foot six inch
guard, and Larry Daly, a six foot

Gannon will face such powers
as St. Bonaventure, Akron, Cheyney State and Loyola of Baltimore as well as traditional rivals
Steubenville, Youngstown and Alliance Colleges.

Joe Peeler
starting at guard
Bulls' starting lineup
The Bulls will start John Pier!
and Joe Peeler at the guard positions, center John Jekeliek and
forwards Ed Eberle and either
Bob Nowak or Doug Bernard.
Guard Joe Rutkowski was injured
during the practice sessions and

will be seeing little action in the
first two games.

Bob Nowak

excellence.
This year's freshman learn is the first yearling club to boast
25 full scholarship Student athletes. The quality of its personnel
is rivaled only by (he Bulls' 1964 freshman team as the best to
enter this University,
Running backs Mike Nixon and John Faller are two of the
most complete football players to make tracks on Rotary Field.
Ed Perry is the heir apparent to Mick Murtha's quarterback post
when the blond bomber graduates in 1969. The pass catching
talents of Dick Ashley and Chuck Drankoski are matched by the
receiving antics of frosh split end Joe Zelmanski.
Barry Atkinson lived up to his preseason press clippings as an
outstanding college tackle, and Joe Moresco sports a “can't miss”
label as a defensive back.
If the funds exist, Coach Urich will be able to continue to bring
in a full complement of student athletes for ensuing seasons.
Scouting the greatest sources of football talent, Pennsylvania
and Ohio, Coach Urich’s staff will be developing finer and finer
prospects for competition at Buffalo,
A word about Urich.
If the good “Doctor” may be referred to as a piece of property,
he is one of the most valuable football men in the country. Rumors
persist that he and his entire staff arc ready to pack up and leave
because of the pressing financial situation at the school, At this
point, opinions of this sort are still speculative, and Doc’s recruiting
efforts show no sign of a slackening in his coaching efforts. Urich
has another year remaining on his three year contract, and by
then the questions of fiscal support will be settled, crystallizing the
Bulls’ chances of continuing their climb to the highest ranks of
Eastern football
If somebody throws the athletic department a
curve and wrecks the program, we'll have second rate athletics
at a first rate University. Pity.
But as the book closes on the 1967 season, there is an air of

optimism among those concerned with the Bulls’ football fortunes.
It may be a bit premature and unfounded, but it does exist.
What may happen in the next ten months between football
seasons’may have more of an effect on the Bulls’ future than their
gridiron heroics of the season past.
Unfortunately, we can’t even get out and cheer.

SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)—Negro athletes split Saturday
over a proposed black boycott of the 1968 Olympic Games.
Among those who vowed to pass up the Olympic competition at Mexico City was track star Tommie Smith, who
holds or shares nine world records in the sprints.

Others, such as sprinter Charley
Greene, said that first of all they
With freshmen allowed to play
were Americans and would com
varsity ball, two rangy men could pete for the United States.
fill the gap in the starting cast
The boycott plan was formufor the Golden Knights. Glen lated last Thursday at a meeting
Summers and Al Chrisman, both in Los Angeles of 50 to 60
Negro athletes. The organizer of
six feet seven inches tall, have
the protest is Harry Edwards,
shown good moves underneath Negro professor of sociology at
and could provide the Golden San Jose California State College
ones of Coach John “Denny" and a former athlete. Edwards
Bayer with the needed scoring said he had the assurances of
“many athletes” that they would
and rebound punch. Other freshgo along with his plan to dramamen on the bench will be John tize the protest against racial
Wassell (six feet seven inches), discrimination.
Steve Young (six feet seven
Smith was the most outspoken
inches) and Tom Frazier (six feet of the track stars who said they
would not compete at Mexico
four inches).

may start as forward

Kent State at Rotary Field almost three months before. In between
these glorious victories, Coach Urieh's squad split eight games, a
record which included four losses in six road contests.
The end of the beginning is near.
Providing that the gods on Mount Albany remain in seclusion
and do no more to menace further the Bulls’ football program,
this institution may begin to make real strides toward athletic

Negro athletes divided on proposed
boycott of '68 Olympics in Mexico

guard.

City.
“Winning gold medals for a
country where I don’t have my
freedom is irrelevant,” Smith said
lacino, Ken Glassmacher, Rich at Los Angeles.
Uritus, Stan Herring and Joe
“So far I have not won my freeGlassmacher. The Gannon roster dom. I will not turn back from
sports two seniors, one junior, my decision.”
Returning lettermen expected
to see action are Jim Lee, Sam

The Bulls’ football season ended as it had begun.

Buffalo splashed past Colgate as brilliantly as they had crunched

Better competition

The Knights will have an overall height advantage over the
Bulls which could be the decid-

3015.
Kansas in turn shutout the lumbering Cornhuskers from Nebraska, 100. Nebraska wisely went West to mortify the University of
Washington, 17-7,
The Huskies though were more than a match for Oregon State
and nipped them 13-6. Oregon State has merely beaten Southern
California, Purdue and UCLA.
Any questions?

six fresh

Returning to one of the forward positions will be six foot
one-inch Avro Neidre who averaged 7.9 points per game in his
first season with the Blues. Six
foot two inch Mark Slater, who
played offensive end for the varsity football team, is slated to see
a lot of action at the forwartf position along with returning letterman Ron Voake.

at 7:30 p.m.

the logic of comparative

of Buffalo Bulls are among the country's top five gridiron powers,
if not the entitled claimant to the national crown.
Way back in September, the Bulls clobbered Kent State in
the season’s opener, 30-6. The Golden Flashes recovered enough
from this pummeling to knock off Ohio University, 2114. Football
fans recall that little Ohio U. upset Big Eight contender Kansas,

men

ketball in the 1966-67 season. To
spell Shaw, Coach McManus will
use John Hadden, a six foot seven-inch letterman who averaged
10.3 points in four games of conference play.

The varsity Bulls will host
the Gannon -Knights tomorrow
evening in the first game of a
doubleheader at the auditorium.
Canisius College will oppose Fairfield in the second contest. The
Bulls’ game is scheduled to start

Editor

be those who believe in

Alcindor favors boycott
Lining up with Smith in the
protest

move

were Lee Evans,

another San Jose sprinter, and
Lew Alcindor, the seven foot, one
inch basketball whiz at UCLA.
In 1964 there were 50 Negroes

among the 362 U.S. athletes at
the games in Tokyo.
Americans captured 126 medals,
with 22 of them going to Negro
athletes. Six Negroes won gold
medals.
Bob Hayes, Ralph Boston, Rafer

Johnson and old Jesse Owens,
four Negro track stars who know
what the Olympics movement is
all about, took exception to
the

proposed
year's game.

boycott

of next

“1 don’t know what they arc
doing,” said Hayes, the man who
won two gold medals in the 1964
Olympics at Tokyo. “I don’t know
what’s going on. I don’t think any
sort of problem would have kept
me from participating."
Boston, one of the world’s all-

time long jump kings who at age
30 is still hoping to make the
1968 U S. team for the games in
Mexico City, was even more puzzled by the movement of a group
of Negroes. The group is seeking
to keep every Negro athlete in
the country out of the competition to pick next year's team.

Boston condemns Edwards
"This whole thing has been
picked up by people who are not
athletes,” said Boston referring
to assistant sociology professor
Harry Edwards of San Jose State,

who called some 50 to 60 Negro
athletes to a meeting of the black
youth conference in Los Angeles
Thursday.

Rafcr Johnson, the nation’s
greatest decathlon star and now
a newsman for the National

Broadcasting Company, attended
the black youth conference, but
as a reporter and not as an

athlete.

Don Newcombc, former Brook-

lyn Dodgers pitching star, said
the boycott would hurt rather
than help the Negro cause.
‘T’ve traveled to many nations
and I don’t know of any other
country as great as the United
States,” he said, adding Negroes
shouldn’t use their race as a

crutch.”

�Pag* Twahf*

Th

a

'

•

Spectrum

Friday, December 1, 1947

Giants picked to win over Browns
in NFL game of the week, 34-24
&gt;y Roach N. Mantis
Spectrum Staff Reporter

The big NFL game this week takes place in Cleveland’s
municipal stadium. There the mighty Browns, led by fleet-

footed Leroy Kelly and rubber-armed, no-legs Ryan, face
the new breed: up-and-coming New York Giants.
The Giants are piloted by Fran Tarkenton who in the
last weeks has begun to establish his team as a leading
contender for the Century Division title.

|l

*

With receivers such as Homer
Jones. Aaron Thomas, Bobby
Crespino. and handyman Joe Morrison, he has a lot of talent to
throw to. Ernie Koy, though hobbled by an ankle injury, is running well this year and young
Randy Minnear, brought up from
Westchester, has already filled
part of the gap left by the loss
of their fine running back, Tuck-

...i

er Fredrickson.

\

But the Browns are a team to
be reckoned with. After their
mortalizing defeat at the hands

—Yat«»

Souped up

Bulls

Bulls' defensive standouts Tom
Hurd (left) and Mike Luzny
towel off mud-splattered faces
during Buffalo offensive drive.

of

Bulls shut out Colgate
in football finale, 31-0
The State University of Buffalo wound up its 1967 football
season with a splash, both figura-

tively and literally last Saturday
at Rotary Field
The Bulls
whipped Colgate 31-0 on a field
that resembled chocolate pudding
with a whipped cream topping.
The pudding was mud and water,
up to six inches deep in spots;
the whipped cream was snow.
Only miraculous work by the
ground crew enabled the game to
be played. During the contest,
the sun was out, it rained, it

hailed and it snowed.
Despite all this, Buffalo did

an amazing job, rolling up 31
points and gaining 300 yards
rushing through the goo. The
Bulls fumbled only twice and had
TD runs of 55 and 64 yards by
Pat Patterson and Dennis Mason.
Colgate, whose attack depends on
the outside speed of Ron Burton,
never got untracked and wound
up with a total offense of 79
yards.
The State University of Buffalo
winds up with a 64 season, 6-2
against comparable teams. It was
a successful year and the Bulls
did much better than the “experts” predicted. One esteemed
publication had Buffalo 0-9-1. The
fact that the results exactly
matched Playboy’s prediction
shows that the players know what
magazines to read!
The season saw several records
established, Pat Patterson, the
sensational soph tailback, set a
single season rushing record with
666 yards, getting 102 last Saturday. Lee Jones broke the alltime career rushing mark with a
total of 1570 yards. He got 98 on
Saturday as Coach “Doc” Urich
let him go when he knew he was
close to the record. Both former
rushing marks were held by Willie Evans. Jones, one of the great
Buffalo fullbacks, also set an alltime scoring mark with 174
points. He set the single season
mark in 1966 with 96 points.

Dranko smashes marks

Chuck Drankoski, the Bulls'
fine split end, set three marks.
His 37 catches and 439 yards receiving were both new records,

and his nine receptions in the

Boston College contest also set
a new standard. Dick Ashley held
the first two and Dr. lid Gicewicz, now the team physician,
had the single game mark. Bob
Embow, an excellent kicker,
broke both career and season

field goal marks with six and may
be the highest scoring kicker
in the East this season. Joe Oscoda) had the old marks.
Quarterback Mick Murtha also broke the
career passing mark held by
John Stofa. Mick has a total of
2169 yards with a year to go.
As a team, Buffalo really had
a potent rushing attack, averaging over 195 yards a game. Patterson, Jones and Ken Rutkowski
account for over 1600 yards rushing among them. The Bulls were
expected to pass more than they
did, due to a young offensive line,
but Buffalo got their running
game established in the opener
and never lost it, running over
twice as much as passing. No one
stopped the Bulls on the ground
all season. Defensively, Buffalo
was really tough against the

rush Only Virginia managed to
get
really
ground. The
got a total
yards against

yardage

mighty Green Bay

they

bounced back to defeat Washington last week.
Leroy Kelly, one of the best

on

the

other nine teams
of less than 700
Ted Gibbons and
company. Buffalo’s big problem
all year was against the pass and
they ran into some good ones.
Three of their four defeats were
directly attributable to a leaky
pass defense.

Holes

to plug
Big holes to fill in 1968 on the
offense will be to replace Lee
Jones and Rick Wells in the

runners in the league, can easily
break away on long runs from
scrimmage and his partner in the
backfield, Ernie Green, is also
a fine sprinter and receiver. Both
play a major part in the Brown
offensive unit.
The aerial attack is highlighted
by the Ryan to Gary Collins combination. Collins, having an offyear. is still one of the best.
Paul Warfield, at flanker, is always a threat in the clutch.

Giant defense improved

The Giant defense is rapidly
improving as the weeks go by.
Their big front four of Colvin,
Condren. LurUumer, and Katcavage has been gaining experience
and seem to be pinning the opposing quarterback rather than
fighting the offensive linemen.
The defensive secondary, revamped from last season, has improved lately and made a fine
showing last week against the
Eagles

But this brings us to the end,
our hopeful prediction.

him, the tailbacks wouldn't have
gotten much yardage on the option plays the Bulls ran so well.
Wells did everything. He is
fourth in rushing, second in pass
receiving, leads in kickoff returns. and was an inspirational
leader Rick at flanker this year,
gained well over a mile for the
Bulls during his career. Rissell
and Finochio played alongside
each other at guard and tackle
for four years and much of the

yardage the Bulls got was through
the holes they opened up. Whenever it was tough that was where
the Bull backs went, behind

Finochio and Rissell.

(Cont'd on Pg. 13)

Cleveland is good, but not good
enough. The Giants should take
an early lead and hold it throughout the game. Final score, New
York Giants 34, Cleveland Browns
24.
Baltimore 21, Dallas 20: The
Colts will rely on their hardnosed
defense and the superlative play
of Johnny Unitas. Cowboys could
rate an upset but their quarterbacking situation is still uncertain. Home crowd gives this one
to the Colts.
Green Bay 24, Minnesota 14:
The Vikings are always bad news

for the Packers, but the Lombardi
men will be sky high for this
one. A healthy Bart Starr is the
key factor in what will be a hard
fought, rugged game.
Los Angeles 45, Atlanta 3: The
Rams smell a possible first place
tie in the west Coastal Division.
The virtually impregnable defense of the Rams, led by their
fabulous front four, should handle the fledgling Falcons easily.

The Rams could name their own
score in this one.
St. Louis 28, New Orleans 14:
Cards get back to their winning
ways in this contest. Saints’ leaky
secondary will provide no contest for young Jim Hart, Cards
must stack the deck if their season's finale against Cleveland is
to mean anything.
Chicago 24, San Francisco 21:
The Bears are getting stronger
as the season progresses. With
Jack Concannon’s passing steadily
improving and the rejuvenated
Gale Sayers, the Bears should
get by the rapidly fading 49’ers,

who have lost their last five.

AFL
New York 28, Denver 13: The
Jets have an extra week to rest
their injuries. Matt Snell should
be running that much better and

Old Joe Willie is still the best

passer in the AFL. Denver looked
very good on Thanksgiving day
but still was defeated by mighty

San Diego.
Kansas City 21, Buffalo 17: The
Chiefs, although eliminated from
the western division race, will
nonetheless happily accept a victory from the charitable Bills.
The Bills are looking for a high
draft choice and can’t afford a
victory.
Oakland 24, San Diego 23: The
Chargers, with a home crowd
cheering them on, could pull an
upset in this tense, hard hitting
match. The uncertainity of Lance
Alworth, plus the fact that the
Raiders are moving towards their
first western division title, makes
the Raiders a slight favorite however. Oakland will rely on their
stingy defense and Bills’ reject
Daryle Lamonica to put the damper on San Diego’s title hopes.
Houston 24, Miami 10: The
rapidly improving Dolphins, led
by their rookie quarterback Bob
Griese, will provide stiff opposition for the young Oilers, the
number two team in the East.
Houston, with their high scoring
defense and bruising backs, does
not give games away like youknow-who.

Bulls hockey club will play host to
Syracuse and R.I.T. this weekend
by

Rich

5pe&lt;trum

Baumgarten

Staff

Reporter

The powerful State University
of Buffalo hockey club returns

to the ice tomorrow night. The
“rinkmen" take on the Syracuse
Orange in an important Finger
Lakes League game slated for
a 10 p.m. faceoff at the Amherst

backfield, Mike Rissell and Jim
Finochio up front. Jones has
Recreational Center.
scored 28 touchdowns in the last
two years and gained almost 1000
The high-scoring Bulls, sporting
yards in the same period. He may a 3-1 record, seem destined to
well be the highest scoring col- break all Buffalo scoring marks
legian in the nation over a two before the season's end.
year period, at least in TDs.
Despite these heroics, his blocking may be missed the most. He
is truly one of the great blockers
in college football and without

NFL

Washington 24, Philadelphia 17:

The Eagles poor secondary was
devastated by the Giants last
week and will be under fire again
this week. Ole Jelly Belly Jurgenson is the leading passer in
the league and though the Red
skins are coming off a tough defeat at the hands of the Browns
they still should be up.
Detroit 20, Pittsburgh 14: This
game should be advertised as the
battle of the have-nots, Detroit
has steadily gone downhill since
the beginning of the season and
the Steelers still aren’t plausible,
Detroit, the winner, by no fault
of their own.

The Bulls already own 13-1 and
14-3 pastings of Buffalo State,
plus a 7-1 conquest of Brockport
State, highlighted by flashy Lome
Rombough's 5 goals! The only
setback for the Blue and White
came in the form of a 4-2 loss to
the Nichols alumni in a nonleague contest.
General Manager Howie Plaster
and second-year coach Trey Coley
recognize this year’s club as at
least an 80*7- improvement over
last year’s 7-7-1 squad.
’’We’re starting to play as a
unit.” confides Coach Coley,
“We’re cutting down mistakes
and playing aggressive hockey.”
Commenting on Buffalo’s only
loss to the Nichols alumni, Coach
Coley pointed out: “We should
have won that game. Their goaltender Howie Saperston was mag-

nificent. We were robbed of at
least six goals on four shots that
hit the goalpost and two that hit
Saperston in the head.”

Rombough leads
Lome Rombough, recently elec-

ted captain by his teammates,
leads the Buffalo scoring parade
with 9 goals, closely followed by
Jimmy McKowen who has dented
the nets six times.

Coach Coley sees McKowen's
quick start as partially the result of a position change which
shifted Jimmy from a center last
year to wing slot this year.
Billy Newman and Frank Lewis,
two newcomers, are also among
the Bulls’ leading scorers with
five and four goals respectively,
while John Watson has served notice with a three goal outburst
against Buffalo State that he
should be a high scorer this season.

The Bulls’ steam-rolling offense
averagipg nine goals a game is
complemented by a hard-rock defense led by Fred Bourgemeister
and Bill DeFoe, and anchored
by all-league goalie Jim Hamilton
in the nets. So far this season
the "stingy” Hamilton has al
lowed only nine goals in four
games.

Len DePrima and Daryl Pugh,

couple of Buffalo hopefuls,
continue to be impressive with
their heads-up play. Boston of
the National Hockey League isn’t
the only team with a Bobby Orr.
State University of Buffalo has
a

one too.
The Blue and White’s Bobby
Orr has been a consistent per-

former and has helped the Buffalo cause with two goals.

RIT invades
After playing Syracuse Saturday night, the Bulls will be home
again on Sunday for what should
be one of their roughest games of
the season.
The opposition will be Rochester Institute of Technology, the
same team which the Bulls
knocked out of tournament play
last spring. This year RIT comes
to town undefeated and with a
commitment for big-time hockey.

RIT’s coach, Jim Hefner, has
been quoted as saying that his
team will run State University

of Buffalo off the ice on Sunday
night.

Needless to say, the Bulls trying to stay on top of the ten-team
Finger Lakes Hockey League will
be ready. A reminder that both
weekend games at the Amherst
Recreational Center start at 10
p.m. sharp.

�Friday,

Decamber 1, 1*47

Th

Head Coach 'Serf Sa

•

Bulls—Colgate

Expect exciting basketball

(Cont'd

Pift Thirteen

Spectrum

from Pg.

.

.

.

12)

Lose Gibbons
Defensively the giant loss is

Ted Gibbons, defensive tackle.
Gibbons, selected for the North

by Dr. L. T. Serfustini
Special to the Spectrum

the bell is set to ring.
These six weeks have passed rapidly, with two and a half to
three hours a day devoted by the team to conditioning, fundamentals,
developing our offense and defense, installing counters to the various
offenses and defenses well be meeting and to all important decisions
that must be made in selecting a squad. tFrom an original squad
of 30 our forces have been reduced to 16.)
later,

Interspaced in our practice sessions have been two scrimmage
games with Canisius College and St. Bonavenlure University. These
scrimmage games proved to be a fine test for our young ball club.
Against Canisius we were pitted against a team that believes
in a rugged defense and a highly disciplined offense. Our back court
men (Peeler, Fieri, Rutkowski, Shea, and Williams) were put to the
test of protecting the ball against this pressure. Our team defense
held against an offense that would only take the high percentage
shots.

St. Bonaventure presented the quick guards, strong forwards with
clever offensive moves and massive size around the basket with the
appearance of sophomore six-foot 11-inch 260-pound Bob Lanier.
This scrimmage exposed our team to a player who can be one of the
finest big men in the college game today. (1 believe there are a few
others—Lew Alcindor of U.C.L.A. to name one.)

Virtually every team we meet this season will field a front
line that will be taller and heavier than our front line. To equalize
this decided advantage of our opponents will be a constant challenge
to our team.
Working against Bob Lanier was a real lesson in learning to
cope with the problem of size. This challenge of equalizing height
and weight will have to be met by John Jekielek. Ed Eberle, Bob
Nowak, Jon Culbert, Wayne Betts and Doug Bernard.
As our sophomores gain in experience we may eventually have
the size to equal that of our opponents.—Jack Scherrer at six-feet
four-inches—Joe Foster at six-feet four-inches—and John Vaughan
at six-feet nine-inches. John Vaughan has improved greatly during
the past six weeks and is making his presence felt. John’s musculature must catch up with the skeletal system be now possesses.
Time, effort, and concentration to develop speed, strength and

endurance is needed here.
Regardless of the number of hours spent in practice and playing
scrimmage games
the final development of the team can only be
achieved through actual game experience. In other words, the fine
timing so vital to the game of basketball can only be realized in situ
ations where the end results are measured in terms of a victory
or defeat.
The curtain goes up today against Toronto in Clark Gymnasium,
and continues the following night, Dec. 2, against Gannon College (a
team that beat us by 17 points last year) in Memorial Auditorium.
Canisius will meet Fairfield in the second game of this double—

header.
We have a team that will be exciting to watch, a team that shows
a potential for balanced scoring, a team with good over all speed and
a team that is aggressive.
The big question to be answered
will we be able to control
the boards? Controlling the defensive boards is important if we are to
fast break and controlling the offensive boards is the only way to
guarantee a consistent high shooting percentage.
We’ll be looking forward to seeing you all in Clark Gymnasium
Friday and Memorial Auditorium on Saturday.

in America at his position. Agile,
unbelievably tough, quick, with
150r ; desire, he can not really
be replaced. At 235 pounds, he
can hold his own with any tackle
in the country and some pro
team will be missing a bet if they
don't give him a shot. Also gone
will be two linebackers who have
given yeoman service. Irv Wright
has been a starter for two years
and Rod Rishel will be a three
year letter-winner. Two defensive backs, Tom Hurd and Tom
Hoke, also go off the starting
unit. Hurd led the teams in punt
returns and tied the career record for pass interceptions with
12. Hoke was one of the hardest
tacklcrs on the squad. Defensive
end Dennis Brisky, also a three
letter winner, leaves a big hole.
These are the big spots that
have to be filled for the 1968
season. It will be up to the frosh
and present members of the
squad to come up with the answers. The 1968 schedule shows
Iowa State, Massachusetts, and
Northern Illinois as new teams.
Massachusetts has been on the
schedule before, with the series

standing at 1-1. Massachusetts
won here 24-22 and the Bulls
won at Amherst 18-6. The complete schedule follows:
1968 Football Schedule

Sept. 14 at Iowa State
Sept. 21 at Kent State
Sept. 28 Massachusetts
Oct. 5 at Boston College

Oct. 12 Delaware
Oct. 19 Villanova
Oct. 26 Holy Cross
Nov.
Nov,

2 at Temple
9 at Northern Illinois

Nov. 23 at Boston University

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A word of thanks to those
of you who will pay 90%
of the cost of the New
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who will contribute 25%
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of winning team.
2. Entries must be postmarked by Friday before game,
received by Friday after game.
3. Five winners per school will be determined each week
in random drawings from among all correctly answered
entries. In the event that there are no correct entries,
winners will be determined by random drawings from
among all entries received.
4. All winners will be included in final sweepstakes in
which 25 winners of trips for two persons will be determined by random drawings. (All judging is being done
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5. Contest is for full-time undergraduates and graduate
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�Friday, December 1, 1947

The Spectrum

Page Fourteen

Entertainment
Calendar

OFFICIAL BULLETIN
The Official Bulletin is an authorized
of the State University of

advised and registered through
the School of Nursing.

publication

responsibility.

Not Nces-sJ-.iould

appointments at the scheduled
time, or who do not keep them
when made, will be required to
register in Clark Gym on Registration Day, Jan. 22, 1968.

be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to 114
Hayes Hall, attention Mrs. Fisher, before
2:00 p.m. the Friday prior to the week
of publication. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication.

Pre-Registration,
sophoall
mores, juniors and seniors—You
can pick up master cards and
resignation material in Diefendort Reception Area, Room 114
through Dec. 15.

General Notices

Freshman Pre-Registration is
now in progress for next semester. Those students whose last
names begin with N-Z may sec
their advisers, plan their programs and register for courses
through Dec. 15.
—

O.T. students will pick up registration material and make their
appointment in Diefendorf 314.

P. T. students will pick up registration material and make their

Students must make appointments with the University College Receptionist in Diefendorf
114 one week in advance: At this
time the receptionist will give the
student the subsequent registration procedures.

the

appointments in
Therapy Department,

Physical
264 Win-

spear.

Nursing students are advised
and registered through the School

of Nursing.
Juniors and seniors in Business
Administration, Engineering, Education, Medical Technology, and
Pharmacy, please refer to the Divisional Office.

O. T. students will pick up their
registration material and make
their appointments in the Physical Therapy Department, 264
Winspear. Nursing students are

Placement Interviews
Please contact the University
make appointments

and obtain
further information concerning
the following interviews:
Dec. 1: Diamond Alkali, The
Travelers Insurance Co., Speer
Carbon Co., Marlin-Rockwell, Div.
of TRW, Inc., Olin Chemicals,
The Trane Co. and Cornell University Graduate School.
Dec. 4: Ford Motor Co., City of
Detroit Civil Service, Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co.,
Harrison Radiator Division, GMC,
U. S. Navy—Naval Ship Systems
Command, Niagara Falls Board of
Education, and Northport Union
Free School Dist. No. 4.
Dec. 5: Civil Aeronautics Board,
Shell Companies, Link Group,
GPI, Starpoint Central School
Dist.
Dec. 5 6: IBM Corp.
Dec. 6: New York Central Rail
road and Griffis Air Force Base,
Dec. 7; Union Carbide—Mining
Metals Division, The
Bendix
Corp. (Electrical Components Division), International Paper Co.,
Republic Steel Corp., South Huntington Schools, Kenmore Public
Schools and SUNY at Binghamton.
General Announcements

Dec. 7

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“Music and Tech-

LECTURE:

Troupe, Kleinhans, 8:30 p.m.
PLAY: ‘Endgame,” Studio Two,
Lafayette and Hoyt, 8:30 p.m.
CONCERT: The Lovin’ Spoonful, Niagara University Student
Center, 8 p.m.
FILM: “Black Orpheus,” Norton Conference Theater.
CONCERT: “Music from Africa,” Student Union, Buff. State,
8 p.m.

PLAY: “Married Alive,” Vindent Price, Patricia Rutledge,
O’Keefe Center, Toronto, 8:30
p.m., through Dec. 16.

TV PLAY: “Dublin One,” five
short stories by James Joyce,
Channel 17, 8:30 p.m.
EXHIBIT; 31st Annual Western New York Exhibition, Al-

p.m.

bright-Knox

Gallery,

through

Dec. 10.
Saturday, Dec. 2

CONCERT: The Four Seasons,
Eastman
Theater, Rochester,
8:15 p.m.
CONCERT: Charles Rosen, pianist, Buffalo Philharmonic, Buffalo
Erie County Library, 3 p.m.
&amp;

Sunday, Dec. 3:
CONCERT: Charles Rosen, pian-

5:

Tuesday, Dec.

CONCERT: Charles Rosen, pianist, Buffalo Philharmonic, Kleinbans, 8:30 p.m.
FILM: “Ballad of a Soldier,”
Norton Conference Theater, 7

JAZZ LAB: Jazz Lab Band,
Fillmore Room, 3:30-6 p.m.
Wednesday, Dec. 6:

CONCERT: Creative Associate
Concert III, Norton Conference

Theater, 8:30

p.m.

TV SERIES: Glyndebourne Opera Festival, Channel 17, 9 p.m,
Thursday, Dec. 7:
FILM: “Sound of Trumpets,
Norton Conference Theater.

CONCERT: Bernard Kruysen
baritone, Kleinhans, 8:30 p.m.
Friday, Dec. 8;
OPERA:

Opera

performance,

ist, Buffalo Philharmonic, Kleinbans, 2:30 p.m.
POP CONCERT: Amherst Symphony Orchestra, Sweet Home
Senior High, 3 p.m.

of Lucretia,” Albright
Knox Art Gallery, 8:30 p.m. also

Monday, Dec. 4:

Saturday, Dec. 9:

FILM:

“Look Back in Anger,”

Capen 140, 8 p.m

FILM: “Loneliness of the Long
Distance Runner,” Circle Art, 2
p.m. and 4 p.m. through Dec. 1.
LECTURE: “New Dimensions in
Sculpture,” Dr. Udo Kultermann,
Albright-Knox Auditorium, 8:30
p.m.

“Rape

Dec. 9.

TV PLAY: “The Successor
17, 8:30 p.m.

Channel

CONCERT: Ravi Shankar, East

man Theater, Rochester, 8:15
CONCERT:

Dave

Kleinhans, 8:30 p.m.
PLAY: “Androcles and
Lion,” Studio Arena, 2 p.m.

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-

PERSONAL

SHALOM! For gems from the
call 075-4265 day or night.

male student
campus.

Call

Contact Mr.
Liquor Store,
834-2116.

immediately.
Gambacorta, Leo Simmons
Springville.
corner Main,

FOR
HALL- Friday-Safurday.

THINKING ABOUT going to Florida for
intersession?
DON'T!
Come
to
the
CONCORD. January 17-19 and have a blast.

RENT

692-6252.

BABY

Don't
ROOMMATES

share apartment
886-1783 after 5 p.m.

with

samp

ONE OR TWO roommates to share apart

Immediately

ROOMMATE FOR

spring semester. Campus
Manor Apartment, own bedroom, $50
per
month. Call 839-3846 after 5.
APARTMENTS WANTED

FURNISHED APARTMENT needed for spring

ment for

January.

Approximately 1200 delegates,
alumni participants, and observers

from all parts of the United
States and Canada will meet in
the Statler-Hilton Hotel for the
purpose of considering ways to
further strengthen the role of
college fraternities in the changing educational world of today
and the future.

In attendance will be deans,
academic officers, and prominent
educators from most of the largest
and many smaller higher educational institutions, as well as officers and alumni fraternity leaders and advisers, together with
hundreds of undergraduate delegates.

my

National

Interfraternity Conference incor
porating over 4000 individual
chapters on 487 college and university campuses.
Attendance is expected to be
the highest in the history of the

conference.
As a consultative body of the
general men’s fraternity systems
in American and Canadian institutions of higher learning, the National Interfraternity Conference
has been holding its annual meetings since its founding in 1909 for
self-examination and searching

for improved ways to strengthen

the relationship of fraternities
with the educational institutions
that harbor them.
Awards will be given for outstanding scholastic achievment
to undergraduate councils as well
as individual fraternity chapters.
Outstanding undergraduate l.F.C.
councils will also be recognized
for their accomplishments during
the past year from the standpoint
of unusual service to the community, campus, and implementation of

high fraternity

ideals.

Stricter policy

pa Phi's new Pan Hellenic Coun-

cil Rep. is Dyan Pctrella.

THE SPECTRUM
printed by

Partners' Press Inc.
,

ABGOTT i SMITH PRINTING
1381 Kenmoke Ave. (at Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

Whit*
Block
fallow

Fraternity and sorority information in The Spectrum will now
be limited to essential news. Emphasis will be placed on serious
achievements and developments
with less emphasis on parlies.

Pink
Navy

FUR-BLEND SWEATERS
Zip Bock, Slip Ovor

News items

or V Nock

Alpha Phi Delta, in conjunction
with the I.F.C., will hold a free
mixer in the Fillmore Room this
afternoon from 3 p in. to 6 p in.
Gamma Phi announces that

John Anderson is theirfl basketball coach . . Sigma Phi Epsilon
has captured the inter-fraternity
football championship . . Theta
Chi Fraternity welcomes its na
tional officials who are in town
for a conference. Rich Howell has
been named assistant basketball
coach.

ing and decorating the Woodlawn
Information Center as part of
their civic service project. The
Center, sponsored by the Community Aid Corps, contains books
which are used by the people in
the area. The pledges are sending
Christmas packages to the solSigma Kapdiers in Vietnam .

1086

ELMWOOD

WAGNER
Blvd. Mall
EYES

for a giant?

BOULEVARD MALL
CLARENCE MALL
NAME BRANDS
FOR MEN AND WOMEN

director and make

an appointment to see the man from Ford
when he visits your campus.
We could grow bigger together.

Jantzen's Casuals
Dexter Loafers
and Brogues
U.S. Ked

DATE OF VISITATION:
DECEMBER 4

Pappagallo

Viners Loafers
Bates Floaters
Florsheim
Eskiloo and
Campus Boots

X

and many other brands

It COOK TON1TE

CHICKEN
DELIGHT!
fHONE

|

—

834-MM

FtEE PtUVtUY

Jhicken Dinner
|

3168 Mom Sf

-

Lot* af

I
|
,

j

~j j
$1.49

forking^

The heer-runner wouldn t call quits
Wr hen his ship lloumleretl off St. Aloritz;
He cried, “Sink if we must.
It

only

just
That the captain go down witk kis Scklitz.
seems

{0
o 196/ Jos

Schhu Brewing Co. IMmvIm ind oihat am.

OPTICAL
TF 5 5526

EXAMINED

Closed Wednesdays

SfatA

Depends on the giant. If the
giant happens to be Ford Motor
Company, it can be a distinct
advantage. See your placement

AVE

GLASSES FITTED
Daily 11:30 «o 8:00
Sa*. 9:00 to 4:00

Your I.D. Card
is Worth 10% at

Whatsit like
to work

•

Poise’n ivy

837-9460.

student needs apart
Spectrum Box 7.

$Q 95

Monogram, 3 initials $2.SO

must be within

disatnce. Telephone
GRADUATE

It will be held in New York
City from Nov. 30 through Dec. 2.

They will represent 61 mem-

THE
who
handbag from 42 Acheson return con
tents (N.Z. passport vital) to candy counter
Norton Union. No questions asked. PLEASE
S. Harvie.
TWO KITTENS seeking a home. Call 8058374, will deliver,
BEGINNING TO ADVANCED skiers, avoid
left lines, ski weekends, some evenings,
student memberships available at $40.00
per season. Slightly higher rates for faculty
and staff. Mafteshorn Ski Club, Colden,
New York. For details, call Lou Flurry,
674-7410.
INTERSESSION
in Puerto Rico.
Check
dormitory or bulletin boards. For full
application
and
call
Andrew
information
Feldman, 885-4685.
KARATE and KungFu. Self defense insfruc
tions. Call . Prof. Wong. 852-9830 or
854-1850. 124 W. Chippewa St.
GUITARS: quality, used, flat top guitars
bought, sold, repaired.
(Martin, etc.)
D'Angelico strings, 874-0120 eves.

7553\

Sororities

Ho\y to make the most of the opportunities facing fraternities on the modern college campus today will be examined jointly by educators, political leaders, and prominent
businessmen at the 59th annual meeting of the National
Interfraternitv Conference.

ber organizations of the

removed

person

WOULD

FREE ROOM, board and compensation for
getting supper, etc. for widower. References. Kenmore bus, tel. 834-7903, 877-

FEMALE

me

MISCELLANEOUS

ROOMMATE wanted to share
furnished apartment three blocks from
Call Nancy or Ann, 837-9775.

bedrooms,

with

TERM papers 25c per page, ditto's
35c, envelopes $2.00 per hundred. Call
835-6897.

FEMALE

ment
with male student.
or January. Call 885-1975.

walk

Jim. Ronnie.

TYPING

campus.

semester. Two

marry

SITUATIONS WANTED

WANTED IMMEDIATELY-roommate, male15 minute walk from campus—$44.58 a
month per person, utilities included; 5
rooms and bath. Call 836-9956, ask for
Mike or John.
TWO BEDROOM furnished apartment, 15
minutes to campus. Male student, available 1-1-68. Call 837-8178.
ROOM ONLY-Male
wanted, near Main
and Ferry. Call 884-6097.

walking

JANE, please come

WANTED

to

GIRL

Jewish Bible

THE NAKED RUNNER is waiting sweetheart. I need you. Joe W.
EXAMS are
but don't let them
near,
hassle you. Get expert help in your
weak courses from SUBJECTPROFICIENCY.
Apply Spectrum, Box CZ.

-

by Elliot Stephan Rose

Trucking Co. Billing clerk
-7:30 p.m. Monday Fn

p.m

877-5111, Mr. Alan Hall,

11520.
-

Role in education will be studied

,

1966. Excellent
condition, blue, sun roof, white walls,
837-7790.
after
5.
Call
radio.

0rf,

Interfraternity Conference

THREE BEDROOM APT. or house, walking
distance campus. Lease by Jan. or Feb.
Call 883-7770.

FOR SALE

GREAT

Page Fifteen

The Spectrum

�Page Sixteen

Friday, December 1, 1967

The Spectrum

U.N. rejects Peking again
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y —The General
Assembly rejected a proposal to seat Communist China, returning the greatest votine margin in three ve.ars to keep the
lesein the United Nations,

It was the 17th straight time the Peking
regime had been turned away from the
United Nations by a decisive vote and

both the Peking and Formosa governments holding U.N. seats, was generally
believed to be the aim of that move.
The assembly voted 58-45, with 17 abstentions, to support Generalissimo Chiang
Kaishek’s government as China’s “rightful" representative.

marked the 18th consecutive year the
assembly refused to seat it in Nationalist
China’s place. No vote was taken in 1964.

The vote on the main issue, actually
presented as a resolution sponsored by
Albania and 11 other countries was to
oust the Nationalists and seat the Com-

The world parliament also rejected for
the second year a proposal for a study
group to work on the China representation issue. A “two China” solution, with

Not since the 57-41 vote in 1963 had
the margin been wider in favor of the
Formosa government.

munists.

Viet war escalation impending?
Robert S. McNamaWASHINGTON
ra’s impending resignation as defense secretary was greeted in Congress with caution, silence and expressed concern that
President Johnson might be planning a
major, pre election escalation of the Viet—

nam war.

Another NYET
for Reds

The scoreboard at the U.N. records the
45-58 vote against a 12-power proposal
submitted by Albania to unseal Nationalist China in favor of the Communist
China regime Tuesday. The 13-vote
margin was two voles wider than last
year.

DeGaulle blames U.S.
PARIS—Storms of protest against
French President Charles De Gaulle gathered in capitals from Jerusalem to Ottawa
early this week. It appeared almost everyone was angry with De Gaulle.
The French president managed to offend nearly all of France’s allies at a
news conference when he blamed the
United Stales for the Vietnam war and
Israel for the Middle East war; vetoed
Britain's bid for the Common Market
without mentioning the other five market
members; called for Quebec’s independence from Canada: attacked the American dollar, and called for a return to the
gold standard.
President De Gaulle’s news conference
touched off emergency cabinet meetings
in Jerusalem and Ottawa and a flood of
questions greeted British Prime Minister
Harold Wilson in the House of Commons

Tuesday.

Pearson blasts DeGaulle
In Ottawa, Canadian Premier Lester
Pearson said President De Gaulle’s comments on Canada and Quebec were an
"intolerable” intervention in Canada's
affairs.
But perhaps the sharpest criticism at
President De Gaulle came in Parts. The
influential newspaper Le Monde said De
Gaulle was a “Machievellian genius with
an insatiable lust for power.” It also
accused him of “anti-Semitism.”

for

war

Other French newspapers from the right
to the left in political shadings levelled
criticism at De Gaulle. Le Figaro said his

criticism of American involvement in Vietnam was unfair. President De Gaulle, as
usual, ignored criticism.

Wilt

not

withdraw

In London, Mr. Wilson told Parliament
that he would not withdraw Britain’s
application for membership in the Common Market because of President De
Gaulle’s veto. Mr. Wilson said Britain’s
application was a matter for all six Common Market members to decide and not
just France.
The Belgian government also rejected
President De Gaulle’s veto, repeating that
all six Common Market members must

—

—

But the White House denied that his
departure would mean any change in the
conduct of the war.
A spokesman for the World Bank said
the 20 executive directors of the international lending institution met on “routine matters” and that no formal meeting
had been called to vote on a successor to
bank President George D. Woods.
Also unsettled were questions of the
exact timing of McNamara’s move and of
his successor at the Pentagon. Gov. John
Connally of Texas said there was no truth
to rumors he was the President’s choice.

—DPI Telephoto

tional lending institution “wasn’t a question that he submitted his resignation.”
Sen. Kennedy referred to “news reports” he had heard during the day, including one that McNamara was “transferred
I don’t know what the world
to the World Bank,”
would be
He was joined by Sen. George Murphy,
R-Calif., who said the nation had the right
to know “under what circumstances . .
how this was done.”

Speculates on dates
Speculation in informed circles said
McNamara, who now receives $35,000 a
year, would assume the $40,000 tax-exempt post at the World Bank at any time
between early spring and late next year,
after the presidential election in Novem-

Expressed concern
Others expressed concern that Presi
dent Johnson’s proposal of McNamara for
the new post might foreshadow a major,

pre-election
war.

escalation

of the

Sen, Robert F, Kennedy, D-N.Y., who
recently has voiced serious reservations
over the U. S. role in Vietnam, had no
comment.
After the news spread throughout official quarters Monday, Robert Kennedy
went to the Pentagon late in the day and
conferred with McNamara for about an

hour. Neither men’s aides would say what
was discussed.

ber.

Will await explanation

The administration was highly unlikely
to make announcement until the bank acts
on the nomination submitted last week.
Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield expressed concern that a powerful
voice of military restraint in Vietnam
would be missing from the President’s
inner circle of advisers. McNamara, he
told newsmen, is “the one we can least
afford to have leave.”
“I hope his successor will be somewhere nearly as strong as he has been,
will continue to exercise civilian control
as he is mandated to do under the Constitution,” Mansfield said.

Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy, Minn., who
plans to oppose President Johnson in the
1968 campaign as a Democratic peace can-

“And I hope McNamara’s leaving will
not mean in the months ahead further
escalation of the bombing in North Vietnam or of the war in other areas” he
added.
Sen. Edward M, Kennedy, D-Mass.,
whose late brother brought McNamara
into the cabinet in 1961, said he had
heard McNamara’s shift to the interna-

didate, said he would await McNamara’s
public explanation before commenting.
McCarthy said the question whether
McNamara’s departure foreshadowed a
“hawkish” intensification of the war effort
would depend somewhat on his successor.
“As to policy, we have a wider war althis is a wider war,” the senator
ready
—

said.

Senate Republican Leader Everett M.
Dirksen doubted the shift reflected any
weakening in McNamara’s position in his

differences with the Joint Chiefs of Staff

over military tactics.
“He’s a very positive guy,” Dirksen

said.
Official sources insisted that McNamara, known to be weary of the demanding

job after nearly seven years, was not
leaving because of any disagreement with
Johnson over U, S. policy in Vietnam or

elsewhere.

decide.
Canadian-French relations have been at
a low ebb since summer when President
De Gaulle repeated the French separatist
cry "long live free Quebec” in' a speech
in Montral. Mr. Pearson criticized the

French President then and President De
Gaulle unexpectedly flew home, cancelling
a visit to Ottawa.

The Israeli cabinet also met Tuesday
to discuss President's De Gaulle's charge
that Israel was the aggresor in the June
5-10 Middle East war. Sources said Israel
was debating whether to recall its ambassador to France.

War only solution says Syria
,

MIDEAST—Syria President Noureddin
Atassi said war was the only solution
to the Arab-Israeli dispute. He told cheering thousands in Damascus that Syria
would never accept the U.N, Security
Council resolution aimed at restoring
peace in the Middle East.
Algeria was reported taking a similar

end to the Arab state of belligerency
against the Jewish nation.
Syria refused to attend the previous
Arab summit and has maintained a hard
line policy.

Atassi also said Syria would not attend
the proposed Arab summit to discuss
strategy in view of the U.N. resolution.
A key point in the resolution calls for
Israeli withdrawal from Arab territory
occupied during the June war, and an

panied by Vice Premier-Foreign Minister
Ibrahim Makhos and Lt. Gen. Ahmed
Sweidani, chief of staff of the Syrian
armed forces. It was believed the Syrians
would urge the Soviets to adopt a tougher

stand.

Damascus Radio announced that Premier
Dr. Youssef Zayyen left by plane today
for an official visit to Moscow, accom-

stand in the Middle East crisis.

Vietnam

—UPI

Telephoto

Members of the American 173rd Air
borne Brigade file past the bodies of
fallen comrades following the capture
by allied troops of the Communist fortress at Hill 875, about 12 miles southwest of Dak To.
-

After
.1

i

tne Dame

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                    <text>I HE bpECTI^UH
Vol. 18, No. 20

Friday, November 17, 1967

State University of New York at Buffalo

Bold new plans for Amherst campus revea
Mile-long building, 30 colleges
to compose main academic unit
A mile long building, nearly
1000 feet wide, is the proposed
plan for the new State University
of Buffalo campus in Amherst.
If it is approved, it will be one
of the biggest construction jobs
to be undertaken in the country,
reported the Buffalo Evening
News. It is being designed by
Gordon Bunschaft who designed
the new wing for the Albright-

Knox Art

building. Classrooms, labora-

tories. offices and research facilities for the faculty and students will be centered in one
building, which could become a
model for University architecture
in the future
It is designed to accommodate
a student body of 40,000 students

Evening News

Proposed

An artist's view of the layout of Amherst campus
Plans call for an academic unit one mile long
Some 30 colleges will go up along Ellicolt Creek

campus

Faculty Senate decision opens campus
to recruiters; Dow Chemical re-invited
The Faculty Senate voted Monday to extend to “all
legal groups” an opportunity to recruit on campus. Dow
Chemical Co. will be “immediately” reinvited as a result
of the decision, according to Dr. Richard A. Siggelkow, vice
president for student affairs.
The Senate also approved Dr. Siggelkow’s decision to
postpone campus recruiting by Dow Chemical and the CIA
two weeks ago.
Both resolutions passed
earlier by the Faculty Senate
Executive Committee pro
tern on Nov. 7.
A third resolution, calling for
“appropriate disciplinary action”
by University authorities in the
event of an attempt to “obstruct
a group or person invited to the
campus," was postponed to a later

meeting.

Addressing the three-hour
closed session. President Marlin
Meyerson insisted that “the issue
is relevant to academic freedom.”

President's

statement
Mr. Meyerson, who is chairman
of the newly-enlarged Senate,

continued:

A man

of

“Some of you deny this on the
ground that career recruiting is
not a primary educational respon
sibility of the University. I would
agree that career recruiting is a
secondary responsibility but
would point out it has a large
educational component. Also, so
long as other campuses provide
recruiting opportunities for their
students, we must do so as well;
for our students, coming largely
from low and modest income
families, would be at a particular
disadvantage without them. If, in
the future, the role of our cam
pus in career placement is to be
changed, it should be done in concert with other universities.

two worlds

A university professor and a colonel in the
U. S. Air Force, Jack Herbert is caught in the position of trying to resolve these two incongruous
worlds. Read about the commanding officer of
the State University of Buffalo's AFROTC detachment and his program at the centerfold of today's
Spectrum.

Happy Thanksgiving
The Spectrum's next scheduled issue will be

published Friday, Dec. 1, due to the Thanksgiving

recess.

Some seek narrow concept

"However, I wish to point out
that many, and perhaps most, of
the questions of academic freedom arise not from the primary
educational mission of the university but from secondary ac
livilies, particularly those of a

political nature. Paradoxically,
some who have been trying to ex

tend the concept of academic freedom include aspects of action as
well as speech, arc, on this recruiting issue, seeking to narrow
the concept.
"Academic freedom must protect more than literal speech
Thus, as you no doubt know, the
national Council of the American
Association of University Professors (AAUP) and civil liberties
spokesmen have maintained that
the question is one of academic
freedom and civil liberty.

T should also point out that
suggestions to restrict or prohibit public speech are usually

by 1974-75.
A common basement, ground
floor and first floor will be built
in an arc shape, facing north on
Ellicott Creek. Music practice
rooms and the University Hospital will be located at the western
end for convenience of entrance
from off-campus, and for the possibility of future expansion.

University town
Transportation will be a main
problem. Since many students
will have to live off-campus, the
University is interested in some
sort of rapid transit system from
downtown to the campus.
A second-hand bookstore, record store and competing clothing
stores located near the campus
may evolve into a university

town. Millcrspirt Hwy., which bisects the campus, may go underground or may be moved to

These units will be arranged
on either side of an open mall.
Reaching a maximum height of
12 stories, they will be stacked
to give a maximum amount of
light and air space

The campus is designed so that
a student can go to all classes
without having to go outside.

v

As an “antidote to the multi
versity” President Martin Meyer
son proposed the construction of
30 colleges for 1000 students
each. These would be built near
(he main building.

These buildings will be livingworking playing areas for a group
of students. They will be less separate than the English univer-

it.

The architect, Mr. Bunschaft,
has also suggested that college
units could be connected my
rmpi-rails or moving sidewalks.
Representatives of the State
University of Buffalo are studying (he proposals. The results
may be announced nevt month.
Dr. Robert L. Ketter, vice president for facilities planning, hopes
that the ground could be broken
next summer and three collges
could be opened for 1967-1970.

Ketter calls development
plan one of many concepts

and
individual students who
choose to converse with him.

“The development plan for the
University’s Amherst campus that
was published yesterday is only
one of a number of concepts that
are now under study This concept, like the others, has not yet
been compltely examined. It is
not aproved in any sense, nor
does it reflect any agreement in

,

Reading and seminar rooms,
cultural facilities, athletic fields
and classrooms for informal seminars will be part of the college.
Elsewhere on the campus, there
wil be a gymnasium and field
house, and a stadium, if it gets
State approval.

swing around

made from outside the Univer

"Academic freedom in a university cannot be limited to a few
specified rights. It goes further
and imposes an obligation on us
not only to protect unpopular
ideas but Ip preserve the broadest range of expression and activity in the university community.
This we must do with a most sensitive regard for fairness and
equality, regardless of popularity
or power.”
(Cont’d on Pg. 11)

culty from a range of academic
disciplines will live in the colleges.

Thirty colleges

Dr. Robert L. Ketter, vice
president for facilities planning,
commented on a story in The
Buffalo Evening News concerning
the proposed Amherst campus;

sity. It is no less a question of
freedom when these suggestions
to restrict come from within the
University, nor is the danger to
liberty less when the target of
restrictive pressures is private
discussion between a recruiter

Married and single undergradu-

ates. graduate students and fa-

Gallery.

All departments of the University will have space in the new

—Buffalo

sity where classes are held within the 'college'. At Amherst, stu
dents may live at their colleges
and attend classes in the main
building.

c~
�

•

I-

principle. Our University is in the

initial stages of evaluation of this

plan. Similar evaluations by the
State University of New York, the
State University Construction
Fund, and the Executive Office
of the Governor have not yet
even begun. Except for the fact

that it dramatizes the scope and

importance of this project, it has
no validity at this time.”

Dr. Kettsr
says proposal is not valid

�Th

Pay* Two

•

Friday, Hovanbw 17,

Spectrum

Nff

'Modified F' system to Greater understanding of law' is goal
be eliminated in '68 of newly organized Blackstone Society
After investigation by the Scholastic Standards Committee and University College, the system of the “modified
F” will be abolished, effective June 1968.
student has the option of repeating the course and attempting to pass it the second time. When overall grade averages
are computed a “modification” is made for the course originally failed but later successfully passed.
In these cases the quality

points of both attempts are counted but the hours are counted
only once. For example, a student failing a course and later
receiving an A, will have taken
six semester hours and received
a total of six quality points, and
will have a B placed on his record as his final passing grade.
The new system, under which
“modified F” procedure will be
abolished, means that when a
course is failed and repeated the
full quota of semester hours is
counted, lowering the final passing grade. After fulfilling three
semester hours in a course and
receiving an F, a student has
accumulated a total of -3 quality
points. Upon successfully passing
the course with an A, and receiving nine quality points the student then has a total of six quality points. This would ordinarily
average out to B, but when semester hours are counted twice
the final grade would average out
to a C. In both the old and new
systems, however, the first grade
of F is never erased from the

student's record.
After a vote by the now-abolished College of Arts and Sciences during the last academic
year, the modified F system was
voted down, and now it will be

“hard to tell until we try it out
a bit" exactly how the new system will affect students, according to Dean Claude Welch of
University College.

Four point system

Another change in the University College grading system is
the change from a three to four
point system. The change, “purely
mechanical” will probably become effective Sept. 1968. This

“linear transformation” between
grading systems will make the
machine-operated processing of
averages more convenient. Most
universities today operate under
the four point system because of
its facilitation of bookkeeping
and computing averages.
The change will not seriously
affect students because instead of
three quality points being equivalent to an A, four quality points
will simply replace the three.
Eliminated by this system will be
negative quality points, F will be
equivalent to a zero index, and
D will now equal a 1.0 grade

average.
“Marginal students may lose
a bit of flexibility” but until the
system has been put effectively
into operation it will again be
"hard to tell” its effect, Dr.
Welch claimed.

Why We Are No. 1 in College Travel

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6— Traveled by Over 3500 Collegefolk Annually

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RETURN: AUGUST 26
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Travel Arrangements handled by

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LARGEST IN GROUPS AND CHARTER FLIGHTS

Promoting fellowship and a greater understanding of
law through a series of lectures and seminars are the aims
tone

Fellowship is by invitation only. A potential candidate
for the Society must be a student of the Law School and be
interested in pursuing the objectives of the Society.
The purposes of the Society are,
according to member Helen
Kaney, “To enrich our own educational experiences. We hope to
establish a more meaningful communication between the professors and us. We want to find
out about the legal climate of
Buffalo, and the practical problems faced by the lawyer-community in Buffalo.”

Board of Governors

At present the Society is not
attempting to become a recognized campus organization for two
reasons. First, in order to be
recognized, the Society must be
open to anyone wishing to join
and this is not consistent with
its goals. Also, by keeping the

club small, it encourages other
students to start their own organizations. The Society hopes eventually to have a membership of
about 20.
Elected to the Fall term of the

Board of Governors (the Executive Committee) were Jonathan
Z. Friedman, Chancellor; Alan
Feldstein, Vice Chancellor; and
Howard; F. Gondree, SecretaryTreasurer.
Also elected was Thomas G.
Kobus, Fellow at Large, who represents “the best interests of the
general membership on the
Board.”
The purpose of the Board is
to establish an agenda for the
Society and to propose resolutions.
Other members are Helen
Kaney, Mary Besantz, Michael Colligan, Richard Kwieciak, and
Michael Couture. An Honorary
(sic) Fellowship was extended to

Peter Castiglia, a former student
of the Law School.

Seminars
A seminar to discuss the New
York State Constitution was held
Nov. 6.

The purpose was not to reach
a conclusion about it, but simply

two or three seminars a month.
After Jan. 1, the Society will
have the Honorable John O. Hen
derson, United States Judge for

the Western District for New
York, give a practical talk on his
views from the bench.
Other discussions in this series
will include legal and judicial
ethics, the new penal law of New
York State, drugs, and various
cases brought before city courts
Attendance at the seminars will
be restricted to members and
their guests except when the program is of special importance to
the general public.
Mr. Jonathan Z. Friedman.
Chancellor, commented on the
Society:

“We believe that the Blackstone

Society will perform a valuable
service to the Fellows. We hope
to supplement for ourselves the
fine work which is being perform
ed by the Student Bar Association.

“While enlightening ourselves,
we shall at the same time, enjoy
the fellowship which comes about
through membership in the Society.”
•'

Allenhurst seeks revised constitution
In a flurry of activity, the
Allenhurst House Council
has recently proposed revisions for major portions of
its constitution.

proposed revision that calls for
elimination of all regular
standing committees and replacing them with committees as the
need arises. House Council meetings, according to the proposed
changes, will be held every week

the

instead of every other week.

Two important changes concern the procedures used in mak-

ing amendments to the constitution, and the procedures used in
the impeachment and trial of delinquent Council members.

Another important revision will
be having two voting chairman
and one non-voting vice-chair-

A referendum will be held by
Allenhurst residents after Thanksgiving. At this time, they will
vote on the constitution and accept or reject it. Three fourths
of the residents must approve in
order to pass the constitution.

"By doing this we hope to get
more participation from mem-

Mr. Kubik’s outlook envisions
an “increase in participation and
responsibility and a government
which is more receptive to stu-

bers,” said Allenhurst House
Council vice-president Mark Kubik.

Other activity

man.

The need to get matters done
more

quickly

has

prompted

a

dent wishes.’’
The council also passed addibus changes. Buses will

tional

THE SPECTRUM
printed by

Partners' Press, Inc.
ABGOTT &amp; SMITH PRINTING
1381 Kenmore Ave. (at Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

Man with computer dating
card I
girl with
I. Things were going
*!#!!@! until he offered
her a Genesee Beer. Now
they are Mr. &amp; Mrs. I

now run from S to 7 p.m. Sundays
and from 8:50 to 9:30 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays. Thus the
evening schedule will be the same
Monday through Thursday.

In evaluating the new “Open
House" Sunday policy, the Council termed it a great success and
is looking forward to further
“open” Sunday afternoons.

The Council, through the work
of the Sports Committee, is also
in the process of setting up an
Intramural Basketball League.
The leaeue will have use of the
Windemere and Clark Gym's on

specified evenings.

One of its major accomplishments, achieved through the efforts of the Social Functions
Committee, was to buy two hundred fifty tickets for the Simon
and Garfunkel Concert Feb, 11,

1968.
The tickets will be sold to Allenhurst residents, who have paid
their Activities Fees, at a substantial reduction. On sale after
Thanksgiving, there will be a
limit of two tickets each.

oes evep on
e music b
Ann
•oems
•

•••

to

ion

Now the songs of Frodo. Bilbo. Sam Treebeard and
Tom Bombadil can be sung or played by aM. Donald
Swann, of Flanders and Swann, has. with the assist
ance and encouragement of Professor Toiluen. set
seven songs from The Lord of The Rings to music.
Each song may be sung individually or taken together
as a group to form a song cycle. The arrangements
are for piano or voice and guitar symbols are given.

poems anO songs

of middle eauth

READ BY J.R.R. TOLKIEN
For his first venture into the recording world Professor
Tolkien has chosen to read from the dehghtfu) poems
of Tom Bombadil On the reverse side Whlham Ehnn
sings the songs from The Road Goes Ever On with
Donald Swann at the piano. This record is a must
|S W
Caedmon Record -*TC 1231
Availably .i|

*ou' collet* WoHIO'i

�T

ih

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vf.V^T?

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Pay* Thraa

The Spectrum

Friday, November 17, 1967

5,

CCS submits petition for open campus dateline news, Nov. 17
A petition bearing 2346 signatures calling for an “open
campus” was formally presented
to President Martin Mcyerson and

The committee also asked for

an open policy that would allow
any group to appear on campus.
The final point was that not only

lures were solicited by the Committee of Concerned Students
(CCS) and the organization was
represented by David Clawes,

acts should be the proper concern of the University and that
appropriate action be taken.

Richard Steck and David Wachtel.

President Meyerson told the
students that this was “an issue
that plagues the University.” The
violence that occurred at the University of Wisconsin is “something we want to avoid here.” He
feels that the postponement allowed for full discussion before
such an event could take place.
“A university community . . .
ought to have open discussion . . .

After presenting the petition
the three students discussed the
issue with President Meyerson
and Dr. Regan.
It was pointed out that the executive committee of the Faculty
Senate had met the day before
and recommended three steps be
taken by the ful Senate.

Concurred

My role is not to make people

behave but to make them learn
what is involved in that behavior,” The president feels that
what can happen here can show
the country how a university
'

First, the executive committee

concurred with Dr. Richard Siggelkow’s recommendation that recruitment for CIA and Dow Chemical be postponed until full discussion on the could take place.
This was in response to fears
that violence would result from
the two groups appearance.

shoul
d
Invite

act.

to return

This brought up the question of
what would happen if the Faculty
Senate passes the recommenda-

Johnson called politically dead
in an address by Lowenstein
by Joel Kleinman
Spectrum Sfaff Reporter

The head of the nationwide “dump-Johnson” campaign,
Allard K. Lowenstein, charged that President Johnson is
as a majority (of voters) now oppose
“politically dead
his present policies,” in an address in the Conference The...

tions, seen as highly likely by
President Meyerson.

He Said: “I would assume that
gelkow would invite Dow and
the CIA to return at the earliest

time.”
(The CIA has indicated that
they would probably not accept,
in line with a new policy of restricting on-campus interviews to
prevent any further incidents. An
invitation to appear at the University of Rochester was declined
recently.)

demonstrations that
could turn into violence. President Meyerson expressed the
hope that the delay acted as a
“cooling-off period” and that students would realize that decorum
is an important part of democ-

"If we carry the primaries

. .

.,

then there will be a veritable
flood of alternate candidates”
which will foster an open Democratic National Convention, he

predicted.
Possible replacements for President Johnson are Senator McCar-

who is currently
the leader of the opposition according to Mr. Lowenstein, and
thy &lt;D.. Minn

In concluding his address, Mr.

Lowenstein called for the formation of a mass movement in the
Western New York area to unseat the President. Student As-

sociation

Vice-president Richard

Miller announced the formation
of such a movement and a recruitment drive is under way.

),

Senator Robert Kennedy,

if he

decides to seek the nomination.

Loyal Democrat
Although often accused of hurting his party’s chances in the
election, Mr. Lowenstein considers himself "not a decisive Democrat. but a loyal Democrat." He
insisted that "what we re doing
is in the interest of the party
and has to strengthen it.
What's hurting the party is the
disastrous policies of President Johnson
"

The speaker deemed it a "trag

In addition to his position with
the Conference of Concerned
Democrats, Mr, Lowenstein is cur-

rently national vice-chairman of

Americans for Democratic Action
and a director of Rev Martin
Luther King’s Southern Christian
Leadership Conference.
Active in civil rights movements
both in Mississippi and Africa, he
is the author of a book that
condemned the apartheid system
in South Africa. A member of
the faculty of City College of
New York, he teaches Constitutional law and also tours the
nation, in support of his “dump-

Johnson" campaign.

Fiedler's trial postponed
The oft-delayed narcotics trial
of Dr. Leslie K. Fiedler, a State
University of Buffalo English
professor and critic, was post-

T. Mikoll on a motion to suppress
evidence in the case.
Fiedler, 50, and his wife Margaret, 49, are charged with main-

poned again Monday.

taining premises where narcotics
were used. They were arrested
in a raid at their home April 28.

City Judge Sebastian J. Bellomo adjourned the case until
Dec. 7. Bellomo said he was awaiting a decision by City Judge Ann

Three members

of Fiedler’s

family and two youths also were

arrested in the raid.

to

President Meyerson concurred
with this view.
He concluded by saying: “1
don’t think anyone should have
the right to keep anyone off the
campus, even collectively. But it
is the responsbility of the Office
of the President, and all people
attached to it, to act on the be-

half of all.”

They range in size from New York City (pop 8 million) to rtkeville,
Ky. (pop. 5000).
Washington, D.C., is one of those selected The others are in 33
states and Pureto Rico.

The New York cities include Buffalo, New York, Rochester and

Poughkeepsee. The cities will share $11 million of planning money.
They will now be expected to draw up detailed plans for eliminating
social and physical blight in entire neighborhoods.
WASHINGTON—Selected Service Director Lewis B. Hershey has
asked government appeal agents—the lawyers who advise young men
of their legal rights—to turn in any men they believe are violating
NICOSIA—Nearby Turkey today placed its military units on full
alert and threatened to intervene in Cyprus where Greeks and Turks
renewed their long feud Wednesday in a seven-hour battle. A U.N.
force that arranged a ceasefire was trying to bring peace back to the
contested island where shooting raged in two villages Wednesday,

shattering a months-long truce.
NEW HAVEN, Conn.—Discovery of a “major connecting link”
in the evolution of man has been announced by a Yale University professor of geology.
Prof. Elwyn L. Simons said Wednesday a newly-unearthed skull
is eight to ten million years older than any previously found.
WASHINGTON —President Johnson announced plans Wednesday
to enlist returning Vietnam veterans to fill a shortage of competent

teachers in slum elementary schools.
The president said slum schools were “a new battlefield where
the

veterans belong.”

Johnson said he had appointed William Driver, head of the
Veterans’ Administration, to get the program started.
He said armed forces veterans would be used to form a special
teacher corps to raise the level of education in urban ghettoes and
other substandard areas of the United States.
SAIGON—The South Vietnamese government today announced
plans to execute three Viet Cong agents at dawn Friday despite
Cbmmunist threats it would retaliate by killing prisoners they hold.
US. officials were reported "distressed” by the execution plans. The
government announcement came less than a week after three American Army sergeants were released from captivity by the Viet Cong.

Issues relate to entire University

Student Senate demands open door
policy at Faculty Senate meetings

pitch,

ed.

would not resort

Mr. Steck responded with the
feeling that “The only time that
police should be on this campus
is when the safety of a person is
threatened and the University
cannot guarantee that safety.”

edy that the President hasn’t
made a record that can be supported.”

His voice rising to a fervent
Mr. Lowenstein charged
the President with waging a
“ghoulish and dishonorable” campaign to discredit war critics
when he accuses them of hurting
our war effort and thus aiding
the enemy in killing U.S. soldiers.
“He is the man whose policies
are leading to deaths,” he shout-

of

racy and
violence.

ater Monday.
As co-chairman of the Conference of Concerned Democrats,
an organization avowed to replace Johnson with a peace candidate in 1968, Mr. Lowenstein
slated that he sees a “moral obligation to oppose . . . the disastrous policies of President
Johnson. We’re going to run a
candidate who is consistent with
the best interests of the country” and the Democratic Party,
he said, as “most Democrats
would like to have another candidate in 1968.”

the names

the draft law.

Also mentioned was the possi-

bility

WASHINGTON—The government today announced

Definite action will be taken

to President Martin
chairman pro tern and
to Mr. Robert H.
sec-

presented

by the Student Senate to keep the

Mcyerson,

administrative doors open when
University policies and decisions

retary pro tern
Senate.

are made.

The Senate made a unanimous
decision Wednesday night to demand that the Faculty Senate
meetings be open to the entire
academic community.
The resolution, calling for an
“open door policy,” staled that
“the members of the Faculty Sen
ate consider issues relating to the
welfare of the entire academic
community.”
This demand, as proposed by
Barbara Emilson, will be

Miss

Your I D. Card
10% at

is Worth

GcAdmevfs

of the Faculty

The Senate voted unanimously
to demand that he be re-classified. “We cannot permit the removal of Mr. Faulkner from the
academic community
”

Protest

Percentage cut

Vigorous protest was made of

In discussion of Senate funds,
the “unconstitutional step against Treasurer Douglas Braun suggestMr, Lawrence Faulkner" taken by
ed a percentage cut of all club
the Draft Board to classify him budgets with a priority system
as delinquent for the failure to of clubs deciding which programs
have a registration certificate in would be deleted. The Spectrum.
his possession.
UUAB and Senate budgets are
among those that would be cut
"Use of the Selective Service by a smaller percentage.
System as an instrument of coersion against those who conscienThe Senate Reorganization
tiously resist war in Vietnam" Committee will submit a proposal
was also condemned by the Senfor restructuring the student
ate in a resolution presented by senate or “redefining" its goals.
The report is due Feb. 1.
Mr, Jeffrey Berger.

College Relations Director
c/o Sheraton-Park Hotel, Washington, D.C. 20008
Please send me a free Sheraton Student I.D. Card:
Name
Address

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Get one. Rooms are now up to 20% off with a
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Sheraton Hotels &amp; Motor Inns (Sj
155 Hotels and Motor Inns in

major

cities.

t

�Friday, November 17, 1967

The Spectrum

P«9» Four

Thanksgiving Day: A Proclamation
grati-

The very first Thanksgiving was an expression of
tude by a handful of adventurers who settled in what is now
the United States of America. We have come a long way
since then, and we have much for which to be thankful.
As a nation for 192 years we can express our gratitude
for forefathers who so adequately provided a Constitution

speech, or of press; of the right of the people peaceably to
assemble ...”
We are thankful, too, that the poverty characteristic of
Appalachia is not characteristic of all of our nation, that the
war on poverty was at least declared and that unemployment
among our 200 million is only 4.3%—a mere three and onehalf million without jobs.
Coupled with the growth of our metropolitan centers
we have seen the growth of the ghetto. Remembering well
the past summer, we are thankful that the nation was not
set aflame by any one of the sparks that flew in any one of
our riot-torn cities.
With our advances in technology, we have learned to
build the fastest jets, the heaviest bombers capable of dropping the most devastating bombs, and the world’s most efficient military machine. We are thankful that the number
who have died in Asia is not tenfold the almost incomprehensible figure that it is today.
May Almighty God adding to all our other blessings, bestow upon us the wisdom to recognize our shortcomings and
to correct the injustices that lie hidden beneath our abundance.
Now, therefore, the President of the United States of
America, in consonance with Section 6103 of Title 5 of the
United States Code designating the fourth Thursday of November in each year as Thanksgiving Day, has proclaimed
Thursday, November 23, 1967, as a day of national thanksgiving.

Closed door policy
The Faculty Senate moved in two opposite directions
Monday at the first meeting of that newly-enlarged body.
Their decision to bar all outsiders at Monday’s extremely
important meeting was deplorable. But perhaps it should
have been expected.
The Faculty Senate has a long, time-honored tradition
of meeting behind closed doors. Some had new hopes for a
change in policy with the recent establishment of a surely
enlarged and allegedly more representative Faculty Senate.
But unfortunately our faculty has chosen to carry on traditions of the past. Until that tradition is broken, until the
Senate can open its doors to all interested students, and other
members of the academic community, it will be hard to get
excited about the “new" Faculty Senate.
After the Senate has assured their security and secrecy,
it was pleasant to learn that they "decided to maintain an
open campus to “all legal groups” for recruiting purposes.
Although there is no public record of the proceedings, one
Senate official described the session as somber and serious.
That is good—the issue is an important one.
A university which closes its doors to a person or group
—whether a majority agrees or disagrees with the views of
that person or group—closes its doors to ideas and is no
longer a university.
The decision of the Faculty Senate to open the doors of
this University to all groups should be applauded. Perhaps
someday they will see the utility of opening their own doors
also.

Watch FSA By-Law Amendments

A number of amendments to the by-laws of the Faculty-

Student Association have been drafted and are presently be
ing considered.
Most distasteful of all the proposals in Article IX, which
outlines emergency by-law provisions.
This article could impower the President of the University “to remove with or without cause any or all of the officers, directors and members of the Association." The provisions of this article may be declared effective “if at any
time in the sole discretion of the President of the University
he shall determine that the conduct of the affairs of the
Association is so detrimental to the best interests of the University, its student body, faculty or administration to warrant
such action . . .”
It would seem that there are other ways to provide for
emergencies. As the present proposal is worded, it looks
indeed as though the President could interfere without a
situation even approaching what might be called an emergency.
But if, indeed, emergency powers are needed as a check
on the activities of the Faculty-Student Association, a system
of temporary suspension of those involved—with subsequent
arbitration and inquiry into the FSA’s affairs—might be a
better proposal.
As the proposed amendment stands, it represents an all
too powerful instrument in the hands of one man. And if an
association needs a check, how much more so does one man?

©IBCtTHCH)

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mum

.SfcS?
Clean, Clean, Clean!

Readers
writings

’

Or perhaps...
by Barry Holticlaw

Dislikes
Following a series of magnificent full page ads
in the New York Times, showing two black left
hands, one clenched in a fist, the other raised in a
tender signal of suffering, Newsweek magazine
appeared on the nation’s newsstands this week
with a flashy 23-page report on the future of the
Negro in America and a 12-point “Program for
reportedly the popular Establishment
Action”
ncwsweekly’s first editorial in 34 years.
The conclusion drawn from the mouths of research by teams of experienced reporters comprise
—

Newsweek’s

“Program

for Action”:

a call for President Johnson “to inspire a
sense of urgency and mobilize support for ghetto
programs" and to “press the case for social justice
, . . with the same energy he uses to nourish his
faltering consensus on the war in Vietnam”
• the appointment of a
“super-cabinet-level coordinator" who will “prod the bureaucracy” in
domestic programs
passage of the income-tax surcharge to stem
inflation, and credit, wage and price controls, if
needed, "for the duration of the war”
• mobilization
of stale and local energies in
providing public services and justice, making the
“agencies of government responsive to the voice of
the ghetto"
• an
effort by businessmen and trade unions to
overcome “color bars"
a tripling of the current $400 million jobtraining program, and the subsidizing of ghetto
cleanup programs to provide jobs for city teenagers
an extension of welfare benefits to the 75%
of the nation's needy who are not now given any
aid, and; reform of the "needlessly abusive . . .
and racist features of the current system”
• raise
the rent-supplements from the $40 million requested by President and the $10 million
atocated by Congress to $200 million and also the
full funding of the Model Cities pilot program
($662 million) more than doubling what was voted
by Congress, and "escalated thereafter"
• a
two billion-dollar primary school intensive
reading instruction program in poverty areas across
the nation
• national
guardsmen and police units "better
trainedi in anti-riot techniques"
• an
intensification of Justice Department en
forement of civil rights laws
a government guarantee of insurance losses
through local banks in riot areas ‘to help stop the
flight of business from the ghetto.”
If you can, Newsweek would have you believe
that the welfare state can solve this country’s
•

•

•

new commencement

In The Spectrum Nov. 10,' 1967, via “Action
line,” the seniors at this University were informed
that the date of Spring commencement has been
changed from Sun., June 2, to Fri., May 31 at 3
in the afternoon.
First, I wish to thank The Spectrum for this
information, since without it, we would probably
remain uninformed until next May. Secondly, I
wish to comment on the stupidity of this decision.
Many seniors have struggled for four years to
obtain a degree from this institution. To them,
graduation is something to be shared with family
and friends. Although Thurs., May 30 is Memorial
Day, Friday will be a working day for many people. Travel on Memorial Day will be most difficult
for parents who plan to attend. Furthermore, it
will be almost impossible to obtain motel accommodations for them. If a May commencement date
is desirable, why not Sun., May 26, since exams
are scheduled to end May 24?
But why complain? This whole situation is
typical
the finale to four years of apathetic
non-identity at this University. The next step will
probably be the elimination of commencement.
The degrees will no doubt be mailed in the same
envelopes as final grades.
I urge all seniors who disagree with this change
of date to make their views known to the Calendar Committee. Perhaps for once, student opinion
will influence decisions made on this campus for
our welfare.
—

A Senior

•

•

problems.

What they have failed to realize, or perhaps
more accurately, failed to communicate, is that this
country is also a welfare state.
Tacit approval of the war
Newsweek has not done anything new. It has
done the same thing a magazine of its ilk is expected to do: present its readers, mostly successful,
educated members of the country's solid pseudoliberal middle, with very readable compilations of
useful sociological data and wateretkdown New
Deal
welfare state criticisms and analysis which
do nothing but make smug people who are worried
about some of the trends in this country feel comfortable in the fact that, with a little all-American
ingenuity and effort, conditions can be improved,
without seriously threatening the status quo.
Read Newsweek's article. It’ll sound good. Even
plausible. One trouble. There is a real world. There
is a war. Let’s hope that the rest of America has
not taken Vietnam for granted.
—

date

To the Editor:

Pushing pot?
To the Editor:

The campus drug pushers are getting bolder
all the time—now they’re using subliminal adver-

tisement!
Or am I the only one who’s noticed that the
center card catalogue in Lockwood runs from
"Narcotics” to “Snuff Bottles and Boxes”?
(Mrs.)

Jeannie Doody

The Spectrum is published twice-weekly
every
Tuesday and Friday
during the regular academic
State University of New York at Buffalo.
3435 Main Street. Buffalo. New York 14214. Offices
are located at 355 Norton Hall. Circulation: 15,000.
—

—

year at the

Editor-in-Chief—MICHAEL L D AMICO
Managing Editor—RICHARD R. HAYNES
Asst. Managing Editor—RICHARD SCHWAB
Business Manager—SAMUEL A. POWAZEK
Advertising Manager—DAVID E. FOX
Campus
Margaret

Anderson

Marlene Kozuchowski
City
Daniel Lasser
Asst.
Lilian Waite
Feature Barry C. Holtzclaw
Asst.
Ronald Ellsworth
Sports
Robert Woodruff

W Scott Behrens
David L. Sheedy
Layout
Asst.
John Trigg
Copy
Judi Riyeff
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Asst.
Photo.
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Asst
David Yates
Promotion &amp; Circulation
Director Murray Richman

The Spectrum is a member of the United States Student Press Association and the Associated Collegiate
Press. The Spectrum is served by: United Press International, Associated Collegiate Press Service. Gannett
News Service, and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate.
Represented for national advertising by National Edu
cational Advertising Service. Inc., 420 Madison Ave.,
New York. N. Y. Repubiication of all news dispatches
is forbidden wihout the express consent of the
editor-in-chief. Rights of republication of all other
matter herein are also reserved.
Second class

Editorial

postage paid at Buffalo, New York.
is determined by the Editor-in-Chief.

policy

�pectrum

CIA work could hurt future

BELOW OLYMPUS

By Interlandi

To the Editor;

It is only fair that prospective applicants for
employment with the GIA should be fully informed
about what is involved. I would therefore like to
draw attention to a little known aspect of intelli-

ffilf1

J*

gence work.
I am referring to the fact that anyone who has
once worked for the CIA—or any other intellieence agency for that matter—is henceforth ef-

II i'

ml

gence agency.

Miran

Bengar

Don't picket learn
To the Editor:

A group called the Resistance has issued an
insulting blanket challenge to the men of the
University to stop hiding behind their 2-S’s and
either enlist or join the Resistance. I hope the
Spectrum will print this alternative,
I cannot deny that if you strongly support the
Vietnam policy, you should consider enlisting. But,
if your conscience forbids this, don't picket! Put
down your signs, pick up your 2-S’s and (to borrow
a phrase) learn, baby, learn. If you hope to change
anybody’s policy on anything, you had better be
educated first.
People listen to educated men—they ignore
demonstrating students. Quite apart from your
war policy, you can do America a lot more good
with the mental skills you will acquire here, than
you can do without these skills. You waste your
own precious time by demonstrating. Your first
duty to your country and, even more to yourself
as a self-respecting man, is to do your best job
at the vocation you now have—as a student.
G. Thompson Burke

Department of Biochemistry

Viet solution offered
To the Editor:

After great soul-searching and thought-provoking discussion concerning the lack of support for
our boys in Vietnam, we have hit upon a natural
solution to the Vietnamese question. In view of the
large number of our misplaced fighting boys in
Vietnam, it has been suggested that South Vietnam—physiology being what it is—stands today
as a magnificent brothel.
In place of our men we could have these legion
girls cross the front lines and accost the dread
guerilla. A posse of lassooing cowboys, silently
snuffling on their heels, could in a Texas-style
roundup hogtie the pawns of the venomous VietCong.
To further reinforce, if necessary, the efficacy
of the final solution, we could unleash upon the
unsuspecting South Vietnamese soldiers left behind the full force of the Dreadful Amazon Raiders. The shock of such an onslaught is bound to

drive the lethargic soldiers, with sudden patriotic
frenzy, in the direction of their lassooing brethern.
They would thus be immediately available to aid
in the massive logistics problem of transporting the
happily delirious prisoners together with their reformed paramours back to the joys of civilization.
This simple field operation would preclude the
need for any further pacification efforts.
The Ad Hoc Committee for
Interpersonal Relations in Vietnam

There are more
Readers' Writings
on pages 6 and 7
Writers: Please be brief. Letters should not exceed 300 words,
should be signed and contain the address and telephone number
of the writer.
Pen names or initials may be used, if requested, but anonyomus letters are never used. The Spectrum reserves the right
to edit or delete, but the intent of letters will not be changed.

-'cia!

OPINION
POLL
MMiOliXiati
"Can we soften our resolve about Vietnam without being rotten

rat peaceniks?"

The Lighter Side
by Dick West

Various Supreme Court interpretations of what con
stitutes obscenity have confused the issue for many people,
including members of the Supreme Court.
Even so, the situation is not as mixed up in this country
as it is in Sweden.
18-year-old starlet appears fully

A recent dispatch from Stockholm reports that a Swedish film
producer has bought out a new
movie in which the boy-meetsgirl theme is carried to its ulti-

clothed.

“Frankly,” O’Hara said, frankly, “the scene has nothing to do
with the plot. I just threw it in
to shock people. I’m hoping it
will appeal to their prurient in

mate conclusion. On camera.

tcrests.”
The film has been banned in

That the epitome of togetherness would eventually be depicted on the silver screen was
obvious to anyone who has been
to the neighborhood theater lately. So there is no point in pretending I am understruck by the
development.
To me, the curious thing was
the comment by a member of
the Swedish film censorship
board, which approved the film
for public showing. He described
it as “profoundly moral.”
Well, now. Any moviegoer who
grew up under old Hays office
code may have some trouble
adjusting to that concept of
morality. But once you grasp it,
you are ready for the next step:
Hollywood—Sol O’Hara, daring avant garde movie director
revealed today that his next film
will include a scene in which an

Quotes

Sweden.
Paris

—

Lacy

D'Estriogen,

France’s foremost fashion design
er, today unveiled his new spring
collection of teeny-weeky itsy-bil
sy-micro mini-skirts.
“Frankly,” D’Estriogen said,
frankly, “even beautiful women
look like hell in these things.
But that’s not important. What
I’m striving for is a virtuous ef
feet.

“Any woman who appears in
one of my creations will be a
sermon unto herself."
Chicago
Bubbles la Bumps,
queen of the strippers, is trying
out a new act.
She appears on stage completely nude and then dresses herself in front of the audience. It
drives men wild.
—

in the news

United Press

h

WASHINGTON—Ellsworth Bunker, United Stales ambassador to
to South Vietnam, saying he sees little encouragement in a year-end

holiday bombing pause:

“I think it would be very unfortunate to have a long pause'unless
there were indications it would lead to something.”
NEW YORK—Vice-President Humphrey, asking the National
Business Council to help Negroes and members of other minority
groups develop ghetto businesses:
“I am asking you lo use your entrepreneurial skills and exper-

ience to develop a package of know-how and financing that will
prime the pump—that will build viable enterprises from the available
ingredients.”
WILBERFORCE, Ohio—John H. Bustamonte, chairman of the
board of trustees of the predominantly Negro Central State Univer

sity, commenting on a riot by 200 students Monday night in which
94 persons were arrested and nine policemen injured;
“We were going lo clean the Black Power thing out and this
gave us the opportunity. I don’t think a few people should be per
mitted to infringe upon and restrict the right of others. This is un

democratic.”

.

.

.

by STEESE

I should have known it was going to be one of
those weekends when I was bitten by a Siamese
cat in Townsend Hall at 5:15 p.m. I mean who
else in the entire world except a clod like me
could pass through Townsend Hall on the way to
the bank and wind up with a chewed thumb.
1 have three Siamese and the only thing they ever
bite is toes, and that when they are of the opinion
that someone should get up and feed them. So I
chased down a cat which I saw run out of an office
and upon catching up with it suffered an assault
upon my dignity as well as my thumb.

may still be connected with his former work, and
no one wants a possible undercover agent on his
staff. This of course is not openly admitted; it is
simply a matter of the door being shut. Anyone

Professional associations are becoming even
more sensitive about any connection with undercover work on the part of their members. The recent NSA scandal has brought this to a head, and
the American Anthropological Association was one
of the first to engage in some self-examination on
the subject.

grump

Forget about the minor tribulations of life.
Forget that the Germans really didn’t start World
War II, forget that Lyndon isn't really trying to
start World War III, forget that pot isn’t really
whatever color you thought it was but bright
red according to Mike Amico, Forget all these and

ployers, especially the large corporations. There
always remains the suspicion that such a person

accepting employment with the CIA should therefore plan on making it a career.
Graduate students should also be warned that
they will find it difficult to enter the academic
community once they have worked for an intelli-

The

So I wrap up the thumb in a dirty old handkerchief. You know, one of those that has been mouldering in your winter coat from last winter and
you haven’t remembered to get washed yet, and
proceeded to the bank. The fates giggle as I go
to the bank and return without incident. The fates
roar as I discover to my amazement that the book
1 want is in the. Library. I should have suspected
then and there that I was being set up, but I never
really was that bright.
Now the great god of Confusion—SNAFU—begins to work his evil spells. I have my xerox
material for sociology well in hand, right, . . .
the left having been greviously assaulted. It is a
puncture wound and it can’t be more than five
or six years since I have had a tetanus shot so I
decide that rather than argue with W-w about
medicine—you know how nurses are—I will stop at
Meyer Memorial Hospital and get a tetanus shot.
It would have been easier to argue, hard as
that may seem to those who know W-w. After a
twenty item form is filled out and I have been
told that I shouldn’t be offended if I am hassled
because I look like a Road Vulture I get to sit on a
bepch and wait for a nurse. She gives me a bowl
of antiseptic in which to soak my thumb and
gives me the tetanus shot, which is all I ever really
wanted in the first place. Enter smiling, sort of,
rather bored young intern who decides that the
thumb is dirty and tells the nurse to wash it off,
and guess who she tells to wash it off? Give
yourself 250 yards of adhesive tape.
So he sits there in his chair watching and I sit
there in mine dutifully dabbing at the thumb
while such adroit dialogue as “You don’t have to
be afraid to rub it!” "I’m not!” is bandied about.
Finally he decides I don’t have the right attitude,
cursorily examines by thumb, and has the nurse
put a band-aid on it and sends me home.
As I pull out of the parking lot of Meyer,
SNAFU strikes. I later learn that the parking lot
dividers at Meyer arc just the right height to
catch I he rear mud guard of my newly repainted
car and rip the metal in half. Blissfully unaware of
this catastrophe I go roaring home to sit blissfully
on the couch and relax before going to a party.
Of course while changing the records on the record
player I knock my freshly made screwdriver over
the rest of the records and have to clean that
up but little do I realize the crowning blow that
is to occur the next morning.

Being tired I get fairly drunk. It works that
way with me. And upon arising the next morning
it turns out that I have lost contact with my
wallet. Friends, there is nothing more miserable
than an American male who is walletless. Forget
that there is $40 in it to pay for an engine tuneup
and groceries (soh), it is all those damn fool
bits of plastic that have you worried, right? One
never realizes how many credit cards one has
until one no longer has them and somebody else
does. And then you swear and stomp and just
generally carry on.
You go kick leaves around where it might
have fallen out of the car, and you go back to
the remains of the party and have absolutely no
luck of course. And everytime the phone rings one
grabs it eagerly but it is just W w wanting to know
if you found it yet. (The same W w whose response
to this earthshaking event was “Oh No! Not again,”

mind

you).

But nothing happens, no bright cheery voice
calls up and says, “Say, &lt;|id you lose your wallet?”
And as the day drags on it begins to occur to one
even as dull as I that perhaps no one is going to
call, and that there arc no places left to look, and
that by gcorge (or by Lyndon) maybe hostile elements have the silly thing. So the phone calls
and the telegrams and the explanations and the
generally increasing aggravation commence. It
takes discussion with no less than five people to
cancel a Marine Charge Card for example, or was
that
and heavens did I do anything about
that one?
....

But what really scares me is what I am going
to tell the American Legion when they want to
see my draft card . . . and worse yet, what if the
draft beard, no damn it, board, doesn’t believe me?

�o»v^

Disturbed by threats of force in Dow-CIA dispute
To tho Editor:
I am disturbed by the fact that the use of force
to arbitrate disputes is becoming increasingly
characteristic throughout American life. It is obvious that the frustration surrounding the war in
Vietnam is having a corrosive effect on our national commitment to the democratic process. This
is evidenced not only by those willing to silent
dissent by whatever means, but also by the increasrecenl

:ies

&amp;

Subs

Variety of Hot and Cold Sandwiches
Big John's Steak Special

PASTRAMI

ol

State University of Buffalo, and other schools, in
attempting to prevent recruitment by Dow Chemical Company and the CIA.
What is most disturbing is that while these
students show a strong emotional attachment to
what we might call “democratic goals,” they no
longer have any abiding attachment to "democratic
means.” Democracy is a fragile thing, and it requires a certain rationality which is wholly lacking
in such statements as that issued last week by the
Student Mobilization Committee which said: “. . .
the real issues arc not academic freedom or freedom of speech, but Genocide. If you want to debate
the CIA or Dow Chemical, you must debate Genocide. We feel that you cannot take the bourgeois
liberal position that you are against napaiming

Spock, with whom I am in agreement, has a right
to “recruit” to a point of view. It should be
remembered that those who want a bigger war
are equally passionate. Passion reacts to passion.
How would the members of the Student Mobilization Committee feel if those for the war had staged
a sit-in which prevented attendance at Dr. Spock’s

has ever been a majority
deeply committed to democratic means. If these
are to be forsaken by those on whom we depend
for future leadership, the future is indeed dark.
Paul N. Carnes
Minister of the Unitarian Universalist
Church on Elmwood Ave.

To the Editor:

Whereas, we feel that this defense is not only
the protection of the physical boundaries of the

The Arnold Air Society, a national student
AFROTC organization with a chapter on this campus, has passed the following policy resolution at
its national conclave:
Whereas, there is dissent from current United
States foreign policy, and
Whereas, the Arnold Air Society is concerned

United Stales, but also the preservation of the
basic human rights of freedom and justice wherever
such ideals arc threatened anywhere in the world,

by the excess public attention given organizations
voicing their dissent, and,
Whereas, the Arnold Air Society recognizes
an inherent danger to the democratic processes of
the American government when the majority fails
to adequately express itself, and,
Whereas, we feel that the purposes, traditions,
and concepts of the Arnold Air Society arc repre
sentativc of the ideals of a significant portion of the
American people, and,
Whereas, the Arnold Air Society supports the
existence of a strong military structure, not as an
instrument of aggression and war, but as a means

and,

Whereas, the Arnold Air Society readily supports the basic democratic processes of representative government,

Therefore be it resolved, that the Arnold Air
Society reaffirms its support of the present United
Stales foreign policy as formulated by the duly
elected officials of the United States,
further resolved,
That with faith in the citizens of
and trust in God, we pledge to dedicate
of the Arnold Air Society toward the
of world wide peace with freedom.

and be it

our nation

the efforts
attainment

Gregory S. Parnell
Information Officer
Arnold Air Society

and,

State University of Buffalo

Writer asks MOB, SDS to picket bakers
To the Editor:

1 speak not only for myself, but for many who
feel as I do. Our ancestors have insured me the
right to speak with whom I please. If I desired
to meet with a representative from the CIA or
Dow Chemical Co. concerning my future, and
would break no campus regulations in doing so.
I would—and if a group of hyprocritical, oul-ofplace juveniles attacked that freedom, they would
get the cracked heads they so desire and threaten.
And I don’t consider this freedom necessarily an
“academic" freedom. To me the issue js far from
debatable.
At the open forum we were obligingly informed
by Mr. Don Mikulecky that we were being "played

On Campus MaxShuIman
{By the author
'

’

lecture?
I doubt that there

Arnold Air Society resolution supports foreign policy

of defense,

Pizza

s

.

le

BIG JOHN'S

of children, but you defend Dow Chemical’s right
to recruit people to napalm.” Such simplistic alternatives are utterly self-defeating.
I am persuaded that the peace movement in
this country is seriously jeopardized by such refusal
to discriminate between issues. It is one thing
for an individual to burn his draft card. This is
an individual action which one takes in spite of the
consequences. It is another thing to attempt to
disrupt orderly procedures which may be unpopular.

(ration is being “played with" by Mr. Mikulecky.
He said that students had “been bought by 2-S deferments," Rather, at 31 years of age Mr. MikuIceky sold himself out when he relinquished his
papers at the local draft board. Yes, Mr, Mikulecky. I agree with you wholeheartedly (even if
you didn't say it)—you don't say much!
I would like to propose a plan for the minority
which is so concerned with the Dow Chemical Com
pany’s involvement in the war and presence on
campus. You can end the use of napalm and bring
our boys hack from Vietnam much more effectively by getting them good and hungry. Millbrook
Bread Company takes part in feeding these war
machines. Gel smart and picket the bakers. It suits
your intelligence.

with" by the administration. Rather the adminis-

y1

of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys!”,
“Dobie Gillis," etc.)

FOOTBALL FOR SHUT-INS

At next Saturday’s football game while you are sitting
in your choice student’s seat behind the end zone, won’t
you pause and give a thought to football’s greatest and,
alas, most neglected name ? I refer, of course, to Champert

Sigafoos.
Charr.pert Sigafoos (1714-1928) started life humbly on
a farm near Thud, Kansas. His mother and father, both
named Walter, were bean-gleaners, and Champert became
a bean-gleaner too. But he tired of the work and went to
Montana where he got a jpb with a logging firm. Here the
erstwhile bean-gleaner worked as a stump-thumper. After
a month he went to North Dakota where he tended the
furnace in a granary (wheat-heater). Then he drifted to

Texas where he tidied up oil fields (pipe-wiper). Then to
Arizona where he strung dried fruit (fig-rigger). Then
to Kentucky where he fed horses at a breeding farm (oattoter). Then to Long Island where he dressed poultry
(duck-plucker). Then to Alaska where he drove a delivery
van for a bakery (bread-sledder). Then to Minnesota
where he cut up frozen lakes (ice-slicer). Then to Nevada
where he determined the odds in a gambling house (dicepricer). Then to Milwaukee where he pasted camera
lenses together (Zeiss-splicer).
Finally he went to Omaha where he got a job in a tannery, beating pig hides until they were soft and supple
(hog-fiogger). Here occurred the event that changed not
only Champert’s life, but all of ours.
Next door to Champert’s hog-floggery was a mooring
mast for dirigibles. In flew a dirigible one day, piloted by
a girl named Graffa von Zeppelin. Champert watched
Graffa descend from the dirigible, and his heart turned
over, and he knew love. Though Graffa’s beauty was not
quite perfect—one of her legs was shorter than the other
(blimp-gimper)—she was nonetheless ravishing, what
with her tawny hair and her eyes of Lake Louise blue and
her marvelously articulated haunches. Champert, smitten,
ran quickly back to the hog-floggery to plan the wooing.
To begin with, naturally, he would give Graffa a present. This presented problems, for hog-flogging, as we all
know, is a signally underpaid profession. Still, thought
Champert, if he had no money, there were two things he
did have: ingenuity and pigskin.
So he selected several high grade pelts and stitched
them together and blew air into them and made for Graffa
a perfectly darling little replica of a dirigible. “She will
love this,” said he confidently to himself and proceeded to
make ready to call on Graffa.
First, of course, he shaved with Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades. And wouldn’t you? If you were looking
to impress a girl, if you wanted jowls as smooth as ivory,
dewlaps like damask, a chin strokable, cheeks fondlesome,
upper lip kissable, would you not use the blade that
whisks away whiskers quickly and slickly, tuglessly and
nicklessly, scratchlessly and matchlessly? Would you not,
in short, choose Personna, available both in Injector style
and double-edge style’ Of course you would.

Don Carmody

Suggests United Nations role in Viet negotiations
To the Editor
"gel out" of South Vietnam is
a question poised upon illogic. Any American who

To "stay-in” or

believes it is politically, militarily, or justly pos
sible for the U.S. to suddenly, without peace negotiations, withdraw troops from Vietnam, has to
be a hypocrite, for the repercussions of such a
move would be multifold and disastrous. Yet still,

no American could possibly wish the U.S. to remain in Vietnam. Those who arc fighting all too
well know that “war is hell!” What has happened
to the United Nations; cannot it supply a safeguard against Viet Cong escalation during a ceasefire for peace negotiations?
This war is costing every American not only
money, but also many “ifs.” If there were no
“war,” government spending could go towards: increased educational facilities, avoiding a depletion
of anti-poverty funds, more medical research programs, etc.; and especially it would save lives and
contribute towards a more progressive modern
America and towards world peace.
Is man destined to destroy that which he has
worked centuries to create? Is the greed of some

nations so great that they arc blinded from the
conquest of life, beset to die in the conquest of
death? Why must man destroy before he rebuilds?
How possible it would be for the dream world

of tomorrow to be here today, if only all nations
and all men within all nations, could work together in peace.
How long must all of this be the dream of the
idealist? Wherein lie the answers? We must
struggle rapidly to find them, and not waste lives
and precious moments on the battlefield of dis-

So Champert, his face a study in epidermal elegance,
rushed next door with his little pigskin dirigible. But
Graffa, alas, had run off, alas, with a bush pilot who specialized in dropping limes to scurvy-ridden Eskimo vil-

The bells toll for peace—why must there be
those deaf to its call? Our arm is outstretched.
Are some nations filled with such a hate and distrust of peaceful endeavors that they will not
grasp onto tomorrow's dream for today?
Are so many students blinded by the leaders
of discontentment, marchers protesting the war,
threatening violence against Dow Chemical interviews on campus? These students must recognize
that they are participating in a movement that is
indirectly hindering our nation’s call for peace.

Pete Rozelle!
They walked silently, heads down, four discouraged
men. For weeks they had been trying to invent football,
but they couldn't seem to find the right kind of ball. They
tried everything—hockeypucks, badminton birds, bowling
balls, quoits—but nothing worked. Now seeing Champert
kicking his pigskin spheroid, their faces lit up and as one
man they hollered “Eureka!” The rest is history.

contentment.

Patriot

lages (fruit-chuter).
Champert, enraged, started kicking his little pigskin
blimp all over the place. And who should walk by just
then but Jim Thorpe, Knute Rockne, Walter Camp, and

*

*

*

©1W7.

Max Shulman

Speaking of kickt, if you’ve got any about your pretent thave cream, try Burma-Shave, regular or menthoL

�XI

Friday, Newamkar V7, 1947

-x

-»

-

.

The Spectrum

Pag* S*v*n

Blaine Amendment still not outdated
HILLEL presents

a

Pre-Thanksgiving Dance

Saturday November 18th
,

9:00 PM. to 12:30

LIVE MUSIC
DRINKS

CASUAL DRESS

Jewish War Vets Post
576 Taunton Place
Members Free

To the Editor:

In your Nov. 10, 1967 editorial you ask for a
repeal of the Blaine Amendment which prohibits
State aid to parochial schools. Why do you call
Blaine outdated? Has Church and State separation
become an issue of the past? Do the hazards of
Church government which the “Founding Fathers"
recognized no longer exist?
The power of the Church was shown by the
powerful lobby it maintained at the Constitutional
Convention. This same lobby supported ads in
newspapers which depicted the government as a
villain which withholds aid from needy children.
Who is the real cause of the suffering? It is the
parent who sends his child (by his own free will)
to a private school though he knows that Statebacked public schools are open to all.
Religious freedom is an absolute right; support of religious schools by the public is not. I

school.”

There is indeed a need for better educated
citizens. There is also (at least theoretically) a seat
-in_a public school for any student regardless of
in a religious school). You say our schools will be
flooded if parochial schools close? My answer is
build more schools and raise taxes if necessary.

The public can surely handle a financial burden which has been managed by only a small segment of the population until now. Take from me
any funds necessary to educate all students in
public schools. But don’t ask me to support the
religious beliefs of others.
Brian Weiss

Other Students; $1.00

For Rides—Call: 876-7076

Writer sees aid as unconstitutional
To the Editor:

YAH...YOU!
Did You Order Your BUFFALONIAN Yet?

ITTODAY!

DO

NORTON LOBBY
10 a.m. 4 p.m.
-

1967 Buffalonian Staff

I would like to take issue with your editorial
urging the repeal of the Blaine Amendment.
Education is available to every single eligible
child under our present public school system. If
one insists on receiving a more “religious” education (which is not the responsibility of the State)
he must be prepared to accept the costs presented
by this alternative.

It is also impossible to ignore the fact that
such an action would be unconstitutional under
the present interpretation of the First Amendment.
The Blaine Amendment does not concern it-

To the Editor:
There’s been a lot said about the right of Dow

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our own efficiently-run, nobly-inspired CIA to recruit innocent and unsuspecting
students on the campus grounds. To set the
matter straight, the relationship between myself
and the CIA is one of immense distrust and
passionate disapproval. But I don’t believe that
anyone has the right to push his hallowed opinions
and/or prejudices on anyone else, and that includes
last year’s military recruitment riots and the Tiffin
room sit-in.

Somebody will probably say that I am the archetype of the German civilian who shut his mouth
while his friends, relatives and the public in general were dragged off to the the gas chambers.
But bear in mind that the whole situation was
created in the first place by people pushing their

domain.

Madeline Levine

beliefs and/or etc. on other people. And don’t
think I am equating pacifists or war protestors to
Nazis, but it all comes out the same in the end.
You’re stepping on other people. And this is not
a protest against people being indiscriminately
dragged off into the night, although it comes close.
I think a campaign to inform and recruit would
be a clear step forward, to beat on a tired cliche.
How many people know what Dow Chemical produces towards the war effort? Or what our allAmerican CIA was (and probably still is) using
students for? I’m sure the information, distributed
in the right places at the right times, would
keep enough people away from the recruiting
tables, and if that means another emotional smear
campaign then, God help us, we arc at least shying
away from a great hypocrisy.
Gerard Strauss

Spectrum editorial raises problems
To the Editor:

An editorial in a recent issue of The Spectrum
(Friday, Nov. 3rd) seems to sum up the CCS and
campus administration position on the CIA-Uow
controversy.

SWEAT£H I PT
COET
AffHmUQUOR

BOX IIOO BALTO.,Hn^l203
PROHIBITED BV LAW

The issue here is not war or
peace. It isn’t U. S. foreign policy.
It isn’t Lyndon Johnson or Busk
or McNamara . . , The issue clear
ly is whether or not any group,
any agency, any individual or any
company has the right to come
on a university campus, (emphasis
added).

The editorial raises several problems.
First, as Gray MacArthur suggests in his letter
to the same number of The Spectrum, it is not so
clear that the issue involves the right of a group,
etc., to Come on a university campus. The Left has
never questioned the right of the CIA to publicly
debate their activities on this campus. (We do
question the possibility of such debate). The issue
which we raised concerns the active recruitment of
students into a genocidal war machine. The at
tempt of the CCS and the administration to shift
the original issue to one of “Free Speech" or
“Academic Freedom” is clearly dishonest.

Beyond this it is valuable to ask why did these
people run to the altar of Academic Freedom in
order to exorcise the Left? The answer to this
question should give us some interesting insights
into the meaning of that concept for the Liberal
Establishment,

OThe National Brewing Co. of Balto., Md. at Balto., Md.
also Phoenix Miami Detroit
•

Yes, I do agree that parochial schools form a
part of our culture, and that they do have a
definite place in American society. But that place
is specifically, and exclusively, in the private

Ob’ tKuQiA

£l»»A.

OFPERVOiP

self with providing funds for private schools, but
rather just parochial schools. As a result of a
recent Supreme Court decision it is forbidden to
recite even a single prayer in a public school. If
such an innocuous gesture is to be considered unconstitutional, how can we support the use of funds
to be utilized largely for religious purposes?

'Campaign to inform' needed
Chemical and

•

ask these same _people who wish to aid a Catholic
school or a Yeshiva if they would just as readily
give their own money to support a Black Muslim
hate school which is in every respect a “religious

"Free Speech” and "Academic Freedom” are
clearly loaded concepts in this society Originally
(when they emerged during the 17th century period
of Enlightenment) they were viewed and used as
namely, the betterment of the
means to an end
—

human condition through the rational dialogue of
honest men. Today, however, these concepts are
used as an end in themselves. They arc abstracted
from any living context, shorn of any meaningful
content. Thus when The Spectrum redefines the
issue as the right of any group to come onto campus they are in effect bypassing the real situation
and calling for academic freedom for the sake of
academic freedom. But they do more than this. For
by dealing with the concept of “Academic Freedom” in the abstract they actually defend its negation in the concrete. The transformation of the
original issue provide a smoke screen under which
the activities of Dow and the CIA are shielded
from consideration Thus when one of the leaders
of CCS asks if the Left would also try to prohibit
Pet Milk from recruiting on campus he shifts to
an abstract plane where it makes no difference that
one produces to feed babies while the other produces to burn them. By a simple act of abstraction
concrete activities are overlooked. The real human

issue is

thereby

avoided.

The Left on this campus has too much respect
for the original liberating notion of free speech
and academic freedom to permit them to be used
as screens for illiberal activity. The issue is not the

abstract right of recruitment but of recruitment
into a war of genocide.

Will the CIA and Dow Chemical come on to
this campus to publicly debate their activities? will
they dare defend their complicity with genocide?
I fear not. And while campus Liberals call for debates on abstract issues these agencies carry on
their concrete activities. It is to these activities
which the Left directs its attention. It is these activities which we will discuss. It is these activities
which we must make every human effort to stop.
BiU Mayrl

�Friday, November 17, 1967

The Spectrum

Page Eight

Teach-in rally will be CAC budget cut causes big problems;
stagedby
and Mob
SDS 3 students seek OEO for answers
The SDS, Student Mobilization
Committee and the Resistance
are co-sponsoring a mass teach-in

The

rally will take place in Nor-

ton Hall and the demonstration
will consist of a picket line in
front of the Federal Building on
Main Street near High Street.
According to Larry Faulkner,
spokesman for the three groups,

the “action is in support of
those members of the Armed
Forces who refuse to fight in
Vietnam.”
It is “specifically in support of
Pvt. Ronald Lockman, who was
just sentenced to two and onehalf years at hard labor for refusing to obey orders to board a
troop transport to Vietnam.” The
action is also in support of the
Ford Hood Three, Pvts. Samas,

Johnson, “whose case
the Supreme Court refused to
review (each are serving three
Capt. Howard Levy, who refused to train Green Berets for
Vietnam duty, and the sailors
who deserted the carrier Intrepid
in Tokyo will also specifically be
supported by Monday’s action.
Mr. Faulkner, discussing the
reasons for the rally and demon-

stration, claimed: “I think that
these soldiers are acting in the
best American traditions. They
are on the soundest legal and
moral grounds in refusing to partake in genocide in Vietnam.
When a war crimes tribunal
(Nuremburg) meets to review
America’s role in this war, these
men will be able to say, ‘We were
not silent when the boxcars
rolled by’.’’

Work-study program to
be discussed for Buffalo
Cooperative Education programs similar to those given now
at Antioch, Beliot College and
Northeastern University may be
coming to Buffalo in the future.
The Vice-PrOsidcnt and Ford
Foundation Professor of Cooperative Education at Northeastern
University in Boston, Mr. Roy L.
Wooldridge, will be on campus
Dec. 5 and 6 to discuss the possibility of offering work-study programs at the State University of
Buffalo.
Professor Wooldridge will give
an address on Cooperative Education at 3 p.m., Dec, 5 in Room
231 Norton Hall. He will also be

available to talk with interested

by Mike Friedman

Mora and

students and faculty, Dec. 6 between 9 a.m. and 11 a m. in
Lounge 2 of Norton Hall.
Cooperative Education gives
students the opportunity to study
and work for a degree over a
period of from 5 to 6 years in
a field related to their major.
Established 60 years ago at Lehigh University, there are now
110 colleges and universities with
cooperative education. There arc
over 56,000 college and university students in these programs
earning 95 million dollars a year.
If Buffalo were to introduce a
Cooperative Education Program,
it would be the first 4 year State
University to do so.

Spectrum

—

854-1137

Reporter

Three students from the State University of Buffalo
to inquire about o taming a
grant for the University’s Community Aid Corps
The three are; Tracy Cottone, director of the CAC,
James Schwinger, head of the tutorial program at Woodlawn, and who is responsible for the CAC budget; and
Barbara Emilson, a student senator.
The CAC is to ask the Of- backgrounds through a continfice of Economic Opportunity uous program of cultural enrichment.”
about money to continue
Secondly it attempts to stimutheir present programs and late student interest in the efto start a day care center in fects of poverty on both the personal and community, it also
the Masten district of Bufpre-professional experfalo. Plans have been made provides
iences for students of the Unifor the day care center but versity, and increases community
not employed for lack of awareness of the University as
funds.
an educational and cultural rewill visit Washington, D.C.

The Corps has been funded
entirely by the Student Association in the past, but their budget
was cut by the Association, because of a lack of money due to
new voluntary student fees.

If the CAC does not receive
a grant from the OEO, and is
forced to fall back only on its
Student Association money, it
will have to curtail many of its
activities, including field trips for
underprivileged children.
These field trips are an important part of the CAC program.
Director Tracy Cottone mentioned
in an interview with The Spectrum: “The most important thing
is to be the child’s friend and
to give him an insight into things
he normally wouldn't come in
contact with.”

source.

The CAC has many projects,
some of which require so little
money that they are pot included
in the plan that the CAC is giving to the OEO. These include
help for the mentally retarded
and other related projects.

Transportation problem

aspiration

Many projects that would normally not require large amounts
of money do so because of the
nature of the Community Aid
Corps. Since it is made up of
University students, many of
whom do not have access to cars,
transportation is a big financial
problem for many of the projects.
The CAC uses cars provided by
the Faculty-Student Association
and by the University, for which
it pays upward of $7 per day
per car.
The recreation project at the
Akron Indian Reservation exemplifies this problem, since it is
25 miles from Buffalo.

turally deprived, minority status

jects have been set up, children

Objectives
The Community Aid Corps has
many objectives that it tries to
fulfill.

First: “To increase the level of
and achievement of
individuals who stem from cul-

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have been taught their Indian
heritage, and field trips have
been taken one each to Fantasy
Island and the Buffalo Zoo.

The Friendship Settlement

House is another CAC recreation
project, in which volunteers are
teaching arts and crafts and are
producing a play.
At the Information Centers at
Woodlawn, in the fruit belt, and
Lackawanna, CAC volunteers tutor underprivileged, undereducated pupils.

The CAC has to provide most
of its own books, because at
Woodlawn Junior High School

the pupils are not allowed to

take their books home.
The CAC has a companion program for the Children’s Aid Society. This program provides a
model for a child who has been
largely ignored or needs to be
brought into the “mainstream of
life”. The Volunteers help the
children to relate to their environments and to take their
places in society.

Financial difficulty
The Community Aid Corps, having tripled its membership this
year, is having a great deal of
trouble financing all the programs it is capable of carrying
out. With its expected budget
cut, it cannot expand or even
run all its present programs.

The representatives of the CAC
are going to Washington Nov. 29
to find out if they can get a federal grant from the Office of
Economic Opportunity or from
the Department of Health, Edu-

cation, and Welfare.
In addition to a federal grant
the CAC is trying to obtain funds
from the Urban Extension
League, part of the state poverty
program. The University of Buffalo Foundation is also trying to
put them in touch with private
foundations.
Joining Miss Cottone and Mr.
Schwinger in their trip to Washington, Senator Barabara Emilson
will also do Student Association
business.
She plans to visit the placement centers, financial aid departments, and health services
of colleges and universities in
the Washington area.

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�Friday, November 17, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* Nln*

Student Senate planning election to
fill vacant Arts and Sciences post
The Student Senate will
student to succeed Sandra
Funt as Arts and Sciences
Senator.
Petitions will be available
beginning Nov. 27 for junior
and senior students interested in filling the vacated seat.
Candidates must be enrolled
in the College of Arts and
Sciences, and they must have at
least a 1.0 overall average including a better than 1.0 average
last semester. A valid petition
must have 142 signatures.

The number of signatures required represents approximately
ten per cent ot ihe total number
of students in Arts and Sciences.
Candidates are required to obtain this percentage on a petition to be eligible to run for
election. All present Senators had
to acquire the same percentage
before they were elected last
spring.
All petitions must be handed
into the Senate Office before
noon Dec. 4.
Signers of petitions will be
called randomly by the Executive
Committee to check for their
validity.
Candidates

will then be inter-

viewed by the Senate Dec. 6.
Hopefuls will be asked to speak
about themselves after which the
Senate will vote. The student receiving a majority vote will become the new Senator.

This midyear election was called by the Student Senate to fill
the seat of Sandra Funt vacated
when she resigned last month
over a controversy on Senatorial

procedure.
Nick Sargent, the University
Law School Senator, also resigned.

His position is not open for
re-election because of a resolution now before the law school
to drop its Senate seat.

GSA unanimously approves budget
The Graduate Student Association’s Executive Council ap-

proved the treasurer’s suggested
budget of $38,556 Nov. 14 at a
special meeting called for that

from the fund rarely bother to
back. The money will be
set aside, out of the fund, until
a way is found to collect the unpaid loans.
pay it

purpose.

The council quickly disposed of
the GSA operating costs, the secretarial salary and benefits, office supplies, postage, and telephone These were all passed by
unanimous vote, and totaled
$7643.

The publications and newsletters budget of $1080 was also
passed quickly, as well as the
$500 allotted for coffee hours in
the GSA lounge.
The $3000 contribution to the
GSA Loan Fund was debated for
a short while because allegedly
the people who borrow money

The Committee budgets were
quickly approved, with a total
of $500, as well as the Graduate
Student Organizations’ budgets.
The total amount approved for
the clubs was $8650.50, with the
biggest single appropriation being for the Philosophy Club, to
print a journal. The journal,
which will, said a Philosophy
Club spokesman, become self-sup
porting eventually, brought the
club’s appropriation up to $1650.
The convocations and speakers
appropriation of $6000 was ap-

proved unanimously. The contribution to The Spectrum of $6000

—

rested.

Four were dragged shouting
from the courtroom at the San
Francisco Presidio, The other arrests resulted from fist fights outside the court building at the base
near the Golden Gate Bridge.

The last item approved was an
Uncommitted Fund of $2185, to
cover clubs that may start during
the year and extra money for
clubs that are covered by the
current budget.

The meeting was stalled at
the beginning of the question of
whether or not a tape recorder

demonstrator yelled, "This
court is illegal and unconstitutional.” Four husky MP's converged on the youth, who clung
to his chair, until they carried
him bodily outside.

If convicted, Lockman faces a

Later, two men and a woman
were dragged thrashing and yel-

His speech, "A Congressman Reports From Vietnam,” will be
followed by a question and answer period. The lecture is co sponsored
by the Office of International Educational Services and the Buffalo
Council on World Affairs.
Dr. Naraln, Visiting Asian professor, will speak on Indian history
since independence in a talk sponsored by the International Club,
Nov. 30, at 8 p.m. in Room 340 Norton Hall.
A Splash Party sponsored by the Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship will be held tonight. All members of Inter-Varsity and anyone
interested in joining should meet at 7 p.m. tdday in Room 334

A discussion will follow the movie at Newman Hall. Students
are reminded to bring their ID cards to get an admission discount.

"Reflections of the Russian Revolution" will be the topic of a
lecture by Dr. Anna K. Moses of the English department and Pierre
Hart of the Modern Language Department. It will be presented by
the Slavic Club, Monday at 7:30 p.m. in Room 234 Norton Hall. At
this time the election of officers for the 1967-68 year will also take
place.

brought in by a graduate student

should be allowed. The process of

disallowing the tape recorder,
climaxed by the walking out of its
owner, clearly strained GSA president Gil Klajman

The fist fights erupted outside
the building when MP’s informed
the demonstrators they could not
go inside because the spectator

As the trial began, one youth-

in Norton Hall,

The Newman Clubs at the State University of Buffalo and State
University College at Buffalo, will jointly attend the showing of the
movie “Accident” Sunday at 7:30 p.m. Club members will meet at
the University’s Newman Hall at 7 p.m., then proceed to the Circle
Art Theater on Bailey Avenue.

More than 200 demonstrators
massed Sunday at the Presidio’s
main gate but military police refused them entry. For the opening of the court martial, however,
about 100 entered with about half

ful

Congressman Richard McCarthy, recently returned from a trip
to Vietnam, will speak at 8 p.m. Sunday in the Conference Theater

The GSA
contingency and
emergency fund was approved
after discussion on it for a few
minutes. It contains $3000.

ling from the
court building.

The private, Ronald Lockman,
23, son of a Negro steelworker,
pleaded innocent to a charge of
defying a lawful military order
Sept. 15 to board a troop plang
bound for Saigon. Lockman said
his “war” was in the ghettoes
at his hometown of Philadelphia.

Dr. Lloyd V. Blankenship of the Political Science Dept.
speak at a lecture sponsored by the Physics Graduate Student Associa
tion at 8 p.m. Monday in Room 111, Hochstetter Hall. The topic of
his speech will be “Politics of Science,"

Norton Hall.

dishonorable discharge and six
years imprisonment at hard labor.

of them obtaining spectator seats
in the courtroom set up in a one
story, wooden building near the
center of the base.

The University of Buffalo Trivia Club will hold elections for
officers during a meeting, Nov. 29 at 3:30 p.m, in Room 246 Norton
Hall. Members of the trivia team will also be chosen at this time.
Anyone interested in trivia should attend the meeting.

was approved after some discussion.

Army court-martial is scene of protest
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)
Screaming anti-war demonstrators
battled military police Monday
at the court-martial of an Army
private accused of refusing to go
to Vietnam. Ten persons were ar-

campus releases...

cream-colored

section was full.

The Harriman Reserve Library and the ground floor reading room
and the bound periodicals annex of Lockwood Library will be open
nightly until 1 a.m. This new policy, sponsored by the Student
Welfare Committee in cooperation with the above mentioned
libraries, will continue as long as student need warrants.

In the past, these facilities were open until 11 p.m. every week
day and Sundays and until 5 p.m. on Saturdays. They were open
until 1 a m. during examination periods during which time they
were extensively used.
Northwestern University has made available a sizable number of
fellowships for Negro students who are interested in pursuing the
Masters

in Business Administration.

Admission is based on the applicant’s indicated capacity for
graduate study in business as evidenced by undergraduate records,

letters and recommendation, and the results of the Admission Test
for Graduate Study in Business.
For additional information and application materials contact

Stanley Faulker of
New York entered a motion for
permission to submit oral depositions to prove the Vietnam war
was illegal. After its denial, the
defense filed a writ of habeas
corpus in U S. District Court on
grounds the military had made it
impossible for Lockman to receive a fair trial.
Attorney

Director of Admissions
Graduate School of Business Administration
Northwestern University
339 East Chicago Avenue
Chicago, Illinois 60611
The African Students Association of Buffalo is sponsoring an
African-American Party, Nov. 18 at 8 p.m. at 1002 Ellicott St., Apt. 6.
Contributions will be: Ladies $1.00 and gentlemen $1.50. Tele
phone Mike Tsomondo at 885-0282 or Opoka at 883-5263

GREjjjt rr'
INTER-FRATERNITY COUNCIL

BEER BLAST
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER

8:30—??

BANAT HALL
LULLv

25 Review Place

17

WILDCATS
$1.75 —advance
$2.00 —door

�■

\

3

00^' 5 ■ cvra

l0
'

C0^cs

. ,&gt;r\G 0S

C

'S$r
vAe a
'

'S&gt;

°

If your major
is listed here,
IBM would like
to talk with you
Dec. 5th or 6th

„

6

apatc"
.

*

Sign up for on interview at your placement office—even
if you're headed for graduate school or military service.
Why is IBM interested in so many different people?
The basic reason is growth. Information processing is
the fastest growing, fastest changing major industry in the
world. IBM products are being used to solve problems in
government, business, law. education, medicine, science, the
humanities—just about any area you can name. Wc need people w ith almost every kind of background to help our customers solve their problems. That's why we'd like to talk with you
What you can do at IBM
Whatever your major, you can do a lot of good things at
IBM. ('battue the world (maybe). Make money (certainly).

Continue your education (through any of several plans, including a Tuition Refund Program). And have a wide choice
of places to work (we have over 300 locations throughout
the United States).
What to do

next

We ll be on campus to interview for careers in Marketing. Computer Applications. Programming. Research, Design
and Development. Manufacturing, and Finance and Administration. If you can't make a campus interview, send an outline of \our interests and educational background to J.E. Bull.
IBM Corporation. 425 Park Avenue. New
.
York. New York 10022. Were an equal
|
*tr
Ivl
opportunity employer.
.

|jVi|

__

,

fv.cc

I

Friday, November 17, 1967

The Spectrum

Page Ten

�Friday, November 17, 1967

The

Pag* El*v*n

Spectrum

Dean Ha wklandplans for Senate open campus decision
Law School's future
(Continued from Page

"We want to build one of the
truly great law schools in the
United States. The law schools
in the U. S, are the best in the
world, and in a short time ours
will be one of the five best in
the country,” said Dean William
D, Hawkland Tuesday in the
University Report.
Today, with a student body of
a faculty of 30, the law

school has outgrown its facilities at 77 Eagle St. Therefore, it
has leased space in the Prudential
Building and will be leasing even
more next year. “But we will
keep the Eagle St. building (even
after the move to Amherst) to
run the clinic and for other departments of the University that
have business downtown.”
Dean Hawkland outlined some
basic elements for building a
quality law school for the future.
Physical facilities are something,
he said, that the school does not
have now and this lack is holding

it back. Many times alaw school
is judged by its facilities and
for this reason the Law School
is often underestimated.
The “heart of a law school is
its library,” said the Dean. The
University Law School has the
largest book budget of any law
school in the country. Right now
there are over 20,000 volumes
in the Erie County Library and
over 10,000 volumes in the Prudential Building.

Continuing, he pointed out that
the Law School uses a student's
college average and his score on
the LSAT (Law Boards)

in admit-

ting him. Out of 150 law schools
across the country, the University’s ranks seventeenth.
He also pointed out than an
important factor in building a
quality school is the need for the
right kind of spirit in the stu-

dents. “Our true character is
running well ahead of our reputation.”

Dr. Bennis to s.

Another University Report
The provost of the Faculty of
Social Sciences and Administration, Dr. Warren G. Bennis, will
deliver today’s University Report
at 9 a.m. in the Conference Thetre. He will speak on “Social

Sciences and Administration:
Prospects and Problematics,”

sciences and the professional
schools of business administration and social welfare as bold
and unprecedented. He also said
the move “is a counter-revolution
against the dangerous tendency
toward fragmentation and specialization in the sciences.”

“As for violence or the threat
of violence," he said, “I am sure
that all of us here deem it intolerable.”

“I do not think," he continued,
“that anyone in this room is unaware that on campuses today the
torment to individual consciences,
the ethical dilemmas, and the impulses to passion are linked to the
war in Vietnam.

“But, if, in the name of that
torment, we tarnish the heritage
a heritage
of our universities
committed among other things
to peaceful dissent respectful of
the rights of others
we will
have damaged those institutions
most vulnerable to attack and
which are our greatest hope for
—

the future,” he added.

Resolution passed

The actual resolution, passed

197-72 vote, states: “Resolved that the maintenance of
the opportunity for all legal
groups to partake in recruiting
on the campus is in keeping with
the responsibility of the Univer
sity to its students and to society,
as is the freedom of the Faculty
and students to express, in a

by a

A resolution to open the session “to all those who wish to
attend” failed 297 to 79. Repor
ters were also banned from the
sat
meeting. Three students
down outside the Millard Fillprotesting the
more
Room,
closed meeting.
Also voted down by a close
margin was an amendment ask
ing the Executive Committee of
the Faculty Senate to appoint a
committee to meet with repre
sentatives of the student body
to formulate a policy on recruit

chology, and sociology now rests
with Dr. Bennis.
University president Martin
Meyerson has said of Dr. Bennis
that he “brings to the University a broad understanding of
human organizations particularly
valuable to use as we begin to
create a new academic structures
and relationships on the cam-

ment.

Dr. Bennis

Three resolutions
Three resolutions will be considered at the next session of the
Faculty Senate. They state:
Resolved that it members
of the University block access or
•

to give next 'University Report

or person invited to the campus
by other members of the University, appropriate disciplinary ac� inn almulfl Kn
tolrpn tjj ITnitiPP111 Ytl
Llv/lt OIIUUlu UV lunvll Km

sity authorities. If any individual
or group causes or threatens bodily harm to another individual or
group or damages property, the
matter becomes, in addition, one
for the civil authorities to deal
with.

The chief cause of disorder
on this or other campuses is not
the irresponsibility of students.
It is the stubborn continuation of
an unjust and futile war by a
government unresponsive to the
moral torment this war inflicts
upon the generation compelled to
fight it. The Faculty Senate calls
for an end to the war in Vietnam,
both for the sake of the Vietnamese people, and as the only
means of halting the disillusionment with, and deterioration of,
democratic processes in America.
•

—

recruiters."

the academic programs of the
former schools of business admintration and social welfare, and
the departments of anthropology,
economics, geography, history,
philosophy, political science, psy-

Dr. Bennis hails the bringing
together of the academic social

President Meyerson warned
-against discrimination among-employers and students, asking: “If
we bar some recruiters, shall we
not bar all? And if we impose
such a bar in placement activities,
may it not be extended in the
name of conscience to many academic activities as well?”

peaceful manner, opposition to
the ideas or actions of the re-

Dr. Bennis, who became pro-

vost in July 1967, has written
ten books and one hundred articles in his field of interest. He
is a noted scholar of leadership,
motivation, and change in human
organization. Responsibility for

pus.”

1)

in other

ways

obstruct a group

It is time for the faculty as
a whole to accept responsibility
for an obligation iritas hitherto
left solely in the hands of administrative officers, namely, the
understanding of student aspirations and the definition of the
role of the campus in their expression and realization. The issue concerning recruitment has
now become one which must be
resolved through the collabora
tion of faculty and students, participating as equals The Execu
live Committee of the Faculty
Senate should, as soon as it is
elected, create a body to represent it for this purpose.
•

No date set

No date has been set for The
next Senate session, but it is expected to convene before the Dow
Chemical Co. recruitment date in
mid December.

In a statement issued to The
Tuesday, Jeffrey D.
Steinberg, a leading spokesman
for SDS in the Dow-CIA dispute,
called “the issues of free speech
and an open campus . . . both
phony issues and a smokescreen
for the real issues: genocide and
University complicity.
Spectrum

"Let it be clear at the outset
that our stand is not changed by
the Faculty Senate action. Genocide is not a matter for debate
nor something which is to be
decided by majority vote—it is
simply wrong. Picture yourself,
for example, as a Vietnamese
child about to be cremated with
napalm—would you, if you had

...

any power to resist, subject yourself to napaiming because some
majority (assuming even that you
had cast a dissenting vote) voted
to do so?

Free speech issue irrelevant
“Secondly, the issue of free
speech and open campus is simply irrelevant except as related
to action. The concern over what
the CIA or Dow may say must be
related to what they do and are
doing. Debate and exchange of
ideas would be quite relevant if
CIA and Dow were willing to
cease their activities during the
debate and

until these issues were

fully discussed.

“Also, President Meyerson’s isassume the University as a
value-free organization somehow
separated from the values of man
and society. Mr, Meyerson himself said to the Faculty Senate
that "I hope after our deliberations today you will feel that
your chairman —like the University—can maintain neutrality
even though as an individual his
views are not neutral,” This University is not neutral —it functions to preserve and further the
values of the society in which it
functions. One of those values at
the moment seems to be genocide.
Simply put, if this University allows an organization to recruit
men for genocide, it has taken a
stand for genocide. There is no
academic freedom or open campus in the abstract—these concepts must be understood within
the context of the real world.
sues

(Climb out of your ivory towers,

dear Professors, the blood is already dripping down its white
walls).

Will oppose CIA, Dow
“SDS does support a free university

in

a

free

society. But

the idea of a neutral

adopted recently by the University trustees.

The policy, adopted at a Nov. 9 meeting of the trustees,
endorsed intercollegiate athletic programs “that contribute
to its fundamental objective of offering all students the
best possible educational and living experiences.”
In addition, the policy effective
at the beginning of the 1968-69
academic year, states “the University intends that neither its
fiscal structure nor its student
personnel policies shall be distorted to accommodate such pro
grams," the trustees said.
“No agency of the University
shall provide or honor student
subsidies based primarily on a
student’s athletic ability," the

policy said.

“The University shall devote to
intercollegiate athletic activity a
share of its total financial re-

sources proportionate to the best
interests of all students in the
three-way program of physical
education, recreation, and athletics. All fees and gate receipts
associated with University controlled intercollegiate athletic
contests shall be received into
the University income fund.

“In view of this, we repeat that
we will oppose and interfere with
the activities of Dow Chemical
Co. and the CIA whenever and
wherever possible. We will oppose and interfere with university complicity in their activities.
This will include such measures
as demonstration, blocking access
to recruiters, and possibly asserting our right to remove them
from our University. Removal of
recruiters, if done, would be a
matter of individual decision.”

faculty-student association activities, shall be used for such activities only with the consent of
the chancellor of the university,"
the policy statement said.
The program also requires all
regular undergraduate students
to take part in physical education.

“This requirement shall generally apply to physically normal,
full-time freshmen and sophomores,” the statement added.

-

“Since all of the University ■
approved activities in physical
education, recreation, and athletics shall be funded normally
through its state operating and
capital construction budgets, supplementary funds, such as those
from studgnt assessments or

Special programs will be defor the handicapped.

veloped

The University endorsed intra-

mural athletics and recreational
programs and promised support
“to the extent possible.”
trustees also sanctioned
student-imposed assessments for

—upi

«i«p oto

Dj_

The

student activities and educational
programs.

•

DUSt

if this

self-deluding joke.

Athletic scholarships are abolished;
University trustees adopt new policy
ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI)—Athletic scholarships have been
outlawed by State University of New York under a policy

(as

equaled free) university in an
unfree society is a cruel and

city Hall at Waferbury,
was filled early this

Conn,

week. Police had earlier raided
a birthday party for a 17-yearold girl and arrested 65 when
marijuana was

found.

�Friday, November 17, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* Tw*lv*

Rusk arrives early; avoids facing
anti-war demonstrators in New York
Club-swinging
mounted police and foot patrolmen clashed with antiwar demonstrators early this week outside

NEW YORK

—

the New York Hilton Hotel where
Secretary of State Dean Rusk
slipped in quietly ahead of schedule to deliver a foreign policy
speech.
At least five policemen were
injured in scattered violence as

the ranks
of demonstrators
swelled to almost 3,000. Police
said 10 demonstrators were arrested.

The demonstration started

peacefully when about 200 pickets
took up positions outside the
hotel to protest the Vietnam war
upon Rusk’s arrival.

Arrived earlier
But Rusk, in a highly unusual
move, cancelled an afternoon
meeting with Japanese Prime
Minister Eisaku Sato in Washington and came to New York
earlier than scheduled.
Rusk wanted to avoid a confrontation with the demonstrators that might have made it
necessary for him to breach their

lines to enter the hotel. In this
he was successful, but as the
ranks of the protesters increased
the violence broke out.
The demonstrators blocked traffic on busy Sixth Avenue and
knocked down police barricades,
Mounted police and foot patrolmen moved in with night sticks
to force the demonstrators back.
The lobby of the hotel where
Rusk was to address the 50th
anniversary celebration of the
Foreign Policy Association, was
packed with hotel guests who
watched the proceedings. Many
of them were in formal attire,
apparently on hand for the $150

tion, only to face a categorical
rejection from the other side,”
he said.
Noting that every American
peace bid has been rejected,
Rusk said: All violence could
end within hours with minimum
cooperation from the authorities
in Hanoi.”
In Washington, State Department press officer Robert J. McCloskey said he was “unable to
disclose” the reason for Rusk’s
change of schedule. But other
official sources said secrecy was
decided, on after anti-war groups
distributed leaflets in New York
calling for a mass picketing pro-

"We have tried
“Those who are concerned
about escalation should know
that we have tried over and over
again, through diplomacy and by
practical actions on the ground,
to start the process of de-escala-

test.
They said Rusk did not intend
to let the protest groups force
him to cancel his wide-ranging
speaking campaign or give them
the ensuing publicity if Rusk had
to crash picket lines.
The demonstration reportedly
was sponsored by the Fifth Avenue Peace Parade Committee, but
other protest groups also were
on hand including the Students
for a Democratic Society.

a plate FPA dinner.
Rusk touched only briefly on
Vietnam in a lengthy, philosophical speech. Rusk warned of the
danger of backing down unilaterally in Vietnam,
.

.

Headquarters for
ARROW SHIRTS

Action line
S3/-SOOO
.

.

.

Do you oftcn think it impossible to untonglo the Stato University of Buffalo
bureaucracy? In cooperation with the Dean of Students' Office The Spettrum
it sponsoring an ACTION LINE. Through ACTION LINE, individual students
can get on answer to a puzzling question. find out where and why University
decisions are mode, and get ACTION when change it indicated.
ACTION LINE will answer all questions of general interest which appear to
be pertinent to the student body. The Spectrum will include them in its special
ACTION LINE weekly column.
Each inquiry will be thoroughly investigated
and answered individually. The name of the individual originating the inquiry
will not be published.
,

Q: Is it true there are many periodicals missing from the
collection in Lockwood Annex, and if so, why?
A: Mr. William B. Ernst, Jr., Associate Director of the University Library, stated that, “At any given time many bound periodicals are not in their proper places. This does not necessarily mean
they are missing or lost, though a few are. Some periodicals are in
nearly constant use. They may be on return shelves awaiting reshelving; in use in a carrel in the Annex; in use in the main building;
at the Copy Service office to be copied; charged out to faculty
members; at the bindery.
“When students or faculty cannot locate a periodical they should
(1) look on the movable sorting shelves in the Annex; (2) check the
visible file of periodical holdings in Lockwood to verify the title
and to see if the library owns the particular volume wanted; (3) ask
the Reference Librarian for help if the title or volume is not listed;
(4) inquire at the Circulation Desk if the records show the library
owns the volume; (5) if circulation has no record of the location of
the volume, ask to have it traced.
“Periodicals not available, either because they are missing or are
not in the library’s collections, may be obtained through the Interlibrary Loan Office, Ground Floor, Lockwood."
Q: Why is there a charge, and an exhorbitant one of $1, for a
transcript?
A: According to Dr. A. Kaiser, Director, Office of Admissions
and Records, the $1 fee is mandated by the business office of the
State University of New York in Albany and is a uniform fee charged
by all divisions of the University. No fee is charged for the first
transcript but the student must pay for each additional one. This
$1 fee, incidentally, does not cover the total costs involved of saff
time, equipment, postage, etc., in processing each transcript request.
Q: Can a commuting student get a board contract to eat in the
Residence Halls?
A: Yes. Mr. T. McCann Food Service Staff Accountant, informs
us that well over a hundred students are taking advantage of this
opportunity at the present time, and arrangements can be made for
additional, students interested in enrolling in this program. The
rate is the same as charged students living in our Residence Halls.

RIVERSIDE MEN'S SHOP
Tonawanda Street, cornar Ontario
Buffalo, Now York 14207

Anyone interested in getting further information about this plan
should contact the Student Accounts Office in Goodyear Hall.
specific answers to your questions, and for direct service, call ACTION LINE,
every Monday, Wednesday,
and Friday, from 4-5 p.m.
If you prefer,
phrase your question in writing and address it to ACTION LINE, c/o The Spectrum,
355 Norton Hall, or the Office of the Dean of Students, 201 Harriman Library.)
(For

831-5000,

Do you buy
a shirt
oralabel?
You buy both, if you’re
smart. Because a good label
means a good shirt. A shirt
that’s styled to last. With
rolls, pleats and tapers in

the right places. And a wide
enough selection of colors so
you don't have to buy the

same shade twice.

This Arrow "Cum Laude'
Oxford has all the things a
good label means. Buttondown roll collar with a soft
flare. Tapered waist.
Perma-lron so it won't

wrinkle. "Sanfprized-Plus.”
And it comes in blue, pinks,
stripes, etc., etc., for $7.00
So, if you want a good
shirt, look for a good label.
And if you want the best
label, buy a shirt made
by Arrow.

Hallowed tradition
of "pinning" a girl is
up-dated by
Sprite bottle caps.
According to an independent survey (we took it
ourseives), a startling new practice is becoming
widespread on some college campuses.

Suddenly, fraternity men are no longer "pinning"
the lovely young things that catch their eye.
Instead, they reach for a bottle of tart,
!ed to "cap"
affections.
Why has this
lome about’
rhaps because
f what happens
rhen you go
tie of Sprite.
lies!
All of which makes for a much more moving moment
than to simply "pin" a girl.
Then, too, the intimacy of two people engaged
in the act of opening a bottle of Sprite in itself
leads to strong emotional involvement.
Capped off, of course, by the sharing of a
few moments of delicious abandon. (Tasting the
tingling tartness of Sprite, that is.)
The beauty of the idea is that if the course
of true love does not run smooth, you don't have
to go to the trouble of getting back your pin.

�Friday, Novambar 17, 1967

Th

to declassify university projects

by Michael Galltzer

WASHINGTON (CPS)
The opposition to secret research on university campuses is at least partly responsible
for a recent Defense Department move toward “declassifying” some projects now underway at universities.

The 90 point fall in the Dow Jones Industrial Average
1967 recovery high has cast many
doubts as to whether we are still experiencing a bull market. Many experts felt that the market would be susceptible
to profit-taking at the 940 level; so a loss of 20 to 30 points
could still have been described as technical, but the ensuing
10% drop in the DJI has created concern.
from its September

The market presently is trying

It might react favorably to good
economic news, but ironically the
best economic news would be the
enactment of the surtax bill.

Another Xerox?

Computer issues must still be

considered as offering the greatest rewards to the investor. Besides IBM, Control Data and
Scientific Data Systems, other issues such as Data Products, Computer Sciences, Computer Applications, Data Processing and Fi-

nancial, and Standard Computers
forecast a tripling in
earnings this year) are being
highly recommended. The airlines are oversold, with the result that Pan America, American,
United and Eastern shouldi be
considered as good recovery situations. However, in this article,
I would like to focus on a stock
which I believe has tremendous
potential and which according to
the Wall Street Transcript “could
become the next Xerox.” It’s
name is Tool Research and Engi(which

neering,
Earnings of THE in fiscal 1967
rose 20% to $1,700,000 or $1.55
per share up from $1,400,000 or
$1.30 per share. However, the
possibility of tremendous growth
for Tool Research and Engineering can be attributed to one word

—stresskin.

Stresskin is one of the most
highly resistant metals know (if
not the most highly resistant),
TRE possesses an exclusive
patent over production of this
metal. Stresskin sales have doubled in the past year. Stresskin
was conceived as a substitute for
brazed honeycomb because of its
great cost advantage? (in 1961
aircraft companies estimated that
the cost advantage of stresskin in
production would be in the ratio
of ten to one in favor of stresskin
over brazed honeycomb). In addition, stresskin has been shown to
have remarable properties in heat
resistance, resistance to sonic
fatigue, and reliability and ease
of manufacture especially in
complex shapes.

Reaction to stresskin
TRE is now working with near
ly every major airframe and en
gine manufacturer on new design as well as on substitutions
of stresskin for parts made by
other methods and on which they
encountered 1 difficulties. The com
pany has received contracts for
the French and British supersonic
transports and for the Boeing 727
and 737 (which constituted the
bulk of the stresskin products in
1967).

control over the Department's entire $7.2 billion dollar research
and engineering program.

—

Spectrum Staff Reporter

to find support at the 850 level.

Pag* Thirtaan

Spectrum

Defense Department taking action

On Wall Street

The underlying cause of the
market’s drop can be traced to
the failure of Congress to enact President Johnson’s 10% surtax bill. Most analysts feel that
the only way to “cool down” the
economy is to resort to monetary
policy which would result in
tighter money and thus have a
more adverse effect upon corporate earnings than would the
10% surtax bill. However, most
economic advisers feel that the
bill will be enacted. They caution that because of Congress’
delay a 10% surtax will not be
enough and foresee a possible
15% hike in taxes.

•

A Pentagon spokesman said the “hue and cry” raised
by some students and faculty members against classified
research is one of the reasons that the move is underway.

It is felt by General Electric,
Pratt and Whitney, and many of

the airframe companies that
stresskin has high potential in the

The amount of this total spent
on university projects is relatively small
somewhere between

sound attenuation of engine and
auxiliary power unit noise. THE
has delivered a prototype heat
shield for the Saturn Program, It
is working with Boeing on many
applications on the 747 and more
important on the SST (supersonic
transport). THE is working with
General Electric on many extensions of the original stresskin
applications on the SST engines,
and is working with McDonnell
Douglas on the DC-8, DC-9, Titan
III and other program applications. Another source of potential application of stresskin lies
in the automotive industry.

Relatively few projects are likely to be declassified, since the
survey to determine what projects
can be given a non-secret status
is aimed only at classified projects in the area of basic research.
Of the more than 4,000 projects that fall under the heading
of basic, as opposed to applied,
research, only 138 are presently

—

and $600 million. Of this
amount, some $140 million goes
into basic research projects.
$400

classified A far greater percent
age of the applied research projects are secret.
The first suggestion that the
Defense Department was trying

One Pentagon source suggested
that it would be difficult to pin
down exactly how much money
goes to universities as such, because of the difficulty of defining what constitutes a university.
This spokesman cited the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
as an example of an institution
that receives such a large proportion of its funds from the
federal government that there is
some question whether or not it
should be considered a univer-

to cut down the number of classified research projects came from
Dr. John Foster, Director of Defense Research and Engineering.

Dr. Foster's office exercises broad

sity.

The Defense Department’s apparent goal in regard to basic

research is to declassify all projects that fall under that heading.
Any project that cannot be declassified will probably be removed from the category of basic

research.
Some of the projects that now
are classified do not actually involve work that must be kept
secret. They are classified because one or more of the researchers involved have access to materials that Defense wants kept

Great optimism
In addition, we must analyze
the statements made by the president of this company. Usually
corporation presidents, in their
messages to stockholders and
analysts, while trying to show
their optimism for the future
growth of their company, appear
to be a bit conservative in tone.
However, Mr. Wyler (president
of TRE) has stated that in three
to four years he foresees earnings of ten dollars per share!
Even if this stock were to sell at
20 times earnings, conservative
because it is a glamour stock, its
price would then be 200. The
stock is now selling at 37.
In conclusion, let me quote Mr.
Wyler in his Aug. 10, 1967, report to stockholders, “Because
we foresee a tremendous growth
potential in our current operations, we look toward logical

acquisitions and feel that such
acquisitions will also play a
major role in our planned growth
program. Our financial position
is excellent, our internal cash
flow and resources provide us
with a base for rapid expansion.
We look to the future with great
optimism."

Big deal

secret. These projects will probably be declassified.
The university head said he
had written to Hershey requesting a further clarification of the
statement and also disclosed he
had requested a group of Navy
recruiters, scheduled to be on
the campus Monday, not to come.

A shot from "Big Deal On Ma-

donna Street" which plays Mon
day in the Conference Theatre.

scene

Dr.
belief

Crime spoof shown in Norton
On

Madonna
“The Big Deal
Street,” an Italian comedy, will
be shown on Monday. Nov. 20 in
the Norton Conference Theater.
The film is a spoof of all the
“scientific” crime movies. It is
a story about a bunch of bunglers
who are trying to pull off the
“Big Burgle.” Characters include
Memmo, who tried to steal a car
and the horn went off; Carlo, who
can’t get his mind off food, and
Marcello, a photographer whose
wife is doing time for smuggling

and has left

him holding

Dearing

indicated that his

was that the general’s
statement was “degrading” to the

military.

the

baby.

Directed by

Mario Monicelli,

the cast includes Marcello Maslroianni and Claudia Cardinale.
Sponsored by the Italian Club,
the film has been called “one of
the most irresistible Italian comedies in years" by the New York

Herald Tribune

Performances are scheduled
for 3:30 and 7 p.m. The movie is
free for faculty members and feepaying

students.

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�Friday, November 17, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* Fourteen

Peace Corps enters its sixth year CADA cautions
WASHINGTON (GNS)-Separating the men from the boys may
have been responsible for starting a rumor about Peace Corps

difficulties

A more sophisticated classification system which separates
those ready
prime candidates
for service within 15 months
from future volunteers is probably at the bottom of the rumor
that there aren’t enough recruits
to fill openings, say Corps offi—

—

cials.

Says public information officer
Hatch; “It’s a durable
myth that crops up at least several times a year.”

Robert

Statistics deceiving

Previous to 1967, application
figure totals have included high
schoolers and college undergraduates who may be eyeing service
two or more years in the future.
Under the new system, “futures”
—including eager high schoolers
—are separated from prime can
didates by filing an abbreviated
information “mini-form.”
Thus,

while

the

statistics

1966,
were

The
1967

decline in applicants, said Mr.
Hatch. Actually, there were 7000
more prime applicants in 1967
than in 1966,
As the Peace Corps enters its
sixth year, it says prospects for
a record number of applicants
have never been belter, and offers the following figures:

By Oct. 31
the end of the
first recruiting month in 1968’s
program year
the prime applicant figure stood at 4093. This
represents one week’s recruiting
at “A”, or most productive, colleges and three and a half weeks
at “D”, or least productive, colleges. Last year the Oct. 31 fig—

—

ure was based on recruiting at
the two most productive college
groupings and ran only 44 applicants better at 4137.

Rechanneling enthusiasm
The
the
Corps, answering
charge that it has lost appeal for

the student generation, insists
that it is only a rechanneling of
enthusiasm from something new
and exciting to something estabWASHINGTON (CPS)—Another solution said free speech is being
lished and just as excithtgr Says liberal student organization—hag
Hatch: “An India assignment m
warned college administrators monstrators. “The best possible
1961 may have been exciting bethat the involvement of local pouniversity policy is that of allowcause the program was new, but
India six years later is just as lice on campuses “constitutes a ing equal access to all,” it said.
dynamic and thrilling a challenge dangerous precedent which could
to the graduating college senior.” Ultimately threaten
The resolution also said that
the traditionanti-war sentiments should be
al autonomy of the academic
teams
Recruiting
made up of
channeled into political activity,
community.”
120 returned volunteers head“and above all into the attempt
quarter in Boston, Atlanta, ChiThe new warning came in a to elect to the White House in
cago and San Francisco, and do
the college circuit throughout resolution adopted by the Na1968 a candidate pledged to a
the academic year.
tional Board of Campus Ameriprogressive domestic policy and
cans for Democratic Action, The to peace in Vietnam as part of a
Corps recruiting booths face
National Student Association reliberal foreign policy.”
little trouble on the .nation's
cently issued a similar warning.
campuses. A picket
CADA also adopted a resolution
eley’s University of California
The
CADA resolution
said highly critical of the Johnson Adcalling the Peace Corps an extension of U.S. foreign policy in
“local police are seldom noted ministration and applauding the
Vietnam did not prevent 1000 for their restraint,” and it is imrecent statement of Sen, Eugene
students from applying during possible for liberals “to stand idly
by and watch our fellow students McCarthy declaring his willingthe year.
ness to enter primary contests.
subjected to brutal treatment”
But the resolution did not go so
‘Mostly,” said Harold Fleming,
far as to endorse McCarthy. “We
But the CADA Board, compos“picketeers turn neutral about
call on other candidates who suped of 16 elected student represenus. They can’t substantiate protest in the face of Peace Corps
tatives, did not side completely port liberal domestic and foreign
policies to enter primary contests
with the demonstrators. The reaccomplishment.”
in both parties,” it said.
In a third resolution, the organization endorsed “The Joint
Statement of Rights and Freedoms of Students,” which was
drafted by five national organizations representing students, administrators and faculty members.
The statement, which endorses
such rights as a student role in
policy-making and due process
for students in disciplinary cases,
has been steadily gaining support
since it was made public this last
summer.

You are the only person who can answer
that question.
To do it, you should know as much as possible about
the 150 new plant units Du Pont has built since
the end of World War II. You’d then choose from one of
the many lively fields of interest at Du Pont:
design, construction, production, marketing, research
and process improvement (to name just a few).
Involvement starts the day you join. There is no
training period. You go into responsible work right away.
Your professional development is stimulated by
real problems and by opportunities to continue your
academic studies under a tuition refund program.
You work in small groups where individual
contributions are quickly noted and appreciated.
The work is significant, and of benefit to society.
You’re part of the most exciting technical environment
available today and tomorrow, and facilities and
associates are the best.
How could you fit in? Why not sign up for a chat with
a Du Pont interviewer and find out? The coupon will
also bring you more information about us.
Finally, what is Project X?
|tj/
We don’t know yet. Could be we’re
waiting for you to tell us.

/fill
Dflld^
\IJU U
|

E. I. du Pont de Nemours &amp; Co. (Inc.l
Nemours Building 2500-2
Wilmington, Delaware 19898
Please send me the Du Pont Magazine along with
the other magazines I have checked below.

i
i

I Chemical Engineers at Du Pont
j Mechanical Engineers at Du Pont
□ Engineers at Du Pont

.

recruiting

showed 42,000 applicants for
only 16,000 of that number
available prime candidates.
23,000 available primes for

against local
police on university campuses

□ Du Pont and the College Graduate
Name
CUa

.Major.

Degree expecl

College.

ip Code.
I

�Friday, November 17, 1967

T h

•

Spectrum

Page Fifteen

N. Y. Education Department stresses minority groups to teachers
by Carol R. Richards

teaching material “shows an unrealistic image of America and

nearby schools where the racial

ALBANY, Nov. 7—(GNS)—Is America a racial “melting
pot?”

mix is different.

Instead, the department recommends in a new set of
teacher handbooks that pupils be shown “the country as it
is—multiracial and multicultural.”

The handbooks, titled
“Intergroup Relations” are
aimed at helping elementary
school teachers find material
that will “affirm the diversity” of children in integrated classrooms.
Suggestions made
To affirm the differences
among pupils in the kindergarten
to third grade level, the manual
suggests:
•

Science lessons

explaining

variations in skin color.
Art classes where students
draw themselves and their neighbors.

fourth through sixth
graders, the manual suggests pupils do individual research on various famous minority-group members and put on assembly programs that can be performed at
For

clubs to
classes.

demonstrate

Inadequate backgrounds

explains:

‘The idea of this supplement
is to assist the teacher to integrate information and activities
about a minority into regular
classroom activties. So often in
the past we have found that it is
the differences which are accentuated, creasing unfortunate additudinal responses ...”
...

As a result students are in
danger of “going rough, their
most important school years
completely unaware of the many
contributions made by the minor-

groups of many of the teachers,
and the fact that much available

ities in their midst—even when

Some say we specialize in power...
power for propulsion.. power for
auxiliary systems... power for aircraft,
missiles and space vehicles... power for
marine and industrial applications...
.

•

Citizenship field trips where
pupils take walks through various neighborhoods and describe
•

the differences.

Lessons in manners and
conduct where the teacher picks
out “some troublesome incidents
from the classroom or playground
and gets the children to roleplay and talk about how the actions and words addressed to
•

them make them feel.”

Community studies, where
the class visits local businesses.
Teachers here are encouraged to
go to places “where you can find
Negroes, Puerto Ricans and other
minority group members in status jobs.” And the other for
fourth, fifth and sixth grade
teachers, were developed in response to teacher requests.
•

m

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We select our engineers and scientists carefully. Motivate
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man-

ual, Theron A. Johnson, Administrator of the Division of Intercultural Relations in Education

tion.”

Introductions to the manuals
point out that the race problem
in the classroom is heightened
by the inadequate background
and training about minority

minority

in the grades 4 through 6

“Photographs and other illustrations offered to our children
continue to show an all-whitemiddle-elass America,” says one
introduction, “not a diverse and
increasingly integrated popula-

in gym

are

group people.”

the way its minority people live

“No,” says the State Department of Education, and to invite Negro musicians to perform in music classes and folk
children shouldn’t be taught that it is.
dancers from local nationality

themselves

they

°

f

co^

CONNECTICUT
An Equal Opportunity Cmptoyor

�Friday, Novambar 17, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* Sixt**n

'Colonel Jack'—a candid view
"Naturally, after being in it for 26 years, I
think it's a pretty good outfit.”
Colonel Johp J. (Jack) Herbert, Jr. loves the
Air Force. It is his life. His lengthy career has given
him excitement, adventure, the chance to know personally some of the world's leading figures, world
travel, educational opportunities, and financial as
well as emotional security. He cannot understand
how anyone would not think seriously about choosing a career in the Air Force. It's not that he can't
take criticism; he simply can see no reason why
anyone would want to criticize the Air Force or
ROIC in particular.
Col. Herbert emphasizes that the current revisions in the AFROTC program at the University
are in no way a reaction to the severe criticism
of ROIC's prescence on campus by various University groups.
He stresses that ROIC is ''an academic department of the University."
"I am a great believer in freedom of speech.

325 students at this
training program, and
the right to have it."
Uniformed faculty member
Although he holds the rank of Colonel in the
Air Force, the ROIC commandant also is employed
by the University as a full Professor, and it is hard
to determine which title he values higher. He is
proud to be a member of the Air Force "team."
He is also proud to be a teacher.
He places a high value on education, as is evidenced by his cracking down on ROIC cadets who
fail to maintain a satisfactory grade-point average.
University want an officer's
they should not be denied

He himself has been going to school off-and-on for
the past 20 years.
The Colonel keeps a personal file on the academic
record of every ROIC cadet, which he examines
periodically. His concern for the welfare of his boys
is more than official: it is almost fatherly.
He tells stories of students coming to him for
advice on all sorts of subjects, from sex to schoolwork.

by Barry Holtzclaw
Spectrum Feature Editor

Once he helped out a "bearded radical type"
who needed some information on military policy in
Vietnam.
A summer student
My first association with Col, Herbert was this
past summer.
He was in a political science course I was taking
in summer school on American Foreign Policy. At
the time I had no idea who he was, because he
came to class in civilian clothes.
In an October interview he noted that he had
worn civvies "to avoid attracting attention."
He was also enrolled in a graduate seminar in
the political science department, taught by the same
visiting professor who was teaching the foreign
policy course.
Anecdotes galore
At the time, I guessed that he was some high
school teacher who wanted to pick up a few extra
credits in the summer. Later I had coffee with him
several times, and, because of his war stories,
realized he either had been, or was, a career Air
Force officer; but I made no connection.
And what war stories they were! It wasn't until
later that I found out that stories are what "Colonel
Jack" is famous for.
It would be futile to relate in detail even a
sampling of some of the tales, for I could neither
reproduce the excitement in his voice, nor the sharpness of his wit.
I remember on one conversation this summer,
or should I say in one listening session over coffee,
he recollected several incidents which led him (and
his listeners) to believe that his flying outfit in
the 12th Air Force in Europe was the subject of
the novel, Catch-22.
Or the casual way he laughingly described in
detail the excitement (and terror) of the five times
he was shot down in his B-25, "Steady Eddy."
Let me tell you: he should write a book
During my three-hour conversation with the Colonel, he managed to hypnotize me with more than
a dozen anecdotes, from the time that Berlin Mayor

Willy Brandt bruised his fingers with a vigorous
Prussian handshake at Tempelhof airfield, to the
story of his acquaintance with Barry Goldwater, who
had been his commanding officer in flight school
during World War Two. I think that had I not snapped
out of it, I would still be there, and he would still
be sitting there, cigar butt clamped in his teeth,
telling me some amazing anecdotes.
Same old Air Force

So what's the point of all this?
Certainly the good Colonel is asking, if no one
else. Colonel Herbert is an affable, garrulous fellow
who has compiled an admirable record in his lengthy
career in the U.S. Air Force.
Although much of his talk dwells in the romantic
past, he is a man, who, primarily because of his
education, responds positively to the pressures of
the present, the demands of the future.
But he is a solid conservative; perhaps politically liberal in the classic sense of the word, his
mission has become one of protection. He must
continually build a better Air Force to combat the
increasingly stiff criticism the military receives in
this country, particularly among the intellectual community. As a purported member of both, he has the
difficult task of somehow uniting the two, while
sacrificing the ideals of neither.
I wonder if he realizes that they may indeed
be incompatible.
He offered me a cigar when I sat down in his

office.

He warmly invited me to come see him again
in the near future when I left.
Beneath that personable exterior, I sensed adeep
loneliness

The loneliness he feels over in his office on
the third floor of Clark Gym must be vaguely remi
niscient of that loneliness in the cockpit during a

bombing run.
You see, the Air Force might be able to provide
a comfortable career, but ultimately an Air Force
pilot may be called upon to drop bombs, to kill.
And that is a lonely job.

—Buffalonian

�Friday, November 17, 1967

P AQA SfVtfltfM

The Spectrum

i

*!

3

7» tr ~yZt

%

i

•«**

*

—Buffalonian

Since 1963, when ROTC became no longer mandatory, the Air Force
officer's training program here at the University has undergone some significant changes, in its emphasis as well as personnel.
The program at the State University of Buffalo is one of the largest
in the country. There are 325 student cadets whose major fields of study
vary from physical education to physics.
The seniors in the Air Force ROTC are the last remnants from the mandatory cadets of four years ago.
Col. John J. Herbert, Jr., the commanding officer here (and a member
of the University faculty, professor of military science) emphasized that
“this year's juniors want to go into the Air Force. Sixty percent will apply
for careers with the regular Air Force upon their graduation."
The Corps is numerically smaller, but the cadets are more dedicated.
According to Col. Herbert, the ROTC dropout rate has radically decreased.
"Without exception, this year's sophomore cadets want to be in the more
advanced program next year as juniors," the colonel said.
Describing the Corps, he said: "These students are really bright. They're

real winners, 1'

a new look for ROTC

When Col. Herbert spoke to this year's freshmen who had signed up for
the program, he stressed the importance of maintaining good grades, and
keeping a neat, crisp appearance while in uniform. He told them that if they
weren't interested, they should "try something else." "And some did,"
he added.
OE 100, the freshman course, is an analysis of democracy and communism; the U.S. power position in world affairs; the Armed Forces as an
instrument of national policy; the mission and functions of the Air Force,
and the citizen student's relation to U.S. world commitments.
The sophomore course, OE 200, is a comparative study of world military
forces.
According to an official statement on the revised curriculum, "the main
emphasis
is on the advanced course."
"This course (the final two years) is the source of our professionals,
and their preparation for a career of officership is our main concern," the
statement said.
The objective of the program is "to induce, yes force, our cadets to think
critically and creatively. We have thrown overboard pat answers and school
solutions. The new method pushes the cadet to arrive at his own answers,
to test these answers against the judgement of his peers and instructors,
and to develop practical programs for placing them into effect in a military
framework."
The junior year, OE 300, deals with the nature of war; the development
of air power in the United States; the mission and organization of the Department of Defense; Air Force concepts, doctrine and employment; astronautics and space operations and future developments in aerospace power,
focusing on the mission environment of the officer.
The senior course, OE 400, provides a study of professionalism, leadership, and management as these relate to Air Force officership, focusing on
the personal identification of the cadet with his career.
The upper-level classes are seminars. The emphasis is on ihe analytical,
the scientific, the rational, rather than the formal showpiece elements of
military training. ROTC serves as a genuine preparatory school for a national
...

professional military.
—Buffalonian

�Prof. Williamson "Eh?" provides
by James M. Bron
Having seen “eh?” twice, there
are several things that can be
said: it is a funny play and a
good production; I, for one, am
glad that it was here; any attempt at a plot summary, however will be futile.
This is not to say that it has
no plot, merely that the plot
follows an indeterminate course.
The acting by the six member
cast is almost always excellent.
The production’s low point was
its “devised” set. The boiler was
too much to be merely representational, but not enough to

counteract the bare

openness of
Baird Hall stage. Also, despite
the complications of building it,
the boiler looks too simple to
confuse and fluster even a Val
Brose. While on the set, special
mention should be given to Miss
Marsha Jacobson who makes marvelous noises.
'Consistently funny'
Mr. Graham Merchant, in the
role of Valentine Brose, was consistently funny. His handling of
the non-sequitore lines proved his
worth as an actor. The difficult
“sea” segment in the second act

Film

Friday, November 17, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* Eighteen

review;

the audience and
charmed this reviewer.
Mr. Frank Dwyer, as Brose’s
boss, started off a bit slowly in
his opening scenes, but his pace
and strength picked up. By the
end of Act I he was secure in
his role and provided some truly
brilliant moments. Mr. Clifford
Group, as the smoke-abater Rev.
Mort, did a competant job of
acting in a contrapuntal role.
He came on innoculously strong
and sustains a consistent character throughout. Miss Corinne
Broskett who took the role of
Val’s financee, later his wife,
seemed somewhat self-conscious
about being on stage. There were
a few sections, like the first boiler
room scene with Val, where there
seemed to be little energy. However, she did overcome her difficulties later in the second act
and managed to play well against
captivated

Mr. Marchant.
Miss Carole Forman who played
Mrs. Murry, the woman responsible for Val’s being at the plant,
did some excellent bits of business, reacted well to specifics;
but she has a tendency to rely
too much on her voice and face

s

while not acting with her body.
Consequently there were fluctuations in situation tension which
gave an awkwardness to a few
of the scenes. Mr. Hadjikakous’
two brief appearances were delightful even if somewhat incomprehensible.

Director's knack
The director, Professor William-

son, has a knack for business and
stage movement, but he let the
necessarily quick pace lay at
points which did detract from
the show. Fortunately this happened very few times.
Many of these remarks can be
amended

in view of the second

night of performance. Everyone

was stronger; Miss Brockett, Miss
Forman and Mr. Dwyer in particular showed many more signs
of life.
The over all effect of the show
was one of funny confusion and
thorough enjoyment. It is an active actor’s piece of theatre which
was carried well by a cast that
sustained itself through the slow
spots. In retrospect, the opening
song “Some Enchanted Evening”
was quite apt.

"Accident"

Strawberry Fields Forever?
by Philip Burbank
Spectrum Staff Reporter

Twentieth century existence, with its marvelous automation and technology, has coupled age-old apathy with boredom and indifference. Now the middle class can be as blase
about life as the neo-intellectuals in Joseph Losey’s film
“Accident,” playing at the Circle Art.
The intellectuals arc comprised
of Oxonian dons, wives and stu
dents who find sex, alcohol, food

perhaps a stage
and everyone
is just a bad actor anyhow.

life equally monotonous.
They go through the motions of
life exceedingly well with touches
of cruelty and disdain. If you look
closely you should see many of
the lives of the people around

“I just saw Francesca,” Dick
Borgarde said to his Provost during a cricket match at Oxford.
"Who’s she?" he replied. “She’s
your daughter,” "Oh yes,” remembers the Provost, “give her

and

you.

—

gem; its beauty was subtle, but
vibrant nevertheless. Leaving lit
tie to be desired were the shots
of England's pastoral scenery
with its lakes, trees, and grass
in the golden rays of summer.
Losey’s film takes a directly
editorial approach to its subject.
If the audience’s mood to the
film becomes casual, it’s only because that is the atmopshere he
wants to show exists. In the end,
though accidents may come crashing through the screen the audi-

ence is complacent. After all they
question, isn’t life just one big
accident after all?

sponso

Barth will participate in
romc poe ry sen
The Literature and Drama Coma rigid discipline or fixed body
of doctrine."
mittee of the University Union
Describing his reasons for writActivities Board will soon present
ing electronic poetry, Mr. Maea four-part series of presentations
Adams said: “I’d do anything to
in the field of electronic poetry.
The first of these, featuring
the internationally famous author,
John Barth, “In a Presentation of
His New Works for Stereo,” will
take place at 8 p.m., Nov. 28 in
the Millard Fillmore Room. Included in this program will be a
number of works written by
Barth especially for tape. These
works have already been performed at Harvard.
A second presentation, “Dada
and Surrealism: Simultaneous
Poems and Verbal Experiments
from the Past,” with William
Sylvester, will take place at 4
p.m., Nov. 29 in the Conference
Theater.
Mae Hammond’s “Original
Works of Poetry for Electronic
Equipment” at 4 p.m., Dec. 11
in the Conference Theater, will
be the third in the series.
A symposium on “Possibilities
for the Future” in electronic poetry at 4 p.m., Dec. 13 in the
Lewis MacAdams
CiConference Theater will conclude
. . . "I'd do anything to break
the series. Expected to take part
in this symposium are Lewis down the boringly lecture asMacAdams, Mac Hammond, Ray pect of poetry ..."
Federman, Ron Hausser, Joe
Romanowski and Mike Dinoto.
break down the boringly lectural
aspect of poetry. Just the idea
In an interview with The Spectrum, Mr. Sylvester and Mr.
of having the poem come from a
MacAdams, both of whom have
different place than the poet is
worked with electronic poetry,
often enough to activate the
poem in the minds of listeners
discussed their views on this relatively new field of literature.
at a poetry reading. I am interMr. Sylvester, in response to a
ested in giving the poem magical
question about the nature of powers.”
electronic poetry, claimed: “In
Widespread campus interest in
producing electronic poetry, one
the field of electronic poetry first
may record his works straight, became evident during an elecmonophonically, or stereophonitronic poetry workshop here last
cally, and may do this with or summer, said Mr. Sylvester.
without distortion. Also, electThe workshop, which was open
ronic poetry may be performed to everyone, suffered from an
with or without live reading by over abundance of participants, so
the poet.” He added: “Many divergreat was its general appeal. A
gent interests may be fitted into
similar workshop is being planned
this field. In electronic poetry,
for this year’s second summer
you do not have to work within
session.

my love.”

the

dialogue, managed to blend the
King’s English with the hum of
an IBM computer. The characters
in the film don’t give a damn
what they say or do for their
world is just a sad joke
or
—

Dirk Bogarde, Stanley Baker,
Jacqueline Sassard, Vivien Merchant, Michael York and Delphinc
Seyrig all turned in fine performances. Not only do they
breeze through the film, but so

do you.
The photography was a rare

En terta inmen t

Calendar

Nov. 17:
CONCERT: Men’s Glee Club
Concert. Fillmore Room, Norton
Hall. 8 p in
CONCERT: Fine Art Quartet,
Beethoven Cycle IV, V. VI, Baird
Friday,

Hall, 8:30 p.m.
FILM: "Thief of Bagdad, ” Nor

ton Conference Theater.
PLAY: "The Imaginary

InTheater,

valid," Studio Arena
8:30 p m.
EXHIBIT; J. Frank Dobie Ex-

Lockwood Library.
PLAY: “Endgame." Studio Two.
Studio Arena Theater School,
8:30 p.m.. also Nov. 18. 19 and
Nov. 24-26.
hibit,

FOLK DANCERS: Balkan Folk
Dancers. Room 231 Norton Hall.

7:30 p.m.
EXHIBIT: Thirty-first Annual
Western New York Exhibition,
Albright-Knox, through Dec. 10.
FILM: “Accident," Circle Art,
7:30 and 9:30 p.m.
FILM; “The Trip" and “The
Endless Summer," Glen Art.
FILM: "Gone With The Wind,”

Granada Theater

Telephoto

q

I

.

DOODy Ifflp

Victim

A Leatherneck carries one of his
wounded comrades, injured by
d booby-trapped 81 mm mortar
near Con Thien recently.

Saturday, Nov. 18:
CONCERT: State University of
Buffalo Chorus, Clark Gym, 8:30
p.m.

CONCERT: Beach Boys, Buffalo
Springfield and The Soul Sur-

vivors, Memorial
p.m.

Auditorium, 8:30

"Androcles and the
Lion," Studio Arena Theater, 2

PLAY:

p.m.

Nov. 19:
CONCERT: Diahann Carroll
and Henny Youngman, Kleinhans,

Sunday,

8:30 p.m.
CONCERT: Pierre Fournier,
cellist. Kleinhans, 2:30 p.m.
Monday, Nov. 20:
CONCERT: Chamber Music
Concert, with Darlene Reynard,
Ronald Richards and Dowell Muller. Baird Hall, 8:30 p.m
FILM: "King Rat,” Capen 140,
8 p.m
CONCERT:
Clark.
P et u 1a
O'Keefe Center, Toronto, through
Nov. 25, 8:30 p.m.
FILM: “The Big Deal on Madonna Street,” Norton Conference
Theater. 3:30 and 7 p.m.
TV DEBATE: "LSD" with Dr.
Timothy Leary and Jerome Lettvin, Channel 17, 9 p.m.
Tuesday, Nov. 21:
CONCERT: Pierre Fournier,
cellist. Kleinhans, 8:30 p.m,
“Hiroshima Mon
FILM:
Amour” directed by Resnais,

Norton

Conference

Theatre.

7

pm.
JAZZ LAB: Jazz Lab Band
Fillmore Room, 3:30 to 6 p.m.
Wednesday, Nov. 22:
CONCERT: Bobby Hackett
Kleinhans, 8:30 p.m.

Thursday, Nov. 24:
PLAY: “Androcles

and

the

Lion,” Studio Arena Theater, 2
p.m., also Nov. 25.
READING: ‘‘Mark Twain Tonight” with Hal Holbrook, Eastman Theater, Rochester, 8:15
p m.
Monday, Nov. 27:

RECITAL; Boris Kroyt, Carlo
Pinto and Allen Sigel, Baird Hall,
8:30 p.m.
The Cousins," Capen
FILM:
140, 8 p.m.
‘

King's English hums
Harold Pinter, who wrote

—DPI

UAB to

Tuesday, Nov. 29;

JAZZ LAB: Jaz Lab Band, Fillmore Room, 3:30-6 p.m.
CONCERT: The Guarneri String
Quartet, Kleinhans, 8:30 p.m.
Wednesday, Nov. 29:
CONCERT: Creative Associates
Concert II, Baird Hall, 8:30 p.m.
READING: “Dylan Thomas
Growing Up," by Emlyn Williams,
Kleinhans.
BALLET: The Harkness Ballet,
Eastman Theater, Rochester, 8:15
p.m
EXHIBIT: Buffalo State: Fine
Arts Exhibition. Upton Gallery,
through Dec. 21.
FILM: “Black Orpheus,” Norton Conference Theater.
NOTE: Please submit all events for Entertainment Calendar to The Spectrum office the Tuesday of the week BEFORE an

event.

�Friday, November 17, 1967

The Spectrum

P«9t

Nineteen

e

The last thing
Frank expected was
someone running
the stop sign.

Stop signs don t stop cars. Drivers stop cars. Make
sure you do and make sure he has. There's very little satisfacti ion in being dead right when you're dead.

Wherever, whenever you drive . . drive defensively.
Watch out for the other guy. He may he the kind who'll
stop at nothing
.

The very last thing.

Watch

out for the Other

Published to save lives in cooperation with The Advertising Council and the National Safety Council.

Guy.

�Friday, November 17, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* Twenty

New York's Public Theater oi

Hair' rotest is focus of new musical play
Special to the Spectrum

Described by its authors, Gerome Ragni and James
Rado, “Hair” is an American tribal love-rock musical dealing
with nearly two dozen contemporary young people. Included
in the group are a high school dropout (Ragni), his protest
poster-painting girlfriend (Jill O’Hara) and an about-to-bedrafted hippie (Walker Daniels) who, in turn, loves her. The
plot revolves around their relationship with each other, their
response to today, their thoughts on war, on interracialism,
on the bomb, on the hypocritical ‘rational’ world of the older
generation.
The contemporary generation,
as depicted in the show, uses as
its prime means of protest against
conformity the simple technique
of tonsorial boycott: "Hair”
“long, beautiful, shiny, gleaming,
streaming, flaxen, waxen, long,
straight, curly, fuzzy, snaggy,
shaggy, ratty, matty, oily, greasy,
fleecy, down-to-there hair.”
—

Out-of-the-ordinary musical
This out-of-the-ordinary musical had the honor of being chosen
by Joseph Papp, founder of the
New York Shakespeare Festival,
to open New York’s Public Theater at the recently refurbished
113-year old Astor Library, now
an official landmark building at

the edge of the East Village.
Subsidized by I he National
Foundation on the Arts, the New
York State Arts Council, and by
many private foundations and in-

benefactors, the Public
has scheduled for its
initial season, in addition to the
classics of the stage, four contemporary new plays, of which
“Hair” is the first.

dividual
Theater

Geromc Ragni and James Ra
do, the co-authors, are two actors
in their twenties. Seen last season
in “Viet Rock,” and previously,
in Richard Burton’s "Hamlet,”

Ragni, in “Hair,” plays Berger,
the dropout. The writer/actor
was described by Clive Barnes
in The New York Times as “a
psychedelic teddy-bear”.

James Rado did not write himself into “Hair,” although, as an
actor, he appeared on Broadway
with Robert Preston in “The
Lion in Winter” and with Albert
Finney in “Luther.” Among his
off-Broadway credits are “The
Knack,” “The Infantry” and
“Hang Down Your Head and
Die,”

The score to “Hair” was writby Galt MacDermot, who

ten

regrets that he cannot afford financially to be a hippie. A serious

composer as well as a jazz pianist, MacDermot wrote, in 1960,
an unproduced opera based on

Joyce

Carey’s

“Mr.

Johnson."

From this work came a piece
called “African Waltz,” which
Cannonball Adderlcy made popular, and which won for Gall MacDcrmot a Grammy Award in
1961 for the Best Original Jazz

Composition.

Directed "MacBird"
Gerald Freedman, the guiding
hand in “Hair,” directed his first
production for the New York
Shakespeare Festival, “The Tam

ing of the Shrew,” in 1960. His
other notable Central Pgrk productions included “The Tempest,”

“As You Like It,” “Electra,”
“Love’s Labor Lost,” “King Richard III” and last summer’s “The
Comedy of Errors” and “Titus
Andronicus.” He also directed
“Barber of Seville” for the New
York City , Opera, “West Side
Story” at N«v York’s City Center,
“MacBird,” the controversial offBroadway hit, and his own “A
Time For Singing” on Broadway.
For the last-named show, he coauthored the book and lyrics in
collaboration with “Hair’s” musical director, John Morris.

The story af a
love triangle and the
four people trapped hi ki

BHMCHKNI

j)

The production of “Hair"
swing into high gear after a ‘parental’ prologue with Claude and
friends

his folks
with “Ain’t Got No" and “I Got
Life” in which they cry out for
recognition as thinking, breathing individuals. Later, Berger
(Gerome Ragni) celebrates with

his cronies his being kicked out
of school in the song “Going
Down,” and the gang is joined
by Claude with the title tune,
satirizing the cult of the sixties
—“Gimme a head with hair. long
beautiful hair, a home for fleas,
a hive for bees,”

Berger and company ‘at
liberty,’ Sheila (Jill O’Hara) puts

With

them to work painting protest
posters and sings about the
“Dead End” of the immediate
outlook of her contemporaries.
That night, at a party in the
park, the flower children give
voice to the hippie anthem,

The Hippies are hopping as the
members of "Hair" perform for
an original cast recording of the
exciting off-Broadway American
tribal love-rock musical.

Going
hairy

admonishing

“Hare Krishna.” Led by Berger

NOW PLAYING

fu

Cult of the sixties

and Sheila, the group begins to
commiserate with Claude who
has just received his draft notice.

7:30, 9:30 NIGHTLY

v,

His confusion over whether to
report or defy gives vent to
“Where Do I Go?” as Berger

The group, having broken the
tension, settles down to business
—smoking pot—and, as the members slowly get high they describe the effects in the song,
“Walking in Space.” As they return from their trip, they sing

uses Sheila to persuade Claude
to join the protest cause.
All-night pot party
As he finally realizes the futility of fighting the social mechanism, Claude joins his friends
for a going away pot party which
gets into full swing with a won-

derful satire of The Supremes
in a take-off by three Negro
girls, Jonelle Allen, Susan Batson and Alma Robinson singing
“White Boys”—and how much
they dig them. Immediate reply
comes from a trio of white girls
telling of their admiration for
"Black Boys.”

with renewed hope and optimism,
and in an attempt to cheer up

“Aquarius,” in which
they finally are able to renounce
the competitiveness of the Es-

Claude,

tablishment.
The all-night session soon
breaks up just hours before
Claude must report for induction, and Sheila and company
greet the oncoming day with
“Good Morning Starshine.” The
group, led by Berger, accompanies Claude and Sheila to her
home, then retires into the waning night.

•••

WINNER TWO CANNES FUJI

Starring DIRK BOGARDE

VIVIEN MERCHANT
STANLEY BAKER
JACQUELINE SASSARD

HAL HOLBROOK in

Claude, left alone with Sheila,

sings the amusing “Exanaplanetooch.” With Claude’s departure
to the station with his draft notice, Shiela sings the final song,

“Mark Twain Tonight!”

“The Climax,” and broods about
what she did to Berger, to Claude,
to herself.

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24 at 8:15 P.M.

FESTIVAL Ml

EASTMAN THEATRE

CRSISvW

“Hair” is of today. The cast

Tickets: $4.50, 4.00, 3.50, 2.50
on sale at box office now!

is of the anti-Establishment. The
songs are of contemporary prob
lems.

3166 Bailey Avenue

SATURDAY, NOV. I8H1 al 8:30 P.M.
BUFFALO MEMORIAL AUD.

WITH

� SPECIAL GUEST STARS

*

THE BUFFALO SPRINGFIELD
"Rock 'n Roll Woman"

�����
PLUS THE NATION'S HOTTEST GROUP

M/
JV1 !
&lt;T
£

id* (“What we’ve got here is a failure to communicate.

tb(! C E WT T E

m

THE SOUL SURVIVORS

)

IECHMC0L0R PtURSHM

"Expressway

nw nuki ms-sna un w
DOORS OKI

IMSUL

to Your Heart"

All Seats Reserved—$5, $4, $3, $2

H
&amp;

t

Tkk«»i now on sole at
Stutler-Hilton Lobby, Sample
Hall. Brundo's. Niagara Falls

Festival Ticket Office, Hotel
Stores, Hertel, Walden. U. of B Norton
Buffalo

�Friday, November 17, 1967

The Spectrum

Page Twenty-One

New theory: 3 involved Senators find fault with operation
A new inNEW YORK (UPI)
dependent study of the assassina—

tion of President John F, Kennedy made public Wednesday claims
the slaying was a conspiracy and
three gunmen were involved, all
of whom may still be at large.

The major conclusions of a
two-year investigation of the 1963
tragedy by Dr. Josiah Thompson
of Haverford College, Pa., are
contained in an article which will
reach the newsstands next Tuesday.

The Post, in an editorial, contends that Thompson “demolishes
the Warren Report” and demands
the assassination case be reopened by the government.
Thompson, 32-year-old Yale Phi
Beta Kappa scholar who teaches
philosophy, charges that although
the details remain unclear, “the
essential outline of the assassination is now apparent
the “one
assassin’ finding of the Warren
Commission is patently wrong;
there were four shots from three
guns in six seconds.
—

established that it would have
been impossible for a gunman to
have hit Kennedy from the station wagon shown in the picture.

The author quotes Connally as
saying that to his “absolute
knowledge” he was hit by a different bullet than hit the President and Mrs. Connally is quoted
as saying “no one will ever convince me otherwise.”
Thompson, said the Warren
Commission, “recognizing that to
believe the governor’s account
meant also to believe in the existence of a second assassin, put
forth its ‘delayed reaction’
theory” to explain the time lapse

between when the bullet supposedly hit Connaly and his realization of being hit.”

Claims commission hasty

Some new
Some of Thompson’s conclusions are based on original research in the National Archives,
documents and photos not seen
by the Warren Commission, and
interviews with eyewitnesses.
Others are grounded in further
analyses of material in the Warren Report.
The author, whofe book Six
Seconds in Dallas will be published November 27, does not
speculate on the identities of the
assassins or their motivation, but
he does cast doubt on the guilt
of Lee Harvey Oswald. He said
Oswald was in the Texas School
Book Depository building and
his rifle was used, but it is “quite
likely” that he was not the assassin at the sixth floor window.
Thompson claims to have had
access to a better print of Abraham Zapruder’s color movie of
the assassination Uian was made
available to the FBI. An analysis
of this print, owned by Life Magazine, by a new technique involving superimposition of sequential pictures and by a dissecting microscope provided
Thompson with data he says indicates:
—Four bullets were fired in
Dallas’ Dealey Plaza and all hit
their mark the Warren Commission reported three shots, two
hits. The first, a cartridge whose
explosive power was substandard,
made a shallow wound in the
President’s back. The second
wounded Gov. John B, Connally.
The third hit Kennedy’s head
from behind. The fourth hit Kennedy’s head from the front and
was fatal.

—The bullets were fired from
three locations
the sixth floor
of the Depository building, the
roof of a nearby buiiding, possibly the Dallas County records
building or the Dal-Tex Building,
and the stockade fence behind the
grassy knoll at the side of the
—

plaza.

—The theory that a single bullet wounded both Kennedy and

Connally is erroneous. The suquality Zapruder film
shows the men were not struck
at the same time but within a
shot enough time to eliminate the
possibility that the bullets came
from the same gun
perior

Another photo examined
Another amateur motion pic
ture of the assassination, made
by Orville Nix and taken opposite from Zapruer’s position,
showed what appeared on enlargement to be a man with a
rifle leaning on the roof of a station wagon behind the fence on
the knoll arid pointing toward the
cavalcade.

months-long independent
A
study of the film by the Itek
Corporation of Lexington. Mass.,
one of the nation's top photographic laboratories, determined,
however, that the “man with the
rifle" was simply a blending of
shadows of tree branches. It also

“With few exceptions, all the
evidence discussed in this study
was available to the Warren Com-

mission," Thompson said. “But
the commission, in its haste, its
uncritical evaluation of the facts,
and its predisposition to prove
Lee Harvey Oswald the lone assassin, overlooked much of it.”

Thompson accused the commission of ignoring the testimony
of at least seven witnesses who
saw gunsmoke in the area of the
stqckade fence and one who said
he smelled it. He said the commission readily accepted an autopsy finding that the first bullet
exited through Kennedy’s throat,

when there was weighty evidence
that a nonmetallic object much
smaller than a bullet and with a
different trajectory made the
wound.

The author said the evidence
suggests that a bone fragment,
driven downward by the bullet
as it entered the President’s skull
caused the throat wound.
Thompson does not speculate
on how many conspirators were
involved. However, he quotes
eyewitnesses to the effect that
there were two in addition to Oswald in the book depository and
one of them may have been a
“look alike” for Oswald. He says
it was probably one of these men
whom three eyewitnesses saw run
down the hill from the building
and escape in a light-color station wagon driven by a darkcomplexioned man.

Several suspected
One witness saw two men be
hind the stockade fence and
Thompson presents some evi-

dence suggesting a man positioned there hid in the trunk of
a praked car and was driven away
later. He repeats the testimony of
a Dallas patrolman who met a
man in the parking lot behind
the fence moments after the assassination who “showed me he
was a Secret Service agent.”

Thompson said a check of the
individual reports of Secret Service agents who accompanied the
motorcade proved all went with
the motorcade to the hospital.
Thompson also disclosed that
a young man was arrested in the
Dal Tex building, from which the
second shot might have been
fired, within minutes of the assassination because he had no excuse for being there. He was
taken to the sheriff’s office for
questioning and apparently disappeared in the confusion. There
is no record of him or the alibi
he gave.

WASHINGTON (GNS)—The Department of Health, Education and Welfare gave a Senate committee the impression that its idea of a federal birth control program would
be a series of conferences and studies on the flight patterns of the stork.

Sen. Ernest Gruening and other members of a Senate
Government Operations Subcommittee told HEW officials
at a hearing they were disgusted with the department’s lack
of leadership and progress in providing family planning
services to a public which badly needs and wants them.
By contrast, the subcommittee
was happy to note the quick,

successful and well-received efforts of the Office of Economic

Opportunity to provide medical
services, information and contraceptives on the spot to help the

poor reduce their unwanted pregnancies.
Why is it, the subcommittee

asked, that HEW with its $13.6
billion budget and all its people
can’t conduct a similarly quickmoving and active program?
Dr. Philip R. Lee, Assistant
Secretary of HEW for health and
scientific affairs, and other department witnesses had no clear
answers, except that it took a lot
of research, planning and coordination to set up these
services.

Too much red tape
This is precisely what everyone on Sen. Gruening’s subcommittee thought was wrong with
HEW. It was suffocating in its
own fat, they said, incapable of
actually getting anything done
and overwhelmed by a fascination
for organizational charts, expensive research, studies upon studies and hollow generalities,
"Policy statements aren’t worth
anything if you don’t do something about them,” said Sen. Joseph D. Tydings. “You’re up here
telling us you don’t have 10 people in your department dealing
with population control full time.
We’re talking about $20 or $30
million here. You spend billions
every year on welfare, and it’s
going up all the time. This is

incredible."

Sen. Gruening charged HEW
was afraid to show leadership in
the field, and that if it has tried
to make improvements “the re
suits arc very inadequate. . .”

Sen. Clifford Hansen said he
was appalled by Dr. Lee’s statement that the department hoped
to reach “by 1973” the 5 million
women who right now want free
or low-cost family planning
services.

“I just can't condone waiting
I used to be presuntil 1973
ident of a hospital board of trustees, and I can't believe that we
can't strike more directly at the
heart of this problem, without
having to be concerned with
charting out the organizational
structure within HEW to do it."
Sen. Hansen said.
...

Rep. James Scheucr, sponsor of
birth control legislation in the
House, joined the three senators
in quizzing HEW.
“You could do this without
asking Congress to dot an T or
cross a T.’
Sen. Scheuer said.
"There isn't one of your agen
cics that doesn't have the discretionary authority to reallocate
"

funds and personnel to family
planning.

field through it maternal health
care programs, he said.
HEW spent $18.9 million in
fiscal 1967 and plans to spend
$24.7 million this fiscal year for
family planning, maternal and
child health care.

and child

From “as yet incomplete” statistics from 46 states, 278,000
women received family planning
services last year, Dr. Lee told

the subcommittee.
But OEO, with its smaller staff
and budget, spent $4.5 million in
fiscal 1967 and provided family

planning help to 120,000 women
as part of its community action
program.

Few

being helped

The subcommittee was told that
only 700.000 of the 5 million
medically indigent women who
need subsidized family planning
help today are getting it, whether through public or private organizations.

“Meeting this challenge is not
a one-man or a one-agency job,”
Dr. Gary London, head of OEO's
health division, told the subcommittee. “Nor does it necessarily
lend itself to a single approach.
It will require the resources and
the cooperative efforts of all federal, stale and local agencies, as
well as health departments, hospitals, private and public groups
and individuals.”
Not one of OEO’s 121 family
planning centers has encountered
opposition
either from Catholics, Negroes or doctors
sufficient to force the agency to
consider closing it, said Dr. London. The program found community acceptance in Detroit
where OEO had a center in the
heart of the riot area this summer, he said.
“When the smoke finally
cleared, the only two buildings
left entirely undamaged were the
Negro church across the street,
and the family planning center.”
But in spile of this progress,
the federal government must
move faster, Dr. London said, because “of every 100,000 women
who want and need family planning services today, but do not
have access to them, 80,000 will
be pregnant within a year.”
—

.

."

—

Conference in January
Sens. Gruening and Tydings
are co sponsors of legislation to
add more . national emphasis to
family planning by creating within the Department of State (as
part of foreign aid programs) and
HEW high priority agencies to
administer birth control programs It also calls for a special
White House population confer
ence next January
HEW would handle the family
planning effort within this country under an "Office for Population Problems," to be headed by
an assistant secretary.
Dr. Lee said the department
opposes the legislation. HEW is
already doing a great deal in the

Holbrook to star as Mark Twain
at Rochester's Eastman Theatre
Hal Holbrook’s brilliant one
man show, “Mark Twain Tonight!” comes to the Rochester
Eastman Theater on Friday evening, Nov 24.

Eight years ago, Hal Holbrook
slipped unnoticed into an off
Broadway theater as Mark Twain
and became an overnight suecess. Since the original New York
opening of the show, Mr. Hoi
brook has added three hours of

new material to the repertoire
while playing some 600 performances here and abroad. At present he has about nine hours of
material on hand.
He does not program a per

formance in advance but chooses
his material as he goes along,
The source of the material is
newspaper reviews of Mark
Twain’s
lectures, photographs,
written descriptions of Twain by

those who knew him, personal
interviews with people who knew
him, visits to the towns and
places Twain haunted and, most

important, reading of Mark
Twain’s own writings. The rest is
imagination.

In addition to having successful readings in 12 countries, Mr.
Holbrook also recreated' his show

for a TV special which won unanimous raves from critics and
viewers alike.

Harkness Ballet to perform Nov. 29
The Harkness Ballet will per

form at the Eastman Theater in
Rochester Wednesday, Nov. 29.
Founded in 1964, the company
came into being at the Watch
Hill, R. I Ballet Workshop, a set
ting created by the Harkness
Foudation in 1961 where choreographers, composers, designers and
dancers participate in coordinated
programs to creat new works for
the ballet stage.
Mrs. Rebekah Harkness, a pa

Iron of the arts, fulfilled one of

her major

goals

with the found

ing of the company. "It is," she
explains, “an American company
which cherishes the great tradi

lions of classical ballet and at the
same time presses forward into
new frontier of the dance, spon-

Choregrapher to the Royal Winnipeg Ballet in Canada and Artistic
Director of the Royal Swedish
Ballet for a number of years. His
ballets are part of the repertoire
of the Harkness Ballet and in
those of many European companies.

soring fresh approaches to dance

techniques, choreography, musi
cal composition and design.”

Brian MacDonald is Director of
the Harknes Ballet. He has been

Among the dancers included in
the ranks of the coRtpany are
Bruilda Ruiz, Elisabeth Carroll,
Lawrence Rhodes and Finis
Jhung.

�Th

P«(i Twenty-Two

•

Friday, Novambar 17, 1967

Spectrum

OUR
MANAGING

EDITOR
IS A
BABY FACE!

'wm

wl

m

He is not an ogre.
Oh, sure, he yells a little. He has to.
But he's not the irascible old man some would-be reporters fear

him to be.

forget it.
if that's what is holding you back from joining the staff of The Spectrum
write stories,
Right now, The Spectrum needs YOU. There are all kinds of general things you can do
check for printer's errors, help layout the newspaper, write headlines
and here are a few specific
jobs that need filling:
to report Buffalo political news.
An interest in government and politics is
City Hall reporter

So

—

.

.

.

.

.

.

•

...

essential, but experience is not necessary.

•

•

•

•

If

to cover on- and off-campus research

Science reporter
Book reviewer
Layout assistant
Artist

knowledgeable, articulate student with a critical eye and lightning typewriter touch.
.

.

.

artistic person with

to do cartooning

an eye

for newspaper layout to help make up the paper

and or photography touch-up.

you have the ability and interest to fill any of these jobs, stop in at The Spectrum office, room
Hall, and ask for the Managing Editor.

We can't pay you money, but he
newspaper.

will explain

some

of the intangible rewards for working on your student

He'll probably invite you into his office and offer you
Why, he's really just a babyfaced teddybear!

The Spectrum
“The

only

355 Norton

a cup

of coffee, just to show you what an ogre he isn't.

©

full coverage student newspaper on the Niagara Frontier"

�Friday, Novambar 17, 1967

Pag* Tw*nty-Thr**

The Spectrum

Supreme Court denies Levy's appeal Overseas work-study
opportunities explored

Army
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Capt. Howard B. Levy, sentenced
to three years at hard labor by
a court martial for his anti-Vietnam war activities, was rebuffed
Monday on an appeal to the Supreme Court.
—

Without comment in a brief
order, the justices refused to review a lower court denial of Dr.
Levy’s claim that he was entitled

to a civilian court hearing on the

constitutionality of the military
charges against him.

The 30-year-old New Yorker
was found guilty at Ft. Jackson.
S. C., for refusing to train Green
Beret medical aides for service
in Vietnam and of making statements of opposition to U. S. participation in the war.

He

was

ordered

imprisoned

immediately after the court-martial verdict was returned on
June 3,

Levy’s attorneys had asked the
U. S. Court of Appeals in Washington, D. C„ to hear their challenges to the court-martial proceedings before they began on
May 10. The appeals judges refused to do so and their stand
was sustained by the Supreme
Court Monday.

Berkeley coeds suffer from LSD trips
BERKELEY, Calif. (UPI)
University of California authorities Sunday were investigating
the possibility that coeds were
served LSD-spiked cookies at a
sociology class.
—

Two

of

parently

the

ap-

who

girls,

were slipped the chemi

cal without their knowledge, un
derwent agonizing “bad trips”
and had to be hospitalized.
The incident occurred last
week during a regularly scheduled seminar which was to have
been held in a campus classroom,
but instead was held off-campus

at the home of an unidentified

class member.
Both coeds became so emotionally unglued they were taken to
Cowell Memorial Hospital on the
Berkeley campus. One was released after a short stay, the
other .only Saturday.
Who

the cookies and
passed them out to the unsuspecting students was not immediately
made

but said it was not known what
substance in the cookies induced
the erratic personality change.
A doctor at Cowell said the
symptoms were those of LSD.
Both Berkeley city police and
university authorities were investigating the incident without
further official comment-

A “You Abroad” conference
held at Buffalo State University
College under the auspices of the
Buffalo Council on World Affairs gave students a balanced
picture of work and study opportunities overseas.

The conference was opened by
the keynote address of Miss Lily
von Klemperer of the Institute
of International Education, who
discussed the rewards and pitfalls of international travel and
study.
She advised travel-minded col-

lege students to start investigating travel opportunities at their
own school by speaking to the
school’s Fulbright Advisor, Advisor on Foreign Study, foreign
exchange students, or looking in
the school library’s foreign study
section.
Miss

von

Klemperer

further

noted that Undergraduate Schol-

arships for foreign study are difficult to obtain, and that one
must have a solid academic background, seriousness of purpose,
and knowledge of the country’s
language in order to obtain one.
One must also be careful not to
get involved in a disreputable
or unsuitable program.
Miss von Klemperer’s speech
was followed by a number of
separate panel discussions by representatives of numerous organizations. They included the Peace
Corps, The American Friends
Service Committee, and Operation Crossroads-Africa.

The State University of Buffalo’s representative, Miss Judith
Falconer, discussed the university's varied foreign study programs which included a study
program in Barcelona for Spanish
majors, a Comparative Law
Course at the Free University of
Brussels, and an Archaeology
Field School in Mexico.

learned.
Mrs. Elizabeth Chilton, assistant
dean of students, confirmed the
incident occurred at the seminar.

Take A Sweatshirt Home for Turkey Day

Sweatshirt Sale
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There are two M&amp;T Banks near the campus
With banking hours that make sense.
Look below.

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MAIN W1NSPEAR OFFICE
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Friday: 9:00 a.m.
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—

�The Spectrum

Pag* Twenty-Four

Friday, November 17, 1967

LBJ necrophilia satire causes McGill furor
porting to be passages cut from William Manchester’s Death'
The Daily published an editoriof a President in the student newspaper at McGill University
here has thrown the campus into a furor, aroused the ire al saying that the article should
not have appeared in the papers.
of Montreal citizens, and resulted in charges of “participat- The
editorial said, “An error in
staff
memthe
of
an
obscene
libel”
ing in
publication
against
judgment was made. The article
bers on the paper.
was considered in the context of
the Realist, and when it came
out in our newspaper, we realized it had no place therein.”

The article originally appeared in the April edition of
Realist, an American satirical magazine edited by Paul Krassner. Its final section, which is usually considered the
most offensive, describes President Johnson performing a
sexual act with the body of the late President Kennedy.
Mr, Krassner has since written
that he did not intend the article
to be represented as the truth,
but rather intended it a satirical
take off on what has been written
and said about the assassination
and events surrounding it.

In support of the McGill Daily
staff, a campus organization called Students for a Democratic
University, which is something
like SDS, put out a special news-

Papers confiscated

The McGill Daily published the
article last week. Shortly after it
was distributed the issues were
taken from places where they had
been put out for distribution. It
was not known who confiscated

paper reprinting the Realist’s article, and giving quotes from
Swift and Chaucer on the im-

portance of freedom of thought.
The newspaper listed the names
of 30 faculty members and stu-

dents who said they w

the universit:

Montreal radio stations got
word of the printing of the article,, and have been broadcasting reports of what has happened
since the newspaper appeared.
One report held that the city’s
police morality squad had closed
down and locked the McGill
Daily’s office, and another said
that the paper’s entire staff had

After the article first appeared, three members of the McGill
Daily staff were called before an
administration committee and
told that the article was “contrary to good ordler and incompatible with your status as a
student of this university.”

resigned According to a Daily
spokesman, both reports are totally

false.

Citizens mad
The university has been receiving calls from citizens calling for
action against the students in-

volved, and from alumni threat-

ening to cut off their support of

unless the students

According to a spokesman for
the Daily, the three thought they
would probably be expelled. However, faculty support has been
growing at McGill, and the Daily
has received strong pledges of
support from students elsewhere
as well.

The Central Council of the Gen
Quebec Students
(UGEQ) endorsed a motion upholding the freedom of student
journalism. The motion said that
eral Union of

no university disciplinary committee should be able to pass
judgment on the contents of a
student publication, and declared
that such judgments could only
be made in a court of law.

Funniest Picture
the Last 25 Years!"

The UGEQ indicated that a
massive student demonstration
might be launched, with students
coming to McGill from other universities in the province, if disciplinary action were taken
against the staff members of the
Daily.

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Friday,

November 17, 1967

The Spectrum

Page Twenty-Five

IJC will decide on 'turning off Niagara Falls
NIAGARA FALLS (GNS) —The International Joint Commission is expected to rule soon whether to allow engineers
and geologists to “turn off” the American Falls for eight
months next year.
The de-watering would permit a detailed examination
of the condition of the rockslide-afflicted cataract. It would
be the dramatic climax to studies that will determine what
measures can be taken to retard erosion that has threatened
continued existence of the cataract as a waterfall.
The de-watering has been recvert the flow of the American

ommended by the American Falls
International Board, a newly established subsidiary of the IJC
that includes representatives of
the United States and Canada.
The board accepted jurisdiction
over the erosion problem at the
requests of the two federal governments.

Bare river bed
Plans originally developed by

the U, S. Army Corps of Engineers call for construction of a
temporary cofferdam
between
the U. S. mainland and Goat Island, the land mass that separates the American from the
Horseshoe Falls. This would di-

channel of the Niagara River to

the Horseshoe Falls. It would
bare the river bed and the face
of the American Falls for the
first time in history.
The IJC also may make a recommendation whether Canada
should bear some of the cost of
the studies and any work that
may be done later. Although the
American Falls lies entirely within U. S, territorial waters, the
Niagara River is an international
stream. Restrictions on diversions
are mandated by treaties between
the two countries, which are committed to preserving the sceni.c
beauty of Niagara Falls.

Concern has been expressed
that additional rockslides may
transform the American Falls
into an extension of the npnmprimarily the major collapses in
1931 and 1954, now is piled almost halfway from the lower
river to the brink of the 182foot-high cataract. Suggestions for

remedial work include removal
of much of this debris.
The engineers also are looking
for ways to retard erosion. Initial
suggestions include reinforcing
the face of the cliff by anchoring weaker sections of rock with
metal rods to the more-solid sections upriver.

To be tourist attraction
The de watering operation,
which will begin late in May if
plans are accepted, is expected
to provide as great a tourist attraction as the American Falls
does under normal conditions.
Reduction of the flow last November as part of the engineers’
initial survey brought visitors
from as far away as California.
The only occasions on .which the
■

American Falls has been without
water have been during periods
of ice blockage. At those times,
ice 01

The State Power Authority and
the Hydro-Electric Power Commission of Ontario "volunteered”
last month to divert the addition-

al water
a second

about 67,000 gallons

—

—

to produce electric

power at their plants five miles

north of the Falls. The de-watering would occur at a time when

sion arc in effect. The power
agencies Could produce up to
200,000 kilowatts of extra electricity for four hours each day
during the eight-month period
if they were allowed to use the
water instead of its being directed over the Horseshoe Falls.

Dealing suspends recruitment
BINGHAMTON, N. Y. (UPD—
Dr. Bruce Dearing, president of
State University at Binghamton,
has temporarily suspended further recruiting for the armed
forces on the campus of the university.
Dr. Dearing’s action was taken
after Selective Service Director
Gen. Lewis B. Hershey told local
draft boards they should strip deferments from college students
who interfere with military recruiters on

campus and place

them at the top of the induction

lists.

The university head said he
had written to Hershey requesting a further clarification of the
statement, and also disclosed he
had requested a group of Navy
recruiters, scheduled to be on the
campus Monday, not to come.

Dr. Dearing

belief was

indicated

that

the

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‘Professional Qualification Test—A prerequisite to
qualify for a career position with the National Security
Agency.

WHEN: December 9,1967
WHERE: Contact your Placement Office for
location of test nearest you, or write to NSA
(address below) right awayl

If you expect to receive a liberal arts degree before September 1968 register for the Professional
Qualification Test. Taking and passing the PQT
doesn’t commit or obligate you to anything, but we
urge you—even if you are not now fully certain of
your future interests—to investigate NSA career
opportunities.
An Agency of national prominence, this unique
organization is responsible for developing “secure"
communications systems to transmit and receive
vital information. How and why does that affect you?
Because NSA has a critical and growing need for
imaginative people—regardless of your academic
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You will participate in programs of national importance, working in such areas as: Cryptography (the

making of codes and ciphers), analytic research,
language research, data systems design and pro-

and administrative management.
At NSA, your professional status and earning
power grow rapidly from the day you begin, without
having to wait for years of "experience.” Starting
salary of at least $6,700 (for bachelor's degrees),
regular increases, excellent advancement possibilities ... and all the benefits of Federal employment.
Another advantage is NSA's location, convenient
to both Baltimore and Washington and a short
drive from ocean beaches and other recreational
attractions.
Plan to take the PQT. It could be your first step to
a great future!I
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IMPORTANT: THE DEADLINE FOR PQT APPLICATIONS
IS NOVEMBER 27. Pick up a PQT Bulletin at your Placement Office. It contains full details and the
necessary registration form.
Applicants must be U. S. citizens, subject to a complete
physical examination and background investigation.

national security agency
College Relations Branch, National Security Agency, Ft. George G. Meade, Maryland

Attn: M321

•

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An equal opportunity employer, M&amp;F

�FrW«r,

The Spectrum

Page Twwity-Six
I

Art Festival
held in church

Enjoy Your THANKSGIVING HOLIDAYS!

in Williamsville will sponsor a
dramatic Art, Festival including
drama,
music, choreographed
dance, painting and films this
weekend, Nov. 17-19.
“All events in the Festival,” the
Rev. Edward H. Kryder says,
“will not be held in the parish
house or in some so-called secular place, but in the sanctuary.
1 believe very strongly that wherever there exists a true artistic
impulse, it can be said that the
hand of God is working.”
Tonight at 7 p.m. and again at
9 p.m., the Festival commences
with a presentation of “The
World of Carl Sandburg,” performed by the Alpha-Omega

a

I

CHA

ineer

Players.

Films, panel discussion
Saturday afternoon at 2 p.m.,
Franklin McMahon, an internationally known artist and writer,
will show two films: “The World
of Vatican I: An Artist’s Report”
and “The Artist as a Reporter.”
Following the showings there will
be a panel discussion featuring
Mr. McMahon, a lecturer from Albright-Knox, and a scholar of
liturgy and the Arts, as well as
Mr. Kryder, who will moderate.
Sunday morning at the 9 a

Thomas Foster.
At 8 p.m., Sunday night, the
conclusion of the Festival of the
Arts will be the performances of

Bach’s “Cantata” and
“Lord Nelson's Mass."

Hadyn’s

Channel 17
explores LSD
Channel 17’s National Educational Television “Journal” pre-

sents a psychedelic showdown,
complete with whirling lights and
fantastic forms, for two sides of
a hardhitting debate, "LSD:
Lettvin vs, Leary,” on Monday
evening, Nov. 20, at 9:00.
Jerome Lettvin, professor of
physiology in the departments of
Electrical Engineering and Biology at M.I.T., argues the psychological. physiological and moral
values of LSD with Timothy
Leary, former Harvard researcher
turned “high priest
of psy-

chedelics."
Leary has been experimenting
with LSD and other psychedelic
drugs for more than four years
and is the leader of the League
for Spiritual Discovery. He appears on the program in the
attire of a mystic and discourses

from the Yoga position. Leary
speaks in darkness and his pre-

sentation is given visual emphasis
by a combination of films, which
attempt to recreate the observer's
view of a "trip” from the outside. and slides which attempt to
anatomize the actual LSD experi
ence from the inside.
While Leary describes "turning
on" as the true sacrament, involving a change in the sensory
equipment as practiced by prophets for thousands of years,
Letlvin offers a dramatic rebuttal
when he takes over the debater's

podium.
Prof.
the use
“loss of
around

Jerome Lcttvin brands
of LSD as an irreparable
judgment" and, roaming
Leary's grinning cross
legged form, describes his adver
sary as “a vicious tool of the

devil.”

enlists

m,

and 1 a m. church services, choral readings and dance interpretations of the gospel will be performed under the direction of
Jane Freeman, a local TV personality, and Scenic Rothicr.
“Rejoice,” a folk song, will be
sung by the choir directed by

n

like a

Would on camp
,

;

ee us

levels)

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1947

�a

the spectrum oi

sports

Fifteen seniors to take final grid Dow

tomorrow against Colgate's Raiders
by Jonathan Rand

Staff

Spectrum

Reporter

The Red Raiders of Colgate provide the opposition tomorrow at Rotary Field for fifteen seniors bowing out
with distinction in their career finale.
Those gridders who will don the blue and white for
the last time are Lee Jones, Tom Hurd, Ted Gibbons, Rick
Wells, Tom Brennan, Jim Finochio, Dennis Brisky, Jim
Remillard, Mike Rissel, Rod Rishel, Ken Rutkowski, Brian
Hansen, and Tom Hoke. The injured Irv Wright will not
suit up.
Lee Jones, unheralded as
a frosh came into his own
as a soph, then exploded as
a junior to lead the nation
in touchdowns scored.
He has proven that his performance was no fluke as he once
again keeps company with the
national scoring leaders with 66
points. In addition, he has carried out his assignments as a
blocking back exceptionally.
His backup man, Tom Brennan,

is a good enough fullback to start
just about anywhere else, and has
given the Bulls as good a number
two fullback as one can find. The
former high school All-American
has consistently run with power

and authority,
Rick Wells, a soph quarterback,
came back courageously from a
broken leg to develop into a fine

flanker whose play has always

been characterized by a tremendous amount of hustle and desire.

Along with Finochio, tackle
Mike Rissel has provided the offensive line with power and much
needed experience. Mike’s experience was a vital factor in stabilizing the Bulls’ line which was
manned by several sophomores.
His performances have shown that
he is capable of knocking any defensive tackle out of a line.
Tom Hurd, brilliant as a frosh
flanker, made an excellent adjustment to the defensive backfield.
In addition to being the Bulls’
key defender against enemy aerials, Tom has consistently displayed adept open field tackling.
His timely interceptions have
changed the complexion of several Bulls’ games.

His companion in the defensive
secondary, Tom Hoke, has always
played heads up ball, often charging up from his halfback spot to
make key tackles, stopping potential long ground gainers.

Brisky excites

Out weighed not out hit

Dennis Brisky, always noted (or

Jim Finochio, though lacking
the size of many offensive guards,
has more than compensated for
and hustle. On several occasions,
Jim has lined up against the opposition's toughest defender, and

his aggressive, hard hitting play,
has provided the State University of Buffalo with an exciting
defensive end during his three
varsity seasons. Offensive linemen capable of keeping Dennis
out of their backfield are indeed

play though outweighed at times
by as much as fifty pounds.

Jim Remillar, a former prepper, has really come into his own

it

by his superlative technique

has put on a rugged blocking dis-

hard to come by.

Jim
Remillard

Dennis

Briskey

this year as a stellar defensive
end. Though not often in the
headlines, Jim is a steady performer who gets the job done.
Brian Hansen sustained a serious injury in his freshman season, but the Detroit native has
done a great deal of the Bulls’
punting during his varsity campaigns.

i

Ted Gibbons is a defensive
tackle whose play can only be
described in superlatives. His
devastating pass rush, resounding tackles, and an amazing ability to play with pain mark him
as one of the best at his position

Lee
Jones

in the East.

Tom
Hurd

Is
fi

Tom
Hoke

Rod Rishel, right outside linebacker has steadily turned in
solid performances, though often
hampered by a painful shoulder
injury. With his shoulder in a
cast all of last spring, it is to
Rod’s credit that he made such
an impressive comeback this sea-

|g|

son.

Irv Wright, who along with
Mike Luzny cemented the left
side of the Bulls’ linebacking
corps, turned in the big defensive
play on several occasions, often
coming up with a key fumble recovery or interception.

A 4
Rick
Wells

Rutko's status in question
Ken Rutkowski, the fleet tailback who has given the State

University at Buffalo its long
awaited breakaway threat, has another year of eligibility left, but
is doubtful concerning the possibility of returning next season.
His strong outside running and
ability to turn corners has constantly kept the Bulls’ fans on
the edge of their seats.
Hick Ashley, tight end par ex-

cellence is another senior who is
uncertain about his plans for next
year Those who saw Dick’s outstanding efforts a a soph and
junior can truly appreciate how
much his loss has hurt the Bulls
this year.
The twelve seniors suiting up
tomorrow will be going all out
against a Colgate squad that has
come on strong after dropping
their first six decisions. They
then proceeded to punish Lehigh
20-7, and humiliate Bucknell, 38-0
last Saturday.

The offensive potency in these
two contests was generated mainly by field general Ron Burton,
tailback Al Pearman, and fullback

Marv Hubbard. Burton also relies fairly heavily on the services
of his two dependable receivers,
ends Dean Taylor and Doug Hale.
Coach Hal Lahar’s charges work
basically out of an “I” formation,
but employ many motion plays
and quarterback keepers.
Last week, in routing Bucknell
scrambling QB Burton showed his
versatility by picking up 122
yards rushing on nine carries,
and completed five of ten passes
for 142 more. The very speedy
Pearman scampered for two tal-

while

Ted
Gibbons

Mike
Rissell

Employ "I" formation

lies,

Hubbard,

Rod
Rishel

another

speedball, snared a 47 yard scoring bomb from Burton.
Defensively, the Red Raider
line is anchored by guard Martin

Tripp, while linebackers Dick
Schrumpf and Gene Detwiler supply backup stopping power.

Injuries slow Raiders
Colgate, boasting twenty one
lettermcn returning from last
season’s 8-M slate, looked forward to this year with unbridled
optimism.
However, injuries have taken
their toll, and it has been a long,
long season for the Red Raiders
who appear to have finally jelled
in their last two games.
The Red Raiders will doubtlessly come into Rotary Field tomorrow a hungry ball club, psyched
considerably from victories over

lightly

regarded

Lehigh

and

Bucknell.

Unfortunately, they will find
proverbial cupboard quite

the

bare, and would be best advised

to hold their appetities for Rutgers the following Saturday.

hooters lackin
Jim
Finochio

Irv
Wright

Ken
Rutkowski

Coach Muto will field determined
frosh squad in upcoming campaign
by Roach N. Mantis
Spectrum Staff Reporter

The State University of Buffalo
freshman basketball team is a
determined and hustling unit.
Coach Muto has put together a
solid squad and has hopes for
a very successful season. They
play a rough brand of basketball,
depending on the fast break and
the strong rebounding rather than
the good shooting of their backcourt men.

■

jt"

Forwards

Dick
Ashley

Tom

Brian

Brennan

Hansen

Robert Jackson, the tallest forward at 6 feet 3 Vi inches, is a
strong rebounder. His fine jump-

ing ability and

the aggressive

way in which he “boxes out” his
opponents makes him very tough
under the boards. His shooting

style

is unorthodox but

he

is

very accurate on one hand sets
from the corners and short jump
shots around the key.
Robert Moog, 6 feet 2Vi inches,

is adept at the art of passing and
dribbling. He too is tough on the
boards, grabbing his fair share
of rebounds You might associate him with a player such as
Van Arsdale of the New
York Knicks. He is tall and agile
and can play guard as well as
forward. Moog has good moves
with and without the ball and
drives extremely well.

Dick

Phil Knapp and Dennis Helen-

brouk arc the other forwards.
Both are hard nosed, scrappy ballplayers and are tough rebounders. Phil, known to his teammates as Flipper, is also a fine

ballhandler.

Centers
Steve Waxman, standing at 6

feet 4V4 inches, although technically a center, is used by Coach
Muto as a third forward. He is
probably the best rebounder on
the team which can be accredited to his tremendous leaping
ability. He gets many important
“garbage shots,” making easy lay(Please

Turn to

Page 24)

�*ix
rage iwenrybight

p

Coach Muto will field,,.
the outside. If no one can find
the range, the offense might be
stalled somewhat and it would
be very hard for the men up
front to carry such a heavy load.
Palcn, Landergen and Petti are
probably the best on defense

(Continued from Page 23)
ups

after he has pulled down
the offensive rebound. His jump
shot is a threat from anywhere in
the area' around the key. Steve
also plays a fine role on defense.

■

while .Tnhnson and Lovello are

center, is a

gooi

has trouble offensively. His passing and defense are adequate
but he doesn’t possess the shot
and moves of Waxman.

Guards

Coach Muto

will have trouble

picking his starting guards. There
are Six boys, Kenny Palen, Jim
Bruwenaus, Bob Petti, Terry Johnson, Paul Lovello and Rich Landergen, from which the coach

will choose
This is probably the weakest
position on the team. None of
these backcourt men have the
ability to score consistently from

The

bling and passing ability
However, the backcourt will be
weak until one guard can be a
potential scoring threat from the
outside.
The team has plenty of spirit
and confidence. Coach Muto runs
the squad with great enthusiasm
which makes all of the boys perform to their peaks. They have
a spunky little manager, Carlos
Olivencia, the little “0”. It is an

interesting team to watch and
this reporter predicts that they
will win many more games than
people expect.

Hoople predicts

UCLA to bust USC bubble
Last week’s college football action was highlighted by
by a strong Oregon
State team.
the upset of top ranked Southern Cal.

The Beavers certainly have to rank as the spoilers in
this year’s football schedule as they already own upsets
over previously unbeaten Purdue, USC, and a tie with UCLA.

In other major action last week, North Carolina State
was toppled from the ranks of the unbeaten by a fired-up
Penn State squad narrowing the ranks of undefeated, untied
Wyoming and Indiana which barely
football teams to two
squeezed by in their game with Michigan State.
—

The

Uoople's predetions last
week were still quite successful
despite the upsets mentioned
above as the Hoople lost only on
USC, Georgia by one point in the
last 30 seconds of the game and
the Bulls debacle. The 9 3 record
of last week brings the Hoople’s
season average to 85 34 for a
very respectable .714 average.

fense. One break could be the
decisive factor in this one.
Oklahoma 42, Kansas 7; Both
these teams are good and Kansas

is certainly better than the score
indicates but the Sooner’s devastating offense will simply over-

whelm the bewildered Jayhawks.
LSU

This week’s action should provide the highpoint to the college
season as the top team in the na
tion should be decided in what
has been ballyhooed as the game
of the year: USC vs. UCLA.
Other lop games pit undefeated
Indiana against once defeated

Minnesota and Big Eight contend
ers Nebraska and Missouri tic up
in a big defensive battle. So here
without further ado are the
Hoople picks of the week.
Alabama 17, So. Carolina 14:
The Gamecocks arc a solid foot
ball team and Alabama ain’t what
they used to be Look for an Ala
bama letdown after their big victory over LSU last week
Notre Dame 34, Georgia Tech
21: Bobby Dodd's no longer here
but then neither is Knute Rockne.
Hanratty vs. King in a wide open
two-fisted aerial battle.
Texas 36, Texas Christian 28:
Bradley and Gilbert are clicking
and the Longhorns appear headed
for a, Colton Bowl bid along with
the Southwest championship The
Frogs certainly won’t stop them.
Purdue 45, Michigan State 12:
Leroy Keyes is the name of the
game and Purdue has more of
him than do the Spartans. It’s
been a long year for Duffy’s boys
and it will get even longer after
this Saturday.
Tennessee 24, Mississippi 21:
Look at California ail you want
but right here is the best team
in the nation. Suffering only an
opening setback to UCLA in the
closing moments, the Vols have
week after week proven that they
are a great team both offensively
and defensively. With better timing in their schedule they might
have gone all the way.
Oregon St. 14, Oregon 3: Throw
out the records in this traditional
rivalry. The nod has to go to
Stale because of the sturdier de-

14, Mississippi

St.

13:

These games arc murder to pick
but the Tigers should be sufficiently aroused after last week’s
one point loss to Alabama not to
let it happen again.

Missouri 17, Nebraska 15: This
game is an absolute toss up. With
the two teams rated even in just
about every category. My guess
is Missouri on the home town advantage.
Indiana 10, Minnesota 9: The
Hoosiers certainly have to be the

surprise team in the nation. Surprise—it’s 11:59 and in one minute the whole Indiana team will
turn into seven white mice and
a pumpkin. They’ll need that extra minute to squeak past the
tough Gopher defense.
Colgate 7,
Buffalo 6:
The
Hoople was going to pul the
screws to the Bulls this week after that horror show at Villanova
but it is better to forgive and
forget
mostly forget. Don Gilbert will be stopped inches short
on a two point conversion late
in the fourth quarter. What ever
happened to Jim Robie? ,
UCLA 24, USC 17: Well, this
is what you’ve all been waiting
—

for. The game of the year for
the National Championship. The
Hoople is probably the only one
in the country who thinks the
UCLANs have a chance. Just remember Gary Bcban still is the
best quarterback in the country
and has a knack of coming up
with the big play when it’s
needed
That field goal kicker with the
crazy, name is good for three
points from anywhere in from the
50 and Greg Jones is one of the

most underrated ballplayers in

the country.
Anyway I picked Clay over Liston in that fight so what’s new.
In the Upset of the Yeer and
Game of the Year the Bruins of
UCLA will rise up and smite the

mighty Trojans of Southern Cal.

• *

rum

Hockey Bulls will carry clean league
slate into Buff State, Brockport games
by Tony DePaola
Spectrum Staff Reporter

The record book is full of teams that should have won

against State and Brockport, Both
games are at the Amherst Arena
and will begin at 10:00 p.m.

added their ndme to that long list Sunday night as they down
to defeat at the hands of the Nichols Alumni Hockey Club
4-2 at the Amherst Rink.
The most dominant factor in mentioned that season tickets are

their defeat was the ‘blind” goaltending of the Nichols’ netminder Howie Saperston. In the third
period where the Bulls out-shot
Nichols 14 to 6, Saperston made
no less than 5 unbelievable saves,
and the thing that hurt the Bulls
most was that he didn’t seem
to see most of the shots, he just
somehow ended up in the way
of the rubber. After a shaky start
in the first period where he let
in two slap shots, one by Bill
Miller and one by Fred Borgemeister, Saperston was not to
be denied and he went the rest
of the route unseratched. All

Howie could say after the game
was “You kids were on me all
night, I’m tired.”

Hamilton sharp

As far as hustle, the Bulls outshot, out-hit, and out-skated the
visitors through the entire game.
Nichols scored from either
scrambles in front of the net or
screen shots for which Buffalo’s
goaltender could not be blamed.
On the contrary, Big Jim Hamilton was very sharp in the nets
for the Bulls.
Defenseman Jim Miller, this
week’s “Second Star” got the
Bulls off to a 1-0 lead at 8:24 of
the first period on a blazing 50footer that beat Saperslon on his
glove side. The second goal
scored for the Bulls was tallied
by another blue liner, Fred Borgemiesler, on a pretty play by

Billy Newman and Scrapin’ Jimmy McKowne. Little Jim went
into the corner and dug the
puck out from a Nichol's defenseman, passed it out to Billy in the
left corner who fed Borgy with
a perfect pass and Fred blasted
Saperslon with a sizzler from
about 40 feet.

Refs goof
After the two goals the Bulls
could not get on the scoreboard.
It was always a case of Saperston
stopping it or the puck hitting
him. Adding to their misery was
the fact that the Bulls hit no less
than three posts and at the end
of the game the Nichols team
readily admitted that the Bulls
had scored at least twice only

to have the goals missed by the
referee. So Sunday night must
be labeled as one of those nights

when nothing went right.
Jim Miller put it perfectly as
he sat in the locker room after
the game. "That's what you call—breaks."
It was the general feeling that
Saturday night's 14-3 rout of the
team from Slate did Buffalo more
harm than good. Although games
like that are good for the morale
they don't call on the skaters to
play their best and thus they tend
to let down a little.
Talking with Freddy Borgmiester, after the game, "I feel State
hurt us because we didn't have
to play up to our potential and
consequently when we came
across a bunch of toe skaters we
really had to hustle."

Attendance up
GM Howard Piaster was very
pleased with Saturday and Sunday

night's attendance. As Mr. Plaster put it, "I wish to extend my
thanks to all the fans who turned
out for this week-nd’s games. We
have done our best to bring big
time college hockey to the University of Buffalo and when the
fans suport you it is worthwhile.
Mr. Plaster also noted that there
was a very large turn-out from
the student body at State and that
he hoped Buffalo could double
Saturday night's attendance. He

still on sale in the gym athletic
office anytime during the day.
The Bulls will be looking to
better their 1-0 league mark
against Buffalo Stale tomorrow

night and Brockport on Sunday.
They’ll probably come out on
top, that is as long as Howie
Saperston doesn’t register at
State or Brockport some time

this week.

Three

star

awards

This week’s "three stars” are
. . . Center Billy Newman who
terrorized State and Nichols with
his accurate shooting and puck
carrying . . . Jim Miller, who
played very consistently in both
games. Jimmy never let down no
matter how rough the going got.
The “third star” is Howie Saperston, even if he didn’t see
some of the saves he still kept
Billy Newman
the puck out of the net and
received first star honors for
Nichols in the game.
Ralph Judge, a key-icer on the his performance against Buffalo
Bulls' attack returns after an inState and Nichols Alumni last
jury for one weekend’s game weekend.

Sportin' Life
by Bob Woodruff
Sports

Editor

The ostrich took its head out of the sand this week
The Trustees of the State University of New York finally recognized the fact that intercollegiate athletics exists on this campus
and at the other branches of the State educational system.
By doing so they may have written a eulogy for football at this
institution.
The situation at this time is still up in the air, as numerous
parties render their interpretations of the extravagantly worded
trustee release. What is clear is that the State has decided to take
over the intercollegiate program en toto.
“The University shall devote to intercollegiate athletic activities
a share of its total financial resources proportionate to the best
interests of all students in the three-way program of physical education, recreation and athletics.”
The Trustees aren’t kidding anybody by making this a policy
for all State operated schools. They’re aiming their message at Clark
Gym and the Bulls athletic program.
Generous support
What they are doing is incorporating athletics into the main,
stream of University revenues and expenditures, and they will no
doubt be generous in their support of our athletic program.

Up to a point.
And that point is the State University of Buffalo’s grant-in-aid
practice.
“No agency of the University shall provide or honor student
subsidies based primarily on a student’s athletic ability.”
Translation: no scholarships, no football.
The University has never before depended on the State for
its athletic grants, as the money previously came out of gate receipts. The State hierarchy however, has not left a stone unturned.
"All fees and gale receipts associated with University controlled
intercollegiate athletic contests shall be received into the University

Income Fund.”
Translation: No longer will the income from the Bulls football
clashes be earmarked for the athletic department. Instead, these
revenues will be channeled into that great all encompassing “University Income Fund." Thus the department of athletics is being deprived of the $85,000 or so it derives from gate receipts yearly,
which is the prime source of grant-in-aid monies.
The athletic department was hoping that the student fees would
either be made mandatory or left to the discretion of the local
units. Albany said “no" on both counts.

Athletic fees?
There is also slim hope that the football program will be entitled to use the future athletic fees paid by the University students
for athletic scholarships, but the grapevine reports that the Student
Senate will not permit such a directioning of funds.
It seems almost hypocritical for the Board of Trustees to grant
this University enough funds to meet the guaranteed demands of
any team in the country, then force this school to play a schedule
on the level of Brockport or Cortland.
When the University of Buffalo joined the State system there
was a silent agreement that the Bulls' prospering and expanding
program of intercollegiate competition would be allowed to grow
and flourish uninhibited by the new affiliation.
Someone has not kept his bargain.
President Meyerson’s administration has always taken a firm
pro intercollegiate athletic stand, and it is hoped it will not falter
in the wake of this new State policy.
Without its assistance it appears that the only thing that will
solve the fiscal difficulties of the athletic program is a sudden upsurge in revenues from private benefactors.
Nobody's counting on Rocky for much of a contribution.

�Friday, November 17, 1967

The Spectrum

Newcomers
by W. Scott Behrens
Assistant

Sports Editor

The State University of Buffalo basketball team will open its 1967-1968 season
fustini is very optimistic about his young
team and feels that it has a much greater
potential than last year’s club which finished the season with a won-9, lost-11
mark.
“With
increased
ing), and
Peeler to

the added depth that we have,

firepower (well balanced shootthe quick adjustment of Joe
his new baekcourt position we
can give a good account of ourselves.
This team wants to establish itself
as one of the finest teams in the area—an area which is a virtual “hotbed” of

basketball,” the head coach remarked in
interview.
A week ago today the varsity scrimmaged the Canisius College varsity and
according to Serf “everything came out
even,” On the basis of this scrimmage it
is felt that the Bulls should do better
then reverse last year’s losing record.
There were many bright spots which appeared in this practice session with the
Golden Griffins and Serf was very encouraged at the outcome of the contest.
“It was a real fine test to draw us together. We will be scrimmaging St. Bon-

cagers

give

Page Twenty-Nine

added depth, firepower

7 points per game last year and has looked
really good to date. He has shown more
quickness on defense and in his ability
to read the fast break. He has been more

just under 6 points per game last season
and at that time was making the transition from the forecourt position which
he held in his freshman year. It looks

1966.

and more consistent in all phases of the
game. Rutkowski is a strong rebounder
and a fine defensive ballplayer.

Edward Eberle—Junior, 6 feet 2 inches,
180 pounds, age 20, from Buffalo, N. Y.
This returning letterman from last year
was the 1966-1967 Most Valuable Player,
This is quite an honor for Ed since he was
only a sophomore. Ed led the team in
scoring last season with a 15.8 point per
game average and hit over 48% from the
field and 80% from the foul line.
He was generally regarded as the top
sophomore in the area last year. He posseses one of the finest outside shots in
Western New York. In his very quiet and
unassuming manner he can be regarded as
a team leader.

Robert Nowak—Junior, 6 feet 2 inches,
175 pounds, age 20, from Cheektowaga,
N, Y. This transfer student from Erie
County Technical Institute scored 999

points in two years at ECTI. He provides
a great scoring punch from the outside
and is regarded as one of the finer shooters in Western New York from anywhere
in the court.
He is extremely aggressive though no
giant in the forecourt. His presence should
give the Bulls more consistent shooting
power and a more diversified attack.
Joseph Foster
Sophomore, 6 feet 4
inches, 230 pounds, age 19, from Rochester, N. Y, One of the players who has
moved up from last year’s freshman
team, Joe has gone through a series of
injuries to his ankle, shoulder and back
in the first four weeks of practice. The
recovery period will delay his condition
ing process.

The coach feels that when he does be-

Bulls John Piere

arcs shot over the outstretched hands
of two St. Michael's defenders. Bulls
dropped double overtime thriller in
Clark Gym dash last year, 93-91.

aventure over the Thanksgiving holidays
to see how we will fair against their exceptional size.”

Better scoring balance
The Bulls will have a much better
scoring balance this year. The opposition
will not be able to concentrate its efforts
on just Ed Eberle’s sharpshooting. Rebounding will be much stronger overall,
despite the loss of 6 feet 4 inches Artie

Walker.

The Blue and White club will also have
a much improved bench.
The team will be faster than last year,
and the overall height will be improved,
but the Bulls will still be out-sized in
many of the contests and this may be
their undoing.
In looking over his depth chart for
the coming season the head coach came
up with the following candid comments
on the progress and future of each of his
16 players:

Forwards
Douglas

Bernard

—

Senior, 6

feet 2

inches, 190 pounds, age 21, from Ilion,
N. Y. This returning letterman’s progress has been hampered considerably due
to a back injury and he has been slow in
coming

around

during

the

pre-season

This still could be his biggest
year. He is an excellent shooter from all
over the court and has very good offensive

practices.

moves. He averaged 10.6 points per game
as a junior last season.
Jon Culbert—Senior, 6 feet

3 inches,

180 pounds, age 21, from Niagara Falls,
N. Y. This returning letterman averaged

Wayne Betts—Junior, 6 feet 5 inches,
190 pounds, age 20, from Bristol, Pa.
Wayne is a transfer student from Wesley
Junior College in Dover, Delaware. He
shows good speed and jumping ability
and could be used at either a forward or
center position. Betts has a fine hook
shot and gives the Bulls depth in the
forecourt which has caused a real battle
for a starting position up front.

Centers

John Jekeliek—Junior, 6 feet 4 inches,
200 pounds, age 20, from Buffalo, N. Y.
John is rather short for modern day col
lege standards at the center position but

possesses good physical strength and maneuverability around the basket. He is the
real aggressive type of basketball player.
Jack Scherer
Sophomore, 6 feet 4
inches, 180 pounds, age 19, from Tona
wanda, N. Y. Jack has moved up from
—

last year’s freshman team where he was

Vr

A

John Pieri —Junior, 5 feet 10 inches,
165 pounds, age 20, from Buffalo, N. Y.
One of the shortest men on the squad,
this returning letterman is one of the most
aggressive for his size. He is a real “spark
plug” for the Bulls. John is a good outside shooter and a fine driver.

—

come healthy his size should help the
Bulls on the backboards. For his size Joe
is an excellent shooter.

m

Joseph Peeler—Junior, 6 feet 3 inches,
190 pounds, age 21, from Buffalo, N. Y.
Joe is another transfer student from ECTI
and is another one of the players who has
been able to make the transition from
forecourt to backcourt. At ECTI he was
voted Junior College All-American as he
averaged over 16 points per game. He is
without question one of the best rebounders for his height anywhere.
He has been able to make the move to
guard smoothly, and in a relatively short
period of time. He has all the offensive
and defensive moves one needs to play
good basketball.
If Peeler keeps making this improvement in early season practice Serf believes that he can be one of the best men
ever to wear a University of Buffalo uniform.

J. Robert Williams—Sophomore, 6 feel
2 inches, 155 pounds, age 19, from New
York, N. Y. Bob is another fine product
up from Muto’s freshman team and is a
real leaper. He possesses a fine outside
shot and as he acquires more strength and
aggressiveness around the basket he could
move into contention for a starting position.

James Shea —Junior, 6 feel, 160 pounds,
age 20, from Albany, N. Y. This returning
letterman has been hampered by an early
fall illness. On the basis of last year’s
performance he will save many a game
for the Bulls with his outstanding defensive play.
Richard Barbara—Sophomore, 6 feel 1
inch, 175 pounds, age 19, from Tonawanda, N. Y. Another of Muto’s products up
from the freshman team, Rich is the quick
and aggressive type of ballplayer He is
the type of player who makes his presence felt in every practice session As he

gains experience, especially offensively,
he could also prove to be a great first

line contender.

. Michael Scotellaro
Junior, 5 feel 9
inches, 160 pounds, age 20, from Buffalo,
N. Y. A transfer student from Mohawk
Valley Junior College, Mike is short bul
speedy and aggressive. He has missed a
good portion of the early practice sessions due to a family illness. It is loo
early to tell what his true potential will
—

be.

John Culbert
leaps high to pop his jump shot against
the U. of Wisconsin at Milwaukee at
the Aud. f Ifaio rolled to 88-77 triumph in f oruary of last season.
The foli ..ing is the 1967-1968 Varsity
Basketball schedule:
AT MEMORIAL AUDITORIUM
Dec, 2—Gannon

Feb 3—-Hofstra
Feb 17—-Buffalo State
Feb. 24—Colgate
Mar. 2—Northern Illinois
AT (’LARK GYM
Dec. 1—Toronto
Dec. 8—Albany State
Dec. 13—San Francisco State
Dec, 18—Belmont Abbey
Jan. 2—MacMurray
Jan. 23—Quantico Marines
Feb. 12—University of Baltimore
Feb. 29—Philadelphia Textile
GAMES AWAY .
Dec. 9—Syracuse
Dec. 22-23—U. S. Navy Tournament
at Norfolk, Va.
Jan. 27—St. Michael’s
Jan, 30—Brockport State
Feb. 2- -University of Rochester
Feb.
State
Feb. 10—Windsor
Feb, 21—Niagara
Feb. 27—Ithaca College

voted the squad’s most valuable player.
He possesses great jumping ability and
has good hands. His backboard efforts
can be helpful in areas which are extremely important such as making the
fast break work.

John Vaughan—Sophomore, 6 feet 9
inches, 220 pounds, age 19, from North
Kingston,

Rhode Island. Another product

of Coach Ed Muto's freshman basketball
team last season, John is the tallest player in the annals of University of Buffalo

basketball history.
Coach Serfustini likes to think of him
as a real “sleeper” whereas in modern
terms he would be known as the “dark
horse contender.” John has real good
hands and is gaining more confidence in
himself during each practice session.
He is becoming more aggressive and
could do a real good job for the Bulls
when he comes around. It is only a question of his physique catching up to his
frame which will take some time and ef
fort.

Guards
Joseph Rutkowski

—

Junior, 6 feet 1

inch, 175 pounds, age 20, from Dunkirk,

N. Y, This returning letterman averaged

1967-68
Basketball Squad

Bottom (I to r): Freshman Coach Ed Muto, Varsity Coach ten Serfuslini, John Culberl, Doug
Bernard, Ed Eberle, John Jekeliek, oe Foster,
Wayne Bells, Jack Scherer, John Vaughan. Rear
(I to r): Joe Peeler, Bob Nowak, Rich Barbera,
Joe Rutkowski, Bob Williams, John Fieri, Mike
Scotellaro, Jim Shea, Manager Fran Welk, Assistant Coach Norb Baschnagel

�fr

The Spectrum

Page Thirty

Friday, November 17, 19i7

Colts have best Nat'l League mark; Intramural all-stars picked
Packers reign supreme in football
by Springville

it. Li

now history.

There have been upsets, squeakers, and the inevitable
triumphs, as no team has come through the action with an
unblemished record. Records though can prove deceiving
as they are not always reliable evaluations of a football team.
The Baltimore Colts own
the best record in the NFL,
7-0-2, but they are not the
best football team.
The Los Angeles Rams and the
Dallas Cowboys come next with
6-1-2 and 7-2 records, respectively. However, neither of these
clubs will find itself in the Super
Bowl in January. When the chips
are down, there is no team to
compare with the Green Bay
Packers who will once again take
the crown of football supremacy
back to Wisconsin.

Two negative factors

Green Bay has six victories,
two losses, to Minnesota 10-7 and
Baltimore 13-10, and one tie, Detroit 17-17.
The negative aspect of their
record can be attributed to two
factors.

One is that they arc the Packers and every team wants victory
just a little more when it faces
them.

The second factor is that he
Packers have been plagued by
juries. Two weeks ago in lh.
13-10 loss to Baltimore, the Pat
ers lost their starting backfield,
Elijah Pitts and Jim Grabowski,
through injury in the first half.
The

Packers

couldn’t

adjust

quickly enough to this handicap

and; the result was a heartbreak
ing defeat. During their week’s
practice they adapted to the situation and on Sunday they

crushed the Cleveland Browns by
the unbelievable score of 55 7,

Packers defense stingy

However, it is the Packer defensive eleven that has won the
plaudits throughout the nation
They have held their opponents to
an average of less than 200 yards
per game while leading the
league in least points allowed
with 118.

Their three linebackers alone.
Ray Nilchske, Lee Roy Caffcy,
and Dave Robinson, will probably
appear in the starting lineup of
the post season Pro Bowl.
The Packers have great pride
in themselves and arc driven by
the desire instilled in them by
their coach, Vince Lombardi, The
Packers are the top team in professional football and will once
again be the victor in the Super
Bowl.
Well, last week Springvillc let

the Hoople undertake the ardu

ous task of picking the pros. Although there were no major upsets, the hapless Hoople only responded by winning seven out of
eleven games for a paltry winning percentage of .636. Nice
try, Hoops.

NFL
Baltimore 31, Detroit 14: Peerless Johnny Unitas might have
put on the greatest single show
of football history last week passing for 370 yards in the first half
against Atlanta. He left the game
with twelve straight completions
and there’s no reason why he
should stop there. Meanwhile Detroit tied Minnesota and committed an unbelievable eleven fumbles in the process. Oh my.
Les Angeles 35, Atlanta 10: The
stingy Rams have kept pace with
the Colls and cannot afford to
lose another game. The only trouble is that Green Bay is coming

soon. The

Rams should be able

to concentrate enough on the
Falcons to cause havoc. Atlanta
has cancelled Randy Johnson’s in
surance policy with the league
office in a smart business move.
Cleveland 28, Minnesota 10:
The Vikings play like they just
got off the boat. The Brownies
should be recovered enough from
that Packer pummcling to resume

their quest for the meaningless

Eastern crown.

Philadelphia 33, New Orleans
13: New Orleans has improved
greatly since its dismal start but
the you tin Saints stil aren’t good
enough to handle the Eagles.
Norm Snead should have a field
day but then again he's probably
betting the game so don’t touch
it on those terrible football cards.

Pittsburgh 21, New York 20:
Darrell Dess scored the Giants
only seven points last week with
an eleven yard run. Mr Dess is
an offensve guard. Allie Sherman
devised the play with Tarkenton
handing off to Tucker Fredrickson who laterals to Dess laying
on the ground after missing a
block (naturally) because he already has a deal cooked up with
the defensive tackle that if he
scores he’ll let the tackle cream
Tarkenton on the next series and
get a raise in pay. The Giants are
desperate.

lis

12,

7: Jim

Chic.

erratic. The only steady thing on
the Cardinal team is the toe of
Jim Bakken and this should be
the difference. Ever since the
Papa Bear left Chicago Gale
Sayers has refused to play football and Chicago is in trouble.
Green Bey 31, San Francisco
17: The Bay boys razzle dazzled
the Browns to the tune of 55

points last week which shouldn’t
really happen with a Vince Lombardi team. Anyway the 49’ers
don’t stand a chance in spite of
John Brodie and his one million
dollar contract.

Dallas 27, Washington 20. Last
week Dallas reserve quarterback
L. N. Ziffer made a couple of
beautiful passes for the Cowboys
to insure their victory. On the
receiving end of most of these
was second stringer A1 Chicky
Sands who finally caught the hint
from his coach and started playing ball. Halftime excitement at
Dalas will be a live dash for Dash
featuring a well known sports
celebrity. Other than that Dallas
will score another unimpressive
victory.

AFL
Kansas City 35, San Diego 27:
We’re still betting KC in the
Super Bowl and to get there this
one is a must. San Diego has
Lance Alworth who is just great
but the Chiefs have too much
talent all around to stay where
they are. Len Dawson and Mike
Garrett to shine in this one.
Oakland 7, Miami

3. This is

getting ridiculous. Week after
week we pick poor Miami to lose
by some outrageous score and
unfortunately they usually oblige.
Look, these guys try hard and
they are real people with real
feelings so this week for the sake
of sport we’ll make it close. In
fact, we proclaim Sunday to be

‘‘Be KIND

to

Dolphin

Day.”

Well, anyway, it will be an excuse
to throw dead fish at Bob Griese.
New York 29, Boston 17: Joe
Namalh is amazing. The man is
deadly with a football and if he
had ends with real good speed
the Jets would be unstoppable.
Boston is out of the money so
don’t count on a tussle in this
one.
Buffalo 4, Denver 2: A virtual
repeat performance of last meeting. Both teams are incredibly
horrid and that is all that has
to be said, besides that we’ll take
the Buffoons. Good Evening,

friends.

Unless the frigid and damp climate of the Niagara
Frontier has caused a postponement of play, the intramural
football championship will be decided by this publication
date. The referees, Director of Intramural Athletics, Mr.
nave
the 1967 season.

Spectrum

ALL-FRATERNITY
Offensive Team
Ends—Steve Davidson, AEPi; Joe Orsini, Sig Ep; John
Busch, APO
Backs—A1 Giacchi, APO; Ken Ritz, Beta Sig
Quarterback—Fran Buchta, Sig Ep
Defensive Team
Ends—Curt Wilbur, Alpha Sig; Bill Freeman, Phi Psi;
Packy Botula, Alpha Sig
Backs—Jim Rasey, APO; Warren Valencia, Tau Delt;
Miles Kavaller, Beta Sig
ALL-INTRAMURAL
Offensive Team

Quarterback—Dave Dux, Nadgos
Ends—Ron Salmonson, Billy Shears; Bill Gallagher,
55ers; Steve Davidson, AEPi
Backs—A1 Giacchi, APO; Ken Ritz, Beta Sig
Defensive Team
Ends —Curt Wilbur, Alpha Sig; Packy Botula, Alpha
Sig; Dick Prizzolo, The Meat
Backs—Bill Munson, Phys Ed. Majors; Morty Gootlerner,
Billy Shears; Jim Rasey, APO
HONORABLE MENTION
Rick Kaplan, Keith Turner, Jerry Sileni, John Davis,
Angelo Monte, Bill Tahanica, The Meat; Jeff Sofer,
Harvey Bender, Gene Haber, Billy Shears; Terry Vesneske, APO; Richie Schwartz, Andy Solomon, AEPi;
Garry Helfenstein, Phi Psi; Bruce Haskin, Theta Chi;
Rich Kantor, Tau Delt; Lou Thompson, Pine Court;
Steve Shapiro, SAM.

Pressure takes toll on
pro hockey league stars
NEW YORK (UPI)—There was a time they used to play
hockey on top of ice.
No more
Today the play is under pressure. More pressure, apparently, than is felt by participants in any other professional sport.
Roger Crozier, the Detroit
goalie, is exhibit A. Check
that. Make it Roger Crozier,

the ex-Detroit goalie. He just
up and quit the other day.
Something about too many
goals being scored against
him, getting down in the
mouth and too much all
around pressure.
Frank

Mahovlich,

Toronto’s

superb but sensitive shot-maker,
is exhibit B. He’s in a room in
Toronto General Hospital now for
what they call “tension and depression.”

Fanatic fans
The way I get it is Mahovlich’s
tension and depression was

brought about by a combination
of circumstances, not the least
of which is the fact that hockey
has the same grip on people in
Toronto that football has on the

citizens of Green Bay.
He loves hockey, but it’s not
the same civic matter of life and
death with him as it is with so
many Maple Leaf fans in Toronto.
They think of Mahovlich as a
superstar, which he is and they
think he should play as well as
say, Chicago's Bobby Hull, which
he does occasionally.
But not all the time simply
because he’s not as good as Hull.
That’s no crime. Some Toronto
fans feel it is, however. So they
boo Mahovlich. The more they
boo him. the more it eats him up

—UPI T•(•photo

Head
•

OVer

I

heeiS

Miami's Vince Palsky look a head-over-heels dive
for the goal line but landed short of paydirt
Saturday against Georgia Tech.

inside.

That may have a lot to do
with why he’s in Toronto Gen-

eral Hospital today.

“I played junior hockey with
Frank and I think I know him
pretty well, but when you get
right down to it no one really
knows what another individual
is like,” says the Rangers’ Reg
Fleming.

“Where I can take abuse from
a coach or from the fans, a fellow like Mahovlich needs a pat
on the back. Maybe that’s all it
is with him.”

Fleming a vet

Fleming,
a hard-nosed and
phlegmatic veteran of 12 years in
professional hockey, seems the
type that nothing ever bothers.
Yet that same feeling once
overcame him, too. Fleming re-

called the circumstances following Tuesday’s practice session
with the Rangers in New Hyde
Park, Long Island.
“It happened to me
minors,” said Fleming.

in the
“I was

with Rochester in the American
Hockey League nine years ago
and I had this knee injury. I

could hardly skate but I went and
got dressed and played the game.
"We won, 2-0, but at practice
the next day the coach said I
wasn’t skating. 1 said, ‘Look, it’s
pretty hard for me to skate. I got
a bad knee,’

Sent

further down

Next thing Fleming knew he
was sent further down to Kingston, Ont., in- the Eastern Profes-

sional Hockey League.
Fleming did leave the team but
was talked into going back to
the game. Chances are that’s what
will happen with Crozier. Mahovlich figures to be back, too.
With the pressure, it’s bad;
without it, sometimes it’s worse.

�Th» Spectrum

Friday, Novwnbar 17, 1967

Pag* Thirty-On*

CL A SSIF I E D
merit; nicely furnished, plus dishwasher.

SALE

minutes walk from campus. Rent
$48. Call 633-8509.
USED FURNITURE for sale. Call 876-3339.
Fifteen

TEMPEST LEMANS, 4-speed, 250 hp.
Driv-train excellent, body fair. $1100. See
Paul, 45 Rounds Ave.
FISCHER ALU skis, G.S. 210 cm. Nevada
12cm
boots.
Grand Prix bindings,
834-4962.
SNOW TIRES, Corvair 650/700 13 on rims.
")964

WANTED

EXPERIENCED DRUMMER for working rhythm and blues band. Must have decent

HELP

WANTED, Trucking Co. Billing clerk,

hours 4:30

Monday
Friday. $2.65 hour. Call Penn-Yan Express,
877-5111, Mr. Alan Hall.

RENT

-

7:30

p.m.,

-

p.m.

COLLEGE MEN, need five, well-dressed.
Can earn $4.25 hour average. Evenings
and Saturdays. Car necessary. Phone
832-7509 after 1 p.m.
PART TIME cook for five grad, students.

ROOMMATES WANTED
IMMEDIATELY: Girl to share apart-

ment. $45 per month including utilities.
Call 836-5835.
ROOMMATE WANTED from Dec. 1st with
apartment. Call Sara, 886-4157.
ROOM ONLY, male wanted, near Main
Ferry, call 884-6097.
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED to share
furnished apartment three blocks from
campus. Call Nancy or Ann, 837-9775.
WANTED: GIRL to share five room apart-

Further
five.

information, call 837-5483 after

1962

AUSTIN HEALEY SPRITE. Snowtirea.
Needs some work Best offer. Call after
835-6819.
6
BABY SITTER wanted, preferably in my
home. 12-4 p.m. Monday thru Friday.
Call 836-6991.
p.m.

I W0Uf5*Tf1ce" to

purchase a reasonably
priced grandfather clock. Any informacall Bruce, 886-1871.

tion,

STUDENTS

BULLETIN

TUTORS: Conserve your time and utilize
your experience.
SUBJECTPROFICIENCY
will supply you with students. Submit

be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to 114
Hayes Hall, attention Mrs. Fischer, before
2 p.m. the Friday prior to the week of
publication. Student organisation notices
are not accepted for publication.

National Security Agency
Professional Qualification
Test

Last Day Test
to Register Date
Nov. 24-Dec. 9

Applications

;

to

FILM SCRIPTS, outlines, original suggestions
needed for group making film at and
concerning U.B. student existence. (On
location, as it were.) Reply to box No. 7,
Spectrum office, 355 Norton Possibility of
remuneration.
PERSONAL

don't waste
dating.

your

Call

on comthree

money

834-4962

for

IT’S WORKED for many people on campus. It can work for you. Try computer
dating. For free information and application form write: Match Maker, room 520,
Genesee Bldg., Buffalo, N. Y.

PHIL

(blue grass
you?
Contact

883-6575.

bass player) where are
(banjo
player),
Brian

KARATE AND KUNG FU self defense instructions. Call Prof. Wong, 852-2930 or
854-1850. 124 W. Chippewa Street.
FOUND
MAN'S

wrist

watch. Call

831-4121

SITUATIONS WANTED

TERM papers 25c per page, ditto,
35c, envelopes $2.00 per hundred. Call
835-6897.
TYPING

MISCELLANEOUS

General Notices
November 20 and 22, Plotting
and Graphics—an outline of tech-

The New York Air Brake Co.
Unilever Limited

quality, used, flat fop guitars
(Martin, etc.) bought, sold, repaired D'Angelico strings. 874-0120 eves.

General Foods Corp.
Aetna Insurance Co.
Gleason Works
Kenmore Social Security Office
J. T. Baker Chemical Co.
Acme Electric Corp.

TOST

GUITARS:

November 21:

niques in Computer Graphics,
with emphasis on systems either
in use at the Computing Center
or available in the near future.
Monday and Wednesday, 12-1

Dlefendorf Annex, Room
30. James Brooking, Instructor.
To register, call 831-4015 and
ask for Mrs. Whitley or Seminar
Registration. There is no charge.
Placement Interviews
The following interviews are
scheduled, please contact the
University Placement Service for
further information and to make
an appointment, 831-3311.
November 20:
Northeastern University
Armour Grocery Products Co.
The Powers Regulator Co.
Hewlett-Packard
New York State, Dept, of
Public Works

113 NOTEBOOK. $5.00
Please call Karen, 831-2692.

MUSIC

LADIES
return

wallet.

t&gt;lease

just drop in Goodyear Post

Office

LONG BROWN SUEDE
•

Reward.

slot.

LOST in
Robert, 837-9650.
WALLE :T
.

p.m.,

Sptfrum Staff Raporftr

Tonight the I.F.C. will attempt
to increase its coffers by holding

Party tonight. There are plans
for a Palace party in the future

The brothers

Capen

140. Reward.

Call

.

.

fun starts at 8:30. Congratulations
to the APO football team for a
6-0-0 sweep of their league . . .
The brothers and pledges of
Gamma Phi will hold their regular Space Ghost party tomorrow
at “99," home of the fabulous
Love a Moose.
Later, everyone will go to Rotary Field to cheer on the Bulls.
In the evening, Johnnie's Night
Owl will witness the happening
of the first Hippie Grab a Thi

mandatory pledge workshop tomorrow. Rides will leave Norton
at 9:30 . . .

The pledges of Chi Omega are
having a buffet dinner for the
pledges of Theta Chi Fraternity,
Gail McCormick was named Chi
Omega’s best pledge at the Pan
Hell Ball . . Thata Chi Sorority

will celebrate its 46th anniversary Monday

(Please see Placement Director
to schedule interview.)

COOK IONITE

-

-

j

—

-*

tucket of Chicken
-

•

j

|

FREE DELIVERY.

i pc.

3268 Moin St.

,

834-6688

3.12

lot* of Parking

|

I

J

f

THE HAPPENING
Buffalo's Newest Boutique
located opposite Clement Hall (UB)

on Main St. at the corner of Bailey
“where what’s HAPPENING
in fashion can be found”
Phone

836-2524

Dlte Pierced Car

|

\

j

—Now and Always, Western New
York’s largest selection of pierced
and non-pierced earrings—
“find what you need, you’ll like
what you find at The Pierced Ear"

The family said “Better call Dad.
Old Mother MacBcth has it bad.
She’s wringing her mitts
Crying‘Out! Out of Schlitz!’
No wonder the old girl is mad.

located opposite Clement Hall (UB)
on Main at the comer of Bailey
Hours: 11:00-5:30
Mon. &amp; Thurs. till 9:00

1967 Jti

832-7579

.

The sisters of Sigma Kappa Phi
had a very successful cocktail
For
call
Joe,
party.
information
party before Pan Hell and a buf835-3732 . . .
fet afterwards. Big and Little
The brothers of Phi Lambda sister night
was held at the MonDelta are having their Champagne
day night meeting.

New York State Comptroller

PHONE

\

Kappa

...

has auditing and actuarial vacancies. State residency not
required. Recruiter on Campus November 29, 1967.

CHICKEN
DELIGHT!

OPEN 11:00-5:30
Mon. &amp; Thurs. till 9:00

of Tau

resides having a good lime,
shirt and beer party with APD.
the main emphasis of the blast Brother Leipow leads the annual
is Spring Rush. Members from fraternity date contest
each fraternity will be in attendTheta Chi Fraternity is holding
ance to provide mirth and infora “Sons of Italy” get-together dimation.
rectly after the football game
Freshmen are especially entomorrow. Spaghetti will be
couraged to attend, for they may served. This gathering will conpledge this Spring.
tinue into the night and will be
Busses will be provided and culminated by a Bocee Blowout,
will leave Norton Hall and the featuring Ken Arena and Paul
Granger.
State University College at Buffalo at 8:30 p.m. If hourlies and
you
Sororities
papers have
down, this is
Congratulations to the followyour last chance before Thanksgiving to have some fun and ing sisters of Alpha Gamma Delta
support a worthwhile institution. for having attained recognition
for their activities during the
months of September and OctoShort blasts
Alpha Phi Delta will create a ber;
“civil disturbance" with the
Terry Goldzier, senior: Maubrothers of TKE tomorrow night
reen Dimmick and Janice Bleile,
at the Flying E. The Heathens
juniors: Sally Kelderhouse and
will provide music
Cathy Messner, sophomores; MarTonight, the brothers of Alpha cia Miller, sophomore pledge.
Phi Omega will hold a pre-turkey Claudia Grala has been elected
party at the Bowlerdrome, The Chapter Scribe. There will be a

ACCOUNTING AND
MATH MAJORS;

)N’T

L_

offered

courses

SPECTRUM box CZ.

Available

Nt. Sec. Agency
Ft. Geo. Meade, Maryland
Attn.: Personnel Office
School of Nursing
Nov. 18-Dec. 2

PreNursing Exam

,and

phone

name,

attractive young bachelors who are
for female counterparts.
SHALOM! For gems from the Jewish Bible,
call 875-4265 day or night.

Student Testing Center Registration Schedule
Test

of old

eligible
looking

OFFICIAL BULLETIN
OFFICIAL

apartment

furnish

Chance to get rid
furniture. Steve, 837-3082.

pufer

The Official Bulletin is an authorised
publication of the State University of
Buffalo, for which The Spectrum assumes
no editorial responsibility. Notices should

to

WANT

cheaply.

GIRLS,

|

by Elliot Stephan Rose

—

HALL, Friday and Saturday, 892-6252.
NEEDED

jobs. Must
be over 18. Able to work three days
week. $60 per week. Aiso several
full time positions available, $130 per
week. Working hours 2-10 p.m. Call Mr.
per

Pitt, 856-1304.

CLASS REGISTRATION CARDS for Business
3402 and Business 3304. No fair price
416
refused. Call collect after 6 p.m.

VOLKSWAGEN,- 1964, beige, radio, excellent condition, must sell. 634-2751.
FOR

COLLEGE STUDENTS, part-time

Inter-Fraternity Council
hold Spring Rush beer blast

SeMu Bfiwmg

Co, Mfcnuktr »nd oiho* cmt».

�P»9»

Tht Sptctrum

Thirty-Two

Friday, November 17, 1967

2 22
*

world
focus

*

•

*

milwauHee
ivesf germany
roc/iesfer
Chicago

compiled from our

wire

services by

Madeline

levin*

Stassen announces candidacy
Former Gov.
MILWAUKEE, Wis.
Harold E. Stassen of Minnesota became
the nation’s first announced presidential
candidate. He said he will enter the 1968
Wisconsin primary as a Republican
“peace candidate.”
It will mark the seventh time Mr.
Stassen has bid for the nomination. He
has run every four years since 1940 with
the exception Of 1956. He won the 1948
Wisconsin Republican primary.
“My decision stems from my deep concern over the nation’s twin frustrations
—the unending Vietnamese war and the
violent unrest in our cities,” Mr. Stassen
said at a news conference.
The former three-term governor said
he was confident that if elected he could
bring about an early and honorable end
to the Vietnam war.
—

Crowded ballot

The announcement apparently assured
a crowded Wisconsin ballot next April 2.
Gov. George Romney of Michigan is to
announce his plans tomorrow and former
Vice President Richard M. Nixon is expected to disclose his intentions in January.
California Gov, Ronald Reagan could
also be on the GOP ballot in Wisconsin

which, under a new primary law, requires
that all bona fide presidential candidates
be placed on the ballot.
All four have statewide organizations
in the state. Mr. Nixon and Gov. Romney
have said that a Wisconsin primary victory is a key factor in any bid for the
GOP nomination.
JFK springboard
The Wisconsin primary in 1960 was
generally credited with being the springboard that put John F. Kennedy in the
White House.
Wisconsin follows only New Hampshire
in holding its primary election. The New
Hampshire test is March 12. Mr. Stassen
said there is a possibility he will enter
that race also.
On the Democratic side

HANOVER, Germany—West Germany’s

National Democratic Party (NPD) leader
sent his national convention into a frenzy
with a speech echoing Adolf Hitler's
appeals of the 1920s. The delegates, many
of them former Nazis, adopted an anti-

American platform.
“We are the rallying point for a rebirth
of the German nation,” thundered Adolf
Von Thadden as the 1,500 delegates made
the hall shake with foot-slamping, ap
plause and cheers.
“We have a historic mission."

for unity

Von Thadden,

—UPI Telephoto

Protests
rnnrt
martial
toil! I'llldl
Udl

in Wisconsin,

Sen. Eugene McCarthy (D., Minn.) has said
he might run as a “peace candidate” opposing President Johnson.
"I respect the sincerity of President
Johnson,” Mr. Stassen said. “But it appears he will continue to compound the
tragic mistakes he made in 1965 when
he turned the Vietnamese war into an
American war and departed from the
careful, restrained policies of both Presidents Kennedy and Eisenhower.”

West Germany rallies

*

46, later in the session

midway through the three-day convention was elected chairman by an almost
unanimous vole.
About 200 anti-Nazi
demonstrators called together by a Com-

munist leader chanted outside.
The NPD platform for the 1969 election

the party hopes will give it representation in parliament demands an American
military and economic withdrawal from
Europe, a German pullout from NATO,
an end to reparations to Israel and German self-sufficiency in all fields.

MPs struggled with an unidentified man
Monday after he attempted to disrupt
the court-martial proceedings of Army

Pvt Ronalcl Lockman. Lockman was accused of refusing to board a plane
bound for Vietnam.

CIA, Dow Draw Fire
The CIA and Dow
ROCHESTER
Chemical Co. continue to encounter angry
demonstrators at college campuses across
the country.
The Central Intelligence Agency called
off campus interviews at the University
of Rochester and Syracuse University,
early this week, in th face of possible student demonstrations.
The CIA decided to hold interviews offcampus rather than risk running into
—

demonstrators.

Stewart Shaw, senior law student from
New York City and a leader of one protest organization at Syracuse University,
said the withdrawal was a major victory.
“The CIA was afraid to come here just
as President Johnson was afraid,” Shaw
said referring to the President’s cancellation of an appearance at the National
Grange convention after being informed
that about 2000 demonstrators planned to
picket.

Prosecution in Philadelphia
In Philadelphia, the University of
Pennsylvania student government demanded a halt to prosecution of 12 students for conducting sit-in protests dur
ing a recent recruiting visit by officials
of the Dow Chemical Co.

The student government claimed that

only it had jurisdiction in the case and the
University was creating a "dangerous
precedent” by prosecuting the students
before a disciplinary committee of seven
faculty members and four students.

Villanova pickets Dow

At Villanova University, five pickets
opposed to the Dow firm’s recruiting on
the campus there vowed to protest again
despite the objections of some of their

fellow students.
The five were bombarded with water
balloons and raw eggs when they paraded
outside a men’s dormitory where-the company interviewed 25 students for jobs.

McCarthy may run
CHICAGO —Sen. Eugene McCarthy, D.,
Minn., an outspoken critic of President
Johnson s conduct of the war in Vietnam,
said he would decide in December whether to run against the President in Democratic primaries. McCarthy made his announcement in a news conference following a speech to the National Labor
Leadership Assembly for Peace at the
University of Chicago. It was sponsored
by the trade union division of the National Committee for Sane Nuclear PolMcCarthy said the basic issue was the

role of the country over the next decade,
"assuming it survives and I think it will."
Center of question
He said Vietnam was the center of the
question of whether we are going to be
policing the planet—or taking a more
constructive, less militaristic role—being
a part of history instead of giving it a push
or kick from time to time.”
He asked
should back
Democratic
tions, and
roared “no"

—UPt Talvphoto

Another

candidate?

Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy (D -Minn.) as
he recently addressed the College
Young Democrats in Boston. He urged
students to involve themselves in the
68 campaign.

the crowd whether dissenters
off for fear of dividing the
party, discouraging negotiaprolonging the war. They

in response.
McCarthy said he hoped to see Sena
tors who share his views express them
by entering state primaries next year.
He mentioned specifically Sen. Robert
F. Kennedy, D„ N. Y. When asked who he
thought had the edge in the Republican
party for the presidential nomination,
McCarthy said he thought California Gov.

for

Pres

.

Ronald Reagan was leading, followed by
former Vice President Richard Nixon.
McCarthy said he believed the objectives in Vietnam at one time were “defensible when they were limited. But
they’ve been escalated until no longer
are they very credible.

Question methods

"Now we are at the point where some
of our methods in South Vietnam must be
questioned. We must ask what would
come after victory.” He asked whether
victory was worth “the destruction of
moral life’” and the distraction of the
U. S. from domestic problems and its
moral committment to Vietnam.
Sen. Walter Mondale, Minnesota’s other
U. S. Senator, warned against a split in
the Democratic party at home. Mondale
told some 200 members of the Young
Democratic Farmer Labor Party attending
a conference at Macalester College here
the United States should consider halting
the bombing in Vietnam only where there
arc assurances from Hanoi that this would
result in negotiations.
Mondale said he disagrees with some
things that have been done in .Vietnam,
but added he still considers himself an

administration backer.
He said further escalation would be
dangerous, because it might bring Com

munist China and the Soviet Union into
the war. But he said unilateral withdrawal
would cost the United Stales "a loss of
faith among our Asian allies as well as
a loss of face.”

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                    <text>Alleged censorship spurs D'Youville pray-in
Suppression of student expression evoked a day-long vigil by
students and several faculty
members last week in the D’Youville College chapel.
The “pray-in” was sparked by
alleged—censorship—by—administrators of a column in the college newspaper, Sigillum,

The

column, entitled “The
and the
Constitution
Travia
Church,” discussed the repeal of
the Blaine amendment in the
proposed state constitution and
critized the methods of some who
supported the repeal.
As a result of the administration’s refusal to allow the column
to appear, Miss Anna Sokusky,
editor-in-chief, and the editorial
board resigned.
—

—

• A statement called “Why”
issued Friday by a group of
dents as “an explanation of
vigil, its motivations and

was
stu-

the
ob-

jectives.
-

“The vigil did not see censurship as The primary issue,"
the statement read. “Rather
they (the students and faculty)
viewed the origins to be the
specific violations of the student rights and, indeed, human
dignity as related by members
of the former editorial staff.”

The executive officers of the
student government, in response
to the statement “Why” which
was circulating among the students,' issued a “Pink Sheet”
stating that “a meeting between

members of the administration
and the student government to
investigate the alleged violations
of student rights has been temporarily terminated.

“The executive officers held
that the distribution of ‘‘Why”

illustrated a direct refusal “to
the student government
method of dealing with the situation.”
The executive officers advised
“against anyone issuing such a

accept

statement, not only on grounds
of Christian principles but also
on the grounds of its very possible detrimental effects on our
attempts to discuss those student
rights. This detrimental effect
has now been realized.”

The Spectrum

Robert Zelnic, a lawyer who
completed an extensive
tour of South Vietnam, presents
his opinions on the recent Vietnamese elections and the post-

recently

election period at 3:30 p.m.
Thursday in Room 147 Diefendorf Hall.

Mr Zelnic will comment on
the basic errors in U.S.-Vietnamese policy he observed dur-

ing his August to October tour
of Southeast Asia. He will also
offer some suggestions “as to
how negotiations should be conducted and what in fact should be

Mr. Zelnic feels that Seplember's “supposedly democratic
elections" were actually "a cal
culated but heavy risk, encum-

bered with structural deficiencies
and heavily stacked in favor of
the existing military regime.”

Tuesday, November 14, 1967

He regrets that the U. S. has
mistakingly fought (his war as a

simple

case of Northern aggres

sion

Volunteer speaks on Peace Corps;
most vital goal is open communication
“One of the most vital goals of
the Peace Corps is to open communication between two peoples
the hope that from communication will arise mutual un-

with

derstanding and respect, and
from these will arise peace.”
Mr. Gene Skowronski, one of
five Peace Corps volunteers who
are visiting the State University
of Buffalo campus this week, expressed his personal belief about
the chief aims of the association.
In an interview with The

helped to establish a community
library.
Mr. Skowronski took part in a
sports community development
program in Uruguay. His work
consisted mainly of organizing
sports clubs first in the area of
Montevideo, the capital, and later
in the city of Artegas.
-

Involvement
he

“Our goal was twofold,”
mentioned. “Aside from merely
organizing these clubs, we also
wanted to make use of this opportunity to

become

truly in-

volved in local activities and to

help

ft*
»

IT*

M

—Hershfeld

Gene Skowronski

"Success in the Peace Corps is
based mainly on sensitivity and
respect . . . Our goal is definitely not 'cultural impreialism'
Spectrum,

community centers

an ambition to
“change the world," but soon
realized that this was not possible.
“Our real purpose is simply to
be of assistance to the people of
these nations in developing their
own resources. Just listening to
their problems is often a very
important part of this assistance,”
said Miss Shea.
“You learn as much as you
teach,” added Mr. Skowronski.
“To me, success in the Peace
Corps is based mainly on sensitivity and respect. . . . Our goal is
definitely not ‘cultural imperialism.’ In my opinion, it would be
a tremendous mistake for any
Peace Corps volunteer to attempt
to forcibly impose American ways
on any people.”
Miss Shea summed up her experience by saying: “You leave
entered

itk
-*&amp;»

establish

where people could work out
their problems together.”
When questioned about what
they felt to be their own personal goals while in the Peace
Corps, they both agreed that, like
most new volunteers, they had

Mr. Skowronski and

Miss Claire Shea, another volunteer, spoke of their experiences
while working in underdeveloped
areas. Their feelings, since returning home, about the significance of the Peace Corps today
in light of the severely troubled
world situation were also disclosed.
Miss Shea worked in Debre
Marcos, a provincial capital of
Ethiopia, as a secondary school
teacher of English. She said of
her work: “We tried using new
teaching methods in order to aid
our students to develop new ways
of looking at the problems which
surrounded them.” Miss Shea also

with

lems. It is the prime motive of
the Peace Corps to help develop-

ing nations because it is the right
and moral thing to do, not be-

He believes that the recogni
tion of the National Liberation
Front (NFL) as a “distinct entity
engaged in a civil war within the
South . . would have resulted in
a de emphasis of the needless and

extravagant torture

of North
Vietnam at the expense of opera
lions designed to improve the po
litical situation in the South."

NFL must have role
Concerning

negotiations.

Mr.

interests Zelnic feels “it is to be desired
in these areas. If there had been that the institutional framework
a Peace Corps ten or 20 years of which the elections were a part
ago, perhaps there wouldn’t be be preserved to the fullest exa Vietnamese war today.”
tent possible But we must not be
To those students who feel they come prisoners of our instituwould like to join the Peace tions, The NFL must be given a
entity not only in the
Corps, but arc hesitant about role as an
“giving up" two years qf their
lives, Miss Shea had this to say:
“What are you hurrying to? And
what will you find when you get
there? When I try to recall my
college years, only a very few
incidents come to mind, but I
will never forget my entire Peace

cause of

governmental

Corps experience. The two years
went all too fast.”
Miss Linda Grey, another volunteer who is on campus, worked
in San Salvador, El Salvador, in
conjunction with a local community improvement project. Mr.
Charles Amorosino Jr., who
worked both as a science teacher
and as an agricultural assistant
in the Philippines, is also here,
along with Mr. George Coakley,
who worked as a field geologist
in Ghana.

SelecWASHINGTON (DPI)
Director Lewis B.
Ilcrshcy's proposed use of the
draft to punish students who
interfere with military recruitment appears likely to be
scrapped.

tive Service

The proposal would require an
executive order from President
Johnson to go into effect, and
Justice Department sources have
said the constitutional grounds

Disclosed last week
Director Uershcy’s recommen-

dation, made in letters to 4100
local draft boards Oct. 26 but
not disclosed until last week
called for revoking the defer-

ments of students participating
in “illegal activity which inter
feres with recruiting."

The youths could then be reclassified, declared delinquent
and ordered to report for induction, Director Hcrshey told the

with the traditional idea of America being the biggest and the
best, but you soon learn that developing nations have many wonderful ideas which you not only
don't wish to change, but would
like to see incorporated into the
American way of life."

boards.

Justice Department source
however, that Hcrshcy's
suggestion “just won’t stand up"
arid appeared “very difficult to
on
constitutional
support
A

said,

Antidote

—Htrshf«ld

Commenting on the Peace
Corps’ relevance in light of the
Vietnam situation, Mr. Skowronski claimed: “I see the Peace
Corps as an antidote to the military approach to solving prob-

"You soon learn that developing
nations have many wonderful
ideas which you not only don't

Claire Shea

.

.

Robert Zelnic

Lawyer regrets U.S. has "mistakenly fought this war as a
simple case of Northern aggression.

Mr. Zelnic spent two months
gathering information for his

lectures. He interviewed Gen.
process of negotiations, but in
the political order to follow.”
Nguyen Van Thieu. Gen. Nguyen
Can Ky, and other government officials in South Vietnam. He also
spoke to all the major civilian

candidates

and

many

of those

people opposed to the military re
gime. Among these dissenters was

Thich Thien Minh, head of the
Buddhist Youth Movement-and
aid to Thich Tri Quang.

Mr. Zelnic is combining writ
and lecturing with his career
as an attorney at-law in Wash
inglon, 1). C, Horn in 1940. he re
eeived his B.S. from Cornell Uni
versify in I9fil A native of New
York City he received his law degree in 1904 from the University
of Virginia I,aw School.
ing

The lecture is sponsored by the
of Social Sciences and
Adniinistralion.

Faculty

Rejection expected for
Hershey draft proposal

for such a move are shaky.

wish to change

£

negotiated.”

State University of New York at Buffalo

Vol. 18, No. 19

Zelnic to discuss errors
in U.S.-Vietnam policy

grounds."

He cited a Jan 6, 1966 letter
from Assistant Ally. Gen. Fred

M. Vinson Jr. In Sen Phillip A,
Hart, shortly after the Selective
Service sought to reclassify University of Michigan students who
staged a sit-in at the Ann Arbor
draft office.
The letter said the criminal
penalties of the Selective Service act “cannot be used to stifle
constitutionally
pression

protected

ex-

of views.”

Service not for punishment
"No sanctions can be imposed"
where such dissent does not violate laws, Mr Vinson wrote And
in cases where it docs, the apnot
plicable criminal statutes
draft regulations—should be invoked to punish offenders.
—

These separate sections of the
U. S. criminal code make interference with recruitment or enlistment subject to a maximum
penalty of $20,000 and 20 years

m jail.

There appeared to be little
difference between Hershey's new
proposal and the one found objectionable in 1966, the Justice
Department source said.
Director Hcrshey said Wednesday he had “talked with somebody" at the White House before
writing the local boards, but he
emphasized he acted on his own
in sending out the letters.

�r. T
Pag* Two

t

-

The

'Spectrum

TurtiUy, November 14, 1967

King examines rights movement condemns war
by Joal Kleinman

“there, the slogan is not ‘attend
the church of your choice,’ but
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. castigated the “national 'bum the church of your choice.’
Opposed
American involveadministration that is more concerned with an unjust war ment in thetoVietnam conflict on
in Vietnam than with winning the war on poverty,” in an moral, social and political
address at Kleinhans Music Hall Thursday evening.
grounds, Rev. King termed it a
I
The 1964 Nobel Peace Prize recipient gave this account “tragic mixup of priorities
of his progress in the field of civil rights: “We have made watch as it brings us closer to a
third World War” and as it
some significant strides over the last few decades, but . . “strengthens
the military-induswe still have a long way to go . . before racial justice is a trial complex” at the expense of
reality in this country.”
the poor. He scored the attitude
of Southern and Southwestern
In his passionate hour-long
legislators who are hawks on the
speech, the Baptist minister
war issue but “won’t let a Negro
lauded recent elections of
veteran live where he wants.”
Negroes to mayoralty posts
As president of the Southern
Christian Leadership Conference,
in Cleveland and Gary, Ind.,
Rev. King is the foremost advoas well as lesser posts in the
cate of non-violence in the civil
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

...

.

.

South as a step “towards the
day when a Negro will be
judged on the content of his
character rather than the color of his skin

rights movement, basing his
struggle on demonstrations and

marches rather than “self-defeating” violence. “I am still convinced that non-violence is the
most potent weapon to an oppressed people,” he maintained,
despite the rise of more militant
organizations. “I still have faith
in the future and will not yield
to the politics of despair,” he
added.

”

But he was less optimistic in
his observation that the plight
of the Negro poor has worsened
over the past few years, despite
anti poverty endeavors.
The grandson of a slave, Dr.
King charged that the “nation
hasn’t used its winters to alleviate conditions that cause long hot
summers.” He urged an immediate nationwide action program to
solve Negro problems. “We cannot wait,” he pronounced solemnly. It will take annual appropriations of $20 billion “for the next
few years” to eradicate poverty
and slums “for all Americans . . .
We have the resources” to eliminate deprivation, he continued,
"but the will isn’t here.”

'Spiritual lynching'

“No section of our country can
boast of clean hands in the area
of brotherhood,” he charged,

Destinies intertwined

—Hershfeld

Martin Luther King
a long way to go
before racial justice is a

"We still have
.

.

.

reality in this country.

while 58 churches have been
burned in Mississippi and there is
“psychological and spiritual
lynching” of Negroes in Northern
ghettos. There was scattered
laughter as Dr. King, speaking
of the “great sovereign state of
Mississippi”

wryly

commented;

He stressed the role of interracial cooperation in the struggle,
remarking: “If we are to move
towards a truly integrated society, we should recognize that
white and black destinies are tied
together . . . whether we like it
or not. There can be no separate
black path to power and fulfill-

ment without white support,” and

called for a de-escalation of the
space race and the Asian war and
vice versa.
—Since his 1905 march on Selma, Ala., Dr. King’s quest has candidate in 1968 if one is nomi
been the realization of legal nated by one of the major parintegration in the South alone. ties.
This new phase is "harder . . .
Good-natured and looking only
because it is easier to guarantee
the right to vote than to create slightly weary from the effects
of a pressing schedule, Dr. King
jobs,” and the equality he presently seeks will “cost the nation prefaced his remarks by terming
Buffalo a “much more relaxing
billions of dollars.”
The predominantly
audi- atmosphere” than the one he
ence gave the loquacious speaker faced last week in a Birmingham
jail. In a possible allusion to last
a standing ovation after he prophesized: “If the inexpressible June’s racial disturbance, Dr.
cruelties of slavery couldn't stop King smilingly praised the Bufus . . . then we shall overcome.” falo police department as “very
efficient.”
Blames Congress
After leaving Buffalo, Rev.
In a brief press cconference folKing plans to travel abroad, first
lowing his address, Dr. King laid to England, and possibly to the
the responsibility for urban riots
Soviet Union in the near future.
on a Congress that is more “conThe address was sponsored by
cerned about getting a man on the Graduate Student Association
the moon than in getting God’s and Student Association of the
own children on their feet.” He State University of Buffalo.

WHY NOT "TURN ON" TONIGHT??????!

AI9VELY SOUTH DEATH
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�Tuesday, November 14, 1947

The Spectrum

IRC discusses freshmen curfews
goals of “building individual maturity and judgment through the

curfews at the State University
of Buffalo.
Although the meeting was intended only to raise and discuss
issues concerning curfews, sev-

one’s own actions?”

pressed the view that a one-se-

Is it the role of the university
to act in loco parentis? Do curfews conflict with educational

These were two of the

ques-

tions discussed at the Inter-Residence Council meeting Thursday.
IRC Preisdent Joel Feinman initiated the discussion of freshman
curfews with a brief history of

mester turfew for all freshman
women would be the most appro-

priate system.
Those who expressed this view
feel that a curfew is necessary
to aid the freshman women in a

Senate Reference Groups urge
involvement in student affairs
A program to introduce undergraduates to student government
and related areas is currently
being conducted by the Student
Senate. The program, called Reference Groups, which was started
this year, is attempting to involve
the student body in a dialogue
with the student government.
Involvement

of

the

student

body is greatly encouraged
through the exchange of ideas
at these daliy Reference Group
meetings. Miss Barabra Persky,

the chairman of the Personnel

Committee of the Student Senate,
has arranged a schedule which
is available at the Senate Office,
Room 205, Norton Hall.
“The students should attend
the Reference Groups. It’s the
best way for them to become
more aware of what is happening
in the student government,”
claimed Miss Persky.
At a time when there is a need
for more communication, the Student Senate urges students to use
the Reference Groups as the initiative for further communication.

period of adjustment. However,
no definitive action was taken
nor were any proposals drawn at
the meeting. A suggestion from
the floor was that a questionnaire
be issued to all freshman women

to determine li.ielr

senl

concerning curfews.
As

the curfew system now
stands, Jeannette Scudder, Dean
of Women, has full authority.
The final decision as to whether
a curfew will remain or if any
modifications of the present system are to be made remains solely in her office.
Noting this, Mr. F e i n m a n
raised the question of curfew enforcement. He postulated that it
would be possible for the InterResidence Judiciary to choose not
to prosecute curfew violators.

P*9* Three

dateline news, Nov. 14
MIDEAST—Israel was reported ready to affirm a new tough
line against the defeated Arab nations in an effort to bring them to

the conference table for direct Israeli-A rah peace negotiations
New details of the Israeli move were expected at the United

Nations where Israeli Foreign Secretary Abba S. Eban addresses the
Security Council and in Jerusalem where Premier Levi Eshkol
addresses the Knesset parliament at about the same time.
BUFFALO—The president of a Buffalo area anti poverty agency
is urging a letter writing campaign to Congress to prevent further
cuts in poverty funds.
Dr. Ralph W. Loew, president of the Eric County Community
Action Organization, said Saturday his agency has funds to operate
for about two more months. "After that, we’re in trouble," he said.
CAIRO—Yemen’s five-year civil war bloodbath came to a standstill Monday after the warring royalist and republican factions
announced a cease-fire agreement.
The truce came less than a week after a Yemeni coup replaced
the government of President Abdullah Sallal with a more moderate
-

republican regime.

He said that it “wasn’t necessary for Administration policy to

be validated by the students."

If the Inter-Residence Judiciary
chose not to enforce a curfew,
Dean Scudder would have to assume such responsibility.
Mr. Feinman announced that

two more meetings were planned
to discuss the issue of a freshman
curfew and that he intended to
invite Dean Scudder to the next
meeting.

Guess
who forgot
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CILEA: L' Arcviana
ROSSINI; La Cenerentola
Petite Meise Solcnnelle
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J

As Gulliver discovered, falling asleep at the wrong time can be downright embarrassir

even for a Big Man on Campus. Ah, well, it can happen to the best of u
droop. Your attention wanders. You’re drowsy all over. Quick! Take a co

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�Page Four

Th

t

Tuesday, November M, 1967

Spectrum

Priority mixup?
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Nobel Peace Prize winner
and president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, raised an interesting question in his address at
Kleinhans Music Hall Thursday.
Calling for a nationwide effort to eradicate poverty and
conditions that deny equal opportunity, Dr. King proposed
that the U.S. immediately begin a program to alleviate those
conditions.
Dr. King was quick to point out that the U.S. has all
the resources to begin such a program, one which he estimated would cost $20 billion a year over the next several
but then he asked, does America have the will to
years
begin such a program?
The Vietnam war, he said, represents a “tagic mixup
of priorities” and he noted that it costs this country a half
million dollars to kill one enemy soldier in Vietnam while
the poverty program only pays about $53 a year in benefits
to people in depressed areas. Dr King remarked that this
“isn’t even a good skirmish.”
President Johnson has, for many months, told Americans that we can afford both guns and butter. But can we
afford a program as extensive as the one Dr. King has called
for? And if we can’t, do we spend another long winter doing
nothing “to alleviate the conditions that cause the long hot

§

%i\o

—

summers?”

America should begin to become aware that we are moving too, too slowly in the field of equal opportunity. Poverty
lingers on; the War against Poverty is presently as stalemated as the war in Vietnam. And that is a tragic mixup
of priorities.

'Oh, well—now to find out who my real friends are!'

by Schwab

Richard Siggelkow not a fortnight ago, made his
historic decision to postpone the recruiting expeditions of the Central Intelligence Agency and the

Dow Chemical Co.

The draft as punishment
development in the Gen. Hershey vs. the
youth of America battle seems to indicate a slight setback
for the general.
Last week the Selective Service Director proposed use
of the draft to punish students who interfere with military
recruitment. Gen. Hershey made this recommendation in
letters to 4100 local boards.
The proposal, however, requires executive approval, and
the Justice Department was quick to point out that the proposed is “very difficult to support on constitutional grounds.”
It’s fortunate that there are some persons in government who would check the arbitrary actions of Gen. Hershey.
But aside from the constitutional question, it’s clear that the
general's proposal smacks of purblindness.
Most disheartening is the fact that a man in such a
pivotal governmental position is unable to see beyond the
local draft board.
How strange that the Selective Service Director equates
the draft with punishment. Has he ever stopped to think that
the draft might be punishment for those who are not active
The latest

protesters?

Unfortunately, Gen. Hershey’s attitudes are characteristic of many local draft boards, and his unofficial recommendation may be just what the boards have been waiting for.
Gen. Hershey is undoubtedly a man of little tolerance,
and he is clearly hostile to dissenting opinions. If we must
have a Selective Service, at least we could hope for a more
enlightened director. We don’t think Gen. Hershey will ever
make the grade.
Perhaps it’s about time the old boy retired

One who values dissent
Events of the past weekend indicate that Sen. Eugene
J. McCarthy (D., Minn.) may enter several Presidential primaries, most likely New Hampshire, Wisconsin, Massachusetts and California.
Sen. McCarthy is becoming more critical of the Administration's Vietnam policy, and he has urged Americans
to beware of “false appeals for unity.”
It is reassuring to note that the Senator has encouraged
discussion and independent thought within the Democratic
Party, In a speech to a convention of the Young Democratic

Clubs of America, he said that senior party leaders who find
themselves in disagreement with the Administration on
Vietnam and other issues “have an obligation to speak out.”
The Senator told junior members of the party that
they must “maintain a continuing moral watch on the policies
and programs of the senior party.” Extending that to the
next logical step, all Americans should maintain a continuing
moral watch on thet policies and programs of those who
determine American policy.
Sen. McCarthy has not succumbed to the White HouseParty line. He has recognized the value of dissent. If the
Senator does decide to run in the Presidential primaries, we
can probably look forward to a candid discussion of the
issues for a change.

Readers
writings

’

the burgher

Ever since the decision was made, the Burgher
has been wondering how anyone could expect to
enforce such a decision. Everyone is aware of the
CIA international intelligence exploits. So why
should anyone believe that the mere formality of
withdrawing an invitation from the CIA should
stop them from recruiting on campus?
this premise
in
It was with this question
mind that I decided to begin looking for CIA
undercover agents. Using the CCS (Committee Concerned about Squirrels), as a front, I pressed into
service a number of squirrels armed with tiny radio transmitters to scour the campus and eavesdrop
on likely suspects. Also bought myself a trench
coat and a magnifying glass.
Figuring that the best way to catch an undercover recruiter was to act as a spy, I dressed in
my Sherlock Schwab garb and began sneaking
—

—

around the nuclear reactor one evening, peering
in the cracks of thet structure with my 5X mag-

nifying glass.
The act was beginning to be tedious work when
I was approached about midnight by a strangelooking man.
“Got a light?” he asked softly, but with force.
Reaching for my trusty butane lighter, I dropped
the magnifying glass and it hit the ground with a
loud crash. The man instantly lunged for the
ground and covered his head. I immediately realized that the man was, indeed, a CIA recruiter,
one who had retired from active service and the
strain of intelligence.
When he was finally revived, we sat next to
the reactor and after discussing the weather and
the December issue of Playboy, he finally got
around to the meat of the matter.
“Say!" he exclaimed, “I was noticing that you're
pretty good with the old magnifying glass."
“Well naturally," I replied “I’m above average
intelligence."
After a long lapse in the conversation he asked:
"What arc you looking for here at the nuclear
center?”

Trying to remember what I knew about nuclear
science I replied: “Oh, I'm looking for beta par
tides and gamma rays."
"Find any yet?" He was beginning to talk in
the abrupt, concise, tothc-point manner of Jack

Webb.
"Well yes," I replied "I have a few beta par
tides here in my pocket."
"Hey, you're pretty pood kid." he commented
"Tis nothing." I moderated in modesty, but
began to reveal my CCS front and talked in length
about my network of spying squirrels. When I
finished, the stranger took a long look at me and
finally said: "Kid, I'd like to offer you a job"
I hesitated, told him that my mother expected
me in by 10 p.m. and that I had a lot of studying
to do and finally began to press for details of
the job he had offered me.
"Well, kid. you're going to be a spy. God knows
we need them. You're going to have to keep your
eyes on that radical Square Deal for Squirrels
group on campus.
"Ha!" I exclaimed “Caught you red handed
I'm going to march you straight over to the Dean
of Students for questioning. You know we don’t
allow CIA recruiters here."
“Wait a minute." the stranger protested "I'm
not a CIA recruiter. Let me show you."
Sure enough, he pulled out his credentials and
proved beyond a doubt that he was a CIA recruiter.
He was a KGB recruiter.

'Shabby' coverage of lecture
To the Editor:

I am appalled at the shabby treatment given
to the third James Fenton Lecture on Religion
and Contemporary Society in the Oct. 31 issue of
The Spectrum. The reporter seems to have halflistened to what Dr. Robert Gordis was saying and
then arranged the snips of quotes to form what
can only .be called inaccurate reporting.
Rabbi Gordis said that many theologians consider the term ‘God’ to have outlived its use, and
they (the theologians) think the term should be
eliminated because of unintended sensationalist
implications. Rabbi Gordis did not make a blanket
statement that God should be eliminated, which
is what the article on page three seems to indicate.
I also think Rabbi Gordis clearly qualified the
statement that the New Testament is “not a workable ethic” today. Your article drops it right there.
Ergo: unintentional overtones which the speaker
did not have in mind at all.

But the most blatant misinterpretation of what
Rabbi Gordis presented lies in the entire last paragraph.

Judaism does not in the least recognize
the love between a man and a woman as the one
and only form of love. The speaker explicitly

pointed out that the Hebrew word “ahavah”—love—-

which is used in the passage “And you shall love
the Lord your God with all your heart, with all
your soul, and with all your might” is the same
word that is used for love between two people.
In Judaism both types of love are equal in strength,
equal in importance, and equal in commitment.
That, and only that, is Rabbi Gordis’ point.
Dr. Gordis’ lecture of Oct. 9 will be rebroadcast over WBFO on Saturday at 6 p m. I suggest
that the reporter
ears.

listen in, this time with both

Gentlemen: If you can’t do it right, don't do it

at all.

Joel Katz

The Spectrum is published twice-weekly
every
Tuesday and Friday
during the regular academic
the State University of New York at Buffalo.
3435 Mam Street, Buffalo. New York 14214 Offices
are located at 355 Norton Hall. Circulation: 15,000.
—

—

year at

Editor in Chief—MICHAEL L. D AMICO
Managing Editor—RICHARD R. HAYNES
Asst. Managing Editor—RICHARD SCHWAB
Business Manager—SAMUEL A POWAZEK
Advertising Manager—DAVID E. FOX
Asst.
W Scott Behrens
Layout
David L Sheedy
Asst
John Trigg
Copy
Judi Riyeff
Jocelyne Hailpern
Asst
Photo.
Edward Joscelyn
Asst
David Yates
Promotion &amp; Circulation
Director Murray Richman
The Spectrum is a member of the United States Stu
dent Press Association and the Associated Collegiate
Press The Spectrum is served by: United Press Inter
national. Associated Collegiate Press Service, Gannett
News Service, and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate
Represented for national advertising by National Edu
cational Advertising Service. Inc . 420 Madison Ave
New York, N Y Republication of ail news dispatches
is
forbidden wihout the express consent of the
Rights of republication of all other
editor in chief
matter herein are also reserved.
Campus
Margaret Anderson
Asst
Marlene Kozuchowski
City
Daniel Lasser
Asst.
Lilian Waite
Feature Barry C. Holtzclaw
Asst
Ronald Ellsworth
Sports
Robert Woodruff

Second class postage paid at

Editorial

policy

is determined

Buffalo.

New York
by the Editor in Chief

�Pag* Fiv*

The Spectrum

Tuesday, November 14, 1967

he sham

By Interlandi

BELOW OLYMPUS

Organized charities defended

democratic faith

To the Editor:

Regarding the letter to The Spectrum of Carl
Murphy Nov. 3, in which he listed arguments for
not giving to support charitable organizations:

by Martin Guggenheim

the unwarranted, absurd faith that Americans
maintain in their democratic processes. That the
same mind can recognize the politician to be a
selfish liar who is more concerned with maintaining
his position and status than with being honest, and
yet' retain complete faith in him and even fully
support his right to lie, is beyond me.

Does Mr. Murphy realize that it costs money
to do things these days? How, I would like to
know, is any organized attempt to rid the world
of its poverty, hunger and disease going to operate
without funds to support itself? There are people
Working for these organizations; they have to eat.
And buildings are needed, and supplies. Does Mr.
Murphy suppose that these people are nourished
by some wondrous feeling of humanitarianism?

Through some process which has yet to be
examined by sociologists, Americans have established a way of life which allows them to completely abrogate moral responsibility by the casting of

There are some organizations where a great
amount of collected income is used to pay salaries
and other expenses, but this only makes sense.
For example, disease-research organizations find
it necessary to hire first rate surgeons and medi-

a ballot.

Whenever I am out of something to say, I'll
resort to a story about people I met in Mexico this
summer. While I was in Mazatlan, I met an elderly couple (about sixty-five years) and their sevenyear-old adopted son. The father was a retired
prison guard from the Los Angeles County Prison
and had left the United Stales with his family
never to return again. They did this because they
found living in the United States intolerable.

cal researchers, who won’t work for chicken-feed
when they could be working in high-paying private
hospitals or universities.
As in everything else, there are some organizain which corruption flourishes. These we
must look out for. But there are others where
almost all funds are aimed directly at the alleviation of suffering and all members are non-paid volunteers. This is usually true of local-action programs, such as many chapters of Hadassah and
other local-oriented programs, often affiliated with
a particular religion. But consider United Fund,
CARE, the International Red Cross, American
Heart Association, or the National Society for the
Prevention of Blindness They can only exist while
they have money to support their structure, which
in turn performs a service.
tions

(07®) up, idi Mmts Times
"Also a good way of identifying a bum!

But if Mr. Murphy wants “pure” charity, he
can devote some of his valuable time to the Com
munity Action Program headquartered here at the
University . . . tutoring children who don’t have the
educational opportunity he has had, or patterning
brain damaged children.

Concerning the suggestion that “political action
and not ‘charity’ is needed,” I ask what kind of
political action can replace the immeasurable
service being performed by charities today? 1 cite
the War on Poverty* whose desperate need for
funds is being pre-empted by the Vietnam War.

The point is: do something! There are people
starving in this world while we leave food over.
There are unnecessarily diseased, homeless, unclothed children; how can we sit back and ignore
this? If you really feel that giving to a charity
reinforces “the bourgeois myth of the moral superiority of the giver and the moral inferiority of
the receiver,” then do something you feel is right.
I don’t feel this way; I can only scorn myself for
doing so much less than 1 might do, and should do
The last paragraph was downright sick. I feel

very sorry for you, Mr. Murphy. You sound so
angry. You don’t know what you are saying. Try
not eating for a couple of days and maybe you’ll
understand better the importance of charity. But
I doubt it.
Dave A, Shapiro

Save the sacred squirrel
To the Editor

As for the secondary consequences, it is written
in some local archives that the number of suitable
homes for these tree dwellers greatly outnumbers
the aggregate of squirrel families, as taken in the
last (1967) census.
Also, the past two years have produced bumpercrops of chestnuts that have satiated the appetitive
interests of the squirrels and the collective interests of frenzied cherubs.
However, I have initiated a campus-wide organization, established Oct. 19, 1967, christened “The
Student Society to Save the Sacred Squirrels"
(SSSSS) whose main purpose is to work toward
the prohibition

(excuse

the

connotation)

of

all

squirrel-dogs from the State University of Buffalo
campus.

By squirrel-dogs we mean any rampant-running

canines entertaining the thought of mangling the

remnants of a once proud squirrel metropolis. We
appreciate your concern along these lines and hope
to enlighten other previously unwary persons of
our community.
Michael Petroski

President of SSSSS
Wrders: Please be brie#, leffers shou/d nof exceed 300 words,
be signed and contain (he address and felepbone number
of the writer.
Pen names or mif ia/s may be used, if requested, but anonyomus letters are never used The Spectrum reserves the right
to edit or delete, but the intent of letters will nol be changed

shoo/d

I told him that I agreed with all he said and I,
too. placed great faith in the youths of today. Hut
when we began to speak of marches, he said they
were no good. Why? Simply because they turned
more people off than on. I let him win that point
but I asked him what could be done. He spoke of a
literature campaign and a house to house confronta-

the gedfly
by

Mark Schneider

After the latest upsurge of radical anti-war action,
question “Where do we go from here?” still drones like
incessant “Whaddya whanna do tonight, Marty?” in
Ernest Borgnine movie. At last, here is the final word
anti-war activity.
As long as the peace movement
concerns itself with fake “radical” efforts like storming the
Pentagon, resisting the draft or
blocking Dow recruiters, it will
continue to remain ineffective.
The

trouble

with

lefists

and

peaceniks is that they never read
Aristophanes and thus don’t un

derstand where the real power
base in America lies.
What can 1.000,000 mobilized
students do to upset the system?
Nothing. What can 1,000,000 mobilized workers do? Close down
the war industries? Never, What
can 1,000,000 black men do?
Elect Brooke senator. The only
answer for the Left is to use the
power for the most powerful
group in America. What we need
is a real Women’s Strike for
Peace!

Schwab has done a grave injustice to the local
campus squirrels. He successfully douses his column in liquid garbage while crying in his beer
(or other dram) about the loss of a few decayed
trees. Narrowminded as he is, he fails to see how
the removal of these blights actually raised the
standard of living of the squirrel population.

Naturally 1 was pleased to meet such a couple
and I immediately began to speak with them about
the conditions in the country. He had been a prolabor activist in the thirties and also was well read
on the causes of war and particularly on the power
structure in the United Slates. He was rather
hostile about the 1964 Presidential elections and
hoped that the youth today could do something
about changing things.

Lady Bird should organize it.
If she cares a whit about supporting our men in Vietnam she could
save every one of them by:
1. Demanding a separate bed
room until American withdrawal
from Vietnam. (This may be in
effective since Lyndon Bird’s bird
may have flown its last flight.)
2. Sending Mrs. Ky and Mrs.
Thieu the perfect birth control
the one clasped between
pill
the knees during any attempt at
and advising them
intercourse
to advise their better halves that
if they want in, Uncle Sam should
get out.
3. Saigon bar girls should get
themselves to a Bhuddist nunnery, and American wives of
servicemen overseas should begin writing letters about the
handsome Dove next door.
4 Wives of the Joint chiefs
(Mrs. Rusk, Mrs. McNamara, Mrs.

the
the
the
on

Intelligence Agency and Mrs.
Chemical) should take like action.

5. J. Edgar Hoover is the only
problem. . . .

“Just a typical dirty election"
commented a manager of Woody
Cole’s campaign for Councilmanat-Large. No one in the Cole of-

fice was particularly surprised
by the irregularities in coverage
of the campaign and on election
day.

The press worked on the
premise that there was nothing
newsworthy in a kook running for
office and subsequently blocked
Cole’s name out. For example “H
Cole" was conspicuously absent
from the Courier’s straw poll.
Similarly, George Richmond of
the Richmond Service, which tabulated the elections unofficially
for all media, felt that ‘expedi
ency” demanded that no one
waste time counting Cole's vole,
and his election returns were not

announced on television. Or when
a D’Youville College group called
the Board of Elections for a list
of candidates to invite them to a
forum, they were told to forget
about the kook independent.

—

—

Quotes
SAN DIEGO,

"It’s like being an 'unperson' in
1984," another worker said, and
that neatly summarizes the posi
lion of relevant dialogue in 1967.
Cole took a clear stand on the
war, on Black Power, on cduca
tion, and on the poverty program,
and because his views were un
orthodox, the Establishment
media could not consciously relate to him and pretended he
wasn't there. Not surprising. 1984
is only 17 years away.

in the news

tion with Americans.

Then I said that sometimes that isn't enough,
that sometimes it was necessary to personally confront that which you do not like In fact, I told
him that I would have to go to jail if I were drafted,
reasoning that when the day comes that we will
murder against our consciences for our country, we
have gone too far. At this, both he and his wife
cursed me and insulted me for about ten minutes.
They called me a communist and a liar and told
me that if I didn't like my country, I should leave,
1 was a bad American. "We must obey the law.
We may try to change it,, hut we must obey it." He
knew Johnson lied, he knew we have no power, he
knew the War is immoral, but we may not break
the law.

Americans have become so warped about the
concept of democracy, they have become so indoctrinated about the sanctity of the Law. that they
would actually rather be chased out of their country than seriously try to change things. And when
one docs try, HE is bad!

It’s interesting, if not disheartening, to notice
our friendly Narcotics Squad (iobns arc getting restless again. I say that it's interesting because it seems to always happen around election
time, and 1 say it’s disheartening because election
lime comes as often as once a year , .
that

A very quick survey of the elections last week

which made me both happy and sad. The nicest
news was the results from Boston while the sad
des( probably came from San Francisco
it's
—

interesting how politics can upset even the most
rigid structures at times.
On the local scene, our peace candidate went
down the drain, probably doing little else than
living those that normally wouldn’t otherwise, an
opportunity to vole. I don't mean to imply any
criticism of Rev Cole I feel a kind of inner glow
whenever I see him
it's just that when only four
thousand others get the same feeling. I must be

come somewhat unhappy
However, it becomes one more example of the
fact that people do not really want to elect, or
even meet, honest politicians Knowing this, of
course, it’s not very easy to wail until next year,
but we will anyway

The Spectrum's pages for

Calif.—Peter Virgadamo, a member of the San

Diego State crosscountry team, describing his reaction to the cxplo
sion of a homemade bomb Sunday in the luggage department of a
jetliner over Kansas

“The explosion sounded like a sharp ban**, like a cherry bomb
or a firecracker. I didn’t think it was a bomb or anything. 1 thought
it was just part of the rough weather we had flown through
“

Editorials

&amp;

Opinions

It is the policy of The Spectrum to report the
news fully and impartially in the news pages,
to express the opinions of the newspaper only
in the editorial pages and to publish all sides
of important controversial issues.
mnninglm"
"Without itprttnoo, fr*«dom of gapfOMtoo
»

�Pag* Six

Th

•

Tuesday, November 14, 1967

Spectrum

NSAULGC report points to rising Resistance holds meeting
costs in colleges and universities
The Buffalo arm of the National Resistance will sponsor a
mass meeting Friday in the Mil-

WASHINGTON (CPS)
Four
fifths of the nation’s state colleges
and universities' have raised tuition, fees, and foom and board
rates this year.
—

crease in in state tuition and fees
at NASULGC institutions, from a
medium of $330 last year to
$351.50 this year. Out-of-state tuition went up 8.4% from $784 to
$850.

tional Association of State Universities and Land Grant Colleges
(NASULGC) and the Association
of State Colleges and Universities (ASCU) says "There is hardly
a student in the country who will
pay as much for his freshman
year of college as he will for his
senior year.
“Tuition fees, and room and
board charges are rising so fast
and so often that today’s state
university senior is paying about
15% more for his education this
year than he did as a freshman
in 1964," the report adds. And
that’s if he’s an in state student.
Non-residents are paying 23%
more than they did as freshmen.
The NASULGC represents large
state universities and the ASCU
represents smaller state colleges
and universities.

At ASCU institutions, in-statetuition and fees rose 4%, from
$250 to $260. Out-of-state tuition
and fees rose 9%, from $550.50
to $600.

rates rose sharply at the
big schools, increasing 12% for
men and 16.3% for women. Room
Room

increases at the smaller colleges
and board increases generally
were all slightly smaller.
The report says there arc two

major

reasons generally given by

institutions for fee increases:

by state governments to appropriate sufficient
funds for higher education,
Rising costs of food, labor,
•

Failure

•

operation, and

construction.
The report also says tuition increases are often “justified by a
desire to keep charges in line
with those of comparable neigh■

w

—

sistance movement.

sults in many tuition increases.

The report says tuition is now
nearly three times as high as it
was 20 years ago. And out-of-state
fees are going up especially fast.
Non resident students are paying
one-third more than they paid in
1964-65, In that year only four
large universities charged more
than $1,000 a year; this year
there are 22.

Members of the Resistance will

relate their experiences and explain their positions on the move-

ment at the meeting.

The Buffalo Resistance has several future plans that will be
implemented within the next
month. These include another
mass meeting scheduled for the
end of November.

This increase in out-of-state tuition “generally reflect moves to
make non-resident students p?y
a

The next action that the Resistance has planned will take
place Dec. 4. At that time, members of the Resistance and others
sympathetic to the cause will

larger share of their costs,

while state tax funds are devoted
to underwriting costs of instruction for in state tuitions.

The State University of Buffalo’s residence hall rents will go
up ten dollars next year, according to University Treasurer Dr.
Claude Puffer. He said he is not
aware of any other changes in

according to a spokesman lor the

Resistance. Several persons will
turn in their draft cards, and the
Resistance predicts that the number will meet or exceed the number that turned in draft cards
Oct. 18,

But the Resistance

does not

guarantee that the tactics will be
the same. “The Draft Board is
wiser and so are we.” There may
be a “graphic demonstration” to

go along with the protest.
Continuing activity of the Resistance includes manning a table
in the basement of Norton Hall.
From 10 a.m. until 6 p.m. this
table is the scene of “heated
dialogue” among students.

fees, since the policy originates

from the State University headin Albany.

quarters

—i

1

A report just issued by the Na-

plans for the meeting call for
well-known speakers to appear
and give their views on the re-

boring institutions.” The need for
more funds to compete for
“scarce faculty talent” also re-

participate in a march on the
Buffalo Draft Board on Ellicott
St. The action will be similar to

Headquarters for Good
College Clothing

The report shows a 6.5% in

«r-)
—

$t£le Crest
RIVERSIDE MEN'S SHOP
Tonawanda Street, corner Ontario
Buffalo, New York 14207

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

WANTED

The Hugger”

Thousands of college students
for resort employment. FunFilled jobs with high pay in
37 states. The 1968 edition of
the Students Resort Employment Directory is now available ! Page after page of certified jobs at leading resorts.
Maps, mileage chart, applications, and helpful hints that
help you “get that job”. SEND
$1.00 for Directory to: andDar
Publishers, Box 15327, Tulsa,
Oakla. 74115.
Name
Address

'68 Camaro:

Comoro SS Coupe

Accelerates smoother, hugs the road tighter,
rides quieter than ever before.
A quiet car speaks for itself.
That’s why Chevrolet went
il out to make the '68
Comoro smoother, steadier
and more silent than ever,

road noise and vibrations.
Even Camara's new Astro
'entilation works

Camara's famous roadhugging performance has
been improved with a refined
suspension system

Comoro's big-cc

le has

been improved, too. Soft
rubber cushions snuff out

quiet. Adjustable

peace

lent

panel

All these Chevrolet
quality features, too:

e Unitized all-welded
•

V
to open c window! It all adds
up to the silent ride of quality.
See for yourself Put a hushed
'68 Coma
tgh ns t

*

Power team choices up
to a 396-cubic-inch V8.
Self-adjusting Safety-

Master brakes with
dua | ty|inders

An automatic buzzer
that reminds you to
take your keys with
you.

Body by Fisher.

wind or
noise

•

e Proved safely features
like the GM-developed

energy-absorbing
steering column and
many new ones that
include armrest-

shielded door handles.

GM

Be smart! Be sure! Buy now at your Chevrolet dealer’s.

All Chevrolet* are priced for greater value! The lowest priced 1968 Chevrolets are (models not shown); Corvoir 500 Sport Coupe
$2,220.00; Chevy II Nova Coupe $2,199.00; Comoro Sport Coupe $2,565.00; Chevelle 300 Coupe $2,318.00; Chevrolet
Biscayne 2-Door Sedan $2,558.00; Corvette Convertible $4,320.00. Manufacturer's suggested retail prices including Federal Excise To.,
twgge»l«d dealer delivery and handling charges. Transportation charges, accessories, optional equipment, state and

local taxes additional.

Terry Turner [above] of San
Calif., working in a castle

Jose

Jobs in Europe
Luxembourg—American Student Information Service is celebrating its
10th year of successful operation
placing students in jobs and arranging tours. Any student may now
choose from thousands of jobs such
as resort, office, sales, factory, hospital, etc. in 15 countries with wages
up to $400 a month. ASIS maintains
placement offices throughout Europe
insuring you of on the spot help at
all times. For a booklet listing all
jobs with application forms and discount tours send S2 (job application,
overseas handling &amp; air mail reply) to:
Dept. O, American Student Information Service, 22 Ave. de la Liberie,
Luxembourg City’, Grand Duchy of
Luxembourg.

�Tuesday,

Pag* S*v*n

The Spectrum

November 14, 1967

Question of

the week

feel that now
1. There is a need for a new temporary gymnasium on the present campus.
2. There is a need for immediate construction
of a temporary gym on the new campus site.
3. There is no need for an additional gymnasi-

Supreme Court refuses war case
The Supreme Court last
week refused to hear a case
touching on the legality of

—

um.
You can answer the Spectrum Question of the
week every Wednesday at the Information Desk
on the first floor of Norton Hall.
Please submit only one ballot answering the

question of the week.
Last week’s question was:
Do you think that organizations such as Dow
Chemical and the CIA should be allowed on campus 9

The results were
74,6% yes

Three Army privates, two from
New York and one from California, had refused orders to go
to Vietnam, claiming the war “illegal and immoral'' and a violation of treaties made by the
United States,
Their suit against Secretary
of Defense McNamara was turned
down by the Federal District
Court in Washington, and a military tribunal had meanwhile
court-martialed them and sentenced them to jail.

25.4% no
Justice Potter Stewart added
his voice to the previously lone
dissent of Justice William 0.
Douglas in opposing the court’s
decision Justice Stewart, considered one of the “conservative”
members of the court, cited the

from SPACE PROBES to STEREOS
from RE-ENTRY to ULTRAMINIATURIZATION
from EDUCATION to EXPERIMENTATION

many

grave

questions

being

raised throughout the country,
and said: “We cannot make these

problems go away by refusing to
hear the case of three obscure
Army privates.” He mentioned
the problems surrounding the
constitutionality of the war, the
power of the President to send
troops without a declaration of
war by Congress, and the interpretation of the Gulf of Tonkin
Resolution as a constitutional

delegation of authority by Congress to the President.

Justice Douglas, repeating his
question of whether the war is a
violation of, or a responsibility
implied bv, such treaties as
SEATO

coin’s suspension of the writ of
habeas corpus- during the Civil
War and the declaration of marwere struck down after the wars
were over

The three privates
Dennis
26; James Johnson, 21, and
David Samas, 21—are currently
serving three-year sentences in
—

The Court has historically refrained from declaring illegal
wartime military acts, with the
sole exceptions of President Lin-

Mora.

Fort Leavenworth, Kan.

Vulture president killed
Special to the Spectrum

Thomas G. Bell, president of
the Road Vultures Motorcycle

Club, was shot and killed last
week in an apartment on the
city's West Side.

It was the second fatal shoot
ing of a member of the Road
Vultures in less than (wo weeks.

A first degree
charge was placed against Walter
Edin, a 29-year-old construction

manslaughter

worker and former member of
the club.

Mr. Bell was gunned down
when he entered the apartment
and began fighting with Edin's
brother late Thursday. Two other
Vultures were wounded.

The case is considered a test
of the state's revised penal code
which limits the use of “deadly
force" to protest one's property.

Mr. Edin waived a preliminary
hearing on his arraignment before City Court Judge Michael
E. Zimmer. He pleaded innocent
to the manslaughter charge. He

also faces assault and weapons
in the shooting.

charges

Charles A. Pfohl, 23, another
Road Vulture, was fatally shot
by a Cheektowaga patrolman two
weeks ago following a police
chase.
The patrolman who shot him
has been suspended from the
force and the case is scheduled
to be presented to a grand jury.

JT

«ll

m

I’ve Got My Eye On The Man

in a VAN HEUSEN'
”417’ VANOPRESS SHIRT
And what an eyeful he Is! A physique as
well-built and manner as smooth as his
permanently pressed . . . VANOPRESS
shirt, A swingy style that matches the
“417" authentic tailoring of his button
down collar and V Tapered fit. Switchedstripes or colorful solids in dress or spor
Van Heusen has them all. Will 1 k
in sight 7 You'd belter believe it!

PHILCO FORD IS
INVOLVED WITH MANKIND.
Want To Help the World?

jjSl

Philco Ford is interested in just about everything
that interests mankind: from manufacturing to education
from
. . . from outer space talking to underwater walking , ,
anti weapons systems to home entertainment systems.
We have the experience, the capabilities
the growth record
and the resources to offer you both challenges and rewards.
.

mjd

The following is a schedule of club and organization pictures to be
taken for the 1968 BUFFALONIAN in the second floor lounge of Norton.
If groups are not on time, they will be overlooked, so please be prompt.

...

COMMUNICATIONS &amp; ELECTRONICS DIVISION WILL BE
HERE ON NOVEMBER 15
Career opportunities are available on the East Coast,
in the Midwest, the Southwest, on the West Coast, and throughout
the world.

DIVISIONS-. Aeronutronic Appliance Communications &amp;
Electronics Consumer Electronics Education and Technical
Services International
Lansdale
Microelectronics
Space &amp; Re entry
Sales &amp; Distribution
Western Development Laboratories
•

•

•

•

•

•

•

PHILCO
PHILCO-FORD
An

•

•

Equal

CORPORATION

Opportunity Employer

•

»

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 15th
6 p.m.- Rugby Club
6:05-Society on International Medicine
6; 10—International Club
6 20 Economics Club
6:30 Anthropology Club
6:35 -Tau Beta Pi
6:40- Catalyst
6 50-American Institute of Aeronautics
&amp;
Astronautics
7.00 Physical Therapy Club
7.10-Undergraduate Medical Society
7 20-Slavic Club
7;30—A.I.I.E. (Industrial Engineers)
7:40 U.6. Asfronomrs
7:50- Undergraduate Math Club
8 00-Italian Club
8; 10-tppon Club
8:20-Philosophical Society
8 30-Student Medical Technology Assn
8 40-Student Theater Guild
8:50-Newman Student Assoc
9:00—Photography Club
9:10-Engineering Studnt Council
9:20-Va&gt;an Society
9:30-Accounting Club
9 40-New Student Review
9 50 Industrial Relations Club
10:00-American Society of
Mechanical Engineers

.

We would like to have a talk with you
—to explain our company and to get to know you bette/. Stop by
and see us. Or write to College Relations,
Philco-Ford Corporation, C &amp; Tioga Streets, Philadelphia, Pa, 19134

Build up your following with Passport 360,
the influential line of men's toiletries by Van Heusen,

10 05

University Karate Club

10: 10 Politics Club
10:20 School of Business Admimstrali
10:30- Pharmacy School Student Assoc
10:40- Sociology Club
)0:50 Bull
11:00 S.D S
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 14th
6 PM Student Association
6:05 Student Assoc. Officers
6:10 Student Senate
6 15 Executive Committee
6:20- Assistants 4 liasons
6 25 Academic Affairs
6 30 -Student Welfare
6 35-Convocations
6 40 National Student Association
Steering Commiffe
6 45-Pubhc Rlations
6 50-International Affairs
7 00-Campus Barrel
7 05-Student Activities
7:10-Elections
7; 15-Publicify
7:20-Expenmental College
7:25-Book Exchange
7 30 Curriculum Planning
7 35 Course &amp; Teacher Evaluation
7 40-Ereshman Committee
7:45-Transfer Committee

&gt;er Planning Conference
7 55 Personnel Committee
8 00 Commuter Council
8 05 New Campus Committee
0 10- Ombudsman
8 15-Community Aid Corps
8.20-American Society of Civil
Fngmeers
A I E SEC
IJkraman American Student Club
H P E R Maiors Club
Chess Club

Quadrangle
Schussmeislers
A

I.Ch.E.

U Ik Opera Club
USAVETS

Debate Society

Student Chapter of the A C MAmer can Chemical Society
Occupational Therapy Student

Assoc.
io 4a Bridge Club
10:50 Social Work Club

CORRECTION

on tbe sdsedele fee Teeeday, November 14th
8 50-Nursmg Executive Board
10 40- Dance Committee
10:4S-Rcreation Committee

�Th

Pag* Eight

•

Tuesday, November 14, ,1967

Spectrum

Music revie

'The Incredible String Band': their next album is worth it
Spectrum Staff Reporter

One of the few new and worthwhile sounds to emerge
recently in the non-rock pop music field is that of The
Incredible String Band.
Although virtually unknown to those on this side of the
Atlantic, they are quickly becoming a major force in the
new music of the British Isles. The upcoming release in
the States of their second album may well bring them to the
forefront here as well.
Then again, it might not, ent traditions as to develop a
but their music is certainly style which is truly unique.
I suppose that one of the
worth hearing in any event. prime reasons for their success

Their name is a curious and
perhaps misleading one, since the
group consists of two people and
their string accompaniment consists of only a guitar, a banjo
(sometimes,) and one or two exotic stringed instruments from the
East, of which (needless to say)
only one or two is played at once.
But there definitely is something quite new and perhaps incredible about this group.
Any attempt to single out the
influences of their music must
inevitably end in failure and frustration, since it springs from
sources so innumerable that even
the two band members are probably not aware of them all.
Scottish and I ri s h ballads,
sounds of India and the Far East,
Japanese haikua, Bob Dylan, tra
ditional banjo picking, and who
could say what else, blending
into a style so new that no one
has yet found a name for it. Fortunately, I think.
Success at Newport Festival
The Incredible String Band was
the highlight of this year’s Newport Festival for many of us who
were there, though it isn’t easy

there was the element of surprise, but it certainly extends to
something deeper and more important. For one thing, their vocal
style is one which most of us
haven’t heard, except in Scottish
ballads which we find it impossible to identify with. In addition,
their songs possessed a lyric
beauty which left us virtually
stunned.

This, contrasted against the
rather
freaky appearance of
Robin
Williamson and
Mike
Heron, was too much to absorb

worthwhile musical
creation.
The lyrics vary from the plaintive to the surrealistic to the
downright unclassifiable. The
love poetry in songs such as
“October Song” and “Womankind" is as evocative as almost
any to be found in Dylan or
Leonard Cohen, which is to say
that nothing I can say about it
could, add to its quiet impact.
I’m trying to think of a phrase
or two from “October Song” to
give to you, but I’m afraid that
the whole of it is more than the
sum of its parts. The fundamental
unit of the song is not the verse
or the measure, but rather the
song in its entirety. Clearly this
only the
elucidates nothing
song itself can do so.

the smoke froze as it arose from
the fireplace. A real problem, no
doubt. To solve, the problem, he
called the police, who “came
’round, three days later, and very
brought down.”
Clearly annoyed, they advised
him to call the fire brigade, or
maybe try to shovel it up the
chimney with a spade. Borrowing
a spade from the woman next
door, he picked up the smoke that
remained on the floor.
Enough said.
The problem resolves itself the
next summer when the pillar of
smoke reaching up to the sky
finally melts. Also, it turns out
that there was an airplane stuck
in it, which he couldn’t notice at
first, ‘twas so cunningly dis-

"Smoke Shoveling Song"

New album to be released

favorite song on their first
album (Electra is their U. S. outlet) is the "Smoke Shovelling

Anyway, returning to the world
of newspaper reality, the group
has a new album to be released
by Electra in a month or two,
which Crawdaddy Magazine says

case in any

—

My

Song.”

It’s about a man who couldn’t
heat up his house last winter

“

guised as a dragon.”

is already

being compared in Eng-

temenl

probably based on a justifiable
hangup.
There are two songs they did
at Newport which should be in-

cluded, and which in themselves
will make the album worth

hearing.

The first is “Chinese Bride,”
which I don’t remember too clearly, except that it was one of
the most eerie and beautiful
pieces of poetry I’ve yet heard.
The second was “I Was Born in
The 1960s,” which provides a historical (it was written around the
year 2000) and frightening look
at what has been happening in
the last year or three.
In addition, there was a third
song which I remember nothing
about other than the chilling
smile on Mike Heron’s face as he
sang “the graveyard is laughing.”
The Incredible String Band
does not need a million cheering
fans, nor 1000 knowledgeable
critics to stand up and speak for
it. It stands alone, and speaks
for itself.

to explain why. They were probably the only group there to have
so enlarged upon so many differ-

WAR STEAK
Sandwich

ALL YOtTWANT
(Within Reason)

U S CHOICE TOP SIRLOIN

AAA
Dine and Relax in

The Peaceable Kindom
Room at the

BLACKSMITH
SHOP

“Oldest Steak House in IT.N.Y.”

1375 DELAWARE AVE.
TT 6-9281

Can there be this kind ofexcitement in engineering?
A high-performance ear in a four-wheel driftaround the first

Watkins Glen* typifies the excitement of sportscar racing ..
precision machinery and human skill in cool coordination.
Is it an exaggeration to suggest there should he an analogous
excitement in your engineering career? In engineering, too,
professional skill is constantly pitted against variables of
mathematics, materials and men. And the pace can be fast.
This is the kind of engineering excitement Xerox can offer you;
a strong drive into new areas and new technologies in a
variety of fields . . . imaging, data handling, graphic arts, education
a grow th pattern stimulating in itself. . . total operating revenues
up from S25 million in 1957 to over S500 million in 1966; research and
development expenditures, at S45 million in 1966, up 36' i over 1965
a professional environment and esprit which you have to
experience to believe
both long-range technical aims and day-to-day
engineering problems on a scale to satisfy any engineer.
Sound unlikely? Check it out and see. A our degree in Engineering or
Science can qualify you for some intriguing openings at Xerox, in
fundamental and applied research, engineering, manufacturing and
turn at

.

Try Xeroxand see

•

C.E. SENIORS
YOUR FUTURE
can be in

TRANSPORTATION

•

•

•

Challenging

opportunities
available in our expanding
program which includes a Vi
billion dollar highway con-

struction program.

generous fringe
No Exam
benefits including tuition refunds.
—

on

Our Recruiter will be here
Monday. November 20th.

Visit your Placement Office
NOW for brochures and SIGN
UP to hear the full story.

New York State Dept, of
Transportation Bureau of Recruitment and Training. State
Campus, Building 5. Albany,
New York 12226

programming.

See vour Placement Director or write to Mr, Roger \ ander Ploeg
Xerox Corporation. P.0. Box 1995. Rochester, New York 14603.
An Equal Opportunity Employer (M/F).

XEROX
*1 hour's drive south of Rochester

�Tuesday, November 14, 1967

Pag* Nin*

The Spectrum

**�***�***�*********����*�**�*��*******�*���*�*£
|

PEACE

*

rue

*

"The St. John Cemetery Stonethrowers" will be the main attraction at a mixer to be held Friday at Newman Hall. Admission is 50c
for members, 75c for non-members.

wr
T

*

TALK ABOUT IT WITH THE PEACE CORPS.

*

*

*

*

9 A.M.-6 p.m.

*

-

Norton Union Lobby

-

Health Science Bldg.

*

*

*

9 A.M.-6 p.m.

|
*

*

rp

I

NOVEMBER 13-17

|
3p Jp »p»p

»P

vp

?p

campus releases...

rp

rp

*p rp

»p

p.m. tomorrow in the Conference Theater
"The Effects of Narcotics and General Anesthetics" will be the
subject of a lecture given by Dr. Cedric Smith, Chairman of the
Pharmacology Department. The lecture will be held in Room 246 of
the Health Sciences Building from 3 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.

"Urban Anthropology and Downtown Project: Results and Projects” will be the subject of a meeting of the Graduate Anthropology
Club to be held on the Ridge Lea campus. It will be held at 7:30 p.m.
tonight in the Anthropology Building. Speaking will be Associate
Professor Dr. Erwin H. Johnson, and Mr. Grant Hancsworth.
The Student-Faculty Film Club will hold its first workshop for
8 p.m. tomorrow in Room 334 Norton Hall.

new members at

Five sessions will be devoted to the use of the camera, editing
processes, sound, direction and production. The club will provide
materials and equipment for new members to work on short productions.

Membership in the club is open to feepaying students and to

faculty

members.

The Community Aid Corps needs dictionaries to be used in
tutoring children and adults in the ghetto at the Woodlawn Information Center. The dictionaries may be turned in at the CAC office.
Room 205 Norton Hall.

The Convocations Committee of the Student Association will hold
a meeting, 7 p in. tomorrow in the Student Senate Office, Room 205
Norton Hall. Plans tor speakers for Spring Semester (18 and Fall '69
will be discussed.
The weekly Women's Recreational Association open house will be
held tonight from 7 p in. until 9 p m. Facilities arc available for paddlcball, gymnastics, swimming and volleyball. All women are invited.
Harriman Reserve Library and the ground floor reading mom and
bound periodicals annex of Lockwood Library will he opened until 1
a m. The schedule went into effect Monday, on an experimental basis.
They will be open until 1 a m. every day of the week, except on major
holidays

and

during

intersessions.

The Undergraduate Psychology Club will have its pictures for the
Buffalonian taken tomorrow at 7:25 p m. instead of Tuesday, at 6:45
p in. Photographs will be taken in the second floor lounge of Norton
Hall. An important meeting will follow.
Professor David Robinson of George Washington University Law
School will be holding interviews tomorrow. The interviews, open to
all students interested in attending law school, will be held between

9:30 a.m. and noon in Room 332, Norton Hall.

NOW PLAYING

7:30, 9:30 NIGHTLY

The etory of a
love triangle... and the

four people trapped hi kl

OS! ACCIDENT

WINNER TWO CANNED FILM FESTIVAL AWARDS

jRT

Starring DIRK BOGARDE

New
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�Pag* Tan

Th

Tuesday, November 14, 1947

Spectrum

•

Race issue discussed in experimental T.V. debut
(UPI)

The

HOLLYWOOD
“Public Broadcast Laboratory”
series of National Educational
—

Televsinn bowed in coast-to-coast

two-and-a-half hours of its debut
to the racial problem.
Extending its
nounced two-hour

previously-an-

length,

and ap-

parently altering part of its content—as befits a live, experimental series—the laboratory also offered two publicized anti-commercials. One mocked the ads for
100-millimeter cigarettes, telling
the viewer they contained more
tar and nicotine. The other said
all aspirins are about equal in
effectiveness, and suggested viewers just buy the cheapest ones.

“PBL,” as the series is nickis, of course, part of noncommercial television. And the
anti-commercials, assuming their
accuracy, are a splendid idea. One
would hope for many more than
just two on the 24 future weekly
broadcasts of "PBL" this season.
The series—in color—hopes to be
a sample of what a national public television service can present.
named

overnight

Good, bad aspects
The laboratory had said it intended to stir things up, and it
news, as it hopes to, it certainly
made news, in a video sense, because of some of its content. Not
that all of its content was successfully presented. It had ups

and downs.

troupe

television: An open confront?tion, a dialogue, among Negroes
and whites with varying views on
the racial question. This con-

acted
in whiteface
out a fantasy of what happened
on a day when all Negroes dis
appeared from a southern town

broadcast worthwhile in its revelation of some of the classic
positions on the racial issue.
And somehow even the occasional hollering in the exchanges
seemed more human than
and
maqy
therefore preferable to
of those ultra-calm, ultra-polished
career talkers we usually see, and
know are usually not truly rep-

point that the South needs Negroes for its own purposes and
that it has remained glued together because of the presence
of the Negro. However, regardless of the play’s content and underlying anger, it was theatrically
a heavyhanded, overlong tirade
that eventually became very thin;
not funny enough to be really
comic, restricted by its format
from being frankly dramatic, and
therefore wavering between.

—

—

The first part of the program,
focusing on political contests with
racial aspects in Cleveland, Boston and Gary, Ind., was professional and visually effective, but
not much different from what the
commercial networks do
and
"PBL” is, after all, aiming at

resenttaive. This dialogue was by
far the highlight of the ”PBL”
premiere.

—

There is

—

still

to get your ad or announcement into the big Thanksgiving
edition of The Spectrum.

Friday’s edition will be the

last published this month, so
announcements for events
scheduled during the rest of

—

being

an alternative in repor-

torial dimensions.

“PBL” says that
“balance
among points of view should be

Heavy play
The last half of the program

Next, however, came a lengthy
segment of genuinely exciting

was occupied mainly by a play,
“Day of Absence,’* an angry
burlesque in which a Negro

Jl

the month should be brought

achieved across the entire series
and not automatically in each
broadcast.” Next Sunday it takes
up the subject of Vietnam.

to The Spectrum office, 355
Norton

Hall, today.

-JH

Funniest Picture
the Last 25 Years!"

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Saturday ft Sunday
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�Tuesday, November 14, 1967

The Spectrum

Diahann Carroll to perform
will be presented Sunday at 8:30
in Kleinhans Music Hall.
Called by Lou Walters “the
greatest natural talent I’ve heard
in 25 years,” Miss Carroll has
directed her talent to both singing and acting. She is a frequent
guest on television’s top variety
shows, plays headline engagements in the nation’s foremost
night-spots, has achieved stardom
on Broadway and is rapidly closing in on Hollywood.
Proceeds from the concert will
benefit Youth Aliyah, the organization within Hadassah which reloctates in Israel displaced children from throughout the world.
Emotionally disturbed children
receive special treatment and culturally deprived youngsters are
benefitted by intensifield special
programs. Aliyah also has instituted a day center program for
young people.
Tickets for the concert are
available at the Norton Hall
Ticket Office.

p.m,

ly donated to the Library by Mr.
Herbert F. Darling of Eggertsville, N. Y.

After more than a third of a
century with the English Department at the University of Texas,
he was called to the chair of
American History at Cambridge
University. There he recorded his
experiences in his book, A Texan

Dobie’s many books on the history and folklore of the Southwest are considered to be among
the most authentic accounts of
regional history in American lit:

erature. Included in the exhibi-

in England.
Throughout his academic career. Dobic's most publicized

cause was academic freedom.
Samples of his thoughts on this
subject are: "All we’re asking for
is to leave freedom free to combat
errors"; "I hate to see a young
man as conservative as an old-line
senator," and "I don't pretend to
be a reformer, I believe in letting
the world go to hell in its own
way."

His best known quote concerns
doctoral disserations: “This is
taking bones out of one graveyard
and putting them in another."
Dobie was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in

1964.

Expo art show comes to Albright-Knox
Diahann Carroll
To appear with Henny Young
man at Kleinhans, Sunday,

sponsored by Buffalo Hadassah.

University Plaza

Opposite U.B.

KNOWN FOR VALUES

V

tion are the inscribed first editions Apache Gold And Yaqui
Silver, Coronado's Children, The
Longhorns and The Mustangs.
Also displayed is an unpublished
draft of How The Alamo Fell.

editions and memorabilia of the
dean of Texas letters was recent-

G/imits
it's at

Tilt "T Frank Dobie Exhibit
currently on display on the balcony of Lockwood Library has
been extended to Nov. 30. The
collection of manuscripts, first

'

“An Evening with Diahann Car.
roll and Henny Youngmann” spon

Lockwood Library extends display of
J. Frank Dobie exhibit to Nov. 30
1

Kleinhans concert

Pag* El*v*n

A spectacular exhibition, Paradis Fantaslique, comprising nine
large kinetic machines and nine
giant-sized polyester sculptures,

will be erected in the outdoor
Sculpture Garden of the Albright
Knox Art Gallery and atop the
surrounding roof.
The exhibition, opening N#&gt;v,
21, will be the first major col

laboration of the Swiss artist,
Jean Tinguely, and his American
wife, Niki dc Saint Phallc. It was
one of the foremost attractions
of Expo '67, where it was in-

stalled on the roof of the French
Pavilion.
The Tinguely machines arc dc
scribed as “black, menacing,
bristling

and

aggressive."

wife’s works, called

His

be in Buffalo prior to the opening to install their works. The
figures and machines will be
placed in a new arrangement ere
ated

by

the artists.

"Nanas,” are

large polyester sculptures allud
ing to the female figure and fan
tastic creatures. The husbandwife team collaborated in 19(&gt;(i in
executing a c o I o s s a t Nana,
through which one could walk,
at the Modcrne Mused in Stock
holm.

The two artists are designing a
poster especially for the Al
bright-KnoX exhibition and will

I

Because of the great size of the

figures, they were dismantled
and cut into sections for shipment
to Buffalo after the closing of
Expo.

Special lighting will be into enhance night-time
viewing of the exhibition, which
will continue at the AlbrightKnox Art Gallery through January 7, 1968.

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�Pag*

Tuesday, November 14, 1967

The Spectrum

Tw*lv*

i

1 II Men's glee club, women's chorale
•

will give performance in Clark Gym
of Buffalo Men’s Glee Club and Women’s Chorale on Sat.,
Nov. 18, at 8:15 p.m. in Clark Gym.
The “UB Blues” and “Baby
Blues,” two well-known popular
singing groups, will also be included in the concert.
Admission is free to students
who have paid the activities fee
and 50c general admission will be
charged.

The Men’s Glee Club, under the
direction of Freder i H. Fm-H will
sing several selections, including
“Kojo no Tsuki,” a Japanese folksong arranged by Mr. Ford; “Der
Herr Signe Each,” from Cantata
196 by J. S. Bach; “The Mole and
Jerboa” from “McCord’s Managerie”; “My Lord What a Mornin’,”
a spiritual featuring Don Levine
as soloist, and others.
'-

The Women’s

■“'ll
Chorus

Proposal to cut poverty
funds would hurt cities
—

poverty

appropriations

to $1.2

billion a year.
In Washington last week the
chairman of the House Appropriations Committee told administra
lion officials that $1.6 million
was the most the House would
allow and said there were “strong
indications” the figure would be
even less. This year's total was
$1.5 billion.
While poverty officials were
wailing for further word from
Washington, a group of businessmen planned to seek funds for
VISTA, the domestic Peace Corps.
VISTA has operated without
money since Congress did not
renew a continuing resolution
on Oct. 23.

ists Julie

Piret, soprano; Rose-

The “UB Blues” and “Baby
Blues,” known throughout the
area, will perform popular songs
including “Hurry Sundown” and
“Summer’s Come and Gone.” The
Blues have performed at the
Statler Hilton, over WKBW-TV,
and have given numerous informal concerts on campus. The
highlight of the Baby Blues performances occurred at Expo ’67

in

May.

The joint UB Chorus, accompanied by Joseph Kubera and
Timothy Vernon, will perform
Johannes Brahms’ “Liebeslieder

Walzer.”

The Men’s Glee Club and Women’s Chorale, founded in the early
days of the university, were reorganized by R. S. Beckwith in
1962. In 1964 the joint groups

The Women’s Chorale sang at
the University of Rochester with
UR Men’s Glee Club and gave a
concert with the Men’s Glee Club
of Case Institute of Technology
here on campus. During the same
year the joint chorus rendered
Boris Godunov in the original
Russian text at Kleinhans.

In May the chorus, under the
direction of Robert S. Beckwith,
performed at three concerts given
at Expo ’67 in Montreal.
Dec. 15 the chorus will perform
Handel’s The Messiah with the
Buffalo Philharmonic. Also included in this year’s plans are
several weekend trips to other
universities and a spring concert
tour to New York City and Washington, D. C.

Studio Arena to present musical
version of 'Androcles and the Lion'

UB Chorus poses at USSR pavil
ion at Expo '67.

Federal
NEW YORK (DPI)
anti poverty officials in New York
say that the cutback in poverty
funds being urged in the House
could cost New York City some
$30 million a year—including all
support for special summer pro
grams.
The cuts would cost Nassau
and Suffolk County about $1
million each and Bergen County.
N. J.. about $235,000.
New York, Buffalo, Newark,
Boston and Rochester would be
among the cities to lose all federal aid for summer programs.
The estimates were based on
House support for a resolution
by Rep. William H. Ayrex (R„
Ohio) which would limit anti

Chorale, directed

by Peter Van Dyck, will perform
Benjamin Britten’s “A Ceremony
of Carols” and will feature solo-

mary Dayton, contralto, and Suzanne Thomas, harpist.

loured New York City and in the
same year performed with the
Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra.
In 1966, the Men’s Glee Club performed Stravinsky’s Oedipus Rex
with the Philharmonic at Kleinhans Music Hall.

The Studio Arena Theater will
present the musical play “Androcles and the Lion” beginning this
weekend.

Mr. Harris has used the “comedia dell” style in his dramatization, a style in which the play
is shown through a troupe of

traveling players.

This adaptation of the ancient
fable is a new version by Aurand
Harris with music by Jim Rogers,
It uses the familiar story of the
Roman slave who is thrown into
the arena to be eaten by a lion
whom he once helped by removing a thorn from its paw.

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The actors are shown getting
ready for the play as they put up
the set, put on parts of their cos-'
tumes and get their props. Thus
the audience sees two shows at
once: the play about Androcles
and the actors doing the play.

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The play abounds in the type
of fun that features merry chases
and funny fights employing “slapstick.” Messages of “love is triumphant," “wickedness is punished” and “loyalty and friendship are rewarded” are completely absorbed in the play.
Included in the cast are Mary
Jane Abeles, John Costopoulos,
Sheila Browne and Russell
Drisch, Directed by Maurice Breslow, the production has a set designed and constructed by Eugene Lee with costumes designed
by Mr. Jean Blanchette.
The performances are scheduled for Nov. 18, 24 and 25, and
Dec. 2, 9 and 16 at 2 p.m.
SKI

MFC

GLENWOOD
Sign-Up 'Til Nov. 15

Phone 831-2503 Nights

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the Directory with our compliments!
—

located in Basement of Norton
open daily 8 a.m. to 5:45 p.m.

831-3545
—Under New Management—

�Tuesday, November 14, 1967

The Spectrum

the spectrum of

sports

Pag* Thirteen

Baby Bulls end season
with defeat ofKent State
by David Pinsky and Gary

Greenfield

Spectrum Staff Reporterj

The State University of Buffalo freshman team Friday
ended its season on a happy note, defeating the powerful
Kent State yearlings 12-7.
The Bulls, led by a fine passing attack and a great
defensive effort, pulled through with a last minute touchdown for the

victory.

The first quarter was mainly

in Kent Slate territory
It seemed the Baby Bulls'
offense jelled until they penetrated the Kent 25 yard line. At this
point the team looked like something out of Pop Warner, and
not the potent offensive machine
it had been on the previous
set of downs.
Their farthest penetration was
to the Kent 15 yard line where a
score could have easily been at
tained
played

Repeat performance
The

—Don

Buffalo quarterback Dennis Mason (19) has the
ball, as fellow Bulls attempt to block charging

Glena

Villanova game

Wildcats including Rich Moore (70) —biggest
foe of the season. Buffalo lost anyway, 41-23.

Bulls drop one to Villanova; just can't
get that ball over the goal too often
by W. Scott Behrens
Assistant Sports

Editor

VILLANOVA, PA.
The State University of Buffalo
football team went down to defeat by a 41-23 score as the
Villanova Wildcats’ quarterback Bill Andrejko unloaded for
six touchdown passes before some 8700 fans at Villanova
Stadium Saturday afternoon.
—

*

This was the Bulls’ fourth loss in six encounters on the
road and gives them a 5-4 season record.
The Wildcats increased
their season mark to 4-5 and
need only a victory over Toledo University on Thanksgiving Day to wind up with a
.500 season.
Andrejko passes for 200 yds.
Andrejko passed both long and
short for a game total of 260
yards, completing 15 of the 19
passes which he attempted. The
senior quarterback found that

passing for touchdowns was the
best method by which his team
could move against the Bulls.
His game totals now give him a
season mark of 103 completions
in 162 attempts and 12 touch-

down passes.

Andrejko didn’t diSveTany trouble moving his team through the
air as Buffalo's pass defense was
stymied with his pinpoint ac-

curacy to each of his receivers.
With only two and half minutes gone in the game, he threw
to his split end Tom Boyd in the
end zone for the Wildcats’ first
score. This was the beginning of
a barrage of TD passes which the
Bulls were to see all through
the game.
About six minutes later in the
same period Andrejko passed 13

yards to

second string tight end
Bruce Bendish to culminate an
80 yard drive and lead 140
Toward the latter part of the
first period the Wildcats' slick
passer hit his right halfback Bill
Walik with a scoring pass which
later proved to be all the scoring

the Wildcats could put on the
scoreboard in the first half.

Bulls unable to move
The Bulls were unable to gen
erate any offensive thrust except
in the waning seconds of the first
half as Buffalo’s offensive line
missed their assignments and al-

lowed the Wildcat defensive front
four to invade the backfield and
jar the Bulls’ quarterbacks, throw

them for several losses.
The Wildcats had scored 20
points before the Bulls could
ing

move the football with any suc-

cess.

The Bulls' lone score in the
first half came on a no-huddle
play at the Villanova one-yard
line. Bull quarterback Mick Mur
•tha passed to senior Captain Rick
Wells in the end zone Junior
placekicker Bob Embow converted the extra point and the Bulls
went into the dressing room with
a 13 point deficit as the Wildcats
led 20 7 at halftime.
The Bulls' pass defense was
again tested in the second half
and proved to be just as erratic
as in the initial half
After three exchanges of the
football, Andrejko started a 70
yard drive in which he hit Walik.
who had outrun two Buffalo defenders, for 34 yards down the
middle, and then connected with
Bcndish again with a 23 yard
scoring pass. Villanova then led
27-7.

The Bulls came back on the
very next drive and Murlha culminated the 74 yard drive with
a 20 yard scoring pass from soph

was al
most a repeat performance of
the first but with a slight O'Henry
twist. The Baby Bulls scored a
touchdown, Kent had the ball on
their own 4(&gt; yard line where the
Kent quarterback Rich "Ambrose
fumbled a snap from center
Alert defensive end Chuck
Dormer jumped on it and the
Bulls had the ball first and ten
on the Kent 47. On a second
down and ten play Moresco looped
a pass to Zclmanski which went
for 34 yards and first down to
the Kent 13
Four plays later, John Faller,
on a pilch from Moresco, ran
around left end for the score.
The extra point failed and the
Buffalonians led 6-0, After the

second

quarter

kickoff the Kent offense stalled
again and they were stopped on
their

own

43 yard line. From

there they punted.
omore tailback Pal Patterson Francis fumbles
Patterson swept wide for the two
The ball came to Boh Francis
point conversion and the Bulls who fumbled at the Buffalo .18
had narrowed the gap to 27 15. Kent recovered in great field
position. On the next play, Fran
Wildcats score again
However, the Wildcats were not cis, making up for his almost
costly mishap, picked off (ptar
to be dismayed and recovered
Buffalo’s on-side kick at the 50 lerback
Ambrose's- next pass
yard line. Andrejko engineered and brought it out to the Buf
this drive to the Wildcats' fifth falo 28,
On the next set of downs Buf
score of the afternoon by hitting
falo moved pretty well, but after
substitute end John Schunke with
two passes, one on a scoring play getting two consecutive first
downs on passes, Morcsco threw
from the 11 yard line.
After the exchange of the foot one directly into the wailing
ball, the Wildcats scored again
on a 35 yard drive which ended

in a completed pass to Boyd in
the end zone. The Wildcats were
well out of reach with a 4115
lead.
Villandva's head coach Jack
Gregory then freely substituted
his players, and the Bulls were
able to push the ball across the
goal line once more before the
final gun sounded.
Mason was operating the signalcalling this time and led the
Bulls from the Villanova 25. the
final tally coming with Patterson
carrying the ball over the goal
line from the host's one yard line.
Mason then passed to his split
end Ed Lowe for the two point
conversion, the final score reading 41 23,
From the vantage point of this
reporter, it seemed as though
some of the enemy aerials could
have at least been baited down
by the Bulls' defensive backfield
if they had just turned themselves around and faced into the
direction from which the football
was coming. The defenders had
caught up with the receivers several times but just let the ball
fall into the receiver’s hands as
though they never even thought
of turning around
Buffalo had more first downs
than the Wildcats and also out
rushed them, but these statistics
don't help much if the Bulls
can't get the ball over the goal
line more often;

Frosh ball

Bu//s
Zeek
n Kei

arms of defender David Greenfield who was tackled immediately on the Kent ten yard line.
The half ended, Bull 6, Kent
State 0.
The fourth quarter seemed to
be just like the other three as
Buffalo moved till they hit the
20 yard line.
On second down and two yards
to {to for a first down, on the

Kent 22. David Greenfield inter
cepted and crushed a drive.

Stopped cold
The punt dropped on the Kent

yard Ijne ami the Hulls took
over. They drove down to the one
yard line but they were stopped
eold by a goal line stand.
The punt came now to the Kent
42. With two minutes to go, Ed
Perry came in to quarterback.
The Hulls were still trailing 7-6.
With Perry's fine passing and
great running by John Zeek, the
Hulls, in ten plays, brought it
over for the touchdown.
Now there were only 48 seconds left on the clock and the
Hulls led 12 6. The kickoff came
to the Kent 40 and the Ohioans
were slopped eold The Bulls retained the hall on downs with
two seconds to go and held it
for the victory.
The Hulls defense was fantastic
holding Kent to 80 yards running and only 28 yards passing.
On I ho other hand; the Bulls
gained 129 yards on the ground
and 292 yards in the air.
Quarterback Joe Moreseo was
17-31 for 259 yards and 186 of
these were to split end Joe Zelnianski Ed Perry came in when
it counted and brought the ball
over for the winning score.
At the end of the game. Coach
Gerry Gergley said: "It was a
great, exciting game. They are
a fine bunch of kids and we look
for good things in the future."
The Baby Bulls closed out their
season wilh a three and four
record.
4!)

Freshman standout

John

.prints through huge hole

Slate defensive

Friday's clash-tilt-contest.

�Tuesday, November 14, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* Fourteen

APO predicted as victor in playoff on the
for intramural football cham lonship
by

Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

This year’s intramural football program is almost at an
end. With all the divisional
winners determined, the
league heads into the playoffs to uncover a championship.
The divisional winners are:

Monday
3 p.m. The Meat
4 p.m, Billy Shears
Tuesday

3 p.m. Business Grads
Wednesday
3 p.m. Bacteriology Club
4 p.m. Pine Court

The team is loaded with plenty
of talent. Quarterback Harvey
Bender is considered by many to
be

as good as

former Zygote
great, Bill Barto. He has three
capable receivers in Jeff Softer,
Gene Haber and Eon Salmonson.

Bearded ends
The defense is led tenaciously
by the two defensive ends, Leon
Laptook and Barry Cohen. But it
will take more than two bearded
defensive ends to beat The Meat.
The winner will then go on to
tangle with the Business Grad
students who after this encounter will wish they had stayed in
and studied. They do, however,
have a fine team but will not
be able to handle the likes of
The Meat or Billy Shears.
The

Thursday
3 p.m. Sig Ep
4 p.m. APO

The first playoff game to be
held will be between two experienced clubs, The Meat and Billy
Shears.
The Meat is composed of some
former Baby Bulls who have given this team a real shot at the
title. Dick Pirhtzollo and Angelo
Monte provide this team with a
tremendous rush which has frus-

trated many teams into throwing

into the hands of corner back
Keith Turner.
The offense is led by another
Baby Bull, John Davis. It is really
hard to determine how good
Billy Shears is since they were
playing in an Allenhurst league.

Wednesday playoff pits
a big, strong veteran team in the.
likes of The Bacteriology Club
(Alpha Sig) against a fine fresh
man team, Pine Court. Pine Court
will have its hands full with some
of the tough Alpha Sig players
such as Packy Botula, Joe Falcone and Joe Dinardo. Joe Morclli, a defensive standout last year
for Alpha Sig, has been slowed
this year but he is still a steady
performer.

Bugaloo excels
The Pine Court boasts of a fine
defensive team with such standouts as Eddie Goldstein. Mark
Binstock and Bugaloo Thomp
son. The winner of this epic
struggle will face the winner of
the fraternity playoff which could
very well be one of the hardest
fought games in years.

The Thursday league playoff
is between two perennial power-

houses, Sig Ep and APO.
Sig Ep has in Fran Buchta the
outstanding quarterback in the
fraternity league. Although they
lost Jim Shey to the basketball
team, they have in Joe Orsini a
good receiver and a tremendous
blocker. Big, blond Bill Freeman,
a two way performer, is one of
the best at defensive end and
blocking back. The Sig Ep defense was probably the best in
the league and the APO offense
was probably the best in the
league. This promises to be quite
a battle.

Vesneske can unload
APO is one of the best dis-

ciplined teams and boasts of two

of the

finest receivers in any

league in John Busch and Jim
Rasey. Quarterback Terry Vesneske has plenty of time to unload the ball to either of his two
sure-handed receivers with big
Al Giacchi providing the blocking.

Although the APO defense is

not as good as that of Sig Ep,

it is not far behind. With Jim
Rasey at safety, APO has the best
all-around performer in intramural football. This game could
go cither way.

The prediction here is that the
campus championship will be
decided between APO and The
Meat. This game would rate as
a toss-up. APO, however, will win
this very close game, thus ending
the long domination of inde-

pendent

teams

over

Romhough

Spectrum Staff

further helped the
blue and while cause by adding

Reporter

The blue and white leers of
University
State
of Buffalo
opened their 1967 season last
Saturday night by slaughtering
a hapless Buffalo State team
14-3 in a crushing combination
of speed, timing, and teamwork
at the Amherst Recreational
Center before close to 600 fans

John

Watson

and

Niagara

Falls’ Billy Newman led the Bull
assault with three goals each
Fred Bourgemeister and Loren

two goals apiece while singletons were notched hy Darrell
Pugh, Jim McKowen and Bobby

Orr. The Bulls could have named
their own score had it not been
for an exceptional goallending
job by Buffalo Stale goalie. Bob
Rigby. With no defensive and
little offensive support Rigby
turned in a first rate performance. All together the Buffalo
State goaltender stopped a total
of 80 State University of Buffalo

Staff

Reporter

persona ;ies ma
irougj lout t ie year, spoi
forgettable imprint on fans across the country. By an action
of superb capability or incapacity in his particular sport, an
athlete can be long revered as a hero or a great. He may
be the epitome of a joke, the laughing stock of a city, or be
put up for governor of a state.

No year can ever go by where
figures in the world of sports

go unnoticed. This reporter
would like you to also notice
these revered athletes of the
sporting world.
In a poem (’Twas the Night
Before Christmas) let us present
a myth of basketball fantasy to
be cherished by the Bulls of Dr.
Serfustini:
’Twas the month before B’Ball
When all thru the gym
There were plenty of shouts
Of win win win.
Serf was yelling, with all his
heart
When without warning he gave
a start.
Down from the window and onto
the gym
Came a lost little boy who
jumped over the rim.
“Please give me a try, Coach.
He yelled out in glee.
“With me in there
I’ll bring you victory.”

"Welcome pal.”

The boy just answered, “You
can call me Cal.”
On the list of all time great
songs is this little tune sung by
Allie Sherman:
“Ode to Joe Morrison”
“How Can I Be Sure?”
How can I be sure
On a team that’s constantly

changing,
How can I be sure
Where you’re gonna play?

The top ten of the sport hit
parade cites these songs as the
hits of today: “Walk on By”
by Freeman White.
by Rosey
“I’m a Soul Man”
t-

—

Grier.

“Born to Lose'

by Floyd

Patterson.

Old Coach Serf had nothing
to lose
So he gave him a try and a new
pair of shoes.
He jumped higher than the
rim, over the top

by
“Tracks of My Tears”
Joel Collier.
“Lightning Is Striking Again”
—by Homer Jones.
These are some of the up and
coming hits, but there is no
doubt that after another performance such as the one he
gave last week. Freeman White
will reach recording stardom (he
had better do something because
his football playing days are num

Wow! He was great, pop-pop-pop.
Serf was ecstatic, Monk too.
This was certainly a dream
come true.
The coach put out his hand

The final question of the week
is: Will the Bulls once again
play .500 football? Is there a
song title for this one?

—

bered.)

fraternity

clubs.

Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra

Buffalo State hockey team badly
beaten by UB Bull leers 14-3
by Rich Baumgarten

Martin

Billy

Spectrum

by Karl Schnitiler

bench

Still a Few Students Series Season Tickets Available !

$15
Two FREE Pop Tickets For Those Who Have Missed
The Opening Concerts
DEADLINE FOR THIS EXCITING OFFER—NOV. 30

Kleinhans Music Hall

885-5000

shots, many of which were lab
eled sure goals.

SRO

soon

After such an auspicious start,
their is no doubt that the Bull
leers rank as the top title contenders in the Finger Lakes
Hockey League. This brilliant
brand of hockey played by this

Freshman Class
Council

exceptional club deserves a full

house.

Amherst
Arena holds
1800, so come early as the

only
"Standing

Presents the Full Length Film

Room Only" sign
should be out for the rest of
the season.

&gt;

Slap shots
Ralph Judge, the Bulls' first
string center who scored 47 goals
for the Niagara Falls Flyers last
year suffered a broken finger
in last week's scrimmage and
did not play against Buffalo

IRMA LA
DOUCE

State. Judge should be back in
action next week—The exciting
brand of hocked displayed by the
second and third periods—Jim
McKowen played a fine headsup game, skated hard and scored
a goal and three assists . . .

The Bulls, having played against
the Nichols alumni on Sunday,
will play the same Buffalo State
Orangemen next Saturday and
Brockporl State next Sunday.
Both home games are slated for
10 p.m. faceoffs
The blue
and white never let up. the sign
of a champion—The Slate Uni
versity of Buffalo completely outshot Buffalo State. The Bulls had
94 shots on goal to 22 for the

&lt;&gt;

Plus: Pink Pantler Cartoon

�
Tues.,

�
Nov.

14th

—

—Bonneau

Hockey

Buffalo received
Orangemen
good goaltcnding from their
trio of netminders as Huber,
Hamilton and DcPaolo played
—

Buffalo Slate defender

swipes

at puck as Bulls cross blue line
on

attack.

well.

Capen

140

Two Showings—7:30 and 9:30 P.M

50c

�Tuesday, November 14, 1967

The Spectrum

Yale University faculty votes for new
iradin
Yale
University faculty has voted to
replace numerical grading with
a system under which students
will be given one of four designations for their work—fail, pass,
high pass or honors.

NEW HAVEN

(CPS)—The

The new system will begin
year and continue on an ex-

next

perimental basis for at least five
years.

Yale’s present system makes
use of a grading scale from 40
to 100, with 60 as the lowest
passing grade. The University at
present compiles cumulative averages for each student, but it
will no longer do so when the
new system goes into effect.

Strobe Tallbott; chairman of the
Yale Daily News, Some student
organizations have been working to end the numerical system,
however.
Derek

Shearer, head of the
Student Advisory Board, said the
new system “moves away from
the pseudo scientific claims of the
numbers system.” He added that
“it should make for an improved
class atmosphere, for there will
be no more quibbling about numbers. There would, I hope, be
more concern for the quality of
a student’s work in terms of his
ability.”

Still undecided is the question
whether or not the University’s
two academic honor lists
the
dean’s list and ranking scholar
designation—are to be continued.
Mr. Tallbott is hopeful they will
be abolished, but indicated that
—

The change at Yale is largely
the result of recommendations
made by the faculty’s Course of
Study Committee, according to

the new grading system will have
important consequences for students regardless of what is done
about the honor lists.

P»9* Fiftnn

CLASSIFIED
TUTORS:

FOR SALE

VOLKSWAGEN, excellent condition,
$1,050.00 or best offer. 875-9875.

1965

Needs some work. Best offer. Call after
6 p.m. 837-3773.
1960 OLDSMOBILE convertible; white, black
top, ful power, snow tires. Must sell
best offer. 837-3773.
FISCHER ALU SKIS, G.S. 210cm. Nevada
Grand Prix bindings.
12m boots. 834-

4962.

When students apply to gradu
ate school in the future, according to Mr. Tallbott, "recommendations are going to be much
more important than they have
been. Graduate schools are going to have to look much more
closely at what faculty members
say about a student’s work."

SNOW TIRES—Corvair 650 700 13. on rims.

The new system is also likely
to end campus-wide competition
for grades. A student’s performance will be compared with the
performances of other students
in his department. At present,
Mr. Tallbott pointed out, students
are ranked by grade average in
spite of the fact that some de
partments give generally higher
grades than others.

FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted to share fur
nished apartment three blocks from campus. Call Nancy or Ann, 837-9775.

The r
tacts or
life.

837-7554.
FIND NEW and used paperbacks and hard
bound books at GRANT Books and
Stamps, 3292 Main St.
1959 DODGE Station Wagon: New snows
with studs, RiH, needs brakes; $50 Rick,
873-2549.
FOR RENT
ROOM. Board optional. Walking distance to
campus. Call 833-7520.
ROOMMATES WANTED

GIRL TO SHARE five room
ly

furnished,

ule walk from
8509.

plus dishw. rasher.
15
campus. Rent: I: $48. Call

min633

experience,

SUB-

rhythm and blues
cent equipment.

band.

Must have de6-7242.

Call Tom, TF
PERSONAL

GIRLS, don't waste your money on comdating. Call 834-4962 for three
puter
eligible, attractive bachelors who are looking
for female counterparts.
INTELLIGENT,
well traveled, interested,
good looking, very busy male graduate
company
student needs
of compatible female in order to survive in Buffalo. Write:
Student, box 60, Kensington Station, Buffalo, 14215.
SHALOM! For gems from the Jewish Bible
call 875-4265 day or night.
IT'S WORKED for many people on campus.
If can work for you. Try computer dating. For free information and application
form write: MATCH MAKER, Room 520,
Genesee Bldg., Buffalo, New York.
LOST
CHEMISTRY 251 lab note book In Acheton,
Call TF 6-5379, Al Schroeder.
FOUND
WOMAN'S BLACK framed glasses.

Main and

Niagara Falls Blvd.,

Bussfop,

885-2942.

MISCELLANEOUS

WANTED

TUTORING:

RIDE WANTED for staff member from
Millersporf and Hopkins ar nd return. Call
Joyce, daytime 831-2806.
STUDENTS

Conserve your

JECTPROFICIENCY will supply you with
students. Submit name, phone and courses
offered to SPECTRUM BOX Cl.

WANT

to

furm

cheaply. Chance to get
mture. Steve, 837-3082.

artment

&gt;ld fur-

French,

832 6468. Low
IERM

Spanish.

other
capable girls for

three

lues., Wed.,

Call

Gina,

fee.

PAPERS and

papers

typed by

20 a sheet. Call

$

Thurs., between 6 9, 895-0440.

tor return of blue, cloth covered,

REWARD
three ring notebook (with notes) left in
305 Dicfendorf on lues., Oct. 25,. R. A.
Bowler, 317 Diefendorf or 834 0717.
quality, used, flat top guitars
(Martin, etc.), bought, sold, repaired—
D'Angelico Strings, 874-0120, eves.

GUITARS:

STOLEN

r

1964 MAROON TEMPEST, license 6 U 3055,
has dent in hood. Any information, call
TF 3-5816 or 16th Precinct. Reward.

BiC Medium

BiC Fine Point

Despite

fiendish torture

Coi
Bill
Ci

dynamic BiC Duo
writes first time,
every time!
me's rtiRnocl pair of

stic k pens wins again
in unending war
against

|
\

ball-point

lou and smear
De spite horrible
pnnislunent by mad

skip

c

.cirntists, UK ''till
writes Hist time, every
tunc Ami no wonder
me n "Dyainile" Hall

I

j

the hardest metal
madr. meased in a
solid brass nose cone
ill not skip, clou
js

\\

smear no matter «
what devilish .dmse
is devised for them
by sadistic students
j
(let the dynamic
me Duo at your
or

Drive a '68' yoongmobile’ from Okkmobtle
’

GM

uJ
?

uin

u.

�Page

Otf

*

•

world
*

focus

*

'IT'J

Champagne
glasses in hand, portable radios tuned to
the voice of Premier Ian Smith beside
their private swimming pools, white
Rhodesians Saturday observed the second
anniversary of their declaration of independence from Great Britain,
In Salisbury, the capital, Rhodesians
are fond of saying they have accomplished
in two years what it took the Americans
six to do in their own battle for independence.
And if private swimming pools may be
taken as a measure of prosperity, the
—

white Rhodesians have done well, indeed.

New pools arc going in at the rate of
nearly one a day and already number one
for every 15 white inhabitants in Salis-

bury.
It is, of course, an oversimplification
of a problem which is drawing an ever
sharper line between black Africans determined to rule their continent and
whites equally determined to hold what
they regard as their own.
And in Rhodesia it is the delermina
lion of 225,000 Europeans to maintain
their rule over 4 million blacks.

Two considerations

parts

4

#oc ninh
cairo
from

question.
Morally, the British are committed to
establishment of an independent Rhodesia under majority rule. And even as the
British Commonwealth loses its economic
meaning and the British seek entry into
the European Common Market, they still
feel responsibility for the disposition of
empire.

our wire

services

by Lilian

m

Waite

The moral responsibility remains even
though the economic sanctions in which
the United States and most others among
the United Nations have joined, admittedly are a failure.
Oil has continued to flow into Rhode-

sia through the Republic of South Africa
and Portuguese Mozambique, the two
other nations most interested in white
supremacy.

Rhodesian asbestos, chrome and cop
per move through South African and Mozambique ports, and familiar brand names
on former imports are being replaced by
development of some 200 new industries
ranging from safety pins to plastics.

Pressures build
The new industries have helped to take
up unemployment arising from the hard
hit tobacco and sugar export industries.
But even as the Rhodesians themselves have gained in confidence, pressures continue to build.

South Africa has established closer
links with Malawi; Lesotho, formerly Basutoland; Botswana, formerly Bechuanaland, and seeks new accords with Kenya

But so long as the Rhodesian question
remains, these efforts cannot be wholly

successful.
The Rhodesians are being pressed to
reach a settlement.
The Rhodesians themselves do not wish
to cut all ties with Britain and still pledge
loyally to the queen.
A new basis for talks is being sought.
If a settlement is to be reached, it
must be somewhere between white Rhodesian determination to maintain the sta
tus quo and the British conscience.

DeGaulle wins budget
PARIS
Cowed by the threat of immediate dissolution of parliament, French
legislators voted to approve the government's controversial $26 billion national
budget for 1968,
Government sources warned National
Assembly members that President Charles
de Gaulle would immediately dissolve the
—

assembly if it rejected the crucial first
reading of the budget.
The nine-month old assembly still has
four years to run.
The budget was approved by a 252
234 vote of the 487 seat house where the
Gaullists hold a one seat majority.
Premier Georges Pompidou took the
floor to appeal for passage of the budget

which he said would spur the economy
The Communist leftist opposition said it
wouldn't.
Unprepared for new election
The government's victory indicated
that opposition parties despite their
claims, were not prepared to face the

Holiday

feud

Arab leaders

soften

Friday, informed sources
CAIRO
said that Egypt wanted a political peace
settlement with Israel and has received
reluctant approval for the move from Algeria, an Arab state which follows a hard
line position in the Mideast crisis.
Qualified Cairo informants said a joint
United States-Soviet Union resolution offered at the United Nations last July was
acceptable to Egypt as a means for solving the dilemma.
This resolution called for Israeli withdrawal from Arab territories occupied in
the war last June without delay and recognized the right of every nation
including Israel
to live in peace and se
curity. The resolution was defeated.
—

—

—

Reported acceptable

In the Friday report, informed sources
said the July draft was acceptable to
Egypt, but that Cairo decided not to
break Arab solidarity and therefore permitted the resolution to be rejected at
the July emergency meeting of the UN
General Assembly.
Observers said Algeria’s approval of
the new Egyptian move may have partially opened the door to peace under the
U.S.-Soviet plan. The door was slammed
last July when Algeria and Syria, meeting in a UN caucus with Arab states,
blackballed the Anicrican-Russian pro-

prospect of another general election by
ganging up on the government.
The Gaullist government was defeated
three limes in the past week in voles
dealing with the budgets of specific ministries. But Pompidou staked the life of
his cabinet on the national budget bill.
Before the key vote, the hostile oppo
sition defeated 244 235 a government pro
posal to introduce advertisements on the
stale-owned radio and television networks.
Expectations at this point were that
the opposition would continue voting
against the government
even on the
national budget pul of pique. But the
temperature in the assembly cooled by
midnight. The deputies approved 244 to
198 a government proposal to ease the
taxation burden of farmers. The budget
bill will pass to the strongly anti Gaullist
but relatively powerless Senate If ap
proved, it will return to the assembly for
a final reading.

Contracts reported

Informed sources said Egypt obtained a
reluctant go-ahead from Algeria for the
political approach to the settlement in recent high-level contacts between Cairo

and Algiers.
In a Cairo statement Wednesday,
Egypt said that the government guaranteed the "right of Israel to exist” but
would never extend recognition to the
Jewish state.
Hassan El Zayyat. the Egyptian in
formation chief, said in a Wednesday
statement that the 1949 armistice agree

hard line

merits which Egypt approved included Israel’s right to live in peace and security
and that the 1949 documents are still
valid in Cairo’s eyes, El Zayatt said Egypt
would oppose any UN resolutions that
did not include a specific call for Israeli
troop withdrawals.

Support Israel

Thursday, State Supreme Court Justice
John C. Bell urged the government to
stand behind Israel in her battle with
Arab neighbors and cut off all foreign
aid to Communist and prb-Communist

nations.

Judge Bell, in a statement, said it was
“ridiculous” of Washington to stand neutral concerning the Middle East.
He explained that the statement was
made because “once in a while a Chief
Justice should be permitted to express
his opinion concerning important matters, especially in times of crises .
Judge Bell said the money saved in
cutting the foreign aid should be used to
finance the war on poverty and Israel’s
fight to preserve her democracy.
Inspiration to West
“From the days of Abraham, Moses
and Solomon, the Israelites, in their tenets and beliefs, have inspired our western world,” he said. Moreover, in recent
years, they have established an oasis of
democracy in the Middle East.”
“How ridiculous of Washington to say
concerning the Mideast war that we are
neutral in thought, word and deed,” he
said.
Judge Bell said it was “high time to
abandon this ridiculous practice of aid
ing those who hate and insult us and are,
in stark reality, our enemies.”
Justice Bell called on “anyone” who
shares his view to “immediately” urge
the President and their congressmen to
end aid to Communist-leaning nations and
turn the money saved over to “the needy
in our country and to Israel, where the
cost of her war for survival and freedom
must be tremendous.”

—

ceasefire possible

Thieu made his prediction during a
tour of the battlefield at Loc Ninh near
the Cambodian border where American
troops killed nearly 1000 Communists in

Ninh Thieu flew to the
provincial capital of Phuoc Binh and said
he still intended to send a letter to North
Vietnamese president Ho Chi Minh proposing they meet to discuss peace talks.
Thieu had said in one of his campaign speeches that he would contact Ho
after the inauguration and propose a
meeting to discuss possible peace talks.
“1 still plan to do it," he said "I can’t
yet tell you when I would like to do it

—

Nguyen Van Thieu

three days of vicious

Interior Secretary Stewart L. Udall and
members of Congress were among
those participating in the official opening of one of four jogging trails at
Mains Point along the Potomac River.

Jogging down
the river

Informed sources said the new development left only Syria out on a limb.

Gen William C. Westmoreland, com
mander of U S forces in South Vietnam,
and vice president Nguyen Cao Ky accompanied Thieu on his tour of Loc
Ninh’s defenses. Thieu flew by helicopter

NINH

—UPI Telephoto

posal.

South Vietnamese Presi
said allied forces
would probably observe three separate
ceasefires between Christmas and the
lunar New Year next February.
LOC

Ll-

3%jt

and Uganda.

For Britain, which has attempted to
force the downfall of the rebellious Smith
government through use of rigid sanctions, it is both a moral and an economic

-

-&lt;W

Apartheid rulers wine, dine
SALISBURY, Rhodesia

'■aV*

Salisbury

compiled

dent

Tuesday, November 14, 1967

The Spectrum

Sixteen

fighting.

“For the purpose of humanitarianism
and respect for religion, I believe we will
observe a 24-hour ceasefire at Christmas

and at New Year’s and for 48 hours at
Tet, the lunar New Year, like last year,"

Thieu said.
It was Thieu's first trip to the field
since his inauguration 12 days ago.

from Saigon.
From Loc

between Vietnamese
with frankness
and not for the purposes of publicity."
—

—

—UPI Telephoto

u

I OUng

warrior

The battle over, a 14-year-old South
Vietnamese soldier enjoys a candy bar
as he carries a rifle over his s houlder
at the Allied fortress at Loc Ninh recenlly

.

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                  <text>&lt;div&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>The Spectrum
Rockefeller proposes Buffalo site
for Alcoholism Research Institute
by Linda Laufer
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

Governor Rockefeller has recommended to the State
Legislature that an Alcoholism Research Institute be established in Buffalo. If funds are approved, this Institute should
become an integral part of the State University of Buffalo.
Once the funds are approved, plans can be made concerning how the Institute will fit into the long range plans
of the University.
According to Dr. Douglas
M. Surgenor, Provost of
Health Sciences, it will likely have a distinguished professional staff, offices, laboratories, libraries, and probably a small number of clinical research facilities.
Dr. Surgenor expressed his
pleasure at “the idea of an Al-

coholism Research Institute located on the University because
it gives us an outstanding chance
to express something we all be
lieve in
Since the State University of
Buffalo is a major asset of New
York State, Dr. Surgenor feels
that by working with the State
in this way, the University can
serve the State and make a contribution to the well being of the
people.

Local urging
Governor Rockefeller recommended in his annual Message

to the Legislature in Jan. 1966
that an institute on alcoholism
be established. In May, 1966, a
committee was appointed to develop a plan for this Institute.
Serving on this committee was
Dr. S. Mouchly Small, Professor
and Chairman of the Department
of Psychiatry.
Locally, a task force was appointed to write a proposal to
the governor’s committee. In addition to this task force, letters
came from other agencies within
the city and county urging that
Buffalo be accepted as the site.

Buffalo

most comprehensive unit of the
State University system,"
“In addition to being mutidisciplinary, this institute can be a
focal point of research on the
problem of alcoholism which
could be utilized not only by
our own faculty, but by the faculty of other colleges and universities in the area and throughout the SUNY system.”

Enthusiastic reaction

University reaction
to
Governor’s recommendation

the

has

been enthusiastic.
Ur, S. Mouchly Small said:
‘Governor Rockefeller's selection
of the Buffalo area as the site
of an Alcoholism Research Institute recognizes the great interest in these problems shown
by the University and many of
our community agencies.
"Alcoholism is a worldwide
health problem and we are hope-

ful

”

Gov. Rockefeller
gives city nod for establishment
of research center.
In June, 1967, the task force
presented its proposal and in
October, 1967, Governor Rockefeller recommended Buffalo as
the site of the institute.

to

Dr. Lawrence
According
Cappiello, assistant to the exec-

utive vice president and chairman of the task force: “It will be
a multidisciplinary research ap
proach to the problems of alcoholism. One of the reasons this
university could mount a more
comprehensive program is be
cause academically we are the

(

that this Institute will be-

come one of the nation's lead
ing research centers.
“The responsibility is great,
the opportunities arc legion and
the challenge to achieve meaningful and significant contributions in this field is most exciting.
“Us close association not only
with the Health Sciences Center
but with the total University
complex will insure the most
comprehensive approach to the
study of alcoholism.”

Chapter: No comment

AAUP denounces protests
against recruiters on campus
WASHINGTON (CPS)
The
American Association of University Professors has condemned recent student demonstrations designed to stop campus interviews
or to prevent speakers invited
to the campus from speaking.
The AAUP position was issued
in the form of a resolution
adopted by the AAUP Council,
the organization’s policy making
board, which consists of 30 elected representatives.

that larger freedom.”
Mr. Schwartz said he has proposed that "any recruiter coming
to campus be required to participate in an open forum to answer questions if students so
request." If the recruiter refuses
to meet this requirement, then
he should not be permitted on
the campus, he added.

"Strong obligation"

solution.
He said, "While there are some
points where we (NSA) would
support a student strike if it was
necessary to achieve a tactical
objective for student power or
educational reform, we can in
no way support demonstrations
where the goal is to prevent
students from seeing recruiters or
to expel recruiters from campus
because of the organization which
they represent."
cies like the Vietnam war.
His proposal would seriously
affect military recruiters, who

—

Effort to resolve the CIA-Dow controversy continues as
two resolutions were formulated to be presented for discussion at the Faculty Senate meeting Monday.

One resolution, written by the Faculty .Senate Executive
Committee Tuesday, includes the proposal of appropriate
disciplinary action for students who cause or threaten bodily
harm to recruiters, or even “obstruct a group or person
invited to the campus by other members of the University.”
The Other, a proposal for- Icnce in situations of conflict
wh lc preserving the fullest pos
mulated by four professors in s,b
ie P
eluding George Hochfield of
J* chief cause of disorder
The
English department, asks on this or otht,r campuscs is not
the r,
that recruiters “present their (he irresponsibility of students,
positions before the Univer- it is the stubborn continuation
sity community as a whole, of an unjust and futile war by a
Kovcrnment unresponsive to the
SO that their points of view
moral torment this war inflicts
.
,
.
u
subjected
to chal-i
may be
upon the gencration compen ed
lenge and inquiry.
U fight it. The Faculty Senate
,

.

.

,

•

,

TT "'TT

,

.

(

Counter-proposal
The Hochfield proposition
states in part:

“The postponement of visits to
this campus by recruiters frqm
the Dow Chemical Co. and the
CIA has raised no substantial
issue of academic freedom. Re
•

cruitment is not an educational
function of the University , . .
it is merely an activity permitted
and assisted by the University as
a service both to students and

Journalists
attacked

generally arc not
discuss important
I.ocally, George
the
Department
spokesman for

permitted to
military poli-

llochfield
of

,

of

English,

the AAUP, said

that the local chapter of the
AAUP has taken no action on
the resolution. He said that the
local AAUP has not yet decided
to accept or reject the resolution.

Faculty Senate will act in Dow-CIA
controversy; two resolutions drafted

,

employers.”

"The threat of violence, however, by any of the groups or
individuals involved in a campus
dispute constitutes a potentially
serious danger to academic freedom . . . Such violence is equally
destructive whether it emanates
front a student group or from
armed police called in to suppress a student demonstration,
Therefore the first obligation of
faculty and students alike is to
seek the means of avoiding vio•

Twelve Negroes invaded the
office of the Cater, San Francisco State College student
newspaper, and beat the editor
and staff members. Here, Cater
staffers bend over editor Jim
Vaszko. He was taken to the
campus medical center for
treatment of undetermined injuries. No motive was given for
the attack.

National Student President Edward Schwartz endorsed the re-

The resolution says “action by
individuals or groups to prevent
speakers invited to the campus
from speaking, to disrupt the
operations of the institutions in
the course of demonstrations, or
to obstruct and restrain other
members of the academic com
munity and campus visitors by
physical force is destructive of
the pursuit of learning and of
a free Society. All components of
the academic community are un
der a strong obligation to protect
its processes from these tactics."
Robert Van Wacs, associate secretary of the AAUP, said, “We're
all for dissent. But we think all
persons, regardless of their beliefs, should have the Santo freedoms, Our concern is that the
larger freedom (freedom
of
speech) not be eroded away by
particular forms of protest which
we think may be a challenge to

,

—UPI Telephoto

NSA endorsement

calls for an end to the war in
Vietnam , .
“It is time for the faculty as
a whole to accept responsibility
for an obligation it has hitherto
left solely in the hands of ad
minislrative officers, namely, the
understanding of student aspira
.”

•

tions and the definition of the
role of the campus in their expression and realization. The issue concerning recruitment has
now become one which must be

resolved through the collaboralion of faculty and students, participating as equals. The Executive
Committee of the Faculty Senate
should, as soon as it is elected,
create a body to represent it for
this purpose."
“Should recruitment be continued. the Faculty Senate recommends that any person or
company or governmental agency
permitted to recruit on campus
be required to accept a commit
ment to the traditional academic
•

standards of free speech. Before
interviews with
students, recruiters should be
available, under terms to be defined by faculty-student consults
lion, to present their positions
holding private

before the University community
as a whole, so that their points
of view may be subjected to

challenge and inquiry.”

One proposal
The Executive Committee pro

posal says:

"that the Faculty Senate supaction taken by the
Vice President for Student Af
fairs, as approved by the President. in postponing campus re•

ports the

cruiting by Dow Chemical Company and the Central Intelligence

further considthe issue by the
Faculty and student body.”
“that the maintenance of the
opportunity for all legal groups
to partake in recruiting on the
campus is in keeping with the
responsibility of the University
Agency, pending

eration

of

•

to its students and to society, as
is the freedom of the Faculty
and students to express, in a
peaceful manner, opposition to
the ideas or actions of the recruiter,”
•

that if members of the Uni-,

versity block access or in other
ways obstruct a group or person
invited to the campus by other
members of the University, appropriate disciplinary action
should be taken by University

authorities. If any individual or
group causes or threatens bodily
harm to another individual or
group or damages property, the
matter becomes, in addition, one
for the civil authorities to deal
with.

�Pag* Two

Th

Prof. Hawkland to

•

Friday, Novambar 10, 1967

Spectrum

Open House at Allenhurst is success;

give

University reports talk weekly visitation rights are approved
"series

Dial

encompasses

many

semester, the Allenhurst House
Council has decided to h,old an

aspects of academic and University interest, will continue Tuesday at 3:00 p.m.

Open House every Sunday afternoon from 1 to 10 p.m.

Professor William D, Hawkland, Provost of the Faculty of
Law and Jurisprudence, wil speak
in Room 231 of Norton Hall on
the “Past, Present and Future of
the Faculty of Law and Juris-

|

■

Goodyear held its first open
house of the semester Oct. 29,
abandoning, for the first time,

prudence.”

Mr. Hawkland

attended

the policy of enforcing certain
rules which were upheld in the
past. These were in line with
what Goodyear House Council
deemed “individual responsibility” on the part of all residents.

the

University of Minnesota and Columbia Law School and was a
professor of law at various colleges, including N.Y.U. and Illinois, before he was appointed
dean of the School of Law at
the State University of Buffalo in
1964.

He is author of
examination of a
mercial code and
written a second
“Commercial Code

a two-volume
uniform comhas recently
book entitled
Work Book.”

The controversy over the question of weekly visitations still
remains unresolved in Goodyear
Hall.

of the residents of Goodhowever, don’t favor visitations on a weekly basis, viewing
the situation as an “invasion of
Many

year,

Dean Hawkland

will continue University Report
series

privacy.”

After discussion on each floor,
the opinions of the girls concern-

Mob president extends invitation to
CIA for open forum on UB campus
An "invitation” has been extended to the Central Intelligence
Agency to speak at an open forum on the State University of
Buffalo campus.

right of an organization to invite
speakers,” he said, “we sent a
letter to Mr. E.D. Echols, Director of Personnel of the CIA saying:

The letter of invitation, sent

“Ever since its inception, one
of the aims of the Student Mo-

Monday, was written by Michael
P. McKeating, president of the
Buffalo Student Mobilization
Committee.

The invitation was extended
"to clarify the issues,” claimed
Mr. McKeating. “Utilizing the

bilization Committee has been to

keep the student body appraised
of the activities of our government.

“We would, therefore, like to
cordially invite you to come to

our campus and speak at an open
forum, so as to acquaint any
students who may be considering
employment with your organization, as well as other interested
students, of the various job opportunities which your organization has to offer in Guatemala,
Bolivia, the Dominican Republic,
Indonesia, Ghana, the Republic
of the Congo, Angola, Mozambique, Murraroa, French Guiana,
or any of the other interesting
places where you have branch

offices.”

UB plays host to Peace Corps team
A team of five returned Peace
Corps volunteers will visit the
State University of Buffalo campus the week of Nov. 13 through
17. The group hopes to promote
interest in the Peace Corps and
to assist students who wish to

They will also be available for
presentations to any student organization during the week. Re-

quests for such appearances
should be made to the Peace
Corps liason, Jerome S. Fink, at
831-3311.

become members.

The

five Corps members,
Shea,
Skowronski,
Charles Amorisino, Linda Grey,
and George Coakley, will speak
to various University classes.
Claire

Two tables will be set up in
conjunction with the visit, one in
Norton Hall, and another in the
Health Sciences Building,
Movies about Peace Corps activities in Brazil, Kenya, and

India will be shown every day
except Wednesday at 12 noon
and 3 p.m. in the Conference

Theater,

A language aptitude test will
be given for those who wish to

join the Peace Corps. This test,
which is in English, merely measures one’s ability to learn a (foreign language, and is non-competitive. Information abdSt / the
test can be obtained aPeitner of
the Peace Corps tables. (/,

Council meeting of Oct. 30.

Visitations were defined at that
time as applying only to situations where a guest has been invited by a resident, who must
meet her guest in the lobby and
accompany him upstairs on the
elevator. It was suggested that
visitations be held on Friday and
Saturday evenings and perhaps
tested weekly on a trial basis.
A committee was formed to resolve the conflict over visitations
by devising a questionnaire which

PATTY LABELL &amp;
THE BLUE BELLS

Sunday
moving

violations

.

nA

Y N/r

“The World of Ballet” will be
‘seen’ through the lecture of
Alicia Markova, Sunday afternoon
at 3 p.m. in room 140 Capen Hall.
Mme. Markova, called “the best
ballet dancer” by New
York Times dance critic John
Martin, will describe the work
required to create a ballet performance. She will also discuss
the various styles of ballet.
living

Trained in the tradition of
classical ballet, Mme. Markova
studied under the Russian master Diaghilev.

Her most famous role is that
of “Giselle.” She has been called
the “embodiment of Romantic

ballet.”

Mme. Markova retired from the
stage in 1963. She now is director of the Metropolitan Opera
Ballet and devotes her time to

teaching,

producing,

lecturing

and doing choreography.

The lecture is open to all students and the public. The admission is 50 cents for students, $1
for faculty and staff, and $1.50
for the public.

Alicia Markova
"Besf living ballet dancer" will
lecture Sunday in Capen Hall.

Norton housing to be changed
“Hopefully, housing changes in
Norton Hall will take place within the next two weeks,” according to Phil Henry, chairman of
the House committee of the University Union Activities Board.

The seven-man Board, with
three representatives from the
Norton Hall administrative office,
passed housing changes at the
House Committee meeting last
There is a slight delay while
the Board waits for the Purchas-

ing Dept, on Winspear Avenue
to move to its new offices. The
Alumni Office will then move
into the vacated Winspear Avenue offices. The Alumni Office
was asked to vacate its Norton

office this summer because it
does not serve the students in
any important capacity, accord-

ing to Mr. Henry.
The following activities are affected by the changes:

The Student Activities Room
will be moved from Room 339 to
Room 329; facilities for the Undergraduate Psychology Association will be in Room 339. The
Pan Hellenic and Inter-Fraternity
Councils will be combined into
Room 346; The Catalyst from
Room 324 to Room 342; Humor
Magazine to Room 324; and the
Inter-Residence Council and Commuter Council to Room 215.
When the Alumni Office leaves
Room 359, the University Union
Activities Board will move in.

The Midnight Oil is relocated
in Room 311 and the Quadrangle
will be moved from its present
offices in Tower Hall to Room
359.

Wednesday
Night
WILMER and

BRANTON WOOD

Clement, although they also
held an open house during Fall
Weekend have not as yet discussed the possibility of visitations on a weekly basis.
Tower Hall already has a policy of visitations on a weekly
basis in effect.

Alicia Markova to lecture
on "The World of Ballet"

Thursday.

INFERNO

a secret balot vote on the issue.
Contained in the survey will be
questions concerning such areas
as frequency of visitations (weekly, monthly, or on Special Weekends only), hours and rules.

the dukes

A complete meal
A
C
PAST
ENT
TAKE-OUT service

EWci

1551 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.
Next to Twin Fair
Call 837-4300
Open 11 a.m. to 2 a.m.
Weekends Until 4 a.m.

BANQUET

FACILITIES

BRIDAL SHOWERS

WEDDING RECEPTIONS
643 MAIN STREET
In

Buffalo's

Thaatra

District

Call 852-0008
Open Daily

11

a.m. to

4

a.m.

For Charcoal Broiled CHICKEN at Its Finest

�Friday, November 10, 1967

'Universi

The Spectrum

of the 21st

Pag* The**

Century'

Amherst master plan being studied dateline news, Nov. 10

versity town was disclosed in the
“University Report" Tuesday by
Dr. Robert Ketter, Vice President for Facilities Planning.
In describing definite plans,
Dr. Ketter called the Amherst
site “the largest single architectural undertaking in the country
and possibly in the world.” The
new campus project may be exceeded in magnitude only by
Brasilia, the capital city of Bra-

zil, he said.
Designs for the “University of
the 21st Century” are being completed in New York City by architect Gordon Bunschaft of the
architectural firm of Skidmore,
Owings and Merrill.
The master plan is now under
careful examination of Dr. Ketter, President Meyerson, Dr.

president

and

members

ol

State Construction Fund.
Both University and State Construction Fund officials must approve the master plan before construction can begin. “If we all
agree that the plan meets our
needs, I hope that a public announcement of the specific details can be made in mid-December,” Dr. Ketter said.

Late summer
Ground could then be broken
in late summer for the construction of the first three colleges on
the Amherst site if the plans are
quickly approved. The colleges
would be ready for occupancy by

1969-70.

Students living in these new
colleges will commute to the
Main St. campus until the seven

on the new campus.
If the plans are adopted several colleges will overlook the
Ellicott Creek, one of the few
scenic features on the Amherst
property.
Other features of the plan include multi-story parking ramps
which will handle 18,000 to 24,000 cars. Traffic surveys have indicated that the campus road system will have to carry 12,000 to
15,000 cars an hour.

Relocate expressway
One

major entrance

University community.

“Amherst

business

—

TI16 BUiiaio Board ot Education has given final

a tentative contract with the city public school teachers.

The pact, covering only noneconomic issues, is subject to a
ratification vote by the 2,000 member Buffalo Federation of Teachers.
The agreement is the first in the city under the new Public
Employe Fair Employment Act.
CLEVELAND
Wasting no time in fulfilling a campaign pledge,
Mayor-elect Carl B. Stokes Wednesday night replaced Cleveland’s
an
police chief in
attempt to improve relations with the Negro
—

community.
Stokes had promised to oust Wagner because he said the chief
was insensitive to the problems of police relations with the Negro
community.
WASHINGTON
Lt, Gen. Lewis B. Hershcy says his new "get
tough” directive against antiwar demonstrators who disrupt military
recruitment was issued after consultation with the White House.
—

to the
will necessitate the relocation of the Lockport Expressway. Then Millersport H ghway
would be the only road bisecting
the Amherst site.
Dr. Ketter also reported lhat a
University town "must evolve adjacent to the new Amherst campus. There is an essential need
for bookstores, clothing shops
and other businesses located
nearby to serve the needs of the
campus

BUFFALO

approval to

interests

may consider building this town.

Perhaps the State University of
Buffalo may follow the example
of other universities and form a
corporation to acquire the need-

ed land which then will be sold

to private interest,” Dr. Ketter
said.

The selective service chief recommended that local draft boards
order induction or assist in the prosecution of what he said were
draft law violators.
The White House had no comment on whether or to what extent
it was involved in the drafting of Hcrshey's letter.
Hershey maintained that a college deferment from the draft
is no longer in the national interest when the student holder attempts
to interfere with the process of raising manpower for the armed
forces.
CAPE KENNEDY
Saturn 5, the world’s most powerful rocket,
was launched today on a mission that could give the United States
a fresh lead in the race to land men on the moon.
MIDEAST
Two peace resolutions, one unacceptable to Israel
and the other branded a "step backward" by the Arabs, came up for
—

—

debate in the United Nations today.
Hussein continued his talks in Washington with U.S. leaders,
including President Johnson.
Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban Wednesday rejected one
resolution before the U.N. Security Council and was critical of
another. He said a draft sponsored by India and demanding Israeli
withdrawal to prewar boundaries was "really an Arab draft."

Republicans make clean sweep in Erie
County elections; Mrs. Slominski wins
Dr. Ketter
gives details

Dr. Robert Ketter, speaking before the Student Senate Wednesday, gave details of the
master plan.

Student Senate hears
Amherst campus plans
by Joel Kleinmen
Spectrum

Stuff

Reporter

Vice President for Facilities
Planning Robert L. Ketter promised that he will “pull out all the
stops
for a ground breaking
late next summer” for the new
State University of Buffalo campus at Amherst.
Speaking before the Student
Senate Wednesday he added that
the Amherst site “must be occupied completely by the 1974-75
academic year,” and will contain
“28,000 full time equivalent students” with a total enrollment of
“40,000 actively pursuing degree
...

programs."

A concept for a master plan of
the campus has been devised by
State University officials and the
architectural and construction
firms that hold contracts for its
development, according to Dr.
Ketter. If approved, the concept
will be subjected to intense discussion to ascertain whether it
provides sufficient “flexibility,
identification for students, and
interaction with the community.”

Heterogeneous colleges

Because of its overwhelming
size, the university complex will
consist of a multitude of heterogeneous colleges of 1000 students
that will include both residents
and non-residents. It will provide
for the opportunity for informal
learning, including seminars designed to “counterbalance the efforts of departments to have welldefined curriculums.” Dr. Ketter
added that a “person can get
what he wants out of education”

through such a system.
Housing facilities on campus
will not be “vertically segregated” according to class, and apartments lacking present dormitory
restrictions are being considered,
as are mixed male and female
housing.
Dr, Ketter voiced concern for
the integration of commuting students into university life, as he
recommended that college facilities be specifically adapted to
their needs. Although opposed by
some State University officials,

The Republican Party stole the
limelight in Erie County Tuesday
as it made a clean sweep in important area elections.
Incumbent Ed Rath claimed the
greatest victory as he defeated
District Attorney Michael Dillon
by over 30,000 votes in the race
for County Executive.
Mr. Rath’s biggest showing
was in the Democrat-oriented
City of Buffalo where he trailed

Mr. Dillon by a surprisingly small
plurality of 7968 voles.
Republican Robert Grimm was
re-elected to his post as County

Clerk.
Mrs. Alfreda Slominski was cas-

ily elected Councilman-at-Large,
giving the GOP minority a gain
of one seat on the Buffalo Common Council. Mrs. Slominski is
a former member of the Board of

Education, where she became
well known for her criticisms of
the school racial balancing policies of Slate Education Commissioner James Allen.

Cole defeated
Also
elected Councilman. )!
Large was Democrat Andrew J.
Morriscy, an incumbcnl. The Rev.
Herman F. Cole, a Peace Parly
candidate, received only 4026 of
the more than 276,000 voles cast.
In the contest for University
-

—Walluk

District Councilman. William F.
Buyers was re elected. Also elected to the Council were: Gerald
Wahlcn, Charles Black, Raymond
Lcwand rowski, Gus Franczyk,
Horace Johnson, John Elfin, and
William Buyers and Carl Perla.
Voters in the county followed

the rest of the stale in soundly
rejecting the proposed state constitution. while passing the huge
transportation bond program. The
defeat of the constitution was
seen as a setback for State Assembly Speaker Anthony J. Tra
via, a Democrat and chairman of
the Constitutional Convention.

“very great interaction between
commuting students and residents
should be allowed,” stated the

Vice President.

Other proposed features of "one
largest universities in the
nation” include a computerized
library system, an on-campus
rapid transit complex, and a 20,000 seat stadium with a field
house holding 12,000.

of the

New Publications Board

In other Senate activities, the

proposed Publications Board
Charter was debated and approved as amended. The Board will
appropriate money to all campus
publications and will consist of
"four non permanent members selected by the seven members of
the Board on a rotating basis
to serve for one year. Selection
should be on an equitable basis,
providing the opportunity for
each publication to be represent-

Students

option to reinstate the editor of

—..L.

ed in turn.” The Board has the
the "dominant
tion.”

campus publica-

'

i

trarlrc

HiaRC U«HI

Buffalo's first snowfall of the season left a
striking impression (with the help of a few
hundred students) in the Norton Fountain area.
Photo was taken from The Spectrum office by
sla ff photographer David Yafes.

�I

Friday, November 10, 1967

The Spectrum

Page Four

Constitution wisely rejected

I

ht\

The rejection of the proposed constitution came as no
surprise, although its defeat by a 3 to 1 margin was greater
than most expected.

c-

II

&amp;

It’s always interesting to see the reactions of those who
have been defeated, and Assembly Speaker Anthony J.

s

•&lt;.

4,

11

The rejection was obviously a crushing defeat for Mr.
Travia, but he unquestionably invited that defeat. His insistence upon a package presentation was an insult to any

IS

clear-thinking voter.
Now Mr. Travia has announced that he will work for
retention of “the best features.” And all the time we
thought he liked the whole constitution.

|||

Ml

Perhaps now the legislators of the State can get down
to the business of providing legislation which would pre-

HE OAMS

serve the better provisions of the defeated constitution.
Let’s hope that Mr. Travia’s lead does not damage those

CQNVPTTICNV

MOUTH ISA BREACH
CfTHE GENEVA/ &gt;

prospects.

Repeal Blaine
One of the features that should be salvaged from the
defeated constitution is the repeal of the so-called Blaine
Amendment.
It’s about time this State lifted the out dated ban on
aid to parochial schools. Parochial schools, as well as public
schools, must keep pace with the growing demands of
higher quality education.
Unless we are willing to see the parochial school go
out of business, the State must provide some type of aid.
The other option, of course, is for parochial schools to
offer less, thereby limiting the educational opportunities
of non-public school children. That seems to be a poor
alternative when we should be realizing more and more
the need for better educated citizens.
There are approximately 1,000,000 non-public school
students in New York State as opposed to 3,200,000 public
school students. If parochial schools closed, it would cost
the taxpayers more than $800,000,000 per year to accommodate the increase of students in public schools. And this
is ignoring new building costs.
The parochial school is a part of our culture, and it
has a definite place in American society. It should not be
destroyed economically, just as it should not be destroyed
legally.
The delegates at the constitutional convention this
summer realized the need to eliminate the restrictions imposed by the Blaine Amendment. The New York State
Board of Regents has realized that need.
It remains now for the Legislature and for other
responsible citizens of this state to call for the repeal
of Blaine. We must begin to work for better educational
facilities for the entire State.

WNY and the University
The sneak-preview of the new Amherst campus that
was offered this week by Dr. Robert L. Ketter, vice president for facilities planning, pointed out that the building
of the new University will be of no small significance. He
termed it “the largest single architectural undertaking in
the country and possibly in the world.”
This should illustrate to the citizens of Western New
York that the State University is making quite an investment in this area. It's unfortunate that most residents
here have not begun to appreciate that fact.
The University has made many efforts to reach out
into the community. Those efforts continue each day. But
in order to be successful, the University needs reciprocity.
The community must make a genuine effort to learn
about and understand the University. Only then can we
build bridges that will truly prove beneficial to all concerned.

Many civic leaders have realized the need for better
University-community relations. But that's only a beginning.
The Town of Amherst, which faces what may be its greatest
transition, must make the greatest effort.
By the time this University moves to Amherst, we
must have made appreciable gains. A community working
with and encouraging the University can be a great asset.

In return, Western New York can only benefit.

Area residents should begin to appreciate the State
University of Buffalo. The expansion that is occurring here
could just as well have been planned for Stony Brook or

Albany.

'A new ultimatum—either we negotiate Or they send Hubert Humphrey to talk us to death!'

Readers
writings

Or perhaps...
by Barry Holtzclaw

What

?

Woody Cole

only got

4000 votes ?

Impossible? Yes.
At one voting machine, only one vote was recorded for Rev, Herman Cole, Jr, in Tuesday’s
election for City Councilman-at-large. Fourteen
voters signed affidavits saying that they voted for
Cole at that machine. One district didn’t even have
his name on the ballot.
At one polling place, the lever for the PEACE
candidate mysteriously jammed.
These were the instances reported. Undoubtedly there were others.
On the television reports of the elections results, no votes appeared opposite Cole’s name.
Officials of the local stations merely said that the
mistake originated with the information sources,
and not with their own stations.
If the bearded professor from Buffalo State
represented no real threat to the machines of
Buffalo politics, then why the mysterious blacklisting? Or was it that the issues he raised were
of a too controversial nature to be given any publicity? And is granting merely fair and equal
election coverage and exposing election irregularities really beyond the capabilities, or concerns,
of the local news media? Apparently so.

Across

the nation

local elections hinted at

some significant trends in the American political
scene.

Mrs. Louise Hicks, the white backlash candidate, was defeated soundly in her bid to become
Boston’s first woman mayor. A “solid” Negro vote

for winner Kevin White is credited with defeating
the supporter of “neighborhood schools.”
Carl B, Stokes edged Seth Taft to become the
first elected Negro mayor in a major U.S. city.
Two years ago he lost to incumbent Ralph Locher
by nearly the same margin which defeated Taft
this year. This time Stokes had the backing of both
city newspapers, the Democratic Party, and organized labor.
Negro Democrat Richard Hatcher won a 1400
vote victory over Joseph Radigan in the mayoralty
election in Gary, Ind. Radigan refused to concede
defeat, charging there were more votes than voters,
but the Justice Department has already issued indictments against election officials, charging that
hundreds of Negro names were removed from the
voting rolls and names of ficticious whites added.
The fact that National Guard troops and state
troopers ringed the city in the event of any “violent” reaction to the election results, a unique
occurrence in the generally sedate American political setting, was, in the context of the mood of
the nation, taken as commonplace.
In San Francisco, 37% of the city's voters said
“Yes” to a special resolution calling for an immediate cease-fire and withdrawal of U.S. forces
from Vietnam.
In New Jersey, the GOP recaptured the state
legislature, sweeping two-thirds of the seats in the
senate and general assembly, in what must be
considered a direct slap at the Democratic Party
and President Johnson. Sen. Clifford Case (R-NJ)
one of Washington’s more outspoken doves, said
before the election that votes for the Democrats
would “be construed as support for President
Johnson and his policies in Vietnam.”
Enough said. In many, areas of the country
local governments are reacting positively, in varying degrees, to the forces demanding progressive
political change.
In other areas, like Mississippi and Buffalo,
local politicians are dragging communities down
into the quagmire of their petty reactionary
politics.

Oberlin: 'misdirected idealism'
To the Editor:
Pleased as I was to see pictures of my former
Alma Mater, dear old Oberlin, on page 12 of Friday’s Spectrum, your coverage of the protest left
me raging. One sees pictures of Oberlinites surrounding the recruiter’s ear and of the president
of the college “telling students to make way so he
can pass.” Of course you do not hesitate to add that
the protest was broken up with tear gas and water
hoses. But with typical negligence you failed to
mention that the protest denied the rights of free
assembly and free speech.
I do not care who comes to the campus and who
protests as long as I can talk with anyone I want to.
Oberlin is a fine example of misdirected idealism. It could more profitably protest against the
death of the small college system or against overcrowded classes. (Just imagine a school of 2300 students having introductory language courses of 40
students per class or an introductory sociology
course with 150 students.)
Of course I recognize the limitations of space
and information available, but you really should
have tried harder, v
Richard Mowrey

Letter writer wants revenge
To the Editor:

Your (most kindly) published (on Nov. 7) version of a letter of mine contains such egregious
misprints and line-shuffling that I really must protest my apparent illiteracy. The letter was indeed
over-long, but I felt the path to my last paragraph
had to be cut broadly were that paragraph to have
any force. As published it manifests little more
than bumbling confusion, and just where I least
needed it.
True, you nicely corrected my spelling of
“commitment,’ but why ‘Grand Mariner’ (Ahab
maybe, but a liquor never brewed) rather than
‘Grand Marnier,’ or ‘facilities’ rather than ‘faculties?’ Was this last your little editorial on their
indistinguishability?
I do, like anyone might, request correction, but
barring that, would you dispatch your proofreader
to the nearest CIA recruitment table? If they take
and use him, I’ll feel amply revenged.
Gray MacArthur
every
The Spectrum is published twice-weekly
Tuesday and Friday
during the regular academic
Buffalo.
University
of New York at
the State
3435 Main Street. Buffalo, New York 14214. Offices
are located at 355 Norton Hall. Circulation: 15,000.
—

—

year at

Editor-in-Chief—MICHAEL L D’AMICO
Managing Editor—RICHARD R. HAYNES
Asst. Managing Editor—RICHARD SCHWAB
Business Manager—SAMUEL A. POWAZEK
Advertising Manager—DAVID E. FOX
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Layout
David L. Sheedy
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Asst.
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Asst
Copy
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Hailpern
Asst.
City
Daniel Lasser
Joscelyn
Lilian Waite Photo.
Edward
Asst.
Asst.
David Yates
Feature Barry C. Holtzclaw
&amp;
Circulation
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Promotion
Asst.
Sports
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The Spectrum is a member of the United States Stu
dent Press Association and the Associated Collegiate
Press. The Spectrum is served by: United Press International, Associated Collegiate Press Service, Gannett
News Service, and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate.
Represented for national advertising by National Edu
cational Advertising Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave.,
New York. N. Y. Republication of all news dispatches
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wihout the express consent of the
editor-in-chief. Rights of republication of all other
matter herein are also reserved.
Second class

Editorial

postage paid at Buffalo, New York.
is determined by the Editor-in-Chief.

policy

�Friday,

November 10, 1967

The Spectrum

Constitution article criticized

BELOW OLYMPUS

Pa*» Fhr*

By Interlandi

To the Editor:

It is obvious that your editorial writer and
Daniel Lasser are following that great American
characteristic of arguing and writing about a document which they have not read. Both your editorial
and your article demonstrates that neither writer
are

Your editorial writer in his mention of the
article in the Constitution in regard to State debt
and borrowing does not realize that most of the
State debt in recent years has not been voted in
referendum. The most blatant example and most
apparent to you as a student at the University is
the bonds issued to pay the costs of the expansion
of the State University. These bonds have not
been voted upon, nor has their amount ever been
announced to the general public,

iW.yWf'

C/A-Dow forum criticized
To the Editor:

A few general comments on the “Free Speech
Forum.”
1. It is interesting to note how the tedious rules
of the debate society effectively obstructed any
real discussion between the contending parties.
Thanks to the future bureaucrats of America.
2. I hope the audience noted that the most
vehement speaker for the affirmative side of the
resolution, who proclaimed that he would speak
to and work for any company he pleased, was the
least interested in free speech at all, as shown by
his responses to questions. Such minds don’t really
require such luxuries as free speech, they will accept anything which appeals to dull, immoral, and
uncritical brains. An ideal cog for the fascist state.
3. The speaker who lost so many relatives to
Russian and German genocide apparently fails to
realize that there could be such a thing as American genocide. But I suppose he doesn’t have any
relatives in Southeast Asia, If he did, his perspective might be a better one. Incidentally, here was
another individual interested in meaningful dia-

"Shades of the Edsel car

To the Editor:
In my letter to the editor, published in the
Nov. 7 issue, either your members of the copy
staff or your printer misread or misprinted. I had
said in my letter, “Be careful of your pointed headlines.” Again, be careful of your headlines. If
your copy people or whoever writes headlines for
your articles does not read the entire article he

!"

The Lighter Side
by Dick West

Of all the legends and folk tales that have been handed
down through the years, none illustrates universal truth
so well as the story of “The Emperor’s New Clothes.”
To refresh your memory, this is a story about an emperor who liked to appear before his subjects naked. Only
he was a few centuries ahead of his time
In those days, public nudity
was not as socially acceptable as
it is now. So the emperor con
suited one of his wise men about
the problem.
“I’ve got a great idea, your
majesty, sir,” the wise man said,
“We’ll use a cover story. When
you go out in the altogether,
we’ll tell your subjects that you
are showing off your new pinstripe suit.”
:

Kid sparks show

The monarch did as the wise
men advised, and sure enough
his subjects followed him into
the credibility gap. All except
one blabber-mouth little kid.
Now in case you don’t recognize it, the universal truth at
work here is that people have a
deep psychological need to feel
that their leaders are smarter
logue.
than they are. It gives them a
sense of security.
4. In the end, Jeremy Taylor and Marvin Zimmerman, was the affirmative the best side to be
So they subconsciously supon? Though I have great respect for both of your press their inner doubts, and
opinions, it might have been tactically better for cling to the illusion that someyou, in spite of the rules, to voice them from the body in charge will be able to
negative side. At least Jeremy, in his second speech, cope with the situation.
did so. But what a den of thieves you were in
I’ll never forget the shock I
got when I first moved to Washbefore!
ington and met some of the conLawrence Richardson
gressmen who were making vital

Finds fault with headlines

Quotes

decisions on matters of life,
death and taxes.
I found to my horror, alarm
and dismay that most of them
didn’t seem to have much more
sense than I did. I’ve been suffering from a severe anxiety
complex ever since.
Fear national panic
But I never mentioned this
discovery to anyone for fear it
might create a national panic.
Then recently, like that kid in
‘The Emperor's New Clothes,” a
freshman lawgiver, Rep. Sam
Steiger, Rep., Ariz., blurted out
the naked truth.
In a television interview, he
said, “I think there are members of Congress that you would
not hire to wheel a wheelbar-

row.”
Although Steiger was reportedly rebuked by his peers, it was
loo late to undo the damage. An
illusion, once shattered, can seldom be pieced together again.
But perhaps you will sleep a
little better at night knowing
there also are some congressmen whom you would hire to

wheel

wheelbarrows.

sooner the better.

And

the

in the news

United Press International

WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.
Mayor M. C. Burton Jr., announcing
that shome National Guard troops will stand by for a school tax
election:
T don’t want anyone to be afraid to come to the polls.
SAIGON
U. S. Air Force Capt. Darrell D. Simmonds, 33, of
is being sorely unfair.
The purpose of my letter was stated in the first Vernon, Tex., commenting on shooting down two MIG-17s in dog
sentence and someone chose it for the headline. fights Monday;
"It was the highlight of my life."
This would have been fine if the headline and first
WASHINGTON
Sargent Shriver, saying he will resign as antiline of the letter were not misprinted. I am weary
of “unknowledgeable” reviewers, not “knowledge- poverty director if his budget for the current fiscal year is cut to
$1.2 billion:
able” reviewers of theatrical performances.
Susan Kaplan
“It would be a disillusion to the poor and a deception of the general public and therefore I don’t think it would be advisable to
continue.”
Writers; Phot* be brief. Letters should not exceed 300 words,
—

—

—

should

be signed
of the writer.

and

contain

the address and

telephone number

Pen names or initials may be used, if requested, but anonyomus letters are never used. The Spectrum reserves the right
to edit dr delete, but the intent of letters will not be changed.

.

by STEESE

Good politicking

la /VafeeTlimes

Law School ’70

-

.

to address myself at this lime.
I am a writer only to the extent that I have
a fair command of the English language and a big
mouth. I write in response to events which cause
me to feel something, either pro or con. I effectively communicate only when I at least think I
have something to say. In conversational terms, I
find it very hard to write this column except when
I am ready to yell about something. Last week I
mumbled my way through. Nobody denies this.
Least of all me. Admittedly I might be more
tempted to deny it if it appeared more possible
to do so but why bother.
Let me explain the temporal sequence before
I go any further. This
(go ahead, fill
in the blank) is typed on Monday night, since I
have classes the next three nights and the deadline is Tuesday. Now think back to last Monday,
Monday the 30th of October to be specific. Now,
can you remember anything notable? Can YOU?
No, right? Told you so. I respond to events, and
while certain interesting things were beginning
to form, and others were in full swing I did not
yet feel able to comment on them.

I

M
mm

Michael C. Desmond

•

.

than usual, as you prefer. For which I, as author
of said rubbish, have come under no little abuse.
It is to this point, dear friends, that I would like

Mr, Lasser, if he had read the Constitution,
would realize that it empowers the Legislature to
take over the cost of welfare, to take over the cost
of Distrcts Courts, which the voters in a County
may esetablish by referendum and to contribute
such funds to non public schools as may be determined to be Constitutional. It does not require
this to be done as his article indicates.

Editors' note; Article 10 of the proposed constitution, which was defeated by the voters on Tuesday,
mandated the state to take over the costs of the
local welfare and district courts over a ten-year
period, as our article indicated. There was no referendum involved in this take-over it would have
been required under the new charter. The writer
has confused this with a provision that the district
court costs could be taken over immediately instead of in the ten-year period if the local electorate voted so. This seemed rather inconsequential
and ambiguous, as the costs of the courts would
eventually be the responsibility of state, referendum or not. We did read the charter
we suggest that a more careful reading by Mr. Desmond
would have been in order.

gru m p

Attend me world. I wish to register a com
plaint. It will be remembered that this corner was

wnl

It would aid the student body to which the
Spectrum is aimed in their analysis of public
issues if those people writing such articles would
spend the time to discover what they’re talking
about, not just to write without knowledge.

The

CAPE KENNEDY
Program Manager Benjamin Milwitsky,
describing the flight of Surveyor 6, which is scheduled to make a
soft landing on the moon Thursday;
“It seems to be a perfect flight in all respects.”
—

For example, the question of Recruiting on
Campus. I hope that Clifford C. watched this episode carefully to sec how a good politician handles
a situation. Note, oh best beloved, how those who
would demonstrate against recruiters arc now
marked as being against free speech and genuinely
unliberal instead of really being democratic. Having backed up a trifle the administration caused
the SDS to chase them so fast that they went right
by them and the SDS is now in the corner the administration was supposed to be in. A coup of no
small measure. Should the radical opposition now
threaten and actually cause violence both the community and university would probably support any
measures to be taken against such violators.
Ignoring the Machacvclian overtones there arc
a couple of points that I am not overly sure I have
seen made anywhere yet. The assumption is being
bandied about that we arc being done a favor by
allowing the companies to come to our University
to recruit. Damned foolishness. The companies need
bodies. And if you will pardon a slightly old fashioned and silly view, is it not the primary function
of a university to educate? I would like to see those
firms who arc interested in recruiting on campus
pay an honorarium for the privilege.

Big empty lobbies
For it is a privilege. These firms have no right
to enter the campus. These arc outside groups
which arc not directly germane to education. I
do not think even the most radical free speechite
will deny this. I respectfully submit that we kick
recruiters of every color and hue the hell out of
Norton Union. There is a big empty lobby in Old
Norton, or Harriman Library if you prefer, where
those individuals who want to sec these people can.
And without taking tables in Norton away from
student groups who find they cannot appeal to the
students for a legitimate campus occurancc because
the Marine Corps, or the CIA, were there first.
The CIA is a ridiculous fight to pick on the
issue of recruitment. It is, to a probability approach
ing infinity, already here. Since, despite the ere
dentials that some publications may feel it has, the
CIA itself has now admitted having strong tics to
both student and faculty groups in the past. Fur
there, is it not a strange sight to sec those who
complain about “big government” rising up in arms
to defend that agency which is absolutely the least
controlled?
The function of the "loyal opposition” is to
offer a constructive alternative, not simply to oppose for the sake of disagreement.

Swing around Asia
But to return to the problem of having nothing
to respond to. You will remember it was not until
Tuesday or later, unfortunately, that my favorite
stand up comedian, Hubert Humphery, started his
latest swing around Asia. Even though the lines
hadn’t changed much they still made you want to
laugh, to keep from beating you head against a
stone wall. An entire column could be dedicated
to the proposition that nobody in the world should
be better acquainted with appeasement that HH.
For it is hard to see what else could have haopened to the standards and colors he once claimed
to bear. The concessions HH has made to his professed ideology can hardly be called anything else.
And i formally call for a moratorium on curtain
calls for Lyndon and the Flock until after he finds
some solution to a couple of minor problems in
Southeast Asia. Lyndon and the Flock. Hmmmm.
What is he going to do in ’72 when he retires? Add
a couple of electric guitars and away we go. Might
even make him famous enough to run for governor
of California.
So if Dr. Spock shouldn't talk about Vietnam,
why should Ronald baby? Fin.

�Friday, Novambar 10, 1967

The Spectrum

Pay* Six

Cooperative education program is
under study by Dean of Students
by Linda Klattky
Spectium

Staff

Reporter

—

Editor '* note: This it the third in a seriet of interviews
provosts of the newly created faculties.

with deans and

Dr. Anthony F. Lorenzetti, Dean of Students, made this
disclosure in an interview with The Spectrum, discussing
several future programs now under consideration, and aims
of fulfilling student needs.
In conjunction with the University Placement and Career
Guidance Service, students may
have an opportunity to attend
the University while gaining appropriate work and experience
under the proposed program.

Learning and working

The prime objective is for the
student to experience learning
and working simultaneously; that

is, to combine

the

and the practical.
This arrangement

“Another program, called
'Lead,' proposed by the University Placement Service,” said Dr.
Lorenzetli, “is being discussed
toward a time when we can provide opportunities for educational programs during the summer
for students coming from disad-

Dean Lorenzetti
announces consideration of
cooperative education program,

is to give some

of our students an opportunity
to work in local companies and

staff

is

concerned

needs.

He said: "We are presently
undergoing a study of our own
central office staff in terms of
its emerging role in student
problems and concerns, and have
a person doing research to determine new institutional programs that will be useful for
both the students and our own
staff.

Handbook
“We are in the process of developing a Student Personnel
Handbook, in order to make students aware of what student per-

sonnel functions are.”
“The Student Personnel Service is also very much involved
in preparing to enter into a Student’s Information Bank which
is to generate information needed
by the
University
community.”
A counselor-at-large program
has already been launched in
which a counselor is available in
the center lounge in Norton
Hall,

His purpose is to discuss any
subjects with students desiring
his service. “The objective is to
bring professional staff members closer to students in the

environments in which students
find themselves.”

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Education at Northeastern University, to the campus Dec. 5 and
6. He will discuss cooperative
education with the students, faculty and administration.
An option has been made by
the University College and University Placement and Career
Guidance Service to those students who have expressed an interest in participating in such

"Lead"

on

his

dents,

Career

with which

they would not ordinarily come
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Dr. Lorenzetti explained that

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Question: Is anything being done to update University catalogues? They are quite obsolete.
Answer: Mr. Gary Cooley, Assistant Director of Admissions &amp;
Records, informed us that all University catalogues are reviewed
and updated each year. It is conceivable that some information has
been carried over from year to year. There will, however, be an
extensive revision of all catalogues for the coming school year
because of the reorganization of the faculty structures.
Question: In the past. University insurance could be obtained
for $12 per semester. It has now been raised to $18 per semester.
As I understand it, this increased rate is supposed to cover the
summer months and thereby give the student year round coverage.
Why such a large increase? It seems unreasonable to pay $6 more
each semester for just three months. Also, if a student will only
be in school until January and will not be around during the summer,
why must he pay the extra $6?
Answer; Mr. W. H. Calhoun, Bursar, stated that “In the

academic year 1965-66 the cost of health insurance to the student
was $11.00 per semester, with an additional $7.50 if the student
wished to carry it through the summer, or a total of $29.50 for the
year.
In the academic year 1966-67, the insurance charge was
changed to S14.75 for a six-month period, due at the beginning of
each semester but covering the student from September to September
—the total still being $29.50 per year. In the academic year 1967-68
the sixth-month rate was increased to $18,50 because of a number
of increased benefits, with the approval of the University Advisory
Health Committee and the Student Associations. The annual premium is now $37.00.
The student who is only registered for the first semester
and pays $18.50 would be covered until March of 1968. He does
not have to take the second semester coverage if he will not be in
attendance at the University.
It is University policy that all full-time students be covered by
either this University-sponsored health and accident insurance policy
or show proof of outside coverage.”
Question: Why was June 2 chosen as Commencement Day instead of some time in May? A June date, even an early one, is
inconvenient and costly because students will have to pay a full
month's rent for the two day's use or move into a motel for the two
days, which is also costly.
Answer: The Calendar Committee had recognized this problem
and recently were able to revise the schedule. Commencement will
be held on Friday, May 31st, 1968, at 3:00 p.m.
Question: What is the reason the University Health Service
is not giving "flu shots" this year?
Can they be obtained any
place else at a nominal cost?
Answer: Dr. P. Hoffman, Director of the University Health
Service, stated that “The U. S. Public Health Service has recommended that influenza immunization should not be given to healthy
young adults. Immunization is medically indicated and recommended
for this age group only when some underlying disease process is
present. It is, however, recommended for all persons in the older
age group. Any student who feels he falls within either of these
categories should contact the Health Office. If, in the opinion of
a medical officer, immunization is advisable, such will be given

free of charge.”

specific ontwers to your questions, ond for direct service, call ACTION LINE,
and Friday, from 4-5 p.m.
If you prefer,
every Monday. Wednesday,
phrase your question in writing and address it to ACTION LINE, c/o The Spectrum,
355 Norton Hall, or the Office of the Dean of Students, 201 Harriman Library.)

(For

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Do you often think it impossible to untangle the State University of Buffalo
bureaucracy?
In cooperation with the Dean of Students' Office, The Spectrum
Through ACTION LINE, individual students
is sponsoring an ACTION LINE.
can get an answer to a puzzling question, find out where and why University
decisions are made, and get ACTION when change is indicated.
ACTION LINE will answer all questions of general interest which appear to
be pertinent to the student body. The Spectrum will include them in its special
ACTION LINE weekly column. Each inquiry will be thoroughly investigated
and answered individually. The name of the individual originating the inquiry
will not be published.

to give them a better understand
ing of American industry.”—
Its objectives are aimed toward
giving students from culturally
deprived and poverty stricken
areas an opportunity to work in
a business office in an executive
setting. This would expose them

A cdoperative education program is being considered
for the State University of Buffalo.

Action line
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�Friday, November 10, 1967

T h

Police brutality may cause
crisis warns NSA president
Mr. Schwartz predicted this week that at least 25 major

protests will be held this year on college campuses across
the country, and he warned college administrators against
calling the police.

Future protests
“The reckless use of police on
campuses last week has merely
highlighted the lack of concern
that administrators feel toward
students and has lent new
urgency for our drive to encourage student power on campuses,”
he added.
He predicted that a confrontation between Central Intelligence
Agency recruiters and demonstrators may occur at Brandeis between new and mid-November.
He also mentioned Fordham, Chicago, Columbia, Michigan, Wayne
State, the City College of New
York, and Oberlin as institutions
where major student protests
may take place.
Mr. Schwartz announced NSA
is sending a list of guidelines to
student governments across the
country to be used when confrontations are expected on their
campuses. Demonstrations reach
serious proportions “because student government leaders frequently fail to play a creative
role before the incidents occur,”
he said. He emphasized that NSA
does not support attempts to
block students from attending job
interviews, but “this does not
mean that student leaders should
sit on their hands until a group
of students is beaten by police.”

To help governments

ple.

"To cite a very simple examthe basic instrument of
classroom education is the lecture Some teachers are brilliant

and fine lecturers, some are not
the technology makes it
possible for each teacher to do
more of what he does best." he
said.

The guidelines being sent to
student governments were written by about 10 NSA staff mem-

Through the use of television,

the large lecture may be in part
eliminated. From the students’
point of view, there is no chance
for individual response in a class
of 500 persons.

bers. The guidelines "are not
policy decisions and are not

mandatory; they are just advice
on tactics,” Mr. Schwartz noled.

Although Mr Schwartz spoke
mainly of campus demonstrations
against recruiters, he said the
same policies about police invasion of campuses would apply to
protests against classified research. “We are not concerning
ourselves so much with what the
demonstrations are for or against;
we are concerned about police
being called to break up protests,” he said.

Some of the drudgery' of teachand learning may be relieved by limiting the teacher's
role as a "deliverer of words
.
.
Words alone do not describe the universe, and arc not
a sufficient means of education."
Through using media, a closer
personal contact between stu
dents and instructors may someday result.
ing

Basic start

Asked if NSA involvement in
campus protests is restricted because many of its programs
funded by the government,
said, “These demonstrations
directed at university policy,
legislative policy.”

Mr. Zweig commented that it
makes no sense to keep television out of schools, when most
of our information outside the
classroom is obtained through
mass media. However, the Uni-

are

he

are
not

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In the past, educational television in the University has been
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lecture. Instead of having a man
stand up in front of the hall,

technician,

professional, college
undergraduate, you are

The use of mass media pro-

vides two important possibilities,
Mr. Zweig feels. First, the use
of the media itself provides a
whole new area of experience
which is a continuation of pre
college life for the student
Second, it breaks the shackles
of a rigid classroom time schedule. A student cannot always be

nurse,

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THE SPECTRUM

experience.

For this shorter period you accept
arrival in Israel,

■

Zweig

satisfying tactile-auralpalatable -optical -oral

SIX MONTHS

•

instructor, tutor.
social worker, etc

Changes
"Very little attention has been
paid to the learning process.
There is an assumption that you
put a teacher at one end, and
an educated person comes out
at the other. Teaching processes
have not been reconsidered for
years."
claimed Mr.
in a n y

It happens as soon as you
pay your money and take your
bottle. Suddenly, Sprite
takes you, the hedonist, on
your way to a sensually

■ any ass-gnment upon

teacher,

present with several department members, Mr,
Zweig has been here a month,
and has done “a lot of talking
and thinking, and action will
begin soon."

Two possibilities

Program

•

years.

Working at

vision

V.I.P.

I

three

he would video-tape his lecture
and use it three or four semes
lers. 1 think the use of television
in that way became symbolic of
the further impersonality of the
University. I think the student
had a legitimate gripe
that is
not the creative way to use tele

Volunteers for Israel

for Israel

graduate or
needed as a

National Educational Television,
and "The Way We Live," and
"Children in Trouble." pilot programs for CBS. He has also written and produced a number of
segments of “David Brinkley's
Journal” for NBC. He has also
been news director for MetroMedia Broadcasting and editor of
the magazine Trans-Action for

versity is starting from the
basics in developing a program
of special eommuticalions.

If you are between 18 and 30. Israel offers you a chat
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ONE YEAR
If you are a

three hours.
The use o( films, television
and other media would allow
students to work independently
for as long as they want in a

tion and Library of Sciences have expressed interest in dc
veloping new media for their courses.

will be a planning session for
direct campus action.

Nights

SINGLES? COMPATIBLE?

.

particular subject.
Mr Zweig has written and
produced for national television.
He served as associate producer
of "Play Your Hunch" for NBC,
"College News Conference" for

He announced that NSA will
sponsor a national student conference on student power at the
University of Minnesota Nov. 1719. The conference will not cen
ter on resolutions, he said, but

Sign-Up 'Til Nov. IS

ATLANTA, GA

The project, which was set up this year, will focus on
developing new media for classroom use. Films, television
programs, and computers may be adapted to University
curricula.
Several faculty members in the departments of English,
history, and psychology, and the Graduate Student Informa

MFC

LINE

.expected to turn on interest in
a subject, three days a week for

constructive role during the demonstrations themselves. Mr
Schwartz said.

GLENWOOD
Phone 831-2S03

a

exercise

“In the long run the classroom as we know it may
disappear,” Says Mr. Leonard Zweig, head of the Special
Communications Project for the University and lecturer in
communications for the Faculty of Social Sciences and Administration.

..

NSA will assist student governments to insure that they obtain
a voice over policies affecting reSKI

cruiters and that they

P*na Baiian
Ijf wvTvfl

■

New media for educational purposes
is concern of Communications Project

WASHINGTON (CPS)—The unrestrained and-brutal
use of police to disperse campus demonstrations may be the
cause of the most serious crisis higher education has faced
in this century, according to Ed Schwartz, president of the
National Student Association.

NSA will “support and assist
student strikes growing out of the
unwarranted use of police to
bludgeon student demonstrators,”
he said.

Spectrum

•

S

�Page Eight

The Spectrum

Friday, November 10, 1967

'National service' plan needs support Anti-draft blood-pourers
WASHINGTON (CPS)—A small-scale “national service”
program could be initiated within the next few years, if
support comes from the right quarters.

“The program would be universal in the sense of providing
service opportunities for all

Such a program would give young people the opportunity to serve their country in non-military endeavors and
would meet educational and manpower needs. Interested
young people would be matched with service opportunities
consistent with both the needs of the nation and with their
own education and skills.

of their
financial
status or educational background,” he commented. He ex-

The concept of universal national service has been widely
discussed in recent years. But,
although the idea has been sup-

ported by Secretary of Defense
Robert McNamara, it has never
received wide-spread support,
primarily because of the conflict

with the draft.

Private organization
But now, a non-profit organization called the National Service
Secretariat is seeking support
for a national service program
which would be as far removed
from the Selective Service System as possible. The secretarial
is supported by private funds,
not by the government.
Donald Eberly, executive director of the secretariat, said his
organization is attempting to set
up a network of service oppor-

tunities which work somewhat
like a computed dating system.
For instance, young persons interested in working for about
two years in some service agency
would feed information about

themselves into a computer. The

computer, in turn, would match
each individual with the service
activity best suited for him.

Unlimited scope
Existing agencies, such as the

Peace Corps, the Job Corps,
VISTA, and the Red Cross could
participate in

the program and

receive volunteers. But the scope
of the program would be almost
unlimited, Mr. Eberly said. “Opportunities would be open for
someone to work in a hospital in
New York or to teach in Appalachia, for example.”

Mr. Eberly will be sending out
a proposal explaining the program and seeking support within
the near future. The proposal,
which came out of a conference
on national service last spring,
will be sent to both government
and private agencies.
If service agencies are anxious
to cooperate, and if enough financial support is received from
private foundations and industry,
the program possibly could start
on a small-scale in a few years.

High costs
But Mr. Eberly thinks an effective national service program
—one that would pay subsistence
costs of service activities for all
young people—will have to be
underwritten by the government
because of high costs ($4-5,000
per volunteer). And it is. unlikely
that the government would support the program fully as long
as the Vietnam war continues.

regardless

plained that, traditionally, volunteer service agencies have attracted only middle- and upperclass people because they are the
only ones who can afford it.
“A 20-year-old who had to support his family would be given
a family allowance to send back
home,” Mr. Eberly said. “This
way everyone would have the
same opportunity.”

Hopes for deferments

defer volunteers

they are in the non-military

••

and cotton with skinny
boxed stripes of green and
blue. Button-down collar,
tapered waist, long sleeves.
Perma-lron so it won’t
"ink!

serv-

He proposes that draft boards
former national service
volunteers later in the order of
call, so that in effect, they would
only be drafted in an emergency.

The Rev., Philip Berrigan, a
44-year-old Josephite priest and
co-chairman, of the National Catholic Peace Fellowship, and
Thomas Lewis, 27-year-old mem-

ments set to follow in about
two days." At the arraignments,
the defendants would enter their
pleas concerning guilt or inno-

during their week-long incarceration. Their confinement was
largely self-sought, since they
refused to sign bonds to be released in their own recognizance.

After their act at Selective
Service headquarters the men issued a mimeographed statement
prepared in advance. It said, in
part: “We are entering the Customs House in Baltimore, Maryland, to deface the draft records
with our blood. We shed our
blood willingly and gratefully in
what we hope is a sacrificial
and constructive act.
“We pour it upon these files
to illustrate that with them and
with these offices, begins the
pitiful waste of American and
Vietnamese blood 10,000 miles
away.”
Selective Service officials apparently had no prior warning
of the act but several newsmen
said they were notified in advance to be at the office at noon.
Witnesses said Mr, Lewis was
the first to enter the office on
the first floor of the Customs
House shortly before noon. He
asked for a new draft card. He
was soon joined by Father Berrigan who said he wanted to inquire about a youth in his
parish.
Mr. Eberhardt then appeared
and asked for a change of address card. While employees were
busy waiting on the men, witnesses
said, they suddenly
walked toward the nearby office
and emptied the contents of the
containers on the records.

ber of the Baltimore Interfaith
Peace Mission, refused to eat

Berrigan and Lewis, who said
they felt they could be of more
use on the outside in the antiVietnam war movement, signed
bonds promising to pay $1,000
each if they failed to appear for
further court action,
Berrigan said he and Lewis
were a “bit foggy” and “dull”
after their fast, each having
taken
no nourishment other
than

juice.

water, coffee and

orange

“I’m going to get a good bowl
of soup,” was the priest’s first
words after leaving the jail.
Two other men involved in
Mr. Eberly does not think the anti war demonstration were
released soon after being arrestyoung people would use the program as an escape from the draft, ed when they signed the pledges
"In the first place the period of to be available for further legal
commitment in the national serv- action. They were the Rev, James
ice program could extend over a Mengel, 38, of the United Church
of Christ, and David Eberhardt,
longer period of time than in the
military service, perhaps two and 26, secretary of the Interfaith
a half years or three years.” And Mission.
volunteers would still stand the
AH were charged with defacing
chance of being drafted, he said. government property, obliterating government records and
hindrance in administration of
the Selective Service Act.
Donald Sharp, assistant U. S.
attorney in charge of the case,
said the maximum penalty for
any one of the offenses would
be five years’ imprisonment and,
or, a $10,000 fine.

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while

ice. Their deferments would end
after they had completed their
service, but
“they should be
given recognition for what they
have done,” he said.
place

IE, Md. (UPI)—A Roman Catholic iriest and
a Baltimore artist were freed from the city jail after promising to appear at Federal Court proceedings on charges
of dousing blood on draft board records.

More helpful outside

After the program gets off the
ground, Mr. Eberly would like to
see legislation passed which

would

are released on bail

checks, plaids, solids and
stripes. All the things you
look for in a shirt-for

Human blood
About
the
blood pouring,
Sharp said an analysis in the
FBI's Washington headquarters
showed that one of the detergent bottles used by the demonstrators contained “all human
blood.”

Each contained “some
human blood,” one showed traces
of “beef blood,” and one showed
signs of “chicken blood.”
The case was scheduled to go
to the federal grand jury Tuesday, Sharp said, with arraign-

cence.
Issued statement

Archdiocese reaction
In a statement issued later in
the day, the Baltimore Roman

Catholic Archdiocese said it had
no prior knowledge of Father
Berrigan’s plans.
“Today’s action,” it said, “appears to be the kind of flamboyant gesture that is self-defeating.
Its real contribution to peace is
questionable."

Father Berrigan

said Friday

he expected to go back to his
parish, the St. Peter Claver
Church. He said he had not
heard whether any disciplinary

action against him would be
taken by his superiors.

$7.00.

And in a good shirt you'll
id a good label.

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SPAGHETTI and MEAT BALLS or
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�f

Friday, November 10, 1967

Th* Spectrum

campus releases...
Sister Reginald Marie will lead a discussion following a supper
isored bv the Newman Club. Sunday at 5:00 n.m. Reservations

Pag* Nin*

City of Buffalo supports Law School's
recommendation to start ombudsman
by Doric

O'Conner at Newman Hall (834-3504).

Spectrum

Staff

Klein
Reporter

1

Jorge Luis Barges, a distinguished literary figure, will be presented by the department of Modern Languages and Literature. Mr.
Borges is lecturing Monday in English on “The Literature of the
Fantastic”; and Tuesday in Spanish on “La literatura argentia de
hoy.” Both lectures will be held in the Conference Theater at 4:30

p.m.

"Wednesday's Child," the first in a proposed series of four
movies sponsored by the Sociology Club, will be shown Monday at
7:00 p.m. in Room 335, Hayes Hall. The film concerning Aid to
Dependent Children and Welfare will be followed by a discussion
at 8:00 p.m.
The panelists for the discussion are: Mrs. Virginia Sullivan of
Community Welfare Council, Mr. Steinhart of Erie County Department of Welfare, and Mr. Duckworth, a professor in the School
of Social Welfare.
A concert to raise funds for legal fees to defend Leon Phipps will
be held Nov. 12. Mr. Phipps was arrested Friday and charged with
possession of marijuana.
The concert will be held from 2 to 6 p.m. in the Fillmore room.
Two bands from the Inferno, the Rising Suns and the Maniacs
will perform.
The Maniacs will play at a mixer tonight, 8 to 11 p.m., in the
Fillmore Room, Admission is 25c for fee payers and 75 1 for non-fee
payers. The mixer is sponsored by the Recreation Committee of the
UUAB.
There will be free use of the recreational facilities in Norton
Hall during 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. on Tuesday. The game hour is open
to only fee payers.
The Junior Board of the Buffalo Council on World Affairs is
sponsoring an afternoon of orientation and information on study
and travel abroad. It will be held Sunday from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.
at Rockwell Hall on the State University College campus.
The meeting will serve as a clearing house for available study
and travel situations. Students and non-students are invited to
attend.
Prof. David Robinson of the George Washington University Law
School will be interviewing all interested students Wednesday.
Prof. Robinson will conduct the interviews from 9:30 a.m. until
noon in Room 332 Norton Hall.
The National Teacher Corps will be on campus to interview
senior liberal arts students interested in teaching. Meeting will
be held at 4 p.m. Nov. 29. If interested, contact the University
Placement Office for an appointment (831-4414).
A correction should be noted in respect to the article written
in The Spectrum on Oct. 31, that the pay for the National Teacher
Corps is $75 a week plus $15 for each dependent and tuition waived
for graduate school.

An institution set up in 1713 in Sweden to fight increasing red tape and government abuse may be put into
effect on a trial basis in Buffalo.
After a successful pilot program launched this summer
dealing mainly with the problems of the low-income areas
of the city, the State University Law School is recommending
establishment of an ombudsman.
An ombudsman is a citizen
appointed by the government to
bridge the widening gap between
expanding bureaucracy and the
increasingly alienated
citizen.
The concept has been recently
publicized in the United States
and is actually in use in Nassau
County on Long Island.
In the Buffalo project this
summer, run by Professor William Angus of the Law School,
complaints from citizens of abuse

or neglect by the municipal and

were investigated. One incident involved
the Parks Department’s failure
to equip a playground in the
ghetto; investigation discovered
that the reason was lack of supervisory personnel. Through cooperation between citizens and
the agencies involved, Prof.
Angus made possible an arrangement for neighborhood civic
groups to supervise the play-

county

ground.

This winter a seminar group at

the Law School will handle complaints and laun'ch its own investigations of suspected abuses.
The group has no official status,
but

has the support of Buffalo

Mayor Frank A. Sedita. The purposes of the seminar are not
only to work out solutions to
citizens' individual problems, but
also to experiment with new
methods of public education and
response to general urban needs.

The report issued by the Law
School study group proposes a
Citizens’ Advisory Service. This
group, unlike the original
Swedish version, would have no
power to prosecute officials, but
would be appointed by the government to work with agencies
as an intermediary between the
bureaucrat and the citizen, considering both viewpoints and
using
additional influence
through the legislature and the
press.

Department of Pharmacology
will present series on drugs
Psychedelics, narcotics, anesthetics, hypnotics, and convulsants will be among the drugs
considered in a series of special
lecture discussions on drugs affecting the brain. This series is
one portion of the new undergraduate course, Drugs and Biological
469).

Systems,

(Pharmacology

Interested students and faculty
are welcome to attend the lectures, presented by the Department of Pharmacology under the
auspices of University College.
The sessions will be held from

3 to 4:30 p.m. in Room 246 Health
Sciences Building. In each meeting at least the last one-half hour
will be reserved for general dis-

cussion.
Dr. Cedric Smith will speak on
“The effects of narcotics and
general anesthetics” Tues., Nov.
14, and on “Marijuana,” Thurs.,

Nov. 30.
Dr. Peter Gessner will speak
on “The Effects of ampheta-

mines, sedatives, and hypnotics,”
Tues., Nov. 21, and on “Psychedeles and Halucinogens,” Tues.,
Nov. 28.

The following group photographs for the 1968 edition
of THE BUFFALONIAN will be taken on Tuesday, November 14, in the second floor lounge of Norton Hall.
PLEASE BE PROMPT. The schedule for photographs
to be taken November 15th and 16th will appear in
next Tuesday’s issue.
6:00—Women's Chorale
6:15—Men' Glee Club
6:30—U.B. Blues
6:40—Baby Blues

6:45—Undergraduate
Psychology Club
7:00—R.O.T.C.
Arnold Air Society
Angel Flight
S;30—Cap and Gown

8:40—Hillcl Foundation
8:50—Newman Student

Open a checking account now.
There are two M&amp;T Banks near the campus
With banking hours that make sense.
Look below,

Committee
9:45—Fine Arts Film
Committee
9:50—Literature and Drama
Committee
9:55—Spring Arts Festival

BANK

Committee
10:00—Foil Festival
Committee
10:05—Music Committee
10:10—Publicity Committee

9:10—Freshman Class

Committee
10:30—Public Relations

9:20—U.U.A.B.
Executive Board
9:25—Arts and Crafts
Committee
9:30—Concert Committee

like a no account

9:35—Fall Weekend
Committee
9:40—Spring Weekend

Association
9:00—S.E A.N.Y.S.
Council

Don’t just stand around

10:15—Publications
Committee
10:25—House Committee
10:30—Personnel Committee
10:35—Art Exhibits
Committee

MCMBKR F.

o.

I. C.

MAIN WINSPEAR OFFICE
3184 Main Street
Mon. thru Thurs.: 9:00 a.m. 4:30 p.m.
Friday: 9:00 a.m. 3:00 p.m. and
4:00 p.m. 6:00 p.m.
—

—

—

UNIVERSITY PLAZA OFFICE
3500 Main Street
Mon. thru Thurs.; 9:00 a.m. 4:30 p.m,
Friday: 9KX) a.m. 3:00 p.m. and
—

—

4:00 p.m. 8:00 p.m.
Drive-In
Mon. thru Thurs.: 9nX) a.m.
Friday: 9KX) a.m. —8:00 p.m.
—

—

4:30 p.m.

�WBFO to present
series on U.S.S.R.
During the month of Novem-

At Eastman Theater

Buffy Sainte-Marie wins emotions

ber of programs dealing with
past and present Union of Soviet
Socialist Republics. This is on the
occasion of the fiftieth anniversary of the Soviet Revolution,
The British Broadcasting Company and members of the faculty at the State University of
New York at Buffalo, are sources
for the production of these programs. The series traces the
course of Lenin’s revolution, the
Soviet Union today as a world
power, and a look at the contemporary literary scene. Since
this month also marks the anniversary of the independence of
the Ukraine from the Czar, the
Ukrainian Club of the University at Buffalo, has prepared a
program qn the cultural and political backgrounds of the

Byron Janis
Buffalo Philharmonic will fea-

ture noted pianist at Kleinhans

Byron Janis to play

with Philharmonic

Ukraine.

These programs on Russia may
be heard Mondays at 10 p.m.,
rebroadcast Wednesday at 2 p.m.
Included in the commemoration
of the Russian Revolution will
be throe programs devoted to
the music of Russian composer
Dmitri Shostakovich. This series
is produced by Robert S. Beckwith, an expert on Russian music, of the Music Department of
the Stale University at Buffalo.
The scries may be heard Mondays at 10 p.m., rebroadcasl Sat-

The Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra will feature the renowned
pianist, Byron Janis in the next
pair of concerts. Music Director
and Conductor, Dukas Foss, has
planned an all Beethoven pro
gram.

Among

Friday, November 10, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* T*n

the selections arc, “Fi-

delio” Overture,

Symphony No.

6 “Pastorale" and Piano Concerto No. 3 in C Minor in which
Mr. Janis will be featured.
The concerts are scheduled for
Nov. 12 at 2;30 p.m, and Nov.
14 at 8:30 p.m. at Kleinhans Music Hall.

urday at 2 p.m,, starting Nov. 15.

For further details check the
November Program Guide. You
can be placed on a permanent
mailing list for this Guide by
831-3405,
during
air
calling

THE SPECTRUM
printed by

hours, or by writing WBFO, 3435
Main Street, Buffalo, N.Y. 14214,
WBFO broadcasts on campus in
I he dormatories at 780 KC. and
off-campus at 88.7 MC.

Partners' Press, Inc.
ABGOTT &amp; SMITH PRINTING
1381 Kenmore Ave. (at Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

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Starring DIRK BOGARDE

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STANLEY BAKER
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Jerry "B" presents
("I'm A

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DAVE

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aui 'ience in
by Lori Pendrys
Spectrum Staff Reporter

A black curtain was the backdrop, a stark white spotlight focused on a solitary woman in a
brilliant red and yellow striped
and print sari who shyly began
to sing. This was the impressive
setting for Buffy Sainte-Marie at

Rochester’s Eastman Theater Saturday evening.

At first there was evidence of
uneasiness and meekness in her
voice as the massive dimensions
of the theater seemed to dwarf
“Broke-Down Girl” and
her.
“Johnny Be Fair” (“an ancient
Irish Ballad I wrote one night
in New York”) were among her
first selections. The audience
supported her indifference at the
concert’s beginning.
By the end of the last encore
everyone was drained emotionally, but left thoroughly convinced of the beauty that is
Buffy Sainte-Marie.

Spectrum

zarus,” that she sang only with
the clapping of her hands and
the stamping of her foot, she
was effective. Her interpretations
of Leonard Cohen’s compositions
“Susanne,” “Strangers” and “Sisters of Mercy” were moving. By
the end of the first half the
audience was truly with her.
“I find it very difficult to talk
about my emotions and feelings.
So I try to explain them in my
songs,” Buffy said. Her goal was
achieved successfully in the second half of her performance. The
incredibly dynamic voice of the

long ebony-haired Indian girl
captivated the audience. She had
the amazing quality of being
able to control the emotions of

her listeners.

Compassion was felt when she

“Now That The Buffalo
Have Gone,” about the plight of
the modern American Indian and
the injustice of their removal for
construction of the Kinzua Dam;
love was the feeling when she
sang her own composition “Until
It’s Time For You To Go.” The
applause grew louder and more
sincere.
Her final triumph was the first
encore “Universal Soldier” which
earned a standing ovation. She
returned again to radiantly sing
her recently written “Wedding
Song” in honor of her new status. And the audience still demanded more. A song about
brotherhood ended the concert.
No one wanted to leave.
sang

Staff

that the pace is fast and snappy

especially when the repetitious
humor begins to get obnoxious.
A slight difficulty was the
spacing of two intermissions; one
in the middle of a song.

Reporter

Moliere, one of the most beloved French writers, has
come to Buffalo in the form of an entertaining Studio Arena
production of his last work, “The Imaginary Invalid.”
Elaborate costumes
This is the laudable tale of a hypochondriac who deThe elaborately bright coscides his fair young daughter must marry a doctor for the tumes, designed
by Jean Blanchobvious convenience of free and abundant medical care ette, are a notable contribution to
from his son-in-law.
the production. Since the play is
Moliere himself played the valid’s brother who states, “Most not dated and applies to any age,
the realistic costumes serve as a
men die of their remedies, and
part of the feigning sick Arnot their diseases.” As we think reminder of the era in which the
gan back in 1673 and ironplay was written.
back to those days when bloodically he was morbidly ill at letting was the most popular
The exceptionally appreciative
the time. In fact, he died treatment and consider the ever- opening night reception also represent disillusion with medicine
flects some good performances by
of a hemorrhagic lung seizwe see why this attack is so easy
the cast. Joe Servello is comically
ure after the fourth performto swallow by modern audiences. convincing as Argan, the simpleance.
Moliere’s bitter derision of the minded invalid. Betty Leighton
In all his plays Moliere re
veals and ridicules the absurd!
tics of human behavior.

Satirizes 'type' characters
Although “The Imaginary Invalid” is gencraly known as a
satire of the medical profession
it really satirizes a whole range
of "type" characters: doctors,
hypochrondriacs, w ives who
marry

for an

inheritance, and

fathers who prescribe a marriage
of convenience for their daughters.

The attack on the art of medi
cine is summed up by the in

medical art and people in general is at times inane and shallow, at times profound and effective.

Play on enemas
"The Imaginary Invalid” is not
a play on words, instead it is a
play on enemas. A frequently
used technique of comedy is repetition: Argan’s obsession with
enemas leads to a deluge of assenine humor.
Donald Davis has done a commendable job of directing the “In
valid" and preserved most of the
satiric overtones. It is fortunate

plays her comic role well. Dennis
Thatcher as the doctor and Kenneth McMillan as his son, who
delivers a very funny soliloquoy
with the aid of a tape-recorder
voice and an unpredictable jerking arm, are rather impressive
as they appear in their shocking
orange

hair.

Kenneth

gives an

-%&lt;

t

their

supporting

roles.

“Mark Twain Tonight
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24 at 8:15 P.M.

at

THE DELLWOOD
(Cor. Utica)

Admission by TICKET ONLY for
the Following Shows
Saturday; 9:30 P.M., 11:30 P.M., 1:30 A.M.
Sunday: Matinee 4 P.M. —Evening 10 P.M.
Sale at

NORTON UNION TICKET OFFICE

BUFFALO HADASSAH
Presents An Evening With

DIAHANN CARROLL
and

HENNY

YOUNGMAN

IN PERSON

Kleinhans Music Hall
SUNDAY, NOV. 19, 1967
8:30 P.M,
Tickets $10, $7.50, $5.00

Students—$3.00

Tickets Available at
NORTON UNION
TICKET OFFICE
GRANADA THEATER
or Call 873-7685

PROCEEDS TO BENEFIT
BUFFALO HADASSAH

Wickes

amusingly queer appearance as the notary.
Jean Hebborn is believable as
the conniving wife, as is Montgomery Davis as the brother. Ann
Bailey. Vincent Baggetta, and Patricia Lobby are competent in

HAL HOLBROOK in

-

on

like an arrow, she was friendly.
In a Negro spiritual ballad “La-

by Richard Perlmutter

TWO NIGHTS ONLY
Nov. 18th 19th

Tickets

In a song about the initial
confrontation of immigrants to
the “friendly” country of America, “Welcome, Welcome, Emigrante" she was bitter. In “The
Dog Ate The Gap,” which she
sang accompanied by a mouthbow, a home-made instrument
from which her voice shot out

Moliere's "The Imaginary Invalid"
playing at Studio Arena Theater

With Their Memphis Review

1388 MAIN

conce

success

Tickets; $4.50, 4.00, 3.50, 2.50
on sale at box office now!

�Friday, November 10, 1967

The Spectrum

Student demonstrations nationwide;
Maryland U. is scene of SDS protest

On Wall Street
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

dents throughout the country last
ALPHANUMERIC, INC. A very impressive name for a week
sat-in, demonstrated and
very new company. Their growth could be fantastic or it obstructed for a variety of causes.
could be absolutely nothing. Alphanumeric is an extreme
At Grambling College in Louiexample of what I feel is the change in the make-up of the siana over 80% of the students
stock market picture, which has, unfortunately, passed most struck the school in protest
against the overemphasis on athof the small investors by.
letics there. A twelve man faculty
It is common knowledge on
If the same man had bought
to

Wall Street that the small investor (the odd-lotter, who buys

stock in less than 100 share
blocks), is almost always going
in the wrong direction. Generally,
this manifests itself in the trading patterns of the small investor
—selling low and buying high.
This is directly opposed to both
standard stock market theory
and practice.
Now, I am sure you are saying
to yourself either—“That's me!”
or “I never do that!” To the
second group
Oh yes you do.
I will discuss this problem fully
in a later column.
—

The institutions

For the most part, large and
small investors alike are aware
of the effect of the institutional
buyers on stock prices. To digress
for just one second, 1 think top
many investors do not really
know who or what the “institutions” are.
They are made up mostly of
mutual funds, pension funds, and
now even schools (take a look at
Harvard’s portfolio). Their buying
power is almost beyond belief,
as they deal in hundreds of thousands of shares at one time. Very

honestly, you could be wiped out
if your thinking runs opposite to
theirs. Enough lecturing and back
to the problem at hand.
These institutions, along with
the new breed of investor, who is
young, dynamic, and most of all,
impatient, has turned the market
upside down. Good stocks sell at
ridiculously low price-earnings
ratios, while stocks worth nothing
are selling at very high price earnings ratios.

The victims

Who are the victims of this
situation? You guessed it—the
uninformed odd-lotter. He wants
to buy stock in a company that
he has always heard was the
biggest, safest and, of course,
growing.
So what does he choose? One
of the old stand-bys—U.S. Steel,
A.T.&amp;T., or Standard Oil of New
Jersey. Sometimes he makes a
real fool of himself and buys
stock on that hot tip from the
guy in the office. Now that’s
really dumb.
If he had bought A T &amp;T. eight
years ago his net loss would be
about 20 points a share. If Jersey
Standard, he would be down
“only” 5 points a share—a loss
of $5 per share after eight years
of investment. He would have
been better off if he had put the
money in the bank.

Alphanumeric six months ago, he
would have seen his stock go
from 57 to 128. Frankly, I have
used extremes here, but the point
must be made that if you want
to make money in todays market
you must use today’s stocks.
I am not saying that this is as
simple as I might have inferred
it is. The A.T.&amp;T.’s serve a very
important function in today’s

market, that of stabilization. This

problem will also be discussed
in later columns. Exactly where
to invest your money is probably
the hardest problem you face and
I do not want to dismiss it
lightly.

Alphanumeric
Briefly, here is the situation
with Alphanumeric, It is an overthe-counter stock (listed everyday
in the Times) which is presently
doing research (no production) on
a new method for computer printout units.
The performance of this stock
verges on the impossible. About
two years ago it sold at 3. By
this past February it was up to
260. After sinking back to 240 it
split 4-1, to 60. It reached a new
high, for the new stock, of 144
this past week and closed last
Friday at 128.
They have just built new facilities, hired new people and seem
just about to break into production, Believe it or not, I feel that
the top for this stock is a long
way off—possibly as high as
1000 on the original stock, which
would be about 325 now. This
would not be overnight, of course,
but would taper off as the slock
went higher. If they are totally
successful even 1000 is conservative.

Warning
I must give a severe word of
warning. This not a sure thing.
Nothing is. This is a highly volatile stock which carries a high
amount of risk with it. A 10
point fluctuation is not unusual
in a day. If you have a weak
stomach keep away from any of
these stocks.
I, personally, think that the

future for this stock is unlimited,
if for no other reason than that
it may be bought out by a large
computer maker eventually. Combine that with their progress up
to this time and I think it gives
Alphanumeric

future.

a

very

bright

If you have any questions about
this or any other stock, please
write to me in care of The Spec-

trum.

Pag* Eleven

r NOW 4tif PeuCHTfOl MOMTHf

committee has been appointed
mediate with the students. The
president of the student body and

paper werfe suspended for their
part in leading the strike.

Pennsylvania a hundred sitting-in
students Wednesday disrupted
job interviews being carried out
by both Dow Chemical Corporation. the makers of napalm, and
the Central Intelligence Agency.
At City College of New York
a student strike broke out
as construction started again on
building earlier
a temporary
blocked by student protestors.
The sit-in at the Maryland engineering building delayed CIA
recruiting for a day or so, but
had little other effect. On Monday when a campus official read
the Maryland Trespass Act to
the demonstrators, they dispersed, and on Thursday, their
numbers depleted, they again

SDS busy

Students for a Democratic
Society had an active week, protesting CIA recruiting at the University of Maryland, secret CIA
financing of research at Columbia, Marine recruiting at the University of Iowa and classified research at the University of Michi-

Entertainment
Calendar
FRIDAY, NOV. 10:
PLAY; “Eh?”, Baird
p.m.

Hall, 8:30

FILM: “Ashes and Diamonds,”
Conference Theater.
EXHIBIT: 31st Annual Western New York Exhibition, Albright-Knox Art Gallery, through
Dec. 10.
SATURDAY, NOV. 11:
CONCERT: Lou Rawls, Eastman Theater, Rochester, 8:15
p.m.

PLAY: “Endgame,” Studio
Arena Players, Niagara University, 8 p.m. also Sunday, Nov. 12.
"Love for Love,”
PLAY:
O’Keefe Center, 2 p.m. and 8:30

TUESDAY, NOV. 14;

WEDNESDAY, NOV.

IS:

LECTURE: John L'Heureux
poet from Harvard, Niagara Uni
versity, 4 p.m.
PLAY: "Waiting For Godot

CONCERT: Buffalo Philhar
monic featuring Byron Janis,
pianist, Kleinhans, 2:30 p.m.
MONDAY, NOV. 13:
CONCERT: The Fine Arts
Quartet, Baird Hall, 8:30 p.m.
also Nov. 15 and 17.
TV FILM: “The Anatomy of
Violence,” featuring Stokcly Carmichael and Allen
Ginsberg,

Thomas Mann,” Channel

836

8 HEBT11 AVt

-

TV

7411

®

*

FILM:

Reflection:
17. 9

"In

pm.
THURSDAY, NOV. 16:
FILM: “The Thief of Bagdad
Conference Theater.
LECTURE: “Method and Design in Wagner’s Tristan/’Bairri
4 p.m.
FRIDAY, NOV. 17:

“Endgame," Studio

PLAY:

Two,
Studio Arena
Theater
School, 8:30 p.m. also Nov. 18,
and
Dec.
and
19, 24 20
1
2.

WHY NOT "TURN ON" TONIGHT??????!

1-fAR BY PARKING

ISs,®

P

In Iowa City there were about
100 arrested in three school
buses after they successfully
blocked entrance to the Iowa
Memorial Union where Marine
Corps recruiting was being carried out. The Iowa incident,
where the local SDS president
Bruce Clark congratulated the
police on their conduct, was the
first time there was significant
student violence involved in a
demonstration. One policeman
was pushed through a plate glass
window and a number of demonstrators were given minor injuries by right wingers and ath
letes heckling and roughing up
the human blockade.
In Ann Arbor a demonstration
to protest secret research at the
Willow Run laboratories of the
University of Michigan turned into a teach-in when a number of
university Vice-presidents welcomed the demonstrators to the
administration building and used
about eight hours of their time
to debate the issues involved.

by Brunnel. Conference Theater.
7 p.m.

Niagara University.

17, 10:30 p.m.
FILM: “Nothing But the Best
Capen 140, 8 p.m.

Violence in Iowa

agara University, 4 p.m.
FILM: "David and Lisa," Niagara University. 4 p.m.
BAND LAB: Jazz Lab Band,
Fillmore Room. 3:30 6 p.m.
“Viridiana," directed
FILM:

p.m.
SUNDAY, NOV. 12

'Channel

broke up their sit-in under threat
of arrest.

CONCERT: Buffalo Philhar
monic featuring Byron Janis, pi
anist, Kleinhans, 8:30 pm.
LECTURE: Harold Mayer, Ni-

ELIZABETH

A jOVELY SORT* DEATH
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presents

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and the

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featuring the

JAZZ GIANTS
SUNDAY, NOV. 12, 1967

Dancing from 9

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Advance Sale $3.50
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19 Camp Road
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Friday, November 10, 1967

Th* Spectrum

Teacher Corps suffers because of
Congress' cut in appropriations bill

’*v

is has received
a
financial uiuw Hut it ma&gt; not cm able to fcemit a new group of interns for the summer and fall of 1968.
The blow came last week when Congress passed and sent
to President Johnson the appropriations bill for the Departments of Labor and Health, Education, and Welfare. The
bill included only $13.5 million for the Teacher Corps, far
less than the $33 million requested by President Johnson and
Teaches Corps officials.

In addition, the shortage of

such

A check for $ I 00 is presented to Dr. Peter F.
Regan (second left), executive vice president of

United
Fund

the University for the benefit of the United Fund.
The money was raise at an auction during FallParent weekend.
The students, representing the Fall-Parent weekend committee and Alpha Pi Opega Fraternity
are, left to right, Alan J. Strutz, Douglas M. Gersten and Dexter S. Levy.

"This is certainly not expansion money. It isn’t even holdeven money,” a Teacher Corps
official said.
The source said the bill will
not finance the Corps past next
June 30. “There will be no money
for us to go beyond the 1,900
Corpsmen we now have, and we
will lose 900 of those at the end
of this school year.”

Funds cut
The

Teacher

Corps,

which

sends college students working
on their master’s degree to teach

in slum schools, is just one of
many Federal agencies which
have suffered because of pressures on Congress to reduce

spending. Congress extended the
controversial Corps for three
years this past summer, but now
has not supplied it with the funds
to meet the needs of urban and

rural slums.
Even though the Corps can be
saved by a supplemental appropriation next year, much of the
damage to the program already
has been done. Colleges and universities will be unable to plan
their training programs, and local
schools systems will not be able
to count on a supply of corpsmen for their schools. Most local
school systems begin hiring
teachers around the first of the
year for the next school year.

tial corpsmen from applying.
The $13.5 million for the Corps
was recommended by a SenateHouse conference committee. The
Senate originally had voted to
give the program $18.1 million,
but the House had voted no funds
for the Corps. The compromise
was accepted by both Houses
with little dispute.

Part of HEW
,

The Corps’ appropriation is included in the $13.25 billion bill
which Congress passed for the
Departments of Labor and Health,
Education, and Welfare.
The bill contains $12.56 billion
for HEW, an amount $141.2 million below the Administration’s
request, but $249.3 million above
the HEW appropriation for Fiscal 1967. For the U. S. Office of
Education, the bill appropriates
$3.88 billion, a decrease of $63.6
million from the budget request
for the new fiscal year, and a decrease of $9.1 million from 1967
appropriations.

.What
the interviewers
,

won’t tell you
about
General Electric.

Congress again allowed no
funds to support the International Education Act. Authorized in
1965, the program has never
been funded.

FUN WORKING
IN EUROPE

Jobs Abroad Guaranteed
BRUSSELS: The IntT Student
Information Service, non-profit,
today announced that 1,000
GUARANTEED JOBS
ABROAD are available to
young people ll'A to 40, YearRound and Summer. The new
34 page JOBS ABROAD magazine is packed with on-the-spotphotos, stories and information
about your JOB ABROAD.
Applications are enclosed.
LANGUAGE-CULTURE-FUNPAY-TRAVEL. For your copy
send $1.00 AIRMAIL to: ISIS,
133 Rue Hotel des Monnaies,
Brussels 6, Belgium.

Your I.D. Card
is Worth 10% at

GcUnmmV
BOULEVARD MALL
CLARENCE MALL
They won’t tell you about all the job opportunities
we have for college graduates engineers, science,
business and liberal arts majors. Not that they
wouldn't like to. It's just that there are too many
jobs and too little time. In a half-hour interview
our man would barely have time to outline the
scope and diversity of the opportunities we offer.
That’s why we published a brochure called "Starting Points at General Electric." In plain language
—

it will tell you exactly how and where a person with
your qualifications can start a career with General
Electric. Pick up a copy at your Placement Office.
Then arrange for a productive session with our
interviewer He'll be on your campus soon.

GENERAL

ELECTRIC

An equal opportunity employer

NAME BRANDS

FOR MEN AND WOMEN

Jantian's Casuals
Daxtar Loafars
and Broguas
U.S. Kad
Pappagallo

Vinars Loafars

Batas Floaters
Florshaim
Eskiloo and
Campus Boots
and many other brands

�Friday, November 10, 1967

Th

t

Spectrum

Pa«* ThirtMn

OFFICIAL BULLETIN
OFFICIAL
The

Official

ihlkation

aI

the

Students who do not make
their appointments at the scheduled time, or who do not keep

BULLETIN

Bulletin

is

Stale

on

authorized
University of

register in 'Clark Gym on Registration Day, January 22, 1968.

no
be

editorial responsibility. Notices should
sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to 114
Hayes Hall, attention Mrs. Fischer, before
2 p.m. the Friday prior to the week of

All SophoPre-Registration
mores, Juniors and Seniors
You can pick up master cards
and registration material in Dietendorf Reception Area, Room
114 through December 15.
—

—

publication. Student organization
are not accepted for publication.

notices

The Faculty of Educational
Studies, Application Deadlines—
Deadlines for acceptance of ap-

O.T. students will pick up registration material and make their
appointments in the Physical
Therapy Department, 264 Winspear.

to the Certification
(Professonal Education
Sequence) are as folows:

plications
Program

December 15, 1967—for those
who intend to begin Spring,
1968.

May 3, 1967—for those who
intend to begin Summer, 1968.
Freshmen Pre-Registration
Is now in progress for next se-

—

mester. Today, November 10, is
last last day for freshmen whose
last names begin with A-M to
pre-register.

Those

students whose last
names begin with N-Z may see
their advisers, plan their programs and register for courses
from November 13' through December 15.
Students must make appointments with the University College Receptionist in Diefendorf
114 one week in advance. At this
time the receptionist will give the
subsequent registration procedures.
O.T. students will pick up their
registration material and make
their appointments in the Physical Therapy Department, 264
Winspear. Nursing students are
advised and registered through
the School of Nursing.

Nursing students are advised
and registered through the
School of Nursing.

Juniors and Seniors in Business Administration, Engineering, Education, Medical Technology, and Pharmacy, please refer
to Divisional Office.

General notices
November 16
The Faculty of Educational
Colloquium Series
will begin
with an address by Dr. Ernst Z.
Rothkopf,
noted psychologist
and supervisor of the learning
and instructional processes research group of the Bell Telephone Laboratories in New Jersey. The topic is “Attentive
Processes in Learning from Written Discourse,’’ Millard Fillmore
Room, Norton, 3:45 p.m.
November 17
Pharmacy Seminar
presents
Mr. W.R. Anderson, University
“Structural
of Wisconsin,
Elucidation of Tumor Inhibitory
Principles Isolated from Acnistus arborescens.” Health Sciences, Room 246, 4 p.m.
—

—

General announcements
Please contact the University
further informatiqn concerning
the following interviews:
November 13

General Dynamics

Owens-Illinois, Inc.
General Tire &amp; Rubber Co.
Pittsburgh-Des Moines Steel
Co.
City of Los Angeles—
Bureau of Engineering
Attica Central Schools
Smithtown Central School
November 13, 14
E.I. Dupont De Nemours
Co., Inc.

&amp;

November 14
Corning Glass Co.
Buffalo Forge Co.
Remington Office Equipment
—Division of Sperry Rand
Corp.

Merck

Co.
Calgon Corp.
Mobil Oil Corp.
West Irondequoit Central
School District
&amp;

Boston U. chapter of
LEMAR IS recognized
MAR,

Special to the Spectrum

University of Buffalo is no longer the only University to recognize a LEMAR as an official student activity. Boston University
recently gave B.U. LEMAR such
recognition, and the group held
its first mass meeting Nov. 1.

“Because of the increase of the

use of marijuana on campus.
LEMAR is not merely an actioninformation group
it is the
son of necessity,” says Eric M.
Zinkawich, president of the new
organization. “Our university is
located in an area which has
been termed the third largest
hallucinogenic and amphetamine
—

center in the country.”
Patterned

after Buffalo’s LE-

About 75
TORONTO (UPI)
deserters from U. S. military

November 15
Union Carbide—Carbon
Products Division
Reliance Electric
Philco Corp.
Reichold Chemicals, Inc.
(Varcum Chemical Division)

and are posing a new problem
for immigration officials already
troubled by youths fleeing here
to avoid the draft, it was revealed Sunday.
Kenneth McNaught, a University of Toronto history professor,
discussed the problem in an article in the weekly magazine of
the Toronto Star entitled, “After
the Draft Dodgers: American Deserters—And Why Wc Should
Let Them in, too."
“While it is hard to get an ac
curate figure for Canada," Me-

November 16
General Electric Co.
(Finance Only)
Westinghouse Electric

November 17
Hooker Chemical Corp
Allied Chemical Co.

mous if they wish, and urges all
public members to sign a pledge
that they will not use, possess,
or sell illegal drugs while a mem-

ber of the group.
Unlike State University of Buffalo LEMAR, however, the Boston students have asked for, and
are in the process of getting,
university office space and financial help.
Both

the State University of
and the BU LEMAR
groups have offered to help Joseph Oteri, the Boston lawyer
challenging the
Massachusetts
marijuana laws as unconstitutional, in any way.
Buffalo

US military deserters
pose Canadian problem

November 15, 16, 17

Eastman Kodak Co.

the Boston group allows

—

forces currently are

in Canada

Naught said, “there are probably
75 deserters who already have
made their way here. That number is certain to grow rapidly.”

Informed guesses have put the
number of draft-evading Americans now in Canada at about
6,000, most of them emigrating
due to opposition to the U. S.
war in Vietnam But the question
of American deserters previously has received little notice.

McNaught said Canadian immigration policy toward
the
draft dodgers is “an unpleasant
mixture of hypocrisy among high
officials and inadequate supervision at lower echelons.”

Student testing center registration schedule
Last Day to

Test

Register

College Entrance Examination

Board
College Level Exam Program
Graduate Record Exam
National Security Agency

Professional Qualification
Test
Navy College Aptitude Test
Pre-Nursing Exam

...Nov. 11....

Test
Date
Dec. 2
Nov, 18

Applications
Available

High Schools

316 Harriman
316 Harriman
Dec, 9 ....Nt. Sec. Agency,
Ft. Geo. Meade, Maryland
Attn: Personnel Office
Nov. 15
Dec. 9
316 Harriman
or Navy Recruitng, 1021 Main
Nov. 18
Dec.2 . School of Nursing
Nov 11
Nov. 14
Nov. 24.

....

Dec. 9

&lt;PJ

NEW...

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AFTER SHAVE from »J 50
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SWANK Inc.-Sol* Distributor
At an alternate fragrance,
try JADE EAST or Jade East CORAL

b

,

J

There once was a lady named Mitzi,
Engaged to a Fritz from Poughkeepsie.
But she bade him goodbye
When his Schlitz had run dry.

Said Mitzi: “No Schlitzie, No Fritzie.”

�Th

Pig* Pi*rt*m

•

Friday, November 10, 1967

Spectrum

Come gather 'round people
Wherever you roam
And admit that the waters
Around you have grown.
And accept it that soon
You'll be drenched to the bone,
If your time to you is worth savin'
Then you better start swimmin'
Or you'll sink like a stone.
For the times they are a-changin'!
iV63

(Unp) by M Witmark &amp; Son in the U.S.A.
1964 by M. Witmark &amp; Son under ll"'Vffwl Copyright Convention.
Used by Permission.

Bob Dylan

To communicate is the beginning of understanding

(A.) AT&amp;T
H tiiKuM

�Friday, November 10, 1967

Pa«* FtftMn

The Spectrum

Sportin' Life

the spectrum of

sports

by Bob Woodruff
Sports

football. Tee

Bulls travel to Philadelphia to complete
road swing against hungry Wildcats
by Jay
Spectrum

Reporter

The State University of Buffalo football team will complete a four-game road trip when it encounters Villanova
this Saturday. A Bulls’ victory would raise their season mark
to 6-3 and leave little to doubt on the success of their deepening venture into big time college football.
Villanova, 3-5 this season, and the Bulls have had identical opponents three times this season but a comparison of
the results doesn’t qualify as a Sherlock Holmes mystery
solver.
Buffalo was able to defeat once-defeated” labels this season,
Boston College, to whom Villanova lost, and they took care

of Delaware

with

considerable

more ease than the Wildcats who
had to struggle for a 21-13 vic-

However, Holy Cross
achieved opposite results from
B. C. in its two games against

tory.

this Saturday’s opponents, scoring 25 points less against the
defense of Villanova and losing
the ballgame.

sive backfield.

The Bulls have been tough in
ground defense through the first
eight games but the pass defense
has not been that stringent. Unless Villanova can find someone
on the style of Jim Nance by tomorrow, Andrejko will probably
spend a great deal of the game
throwing footballs through the

Pennsylvania air.

Should a pass rush or numerous inlercenlions force him to
go to a ground game, he'll probably call on Frank Boal. This jun-

ior

Rich Moore
Bulls' biggest foe of the season
(6-7, 280)

Defense the key word
Defense is the key word for
Villanova. Head Coach Jack
Gregory inherited this team from
former coach Alex Bell after
spring practice and one of the
more interesting things he found
on inspection of his new possession was tackle Rick Moore.
Moore is

the biggest player

the Bulls have faced this season
and his size and talent seems to
leave him destined for a shot at
professional football He was a
member of the Villanova defense
that allowed only two touchdowns in the last four games of
the 1966

season.

This year he had three other
returnees, linebacker and co-captain Fred Levinsky and safetymen Joe Gaco and Dennis Kelley
have led the better half of the
Wildcat’s team.

With the rest of a big defense
they've been responsible for
breaking the hearts of Villanova
fans on at least two separate
occasion this

year, when their
efforts couldn't make up
for weaknesses on offense. The
opponents were Xavier and Virginia Tech, both wearing “only
gallant

halfback

has

tremendous

of

Hutch Teeh

Almost three decades ago. there was
another Lee Jones bursting out of the UB
backfield. Lee Jones Sr. was as brilliant
a runner in the dawn of the forties as
his son is today. The gentleman who
coached Lee Sr. and is now the Director
of Athletics at this school, Mr. James
Peelle, passed along this story about the

Bulls in Emerson hotel
When the Bulls squad arrived in Baltimore, they were put up
at the Emerson Hotel. Everyone, that is except Lee Jones Sr., who
could not stay with his white teammates, and was forced to stay at
a Negro YMCA.

itkJKm

M

Frank Boal

junior

halfback with 'tremen-

dous speed.'

team for the fifth time, a record,
and cornerback Tom Hurd will
be looking to pick off an aerial
to break the career school mark
of twelve interceptions, which he
lied by snaring two against Dcla-

Widespread talk
Meanwhile, in Baltimore,

year

the Bulls defeated

Villanova, 28 8. Two in a row and
the Bulls come home as “victorious conquerors,” but in order to
do so they'll have to handle a
team itching for revenge and
more important, trying to sal
vage a .500 season

talk of Jones’ appearance became

widespread. Newspapermen repeatedly called Peclle to find out if
he was going to use his hoy in the game. Editors of Negro journals
begged the Buffalo coach to use Jones, but Peelle remained noncommilal.

The day of THE game arrived, and one of the largest crowds
ever to see Hopkins play filed into (he stadium. Actually, the contest was rather one-sided, as the Bulls surged to a four touchdown
lead as the fourth quarter opened.
Jones was still

ware

Last

Upon his arrival in Maryland, Peclle conferred with the athletic
staff at Hopkins. He was warned that if Jones went into the game
the Southern fans might leave the ballpark, or the Hopkins players
might leave the field. Smart tactician Peclle realized that under
certain conditions Jones presence could come in quite handy. If
the Bulls fell behind, he would just substitute Jones, and hopefully
the stands would empty and the hosts would exit. It might be a
little lonely, but at least the Bulls could have a good workout in a
temperate climate.

riding

the bench

As Mr. Peelle describes it. the day was very windy and dust
swirls on the gridiron hindered the spectators view. I hiring the height
of the turbulence on the field, Peelle sent Jones in hoping the fans
woudn’t catch the substitution.
When the dust settled, Jones was at halfback
Nobody

walked off the field
the stadium

Nobody left

And Lee Jones Sr. had left his mark on Balt

The offensive line that will be
trying to prevent Ted Gibbons
and company from dumping
Andrejko is a big one, just under
230 pounds, and it is manned by
back from last

Injuries plague UB
Meanwhile U, B will go into
this game with a variety of injuries that could prove to be a
key factor in the outcome. The

Bulls’ only real breakaway runner, Ken Rutkowski, reinjured his
left ankle against Delaware, and
long
is doubtful. Rulkowski’s
runs have awakened a plodding
offense at various times this season. The Bulls did without him
one other time this season, and
could only manage to put six
points on the scoreboard.
Also doubtful is Irving Wright,
a standout linebacker, who is suffering from a deep thigh bruise.
Aches and pains of a less serious
nature are hampering fullback
Lee Jones and quarterback Mick
Murtha, both of whom are nursing sore shoulders. Both, however, are expected to play.

On the positive side, linebacker Mike Luzny will have an opportunity to make the All-East

vi-ilhont a

Bulls have ever greeted

speed and last week against Holy
Cross he ran a punt back 83
yards. He is another example
of the fallability of the theory
of size, to which many football
coaches seem to adhere.

five lettermen
season.

Tfiph

The athletic department at Hopkins was not sure that it would
be advisable for the Bulls to bring along their Negro halfback on
this Southern trip, but they left the final decision on this issue to
Buffalo coach Jim Peclle. Pcelle sat down with his soft-spoken backfield threat and asked Lecland if he wanted to go to Baltimore under
such conditions. Jones was willing.

QB is 13th in nation

erly escaped answering phones
from the press box by winning
a starting position in the defen-

tn Buffalo mil

racial sentiment in Baltimore paralleled
the feelings in Mississippi, Alabama and
the other hard core confederate states.

and the scores were the same,
3-0.

The player who was unsuccessful in those instances in piloting
the team will be directing the
Cats’ offense this Saturday. He
is Senior Bill Andrejko and with
his failures have come more than
an unequal amount of success.
At the present time Andrejko is
thirteenth in the nation in passing, using John Schumke and
Bruce Bendish as his primary
receivers. Backing up Andrejko
is John Sodasko, who has clev-

ramp

elder Jones.
In the season’s finale in 1942, the
Bulls were scheduled to meet Johns Hopkins in Baltimore. Twenty-five years ago,

Schreiber
Staff

editor

The two touchdowns Lee Jones notched in Delaware on Saturday
makes him the highest scorer in the annals of University of Buffalo

Kickina

*

specialist

Zenon Andrusyshyn, the UCLA kicking specialist,
Shown as he punts out of his own end zone
aga/nsf Oregon Stale. Andrusyshyn kicked three
goals last week, but game ended in 16-16

more

�1

7 he

Friday, November 10, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* Sixteen

Hoople predict:

Alabama should defeat LSU;
Two games decide Rose Bowl
Last week the Hoople’s assistant, Richer, enjoyed a
tremendous week picking 10 out of 12 games. His only loss
was by one point as Houston nipped Georgia in a close
15-14 decision while UCLA was tied by Oregon State 16-16.
This 10-1-1 record surpasses the Hoople’s best record of
10-2 but things were all even up as the Hoople soundly
trounced Raunchy Richer in the Physics Bowl 36-34.
However, enough said about
last week’s beginner’s luck and
on to this week’s slate of games.
An unusually large number of
top games are on tap for football buffs starting off with a
great battle in the South between LSU and Alabama.
Following this contest are two
Big Ten games which could very
well decide who will go to the
Rose Bowl.
Undefeated Indiana meets the
hardnosed Spartan’s of Michigan
State, while the highly rated
Purdue Boilermakers knock
heads with defensive giant Minnesota. So here without further
ado are the Hoople Picks of The

Week:
Texas 31, Baylor 7: Chris Gilbert and Bill Bradley are finally
beginning to live up to their

Alabama 14, LSU 12: Quarterback Kenny Stabler and end
Dennis Homan should team up
to provide the Crimson Tide offensive fireworks and in a you
pick ’em affair the nod will go
to Alabama. After all, any team
that has a coach that can walk
on water can’t be that bad. In
a week of great contests this
should be the Game of The
Week.
Purdue 21, Minnesota 10: This
game matches the great defense

of Minnesota against the explosive offense of the Boilermakers,
Spearheading Purdue’s attack is
the brilliant Leroy Keyes who
will have to be at his best to offset the dynamic Gopher defense.

use 28, Oregon State 21: Without their mercurial halfback,
vaunted reputations. The Long0. J. Simpson, the Trojans are
horns possess a tough mobile defense and a grinding offense, reduced to just another great
while the Baylor Bears don’t team. However, senior halfback
Steve Grady has more than adescare anyone this year.
UCLA 21, Washington 20: This quately replaced the Southern
superstar. In the Beavers they
game between two of the nation’s most talented teams should meet a talent laden team that albe a close scoring affair, but the ready owns an upset over previously undefeated Purdue. If the
nod has to go to the Uclans because they have one Beban and Trojans are not caught looking
ahead to their game with UCLA
Washington doesn’t have any.
Tannassoe 28, Tulane 6: The they should manage to break
Vols shape up to be the best through the Beavers’ dam.
team in the SEC which is the
Colorado 31, Kansas 7: The
best conference in the nation.
With three great quarterbacks Buffaloes should be mad enough
to start a stampede after losing
and end Richmond Flowers, Tentwo weeks in a row. Wilmer
nessee will more than offset the
Cooks and L. E. Margolis, Colorrunning of Tulane’s great fulado’s two running backs, should
back, Jeff Hills,
Indiana 28, Michigan State 24: have a field day running through
The Hoosiers have been the Cinthe porous Kansas defense.
Georgia 17, Florida 0: The
derella team of the year so far,
but their bubble might be broken Gators will find it rough going
this week as they run against a against a big and talented Bulldog squad. The game will featough Spartan team. If quarterback Harry Gonso can come up ture a running contest between
with a good game the Hossicrs Georgia’s fullback Ronnie Jenkins and Florida’s fine halfback,
should remain unbeaten.
Penn State 17, North Carolina Larry Smith. However, the deciding factor will be the Bull14. This should be one of the biggest upsets of the season as dog’s superior depth.
Bulls 24, Villanova 21: Defourth ranked North Carolina
meets the always tough Nittany spite the score of last week’s
game, the Bulls were very unLions. The key to this game will
be Penn Slate quarterback Tom impressive. Mickey Murtha is too
erratic to be considered a suSherman who will match his aerial skill against a tenacious
perior quarterback, while the
Wolfpack defense. In what should pass defense is about as good as
be the Upset of The Week.
a screen door in a submarine.
Although Villanova has failed
Oklahoma 21, Kansas 0; The
Sooners of Oklahoma arc beginto impress anyone this year, the
ning to resemble the Bud WilkinBulls will have to play all out
son dynasty of old. With a trefootball if they arc to avoid an
mendous offense and a rugged embarrassing upset. The differdefense the Jayhawks will be in ence in this game should be the
for a rough afternoon of football
toe of Bob Embow and the dethis Saturday.
fensive wizardry of Mike Luzny.

Playboy bunnies beat UPI
in last play of game
Hugh
NEW YORK (UPI)
Hefner’s “look but don’t touch”
policy for his Playboy bunnies
was overlooked a bit Sunday
when the New York bunnies
played a touch football game at
Central Park.
—

Providing the “opposition” were
a group of eager staffers from
United Press International, who
were issued a record number of
“illegal use of the hands" penalties during the spirited clash.
There were some questions
about the final score as the game
was tied 6-6 going into the final

minutes.
But on the last play the bun-

nies pulled

the

“hidden

ball

trick” as one of the gals stuffed
the ball under her shirt and the
bunnies took off in every direction, By the time the UPI players figured out which one had
the ball, she had crossed the
goal line and the bunnies claimed
a 12-6 “victory."

Coach Fred
UPI
McMane
claimed the play was illegal but
to
look at the
said, “I’ll have
films” before making any further comments.

UB fencing coach expresses optimism
although team is short on experience
by Angejo Cordero, Jr.

With a considerable rebuilding task and an ambitious
schedule confronting him, State University of Buffalo fencing coach Sid Schwartz nevertheless expresses an air of
optimism when discussing his squad’s prospects for the upcoming season.
Asked about his expectations, he said: “Although we’re
somewhat short on experience, I’m confident that the boys
will fence well. Saber is the only real question mark, but
if our second and third men continue to progress the way
they’ve been doing, it shouldn’t be too much of a problem.
I’m looking forward to a really good season.”
An examination of Coach Schwartz’s record lends considerable
credibility as to the accuracy of
his forecast. In 28 years at the
State University of Buffalo helm,
he has experienced a losing
slate but once. Over that span,
his teams have compiled an impressive 240-69 log for a winning
percentage of .776, one of the
best in the nation. In addition,
Coach Schwartz has produced
three All-Americans within the
last decade.

Formidable opposition
With only four returning letterthe Swashbucklers are
forced to go with five first year
men in the starting lineup against
the likes of Cornell, Notre Dame,
Penn State, Syracuse, and Oberlin. The Big Red and Irish tied
for the sixth spot in the 1967
men,

NCAA Championships.

As usual, the Bulls will conclude their season by competing
in the demanding North Atlantic
Intercollegiate Fencing Championships, and the intensely competitive NCAA Championships.
Epee appears to be the fencing
Bulls’ strongest weapon with returning lettermen Steve Morris
and Tony Walluk seeking to at
least duplicate last season’s successes. Morris finished fourth in
the 1967 North Atlantic Championships, Bruce Renner, last

year’s top frosh fencer, rounds
out the potent trio with sophs
Phil Henry and Jim Ellenbogen
as the backup men.

Wirth top toiler
Leading the foil team will be
letterman George Wirth, a consistent winner last year, and
stylish Pierre Chanteau who was
sorely missed last year when torn
ankle ligaments sidelined him for
the entire campaign, Ronnie
“Doe” David up from the frosh,
completes the foil squad, with
newcomer Don Janeszco in reserve.
The saber team looms as the
squad’s major weakness with only
one experienced performer, senior captain Jon Rand. Rand accounted for thirty-two victories
last year, and is expected to come
through with another fine campaign. Promising soph Eddie
Share and quickly developing
newcomer A1 Demsky round out
the starting lineup with Bill
Goldstein and Herb Sanford providing depth.

Willert optimistic
Second year frosh coach Dick
Willert left himself little room
for improvement, racking up an
11-2 slate last year, but seems to
think that his current crop of
freshmen have the potential to
do even better. The youthful,
dynamic frosh mentor quipped:

ferlmk*
Jon Rand
Buffalo's captain returns for his
third varsity campaign as team's
top sabreur.
“This team has a lot of potential.
If the kids are willing to really
put out, it should be a really
good season. Otherwise, it might
just be an ordinary year.”
The highly spirited Baby Bulls
will be led by talented New York
City high school star Bill Kazer,
who is expected to make a sizeable dent in the State University of Buffalo record books. ■
The fencing Bulls will get the
benefit of a tightener against
the State University of Buffalo
Alumni Nov. 31, and will open
the season on Dec. 2 at Clark
Gym against R.I.T. and McMaster

in a triangular meet.

Pro football forecast predicts
Buffalo Bills over New York Jets
Surprise! Instead of reading the usual dull commonhowever, should swing the tide
place pro football predictions by Springville, The Spectrum of the game in favor of the Bay
readers are in for a great treat this week as the Hoople has area boys.
San Diego 56, Miami 13: The
graciously consented to help out the boys and write their

Chargers should
great
column.
offensive show against what has
schedule
Also, this week’s pro
is again basically very to be the poorest defensive team
easy (not like the college picks) with but one or two hard in the league. Anyone who could
give the Bills 35 points must be
games highlighting the agenda.
put on a

The Packer-Brown game shapes
up the best contest in the senior
league while New York and Buffalo knock heads in a key con-

test at Shea Stadium.
So far the Hoople has yet to
lose a pro game so his percentage
is a perfect .1000. Last week the
scores were 37-7, 27-24, 17-7,
21-17, 43-7, and 3-2. In the AFL
the scores were 42-21, 21-17, 10-7
and 123-9. So here without further
ado are the Hoople Pro Picks Of
The Week.

Baltimore 38, Atlanta 10: No
contest here as Unitas and company should shred the nonexistent Falcon Defense. The only
thing that will save the game
from hitting triple figure is the
brilliant play of Falcon middle
linebacker Tommy Nobis.
Green Bay 28, Cleveland 21;
This game should highlight of the
pro schedule as Bart Starr and
the Packer defense tangle with
Ryan, Kelley and Collins. The tilt
could go either way depending on
the fragile condition of both quarterbacks.

Dallas 35, New Orleans 17: The
Saints gained their initial NFL

victory last week but won’t be
able to repeat that performance
against the revitalized Cowboys
led by Don Meredith.
Chicago 21, New York 20: This
has to be the toughest NFL pick
of the week. The Bears are coming off a big win over the Lions

while New York blew last week’s
game to the. Vikings. Chicago’s
snowy Soldier’s Field could be
the decisive factor in this one.
Los Angeles 44, Philadelphia 7:

The Rams' front four should have
a field day with Eagle quarterback Norm Snead. Philadelphia
certainly didn’t impress anyone
by their loss to the Saints last
week.

St. Louis 24, Pittsburgh 14: St.
Louis quarterback Jim Hart is a
future NFL standout and coupled
with rookie of the year candidate
Dave Williams, the Cardinals will
make this Sunday a rough afternoon for the Steelers.
San Francisco 35, Washington

31: This should be one of those
high scoring affairs as quarterbacks Brodie and Jurgensen will
literally fill the air with footballs. The Forty-Niners’ defense,

playing with only 10 men.
Kansas City 35, Boston 28: The
Chiefs showed last week that
they are still a team to be reasoned with as they handily defeated the Jets. In their last ditch
effort to remain alive in the
Western title race the Chiefs
should have more than enough
dive to stop the hapless Pats.
Houston 14, Denver 10; This is
a choice of the lesser of two evils.
Denver has no offense but it
more than makes up for this with

its lack

of defense.

Houston’s

biggest offense is their defensive
secondary and specialty teams. In
what should be a terrible game
Houston will win on a interception runback in the fourth
quarter.
Buffalo

28, Jets 17: This game
had to be saved for last as it
will come as a shock to most
normal people. The Jets have lost
Emerson Boozer for the year and
Matt Snell is not in top shape as
of yet. On the other hand the
Bills are beginning to show some
life and if Jack Kemp can complete more than two passes in
a row the Jets wil be in for the
Upset of tho Year,

�Friday, November 10, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* S*v*nt**n

UB Hockey Bulls open season with Hurd honored by ECAC
game against Buffalo State tomorrow
Spectrum

Staff

were

Reporter

The fiery Hockey Bulls of the State University of Buffalo will start playing for real tomorrow night at 10 p.m.
as they take on Buffalo State in the Bulls’ home opener at
the Amherst Recreational Center.
Second year Coach Trey
So as the 1967 season is about
Coley and General Manager
to get under way, memories of
Howie Plaster have their
last year’s third place finish in
players ready for tomorrow’s the Finger Lakes Hockey League
debut in what is beyond a dance in Coach Coley’s mind. Mr,
doubt the finest Hockey Club Coley has definite plans for imever to represent our school. provement, and he doesn’t want
“We’re 80% better than last
year,” Coach Coley candidly admits. After watching the team
work out, this reporter has come
to the conclusion that Mr. Coley
is wrong. The 1967 Bulls ice
hockey club is at least 100%
stronger than last year’s 7-7-1
squad.

Canadian recruitment
The main reason for the highcaliber personnel on this year’s
club is a magnificent Canadian
recruitment job by Mr. Flaster.
The fact that Mr. Flaster actually
lived in Canada for six months to
help in Canadian recruitment is
a story in itself.
At any

to settle for second place.

Slap shots

Buffalo’s marksmen against Mo-

hawk.

Last year’s leading scorer was
A1 Dever with seventeen goals.
This year Coach Coley feels at
least five Bulls have a crack at
forty or more goals—The speed
on this year’s club? Last year’s

quickest skater was Jim MeKowen who has all he can do to
keep up with many of this year's
newcomers. Frank Lewis is probably the fastest player on the
’67 club
General Manager
Plaster lights a match after every
goal scored in practice. At a recent scrimmage, the scoring was
so heavy that Mr. Plaster ran
out of matches
Amherst Recreational Center is located on

blue and white have
played in only one exhibition
giving away a sure win
game
last Friday to Mohawk College of
Hamilton, Ont. Mohawk College
scored seven times when Bull
icers were in the penalty box to
beat the State University of Buffalo hockeymen 7-6. Buffalo
picked up an unbelievable seventy-eight minutes of penalties,
forty in misconducts. In rare
full strength they outskated and
moments when Buffalo was at
outchecked their Canadian hosts
Judge, Lewis, Rombough, Mar—

—

ence
Hurd was a defense standout
in the Bulls 38-19 victory over
Delaware last Saturday, just as
he was the week before in the
loss to Holy Cross. Against Delaware he intercepted two passes,
recovered a fumble to set up a
field goal, ran a punt back 22
yards to set up a touchdown
and made
seven
unassisted
tackles.

—

—

The

Tom Hurd, University of Buffalo’s senior back from Elmira,
Tuesday was named Defense
Back of the Week by the Eastern College Athletic Confer-

Millersport Highway

just eight

minutes from the Main Street
Campus. All home games start

One of his tackles stopped a
Delaware back apparently on
his way to a touchdown on the
one yard line. Hurd’s two interceptions tied him for the Buffalo
career record of 12, set by Dan
Sella, a 1967 Buffalo graduate.

Tom Hurd
E.C.A.C.

labs Elmira senior

at 10 p.m. sharp
Special season tickets are available to stu—

all eleven home games
dents
for the price of five dollars—
Student support is necessary for
big time hockey at this University
The Bulls arc also home on
Sunday to play a strong alumni
team of Nichols
should be a
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�Friday, November 10, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* Eighteen

Fenton lecture
studies religion

§

Speaking on “Religion in the
University" the role of the uni-

discussed by B. Davie Napier in
the last Fenton lecture.
He

stated

that

ca

the position

once held by religious institu-

tions is now held by the university. The family and government
ihave

lost

influence

with the

youth, he claimed. Since the
university iis only force respected by the intelligent student, it
is forced to fill this void.

Mr. Napier feels that "To
whom much is given much is
expected." He stresses the concept of the “servant university”
as the means through which the
student can fill the gap left by
the dissolution of traditional val

ues. According to

Mr.

ef°«*

Napier,

the passion the student feels for
the university is “almost mes-

sianic.”

He also commented on the
various problems facing the student today. One of the most important of these is the impersonalization that is a direct result
of institutionalization. He feels
that there is little concern about
the student as a "whole person.”
Mr. Napier used the term "well-

*

|3

a

00coi*»P

trained hamburger” to describe
the average student upon leaving

the university.
The problem of communication
between the generations was also
discussed. Mr. Napier claimed
that the younger generation's at
titudes toward sex can be traced
back to the parents and that the
student of today is caught in the
middle of a moral revolution. He
said: "Some of the old gods are
dying and we cannot resusitate
them even if we would.”

CCNY protests
police on campus
A sluNEW YORK (CPS)
dent strike took place at the
City College of New York in
protest against the use of outside police on campus.
—

The police were called in to
arrest students who were blocking construction of a temporary
building on campus. A total of
49 students were arrested and
charged with criminal trespass.
The strike was hastily organ
ized after a protest rally outside
the CCNY library. An estimated
1500 students attended the rally.
Students set up picket lines in

front of several classroom build
on campus and chanted
"cops
off campus"
as they
marched. A spot check of students coming from class indicated that attendance was cut by
ings

about one half.

The flare-up was reminiscent
of a controversy that arose over
the same temporary building
two weeks ago. At that time the
protesters won a two-week delayin construction. Their original
goal had been to keep the building from going up on what they
regarded as a particularly scen-

ic spot on campus.
The stay in construction ran
out, and CCNY President Buell
G. Gallagher held to his promise to arrest any students who
continued to sit-in at the construction site.
In justifying his use of outside police, President Gallagher
introduced a new source of dispute into the controversy. He
told the press he had taken the
action to fulfill a promise made
to the Onyx Society, CCNY’s organization of black students, that
more classroom space would be
made available for a special program involving graduates of slum
high schools.

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�Friday, November 10, 1967

Th

•

Spectrum

Page Nineteen

Greek graphs

Another party weekend planned by frats
by Elliot Stephan Rose

into Gamma Theta Upsilon, the

Sigma Phi Epsilon, by holding

stone, Secretary Treasurer, New-

-iv

Alpha Epsilon Pi is going to

hold its F.I.S.H. party tomorrow

night at our hall. Monday, the
brothers will hold their 3rd annual track night at Batavia
Downs. Congratulations to newlyinducted brother Ron Siegal . . .
Alpha Phi Delta meets tonight at
the Dellwood to hear “Country”

and his soul band. John’s West
Side rooming house will provide
the scene for tomorrow’s Bowery Party . . . The brothers of
Alpha Sigma Phi are looking
forward to tonight’s social with
the nurses of Buffalo General.
Tomorrow is a B.Y.O, at Banach’s Bungalow. , .

Gamma Phi, in accordance with
the President’s Council on Physical Fitness, will hold a hayride
tomorrow night at the AAA
ranch., The first shift led by
Sober Stephanson will depart at
7:30 p.m.; the second at 9:30
p.m. For information call Paul
at 832-7183.

Congratulations to brother
Dave Becker who was initiated

. . . This
Saturday is Phi
Epsilon Pi's Australian Aborgine
Day. A football game is scheduled in which there will be no
cheating, with an ensuing scavenger hunt at 3 p.m.'

nity

appointed

committee chairmen

are Shiela Abramowitz, activities;
Carm De Fazio, publications; Gail
Frankenstein, assistant treasurer; Sharon Gerstein, phone
squad; Mary Lou Greco, scholarship; Patti Hatmaker, chaplain; Bonnie Plostock, sunshine;
Lori Rittenhouse, philanthropic;
Myra Rosenbaum,
files; Lori
Sheskan and Naomi Wiseman,

urday, were able to present a
check totaling $702.64 to the
Muscular Dystrophy Foundation.
The brothers would like to thank

all those who contributed . .
Tau Kappa Epsilon will hold a
cannibal party at Russ apartThe winners will receive appropriate gifts. At night the ment tomorrow night. The brothbrothers will congregate at ers would like to congratulate
the raiders for their exhibition
Emile’s Polish Barn for our unusual party. Pajamas and loin Friday night . . . Theta Chi Fracloths will be the expected dress. ternity is holding a Colt 45 party
tonight at the house. Dress will
Prospective freshman and sophomore rushees are welcome and be casual.
should contact our rush chairSororities
man, the Duck, at 836-8048. . .
The sisters of the pledges of
The pledges at Pi Lambda Tau Alpha Gamma Delta will be at
will host the brothers tonight tending the Pan-Hellenic Ball
with home movies and live enter- tomorrow evening. There will be
tainment. Tomorrow night the a cocktail party preceeding the
brothers will have a party at the Ball at the Buffalo Athletic Club
Hoiei Worth with the Middle starting at 7:30 p.m. . . . The
Class . . . The brothers of Sigma sisters of Chi Omega will have
Alpha Mo will hold a party toa punch party before the Pannight at the Walden. There will Hellenic Ball at the home of Liz
be plenty of antifreeze served Lade. The sisters will be having
to keep the engines going. Cona football game with the Thela
gratulations to our bowling team Chi Pledges; our overall record
which is currently in first place. is 1 win, 1 loss, 1 tie . . .

alumnae; Carol Stefan, historian
and Fran Stern, assistant social
chairman.
The new president of the standards board is Patti Wartley.
The sisters are going to Rochester to see a production of “Marne"
Dec. 2. The sisters will be attending the Pah-Hellenic Ball tomorrow night, A cocktail party
at the Statler-Hilton will be held
before the Ball.

CLASSIFIED
FOR SALE

HOUSE FOR SALE,

convertible.
White,
black top, full power, snow tires. Must
sell, best offer. 837-3773.
1960

OLDSMOBILE

1962 VOLKSWAGEN, sunroof $325 or best

offer,

875-9875.

1964 FORD COMET, two door,
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Must sell, call 839-4169.

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CONSIDER A CAREER
WITH CORNING
Representatives of Corning Glass Works will be on
the campus of the University of Buffalo November 14
to interview young men and women with scientific,

technical or business career interests.
Corning Glass Works is an international, growth
oriented company with plants and sales offices all over

by owner. One block
under $19,000.

from U.B. Call 836-4575
WANTED

RIDE WANTED for staff member from
Millersport and Hopkins and return. Call
Joyce, daytime, 831-2806.
WANTED ORGAN and horn player for
blues band now forming. Call between
6 and 8 p.m., 876-1865.
WARM BODIES for cold beer. Continuous
dancing included. Banat Hall, tonight at
9:00. Transportation from U.B. provided.

$2.00 male, $1.50 female.
I WOULD LIKE to purchase a reasonably
priced grandfather clock. Any information, call Bruce, 886-1871.
STUDENTS WANT
to furnish apartment
cheaply.
Chance to get rid of old
furniture. Steve, 837-3082.
TUTORS: Conserve your time and utilize
;iency
your experience.
SUI
will supply you with students. Submit
phone and courses
name,
offered to
SPECTRUM box CZ.
PER$ONAL
SHALOM! For

from the
day or night.

gems

call 875-4265
LOST

LOST: One pair

Jewish Bible,

AND FOUND

of

prescription sunglasses
Nov. I. Please
return to Norton Lost and Found.
LOSTTCHEM 251 Lab Notebook in Acheson
Call Al Schroeder, 836-5379.
FOUND: One pair women's brown glasses
bewteen Diefendorf &amp; Diefendorf Annex.
in

Hayes

333,

Call Lawrence,

Wed.,

892-9548.

SITUATIONS

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TERM PAPERS 25c per
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ditto's 35c, envelopes $2.00 per hundred.
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�Friday, November 10, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* Twenty

Constitution

defeat analyzed

Religion, combined
ALBANY, N. Y.
with politics and confusion, brought a
crushing defeat to the proposed new constitution.
The to
dissent was expressed or
something that was left out of the pro
posed new charter
the Blaine Amend
—

-

ment.
A flurry of confusion in the five weeks
before election brought widespread misunderstanding of what repeal of the
Blaine Amendment meant, and voters
cast their vote as a result of that confusion.

Future action seen

The controversy is not yet over, for
both Assembly Speaker Anthony J. Travia and Senate Majority Leader Earl W.
Brydges have pledged to push it through
the legislature in time for another statewide vote in 1969.
The Blaine question split the Roman
Catholic Church from the rest of the
state's religious community and could
well set the ecumenical movement in
this state back some years.
A heavy attack on the repeal came
from the State Council of Churches, representing all the leading Protestant denominations, and from Orthodox Jewish
organizations.
Even the Catholic vote was split. Senator Brydges told conservative Republican
Catholics they could get Blaine repealed
through the legislature without accepting
the “bad” parts of the new charter. Many

of the Catholic voters obviously listened.
Rockefeller’s lukewarm attitude towards
the constitution was well displayed when
he released figures that the new charter
could cost as much as $23 billion over a
10 year period. Although it was generally
agreed the figures were vastly distorted,
they helped in the battle to kill the
constitution.
Most opposed
Another deciding factor in the defeat
was the almost unanimous opposition of
all major state organizations except the
AFL-CIO. Groups such as Associated Industries, the State Bar Association, the
League of Women Voters and the State
Chamber of Commerce zeroed in on various articles in the new charter with outspoken condemnation.
But despite its defeat, New Yorkers
did not waste $10 million on the convention. Over the past 10 years little has
been done by the legislature to modernize the state’s outdated constitution. The
main reason was that the lawmakers
lacked the tools to do the kind of constitutional research the convention did,
Now drawing on the convention's work,
a flurry of constitutional reform will probably flood legislative sessions for the
next decade. The result will probably be
like that in 1915, when the voters defeat-'
cd the convention’s work, but the legislature modified it and finally achieved its
incorporation in the state’s basic document.

•

•

•

*

•

albany

Washington
new yorl r

boston

san franclsco

compiled from our wire services by

Madeline Levine

Negroes win in Cleveland Gary
,

NEW YORK—Negro candidates scored
significant political breakthroughs in the
North and South, winning mayorships in
Cleveland, Ohio, and Gary, Ind., and gaining state legislative seats in Mississippi,
Virginia and Kentucky.

None materialized
Both Negro candidates won by razorthin margins but their victories demonstrated the growing voting power of
Negro city dwellers.

In the steel town of Gary, Ind., Richard
Hatcher, a Negro Democrat, won after
a campaign which featured the race issue
and opposition of his own local party

organization.

Victory is symbol
Democrat Carl B. Stokes, a product of

the urban slums who became the first
ever elected mayor of a major
American city, said his victory was a
"symbol of new things,”
Negro

“Truly never before have I known to
the extent that I know now the full
meaning of the words ‘God Bless America,’ said Stokes of his historic victory
over Republican Seth C. Taft.
”

As Stokes was making his victory statement in the early morning hours, horns
blew in Cleveland streets and thousands
of persons in the city’s Negro neighborhoods rushed from their homes to celebrate Stokes’ victory.
Stokes urged the city’s various ethnic
groups, many of whom deserted the Dem-

ocratic party to vote against him, to unite
behind his new administration for the
good of Cleveland.

National Guardsmen had been placed
on the alert in both Cleveland and Gary
to deal with any outbreaks of violence.

6

?

BOSTON

—

Massachusetts Secretary of

gathered considerable strength in sections
she considered White strongholds. As
expected, White carried the Negro precincts.
Mrs. Hicks, a school committee member,

lawyer and ex-schoolteacher opposed busNegro children from the ghetto to

ing

Telephoto

Another
struggle

Campus police struggled with anti-war
demonstrators who crashed through a
police barricade and set up picket lines
around the Student Placement Center
at the Univ. of California Monday. The
demonstration protested recruiting on
campus by the Central Intelligence
Agency and the Dow Chemical Co.

Action against protesters urged
WASHINGTON—Selective Service direc-

tor Lewis B. Hershey has recommended

that college students who physically interfere with military recruiting officers
on campus be subject to immediate drafting.

Disclosure of Hershey's letter to local
draft boards across the country followed
incidents in which recruiters for the armed
forces as well as the Dow Chemical Co.,
which manufactures napalm for use in
Vietnam, were blocked by student antiwar demonstrators.
At Oberlin College in Ohio, student
protesters trapped a navy recruiter in his
car for four hours until they were dispersed by police with tear gas.
In a letter dated Oct. 26, 1967, Hershey

noted that student deferments are "given
only when they serve the national interest," By the same token, he said, anyone
who violates the Selective Service Act or
any of its regulations or operations should
be denied a deferment in the national
interest. “It follows that illegal activity
which interferes with recruiting or causes
refusal of duty in the military or naval
forces could not by any stretch of the
imagination be construed as being in support of the national interest,” he said.
Hershey’s letter made no mention of
the anti-recruitment incidents, but a
spokesman in his office said it was clear
that Hershey considered any interference
with a military recruiting officer to be
illegal.

Carl B. Stokes
new mayor of Cleveland

White backlash symbol loses

State Kevin H. White was elected mayor
of Boston in a close race with Mrs. Louise Day Hicks, symbol of racial backlash.
Traditional voting patterns were shattered throughout the city as the 38-yearold White ran far ahead in areas in which
he was considered weak, while Mrs. Hicks

—UPI

Felephoto

predominantly white schools. She advocated repeal of the state’s racial imbalance law which stipulates that no school
can be more than 50 per cent non-white.
She also expressed opposition to federal
or state open housing laws designed to
ban discrimination in the sale or rental
of property.

White supported the racial imbalance
law but proposed that it be amended to
forbid busing of school children in the
first four grades. He would permit busing
the middle four grades and then let children attend a campus-type school the
last four years.

Frisco votes down Viet proposal
San Francisco beSAN FRANCISCO
came the first major city in the nation to
vote on the Vietnam war. Proposition P,
advocating an immediate ceasefire and
withdrawal of U.S. troops from Vietnam,
was on the ballot in the municipal elec—

tion.
The Vietnam proposition, allowing only
a yes or no vote, declared:
"Shall it be the policy of the people of
the city and county of San Francisco that
there be an immediate cease-fire and
withdrawal of U.S. troops from Vietnam
so that the Vietnamese people can settle
their own problems.”

Near record turnout
The voter turnout was

nearly an alltime record, about 85% of the registered
voters. Almost 40% of the voters were
in favor of immediate withdrawal. Such
a large number of dissenters from current U.S. policy was surprising in view of
the many conservative elements in San
Francisco.

A spokesman for groups advocating
passage of the proposition refused to
call it a defeat. “It's a matter of seman-

tics,” said Ed Farley. “We got 37% of
we think we’re making
the vote
...

progress,”

Dearborn, Mich., residents defeated a
last November by a
vote of 59 to 41%.
Officials of the Johnson administration
had expressed concern that the issue was
worded in such a way that it might receive a majority vote which could be interpreted as repudiation of President
Johnson's policy. Pre election polls indicate a substantial anti war vote. Although
administration officials had said repeatedly that the Vietnam referendum would
have absolutely no effect in foreign policy. they were admittedly watching the
results of the San Francisco balloting
similar resolution

with interest.
Alioto, San Francisco’s mayor, said that

Proposition P “lost because the people
could not accept a proposition calling
for unconditional surrender. But its defeat wasn’t a victory for the hawks. Most

people opposed immediate withdrawal but
they want honorable negotiations and ultimate withdrawal from Vietnam.”

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                    <text>The Spectrum

lection

prediction

County Executive, new constitution
among issues to be decided today

State University of New York at Buffalo

by Peter Simon
Spectrum

Vol. 18, No. 17

Staff Reporter

Tuesday, November 7, 1967 area will determine the outcome of one of the hardest
fought County Executive races in county history, the complexion of the new County Legislature and the fate of one
of the most controversial local political figures in recent
years.

Mikulecky says University officials
are being "played with' by war-makers
Don Mikulecky, assistant professor of biophysics, told
a Fillmore Room audience Thursday that they are being
“played with.” He said that University officials play into
the hands of war-makers by dividing students over the
question of academic freedom.
He said that students had tion of arranging the debate “to
cloud the issues.” He claimed
“been bought by 2-S defer-

Also, the fate of a $2.5 million
transportation bond issue, being
pushed hard by Gov. Rockefeller,
will be decided.

Today the long months of campaigning. ranging from rational
to ridiculous, ends, and here is
a prediction of what the people
will decide:

that a statement by Vice President Richard Siggelkow about the
Dow-CIA question occurred simultaneously with the arrangement
of the forum.

ments.”

he said.

Meaningful dialogue is essenaccording to
Terry Keegan, speaking in de-

tial to freedom,

fense of the resolution. One peison in the audience reacted by
saying: “While we are discussing, they are killing.”

Jeremy Taylor
of a campus
"ruled by administrative fiat"
expresses

fear

Mr. Mikulecky spoke at an
open forum to discuss the resolution: “The Dow Chemical Co. and
CIA should be allowed access to
the University for the purpose of
recruitment.”
The question is “not napalm,
but academic freedom” said the
primary speaker for the affirmative, Ken Becker. He quoted the
Task Force Report as stating:
“Any person invited (to the campus) shall have the right to
speak.” CIA and Dow are being
denied this right, he said.

Clouded the issues
Robert

Little, a third year
student in chemistry, accused the University administragraduate

No educational purpose
Vic Doyno of the State Univercity of Buffalo English Department argued that companies do
not serve an educational purpose
but rather a business function of
“replacing parts for a deteriorating society.”
He said to assure genuine academic freedom all business matters should be banned from cam-

pus.

Jeff Steinberg and Dr. Leroux
of the Classics Department both
said that we are living in a ‘moral vacumm.” We debate trifles,
said Mr, Steinberg, “while murders are going on in our name."

trict Attorney. This campaign,
mostly of a negative nature, is a

good example of why people shy
away from politics.

It will eventually reach

Council’s Committee

the

on Legisla-

tion, of which Mr. Johnson is a
member.
Mr, Johnson, a Democrat, represents the Masten District. He

New York State Constitution
along with the
rest of the State by telling Mr.
Travia and his accomplices to roll
it up in one big ball and throw it
out the window. However, very
few people are able to say that
they don't want any part of the
new document.
•

Buffalo will go

—

—Yates

Jeff Steinberg
"We debate trifle s, while mur
ders are going on in our name

•

Transportation Bond Issue—

This will pass, but not with much
The forum was suggested by
the Student Association and handled by the Debate Society. It
was designed to discuss but not
to decide. It began with a short
outline of the functions of the
Placement Bureau by Dr. Gerry.
Fink, the Bureau's Associate Director.

pervisor.

The meeting will be held in the
Council’s chamber in City Hall

at two o’clock.
There could conceivably be
some unhappy councilman at tomorrow’s meeting. Twelve Council seats will be decided in today’s
election, and incumbents are running in each case.

Mr. Johnson, who along with
Democratic backing has the Liberal endorsement, is opposed by
Robert Allen, a Republican, in
the election.

Albert Abgott, known on the
University campus for his role as

head of the Partners' Pres in last
year's controversy with The
Spectrum, has the Republican endorsement in the 10th District,
and will win a tight one.
County Clerk
Republican
Liberal Robert Grimm will win a
third term by a large margin
over challenger Richard Miller
•

—

(DO.

Councilman-at-Large

•

Mrs

Democrat Liberals Joseph Dudzick and Andrew Morriscy; and

Thomas Brooks. Mrs. Slominski’s
running mate, to fight it Out for
the second seat. Morrisey will win
it. with Dud/ick and Brooks close
behind. Rev. Herman Cole, a
"Peace" candidate, and an unknown, will gather a relatively
small number of votes.

District Councilman
With
nine district seats at slake, the
Democrats will win six of them.
•

—

•
Council President
Incumbent Chester Gorski (D-L) will be
re-elected hut was gtven a good
—

This
County Legislature
twenty seal body is replacing the
present 54 member Board of Su

smother Henry
with votes.

•

—

Alfreda Slominski (R-C). former
member of the Board of Education and an outspoken critic of
the concept of bussing public
school pupils, will win one of
the spots handily. This leaves

his

fight

by

Republican Conserva-

tive Albert Petrelja,
•

Comptroller
third term

George

In gaining
as Comptroller,

O’Connell (D-L)
will
Orlowski (R-C)

Survey shows that smoking pot is a
major pastime for Gl's in Vietnam
—

previously served as a County Su

pervisors. The Republicans will
capture 13 of the seats, giving
Ed Rath a six-seat GOP advantage to work with.

to spare. Gov. Rockefeller is behind it. and has a lot of prestige
at stake. If it fails. Gov. Reagan
will surely have to start looking
for another presidential running
mate.

SAIGON
The major offense of U. S. servicemen in
Individual decision
Vietnam is listed as smoking marijuana
Conscience is an individual
Articles in a Washington magazine written by John
thing, not something that can be
IV, son of the novelist, who recently served a
Steinbeck
imposed by a “violent minority,”
year in Vietnam, report that three-fourths of the GIs in
protested Bob Furconi.
Vietnam smoke marijuana.

Common Council will be asked
to draft anti-discrimination bill
The bill is concerned with discrimination involving factors such
as race, religion, sex and age.

—

Michael Dillon. Democratic Dis-

A recent survey showed

Councilman Horace C.
Johnson plans to introduce
to the Buffalo Common
Council tomorrow a bill dealing with discrimination ini
housing and employment.

County Executive

In
cumbent Edward Rath (R-L) will
be elected to his third term with
an extremely tight victory over
•

Neither of the factions involved
in the dispute had prior knowledge of the forum at the time of
this statement according to Mr.
,
Little.
A campus ruled “by administrative fiat” is the fear expressed
by Jeremy Taylor. He opposes
keeping Dow and CIA off-campus.
If the administration begins banning organizations from campus
then our “protected campus environment will be in jeopardy,

Of equal importance, voters of Buffalo and Erie County will join with the rest of
the State to determine whether or not the work of the
Constitutional Convention is
to go for naught.

of a group of inmates at a If. S.
Army stockade admitted smoking
pot. The survey prompted a wide
study to determine just how many
GIs in Vietnam are turning on.

Study ordered
The stockade study was made
by a social worker at Long Binh
on orders from Brig. Gen. Harley
L. Moore Jr., U. S. Army provost
marshal.

Of the 95 men at Long Binh
who consented to fill out ques
tionnaires, 79 admitted to smoking marijuana.

The 79 men fell into three
catagories: 45% of them had
smoked it before entering the
service, 10% since entering the
service, but before coming to
Vietnam, and the remaining 45%
since coming to Vietnam.
In a

larger study that followed, 500 men received anony-

mous

questionnaires

at

their

placement Battalion on their way

zone to the Mekong Delta
Authorities have reported finding marijuana cigarettes or bulk
marijuana in a variety of places.
It has been found during baggage shakedown, in replacement
companies, and at rest and recreation centers.

lieved.

Medics find it in the clothes
of men wounded or killed in action. No reliable figures as to
frequency are available because
any pot found by medics or at
replacement companies for homebound troops is simply destroyed
with no attempt to keep any
sort of record.

Readily available

In combat

home to the Stales.
The study is not yet complct
cd, however, according to p,«!y
chologist Capt. Ely Saypol. mari
juana usage is more widespread
in Vietnam than is generally be

Marijuana can be grown al
most anywhere in Vietnam and
is readily obtainable in the major
cities where there are major concentrations of U, S. troops.
Gen. Moore described the problem as “a damn nuisance, not a

catastrophe."
“We have pur pot trouble just

like about every community that
deals with people in this age
group,” he said.
He said the problem

was

coun-

trywide, from the demilitarized

Asked at a recent press conference whether some GIs were
smoking marijuana under combat conditions, Gen. Moore said:
"It wouldn’t surprise me in the
least.”

Gen. Moore is hoping that better enforcement and a program
to educate unit commanders to

the look and smell of pot will

cut down its use.

“By education we hope to curtail it,” the general said. “1 don’t
think we'll ever stamp it out.”

�P«9*

Two

Tuesday,

The Spectrum

7, 1967

into ghetto violence King address to examine
dtes rioting as 'threat to security' future of rights movement
inquiry

WASHINGTON
said last week vio-

“It is apparent,” Sen. McClellan said, “a new philosophy
had flourished in recent years,

tee’s senior Republican, made it
clear they would concentrate on
immediate causes of ghetto riot-

major racial disturbances in the
United Sutes killed 130 persons,
wounded 3623 and caused an estimated S210.6 million propertydamage since 1965.

theory that' we are no longer a
nation of laws.”

standing social problems such as
ghetto unemployment.

He said this movement of increasing civil disobedience “will
sweep us swiftly down the road
to chaos and anarchy.”

Warning “there is no limit to
conflagration which could sweep
this country,” Sen. Mundt said

investigators

The statistics were the first
ever compiled nationally. They
were released by the Senate per-

son.

McClellan and Sen. Karl
Mundt (R„ S. C.), the subcommit-

the first order of business should
be “to lay down more firmly the
law of the land.”

manent
mittee as it began what is expected to be an exhaustive and

lengthy inquiry into slum violence
Chairman John L. McClellan told the opening hearing
the riots are becoming a “tangible threat to the preservation of
law and order and our national
security.”

The subcommittee said its statistics were based on a survey of
129 mayors who reported 101
“major” disturbances in 76 cities. They ranged from this summer's Detroit riots to the 19bo
civil rights march in Selma.
Ala., where there was no sniping. looting, arson or vandalism.

Twelve police officers were
among those killed and 1199 officers were wounded, the panel
said. There were 7985 cases of
arson. 28.939 arrests. 5434 convictions and economic loss estimated at $504.2 million

UB will participate in
Concord Hotel carnival
State University of Buffalo students will join students from
many other Eastern colleges and
universities in participating in
the Concord Hotel’s Intercollegiate Winter-session Carnival,
A small number of students
have formed a group for those
Checks
in
going.
interested
should be made out to this group
known as “College Holidays.”

The price of $44.50 for three
days and two nights during the
carnival. Jan. 17 to 19, is less
than half the normal price for a
stay of that length.
Students from Boston U., Brandeis. CCNY, and Queens College
have gone in the past. This year

campus group expects
to 400 people to sign up.

the

300

The Concord, which accommo3000 people, has been
called the most complete resort
in the country and is said to offer virtually every type of indates

door and outdoor activity. Among
its many facilities are indoor

and outdoor ice skating, skiing,
tobagganing, indoor tennis and
swimming.

The Concord is situated in the
heart of the Catskill Mountains
in Kiamesha, N. Y.
Anyone wishing further information may contact Howie Wertheimer, 831-3365 or Janice Metropolski, 831-2894.

KLEINHANS
Thrwway

Plata

Effort £l?np And (Eollegf

All Wool
Sport Coats

;onvi

by the Student Association and
the Graduate Student Association
at 8 p.m. Thursday at Kleinhans

Music Hall.
Dr. King is one of the founders
of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference which was
formed in 1957 in Atlanta, Georgia. He is presently President of
the SCLC, which adheres to the
principle of nonviolence. This organization is committed to the belief that nonviolence can eliminate the ignorance, misunderstanding, and hatred which is
present between individuals and
ethnic and religious groups.

i

—I

—

*29”

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

In 1959, Dr, King was recognized as one of the 16 world
leaders who had made the most
contribution to the advancement
of freedom. He has been recognized also as one of the most
admired religious leaders in the
world. Dr. King is also listed in
Who’s Who in America.

more than 20 honorary degrees
from various colleges and univer-

Natural shoulder styling in
all wool fabrics. Popular patterns including plenty of
bold plaids. Spark up your
wardrobe at this money-saving prce. Sport Shop. Downtown. Also Thruway Plaza
and Boulevard Mall.

as a speaker for several
years. According to John Marci-

King

ano, Chairman of the Convocations Committee for the GSA,
“Those people who had the responsibility of inviting speakers
have been tremendously influenced by Dr. King. When the
time came to choose a speaker.
Dr. King was the logical choice.”
Working with Mr. Marciano is
Meryl Markowitz, NSA Coordinator, representing the undergraduates. This is a combined convocation of graduate and undergraduate students.

Selecting Dr. King as “Man of
the Year," Time magazine stated
that he was chosen “. . . as a man
—but also as the representative
of his people, for whom 1963 was
perhaps the most important year
in their history.” Dr. King had
become “the unchallenged voice
of the Negro people, and the disquieting conscience of the white.”

He has studied at Morehouse
College, Crozer Theological Seminary, University of Pennsylvania,
Harvard University and Boston
University where he received his
PhD in the field of Systematic
Theology. He has also received

(Srest

The Graduate Student Association and the Student Association

1963 Man of the year

—

Drive Defensively.

Great influence

In 1964, Dr. King won the
Nobel Peace Prize. Eight members of the Swedish Parliament
nominated him because “he had
succeeded in keeping his followers to the principles of nonviolence.” In addition they stated,
“without King’s confirmed effectiveness, demonstrations and
marches could easily have become violent and ended with the
spilling of blood.”

Time also claimed, “Birmingham was the main battleground
of the Negro Revolution, and
Martin Luther King, Jr., the leader of the Negroes in Birmingham, became to millions, black
and white, in South and North,
the symbol of the revolution
and the Man of the Year.”

Baulavard Mall

SALE

Civil rights leader Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr. will speak on

sities.
Dr. King has written several
books, including The Measure of
Man, Why We Can't Wait, and
Where Do We Go From Here:
Chaos or Community.

Martin Luther King
Time's "Man of the Year" will
speak on "The Future of Integration" Thursday at Kleinhans.
Kleinhans Music Hall is being
used because of its large capacity.
Mr. Marciano claimed, "Students
would be most anxious to hear
Dr. King speak, since he is one
of the most admired and respected leaders in the world to-

day.”

Buses available
The Inter-Residence Council
will make available five buses
to take students to the lecture.
Dorm students who have paid
their dorm activities fee will
have priority. The buses will be
leaving the front of Norton Hall
at 7 p.m. and will be leaving
Kleinhans at 10;30 p.m.
John Marciano added that "the
student associations are pleasantly surprised that Dr. King accepted the invitation because he
is in great demand and is extremely busy.”

Wool Slacks
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are a bear for wear. Popular
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Sheridan Dr. and Eggert Rd.

PLAN YOUR FUTURE IN
PUBLIC WORKS ENGINEERING
WITH THE
CITY OF LOS ANGELES
BUREAU OF ENGINEERING
The tremendous growth and development of Los
Angeles presents challenging career opportunities to
young engineers, helping to build the fastest growing
major city in the nation.
Our starting salary is $776 a:month. In addition to
excellent salary, we offer job rotation and tuition reimbursement.
Arrange with the Placement Office to talk with our
Engineering representative who will be on campus
NOVEMBER 13, 1967

�Tuesday,

Nbvambar 7, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* Three

Memorial is held in Norton Hall for dateline news, Nov. 7
Guevara, 'the perfect revolutionary'
"A*

A memorial to Ernesto Che Guevara, known to his
followers as “the perfect revolutionary.’’ was held Friday

ow rs . almost a

f

n^' lh

He ha&lt;i an

up a situation and do many things

BUFFALO, N.Y.—Twelve persons arrested in a narcotics raid
by federal, state and local authorities were scheduled to be arraigned
in Buff al ci| y Court today.
°

charged with

was

as a

possessing marijuana. He
identified
student
Bolivian jungle, was the head of a resistance movement well
from playing chess to at the
State University of Buffalo. The II others arrested Sunday
shooting
making
gun
a
to
a
revogoing on in Bolivia for the past few years.
were charged with disorderly conduct.
The Argentine-born major had fought with Castro lution.
Narcotics agents said ten other persons picked up during the
Guevara
Mr. Borstein described
raid were later released. A small quantity of marijuana was conbefore the 1958 Cuban Revolution.
who
as a great man
made decifiscated. they reported.
He was killed while leading 16 Almost mythical
sions not only about matters of
men into a new Bolovian guerril—

la zone. Fifteen hundred Bolivian soldiers were deployed into
the zone.
Guevara was wounded and shot
the next day.
Revolutionaries in Latin America expressed hope for the resurgence of Bolovian guerrillas.
Castro, premier of Cuba, said:
“We cannot conceive that revolutionary conditions disappear because the chief disappears.”
Selections from Guevara’s writing and poetry were read at the
memorial. “Canto a Fidel,” a
poem written in Mexico in 1956,
is a statement of belief in the
Revolution. It was read in English and Spanish.
Mr. Edward Borstein, an economist who worked in the Ministry of Foreign Commerce in
Cuba, mentioned some anecdotes
from his acquaintance with Che.

He described Guevara as toughminded with a tough sense of
humor, a Mephistophelian look
about him. He became to his fol-

the economy, but also about life
and death of people, winning or
losing a battle or building a resistance movement.

HILO, Hawaii—Planeloads of tourists and residents of other
islands flocked to Hawaii's volcano country today to watch Ml.
Kilauca's Halcmaumau fire pit put in its most spectacular show of
the year
Kilauca. one of the largest and most temperamental volcanoes
in the world, exploded Sunday morning in a tower of sulphurous
smoke and lava Her dazzling fire fountains etched a bright orange
glow in the Hawaiian sky.

MOSCOW—With speeches and pageantry the Soviet Union Monday completed preparations for celebrating Bolshevism's 50lh year
in power. Communist China disdainfully ordered a countcreclebra-

lion.

Guevara
memorial

University

students staged

"memorial service" Friday

a
to

Che Guevara.

Placement Center to conduct interviews
as scheduled, excluding Dow and CIA
Interviews conducted by the
University Placement Center,
with the exception of the Dow
Chemical Company and the CIA,
will continue as scheduled.

terviews will continue “until we
are told otherwise.” The decision
on the Dow Chemical-CIA problem may be handed down by the
Faculty Senate Nov. 13.

Dr. Jerome S. Fink, Associate
Director of the Placement Center,
said that he has interviews scheduled until the end of December,
with a second list to come out
for next semester.

Friday, the State University of
Buffalo was host to, among others, American Meter, Hughes Aircraft, and Boeing Aircraft, Monday, A:T.&amp;T. and General Aniline
and Film were on campus.

Mr. Larry Drake, assistant director of the center, said the in-

SAIGON —US. fighter-bombers Monday bombarded tons of suspected war goods within three miles of downtown Hanoi and shot
down at least two MIGs in dogfights over the North Vietnamese
capital, a military spokesman reported.

The university is continuing to

host other companies this week.

An anniversary meeting in the Kremlin was capping four days
of almost constant meetings and oratory working up to a huge
parade today in Bed Square. For new Russian rockets are expected
to make their first public appearance in the parade.
PRINCETON, N.J.—A Gallup Poll released Sunday shows that
50 r; of the Americans polled disapprove of the way President Johnson is handling his job.
The poll, taken last month and released by the public opinion
survey, showed the percentage expressing disapproval was up from
47';; in September.

MIDEAST—Israeli and Jordanian artillery dueled across the
River Jordan for the second consecutive day, a Jordanian military
spokesman reported in Amman. Israel warned it may have no
alternative but to retaliate if Jordan opens fire again.

Today, A.T.&amp;T. will again visit
the campus, in addition to Union
Carbide Company’s Chemical Division.

Wednesday, interviews will be
given by the Niagara Chemical
Division of the FMC Corp. and
the Monsanto Company. Monsanto will be back Thursday, with
the Grinnel Company.
A complete list of placement
interviews may be obtained from

the University Placement Center
in Schoelkopf Hall.

Columbia students favor open campus
Special io the Spectrum

NEW YORK —In a four-day
referendum conducted at Columbia University, students raised
their voices in favor of an open
campus policy.

Of students polled,

67.6% voted

in favor of allowing any organization to recruit on campus.

In response to a demonstration
at the University and on
campuses throughout the nation,
officers of the senior, junior and

sonhomore classes conducted the

poll.

a Democratic Society which urged
students to vote for two alternat
lives: to end all recruiting of a
non-academic nature, or to list
specific organizations which

should be barred from the New
York City campus.
While 1473 students voted for

an open campus, 312 favored the
first alternate choice, and 390 the

second.
Edward Yario, chairman of a
group called Students for a Free
Campus and a critic of SDS, com-

Peace march is subject of
report by student group
The peace march recently held
in Washington, D.C., is the subject of a report now being prepared by students of Dr. Thomas
Benson, assistant professor of
Speech Communication
The group, which hopes to publish its findings next semester, is
seeking the co-operation of all
students who attended the march,
Those students who took part
in the march and are willing to
relate their impressions of the
experience in conjunction with

mented that “SDS and other New
Left groups were decisively re-

pudiated by an overwhelming majority of their fellow students,”
Ted Kaptchuk, SDS chairman,
that “under the circum
stances there was no time to

said

bring out the anti-war implica-

Columbia has followed a policy
of open recruiting.
However, no military or con-

troversial government organizations have been allowed on the
campus pending a policy study
by a five-member faculty com-

mittee.

SPECTRUM

Partners Press, ~9nc.

Interviews wil be held in Room
329 Norton Hall from 12:30 to
3:30 p.m. beginning Wednesday,
and continuing through the fol-

1381 KENMORE AVENUE

All information given will be
held in the strictest confidence,
according to the students involved.

eveninq

dance

parly.

tions of the closed campus vote.”

this report are advised to report
to the Speech Communication
table in Norton Union some time
Thursday or Friday or phone the
department at 831-2243

lowing Wednesday.

Dancers

November 11 Balkan Festival
will include daytime instruction in Balkan Dance, and an

Published by

_y4iyoll &amp; Smith Ptinlinf
(at

Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

Balkan Festival will be
held in Norton Nov. 11
The Balkan Folk Dancers of
the State University of Buffalo
will sponsor a Balkan Festival
Nov. 11. The program for the

Festival includes daytime instruction in Balkan dances, as well as
a dance party during the evening.
Stan Isaacs, a specialist in the
field of Balkan dances and especially Bulgarian folk dancing, will
leach two folk dance sessions during the day. The first, for advanced students, is scheduled for
9:45 a.m. to noon in room 231
Norton Hall. Beginning and intermediate instruction will take
place in the Fillmore Room from
2 to 5 p.m.
The dance party is scheduled
for 8 p.m. in the Fillmore Room.

Music

will be provided by the
Balkan Serenadcrs, a five-piece
tamburitza orchestra, well known
to Balkan folk music enthusiasts
for its authenticity in interpretation and presentation of SerboCroatian songs and dances.
The "lamburitze” or "family”
of instruments played by the orchestra include the brae, a-fourtoned instrument generally used
for melody; the prim, an instrument similar to the brae, but
tuned one octave higher; the burgaria, used for rhythm and chord
accompaniment; the cello, used
for counter-melodies one octave
lower than the brae, and the herds. a brass instrument resembling the modern string bass.

�Pag* Four

Tuesday, November 7, 1967

The Spectrum

Polarization poses threat

VlCANAF

This nation will soon face a period of great challenge.
Forces are polarizing on burning issues: The war, civil
rights, civil liberties, the role of higher education, labor

msmu/mcH

and business.

STATUS/

Those on the left are becoming increasingly radical;
those on the right are becoming more reactionary.
strcn

of the other.

If the polarization continues, there will be more violence. If there is more violence, all those involved, directly

lAPW^i

one,

There it

or indirectly, will lose.

The peaceful protest has served a vital function in
mid-20tb century America. It has forced many to think
and evaluate. The protesters have won some victories. They
have not yet been vanquished.
The greatest danger that faces all of us is the success
of intolerance. Danger also lies in the fact that, in all-out
battle, the forces of suppression will win.
The victory will not endure forever, but the imprint
will linger for many years.
Reign by the forces of suppression may not do irreparable damage to this country, but this country will
suffer because of it. All that has been gained by the freethinkers and free-speakcrs will he lost. And that’s a great
deal to lose.

But just as the forces of suppression must be stopped,
so too must the forces of disruption. This nation doesn’t
need chaos; it doesn't need anarchy.
Either extreme is unacceptable. But the desire for one
may perpetrate the other.
This is not to advocate a middle-of-the-road policy, for
compromise is not always the wisest course.
This is not to advocate maintenance of the status quo,
for inaction perpetuates sterility.
This is not to advocate conservatism, for conservatism
stagnates progress.
It is, instead, a call for all Americans to temper their
hostile, belligerent attitudes with thoughtful, constructive
policies and actions. It’s a time when level-headed Americans must take charge of the situation and avoid both
suppression and disruption.
This is not a call for moderation in points of view, but
moderation in courses of action. The challenge is indeed
a great one.
It takes many to build a nation, but only a few to tear
one down.

Tax need must be realized
Last week’s Spectrum Question of the Week polled
students on the issue of a student tax to replace voluntary
fees. Our results show that 03.7' of those who answered
approve of the tax.
&lt;

This indicates that many students are not pleased with
the voluntary fee structure. They have good reason not

to be

The inadequacy of the voluntary fees system has been
evident. The activities of almost every organization have
been cut. Because of the anticipation of these cuts, it has
been virtually impossible for organizations to plan their
activities for this semester, let alone for the entire vear.

If this University is going to offer anything in the area
of student activities, there must be a more adequate and
more certain method of collecting fees.
The student tax is only one option. In the absence of
any more feasible proposals, the student tax is the best
solution

Unfortunately, many students don't realize the need or
the importance of fees. Without them, all activities will be
severely restricted. Perhaps if the Union closed for a semester, the effect of non-payment would reach more students.
It’s too bad that the only way to show the importance
of fees is to let activities grind to a halt. That’s the other
most apparent choice, and that’s the course this University
is taking.
w'e

We need the tax—or any type of mandatory fees—if
are to avoid that shutdown of student activities.

.

HCWMMra roNiv;
YOU YMKE (am)
.

Recent years have seen the eruption of a violent Negro
revolution. Rioting in American cities has pushed the nation’s metropolitan centers to the brink of anarchy.
Recent weeks have seen the eruption of a violent antiwar sentiment. Protests have become violent in Washington and on many university campuses across the country.

is, gentlemen—our new

1500 millimeter cigarette!'

Readers

the burgher
by

writings

Schwab

The Burgher, mild-mannered reporter and citi
zen of the crampus at the State University

oj Time

Buffalo, is constantly searching out injustices am)
exposing them to the public eye. In his search
for truth, justice and the American Way, he is
oft-times daunted by the perceptive realization that
all is not right in the world, or in this country,
or here on crampus.
The Burgher was thusly daunted not a day ago
when an almost equally perceptive student noted
that the squirrels have no place to go.
Now, for the past week
rmany have been fighting
for the right of any
"

no

,4

may involve, lo exist on
These people
campus
have formed he Commit

t

dents (CCS).
I would propose another CCS be organized

immediately—a Committee Concerned about Squirrels so that the injustices inflicted upon this
minority group—which I will enumerate—can be
rectified.
The first injustice inflicted upon the squirrels
was the wholesale slaughter of chestnut trees to
make way for the multi-pastel-colored monstrosities (sometimes known as temporary classrooms
or annexes), which so frequently sprang up here
in years past. Untold damage was done by this
malicious act. Many a squirrel was felled from his
home (or fell with his home) as the whining chainsaw slashed at the very roots of his existence.
This act also had secondary consequences. As
more trees fell in the pastel purge and the devastating blacktop plague of 6(i, the squirrels had to
work harder and harder to find food and shelter.
Some look refuge in the Vivarium, but were
caught and sent ten flights below to the BURSAR
(see last week’s column), where they met an untimely death. Others sought shelter in the Hayes
Hall Clock Tower, but were poisoned with administrative double talk. Some still made their way to
Townsend Hall but could not withstand the psychological warfare and were soon brainwashed.
Although this is shocking indeed, (here is
still much more to be said on the miserable
treatment of our flying, four-footed and furry
friends.

true that the scourging of the trees
the nut yield and thus deprived the
squirrels of their main foodstuff, but the creatures
have yet been plagued by another kind of nut.
This is the kind of nut who daily walks his dog
on campus and takes pleasure in siccing the pooch
on our beloved squirrels. I do not want to comment on the mentality of the nut or his "best
friend " except to say that the latter's presence has
oher ill consequences—ever notice how our fire
hydrants are corroding?
But, Student, let me ask you this: Would you
favor a mangy mongrel molesting you every day?
Tis no wonder the poor devils arc neurotic.
These injustices have combined to yield what
we view today: A bunch of sickly, skinny, scraggly,
scrawny squirrels.
And these are the reasons I would form a Committee Concerned about Squirrels, a committee
that would safeguard the right of squirrels to exist
on campus and to travel about its domain freely.
The committee could construct some temporary
trees until those already destroyed could be replaced. “Nut-ins” could be organized to see that

Tis

diminished

-

the group is well fed.
I could even accept a more militant group,
say a Square Deal for Squirrels (SDS) group, in
the fight for squirrels’ rights. 1 do fear, however,
that such a group might want to ban dogs and
other predators from the campus in the fight for
squirrel salvation. And that, I think, is nutty.

’

has played a role

To the Editor:

There is a compatible contrast: between youth
and age. On a cold Saturday night I stood between
Lockwood Library and Norton Hall and felt it to
be true. The old library, a pompously proud mass
of stone, shares the campus eenterpoint with the
streamlined novelty of the Student Union.
I walk from the modern beauty and precision
of the Nuclear Research Center and Acheson Hall
to ivy-covered Clark Gym. Past the red-brick convenience of Clement Hall, Goodyear and Tower,
through a cement parking lot and onto a grassy,
tree-lined field.

Even the prefabricated buildings have a place
among the young and old grandeur of glossy black

Baird Hall and Harriman Library, Diefendorf and
Hayes Hall, with its church-like steeple. There is
something beautiful about it all; I don’t know what.
But I somehow feel that time has played a role—one factor that can never be incorporated into the
new Amherst campus. It will be sad.
Dave Shapiro

Liquor not an issue
To the Editor:
As a result of your article of Oct. 31, concerning the Allenhurst House Council meeting of Oct.
25, many people have approached me with the
wrong impression of our actions.

Liquor is not an issue in Allenhurst. Our meeting was concerned with buses, open houses, study
lounges, sports activities and this semester’s budget. On advice from our assistant head resident, we
established a committee to draft a resolution and
rules in the event that the State University of Buffalo goes wet. At this time the Allenhurst Council
has no reason to make an issue of the liquor situation on campus.
At this meeting, no definite plans for another
open house were discussed since the first one had
not taken place, and we were unsure as to what
to expect. There was no mention at this meeting of
future visitation rights or the future of a chartered
bus on open house days.
Steve Rice

President of Allenhurst
every
The Spectrum is published twice-weekly
Tuesday and Friday
during the regular academic
the State University of New York at Buffalo,
3435 Main Street, Buffalo, New York 14214. Offices
are located at 355 Norton Hall. Circulation: 15,000.
—

—

year at

Editor-in Chief—MICHAEL L. D’AMICO
Managing Editor—RICHARD R. HAYNES
Asst. Managing Editor —RICHARD SCHWAB
Business Manager—SAMUEL A. POWAZEK
Advertising Manager—DAVID E. FOX
Campus
Margaret Anderson

Asst.

Marlene Kozuchowski
City
Daniel Lasser
Asst.
Lilian Waite
Feature Barry C. Holtzclaw
Asst.
Ronald Ellsworth
Sports
Robert Woodruff

The

Asst.
Layout
Asst.
Copy
Asst.
Photo.

W. Scott Behrens
David L. Sheedy
John Trigg
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Edward Joscelyn
David Yates
Asst.
Promotion &amp; Circulation
Director Murray Richmarr

Spectrum is a member of the United States Student Press Association and the Associated Collegiate
Press. The Spectrum is served by: United Press Inter
national, Associated Collegiate Press Service, Gannett
News Service, and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate.
Represented for national advertising by National Educational Advertising Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave.,
New York, N. Y. Republication of all news dispatches
is forbidden wihout the express consent of the
Rights of republication of all other
editor-in-chief.
matter herein are also reserved.
Second class postage paid at Buffalo. New York.
Editorial policy is determined by the Editor-in Chief.

�Tuesday, November 7, 1967

Weary of knowledgeable reviewers

The Spectrum

BELOW OLYMPUS

Pag* Fiv*

By Interlandi

the sham

To the Editor:

revolutionary confusion

I am weary of knowledgeable reviewers of theatrical performances. If the Spectrum is going to review a production of The Student Theatre Guild or
that of any other sponsoring organization, The
Spectrum ought, I think, to present the public with
an intelligent criticism.
In reference to the Nickel Theatre review: I
am happy that Mr. Perlmutter eninveH iHp npr.

by Martin Guggenheim

One of the unfortunate things about writing
a weekly column is that, at times, it is possible
to miss a story. I'm not yet sure if this has han-

is being written after the meeting Thursday, it
seems as though perhaps this is true.

nate and unforgivable on the

part of The Spectrum
that practically nothing was mentioned about specific directing techniques used. The virtues of some
of the scenes lie in the directoral talent displayed.
All that Mr. Perlmutter can see is acting.
Theater is a total experience and you ought to
have someone writing for you who understands
that actors cannot walk on stage and do a decent
job without a director and technical staff.
Be careful of your pointed headlines. Also, a
statement like, ‘Romeo and Juliet’ was just not
the proper choice for the occasion,” is absurd as
the purpose of the Nickel Theatre is to present a
selection of scenes from world theater. Any such
selection would not be complete without William
Shakespeare. I am glad you thought “Romeo and

At any rate, the events of last week moved
me and caused me to think, and if my only reason
for writing this is to satisfy my need to reveal
that confusion, then I still feel justified. My first
comments deal with that meeting. Admittedly, I
didn't expect much, but I still was disappointed
to know I shouldn’t have.

Cl

It seems elementary to realize that moral
issues are not debatable. This is not to say that
the meeting could not have been successful, or
even that it shouldn't have been offered, but
merely that when you structure the meeting to
have a pro and con speak consecutively, you miss
the point! There was very little communication
at that meting, and to my mind therein lies the

“

Juliet” amateurish because The Student Theatre
Guild is not a professional organization. We are
as proud of our amateur productions as you are
Of your very good amateur newspaper.
Susan Kaplan

Disapprove Dow, CIA postponement
To the Editor:

The following is a copy of a letter sent this
week to President Meyerson;
Dear President Meyerson,
Recent events on this campus regarding the
withdrawal of invitations to recruiting personnel
of the Dow Chemical Company and the CIA have
made imperative our placing the following statements before you.
The University Administration should not be
to intimidation by threats of physical disorder. We strongly disagree with the decision denying access to our campus to the CIA and Dow
Chemical Company on their scheduled interviewing dates.
The members of the University community
should have the right to participate or the equal
right not to participate in University functions
and services. We believe that individuals should
have the right of choice to interview or not with
representatives of organizations which request
contact through the University Placement Service.
The decision-making process has, in this instance,
been removed from the indivdual domain.
The University should be cognizant of the fact
that what some term “temporary postponement”
others term denial of freedom.

problem.

'jMfifrftil&amp;mi* W’M' nuts
"Whafa's ya mean, with all our technology we should be able
to do something about smog? That's what's causing it!"

the gadfly
by Mark Schneider

open

Respectfully.
THE GRADUATE CHEMISTS CLUB of
the State University of N.Y. at Buffalo
Frank Hilifiker, President

Paul Torrence, Vice-president
Michael Pavelieb, Recording Secretary
Carolyn Ertell, Corresponding Secretary
Richard Barrett, Treasurer
And 85 others

Hitting the nail on the head
To tho Editor
The German 411 course, “The Age of Goethe,”
meeting in 322 B Foster Hall was cancelled Monday
because the carpenter hired by the University sitting on the floor outside the classroom insisted on
hammering on the walls. The hammering is expected to continue for over a week.
I telephoned the Office of Planning and Development which, although admitting its responsibility, refused to hear my complaint on the grounds
that I am an undergraduate student. The Department of Modern Languages has twice complained
to this same office only to be reassigned each time
a classroom which was already occupied. One immediately wonders to whom the Office of Planning
and Development is responsible.

I understand people not willing to attend be
eausc they don't believe any value may be obtained
from going, but 1 get rather worried when I
consider where that leaves us. So naturally I
went and will probably go next lime again.

One hoped to avoid discussion of an over-discussed and

willfuly misunderstood issue, but the narrow-mindedness

and intellectual dishonesty of Establishment editors from
The New York Times to The Buffalo Evening News to the
two campus newspapers demand response in regard to the
CIA-Dow recruiting controversy.
The questions of whether a
university should allow all recruiters to visit its campus, and
if not, which it should bar, should
not be confused with an academic
freedom issue. Academic freedom

implies the questioning and dis-

cussion of values in free debate.
The CIA and Dow Chemical explieity propose only to further
their business ends, not to benefit the community while on
campus.

The university policy of allowing all recruiters to use its facilities abandons moral responsibility. It is the easy way out to say:

"All institutions have freedom of

action on the campus.” Such a
position implies that there is no

or unwilling to accept that the
United Stales might possibly be
involved in anything reprehensible, and find the two analogies
above so far removed from real
ity as to violate sensibility. Their
world view is that of the child
whose father can do no wrong; it
is the view of an innocent.

It seems that all arguments
against the war taken alone are
sufficient for our responsible
withdrawal. Even if we would
forget, as our President would
have us, the Geneva Agreements
and UN Charter, even if we for
get, as Charles Collingwood told
us, that we could have won the
war years ago if the vast majority of peasants were not sympathetic to the NLF, we still should

,

evil in the world, and it is the
same position taken by “good
Germans” who allowed SS troops realize that the ratio of Vielna
to carry off their Jewish neighmese civilians dead to soldiers
is too gross to allow us to remain.
bors, Mr. Meyerson and Dr. Siggelkow: Assume you are officials
If you have never seen a napat Berlin U. in 1933. Would you
allow the SS to recruit on your aimed child, it may be difficult
to imagine what is so bad about
campus? Is their freedom to recruit more precious than the Dow Chemical, and one will not
try to render this horror in
lives of 6,000,000 Jews? Suppose
words. However, William Pepagain that the Mafia asks to use
per’s article, “The Children of
Schoelkopf basement for recruitVietnam,” or Martha Gellhorn’s
ing trigger men to murder gro"Suffer the Little Children” in
cers who fail to pay protection
Ladies Home Journal attest to the
money. Is their “right to be
It would seem that the assumption that when heard” of higher value than the
extent of damage. Mrs, Gcllhorn
one registers for a course adequate space will be right of my neighborhood drug- reports that there are 77 orphan
provided for the teaching of that course is as inages and 80,000-110,000 registered
gist to live in peace?
valid as the assumption that one does have recourse
orphans in government controlled
to the people responsible for such conditions.
areas alone. In Danang hospital
If we accept, as we must, that
Kathleen Center
there are 700 patients for 350
freedom to recruit is not an abUndergraduate German major
solute, we then should examine beds. Pepper reports that there
the truly relevant issue here. have been 1,000,000 child casualWhat is the nature of the CIA,
ties in the country.
Ask a child who has lost his
Dow and the war in Vietnam?
Writers: Please be brief. Letters should not exceed The people who advocate an open parents and his hands about Dow
300 words. All letters must be signed and the address policy on recruiters are unable
Chemical and freedom to recruit.
and telephone number of the writer must be included. Positive verification of authorship will be made
before a letter is printed.
United Pren International
Letters will be kept in strict confidence.
WASHINGTON—Chairman Olin E, Teague (D-Tex), of the House
The Spectrum will use initials or pen name, if
Veterans Committee, who wants local veterans’ groups to take the
requested. But anonymous letters are never used.
lead in building public support for the U.S. position in Vietnam:
The Spectrum reserves the right to edit or delete
"Every honest dissenter, draft card burner, peacenik and draft
material submitted for publication, but the intent of dodger is prolonging the war. They are encouraging the enemy to
letters will not be changed.
kill more Americans."

Quotes

in the news

But the problem of whether the CIA or the
Dow Chemical Co. should be allowed to recruit
on campus is still with us. Essentially, two questions come to the fore. The first one is in regard
to banning them: IS IT TIME MORALLY? This
is the area which is not debatable. I am in great
sympathy with, and understanding for, those that
feel they can no longer tolerate compliance with
immorality

I The question of. when does a person become
guilty, how is it determined what is immoral
compliance, or when does anyone draw the line,
is totally personal. There is no objective criteria
to refer to There can be no process of convincing
someone.
As such, people like me are left in a bind.
I cannot argue that we should wail longer and
try to accept what we have; 1 can't deny the
honest feelings of some unusual Americans who
feel responsible if they do nothing. But the second
question which is relevant is one that I can discuss.
It is the major consideration for discussion, be
cause, as I have indicated, the first is not debatable.
The second question is, quite simply, IS IT
TIME STRATEGICALLY? At the meeting, only
Jeremy Taylor had the sense or foresight to recognize this, as THE issue. Is it a smart way of

combating the System? Are we really causing
the structure any difficulties?
I will not feel any guilt when the CIA enters
this campus. I will sit-in and resist their attempt
to recruit, but at least they have the technical
chance to recruit. This may be read as a cop-out.
I hope I can make it clear.

If a precedent is established whereby any
group may be barred from this campus simply because their presence may cause violence, it may
clearly lead to something we don't want If it is
established that every lime a group of students
is outraged at the attendance of any other group,
again it will create difficulties. What Mr. Taylor
said, and what I am indicating, is that we should
not be willing to risk this danger so easily.
We are relatively safe on this campus; we are
relatively free here. The merely symbolic act of
barring the CIA (all of us know they'll get the
people they want anyway) is not worth opening
the Pandora’s Box that it must. Someday perhaps
it will be necessary to act that way, but at this
time it seems to be foolish.

Let's make it as hard as possible for them
here, but let us allow them to be here.
Until we can figure out a system which easily
recognizes who is right, let us not in our desire
to end that which we do not like, also end that
which we do like.
to be

There are people who, very sincerely, believe
the Doves to be murderers. Enough said .
.

The Spectrum's pages for

Editorials

&amp;

Opinions

It is the policy of The Spectrum to report the
news fully and impartially in the news paces,
to express the opinions of the newspaper only
in the editorial pages and to publish all sides
of important controversial issues.
"Without

ixpfwiioo,

fr—dom of

ispnuion

is

moniwgbgi.**

.

�Pag* Six

Tuesday, November 7, 1967

Th* Spectrum

Readers’ writings
The University; Dow Chemical[ napalm and moral responsibility
To the Editor:
It is sometimes difficult to draw a sharp line
between permitting free speech in behalf of possibly immoral activity, and permitting the activity

itself.

It is

necessary,

however,

for a

university

If a leader of organized crime or a white-slave
trader were invited by a campus group to speak
openly and-publicly in defense of his activities, it
would be proper, we believe, for the University
to tolerate this, though outraged howls would surely arise. The danger that the speaker would corrupt
the audience, perhaps even winning some “recruits”
to his cause, seems not as great as the damage to
freedom of speech that might be done by denying
it even in this extreme case.
It would be entirely different for the University to put an office at the dispersal of our hypothetical criminal in which he might speak privately to students, trying to recruit them for his activities. This type of recruiting, besides being probably illegal, would certainly be immoral; and it
would be improper for the University to sanction it.

This

United States po
other path to “victory” but the extermination of
large parts of the population, especially in South
Vietnam. The use of napalm on the Vietnamese, inVietnamese people has left the

hypothetical case has a relevant analogy to

the current problem of whether Dow Chemical,
manufacturer of napalm, should be given University
facilities for recruiting students. An important difference, of course, is the fact that in this case there
is sharp disagreement as to the moral character
of certain activities permitted by American law
and encouraged by the government. The moral issue has two aspects: Is the American war in Vietnam justified? If so, is the extensive use of napalm
there justified? If the answer to either of these
questions is in the negative, the use of napalm,
and the manufacture of it for profit, are immoral
activities, which no person or institution should

lating succession of war crimes. Everyone in the
University community must make up his own mind
on these issues.
Some who agree with us on the evil of the
war itself, or of such means as napalm, nevertheless think that freedom of speech requires that we
give Dow Chemical facilities for recruiting. Free
speech does indeed require that any campus group
that wishes, be free to invite a representative of
Dow here to make a public defence of its position
in open forum. It does not require, however, that
the University make its facilities available for any
part of the production if napalm, including the
essential part of recruiting people to work for Dow.
If the University turns over an office for such
private recruiting, it is condoning, even participating in, the production and use of napalm. America, like other nations, has no inherent right to
burn alive people who object to our presence in
their country. We are not violating freedom of
speech or academic liberties if we decline the use
of our campus as the first stage in the production
line of napalm. We hope and believe that the University will recognize its moral responsibility in
this matter.
A Group of Members in the
Philosophy Department
William T. Parry
Shia Moser
Dale Riepe

condone.

Robert Martin
Charles Paillhrop

We believe that America’s undeclared war in
Vietnam is unjustified by religious or humanitarian ethics or international law. We also believe
that the irreconciliable opposition of most of the

Kenneth Barber
Berkley B. Eddins

The following is the text of a letter I have sent
to President Martin Meyerson:
Dear President Meyerson:
A serious and potentially dangerous confusion,
I think, has been permitted to enter the discussion
concerning the postponement of visits by Dow
Chemical and CIA recruiters to this campus. The
confusion relates to the appropriate University
policy under which such visits are allowed to take
place. Your letter to faculty and students of Oct.
30, and Dr. Siggelkow's statement in The Spectrum
of Oct. 31, assert that the circumstances of (he post
ponement raise an issue pertaining to academic
freedom. The position of both documents is that
the open character of the campus, the University's
commitment to free speech, are at slake in the
ultimate decision to be made concerning these
visits.
I disagree. Recruitment by private firms or
governmental agencies, it seems to me, is not

speech to which the principle of academic free
dom applies. No educational value attaches to such
speech. Recruitment occurs on campus under an
administrative policy which recognizes toe convenience’to students of being able to talk to future employers. But students do not have a "right" to use
the campus as an employment bureau as they have
a right to invite and hear speakers of their choice.
Nor do employers have a “right" to use the campus.
They

could conduct

Jesse G. Kalin

hotel rooms without the slightest detriment to aca
demic freedom.
Dr. Siggelkow’s decision to postpone, therefore,
was strictly an administrative one, relating to the
peace of the campus. I assume that he knew what
he was doing. But the resolution of this case must

also be administrative.

Ways must be found either
to carry out University policy or to modify it, or the
Faculty may be asked to abondon the policy altogether. II is not, however, appropriate to dignify
this rather trivial, if thorny, administrative problem
with an appeal to the principles of academic free-

dom.
The danger of such an appeal is that it may.
if it hasn’t done so already, force the University
into a confrontation potentially more explosive than
the one Dr. Siggclkow sought to avoid. For if we
treat the appearance of recruiters as an issue of
academic freedom, we thereby turn their visits
into a 'Tight." one which must be defended at all
costs. Tactical flexibility in the administration of
policy will be lost, and we will be faced with the
necessity of imposing these recruiters in the teeth
of an opposition already emboldened by far more
success than they could have hoped for. I dread the
day when Dr. Siggelkow, in the name of this latest
and most peculiar of academic freedoms, is driven
to calling in the Buffalo Police Dept, against the

students whose affairs he is supposed to preside

over.

Sincerely yours,
George Hochfield
Dept, of English

their business in downtown

Band leader calls editorial "false and misleading”
several small ensembles wind brass,
and percussion. Each of these groups devotes itself
to the performance of the best musical literature

To the Editor

band, plus

I wish to call your attention to the false and misleading statements made in the Oct. 31 issue of
The Spectrum' concerning the Slate University of

available.

Buffalo bands.

The Marching Band HAS NOT been trying “to
find out just where they will get an appropriation."
The Marching Band segment of the total band bud
get request was submitted in April of this_ year
through proper University channels. As in previous
years, no suggestion was made or implied as to
what particular fund should be used for any of
the specific items requested.
“The Band is clearly of more use to the Dc
than it is to the rest of the
University.” When talking or writing about THE
BAND please be advised that this is a total program
of which the Marching Band as presently constituted is only one part and to suggest that the
total band's activity is solely with the Athletic
Department is ludicrous. I assume you meant to
imply the Marching Band. However, THE BAND
also includes two concert organizations, a jazz-lab
partmcnt (athletic)

EH?
A MODERN FARCE BY
HENRY LIVINGS

November
8:30 P.M.
Baird Hall

9-10-11-12
Student Tickets 50c
Norton Union Box Office

Newton Carver

Says recruitment policy not a matter of academic freedom
To the Editor:

PROGRAM IN THEATRE

It is not within the jurisdiction of THE BAND
to resolve the legalistic problems concerning the
disbursement of funds questioned by the Graduate
Student Association. Wc object to this particular
Spectrum article which is based on one aspect
of the total Band's activities being presented from
the standpoint of THE BAND program as a whole.

also point out that, in fact, the University
Bands were included on the posters soliciting support for Student Activities Fee payment. In addition. I refer you to the August Special Fee Issue
of The Spectrum in which there appeared an article pertaining to the Band Program and student
fees
May I

Respectfully submitted on behalf
of the University Bands

Thomas Foster
President, University Bands

—

PAID ADVERTISEMENT

—

The undersigned members of the psychology department are veterans of American military service,
can lives in Viet Nam.
We demand an end to the tragic squandering of AmeriWe urge that a staged withdrawl from Viet Nam
be executed over a 12 month period as follows:
Immediate cessation of air operations over the
north and immediate cessation of search and
destroy operations.
Withdrawl of icrtified enclaves.
Allocation of funds saved from the reduction in
armaments for the purchase of large tracts of
land in Formosa and/or the Ryukyu Islands and
for the construction of community facilities thereon.
Relocation of any and all Vietnamese so desiring
to such communities.
Allocation of funds saved from the reduction in
armaments for medical and other emergency care
for those choosing to remaining in Viet Nam.
Withdrawl of all American troops from the enclaves within the year.

Although each of the undersigned had specific reservations about one or more of the steps proposed,
there was unanimity in the view that continuation of the
war represents the greatest evil.
Seymour Axelrod, Professorial Lecturer
U.S.A.A.F., 1945-1946
LeRov Ford, Associate Professor
U.S. Army 1945-1947
James Julian. Associate Professor
U.S. Army 1955-1958
Rov Lachman, Professor
U.S. Armv 1950-1952
Joseph Masling, Professor
U.S.A.A.F. 1943-1946
Neil Murray, Assistant Professor
U.S. Armv 1958
Willis Overton, Assistant Professor
U.S.M.C. 1953-1956

Egan Ringwall, Professor
U.S. Armv 1942-1946
Silverman,
Associate Professor
Irwin
U.S. Armv 1954-1956

�November 7, 1967

The Spectrum

News commentar

Questions are raised in
slaying of Road Vulture

Recruiting is an action, not a speech
To the Editor;

All speech is action, but not all action is speech.
Consequently, speech and action arc distinct. It is
perfectly intelligible to ask whether or not the
principle of free speech applies to speech. But it
is senseless to ask whether or not the principle of
free speech applies to actions because actions, liter
-ally, cannot speak. To ask sueh a question is to
a category mI slake. It is hi fe as]
ideas heavy?" or "Are roses smart?
One cannot sensibly talk about the gravitational
pull on ideas or about the intelligence of a rose.
This does not mean that no questions can sensibly
be asked about actions, speech, ideas and roses.
One can, for example, sensibly ask about the consistency of an idea or the beauty of a rose. Similarly, one can ask whether all speech and action
is allowable
The point of all this is that each of us who artroilinill

Special to the Spectrum

Why is it that a citizen (albeit that the claim to citizenship in most people’s minds is a tenuous one due to the
fact he was a Road Vulture) can be shot for . coasting his
car through a stop sign?
Why is it that there was no coverage of the event in
the newspapers or television, except for an article that
included the dry and biased police account of the incident
—one which has historic overtones due to the fact that
it’s the first time the much-maligned and newly-revised
State Penal Law will be used in such a case

Why is it that a police department would hire a professional
boxer to “protect the people”—
a man trained to use his hands
as deadly weapons?

than to make them abide by the
legal as well as ethical laws of
our society that already exists.

Pattern of brutality
I am not saying here that Patrolman Wipperman is guilty or
that he is innocent; he is merely
a symbol of part of a pattern of
police brutality and denial of human rights that is either tacitly
accepted as necessary, or accepted because people would rather
turn their backs and not know
what’s going on than become in-

Policemen "more right?"
In this country,

the laws

are considered to be more important than the people they protect, just as the society is considered to be more important than
the people they protect, just as
the society is considered more
important than the individuals

in it.

volved.
The police are allowed to per
secute minority groups, especial
ly groups such as the Road Vul
lures.
At what conclusions can we ar
rive in this matter?

The fact that laws are more
important than people leads one
to the logical conclusion that the
“protectors of society” who enforce these are more correct in
their judgments, as well as more
important than the people in the
society with whom they deal.
This means, simply, that the concept of human rights, while being set up as an ideal, has little
if any practical application within this society.
In Buffalo today, the police are
thought of as good people as
well as good police officers. Po-

Everyone is subject to such
a police-biased kind of treatment.
Groups such as the Road
Vultures which although initially a violent group has in the last
few years made efforts to change
this group image and mode of action, are subject to a particular
kind of harassment and brutality
that few people know about.
It will take a community effort to change the method in
this town of what people mistakenly call law enforcement.
•

•

lice have, in their traditional

role, essentially upheld lowerclass values which center around
violence, but people believe it is
more important to let the police
make their rules as they go along

•

HAL HOLBROOK in

“Mark Twain Tonight!”
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24 at 8:15 P.M.

Tickets: $4.50, 4.00, 3.50, 2.50
on sale at box office now!

SATURDAY, NOV. 18th at 8:30 P.M.
BUFFALO MEMORIAL AUD.

concerned about the Dow Chemical Co.'s and the
CIA’s presence on campus, should be perfectly
clear about the question to which we are to ad

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To the Editor:

The attempt to turn the postponement of the
CIA-Dow interviews into an issue involving aca
demic freedom is dangerously unwise, if only be
cause it obscures what ought to be the primary con
cern of libertarians—the integrity of the Univcr
sify.

It is by no accident that these two organiza
tions, Dow and the CIA, have been relentlessly attacked on numerous campuses. Students are troubled not only by the specific issue of Vietnam, but
also by the distressing phenomenon of universities
willing to prostitute themselves for the riches dis
pensed by industry and government. Michigan Stale
fell panting with vulgar lust into the arms of the
CIA. The recently installed President of the Uni
versity of Minnesota discovered with understand
able chagrin that many of the research projects
current at his school were closed to his supervision
because he lacked the requisite security clearance
If the autonomy of the American university has
been historically fragile, it is imperilled today as
never before, and Dow and the CIA are convenient,
wholly appropriate symbols of the forces challeng
ing that autonomy. The maidenly protest of the
administration that it was spooked by the SDS in
turning away the representatives of Dow and the
CIA certainly covers them with less than glory. It
had sufficient and sound reasons for its decision.
When the Placement Bureau arranges facilities
for corporations and governmental agencies to in

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S*atU# Hilton Lobby; Sompl« Starts, Hortol, Waldon; U. of I
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Wc

can, though. sensibly ask

whether we wish

to deprive them of their right to come and address us and to be addressed by us. But that would
be irrevelant since that is not what they want to do.
Now. a number of actions arc not necessary for a
university to be what it is, e g., it is not necessary
to have an assembly line on a university in order
for it to be one. On the other hand, some actions
are wholly incompatible with the idea of a university. e g., suppression of free speech. Thus, the question to which we should address ourselves is: Are
the recruiting efforts of the Dow Chemical Co and
the CIA necessary to and consistent with what
a university should be?
Mans Sprohge

tervigw prospective enlployees, it provides the student with a gratuitous service not unlike the installation of a Coke machine outside the classroom,
a service that has nothing to do with academic pur
suits. If representatives of Dow and the CIA wish
to come to our campus to discuss or defend their
organization and its policies, that is a different
matter. Then, indeed, they expose themselves to
dissent, to a free exchange of Ideas, and we must
defend their right to stale their position.
The elevation of a job interview, however, to
the level of philosophic colloquy seems to me ab
surd, particularly in respect to the CIA. Clearly
the University does the student a warrantable favor in running what is essentially an employment
agency on the side. I have no dispute with that
I do disagree with the contention that the Univer
sity has no right to investigate the credentials of
orgamzaion.s seeking the use of the Placement
Bureau, no right to decide on whether or not it will
bestow an implicit sanction on the activity of that
organization.

The University should be the one place where
companies and organizations that discriminate on
the basis of race or political belief receive absolutely no toleration. If that means that the Placement
Bureau would shortly go out of business, then the
University ought to he making that indictment as
loudly and clearly as possible
Neil Schmitz
Department of English

Says University should make moral decisions
To the Editor:
To understand why the CIA should not he al
lowed the use of campus facilities to interview prospective employees requires that wc disabuse our
selves of various bromides. Wc must remember that
the University is not a democratic organization, that
recruiting is not a civil right or academic freedom
problem, that the University does and should make
moral decisions, take moral stands, and that if the
powers do not like the smell of such organizations,
they must ban them, students or facilities be
damned. This may sound onerous, autocratic, even
frightening, but that is how it is.
1. To boot CIA recruiters off the campus in
fringes upon nobody’s civil rights, nobody's academic freedom, simply because it docs not curtail
the products available in the academic marketplace
as it would were one to ban lectures or performances. One need only conjure up the image of the
recruiter across the desk from the student and
listen to their talk of salary, fringe benefits, officecarpeting, and clubs for wives to realize that such
activity just cannot be taken seriously in terms of
notions like the free dissemination of ideas or the

fraternities with racist charters, but does allow
Lemar and spring dances. It must be understood
that the University is quite autocratic here, but not
right-infringing. When the administration takes
pains to preserve the virginity and sobriety of our
hot-blooded undergraduates, and does this by the
imposition of sanctions, rules, restrictions, and so
forth, nobody yells "Free speech”; nobody yells

“Academic freedom." Not that all administration
dcisions on conveniences are moral ones, of course
—recist fraternities and cooks at Norton both involve decisions.

All Seals Reserved—$5, $4, (3, $2

dress ourselves. We should not be asking "Does the
principle of free speech guarantee them the right
to recruit on campus’" because that is an untelligible question. Although recruiting involves speech,
not all recruiting is speech. If it were, then every
lime anyone would speak he would be recruiting.
Recruiting is an action, not a speech.

Academic freedom obscures the CIA-Dow issue

right to hear.
2. Letting recruiters ori campus is not a right
students should or do have the benefit of, but a
convenience the administration provides. This is a
distinction of paramount importance, for rights and
conveniences are not the same sorts of things. We
arc not a Renaissance Bologna, but a 20lh century
State University campus, and our University, like
all others, constantly makes moral decisions cover
ing the conveniences it will allow its students. It
allows, by executive decisions, students to play
idiots with the Mr. Formal kick, but does not allow
co-eds to stay out too late, or Grand Mariner parties
in Norton Hall. It does not allow (I hope) national

�

Pag* S*v*n

(

Tuesday,

3. By allowing football here, the University takes
a stand behind what they consider the point, purpose, and value of footbaB just as much as when
it bans racist fraternities. Ahd~if the University is

prepared to hack fool hall, virginity, and sobriety,
all without consulting students or faculty, all with
out maintaining in any way that such a decision
represents some majority or other, should it not
take stands on other issues as well, other principles,
other areas’ Indeed it should, and does, like it or
not. For, by allowing recruiters here, the University just as surely stands behind them as behind
football, and by banning recruiters, explicitly turns
its hack, just as on racist fraternities Here is the
crucial difference between a right and a convenience. We allow the CIA man to lecture, because
he has the right to he heard and we to hear We
ban the racist fraternity because there arc no rights
involved, and because we don't like such organiza
lions.
4 The conclusion is inescapable Recruiting is
a convenience the administration can ban or not
If it doesn’t, it stands behind the recruiters; if it
does, it turns it back As an autocratic, self moral
determining agent, the University (and by that I
mean the same university that bans or allows fra
ternities, not the university which is largely composed of students, for example) must make up its
mind whether it wishes to stand behind the CIA
or not The University can no more hide behind
some smokescreen of supposed civil rights than can
those who have argued similarly for the recruiters.
To lecture is not to recruit. To allow a lecturer is
not to embrace his views. But to allow a recruiter,
a convenience like fraternities, is to stand behind
the point, purpose, and value of the recruiter, There
is no escape from commitment here.
5. Therefore, the CIA should not be allowed to
recruit on campus, simply because it is a dangerous,
immoral, pernicious, and overly independent organization, and to allow them here is to stand with
such immorality It is not up to the students or faculty any more than night hours for co-eds are, not
on football or drinking. And if those powers agree
in the present scheme of things. It is up to whoever
has made all the other moral decisions, whether
in a stance against the war, the bombing, the escalation, and a secret police with too much autonomy,
then the powers must show the way as they have
with other issues, and keep recruiters from repugnant organizations out of here. They can set up in
the University Manor Motel, or downtown, and the
same students may very well see the same recruiters, but they will know they have a University with
moral muscle, and they will see just how, when,
and why that muscle is used.

Gray MacArthur

�Pag* Eight

Tuesday, November 7, 1967

Th* Spectrum

MP's on

Pres. Johnson's alma mater is
freedoms sought by scene of anti-war protest

campus

Bask
students at U. of Madrid
dent unrest at the University of
in a
series of strikes, protests, and
battles with police,
Madrid has come to a head

Among the things the students
an end to the
use of military police at the university. At present, a student who
is detained by police must appear
before a military court for a
court martial. They are denied
redress in civilian courts.

are demanding is

They

are

also asking for a
number of basic freedoms, including freedom of speech and assembly and the right to have
their own organizations.

Illegal group supported
In an attempt to reach the latter goal some students have
formed the Democratic Students
Union of the University of Madrid and split with the state-run
University Students Union, It is
difficult to determine exactly
how many students are members

of the rebel student group, because it is illegal and none will
admit belonging to it, but it appears to have the support of a
majority of the students.

tic between police and students,
concluding the week of protests.
The demonstration began when
at 12:30 p.m, almost 1,000 students gathered in front of the
School of Philosophy to protest
their lack of freedom.
At first, the police were restrained in dealing with students
and avoided contact with them.
But when students began breaking up concrete manhole covers
and picking up rocks, an armored
hose truck was rushed into the
square to spray the students with
dye and a chemical irritant. The
dye is used as a means of identification.
As students began calling to
leave, a mounted
riot squad attempted to disperse
them. The students continued
the police to

shouting anti-government slogans
and turned their ire on the
horsemen. One horse and rider
were knocked down, although
neither appeared to be seriously
njured. No student injuries were
reported.
en

At 2 p.m. the police moved in
masse and surrounded the

SAN MARCOS, Texas (CPS)—
The
antiwar movement has
reached the alma mater of President Lyndon B. Johnson.
At Southwest Texas State College, three students began handhour the students were permit
ing out anti-war leaflets in front
ted to leave quietly.
of the student center after getting
permission from the dean of stuPolice stop rally
dents. It was the first anti-war
On Oct. 26 the students had effort on the campus.
mass
planned a
rally and march
The three students were suracross town to the Ministry of
Education, but they were kept
from assembling by mounted riot
police. At first, it appeared that
the students would be allowed to
continue their march along the
sidewalks but once the limits of
the campus were reached the
marchers were continually harrassed and broken up into small
groups. These groups finally dissolved into the noon crowds. SevWASHINGTON (UPI)
Black
eral students were held by police. power militants
seized Control and
ruled the campus of Texas SouthSeveral smaller demonstrations
ern University at Houston last
earlier
alin the week,
were held
spring through intimidation of a
though they were squashed by pofearful student body and administration, Senate investigators were
lice before they gained any motold last week.
mentum.
James B. Jones, former Dean of
anti
On Oct. 23 there was an
Students at the state-supported,
war rally at the School of Philosopredominantly Negro liberal arts
phy. About 80 students particiinstitution, said school officials
were afraid to take action against
pated, haranguing American stumembers of the Student Nonviodents and shouting anti-Ameri
1 e n t Coordinating Committee
can slogans.
(SNCC) who eventually touched

rounded by a hostile crowd in
the afternoon. Part of the crowd
took the antiwar pamphlets
handed to them and burned them
on student center steps. There

one of the protestors was pushed
around.

The

student

newspaper,

the

College Star, defended the two
protestors, although the editor
said in a separate column that
he favors the war.

Former Texas Southern Dean
blames SNCC for spring riot
—

Hershey says reprisals against
anti-war demonstrators not likely
BOULDER, Colo. (CPS)—General Lewis B. Hershey, the
only director on the 27-year history of the Selective Service
System, claims there aren’t likely to be reprisals by his

agency against those who participated in anti-war demonstrations during the past two weeks.

“We don't want to make martyrs of these people,” he told
Frank Bell of the University of Colorado Daily. In reference to
those who turned in or burned their draft cards last week he said;
"We do anything we can to keep the youngsters from being tried.”
But he added ominously that the draft agency furnishes any
information which it can to the Justice Department,
Action against members of the Resistance who turned in their
draft cards—Hershey refers to them as “deliquents”—will be determined by local draft boards. However, two years ago Hershey
ordered anti-draft demonstrators at the University of Michigan
reclassified 1-A.
Hershey also had several criticisms of the demonstrators. He
said they are causing disunity and have been caused by “a deterioration of the family” and too much “permissiveness.”
He also doubted the effectiveness of demonstrations. Out of
34 million draft registrants “200 demonstrators here and 300 there
does not make much difference.” He said that none of the demonstrations have stopped inductees from joining the army.
Demonstrators, said Hershey, “are being put on by older folks.
There are people with prestige that tend to command attention with
the emotionable and impressionable kids. Heady wine, this wanting
to get your picture on the papers and on radio and television.”
&gt;1111

M

K

off a two-day riot.
One policeman was killed and
two were wounded in a gun battle that broke out May 16 on the
campus. Jones, now a psychology professor,
estimated that
about 125 of the University’s 4500
students supported the shooting.

"Good men timid"
Asked why a small band of agicontrolled the student
body, Prof. Jones replied:
“Wrong triumphs because good
men are timid.”
Prof. Jones testified on the
third day of hearings by the Senate permanent investigations subcommittee into recent Negro riottators

ing.

The chairman, Sen. John L.
McClellan,
expressed surprise
that no school administrator was
at the scene of the rioting. “It
sounds like you abdicated because
you were intimidated, out of
fear,” he said.
“There was some fear,” said
Prof. Jones. “Yes, I had in a sense
abdicated.” Yet, he added, “in
a shoot-out I don’t know if an unarmed Dean of Students has a
place. The work is in the preventive stage,”
Mr. McClellan also was upset
at the seeming inability of University officials and Houston police to control the agitators.

Dangerous to testify
Campus

discipline completely

broke down, Prof. Jones said, because of a climate of fear that
made it “too dangerous” for students to testify against troublemakers and “too inflammatory"
for the school to order suspensions during the academic year.
The former dean testified that
the trouble began after James
Foreman, a national SNCC leader, visited the campus in October
1966, and “gave black power the
appeal the others had not been
able to give.”

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�Tuesday, November 7, 1967

The Spectrum

San Francisco voters face Viet
war question in today's voting
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)
A
quarter million San Franciscans
foreign
try
their
hand
at
polwill
icy making today when they vote
in an official Vietnam—epi
poll
—

They will cast ballots on a
“policy statement" calling for an

was unimportant—the real
issue was approval or disapproval of the President s Vietnam
policies

On the ballot, the complexities
of Vietnam have been reduced
to the question:

measure said the first big city

watched by

41% in Dearborn

nam.

The

Johnson

Administration

has indicated its interest in the
results, and opponents of the

vote on Vietnam also would be
Hanoi,

Wording criticized
Administration officials voiced

concern that the statement might

receive a majority vote and be

interpreted as a repudiation of

President Johnson’s policy. They
complained the issue was "loaded”—cleverly worded to appeal
to the natural desire of Americans for an early end to hostilities.
But its sponsors, who gathered
22,000 signatures and went to the
California Supreme Court to get
on the ballot, said the wording
expressed their viewpoint: the
U. S. should get out now.
A great many of its advocates
however, argued that exact word-

The same
proved by

question

was

ap-

of the voters in

Dearborn, Mich., a year ago.
Registrar
of Voters Basil
Healy predicted 80 r c of San
Francisco’s
317,000 registered
voters would cast a "yes” or
“no” ballot on the propositon.
They also will elect a mayor and
six supervisors.

swin

Don't drink up thee zider, doctors say

ing

“Shall it be the policy of the
people of the city and county of
San Francisco that there be an
immediate ceasefire and withdrawal of U. S. troops from Vietnam so that the Vietnamese people can settle their own problems?"

immediate ceasefire and withdrawal of U, S. forces from Viet-

ngland

P0RT1SHEAD, England (UPD
—An apple a day may keep the
physicians
doctor away, but
aplenty gathered Saturdayfor
Britain's first cider drinking contest. They feared it could end

from farm to farm, town to town.
those who drink scrumpy
agree it has as much kick as any
corn likker from the Kentucky

in death.

The British
brew has more
, .
than
the kiss of . the, apple. . Some
,

,

hills,

es with a ditty called “Drink up
Thee Zider."
It was the song
that led to tonight's contest

,

.,

...

.

„

,.

.

.

,.

.

,

body

his grave.
Regular drinkers remained un
impressed about the dire predic-

drink up is expected
involve only commercially
brewed stuff, not loo strong by
hardened
drinkers' standards
but enough to set an amateur's
head spinning after two pints.
Tonight's

to

tions. Said one. "For strangers
to it, maybe. But we were
weaned on it

They have to be. The apple
cider's alcoholic content varies

Question of

.

,

spike
it. with whiskey.
It is not
r
.
unusual for a brewer to plop a
.
■
■
side of beef into the cat to give

_

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Scrumpy's local reputation was

the week

Do you think that organizations such as Dow
Chemical and the CIA should bo allowed to recruit on campus?

You can answer The Spectrum Question of the
Week every Wednesday at the Information Desk
on the first floor of Norton Mall.
Please submit only one ballot answering fhc
question of the week.
Last week’s question was
The Student Senate is presently

considering
a mandatory tax to replace the voluntary student
fees. These taxes will he used to support the dif
ferent activities on campus. Would you support
this student tax?
The results were

mint condition
Share in Flying Club

IFR

.

„„

Proponents of the policy statement campaigned with signs,
bumper stickers, newspaper ads
and door-to-door canvassing. The
opposition was not formally organized, but both of the city’s
out
daily
newspapers
came
against the proposition.

(2

,

••

barrassment for most candidates
for city office, who were forced
to take a stand for or against the
war in addition to debating local issues.

*

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enhanced recently when a folksy
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But

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Medical leaders predicted rap:a quaffing of scrumpy, as ,i,„
id
the
.

The Vietnam issue was an em-

*

Pag* Nina

Yes
No

Cutler’s manager John Miles
decided to celebrate with the nation's first-ever "Zider Drinking
Championship." The title was
to go to he who could quaff the
most brew in two hours.

Doctors' protest
Protests from the doctors led
Miles to reduce the competition's duration to an hour al
though, he said, he doubted the
original bout would have hurt
anyone.

“The ten finalists are all big
scrumpy drinkers and used to
drinking pots of it every night,"
he said. "They are the best out
of more than 60 original entries
and none of them has any doubts
about his capabilities.”

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�Pag* T*n

The Spectrum

Tuesday, November 7, 1967

Dr. Spock, 'baby doctor peacenikr speaks from his heart
'

by Barry Holticlaw
Feature Editor
. . and I am diametrically opposed,
Lord knows, to everything you stand for,
Doctor, I mean I think the federal gov-

know,- it’s the only country we got, but
I must admit, Doc, that I admire you for
sticking up for what you believe in, and,
by golly, it looks like the kids in this
country are sure behind you, you know,
and, like I was saying, this country’s sure
in one helluva mess, but it’s the only one
we’ve got, all the same, you know?”
Dr. Benjamin Spock rose, napkin in
hand, to bid farewell to the tipsy salesman, and as the man was leaving to go
back into the bar area, the doctor smiled
warmly, and said:
“Yes, well we’d like to do something
about that mess, sir.”
The baby-doctor-peacenik had made
another friend.
•

*

*

Dr. Spock’s plane arrived a half-hour
late last Wednesday, and if it had been
left up to the Cheektowaga Police Dept.,
he might never have arrived.
Some said it was a neo-fascist plot, but
most likely it was a lack of communication
between the airport boss and the patrolman: the Faculty-Student Association sedan, property of the State of New York,
was towed away from the airport by the
Cheektowaga police for parking in a restricted area.

“No kidding? Yeah, I think I remember
seeing something about him in the paper
in the story on that Washington parade.
He spoke there or something, didn’t he?
Say, are you against it?”
or Dr.
Spock?
“Vietnam—are you against it?”
“I certainly don’t think we should be
fighting there, if that’s what you mean.”
“Yeah, well I’m for it. Hey, Gladys, did
you know that this baby-doctor nut is
gonna make an anti war speech tonight
up at UB? He even marched at that
Washington thing!”

Dr. Spock retired from the medical profession last June; he had been a member
of the medical school faculty of Western
Reserve University for 16 years. He said
that he had received a “fair amount of
sneering" from His medical colleagues
when he began to be involved in peace
activities several years ago, but he noted
that “more are now agreeing.”
"Actually I’ve had relatively mild differences of opinion with my colleagues
over the war compared to our disagreements over the Medicare Bill of which I
was a supporter.”

The tall (6-foot, 5-inch) stately gentleman, looking a very trim 65 years, his
gray hair betraying his age, smiled wideeyed and shook hands firmly when I met
him. Dr. Spock didn’t fit the baby-doctor
image
he looked like a stateman.
But his cool dignity swiftly subsided
when we sat down to lunch and he began
telling stories and answering and asking
questions—his face breaking into a big
smile, his hand resting on my shoulder
during a tale in a moment of mock confidence, that Yankee accent emphasizing
the firmness of his convictions, the depth
of his sense of humor.

naturally, around the Vietnam War, and
the anti-war movement in particular.
“The two best ways of combatting the
War in this country are the draft resistance movement which may well prove
to be the most effective, and the political
organizing of local anti-war movements
and political campaigns tying, through

—

•

The luncheon

•

•

conversation centered,

local candidates, local issues to the peace

issue,” the doctor said.

A large part of the discussion of the
anti-war movement revolved around one
of the current controversies in the movement: How much can you trust the lib-

erals?

for President, Dr.

“Well, I was aware of the talk going
around about a King-Spock ticket, but I
never was running for President, and as
far as I know, Dr. King never made any
such commitment. I heard of the several
movements for such a national ticket in
California and the Midwest, but it was
decided at the National Conference for

New Politics in Chicago this summer, and
I think rightly so, that it would be better to direct our energies at things at a
local level. No, I am not running for Pres-

foremost concerns of the moment. The

The doctor, laughing, took it in his
The GSA officers were politely
frantic. After an escorted taxi ride to
the motel and several phone calls later,
things had been straightened out. The
car was retrieved from Stanley’s Garage
and Service Station somewhere in the
heart of the Cheektowaga suburb.

•

•

Dr. Spock, world-famous for his book
Baby and Child Care, a 16 million copy
best-seller, was in Buffalo last Wednesday
for a speech about Vietnam at the Univerr

—Photo

by Tony

Walluk

about

speaking
Vietnam? I
thought he was a baby-doctor!” “Yes, he
is a medical doctor, but he’s also the head
of a peace group called SANE.”

"He’s

you running

“Are

Spock?”

respectability of the position isn’t worth
the time I would have to spend on little
details and party politics. If I keep at it,
if I can keep up the same things I’m doing now, people will get used to my talking about the problems of war and peace,
and I’ll have as much effective authority
in the eyes of the people of this country
as a Senator.”

stride.

my last name,

tricidal sentiments” that threaten to divide the movement for a New Politics
in this country.

“What about a senatorial campaign
against Javits in 1968?”
“I’d be 66 then, and even if I could
win, they’d probably put me, as a freshman senator, aside in a child welfare
committee or something, away from my

escort.

sity Graduate School Convocation.
Waiting for the doctor to arrive for a
luncheon date at the Lord Amherst, I was
talking to the day clerk on duty, a hollowcheeked Vitalis fellow who pronounced
my first name “Beearie,” but for some
reason, had no problem whatsoever with

even turn against von.
“But,” he added, “every bit helps in the
movement for peace. Don’t sneer at people who are only partially on your side.
The easiest thing in the world to do is
sneer at liberals because they’re so timid.
But they are more for you than against
you.
“You almost have to take a chance on
anybody. They may turn against you, but
you can use them while they are for you.”
Dr. Spock urged, as he did that evening
in his speech, an end to the “almost fra-

ident.”

When Dr. Spock and representatives of
the Graduate Student Association, who
had arranged for special VIP parking
privileges, stepped through the swinging
glass doors at the Greater Buffalo International Airport, their car was gone. The
motorcycle, policeman who had been assigned to give them an escort to the Lord
Amherst Motel didn’t know what was coming off—there wasn’t anything for him to

•

In describing the problem, Dr. Spock
noted that “there are an awful lot of people who you think are on your side, but
then they turn away, and some of them

Df SDOck
r

"The two best ways of combating the
War in this country are the draft resistance movement . . . and the political
organizing of anti-war movements . .
tying . . . local issues to the peace
issue."
.

•

•

Dr. Spock is a world-famous pediatrician and lecturer who believes that the
threat of nuclear destruction is a greater
danger to the babies of this country than
any disease could possibly be. He does
not speak as an expert on the Vietnam
War although he has studied the subject
a great deal, and he does not speak as
an intense revolutionary political philosopher; he is a very intelligent, very articulate man with a humanitarian conscience,
and he speaks from his heart. His greatness is not so much in what he says, but
in his example to the rest of adult Ameriica: an example of integrity voicing concern for the future, of a man willing to
take a stand, willing to convince others to
take that same stand, against war, against
the danger of an America going mad—before it is too late.

Visual and violent pop phrase emerges Literary landslide reports
on Soviet half century
by Joan Deppa

United Press

International

LONDON—Rock, the musical pulse of the young, is
beating live in Britain again—violently.
The strange progression from the hysteria of early
Beatle concerts to the hyper-sophistication of recordings
that defy duplication onstage is taking another turn—to
something that defies duplication on record.
The new pop phase in the
birthland of the Beatles is visual
and violent, with a sort of total
audience involvement that would
take a Marshal McLuhan to analyze.

Its performers must be seen
and beard in person to be be-

lieved.

Like Jimi Hendrix, the Seattle
Negro guitarist who is credited
with leading the breakthrough
back to live music in Britain.
Hendrix plays his electronic
guitars with his teeth, his elbows, behind bis head, on the
floor, anyway and everywhere
until be decides that smashing
the guitar itself would produce
the desired musical effect.

Wild appearance
His appearance, with wildly
backcombed hair and a fantastically colored wardrobe of embroidered satin j;ear, is violent
and his guitar-smashing, musically-crashing act is even more violent.

But Jimi Hendrix is a mild mannered maestro compared to “the
crazy world of Arthur Brown.”
Led by a 23-year-old former
London University stjdent who
screams, shrieks and flails his
way thruogh ear-splitting, mindbending musical nightmares, it
is even more violent and certainly more mystifying.
Brown, wearing hideous

war

paint or a frightening art nouveau mask, literally terrorizes his
audiences into a sort of stunned
submission.

One of his managers, Chris
Stamp of Track Records which
releases Hendrix. Brown and
other avant-pop artists, recalled
one of the few times Brown’s
act was interrupted by screams.
"We put him into some halls
up north where they didn’t know
about him, just to test the reaction,” Stamp recalled. “In one of
them, there were about eight
girls, little teenyboppers, who
were right in front of the stage
giggling when he came on.
“So he started doing what he
does right at them and they ran
right out of the hall screaming,
they were so scared."
What seems paradoxical at
first glance is that both Brown
and Hendrix found success during Britain’s hippie summer,
when flower power rather than
brute force was supposedly the
keynote.

Some 30 books inspired by the
50th anniversary of Communist
seizure of Russia will engulf American bookstores with a literary

landslide these coming months.
An objective balance sheet on
the half century of Bolshevik
power was the goal of the New'
York Times in dispatching a
squadron of reporters to investigate achievements and
shortcomings of Soviet life from
schoolrooms to Sputniks.
In their book. The Soviet Union: The Fifty Years, editor Harrison E, Salisbury concludes,
"Now 50 years have passed since
the dramatic days of 1917 . . .
Yet the socialist order of which
Lenin spoke remains largely a
mirage . . . within the Politburo
quarrels go on over what went
wrong and what lines should be
followed back to the dream of
1917.”

The most comprehensive look

at social change in the Soviet
Union attempted to date is
Propspects for Soviet Society,
which weighs the past record in
order to suggest the Soviet future. Seventeen American professors, all experts on the Soviet
Union, contributed essays on
their specialties from agriculture
and science to the family and

national minorities.
The weighty 600-page book, organized by the Council on Foreign Relations, indicates the Bolsheviks will continue in power.
Eugene Lyons has produced a
balance sheet, Workers' Paradise
Lost, that scathingly labels the
a tragic failSoviet experiment
ure” and claims of Soviet prog“

ress as “gibberish.”
A history of the Soviet Union
is offered by English author Ian
Grey in The First Fifty Years,

which has overtones of the British point of view.

�The

Tuesday, November 7, 1967

'Eh?' to

play at

Spectrum

Pag*

Eleven

Baird Hah

Mushrooms to have role in Livings' comedy
this year. The dates mentioned are the performance dates
of Henry Livings’ play “Eh?” directed by Ward Williamson
and presented by the Theater department. Baird Hall auditorium, where the play will be performed, may never
recover.
Professor Williamson, who saw
this play in its original London
productions in 1964, chose it because he was “interested in experimenting with a play which
would make new demands on the
actors and on the audience.”
From actor's point of view
When I spoke with him, Prof,
Williamson preferred to talk
about the play as Jittle as possible. All of his ideas about it
will be in the production. He
did say, however, that “Eh?” is
a play really written for the

played by Frank Dwver. is w
manager

Mr. Dwyer says that. "Prices'
reaction to Val is absolutely typical of society's reaction to the
non conformist " Val brings 35
references for the job of
boilerman. This astonishes Price.
Eventually Val brings Price a
massive dose of frustration.
Miss Broskelt lakes the role of

Betty Dorrick, later Mrs, Brose.
She feels that "everyone in the
audience will leave the play with
varying degrees of eonfusion
after having had a good laugh
over a funny comedy."
About Betty, Miss Broskelt says
that, "she wants to be liked by
everybody. Val is her strong
point but he is more interested in
his mushrooms than in being a
husband." They (Val and Betty)
live in the boiler room.

minister who plagues everyone
at the plant at the slightest sign
of black smoke from the plant's
chimneys.

lion.

Baird Hall

It is somewhat ridiculous to
talk about the plot of the play.
Mr. Livings' play stands as its
own best statement in that way.
Hut does this play, outside of its
comedy, have anything to say to
us as University students’ Mr.
Ihvyer feels that, “the things Livings is talking about in "Kit?" are

As Mr. Dwyer pul it. “It’s easy
to imagine yourself in a big
boiler room when you're in
Baird." Any efforts now being

fusion.

Mushroom-growing
Mr. Marchant says that, “one of

Anti-air-pollution minister
Unfortunately I was unable to
contact the three other performers who play characters no less
interesting than those already
—Photo by David

Yates

"Eh?"
to

be presented in Baird's
"Boiler Room" beginning
Nov. 9.

Living’s main points is that the
truth can be funny. It is a difficult play to grasp because it

shows the contrast between what
people say and how they act, but
it is an effective comedy.” Mr.
Marchant, a graduate English student, takes the role of Valentine

Brose, a mushroom-growing nonconformist who upsets the works
at a dye plant where Mr. Price,

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the sort of things being talked
about in the Rathskeller." That
Livings is saying something about
the dilemma of a thinking in
dividual in a structured society is
fairly

certain

mentioned.

What exactly it is that he is
saying is much less certain. Mr.
Dwyer thinks that “layings is

sonnel officer having a struggle
for recognition in a male world.

body being able to make bis own

Miss Forman lakes
the role of Mrs. Murray, the per-

fascinated with the idea of every

Consequently she (Mrs. Murray,
not Miss Forman) uses all possible tactics.
Mr. Group, not seen on stage

here

since

"An

Italian Straw

Hal," plays the role of Reverend

statement." Miss UrosketI feels
that Livings is saying that "the
individual's attainment of a personal goal should not be ham
constricting social
pined
by
moves."

stage. Professor Williamson said
that one of the points in "Eh?"’s
favor is that it is suited for the
stage.

made toward a new theater cannot he completed too soon. It is
anyone's guess how much longer
the intolerable conditions of
Baird Hall will be needed, but
how many plays are set in a
boiler room?

Oh.

rooms:

yes.
Mr

about those mushMarchant feels that

"Val is the optimislie sort of fel-

low for whom the mushrooms always eome up." Which is nice if
you're growing mushrooms in a
boiler room. To discover some
thing new, to really discover
somethin}; good in theater, come
to the Itaird Hall boiler room—Nov. 9 through
sorry, stage
Nov, 12 at 8:30 p.m. Who knows?
The east might pass out mushrooms at the end of every per
formanee.

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UCLA vs. USC (Sat., Nov. 18)
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tion should be commended. Pro-

ducing a play on this campus requires the ability to make the
maximum use of an atrocious

stage.

Livings is an actor who writes
from an actor’s point of view, not
a literary point of view. This is
a comedy which is different from
standard comedy. It stems from
no historic tradition.” He linked
the play with those of Beckett,
Jellicoe, and Kopit.
“Eh?” along with being a different sort of comedy, also bririgs
three new faces to the University.
Stage; Graham Merchant, Frank
Dwyer, and Corrinne Broskett.
The three other cast members,
Carol Forman, Piero Hadjikakou,
and Clifford Group, have all been
seen before in various productions. Talking with the performers one gets the sense of a comedy portraying organized con-

No matter what the play is
saying, if anything, its presenta-

Val frustrates and exasperates
the Reverend as much as he does
Mr. Price. Mr. Hadjikakou has the
opportunity of a lifetime taking
the role of Aly. a little Pakistani
who opens and closes the play.
The spirit of Aly hovers over the
set throughout the entire produc

I

From Nov. 9 through Nov. 12, mushrooms are going
to provide -some of the impetus for what may well prove
to be the funniest, wackiest theater seen on this campus

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Tuesday, November

The Spictrum

If your major
is listed here,
IBM would like
to talk with you
Dec. 5th or 6th

Sign up for an interview at your placement office—even
if you’re headed for graduate school or military service.
Why is IBM interested in so many different people?
The basic reason is growth. Information processing is
the fastest growing, fastest changing major industry in the
world. IBM products are being used to solve problems in
government, business, law, education, medicine, science, the
humanities—just about any area you can name. We need people with almost every kind of background to help our customers solve their problems. That’s why we’d like to talk with you.

What you can do at IBM
Whatever your major, you can do a lot of good things at
IBM. Change the world (maybe). Make money (certainly).

Continue your education (through any of several plans, including a Tuition Refund Program). And have a wide choice
of places to work (we have over 300 locations throughout
the United States).
What to do next
We ll be on campus

to

interview for careers in Market-

ing, Computer Applications. Programming, Research. Design
and Development. Manufacturing, and Finance and Administration. If you can t make a campus interview, send an outline of your interests and educational background to J.E. Bull.
IBM Corporation, 425 Park Avenue. New

jVj

—

York. New York 10022. We're an equal 1 T
rv
opportunity employer.

J

Ivt

[

7, 1967

�Tuesday,

November 7, 1967

Th

•

Pag* ThirtMfl

Spectrum

the spectrum of

sports
me elaware quarterbacking fails
to stifle Buffalo ground game
Delaware’s Frank Linzenbold passed 42 times and netted 265 yards, but his aerial
antics were offset by a punishing State University of Buffalo ground game as the Bulls
triumphed 38-19 Saturday before a sparse gathering of 6423 in Newark.
The victory gave the Bulls a five and three season’s log, and left the Fighting Blue
Hens still with only one victory in seven outings.
Linzenbold’s 17-completion performance is even more remarkable when it is considered that the senior quarterback was throwing into a 35 to 40 mile an hour cross wind.
His passing set up two Delaware scores and directly came up to make the stop on wind held up Lee Emmons’ punt
Brian Wright short of a Hen and the opportunistic Bulls
accounted for a third. Secfirst down and the Bulls had a scored on a seven play drive
onds into the fourth quarter, handsome field position on the covering 37 yards, with Pat Patafter Pat Patterson had opponent’s 16. Dennis Mason terson rambling the last 13 virswept the right side from lofted a third down pass to Drontually untouched.
With a strong crosswind to
five yards out to give Buffalo koski at the four yard line, and
the Bulls decided to forea 30-13 bulge, Linzenbold three plays later, Lee Jones buck,
go the kick, but Murtha's two
crashed for his second touchdemonstrated his passing down of the afternoon. Rick point pass was poorly thrown to
wizardry to perfection
Wells gobbled up the two point Wells.
Starting inside his own 25,
Linzenbold threw two strikes to
Ron Withelder which advanced
the ball to the Buffalo 29. On
the very next play Hen halfback
Jack Tracey gathered in Linzenbold’s toss and romped in for
the score. The three play drive
covered seventy-six yards and
took only one minute and fifteen
seconds of the Hens’ valuable
time. The attempted two point
conversion pass failed, and the
hosts trailed by 11 points with
12 minutes left to play.
The Bulls’ offense sputtered,
but Linzenbold found the going
quite a bit rougher through the
of the afternoon.
remainder
Teddy Gibbons and Dave Richner
hit the fabulous flinger before
he could get his passes off, and
Joe Riccelli batted down another
pass attempt further stymieing
the Hens’ march.

Richer makes stop

With time all but run out, Delaware attempted a desperation
fourth and three play from their
own 15 yard line. Dave Richner

conversion pass, and the Bulls
had their 38-19 margin of victory.
Delaware

coach Tubby Raymond most assuredly did not decide in his game plan for his
quarterback to exercise his right
arm quite that much, but the
Bulls’ early touchdowns necessitated the quick lightning scores
that Linzenbold had shown he
could produce.
After initially failing to score
from inside the Delaware 20 yard
line on an abortive 34 yard Bob
Embow field goal try, the Bulls’
next drive netted an embow conversion from 42 yards out, giving
them the afternoon’s first score.
For Embow it was his fifth career
field goal for Buffalo, a school
mark he extends every time he
splits the uprights.

Wind a factor

The Hen defense was a lot
tougher than most forecasters
had predicted, and the Bulls
couldn’t get their first touchdown until midway through the
second period, A 30 mile an hour

The Bulls padded their lead to
17-0 on their next drive.
Wells ran brilliantly to the

outside, and Lee Jones did his
usual fine job thundering off
tackle as the Bulls marched from
their own 38 to paydirt, Murtha
ate up a large chunk of ground
on this drive with a 23 yard flip
to Paul Lang on the Delaware
15. It was Jones who finally scored from the three. Pat Patterson
knifed across the goal line for
a two point conversion.
The teams exchanged scores
before the half ended.
Ron Witheldcr, who caught
eight passes for 134 yards during the contest, caught two passes good for better than 40 yards
on the Hens’ 74 yard sustained
drive. Linzenbold scored on a
keeper from the Bulls' four, but
the pass after touchdown was incomplete.
Mick Murtha then showed why
he’s Urich’s number one signal
caller. After a fine kick return
by Wells to the Buffalo 41, Murtha passed to Wells on the Delaware 41. Pat Patterson toted the
next two plays and moved the
ball to the 28 on the pitchout
sweeps.

Murtha scrambles

Murtha then scrambled like
Tarkenton when he found his
receivers covered, and was pushed out of bounds on the ten.
On the next play, he found Drankoski in the end zone for six
points. The try for two failed,
but the Bulls led 23-6 at intermission.
The Hens came out a determined club in the third stanza. The
Bulls drove to the 12, but Murtha’s pass was picked off by Hen
Linzenbold
captain Art Smith
passed his club most of the way
down to the Buffalo six. Sam
Brickley scored and the kick
made it 23-13.
That was as close as the Hens
were going to get.

The Bulls added the clincher

moments later. Patterson carried
most of the way on this 41 yard
play drive which he capped with
a five yard sprint.
It was in no way a spectacular
victory for the Bulls who must
win their last two contests to
produce a 7-3 record, the club’s
best since the 1959 Lambert Cup

mark.

—Photo by Ron Dubick

Dranko sets mark

Frank
linzenbold

Outstanding Delaware quarterback had 17 completions good
for 265 yards against the Bulls.
0 ,riumP hed ,hough '
«;('

31

-

Swimming
team

The Bulls smashed a host of
personal records in this contest.
Drankoski’s five receptions gives
his 33 for the year, breaking
Dick Ashley’s one year old mark

of 30 catches.
•

Please turn to page 14

The 1967-1968 Slate University
of Buffalo swimming team is
pictured here with captain Rick
Rebo (front row, fifth from
left).

Sanford readies varsity
swimmers for new season
by W. Scott Behrens

Assistant

Sports

Editor

The State University of Buffalo varsity swimmers are
now in the process of making themselves ready for the coming season. Head coach Bill Sanford will have to do some
reshuffling with the loss of one of the up-and-coming freshman stars of the 1967 season.
John Serfustini, nephew of the Bulls’ head basketball
coach Dr. Len Serfustini, was the freshman team’s most
valuable swimmer last season and broke a pool record in
the 50-yard freestyle event.
For some unknown reason
John decided to enlist in the Ma
rines this summer and the Bulls'
hopes for a winning season in
1968 were cut down considerably
with the loss of the excellent
sprinter.

Serf

a

great loss

Coach Sanford had other events
in mind for John besides the freestyle short distance events. Scrfustini was exhibiting some of
his versatile swimming style
when he swam in a couple of exhibitions in the varsity swimming
meets. John entered the individual medley event against varsity
competition and showed very
well for only a freshman. The
loss of “Serf” to the varsity
swimming team this year will
prove to be the one in which the
team will hurt the most, although
graduation look some healthy
swimmers away from the squad.
Graduating last season were:
Captain Howie Braund, who holds
a pool record in the 200-yard
breaststroke; Charlie Zettcrberg.
backstroker, who also has a pool
record in the 200-yard back
stroke; and Steve Ronis, who
swam
the 200-yard buttcrfly
event. All three of these seniors

were entered in the 400 yard med

Icy relay.

Returning lettermen

Returning lettermcn arc senior
captain Rick Rebo. who holds the
Bulls’ diving record. The Bull's
number one diver will dive from
a one- and three-meter board this
season. (Clark Gym Pool has no
three-meter board but Rick

will
the
three-meter event
wherever the event is offered.)
Also returning to give the Bulls
veteran experience will be junior
Mark Clarcq, the Bulls’ distant
freestyler this season. Senior individual medley swimmer Mike
Conroy, who was voted the 1967
team’s most valuable swimmer,
will also be back and besides his
own specialty he will probably
swim in the 200-yard backstroke
and return to his duty as anchorenter

man on the medley relay team.
Senior Gary Helffenstein will
return this year as the Bull's second diver on the one-meter board

and may be entered in the freestyle relay event, as he did last
season

The

following is the

1967 68

The asterisk denotes returning lettermen.
swimming squad

Wrestlers wanted: varsity,fro$h
Varsity and Freshman wrestling practice started Monday afternoon and will continue through
the wrestling season. Head Coach
Gerry Gergley is very much in
need of a freshman team to build
future varsity squads.
Mr, Gergley asks that all var
sity members who have not re

ported to him please do so at
once so that equipment can be
issued in the most efficient manner possible. Any upper classman
who is interested in trying out
for the varsity squad is welcome
to do so any afternoon this week.
See Mr. Gergley at 4 p.m. in his
office or in the varsity team
room.

�on the bench
A quick look at college football tells us that North
Carolina State is number four in the nation’s cqllege football polls
Another inconspicuous glance shows ns that the Bulls
of Doc Urich are right in the middle of the rankings of
major independents.
This in itself is trivial unless we attempt to look at
what has transpired in the last month since the Bulls
literally threw away a ball game to N. C. State.
On paper the Bulls look

Tuesday, November 7, 1967

Th» Spiclrum

Pag* Feurtaan

small;

on the field their equipment
makes them seem a bit bigger,
but nevertheless, when they are
right, they play a hard brand
of football.
For quite a while the supporters of Buffalo football have
waited for a club that would
dominate ten out of ten games
per year. They would hope that
victory would chime ten limes a
year and a Saturday without a
win would be like Christmas
without Santa Claus.

No "miracle"
No, friends, there won’t be a
“miracle on 34th St.” this year
for Buffalo footballers, but there
are many football players who deserve a pat on the back. They
tried to bring victory, but there
is an old saying, “You can’t win
’em all.” The Bulls have only
lost to top competition and,

whereas it is true that at times
the team has looked deficiently
poor, they have also looked like
a powerhouse.

This is by no means writing
off the season as over, for there
are still two big ball games
coming up, but this has been a
somewhat disappointing season
for the fans, football seniors,
and for Dick Ashley.
There is, however, one bright
spot in a season dimmed by
key losses to players and games,
and that illuminating light has
fallen on Mike Luzny.
His consistency as linebacker
has produced All-East honors
four times.
He also was one of six defensive players considered for
national honors as “lineman of
the week,” Only a sophomore,
Luzny has spearheaded Urich’s

Winter sports in the making;
intramural schedules released
Winter intramural sports are in the making with the
fall season coming to the end. Intramural athletic directors
Ed Muto and Bill Monkarsh have released information concerning applications for entries into winter leagues, types
of leagues offered and the time and day each type of league
will be run. These intramural sports wil be run during the
winter as follows
Swimming;

defensive platoon and has got
ten rave notices for his perform
ance on the gridiron.

All entries must be submitted
to Mr. Sanford, in the Swimming
Office, by Nov. 13, 1967,

It has been brought to the
attention of this reporter that
the officiating on the intramural
football field is below par and,
in fact, poor. This is the opinion
of those who are playing or are
incapable of participating and
stand on the sidelines yelling for
their favorites. This is an outrageous and rather ridiculous
charge to be levied at a group
of men doing their best to handle
rough, tough, and very trying
football games.
It has been said over and over
again that one official cannot see
the out-of-bounds; one official
cannot adequately see a full
field; and one official cannot see
every infraction; in fact, it is
difficult to see an infraction
play is
other than where

Time trials for the final meet
will be held on Monday, Nov.
20th, from 6-9 p.m.
The final Intramural meet will
be held on Monday, Nov. 27, 1967

Intramural officiating

actually taking place.

Not supermen
These referees are not supermen and they don’t try to be.
All they try to do is keep a 40minute hassle under
control.
Wouldn’t it be nice if there
were three officials per game?
You bet it would, but it’s not
possible. No one person wants to
try to do something, but they
will try to say something. There
in itself lies the hypocrisy of the

entire situation.
There are so many who yell,
who use language better suited
for writing on bathroom walls,
and complain, but so few who
want to help and have enough
intellect and courtesy to understand the position of one official. It’s a helluva way to make
$1.50!!!!!

beginning at 7 p.m.
Events to be held are as fol

lows:
Dive, 100 yd. Medley Relay, 50
yd. Freestyle, 50 yd. Backstroke,
100 yd. Freestyle Relay, 100 yd.
Individual Medley, 100 yd. Freestyle, 50 yd. Breaststroke, 50 yd,

r

Butterfly.

Handball
All entries must be submitted
to Mr. Monkarsh, in the Intramural Office, by Nov. 10, 1967.
Organizations may enter 8 singles
players and 4 doubles teams as
a team entry.
The tournament will begin on

Delaware loss

.

.

*

follows

“It is agreed that the Chairman
of the Sub-Board will order the
disbursement of the $5,900.00 appropriation for the University
Marching Band's trip to the Villanova-SUNYB football game on
Nov. 11, 1967, and it is further
and expressly agreed that this
appropriation will, for the time
being, be drawn from the general cash holdings at the Board's

Lee Jones established a new
career scoring mark with his two
touchdowns. Lee has notched 168
points in his three year varsity
career at Buffalo.

The bright spot in the Bulls’

pass defense on this day was the
play of Tom Hurd. Hurd reacted
quickly against the Delaware
sweeps, making seven tackles,
and protected well against Linzenbold’s tosses, nabbing two interceptions and tying a Buffalo
career mark of 12.

Mike Luzny was credited with
eight unassisted tackles and aided in three others. He harrassed
Linzenbold in the Hen backfield

disposal.
It is expressly agreed, in view
of the questions and objections
raised by the Graduate Student

Association in their communication to the Chairman of the
Board on Oct. 27, 1967, that the
question of the particular Fund
(i.e., whether Educational and
Rec-eational, or Athletic), from

which this cash disbursement will
be drawn is an open question, and
further, a question on which the
Graduate Student Association reserves all right, including that of
adjudication.”
The disagreement stems from
the fact that the

Graduate Stu-

dent Association believes that the
appropriations should come from
the Athletic Fund and the Student Association believes that it
should come from the Education
Recreation Funds, For the past
two years the University Marching Band has received money
from the Educational and Recreational Fund. However, since Saturday's trip is for an athletic
event, the GSA felt the money
should come from the Athletic
&amp;

Fund.

SLA
"HAMILTON HOUSE"

TROUSERS

$16 TO $25

HUBBARD SLACKS
$10 TO $20
"BREECHES”
PERMANENT PRESS
$7 TO $9

Basketball
All entries must be submitted

to Mr. Muto, in the Intramural

Office, by Nov. 17, 1967.
All leagues will be filled on a
first come basis, and the leagues
will be limited to 7 teams.
Leagues will
Monday 8:30
Monday 9:30
Wednesday

DUPONT* BLENDS INSURE
LONGER WEAR

be as follows:
p.m. Independents
p.m. Independents
8:30 p m. Allen-

hurst
Wednesday 9:30

p.m.

Alien-

hurst
Thursday 8:30 p.m. Clubs
Thursday 9:30 p.m. Clubs
All leagues will begin play the
week of Nov. 27, 1967.

Continued from page 13

Agreement reached; Marching Band
will perform at Villanova-UB game
A “stipulation and agreement"
between Sub-Board I of the Faculty-Student Association, the Student Association, and the Graduate Student Association will enable the University Marching
Band to play at the VillanovaBuffalo football game Saturday.
The agreement was signed Friday by Stewart Edelstein, Chairman of Sub-Board I and President Association; Richard Miller.
Douglas Braun, a member of SubBoard I and Treasurer of the Student Association! Richard Miller,
a member of Sub-Board I and vice
president of the Student Association: Dugald McLeod, a member
of Sub-Board I; and Gilbert Klajman, a member of Sub-Board I
and Chairman of the Graduate
Student Association. It read as

Nov. 13, 1967. Matches will be
played on the following days:
Singles Matches: Mondays and
Wednesdays at 4 and 5 p.m.
Doubles Matches: Thursdays at
4 and 5 p.m.
Equipment will be provided by
the Intramural Department.

AMERICA’S
GREATEST

during a good first half Buffalo
pass rush. Teddy Gibbons played

his usually great game at defensive tackle. Ted has six unassisted knockdowns, and
he too
greeted Linzenbold with anything
but tenderness.

Patterson matures
Pat Patterson, Lee Jones and
Rick Wells ground out 250 yards
for the Bulls, Patterson, who has
definitely matured as a runner,
gained 123 yards on Saturday,
and scored two touchdowns.
Jones was his great blocking self,
and also netted 74 yards. Wells
ran more than in previous contests, and ran sweeps good for

45 yards.

WAR STEAK
$J95
Sandwich

ALL YOU WANT
(Within Reason)

U S. CHOICE TOP SIRLOIN

�

�

�

Dine and Relax in

The Peaceable Kindom
Room at the

BLACKSMITH
SHOP
Olilesi Steak House in W.N.Y

1375 DELAWARE AVE
TT 6-9281

FEATURING

BLENDS WITH

DACRON 5
POLYESTER
DuPont

registered

trade

mark

�Tuesday, November 7, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* F iftacn

Syracuse tramples UB fresh 36-0;
Buffalo offensive team immobilized
by Roach N. Mantis

Staff Reporter
East Friday afternoon was a
bleak one for the State University
of Buffalo yearlings as they were
Spectrum

trounced by the Syracuse University freshman football team, 36-0.

From the outset of the game,
the Tangerines never gave our
boys a chance. A fleet running
halfback, Ron Trask, tallied three
times and a tenacious defense immobilized our offense.
The Syracusians’ first score
came early in the first quarter
when quarterback Lew Thompson
threw a 23 yard pass to Trask
for the touchdown.
Jack Rouff added the point
after and the Tangerines led,
7-0, On the following kickoff

Barney Woodward fumbled, an
a safety. The score then stood
at 9-0. A few minutes later Trask
scored his second touchdown as
he plunged over the goal line
from about one yard out. The conversion was good and the first
quarter ended with the score Syracuse, 16 and Buffalo, 0.

Second quarter repeat
The second quarter was almost
a repeat performance as the Tangerines scored 13 and the Baby
Bulls could not initiate an effective offensive drive.
The first score in this quarter
came on a 29 yard pass play from
quarterback Thompson to split
end Ken Seri. Rouff missed the

and

the—Syracuse

in the first half was another one
yard run by Trask.
The conversion was good and
the first half closed Syracuse, 29,
and Buffalo, 0.
The third quarter was highlighted by the Baby Bulls' deepest penetration, to the Syracuse
40 yard line. This was the only
time that the Baby Bulls’ stagnant
offense was able to invade the
enemy territory. The Bulls' defense also faired well as the Tangerines did not score.
In the fourth quarter Lenny
Dash, the well-known Jackson

Heights flash, crashed through
the Buffalo line from two yards

out for the final

tally.

CLASSIFIED
FOR SALE

1963 VOLKSWAGEN, sunroof $550 or best
offer. 875-9875.
1964 FORD COMET, two-door, radio and
heater. Six cylinder, excellent condition.
Must sel,l call 839-4169.

BORED BIKE, 315 cc, CB77. Call

834-3406
after 8 p.m.
1953 HARLEY DAVIDSON, 75 cu. in. full
dresser, good shape, ready to chop,
$395. TR 4-3954.
GRUNDING 4-track tape recorder, three
months old with phonograph attachment.
Sacrifice price! Call Ann, 831-3197.
FIND NEW and used paperbacks and hard
cover books at GRANT Books and Stamps.
3292 Main St.

MISCELLANEOUS
IF ANYONE saw a white 1964 Plymouth
scraped in Baird Lot; Oct. 30, call TA 35966.
WANTED
STUDENTS want to furnish apartment cheaply. Chance to get rid of old furniture.
Steve, 837-3082.

TUTORS: CONSERVE your time and utilize
your experience;
SUBJECTPROFICIENCY
will supply you with students Submit name

phone and
box CZ.

courses

offered

to Spectrum

quality, used, fl.it top guitars
GUITARS
(Martin, etc.) bought, sold, repaired
D'Anyelico strings. 874-0120 eves.
buy

PERSONAL

Jewish Bible
cal 875-4265, day or night
TWO LOST sheep, in search of their shep
herds. Call 831-3968, 831-3973.
IT'S WORKED for many people on campus.
It can work for you. Try computer dating. For free information and application
form writ; MATCH MAKER, Room 520,
Genesee Bldg., Buffalo, Nw York.
SHALOM! For gems from the

SITUATIONS WANTED

ALL TYPES of typing, done at home. Contact Marilyn, 1-HF 3-6395 or 632-5260.

APARTMENT

FOR RENT

Dissatisfied customer says don't
$100 from H Joseph Motors.

CAUTION

the 50th Anniversary of fh«
Revolution: Stab a friend in th«

CELEBRATE

Russian

back.

LOST

PARKER FOUNTAIN PEN lost during grenl
Allenhurst Bus Escape
11/1/67; grey
plastic barrel with metal top; reward, call
833-6195.
CASSETT laperccordcr in Health Sci
ence Bldg. Reward $10. Call TF 3-9309,

SONY

after 6.
LADY'S

tion.

ward.

GOLD

Very
Pat,

to

839-2164.

APARTMENT, FURNISHED, upper, all utilities. Two minufte walk from campus on

Lebrun. Available Nov. 15. Married couples
or males prefered. Call 837-7752 or 8377137.

WATCH,

valuable

P.J R." msenp
owner. $10 re

FOUND
ONE PAIR of women's brown glasses found

between Diefendorf and Diefendorf
nex. Call Lawrence 892-9548.

An-

campus releases...
The Political Science Department will present Dr. Arend Lijphart
at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow He will deliver a public lecture on "Types of
interim campus. 4238 Ridge Lea Rd.
Dr. Lijphart. a native of the Netherlands, is assistant professor of
political science at the University of California at Berkeley.
The Department of Continuing Dental Education is sponsoring a
conference to be held on two consecutive Fridays. The conference,
"Periodontal Therapy for the General Practicioner,” will be held
Nov. 9 and Nov. 16 from 9:30 a m. to 4:30 p.m. in Capen Hall.
According to Dr. George Greene Jr, director of continuing dental
education and professor of oral pathology, the course is designed
to familiarize the general practitioner with principles of clinical
periodontics.

Dr Beatrice A. Wright will speak here! at 9:30 a.in. tomorrow in
room 233 Norton Hall. She will speak on the topic. "Psychological
Snares in the Investigative Enterprise."

"Folklore —Literature of Organiied Aggression" will be the subject
of a lecture by Mr. Bruce Jackson, assistant professor of English, at

Wednesday in the Conference Theater.
An authority on North American folklore, Mr Jackson has pub
lishcd articles in the Journal of American Folklore, Southern Folklore Quarterly. New York Folklore Quarterly, Atlantic Monthly. Noble
Sax age and the New Republie.
Mr Jackson belong to the Harvard Society of Fellows before
coming to this University.

The Undergraduate Psychology Association will sponsor a dis
cussion on educational psychology by Dr. Thomas Shuell. Dr Shuell
will speak at 7:30 pm. in room 2,'ll, Norton Hall
Anyone interested is invited to attend.
The SDS and Student Mobilization Committee are sponsoring a
discussion at 8:30 p in tomorrow in room 147 Diefendorf Hall The
speaker will be Mr Jeff Gordon, a leader of the recent Brooklyn
College strike. He is the Progressive Labor Parly NatiaMl Student
Organizer, and as such was called before the HCUA lath winter
Mr. Gordon was also a delegate to the Organization of Latin
American Stales (OLAS) conference held in Cuba this summer. Last
year he spokgat the teach-in on Vietnam held at the Stale University
of Buffalo.
The Spanish Club will show slides of Cuba and Chile at K p m
tomorrow in room 333 Norton Hall. Accompanying the slides will he
short talks given by Ibis Come/, on Cuba and Steve Moscov on Chile,
The Christmas Variety Show will be discussed at this time
All those interested in participating in this event must attend.

A Synchroniied Swimming group Is brim: formed All girls inmeeting at the pool in Clark
Gym at 7 p in. Thursday.

Icreslcd arc invited to attend the initial

A cookie sale is being held today in.the first floor of Norton Hall
opposite the cafeteria, in (he Aeheson lounge, and in the Medical

complex.

The sale, sponsored by the Dames Club, will raise money for a
club room on the Amherst campus.

:
I

I
i

BIG JOHN'S
Pizza

&amp;

Subs

Variety of Hot and Cold Sandwiches
Big John's Steak Special

PASTRAMI
|

771 Niagara Falls Blvd.

836-4881

SENIORS
Proofs ore to be returned:
Tuesday, Nov 7—11:30-1:00, 2:00-6:00
Wednesday, Nov. 8
Thursday, Nov 9

—

—

9:00-1:00, 2:00-6:00

9:00-1:00, 2:00-6:00

BUFFALONIAN OFFICE
Norton Union

PLYMOUTH SHOP. COMPANY, MIDDLEBORO, MASS.
MICHAEL ROBERT CUSTOM SHOES, BUFFALO
LIDDON'S BOOT SHOP, BUFFALO

—

Room 356

(Any senior who missed their pictures and still desires
to have one, please leave name and phone number at
Buffalonian Office, Norton 356)

)

�Pag* Sixteen

•«

The Spectrum

Tuesday, November 7, 1967

U.S, says VCs welcome to talk
*

*

*

focus

*

moscoiv

WASHINGTON—The United States has
backed Ambassador Arthur Goldberg’s offthe-cuff declaration that Washington
would agree to Viet Cong participation
in a Vietnam peace conference if other
parties concerned desire this.

/a/rarfa
hong hong

mideast

compiled

from our wire

services

by

Lilian Waite

even somewhat further than Goldberg. It
said in a carefully prepared statement
that conference participants would also
decide the “form” that Viet Cong par
ticipation might take, implying the possibility it might have some status of
formal recognition.
The U, S. ambassador to the United
Nations, answering questions before the
Senate Foreign Relations
Committee,
said conference members could “decide
the invitees and the scope” of any Southeast Asia peace conference. But he did

Liu

Chairman Mao Tse-tung.

High SChOOl

riot

Oliver High School students seek relief

from a riot control chemical mace spray
by standing near windows and rubbing
their eyes.

Hope to improve relations
‘Even in the case of the United

Big

States,

MOSCOW
Kremlin leader Leonid I.
Brezhnev has told the greatest Communist
gathering in history that Red China is
undermining the world Communist movement and the United States is threatening it with nuclear war.
In a keynote speech opening the Soviet Union’s golden anniversary celebra
tion, Brezhnev called for a world Communist congress to deal with Peking. He
also pledged to aid Hanoi “until the
American imperialists get out of Viet—

nam.”
The first secretary of the North Vietnamese Communist party, Le Duan, later
told the big Kremlin meeting the United
States could have peace negotiations only
if it "stops unconditionally" the bombing
of North Vietnam. Otherwise, he said.
Hanoi will fight on.
Walked out
Two Chinese Communist diplomats,
who apparently came for no other reason
than to walk out, headed for the doors
the minute Brezhnev’s sharp criticism of

HHH
JAKARTA

,

American

Ambassador Llewellyn E.
Thompson, aware that the attack of U. S.
policy was coming, stayed home.
The Soviet Communist party head appeared to have both Washington and
Peking in mind when he declared the
Soviet Union

would smash any aggression "wherever it might come from—the
North or the South, the West or the
East."

MIDEAST
The Cairo newspaper
Akhbar Elyom said a big four agreement on the Middle East conflict was
“imminent.” But the weekly warned its
success “depends on whether the United
States has enough courage to make Israel
approve the agreement.”
The newspaper quoted sources in
London saying talks were under way in
the United States, the Soviet Union, Britain and France on a solution calling for
the withdrawal of Israeli troops from
Arab lands and an end to the Arab
state of belligerency against Israel,
Israel has vowed it will not return

“The Soviet army has the best weapin the world. The Soviet people
will win,” he told a crowd of 6,000 persons, including most of the world's Communist leaders, in the Kremlin Palace
of Congresses.
But abroad, Brezhnev said, Communism’s work is far from done.
"The line taken by Mao Tse-tung’s
group damages the development of the
revolution in China,” he said as the
Chinese observers walked out from their
balcony seats. “This line is undermining
the world Communist movement."

Vice President Hubert
H. Humphrey has met the man who
smashed Communist China’s coup attempt
two years ago and ousted President Sukarno and he said Washington found
“great comfort in the new government in
Indonesia.”
“We find comfort because the people
in Indonesia have a chance to live in
freedom and independence and in selfrespect,” Humphrey said in a talk to
Americans living in Jakarta.
Humphrey arrived in Jakarta early
Friday on the final leg of his three-nation Southeast Asian trip. He is the highest ranking American ever to visit Indonesia.

To strengthen friendship

H.s talks with acting president Suharto
were aimed at strengthening America’s
new friendship with the nation where
Communist China suffered its greatest
setback in a decade.
Suharto and the entire Indonesian
cabinet went to the airport to greet
Humphrey while a dozen tanks and armored cars kept tight security.
Humphrey said that the United States
was following a policy of commitment to
the United Nations charter. In it, the U. N.
charter calls upon the members “to resist aggression either individually or col-

’

was

purged

we also hope to improve relations with

it
if the United States withdraws its
troops from Taiwan, then the bone of
contention will disappear and we may
develop friendly relations with it, China’s
Khruschev once said nonsensically,” the
article claimed. “This is a self-confession . . . about his currying favor with
and surrendering to the U. S. imperial...

ists.”

The article said the United States had
carried out “military, political, economic
and cultural aggression” against China
since the Opium War of 1840.
The article added that Mao correctly
assessed the “ferocious” nature and
threat of U. S; “imperialists,” but Liu
did not.

Israel

to the situation which existed before the
June 5-10 Middle East war and has demanded direct negotiations with the

Arabs.
Israeli Prime Minister Levi Eshkol
hailed President Johnson’s five point
peace plan as “realistic” in a speech in
Tel Aviv Friday.
King Hussein of Jordan has scheduled
talks with United Nations Secretary General Thant before going to Washington
to seek both arms and American support
against Israel. Both Thant and the Johnson administration were expected to urge
direct Arab-Israeli negotiations.

onry

finds friends in
—

China

China began.

the decisions disclosed

by State Department Press Officer Robert J, McClosky represented no change
in American policy.
McClosky said Goldberg’s statements
“were in context of the basic United
States position.” As stated many times
by President Johnson and many other
officials, he said, it was that the “Viet
Cong would have no difficulty in being
represented and having their views presented” if North Vietnam stopped its
“aggression.”

four plans upset
—

Breshnev blasts U.S.

No policy change

flirted with U.S.,

HONG KONG—The official publication
of the Chinese Communist Party has
charged that purged President Liu Shaochi wanted to make up and be friends
with the United States,
The Red China Communist publication branded him a traitor.
The charges were contained in an
edition of the Peking People’s Daily dated Oct. 16 which was received and translated in Hong Kong.
The article did not call Liu by name,
but instead referred to him as “China’s
Khrushchev,” the title the Communist
Party has given him ever since the power struggle began between him and party
—UPI Telephoto

not get into the question of the “form”
of the participation by the National Liberation Front (NLF), the political arm of
Viet Cong.

Indonesia

lectively,” Humphrey said.
"We are not the Roman Empire," he
said. “We are the people of the United
States. We don’t want to be the world's
policeman even though we are perfectly
willing to stand by with other free people when their citadel of freedom is

under attack.”

Endorsement unlikely
Informed sources said

it was unlikely
Humphrey would press Suharto for In-

donesian endorsement of America's Viet-

nam policy.

When the Chinese backed an attempted coup here in October of 1965, Suharto
led royal army officers to crush it. Suharto has since replaced former president
Sukarno, turned Indonesia from the Communist camp and gave Red China its
worst setback in a decade.
Hundreds of thousands of Indonesian
Communists were reported slain after
the abortive coup.
Only last month Indonesia suspended
all diplomatic relations with Peking, recaled its diplomats and closed its embassy.

Political observers said they doubt
Indonesia might serve as a peacemaker in
Vietnam, although Suharto's regime maintains relations with both Hanoi and Washington.

—UPI

Telephoto

CIA
protest

State University Junior Debra Brault of
Glens Falls, N.Y.„ letters a sign in
preparation for a student protest against
recruiting seniors for service in the CIA.
Her sign reads, "Does your best friend
work for the CIA? Get Big Brother off

campus."

-

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                    <text>The SpECTRUM 0

Vol. 18, No. 16

State University of New York at Buffalo

Academic freedom

Mob president calls for discussion
of 'real issues in Dow-CIA dispute
by

Marlene Kozuchowski
Assistant

Campus

Editor

The Student Mobilization Committee refused to be
smothered in Thursday’s University forum because “the
liberals attempted to blanket the issue of CIA and Dow
Chemical Company with the issue of academic freedom,”
declared Mike McKeating, president of Student Mob.
“We feel that you cannot take
A statement issued Tuesthe bourgeois liberal position that
day night by Mike McKeatyou are against the napaiming of
ing, Mike Nevin and Carl
children, but you defend Dow
Kronberg, Student Mob memChemical’s right to recruit people
bers, stated that they “are to napalm. Or that you are against
perfectly willing to debate the CIA’s murdering of thousands
of people around the globe daily,
the real issues.”

“However, in our mind the real
issues are not academic freedom
or freedom of speech, but Genocide, If you want to debate the
CIA or Dow Chemical, you must
debate Genocide.

but that you defend their right

to come on campus and coerce
people into doing the murdering.

Not free speech
“This is not a matter of free
speech. We are not talking about
the CIA coming on campus to explain their philosophy or policy.
We’re talking about them coming on campus and holding secret meetings with a few poten-

tial murderers in the basement

of the Placement Center.”

“What about our academic freedom?” asked Student Mob members in their statement. One thousand people according to the
statement, with “leftist, pacifist
or ‘subversive’ leanings or sympathies would have been excluded from the interviews” because
the CIA is a “bigot of a very ileal
sort” which rejects certain political philosophy.

—Yatw

Dr. Zimmerman
addresses the crowd

on

of the CCS.

behalf

The Student Mobilization Committee indicated Tuesday that
they would not participate in
Thursday’s forum, “The people
who chair the meeting, purporting to be neutral, force us to debate on their own terms only
which are irrelevant pseudo-issues,” said Mr. Nevin,

accuse us of fascism,” Mr. Nevin
continued, "they are free to do
so in their half of the debate.
However only if we are free to
give our definition of t.ie issues
and elaborate on them.”

The format of the University
forum called for by the Student
Association was, in Mr. McKeat
ing’s opinion a "ploy by adminis
tration to suppress the left.”
The statement, issued Tuesday
night, concluded: "In effect, the

Student Senate and CCS have said
that 'We are going to have a de
bate on freedom of speech and
you are going to take the nega
live position.' We the undersigned do not suggest thalt we re
fuse to take part in debate.

Refuse to debate
“We do however suggest that
we refuse to take part in a debate where the issues and groundrules are defined by the opposition. We suggest, therefore, that
SDS and Student Mob withhold
their assent to the forum until
such time as the relevant issues
and equitable ground rules can
be agreed upon."

Referring to President Meyerson's statement Mr. Keating said:
“An open campus
that is a
lie. There has never been an
open campus here. In 1962, SANE
was banned from the State Uni
versity at Buffalo, In 1964, the
Youth Against War and Fascism,
was also banned.
—

Feinberg law
“Even today, the Feinberg law
hangs over every faculty head,”
added Mr Nevin. “Our right wing
or conservative Marxist friends,
namely the Communist parly
USA,
effectively banned
are
under the Feinberg law.”

Friday, November 3, 1967

Spock calls the Vietnam
War 'militarily hopeless'
by Bill MacBlane and Joel Kleinman
Spectrum

Staff

Reporters

Dr. Banjamin Spock called the Vietnam War “militarily
hopeless” at the Graduate Student Association Convocation
Wednesday night in a crowded Fillmore Room.
Although not a pacifist, the eminent pediatrician and author opposes the war because: “We
found Diem in America and installed him as a puppet to fill
the power vacuum left by the
French withdrawal.’’ Dr. Spock
quoted former President Eisenhower as having admitted that
80% of the people of North and
South Vietnam supported reunification under Ho Chi Minh in the
50's.

He feels President Johnson is

attempting to save face in Vietnam at all costs, attributing to
Johnson the remark: “I refuse to
be the first President to lose
a war.”
We are trying to impose a
puppet regime the people don’t
want
he charged. We are being
beaten by a force one-quratcr
our size, although “we have used
more bombs than in all of World
War II. Even if we succeed in
leveling every building in Vietnam, we will still have to contend with the Red Chinese.”

Legally wrong
“The war is legally wrong beon the Geneva accord” and we are disobeying
the rules of war laid out by the
Geneva Convention in 1954 by
poisioning crops and using poisonous gas,” he charged.

cause we went back

In relating his views on the
kind of atmosphere that must be
present in America to allow a
war effort, he said: “Americans
displace their hostility on people
they don’t identify with' We
bring up our children to be very
tolerant of violence,” as reflected
in war toys.
America has little inhibition in

“imposing our might

project bad

because we
to the

characteristics

Russians and Chinese, and overlook these same traits in ourselves," adding that “to combat
this psychological sickness we
must bring up our children to
have a stronger sense of service
to the world."

When questioned on draft resistance, Spock replied: “I have
publically supported the burning
of draft cards and other acts of
civil disobedience.” They are
small acts of illegality compared
to our government’s action in
Southeast Asia, he said.

Press Conference
At a press conference for Buffalo area news media earlier in
the day, the speaker, in reply to
a question about the violence at
the recent march in Washington
at which he spoke, replied, "Only
a small number of demonstrators
used provacative actions," but
the brutality of the U.S. Marshalls, he said, served to bring
home the violent nature of our
government.

General Gavin is the most attractive candidate for president
in 1968, in the view of Dr. Spock,
because of his anti-war position

and because the Republicans have
no commitments to uphold in
Vietnam.

To relieve ourselves of the burden of Vietnam, we must slop the
bombing, negotiate with the National Liberation Front, and remove all our forces, he said. A
peace force comprised of soldiers
from non-aligned nations would
protect South Vietnam
while
negotiations are carried on.

Fascism

Silverman, director of libraries, claims
Organization budget cuts to be special collections are not adequate
“If the Committee of Concerned Students (CCS) wants to

determined by fee payments
The organization budgets for
the Student Association of the
State University of Buffalo have
been submitted and most have
been approved. Student Association Treasurer Douglas Braun has
approved all budgets submitted
to him, and most have been approved by the Senate,
Mr,

Braun

said

that

he ap-

proved all budgets on the basis
that 100% of the students paid
their activities fees. In that way,
he said, he did not have to pass
value judgments on clubs, and
decide what portion of the budget
would be cut out. All budgets
except some that cannot be cut
will be deleted at the same rate.

The budgets that cannot be
cut, said Mr. Braun, include the
Senate, the UUAB, and the student publications.

not all students have
paid their activity fees, clubs are
not allowed to admit for membership any student who has not paid
Since

the fees. Because enforcement of
this rule is nearly impossible with
present staff, clubs are on the
honor system. “We have to leave

it to the club,” said Mr. Braun,
“to act in the best interest of the
students.”

The total expenses of all organizations that submitted budgets was $309,000, and appropriations were $215,500, with the rest
made up of club dues, or in the
case of publications, from advertising revenues.

In the event that budgets are
all clubs
to raise money on their own, by
raffles, sales, or any other means,
to support themselves.

cut, Mr Braun advises

More books are the future of this library; Dr. Oscar A.
Silverman, director of libraries at the State University of
Buffalo, claimed at the eighth in the series of University

Reports Tuesday.

Speaking on “Special Collections and the University
Libraries,” Dr. Silverman mentioned that his speech was
concerned not only with all collections, since all collections
become special collections, but also with all new develop-

ments.

“We have developed since 1960
and most especially since 1963.
We have moved from the position
of being a rather small and limited university with a small and
limited library to where we are—a large university with a rather
large number of special collections,” according to Dr. Silverman.

He claimed that there is more
need for special collections now
that there are more students
working for their Ph.D’s than in
the past. Substantiating this, he
gave statistics
indicating the
growth in the number of candi-

dates for Ph.D.’s, the number receiving them, and also the number of areas.

Considering the increase in the
number of Ph D. candidates, there
is a "tremendous drain on the
on not only our relibraries
sources, but also our resourcefulness.”
—

Speaking of the amount of

ma-

terial available, he said, “We may
not say today that our special
collections are more than medium to adequate. We are working
all the time to bring them up to
adequacy or better than adequa

cy.”

Oscar Silverman
describes rapid growth in li-

brary specialization since 1963

�Pas* Two

Th

•

Spectrum

Friday, November 3, 1967

'Learning experience' is discussed
National Travel Forum
at Fall-Parent Weekend symposium will be held in Norton

Problems faced by students, clarity in matters of truth. He
faculty—and—administrators and —also mentioned that it was his
solutions to these problems were , belief thbt (he right of students
the subjects of a Fall-Parent to examine and discuss whatever
seems of true relevance to them
Weekend Symposium held Saturday.
is an integral part of the “learning experience.”
The symposium featured guest
speakers, Miss Jeanette Scudder,
Dean of Women; Mr. Anthony F.
Dean Lorenzetti also discussed
Lorenzetti, Associate Dean of individually four major issues
Students, and Mr. Herbert S. prominent in the current nationwide controversy over academic
Eisenstein, Assistant Dean of
freedom. These are the freedom
University College.
Dean Lorenzetti, speaking on
of students to join together to
discuss topics to their own choosacademic freedom, called the Uni
ing, the freedom of students to
versity “anexciting melting pot
of people, ideas, buildings, books, invite any person to speak to
them, regardless of his views or
and problems.”
beliefs, the freedom of the stuHe sterssed the need for student exposure to many different
dent press, and the freedom of
students to participate in acaideas in order for them to achieve
'

Meeting to be held to explore
opportunities for foreign study
Foreign Study Programs for
undergraduates will be the subject of a meeting sponsored by
the Department of Modern Languages. The meeting will be held
Nov. 15 in Room 147 Diefendorf

Hall.
The

for Foreign
of the
effective programs for students interested in studying in Europe or
South America during the summer. Programs for spending a junior year abroad will also be disCommittee

Study has compiled a list

cussed

The Committee, which is now
four years old, has information on
jobs, travel and study for students majoring in any field.
Speaking at the meeting will be
Dr. Gordon Silber, chairman of
the Department of Modern Lan-

guages and Dr. Leon Livingstone,
professor of Spanish, and head of
the University summer program
in Barcelona, Spain. Under this
program, students receive credit
while living and studying in Barcelona.
The Committee makes avail-

able to interested students information about study programs
sponsored by many other colleges. Dr. Arcudi feels that all
students should have an opportunity to travel abroad, not necessarily for studying. “Students
should experiment in observing.
We are very interested in students of this University studying

abroad.’’

The meeting is not restricted to
students majoring in languages.
Students in all majors are welcomed to attend.

demic decisions which will af-

Assistant Dean Eisenstein
spoke chiefly about the establishment and goal of the University
College. He told of plans to increase the flexibility of its curriculum, thus eliminating the
“over-concentration” experienced
by many students.
Research pressures
i
Mr. Eisenstein highlighted his
speech with the discussion of a
problem which he stated to be
“rather unfamiliar to parents and
those not involved in the profession of college teaching.” The
problem involves the difficulties
which may result because of the

tremendous pressures placed on
faculty members to do research
and to publish their works.
Speaking for himself and his
colleagues in University College,
Mr. Eisenstein said: “We want
the baccalaureate degree to represent an active, involved, and
freely expressive intelligence.”
In her address, Dean Scudder
emphasized the problem which
cause parents and students to

live in “two different worlds.”

“The Freshman Class Council
hasn’t been run very well in past
years, but the Council and its
advisor, Mr. Edward Dale want

to show that the freshmen have
enterprise and initiative,” according to Gail Paterson, secretary of the Council.

To show this initiative, the
Council has undertaken various
tasks. Its first project involves
arranging for movies to be shown
in room 140 Capen Hall.
Recently the Council obtained
a form that told what movies

Will the young lady who
parked her red convertible
in front of the library last
Friday with two cases of
Genesee Beer in the back,
please pick up the empties?

•

•

l:'r J r
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•

shsrs*

89c

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'

Roll and butter

PI
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™

Fish Dinner

si

I

•

Baked potato or
French fries
Crisp green salad

.

1

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I

film, “Discover America,” will be
shown.

1 p.m. Greyhound Bus, two
films, “Magnificent West” and
“Florida,” along with information on obtaining tickets on

campus.

Tuesday:

11 a.m. American Airlines, two

p -^Sheridan at Sweet Home

11

STUDENTS; Bring this ad to Char/Steak House. It's good for one (I) Pepsi

■

were available. They were distributed in Allenhurst, Tower,
Goodyear, and Clement dormitories. The resident advisors were
instructed to have the students
fill out the forms and return
them immediately. Then a table
was set up in Norton Hall to distribute forms to upperclassmen
and commuters.

Fair
The Council thought it would
be fairer if the students were
given a choice in this matter
rather than arbitrarily selecting
the movies. Admission will be
50 cents. The Council members
feel that it is worth paying a
little more to see good pictures.
The Council’s reason for sponsoring these movies is to raise
money for other projects later
in the year. Although it receives
funds from the Student Senate as
a student activity, it would rather
earn money on its own.
The first movie to be shown
will be “Tom Jones” in 140 Capen. There will be two performances and advance ticket sales in
Norton Hall.
Future movies will be: Nov. 14,
“Irma La Douce;” Nov. 21, “Exodus;” Dec. 5, “A Shot in the
Dark;” Dec. 12, “A Thousand
Clowns;” and Dec. 19. “The Manchurian Candidate.” If there is
enough response, each film will
be shown twice.

Dr. Beatrice A. Wright, professor of Psychology at the University of Kansas, will lecture
here at 9:30 a.m. Nov. 8. The
speech, “Psychological Snares in
the Investigative Enterprise,”
will be given in Room 233 Norton
Hall.

Open daily

,

•

Monday:
11 a.m. United Airlines, a short

1 p.m. Mohawk Airlines, Mr.
Maxwell Smart will be here with

a short film and an explanation
his airline’s compensating
fares.

of

2 p.m. Eastern Airlines, along
with a short film, there will be

information concerning the Eastern Travel Club.

3 p.m. Automobile Club of Buffalo wil present a film, “A Nation on Wheels,” and discuss the
services it offers.

Co-chairmen of the Travel
Committee, Jacqueline Moss and
Ellen Streitfeld, will be available
both days to answer any

ques-

tions concerning NSA’s role in
aiding students planning national
or international travel. In addition, the Travel Office (Room 213,
Norton Hall) has daily office
hours where additional information may be obtained.

amateur folk contest 7:30 p.m.,
Dec. 18 in the Conference Theater. The contest will be open to
all full-time students and to all
groups that have at least one

full-time student member. The
entrance fee for single performers is $1.00 and for groups, with
a limit of five members, is $2.00.
Judging the contest will be a
local disc jockey, a member of
the campus radio staff, and a
member of the music department.
The winner will be awarded a
two show engagement at the Club
Sheridan.
Winter Weekend, which will be
held in February, is another project for the Freshman Class
Council. Other activities are being
planned, such as a raffle, theater
party, and a concert.
An accomplishment of the
Council this year was installing
a pay telephone in the Alienhurst Bus Lounge.
Need support
The Council is looking for peoserve on the Communications and Publicity Committee,
whose chairman is George Heymann. According to Michael Sisti,
President of the Council, “This
year’s Freshman Council is eager
in its revolutionary ideas, but
is only as good as the support
students—freshmen or not—give
it.”
Meetings are open to the entire
freshman class and are held at
3 p.m. Thursdays in Room 334
Norton Hall.
ple to

Psychology lecture held

Steak
CharfHouse

so

The following is the planned
schedule for the two day forum:

Another project to be sponsored by the Council will be an

XJLl.

°

Sponsored by the National Student Association, the two day program of speakers and films will
attempt to acquaint students with
existing opportunities for travel.

Folk contest

m

Chicken Dinner

ium

.SSSL
•

CrUp B

Travel Committee of the NSA.

films highlighting West Coast
travel: “A Touch of California”
and “California Cameos.”

Freshman Council undertakes projects

PERSONAL;

Complete
Steak Dinner

The first National Travel
Forum will be held in the Conference Theater Nov. 6 and 7.
There are many students who are
not aware of the travel opportunities that their own country
has to offer, according to the

FREE with dinner.

Dr. Wright, author of Physical
Disability: A Psychological Approach, is also co-author of other
books and papers, as well as
editor of Psychology and Rehabilitation, a book dealing with the
theoretical and research contributions to the psychology of
the disabled.
She has also won an award for
her outstanding work in editing

the publication of the National
Council on Psychological Aspects
of Disability, the Bulletin.
As a psychologist, she has been
a consultant to institutes for the
parents of deaf children and of
children with cerebral palsy, as
well as to nursery schools in Cali-

fornia and Kansas.

Dr.

Wright

Swarthmore and

has

taught

at

San Francisco
State Colleges, and at one time
conducted parent education pro-

grams for the California State
Board of Education.
The talk is sponsored by the
Students’ Association of Rehabilitation Counselors of the State
University of Buffalo.

�Friday/ November 3, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag*

Schindler feels goals accomplished;
resigns as dean of business school
Dr.

James S.

Schindler who

Schindler has also assisted in the

sity School of Business Administration, considers his objectives
as dean "accomplished.” The resignation becomes effective at
the end of the current academic

undergraduate curriculum. Dean
Schindler noted the “substantial
change in the direction of the
Business School,” from an emphasis on specific concentration

year.
Dean Schindler plans to remain
at Buffalo and devote his energies
to full time teaching, research,
and publication commitments.

The “launching of the graduprograms in Business Administration” was Dr. Schindler’s
objective. From an initial class of
20 students in the fall of 1963,
the Master of Business Administration program has krown to
include over 160 full time day
students and a nearly equal number of part time students in the
evening division. In addition, 30
students are now in various
stages of the Ph.D, program.

ate

Dean Schindler has also been
actively planning a School of
Management, for the purpose of
“training persons for management in large scale, formal organizations.” Dr. Schindler hopes
to see the School of Management
a reality within a short period.

Broadened outlook

~

G n&gt;
'*

Dean Schindler
i •
resigns Business Administration
_

In addition to the establishment of graduate programs, Dr.

*

school post to devote full time
to teaching and research.

of

dateline news, Nov. 3

study to a mote

elimaxii.g a bust by federal and local narcotics agents which yielded
$60,000 worth of amphetamine drugs and a “small quantity" of marijuana.
Following a tip-off from an undercover agent who had arranged
to make a connection for the “speed," authorities arrested Mrs, Patricia Huber, Carl Huber, Robert Moore and Peter S. Berardi, Jr. in
Niagara County raids.
Gary Stevens, operator of the "Gallery Arcanum” on Allen St.,
President Meyerson expressed was arrested at Main and Kenmore. Police allegedly confiscated over
his appreciation of Dean Schind$30,000 worth of powered amphetamine from his person.
ler's service, observing that:
Meanwhile, Buffalo Narcotics Squad agents raided Mr. Steven's
“Dean Schindler has been rehome at 180 Allen St. Mrs, Hazel Stevens, his wife, was charged
sponsible for major developments with possession of marijuana and permitting the premise to be used
of the School's curriculum and
for drug sale.
faculty. He has provided a base
Also arrested at the Allen St. address: Manuel “Spain” Rodrigues,
for the further broadening of the David Edelman and Sharon Schulman. The latter two are State UniSchool's development into new versity
of Buffalo students. The trio was charged with frequenting a
areas.”
place where drugs are used.
Mr. Edelman is a former editor-in-chief of The Spectrum.
Dean Schindler, after an abSAIGON—The aged supreme monk of South Vietnam’s militant
sence of fifteen years, returned
to burn himself to death to protest
to Buffalo in the fall of 1963, Buddhist faction today threatened
the religious policy of President Nguyen Van Thicu, aides said.
as Professor and Chairman of
Five of his followers have committed fiery suicide since Oct. 2
Accounting. In February, 1964 Dr.
in their campaign against Thieu, a Roman Catholic convert they acSchindler was appointed acting cused of trying to “destroy” Buddhism.
dean and in July, 1964 he was
WASHINGTON—President Johnson, lashing out at critics of his
appointed to the position of full
Vietnam policy, maintains that the nation will find peace "much
earier united than we will divided."
time dean.
At an unscheduled White House news conference Wednesday,
the Chief Executive spoke scornfully of anti war demonstrations.
Reflecting upon his term as
“I think . . . that
the American public could read Hanoi’s
dean, Dr, Schindler said: "These cables and statements ifand could see the Communists’ reaction
have been very busy and conto some of the things that are being said in the country, that they
structive years in terms of the would agree with me that all their private proposals and statements
School, I hope the very fine have not contributed a great deal to the solution that we so eagerly

For example, Dr, Schindler
noted: “Developments in the behavioral sciences have been
added to the base of theoretical
and applied economics."

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Management offers,"

Service inaugurated to find teaching jobs
Highly mobile graduating classes have led to the formation of
educational placement service
through the Association of
Schools, Colleges and University
Staffing. The service will allow
graduating seniors to seek jobs
anywhere in the United States in

the field of education.

The

computer correlates the
are given

two, and employers

lists of all students that meet
their requirements. The responsibility for contacting candidates is
up to the employer. Students may
specify areas as local as an area
of a state, on a quarter system
of northeast, southeast, northwest

Thr**

southwest, or as general as
anywhere in the United States.
and

There is no cost for either of
the services and students interested are urged to visit the
Placement Office and bring (heir
files up to dale.

seek.”
Johnson said that “not even the intellectuals or the editorial
writers or the columnists, pro or con,” have the information top
administration policymakers have at their command when deciding
on the U S. course in Vietnam.
PITTSBURGH—Classes resumed at the racially troubled Oliver
High School today with social workers and police plainclothesmen
circulating in the halls to prevent a repetition of the violence which
broke out Wednesday.
Sixteen students were taken to hospitals after the eruption, 12
of them for treatment of the temporary effects of a chemical spray
used by police to break up the disturbance. One Negro youth was
arrested but later released in custody of a priest.

Presenting The Drinking Song for Sprite:

"ROAR, SOFT-DRINK, ROAR!"
(To the tune of "Barbara Fritchie")

The program itself is two fold.
The first involves a system called
reciprocity. Using this system, a
senior chooses an area of the
country in which he wishes to be
placed. The University will then
write to a cooperating university
in the specified area to request
reciprocity.

The student’s files are sent to
the area university and he receives all placement bulletins

Thus, local
from the area.
schools are able to view the student’s credentials easily and the
student is aware of area possibilities.

The second facet of the program involves a computerized
system. Candidates’ qualifications
are coded, and prospective employers’ requirements are also
coded.

FREE
Just Present This Ad for
FREE HAMBURGER
(LIMIT—1—PER PERSON)

OFFER EXPIRES:

NOV. 9,

1967

McDonald's
3424 SHERIDAN DR
at Sweet Home Rd.

Traditionally, a lusty, rousing fight song is
de rieeur for every worthy cause and institution.
But we wrote a song for Sprite anyway. We'd like you
to sing it while drinking Sprite, though this may
cause some choking and coughing. So what? It's all in
good, clean fun. And speaking of good, clean things,
what about the taste of Sprite? It's good. It's
clean. However, good clean things may not exactly be

your idea of jollies. In that case, remember that
Sprite is also very refreshing. "Tart and tingling,"
in fact. And very collegiate. And maybe we'd better
quit while we're ahead.
So here it is. The Drinking
Song For Sprite. And if you can get a group together
to sing it--we'd be very surprised.

Roar, soft drink, roar!
You're the loudest soft drink
we ever sawr!
So tart and tingling, they
couldn't keep you quiet:
The perfect drink, guy,
To sit and think by,
Or to-bring instant refreshment
To any campus riot! Ooooooh-Roar, soft drink, roar!
Flip your cap, hiss and bubble,
fizz and gush!
Oh we can't think
Of any drink
That we would rather sit with!
Or (if we feel like loitering)
to hang out in the strit with!
Or sleep through English lit' wi
Roar! Soft drink! Roar!
Yeahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh, SPRITE!

SPRITE. SO TART AND

�Pag* Four

The Spectrum

Friday, November 3, 1967

New constitution: vote no
New York State voters will cast ballots Tuesday for and
against the proposed State constitution. This State will be
be better off if voters turn it down.
Speaker Travia was in Buffalo this week campaigning
for the constitution. He claims that opponents of the new
constitution have been complaining about the “package”

.S'

That’s reasonable most of the new constitution is worth-

Proponents of the document suggest that we pass it and
then change what we don’t like by amendment. That’s absurd.
It would be much wiser to impliment the things we do like
by amending the present constitution.
Some have labeled the new document “up to date.” That
doesn’t seem to be the case.
The provisions dealing with the judiciary, the legislature
and state taxation and finance are anything but forward
looking.
It has left to the legislature the power to lower the voting age rather than presenting the lower age as part of the
document so voters could have their say. It has given the
legislature the power to issue State bonds while, previously,
such issuance needed voters approval.
The desire to repeal the “Blaine Amendment” may lead
many to vote for the constitution, but approval of the entire
constitution is not needed to repeal Blaine. Many legislators
have, in fact, pledged themselves to work for the repeal if
the constitution is not approved.
Mr. Travia thinks the entire constitution should be
passed so, naturally, the package deal appeals to him. It is
difficult to believe that many think the entire constitution
is good, and we cannot urge voters to take the bad with the

gjt

■

§3
■

;

fl

'Remember, all they

can

[the soup'

see at this disi

What’s all this talk about a negotiated settle
ment in Vietnam?
“Stopthebombingandnegotiate!” is the most popular rallying cry of the wishywashyliberalcynical
frustratedestablishmentwarcritics.
The war’s gotta end, right? Nobody, so the story
goes, likes war. Peace is where it’s at. The question is, what’s the quickest way to get it?
Two extreme proposals have been offered:
Bomblhegooksbackintolhestoneage!

Individualism needed

Face the real issue
The C.I.A.-Dow Chemical controversy is still very much
with us and there is little hope that it can be easily resolved.
Those who wish to deny the C.I.A. or Dow Chemical
Company use of University facilities are adamant in their
beliefs.
It is now claimed that the issue is not one of academic
freedom or the right of any group to come on campus. Instead
it is said that the issue is American foreign policy and war.
That is indeed a shallow response by those who seek to
close up the University.
No matter how you slice it, threatening violence because
of displeasure over another’s point of view is an indication
of a narrow, intolerant mind.
Situations have been distorted in the past by various
groups taking various stands. Changing the focus of this
dispute is just that type of distortion.
The issue here is not war or peace. It isn’t U.S. foreign
policy. It isn’t Lyndon Johnson, or Rusk or McNamara.
The issue clearly is whether or not any group, any
agency, any individual or any company has the right to
come on a university campus. If you can’t face that issue,
you’re fooling yourself.
No one else is fooled.

uniforms and

Activities of CIA are cited
To the Editor:

This week the CIA will be recruiting from the

State University of Buffalo. We the undersigned
believe that the University community should be
aware of this organization’s activities. Granting
that this and other concerns do offer excellent employment opportunities, we urge, however, that
everyone should consider the role they may be

asked to play in the continuance of United States
foreign policy as a result of employment.
1954
The CIA engineered a revolution
against the communist-oriented President of Guatemala, Jocobo Guzman.
•

give back to Vietnam her precious virginity.

—

A military dictatorship was imposed.

•

•

•

•

He also knows that, as long as he maintains
the main force of his troops in the North, concentrating on defense and harassment along the

tion, or we can pull out.
And even pulling out won’t heal the pain, won't

’

writings

perialists.

demilitarized zone, and continues to bolster his
anti-aircraft defenses while maintaining a high
level of input of Soviet aid, he can survive. His
economy is strained, but his people are unified in
their fight for survival against the world’s greatest power. Nothing short of an invasion and/or
nuclear weapons will force him to capitulate.
The Viet Cong have been forced into the bush,
and they will not come out alive, except as victors.
There is no point in forcing, or talking them into
giving up their struggle. They know that, given
the current totalitarian political climate in Saigon,
a coalition government is ridiculous. A true popular democracy in the South would oust the military men in a day. The Cong are convinced that
they can do this by guerilla tactics, and they don’t
care how long it takes.
Civil strife existed in Vietnam following the
overthrow of the French. Our presence there merely deepened the split between the two sides of the
civil war, and effectively killed any chance of a
strong coalition neutralist regime.
There can be no talking of peace in Vietnam
until the U, S. is out of there. Our policies of escalation have failed. Our “pacification” programs
have failed. We cannot negotiate with anybody.
Nobody will talg about the possibilities of peace
to a stubborn bully with a false sense of pride. We
may want to talk, but nobody will listen.
Vietnam is no threat to our national security.
Some think that she is a threat to our pride. I submit that we have none left.
We have raped a country.
We can destroy her, and risk our own castra-

a recruiting station

Readers

by Barry Holtzclaw

and
Getthehelloutathere!
Thus, the great liberal consciousness of the nation has reacted to the situation in Vietnam with
Stop the bombing in the
The Buffalo Common Council is generally a very unin- a compromise ofwallsorts:
along the demilitarized zone,
North, build a
With
few
the
Council
teresting body.
exceptions,
votes along and, while “pacifying” the South, arrange for
party lines.
ceasefire talks between Saigon and Hanoi.
The City needs more individualism in government. This
The talks would serve a dual purpose of halthas prompted The Spectrum to endorse three very individual- ting hostilities for a short period to allow for
troop regroupings and reinforcements and of legiistic candidates.
the division of the country and the miliFor councilman-at-large: Herman F. Cole Jr. and Alfreda timizing
tarist regime in the South.
Slominski.
W.
And it ain’t gonna work.
For University District councilman: William F. Lyman
Ho Chi Minh is not going to sit down at the
All three candidates have exhibited firmness in their same table with the military dictators of the South.
beliefs and concern for the community. Each speaks his mind First of all, he doesn’t recognize the legitimacy of
on pressing issues.
their government, and secondly, he doesn’t view
It is clear that the three do not espouse the same causes, Vietnam as an issue involving two countries. To
him it is merely a case of overthrowing a renegade
but a Council that is always of one mind offers little dialogue. puppet government
in the southern provinces,—the
Different points of view can be a valuable asset to a US has merely taken the place of the French im-

legislative body, and we are quite certain that Mr. Cole, Mrs.
Slominski, and Mr. Lyman can offer different points of view.
Tuesday’s election provides an excellent opportunity for
the people of Bufalo to vote for individuals. Perhaps that trio
can spark the Common Council into action.

fance is

Or perhaps...

good.

Voters should have the opportunity to vote on individual
issues. At least that way we can be sure that a majority of
the citizens of this state have really approved the entire constitution. Tuesday’s “Question One” on the ballot denies us
that centainty.
Those going to the polls should vote no on the proposed
constitution.

.£

•

(NYT June 19, 1:7 1954)
(NYT July 1, 1:2, 1954)
1961
The CIA organized and executed an
invasion of Cuba at the Bay of Pigs.
(NYT Apr. 18, 1:5 1961)
(Look May-June 1964)
1954-60—The CIA infiltrated and used Michigan State University’s faculty advisors to South Vietnam for the purpose
of building Diem’s police force and
40,000 man militia.
(Ramparts Apr, 1966)
For fifteen years the CIA financed
and used the National Student Association and its officers.
(NYT Feb. 14, 1:1 1967)
(Time Feb. 24, 1967)
For twenty years the CIA financed
and used American labor unions and
especially their international affiliates.
(NYT Feb. 19, 1:15 1967)
(Time Mar. 3, 1967)
The CIA has financed and controlled
Radio Free Europe. (The Voice of
America is an acknowledged government operative.)
Robert Little
Dr. Jacob Marinsky
Thomas Jarzab
Dr. Curtis Hare
David Langs
Thomas Sleight
Chemistry Dept.
Richard Barrett
—

Dr. Elliott Blinn

every
The Spectrum is published twice-weekly
Tuesday and Friday
during the regular academic
of New York at Buffalo,
3435 Main Street, Buffalo, New York 14214. Offices
are located at 355 Norton Hall. Circulation: 15,000.
—

—

year at the State University

Editor-in-Chief—MICHAEL L. D’AMICO
Managing Editor—RICHARD R. HAYNES
Asst. Managing Editor —RICHARD SCHWAB
Business Manager—SAMUEL A, POWAZEK
Advertising Manager—DAVID E. FOX
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Daniel Lasser
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Sports
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Director Murray Richman

Layout

The Spectrum is a member of the United States Student Press Association and the Associated Collegiate
Press. The Spectrum is served by: United Press Inter
national, Associated Collegiate Press Service, Gannett
News Service, and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate.
Represented for national advertising by National Educational Advertising Service. Inc., 420 Madison Ave .
New York. N. Y. Republication of all news dispatches
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editor-in-chief. Rights of republication of all other
matter herein are also reserved.
Second class postage paid at Buffalo, New York.
Editorial policy is determined by the Editor-in-Chief.

�Friday, November 3, 1967

No progress seen in Vietnam

Pag* Fiv*

The Spectrum

By Interlandi
rM
[3
»«»*'
■
(SJl
S&amp;s, sk.

BELOW OLYMPUS

To the Editor:
“Dear Brother,
Screw your work

KY-

or whatever for a little while
and get down to the serious business of communicating to your long-lost brother in the wilds of this
nightmarish war, which Vietnam is turning out
more and more to be. I used to think we were win-

r nJK- V,
-

kM

WMME

in the States, and the growing disillusionment here
of the Vietnamese people, I’m not at all sure we’re

going to get anywhere.
I have seen the resentment in their eyes all
along (of us, the haughty foreign troops who are
supposed to be helping them, but most of the GIsreally have little feeling for the Vietnamese as
human beings, and many will outrightly injure
them at the slightest provocation, or even for the
hell of it, just ’cause they’re pissed-off to be here,
and the nearest “gook” makes a good target for
vengeance), but the longer the American presence

n

.

.

.

A UB Student

/!

VI

continues, with little noticeable effect except the
defilement of their country (the creation of vast
military complexes, ugly, dusty barbed wire messes,
complete with subservient Vietnamese peons,
whorehouses, bars, and shantytowns), the inflation; the terrible intrusion, the more I think they
come to just resent us and believe Vietnam would
be better Vietnamese even if it were Communist.
And we cannot make progress here without the
full, wholehearted support of the people. It’s extremely complicated from even a close-up view.
All I know for sure is we are personally getting screwed and I want more than ever to get
out

[J

u

f]£) iw, ik wmb"&amp;"«
"The hell with it! We've decided to march against something
we can actually do something about!"

Checking the fair share square

The Lighter Side

To the Editor;

“Check your fair share square,” the United Fund
advises me in a propaganda mail kit I received from
it the other week.

by Dick West

May I publicly reply that the United Fund can
take its fair share square and stick it up its collective, bureaucratic, bourgeois arse-hole.
As in the past, so too this year 1 am refusing
to donate to “charitable” organizations. Consider
the reasons for my action, and perhaps you will
feel compelled to do likewise.
Private “charities” like other money making organizations respond not to human needs but to the
needs of the organization itsqlf, i.e,, the bulk of the
money collected for the so-called poor and distressed
never reaches them, but goes to fuel the bureaucracy of that private “charity.” If you must believe in
the dole system, better you should go out and give
the first deleliet you see $20. At least he receives
all the money. And the chances are he will spend
it in a more productive and human way.
Private “charities” are shoddy attempts to assuage the conscience of a brutally exploitative society on the one hand. And, on the other, they are
institutions which reinforce the bourgeois myth of
the moral superiority of the giver and the moral
inferiority of the receiver. To give to “charity" is
to support this kind of society and its disgusting

I was thumbing through a national magazine the other
day, my attention was blitzed by an advertisement sponsored by the National Coal Association.
It pictured a tousled-haired boy lying in the grass, chin
in hand, a pensive look on his freckled face. And beneath

mythology.
Finally, private “charities” operate on the prem-

ise that the solutions to poverty, cultural deprivation and illness are in the realm of individual “good
works” and are divorced from the body politic. This
is a lie. Being poor, being culturally deprived, being ill in a society which has vast medical resources
are problems of the powerlessness of those who are
afflicted, problems of disenfranchisement. Disenfranchisement is a political problem. It has a political solution. Political action and not “charity”
is needed.
“The United Fund’s Fair Share plan was developed several years ago to answer the universal
question: “What are others giving?” the propaganda
brochure tells me.

was a caption that read:
“What to say to your child

when he asks, ‘What’s coal?’
Then in smaller type, the ad
said: “It’s a fair question. Chances
are he’s read of coal but never
seen any. And don’t start with
the When I was a - kid we
to carry out the ashes
- had
”

-

tend concern for this sick and untransformed thing
Carl Murphy
Teaching Fellow
Dept, of English

Writers: Please be brief. Letters should not exceed
300 words. All letters must be signed and the address
and telephone number of the writer must be included. Positive verification of authorship will be made
before a letter is printed.

Letters will be kept in strict confidence.
The Spectrum will use initials or pen name, if
requested. But anonymous letters are never used.
The Spectrum reserves the right to edit or delete
material submitted for publication, but the intent of
letters will not be changed.

-

•

-

very question.

Big question
“Big daddy,” he said, “It’s time
you and I had a serious talk.
What is coal?”
I turned red. I mean, good
heavens: You know that sooner
or later a kid is going to get
curious and start asking where
coal comes from and stuff like

Straight answer
They say you should give simple, direct, straightforward answers and not hem and haw or
beat around the bush about it.
So I decided to do the cour-

ageous thing.

Looking my son
right in the eye, I said, “Why

word?” 1 gasped.

don't you go ask your mother
what coal is?"
Unfortunately, his mother came
into the room about that time.
“Oh, no, you don’t," she snapped. “I had to go through that
with the other children when you
turned chicken. This time, you
handle it yourself.”
I could see I was trapped.
"Well my boy,” I hemmed, “it’s
like this. When I was a kid we
had to carry out the ashes

ing innocence.

and . .
I can only hope the National
Coal Association will forgive me.

that.
But to have one spring it on
you when he is hardly more than
a baby . . . well, it’s just too
much.

“Where

did

hear

you

that

“Oh, the older boys talk about
in all the time,” he replied, ooz-

“What are others giving?”

called society.

-

routine . . .”
Now there is what I call a
real coincidence. For only a
couple of evenings previous my
5-year-old son had asked me that

Quotes

Who knows? But I’m giving the finger
And this as a positive sign that I recognize the
“charity” system for what it is: a creature of the
masters of war, the wizards of public relations and
the captains of industry to maintain their control
and to keep you and me powerless, while they pre-

■

-

.

•

first temptation was to
say, “Well, why don’t you ask
the older boys what it is?” But
I knew that would be taking the
coward's way out.
All the books by Dr. Spock and
other pediatric authorities say it’s
better if kids learn about this
sort of thing from their parents.
My

in the news

WASHINGTON
Sen. Charles H Percy (R. 111.) commenting on
the result of a survey of the Yale class of 1952 in a speech to the Yale
—

Club of Washington:

"He, the graduate, is more concerned with protecting his own af
fluchce and well being than with improving the condition of the rest
of the country and the rest of the world."
WASHINGTON

—

William L. Dawson, chairman of the House

Government Operations Committee, commenting on “pricing errors'
admitted by a supermarket chain official:

To get rich at the expense of other humans is a detestable
thing

WASHINGTON
Sargent Shriver, director of the Office of
Economic Opportunity, commenting on a House vote that approved
wage increases for all government employees except those in OEO;
—

“I am certain that yesterday’s house action will in no way dimi
nish our unremitting efforts on the part of the poor.”

The

grump

.

.

.

by STEESE

Writing a column is sometimes very good for
the soul (alleged) of the person writing—or attempting to write—same. You take a fresh, clean,
lovely white piece of paper and put it in the maat you. Which is basically not at all what it is supposed to do. Said piece of paper, if it had any real
sense of honor, would immediately cover itself
with many, many lines of highly readable prose—or whatever it is that I write.
This is one of those columns where I don’t know
what I have to say and most of you know it. I mean,
1 would much rather go off and drink 16-ccnt schupers of beer to fend off my cold than sit here and
write, . . compose? . . . Bull sh.... (why bug the censors every week? Save it for somebody or some1 assume it is by this time as obvious Ip you
as it is to me that very little is poping into my
head this week. It doesn’t really matter I guess,
it being almost impossible to understand this column even when 1 do know what I am saying.
Scratch that, make it when 1 know what it is that
want to say. Which I am sure a number of you
will agree is significantly different from my knowing what I am saying.

Hmmmmm. I could always write something
cheery about the War. But I can't think of anything cheery. One wonders if those over there can.
1 don’t really want to sound paranoid, but I find
it of high interest that John Steinbeck Jr. was
arrested in Washington, D. C. on marijuana charges
at the same time that he was trying to clear for
publication two articles claiming that up to 75% of
our defenders of the faith in Vietnam use the stuff.
Bui that is surely only coincidence.
Speaking of marijuana, I have this idea. I think
that the government should go into the “Pot" busi
ness. I mean, ever since I had to procure five gal
Ions of Ethyl Alcohol at the cost of $.59 a gallon—like four quarts right?—it has occured to me that
any government that hard up for cash should certainly explore the possibility of making a keen
profit bv raising jolly giant green plants. 1 mean
they could even put “MAY BE PSYCHOLOGICALLY DEPEND . . . damn, fouled up again. , . . MAY
CAUSE PSYCHOLOGICAL DEPENDENCE on the

label just to keep the AMA happy.

Oh, while slamming things of an oral nature,
did you happen to see that one of the house organs
of the broadcasting industry has stated in bold,
forthright terms that all cigarette advertising is
ONLY designed to cause people to change brands,
and that anyone accusing them of making it appear to all and sundry that the hip, moving people
are those that smoke—one thing or another—is a
malicious falsehood. One suspects that Lyndon
Johnson could find use for the gentleman who
wrote said editorial.
And what else can we find to save the Editorial page from a quarter column of blankness?
Onward into the murk of the non-scholastic area
of my mind (also alleged) which has stubbornly
refused to atrophy like (as, for all you purists)
it should in a good student. What do you mean,
Madison Avenue don’t speak good English?
Templed as I am to stop these mutterings and
cause consternation in the lay out department, I
shall not. Let us talk instead of beards and of
the rest of the world. I have a beard. I assume this
is remembered since it has been used to fill out
other columns of this nature in the past. I even
cut it back some so I look a little less like an
Amish minister the other week but it does not
seem to have done much good.
I have been getting so irked at gawkers of
late that I have even considered (sellout) shaving.
I find that shaving the beard isn't so awfully
frightening. It is the concept of going back to scrap
ing my face every morning which annoys me—even more apparently than the astounded attention
I draw upon entering some places. I mean what is
wrong with having a long red beard’’ Admittedly
it clashes with my hair, but that is not my fault I
see bleaching one's hair just about as well as 1 see
shaving. Dimly and from a great distance. I mean,
what happens after the bomb destroys all the per
oxide factories? (In all seriousness, if anyone knows
where to purchase mustache wax, would he notify me at The Spectrum and 1 will announce it
as a public service.)
It would seem that I have managed to lumber
to my more or less customary length. Without much
saying anything. Things might be better next week;
on the other hand they could be . . . yes, damn it,
it is possible.

The Spocti um'i

page*

Editorials

&amp;

for

Opinions

It is the policy of The Spectrum to report the
news fully and impartially io the news pages,

to express the opinions of the newspaper only
in the editorial pages and to publish all (idea
of important controversial issues.
"Without

•xprouton.

trwdom of oprauton u moaning law.**

�Pag*

Friday, November 3, 1967

The Spectrum

Six

Letter describes Brooklyn College incident

Investigate

Opportunties

Engineering

1
To th* Editor:

The following is a letter received by Joel Taxer,
a State University of Buffalo student, from a Brooklyn College student.
To my dearest friend,
"It is 2:10 a.m. (Friday morning) and I have
just spent one of the greatest days of my life and
definitely the most educational so far. As you must
lyn College today, but I am sure that whatever you
did hear on TV, papers, etc., did not even closely
resemble the true circumstances involved and the
events that occured.
From this moment until the time that all civil
authorities shall have been driven from the campus, all STUDENTS are permanently requisitioned
for service in any movement which will accomplish these ends.
Young men have gone forth to battle the po-

lice, students have made strong committments
toward freedom of speech and assembly and have
in the process been brutally beaten and have nevertheless stuck strongly to their principles, regardless of the future consequences of their personal
lives.

Professors have been arrested, even the more
conservative side of the faculty has been brought
to the students’ side, they came to the windows
above the protest and have thrown money to help
raise bail bonds for those arrested and help the
moral of the students and have preached and
begged for the unity of students and faculty against
the hated administration and civil authorities.
fear I had today and I cannot do justice in describing, the events that occurred. But all I can say
is that the police exercised the most inhuman and
totally repugnant methods of discipline for a peaceful demonstration that I have ever dreamed of,
at any time in history or in any place on this

earth.
This has truly been the most educating day of
my entire life. Its impact will forever affect all
my future thoughts. And my only hope for tomorrow is that it will be one half as successful as today was.”
All my heart
soul,
&amp;

Bern

Let’s hope the same thing does not happen here
J. Hayden Lynford

INSTRUMENTATION and CONTROL
Bailey Meter Company, an international leader

in the development and manufacture of instruments,

cess control, will be on campus Friday, Nov. 10th to
interview candidates with BS degrees in Electrical and
Mechanical Engineering.

ENGINEERING CAREERS
Systems Development
Product Development
Systems Application Engineering
Manufacturing Engineering
Sales Engineering
—

TRAINING
On-the-job Training plus Formal Training Program
LOCATIONS
Wickliffe, 0. (Suburban CleveHeadquarters
land); Plants
Wickliffe, 0., Cleveland, 0., and Daytona Beach, Fla.; Sales-Service Offices
23 Major U.S.
Cities.
—

Asks that a policy

on recruiting

be formulated

To the Editor
Without (in this letter) siding with either house,
1 think it should be made clear to all involved in
the CIA and Dow Chemical problem that it is not
as easy as some would make it appear.
Firstly, it is not obviously a problem of academic
freedom, or a civil rights problem, much less specifically one of free speech. Do we know exactly
what and whose f-ecdom or rights are being battered if permission to interview prespective employees is withdrawn from an industry? Or again,
is it self-evident that we can assimilate the right
to lecture to the right to recruit? Does, in other
words, withdrawing an invitation to recruit curtail
the range of products available in our academic
marketplace? After all, 1 have spoken to not a
single student, faculty member, or administrator
who would oppose extending the use of campus
facilities to a CIA lecturer, although many oppose
recruiting. Are these two positions so clearly contradictory?
Secondly, the cry has been: If any industry,
then all industries. Well indeed, why any? Or why
any government agencies? Should it be only academic institutions? Like the University of Missis

—

—

sippi? On the other hand, “If any then all” is no
tautology, particularly if the problem is not clearly free speech or some other civil right. Whatever
the missing premise, I doubt that it is self-evident,
and it may logically connect with some rather
large issues. Should the University act ad hoc when

the threat of violence, of student bloodshed, is with
us? Should the University be responsive to community pressure? Should it lead or follow? Indeed,
who should constitute “The University?” in such
cases, and should the policy rest in a man, a committee, pure community democracy, or in explicit

CAMPUS

For information and interview registration, visit
your Placement Office.

BAILEY METER COMPAHY
An Equal Opportunity Employer

law?

Rights do not, of course, exist in vacuums, so
defering to one may stomp on another, or run
counter to a moral policy we might wish our University to adopt. After all, presumably it should
lead and teach as well as permit. Perhaps, then,
Dow and the CIA should come, but surely not on
the undiscussed premises of “If any then all,” or
“Free speech forever.” Let us rather get whatever policy we need clarified or created, just as
soon as we find out who can and should determine
that policy, and let us hope they or we avoid not
only tromping on rights, but determining by slogan.
Gray

INTERVIEWS: NOVEMBER 10, 1967

OUR ENTIRE STOCK

FOLK

RECORDS

MacArthur

Charges 'malicious distortion on voluntary fee issue
To the Editor:

The Spectrum's assertion that Buffalo is the
only school having voluntary fees and their seeking approval for this brave disclosure is an outright and malicious distortion of the truth.
In reality, the State University of Buffalo is
almost two years behind Albany, where a faculty
member had the courage to test what was an obvious illegal levy. Thus, since the spring semester
of 1965 fees have been voluntary at Albany. For
those who fling their hands into the air in dismay
over the impossibility of collecting fees, the nonpayment has been about 10%, the result of an active student government with much to offer the
student body.

s

At another small university, Geneseo, this issue came up last year and was resolved when the
legal council of the State University issued an
opinion that the only body that could make fees
mandatory was the Board of Trustees in Albany,
as part of a raise in the overall tuition.
There can be little room for pride in the systematic withholding of information, both by student government and student publications. I did
not pay my fees because I am a commuter student
and can gain little from campus activities, but if
I did live on campus, I could hardly be expected
to give my hard-earned money to a government
headed by people not honest enough to admit their
own shortcomings.
D. J,

Co^°9
price

Pe

$4.79

Who is Martin Meycrson trying to kid! He states
in a letter released this week in reaction to the
CIA Dow controversy that: “Our University has had
for decades the practice of maintaining an open
campus" This pompous statement is patently ab
surb It is. in fact, another example of the "big
lie,” a form of communication the Washington
regime has become world famous for.
I’ve been around here a bit longer than you
have, Mr. Meycrson. sir. I witnessed the Slate University of Buffalo administration pressure the Buf
falo Committee for a SANE Nuclear Policy right
off campus in the fall of 1960. I also remember
that the local chapter of Youth Against War and
Fascism has not been allowed to distribute leaflets
on campus as recently as the fall of 1966.
I am also aware of the several fine teachers who
once taught on this campus but have been replaced
by people less militant in their positions on loyalty
oaths and less investigated by such freedom loving
groups as the House Committee on Un American
Activities. And the presumption of yourself, sir,
referring to “our traditional open campus’ ap
proach." It is anything but traditional and you, sir,
have done none of the fighting for what freedom
exists.
interestingly enough .neither did the previous
regime. A bit of academic research would show you
that what freedoms exist here are the result of the
actions of a few brave men who have been willing

to risk their careers. Of course, we can't all do that.
Some of us have a great deal to lose, don’t we?
I submit that your actions during the draft test
controversy one and a half years ago strongly suggest that you have little concern about a student
voice in University affairs, except on your terms,
and little understanding of democratic processes
since 1) the decision to hold the referendum came
from the top li e., you), 2) there was no discussion,
no debate, no forum possible in the limited time
you allowed between your decision and the actual vote, and 3) you insisted that the results of the
referendum would not be binding, in short, an electoral travesty. (What is your definition of tyranny?)
Therefore. 1 for one am not at all convinced
that you arc the proper authority to make the
judgment that someone’s liberties are being infringed upon in the present controversy. You imply, sir. that the Left is threatening the rights of
the non-Left student majority. I would suggest that
this is a false issue which you feel to be more palatable than the real one: University complicity with
the industrial-military complex.
There certainly is a problem of infringement
on the rights of others but it exists, sir, in the con
text of CIA atrocities in Indonesia and many other
parts of the world and in the context of the napaiming of peasant villages in southeast Asia. And who
among us are silently acquiescing, sir, to this infringement, sir, of the liberties of the vast majority of the peoples of the world.
Robert McCubbin

r^ 0

"

1

—

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Price
$5.79

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399

Per Record

President Meyerson's open campus' statement questioned
To the Editor

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JOSH WHITE
GLENN YARBROUGH
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RECORDS and

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Boulevard Mall and 998 Broadway

�Pag* Sevan

The Spectrum

Friday, November 3, 1967

Frank and flamboyant—
I met Bill Lyman for lunch last Saturday after
noon—I wondered how I’d know him when he
He
showed up, but I shouldn't have bothered.
drove up in his campaign bus, a giant white thing
with political posters covering it and two silver
horns on the hood. He said in the off-election
years he uses it to take people to his hunting lodge
in Canada. It was quite apparent that Bill Lyman
was not the usual city Councilman figure, or at
least not what I’d conceived one to be.
Seeking fifth term
This is his eighth year as Republican Councilman for the University district. Currently, he's
seeking his fifth term of office, the election complicated by the fact that two out of his three ward
chairman declined to give him the party’s nomination. Lyman then personally gathered 625 signatures or a petition, entered himself in the primary
as an Independent and won. Faced with the choice
of remaining an Independent or realigning himself
with the Republicans, he chose to remain with the
party and is now running on their ticket with Mrs.
Slominski, candidate for Councilman-at-Large.
Lyman, who is now 65, worked 14 years as a
lineman for the Niagara Mohawk Power Corporation, and before entering politics owned a liquor
store on Kensington Avenue, which he still maintains.
He was born in Pennsylvania, lived with his
grandmother after his parents were divorced, and
partially as a result, never finished grammar
school. “I was never a kid that could grasp much.
The teacher would be talking about -Math and
Science, but my mind would be outside the window
—on hunting and fishing. My education w as mostly through reading newspapers and the like,” he
f

says.

Curfews for kids
Perhaps because he has no children of his own,
Councilman Lyman’s chief concern seems to be
kids—anybody’s kids. In 1966 he brought up his
now famous curfew resolution for the first time:
It was defeated. Recently he introduced it again.
If passed, it would give police the right to pick
up a child under 17 if found on the street unaccompanied by an adult after 9 p.m. The child would
not be arrested, but taken to the station house
where his parents would be called to bring him
home. If this occurred a second or third time,
the parents could be fined anywhere from $5 to

Bill Lyman adds color

to Buffalo politics
by Linda Hanley
Spectrum

there was a pay-off in the licensing of the hall
Legally, the charge has to do with the nature of
the parking facilities, but basically his motives arc
a concern with what the teenagers arc doing inside. He suspects some of them might be spiking
their drinks, using pep pills, or "Who knows what!"
One of his aims in his campaign platform, similarly, is “getting strict discipline in the schools,
taking the belt out again, and the police having
to take their handcuffs off.” Others arc better
police protection, belter street lighting, and more
recreation areas. But there is a problem here.
“They say get us a community house. But what
happened when we began holding dances in a few
of the local churches? There was a knifing two
days after they started.”
Lyman’s preoccupation with the problem of
crime is not completely that of a disciplinarian. He
talks about the emotional impact any kind of criminal assault has on a person. “Having some guy
holding a knife to your throat, not knowing wheth
er or not he’s going to kill you the next minute
is not something you can easily forget. That kind

$250.

“Obviously this can’t be done without parental
support,” he realizes, “because it IS your constitutional right to be on the streets. But a great many
parents ARE for it. I’ve had people say to me: I
hope the curfew resolution is passed because then
in the winter when it’s dark, we can say definitely
you HAVE to be in the house by 9 o’clock.
Lyman is particularly upset by the increasing
crime rate in Buffalo. He is appalled by the gang
fights, finds it so senseless that kids knock each
other’s brains out for no reason whatsoever except
the thrill of it: “What’s the point? It’s O.K. for
kids to have fist fights, but when they take to the
meal pipes, knives, and guns that’s out.”
For Lyman, just proposing a resolution was not
enough. This month he was driving in his bus
when he passed a group of about 15 teenagers on
a street corner. He stopped to disperse them when
another carload of teenagers drove by and hurled
a brake shoe, a lead pipe, and a bottle of gasoline
with a lighted wick at them. No one was hurt, but
the incident reinforced his belief that some sort of
regulation is needed in the city.
But the problem is not legislative alone
Lyman thinks WKBW Television has the right idea
when, after their nightly newscasts they ask: "Parents, do you know where your children are tonight?”
'Taking the belt out again'
If not every parent is concerned about where
his children are at night, Councilman Lyman certainly is. Just recently he proposed a resolution
in the Council that would close down the Volcano
Dance Hall on Bailey Avenue. He charged that
—

Councilman Lyman
'Father figure' seeks re-election as Republican
councilman in the University District.

Staff

Reporter

of thing sticks with you for a long, long time.
Opposes further gun legislation
Strangely enough, though, he is totally against
any further gun legislation. He feels the Sullivan
Law is adequate, and is working through his office
to submit a resolution to preserve people's rights
to bear arms. I asked him if this wasn't inconsistent with his stand on crime, and juvenile crime in
particular, but he told me that "any criminal
could get a gun if he wanted to.” He draws a
strong connection between the crime increase in
Buffalo and Narcotics Head Amico's clamp-down
on drug addicts, attributing many of the recent
robberies to “addicts trying to finance a $30-$40
a day habit."
Lyman speaks proudly of filing the longest
resolution in City Council history, an exposition of
“one of Buffalo's biggest scandals.” It was an ap
peal to the governor to investigate the purchase of
police garages, and was promptly censored by the
Democrats.
The last of a breed
I couldn't help thinking that Bill Lyman is one
of the last of the Irish politicians—a really “regular guy." frank, flamboyant, fond of a few beers .

Whatever else he might be. I'm convinced he’s
sincere in the things he does. His attitude towards
kids is not merely critical; surprisingly, he doesn’t
fear as many do, the day when this country will
be in their hands, "The foolish things you kids
do, we all did too. 1 don't think there's any rca
son to worry about what things will be like when
they're the leaders. After all, we didn't do such a
good job of handling things either, otherwise we
wouldn’t be in Vietnam now. The only difference
is ,we’ve been through all of this already—all that
you have yet to live.
Father figure
That comment probably best sums up Councilman Bill Lyman. He appears as a sort of "father
figure" in City Hall looking out for what he feels
is best for the people of his district; a man who'll
sit back and tell you about his childhood in Pennsylvania when he had to walk two miles to school
in the snow and back, carrying his lunch in a lard
bucket; and about his hunting trips and the 1300pound moose his nephew bagged recently; and his
grandfather on his mother's side whose name was
Kelly and worked his way up on the B&amp;O Railroad back in Pennsylvania.
He made it clear when he assumed office that
no one could buy his vote and I believe it. because
1 don't think even money could change Bill Lyman’s opinion about anything' He's a sort of selfappointed law enforcer-stern parent riding around
in his bus with its police receiving radio, telling
gangs of teenagers to move on, looking over his
district like an old fashioned father image. His
convictions might not be appealing to everyone,
but he sticks by them —a stand which has gotten
him into much hot water with other city officials,
Buffalo newspapers and the public in general.

�Th

Pag* Eight

Spectrum

•

Friday, November 3, 1967

Bill passed for
Convict hides in girls' dorm at St Bonaventure free abortions

Holds

hostage at gunpoint

by Jan Fritz
Special to the Spectrum
Editor't note; Jan Fritz it a journalism
major at St. Bonaventure University and
works port time for the O lean Times
An

escapee

irom

a

stale

t*or-

rectional institute in Pennsyl
vania took refuge from police bn
the grounds of St. Bonaventure
University last Thursday, invading Shay Loughlen Hall, a girls’
dormitory.

Clutching a gun, the convict,
Gary Ayers of Elmira, ran
through the side door of the dormitory and gasped to the Dean
of Women, Miss Catherine Keogh.
“The cops are after me. How
do 1 get out of here?”
“The same way you came in,"
she told him calmly.
At this point sophomore Sue

Skomski, from North Tonawanda,

passed through the dorm lounge.

Terrorizes residents

sion to leave, telling her, “If you
see any of those coppers, you
tell them they’ll never get me
alive.”
alive, but not before he left the
dean and dashed up to the second and fourth floors of Loughlen

Hall.

One fourth
floor resident,
freshman Margaret Gee land,
from State College, Pa., recalled
hearing a man’s voice, glass
breaking, and a girl crying. The
hysterical coed was Cathy Simmons, stil very upset as she told
her version early this week:
“He ordered me to come out
of my room and to get the other
girls off the floor,” she said. “1
banged on the doors and pleaded
but

no one appeared, and he
said, ‘111 shoot her if you dont
come out.’

Please come out I’ I screamed
and finally they did.”
“

“Where do you think you’re
going?” Ayers demanded. "Get
back in here.” He then pointed
the rifle at Miss Skomski and
forced her to remain in the
lounge. Later he gave her permis-

Takes hostage
The frightened girls went from

their rooms to Miss Keogh’s firstfloor apartment, where they

stayed until after Ayers was captured. On the way down they
passed Sergeant Robert Gaines of

the campus

detectives.

Despite

he was unarmed, he proceeded
to the top floor, where Ayers took
him as a hostage. The convict,
holding a gun to Gaines’ head,
left the dorm, and after releasing the guard, jumped into a
Bonaventure maintenance car.
The convict then began the last
lap of his flight, pursued by
about 20 police. Ed Greene, a
freshman from Marcellus, recalls,
“The car went flying by Plassman Hall (center of the arts
classes) toward the athletic field
and made a U-turn. Four kids
were walking across the lawn; he
missed them by about five feet.”
The convict’s vehicle headed toward the campus library, where
police succeeded in stopping him.
Ayers was handcuffed, uninjured
except for facial glass cuts.
A crowd gathered around the
car to view the damage.
“I counted 11 bullet holes in
the car,” said Frank

freshman. “There was a hole in
the center of the windshield; another foot over and the bullet

The House
LONDON, Eng,
of Commons passed a bill granting free abortions on diverse medical and social grounds last week.

Annville, Pa., was
stopped by police at a bridge
and never reached the campus.

that restricted abortions to mothers whose lives or health were
gravely endangered. It is estimated that 100,000 women sought illegal abortions each year.

would have hit him in the head.”

rich

from

THE SPECTRUM
printed by

Partners' Press, Inc.
ABGOTT
SMITH PRINTING
1381 Kenmore Ave. Cat Delaware)
&amp;

Phone 876-2284

Breen, a

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a

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The new bill applies only to
England and Wales. Under the
new program, Britain’s national
health service will carry out the
abortions free of charge.
The new program justifies abor
tion under the following conditions

The mother is pregnant as
the result of rape;
There is a grave risk to the
health or life of the mother;
The mother is mentally de•

•

•

fective;

The woman’s capacity as a
mother would be severely over•

strained;

There is a substantial risk
that the child would be born with
serious physical or mental ab•

normalities;

The mother is under 16.

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Opponents to the bill
claimed it would lead to abortion on demand.
case.

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�Friday, November 3, 1967

Th

•

Spectrum

P*9* Nin*

Plans are made
for new college

Dr. King serving five-day prison sentence for
violating court order prohibiting demonstrations
by Dorie Klein

United Press International

way announced its decision not to award a Nobel Peace Prize
for 1966 or 1967, the last man to receive the award was being led away to jail.
The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King and three other Negro
clergymen were taken into custody early this week on a jet
plane and led to a Birmingham, Ala. Courthouse to serve
five days for contempt of court.
Dr. King and the others had
been found guilty of violating a
court injunction prohibiting demonstrations in the 1963 .riots between demonstrators and the
Birmingham police force led by
"Bull” Connor. The confrontation proved to be one of the most
crucial episodes in the civil
rights movement.

'Small price'
Dr. King mentioned that his
five-day sentence was “a small
price to pay” in return for the
1964 Civil Rights Act. Passage of
the act was largely a reflection

of the widespread reaction to the
events in Birmingham.
Birmingham, a large industrial
center which had been the scene
of numerous burnings and racial
killings before the 1963 encounter, had the reputation of having
one of the most racist municipal
administrations in the South.
Negroes, who made up 35% of
the population, would not dare
enter a restaurant or movie thea-

ter in the downtown section of
lhe city.

had become the central domestic

ALBANY, N Y. (UPD—Trustees
of State University of New York
have approved the establishment
of a community college in Schen-

issue in America.

ectadv

Dr. King planned his attack
on Birmingham as one of nonviolence, of breaking “unjust”
laws “openly, lovingly” and of
staying in jail “to arouse the
conscience of the community over
its injustice.”

Dr. King’s appeal of the sen
tence and $50 fine to the Supreme Court was recently refused. He told reporters in Atlanta this week: “I am sad that
the Supreme Court of our land in
a 5-4 decision could not uphold

The conflict shown on televifire hoses directed at
women and children, police dogs,
the Birmingham sheriff—did indeed arouse the conscience of the

the rights of individual citizens
in the face of deliberate use of
the courts of the State of Alabama as a means of oppression."

sion

nation, if not of the community.

Troops used
Federal troops eventually restored order, but demonstrations
had begun across the country
throughout May and June. By the
end of 1963 the Negro revoution

The

County.
college,

exf)Mlffl

opening.
There are 30 community colthe university system
now. In addition to Schenectady,
five more arc expected to be in
leges in

“All the signs of our times indicate that this is a dark hour
in the life of America,” Dr. King
said.

operation by 1969.

THE SPECTRUM
printed by

Dr. King is scheduled to address a student convocation of
the State University of Buffalo
on Nov. 9 on “The Future of

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If Matthew Thornton had signed his name
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Scripto’s new Reading Pen makes what you write easiertoread.That’swhy Scriptocalls it the ReadingPen.
It's a new Fiber-Tip pen that writes clear and bold.
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10

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of 1968. previously was approved
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more than 500 full-time students
within two or three years of its

if

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�Pag* Tan

Th

Spectrum

•

Friday, Novambar

Nickel Theatre praised as successful
in all presentations but Shakespeare

campus releases...
A two-day moating of Taachars of Oral Pathology will be held
today and tomorrow in Room 147 Capen Hall from 9 a m. to 5 p.m.
The Continuing Education Department, School of Dentistry, State
University of Buffalo is sponsoring the conference.

the t

Wednesday in Room 333 Norton Hall. Accompanying the slide will
be short talks given by Ibis Gomez on Cuba and Steve Moscov on
Chile.

After living its own private
life for the last few months, the
Student Theatre Guild has again
emerged into the public light
with a most enjoyable presentation of selected scenes from
seven plays. The Nickel Theatre,
as it was called, played Friday
and Saturday in the Millard Fill-

The Christmas Variety Show will be discussed at this time
All those interested in participating in this event must attend.
The Publicity Room in Norton 307 may be used by Student
Groups recognized by the Senate.
Instruction and assistance is available on the following schedule;
Sunday, 7 to 10 p.m.; Wednesday, 7 to 11 p.m.; Thursday, 7 to 11
p.m.; Friday, 7 to 11 p.m.
Contact the Publicity Chairman, Gail
Norton Hall several days in advance.

Cooper, in Room

more Room.

The seven excerpts, taken from
several varied genre of theater,
were strictly student directed.

215,

Mr. Bruce Jackson, a noted folklorist, will lecture Wednesday
at 4 p.m. in the Conference Theater. The lecture “Folklore-Liter
ature of Organized Aggression” will be presented by the Literature

Margot Fein 'fine'
Presentations varied from ex
cellent to poor.

and Drama Committee of the UUAB.

Dad, Poor Dad, Mama’s
Hung You in the Closet and I’m
Feeling So Sad” was the hilarious and well executed showstopper of the evening. The sarcastic
humor of the lines was conveyed
most amusingly by Debbie Gelman as the harlot and James
"Oh

The Student Faculty Film Club will hold a meeting for new
members at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Room 233, Norton Hall. All inter
esled persons are invited to attend.
A roller-skating Party sponsored by the Inter-Varsity Christian
Fellowship is open to all students. A meeting concerning the party
will be held tonight at 7 p.m. in Room 334, Norton Hall.

Bron as the “little” son. Margot
Fein delivers a relatively short
but superb part as Madame Rosepetal. the psychotic, domineering mother who convinces her
son of the hazards of those birds
in the trees and shuns any mention of the birds and the bees.

The Community Aid Corps is requesting volunteers for tutoring
in all high school subjects. There is a special need for tutors of
mathematics, reading, science, history and languages.

The CAC is also looking for dictionaries to donate to the
Woodlawn Information Center. Adult education tutors need them
to help teach English.

Anyone interested in tutoring should call the Student Senate
Office at 8313446. Dictionaries should be brought directly to CAC
at the Senate Office.

movie about Glenwood Acres will also be shown.
Any student may attend the meeting, not only MFC students
Anyone interested may sign up for the skiing season at this time.

Mr. Victor Grauer, ethnomusicologist here, thinks that the De
partment of Music is “moving to-

The HUtory Department has invited two speakers to come to the
State University of Buffalo. They were invited “because of particular

ward

skills and talents' that they possess, according to Administrative As-

—

vited to attend
Mr. William Taylor will speak at 3:30 p.m. Thursday in Room 231
Norton Hall on "Teaching History to Undergraduates.”

ie

of character who

Thesaurus. Miss Fein’s fine performance was further supplemented by the supporting role
of a Venus Fly Trap.

*

creative

experimentation.”

Mr Grauer, who has been at
'*ie University since January,
leaches freshman theory while
working on his PhD in compose
•■on. He describes his unusual
occupation as a combination of
anthropology and musicology, regarding music from all over the

World War. Too bad

the First

Children’s Hour” is a
moving drama of exceptional tension, most of which was not reflected in the presentation of the
climactic scene. But the actresses
and director did manage to capture some of the ironic tragedy
of Lillian Heilman's masterpiece.

losing his accent.

“The

Ionesco skit succeeds

Shakespeare amateurish
The

combined

"West

choice for the occasion. The idea
of paralleling the two love stories
is clever and has potential. But
when amateur actors perform a

humor.

and amateurish.

“Gladly Otherwise” was very
funny. Peter Madison and Edna
Arbetman deserve credit just for
keeping straight faces in the
midst of their silly but most entertaining dialogue. For instance,
the man asks Mrs. Brandywine

“West Side Story,” a more suitable choice for the two young
performers, demonstrated some

about the condition of her husband’s kidneys, to which she replies, “I don’t now, he never lets
me see them . . . and I don’t like
to rummage behind his back."

world from a cultural viewpoint.
After receiving his bachelor’s

degree at Syracuse University,
Mr. Grauer went on to get his
masters in ethnomusieology at
Wesleyan. In addition to teaching
classes and working toward his
PhD, Mr. Grauer broadcasts a

program of international music
every Sunday night from 9 to 10
p.m. on WBFO.

Among his accomplishments is
a recent collaboration with Alan

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4

The First of a Series

Mailman heatre
ROCHESTER, NEW YORK

Shakespearean tragedy, barring a
miracle they will usually come
out looking especially untrained

genuine acting ability.

The Student Theatre Guild’s
Nickel Theatre, which revealed
student talent in directing as well
as in acting, was over all a most
entertaining evening. Let us hope
it is a taste of more worthwhile
productions for the future.

Lomax on a system of analyzing
music, under a grant from Columbia University. Mr. Lomax is
working on an anthology of folk

music edited according to stylistic relationships. When Cantometrics is published, it will be a
book of records illustrating song
styles.

An original musical piece by
Mr. Grauer will be featured at
a concert in Baird Hall, Dec, 13,

OLD

TIMERS

(21 or Over)

SING ALONG
FRIDAY, NOV. 3rd

Tonight!
featuring

Don Burns
9:00 P.M.

-

1:00 A.M.

at

HOLIDAY INN
Delaware Avenue

Tickets: $4.25, 3.75, 3.25, 2.25
On Sale at Box Office Now!

SPONSORED BY
SENIOR CLASS OF
D’YOUVILLE COLLEGE

Admission—99c
CASUAL ATTIRE

TUESDAY, NOV. 7th

Two Showings—7:00 and 9:15

Capen 140

Side

Story/Romeo and Juliet" sequences were the expected highlight of the show but unfortunately they failed and suffered miserably in comparison with several
of the previous skits. Romeo and
Juliet was just not the proper

The Student Theatre Guild
presented "The Foursome” in its
entirety. Ionesco’s witty conversations of nonsense and double
talk were handled skillfully as
actors and director succeeded in
preserving the light and inane

IN CONCERT

presents

TOM JONES

adaption of George Bernard
ShaW’s satire (naturally) of an
insecure security officer during
Augustus kept

S)ainic lf!/]arie

Freshman Class Council
The Full Length Version of

“Am ;ustus Does His Bit” was

Grauer cites Music Dept creativity

Nachfe Wedeln, the Millard Fillmore College Ski Club, will hold
a meeting at 8:30 p m. tonight in Room 361, Norton Hall. Mr. Perry
Fairbank, Ski School Director at Glenwood Acres, will speak. A

.
sistant Jeremy Taylor.
The two men are: Lawrence Washington Chisolm and William R.
Taylor. Mr. Chisolm will speak at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday in Room 213
Norton Hall. The topic will be "Modern Cutural History
Possibilities and Problems.” Coffee and donuts will be served and all are in-

3, 1967

thru Sun.
BOBBY DUKES and
THE COUNTS
and RISING SONS

Wednesday

lues,

Night
Ruby Andrews
Singing Her Hit Record
"CASSANOVA"

WILAAER and
THE DUKES

�Friday, November 3, 1967

Tha Spectrum

Page Eleven

Charles Pfohl, Road Vulture killed
by policeman, is buried with full colors
Charles Pfohl. the Road Vulture who was mortally wounded
last weekend by a Cheektowaga

later on the operating table in
Meyer Memorial Hospital.

wife Marjorie and a two and a
half year old son, "Little Char
lie." Mr. Pfohl was described as

morning.

was suspended pending the out
come of a review of the incident.

bers of the club.
Mrs. Pfohl, upon arriving at
the hospital at 4 a m., found a
group, of Buffalo policemen,
which included Patrolman Wipperman, standing in the core dor,
laughing. Several members of the
motorcycle club arrived shortly
thereafter, offering to give blood.
She then confronted Patrolman

He was buried in the style in
which he chose to live, with full
colors.

The processional, which started
from Wozniak's Funeral Home on
Lovejoy St., consisted of 40 mo50 cars, and
torcycles and
stretched a mile through the city
streets. The funeral procession
headed toward St. Agnes Church,
where a mass was held, and included representatives from the
newly-formed Hells-Angels chapter in Massachusetts, the Gooses
M.C. from Cleveland, the Comancheros M.C. from Hartford, Connecticut, and the Animals M.C.
from Euclid, Ohio.
More mourners were expected,
but a contingent of 50 cycles
from clubs in Toronto and Niagara Falls, Canada, were denied

entrance into the U. S.

In the early morning hours
last Saturday a Cheektowaga policeman, Patrolman Richard Wipperman, fatally wounded a fugitive accused of running a stop
sign after an automobile chase.
Charles Pfohl, 23, of 419 Fargo
St., a member of the Road Vultures Motorcycle Club, died hours

Patrolman Wipperman, a mem-

District Attorney Michael Dillon announced.that a grand jury
would investigate the case, apparently the first such incident
to take place since the passage
of the revised New York State
Penal Code which forbids police
to use deadly force unless threatened with deadly force themselves.
Patrolman Wipperman claims
the shooting was an accident.

He and Sloan Patrolman William Kuczkowski were parked in
a red Cheektowaga patrol car
without a blinking red light
around the corner from the Road
Vultures’ clubhouse at 775 Ogden
St. when they spotted Mr. Pfohl
and a companion, Thomas Murray, coasting through a stop sign
in their white Corvair station
wagon.

The station wagon belonged to
an older member of the motorcycle club, Mr. Pfohl borrowed
it instead of riding his cycle because he wanted "to avoid trouble,” according to Tom Bell,
RVMC President.
Surviving the victim are his

Action line

.

.

.

331-5000
For specific answers to yoor questions, and for direct service, call ACTION LINE,
831-5000, every Monday. Wednesday, and Friday, from 4 to 5 p.m. If you prefer,
phrase your question in writing and address it to ACTION LINE, c/o The Spectrum,
355 Norton Hall, or the Office of the Dean of Students, 201 Harriman Library..

Q. Are any students involved in policy planning for the library?
In a review of its readers' services?
A. Mr. William B. Ernst, Jr., Associate Director of Libraries,
stated that “Policy for the library is formulated by the Director,
after consultation with the staff, and is reviewed by the Library
Committee on the Faculty Senate. Students are encouraged, and
always have been, to review and discuss any policy with the Director or any of the Department Heads.”
Q. A yellow Volkswagen convertible, license No. IE 9445, has
parked, and apparently abandoned, in the medical school
parking lot for months. Why hasn't it been towed away?
A. The car, formerly owned by a faculty member now deceased,
is part of his estate which is still under litigation. Permission has
been sought to have it removed to the City Police Pound and Mr.
E. Murray, Chief of Institutional Safety, has been assured this will
be done by November 15.

been

Q. Why did the notice in The Spectrum regarding pre-registration appear in the paper on the day after pre-registration started?
Why not on Friday, October 20?

A. Mr. Richard R. Haynes, Managing Editor of The Spectrum,
indicated that this was indeed unfortunate, but the informational
material did not arrive in time to be included in the issue of
October 20. The deadline for general announcement is Tuesday, at
noon, for the Friday issue and Friday, at noon, for the Tuesday

paper.

Q. What are the plans for the Greek columns presently lying

outside Baird Hall?

A. Mr. W. Doemland, Director of Planning and Development,
stated that no specific plan has yet been developed to incorporate
the columns onto the new campus. There is a good possibility, however, that the columns, in some way, will become an integral part of
the overall landscape program.

PROGRAM IN

Wipperman,

calling

"coward.”

hi m

The policeman's response was
one of total silence.
The American Civil Liberties
Union and members of the Buffalo Human Relations Board have
been contacted and have expressed interest in the case.
Until detectives tore it down,

a large sign, allegedy marking the
spot of the shooting, and lit by
a kerosene torch, read: "On this
spot, a Road Vulture freedom
fighter was murdered in cold
blood by a W. N. Y. gestapo
agent. Free men of the world,
unite, to break the bonds of
slavery.”

Albany given
liquor license
Special

#o

the Spectrum

The State University of New
York at Albany has received a
liquor license for use in the
school’s Student Center, The
school’s rathskellar, called the
Patroon Room, will serve several
kinds of alcoholic beverages. It is
expected that full bar service will
come at some time in the fu-

Entertainment
Calendar
Friday, Nov. 3

PLAY: “The Imaginary Invalid," Studio Arena Theater.
PLAY;—"The Queen and the
School, 8:30 p.m.,
4 and 5.

also Nov.

FILM: “Don't Look Back,” Bob
Dylan, Circle Art Theater, 7:30
and 9:30 p.m,
FILM: "Shakespeare Wallah,"
Norton Conference Theater,
PLAY: “Love For L o v e,"
O’Keefe Center, Toronto, 8:30
p.m., also Nov. 4, 8 and 11.
CONCERT: “Die Ficdermaus,”
Kleinhans, 8:30 p.m.
FILM: 'Gone With The Wind,”
Clark Gable, Vivien Leigh,
Granada Theater.
FILM: “Becket,” Richard Bur
ton, Peter O'Toole, Cinema I
through Nov. 7.
FILM: “Goal,” Glen Art Thea-

ter.
Saturday, Nov. 4:

The Metropolitan
Opera Studio Ensemble in
"Shakespeare in Opera and
Song," Butler Auditorium.
Capen Hall, 8:30 p.m.
CONCERT: Buffy Sainle Marie,
CONCERT:

Eastman Theater, Rochester.
Sunday, Nov. S:

CONCERT: Maurice Chevalier,
Kleinhans, 8:30 p.m.

CONCERT: Evenings for New
Music by Creative Associates,
Aibright-Knox Art Gallery, 8:30

Western New York
Art Exhibit, Albright Knox Art

Gallery, through Dec.

10.

‘The Dance Of Death,

"UTTERLY UNIQUEI
LINGERS LONG IN
MEMORY II "i;&gt;.
MtMUKT
"uh hiuim

—

Thursday, Nov. 9:

PLAY: “EH?.” Baird Hall,
PLAY: "The Wild Duck,"
Milkie Way Theater, 8:30 p.m,
FILM: “Ashes and Diamonds,"
Norton Conference Theater.
PLAY: "A Flea in Her Ear,"
O'Keefe Center, Toronto, also
Nov.

CONCERT: Lou Rawls,

Eastman Theater, Rochester, 8:15
p.m.
PLAY: "Endgame.” Studio
Arena Production, Niagara University, also Nov. 12.

BUFFALO HADASSAH
Presents An Evening With

DIAHANN CARROLL
and

HENNY

YOUNGMAN

IN PERSON

Kleinhans Music Hall
SUNDAY, NOV. 19, 1967
8:30 P.M.
Tickets $10, $7.50, $5.00

said.
The university will allow peo-

WALTCR REAM-STERLING

SHAKESPEARE
WALLAH OmnKou.®

NORTON UNION
TICKET OFFICE
GRANADA THEATER
or Call 873-7685
PROCEEDS TO BENEFIT
BUFFALO HADASSAH

CONFERENCE
THEATER
Performance Schedule
Thurs. 1, 3, 5, 7, 9
Fri.

&amp;

Sat. 1,3, 5, 7, 9, IT

VBUCHTfOL MOMTHf

THEATRE

EH?
A MODERN FARCE BY

II# Aiarlon
■BRANDO
■ REFLECTIONS

HENRY LIVINGS

||
•

November 910-11-12

8:30 PM
Baird Hall

10.

Saturday, Nov. II:

Students—$3.00
Tickets Available at

kinds. It’s more than books,” he

r MOW

dron (Electric Neo-Pathic Elec
tro Vibrational Cerebral Music)
Haas Lounge. 7:30 p.m.
LECTURE: “Folklore
Litera
lure of Organized Aggression,
Mr. Bruce Jackson. Norton Con
ference Theater, 4 p.m.

EXHIBIT;

new license allows for an "amplification of living in an adult
manner" and said that he “has
faith in the university student."
“The university years are a time
for growth and learning of all

are.”

Wednesday, Nov. B:
PLAY: “Waiting for Godot,’
Niagara University, also Nov
9 and 15.
CONCERT: Concert by Den

Monday, Nov. 6:

O’Keefe Center, Toronto, also

regulations

ton Conference Theater. 7 p.m
CONCERT: “Evenings for New
Music by the Creative Associ
ates, Albright Knox Gallery
8:30 p.m.

berg,” College Union, Buffalo
Slate, 7 p.m.

PLAY

ing waited so long. A lot depends
on communications with students.
Students have to know what the

Nov. 7

CONCERT: Zara Nelsova, ecl
list, Kleinhans, 2:30 p.m.
FILM; "Judgement at Nurem

Dr. Neil C. Brown, Director of
Student Affairs, feels that the

ing the license,” he warned. “It
would be the worst possible thing
if we lost it, especially after hav

Tuosday,

p.m.

ture.

ple to register special events with
the Director of Student Affairs
and his staff for permission to
serve alcoholic beverages.
Dr. Brown feels that the keeping of the new license is up to
the students themselves, though
they must obey, the law strictly.
“We are all responsible for keep

BALLET: The National Ballet,
Niagara University. 8 p.m.,
Nov. 7.

Student Tickets 50c
Norton Union Box Office

#

a

Mioa in
rmiM
tewtiCMha

HiMhaxf

WmSBBSm

mmrn

ifljfmn

�Pag* Twalv*

Friday, November 3, 1967

The Spectrum

LOCALLY AND NATIONALLY STUDENTS
PROTEST: AGAINST THE DRAFT, THE
WAR, CIA AND THE DOW CHEMICAL CO.
-

Police brutality offsets success
MADISON, Wis.—The student strike at the University
of Wisconsin is over, leaving behind it depression, puzzlement, rancor, and injuries.

500

sign

etitioi

Committee of Concerned Students
respond to CIA, Dow postponement

Dow Chemical Company has been chased off the campus, it seems likely that the student protest has kept the CIA
by Marlene Kozuchowski
away, and the faculty has set up a student-staff committee
Assistant Campus Editor
review
of
demonstrato
the policies to govern the handling
“Our rights have been violated. All we ask you to do
tions and the corporations that are to be allowed to recruit is read our petition and if you are in favor of it, then sign.”

have an interview. I myself want-

ed to see the CIA for a possible
job after graduation. They’re infringing on my rights.”

�Friday, Novambar 3, 1967

Th

•

Spectrum

Pag* ThirtMti

Meyerson statement on
Dow-CIA controversy
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About 200 students from the University

Kally prOtCStS

of Minnesota gathered

DOW Chemical

week to protest the University's action
* e,,tn
9 Dow Chemical job recruiters
on campus.

,

,

at a rally

last

Demonstrations protest recruiters
on campuses throughout the country
WASHINGTON (CPS)
Students on at least
seven campuses made it rough going for recruiters
from the armed services and from other organizations connected with the military last week.
—

Their sit-ins and other protests are almost all

over now, but the promise of disciplinary action
against protesters on most of the campuses may
provide thte next source of controversy.
Dow Chemical Company recruiters, catalysts
for the massive protest at the University of Wisconsin last week, figured in three of this week’s
sit-ins; that at Harvard, and those at the Uni-

versities of Illinois and Minnesota.
Other targets for demonstrations were the
Navy recruiter at Oberlin College, in Ohio; the
CIA recruiter at the University of Colorado; a
center for classified research at Princeton University; and a conference of defense contractors in
Detroit, Mich.
Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) mem
bers figured to some extent in all the protests
but not all were organized by SDS.

Police called in
On three campuses—Princeton, Oberlin, and
Wayne State in Detroit—police were brought in
from outside to deal with the students. Although
it was the appearance of city police on the University of Wisconsin campus that brought thou-

sands of otherwise uncommitted students into
the protest thre, the police did not have the same
effect this week.
On one campus
Illinois
the protestors
achieved their immediate goal. After 200 of them
and
sat-in in the doorway
corridor outside the
office where Dow was recruiting, the administration cancelled the company’s recruiting program
—

—

there. According to a university spokesman, the
action was taken to “avoid possible bodily injury
and destruction of property.”
In the Detroit protest, there was a brief outbreak of violence. The students, returning for a
second day to protest the Fourth Annual Defense
and Government Procurement Conference (in which
businessmen heard Army and Air Force officers
tell them “how to keep your share of defense business”) tried to enter the building where the conference was being held from the rear.
They scuffled with the police there, and with
some of the businessmen attending the conference. One demonstrator was arrested, bringing
the total number of arrests for the two days to 14.

Oberlin prepared
Certainly the best organized protest was the
one at Oberlin, where students knew well beforehand what day the Navy recruiter was to arrive.
Some of them drove out to the edge of town Thursto meet him and escort him to the campus. There
more than 100 students surrounded his car and
kept him trapped inside for about four hours.

When the recruiter finally tried to drive his

way out of the predicament, he succeeded only in
ramming a newsman’s car behind his. He was finally freed when local police and firemen drove the
demonstrators away with teargas and water srayed

from fire hoses.
Following is a resume of what occurcd at four
of Ihe campuses:
At Harvard, about 300 Harvard and Radcliffe
students sat in in thhe chemistry building outside
the Dow recruiters’ office. According to one oh
server, Ihe recruiter "was effectively imprisoned
there.”

The protest was organized by SDS, and it had
originally been planned as a picketing demonstration outside the builiding. When demonstrators
arrived Wednesday morning, however, the protest
became a sit-in.
About 450 students, including the heads of the
two major undergraduate political bodies, have
turned in their bursar's cards to express complicity with the protest. A meeting of all members
of the faculty has been tentatively scheduled for
Tuesday, to decide on disciplinary action for the
protestors.
At the University of Minnesota, about 40 stu-

dents jammed into the entrance of the placement office to protest the presence of a Dow re-

cruiter there.
Some of the students slept in a room near
the president’s office through the night. Others
held a hunger strike that lasted until the Dow re
cruiter left Thursday.
No disciplinary action is planned against the
protestors.

30 arrested
At Princeton 50 students blocked the entrance
to a building where the Institute for Defense
Analysis branch there is housed. When thte students refused to move away from the door and let
employees in, 30 of them were arrested.
Doug Seaton, a leader in the SDS chapter at
Princeton, said protests in other forms would continue.
At the

University of Colorado, 30 students
blocked the entrance to the placement center
where a CIA agent was recruiting. Their protest
came close to breaking into a fist-fight with about
50 students who said thhey wanted to get in to see
tthe recruiter, but campus police and a faculty
member calmed the two groups.
The protestors, most of them members of SDS,
had earlier tried to get the CIA recruiter to leave
voluntarily.

One of the protestors explained why his group
had chosen to use civil disobedience tactics; “Be
cause we feel dishonesty, secrecy and totalitarian

tactics have nothing to contribute to the educational enterprise, we arc protesting their use of
our campus facilities.”

Our Univeisily has nan for decades the practice of maintaining
an "open campus." This position, in accord with a long histbry of
academic freedom throughout the world, has meant that we have
defended the right of our academic community to have speak to
us —and even to recruit us—fascists, communists and others whose
opinions may be not only unpopular off the campus but bitterly
opposed by most on the campus. We have similarly been an “open
campus" for recruiting by any private and public employer in
order to make available to students the widest knowledge about
careers and employment opportunities. This practice assumes that
no group on the campus can restrict or deny to any students or
faculty the freedom to avail themselves of many opportunities. The
effect has been to prevent discrimination against the interests of
any group of students or scholars, however small. At the same
time we have had a respected tradition of peaceful protest against
particular speakers or recruiters.
However, in recent days some students and faculty members
questioned by petition and in other ways the "open campus" practice as applied to the recruiters of the Dow Chemical Company
which produces napalm, and the Central Intelligence Agency. Many
of these protesters believe the American involvement in the war in
Vietnam is unconscionable and should be opposed by any means.
After discussions with those intending to demonstrate, it seemed
probable to Professor Richard A. Siggelkow, our vice president for

student affairs and his staff that the recruitment would be obstructed
He, therefore, postponed the visit of
these two recruiters.

and that violence would result.

His action, with which I agree,
was designed to protect the safety of the recruiters and our students. More importantly, it gives
us all the time to discuss this
matter with care and to explore
the issues involved. Anything less
than reasoned deliberation would
not be worthy of a University.

The postponement elicited
strong expression's by students
and professors in behalf of an
“open campus" policy. The Stu
dent Senate has called for a
forum to discuss the questions
before us. In turn, 1 am calling a
meeting of bur newly enlarged
faculty senate on November 13
to review our traditional “open
campus” approach and those
measures to protect this approach
and prevent the disruption of our
academic life and freedom. If
these deliberations affirm our
traditional practice of an "open
a practice consistent
campus”
with the ideals of academic freedom and civil liberties — we shall
continue to be committed to allow
President Meyerson
the recruiters of the Dow Chem
ica Company, the Central Intel
releases statement on Dow
ligence Agency and other organi
Chemical
CIA campus relations to use campus placement cruilino
—

.

,

-

facilities.

1 cannot refrain from reacting to these recent manifestations
of violence or threats of violence on this and other campuses. Their
implications are grave for the very existence of a free university.
They are well stated by a group of Harvard University undergraduates who themselves are opposed to the war in Vietnam. They wrote
the following letter to the Harvard Crimson which appeared in the
issue of October 28, following the imprisonment by students of a
Dow recruiter at that university last week:
"To the Editors of the CRIMSON:

“The argument that some specific speech or recruitment is so
immoral that it cannot be tolerated is used not only by the extreme
left. The American right has continuously argued that demonstrators
against the war in Vietnam are directly responsible for killing—the deaths of American troops and Vietnamese—by persuading Hanoi
and the NLF to fight on and prolong the war Arc extreme rightwing students, folowing the moral, imperative of their arguments,
to prevent by tactics similar to those used at Mallinckrodt, (a
University building), student recruitment for a Mobilization against
the war?
“This sit-in exemplifies a vision of the University that we
find repugnant. Following that vision would transform the University
into a battlefield where oopposing political groups could fight it out
on campus, with victory (?) going to the strongest. (Or do the demonstrators accept only their own right to disrupt?) Even from a
pragmatic point of view, we cannot understand how a section of
the left can advocate restrictions of the broadest possible range of
civil liberties, when we of the left are unfortunately in such a small
minority in this country For we would be the first to be ‘restricted.’

“Most disturbing about the sit in were the anti democratic, anticivil libertarian views of the sit in's leaders, as expressed by their
actions and statements. Some of the undersigned participated in
peaceful picketing against Dow's production of naplam, and all of
us support such protests. And if picketing is not enough, there
are other ways to protest the War—for example, working for the
CNCV referendum The sit-in has blunted the moral and political
thrust of opposition to Dow's policy. For the leaders of the sit-in
have assumed the privilege of determining what individuals or
groups may recruit or speak on campus—a privilege which nobody in
the

Univeresity

should have."

�Th

Pag* FourtMfi

•

Spectrum

Friday,

Columbia research project
is financed by CIA funds

OFFICIAL BULLETIN
The Official Bulletin

is an

authorized

publication of the State University of
Buffalo for which The Spectrum assumes

be

senf

in TYPEWRITTEN form

to

114

Hayes Hall, attention Mrs. Fisher, before
2:00 pun. the Friday prior to the week
of publication. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication.

General Notices
Freshman

Pre-Registration

appointments in the Physical
Therapy Department, 264 Win
Nov.

—Nursing students—are—advised
and registered through the
School of Nursing.
Juniors and Seniors in Business Administration, Engineering,
Education, Medical Technology,
and Pharmacy, please refer to Division Office.

preThe Computing Center
sents Dr. J. Traub, Bell Telephone
Laboratories, “Algorithm for An
Automatic General Polynomial
Solver,” 146 Diefendorf, 4 p.m.

Placement Interviews

Please contact the University
Placement Service, 831-3311, to
make appointments and obtain
further information concerning
the following interviews:
Nov. 6

Oct. 30-Nov. 10—A through M
Nov. 13-Dee. 15—N through Z
Students must make appointments with the University College Receptionist in Diefendorf
114 one week in advance. At
this time the receptionist will
give the student registration
cards and a list of instructions to
follow in the subsequent registration procedures.

0. T. students will pick up their
registration material and make
their appointments in the Physical Therapy Department, 264
Winspear. Nursing students are
advised and registered through
the School of Nursing.
Students who do not make their
appointments at the scheduled
time, or who do not keep them
when made, will be required to
register in Clark Gym on Registration Day, Jan. 22, 1968.
A I I SophoSeniors
After the week of Oct. 23 you
can pick up master cards and
registration material in Diefendorf Reception Area, Room 14, at
any time between Oct. 30 and
Dec. 15.

Bechtel Corp.
General Analine &amp; Film Corp,
West Virginia State Road

Commission

Nov. 6, 7, 8
American Telephone

Juniors and

6

&amp;

Tele-

Western Electric, and
N.Y. Telephone Co.)

The project, designed to study the economies of countries in East Central Europe, has been in existence since
1955, but has been funded by the CIA for only the last six
years. The CIA has been giving Columbia University $125,The Department of Classics
presents Professor Hugh Llyod- 000 annually for the project.
Jones, Regius professor of Greek,
Europe.” Three books involving
The only secrecy regardOxford University. “Greek Poetry
the economies of Czechoslovakia,
the
has
been
the
ing
project
Papyri,”
246-248
Norin Recent
Hungary, and Poland have been
source of funds. Columbia published as a result of the reton, 5 p.m.
has listed it in the school’s search. The project is headed by
preJames Fenton Lecture
catalogue, and a number of Dr. Thad P. Alton, whose only
sents Dr. B. Davie Napier, dean
reportedly have connection with Columbia Uniof the Chapel and professor of students
versity is a project director.
involved
in the rereligion, Stanford University. The been
—

—

topic is “Religion in the University,” Conference Theater, Norton, 8:30 p.m.

The University Report
with
Dr. Robert L. Ketter, vice president for facilities planning. “Amherst Campus Plans,” Conference
—

Theater, Norton, 9 a

Nov, 7

The Standard Oil Co. of Ohio
Atlantic Richfield Co.
Union Carbide
Chemical Division
—

Nov. 8

FMC Corp.
Nov. 8, 9
Monsanto Co

National Lead Co.
Gamble
Procter
Distributing Co.
Humble Oil &amp; Refining Co
&amp;

Spencer Kellogg

Nov. 10
Continental Can Co.
Dow Corning Co.
Leeds &amp; Northrup
Bailey Meter Co,

0. T, students will pick up reg-

Manufacturers

istration material and make their

Nov. 8

Pharmacy Seminar
presents
Mr. B. A v n e r . The topic is
“Mechanism of Action of Steroid
Hormones,” Health Sciences 244,
4 p.m.
—

&amp;

search
The CIA funding of the project
was disclosed by the , Columbia
chapter of Students for a Democratic Society at a special news
conference this week. SDS members would not say how they
found out about it.
The university confirmed the
CIA has been financing the project, but gave no indication that
the project would be stopped or
that future CIA funds would be
turned down. From all appearances, the project will continue
existing financial
under the
setup.

The University Orchestra—with
Pamela Gearhart, conducting, will
read works of Prokofieff, Corelli,
Brahms, Bizet, Bruch and Borodin. Visitors welcome, Baird 7-10
p.m.

—

Division of Textron, Inc.
Grinnel Co., Inc.

—

m.

Nov. 9

Nov. 9

NEW YORK (CPS) —Columbia University has confirmed
that it has been receiving funds from the Central Intelligence Agency since 1961 for a research project.

—

Nov. 7

graph Co., (Long Lines Dept

Pre-Registration,

mores,

General Announcements

spear

—

Is now in progress for next semester, Freshman students whose
last names begin with the letters
designated below will see their
advisers, plan their programs and
register for courses during the
following times:

Nov. 10
presents
Pharmacy Seminar
Dr. B. L, Vallee, Harvard Medical
School, “Approaches to the Mechanism of Action of Carboxypeptidase,” Capen G-22, 4:30 p.m.

A spokesman in Columbia’s
news office issued the official
statement. The Columbia Spectator, the student newspaper, also
said Ralph S. Halford, a special
assistant to the president, confirmed the link between the CIA
and the research program.

—

Books published
The project is officially called
the “research project for the national income of east central

8
11
11
14
15

Nov.

College Level Exam Program
Graduate Record Exam
Navy College Aptitude Test

Nov.
Nov.

Pre-Nursing Exam

Nov. 4

Nov.
Nov.

Dec.

Dec.
Nov.
Dec.

Dec.
Nov.

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9 All High Schools
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First, they called for the reinstatement of a student suspended
last year for participating in an
anti-CIA sit-in on campus. SDS
said the university’s involvement

with the CIA probably affected
its action in suspending the
student.

SDS demands
The SDS members also demand-

ed that the university hold public hearings on its relationship
with the CIA where top-ranking
university officials would answer
questions from students and the
public.

Third, SDS called for the university to immediately suspend
any and all contracts with the
CIA and the Department of Defense.
The university’s statement said
the CIA finances only the one
project. Any ties with the Defense Department have not been
made public.

National Lead
THURSDAY-NOVEMBER 9, 1967

(A

university.

Trust Co.

American College Testing
College Entrance Exam

—

When SDS members disclosed
the CIA funding, they demanded
three immediate steps from the

Traders

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November 3, 1967

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�Friday, Novambar 3, 1967

Tha Spactrum

Sportin' Life

the spectrum of

sports

by Bob Woodruff

The State University of Buffalo football team goes on
the road for the third straight game tomorrow afternoon,
but this time they will travel southeast and take on the Blue
Hens of Delaware in Newark, Delaware.

The Hens will entertain the
Bulls with a 1-5 season’s record.
Delaware’s lone victory came easily a couple of weeks ago when
they visited Lafayette College in
Easton, Pa, and walked off the
field with a 21-2 win. They
opened the season with four
straight losses, Rhode Island, Villanova (Buffalo’s next opponent
after Delaware), Hofstra, and
Rutgers before the win over
Lafayette. Last Saturday the
Blue Hens fell prey to the visiting Temple Owls, a previous Buffalo victim, 26-17.
The Bulls lead in the six game
series between the clubs with
four wins and two losses, the last
win for the Bulls coming in 1966
when they romped over the visiting Hens 36-6.

In head coach Tubby Raymond’s freshman season the Blue
Hens surprised all the “experts”
last year when they swept undefeated through the Middle Atlantic Conference competition and
wound up with an over all record
of six wins and three losses.

Must rebuild
However, Coach Raymond figured that he would have to do a
lot more rebuilding this year than
he did the year before. Replacements had to be found for eight
graduated players who earned allconference laurels during their
careers at Delaware.
“We have a great many holes

to fill,” Coach Raymond notes,
“and we will be relying heavily
on some of our young players.
Nearly every team on our schedule expects to be improved and
we can’t afford a letdown,” Obviously the Hens have fallen victim to the letdown bug repeatedly

this season.

“Defensively, we must find
some interior linemen and some
problems are finding a
spread receiver and a center.”

Though Murtha at times has appeared to be an adequate college passer, his lapses into high school form have been too often
and too injurious to let slip idly by. While Mick leads an assault
on his personal high of 16 interceptions which he set last season,
Mason has thrown for 221 yards and four touchdowns on 19 completions in 32 tosses. Against North Carolina State, Boston College
and Holy Cross, Dennis directed the Bulls in sustained touchdown
drives, and in all three of Buffalo’s losses Coach Urich has had the
press box and the stands mumbling as to why Mason was still collecting splinters on the sidelines.

Atta boy Coach!
After all, Joe Collier stuck with Jack Kemp as his number
man, and just look how well the Bills are doing now.
•

Dennis Mason

The Blue Hens suffered a tough Bulls' junior quarterback has
blow when their leading scorer, done an outstanding job as the
backup signal caller and many
sophomore halfback Tom DiMunzio, was hurt in the Temple game. Buffalo partisans are eagerly
awaiting his promotion to a
He may be lost for the season.
starting berth.
Buffalo came out of the Holy
Cross game in good physical
The probable offensive line-ups
shape and hoped to have tailfollow:
back Ken Rutkowski at full
speed for Delaware. Ken gained
Buffalo
90 yards rushing against HC but
obviously was hampered by his SE 44 Chuck Drankoski
left ankle injury.
LT 61 Mike Rissell

Co-Captain Ted Gibbons, the
Bulls’ great defensive tackle, and
sophomore linebacker Mike Luzny
will spearhead the defense which
has been real tough against rushing offenses. Gibbons is one of
the best defensive tackles in the
country and certainly among the
top few in the East. Luzny has
made all-East four times already,
including this week’s selection
for his play in the game against
Holy Cross. “Luz” could be one
of the upcoming national stars

Like any respectable “number two," poor Dennis “tries harder” every time he’s called on to roll up the store on a hapless foe
like Temple, or to produce a miracle by salvaging a game from
which the Bulls have long been eliminated. But alas, he’s still a
runner-up.

monica type controversy.

Once again the Bulls will be
faced with the prospect of stopping a good passer. This time it
is Frank Linzenbold, who has
completed 78 of 154 attempts for
962 yards in only six games. Buffalo has had trouble stopping the
opponents' passing this season
and it is obvious the defensive
backfield will be tested fully tomorrow afternoon.

The Bulls have had their troubles in past years at Newark but
hope to get back on the winning
track. Quarterback Mick Murtha,
who has passed for 783 net yards
this season thus far, and fullback
Lee Jones, who is coming on
strong in the scoring race, will
lead the offensive charge. Jones
scored four touchdowns against
Delaware last year en route to 16
for the season. He has nine TD's
thus far in 1967 and has scored
five in his last two ball games.

What is he using, tea leaves?

At the Touchdown Club Luncheon on Monday, Coach Urich
emphasized that he doesn’t want to get involved in a Kemp-La-

defensive backs. Our top offensive

Jones stronger

Editor

Sports

Bulls’ football coach Doc Urich has obviously decided that the
only place Dennis Mason comes before Mick Murtha-is in the alphabet, and he insists that he’s not devising his depth chart in such an

Traveling Bulls to attempt rebound
against fighting Blue Hens tomorrow
The Bulls, now 4-3, will
have to rebound after last
week’s defeat at the hands
of Holy Cross.

Pag* Fifteen

LG 64 Mike Maser
C 53 Charles Powrie

RG 65 Jim Finochio
RT 72 Scott Clark
TE 82 Terry Endress
QB 14 Mick Murtha
FL 49 Rick Wells
TB 21 Ken Rutkowski

•

•

General Managers are not known to be overly optimistic, and
when Howie Plaster of the Bulls Hockey Club says that his squad will
go undefeated, many skeptics think he’s been hit on the head by
one too many slap shots.
It is true, however, that Coach Trey Coley will field the best
Buffalo hockey team in history tonight when his charges take the
ice in an opening exhibition contest against Mohawk College in
Hamilton, Ontario.
This outstanding squad must be attributed to the exhaustive
efforts of Messrs. Coley and Plaster and the State University of
Buffalo athletic department who have done such a tremendous
job in the building of this school’s hockey program.
Three years ago Sports Illustrated magazine gave fine coverage to the creation of the hockey club at Buffalo, and applauded
the efforts of the student body in maintaining the program. In
actuality, the students have enjoyed the play of a fine hockey team
through no additional personal expense outside of the payment of
the formerly mandatory student fees.
This year tl"' Bulls have pul together one of the finest hockey
clubs in the United States, but the free ride must end. The department of athletics has been virtually stripped of funds, and can no
longer subsidize the hockey team fully. A one dollar charge has been
instituted for admission to Bulls hockey games, and a season pass for
athletic fee paying students may be obtained for five dollars.
If the Bulls hockey fortunes are to continue their upsurge, attendance and dollars must come from the student body.
It’s not a high price to pay to see “the best.”
•

•

•

This corner is happily overwhelmed at the plans for recreational facilities on the new campus. It appears obvious that future
student bodies will not want for athletic facilities of any kind,
and the intramural and interscholastic programs will be ones of

FB 36 Lee Jones

which the University will be proud.

Delaware

It’s great to look towards the distant future, but what about the
next six of seven years until those constructions are completed. Must
the present student body and those entering in the next two or three
years be penalized for attending an “interim” University?
There is a possibility that a prefabricated gymnasium can be
erected on this campus, or immediately on the new site. Such a
project needn’t be cosily and it would enable students to play ball
at school instead of paying for membership in local "Y's."
Sometime during the next two weeks, The Spectrum will run
a “question of the week” designed to find out if the students do
want additional athletic facilities now.
Demand something for your athletic fees
Vote FOR the construction of a new gym.

SE 81 Ron Withelder
LT 73 Scott Campbell
LG 63 Hank Vollendorf
C 54 Jim Laser

RG 60 Bob Novotny
RT 70 Chip Vaccarino
TE 87 Mark Lipson
QB 15 Frank Linzcnbold
LHB 48 Jim Lazarski
RHD 46 Brian Wright
FB 34 John Spangler.

of the future.

Buffalo would like to place a
7-3 record in the records books
for the 1967 season and will be
out to make Delaware their fifth
victim of the campaign. “We just
didn’t have a good team effort,”

remarked Head Coach Doc Urich
after the Bulls’ defeat by Holy
Cross. “I wouldn’t say the offense
had a great day, but we scored
enough and played well enough
offensively to win. We just didn't
stop Phil O’Neil's passing when
it counted.”

—UPI
ij.
u
nctrold
Koymond
In his second season as head
football coach at the University of Delaware.
,

The Bulls just didn’t seem to
be “up” for the game in Worcester, Massachusetts, but they'll
have to reverse their attitude in
order to get on that winning
track again.

Telephoto

Lonbora

*

•

one

■

•

enienams

Jim Lonborg, pitching ace for the Boston Red
Sox,
ac^‘s as
as Children laughing
Monday as he read a Halloween fairy tale in a
ward of Children's Hospital Medical Center.
Lonborg was the star attraction at Halloween
party for patients of the hospital.

�The

Pag* sixteen

Spectrum

Friday,

November 3, 1967

Best Bull hockey team ever opens Super-vets to clash;
20 game season tonight in Ontario Colts to buck Packers
by Scott Behrens
Assistant Sports Editor

ly SprTni

in conjunction with Howard Plaster,
Manager of UB Hockey Club

iville

General

Professional football has a thousand faces. The faces
The State University of Buffalo hockey club will complete preparations for an ex- are familiar as are the names and the numbers that stand
tended league schedule by traveling to Hamilton, Ont. tonight to play Mohawk College for them.
in an exhibition game.
Each Sunday, the thousand names are tossed about with
Coach Trey Coley plans to use the entire squad in an attempt to find the best comthe 70-yard passes and the 40-yard runs but what about the
binations for the Bulls’ bid to win the championship in the ten team Finger Lakes Hockey faces?
League.

*

There appears to be no doubt that the Bulls will be loaded with talent this year.
General Manager Howard Blaster freely predicts that “every scoring record will be broken
before the season is half over.” This optimism is based mainly on the many new forwards
that are impressing the observers who have attended the squad’s scrimmages.
Left Winger Lome Rombough, last year’s Fort Erie
Junior B team leading scorer, turned down a professional contract with the St. Catherine Junior A team to enroll here.
Known for his adept stickhand
ling and terrific shot, Rombough
may score 50 goals this season,

according to Coach Coley,
Another Fort Erie boy of whom
much is expected, is Center Frank
Lewis. Possibly the fastest skater
on the squad. Lewis led the Junior B team last year in assists
He has impressed the Bulls’ coach
with his hustle and checking ability and should be one of the best
centers in the league.

Newcomer best center
Certain to be one of the best
centers in the East is newcomer
Ralnh Judge A native of
Falls, Ont., Judge was sought after
by several major nucney senuois,
including NCAA champion Cornell. An outstanding star who has
played for the Boston Bruinowned Niagara Falls Flyers, he
should terrorize the league.
Another Canadian who will be
playing on the same line, is Bill
Newman. He is very highly regarded as a winger from Chippewa. Ont. Newman, who was invited to the Boston Bruins train
ing camp after he had played for
the Flyers, was sought after by
Cornell and Colgate among others.

Impressive hard shot
John Watson, a skillful skater
from Niagara Falls, has also impressed observers with his hard

shot and will probably play on
the same line with Judge and
Newman. Daryl Pugh, a local boy
who was leading scorer in the
Buffalo Muny League last season,
has also looked impressive and
will probably team up with re-

turning veterans Wayne Frazer

of Toronto and Len DePrima of
Buffalo. Both men proved they
could score last year.
James McKowne, son of a for
mer All-American at Cornell, and

the Bulls’ second leading scorer
season, will probably join
Rombough and Lewis. McKowne
is being pressed by Mike Sullivan,
a transfer student from Merrimac
College in Massachusetts.
last

Defense impressive
If anything, the defense appears to be even more impressive
than the offense. Returning to

the nets is All-League Goalie Jim
Hamilton. A native of Fort Erie,
this sophomore was the Bulls
most valuable player last season.
Hamilton's backup man will
again be Chuck Huber, who did
some outstanding relief work last
season. Freshman Tony De Paolo
adds increased depth to this vital
position.
The defensemen appear to be
outstanding. Fred Borgemeister
of Niagara Falls was voted to the
All League team last season and
was a local favorite for his smashing checks. Newcomer Bill DcFoe
looks even better than Borgemeister. An outstanding player
from the St. Catherines’ B team
last year, DeFoc, with his skating
and slickhandling ability, should
be a consensus All-League selection.

Team-ups
DeFoe will probably team up
with the rugged Jimmy Miller, an

outstanding hockey player from

Fort Erie who played Intermediate A hockey last season. Borge-

meister will probably team with

Jim Murdoch, a transfer student
and former star in the Buffalo

Muny League. Fred Perrin of
Potsdam adds increased depth although Judge and Newman can
also play defense, if necessary.
All in all, it looks like an outstanding season for the club. The
Bulls came on strong over the
last half of the 1966-67 season
and were invited to the league
tournament at Oswego where the
team played well. After losing a
sudden death overtime decision
to Canton, the Bulls scored three
goals in the last minute to defeat
Ithaca 4-3.
The excitement, scoring and
hard-hitting that makes hockey

such an outstanding sport should
be increasingly evident this season at the Amherst rink. The
league schedule opens a week
from tomorrow as the Bulls begin an eleven game home season.
This year the tickets will cost $1.

This week the Green Bay Packers meet the Baltimore Colts in
a game that for years has become a kind of monumental
stepping stone to football supremacy. For nine consecutive seasons
two numbers have established
themselves in these games as belonging to great professionals.
The numbers are 19 and 15 and
are worn by John Unitas of
Baltimore

and

Bart

Starr

Green Bay, respectively.

of

General Manager Howard Piaster

explains why:

“When the Bulls’ Hockey Club
was founded six years ago, money
was provided by the Student Sen
ate. Two years later, the Senate
placed the responsibility for our
support on the Athletic Depart-

ment.
“Mr. Pcelle has been more than
kind to us and we have been able
to concentrate on building a hockey program at the University relatively free of monetary woes. As
a result, we have always allowed
all students free admission to our
games upon presentation of their
student ID cards.

The faces this year are different. Starr and Unitas have
both been pro football’s Most
Valuable Player, Both have per-

formed artistry unparalleled by
their peers. Both have played
behind teams which were considered great. Both come into this
game as true team leaders, but
the price of winning and greatness is now telling.

Ravaged by injury

John Unitas leads the league
in passing, completing almost 60
percent of his passes. He has
been ravaged the past two years
Fees blamed
by injury. First a torn ligament,
“Due to the voluntary fee sysand then a bad arm have stricken
tem, we must regretfully change Unitas from the Colt roster. The
our policy. With the Athletic Deknees healed quickly but the arm
partment hard pressed for funds, is not the same. The bullets
we must help pay our own way. which once flew from the Colt
As a result, tickets to our home backfield have been slowed by
games will cost $1 this season. an arm infected by tendonitis.
However, since we do not want Instinct and perseverance have
to overly penalize those students made John Unitas a good junk
who have paid the athletic fee, a pitcher; the fastball is gone.
season ticket for the eleven home
games may be purchased for five
Bart Starr, protected by what
dollars upon presentation of a was once the greatest offensive
valid ID card at the ticket office line in football history has probin Clark Gym.
lems of his own. The minor in“There is no doubt that we juries, those to his hand, shoulder
need your support, both morally and ribs, are ‘'laughed” off. The
and financially, if Buffalo hockey one that isn’t is
the nemesis,
is to continue its path to success. tendonitis. Starr continues to
team
is
the
we
This year's
best
play and win for the Packers,
have ever had and will furnish though his face is writhed with
than
and
enough excitement
more
pain.
thrills.
Picks Baltimore
“1 will go on record as saying
The two men have been locked
I hat every scoring record we have
will be broken before the season in great debacles before and it
is half over and there is a good seems strange that both should
chance that, despite the rugged suffer the same burden. Both
schedule, we will go undefeated play with cortisone injections
this season. All of this, however, and both realize the implication
will be of little importance if the of the hour. The winner here
student body does not come out will probaby represent the NFL
to the Amherst rink and support in the Super Bowl and that’s the
name of the game. We have to
us.”
pick a winner and we’ll take
Baltimore 20-17. Faces change
and so do the times.

Springville regained early season form last week going a 10-2
record and raising its percentage
to .735. The unbelievable feat
of the Lions, scoring 45 points
with a total offense under 250
yards not only caught us napping,

but

left

John Brodic

and the

49'ers walking in circles.

Atlanta surprised Minnesota
by beating them, compliments of
Tommy Nobis, the Falcons' fine
middle linebacker. Other than
that we were perfect. The ques-

tion of the week is: Minnesota
beats Green Bay, Atlanta beats
Minnesota, therefore will Atlanta
beat Green Bay? The answer:
Yeah, Hello.

National Football League

UB Hockev
•

.

16dm

Front, left to right, J. Watson, F. Borgemeisler, D. Pugh, J. McKowne, J. Hamilton, F. Lewis, J. Murdoch, B. Defoe. Rear, left to
right, General Manager H. Flaster, Coach T. Coley, C. Huber, B.
Newman, J. Miller, L. Rombough, W. Fraser, F. Perrin, L. DePrima,
M. Sullivan, T. DePaolo, Trainer Steve Newman.

Dallas 27, Atlanta 13: As
Springville predicted, Dallas
went down to defeat at the hands
of the tough but erratic Eagles.
But Atlanta is not tough or
erratic, but simply terrible. The

return of Don Meredith at the
QB slot should light a fire under
the Cowboys,
Detroit 24, Chicago 10: At their
last meeting, Chicago upset Detroit in a game which Springville successfully foretold. The
tables will turn this time as the
Lions’ dormant offense has finally come alive. The Bears are
having trouble putting the ball
across the goal line and this week
the story will be the same.

Cleveland 24, Pittsburgh 20:
The Browns’ balanced attack
should help Cleveland squeak by
the Steelers in a most uninteresting Capitol Division contest, We
would like to personally congrat-

ulate Lou Groza as he finally
put a football through the crossbar from more than 18 yards out.
Los Angeles 17, San Francisco
10: Detroit last week might have
found the answer to the 49’er
offensive attack—the blitz.. Couple a blitz with the Rams’ front

four rush and John Brodie will

probably spend a lot of time
eating the turf of Kezar Stadium.

It’s all downhill for the 49’ers.
New York 34, Minnesota 24:
The Giants have the best offense
in the league and the worst defense. Fran Tarkenton has simply
been fantastic at the helm of the
Giants and this week will only
be icing on a cake. The Viking
offense, mercifully for New York,
is an exciting as twin beds.
Philadelphia 35, New Orleans
17: The Saints have come close
but as yet have failed to win
their first professional game. The
momentum of last week’s big 2114 upset of Dallas should carry
the Eagles past the improving
but inexperienced Saints.

St. Louis 34, Washington 20:
The Cardinal passing attack has
been spectacular. Tight end Jackie Smith is the most underrated
player in the league and rookie
split end Dave Williams made
Green Bay’s all pro cornerback
Herb Adderly look like a bush
leaguer. The Redskins are not
as bad as they have looked, as
their offense and defense have
simply not jelled in the same
game.

American Football League
Boston 17, Houston 7: The Upset of the Week! The Oilers’ de-

fense wins it for them every
week, but we're betting that this
week will be a different story.
The Pats looked tough in a losing
effort against the Jets and just
won’t play patsy to the oftensivcless Oilers.

Oakland 42, Denver 10: Oakcompletely destroyed the
previously undefeated Chargers
and look like the AFL representative to the Super Bowl. The
Raiders combine an explosive offense and a rugged, stingy defense, while the Broncos have adequate specialty teams.
New York 21, Kansas City 17;
We're picking the Jets as sentimental favorites. The New York
aerial attack has been spectacular and the defense has proven
tough when it has to be. The
whole Kansas City team has been
erratic this year with secondyear man Otis Taylor heading the
land

list. The Jets in a close one.
Buffalo 17, Miami 13: Charity!

�Friday, November 3, 1967

P»0« ScvantMn

The Spectrum

outlooi

College

Sooners will bump Colorado
Last week as the Hoople decided to pick the complete
rnlleprp schedule it was inevitable that the weekend would btr
marred by a rash of upsets.
However despite some close scores and the above mentioned upsets the Hoople picked 21 out of 31 games for a
.670 average,
This weekend’s slate of games
will prove to be the toughest of
the year as many of the nation’s
top teams are paired off against
each other. Such gridiron tilts as

Georgia vs. Houston, Colorado vs.
Oklahoma, and Missouri vs. Oklahoma State highlight the week's
action.
Due to unforeseen events such
as the Hoople finding out that
he is a full time student (contrary to popular belief) who has
a physics test this week, the precipitous prognosticator was not
able to write this column. But
have no fear for the Hoople has
managed to get one of the alltime great back-up men in the
league in the person of Raunchy

Richer. So here without further
ado is ‘‘Richer’s Rubbish.”

10, Colorado 9: Oklahoma, which has allowed only
sixteen points thus far this season, has only the loss to Texas
in the way of a perfect record.
Colorado, stunned last week by
Oklahoma State, will fall prey to
Oklahoma’s strong defense and
lose their second in a row.
Penn State 37, Maryland 0; Lacking what you would call a potent
offense (12 points in five games)
and possessing a weak defense
are just two of the reasons why
Maryland will suffer another loss,
this time at the hands of powerful Penn State.
Notre Dame 21, Navy 7: Navy
might have been looking ahead
to this game last week as they
Oklahoma

were almost caught napping by
an aggressive Pittsburgh team.
Out to avenge last season’s loss
to Ara Parseghian’s boys, Navy’s
effort will just fall short of victory in an exciting game at

South Bend.
Miami 21, Virginia Tech 7: Miami
is finally playing ball like the
pre-season polls predicted. A defense that has held its opponents
scoreless in the last two games,
combined with an adequate offense will hand Coach Jerry Claiborne’s boys their first defeat of
the season after rolling over
seven lesser foes.
Missouri 14, Oklahoma State 10:
Although State upset third
ranked Colorado last week, they
won’t be able to duplicate their
effort two weeks in a row. A
combination of State’s inept offense and Missouri's tough defense should prove decisive.

T"

able.

—

The

North Carolina State 17, Virginia
14; N, C. State will be caught
looking ahead to their bout with
Penn State the following week
and will almost succumb to a
fired up Virginia team. A field
goal in the last quarter will keep
N. C. State in the ranks of the
unbeaten.

Indiana 28, Wisconsin 7: Perhaps
the most improved team in the
country this year, the Hoosiers
will remain unbeaten for another
week, via the strong passing of
Harry Gonso and the receiving
of Mike Perry. Wisconsin, which
hasn’t shown much of anything
this year, remains the doormat
of the Big Ten for still another
year.

Purdue 42, Illinois 10: With Mike
Phipps and Leroy Keyes leading Purdue’s high powered of-

fense, Illinois’ pourous defense
should not prove to be much of
an obstacle. With Illinois’ great
defensive back “Fancy Man” out
for the season with a hangnail,
his not-so-able replacement,
Greenbaum, will find the going
too difficult.

Georgia 14, Houston 6: Once
beaten Georgia will take on twice
beaten Houston at the Astrodome
in what promises to be a tight
defensive battle. The key to this
game will be Georgia’s ability to

stop Houston’s All-American Warren McVea and to utilize the services of their fine running back,

Ronnie Jenkins.
Buffalo 36, Delaware 7: After
three tough games in a row, Buffalo will have a breather this
week with Delaware. Look for
Denny Mason and Lee Jones to
spark the offense, while Luzny,
Gibbons and company will prove
too much for the impotent Delaware offense.

N

'

~

PATlTOlOPn
10c

POLAROID SWINGER FILM
*

*

a

their

35, Oregon State 14:
After a week’s layoff, Beban and
Greg Jones should be well rested
and ready to host the boys from
the North. Watch for U.C.L.A. to
roll up an early lead and coast
to its seventh in a row.

BIC PENS

UB

with

U.C.L.A.

3i€&amp;MflW- NO* &amp;R/*iAO^TVCATtR

'

Trojans

great depth and speed will prove
too much for an improved California team.

r V

i

"

U.S.C. 21, California 7; The effects of O. J. Simpson’s ankle injury will keep this game respect-

*

i
*■

1 i

'

.

■

i.

r
.

$1.59

m

Intramural

Dave Dux rounds

end in ESC EE-ME

meet

EE's won

competition

Meat clinches Monday 3p.m. crown;
Vesneske and APO best Tau Delt
As the end of the intramural football season approaches, only one division
has had a winner decided.
In the Monday 3 p.m. league, the Meat clinched the
title last week.
In their next game, they were
upset by the 55’ers, proving that
let-downs do take place, and that
the inter-division playoffs should
be very interesting to watch.
In the Monday 4 p.m. loop, Oak
Court and Billy Shears, both undefeated. will meet Monday in
the decisive game. The Tuesday
leaders, Grad Business and the
Do-Loops, were scheduled to

meet on Tuesday. If you haven’t
already heard who won. the re-

suits will be published here in
our next column.

Close one

The Wednesday 3 p.m. league
is another close one. The undefeated Bacteriology Club will
meet the Dukes at a date as yet
undecided. The Beeps, with a
30-1 record and the Nadgos, 3-1,
were scheducd to meet Wcdnes
day. The results will be right
here Tuesday.
In the Thursday 3 p.m. division,
Sig Ep met winless APD yesterday. If Sig Ep won, they

are

the

champs. If APD pulled off an upset, then Phi Psi is the loop winner. Sec Tuesday’s Spectrum for
the results.

Tau Delt beaten
In another divisional champion-

ship battle fought yesterday, APO

met Sammy. APO moved into the
favored spot by defeating previously unbeaten Tau Delt by a
20 7 score on Tuesday. The heroes
for APO were John Buseh, who
caught two TD passes; Terry; Vesneske, who threw for two TD’s
and scored one himself on a QB
option; and Jim Rasey, who
sparkled on the receiving end of

many of Vesneskc's passes. The
game was a Standing~R«om Only
affair, with the highly emotional
crowd cheering for almost anything. Richie Kantor, Jeff Janoff,
Warren Valencia and Scott Friedman were brilliant in a losing
cause for Tau Delt.

There will be a meeting some
time next week for the winter
sports phase of the intramural

program.

Murtha-Mason controversy rages on
what's up doc?—
“Well, what did you think of last Saturday’s
game at Holy Cross?”
“That game was as exciting as twin beds. Nothing looked good—not even the trip back to Buffalo. However, 1 finally figured out what’s wrong
with Mick Murtha’s passing. He’s actually left
handed—he’s been throwing with the wrong arm!"
“Now come on. The offense did score 25 points.
What would you call the defense?”
“Mostly ineffective! It’s not that Holy Cross
was so offensively powerful; it was that the Bulls
were so defensively blah!! As far as pass defense
goes, I found something out. Buffalo doesn’t have
any. Buffalo could never be called for pass inter
ference because our guy isn’t anywhere near the
receiver. Those officials shouldn't try to flatter
“I heard about that. Denny Mason sure looked
good when Urich put him in.”

40-yard TD

“He always does. Did you notice he directed
a 40-yard TD drive and completed four of four
passes. He doesn’t throw any soft ball either.
It’s a shame he didn’t start the second half.”
"Well, Murtha completed 11 of 25.”
“Fourteen of 25 if you count the interceptions.
Do you realize that Mason has attempted 32 passes,
completed 19 for 221 yards and four TDs. Mean-

132, completed 58 for
783 yards and only one TD. What do those statistics tell you?”
"What about Murtha’s injured arm? That must
influence his passing."
‘Td say it was a bad influence and if it’s that
bad —he shouldn't be directing the offense. Maybe
they could use him as a defensive back. We need
them too!!”
“Now you’re being too harsh on the poor kid
Take it easy. This was only one game."
while Murtha attempted

Inconsistent

"But he's been like this all season—inconsistent.
I can’t see why Urich won't give Mason a break.
He certainly has proven himself. Every time he
goes in he looks good. That pump fake of his
stops the defense cold. Why doesn't Urich make
the switch? What does he have to lose—only the
game and he can do that Murthfully."
“A seven and three record isn't that bad."'
"Don't count your chickens before they’re
hatched. This Saturday the Bulls play the Delaware Blue Hens and if UB doesn't watch out.
they’ll lay an egg,”
“That’s a lot of bull. Buffalo can win this
game if they’re up for it. By the way, what do
you say about Mike Luzny making All-East for

the fourth time?”
“I’ll drink to that!!!”
Paid Adverfuemenf—

FREE SPEECH Should Be
Permitted to Everyone
Except—Army Recruiters,
Dow Chemical and

Those We Don't

Agree

With

Do your part to
Help stamp out
freedom of speech
for undesirables

SOCIETY FOR
CONTROLLING
UNACCEPTABLE
MISINFORMATION

�Friday,

The Spictrum

Pag* Eightaan

If your major

%

II

H

Vl0n

NCC

$&gt;•
S

t°9 re
"

so c'a

'

is listed here,
IBM would like
to talk with you
Dec. 5th or 6th

S

Sigis^
.

VAa,v ma''cS
‘

&amp;*

c

)

“

0'

ttaosP

Sign up for an interview at your placement office—even
if you're headed for graduate school or military service.
Why is IBM interested in so many different people?
The basic reason is growth. Information processing is
the fastest growing, fastest changing major industry in the
world. IBM products are being used to solve problems in
government, business, law. education, medicine, science, the
humanities—just about any area you can name. We need people w ith almost every kind of background to help our customers solve their problems. That's why we'd like to talk with you.

What you can do at IBM
Whatever your major, you can do a lot of good things at
IBM. Change the world (maybe). Make money (certainly).

Continue your education (through any of several plans, including a Tuition Refund Program). And have a wide choice
of places to work (we have over 300 locations throughout
the United

States).

What fo do next
We'll be on campus

to

interview for careers in Market-

ing. Computer Applications. Programming, Research. Design
and Development. Manufacturing, and Finance and Administration. If you can't make a campus interview, send an outline of your interests and educational background to J.E. Bull.
IBM Corporation. 425 Park Avenue. New
_

1

York. New York 10022. We're an equal 1 |
r ’ll*
opportunity employer.

jVj
lvl!l«
|

November 3, 1967

�Friday, November 3, 1967

and

rafernity

Tha Spectrum

Pag* NlnatMn

sorority new

500 sources give
loans to students

Sig Ep campaign to aid Muscular Dystrophy
Elliot

by

man for doing an excellent job
on the purple astor party.

Stephan Rose

Staff

Spectrum

Reporter

The brothers of Alpha Sigma
Phi extend their thanks td those
who attended last night's showing
of “Gone With the Wind.”
Congratulations to newly appointed officers: Curt Wilbur, So-

cial Chairman; Charles McDom
nell and Joe Fallone, Pledgemasters. Tuesday will be the first in
a series of lectures featuring the
brothers’ opinions of the pledge
class.
This week’s bash is a B.Y.O.
at DiNardo’s Dungeon . . . The
pledges and brothers of Pi
Lambda Tau will hold a stag tonight. Tomorrow night there will
be a “Rodent and Cockroach
Party” at the luxuriously appointed Hotel Bailey . . . Sigma Alpha
Mu would like to thank the Walden Manor for being there, Military Liquor for being reasonably
priced, the Noblemen for playing
good music, and our Social Chair-

Tomorrow, Sigma Phi

Epsilon

will march in a "Crusade on
Crutches” campaign for Muscular
Dystrophy. Colections will be
taken by the brothers on the
march, which will begin at 2 p.m.
on Main Street and continue to
City Hall.

The officers of the fall pledge
class are: President. Dan McLaughlin; Vice-President, Dick
Katz; Secretary, Ray Holtz; Controller, Brian Vandenberg; Historian, Steve Salerno. Tomorrow
night the brothers will hold their
annual Halloween Party at the
Flying “E” Ranch . . Tao Kappa

Epsilon will hold a Tom Jones
party tomorrow night. The brothers would like to extend their
best wishes to Larry Zidow and
Ned Hayden who are heading
into the defense of our country.
Theta Chi Fraternity announces

its semesterly pizza sale headed

by

Ken

gin early tomorrow morning and
will continue till Sunday. Tonight, the pledges are conducting a stag for the, brothers at the
house. Celluloid entertainment
will ensue.

Best of luck to brothers Segert
and Huebsch who enter the
armed services next week

Sororities

Class: Julie Rusyczyk, President;
Marcia Miller, Vice President:
Maryruth Morris, Secretary; Pat
Buchinsky, Treasurer; Cindy
Thomas, Chaplain. There will be
a dated party tonight at the Fly-

“E”.

with

tertained their parents
a
buffet supper Saturday evening.
Congratulations

and

m3&gt;ny

thanks to sisters Carol Roberts
and Beth Ann Steger. who placed
first and second runners up respectively in the Fall Weekend
Queen Contest. The sisters are
planning a party for eight High
School girls from the Y.W.C.A.
Sunday.

The sisters of Alpha Gamma
Delta wish to congratulate the
officers of the Fall 1967 Pledge

ing

. .

Chi Omega's dirty dozen foot
ball team has a 1 win and 1 loss
record against Theta Chi and
APD fraternities. Donna Goehle,
our chapter visitor from National,
is visiting us this week . . . The

Assistance Corporation, announced last week 500 New York
State lending institutions are participating in the student loan program.
He said the total includes commercial banks, savings banks,
savings and loan associations, and

credit

unions

throughout

Tomorrow morning. Sig Kapp
and Theta Chi are participating
in the Program Early Push clothing

drive.

The new pledge officers are;

President. Paula Agostino; Secretary.

Pat

Becker;

Treasurer,

Marge Guerra; Scholarship
man. Joy Buchnowski; and

Chair
Social

Chairman. Linda Stevenato.
Two new pledges were initialed
at last Monday's meeting; Mario
Goerss and Linda Stevenato. The

Cahn said that on Sept, 30 the
corporation had guaranteed 386,000 loans totaling $318 million
since its organization in 1957.
More than 180,000 students
presently have loans outstanding
totaling $270 million.

BARTENDERS WANTED
GLEN CASINO.Williamsville

Apply 7:30-8:30 P.M.
Tuesday Sunday

pledge shoe shine will take place
Nov. 8.

-

SITUATIONS WANTED

FOR SALE

V-8, four
low milecondition.
per week.

BORED BIKE, 315 cc, CB77. Call 834-3406
after 8 pm.
FENDER MUSTANG guitar $150; Fender
piggy back amp 230; Gibson fuzz-tone
$30.
Best offers considered. Call Jack,
TR 3-9329.

1953 HARLEY DAVIDSON, 74 cu. in. full
dresser, good shape, ready to chop.
TR 4-3954.

$395,

TERM PAPERS 25c
tos 25c, envelopes
$2.00
Call TF 5-6897.

page, dit-

per
per

hundred.

DONE at home (close to UB).
Any type of assignment. Call Phyllis
McGee, 836-0345.

TYPING

MISCELLANEOUS

GUITARS:

qualilfy, used, flat top guitars
etc.) bought, sold, repairedstrings. 874-0120 eves.
NEED BREAD? Distribute Psychedelic post
ers, etc. Write to Joyce James Co. Ltd.,
734 Bay St., San Francisco, Cal. 94109.

(Martin,
D'Angelico

&amp;
HORN PLAYER for Blues Band
now forming. Call between 6 to 8 p.m.
876-1865.

ORGAN

ROOMMATES WANTED

female roommates wanted
for next semester. Beautiful apartment
across street from campus. Call 836-5625.
TO SHARE modern five bedroom house.
$160 monthly. Call Steve at 832-1853.
ONE

TYPING

OR TWO

NIGHT SKIING at Glenwood
MFC Ski
Club Meeting tonight at 8:30 in Norton
-

361.

WANTED
PART TIME, student with car to deliver
orders and help in meat market at Vic
and Norm's Market, 1006 Elmwood Ave.
WE NEED three or four clean cut, mature
individuals for part-time employment,
11 a.m.-3 p.m. Apply McDonald's Drive In,
1385 Niagara Falls Blvd.
COLLEGE MEN, Need (5) well dressed, can
earn $4.25 hr. average. .Evenings and
Saturday. Car necessary Phone 832-7509,
1-6 p.m.
I WOULD LIKE to purchase a reasonably
priced grandfather clock. Any information, call Bruce 886-1871.
STUDENTS WANT to furnish apartment
cheaply. Chance to get rid of old furniture. Steve 837-3082.
JAZZ BASSIST needed for trio. If interested, call Ken Solomon: 837-7307 after

7

p.m.

TUTORS: Conserve

your

time

your

experience.
Subject
supply you with

will

name, phone and
Spectrum Box CZ.

and utilize
proficiency

students. Submit
to
courses offered

PERSONAL
SHALOM! For

gems from the

875-4265

call
TWO

LOST

shepherds.

There’s an M&amp;T Bank
almost everywhere

Jewish Bible

day or night.

SHEEP, in

search of fhei
831-3973.

Call 831-3968,
LOST

SWEATER; lost in Norton BowlAlley Sat., Oct. 21. Reward. Call

BROWN

ing
Dick

836-6825.

CASSETT
Science Bldg.

SONY

9309 after 6.

taperecorder
Reward $10.

in

Call

Ready to help you
with over 100 different services.
Over 60 locations throughout
Western New York. You’ve got us
right where you want us.

Health
TF 3-

GOLD WATCH, "P. J. R.” inscription. Very valuable to owner. $10 reward. Pat, 839-2164.

LADY'S

&gt;N’T COOK IONITE

•**

CHICKEN
DELIGHT!

M&amp;T BANK

PHONE —834-6688
FREfc DELIVERY

L_

Shrimp Dinner
3268 Main St.

-

- lots

|

$1.59
of Parking

I
|

the

state.

CLASSIFIED
1964 CHEVELLE MALIBU, 283
door sedan. Radio, snow tires,
age. Call 773-5780.
1965 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE, perfect
Must sell, make offer or $10
TF 2-9256 or TR 3-0690.

of

Dr. Judah Cahn, chairman

,rena

Mein-Winspcer Office

University Plu* Office
MEMBER

r

D I. C.

�Friday, November 3, 1967

Til* Spictrum

Pag* Twenty

Hong Kong violence continues
HONG KONG
Communist Chinese
hurled hand grenades into
British Hong Kong Monday after attempts
—

*

world

*

•

focus

m/deast

militiamen

Terrorism
The border incident coincided with a
massive new terrorist attempt to “smash"

hong hong
salgon

Compiled from our wire services by Madeline Levine

side.

Soviet warships sent to Egypt
CAIRO
More Soviet Naval vessels
sailed into Egyptian waters amid reports
that a group of Egyptian Air Force officers blamed for the fatal Israeli blow delivered against U.A.R. forces June 5 would
be court martialled shortly.
A Soviet Navy tug joined two subma
rines and a destroyer in a bristling display
of Russian warships currently on a “goodwill visit” to the Egyptian port of Alex—

andria.

Still another Soviet destroyer was nearing Alexandria. Four other vessels, also
part of the Soviet Mediterranean fleet,
lay in berth at Port Said at the northern
entrance to the Suez Canal.

To deter fighting
The Soviet warships were believed to
have been dispatched to Egyptian ports in
a move aimed at deterring any further
outbreak of fighting in the wake of the
Egyptian sinking of the Israeli destroyer
Elath and last week’s Israeli shelling of
Port Suez refinery installations.
In Cairo the semiofficial newspaper Al
Ahram said court martials would be held
soon for a number of Egyptian Air Force
officers, including Air Marshal Mohamed
Sidky Mahmoud, commander of the Egyptian Air Force during June's brief Mid-

east war, and his two assistants.
The Air Force officers were arrested
shortly after the end of the war and have
been interrogated since then.
The exact number of officers detained
was unkown but Al Ahram editor Hassanein Haikal said last Friday that 140 of-

ficers had been retired either for their

responsibility in the June defeat and a
later abortive attempt to seize command
of the army while a similar number had
been pensioned off for inefficiency in
fighting.
May go to Assembly
Secretary General Thant said that unless the Security Council can reach agreement on Middle East action in the coming week, the issue may have to revert
to the General Assembly.
Thant told newsmen as he left U. N.
headquarters that he doubted the two dif-

ferent draft resolutions under consideration could be merged successfully into an
agreed proposal. Both drafts call for an
end to the state of belligerency claimed
by the Arabs and for appointment of a
special U. N. representative as Middle
East go-between. But they differ in the
wording of an appeal for Israeli withdrawal.

The futility of fire fighting can be seen in this
photo as firemen watch hopelessly as a house
burns to the ground in Villa Park, a community
in North-central Orange County, about 60 miles
south of Los Angeles.

California
burning

HHH claims progress in Viet
SAIGON
Vice President Hubert
H. Humphrey attended the inauguration of
President Nguyen Van Thieu early this
week, and said South Vietnam is making
'remarkable" progress in the military, political, economic and social spheres.
In remarks to members of the U. S.
Embassy staff Humphrey said:
"I saw natiombuilding this morning.
“Some people can never see the forest
for the trees. Some people cannot see
progress because they don’t want to see
militarily, poliit. The progress here
is retically, economically, socially
markable.”
Speaking forcefully Humphrey threw
away his prepared speech and cited some
of the most striking chapters of history
to defend President Johnson’s policy in
Vietnam.
—

—

—

—0P1 Tttaphoto

Peace prize
winner jailed

Dr. Martin Luther King and his wife answered
newsmen's questions at the airport Monday
as the civil rights leaders departed for Birmingham to begin serving a five-day&lt; jail sentence
in connection with 1963 demonstrations in the

Alabama

City.

U.S. returns land to Mexico
President Johnson and Mexican President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz, mobbed by 200,000 to 300,000 wildly cheering Mexicans.
Saturday ended a century-old border dispute by ceremonially transferring 437
acres of land from the U. S. to Mexico.
Johnson was given a welcome seldom
seen by any American president in his
own country. He used the occasion to urge
the nations of the Americas to stand
together against “subversion and concealed aggression,” and pledged the U. S.
would never go back on its word anywhere in the world.
Soal 1963 treaty
The two presidents and their wives
flew from Washington to El Paso, Tex., to
seal the 1963 treaty which transferred
the Chamizal, claimed by the United States
since the Rio Grande changed its channel
in 1864, back to Mexico.

At the starkly modern marble Chamizal monument on Cordova Island, the two
presidents signed a proclamation that the
monument "wil stand forever as a symbol
of good will between our two nations.”
In addition to a rallying call for hemispheric unity against subversion and aggression recently evident in South America, the U. S. Chief Executive used the
Chamizal as proof of this country’s sincerity of purpose.

Refers to S. Viet

In this connection, he made an obvious
reference to South Vietnam and U. S, determination to meet its commitments
there.

“I have said that it is important to the
people of the world that both our friends
and our enemies believe that we in the
United State mean what we say,” Johnson
said.

War I; George Washington and

Army

de-

serters at Valley Forge; Harry S. Truman

and the near-defeat of the Korean War;

Lord Cornwallis at Yorktown, and such
traitors as Benedict Arnold and Aaron
Burr. At one point, the vice president
threw his arm out and declared: This is
and a wonderful
our great adventure
—

one it is.

“Our business is to make history,” he
added. “I’ve said from many a platform
and I did.
that it’s all right to study it
and I have.
It’s all right to teach it
But it’s wonderful to make it, make history in your own way and your own time.”
—

—

The historian
Then Humphrey, the historian, gave
his own analysis of the American involve-

Dunkirk mentioned

ment in Vietnam.
“Let the chapter of history of the last

He mentioned Dunkirk and British resolve; Franklin Roosevelt, Pearl Harbor
and its voices of doom; Abraham Lincoln
and the trying days of 1864; Woodrow
Wilson and the draft revolt before World

third of the 20th century read like this
about our America: that without regard
to race, color, creed or religion, Americans at home and abroad took their stand
for freedom and for opportunity.”

Thieu to ask

for peace

Nguyen Van Thieu took the
SAIGON
oath of office as president of South Vietnam early this week and said his popularly elected government wanted peace talks
now with Ho Chi Minh and the other leaders of North Vietnam.
In his inaugural address, Thieu said:
“I will make a direct proposal to the
—

North Vietnamese government to sit down
at the conference table in order that the

governments of the south and the north
can directly seek together ways and means
to end the war.

Peace door open

"I will widely open the door of peace

and leave it wide open to the North Viet-

namese authorities in order to seek a
peaceful solution to end this war which
is causing suffering to the entire Vietnamese people.”
With Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey

and Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker

looking on, Thieu made no mention of any
U. S. participation in the peace move and
said the status of the Viet Cong insurgency
should not be a precondition to negotia-

tions.

talks

Thieu bypassed previous hints of a
bombing pause, and said South Vietnamese
forces were holding the initiative on the
battlefields and making progress in the
pacification program in the countryside.
His emphasis was on South Vietnamese
efforts to win the war and he seemed to
be saying that the problem was a Vietnamese problem despite the heavy American military commitment.

War on corruption

Thieu pledged a war on governmental
and military corruption and urged his
people to make “greater efforts and sacrifices.”
Thieu also said that the status of the
National Liberation Front, the political
arm of the Viet Cong, “should not be a
preliminary condition to peace talks.”
The address was Thieu’s strongest
statement to date on peace talks, and it
was seen as a direct challenge to Ho and
his Hanoi regime to negotiate and end
the fighting that has torn both parts of
Vietnam asunder. But he made it clear
South Vietnam would never knuckle under

communist aggression.

�i
\

Feature Magazine

Friday,

"Cole

for

November 3,

1967

Council"

The birth of New Politics in Buffalo?

��)
&gt;

We should take democracy seriously and literally. Insofar as we
should accept the democratic her.we must realize that it
itage.
has been a historically specific
formation, brought about by a set
of factors, a union of procedural
devices and ideological claims
quite specific to Western civilization: and that it is now in a perilous condition not only in the
world but in the West itself, and
especially in the United States
of America. In the U.S. we must
begin insistently to make that
peril clear; we must clarify again
the values that are threatened, and
the trends and decisions that now
threaten them; and we must consider and invent programs by
which the threat can be lessened,
the chances of the values to be
realized maximized. The thing to
do with civil liberties is to use
them. The thing to do within
formal democracy is to act within it and so to give it content.
If we do not do so, then we
ought to stop "defending” democracy and say outright that we
do not take it seriously.
.

C. Wright Mills

P»9» 2

�/\fter six months of politicking and deliberations, the third New York State constitutional conven
tion of this century and the pinth in state history approved the entirely new State charter Sept. 26.

TfJBF

,*

» »

MM«

m'mITh

1 Wlftl

•

MIMI9

■ mi
ys&amp;'

N

Y

Times

by Daniel Lasser
City News Editor

A new state constitution with several changes, including an emotional
church-state controversy that has raged
for many years, will go to New York
State voters on Nov. 7.
State constitutions are generally
long and detailed, and in some cases
picayune and trivial; most range between one and a half to three times
the length of the U.S. Constitution.
New York's present constitution is no

exception:

a cumbersome 45,000

word document four times the length
of the federal charter, it has been
amended 162 times. The proposed
constitution has been cut down to
under 23,000 words.
Blaine repeal key issue
With just six weeks between the
adjournment of the convention and
Election Day, the New York voter is
faced with the complex task of comparing the two constitutions and deciding which one is better for him. Perhaps in too many cases, voters will
wind up analyzing the entire document on the basis of one change:
the repeal of the so-called "Blaine

Amendment." In the end, it will
prove to be the key question that will
decide the fate of the constitution.
The Blaine Amendment states that
the state may not aid or maintain
any institution of learning "wholly or
in part under the direction of any

religious denomination."
Candidates questioned
When candidates were running for
election as delegates, t|heircampaigns
were generally obscure; few voters
knew their qualificatidns and views;
many didn't even realize that the
state was planning to hold a Constitutional Convention,
It was at this point that the chief
anti-Blaine force in the state, Citi-

zens for Educational Freedom, became
important. Pro-repeal forces became
active early, before most other groups
had even made preliminary plans concerning the convention. They organized meetings in every district in the
state, inviting the candidates to come
and give their views. Any potential
delegate who went on record as being
anti-repeal ran the risk of losing every
Catholic vote in his district.

As a result, Citizens for Education
al Freedom was able to get repeal
commitments from two thirds of the
delegates before the convention had
even started.
Because of the controversial na
ture of the repeal of the Blaine Amend
ment, many hoped that the convention
would present the proposal to the
voters separately from the main body
of the constitution.
But it was Convention President
Anthony J. Travia's judgment, which
he made stick as the convention ad
journed, that the best chance of win
ning voter approval of the new charter
lay in putting it as a .single package.
Despite many of the changes, it
will be the repeal of the Blaine Amend
ment that will determine whether or
not the new constitution is accepted.
Opponents of repeal claim that all
the reforms proposed could still be
put into the present constitution in
the form of amendme nts if the con
stitution is rejected. On the other hand
those who favor repea il of Blaine con
barter has its
cede that the new
weaknesses, but that t hese should be

The new constitution
a church-state issue?

overlooked in the Interests of state
aid to parochial schools
State will assume costs

If the new constitution is adopted,
the state, over a ten year period, will
take over the costs of all local welfare programs in the state plus the
operation of the courts. Money for
these programs, along with the state
funds going to private schools, would
eventually necessitate a substantial
raise in taxes.
The convention skirted around an
important issue by leaving the decision
to lower the voting age to 1 8 up to
the legislature. However it did abolish
literacy requirements for voting. It is
estimated that 100,000 voters could
be added to the rolls as a result.
The proposed constitution's Bill
of Rights is studded with significant
changes
Probably the most important is the
provision giving citizens the right to
file suit to stop state officials from
violating the constitution or spending
money unconstitutionally

Another key change involves strict
er requirements for obtaining a court
order for wiretapping. There was a considerable amount of sentiment at the
convention for outlawing wiretapping
and eavesdropping altogether

A third change in the Bill of Rights
liberalizes the right to inspect Grand
Jury minutes. When a defendant is
indicted without a preliminary hearing,

he is given the right to see the Grand
Jury minutes. Law enforcement agents
aren't too happy about this section
claiming that it may hamper law en
forcement and endanger witnesses
If the constitution is defeated, the
next chance to revise the state's chart
er will not come until 1 975

Page 3

�What's to prevent another riot? The article below appeared in the July 6 edition of the
Manchester Guardian, a British newsweekly. Although written four months ago, Mr. Cooke's
brilliantly cogent analysis of the June East Side
disturbances in Buffalo is a description of a city
which has not changed: There are still more cops
than jobs, there are still more families than
houses.

Buffalo's ghetto: a British view
By Alistair

Cooke

Reporter, Manchester Guardian
Special to The Spectrum
Hundreds of rampaging Negroes
gave a grim twist last night to the
saucy old folk song "Buffalo Boys,
Won't You Come Out Tonight?" They
came out in furious droves for the
third night in a row to protest against
their useless life in Buffalo's Negro
ghetto and the civic indifference that
perpetuates it.
By midnight, 1 8 persons had been
wounded, most of them fry pellets fir
ed by shotguns and more than a hundred people had been arrested. All
through the night the dull roar of the

battle between the rioters was punctuated by the rattle of stones and bottles, the squirt of tear gas, the whine
of sirens, and the hammering of plywood braces against the windows of
small shops.
Before a turbulent crowd of 200
young Negroes, at a meeting called
by the Youth Council of the National
Association for the Advancement of
Colored People, Mayor Frank Sedita
stood behind a microphone and bawled
give
an appeal for "just one week
—
one week."
me a week's time
He went off amid a hail of jeers
and screams to summon 1 50 business—

see what can be done about
the jobs and the houses that the
Negroes lack and crave.

men to

Desert of slums
Buffalo is a steel centre, a great
manufacturing city, with a state university of rising eminence, a distinguished art gallery, and elm-lined avenues
of houses as solid as the Victorian
age that built them. But Buffalo might
as well be Athens or London for all
the good its affluence and its Victorian traditions do to the Negroes,
who seethe in an interior desert of
slums rising like war ruins from empty
lots stacked with litter and garbage.

The facts of the Buffalo situation
seem to be simpler and starker than
in the other cities that have rioted
through other hot summers. Ten years
ago, the Negro section was crumnyy,
but evidently bearable to its 40,000
inhabitants. Today there are 1 00,000
Negroes packed into an urban ghetto
that has seen only 250 new housing
units go up in the intervening decade.
Rioters are native sons
Unemployment has risen among
the Negroes in the usual inverse proportion and last night's rioters and
looters paid little heed to the mayor's
frantic assurance that "outsiders" had
moved in to spark the trouble. Of
course, there are always outsiders,
not least a few Communists, to recruit mobs. But the mobs themselves
are native sons who do not propose
to fight the Communists whentheyare
ie challenge they flung

at the city

spec ific and unanswer
able. The Negroes once sprawled
around the city. They are now hemmed
in on one side by an Italian quarter,
fathers

was

and on the other by industrious Slavs.
They see themselves imprisoned physically and materially.
The 1 6-year-old vice president of
the Youth Council said it alt with
despairing eloquence: "We can be
laborers or athletes or entertainers,
and nothing else, and if we speak
out against it we’re called Communists or Black Muslims."

-Yates

slums

rising

litter and garbage

P»9«

4

like war

ruins

from empty lots slacked with

�of Christ.
The Spectrum: What were the origins of your present candidacy? Was
it an outgrowth of the protest against
the War?

Cole: The candidacy grew out of a
group which was formed in 1 964-65,
called Council for Citizen Responsibility in Foreign Policy, a group of
old radicals and new radicals, people
who were upset aboutthe implications
of our foreign policy, about the growing militarism in this country, with the

paramilitary organizations which seem
to control policy. We were concerned
at this time not only with Vietnam,

but we were also worried about the
future Vietnams.
We were also aware of certain goals
and directions which had been presented by what we thought was
the Kennedy administration. At least
some of us saw some hope in the
Peace Corps, and in the Alliance for
Progress; we saw the possibility that
here was a young man who by his
own energy and with the help of others around him would be a change
in the direction of the country. But
this never came to pass. And I was
foolish enough back in '64 to hope
that the impetus would perhaps carry
on a little longer with Johnson, Of
course the promises put forth by Johnson in '64 were completely denied
and never fulfilled.

—-

The Spectrum: If things are this bad
what can you do about it?

I would say, 1
still have a great deal
of faith in the average person, that
if he's really made to see the problems that are confronting our society,
and these are not hurled at him, but
he's given a chance to have a conversation around them, he may begin
to see the problem and may begin
to respond to it.
If you really hold up to people
the fundamental humanitarian values
that our society has always supposedly worked for
that man is more
important than property, that man is
to be judged by his actions, by his
deeds, by his concerns, and not by
how much he owns, or the color of
they listen.
his skin,
People do see that World War
Three is a real possibility and that
Cole: In all
don't know.

honesty,

I

—

—

m

that the press had un’ui1 1 it up to be. The
problem w
he New Politics Confe
was
at the conference itself
who went there and
didn't really see what was going on.
They went there apparently with alt
kinds of expectations of another Progressive Party, a large third party
movement, an anti-war party. Somehow these people had never paid much
close attention to the student movement, hadn't read any of the literature of Students for a Democratic
Society, hadn't read any of the literature of Rene Davis or Staughton Lynd,
or paid any close attention to Carl
Oglesby.
As an expression of unity, most
of the people in the New Left
nize the extent of the sickness in
not

a

fortunately

earn

tc

we woi
together

Peace
this city
futures a
tent to v

01 another we have to
work tc agether. If we don’t
any world
have
to wor

Even the fact that I’m wearing a
beard, and I look a little bit like
Lenin, and therefore I look like a
radical, even this kind of presentation
does some kind of good, because it
makes people see that not everyone
that has a beard, and not everyone
that looks like Lenin, not everyone
who is for peace, is some kind of
kook, in spite of some of the comments that are coming out of City
Hall and the Democratic headquarters.
If 1 can present myself to people
as an average Joe, who is an honest
human, a democratic, American, with
theological concerns, and make people
see this, , that I have a wife and
four kids, that I'm not carrying a
bomb in my hip pocket, that I don't
advocate the violent overthrow of the
government, then I'll be successful.
People have to judge you on what
you stand for, and not on a bunch
of namby-pamby issues
like the
busing issue in Buffalo, for instance.
This is a non-issue; the real issue
for the city is quality education.
When I speak of a radical, I mean
anyone who sees what is fundament
ally necessary to bring this country
back to its senses, to its basic values.
It is not simply a reform of the institutions now present, but a fundamental change in these institutions.
I have my pessimistic moments and
I have my optimistic moments. I think
the only thing we can call upon people to do is participate more actively
to change in a fundamental way the
institutions of this country, including
the political institutions, and I think
people will respond to this.
—

The

Spectrum: is an independen
campaign, such as yours, outside the
advantageous-

two-party framework,

Cole: I think it's the only way you
can work right now. I say this recog
nizing of course that I may be proven

wrong, but my discovery here in the
local situation Is that the quality of
men who are going into governmen
and

quality

issue

of effort
s

would call fundainterests

of our Western humanitarian values.
I don'4 see how anyone can take seriously parties which do this.
You can’t really recognize the difference between the two parties. We
have lost the real alternative.
The voter goes to the polls not
knowing what the differences between
the tvvo parties are. It's kind of an
atrocious situation because it doesn't
really give the citizen a handle to latch
onto, a cause to rally behind, and
you get increasing apathy and increasing disenchantment with party
politics.

This is certainly true of my (experience in Buffalo. I would say that
two out of every five registered voters
in the city are very turned off by

party politics. This should be some
source of optimism 1 suppose, because it means that third party politics
could build a base from this. But I
don't know if this local instance here
is true of the rest of the country or
not.

Hopefully all sorts of people will
begin to emerge, who will begin to
work on specific problems, and rally
people around specific issues
issues
that are right there in their own backyard: the failure

of landlords

to

re-

place windowpanes, to fix the plumb 1
ing; the failure of the city to pick
up the garbage, the failure of the city
to allow the black man, for example,
to be employed in a fair way in all
the unions in the city.
prob
The Spectrum: Is there a rf
lam In establishing a feeling of mutual
trust, particularly in the black community, where all white men represent
part of the oppressive white power
structure?

Cole: I think a lot of the Afro-Amer
icans think this way, and
t thi
that I blame them, and I re
feelings on this, because I know tha
it has been the case, and is the case,
that The Man really doesn't give a

The Spectrum: Do you think that
the energies being put forth by peo~
pie in efforts such as the "Dump
Johnsoi
directec f at
grass-r

pa

he

I

mentally opposed to the best

could be bet
a nc
radicalism thr
ampaign

fostering

reg 10

tire

issu

ific I
New

exp

i

Cole: The New Politics Conference

some way

one can hit these important

issues

port people whom

to rectif
will be

Cole

mined

will

think that

it

wo

I

Chicago?

his

blem

city

by

i

The Spectrum: Of what significance
was the New Politics conference in

where

,

criticism of policy, programs, especially in local politics. Take the local
Buffalo newspapers, for example,
you get no vigorous criticism of any
of the candidates, you get no vigorous
criticism of City Hall, and very little
attempt to uncover what's going on.
And of course that's because papers
are in business.
In national news media the same
thing is true. There is very little
in-depth criticism of the War, and part
of the reason for that is the fact
thdt the channels of communication
are so well manipulated by the Pentagon.
The Old Left was tied to the labor
movement in this country; and this
group of people have made it. Just
look at the pictures in the press of
the picket lines; these cats are welldressed, They've made it, and when
you've made it, you fit into the commercial system.
The problem with radical politics
today, other than the Vietnam War
protest and the growing dissent and
revolution that's arising ,out of our
nation's ghettoes, is that there's no
real base for a third party or a third
ticket on a nation-wide basis.

in this political focus, using the paraphernalig of traditional politics, that
we're able to bring these issues out
to people. 1 It gives a kind of legitimacy, it gives ai kind of platform

/nferv/ew

self

the t

with

force tf

tie wmdo

And

you

Woody

issues

h

i

Riverside Salem United Church

as we can get. All you have to do,
for example, is look at the way in
which the press handles the news.
Do you see really very much vigorous

1

Herman "Woody" Cole, independent candidate for Councilman-at-Large, is no stranger
to the conditions that plague
the poor. He was raised in
West Virginia, and, following
his studies at the University
of Chicago Divinity School,
worked for some time to alleviate the oppressive living conditions of the poor of that city.
He is currently on the faculty
of the State University College
at Buffalo, and pastor of the

into the local

conirr

Co/e

"peace is a local issue"

our society

In the first place, in this society
re about as close to 1 984

now we

5

�ft

"We, ourselves"
a radical proposal
—

EDITOR'S NOTE: The following article is an
excerpt from a proposal submitted by Mr.
Lane in June 1966 to the White House Conference on Civil Rights, entitled, "We, Ourselves
A program to remedy the social
and economic problems endemic to Negro
communities." The plan has not been implemented because of lack of funds, but the
author's insight into the real problems confronting the black community and his challenging approach to the need for "black
power" remain relevant to the situation in
Buffalo today
16 months of misery and
one riot later.
—

—

By Ambrose Lane

Executive Director,
Community Action Organization
of Erie County
In one sense, the pathfinders have
gone before us. Out of the heartbreaking trials endured heroically by
some of our ancestors, and sanctioned

savagely by others of our ancestors,
we have finally distilled some semblance of a common will to live together as brothers. But the ghostly
legacy of the shameful master-servant,

subject object relationship between
Negro haunts even the
councils of God-fearing men schooled
in the ideals of reason and mercy.
-

White and

For when one examines the fabric of
their pronouncements and programs
with attention, one is saddened to discover a familiar thread of contradiction.

On the one hand, they argue that

recent actions by courts, legislatures,

agencies and bureaus betoken the
advent of "The Great Society" where
"the ideal of true equality is becoming a real and vigorous idea". All

the prestige within the power of the
government to confer and all the dollars in the vaults of Fort Knox will
not command for a Negro the respect
that is due to a human person.

Other approaches have failed
On the other hand, the enlightened and compassionate politicians and
preachers advise us that all is not
well within the ranks of the brethern.
Accordingly, they recommend either
(1) a direct action approach, or (2)
social work approach to the problem.
The direct action approach is best
exemplified by those direct action
programs that begin and end with direct action and have no substantial

relationship to any long-term goals.

The social work appraoch can be
discerned among "professionals” in
old-line agencies who view inhabitants of the ghetto paternalistically;
what they see is a "black blur" com-

posed of psychotics, junkies, whores,
cripples, idiots, clowns, beggars, and
servants, whose needs can be met
by psychoanalysis or contraception, a
night stick or a handout, a lecture or

a pat on the head.

and now i mean the relatively
If we
conscious blacks, who must, like lovers,
insist on, or create, the consciousness of
the others
do not falter in our duty
now, we may be able, handful that we
are, to end the racial nightmare, and
achieve our country, and change the history of the world. If we do not now
dare everything, the fulfillment of the
prophecy, recreated from the Bible in song
by a slave, is upon us:
—

—

God gave Noah the rainbow sign, No more water,
the fire next time!
James Baldwin
—

Pag* 6

Both approaches have failed. Be-

hind each approach lies a basic lack
of faith in the strength, ability, and
resiliency of Negroes. The direct action
approach conceives of the Negro as
a pawn to be manipulated for short-

term inconsequential gains that ad-

vance the few at the expense of the
many. The social working approach
conceives of the Negro as something
less than a person. It views him as
a problem, a threat, or a pet. The
schoolman studies him; the churchman pities him; the bureacrat plans
for him; the conservative fears him;
the liberal admires him
but who
—

challenges him? Who challenges him
to nurture his own God-given strength,

and to direct his own human resources
towards the consummation of a marriage

between

ability and achieve-

ment?
No more half-way measures
The direct action approach and the
social working approach are generally
viewed as the correct antidotes for
the social and economic ills that plague
the citizens of our ghettoes. Among
white leaders and black leaders alike,
one finds a common disposition to
eschew radical alternatives to the system that has thus far prevailed in this
land. Instead they advocate moderate
adjustments within the system. Their
approach results in a doing-for; not a
doing-with. A using; not a sharing.
The terrible premise that underlies
such a philosophy is that American
Negroes are to be regarded as objects. Recognition of the Negro as a
subject, as a human person is essential to any program having as its goal
the establishment of a genuine community.

We all deplore the general condi-

tions and temper of most Negro communities in the United States. But
when it comes to developing a constructive program that would produce
lasting, positive changes in these conditions, we are either found lobbying
for more effort on the part of the
white man, and for more federal funds,

�or we are mute. I reject the tired
half-way measures that imply that my
people are selfish, lazy, childish wards
of the State. And I reject even more
vehemently the apocalyptic counsels
of despair, hate, racism, and rebellion.
In their stead I offer, with all the
earnestness of conviction that a man
can muster, a challenge to my people
to undertake a program of sacrifice
and self-help.
I have entitled this presentation
"We, Ourselves" for two reasons:

(1) because in translation it recalls
the inspiring lesson of those valiant
freedom fighters, the Irish Sinn Fein,
whose revolutionary struggle was ultimately crowned with success; (2)
because it sums up the truth of Father

Thomas Merton's radical but valid
message to white America. Father
Merton says in his "Letters to a
White Liberal" that this is the "Kairos," the providential hour of American history. He bluntly declares that
our social system requires complete
reformation. And further, he stipulates
that this work of reorganization must
be carried out under the inspiration
of the Negro whose providential time
has now arrived and who has received
from God enough light, ardor and spiritual strength to free the white man
in freeing himself from the white
man.

I

The purpose then of the program
am submitting is nothing less than

redemptive.

A radical program
The general program that I advocate has ten constituent parts. It is
recommended for urban areas of high
population density. It relies on local
Negro leadership for its constitution,
direction, and execution. It does not
supplant worthy efforts already being
undertaken by governmental and voluntary groups to combat identifiable
social problems, but neither does it
depend on them. Its reason for being
lies in its faith in the American experience, and its authority rests not
only in the conclusions arrived at by
the behavioral sciences, but also in
the teachings of history and in the
insights gained from encountering the
reality of the American Negro.
The self esteem, self control, and
stability that has characterized other
ethnic groups as they pursued their
place in the sun, stemmed largely from
their internal control of the conditions
that motivate man to recognize, value,
and act in accordance with certain
standards. This group strength was
a necessary antecedent for the political, social, and economic evolution that has attended the emancipation
and assimilation of every minority
group in our culture. Although the
hour is late, we may still develop
the same type of internal group control
of the conditions of daily life among
Negroes, if we establish the following
program.

•

Upgrading of

educational and

marketable skills.
•

Fostering of „the values of ex-

Everything that I have stated as
applying to the American Negro, gen
Ri-ally, applies specifically to the Ne-

cipline

action which I have outlined as ap

Pooling of private resources for
common goals and the establishment
of cooperatives.

propriate

•

Public information facilities to
disseminate throughout the commun•

ity the methods necessary to realisticwith daily conditions of
living.
Systematic and intensive efforts

ally cope
•

on all levels to combat the defeatism
inherent in the negative self-image
of too many Negro persons, groups,
and communities.
A "truth" campaign to combat
the historic evils of racism.
A national committee to coordinate the local efforts of each
urban program.
•

•

This is admittedly a radical program.
If implemented, however, on anything
more than a token scale, I have confidence that it will prove to be a lantern that will light the way for all
of us towards the gates of the true
community envisioned by the framers
of the Constitution, but unhappily still
hidden in the shadows of tomorrow.

to large urban areas, na
tionally, applies equally to the resi-

dents of Buffalo's ghetto. Perhaps
Tucumcari, New Mexico or Bogalusa,
Louisiana would be ideal targets for
testing this program, but I am unfamiliar with these euphonious municipalities. I am a resident of Buffalo,
and my acquaintance with its social
order has been officially recognized
in more than one quarter. Consequently, I hope I will be forgiven if I
propose that which I know best as
the testing area for this program.
I suggest that a non-profit, membership corporation be formed in Buffalo persuant to the laws of the State
of New York for the purposes of:
Providing interest-free loans to
existing businesses within the Negro
Community for renovation, expansion,
or improvement thereof.
Providing interest-free loans or
scholarships to students.
Providing educational, vocational, cultural, and business training programs to the participants.
Providing remedial and pre
school educational training.
Conducting psychological, psy
chiatric, and social counseling ser•

•

•

•

Need able leadership
The need i? for Negro initiative in
the vital areas of pooling money and
thoughtful, intelligent, informed selfdirection. Negroes must assume responsibility for keeping our people
properly informed, for establishing
working planning groups, for pooling
our money and talent, and for developing sufficient political muscle to
assure acceptance and execution of
plans developed by us. Thus, a heavy
unavoidable responsibility lies with

us. And one does not meet that responsibility by pointing to the legitimate responsibilities of others. It is
simply able leadership to direct this
kind of sacrifice. It is a failure of
leadership not to do it.

•

vices.
Promoting knowledge of and
participation in the free enterprise
system among the participants.
Sponsoring moderate and middle-income housing developments.
Providing for the care of destitute, delinquent, abandoned or ne
glected children.
Establishing or maintaining a
hospital, informary, dispensary, clinic,
or home for invalid, convalescent, aged
•

•

•

•

or infirm persons.

Fulfilling any purpose inciden
tal to any of the foregoing.
•

Long-range planning in the fields
of health, employment, politics, education, housing, the arts, commerce and
•

technology.
•

Permanent, financially-stable or-

ganization.
•

Broadening and deepening the
of the Negro com-

economic base
munity

—v«u*

7

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                  <text>&lt;div&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Student Association to bring CIA, Dow Chemical visits postponed;
CIA controversy to open forum University to examine recruitingpolicy
A University forum to discuss academic freedom has
been called by the Student Association. The issue involves
the Placement Services and the presence of the CIA and the
Dow Chemical Company on campus.
In the initial debate, leading
will include David
Watehtel, president of the Committee of Concerned Students and
Michael McKeating, president of
Student Mobilization Committee.
The moderator will then open the
floor to general discussion.
speakers

The issue will be presented in
these questions
Does the presence of exclusion
of such groups as the Dow Chemical Company and the CIA on
•

campus alter the University’s position on academic freedom?
How are placement services
related to the educational goals
of the institution?
•

How and by whom should
this question be resolved?
•

The purpose of the open University forum is to identify and
discussed the probem and propose
a solution according to Student
Association President Stewart

Edelstein.

Officials of the State University of Buffalo have asked job recruiters from the Dow
Chemical Company and the Central Intelligence Agency (ClA) to postpone scheduled visits
to the campus this week.
Affairs. Dr. Siggelkow pointed out that the postponements are only temporary, pending an
examination of the University's overall policy toward the presence of job recruiters on the
campus.
clubs and tear gas were called in
Within the past two weeks, to break up the sit-in.
demonstrations against the New group formed
presence of Dow, a chief
When invitations were withmanufacturer of naplam used drawn Friday, a new group of students
calling themselves the Comin the Vietnam war, have
been held at a number of mittee for Concerned Students
was formed. Claiming that Uniuniversities, including Harversity officials were
vard and the Universities of ed" into cancelling the "blackmailinterviews
Illinois, Wisconsin and Mich- by SDS, the committee said that
the rights of students who wished
igan.
At

Wisconsin, over 71 were injure I when police wielding riot

The Spectrum
State University of New York at Buffalo

Vol

18, No. 15

Tuesday, October 31, 1967

Proposal for restructuring Publications
Board stresses financial independence
A proposal for a financially independent Student Publi
cations Board was submitted Friday by a committee of edi
tors to Stewart Edelstein, president of the Student Associa
tion.
The plan outlining new structure and functions of the board
was formulated by Michael L.
D’Amico, chairman of the committee and editor-in-chief of The
Spectrum, John Hillman, editor
of the Catalyst, Midge Buck, editor-in-chief of the Buffalonian,
Bruce Marsh, editor-in-chief of
the Quadrangle, Wiliam Siemering, assistant coordinator of student activities, and Dugald McLeod, representative of the Graduating Student Association.
Structurally, the Publications
Board, according to the proposal,
would be composed of 11 members. Five undergraduates and
two graduates would be selected
by their respective Associations
from applications.

One permanent position would
be held by The Spectrum as the
dominant publication of the Uni-

versity. The remaining three seats
would be rotated on a yearly
basis among the remaining publi-

cations.
The committee’s proposal calls
for major changes in the function
of the Publications Board. All
member publications would submit their budgets and receive finances from the
Recognition of
the Board would
the name of the

Board.
a publication by
entitle it to use
State University
of New York at Buffalo, an option
to receive finances, access to attorneys and other services of the

Faculty Student Association and
participation in special Publica-

$488,000 needed to rent Bell plant
An estimated $488,000 per year
is needed for the rental of the
Bell Aerosystems, Inc., plant by
the State University of Buffalo.
The plant, located on Elmwood
Ave. and rented from the Western New York Industrial Park,
Inc., has a surface area of 160,000
sq- ft. In the fall of 1968 it will
be used by graduate students for
research work.
An additional sum will also be
needed for the reconstruction
work taking place. When asked
about the high cost of renting
this plant, Vice-President Peter
F. Regan said, “Yes, the rationale
you have to follow is that it is
high. But do we continue with
overcrowding our students and
faculty or do we get some breathing room for ourselves? We are
not in the position to construct
a building right now, so we must

provide the space by rental or
continue our present status of
terrible overcrowding.”

Rental budget

The money for the rental of
the Bell plant originates in thcrental budget for the ’68 ’69 fiscal
year.

Reconstruction such as partitioning, heating, air conditioning,
lighting, and new flooring is now
in the planning stage.
The plant has been rented to
allow graduate students the opportunity to do independent research. The departments themselves will not be moved.
A shuttle bus service is being
planned for the transportation of
students from the Main Street
campus to the plant at 250 Elmwood Ave., between Hertel and
Kenmore Ave.

tion Board activities such as sem
inars. The Publications Board
would also ratify the appointment
of editors of the various publications.

The entire proposal is subject
to vote by the Student Association and the Graduate Student
Association, both

of which will
have to amend their constitutions to include the proposal.

to be interviewed by Dow and the
CIA had been violated. They announced plans to set up a table in
Norton Hall and to picket the
Placement Center.
In response, Dr. Siggelkow's Of
fice issued the folowing statement

"Dissent and differences are
best expressed at a university in
free and open discussion, rather
than through demonstrations. All
members of the university community must continue to share
responsibility for maintaining a
climate in which diverse views
can be expressed freely and with
out harrassment.
re“Intelligent controversy
mains essential to the educational
mission of higher education, and
it would be most unfortunate if
thoughtless actions and emotionaly inspired confict among per
sons holding opposing points of
view physically disrupted the educational program of any university.

“The general welfare of all
must be considered when situations could develop in which potential danger is present. Involved is the greater good to the
greatest number. No university
should allow itself to become a
battleground for conflicting opinions that could loo easily disrupt
its basic educational functions
and subject individuals to possible physical harm.”

"Full and open discussion"
"It is well recognized that seri
ous divergences of opinion among
faculty, students, and administrators exist as to appropriate use of
university placement resources

—Yates

Dean Siggelkow

trys to

clarify the University's
stand

relative to CIA and the Dow
Chemical Company. In view of the
fact that the entire academic
community has not had sufficient

opportunity to resolve this matter
through full and open discussion,
campus interviewing facilities arc
being withheld from CIA and the
Dow Chemical Company for the
time begin. All students who wish
lo he interviewed by these representatives will be notified as to
alternative provisions for conducting the conferences elsewhere.
it is important both to preserve the rights of those who desire to arrange such interviews
through the Placement

office and
still not ignore the deeply felt
concerns of other students relative to current use of on-campus
facilities,”

Clarifies
Dr. Siggelkow clarified his po
sition in a second statement issued Saturday, the text of which
is printed below.

Dr. Siggelkow issues statement
to clarify stand on CIA
Editors note: In an attempt to clarify the administration decisicn to postpone CIA and Dow Chemical Corp. interviews at the University this week,
Dr. Richard A. Siggelkow. Vice President for Student Affairs, issued the following statement Sat-

urday.

This is to amplify our position relative to
C I A. and the Dow Chemical Company, a decision
reached because of our desire to allow immediate
full and open discussion of this matter, as well
as not to place itself in unnecessary jeopardy:
If the time has come in American universities
where differences of opinion are to be resolved
only through force and counter force without respecting the rights of all concerned, we may well
be facing the beginning of the disintegration of
higher education as a positive influence in our
society.

A university worthy of its name should not

allow itself to become a battleground of physical
violence that inevitably would only further in
flame the emotional climate that typifies such
situations. Experiences on other campuses to date
reflect that what occurs elsewhere tends to esca»
late similar situations at other institutions.
Were were informed by those intending to dem
onstrale that they could not at this time guaran
tee peaceful behavior by all who would be involved,
despite our presently defined procedures for peace
ful protest that have been traditionally upheld and
respected on this campus. Any type of "sit-in”
within the relatively limited confines of the place-

ment office also would have precluded the possibility for conducting interviews of all other concerns scheduled for the same period. Some of
those from among the group planning the protest also signed up for interviews, apparently in
the belief that the placement office might attempt to hold duplicate conferences elsewhere.

This was unnecessary, since such clandestine pro-

cedures should have no place within a university

setting.

Academic freedom must still include respect for
the rights and opinions of others. Concern has
been rightly expressed with equal emphasis by
students anil faculty who do not bcjicve that any
minority or majority group should influence on
going programs of the University through force
or threats of force. They point out that through
such actions any given group could determine what
it wants for itself with complete disregard for the
rights of others.
It is vital for the question to be considered immediately so that the University may proceed about
its business unhampered by activities that ad
versely affect its educational purpose or deprive
students of their right to move about freely on the
campus proper.
It is finally appropriate to note that the placement office itself also perceives its own role as
one of educational service, and that this Univer
sity has long recognized the importance and ne-

cessity to provide opportunities through which students can seek appropriate employment upon completion of their formal course work.
October 29

�Pag* Two

If the campus goes 'wet/ LEMAR
Allenhurst wants same
"We want to make it clear to

the community and to the administration that the residents of Allenhurst are mature enough to
handle the responsibility that
goes with the privileges we seek,"
said Allenhurst president Steven
Rice at the house council meeting

Wednesday.

The residents

Tuesday, October 31, 1967

The Spectrum

of

Allenhurst

It was suggested that even if
the campus “went wet,” Allenhurst, by virtue of its unique
position off campus might remain
dry, Vice-president Mark Kubik
answered.

“We are not a West Berlin out
here, even though it seems that
way.

want to show by their actions,
both in the Allenhurst Council’s

rules and resolutions, and in the
individual students’ deportments,
that they are worthy of the University's trust.

Mr Rice said at the meeting
that Allenhurst might have another open house in two weeks,
depending on the success of the
one held Sunday. He added that
there would be no extra buses
for the second open house —a
measure to make it more like visitation. a privilege Allenhurst
residents do have, and wish to
obtain.
The council in other action appointed a committee to draw up
rules preliminary to the passing
of a resolution stating its position on the question of liquor
on campus.

The problem was presented
that if Allenhurst residents were

able to have alcoholic beverages
in their apartments, local residents might complain and force
the University to remove the privilege from “the Hurst.”
New Constitution
The council is now in the process of drawing up a new Allenhurst constitution, one that will
be “easier to operate under and
understand.”
Plans were also made to use
the gym of the Windermere
School one day a week and set
up a weight room. Bus service
to Allenhurst from the campus
Sundays, when no buses run during the afternoon and evening
was also proposed.

pot aside for once

Meditation, Mantra chanting,
and an attempt at spiritual ecstasy have come to Norton Hall.

other participants sat in full lotus
positions during the chanting.

interested

Mystical unity

Thursday night, SUNYAB LE-

MAR head Mike Aldrich demonstrated some techniques of meditation he observed in India, and
led a small group of students in
chanting the “Hare Krishna Mantra,” a Hindu chant used to help
concentrate the mind. He was assisted by Lai Goel, a graduate
fellow from India.

“Meditation does not mean being thoughtful. If you want to
think out your problems, or reminisce over some happiness, do
it some other time. Concentration
on a single point brings you closer to a mystical unity with the
Godhead, the magical forces in
the universe; rational thought
and discourse never will.”

Asked why LEMAR was sponsoring meditations, he replied,
"Because in India, many people
marijuana
turn on with ganja
—before they meditate. Here, of
course, we can’t, because pot is
illegal. But that doesn’t mean we
can’t gain the benefits of meditation itself; and it’s a nice thing
to have going on at a university.

Explaining that such meditation could bring anything from a
state of pleasant relaxation to a
state of religious illumination,
Aldrich emphasized that “the important thing is not to talk about
it, but to do it.” He and several

Noting that he considered the
session “successful enough, for a
first attempt,” Aldrich said that
he would continue to hold occasional meditations in Norton Hall
but “since it is very difficult to
meditate in large groups, anyone

More educational, in many ways,
than anything you’ll learn in the
classroom. Medieval Western universities offered sustenance to
the soul as well as the mind, and
I think we ought to, too.”

-

stands Collar and
shoulders

—

University seeking budget increase;
more space, larger faculty required
“Next year we are seeking an
increase of 20% over this year's
budget total,” said Dr. Peter F.

Regan, executive vice president
of the University, in a recent
Spectrum interview.

aims involved in the planning of
next year’s budget. The first aim
is to increase faculty strength.
There will be 140 new faculty positions and the bulk of the increase of revenue will be used
there.

THE GENTLEMAN S SHIRT

in participating will
have to tell me so ahead of time.”

Dr. Regan discussed University
budget for 1968-69 and its aims
toward providing needed space,
a larger faculty and support of
educational programs.
The present year’s budget,
which amounts to $67 million,
has proven to be inadequate for
satisfying the needs of the University so a 20% increase has
been requested.
The budget is now in the process of being formulated and
when it is completed, it will be
submitted to Albany for review
and modification first by the
State University, and then by the
Division of the Budget and lastly
by the legislature. It will go
into effect April 1.

Three aims
There

are

certain

principal

Dr. Regan commented, “We
plan to keep University enrollment level, at least for next year,
and to catch up in areas in which
we are behind, namely space
and strength of faculty in relation to students. We want to
create a better balance.”

The goal in this direction is to
reduce the student-faculty ratio
from 14.9 to 1 to 13.8 to 1.
A second aim is to provide ad-

ditional space for both the present and future faculty and student body. Dr. Regan claimed.
“We have previously had opportunities to hire faculty but have
not been able to provide them or
the students with adequate space

or equipment.” Through acquisition of rental space this will be
accomplished.

New programs
Another aim mentioned by Dr.

Regan is to secure appropriations
for new programs. Dr. Regan
said, “We are now strenuously
increasing the amount of support

for educational programs. We
are proposing 16 new programs,
14 of which are at the masters
and doctoral level and two of
which are newly organized re-

search programs.”

The present $67 million dollar
budget is comprised of a $45 million dollar operating budget, a
capital budget of $2.3 million,
and related budgets of $20 mil-

lion.
The related budgets are comprised of an allotment of $10 mil-

lion for research and $10 million
for self-sustaining enterprises
such as dormitory activity and
university services.
Appropriations for the seven
individual faculties of the uni-

versity are not proportional to
their size but proportional to

their needs.

Placement Office:Where to go to get that job
Students interested in parttime employment can find a
large number of job openings at
the Placement Office in the basement of Schoellkopf Hall.

The goal of the office, accordto Gene Martel, Assistant

ing

WAR STEAK
$195
Sandwich

to the trim tapered look of today’s astute traditional dresser. Clean-cut body lines . . . the
exclusive Sero full-flared, soft-rolled collar
.
. a seven-button front . . . classic shirtmanship at its finest. Exclusive colours and distinctive stripings
on a host of handsome
fabrics.
—

ALL YOU WANT
(Within

�

�

Dine and Relax in

The Peaceable Kindom
Room at the

AVAILABLE AT

NEWCOMB

BLACKSMITH

ROBB
291 Main Street
Buffalo, New York
-

Potential employers in the Buffalo area were contacted by the

ON BARBER
SHOP

Reason)

U S. CHOICE TOP SIRLOIN

�

Director, is to give each student
interested in a job the chance to
secure one in his major field of
interest. A communications gap
between the office and the students has prevented this, he addmany potential emed, and
ployees remain unaware of the
service and available jobs.

SHOP
“Oldest Steak House in W.f’i.Y.''

1375 DELAWARE AVE.
TT 6-9281

hair styling
razor cutting

custom haircuts
appointment

service
available
located in Basement of Norton
open daily 8 a.m. to 5:45 p.m.
831-3545
—Under New Management—

Placement Office earlier this year
and their response was excellent,
providing the student with a wide
variety of employment opportunities.

Interested art and business
majors can choose from a number
of openings in their field of endeavor, added Mr. Martel, and
also those requesting sales work
and manual labor employment.
There is available work in seventeen additional disciplines.
Most jobs offered by the Placement Office are off-campus, because the few campus jobs made
available are quickly filled by
various means.

�Tuesday,

P»9« Thr#*

The Spectrum

October 31, 1967

Undergraduate law course dateline news, Oct 31
available next semester
of Law and Jurisprudence has arranged an undergraduate course for the first time
during the second semester of
this year. The course, “Introduction to Law and the Legal Process’ (Law 201R) will be conducted by Professor William Greiner.
The new course will cover
“Legal institutions and processes;
law as a system of thought and
behavior, and a frame of order
within which competing claims
are resolved and compromises;
legal reasoning; law as a process
of protecting and facilitating voluntary arrangements; law as a
process of resolving intense social conflicts.”
Four credits will be given and
the class will be held twice a
week tor one hour and 40 minutes.
Although this will be offered
as a Law School course, it is not a
pre-professional one. “It is intended to fill a gap in undergraduate education which has long
been apparent to law teachers
and to the faculty in the liberal
arts, namely, that in the United
States, perhaps the most law dominated and law oriented of nations, the study of law is almost
entirely limited to professional

programs in law schools. We in-

tend to do ouf bit to correct this
oversight and this eouse is the
first step in our efforts,” according to Professor Greiner.

Si
He favors placement of this
course in the sophomore year. In
the past, he has handled it on the
sophomore level and has had reasonably good results. Dr. Wade

J. Newhouse, Jr. Professor of Law
and Associate Dean, claimed that
at that level, it is more of a background course for many of the
social sciences and it is more likely to attract some students who
will go on to the physical and
biological sciences and who might
be less inclined to take the course
during the years when they are
concentrating on their majors.”

Professor Greiner has taught
this course to undergraduates at
the University of Washington. He
has also co-edited a book in which
he describes the function of the
course. This is the book that he
proposes to use.

Wiliiam Greiner
to

teach first undergraduate
law course

According to Dr. William R.
Greiner, “This is a new venture
for the Faculty of Law and Jurisprudence in that it marks our
entry into the field of undergraduate education. The new course
is the first of several which the
Faculty of Law and Jurisprudence intend to offer through the
University College.

Dr. Bennis seeks closer ties between
professional schools and disciplines
Editor’s note: This is the second in a series of exclusive interviews with the provosts of the newly created Faculties.

“The first goal of this new faculty is to develop more
conviviality between research, schools Of professional practice, and among the various disciplines.”
Faculty of Social
Dr. Warren G. Bennis, provost of the
Sciences and Administration, discussed this goal in an interview with The Spectrum.New methods of studying and
solving social problems, plans for
a new degree program, and expansion of the concept of the
School of Business Administration, were also mentioned by the

provost.
Dr. Bennis spoke of the development of a closer, more convivial relationship between the
professional schools of practice
and the disciplines—fields such
as psychology, economics, social
welfare, and business administration.
He calls this goal a “new ecu
menicism.”
Because of the “tension that
exists between theory and practice, and research and real-world
problem solving,” he spoke of
his desire for a “unified concept
or social invention to bring about
more interaction between the
social sciences.” His hope is that
this increased interaction will
help to merge them.

Three themes
The ultimate goal is

to form

a cohesion of the three dominant
themes in the social sciences

humanism, scientific method, and
activism.
Dr. Bennis discussed his view-

point on solving sociological problems, claiming, “I have always
been aware of the little insight
people possess of our own social
processes in history. We really
have to develop more knowledge

about the processes of social science and know more about its

history.”

He thinks the history and sociology department should be
more aware of themselves and
said: “Unless we become more so,
I don’t think we will grow.”

Dr. Bennis spoke of a plan that

He
said: “We want to learn how we
can forecast and predict more
complex and hard to measure
factors. Examples of this are
what kind of social arrangement
are we going to live in in the
future, and what will be the
moral consequences of modern

concerns social forecasting.

scientific methods.”
The plans of a task force to
devise an academic program for

a new doctoral degree in the application of the behavioral sciences were also mentioned by
Dr. Bcnnis.

Full practitioners
The aim of the new program
is to produce graduates who will
become full practitioners of the
behavioral sciences.
In discussion of the School of
Business Administration, Dr. Bennis spoke of plans to expand the
concept of the school of business
to a school of management and
public policy. This is needed because the laws of administration
cut across different institutions,
he said. The school will deal with
many institutions instead of only
dealing with business.

Part of the reason behind this,
according to Dr. Bennis, is that
"young men no longer find business as exciting as they used to
and arc going into different areas
such as those of service. The
peace corps is an example.”
Dr. Warren G. Bennis, Provost
of the Faculty of Social Sciences
and Administration, received his
bachelor's degree at Antioch College and his doctorate in economics and social science at M.I.T.
Me has formerly taught at Boston University, Harvard, M.I.T.,
the Management Development Institution in Lausanne, Switzerland, and the Indian- Institution
of Management in Calcutta, India.

Teacher Corps program explained
The National Teachers Corps
is one answer for the liberal arts
major with no immediate job
prospect.
The greater majority of the recruits are recent graduates with
bachelor’s degrees, usually in the
social sciences. There is also a
limited number of qualified
teachers to form a nucleus.
After a three month training
period, during which a stripend
is provided, the teacher intern

is sent to one of more than 50
cooperating communities. Once
there, he is expected to work
with a career teacher, relieving
part of the workload and also

taking on more ?nd more responsibility.
At the same time, he takes
courses at a partner university
towards a master’s degree, preferably in education. The pay is
$75.00 a month plus $15.00 for

each dependant, and tuition. Mar-

ried couples may apply; only one
spouse need work in the program.

Edwin Tyler, a career consultant to the University Placement
and Career Guidance Service at
the State University of Buffalo
has requested that all interested
seniors contact him so that he
can set up a meeting with an as-

sociate director of the program.
His office is in Hayes Hall; he
may be contacted at 831-4414.

GULFPORT, Miss.—A tornai lo dropped out of a morning rain on
this bustling gulf coast city Mo
injuring as many as 200 others.

OSLO—The Norwegian Nobel Committee decided Monday not
to award a Nobel Peace Prize for 1966 or for 1967.
MOSCOW—The Soviet Union announced today two of its artificial earth satellites had carried out an automatic docking procedure
in space. The Tass news agency said the docking procedure was carried out by artificial satellite Cosmos 188, launched today, and Cosmos 186, launched Oct. 27.
NEW YORK—Senate Majority Leader Earl Brydges said Sunday
the Republicans would seek legislative action to repeal the Blaine
Amendment barring aid to parochial schools if the proposed new
state constitution is defeated.
Brydges said that while he approves repeal of the Blaine Amendment, he is opposed to the document as a whole because of its cost
and other features.

MIDEAST—Damascus Radio reported that four Israeli planes
flew over Syria Monday and that one of them was shot down in a
brief air battle with Syrian planes south of Damascus.
It was the first incident reported on the Israeli-Syrian front in
days although Israeli troops have exchanged fire repeatedly with
Egyptian and Jordanian forces.

Israelis and Arabs clashed in a series of incidents Sunday night
in the Beitshean Valley 20 miles south of the Sea of Galilee, Israeli
officials reported in Damascus. No casualities were reported in one
skirmish but seven Israelis were wounded by grenades in a second.

God is dead in a sense,
says third Fenton lecturer
Dr. Robert Gordis told a ca
parity audience Monday night
that “millions of men and worn
en have lost faith in God” in
the face of “massive- brutality”
and that in this sense God is
dead.

Speaking in the third of the
James Fenton Lecture scries,
the rabbi of Temple Beth-El in
Rockaway Park said the term
God was considered by many
theologians to have “outlived
its use” and should be elimi
nated.
Dr. Gordis claimed that the
dominant religious trend today
was to "minimize concern for
God and maximize concern for
men.” More time should be devoted to “philosophy and not (to)
theology.”

Modern application

The Judaslic ideals from the
Old Testament are finding ap
plications in today’s world, according to Dr. Gordis. There is
a “new involvement of clergymen into the issues and affairs
of our time.” No longer con-

sidering themselves or the Ponliff divine, the bishops feel that
the Pope should share his power
with them. In this way, they
would have more authority to
help mankind.
to
Ur, Gordis also referred
the New Testament as "not a

workable ethic. He said that it
had little concern tor nature,
politics, and welfare of men.
Us “basic concept that man is
evil and can only find salvation through God” does not ap
ply to the modern concept of
religion.

The Christian concept that
“love and sex” should be kept
apart” is also outmoded, he
claimed. “Spiritual love is the
highest form of love,” accord
ing to Christian ideals, while
physical love is the lower form
of the two. Judaism recognizes
only one form of love, that between a man and a women. The

Hebrcwic doctrine therefore,

agrees better with the modern
concept of sex and love than
the Christian doctrine, according to

Dr. Gordis.

Martin Luther King will speak
at Kleinhans; GSA sponsored
Dr. Martin Luther King will ad
dress a State University of Buffalo student convocation Nov. 9.

The convocation is sponsored
by the Graduate Student Association and the Student Association.
Dr. King is the head of the
Southern Christian Leadership
Conference, and was the recipient of the 1964 Nobel Peace
Prize. The address, “The Future
of Integration” will be given at
8 p.m. Nov. 9 in Kleinhans Music
Mall.

Tickets will be distributed only
to graduate students Oct. 30 and
31 in the GSA office, Room 343

Norton Hall. After Nov, 1, tickets will be available to faculty,
staff, and graduate students in
the GSA office.
Tickets will also be available
Oct. 30 and 31 at the Norton Ticket Booth to fee-paying undergraduates. This policy is the result
of a resolution of the Student
Senate proposed by Meryl Markowitz and Andrea Roth. After
Nov. 1, the tickets will be available at the ticket office to everyone.

Martin Luther King
to

address student convocation
Nov. 9

�Pag*

at**

paur

TptcUy, ,Qctqlw,

V. ,1967

So this is victory
Someone hung a sign in the Union Friday: “The
versity has withdrawn its invitation to the C.I.A. and
Chemical Co. to recruit on campus. Victory!”
Victory?

Victory for

horn?

Victory for what cause?

Success by a minority who threatened violence is no
success.
Satisfaction in having prevented any group from coming on a university campus is perverted satisfaction.
Triumph of the cause of a few which potentially denies
the rights of many is no triumph.

■

WENWESmKEM
%NX TaSEW?,

The University chose to postpone the interviews in an
effort to avoid violence. When universities must bend to
the will of minorities which apparently threaten violence,
they are no longer universities.
In the present situation, the decision by the University was a good one. Any effort to avoid turning the campus
into a battleground should be commended.

Any group that would turn this campus into a battle
ground because of a difference of opinion should be con
demned.
Those who gloat over their “victory” have done the
greater harm. No matter how strong their beliefs, no matter
how valid their beliefs, they have no privilege to deny the
rights of others. There are others who have opinions and
beliefs that are just as strong.
Those self-appointed designators of what is or is not
acceptable for the University community are no better than
bigots. Their self-righteous attitudes are dangerous for the
university community.
No one has challenged the right of anyone to dissent,
but when dissent emerges as a threat of violence, it is no
longer of any value. Proponents of that course have no
place in a university.
Their minds are closed and narrow. Their actions are
tainted with deleterious overtones. The value of their views
is substantially decreased.

They are, in fact, worthless in any constructive search
for valid answers to real problems.
Your victory is not so sweet, victors; you have so very
little of which to be proud.

Sub board action questionable
The University Marching Band has been marching
around trying to find out just where they'll get an appropriation.
Sub Board 1 of the Faculty Student Association has
rather arbitrarily decided to fund the Marching Band through
the Educational Recreational Fund. This action is being
challenged by the Graduate Student Association, holding
that the Sub Board is bound to a decision made in May of
this year that states: “Only respective student governments
shall have the power to determine how student fees are
appropriated.”
Since there is every indication that the GSA will not approve spending Educational Recreational funds for the band,
it is clear that the Sub Board should not permit those
funds o be disbursed.
The GSA has a valid argument in urging that the
Marching Band be funded from the Athletic Fee, since the
band is very much tied to the athletics program. The band
is clearly of more use to that department that it is to the
rest of the University.
The Educational Recreational Fund is drawn from Student Activities fees, not Athletics fees. If the football team
would like the band to accompany them to any “away”
games, then the Athletics Department should assume the
expense.
There isn’t enough money in Athletics to pay for the
band? Well, there isn’t enough money in Educational Recreational to pay for the band.
More important, however, is th£ fact that students who
paid their activities fees paid them under the assumption
that those funds would be earmarked for certain student
activities. We seriously question whether or not the Marching Band is one of those activities.
At any rate, there is little doubt that the GSA's objection to disbursement of funds to the band is on solid legal
ground. The money should be withheld until the issue is
resolved.

UTTs MIX

'EM

UPAgnT

Rr

'An eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth, an arm for an arm,
. .where is everybody?
a leg for
..

Readers

the burgher
by Schwab

The Vivarium . . . who knows what goes on inside those crumbling, vine-covered walls? Is it a
meeting place for campus reactionaries or revolutionaries? Does it contain secret documents? Lists
of Feinberg oath signers? Presidents’ memoirs?
Or is it a center for secret research? Vivsection? Has anyone ever heard faint screams originate there? Are campus spies punished within?

These questions have plagued me for two years
until I decided to find out for myself.
It was Friday night 1 &gt;st—the windy One. Was
sitting in the Spectrum office thinking about it
when suddenly I slammed down my fist, grabbed
my coal and started for the Vivarium, prepared
to meet my end, if the need be, to solve the perplexing mystery.

“A mystery is like a glass of beer,” I told myself, fighting the howling wind with every step,
“you’ve got to gel to the bottom of it!”
The campus was as black as could be. Power
lines were down and the lights were out. Only the
fainl glow from my pipe lighted the way. Suddenly a great gust of wind blew the pipe out. And

1 knew I was in trouble.
Was .trembling feverishly when some semblenee of a slimey hand wrapped around my throat.
“I'm in trouble," I said, quickly assessing the
situation before I fainted.
The next thing T remember was a group of
black-shrouded men, looking down on me from a
circular table. I was completely surrounded.
"How do you plead?” they demanded in unison.
What's the charge?” I innocently asked
"This calls for a lower court decision,” observed one of my judges, seizing me as he spoke
and dumping me into an elevator. “Down!" he
called to the operator.
"Where am I?" I asked the elevator operator?
"You’re in the Vivarium” he replied, a menacing lone in his voice.
"And where arc you taking me?" I asked hesitantly, fearing the worst.
"You're not going to relish this,” he roared,
“you're going to meet the BURSAR!!”
I gasped. "Who’d a thunk it?” 1 quipped to myself. After all these years I, a lowly student, would
meet the BURSAR.
The elevator ground to a halt some ten stories
below. The operator grabbed me by the collar and
threw me out. 1 was now in a smaller chamber
than the first. One large desk, some eight feet
off the floor, was the only object in sight. Another
courtroom. I surmised.
My conjecture was reinforced when a wigged,
robed justice materialized at the bench, “Humphh.”
he muttered, “who might you be?"
"A budding journalist," I replied, “come but
to solve the mystery of the Vivarium."
“A journalist?” snorted he. But what’s your
place in the academic hierarchy?”
“Aye, I am but a student,” I plainly admitted.
The justice stared sullenly and then a smile
revrberating with his tremendous laughter. The
laughter subsided finally and the man before me
finally was able to wheeze out, "And I’m the
BURSAll." This was followed again by some five
minutes of resounding belly laughter which broke
into a coughing fif and convulsions.
When the BURSAR finally recovered I asked
him what was so funny.
'Tis not often I am paid a visit by a student.”
he admitted. "Did you pay your fees?” Without
waiting on my reply he grabbed me by the feet,
upended me and shook from my trousers my coins
and wallet, laughing devilishly.
What’s the sense of paying fees?
“

’

writings
Ends justify violent means
To the Editor:
The editorial of Oct. 24, “No Endorsement of
Violence,” is a superb example of the irrelevance
of a not unique ethical opinion: “There is no more
justification for a dissenter assaulting a soldier
than there is for the soldier or policeman clubbing
and battering a protester.” “Justification” for
whom?

The (violent) “activism” of the oppressed and
their sympathizers, and the “clubbing and battering” of the oppressors (for this is what they are),
is equalized by means of an ethic which yields as
its sole content, ignorance of history and men. The
actual violence of the actual military is qualitatively different from the proposed (and, in a very, very
few cases, actual) violence of the oppressed in this
land.

The military relies on violence because it is
the only historically feasible means to maintain the
status quo, which is their sole duty. The radicals
may be violent in an equally instrumental way;
only their goals are different! When one speaks
as if men were “ethical animals,” rather than to
look at what in fact they are doing (i.e., pursuing
goals), will be led to the espousal of platitudes
which serve only to preserve the present inequities
and patterns of violence. Would you equally condemn the slave wno revolts against his “master,”
in order to be more fully human? Would you condemn the Allies for reacting against Hitler with
violence? Would you condemn 1776?
In history, in societies, in fact, violence has
served very different ends. At present, it serves to
keep millions enslaved by the American dollar.
Reason fails. Legislatures fail. Talk fails. We have
learned this lesson well, for we have had the best
teachers. The abstract ethic proposed for our adoption is precisely the one which the oppressors would
have us grasp, for it is in the interest of the continuation of slavery that we do so.
James E. Hansen

The

Spectrum

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every

Tuesday and Friday
during the regular academic
year at the State University of New York at Buffalo,
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Circulation: 15,000.

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Represented for national advertising by National Educational Advertising Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave.,
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policy

�Questions pre-registration

■

Th'» Sp»et f drti

Tuesday, October 31‘ -m7

the sham

By Interlandi

BELOW OLYMPUS

The dove

To the Editor:
Once again Pre-Registration is upon us and the
bureaucracy of the Administration must be congratulated for devising their new system. It is inconceivable that they could have formulated a more

P&gt;b*'Fiv*

by Martin Guggenhaim

i

‘We will match your capacity to inflict suffering
our capacity to endure suffering. We will meet
your physical force will soul force." These are the
words of Mahatma Gandhi, perhaps the greatest
proponent of passive resistence. Civil disobedience
as preached and practiced by Gandhi has never been
established in tins country. Dr. King, has attempted
this in the South, but he in many instances has
been backed by the threat of force from the Fed-

days when a student could pick up a book with the
schedule of courses listed and choose his courses

I

at his “leisure” and in turn hand in his cards.

This practical system has been replaced by chaos.

*

Now the student must fight through seven hundred

students simultaneously to look at the ONE Master
Board. Advocates of this new system will quickly
tell me that there are boards in the dorms. However, if you do not live in the dorms you just have
to suffer with the one board.
Not only is the administration unwilling to provide schedule books but they have also decided
against placing clear plastic covers on the master
schedule. Without this extra expense of clear plastic covering any clown can take a red pencil and
“cancel” a course, and who is going to know that
this course is actually available but was crossed
out as a joke. You might question who would pull
such a stunt but I know for a fact that the above
mentioned situation has happened.

I*

ill

eral Government.

;1

Certainly the Mobilization last week cannot be

termed anything but violent, in the Gandhian sense.
The ostensible intent of the demonstration was to

a
i

SSK
WOK'f 6°1

In parting I would like to know why last years’
system was replaced with this new system when
last year’s system proved to be successful.
Mel Levi

The garbage and the marchers
To the Editor:

Mondays are usually difficult days to cope with
in our Great Society, but any day becomes exceedingly more difficult as we are bombarded by onesided news releases.
The 8 a.m. Monday morning editorial on one of
our local stations did a splendid job of comparing
the Peace Marchers to the “bad guys” of the aggressive communistic side. The “editor” subtly suggested that what the marchers could' not accomplish Saturday, the Russians (any good Communist
for that matter) can accomplish.

Counter Picket)

the gadfly

Regardless of the nebulous approach of the edi-

by Mark

tor, it was to be

assumed by his audience that Saturday’s activities were at least colored unAmerican or, for that matter, communistic. Maybe the

point of view of one small station is not important,
or is it? On that same station, 12 hours later, during an evening news broadcast, our Vice President
capped off the day by criticizing those people who
gathered around the Pentagon Mall for leaving litter in the area which was eventually picked up by

“draftees.”

Some of us might begin to wonder about such

great concern over trash and garbage. Humphrey

suggested that the marchers should have been detained (at bayonet point?) so that they could have
cleaned up their own mess. It appears that our government is bent on doing anything these days, even
making garbage collection a national issue (as a
subrogation for the real issue?).

Given that we somehow “fulfill” our commitments in Vietnam, we might also wonder if some
“draftees” will remain behind to pick up the garbage of bones and flesh our government will have
left behind in that country because of our national
dissent of a majority opinion (adding up that population of South Vietnamese partisans supporting the
Viet Cong and all of the North).
One might ask if our action in Vietnam is not,
in fact, analogous to the action taken by the various
organizations on Saturday, Oct, 21, that is, a demonstration of a minority faction. Of course, we cannot come to any reasonably valid conclusions about
either since, it seems, our news media pass out only
that information which supports a minority of nonAmericans (that small group of South Vietnamese
who do not support the Viet Cong) and ‘ignores”
the pleas of another minority, of Americans, by
talking about garbage. Whose garbage belongs to
whom?

Most Americans are concerned with our present “supporting action” in Vietnam. If the action
in Vietnam is as justifiable as we are led to believe,
why then can we not receive, over a controlled news
media, sufficient information that it is, in fact, justifiable? Mr. Vice President, et al., let’s stop talking
(about) garbage. Tell us what really has convinced
you. It might convince some of us. Or would it?
A Veteran

be brief. Letters should not exceed
300 words. All letters must be signed and the address
and telephone number of the writer must be included. Positive verification of authorship will be made
before a letter is printed.
Letters will be kept in strict confidence.
The Spectrum will use initials or pen name, it
requested. But anonymous letters are never used.
The Spectrum reserves the right to edit or delete
materia] submitted for publication, but the intent of
letters will not be changed.
Writers; Please

Schneider

An important, if premature, announcement: Among
the approximately 2000 persons who returned draft cards
to the government last week, zero arrests have been made.
The director of the Washington area draft boards says that
he doesn’t wish to make an issue; the FBI is busy investigating, but toward no apparent end, all the New England
students involved in the Resistance.
Two people from Buffalo State recently became resistors and more are teetering on the brink in numbers there
is strength
The Justice Department is unwilling to prosecute; draft boards
are hesitant to reclassify for they
are afraid of a massive uprising

and don’t want to make martyrs.
The Diabolical Draft, that great
Freudian father figure with its
bald WASP directors, neat, rigid
classifications and grandma clerks
can come tumbling down like
Jericho if enough men blow their
horns and say “No".
Every schoolboy who learns
about John Peter Zenger sometimes imagines himself in the
same underdog role of fighting
for freedom of the press against
a tyrannical, if boobyheaded,
King. Since the first amendment,
Americas dilemma has come full
circle from pre-Revolutionary
days: our journalists have legal
freedom to report everything honestly and don’t, or can’t. There
are two sorts of repression at
work, one more ominous than

the other.
The first, simplest sort is that
practiced by the Conservative Establishment from Time magazine
to The Buffalo Evening News.
Tied to officialdom, these journals can always give us a report
from a high-ranking general or
corporation executive but never
an interview with a Vietnamese

peasant. The difficulties peace
candidate Woody Cole has had
in getting accurate, or any, coverage in the local media is a
prime example of the Establishment’s refusal to print controversial material. Other than silence,

a favorite technique is to lie. But
these transgressions are flagrant
and constant and as such are not
too dangerous.
The liberal, more professional

Establishment threatens the truth
with accurate but incomplete information and its editorial lack
of courage. It is first disheartening and finally sinister that
valuable information found in
non-Establishment journals like
The Nation, New Republic, Ramparts or National Guardian seldom finds its way into the Times
or CBS News.
For example the news of systematic persecution of Victna
mese civilians in villages like Ben
Sue, Phu Li or Vinh must trickle
back via the left-wing journals.
Anyone who spent the night on
the Pentagon steps last week must
be shocked at the media's failure
to report the beating of peaceful protesters by Federal marshalls and troops. And why didn’t
anybody print the recent NLF
program?

Personally, I find most distressing the inability of Establishment editorialists to view their
facts in perspective. Charles Collingwood recently presented an
informative television show on
the military part of the war, but
he tacitly accepted that our massive American presence was jus-

tified. James Reston is emergas a pious fool who condemns
the war and any attempt at stopping it, too. Poor Zenger. Was
it all for naught?

ing

the United States.
The implied intent of the demonstration however had overtones which I believe should be elaborated. Some people brought flags of the North
Vietnamese; some wanted to fight with soldiers,
some wanted to physically storm the Pentagon for
reasons yet to be articulated to me.
In our aspiration for peace, non violence must
be our method. Were fifty thousand people to have
sat in front of the Pentagon and done no more,
the Government would have had more difficulty
than that which resulted from the few hundred
people who tried to storm the building. And at a
less harmful price!
It must be realized that non violence entails a
willingness to suffer and sacrifice, perhaps more so
than an immediate physical act of force. Non-violence should and must, I believe, serve as a moral
force in winning to our side the consciences of the
masses.
Perhaps the most positive event to come from
the demonstration was the action of two military
police. In full view of their fellow soldiers, they
took off their belts, dropped their guns and crossed
over to our side.
A second incident is also exemplary of a victory without strength. There was a wall around the
Pentagon and people were forbidden to be on it.
A particular young man decided to just sit there
in tpite of the rule. A Military Policeman soon came
over to him and clubbed him so that he would
leave. But the boy remained. No matter what the
soldier did, the boy sat there, finally causing the
soldier to leave. Then, hundreds of people began
to sit on that wall.
It isn’t easy to determine the best way to obtain results. But it is necessary to consider this
problem. When people become involved in social
movements, they often lose their perspective. It
is easy, too easy, to physically attack a soldier standing in front of you. But consider why you are doing
this.
Try to determine who the enemy is, and then
try to decide the proper way to defeat him. Keep
in mind the thought that if a true social revolution is desired, then the masses are going to have
to become involved.
Youths fail at times to realize consequences of
events. As a symbolic act, civil disobedience can be
most effective and important. As self-gratifying results, however they can be most harmful. When we
consider ourselves too much, we forget that we
represent a cause, and when we do this, we fail to
succeed. A physical assault on the Pentagon is not
symbolic. It is very real.
It may precipitate a result which was not even
considered by the demonstrators. If this is so, then
we need to think more seriously on the subject.
Non-violence is our only alternative to a full-

scale revolution in this country. And I’m scared,
very scared, of a revolution. To the more militant
of us, I quote the Biblical proverb: "All who live
by the sword, shall perish by the sword.”

Quotes in the

news

BOULDER, Colo. —Colorado State Senator David
Hahn, indicating that punishement for drug offenses does not fit the crime:
“Most first offenders in criminal matters don’t
go to jail, but 1 would suspect that first offenders
of drug laws go to jail more often than first offenders on murder charges.”
VATICAN CITY—Patriarch Athenagoras of the
Eastern Orthodox Church, agreeing with Pope
Paul that the ancient split between his church and
the Roman Catholic one could be healed:
“With charity we can rid ourselves of all the
negative elements we inherited from the past,”

The Spectrum's pages for

Editorials

&amp;

Opinions

It is the policy of The Spectrum to report the
news fully and impartially in the news pages,
to express the opinions of the newspaper only
in the editorial pages and to publish all sides
of important controversial issues.
"Without expression, freedom

of

expression it meeninglett."

�The Spectrum

Six

Urban problems seminar
cites downtown Buffalo

ban renewal program: (1) A program that the city has confidence

“We

must

face

the

problem

of the Buffalo ghetto and not
call our city the City of Good
Neighbors
we must face the
problem of water pollution and
not call Buffalo the Queen City
of the Lakes . . . and let’s not
have to call ourselves the city
of Lost Opportunities.”
...

Mr. Max Clarkson spoke of
downtown Buffalo pessimistically
at the second Urban Problems
Seminar, “Downtown and its
problems” Oct. 21 at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery. The
meeting covered topics concern-

ing metropolitan expansion, pro
fessional and managerial active
ties, futures of residential areas,
and city politics.

Downtown Boston improved
A keynote speech was delivered by Mr. Edward Cogue, De-

velopment Administrator for the
Boston Redevelopment Author
ity. He outlined what has been
done in downtown Boston, an
area similar to Buffalo. The Bos
ton project, which is seven years

old, has rehabilitated old residential sections and greatly im
proved the appearance of the
city.
Mr, Cogue fell that Buffalo has
done some good work in urban

development, but that not enough
has been accomplished. He suggested improving downtown Buffalo by centralizing the government buildings and placing the
new university on the waterfront, where it would be a source
of strength to the present eye
sore.

building plans.

transportation new
buildings and belter

stores.

Five points stressed
The conclusion of his address
included a five point index of
necessary components for an or
?

7

—

7

?

?

?

?

Attorney Robert Babcock, consultant to Buffalo’s City Planning
Commission, made comments eon
eerning zoning regulation. He
felt that this was a way to negotiate with, if not prohibit, private business. He noted that (he
present supervision is poor in
that it does not stale clearly the

strictions.

would go up. they would then
stimulate growth and competition, which would bring improve

ments in
apartment

When compared to cities such
as Toronto, Buffalo is a “second rate city” that has * made
many mistakes it must face up to
in the future, he said. In the
future, he added, more planning
will have to be done to solve
the problems at hand.

and that often loo
many exceptions are made, defeating the purpose of the re-

When buildings

The Undergraduate Psychology Association will hold a meeting
for seniors interested in graduate work in psychology Thursday in
room 231 Norton Hall, Dr. Raymond Hunt will speak on career opportunities and graduate schools.

in all high school subjects. There is a special need for tutors in mathematics, reading, science, history, and languages.
fet
The Student Chapter of the American Pharmaceutical Association
by the city designed to make dewill meet on Thursday, at 7:30 p.m. in room G-22 Capen Hall. Dr.
cisions and use private funds; Edwin Neter will speak on “Bacterial Infections Yesterday, Today,
(4) A staff of specialists that are
and Tomorrow.”
The Eastern Orthodox Youth Group will hold a meeting Nov. 5
not politically influenced with
a good salary comparable to what at 7:30 p.m. in room 335 Norton Hall. The guest speaker will be
Reverend Stephen Upson, Ph.D., on the topic “Is Orthodoxy Relevent
a specialist could get in private
A question period and refreshments will follow the talk,
Today?
enterprise; (5J Leadership on the and everyone is invited to attend.
civic and political level—people
The Women's Recreational Association will hold a Halloween
to make final decisions and to party tonight at 8 o’clock in the Clark Gym. Please wear sneakers.
Any girls who are interested in regular horseback riding should attend
boost the project.
a meeting Nov. 2 at 8 p.m, in the Clark Gym.
A memorial meeting for Dr. Ernesto Guevara will be held at
He also encouraged the Uninoon Friday in Room 231, Norton Hall, It is sponsored by the
versity to aid in the improveSocialist Club.
ment of the city as well as the
A forum on Cuba and Revolution in Latin America will be held
downtown area.
at 8 p.m. Thursday in the Fillmore Room. Participants are James
Nelson Goodsell of the Christian Science Monitor, Edward Boorstein,
Panel discussion
author, and State University of Buffalo professors William Harrell
and Albert Michaels.
Mr. Clarkson, Chairman of the

regulations,

Mr. Loguc pointed out that lint
falo does lack the strength it
should have. Me suggested lhal
a national compelilion lie held
to Ret ideas for architecture and

campus releases...

AMERICA’S
GREATEST

and federal government sources;
(3) A special corporation
up

Citizen’s Advisory Committee
on Community Improvement, began a panel discussion, commenting that Buffalo does not have
any of the five points listed hy
Mr. Cogue, with the exception
of possibly some leadership.

A more optimistic viewpoint
was given by the Senior Deputy
Corporation Counsel and Secretary to Mayor Scdila, II. Buswcll
Roberts. Me mentioned that Buffalo is executing a "real live"
project without
rehabilitation
federal aid. Mr. Roberts attributed the success of the projects
accomplished so far to the politi-

cal administration and business
community. For him, "Buffalo is
doing pretty well.’’
?

?—?—?—?

PROGRAM IN THEATRE

EH?

October 31, 1967

“HAMILTON HOUSE”
TROUSERS
$16 TO $25
HUBBARD SLACKS
$10 TO $20
“BREECHES”
PERMANENT PRESS
$7 TO $9

DUPONT*BLENDS INSURE
LONGER WEAR

will discuss Viet,

Spock

cold war tomorrow night
Dr. Benjamin Spock will discuss the Cold War and Vietnam
tomorrow night at the Graduate
Student Convocation.
As co-chairman of The National Committee for a Sane Nuclear
Policy (Sane', Dr. Spock feels
that it is his duty to inform the
people of the dangers of nuclear

contamination.
“Because of the war in Vietnam
I he physical threat to our children by nuclear annihilation is
1000 times as great as all the dangers from the usual children’s
diseases and accidents combined,’

the well known pediatrition said.
Dr. Spock will also discuss to-

morrow night the position of

America in the world and his
plans to correct its weaknesses.

The convocation address will be
given at 8 p.m. in the Fillmore
room. Since the supply of tickets
has already been distributed, the
speech will also be broadcast in
the Haas Lounge, the Conference
Theater and Room 231.
This year’s Convocation is the
fourth annual address. Previous
speakers were Supreme Court
Justice William O. Douglas, Dr.
Linus Pauling and Pierre Salin-

'

i

I

by Barbara Steinberg
Spectrum Staff Reporter

Tuesday,

•

Pag*

ger.

The Convocation is designed to
graduate students into

bring

closer contact.

German novelist Jakov Hind to
visit campus, address students
Jakov Lind, the German writer
who has been cited as the “most
notable short story writer in two
decades," will visit the Stale University of Buffalo campus Wednesday.

At 2 p in. Wednesday, he will
speak to all interested students
of writing in Room 233 Norton
Hall. Then at 4 p.m. in Room
147 Diefendorf he will read se#

x

—

w

lections from his novel, Ergo,
which will be published this week
by Random House.
Mr. Lind’s previous works, especially “Soul of Wood,” describe from firsthand experience
the “mind defying horror,” as
he said, of the Nazi regime. Born
in Vienna, Austria in 1927, his
parents were deported and murdered by the Germans after the
Austrian Anschluss.

■

Headquarters for Good
College Clothing

A MODERN FARCE RV

HENRY LIVINGS

November 9-10-11 12

8:30 P.M.
Baird Hall

Student Tickets 50c
Norton Union Box Office

RIVERSIDE MEN'S SHOP
Tonawanda Street, corner Ontario
Buffalo, New York 14207

FEATURING BLENDS WITH

DACRON 5

POLYESTER
DuPont

registered trade mark

�Tuesday, October 31, 1967

Shakespeare
in concert
UUAB and Departments of English and Music with the support
of the New York State Council
on the Arts will present The
Metropolitan Opera Studio Ensemble in “Shakespeare in Opera and Songs” Saturday.
Featuring Karen Altman, soprano, the ensemble’s program
will include selections from the
operas “Romeo and Juliet,” “Merry Wives of Windsor,” “Otello”

Pag# S*v»n

The Spectrum

If an orderly demonstration

goes

wild

Campus riot procedures outlined
Dogs for Pooping Toms

by Lloyd Sokolow
Spectrum

Staff

According to Eugene Murray,

Reporter

head of campus police, the incident rate of cases of "neening"

In the past few weeks anti-war demonstrations on cam-

presence of the dogs on night
patrol has been made known.
If a demonstration does take
place on campus or within one
mile of its boundaries, the campus policeman can arrest any par-

songs from “As You Like It,” frontations with police.
“The Tempest” and Cole Porter’s
The same thing could happen here.
“Kiss Me Kate,” based on ShakeIf a peaceful demonstration did result in a riot, what
speare’s “Taming of the Shrew."
would
the University’s actions be?
Supporting Miss Altman will be
Karen Wilson, mezzo-soprano, Leo
If this special policeman wishes
The University operates on the
Goeke, tenor, and Jonathan Crom- rule of academic freedom, and to, he can have all the rights of
well, baritone. John Ryan will student demonstrations or other a regular police officer, employaccompany them at the piano.
means of petitioning for redress ing all his powers to carry out
The concert will take place at of grievances are thereby duties and protect his own life.
8:30 p.m. in Butler Auditorium, sanctioned by the administration.
Capen Hall.
Need no training
“Disorderly” demonstrations are
forbidden.
The official role of campus poCannot block doorways
lice is to ‘protect the life and
Disorderly demonstrations are
property of the students and
defined as those which block doorState University property."
ways or where property is damThey also seem to spend a good
aged or destroyed. In such cases
proportion of their time ticketing
of judging were Richard Anuszit is inevitable that the University
misplaced cars.
kiewicz, painter; James Rosati,
administration would act.
To qualify for the job it is
sculpter, and Gordon B. WashThe first move on the part of necessary to pass a civil service
burn, formerly the director of University officials would be
to examination. Previous training is
the Albright-Knox Art Gallery
not required.
request that the students involved
and now the director of Asia
cease the demonstration. If this
Job placement is not based on
House, New York City.
the grade on the civil service
failed, Campus Police would be
called in.
examination, rather it is done on
Prize winners will be announced
Campus Police are more than
a first come, first serve basis.
at the opening of the exhibition.
employees. If a subdivision
Though the campus police may
state
continue
The exhibition will
Law is enof
the
State
Education
not
now carry guns, police dogs
Dec.
through
10.
forced, the campus policeman are used. Dogs are used for night
who normally merely issues parkpatrols and to keep “peeping
ing tickets becomes a ‘peace offitoms” away from the girls’ dorcer.”
mitories.

are

ticipant in it if he is breaking

the law.

The demonstrator is advised of
his constitutional rights and the
arrest proceeds as if it were being
done by regular city police.

Campus policemen may use

"reasonable force” to carry out
arrests, though student demonstrators will probably be held for
punitive action by the University
rather than by city police.
The Buffalo Police Department
may be called to the University
to take the student into custody. Normal judicial proceedings
would follow.
State Police troopers would only
be called in if the Buffalo Police
Department could not handle the
situation.
Non-students can also be dealt
with if they are participating in
a demonstration by another section of the Penal Code which forbids the loitering of non-students
on campus except with written

Art exhibit opens Nov. 6
The 31st Annual Western New
York Art Exhibition will open
Nov. 6 at the Albright-Knox Art
Gallery in Buffalo. The works
were selected from a total of
1328 entries submitted by 491
artists. All artists living in the
eight counties of Western New
York were eligible for the exhi
bition.
Jurors who examined all the
entries during two intensive days

Institute for alcoholism is
proposed for new campus Student reclassified 1-A for turning in
draft card; committee protests action

A New York State Research Institute on Alcoholism
has been proposed for the new State University of Buffalo
campus in Amherst.
One of the students who turned
in his draft card Oct. 18 has been
Governor Rockefeller announced last week that the in- reclassified 1-A “Delinquent” by
stitute will become a part of the Health Sciences Center. his local draft board as a result
It will be operated by the Department of Mental Hygiene in of his act of “willful non-possession" of his Selective Service Regaffiliation with the State University of New York.
istration Certificate.

The institute should become

a national cento for the study

of alcoholism

Smd

its related

problems. In addition it will provide for in-patient and out-pa-

tient care of alcoholics, and for

training of professional workers

in the field.

According to John

JJ. Butler,

director of the Division of Alcoholism for the Mental Hygiene
Department, the operating budget of the institute will reach
“several million dollars per
year.”

"Knowledge inadequate"
In his announcement, the Governor stated:
“There are an estimated 700,000 New Yorkers who suffer
from alcoholism and the knowledge of the causes and effects of
this illness is wholly inadequate.
“The Buffalo area was chosen,
in part, because of the long and
intense interest shown there in
the multiple problems of alcoholism. Erie County has been a
leader in providing a variety of

community services to alleviate
these problems.
. . We must know more
about alcoholism and its victim,
not only his medical condition
but how his life and livelihood
are affected.
“

.

“We must find some way to
halt the rising human and economic costs of this disease.”
State University of Buffalo
President Martin Meyerson said
that the choice of the new campus is a “great step forward for
the state and the Western New
York community.”
"... as the University of Buffalo grows, both in its own programs and in its relationships
with other area agenciej, the interests and potentialities of an
Alcoholism Research Institute
will take on even greater magnitude.”

PLAZA SHOE REPAIR
ONE STOP SERVICE
CENTER
Shoes Repaired While-U-Wait
Laundry &amp; Drycleaning
ONE DAY SERVICE

Larry Faulkner, a full-time
graduate student and PhD candidate in the history department
at the University, has 30 days in
which to appeal the reclassifica-

tion.
The “delinquent" label added
to the classification means that,
following the 30-day appeal period, the individual is placed in a
high priority pool of draft eli-

punitive step against a

fellow
member of the academic com-

sity academic community, we
cannot permit Mr. Faulkner to be
penalized and removed from this
University, because he has performed an act of conscience, a
symbolic act, which many of us
would like to do, but simply don’t

munity.”
Russell Smith, graduate assistant in the modern language de-

partment, stated the purpose of
the committee:
“As members of the UniVer-

have the guts to carry it out.”

BIG JOHN'S
Pizza

&amp;

Subs

Variety of Hot and Cold Sandwiches
Big John's Steak Special

gibles.

A committee of faculty and
graduate students has been
formed to “vigorously protest this

permission.

PASTRAMI
771 Niagara Falls Blvd.

836-4881

******* ese^

e

(

.. s

sfjVv®

w^ov) 5-

a-'vV-e

University Plaza

«£?&gt;*
se^'°

e
.

CONFERENCE
THEATER
Performance Schedule
Thurs. 1, 3, 5, 7, 9
Fri.&amp;Sat. 1,3, 5, 7, 9, 11

%**'

w

co.'*,
,

t

C

i*•“

o-”

■

836-4041

-

v:

�Tuesday, October 31, 1967

Th* Spt'ctrom

Pag* Eight

fall-parent

weekend

—Yatas

Parents
informed

Siggelkow tells parents
'how it is' at Sunday brunch.
Dean

Altoaether
dismal
*

A dismally attended rugby
game attracted principally a

few spectators from opponent
St. Catharines on dismal Saturday.

�Tuesday,

October 31. 1W,

Tha Spectrum

Bad luck: Baby Bulls
drop one to the Navy

the spectrum of

s ports

by Roach N. Mantis

Bulls go down to Holy Cross 38-25;
hopes lor Lambert trophy shattered
by Danny Edelman
Spectrum Staff Reporter

WORCESTER, Mass—The State University of Buffalo

football team’s three game winning streak and its ambitious

Pag* Nin*

O’Neil didn’t want to let this opportunity go, as he hit his favorite receive Vrionis with a 15yard scoring pass. This ended the
Crusaders’ scoring for the afternoon at 38 points.

Last Friday afternoon was a dismal day for the State
University of Buffalo freshman eleven. The Baby Bulls succumbed to the Navy Plebes 9 to 0 as they fell victim to a
large amount of bad luck.
The Navy touchdown was
scored on a broken play. Navy
had the ball, fourth down and
26 yards to go on the Buffalo 28
yard line. While being pursued
heavily, the Navy quarterback
threw a desparation pass which
was caught in the end zone for
their one and only touchdown.

hopes for a high Lambert Trophy ranking were ended Sat
urday as Holy Cross defeated the Bulls 38-25 before 12,021
The final score of the game ocA major factor in the game was
enthusiastic fans in a wide open offensive show.
curred late in the fourth quarter. the wind. The Bulls' passing atDennis Mason was now at quarwhich is usually the highGoing into the game, the Bulls ranked number nine in terback for the Bulls, replacing tack.
ppinl of their offense, was severethe balloting for the Lambert Trophy, which is awarded Murtha. He directed a 43-yard ly hampered by the strong predrive which was capped off by vailing currents. The windblown
annually to the top major college team in the East.
:

The Bulls won the battle of statistics. They ran 88 offensive
plays from scrimmage as compared to 69 by Holy Cross. But
in the all important department
of turnovers, the Bulls had three
passes intercepted and two fumbles recovered by the opposition
while the Crusaders had only two
fumbles lost.

69 yard drive
The

k

Crusaders

scored

first.

t

falo 26. This 37-yard pass set up
the Crusaders' third touchdown
which was scored on a fourth
down pass from O’Neil to Vrionis.
Down ten points instead of three,
the Bulls spent the rest of the
afternoon trying to make up this
deficit without success.
The breaks now began to turn
against the Bulls, Deep in the
Bulls’ territory, a pass intended

for halfback Pat Patterson
bounced off his hands into the
arms of Holy Cross defensive
halfback Bob Kurcz who carried
the bal to the Buffalo two-yard
line. On the next play from scrimmage O’Neil kept the ball and
went in for the score, giving the
Crusaders a 28-11 lead near the
end of the first half.
A final drive by the Bulls just
was
squelched by Kurcz again with
his second interception of a Mur-

before the first half ended

tha pass.

Repeat story

Rick Wells
picks up 77 yards in five

re-

ceptions during game against

Holy Cross
Southpaw quarterback Phil O’Neil
drove his 69 yards down the field
with the score coming on a fourth
down pass to the split end Bob
Neary. The point after was good
and Holy Cross led 7-0.
Doc Urich’s boys got off and
winging when linebacker Jim
Mosher recovered a Crusaders
fumble at the Buffalo 42. Quarterback Mick Murtha relied on
the ground attack to move to the
Holy Cross 7 yard line where Bob

Embow kicked his fourth field
goal of the season (a Bull record
tor most field goals in a season)
to make the score 7-3.
In the second quarter} Holy
Cross jumped to a 14-3 lead as
O’Neil led a 63 yard march with
the big play being a 42-yard pass
from O’Neil to his fine tight end

John Vrionis.
The Bulls came back on the
running of Ken Hutkowski and
the pass catching of Paul Lang
highlighting a 56-yard drive with
fullback Lee Jones crashing in
from the one-yard line. A two
point conversion pass from Murtha flanker Rick Wells was good
and the score was 14-11.

Key play

The key play of the game followed Embow’s kick-off, O’Neil
was chased out of the pocket by
three men, but before they got to
him he managed to throw a pass
complete to Vrionis on the Buf-

It looked like a repeat story of
the game the Buis played at the
University of Virginia four weeks
ago as the Bulls came out of the
dressing room with a different at
titude in mind. The Bulls’ pass
rush improved and its secondary
broke up some of O’Neil’s deep
passes. The Bulls outscored the
hosts 14-10 in the second half
just as they outscored Virginia
that day.

Folowing the second half kick.the Bulls took the ball at
their own 30-yard line and went
to the Crusader 15 on the Blue
off,

and White’s best offensive series
of the game. But, unfortunately
for the Buis, Lady Luck was still

out for lunch. Murtha fumbled
the pigskin on the next play,
which was recovered by the Pur
pies’ outstanding defensive lineman Glenn Grieco, and the Bulls’

Jones’ one-yard leap over the opponent’s goal line for the touchdown. A pass from Mason split
end Drankoski was good for the
two point conversion and the final score read 38-25.

passes of our quarterbacks, Perry,
Stiscack, and Shine were often

Offensively, the Bulls were led
by the fine running of Rutkowski,
who averaged six yards every
time he ran with the ball. His
replacement did almost as well,
as Patterson picked up almost
four yards per carry. Tight end
Paul Lang and flankerback Rick
Wells tok receiving honors with
Lang jicking up 88 yards and

It was apparent that the ball
would fall way short of its mark

Wells 74. Each had five receptions for the afternoon.
The Bulls didn’t put out the
exceptional effort that they did
a week ago against Boston College. It’s hard to expect a team
to reach such a high level of play

week after week. The torrential
down pours of last week in Buffalo were certainly not conducive
to football practice and some felt

that the end results of this Holy

Cross game relected that fact.
Nevertheless, this defeat was a
difficult one to be swallowed by
the Bull coaches and players
will get over the psychological
aspects of this defeat in time to
really grind their next foes, Delaware,

into the ground.

Bull sideliners
Jones’ second touchdown was
his ninth of the season. This
brings him up to 156 points in
his career. The career mark of
162 points is held by Lou Cor
riere of the late 1940's—Mick
Murtha is very close to former
Bull QB John Stofa’s career total
yardage record of 2133 yards.
Murtha should break the record
in his next gome—Embow’s field
goal was his fifth of his career,
another career mark.

picked off by the Navy defenders.
The wind was also instrumental
in Navy's last score, a 31 yard
field goal by Ron Bloomberg.

but all of a sudden a large gust
of wind steered the ball through
the uprights for the three points.
The defense, as in the previous
Ithaca game, was outstanding. The
front four, led by Barry Atkinson was again very effective; The
Navy defense, however, was also
to be commended. Paul Kaplan
and Warren Valencia, two Navy
defensive halfbacks, both intercepted stray Buffalo passes.
One of these was nabbed in the
end zone to crush a closing minute offensive drive.
A few years ago, a Buffalo
frosh team could never hope to
defeat Navy. Now our freshman
football team is in the same class
with Navy, a team which is a
powerhouse in eastern football.
Surely, this is another sign of our
rising to major college status.

Sanford wants more swimmers
Head swimming coach Bill Sanford has just announced that
there is a very definite need for

for becoming a better swimmer
and where else can one improve
himself but in actual competi-

Anyone who knows the basic
strokes is welcome to turn out,

If anyone has the desire to
compete in the freshman meets
this year please contact coach
Sanford in the swimming office
at Clark Gymnasium, He will
gladly teach him the fundamentals of competitive swimming.
Coach Sanford’s campus extension is 2931,

his 1967-68 freshman squad.

even though he has never swum
in competition.
Many of the varsity swimmers
according to coach Sanford, had
never really competed before
coming to the University but always had the desire necessary

tion.

Another UB loss: cross-country
team beaten by Fredonia State
The State University of Buf
falo cross-country team, suffer
ing from an over-crowded eal
cndar and a severe lack of depth
lost to Fredonia

Tuesday.

Jim Hughes of Buffalo led the
4.1 mile race and broke the
course record by 18 seconds in
23:03 minutes. Unfortunately, the
rest of the team didn’t back
him up and Fredonia won, 26 to
29

Inadequate pre-season training

time and the lack of desire by
the members to train regularly
and to win, seem to be the reason for the team’s poor record.
However, not all the blame lies
with the team. Buffalo runs most
meets against schools with one-

tenth

Buffalo’s

undergraduate

male enrollment, yet can’t find
enough runners to make a win-

team every year.
Coach Fisher is confident that
next year’s team will be willing
to work and will want to win.

ning

high and short out of bounds.
This gave the Bulls the ball on
the HC 36-yard line and six plays

Finley bids for support for Athletics;
DiMaggio takes good-will tour to Viet

28-17.

Charles 0. Finley, the despair
of Kansas City is attempting to
put his best foot forward today
in a bid to build up support for
the transplanted Oakland Ath

drive ended.
A few minutes later Buffalo got
their chance to score when allEast linebacker Mike Luzny nearly blocked a punt and forced the
Crusader kicker to kick the ball

later Bull tailback Kenny Rutkowski slammed over right tackle
for the six-pointer. The try for the
two point conversion failed this
time and the score remained

The Crusaders then widened
the gap on an 18-yard field goal
by Dick Kaminski after the Bulls
had stopped a Holy Cross sustained drive. Kaminski also made
good five out of five extra point
conversions.

letics.
“Some of our players are going
to meet the public and let them
know 1 that their support is needed
and that we’ll do all in our power,
to earn their support.” Finley
told a Friday news conference.
He introduced Rick Monday,

Kurci intercepts

Jim Gosger, and Mike Hershberger as the ballplayers who are in
town as ambassadors of good will.
Finley incurred the rath of
many Kansas City fans and was

Crusaders had another
touchdown as a result of
Kurcz’ third interception of the
game. This gave the Purple the
ball on the Bulls’ 31-yard line.

The

easy

denounced

by Senator Symington

of Missouri after the American
League okayed the team’s trans
fer to Oakland earlier this month
During an hour's session with
reporters Friday. Finley said that
the dissension of last August
which shook his club was "over
the dam" and the A's were dedi
cated to winning the pennant as
soon as possible.

Charlie Finley comes up with
some good ideas, too Now that
Joe DiMaggio is a member of the
firm and is going on a good-will
tour to Vietnam along with Pete
Rose, Tony Conigliaro, Jerry Cole
man and Yankee drum beater Bob

Fishel. Finley has ordered 100
Athletics' caps for DiMaggio to
distribute among the GIs.
Our servicemen over there also
arc being sent a gross of autographed baseballs by Commissioner William Eckert plus the
Cardinals’ and Red Sox' world
scries pins which can be attached
to Finley's caps. Can't you see it
now? All those gals in the Saigon
bars wearing Oakland baseball
caps with Cardinal pins attached’
Why not’ A "Let's Go Mets"
decal has been seen pasted on the
base of the Trevi Fountain in
Rome and a Cantonese beauty
wearing a Mels' cap over her ear
in Hong Kong.

�Page Ten

Tuesday, October 31,

The Spectrum

Legalization of marijuana called
unthinkable by Judge Mattina
Judge
Buffalo City
Court
Joseph S. Mattina said Monday
night that legalization of mari-

Judgc Mattina made the comments during a panel discussion
on marijuana at the State Univer-

ately objected.
Judge Mattina
argusaid
ments supporting legalization
of the drug were ‘‘based on pure

old P, Fahringer, said there was
no scientific evidence to support
a ban on the drug.
Mr. Fahringer is defense attorney in a marijuana case involving State University of Buffalo English Professor Leslie A.
Fiedler.

hedonism.” He said proponents
want the legal right to use it
because it gives them pleasure.
“But until some way is found
to measure the effects of marijuana on nerve cells or chromo-

somes, legalization, to me, is un-

thinkable.” he said

Question of

“With what evidence we have
before us, the law that you can't
use it or possess it seems unwarranted,” Fahringer said.

the week

The Student Senate is presently considering a
mandatory student tax to replace the voluntary
student fees. These taxes will be used to support the
different activities on campus. Would you support
this student tax?
You can answer the Spectrum Question of the
Week every Wednesday at the information desk
on the first floor of Norton Hall.
The results of last week’s question of the week
were:
In your opinion
Yes

No
89 7,

87';;

Should instructors take attendance
in class?
2. Should attendance affect your final

1

grade?
597,

3. Should instructors dictate smoking,
eating, and drinking bevarior in
class?

See the LADY WRANGLER'S at

POISC
M IVV
cm
mm

»

.

.

.

1086 Elmwood Ave.
886-0011
Between Bird &amp; Forest

Wresist.

1967

NSA national president endorses

student power

to

obtain demands

EDITOR’S NOTE: The following column is written by Ed Schwartz,

tight for it. That, too, is a student

based on a paper which was used in NSA’s resolution on student power
power this summer.

power may choose to ignore it—even those who have decided not

WASHINGTON (CPS)
The point should be clear—student power means not simply the ability to influence decisions, but the ability to make decisions.

a decision.

to decide have made

—

The days when two students, hand-picked by the administration, could sit on a college-policy committee for
seven months, only to endorse a report having little to do
with student demands, should end. Student power involves
the organizing of all the students, not just the elite; it involves the participation of the students, not just the elite.
The educational premise behind
demands for student power reflects the notion that people
learn through living, through the
process of integrating their
thoughts with their actions,
through testing their values
against those of a community,
through a capacity to act. Education which tells students that
they must prepare to live tells
infants that they learn to walk

by crawling.

College presidents who invoke
legal authority to prove educational theory—‘if you don’t like
it, leave; it’s our decision to
make"—assume that growth is
the ability to accept what the
past has created. Student power
is a medium through which people integrate their own experience with a slice of the past
which seems appropriate, with
their efforts to intensify the relationships between the community within the university.

Let this principle apply—we
who must obey the rule should
make it.

Most don't care
Students should make the rules

governing dormitory hours, boygirl visitation, student unions,

Students, faculty, and administration should co-decide admissions policy (they did it at Swarthmore), overall college policy affecting the community, even areas
like university investments.

They create walls between
their classroom material and their
lives, between their inner and
outer selves. Acquiescence is
boring, even humiliating. Education should be neither.

Student power brings those
changes, and in the latter cases,
it means that the student view
will be taken seriously—that it
will be treated as a view, subject to rational criticism or acceptance, not simply as “the student opinion which must be considered as the student opinion—i.e. the opinion of those lesser
beings in the university.”

Student power is threatening
power now,
but this is understandable. A
student should threaten his administrators outside of class, just
as bright students threaten professors inside of class.

Student power brings change

in the relationships between
groups within the university as
well as change in attitudes between the groups of a university
It renders irrelevant the power
of factions outside a university
who impose external standards
on an internal community
trustees, alumni.
—

Student power should not be
argued on legal grounds. It is not
a legal principle. It is an educational principle. Students who argue for “rights” usually fail to
explore the reasons for rights.
In a university, a right should
spring from a premise of education, not a decision of a court, although the two may coincide.
Student power can suggest a
critique of education.

fees, clubs, nwspapers,
and the like. Faculty and administrators should advise—attempt
to persuade, even. Yet the student should bear the burden of
choice. They should demand the
burden.

Who decides?

Students and faculty should codecide curricular policy.

Most students don’t want student power. They are too tired,
too scared, or too acquiescent to

student

Yet, abdication of responsibility
transferral of authority to
other people inhibits individual
and collective growth. Students
who accept other people’s decisions have diluted their desire
to question, to test themselves,
to become through being.
or

to those who wield

Student power ultimately challenges everyone in the university

—the students who must decide;
the faculty and administrators
who must rethink their own view
of community relations in order

to persuade.

People who say that student
means anarchy imply really that students are rabble who
have no ability to form community and to adhere to decisions
made by community.
power

Student power is not the negation of rules—it is the creation
of a new process for the enactment of rules. Student power is
not the elimination of authority,
it is the development of a democratic standard of authority.
Students who abjure student

power abjure themselves. They
are safe, respectable, but emasculated. Ultimately, they can be
dangerous. Later in life, they
wield power in the way in which
it was wielded upon them—without any standard to govern it
save that of power.

The standard of the university
should encourage a democratic
temperament, not an authoritarian elite. That’s the point of
student power.

—ijls

—

Crest
tfft&amp;n&amp;SAcfU
UNIVERSITY PLAZA

Raymond’s
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Razor Cutting For
the "in group"
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�Tuesday,

October 31, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag*

Resnick charges discrimination CLASSIFIED
against Puerto Ricans by NYS

Free-for-all in

WASHINGTON (UPI)
New
York State Representative Joseph
—

spread” discrimination against
Puerto Ricans in New York State
government agencies.

“It is with a sense of genuine
shock that I have just learned
the kind of example that New
York State, a supposedly liberal
and progressive state, is setting
in this critical area,” Resnick
said Monday.
He said certain state agencies
have engaged in a “pattern of
job bias,” and he accused the
State Employment Service of
collusion” with biased employers.
No investigation

Resnick
gainst

said

discrimination
Puerto Ricans “is also

He said one county, which employes between 130 and 260 persons, has no Puerto Rican workers, although Puerto Ricans inhabit the area "in fairly large
numbers.”

The Ellenvile, N.

Y., lawmaker

cited the New York State Bridge
Authority for allegedly discrim-

"I realized that he has been too
busy chasing rainbows and cruising to the Virgin Islands to concern himself too closely with the
problems of New York State and
its counties." Resnick said.
the governor of

giving “lip service” to the concept of equal job opportunity,
but failing “to back up his words

with effective action.”

discrimination,”

Resnick

115 employes,” he said. “There is not
authority has

one single

Puerto

Rican

em-

ployed by this agency.”

rnnditum

running

1965

tion,
week

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Quoting American essayist Henry David Thoreau’s “Civil Disobedience,” the petition said the
writers would not pay the proposed 10% tax surcharge, and
some would refuse to pay the
23% of their current income taxes earmarked for the Vietnam
war.

In

their petition

the writers

wrong.

at

New

N.

&amp;

the

finest

York,

Con

In the theoretical Nixon John
son race, there wore 4!)', for
Nixon and 45'. for Johnson. Six
por coni wore undecided.

Hi

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In a Rockefeller Johnson race,

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TERM PAPERS 25 cents per pagi
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Rockefeller’s figures were 18.
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Romney's dropped from 24 r; late
in September to 13r; at present

■

According to

the poll,

Gov.

Ronald Reagan of California, who
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now shows

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They said they understand refusal to pay federal income taxes
is punishable by one year imprisonment or a $10,000 fine or
both

They also said they would not
further tax increase designed for war purposes.

If a thousand men were not

n

Weste
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said they believed American involvement in the war "morally

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WE NEiD three or four clean cut, roati
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The poll also indicated that
Nixon and Rockefeller were gainins; support for the GOP nomination, while Romney failed to recover the support he lost follow-

defeat either Republican,

RIDE

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However, the poll also indicated that as of this time, neither Democrat would be able to

WANTED

He said job discrimination
against Puerto Ricans and Negroes “has been one factor in
keeping welfare costs higher than

Mailer, Spock among petitioners
refusing to pay taxes aiding war

Nixon and Nelson A. Rockefeller,

1853.

tact Mr. Fein
tel, 634-2700.

they might

300 writers and editors, including novelist Norman Mailer and
pediatrician Benjamin
Spock,
have sent the federal government
a petition declaring they will not
pay taxes to be used to finance
the war in Vietnam.

PKINCETON. N. J. (UPD—Results of a Gallup poll released
Monday indicate Sen. Robert F.
Kennedy (D., N.-Y.l, would stand
a better chance than President
Johnson in defeating Richard M.

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1959

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Tuesday, October 31, 1967

The Spectrum

Twelve

*

•

world

*

*

focus

mideast
Washington

iondon
united nations

Compiled from our wire services by Madeline Levine

Soviet ships cement Arab relations
today but a new border incident between
Israel and Jordan kept tensions high.
The arrival of the Soviet warships coincided with warnings in both Cairo and

Eight Soviet warships arMIDEAST
rived Friday in Alexandria and Port Said
in a demonstration of solidarity with
Egypt at a crucial time when both Arabs
and Israelis appeared resigned to another
round in the Midcast war.
—

Jerusalem that peace in the Middle East
was far off and with press reports in

Beirut, Lebanon, that Russia would supply

Four ships, two submarines, a command
ship and a Innate docked at Alexandria.
Four other ships arrived in Port Said
where Egyptian missiles were fired last
Saturday to sink I he Israeli destroyer

more missiles to Egypt.

—UPI Telephoto

Modern weapons

Elath.

Egyptian sources in Cairo called the
visit a "good will” one but they expressed
hope that the presence of the Russian
ships only a few miles from Israeli posi
tions along the Suez Canal would deter
any further Israeli "aggression” in the

"There

is information that

had Russian surface-to-air SAM
missiles before start of the June war but
was unable to use them because of a lack
of training and because of the swift advance of the Israeli armies to the bases

Egypt

area.

Fires at the two great Egyptian oil re-

fineries at Suez at the opposite end of the
canal were reported finally extinguished

John's University, which instituted a
in Irish History this semester,
look over 250 volumes on Irish History
presented to the University by the government of Ireland.
course

history

missiles

have been built within a wide electronic
network" in the U.A.R., Al-Anwar said.

Fires extinguished

Irish officials and representatives of St.

Irish

The pro-Egyptian newspaper Al-Anwar
said Egypt would use modern missiles on
land, sea and air in any new clash with
Israel, and it quoted Egyptian sources as
saying Israel expected an Arab missile attack on her cities,

near the Suez Canal.

Britain: 4Let us in or elseV
British political leaders
LONDON
were reported early this week to be considering a series of reprisals
including
military pullout from Europe and recognition of East Germany
if they are denied entrance to the Common Market.
The report, without mentioning sources,
was carried on the front page of the London Daily Express. It was promptly and emphatically denied by the government, but not before it kicked off a
press debate that is expected to bring a
round of speeches in the House of Commons.
The Express story said Prime Minister
Harold Wilson had hinted to French President Charles de Gaulle of a series of ac—

—

—

tions that would be taken
quest for membership in

if Britain’s rethe Common

Market is vetoed.
The actions, according to the story, included:
—Withdrawal of forces from Europe, including the 50,000-man-Army of the Rhine.
—Threntening the four-power status of
Berlin and extending diplomatic recogni-

tion to East Germany.
—Quitting the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization NOTA and perhaps negotiating a new defense pact excluding France
and Germany.
A spokesman for Wilson called the report “absolutely a complete untrue. No
such threats have been made.”

UN charts peace in Mideast
Friday. Security
UNITED NATIONS
Council nations neared agreement on a
United Nations peace drive in the Middle
—

East.

Diplomats pursued tortuous and secret
discussions on the guidelines for peace.
Delegates said that they were close to
an agreement on a draft resolution to put
before the Security Council. But none
would comment on what was likely to
—UPI

Telephoto

Northwestern
queen

Daphne Maxwell, 19, of New York, has
good reason lo flash that bright smile;

she

named Nolhwestern University's Homecoming Queen October 20.
Daphne, a sophomore who is studying
design, is the first Negro ever to be
named Homecoming Queen.

If Rusk resigns

9

was

peace may come

WASHINGTON
The quiet resigna
lion" of Secretary of Slate Dean Husk
could increase chances for negotiations to
end the war in Vietnam, according,to Sen
Eugene J McCarthy.
The Minnesota senator, a member of
President Johnson's own party, injected
a new clement into the continuing debate
over US. Vietnam policy last week with
his call for Rusk
"the hard line man"
—to step down from the post he has held
since 1961.
His demand appeared to presage a broad
new attack on the administration's con
duct of the Vietnam war by dissident
—

—

Democrats.

He

said

Rusk's

resignation

would not only indicate a possible shift
in U.S. foreign policy, thus possibly opening the way to negotiations, but would
also close the “credibility gap."
Top Dems should oppose
McCarthy, who once was considered by
Johnson as a possible vice presidential
running mate in 1964, told an audience
at the University of California at Berkeley
that if Rusk’s resignation was not forth
coming, “top Democrats” should oppose
the President in the 1968 primaries. How

ever,

mind.

be in the document.
The resolution probably will authorize

Secretary General Thant to send a special
representative to the Middle East, under
carefully difined terms of reference, to
seek a permanent peace settlement.
The representative would have to deal
with the problems of Israeli troop withdrawal from Arab territories, the ending
of the Arab state of belligerency against
Israel, the plight of Arab refuges, freedom

of passage for all ships in all international
including the Suez Canal
waterways
and the Gulf of Aquaba
and the future
—

—

of Jerusalem.

Resolution

A draft resolution calling for the admittance of Communist China to the

United Nations and the ouster of Nationalist China from the world body was submitted Friday in the General Assembly.
Eleven nations signed the resolution
which asked the Assembly to recognize
the Peking regime of Mao Tse-tung as
“the only lawful representatives of China
to the United Nations.” It further asked
the Assembly to expel Generalissimo
Chiang Kai-Shek’s Taipei regime.
The resolution was signed by Albania,
Algeria, Cambodia, the Congo Brazzaville,
Cuba, Guinea, Mali, Mauritania, Pakistan.
Romania and Syria.

ho had no particular opponent in

Reagan swipes
California Gov. Ronald Reagan Friday
night took a verbal swipe at the Johnson
administration's great society and called
for "peace through victory" in Vietnam.
Reagan called the great society a “colossal and complete failure."
"I say the time has come to stop being
our brother's keeper and start being our
brother's brother and he'll start keeping
himself," Reagan told a throng of 15,000
at a GOP rally in convention-exposition
center.
The time has come, Reagan said, to return the country to a party that believes
"government is derived from three important words: we the people.”

No intention

Denying any intention of running for
President next year he said he thought
any presidential nominee in 1968 would
be a "peace candidate.”
"The only question is how you're going
to achieve that peace." he said. "I happen
to believe that peace should come through
victory

—UPI Telephoto

Dow
sit-in

Russell Van Dyke, left, a recruiter for
the Dow Chemical Co., manufacturers
of napalm, talks with protestors and
newsmen in the Chemistry Building
at

the University of Illinois.

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                    <text>The Spectrum 0
Vol. 18, No. 14

State University of New York at Buffalo

Reporter describes injury, arrest
during demonstration at Pentagon
EDITORS NOTE: UPI reporter Larry Hatfield happened to be in on two of the highlights of the weekend
Vietnam war protest in Washington, In the following dispatch, he tells what happened to him personally
during the largest war protest in the capital’s history.

WASHINGTON—Washington’s big antiwar demonstration is over and it was a long
weekend for both the demonstrators and the soldiers defending the Pentagon from their
assaults.
It was also a long weekend for reporters
It all really started for me
Saturday when I was clouted
in the back of the head by a
federal marshal’s nightstick
and ended more than 36
hours later stumbling groggily out of a temporary federal detention center in Virginia.

—on

Turnup

Buffalo students
arrested

Military police and U. S. Marshals clash with demonstrators
in Washington, Oct. 22, second
day of the anti-Vietnam protest. Buffalo students were
among those arrested.

Ten Buffab students arrested
in D.C demonstration incidents
Ten persons from the Buffalo
area were arrested at the weekend
anti war demonstrations
in Washington, The . Spectrum
learned Thursday.
-

At least four are students at
the State University of Buffalo.
They are: Geraldine Gissin, a
sophomore from Rochester and
three believed to be freshmen,
Steve Delinger, June License and

John Sanno.

A spokesman for the Dean of
Students Office said that no University action would be taken
against the students.
The arrests in Washington do
not warrant academic penalties,
the spokesman said.

Also arrested was Martin Kane,
a Millard Fillmore College student and a technician at the University Medical School.
Miss License remains in jail

pending a hearing. She refused

bail, and pleaded "not guilty.”
The others pleaded “no contest.”

Mr. Sanno was arrested at least
twice. He is secretary of a
national anti-Vietnam organization called Resistance.

All were arrested at the Pentagon Saturday, except Mr. Kane
who was arrested Sunday. He arrived in Washington too late for
the general demonstrations, and
staged a one-man sit-in on Pentagon grounds.

The last group of Buffalo area
demonstrators arrested was released Tuesday. Bail was provided by the Student Mobilization
Committee, the State University
College at Buffalo SDS and Cole
for Council, a group for the political campaign of Buffalo Couneilman-at-Large for Herman Cole.
Total bail

was about $400.
Fines ranged from $10 to $100.

The clout from the marshal
probably was an accident. It happened during the demonstrators'
frontal assault on the press room
door of the Pentagon. I beat the
crowd to the steps of the Pentagon by a few yards and started
dictating a story on UPI’s outdoor phone. I was hit—but not
injured—as marshals and soldiers
clubbed the demonstrators back
down the cement steps.

Arrest an accident
My arrest also was an accident. It came shortly after midnight Monday morning. This was
when U.S. marshals and military
police moved into the tiny band
of demonstrators left on the
Pentagon’s steps. They were arrested for staying beyond the
midnight deadline spelled out by
the government's demonstration
permit.

I was standing among the 250
demonstrators as they were being
arrested and loaded into closed
vans that used to belong to the
Women’s Army Corps. It was a
very quiet arrest, A federal marshal took my arm lightly, just
above the elbow and asked: “Are
you a walker or a carrier?" Some
of the demonstrators had to be
carried to the line of waiting
vans. Others walked voluntarily.
I answered: “I’m a reporter.

The marshal looked doubtful
—but almost believing—as I
reached for my shirt pocket,
where I was carrying my special
credentials. But as I
did a burly MP sergeant took my
other elbow and the question

Pentagon

Fee collection down

Senate asked to levy student

"The problems that come from
being honest” loomed before the
Student Senate Wednesday as the
first returns on voluntary fee
payment came to light.
Senate President Stewart Edelstein reported that the Student

Association has $51,000 to work
with in the first semester and
has “almost spent $30,000 of that
amount.”
Treasurer Douglas Braun said
that if UUAB, student publications and the Senate carried out
their programs, only $29,000
would be left for the 54 clubs
wieh receive senate funds. This
would represent a 65% cut in
budgets.
A similarly gloomy picture was
presented for athletics, which Mr.
Edelstein predicted “will be in
the red from $75,000 to $100,000”

by the academic year’s end. “The

future of the athletic program is
indeed a question,” he said.

Student tax proposed
Mr. Braun read a resolution
which calls for a student tax to
replace voluntary student fees.
The amount would be determined
jointly by the Executive and
Finance Committees of the Senate and approved by the Senate
body. He will present the proposal at the next Senate session.

Calling the resolution a “dangerous” and “very big issue,” Mr.
Edelstein urged senators to consider the alternatives carefully.
The State University of Buffalo
is the only SUNY institution
plagued by the voluntary fee
system. Other schools have either
arbitrarily made the fee manda-

was settled. They loaded me into

the truck.
Second reporter arrested
They also loaded another reporter, John Burnett of UPI
Audio, into the same van. He
was a few steps behind me and
also was asked whether he was
a walker or carrier.
He answered: “press” and his
marshal replied: “Don’t get
smart.”
There were about 30 of us in
the closed van, including Jerry
Rubin, a protest leader.
After a short wait, the van
travelled what seemd about a
half mile and stopped. We remained there in the stuffy darkness as the demonstrators sorted
out their identities and talked
of various things. Oddly enough,

they didn’t discuss the demonstration. The sweet smell of marijuana added to the van’s closeness.
Then the back doors were
thrown open and we saw we
merely had been moved to
another side of the Pentagon
where a portable booking station had been set up.

Duo booked
We were .taken out for
booking and frisking, then
onto a prison bus. I was
number 601. Burnett was

photos,

loaded
docked
602.

The bus took us to the Occoquan workhouse a District of
Columbia facility that had been

taken over by the Federal Bureau
of Prisons as a detention center
in anticipation of the weekend’s

arrests.

There, an official cut Burnett
out of the crowd after guards
saw our press credentials when
we emptied our pockets. We were
processed anyway, giving medical information, being thumbprinted and having another mug
shot taken.
We were then placed on hard
wooden benches in a back room

of the processing center while
officials contacted Justice Department officials in Washington to
determine what to do with us.
About an hour later, we were
moved to another barren room
—the front end of “dormitory
10”—and allowed to make the
customary one phone call each.

Call bureaus
I called UPI’s Washington
bureau to tell my editor why he
hadn’t heard from me lately. Burnett called the New York bureau
and provided an audio broadcast
report.
Then a prison official, obviously still awaiting instructions, had
us escorted to another dormitory
where we rejoined the demonstrators. It was now five and a
half hours after the midnight
deadline for the end of the demonstration.
During our stay, Burnett and
I talked with our fellow prisoners on what the weekend had

proved.

Their consensus was that the
war effort had suffered at least
a slight setback. Our consensus
was that it was a long weekend.

Then, a little before 7 a,m„

one

of

the

dormitory guards

came to the door and yelled,

"Hatfield and Burnett, come on
and bring your gear.”

As we left, our former fellow
prisoners shouted: “Go back and
tell it like it is.” “Don’t forget
about us." “Thanks for coming,"
The guard turned us over to
two Bureau of Prison officials
who said everything was now
cleared up, there had been a
mistake, charges were being
dropped and everyone was sorry.
They asked about our treatment.
We told them it was fine, which
it was.
Then we were given breakfast,
more apologies from more officials and a ride back to the
Pentagon.

blamed for transfer
of priest protesting draft

tax FBI

lory or have made Do mention of
its voluntary nature.

Debate philosophy
A resolution read, but not formally presented by Barry Tellman called for a suspension of
the Student Association.
A structured self-assessment of
the body followed as each Senator was asked to present his
philosophy of student government.
When the debate was under
way, Mr. Tellman noted that
“everyone is thinking of all the
great things we haven’t done.”
Miss Penny Bergman said the
Senate’s main function is to

“work for the student.”
“Let’s turn over a new leaf
and zap, here we go,” she urged.
Many senators noted apathy on
the part of students as the main
problem facing the Senate.

A Roman Catholic priest who
turned in his draft card to the

Selective Service office downtown in last week’s resistance demonstration has been transferred
from his North Tonawanda teaching post to Toronto.
According to the Rev. Kenneth
Sherman, coordinator of the Clergy and Laymen Concerned About
Vietnam, the FBI pressured the
officials of the Barnabite Fathers
of North America to transfer fhe
Rev. Gian Pietra out of the country.

He said that Father Pietra is

an Italian citizen who has been

in this country for six years.
Father Pietra was hoping to attain his American citizenship
next year.

The Rev. Steven Grancini, pro-

vincial for the Barnabites, confirmed that Father Pietra, who
had taught mathematics at Bishop
Gibbons High School in Tonawanda, was transferred to a parish just outside Toronto.
Charging the FBI with pressuring the order, Rev. Sherman also
noted that "very few parents put
a lot of pressure on the school."
Father Grancini, claiming the
transfer to be an “internal matter” of the order, refused to make
any statements concerning it. The
FBI also declined to comment.
Rev. Sherman said that the
Selective Service sent the draft
card back to Father Pietra before
he left Monday.

�Pag* Two

Th* Spectrum

Friday, Octobar 27, 1967

It's not happening baby' is the plea Pizza to grace the face
from Union Board for new members of dorm decoration winners
an

activities drive at its Execu-

tive Board meeting Tuesday.
A “save union board” table
will be set up outside the Millard
Fillmore Room in Norton Hall
throughout next week. Applications for any Committee can be
obtained at this table. A booklet
entitled “It’s Not Happening,
Baby” will encourage students
to join UUAB committees.
In other action at the meeting,
a motion suggesting that Convocations Committee of the Student Senate be incorporated into the Public Relations Committee of UUAB was passed.
This will be one step in an

effort b:

the UUAB to create

faculty members, provosts

and

budget considerations. The

reso-

quiz the bursar and administra-

students.

tive officials about the funds.

Preventing duplication in the
cultural undertakings of the various academic departments and

Advisor authorized

student government organs and
the UUAB was the intent of a
resolution that calls for sending
a letter to the various bodies encouraging cooperation.

The UUAB decided to send a
formal request to Stewart Edelstein, president of the Student
Association, concerning Student
Association Funds. They wish to
know how many students paid
their fees in order to facilitate

Authorization to the Faculty
Senate to appoint one or more
members that would like to act
as advisors to the UUAB was
also approved at Tuesday’s meeting. It was also decided to send
a letter to Mr. Gdelstein asking
why the Graduate students are
“able to enjoy all the benefits
of undergraduates yet undergraduates are discriminated
against in Graduate Association
activities.”

in a dormitory decoration contest sponsored by the Fall-Parent
Weekend Steering Committee.
Goodyear and Clement entered
the inter-dorm competition,
whose theme was “Two Different
Worlds.”
Goodyear entered a decoration
of two live dancers. One dressed
in the costume of a 1920’s flapper, and the other was a Go-Go

fashioned picture of Mora and
Pop was painted on the inner

1

front doors.

Other solutions proposed

Another proposed solution to

the problem is to keep an alphabetical file of all students who
have appealed tickets. This list
will be made available to all
courts and justices.
In discussing the role of the
Student Judiciary, Robert Weiner,
one of the judges, said that any
rule infraction involving commuter students will be brought immediately before the Judiciary.
Disputes involving at least one
resident student will be brought
before the Inter-Residence Judiciary.
Appeals to its decision may be

See the LADY WRANGLER'S at

POlSfi II IVV
*

1016

Elmwood Ave.
Between Bird I.

.

.

.

886-0011
Foroit

mittee,

each

decoration

girl.

tention, and how it relates to
the theme.” Judges were members of the Fall Weekend Steering Committee and Publicity

Clement entered 2 collages, to
represent the world of parents
and the world of students. Each
was in the shape of a circle.
Beneath the collages was written
the theme, “And Our Two Different Worlds Are One.” An old-

Committee.
As first prize in the contest
Clement dorm residents will take
part in a pizza party. The residents of Goodyear will have a
smaller scale pizza party as second prize.

Wreward.

NSS

filed with the Student Judiciary.

Behavior. Petitions for appeals
are available in the Student Senate office, Room 205 Norton Hall.
Students wishing legal counsel
may have the Court appoint a

third year law student to assist
them. Informal, but legalistic
rights under due process of law
are observed by the courts.
The strictest sentences that the
Student Judiciary hands down
are expulsion, suspension, fines
up to $100 or social probation,
which is the loss of the right to
represent the University on or
off campus.

THE SPECTRUM
printed by

Press, Inc.

ABGOTT &amp; SMITH PRINTING
1381 Kenmore Ave. (at Delaware)
Phone 876-2284

was

judged on the basis of “originality, creativity, how it draws at-

Further appeals are then filed
with the Committee on Student

Partners'

■

Judging took place Monday
night. According to Elaine Bolot,
co-chairman of the Publicity com-

No more review of parking tickets
Students may no longer submit cases involving parking violations to more than one traffic
court. Previously students had
attempted to receive favorable
rulings by having eases reviewed
by more than one court.
But the Student Judiciary has
introduced a rotating system of
courts. Each of the three courts
will have four parking judges
assigned to it. The judges will
periodically be rotated to another
traffic court.

i.

•

The University Union Activi-

First prize

Goodyear and Clement Halls
won first and second prize
respectfully for these dormitory decorations. The Fall-Parent Weekend Committee will
give them pizza parties.
.

�Friday, October 27, 1W7

The'Spectrum

New orientation program, added
interest called for by Senate VP
A new orientation program for
freshmen and transfer students
is needed that will “allow for a
greater amount of expansion and
an immediate awakening in their
participation,” according to Richard Miller, Vice President of the
Student Association.
Mr. Miller feels that “there is
missing from the University an
intellectual attitude and an intellectual climate which the individual students possess. Some
place along the line, there has
been a failure and the resources
for an intellectual climate have
never been tapped.”
Orientation in the past few
years has been good, Mr. Miller
said from a social point of view.
He felt that the social activity
should not be sacrificed, but that
the programs should be changed
and made more meaningful.

Eliminate orientation

One suggestion that has been
implemented on other campuses

proposes to eliminate the actual
three-day freshman orientation
program. This would eliminate
discussion with professors from
one’s prospective major and the
tours of the campus. Replacing

this type of program would be
a full year, or at least one semester of seminars of 20 students
and a leader. “This would immediately expose the student to both

his fellow students and their
ideas,” according to Mr. Miller.
A new program for transfer
student orientation is also under consideration. There will be
a joint committee which will be
a roundtable for student affairs.
The committee will consist of
students who worked on Freshman Orientation, Transfer Student Orientation and the Summer Planning Conference, along
with University College advisors
and other student personnel.
The committee will try to reach
a common outlook on orientation
so that both freshmen orientation
and transfer student orientation
will be fairly similar, with some
adjustments to each group.

Make corrections
Mr. Miller claimed “People
need to have a fresh outlook on
education. This is a good way of
making corrections. If people can
be made aware of the problems
and start seeing things that are

SDS will hold a peaceful sit-in
Monday wherever CIA officials
assemble for purposes of recruiting University students.
SDS is “spear-heading” the proall students concerned
with the issue of University complicity are urged by SDS mem-

test but

“The CIA has no right to
exist," said Carl Kronberg, vice
president of Students for a Democratic Society.
“It contributes to genocide,

Using a producer-consumer analogy, he said “The producer is
the University and the consumer
is the student. If the consumer
makes new demands on the pro-

ducer, the producer would have
to change.”

He added that in some cases,

expectations of students have not
been met by the junior year and
there is a feeling of frustration.
If these expectations can be articulated in the freshman year,
then the students would begin to
look for the things that are most
necessary and most meaningful.
People are needed to work on
a committee for freshman orientation. Interested students may
either speak to Mr. Miller or
leave their names in the Student
Senate office, Room 205 Norton
Hall.

STAMP IT!
I

20, The Spectrum, in
error, stated that the “Greek
Premiere” associated with the
Granada Theater would be held
at the movie “Ulysses.” This
event is planned for the Nov. 2
premiere of “Gone With the
Wind," also to be shown at the
Granada Theater. The proceeds
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SAI60N—South Vietnam today declared a “partial mobilization,''
Ipwering the draft age from 20 to 18 and cutting down on deferments.
Chief of State Nguyen Van Thieu and Premier Nguyen Cao Ky issued
the order designed to increase the nation's military manpower by
60,000 to about 700,000.

NEW YORK—Sen. Jacob K, Javits, R-N.Y., and Mayor John V.
Lindsay Wednesday urged the federal government to make the air
pollution crisis a top priority project before major American cities

become uninhabitable.
UNITED NATIONS—The United Nations Security Council today
sought a long-range peace formula in the Middle East crisis after
unanimounsly approving a stopgap resolution condemning both Israel
and the Arabs for violations of the existing cease fire.
The Big Four powers planned joint private meeting to work out
guidelines for the troubleshooter in the UN is expected to send to
the Mideast.

WASHINGTON—Republican leader Everett M. Dirksen predicted
today that the 1967 civil rights bill will be blocked by a Senate filibuster, but the GOP leader gave no indication how hard he would
right against the legislation. His absolute resistance last year killed
the 1966 civil rights bill.
PRINCETON, N.J.—A Gallup poll released Wednesday reported
the number of Americans opposing the Vietnam war has almost
doubled in the last two years.
A poll in August, 1965, showed 24% of the population opposed
the U.S. involvement in the war, while Wednesday’s poll indicated
46% opposed it.
This massive shift of opinion on the war, the poll said, representing an estimated 25 milion Americans, has been greatest in recent
months. The poll further showed 70% of the population thinks the
Johnson administration has not told the public all it should know
about Vietnam policies.

OLEAN, N.Y.— An escaped convict took refuge in a girls’ dormitory on the campus of St. Bonaventure University today and en
gaged in a shootout with state troopers before he and another escaped prisoner were captured.
Several students were milling about the campus during the
gun fight, police said, but none was hit.
One of the two escapers from the Pennsylvania Correctional
Institution at Camp Hill, Pa., made his way into the dormitory, chased
the girls from the fourth floor and began firing at police below. He
was subdued in the ensuing battle.

suppresses democracy, supports

dictatorships and perpetuates the
US power structure throughout
the world,” continued Mr. Kronberg.

Correction

dateline news, Oct 27

,

wrong and demands that are not
met, then they will start working for changes.”

-

SDS to picket CIA recruiters

rtS* TRnw

“We hope to bring the issue
of University complicity to the
circumspection of students and
the general public. The basic issue is that the University is an
educational institution and should
not serve as a “clearing house
to refer people to the CIA,” he
concluded.
Law enforcement will not be
called on the scene providing the
rights of others are not violated
and the demonstration remains
peaceful and orderly, according
to vice president Siggelkow.

DOKT

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Four

•

Friday, Octabar 27, 1967

Spect rurri

CmimTs college plan praised
The Buffalo Common Council this week passd a resolution expressing approval of a two-year county college in
the Waterfront Redevelopment Area. The need for a community college in Buffalo is finally being recognized.
As was expressed in a Spectrum editorial early this
month, a Buffalo community college could help reconcile
some of the differences that exist between the State University of Buffalo and the community.
It would curb local demands for admission to this University and eventually alleviate many overcrowded conditions.
Idealistically, the community college would primarily
serve Buffalo residents, providing the opportunity for students who might not have been accepted after high school
to transfer to this University after two years in the community college.
The Common Council should be commended for passing
the resolution. Let’s hope the plan is put into effect in the
very near future.

Limit census questions
Every decade about this time the question arises of
how best to conduct the next U. S. Census. A House of Representatives subcommittee is presently considering cutting
back the number of questions to be asked in 1970.
Information seekers are getting out of line these days,
and there is no reason why the government, under the pretense of a census, should invade a citizen’s privacy.
There has been speculation that the Census Bureau
wants to include religious affiliation and citizen’s Social Security number in the next census. At this rate, it’s conceivable that some large computer in Washington could compile a comprehensive file on everyone in the country.
At present, there is a bill before the House Subcommittee on Census and Statistics by Rep. Betts (R., Ohio) which
would limit the questions in the 1970 census to: Name and
address, relationship to head of household, sex, date of birth,
race, marital status, and visitors in home at time of census.
You should write your congressman in support of this bill.
It’s about time we started limiting the informationgathering functions of government. After all, it’s really none
of the government’s business whether or not you share your
bathtub with someone else.

'My parish is the world'
Pitifully few Christians seem dutifuly aware or concerned about the state of things outside their own locale.
The leaders of American Christianity remain relatively
unconcerned about the plight of America’s 20 million Negro
citizens, about the 600 million children in the world undernourished or malnourished, or about the tragic war in
Vietnam.
Throughout America, priests and ministers are content
tending to their small white parishes, while deftly rejecting
involvement in real issues.
Occasionally, someone like Milwaukee’s Fr. Groppi will
appear on the scene to lead a crusade or speak out against
racial injustice.
Occasionally, someone in the heirarchy like Rochester’s
Roman Catholic Bishop Sheen will remind his people of their
assumed responsibilities as Christians.
And just occasionally, someone in the religious community will draw attention to The War that he believes to
be immoral.
A Buffalo priest did that the other day. And because
he realized his Christian obligation, and because he did
something to make other Christians aware of what he
believes to be their obligations, his order promptly transferred him to Toronto.
Fr. Gian F. Pietra, a mathematics teacher at Bishop
Gibbons High School in North Tonawanda, turned-in his
draft card ten days ago.
Pressure by a few parents and others, possibly the FBI,
convinced his superior in the Barnabite order, Fr. Stephen
Grancini, to make the transfer.
The Barnabite fathers are an immigrant community of
priests, and Fr. Pietra is not an American citizen.
The implication is that the FBI might possibly cause
deportation of the Fathers if they did not “take care” of the
rabble rouser in their midst.
To bring such pressures to bear on a religious community is reprehensible.
To bend under such pressure, indefensible.
And where were the Christian leaders of Christian
Buffalo while all this was going on?
If they worried less about what is on the luncheon menu
at the Buffalo Club, and provided more dynamic leadership
for their people, tlfe community and the world would benefit.
John Wesley, the founder of Methodism, was once asked:
“Where is your parish?” His answer was: “My parish is the
world.”

*■*’

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'Mr. Thieu is offering me a bomb-free talking pause How very nice of him.
And Who is Mr. Thieu?'

Readers
writings

Or perhaps...
by Barry Holtzclaw

WASHINGTON—This weekend’s events dra
matically characterize the evolution of the anti
war movement in this country.
Federal troops are no longer being used to
protect demonstrators, they’re being used against

them.
The Pentagon Saturday was a battleground.
Visions of the Storming of the Bastille raced
through the thoughts of observers. And scenes
like that don’t happen in a stable democratic state;
they happen as a result of, in response to, totalitarian controls in periods of social upheaval.
The 35,000 who crossed the barrier illegally
at the Pentagon were acting in civil disobedience,
in a massive denial of legitimacy of the legal authority. It was a statement of dissatisfaction and
contempt such as this capital has never seen.
The march organizers stood at a loudspeaker
platform at one end of the Pentagon, and, as the
first group of the marchers began to arrive, the
loudspeakers waged people to join leaders in a
“constructive probing” of the “hole” in the barrier.

The loudspeaker echoed warnings of the illegality of the act, and urged only those marchers who
had carefully thought out the consequences to go
to the fence at U.S. 1.
Nobody stopped.
The parking lot filled and crowds kept coming,
with no one so much as batting an eyelash. A majority did halt when they arrived at the two small

hils where the small wire and rope fences had
been erected, but many did not. MP’s patroling
the line backed off—it was a big crowd. Neither
the march organizers or the police really expected
so many people to break the barrier. There was
no violence at that time, merely a lot of scrambling, Everybody wanted to be there first.
The size of the mob increased tensions as well
as courage. Many did become violent. They had
been seeing students’ heads beat in all week on
national television, they had sat for four hours
waiting impatiently for the march to begin, listening to speeches saying: “Today is different;
the Movement had become a Resistance.”
What these violents wants to do, in the words
of one red-faced student was: "Get the friggin cops
cops before they get me."
No one could change these kids’ minds. Only,
after heads were cracked and the air became thick
with tear gas, did most of these demonstrators
realize the futility of such action.
The people that remained throughout the night,
suffering severe cold and police harrassment, were
courageous.
The students who resorted to the rock-throwing, spitting, suicidal violence may be judged
wrong. But it is wrong to judge their actions on
the basis of what they hoped to achieve by them.
Their violence was spontaneous; it didn't want
results; like the riots in the ghettos, only this time
performed by white middleclass college students,
the voilence represented the tremendous sense of
frustration and alienation that these people felt.
The issue was not Vietnam, it was not the military,
it was the whole friggin society.
No matter what one's beliefs, Saturday did
happen. It can’t be dismissed as merely another
bunch of nervous nellies. It was a battle. And it
meant something is very, very rotten in the state
of LBJ land.

’

Beer is uncool'
To the Editor:
Some people don’t take school seriously. Many
times I’ve heard students (usually from the liberal
arts faction) say that “school is a farce.” What’s
the matter with these people? Don’t they realize
that a liberal college education is the mark of a
well-rounded individual?

There is so broad a spectrum of experience to
be learned from Descartes, Goethe, Toynebee, B.F.
Skinnr, Kinsley Davis, and even Blake that one
could remain in school the rest of his life and
still lack something. Students should learn something. There are people walking around leading
what appears to be a happy life but who have
never even had a good school experience.
Here in the University, we have professors and
writers who have spent almost their entire lives
in schools and colleges. If we can’t learn something
from this, we are blind fools. When those grumbling students and others just open their eyes, they
will see that it is not school that is a farce.

I am sure that these same people who call
school a farce are in league with those who, without knowledge, dismiss the Union Board by saying,
“It’s bad.” How can anyone be expected to participate in something that’s bad?

Frankly, Norton Union is the greatest place
in the world. Where else but in the Haas Lounge
can you see the hard-working new generation of
Buffalo in a nutshell—and not laugh to yourself
in pride. But I hope they don’t make the campus
“wet,” since all the potheads and hippies—the
truly honest of the University—would then disappear from the Rathskeller because, let me tell
you, beer is really an uncool thing. I know, I go
to the University.

Charles David Chalmers
every
The Spectrum is published twice-weekly
Tuesday and Friday
during the regular academic
year at the State University of New York at Buffalo,
3435 Main Street. Buffalo, New York 14214. Offices
are located at 355 Norton Hall. Circulation: 15,000.
—

—

Editor-in-Chief—MICHAEL L D’AMICO
Managing Editor—RICHARD R. HAYNES
Asst. Managing Editor—RICHARD SCHWAB
Business Manager—SAMUEL A. POWAZEK
Advertising Manager—DAVID E. FOX
Campus
Margaret Anderson
Asst.

;howski
Mi
KozucL
...o.lene
City
Daniel Lasser
Asst.
Lilian Waite
Feature Barry C. Holtzclaw
Asst.
Ronald Ellsworth
Sports
Robert Woodruff

Asst.
W. Scott Behrens
Layout
David L. Sheedy
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Asst.
—.
Copj
-opy
Judi Riyeff
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Photo.
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Promotion &amp; Circulation
Director Murray Richman
....

The Spectrum is a member of the United States StuPress Association and the Associated Collegiate
Press. The Spectrum is.served by: United Press International. Associated Collegiate Press Service, Gannett
News Service, and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate.

dent

Represented for national advertising by National Educational Advertising Service. Inc., 420 Madison Ave.,
New York. N. Y. Republication of all news dispatches
is forbidden wihout the express consent of the
editor-in-chief. Rights of republication of all other
matter herein are also reserved.
Second class postage paid at Buffalo, New York.
Editorial policy is determined by the Editor-in-Chief.

�Friday, October 27, 1M7

The Spectrum

Student proposes library plan

BELOW OLYMPUS

F«g* Five

By Interlandi

To the Editor;
It has come to my attention that many
have become somewhat disconcerted over
selection of reference books in various
the libraries. Books that would seem to be

students
the poor
areas of
valuable

GOP NATIONAL
CAMPAIGN

n

listed in the card catalogue. Some students are
compelled to travel to other libraries in order to
“track down” a book recommended by a professor
or one found in a bibliography. Others do without.
Perhaps this is one explanation for poor quality
research papers which are often evidenced in any

r

No doubt this system would build on the current
deficiencies in those particular areas, bringing the
selection up to a more than “adequate” status. The
system would also give the student the privilege,
satisfaction and encouragement of knowing that
he or she is in some way contributing to the
academic advancement' of the University.
Charles R. Cammarata

n

&amp;

-

by STEESE

also a very real and difficult week for those
of us who wavered about whether or not we should
go. Since it is impossible to tell who is lying and
how many people were really there, the only
thing I can do is note the ratio of people I know
who wanted to go to those who did. Which is very
probably grievously fallacious because of the
biased nature of my sample.
But I would say that there were easily twice
as many of us stay-at-homes as there were people
who did go. The reasons varied tremendously for
not going, just as the anecdotal evidence I have
varies considerably as to why people did go. One
person said it was anger that drove her—she was
mad at being told what she could or could not
do. Then there were any number of others who
probably hoped that this would make a real impact
on the war.

2&amp;a

"But Dick, I know they're saying anybody can beat Johnson in
'68, but they don't really mean 'ANYBODY'."

The Lighter Side

Brown is man of violent means
The letter of Carl Ratner in Oct. 17th’s Spectrum was well put and I agree with him entirely,
but I do believe that he either missed my point or
I did not make it quite clear. I said that I would
not follow H. Rapp Brown on a peace march because he is a violent man. Since my original
letter in The Spectrum, Mr. Brown and those colleagues he was going to bring that were “ready
for any trouble,” were asked to go to the Lincoln
Memorial by other Negro leaders
Martin Luther
King, for one, a peaceful man. I am not saying
that Brown does not have his place in the Negro
revolution, he certainly has! He has an opposing
role to that of Dr. King.

.

It was a rather strange weekend. Last week, as
you may remember, was the week leading

by Dick West

To the Editor:

gFlintp

some of

given course.

As a suggestion, this unfortunate situation may
be alleviated by a system whereby students would
be permitted to order any book they consider
pertinent to their study. No doubt a student researching the same or a similar topic in the future
will find the source useful. The library would
keep on hand a form with a space for the title
and author of the book, publishing company, etc.
as well as a space for the signature of the professor
from whom the course is being taken. The latter
point is offered as a check to prevent a deluge of
unnecessary books which may result. However, I
would prefer that this be treated on an experimental basis, and if found to be unnecessary, discontinued, thereby giving the student full responsibility for the order.

T he

I was in a bookstore the other day looking at some
of the new adult parlor games that will be featured during
the Christmas shopping season.
A few of them are pretty ingenious, including one called
“seduction,” which indicates that adult parlor games are
getting progressively more realistic.

My own personal chicken-shit reason for not
going was that 1 felt very old and very tired.
I was doubtful as to whether or not this was going
to do anything, except allow people to vent their
personal feelings. I had a sense about this march
of the same sort of thing that I get when talking
to a supposed independent who has obviously
already made up his mind whom he is going to
vote for in an election. The battle lines were
sharply and distinctly drawn. For both sides, all
the good was on their side and all their opponents
were bad by definition. There wa,s to be no
dialogue, not even an attempt at a dialogue. The
positions were there, rigid and unyielding—period.
The obvious accusation that there was nothing to
say can of course be leveled at either side.

But examine, if you will, the position this
leaves a natural born wavercr and conciliator like
myself in. I have a firm belief in the fact that
presenting rigid and flat positions gets nobody
anywhere except into a dismal swamp of position
statements which generally have to be retracted
or lied about. On the other foot, I agreed with
the principle of the march completely. The result
was a whole week of consultations by telephone
between various wavering parties about whether
or not we should go, with the principal supporters
and detractors of going changing, it seemed, almost

Children’s parlor games have,
Card 2
‘‘An unauthorized
of course, been that way for years. campaign headquarters is opened hourly.
But none of the games I saw
in your behalf. Advance two
None of which was helped by seeing “Billy
was based on the true-to-life situ- spaces.”
ation that offers the ultimate for
Card 3—"Your name is entered
Liar” in the Conference Theater in Norton on
Saturday night. A film which gets a little too
in a presidential primary without
gamesmanship. So I began tinkering around with the idea on my 'your permission. Advance one close for those of us who lend to find the world
inside
ourselves more attractive than that withown.
space.”
out, it closes with Tom Courtenay unable to carry
“Your name is not
What I finally came up with is
Card 4
through and go off to London with Julie Christie
a game called “non-candidate.”
mentioned on former President
It is different from other games
Eisenhower’s list of players who because of—if you will—the shape he had been
bent into by society's pliers. (Saw the Bob Dylan
all the
are qualified. Go back five
in one marked way
film Friday night at the Circle Art and cannot
players must pretend they aren’t
spaces.”
honestly remember the last time 1 saw movies two
Card 5
“Your name is inreally playing.
nights in a row.)
Although it is too late to get
cluded on former President Eisthe game on the market for
enhower's list of players who are
The ending left some of us wondering, I suspect,
Christmas, if you care to try it qualified. Go back 10 spaces.”
if perhaps our trains had already pulled of some
can
6
“The
latest
poll gives
you
assemble the equipment
Card
station, some time, some place, and that we had
at home. Here are the rules and
you a popularity rating 10 points
so warped by the society in which we exist
been
instructions.
higher than President Johnson’s.
(live being a questionable term in this instance)
Remain in place.”
game
a
The
is played around
that we did not even notice when it pulled out—“You announce that
Card 7
map of the United States. Each
a question which obviously turns neatly back to
although
you
are
not
a
candidate
starts
of
the
player
from one
the march and causes one to look again through
you would accept a genuine draft.
“key" states, which are New
the material at hand to try and find a specific
Lose
next
turn.”
York, California, Michigan and
single real cause.
8
you
Card
"You
announce
Illinois. The object is to capture
will refuse to accept the vice
Miami Beach.
It would not be so bad, at least for me, if I
presidential nomination. Advance could have said it was obvious that 1 was a coward.
The players take turns draw10 spaces.”
Being a coward would be much easier than the
ing cards, which direct their
“You announce you
Card 9
constant recriminations and reexaminations in an
movement about the board.
no longer have the desire to be
effort to find a cause only to end with nothing,
president. Advance 15 spaces.”
Card 1
“One of your old
with a bunch of factors the sum total of which
“You discover you
movies is selected for the late,
Card 10
was unfavorable to the march—which is so frightenlate show on television. Advance
have been brainwashed on Viet
ing because of some of the utter mundaneness of
'go.'
nam
Return
to
policy.
three spaces.”
some of the factors on both sides. Where, oh
where the hell arc the great principles which
should have made this choice easy?
—

—

There are two polar stands (peace and
being justified as to bring about an end.
Brown is the man of violent means and
not follow him in a peace march because

violence)
H. Rapp
I would
of this.

—

—

Brown wants to focus national attention on his
own war. His war also concerns me but should
not be covered up in his calling for peace and
being ready to start his war when he can get the
attention to do so. If he planned to attack the
White House and Pentagon with guns, (are we
forgetting our revolutionary heritage while quelling others?) I’d have different thoughts on following him. But then, maybe he was speaking to me
when he said “Get you some guns.”

I never did say, Mr. Ratner, that his statements
were ridiculous and I am not employing the logic
1 dislike in others.
If it is an anti-war march, let us be marching
as those in favor of a non-agression policy. If we
want war on the warmakers, make war, not a
peace march. Again, if I were to follow an attack
on the Pentagon, I would not march behind Martin
Luther King.
I did not want to follow 2000 useless rioters in
march the same way in which I would not
follow 2000 total doves in an attack. As far as I
was concerned I wanted to go to a peace march
which I am getting a pretty clear idea of it ain’t!
a

peace'

—

—

—

—

—

—

”

Quotes

in the news

-

Is it a black power show or an anti-war march?
That was the question I had in mind. Now that
Mr. Brown will not be leading the march, I hope
that by the time this letter is printed, I will be
back from a peace march in Washington.
Kenneth E, Bress
Writers; Please be brief. Letters should not exceed
300 words. All letters must be signed and the address
and telephone number of the writer must be included. Positive verification of authorship will be made
before a letter is printed.

will be kept in strict confidence.
The Spectrum will use initials or pen name, if
requested. But anonymous letters are never used.
The Spectrum reserves the right to edit or delete
material submitted for publication, but the intent of
letters will not be changed.

Letters

United Press International

WASHINGTON
President Johnson speaking to the annual
meeting of the International Federation of Commercial, Clerical and
Technical Employes just hours after anti-war demonstration ended in
Washington:
“Those who began the war are not willing to explore ways to end
it. They cling stubbornly to the belief that their aggression will be
rewarded by our frustration, our impatience, our unwillingness to
stay the course. It will not be so, ’
—

LOCK HAVEN, Pi.—A friend and coworker of Leo Held, the man
who Monday shot six persons to death and seriously wounded six
others:
“He knew how to handle his guns. He hunted whatever was in
season. Today it was people.”
CHICAGO—Dr. Norman Green, school superintendent in the
Chicago suburb of Maywood, in announcing, a get-tough stand on

school racial disorders:
“We are not fooling around with any student, white or Negro.”

I was damned sure I was not interested in
pushing a hardboilcd egg from the Buffalo State
campus to down town Buffalo for the United Fund,
and I was equally sure that I was not going to fly a
flag or leave my lights on in the daytime to support
the war. But there was no such certainty anywhere
else in the world, no explanation of why I was
not in a car or bus headed for Washington.

No explanation has yet been kind enough to
raise its head and volunteer for active duty. I am
still in a quandary. I am very frankly a little bit
scared. I can't tell at this point whether I did not
go to Washington because of conflicting and confused principles or because of the lack of any at
all. It is obvious that both are explanations of a
type hard to refute at this point and which I
can only answer for myself eventually, when enough
time has passed to give some sort of perspective,
and I can stop fighting myself over the issue at
least somewhat and take a look at it.
Run as a public service announcement for all
members of Confusion, Unlimited.

�p«*0

«»

Tho Spicfru m

«°

UUAB lists budget cuts made by Finance Committee
To tho Editor:
In the face of Mr. Braun's irresponsible misrepresentations (Readers’ Writings, Oct. 24) I feel
compelled to mention the facts which he continues
to ignore in his smokescreen manner.
In addition to the list which Mr. Braun’s letter
la pi
Committee: (1) A touring
Subsidy for a proposed coffee house on campus
and (3) The number of mixers and game hours.
In addition, Mr. Braun fails to note that I have
told him countless times that the major costs for
Art Exhibits are transportation and guarding costs.
In addition, Mr. Braun fails to note that his
cutting didn’t even start till UUAB limited its
request severely at his request because of financial
shortages.
In addition, Mr. Braun attempted to cut another
$7000 from UUAB budget which would have further
paralysed the Film Committee, Music Committee,
Publications Committee (the calendar) etc., ad

nauseum.
It was only through the efforts of such responsible Senators as Mr. Slatkin, Mr. Berger and
Mr. Tellman that this irresponsible damage sponsored by Mr. Braun did not occur.
In addition, there is the matter of flexibility
to be considered. In past years UUAB was able
to respond to student requests through use of
reserve uncommitted money. It has apparently
been Mr. Braun’s policy to allocate all the money
line by line now at the beginning of the year when
it is impossible to know what opportunities will
present themselves. Due to this policy of Mr.
Braun's many fine programs will not be initiated
later in the year.
It was my criticism of Mr. Braun that apparently

led him to state that I would arrogantly misuse
student appropriated money. Since I have never
stated that I would misuse student money (nor
could I conceive myself doing so) I feel particularly
annoyed that a person making such unfounded and
irresponsible statements should be found in such
I clearly pointed

out to Mr. Braun

that

1947’

ATTENTION CAMERA BUFFS!
SPECTOR'S CAMERA SERVICE will hold an instore demonstration on Monday October 30th
from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.

uuab

budget has never before been under Senate (which
is true), and that a no-reserve line by line budget
(committing every cent of money to a specific
activity) would be detrimental to student interests.
1 would further add that I consider UUAB,
which is not only a service group for the whole
student body, but also a branch of student government, different from “all the other clubs.” Somehow it would not seem contrary to Mr. Braun’s
nature to want to put UUAB under his “power”
as all the other clubs are (as it never was before

this

Friday, October 27,

'

year).

Finally, to Mr. Braun’s repetitive claims of no
money, I ask him why he has never considered
cutting the money paid to himself and other Senate
officers before cutting students’ activities. It seems
that certain “necessary” expenditures have never

been reviewed.

In answer to many questions asked of me, I
would like to add that I hope serious-minded people
do not let these unfortunate circumstances that
exist keep them from paying their fees. I will

pay mine. Without fees, activities will be harmed
much more badly than even all of Mr. Braun’s
ineptitudes. I ask instead that people take an
interest in their student government so that represenation and activities are left in the hands
of responsible people.
Harold Bob, 2nd V.P. UUAB

the Karl Heitz Co. will be demonstrating the varied
aspects of
.

.

.

� The

ALPA
SYSTEM

�

THE TESSINA
the only 35

millimeter
minature camera
REFRESHMENTS
WILL BE SERVED

ERECTOR'S
Camera

Repair Service

&amp;

3041 BAILEY AVENUE
DATE ARRIVING LATE TONIGHT?

Student tax 'would create

a

much more serious problem'
these activities, why pay for them if one cannot

To the Editor:

participate?
Really sir! A student tax?! In the Oct. 20 issue
of The Spectrum, there appeared a “solution" to
the lack of funds. In order to make any attempt to
solve a problem, we must first know what the
problem is and its probable causes.
The problem
lack of funds. The probable
cause—students not paying their voluntary fees.
The reasons for not paying could be one or more
of the following: (a) no money; (b) on probationary
status; (c) disinterest in University affairs; or (d)
exercising personal dcfinance of the system.
First let’s consider point (a) no money. The
grand total for this fee is $30. If a student is financially able to afford living in the dormitory
or in an apartment, drive a car, buy textbooks,
join fraternities or sororities and maintain a normal social life, the chances are that he or she can
afford the $30. However, if there is a lack of funds,
certainly the student should not be criticized nonpayment.
Secondly, we shall consider point (b), probationary status. A student at this University failing
to maintain a “C” average is placed on probation.
As such, he is excluded from participating in any
student activities. Since the student fees cover
—

Third is disinterest in University affairs. If a
a student is willing and able to participate in the
many varied activities of the University, he would
be more than willing to participate in the paying of
theshc fees. However, if one is uninterested, why
pay for them?
Forth is point (d), exercising personal defiance
of the esystem. It is human nature to rebel and
to question. If we weren’t allowed to do so, it
would be impossible to live in this society. Many
students may withhold their funds believing that
here is a chance to hurt society. Others may do so
hoping to curtail certain activities opposing their
political views.
I have proposed several reasons for not paying the activities fee. All of which may be valid
for certain individuals. 1 therefore believe a student tax would be a mistake and would create a
much more serious problem than we now have.
Without students, there is no university.
I would like to conLastly but not the least
gratulate you on a wonderful job being done on
this year’s Spectrum. I am very pleased with the
splendid job you have done. Thank you.

Fall Weekend Blast
TONIGHT
at BANAT HALL
25 Review Place
...

2 LIVE BANDS
� THE UNWANTED

Robert Morrison

CHILDREN

3

FREE BEER
Donation $2.00
Advance Sale $1.75

PLACE

3

Tickets Available in Norton Lobby
Buses Leaving Norton at 8:00 PJA.
Leaving Buffalo State's Rockwell Hall at 8:1S P.M.

CONTINUOUS ENTERTAINMENT—8:30

The statement should be signed, and the signature should be witnessed. Senders should be sure
to include their addresses of both themselves and
the address of their witnesses. The statements
should be sent to me—Prof. Bruce Jackson, Dept,
of English, Annex A, State University of Buffalo
and I will see that they are passed along to members of the Mobilization Committee’s legal staff
working on this nightmare.

-

?

Bruce Jackson, Prof, of English

SanioJuBLL.

“La Stanza”
AN ALL NEW QUIET ADVENTURE
IN ITALIAN DINING

—

Special Dinner Menu

—

OVER 50 VARIETIES OF OUR FAMOUS
ITALIAN AMERICAN FOOD

Calls for an end to all wars
-1 did not attend the Washington march, but I
flew over it, and it occurred to me that the real
issue here is not our withdrawal from an unjust
war, nor abolishment of the draft, but rather our
survival and maturation as a race. If this conflict
can be brought to an end by such a massive
display of organized disapproval, then we have
won the right as Americans and as people to
abstain from unjust aggressions. And we have
won our rights as a species to remain extant on
this planet.
If we cannot stop this war, if it goes to its
ultimate end, then win, lose, or draw, humanity
will become a farce. War will become merely
nature’s way of eliminating the excess population.
And, eventually, someone, somewhere, will push

if REVIEW

CD

swear and affirm that on October
I was
witness to the following incidents: (describe incidents, giving approximate time, and location)

(name)

To tho Editor:

HERTEL AVE.
“

...

Witnesses to brutality at Pentagon asked to report
To tho Editor:
As many who attended the antiwar rally at
the Pentagon late Saturday and most of Sunday
know, the press did not present a very honest
picture of what went on there. Especially missing
from the accounts were the numerous brutalities
committed during the night by airborne troops
and U.S. marshalls. We are trying to document
as many incidents as possible. If anyone saw any
brutality, any MP’s leaving their lines to join the
protesters, any soldiers actually throwing tear
gas cannisters or any other similar incidents, they
should file a statement in the following form:
hereby
I,

Start Early!—at the

-

the button, and there will no longer be anyone
to worry about draft deferments and unjust conflicts.

from 4 P.M.

Late Night Menu
“Something For The Night
—

The police estimation of the Washington demonstration placed the number of marchers at 25.000.
The demonstrators themselves estimated between
150(000 and 200,000. From where I was, I would
have said the number was insufficient. It there
is to be an end to this war by public demand,
then all the small and unhappy grumblers who
dissent among themselves in groups of three and
four, and all the silent sleepwalkers who will not
commit themselves one way or another, must
decide once and for all to pull themselves out of
the woodwork and have an end to all wars.
Gerard Strauss

—

People”

Featuring—PIZZA AS YOU LIKE IT
TENDERLOIN STEAK BOMBER
(A

with Dandelions
SANTORA ORIGINAL)

SPAGHETTI and MEAT BALLS or
YOUR FAVORITE SANDWICH
Call 833-4255

1030 Niagara Falls Blvd

Just North of Sheridan

'

�Friday, Octobar J7, 1967

Th

•

Spectrum

Pago Seven

campus releases...
WBFO radio will feature the lecture of Dr. Ira Glasser on Oot. 28
at 6 p.m. Dr. Glasser, a recent visitor to the University, was one of
the seven lawyers who defended Captain Howard Levy at his courtmartial.

be the last day to sign up for lessons and to join. For safety reasons
it is strongly recommended that all who join sign up for lessons,
which range from beginner to expert levels. The club will hold a
party Nov. 3 at Kissing Bridge. Sign up for these at the Ski Cub
office, room 320 Norton Hall, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m,
Mr. Herman Cole, candidate for council-at-large, will speak
Monday at 5:45 p.m. in the Medical Students Lounge in Capen Hall.
The talk will be presented by the Medical Students for a Sane Foreign
Policy, and all those in the health sciences are invited to attend.
A bowling league will be starting Friday, Oct. 27 in the Norton
Hall bowling lanes. Sponsored by the Millard Fillmore College
Student Association, it is open to all students interested in bowling
Friday nights, not only MFC students. For further information contact
Lawrence Heaslip at 627-7981.
Commuters can now purchase entire meals at the reduced price
of $1.00 at Goodyear or Tower Hall through the efforts of Judy Mann,
co-chairman of the Commuter Council, and the Inter-Residence
Council.
Second, third, and fourth helpings of everything but the main
course will be available. Hours are from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., Monday

through Saturday.

"Whaf is Torah?" is the subject of the
Sabbath Service given
by Dr. Justin Hofmann at the B’nai B'rith Foundation at 7:45 p.m,
today. An Oneg Shabbat will follow.
Reservations can still be made for the annual one-day Hillel
Institute to be held Nov. 5. Reservations can be made during regular
office hours at Hillel House.

The Law School's Assistant Dean will be in room 333 Norton
Hall from 1 to 5 p.m. on Nov. 6. He will be there to discuss the
Law School with those students interested in attending it. Dean
Smith is the 5th in a series of visitors from law schools. Others will
be coming to the University later this semester and next
semester.
Details on the visits appear on the last page of the yellow placement bulletins.

Candidates for the Wrestling Team should meet with Coach
Gerry Gcrgley before Oct. 31. Physicals will be given on that date.
Tryouts are not restricted to returning lettermen.
A new service has been started for those people who must use
the University’s business offices at. 1803 and 1807 Elmwood Ave. A
station wagon shuttle is running between the front lobby of Hayes

Hall and the business offices.
Depending upon traffic conditions, the shuttle should arrive at
each location every half hour. The station wagon will begin trips
from Hayes at 8 a.m. and end by departing from 1807 Elmwood at
5 p.m. The service runs Monday through Friday.

1 won't
go into business when
1 graduate because:
□ a. I'd lose my individuality.
□ b. It’s graduate school for me.
□ c. My mother wants me to be a doctor.
Can't argue with c), but before you check
a) or b)-pencils up! There have been some
changes. Drastic changes in the business
scene. But changes in the vox popiili altitude
regarding business. .. especially on campus
. . . just haven't kept pace.
Take the belabored point that business
turns you into a jellyfish. The men who run
most of the nation’s successful firms didn't
arrive by nepotism, by trusting an Ouija
board, or by agreeing with their bosses. Along
the way. a well-modulated “No" was said.
And backed up with the savvy and guts today’s business demands.
In short, individuality is highly prized in
much of the business world-the successful
much. Even when the business is big. Like
Western Electric, the manufacturing and supply unit of the Bell System.
We provide communications equipment for

our Bell System teammates, the Bell telephone
companies. This takes a lot of thought, decisions, strong stands for our convictions, (and
sometimes some mistakes . . . we're human,

every 160,000 of us).
Individuality pays ofT. Not only in raises,
but in personal reward as well. Like an engineer who knew deep down that there was a
belter way to make a certain wire connector
-and did. Or a WE gal who streamlined timeconsuming office procedures, and saved us
some $63,000 a year.
Rewards and accolades. For saying “No."
For thinking creatively and individually. For
doing.

Not every hour is Fun Hour, but if you’ve
imagination and individuality-you’ve got
it made. With a business like Western Electric.
We’ll even help you answer b) with our Tuition Refund program. Come on in and go
for President!
got

Western
Electric
MANUFACTURING i SWTIY UNIT Of THE BELL SYSTEM

�Friday, October 27, 1967

The Spectrum

P*9* Eight

•

i

$r*:v

Fall Parent
Weekend 1967

£

Queen
Candidates
—Queens by David Yates

Carolyn Virgili

Carol Roberts

“Two Different Worlds” is the unique theme of Fall
Parent Weekend.
Traditional festivities will include special events to introduce parents to campus life. “Parents rarely have a chance
to visit the campus while things are in full swing,” explained a spokesman of the Steering Committee of the weekend.
“Now is an adequate opportunity for parents to enjoy themselves and see what their sons and daughters are doing.”
Response to the weekend has been very good, according
to Eliot Schulman, Co-Chairman of Parent Coordination. “As
of Wednesday, over 650 parents and 150 children will come
up for the weekend. We expect at least another 100 parents
of commuters to stop in for some of the events.”
Parents will be the honored guests at the dance Friday
evening at the Parkway Inn. Saturday, they will be formally welcomed to the State University of Buffalo by Jeannette
Scudder, Dean of Women, Anthony F. Lorenzetti, Associate
Dean of Students, and Herbert S. Eisenstein, Director of
Advisement.
Dr. R.A. Siggelkow, Vice President for Student Affairs,
will speak at a bunch for parents and students on Sunday.
Classes open
Classes and labs will be open to the parents Friday.
Dormitories will hold an open house Sunday afternoon.
“This way,” explained Mr. Schulman, “kids won’t have to
‘hang on’ to their parents. There will be many opportunites
for them to explore the campus by themselves.”
Fall Parent Weekend debuts on campus Friday, Saturday and Sunday. Its success depends on student participation. “This is still the students’ weekend. Parents are our
special guests,” emphasized Judy Bernard, Co-Chairman of
Parent Coordination.

Beth Ann

Beverly Shelly

Sieger

Friday:

3 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Information Center
First Floor, Norton Hall
10 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Auction—Benefit of United
Fund
Center Lounge, Norton Hall
Auctioneer—Jefferson Kaye
7:30 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Faculty-Student Reception
by invitation only
Parkway Inn, Niagara Falls,

New York
9 p.m: to 1 a.m.
“Two Different Worlds” Dance
Parkway Inn

11:30 p.m.
Coronation of the Queen
Saturday:
9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Information Center

Michele Huse

Marianne Safrah

First Floor, Norton Hall

11 a.m. to 1 p.m.

Welcome of Parents to State
University of Buffalo
Guest Speakers:
Jeanette Scudder, Dean of
Women

Anthony F. Lorenzetti, Associate Dean of Students

Herbert S. Eisenstein, Direc
tor of Advisement
1 p.m. to 3 p.m.
Coffee Hour in Rathskeller
Band: “The New Order”

3 p.m.
Rugby Game at Rotary Field
U.B. vs St. Catherines
8 p.m.
Smokey Robinson and the Mir
acles and The Spinners
Clark Gym
11 p.m. to 1 a.m.

Free Recreation

“Moonlight Bowling”
Norton Recreation Area

Sunday:
11 a.m.

Brunch for Parents

&amp;

Speaker:

Students

Dr. R. A. Siggelkow, Vice
President for Student Affairs

Afternoon

Dorm Open House

8 p.m.
Mixer

“The Lab Band”
Millard Fillmore Boom

�Th

Friday, October 27, 1967

•

Page Nina

Spectrum

UP! Best
Seller List

OFFICIAL BULLETIN
Tha Official Bulletin it an authoriiad publication of the State

lege Receptionist in Diefendorf

falo, for which tha Spectrum atsumat no editorial responsibility.
Notices should bo sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to 114 Hayes
Hall, attention Mrs. Fischer, before 2 p.m, tha Friday prior to
tha weak of publication. Student
organization notices are not ac-

the student registration
cards and a list of instructions to
follow in the subsequent registration procedures.
O. T. students will pick up registration material and make their
appointments in Diefendorf 314.
P. T. students will pick up their
registration material and make
their appointments in the Physical Therapy Department, 264
Winspear. Nursing students are
advised and registered through
the School of Nursing.
Students who do not make
their appointments at the scheduled time, or who do not keep
them when made, will be required to register in Clark Gym
on Registration Day, Jan. 22,
1968.

cepted for publication.

Ganaral Notices
National Dafanta Student Loans
—Applications for the 1967-68
academic year will continue to
be accepted by the Office of Financial Aid through Friday,
Nov. 3.

Applications for the second
semester will be accepted Monday, Nov. 6 through Friday, Dec.
15. Action on second semester
applications will be subject to

available funds.
Education Studantt
Class
cards for Education 322, 422, 425
and appropriate methods course
will be available at the Office of
Teacher Education, Room 105
Foster Hall, during the Spring
1968 Advanced Registration period from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Oct. 24
through Dec. 15.
These courses are open only to
students who have been accepted
into the Professional Education
Unit’s program.
Freshman Pre-Registration
Is now in progress for next semester. Freshman students whose
last names begin with the letters
designated below will see their
advisers, plan their programs and
register for courses during the
following times:
Oct. 30-Nov. 10—A through M
Nov. 13-Dec. 15—N through Z
Students must make appointments with the University Col—

—

114 one week in advance.

At

from 114 Hochstetter Hall to 140

Capen

Hall

Pleasp

rpnnrt

Boeing Co,

at

Compiled by

give

Pre-Registration, A 11 Sophomores, Juniors and Seniors
After the week of Oct. 23 you
can pick up master cards and
registration material in Diefendorf Reception Area, Room 14, at
any time between Oct. 30 and
—

Dec. 15.
O. T. students will pick up registration material and make their
appointments in the Physical
Therapy Department, 264 Winspear.

Nursing students are advised
and registered through the
School of Nursing.
Juniors and Seniors in Business Administration, Engineering,
Education, Medical Technology,
and Pharmacy, please refer to Division Office.
Graduate School Foreign Language Exams—French, German,
Russian, and Spanish to be given
on Oct. 28, 1967 at 9 a.m, (report

at 8:45 a.m.) have been changed

Placement Interviews
Please contact the University
Placement Service, 831-3311, to
make appointments and obtain
further information concerning
the following interviews:
Oct. 30
General Mills
Hunt-Wesson Foods
Central Intelligence Agency
Carnation Co.
*

Burroughs Corp.
Ingersoll-Rand Co.
Oct. 31
General Electric Co.
Wright, Patterson Air Force
Base

Phillips, Wertman &amp; Co.
New York University Law
School
Nov. 1
American Hospital Supply
Corp.
U, S. Forest Service
(Dept, of Agriculture)
Iroquois Gas
Nov. 1 &amp; 2
Dow Chemical Co.
Union Carbide Corp,—

Linde Division
Nov. 2
Moog-Servo Control
Nov. 3
Lehigh Portland Cement Co.
National Steel Corp.
American Meter Co.
Hughes Aircraft Co.

Oct. 30
James Fenton Lecture
The
fourth in a series of five lectures
on the theme “Religion and Modern Society,” features Dr. Joseph
Fletcher, Robert Treat Paine professor of social ethics, Episcopal
Theological School. The subject,
“American Pragmatism and the
Problem of Theological Ethics,”
Conference Theatre, Norton, 8:30
—

p.m.
Oct. 31

With
Th« University Report
Dr. Oscar Silverman, director of
University Libraries,
“Special
Collections and New Developments in the University Libraries," Conference Theatre, Norton,
3 p.m.
Nov. 2
The Department of Physics—
Presents Dr. H, Fried, Brown University, "Unitary
Difficulties
with Non-Linear Dynamics.” Ill
Hochstetter, 4 p.m.
Presents
Pharmacy Seminar
Howard Weintraub, Graduate Student, SUNYAB. “Polyphase Mixtures: Dissolution Characteristics,” 233 Health Sciences, 5 p.m.
The School of Pharmacy—Presents Mr. Y. A. Hajj, University
of Wisconsin "Stereochemistry
and Mechanism of Enzymatic 1,
2-Dehydrogenations of Steroids,”
246 Health Sciences, 4 p.m.
—

Last Day to
Register

American College Testing
Program (A.C.T.)
College Level Exam Program
M.L.A. Foreign Language
Proficiency Test
Pre-Nursing Exam

Nov.
Nov.

8
11

Oct. 27

Nov.

4

Fiction
Night Falls on tha City—Sarah
Gainham
A Night of Watching—Elliott
Arnold
Tha Arrangement—Elia Kazan
Tha Chosen—Chaim Potok
Thornton
The Eighth Day
—

Wilder

An Operational Necessity
Gwyn Griffin
Washington, D. C.—Gore Vidal
A Second-Hand Life—Charles
—

—

Student Testing Center Registration Schedule
Tast

Publishers’ Weekly

Test

Date

Applications

Available

Jackson
The Gabriel Houndt
Stewart
Topax—Leon Uris

—

Mary

Levin
The Plot—Irving Wallace
Rosemary's Baby—Ira

Non-fiction
Our Crowd—Stephen Birmingham

The New Industrial State
John Kenneth Galbraith
Nicholas and Alexandra—Robert K. Massie
Incredible Victory
Walter
Lord
A Modern Priest Looks at His
Outdated Church—Father James
—

—

Kavanaugh
At Ease—Dwight D.

Eisenhower

Anyone Can Make a Million—
Morton Shulman
The Lawyers—Martin Mayer
Everything But Money

—

Sam

Dec.

9 High School
Nov. 18 316Harriman

Levenson
The Fall of Japan

Nov. 18 316 Harriman

Craig
Edgar Cayca
The Sleeping
Prophet—Jess Steam

Nov. 18 Schl. of Nurs.

—

William

—

IN MEREDITH, STAR QUARTERBACK OE
THE DALLAS COWBOYS SAYS:
Nsw improvad Aqua Valva SILICONS
LATHER Is grsatl Lubricatinj aHIcaaaa
rua iutarfsranca tar my ratft.. gMag warn
Mm clasuaat, lunlfciH ikm aaarl

�Pag*

Th

T*n

•

Spectrum

Friday, Octobar

27. 1967

Incredible political drama highlighted Review: Don't Look Back
by exceptional performances by cast Like a Rolling Stone
by Philip Burbank

Sheila

Studio Two’s first production of the season is a competent adaption of Ugo Betti’s political drama, “The Queen
and the Rebels.”
The play is not exceptionally original and is similar

to works of Sartre and several other writers. It depicts

the attitudes of the people living in a nation torn by revolution, counter-revolution, and political upheaval.
•

Although the drama was written in 1951, the country depicted
bears a clear similarity to Vietnam, Indonesia, or Greece, where
governments change hands and
political instability reigns.

Harlot adds spice

Obviously the plot would lack
spice and so we are introduced
to the harlot played by Sheila
Browne who serves as the central
character.

The motif of the play is to expose her basic dignity and benevolence which is well hidden by
her hardened exterior.
The denouncement and climax

are contrived. No adequate reason for the prostitute’s complete
reformation is to be found in the
play. She is accused of being the
queen and does not bother to disprove the charge. In fact she refuses to ask for pardon and dies
for her newly aroused principles.

Her motive or at least the time
involved in her transformation
are slightly unbelievable to the
incredulous viewer.
But such flaws are with Betti’s
play itself and do not discredit
the acting company which handled its roles most capably.

Browne’s

exceptional

performance made her difficult
role as credible as possible. Mary
Jane Abeles as the Queen and
Michael Stein as Amos deliver
especially effective supporting

roles.
The intended humor of the lines
comes across sharply as Betti
cynically expresses his abhorrence of chaotic revolution and

temperary regimes.
“Studio Two," an extension of
the Studio Arena on Main St.,
will this year present a series

of plays, the first being “The

Queen and the Rebels” which

will be followed by Samuel Becket’s “Endgame.”

The “Queen” will be presented
for the next two weekends, Oct.
27, 28, 29 and Nov. 3, 4, 5. “Endgame" opens Nov, 17 and will
play for three successive weekends. The five professional plays
will be held at the Studio Arena
Theater School on Lafayette St.
near Hoyt St.

Student Theater Guild to present
selections from Shaw, Ionesco plays
Tonight and Saturday at 8:30
p.m. the Student Theater Guild
will present selected scenes from

varied and interesting plays in
the Millard Fillmore Room.
The scenes are taken from such
plays as ‘Children’s Hour,” by
Lillian Heilman, which is about
the effects on two schoolteachers
of an accusation that they are
lesbians.
“Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Momma’s
LEAVE

Hung You in the Closet and I’m
Feeling So Sad” by Arthur Kopit
is a comdey about a woman who

murders her husband,

“Gladly Otherwise,” “Augustus
Does His Bit” by George Bernard
Shaw and “The Foursome” by
Ionesco are three other comedies
to be presented.

“West Side Story” will directly
follow "Romeo and Juliet” and

THE CHILDREN

HOME

ELIZABETH TAYLOR
MARLON BRANDO
Cv

INIMF JOHN HUSTON RAYSTARK PRODUCTION

REFLECTIONS
IN A GOLDEN EYE

they will both be performed by
the same group of actors.

Members of the company have
appeared in “Dracula,” “Birthday
Party," “Italian Straw Hat,” and
most recently “The Private Life
of the Master Race.”

The series of short selections
reflects a variety of theater genre
and should include something to
please everyone.

Anyway, it is surely worth the
five cent admission charge.

FREE

Exploring the life of an individual with film on any
more than the most superficial level is indeed a difficult
task. “Don’t Look Back,” about Bob Dylan’s three and onehalf week tour of England in the spring of 1965, makes
the attempt and succeeds.

The audience’s journey with Bob Dylan begins with
“Subterranean Homesick Blues,” a unique start with Allen
Ginsberg in an inconspicious role. The film moves to Albert
Hall, to parties, to interviews and more. Still it’s all Dylan
and he’s alive and not some ficticious Hollywood giant.
The photography was done by
man, Bonn Alan Pennebaker,
who accomplished Dylan on the
trip, and its impromptu nature
lends a kind of credibility to
the film. It should be noted, however, that Pennebaker was commissioned for the job and that
Albert Grossman, Dylan’s manager, was the film’s producer.
one

Dylan makes some quick and
witty remarks. When a reporter
asks him how he feels upon meeting somone, Dylan replies to this
trite question; “I don’t like them.”
“Are you putting me on,” asks
the reporter. “I only goof on
people I don’t like,” answers
Dylan.

Donovan. At times he gets carried
away in his language, but he’s

NOVEMBER 2,

On Sunday, Oct. 29, the Department of Music will present a
Senior Recital featuring Penelope

Lund.
Miss Lund will play “Prelude
and Fugue in E Minor” by Mendelssohn and Debussy’s ‘“Estamp-

STRENG OLDS
features
QUICK
�
�
�

1967

McDonald's

SERVICE

SKILLED HANDS
using

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DAILY NCWS

Farm.” Donovan and Joan Baez
also chip in with some lyrics of
The plot of the film, like life
itself, does not always follow a
direction. But if you like Dylan,
you’ll really groove on this film.

es.” Also scheduled for the performances are Mozart’s “Themes
and Variations, K. 501” and “Aria
and Toccato for two pianos” by
Norman Della Joie. For these
compositions Miss Lund will be
accompained by Miss Rebecca
Hartshorn.
The concert will take place at
8:30 p.m, in Baird Music Hall.

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Dylan sings some of his most
popular songs in the film, among
them: “The Times They are AChangin,” “The Lonesome Death
of Hattie Carroll,” and “Maggie’s

Music Dept. gives recital

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In order to understand what
Dylan is saying sometimes, you
have to be one of his people.
That is, you have to appreciate
him for what he is. Even Dylan,
after reading an article commenting that he smokes eighty
cigarettes a day, remarked: "I’m
sure glad I’m not me.”

their own.

Dylan hits some notes really
high at a party (shades of Tambourine Man!) where he meets

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1947

Th 1

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1 5l»*trtf u'iW T

Miracles' will perform
for Fall-Parent Weekend

Entertainment
Calendar
PLAY: “The Threepenny
Opera,” Studio Arena, 8:30 p.m.
PLAY; ‘The Queen and the
Rebels," Studio Arena Theater
School, 8:30 p.m., through Oct.
29 and Nov. 3 through the 5th.
PLAY: “Number Ten Downing
Street,” O’Keefe Center, Toronto, through Oct. 28.
FILM: “Alphaville,” Norton
Conference Theater.
LECTURE: “Contemporary
China,” Dief. 147, 8 p.m.
FILM: “Ulysses,” Granada
Theater, through Oct. 31.
Saturday, October 28:

CONCERT: Smokey Robinson
and the Miracles, Clark Gym,

8:30 p.m.

CONCERT: Piano recital, Leo
Smit, Baird, 8:30 p.m.
READING: “Bramwell Fletcher
as Bernard Shaw
the Man,”
Nazareth College Arts Center,
Rochester.
-

Orchestra, Amherst Central
Junior High, 8 p.m.
CONCERT: The Mothers of Invention, Memorial Auditorium,
Rochester, 8:30 p.m.
Sunday, October 29:
RECITAL: Penny Lund Senior

Recital, Baird, 8:30 p.m.
CONCERT: Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra featuring
Jesse Levine
David Cowley,
Kleinhans, 2:30 p.m.
&amp;

Monday, October 30;
LECTURE: James Fenton Lecture, Norton Conference Theater, 8:30 p.m.
FILMS: “Isle of the Dead” and
“Bedlam,” Capen 140, 8 p.m.
PLAY: “The Dance of Death,”
O’Keefe Theater, Toronto, 8:30
p.m.

Tuesday, October 31:
CONCERT: Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra featuring
Jesse Levine &amp; David Cowley,

Kleinhans, 2:30 p.m.

flLM!

"The

White Shiek"

“Fantastic”

"Dynamic”

di

reeled by Fellini, Norton Conference Theater, 7 p.m.

Wednesday, November 1:
LECTURE: Dr. Benjamin
Spock, Fillmore Room, 8 p.m.

like “You Really Got a Hold On

Business Today” . . . These are
just a few of the many accolades
which have been bestowed upon
a group which today is recognized as one of the most original
of the
“Detroit
proponents
“Smokey Robinson and
Sound”
the Miracles.”

‘The Tracks of My Tears." The
dynamism and interaction of Bill
“Smokey” Robinson (Lead), Robert Rogers (Tenor), Ronald

White (Baritone), and Pete Moore
(Bass) is that of professionals, a
group endowed with talent and

—

Thursday, November 2:
FILM: “Gone With The Wind,”
Granada Theater, 8 p.m.
FILM: “Shakespeare Wallah,”
Norton Conference Theater.
Saturday, November 4:
CONCERT; “Shakespeare in
Opera and Songs,” Butler Auditorium, Capen Hall, 8:30 p.m.
CONCERT: Buffy Sainte-Marie,
Eastman Theater, Rochester.

showmanship.

Ever since their first big million seller “Shop Around,” the
sound of the Miracles has been
the sound of success, with songs

“The Miracles” will be present-

ed as a highlight of Fall-Parent

Weekend tomorrow in Clark Gym
at 8 p.m.

What kind do you smoke?

Sunday, November S:
CONCERT: Maurice Chevalier,
Kleinhans, 8:30 p.m.
CONCERT: Zara Nelsova, cel-

list, Kleinhans, 2:30 p.m.
CONCERT: Evenings for New
Music with the Creative Associates, Albright-KnOx Art
Gallery, 8:30 p.m.

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�Pag* Twelve

Friday, Octobar 27, 1967

T h• Spectrum

•

.

.

Q31-SOOO
Do you often think it impossible to untangle the SUNYAB bureaucracy? In cooperation
with the Dean of Students' Office, the Spectrum is sponsoring ag ACTION LINE.
Through ACTION LINE, individual students can get an answer to a puzzling question,
find out where and why University decisions are made, and get ACTION when change
is indicated.
pertinent to the student body. The Spectrum wil
LINE weekly column. Each inquiry will be .thoroughly investigated and answered
individually. The name of the individual originating the inquiry will not be published.

Q. It there a speed reading court* available on camput?
A. A speed reading course, under University College auspices,
is open to ail registered students, undergraduate and graduate, on a
non-fee, non-credit basis. Each class meets once a week for 12 weeks,
and six different classes are held each week, to make the course
accessible within any student program. Classes meet on Monday,
Tuesday, and Thursday, from 11 a.m. to 12 noon and again from 12
noon to 1 p.m. The present classes have been meeting since Sept. 25,
1967, and registration was closed at that time. A new series will
begin the week of Jan. 29, 1968. Applications are now being taken
for enrollment in next semester's series. Anyone interested in attending a speed reading course should register for such at the information
desk in University College, Diefendorf Hall.
Q. Can a student who has paid his activity fees purchase a
second ticket, for his date, to attend the Spring Concert at the
reduced rate allowed students who have paid the fees?
A. The Union Activities Board policy has always been to give a
student the option to purchase a second ticket at his special student
rate. This policy, however, might have to be reviewed, if necessary,
to permit a more equitable distribution of available tickets.
Q. Why is the Audio-Visual center only open from 12-3 on Friday
for those who must get their I.D. Cards? This is an impossible
time for many Graduate Students in Education.
A. The hours from 12-3 were thought to be the best time for
the A. V. Center to service students wishing to replace I. D. Cards.
This time is flexible and, upon request, the A, V. Center will attempt
to accommodate students.
The Audio-Visual Center was open for three weeks in September
at night, specifically for Graduate Education students. The Center
re-opened, again in the evening, on Oct. 10 and 11 and on Oct. 18
and 19 to further accommodate Graduate Education students. The
A. V. Center is willing to alter their schedule if students request
such a change. However, it is felt that ample time has been given
Graduate Education students to get their I. D. Cards.

Doc Holliday's the name.
I’m not really a doctor-folks just
call me that ’cause they
I
usually need one after I'm
through with ’em. My shootin’ days arc
over, though. Last night I had the
good fortune of eatin' one of those
great tastin' Bonanza $1.69 steak
dinners. Sorta took me back to my
childhood in the Old West. I figure
there’s only one thing more
fun than a good fight...
AND THAT’S GOOD FOOD!

Vj

tl

9

King notes tragic'
ratio of U.S. war.
poverty spending

by Frothingham

time
Martin Luther King stated last
week the United States is spending $53 a year on each of its
“poverty victims” and $500,000
to kill each enemy soldier in
Vietnam. This is a “tragic mixup
of priorities,” he said.
The Rev. Dr. King, who was
in Boston to arrange a benefit
concert today for the Southern
Leadership Conference which he
heads, told a news conference the
antiwar and civil rights demonstrations were both born of “frustration and despair.”
The Nobel Peace Prize winner
said the draft card burnings and
antiwar protests were “indications of frustration and despair
within the larger community,
particularly among the young
men who have to fight the war.”
He called the Vietnam conflict
“fruitless and bloody.”
Asked if the same feelings
were the impetus for civil rights
demonstrations, the Rev. Dr.
King replied, "Yes, and social
programs suffer because of the
war.
“In both cases the resources
are going away from the basic
problems of pur society. The war
is playing havoc with our domestic destiny,” he said.

wny it is that some
in the stock market and why it is that you never quite make
that big killing.
to time

The reason could be that you’ve
never given apy thought to the
difference

between

speculation and

investment,

gambling, and
that you may be calling your activities in the market investing
when, in fact, they are out-right
gambling.
The goal of the investor is to
invest his capital in stocks which
will have safety of principal and
a reasonable, steady rate of return, To facilitate this objective,
the investor always takes care to
explore all the various sources
of information concerning a
stock before making the decision
to invest. To be sure, the wise investor relies as little as possible
on hearsay, rather he seeks the
most current and accurate sources

of information.
The speculator, unlike the investor, is less concerned with
safety of principal and a reasonable rate of return. He is more
likely to minimize the risks involved in “playing” the stockmarket and to be less cautious
as to verifying the accuracy of
information.
The speculator will tend to proceed with as much caution as his
eagerness to make a killing will
allow. His goals are most likely
to be of a very short-range nature—to get in and out of the

W
Mi

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market as swiftly as possible with
as much profit as possible. Timing is the crucial and most difficult aspect of speculation; it is
the factor which makes or breaks
the speculator.
The gambler is characterized
by not only a lack of consideration of safety of principal and a
reasonable rate of return, but also
with a total disregard for current and accurate information
and an inability to time his
moves. The gambler “plays” the
market on impulse and is, to say
the least, totally impervious to
the risks of the market. He is
the one who is typically enthralled with the notion of “making" money with a modicum of
effort. Unfortunately, it is usually the gambler who can least
afford the potential loss of
money.

May I suggest, therefore, that
you sit yourself down and think
about which type you are—investor, speculator or gambler. Remember the “true” investor goes
to great lengths to ensure that

his principal will be reasonably
safe from the dangers of inflation and deflation; that there will
be an income reasonably invulnerable to economic changes; that
the income will fluctuate little,
and there will be constant purchasing power regardless of the
change in price level, and naturally that the income will be as
large as possible.

It is conceded that no invest-

ment will be perfect in

every

respect, but it should be the goal
of every investor to assuage the
risks inherent in the stock market to the greatest degree practicable by careful examination of
information concerning the stock
and by looking for stocks which
will satisfy the definition of an
investment.
Success in the stock market
may balance on your appraisal of
yourself. It might not make you
rich, but then again, there won’t

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�Friday, October 27, 1967

The Spectrum

P*g* ThirtMn

Holy Cross out for blood
after last year's defeat

the spectrum of

sports

by Jonathan Rand
Spectrum

Hoople predicts

Old standbys give way to new ball
teams as season passes mid-point
As the Year of the Upset
swings past its midway point, new
dynasties seem to be emerging

across the land. This

year the
scene has been changed as the
old reliables such as Notre Dame,

Michigan State, Texas, Alabama
and Nebraska have given way to
the new gridiron powerhouses in
such faraway places as Tennessee,
Houston, Southern California, and

Colorado, Without, of course,
some sort of elimination tourna-

ment there will always be doubt

as to who is really number one,
but here is a list of some of the
top contenders to the mythical
“national championship.”

South
“The king is dead
all hail
the king.” This slogan aptly
describes the situation in Dixieland as the long lived ruler of
the south Bear Bryant of Alabama has finally passed into the
depths of mediocrity. The question is who will succeed the kindly old Bear as SEC champion.
Tennessee certainly has to be
given the inside edge following
their devastating upset of the
Crimson Tide in Alabama last
week. Following close behind,
however, are the Bulldogs of
Georgia who have posted 4-1 record marred only by its defeat
at the hands of the Mississippi
Rebels two weeks ago. Both these
teams are of bowl caliber and
don’t be surprised if you see one
of them in the Orange Bowl on
New Year’s day.
—

East
This is a “you pick ’em” section of the country. Generally regarded as the weak sister in football circles, this year the East
has come up with absolutely nothing to change that status. Syracuse was the early favorite but
suffered a midseason reversal to
a strong Navy team which the following week abandoned its claim
as top team by suffering a humiliating upset at the hands of William and Mary.
With three points all that is

The South
at war

separating the Nittany Lions from
an undefeated season, they must
be strongly considered for top
honors in the area. Rounding out

the East is coach of the year Tom
Cahill’s Black Knights. Sporting a
nifty 4-1 record and led by the
best quarterback in the East,
Steve Lindell, the Army eleven is
another legitimate contender for
the Lambert Trophy. As it stands
now, the season all boils down to
two important clashes—Syracuse-

Penn State next week and Army
on Dec, 2. Look for Army to win
the race for Eastern supremacy.

Southwest
With Texas and Akansas no
longer considered as threats, the
Southwest west championship is
up for grabs for two teams, Rice
and Houston. Houston, led by its
mercurial halfback Warren (Mack
the Knife) McVea, possesses a
devastating offense capable of
scoring from anywhere on the
field. The only thing that holds
the talent laden Cougars back is
themselves as dissension has been
known to break out on numerous
occasions.

Lacking that all important cohesion needed by any winning
team Houston wins on individual
talent and not team effort. The
Owls of Rice on the other hand,
are a hungry team. It has been
a long time since the Rice eleven
has been rated a contender and
coach Harold Hagan doesn’t intend to let his boys slip in the
standings. The Owls will ride all
the way to the Cotton Bowl on
the strong arm of quarterback
Bob Hailey,

Midwest
Michigan State died last week
while Notre Dame expired a week
before. In the wake of all this
mourning, the Colorado Buffalos
will go undefeated and become a
gridiron juggernaut that will have
to be reckoned with for many
years to come. Following Colorado are Purdue and Indiana and
not necessarily in that order. The
Boilermakers are carried by the

Tennessee's Walter Chadwick
(20) dives over the Alabama
line for the first score which
helped to defeat Alabama,
24- 1.3-

Report?

1

The

Staff

Revenge looms as the primary motive tomorrow at
Worcester as far as Holy Cross is concerned.

amazing Mr. Leroy Keyes who
runs, passes, punts, returns punts,

returns kickoffs

and

sells hot-

dogs in the stands at halftime.
With an unblemished record
(5-0), the Hoosiers are just biding
their time uitl Nov-. 25 when they
meet Purdue in the game that
will decide the Big Ten championship. No matter the result of

that game, Indiana will go to the
Rose Bow! and undefeated Colorado will go to the Orange Bowl.

Picking the upset
With an abundance of top
teams in the area, the West will
be the scene of some titanic battles including the game of the
year which will pit the Bruins of

UCLA against the Trojans of USC
for the National Championship.
The Trojans are led by the incomparable super, super back
0. J. Simpson.
Undoubtedly the most excitirig
football player in the past decade,
Mr. Simpson possesses blazing
speed, unbelievable balance and
tremendous power. Complemented by speedsters Earl (the Pearl)
McCullogh and Jim Lawrence and
quarterback Steve Soggee, the
Trojans have to be one of the
greatest football teams ever assembled.
In UCLA they will meet a team
not quite as big nor as fast but
with a team with the best quar-

terback in college, Gary Behan.
Whether running or throwing, Mr.
Behan has proven himself a man
of extreme talent who seems to
have the knack of coming up with
the all important play.
Blessed with a speedy end in
Hal Busby and a great runner in
halfback Greg Jones, the
UCLAN’S would certainly be a
threat on anyone’s football field.
Look for USC to defeat UCLA by
a narrow margin in their Nov.
18 meeting. USC will win the
Rose Bowl and 0. J, will win the
Heisman Trophy but will be disqualified after the judges find
out that he is really Captain Marvel in disguise.
So here without further ado are
the Hoople Picks of the Week:
Alabama 21, Clemson 7
Indiana 28, Arizona 14
Wyoming 35, Arizona State 6
Arkansas 9, Kansas State 7
Auburn 21, Miami 20
Boston College 28, Maine 0
Buffalo 14, Holy Cross 10
Washington 21, California 17
Colorado 10, Oklahoma State 9
Florida 21, Vanderbilt 13
Florida State 14, Mississippi St. 12
Georgia 24, Kentucky 7
Georgia Tech 28, Tulane 9
Harvard 21, Dartmouth 20
Houston 35, Mississippi 21
Purdue 46, Iowa 12
Tennessee 28, L.S.U. 27
Navy 28, Pittsburgh 0
Nebraska 17, T.C.U. 10
North Carolina St. 13, Duke 10
Notre Dame 10, Michigan State 7
U.S.C. 51, Oregon 0
Penn State 21, Syracuse 14
Princeton 16, Penn 14
Rice 21, Texas 17
Tulsa 28, Southern Illinois 7
Virginia 21, V.M.I. 10
Virginia Tech 35, W. Virginia 14
Cornell 24, Yale 17
Army 17, Stanford 14
Missouri 14, Oklahoma 10

The Crusaders boast 28 returning lettermen, all of
whom experienced last year’s humiliating 35-3 thrashing
at the hands of the Bulls at Rotary Field.
Fresh from a 21-17 come from behind triumph over
fading Boston University, the Crusaders should have little
difficulty getting up for this game. The purple, now 3-1,
have also defeated Yale, 26-14, and hapless Colgate, 17-0,
while bowing to Dartmouth, 24-8.

Well-disciplined

"*

According to Coach Urieh,
“Holy Cross is the best team we

vs

face this year outside of North
Carolina State. They are welldisciplined, well organized, and
fairly big,”
The Crusaders’ attack appears

to be nicely balanced with field

general Phil O'Neil’s aerial talents complementing the running
of Richie Giardi. Tim Hawkes,
and Steve Jutras. Giardi. at 5’9”
and 195 is a powerful running
back, and leads the Crusaders in
scoring with thirty points, while
Hawkes is the squad's leading
ground gainer. Jutras runs with
power and authority. Although he
has seen limited action thus far
this season, the Bulls will probably see a lot of him tomorrow.
O’Neil

has

very

capable re-

ceivers in ends Bob Neary and
John Vrionis. First year mentor
Tom Boisture touts Neary as “one
of the best ends around and one

that will always come up with
the clutch catch,”

U. Mass

almost stopped
Junior Bob Kurcz (39) rushes
in and nearly blocks a U. Mass,

Dangerous passer

punt.

O’Neil is a dangerous passer,
though inconsistent at times.

nor Rutkowski are able to play,
the starting assignment will go to
Harry Bell, the converted flanker
who filled in capably against the
Eagles last week.
One Blue and White back whom
the Crusaders will have little
trouble remembering is Lee
Jones, who battered the Holy
Cross line for four scores in last
year’s encounter, Jones has scored
forty two points thus far, and
would find a repeat performance
to be a significant asset enabling
him to once again enter the national scoring picture.

Boston University, he
threaded the needle beautifully,
hilling his receiver between three
defenders, only to overthrow an
open man in the flat on the following play. O’Neil benefits from
good pass protection, and employs play action passes quite
frequently. He also favors the
keeper with a guard pulling. The
Crusaders run basically out of
the “I” formation, but employ
plenty of variations.
Against

Another Crusader offensive
asset is the toe of Mike Kaminski, last year’s top toe scorer in
the East. Rated by Holy Cross
partisans as a pro prospect, Kaminski registered thirty nine
points last season, including his
team’s only score against the
Bulls.

Bulls' defense

Defensively, the Bulls arc in
superb fettle. The Purples’ claims

to hitting

prowess should certain-

ly whet the appetites of Luzny,
Gibbons, and Co. Luzny, a multirecipient of All-East accolades,
has blocked a punt in each of the

Bulls’ last three victories in addition to his outstanding tackling
Defense rated
and pursuit. John Przybycien, defensive lineman of the week and
Defensively, Holy Cross emGary Grubbs have been playing
ploys a 5-4 or a 6-2, while rotatgreatly improved ball, while Tom
ing their backs, and frequently
utilizing “monster” set-ups. All- Hurd has made an excellent adEast middle guard, Glenn Grieco, justment to his new position at
the team captain, has been the left half back. Ted Gibbons continues to play the tremendous
Crusader s’ defensive mainstay, along with ends Pat Bourque ball that marks him as probably
the outstanding defensive tackle
and Dick Krzyzek, Both the Purin the East. The previous porous,
ples’ defensive and offensive
but improving defensive backunits pride themselves on physifield will no doubt see considercal and mental toughness, and
have boasted that, "We haven’t able action tomorrow against the
really been hit hard yet this Crusaders’ aerial attack.
The Bulls, now 4-2. are beginyear. We love pain.” In this ressignificant Lampect, the Bulls should do their ning to attract
attention, and have
utmost to provide their hosts with bert Trophy
their sights determinedly set on
a most lovable afternoon.
the achievement of an 8-2 slate.
This is the eighth renewal of
The Bulls’ principal concerns
the UB Holy Cross series in which
for this tilt have been the mainthe Crusaders hold a 5-1-1 advantenance of their superlative detage. The Bulls, however, have
fensive edge, and the resolution
a d
of the tailback situation, which drawn the most recent blood, wincan be taken to extend their
endangers UB’s offensive potency
If neither Patterson ning streak to four tomorrow.

somewhat.

�Pag* Fourtoon

T h o Spectrum

Friday, October 27, 1947

Buffalo Buffoon'hoax undone; team Golfers close with 5-3 record;
is reported to Better Business Bureau Santelli's loss major setback
by Jay Schreibar

story of the NFL this year, making a habit of being the victors

by Springvilla

If we wanted to talk about detriments to professional

for the first 55 minutes of each
game and a loser when including
the next five. Impressive rookie
QB Kent Nix to make this week
a 60 minute reality.

footl
lave
Springville realizes that people must make their livings and
that aggressive attitudes must be satiated, but to perpetuate
a hoax on the public by calling it a professional organization
leaves us only one alternative: We’ve reported them to the
American Football League
Better Business Bureau.
Oakland 21, San Diego 17:
10:
Washington
Baltimore
31,
It all started when the
Oakland killed the Patriots in
Bills, henceforth the local John Unitas, who last week surtheir tune up game while the
passed Y. A. Tittle’s all-time
buffoons, refused to score NFL pass completion mark, gets Chargers had a tough time with
points, a tactic unique in the nod over the Skins’ Jurgen- the pitiful Broncos. San Diego’s
the annals erf football. Then sen in an offensive battle. The rookie halfback sensation Dick
will find the going a lot
just to spite the offense, Colts arc the only unbeaten Post
tougher against the best front
and should rethe defense fell apart. Then team in the NFLagainst
wall in the league. The Raiders
main that way
the sagin order to discount all ru- ging Washington defense.
will give their hometown fans
a treat by finally giving the surmors that the buffoons were
prising Chargers their first loss.
New York 35, Cleveland 28:
still a good club, super man
a
played
The
Giants
first
great
Shaw
returned
Billy
to open half against
New
31, Boston 20: Joe
the Packers last Namath York
up more obvious holes in week,
rips apart weak defenbut ran out of gas in the
the other side of the Bills second half. The Browns played sive secondaries and the Paoffensive line.
the Bears minus Gale Sayers triot’s secondary rates with the
But that’s not at all the beginning or the end. It all began
with the systematic depletion of
all the good ball players the
buffoons ever had. Cookie Gilchrist, Tom Keating, Daryl Lamonica, Tom Day and even Pete
Gogolak. As the old adage goes,
always break up a winner!—or
does it?

Buffoon ballet
Well anyway, there are some
bright spots on Sunday afternoons in Buffalo. Culturally, the
great Nureyer would finish a
distant second in the ballet super bowl with Booker Edgerson.
Booker’s Sunday routine even
leaves room for personal interpretation. Is he flailing his arms
at the ball or is he merely waving goodbye to the goalward
bound pass catcher?
Let us not forget old “Goldin
Wheels” Dubenion who continually leaves his mind in the huddle
and runs his own patterns remembering the days of old.
Finally we come to Joe Collier,
the coach of the Buffoons.
When asked last week about
his team’s problems, Joe just
scratched his head and burped.
Enough said about the Bills,
because we have our own problems. Circumstances beyond our
control left us with a 5-5-2 record which is hardly championship calibre. We’ll forget about
it if you will.

National Football League
Green Bay 24, St. Louis 10;
St. Louis, led by Jim Hart, walloped the Eagles last week and
caused havoc in their defensive
secondary. However, rookie Hart
will be up against an impenetrable barrier when trying to
pass against the Packer secondary of Wood, Greminger, Jeter,
and Brown who usually catch
more passes than the men they
are guarding. With the return
of Bart Starr the Packers will
begin to look like the team of
old.

weakest. Namath’s passing has
been accompanied by the great
all around play of second-year
man Emerson Boozer who is lead
ing the league in scoring. Boston

which was probably the cause
of their lopsided victory. Tarkenton to Jones and Cleveland
moans.

should stick to baseball.

Philadelphia 17, Dallas 14;
Dallas, while still having its
troubles, won another close one

Kansas City 21, Denver 3: The
Chiefs have been football's big
gest disappointment this year
and just can’t seem to get untracked. On the other hand, the
Broncos’ 1-6 record hasn't disappointed anyone because everyone is still surprised they have
one victory. The Chiefs may be
having their problems, but Denver will only serve as vitamin
pills.

as the Eagles were
unexpectedly creamed by the
Cardinals. Philadelphia must be
up for this one while Cowboy
luck must run out sometime.
Upset! !
last

week

San Francisco 30, Detroit 10;
The 49’ers have turned out to
be the surprise of the league
with explosive offense and a
much improved defense. Detroit
is experiencing quarterback problems which seems to be the thing

in professional football. Nobody
worries in San Francisco, though,
with Brodie, Mira and Spurrier.
Los Angeles 24, Chicago 7; LA
is the only club in the league
that scores more points while
the offensive unit is sitting on
the bench, but the Bears simply
don’t score at all. Even the return of Gale Sayers won’t help
the Bears against the best front

Houston 17, Buffalo 10: The
battle of the offensive giants!
Houston wins every week with
two defensive touchdowns while
Buffalo doesn’t win at all. Look
for the Bills to be overconfident
coming off a big come-from-behind win over Lackawanna, 3-2,

four in the business.
Minnesota 28, Atlanta 14:
Everyone thought the Viking
victory over Green Bay was a
fluke, but now coming off a
20-20 tie with the league leading
Colts, the Vikings cannot be
taken lightly. Their improvement
has been hastened by the establishment of former Canadian
Joe Kapp at quarterback. The
hapless
wouldn’t even
scare the Buffoons.
Pittsburgl/31, New Orleans 20;
The Steelers are the hard luck

Like the general whose victory
is tarnished by heavy casualities,

of golf for the Bulls.

Serf comments

golf team sat back and reflected
on the sadness that accompanied
the close of a successful season.
The Bulls finished play with a
fine 5-3 won-lost record but had
to acknowledge the loss of Tony
Santelli, the player who had pi-

In a tribute to Santelli, coach
Len Serfustini commented that
“it’s been a tremendous honor
to have Tony play intercollegiate
golf for us. He’s been number
one every year and he’s had to
compete against the top player
loted the team for three consecufrom every school we’ve faced.”
tive years. In a bit of poetic jusTwo other players, Doug Bertice, Santelli turned the key that nard and Rob Stone, will be joinlocked the door for the season,' ing Tony in departing from the
when he competed last Saturday Bull’s ranks. Leading next year’s
in the Eastern College Athletic repeaters are Mike Riger, outConference finals at Bethpage, standing as a first year player;
N. Y.
Gary Bader and Ted Beringer.
This was the third straight year
Though no one’s being hung in
that Tony found himself taking effigy, Coach Serfustini summed
an October exodus to Bethpage.
up the season as “disappointing
Two years ago Tony went as the since we never had a consistent
leading member of a four-man
six-man team. As it turned out the
team, the last two years he has Bulls’ greatest enemy was the
been the sole representative from scholastic schedule. It claimed
Buffalo. As captain of the team Bill Ahrentsen as a permanent
this year Tony won five of eight victim and had its greedy hands
individual matches and consiston Mike Riger and Ted Beringer
ently came in with low medalist
for alternate periods of time. Few
honors.
people realize that golfers miss
On Saturday he paired fourmore class time than any other
teen of the eighteen holes of a
college athletes since matches
very demanding course.
The
take upwards of five hours of a
fourth hole however displayed weekday afternoon, when classes
little sympathy to the dramatic are always in session.
meaning of a Santelli victory and
This forthcoming spring (if we
marred an otherwise superb survive the winter) there will be
round. On that infamous fourth an annual intercollegiate 36-hole
hole Tony aroused the standards tournament.
of the Great Golf God in the Sky
Though the season is officially
when he gambled to salvage a over, the Bulls are still left with
par after a poor tee shot. Faster
one piece of unfinished business:
then you could say “Arnold Palmthe selection of the most valuable
er lost the U. S. open for being player. Last year it was Tony
too daring,” Tony flubbed the Santelli. Any guesses for this
ensuing shot. From there seven
one?

&amp;//,

Saint. VI.

ane

IN CONCERT

COLLEGE STUDENTS

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4

Applications are being accepted for temporary help on
a full shift basis. No experience necessary. You will work
a maximum of 8 weeks.
Assignments will be completed by Christmas vacation.
Transportation necessary.

Mailman theatre
ROCHESTER, NEW YORK

Tickets: $4.25, 3.75, 3.25, 2.25

APPLY AT

J. W. Clement Co.

On Sale at Box Office Now!

2475 George Urban Blvd.
Depew,

more shots followed, the only
poor hole in Tony’s final round

N.Y.

Falcons

SUDDENLY THE WORD IS ALPHAVILLE...

and a Sacral Agent
is in a Breathless Race

mo Masters
otme Future!

Against

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CONFERENCE THEATER
THURS., FRI., SAT.

OCT. 26, 27, 28

Performances at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 on Thursday
Friday and Saturday at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11

�Friday, October 27, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* Flft**n

Gone With The Wind/ sponsored by Sportin' Life
Alpha Sig, benefits scholarship fund
by Bob Woodruff
Editor

Sports

by Elliott Stophan Rota

returned this year to spark our

Alpha Sigma Phi Fraternity is
sponsoring the Greek Premiere
performance of Margaret Mitchell’s “Gone With The Wind.”

brothers of Gamma Phi will hold
a football victory party tomorrow night to celebrate their win
Monday. The party will be held
at Fibia Moss.’ house. The brothers are looking forward to supporting Fall-Parent Weekend , . .
The new brothers of Pi Lambda
Tau, John Hoeplinger, Bob Hoskinson, Steve Knapic, Frank Kosmerl, John Nusz, Larry Osolkowski and Tom Saleh were initiated
Oct. 18 at the Lakeview Hotel.
New pledges are Ron Brown,
Mitch Drucker, Phil Ferber, Sean
Monagham, Tom Romalewski and
Ed Throm. There will be a road
rally sponsored by our alumni
association Sunday. Call Sandy
Simon at 894-1680 for the details
. . . Sigma Phi Epsilon recently
inducted the following pledges:
Bill Brantley, Chuck Concordia,
Bill Fellows, Ray Hotz, Dick
Hotz, Dick Katz, Dan McLaughlan,
Mike Nelson, Chet Provorse, Joe
Rutkowski, Steve Salerno and
Brian Vandenberg . . .

The movie has been redone in
70-mm and stereophonic sound,
so modern movie-making techniques should make the “greatest movie ever made” even greater.
It stars Clark Gable and
Vivien Leigh.
Proceeds from the movie will
be used to establish a fraternal
scholarship fund, set up by Alpha
Sig but open to any qualified student. Alpha Sig also plans to
sponsor a Vietnamese war orphan
through the foster parents plan,
or a similar organization.
Tickets for the performance
are $3.00 but can be purchased
by students for $2.75. Block tickets for students can be purchased
at a further reduction in price
for groups of 20 tickets or more,
priced at $2.50. For information
or tickets contact any brother of
Alpha Sig or call Gary Adelman
at 833-7691, Art Weigold at 8381659 or Joe DiNardo at 836-7680.

Short blasts

Alpha Epsilon Pi will be holding its annual Fall Weekend
Semi-Formal Dinner Dance tonight. It will take place at the
Lakeview Manor featuring the

A1 Pontez Jazz Band and all the
food you can eat. Monday we will
hold our third annual “Track
Night” at Batavia Downs . . .
Alpha Phi Delta will hold their
annual Holloween Party tomorrow night. The Pumpkin of the
Year Award will be given to the
best costumed brother. Monday
we will play the Chi Omega AllStars in a football game . . .
Alpha Sigma Phi would like to
congratulate pledge Pat Patterson for being chosen All-East for
his efforts against Boston U.
This week’s rendezvous is a BYO
at McDonnell’s Duck Farm , . .
Beta
Sigma Rho announces
that top end Larry Burstein has

Tau Kappa Epsilon will hold
their annual “Spook” party tomorrow night. Newly initiated
brothers are; J. Ellison, P. Linstruth, J. Borelli, L. Borelli, R.
Bucelli, J. Hiller, R. Kidd, B. Leipow, J. McArde, G. Riscile. The
new pledges are; G. Amendola, P,
Sabo, S. Bennet, B. Pettigrew, J.
Boyko, and M. Kamholz . . .
Theta Chi Fraternity is holding
its annual “Witch Hunt” party
tomorrow night. Tar and feathers will be the order of the day,
along with hard eider. Brother
Bob

Agoglia was awarded an
R.O.T.C. scholarship last week.
Our pizza sale will take place
Nov.

4.

Sororities

campus

rush

resulted

in

44

This total is expected to increase as a result of open rush.
Off to a good start, we are determined to work for a very successful year. The officers are:
Bonnie Scherer, President; Janet
Leslie, Vice President; Ann Recore, Treasurer; and Marilyn Rutstein, Secretary.
Alpha Gamma Dalta welcomes

its Fall pledge class: Mary Morris, Julie Ruszczyk, Lynn Klein,

Dener, Carlotta Rudgers,
Mador, Lonnie Hecht,
Cindy Littlefield, Cindy Thomas,
Susan Green, Debbie Brown, Terri Stephens, Bev Kirsitts, Marsha
Miller, Kim Seege, Kathy Lake,
Pat Buchinsky, Cathy Dias, Leslie
Smith, and Mimi Blits, Best of
luck to Carolyn Virgin who is a
finalist in the Fall Weekend
Gail

Harriet

Queen Competition

.

.

.

Chi Omega is proud to anan additional pledge, Lin
da Wensel. The newly-elected
pledge officers are: .Sue Straus,
President; Liz Cameron, Vicenounce

President; Pat Taber, Secretary;
and Pat Mooney, Treasurer. The
sisters will be having a football
game with APD at 4 p.m.
Monday night the sisters will
hang a board in the Beef
Ale
House. Thursday the sisters are
going to see “Gone With the
Wind."
&amp;

Sigma Kappa Phi wishes the

best of luck to Carol Roberts and
Beth Stteger who are running for
Fall Weekend Queen. A buffet
dinner will be held this Sunday
for our parents from 6 to 9 p.m.
at the apartment . . . Newlyelected officers of Theta Chi Sorority's pledge class are: Steph-

The College Pan Hellenic Association of Buffalo, composed of
Sigma Delta Ttu, Alpha Gamma
Delta and Chi Omega sororities,
is very pleased with the successes
of Fall Rush. Under the leadership of Janet Leslie, this first off-

anie Sacks, President; Lynn Kaski, Vice President; Sue Walczak,
Secretary; and Louise Tedeschi,
Treasurer. The sisters are holding a pumpkin sale this week in
Norton Hall. Congratulations to
Mariann Safran, Kail Weekend
Queen finalist.

CL A SSIF I E D
Wagon, Std., 6 cyl. Snow
very good condition, perfect for
hunting, etc. Going to Sweden,
must sell. $675 or best offer 637-4478.
1965 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE, perfect condition,
must sell, make offer or $10 per week.
832-9256 or 873-0690.
1959 TRIUMPH, red TR3, excellent condi
1963

CHEVY l.l

tires,

skiing,

must sell, 837-5682.
1965 YAMAHA 55cc, need cash. $110 or
offer.
Call Richie, 836-0691.
best
ASH BLONDE 24” human hair fall must
sacrifice, 877-6199.
GUITARS, quality used Hat fop guitars Mar
fin, etc.) bought, sold and repaired. Dan
gelico strings. 874-0120 evenings.
ROOMATES WAN!
house,
TO SHARE 5 room bedroom
tion,

monthly. Call

Steve

at

WANTED from mineral springs and
seneca to U of B at 7:30 a.m. and back
at 4:30 p.m. Call 831-5104, ask for Mike.

tost

RIDE

FOR SALE

832-1853.

tonight,
JOSEPHINE, meet you at the
Napoleon.
WANTED
SOMEWHERE to go tonight, try the FAIL
WEEKEND BLAST, at Banat, 8:30 p.m.

WE NEED 3 or 4 clean cut, mature indivi
duals for part-time day employment,
11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Apply McDonald's Drive
In, 1385 Niagara Falls Blvd.
MEN OF SUBSTANCE, women of virtue.
Apply between 8:30 • ? tonight, Banat
Hall, 25 Review Place.

STUDENTS
cheaply

WANT
.

.

.

to

old furniture. 837-4082,

apartment

furnish

Chance

to

get

rid of

Steve.

PERSONAL

Jew.sh
gems from the
For
Bible call 875-4265 day or night.
anyone
for
responsible
NO
LONGER
Pm
who doesn't attend the Fall Weekend
___
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SHALOM!

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intelligent.

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after 6.
SITUATIONS WANTED

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TYPING TERM papers

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envelopes
TF 5-6897.

Not surprisingly, Bob Cousy looked out of place in a football
stadium. Sitting to my left in the Boston College pressbox and

far removed from the gridiron action where the Bulls were upsetting
the Eagles. He watched the entire game with not so much as a
change of facial expression, and with but an occasional remark on the
adeptness of the Buffalo squad.
The former great back court star of the Boston Celtics who made
his name synonymous with professional basketball, is now using his
unequaled court knowledge and skills as a coach and is building a
basketball powerhouse at Chestnut Hill. Before our halftime con
versation began, the former Holy Cross star begged off any questions
about football, a topic on which he seemed to know uncomfortably
little. Our talk turned instead to basketball, about which Coach
Cousy is most assuredly well versed.
"I think the pro leagues suffered a great deal of dilution in the
expansion. Most of the clubs are lacking the depth that N.B.A.
squads have customarily had. The East still has the balance of the
strength, but I’m afraid the Celtics will have to take a back seat
again this season to that good Philly club.”

Comments

on Knickerbockers
Being a New York boy, I asked Mr, Cousy about the “New

Knicks.”
“New York has always been an enigma in the league. They
never seem to jell, but (Bill) Bradley may be the man they’ve needed.
They could win it all or wind up in the cellar."
In the West, the Eagles' basketball mentor cites the Hawks as
the strength, while noting that the Los Angeles Lakers have been
hurt most by the draft and are an injury hobbled club.
What does Cousy think of the new A.B.A.’s chances?
“The new league will succeed. The American public wants the
fast moving games like basketball and football and that’s why we’ve
seen the decline of the baseball market. The A.B.A.’s teams are
located in prime cities, and the public is not aware of the difference
in the quality of play between the leagues. 1 was in Dallas last
week and they’ve got 350 million dollars backing that franchise.
How can they fail?

Tight sport
“Don’t forget, basketball has always been the "tightest" of the
professional sports. I mean that just the very best of the college
stars made it in the N.B.A. There is enough basketball talent to
supply both leagues. What they need most is one of those fat television contracts, and I’m sure one of the networks will pick it up.”
Last year the Eagles surprised a lot of people by making it
into the Eastern zone finals of the NCAA tourney. With only captain
Willy Wolters gone, and the addition of an 18-1 frosh squad, Coach
Cousy's squad seems even more awesome this season.
“I can’t complain about a height problem. (Jim) Kissane is 6’7”
and Terry Driscoll is 6’8”. The East, though, should be real tough
with Syracuse and Princeton being one-two in the area. I hear
Niagara and St. Bonavenlure have real good teams in Western New
York.”

Cousy’s comment on Niagara's Cal Murphy: "I've heard he's not
too bad.”
Nationally, Cousy figures BC will round out the top ten in the
preseason polls, hut dismisses this early ranking because "these
standings arc all based on rumor.”
At the end of January, Cousy’s Eagles will face Lew Alcindor
and UCLA in Madison Square Garden. As to how he will defend
against the seven foot giant, Cousy had some choice remarks.
“I think I'll have the priests up praying the night before. I'll
also give Jim (Kissane) a portable baseball bat to slip in his shorts.
He can give Lew a few good raps when nobody’s looking.”

Reflutes gambling link

As the second half kickoff approached, I asked the coach about
the recent article appearing in a national magazine which linked him
with professional gamblers. The American Broadcasting Company
last month featured a telecast of Cousy’s rebuttal to the article, and
Cousy broke into tears before the cameras.
“The poor magazines will do anything to sell, and sensationalism
is a big seller. It’s been a harrowing experience these few months
since this thing blew, and I hope by now people have dismissed it
as being greatly distorted and untrue.”
Just a few minutes talk with Mr. Cousy makes you want to
believe him.

N’T COOK TONITE

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(Four

J

)

�Pag* Sixteen

Th

27. 1M7

mideast

•

•

Friday, October

Washington

•

focus

Spectrum

salgon

•

world

•

new yorh

Compiled from our wire services by Madeline Levine

Bombing extends to new targets
SAIGON —U.S. jet warplanes, for the
first time in the war, bombed North
Vietnam’s largest and best protected MIG
base at Phuch Yen early this week. The
American raiders shot down one and
possibly two MIGS that rose to defend
the key base to Hanoi’s aerial defenses.
There was no U.S. report of American
planes lost in the attack, but pilots said
they had to dive through every kind of
defense the North Vietnamese could
throw at them.
In Washington, the Pentagon said Phuc
Yen was taken off the restricted target
list because of a “significant recent in-

crease” in MIG activity and increased
the danger to American warplanes.
Pilots reported “all bombs on target”
and that the field was left in a shambles.

Phuc Yen, located 18 miles northwest
of Hanoi, is one of the targets pilots had
been hoping for months the Pentagon
would let them tackle. The Air Force,
Navy and Marines all volunteered for the
job.

Creation

of

Details missing
Complete details were withheld, but it
appeared that the air strikes may have
been the most intense air assault since
the first American bombs fell on North
Vietnam in February, 1965.

Hundreds of U.S. Air Force, Navy and
Marine fighter-bombers took part in the
massive assults, unloading tons of explosives during missions that began early in
the morning and continued until sundown.

In a delayed report, a U.S. spokesman
said American helicopter gunships firing
at Viet Cong snipers accidentally killed
17 South Vietnamese civilians and wounded 23 others. The tragedy occurred in the
Mekong Delta on Thursday.
The spokesman said that government
troops had received sniper fire from a
treeline and asked the helicopters to attack. The gunships swooped in, blazed
away with rockets and machine guns, not
knowing civilians were among the Viet
Cong hiding in the trees.

‘war council urged
9

WASHINGTON
A House Republican
leader this week proposed creation of a
“council of war” of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff and retired generals and admirals
to devise a victory plan for Vietnam.
—

Rep. Bob Wilson, Calif., chairman of
the House Repu &gt;lican Campaign Committee, declared it was time President Johnson stopped listening to civilians and gave
the military a say in U.S. Vietnam policy.

"We politicians, of which I am one, and
the bureaucrats and the diplomats and
even our noncombatant allied leaders have

had their say. Now let the military leaders
have theirs,” Wilson said in a letter to
the President.
“Give these experts all the facts and
allow them without political restraints or
bureaucratic veto to make current and
long-range military recommendations that
will bring victory in Vietnam,” he said.
The California Republican’s proposal for
an all-powerful victory council was the
latest chapter in the continuing public
debate, both in and out of Congress, on

Johnson’s conduct of the war.

—DPI

Radiophoto

Eilat survivor
comes ashore

A survivor of the sinking of the Israeli
destroyer Eilat is removed by stretcher
from a helicopter to be taken to the
military hospital. The Eilat was sunk
Saturday by Egyptian missile fire as it
sailed somewhere off Port Said, Egypt.

Ship sinking sparks Suez battle
Egyptian and Israeli forces
MIDEAST
battled across the Suez Canal this week,
and Egypt warned of expected Israeli
eye-for-an-eye retaliation against the missile sinking of the Israeli destroyer Elath.
Israel seethed with indignation and anger, both at Egypt for violating the ceasefire and at the Soviet Union for supplying
the Egyptians with such dread weapons
of war as the ship-to-ship missile called
the Styx.
There was growing belief in Israel that
Soviet technicians might have actually
pushed the buttons which sent the three
missiles into the Elath Sunday. And there
was Western speculation that the Egyptians were not sophisticated enough to
handle such weapons.
Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Dayan
charged that Egyptian President Gamal
Abdel Nasser had ordered a renewal of
hostilities in ordering the attack last week
on the Israeli vessel.
And he warned: “We will know how to
react, step by step, as we did after he
ordered the blockade of the Tiran Straits
May 23."
—

Egypt loses 80%

Israeli artillery knocked out 80 percent of Egypt’s oil refining capacity during a bitter hours-long Suez Canal battle
that left refineries and oil depots aflame
in the Egyptian port of Suez, Israeli
sources reported.
Egypt demanded an emergency meeting
of the U.N. Security Council, charging
Israel with “unpremeditated aggression,”
and the 15-nation peacekeeping panel was

called into urgent session at New York.
Soviet Ambassador Nikolai T, Fedorenko
presented a formal resolution, urging the

council to agree with him that Israel was
guilty of a “gross violation” of U.N. ceasefire orders. Fedorenko said the Council
must adopt a measure that “resolutely
condemns Israel for the act of aggression
committed by it in the city of Suez” and
“requests that Israel compensate the United Arab Republic for the damages caused
by that act.”

U.S. pessimistic
U.S. officials are

pessimistic about the
possibilities of defusing the latest Arab-

Israeli crisis.
They acknowledged that as yet they
could see no way out of the short-term
perils posed by the sinking of an Israeli
destroyer or the destruction of what appeared to be a major portion of Egypt’s
oil refining capacity.
The United States and other would-be
peacemakers were faced with stiffening
attitudes on both sides. Officials here were
further depressed by the feeling that the
United Nations would prove ineffective
in finding a way to lower tensions in the
area and move toward a compromise.
The United States and the Soviet Union
clashed early this week in an urgent
United Nations Security Council meeting
on the Middle East fighting. Soviet Ambassador Nikolai T. Fedorenko urged council adoption of a resolution demanding
that Israel be condemned as an aggressor
and be ordered to pay for damages
inflicted in the Suez Canal battle.
U.S. Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg
dismissed the Russian demand and offered
a counter-resolution asking the council to
condemn “any and all violations” of the
cease-fire imposed by the U.N. after Israel
won the Mideast war last June,

The 6purloined telegram 9 incident

—OM

Telephoto

While demonstrations around the world
protesting the Vietnam war were in
Saturday, a group of high
students hold a
patriot vigil in Battery Park in New York
City, expressing their support for fighting American men in that war-torn
Southeast Asian nation. The group is a
composite of several organizations. Vigil
is sponsored by the New York Coordinating Committee for Responsible Patriotism.
progress

Another point
of view

school and college

NEW YORK—The eight-day cruise of
politics and pleasure for the nation’s governors ended Tuesday with the suspension
of the chief operator of the luxury liner
Independence, in the case of the “purloined radiogram."
The radio operator was suspended Tuesday pending investigation of how a White
House telegram got into the wrong hands
during the shipboard governors’ conference.
The mysterious “purloined radiogram”
—as it came to be known during the governors’ eight-day cruise to the Virgin
Islands—was sent by White House aide
Marvin Watson to former Gov. Price
Daniel of Texas, President Johnson’s liaison man at the floating conference.

Reagan gets message

The message ended up in the hands
of California Gov. Ronald Reagan, who
disclosed its contents. It specifically pressed Daniels to recruit support for a resolution backing Johnson’s Vietnam policy.
The resolution was defeated among charges of "White House intervention” in the
affairs of the conference.
Reagan told a news conference in Sac-

ramento, Calif., Tuesday that he had not
broken any federal law, intentionally or
accidentally, when he read and disclosed
the radiogram’s contents.
“I did not intercept someone else’s message or mail,” Reagan said. He said the
envelopes containing the radiogram were
addressed to him.
“I assumed it was some kind of general
distribution,” he said, “so I read it. The
last few lines were instructions for armtwisting a couple of Republican governors.”

'Romney said to': Reagan
The California governor said he made

the radiogram public at the suggestion of
Michigan Gov. George Romney, who has
been mentioned along with Reagan as a
possible GOP presidential candidate in
1968.
The delivery of the telegram to the
wrong party could be the subject of an
investigation either by the Marine Inspection office of the Coast Guard or by the
Federal Communications Commission. The
FBI said it would only conduct inquiries
into the matter at the request of the
Justice Department.

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                    <text>IRC bans non-fee payers v
from residence activities I HE
Students who have not paid their Residence Activities
Fees will not be admitted to any Inter-Residence Council
event funded, by these fees. The IRC unanimously decided
on this policy at a meeting Thursday night in the Tower
Private Dining Room.

Vol. IS, No.

dormitory.
Other financial regulations concerned the monitoring of monies
which organizations and publications spend under IRC by the finance committee. These IRC
sponsored groups cannot operate
under a deficit.

Public address system

A third resolution, proposed
by Mike Barcham and Robin
Nuskind, calls for a more effective use of the public address
systems by IRC.
Announcements would be made
during dinner hours “in cafeterias and public areas of the halls
after the approval of the respective house councils or their designated representative has been
secured or if the material to be
announced has been printed on

by Joel Kleinman
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

Terming last week’s Student
Senate meeting “the most embarrasing two hours I ever spent,”
Law School Senator Nick Sargent
submitted his resignation to the
Senate. Senator Sandra Funt also
resigned from the Senate that
"regards procedure more important than issues.”
The resignations were precipitated by Senate discussion of a
resolution calling for the cessa-

tion of bombing of North Viet-

Committee reports established
the participation of all resident
halls in the open house program
during Fall-Parent Weekend. Dan
Becken was elected IRC information officer. He will act as an
advisor to any student seeking
information on IRC activities.
David Bunch was voted in as
election committee chairman. He
will be in charge of improving
the efficiency of IRC elections.

Tuesday, October 24, 1967

Two who quit Student Senate
criticize body, last session

hall.

Other action

13

ist embarrassing two hour:

the official stationary of the Student Association or the InterResidence Council”. Announcements which are made at other
times must be approved by the
house councils of each residence
Miss Berland also presented
the budgets of dormitories to
the representatives. The amount
for each resident area was based
on 40% of, the fees collected
from each hall. A “correction"
was then made, subtracting a certain amount for each student in
a dormitory who did not pay his
resident activities fee.
The budgets were unanimously
carried. Tower will receive
$1047.40; Allenhurst, $1692.60;
Goodyear, $1203.80; Clement,
$1201.20, Cooke, $343.20; MacDonald, $387.40; Michael, $140.40;
and Schoellkopf, $374.40. The
resident population was set at
2542 students with only 84 nonfee payers among them.

SpECTI^IIM
of New York at Buffalo

The resolution, proposed by Treasurer Karen Berland,
left the establishment of any financial requirements for
admission to events to the House Committee Councils.
Financial rules and regulations
were also proposed by Miss Berland and passed by the IRC representatives. The proposals included seating one member of
each residence hall on the finance committee. They will be
appointed by the chairman of the
finance committee who will be
the treasurer of IRC. The chairman will have privileges of a
voting member.
A major new financial rule
concerns the itemizing of the resident halls’ budgets. Instead of
submitting a request for one
lump sum of money, budget outlining expenses will have to be
hartded in to the IRC by each

£

nam and a negotiated settlement
of the conflict. The motion was
passed after a “two-hour embroilment in parliamentary procedure” that was marked by repeated objections and motions
that prolonged the discussion unnecessarily, Mr. Sargent told The
Spectrum,

Mr. Sargent further commented, “It seems inconceivable

that a resolution of such importance, whether one is for or
against, could end up being delayed by so many minute technicalities. As a result of this performance by the Senate, I feel
that in all due respect to the
Law School and myself, I am no
longer able to function as an
effective representative.”
Both Miss Funt and Mr. Sargent felt that the senators should
have been versed on the issue
before the meeting, and should
have known their positions.

Attitude scored
Mr. Sargent scored the attitude
held by some senators that the
Senate had no authority to express an opinion on the war,
claiming "The Student Senate, as
an elected body, should recognize
that it should express itself not
only on campus, but national affairs. We must not only provide
the means for student expression,
such as referendums, but we
should also provide the impetus

by expressing to the students and
the community our own feelings.”

Miss Funt took issue with the
“apathy of the Senate that is just
a reflection of the apathy on the
campus as a whole. The Senate
should take the initiative, not its
committees,” she added. Voting
in the affirmative on the resolution, Miss Funt stated that it was
inconceivable that a student leader could choose to abstain from
an important moral issue.

She expressed interest in starting a petition to recall the Senate because, “people with initiative and leadership should be

elected” to office.

Mr, Sargent has not at this
time submitted a written resignation. Student Association President Stuart Edelstein refused to
accept the written resignation of
Miss Funt, Consequently she must
explain her action before the Senate at a future meeting

Peaceful demonstration outbursts into violence
By Daniel Lasser and Barry Holtzclaw
Spectrum

Editors

WASHINGTON D.C.—Peaceful protests turned into mass violence as 35,000 angry
anti-war demonstrators attempted to storm the Pentagon late Saturday afternoon.
The protesters threw rocks, broke windows, used ropes to climb a 15 foot wall, and
rushed lines of troops twenty deep to gain access to the doors of the building. They were
met at the nerve center of the nation’s military by some 6,000 paratroopers, military police,
and other army troops who used tear gas, nightsticks, bayonetted rifles, and rifle butts to
hold back the crowds.
The confrontation marked
the first time in 35 years that
federal troops have been
called into Washington to
quell a civil disturbance.
Over 430 arrested; among the
first were novelist Norman Mailer and Mrs. Dagmar Wilson of
Women’s Strike for Peace. David
Dellinger, chairman of the National Mobilization Committee,
was also placed under arrest.
Of the 47 participants reported
injured, 23 were police. Hundreds
of students complained of throat
and eye irritations from tear gas.

125.000 march

The assault on the Pentagon
followed a rally of more than
125.000 at the Lincoln Memorial
and a march across the Potomac

River to the military headquarters.

The rally began in the morning
grandas the demonstrators
mothers, mothers-for-peace, doctors, professors, old radicals, new
leftists, ivy-leaguers, teeny-boppers, grandchildren, flower children and more
arrived from
points all over the country.
A lengthy list of speakers and
popular singing groups performed
for nearly five hours as the tree—

—

lined area around the Reflection
Pool filled with people.
The warm sun, flowers and
burning incense gave the rally a
relaxed love-in atmosphere.
The Jefferson Airplane, The
Fugs, Peter, Paul and Mary, and
Phil Ochs sang anti war songs,
many of them written especially
for the rally.
New stage in movement
In his opening speech, Mobilization chairman Dellinger commented: “This is the beginning of
a new stage in the American
peace movement, in which the
cutting edge becomes active resistance.”
Dr. Benjamin Spock said: “We,
the protesters, are the ones who
may help to have our country
if we can persuade enough of our
fellow citizens to think and vote
as we do."
The speech of British Labourite
Clive Jenkins was briefly interrupted by three youths who
rushed the lectern, knocking over
the podiuni 'and a dozen microphones.

The three claimed membership
in the American Nazi Party.
Other speakers at the rally included Lincoln Lynch of CORE,
Mrs. Wilson, and Green Beret

Simultaneously, a meeting of
Negroes was held next to the Lincoln Memorial, and approximately
130 decided to leave for a separat caucus in another section of
the city.

March delayed
At this

time, Mobilization officials announced that the start
of the march to the Pentagon
would be delayed. The last-minuate erection of an 8 foot barbedDonald Duncan.
John Wilson of SNCC concludwire fence along the perimeter
ed the scheduled program at the of the Pentagon area by military
rally with the chant: “Hell, no officials caused march leaders to
. . . hell no
remap their strategy.
we won’t go!”

—upi Telephoto

This
.

.

is

not

Vietnam

As the delay grew longer and
demonstrators grew more impatient, several factions broke formation, starting for the Arlington
Memorial Bridge. Marshalls succeeded in holding them back, and
the march began one and a half
hours late.

The column of chanting marchers, arm-in-arm, snaked its way
across the Potomac river and
made their way to the North
Parking area of the Pentagon
two miles away.
Following a brief rally in the
parking area, marchers were told
(Cont’d on Pg.

Troops are silhouetted against the Virginia sky
Saturday evening. They carried sheathed bayonnets and wore gas masks in an attempt fo
keep anti-war demonstrators from entering the
Pentagon.

10)

�P*9f Two

Tuesday, October 24, 1967

The Spectrum

Freshmen elect Senators; turnout
Program is designed too small to signify 'true mandate'

Freshman Forum

ms held Wednesda

in which 456 put of 1900

freshmen voted, resulted In th

and Ellen Price to the Senate
Dean Scudder added: “It is not

Freshman Forum, a unique
first year student program,
is currently in progress.
The Forum has been designed to provide freshmen
with some sort of answers to
questions they may have
formulated during their first
weeks of university life
through a series of frank
discussions with faculty members and upperclassmen on
various topics of interest.

Create identity

Discussion afterwards
included such topics as the desirability of basic distribution requirements, mental confusion
caused by the diverse and oftentimes contradictory opinions encountered within a “multiversity”
such as the State University of
Buffalo and the problem of deciding on a major field of study.
According to Dean Scuddcr, an
opportunity will be given for follow up of the Forum by means of
small discussion groups composed of students who are interested in further dialogue with
faculty and upperclassmen.
Remaining Freshman Forum
meetings will be held in the Conference Theater in Norton Union
at 11:00 a m., today and at 11:00
a.m. and 3:00 pin. Thursday.

Bettle

Gannett News Service

ALBANY—It would be hard to fight with the observations made recently by temporary State Senate President
Earl W. Brydges, Niagara Falls, that he’d like very much to
see the Supreme Court clear up some of the confusion over
the extent to which the federal constitution permits government aid to parochial schools and their pupils.

Margin of difference
But he's not sure specifically
what the margin of difference is.
Obviously, even if Blaine is
repealed, unless the Supreme
Court takes a few church-state
cases in the field of education,
the legislature wil have great difficulty in decided the extent to

)

created,"

by David H.

The most recent ruling calling
attention to the issue is one made
by New Hampshire’s highest
court. It decided that for the state
to share its lottery proceeds with
parochial schools would be violative of the "establishment of religion” clause in the U.S. const i
tution.
This is the very clause within
the framework of which the New
York state budget director feels
it is probable the state would be
chanelling up should the new
constitution be passed.
Brydges who is against the new
constitution but who would like
to see the Blaine Amendment barring "direct or indirect”
aid to parochial schools repealed
feels Blaine is more restrictive
than the federal wording.

Mr. Heymann a resident of
New York City, is a Political Science major. His previous experience includes chairmanship of
the Elections Committee and a
membership of the Executive
Board in high school. He was
chosen president of his high
school Alumni Association. He
was also a member of the Freshman Council this semester.

In introducing the topic of Identity Within the University, Dr.
Stanley Cramer, associate professor of the Department of Counselor Education said: “Identity
cannot be found, it has to be

Need seen for test case
on parochial school aid

He sees a crying need for
some up-to-date guidelines
and thinks that the question
is arising so often in different
parts of the country that the
court can no longer by-pass
an obligation to speak out.

Mr. Heymann received the
plurality of 221 votes. Harry
Klein and Mary Carlson received
180 votes respectively and Ellen
Price received 144 votes.

the freshmen.

cieties.

man Forum.
She said; “The Freshman Forum
is meant to give freshmen an opportunity after several weeks on
campus to talk about their interests and concerns, and to help
them to formulate guidelines for
the decisions and choices which
they will make as students and
as members of the University
community."

Voting was conducted from 9
a m. until 5 p.m. in Norton Center
Lounge and in the lobby of Goodyear Hall.

At a typical Forum meeting,
a faculty member gives a short
introductory presentation, after
which he and the student panelists hold open discussion with

It is sponsored by the Office
of the Dean of Students and the
Cap and Gown and Bisonhead soThis year, the Freshman Forum
is focusing on two major topics,
Identity Within the University,
and Experimentation: Its Implications.
In an interview with The Spectrum. Miss Jeanette Scudder,
Dean of Women and Associate
Dean of Students, who is the coordinator of the Forum program,
explained the purpose of Fresh-

According to Steven Rotter, Chairman of the Elections Committee, “the turnout,
although better than previous years, was not enough to warrant the elections as a true
mandate of the Freshman Class.”

the purpose of the Forum to tell
freshmen what to do, but rather
to discuss with them the various
questions and issues to which
they may have to respond here
at the University."

which parochial schools or their
pupils can be given state assistance.
As the law and constitution
now stand, Senator Brydges feels
certain that there will not be
trouble about aid similar to that
which the state now provides for
bussings, health facilities, and
textbooks. He thinks this could
be extended into such non-academic fields as driver-training.
But how far beyond that it is
possible to go, he—like everyone
who faces up to the issue honestly—has doubts.

Too much discussion about the
Blaine Amendment has, of necessity, gone on in a pea soup fog
through which none of the participants could see clearly.

Lawmakers shun
The Senator does well to cut
through to &lt;he heart of the matter: the need for some judgemade law on the subject. Legislators are usually allergic to this
sort of thing, but it’s hard to
see how it can be avoided when
a basic issue such as the relation

between church and state is at
stake.
It will be unhappy, indeed, if
legal guidelines come only after
a hugh state-aided structure has
arisen in support of church-related schools—especially so if the
belated guidelines require thatthe structure be dismantled.

the Commuter Council provides
commuters with an opportunity
to be equally represented in campus activities.

Council member and a cheerleader. She would like to see more
student representatives on the

Curriculum Planning Committee.

Active
Ellen Price is a graduate of
Kenmore West High School
where she was active in school
government. She is a Commuter

sai&amp;
of

m

fWI HI 1!

Mr, Hcymann feels that there
should be more student participation on campus, especially with
respect to the Student Senate.
"Everyone should be encouraged
to vote on Senate issues. Then
the results should be taken to
the administration by the Student Senate.”

It is also his opinion that Sen-

ate meetings and issues do not

receive enough publicity and that
students should be encouraged
to attend Senate meetings and
contribute ideas to the discussion.
He feels that the more contact
the senators have with the student body, the more effective the
Student Senate will be.

George Heymann

"Everyone should be encouraged to vole on Senate issues."

Senate
contact

Harry Klein

"should establish more
with the students."

Math major
Harry Klein is a Math major
from Elmont, Long Island. He
would like to see more experimentation with the pass-fail
grading system. He also feels
that there should be more student participation. “Commuters
should take more active interest
in Student Senate activities, therefore, Commuters Council is a
step in the right direction and
should be taken seriously and
supported by the student body.”

Mr. Klein thinks that what the
Student Senate needs is a new
image; "it should establish more
contact with the students.”
Lancaster freshman
Mary Carlson is majoring in
mathematics and psychology. A
graduate of St. Mary’s High
School in Lancaster, she was an
officer in the student council.
She was also the secretary of her
class. Currently she is a member
of the Commuter Council.
“I would like commuters to
have greater involvement in Student Senate affairs,” she said.
Miss Carlson also believes that

Mary Carlson

Ellen Price

would like commuters to have "I would like to help in plangreater involvement in Student ning the new campus."
Senate affairs."

"/

Plans for University coffee house
in Goodyear Hall being formulated
Plans are now being formulated for a coffee house to be set
up on the State University of Buffalo campus.
Woody Graber, chairman of a
.

University Union Activities Board
subcommittee explained to The
Spectrum that his idea would in-

clude both entertainment and
food.
The coffee house would be in
the Allenhurst Bus Lounge in

Gobdyear Hall. It would be open
three days a week, from 8 p.m.
to 12 p.m. weeknights and 8 p.m.
to 1:30 a.m. weekends.

would be supplied by one or more college coffee house circuits, as well as local
talent. The entertainment will be
made up of good, but yet unknown artists.
Mr. Graber plans to have food
Entertainment

provided by the University Food

Service, with some connection
with the Goodyear Snack Bar.
The coffee house would have to
charge admission, and be selfsupporting. The Student Senate
has not approved any funds for
the coffee house because Treas

urer Doug Braun said, “no one
has explained the whole idea to

me.”

�Tuesday, October 24, 1967

Th

•

Spectrum

Pag* Thr**

Future of medical practice is subject dateline news, Oct 24
of McKeown address to Convocation
Medical service

by Nora Gamer and David Hansen
Spectrum Staff Reporters

Commenting on the need (or

Thursday, Dr. Thomas McKeown, professor ol social medicine at the University of Birmingham, England, discussed the
future of medical practice.
Dr. McKeown feels that the
question of the direction which
medicine is taking is a basic one
to all connected with the field.

“I find little difference in discussing certain problems with
first year students or London
physicians,” he said, “The shape
of medical practice is a recent
thing, and variable from one
country to another.”
He claimed that three phases
of medical practice exist. In the
first phase, the general practioner is responsible for administering complex services, ‘This practice is not well adopted to modern physicians," he said.
In the second phase, the general practioner relies heavily on
the assistance of specialized consultants.
In the third phase, complex
specialties are created which
make it difficult to obtain any
type of complicated medical care
outside of a hospital. “Such a
system leads to a loss of personal care," he added.

Personal care

There are several issues which
Dr. McKeown feels are relevant
to the future of medical practice.
He believes that it is desirable to
maintain personal care.
On the matter of family care
by one doctor, he said: “I think
it is highly desirable but not
realistic
we should diminish
the idea of the doctor as consultant in all family matters.”
Dr. McKeown questioned the
value of the hospital system in
some instances. He pointed out
that ‘putting a psychiatric patient
in a hospital may prolong and
increase his illness.”
He said that the hospital invironment might have an adverse
effect on elderly patients, but
...

conceded

that "it is becoming
increasingly difficult to maintain
home services in the United
States."

He mentioned that “the issues

are far to complex for anyone

to say assuredly that he can pre-

dict the future of medical practice.”
“We need medical centers intimately associated with the community.” The
medical
field
should ideally be integrated fo
include personal doctors and consultants “in any field in which
that work can only be done by a
person who is explicitly trained
in it.”
“I think that if we bend in
such a direction, we would resolve many of the quarrels in the
medical profession.”
Dr, McKeown said that his
hope for young doctors is that
“they may have an idea of where
we have come from, so they may
better discern the direction in
which we are to proceed.”

Social medicine
In an intrview with The Spec-

trum, Dr. McKeown said that social medicine defined as 'population medicine” or “medicine
for large groups” is “suffering
from organization,”
He claimed that separate hospitals for treatment of acute sickness, chronic and mental disease
prevent hospitals from using
their facilities to the utmost.
Dr. McKeown suggests consolidating the three types of hospital in order to create a large
complex hospital which would
meet the needs of each type of
patient. Setting up a framework
for the entire medical and nursing staff would result in better
care for all types of patients.

.eown

the medical school should attempt service for the population.
"By treating sickness of the community, students would have a
more realistic idea of the medical
needs of the public," he added.
At present, high entrance requirements to medical school discourage many able students. Once
in medical school, students often
get “a false impression of medical tasks and appropriate methods. Some of the ablest people
are prevented from making sug-

for improvements in
medical practice.”

gestions

In a large University, the
school of medicine itself is at
a distance from the main part of
the school. “The real need is to
make the school of medicine part
of the University by locating it
on the same campus.”
For medical students who are
interested in other fields, such

as music, languages or literature,
the resources of the University
should be open to him.
Dr. McKeown visited Buffalo
from Monday until Friday. He is
a National Research
Council
Scholar and Demonstrator in Bioat
chemistry
McGill. He is a mem-

ber of the Minister of Health’s
Standing Medical Advisory Committee, and former editor of the
British Journal of Preventive
Medicine.

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WASHINGTON—The huge Pentagon building, nerve center of
resumed business as usual Monday after enduring a
weekend siege by antiwar protesters. The antiwar demonstration,

lI.S. defenses,

U.s. marshals arrested and hauled off to jail a last-ditch band of 240
men and women who refused to leave when a rally permit expired at
midnight.
LONDON—A mob of 4,000 demonstrators chanting anti-American
slogans and hurling rocks, sticks, clods of dirt and firecrackers battled London riot police Sunday in a wild donnybrook outside the U.S.
embassy in Grosvenor Square.
The protest against the Vietnam war injured 30 policemen, 11
of them seriously enough to require admission to hospitals. Police
arrested 44 persons on charges of possessing dangerous weapons,
and behaving threateningly.
causing bodily
AMSTERDAM—A crowd of 500 teenagers stoned the American
consulate with rocks and bicycle bells Sunday in a protest against U.S.
involvement in Vietnam. Police on horseback charged the group of
youngsters swinging clubs and drove them from the building.
One demonstrator was reportedly hospitalized with injuries
Scores were arrested.
ALBANY—The state chapter of the National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People has condemned the proposed new
constitution and the war in Vietnam. Concluding their 31st annual
convention Sunday, the 700 delegates approved a resolution opposing
the proposed new state charter despite efforts of some Negro delegates to the Constitutional Convention to drum up support,
ALBANY—Governor Rockefeller announced today that more
than $58 million worth of building has been completed on State University of New York campuses this year. He said this was done in
order to accommodate an anticipated record student enrollment, and
more is planned to take care of the estimated 290,400 full time students the university is planning for by 1975.
MIDEAST—Israel buried 15 sailors and Egypt decorated four
naval officers Monday after the missile destruction of an Israeli
destroyer in an angrily debated incident that raised fears of reviving
full scale Middle East war.
U.A.R. President Gama) Abdel Nasser’s regimie, after proclaiming honors for two missile ships it said sank the destroyer Eilat in
Egyptian waters Saturday, fired off a protest to the United Nations
about Israel's "provocation." In Israel, where Premier Levi Eshkol
denounced the “despicable attack launched without cause” in what
officials insisted was international waters, the recovered bodies were
being laid to rest with full military honors. Hope dwindled for 36
Eilat crewmen listed as missing. Of the 151 men rescued, 48 were

reported wounded.

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�P«g* Four

Tuesday, October 24, 1967

The Spectrum

is

For student-fall weekend
Fall Weekend at nearly every University in the country
is a weekend set aside for fun and entertainment. It’s a time
when students can turn away from the books and enjoy
themselves by attending dances, mixers, football games and
concerts. That’s the way it should be.

T*

ill

ta

’arem
1, open louse or paren
Although it’s a nice gesture to invite parents here for a
weekend, it would indeed be wiser to select a weekend that
does not coincide with Fall Weekend.

Timing of the Weekend, parent or not, was also rather
poor. Many students are in the midst of exams by this time
of the year. Late September or early October would be more
appropriate.
The University Union Activities Board, planners of the
weekend event, have again exhibited a lack of planning ability. The activities scheduled should really provide an interesting three days for parents. At least UUAB could have
selected a weekend when the football team would be playing
at home.
This weekend may not prove to be the most fun-filled,
but it will undoubtedly be interesting.
Too bad Fall Weekend couldn’t be for the students.

No endorsement of violence
A, week of anti-war protests and demonstrations climaxed in Washington Saturday and continued into this week.
The week’s events point out that there is growing concern and growing vociferous opposition to the war. But it
also indicates something more.
Both side in the conflict of opinion are becoming more
radical in their outlook.
Those backing U.S. policy are becoming less tolerant
of the dissenters. Police are no longer carrying the sit-in
participant off the premises; in many cases they are clubbing
them and dragging them in a far from gentle manner.
In some cases groups of officials have taken it upon
themselves to vent their wrath and distaste for dissenters.
On the other hand, the protestors are turning from
pacifism to activism. Many no longer peacefully demonstrate; they attack and provoke. Many dissenters now feel
that peaceful demonstration is not enough.
The passions of each side serve only to inflame the
passions of the other. Demonstrations in some part of the
country last week reached riot proportions.
We can endorse dissent, we can endorse protest, we
can endorse the demonstration. But we cannot endorse violence.
Nothing can be gained by employing violence in this situation, but a great deal can be lost. There is no more justification for a dissenter assaulting a soldier or police officer
than there is for the soldier or policeman clubbing and battering a protestor.
Perhaps some of the protestors have turned to violence
because they seek a martyr. Perhaps they seek sympathy for
their cause. Perhaps some just like suicide.
Violence will not evoke those responses. Violence by
the protestor indicates that he has failed, and has no other
way to turn.
Swinging and clubbing can easily be expanded to shooting in the heat of controversy. The protestor who advocates
violence is just as ignorant, just as guilty, just as repulsive
as any law officer who uses force to quell peaceful dissent.
A bullet fired by a protestor is just as deadly as a bullet
fired by a policeman.
Are there so many who place no value on human lives?

Ranks of dissent swell

wum,
waw!

fvSC

-av*=err
r^TVoiAirrv

—

‘Well, I don't know what to do with all these turned-in cards —we certainly can't burn them, ha. ha.'

Readers
writings

the burgher
by Schwab
Spent the weekend in Chicago while the rest of

you Were parading around the nation’s capital. And
instead of taking a bus I flew American Airlines.
I don’t fly very much; you might say that I’m
I don’t pass out
just beginning to get used to it
or get air sick anymore.
Wilbur and Orville never had it as good as we
do. What if they’d had all the advantages that
modern air travel provides? Their historic Kitty-

Family is joyously reunited

—

hawk trip might have gone somthing like this:
First Wilbur and Orville climb aboard. Standing
in the doorway is a luscious stewardess, smiling
warmly.

“Would you like a cocktail sir?” she asks.
"No, I’m rather nervous, you see I’ve never

flown before.”
The plane’s engine starts and soon they’re taxiing down the runway. A click precedes this fuzzy
voice:
“Good afternoon, Wilbur and Orville. You are
lucky to be aboard our newest Wright Special.
You’ve just taken off from Kittyhawk International
Airport and when we touch down in West Kittyhawk, some 53 seconds from now, you can expect
the weather to be much the same.
"We’ll climb to an altitude of about 130 feet
and our cruising speed will be approximately 46
miles per hour.
“I’d like to call your attention to the Wright
Special information card in the rear of your seat.
As you can readily see, the emergency exits are
located over the wing, which was a pretty stupid
thing to do since they are made of paper.”
“Who is that lady, Wilbur?”
“I don’t know, Orville, I thought she was a
friend of yours.”
The voice continues:
“Your emergency oxygen supply consists of a
long rubber hose and a face mask, but we just
couldn't get a big oxygen tank on board; so if you
have any trouble, take a deep breath.
“Rest rooms are located in the rear, but we’ll be
landing in about 20 seconds, so forget it.
“If you gentlemen would remove your hands
from your eyes and look down, you’ll see hundreds
of souvenir hunters ready to tear your planes to
shreds as soon as we touch down.
“Keep your seat belt fastened and please observe the no smoking sign.”
Short pause as the plane noses down.
“Wilbur and Orville, we’ll be landing in about
two seconds. Kindly keep your seat belt fastened
and remain in your seats until the plane comes to
a complete halt. Check under the left wing for any
of your personal belongings. Thanks for flying

Estimates of the number who participated Saturday
in the anti-war rally at the Pentagon varied from a conservaWright.”
tive 30,000 to upwards of 70,000.
Recognizing that the true figure lies somewhere between On Chicago streets
It was my first visit to Chicago so I did like the
the two, no one could help finding the rally a significant
song says and hit State St. and I just want to say
event. Civil disobedience by thousands of persons should be that it is filled with flashing
neon, pimps, prostienough to have a sobering effect on any thoughtful Ameritutes, penny arcades, peep shows, bookstores (for
can.
those 21 and over), old women telling us that it’s
Administration spokesmen indicated that protestors were not too late to save our souls, Sidney Portier movgranted permits to show the world that this is a free country ies, couples kissing at the edge of alleyways and 19
cent hamburgers.
and that we recognize the right to dissent.
On lower
St. I saw a scene I’d never seen
Now that the world has been enlightened, and the right before. A manState
running; two chasing. The capture.
to dissent has been upheld, we can all rest easily.
A not-sO-gentle shove into the doorway of a vacant
If only this is grasped by Administration officials after building. The frisk. Handcuffs. Whisk . . . across
the street to a waiting military police car.
Saturday’s march, their perceptive capacity is severely lackFast, clean and efficient they were. The aring.
restee’s face showed no sign of regret or surprise,
If they could not see that more and more persons are just a mild sort of agony, as if the handcuffs
questioning the correctness of U.S. policy in Vietnam and pinched, perhaps.
the nature of the entire military establishment, they are
AWOL probably, I thought. I wonder if he’d
go to prison, I asked myself at the time, disturbed,
indeed blind.
unseeing, walking then slower than the State St.
And blind men should not be leading nations
throngs. Maybe he didn’t like the Army.

To the Editor:
The University Union Activities Board and the
Student Senate have always worked together in a
relationship which has been close and strong. However, even in the most harmonious of relationships
do strains or problems develop. This is natural
and is to be expected. Only through direct intercourse and exchange of ideas between the two can
the disagreements be resolved.
Last week such a situation developed between
these two organizations. Like the constant source
of trouble it has been, the student fee situation
again became the primary cause of this development. Both organizations are, of course, very much
concerned with the payment of these fees, the Student Senate dealing with all university-recognized
groups, the UUAB concerning itself with campuswide programming of activities. Although standards, rules and procedures are set up to conduct
the business of these organizations, items such as
student fees tend to upset the set and rational. In
order to maintain the functions of the UUAB and
the Student Senate, as well as other organizations,
money is needed
before student fees became
voluntary, there was never any doubt as to receiving the amount requested. However, with the
advent of the voluntary fee situation, this amount
could not be assured and so the guesses, the questions and the irrational began to enter.
When thoughts are said or written, it is not
so much the literal translation which is important
as is the main idea behind it. Emotions sometimes
become external when best left internal. As a
result, individuals, organizations and ideas associated with these become the scapegoat for the emotions. This is not done with any planned intent.
My writing of this letter is intended as an explanation to both those directly involved and those
indirectly involved in the University Union Activities Board and the Student Senate in regard to
recent policy disagreements.
Errol Craig Sull, President
University Union Activities Board
P.S. The family is now joyously reunited and, oh
yeah, thanks for the raise in our allowance, Dad!
-

The Spectrum
is published twice-weekly
every
Tuesday and Friday—during the regular academe year
at the State University of New York at Buffalo, 3435
Main Street, Buffalo, New York 14214,
Offices are
located at 355 Norton Hall.
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Editor-in-chief—Michael L. D’Amico

Managing Editor —Richard R, Haynes
Asst. Managing Editor—Richard Schwab
Business Manager—Samuel A. Powazek
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Feature

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asst.—John Trigg
asst.—Joceylyne Hailpern
Photography editor
Promotion Circulation
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Joscelyn
Director—Murray
Edward
asst.—Alan Gruber
The Spectrum is a member of the United States Student
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United Press International. Subscriptions at $3.00 a
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Represented for national advertising by National Educational Advertising Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave.,
Second class postage paid at Buffalo, New York.
Editorial policy is determined by the Editor-in-Chief.
New York, N. Y.

��Tuesday, October 24, 1967

P*g* Fiv*

The Spectrum

Treasurer defends budget cuts
To the Editor:

BELOW OLYMPUS

By Interlandi

Mr. Larry Shohet has sounded off once again
without any knowledge of the relevant facts. In
reference to Mr. Shohet’s letter condemning my
handling of University Union Activities Board’s
budget, it is quite obvious that he failed to find
out what exactly was cut from the University
It is with this thought in mind that I would
like to enlighten Mr. Shohet and others, by showing
where the University Union Activities Board’s activities were curtailed.
The first committee to be cut was Arts and
Crafts. The line which was reduced was promotion,
as I informed them that they would be able to get
their supplies at a reduced rate from another
source. Their allocation was reduced from $450 to
$350, The second area that was reduced was Free
Game Hours, This was indeed cut from a highly
inflated figure of $500 to $400, but, in fact, there
will be more game hours this year.
The next item was the Concert Committee whose
budget was in the raised $500 to cover additional
publicity and physical arrangements. The Arts Exhibits Committee was reduced. Rental of art exhibits was trimmed from $1000 to $800 while the costs
covering these rentals was lowered from $1650 to
$1320. (It was the belief of the Finance Committee
that many free exhibits could be substituted for
those cut from the University Union Activities
Board.) In addition, lectures and slides were eliminated at a cost of $200 since plans had not fully
materialized and this was not considered a vital
function.
The folk festival was not cut by the Finance
Committee but was an ex post facto reduction as
the concert was eliminated by the UNIVERSITY
UNION ACTIVITIES BOARD. The Community Aid
Corps budget was not eliminated, but was transferred to the auspices of the Student Senate.
The Dance Committee also suffered a reduction.
This being a new experience, the Finance Committee felt that it would be wiser to have one dance recital as opposed to two and evaluate the results of
the first one before they planned the second. The
Public Relations Committee also had $75 reduced
from coffee hours.
In addition to the above cuts the payment for
the yearbook was transferred from the University
Union Activities Board Budget and placed on the
Student Senate budget at a cost of $750. A reserve
fund of $2000 was eliminated because it was considered an unnecessary expense, and the summer
program of $2000 was eliminated because this activity comes out of summer activity fees and not
present ones.
Now that Mr. Shohet is aware of the budget
reductions for the University Union Activities Board
activities, I think that he might finally realize that
no vital function or activities were eliminated. It
is only by reducing the fringe events from one
organization’s activities that we will be able to
provide other organizations with money for their
worthwhile events.
Again, I would like to reiterate and stress that
we are working with limited funds this year, and
we are not in a position to dole out money for
anything and everything that anyone desires. Perhaps Mr. Shohet can come up with a “master plan”
that would be a panecea for our present predicament. Naturally, his solution is more than welcome
and will received immediate attention from the
Finance Committee.
Douglas Brown
Treasurer, Student Senate

Another Landers Letter
To the Editor:

This is in response to a letter which appeared
in The Spectrum (Oct. 20):
Dear Buffalo Boobie,
On behalf of the Steering Committee for ParentFall Weekend, we would like to extend an invitation
to our dance. With the purchase of two tickets, a
suitable escort will be provided, since your animal
magnetism seems only able to attract compasses.
To insure parents choice seats, we have constructed a special section for the infirmed and aged.
Included in the section will be a special lift elevator
at six levels of the bleachers. This service will also
be provided for students, since many seem to possess your mother’s problem of dress and music appreciation.

We feel, however, that $3.50 is not too much
for these little added extras. And by the way, what
do you think we’re paying Smokey and the Miracles
with
the crying towel and violin ensemble of a
critical editorial letter writer?
So please, if home is where your heart is, stay
there this weekend. That way, you’ll be able to sit
—

around the fireplace with Mommy and Daddy while
listening to records of the Mormon Tabernacle
besides, it’s
Choir singing “We Shall Overcome”
free!
—

Sincerely,

D.L. and E.S.,
Steering Committee,
Parent-Fall Weekend
P.S. If there’s anything we can do to help, don’t
hesitate to write.

the sham

On communication
by Martin Guggenheim
Perhaps one of the most frustrating media of
communication is writing a weekly column in a

j|J

t"P the

$aft-I

U

1 am not aware of all the psychological reasons
which arc involved with why I decided to write this
year, but certainly the strongest conscious reason
was, and remains, to communicate. In the past few
weeks particularly, I have written material which
deals with real contemporary issues and which
has as its purpose to\£ause people to act.

There is not a great deal of reaction to my
ramblings but the little that there has been in the
past two weeks has been quite complementary. At
least the intent of the person telling me meant
it to be.

o

Two weeks ago I advocated mass attendance
at the mobilization held in Washington on Saturday. 1 stated that if anyone was opposed to the
War, he must, in order to be honest, attend the
march. The reaction to it was a few persons telling
me it was a good column. But when I asked if they
were going to Washington
oh no! They were
too busy.
...

"You’ve got to admire them for having convictions but why
do they always pick unpopular causes?"

the gadfly
by Mark Schneider

“The enemy,” explains Capt. Yossarian in Catch-22, “is
anyone who’s trying to get you killed.” So having flown his
required number of combat missions over Italy, he sets off
to murder his commanding officer Colonel Cathcart, who is
forcing him to fly more.

It’s difficult, if not futile, to constantly attempt
to explain to Americans, particularly rich, secure
Americans, why they should be committed to
something.
I don’t feel right now like explaining that position again, and yet the War is still most important
to me. So I’ll just continue to rap this week. I
think I'll even tell you a story which may or may
not seem consistent with my head right now, but
it seems to me to be so.
This summer I traveled in Mexico a little. While
I was there I met a man who works as an atom
smasher for the Stanford University Department
of Chemistry. It didn’t take too long before we
began speaking about the American foreign policy.
I generally enjoy a good discussion particularly
when it is with someone from another section of
our country.

1 began by telling him that I was opposed to
the War and could not, in good conscience, fight
were I so asked. Generally when this topic is discussed. I end up either agreeing with the person,
or finding the clash area as being my inability

The fictional device which describes Yossarian’s alienation is hyperbole, or extreme exaggeration. Obviously no to convince him that the United States is fighting
an imperialistic, aggressive war, from which both
American soldier in World War II ever schemed the murder the country and him (the person
I am conversing
of his commander, or received a medal from that commander with) are profiting from.
while standing stark naked in the ranks, or suffered the
After I told him that I couldn’t fight in this
fictional disease “Wisconsin shinglew,” But Yossarian does, war, I asked what his feelings were. He told me
that we are pursuing an aggressive war, but he
and we laugh.
saw nothing wrong with it. In fact, he wanted it;
it was “a fact of life” necessary for a capitalistic
If there was ever a war for refused to go to Vietnam says, nation.
anti-heroes, hyperbole and black
humor, our present one is it.
People have criticized the Left
and justly sometimes, for condescending to and distrusting the
people it trys to ally with itself.
The Left’s distate for electoral
politics is one area in which, I
think, this criticism is valid. But
the Establishment’s refusal to
look at the havoc it is wreaking
on young American lives makes
it not condescending to its young
soldiers and civilians, but downright contemptuous of them. It
produces some situations which
must be laughed at to prevent.
very day a

On the
record 58
Americans are killed in combat
columnist Joseph Alsop talks
about a turning point in the war
and the “home front failing the
U.S. soldiers.” For a young man
in the hell of war, his only
failure as a human aijimal can
be not to survive intact.
One suspects that Mr. Alsop
and certain generals who see antiwar protest as the sole support
of the NLF are failing such soldiers as Spec. 4 Phil Youngman
of Buffalo who fractured his leg
in Vietnam. He says “I’d like to
go home," the Times reports. Or
are the warmongers supporting
George Powell of Tennessee,
wounded, who said “I’ve got 55
more days left. I won’t have to
go back to the field, will I?” Or
are President Johnson and the
Establishment supporting the
other 99 men in Pvt. Ron Lockman’s company? Lockman, who

the majority of his fellow soldiers agree with his action but

I said surely you don’t mean that, the logical
won’t join him because of the extervtion of that philosophy
is that is perfectly
he
faces.
11-year jail sentence
proper to kill people as long as it was profitable.
Cynical novelists will have much
He agreed. 1 said then that maybe capitalism
material for a nihilistic or absur
wasn’t worth maintaining as a system, but at this,
dist book with Gen. Hershey as
he became angry as I was speaking heresy.
the new Col. Cathcart and a cast
of thousands as Yossarian.
I tried everything to make him see what his
beliefs meant, but no matter what
he agreed
The American political scene to. He said a huge war machine, 1 said,
with all of its
was loo funny for words this
implications was needed for the preservation of
week but one will try anyway: this country. He said that it was necessary to begin
Dedication to Duty Award goes a conflict if one was
not in existence. Everything
to the entire American Senate. I would
have used as an argument against this
While Mr. Fulbright delivered a country,
he used for it.
major foreign policy speech his

earnest, responsible colleagues
where busily studying the tense
conflicts in New England. They
reported to a concerned President that the Red Sox lost . . .
Senator Percy is distinguished
as Liberal of the month for his

that Asian boys be
drafted to suppress the revolution in Vietnam instead of Ameriboys . . . The Medieval Morality
Play and Fairy Tale Professorship at Cracker U., Georgia, will
probably be offered to Dean Rusk,
The Secretary’s analysis of the
war in terms of Good White Man
fighting Evil Yellow Man has already been sold to several comic
book publishing houses . . . Mr.
Romney wins a box of Tide but
I think his brain requires only a
slight rinse . . . The director of
the pro-war parades refused the
American Nazi Party's request
to participate in the march. His
suggestion that they call the
proposal

Jewish War Veterans and ask for
an invitation wins the Black Humor award.

I stopped talking to him for about five minutes.
I dug deep into my head knowing that this man
was wrong but not knowing how to make him see
it. Finally I came up with an argument that had to
work.
I said that if it was all right to kill for profit,
then if it was found that he was unprofitable to
this country's government, then he couldn’t object
to being killed.
He mumbled something about crazy college kids
today, and he rather quickly went to bed.

The Spectrum's pages for

Editorials

&amp;

Opinions

It is the policy of The Spectrum to report the
news fully and impartially in the news pages,
to express the opinions of the newspaper only

in the editorial pages and to publish all sides
of important controversial issues.
u
"Without e*proi»iwi, froodont of ooptootion i« mooning Uoo.

��Pag* Six

T h

•

Tuesday, October 24, 1967

Spectrum

University Reports series

Education viewed as student-teacher
relation by University College dean
Staff

Spectrum

Reporter

should be envisaged as relationship between
a student and teacher, in which
both learn and . . . both teach.”
This view was expressed by Dr.
Claude Welch Tuesday, speaking
in the University Report series.
Dr. Welch, Dean of University
College, spoke on “New Directions in Undergraduate Education.”
"Education

He

.

.

.

said

that the new apeducation will be
mixtures of the old systems of
University teaching: the English,
German, and American systems.
proaches to

Systems of education
In the English system of Oxford and Cambridge, small groups
of men would gather around a
few outstanding Latin and Greek
scholars, and learn of the great
ancient civilizations. This system,
said the dean, turned out only a
minute part of the British population who were “well fit . . . for
preeminence in society."

The German system, in addition to educating students, was
dedicated to public service. Its
universities were communities of
scholars advancing their societies through research.
A third system of universities
was started in the United States
with the rise of the land grant

centrating on directly applicable

able

skills, gave considerable public
assistance to students. They

lizations, science and its impact,
and the expressive and communi-

helped to spark the extraordinary

to

study:

Comparative civi-

cation skills.

growth of the American economy

in the past century, according to
Welch.

In response to questions, Dr.
Welch gave his opinion of grades.
He said grades are a measure of

The three different systems of
education are not compatible.
They have entirely divergent
goals: Training for leadership, research, and public service, respectively. Relating these to the
State University of Buffalo, Dr.
Welch mentioned: “In undertaking the re-development of this
University, I hope to include
some „of the best elements from
all three models, and thereby
create a new paradigm for education in this country.”

different things. They measure
knowledge in a field of absolute
truths, imagination and creativity
in fields of originality, a measure
of a person’s inndte ability, or
the measure of a* person’s individual development in a course.

Dr,

He said that this must all be
within the context of challenging
the capabiities of the students
with us today.

Courses of study
University College, as it operates now, encompasses all candidates for a Baccalaureate degree,
including those in Engineering,

Health Science, Business Administration and Liberal Arts. Dr.
Welch raised the question
whether all curricula should contain a common course or courses
of study.
There

are

three basic areas

The computer will arrive by
late December or early January,
anticipates manager John S. Hale.
The new computer, which will
ultimately be housed on the
Ridge-Lea campus, is replacing
the IBM 7044 and the IBM 360/40
computers, currently in use for
student and faculty research, administrative data, accounting and
student record processing.
“With the installation of the
computer, the State University of
Buffalo will have computing facilities equal to all but the largest
universities in the country,” Mr.
Hale noted. In addition to the
NSF grant, the University has
purchased $1 million worth of
parts for the computer and will

ON BARBER

SHOP

lease another million dollars
worth.

In discussing the new computer, Mr. Hale said he felt its most
important aspect was “its capability of being used from a remote location. There will be terminals on the Main Street campus
Some time during the
next year typewriter terminals
will be available to students, faculty and administrators for interactive dialogue with the computer."
There is a trend toward great
er use of computers by the faculty in both 'research and scholar
....

ly work.”

Dr, Anthony Ralston noted that
with terminals in their offices
and laboratories “faculty researchers and scholars will become more productive and will
discover new uses for computers
which were either impractical
before or which did not occur to
them using old techniques.”

Candidates for the title of Fall-

Queens

are a distortion"
"Grades
The dean said all grades, being

a “sort of shorthand, are a distortion." He said a plan for passfail courses was being discussed
for non-major courses, but the
plan would be a great hinderance
to some students and might jeopardize the entrance of some into
graduate

schools.

Dr. Welch concluded that the
State University must “try to
train individuals for leadership,

to enhance man’s body of knowledge through research, and . . .
give a wide range of educational
offerings to the qualified undergraduates of New York State.”
Next week’s University Reports
lecture will be held in the Conference Theater at 9 a.m., Tuesday. The speaker will be Dr.
Richard Siggelkow, Vice President for Student Affairs.

University will get new computer;
remote typewriter facilities foreseen
The State University of Buffalo computing center, with the
aid of a $450,000 National Science
Foundation grant, will soon have
a new computer, the Control Data
6400.

—Yates

Students will be able to solve
problems by the computer interacting directly from a terminal
and an eventual program of
courses in computer science is

foreseen. Administrative duties
in keeping track of student payments. registration, and university finances will be eased and
reduced by the speed and memory capacity of the computer. The
computer is expected to be useful in the creation of “wider library networks to enable better
utilization of library resources”
and in “faster and more accurate
transfer of information around
the new University hospital for
the purpose of improving patient
care.”

Computer terminals will also
be available as an information
source in planning for the universify

Parent Weekend. Back row, l-r:
Carol Roberts, Bev Shelly, Marian Safaran. Front row-. Michelle Hause, Carol Virigtei,
Beth Ann Steger.

If you plan to be a queen
put a flower in your hair
The title of Queen of the FallParent Weekend will be bestowed
upon one of the six girls selected
Wednesday in the Dorothy Haas
Lounge.

The six candidates, chosen
from among fourteen semi-finalists are: Michell Huse, a junior
majoring in social welfare; Carol
Roberts, a junior majoring in
English; Marianne Safrin, a sophomore in the nursing program;
Beverly Shelly, a freshman majoring in physical education; Beth
Ann Steger, a junior in the nursing program, and Carolyn Virgili,
a junior majoring in history.
The semi-finalists mingled first
with the eight judges, then were
asked to come to the microphone
one at a time. They were then
asked questions relating to their
majors and future plans.
The girls, dressed in wool
dresses and suits, were judged on
poise, personality, and beauty.
Until Friday, each of the six
finalists will be required to wear
a flower in her hair while on
campus.

The final judging will take
place at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow in

the Millard Fillmore Room. Fashions from the Cockeyed Shape,
a women’s clothing store on Elmwood Avenue, will be modeled
to the tune of “San Francisco.”
The stylish, up-to-date apparel
will range from mini and mod
clothes to more traditional styles.
There are two types of questions to be asked of the girls:
situation comedy and more serious queries.
The nine judges for Wednesday’s competition will be Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Henderson, Mrs.
June Knab, Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Nigrelli, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Saloman, Mr. Richard Goetz, and
Mrs. Nadine Colling.
Miss Diana Brunscold, last
year’s Queen will crown the winner at the Parkway Inn Friday
evening. The Queen will receive
two dozen of her favorite roses
and she and the other finalists
will each be presented with a
trophy.

Industrial Relations Club slates
first meeting; tours planned
The Industrial Relations Club
will hold its first meeting at
11 a.ra. Thursday in Room 329,
Norton Hall. The members of
the IR club will be present to
discuss the club’s agenda for the
coming year.
This year the IR Club is mak
ing plans to tour such organiza
tions as Westinghouse and General Electric in Buffalo, and Kodak and Xerox in Rochester.
“These trips will help the student to meet and see the magnetism of business related occupational positions he himself soon
hopes to hold,” according to the

club secretary Gene Wrobel. “The
student will see the problems
that business holds but also the
physical operations as well.”

In the past the IR Club toured
Kodak Park in Rochester, Bethlehem Steel and Ford Motor Co.
in Buffalo, and the Corning Glass
Works.
Joe Leorne is the president of
the Club this year. His executive
committee includes Joe Albano,
vice-president; Tony Walluk, treasurer; Gene Wrobel, secretary;
A1 Corvigno, program director;
and Tom Lehman, historian. Dr.
David Lipsky is the faculty advisor.
Coffee and doughnuts will be
served after the meeting. Membership is open to all students
who have paid their Student Activities Fees.

hair styling
razor cutting

custom haircuts
appointment
service

available
located in Basement of Norton
open daily 8 a.m. to 5:45 p.m.
831-3545
—Under New Management—

COMPLETE MEAL
OR A SNACK
FAST, EFFICIENT

A

BANQUET

FACILITIES

BRIDAL SHOWERS

TAKE-OUT SERVICE
1551 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.

WEDDING RECEPTIONS
643 MAIN STREET

Call 837-4300

Call 852-0008

Next to Twin Fair

Open

11 a.m. to 2 a.m.

Weekends Until 4 a.m.

In

Buffalo's

Theatre

District

Open Daily

11 a.m. to 4 a.m.

For Charcoal Broiled CHICKEN at Its Finest

�Tuesday, October 24, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* S*v*n

Visiting Ceylonese professor to study Student government forum at
administration procedure during stay Troy hits adult ethics, mores
by Linda Laufer
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

tivity at the State University of
Buffalo. You can feel the development that takes place on all
fronts. I find that the student
activities are well-organized to
cater for the varied needs of the
student body.”

These are the impressions of
Dr. Anada W. P. Guruge, senior
assistant secretary to the Ministry of Education and Cultural Affairs in Ceylon. Dr. Guruge is
currently visiting the State University of Buffalo in conjunction
with the School of Education’s
Visiting Asian Professor Project
and will be here until the end
of December.

The universities are also examoriented. There is no flexibility
of any type. Once a student gets
into a certain course, he is'commited until he leaves the university. “As' a result,” Dr. Guruge
claimed, "the individual interest
that the American university
student can pursue can not be
developed in the same way in
Ceylon. I feel that at the level
of the university, there should be
the flexibility that we see in the
United States.”

Reform in Ceylon
In 1966 a new educational act
was passed in Ceylon to reform
the university system. An attempt
is now being made to provide
for a wider curriculum with
greater emphasis on practical
and technological aspects of
study. Another innovation in the

education system of Ceylon is
the establishment of five comrnuniiy colleges, They started for
1 6
the begmnmg

—

o^Oetober'

"

**

This act has legal provision for
student unions and student council so that the university administration has to consult students
on activities connected with their
welfare. The only restriction is
that no student body may be affiliated with a political party.
Dr. Guruge wil be available
to speak to various groups on
such topics, as “Religions of
Asia,” “Philosophical Thought of
South Asia,” and “Social, Political and Cultural Problems of
Modern Ceylon and India."

During his stay, Dr. Guruge
will be doing research work and
writing a history of Buddhist
civilization. When asked why he
chose the U. S. for his Buddhist
study, he explained that the U. S.
provides more facilities for work

“The choosing of a student
to enter the university depends
entirely on his merits, regardless
of what school he comes from.”
•

examination system
emphasizes a set type answer and
as a result, the education system
stresses a precise use of language,
grammar, spelling, etc.”
•

“The

Much

of the

student attack

was focused on George A. Strichman, president of Colt Industries,
whose company makes the M-16
rifle used by the Army in Vietnam.

“You cannot solve your country’s problems by throwing away
your country, you back your country up in these things,” he said.
One

student

compared Mr.
Strichman’s view to that of people in Nazi Germany who blindly followed Hiller's commands
and were later imprisoned after

the War Crimes Trials.

—UPI

“Moral decisions arc something
that can only be made at the individual level,” Stanford Ph.D.
candidate Peter Lyman said.
“They aren’t something that can
be legislated by any authority,”

Telephoto

Venus

probe

A lest model of the roundbottomed Venus 4 space probe
rests beside its parachute fol-

lowing a "soft landing" in the
Soviet Union during tests that
preceded its launching last June.

In addition, he is giving a sem
inar in education in Asian cul

When asked about the educational system of Ceylon, Dr. Guruge explained that it is of British origin. Education in Ceylon
is “highly examination oriented."
Dr. Guruge stated that there are
two advantages to this:

The exchange came during the
second day of "Identity 67,” a
forum of student government
leaders from around the world
at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

country whether he believed in
the Vietnam conflict or not.

In addition to writing a book,
he is also trying to understand
the university procedure in the
U. S. in greater detail. He was in
the U. S. in 1960 on a leadership
grant and in 1964 on a second
leadership grant.

tures.

Oxford University co-ed Daphne
Triggs said students were "sickened and distressed by the policies of our governments.”
“If this is what we disapprove
of, yet this is what we have to
live with, where do we go?” the
English girl asked.

Mr. Strichman said it was the
duty of the corporation president
to provide war materials for his

of this nature than any other
country. He mentioned, “The
sources on this subject are in
hundreds of languages. Each one
of these languages has been developed in some institution in
the U. S. and there are libraries,
journals, and scholars to be consulted on any aspect.”

During these two visits he traveled to a number of large universities; however, he moved
from place to place so rapidly
that it was not possible to get to
know the internal administration,
instructional procedure, tests and
examinations and general administration. Dr. Guruge is concentrating on these items during his
present stay.

TROY, N. Y. (UPI)—College students from a dozen
campuses crossed swords with their elders Friday over
Vietnam war protests, sex, drugs and their role in society,
Dallas Mayor J. Erik Jonsson said some of today’s college students have “failed mentally to adjust to our fastchanging society and have allowed it to degenerate into a
kind of protest where we don't think things through.”

SPECTRUM
Published by

Parln PnSS, *9nc.
trs

oll

f

&amp;

’

SmilL Printing

1381 KENMORE AVENUE
(at Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

Both students and administrative panels disagreed among
themselves over the question of
legalizing marijuana.

Sociologist Joseph J. DiStcfano
of Cornell University argued the

drug should be legalized because
a person should be allowed to

determine what he will do with
his own body. He did not favor
legalizing of more dangerous narcotics such as LSD and heroin.

“I do not think though these
drugs will come to grips with
the problems the students face
to find their identity,” the sociologist

said.

“How many drug addicts do
you know?” Mr. Strichman asked.

“1 know three and they all started
on marijuana, and that’s reason
enough not to legalize it.”

McGill University medical student Keith Campbell of San Francisco opposed the legalization of
either marijuana or LSD.

"What good do these drugs
do? We can have a good life
without them,” Mr. Campbell said.
“Even marijuana can be harmful
to the central nervous system;
we can’t get away with believing
it is no more dangerous than
liquor or cigarettes.”
Drugs, especially marijuana,
are apparently fairly easy to get
on the college campus, and the
police are not strictly enforcing
the law, according to the stu-

dents.
"In New York, the easiest place
to get pot marijuana next to the
East Village is the Columbia or
CCNY campus,” said Joseph H.
Korn,' a pre-med student at City
College. “Acid LSD is a little
harder to obtain, but there's
enough of it around.”
“At a college like Oberlin, it's
a case of somebody going into
the city, and they don’t have any
special contacts but they can
bring back all the marijuana you
want," said Oberlin senior Bernard S. Mayer of Cleveland, Ohio.

See the large selection of
VAN HEUSEN SHIRTS
available at
3082 Bailey Ave. (corner Midway)
UNITED MEN'S STORES

�Tuesday, October 24, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* Eight

Blaine Amendment

Constitution controversy over repeal
taking shape as religious civil war
ALBANY (GNS) —The battle over passage of the proposed constitution may deepen into a religious civil war.
While spokesmen for Catholic and Protestant groups
say they are “hoping and praying” a religious fight can be
prevented, the battle lines are shaping up.
Across the state, Roman Catholic priests and laymen have declared themselves in favor of the
new document, while several
Protestant denominations and the
most of them are urging their
Council of Churches representing
congregations to vote “no.”
Center of the controversy is
the so-called Blaine Amendment
to the present constitution which
schools. Passage of the new document could mean up to $351 milbans state aid to parochial
lion aid to private and parochial
schools the first year, according
to estimates by the state budget
director.

Lay members of the Catholic
Church across the state have reportedly launched a drive to raise
$900,000 to secure the constitu-

tion’s passage.

Laymen campaign
The campaign must be conducted by laymen in order to avoid
possible conflict with the tax-

exemption

laws

that

apply

to

churches.
The Catholic Courier-Journal
in Rochester, which last May became the state’s only ecumenical
newspaper, will soon publish an
editorial in favor of the new constitution, a spokesman said.
"The paper is still owned by
the Catholic Diocese,” said the
Rev. Robert Kanka, associate editor. “It’s policy hasn’t changed.”
The State Council of Churches,
headquartered in Syracuse, has
announced it will raise money,
print booklets and posters, and
campaign in every section of the
state for defeat of the constitution.

A spokesman for the Albany

Catholic Diocese has confirmed
that parish lay leaders have
formed a committee for the constitution and that quotas have
been set for fund-raising drives
in each parish.

Rev. Theodore Conklin,
executive secretary of the group
which represents
17 Protestant

The

demoninations including Methodists, Lutherans, Baptists, Episcopalians and Presbyterians (some
of which have come out inde-

said the new constitution’s repeal
of Blaine is its “fatal defect.”

campus releases...
The Student Theater Guild will present a “Nickel Theatre” this
weekend in the Millard Fillmore Room featuring eight selected scenes
from world theater, directed by Theater Guild officers and performed
by new members.

Heilman), “Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Momma’s Hung You in t,he Closet and
I’m Feeling So Sad” (Arthur Kopit), “West Side Story” (Jerome Robbins), “The Foursome” (Ionesco), "Romeo and Juliet" (Shakespeare),
“Augustus Does His Bit” (George Bernard Shaw), “Gladly Otherwise”
(N. F. Simpson), and “Anastasia.”
The cost is a nickel.

Members of the Council will
hold planning meetings this week
with local ministers and lay leaders, with the goal of reaching,
N.Y.S. Regents Fellowship Applications including the Herbert H.
through local congregations,
missing form SFA-751. Students are urged
every voter in the state, Conklin Lehmann Award may be
to obtain missing items in Room 7, Hayes Annex “C.”
said.

Campaign tour

The Council’s campaign tour
will take spokesmen to Rochester
on Tuesday; Syracuse, Wednesday; Binghamton and Lake
George, Thursday, the Utica area,
Watertown and Chemung County
on Friday.

Council members will be meeting with Protestant ministers and
lay leaders in Buffalo on a weekly

basis.

The Rev. Leo O'Brien, Chancellor of the Albany Catholic Dio-

cese, said he was “hoping and
praying” the religious split over
Blaine “won’t hurt the ecumenical movement.”

In Syracuse, Rev. Conklin said:
“I expect to live with and love
my Catholic brethren when this
is all over—but I’ll be awfully
disappointed if we (the Council
of

Churches)

lose.

Tickets are now available to all students in Norton ticket office
for the address by Dr. Benjamin Spock, “The Cold War and Vietnam.”
The address will be given at 8 p.m., Nov. 1 in the Millard Fillmore
Room. There will be no charge, and identification cards will not be
required in order to pick up tickets;
Bruce Watkins will lecture on the turning machine theory, a
topic in elementary computer science, at 7:30 p.m., Wednesday in
Room 334 Norton Hall.

An AIESEC meeting will be held at 4 p.m. tomorrow in Room
242-244 Norton Hall. Plans for obtaining jobs and the New England
Regional Conference will be discussed. The meeting is open to all
interested persons.
Friday at 8:30 p.m., AIESEC will sponsor a beer blast at Banat
Hall. The “Fall-Parent Weekend Blast” will be $2.00 per person and
buses will leave from Norton Hall at 8 p.m. Everyone is welcome.

Mr. Bradley Brennen will speak on “Foreign Students in America”
at 8 p.m. in Room 340 Norton Hall Thursday. Mr. Brennen is a former
Peace Corps worker in Ethiopia. The lecture is sponsored by the

International Club.

The Fifth Recreation Workshop will be held in Buffalo beginning
Saturday and continuing for six consecutive Saturdays, except November 25. The Workshop, to be held at Westminster House, 421 Monroe
St. from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m., will be teaching skills in leadership in various recreation activities. A fee of $25.00 per person will be charged
for all six sessions. Classes will be offered in Games, Song Leadership,
Informal Dramatics, and Puppetry.
More information may be obtained from the registrar: Mrs.
Martha Murray, 219 Cedar St., 852-2346, or from Mrs. Halina Kanter,
632-2607.
Smokey Robinson and the Miracles will star at a concert given
Saturday night in Clark Gym. The tickets will cost $3.50 apiece for
those who paid their activities fee, and $4.75 for those who did not.

Question of the week
In your opinion.
1. Should instructors take attendance in class?
2. Should attendance affect your final grade?
3. Should instructors dictate smoking, eating, and
drinking behavior in class?
You can answer The Spectrum Question of the
Week every Wednesday at the Information Desk
on the first floor of Norton Hall.
Last week’s Question of the Week was: What
in your opinion should be the status of alcoholic
beverages on campus?
The results were:
8% Banned completely
10% Just for special occasions
18% Beer only
•

•

•

•

64% No restrictions

Opportunity Fellowships
offer aid to students
Financial aid in the form of

Opportunity Fellowships is available to students from culturally
deprived backgrounds.

The awards, which range

a maximum of $3000,
to Negroes,

to

are open
Spanish-Americans,

American Indians, and residents
of the Southern Appalachian and
Ozark Mountain areas, Guam,
Puerto Rico, Samoa, the Pacific
Trust Territory and the Virgin
Islands.

grams. Projects in such fields as
business and industrial administration and labor education will
be welcome. A program of study
may include practical as well as
formal academic work.

Inquiries

concerning applicabe addressed to:
Opportunity Fellowships, John
Hay Whitney Foundation, 111

tions should

West 50th St., New York, N.Y.
10020. Complete applications
must be filed not later than Nov.
30,

Mntmun
1*10111 Wll
•

j

bands

Smokey Robinson and The Miracles and The
Spinners will perform in Clark Gym Saturday
night. Tickets for the two hour concert of FallParent Weekend are $3.50 for students who
have paid the activity fee and $4.75 for non-fee
payers.

Candidates for degrees must
be seniors in college who plan
to study beyond the Bachelor’s
degree in the humanities, the
natural or social sciences, or in
the professions. College graduates
planning, or already engaged in,
graduate or professional studies
may also apply.
Consideration will also be given
to candidates in non-degree pro-

Students seeking additional information on the awards may
contact Jerome S, Fisk, Associate
Director of University Placement
and Career Guidance Service at
the State University of Buffalo.

The results of the competition
will be announced in the latter
part of April.

�Pag* Nin*

The Spectrum

Tuesday, October 24, 1967

I

B iefore Senate Foreign Relations Commit!

Peace Corps director Vaughn
evaluates 6 ears of service

OFFICIAL BULLETIN

1

All University College Sophomores, Juniors and Seniors begin registration, AAonday, Oct. 23.

—

Sophomores, juniors and seniors

WASHINGTON (GNS)—Six years have passed since Congress confirmed the Peace
Corps which is proving itself to be among the most timely and helpful institutions ever
conceived as a function of any government anywhere.
The Peace Corps now has 14,500 volunteers overseas or in training. The number of
strength. And as Jack Vaughn, director of
the Peace Corps, told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee last month, “The impact of
the Peace Corps idea will have to be reckoned at home, as well as overseas” as the Peace
Corps veterans re-enter domestic society. Mr. Vaughn’s testimony before the committee included some startling and inspiring facts.
its “alumni” has just moved ahead of its field

registration material in Diefendorf Reception Area, Room 114
between Oct. 23 and Dec. 15. If
you pick up registration materials
the week of Oct. 23, please do so
according to the following alphabetical breakdown to handle

the volume and prevent the irritation of waiting in long lines:
Oct. 23:
C. D, E
am.
A. B; p.m
Oct, 24:
I, J, K
a.m.
F, G, H; p.m
Oct. 25:
a.m.
L, M; p.m.
N, 0, P
Oct. 26
S, T
a.m.
Q, R; p.m.
Oct. 27;
a.m.
U, V, W; p.m.
X, Y, Z
0. T. students wilt pick up
registration material and make
their appointments in Diefendorf
314.
P. T. students will pick up registration material and make their
-

—

—

The Peace Corps is now attracting the “serious attention of two
out of every three college seniors
in America.” The applications
parallel the proportion of men
and women in the college generation, Mr. Vaughn said. So it is
not an escape vehicle for men
trying to evade the military draft.

have joined the Peace Corps
knowing what their two-year
hitch abroad would entail. This
means, Mr. Vaughn told the committee, that “some very high
grade, high gear and highly motivated talent is becbming available in the U.S. in increasing
numbers.”

The Peace Corps is now the
largest single “employer” of new
college graduates iii the nation.
For example: 29% of the senior
class of Maryhurst College in
Oregon (a small Catholic girls’
school) applied for the Peace
Corps.

The, Philadelphia board of education is hiring Peace Corps
teachers by mail from overseas.

Even though the selection process was tightened and the training was toughened, 17% of this
year’s seniors at Stanford, University applied for appointment;
20% at Swarthmore and 21%
at the Carl Sandburg’s alma mater, Knox College in Illinois.

Why willing?
Why are these young people
willing and eager to bypass even
temporarily the opportunities in
commercial, industrial or professional life here at home, and
plunge into the grinding problems that plague the have-not
nations of the world?

Mr. Vaughn believes that the
Peace Corps represents an idea
that, to the thousands of young
people interested in it, “is an expression of themselves.” And,
Mr. Vaughn says, Peace Corps
volunteers “seem to skip the
structure of the Peace Corps as
a government agency, and identify with the spirit—a logically
American outlet through which
both they and the people they
serve abroad “become the very
best that is within them to become.’

”

Nor is the Peace Corps good

news simply to nations needing

primary and secondary teachers:

Tunisia, Botswana, Thailand,
Ghana, Brazil, Ethiopia, Uganda,
Nepal or Afghanistan, for example. They are proving to be
“good news” right here in the
U.S., too.
Ninety-four per cent of the returning volunteers say they would

New York hires
New York regards the volunteers highly enough to hire them,
with or without Peace Corps
teaching experience, though they
are not even certified on a tem-

porary certificate.

are not only affirming themselves
as individuals but also "Making
love, not war” in the most meaningful way.
When the Peace Corps idea was
first put forward by President
Kennedy, it was sneered at by
some who described it as another
open-end boondoggle. Now, six
years later, there is little doubt
that the Corps will receive its
modest appropriation request, to
increase the corps by 18% to
17,150 volunteers and trainees.
Rarely has an officer of the
government been able to make
a more uncontestable claim for
the favor of Congress than Jack
Vaughn, with the simple assertion in behalf of the Peace Corps;

"Our nation will be the better
for it.”

California, which boasts of the

nation’s most advanced system of
education, waives normal requirements and grants credit for Peace
Corps teaching experience.

will see their advisers, plan their
programs and register for courses
during the following times:
A through M
Oct. 30
Nov. 13
N through Z

The SPECTRUM

—

—

—

appointments in the Physical
Therapy Department. 264 Winspear.

Nursing students are advised
and registered through the School
of Nursing.
Juniors and seniors in Business
Administration, Engineering, Education, Medical Technology, Pharmacy, please refer to Division
Office.

—

Students will make appointments with the University College
Receptionist in Diefcndorf 114,
one week in advance of the

above scheduled times. At this
time the receptioniest will give
the student registration cards
and a list of instructions to follow in the subsequent registra-

tion procedures.
O. T, students will pick up registration material and make their
appointments in Diefendorf 314.
P. T. students will pick up
their registration material and
make their appointments in the
Physical Therapy Department, 264
Winspcar. Nursing students are

advised and registered thorugh
the School of Nursing.
Students who do not make their
appointments at the scheduled
time, or who do not keep them
when made, will be required to
register in Clark Gym on Registration Day, Jan. 22. 1968.

COMPACT
CONTACT

Freshman Pre-registration
Pre-registration is in progress
for next semester. Freshman students whose last names begin
with the letters designated below

Published by
The Peace Corps has made a
valuable contribution to sustain-

ing and improving the American
image abroad.

Sen. Robert F. Kennedy overstated the role of the volunteers
when he said that “the Peace
Corps has done more for our
position around the world than
all our armed forces and foreign
That, as William V.
aid . .
Shannon writes in his recently
released political biography of
the Senator, “mistakes the popularity of the Peace Corps for the
substance of power.”
More important is the Peace
Corps’ illumination of latent and
residual idealism in the minds of
the college-age generation.

Similar qualities
Similar general qualities are
assigned to the behavior of many
other young people who pursue
varying extremes of non-conformist conduct. The Peace Corps, by
contrast, is not a novelty, as Mr.
Vaughn explains, but an “exciting, working reality
an organization getting things done.”

Partners Press, Jnc.
’

&amp;

-S*mitlt Printing

1381 KENMORE AVENUE
(at Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

vss TAPE
1

CARTRIDGES
ENTIRE

...

Those committed to it, whether
introducing hybrid corn in the
State of Mysore, India, or trying
to teach in revolt-torn Nigeria,

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for contacts

�The Spectrum

Pagi Ten

Tuesday, October 24, 1967
*

(Above): Two demonstrators assist a fallen comrade, convulsed
by tear gas fumes.

(Top Left): Choking demonstrators flee a tear gas barrage,
stumbling down the knoll from the restricted Pentagon area

Lincoln Memorial

Thousands

ne ,He R(
the steps
the foregro

,

I

but--

II

■oily

ton

Monum

�Tuesday,

Pag* Eleven

The Spectrum

October 24, 1967

*

Washington demonstrations...
(Cont’d from Pg. 1)

of the existence of a “hole" in
the barbed-wire barrier. After
being warned of the possible consequences of entering the restricted area in an act of civil disobedience, Resistance leaders invited

the participants to join them in
a “constructive probing” of the
fence.

35,000 cross barrier
An initial swarm of 5000 people broke down wire and rope
barriers on either side of U.S.
Route 1, and encountering little
resistance, swarmed into the restricted area.
Meanwhile, thousands of marchers continued to arrive, filling
the large parking area. Seeing
the absence of police opposition
along the 100 yard opening, they
followed the initial vanguard of
civil disobedients onto the Pentagon lawn.
About one-third of the incoming marchers continued to pour
across the blockaded highway up
the knoll into the grassy area,
swelling the size of the crowd
within the restricted zone to
35,000.
A majority of the original
marchers stayed in the parking
lot, supporting those who had
crossed the two barriers. The
others returned to Washington.
Several platoons of military police stood guard along a narrow
corridor on one side of the Pentagon building and blocked the
steps leading to an elevated en-

i from the

i, dementi front of
)r

gas bat-

he left of

e is
as use

trance.

Tensions mounted as the crowd
swelled. Marshalls of the Mobilization Committee found it more
and more difficult to maintain a
non-violent mood of resistance.

Troopers move in

The crowd encircled and isola
ted the police into small islands
Protesters at the steps succeeded in pushing the police back to
the large entrance to the side of
the building. Along the side of
the steps, a group of police, reinforced by a bayonet-wielding
members of the 82nd Airborne
Div.. managed to fan out and isolate about 250 demonstrators,
pinning them against the side
of the building.

Tear gas fired
Ignoring pleas for restraint
from Mobilization marshalls, the
angry crowd pressed against the
police line in an attempt to reach
the trapped students. In a lastditch attempt to stop the crowd,
troops fired three tear gas shells
without warning.
people

down

the

comrades.

Porch battle

pressure grew for a push against

knoll to safety.

the main doors of the

The main body of protesters, in
front of the elevated entrance,
were unaware of the fate of those
several hundred yards to their
left. At this crowd continued to
grow, a rollicking carnival atmosphere prevailed. Students waved
college banners, dumbed trees
for a better look, and one group
event sat around in a circle and
turned on.

crowd of cautious students and
formed a rigid rectangle. Both
they and the military police below them at the edge of the parking lot held their positions.
After another barrage of tear
gas was fired at the crowd above
the highway on the grassy knoll,
the main body of protesters became aware of the plight of their
The numbers on the large elevated porch area increased, and

The stinging gas sent scores of

panic-striken

A platoon of the Army paratroopers, equipped with rifles and
gas masks, marched out on to
U.S. 1 in a show a force, slowly
dividing the crowd in that area.
Suddenly there was another puff
of tear gas, pushing the crowd
in two directions: down the hill
to the parking lot, and up to the
knoll to the largest grassy area.
A squad of military police
moved* in slowly in an attempt to
reestablish the original barrier of
the restricted zone.
The troopers on the highway
were soon surrounded by a large

Pentagon,

in front of which stood a stiff
cordon of riot-equipped troopers,
bayonets glistening in the twilight, and revolver-toting U.S.

Marshals.
Several protesters threw rocks
at the doorway.
The troopers stiffened, but gave
way against the initial push of
the thousands of shouting militants, and more than a hundred
got inside.

Several hundred Army reinforcements arrived immediately
to keep others from entering,
and several people were pummeled with rifle butts and riot
sticks, as police moved inside to
subdue and drag out those who
had penetrated the doorway barricade.
Several more clubbings and another tear gas barrage kept the
crowd at bay.

Medical aid lacking
Overwhelmed by the number

of demonstrators injured or ill
from the gassings, the Mobiliza-

tion’s medical facilities proved to
be inadequate.

Military officials forced them
to vacate their position on Pentagon grounds before the last major confrontation. Officials said
the permit for presence of a first
aid crew in the restricted area
expired at 7 p.m.

Bus schedules, the darkness,
and temperatures dropping into
the 30s reduced the remaining
crowd to less than 5000, and only
several hundred remained at daybreak.
New arrivals boosted the pro-

test ranks to 1500 Sunday afternoon, and many vowed to remain
until they were dragged away.
March organizers proclaimed a
"victory” and urged participants
to heed the midnight expiration
of the demonstration permit.
Shortly after midnight, U.S.
Marshalls and military police escorted and dragged the 175 remaining stalwarts off the Pentagon grounds.

\
—March demonstration photos by Hsaing and Lasser

air Jp?
■

’■jffiffiHJL'

■

S

jg|

v

■

*

'.fl

Thousands of demonstrators
line the Reflecting Pool, from
the steps Lincoln Memorial in
the foreground to the Washington Monument in the distance.

Show of force
on U.S. 1

Riot-equipped members of the
82nd Airborne Div. block protestors at the Pentagon. The
trooper in the background is
holding a tear gas grenade in
his right hand, the grenade
launcher slung over his left

shoulder.

�Ah

Lab Band to play at mixer
Technical problems hamper concert for Fall-Parent Weekend
crashes in Rochester

The Jefferson Airplane crash in

They sang ‘She Has Funny
Cars” and “Today” from the re-

provement of
whatever was
wrong in the first place. During

they did not do “Somebody To

tween numbers, an uninhibited
fan dramatically exclaimed “Do
‘White Rabbit’!” and they did.
And then they walked off stage.

Amidst turbulent weather and

—nowned—album “Surrealistic HiL.
low.” They also performed “Fat
Angel” and “It’s No Secret,” but

poor visibility, the popular singing group Jefferson Airplane

Love,” the expected highlight of

Rochester.

the show.

landed in Rochester Wednesday

evening.

Technical problems

But the group was flying real
ly low in the Eastman Theater:
many fans were turned off.
The

Tuesday, October 24, 1967

The Spectrum

Twelve

Page

Rochester

teenyboppers

and college kids who attended
were visibly impressed by the
appearance of "The Plane” on
stage and were just as visibly

depressed by the sudden end of

the so-called concert.
To make a short story shorter,
the Jefferson Airplane performed
just seven songs.

Instead, most of the time was
occupied by technical problems,
Gracie complained of a “power
failure” and stage hands pranced
around on stage, tampering with
this and that gadget while the
Airplane took advantage of the
break to tune up their guitars
and drums. The group sidled
back and forth while the house
lights were put on.
Finally they resumed their per
formance with no noticeable im

After a few moments of hesitation, a revelation occured to
the audience: The concert was
over.

Technical problems are one
thing; they are sometimes excusable, but a poor performance
with little enthusiasm or effort
put forth is not.
The farce lasted 90 minutes,
half of which was wasted. When
a fan pays $4.75 for a ticket, he
deserves more than such a short
flight during which the crew is
preoccupied with engine trouble.

'Master Race, anti-Nazi play by
Brecht is artistic, technical success
'

by

Richard Perlmutter

Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

Amidst revolving searchlights, four projectors, and a
blaring and haunting recording of Hitler’s oratorio, the cast
of “The Private Life of the Master Race” goose-stepped last
week in the Fillmore Room in front of an audience which
stared on in awe
an awe which deepened throughout the
evening.
Henry A. Wickc Jr., the director to whom this paean is dedicated, has superbly adopted
Brecht's 17 skits to a college
cast, and the result is a most

memorable

evening of drama.

The play, originally entitled
Germany, An Atrocity Story," is
supposedly a documentary based
on eyewitness accounts and news-

paper reports.

But

the lone is

not the objective one of a documentary: it is bitterly and sardonically anti-Nazi.

Powerful message
Brecht is at times subtle, at
times blunt, at limes cynical, but

always conveys a powerful message or altitude with maximum
efficiency.

The production succeeds to an

astounding degree in arousing
the empathy of the viewer.
To establish an effective milieu, floor-lo-ceiling sheets painted red with black swastikas hover
over the stage, giving the impression of a Nazi dining hall. The
audience is engulfed by the arms
of a raised swastika which serves
as the stage.

On this stage a cast of very
competent actors perform 17
“slice-of-life” skits reflecting the

Outstanding performances
The suspicions and conflicts of
the German of the 1930s, torn
between loyality to family or
Fuhrer, conscience or country,
are vicariously relived. Emphatic

and sincere performances coupled

with superior direction allow the
atmosphere to generate considerable emotion.

James

All rehearsals are open and
there will be one today from
4 p.m. to 6 p.m. in the Baird Recital Hall,
This session has been planned
in conjunction with the Lab
Band’s engagement at the Sunday
night mixer during Fall-Parent
Weekend. Coordinator of this
program is Sherri Bryant, cochairman of special events of
The mixer will be held in the
Millard Fillmore Room from 8
p.m. until 11 p.m. There is no

ing.

members

Mr. Sandgarten was referring to the Lab Band, which
he directs. This organization
may be heard at rehearsals
which are held in Norton
Hall whenever possible.

Fall-Parent Weekend.

overpowering effects of the Nazi
ideology on the lives and minds
of the people of Germany 30
years ago. The viewer is so close
physically to the actors that he
not only feels the physical violence and tension but soon begins to experience the fears and
sufferings that they are portray-

Cast

“A student group for student enjoyment”—a grou with
vast potential “not only from a musical standpoint but from
a community service aspect as well,” according to Mr.
Michael D. Sandgarten.

Bron

Olds
Kaplan, Shelly
Susan
Gladys Bowman, and Bonnie Rob
bins are especially impressive.

The 17 selected scenes are divided into three groups—to Po-

land. to Russia, and to France
as we observe the reactions of
Ihree nationalities to Hitler’s development and misuse of power.
—

Each scene is a delicate exploration of the troubled existences
of the European during the Nazi
era. The touching irony of “The
Informer” and the moving poignancy of “The Jewish Wife” are
unforgettable.

THE SPECTRUM
printed by

Partners' Press, Inc.
ABGOTT &amp; SMITH PRINTING
1381 Kenmore Ave. (at Delaware)
Phone 876-2284

admission charge for fee paying
students with I.D. cards. Non feepaying students’ admission is 35
cents. Dancing and listening to
music will alternate during the
evening.

Formed last December because
of both interest and need, the
Lab Band is now entering its
second year. In the past, the JazzLaboratory Ensemble has performed at two home basketball
games, two concerts in Norton
Hall and a concert at the State
University College at Buffalo.

designed to bring local college
talent to the community.

Any student
Membership

in the band

is

open to any student who qualifies by audition and it is not
restricted to any music majors.

Of the eighteen musicians in the
group, only eight are music majors. No credit is given because
it is strictly an extra-curricular
activity.

The members are: Richard LeCastre, James Miller, Richard
Griffo, Jeffrey Silberman, and
Jim Tudini, saxophones; Donald
Abrams, Kenneth Hafner, Norman Freedman, Nelson Starr, and
Donald Montalto, trumpets; James
Kasprowicz, Gary Brocks, Gary
Beuth, and Stephen Novick,
trombones; Don Hart, bass; Dan
Hart, guitar; Jon Weiss, piano;
and Bill Thiele, drums.
The group not only performs,
but also does arranging and composing. The lab situation lends
itself to experimentation by faculty and students.

No budget

Since the Lab Band has no budget, the only money available is

that which is earned. The group
is saving to attend one of the
several jazz festivals being held
at other universities. At present,
Villanova or Quinipiac are being
considered.
Forthcoming engagements this
will be at Canisius College,
Rosary Hill College, and Fredonia State. There also will be a
night concert in Norton Hall.
year

In addition, the

group

ap-

peared on a local television program which was part of a series

Alphaville shown in Norton
Jean Luc Godard’s “Alphaville,”
a unique science fiction spy flick
about love in a cybernetic utopia,
is this week’s attraction at the
Conference Theater beginning
Thursday.

Godard, who also directed
“Breathless” and “Masculine/
Feminine.” also wrote the script
for “Alphaville.”

Alphaville is a city of the future completely ruled by computers. A secret agent from Earth
(Eddie Constantine) arrives there
on a secret mission. While there,
he tries to break through the conformity demanded by the rigid
Alphaville society, in order to
teach a girl (Anna Karina) the
meaning of love.

Concert held in Haas Lounge
The Dorothy Haas Lounge will
be the scene at 3:30 p.m. Thursday of an informal concert by
the “UB Blues” and the “Baby
Blues.”
The UB Blues, a male octet led
by Gerry Wycoff, was founded in
1962. Now a professional recording group, the Blues incorporate
close harmony into popular songs.
Thursday, they will perform

Buffy Sainte Wane

their arrangements of “Hurry
Sundown” and “Softly as I Leave
You” among other well known
songs.

The Baby Blues, ten young
ladies under the leadership of
Pamela Hansen, began singing
only a year ago, but have travelled extensively. They performed at Expo ’67 in Montreal
last spring.

STRENG OLDS
features

IN CONCERT

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4

£aitman
ROCHESTER, NEW YORK

Tickets: $4.25, 3.75, 3.25, 2.25
On Sale at Box Office Now!

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�Tuesday, October 24, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag*

ThirtMn

Wisconsin students
kicked
Doors' sound provokes out of University Commerce building
moods and imagination

A record review

by David-Lloyd-Jones

Spectrum

Staff Reporter

Listening to the new Doors album is something closely
akin to an exercise in masochism. It’s called “Strange Days,”
and if there is a ray of hope to be found within, it certainly
has eluded me.
The album comes across as a montage of confused
bodies, drowning swimmers, lost little girls, and assorted
types who find that there is no place left to escape to. I
suggest you hear the album before buying, unless you happen
to be of the type who can listen to the Velvet Underground
for more than 15 minutes without starting to scream.
Musically, this record marks a
departure from the style of their
first. The Doors seem to be
searching for sounds as yet undiscovered, and with some success. The organ sound which catapulted the group to the top
of the charts has been relegated
to the background to make way
for experimentation on the electric harpsichord, piano, and for
an interesting high frequency
vibrato sound on the organ.
Ray Manzarek, the keyboardplaying Door, seems to be testing the limits of his versatility.
This, along with some imaginative
guitar work by Robby Kreiger,
makes the album a step forward
musically.
Kreiger is experimenting with
a guitar style which moves away
from the concept of guitar as a

fretted instrument.
The Doors have by no means
perfected these new techniques,
and musically this album is more
a report of progress than a display of virtuosity.

"In mute nostril agony"

As far as the lyrics are concerned, I'd prefer not to judge
them. They vary from the vividly
evocative to the barely intelligible, with these characteristics
overlapping at times. Consider
the following: Awkward instant/
And the first animal is jettisoned/
Legs

furiously

pumping/Their

stiff green gallop/ . , . In mute
nostril agony/Carefully refined/
And sealed over.”
The only song from their first
album which I can see as having
foreshadowed the predominant
mood of this one is the Kurt
Weill-Bertolt Brecht “Alabama
Song." It seemed to me that the
Doors’ version of the song had
missed the point leaving them on
the wrong side of the irony.
Now, however, they have
grasped this mood and attempted
to adapt it to the terms of their
own condition. The mood is perhaps impossible to explain, but
its basic idea is this: that something is very wrong and about
to turn for the worse, but what
it is can’t be directly communicated so I’ll try to evoke it within you.

Wis.

MADISON,

by Danny Rotholoz

Songs of this type (when successful) bring the listener into
whatever hell his imagination is
capable of
be it the Third
Reich, Brave New World, or the
Endless Bad Trip. I’m not sure
how successful the Doors are in
bringing this all across, but
clearly this mood is the basis of
—

their direction.

Disturbances
The two cuts from the album
which I remember most clearly
both had negative impressions on
me.

The first is “Horse Latitudes,”
which is no song at all, but rather
background
an oration with
sounds (wind, sea, and unidentifiable cosmic disturbances). Jim
Morrison’s exhortation can grate
on the consciousness, and is far
too affected for my taste.
The other piece which I should
mention is “When The Music’s
Over," the second 11-minute catastrophe produced by the group
in as many attempts. Although
this contains some of the finest
and most frightening imagery
they have yet produced, the music, which is vital to sustain a
piece of this length, fails completely.
It starts off with the organ solo
from “Soul Kitchen” and proceeds to disintegrate. At least
they’re plagiarizing their own

(CPS)—Two

dozen Madison city police Wednesday used clubs, hands, and
boots to evict about 400 students

sitting in at the University of
Wisconsin Commerce Building.
Later

40

more used over a

dozen tear gas grenades to disperse the crowd of about 3.000.
Sixty-five students were treated
for abrasions and concussions at
the UW hospital.
The confrontation came after
students occupied the building to
obstruct recruiting by agents of
the Dow Chemical Company, manufacturers of napalm used in
Vietnam, Dean of Students Josep
Kaufman had previously declared
that Dow recruiting was “a uni
versity function” and tliat students disrupting it would be subject to university discipline.
Percy Julian, Jr., and Michael

Reiter, attorneys for the students,
are seeking a restraining order
against the dean on the ground
that such a threat over and above

the sanctions of state and city
law is aii invasion of First
Amendment rights.
About 2.000 students marched
to the Commerce Building St 10
a m. and 130 sat in the hall where
Dow was to recruit. Another 400
lined the corridors of the building and 200 formed a supporting
picket line onthe outside. Proceedings were peaceful and orderly. with singing, joking, and

occasional chants of “Down with
Dow." "Hey. hey, LBJ, you want
it? Now.”
Campus police chief Ralph Hansen at one point pushed the
crowd and said with a smile, “I’m
going to tell your chancellor. He’s
not going to like this at all..”
At noon 18 club-carrying city
police wearing gray plastic helments assembled outside the
building and were greeted with a
performance by The Uprising, a

four-member mime troupe from
the university. The policemen
smiled but were not noticeably
affected by the performance.
Police Chief Hansen addressed

the demonstrators, promising that
"leave the campus
forever" if they left the building.
The demonstrators demanded this
in writing and movement leaders
Evan Stark. Stewart Ewing, Carlos Joly, and Richard Samson left
to meet with Dean Kaufman.
When Kaufman refused to talk
to them or follow up on Hansen’s
promise, Hansen declared the sitin an unlawful assembly, and
called in the police.
Marching into the building two
abreast, the police waded into the
first row of demonstrators, jabbing and thrusting with the ends
of their clubs. As the line of
students broke individuals were
lifted and thrown towards the
door. A number were injured
against the doorframe and handle
and one hit a plate glass window
head on, breaking it.
After about five minutes of
jabbing, pushing, and beating,
demonstrators began to break and
run in fours and fives. Within 20
minutes the entire building was
cleared.
Dow would

G. B. Shaw program
to be in Rochester
Brafnwell Fletcher will present
“Bernard Shaw The Man,” Oct.
28 at the Nazareth College Arts
Center in Rochester, New York.
■

This play is a fully-rounded
theatrical portrait of playwright
Bernard Shaw. Not merely a
dramatic reading, but using a
minimum of props and setting,
and ingenious stages, Bramwell
Fletcher fills the stage with
Shaw the man
outrageous,
witty and wise: a symphony of
ideas compiled and dramatically
presented by Mr. Fletcher from
comparatively unknown works
his autobiographical sketches, es•—

—

etc.

says, speeches,

music.
In case you’re

Thoughts on almost any subject are explored, as Shaw himself states: “The only predictable
thing about me is the unpredictable. Many people today regard
me a general consultant to mankind on questions of sex, religion,
music, drama, procreation, education, polities, war, criminal human stupidity, the destiny of man
and even American baseball!”

interested, the
Doors have provided a copy of
the Ivrics for you on the inside
jacket of the album.
i ins uangerous practice should
be stopped immediately, since
half the fun is taken out of an
album when there isn’t any dispute as to what they’re really
saying.

Fall Weekend Blast
FRIDAY, OCT. 27—8:30

-

?

BANAT HALL

25 Review Place

2 Live Bands

Free Refreshments

—upi

Telephoto

Students and
I*
slack
pOIICc Ciasn

Madison police and University of Wisconsln students clashed last week when
police were called in to break up an
anti-war demonstration. Dozens were
injured in the rioting that followed.

SUDDENLY THE WORD IS ALPHAVILLE

and a seem agent
is in a Breathless Race
against me Masters
ol me Future!

ADVANCE SALE—$1.75
Busses Leave Norton at 8 P.M.
Tickets on Sale in Norton Lobby 9 A.M. 4 P.M.

DONATION—$2.00

WAR STEAK
$*95

Sandwich

-

KLEINHANS—WED., OCT. 25,

PETER SCHICKELE

ALL YOU WANT
(Within Reason)

WITH THE

U.S. CHOICE TOP SIRLOIN

�

�

8:30 P.M.

By Overwhelming Public Apathy

ROYAL
P.D.Q. BACH
FESTIVAL
ORCHESTRA

�

Dine and Relax in

The Peaceable Kindom
Room at the

BLACKSMITH
SHOP

(1807-1742)?
nnn
".

“Oldest Steak House in W N.Y
.

1375 DELAWARE AVE.
TT 6-9281

.

.

sets music back

several hundred years'*

TICKETS AT:

NORTON HALL TICKET OFFICE
sAdmieeion; Oreh. $4.00,

3.50; Bak. 53.50, 3.00, 2.50*

CMS

ALPHAVILLE!

'IUK

I

[DK

MM

CONSTANTINE KARINA
WDDIUUKili-WUllUIIIC
MUX H

W9W • I OWMM IlKIIM

CONFERENCE
THURS., FRI., SAT.

I

MiM

ITAMIROFF

BUM P UUK OM
•IMWtMMW IIBHUS

THEATER
OCT. 26, 27, 28

Parformanca* at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 on Thursday
Friday and Saturday at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, U

�The Spectrum

Pag* PourtMn

Tuesday, October 24, 1967

■

I sang my harp on the sun's deck
Here at the water in the cool unblossomed year.
And the light notes clung at my hair roots
Like bird cries gathering.
All the day's time leaned
Into lengthening shadows
And moments clung like fresh leaves
On water.
Wind crossed the pond
Leaving stripes and crosses
As though it rolled and cast down.
Cast down its shape for vision.
Wisteria hung for lavender
In a blossom of perfume.
And on the stone a toad
Settled in sunlight.
Is this saturation of senses enough?
Living together between a time frame.
We creature and non-creature
And I among them.

Susan McCord ©Contact Magazine, 1965

To communicate is the beginning of understanding

fjmj AT&amp;T

V-P-V

mIIUmmMCmhmi

�Tuesday, October 24, 1967

Tho Spectrum

Pag* Flft**n

on the bench

the spectrum of

s p or ts

by Billy Marlin

Approximately one year ago on this campus an organization was founded to promote good and healthy athletic fun

Lee Jones tallies three touchdowns
as UB defense stops Boston College
three Lee Jones carries failed to
produce a first down.
DiVito passes to Erwin and Jim

Cavanaugh netted the Eagles 25
yards and put them on the Buffalo 5. The Eagles slammed three
times unsuccessfully and a

fourth DiVito sneak also failed
and gave Buffalo the ball and
also the ball game.

J

A

I

L

Xfcj-

,

*

Lee Jones
Senior fullback score all three
touchdowns

Mick Murtha hit Chuck Drankoski
three times to give the Bulls
the field position necessary for
Bob Embow to kick a 34-yard field
goal and earn the Bulls a 19-6
halftime lead.
The last Buffalo score came
early in the fourth quarter. Dennis Mason replaced a shaken
Murtha and completed his three
passes, two to Drankoski and
one to Rick Wells. The Bulls took
a dozen plays to score from their
own 46-yard line with Jones carrying the last three times and finally scoring from the BC three

The Bulls began to build their
three touchdown cushion the
first time they were on attack.
On the season’s finest sustained
drive by a Murtha-led eleven, the
Bulls marched 82 yards on 14 yard line.
plays. The highlight of the drive
was a brilliant fourth down call
Leading the way to the Bulls’
from the hosts 34-yard line. Murthird consecutive victory was
tha threw a screen pass to Kenagain the great play of Mike Luzny Eutkowski and the splendid
ny. “Luz” intercepted a pass to
sprinter carried to the BC 12-yard stop a BC drive, recovered a
line. The Bulls ground their way fumble to set up a Buffalo score,
down to the one-yard line where and blocked a punt for the BufLee Jones took the ball over for
falo safety. Luzny was also able
the score. Bob Embow converted
to get to quarterback DiVito, who
the first of his three successful generally enjoyed a comfortable
point-after-touchdown tries and
afternoon, in the passing pocket,
as the Bulls’ pass rush was stymied.

by Bob Woodruff
Sports

Drankoski established a new
Buffalo mark for receptions in
a single game. Dranko had nine
catches for over one hundred
yards, Drankowski did have some
trouble holding on to the football but Mason and Murtha looked
repeatedly to the shifty split end
for key yardage.

Editor

Lee Jones
BOSTON, Mass.
crashed for three touchdowns and
the State University of Buffalo
great defensive unit held off a
last quarter Boston College spurt
to give the Bulls a 26-14 victory
over the Eagles before 15,000
fans at Chestnut Hill Saturday.
—

The Bulls played a good ballcontrol game in all but the final
quarter when the Eagles dominated the final action. Irv Wright,
Ted Gibbons, Rusty Sabo and Tom
Hoke turned in outstanding defensive performances.

In winning their fourth game
of the season against two losses,
coach Doc Urich’s squad snapped
a six road-game losing streak, and
gave the Bulls their first victory
over a Boston College team infour meetings.

Injuries to key Bull personnel

contest, and the Buf
falo coaches had to shuffle their
lineups. Danny Walgatc, Don Zabo and Teddy Gibbons, as well as
Murlha, Patterson, and Rutkowski all had to leave the action
at some time of the game.
marred the

The Eagles dropped their third
game in four starts.
The Bulls led 26-6 after three
minutes were gone in the final
quarter. Injuries to quarterback
Mick Murtha and first and second
string tailbacks Ken Rutkowski
and Pat Patterson idled the Buffalo drive. The Eagles, led by
alternating quarterbacks Joe DiVito and Mike Fallon maintained
ball control and field position
throughtout the final stanza but
could score only one second-half
touchdown against a tough Buffalo defense.
BC started applying the pres-

sure to what seemed to be

a

com-

fortable Buffalo margin when
Robertson recovered a muffed
punt return on the Buffalo sixteen-yard line. Four plays later
Dave Bennett scored from the
Bulls three. Quarterback John
Fallon swepf end for the two
point conversion and with six
and a half minutes left the Eagles
had closed to within twelve
points. BC continued to threaten
when Tom Hurd fumbled the ensuing kickoff on the Buffalo 32yard line where the Eagles’ Joe
McDonald fell on the ball. A DiVito to Terry Erwin pass moved
the hosts inside the Buffalo 20,
but fullback Brendan McCarthy
lost the handle on the ball after
which the Bulls’ sophomore safetyman Dick Horn pounced on the
ball.
Deep in their own territory, the
Bulls were forced to punt after

—Y»t«

Chuck Dmnkoski
caught nine passes for 103 yds
the Bulls were on their way
great victory.

to a

The Bulls’ defense kept pressure on DiVito and company and
sophomore sensation Mike Luzny
picked up a BC loose ball on the
Eagle’s 39-yard line.
Murtha
needed to throw only one pass in
the next eleven plays which set
up Jones’ one-yard leap for the
touchdown.

The Bulls will be seeking their
fourth straight victory, a feat
they haven’t accomplished since
1959, against Holy Cross in
Worcester, Mass., this Saturday.

Rugby is a game similar to football and soccer. It is a
continuous event comprised of two 35 minutes halves. Each
team fields 15 men who like to indulge in rough, tough and
torrid competition, not to mention beer drinking.

Originated in England and popular in the Commonwealth countries, this sport has long bee.n
regarded as the drinking man’s
sport (after one game you have
to drink so as to get so numb
you don’t realize you are hurt).
In this country, Rugby is now
being played in West Coast
(where else) in high schools all
around the area. It is fast becoming a popular sport in this
country, but why not at this uni-

versity?
A possible reason for its lack
of popularity on this campus may
be due to the fact it’s a club
sport. However,
Andy Smith,
president of the club says, “It
helps us by not being a varsity
sport.” The reason he gives is
that the club may want to go its
own way and do what they want.

by Eddie Levine
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

In intramural action this week,
two sports were in the spotlight.
The tennis tournament reached

winner in the singles was Rich
Kantor, who defeated Mark Newton by scores of 6-0, 6-4. Newton
came back in the doubles, teaming with Paul Goldsmith to win
by a 6-1, 6-4 margin.

-w/

The touch football league con
tinned into its fifth week of action. The seven divisions are all
very close, with no division having a sure bet for the champion-

ly on a 38-yard scoring pitch to
Jim Cavanaugh who had just

beaten defensive back Tom Hurd.
The Eagles never got to try the
conversion due to a fumble on

ship.

the placement.
During the entire afternoon,
Mike Luzny displayed the form
which made him one of the East’s
top linebackers. Luzny blocked

Mike Robertson’s punt from the
BC end zone and the Bulls added
a two-point safety to their lead.

Mike Luzny
star

of I he game

Hill, Mass.

at

Chestnut

it’s free) try Rugby,
It is time the students of this
campus took an interest in something better than picketing, burning draft cards, and arguing about
the war, and give it up for a few
hours and enjoy a sporting event
on its way up in this country and
on this campus. And if you still
feel aggressive, anxious, and willing to let yourself go, there will
be not one, but two Rugby teams
in the spring. That means that
next spring there will be two articles on the sport.
(and

Tennis and touch football
in intramural spotlight
The finals of the tennis tournament were held on Friday. The

I

game against St. Catharines of
Ontario. This game will be played
on Saturday afternoon at approximately 2:30 p.m. on Rotary Field.
There is no football game at
home this week, so why not Rugby? For excitement, thrills, and
a sport that is well worth seeing

Another reason may be the
failure of communication between
Hopefully, you will give Saturday afternoon a try at watchthe student body and the club.
If the students don’t know about ing something different. Be prethe team, how can they support pared to see a thrilling sport and
it? On this campus, you may
perhaps you’ll take an interest.
learn through reading the sports This js the year of the upset, and
section of this paper.
it would be an upset to see this
However, how many times has university get interested in this
sport. A nicer thing couldn’t hapthe sport been given its due representation in the sports pages? pen to a group of nicer Rugby
It’s sad, but true, that Rugby has players.
not been covered very well at
all by the Spectrum, so strange
Bench warmer*
as it may seen there is a Rugby
Overheard at a banquet given
team. One last reason is the unfor Clyde Pupick, one of the outwillingness of this country, let standing football players of the
alone this campus, of accepting Lackawanna All-Stars was this,
this sport. Lately, as was men"Clyde, being a football player,
tioned, the sport is catching on. you must eat, sleep, and drink
on the West Coast, The question
football.” Clyde couldn’t believe
is can it catch on here?
this was asked of him and
Fall weekend game
astounded everyone by saying.
Comprised of faculty and stu“Eat, sleep and drink football?
dents alike, the Rugby Club is
Are you crazy? A pigskin in my
preparing for its Fall-Weekend
kosher house?! . . ."

its conclusion, while touch football continued.

The Eagles, however, were out
to show their fans that last week’s
50-28 dunking at the hands of
Penn State was not a fluke. After
a short punt DiVito struck quick-

The Bulls also got possession
of the ball after the safety and

University. Under their own supervision, as this is not a
varsity sport, these boys play a game that is fast, exciting,
rough, and wide-open.

In the Monday 3 p.m. league,
the Meat and the Physical Edu
cation majors continue to be undefeated. They were scheduled
to meet yesterday. There are also
two unbeaten entries in the Mon
day 4 p.m. league: the Billy
Shears squad and the Oak Court
entry. Billy Shears drew a bye
this week, while Oak met Oxford in another game scheduled
yesterday.

The USAVETS and Graduate
Business, sharing the top spot in
the Tuesday loop with the DoLoops, will clash this afternoon
at 3 p.m. The Pop-Tops, with a
2-2 record, have an outside chance
for the title.

The Bacteriology Club and the
both unbeaten, are tied
for first place in the Wednesday
3 p.m. division. They met earlier
in the season, and the game reBeeps,

sulted in a tie. It will be up to

the rest of (he teams to knock
off one or the other in order to
avoid a tie in the final standings.
Pine Court is the only team in
the Wednesday 4 p.m, league with
no losses, but second-place Yale
Court will have their shot at pinning the first loss on Pine tomorrow afternoon.

Five unbeaten teams
There are five remaining un
beaten teams in the two fraternity loops. In the Thursday 3
p.m. league. Phi Kappa Psi is
3 0, while Sigma Phi Epsilon is
2-0-1, having been tied by oncebeaten Theta Chi earlier. Alpha
Epsilon Pi also has only one setback, The two unbeatens will play
(Please turn to Pg. 16)

�Intramural action
(Cont’d from Pg. 15)

their showdown game this Thurs-

day at 3 p.m.

Three of the seven entries in
not lost a game. Alpha Phi Omega
has won two games in their two
starts, while Tau Delta Rho and
Sigma Alpha Mu have won two
and tied one each in their three
games. Alpha Phi Omega and Tau
Delta Rho will meet head-on this
Thursday.

The golf tournament, already
twice-postponed, has been set for
this Friday. If the weather forces
another postponement, the new
date will be set for sometime in
Spring.

Cross-country is the other intramural sport which will have
its day at the golf course. The

teams have already been entered,
and five or more runners from

each entry will compete.
Monday 3 p.m.

The Meat

Phys. Ed. Majors
Due Process

The 55’ers .
Number Ones
Tonkers
Grad. Law

Monday 4 p.m,
Billy Shears
Oak Court
Walnut Court
Oxford Court

Redwood Court
Hickory Court
Cedar Court
Tuesday

USA VETS
Do-Loops

...

3-1
22
0-4
0-4

Grad Business
Pop-Tops
Hillel Bills
Auldins
Wednesday 3 p.m.

20 1

The Beeps
Nadgos

2-1-0

Manhattans

1-1-1
1-3-1

Dispensibles
Sctorbeni

0-3-1

Dukes

03-0

Wednesday 4 p.m.

Two other intramural tournaments will be held this Friday at
the Grover Cleveland Golf Course.

the

Tuesday, October 24, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* Sixteen

40-0
3 0-1
220

1-1-1
1-2-1

0-20
030

4-0-0
2-1-0
2-2-0
12-1
1-2-0
02 1

Pine Court
Yale Court

Elm Court
Paonessa

Maple Court
Beech Court

Sycamore

Court

Thursday 3 p.m.
Phi Kappa Psi
Sigma Phi Epsilon
Alpha Epsilon Pi

Theta Chi
Alpha Phi Delta
Gamma Phi
Thursday 4 p.m.
Alpha Phi Omega
Tau Delta Rho
Sigha Alpha Mu
Pi Lambda Tau
Phi Epsilon Pi

Coll 45's
Rolling

Stones

0-3-0
3 00
20 1
2 10
111
030
03 0

200
2 0-1
20 1
120
1-2 0
030
030

Bulls' statistics
Bulls
First Downs

Yards Gained
Rushing
Passing
Passes Attempted
Passes Completed
Yards Penalized
Fumbles Lost

Pbrmer All-American, killed m
Vietnam war, eulogized by friend
Editor’s note: The author of the following dispatch is with UPI

he had been assigned to Virginia

der, the former West Point All-America end who was killed with 57
other U.S. soldiers this week in a Viet Cong ambush: Robbins reflects
on the relationship in this piece.

Holleder loved to recall how
he first met Paul Dietzel when the
soft-spoken- coach jumped from
Louisiana State to Army, laughing at how the young Southerner
left the wives and “brass” of

by Paul Robbins
BOSTON, Mass. (UPI)—“I don’t need statisticians or writers,” Don Holleder snapped at me. “I need halfbacks and
linemen.”
cadet and then as an assistant
I had just reported to Holathletic director when he decided
leader at Camp Casey in Koto make the military his career,
rea. He was the head coach taught him what
was best.
Division
of the 7th Infantry
Pride cracked a whip and Holfootball team and I had been leder followed its direction.
The rawboned Webster, N.Y.,
assigned as “business mananever
he
ger,” a plush job for a second product at West forgot what
learned
Point. Those who
a
lieutenant with just couple served under him Undoubtedly
of months left in Korea.
won’t soon forget him either.
It was the Holleder “mask,”
Team undefeated

similar to the one Mickey Mantle
or other persons in the limelight
flash at first acquaintance. When
you get to know them it drops.
At a height of five feet eight
inches and a weight of 135
pounds, Holleder realized I
couldn’t answer his player problems but maybe I could help him
otherwise. The mask dropped.
Holleder, who had turned down
a lucrative football contract with
the New York Giants to stay in
the Army, paused and took a last
drag at his cigarette. Then he
sat down and started with, “Well,
okay. Here’s what you’ll do . .
My job was easy, though, since
Holleder knew what had to be
done. His motto of “always go
'top drawer’
and nothing but
the best—became the team’s unofficial motto.
Holleder knew what he wanted
—for himself and his men. His
years at West Point, first as
’’

His division football team went
including a
undefeated
13-0
Coconut Bowl win over a team of
military all-stars from Hawaii in
Honolulu just before Christmas,
1963. Holleder saw to it that any
of us who would ordinarily have
returned to Korea after the game
and then been sent home within
a couple of weeks went home, instead, from Honolulu. The rest of
the team spent the holidays
among the palm trees and sandy
beaches, instead of overlooking
snow-covered rice paddies and
desolate mountains that make up
Korea in mid-winter.
Holleder returned to Korea
a far cry from his previous assignments as a platoon leader
with the 25th Infantry Division in
Hawaii and assistant athletic director at West Point—to win a
leadership award for the Pacific
Area Command. I lost track of
him after that, except to learn
—

—

—

West Point spellbound when he

returned to where he had served
as an assistant coach. Holleder
picked up some of Dietzel’s-ways
because he, too, was demanding
of his subordinates, yet wise
enough to know when to be tactful.

Recalls Army

-

Navy

Another thing Holleder loved
to recall was the hubbub surrounding the Army-Navy game
. . . painting the grass green . . .
massive programs that brought
in thousands of dollars from ads
and sales . . . the tradition. “It’s
a million dollar production. You
just have to be there,” he’d mutter, comparing the pomp of the
Army-Navy classic with Korea.
Col. Earl “Red” Blaik, who
stunned the sports world in 1955
when he changed Holleder from
an All-America end to an untried
quarterback, even if he was lefthanded, devoted a chapter of
his memoirs to Holleder. Anyone
else who knew the ex-AIl-America end probably would do the
same if he ever wrote a book.
If anything rankled Holleder,
it may have been that his pretty
wife Caroline had presented him
with three girls. “Maybe some
day I’ll have a boy,” Holleder
would say with an embarrassed
grin. “Maybe . .
I see by the newspaper that

Holleder left four children in addition to his wife in Arlington,
Va. Maybe he got that wish.
Don Holleder, cut down by a
Viet Cong ambush at the age of
32, obviously didn’t know too
much about renting cars. He said
it “was when you’re No. 1 that
you try a little harder,” and he
did.

—

$tglc Crest

What's a wild, new
snack that takes
30 seconds to make,
needs no refrigeration,
comes complete
with nothing to wash,

and can be stored
in a dormitory
for 63 years?

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Raymond’s
Gay Ninety
BARBER SHOP

Razor Cutting For
the "in group"

3205 Bailey Ave.
(at Stockbridge)

�Tuesday,

c

October 24, 1967

The Spectrum

Peace Corps loses doctors
due to draft exemption change
Special to The Spectrum

WASHINGTON

—

Recent re

visions in the Selective Service

laws have caused the Peace Corps
to launch an intensive nationwide
campaign to recruit doctors.
During the first six years of
its existence, the Peace Corps
was assigned staff doctors by the
U.S. Public Health Service. By
working for the Corps, these doctors were able to fulfill their
military obligations without serving in the army or with the Public Health Service.
However, changes made in the
draft laws this year barred such
future assignments.

ada.

With a population of 20 million, a way of life that is only
marginally different from the
American, political freedom, job
opportunities and, for some most
importantly, no conscription, Canada is easy to make the transition
to. About 15,000 Americans move
to Canada every year.
Until recently this migration
has been more than matched by
the ‘Brain Drain’ Canadians worthe several thousand
ry about
nurses, teachers and production
workers who move each year into
the States. But this year, for the
first time since the war, it is
expected that migration to Canada will outweigh immigration to
the U.S.
Recently
and this accounts
for the change in direction of
young Amerithe brain drain
cans are more and more moving
to Canada to evade the draft and
involvement in the war. Canadian
immigration officials have no record of the number of immigrants
who were 1-A before they arrived,
but Marc Satin who runs the
Toronto office of the anti-draft
program says he gets about
half-a-dozen draft-evaders going
through the office a day, and says
that the load is about the same
in offices in Montreal and Vancouver. There are also eight small
offices and groups helping draft
evaders in other cities. Thousands
of others simply cross the border
as landed immigrants without
contacting groups concerned with
—

—

—

draft evaders.

Volunteers in Canada
Since Canada’s unified armed
services are manned by volunteers. Canada does not recognize
"draft evasion” or “international
flight to avoid prosecution” as
crimes, though these are punished by five to ten years in jail
in the U.S. Consequently, draft
evaders cannot be extradited.
Tom Kent, the left-leaning
chief civil servant of the Department of Citizenship and Immigra-

has put it quite plainly:
“There is not any prohibition in
the Immigration Act or regulations against the admission of
persons who may be seeking to
avoid induction into the armed
services and, therefore, providing
tion

they meet immigration requirements. we have no basis in law
for barring their entry.”

Asked about American efforts
to prosecute draft resisters, External Affairs Minister Paul Martin said that Canada does not
"feel under any obligation to enforce the laws in that regard of
any country.”

create association to
grant health degrees

In the past, we had up to 400

The Association of Schools of

their internship who asked for
Ups assignment,” said Dr. Stanley
C. Scheyer, director of the Peace
Corps’ Office of Medical Pro-

13 universities that
offer degrees in health related
professions. The State University
of Buffalo school of Health Related Professions has announced
that it is one of the schools involved.

grams.

“We’ve had over 400 inquiries
this year, but now that the draft
exemption is gone, we’ve been
receiving letters from applicants
saying they can’t take two years
out of their lives to serve in the
Peace Corps and then another two
years for military service,”
The Peace Corps now has 134
doctors serving overseas in 45 of
the 55 countries to which volunteers are assigned.

Viet war increasing flow
of Americans to Canada
TORONTO (CPS)—In the past
few years more and more Americans have been moving to Can-

UB joins others to

An American who wishes to
become a citizen of Canada enters as a landed immigrant by
filling in the appropriate forms
from the Department of Citizenship and Immigration and either
mailing them to Ottawa, the capital, or presenting them at the
border when he enters Canada,
A would-be immigrant must be
18-years-old (though his wife need
not be) and not a member of one
of the “prohibited classes.” Prohibited classes are defined by
Section 5 of the Canadian Immigration Act to include idiots, the
insane, convicted criminals, and
those who are likely to become
public charges.
Those jailed for civil rights activity are not likely to be barred,
and any healthy, honest young
man with either a job offered or
enough money to survive on is
likely to be admitted. Newspapers
here have from time-to-time commented that the certification 1-A
is a pretty good guarantee of the
quality of an immigrant.
Almost any American may visit
Canada. Soldiers in uniform are
required to produce leave papers
at the border, but others pass into
the country after only cursory
examination of baggage. It is illegal however for visitors to work
in Canada, and a visitor must
generally return to the U.S. in
order to make application for immigration.

Student entry
Any student admitted to a reputable Canadian school and having the money to pay for it may
enter Canada on a “student entry
certificate” which allows him to
work during the summer and become a landed immigrant without leaving the country once he
has graduated.
Generally, a bare majority of
Canadians seem to be opposed to
the American war (though the
government is a member of the
International Control Commission
in Vietnam, and hence strictly
neutral), either from principled
opposition to its illegality and
immorality or through a feeling
of nationalistic superiority to the
U.S. These people therefore sup-

port draft evaders.
Since Canada has a chronic
shortage of skilled labor, employers welcome Americans, who are
generally better educated and
trained than other immigrants
or Canadians. Draft evaders' here
report little difficulty in finding
jobs.
Psychology Professor Martin
Wall of University College said
a continued effort will be made
to raise money from other stu
dent associations and to inform

American students about the possibilities of going to Canada.

created by

Dr. J. Warren Perry, Dean of

the State University of Buffalo
School, said that the “Association
was established to meet today’s
changing pattern of health care
with its emphasis on well being
and keeping people healthy, re-

habilitation services for the ill
and disabled, and early detection
and prevention of disease." 1

Dr. Perry is vice president of
the organization and also president-elect.
The aims of the association are
to provide a means of communication

between the different
schools and set some guidelines
for the teaching of health sciences. The organization is strictly voluntary and strives for educational betterment.
New trends in medicine to prevent disease and rehabilitate those
stricken with formerly incurable
afflictions have nurtured a tremendous growth in the Health
Related Professions.
Twenty more colleges are developing degree programs in health
fields and it is estimated that by
December 1968, 60 colleges will
be offering programs in this field.

The State University of Buffalo
school is indicative of this growth.
Created in 1965, the School now
offers BS degrees in Medical
Technology, Physical Therapy and
Occupational Therapy. In May,

1967, 61 students received de-

grees and presently 306 students
are matriculating in these health

related fields.

Peg* S*v*nt**n

On Wall Street
by Michael Galitier

After rising to the 940 level several weeks ago, the Dow
Jones industrial average has 'slipped to the 915 area. The
main reason for this downswing has been the hesitance exhibited by traders due to fears of higher interest rates.
As one broker commented, “Higher interest rates mean
tighter money.” It should be remembered that higher interest
rates were the cause of the 1966 bear market.
One reason that future higher
interest rates arc probable lies
in the failure of Congress to
enact President Johnson’s 10%
surtax bill. Thus, if the necessary
fiscal policies are not adopted,
stricter monetary policies must
be the next and last resort. Con-

gress says to Johnson. "We vyill
pass your surtax bill only if you
decrease your budget by five
billion dollars.” Johnson says
firmly, “I will not decrease

spending." Congress replies,

"Then you won’t get your bill
passed." I hope they don’t take
too long in concluding their little

game.
I would recommend

that caution be taken in investing at
this time until some decision is
made concerning fiscal policies.
The market presently is quite
selective. Evidence of this selectivity is seen upon noting the
close on Thursday, Oct. 12. 24
stocks set new 1967 highs while
51 stocks set new lows.

An evaluation
of certain industries

1967 first-half nets were down
from 1966 first-half for all domestic airlines except 1 Continental and United, which were up
30.4% and 33.2% respectively
(National and Delta report on
fiscal year basis. However, Continental second-half net should
be lower due to cancellation of
flights by the Military Air Command (MAC) on which Continental is quite dependent.
Uramium
has been moving
much higher due to realization
of the vast potential inherent in
the nuclear energy industry.
United Nuclear, a uranium supplier, has already moved from a
low of 18 to a high of SI this
year. EG&amp;G, involved in Atomic
Energy Tests, has moved from
15 two years ago to a high of
—

140.
Auto
So So. Chrysler, due
to the Ford Strike, has increased
its share of the market to 20%.
Dealer reception to AMC’s sporty
Javelin has been very good.
Whether AMC will return to the
black is still a question.
How Sweet They
Computer
Are. Buy, Buy, Buy! IBM reported
a 27% increase in third quarter
earnings. It has moved from 500
to 580 in a little over a month.
Control Data at 140 should see
200 by early next year. Scientific
Data has already risen from 70
to 120 since the summer.
Air Pollution
Industry of
the Future. Companies participating in the future growth of this
industry include Zurn Industries
(Over the Counter) and Research
Cottrell (American Stock Exchange). Both these stocks possess a great deal of glamor. From
last June to July, Zurn climbed
from 20 to 60 and then split two
for one. In one week in September, Research Cottrell rose 15
—

—

Though six million
Color TV
sets are scheduled to be sold in
—

1967 up from 4.7 million in 1966,
third quarter earnings results
have not been good (in fact
pretty poor, particularly for Admiral, National Video, and Mag
navox. Motorola, however, has
been strong lately due to a recommendation by a brokerage
house. Looks like my optinlism
several weeks ago concerning
this industry may have to wait
a while.
Airlines
Costs rising faster
than revenues. The Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB) doesn’t look
kindly on air fare increase. Mu
tual funds have steadily lightened
their positions in Pan Am, Continental, American and others.
—

—

points.

Percy claims South Vietnamese
are neglecting responsibility in war
by Robert W. Lucas

at night when some of the bitterest fighting begins,” Percy

WASHINGTON (GNS)
Sen.
Charles H. Percy (R.-Ill.) said that
returning American fighting men
have told him that the South
Vietnamese "are increasingly will
ing to hold our coat while we go
in to do battle.”
The Illinois senator made his
statement in an exclusive question-and-answer interview with reporters for the Gannett News
Service in Washington.

said.
He said he had had no feeling
that the “South Vietnam army
was a terribly hard-working, dedicated army such as, say, the
South Koreans had developed."

—

Percy had said earlier that he
did not believe South Vietnam
was "carrying its rightful share
of combat” in the Vietnam war.
Asked to identify his sources of
information on this score, Percy
quoted wounded U. S. servicemen and “distinguished Ameri-

Percy linked his doubts about
the performance of the South
Vietnamese in the war with his
skepticism about the Johnson Administration’s “lack of candor in
reporting back to the people . .

“There have been so many misleading statements that this has
now become a matter of general
concern in the nation," Percy

said. And he said the press has
been the most severe critic of
the lack of candor in the Ad

can

ministration.

Associated Press, The National
Observer and Newsweek magazine.

People unhappy

correspondents,” including
writers of recent articles for the

Works in daylight
“Vietnam reporters have characterized the South Vietnamese
army as working only

daylight

hours and stopping its activities

Percy repeated his earlier warnings that the “vast majority of
people are unhappy with the
Johnson Administration's policy

in Vietnam." And he expressed
doubts about the Administration's
ability to 'bring about useful negotiations,"

bilities for talks, once reported
by the late Adlai Stevenson, previously existed.
Percy’s references to press reports in U. S. newspapers obviously referred to a story in the
Aug. 7 New York Times. It said
American officers in Vietnam
describe the South Vietnam army

as lacking in leadership,
“The fighting men are tough,
willing

story

and courageous," the
said, "but like soldiers

everywhere, they are worthless if
badly led and poorly motivated.”

Saigon nightclub
The Times story also said: "It
is not uncommon to see two dozen off-duty army officers talcing
their ease of a Saturday night in
Maxim's, an expensive Saigon
nightclub.”

In his interview, Percy said
that “If leading officials in the
Administration wish to refute
this (the part-time performance
of the South Vietnam army), they
will have to debate it with the
fourth estate (the press)
not
with those of us who have not recently been there in the field
actually to make a personal ap-

even though possi- praisal."

—

�Tuesday, October 24, 1967

The Spectrum

Page Eighteen

Some people
don’t like
us.

We don’t
care.

We’re not
in

business

to be liked.

Our business is news . . . and we report it factually, concisely, brightly. We report it without regard to outside pressures. And we don’t let our own opinions color its presenta. tion. We express our opinions on the editorial pages—and only on the editorial pages.
Our business is service . . . and we serve students better and more often than any other college newspaper in Western New York.
Our business is people
we tell them what other people are doing and saying. And how
others effect their lives.
...

Our business can be your business . . . The Spectrum needs more interested and dedicated
people on the staff. You don't have to be able to write. We can teach you that. Or
you can work on a non-writing staff. . . advertising, layout, copy or photography.
and see us. You can’t make money on The Spectrum. But you can earn tremendous satisfaction helping to keep the University community informed and aware.

Come

The Spectrum Q
“The only full coverage student newspaper on the Niagara Frontier”

355 NORTON HALL

831-2210

Some people do

like u«.

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                    <text>The $pecti\um
Vol. 18, No. 12

O

State University of New York at Buffalo

ra

ro :es

Friday, October 20, 1967

ow across coun

resis

Arrests and injuries mar protests
on eve of Washington demonstration
United Press International

OAKLAND (UPI) —Violence erupted early this week in
coast-to-coast demonstrations
draft and the VietJ )
nam war.
On the second day of a side the center and were escorted
planned week of protests, out of the building.
club swinging police routed Nationwide round
The demonstrations were part
more than 3,000 rebellious,
screaming pickets from of a nationwide round in which
protestors were throwing away
around the Northern Calior burning their draft cards to
fornia Induction Center at dramatize their resistance to the
Oakland.
draft and the war in Southeast
-

Twenty-two persons were treat-

than 140 were arrested
Monday in the first day of the
demonstrations when they blockaded induction centers, staged
sit-ins or fought with police and
U. S. marshals.
The protests sparked largely
by a group called The Resistance

the building.
Some 250 to 300 demonstrators
picketed an induction center in
Seattle, Wash. Four of the group
tried to distribute pamphlets in-

and the National Mobilization
Committee to End the War in

Nineteen demonstrators were
arrested and hauled away at Los
Angeles when they staged a sitdown in front of an induction
center, barring the path for inductees who were trying to enter

—UPI

Telephoto

Oakland
melee

Oakland, Calif, police, swinging
billy clubs and firing cannisters
of eye stinging liquid marched
into a crowd of two-thousand
anti-draft demonstrators Tues-

day.

Local anti-war actions mount in
support of Washington march
Special to The Spectrum

“There is no difference between the American government
(in this war) and the support the
support the German people gave
to the Nazi government when it
destroyed 6 million innocent people,” Donald Mikulecky, assistant
professor of biophysics at the
State University of Buffalo, told
the Selective Service personnel.
He was one of 20 faculty members, students and clergymen
who handed in draft registration
cards, classification cards or letters of support this Wednesday in
Buffalo as part of a national resistance against the draft.
He handed in a letter of full
support for those turning in their
cards and said he would aid and
abet such actions until such time
as young men are no longer
called “to commit crimes against
humanity.”

His letter also stated his intent
to turn in his own draft card
Friday in Washington at the Justice Department.

“I was one of hundreds of
other faculty, clergy and professional people who had publicly
dedicated themselves to resisting
and supporting those who resist,”
One of the first students to return his draft card was Lawrence
Faulkner, a graduate student
here. He went into the office and
was informed that he could be
sentenced to five years in jail
for willful non-possession of his
draft card.
When asked to affirm that he
had been informed of the law

and the penalties, he replied: “I
will affirm that the Vietnam war
is illegal, immoral and unjust and
that I will have no part in it,
and that I will affirm.”
While draft cards were being
handed in, war protestors who
had been picketing Buffalo’s old
Post Office building on Ellieott
St. filed inside and supported the
draft resisters by picketing and
chanting: “Hell no, we won’t go.”
Mr. Falkner was loudly applauded after he turned in his
card and explained: “They are
applauding for every young man
across the country who is handing in his card this week.”
There had been a rally proceeding the resistance on the
first floor of Norton Hall which
attracted about 600 students.
Speakers commented on the effects of the war in the United
States.
Mr. Faulkner said that men
returning from the service were
seen becoming hard and violent.
“An ex-Marine came up to me,
he said he had fought in Vietnam. With regard to violence he
said that it took him and a friend
of his about a year to get killing
out of their minds. He marched
with us against the war on Oct.
7,” he said.
A second major draft resistance
is being planned in Buffalo for
December.

Asia.
More

ed for injuries at hospitals and
police arrested 14 persons.

Vietnam, will be climaxed tomorrow by a mass demonstration

in Washington.

The National Guard will fur-

nish 2,500 military policemen

the Lincoln Memorial and march
on the Pentagon.

Wisconsin melee
Club wielding police broke up
an anti-Vietnam war sit-in at the
University of Wisconsin Wednesday and held mobs of retaliating
students at bay with tear gas.
Scores of persons were injured.
A spokesman for the university hospital said about 65 persons were treated for injuries
and one was hospitalized with
blurred vision. Five or six policemen were among the injured.
The melee erupted when campus and city police equipped to
deal with riots moved against
about 150 demonstrators who sat,
arms locked together, in corridors
of the Commerce building.

Local students return draft cards
protestors turned in
or classification noSelective Service OfEllicott Street Wednesday to climax a demonstration against the draft.
Approximately 100 State University of Buffalo students and
faculty members began marching
in front of the building at 2:30
p.m. Half the group then proceeded to Room 208 where the
cards were to be turned in. The
other half of the group was prevented from going upstairs because of overcrowding in the
About 20
draft cards
tices to the
fices at 121

involuntary

servitude

stopped.”

The Local Board was ordered
by Selective Service headquarters
in Albany to accept any cards
turned in. No immediate action
was taken by authorities against
those who turned in their cards.
A leaflet passed out by the

group declared, “We are turning in our draft cards because
we will not involuntarily serve
an unjust conscription system.”
The action is part of a nation-

wide Anti Draft Week that has
engineered similar demonstrations in Oakland, Seattle and

other parts of the country.

building.
They were met at the second
floor offices of the board by two
U.S. marshals, who permitted
them to enter the offices one at
time.

As each protestor entered, the
board’s auditor, Edward Doody,
warned them of the penalty for
failure to carry the Selective
Service registration card.
The peaceful demonstration,
replete with anti-draft placards
and anti Vietnam war chants, was
designed, “To demonstrate to
thousands of young people that

Dec.

note: This story was writby Miss Ronnie Bromberg, an
editor of the Bullalo Insighter.)
&lt;

ten

to

help District of Columbia police
patrol the Capital's streets. Organizers predict that from 40,000
to 100,000 protesters will rally at

Editor’s

local

�Th

Pag* Two

•

s tudent Senate holds uproarious session

Two senators resign as anti-war
resolution passes after wild debate
but more imi lortantly as

lay

nigl

President Richard Miller’s, resolution calling upon the U.S. government to end all “offensive
military operations” in Vietnam.
The resolution was passed following a fiery two-hour debate,
during which two Senators, Nick
Sargent and Sandra Funt, announced their resignations.

Student Association President
Stewart Edelstein said Thursday
that he had not yet received any
written resignations, and that the
resignations of Mr. Sargent and
Miss Funt had been only verbal.

The resolution stated that the
Student Senate believes “the freedom of the University and the
freedom of the society cannot be
diverted from the struggle for
world peace.” It also listed the
world wide and domestic consequences of the war. The Senate
urged that the U.S. Government
should take the following action:
The immediate cessation of
bombing in North and South Viet-

cal settlement

The termination of offensive
military operations, such as
“search and destroy missimjs"
and programs of crop dcslrumon.
These steps de-escalation arc required not only as humanitarian
•

I

-

Programs initiated to aid
visiting foreign scholars
One hundred foreign scholars
representing more than twentyfive countries are visiting the
State University of Buffalo this

over
of the Student
Senate. Senator Daryl Rosenfeld
brought up the issue of student
apathy over this question. She
pointed out that interest in the
resolution was low, as evidenced
by student attendance at the Senate meeting.
the role

The recognition by the United States in an unequivocably
clear manner that the National
Liberation Front must be a separate party to any negotiations.
•

A negotiated settlement that
will allow for the earliest possible removal of fighting forces
•

in Vietnam

The Senate also called for a
University ■ wide referendum on
the Vietnam resolution in an addition sponsored by Penny Bergman

Mr. Miller spoke in support of
his resolution, stressing the fact
that it does not speak for the
student body, but only for the
Senate, He stated that it was the
role of the Senate, as student
leaders, to motivate opinion, and
not merely to reflect it.

•

nam.

debate

Leni

Friday, October 20, 1967

Spectrum

In reaction

to this opinion,

Senator Barry

Tellman offered

an alternative motion. He suggested that before the Senate
take a stand, a referendum should
be held to determine the feelings
of the majority of the student
body on the Vietnam issue.

To aid them in adjusting to
American way of life, the University’s Office of International Educational Services has planned a
variety of activities for the new
faculty members and research
workers.
To coordinate the program, the
Office has appointed Mrs, Dean
Neal Slalkin asked why the G. Pruitt, as advisor of foreign
Senate should be involved in the
scholars. Formerly Mrs. Pruitt
issue at all. Mr. Miller explained was assistant advisor on foreign
that it was their responsibility as student affairs. She has planned
individuals in a position of power. a series of monthly activities
He added: “Are we leaders or which may take the form of a
followers, are we rubber stamps, reception, a coffee hour or a
or are we going to make decistour of Buffalo points of interions on our own?”
est. This is being done in conjunction with the Special project
Slatkin objects
of the Women’s Club, a group of
After this was passed, Mr. Slatvolunteers who will assist her in
kin made a motion for reconsidthis program.
eration of the resolution. He inAlso, between monthly meetsisted that there had been little ings, the Office may introduce
actual discussion on the resolution itself. In effect, he suggested
that another resolution could be
brought up with more acceptable

wording.

There was extensive debate by
almost every senator on the terms
of the resolution.

the foreign faculty to local families or arrange dinner engage
ments for them.
Mrs. Pruitt expressed her de
relieve “homesickness’ felt by the
foreign visitors by making them
feel that someone is truly concerned about their welfare as
individuals.
Sometimes the language barrier may present problems for
the foreign scholars and their
families. In this case, the University’s program in English for the
foreign born can help, and the
Office of International Educational Services sees to it that those
in need of such aid are quickly
informed of the courses available.

The Office also helps fbreign
scholars to meet other problems
of everyday life in the U.S., such
as searching for suitable living
quarters, registering children in
school, paying taxes, opening
bank accounts, and getting the
services of a doctor or dentist.

Suicide Prevention Center
financially forced to dose

The Suicide Prevention Center
A roll call vote was then taken
of Buffalo officially closed down
on the unrevised Mr. Miller resolution which passed 9-3-0. A sep- early this week.
arate vote was taken on the
Faced with insurmountable
motion to hold a referendum debts, the center closed only after
after the resolution was passed. having its phone service cut off
This also carried.
and every piece Of furniture in
its office tagged by the sheriff
for public auction.
The center was located for the
past two weeks at 19 Laurel
Street, a location donated free of
charge after Director Joe Vetter
and his staff were evicted from
their former offices at 1361 Main
Street.
Mr. Vetter explained that a
lack of donations from the community finally forced him to close
up the center. On Monday, the
last day of operation, he reported
receiving $1.75 in the mail.
He is presently over $7000 in
debt, and has_ found that he is
being held personally responsible
for the debts of the center.

The closing came as the final
round in a long financial struggle to keep the center open. Mr,
Vetter commented that he had
seen the center through similar
difficulties in the past, but that
this time the pressure from Buffalo’s “professional” agencies was
too great. Various agencies have
criticized the center for its unorthodox techniques of partially
staffing its twenty-four-hour-a-day
operation with former alcoholics
and addicts, and of eliminating
most necessary paperwork and
back files.
Joe Vetter is now planning to
go to work as a business consultant: “I’ve got $7000 to make up,
but with the help of God, I’ll
eventually make it.”
When asked if he has plans for
opening another Suicide Prevention Center in the future, he commented that the chances are slim
—he feels he has met all the
opposition he can take in Buffalo.

BWFALOt FMKST

TJMIM

III MMi W.
w Qp— 11:4ft A.

�Friday,

October 20, 1967

The Spectrum

P»9e

Brockport expands Peace Corps
field service and degree program
BROCKPORT
The Peace
Corps and the State University
College at Brockport have an—

ments to

ana expand the
Peace Corpfe/College Degree training project launched in the summer of 1967. The highly favorable reaction to this summer’s
pioneer venture sparked the decision to enlarge the program for
exiena

1968.

It is the first program to make
Peace Corns training and service an integral part of curricula
leading to Bachelor’s and Mas-

ter’s degrees.

Candidates will be selected
from students in good standing at
an accredited college who are
completing their sophomore or
junior year by June 1968. Those
selected will be able to earn, an
AM or BS degree and will be
eligible for a Peace Corps assignment in one academic year
flanked by two summers of fully

subsidized and integrated academic courses and Peace Corps
training. They will be expected
"tmnaior in mathematics or the
sciences; those who have completed their junior year prior to
entrance into the program will
have the opportunity for a double-major.
At the end of the second summer the graduates as Peace
Corps volunteers will be off on
their Latin American assignment.

As members of the staffs of
teacher training institutions or
consultants to secondary teachers of mathematics or science,
they will be important participants in the educational development efforts of their host countries. During their two-year service they will have the opportunity to earn up to twelve semester hours graduate credit.
Peace Corps and College officials pointed out the several features which make the program

unique, including:

dateline news, Oct 20

academic cred-

it for Peace Corps training,

fully subsidized
totalling

thirty

two

summer sessions
semester

rrpHit

hours, in-depth Peace Corps,
synchronized training with the
liberal arts and specialized professional preparation, individualized programming, opportunity
for double majors and supervised
overseas graduate work.
Brockport President Albert
Warren Brown commented: “This
integrated program is based on
our two fold conviction: to combine the college and Peace Corps
experiences is to make both more
relevant and meaningful and the
personal product more Valuable,
and to provide much-n e e d e d
skilled specialists
mathematics
—

and science teachers—as Peace
Corps volunteers in Latin Amer
ica is to make a significant con

tribution to all concerned.”

Anti- Vietnam Democrats circulate
petition to halt Johnson renomination
A petition to block the renomination of President Johnson
as the Democratic Presidential
candidate in 1968 is being circulated at the State University of
Buffalo and across the country.

in The New York Times on Sunday, Nov. 26.
The letter is the first step in
a grass-roots campaign of Democrats who voted for peace in 1964
by supporting President Johnson.
They

An organization known as Dissenting Democrats is collecting
signatures and funds for an Open

Letter to President Johnson and
the Democratic Party to appear

are

now organizing a na-

tional movement to oppose his renomination at the Democratic
National Convention. 12,000 signatures have been collected for
an ad in the Los Angeles Times

Anyone can

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Three

to appear on the same day.
The campaign also involves
sending delegates to the Democratic Convention next year who
will be pledged to peace candidates, The group has not yet determined which alternative candidate they will support.

UNITED NATIONS
The 10 non-permanent members of the
U.N. Security Council were meeting today to assess hopes for reconciling Arabs and Israeli differences on a Middle East peace settlement.
CANBERRA, Australia—Prime Minster Harold Holt said a summit meeting of Vietnam allies is likely to be held in late November
or early December.
Holt told a news conference the summit meeting probably would
be in Seoul, South Korea or Bangkok, Thailand.
MIAMI—Cuban premier Fidel Castro eulogized his slain guerrilla
warfare expert, Ernesto Che Guevara, Wednesday night over a nationwide radio and television hookup in Havane iO days ago and called
his death “a lucky blow” for Bolivian forces, adding that Che's death
might have resulted from "his Achilles heel—m« absolute score for
—

danger."

VATICAN CITY—Catholic lay leaders ended a world congress
Wednesday night by approving an outspoken resolution asking their
church to let individual couples decide whether to use contraceptives.

The birth control issue was part of a lengthy resolution on world
development which noted the "anguishing" problem of over popu-

lation.

A strongly-worded draft resolution condemning the Vietnam
war and bombing of civilians did not reach the congress floor but
another resolution generally deplored “the scandal of all wars" and
urged “all possible steps” to terminate them.
ALBANY, N.Y.—Constitutional Convention President Anthony J.
Travia is expected to personally kick off the campaign in Rochester
next Monday to sell the proposed new state charter.
The long-awaited campaign opening will begin just three weeks
before New York voters go to the polls to decide the fate of the
product produced at the $10 million convention this summer.
MERIDIAN, Miss. A seven-woman, five-man jury resumes deliberation for three hours and 18 minutes without reaching a decision
Wednesday, the jury quit for the night a U0 p.m. EOT. Deliberations
resume at 9:30 a.m. today.
SAIGON—Communist troops trapped major ambush in two days,
military spokesmen said Thursday. American bombers hit North
Vietnam in a 100-mission assault in which one U.S. and one Communist plane were shot down.
U.S. Airforce B-52 Slratofortresses smashed at positions of some
30,000 North Vietnamese troops poised on the South Vietnamese
border in front of embattled U.S. Marine forts.
The spokesmen said U.S. battle deaths last week amounted to
171, bringing the toll through Saturday to 13,907. Fighting since
Sunday has pushed the figure to about 14,000.

PEOPLE NEEDING HELP
FROM PEOPLE;
it's as simple as that.
The Suicide Prevention Center, Citizens
for Mental Health are sponsoring a FALL
FESTIVAL at the Lance &amp; Shield Club on
Sunday, October 22, 1967 from 2 P.M. till
10 P.M. There will be dancing, entertainment,
and food. Tickets are $2.00 and can be picked
up at the Center at 19 Laurel St. (Just around
the corner from the old center at Main and
Utica.) For further info. just call 886*8749, or

8867188.
STAMP IT!

ir» TNI RAOI

REGULAR

PS

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Cm

The finest
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Send check or money order. Be
sure to include your Zip Code. No
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Prempt shipment Satisfechen Gnarenlaei
TNI MOPP CO.
P. 0. Boa 1812) Lenex Spnts Station
ATLANTA. BA.. 10328

�P»g« Four

The Spectrum

Friday, October 20, 1967

Accounting causes confusion

GOMM'mm,
I mmjmmrmJ

The University is dead.

-A ■T'

i

mate turn of events has been broil] ;ht about
not solely by student grbups which had
by poor planning
planned this year’s activities, not solely by the Student
but by an accounting
Senate which appropriates funds
office that has succumbed in the face of a task which it is
apparently unable to perform.

'

1

Most students can easily remember all the publicity
that urged payment of student fees through September. The
fee-payer was promised a world of benefits. Never a dull
week around this University.

-j-

—

No one knows exactly how much has been collected.
Even the great computers haven’t been able to figure that

out yet.

Since they don’t know how much they have, they logically don’t know how much they can spend. Since they don’t
know how much they can spend, all spending has been kept
at a minimum.

I CANT HELP THINKINGS
rfs a Funny- RaceIm

.mASHIPEWOO

•we—
,

am r '

p&gt;

(T)i967-0CPOX€R«XT*-

Result: Sharp curtailment of activities,
Most students have come to realize that little is being
offered.
Result: Why pay fees next semester?

"You can't do this to us because we want to discuss Vietnam!"

Or perhaps...

It doesn’t take a financial wizard to realize that if students don’t poy fees next semester, the problem won’t be one
by Barry Holticlaw
of accounting
there will clearly be a shortage of funds.
This in turn could imply that less can be offered and
even more students will say: “Why pay fees.”
It’s time for a revolution in the U. S. empire
When the chant becomes nothing more than a resoundGreat Britain should stage a reenactment of the
ing echo of students who once paid their fees, the place will Boston Tea Party, with the roles reversed. Harold
Wilson, dump your bloody endorsement of an equallook as though depression hit.
ly bloody U. S. foreign policy into the muddy waters
The Spectrum recognizes that there are problems in- of the Thames. It’s about time the British declared
volved in collecting and dispersing student activities fees. their independence from us.
In an amazing show of popular sentiment and
We also recognize that given the present trend, these probopposition polities, a kind of pleasant surprise one
lems won't exist for long.
finds rarely these days in British politics, the Labour Party voted by a slim margin in their annual
No fees paid, no problem.
Party congress last month to
a governmental
Students can look forward to a host of cancelled events, denunciation of United States urge
war policies in VietThe laurels go to administrative handling of funds.
nam, particularly the aggression against the North.
—

Riding the fence

Readers
writings

'

Spock ticket prejudice
To the Editor
At first, I was very pleased to learn that the
G.S.A. had invited Dr. Benjamin Spock to speak
at the University. But, when I learned how they
intend to distribute the tickets to his speech, I
was disgusted to say the least.
The organizations of the Undergraduate Student Senate have allowed and even encouraged
participation of graduate students in their programs. However, for some reason the G.S.A. thinks
that a program sponsored by it should be available
to undergraduates only after they are sure there
is room left over.
All I can say to you, G.S.A., is: Thanks, THANKS
A LOT! We will return the favor some day.
Frank A. Burton
President,
Sociology Club

Prime Minister Wilson then disregarded the
mandate from the rank-and-file sentiment of his
uppity backbenchers and pledged anew his full
support for President Johnson’s “search for peace”
in Southeast Asia.
Unless something is done to halt the trend of disappearIt’s an old political game called riding the fence.
on
this campus, the State University of Bufing affluence
Prime Minister Wilson is Capitalizing on the tradifalo will generate the most stifling atmosphere this area has tional elements
in the Conservative Party and on
seen since the inception of the Lackawanna steel plants. A Atlantic-community sentiments in his own leadership party in an attempt to consolidate his middleremedy to the fee situation does not seem unattainable.
of-the-road power around this foreign policy issue.
If the course of the apparent dilemma is sought out, He is attempting to gain back the prestige he has To the Editor:
the inadequacies of the voluntary fee structure will inevitably lost as a result of Britain’s severe economic crisis.
Mr. Ratner seems to be against war but in favor
Mr, Wilson is not only turning his back on
be exposed. Voluntary fees have made it impossible to preof violence to bring about his ends. If this isn’t
British political traditions, namely, parliamentary
I fail to see a difference!
dict how much money will be available.
what war is all about
government with strict party discipline, but also
It’s wrong to use violence to convince the Vieton the only real hope left for the British economy,
The surest way to ascertain a figure that will total stunamese of the “evil” of Communism, but it’s pernamely, a definitive British integration into the fectly alright to use violence to convince the Amerident fees is to have compulsory fees.
European Common Market.
can people of the evil of the war.
Great Britain faces a very serious fork in the
Action by the State Board of Trustees, of course, is road:
What you’re proving Mr. Ratner is that, according
She must direct herself toward Europe, or
needed to implement such a program. Given the great diselse try to build some sort of Atlantic community to you, the U.S. is right in using war to further
patch with which that select group operates, the need for with the U. S. and Canada, which, in effect means it’s selfish ends. You, Mr. Brown, and Mr. Johnson
you all seem to advocate
subjecting herself to subjugation as part of the should all join forces
another solution
at least in the interim
is obvious.
killing for peace.
new world empire.
The Student Senate should get down to the business of
If there is any violence this weekend, I won’t
levying a student tax to replace voluntary fees. The tax Peacemaker or U.S. Subjects ?
look to blame it solely on police brutality
parPerhaps the island nation still does have a
don the cliche, but it takes two to tangle. March
could provide needed revenue and permit an early deterfor greatness, but it appears that she either with you and H. Rapp Brown? I’d sooner march
mination of the expected funds. The Senate has the power chance
doesn’t want it, or else she is flubbing her chance with the Devil; or even L.B.J. for that matter.
and the responsibility to act on the matter of finances. Immiserably: as the role of peacemaker.
Paul Brian Gandel
plementation of a tax is not unrealistic, it may provide the
Britain remains the only major world power
means for solving many budgetary problems.
that supports the U. S. escalation in Vietnam. Johnson has several times been able to silence critics,
The Spectrum is published twice-weekly
every
A priority issue for the Senate agenda: The student tax.
particularly in Capitol Hill, by relying on the supTuesday and Friday
during the reguiar academic
year
at the State University of New York at Buffalo,
port# the always-prudent British; it is hard to
3435 Main Street, Buffalo, New York 14214. Offices
giv^yreason why Britain shouldn’t support the
are located at 355 Norton Hall. Circulation: 15,000.
United States, unless of course there were some
Editor in-Chief—MICHAEL L. D’AMICO
secret righteousness to the Vietnam conflict.
Managing Editor —RICHARD R. HAYNES
A British pull-out would considerably hurt LBJ’s
Asst. Managing Editor—RICHARD SCHWAB
position.
Business Manager—SAMUEL A. POWAZEK
Advertising Manager—DAVID E. FOX
Mayor Sedita this week indicated that the Buffalo Police
What has happened is that in an attempt to gain
Campus
Asst.
W. Scott Behrens
Department is understaffed. More policemen are needed to domestic political support on a rather short-term
Margaret Anderson Layout
David L. Sheedy
basis, Wilson has found it hard to leave his Anglocope with rising crime rates.
Asst.
Asst.
John Trigg
Saxon womb, and has placed Britain’s long-term
Marlene Kozuchowski Copy
Judi Riyetf
City
Jocelyne Hailpern
Daniel Lasser Asst.
The Municipal Civil Service Commission is expected to .future in jeopardy.
Asst.
Lilian Waite Photo. Edward Joscelyn
Feature Barry C. Holtzclaw Asst.
David Yates
announce a new examination for patrolmen in an effort to
Britain has no future unless she manages to
Asst.
Ronald Ellsworth Promotion
Circulation
Sports
boost Department strength. If the new examination implies assert herself as a significantly independent EuroRobert Woodruff Director Murray Richman
pean force, both as an economic and a political
The Spectrum is a member of the United States Stua lowering of qualifications for acceptance to the Departdent Press Association and the Associated Collegiate
leader.
ment, it would certainly be a foolish move.
Press. The Spectrum is served by: United Press International, Associated Collegiate Press Service, Gannett
Instead. Mr. Wilson is acting like LBJ’s twin
News Service, and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate.
More than we need police, we need educated police. brother, walking the same political tightrope.
Represented for national advertising by National EduIf expansion means a lowering of quality, Buffalo will be
Wilson
is
Mr.
probably waiting for his own
cational Advertising Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave.,
New York, N. Y. Republication of all news dispatches
political situation, to get better before he attempts
paying for many years to come.
is forbidden wihout the express consent of the
to break with brother Lyndon. If that time ever
Rights of republication of all other
editor-in-chief.
An extra effort may be needed to curb crime, but at arrives, he may find himself without a country as
matter herein are also reserved.
There
be
a
need
for
a
new
postage
paid at Buffalo, New York.
certainly may
what expense?
well as without a party.
Second class
Editorial policy is determined by the Editor-in-Chief.
exam. If it does anything, it should raise the qualifications
And his “brother” won’t be far behind.

Death or taxes

l/Von't march with vio/ents

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

New police test?

&amp;

�Friday, October 20, 1967

The Spectrum

"Athens of the West"?

BELOW OLYMPUS

Pag* Fiva

By Interlandi

To the Editor:

Your quotation from Newman in the magazine
section of The Spectrum, Oct, 13, was a pleasure to
read. It recalled for me memories of my own freshman year when Newman’s University Sketches was
required reading. This book, more than any other
single work, helped to make sense of undergraduate days. Here, one came to see, was a masterly

-MEETING-

A,

nmYER BACKLASH
8HM.-HKHUHM.

Newman’s practical awareness of the present, his
visionary hopes for the future, above all, his imaginative historic grasp of the past never failed to
instruct and to inspire.

The

steke

The name of the game—I am told by a friend——is senioryearitis. Which one would think would
be less of a problem when it has taken ten years,
more or less, to gain the eminence of a Bacheloreate
degree. But as is ever the tale of woe in being
a muddlehead, the future lies murky, murky, murky
now, now,

A classical student, reading your extract today
and thinking of Newman’s lovely description of
the greatest of universities, “the first and most
celebrated house of European literature and source
of European civilization,” will be pardonned for
dreaming that, one day, our University may be
known not as “the Berkeley of the East” but, as
“the Athens of the West.”
John A. Madden

grump
now.

There is graduate school. Find someplace that
will keep you for five to seven years and lay the
old rubber stamp right in the middle of your
forehead which entitles you to he a bona-fide
intellectual. Groovy, or is it groovy? Swinging.
Really turns me on and all that good modern
McLuhanist noise. But it doesn't, you see.
I have this little voice way down in there
somewhere which keeps yelling up that my motivation definitely lacks something. I keep telling
it that motivation is passe these days. One learns
his field first and then gets motivated. But all
VDLV (very deep little voice) does is snicker. This
has been happening so long now that I am beginning to wonder if
, well, it might not be just
a little bit right. Just for me, you understand,
I would not want to propose anything that might
disturb the onward march of our civilization. (How
does surlyization strike anyone?)
Anyway this seditious idea has crept into my
thick head that maybe 1 should not go right into
graduate school. Take a year off, goes this siren
call, sit a while and wonder about where you are
going and what, if anything, you would really like
to do. "Impractical!” says the Auditor.
“Think
of the time and money sitting around would waste.”
Which is a point, I mean damn what a mess the
world would be in if people only went around
doing what they wanted to. In a number of ways.
To which perhaps a whole column should be devoted some time.
The auditor goes on, “What would you do? You
have the most impractical education in the world
for maintaining yourself in the style to which
New York State Civil Service has accustomed you.
You would starve.” Which is true. 1 mean what
does one do with a liberal arts degree after making
one pot of very thin soup out of it? I can always
put WW to work, “Well, where would you go
to live as a parasite off your poor wife, to San
Francisco, I suppose?”
Say, did 1 tell you about my father? He sort of
wandered into the beer business a while back.
Brews a thing called Anchor Steam Beer in a
little tiny brewery in—would you believe?—San
Francisco. Kind of' nice town, San Francisco, and
it is rather good beer, even if I am a bit prejudiced.
It is fairly apparent by this time that the Auditor
is getting worried; so worried that he calls on
somebody he, and everybody else, tries to ignore
inside my head—the Moralist. Who, upon being
made aware of the situation comes forth and
spakelh thusly: "I know you well, my son, and
will not believe that you would live off the sweat
of your wife’s brow for one fleeting moment.”
Which shuts everybody up for about ten seconds.
Then the VDLV starts snickering at the Moralist,
which makes me think maybe he and I—VDLV,
not the moralist—must have something in common
after all. (Writer’s note: 1 just took this out of the
...

Parent-Fall Weekend scored
To the Editor:
My parents received a form letter concerning
the Parent-Fall Weekend. It vaguely told about the
scheduled events, and it was written along the
lines of a “Dear Ann Landers” letter. (“Please Ann
Landers, help me with this problem and tell me
how to get my parents to attend Parent-Fall Weekend . . . Remember, don’t spare me any heartaches.”)

:/W66lK7T&lt;neS

j'

“&gt;

"See what I mean? Nobody cares, and they deserve everything
that's coming to them!"

This is the letter I sent home regarding It; Dear

Ann Landers.

I’ve been reading your column for years, and
I think it stinks. But you’re my last resort, as
the local rabbi, psychologist and pawnbroker just
aren’t turned on to my hang ups.

So’s here’s my load: My school is having a first
annual Parent-Fall Weekend, and the way they’re
planning it, you’d think it was the last annual
Parent-Fall Weekend.
They’ve planned a semi-formal dance at $3.50
per couple for Friday night . . . which is fine except
I won’t have a date. I’ve thought of chaperoning
my parents, but how do you buy 1% tickets?

Of course, Saturday night there is a concert
with Smoky Robinson and The Miracles. I know
that "Mickey’s Monkey” is high on the list of my
mother’s favorite golden oldies, but I don’t think
she’d be up to climbing bleachers in heels while
overly enthusiastic students race by here for bet—

ter seats.

And tickets for this concert are $3.50 per person. Besides that, with the wonderful acoustics of
Clark Gym, they’ll probably be able to hear the
concert better at home.
To attend classes, my parents would have to
arrive for the weekend by 8:30 Friday morning,
cause my classes are from 9 to 12.

I could have my parents practice the “Funky
Broadway all week so that they could really show
their stuff at the mixer. Of course, by the 28th the
“Funky Broadway” will have been replaced by at
least three new dances, and it will be almost as
taboo as the “twist.”
Why couldn’t the school have chosen a weekend with a football game and gotten Jack Jones,
say, for a concert, and maybe even have planned
various activities in Norton Hall that parents would
enjoy?

Besides Ann Landers, I won’t even be in Buffalo that week-nd—I’m going to watch the football
game in Boston.
What should I do?
A Buffalo Boobie
Dear Boobie;
Don’t let the school’s hand-ups mess you up.
Invite your parents at your own convenience, and
plan your own entertainment schedule.
Regards,
Ann

Thanx,
A.S.

Readers' Writings
are continued on page six

The Lighter Side
by Dick West

Theoretically, you could be fined $100 and sent to jail
for six months for refusing to tell the U.S. Census Bureau
in 1970 whether you share your shower.
Now I realize that one of the suggested slogans for National Brotherhood week is “Take a shower with a friend.”
And I certainly don’t want to make it appear that 1 am knocking togetherness.
Nevertheless, I am inclined to
Rep. Jackson E.
Betts, (R„ Ohio) in his complaint
that some of the items in the
sample questionnaire for the 1970
census could be embarrassing.
go along with

Among

the

questions

Embarrassing question

You can easily see how that
answer might be embarrassing.
Particularly if the other household had its own shower.
Pointing out in a press release
thaat fines and jail sentences may
be imposed on persons who refused to answer census questions,
Betts said the proposed 1970
form amounted to an invasion of
privacy and governmental harassment.
To this I might add that some
of the questions also are difficult
if not impossible to answer. Take
H2N for example.
It asks: “How do you enter
your living quarters?” The alternatives listed are: “a common or
public hall; through someone
else's living quarters."
That doesn’t begin to cover
the ways I might enter my living

Quotes in

Telephone toughie

Or consider HI: "Is there a
telephone on which people who
live here can be called?”
I couldn’t simply answer that
question “yes" or “no,” as the
questionnnaire requires. It depends on whether my two daughters are home.
To me, however, the most
shocking inquiry on the sample
form is found on page 20. It says:

“Please list below all persons who
stayed here overnight on Tuesday, April 4, 1967 ...”
In 1970, the date presumably

would be advanced.
It so happens that on Tuesday,
April 4, 1967, my wife was visiting her mother in Florida. I have
already told her I was at home
alone, taking a shower.
Is the Census Bureau, through
snide insinuation, now attempting to stir up trouble retroactively? If so, the questionnaire
is unconstitutional.
It violates the provision against

double jeopardy.

the news

United Press International

Dr. Jessie Bernard, professor of sociology at
WASHINGTON
Pennsylvania State University, telling the American Association of
Marriage Counselors that affluence in this country is changing the
nature of the relationships between the sexes;
“The odd, life long monogamic commitment represented by traditional marriage no longer seems to have a monopoly as a design for
living.”
Michigan Gov. George Romney speaking
NASHVILLE, Tenn.
to a group of editors and editorial writers about reallocating space
funds to solve domestic problems:
“Let us spend more in Harlem and less in the Sea of Tranquility."
WASHINGTON
Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower commenting to newsmen about the war in Vietnam:
“All wars are nasty and this one is particularly bad."
—

Writers: Please be brief. Letters should not exceed
300 words. Alt letters must be signed and the address
and telephone number of the writer must be included. Positive verification of authorship will be made
before a letter is printed.
Letters will be kept in strict confidence.
The Spectrum will use initials or pen name, if
requested. But anonymous letters are never used.
The Spectrum reserves the right to edit or delete
material submitted for publication, but the intent of
letters will not be changed.

Betts

criticized was H19 which asks:
“Do you have a bathtub or shower?” There are three possible
answers, including “yes, but
shared with another household.”

quarters. At least after midnight.
To be complete, the questionnaire should include: 1—take off
shoes and sneak in back door;
2—softly open kitchen window if
back door is locked; 3—if window
is locked, climb down chimney.

—

—

typewriter prior to typing an entirely, new and
more sensible column but I decided to hell with it.
It may be totally unintelligible, but it is vintage
Steese).
After which a monstrous brawl started which
is nowhere close to being resolved and I don’t
know what to do, to do. All the people inside
my head are too busy fighting to pay any attention
to me—whoever me is—and help make i choice.
Confusion is the name of the game, and it lasts
from the first time we wake up until the last time
we lose consciousness, and why is it I can’t get
used to it when everyone else seems to have? Or
almost everyone else, since 1 do seem to know a few
people who are having at least a couple of twinges

here and there.
For those of you who find it difficult to follow
what I am saying because you are not yet faced
with the awful immensity of having to chart some
sort of course in the world, 1 will rephrase the
problem. I do not have enough information to
do it, but it is being communicated to me by
subtle ways, and some not so, that it is time for
me to choose a major in life and be a good solid
citizen. Which 1 am finding hard. I remember
what happened when I chose a major as a freshman
with insufficient data and got thoroughly burned.
But there seems to be a definite lack of sympathy
for someone who admits to doubts about the system
in this ease. I have been “educated”; some people
seem to think that not to use that education immediately and directly in the pursuit of another
educational goal is to waste it.
All of which merely increases the confusion
rampant in my warped little mind. One is tempted to call for help, but to whom does one call?
It is the policy of The Spectrum to report the
news fully and impartially in the news pages,
to express the opinions of the newspaper only
in the editorial pages and to publish all sides
of important controversial issues.
"Without

expression,

freedom

of

expression

is

meeninglees.

�■*?r ,r; t»*r rZ .V.
FrWiy, October 20, T967

The Spectrum

Pag* Six

Readers’ writings
Larry Shohet blasts Student Association for UUAB budget cuts
To th* Editor:

am

in substantial and fundamental disagreeall the elected officials (senators
and officers) of the 1967-68 Student Association.
Last year in my capacity as a Spectrum editor, I
had the opportunity to participate in interviews
with all of our present Student Assoication leaders;
I

ment with nearly

on the basis of these interviews as well as my
personal knowledgge of most of the candidates and
their previous records in student government I
concluded that there was a general lack of knowledge of State University of Buffalo affairs, initiative, experience .enthusiasm, leadership qualities,
insight, imagination, and most importantly, vision
among them.
I felt that they were incapable of meeting the
most elementary and essential needs of the student body, and as such, should not be supported.
As a matter of fact, I believed, and still believe,
that these people were so grossly incompetent that
more harm would come out of their administration
than good, and hence, that it was probably more
constructive to have no student government at all
than to place the destiny of present and future

student affairs in their hands.
My feelings being what they were, I should not
have paid by voluntary student activity fee as a
means of (a) registering my general disapproval,
and (b) giving them $17.50 less to work with. But
I paid my fee for one reason only—to subsidize
what I consider to be perhaps the only significant
organ of our present student government—the University Union Activities Board (UUAB). I felt that
the vast array of cultural programs (concerts,
movies, theater( etc.) sponsored by UUAB were, of
themselves, worth $17,50 if not a great deal more.

I was amazed, if not surprised, when Student
Assoication Treasurer Douglas Braun announced
that several of UUAB’s most vital and worthwhile
activities would have to be reduced or scrapped
because of ‘insufficient funds.” Presumably, Mr.
Braun was referring to the reduction of monies
available to student activties as a result of the
voluntary nature of this year’s student activity fee.
It is not too difficult to understand why the
Student Association would prefer to spend a large
portion of its more limited budget on programs
which it has initated, e g. the Undergraduate Research Program, in order .0 encourage their suc-

cess. And I can well appreciate the budgetary havoc
Mr. Braun is faced with as a result nf this year’s
student fee situation. And since UUAB is the largest
single consumer of student activity money, I can
easily see why Mr. Braun reasoned that a curtailment of UUAB activities was an expedient way out
of the mess that he and his colleagues had helped
to create in the first place.

I was quite amused to read the letter from Mr.
Errol Sull and Mr. Harold Bob, President and VicePresident of University Union Activities Board respectively concerning the ineompetency of the Student Senate in its handling of Student Activity Fees.
It is unfortunate that the University Union Activities Board finds it necessary to have a scapegoat to excuse their own lack or responsibility in
planning and fiscal matters.
For the record, University Union Activities
Board presented its second budget for the Academic
Year 1967-1968 which amounted to $41,341.00. At
this time Mr. Errol Sull came before the Finance
Committee to discuss the budget and have it approved. Mr. Sull was, however, quite unaware of
a great many of the items on his budget, and had
virtually no idea of the costs of these events. In
fact, when asked to pinpoint the costs of specific
programs he was unable to do so and often quoted
costs that were highly inflated and out of line with
normal expectations.
After his budget was approved, with minor alterations, a new and interesting series of events
took place. Various representatives of the University Union Activities Board accused me, as Treasurer of the Student Association, of cutting their
budgets by phenomenal percentages. However,
upon review of their original budget requests these
items and costs were not even included.
Certainly, Mr. Sull, as President, and the other
University Union Activities Board members involved should have co ordinated their efforts to
know what they were actually submitting. It is indeed a pity that one arm of an organization does
not know what another is doing. Arc we to believe
that this happens perpetually? In addition, when
one of their members submitted a new budget request for his committee, he was unable to explain

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However, to assume that the best way to solve
a budgetary problem is to force a cutback in the
activities of what is certainly the most productive,
the most recognized, the most meaningful, the most
enjoyed, and the most vital endeavor of student
government—indeed the activity in which more students participate more often than any other—is to
lack the most basic and fundamental qualities of
effective student leadership.
During last year’s Student Senate election campaign The Spectrum called Mr. Braun (along with
most of his colleagues) an “intellectual dwarf.” His
inability to see the necessity for maintaining'and
increasing the high quality of UUAB—even at the
expense of new programs which the Senate cannot
afford to begin until it solves its financial problems
—can only be seen as yet another proof that The
Spectrum was right.
I am glad to see that Messrs. SuII and Bob have
realized their error in supporting Mr. Edelstein
and his colleagues in last year’s Senate election,
and I’m encouraged by the fact that they’ve added
their names to the constantly growing list of responsible student leaders who have gone on record
in extreme opposition to them.

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KLEINHANS—WED., OCT. 25, 8:30 P.M.
By Overwhelming Public Apathy

PETER SCHICKELE

I hope the Student Assoication will realize before it is too late that UUAB should have first
priority over funds, and that it should not begin
to initiate new programs that would necessitate
taking funds away from UUAB until after it has
solved its money problems.
I would further caution the Student Association
that if it does hold back needed funds from UUAB
it may lose what little support it has left. If UUAB
is prevented from carrying out any of its worthwhile
programs as a result of the proposed monetary
cutbacks initiated by Mr. Braun, I will not pay my
student activity fee next semester and I’m certain
there are many other students who will do the
same.

Larry Shohet

Student Association treasurer defends decision on UUAB budget
To tho Editor:

an/a

the costs for his activities alone. He had no idea
of the exact costs, stating that these things are
hard to determine, although it is certainly a responsibility of his position to find these things
out. Certainly it would have not been a responsible
atcion on my part had I readily alloted the money
for a program without having seen any justification

ii
.

.

It

is again unfortunate that the University
Union Activities Board refuses to accept the fact
that -the voluntary fee policy has required us to
curtail activities of all campus organizations and not
soley University Union Activities Board.
With regards to Mr. Sull's and Mr. Bob’s reaction to Senators leaving the meeting during the
budget reviews. I am in full accord. One would like
to think that persons elected to such offices would
be more responsible and conscientious in their
duties; unfortunately, this attitude does not seem
to prevail.

I would think that in the future, before the
University Union Activities Board begins jumping
to conclusions, they would take the time to consider and become knowledgeable about the entire
situation. This would prevent the misconceptions
and problems which have occurred concerning this

particular matter.

Douglas G. Braun
Treasurer, Student Association

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of the costs.

I was quite interested in Mr. Bob’s statement
that the University Union Activities Board would
not follow the line budget which they were granted
and would abuse the lines without the consent of
the Finance Committee. The arrogant attitude that
he displayed cannot promote harmonious relations,
and shows a complete disregard for policies which
all organizations are required to follow. Perhaps if
he had read the Financial Policies of the Student
Association he would have realized that his budget
was more flexible than he believed.

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Friday, October 20, 1967

•

Spectrum

Pag* S*v*n

Education convention examines recent student
AMERICA’S activist position in University policy decisions
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WASHINGTON (CPS) —Student involvement in academic
decision-making was a frequent topic as some 1,700 administrators of colleges and universities across the country gathered here this week for the 50th annual meeting of the
American Council on Education.

ley

Although most of the college presidents and other
executives who participated in the program endorsed significant student participation in the governing of academic instituions, there nevertheless seemed to be an undercurrent
fear of the student activist movement and of the cries for
student power.

This fear and concern about
the future was evident from
the very start of the conferDUPONT* BLENDS INSURE ence when Dr. Samuel B.
Gould, chancellor at the State
LONGER WEAR
University of New York,
warned in his keynote address that the “power of
student activism cannot be
minimized nor can its potential for creating and maintaining unrest be taken
lightly.”

He added. “Unrest and tension
on a campus can and should be

dynamic factors for university
good, but there are certain elements of the current student
movement which openly advocate
such unrest as means toward total disruption and destruction,”
He said that some views circulated by Students for a Democratic Society and the National
Student Association “reflect goals
of extreme negativism and even

anarchy

which,

pursued,

could make the Berke-

if

assiduously

episodes

seem

like

mere

dom of speech on most campuses,

warm-up

J. Edgar Hoover on few; Nelson

Freedom undermined

on many. Richard Nixon and Hubert Humphrey on few,” Dr. Wallis wrote.

Dr. Allen Wallis, president of
the University of Rochester, said
in a paper prepared for the conference that the student activist movement has undermined
the freedom to present controversial views on campus exists
at few institutions of higher
learning.
"Stokely Carmichael can speak
hindrance, but George
Wallace creates so grave a threat
of disorder as to preclude the
possibility that he would be listened to calmly and fairly. Senator Fulbright would be given
a respectful hearing on any
without

campus; few would

dare invite
Secretary McNamara, since his
appearance would almost certainly precipitate tensions, probably

protests, and possibly disorders
that would almost prevent free
and open discussions.
“Timothy Leary enjoys free-

Preserve freedom
Dr. Wallis said administrators
cannot take steps to preserve
freedom of speech for unpopular
speakers "without incurring the
charge of suppressing free
speech.”
Despite these reservations, the

overall sentiment among the ed-

ucators was that students should
play a role in the decision-making process. But there were few
definite answers as to just how

students should be involved, and
no one came forth with a formula to define how much actual
authority students should have.
In a background paper on “The
Academic Community: "Who Decides What?,” David Fellman,
professor of political science at
(Cont'd on Pg. 9)

Astronomers,
salesmen, designers,
programmers,chemists,
psychologists,writers,
sociologists,economists,
metallurgists, artists,
accountants,physicists,
mathematicians,
etc,etc, etc.

That’s what
General Electric
is made of.
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engineers because it takes a lot more than engineers to tackle the problems we deal with. Like
helping to unsnarl traffic jams in our cities, fighting air pollution or finding new ways to provide
power for underdeveloped nations It takes sociologists, meteorologists, astronomers, writers —in
fact, it takes people with just about every kind of
training. But, more than any of this, it takes people
—

with nerve, gumption, intellectual curiositypeople who care about what happens to the world.
So it’s not only your major we’re interested in.
It’s you. Why not see our interviewer when he
comes to campus and find out whether you’re the

kind of person General Electric is made of.

GENERAL

ELECTRIC

An equal opportunity employer

�The Spectrum

P»9« Eight

Friday, October 20, 1967

Education may need greater state aid
WASHINGTON (CPS)
State support of higher education has more than tripled in the last eight years.
But it still may not be enough to meet expanding needs.
M.M Chambers, a professor at Indiana University, says

states—North Carolina, Georgia,
Alabama, and Mississippi, are
among the leaders in overall increase, they “are still not closing
the gap as the rest of the nation

state appropriations for operating colleges and universities

report says.

—

have increased 214% in eight years
from $1.5 billion in
1959-60 to $4.4 billion this year. He also says that the increase is 44% above the $3 billion appropriated in 1956-66.
—

His report was issued Sunday
by the Office of Institutional Re

search (OIR) of the National Association of State Universities and
Land Grant Colleges. The report
deals only with state tax appropriations for operating expenses of higher education. It
does not include other income,
such as from student fees, or tax
appropriations for buildings.
In spite of the big increases,
both Dr. Chambers and OIR director Edwin M. Crawford warn
that many states with big in
creases still have not caught up
with the rest of the nation and
that all states will have to ap
propriate even greater sums to
meet the increasing demands of
higher

The

education.
report

cites

population
growth, enrollment growth, increased graduate study, inflation,
rising faculty salaries, and ex
pensive new equipment as rca
sons for the big increases.

Vet. Mr. Crawford cautioned
that “many states which appear to

The report also makes no comparisons between what is actually
appropriated and what is requested. Though university requests
may be somewhat inflated, as are
most requests from state agencies, many states with fairly large
increases still make big cuts in

be doing all they can for higher
education must manage to double
or triple their efforts,” He said

that some slates, especially in the

East, still lag far behind the rest
of the nation in overall support.

what higher eduaction says it
needs. In California and Michi-

gan, to take two examples, governors and legislators combined
to cut deep into budget requests
from major universities.

For example, Massachusetts,
which had the fifth largest in-

crease over an eight year period
and is second in two year increases with 80%, still trails
every other slate in per capita
support of higher education, the
proportion of residents to whom
public higher education is available, and the proportion of high
school graduates who go on to

Mr. Crawford also attacks “the
annual wave of announcements
of tuition increases designed to
compensate for deficits created

by cuts in university budgets” as
“a dangerous threat to the American commitment to low cost educational opportunity.” He cites

college.

New York leads
New York, however, remains
the recognized leader in stale
funds for higher education. Dr.
Chambers calls it "a leading element jn the great surge of recognition and support for public
higher education in the whole
Northeastern region.”
Though

several

California, Florida, Ohio, Michigan, New Hampshire, and New
Mexico as states where tuition or
fee increases have been proposed
or approved because of cuts in

state funds.

The same factors which resulted in the large increases in appropriations over the last eight
(Cont’d on Pg. 9)

Southern

Religion in modern society
is topic of Fenton lecture
A “mixture of personal experience and religious training” provide the background Monday for the second lecDr. Herbert W. Schneider spoke on “Religion in the
Service of Modern Society.” He discussed the “relations between the spirit of piety and the spirit of equity, and the
relationship between devotion and justice.”
In an interview with The Spectrum he
“I think that
it is important to show this relationship, because the natures of
them are in constant tension. I
will be discussing tension as it

“By service I mean social
service. There are all kinds of
social services
not just benevolences but anything in public
affairs. I mean social problems
in general and community problems and trying to deal with
—

affects social matters.

interpersonal problems.”

“Three illustrations of these
tensions are between contemporary humanism and existentialism,
18th century enlightenment and
the growth of ‘pieism’ at that
time, and ancient Israel and the
Commandments. This is to show
the tension between the two aspects of conscience and the knowledge that we have to live with

Continuing he also said that
his lecture concerns the “crisis
in human History and the tension
in public affairs.

them.”

Dr. Schneider commented on
his definitions of religion and
service. “I mean religion in the

most general sense,
fically one religion.
indicate that religion
appointed and has top
public affairs.

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when they say
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“Tensions can vary from unconscious uneasiness to schizophrenia. When conflicts get serious, they get very serious. We
can’t reconcile them completely,
ever”

The next in the Fenton Lecture
series will be held at 8:30 p.m.
Monday in the Conference Theater. Dr. Robert Gordis will speak
on “The Image of God in Our
Time.”

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�Pag* Nin*

The Spectrum

Friday, October 20, 1967

Education convention
the University of Wisconsin and

past president of the American
Association of University Professors, relegated the role of the
student in decision-making to a

.

.

.

continued from page 7

many students should be on a cer-

tain committee.” Mr. Robinson
said while the important decislons are generally made "by a
footnote. He explained to the small group of presidents and
delegates that he dealt with the—vice—presidents—behind—closed
topic in a footnote not because
doors.”
he doesn’t consider it important,
didn’t
know
how
but because he
Robinson said students should
to define it.
actively participate in and help
decide important policy matters
“I’m not prepared to say how such as the relationships between
far we should go with student
teaching and between governinvolvement, but I can tell you ment and the university.
that we are going to get more
and more of the student voice,”
The background paper which
he said. “Students should be adRobinson had prepared for the
mitted into policy-making whendiscussion called the leadership
ever they can make a contribuof this country “incompetent, intion, but not beyond that point.” capable of seeing past the existing structures and traditions, inThe students on the ACE procapable of devising new ways for
gram responded with calls for men to relate to each
other and
more student power and student
their society.” Dr. John Millett,
rights. There were frequent stuchancellor of the Ohio Board of
dent criticsms of the present Regents, called Robinson’s paper
leadership in today's colleges and
“completely outrageous.”
.

,

universities.

Former University of Michigan
student body president Edward
N. Robinson assailed the administrators for their views on student participation. Administrators “don’t see the problem of
student involvement beyond how

The leadership in academic
institutions was critized by Robert S. Powell Jr., former student
body president of the University
of North Carolina. “The crisis in
higher education in 1967 springs
from the lack of strong and purposeful leadership within our institutions—in the inability or un-

More State aid

continued from

Administrators hit

...

will require states to continue to step up their support of
higher education.
years

State schools expanding
For example, enrollments in
colleges and universities total 6.5
million this year but are expected
to increase three million by 1975.
And state institutions are expected to continue to have bigger enrollment increases than the private schools.
Faculty salaries must continue
to rise at an even higher rate,
Mr. Crawford says, though the
average salary for a full profes-

willingness of those

Lost faith
He said the American student
has lost faith in the leadership
of the colleges and universities
and thus in the education they
offer. He said the first step institutions should take is to “reorder the process of decision-

And, despite the increases,
state funds are declining as a
percentage of the income of many
public universities, as the federal
share rises. Mr. Crawford says
that state tax dollars actually provide an average of only 40% of
“state” university budgets.
Yet, Dr, Chambers remains optimistic about future support of

■&gt;*#
&lt;&lt;

vV

On Campus ffexShulman
(By the author of “Rally Round the Flag, Boys!’’,
"Dobie Gillis," etc.)

THERE ARE NO BAD TEACHERS;
THERE ARE ONLY BAD STUDENTS
The academic year has only just begun and already
clear; you’re not ready for college.

making.”

one thing is

The students participating in
the program even suggested that
students should have more control over research.

What, then, should you do? Should you throw up your
hands and quit? I say no! I say you must attack, grapple,
cope! I say America did not become the world's leader in
motel construction and kidney transplants by running
away from a fight!

In a panel on "The Research
Function and the Advancement
of Knowledge,” W. Eugene
Groves, immediate past president
of the National Student Association, said “One way to give the
student more control over the
rewards offered the faculty, and
hence over tiis own education,
would be to make him financially independent of his particular

departments.” Groves suggested
the student be given guaranteed
fellowship paid directly to him
by the government agency, foun-

dation, etc., that supports him.”

page

sor has increased from $11,295
to $15,028 in five years. He notes
that faculty salaries at public
institutions still trail private
schools by an average $2,362. And
in 1961 the difference was only
$1,664,

now making

decisions to confront and answer
the question: “What is this place
for?” Powell said “our institutions have truly lost any real
sense of educational purpose.”

8

higher education, as he points

to those who said in 1957 that
the big appropriations of that
year were all that states could

afford to give higher education.
One reason, he says, is that
some increases “come automatically from economic growth without changes in taxation.” And
state revenue systems could be
overhauled to produce three
times as much revenue as they
do now. Dr. Chambers also expects that more and more federal
funds will be allotted for domestic needs, including higher
education, in the next few years.

To the question then: You say you’re not ready for college. You’re too green, too naive. You lack maturity.
Okay, the answer is simple: get mature. How? Well
sir, to achieve maturity you need two things;
a) a probing mind;
b) a vest.
A probing mind will be quickly yours if you’ll remember that education consists not of answers but of questions. Blindly accepting information and dumbly
memorizing data is high school stuff. In college you don’t
just accept. You dispute you push, you pry, you challenge. If, for instance, your physics prof says, “E equals
me squared,” don’t just write it down. Say to the prof,
“Why?”
This will show him two things:
a) Your mind is a keen, thrusting instrument,
b) You are in the wrong major.
Ask questions, questions, and more questions. That is
the essence of maturity, the heart and liver of education.
Nothing will more quickly convince the teachers that you
are of college calibre. And the tougher your questions,
the better. Come to class with queries that dart and flash,
that make unexpected sallies into uncharted territory.
Ask things which have never been asked before, like
“How tall was Nietzsche?” and “Did the Minotaur have
ticks? If so, were they immortal?” and “How often did
Pitt the Elder shave?”

(Incidentally, you may never know the complete answer to Pitt the Elder’s shaving habits, but of one thing
you can be positive; no matter how often he shaved and
no matter what blades he used, he never enjoyed the
shaving comfort that you do. 1 am assuming, of course,
that you use Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades, a
logical assumption to make when one is addressing college men—which is to say men of perspicacity, discrimination, wit, taste, cognizance, and shrewdness-for
Personna is a blade to please the perspicacious, delight
the discriminating, win the witty, tickle the tasteful,
coddle the cognizer, and shave the shrewd.
(I bring up Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades because the makers of Personna Super Stainless Steel
Blades pay me to write this column, and they are inclined to sulk if I omit to mention their product. I would

not like to see them unhappy, the makers of Personna.

for they are fine ruddy men, fond of morris dancing and
home brewed root beer, and they make a blade that
shaves closely and cleanly, nicklessly and hacklessly, and
is sharp and gleaming and durable and available both in
double-edge style and Injector style.
(And from these same bounteous blade makers comes
Burma-Shave, regular or menthol, a lather that outlathers other lathers, brother. So if you’d rather lather
better, and soak your whiskers wetter, Bunna-Shave’s
your answer.)

But 1 digress. We have now solved the problem of
maturity. In subsequent columns we’ll take up other issues, equally burning. Since 1953 when this column first
started running in your campus paper, we’ve tackled
such thorny questions as “Can a student of 19 find happiness with an economics professor of 90?” and "Should
capital punishment for pledges be abolished?" and "Are
room-mates sanitary?” Be assured that in this, our 14th
year, we will not be less bold.
*

*

*

O USI.

Mm, Shotau

The makers of Penonna .Super Stainless Steel Blades
(double-edge or Injector) and Burma-Shave (regular
or menthol) are pleased (or apprehensive) to bring you
another year of Max Shulman’s uninhibited, uncensored column.

�Friday, October 20, 1967

The Sprclrum

Pag* Ten

Action line

•

.

•

331-3000
ACTION LINE—
Do you often

think
operaton -with the Dean
Through ACTION
LINE.
question, find out where
when change it indicated.

In coit impossible to untangle the SUNYA&amp; bureaucracy?
of Students' Office, The Spectrum is sponsoring an ACTION
LINE, individual students can get an answer to a puzzling
and why University decisions are made, and gel ACTION

will answer all questions of general interest which appear to be
pertinent to the student body. The Spectrum will include them in its special ACTION
LINE weekly column. The name of the individual originating the inquiry will not be
published.
ACTION LINE

At the last folk concert the first 10 rows of seats were
for administration.
The average paying customer can
never buy tickets in those rows and have to sit further back. Why?
A. Miss Jane Cohen, secretary of the Union Activities Board,
stated that the official policy of the Board regarding tickets for all
concerts sponsored by them grants complimentary tickets to the

Q.

reserved

Executive Committee of University Union Activities Board, University
Union Activities Board advisors. Committee planning concert, Concert production staff, and the Music critics of The Spectrum, Buffalo
Evening News and the Courier-Express. All additions to this basic
policy must be approved by the Executive Committee of University
Union Activities Board. As you can see, a very &lt;;mall percentage
of tickets is reserved for Administration, and at_Jire ast Folk Concert
only 5 rows were reserved for all complimentary tickets.
0. Why can't the Faculty Lounge in Norton Hall be used by
students for a study room?
A. According to Thomas

Hacnle, Associate Director of Student
Activities, Room 232, formerly known as the Faculty Lounge, is
regularly used as a meeting room on a reservation basis and needs
to be retained as such.
Q. Why does the Bursar's Office have the steel bars at each
window? This makes communication extremely difficult.
A. Mr. Docmland, director of Planning and Development, stated
that the cage situation exists for security of the area.
Q. Why must the women's food line in Clement be closed at
6 p.m.? If it were kept open longer it might reduce congestion
in the lines at Goodyear.
A According to Mr. Bossac of Food Services, the Clement
Dining line closes at 6 p.m, because of the small number of students
eating after 6 pin. Time studies on this issue have been made
and found that it was not economically sound to keep the Clement
dining line open.

r MOW

VtUGHTfOL MOMTHf

Survey reveals class of 71 to be
most select in University's history
by Mark Kubik

plicants has nearly doubled, while

Staff

the size of the freshman class has
decreased slightly.
The changes in admission policy have been a significant factor in the phenonmenal increase
in the number of degrees awarded.

Spectrum

Although he might look the same, this year’s freshman
is the most talented and select student ever to be admitted
to the University.

In a revealing survey of
missions policies compiled by
Records, the average member
pared to the freshman of six
The survey, headed by AssisDirector of Admissions
James Schwender, pictured this
year’s average freshman as a student in the top 10% of his high
school graduating class.
tant

The entering student is a graduate of a high school in the New
York City metropolitan area or
the Niagara Frontier, where he

compiled a composite average of

89.5.
He may not know it, but he
has applied to the fourth most
eompetitiive school in the New
York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania

area; the University rejects nearly six out of every ten who apply.

Most capable and talented
In the words of Mr. Schwender:
“These are not only the most
capable and talented students
we’ve ever accepted, they are
also the most varied in their
scope of interests.”
Compared to this year’s freshman, the entering member of the
class of 1964 had a high school
average of 82.1 and found that
three out of every four of his
fellow applicants were accepted
to the University.
In six years the number of ap-

An increase of 374% and 314%
was noted in the PhD and BA
degree programs, respectively.

With the reputation of the
State University of Buffalo growing, significant increases have
been noted in the graduate school
programs.

Since 1961, the number of grad
uate students here has doubled.
University College Dean Claude
Welch noted that “with a decrease in the size of the freshman class and a lowering of the
attrition rate, we realize that
these students are now here to
stay, and are being drawn upon
for many leadership roles.”

the students felt themselves pre-

by Grace B. Martin

pared for college by their high

Special to The Spectrum

education indicated that
Because the people “out there” want to know more school
they were considerably more conabout that mysterious phylum, The Student Body, because fident about how well their
high
the faculty are anxious to find out what makes their pupils school experience had prepared
tick, and because the alumni deserve some documented inthem than they were about how
formation to which they can turn in an effort to find out well they could study. It would
appear also, that the freshman
why they no longer recognize or identify with the students class
of ’66 appears to be less
which
old
Alma
to
Mater has given birth, the University’s fond of studying than the class
Division of Instructional Services recently published “A of ’65—a trend which professors
Biography of a Class,”
might watch carefully. But withThe study does not intend fering of specifically desired in the ’66 class a higher proporareas of study, and its relatively tion of females than males alto, nor could it, find the “avways or frequently enjoyed studylow cost.
erage student,” anymore than
Surprisingly enough, most of ing.
one could find an “average” our freshmen must have felt seThe males disliked foreign
rose. But it does try to make cure in the ability to make languages most and the females,
a definitive study of the friends, since the reasons least mathematics. A high correlation
was found between dislike for a
freshman classes of 1965-66 indicated for choosing this camsubject and difficulty experienced
pus were the presence of friends,
and 1966-67.
with it in high school, and almost
and the perception of the campus
For

evaluation

Happy

THB IS THE WILO.WlLD WEST

the change in University adthe Office of Admissions and
of the class of 1971 was comyears ago.

'Biography' studies student attitudes

purposes,

in-

coming freshmen were given a
series of questions dealing with
attitudes, opinions, preferences
and aspirations.

MM IH MS CHI Min TNf GN&gt; HIM USE!

Reporter

to

be here

Over three-fourths of these two
freshmen classes are happy to
be here rather than somewhere
else, having indicated that Buffalo was their first choice among
the schools to which they applied.
The three most frequently indicated reasons for choosing this
school were its reputation for
high academic standards, its of-

£

Conference
Theater
October 19, 20, 21
at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 p.m. plus
an additional showing at 11
p.m. on Friday and Saturday.

25c and 50c for those who
have paid their student fees.

50c and $1.00 without fee payment.

choices,

In general, the freshmen
seemed not to be very great worriers. In seven of the ten “problem” areas outlined, 85% of the
respondents anticipated no prob-

lems. The three areas about
which they worried some were,
for the males, study habits, choice
of vocation, and finances, in that

The girls, on the other hand,
were worried first about their

B1IXY LIAIfe
iiuTnmrc sTauKmsniiuu

The fact that students had
brothers or sisters who had attended or were attending the University did not seem to be a deciding factor in making their

order.

■jnwcooummr
AS
9

THEparoMel

as a place for “fun and games.”
“An outstanding faculty” was
chosen as the fourth factor by
females, the fifth by males.

choice of vocation, second about
their study habits, and last about
their finances. The area in which
problems were least anticipated
by women freshmen in 1966, was
“physical condition,” while in
1965, “morals” ranked as a last
source of worry.

Less fond of study
A question related to how well

all students expected college to
be more difficult than high

school.

Career plans
Over one-third of the boys and
a quarter of the girls had been
employed while attending high
school. Nearly a third of both
sexes planned to work part-time
or full-time while attending college.
Only about one quarter of the
men and one third of the women
intend to end their higher education at the bachelor’s degree
level, and only about one-third
had no definite vocational plans.
A majority of female students,
however, eventually prefer to be
a “married career woman with
one or more children,” and the
majority of freshman
males
would eventually prefer a professional career. An academic
career was a distant second

choice. One of the alternative
choices offered males was “some
aspect of the creative arts,”
which was chosen by only a small
percentage of the male population.

Literature and Drama Committe of the UUAB
presents

Bertolt Brecht's
"THE PRIVATE LIFE OF THE MASTER RACE"
OCT. 18 -21, at 8:30 P.M.
FILLMORE ROOM
Prices

.75 students,fee-paid
1.25 non-fee students
faculty and staff
2.00 general admission

�Friday, October 20, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* Eleven

Calendar

OFFICIAL BULLETIN
The Official Bulletin is an au-

and University Staffing. Through

University of New York at Buffalo, for which the Spectrum assumes no editorial responsibilty.
Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to 114 Hayes

a greater opportunity to locate
teaching and administrative posioutside Erie County. There
is no cost involved for candidates
in completing the necessary forms
for the ASCUS File. Please con-

October 23:

further information.

Computers.”
noon.

GENERAL ANNOUNCEMENTS

nro

dent organization notices are not

accepted for publication.
GENERAL NOTICES
(AIR FORCE PILOT TRAINING
PROGRAM) —The Department of
Aerospace Studies is now taking
applications for entry into the
two-year Air Force ROTC program. If you are a male student
in good academic standing and
will be graduated in the Spring of
1970, you are eligible to apply.
If you pass the required mental
and physical tests upon your graduation from college you will enter
the pilot training program.

The first requirement for the
pilot training program is a passing score on the Air Force Officers Qualification Test. The test
is being given on Saturday, October 28, 1967. All interested students should contact the Department of Aerospace Studies in
Clark Gym to register for the
test, 831-2945.
NOVEMBER 1, 1967
is the
deadline to apply for admission
to The Faculty of Educational
Studies, formerly the School of
—

Education, for consideration for
the Spring 1968 semester. Forms
may be obtained at the general
office, 201 Foster Hall.
Admission Test for Graduate Study in Business (ATGSB)
—is required of all candidates applying for Graduate Programs in
Business Administration and will
be given Saturday, November 4,
1967. Applications must be filed
with the Student Testing Center
by October 21 and can be picked
up in 316 Harriman or the Graduate Business Programs office,
121 Crosby Hall, 831-3401.

tact the Placement Service for

ELIZABETH
TAVIOR
MARLON
BRANDO
IN THE JOHNHUSTONRAYSTARK PRODUCTION

REFLECTIONS
INA
GOLDEN
EYE

—

pre-

sents Professor Malcolm Harrison,
Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences,

“Mathematics and
Diefendorf, 12

4

PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS
(James Fenton Lecture)
the
third lecture in a series of five
on the theme “Religion and Modern Society,” features Dr. Robert
Gordis, seminary professor of
Bible, Jewish Theological Seminary. The topic is “The Image of
God in Our Time,” Conference
Theater, Norton, 8:30 p.m.
—

October 23:
Kimberly Clark
American Voting Machines
(AVM Corp.)
Worthington Corp.
October

23, 24 and 25:

Bethlehem Steel Corp,
October 24:

Arthur Anderson

&amp;

Co,

American Cyanamid
Stauffer Chemical Co,
October 25;

H.H. Robertson Co,
Rochester Telephone Corp
October 20:

October 24
(The University Report)—features Dr. Richard A. Siggelkow,
vice president for student affairs
whose topic is “The Changing
Student in the Changing. University,” Conference Theater, Norton, 9 a.m.

October 25
(The Department of Music)

S.D. Leidesdorf

&amp;

Co.

October 26;
General Electric, Credit Corp.
American Can Co.
Xerox Corp.
October 27:

Whitney Aircraft Co.
Pratt
Combustion Engineering, Inc,
Firestone Tire
Rubber Co.
General Electric Co.
&amp;

&amp;

—

presents a lecture-demonstration
by Mr. Stuart Dempster, trombonist and creative associate. Recital Hall, Baird, 12 noon.

A

ran a

JTWT n

rr»

PLAY; “La Ronde,” Milkie Way
Theater, 8:30 p.m.
PLAY: “The Queen and the
Rebels,” Studio Arena Theater
School, 8:30 p.m., through Oct. 22,
Oct. 27 through 29 and Nov. 3
through 5.

CONCERT: P.D.Q. Bach Concert directed by ’ Prof, Peter
Schickels, Kleinhans, 8:30 p.m.

CONCERT: Creative Associate
Concert I, Baird, 8:30 p.m.
LECTURE: Sengbrusch Lecture,
Conference Theater, 8 p.m.
POETRY READING: Louis MacAdams, Conference Theater, 4

PLAY: “Number Ten Downing
Street,” O’Keefe Center, Toronto,
through Oct. 28.
PLAY: “Private Life of the
Master Race,” Fillmore Room,
8:30 p.m.
FILM: “Billy Liar,” Norton
Conference Theater.
LECTURE: “Contemporary
China,” Dief. 147, 8 p.m.

p.m.

Thursday, October 26:
“Alphaville," Norton
FILM:
Conference Theater.
LECTURE: “A Florentine Gift
of Motets and Madrigals to King
Henry VIII,” Baird, 4 p.m.

Saturday, October 21;
RECITAL: Jacob Berg, Library
Auditorium, Lafayette Square,
3 p.m.

Friday, October 27:
LECTURE: “Contemporary
China,” Dief. 147, 8 p.m.

CONCERT: Eileen Farrell and

Saturday, October 28:
CONCERT: Smokey Robinson
and the Miracles, Clark Gym.
CONCERT: Piano recital, Leo
Smit, Baird 8:30 p.m.
READING: “Bramwell Fletcher
as Bernard Shaw
the Man,”
Nazareth College Arts Center.
CONCERT; Amherst Symphony
Orchestra, Amherst Central Junior High, 8 p.m,

Lukas Foss, Kleinhans, 8:30 p.m.
Sunday, October 22:

CONCERT; Jack Jones and the
Rubin Mitchell Trio, Kleinhans.
PLAY: “Turcaret,” performed
in French, Buff. State, Rockwell
Auditorium, 7:30 p.m.

—

Monday, October 23:
FILM: "The Unholy Three,
Lon Chancy, Capen 140, 8 p.m.
LECTURE: James Fenton Lee
lure, Norton Conference Theater,
8:30 p.m.

CONCERT: The Mothers of Intion, Memorial Auditorium, Rochester, 8:30 p.m.
Sunday, October 29;

(The School of Nursing)—pre-

sents the

Maloney, Columbia University
Teachers College, “Nursing In
tervention,” Conference Theater,

Tuesday, October 24:
CONCERT: Eileen Farrell and
Lukas Foss, Kleinhans, 8:30 p.m.
FILM; “Vitclloni,” directed by
Fellini, Conference Theater, 7

Norton, 8 p.m.

p.m.

Lecture

Anne W. Sengbusch
with Dr. Elizabeth M.

STUDENT TESTING CENTER REGISTRATION SCHEDULE
Last Day to
Register

(The

The University Placement Service is now cooperating with the
Association for School, College

(The Computing Center)

11 CFiiiISa

—

Applications
Available

Test
Date

RECITAL: Penny Lund Senior

Recital, Baird, 8:30 p.m.
Monday, October 30:
PLAY: “The Dance of Death,”
O’Keefe Theater, Toronto, 8:30
p.m.

Toni
■ THER

Nov. 18 316 Harriman

College Level Exam Program

Nov. 11

Law School Admissions Test

Oct. 21

Nov. 11

M.L.A. Foreign Language
Proficiency Test

Ocl. 27

Nov.

18 316 Harriman

Pre-Nursing Exam

Oct. 21

Nov.

4

316 Harriman

Therefoi

School of
Nursing
'

GREEK PREMIERE THURS. NOVEMBER 2nd at 8:00 P.M.
Tickets Available at Norton Ticket Office

Proceeds to Benefit The Fraternal Scholarship Fund

NOW FOR THE FIRST TIME AT
REGULAR PRICES

Special Exclusive Limited Engagement!
"‘ULYSSES’A SUPERB FILM!”
fo:
RE:

THE
TRUTH
ABOUT
THOSE
who ha;
DISCOVERI
HOW AN!
WHERE
EXERCISE
THEIR
PLEASURES
WITHO!
AND W[
HARASSMENT!
WEIRD
WITH MEMBERS Of THE JET SET THE IN SET THE FAST SET THE
SET THE KICK SET THE STAR SET BEING THEMSELVES IN THE PLACES
IN.
PERFORM
—THEY ACTUALLY
-

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PLUS 2 MORE BIG HITS!
OFFICE

Start! WW., Octakw 4*
KATUM TIMES

GRANADA

j j

Hall, attention Mrs. Fischer, before 2:00 p.m. the Friday prior
to the week of publication. Stu-

tions

DEMONSTRATION: Lecture
demonstration, Stuart Dempster,
trombonist, Baird, 12 p.m.

Friday, October 20;
PLAY: “The Comedy of Errors,” Kleinhans, 8 p.m.
PLAY: “The Threepenny Op-

�The

Page Twelve

Physiology expects

$1,000,000 from
U.S. Defefne Dept.
The State University of Buffalo
Department of Physiology is one
of “50 centers” awaiting a United
States Defense Department research grant. If a pending Defense budget is approved, then
the University will receive
$1,000,000 to develop a new research center.
Dr. Leon E. Farhi, instructor
of physiology who will be head
of the project, said research
“studying man and his environ
ment" could begin “the day we
get the grant." The center itself
will be constructed adjacent to
Capen Hall, The new facilities
will include a ccntifuge, a sub
mergence tank, and a pressure
chamber complex.
The submergence tank will be

built around the outside of the
centifuge area so both can be
used during research projects.
Observers of submergence activities will look out of windows
along the walls of the tank and

Friday, October 20, 1967

Spectrum

Colorful badge to be sign of counseling service
An informal opportunity for
counseling is now available to

talk informally about any issues
that students wish to raise, According to Mrs Charlotte Opler,

by twenty counselors, it is one of
the largest in the country, with
only the University of California

ist, “In order to work with them
better ourselves we want to find
out what students are like—their
needs, interests, and concerns,

of Michigan having services
comparable size.

Clinical psychologist Dr. Nathan Altucher directs the Student
Counseling
Service The Coun-

[oral

been started by the Student Coun
seling Service, to aid students out
side its typical areas of service.

Six different counselors, alternating daily, plan to be. at a table
set up in the lobby of Norton
Hall. They will be identified by
a colorful badge. The service
wishes to increase its contact with
students and to increase its usefulness to them.
Counselors will be available to

what they are doing and where
they are going.”

The Student Counseling Service is located in- the basement of
Harriman Library,

Room 785 at

the south end of the building.
Its aim is to “free students to
make their own decisions. Staffed

of

lor-ai

stituted by Dr. Murray Landsman,
assistant director.

The service may be unfamiliar
to many students because of its
past policy of remaining semiobscure. "We felt if a student
thought his problem was serious
enough he would be able to find
us. But now we are interested in
being available,” Mrs. Opler com-

THE SPECTRUM
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on a platform placed on one end
of the arm of the centifuge.
Dr. Farhi said the research
program would include “exposure
to abnormal temperatures, expos
ure to underwater conditions, exposure to altitudes and so on.”

The Physiology Department
was chosen for this project because of its previous research
concerning effects of altitude on
living organisms. Under Dr. Hermann Rahn, ,now head of the Department, Buffalo was one of the
first schools in the country to
do such research.
Dr. Karhi said the research
center would be a "University
project." He explained that the
University Engineering School
will play a significant role in designing and building the new

facilities. He also mentioned that
the Defense Department had no

specific military goals or objectives in building the research
center. They are only trying to

centralize essential research into
a “few centers of excellence"
across the country.

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�Friday, October 20, 1967

The Spectrum

Pago Thirtoon

campus releases...
The Fenton Lecture Series will present Dr. Robert Gordis at
8:30 p.m. Monday in the Conference Theater. Rabbi Gordis will
speak on “The Image of God in Our Time.”
logical

Seminary and

is

a

consultant

for

the Study of Democratic

Institutions for the Fund of the Republic.
Temple Beth-El of Rockaway Park, N. Y,

He is also rabbi

of

The Women's Recreation Association holds an Open Gym
Tuesdays from 7 to 9 p.m. The activities include Fitness and Conditioning, Basketball, Volleyball, Gymnastics, and Swimming. All
interested women are invited.
Anyone interested in Course and Teacher Evaluation please
contact Geri Goldstein or Penny Bergman in Room 205 Norton Hall.
A meeting for all interested persons will be held at 4 p.m, Monday
in Room 205. The Committee will handle evaluations for all University College courses which will then be published in a University-

wide book.

The Math Club will sponsor a lecture by Bruce Watkins at 7:30
p.m. Wednesday in Room 334 Norton Hall. He will speak on the
“Turing Machine Theory” of Elementary Computer Science.
The B'nai B'rilh Hillel Foundation will sponsor a Sabbath
Service this evening at 7:45 p.m. in the Hillel House. Dr. Justin
Hofmann will speak on “Sukkoth Reflections.” An Oneg Shabbat
will follow.

Hillel will hold another of its weekly suppers at 5:30 p.m

Sunday in the Hillel House,

The program will be a discussion led by Dr. Justin Hofmann
on “The Jewish View of Birth Control.” This will be the third program
in a semester series on “Issues Facing the Jewish Student.”
The Pan Hellenic Council will conduct its annual charity project
this Sunday. The Council is having a clothing drive for the prekindergarten program, Project Early Push. This project operates
in seventeen centrally located target area schools in the Buffalo
area. The children participating in the Head Start program are
three and four year olds. If anyone wishes to help, contact any
member of Sigma Kappa Phi or Theta Chi sorority.

Deadline to pick up checks from the Student Book Exchange is
Wednesday. Students should fo to Room 205, Norton Hall from
11 a.m. to 4 p.m..

All commuting students can now purchase lunches in all dormitory cafeterias for one dollar. The lunch includes a main course and
extra helpings of all except the main course. The commuter lunch
program is co-sponsored by the Commuter Council and the InterResidence Council.

I won't
go into business when
I graduate because:
□ a. I'd lose my individuality.
□ b. It's graduate schoolmefor me.
to be a doctor.
□ c. My mother wants
Can’t argue with c), but before you check
a) or b)-pencils up! There have been some
changes. Drastic changes in the business
scene. But changes in the vox populi attitude
regarding business ... especially on campus
,,.

just haven’t kept pace.

Take the belabored point that business
run
turns you into a jellyfish. The men who
most of the nation’s successful firms didn’t
arrive by nepotism, by trusting an Ouija
board, or by agreeing with their bosses. Along
the way. a well-modulated “No” was said.
And backed up with the savvy and guts to.
day’s business demands.
In short, individuality is highly prized in
much of the, business world—the successful
Like
much. Even when the business is big.
Western Electric, the manufacturing and supply unit of the Bell System.
We provide communications equipment for
.

our Bell Systemteammates, the Bell telephone

companies. This takes a lot of thought, decisions, strong stands for our convictions, (and
sometimes some mistakes.. . we’re human,
every 160,000 of us).
Individuality pays off. Not only in raises,
but in personal reward as well. Like an engi-

neer who knew deep down that there was a
better way to make a certain wire connector
-and did. Or a WE gal who streamlined timeconsuming office procedures, and saved us
some $63,000 a year.
Rewards and accolades. For saying No.
For thinking creatively and individually. For
doing.

Not every hour is Fun Hour, but if you ve
got imagination and individuality—you ve got
it made. With a business like Western Electric.
We’ll even help you answer b) with our Tuition Refund program. Come on in and go
for President!

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�Pag* FourtMn

Friday, October 20, 1967

The Spectrum

An e YJ ewitnes

8 busloads of UB students
Trial of Army Captain Howard Levy to participate in Viet protests
called a 'witch hunt' by observer

The Student Mobilization Committee of the State University of Buffalo will send 8 busloads of students to Washington tonight to participate in mass protests against the war

Describing the trial as “not real, one long sustained
psychotic episode,” he said that he had become “paranoid
about the military” from his experiences at Fort Jackson,
South Carolina.
Captain Levy was, according to

Dr. Glasser, “in no way a soldier.”
He was drafted into the army to
serve on a “most casual program” of
informing Special
Forces medics on various types
of skin diseases, such as acne, etc.
While he lived off base, Levy
became involved with certain civil
rights groups in South Carolina,
mostly in the field of voter registration. His attitudes and projects
were closely watched by his fellow officers and base commander,
was “pegged” as a
“pinko,” according to Dr. Glasser.
His file was marked by a small

and Levy

red flag, marking him as a “security risk.” An Army counter intelligence, James B. West, wrote
an 180 page dossier on his civil

rights and antiwar activities,
naming him as part of a “communist conspiracy.”
Howard Levy was vociferously
opposed to the war in Vietnam,
Dr. Glasser commented. “He was
convicted of talking." Levy received special written orders to
train Green Beret medics on various skin disorders, becoming the
first and last to be given this
special notice. “He refused and
they had him.”

Dr. Glasser points out, this disobedience has as its punishment
no more than a 30 day confinement to the post, “the same mild
punishment as if your boots had
not been shined properly.” However, the charges were changed
to read, “willful disobedience,
conduct unbecoming an officer”
and three more charges. “The
trial had a snowballing effect and
no one tried to stop it.”
Finally, Dr. Glasser commented
military court procedure,
calling it a “capsulated reality,
in which all the rules are theirs.
The trial was like a witch hunt.
Howard Levy was convicted because of his civil rights activities.
The dossier against Levy was the
sole reason for the charge and
upon

the conviction.”
A recording of the ACLU meeting will be played on 'WBFO-FM
later this month.

In addition to the 320 students who will travel by bus,
200 students are expected to drive to Washington from
Buffalo by car

Dane, Phil Ochs, the Jefferson
Airplane and the Fugs.

The protests will include
a rally at the Lincoln Memorial, a march and rally at
the Pentagon, and a sit-in
inside the halls of the Pentagon.

Careful planning has gone into
the mobilization. The committee
reports that medical facilities, a
team of lawyers, mass quantities
of picket signs, marshalls, and
some transportation will be available for the demonstrators.

Speakers at the rallies will
include: Dr. Benjamin Spock,
Lincoln Lynch (CORE), Clive
Jenkins (British Labour Party), Mrs. Dagmar Wilson
(Women Strike for Peace),
Donald Duncan (former Master Sgt., Green Berets), John
Wilson (SNCC) and others.
be

The committee has had trouble
in obtaining permits for the derm
onstrations, but it expressed confidence in obtaining them from
the General Services Administration.

In addition to the schedule
planned by the National Mobilization Committee, a contingent Of
hippies has planned their own
program. They plan to pass secret incantations over the Pentagon in an attempt to drive out
the “evil spirits.”

Several entertainers will also
present, including Barbara

dsmobi e:

Great,
spot tor
a sit-in.

HVM—

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SCHOLARSHIPS
BY COMPUTER

Last year $30 million in college scholarships went unclaimed
because no
qualified persons applied . . . because
no qualified persons knew of them.
Now ECS engineers and educators
have programmed a high-speed com—

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aid, worth over $500 million, to permit
students to easily and quickly locate
scholarships for which they qualify.
The student fills out a detailed, confidential questionnaire and returns it to
ECS, with a one-time computer-processing fee of $15. In seconds the computer compares his qualifications against
requirements of grants set up by foundations, business, civic, fraternal, religious, and government organizations,
and prints a personalized report to
the student telling him where and when
to apply for grants for which he qualifies. Thousands of these do not depend
on scholastic standing or financial need.
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court martial of Army Captain Howard Levy, spoke to a
meeting presented by the American Civil Liberties Union in
Norton Hall Monday evening.

�Wf .OS &lt;9oel c ,.
Friday, October 20, 1967

Th

•

Spectrum

P»9« FiftMn

the spectrum of

i«

sport

'

*Sm

I

Bulls face Boston's Eagles; S!
seeking first series victory
confines of Alumni Stadium in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts,

to oppose the Eagles of Boston College
The Bulls will take a 3-2
record on this first leg of a
four week road excursion.
The Eagles face the Blue and
White with a 1-2 record, with
their lone victory coming on
their opening day when they
visited Villanova, a future
Bull opponent, and squeezed
by them 27-24.
The Eagles have dropped their

first two games at home but are
awaiting the Bulls’ appearance on
their; own field in an attempt to
repeat their performance in last
year’ll tilt.
The boys from Beantown nosed
out the Bulls in a squeaker 2221 as head coach Doc Urich decided to go for a win with a two
point conversion late in the last
period, but the play failed and
his gamble lost.
The Bulls will attempt to re-

venge this loss and come back
to Buffalo with their first -victory over a Boston College squad
in four attempts in a series which
dates back to 1963. Buffalo will
have to upset the Eagles this
week without the benefit of
the services of fleet halfback
Ken Rutkowski, the Bulls’ lead;
ing ground gainer in their first
four games.
AibEast selectee sophomore
tailback Pat Patterson will again
have to fill Rutkowski’s shoes

just as he did in Rotary Field
last Saturday afternoon against
Boston University’s tough defense. Rutkowski has a possible
tendon pull in his right leg and
may be forced to be out of the
Bull offensive line-up for “possibly three weeks,” according to
a report from Sports Information
Director Jack Sharpe.
Sophomore safetyman Dick
Horn will again replace Tom
Hoke in the starting defensive
unit even though he came out
of the game against Boston University with a broken nose.

Explosive offense

For Buffalo to come up with
its third win in succession they
will have to come through with
another fine defensive show as
EC’s offensive attack can be explosive. The statistics show that
the Eagles gained 630 total
yards in their first two games
but their defensive unit gave up
almost the same total of offensive yardage to their first two opponents.
In their first two games the
Eagles scored more points in
the first half but in their recent
setback against Penn State (5028) they came up with 20 points
in their last fifteen minutes of
play. This could mean that their
offensive unit is maturing and
might use the Bulls to prove
this point.

Jim Miller. The Eagles seem to
be stronger and more experienced at the quarterback, offensive end and the defensive backfield spots than in 1966. Another
strong suit should be their inning backs, headed by fullback
Brendan McCarthy, and halfbacks Terry Erwin and Dave
Bennett.

Improved passing attack

One of Coach Miller’s key objectives has been to realize a
marked improvement in EC’s
passing attack. Miller feels this
objective will be accomplished
this year as he has three excellent signal callers who can

throw the ball very well.
Senior quarterback Joe DiVito
will lead the Eagle offensive attack but if he can’t keep the attack moving either junior Joe
Marzetti or sophomore Mike Fallon will step in for the Eagles
and do the signal calling.
Senior fullback McCarthy has
amassed a total of almost 1500
yards gained in rushing and
holds many of EC’s rushing records. Two. years ago this 215
pound dasher won E. C. A. C.
“Sophomore of the East” award.
Junior halfback Bennett will
help Divito on his left side. Combining his great speed and
strength he scored three of the
Eagle four touchdowns last week
against Penn State. He is also
used as a kickoff returner and
last year returned eight kickoffs
for a total of 226 yards.
Senior halfback Erwin is Boston College's top halfback and if
he can shake the injury jinx, he
should have a tremendous senior
year. In last week’s game against
Penn State Erwin used his great
speed and uncanny balance to
catch a Fallon pass on the Penn
State 14-yard line to set up the
Eagles first score of the game.
At the Eagle’s right end slot
will be senior Jim Kavanaugh,
who last year was their number

n

||

DUIIS

kawaro

of the nation's premier
running backs Brendan A/lcCarthy cras^es against Ohio at
One

Chestnut Hill last year.

one receiver with 17 catches for
282 yards, seven of those receptions came in their final game
against Holy Cross. In his first
two games this year he caught
four passes for 64 yards.
At left end for the Eagles will
be Barry Gallup, a junior who
pulled down 11 passes for 157
yards in his first year with the
varsity. He has excellent speed,
good moves, good hands, and
combines these traits with a great
attitude.
The interior offensive line
weighs in at an average of 225
pounds and will be tough for the
Bull’s defensive front four to
penetrate.
Defensively the Eagles will
have John Salmon at the left corner in the backfield. This 20-yearold 180-pound junior is regarded
as one of the better pass defenders in the area. At the other
corner spot will be senior A1 Giardi, who had been a great backup quarterback until he proved
this year that he could be more
valuable in the defensive backfield where he has been a starter
ever since.
Safetyman Bill Rabadan and
Jim Catone will also provide additional aid to the Eagle back-

field and will attempt to snare
some of Bull quarterback Mickey
Murtha’s long passes.
Coach "Doc” Urich and the
Bulls want the next five games
very much. They particularly
would like to win this game on
the road to prove to the Bull fans
that road games aren’t really the
jinx that they have appeared to
be. This game will be televised
to the locaal faans in Buffalo
over WKBW-TV, Channel 7. Buf
faalo has the unfortunate habit
of not looking their best on tele
vision
BUFFALO
I’aul l.ang. Supli 6-0, 210

Scoff Clark Soph 6-0. 212
Jim Kinoehiu. Nr 5-10. 219
j WVsoiowski. Jr 5-11,214
Mike Maser. Jr 5-11.214
Mike Hissel. Sr 5 11. 233
Clunk Drankiiski. Jr 6-1, 183
Miek Mnrlha. Jr 5-11. 176
.

The State University of Buffalo football team will
attempt to make their record against New England State
opponents 2-0 tomorrow afternoon when they invade the

T&gt;

Boston College will strive to

bounce back from their first
losing season (4-6) for head coach

Kick Wells. Sr 6-0. 195
Ui jom v S, 5-11 208
I’at Pattervm. So . 5-11, 191
BOSTON COLLEGE

Kavanaugh. Sr , 6-2. 210
Hill l.adewig, Sr 6-3. 225
Chris Markes. Sr.. 6-4. 210
Mikr Evans, Sr 6-4. 240
Mike Navard. Sr . 6-1. 190
Jerry Hagnsa. Jr. 6-3, 240
Barry Callup, Jr 6-3, 200
Joe DiVltu. Sr.. 6-2. 205
Terry Erwin, Sr . 5-11. 185
Dave Bennett, Jr . 5-10. 180
B McCarthy, Sr . 6-3. 215

Jim

.

Assistant Sports Editor

,

by W. Scott Bohrens

m

Buffalo golf team looking for
gold cup with only one game to go
by Jay Schreibar
Staff Reporter
Two down and one to go. That’s
the situation as it now stands in
Spectrum

the State University of Buffalo
golf team's quest for a tournament trophy. Though not overly
materialistic the members of the
squad would no doubt like to capture some hunk of metal, pre-

ferably gold-painted, to highlight
the season. Unfortunately, they
failed in this venture for the second time last Friday when they
finished third in an eight-team
tournament at the Brook-Lea

Bomb
thrower

Junior signal caller Joe Marzetti (7) runs to daylight
against a hapless Boston College foe in 1966 clash. Marzetti is one of three quarterbacks who will direct the Eagles
in their game against the Bulls
tomorrow.

Invitational tourney in Rochester.
Rochester Institute of Technology, who was playing in friendly surroundings, won the tournament with a four man cumulative
score of 325. This was nine
strokes better than the Bulls
could manage. These scores didn’t
prove anything, for everyone was
playing well over par in the tour-

nament.

The biggest surprise in the
Bulls’ relatively poor showing was
Tony Santelli, who ballooned to
an 84. According to Coach Serfustini, "Tony had an off day—
I hope he regains his style for
next weekend.” Tony will be playing in the Eastern College Athletic Conference finals in Bethpage, Long Island tomorrow and
on his performance rests the
Bulls’ last chance for the aforementioned gold medal.
Last Friday Santelli had been
accompanied in futility by teammates Gary Bader and Ted Beringcr, who joined a multitude
of competitors failing to break
80. The only excuse the Bulls
could muster was that their
fourth member, Rob Stone, (who
shot an 89) was not scheduled
to play but was forced into competition when exams kept Mike
Riger in school.
The day before the Rochester
tournament the Bulls had played

far better golf in defeating St.
Bonaventure, 10-8. Santelli, playing more true to form, shot a
medal score of 71. Without question part of Tony's success came
from his keen knowledge of the
home fairways at the Audobon
golf course. In raising the Bulls'

season mark to 5-3, every player

shot under 80, though only Ted
Beringer and Doug Bernard,
along with Santelli, were able to
win their individual matches.
The Bulls knew they had a
chance to make amends for their
season’s showings on Tuesday
when they faced R.I.T. in a regularly scheduled match. Results
of the contest are still unknown
due to a misunderstanding about
the scoring system to be used.
Apparently the match was played under a different system than
the one to whicfr the Bulls had
been accustomed, using best ball
instead of match scores.

�Friday, October 20, 1967

The S p c c truin

Sixteen

Lawyer sues Clay
for $284,615
HOUSTON (UPI)
Cassius
Clay’s former lawyer Hayden
Covington sued the former
—

da Monday, complaining ne na,s
never gotten his share of the
purse in the bout between Clay
and his draft board.

Clay took the count after refusing to take the symbolic step

forward and be inducted into the
U. S. Army last April.

He was fined $100,000 and sentenced to five years in prison
and is now free on $75,000 bond
while his case ts on appeal.

The conviction last June is
now before the U, S. 5th Circuit
Court of Appeals in New Orleans.
‘T’ve got a lot of bills that
are due,” Clay said, "And that
I can’t pay. The government
won t let me leave the country,
so I can get some money.”
Clay asked a federal court last
August to let him leave the country for a scries of fights in Japan.
The court refused permission.

Hockey Bulls face tough Sportin' Life
competition this season

by Bob Woodruff
Sports

The State University of Bufisnea wnn a record ot v-v-i last
season, promises to better that
mark during the upcoming campaign even in the face of tougher competition.
Facing off with as strong a
team as ever produced, the 1967
Icemen will lock sticks with such
stalwarts as Oswego State, reigning Finger Lakes Champions,

Utica, a team specializing CanaTeen

s club,

which is rated

among

the top American collegiate sex-

lets.

i n releasing this year’s schedule, General Manager Howard
Piaster pointed out that all Buffalo games will be played at the
Amherst rink, just ten minutes
from the Main Street campus, amj
the action will start at 10 p.m.

1967-68 UB Hockey Club Schedule
November
3 —at Mohawk College
11— Buffalo State
12—Nichols Alumni
18 Buffalo State
19—Brockport State
December
—

2—Syracuse
3—Rochester Institute of
Technology
9—Canton A&amp;T
10—Utica
16—Ithaca
January
27—at Brockport

28—at Rochester Institute of
Technology
February
2—at Cornell JV

3—at Ithaca
10—Buffalo State
11—Nichols Alumni
16—at Canton A&amp;T
17—at Oswego State
24—at Utica
March
2—Hobart
8-9—Finger Lakes Hockey
League Invitational
Tournament
\

Editor

The National Collegiate Football Champion last season was
The Fighting Irish did not receive this acclamation

Notre Dame.
spor
best.

ie couni

ifs

Hertz isn’t number one because they defeated Avis in a popularity poll, and so it should not be with the NCAA Football crown.
In every other major sport and in quite a few of the lesser
athletic fields, the NCAA sponsors a post-season tournament to

decide competitive supremacy. Only in football, the greatest of
the intercollegiate athletic programs, must a “mythical” champion
be named.
This fact came to the attention of the almighty Board of Directors
of the NCAA, and in between their petty disputes with the Amateur
Athletic Union, the board set up a nine member committee to study
the feasibility of establishing a post-season playoff to determine the
nation’s number one grid power.
Don’t bet on any results.
The stiff collared NCAA may decide that such a move is too
revolutionary and may keep the idea “under consideration” until
such time that the sporting public gives up its demands out of
frustration, or bangs down the door of the NCAA office.

Many obstacles
Besides the backward thinking NCAA, many obstacles stand in
the way of a post-season tournament.
The Big Ten and the Far West conference have stringent rules
against members participating in contests after the regular season,
with the exception of the illustrious Rose Bowl, which more often
than not is a great mismatch.
The Service Academies very often have a member in the nation’s
top ten, and the military has been more than reluctant to have its
institutions play football after their season’s slates are complete.
Most important, Notre Dame has had a long standing policy against
post season grid tilts, and the priests at South Bend will not be quick
to reverse this position.
Without representatives from these different sources of football
excellence, a tournament champion would have to have an asterisk
next to its name, and the football world would be back in the same
unfortunate position: without a true national champion.

Force action
Though the hurdles are high, the necessity of a tournament
should force action.
This year there is a distinct possibility that Purdue and either
Southern California or UCLA will finish their seasons unbeaten
and ranked one, two by all those smart pollsters.
Ordinarily this would be an ideal situation, because the Big Ten
and West Coast champions meet annually in the Rose Bowl, and
such a clash this year would match the nation’s two best football
powerhouses.
Unfortunately, however, the Establishment of the Big Ten has
decreed that no team will go to consecutive Rose Bowl meetings
and thus last year’s entrant, Purdue, won’t have a chance to displace
Southern Cal or the UCLANs as the number one club in the country.

The hassle this season over which school boasts the country’s
best eleven will also be complicated, as it is every year, by the claims
of Bear Bryant. No matter what record Alabama finishes with,
it’s a good bet that Bryant will announce that 'Bama has been
cheated, and that his Crimson Tide is number one.
This corner hopes Dewey Warren and Tennessee destroy Alabama tomorrow and silence the Big Bear.

Colorado may be unbeaten
Poor Colorado may demand a tournament this season!
The
Buffaloes may be among the ranks of the unbeaten, get a number
four ranking and meet nobody worthwhile in the Orange Bowl to
improve their status before the final ballots are in.

A playoff would also rid the American public of all thdse bowl
games which have turned out to mean absolutely nothing. There is
now a bowl game named after every piece of fruit, vegetable and
condiment known to man. When Principia College in the Midwest
is sitting back waiting for a bowl bid, its time to junk the whole
system.

There’s an M &amp;T Bank
almost everywhere
Ready to help you
with over 100 different services.
Over 60 locations throughout
Western New York. You’ve got us
right where you want us.

The decision to pick a number one team by voting is analagous
to computer contests, where the only factors which decide results
are height, weight and talent, If all underdog college elevens rolled
over and played dead every Saturday, football would be as exciting
as taffy pulling. College football needs a true champion.
What do sportswriters know, anyway?

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�Friday, October 20, 1967

The

Hop

Page Seventeen

The Spectrum

1e and Schweia

t

Tennessee to meet 'Same in dual for Jets should be number
supremacy: VqIs one in AFL but...
southern

As another week of collegiate football enters into the
recordbooks the Hoople and Schweiger find that their perilous predictions have risen to a quite respectable .690 average.
Picking last week’s games with
a 8 and 3 record for a weekly
.728 average, the gruesome twosome will attempt to improve
upon their slate in a week that
should see some interesting gridiron clashes.

First however, let us comment
on last week’s action which was

the scene of some great upsets
and a host of big scores. Top
rated U.S.C. proved the truth of
their position by easily defeating
a talented Notre Dame eleven.
Before a packed house at South
Bend, the speed of the Trojans,
especially the fabulous O.J. Simpson, seemed to totally bewilder
the Fighting Irish. Down in Dixie,
the powerful Georgia Bulldogs
were handed their first loss of
the season by a lightly regarded
Mississippi squad while in the
East, Syracuse rolled over and
played dead for Bill Elias’
spirited Middies. With these notable exceptions, all went as expected in the college ranks and
other top ten teams advanced
without much difficulty and so
here without further ado are the
Hoople Picks of the week.
Tennessee 21, Alabama 20: This
should be one of the best games
of the season as it matches the
passing of Tennessee’s Dewey
Warren and Alabama’s Kenny
Stabler. Warren missed last
week’s game but third string
quarterback Bubba White was
tremendous in his role as understudy. The difference in this
game will be the Vol’s great end
Richmond Flower’s clutch pass
catching, in what should be the
Upset of the Week.
Georgia 38, V.M.I. 6: The Bulldogs were stunned’last week by
Mississippi but should rebound
to roll up a big score against a
poor Keydet squad.
Notre Dame 21, Illinois 10:
After suffering their second loss
of the season against the top
rated Trojans of U.S.C., the Fighting Irish should be fighting mad.
With players like Hanratty,
Hardy, Seymour and Verber,
Notre Dame is just too good to
lose twice in a row.
Colorado 28, Nebraska 14: This
is the big one that everyone in
the Big Eight has been waiting
for. Unbeaten Colorado tangles
with once beaten Big Eight
champ Nebraska. In a game that
has been predicted since The
Spectrum’s first issue, the Buffaloes will end Cornhusker’s
coach Bob Devaney’s dreams of

a sixth consecutive title, in what
will easily be the Game of the

Week.

North Carolina State 31, Wake
Forest 10: The Wolfpack has
turned out to be the surprise of
the season winning its first five
games including a

victory over
mighty Houston. Now that they’ve
hit the top ten, Coach Earle
Edward’s boys don’t intend to let
lowly Wake Forest detour them.
This is a hungry State team that
will rely on a tenacious defense
along with an adequate offense
to win their sixth in a row.
Boston College 22, Buffalo 14:

The Bulls have been very erratic
thus far. They just do not seem
to have the consistency necessary
to beat a really good team. BC
with a 1-2 record plays tough
teams and has an exceptionally
good passing attack. Buffalo must
overcome three big if’s in order
to win; if the team learns to play
good ball on the road, if the
passing attack is on target, and
it the defensive secondary plays
a good game.
Texas 14, Arkansas 6: Arkansas has been very unimpressive
thus far. Last week they tied an
inept Baylor club. Texas won two
in a row and appears ready to
fight it out with Rice for the
S.W.C. championship. The Razorbacks are playing this one at
Little Rock but that won’t be

enough.
Syracuse 14, California 12; The
Orangemen suffered their first
setback last week against Navy
and simply aren’t that good.
However they are home this
week and Cal. isn’t so good
either. Syracuse’s defense will

lead them to victory over their
sunburned intruders.
Southern Calif. 21, Washington
20: U.S.C. will have a real fight
on their hands this week when
they travel up north to meet the
men from Washington. Washington has won four in a row after
an opening loss to Nebraska,
U.S.C. is the number one team in
the country but can not afford
a letdown after last week’s big
win over Notre Dame. O.J. Simpson is the best halfback in the
codntry.

U.C.L.A, 35, Stanford 6: UCLA
Is unbeaten and looking ahead
to the showdown with U.S.C. Stanford is improved this year but
is not in U.C.L.A.’s class. This
game is a contrast of quarterbacks. Beban of U.C.L.A. is quick
and throws exceptionally well.
Stanford's Richer appears to be
fat but nevertheless is extremely
slow. U.C.L.A. will romp.

The New York Jets should be the best football team in
the American Football League. Their offensive backfield of
Joe Namath, Emerson Boozer, Matt Snell, and Don Maynard
could be the best in the league.
Half of their starting 22 players have the potential to
be all-pro. The Jets are not the best football team in the
AFL and only one conclusion can be reached—The talent
is there, the desire isn't.
On the field, Joe Namath is
leader of the N . Y, Jets, He
throw a football better than
quarterback in either league.
everybody knows, Namath
does not confine all of his activities to the playing field. The
N.Y. playboy says that he is a
football player first and that his
personal life does not affect his
Sunday afternoon performances.
Last Sunday, Joe Namath was intercepted six times by an unheralded Houston Oiler secondary. Joe Namath is riot even the
best quarterback in the AFL tothe
can
any
As

day.

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of the
in pro football. The Minnesota Vikings lead the parade
with a shocking 10-7 victor)' over
Ihe Green Bay Packers. The AFL
champion Chiefs went down to
defeat before a brilliant offensive display by the San Diego
Chargers, 45-31. The Chicago
Bears ran all over the Detroit
Lions in the mud, 14-3. in an upupset

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Week of the upset
Last week was the week

We at Springville believe that
one reason for the
N.Y. Jet failure—Wecb Ewbank.
set which Springville foretold.
The Jet head coach, knows talent
The winless Atlanta Falcons tied
as he has shown by drafting
Ihe tough Redskins and finally in
Emerson Boozer and Verlon
Ihe game of the week, the Los
Biggs from Maryland State and
Angeles Rams came from behind
Jackson Stale respectively. He to lie the Baltimore Colts. 24-24
also had a stroke of genius by
Like all good teams. Springville
drafting Ohio State linebacker
suffered last week and slumped
Snell
and
converting him to
Matt
to a 6-3-3 slate for an overall
fullback. However, Weeb Ew41-13-5 mark and a 760 percentsimply cannot light a fire
age.
Purdue 38, Oregon State 14: bank
cannot instill
Led by brilliant play of Leroy under the Jets. He
(Cont'd on Pg. 18)
Keyes and soph quarterback the desire in them which is a
Mike Phipps, the Boilermakers
have become one of the most
OCT. 20th THRU OCT. 28th
explosive teams in college football. The Beavers have a solid
defense but won’t be able to
contain Purdue for the entire
Penn State 27, W. Virginia 13;
1’enn State despite two losses is
the top football team. They might
be the team to knock North
Carolina State from the unbeaten
ranks when they play them in
November. West Virginia is good,
but Penn State may not lose all
year. Any team that can score 41
points in one half has an explosive attack.

ARE YOU READY FOR FALL WEEKEND?

*

must in the pro football world of
today. Ewbank could be an excellent general manager were
his knowledge and talents would
be used to their full extent. However he is not a good coach and
is not the man to lead the Jets.

Sunday October 22
,

—

THE DELLWOOD

1388 MAIN (CORNER UTICA)
2 SHOWS: 10:00 PJA. AND 12:00 AM.

�

�Friday, October 20, 1967

The Spectrum

P, •a! ige Eighteen

UB basketball season to open against
Toronto in Clark; outlook is optimistic
Though the World Series has just ended, and Coach
Doc Urich’s Bulls are in the midst of their grid campaign,
is beginning to take shape.
Optimism tempered by reality marks the early outlook

for Coach Len Serfustini’s hoopsters who will open their
season on Dec. 1 against Toronto in Clark Gym and will
play a 21 game schedule plus a holiday tourney at Norfolk,
Virginia
standing freshman will join them
in a merry battle for starting positions.

Outstanding junior college
boys are: Joe Peeler, 6 feet 3
inches from Erie County Tech
where he was an All-American
pick two years ago, and Bob
Nowak, a 6 foot 2 inch sharpshooter from the same school
who scored 999 points in two
years of competition.
Wayne Betts, a 6-foot 5-inch
graduate of Wesley Junior College in Dover, Delaware, is expected to help out on the boards
and Mike Scotellaro of Mohawk
Valley will be a candidate for
the back court.

Strong bids

Six graduates of the frosh team
arc expected to make strong bids
for starting spots.
John Vaughn, a 6-foot 9-inch
prospect, is the first “big” man
UB has had in years but may be
a year away. Joe Foster, a 6-fool
4-inch, 230 pounds, is tough to
move and has a good outside
shot. Another forward who is a
strong rebounder and scorer is

Ed Eberle

Leading 1966 Scorer
The optimism is reflected in
the fact that nine lettermen return from the 1966 squad including leading scorer forward Ed
Eberle who averaged just under
16 points a game. Four junior
college graduates and some out-

0-foot 5-inch Jack Scherrer and
Stan Jok, at 6-feet 3 inches, has
potential in the forecourt.
At guard, Bo b b y Williams, 6feet 2-inches from New York, is
an exciting ball player with blazing speed.

This is your chance.
Student #7026941.
Drink Sprite and be
somebody.

MR.BIG

Rich Barbera, a 6-footer, is a
real hustler and very aggressive

The Jets should be
National Football League
Detroit 24, Atlanta 10: The Falcon surprise last week can only
show the improvement they have
made. A young team always has
its ups and downs. The Lion defense shouldbeahletoinaini

Culbert returns
Back from last year’s squad
are Jon Culbert, a smooth 61
foot 3-inch forward who shared
a starting spot last season with
Doug Bernard, a 6-foot 2-inch
husky who also returns.
Both are good scorers and rebounders. At center, Jon Jekeliek, a local 6-foot 3-inch product
returns. Jack is very aggressive
and should be a better scorer
after a year of experience.
Eberle, of course, was the best
sophomore in the area in 1966
and can shoot the eyes out of the
basket. He should definitely be
headed for post season honors
along with Peeler. Another potential star is John Fieri, a 5foot 10-inch guard. Fieri is
another boy with exceptional
speed and outstanding driving
ability.
He showed a tendency to foul
last year but should be much improved in that category this season. Joe Rutkowski, 6-foot 1-inch,
is another letter winner at guard
and is possessed with a fine outside shot and good ball handling
ability.
Jimmy Shea, another 6-footer,
was valuable in spot duty last
year and will push for a spot on
the team. George Henry and Dan
Curran are other letter winners
who figure in the battle for
squad spots.

Little experience
The realism mentioned before
lies in the fact that the squad is
short on experience and it may

lake time to mesh the newcomers
into a cohesive unit.
With such teams as Syracuse
and Gannon early in the schedule, the time may not be available. Also, the chronic lack of
height is present again.
Last year’s leading rebounder,
Artie Walker, has left school and

Vaughan still needs time to be
ready. There are only four seniors among the 24 candidiates
who reported for practice. “We
should have better depth, and
more balanced scoring this sea-

Baltimore 30, Minnesota 17:
The Vikings beat Green Bay once
a season but they never manage
to do well against the Colts. The
Packers couldn’t move the ball
behind Zeke Bratkowski; Baltimore won’t have that problem.

Chicago 17, Cleveland 16; Chirough and Chicago is
lough defensively. Frank Ryan of
Cleveland, throwing on two wobbly ankles has not been good of
cago is

late; neither have the Browns.
Gale Sayers came out of his
hibernation last week and should
lead the growling Bears to the
upset.

Pittsburgh 21, Dallas 17; Coming off a heart breaking defeat
at the hands of the Giants, the
Steelers will rise up to shock the
Cowboys. Dallas without Meredith is impotent. Unheralded Pitt
QB Kent Nix will surprise a lot
of people this week.

Green Bay 23, New York 17:..
Try for three upsets in a row.
Sorry! The Giants are good and
Tarkenton can allude the Packers’ front four all day, but the
Giants simply never beat Green
Bay. We’re tempted, but nah ...
San Francisco 35, New Orleans
21: The 49’ers possess the best
offensive line in pro football and

when John Brodie has time
look out! The Saints to go marching in and limping out.

—

from Pg,

Philadelphia 30, St. Loius 24:
The Eagles’ ground game finally
jelled last week and coupled
with Norm Snead’s passing will
provide fits for the Redbird defense. Oh yeah, Jim Bakken will
kick eight field goals.
Los Angeles 27] Washington
17: Roman Gabriel led his team
to a tie against the powerful
Colts last week, while Ole Jelly
Belly Jurgensen and the Skins
were tied by the hapess Falcons.
Anyway, Los Angeles is too close
to Hollywood for
to win.

American Football League
Kansas City 31, Houston 13:
The Chiefs are not going to lose
again and the Oiler offense is
still extinct. If Otis Taylor ever
wakes up and stops dropping the
bombs, the Chiefs will once again
make it to the Super Bowl.
New York 20, Miami 13: The
Jets won this game when the
schedule was drawn up. We’re
just hoping that Joe Willie gets
off the beach in time for the
game.
Boston 24, Oakland 21: Oakland just squeaked by those local
buffoons, and Boston is coming
on strong. Babe Parilli has traded
interceptions for touchdowns and
unless he dies of old age, the
Pats will upset the Raiders.

San Diego 35, Denver 17: The
Broncos would have a tough
time bucking Shirley Temple
much less the red hot Chargers.
Buffalo 7, East Lackawanna
All-Stars 3: In the week of the
upset, this is the Upset of the
Week!)

Sophomore halfback Pat Patterson, who scored the touch-

down that gave the State Univer-

sity of Buffalo Bulls a 6-0 victory over Boston University Saturday was named to the ECAC’s

Division I All-East Football Team.

WORSHIP

—Glena

Pat Patterson
Selected to this week's
All-East ECAC Squad

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And then? And then you unleash it
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good cheer!
Heads turn. Whisperings.
"Who's that strangely
fascinating student with the arch smile.And what's
in that curious green bottle that's making such
And then?

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a racket?"
And you've arrived!
The distinctive taste and
ebullient character of Sprite has set you apart.
You're somebody, uh...uh, whoever-you-are.

17)

Halfback Patterson
is named All-East

Patterson gained 89 yards on
son,” noted Dr. Serfustini, “If 25 carries and scored the touchwe can jell early and our re-, down on a 15 yard run. He also
bounding comes along we could caught two passes in the contest.
have a good season. This squad Patterson was forced to play the
bounding comes along we could entire game in the Bull’s offenhas great potential and desire. sive backfield due to an injury
We should be better than in to starter
Kenny Rutkowski.
1966.”

SUNDAY AFTERNOONS,

(Cont’d
...

�Friday, October 20, 1967

Pag# Nineteen

The Spectrum

CLASSIFIED

Rush season ends; 97 men for pledging

FOR SALE

1958

by Elliot Stephan Rose

This semester the number of men accepted for pledging
fraternities compares closely to the average of previous years.
Despite restriction, 102 out of 131 bid, and 97 men were
accepted by the various fraternities for-pledging. However,
with a steadily increasing student body, it is not especially
encouraging.
Next semester should be one
of the largest and best rush seasons the State University of Buffalo has ever had. I.F.C. rush
chairman, Joe Cardarelli, assured
all fraternities; “I am going to
work hard to inform the student
body of all functions and to make
sure that everyone has an eqaul
chance to participate in the total
program.”

Fraternity pledge class

break-

down:

in its annual charity project this
week, “The White Cane Drive.”
This drive is held each year by
the Lions Club for the benefit of
the area blind. There will be a
farewell stag for Brother Millen
who is leaving for the army. The
action will take place at John’s
West Side Rooming House . . .
Alpha Phi Omega will hold a
dated costume party at the Jewish
War Veterans Hall. It is a Halloween-wino party and the fun
starts at 9 p.m,

.

.

Alpha Sigma Phi
Sigma Phi Epsilon
Theta Chi
Alpha Epsilon Pi
Phi Epsilon Pi
Phi Kappa Psi

Pi Lambda Tau
Tau Kappa Epsilon
Sigma Alpha Mu
Gamma Phi
Alpha Phi Omega
Phi Lambda Delta
Alpha Phi Delta
...

...

Short Iplasts
The brothers of

Alpha Epsilon
Pi would like to congratulate the
newly inducted pledge class:
Marc Adams, Gordon Doody,
Marc Epstein, Artie Guarinello,
Scot L a n d o w . The semi-formal
dinner-dance will be held at the
Lakeview, Oct. 27. Brother
Deutsch is holding his annual
“Hummingbird” party tomorrow
at his apartment . . .
Alpha Phi Dalta will participate

Phi

,

. .

Alpha Sigma

inducted
the following
pledges: Jim Redmond, Don Bain,
Bill Clark, Pat Patterson, Steve
McCullough, Bill Falkner, Pat
Carney, Neil Brawn, Paul Jack,
John Kovack, Bill Tehonica, Larry
Lehner, Dick Bronson, Dan Santangelo, Chris Wolf and Chuck
Sehumway. This week’s bash is
a BYO affair at Weigold’s Wine
Cellar. Don’t forget, tickets are
still on sale for the Nov. 2 showing of “Gone With the Wind”
so contact any brother for tickets
Tomorrow night, the brothers
of Gamma Phi wiH hold a Colt
45 party at the home of Bob
Russell. The new pledges are:
Jim Chiswell, Gregory Schulte,
Dan Wade, and Stan Phillips.
Bob Russell and John Anderson
were recently elected Sec’y and
Treas. respectively of the local
IFC . . . Phi Epsilon Pi announces
that Alan • Bernstein has been
elected member-at-large and Jerry
Barnett, pledgemaster. Fall
pledge class: Steve Abramson,

Judd Fink, Bob Goodman, Carl
Kirschner, Mike Nussbaum, Steve
Snyder, Lenny Weber, Don Zellman and Stan Weiner.

Bonnie Percy, Susan Straus, Lynn
Hoyer, Pat Taber, Cynthia Nasierowski, Mary Hall, Sandra Marcoccia, Carol Pereicich and Debbie Cordean. The pledge class is
conducting a candy sale—as —a

a social with Sigma Sigma sorority of Buffalo State tonight and
a social with the Meyer Memorial
Hospital nurses tomorrow night
Chi Fraternity an. . . Theta
nounces that Bob Agoglia has
been appointed scholastic chairman and Elliot Stephan Rose basketball, coach. Sunday afternoon
there will be a “Box” party at
which everyone will make boxes
for our upcoming pizza sale. The
newly inducted pledges are: Jeff

pledge project, so contact any
sister . . . Sigma Delta Tau is
holding a dated party at the
Sheridan Lanes tonight. Congratulations to the newly inducted
pledges.
The sisters of Sigma Kappa Phi
welcome their Fall pledge class:
Paula Agostino, Pat Becker, Joy
Buchnowski, Marge Guerra, Linda
McDougall, and Chris Scappator.
Open rush is now in progress
and all rushees are invited to our
table . . . Theta Chi Sorority
would like to congratulate its
pledge class: Jackie Bernard,
Laurie Greene, Judy Holler, Lynn
Kasky, Stephanie Sacks, Louise
Tedeschi, and Sue Walczak. Congratulations to Diane Elstner, our
outstanding sister, and Lillian
Karides, outstanding pledge.

Brent, Bob Hayter, Rich Howell,
Bob Knupp, George Quintero,
Tom Reamon, George St. George,
Bob Wallace, Willy Watson and
Mark Kane. Bob Hayter was
elected pledge president.

Sororities
Alpha Gamma Delta wishes the
of luck to sisters Sally
Schoenfeldt, Carolyn Virgili, Joan
Groucaski, and Claudia Grala who

best

are candidates for Fall Weekend
Queen. Newly inducted sisters

are: Elaine Lamy, Georgia Abbruscato, Kathleen Anderson,
Linda Berdine, Gloria Bilynsky,
Janice Bleile, Maureen Dimmick,
Cheryl Putnam, Sally Schoenfeldt,
Sandy Thayer, Peggy Uberto,
Carolyn Virgili, Kathleen Wardell, Gail Wolcott, Carol Fendryk,
Claudia Grata, Sally Kelderhouse,
Cathy Messner, and Gail Rcineman. Gail Wolcott was honored
as best pledge. There will be a
social tonight with the brothers
of Phi Psi.

The sisters of Chi Omega an-

nounce their pledges: Liz Came-

ron, Pat Mooney, Diane DeLancy,
Nancy Moulaison, Janice Chapin,

SMITH

runabout,

side windows,
tandem axle trailer. Perfect for skiing,
excellent condition. $750 or best offer.
634 8652.

APARTMENTS FOR RENT
3 ROOM STUDIO apartment in North Park
area available Dec. 1 Utilities included,
faculty only, call TR 6-9150.
ROOMATES WANTED
TO

SHARE

modern five

$160.00 monthly. Call

bedroom

house.

Steve at 832-1853,

WANTED
RIDE WANTED from Mam Campus to Williamsville, Mon., Wed., Fri., after 4 p.m.
Will pay. Joan: 632-8548
PERSONAL
SHALOM!

For

from the Jewish
day or night.
Batman. If you are he,
gems

Bible call 875-4265
seeking
please call 831-4088

ROBIN

IOST

and

$15,

Pencil. Reward
Call 831-3374.

PRINTING

TYPING TERM papers 25c per page; ditto's
35c; envelopes $2.00 per hundred. Call

TF 5-6897.

INSTRUCTIONS

NEW YORK 14217

PR IV. ATE PILOT ground
school
cU
star!rt Saturday, Oct. 21; 10 a.m.
12
Indivit idual tutoring available. 834-852

n

PETER
NERO
SWING THE
IN ON THE HITS

I
■■I ■
■ f 9
*

in-

SITUATIONS WANTED

•

■

45

windshield, conv.

by

1381 KENMORE AVENUE
KENMORE,

molded lapstreak
h.p. Mercury
motor,
fop, reclining buddy seats,

itialed S.O.R.

Partners* Press, Inc.
ABOOTT I

1963 CHEVY II Wagon, Sfd., 6 cyl. Snow
tires, very
good condition, perfect for
hunting, etc. Going to Sweden,
must sell. $675 or best offer 837 4478.
I960—FALCON,—good—mechanic^—shape.
New brakes, must sell. $#95, 834-2557.
skiing,

GOLD PEN

THE SPECTRUM
Printed

OLDS, good condition. 58,000 actual
miles; power brakes and steering. Best
offer, NH 9-5548.

Peter zeros in on "A Whiter Shade
of Pale,'"'Ding Dong! The Witch Is
Dead," "Up-Up and Away," "Alfie,"
and "Somethin' Stupid,"-and his

beat and sound are right on target.
Peter's also included tunes from hit
Broadway shows and two original
songs in an album that delivers
solid entertainmentfrom the first
note to the closing chord.

RCA VICTOR#
@The most trusted name in sound

�Friday, October 20, 1967

The Spectrum

Page Twenty

•

Colony vital to Chinese trade

hong Hong

British trade sources feel
LONDON
that the strength of Hong Kong during
the current troubles with the Communists
still lies in its economic importance to
China.
Red activities in Hong Kong are clearly related to the internal struggle on 4he
Chinese mainland, but no one can say,
with any certainty to what extent they
may be directed.
The feeling expressed by the Hong
Kong Association of British firms trading
with the colony in an information bulletin is that “a considered formulation of
foreign policy is not at present practicable in Peking, but that they are reacting
to events rather than initiating them.”
—

•

*

•

*

moscoiv

salgon

midleast

Iondon
compiled from our wire service

by Lilian Waite

Egypt prepares for new attack
MIDEAST—Egypt prepared Wednesday for renewed warfare along the Suez
Canal..
Secret high-level talks in Cairo and
New York Tuesday increased hopes for
some movement toward a Middle East

peace agreement.

King Hussein of Jordan, one of the
Arab world’s moderates, flew to Cairo
for a meeting with President Gamal Abdel
Nasser, the self-proclaimed leader of Arab
militants in the long dispute with Israel.
Sir Harold Beeley, the former British
ambassador to Egypt, worked behind the
scenes in the Egyptian capital on the
second day of his Mideast peace mission.
Goldberg secret
At United Nations headquarters in
New York, U.S, Ambassador Arthur J.
Goldberg imposed a curtain of secrecy
on his talks with Egyptian Foreign Minister Mahmoud Riad and other diplomats

with a stake in the dilemma.
Mr. Goldberg was reported playing the
role of a mediator, seeking a peace formula acceptable to both the Arabs and the

Israelis.

Give and take
Some quarters sensed a feeling of
give and take on both sides, but on the
surface the issue seemed just as dead-

locked as it was more than four months
ago when Israel won the war and occupied large areas of Arab territory.
The Arabs insist that Israel withdraw
its troops to boundaries as they were
when the first shots were fired on June 5.
Nasser has refused any direct talks with
Israeli leaders on grounds that Israel does
not exist and that it was illegally formed
from Arab Palestine in 1948.
Israel, refusal
Israel has refused to pull back to the
June lines, arguing that such a withdrawal
would invite new Arab terror attacks. The
Israelis are demanding an Arab pledge of
nonbelligerence, something that Nasser
has always refused.

U.S.-Britain split

—

Radio broadcasts

During the past few days, Viet Cong
broadcasts over the clandestine Libera-

As for the colony’s importance to the
China mainland, the sources said China’s
outstanding commitments for the purchase of wheat and fertilizers alone must
be at least $420 million.

in the colony.

Leftists not confident
The sources said Hong Kong leftists
no longer confident of receiving effective support from the China mainland
because they have been unable to muster
any notable support from the people of
the colony.
are

During the early weeks of the disturbances, there were heavy withdrawals
from Hong Kong banks and a large increase in the issue of notes, but the actual flight of capital seems to have been
very small.

\

Britain and the

United States have
split over terms for an Arab-Israeli settlement, diplomatic sources said Monday
in London. This in turn has widened the
rift in the Big Four’s Middle East peace
strategy.
The Western powers were hunting
some kind of break in the Mideast deadlock but were taking a different approach
to the problem. Britain's policy appeared
to be swinging closer to the Arab view.
The United States was closer to the
Israeli view.

South Vietnam to elect House
SAIGON
South Vietnamese voters
Sunday will elect a 137 member house
of representatives and complete the nation’s first elected government since the
dictatorial regime of Ngo Dinh Diem was
overthrown four years ago.
The Viet Cong has warned the 1235
candidates and the voters that they risk
their lives if they go to the polling places.
During the Sept. 3 balloting that elected Chief of State Nguyen Van Thieu and
Prime Minister Nguyen Cao Ky president
and vice president, the Communist insurgents killed or wounded more than
300 civilians in ballot box terror strikes.

No notable support

These commitments could not be honored without the revenue derived from
trade with Hong Kong. The sources found
it hard to believe that officials in Peking
who are trying to keep the Chinese economy on an even keel would not make

tion Radio have urged “stalwart people
to smash the election” this Sunday.
Observers said the reference to “stalwart people” was a virtual order to Viet
Cong terror teams to use bombs and
bullets as they have in the past to try
and sabotage the elections.

Expect voters
Despite the Communist attempts to
spoil the elections, a turnout of 70 to
80% of- the registered voters is expected.
The presidential election drew 5.8 million voters, a turnout of 83%.
A 60-member senate was elected Sept.
3 during the presidential balloting. The
new house of representatives will replace
the current 117-member provisional assembly which earlier wrote the nation’s

constitution.

Oakland
arrests

Folksinger Joan Baez is stopped by
police in Oakland, Calif., as they advise
her of her constitutional rights, just
prior to her arrest. She had been demonstrating at the city induction center.

Red paper charges U.S. buildup
MOSCOW—The Soviet newspaper Red
Star said Wednesday the United States is
massing troops, artillery, planes and warships near the Demilitarized Zone for an
invasion of Communist North Vietnam
next February.
The official newspaper of the Soviet
Defense Ministry gave no source for its
allegation.
It came in a lengthy article written
by Lt. Col. Alexander Leontiyev on the
recent fighting along the DMZ dividing
North and South Vietnam. The article
was headlined “They Are Losing Their
Heads.”

American dead end
Col. Leontiyev said the American generals have reached a dead end, and the
only solution they see is further escalation of the war.
“There is reason to believe that for a
long time preparations for an invasion
has been going on,” Col. Leontiyev said.

“A 100,000-man strong army including

Marines

—

the shock force of the ag-

gressor’s army
artillery, aircraft and
7th Fleet ships have been concentrated
near the 17th parallel,” he said.
—

Dangerous step
“The American aggressors are prepar-

ing their most dangerous step of their
Vietnamese adventure and they should
know that it is fraught with the gravest

consequences for the United States,” Red
Star said.
“Free Vietnam and its friends possess
the necessary means and possibilities to
administer a worthy rebuff to the maddened aggressors,” it continued. “Every
step of aggression inevitably will produce
the necessary countermeasures by Vietnam’s friends, whose aid will grow without
interruption.

“An invasion can have only one result
the full collapse of the Pentagon’s
entire adventure in Southeast Asia.”
—

Border trouble in Hong Kong
HONG KONG
Chinese Communists
demanded this week that the British reopen a vehicle crossing they sealed after
the Reds kidnaped a senior British police
official and dragged him across the fron—

tier.

But British authorities reported by
loudspeaker that they closed the crossing
point three days ago because of Chinese
lawlessness and gave no indication they
would comply with the demand despite
Communist threats of “consequences.”

Tension high

D n,i nn
DU&amp;IOII

exhibit

rftllaiia
college

Soviet Ambassador Anatoly F. Dobrythe president of Boston Colnin

/ege a moc e of a Russian airliner prior
to opening day ceremonies of "Educa/

lion-USSR,"

college.

/

a

Soviet

display

at

the

Tension remained high as troops on
both sides of the Man Kam Bridge, one
of several crossings on the colony’s 17mile frontier with China, remained near
the border after backing off from faceto-face positions they held earlier.
The closing of the Man Kam crossing
has cut off truck deliveries from Red
China. But food and other supplies from
China were reaching Hong Kong in sufficient supply by rail and sea.

Chinese boast
Communist China Monday boasted that

the United States is “extxremely afraid”
of its fledgling nuclear stockpile.
But it also admitted “utter chaos” in
the nation as a result of party leader
Mao Tse-tung’s cultural revolution.
Peking cited the U.S. decision to build
an antimissile system as proof “that the
American imperialists are extremely afraid of the Chinese hydrogen armament.”
It alleged: “America made this decision as a result of talks with Soviet
revisionists.”

Chaos rampant
In the same issue of the official Peking
Peoples Daily, an editorial admitted that
“utter chaos” was rampant throughout
the nation. But Mao’s organ said that
“such chaos is very excellent.”
The newspaper’s reason: “Chaos and
order constitute antagonistic unity. With
Chairman Mao’s high reputation and the
Peoples Liberation army as our mighty
great wall, we dare to go through a
situation which looks like utter chaos
on the surface and expose to light all
devils and demons.”

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                    <text>Senate will act on
war resolution

The Spectrum

The Student Senate will be asked tomorrow to support
a resolution calling for an immediate cessation of bombing
in North and Smith Vietnam.

State University of New York at Buffllo

The proposed resolution, to be presented by Senate
Vice President Richard A. Miller, will also recommend “termination of offensive military operations” and recognition
by the U.S. that the National Liberation Front must be a
separate party in any negotiations.
The resolution says the
U.S. should obtain a negotiated settlement “that will allow for the earliest possible
removal of fighting forces in
Vietnam.”
According to Mr. Miller, the
presentation of such a resolution represents “a bit of dramatic departure from the past” in

that “it has never been done in

such an explicit manner in the
history of the Student Association.”

Resolution for resolution
The United Student Government of Harpur College, State
University of New York at Binghamton, passed a resolution
backing the intent of the Miller
Resolution at an Oct. 9 session.
According to a report written by
Mickey Shaw, Harpur student
president, the resolution “spurred
us (Harpur) to reconsider our
own stand on Vietnam.”
“In previous resolution," he
said, “United Student Government has opposed and condemned
Amrican involvement in the war
with Vietnam,

“Now, the United Student Government goes on record as seeking the soonest end to American
participation in the war, urging
all peaceful efforts to stop the
war, including unilateral American withdrawal, if necessary.”
Passage questionable
Mr. Miller told The Spectrum
that no one from the State Universtiy of Buffalo had asked him
to present the Vietnam resolution
and that passage might prove difficult.

—Lepczyk

Richard Miller
Student Association vice president will recommend "termination of offensive military activities" to the Student Senate
tomorrow.

He reasoned that some Senators might think the resolution
“inappropriate” for the Senate

to act

upon and asked:

“If it is
passed, what good will it do?”
A separate bill, which would
call for a University-wide referendum on the war, may also be
presented by Vice President Miller.

University of Michigan is
the third NSA dropout

Tuesday, October 17, 1967

Vol. 18, No. 11

i Friday rail

Draft resistance, mass protest urged
by faculty members and clergymen
by Bill Mac Blane and Marty Guggenheim
Spectrum

Staff

Norton Hall will arrange for dcfnite plans and outline a course

Reporters

A rally to discuss draft resistance and bolster support
for this week s mass protest against the Vietnam War was
held around the Norton fountain at noon Friday.

of action to be followed. Particiin the march will turn in
their draft cards and cooperate
in similar forms of protest.

pants

The

National Resistance

Robert Potts, one of the
speakers, cited articles in the
New Republic and New
York Review to point out
that “we should stop marching and question the legality
of the War by disengaging
ourselves of our draft card.
The card is a symbol of the
war.”
Professor

of

English Robert
Greeley said that "we should
each be dictated by our con
science” and that he was hostile
to the War commitment.
Lutheran

Minister

Thursday was actually a Declara

lion of World War Three.

City march planned
At a meeting following the
rally, it was decided that Wednesday will he the date of a city
wide march on local draft boards.
The march will act in direct
accordance with a nationwide
movement held Monday. It will
follow a day long rally of speakers, will include a ‘Teach in”, and
will proceed downtown as sched
uled at approximately 2 p m A
meeting at 7:30 p.m. tonight in

cooperation of student, faculty,
and community, is essential in a
movement whose progress thus
far has been significantly i g-

nored.”

Regarding the goals of this
movement, they are simply to
"awaken the community and student population to a cause which
if it is to create a dent must have
this vital support.”

Demonstrations Monday are expected to attract well over 1000
students, professors, and members of the clergy on the national
level and those of tomorrow hope
a proportional similarity.

Kenneth

Sherman read from a statement
by a national committee of clergymen. The statement called for
resistance to military' servitude
It said that the Americans arc
a “dishonored" peope who have
no representation.
The statement also claimed that the Senate
surrendered all control of foreign
policy with the Gulf of Tonkin
Resoluton and President Johnson has defied the “peace mandate” of the 1964 election.

The University of Michigan
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (CPS)
last week became the third school in the nation to withdraw
from the National Student Association following last February’s report that NSA received funds from the Central Intelligence Agency over a 15-year period.
—

Reverend Sherman said that
we should “build a tidal wave
of revulsion against the intruson of the Pentagon into foreign
affairs."

Time for risks

Michigan’s Student Government Council voted 7-3 in
favor of withdrawal with no
debate. SGC had defeated an
identical motion three weeks
earlier by a 6-5 margain.
The vote to withdraw was apparently motivated by the revelation of NSA’s links with the
CIA and by reports of several
Michigan delegates to the national convention that NSA was
an “undemoctratic, unrepresentative, elitist” body.
Brandeis University seceded
from NSA the day after its connections with the CIA were made
public in January of this year.
Amherst became the second this
fall.
SGC President Bruce Kahn, a
senior in Michigan’s literary college, said, “I am extremely happy about this. NSA has done
some really rotten things. To go
to the convention takes one ninth
of our $18,000-a-year budget and,

far as I’m
wasted money.”
as

concerned, it’s

"A shame"

SGC’s Executive Vice President, Ruth Baumann, who voted
against withdrawal, said, “It’s
really a shame. It’s not so much
that Michigan needs NSA. NSA
needs Michigan. If we didn’t like
NSA we should have stayed in
and tried to change it.”

Miss Baumann, a member of
NSA’s National Supervisory
Board, placed third on the first
ballot with 78 votes during NSA’s
presidential election this August
at the University of Maryland.
Campus sentiment seemed to
be running strongly against NSA.
After SGC-rejected the motion
to withdraw three weeks ago, unknown students painted the words
“Withdraw from NSA” and
“NSA Stinks” on a blank wall
surrounding a construction project on campus.
Michigan’s student newspaper,
The Michigan Daily, had printed
two strongly worded editorials
demanding withdrawal.

and

Professors and clergymen addressed the gathering of the Student Mobilization Commitseveral hundred students urging resistance to a draft system tee, who have sponsored these
that is “criminal abregation of the rights of the individual" programs, feel that “this course
of action, an overt, direct, non
in the words of rally leader Mike McKeating.

"It is time to risk our futures

for the sake of humanity," said
Roman Catholic priest Fr John
Pietra. He pointed out that the
men “devoted to savagery” offer
lives. The men "dedicated to hu
manily" are afraid to risk their
security, he claimed

Dr. Herman Cole, an assistant
philosophy professor at the University College at Buffalo and
candidate for councilman at large,

said that
necessary

civil disobedience is
to make dissatisfied
people proud of America once
again.

Dr. Donald Mikulecky, of the
State University of Buffalo Bio-

physics Department, urged faculty
members to make the war more
real to themselves, risk their security and act for what is just.
“We must

liberate ourselves

before we can go to another
country and liberate them," said
Dr. Sidney Wilhelm of the Sociology Department. He said,
“We must dry up the military’s
ocean" and the only way to do
this is by resisting the draft He
also claimed that Secretary of
State Dean Rusk's statement last

—Bonneau

Anti-draft
rally

Poet Robert Crdeley told an enIhus'iaslic audience here Friday:
"We should each be dictated by
our conscience." He spoke at an
anti-draft rally held at the Norton fountain area.

�Tuesday, October 17, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* Two

pays tribute to Italian-A mericans; Balance sheet is unfavorable'
wreath placed at statue of Columbus after 50 years of Communism

UB

tribute to

Italian-Americans

Thursday, Columbus Day.
Dr. James LiBrize, Dean
William Hawkland, Judge Joseph Sedita and James Augello, president of Buffalo’s
Federation of Italian-Ameri-

can Clubs, placed a wreath

pher Columbus at Franklin
and West Eagle Sts.
Dr. LiBrize opened the ceremonies with a brief speech. The
Law School instructor said the
Law School presented a proposal
to Mayor Sedita and the City
Council to rename the intersection of Franklin and Eagle “Columbus Square” or “Columbus
Circle.”

LiBrize then introduced
Hawkland, Provost of the
State University of Buffalo Law

Dr,
Dean

School.

Dean Hawkland declared his
non-Italian heritage by saying:
“Some of my ancestors were Vikings.” His remarks drew favorable reactions from the crowd
which was comprised mainly of
students. He concluded that
Americans have drawn heavily
on all cultures.
Dr. LiBrize then introduced
Judge Sedita who discussed the

H,,* n ‘

Columbus

Wreathed Viking contender
feted by Law School.

History of Columbus
After Judge Sedita Charles La-

Loggia, a law student, presented
a

history of

Columbus. Robert

Perlman, another student at the
Law School also spoke. After the
ceremony he said that the ItalianAmericans deserved more recognition. “The Irish have St. Patrick’s Day; therefore, the Italians
should be honored on Columbus
Day.

Dr. Li Brize mentioned that the
Law School planned to make this
Columbus Day ceremony a yearly event and that “all students
should be here.”

Frosh elections tomorrow;
four to serve on senate
Four freshman will be elected
tomorrow to serve on the Student
Senate.

r*

lack of individualism in a bureaucratic society—He said the individual was being replaced by
the ‘obstrusive, efficient and prosaic organization man." Judge
Sedita feels a “high moral commitment” is needed to save the
indiivdual in our modern society.
He also pledged his “moral commitment of the highest degree”
to deal with ‘socialism and capitalism and other vital issues.

Freshmen will cast their ballots
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at polling
places in the Center Lounge in
Norton Hall and in the lobby of
Goodyear Hall. Students must
have their I.D. cards to vote.
The election is open to both activity fee and non-fee payers.
The twelve

cording to the University’s divisions. For every 500 students in
a division there is one seat in
the Senate.

The four freshmen Senators
will represent the 2000 frfeshmen
at the State University of Buffalo.
Prior to the election, freshmen
are represented at Senate meetings by two delegates of the
freshman class council.

candidates, in alorder are: JoAnne
Balsom, Andrea Baruchin, Mary
Carlson, Marian Dreksler, George
Heymann, Rich Haier, Thomas
Keller, Harry Klein, Ellen Price,
Larry Lerner, Ellen Rossman, and
Michael Seldin.

According to Stewart Edelstein,
Student Association president,
this is a very important election
for the freshmen. “I hope that
every freshman votes,” he said,
“because these four seats can
determine the fate of a resolution.

This is the second year that
the freshman class will be represented in proper relation to
its size. The freshmen have had
four seats on the Student Senate
since the Senate re-apportionment two years ago.
Representation is alloted ac-

“A freshman class is usually
never heard from. At many uni-

phabetical

versities, freshmen have little in-

fluence on decisions made by
student government and administration. Here they have the
chance to be represented,” continued Mr. Edelstein.

by Nora Gamer

Hunthe last Prime Minister
gary, speaking on “A Balance Sheet on 50 Years of Communism” Thursday claimed that hjs balance sheet was not
favorable to the Soviet Union.
!

The State University of
Bi.Ltalo paid its first annual

Dr. Nagy was the National President of the Independent
Smallholders’ Party in 1945, the President of the Hungarian National Assembly in 1945, and Prime Minister of Hungary during 1946 and 1947. He has been living in exile in
the U.S. since 1947.
His address centered on the

growth of the Soviet Union in

the last 50 years, and an outlook
for the future. Dr. Nagy feels
that Communism is no longer
the revolutionary philosophy it
used to be and that, as a system of government, it has become reactionary rather than
progressive. Recent unrest among
young intellectuals of Russia and
blast Europe was cited as an indication of this.
At a time when capitalism has
become more social-minded. Dr.
Nagy feels that communist gov-

ernments, especially in

Eastern

Europe, have remained against
profit and private ownership of
business. In spite of this, small
enterprises have been increasing
in recent years.

The “Balance Sheet” report included points about the Soviet
economy, which was built up
in a short time to a point where
it competes with the U. S. Illiteracy has been eliminated, and
education centers around the
natural sciences. Students have
trouble finding books of Western philosophers and theologians.
Diplomacy and propaganda score
the best among Soviet gains. Dr.
Nagy posed the question “where
would the Soviet Economy be
now had the Russians had a real

democratic government after the
Revolution?”

Liberalization in East Europe
At a press conference earlier
in the day. Dr. Nagy discussed
Russian and Eastern Europe since
the Hungarian Revolt in 1956. He
feels that there has been a general liberalization of government,
and some improvement. Police
terror is not as brutal, traveling
privileges are granted more readily, and the regime tolerates criticism at the local level, he said.
The disagreement between IJed
China and Russia is regarded in
Eastern Europe almost as a cold

Dr. Ferenc Nagy

Last Prime Minister of free Hungary discusses evolution of
communism.
war, similar to the one between
Russia and the U.S. He compared the three great powers to
a triangle and claimed that the
future of mankind rests on which
two sides of the triangle move
closer to each other ideologically.
Dr. Nagy feels that when threatened from two sides, Russia will
will be forced to make peace on
one front at any price. He thinks
it would be easier for Russia
'to come to an agreement with
the U. S. than with Red China.
Dr. Nagy feels that the old
revolutionary spirit has run out
of Russian Communism. Describing himself as a progressive man
and anti-Communist, he would
like to see some of the reforms
his government started during
the short rule of democracy returned to Hungary.

Headquarters for Good
College Clothing

RIVERSIDE MEN'S SHOP

Tonawanda Straat, comar Ontario
Buffalo, Now York 14207

NEW STUDENT REVIEW
is accepting manuscripts of
POETRY
PROSE
and is also accepting applications
for staff members.
Please contact—John Staley, Poetry Editor
Steve Mione, Fiction Editor
Wednesday at 3:30 or call
on
Norton
302
in
&amp;

Mtdium Point

831-2319

�Tuesday, October 17, 1967

P*B* Thra*

The Spectrum

Dr. Dong, visiting Asian professor,
lectures on significance of Korea
by Caryl Schwartz
Staff

nomic development to a heavy

Report

the principles of democracy,” and
said there was a “question whether a small republic will stand
against communism or not.” The
war destroyed over 95% of Korean industry, which required extensive reconstruction at which
time Korea was aided by the
U. S.

be “common interest to defend
Asia,” and that it was not entirely “South Korea's burden.” In
support of Korean unification he
claimed. “I think the most important problem is that as long
as Korea is divided as it is now
and has been for eighteen years,
there can be no genuine peace
as long as there is war in
Asia there is no world peace.”
South Korea advocates peaceful
unification, according to D r.
Dong, by means of UN-supervised
elections by secret ballot. He said
the North Koreans fear loss of
public support in an election with
secret ballots.

Explains role in

Fighting continues

“In order to have true permanent peace in the world
there must be peace in Asia. As long as Korea is divided and
war.”
a source of conflict
—

This observation was made by Dr. Chon Dong, visiting
Asian professor at the State University of Buffalo, in his address to the Politics Club Wednesday.

Dr. Dong emphasized the
importance of Korea’s past
role as defender of the Asian
peninsula, the present role
of “active participation” in
world affairs, and the future
of his country in view of the
“constant tension” in Asia
today.
He stressed that Korea’s traditional importance as defender
of the Asian peninsula was, and
still is, due to its strategic location. In discussing Korea’s history, Dr. Dong talked abput the
struggle for control of Korea due
to its geographic location, illustrating his point by mentioning
the Sino and the Russo-Japanese
Wars. In 1948 Korea’s role in
world affairs was of a different
nature. “I like to call it active
participation,, by leaders and people in Korea, particularly those
opposed to communism.”
Referring to the Korean War,
and Communist aggression south
of the 38th parallel, he said the
Koreans were “shocked” and unprepared to fight lacking proper
weapons. The Koreans were
“morally obligated” to the UN

troops who intervened

in the

name of “police action” to
South Korea

from

save

Communist

takeover.

In defining Korea’s role during
the war Dr. Dong referred to his
country as “a testing ground in

war

Commenting on the war in
Vietnam, Dr. Dong said, “I would
like to make it clear that Korea
sent over 50,000 troops partly because of support of American
policy. Korea feels they can take
an active role in paying back
debts . . . moral debts to the U. S.
for liberation of Korea from Japan. We are morally obligated to
the U.S. for protection from

Communists.”

These he considered “the main
reasons for sending our sons and
brothers to Vietnam.”
In emphasizing the need for
“closer political-military ties” between nations, Dr. Dong said that
if one country should fall to the
Communists it “affects the other
countries in Asia.” Because of
the threat of the Communists
South Korea maintains the fourth
largest standing army in the
world.

Discussing problems confronting South Korea today, Dr. Dong
mentioned that his country cannot continue to sacrifice its eco-

—

clown.

Four

of

the

Hippie

...

Despite the armistics which of:
ficially ended the Korean War.
he claimed fighting still exists
between North and South Korea.
This agreement "never worked
out, we are still technically without peace,” Dr. Dong said. In his
observations on North Korea, he
noted they choose political af-

filiations with either Red China
or the U. S. S. R. depending upon
which is more powerful. Since
the Russian-Chinese ideological
conflict North Korea has shifted
its affiliations to Russia, which
can provide economic and military aid.

During the question answer
period Dr. Dong was confronted
by a report made by economist
Kenneth Boulding in 1964 that
South Korea was economically
bankrupt. In answer to the question on his country's economic
state Dr. Dong cited the examples
of four and five year plans which
achieved “more than people expected.” He emphasized the importance of American foreign aid
in helping to industrialize South
-

Korea, which lacks the natural
resources of North Korea. “It is
important to have resources, but
more important to make use of

Hippie art competes with
masterpieces at Binghamton
They
BINGHAMTON (GNS)
were thre centuries apart, but
two artforms were recently available on the campus of the State
University at Binghamton.
There were the masterpieces
of Bernardo Strozzi, a 17th century Italian cleric, who was receiving his first “show” in
America, at the handsome gallery
in the new Fine Arts Building of
the Harvey Hinman complex.
But among the student body
was a small group displaying
the art of “flower power,” or a
new form of love expression.
They paint flowers on their faces,
not too much unresembling Emmett Kelly, the famed circus

-The Soviet Union

«

Spectrum

dateline news, Oct 17

it.”

Asked for his viewpoint on the

difference between South Korean

list of 57 sloi ;ans for

words eliminated previous calls for a halt in U.S. air attacks on
North Vietnam add a withdrawal of American forces from South
Vietnam.

NEW YORK—The nation’s governors are pointing to big city
problems—whether they describe them as race riots or improving
the lot of slum dwellers—as major issues in the 1968 political
campaign.

Some of them believe that these domestic issues will overshadow
even the conduct of the Vietnam war in electioneering next year.

HAMBURG, Germany —The West German news magazine Stern,
in a photographic report made available Sunday, said North Vietnamese officials are giving captured American bomber pilots good
treatment. The report was done by two Communist journalists for
the East German film company Defa.
WASHINGTTON—American servicemen held captive by Com-

munist North Vietnam are being exploited for propaganda purposes
and “for hard cash,” according to the Defense Department.

WASHINGTON—Vice-President Hubert H. Humphrey, stepping

up the administration’s counterattack against Vietnam policy critics,
contends that the future of America is at stake in the anti-Communist
struggle in Asia.

NEW YORK—Michigan Gov. George Romney said he has detected
a shift in the Johnson administration's “ping pong” Vietnam policy
that may result in an invasion of North Vietnam.

As an alternative to this possibility, which he said would risk
Word War III. Romney proposed that Vietnam and its Southeast
Asian neighbors be neutralized through some new international
machinery.

HAVANA—His voice trembling with emotion. Premier Fidel
Castro said his old comrade-in-arms Ernesto “Che” Guevara probably
was caught alive by Bolivian troops last week, then shot to death.
Speaking slowly, Castro said it was “painfully true” that Guevara

is dead.

UNITED NATIONS -Diplomatic sources said the United States
appears to be makng an all out effort to get the two sides in the
Arab-Israeli conflict together for direct or indirect negotiations.
US. Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg was meeting Arab leaders,
including Egyptian Foreign Mnisler Mahmoud Riad, at the United
Nations in backstage maneuvering to end the crisis.

Canyou

meef the test?

and

types

showed up when Governor and
Mrs. Rockefeller visited the University to dedicate the Hinman
selection last Thursday, They
stood along corridors where the
Governor would pass, looking at
him a little self consciously.
A larger number of students
with signs, to protest
slowness in contraction of new
buildings at the rapidly growing
collegiate center.

American democracy Dr.
Dong said that U, S. democracy
was based on struggles and efforts of the people, while South
Korean democracy was "handed
down” and patterned after the
U. S. Constitution. It is difficult
to implement action. People damand rights. People are not pre
pared for the duty that goes with

published a

it."

•

•

•

•

were out

The Strozzi show of 41 pieces
was put together after long work
by Michael Milkovich, Director of
the University art gallery. It will
be on display until Nov. 5.

Here’s everything you need to
help you get a top score in the
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�P»9» Four

Tuesday, October 17, 1967

The Spectrum

Consideration and ratification

""‘“'pS^rTwlKSlRbo?
,
=

The Spectrum has been reprinting the Final Report
of the Task Force on University Policy in this and two
previous editions in an effort to help students familiarize
themselves with the proposed Charter. The effectiveness
number of students who cast a ballot.
Student participation in this referendum is vitally important since the Charter, once ratified, will become an instrumental device in asserting the rights of all members
of the academic community as well as the guidelines for
the formulation of University policy. The time to voice an
opinion about these ground rules is now.
The first three chapters of the Task Force Report have
been considered previously in this newspaper. The Spectrum
urges students to vote for these chapters with the following
considerations:
In the Student Bill of Rights, Chapter I, section G on
student publications should be amended to specify that
staffs of various publications should play a vital and dominant role in the selection of their editors,
In the Faculty Bill of Rights, Chapter II, section D on
self-government should be revised to deny faculty participation in hiring, firing and selecting chairmen, deans, provosts
and other administrative appointments.
These points were considered in greater detail in Oct.
10 and Oct. 13 editions.
The last Section of the Task Force Report—Chapters
IV through VIII—require less comment. All of these chapters are adequate.
The official comment on Chapter IV, Formulation of
University Policy, points out that the chapter “envisages
the creation of a new body, here called the Student Council,
to represent all students in the formulation of policy.”
In this, the Charter recognizes, as have many University leaders, that the present structure for student representation is insufficient and is growing more insufficient
daily. With an expanding University, a growing graduate
student population, and a greater role being played by professional schools, we are becoming more aware of the need
for a new council, truly representative of all these groups
of students.
The present undergraduate Student Senate is severely
limited because of the nature of its representation, and the
Graduate Student Association has been largely ineffective as
spokesman for graduate students.
Student government is an area that will require a great
deal of revision as students play a greater role in University
decision-making. Recognition of the need for this revision is
the first step. Chapter IV of the proposed Charter takes that
step.
It is clear that many problems exist in the operation of
this University, and the Task Force Report is aimed at solving many of those problems. But acceptance of the Report
by students involves more than student input in the drawing
up of the Charter. It involves student consideration and ultimately student ratification.
There has been student input. Student consideration
should be going on now Tomorrow is4he time for ratification. All students should make an effort to be a part of this
process.

W,
M??
%

•

•

Anti-war resolution
—

—

Readers

the burgher
by Schwab

The Student Senate tomorrow gets an opportunity to act on a unique resolution, one which calls
for an immediate cessation of bombing in North
and South Vietnam, the termination of offensive
military operations, recognition of the NLF as a
separate party to any negotiations and a negotiated
settlement that will allow for the earliest possible
removal of fighting forces in Vietnam.
The resolution will be presented by Senate

Vice President Richard A. Miller and states many
of the consequences of the war:
It has incurred the risk of wider war;
It has increased the risk of nuclear war;
It has caused the United States’ relations with al
lied, non-aligned, and communist nations to suffer;
It has resulted in a lack of credibility in U.S.
Government pronouncements, and has impaired
the integrity of the Johnson Administration;
The war has created a climate in this country
•

•

•

•

•

•

•

which endangers the right of dissent and threatens basic civil liberties;
The war has drastically affected the American
commitment to the resolution of serious internal
problems by diverting the nation’s resources
from vital domestic problems to the war effort;
And the war has had a disastrous effect on the
educational plans and the lives of young Americans,

The resolution is a very good one and although
it is unprecedented at this University, others have
made similar pronouncements. Queens College and
SUNY at Binghamton are notable examples.

The

resolution is not unlike the one passed by the National Student Association, according to Mr. Miller.
But how will the Senate react to such a bill?
Projecting from past performances the debate will
go something like this:
Sen. Pres.; Will anyone speak in favor of the
resolution?
Sen. A.; Personal privilege! I consider that an insult!
Sen. Pres.; What are you talking about? I only asked
for a speaker in favor of the resolution.
Sen. A.: Oh, sorry. I thought you said the bill is

revolting.
Sen. Pres.: Sen. F„ would you like to say something?
Sen. F.: Huh? Oh, no. I was just scratching my
head.
Sen. Pres.: Well, could you kindly scratch your
head someplace other than the Senate floor?
Yes. Sen. B?
Sen. B.: Like I don't know if it is the Student Senate's function to pass a resolution like this one.
It says here that the Government should stop
the bombing. Do we have any assurance that
if we do pass this resolution, the bombing will
be stopped? And if it isn’t, what do we do then?
These are the kinds of questions which must
be considered.
Sen. Pres.: YEECH! Sen. M., could you answer the
question?
Sen. M.: Certainly. Well, actually, I don't think
the bombing will be stopped if the resolution
is passed. But if every student senate in every
college passed a similar resolution, it might
make page three of The New York Times.
Sen. Pres.: Thank you, Sen. M. Sen. R?
Sen. R.: I’m in favor of the resolution because just
yesterday someone asked me why the Senate
hadn’t done anything groovy. I think the resolution is extremely groovy, especially on the
eve of the march on Washington and the Resistance.
Sen. L.: That’s a lie!
CRASH! CRASH!! CRASH!!! (sound of the gavel)
Sen. Pres. You’re out of order, Sen. L. Do you
wish to be recognized?
Sen. L.: Thanks. It isn’t true that we haven’t done
anything groovy. We’ve done plenty of groovy
things , . . like penalizing non-payers . , .
we let
like slicing budgets unmercifully
the Law School have their own graduation,
which got President Meyerson mad . . . how
many groovy things can we do? We must be
the grooviest old Student Senate in the coun

All indications are that this weekend’s National Mobili
zation in Washington will be the largest anti-war demonstra
tion in the history of the world.
Young Americans pledged to non-cooperation with the
Selective Service
and some civil disobedience
are this
week returning draft cards to local boards throughout the
country.
Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield said Saturday
that the United States is “on thin ice” in Vietnam, and that
“there lies ahead only a deepening involvement and further
expansion of the conflict in Southeast Asia.”
He did not predict what lies ahead at home, and as the
war continues, the nation becomes more divided.
In the near future the Student Senate will be faced
with an anti-war resolution
one which will call for a
halt to the bombing, the earliest possible removal of fighting forces from Vietnam, a negotiated settlement and recognition of the NLF as a separate party in any negotiations.
Many student senators may be reluctant to pass on this
issue, feeling that it is outside the realm of their normal
business. The truth is that it couldn’t be more pertinent.
If the first two senate meetings are any indication of
what the Senate will do for the rest of the year, consideration of this resolution will probably be the highlight of the
year.
try!
The Student Senate has an obligation to do something
Sen. B.: Would someone please
worthwhile. The opportunity is coming, Senators; Back that
tion? I forgot what it was.
resolution.
Ad infinitum
—

oawr

.

. .

...

re read the resolu-

’

writings
Heart in the right place
To the Editor:

I sympathize with Mr. Taylor in his desire
to restrict his job to clean Johns and clear walks

but I do not think it likely that his role will long
allow such a lack of commitment to other more
ambiguous administrative problems.
1 think it is clear that the student is not in anyway responsible for the economic affairs of the

University beyond his tuition and fees.

In the article (Spectrum, Oct. 10) Mr. Taylor
with this, at least he is “not
entirely sure” budgeting problems are the students'
concern, but yet he proceeds to argue that perhaps
students should refrain from boat-rocking, lest
the campus appear unseaworthy, the captain unfit,
and the funds dwindle.

appears to agree

This is an administration’s (also an Administration) argument based on the assumption that what
is good for the administration is good for the University, and to accept this advice would be to deny
students of just that opportunity which Mr. Taylor
himself has so clearly prospered from, besides
making this University a much more boring place,
and perhaps also refusing our creative anarchistic
and iconoclastic students a valuable occupational
ladder.

I know Mr. Taylor’s heart is in the right place,
it’s the rest of him that worries me.
Bob Gaus

Old Buckpassers never die
To the Editor

In the Oct. 6 issue of The Spectrum there was
a headline on page 17 which read; “Death comes
to horse who finished second.” Anybody who thinks
that being retired to stud is death must have holes
in his head. Buckpasser is about to live!
Also living

Editor's Note: Thousands of pardons. The girl who
wrote that head is not familiar with racing terms.
every
The Spectrum is published twice-weekly
Tuesday and Friday
during the regu.ar academic
the State University of New York at Buffalo.
3435 Main Street. Buffalo, New York 14214. Offices
are located at 355 Norton Hall. Circulation: 15,000.
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year at

Editor-In-Chief—MICHAEL L. D'AMICO
Managing Editor—RICHARD R. HAYNES
Asst. Managing Editor—RICHARD SCHWAB
Business Manager—SAMUEL A. POWAZEK
Advertising Manager—DAVID E. FOX
Campus
Margaret Anderson
Asst.
Marlene Kozuchowski
City
Daniel Lasser
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Feature Barry C. Holtzclaw
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Sports
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David L. Sheedy
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Director

The Spectrum is a member of .the United States Student Press Association and the Associated Collegiate
Press. The Spectrum is served by; United Press International. Associated Collegiate Press Service, Gannett
News Service, and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate.
Represented for national adverting by National Educational Advertising Servirr me.. 420 Madison Ave.,
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�Tuesday, October 17, 1967

UUAB scores Student Senate

By Interlandi

BELOW OLYMPUS
*

•.

V

-

/

J

To the Editor:
This year several hundred thousand dollars of
voluntarily paid student monies have been placed
in the hands of complete incompetants who are
handicapped by non-psychedelically induced visions
of their own importance. These people are collectively organized as our Student Senate.
Last week Student Association Treasurer Doug
including free game nights, mixers, art exhibits, a
touring theatrical performance, and a proposed,
coffee house would have to be reduced or scrapped
because of insufficient funds. While the Senate is
squandering money on favored brainchilds the whole

cultural and recreational program of UUAB is
being told to cut back, charge more and do less
for students.
At their last meeting these pillars of responsibility found that with many many budgets still to
discuss, most of their number had found other
diversions and there was no quorum. This was particularly frustrating for organization representatives who had sat through a great deal of inconsequential dribble, often interspersed with light moments when these mature people giggled over their
own “witty” comments and jokes. Perhaps considering the quality of their other actions, it is just
as well that our costly jokers dispersed early.
The Senate took time to review the budget of
a student group which in the first month of school
used up its whole first semester allotment. This
partly occurred because they overestimated their
income by a paltry 400 per cent with no corresponding drop in expenditures. After several Senators noted that this organization was not fulfilling
its intended purpose, and several others noted that
this irresponsibility was likely to be repeated again
(obligating more student money), the Student Senate unanimously censored this organization by
doubling its budget. A truly amazing action to be

P«9« Fi»»

The Spectrum

fi

h

i

UUAB President
Harold Bob
2nd V.P. of UUAB

Raps anti-Brown letter
To the Editor:

The letter of K. E. Bress in Oct. 10’s Spectrum
has disastrous consequences for those acting toward
social change.
The reason Mr. Bress will not attend the antiwar demonstration in Washington is because H.
Rapp Brown, an advocate of violence, will be present at a march which urges peace. This is an assertion that peaceful ends require peaceful means,
and it can be argued against with the following

points.

First of all, the achievement of an end does not
necessitate means which seem to be consistent with
it. The citizens of the U. S., for the most part, endorse the most brutal violence ever perpetrated.
This goal (of those who profit from the violence)
was not arrived at by violently forcing the American public to accept it; it was brought about by
subtle propagandizing and verbal lies. Thus the
imposition of violence does not require violence,
and similarly, bringing about peace does not necessarily require peaceful

means.

Indeed, circumstances can necessitate the use
of violence to achieve peace. Given a state where
a group of violent people will not give up their
practices and are prepared to defend them by
force, the only possible way of stopping them may
be through force of arms.
If Mr. Bress’s entire family and all his friends
were lined up and about to be shot by a madman,
and Mr. Bress was 100 yards away with a rifle,
and the only way to prevent the murder of all these
beloved, innocent people was to shoot the madman
(not necessarily killing him), Mr, Bress would have
to agree that pulling the trigger of his rifle would
be the only correct alternative—in fact, the only
morally responsible action. It he did not, I think
we all would condemn him, and that he also would
probably place the burden of the deaths upon himself. Violence in self defense, or violence against
an exploiter, is qualitatively different from violence in the interest of exploitation.
So Rapp Brown’s statements are not, in themselves, ridiculous and should not be scorned.
In staying home from the march, Mr. Bress
is employing the very logic he dislikes in others,
e g., Rapp Brown, The criticism of the use of force
includes an abhorrence of imposing one’s ideas
on others, yet in not participating in the demonstration, Bress is saying that everyone must agree
with his point of view or he will not work with
them. This is totalitarianism far worse than anything attributable to Brown. Brown isn't staying
home because many liberals will be in Washington.
The march is open to all opposed to the war.
The anti-war movement is the only force opposed
to the. war and therefore must be supported. This
country will not come to its senses as Bress hopes;
it must be brought to its senses. Whatever this requires, we must do it.
Carl Ratner

the resistance
by Martin Guggenheim

—

There are very real substantial actions being
a group of people throughout the

pursued by
uuizauon in

wasmngion this Saturday,

a

great

num

ber of Americans will be protesting against Ameri
can foreign policy both verbally and physically.

■ri

Yesterday was the official day for resisting
the War and the draft for the nation. Throughout
the country, in Boston, New York, Chicago, San
Francisco. Oakland. Ithaca and several other cities,
a resistance
that is, a direct confrontation with
the Selective Service System, was made.
—

PEACE

[/lAJutyQM/lai dieses line i
"I'm through marching
itself up!"

—

It is not my intention to advise anyone as to
the correct course of action for himself. In this
area of moral responsibility, it is senseless to
have
any other person dictate a mode of action which
inevitably must be made by one’s conscience.
The people resisting, however, are acting courageously. The intent of the act is to confront the
crisis in the United States and to raise the question
of the legality of the Draft itself. In order to do
this, they have decided that demonstrating or mere
verbalization of their dissent is no longer enough.
In short, their philosophy is that if you are opposed to the War then you are opposed to the war
unequivocally.

I've decided to let the world blow

sure.

The actions of this year’s Senate (alternating
irresponsible action with none at all) are endangering the total scope of Student Activities on this
campus. It is time the student body became aware
of his situation. It is time for the student body to
react against it.
Errol Craig Sull

—the sham

the gadfly
by Mark Schneider

There are a number of serious questions which
have been and may again be raised in the areas
of when does a person become in fact responsible
for his government's actions. I am not willing to
confront that particular problem at this time. The
important thing to keep in mind is that there are
people willing to resist. There are people who
are willing to go to jail because they do not like
the status quo. There are people who feel guilty
for not resisting.

A rather late but, nevertheless, serious effort
to resist the War has been made on this campus
and in this city. Last Friday a rally was held in
front of Norton to discuss the War. After that
rally a meeting look place on the third floor of
Norton in order to plan the actual resistance which

Yesterday may well have marked a significant turning would exist.
point in the development of the American temper and spirit,
It was fell, and I believe wisely so, that not
if not its politics. The 600 to 1500 men across the nation enough publicity was given to the movement and,
who resubmitted their draft cards and severed all ties with so, in spile of the official day to resist (Monday)
its resistance on Wednesday,
their local board until the end of the Vietnam war represent Buffalo would stage actually
Oct. 18. What will
occur that day, is a
a rediscovery of the most illustrious moments in our history, rally will begin in the morning and continue until
from Nathan Hale and the Boston Tea Party to Thoreau’s about two o’clock.
simple act of tax refusal.
At that time, everyone who so desires will go
Despite the unfortunate fact that many people sincerely down to the Federal Building on Ellicott St.
grieved by our Vietnam tragedy hold such radical disobedi- and return their draft cards. It is not an easy decisence to be unpatriotic, or merely ineffective, it is a brilliant, ion to risk imprisonment. Do not for a moment
think that when you sec a person who goes to jail
daring political stroke.
people
willing
The Administration, which
values power and stability above
all, now finds these ends threatened. Can Johnson and Hershey
afford to draft these people as
delinquents, or arrest them for
non-possession of the card, or
arrest them for refusing induction? If they crack down the
resisters will mount strong demonstrations or disruptions at induction centers. There will be
public outcry against the reason
for all the commotion . . . the
war.
An administration that
needs to hold its people in check
by fear of arrest will be criticized by its opponents as Machiavellian or Fascist.
If the administration chooses
to play down these violations, it
faces the snowballing of this
movement to avalanche proportions. While I have offered statistics from the National Lawyers
Guild indicating a stern govern
ment response thus far (100 convictions) the Quaker Committee
for CO's finds only 46 convictions.
The experience of the Cornell organizers of the April 15 card
burning is that there has been
FBI harassment but little else.
As organizer Lewis Zippin put it
“They’re scared stiff of this tactic. Either way, they lose.”
A deep sense of urgency moves
the resisters particularly at this
time, because as unpopular as
the war is, chances remain slim
for American withdrawal, even
after 1968. North Vietnam and
perhaps the NLF seem to be
toughening negotiation demands
and attitudes.
A recent statement in the official North Vietnamese newspaper
quite reasonably said the U.S.

for a belief such as these
arc
to do,
that they do so without any mixed feelings or quescan expect little from them in
tions in their own minds.
return for a bombing stoppage.
("Reasonably" because: “The
These people have, just as you, been socialized
guerillas arc obviously not being
as Americans. They have, initially, the same hangreinforced or supplied from North ups about breaking the law. Yet they have chosen
Vietnam or China. They depend to break it. This is something which should, miniprimarily on what they can cap
mally, cause all of us to think.
Gen, Paul D. Harkins,
ture”
As 1 have said, 1 do not feel the right to dictate
VietHead of U.S. Operations in
nam, March 1963. As of 1965. to anyone what the correct action is; however, I
do feel proper in saying that if you do oppose the
when the bombing began, the Dc
war you owe these people your complete support.
fense Department had no evidence of Northerners in the If you do feel that the war is immoral, then recognize that you are profiting from that immorality.
South. We had captured only 179
Communist bloc made weapons, And furthermore, in this instance you are now benefitting from these persons’ conviction.
but 15,100 altogether.)
Though the recent NFL pro
I do not say that this is necessarily evil, but
gram is unbelievably moderate,
merely that you should at least show your support
they have experienced nothing
of one side. This is too serious an age; this is too
but betrayal of their past negofinal an era; this is too encompassing an involvetiations. In 1946 while Ho was ment, to shy away from any response. If you oppose
finalizing independence agreethe war please show up tomorrow and let it be
ments with the French, they
known. Go down to the Federal Building and tell
pulled a Pearl Harbor on him by
all the world that you arc not proud of what
shelling Haiphong and recapturare doing in Vietnam and that you are proud of
1954
Diem
ing their colony. In
the stand that your fellow Americans are willing
of
the
Geneva
made a mockery
to take.
Agreements and jailed or killed
any NFL fighters he could. In
There are all kinds o( courage. Now is the
Short, history has twice taught time to search our hearts and do the most couragWest
the NLF and Ho that the
eous thing possible.
is not to be trusted. This was recently spelled out to 40 American-radicals by NLF people at a
—

conference in Czechoslovakia.
To America, this means that
even if we “dump Johnson in
’68” a strong peace candidate
must be found, or the NLF will
not listen. And if the draft resisters and “Dump Johnson" people are crushed, w&lt;_ will continue
wasting $390 billion and loosing
100,000 casualities a year Remember, “The major part of the
U.S. military task can be completed by the end of 1965”—
McNamara, Oct. 1963.

The Spectrum's pages for

Editorials

&amp;

Opinions

It is the policy of The Spectrum to report the
news fully anil impartially in the news pages,
to express the opinions of the newspaper only
in the editorial pages and to publish all sides
of important controversial issues.
'Without

expression,

freedom of expression is meaningless."

�Tuesday, October 17, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* Six

Science Foundation to give fellowships Police seek suspects
in East Village deaths
Special to The Spectrum

WASHINGTON, D.C.—The Na

vise the National Science Foundation this year in the selection of
candidates for the Foundation’s
program of graduate and regular
postdoctoral fellowships.

Panels

of scientists appointed by the Research Council will evaluate applications of all candidates. Final
selections will be made by the
Foundation, with awards to be announced on March 15, 1968.
Fellowships will be awarded
for study in the mathematical,
physical, medical, biological, engineering, and social sciences, including the history and philosophy of science. Awards will not be
made in clinical, education, or

business fields, nor in social
work, diplomacy, history, or law.

the United States and in certain

foreign countries.

The annual stii

mds for Grad-

college seniors, graduate students

working toward a degree, post-

doctoral students, and others with
equivalent training and experience. All applicants must be citizens of the United States and will
be judged solely on the basis of
ability.
Applicants for the graduate
awards will be required to take
the Graduate Record Examinations designed to test scientific
aptitude and achievement. The
examinations, administered by the
Educational Testing Service, will
be given on January 20, 1968,

at designated centers throughout

Village hippies last week for two more suspects in the mufders of a wealthy Connecticut teen-ager and her boyfriend
Three men already have been arrested.

for the first year level; $2600 for
the intermediate level; and $2800
for the terminal level. The basic
annual stipend for Postdoctoral
Fellows is $6500. Dependency allowances and allowances for tuition, fees, and limited travel will
also be provided.

Mayor John Lindsay warned that the fatal bludgeoning
Sunday of Linda Fitzpatrick, 18-year-old spice heiress from
Greenwich, Conn., and Leroy Groovy Hutchinson, 21 of Central Falls, R.I., could have been expected in the sociological
climate of the lower East Side area.

Further information and application materials may be obtained
from the Fellowship Office, National Research Council, 2101 Constitution Avenue, N.W&gt;, Washington, D.C. 20418. The deadline
for the receipt of applications for
graduate fellowships is Dec. 8,
1967, and for regular postdoctoral
fellowships, Dec. 11, 1967.

“There’s a very serious problem whenever there’s a tragedy
like this,” the mayor told news“It’s the problem of the
disenchantment of young people,
largely in their teens. They have
come from the suburbs to the city
to give expression to themselves.
If they congregate in the East
men.

Village it is because they find
a commonness there.”

Police said Hutchinson, who
had a minor police record, had
turned to selling marijuana, LSD
and Methedrine to support himself. He had befriended Miss Fitzpatrick, an artistic girl who made
occasional sorties to the East Village from her Greenwich home.

Alleged acid party
An autopsy showed Miss Fitzhad been raped four
times but whether she had been
using narcotics was not immediately established. Police alleged
an LSD party was in progress on
the night of the murders in a
basement room adjoining the
boiler room where the victims’
bodies were found.
Arrested on homicide charges
were bearded Donald Ramsey,
26-year-old ex convict, and Thomas Dennis, 25, both Negroes and
residents of the East Village. Dennis was nicknamed “The Mayor
of Tompkins Square Park,” the
focal point of hippie love-ins and
demonstrations last summer.
Fred Wright, 31, superintendent of the building where the
murders took place, was held on
$50,000 bond on a charge of raping a 25-year-old woman in the
Police
building last Saturday.
said the two cases were “connected,” but did not explain how.
patrick

Possible syndicate link

Authorities said Ramsey, who
claims to belong to the Yoruba
blood-sacrifice sect, said three
other men were in the boiler
room when Miss Fitzpatrick was
raped and all had taken LSD. He
allegedly admitted smashing Hutchinson’s head with a brick.
East Village dwellers claim narcotics syndicates were after Hutchinson because he sold drugs

at cost to help out impoverished
friends. At least five drug-connected murders have occurred recently in the area in spite of
heavy police surveillance.

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��.

Tuesday, October 17, 1967

The Spectrum

Provost Larabee discusses need
depa
University
for
by Linda Klatsky
Spectrum

Staff Reporter

“The administration shouldn’t
be a burden or bureaucratic. It
should make it possible for people to do their work, their best
work.”
This comment was made by Dr.
Eric A. Larabee, provost of the
Faculty of the Arts and Letters
in a recent interview.

ance. He claimed, ‘‘We have to
aim toward getting the person
who is a teacher, scholar, and
artist, for he is the kind of person we want the students to be-

come.”

Concerning future develop-

ments, Dr. Larabee said, ‘‘We will
be starting, as soon as we can

things.”

Integration of faculties

Dr. Larabee said that the mod-

He discussed the desire of university officials for more unity

ern language department feels it
is too large and has expressed

desire

smaller

\

for

division

and integration of their faculties. He stated, “We don’t want
rigid divisions in the departments and faculties.” The Arts
and Letters faculty, of which he
is provost, wants to have a closer
relationship with the Engineering and Applied Sciences faculty and the Natural Science and
Mathematics faculty.

into

departments.

When the change is completed
there will be three smaller departments, French, Spanish and
German. The Italian division will
be associated with the Spanish
department and the Slavic languages will be associated with the

'German

“One of the reasons is that
characteristically in most archi-

tectural schools, the architects
and designers are organized into
war and camps. It is then very
difficult for the student to get
a balanced overall view of

division of the Modern
Language department into
three new departments and the
creation of a school of architecture were also discussed.
The

the

Dr. Larabee considers its establishment an extraordinary opportunity because he feels one of
the worst problems in this country is the problem of environment. He commented that “the
place to solve these problems is
the university, and at present
they are not being solved.

department.

Larrabee feels the science
and literary cult should be closer
to one another. “It is the duty of
the President and his colleagues
to decentralize the university and
allow people to make their own
decisions further down the line.
I think he would like to do his
job by persuading rather than by
giving orders. This implies that
the faculties will have to be
strong and self-governing,”
Dr,

These smaller divisions will be
free to grow and become departments in their own right.
—Gtena

Dr. Eric Larrabee

Emphasis on cinema

New Provost of the faculty of
Arts and Letters indicates up-

Dr. Larabee feels that individual departments at the University
should be brought up to the
scale of the English department.

coming departmental improve-

He said: “We ought to have a
strong department in theater
but we don’t.” He would also like
to see the American Studies division strengthened, with more
emphasis on the cinema. There
are now two courses in cinema
being taught by the English department and two by the Art

a school of Architecture which
will consist of three joint faculties. They will be the faculty of
Engineering and Applied Sciences, the Social Sciences and Administration faculty, and the faculty of Arts and Letters. It may
be called a School of Environmental Design and is expected to
Contain many new features.”

department.

In view of the University and
its quality of instruction, he feels
there should be three things
going on simultaneously; teaching, scholarship, and perform-

ments.

U. of Toronto students initiate
birth control education service
The student adminisTORONTO, Canada (CUP-CPS)
trative council at the University of Toronto has endorsed a
birth control education program to be run by a group of
—

They have been distributing contraceptive information

to anyone asking for it and referring inquiries to the Planned

Parenthood Association and Toronto doctors who have agreed
to co-operate.
adian university with such a proThe council’s president, Tom
gram. Carleton University’s chaplain says there was a similar club
on the campus and there was no

Faulkner, thought he might face
jail as a result of the council’s
action, since it is against the law
in Canada to sell or dispose of
any instructions “intended or represented as a method of pre-

trouble from either university
authorities or the law.

But Ontario Attorney General
Arthur Wishcrt said: “I have not
thought of talking action in this

University, Long
York, last year.

venting conception.”

matter.”

Toronto is not the first Can

Court examines
draft card law
The
WASHINGTON, (UPI)
Supreme Court agreed last week
to decide the constitutionality of
1965 law making it a federal of
fense for a person to burn his
draft card.
The court will hear arguments
on the issue later this term in a
Boston case. The 1st U. S, Circuit
Court of Appeals there invalidated the law last April 10.

Such clubs have also been
formed on U.S, campuses, as
well. The first was at Hofstra

Island.

New

Although many student groups
the U.S. have pressed for
health services to give out birth
control pills, a survey of 315
in

health services last year showed
that only one in 25 campus clinics will give pills to unmarried
women and 55 per cent will not
prescribe the pill under any cir-

cumstances.

CONTACT

—

WEARERS!

The lower court decision was
appealed by both the Justice Department and David P. O’Brien,
20, of Framingham, Mass., who
was convicted under the law in
Boston Federal Court in 1966.
He also commented, “It is very
O’Brien appealed because even
stimulating to work with this though the Appeals Court struck
group of people. The spirit of down the law, it upheld his concooperation is evident. We are viction. The court relied on a
all very conscious of the benefederal regulation requiring a
of us who are new are here bedraft registrant to carry his
fits of working together. Those card with him at all times.
cause we know it is that kind of
His case was returned to trial
place and a unique opportunity.” court for resentencing.

Correction

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Sept. 13 The Spectrum printed
the new bus schedules for the
Interim Campus. The schedule
headlines, indicating the place

Xerox Copies
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reversed.

Pag* Seven

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��Page Eight

Th

lints Charter,

sui

•

Tuesday, October 17, 1967

Spectrum

lies ballot

Undergraduates vote on Task Force tomorrow
the Academic Community priate appellate bodies.
will take place tomorrow.
2. In cases in which a student
The Spectrum has printed challenges a decision affecting
the Student Bill of Rights and him, due process requires: (a) that
the procedure for challenge be
the Faculty Bill of Rights in clearly
and publicly stated in
two previous issues. In this some convenient place; and, (b)
issue, the entire text of'the that the student be permitted to
Task Force Report appears, make his challenge directly, in
to the appropriate perin keeping with our policy of person,
son or governing body deciding
comthe
academic
informing
his case.
munity of controversial is3. The faculty shall establish
pes.
whereby
An IBM card ballot is inserted

at the last page of The Spectrum,
Undergraduates are asked to vote
on each article individually by
indicating “Yes” in box number
one of “No” in box number two.
Students wishing to comment
on a specific article should check
box number three in addition to
their yes or no vote. The comment must be prepared and typed

orderly procedure
student allegations of prejudice
or error in the awarding of grades
or the evaluation of progress
toward a degree may be reviewed
by competent academic authority.
an

4. Freedom from Disclosure.

All information which teachers
and other University personnel
acquire about the personal views,
convictions and political associations of students, or about their
disciplinary, emotional and social
problems, is confidential and
shall note be disclosed. Disciplinary actions which do not result
in dismissal shall not be posted
to permanent academic records
that are made available to outside parties.
A student’s permanent record
or any part thereof shall not be
released to any organization or
party outside the University without the explicit written consent
of the student.
The rights under this section
may be waived by the student
but no waiver shall be considered
1. Preface
valid unless stated by the student
in writing and any such waiver
The members of the academic shall only apply in those incommunity, which consists of stances specified by the student.
students, teachers, scholars, researchers and administrators, are
5. Freedom of Admission on a
collectively responsible for mainFair, Nondiscriminatory Basis
taining conditions under which
the creation, discovery, conservaAdmissions policies must not
tion and dissemination of knowledge may flourish. The following discriminate against individuals
statement sets out standards and on the basis of sex, marital status,
procedures under which this age, race, creed or national origin.
University facilities and services
obligation may be discharged.
shall be open to all students. The
2. Freedom of Expression.
University shall use its influence
in the community to ensure that
Students are free to speak puboff-campus housing, eating and
licly on any issue and to conduct
recreational facilities are open to
research or publish on any topic.
all of its students without disStudents are free to take reasoned
crimination.
to
or
exception
the data
views offered in any particular courses
of study.
6. Freedom of Organisation
and Association.
3. Freedom from Arbitrary or
Procedurally Unfair Actions.
Students have the freedom to
organize in order to promote
A student has the right to be
heard in any case in which he their common interests. Any such
is charged with misconduct and organization shall be recognized
the right to challenge any other upon the filing of a statement of
decisions which affect him. Stu1. Student organizations shall
dents have the right to be pronot be required to submit lists
tected against unjust grading and
of members other than current
evaluation due to incompetence, lists of officers; except that orerror or prejudice. Procedures
ganizations required to maintain
for hearing and challenge shall minimum grade averages for their
be in conformity with due promembers may submit current
cess of law.
membership lists for checking
grade averages.
1. In cases of alleged miscon2. Campus organizations, faciliduct, due process requires: (a)
that the student be given an opties and activities shall be open
portunity to discuss the alleged to all students without respect to
misconduct with the accuser and race, creed or national origin, exthe party formally initiating the cept for the possible limitation of
charge, before the formal charges sectarian organizations. Organizaare preferred; and (b) that the
tions and activities shall be open
student be informed in writing of in fact and not merely formally
all the charges against him; be open through the absence of represented with all the evidence strictive clauses.
to be used against him; be given
3. Students and student organsufficient time to prepare his izations shall be free to discuss
defense; be given the opportunity all questions of interest to them
to deny, refute and rebut the and to express opinions publicly
charges, assisted by an adviser or or privately without penalty, to
counsel; be given the right to promote the causes they support
have the hearings conducted by by distributing literature, circuan impartial judge or judges; and
lating petitions, picketing or takother disciplinary action for mising any other peaceful action on
conduct shall be imposed on a or off campus.
student unless it be imposed by
4. Any person invited by a stubeforehand and submitted with
the ballot tomorrow.
Only undergraduate students
will be allowed to vole. Students
must have I.D. cards with them
when handing in the ballot. Voting will be open to both fee-paying and non-fee paying students.
Polls will be located at Goodlounge, Norton
year
Central
lounge and tentatively at the
Political Science library on the
Interim Campus.
If a proposed article is disput
ed by a majority of the students,
the article and comments will be
submitted to a committee of Student Senators appointed by Ihp
Executive Committee of the Student Association.

dent

or

student

organization shall

be allowed to speak on campus;
the only controls which may be
imposed are those required by
orderly scheduling of the use of
space.

5. Students are free to organize
and join associations for educational, political, religious or cultural purposes The fact of affiliation with any intramural association, so long as it is an open affiliation, shall not of itself bar a
group from recognition.
6. A student organization shall
be free to choose its own faculty
adviser, but no organization shall
be forbidden because it does not
have a faculty adviser.

7.

Freedom to Establish and

Operate Student Government.

Student government must be a
fully representative self-government and free from arbitrary intervention in its affairs by the removal or suspension of its officers, the withholding of funds
or unilateral changes in the charter that defines its organization
and competence. The electorate
of such a government shall con-

sist of the entire student body.
As a constituent of the academic
community, the student government shall have clearly defined
means to participate in the administrative formulation and application of regulations affecting
student conduct. It also has the
right to participate in the formulation of institutional policy.

8. Freedom of
Student Publication.
Students have the freedom to
establish their own publications
and to conduct them free of censorship or of outside determination of content or editorial policy.

1. Editors and managers of
student publications shall be selected on the basis of competence,
in accordance with fair procedures.
2. Editors and managers shall
have independence of action during their term of office. They are
to be free of suspension or removal because of faculty, student,
administrative or public disapproval of editorial policy or content.

3. Students are free to distribute any publication on or off

campus.

4. Students have the freedom
to establish and conduct, without
institutional interference, publications that are not subsidized
by the University.

5. Student directors of campus
television and radio stations not
operated primarily for instruction purposes shall have freedom
of programming comparable to
that of the editorial staff of campus publications.

•pofTtobe voted on by students
next Wednesday.

Student comment must be written and typed beforehand, and

submitted with the ballot. The
comment can concern an amendment of the article, a proposal
for a new article, or a general
discussion of an individual topic.

In an attempt to inform the
University Community about the
Task Force which was started last
spring, the Spectrum is running

Larger Community.

Students have the rights of private citizens, and the exercise of
these rights on or off campus
shall not subject them to institutional penalties.

Violation of civil or criminal
law by a student shall not subject him to institutional sanctions
unless the infraction is also a
violation of University standards.
No student including those
employed by the University, shall
be required by the University to
swear or affirm any loyalty oath.
The Task Force on University
Policy will present its final re-

No faculty member shall be required by the University to swear
or affirm any loyalty oath.

15. Administrator's Bill of Rights

In their capacity as faculty
this second of three installments
administrators shall
of the text of the Charter for members,
have all the rights applicable to
the Academic Community.

10. Freedom of Expression
Faculty members are free to
speak publicly on any issue and
to conduct research or publish
on any topic.

11. Freedom from Arbitrary or
Procedurally Unfair Actions.

A faculty member has the right
to be heard in any case in which
he is charged with misconduct
and the right to challenge any
other decisions which affect him.
Procedures for hearing and challenge shall be in conformity with
due process of law.
1. In case of alleged misconduct, due process requires: (a)
that the faculty member be given
an opportunity to discuss the alleged misconduct with the accuser
and the party formally initiating
the charge, before the formal
charges are preferred; and (b)
that the faculty member be informed in writing of all the
charges against him; be presented with all the evidence to be
used against him; be given sufficient time to prepare his defense; be given the opportunity
to deny, refute “and rebut" the
charges, asisted by an adviser or
counsel; be given the right to
have the hearing conducted by an
impartial judge or judges; and be
given the right to appeal any
adverse decision.
2. In cases in which a faculty
member challenges a decision affecting him, due process requires:
(a) that the procedure for challenge be clearly and publicly
stated in some convenient place;
and (b) that the faculty member
be permitted to make his challenge directly, in person, to the

faculty members that are set forth
in this Charter.
In their administrative capacity,
administrators have all the rights
of faculty members as set forth

in this Charter, except where
these rights are clearly incompatible with their administrative
positions

or obligations.

16. Formulation of University
Policy.

No university policy, however
formulated, shall contravene the
basic freedoms expressed in Chapters I, II and III of this Charter.
University policy may be developed by the administration or
by the concurrent action of the
Faculty Senate and a council
broadly representative of all students. Policy developed by the
concurrent action of the Faculty
Senate and Student Council shall
take precedence over and supersede c o n tr a r y administrative
policy.

17. Safeguarding the Integrity

of Charter.
This Charter and the freedoms
and procedures it announces shall
be safeguarded by a University
Committee consisting of three
undergraduate students, two graduate students, three faculty members, and two administrators. Stud e n t undergraduate members
shall be elected through procedures established by the Student
Senate; the graduate student
members shall be elected through
procedures established by the
Graduate Student Executive Council; the faculty members shall be
elected through procedures established by the Faculty Senate; and
the administrators shall be appointed by the President. All
appropriate person or governing members shall
serve for a onebody deciding his case.
year term and may not be recalled.
The University Committee shall
12. Freedom from Disclosure.
make its own rules for the hearInformation about a faculty ing and disposing of cases, but it
member shall not be revealed to shall hear a case only upon an
application from a member of
non-university agencies or persons unless it is relevant to the the academic community alleging
that the Charter has been viofaculty member’s academic perlated. There shall be no appeal
formance or he specifically aufrom the University Committee
thorizes its revelation.
to any other University agency
or office.
13. Freedom of Self-Government.

Faculty

members

collectively
right to participate
democratically in the formulation
of educational policies at all
levels. Faculty members individually have the right to participate
democratically in the formulation
of educational policy in all the
academic units of which they are
members. All faculty members
have the right to be represented
in the Faculty Senate.

have the

9. Freedom to Enjoy Rights and
Assume Obligations of the

Violation qf civil or criminal
law by a faculty member shall
not subject him to institutional
sanctions unless the infraction is
also a violation of University
standards.

M. Freedom to Enjoy Rights and
Assume Obligations of the
Larger Community.
Faculty members have the
rights of private citizens, and
the exercise of these rights, on
or off campus, shall not subject
them to institutional penalties.

18. Amending the Charter.
This Charter may be amended
by a two-thirds vote of both the
Faculty Senate and Student Council and the ratification of the
President.

19. Interpretation of Charter.
This Charter shall be literally
construed to the end that the
purposes announced in the Preface shall be achieved. Official
Comments may be consulted in
construing the Charter, but in
case they conflict with the official
text, the latter governs.
20. Do you agroo in principle
with tho entire report?

�Tuesday, October 17, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* Nin*

Undergrads need broad study program Feldman named chairman
of psychology assembly

The Student Curriculum Planning Committee issued a
proposal Thursday concerning University College.

to take only five out of seven
basic requirements.

The proposal states that the University should limit the
student in specialization in the undergraduate years. It also
proposes that the student should take courses outside of his
major field, which should not be specified by the University
and should not be less than 72 hours.

Terry Keegan, chairman of the
committee, said that the student
should have an awareness of various —101 courses for—general

Various opinions were given
concerning this issue. In favor of
requirements, some members felt
that freshmen coming into the

gument was: If certain courses
were not required, would the
student take courses to give him
self a liberal eduaction?

University are not mature enough
to select courses which are best

Opposing these mandatory
courses, some committee members said that the University
should not have the authority
to set down prerequisites.
Several members thought that
the student should be required

for them.
It was also felt that basic distribution requirements are part
of a liberal education. The question posed in support of this ar-

knowledge.

Co-chairman Barry Tellman,
however, disagreed. He said he
could see no purpose in taking
a number of 101 courses in which
the student has no interest. He
feels that unless the student
plans to continue in a required
subject or area, it does nothing
for him.
Mr. Tellman also said that the
student becomes a “slave” to the
distribution requirements.

Law school representatives visit UB
for interviews with interestedstudents
This semester the State University of Buffalo is being visited
by representatives of several law

admission may contact Mrs. Charlotte Opler, pre law adviser at
78S Hariman Library. Appointments may also be made wth Mrs.
Opler by calling 831-3717.

schools. The purpose of these
visits is to provide an opportunity for those students interested in law study to discuss
various aspects of law school.

All interested persons are advised to watch bulletin boards,
The Spectrum and placement
bulletins for notices of interview
schedules.

Question of the week

Prominent law school representatives who have already interviewed students on campus
were Dr. Albert Niemeth, Dean
of Cornell Law School and Dr.
Melvin G, Schimm, Professor of
Law at Duke University.

Full MFC integration urged
You can answer the Spectrum

Question of the Week every Wednesday at the Information Desk

Scheduled to visit the campus
Oct. 24 is Professor Travis Lewin
of Syracuse University Law
School. He will be in Room 220
Norton Hall from 2 to 5 p.m. All
interested students are invited to
speak to Dr. Lewin.

onjSie first floor of Norton Hall.
Last week’s Question of the
There has been much
discussion concerning the relationship of the University night
school, Millard Fillmore College,
to the curriculum and programs
of the University. What are your
ideas on this matter?
The results were:
I think Millard Fillmore College should be:
1.—29% an entirely separate
degree-granting institution.
2. —6% a division of the UniWeek was:

On Oct. 31 Howard L. Greenberger, Assistant Dean of New

York University, will be available
for consultation every half hour
from 9:30 a.m. until noon in Nor
ton Hall.

Those wishing to discuss any
problems related to Law School

Dr. Marvin J. Feldman will be
the chairman Thursday and FrTday of a psychology symposium,
sponsored by the State University
of Buffalo’s Psychology Department. This assembly, “On Studies
in Psychotherapy and Behavioral
Change” will study research in

day in the Conference Theater.

At 1:30 p.m, Dr. Donald M.
Baer, head of the Division of
Child Development at the University of Kansas will speak on
"The Preparation of Poverty
Class Children for Middle Class
Public Schooling," in the Baird
Hall Auditorium, Dr. Baer is also
working on the problem of patterning behavior relative to reinforcements.

therapy.

The annual symposium series
is used to teach graduate students
and to keep the University informed about the latest developments in the field. This year,
three bchavioralists are featured

Dr. Thomas G. Stampfl of the
University of Wisconsin will
speak at 9 a m, Friday. His lecture will be "Avoidance Learning
and Psychopathology: Some Implications and Related Research

speakers.

The first lecture will be given
by Dr. Ogden R. Lindsley, of the
University of Kansas Medical Center, He will give a lecture en-

from the Behavioral Reference
of Implosive Therapy.”

titled “Precise Behavioral Management in Classroom and Home,"
Dr. Lindsley was formerly associated with Dr, B. F. Skinner, who
developed (he process of shaping
a person's behavior by simple reinforcements.

Dr. Stampfl's theory is that fears
can be removed, like conventionHowever, he
al behavioralists.
believes that the patient is best
treated by being subjected to
the thing he is most afraid of
rather than being lead to it by
gradual steps.
Dr. Feldman said that the series
will be open to the public. He
mentioned that unlike some of the
other open science lectures, it
can be understood by anyone who
has had as little as an introductory course in psychology.

This process, which entails re
warding a correct reaction and
not rewarding an incorrect reaction, is used by Dr. LindSlcy to
help schizophrenics toward recovery, and is being extended to
help teach children to read. The
lecture will be at 9 a m. Thurs-

versity offering courses only on
the freshman and sophomore

levels.
3.—9% a non-degree division
of the University offering courses
on all levels but with different
faculty and admissions policies

(its

present status).
4. —56% completely integrated
into the University with the same
admissions policies and faculty.
This week’s qeustion is:
What in your opinioin should

be the status of alcoholic beverages on campus?
1. Banned completely,
2. Just for special occasions,
3.

ENTIRE
STOCK

Beer only.

4. No restrictions.

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�Page' T*n

'The

Tuesday, October 17, 1967

The Spectrum

Threepenny Opera'

Brecht classic is interesting brew'
Favorite prostitute

by Richard Perlmutter
Spectrum

Staff Reporter

Who would have thought that the popular tune “Mack
the Knife” would have come from ah opera?
In Bertold Brecht’s “The Threepenny Opera”, the first
Studio Arena production of the season, vulgarity is mixed
with poignancy and the result is a most interesting brew.

In 1928 “The Threepenny Opera” opened in Berlin
where it astonished its viewers and cause a scandal.
Now the comedy has returned for a second stay in
Buffalo where it is creating
little controversy, but a lot of
satisfied patrons of the Studio Arena Theater.
The opera was adopted from
John Gay’s eighteenth century
play “The Beggar’s Opera.' German poet and playwright Bertolt
Brecht found a vehicle for his
proletariat philosophy in this
play and transformed it into
“The Threepenny Opera" with
Kurt Weill supplying the music.
The opera explores the humor
of the world of beggars, thieves,
and prostitutes. Brecht in pretending to lampoon the poor and
degenerate states of society, effectively satirizes the sources of
injustice and inequality.
Brecht takes us to the slums
of Soho in London at the time
of Queen Victoria. J. J. Peachum,
an entrepreneur of the slums
and his wife, a sotty, cantankerous old woman, open a small
shop designed to sell beggar’s
outfits
oufits of such quality
—

as to arouse pity in even the most
of Londoners. Alice
miserly
Beardsley gives an especially delightful performance as Mrs,
Peachum,

A
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)
phalanx of policemen swept
through the Haight-Ashbury district Monday and arrested 32 suspected juvenile truants, including
the 17-year-old son of Timothy
Leary,

The mass arrests of juveniles

brought charges from hippie elders that police are waging a war
to destroy their Haight -Ashbury
community.

The youngsters were hauled off
to Park Police Station in midafternoon. Eleven, including Dr.
Leary’s son, John, were released
when they convinced officers they
were over 18 or had completed
high school.
Of the 21 who were held, 12
admitted being runaways.
A team of policemen moved
down the Haight Street sidewalk
from Masonic Ave. to Golden

We are also introduced to the
famed and feared criminal Macheath (Grank Georgianna), better known as Mack the Knife. He
has married the beautiful and
naive Polly (Ann Bailey), much
to the displeasure of her parents,
the Peachums.

$*95
Sandwich
Sand
ALL YOU WANT
(Within Reason)

But then one of Queen Victoria’s messengers comes hopping
in on a broom and grant’s a royal
reprieve. Our hero rogue, Mack
the Knife, is not only spared his
life but also the title of Knight of
the Goiter is bestowed upon him
and he is awarded a castle at
Mucking on the Creek.

Slapstick

Mrs. Peachum attempts to dissuade her daughter from marry
ing the London louse and reprimands her for placing love before convenience in marriage.

The slapstick, low-brow humor
was an effective and entertaining method of conveying the bitterness that Brecht intended.

“Love” exclaims Mrs. Peach-

um, “why, it’s those threepenny

books you’ve been reading; that’s
where you get that nonsense.”
But the Peachums are not
prone to word; alone; they decide that their newly acquired
son-in-law should be hanged.
Then the conspiracy ensues. Macheath flees but not before paying a farewell visit to his favorite
whorehouse.

Gate Park. A paddy wagon followed to cart the young suspects
off to jail.
“It’s really frightening to see
something like this,” said Connel
Little, of San Diego.
Hippie leaders, at an emergency meeting at Happening House,
licked off a long series of police
actions which they said were de-

signed to drive them out of town.
The daylight raid_was an extension of similar police sweeps
carried out each night on Haight
Street since summer’s end.

Dr. Leary’s son was released to
the custody of a family friend,
a University of California pro-

A well-synchronized orchestration did a commendable job of
handling Kurt Weill’s catchy but

not too operatic tunes.

In “The Threepenny Opera”
Brecht has created a most unique
and unforgettable cast of char-

acters.

The play at the Studio Arena
Theater on Main St. continues
through October 28.

Call it what you want, New
School, Free University or Experimental Colege, the growing trend
among schools across the country
is the establishment of a school
separate from the regular university and thus able to be as unstructured as the students would
like.

Started at San Francisco, the
movement spread across the country, with the biggest institutions
at Chicago and the Free School
in New York City.
An

organizer for the New
School in San Francisco said at
the time: “We feel that we must
provide some intellectual basis
for what we are doing."

Dr. Leary said in New York
that his son had been living in
Berkeley for a month with his
full approval.
“This is the fourth time Jack’s
been arrested—just for being his
“Each time he's been acquit

Typically these institutions have
grown out of student protest and
represent a means of doing instead of talking.

At the current time, and devoid of this cathartic beginning*
there is a movement afoot to
start

an Experimental

College

KLEINHANS—WED., OCT. 25, 8:30 P.M.
By Overwhelming Public Apathy

We see Dylan readying for performance, fighting fans, fighting
boredom at pointless press parties
in expensive hotel rooms, being
interviewed (A Time reporter
asks, “Do you care about what
you sing?” and Dylan puts him
down by telling him exactly what
he thinks of Time and its readership), and relaxing with Joan
Baez and his arch-concert rival,
Donovan.

The attitude maintained by the
producers throughout the film is
pure Dylan. It shows him as he
really is, “one of the best, if not
the very best, portrait of a performing artist to be shown publicly,” according to Ralph Gleason, critic for the San Francisco
Chronicle. “The most effective

at State University of Buffalo,

for the same purposes.

Andrea Roth, secretary of the
Student Association and chairwoman of the committee to investigate the possibilities said
that the purpose of the college
would be to have “courses set up
in which topics are those that
the students are interested in:
learning for learning’s sawe.”

Time, place given
The courses will be structured
only to the extent that a time and
place will be designated for them.
Beyond that, the content and direction of the courses are up to

WITH THE
ROYAL
P.D.Q. BACH
FESTIVAL
ORCHESTRA

The Peaceable Kindom
Room at the

(1807-1742)?
ntrtr*
.

set* music back several hundred
TICKETS AT:

years"

NORTON HALL TICKET OFFICE
■ Adminion:

Bob Dylan
appears in "Don't Look Back"
rank with that small number of
totally contemporary films that
include the Beatle flies, Morgan,
Blow Up, and a very few others.”

Orth. $4.00, 3.S0; Bale. $3.50, 3.00, 2.SOWUB

chological drama, democracy to
day, 20th century music, techniques of the revolutionary theater, new student left, stock mar-

ket and creative process.
Courses

Also, anarchy, yoga, art history,
contemporary economics, industrial sociey, political and social
forms, language and perception,
revolution as a political process,
primitive society and the laws
and constitutional problems in
will be the materials needed for
civil liberties.

in the cc arses.

currently being sought for the
courses.

The only cost for the student
the course. An operating budget
for initial expenses is expected
to be requested from the student
government.

Anyone, student, faculty, staff,
or city resident, who feels himself qualified may apply for the
job of instructor. Students may
be any member of the Univerversity or city who wishes to
participate.

Committee members include;
Miss Roth, Brian Alexander, Dennis Conrad, Phil Cooke, Miriam
Fuchs, Nicholas Linden, Meryl
Markowitz, Cynthia Nihart, Suzanne Rovner, Ellen Schull ? Neal
Slatkin, Robert Weiner and

the instructor and the students
Instructors are

guitar

playing,

glass

blowing,

sexual response and sewing.

Also, drugs, the conscientious
objector, urban ghettoism, psy-

PETER SCHICKELE

� � �

1375 DELAWARE AVE.
TT 6-9281

tions.

Courses currently being considered are: weaving, cooking,

Oina and Relax in

“Oldest Steak House in W JV.Y."

...

and to creativity. It will quickly

The film is a continuously engrossing and revealing portrait of
Dylan and his milieu, an account
month-long concert tour
of
through England made last year
by Dylan and Joan Baez. Although
Dylan sings some of his biggest
hits in the picture, (“Hattie Carroll,” “The Times They Are A’Changin,’ “Gates of Eden,” etc.)
“Don’t Look Back” is more than
a series of concert hall presenta-

ted.”

U S. CHOICE TOP SIRLOIN

BLACKSMITH
SHOP

■

presentation of the reality of contemporary youth attitudes that T
a poem to life
have ever seen

Experimental College idea studied

fessor.

old man’s son,” he said.

WAB STEM

Before his expected demise,
Mackey relates all his attitudes
and philosophy in “The Call
From the Grave.” His thoughts
even turn to the time Cleopatra
fell on her asp.

Bob Dylan’s “Don’t Look Back,”
an up-tight look at one of Amurlea’s top folk rock celebrities,
opens its Western New York engagement at the Circle Art Theater, this Thursday, Oct. 19.

”

Mack the knife

Haight police arrest Leary's
son, others as juvenile truants
—

Lutes), his famoney before
fidelity and informs the police
that Mackey is there. Before the
trek to prison Macheath and
Jenny perform the highlighting
“Tango Ballad.’’ He then engages in romantic dialogue with
Lucy Brown (no relation), but
soon it’s off to the gallows.
Jenny (Betty

vorite whore, puts

Documentary reveals
true Dylan personality

Marge Zinsky.

Comments are welcomed by
the committee. Miss Roth asked
that all people interested in the
Experimental College program
contact her in the Senate office.

�Tuesday, October 17, 1967

The Spectrum

Studio Two' to be staged
The Studio Arena Theatre in
Buffalo, New York, announced
last week that “Studio Two,” a
second series of plays, (besides
the eight-play season at the Main
Street Theatre) is being initiated
at the Studio Arena Theatre
School building, at 305 Lafayette
Avenue,

Five professionally produced
plays will be offered in the 275
seat theater at Lafayette and
Hoyt Sts. This series of plays
is designed to augment the Studio Arena season by bringing an

additional aspect of the theater
to the Buffalo area.
The first play of the series,
“The Queen and the Rebels,” by
Ugo Betti, opens Oct. 20 to 22, 27
at 8:30
to 29, and Nov. 3 to

w

jJ./

NO

FOR

Maurice Breslow, director of
the Theatre School, will direct,
and the company of actors is
made up of the professional Arena Theatre touring group that
performs
for Buffalo Public
Schools on the Title I, Curtain
Call 'Project.

Pig) El«v«fl

UtiJOST

_

your flag...
your future

VIETNAM

20 compete in queen contest
More than 20 State University
of Buffalo girls will compete for
the title of Parent-Fall Weekend
Queen. The Queen will be presented at a dance Oct. 28 after
two eliminations. The first one
takes place tomorrow night in
the Dorothy Haas Lounge, and
the second occurs Oct. 25.
The first elimination will be
closed to the public. It will give
the girls a chance to become informally acquainted with the
judges. Nine girls will be chosen
as semi-finalists at this time on
the basis of poise, personality
and beauty, according to Christine Scappator, the chairman of
the Queen’s Committee for this
annual UUAB sponsored event.
The nine finalists will then advance to the final elimination

p.m. in the
Room as the
model clothes
eyed Shape, a

store.

Millard Fillmore
nine contestants
from The Cockwomen's clothing

The finalists will be judged on
poise, beauty, posture responses
to specific questions and personality.
The Queen will be crowned at
the dance at the Parkway Inn
in Niagara Falls. She will receive one dozen of her favorite
roses, and she and the runnersup will receive trophies.

All the girl watchers on campus will be able to recognize
the nine semi-finalists since each
will wear a flower in her hair
from Oct. 19 until Oct. 28,

Liar:' storof

'Billy
a

Oct. 25. A fashion show will be
presented to the public at 3:30

rebellious dreamer

Liar,” this week’s attraction at the Conference Theater, is the story of a rebellious
dreamer who escapes reality by
lying and inventing fantasies.
“Billy

Billy, played by Tom Courtenay (“The Loneliness of the Long
Distance Runner,” and “Doctor
Zhivago”), is a clerk in an under-

taker’s office. His fantasies, which
become reality on screen, star him
as a revolutionary, a writer, a
lover, and a president of the im-

jn

the US* ARMY

—UPI Telephoto

Another anti-war

demonstration

Both Rutgers and Princeton University students
were among more than 75 pickets who marched
in front of an firmed Forces Induction Center
last week in Newark, N. J. They were protesting
the draft.

Workshop to perfor
Oct. 17, 18 in Baird Hall
The magic of the circus, 'the
tragedy of war and the thanksgiving of the psalms are among
the moods which will be expressed by the members of State
University of Buffalo’s Dance
Workshop at a Dance Theater
Oct. 17 and 18.

of the gestures seen in the drawed by American modern dance
capturing their three great Charles Wcidman. Weiddimensional quality in space.
man made (he dance as a tribute
The dreams result in lies, such
to his partner, Doris Humphrey,
In the second premiere, "Ziras being engaged to two girls
(hemes of
at the same time. When he finally
kus,” Mr. Wilson likewise does and based it upon
not intend to tell a story but to movement which are the structure
has the chance to leave his drab
“evoke the particular mood and of her approach to modern dance.
existence for the excitement of
charm of the circus’’ with taped In recreating 'Waltzes," which
London, he doesn’t; he’s more seprogram, which will take
The
circus
sounds, a colorful set and she was taught by one of its orighis
dream-world.
cure in
inal dancers, Miss Kirpich used a
place in Baird Hall at 8:30 p.m
dancers portraying clowns, a bare
nights, features four consystem of combined notation
both
a
and
of
is
the
back
lion
tamer
ballerina,
A highlight
the film
temporary works choreographed a trapeze artist making a
collage called Labanotation which records
walk-on role of Julie Christie,
by Miss Billie Kirpich, University
dance movements by symbols. The
big top atmosphere.
which rocketed her to fame.
of
dance director, and Mr, John Wilwork will be performed by eight
The film was directed by John
program
on
piece
The
third
the
original members of the Dance
son of the Julliard School of
Schlesinger (“A Kind of Loving”).
a
Music who is currently visiting is repeat performance of “Close- Workshop.
up,”
performed
which
was
at
the
at the University.
The following dancers from
The two works choreographed Workshop’s first Dance Theater the University Workshop arc perChoreographed
by
year.
Miss
last
by Mr. Wilson are premieres.
forming: Susan Ackerman, Laura
Kirpich, “Closeup” features the
“Chorales,” which uses the muBarwicke,
Ann Marie Chembri,
of
the
modern Polish com
sic of Charles Ives, is comprised music
Yvonne James, DebCrespo,
John
poser Panderecki,
of six movements: Three “Harbie Hirsch, Phyllis Morrison, Subabysit for children three to five
vest Home Chorales,” the 67lh
Miss Kirpich described “Close- san Matoba, Joanne Robinson. Suyears old. They will try to stimuand 100th psalms, and “Serenity.” up” as a dance about a civilian san Sausncr, Linda Swiniuch, CarIn interpreting Ives’ music via
population in wartime. “Interwov
ole Weiner, Carol Welsh, Bruce
late these youngsters’ interests
cn into the sound and chorcogra
dance, Mr. Wilson said he is not
Kaiden, Ava Kaplan and Joseph
and attempt to increase their imitating a story
in “mime-like phy is film and projected slides Kessler. Miss Kirpich and Mr.
awareness of the world around
to bring closer together the dancmovement, but illustrating the
Wilson will also appear in the
nursery
ers and the people who arc sufferthem. This non-profit
sub-texts of the psalms. Under
four dances. Music will be per
neath are qualities and praises of ing from war,” she said,
formed live by members of the
school will use games, toys, readUniversity’s Music Department.
A first for the University danc
ings and field trips as aids in thanksgiving.”
ers, although it is not a premMr. Wilson said he took the
teaching children.
visual design for “Chorales” from iere, will be the reconstruction
and performance of “Waltzes”
drawings of Michelangelo and
Thursday is the day. to volunwhich was originally choreograph
You're Invited
Leonardo Da Vinci, using some
teer for work at the Day Care
to the
Center. A meeting will be held
at 4 p.m. in Room 246 Norton
aginary state of Ambrosia.

ings and

Day Care Center needs volunteers
A new Community Aid Corps
program—a Day Care Center
“desperately needs volunteers.”
Miss Ronnie Witkowsky, program
head for the Center, said it will
operate in Buffalo’s Ellicott disrict area from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
five days a week.
—

Miss Witkowsky wants people
who can work any day, Monday
through Friday, for at least two
hours.

Workers will do

more

than

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Summer and year ’round jobs for young people 17 to 40. For
illustrated magazine with complete details and applications
send $1.00 to The International Student Information Service (ISIS),
133, rue Hotel des Monnaies, Brussels 6, Belgium.

"Wig Party"

We are having a showing
of the finest imported hair
pieces direct from California.
These will be made available to those attending the
Wig Party at Special Discount Prices.
FOR RESERVATIONS
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�Pag*

Twelve

Tuesday, October 17, 1967

The Spectrum

campus releases...
All senior English majors interested in information about graduate work in English should attend a meeting at 3 p.m. today in Room
146 Diefendorf Hall. Members of the English Department will speak
lo

am

The Undergraduate Medical Society will have a coffee hour with
the Society on Intcrnationaal Medicine and interns from Kenmore
Mercy Hospital at 8 p.m. today in Room 329 Norton Hall.

I.

The Spanish Club will sponsor a theater party at 7 p.m tomorrow
at the Circle Art Theater, Bailey and Berkshire. “The Exterminating
Angel” and “To Die in Madrid,” both in Spanish, will be narrated by
John Giulgud. All tickets will be $1,00. Reservations for the showing
can be made through Aida Camacho, president, at 834-7386; Martha
Levine, secretary, at 836-1501, or Tomas Arana, treasurer, at 894-4938.

WASH, DRY, WlARI

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_

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Professor Hazard Adams from the University of California at Irving will speak about graduate programs in English, comparative literature, and creative writing at 11 a.m. tomorrow in Room 210 Foster
Hall. All interested undergraduate seniors are invited to attend.

=1\~Fft
//'A

s4.00

Mr. James Flanagan, Chief Engineer in the Department of Rockets and Propulsion at Bell Aerosystems, Niagara Falls, will be guest
speaker at the meeting of the American Institute of Aeronautics and
Astronautics tomorrow. The meeting will be held from 4 to 5 p.m. in
Room 362 Acheson Hall.
His topic will be “The State of the Art.” He will also speak on
the future problems in rocketry and propulsion. All information given
will be of a non-technical nature and everyone is invited to attend.

Reg. Value $5.99
The dash of fashion . . done in
easy-care nylon. With zip-back.
Available in all the newest colors.
30-40.
.

Dr. Kenneth N. Waltz, a leading authority in the field of international relations, will lecture at 3:30 p.m. Friday in Room 233 Norton
Hall. The lecture is sponsored by the State University of Buffalo’s
Center for International Security and Conflict Studies.
Dr. Waltz is professor of politics at Brandeis University. He
is the author of two books and numerous articles on Foreign policy.
The lecture will be open to the public.

SAVE ALMOST $2

Bonded Orion Acrylic
twill slip-on-pants

Sole

Dr. Claude E. Welch, dean of University College, will speak on
"New Directions in Undergraduate Education” at 3 p.m. Tuesday in
Room 231 Norton Hall. His speech will concern changes in University College. It is the sixth in a series of “University Reports” held
to inform students, faculy, and staff of the policies, progress and
plans of the University.

4
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Tha Social Work Club's Westminster Companion Program signup sheet is posted on the Student Senate bulletin board outside Room

205 Norton Hall. A coffee hour with parents has been tentatively
scheduled for 4 p.m. Oct. 29 at Westminster House. All those who
have not contacted their companions or have not yet been notified
of their companion may contact Richard Segan, 836-5980.

The Sociology Club will hold a general meeting to discuss club
activites for the current semester at 4 p.m. Thursday in Room 332
Norton Hall. All members and any other interested persons are
urged to attend.
*.

Mr*. Sarah Reed, principal of Co-operative Pre-school of the
Cerebral Palsy Association, will be guest speaker preceding the
business meeting of the Student Physical Therapy Association. The
meeting will be held at 7 p.m. tomorrow in Room 244 Norton Hall.
All H. R. P. students and faculty are welcome. Refreshments will

be served.

Vietnam Summer' program
seeks anti-war support
During the past four months, a
national movement, Vietnam Summer, has brought the issue of war
in Southeast Asia directly to the
American people.

The purpose of the program has
been to present the public with
factual information concerning
the Vietnamese conflict, and to
seek greater public support for
the anti-war movement.
The project was originally proposed by a group of Harvard University students in the spring of
this year. On April 23, Martin
Luther King made a public statement in support of the Harvard
students’ proposal.
Locally, groups of about twenty
Vietnam Summer volunteers canvassed the city of Buffalo and
suburban neighborhoods. Going
from house to house, the workers
sought

the occupant’s feelings

to-

ward the war, and asked a series
of questions to determine the person’s knowledge of the subject.
People were also asked to sign
a petition calling on local congressmen to conduct an open
neighborhood hearing concerning
the Vietnamese war. Further information was sent to all persons
who expressed interest in the anti-war movement.
The volunteers claim they found

considerable dissatisfaction with
America’s present Vietnam policy.
The complaint heard most often
was that the money being spent
on the war could be put to better
use in solving our own country’s
problems.

The

local

Vietnam

Summer

group has now become active in
the election campaign of Dr, Herman F. Cole, peace candidate for

councilman-at-large.

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�Tuesday, October 17, 1967

The Spectrum

Bull yearlings overpower
Ithaca College frosh 48-0
Spectrum

Staff Reporter

The State University of
Buffalo freshman football
team could do no wrong last
Friday as they crushed the
Ithaca College frosh 48-0.
Coach Stock’s team looked
like something out of Green
Bay, showing a powerhouse
running attack, and a tenacious defense in evening its
season’s record at 2-2.

Barney Woodward got the rout
started as he returned the opening kick-off 42 yards. Five plays
later, the Bulls starting quarterback Bob Stiscak, took the ball
over for Buffalo’s first score.
On the following set of downs,
the Ithaca offense stalled against
the strong Buffalo defense, This
was the situation all afternoon
as Ithaca gained only 63 yards
offensively. Defensive ends, Donner and Goeckel, were constant
visitors in the Ithaca backfield.
The defensive secondary highlighted by Moresco, Zalar and
La Verdi blanketed the gridiron
as they picked off four of the
opposition’s passes.

In the

first half, the

Bulls’

running attack was unstoppable.
Collectively, the offensive

backs, Faller, Zeek and Wood-

Ptgt Thirteen

the spectrum of

rushing. The passing game, on
the other hand, did not jell until

the second half as the quarter-

backing trio of Shine, Perry and
Stiscak passed for 18 yards and

two touchdowns. One of these

touchdowns was scored on a dramatic 73 yard pass from Shine
to Zelmanski.
John Faller, one of the most
promising of the Baby Bulls,
led the rushing attack by gaining
129 yards. This figure better than
doubled Ithaca’s offensive yardage total.
Faller’s ability to break tackles
and keep his balance fascinated
the home crowd.
Two Ithaca ballplayers, Arnie
Strickman and Phil Stefinides,
'

were injured just trying to bring

Faller to the turf.
Ithaca, at best, was lethargic.
There were, however, a few
bright spots. Mitch Novak, a
speedy split end, caught four
passes and Lynn Wiener, a 6 foot
3 inch, 230 pound defensive end,
played well enough to deserve
commendation.

Coach Gerry Gegley commented after the game: “It’s great to
win, victory is sweet." The Baby
Bulls will try to continue their
winning ways on Oct. 27 when
they journey to Annapolis to face
the freshmen of Navy.

—Hsiang

Bab y Bulls' outstanding halfback John Fowler
rips through the Ithaca defense for a substantial
third quarter gain, as a host of teammates lead
the way. Bulls frosh romped 48-0.

Fowler rips
Ithaca

f

i

B offense s utter

Luzny and Bulls' defense stop Terriers cold
by Bob Jacobs
Spectrum Staff Reporter

Pat Patterson’s 15 yard scoring jaunt late in the opening
period held up last Saturday, as the State University of Buffalo’s stingy defense overshadowed an impotent offensive
display to give the Bulls a 6 to 0 triumph over Boston Uni
versity before an inflated crowd of 8,573 at Rotary Field
After an initial exchange
of punts, Buffalo went to patterned option pitchout from
Mick Murtha. Patterwork from their own 36 yard quarterback
son’s sweeps and Jones’ offline. It was sophomore Pattackle slants moved the Bulls to
terson and hard-nosed full- Boston University’s 26 yard line.
The Terrier defense stiffened
back Lee Jones who accountfor three downs, but on fourth
ed for most of the Bulls’ rushand eight, Murtha hit tight end
ing yardage on their scoring Paul Lang at the Boston 15 for a
drive.
first down. On the next play,

Patterson, subbing for the in
jured Ken Rutkowski, was initial
ly effective in running the Bulls

Patterson shook off two tackles
and utilized a key Lee Jones
block to punch over for the

score. Bob Embow’s conversion
attempt was wide, and the afternoon's scoring was complete.
For the next three quarters it
was the Bulls' defense that pro
vided the excitement in the contest. Defensive line coach Bill
Dando’s charges limited BU to a
total of 31 yards rushing in their
41 cracks at the Bulls’ line.
The trio of tackle Teddy Gibbons and linebackers Irvin Wright
and Mike Luzny combined for
an unofficial total of 22 tackles.
Buffalo’s entire defensive unit
provided the big effort in stop
ping Boston’s attack all afternoon.

Backbreaking play
Mike Luzny came up with what
might be called Boston University’s backbreaking play.

In the third quarter with a
fourth down and 23 situation on

the Boston 33, the Terriers elected to punt, but Neil Smith’s
kick was blocked by the Bulls’

All-East candidate to give the
hosts the field position they were
going to need the rest of the con
test.

The well scouted Buffalo offensive machine stalled as it did so
many times during this long
afternoon, but they pushed the
visitors deep into their own ter
rilory.

activities

On second down Saurino hit
Rucker on a down and out pattern only to have the split end
drop the ball A third down pass
to Rucker also fell incomplete.
With 90 seconds remaining in the
contest, Saurino’s last ditch toss
went astray and the Bulls took
possession out ran out the clock.

yardage.

Four games away
The Bulls will now be faced
with four consecutive games away
from the familiar confines of Rotary Field where they have won
their last seven tills.

Further contributing to the
Terriers’ lack of scoring punch
was the consistency with which
their wide receivers failed to hold
on to quarterback Danny Lucca’s
passes.

The results of the afternoon's
might have been reversed if Boston’s pass catchers
had glue rather than grease on
their hands.
Two BU quarterbacks clicked
on 7 of 22 aerials for 78 yards.
This was twice the Bulls’ passing
Murtha hit on only 5 of 17
tosses for an anemic 36 yards
The junior signal caller repeat
edly missed his not-so-well-blank
eted receivers, and on several
occasions it appeared as if he did
not know the patterns his team
mates were running. Though the
wind might have been a contrib
uting factor to Murtha’s inaccuracy, it’s obvious Mick was
having one of his poorer games
Previous quarterbacking difficulties resulted in Buffalo defeats
at the hands of Virginia and
North Carolina State. As Murtha
goes, so go the Bulls and Coach
Urich’s club was fortunate to win
on a Murtha off day.

—Walluk

Varsity action

Jones drives through Boston line for first down

Saurino was called on to pull the
game out for Warren Schmakel’s
club.
By completing passes to Reggie
Ruckner and Neil Smith, Saurino
moved his team inside the But
falo 30 yard line. With three
minutes showing on the clock
and the Terriers driving, the Buffalo defenders had their work cut
out for them.
Saurino missed hitting Neil
Smith on first down, as the
Bulls' pass rushers forced a hurried throw.

Poor offensive show
Time and time again the Bulls’
defense was tested, and late in
the fourth quarter it appeared
Luzny and company might have
been overextended by a poor
offensive show. Sophomore Joe

Coming up this week will be
the Eagles of Boston College. If
the Bulls hope to make it three
in a row the offense could stand
shots as well as
u few adrenalin
the return of Rutkowski.
Patterson performed well, but
the outside speed of the little
halfback is necessary to vary the
Bulls’ offensive maneuvers.
First Downt
Yard* Gamed Rushing
Pastes Attempted
Pastes Completed
Pastes Had Int'c'd.
Yards Gamed Passmg

Total

Offense

lottalo
'3
135

Boiton U.

22

10

3
36

*

171
28-0
10

31.6
Punting Average
50
Yards Penah/ed
lolls Individual Statistics
Am. N«» 0«m
16
4
Murlhd
62
21
Jones
90
25
Patterson
Compl
Am
lnt«. Y»r*
fining
36
17
5
2
Murtha
. 1
1
0
0
Mason
No
Yards
Receiving

Drankowsk
Patterson
Lang

2

25

�Pag* Fowrt**n

Tho Spectrum

TuMdiy,

Montreal and New York favored for
the
on
top slots in National Hockey League
The National Hockey League
Eastern Division team profiles
scheduled for last Friday’s paper
were pushed back to today’s edition in order to make room for
World Series coverage.
Championship action is in full
swing in all twelve towns of the
Hockey Empire. Jean Beliveau
has already scored his 400th career goal, and Bobby Hull is well
on his way toward sixty this season.

Here are the prospects for the
"NFL” of the NHL in 1967-68.
Montreal Canadians: The Flying Frenchmen are the finest
hockey club in the world, and
their supremacy will be manifest
in the final league standings.
There’s no reason for a recurrence of last season’s first-half
slump, which prevented the Habs
from outstripping the Black
Hawks down the stretch.
Jean Beliveau is healthy again,
meaning he will battle Henri
Richard and Ralph Backstrom of
his own team for the all-star conter berth.

The Montreal defense, headed

up by Jacques Laperrire and Ter-

ry Harper, has no match. The
great Bobby Rosseau leads an
exceptionally fast, tricky pack of

wingmen.
Gump Worsley and young Rogatin Vachon, a pair of well-guarded goalies, mind the nets at the

the addition of many goals to an
already strong attack.
It seems that the revolutionary
rookie left-winger Pierre Riegiere,
who flicked in 44 goals at Ardsley of the Quebec WWL last season, has made the parent club
on the basis of his exhibition
play. Riegiere is the lad reportedly implicated with a certain
young righthknder from Boston
in a New York bar brawl over a
mutual lady friend.
Any defense that faces the constant problem of employing Jim
Neilson, the vastly overrated
“Chief,” can’t
be extremely
strong, but aging Harry Howell
and improving Arnie Brown will
again be backed up when it counts
by Hockey’s premier shot-stopper, Ed Giacomin. Last season’s
most valuable Ranger, and Heavyweight Champion of Hockey, Orland Kurtenbach, plus Boom-Boom
Geoffrion, Reg Fleming, and Vic
Hadfield provide the Rangers
with too much force and hustle
for anything less than second
place.
Chicago Black Hawks: The
Hawks may not be the powerhouse of years passed.
The Windy City crew lost Glenn
Hall, center Red Hay, and defenseman Ed Van Impe in the
draft; all played significant roles
in the Hawks’ first pennant.
Pierre Pilote, the long-time mainstay of the Chicago backline, is
slowing down, and the great Pat
Stapleton will need more help
than he can get this year in defending goalie Dennis DeJordy.

Forum. Montreal's fine offensive
and defensive checking, passing
finesse, and shooting ability add
up to a formidable pre-season
favorite.
Now York Rangers; The BroadThe offensive attack of the
way Blues of Emile “the Cat”
Hawks has definitely been imFrancis are expected to forego proved with the acquisition of a
last season's-end tailspin and to
fine young center from the Bruremain in contention for the ins, Pit Martin, and on this
Prince of Wales trophy right strength some observers are
through the final face-off. They
ready to call the Black Hawks
lost almost nothing in the exfavorites.
pansion draft and have added
Five men had sixty points or
some key players to a team which better last season, and with Marstill remains a mystery for those tin now centering for Bobby Hull,
experts who seek to understand
Chicago has in this unit and the
why some hockey teams win and
"Scooter Line” of Mikita, Mohns,
others lose. Rod Gilbert, a fine and Wharram what ihay be the
defensive player, and stylish Jean two best lines in the League.

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I was spinning the sports wheel for a column this week
and the wheel of fortune landed on intramural football.
surprising Stanley Cup ChampDoc Urich and The Saturday News have gotten coverage
ions, veteran Bob Pulford teams the last month so now it’s time to say something about the
on the “Hot Line” with younglesser lights, the Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thurssters Pete Stemkowski and Jim
Pappin, both big Cup stars, to day 3 and 4 p.m. heroes.
give the Leafs one of the best
Yes, sports fans, there are other football teams on this
forward units in the League. The
Leafs are expecting a return to campus. There are representatives from Allenhurst, there
“Big M” form from Frank Maare law students, last year’s campus champs; the 55’ers, and
hovlich and continued “first star”, an undefeated team called The Meat who
must play the
performances from classy Dave 55’ers.
Then there is the Bacteriology Club, and of course,
Keon and Ron Ellis.
the Club League, or the Fraternity League.
It’s another story on the To-

ronto

backline, where Bobbie
Baun and Kent Douglas went to
California, and an aging crew of
rearguards will try to protect
ancient Johnnie Bower, now 42.
Having been traded to the Bruins for sharp-shooting Murray
Oliver, the ever-popular Eddie
Schack won’t be around to mitigate the disappointment in Maple
Leaf Gardens with his flashy
rushes when Toronto finishes
fourth in the East.
Boston Bruins; This is the year
the Bruins will finally come out
of hibernation in the cellar. They
possess a strong defense built
around 19-year-old Bobby Orr and
rough Ted Green. Actually, they
need a strong defense with goalies
Eddie Johnston and Jerry Cheevers. The Beantowners will sport
fast lines centered by Phil Espisito and Fred Stanfield, both
being obtained in the Martin deal
with the Hawks, and Americanborn Tommy Williams.
Eddie
Schack will delight the fans at
Boston Gardens, and his return
to ’66-67 26 goal form could be
instrumental in bringing the Bruins up to fifth place.
Detroit Red Wings; This .is an
old hockey team which will have
difficulty in beating some of the
expansion clubs as the season
progresses.
The Wings must get still another great year from 40-year-old
Gordie Howe, the NHL all-time
leading scorer, and this much can
probably be expected. But the
Wings have a porous defense, an
erratic goalie in Roger Crozier,
and an amazing propensity to lose
on the road (6-28-1 road record
last season).
Detroit has an adequate group
of forwards with Norm Ullman,
third highest scorer in the league
last season, Ted Hampson,
Dean Prentice, Bruce MacGregor, and Alex Delvecchio, but
they’re loaded with age and lacking the spark a real winner embodies. The Wings will be last.

ITON BARBER

—

500 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.
(between Kenmore and Sheridan)

SHOP
if hair

styling

if razor cutting

if

custom haircuts

if

appointment

■

service

available
I

VALUABLE COUPON

,

located in Basement of Norton
open daily 8 a.m. to 5:45 p.m.

Free Donut I

of your choice with a purchase of a cup
of the World's Finest Coffee.

—Under New Management—

I

I

Valid thru October 23rd, 1967

500 Niagara Falls Blvd.
between Kenmore Ave. and Sheridan
I

bench

this season.
Toronto Moplo Loots: For the

—

DUNKIN’ DONUTS

October 17, 1967

It wasn’t too long ago when
independent teams entered the
football league and were thrust
into the midst of powerhouse
competition. These were usually

freshmen from Allenhurst, little
kids with a:ne, who all bragged
about their great playing days
in high school. Then, before you
could say Stridex Medicated Pads,
they were playing teams like the
Zygotes.
Many of us still remember that
team and the championship game
vs. AEPi, won by the Zygotes
on a field goal in 1964. Now,
how can an Allenhurst team play
that brand of football?

Allenhurst league
The end result is that there

now is an Allenhurst League.

This year they play their own
friends.
Boys, say thank you to the
Physical Education Department,
because they kept you out of the
hospital.

There’s

another

weird

team

playing football Wednesday afternoons
the Bacteriology Club.
This reporter expected to see six
streptococci playing like
the
common bread mold, rhizopic nigricans.
—

What a mistake!

under the careful supervision of
Bill Monkarsh, the capable head
of the league.
Last year a small APO team

went into the finals vs. Phi Psi.
This year the same APO team
has

added

beef up front

pionship laurels. Other teams to

watch for are Sig Ep, who might
win under the guidance of its
fine quarterback Fran Buchta;
AEPi, who is always a threat and
this year has a fine new coach,
Karl Schnitzler, who is doing .a
good job of taking politics out
of football.
Phi Psi, last year’s fraternity
champs may need a quarterback, but are still tough.
Big games
The big games coming up on
the schedule are Sig Ep vs. Phi
Psi and Tau Delt vs. APO. The
two winners should make it to
the fraternity championship, although SAMMY has an outside
shot at APO later this year.

In the Independent Leagues,
watch for the 55’ers, the Meat,
Pine Court and Billy Shears to
battle it out for top honors. It’s
an exciting sport and well worth
an hour of your time.
The time has now arrived to
offer a word or two of thanks
to those important men in blue
(?),
or black, or whatever they
wear at the time
the knowledgeable men who offer their
time to keep peace on the football field, the referees. This year
there is a shortage of competent
officials and those serving under
Mr. Monkarsh are doing admirably because for the most part
there is only one official per
game and it’s a difficult chore
for one man to see the whole
field.
—

This

Bacteriology Club plays
more like a herd of charging
elephants. They should change

their name to the Packaderms.
Do you think Alpha Sig knows
about this?

Have you ever heard of the
Hillel Bills? You haven’t? Well,
that’s alright, they play like those
other Bills!

Frat league

When you talk about intramural football, you must still lay

These officials have handled
the games in a fine manner and
have arbitrated to the best of
their ability.

Under the guidance of their individual coaches, most of the
teams put on a good offensive
and defensive show for their loyal

Remember, there was a time
when you all had an opportunity
to officiate and all but about
seven balked at it.
Now the
games are in their hands, so respect their decisions. Thank you,
boys, for an admirable job.

claim to the Fraternity League
as the class of the sport.

supporters.

This year, the Fraternity
League got off with a bang, when
Phi Epsilon Pi played the Rebs of
ol’ Tau Delt. In a game billed as
"bloodbath” of the century, Tau
Delt unleashed a powerful offense to go with a stubborn defense and defeated Phi Ep 30-6.

Due to reasons obvious to many
of us, there was much animosity
on the field, but the game was
still played in a clean manner

Bench warmers

Tickets are on sale for the
Tau Delt-APO game Oct. 26 at
4. Prices range from $5.00 to
$1.00 . . . Does AEPi miss Jeff
Softer more than SAMMY misses
Marty Guggenheim? . . . Can
Beta Sig (The Beeps) defeat Alpha Sig (Bacteriology) in a playoff? Remember, the Bugs just eat
up those Bacilli . . . Whatever
happened to Adios Mumbles?

r—4ft—I
&amp;tgle€rest

1

and

poses a serious threat for cham-

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

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                    <text>The Spectrum
Vol. 18, No. 10

State University of New York at Buffalo

Friday, October 13, 1967

SNCC speakers attend t Wednesda meeting
Black Power meeting Student Senate accepts Law School
proposal for separate graduation
by Gregory Henrich
Spectrum Staff Reporter

...

ens flavor . . .”
Finally, Mr. Townes mentioned
the need for “true Negroes.” He
fet that his race should doggedly

pursue and eliminate all “Uncle
Toms,” especially “Black and
White Uncle Toms.” The “Black
and White Uncle Tom” is a
“Negro with a white mind.”
Mr. Mayrl then introduced Dr.
George “Woody” Cole. Dr. Cole
is a candidate for councilman-atlarge for the Buffalo area.
His speech dealt with the superiority complex the white people have over other races. He
said: “The realization is that we
as whites think our superiority
enables us to police the world.”
Dr. Cole also said that the riots
in Watts. Newark, and Detroit
should “bring us to realization of
our racism . , . the black man
is as much a man as any homosapiens on this planet . . . We
don’t really trust the black man
. . . Black Power says we must.”
Dr, Cole further explained that
the Negro was going to establish
his own dignity and humanity.
“A white who understands bigotry and tries to overcome it
. .
this man must help Black
Power to help white man confront
his own racism.” Dr. Cole stated
that he was such a man. He felt
that he, as councilman, could
.

bring the correct guidance to a
city which “failed to recognize

the issues,”

SNCC chairman
The highlighted speech of the
evening was by the Chairman of
Buffalo SNCC, George Harris. He
announced the initiation of “gen-

ocide,” which would show “the
racial manslaughter America has
committed within its own shores.”
Mr. Harris continued, “As of
Oct. 21, 1967, our movement is
being taken to the United Nations.” He assured the audience
that the Negro human rights
drive was to be an international
movement by saying: “We must
get our own bag together and
find exactly what’s happening in
Vietnam and South Africa."
The SNCC chairman further explained: “We want freedom, justice, and equality for all. We don’t
want to get Whitey, we want an
equal share.” Mr. Harris also felt
that the Negro’s freedom must
be obtained by using violence.

Accuses LBJ

In his remarks about President
Johnson, his kindest word was
‘fool.’ He accused Mr. Johnson of
passing decisions on Negroes
without consulting any true
Negro community leaders.
Mr Harris concluded that Black
Power was a movement by Negroes to achieve cultural and social equality. His closing remark
about Negro opposition to the
Vietnam War drew a standing
ovation. He said that if Negroes
were to defend their country,
they should be given one in the
first place. “Let each individually

Spectrum Staff Reporter

A resolution allowing the School of Law to conduct its
own graduation ceremonies, without required attendance
of the law students at the general University exercises,
passed Wednesday by the Student Senate.
The resolution read: “Let it be resolved that the
SUNYAB School of Law be permitted to conduct a separate
graduation exercise, without required attendance at the university ceremony.”

The resolution was carried 14-4
The Senate discussed the English Department’s policy regarding courses taken at Millard Fillmore College. The Department
now refuses to accept English
credits earned in Millard Fillmore
for transfer toward an English
degree from the day school.
Since Millard Fillmore does not
confer degrees, this decision
means that night school students
will not be able to receive a BA
in English and day students taking English courses at Millard
Fillmore will not receive credit
for these courses toward their

by Joel Kleinman

Staff

Reporter

Members of the Buffalo community will march on local draft
boards Monday as part of a nationwide movement of draft resistance.

Sponsored by National Resistance and the Student Mobilization

tion between

Millard Fillmore

and the English Department.
The discussion was marked by

from

both

pairs

of

Edel

Hchcd

■'A number

however,

by President

of budget alloca-

tions were also approved at the
Wednesday meeting. They were:
Debate Society, 5250; The Industrial Relations Club. $1033; The
Spectrum 44.932.71; The Quadrangle, $12,407; Humor Magazine.
$500; the Bridge Club, $277; Stu-

dent Affiliates of the American
Chemical Society, $975; the Philosophical Society, $1240; and the
Rugby CluV $641.50.
Near the end of the meeting,
two quorum calls were requested
due to the disappearance of
many of the Senators before the
meeting had adjourned.
Mr Doug Braun, treasurer of
the Student Association, express
ed his strong disapproval of those
Senators who walked out ahead
of time.

discussion, slated that there
exists, in his opinion, a great
need to clear away some of the
confusion about the decision and
who it affects.
He stressed that the decision
is not retroactive. According to
Dr. Riddel, it does not affect any
student who is an accepted English major at present. It also does
not afect potential English majors in freshman or sophomore
level Millard Fillmore courses,
or majors in any other subject
who are taking Millard Fillmore
courses in English.

Charges distortion
During the discussion, Dr. Ridsay, ‘I won’t go.’
del accused the press of distortThe last speaker was Joyce ing his statements concerning the
Pearson, a representative of Us inferiority of Millard Fillmore
Now, a combined organization of College students. “Inferior progall Negro groups to promote rams do not produce inferior
unity, culture, pride, power. She students,” he stated.
Also speaking was Mr. Fralin,
mainly reiterated the Negro’s intention to achieve already stated who said he was offended at his
goals through Black Power.
department’s being “put on trial”
The floor was then opened to because of this affair. He also
questions, which were handled stressed his belief in the reasonmainly by Mr. Harris. No plans ability of the decision, since a
were announced for any future radical difference exists in the
Black Power meetings at the program for the day school and
State University of Buffalo.
that of the night school.
”

Participants will turn in their
draft cards to a Selective Service
official along with a personal letter stating their reasons for noncooperation with the draft. About
400 marchers have been recruited
in Buffalo, with 150 pledged to
civil disobedience, according to
a MOB spokesman.

according to Lewis Zipin, coor-

The maximum penalty for
“willful non-possession” of a draft
card is 5 years in jail and $10,000
fine, but Mr. Zipin added that
the law is rarely enforced, as

dinator of the Ithaca Resistance
at Cornell. Mr. Zipin spoke before
a joint meeting of SDS and the
Student Mobilization Committee
Oct. 10.

ed” after 250 burned their draft
cards last April.
National Resistance hopes to
have 1000 students, professors,

Committee, the march purports
to alert the community to the
moral and political reasons for
non-cooperation with the draft,

that unnecessary confusion had
arisen regarding the decision due
to a serious lack of communica-

outbursts

hich were,

English major.
Dr. Joseph N, Riddel, associate
English Professor, representing
the English Department in the

Draft cards handed into local
boards as part of protest movement
Spectrum

Representing Millard Fillmore
College were Nicholas Kish, Assistant to the Dean and Thomas
B. Nixon, Advisor to the Dean,
who acts as liason to the English
Department.
Both emphasized their belief

English department's Dr. Riddel,
left, defends new policy which

.

Bill Mayrl, moderator, introduced the speakers. He commented that SDS was approached by
SNCC, which asked for a Black
Power Forum, intended primarily
for Negroes. Therefore, he left
discussion in the hands of Black
Power advocates, since it was
“their meeting.”
The first speaker was Oliver
Townes, a field worker for SNCC.
Carrying a pair of black leather
gloves, Mr. Townes said, “Td like
to put on my black gloves . . .
for fighting—verbal fighting.” He
then proceeded to define Black
Power as the “organ to unite
to put ideas into
black people
their minds of black unity.”
Mr. Townes explained that only
Negroes should involve themselves in Black Power. He said
that white people only weaken its
effect and used the analogy
“black coffee with cream weak-

pnrj rcipals,
quit:kly sqi

by Joanne Grzelewski

r

Approximately 100 “brothers and sisters” attended a
Black Power meeting Tuesday night. Representatives of the
Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee spoke at the
meeting sponsored by the Students for a Democratic Society.

only “one demonstrator was bust-

and members of the clergy in
volved in civil disobedience Mon
day, as demonstrations are plan
ned in New York City, Ithaca,
Syracuse, and Rochester.
“We realize we’re not going to
end the draft in the near future,”
Mr. Zipin told The Spectrum,
“but by making resistance visible,
morally committed people can
awaken the community to the injustices of the draft and the
war.” He claimed that the marchers will pose a “definite threat
to the war, the system, and the
country.”
An appeal for contributions is
being made to cover bail of anyone arrested in the Oct. 16
march.

Senate
debate

prevents MFC students from re-

ceiving degrees under departmental auspices.

Committee backing Viet
war plans demonstrations
On Oct.
NEW YORK (CPS)
21, the same day the National
Mobilization to End the War in
Vietnam hopes to have the largest anti war rally ever, a group
called the Committee for a Res
ponsible Patriotism is is co-ordinating a series of local demonstrations “to support the men and
women of our armed forces, cspe
cially those fighting in Vietnam."
—

Charles Wiley, a spokesman for
the group, says the committee is

“non-political, nonpartisan, and
takes no position on the war." He
says the group's only position is

that “when guys in American
uniforms are being shot at. that
makes it the duty of every citizen to show their support of those
men."
The committee is made up of
the same people who organized a
similar demonstration in New
York last April after the April
15 marches against the war in
New York and San Francisco,

which were organized by the Mobilization
Wiley says the committee is
co-ordinating autonomous local
efforts. He says they have already had requests froni more
than 100 communities for assistance in setting up parades and
other demonstrations "dedicated
to respect for the law and support
of our armed forces."
Art Goldberg of the New York

Mobilization Committee has
charged that the Committee for
Responsible Patriotism is "prowar and should identify itself as
such.’ Goldberg says that “By
down playing their political position. and attempting to be ambiguous. they hope to attract the
many Americans who are now uncertain about the wisdom of pursuing the Vietnam war.”
Wiley calls that charge iudicruous.” He says, “No one is in
favor of war Franklin Roosevelt
and the people who fought World
War U were not pro-war.”

�Th

Pag* Two

•

Friday, October 13, 1967

Spectrum

Political science study reveals
judges disagree on their role

SANE head to speak
on Viet and Cold War
The Cold War and Vietnam will be the toi ik of Dr.

and jui
laws?

Iges

or

jui Iges

mal

However, the majority of the

According to State University
of Buffalo political science pro-

fessor Dr. Kenneth Vines, even
the judges can’t answer that question.
Interviews with 26 of the 28
judges now seated on the State
Supreme Courts of New Jersey,
Louisiana, Pennsylvania, and
Massachusetts revealed that judges have very definite, but also
very contradictory ideas of what
they should be doing. Dr. Vines
told a group of judiciary researcher scholars this week at
the Shambaugh Conference at the
University of Iowa (Iowa City).

In a paper entitled "The Judicial Role in American States: An
Exploration,” Dr. Vines presented
conclusions reached from investigations into each court’s case
decisions (for the year 1965-1966)
and interviews with each of the
court’s judges.
“The most significant finding

from my work,” Dr, Vines said,
“was the divergence in the feeling about judicial behavior.” In
the eyes of the Louisiana court
judges, a judge is irrevocably an
interpreter of the law. To picture
him in a larger role, in their
viewpoint, is to violate the

New Jersey Supreme Court judiciary consider a judge a lawmaker. and to suggest otherwise

is not to realize the true situation, they indicated in their interview's.

No uniform model
There was no uniform model
proposed by the judges, concluded Dr. Vines. While a majority
clung to the more technical and
narrow position of the judge as
an arbiter and interpreter, another group with equal confidence supported the creative lawmaker position.

Perhaps the most insistent
claim of the judiciary in general
in this country is its claim to
independence from political involvement, Dr. Vines tempered
the validity of this claim with
his findings: be disclosed that the
opinions and decisions of the
State Supreme Court judges yere
influenced by their state's political environment. State politics
do set "important norms in the
slate judiciary," he declared.
Using judges' opinions on two
of the most hotly debated judicial roles (that of law interpreter
versus that of law maker). Dr.
Vines demonstrated the impor

179,542 FLUNKED!
That's how many applicants for insured savings
plans failed the health exam last year.

Why wait longer

!

He attributed

the overwhelm-

ing support of Louisiana judges
for the position of judicial interpretation to the conservative political values of Louisiana and the
desire there to “maintain a

status quo.”
“In New Jersey, on the other
hand, a majority of the judges
hold to the Law Making purpose,”

he continued. Their views, he
closely linked to the
felt, were
special development of the present court system,” which he said
was “an important political issue
in its early stages,” and thereby
shaped by political events at the
“

time.

Though judges may be affected
by their general political environment, Dr. Vines said that contrary to what he had expected
individual judge's decisions were
not noticeably influenced
by
their party affiliation. “One
might have expected Democrats
to be more liberal,” he noted,
"but the results actually show
them to be less creative.”
Dr. Vines has published books
and numerous articles on the
American judiciary and American politics which have appeared
in such journals as "The American Political Science Quarterly,
Journal of

Politics, and Western

Political Quarterly.
He is currently consulting editor for Little, Brown and Company and is on the Executive
Council and chairman of the
Nominating Committee (1966) of
the Southern Political Science
Association. He is also on the
Executive Council of the Law
and Society Association.

THE SPECTRUM
printed by

PAUL A. WEYER, SPECIAL AGENT

Partners' Press, Inc.

THE NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
835^2651
290 Main Street

ABGOTT &amp; SMITH PRINTING
1381 Kenmore Ave. (at Delaware)
Phone 876-2284

Association

Convolution.

Dr. Spock is a well know pediatrician whose book
Baby and Child Care has sold over 12 million copies. The
book is second only to the Bible in sales in America. Presently, Dr. Spock is on the faculty of the Medical School at
Western Reserve University.
The dread of nuclear contamination led Dr. Spock into The
National Committee for a Sane
Nuclear Policy (SANE) of which
he is now co-chairman.
“Because of the war in Vietnam
the physical threat to our children by nuclear annihilation is
1,000 times as great as all the
dangers from the usual children’s
diseases and accidents combined,”
he said.
Dr. Spock feels it is his duty
to notify people of these dangers.
With this goal in mind he has
become a leading figure in the
peace movement.
Dr. Spock agrees that America
should stand up to aggression,
“But in Vietnam we are not
standing up to aggression; we
provoked it by trying to establish a sphere of influence on the

other side of the world.”
Mass distrust and misunderstanding of Communism coupled
with a passive fear of Communist
superiority has forced America
into reckless actions, Dr. Spock
feels. The Dominican Republic,
Bay of Pigs and Vietnam were
cited as examples by him.

Can give security
“America has the power and
knowledge to give everyone in
the world security and health
but we do not have the boldness
to discard our sick ideas,” he
said. In his address, Dr. Spock
will discuss these concepts concerning the state of America and
his plans to correct its weakness-

Dr. Spock
will address GSA Convocation
This year’s Convocation is the
fourth annual address. Previous
speakers were Supreme Court
Justice William O. Douglas, Dr.
Linus Pauling and Pierre Salinger.

The Convocation is designed

to bring graduate students
closer contact.
Tickets will be distributed

into

Mon-

day through Wednesday from 9
a.m. to 9 p.m. to graduate students who have paid their activy

ties fees and have identification

proving they are graduate

/stu-

dents. Tickets will be obtained
at the Norton Ticket Office. Any
remaining tickets will be available (limit two) after Wednesday
to any student.

WORSHIP
(Protestant)

For Students, By Students
Sponsored by the

LUTHERAN MINISTRY
TO THE UNIVERSITY
SUNDAY AFTERNOONS, 4:00

Calvary Lutheran
Church
4110 North Bailey

(Four Blocks from Campus)

Your I.D. Card
is Worth 10% at

(Sddmuufs
BOULEVARD MALL
CLARENCE MALL
NAME BRANDS
FOR MEN AND WOMEN

Jantzen's Casuals
Dexter Loafers
and Brogues
U.S. Ked
Pappagallo

Viners Loafers
Bates Floaters
Florsheim
Eskiloo and
Campus Boots
and many other brands

,,,

�The Spectrum

Friday, October 13, 1967

Pa*a Tkraa

Doctor Ewell reports on need for
dateline news, Oct 13
creativity in obtaining research grants

areas.

•

Dr. Ewell had much praise for
the School of Pharmacy and
noted that their current $800,000
grant was “unusual.” He rated
the school as number one in the

and biology.”

feel the proposed new constitution would oe a great
improvement in the field of higher education.
The presidents of Columbia, New York, Syracuse and Rochester
universities issued the statement in New York. They said it would
not be “appropriate” for them to comment on the complete document.
State said they

search.
$200,000 from the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration for research on incentive
contracting to the School of Business Administration.
$700,000 from the American
Cancer Society for continuing research.
$100,000 from the Office of
Economic Opportunity to the Law
School for a trial of the ombudsman proposal over a two-year period.
$2-3 million from the Department of Defense to the Psysiology
Department for research in stress
conditions effects.
Dr. Ewell has been vice presi
dent for research since 1957. Before that he served as assistant
director of the National Science
Foundation.
The next in the series of Reports will feature Dr. Claude E.
Welch, dean of University College, speaking on “New Directions
in Undergraduate Education.” Dr.
Welch will lecture at 3 p.m, Tuesday in Room 231 Norton Haall.
•

BUFFALO—An FBI official warned police they can expect organized trouble in an ever-widening area of the state’s second largest
city next year.

•

PARIS—Barricades Thursday started a daylong demonstration
aimed against the French government's “stagnant agricultural policy.”
Hundreds of police turned out to keep today’s demonstrations from
developing into bloody riots as previous protests did Oct. 2.

•

SAIGON—President-elect Nguyen Van Thieu will invite President
Ho Chi Mjuh of North Vietnam for face-to-face peace talks and offer
a bombirig pause if he accepts, a government spokesman said Thurs-

•

Dr. Raymond Ewell
says more creative ideas are
needed in research.
Other research projects of note
were:
•

$450,000 from the National Sci-

ence Foundation for

a

new com-

day.

Question on Regents Scholarship
Exam may be declared invalid
by Carol R. Richards
Gannett News Service

The man in charge of Regents Scholarship
ALBANY
Examinations last week admitted there may have been an
error in the test given Tuesday to 160,000 high school seniors
in the State.
Dr. Sherman N. Tinkelman, assistant commissioner for
Regents Examinations and Scholarships said all answers to
question 210 on the Regents Scholarship Examination might
be considered invalid.
—

The question was: “Which are
the largest lakes in the world?”
Students could choose from five

answers given.
The correct choice, Tinkelman
said, was number two; "Lake Superior and Lake Victoria.”
But the National Geographic
Society of Washington, D.C., lists
the world’s largest lakes as the
Caspian Sea in Asia, followed by

Lake Superior and Lake Victoria
in Africa.
“A lake is a body of water
surrounded by land. Although
some lakes are called seas they
are lakes by definition,” it says.
On the exam, the Caspian Sea
was not among the possible answers.
Perhaps the people who drew

Oct 16 begins new bus
schedule to Ridge Lea

up the question left out the Cas-

pian Sea because it is called a
“sea” instead of a “lake," Tinkelman said. They probably didn’t
want to confuse the students.”
General instructions at the top
of the exam told students to

“select the alternative that is the

best answer.”

Answer 2 was the best choice
available, he said.

All complaints about the question are being referred to the
committee of seven social studies
teachers that drew it up.
“If the committee finds the
question was not valid, we’ll
throw it out,” Tinkelman said.
“In that case, students’ answers
would not be counted.”
He said the question probably
would be thrown out.

I

SAIGON —y.S. officials disclosed that American troops have uncoveretKaJiuge cache of Viet Cong arms, including hundreds of brand
new Russian sniper rifles, in a five-level tunnel complex in the jungle
just 31 miles outside Saigon.
UNITED NATIONS—The Cambodian Ambassador to the United
Nations, Huot Sambath, accused the United States of waging Genocide
in Vietnam and said Americans were engaged in “the conscious
destruction of an Asian country and people.”
LA PAZ, Bolivia—Cuban revolutionary Ernesto (Che) Guevara
felt that he had failed in his mission to foment Communist revolution
in Bolivia and was seeking to flee the country when he was slain by
Bolivian rangers, his field diary revealed.
MERIDIAN, Mists.—A handsome preacher told a federal jury
Thursday that his Ku Klux Klan chief was pleased with the slayings
of three civil rights workers because “it was the first time the
Christians had planned and carried out the execution of a Jew.”
Del mar Dennis was the government's second surprise witness
in the trial of 18 men—including four law officers—for conspiring
to slay the three men in Philadelphia. Miss., three years ago.

A new schedule for the shuttle
busses operating between the
Main Street and Ridge Lea Campuses has been announced.

Beginning Oct. 16 the new
schedule will be in effect Monday
through Friday. At the Interim
Campus the new schedule will be
in effect until 12:50 p.m. Saturdays. Saturday from 1:30 to 5:30
p.m. buses will leave Building G
on the half hour.
From Main St. Campus buses
will follow the new schedule un

ex

ansion

Caret R. Richards

Gannett News Service

ALBANY—You can now watch
top educational programs from all
over the State on your local educational television station.
The unique New York network,
an open-circuit microwave hookup between ETV stations in Buffalo, Rochester, Schenectady,
Syracuse and New York, was
started at the push of a button
last week.

The $780,000 a year operation,
paid for by the State, is run
by the State University of New
York and the five community
ETV stations in conjunction with
the State Education Department.
At the network’s opening. State

University Chancelor Samuel B.

Gould said he hoped “the growing kinship between ourselves
and the stations, represented by
the New York network, may serve
as an architect’s drawing for

others.”

They will run on the half hour
from the Interim Campus and on
the hour from the Main Street
Campus.

Six buses provided by the
Tonawanda Coach Lines will continue to make the 15-minute trip
between campuses.

0:J3

0:30

Os33

8:75

0;«6

3:43

*«33

0:30

0:43

Os33

B:J3

»ilS

State-wide programs available to
local educational television stations
by

Saturdays.
Sundays, buses will run from
12 noon to 5:30 p.m.

LEAVES BUILDING G
:70

ETV

til 12;55 p.m. Saturdays. From 1
p.m. to 5 p.m. buses will leave
Diefendorf Loop only on the hour

The network is equipped to
transmit color programs, he said,
and predicted by 1970 the ETV
stations would be broadcasting
in color.
Network headquarters, equipped with taping, receiving and
transmitting facilities that rival
those of commercial television
networks, are located on the 12th

floor of the Alfred E. Smith
state office building in Albany,
Network programming will be
determined by a committee of
representatives from the five affiliated stations. Each local station will have the option of televising the network programs, taping them for later replay, or
using its own shows.

Justice Brennan speaks
U.S. Supreme Court Associate
Justice William J. Brennan feels
that clashes between the government and individuals will increase
as the government extends its

Justice Brennan also touched
0 n such topics as state’s rights
and and the adaptability of the
.
.
Constitution to the present probsociety.
lems

Lecturing at Canisius College
last week. Justice Brennan commented that freedom for Negroes
lacks reality in the United

Looking at the conflicts between federal and state govem-

power.

States

.,

...

..

..

.

Justice Brennan cited
various cases within the past fifteen years which have divided

j

10

I

11 AN

10»

10*

2

lOlli

10:43

11: IS

11:43

10:30*

10:33

12:IS

f*

5:IJ

JtOS

6:00

3:33
4:30

iiU

3:43
4:43

liN

M;U

‘Indicates

1

getter” for research, Tuesday expressed the need for more creative ideas if research is to expand. His remarks came in the
fifth of the University Reports
series.
Dr. Ewell reported that research grants have doubled in
the last four or five years and
currently stand at about $11 million. with some research going
on in almost all of the University’s 90 departments. The figure
is about one-fifth of the University’s yearly expenditures.
Health Sciences receive about
two-thirds of the $11 million total
grants, mostly from the Public
Health Service and the National
Science Foundation. The money
is used to support studies in
pharacology, pediatrics, pathology, bacteriology, psychology and
in many other health-related

Monday, Wednesday, Friday only

LEAVES DIEFENDORF LOOP
:10

1)

9:55

■ill

1:1)

Os

*:15
10: IS

UiU
1:15
111)

Jill
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)»15

ments,

•cates

iy,

Wi

ly,

Friday only

�Pag* Four

dl ,11 .lid &gt;f» ,M.
Friday, October 13, 1967

The Spectrum

Task Force on faculty rights
The second chapter of the Final Report of the Task Force
Report on University Policy is the proposed Faculty Bill of
Rights. Like student rights, faculty rights are basic to the
concept of a free university.
md inclusive. 'reed*

c

trary or Procedurally Unfair Actions are drawn along the
same lines as the Student Bill of Rights. There should be
no question about the need for their adoption.
Freedom to Enjoy the Rights and Assume Obligations
of the Larger Community (section E) may disturb some members of the non-university community.
The official comment on that section points out that
“violations of civil or criminal law, or course, may subject
the faculty member to civilian sanctions, but this fact is
p.rm-r'S
irrelevant to the academic community unless the infraction
%-J
tc think ivith,
also violates academic standards.”
AUTfWT ■
SANSON,
It is most probable that many in the community will
find that difficult to accept, and a strong University stand
on this issue may be needed. Those in the community should
realize that faculty members should not have to sacrifice
their rights as citizens because of the nature of their pro.
fession.
'Close the window, Fred, please—shut out that ghastly screaming.'
This section also recognizes the fact that with the rights
of private citizens go obligations. In essence, this section
is ensuring to University factulty members the same rights
which members of the Larger Community already enjoy.
Strong support for this section is vital.
The only section of the Faculty Bill of Rights that should
by Barry Holticlaw
not be approved as it stands is section D, Freedom of Selfgovernment.
There he stands, homespun, forthright, and
The official comment following this section says in
part: “Collectively the right to participate in education policy righteous, the leader of the world’s richest and
most powerful nation, asking delegates from 53
includes, but is not necessarily limited to . hiring, firing, countries at an international conference
on educagranting tenure; selection of chairmen, deans, provosts and tion last week to consider asking the United Nations
other administrators . .
This is unrealistic and borders on to set up 1968 as an International Education Year,

Or perhaps...

.

Readers
writings
’

.

“in order to promote peace and order in the world.”
He urges the countries of the world to make
“learning a weapon in the arsenal for peace,” evoking a plea to the world’s leaders "to convert man’s
tragic will to destroy into a determination to build.”
Who in hell is he kidding?
The same man is the commander-in-chief of the
world’s largest military machine, the leader of a
nation which has become the greatest promoter
of violence in the world, the director of a war in
Southeast Asia in which a courageous, divided little
nation is being bombed and mutliated into extinction.
President Johnson thinks in terms of war. Rather
than working again poverty, he declares war on
it, rather than seeking to alleviate the social conditions which cause crime, he declares a war on
crime. And now he wants learning to be a weapon

absurdity.

The right to “participate in” hiring and firing and the
selection of chairmen, deans, provosts and other administrators can ultimately mean little more than a faculty “stamp
of approval” of administrative appointments. It is highly
questionable whether this is necessary or even desirable.
On the other hand, if the faculty is to be given a greater
role in these areas, why not extend the same rights to students? This section seems to imply that the faculty should
play a dominant role in the University community. This wc
cannot endorse.
The official comment pertaining to section D must be
significantly revised to permit faculty self-government but
not faculty control of the University.
It might also be wise in revising this section to clarify
what is meant by the last sentence of the section: “All faculty in a new war.
members have the right to be represented in the faculty sen- A sick metaphor
ate

p

”

This appears to be purposefully vague. Does this mean
tnat all faculty members would be members of the senate,
or that representatives of the faculty will comprise the senate? The matter should be clarified now, and students should
voice their opinion on the subject.
The Administrator’s Bill of Rights, Chapter III, merely
extends faculty rights to administrators “except where these
rights are clearly incompatible with their administrative positions or obligations.”
With adequate clarification and revision of section D
of the Faculty Bill of Rights, both Chapters should be approved. Students should carefully consider alternatives to
section D and be prepared to make their opinions known in
the Oct. 18 referendum.

Interim campus (oily

Such a combination of words is not a cute metaphor, it’s sick.
Weapons kill. Wars destroy. And those aren’t
the words to use for anything except killing and
destroying. Peowple who use them in connection
with other things have more than a poor knowledge of the English language, they have warped

minds.
The idea that education should be a weapon of
any kind is an insult to this University, and to education in general. The frightening reality of course
is that a great majority of our country’s minds and
resources are being used as weapons, as tools in
creating the Frankenstein monster that the industrial-military complex has become. When education is concerned with channeling behavior, or at
preserving order, it negates its most fundamental
principle; namely, working towards open-ended
goals, towards education for its own sake.
A greater insult is when President Johnson tells
leaders of other nations how important peace is.
The War in Vietnam is not being sought to preserve peace; wars don’t do that. Wars preserve

Raps football seating policy
To the Editor:

I just came back from the football game, but
even though we won, I am thoroughly disgusted
with the school’s policy concerning reserved seats.
Until today I have been a fervant supporter of
the athletic fee, mainly because I am a sister of
a football player and realize the need of the student body’s support, but also because I am a State
University of Buffalo student with much spirit for
our teams.
In our first game I was moved four or five
times because I was in someone’s seat; in today’s

game the student section was so small that the first
few got the seats and the rest, I being one of
these, were turned away by the ushers. In other
words, I, being a student supporting my team,
wasn’t even allowed to watch the game.
Who deserves priority in seating, the students
of the school supporting their fellow students, or
the adults of the community who are interested,
but give no support to the school?
If the school’s policy towards reserved seats
doesn’t change, they’ll have fewer supporters of the
athletic fees, because I wasn’t the only outraged
student.
Susan Hodes

Intoxicating experience
To the Editor:

occurs at UB Bulls games.
I think it would be a feather in the University’s
progress if this was ending at this time.
Keep warm, yes. But not with liquor.
Drinking

Hot chocolate lady

power.

Dissatisfaction continues to be the key word when the
Peace must have no meaning for the man. Perinterim campus is discussed. Students who had hoped for the haps it has no meaning for this country; we've
best in early September are beginning to realize that the been in a continual state of military growth since
Pearl Harbor, It is apparent that from now on when
interim campus is more than just an inconvenience.
LBJ says peace he means power.
The library in the political science building offers only
That makes "peace feelers” and “peace negoa minimal amount of desks for students to use. Against one tiations” in Vietnam more believable in the conwall of the room are unemployed tables with chairs, stacked text of the Johnson administration. When Dean
Rusk says that we must "negotiate from a position
on top.
he s not talking about negotiation at
Buses used to shuttle students between campus are far of
a
3
Ut P Un ng 1 e ther side
from adequate. Seats are small with little leg room, and if nt0 submission8
a student happens to be taller than five feet, there’s a good LBJ concerned with power
chance he’ll hit-his head on the baggage rack when he leaves
when President Johnson talks about creating
peace in the world, about building peace, he’s talkhis seat.
n g about building power. Empires don’t create
Food service is still non-existent on the interim campus.
especially if they are empires built up by
At last report, the cafeteria was to open this Sunday
five
weeks late
but no one will be surprised if he’still has
late A. J. Muste once said: “There is no
10 pack a lunch Monday.
way to peace. Peace is the way.”
Construction workers are still on the site, and the conThe President has realized that the people of
tinual burning of rubbish against a background of the ubi- this country are disturbed about his role as a war
disturbed enough to defeat him in ’68—
quitous “Johnny-on-the-Spot” provides an extremely pleasant ma !‘ e!'
atmosphere. Muddy thoroughfares are
added attraction.
It S no surprise students are dissatisfied.
he stops talking power and starts making peace.
°

'

°

*

—

—

~

”

Si

f JS'iEl

The Spectrum is published twice-weekly
every
Tuesday and Friday
during the regular academic
the State University of New York at Buffalo,
3435 Main Street, Buffalo, New York 14214 Offices
are located at 355 Norton Hall. Circulation: 15,000.
—

—

year at

Editor-inChief—MICHAEL L. D’AMICO

Managing Editor—RICHARD R. HAYNES
Asst. Managing Editor—RICHARD SCHWAB

Business Manager—SAMUEL A. POWAZEK
Advertising Manager—DAVID E. FOX

CamP u

=

Asst -

Margaret

Anderson

Asst.

Layout

Asst.

Scott Behrens
David L. Sheedy
John Trigg
Judi Riyeff

W.

Marlene Kozuchowski Copy
Jocelyne Hailpern
Daniel Lasser Asst.
Lilian Waite
Photo. Edward Joscelyn
Feature Barry C. Holtzclaw Asst.
David Yates
Asst.
Ronald Ellsworth Promotion &amp; Circulation
Sports
Robert Woodruff Director Murray Richman
The Spectrum is a member of the United States Student Press Association arid the Associated Collegiate
Press The Spectrum is served by: United Press International. Associated Collegiate Press Service, Gannett
News Service, and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate.
Represented for national advertising by
National Educational Advertising Service. Inc., 420
Madison Ave.,
New York. N. Y. Republication of all news
dispatches
is forbidden wihout the express consent of the
editor-in-chief. Rights of republication of all other
matter herein are also reserved.
Second class postage paid at Buffalo, New York.
Editorial policy is determined by the Editor-in Chief.
£ss

*

�Friday, October 13, 1967

The Spectrum

'Erroneous impressions' in editorial

'

more than
just the “ambition” and “desire” to upgrade its
admissions polices and standards; it not only has
changed its policies and raised its standards, but
also has implemented these changes in meaningful
ways. Prior to the merger of the University of
Buffalo with the State University of New York,
Millard Fillmore College had begun to change its
admissions polices and procedures so that it was
more selective regarding students allowed to enroll in degree-credit-bearing courses. After the
merger Millard Fillmore College adopted the standard State University application forms.

GAUTAMA'S

NOBLE PATH

1

104*1 UMOMBMld

Fillmore College has had

(

It is true that these elements exist. That in
theory, and often, if less often than theory would
claim, the rights guaranteed us by certain illustrious documents do hold the forces of evil at bay.
But, being a radical, I must reply that the theory
is not enough. Big radical. I claim that the defenses
of the individual are crumbling, and at a speed
which frightens me despite the lip service paid to

i%1

,

M6e WTm«

"He feels capitalism and communism arc morally corrupt, which
is why a lot of people are turning to Eastern spiritualism."

The Lighter Side
by Dick West

to enter because of their present motivation, rather
than on the basis of earlier records which, as time

passes, become progressively
dictors of success in college.

less valid as pre-

The academic performance of all Millard Fillmore College students is watched closely, and
records are reviewed after the close of the Spring
semester each year. Students are continued in good
standing, placed on scholastic probation, suspended for one year, or permanently dropped according to the relatively stringent retention regulations
adopted by the College several years ago.

I trust that this explanation will clarify for
both you and your readers any misconceptions
which might have been held concerning the admissions and retention polices and procedures of
the Adult Evening College.
Walter N. Kunz
Assistant to the Dean

Regrets seating problem in Baird

Just about everything a li S. president does is subjected

to intensive study, not only in this country but in other
nations as well.

You may be sure that at this very moment the foreign
offices of many governments are analyzing President Johnson’s recent decision to give up drinking and take up golf.
In this country the main point
of speculation is how the President will reconcile this move
with his image as a man of reason
and moderation.

The President could and did
drink in moderation, but there
is no such thing as a moderate

In last Friday’s Spectrum there appeared a let-

ter to the editor critical of the fact that students
could not find admission to our Guarneri Quartet
recitals last week. We truly regret that we had
to turn away a great number of students, faculty
and music friends of the community.

I am sure you are aware of the fact that our
seating capacity in Baird Hall (the only recital hall
available to us) is very, very limited. Tickets usually go on sale at least two weeks before performances, and we have to sell them on a first-come,
first-serve basis. We would love to see the entire
hall filled with students since we are an educational institution and the student is our most important asset. Maybe you could include in future, announcements of our events the urgent message
to please come early for tickets.
Alice Klein
Music Coordinator

Readers' Writings
are continued on page six
Writers: Please be brief. Letters should not exceed
300 words. All letters must be signed and the address
and telephone number of the writer must be included. Positive verification of authorship wilt be made
before a letter is printed.
Letters will be kept in strict confidence.
The Spectrum will use initials or pen name, if
requested. But
letters are never used.
The Spectrum reserves the right to edit or delete
material submitted for publication, but the intent of
letters will not be changed.

it may lead to a purge

in their

office.
Only a few days previous, they
had advised Premier Kosygin that
Johnson had encountered enough
troubles this summer to drive any
man to drink.

golfer.

100% wrong

The first time out on the links,
Johnson drove a ball that almost
hit another player on an adjacent
fairway. Which isn’t bad for an

Upon learning that their ap
praisal was 100 per cent wrong,
they immediately began packing
their bags for a trip to Siberia.

amateur

To the Editor

by STEESE

Anyway 1 got some static from certain conservative and benevolent elements in the community when I claimed that this country was essentially without morality. The countering argument was
that this country is still based on very real and
very effective guarantees of certain rights and
privileges, and that no matter how I may consider
the issues—ideologically—it is not right to say
that of a system which offers the protection that
one in the United States comes to expect.

Beginning with the Fall 1965 semester, the college has required all applicants with previous college work (at this institution or elsewhere), or who
graduated from high school within two years prior
to the semester for which they were applying, to
file formal applications in advance of the semester
in which they wished to register. A review of these
credentials has enabled the college to admit only
those applicants whose records comply with its upgraded standards. The number of applicants who
have beeen rejected has increased consistently each
semester.

In accordance with its policy of affording adults
an opportunity to pursue higher education, the
College has continued its practice of allowing applicants who have had no previous college work
and who either hold high school equivalency diplomas or have graduated from high school two years
or more prior to their entrance to register without
advance application. This group faces no qualitative requirements for admission. They are allowed

gFljinp

This column may very well be a bomb. It was
a long tiring weekend full of storm windows, family gatherings and so forth, and today is a drak,
gloomy and generally nasty sort of occurence. All
of which makes for a gloomy and unmotivated
columnist. Which is usually no problem as long
as there is a cause celebre—or something. Then
one is able to spew out frustrations upon parts of
the world which are sufficiently removed not to
fight back. Which is a really nice way to get rid
of frustrations since W-w learned karate.

1-RKttT

*ncmUM*
a-MMT IVTWiTioH
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£Mf»T effOKT ,
zfatm MwDFiUKi.

The

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Iirt

SIDDHARTHA

As Assistant to the Dean of Millard Fillmore
College responsible for the admission and retention
of evening students, I would like to respond to the
“MFC vs. English Department” editorial which appeared
6 issue of The Spectrum. Unfortunately, the editorial gave several erroneous
impressions regardirig these two important aspects
of the operation of Millard Fillmore College.

Millard

By Interlandt

BELOW OLYMPUS

To the Editor:

Pag*

As his game improves, he
be making shots that land in

will

the

sand traps and the rough. But
he cannot be adjudged as a bona
fide golfer until his scores start
landing in the credibility gap.
It is difficult for even a President to arrive at a golf score

through

Hanoi—Word that Johnson has
to play golf is being
interpreted here as a sign that
he is moving closer to the policies pursued by former President
Eisenhower when he was in the
White House.
This view has caused great con
sternation among North Vietnamese leaders. None of them
was ever able to figure out just
what Eisenhower's policies were.
Paris—President de Gaulle sees
no reason to regard Johnson’s
golfing abilities as a threat to
his own personal grandeur.
If it came to a showdown, de
Gaulle is confident he could beat
Johnson at the game.
Johnson might have a smoother
swing, but only de Gaulle would
be able to walk across the water
hazards.
started

Sand trap shots

consensus.

We do not, of course, have any
way of knowing what significance

other world capitals attach to
the switchover. I dare say, however, that preliminary reaction is
running along these lines:
Moscow
Kremlin experts on
American affairs were stunned by
the news that President Johnson
has turned teetotaler. They fear
—

Quotes

in the news

United Press International

his
MILWAUKEE—The Rev. James E. Groppi speaking to
of
support
a
march
in
them
on
leading
before
followers shortly
open housing that ended in a battle with club-wielding police:
use that
“There’s nothing a policeman likes to do better than
club on the head of a black person.”
MERIDIAN, Mitt.—Federal Judge Harold Cox issuing a warning
charged with
during jury selection at the trial of 18 white men
conspiracy in the 1964 slaying of three civil rights workers:

“I’m not going to allow a farce to be made of this trial and all
of the defendants better get this in their minds.”

the great American ideals.
The fact that one of those Vietnam generals—the one who was elected—is now packing students
who disagree with him off to military training
camps is cause for certain complaints from people
who thought it was a great idea that Gen. Hershey
reclassify all those nasty kids who spent too much
time demonstrating as 1-A’s. Which I find somewhat grimly amusing. Must be he didn't say nay I.
I find it amazing that so many people can find
themselves morally indignant that the Negroes
should want more after all the laws we passed to aid
them. Amazing for the simple reason that the law
is simply no damned good if it is not enforced,
and the executive branch of the government has
done a magnificent job of doing nothing to enforce the laws. One is struck by the fact that while,
by repute since it is hard for me to comment personally, the Eisenhower administrations were characterized as do nothing administrations, Johnson
manages to do very little more except save his
face in South Vietnam. He talks such a good game
that everybody is mad at him for doing too much
when he is doing nothing.
Laws as laws protect nobody if they are ignored or enforced only to the letter. 1 maintain,
with much vigor, that if one does not like the
concept of living in a culture which is basically
morally bankrupt, one substitutes instead the idea
that he is living in a completely, and paranoidly,
fixated on legalism culture. I find very little difference. 1 have a bad memory. It keeps remembering things that it is apparently supposed to forget. Levy. Capt. Howard Levy, remember? Where is
he now that the completely biased structure of military justice came to an inevitable decision—for
since when has the army recognized morality except on its own side? One assumes that while the
appeals drag on he has actually begun his sentence.
The system is not enough without a morality in

back of it.

Anybody who flees to Canada to avoid the
draft is a dirty, messy, sloppy, stupid leftist according to most of the material I read in the
Canadian churches the decision was made to urge
members of the organizations involved to open
their homes to such individuals. They, those who
flee, and Levy felt that they were being involved
in a fight based on morality. This country could
give (ANOTHER DIRTY WORD APPROACHING)
a damn (chickened out) about morality. None of our
laws say anything about it so it does not exist
in this country as a viable force any longer.
Congress, in its infinite wisdom, is now trying
to do away with certain loopholes in the Conscientious Objector classification. Why the hell aren't
they making it easier, not harder to get it? Because we, as a nation, have no interest in morality.
Right and wrong are defined legally, and are even
fought on those grounds. Levy has no hope for
an appeal based on the ridiculous concept that he
is moral and the army is not, no. There has to be
an irregularity, a mistake, an improper procedure.
It seems it is all right to legislate morality for the
German Army but not for the U. S. Army—that
is apparently by definition moral.

The average citizen in this University. City,
country has a fear of responsibility which is almost an obsession. Don’t become involved, avoid
any contact with strangers, he wasn’t really hit by
a car he’s faking, ad nauseum. I suggest that one
reason is that there is no more moral standard
on which to base decisions, it is perhaps the largest
reason in fact.
And the damned irreconcilable shame of this
column is that those who know what I am saying
are already involved, and those who don’t could
care less. Love.

,

�Th#

Six

Pnge

Friday, October

Sp«ctr«m

13, 1967

*

Another view of the English Dept-MFC controversy
To tho Editor:

I am one of five assistants to Dr. Robert F.
Berner, Dean of Millard Fillmore College. As such,
my official duties and responsibilities encompass
several areas. Only two of them, however, are pertinent here. I am the co-ordinator, or liaison person,
between the English Department and the Evening
Adult Credit College and an adviser to evening
students who are pursuing Bachelor of Arts degree
programs.

In these two capacities I should like to elaborate upon and/or clarify the situation existing between Millard Fillmore College and the Department of English that has been mentioned quite
frequently in recent issues of your publication. I
have noted with great interest (and some amazement and consternation that which has been printed to date.
Point 1. It has been stated several times that
the Executive Committee of the English Department reached its decision in January of this year.
What has not been stated is that the Department
DID NOT NOTIFY THE MFC ADMINISTRATION
of the results of its deliberations for weeks and
might not have at all if MFC had not become involved actively.
Point 2. A letter from the Department dated
March 28, 1967, enumerated two separate decisions
made by the Executive Committee of the English
Department:

(X) Regarding Arts &amp; Sciences day students:
. credit toward the major for MFC English
courses will no longer be allowed for regular
day students. This policy will be effective September, 1967, and will, of course, not be retroactive."
. . we
(2) Regarding regular MFC students:
will honor MFC commitments to those students
currently taking a major in English in MFC, but
that beginning September, 1967, we will not accept
any new majors who offer exclusively MFC programs.”

Contrary to what has been both assumed and
stated, Dean Berner, upon receipt of this letter,
immediately and completely informed his entire
professional staff of its content. Staff meetings were
held, and the entire situation was thoroughly

discussed.

The word “exclusively,” which appeared in the
decision concerning students registered in Millard
Fillmore College, was rather perplexing. We still
have received no clear-cut definition of that key
word. (Obviously, a student who registers in a
single day course in any summer, fall, or spring
semester cannot be included in the group as referred to. However, we doubt if this interpretation
is what was meant.) Clarification is definitely
needed.
The MFC advisement staff did advise evening
students, whenever appropriate, to the best of its
knowledge, of the position being taken by the English Department, but the Department’s stand was
never completely clear due to the variety of
sources of information from the Department as
well as the wording of some of the statements.
Point 3. It has been admitted that the sign done
in black magic marker on green posterboard which
appears on the “Undergraduate English” bulletin
board in Annex A” . . , was directed at our students in the day program . .
but there is nothing
to indicate this. Neither does the notipe mention
the fact that probably only 300- and 400-level
courses are involved. I reads: “The Department of
English will no longer allow credit toward the
English major for any courses taken in Millard
Fillmore College. Such courses may continue to be
taken for elective credit.”
The MFC advisement staff learned of the sign,
from a student registered in MFC, during the first
week in September. On two separate occasions I
mentioned the confusion caused by the sign to
a member of the English Department. He assured
me the matter would be related to the member of
the Department whose responsibility it was. (As
of 8 p.m., Friday, Oct. 6, 1967, the wording REMAINS UNCHANGED IN ANY RESPECT from the
manner in which it was worded when initially

Point 4. MFC is offering only nine 300- and 400level courses in English this fall. However, enrollment in them indicates that they are serving the
clienteles which they are designed to serve adequately. It should be obvious that a part-time
evening student body, much smaller in total number than full-time day students, does hot need
each semester the wide variety of courses available to day students. It is very important, however, that the full-range of courses, all taught
on a high level, is offered on a definite cycle at
night. The comparision of nine (in a single semester) to 45 (in total number probably since approximately 30 are being offered in day school
this semester) is completely invalid.
Point 5. The staff of MFC was, indeed, delighted
to learn of the English Department’s interest in
teaching a wide variety of imaginative continuing
education programs. However, these are courses
which carry NO DEGREE CREDIT. We have equal
interest in continuing to offer sufficient creditbearing courses of the same high caliber so that
a major in English is possible at night.

Point 6. This relates to many procedural matters. Contrary to what may honestly be the beliefs
held by members of the English Department for
various reasons, the rules for MFC’s dealings with
any existing academic department are clear and
consistent.

(1) A department, although it does not have
control over who is admitted to Millard Fillmore
College, has exclusive control over who is accepted as a majoring candidate.
Once a MFC student is accepted by a department, his program is planned and/or approved
each semester by the member of the department
designated as his adviser.
(2)

An uproar has been created not because the
.
English Department is sincerely attempting
to induce more quality into its programs,” but due
to the MANNER in which the Department chose
to accomplish its upgrading. One of the basic
issues is the removal of a major which has been
available entirely through evening study for a
.

number of years.

In the past the MFC professional staff itself has
proposed a new degree program which would ful-

fill the needs and/or desires of many adults—a
Bachelor of Arts degree in General Studies or
Humanities. However, in our thinking this would
be an additional degree, rather than a substitute.
That confusion reigns cannot be denied. Students—both day and evening—have received many
different pieces of information, from a variety of
sources, only some of which have been accurate.
I have been told by MFC students, for example,
that they have been informed, whether or not they
are majoring in English, that credit for English
101, 102, 201, and 219 completed in Millard Fillmore College cannot be used for degree purposes.
I trust that this letter will reduce the confusion and
clarify the situation substantially.
Thomas B. Nickson
Assistant to the Dean
Millard Fillmore College

Feinberg Certificate can be destroyed on request

.

.

Editor's Note: The Spectrum Wednesday received the following
report from Dean Welch of University College and Dr. Norman
Holland, chairman of the English Department. In order to clarify
the issues surrounding the present MFC-English Department controversy, we print the text in it entirely :
On Tuesday, Oct. 10, 1967,
Dean Welch, Dean Berner, Professors Holland, Riddel. Levine
and Fradin, and Provost Larrabee
met to discuss the relationships
of the English Department of
Millard Fillmore College. It is the
belief of al who were present on
this occassion that none of the
issues involved adapt themselves
to easy solution, but that a service would be performed by setting forward some of the basic
circumstances which have

been

obscured by the present controversy:

1. The English Department is
not

withdrawing from

Millard

Fillmore and has no intention of
doing so. It has proposed a number of alternatives to its present
program which will receive active

consideration by University Col-

lege.
2. The decision of the English
Department no longer to admit
Millard Fillmore students as majors is not retroactive. It does not
(3) Each academic department has control over
its curricular offerings in Millard Fillmore Col- affect any student who is an
lege. A MFC professional staff member submits English major at present.
3. The decision does not affect
PROPOSED COURSE OFFERINGS three times a
potential English majors in freshyear (for fall, spring, and summer) to the chairman or sophomore level Millard
man of the department or his designated repreFillmore English courses: these
sentative(s). These may be revised, for valid reastudents will still be free to transsons, within budgetary limitations.
fer to day school, and will re(4) The obligation of full-time faculty members ceive credit for night courses at
to teach in MFC varies from individual to individthe 100 and 200 level.. Similarly,
ual and from department to department. Some majors in any other subject will
teach in the Evening College on an “on-load” basis, continue to receive credit for
while others instruct in MFC for “extra stipend.” Millard Fillmore courses in English they may happen to take.
(5) Neither the MFC student body nor the administrative staff has ever requested special concessions for evening students. Quite the contrary
is true. The Evening Division administration has
been insistent that high standards be maintained
in night school. The student body pays for, and is
entitled to, a quality program both during the day
and at night.

posted.)

To IKi Editor:
Members of the faculty may be interested in
the following advice received from Chancellor
Samuel Gould. The Chancellor had been urged
by the State Conference of AAUP to destroy or return to faculty members all copies of the Feinberg
certificate. He replied, in part, as follows:
The statements, signed by individuals,
cannot be removed from the files without specific
authorization from the signers. 1 am sure you realize that considerable cost would be involved if we
were to exhume the Feinberg sheets from each of
the many thousands of files, and attempt to locate
the present address of each signer to return the
documents.

No easy solution seen
in English-MFC rift

“However, as an alternative which would perhaps meet the intent of your resolution, we will
pull and destroy the Feinberg certificate of any individual, upon receiving his or her written request.
Such requests may be directed to the Personnel
Office, State University of New York, 8 Thurlow
Terrace, Albany, New York 12201. If the individual
would prefer return of the document to destruction of them, we will gladly return them on request
accompanied by a return envelope bearing postage.”
George Hochfield

President,
SONY Buffalo Chapter. AAUP

&lt;There is no course in English for
wjiich credit will not be given.
4. Admission to a major is a
prerogative of the department
concerned, whether English or
any other. The English Department has in the past drawn many
students of high quality from Millard Fillmore, including those
who have progressed with excelavenue for such students will be
lence to the doctoral degree. An
kept open.
5. In the nature of things, day
and night instruction must differ; they cannot be exact duplicates of one another, and any
resolution of the present differences must reflect this fact.
6. As an interim solution, the
English Department, Millard Fillmore College, University College,
and the Provost of Arts and Letters agree that Millard Fillmore
College students intending to major in English who have now
completed 64 hours or who will
have completed 64 hours by Sept.
1, 1968, including two semesters
of 200-level work in English may
apply to become English majors.
More satisfactory arrangements

for advisements of these students
will be worked out by Millard
Fillmore College, the English Department, and University College.
7. The long-term relationship,
involving as it may new programs
and the granting of degrees, will
be worked out between University College, the Faculty of Arts
and Letters, and the departments
involved.

�T h

Friday, Octobar 13, 1967

•

P«v»

Spectrum

Parade in Haight-Ashbury district
proclaims death of 'hippie' site
SAN
Hundreds of flower children paraded through the Haight-Ashbury
district of San Fransisco last
weekend proclaiming “The Death
of The Hippie.”
The “funeral” procession solemly circled the district, symbolically purging the area of its
“evil.”
Marchers, described the evil as
“the bad Vibrations” from the
hordes of" tourists and teeny-boppers who are not living up to
hippie standards of “do your own
thing.”
“Things have gone wrong,” explained Arthur Lisch, a leader of
the Diggers.

He said some of Haight-Ashbury’s most creative people were
leaving San Francisco for more
quiet rural abodes unspoiled by
the fights and arrests common
on Haight St.
“With the death of the hippie,
we will be reborn,” he said.

Mr. Lisch is trying to scratch
thg word “hippie” from the social
movement. The label is considered by hippies as a trick by
which mass media have hung all

buttons,

placed

kimis

"Hippie" bad connotation
San Francisco hippies do not
consider themselves 'drug-crazed
or unclean. The old-time hippies
believe in working, but only at
tasks which are fun or absolute-

TT
i

*

i'j

money,

beads,

I

“It’s to get rid of our affectations.” he said solemly. “If beads
are not you. put them in. The
purpose of this community is to
be yourself.”

A few brought their children
along for the parade through
the Haight-Ashbury district and
nearby Golden Gate Park Pan-

Mr. Darling, one of the operators of the hippies’ communications center known as Switch-

handle.
Joints were passed around to

It was written especially for
board, said: “We are hoping the

reporters.

“The hippies is dead, now we
are free,” chanted some of the demonstrators waving sticks of
burning incense and small American flags. Others chanted a Hindu prayer, “Hare Krishna.”
A large banner read: ‘The
Brotherhood of Free Men is

disillusioned

who

■

have moved

out will come back.”
A poem, “Come Praise With
Me the Sun," was read. It was
written especially for the occasion by a Roman Catholic nun,
Sister Mary Norbcrt, a local
friends of the hippie commu-

hippies

*

\

nity.

Pentagon picketing forbidden

Permits refused for Viet march
Police in Washington have refused to issue permits for the
demonstrations against the war
in Vietnam planned for Oct. 21.

An official of the General Services Administration told the National Mobilization Committee to
End the War in Vietnam that
“under no circumstances would
the government allow picketing of
the Pentagon.”

Mr. Dellinger noted: “The administration has taken a perilous

The GSA told the committee to
publicly disavow their call for
civil disobedience around and inside the building.
At a press conference, Dave
Dellinger, chairman of the committee, rejected any ideas of cancellation and said the protests
would go on as planned.

ArrivCS
|,t.
,alc

ity of the war and the Johnson

Administration.”
"If they want to stop us, they
can arrest us,” he said.

step in trying to deny the democratic rights of the American peo-

ple to express their dissent from
the war program of Johnson and
the Pentagon. The government's
ultimatum is a political blunder
that will increase the unpopular-

Dr, Benjamin Spock comment-

ed that even with the permits he
would speak at a rally at the
Lincoln Memorial.

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explained by bearded George
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flags, small, symbolic painted
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ii

"Be yourself"
The significance of using the

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�Th

Pag* Eight

•

'Heat' decreases quality
of obtainable marijuana
prosecutor said the brown leaves
confiscated by police were not
marijuana but the girl and her
two male co-defendants insisted
they were the best marijuana obtainable “while the heat is on.”
The reserved position in the
courtroom caused Judge Leo
Weinrott ito undergo a “psychedelic feeling.”
Sandra Carol Bird, 19, protested Wednesday when the district
attorney stated that the bundle
of leaves confiscated in a South
Philadelphia house last Saturday
was not $50,000 worth of marijuana as it first was believed.
Judge Weinrott tried to dismiss the case against the girl
and her companions, Clyde Pew
m, 19, and Erwin Sergieko, 25.
He noted the girl had attended

Agriculture and Horticulture and
asked if she acquired her knowledge of marijuana there.
“I went there to study animal
husbandry, not botany,” the girl
replied.

Police raiders testified Miss
Bird was “cooking” the leaves
in the house when they broke in
and she apologized for the poor
quality. Police said that after the
raid, one of the defendants was
trailed refunding money to purchasers who had complained
about the low quality of the
“marijuana.’
The judge finally succeeded in
convincing the defendants that
the district attorney had to dismiss charges against them at least
until a chemical analysis would
support their claim.

Friday, Octobar 13, 1967

Spectrum

OFFICIAL BULLETIN
York at Buffalo, for which The
Spectrum assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in
TYPEWRITTEN forms to 114 Hayes Hall,
attention Mrs. Fischer, before 2 p.m.
the Friday prior to the week of publinotices
cation. Student organization
are not accepted for publication.

Openings for:

BS, MS, and PhD Candidates in
ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING
INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING
MATHEMATICS
PHYSICS

For work in

RESEARCH and DEVELOPMENT
DESIGN
MANUFACTURING
VALUE ENGINEERING
FIELD ENGINEERING
RELIABILITY ENGINEERING
ENGINEERING WRITING

Sign up for interviews through your Placement
Office, or write Manager of College Relations,
Raytheon Company, 141 Spring Street,
Lexington, Massachusetts 02173.

Faculty of Educational Studies,
formerly the School of Education,
for consideration for the Spring
1968 semester. Forms may be
obtained at the general office 201

Faculty of Educational Studies'
Graduate Students—If you do not
already have an identification
card, you are urged to go to the

All students should be informed of
changes which are taking place in
the new University College. One
of the gradual changes deals with
advisement, since in the near future, advisement will be on a
voluntary basis and registration
will be done by machine.

Basement of Foster Hall from 6
to 9 p.m. to have one made. The
dates are indicated below:

Wednesday, Oct. 18, 1967
Thursday, Oct. 19, 1967

of Financial Aid to Students—is
notifying you that a new amendment of the law provides that
New York State scholar incentive
awards may now be made concurrently with payments authorized under the Veterans Readjustment Benefits Act of 1966 (G.I.
Bill). However, the G.I. benefits
may not be used concurrently
with any Regents fellowship or
scholarship other than the Regents child-of-veteran scholarship.
Scholar incentive applications
at the Office
of Financial Aid (216 Harriman
Library), the Office of the Bursar
(Hayes A), or by writing to the
Regents Examination and Scholarship Center, Albany, New York
may be obtained

12224.

Product lines include; Communications,
Radar, Missiles, Space, Ocean Systems,
Advanced Components.

Nov. 1, 1967 is the deadline
to apply Tor admission to the

Foster Hall,

Attention Veterans—The Office

...

year.

General notices

Students without proper identification will not be able to avail
themselves of certain facilities
on campus, e.g. the library; therefore, an ID card is imperative.

RAYTHEON COMPANY
involved
in sophisticated
electronic systems
utilizing state-of-the-art
techniques...will have
CAMPUS INTERVIEWS
OCTOBER 19, 1967

lege

of New

To be eligible to receive a
scholar incentive payment for the
entire 1967-68 college year, a
student must file his application
with the Scholarship Center by
Dec. 1, 1967. Applications received after Dec. 1, 1967 will be
considered for the spring 1968
semester only, and no applications can be accepted after April

University College

—

Freshmen are required to see
an adviser to discuss long-range
planning, choice of major field,
assessment of academic strengths
and weaknesses, study and adjustment problems, and to secure
the signature of their adviser in
order to register. Advisers share
the responsibility with the student in decision making and will
prepare freshmen for their forthcoming voluntary advisement and
define to them the nature of
advisement. Freshmen will be
allowed to sign their own Change
of Program forms before Drop
and Add Day on Jan, 26, 1968.

Proficiency
Pre-Nursing Exam
State University Admissions

jrder to apply to a department

and to do general planning for
their last two years. Although
sophomores may seek the aid of
an adviser, they will sign their
own registration cards.
Fifth semester sophomores,
having attempted 58 hours, who
have not met requirements for
promotion must have a University
College adviser’s signature.

to Register

Test
Date

PARKSIDE
LUTHERAN CHURCH
&amp;

Applications

Available

Oct. 21 Nov. 4 316 Harriman
Oct. 14 Oct. 21 316 Harriman
Oct. 21 Nov. 11 316 Harriman

Oct. 16 Nov.

Come Worship With Us This
Sunday—11:00 AM.

Depew

Last Day

Oct. 27 Nov. 18 316 Harriman
Oct. 21 Nov. 4 Sch’l Nursing

Exam

Wallace Aves.

Mile from Campus off
Main St. Across from
Bennett High School
LIVELY ADULT DIALOGUE
9:45 AM.
New Young Pastor
(1

BRIAN J. SNYDER

from the Divisional Office, obtain the signature of a faculty
adviser, and return the completed
cards to the Office of Admissions
and Records (Hayes B).

Placement interviews
Please contact the University
Service, 831-3311, to
make appointments and obtain
further information concerning
the following interviews:

Placement

16

Oct.

Arthur Young
Co.
West Virginia Pulp Paper Co.
Duke University Law School
&amp;

&amp;

Amercoat Corp.

New York State,
Dept, of Health
Aberdeen Proving Ground
(Dept, of Army)
Torrington Co.
Slippery Rock State College
Oct.

17

Haskins

Advisement for sophomores is
voluntary except for Occupational
Therapy, Physical Therapy and
Nursing. Third Semester sophomores should see an adviser if
they are undecided about a major
to explore various possibilities.
Advisement for sophomores is the
same as for freshmen except
when a sophomore is selecting
a major, academic difficulty will
be of greatest concern at this
time. Fourth semester sophomores must see their advisers in

Student testing center registration schg^ule
Test
Admissions Test for Graduate
Study in Business
College Level Exam Program
Law School Admissions
M.L.A. Foreign Language

been accepted or deterred by a
Department must have pre-registration cards signed by a faculty
adviser. Students rejected by a
Department will be registered by
University College advisers.
Those Juniors and Seniors in Engineering, Education, Business
Administration, Pharmacy and
Social Welfare must obtain cards

4

Admis. Office

university dance workshop

presents
an evening of contemporary

works

DANCE THEATER
Director
Billie Kirpich
Guest Artist
John Wilson
Baird Hall
8:30 P.M.
OCTOBER 17, 18, 1967
State University of New York
at Buffalo
Tickets—Norton Box Office
$1.50
Students $.50 and $1.00
—

Ernst

&amp;

&amp;

Sells

Ernst

R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.
York Corp.
Texas-U.S. Chemical Co.
Johnson Service Co.
Dansville Public Schools
Gorham Central School
Oct. 18

Bradstreet, Inc.
Dun
Lord Corp.
Bunker-Ramo Corp.
Penna. Dept, of Highways
&amp;

Oct. 19

Carborundum Co.
Raytheon Co.

Grumman Aircraft Co.
Sperry Gyroscope Co.

Oct. 20

New York State Banking Dept.
Sinclair Research, Inc.
Texaco, Inc.
Addressograph-Multigraph
Corp.
Fisher-Price Toys, Inc.
Mobil Oil Co.

General announcements
Oct.

16

James Fenton Lecture
the
second in a series of five lectures
on the theme “Religion and Modern Society,” features Herbert W.
Schneider, professor of philosophy and religion, emeritus, Claremont Graduate School and University Center. The subject will
be “Religion in the Service of
Modern Society.” Conference Theater, Norton, 8:30 p.m.
—

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Spectrum

Elections in 4 states
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Vietnam war to be issue in Nov.

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WASHINGTON (CPS)

—

More

than a quarter of a million citizens in major cities and small
towns have petitioned to put the
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Despite roadblock; thrown up
by city clerks maintaining that
Vietnam is not a civic issue, a
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ballot in San Francisco. New
York, Cleveland. Cambridge. Mas-

—

sachusetts. Wisconsin and elsewhere.

In California, the Supreme
Court ordered the San Francisco
city clerk Sept. 18 to put the
referendum committee's Proposition P on the November ballot.
Proposition P states that "it is

the policy of the people of the
city and county of San Francisco that there be an immediate
ceasefire and withdrawal of U. S.
troops from Vietnam so that the
people of Vietnam can settle
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A poll taken by San Francisco
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Significantly, 67 rl of Negro voters
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With or without radical electorates, though, votes against the
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MUSIC TO SWT ANY OCCASION

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In Berkeley, organizers are
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�Friday, October 13, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* Tan

Entertainment
Calendar

Technical problems unnoticed at
warm' Peter. Paul and Mar concert

Wednesday, Oct. 18

Friday, Oct. 13;

PLAY: “The Threepenny
Opera,” Studio Arena, 8:30 p.m.
PLAY: "Emperor Jones,” Buff.
State. Upton Auditorium, 8:15
p.m. through Oct. 15.
FILM: "The Entertainer,” with
Laurance Olivier, Norton Conference.

Contemporary
LECTURE:
China, Dief. 147, 8 p.m.
Saturday, Oct. 14:

CONCERT: The Four Tops, St
Bonaventure University, 9 p.m.

Thursday, Oct. 19;

FILM: “Billy .Jjar,” Norton Con

ference Theater.

Friday, Oct. 20:
PLAY: “The Comedy of Errors,” Kleinhans, 8 p.m.
PLAY: “The Queen and the
Rebels,” Studio Arena Theater
School, 8:30 p.m., through Oct.
22, Oct. 27 through 29 and Nov.
3 through 5.

Saturday, Oct. 217
CONCERT: Eileen Farell and
Lukas Foss, Kleinhans, 8:30 p.m.
CONCERT: Recital,. L i b r a r y
Auditorium, Lafayette Square, 3

Monday, Oct. 1«;
FILM; “Night of the Hunter,
Capen 140, 8 p.m.

LECTURE; James Fenton Lec-

ture, Norton Conf. Theater, 8:30

p.m.

PLAY: “Number Ten Downing
Street," O'Keefe Center, Toronto,
8:30 p.m. through Oct. 28.

Tuesday, Oct. 17:
RECITAL: Dance Theater. John
Wilson, guest artist. Billie Kirpich, director, Baird, 8:30 p.m.
also Oct. 18.

FILM: “Open City" directed by
Rossellini, 7 p.m.

p.m.

Sunday, Oct. 22:
CONCERT: Jack Jones and the

Rubin Mitchell Trio, Kleinhans.

Tuesday, Oct. 24:
CONCERT: Eileen Farell and
Lukas Foss, Kleinhans, 8:30 p.m.
Wednesday, Oct. 25;
CONCERT: P.D.Q. Bach Concert directed by Prof. Peter
Schickels, Kleinhans, 8:30 p.m.

the happiest way to entertainment Is to

“enter laughin g"

Spectrum Staff Reporter

Peter, Paul and Mary quickly endeared themselves to
a receptive, youthful audience of 3100 both last Saturday
and Sunday evenings at Kleinhans Music Hall. Peter Yarrow,
Paul Stookey and Mary Travers are true professionals who
are comfortable and capable on stage. Mini-clad Mary added
exuberance to the group with her expressive style.

The difficulty was all but unnoticed by the audience but the
folk singers were visibly distracted. They mentioned the problem on stage and further complained after the show that they
were not allowed to use their
own sound system in Kleinhans.

Overcome
The surplus of warmth, sincerity and talent easily overcame
technical difficulties Saturday
evening. Some highlights of the
show included a jug band version of "I’m in Love With a Big
Blue Phrogg” and “Hurry Sundown,” which brought out the
excellent harmony of the group.
The intellectual undertones of

the trio and of the songs they
write was exposed as Paul introduced several of their more profound works, such as “The Great
Mandella.”
As the time came for the beau-

tiful and effective contemporary
folk song “Puff the Magic
Dragon,” Peter introduced it:
“This is a children’s song and
nothing more; and when 1 write
a song about pot, I’ll tell you.”

strikingly friendly.
a
_"~ 836

Z_4II_

'"1

_

*

NOW P

EASTMAN COLOR

LAYING*f"

t

Mary

Each member of the group has

distinctive

background.

Peter had an early interest in
music and art and at the age of
seven he sold his first painting.

By the time he had been grad
uated from the High School of

Music and Art and Cornell University, his career was launched
as a solo performer.

reflected the trio’s views

on performing as she spoke about

With so much talent on stage it is regretable that technical difficulties marred the evening’s concert. The monitors
and speakers of the sound system were out of phase and
feedback distortion resulted.

Interview
I had the pleasure of meeting
and interviewing Peter, Paul
and Mary after the concert. They
are intelligent, sincere, and most

C0LUMBIAPICTURES

New sound
When asked about the “new”
sound of Peter, Paul and Mary in
their album “1700,” Paul contended that the music does not
matter as much as what is being
said. “A changing style is part
of growing," as all three agreed.

by Richard Perlmutter

CONCERT: Jefferson Airplane,
Eastman Theater, Rochester.

“the love affair” of the artist
with creation. Performing has

Paul always felt an instinctive
love of music and during his
campus years at Michigan State
University he was known as a

comedian and singer. A change
visit to a Greenwich Village coffeehouse convinced him that singing would be his career.
Born in downtown New York,

Mary Travers also had an inherent love and proclivity for
singing and had been a member

of several folk groups.

Big break
The big break came six years
ago when Peter, Paul and Mary

met in Greenwich Village to discuss folk singing. It was soon
evident that not only did they
combine to make a captivating
new sound but they also shared
the same views of life and enthusiasm about communicating

these views via the folk song.

Peter, Paul and Mary

capacity crowds at Kleinhans
And thus the three voices and
heard Peter, Paul, and Mary
souls were amalgamated to form
perform works from their new
the creative rapport of Peter,
"Album 1700," as well as sevPaul and Mary.
eral

From this point on, theirs was
the “typical success story,” from
struggling in abject poverty to
small night clubs, to large night
clubs, television, record contracts,
etc,, etc.

Their outlook on their music is
idealistic. They are attempting to
communicate what they feel and
are not performing for the financial rewards. Meeting them
Saturday convinced me that this
motivation is authentic and sincere; They write their own music
and emphasize honestly in all
their work.

"new direction" numbers.

become a kind of “group therapy” for the trio, she said.
“The moment performing becomes a job, then the group will
cease to exist.” No one would
have the energy or ambition to

continue, she added.

Peter enjoys talking about the
hippie movement. Although he
does not condone drugs, he feels
that hippies have really found a
method of relating themselves in
an atmosphere of calm feeling
and love.

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�Friday,

Pag* El*v*n

The Spectrum

October 13, 1967

Ma Sitson, Chinese escapee, to have Book Review
Chinese
Revolt
Cultural
Philadelphia
concerto performed in
reflected last week on his escape from the mainland and
ten months of political asylum in the United States during
an interview at his suburban Washington home.
In one of the first interviews Ma Sitson has granted
since his arrival here in January, the composer-violinist sat
relaxed and looking well-rested. The dignity of which he
had been stripped during his ordeal at hard labor in Mao
Tse-tung’s “intellectual concentration camps” was restored

Iture
The effects of the experience
kept Ma from practicing the violin for a long period. He resumed

Of hjs 30 major works and 13
unpublished compositions, only
one was saved from the Red
Guards, and its preservation was
not intentional. The composition
was passed from the parents of
Ma’s godson, who is also the son-

in workers’ clothes late that
month.
There followed months of wandering, during which Julon and
Celia made secret trips to see
their father. On Celia’s third trip
she delivered a suit of worker’s
overalls and shirt, and she and
her father escaped from the camp
and rejoined the others. Celia
has just finished writing a book
on the experience.
This family reunion took place
in November, 1966, After that
the escape of the Ma family be-

in-law of violinist Yehudi Menuhin, in Shanghai, to their son
in London, who in turn gave it

to the famed violinist.

Will play concerto

It is through this interplay that
the Camden (N.J.) Symphony Orchestra, under the direction of
Ling Tung, will play the concerto
on Oct. 31. China-born Ling Tung
is Ma’s brother-in-law. Staged at
The Academy of Music in Philadelphia, the concert will feature
Ma’s brother, Ma Si-Hon, as solo
violinist. He has been in the
United States with his family
since 1948.
The concerto, written in 1943,
has been performed in China as
well as in Czechoslovakia and the
Soviet Union
Ma’s writing is of notably conventional western style in comparison to that of his fellow
Chinese composers. His studies at
the Paris Conservatory may have
been responsible in part for the
influence of the West in his
music.

The Concerto for Violin and
Piano, though written in Japanese-occupied Canton during the
war, “shows nothing of the- period. In fact,” Ma said, it is pastoral. Its three movements follow
traditional concerto form of a
sonata; a slow, sad piece based
on a Cantonese folk song; and
then a rondo.

only recently.
1 Ma was removed to a second
camp in August, 1966, and his
wife, daughter Celia, then 22, and
son lulon, 19, were terrorized by
Red Guards. They fled Peking

President of conservatory
When Mao barred western
music in Red China in 1963, it
put an end to Ma’s concertizing.
He retired from the concert stage
to compose. At this time he was
president of the Central Conservatory of Music in Peking, a job
more ornament than power since
the vice president was a powerful Party official.
Of the conservatory itself,”
Ma’s wife, Mary, also at the interview, said: “It is a different ar-

comes purposely vague. To protect relatives and those who
helped them, they will say only
that they reached the coast, presumably Canton, and escaped to
an undisclosed destination in a
stolen boat.

rangement than in your country.
Like Poland, China’s conservatory

is state-run; it is where all music
allowed in the country is controlled.” As a former vice chairman of the All-China Federation
of The Literature and the Arts
Circles, Ma once decided what
composers could be heard in
China. The old masters were
among the few accpted as were
Bartok, Prokofiev and Shostakovich.

"Cultural revolution"
As a musician, once an honorable profession in China, Ma was

subjected to the brutal treatment of the Cultural Revolution.
He was publicly degraded at the
Academy, then sent to a Socialism Academy for 50 days where
he and 500 others of the culturally elite were forced to read communist propaganda and undergo

Mas Settled in U. S
The Mas arrived in the United
States last January. The State
Department first publicly acknowledged their presence here
in April,
Now settled in a comfortable
home, Ma talks of his future. He
would like to teach soon. Right
now he busies himself writing a
book, composing a second violin
concerto and a piano concerto,
and trying, with only moderate

world has nothing to fear from
the current cultural revolution
now sweeping Communist China,
according to the Swedish journalist who has viewed part of the
turmoil first-hand.
Granqvist b e I i e v e s the upheaval on the mainland of Communist China is domestic both
in its causes and purposes. He
bases his conclusions on the result of two visits he made to
Communist China
NoveifiberDecember 1964, and April-May,
1965
plus his own study of
the writings of Chinese Communist party chairman Mao Tsetung and official Chinese documents and press releases.
—

Granqvist believes Mao is an
old man in a hurry. He thinks
Mao fears that old age might
deprive him of the energy and
time he still needs to build his

“absolutely just society.” He also

believes Mao is convinced his
successor would not pursue that
goal as relentlessly as he has.
Although Granqvist’s last visit
to Communist China was more

Kong.

VeuCHTfOL MOUTH!
r NOW
RfP-ROARWG

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SPOOF
OF WE /920s SP/CBD
v
WTH mSfC SONGS
AND KBY3TOHE COMBDy/" J
'

,

,

*

1
JULIE ANDREWS
I

cape.

THOROUGHLY MODERN

His two children, who live with
him, commute daily to George-

'MU

town University, where they are
enrolled in language studies.
Both are proficient musicians, although Celia is equally content to

“When a young child is put
to hard labor and grows up being
used to it, he has no problem,”
said Mrs. Ma in halting English,

“On the whole,” Granqvist
says, "the peasants look upon the
Cultural Revolution as still one
more of the innumerable campaigns begun since the Communist power seizure in 1949, and
they figure that this too shall
pass away,”
"For that reason,” the author
believes, “they are waiting patiently, going about their business as usual. And some of them
have once again begun to burn
incense on the family altars of
their ancestors.”
Granqvist currently is Far East
correspondent for Scandinavian
newspapers, radio and television,
with his headquarters in Hong

—

success, to reconstruct some of
the compositions lost in the es:

hard labor.

than a year ago, his work is one
of the few first-hand accounts of
the turbulence which Secretary
Rusk has described as one of the
most important dramas of our
time.
Granqvist believes the Revolution ‘has robbed China of its
freedom in international -affairs.
The necessity of remaining ideologically pure has forced the
Chinese to isolate themselves
more and more from the rest of
the world.”

The Red Guard: A Report on
Mao's Revoltion by Hans Granqvist Praeger $5.95: The outside

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�Friday, October 13, 1967

The Spectt-um

Page Twelve

Task Force part two

campus releases...

Faculty bill of rights

The History department will sponsor a lecture by Konrad Von
Moltke at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday in Room 329 Norton Hall. Mr. Von
Mnltlrp tnrinlnpisi and historian, will speak on “Max Weber and
Refreshments will be served and all interested students are in
vited to attend.

The Task Force on University
present its final reThere will be a meeting of all senior English majors interested/ Pol CJ f
v ted on
port
students
in information about graduate work in English here and
J16*, , etlnesda
Members of the department will be available to answer questions. s
Undergraduates will be asked
The meeting will be held at 3 p.m. Tuesday in Diefendorf 146.
’

°

(

,

7

.

,

.

to vote yes, no, or comment on
each separate article of the Charter for Academic Freedom.
Student comment must be written and typed beforehand, and

.

The Niagara Frontier Chapter of the American Civil Liberties
Union will sponsor an open meeting at 8 p.m. Monday in Hoorn 231
Norton Hall. Mr. Ira Glasser, Associate Director of the New York
Civil Liberties Union, will give an eye-witness account of the court-

martial of Capt. Howard Levy.
Following Mr. Glasser’s presentation will be a panel discussion
by Dr. Bruno Schutkeker, Dr. Lyle B. Borst, and Mr. Glasser.

Today it the deadline for submitting candidates for the Fall
Weekend Queen contest. Any girl wishing to be a candidate may
submit her name to Rose Freedman in the Norton Hall Administrative Office.

Preliminary judging will be held at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday
in the Dorothy Haas Lounge. Final judging will take place at 3:30
p.m., Oct. 25 in the Millard Fillmore Room.

Student Association treasurer Douglas Braun has announced
that copies of the final financial policy regarding student fees of
the Student Senate will be available in the Senate office. All clubs,
publications and organizations may pick up this information.

Dr. Thomas McKeown, professor of social medicine at the University of Birmingham, England, will be “visiting professor” at the
School of Medicine, Oct. 16 through 20.
Besides working informally with students, faculty and hospital
personnel during the five days he will be here, Dr. McKeown
will also address the annual student medical convocation. His speech,
“The Future of Medical Practice," will be presented at 2 p.m., Oct,
19 at Butler Auditorium in Ckpen Hall.
Mr. McKeown is a National Research Council Scholar and Demonstrator in Biochemistry at McGill. He is a world authority on
social medicine, medical education and fetal abnormalities.
The Buffalo branch of the American Association of University
Women has funds available to women students for post doctoral work.
Those who have completed course work leading to the doctorate are

also eligible.
Applications may be obtained from Dr. Carol H. Collins, 107
Noel Dr„ 634 4938.
Loan funds arc available to undergraduate women who have
completed the freshman year. For information, contact Mrs Bernard
Shilt, 885-8926.
The Slavic Club

will hold its opening meeting at 7:30 p.m.
Monday in Norton 233. Students will discuss their experiences while
on tour of the Soviet Union; a coffee hour will follow. Both old and
prospective members are urged to attend this meeting.
The UUAB Literature and Drama Committee will present “The
Private Life of the Master Race.” a play by Bertolt Brecht, Oct, 18
through 21 at 8:30 p.m. in the Millard Fillmore Room.
The B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation will hold services for out-of-

town students at the Jewish War Veterans Post Friday evening and
Saturday: A "Break the Fast" supper will be served at the conclusion
of the Yom Kippur Service.
There will be a supper at 5:30 p.m. Sunday in the Hillel House.
Reservations are necessary. Following the supper the movie, "Death
of a Salesman” will be shown in the Conference Theater in Norton
Hall. Admission is free and open to all students.
Hillel’s annual One-Day Institute will be held Nov. 5. The main
lecture will be given by Dr. Trade Weiss-Rosmarin. Students planning to attend this event should make their reservations now at the

submitted with the ballot. The
comment can concern an amendment of the article, a proposal
for a new article, or a general
discussion of an individual topic.
In an attempt to inform the
University Community about the
Task Force which was started last
spring, the Spectrum is running
this second of three installments
of the text of the Charter for
the Academic Community.
II FACULTY BILL OF RIGHTS
A. Freedom of Expression.
Faculty members are free to
speak publicly on any issue and
to conduct research or publish
on any topic.
B. Freedom from Arbitrary or
Procedurally Unfair Actions.
A faculty member has the right
(o be heard in any case in which
he is charged with misconduct
and the right to challenge any
other decisions which affect him.
Procedures for hearing and challenge shall be in conformity with
due process of law.
1. In case of alleged misconduct, due process requires: (a)
that the faculty member be given
an opportunity to discuss the al-

NOTE'S FLUDDE
THI

CHESTER MIRACLE
PLAY

A four-day workshop designed
to encourage greater participation
by predominantly-Negro southern colleges in community service
programs was held last week at
the University of Wisconsin,
Presidents of 26 Negro colleges
and universities in 16 southern
states and some of their faculty
members attended the sessions in
Madison and discussed the values of continuing education, particularly as they apply to solution
of community problems. Other

in

u

■

T COOK IONITE.

-

—

|
|

ICKEN DINNER... $1.49
3161 Moin St.

—

Assume Obligations of the

Larger Community.

Faculty members have the
rights of private citizens, and
the exercise of these rights, on
or off campus, shall not subject
them to institutional penalties.

Violation of Civil or criminal
law by a faculty member shall
not subject him to institutional
sanctions unless the infraction is
also a violation of University
standards.

No faculty member shall be required by the University to swear
or affirm any loyalty oath.

educators, representatives of Federal programs and experts on
community service organizations
also participated,
Special attention was given to
problems that are peculiar to the
South and those that the region
shares with other sections of the
country. The leadership role of
higher education institutions in
the community was studied in
terms of administration, sources
of funds, faculty and staffing, and
understanding the local power

pect the loyalty oath to weaken
anti-Johnson movements including those being organized by reform Democrats in New York and
the California Democratic Council
on the west coast.
The Pro-Johnson sources reason
that the anti-Johnson delegates
will impair their credibility if
they agree to support the party’s
Presidential candidate, who
would probably be Johnson, in advance.
According to the resolution, if
any delegates refuse to support
Johnson, they will not be seated
at the convention.

SSK

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834-6688

FREE DELIVERY.

E. Freedom to Enjoy Rights and

'

DELIGHT!

PHONE

ficient time to prepare his defense; be given the opportunity
to deny, refute “and rebut" the
charges, asisted by an adviser or
counsel; be given the right to
have the hearing conducted by an

)

-

.CHICKEN
|

states, was formally placed

the Democrat’s Equal
Rights Committee by Governor
Richard Hughes of New Jersey.
The loyalty oath proposal was
aimed at both “dump-Johnson”
movements and southern critics
of the administration’s civil-rights
programs. Johnson supporters ex-

Ul, Ret
Mi m—Mr. ht II, ■ M
ilmttnMiMiMmnkiPtolMI
at IBS Peak d. 14202

The Democratic National Committee has been urged to bar any
delegates to the 1968 Democratic
National Convention who refuse
to pledge their support of the
National Ticket in advance.
The recommendation, made by
party leaders from thirteen westbefore

SAINT PAULS
CATHEDRAL

D. Freedom of Self-Government.
Faculty members collectively
have the right to participate
democratically in the formulation
of educational policies at all
levels. Faculty members individually have the right to participate
democratically in the formulation
of educational policy in all the
academic units of which they are
members. All faculty members
have the right to be represented
in the Faculty Senate.

Democrats urged to bar
anti-Johnson delegates

ern

Mink by benjamin Britten

leged misconduct with the accuser
and the party formally initiating
the charge, before the formal

Lots of Parking,

j
)

charges are preferred; and (b)
that the faculty member be informed in writing of all the
charges against him; be presented with all the evidence to be
used against him; be given suf-

impartial judge or judges; and be
given the right to appeal any

adverse decision.
2. In cases in which a faculty
member challenges a decision affecting him, due process requires:
(a) that the procedure for challenge be clearly and publiclystated in some convenient place:
and (b) that the faculty member
be permitted to make his challenge directly, in person, to the

appropriate person or governing
body deciding his case.

COMMUTER COUNCIL
Residence dining rooms in
Goodyear, Clement and Tower
halls will be open 8 p.m. to 3

a.m.

Sunday

through

Friday.

Both commuter and resident students may use these rooms as
evening study areas. The Food
Service will remain open.

The new policy was announced
by Peter Gamba, vice president
of the Inter-Residence Council.

26 Negro college presidents meet

Hillel House.

Prof. Melvin Schimm of the Duke University Law School will
interview interested students from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Monday in Room
262 Norton Hall. Anyone interested in attending law school is invited
to meet Prof. Schimm.

C. Freedom from Disclosure.
Information about a faculty
member shall not be revealed to
non-university agencies or persons unless it is relevant to the
faculty member’s academic performance or he specifically authorizes its revelation.

-

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For senate
The freshman candidates for
election to the Student Senate
have been announced. These students have been approved by the
Election Committee and the
Dean’s Office.
In alphabetical order, the candidates are: JoAnne Balsom, Andrea Baruchin, Mary Carlson.
Marian Dreksler, George Heyman.
Rich Haier, Thomas Keller, Harry
Klein, Ellen Price, Larry Leraer,
Ellen Rossman, and Michael Seldin.

Of these twelve candidates,
four will eventually be elected to
serve on the Student Senate.
Campaigning will begin Wednesday, and will continue until
the following Wednesday, when
voting will take place.
Students will be able to cast
their ballots on that day from
9 a m. to 5 p.m. Ballot boxes will
be located in the Center Lounge
in Norton Hal] and in the lobby
of Goodyear Hall.

WAGNER OPTICAL

—

—

structure. The responsibility of
institutions to grapple with community problems and the experience of other institutions with
community service adult education programs also was discussed.
The workshop was sponsored
by the University of Wisconsin
Department of Education, University Extension, and the Negro
College Committee on Adult Education under a contract between
the U.S. Office of Education and
the university regents.

—

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TF S-5526
EYES EXAMINED
GLASSES FITTED
Daily 11:30 to 8:30
Sat. 9:00 to 4:00
Closed Wednesdays

�Friday, October 13, 1967

The Spectrum

Page Thirteen

Meyerson appoints James DeSantis N.Y.S. loses population lead

liaison to Buffalo broadcasters
panel of experts on various Uni-

T also want to try to work

pointed Mr. James R. DeSantis
director of the Office of RadioTelevision Programming Liaison
for the State University of Buf-

cuss current problems. Transportation will be the topic for this

program and expand national
coverage of University events and
people. If anyone on campus has
a project worth while and brings
it to our attention, we would try
to include it in one of our programs.

falo.
Mr. DeSantis had worked in
this capacity on a part-time basis
since January and he has been
acting director since June. He is
in charge of producing radio and
television programs about the
University, its students and personnel, and its happenings.

Current programs include “Dialouge,” an informal interview
program spotlighting only University personalities. Controversial topics are often discussed on
this channel 7 program.
“Blueprint for Buffalo” will
premiere Sunday from 4 to 4:30
p.m. on channel 7. Each week a

Another series currently being
aired is the “State of the University” radio series. The series, currently being broadcast on 52
radio stations in New York State
and one in Washington, D.C., consists of an interview with people
related to the University.
“My belief,” said Mr. DeSantis,
“is that we have growing right
here in Buffalo a world renowned
university because of the excellence of the faculty and students
being attracted here. I want to
work more people of the University into the local broadcasting
media, in order to make the people of Western New York more
aware of the strides taking place
at the University.

The report, listing some 170
New York colleges and universities which ‘received federal support in 1966, shows that this grew
from $170.2 million in 1963 to
$311.1 million last year. Six New

A report by the National Science Foundation indicates that
New York sets the pace in earned
degrees at all levels and in advanced degrees. The state also is
ahead in earned degrees at all
levels
doctor's, master's and

such support.

—

President Martin Meyerson an-

week.

WASHINGTON (GNS)
New
York State has lost its population
lead to California and also runs
second to that state in number
of college students, but the Em
pire State still leads in higher

—

“We are desperately trying to
hit a middlemf-the-road between
the education aspect and the commercial aspect.”

Mr. DeSantis, a 1967 graduate
of Canisius College, was production assistant for the College
radio series, “Canisius Presents”
from 1962 to 1964,
He also worked as , an announcer for the Niagara Frontier Broadcasting Corporation and
producer for WADV-FM in Buffalo for the “Campus Profiles”
program.

bachelor's—in the sciences and
engineering degrees.

Cornell University is 18th on
and the University of
Rochester is 21st. The University
of Michigan and Massachusetts
Institute of Technology are the
the list

leaders.

Foss and Farrell to open
The Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra will open its eighteenth
concert series at Kleinhans Music
Hall.

Eileen Farrell will be guest
soprano with Lukas Foss acting as
conductor and pianist. The concerts will take place at 8:30 p.m..
Saturday, Oct. 21 and Tuesday.

THE SPREAD-EAGLE OF TECHNOLOGY
AT GRUMMAN
Ranges from inner to outer space
Grumman has special interest for the graduating engineer and scientist seeking the widest spread of technology for his
skills. At Grumman, engineers are involved in deep ocean technology...engineers see their advanced aircraft designs
proven daily in the air over Vietnam, and soon... in outer space, the Grumman LM (Lunar Module) will land the astronauts on the lunar surface. Grumman, situated in Bethpage, L.l. (30 miles from N.Y.C.), is in the cultural center of
activity. Universities are close at hand for those who wish to continue their studies. C.C.N.Y., Manhattan College. New
York University, Pratt Institute, Columbia University, State University at Stony Brook, Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, Hofstra University and Adelphi College are all within easy distance. The surroundings are not hard to lake. Five
beautiful public golf courses are in Bethpage—two minutes from the plant. While sand beaches stretch for miles along
the Atlantic (12 minutes drive). The famed sailing reaches of Long Island Sound are only eleven miles away.
The informal atmosphere is a Grumman tradition, matched by an equally hard-nosed one of turning out some of the
free world's highest performance aircraft systems and space vehicles.To name a few...

ntruder—:actical,
:apon system

ton
Seacraft

Oct. 24.

A diverse season is planned
for the series. In the classical
realm, concerts are scheduled
with such artists as Van Cliburn,
Jacob Lateiner and Igor Stravinsky. Pops and youth concerts
are also being presented throughout the year.

overnight
case

t
You gel one with every
bottle of Lensine. a
removable contact lens
carrying case. Lensine.
by Murine is the new.
alt purpose solution

PX15—4-Man Deep
Submersible Vessel to
conduct undersea experiments

tor complete
contact lens care
It ends the need

and Chemical Engineering
Here then is the opportunity for graduating engineers. AEs. CEs, EEs, MEs, lEs, Physic majors
representatives will be
majors...to take their place in the continuum of technology that is Grumman. Grumman

If an interview is not convenient at this

.

time, send comprehensive resume
to: Mr. Frank A. Hurley,
Administrator of College Relations,
Engineering Employment, Dept. GR-251

Jk..

(

GRUMMAN

AIRCRAFT ENGINEERING CORPORATION
Betbpage Long Island
New York, 11714
•

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An equal opportunity employer (Ai/F)

tegttHfefi

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ON CAMPUS OCTOBER 19

office.
To obtain Grumman literature and arrange an interview, contact your placement

JH
illtnlltH

for separate
solutions for

its

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It s tne

one solution for
all your contact
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30

for contacts

�Th

Pag* Fourteen

•

Friday, October 13, 1967

Spectrum

Man is granted CO status despite
stand of qualified opposition to war
itus

that he does not object to “international police actions,” nor to
defensive wars.
He “would have fought Germany and Japan” in World War

I, but he is totally opposed to
nuclear war and to “war which
involves the nationals of one
country intervening in another.”
In short, John McAuliff is opposed to certain kinds of wars,
but not all wars.

Since he is not “conscientiously
opposed to participation in war
in any form,” as the Selective
Service Act says a conscientious
objector must be, he does not
completely fullfill the requirements to be a C. O.
In spite of his beliefs about
war, however, his state Selective
Service appeals board (in Indiana) has granted him C.O. status.
He is to serve two years doing

alternative service.
Mr, McAuliff does not know
why his state board decided to
approve his C.O. application. He
had not expected them to do so,
and was preparing for further
appeals and court action.

Mr. McAuliffs case was being
considered), his appeal could have
been forwarded to the Justice
Department by his state board if
there was any question about it.
The department would then have
held a hearing to decide his
case.

As far as he knows, the appeal was never forwarded to
Washington. No Justice Department hearing was held.
The decision by the Indiana
Appeals Board in McAuliffs case
has no legal standing, and cannot be employed as a legal precedent by other applicants for C.O.
status.

Case being appealed
According to a spokesman for
the American Civil Liberties
Union, there are a number of
selective C.O. cases that will be
reaching the courts within the
next year. Only one case, however, that of Air Force Capt.
Dale Noyd, is currently on appeal to the Supreme Court.
Capt. Noyd objects specifically
to serving in Vietnam or aiding
in the war effort there, and has

On the

According to one of his attorneys, the Supreme Court is
supposed to be deciding whether
or not to hear the case within a
month and a half, but it may
never get to do so.

Action line

.

.

331-5000
Do you often think it impossible to untangle the 'SUNYAB bureaucracy?
In cooperation with the Dean of Students' Office, Th# Spectrum is sponsoring an ACTION
puzzling
Through
LINE.
ACTION LINE, individual students con get an answer to a
question, find out where and why University decisions are mode, and get ACTION
when change is indicated.
pertinent to the student
LINE weekly column.
Each inquiry will be thoroughly investigated ohd answered
individually. The name of the individual orginoting the inquiry will not be published.

Q. Why does the University Bookstore charge a 10c fee for
cashing personal checks?
A. Mr. George P. Bielan, General Manager of the Bookstore,
stated that, “The 10c fee is not applicable in cases where merchandise
However, the cashing, depositing, and
Capt. Noyd has been assigned purchases are involved.
luty as a flight instructor. “As general paperwork for this check cashing service requires the full
soon as he is ordered to train a time efforts of two employees. Additionally, some people have abused
pilot who is going to Vietnam, the privilege by cashing N.S.F. checks which has increased our work
he’U have to disobey,” says the load and when a $25.00 check proves to be uncollectable, it is
necessary to cash 250 checks at 10( each to recover the loss thus
attorney.
incurred. The University Bookstore has worked closely with Jack
If that occurs, Noyd will prob- Huttner, President of the Student Judiciary, and with Ronald Stein,
ably be court-martialled, and his
military trial will take precedence Assistant Dean of Students, in hopes of reducing the incidence of
a sigificant reduction
over his appeal to the Supreme N.S.F. checks cashed in the Bookstore. With
in this area we can then consider the elimination of the 101 fee
Court.
and possibly raise the check cashing limit.”
Q. Why was there such a drastic reduction in individual loan
There is little likelihood, therefore, that a “selective C.O.” case funds granted by NDL over last year's allotment?
will reach the Supreme Court in
A. In the case of each application, the amount of loan authorized
the near future. Others whp apply is based upon the information contained on a student’s Parents’
for C.O. status under circumConfidential Statement, and any other information which he substances like Mr. McAuliff’s may mitted relative to the sources of financial assistance available to him.
be successful, but if they are, it
Where the Parents’ Confidential Statement reflects an increased
will be because their local or ability on the part of the family to contribute toward the student’s
state boards construe the phrase educational expenses, or where additional sources of assistance, such
“war in any form” as his state as private scholarships, etc., become available to him, a corresponding
board did. There is not a legal change in the amount of the loan which may be authorized must be
precedent that will support C.O. made.
applicants who object to the
Since students submit a new financial assistance application each
Vietnam war in particular, or year, and the loan which may be approved is based on the family’s
to wars of intervention generfinancial status in applicable years, an increase in a loan in ensuing
ally.
years could also be authorized where the circumstances warrant this.
Q. Last year. Action Line investigated the question of why
dorm students were not permitted to make long distance calls from
their rooms, and learned that this possibility is "under study." So
far, no one has been contacted and as far as we know, nothing has
been done about this. Why? Other campuses have this privilege, i.e.,
Harpur and Stony Brook.
A. The I.R.C. has just received a proposal from the New York
The demonstrators were seekTelephone Company outlining the procedure for converting present
a
ing
delay in the construction
residence hall telephones to full-service long distance instruments.
so that alternate sites could be
After I.R.C. reviews this and talks with other colleges in the area
considered. Many brought sleeppresently have long distance privilege, they will approach the
ing bags and spent the night on who
resident population. Several problems must be resolved (i.e. student
the campus.
responsibility for payment of charges) before the plan can be put
Seven students were suspended into effect. Also, after the decision is made by all concerned, it would
for interfering with the chopping take several months to make the change. Joel Feinman, President
of I.R.C., can be contacted for more information.
down of trees, but then were reinstated pending a hearing this (For specific answerss to your questions, and for direct service, call ACTION LINE,

CCNY students act to save grass
against the construction of temporary prefabricated classrooms
and offices on the campus. One
student was nearly crushed
by a bulldozer as he lay down
behind it in a successful attempt
to stop it.

Students at the City College
of New York last week temporarily saved campus lawns and trees
from the fate that has met the
campus grounds at Buffalo in

recent

The

years.

students

demonstrated

PARENTS' WEEKEND
Let Your Parents Enjoy the Colonial Hospitality
and Modern Comfort of
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�Friday, October 13, 1967

Tha Spectrum

the spectrum of

sports

Bulls and Terriers to clash Saturday
in rivalry contest at Rotary Field
A solid sixty minute effort last Saturday afternoon by
the State University of Buffalo football team has undoubtedly destroyed all Lambert Cup aspirations of Temple University.
Buffalo, now two and two on the season, must contend
with perennially hard-to-manage Boston University tomorrow at Rotary Field.

,—

Though they defeated the Bulls in 1966, 26-16, the
Terriers still remain one game behind Buffalo, which leads
with four wins and three setbacks, in a series which is
developing into quite a cantankerous rivalry.
After two initial victories—20-16 and 20-14—over Bucknell and Colgate, respectively, BU has been humbled by
Temple, 22-16, and outclassed
by Harvard, 29-14, on consecutive weekends.

Complementing Dexter in the

backfield will be Buffalo-b red
Neil Smith at wingback.

Smith, an outstanding receiver,
stands at 6 feet. Weighing 195
pounds, Smith is the best blocking back on the squad. Last
season, Smith led the team in
receptions, 29, and ran for a

49-yard TD against—you guessed

it—the Bulls.
Rounding out the Terrier
ground attack is fullback “Rog”
Rosinski. A reputable blocker,
Rosinski is responsible for BU’s

Tom Thornton
will call signals for Terriers
After a mediocre 5-5 season
last year, Coach Warren Schmakal, in his fourth campaign at
Boston, feels that his twenty experienced starters, coupled with
new speed, size, and balance,
represent a good deal more promise than one might glean from
the records. The promise is such
that epidemics of optimism have
been rampant on the BU campus
since the close of last season.
However, with two defeats to
date, Terrier optimism must slowly be diminishing.
The Terrier offense revolves
about the “I” formation, which
is believed to take fullest advantage of the talent on hand.
Occasionally, though, Boston exhibits Schmakel's traditional
double-wing, which he is reluc-

tant to

scrap entirely.

Leading passer
Calling signals for the Terriers
will be Tommy Thornton, the second leading passer in BU history.
The 5 feet, 9 inch, 175-pounder
has compiled quite a record in
two seasons. He has thrown for
1,889 yards, and had a one-game
high of 260 yards against the
University of Massachusetts when
only a sophomore. Thornton is a
real scrambelr, and is regarded
as the “key" to the Terrier offense this fall.
Although Coach Schmakel
doesn't expect him to scramble as

inside drive.
Reggie Rucker, a 6 feet, 1 inch,
185-pound split end, adds some
real punch to the Terrier offense
and, given an open field, .Rucker
is exceptionally dangerous. He set
a BU record last year by returning three punts for TDs (71, 71,
and 54 yds.).
At tight end Boston features
“Hap” Redgate. The 6 feet, 190pound Redgate has been moved
from the split end spot he occupied during his junior year.

Line intact
The Terrier interior line remains intact from a year ago.
Although a few pounds heavier at
every position, BU will have no
sizeable weight advantage over
the Bulls.
Defensively, the Terriers are
solid and have a much improved
second unit in reserve.

Schmakel feels he has an exceptional tackle combination in
Ray Norton (6 feet, 2 inches, 240)
and Wilson Whitty. Whitty at 6
feet, 3 inches and 218 pounds is
extremely fast and strong, and
is considered a top pro prospect
Named BU’s
as a linebacker.
“MVP” last season, Whitty received the “outstanding lineman
award” on two occasions.

With five lettermen back, Boston’s linebacking contingent has
shown real strength, especially
in 6 feet, 215-pound Bill Campbell and 5 feet, 11 inch, 212pound Cliff Burton.

Sportin' Life
by Bob Woodruff
Sports Editor

Would those members of this academic community who believe
that the world of sports is divorced from the harsh world of social
jsalitx please awaken | ■
is a distinct possibility of a boycott of the 1968 Olympics by Uncle
Sam’s Negro athletes. If such a walkout is instituted it would not
be provoked by the madman screams of H. Rapp Brown or other
radically oriented Negro revolutionists. It would instead be the
collective action of some of the world's greatest athletes who have
correctly aligned their sense of values.
The roster of athletes who are considering foregoing the personal glory of the Olympic spotlight is stocked with the greatest
names of track and field today. Sprinters Charlie Greene and Jimmy
Hines have traded victories in the 100 yard dash and are leading
an assault on the nine-second-flat hundred. Willie Davenport holds
the world standard in the 120 yard high hurdles and Earl McCullough is right on his heels.
Lee Evans is the nation’s fastest at a quarter of a mile, and
Tommy Smith holds no less than nine world marks, including the
best time in his specialty, the 220. Jerry Proctor and Ralph Boston
are the world’s premiere long jumpers with both having soared over
26 feet. The 440 yard world relay record is held by an all-Negro
University of Southern California quartet.
The list of potential superlative Negro athletes for the ’68 games
in Mexico is endless.

Work of extremists?

much this season, Thornton’s
ground-gaining ability was proven
last year in a contest against
Maine, when he earned All East
(ECAC) honors for his combined
running and passing performance.
Supporting Thornton’s air attack is a potent ground crew
led by junior tailback Pete Dexter. At 6 feet, 2 inches, 185
pounds, Dexter is a fine runner
with excellent speed (under 10,0),
enabling him to be quite formidable as a broken-field threat.

Pig* FHhn

Wilson Whltty
considered top pro prospect
Sophomore Pat Hughes, 6 feet,
3 inches, 235 pounds, is a welcomed addition in reserve. The ends,
corners, and safety are also solid,
with good size and speed.

The American public will undoubtedly view any such Negro
action as the work of extremists, instead of a true outgrowth of the
honest desires of a people to be heard above the din of the internal
racial strife with which this country is faced. However, perhaps the
best place to strike the backwardness of an unseeing public is to
dent the pride of the nation.
When our national anthem is not played repeatedly to commemorate triumphs of United States’ athletes, and Old Glory does
not sit atop the competition on the highest pole, perhaps some people
will begin to take notice, and ask themselves why there is no Negro
contingent to bring home the medals for the United States. Some citizens may be stimulated to inquire about the grievances of the Negro
and hopefully may even work to take a progressive step towards
solving this country’s racial problems.

Public dismay
Imagine the dismay of John Q. Public when he sees the Soviet
Union leading the parade of nations in the gold medal derby, and
the United States team well below her accustomed position of athletic domination. If a handful of Americans are taken aback by
the United States’ competitive impotency and begin some introspection concerning the plight of the Negro, such a withholding talent
is desirable.
To an athlete, nothing is more precious than the possession of
an Olympic gold medal. It is the highest aspiration of any athletic
competitor to someday stand alone on the Olympic winner’s
platform as the world's best in his field. Now each among the
brotherhood of Negro athletes is considering relinquishing this moment for which he has trained and dedicated most of his life. Together they are showing this country what value they hold most
dear, and that they care enough to promote this above self and

The Terriers, one game behind
Buffalo ih the seven year series,
will be looking to make up the
deficit on Saturday. However, the
Bulls haven’t lost at home since
“Doc” Urich took over the reins
last Sept. 26 and dropped a game
to Cornell’s Big Red, 28-21. In
their six consecutive Rotary Field
triumphs, Buffalo has piled up national prestige.
198 points, relinquishing only 53.
Perhaps they will move an entire nation to caring.

Bulls ready
The Bulls appear to be both
psychologicaly and physically intact for Boston. Mickey Murtha,
who threw 7 for 13 against Temple for over 200 yards, has turned
in two outstanding home performances thus far.

Bonaventure narrowly
defeats Buffalo harriers

had not yet taken first place this
by Andy Brtiman
Spectrum Stdff Reporter
year. Tuesday he ran his best
Commendations go to Rick
race, leading all finishers with
Wells on his 73-yard reception
in last Saturday's tilt; to Chuck
The cross-country season is the second fastest time ever recorded for the course.
Drankowski, who already has slowly becoming a source of frushauled in 17 aerials and is well tration for both runners and
It seems to this reporter that
ahead of Dick Ashley’s pass-catchcoach alike.
the schedule of meet* is far too
ing calendar; to Mike Luzny on
Whenever the Bulls’ harriers compact. Meets are scheduled
his heads-up defensive play, with have a bad day the opposition Tuesdays and Saturdays.
The possibility of scheduling
five unassisted tackles last week; puts together a fine performance
and to Kenny Rutkowski for an- and soundly defeats our boys. several triangular or quadranguother fine exhibition of speed and
When Coach Fisher and his lar meets would probably imteam put out a fine effort, as they prove the team’s performance due
agility.
did Tuesday, they somehow end to increased time allotted for
practice. This suggestion will be
up on the long end of the score.
Hitting hard
So far this season the Bulls pursued by Coach Fisher in schedThe Bulls should be hitting eseasy meet. They uling for next year, Saturday’s
pecialy hard this weekend in a haven’t had an
meet with Niagara University has
were defeated Tuesday afternoon
game which could turn into some
margin of 26-29 been postponed.
grudge match. For, as "Doc” by a narrow
The next meet for the Bull
against St. Bonaventure UniverUrich has noted, Boston is tl&gt;e sity.
Jim Hughes, a junior, led harriers will take place Tuesday
“team which beat us last year
afternoon at Brockport State
the Bulls again as he has throughin a game we felt we gave
out the six meets thus far. Hughes Teachers College.
away.” This year’s clash, however, should underscore the
Bulls' superiority. With Teddy
Gibbons leading the defensive
nemesis, and Mick Murtha magnetizing the offensive outfit, the
Salurdey, October 14
Last Saturday’s Result*
Bulls will be more than a match
Boston University at State Unifor BU’s Terriers.
Miami (Ohio) 21, Kant Stat# 7 versity at Buffalo (kickoff at 1:30
Field)
State Univ. of Bflo. 44, Tempi* 14 p.m. at Rotary
Kent Slate at Western Michigan
North Cerollna St. 16, Houston 6 North Carolina State at Maryland
THE SPECTRUM
printed by
U. of Virginia 14, Wake Forest 12 Duke Univ. at Uni* of Virginia
Harvard Univ. 29, Boston Univ. 14 Hofstra at Temple IMv. (night)
Partners' Press, Inc.
Dartmouth Col. 24, Holy Cross 6 Penn State U. at Boston Collage
ABGOTT &amp; SMITH PRINTING
Colgate at Holy Cross
Hofstra 33, Univ. of Delaware 31
1381 Kinmoki Ave. (&gt;t Delaware)
Virginia Tech 3, Vlllanova 0
Univ. of Delaware at Rutgers U.
Phone 876-2284
Quanlico Marines at VIBassova U.
Cornell Univ. 23, Colgate 7
...

Game results and schedules

�Friday, October 13, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* Sixteen

Hooi le hits .66

Irish to oppose Trojans
m game of the week'

*

f.i

31

The highlight of last week’s college action was the
upset defeat of third-ranked Houston by a tough North

Carolina State team. With the exception of this game* the
top ten teams seemed to get their opponents with little
difficulty.

As the teams begin to hit their stride, the Hoople’s
percentage is starting its long upward climb. Last week my
record was 10-2 for a nifty .830 percent. This places the
overall average at 26 and 13 for a prosperous .667 average.
This coming week the trend
reverse as the college slate
has some unusually difficult
picks. Among the top games of
the week are number one-rated
U. S. C. against seventh-rated
Notre Dame. In the Big Eight the
battle of the undefeated looms,
as eighth-ranked Missouri takes
on ninth-ranked Colorado, Fourthranked Purdue meets the hard
nosed Ohio State eleven, while in
the East top-ranked Syracuse with
a fantastic defense knocks heads
with a powerful Navy team in
the game that could decide the
Lambert trophy, symbolic of
Eastern supremacy. These and
other top games will highlight
what should prove to be a very
exciting week for college football fans. So without furthur ado
here, with help from my trusted
Indian guide Schweiger, are the
Hoople Picks of the Week.
may

Notre Dam* 28, USC 27: This
contest is the highlight of the

week’s football action. The Fighting Irish were upset by Purdue
two weeks ago, but with players
like Terry Hanratty and Paul
Seymour everybody should have
Mr. Parsegian's problems. This
one will match the passing of
Hanratty against the running of
0. J. Simpson in what will prove
to be The Gam* of the Week.
Nebraska 31, Kansas 14: Coach
Bob Devaney’s Cornhuskers have
been near perfect in their schedule so far. This week’s game
against the Jayhawks should be a
tune-up for their important clash
with Colorado. Look for All-American Wayne Meyland to make 30
or 40 unassisted tackles and the
Cornhuskers to roll up a big
score.
Colorado 28, Missouri 27: It
looks as though the Buffaloes of
Colorado may never lose. Not
only will they win this week’s
game against a tough Missouri
team, but they will go on to win
the Big Eight Crown to the surprise of everyone except myself.
U.C.L.A. 123, California 0;
Sounds funny, but it might not
be far off. The only way this
game could be considered fair
is if Mr. Bcban plays alone. Look
for speedy end Hal Busby to
snare about three touchdown
passes and Beban to run for
another couple in the Mismatch
of tho Week.
Alabama 37, Vanderbilt 6; Coach
Bear Bryant’s Crimson Tide has
finally hit their stride after suffering a humiliating tie with
Florida St. Led by quarterback
Kenny Stabler and the best defense in the south, the Alabama

team is well on its way to a bowl
game for the 91st straight year.
Built 21, Boston University 6:
After this week’s game against
Temple, it looks as though the
Bulls can go all the way. With
Kenny Rutkowski running around,
Lee Jones running through, and
Mr. Murtha throwing over the
Boston line, Cpach Urich’s men
should come out with a winning
record. Look for the Hoople to

in the stands and throw
touchdown passes to the

win series

campus cop.

Arkansas 21, Baylor 6: Frank
Broyles’ Razorbacks lost their
first two games but bounced back
last wek to romp over T.C.U. 26-0.
Arkansas cannot afford to lose
if they hope to stay in contention
for the Southwest Conference
championship. Baylor, without
quarterback Terry Southall, scares
no one.
Penn SI. 27, Boston College 14:
The Nittany Lions came only a
blocked punt away from upsetting
powerful U.C.L.A. last week and
should really be up for this
game. This is a must game for
State if they wish to stay in contention for the Lambert Trophy.
B.C. never seems to win the big

Dick Hughes, Cards' pitcher.
Cards won the series anyway.

Showdown in fhe West

John Unites and Colts to clash with
impregnable Ram defensive four

Perhaps it is unfair to compare this week’s meeting of
the Los Angeles Rams and the Baltimore Colts with the
meeting of the immovable object and the irresistable force
but for all intents and purposes it may be just that,
The immovable object
game.
.778. But perhaps this week we
four all-pros, Lamar Lunde, are
most proud of our ridiculous
North Carolina St. 14, Maryland
Olson, Roger Brown prediction of a 5-3 score in last
10: N. C. State may be caught Merlin
napping after their big win over and Deacon Jones, who man Sunday’s Bills-Denver game. At
Houston last week. Maryland has the defensive line for the halftime, disbelievers, the score
not won yet and will be playing Rams. Opposed to them will stood at 3-2 which should tell you
at home for the first time. Neverbe two more all-pros from something. Hmmm?
theless, N.C. St. will get victory
Baltimore,
Jim Parker and National Football League
number five.
Bob
Pro football Chicago 17, Detroit 13; Chicago
Vogel.
Georgia 14, Mississippi 7: For
are
won
and lost at played Baltimore a lot better last
the first time in years, Mississippi games
week than the 24-3 outcome
has scheduled some tough teams. the line and yet how can we
shows. The return to uniform of
Georgia’s defense will prove to be predict the outcome of these
Rudy Bukich should relieve the
too tough, however, and the fans
duels
Bears quarterbacking miseries.
go

in Jackson, Miss., will

—

home

The irresitible force is
disappointed.
back John Unitas. Still hampered
20,
Purdue
Ohio St. 17: The by tendonitus in his elbow, he
Boilermakers had a real tough has learned to live and play with
game last week with Northwestpain. His genius has led Baltiern and this one should prove to more to four consecutive victories
be just as tough. The game will and his mere presence incites an
be played at Columbus and the air that gives sport its awesome
Buckeyes of Woody Hayes are specter. Opposed to
him will be
always tough at home. Purdue’s All-Pro safety Ed Meador and
Leroy Keyes will be the differflashy Clancy Williams. In our
ence.
opinion
stalemate again.
Navy 14, Syracuse 7: Syracuse
This leaves but two more varhas had better teams in the past iables; the Colt defense and the
and has lost to a lot worse than Ram offense. The game will be
the likes of Navy. Syracuse, un- won or lost right here. The Rams
defeated in three starts, relies on can move the ball yet. their offullback Larry Csonka and a f e n s e is far from explosive.
tough defensive line. Navy has Roman Gabriel can make the big
lost only to Rice in three starts play and yet too many small
and will be playing at home. It plays elude him. .The running
should be a defensive battle with game is good but not good enough
Navy winding up on top in the to carry the team.
Upsot of tho Wook.
The Colt defense is underrated.
It has given up less total points
than the Rams’, just sixteen in
quarter-

—

Mike Luzny selected All-East
by ECAC; 2nd time this season
Mike Luzny, State University
of Buffalo sophomore defensive
linebacker, was again named to
to the weekly Division I All-East
team at guard Monday. Hike
played exceptionally well at his
defensive post and received credit
for five unassisted tackles as well
as numerous assists in knocking
down the enemy ball carriers. He
was previously named All-East
two weeks ago in his outstanding
effort against now llth-ranked

Cardinals

get drunk

two

In one of four homers that kept
the Red Sox in the World Series
Wednesday, Rico Petrocelli has
sent the ball over the fence in
the second inning and trots past

North Carolina State.
Other ECAC All-East team electees were: Ken Johnson, Army
guard; Sodowski, Villanova tackle;
Ray Norton, Boston Univ. tackle;
Bill Wazevich, Columbia end; Jim
Utterelle, Penn State end; Glenn
Grieco, Holy Cross center; John
Cartwright,

Navy

quarterback;

Bruce Van Ness, Rutgers halfback; Bob Weber, Princeton halfback; Larry Csonka, Syracuse
fullback.

the last three games, and beat

Chicago last week with two touch-

the fourth quarter.
game of the week the
Baltimore, 24-10. Perreason is intuition or
plain sentimentality but we feel
that Unitas, in spite of the odds
against him, will be able to
handle the game in his usual
fashion. In addition the Colt defense should be able to stop the
Rams sufficiently to give Unitas
time enough to pick L.A. apart.
Last week Springville bounded
to a 9-2 slate. The upset of Los
Angeles by San Francisco and the
Jets trouncing of the Raiders
were the only games that eluded
us. Our percentage now stands at
downs in
In this
choice is
haps the

Detroit after a great start has
begun to slide.
Green Bay 27, Minnesota
7:
Whether it’s Bratkowski or Starr
the Packers will have no trouble
with the Vikings. Although they
haven’t looked really good, Green
Bay still remains undefeated. The
Vikings came alive last week in
the first half against St. Louis,
then rolled over and played dead.
Funeral services will be held this
Sunday.

Dallas 30, New Orleans 13: Dallas pulled one out against Washington last week with a Meredith
to Reeves pass in the final ten
seconds, while The Saints lost
one in the waning minutes against
the Giants. No suspense in this
one though, it should be over by
the second quarter.
New York 31, Pittsburgh 28: By
all right the Giants should be 3-1
at this point. Ernie Koy has developed into the runner Allie
Sherman had hoped he would be
and the Tarkenton trade seems
like the steal of the year. Pittsburgh to plop deeper into depths.
Cleveland 28, St. Louis 20: This
game might prove to be the deciding factor in the Century Division race. St. Louis 3-1 continues
to improve under the leadership
of rookies Jim Hart. But Cleveland 2-2 must win. Ryan and Coltoo
lins, Warfield and Green
much for the Cardinal defense.
Philadelphia 31, San Francisco 27:
The Forty-Niners have played
Baltimore and Los Angeles the
past two weeks and although they
performed brilliantly against the
Rams they should suffer a letdown against the Eagles. San
—

Francisco’s young Willie Wassen
will replace the injured Kermit
Alexander but won’t provide adequate coverage over split-end
Ronnie Siegel, and his inexperience may prove to be the 49’ers

undoing.
Washington 38, Atlanta 14: Wil
liam Tecumseh Sherman’s great
grand nephew Sonny Tecumseh
Jurgenson should burn Atlanta
to the ground this week. Look for
Charley 0. Finley to buy the
Falcons and move to Milwaukee.

American Football League
41, Houston 13: Houston does not seem to pose a
formidable obstacle in the Jets’
path to the Eastern division
New York

Emerson Boozer ripped
through Oakland last week for
one hundred yards and scored
his seventh and eighth touchdowns of the season. As long as
he can keep the defense honest,

crown,

Joe Willie should find the airways clear and lead the Jets to
their fourth straight victory,
Houston offense, on the other
hand, is extinct.

Kansas City 31, San Diego 17:
Hadl to Alworth might be better
than Dawson to Taylor but aside
from this match-up the Chiefs
solidly outman the Chargers. San
Diego, though undefeated, hasn’t
played any of the contenders and
Kansas City, with one loss already, must win to keep that
date in the Super Bowl.
Boston 31, Miami 10; Miami surprised everybody last week with
their consistency. They gave up
points in every quarter, holding
the Chiefs to a mere five touchdowns and two field goals. They
even stole the show from the
Bills scoring deficit Boston lesser
of two evils.

Oakland 82, Buffalo 0: The return of Billy Shaw and Jack
Kemp to good form, the resurgence of the great defense and the
addition of some good solid twohand-touch-on 182nd St,—Bronx
—football plays should keep the
Bills in the AFL if not the game.
If you think we’re kidding wait
till you see the Denver films of
last week. In all honesty the Bills'
offense could be the worst we’ve
ever seen. This could only happen in that world garden spot:
Buffalo.

�Friday, October 13, 1967

Pa9§ S®vwit®®ii

The Spectrum

Niagara golfers defeat UPI college grid rating Baby Bulls
play Ithaca
Buffalo by 16-2 margin
NEW YORK (UPI)—The United

Press International major college
football ratings with first place

Spectrum Staff Reporter

There are a number o(
tions that the members of the
State University Golf team could
have bewilderingly asked each
other last Tuesday evening. Like,
“were those golf balls Niagara
was using controlled by radar
signals beamed out from every
hole?” or “didn’t that number
two player resemble Jack Nicklaus, and that other guy, all in
black, Gary Player?” They could
have but didn’t. Overwhelmed by
Niagara by a 16-2 score, the Bulls
had no excuses, only an acknowledgement that the opposition they
faced was truly superb.
It took a tremendous effort
for Niagara to achieve such a
rout because the Bulls actually
played fine golf throughout the
match. It was typical of the success that Niagara, fthich Coach
Serfustini assessed “as one of
the best balanced teams that I
can ever remember meeting,” has
been having all year long. They
have already captured the Little
Three Crown from Canisius and
St.

Surprisingly
though they didn’t qualify at the
ECAC regionals and it’s even
more surprising that one of the
teams defeating them was CanisBonaventure,

ius.

In the Tuesday match four of
the Bulls were shut out completely in point score. Only one, Mike
Riger, was able to tie his opponent. Even Ted Beringer, who has
played so well since rejoining the
team, showed nothing for a low
score of 73.
The defeat dampened a big victory that the Bulls had scored
over Buffalo State last Friday.
Doug Bernard led the Blue and

White with a best score of 74
and four others followed him by
straight time the Bulls have triumphed over their cross-town rivals, the score being 13Mt-4V4, and
it enabled Tony Santelli to avenge
an earlier individual loss to Buffalo State’s Bob Rigby.
Between these two matches the
ECAC regionals was held on Saturday. The Bulls were one of sixteen teams competing and one
of fourteen teams that fell into
the glorious mass called non-qualifiers. Tony Santelli, however,
shot a 74 and qualified for the
ECAC finals for the third straight
year. Last year in poor weather
Tony had led the field with an
82, giving an indication how nature can make golf scores pretty

fickle.

Today the Bulls will travel to
Rochester’s Brook Lea course
where they will participate in
another four man tournament.
Coach Serfustini has designated
Santelli, Beringer, and Bader as
repeaters from last Saturday and
has replaced Doug Bernard with
Mike Riger.
Line Score
Pts.
Buffalo
Score
-

2. Riger
1. Santelli
3. Beringer
4. Bader
5. Bernard
6. Stone

Total Points
Niagara
1. Cox

74
77

73
76

—

0
2

Pts.

2. Marrondette
3. Williamson

1'k

3

4. Larocque

5. Witczak
6. Kazcynski
Total Points

—

79
82

Score

73
74
72
74

.2V,

76

3
16

76

109

parenthesis;

Team

Second 10-11, North

2. Purdue 5 (3-0)
3, UCLA 3 (4-0)
4i Georgia (3-0)
5,

Notre Dame

285

....

264

232
173

(2-1)

&amp;

Sun.

THE FABULOUS FAKES

Saturday Night!

FREE
FROM
GENE

Carolina

St

32; 14, Georgia Tech 24; 15,
Tennessee 14; 16, Oklahoma and
Syracuse (tie) 10; 18, Indiana 3;
19, Washington 2; 20, Tulsa 1.

Bulls'4 game statistics
TEAM

BUFFALO

778 yds 197 carries
3.9 vds per plav
46, 96(48'*) 605 vds
1383 yds - 293 plays
10lor 90 vds
24 for 36 j •
7 lost 3

Passing
Mnrtha
Mason

Kntkowski
TOTALS

Receiving
Drankoski

Wells
Endress
Patterson
Bntkowski
Lang
Washington

Alt. Comp.

Bushing

Ini.

Bntkowski
Patterson

-

24
2
96

Jones

Weils

Mnrtha
Mason
Washington
Brennan
Aliinonli

Yards

7
6
5
2

TOTALS

Punting

1

“The game should be evenly
matched," St6ck said. “We have
a fine group of athletes here.
They should be a great help to
Coach Urich’s varsity squad next

24 for 33.6
lost 8

9

N«
289
176
140

season."

“I understand that Ithaca uses
a 5-4 Oklahoma defense. We'll
try and practice against this defense as much as possible this
week. Sometimes you really don't
have enough time to practice and
prepare as much \Js you would
like to. I just wish we had more
time.”

24
16

199

No,

TOTALS

Kickoff RelurnsNo.

Pass Interceptions
Horn

Yards

Cheerleaders chosen

Yard*

llnnl

Kntkowski
Wells

Wright
TOTALS

Patterson

Mosher

Scoring

Emhow

TDs
4
2
2
0

Wells

I

Jones

Punt Returns

Yards

Hurd
Drankoski
Buffalo (2-2)
Kent StatiNorth Carolina St
.Virginia

temple

Kntkowski
Drankoski
Mnrtha

Endress
Patterson
Lang
Bitcha k

1
1
1
1
0

&amp;

Sun.

WILMER &amp;
E DUKES

™

Field. The Baby Bulls will be trying to even their season’s record
at 2 and 2.
John Filler, a steady performer all season (four touchdowns),
will start at one halfback spot,
while Barney Woodward will
move from the fullback spot and
run from the remaining halfback
position. John Zeek will start at
fullback.

game time.

-

All.
51
43
39
19

Today at 2 p.m. the State University of Buffalo Freshman football team will meet the Ithaca

Coach Stock will decide on his
starting quarterback, either Ed
Perry or Bob Stiscak, just before

61
578 yds 166 carries
3.1 vds per plav
40/75 (53.3** ) 607 vds
1184 vds 241 plaw
20 for 207 vds

PASSING
TOTAL OFFENSE
PENALTIES
PI'NTS
FUMBLES

TO

No.
IT
8

OPPONENTS

TOTALS

FIRST DOWNS
RUSHING

-

Wed

THE SHOWSTOPPERS

71
71

..

11.019 At Buffalo, \ V
20.200 at Baleigh. N.C.
16.600 a( (.'liailottrsvillc. Va.
9.275 at Buffalo. \ V

Tues.

97
95

7. Colorado

(3-0)
8. Missouri (3-0)
9. Nebraska (3-0) (tie)
9. Louisana St. (3-0) (tie)

votes and won-lost-tied record in

by Jay Schreiber

6. Alabama (2-0-1)

F.C.
0
0
0

Total
24

12
12

The freshman cheerleaders for
the coming 1967-1968 freshman
intercollegiate season have been
selected. These students will lead
the cheers in the remaining football games and throughout the
entire basketball campaign.
Those elected freshman cheerleaders were: Gail Borek, Sue
Bosnick, Linda Luccioni, Cheryl
Mayo, Diane McMahon. Sue Pierotti, Ellen Price and Rita Yousey.
Those selected as alternates
were: Kathy Fenton, Phyllis
Kramer. Karen Schuler and Roberta Zelawski.

�Th

Pag* Eighteen

•

Friday, October 13, 1967

Spectrum

Buffalo State rogram

Faculty to show support for
anti-war activity a rally today

Winkleman to lecture, read poetry
Dr. Donald Winkleman will
be presented by The State University College at Buffalo as a
Dr. Donald Winkleman will
speak on interpretation of poetry,
some of which is his own. He is
associated with the Special College Programs in Albany.
The lectures are open to all

students. Monday will be given
to the academic aspects of poetry and luesday will be spent in

Dr. Winkleman, by local poets,
by some of State’s SEEK students,
and by some State University of
Buffalo students, several of whom
are in the Upward Bound program.

Jeremy Taylor, Administrative

Assistant to the chairman of the

The Symposium will be held
Tuesday from 2:30 to 5:30 p.m.
in the Social Room of the New
Student’s Union at the State University Cpllege at Buffalo on Elmwood Avenue

Failure to report finances results
in 0E0 fund cut-off for Syracuse
NEW YORK (UPD—The Office
of Economic Opportunity has cut
off funds to Syracuse’s antipoverty agency, apparently because the agency has not given a
detailed explanation of its expenditure of a portion of the

called the Crusade for Opportu

money.

nity, Tuesday night.
The action was taken after the
crusade reportedly failed to comply with an OEO directive for an
up-to-date accounting of the
group’s use of federal funds and
a call for a shift in administra-

The OEO’s northeast regional
office here announced the cut off
of funds to the Syracuse agency,

tive control of the agency.
A spokesman for the OEO said
all valid expenses, including sal-

Today at noon there will be a
Draft Resistance Rally in the
fountain area in front of Norton

Department of History, and a
former English instructor,, will

“show faculty support for the
total anti war activity.”
Michael McKeating, Student
Mobilization Committee representative, announced that three
well known faculty members will
speak at the rally. They will
“urge students to go to Washington and hand in their draft
cards Oct. 20, the day before the
march.”
Also speaking will be Father

John Pietra, a Catholic Barnabite
priest. He will be among the persons who will turn in their draft
aries, incurred by the agency cards in Washington.
through Monday night would be
paid. He said anti-poverty proThe rally was organized by two
grams in the city would be confaculty members, Dr. Donald Mitinued by independent financing kulecky of the biophysics dethrough an OEO board of trustees partment. and Prof. Robert Hass
named in July to handle crusade of the English department.
finances temporarily.
Syracuse has been receiving
The speakers at the rally toabout $4 million annually through day will urge both students and
faculty members to join and supthe OEO anti-poverty program.

port the draft resistance movement.

Student Association Vice President Richard Miller announced
Wednesday that he will present
a resolution calling for a cessation of the bombing and negotiation in Vietnam at the next Student Senate meeting.

Mr. Miler, who is heading the
University’s “dump Johnson” effort, will present the resolution

Wednesday at 7 p.m.

San Jose teachers
discuss Vietnam
A group of professors at San
will abandon
their scheduled classroom lectures next week to lecture on
Vietnam.
They will do this in conjunction with Vietnam “Teach Week,”
an outgrowth of the national
“Stop the Draft” Program.
The professors, led by Alan W,
Barnett, Assistant Professor of
Humanities, are members of Professors Against the War (PAW).
Jose State College

Barnett said that “we are going
to spend the week relating what
we teach to the Vietnam situation. We will follow our regular

classroom schedule for the first
three days, and plan to discuss
Vietnam exclusively the last two

we were

happy

days.”

Also, the PAW is sponsoring a
lecture by Felix Greene, a journalist who recently spent four
months in North Vietnam.
In addition to these “Teach
Week” activities, the PAW has
scheduled two monthly Vietnam
forums.

with the world
the way it is,
we wouldn’t
need you.

RUBIN MITCHELL TRIO
SUNDAY, Oet. 22—Si30 P.M.
KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL
$5.5*. HM, J3.50—All Sate

Seamed.

TICKETS NOW OK SALE
■t Festival Ticket Office, Sutler
Hilton Hotel end at Norton Union,
University of Buffalo ticket office.

Kids choke on polluted air. Streets are jammed by
cars with no place to go. Italy’s priceless art and
libraries are ravaged by floods. This is the way the
world is, but it’s not the way it has to be. Air pollution can be prevented. Better transportation can
be devised. Something can even be done about the
weather. Many people at General Electric are
already working on these problems, but we need
more. We need help from young engineers and

scientists; and we need help from business and
liberal arts graduates who understand people and
their problems. If you want to help solve important
problems, we’d like to talk to you. We’ll be visiting
campus soon. Drop by the placement office and
arrange for an interview.

GENERAL

ELECTRIC

An equal opportunity employer

STAMP IT!

IT'S THE RAGE

REGULAR

M
LINE
Tha finest II

TEX? C±
METAL

POCKET RUBBER STAMP.
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sure to include your Zip Code. No

postage or handling charges. Add
sales tax.
Prompt shipment. Satisfaction Guaranteed

THE MOPP CO.
P. 0. Bo* 18623 Lenox Square Station

ATLANTA. GA.. 30326

�Friday, October 13, 1967

CLASSIF IE D
ROOMMATES

FOR SALE

1966 MUSTANG conv., 3-speed, 289 V8~
UB commuter. Call 633-3281 for appoint-

see. $1700.
1960 FALCON, automatic, exceptional condition; radio, heater, 834-9143; 84 Heath

ment

to

CHEVY, stick. Needs some body work
856-4601.
1962 TEMPEST, 2 door sedan. Good condition. Must sell. Including 2 snow tires.
$100 or best gffer. Call Ken at 874-2071.
1965 YAMAHA, 80 cc. Excellent condition,
only MX) miles. $195. 834-7704.
16 FOOT Lapstreak runabout, 45 h.p. Mercury motor; windshield, conv. fop, reclining buddy seats, side windows, tandem
axel trailer. Perfect for skiing, excellent
condition. $750 or best offer. 634-8652.
TYPEWRITER—Remington

portable, 4 years
Best
offer.

old; excellent condition.
836-1419, 836-8088.

ROOMS FOR RENT

MALE,

single—private bath, cooking privileges; $50 per month. In suburbs, about
miles from UB campus. Must be willing
to work around the place for part of room
rent. Phone 633-5808.
5

Near cam-

TWO STUDIO rooms; girls only.
pus. Call after 5-832-6270.
ROOMMATES
RuOMMATE
mate

male

to share apartment with one
Call 885-6737, 7 a.m.-9 a.m.

student.

APARTMENT WANTED

to share

sem*«W ; »*»»?i»ble

pis.

by

students.

Call 885-1975.

by Elliot Stephan Rose

Roach

—Spectrum Staff Reporter—

RIDE

wanted from main camp s to Williamsville, Mon., Wed., and Fri. after 4

p.m.

Will

pay.

Joan—6432-8548.

LEFT HALF $1,000 Sunny Dollars. Will split.
875-7287.
MUSICIAN wanted; The Cave
looking to an organ player.

Men

are

Call

Al—-

896-5698.
RIDE wanted for staff member from Millersport and Hopkins, and return. Call
Joyce, daytime, 831-2806.

SITUATIONS

835-6897.

INSTRUCTIONS
PRIVATE PILOT ground classes start Saturday, Oct. 21; 10 a.m.-12 noon, individual tutoring available. 834-8524.
FOUND

-

HALL —Friday
892-6252.

and

Saturday

WANTED

TYPING term papers, 25c per page; dittos
35c, envelopes, S2.00 per hundred. Call

PERSONAL

REWARD for return of filled-in form lost
in Chaucer textbook on Interim Campus
bus. 837-3384.
cheap
physical stuff call
'FOR THAT
Chevy's wild child," 836-7680.
CLARINET LESSONS
excellent instructor,
minimal rates. Call 832-3689 after 10
10 p.m. Mr. Leonard Lazarus.
SHALOM! For
from the Jewish Bible,
call 875-4265 day or night.

nights,

call

weekend to visit our chapters at
Colgate, Rochester, and Cornell.
There will be a “Bunny” party
tonight and hare-pie will be
served.

AUTO SERVICE
AUTO PROBLEMS got you dizzy? See Joe
Vizzi, Gulf Station, Kenmore corner
Starin. Road service. 836-8998.

FOR RENT

with two

comparable

for second
Jan. 14, near cam-

Call 759 8898.

WANTED
apartment

quet

A PARTY-formal dinner banor dance? Why not try the inCordon Bleu? Contact John
at 839.2167,

A PDannounces plans
for annual toga party

PLANNING

FURNISHED apartment wanted

WANTED

1960

Pag* Nin*t**n

The Spectrum

WOMAN S WATCH

call 831 2210, ask

The brothers of Alpha Phi Delta revive old Rome tomorrow
night at their annual Toga party.
Grapes from the Sillato Vineyard
will provide the base for a grape

Sororities
The sisters of Alpha Gamma
Delta welcome any open rushees
to the table this week. Girls accepting bidsvwill be pledged into
the sorority Monday evening, and
a dated party is being planned
in honor of the new pledge class
. Sigma Kappa Phi announces
their annual Neewollah, which
will be held tomorrow at 45
Merrimac from 11 a.m. until the
football game. Induction of the
new pledges will take place Monday night . . Theta Chi Sorority
is looking forward to the Dinner
Dance tomorrow at the Camelot
Inn. We’d also like to congratulate our new pledges and wish
Marianne Safran, Kathy Fuller
and Norecn Mils best of luck in
Fall Weekend Queen competition.

crush.

“The Little Old Wine
Maker" award will be given to
the top-grade crusher. Joining
the brothers for both the football
game and the party will be Sigma
chapter of APD from Boston U.

found

today (10-10)
for Sam.

MISCELLANEOUS

MAJORS-Highest price paid
for social studies resource unit for Junior
High
School teacher. Call 839or Senior
0676 between 4-6 p.m.

EDUCATION

'67 tickets for two to N. Petrov.
pianist; Berliri Philharmonic Octet, Straffor Festival Players; National Theatre of
Great Britain. Oct.
16-19, respectively.
Housing reservations also available. Call
8859279.

EXPO

Alpha Phi Omega announces
that tomorrow night the brothers
will meet at the apartment of
brother Sturtz for a party. The
fun will begin at 9 if you can
find his house . . . Alpha Sigma
Phi will have a bash this weekend at Norton's Nut House, a
B.Y.O.B. affair. The brothers are
still selling tickets for the premiere performance of “Gone
With The Wind" to be opening
at the Granada Theater Nov. 2
. Gamma Phi will hold a stag
tonight at the Sheridan Lanes
to welcome the new pledges. Tomorrow at noon, the brothers
will hold a space ghost party at
“99” then go on to watch the
Bulls win. Bowling rosters must
be in today to John Anderson at
our table. Games start next
Wednesday

...

Short blasts
Tomorrow, the brother of Pi
Lambda Tau will have a Schiung
Party at the Hotel Worth. Dress
will consist of anything that is
too grubby to wear on the street
(come as you are). Music will be
provided by the Shandoos.

Phi Epsilon Pi

would like to congratulate their
new pledges. Jay Steinberg has
been elected Corresponding Sec.
of the chapter . . . Tau Kappa Epsilon will hold a Toga Parly at
the flying “E" ranch. There will
also be a post-game get together
at the apartment . . . Various
members of Thata Chi Fraternity

Students who bought tickets
to last week’s Colt-45 Blast and
were not admitted will be given
refunds. Due to capacity crowds
and fire law limits, not everyone
with a ticket could gel in. Tickets may be turned in for refunds
at a special table set up in the
lobby of Norton Hall Monday
from 9 a m. to noon.

are doing some travelling this

DOG HOUSE Restaurant
Always
Open

Always
Good Feed
3248 Main St. at Heath
(South End of Campus)

U.B. SPECIALS

There’s an M&amp;T Bank
almost everywhere
Ready to help you
with over 100 different services.
Over 60 locations throughout
Western New York. You’ve got us
right where you want us.

Our Tempting, Tasty, Delicious
Mouth-Watering MISSILEBURGER
With French Fries &amp; a Thick 16-oz. Milkshake

A $1,25 Value
For Only
.

,

J J

.

and Don't Forget Our City-Wide Famous
for only 89c
BREAKFAST SPECIAL
But

For You

M&amp;T BANK
Main-Winspear

Office

University Plaza Office

•

•

•

Includes: JUICE—2 EGGS (Any Style)

BACON or SAUSAGE—HOME FRIES
TOAST &amp; COFFEE

Just Show The Waitress Your I.D. Card
HAPPY EATING
.

MEMBER F. D. I. C.

.

.

�P*g« Twenty

The

Spectrum

Friday,

*

fftt world

*

•

•

October 13, 1967

sa/gon

mideast
hong hong
Washington
compiled from our wire service by Lilian Waite

LBJ determined
Secretary of State
WASHINGTON
Dean Rusk is scheduled to lead the next
Johnson administration counter attack
against the increasingly vocal congressional critics of the President’s Vietnam
—

-

policy.

Draft card
burner

A University of Chicago student this
week used a peace torch lit in Hiroshima, Japan to burn his draft card
during an anti-war rally in Chicago.
The rally was attended by 200 persons.

Johnson himself set the tone of the
counterattack last Saturday night in a
speech at a Democratic fund-raising affair
here when he said he was firm in his
determination to “see it through” in Asia.

‘see it throughto
’

ciprocal gesture, would be irresponsible.
This is particularly true, in the view of
the administration, considering that Hanoi
had made it clearer than ever in recent
days that it wants no negotiations except
terms which would involve an American commitment to surrender South Vietnam.

At the other end of the spectrum is a
rising chorus of voices led by Chairman

The Chief Executive said most of the
recommendations he had heard “on how
to get out of trouble cheaply and fast
. . , come down to this: deny your responsibility.”

Hanoi is warned to talk peace
SAIGON
President-elect Nguyen Van
Thieu swore in South Vietnam’s new senate this week and warned Hanoi he will
urge an allied step up of the war if North
Vietnam fails to adopt a “more realistic
and reasonable attitude” toward peace
talks.
There was a veiled threat of an inva
sion of North Vietnam in Thieu’s major
policy speech.
He said the allies were prepared to
"bring peace to both North and South
Vietnam.” He did not go into specifics.
The United States has made it plain many
times that it is opposed to an invasion
of North Vietnam.
The statement pleased South Vietnamese commanders who have suggested a
ground invasion of North Vietnam, but
Thieu is not among this group of officers.
Premier Nguyen Cao Ky, the vice president-elect is on record as saying a push
info North Vietnam would be a good
military move which would have to be
weighed against political considerations.
Thieu spoke at an inauguration ceremony for the 60-member senate, which
—

was elected with him and Ky in the Sept.
3 national voting
a big step toward
constitutional government in the warravaged nation. He aimed his remarks at
Hanoi.
—

“I believe that with our lasting goodwill
for peace, with the peace efforts of friendly nations and personalities all over the
world, and first of all with a full-scale
efforts of the armed forces and the people
along with the help of our allies, either
the enemy will adopt a more realistic and
reasonable attitude or we will soon bring
peace to the people of both north and
south,” Thieu said.
If in spite of the goodwill we have
shown, the Communists continue fighting,
we should intensify our military and political efforts so the enemy will realize
that they can no longer win this war in
one way or the other.”

Much of Thieu’s senate address echoed
remarks made in recent week by President Johnson, although Johnson has never
coupled peace proposals with threats of
stronger military action.

Must face problem
He said such advice would have the
United States behave as if it were “a
small nation with few interests
as
if the oceans were twice as wide as they
are . .” This is the voice, not of the
hawk or dove, he said, “but of the ostrich.”
...

trich.”

The next round in the battle came
Monday when Democratic National Chairman John M. Bailey fired off a blast at
the Republicans for allegedly playing politics with the war.
Rusk, at a news conference tentatively
scheduled for Thursday, will attempt to
blow holes in some of the various congressional peace proposals of the past 10
days.

The administration believes

Communists,

Israel rejects Tito peace plan
MIDEAST

Israeli officials Wednesday accused Britain of “peddling” a Middle East peace plan that were merely
a Western version of a plan recently proposed by Yugoslav President Titom.
The Tito proopsal would have Israel
withdraw from occupied Arab territory
in exchange for limited Arab acceptance
of Israel's status. Israel rejected if.
The Israeli officials interviewed in Jerusalem said Britain has not yet formally
presented its plan, but was seeking support for it at the United Nations.
The officials, showing some bitterness
over British policy, said London apparently was mainly interested in getting the
Suez Canal reopened rather than forging a durable peace settlement.
Mrs. Indira Gandhi, the neutralist Indian prime minister, flew from Warsaw
Wednesday to Belgrade for three days
—

of talks with President Tito on the Middle
East and Vietnam.
Mrs. Gandhi, who has supported Egypt
in the Mideast crisis, has joined Tito in

that pro-

posals put forth by lawmakers such as
Senators Thruston B. Morton, R-Ky., Stuart Symington, D-Mo., and Charles H.
Percy, R-Ill., are unrealistic and have
fatal flaws when examined in the light
of Hanoi’s position.
Morton’s about-face in urging complete
cessation of U.S. air attacks on North
Vietnam gave increasing respectability to
a position the administration once dismissed as representing only the ideas of

neutralists

doves.

Cite Hanoi position
Rusk can be expected

and

deluded

to point out again

that such an action, without any specific
assurance that Hanoi would make a re-

President Johnson
won't deny the responsibility
John C. Stennis, D-Miss., of the Senate
preparedness subcommittee, clamoring
for intensification of the war, including
bombing of Haiphong harbor.
But Johnson and Rusk believe that an
all-out intensification of the war would
be equally irresponsible since it would
risk the danger of greater Russian and
Red Chinese aid for Hanoi, including the
possibility of waves of Chinese “volunteers” such as swept into North Korea
16 years ago.

condemning U.S. policies in Vietnam. She
appealed for an end to the American
bombing before she left Warsaw.
Indian embassy sources in Belgrade
denied speculation Mrs. Gandhi and Tito
would try to work out some new formula
for settling the stalemate between the
Arabs and Jews. India supported Tito’s
rejected peace plan.
Britain was also attacked today by a
leading Egyptian columnist, Yussef Sebai,
who warned in the weekly A1 Akler that
Britain had better “stop supporting and
aiding Israel" or risk continued Arab
hostility. He urged the British to follow
the example of France, which has been
sympathetic to the Arabs.

China tells world to oppose U.S.
HONG KONG
Communist China,
shunned by almost the entire,world, Tuesday, called for a “broad international
front” to oppose the United States.
Premier Chou En-lai made the call at
a rally in honor of a visiting delegation
from Albania.
The official New China News Agency
quoted Chou as saying the front should
—

“untie all anti-U.S. forces that can be

united.”
There was no mention of Peking’s latest
troubles with Jakarta.
Chou said the Vietnam War was playing
a very big part in the drive to weaken

the United States, but this vyas not enough.
"To isolate and hit U.S. imperialism
hard we must establish the broadest international united front to oppose U.S. imperialism and its lackeys,” Chou was
quoted

as saying.

But the premier made it clear there
was no room in the proposed alliance for
the Soviet Union and its friends.
“This united front cannot include
modern revisionism, with the Soviet revisionist leading clique at its center,
which is working hand in glove with U.S.
imperialism in selling out the interests
of all countries,” he said.

Tnkvn
lOKyO

riot

cars burned in Tokyo this
week as po,ice battled wi,h ul,r leftist
fstudents who tried to break through
the
departure
to
of
police lines
block
the Japanese Premier on a tour of
Southeast Asia, including Vietnam.

Armored

siuaenis

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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>The Spectrum
State Universil

"-ts

*

■

T

VI

%

of New York at Buffalo

Vol. 18, No. 9

Tuesday, October 10, 1967

Former /; all-facult

Two students will serve on University
College Curriculum Planning Comm.
by Linda Laufer
Spectrum Staff Reporter

Two State University of Buffalo students, Terry Keegan
and Barry Tollman, have been chosen to serve as voting
members of the University College Curriculum Planning
Committee, a formerly all-faculty committee. This is the
first year that students have been represented on the committee.
At the first University College Curriculum Planning
Committee meeting there was a basic discussion of what the
committee is going to do. Generally, attention will be directed
toward broad policy changes rather than specifics.
Mr. Keegan and Mr. Tellman
also serve as chairmen of the Student Curriculum Planning Committee. The purpose of this committee is to increase student involvement in curriculum planning decisions and to recommend
certain innovations in education
which will be presented to the
University College Committee.
Mr. Tellman cited an example
of the need for more student participation in curriculum planning. He said: “The recent incident concerning students taking
Millard Fillmore College English
coourses shows the direct need
for student involvement in curriculum decisions.”
The first Student Curriculum
Planning Committee meeting was
held Thursday. Various issues
were discussed, including smaller
classes, the creation of new
courses shows the direct need
from one department to another,
interdepartmental courses and advisement.
Discussion

also centered on
graduate courses for undergraduates, better course descriptions,
basic distribution requirements,
and the pass-fail system.

The committee proposal is:
“Pass-fail would be available in
any course the student wanted.
The student would decide before
he entered the specific subject
whether he wanted the pass-fail
or the grade in the subject. Even
if the student requests that a
pass-fail be given in the course,
the teacher would still record the
grade the student would have received.

“However, a mart in a passfail subject would never be revealed to the student unless it is
to be counted as a mark. If the
major is changed or if graduate
school demands or job demands
necessitate, one can go from passfail to a grade, but never from a
grade to pass-fail.”
This will be presented to the
University College Curriculum
Planning Committee for approval.

Pass Fail system
-

Regarding this proposal, Mr.
Keegan commented: “I think we
will be losing control by having
even less precise measurements
of student ability with the passfail system than with more accurate expressions of evaluations,
such as letter grades or numerical

averages.

I also think that the potential abuses are greater than
the possible advantages."

He also said: “The criteria of
evaluation in a course should be
the amount of one’s knowledge
in it and the excellence with
which it is expressed, not by attendance, by ‘class participation’,
or by other dubious means,”

On education
When asked about his views on
education, Mr. Tellman replied:
“Education as it stands now, I
believe, is going in the wrong
direction. The student is becoming de personalized and the University is turning into an academic factory. Education should
not be forced upon the student,
but rather the education should
be there for the use of the student.”
He added, “One of the problems of the large state university, such as the State University

of Buffalo, is the substitution of
quantity for quality.”
Asked the same question about
education, Mr, Keegan answered:
“The university is for the students. The university is to help
each student become as much as
he can. We must keep an excellent faculty and most efficient
administration for the students.
One of the functions of education is to help the student acquire
the tools with which he may discover himself, the world, truth,
and beauty.”
The Student Curriculum Planning Committee will meet at 4
p.m. Thursday in the Student Senate office, Room 205, Norton Hall,
and all students are invited to attend.

—Herschfeld

March on Buffalo's War Industries met with only a few
minor incidents on their trek
downtown Saturday. Here the
group prepares to leave Baird

Saturday

Demonstration

Parking area.

March on war industries calls
for fundamental societal reform
by Bill MacBlaine
Spectrum Staff Reporter

Saturday’s “March on Buffalo’s War Industries” was
an alliance of activists calling for broad reform in society,
industry and government.
The primary purpose, according to the March Cpmmittee
was to “divert the $30 billion a year being spent on that
orgy of butchery (Vietnam) into solving America’s acute

problems.”
Colorful placards accompanied
by about 100 marchers organized
outside Baird Hall to prepare for
the eight mile march.

The march led them down Main
St., south on Jefferson Ave. and
west on Genesee St. to the lowering Manufacturers and Traders
Trust Company building.

One sign read, “If corporation
profits are worth dying for, let
the filthy rich do the fighting.”

Another read, “Vietnam is Presi-

dent Johnson’s War on Poverty,
the rich gel richer and the poor
get killed.”

Marchers, though united in
their dissent, proved they could
not be sterotyped. Their costumes
varied as much as their opinions.
Larry Fedeseo said he felt “the
senior members of Congress run
the nation,” not the industrialmilitary complex.

Ranks of the marchers swelled

to 140 when a contingent of slu
dents from the Slate University
College joined the march at Jefferson Ave. and East Ferry St.

As the group neared the Manufacturers and Traders Trust Company Plaza they began to chant;
“Hell no, we won’t go.”

Demonstrator attacked
Two

incidents

marred

the

otherwise peaceful demonstration. There was alleged assault
by two youths upon a sign-carry-

ing demonstration.

A priest who tried to detain the
assailants also reported being hit
in the mouth by the attackers.
An

incident

involving young

Joel Mikulccki and a patrolman
of the Buffalo Police Department
also marred the quiet climate of
the march. Joel, who was marching with his father, was wearing
a sign reading
Big Business
“

turns prejudice into profit.’
The patrolman allegedly asked
where the boy got the sign in
such a gruff manner that the
young boy broke down in tears.

East Side support
Marchers were generally wellreceived by residents of Buffalo's
predominantly Negro East Side.
One young onlooker declared:
“I agree with every one of you,”
as the parade marched past his
Genesee St. home.
An elderly gentleman said: “I
will march any place for peace,”
as he joined the marchers.

Goldwater calls for end of national
division on Viet policy, backs LBJ
by Joel Kleinman

Spectrum Staff Reporter

Goldwater at
Buffalo State

Barry Goldwater Friday told
Buffalo students that he supports LBJ's Vietnam policy. "In
his heart he knew I was right,"
quipped Goldwater, speaking
of President Johnson.

Former Arizona Sen. Barry
Goldwater called for an end to
“a nation divided on Vietnam”
Friday and said he supports President Johnson’s policy in the war.
unsuccessful
Goldwater, the
GOP presidential nominee in
1964, addressed some 3,000 students at the State University College at Buffalo.
“It may sound strange coming
from a Republican,” he said, "But
I stand back of my president in
this war.
Mr. Goldwater urged the Republican Party and all Americans
to stand behind the President in
the Vietnam conflict, postponing
debate until the effort is completed. The commitment made to
the South Vietnamese government
by President Eisenhower and augmented by Presidents Kennedy
and Johnson should be honored
in line with the Geneva Conven

lion of 1954. The U.S. is “winning
the war at a faster clip than most
Americans believe,” as the “morale of the North Vietnamese is
slackening,” and their supply
lines are being interrupted. Mr.
Goldwater was in Vietnam earlier
this year.
Observing the world situation
“as an American, not a conservative," he blamed the trouble spots
in the world today on communist
philosophy that attempts to
undermine democratic governments. Conflicts in Asia and the
Middle East would not have
arisen in the absence of communist agitation, he remarked.
He described Cuba as a "warehouse for intelligence and supplies” of the communists and the
apparent revolution in Red
China as a “healthy thing.”

QuMtion period
In a brief question and answer

period following the address, the
former Senator stated that the

"credibility gap” will be one of
the main issues in next year's
election, because at the present,
“no one would buy a used car
from Johnson.”
7
Mr. Goldwater’s address was interrupted at regular intervals by
laughter and applause as the
speaker took verbal swipes at
former political adversaries. In
explaining President Johnson's
policy of escalation in the war, a
position the Republican candidate
advocated during the campaign of
1964, he stated. "In his heart he
knew I was right.”

After his retirement from political life, the former leader of
the conservative wing of the Republican Party has lectured extensively to college students
across the country and has written a syndicated newspaper column. He enjoys exchanging opinions with young people, and feels
that it is the “challenge of the
young to advance towards peace.”

�Pag* Two

Th* Spectrum

Tuesday, October 10, 1967

Community Aid Corps project needs
LEMAR mailing list to
volunteers to help brain injured children replace membership list
The community
seeking volunteers
damaged children.
project head for

Aid Corps is
to help brain
Cindy Jones,
brain injured

and retarded children, is searching for 50 volunteers who will
devote one or two hours a week
to work in an experimental patterning program.

Patterning is basically a 24hour a day childhood rerun in
which brain damaged children
are retaught everything they
learned as infants. Normally, a
righthanded child develops the

left half of his brain. If this portion is somehow injured, the
child can be taught to function
normally using his brain’s right
half.
Before a child begins patterning, he must first go to a center
in Philadelphia to determine if
he can be helped. This program
does not work with mongoloids
or children suffering genetic
brain damage. Less than one-

dren can be helped by pattern-

ing.

Patterning involves working
with a child 24 hours a day. He
is constantly kept busy while
awake, being taught activities
he would otherwise learn naturally. For example, a child is taught
to creep, then crawl, and finally
to walk.

Natural progression
Steps follow a natural pro-

gression. They teach coordination, which, in turn, leads to development of intelligence. If successful, the program takes three
years to complete. At that time,
a child is ready for academic
work.
Cindy Jones worked with a
four year old girl who could not
talk at all. After four months of
patterning, she could speak and
count. She also had better coordination and more realization
of her environment.

proclaimed Wednesday that the
State University of Buffalo chapter is "most active LEMAR group
in the country.”

for close cooperation by the
child’s family. They must not let
him deviate from his own individual program, which includes
keeping the child on a strict diet
and offering him no outside
stimulation such as art or music.

At an

Optimistic, despite the relative-

organizational meeting

Illness a threat

of the group Wednesday night,
suggestions were offered for future activities.

The biggest threat to a child’s
progress is illness. Any temperature of 101 degrees or over can
result in a seizure which causes
setbacks or further brain damage. Patterning tends to improve
the health of the children involved in it. Therefore, it helps
its patients both physically and

The most important change
in the operation of LEMAR this
year will be the absence of an
official membership list. This,
according to Mr. Aldrich, will
help alleviate the problem that
“anyone associated with LEMAR
lives in paranoia.”

mentally.
The patterning program begins in November. Anybody interested in working with brain
damaged children should attend
an orientation meeting on Oct.

and speakers was expressed by
Mr. Aldrich for the “educational,
not political” group.
poor turnout, Mr. Aldrich
claimed that the LEMAR organization “means energy.”

ly

At the next LEMAR meeting,
Mr. Aldrich will conduct a medi-

tation instruction. He will demon-

strate the form of meditation
techniques he learned while in

India.

Instead of a membership list,
there will be a mailing list which
will serve two purposes. It will
be a source of income, entailing
a contribution of $1 for each person on the list. Also, it will in
no way be definitive that any
person on the list has had any
experience with marijuana.
Commenting on the purpose
and approach of LEMAR, Mr.
Aldrich stated that the purpose
of the group is to legalize marijuana through legal channels;
“it is not a hippy approach.” Mr.
Aldrich has appeared on local
TV and radio stations “to have
laws that I think are wrong

10, in Room 330 in Norton Hall.
For further information, call
Cindy Jones at 831-2896 or the
Senate office at 3446.

Headquarters for
ARROW SHIRTS

changed.”

Included in the future plans
are appearances by well known
speakers. Such names as Timothy
leary and Allen Ginsburg were
suggested. Other plans included
the collection of “drug literature” to be made into a book.

RIVERSIDE MEN'S SHOP
Tonawanda Street, corner Ontario
Buffalo, New York 14207

Do you buy
a shirt
ora label?
If you're looking for

a short-sleeved oxford shirt
with a button-down collar,
that’s what you buy. After
you've checked the label.

Because a good label
guarantees a good shirt. It
means the shirt is rolled,

tapered and pleated in the

right places. And is styled

to last.

The label on this shortsleeved button-down says
"Cum Laude" Oxford. It tells
you the shirt is Perma-lron
so it won’t wrinkle,

Dr. Benjamin Spock to address
Graduate Student Association
Dr, Benjamin Spock, noted
author and pediatrician recently
noted for peace activities, will
address the Graduate Student
Association Fall convocation Nov.
1 at 8 p.m, in the Millard Fillmore Room, Norton Hall.
Tickets will be distributed free
of charge to graduate students
on Oct. 16 through 18 from 9
a.m. until 9 p.m. at the Norton
Hall ticket office. They will be
made available only to those
graduate students who have paid
their student activities fees.
Positive identification proving
that a person is a graduate stu-

"Sanforized-Plus" and
tapered. It comes in canary,
green, purple, orange and
white. For $7.00.

The good things you’re
looking for in a shirt are all

on the label. And the best
shirts have the best labels.
They’re ours. Arrow's.

Mike Aldrich
Lemar head says Buffalo chapter
is nation's most active.

dent must be shown in order to
obtain tickets. No more than two
tickets will be given to each student.
Any tickets remaining after
Oct. 18 will be made available
to anyone else upon request at
the ticket office (limit of two).
Information about any remaining
tickets will be posted in the
Union and various other places
around campus.
For the convenience of those
who could not obtain tickets, Dr.
Spock’s address will be broadcast
into the Conference Theater and
the Dorothy Haas lounge.

I

I

FOUR TOPS
MEMORIAL AUDITORIUM

Columbus Day
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12
Tickets on tale at the Norton Hall ticket counter

$5.50

(

i

—

4.50

—

4.00

—

3.50

GOOD SEATS STILL AVAILABLE
1

�Tuesday, October 10, 1967

The Spectrum

Papa Ttiraa

War protest Oct 16

Resistance organizes draft-age men dateline news, Oct 10
to slow manpower flow to Vietnam

NEW YORK—A Negro leader assailed Sen. Robert F. Kennedy’s

and on college campuses across the United States will turn
in their draft cards to federal officials.
It will be the first major national anti-draft effort organized by the Resistance, a group of young men who have
turned from protesting the war in Viet Nam to an attempt
to slow down the flow of manpower into the war effort.
The young men who make up
the Resistance are uncertain now
how many men will end their
complicity with the draft on
Oct. 16, but they hope for several
thousand. “There are at least
several hundred who are committed,” says Rodney Robinson
of the Redwood City, California
branch, and “a lot more who are
searching their consciences.”
Besides turning in their draft
cards, the group also plans to
present letters saying they refuse to co-operate with the Selective Service System and will
refuse to go in the army if inducted.
What happens to members of
the Resistance after Oct. 16 is
uncertain. The few individuals
who have returned their cards
before have usually gotten another one in the mail from their
boards, and are often later declared delinquent and called for
induction.
They plan speaking tours, civil
disobedience, and other actions

to “keep vital the spirit generated by Oct. 16.” They plan another
larger non-cooperation day in
December, and still larger ones

after that.

If any member of the Resist-

ance is given 1-A status and call-

ed for physicals or induction, all
members of his local group.are
supposed to go with him to the

inductipn center, “leafletting,
talking to other draftees, perhaps
disrupting.”

Face jail
They also

expect that some
of them will eventually face jail.
At that point they may go underground, leave the country, or go
to jail. “Whatever is the most
politically visible, while at the
same time not breaking the momentum we have been able to
build up at that point, will be
the reasonable choice.” says a
paper written by the New York
Resistance, “but the choice is
not one we can make now.”
The resistance began in Cali-

Students may get voice
in UB catalog changes
Students of the State University of Buffalo may expect major
changes in university catalogs
issued after Jan. 1, 1968.

stressed that
Dr.
these changes are still under discussion.

According to Dr. A. Westley
Rowland, Vice-President for University Relations, “the object of
these proposed changes is to enable the catalogs to better reflect the new organization and
purposes of the University, as
well as to make them considerably more useful to all students.”

made in reference to the catalogs
is that students should have a
much greater say in determining
their actual content, since they
must actually make use of them.

Among these proposed changes
is the publication of a new general information catalog which will
not only contain the usual data
concerning course of study requirements, 'fees and regulations,
but, unlike previous catalogs of
this type, will also include a brief
description of every course offered at the University.
Separate catalogs would also
be issued for the University College, the University Summer
School, Millard Fillmore College,
the Graduate School, one for each
of the seven faculties, and one
for each of the seven schools.

You're Invited
to the

"Wig Party"
We are having a showing
of the finest imported hair
pieces direct from California.
These will be made available to those attending the
Wig Party at Special Discount Prices.
FOR RESERVATIONS
CALL
.

.

.

837-8522

Rowland

Another

Stanford’s radical student body
president, and a few others. It
spread to several other cities and
began to gain momentum this
summer. It is primarily a local
movement. The groups cooperate
but there is no national office.

The men who make up the
Resistance have concluded that
protests will not end the war
and that they must take direct
action against the war, to confront the "power centers of the
war-makers,” as a recent article
in the Washington Free Press
stated.

Have deferments
Many Resistance members have
deferments, but, as they say in
one of their leaflets, “we will renounce them. We realize that
the student deferment, the granting of conscientious objector status to a select few, deferments
for the clergy and divinity students, the 1-Y classification, and
other favors dispensed by the
Selective Slavery System, are the
tools the war-makers employ to
silence, manipulate, and divide
young men and to prevent the
growth of united opposition to
conscription in the war.”
The Resistance says that the
student deferment is the strongest of all these because “the bestinformed, most vocal opposition
to the war comes from the campus, where young people have
access to the truth. The warmakers know that many students
would refuse induction and that
massive resistance to the draft
would erupt if students were
drafted.”

Dr. Thomas W. Matthew, president of the National Economic
Growth and Reconstruction Organization N.E.G.R.O., said the government money the N.Y. senator wants to use to encourage white industries to develop slums should go to companies already existing in
ghetto areas.
SAIGON—A high-ranking nun burned herself to death in an
anti-government protest, it was announced. The dispute she gave
her life for appeared on the verge of settlement.
WASHINGTON—Former White House assistant Arthur Schlesinger Jr, condemned President Johnson's military policies in Vietnam
as a “dismal failure” and urged a political campaign next year for
de-escalation of the war.

He said the President should be denied re-election if he continues
his present course in Vietnam.
WASHINGTON —The ranking Republican on the joint congressional Atomic Energy Committee suggests the administration may be
planning to bury nuclear land mines to reinforce its anti-infiltration
barrier across Vietnam.

QUITO, Ecuador —U.S. Ambassador Wimberly Coerr prepared to
leave for home today following his recall at the demand of the Quito
government.
Ecuador accused Ambassador Coerr Saturday of "open criticism”
of President Otto Aroscmena Gomez and requested that he leave the
country within 48 hours.
NEW YORK —A full-scale “Draft Rockefeller" movement is under
way today following the announcement of a citizens committee to draft
Governor Rockefeller for the 1968 Republican presidential nomina-

tion.
HONG KONG —The Chinese Communist parly ordered new strong
doses of Mao Tse-tung's thoughts to wipe out deeply rooted traditions
including the concept that private ownership is more appealing than
communism.

JAKARTA—The Indonesian government bowed today to the
demands of militant student groups and suspended diplomatic relations with Communist China. It was the worst diplomatic setback
Peking has suffered in its 18 years of existence.
The suspension, one diplomatic shade short of an outright break,
was announced after an emergency cabinet meeting called by acting
President Gen. Suharto and an emergency meeting of Indonesian diplomats called home from Asian countries by Foreign Minister Adam
Malik.

important proposal

Stewart Edelstein, president of
the Student Association, stated
that he and his associates are
strongly in favor of such student
contribution, and have expressed
their opinions to those directly
concerned.

As yet, however, plans concerning student participation in
the publication of the catalogs

are still in the process of formation.

N MIT

�HI

-

,

)

aira0 vs

'*

»7

Tuesday, October 10, 1967

The Spictrum'

Pag* Pour

Presentation of Task Force Report
The Final Report of the Task Force on University Policy
will be presented to the students Oct- 18 for their approval
or rejection. The Spectrum is reprinting that Report in
three parts, the first of which
the Student Bill or Rights
is appearing in this edition.
—

—

what is most probably the most expedient and most efficient
method. Unlike procedures adopted for last year’s referendum on the campus draft exam, procedures this year are
wholly adequate.
A sufficient amount of time is being provided for discussion, and an effort is being made to involve as many
students as possible.
Unfortunately, graduate students did not have a procedure as adequate or as viable when they voted on the
Task Force Report during the summer. The Graduate Student Association, in an effort to sound-out graduate student
opinion, mailed the Report for a yes or no package vote
to graduate students.
The inadequacies of the method employed by the Graduate Student Association are obvious. It is ludicrous to
assume that everyone would agree or disagree with the
entire Report. This is very much like presenting the proposed New York State Constitution to the voters in a package.
It provides little opportunity for discussion and forces many
to feel that they must take the “bad” with the “good.”
The possibility that the entire document may not be
acceptable is clearly taken into account on the Oct. 18 ballot.
No one need vote for any section which he finds unacceptable.
The balloting on the Task Force Report will, of course,
only be of value if a significant number of students vote.
It is important that each student consider carefully every
section, and that he be familiar with the Report well before
it’s time to cast his ballot.
This preparation, coupled with a large voter turnout,
will make the referendum a success. Every effort is being
made to insure a large vote, and the Student Association
should be commended for that effort. Student apathy, however, is always a problem. Let’s hope there is no apathy next
Wednesday.

Student Bill of Rights—vote yes

■If They'd Slop Wasting MoneyThey’d Slop Wasting Money
on War, Poverty Programs and
'Programs, We Could Finish the War!' gggJJSES" Moon Shots, They Could Cure F

on Moon Shots and Poverty

the burgher
An ode to Administration Road was something
I’ve always wanted to write. The sight of Hayes
Hail, with all her majesty and grandeur, would
one day choke me up, I thought, when I made a

I used to have nightmares that the Hall would
be condemned by the city engineers, and I would
be the one to form a Citizens for the Salvation and
Restoration of Hayes Hall. Or that angry students
would attempt to burn Hayes Hall in retaliation
for some unjust action by some undeanly dean.
And that I, superstar of all my nightmares, would
at the last instant turn the trick and by means
of great diplomacy quell the rebellion before it
broke into general campus rioting.
New nightmares have replaced those, the cause
being a truly traumatic experience within the walls
of old Hayes Hall.

!!"

Last week’s Spectrum Question of the Week polled
students on what has become the most controversial question presented this semester
the infamous question 47.
Our results show that 40% of those who answered
strongly approved the idea of rooming with someone of
the opposite sex. Only 18% strongly disapproved. The other
42% lie between the two extremes.
After the questionnaire was distributed, a University
official indicated that the question was included merely to
determine how truthfully students answered each item. A
high percentage of “strong disapprovers” would insure the
validity of the questionnaire.
Our results would indicate one of two possibilities:
Either the questionnaire or the statement by the University
was worthless. Both, in fact, seem entirely feasible.

■

—

*

pilgrimage back to my dear old alma mater.

Twas but a day or two ago and I still shudder
The first chapter of the Task Force Report is the
thinking on the event.
when
is,
Student
of
It
a
Bill
proposed
Rights.
unquestionably,
was my first venture into Hayes Hall this
It
carefully conceived and well prepared chapter.
fall, and my only business was to find and talk to
The freedoms outlined in Chapter 1 are basic to the a certain Dean or Provost or VP—I don’t rememevolution of a free university. The adoption of this chapter ber which.
is most vital to the whole concept of academic freedom.
Inquiring as to the whereabouts of so-and-so,
The section on Freedom from Arbitrary or Procedurally I was directed to the second floor, surprised to
Unfair Actions (section B) is particularly worthy. It outlines find it so clean and white and sterile. Gazing down
the hall each way. I found that the second floor
the requirements for due process and insures fair considerawas but a bank of offices. Vice presidents for Urtion of any case involving a student charged with misconduct. ban Affairs, Planning and Development, Student
The right of a student to challenge any decision which might Affairs. Restroom Maintenance, Snow Removal and
Hayes Hall Clock Repair—they all had offices there.
affect him, also in section B, provides added safeguards.
Freedom of Organization and Association, and Freedom Seven provosts and a goodly number of deans’ offices were also to be seen. Secretaries laughed
to Enjoy Rights and Assume Obligations of the Larger lewdly
in the halls and scurried ’round about me
Community point that students must be entitled to all the not noticing my plight and confusion.
rights of private citizens.
The spell was suddenly and viciously broken
One section which should draw comment is that dealing when a shrill voice cried out, “HALT!
When I again came to my senses and scraped
with freedom of student publications (section G). Part 1
off the wall, I was surrounded by three
of that section merely states that “editors and managers myself
campus security officers and a rather burly secreof student publications shall be selected on the basis of tary.
competence, in accordance with fair procedures.”
“Stale your name, accumulative average and
It should be amended to specify that the staffs of the student number,” she commanded.
Quite scared, and without thinking, I rattled
various publications should play a vital and dominant role
the required information.
in the selection of their editors. This would provide an off “State
your business,” she demanded.
added safeguard against an arbitrary selection of an editor
Now more conscious of what was happening, I
who may not be acceptable to this existing staff.
took the defense, remembering Part I, Section C.
With the inclusion of that amendment, The Spectrum second paragraph of the Student Bill of Rights. I
proceeded to quote it.
urges students to approve Chapter 1.
“Knock it off. varmit,” hollered the burly sec-

Is questionnaire valid?

Readers
writings

by Schwab

retary. “You some kind of wise guy or something?”
“I only wanted to see some dean or VP, I don’t
remember which,” I replied meekly.
“Hey. Florence” she yelled, “some nut wants
to talk to some VP or dean, he don’t remember
which."

“Five hundred VPs and 116Vi deans here, and
he don't remember which? He must be some kind
of spy.”
At this point, quick thinking saved me. I pulled
out ray student ID card and showed them the reverse side.
“You see." I said, “I’m but a student here and
here is my NSA Discount Card, Actually I’m with
the CIA, and you’d better not mess around with
me.”
Everyone gasped and stepped back. I saw my
opening and ran. And as I was running, I heard
the secretary excitedly relating that “I just saw a
.”
student and he didn’t smell funny or anything
Hayes Hall has changed and my latest nightmares are of a recurring Big Brother theme. I’ll
never write an Ode to Hayes Hall, but rather on
the Disorder of and the Odor of Old Hayes Hall.
.

.

Living together in society
To the Editor:

I would like to respond to Mr. David C. Sweeton’s (’69) letter in the Oct. 3 issue of The Spectrum.
Mr. Sweeton
My response .to your letter is thus:

There is nothing wrong with a man and
woman living together in an apartment, comple(1)

menting each other psychologically and sharing the
duties of maintaining their living standard as best
each can—providing this is an acceptable mode
of behavior in the society in which you live.

Therefore it would seem you have two choices:
Either find a society where this is an acceptable
social standard, or accept the social standards of
the society in which you live.
(2) I’m sure no one can disagree with your
right to express your opinion on this matter, but
you seem to disagree with our right to express our
opinions regarding yours.

Don’t the rest of us have the same right to
disagree that you claim? Then why may we not
disagree with you without your complaint?
(3) You object to wasting another half hour of

your time helping the Administration with planning.
Will you also find it equally acceptable if the
University agrees not to waste any time helping
you?

Paul A. Martin
Grinnell College ’49

every
The Spectrum is published twice-weekly
Tuesday and Friday
during the regular academic
the State university of New York at Buffalo,
3435 Main Street. Buffalo, New York 14214. Offices
are located at 355 Norton Hall. Circulation: 15,000.
—

—

year at

Editor-in-Chief—MICHAEL L. D'AMICO
Managing Editor —RICHARD R. HAYNES
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Business Manager—SAMUEL A. POWAZEK
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Campus
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Director Murray Richman

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Asst.
Sports
Robert Woodruff
The Spectrum is a member of the United States Student Press Association and the Associated Collegiate
Press. The Spectrum is served by: United Press Inter
national. Associated Collegiate Press Service, Gannett
News Service, and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate.
Represented for national advertising by National Educational Advertising Service. Inc., 420 Madison Ave.,
New York. N. Y. Republication of all news dispatches
is forbidden wihout the express consent of
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editor-in-chief. Rights of republication of all other
matter herein are also reserved.
Second class postage paid at Buffalo, New York.
Editorial policy is determined by the Editor-in-Chiaf.
City

�Tuesday, October 10, 1967

Says H.

The Spectrum

Rapp threatens march

BELOW OLYMPUS

Pago Phi*

By Interlaid

“the

the mobilization

To The Editor:

On Oct. 21, there will be a “peace” demonstration at the nation’s capitol. One of the leading
coordinators of the demonstration will be H. Rapp
Brown who plans to lead the show with a large
vanguard of Negro youths “ready for any trouble.”
All that the government has to do is begin ar-

by Martin Guggenheim

I am constantly in a struggle with myself and
the world. Everytime I begin to write this column.
that exist in our advanced civilization. I attempt
to present horrors and evils on this campus and
maybe even prove that Mr, Meyerson is insincere.
Well . . . everything is in perspective—I imagine.
But a few times a year I am permitted—no,
I am obligated to pursue intellectual discourse about
real problems. This week particularly is one such
time. Throughout the country people are stirring
and preparing for a journey. It is a journey that
all knowledgeable and sensitive people must make.
Pessimists and sceptics—I understand you . . .
but, so what! Is it of any value to argue the possibilities or probabilities of altering the apparent
destination of mankind? As human beings senselessly die, is it not a prostitution of the concept
of education and knowledge theory to discuss
whether or not one's reaction to it is of any consequence?
Where will we end up if we conclude negatively? We may then simply reduce all occurrences,
good or bad, as events, and go on our merry way.
A conspicuous absense of all feeling is, of course,

the newspapers making a mockery of the “peace”
demonstration.
As for myself, I was planning on driving to
Washington until I found out the name of the
curtain raiser of the whole thing. You can’t very
well expect people to listen to a cry for peace from
one who preaches “Get you some guns." H. Rapp
Brown is a violent man and not the person to be
leading a peace demonstration.

1

If there is a peace demonstration in the spring,

sham

_~1

1

will be there with the many who

are avoiding
this one because of its leaders. I hope that by
next year our nation comes to its senses and there
is no need for a demonstration, but for those attending this one, come to your own senses and
don’t be so ready to follow.

Kenneth E. Bress ’68.

Reader objects to pollution

noticeable.
I get down right pissed off whenever

Why isn’t the Norton fountain turned off on
windy days? It does not so much bother me to be
sprayed with every shift of the wind, but that
fountain contains polluted water. That is unbearable.
How long has it been since you were wetted
with dirty, water, President Martin Meyerson? And
what will be done to correct this horrendous situation that develops every spring and fall?
Polluted

"You *eo, wo had this President who turned everything
over to the military
.1"
.

.

the gadfly

my argument becomes self-evident, I believe.
However, the Orwellian concept of the new
world seems all to pervasive. For the next week
or so, try to remember all the gunfire that is being

by Mark Schneider

Asks more repoire with City
To tho Editor:

I think that some interested organization or organizations—The Spectrum and the Buffalo Area
Chamber of Commerce would be ideal
should
get together to build more repoire between the
University and the community.
There is a large resident population here which
considers anything farther north than Nassau County strictly hicksville. (Well, believe it or not there
is at least one self-service elevator in Cheektowaga,
too!)
These downstate clods are oblivious to the resources of our area, and unaware of the advantages
of living on the Niagara Frontier.
They crowd-up our University for four years,
and then go away spreading lies about our winters.
My idea is this: The Spectrum could obtain hundreds of little facts about Buffalo from the Chamber of Commerce, and use them as fillers at the
—

bottom of columns in the newspaper.
Buffalo Gal

Danger lurkes in Norton Hall
To tho Editor:

I want to warn my fellow students about the

family of vending machines that resides on the

third floor of Norton Hall.
every last one. Even the
They are crooks
baby who dispenses pretzles and potatoe sticks.
He takes your dimes, and if he is in a crabby
mood, refuses to hand over your allotted merchandise. I tried beating him about the face and shoulder area only last week. But to no avail. He still
refuses to give me anything.
Big mama machine is not good enough to keep
her ice cream sufficiently hard.
And daddy does not enough carbonate his soft
drinks.
I urge all students to KEEP AWAY from this
dangerous clan.
—

Plundered

Writers; Please be brief. Letters should not exceed

300 words. All letters must be signed and the address
end telephone number of the writer must be included. Positive verification of authorship will be made
before a letter is printed.
Letters will be kept in strict confidence.
The Spectrum will use initials or pen name, if
requested. But anonymous letters are never used.
The Spectrum reserves the right to edit or delete
material submitted for publication, but the intent of
letters will not be changed.

Perhaps the most problematic and ominous of Eastablishments in any young sprout’s future is the military one.
Six years ago when his voice was changing John Q. Public
cheered on army “men” in the movies, now he’s just registered with his local board and what does that mean?
Ostensibly a free man, John Q. now finds that some
distant bureaucracy is going to take some years of his life
and run it absolutely. No matter what lies the Army tells
about officers thinking for themselves, Captain Howard Levy
now sits in a cell for doing exactly that. According to the
National Lawyers Guild 100 civilians are in jail for refusing
induction and 700 soldiers in military stockade for refusing
to go to Vietnam. Obviously, the Establishment isn’t kidding
around when it says “We can draft you whenever we please
and make you kill for us whenever we please.”
On the State University of Buffalo campus a draft counseling
service is being formed to alleviate the tragedy of young men being told, once again, that asking
for the right to be captain of
one’s fate is being presumptuous.
A “No Draft for Vietnam" petition will be circulated to continue
dialogue on, it is hoped, a more
personal level. Draft resistance
is nothing new in American his-

tory (witness the Civil War) but
genocide (depending upon how
you view the Indian Wars) probably is. It should be no shock that
as the quality of American violence escalates, reaction to it by
Americans should stiffen.

The most recent example, of
this is the statement by 320 educators, clergymen and literary
figures who have coordinated acts
of civil disobedience across the
country. Thirty-five of the signers
were clergymen, most significantly Yale Chaplain Rev. William

S. Coffin Jr. Others include Dr.
Spock, author Mitchell Goodman,
and literary critic Dwight MacDonald. The statement "A Call to
Resist Illegitimate Authority”
supports draft resisters and promises church sanctuary (which
means as much legally now as it
did to Thomas Beckett) to them.
The central relevancy of the
draft is that it crystallizes Rousseau’s paradox “Man is born free
and everywhere he is in chains.”

Congress’ changing of the draft
law so that the youngest get

brabbed first reflects the fear
that men are no longer going to
accept conscription for a vile
cause. The Lawyers Guild estimates an expatriate community of
3,000 to 7,000 resisters in Canada
and the planners of the Oct. 21
march in Washington expect 1500
people to return their draft card
on that day. And as resistance
to the paralysis and powerlessness rife in our country grows, so
does the war. “We are not about
to send American boys more than
ten thousand miles away from
home” LBJ promised us Sept, 29,
1964 in Akron, and now the death
count of those American boys is
nearing 14,000.
•

•

•

Democracy in Action award
goes to Messrs. Ky and Thieu for
the arrest of peace candidate
Truong Dinh Dzu. Arrested on
Saturday, as of Thursday “No
firm charges have been filed
Mayor Frank
against him.”
Sedita wins the Culture Vulture
prize of a bus ride through the
ghetto for his remark “I think
Buffalo compares favorably with
any city I saw in Europe” . .
Civil Disobeyers Of the Week is
a well-to-do Cleveland lawyer
finally caught after committing
140 minor traffic violations. He
is considering firing his chauffeur, who incurred them all.
’

’

I come in

contact with some cynic (who, incidently, perceives
the War as wrong) who completely divorces himself from any response to that act of aggression.
There are too many people around that do not perceive the United States foreign policy as evil. But
their silence is understandable. They are satisfied.
If it is possible for Americans to keep in mind
the thought that everyday kids are getting killed—cither due to a warped sense of patriotism or a
warped conception of bravery or, in the case of
the Vietnamese, for more innocent reasons—then

To tho Editor:

heard everyday halfway around the globe. Then
try to keep in mind the thought that maybe you
could change all that.
A few times a year you are allowed, or asked,
to stand up and tell all the world that which you
do not like. Tickets are on sale all this week in
Norton for the Mobilization in Washington Oct. 21.
For fourteen bucks you can let it be officially
known that you oppose the present policy which
your Government advocates. Your country needs
this last attempt for sanity.
More importantly, I pray, you need it for yourself. Surely the sham of this Institution would
become apparent even to the most blind, if it is
decided all is hopeless. Obstensibly you are being
prepared to go out and live and exist in the world.
Rcmmber that the next time you go to your history or sociology class. Fourteen dollars isn’t too
great a sacrifice for your patriotism. Many have
died for the world to become what it is.
There’s always lurking in the back of my conniving mind the thought that ten million kids will
show up in Washington. But if only 500,000 show,
and it is all in vain—at least I want to be able
to know that I officially voiced my objection. Ultimately, 1 only have to talk to myself—but I
can’t avoid that.
Something’s happening, Mr. Jones, but the sad
joke is, no one knows what it is.

Quotes in

the news

United Press International

WASHINGTON—Sen. Hugh Scott (RPa ), say
ing he would oppose President Johnson for election
but would support his Vietnam policies:
“I personally do not enjoy defending I.yndon
Johnson, but I will not play parcheesi with the
war.”
NICASIO, Calif.—Mrs. Garnet E. Brennan, an
elementary school principal, after being suspended
for admittedly using marijuana since 1949.
“I do not consider marijuana a habit-forming
drug, but for me, nicotine is.”

DETROIT—The United Auto Workers' Walter
Reuther after the union approved a $20 million
a month dues increase to help finance the strike
against Ford Motor Co.
“The union is not afraid to go into hock.”

’

.

The Spectrum's pages for

Editorials

&amp;

Opinions
o

The Spectrum to report the
news fully and impartially in the news pages,
to express the opinions of the newspaper only
in the editorial pages and to publish all sides
of important controversial issues.
It is the

"Without

policy o(

•xprvuioo,

frtodom of

txprottion it mttningUtt."

�Pag* Six

Th*

Spectrum

TiMfday, October 10, 1967

Cornell seeking divorce

March on Washington

'Mob' Vietnam protest approaching from student-police issues
by Linda Mills

Spectrum Staff Reporter

On Oct. 21 and 22 the National
Mobilization Committee to End
the War in Vietnam will sponsor
a rally, march and sit-in at the
Pentagon. The confrontation will
be the first significant attempt
by the peace movement to use
any direct action on a sustained
basis.

Prof. Sidney M. Peck, co-chairman of the National “Mob,” has
urged “everyone who opposes
the war to attend.” The demonstration is planned for all who
feel they must communicate the
need for a serious anti war protest and the need to build a mass

movement to take on the responof calling the warmakers
to task.

The general plan calls for two
marches to the Pentagon starting
at the Lincoln Memorial and the
Washington
Monument.
Both
groups will converge at the south
parking lot of the Pentagon for
a rally. At 4 p.m. those wishing
to participate in direct action
will enter the Pentagon to block
stairways, hallways and doorways.
Those not engaging in the sitin will stage supportive demonstrations outside the Pentagon.
These will include massive picketing, vigils, music, drama and rallies designed to disrupt and close

down the Pentagon. Direct action
and supporting demonstrations
will continue for a second day
on Oct. 22.

A diversity of groups will take
part, including SNCC, Diggers,
Students for a Democratic Society, and the Congress for Racial

Equality.

The Oct. 21 march is an outgrowth of protests which began
Sept. 11. Operating within the

framework of direct confrontation and disruption, teams of
people from all over the country
have been sent to Washington
on a daily basis.
On campus the Buffalo Student
Mobilization Committee will be
providing buses from Buffalo to
Washington. Information can be
obtained at the mobilization table
on the first floor of Norton Hall.

Special to The Spectrum

ITHACA, N.Y.—A faculty-student committee at Cornell University has recommended i that
the university should no longer
intervene in matters concerning
students in trouble with the police.
The committee, established
early this year after incidents
involving students and marijuana, Vietnam war protests and a
charge of obscenity in a student
magazine, suggested changes in
the relationships between students, the university and the police. According to Allen P. Sindler, chairman of the group, the
present policy is for the Ithaca
police to turn over to the university any student who has committed a minor off-campus offense.
These include such offenses as
drunkeness and disorderly conduct.

The committee reported that
this policy “retards the deveiopment of responsibility and maturity among students.
The committee’s report also
suggested some changes in the
policies concerning on-campus infractions.
The current policy is to handle
minor infractions in the same

manner as disciplinary matters,
calling in the police only for major offenses. The report suggested

that the line between “minor”
and “major” infractions be clearly drawn.
Regarding student use of marijuana on campus, the study re-

commended that it should be prohibited, maintaining that “the
behavior and attitudes accompanying student use of marijuana
are detrimental to the maintenance of a suitable educational
environment.”

Date isscheduled for
Frosh Senate election Computer Center plans
for regional expansion

The election process for four
freshmen Student Senators was
well under'way Friday as some
15 students returned petition
forms to the Senate office, according to an unofficial spokesman. The election is scheduled
for Oct. 18.

Petitions, which were issued
Oct. 2 to 6, require at least 100
signatures and must also be approved by the Senate elections
Committee before the student
can run. The names of those running will be issued later this
week.

The freshmen have had four

seats on the Student Senate

since

the Senate re-apportionment two
years ago. Representation is allotted according to the University’s divisions. For every 500 students in a division there is one
seat in the Senate.

The four freshmen Senators
will represent 2000 freshmen at
the State University of Buffalo.
Until the election, freshmen arc
represented at Senate meetings
by the president and vice president of the freshman class council.

Begun just three years ago, the
Computing Center, located in
Goodyear Hall basement, is already in a phase of expansion.
Under the direction of Mr. John
S. Hale, it operates on a half research and half service basis.

It is continuing to educate the
public with a series of seminars.
The seminars, designed to bring
people up to date on the newest
machines serve as an introduction
or explanation to the man languages used by computers. Languages such as snobol, a natural
language such as English or

TAIWAN
4543 MAIN ST.

/TV

French; algol, a numerical language, or fortrana general language of computers similar to algebra are taught. The seminars are
free of charge and are opened to
all interested.

The center hopes to become a
decentralized access to a central
computing system. Members of a
regional network will subscribe
to the computer system and all
the facilities of the center will be
available to the subscribers.
Regional members in addition
to the State University of Buffalo would include the State Uni-

RESTAURANT
—

mFEATVRING

2 Miles from U.B.
g

\JhutBSB A J&lt;ood
•

Dine in leisure in an exotic Far East atmosphere. Serving the
best in authentic Chinese and American cuisine. Cocktails
mixed to your taste at our unique Oriental cocktail bar. Open
daily 11:30 a.m. till midnight. Fri. and Sat, till 2:00 a.m.

versity College at Buffalo, the
State Universities at Brockport,
Geneseo and Fredonia, the community colleges
Monroe County, Erie County Technical, Niagara County Community and
Jamestown Community.
—

A teletype device will be
placed at each of the schools and
at two of the four year schools
a small computer, Univac 9200,

will be installed. These satellites
will make it necessary for all
work to be brought to Goodyear
for processing. Only in an experimental stage, it is one of the first
of its kind in the country.

New York, because of its central administration has a unique
university system in which to incorporate this. The benefit of a
more complete informative and
processing system that each independent college alone could not
afford will be made available by
this two million dollar installation.

Ample Free Perkins
TAKE OUT SERVICE
839-3924

PtAZA SHOE REPAIR

What kind do you smoke?

ONE STOP SERVICE
CENTER
Shoos Repaired While-U-Wait
Laundry &amp; Drycleaning
ONE DAY SERVICE

—

University Plaza
836-4041
—/

Whatever kind you smoke,
you owe it to yourself to

try MONZA Pipe Tobacco.
Your favorite pipe will give
you more pleasure when
you choose this imported
blend of the world’s fine
tobaccos.

move up to
THE IMPORTED PIPE TOBACCO
ONLY 30* A POUCH

MONZA i
nrt iosacco

—mmLJ

$*95

MONZA

For a COMPLIMENTARY pouch of MONZA PIPE TOBACCO,
send 10* to cover postage and handling with this
coupon to:

ROMICK’S INTERNATIONAL. INC

P.O. BOX 3033, DEPT. 220

NO. HOLLYWOOD, CALIF. 91606
(Please Print)

Name

WAB STEAK
Sandwich

ALL YOU WANT
(Within

Reason)

U S. CHOICE TOP SIRLOIN

� � �
Dine and Relax in

The Peaceable Kindom
■

Room at the

BLACKSMITH
SHOP
"Oldest Steak House in W.N.Y."

State

1375 DELAWARE AVE.
TT 6-9281

�Tuesday. October 10, 1967

UB orchestra to give two concerts
Most people in the University

ber 21, and one at Canisius College December 7. The program
for this semester will vary from
Prokofieff to Faure to Honegar

its sound can be heard all across
campus when they practice.

professional symphony orchestra
in the country. The Orchestra
will be giving two concerts this
semester, the major one Decern

What is not generally known
is that the University has an Orchestra, comprised of students
from various departments, including Psychology, Physics and Electric Engineering.

Lewis Zippiii will address
joint SDS, 'Mob' meeting

The Orchestra is conducted by
a rare species of women
conductors: Mrs. Pamela Gerheart. Mrs. Gerheart also conducts the Community School Orchestra, teaches at Baird Hall,
and is an accomplished performer on the violin as well.
The musical literature of the
Orchestra covers a wide range
of composers from Bach to Stravinsky, the staple diet of any

The Students for Democratic
Society and the Student Mobili
ration Committee will co-sponsor a meeting at 7:30 p m. tonight

are aware of the Band because

one of

P§9® S«vmi

Tho Spectrum

in Room 335 Morton Hall. The
guest speaker will be Lewis Zipin, coordinator of Resistance, an
anti-draft anti-Selective Service
movement.
Mr. Zipin will discuss his plan
for a national movement to lake
place Oct. 16. On that date, all

Selective Service registrants will
hand in their draft cards, classification notices and medical
forms. A representative will in
turn present them to a federal
marshall along with a letter of
explanation.
The Resistance is a movement
started in March 1967 at Berkeley. Calif., for the purpose of
defying both the draft and the
Selective Service.

campus releases...
Fall retreat of the Intervarsity Christian Fellowship will be held
Oct. 13 to 15 at Canandaigua Lake. The weekend is open to all students. Its topic is “Life—Worth
formal ion is available in room 217 Norton Hall.
Mej. Charles Nagel, a member of the United Nations Staff, will
speak at the International Club meeting Thursday at 8 p.m. in room
340 Norton Hall. Maj, Nagel will describe his experiences and observations in the Middle East. Slides will also be shown.
The Social Work Club will hold a meeting for all those interested
in the Companion program at 7:30 p.m. in room 335 Norton Hall. The
guest speaker will be Rev. Richard Ford, past director of Westminster
House. All new members must attend. Members who are unable to
come or want more information should call 836-5980.
Mr. Michael Flanigan will read his poetry at 4 p.m. Wednesday
in the Conference Theater. The reading will be from his newest collection of poems, Visions America.
The Opera Club will hold a meeting Tuesday at 7 p.m. in room
334 Norton Hall. A trip to New York during Thanksgiving will be discussed.
WBFO will hold a recruitment meeting for newscasters at the
WBFO studios on the second floor of Baird Hall Wednesday.
News Director Jim Bala announced that some auditions would be
held at that time, and others would be scheduled at later times. Mr.
Bala emphasized that no previous experience in radio or speech is
needed to apply. All interested students are urged to attend.
Two student positions for one upper and underclassman are open
on the new Grading and Ranking Committee. To apply, contact the
Student Senate Office, Room 205 in Norton. Leave your name with
the secretary or leave a not on the desk. Applicants will be interviewed by the Executive Committee.

After you've met
the challenge?
If you're the kind of Civil Engineer
we're looking for, you'll start searching for another one to conquer. Here
at the Pennsylvania Department of
Highways, we offer a host of challenges to the right man. But, to be
that right man, you've got to be pretty

special.

Rabkf'SKaveiinie...
Jtfca whole new
in Shay/ir\g!

Ipok for the rime-green can
®)967,

Colgole-Polmolive Compony See The PlfiejMim.*

MMWT, A»C-TV

You see, we search out and encourage Civil Engineers whom we consider
capable of grasping a challenge;
skilled men, comparable to the great
Engineers who are "building Tomorrow today in Pennsylvania." If you
can measure up to the standards
necessary to fulfill Pennsylvania's $10
billion plan to lead the nation in highways, we'd consider it a challenge just
to get to know you.
A Pennsylvania Department of
Highways Career Representative will
visit your campus. To arrange for an
appointment, or if you desire
additional information, contact the
placement office
INTERVIEW DATE:

October 18

Pennsylvania
Department of Highways
LIME, REGULAR

AMO MENTHOL

Bureau of Personnel
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania 17102

�■&gt;
f
The Spectrum
-

Pas*

Eight

Tuesday, October 10, 1M7

,

Universit
The chain
students then.
now

they are really like; but such reports
are also dangerous because they are
often so incomplete and so inaccurate
bizarre or unusual behavior of
a few is highlighted as the norm
rather than sharply contrasting withthe
great majority.
Much also depends on what is read
at the moment
students are "beat”
or "silent," idealistic or pragmatic,
radical or conservative, conforming
or nonconforming, cowardly or courageous, sophisticated or naively awkward, with questionable moral values
or with values "no different than in
our day," whenevej that was.
National image unfair
While it is admittedly difficult to
portray a reasonably clear picture of
college youth today, the current national image is neither fair, accurate,
nor trustworthy. People are in a constant state of change, and the parades
of passing generations have their own
unique impact on the times that also,
for better or worse, constantly change.
Continued accent on sensational aspects could ultimately harm the nation
if it results in an unfair projection
of our future adult leadership. Almost
anything students do today seems
newsworthy, but the need is great
for serious writing about the many
problems of higher education. Various
news media should consider carefully
their traditional responsibility for accuracy, objectivity, and fair play.
Students, as always, generally re-

otl
,

rer

—

A

—

and tomorrow
by Richard A. Siggelkow
Vice President for Student Affairs
The University of Buffalo in 1959
was still influenced by its origins as
an urban institution although the residence hall program was rapidly growing. Such housing accounted at the
time for about 1000 men and women,
or approximately one-fifth of the total
day-time undergraduate student population in 1959. The full impact on
the State University of Buffalo of
new students with differing outlooks
and backgrounds was beginning to be
felt.

The student population in 1959
reflected an already varied social, racial, economic and religious makeup representative of the city of Buffalo and the surrounding community.
Twenty-one percent of the graduates had parents either one of whom
had attended college. In 38% of the
cases neither parent had gone beyond
the grades. The other 41% had one
or both parents with some high school

education.
A married undergraduate student
on any university campus before World
War II was a rarity, often meriting a
feature story in the student newspaper. Yet, by 1957, 22% of all

affecting those who come from outside
the area.
Slow development
After tracing the historical development of student government and social
activities, W. Max Wise in a 1958

American Council on Education bulletin indicated: "Students are growing
more and more resistant to organization, whether for student government
or for fun." The University of Buffalo
has experienced a slow development
in student activities and participation
in self-government. Buffalo students in
1959 were sometimes apathetic about
voting records at
self-government
student elections were weak with some
seats often uncontested.
Fraternity and sorority groups on
the Buffalo campus in 1959 represented about 16% of the full-time
undergraduate student body. Many
campus leaders who were active in
student affairs had fraternity and sorority affiliation.
"Campus traditions, in activities
—

generations, at least according to
standardized measures.
Interest in student groups and
clubs, including fraternities, has steadily dwindled. Campus traditions and
activities have also tended to disappear and new ones to replace them

seem slow to materialize
a source
of regret to many, particularly alumni.
Our students also do not differ
from counterparts throughout the coun—

through discussion groups or coffee
hours.

There also is a sincere desire on
the part of some students to involve
themselves seriously in the problems
of the University before they become
alumni, a trend so contrary to established tradition that it has aroused

—

suspicion and criticism.

—

Dr. Richard Siggelkow
and behavior, have tended to disappear, and new ones to replace them
seem slow to materialize
a source
of regret to many people, particularly
the alumni groups," reported Wise.
This institution
despite its founding date of 1846
had not really
had much time to develop "traditions."
Many individuals and student
groups consistently expressed interest
in 1959 in convocations which would
involve faculty and students. Students
in that year cited a need for improvement of communication between themselves and the faculty.
New spirit
There were glimmerings of a new
kind of school spirit and pride in be—

—

—

This article, representing the opinions of
an experienced educator and administrator
on the changes in the University sludenland
the prospects lor the future, has been compiled from a paper written in 1959, a speech
delivered in July, 1966, and a speech delivered lost month in the School of Education. Dr. Siggelkow served for eight years
as Dean of Students, and this year was
appointed to the new post of Vice President

throughout the nation.

The Sixties
Students are different in some respects today from university students
of 10, 20, or 30 years ago, but not
that different. More intelligent, they
theoretically know more than previous

interest in improved faculty-student
communication, urging more contact

—

relationships similar to those existing
during high school. Even vocational
goals differ for local students whose
roots with * Western New York are
too deep to cut, a consideration not

also reflected the heterogeneous background and strong vocational interests of their counterparts

respects,

never meet the faculty," or that "the
faculty has no interest in students."
Many students consistently express

—

such ties may be too close if parents
look upon the university as simply an
extension of high school and expect
their son or daughter to maintain home

ing associated with a growing institution. Otherwise, the majority of University students in 1959, perhaps because of the school's unique urban
development, did not seem to differ
essentially in outlook, background and
attitude when compared with theirpredecessors. These students, in most

try when they complain that "they

full-time college students were married, 17% of the men, 4% of the
women. The number of undergraduate
full-time day students with children
paralleling enrollment
had increased
changes, of course,
from 4% in
1952-3 to 7% in 1957-8. University authorities began to refer to the
possibility of providing married student
housing, already a reality on many
other campuses.
with the
The university student
possible exception of residence hall
always has maintained close
groups
home and community ties. Sometimes

for Student Affairs.

‘We need to

A share in planning

Students do

not

wish to take over

the direction of the University, but
they do desire more of a share in
curriculum planning, securing of adequate funds, recruiting and holding
able faculty, and the development of

the physical plant. The "image" of contemporary college students, presently reflected by
the press, radio, television, and all
types of periodicals, forms a hazy
montage of such complexity that even
as the most intent observer begins to
bring a part of the confused picture
into focus, the image blurs into another, equally momentary, transitory and
indistinguishable.

These ungear impressions are valuable only insofar as they reflect the
impossibility of keeping the subjects

As
me
W infi
Mt

main a reflection of current American
society, preoccupied with their personal lives and generally unconcerned over
national or international issues.
Students still enter college to get

ahead, anticipating the higher social
status and monetary benefits that come
with a college degree. Essentially security-conscious and materialistic in
outlook, scholarship and learning are
important but only as part of the total
picture in obtaining that degree. More
than any previous generation, they are
subject to a greater and increasing
emphasis on strong academic records,
passports to graduate schools or the
professional school of their ultimate
choice.
A few sensitive and intelligent
college students can hardly fail to
experience dismay and concern over
daily examples of man's inhumanity
man in their own nation, the world,
and even in their home community.
to

Examining values
Another handful of sincerely motivated students, concerned with people rather than things, are seriously
examining the values of society with
great interest and introspection.
Meanwhile, adult leadership erroneously assumes that the mode of life
of previous generations is somehow
still appropriate as a solid philosophithat all
cal base for today's youth
we need to do is superimpose the
past on the present. It is not that
simple, and many adults are surprised
when what
and frequently hurt
appeared to them as a good pattern
for a previous generation is rudely
cast aside as useless and obsolete.
If students in any general sense
are permanently committed in great

*

'

—

—

—

There are two types of ‘rea,
and those who seek to shape
reality will be regarded as dree
reflect the hallowed principle the
—Harry D. Gideonse,

Chcjncei

�Th

Tuesday, October 10, 1967

•

Paf* Nina

Spectrum

9
to develop students as individuals rather than forparticular roles in society
,

;

It is already evident that students

J

yet to discover them on this or any
other campus. The great majority still
remain more concerned over jobs, dat-

ing, and finances than Vietnam, civil
'rights, or the threat of nuclear war.
The extent of real turmoil and concern over world problems remains high-

exaggerated. Conversely, to catalogue the majority of students as
generally lacking in ethics or morality
is similarly an incorrect perception although this, too, happens to be commercially profitable.
The desire to inquire into the
true nature of things and the exercise
of the right of dissent are essential
if we are to survive as a democracy.
ly

■
*

As never before we need more and

more participants in our society with
informed and intelligent viewpoints.
Majority not active
Perhaps many students do really
care about issues and the problems
that beset mankind, but the overwhelming majority do not want to take
the time to be either intelligently active, properly informed, or meaningfully concerned.
Conversely, the adjective "apathe-

tic" is sometimes erroneously applied
to all students who do not participate
in non-conformist behavior of many
groups that receive publicity and make
headlines. There is nothing wrong with
any student who has a desire to prepare himself for a profitable, socially
desirable vocation. These students are

committed to the absorbing adventure

of the discovery of knowledge. In
addition, they respect the honesty and
integrity of those who disagree.
College students can not be neatly
divided into little segments ranging
from active to apathetic. In between
the two extremes, in varying degrees,
are the great majority. An academically oriented student should not be condemned because he wishes to study
the various issues and in his own
way carefully follow a plan to achieve
appropriate aims. He may desire to
work quietly as an evolutionist rather
than a revolutionist, and should not
be criticized if he is sincerely more
interested in ultimate outcomes than
present activity. The real test comes
when men of intelligence and good
will fail to fight an outrage or promote
a good. Too many complacent individuals with college degrees proceed
through life without leaving any positive reminder of their presence.
Even if most students remain silent on the issues articulated by a
small percentage of the student body,
the majority apparently also believe
something is wrong with their education and that they are, in some way,
being given less than they should
receive. Unless an educationally desirable atmosphere is created, negative
student reactions can hardly fail to
result. While it is also true that any
student protest may, and usually does,
subside into

resignation

and indiffer-

any more desirable.

Assembly line products

There is real need to consider
carefully what students are thinking
and the significance of their interest
in previously unexplored areas. To
many, the increasingly depersonalized
atmosphere of our growing university
system too obviously reflects certain
aspects of what they consider an
imperfect society in the non-campus
world. There is something seriously
wrong with higher education when the
university experience, which should be
so continually exciting and challenging, shows signs of degenerating into
a depersonalized learning factory. It
is small wonder that students often
conclude they are nothing more than
an assembly line product on a conveyor belt to be either discarded along
the way as inferior or possibly receive some meaningless stamp of approval at the last station. Institutions
of higher learning must indeed offer
more than a series of dull and uninspiring impersonal experiences conducted by almost anonymous professors.

Everywhere students are victims of
the population explosion in higher
education in which there is no privacy.
There is no real escape from the crowds
tripled rooms in residence halls in
areas designed comfortably for only
two persons, and closely resembling
prisons or army barracks; overtaxed
—

erogeneous in background as the college experience becomes an increasing expectation on the part of youth

and their parents. Each individual is
increasingly forced to interact, associate, eat with, and live with peers
who have different ideas, notions,
beliefs, and prejudices.
It is predicted that students will
soon be faced with as many as nine
career decisions in their lifetimes in
contrast to something like three today. The student will necessarily take
a longer time to get the information
that will fit in with his increasingly
complex life and should be able to
do so without undue hardship.
We have long neglected the importance of conserving that most wasted of all resources
human resources
and the importance of assisting students who drop out of school for personal and academic reasons. For, once
a drop out, always a student. These
students need special counseling and
careful job referrals and should have
resources to assist them in making
effective transitions into more suitable
study elsewhere, to a new job, and
hopefully, to make plans for a future
—

—

return to the academic world.

Most educate for change
We are always on an escalator;
between the time we go to sleep at
night and awake the next morning
the world has already radically changed. Thus it is important to educate
for change. The old rules and courses
must be subjected to analysis in light
of tomorrow's events. If college trained youth are to take their traditional

leadership role

in

the world,

they

must realize that they will be citizens

in an age that will dwarf the age of
discovery for which the 1 6th century
was so well known.
Education, then, will have to take
into account the world as it really
is going to be
a world of communities with ever-increasing interdependent human services, operated by
workers with the highest possible level
of education that can be devised and
afforded. The truly educated person
who understands his role in the world
must be prepared by his education to
go on learning and meet new problems he has to face in a rapidly
changing society. We need to develop
students as individuals rather than
for particular roles in society, requiring a new flexibility in education that
will enable our citizens to continue
learning while maintaining a stable
sense of themselves through a succession of changing roles.
Among the great social and intellectual new forces now unleashed
in the world, will our present colleges and universities be swept along
into hasty and irrational expedients,
or will they gain command of the situation and, by their efforts, conquer
—

of

‘rea,

shape
as dfei

:iple th&lt;

7icjnce//or, New School of Social Research

them?
Concerns with conflicting interests
of students, faculty, and the administration will cause many colleges to
retreat and try to ride out the storm,
remaining quietly among their traditions, sterile and forgotten.
Those few institutions that try to
face the new challenges squarely and
recognize that change is inevitable
and profound, will insist on programming that change in line with their
own values and concepts of societal
needs.

�Pag*

The

Tan

University of Minnesota

Contract for Secret project
cancelled b' U.S. Air Force
to

n

MINNEAPOLIS
A $200,000
secret research project at the
University of Minnesota was recently cancelled by the Air Force.
—

According to the Minnesota
Dally, the project was in the
field of psychological testing and
involved methods of interrogation. Human subjects and the
campus police are said to have
been used in the experiments.

The Air Force said it did not
renew the two year contract because of “lack of funds." The
cancellation came despite the
overwhelming apporval of the
university’s board of regents to
renew the classified program.
The only objection to the renewal
at the Sept. IS meeting from the
University President, Malcolm
Moos, who had taken office just
two weeks before.
Since Dr. Moos had not received coeiiritv clearance, he was unaware of the nature of the proj~r. Moos commented however that he was opposed to secret research because “it tends
to guide the direction of free inquiry."

Laurence Lunden, the University Business Vice-President and
the highest university official to
have access to the programs details, asked the board of regents
to renew the contract on “faith
alone.”

Mr. Lunden said the project
was “very, very important to the
defense effort” and that it had
the support of both government

and university personnel includ
ing Dr. Moos’ predecessor, O,

Meredith Wilson.

Last year the University of
Pennsylvania became a center

of national controversy when it

was discovered that secret government research on germ warfare was being conducted on the
university campus.
Mrs.

Shirley Stout,

Assistant

to the Vice-President for Re-

search at SUNYAB, commented
that there is some governmentsupported research being conducted here but none of it is
classified.

Dr. Leary to play sheriff in comedy
being filmed on Millbrook estate
Special to The Spectrum

tence for the illegal importation
of one-half ounce of marijuana
was recently upheld by a U.S.
Court of Appeals in New Orleans,
reverses roles and plays the part
of a sheriff in a psychedelic
comedy being filmed in Millbrook, N.Y.

The

film, “Indian Givers,”
being filmed on the grounds of
Dr. Leary’s 2700-acre estate, is
called an Eastern-Western film.
It uses a cowboy-and-Indians film
as a vehicle for mocking Western
culture, and also as a means of
introducing aspects of the mysticism of the East to American
movie audiences.

State Department sponsoring
study abroad for students
An educational cultural program of the U.S. Department of
State administered by the Institute of International Education
(HE) grants for graduate study,
research, or for study and professional training in the creative
and performing arts abroad.
-

Applicants for the awards
must be U.S. citizens, have a
bachelor’s degree or its equivalent by the beginning date of the
grant, and usually, be skilled in
the language of the host country. The basis

for selection is

Tuesday, October IQ, 1*67

Spectrum

academic and/or professional record, a reasonable study plan,
and personal qualifications.
There are two types of grants
available through the HE under
the Fulbright-Hays Act
U.S.
Government Full Grants, and
U.S. Government Travel Grants.
—

Application forms and informa-

tion may be obtained from the
Fulbright adviser, Andrew Holt, Hayes Annex C room
7. The deadline for filing applications is Oct. 20, 1967.
campus

It is no underground venture,
ith a £250.000 budget and an

technicians, it will definitely be a
commercial venture, to be released to regular commercial movie
houses.

pie movements to use a cornmercial motion picture to convey
their message to the American
general public.

The project is being produced
by Don Nestingen of Nestingen

Now in its second week of a
10-week shooting schedule, “Indian Givers” is being made by
members of the Group Image
and the Third World, two communal “tribes” of imitation Indians, who are living in teepees
on the grounds of the Millbrook

Films in New York, and is the
company’s first film for regular
commercial release. The company has been making industrial
films for 15 years.
The film’s director, using the
pseudonym of Roberto Incognito,
had been chosen in 1961 as one
of two screen newcomers to receive a Robert Flaherty film scho-

new idea in ventilation comes standard on every
1968 Camaro and Corvette. It’s Astro Ventilation,
a system that lets air in, but keeps noise and wind

estate.

The premiere of the film is
scheduled for Tompkins Square
Park on April Fool’s Day.

Question of the week

40%

approve

co-ed rooms

There has recently been much
discussion concerning the relationship of the University night
school, Millard Fillmore College,
to the curriculum and programs
of the University. What are your
ideas on this matter?

levels, but with' different faculty
and admissions policies (its pres-

I think that Millard Fillmore
College should be:
1) an entirely separate degreegranting institution
2) a division of the University
offering courses only on the
freshman and sophomore levels
3) a non-degree division of the
University offering courses on all

nesday at the Information Desk
on the first floor of Norton Hall.

Daringly new!
new line of
Super Sports for '68.
Computer-tuned suspension systems. Improved
shock absorbers. New double-cushioned rubber
body mounts. They all team up to bring you the
smoothest, most silent Chevrolet ride ever. A fresh

larship award. He regards the
serious bid by mem-

project as a

ent status)
4) completely integrated into
the University, with the same admissions policies and faculty
You can answer the Spectrum

Question of the Week

every Wed-

Last week's Question of the
Week was: How did you answer
question 47 on the recent cam-

pus-wide questionnaire?
According to the scale below,
indicate your approval of having
a member of the opposite sex as
your roommate.

The results were:
1— 18% strong disapproval
2— 13% mild disapproval
3— 10% indifferent
4— 19% mild approval
5—40% strong approval

out. You’ll appreciate all the proved safety
features on the ’68 Chevrolets, including the
GM-developed energy-absorbing steering
column and many new ones. More style.
More performance. More all-around value. One
look tells you these are for the man who loves
driving. One demonstration drive shows why!

Charlie Brown.
must qou always

take me so
literallq?

ll

Chevelle SS

Be smart!
Be sure!
Buy now at your

Chevrolet
dealer's.

-

f

~1~

'•

YOU’LL
FLIP,
CHARLIE
BROWN

396 Sport Coupe

THE NEW

PEANUTS

•

CARTOON BOOK!

by Charles M. Schulz

JjM

r,;rr
Halt. RMturt ml

Winston, Inc.

I

�Tuesday, October 10,. 1967

Olivier film
to be shown

Page Eleven

The Spectrum

Lit. and Drama Commi

3-part play by Bertolt

This week's attraction at the
ale ol Arcme
an unscrupulous, fading
burlesque clown.
iner,

Rice,

In what has been hailed as one
of his best performances, Laurence Olivier plays the untalented
Archie, who tries to follow the
brilliant career of his father, refusing to face the fact that he
hasn't the ability to succeed. The
talented Olivier makes the clown’s
lack of talent both believable and
entertaining.

The film was directed by Tony
Richardson (“Tom Jones”), and
the screenplay was written by the
controversial British playwright,
John Osborne (“Look Back in
Anger”).

Other well-known performers
in “The Entertainer” include
Joan Plowright (Mrs. Olivier),
Albert Finney, and Alan Bates.

The UUAB Literature and Drama Committee will present The
Private Life of the Master Race,
by Bertolt Brecht at 8:30 p.m.
Wednesday through Saturday in
the Millard Fillmore Room.

son not to report some antiNazi remarks of theirs; and In
Search of Justice in which a
judge is at a loss how to decide
a case of robbery in a Jewish

The price of admission is $.75
for students who paid their activities fee, $1.25 for those who did
not, and for faculty and staff,
and $2.00 for general admission.
Tickets are on sale at the Norton
ticket office.

play is to involve the audience
directly, thus shifting the reactions from passive to active
ones. Director Henry A. Wicke
says of his approach, “I am trying to approach the play as a
collage of sounds and visual
images, all attempting to recreate

Brecht wrote the play in the
II,
from 1935 to 1938. The most
famous scenes stand as playlets
themselves.
The Jewish Wife, a part of
off-Broadway’s Brecht on Brecht;
The Informer, in which a schoolboy’s parents are terrified because they cannot trust their
years just before World War

shop.

fS

The director’s intention in this

for the audience what it feels
like to have been in Hitler Germany during this time. I am interested in projecting the debilitating effect as well as the insidious overtones for our society
today of a government which
causes an entire nation to be
suspicious of its friends, neighbors and children.”

The Old
Nazi'

Front (I to r): Lee Rosen, James
Bron, Margot Fein; Rear (I to r):
Rosalind Jarret, Gladys Bowman, Robin Herniman.

UB Med School
to hold annual
THE SPREAD-EAGLE OF TECHNOLOGY
AT GRUMMAN
Ranges from inner to outer space

staff conference
The fourth annual State Uniof Buffalo School of
Medicine faculty conference will
be held Minday, at the Parkway
Inn, Niagara Falls, N. Y.
versity

Grumman has special interest for the graduating engineer and scientist seeking the widest spread of technology for his
skills. At Grumman, engineers are involved in deep ocean technology...engineers sec their advanced aircraft designs
proven daily in the air over Vietnam, and soon... in outer space, the Grumman I.M (Lunar Module) will land the astronauts on the lunar surface. Grumman, situated in Bethpage, L.l. (30 miles from N.Y.C.), is in the cultural center of
activity. Universities are close at hand for those who wish to continue their studies. C.C.N.Y., Manhattan College, Now
York University, Pratt Institute, Columbia University, State University at Stony Brook, Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, Hofstra University and Adelphi College are all within easy distance. The surroundings arc not hard to lake. Five
beautiful public golf courses are in Bethpage—two minutes from the plant. While sand beaches stretch for miles along
the Atlantic (12 minutes drive). The famed sailing reaches of Long Island Sound arc only eleven miles away.
The informal atmosphere is a Grumman tradition, matched by an equally hard-nosed one of turning out some of the
free world’s highest performance aircraft systems and space vchicles.To name a few
...

LM—Lunar Module

to land the astronauts
on the lunar surface

President Martin Meyerson will
open the morning session with
a brief “charge” to the participants.
Dr. Thomas McKcown of the
University of Birmingham, Eng.,
will give an address at 9 a.m. on
“Obligations of a University
Medical School to the Community.”
At 2 p.m. Dr. Campbell Moses,
associate professor, University of
Pittsburgh School of Medicine,
will speak on “The Obligations of
a University to the Medical Profession.”

EA-6A IntruderAll-weather, tactical,

Dr. Warren Dennis, provost of
the faculty of social sciences, will
speak on "Organizations of the

electronic weapon system

4

Future.”

PG (H)—57-ton
Seacraft

V

UUAB reveals plans
for official ride board
The University Union Activities Board announced recently
that an official ride board will be
started soon, ending confusion on
other bulletin boards placed
throughout Norton Hall.
It

PX15—4-Man Deep
Submersible Vessel to
conduct undersea experiments

cities and various locations will
be put at the top of the board
with hooks for cards underneath.

Here then is the opportunity for graduating engineers. AEs, CEs, EEs, MEs, IEs, Physic majors and Chemical Engineering
majors. ..to take their place in the continuum of technology that is Grumman. Grumman representatives will be

ON CAMPUS OCTOBER 19

To obtain Grumman literature and arrange an interview, contact your placement office.

If an interview is not convenient at this
time, send comprehensive resume
to: Mr. Frank A. Hurley,
Administrator of College Relations,
Engineering Employment, Dept. GR-251

will be located in the base-

ment of Norton Hall, opposite the
University Bookstore. Names of

GRUMMAN

AIRCRAFT ENGINEERING CORPORATION
Bethpage Lonr Island
New York, 11714
•

An equal

.

opportunity employtr (M/F)

Two types of cards will be
used: A green card for “Ride
Wanted” and a while card fer
"Ride Offered.” Students will be
responsible for filling out the
cards and hanging them on the
board and also for contacting the
ride or riders.
Any suggestions for improving
the Board can be sent to the
Ride Board, UUAB, Box 12, Norton Hall.

�Tuesday, October 10, 1967

The Spectrum

Page TvfFn

Charter for University scheduled for student vote
ing any other peaceful action on
or off campus.
4. Any person invited by a stu-

A Charter for the Academic
Community will be presented to
the students for their approval
The Charter is the final report
of the Task Force on University

policy.
Undergraduates will be asked
to vote on each article individually by indicating yes, no, or comment.

The comment must be prepared
and typed beforehand and submitted with the ballot. Student
comment includes amendment of
the article, proposal of new article, and general discussion of
the individual topic.

If 75% to 95% of the students
article, it will remain in tact. Articles receiving
less than 75% approval will be
referred to the committee. The
decision of the committee will be
subject to final approval by the
Student Senate. These tentaUve
rules governing the referendum
will be voted upon at the Senate
approve of an

meeting tomorrow night.

Many students
particularly
freshmen are not aware of what
the Task Force was, or what its
—

proposals

were.

In an effort to inform the Uni-

versity community about this
very important issue, The Spectrum will serial the Task Force

report. This is the first of three
instalments.

The members of the academic
which consists of
students, teachers, scholars, researchers and administrators, are
collectively responsible for maintaining conditions under which
the creation, discovery, conservation and dissemination of knowledge may flourish. The following
statement sets out standards and
procedures under which this
obligation may be discharged.
community,

I STUDENT BILL OF RIGHTS
A. Freedom of Expression.

Students are free to speak publicly on any issue and to conduct
research or publish on any topic.
Students are free to take reasoned
exception to the data or views offered in any particular courses
of study.

B. Froodom from Arbitrary or
Procadurally Unfair Actions.
A student has the right to be

heard in any case in which he
is charged with misconduct and
the right to challenge any other
decisions which affect him. Students have the right to be protected against unjust grading and
evaluation due to incompetence,
error or prejudice. Procedures
for hearing and challenge shall
be in conformity with due process of law.

faculty and administrators, and specifically mandated by these same constituencies, we of the committee interpreted our raison d’etre to mean (1)
that out responsibility was to all segments of the academic community, (2)
that we had consequently to address ourselves to reforms which would
guarantee to each segment its rights to be heard and to decide on subjects
of university policy, and (3) that our final recommendations to these purposes must be founded on the broadest testimony and research. In keeping
with these guide posts, we early divided ourselves into two standing subcommittees, one to study the mechanisms and procedures for policy making
at this university and on other selected campuses, the second to hold open
hearings at'which interested individuals could present their views and
make recommendations. We secured funds for a research assistant to aid
the organizational analysis subcommittee and a recording secretary to
work with the hearings subcommittee.
As our investigations proceeded, the evidence we gathered and the
testimony we heard confirmed our belief that the demonstrations of the
spring were manifestations of long standing dissatisfactions. Our interim
report spoke to this conviction. As we continued our researches we became
aware of two important factors. The organizational changes proposed by
President Meyerson convinced us that it would be senseless to recommend
detailed, substantive reforms in all areas of our community; clearly the conditions which warranted the recommendations soon might no longer obtain. Another obvious stricture on our deliberations was the fact that in
the foreseeable future many outside legal restraints on the goverence of
our university would continue to operate. Recognizing these limitations, we
still believed that we could discharge our responsibilities to our constituencies; and with this conviction we framed our final report.
The report is divided into a short preface and eight chapters. The
preface spells out the premise on which the report is based. Chapters I, n,
and m constitute an academic bill of rights, that is, a listing of those specific,
inviolable principles which taken together form the legacy of the community of scholars. Chapter IV announces the additional principle of participation, without which the others can have no validity. This principle is stated
in terms that assign to the members of the community of scholars the responsiblities which are rightfully theirs. Chapter V provides for the establishment of the University Committee to protect the integrity of the Charter.
This body is to be so structured and empowered that it will remain a viable
entity, performing its assigned functions, regardless of subsequent organizational changes on our campus. Finally, Chapter VI, VII and VIII describe
procedures for interpreting, amending and ratifying the Charter.
It must be noted, however, that these solutions, if implemented, should
in no way restrict the processes of further trial and experimentation. Hopefully, we have built into our recommendations sufficient flexibility to permit
the discussion an inquiry without which constructive change is impossible.
But one must never forget that the important thing is the perpetuation of
the traditions of the community of scholars; and specific mechanisms must
not become so vested that their existence threatens these traditions. In
this respect, the committee was heartened by the attitude of the new administration. Its willingness to underwrite our endeavors encouraged us
to believe that it would protect and foster these traditions.

be given the right

to appeal

any

adverse decision. No sanction or
other disciplinary action for misconduct shall be imposed on a
student unless it be imposed by
the Student Judiciary or appropriate appellate

bodies.

2. In cases in which a student
challenges a decision affecting
him, due process requires: (a) that
the procedure for challenge be
clearly and publicly stated in
some convenient place; and (b)
that the student be permitted to
make his challenge directly, in
person, to the appropriate person or governing body deciding
his case.

1. In cases of alleged miscon3. The faculty shall establish
duct, due process requires; (a)
an orderly procedure whereby
that the student be given an opallegations of prejudice
portunity to discuss the alleged student
of grades
misconduct with the accuser and or error in the awarding progress
the party formally initiating the or the evaluation of
degree may be reviewed
charge, before the formal charges toward a
are preferred; and (b) that the by competent academic authority.
student be informed in writing of
all the charges against him; be
presented with all the evidence C. Freedom from Disclosure.
to be used against him; be given
sufficient time to prepare his
All information which teachers
defense; be given the opportunity and other University personnel
to deny, refute and rebut the acquire about the personal views,
charges, assisted by an adviser 01 convictions and political associacounsel; be given the right to tions of students, or about their
have the hearings conducted by disciplinary, emotional and social
an impartial judge or judges; and problems, is confidential and

shall note be disclosed. Disciplinary actions which do not result
in dismissal shall not be posted
to permanent academic records
that are made available to outside parties.
A student's permanent record
or any part thereof shall not be
released to any organization or
party outside the University without the explicit written consent
of the student.

The rights under this section
may be waived by the student
but no waiver shall be considered
valid unless stated by the student
in writing and any such waiver
shall only apply in those instances specified by the student.

D. Freedom of Admission on a
Fair, Nondiseriminatory Basis
Admissions policies must not
discriminate against individuals
on the basis of sex, marital status,
age, race, creed or national origin.
University facilities and services
shall be open to all students. The
University shall use its influence
in the community to ensure that
off-campus housing, eating and
recreational facilities are open to
all of its students without discrimination.

E. Freedom of Organizetion
and Association.
Students have the freedom to
organize in order to promote
their common interests. Any such
organization shall be recognized
upon the filing of a statement of

purpose and/or constitution.

1. Student organizations shall
not be required to submit lists
of members other than current
lists of officers; except that organizations required to maintain
minimum grade averages for their
members may submit current
membership lists for checking
grade averages.

2. Campus organizations, facilities and activities shall be open
to all students without respect to
race, creed or national origin, except for the possible limitation of
sectarian organizations. Organizations and activities shall be open
in fact and not merely formally
open through the absence of restrictive clauses.
3. Students and student organizations shall be free to discuss
all questions of interest to them
and to express opinions publicly
or privately without penalty, to
promote the causes they support
by distributing literature, circulating petitions, picketing or tak-

the only controls which may be
imposed are those required by
orderly scheduling of the use of
space.

5. Students are free to organize
and join associations for educational, political, religious or cultural purposes. The fact of affiliation with any intramural association, so long as it is an open affiliation, shall not of itself bar a
group from recognition.
6. A student organization shall
be free to choose its own faculty
adviser, but no organization shall
be forbidden because it does not
have a faculty adviser.
F. Freedom to Establish and

Operate Student Governmi

Student government must be a
fully representative self-government and free from arbitrary intervention in its affairs by the removal or suspension of its officers, the withholding of funds
or unilateral changes in the charter that defines its organization

and competence. The electorate
of such a government shall consist of the entire student body.
As a constituent of the academic
community, the student government shall have clearly defined
means to participate in the administrative formulation and application of regulations affecting
student conduct. It also has the
right to participate in the formulation of institutional policy.
G. Freedom of
Student Publication.
Students have the freedom to
establish their own publications
and to conduct them free of censorship or of outside determination of content or editorial policy.

1. Editors and managers of
student publications shall be selected on the basis of competence,
in accordance with fair procedures.
2. Editors and managers shall
have independence of action during their term of office. They are
to be free,of suspension or removal because of faculty, student,
administrative or public disapproval of editorial policy or content.
3. Students are free to distribute any publication on or off
campus.

4. Students have the freedom
to establish and conduct, without
institutional interference, publications that are not subsidized
by the University.
5. Student directors of campus
television and radio stations not
operated primarily for instruction purposes shall have freedom
of programming comparable to
that of the editorial staff of campus publications.

H. Freedom to Enjoy Rights and
Assume Obligations of the
Larger Community.

Students have the rights of private citizens, and the exercise of
these rights on or off campus
shall not subject them to institutional penalties.

Violation of civil or criminal
law by a student shall not subject him to institutional sanctions
unless the infraction is also a
violation of University standards.
No student including those
employed by the University, shall
be required by the University to
swear or affirm any loyalty oath.

�u

Tuesday, October 10, 1967

Th

on the bench
:trum

•

.»

Spectrum

Pat* Thirteen

the spectrum of

sports

Reporter

Saturday was one of those days when everything went
right and nothing went wrong
nothing that could be
evidenced by those of us watching in Rotary Field.
—

The running was fast, passing
was sharp and blocking was crisp,
not to mention the fine defensive
play of Urich’s assassins
By looking at the final score
one would assume it to be an
exciting game, but the truth of
the matter is that the word for
the ball game was lethargic. The
Bulls dominated so much, that
the fans watching were at times
more enthused over the shenanigans in the stands. Despite Murtha
throwing for the bomb and Ken
Rutkowksi showing his fine speed,
the highlights of the game turned
■out to be a drunken fan yelling
for girls (and guys) and a blanket
throwing contest held on the Buffalo side of the field.
Many questions enfolded upon
us last week; this week we won’t
ask any, except this one: “For
four years, Buffalo’s home record is near spectacular, in games
won and caliber of play. If one
team can be so good at home,
what’s the reason for their utter

failure on the road?”
The answer to this question
does not come from the support
of the Bulls’ fans, for they have
been regarded as apathetic social
butterflies whose football team
is nothing more than a Saturday
afternoon date, a time for drunkedness and revelry and conduct
becoming of rowdy fraternity

parties.
I enjoy this type of sporting
event and if this is the answer
to the Bulls’ home success, mazel
tov, for we have two more home
games this year and we’d love

to win both of them.
So the question this week is
not how we lost, nor is it how
we won. We know we “whipped”
them by a lopsided score, and we
know the team is capable of playing superlative football at home,
what we’d like to know is why
the brand of football displayed
against Temple cannot be duplicated on the enemy front.

']

Pat Patterson begins charge out of the backf/e/d as Lee Jones (36) and Mick Murlha (14)
throw up a wall of blockers to lead the line

'-narge out�

crashing halfback

Bulls beat Temple to even record
by W. Scott Behrens
Spectrum Staff Reporter

The State University of Buffalo football team evened
its record at 2-2 Saturday afternoon in Rotary Field by overpowering the visiting Owls of Temple University, 44-14,
before a Homecoming Day crowd of 9,275 excited fans.
, This was the best offensive scoring show put on by a
blue and white team since 1960 when the Bulls shut out
Western Reserve, 44-0.
It was the first setback of up a combined total of 233 net
yards passing and 197 net yards
the season for the Owls, havrushing in what proved to be the
downed
Kings best effort by these Bull signal
ing previously
Point and Boston University. callers in the two years which
The game was the seventh they have played together. Murmeeting between the two tha passed for 202 yards and used
Ken Rutteams, and the Bulls have hand-offs to halfback
fullback Lee Jones and
yet to lose a football game to kowski,
Pat Patterson to keep the Bulls’
Temple University.
running attack moving.
Junior quarterbacks Mickey
Murtha and Denny Mason picked

Rutkowski played another brilin the home field

liant first half

as he sprinted 47 yards for Buffalo’s first score of the afternoon
which came about six minutes
after the opening kickoff. Split
end Chuck Drankoski kept the
Bulls momentum going with a 56
yard touchdown pass from Murtha. was standing at his own 44
yard line and passed the ball to
Drankoski who was all alone
about 30 yards from the line of
scrimmage down the center of the

field. Chuck took the ball and
scampered the rest of the way for
the six-pointer and the Bulls went
into the dressing room with a
half time lead of 13-0.

Wells impressive
The entire Buffalo team really
showed that they were “up” for
this one, as each one of them contributed in some way or another

victory.
to this much-needed
Flankerback Rick Wells caught
two passes, one for long yardage
which he took to the Owl fouryard line to set up the Bulls second touchdown of the third quarter.

Wells also took a down-and-out
pass into the end zone for the
two point conversion score after
Jones had gone through the center of the line for the touchdown.
Wells earlier had taken a 20 yard
pass from Murtha to the Temple
one-yard line to set up the first
six-pointer of the second half for
the Bulls. Sophomore halfback
Pat Patterson took a hand-off
from Murtha and jumped over
right tackle for the score.
The two other touchdowns for
the home team came on passes
from Bull quarterback Mason in

the last quarter of play. Mason
threw the ball 12 yards to sophomore light end Terry Endress for

one score and tossed sophomore

Paul Lang a ten yard pass from
the Temple four yard line for the
final score of the afternoon.
The Bulls’ placekicker, Bob
Embow, made good one of two
field goal attempts as well as
two of three extra points. Embow’s understudy, Mike Buchak,
put an extra point through the
uprights for the Bulls’ 44th point.

Temple strikes twice

The Bulls' offensive unit had

placed 30 points on the scoreboard before the Owls could find
themselves on offensive attack
of their own. Temple quarter-

backs Tom DeFelice and John
Waller used pass patterns to their
two ends, Ed Boosts and Jim Callahan all afternoon as the Bulls’
stalwart defensive unit kept their
running attack down to a paltry

24 net yards.
Waller got the Owls on the
scoreboard for the first time with
a 54-yard touchdown pass to Callahan on the first play from
scrimmage in the last quarter.
Waller’s pass to Ed Poostay fell
incomplete in the end zone and
the two point conversion attempt
failed.
It seemed as though Temple
would be able to recover from
their deficit when Waller moved
them again to pay dirt on a 53
yard scoring drive. Poostay
caught a Waller pass in the end
zone from the Bull two yard line.
The pass combination of Waller
to Poostay for the two pointer
worked this time and the Owls
trailed 30-14. But this was the
end of the Owl scoring spree as
the Bulls' defensive outfit held
them in check for the remaining
ten minutes of play.
FINAt TEAM FOOTIAU STATISTICS
MIA Tm*&gt;*
First downs
19
IS
Yards gained rushing
214
74
Nat Yards gained rushing ..197
24
2)
No. of Passes attempted
29
10
No. of Passes completed
IA
intercepted
had
No. of Passes
I
2
Net yards gained passing ..233
2A2
Total offense yardage
430
206
Punting average, yards
34,8
27J
...

„

—Yates

Tom
Hurd

Bull defensive back Hurd (48) grabs as loose football as defensive
end John Prsyzbycien (84) also reaches for the elusive pigskin.
Bulls turned the Owl miscue into a touchdown four plays later
on a 56 yard Murtha to Drankowski aerial.

Number own fumbles lost
Ice dug by Owarters;
Buffalo
.7 6
0
Twnpl*
0

0

2

17
0

14-44

14-14

�Pag* Fourtaan

Th

Preparations begin today for
most ambitious' hockey season
The 1967 edition of the State
University of Buffalo ice hockey
season, featuring the fastest and
reporting to Clark Gym room
G5A. There General Manager
Howie Piaster and Coach Trey
Coley will begin preparations for
the most ambitious schedule in
the hockey club’s six year his-

Men of vision expand league slowly
by Rick Kaplan
Spectrum Staff Reporter

It seems physicians have been reporting an unusually
-frpmipnry nf wrist injuries during the past few weeks.

kev teams. Incidentally, Buffalo

tween the incidence of these ailments and the mass schizophrenia induced by the simultaneous telecasting of the American League pennant action and the initiation of this year’s
Pro Football Wars.

Whatever, it is the resolute
intention of this Ranger fan
There is just too much talent fan(atic) to generate excitement
available for the hockey team about the upcoming, all new,
bigger and better, coast-to-coast,
not to do better.
National Hockey League season.
Plaster and Coley will still
The owners of the six estabbe working around a nucleus of
veteran talent including All- lished NHL franchises are men
league goalee Jim Hamilton, all- with vision. Looking to the expansion experiences of the other
star defenseman Pred Borgemeistcr, and last year’s leading major sports, they found the inscorer, center Al Deber. Throw cremental approach, where each
in some needed help at defense, league might add one or two
a little depth on the forward line new clubs in such a way as to
some
and they could make a run for maintain young competitive basis
and old, as basithis year’s Pinger Lakes hockey between
cally archaic and non-lucrative.
championship.
Buffalo should definitely im-

tory.

prove on last year’s 7-7-1 record.

Plaster is especially interested
in new players and invites “anyone who feels he can help the

team” to report to the athletic
office between 11 a.m. and 5 p.m.

Also needed are one or two

equipment managers.

Plaster is counting on a team
of between 15 and 20 players,
and make no mistake—he’ll need
every one of them. There are no
slouches on this year's 22 game
schedule. Buffalo, as a member
of the rugged Finger Lakes
hockey league, takes on some
of the top eastern collegiate
hockey powers including Syracuse, Utica, RIT, Canton Tech,
and Oswego Stale, a team which

So keep your eye on our 1967
hockey team. It’s an exciting
sport, and played Bulls style,
it should be a winning sport.

Buffalo harriers run best
meet of season at Syracuse
by Andy Breiman
Spectrum Staff Reporter

Saturday afternoon the Bull
Harriers traveled to Syracuse for
the LeMoyne Invitational CrossCountry Meet. This meet marks
the annual fall gathering of many
of the Eastern cross-country powers, including Roberts Wesleyan
College which has taken first
place in the event for the past
six years.

The Bulls entered this meet in
the midst of a not so spectacular
season (one win and four losses)
and were not expected to do well
against the top competition in the
meet. However, the staunch Buffalo Harriers, under the urging
of head coach Emery Fisher, ran
their best meet of the season.
Each man put out 100% effort
and Buffalo was therefore able
to come through with a quite respectable ninth place in the sixteenth team meet.

Again as in all the meets thus
far this year, Jim Hughes carried
the team as a result of his lead-

NHL banner.

Fortunately, the pitifully talent-thin teams in Minnesota, St.
Louis, California (San Francisco-

Oakland), Los Angeles, Pittsburgh
and Philadelphia, together comprising the expansion Western division, will meet the men in
Montreal, Toronto, Chicago, New
York, Detroit, and Boston on an
initially limited interleague scale
—only four games with each team
of the older division. These contests may prove to be real cartoons.

The championship season opens
this week, and, recognizing the
potential influence of such unknowns as injuries or trades, I
can give some brief introductions
to the new clubs in the AFL of
the National Hockey League, the
(he
isher for
Bulls, and his 29.03 Western Division. On Friday,
second
I line was good for
place. we’ll have a look at the Major
Coach Fisher was displeased at
League, the Eastern Division. The
the finishes of (he balance of the teams in the West are predominBull squad. Much of the team had antly the results of a player draft
already recorded times faster from an NHL pool consisting prithan Niagara’s third and fourth marily of unproven minor-leagplace finishers.
uers, good “batting practice hitToday (he team (ravels to Olean ters,” old men, and blacklisted
to oppose St. Bonaventure.
bad boys. Somehow, it seems the
newcomers lost more than the
traditional teams in this transTHE SPECTRUM
action.
printed by

Partners' Press, Inc.

California Seals; Bert Olmformer Canadian and
Maple Leaf star left wing, and
highly sought after as a coach

ABGOTT &amp; SMITH PRINTING
1381 Kinmme Ave. («t Delaware)

stead,

Phone 876-2284

—

Why not, in the Nuclear Age,
undergo expansion through fission? So, we now have twelve,
before we had six, and each of
the neophyte franchises iced $2
million over to the visionary six
for the right to carry the prestigious

ing performance. Hughes finished
seventeenth out of 121 entries
over what is perhaps the toughest course the Bulls will run this
year. Coach Fisher was quick to
praise his boys for their performance in the LeMoync Meet as
(hey faced some of the East’s
best competition.
l-asl Wednesday the Harriers
met neighboring Nassau Community College at Grover Cleveland
Bark. The Bulls came out victorious in a 26-31 squeaker. The
leading finisher was Chris
Thomas of Niagara with a time
of 28:25 over 5.1 mile course.
Jimmy Hughes was the first fin-

LWiKtHSX

People Are Wonderful
Twl

EHTtSraJKSES.
_

CONFERENCE

THEATER
October
12, 13, 14
Performance! at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9

Consider a career working with
young people—a professional

position in the YWCA. Opening anywhere in the U.S. for
women with social work, phy-

sical education, social science
majors. Make appointment
with University Placement Office for interview October 12
with National Recruiter, Miss
Adelaide Noble, or call her at
852-6120.

25c and 50c for fhoto
who hava paid their foot
50c and $1.00 without
fao payment

by the upper division, is at the
helm. He does have material good
enough for contention.

Larry Cahan, an ex-Ranger, is
another story. Any Ranger fan
who has thrilled to Larry’s assists to the opposition will be
disappointed the New Yorkers
won’t be directly aided by Caban’s inability more often than
the four interleague contests.

Bill Hieke, another ex-Ranger
and former NHL rookie-of-theyear with Montreal, carries both
a good slick 2nd right wing and
recognition as “the Baltimore
Clipper player with the most sex
appeal” as voted by the wives.
Center Billy Harris could help
most of the older teams, and
youngsters like minor league
standouts Bob Lemieux, Brian
Hextel, and oldster Boom Boom
Caron (35 goals at Portland of
the WHL last season) round out
the nucleus of a comparatively
strong team.
The Seals should be second.
Los Angeles Kings; The nucleus of this entry in the Western
Division is a bit smaller . . . call
it coach Red Kelly, who might
feel the need to suit up as the
season progresses, and 37-year-old
all time great goaltender Terry
Sawchuk. The Kings reached into
the Ranger organization for Doug
Robinson, a young left winger
who netted 39 goals at Blatimore
last season.

Beyond this point the Kings
roster shows only jesters. Los
Angeles should be last in the

West.
Minnesota North Stars; Minnesota should be able to compensate for its weakness in the nets
in the presence of ex-Ranger
Cesare Maniago with a sound defense comprised of veteran Elmer “Moose" Vasko from the
Black Hawks, Pete Goegan, JeanGuy Talbot from Les Canadiens,
and rookie Mike McMahon, a
combined Canadien-Ranger product, plus a&lt; group of forwards
who pack some real scoring
punch. Dave Balon, Parker MacDonald, and Wayne Connelly
are proven NHL performers, and
the North Stars find themselves

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Available for fraternity
blasts, mixers, etc.
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MRS. JUDY JAYSON

PASTRAMI
836-4881

with some rookies, like Montreal’s Andre Boudrias and Bob
Charlebois, who can hit the net.
The stars will be a contender.

Philadelphia Flyers; The one
factor that may be preventing
this club from flying away from
the rest of the league is their
goal-tending. Bernie Parent, obtained from the Bruins, has never
given any sustained evidence of
major-league netminding ability.

Bobby Baun and Kent Douglas,
picked up from the Leafs, are
more than major league defensemen, who can throw up a strong
wall in front of a very adequate
Charlie Hodge, a Vezina (lowest
goals/game avg.) award goalie
with the Canadians.

The

BIG JOHN'S
Pizza

10, 1967

'Spectrum

National Hockey League

has won its last 39 league games
and is rated as the number one
team in NCAA—Division 2 hocwego State, way back in 1964 by
a 6-4 score, so this year’s contest shapes up as a vengence
game, and could wind up as a
pier-six brawl.

•

836-7198

The Flyers risked an early round
pick in the player draft when
they chose Ed Van Impe a former
Bison star who came in third in
NHL rookie-of-the-year last season as a Black Hawk.

If the young defenseman’s
broken leg has mended properly,
Van Impe will team with Joe Watson of the Bruins, John Miszuk,
Jim Morrison and Lebanon’s own
John Hanna to give Philadelphia
a strong defense.
Flyer forwards such as Lou
Angotti, Leon Rochefort, Forbes
Kennedy and Pat Hannigan provide this team with lots of hustle
and playmaking finesse, but the
group may be lacking in scoring
ability. I think Philadelphia will
finish a strong third place.
Pittsburgh Penguins; Coach
Red Sullivan has assured the
Penguins (what a name!) of a distinctive New York Ranger flavor
in assembling this Steel City entry. Right wings Andy Bathgate, Ken Schinkel, Billy Dea,
and Paul Andrea, centers Earl
Ingarfield and Art Stretton, like
Dea, a former Buffalo Bison star,
left wings Val Fonteyne and Mel
Pearson and defenseman Noel
Price, Dune McCallum, and A1
McNeil were all Rangers at one
time or another (mostly another).

When you add to this solid
group defenseman Leo Boivin,
who I once saw shatter the protective glass with the body of
an opposition player who he had
checked, and erratic Ab MacDonald from the Hawks, the
makings of a decent hockey team
are present. The Penugins could
be the surprise team of the West,
but lack of an experienced goalie
will probably drop them in fifth
place.

St. Louis Bluet; Hockey fans

may be surprised to find as established a super-goalie as Chi-

cago’s Glen Hall in the nets. The
quality of the Blues doesn’t cease
with Hall, either. Bob Plager,
gotten in a deal with the Rangers,
may be the roughest customer in
hockey. Include the veteran, hardchecking AI Arbour, Jim Roberts
from the Canadiens and rookie

Noel Picard, and one can see

why the Blues will be hard to
score on (for the West!).

St. Louis drafted an unusually
fine crew of forwards
Ron
Stewart, Wayne Rivers, and Ron
Schock from the Bruins, Billy
Hay, who has centered at times
for Bobby Hull, Don McKenney,
a big-time NHL goal scorer, and
John Brenneman. Emphasizing
that coach Lynn Patrick has
Glenn in the goal, his Blues
should be the Western champions
—

�Tuesday, October 10, 1967

Th

•

Pn» FllUm

Spectrum

Red Raiders capitalize on UB 1 Homecoming sta
miscues, dump Baby Bulls 18-6 Four elected to A thletic HallofFame
The Bed Raiders
feated the State
Buffalo freshmen
18-6. Colgate took

of Colgate deUniversity of
football team
advantage of

turned them into touchdowns.
Colgate struck first when it
recovered a Buffalo fumble on
the Bulls three yard line. The
Bulls defense, which performed
with distinction thoughout the
game, held Colgate for four
downs. On the fourth down, however a pass interference call
gave Colgate another chance
on which they cashed-in. The
point after touchdown was no
good.

In the second quarter, the
Bulls took the ball and went 55
yards for a touchdown. John
Faller took it in from the 12yard line on a great individual
effort breaking three tackles.
The two-point conversion attempt
was good and the Bulls led at
halftime 8-6.

The second half was all uphill
for Buffalo as Colgate scored two
more touchdowns. One came as
a result of a fumble, the other

Four great athletes of the past were inducted into the
State University of Buffalo’s Athletic Hall of Fame last

Bulls' offense simply could not
Selected were: Dr. Victor Grieco, Dr. Louis Farris,
get the ball over the goal line.
Donald
Holland and Robert L. Beyer.
Coach Mike Stock was very
disappointed in his charges’ perthe National Football League, Dr.
Dr. Grieco, presently a profesformance. They hope to avenge
sor at Ohio University, was one Grieco declined in order to coach
this loss aaginst Ithaca this Friday at Rotary Field and even of the greatest football stars ever
and teach.
to attend the State University of
their record at 2-2.
Buffalo. A center for three years,
Basketball was Dr. Farris’ game
he was elected captain of the
and he was one of the best at it.
1938 team.
He played four varsity years from
He was also selected as Captain
1922 through 1926 and as a freshColgate and Canisius qualified
of the All Western New York
man led the team in scoring with
as team entries in the ECAC diseleven that season, and was
trict eliminations held at Drum98 points, an impressive total in
lins Country Club, Syracuse. picked for the AP all-East team. those days. He was captain of the
Though the State University of He played 1002 consecutive minteam in both his junior and seBuffalo failed to qualify as a utes of football without substituand
then
because
tion,
only
left
nior years, as well as president
the
Bulls’
Santelli
Tony
team,
will represent this school in the he had a broken finger on each of his junior and senior classes.
ECAC tournament to be held next hand and had trouble tackling. Dr. Farris was a member of
month in Bethpage, Long Island. The recipient of three offers from Bisonhead (the honorary men’s
society) and graduated Phi Beta

ECAC results

CLA SSIF I E D
MISCELLANEOUS

FOR SALE

WANTED

1960 CHEVY, stick. Nudi some body work.
856-4601.

RIDE WANTED for staff member from Millersport and Hopkins and return. Call
Joyce, daytime, 831-2806.
TEACHER wants female grad student or

1962 TEMPEST
2 door sedan. Good condition. Must sell. Including two snow
tires. $100 or best offer. Call Ken at 8742071.
Remington portable, 4 years
TYPEWRITER
old; excellent condition. Best offer. 836-

working person between ages 23-28 as

roommate. Call

—

1419; 836-8068.

FIND NEW and used paperbacks and hard
bound books at GRANT books and
stamps. 3292 Main St.
1965 YAMAHA, 80 cc. Excellent condition,
only 500 miles. $195. TF 4-7704.

APARTMENTS FOR RENT
APARTMENT AVAILABLE after Nov. 1. Very
attractive 5 room and bath, two bedroom,
first floor. Kitchen furnished with appliances indusive of dishwasher and garbage
disposal. Location near Union Rood at
Wehrle Drive—7 minutes from campus. Convenient to shopping areas. Coll 634-2576.
FOR RENT
MALE, SINGLE. Private bath, cooking privileges—$50 per month. In suburbs—about
five miles from U.B. campus. Must be willing to work around the place for part of
room rent. Phone 633 5808.
NO MEALS. Jewish boy preferred. Call
after 6 p.m. 876-0324.
ROOMMATES

WANTED

CLARINET

832-3023 after 9:30
PERSONAL

p.m.

LESSONS—excellent

instructorminimal rates. Call 831-3689 after 10
p.m. Mr. Leonard Lazarus.
$50.00 REWARD for information leading to
the positive identification of the car that
mangled the tan VW fastback in the Baird
parking lot, Tuesday, Sept. 19. Call 8393846.
IT'S WORKED for many people on campus.
It can work for you. Try computer dating. For free information and application
form write Match Maker, room 520, Genesee Bldg., Buffalo, New York.
SHALOM! For gems from fhe Jewish Bible
call 875-4265 day or night.
—

AUTO SERVICE
AUTO PROBLEMS got you dizzy? See Joe
Vizzi, Gulf Station, Kenmore corner Star-

in. Road

service. 836-8998.
FOR RENT

Friday
HALL
TZ 2-6252.
—

and Saturday

nights;

call

ROOM

AND BOARD in exchange for babysitting for 8 year old child. Only 10 minutes from campus. If interested call 8360366.
Highest price paid
MAJORS
for social studies resource unit for junior
high
senior
school
teacher.
Call 839-0676
or
between 4-6 p.m.
KARATE AND KUNG FU. Self detente instructions. Call Prof. Wong 852-9830 or
854-1850. 124 W. Chippewa St.
EXPO '67 tickets for two to N. Petrov, pianist; Berlin Philharmonic Octet; Stratford
Festival Players; National Theatre of Great
Britain. Oct. 16-19 respectively. Housing
reservation also available. Call 885-9279.
LIGHT SHOWS geared to your facilities.
Equipment includes: 200 feet of Pulse
lights, —2,700 watts— 6,000 Waft color
organ. Overhead Projection of Oil Slides
and Rotating, colored MOIRE' screens. Polarized Light Machines for the projection
of constantly changing abstract designs,
35mm projection with 400 excellent slides,
8mm silent films and colored Flood and
Spot Lighting. Black Light Fluorescent tubes
available dlso where fixtures are available. Show prices are contingent upon
amount of equipment and number of operators required. James M. Mohr Advertising
Ltd. 220 Delaware Avenue, Buffalo 14202.
Phone 854-1396.
EDUCATION

—

LOST

OOMMATES TO share apartment with one
male student. Call 885-6737. 7 am 9 am.

GOLD PEN and pencil. Reward $15.
tialed "S.O.R.". Call Steve 831-3374.

Ini-

WOMEN'S WATCH found
2210. Ask for Sam.

today.

THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE and
THE UNITED STATES INFORMATION AGENCY
announce the

Annual Written Examination
DECEMBER 2, 1967

Career Officers of the
U.S. Foreign Service

for

YOU ARE ELIGIBLE IF YOU ARE:
� 21 or 20 and have completed your junior
�

Kappa.

year of college
under the age of 31 on Dec. 2, 1967
a U.S. citizen for at least 7Vi years
on Dec. 2, 1967
for applications and more information

SEE your PLACEMENT OFFICE or

WRITE: College Relations Program
Department of State
Washington, D.C. 20520

Exam Applications must be postmarked by Oct. 21

Call 831

In 1925, when head coach Art
Powell was ill, Dr. Farris ran
the team for three weeks and his
team won all three contests during that period. He is now a director of the Buffalo Athletic Club
and the Ellicott Club.
Donald Holland was one of the
greatest quarterbacks of modern

Buffalo football history. A star at
Lafayette High School, where he
made All-High honors two years
in succession, Don played for
Buffalo from the 1948 through
the 1951 seasons. In his junior
and senior years he was selected
the most efficient offensive back
for the Bulls and made the All-

Western New York team of the

Buffalo Evening News.

Mark stands 10 years
As a senior Holland bad a total
offensive mark of 1092 yards

over

a

until the record was broken by
Don Gilbert. A season record of
64 completions stood until 1966,
and he averaged well over four
yards per carry in running for
423 yards in the same year. Holland also led the team in scoring
that year with 36 points. Don is a
salesman for Ryerson Steel.
Robert L. Beyer was an all
around athlete at the University.
He graduated in 1932 after playing four years of football and four
years of hockey. As a gridder,
he was elected to the All-Western
New York team in 1931 and was
respected as a defensive back,
excellent blocker and fine pass

receiver.

Class president
Mr. Beyer was president of his
senior class, a member of Bisonhead and a member of the student council. As an alumnus he
has served as a member of the
General Alumni Board and president of the Business Administration Alumni Association. Bob is
now the vice president of the
Spencer-Kellogg Company and a
vice-president of the Rotary Club
of Buffalo. He served as a Major
in the U5. Army during World
War II.
Previous members elected to
the Hall of Fame are: Dr. James
Ailinger, Louis Corriere, Daniel
Dalfonso. the late Edmond Malanowicz. Dr. Philip Weis, Dr. Edmond Gicewicz, Robert Harrington. Robert Rich, Dr. Lester
Knapp, and James Horne.

Wresist.

�Tuesday, October 10, IM7

The Spectrum

Pag* Sixt**n

Jordan may accept Soviet
Jordanian Prime
AMMAN, Jordan
Minister Saad Jumaa resigned Saturday
and King Hussein named veteran politician Bahjat Talhouni to succeed him. The
move apparently set the stage for Jordan
to accept Soviet arms.
—

Talhouni was also ..named foreign affairs and defense minister in a new government,

King Hussein, preparing for a peace
mission to Washington, declared in a 14point policy statement to his new cabinet
that Jordan would rebuild its armed forces
with arms “from any source available.”

To accept aid

Ike rejects Viet extremism
WASHINGTON
Former President
Dwight D. Eisenhower said Saturday that
the terms "hawk” and “dove” indicated
extremism, and that he had joined an
organization dedicated to a more sensible
Vietnam war policy.
Gen. Eisenhower, indicating he considered himself neither hawk nor dove,
said the terms suggested the extremes of
either pulling out of the war or bombing
Peking.
—

Administration sources said the
United States expects an increase in troop
commitments in South Vietnam by its
Asian allies.
•

Possible invasion

Sen. Vance Hartke, (D.-Ind.), said Saturday that the possibility of invading
North Vietnam is being "seriously considered” by the Johnson administration.
“President Johnson is under increasing pressure to do that. There is no question that an invasion is being seriously
considered,” Sen. Hartke said.
Sen. Hartke’s statement came amid
growing reports that an invasion of North
Vietnam had been proposed by some military leaders to relieve Marines from a
murderous artillery attack from Communist guns in the area separating North
and South Vietnam,
intensification pattern
Sen. Hartke said the pattern of past
intensification of the U.S. war effort was
being followed by the administration—"a
contrived leak, a trial balloon, a carefully
worded Pentagon denial.”
Sen. Hartke claimed Henry Cabot
Lodge, former ambassador to South Vietnam, sent up the trial balloon in Pittsburgh where he was reported as advocating an invasion. Mr. Lodge denied making
such a statement.

Denial next step

Gen. Eisenhower
neither hawk nor dove

New developments
Meanwhile, the war policy debate continued with these developments:
Sen. Bourke B. Hickenlooper (R•

Iowa), Senate Republican policy chairman,
defended President Johnson’s Vietnam
peace efforts and said de-escalation proposals by fellow Republicans would mean
“surrender.”

Senate Democratic leader Mike
Mansfield challenged Russia and other
nations which have offered “advice” on
obtaining peace to frame their views as
resolutions before the United Nations
Security Council.
•

Saigon

drafts

In the past, King Hussein had bought
arms soley from the United States and
Britain. Before going to Moscow, King
Hussein said he would not seek new
markets to buy weapons as long as America and Britain kept supplying him.
But Kremlin leaders reportedly offered to sell him arms during his visit
and the young king visited a Soviet airfield to inspect the Russian-built military
hardware.

Wanted to resign
Prime Minister Jumaa had asked King
Hussein’s permission to resign before the

the June 5-10 Middle East war. But the

king pursuaded him to stay on and Prime
Minister Jumaa formed a “national coalition” cabinet on Sept. 11 to deal with
the problem facing Jordan after its defeat
by Israel.

KingHussein made-only a few changes
in the cabinet Prime Minister Jumai
formed. Observers said he apparently feu
satisfied with the “coalition” cabinet and
granted Prime Minister Jumaa his desire
to return to private life.

New vice premier
Among the changes in the cabinet was
the naming of Palestinian Arab Ahmed
Toukan as vice premier and Sheikh AbdulMajeed el Sayeh as minister for religious
affairs and holy places.
During his projected trip to Washing-

ton, King Hussein was to seek American

support for a compromise Middle East
endorsed by Egyptian President
Gamal Abdel Nasser and other moderate
Arab leaders.

plan

Failure would mean the moderates
would lose to Arab extremists and would
begin preparation for another war with
Israel, the sources said.
King Hussein won Soviet approval
of the plan during his recent visit to Moscow and the sources said it now needs
only the endorsement of President Johnson.

Indonesia to break with Red China
Foreign Minister Adam
JAKARTA
Malik told angry anti-Communist students
Saturday that Indonesia is moving toward
a formal break in diplomatic relations
with Communist China.
—

The students demanded the break Fri-

day and warned if it were not done by
Monday morning they would seize control
of the Communist Chinese embassy in
Indonesia and oust the diplomats.

But Malik told them the government
needs time and warned that a bloody incident might cause harm to Indonesian
diplomats in Peking. The students called
off their ultimatum and promised to refrain from any activities which “might
damage the national interests.”
Mr. Malik met with a student delegation shortly after he returned from heading the Indonesian delegation at the United Nations.

Needs time
“We will move toward a stop in diplomatic relations,” he said. “The government will take measures, but it needs
time to make preparations. You can rest
assured that we are moving toward the
direction that you wish.”
Last Sunday, students sacked the
Chinese embassy and beat Chinese diplomats.

Chinese underground
They said they found documents proving that China, blamed for the abortive
Communist coup two years ago, had set
up an extensive underground apparatus
possibly for another try.

The government and military officials
have so far declined comment. But Malik
accused the Chinese of running “an extensive subversion network” in the country.

—

sion.

Sen. Charles H. Percy, who introduced
a resolution to urge the President to get
more help from other Asians in fighting
the war, said today he was content to let
the proposal rest for a while.

war demonstrators

SAIGON—The government announced
late last Thursday that it had drafted
“about a dozen” student demonstrators
into the army in a new get-tough policy
against anti-government protests. It also
warned that future demonstrators would
lose their civil rights.
Lt. Col. Nguyen Van Laun, Saigon police director, said that of 35 students arrested last Monday “about a dozen” of
draft age had been drafted into the army
and the rest released after being reprimanded. He said one of the student leaders might be tried before a military
court.

Possible trial
Col. Laun said Kien Be, one of several
students arrested last Saturday when they
attempted to tear down a billboard proclaiming Gen. Nguyen Van Thieu’s election as president, was still being held by
police and that a military trial was under
consideration.
Police said Kien Be had “recognized
his errors.” In a statement distributed to
the press, be was quoted as urging the
students throughout the country to “stop
all activities” against the government and
as saying a cooperative spirit serves the
majority.

The "carefully worded Pentagon denial” that an invasion has not been recommended by the Joint Chiefs of Staff is
the nexxt step in the process, Sen. Hartke
said. He said this would be “the common
denial before the actual implementation.”
“It doesn’t mean high officials aren’t
considering invasion.” Sen. Hartke said.
Defense sources said all courses—including invasion
which could have
brought relief to Marines under heavy
fire at Con Thien were considered. But
they said there was nothing to indicate
the Joint Chiefs had recommended inva-

Observers concluded that King Hussein,
who just returned from an official visit
to Moscow, was about to accept Soviet
military aid.

arms

Campaign begins
Thieu flexed his muscles as the government moved ahead with plans for today’s kickoff of the official campaign for
the nation’s 137-member house of representatives.
And at the same time, there were
signs that the currently ebbing government protest led by militant Buddhist
chief Thich Tri Quang may be headed for
a compromise.
The government warnings against future Buddhist-led demonstrations were issued in Da Nang and Hue, scene of disorders in 1966 verging on civil war, as
well as in Saigon.

Threaten strike

One of the things apparently prompting the get-tough decree was leaflets apparently issued by followers of Tri Quang
in his former Hue stronghold urging a
general strike by shopkeepers and bus,
taxi and cycle drivers.
Violators were warned they would be
taken before military courts for sentencing, a much harsher measure than civil
courts. And draft age violators were
warned that they would be promptly put
in the army and sent to fight the Viet
Cong no matter what their status.

United Press International

Student
clubbed down

Riot-equipped city p o I i ce
march to break up a group of
one thousand Ohio University
students. Here, an officer uses
his riot stick to subdue a student
who failed to move Friday.

���What will be the role of student government in the new community which is evolving at the State University of Buffalo? In

last month, Student Association President,
Stewart Edelstein, stressed the need for a "community government."
a Spectrum interview

President Edelstein comments on
the role of student government
The Spectrum: What we'd like to get
at in this interview is some idea of
the directions which student government at the University might take.
Could you begin with kind of a longrange prospectus of the changing role
of student government at Buffalo?
Edelstein: I don't think that you want
a very, very powerful government. I
don't think you want a very extensive
government. I think when you're talking about student government, you're
talking about what the students can
do.
I think ideally people want a type
of community government where faculty and students are free to do the
things they want to do, and also
have a say in the policies and directions which the University is taking.

Right now, what do we have? Well,
we have organizations like student
government and faculty government.
What really should happen at this
University if it really wants to be
a great university is that there has
to be some type of community. You
don't have that by having a strong
student association, by having a strong
graduate association, and having for
example, the law school and the faculty governments. You have it by people sitting down and saying: We are
the members of a community; we have
problems; let's try and solve the problems together. I think these directions
are happening via joint faculty-student
committees.
I think what the Student Association has to do is to set an atmosphere where the faculty realizes that
the students are indeed directly concerned, directly involved, and are responsible enough and capable enough

sit down in a committee and decide directions and policy. I think that
in the past few years we've approached that. We’re getting towards it, and
there are more students involved.
There's a higher caliber of students
involved, not only in student government, but in everything around the
to

University,

I think that what we have to try
and do is change student attitude and
faculty attitude. I think the students
have to be made to realize that it's
their University. When the student
government, faculty and administration
say “citizen," they mean equal citizenship, and that means equal responsibility and that means equal say.
Every student and every faculty mem-

Pag* 2

ber has a responsibility to the University. That has to be defined. The
degree means nothing unless you have
the understanding of what the degree
was intended to mean.
One has to understand one's place
in the community.
The Spectrum: And the Student Association can give the students a
sense of this community?
Edelstein; Right, The problem with

the Student Association, and I think
the problem with government, is that
it's become too involved in itself.
Take its committees for example
there's no need for duplication in committees in the University. If there's
a University committee that does the
same thing as a student committee,
then students shoujd be on the University committee. There's no need
to duplicate it in the student gov—

ernment.

Curriculum is a little different.
There are certain committees in which
you need a student outlook and only
student outlook. You get students together to talk about some things,
then you get some students from that
committee to go and talk to the University committees and make the policy. That's one of the reasons why
you have curriculum committees of
students. Students get together and
say: these are our concerns. It's not
faculty infiltrated. The students can
be more idealistic than the faculty.
As a matter of fact, faculty are in
many cases more apathetic than students are. They came in with these
great ideas and got disillusioned because they couldn't do it, because it's
the nature of the system. The students aren't as involved within the
system; they're outside it. This is one
of the reasons why student involvement is even more necessary
because they see things that they think
should be right, they see it more
idealistically, more in terms of what
should be: not "this can't be," but
"it should be."
The Spectrum: When President Meyerson talks of student involvement,
is he talking about the same thing?
Edelstein; I hope so. You can only
judge from President Meyerson's actions, not from what he says. There
are many, many administrators all over
the country that claim student involvement who are meeting with students
on committees, but who would just as
soon have them not involved as have
—

them involved; they do it only because it looks better. The problem with
most student governments is that they

just don't realize this.
What I think a student government

should do, and some of the directions
think we're taking, is an attempt to
stimulate student involvement. We
don't take it over, but constantly look
for groups outside the student govern-

I

ment to do the things that student

government is doing, in the way of
community involvement and intheway
of cultural things. We have a community affairs Mason man, and this
person is supposed to try and push
for involvement in University programs

as well as initiate other student community programs.

University

involvement

Edelstein: It's not even a definition;

it's an understanding.
When you come to the University
at Buffalo, you have an obligation
to the University, to yourself and to
the community in which you live. And
it takes all three of those things to
understand your place.-That's a very
important type of commitment, and

although people don't like the word
commitment, because it says to them;
"You have to give something," the
word here definitely is commitment.
I think President Meyerson and all
the people who are talking about the
new campus are making fine suggestions, but if the students of this University don't understand what the purpose of these proposals are, or in
what directions the University is headed, they won't be able to apply these
changes to themselves.

The new student comes in here
and immediately he has to make some
decisions, and the decisions are his
to make; they're not for the University to make. Changes in the core
curriculum, and, for example, the institution of a pass-fail system change
the atmosphere in which students
work, and it allows them to question.
Student government can be looked
at in a different context. It's not a
diddly group, but it's a group to

At t

which students must go to make the
decisions which shall govern them.

Stewart EdeUtein

tion centers, only by urban planning
departments that sit in Hayes Hall,
or things like that. You have to let
people really understand what'g going

on.
The biggest thing I think
much the programs, but
the fact that people have got
derstand why the programs
should be done, so that they

what

means.
President Meyerson talks about an
academic community, the faculty talks
about an academic community, and
they try and approach an academic
community, but they'll never get an
academic community if the faculty and
students don't get together and understand what an academic community
means.
The Spectrum; Then the definition
should be a collective effort of students and faculty?

-

So you see, it's getting student
government to go out and stimulate,
as opposed to looking inward and closing up. I think the University has a
very, very large obligation to the community. I don't think, unfortunately,
that you can do this only by informa-

so

stand

is not

rather
un-

to

really
under-

One of the things we're doing with
regulations regarding student affairs is
to form a rules and rights committee
which will review all regulations which
govern students. They will give recommendations to the Senate and the
Senate must pass on these. So it's
the Senate that makes the rules and
regulations, and it is the judiciary that
carries them out. The student government, not the administration, shall
make the rules.

�'People cell students apathetic, but I don't think
that's a very good word. I think that they just
do&amp;t know what's going on.'

This changes the atmosphere in
which students live. If the students
say they don't want curfews, then it's
for the students to decide; rather
than the Dean of Men, it's the students' responsibility.
The Spectrum: Does the fact that
the University is part of the state
system impose greater restrictions
upon actions student government
might initiate here?
Edelstein: It doesn't impose restrictions upon the student government
as much as it imposes restrictions
upon the University in general. One
of the problems of the State University is in feeling its way out. It's
going to be a very big system, there's
no doubt about it, and it will probably be one of the best in the country,
but it's very young and it's trying out
things, like voluntary fees, which are
experiments.

Should the State University finance
student activities or should the students finance them? What is the relationship of student activities to a
university?

If this University didn't have fees
and didn't have a way of funding
student activities, I would say that
75% of them would be scratched.
One of the problems is individual
university autonomy. I think they've
got problems in trying to define the
role of the State University and the
role of the individual units. Should
an individual unit be allowed to go
off on its own way and decide its
own courses of action?
These are all serious questions because they can impart or they can
implement progress.

The Spectrum; At this

particular

time

in the history of the State University
of Buffalo are there many more opportunities for direct student involvement in curricular matters?
Edelstein; There are limitless opportunities for everybody involved in planning the University. It's not a matter
of saying that students have more
opportunity; everybody has more opportunity.
Potentially the State University of

Buffalo can be a fantastic institution.
It's a big experiment, because it's being built up in one clump, and universities aren't usually built up in one
big clump.

What that means for students involves an expansion of their role in
this University, and an expansion of
their involvement in the outside community.

The Spectrum: There has been a general change in student attitudes across
the country towards student government. What about those who thought
your election represented a backward
step in trends toward increasing reprepresentation and the relevant power

o* student government here at Buffalo?
Edelstein: The problem with student
government is that it tries to cater
to nobody, and interest groups develop. Certainly these interest groups
are very vocal, and they make a lot
of noise, but it doesn't mean they
represent the majority of the student
body. What student government has
to do in all cases is to understand
that it has a responsibility to the
whole student body and not to the
individual people involved.
You can't play favorites. I think
student government, if it's going to
succeed, has to be more representa-

live
it just has to be. One of the basic ways of trying to do this is in
understanding the importance of a
representative government, that you
can’t be interested only in some specific group of people.
The student senators that were
elected last year are representative of
the student body: they represent interest groups; they represent large
groups of people, and I think that’s
good. I don't think student government should be a way of furthering
an individual group's interests, be it
political, or social, or anything like
that. Student government has a responsibility to stimulate students and
to represent them as best as it can,
and that means all students.
People call students apathetic, but
I don't think that's a very good word.
I think that they just don't know
what's going on. One of the things
student government has to do is to
tell the students who they are.
I have not met a student yet with
whom I could not start an interesting
dialogue about student government.
Everybody's interested, even the card
players in the Haas Lounge.
The Spectrum: There's been a lot
of talk about different ways of organizing students. What about the feasibility of a student union, like a
labor union?
Edelstein; Student government should
--

begin, especially in the problem of
fees, to look at a student union, to
at types of government that are
pressure groups, as opposed to a group
involved in the administrative structure. There are benefits in the way

look

that student government is organized
in that everybody is

now, however,

represented, and directly involved with

the institutional framework.
What the student government is
going to do this year in its reorganization, is, very quietly, to look into
the union concept. I don't know right
now whether unions are a good thing
or not. They could prove detrimental
to this University and the progress
that it's made with respect to student
involvement, because unions tend to
localize power, and they also tend to
localize involvement. You don't get
a community that way.
One of the problems with the union
concept and particularly with a union
of students, is: do you really get
what you want? By what I call the
pressure diagram, or the tension diagram, if enough tension is created,
forcing people to change, do you get
what you want, or do you get merely
concessions? Do you really get changes in attitude and in atmosphere?
The way student government
should work is to work very slowly,
maintaining a level of activity; the
commitment is then steady.
That's not to say that pressure
groups aren't necessary within the
context of student government.
The character of the University is
going to change tremendously. One
of the problems is that it has to
change with student and faculty involvement and understanding of the
change. Students and faculty have to
go with the

change and push the

change.

The change can not come from
Hayes Hall and hope to filter down.
We have to approach very, very slowly and very cautiously a community
government.

P*9* 3

�Jeremy Taylor
'

—

activist student turned ad
his ii

"If an administrator were to
realize as I have that the sole
job is, say, to keep th sidewalks shoveled and keep the
johns clean, the University
would be a much better place."
Can It be to?
Jeremy Taylor, long sfereolyped as "that
radical up at UB" telling oul to hit former

enemy?
The brilliant and creative activist writer,
editor and filmmaker now a pencil-pusher?
The former editor of The Spectrum, founder of the New Student Review, and spolesman and organizer for the New Left, whose
vitriolic comments in the editorial pages of
The Spectrum alone succeeded in raising
eyebrows and voices throughout an indignant Buffalo community
reduced to writing
departmental memoranda?
No such luck, Buffalo. When The Spectrum
interviewed Mr. Taylor last month, it found
the new administrative assistant to the Chairman of the Department of History just as
confident, dedicated and articulate as ever.
Far from having sold out, the sensitive social
critic is aware that a new generation is taking over, that he's done his thing, that he
must now look to new bases of support and
new channels of expression.
The Spectrum was less concerned with
where he's goind (why let the cal out of
the bag? and more concerned with his impressions of just where this University is

vast majority of

administrators don't
look at their jobs in that way, so I'm
still a part of the minority in that
respect. If an administrator were to
realize as I have that the sole job
is, say, to keep the sidewalks shoveled and keep the johns clean, then
the University would be a much better

—

—

place.

The Spectrum:
What about the success of the socalled Movement? Has real progress
in academic reform been started as
a result of organized student pressure
upon the administration?

Taylor:
In Meyerson the Movement faced

a much

more articulate and clever
person than Furnas, and a lot of the
supposed gains that were achieved
under the Furnas regime were pretty
spectral, and Meyerson has succeeded
in undercutting almost all of those.
There are certain enclaves where these
successes have been retained. The
English department is one. The Spectrum used to be one, although I'm
pretty unhappy about the way it's going

headed.
The Spectrum:
Perhaps we could start off things
by asking you to briefly summarize your
relationship with the University.
Taylor:

Well, I came to UB in 1961 as
part of the first wave of war babies,
I couldn't get the kind of education
I wanted within the rigid framework

of departments, so I changed departments several times, and I used to
get very, very depressed about every
semester and a half and take a leave
of absence, which was one of the reasons it took me five years to get the
BA.

I spent a lot of time in student
activities when I was still an undergraduate. I started the literary magazine which is now known as the New
Student Review. I edited The Spectrum for a while and was active in
various sorts of academic reforms and
social reform movements, active in the
movement against the loyalty oath for
teachers, which the Supreme Court
eventually threw out, and also in resistance to ROTC and in a campaign
against capital punishment in New York
State. Most recently, of course, I
have been active in resistance to war

Pag* 4

Jeremy Taylor
in general and Vietnam in particular,
The Spectrum:
Once a gadfly to the Establishment here at the University, you now
seem to have become one of "them."
What would you say to charges of
"sell-out" if there were any?
-

Taylor;

I suspect that to some extent I've
been bought off, but I'm having such
trouble with the draft board, and I
have to eat, and the University is
one of the only places around town
where I can find a job. Also, as much
as I despise administrators as a breed,
I think that it is possible for an
administrator to actually do his job to
make the work for students and teachers a little easier. Unfortunately, the

now.
The Spectrum;
What about The Spectrum? Do you
think that the charges that The Spectrum has given in on the issue of
censorship are valid?
Taylor:
I don't know whether you noticed
in the paper the other night, but Al
Abgott was addressing the printers'
craft guild, and the title of his speech
was "The Man Who Dared Not Print
It." He's making a lot Of political hay
out of what he did last year, and I'm
very upset that the paper is back with
Abgott.

I don't foresee any particular difficulty with Abgott this year because
I don't think that the present administration of The Spectrum is going to
be in the business of printing that kind
of controversial stuff, but I'm very sorry

to see it get out of that business.
Also, you have to remember that for
my money, Abgott is the best printer
in town. Technically he does the best
work, so there is some rationale for
that decision. It seems to me that
the ethical problems are more important than the technical problems at
this point.
Certainly the easiest thing to do
from the technical point of view was
to go back to Abgott, but my own
feeling is, having explored the possibilities myself, that there were several
other things they could have done
which would have been better.
I can remember the days when
The Spectrum used to be the most
powerful organ of student opinion on
campus. It was more powerful than
the student government. But, through
a series of unfortunate events and
copouts, they lost that power. The
newspaper used to be the only thing
that kept the student government honest, but they don't seem to be in
that business anymore, so what little
pressure there was on the student
government to concern themselves
with significant issues and to try and
exert some pressure toward improving
conditions in the academic community

has been relieved.
My main argument with the current
student government is that they identify much more strongly with the administration than they do with the

students. They seem to see their pri-

mary role as helping the administration out rather than helping the students out, and I think that's a pretty
sorry state oi affairs for an elected
student government. They seem to

rat

ha
Ta

up

tar
be

�inistrator:
aressions

The Spectrum:
Do you think that administrators are
using the long-range development
problemsconfronting the University as
an excuse for putting off important
decisions and as a trump card in

relations with student leaders?
Taylor:

Whenever students have a legitiand they're not being
treated decently, they're always told
that it will be all right in ten years
when the new campus is opened up.
It has, in the minds of administrators,
become a tool to control student discontent, and I think that's a very, very
cheap way of going at it. The people
who are here right now, the undergraduates and the graduate students,
have a right to a decent kind of education which at this point they're not

early twenties, are just exhausted.
They've been in it so long they just

have gotten their names confused a
little.

It's a little early in the year to
tell what Stewart and the Senate are
going to do on important issues, of
which there haven't really been any
yet, but at this point I don't give
much hope.

don't have any energy left, and the
younger ones have come into the movement comparatively late and have seen
almost no progress, and have therefore
been disillusioned by the whole political thing. I suspect that that's more
a function of the failure of leadership
within the general national student
movement than it is a function of the
generation. I think that had SDS, had

getting.

The Spectrum:
In regard to the apparent decline
of student political activism on this
campus, it has been suggested that
many of the students with an expressed dissatisfaction with conditions at
the University, and in society in general, are becoming apolitical hippies
rather than political radicals. Is this
happening here?

The Spectrum:
Have you been subjected to any

personal harassment by the Buffalo
police?
Taylor:
My phone has been bugged ever
since the HUAC hearings, and I
don't know whether it's bugged now
or not. It certainly was then.
I've had pretty significant harassment, not so much from the Narcotics
Squad as from the Subversive Squad,
which is a very depressing state of
affairs because I'm doing next to
nothing, which indicates to me at least

Taylor;

I wish that more students on this
campus really were hippies.
I feel that the hippies are really
a very small minority, even among the
people who consider themselves to be
hippies, and that, of the vast majority
of students that I've talked to and
gotten to know at all, it's merely a
question of affectation in dress and
mannerisms. That really hasn't any
connection with what the serious hipr '
pies I know of are doing.
I’m not sure why that's happened.
I know it has happened at other places
than this school, and I suspect that
it has a great deal to do with the
war in Vietnam. There is tremendous
general feeling against the war, but
no one has been able to as yet come
up with a tactic or a plan of resistance which is at all meaningful. It's
been all symbolic, at best.
The older generation of student
activists, who have been involved, in
some cases, up to ten years in resisting this war and other wars, and
in working in the civil rights movement, the older ones, say, who have
been in it since their late teens and

mate gripe

that the Left in America is so ineffectual that the police haven't got anybody more important to look at. That's
(

Mr. Taylor
FSM, had even NSA been able to

develop any plan of national student
resistance, a great many more people
would be political right now. I don't
see that there's any basic antipathy
among today's hippies toward community action, but at this point they
haven't been offered anything to do,
so they retreat into some sort of
personal

life.

The Spectrum:

Especially as a result of the controversy surrounding the Fiedler arrest,
there have been many charges and
intimations that the city, through the
police department, is out to discredit
the University by busting key people.
Does this charge have any validity?
Taylor;
Well, there's a fairly well-founded
rumor that there is someone actually
employed by the English department,
either as a teacher or a staff member,

who is connected with the Narcotics
Squad. I suspect that it's true although
I have no proof of it.

really sad, because by rights I ought
to be like nothing; I ought to be below
their attention.

The Spectrum;
Does the University administration
keep files on the so-called subversives
on this campus?
Taylor;

The administration keeps files on
just about everything. I don't think
the administration, at least most of
the people in it anyway, pay any particularly close attention to subversive
activities. I've had occasion to look
at my file once in a while, and I
see there are notes in there about
what I've been doing, but there are
just as many notes about my academic activities as there are of anything
else.
The administration has invited police on campus and sanctioned the
presence of undercover plain-clothestype investigators on campus, and I
think that's terrible, and something
should be done about it. Everybody

knows they're here, and the fact that
they're here with the permission and
sanction of the administration, I think,
is just rotten. Now if Stewart Edelstein needs an issue to get involved
in, that would certainly be one that
would be worth it.
The Spectrum;
You were associated for a while
with Planning and Development. What
are some of the factors involved in
the problems and continual delays in
the expansion of the University and
the move to Amherst?
Taylor:

The State is apparently not financing higher education to the point which
it was apparently suggested that they
would. A lot of that has to do with
the fact that there just isn't enough
money around. Also, at present at
least, the University at Buffalo seems
to be very low on the list of priorities
in the State University system. They're
concentrating on community colleges,
and they're giving a lot of funds to
Stony Brook which, in theory at least,
were going to go to this campus. Stony
Brook has been winning over a lot
of development funds which were earmarked initially for the construction
of the new campus.
This is the biggest unit of the
State University, and apparently the
planners in Albany have decided that
this situation is not going to continue.
This campus, if one can judge by the
type of decisions they've made recently, is not as important as say, Albany,
or Stony Brook, or even Harpur.
It now becomes possible to suppose at least that the student movement

in some long-range things should

support Meyerson rather than attack
him, because if this unit of the State
University does not appear to be stable
and well under control, then these decisions about expansion and money
will continue to be made favoring
Albany and Stony Brook, and this campus will become a backwater. I'm not
entirely sure that it's up to the students to settle that kind of problem,
but I think that they should at least
be aware of it.

The Spectrum:
Do you think the University will
become “the Berkeley of the East?"
Taylor

Prior to what happened with the
Free Speech Movement at Berkeley,
that was a common phrase among
many University people here. I hoped
last year in several respects that we
would become the Berkeley of the
East, but it appears now that we don't
have as much chance of becoming it
as we had before, partly because of
these kinds of planning pressures in
Albany, and my own suspicion is because of the kinds of unethical dealings
which have been going on continually
concerning the new campus.

�A look at Ron Stein,
former GSA president,
new assistant dean
Can a radical student leader become an effective administrator? Will
a man who just last year picketed
the offices of various administrators

and faculty be able to confer with them
now as a trusted equal?

These problems are only two of
those Ron Stein will have to face
in his new position as Assistant Dean
of Students.
Mr. Stein, up until the time of
his appointment, was President of the
Graduate Student Association. His
leadership in that organization was one
in support of student power. He felt
his job was to test limits, and he
found not a few.
According to Mr. Stein, a student
leader should not be afraid to say
what he wants to be heard. As issues arose, he followed this philoso-

phy.

He was chief proponent of voluntary student fees. The former GSA
president did not want students to
be coerced into paying fees.
Mr. Stein was the first GSA pres-

ident

to meet

with the then-Executive

Vice Chancellor, Harold C. Syrett, in
Albany, to discuss, graduate student
representation in the State University
system.

GSA became progressive
Ron Stein's election as president
of the GSA brought with it a noticeably more progressive council membership. In his position Mr. Stein had
the problem of coordinating this new
factor with the older tradition-oriented
council members.
According to Gil Klajman, Acting
Chairman of the Graduate Student Association, "Mr. Stein produced an
amazingly viable GSA council." His
position of making the administration
more responsible to, and representative of the graduate students permeat-

ed all his actions in that role. He
brought to the council "the expertise
of not only knowing what the GSA
wanted, but exactly what they had
to do to get it," according to Mr.

Klajman.

Mr. Stein's background is a peculiar one for such an active student
leader. He entered the State University of Buffalo's School of Pharmacy
and proceeded to flunk-out, twice. He
returned to the philosophy department,

did his graduate work at Buffalo, and
with the aid of a fellowship, spent
another two years at the University
of Edinburgh. Though burdened with
the responsibilities of his new office
and teaching his classes in logic, he

P*«* 6

also fills the role of a student by
continuing to work on a dissertation
for his doctorate in philosophy.
"To test limits"
As a student leader Ron Stein felt
it was his duty to test limits. In the
role of Assistant Dean of Students
he feels bound to the same principle.
Mr. Stein does not believe that the
switch of roles is a sell-out to the
administration. Rather, he feels, it will
provide him "with a greater opportunity to bring perspective to the University." As student leader, Ron Stein
had to push to influence policy. Now
as administrator, he hopes he will lion's ears and the like. The parent
be able to affect the structure, a more does not realize that he has succeeded
rather than failed if the child (although
permanent change.
One of Mr. Stein's greater desires he no longer has any need to be
sustained by the parent) merely has
may now be realized:, "The destruction of the University as an artificial the desire to engage in these pursuits
which are progressive and construcsociety."
The Assistant Dean feels that tive.
"The parent may have raised the
"there is discrimination and prejudice
in this University, the same injustices child, but that does not necessarily
that are found in any part of the United mean he knows what is best. The
States." Removal of restraints caused parent should let the child go."
In the same way, those trained
by this discrimination must be made
if the administration, students and administrators who feel that the unifaculty are to solve their specific and versity should be made some sort
communitive problems," says Mr. of test of strength and will power
must be made to realize that the
Stein.
He is now able to do what he university experience, preferably a "tocould only talk about doing as GSA tal experience," should be made "as
president. Being young at his job, he painless as possible," according to
is able to relate to students. Mr. Stein. To solve problems, additional
Stein feels that, though one can be ones may have to be created for the
trained in student administration, one administration or the faculty. Stein
can not relate to problems unless one wants the solution that does the greatest good for the greatest number to
is actually confronted with them.
be followed.
Is there a trend to have activist
A new breed
Mr. Stein seems to be one of a leaders participate in their own adbreed that represents all facets of the ministration? Mr. Sol Tauster, administrative assistant to President MeyerUniversity
students, faculty and administration. Perhaps this represents son, feels "that the accent is on
a trend of the administration: to pick youth. Student leaders are probably
those closest to the problems at hand. student leaders because they are inHe feels that trust is essential in terested in education. They can thererelationships that form between these fore be used in the administrative
three groups. Though one can respect process because they are close to the
an elder, it is hard for today's youth, problems of the university."
to trust those already in power. In Students focus issues
this way, having young, enlightened
Mr. Tauster feels that it is better
administrators working in coordination to move directly to the students then
with radical student leaders, mutual to self-bureaucracy. "Young people
problems can be more easily solved.
may be used for short periods of time
A graphic illustration of this lack in the administration because they are
they have less to
of understanding between generations not committed
is shown in a problem which Mr. Stein lose. Students probably have more inhas to come up against. This is the fluence than is known due to student
case of the parent who thinks he has participation on committees. Students
failed in bringing up his child because make the contribution of focusing isof "wild ideas" such as marijuana, sues."
music unaccustomed to older generaMr. Tauster feels that the nation—

—

wide trend to pick student leaders is
a progressive step in education, not
a method of absorbing those whose
opinions would rather be silenced.
"Students keep the administration, or
rather the educational process, hon-

est."
Conversely, Dr. Anthony Lorenzetti, Dean of Students, says Mr. Stein
was hired for his personal competency,
not his personal views. Mr. Stein was
thought to have a good academic
background, student feelings and values. The administration felt that he
would be able to use his background
and knowledge, not inflict his values.
The administrator, according to the
Dean of Students, should not express
his own opinion, rather let both sides
express theirs. The administrator's values should not be suppressed, rather
held to himself in relation to his
students. Men are picked for their
ability and no such trend is indicated,
according to Dean Lorenzetti. Age is
not a factor. "I know some old fogies
that are nineteen years old."
Mr. Stein's position is different
from that of a student leader. In both
jobs he needed student support, respect and trust. A leader of any
kind earns these by doing things, not

necessarily

making

people

happy.

Whether a trend was involved in his
appointment is not as important as
doing his job, to create a great University on all levels. Mr. Stein wants
the student not only to leave the University with a knowledge of a profession, but with the ability and desire to change the world. Issues of
alcohol on campus, commuter students, the disappearnce of the student
into the university complex, and how
to get the drop-out student back in
are specific issues Stein will have
to face.
Mr. Stein believes: "The satisfaction of doing something for somebody,
of being alive, makes a difference."

�Buffalo Law School:

I'm enthusiastic about our past; I think we've had a good past. I'm enthusiastic about
our present. I'm enthusiasticabout our future. Our aim is to build one of the great law schools
in the country, and there's no doubt that we're succeeding."
Dean William D. Hawkland
"

—

No law school

growing as

in the country is

rapidly as the Buffalo
Law School. In the next decade it
will be one of the top ten in the nation, possibly second only to Harvard.
That's the outlook that is held by

Dean William D. Hawkland. "The State
wilt abundantly support us," he said,
and with that promise, a crash program was initiated and is already
underway.

The Law School growth is one important phase of the tremendous
change which the State University of
Buffalo is presently undergoing. A
large part of that growth is aimed
at interdisciplinary

studies.
Undergraduate courses to be taught
The Faculty of Law and Jurisprudence will be working with other
departments on campus, and by 1972,
law professors will be teaching 15
to 20 undergraduate courses.
"A well-educated man should know
something about the law," the Dean
said. "We're not trying to make everyone a lawyer, but we feel that many

aspects of law should be studied."

"Many students study art, not to
become artists, but to gain a greater
understanding of the value of art. Law
has contributed a great deal to society,
students should have the opportunity to know about those contributions too without having to become
practicing lawyers in the process."
and

Apart from the interdisciplinary
studies, expansion plans for the Law

School itself are based on a fourpoint program encompassing the student body, the faculty, the library and
the physical plant.

More applications received yearly
In five years the Law School will
have a total enrollment of more than
800, with a freshman class of 300.
In the past, total enrollment was only
200, but class sizes have been increasing yearly to reach the projected
figures.

The enrollment increase will not
lead to a lowering of quality, according to Dean Hawkland. "We are
receiving more and more applications

yearly, and each freshman class is

a better class than the last one. This
year we had to turn away three students for every one we accepted."
Of 1 50 law schools in the country, admissions policies rank Buffalo
1 7th. Greater prominence will put Buffalo very near the top during the
1970s.

Nation's largest faculty to be here
The Dean also said that the Law
School is becoming more nationally
known daily. That's one reason why
the School has been able to recruit
an excellent faculty.
"We're recruiting a faculty at the
fastest rate in the nation," the Dean
said. "Our goal is a faculty of 78 by
1972.”
Harvard now has the largest law
school faculty with 53. "We're going
to throw a big party when we hire
our 54th faculty member," said the
Dean.

The student-faculty ratio here will
be 10 to 1, as opposed 49 40 to

1 at Harvard
Other record-breaking growth statistics are being compiled in the expansion of the library and the physical plant.

Library personnel needed
The Law School's library budget
of $2,475,000 for seven years will
provide a library collection comparable
to the best state and private law
schools in the country.

"One of our greatest needs is library personnel," said the Dean. "We
now have 1 1 persons working in our
library; we need 22. By 1972, we
will need 37. This is the only area
in which we are behind our projected
plans and that's because the State
has not yet recognized the need for

a larger library staff."
The State has, however, recognized the need for a larger physical
plant. When the Law School moves
to the Amherst campus, there will be
adequate space to house the increased
student body and faculty.

Buffalo has only State law school
Contemplating the possibility of a
Law School dormitory, complete with
suites for visitors, apartments for faculty and rooms for commuters if they
desire, the Dean foresees "an excellent facility."

Buffalo Law school is the only State
law school in New York, and Dean
Hawkland pointed out that he would
be opposed to the establishment of
a second school. He feels that another
state school could seriously damage
the "student mix" at Buffalo by drawing many downstate students.
A second school would also imply

Mr

"Law has contributed a great deal to society and
students should have the opportunity to know
about these contributions to without having to
become practicing lawyers in the process."
,

"We are receiving more and more applications
yearly, and each freshman class is a belter class
than the last one. This year we had to turn away
three students for every one we accepted."

that not as much financial assistance
would be available here, and that another school's "modest goals might be
imposed upon us."
There's little doubt that Dean Hawkland has been pushing Buffalo Law
School toward greatness.
He termed Harvard a "Lawyer's
Mecca," but he also said: "Harvard
wasn't built by God-it was built by
men and money. Given the same kind
of imagination and financial support,
we can do the same thing here.”

P*9*

1

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                    <text>The

0
October 6. 1967

State University of New York at Buffalo

Vol. 18, No. 8

Sir John Eccles joins faculty

UB asked to help
Nobel Prize winner to teach med Negroes pass test
students and conduct experiments
by Linda Laufar

Spectrum

Sir John Eccles, Nobel Prize winner for Physiology and
and Medicine, called the State University of Buffalo one of
the great expanding universities in the country. Commenting on his recent appointment to the faculty of the School
of Medicine, Dr. Eccles said “It is exciting to be associated
with a growing university
”

At a press conference Wednesday at Greater Buffalo International Airport, Dr. Eccles discussed his recent and forthcom-

ing research in the field of neurophysiology. Most recently, he
worked in Chicago for the AMA

Institute for Biomedical Research,
investigating the mode of operation of the cerebellum.
While he will mainly be concerned with conducting research
at the University, Dr. Eccles will
also be a professor of physiology
for medical and dental students.
He will teach specialized courses
on the physiology of the brain.
A special laboratory at the
Ridge Lea campus will be set up
for esearch purposes. With 2500
sq. ft. of floor space, the laboratory will consist of two research
rooms, each capable of holding
three persons. Dr. Eccles will be
bringing modern, transistorized
equipment, valued at $200,000.

Continuing support
Although the University will
provide a “continuing level of
support” for Dr. Eccles, according to Dr. Douglas M. Surgenor,
Provost of Health Sciences, he
will now be able to apply for
government grants.

Sir John Eccles
at airport

press conference

Dr. Eccles will continue

his

experiments on squirrel monkeys
at the Ridge Lea campus. He

mentioned that the results of
such experiments are directly
applicable to humans. This is
preferable to human experimentation, which according to Dr.
Eccles, should be undertaken
only under special conditions.
Dr. Eccles mentioned that he
will not be the only researcher
in his field coming to Buffalo.
Although he “hasn't decided on
the details,” there will be a nucleus of two or three of his fellow workers starting with him.
Although Dr. Eccles is close
to the mandatory retirement age
of 70, Dr. Surgenor claimed that
President Meyerson would recommend that he be retained past
that age.

Pities flower people

Stm/f

Reporter

A prominent Buffalo Negro has suggested that the State
University of Buffalo take the initiative in establishing training classes to aid area Negroes in passing union entrance examinations. This would insure Negro participation in the
building of the Amherst campus.
Mr. David Collins, field representative of the Workers Defense
League made the suggestion. He
has been working closely with
several campus officials. Although Dr. Robert Ketter, vicepresident for Facilities Planning,
was “very receptive” to the idea,
there have been no definite plans
or decisions made concerning the
establishment of training classes.
The Workers Defense League
was officially opened in Buffalo
in May, 1967, Its function is to
tutor Negroes who meet minimum union requirements. Tutoring is given in math, special relations, mechanical reasoning and
other subjects. After a Negro
takes the test, he is ranked on a
qualifying list. If he is accepted
into a union’s apprentice program, the League keeps in contact with him to help with any

Commenting on the young generation, with whom he will be
coming into close contaci, Dr.
Eccles said that the “people who
go in for violence are the real
disease of society." He claimed
“the ‘flower people’ are to be
pitied. It is an emotional reaction
that won't go very far in the
end. Young people are experidifficulties.
menting in new ways of living
Mr, Collins gave several reawithout competition."
sons why a training school should
many
opportunEccles
sees
Dr.
be set up:
ities opening to him by coming
to the University. “Here I will
belong to a university again, and
live in an academic community
with people who think in terms
of values similar to my own.”

Construction in this area
generally has been good, and
most union members are working. The University construction
•

will drain local manpower and it
will be necessary to bring in
workers from other parts of the
country. There is no reason to
“import” labor when Negroes in
the area, with some training,
could do the work.
The union's claim that a
massive training project now
would flood the labor market in
15 years is not true.”
•

In addition, Mr. Collins claimed
“There was not enough Negroes
in trade unions at this point. The
new University is under close
scrutiny by various civil rights
groups and I am afraid they
(the University) might run into
trouble in maintaining contracts
when non-discriminating employment is not upheld.”

Action shaping in MFC-English rift;
Student Senate will sponsor debate
by Marline Kozuchowtki
Assistant campus editor

The Student Senate is taking steps to clarify the issues
surrounding the MFC-English Department controversy.
The English Department has ruled not to accept credits
earned in the 300 and 400 level MFC courses for transfer
toward a day school English degree.
An panel will be held Wedshould only came after much renesday during the Senate search and study is made into
meeting to clarify the powhether there are differences besitions of Millard Fillmore tween the aptitudes and levels of
achievement of Hillard Filmore
College and the English Destudents and day students.
partment on the issue.
Dr. Joseph N. Riddel, associate
professor in the English Department, will explain the department’s reasons for the new
policy. An outline of the position
held by Millard Fillmore will be
given by Nicholas Kish, assistant
to the dean of MFC, Thomas B.
Nixon and Walter N. Kunz, both
advisors to the dean of MFC.
Senate action is being coordinated by Daryl Rosenfeld, student
senator from Arts and Sciences.

Senate resolution
Miss Rosenfeld introduced a
resolution concerning the English
Department policy to the Student
Senate meeting of Sept. 27.
The resolution read in part:
“We (the Student Senators) feel
that this decision is based on
gross and unproven assumptions
and that it is premature at best.
A decision of this magnitude

“We strongly urge the English
Department to rescind this unfair
decision until a study is made,
and student and faculty members
are consulted. Many possible avenues of thought must be considered before a decision of this
importance is made.”
The resolution was accepted
unanimously by the student senators.
Hiss Rosenfeld said she considers the controversy “a matter

of academic freedom.”
“The Student Senate is a representative body. Students are
directly concerned in this issue
and will be affected by the English policy. We will use whatever
influence or power we have to
insure the rescission of the policy.”

Conflicting reports
Miss Rosenfeld told The
trum she discussed

Spec-

the matter

with several University officials
including Dr. Claude E. Welch,
dean of University College; Eric
A. Larrabee, provost of Arts and
Letters; Dr. Norman N. Holland,
chairman of the English Department; Dr. Robert F. Berner, dean
of Millard Fillmore College; Gilbert Klajman, acting President of
the Graduate Student Association,
and Ronald Stein, assistant dean

of men.

“These people have given me
conflicting stories concerning the
policy,” reported Miss Rosenfeld.
“It seems to be a matter of administrative entanglement which
involves students."

Joint action needed
Richard A. Miller, vice president of the Student Association,
said: “I think the actions are
indicative of an attitude that
some people in the University
possess. They think that the
school exists solely for themselves. Some policies are made
without consulting students or
without considering the serious
repercussions such actions will
have.
“President Meyerson is trying
to build an academic community
here,” he continued. "It will not
be built until faculty and students
make joint decisions on policies
of this nature.”

—UPI

T«l«photo

This official Communist Chinese
purphoto
just released
portedly shows the familiar
mushroom cloud rising after
the explosion, sometime last
June, of Communist China's
nydrogen bomb.
—

—

China's
H bomb

�Th

Pag* Two

•

Spictrtn

Candidates give views

39 ran in Graduate Student Election
The up-coming Graduate Student Association elections for the
Executive Council will provide

he would like to see a GSA which
gets more accomplished. He felt
that the GSA too often got

uate and undergraduate; a single
announcement sheet for
the
events on and off campus."

councilors from thirty-nine candidates: Ballots will be sent in
the mail to all graduate students.

sues.

According to Michael B. Schiller the GSA does not have a large
enough voice in the areas of University regulations and faculty
appointments. He would like to
see a more active GSA which
could speak out in these areas,
and others, which have previously
“been in the hands of the administration and senior faculty.”

The Graduate Student Executive Council is similar to the
undergraduate Student Senate;
however, it deals in graduate student interests. In the hope of
establishing some of the major
ideas and issues concerning those
interests, The Spectrum took a
random sampling of six candidates.
George Boger, Philosophy graduate student, stated that the
"GSA is an opportunity.” An opportunity which he hopes can be
used to voice the students concepts of educations; and primarily to “break down the barriers in communication between
the administration, faculty and

students.”

Albert J. Ermanovics, sociology
graduate student, mentioned that

Several ideas which Ermanovics hopes to see accomplished
are:

“More equal representation of
all departments in the GSA; The
creation of a Graduate School
Judiciary; The establishment of
extra parking facilities for graduate students during class hours.”
Orao. Omoruyi feels that it is
of primary importance for the
GSA to establish a “separate
identity” from the Student Association. He also hopes for the
development of separate planning
facilities and special library facilities for graduate students.
Mr. Omoruyi stated that he
would like to see the creation of
closer interaction between the
graduate students and the different departments, and the development of more graduate student activities.
Peter Hedblom stated that the
students are unaware of the potential they possess for change.
Among

the changes he hopes

to see accomplished are:
“more efficient registration;
city relabetter University
tions, not only on an official level
but with the general populace;
better use of available space,
such as the library facilities;
housing for graduate students
and married students, both grad—

Mr. Schiller would also like to
see the GSA have a voting membership on various departmental
faculty committees which determine department policy for graduate students.
Hans D. Sproghe is running because certain principals which he
feels are necessary to provide a
means for learning have been

violated.
First of all, he feels the faculty
and students should have the
right to express their ideas at
all times.
Secondly, “no one should be
separated from the University for
other than academic reasons. If
such separation is necessary it

should be based on due process.
Thirdly, “there should be no
political test for the right to be
associated with the University.”
Fourth, "the University should
be an independent institution. It
should be free of all outside control, for example, the Air Force
R.O.T.C. whose instructors hold
University positions but are controlled by the Air Force.”

Student Senate finance rule

bans

non-payers

Presidential Assistant for Student Activities Marilyn Wbiting
announced that students must
pay the student activity fee to
be entitled to join a Senate financed club or organization. This
is due to the new financial rules
of the Student Senate.
Those students who did not
pay the fee and now wish to do
so will have the opportunity to
change their ID cards on October
11 and 12, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
in the basement of Foster Hall.
Anyone wishing this change

Terry Turner [above] of San Jose,
Calif., working in a castle

Jobs in Europe
Luxembourg—American Student Information Service is celebrating its
10th year of successful operation
placing students in jobs and arranging tours. Any student may now

choose from thousands of jobs such
as resort, office, sales, factory, hospital, etc. in 15 countries with wages
up to $400 a month. ASIS maintains
placement offices throughout Europe
insuring you of on the spot help at
all times. For a booklet listing all
jobs with application forms ana discount tours send $2 (job application,

overseas handling &amp; air mail reply) to:
Dept. O, American Student Information Service, 22 Ave. de la Liberte,
Luxembourg City, Grand Duchy of
Luxembourg.

from clubs

must bring a current ID card or
brown card.
Once a student has agreed to
pay the fee, he can no longer
waive this privilege.

Friday, October

dr 1967

MFC Dean speaks on continuing
education in 4th of reports' series
by Nora Gamer
Spectrum Staff

gave the fourth of the University Report series Tuesday in
the Norton Conference Theater. The subject of Dr. Berner’s
lecture was ‘The University and Continuing Education.”
The fact that there is a
distinct difference between Dr. Berner feels that the major
problem confronting Millard Filladult education and continumore College now is finding facing education was stressed. ulty competent enough to teach
Dr. Berner said education is the courses.
a continuous process which
Urban college
does not take place in a block
As an urban University, Millof years from 6-21, but learnard Fillmore is trying to provide
is
a
of
life.
ing
way
a place for discussing problems
On accordance with

this, Millard Fillmore College is projecting a system of activities for selfdirection and self-support for the
adults of the community, he said.
Included in the plan now are
credit and non-credit courses,
conferences, institutes, and TV

programs to provide continuing
education as a public service to
adults.

Dr. Bernard referred to the
spread of automation as a reason
for the need of continuing education in job-related fields and liberal and fine arts. Courses on the
career level range from chemistry
for the paint and lacquer industry to courses on I.B.H. programming. There are special courses
for women planning to re-enter
the job market. At present there
are 350 courses sections and 320
faculty members in the fields of
Arts and Sciences. Business and

Engineering.

Hillard Fillmore College has
in the field of
technical education. The Schools
of Nursing, Social Welfare, Business, and Engineering began as
part of the evening school program. Starting with 300 registrants in the evening sessions in
1923, the school is now serving
about 100,000 adults every year.
been an innovator

of urban life. Suggestions to help
this problem have been to work
more actively with Urban Extensions
like the one in the Law
Building downtown
in programs which may eventually give
University credit. Most of the
adults now involved in continuing education
25 million across
the country
have had high
school education. Higher training
is often closed to the under-educated, and for this reason it is
important that the University try
to reach the community.
—

—

—

—

Questions
During the questioning period
following the presentation, Dr.

Berner was asked how he feels
about the ruling by the Univer-

sity English department denying
credit for English courses at Millard Fillmore College. His reply
was that Millard Fillmore will
try to work with the University
Administration, which is now responsible for granting all degrees.

Dr. Berner became Dean of
Millard Fillmore College in July
1955. Before that he was Assistant Dean from 1949 to 1951. His
activities have included Chairmanships of the Adult Education
of the Community Welfare Council of Erie County, (1961-64), and
the 11th annual Conference on
Community Living.

$4900 in books sold through

AIESEC offers student-operated exchange
foreign program

The final results of the Student Book Exchange were announced by co-chairmen Daryl
About 60 State University of Rosenfeld and Sandra Funt. A
Buffalo students will have the total of $4900 worth of books
opportunity to work and study were sold this year. The total
in a foreign country this year value of the books that were
under the auspices of the Interbrought in by students to be sold
national Association of Economwas put at $7000. Books valued
ics and Business Students at $250 were lost or stolen.

(AIESEC).
AIESEC is a short-term worktraining exchange program designed to give promising American business and economic majors experience in their field
while employed in a foreign
country; foreign students are offered “traineeships” by the business community of Buffalo and
other participating U.S. cities

under this program.
The American student may
choose any of 45 member nations
and can select a job that best
suits his interests. While abroad,
he may reside with a family or
with other students. Although
paid an average of $70-90 per
week, the trainee uses his own
funds for all expenses. About
600 selected American students
will participate in the program
this year.
While in America, foreign students are employed by the nation’s leading business companies. They attend conventions,
tour the country and meet various political leaders, providing
a healthy exchange of views, according to Douglas Brown president of the Buffalo Chapter of
the AIESEC.

The Book Exchange was held
from Sept. II through Sept. 30
in Room 231 Norton Hall. Although the Exchange is officially over, books and checks may

still be picked up. They may be
picked up until October 13 in

Room 205 Norton Hall. The hours
are from 1:15 to 3 p.m. Monday,
Wednesday and Friday; from
12:30 to 3 p.m. Tuesday; and
from 11 a.m. to 12:15 p.m. Thursday.

The co-chairmen apologized for
the erratic hours, “but since we
do not pay workers, we could
not get enough people to volunteer.”The Exchange is a non-profit
service of the Student Association.

Social Work Club begins
2nd year in community
The Social Work Club is now
beginning its second year of work
in the Buffalo community.
According to President Richard Segan. members of the Social
Work Club are not trying to work
miracles or change the world

overnight. “They’re just giving
kids a chance to do things that
they might not otherwise have a
chance to do, and see things they
might not otherwise have a
chance to see,” he said.
The club runs a “companion”
program

where students

children from the

meet

city’s under-

privileged areas on a one-to-one
relationship.
The companion program, in
which over 60 students participated last year, has been the
main part of the Social Work
Club’s activity.

This weekend the club needs
volunteers to work with SNCC
and BUILD on a voter registra
tion drive in the Fruit Belt area
of the city’s East Side. Interested students can sign up at the
club’s table in Norton Hall. Rides
will be leaving from the front
of the Union at 9:30 a.m. Saturday and Sunday.

�Friday, October 6, 1967

Th

•

Seminar series to explore problems
of Niagara Frontier transportation
The first of a series of Urban
“How can we creal te a
transit system to serve the chang-

ing needs of the Niagara Frontier?”, was held in the Conference Theater on Sept. 30.

The seminar was jointly sponsored by the Office of Urban
Affairs of the State University
of Buffalo and by the Cooperative Urban Extension Center of
seven other colleges in the area.
The series of conferences is
designed to search for guide-

lines for solution to the many

place for human

ley are open to
The culmination of the program will be a three-day metro-

attractive place to live depends
in large part upon the amount of

politan conference next summer,
whihe will integrate the individual topics with a general plan for

urban renewal.
“Downtown

Buffalo

has

be-

come a casualty of metropolitan
expansion," commented Dr. Gordon Edwards, Director of the
University Office of Urban Affairs, “and the question remains
whether it has a future as a fit

habitation."

available.
Dr. Lyle C. Fitch, Director of
the Institute for Public Administration in New York, spoke of
the concept of planned urban
subcenters as opposed to the suburban sprawl that is taking place
today. He concluded by noting
that “speed, ease and production

are not what we are trying to
achieve, but a higher quality of

life.”

Local and national marches scheduled
to protest U.S. involvement in Vietnam
Final plans for the “March on
Buffalo’s War Industries” were
made Tuesday at a joint meeting
of the SDS and the Student
Mobilization Committee (Student
MOB).

Community groups and groups
from State University College
will participate, it was an-

nounced. The march is scheduled

to begin at 12:30 p.m. Saturday,
and will proceed from the Baird
Hall vicinity to downtown Buffalo.

In connection with the march,
“Mothers and Sons,” an anti-war
film, will play at the Circle Art

Theatre at 4 p.m. Saturday. Panel
discussions are scheduled in Norton Hall Sunday.

Washington march
Final plans for the March on
Washington, scheduled for Oct.
21, were also announced. Bus
tickets for the Washington trip
are available at the peace table
on the first floor of Norton Hall.

Black power forum
Two Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee officials and
Herman Cole, a candidate for
Councilman-at-large will highlight
a black power forum Monday.
George Harris, a SNCC chair-

Med students form new
campus leftist group
Medical Students for a Sane
Foreign Policy, which calls itself
a “leftist oriented student group,”
will hold its first meeting at 2
p.m. next Friday in Capen Hall.

elude having a public meeting at
least once a month. Other regular
features wil be discussions and

One of the organizers of the
group, Micha Abeles, noted that
there is a need in the medical
school for inspection of the role
of future physicians as individuals and also their relationship
to the outside world. According
to Mr. Abeles, since the medical
procession seems to limit students in a regimented system, the
new organization is needed to allow an outlet for political expression.
Plans of the organization in-

man, will speak on “Black Power” and Fred Hudson. SNCC program director on "South Africa.”

“The White Politician and
Black Power” is Mr. Cole’s topic.
The discussion session begin at
8 p.m. Monday in the Fillmore

Room, Norton Hall.
The purpose of the discussion,
according to one SDS member,
is to “educate the white community as to the purpose and inten
tion of the Black Power Movement.”

dateline news, Oct 6
SAIGON—South Vietnamese National Police Thursday morning

arrested a few hours before the National Assembly began debate
on the validity of the voting.
SAIGON
The authoritative Saigon Post said Thursday
Nguyen Van Loc, campaign manager for President-elect Nguyen
Van Thieu and Vice President-elect Nguyen Cao Ky, has been chosen
as the next prime minister of South Vietnam.
The English language Post, which has served as an unofficial
publications for government announcements, quoted “unimpeachable
—

sources.”

JThurs-

SAIGON—Militant Buddhist leader Thich Tri Quang said
day that monks and nuns have formed a suicide squad ready to burp
themselves to death supporting his campaign against Presidentelect Nguyen Van Thieu.

LAGOS, Nigeria- —The Nigerian War Office Wednesday announced
federal troops had seized Enugu, stronghold and capital of the breakaway republic of Biafra.
Authoritative government sources elaborated on the official
communique by saying federal armies had heavily shelled the rebel
city and that it was deserted when troops entered at the end of
a week-long assault.
HONG KONG—An anti-Communist newspaper said Thursday
that Chinese Communist party chief Mao Tse-tung launched his violent
cultural revolution after learning from a dying general of a plot to
overthrow him.

The Hong Kong Express said the general, former air force
commander Liu Ya-lou, gave Mao a list with the names of the leaders
of the anti-Mao plot, many of whom have since been purged or
discredited in the cultural revolution.
ADEN —Shooting broke out in the streets of the capital of
Yemen Wednesday between pro-government demonstrators and sol-

diers, the Yemeni radio reported. There were unconfirmed reports
of a possible military coup.

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Pag* Four

•

Friday, October 6, 1967

Spectrum

Department
MFC vs. English
controversy continues over the apparent

Although the
Millard Fillmore College-English Department rift, that controversy has led to an outpouring of information.
This comes mainly from English Department replies
to the charges that have been leveled against it. Spokesmen
-for-ihp Department have made a number of valid points.

for an English degree was neither recent nor arbitrary. It
was made in January of this year after much debate and
discussion within the Department.
According to the Department, efforts were made on a
number of occasions to upgrade the level and increase the
number of English courses offered at night. Several proposals were set forth.
If this is indeed the case, then Millard Fillmore administrators must share part of the blame for the inconvenience to night school students caused by the English
Department decision.
The main problem arises from the fact that while
standards in the day school have been rising steadily since
State affiliation, night school standards have not appreciably
risen. A decade ago there was no great difference between
University of Buffalo programs and Millard Fillmore programs. Today, there undoubtedly is.
Millard Fillmore College has continued serving primarily Buffalo area residents while the State University of
Buffalo has been reaching for and attaining national prominence as a state university of the finest quality. The
divergence will continue so long as each institution sees its
1
'
goals as fundamentally different.
The English Department decision has accented that
divergence. Perhaps the Department should be criticized
for failing to exhaust all possibilities before closing the
door. It should certainly be criticized for not bringing the
issues out into the open and for failing to discuss the issues
fully before the decision was made.
On the other hand, Millard Fillmore College has had
neither the ambition nor the desire to raise its standards
or change its admission policies. But, then, perhaps it
shouldn’t. It serves a very different function by its own
choice. This would provide sound reasoning for MFC rejection of English Department proposals.
The choice for Millard Fillmore College at this juncture
is clear: Either a genuine effort must be made to raise
standards to a level acceptable to the day school—which
implies a substantial revision in the definition of its purpose
—or the College must be prepared to accept more and more
restrictions placed on it by day school departments.
Perhaps the best solution would be a disassociation of
the two schools altogether and the creation of a degreeconferring authority within Millard Fillmore. However,
until an acceptable alternative is reached, or until a reasonable time has elapsed, the English Department and other
departments should temper their actions and employ some
restraint.

Community College Needed
While the State University of Buffalo is doing a great
deal for Buffalo, it is quite apparent that the aspirations
of this University are causing ripples throughout the City.
For years Buffalo has viewed the University as an
institution serving primarily the needs of Buffalo residents.
More and more Buffalo high school students are finding
that admissions policies here are becoming more stringent
at “their” school.
This is, of course, a result of the steadily increasing
quality of this University. It is difficult for many Buffalonians to understand that the State University of Buffalo,
unlike the old UB. is no longer just their private concern.
It would be absurd to assume that residents of Berkeley
should be permitted to attend the University of California
at Berkeley merely because it’s located in their town. As
this University becomes one of the great universities in
th nation, it would be equally absurd to assume Buffalo
residents should have any priority when it comes to admission.
With this process already well underway, and with the
increased enrollments yearly in the State’s schools of higher
education, it is about time that New York started a community college program.
The community college would primarily serve Buffalo
residents; it could, in fact, provide the opportunity for
students who might not have been accepted after high school
to transfer to the University after two years in the community college.
Aside from these benefits to Buffalo, the community
college would take much of the strain off the University
as far as attitudes of the City and local demands for admission are concerned.
The community college concept is rapidly becoming the
most feasible solution to an increasingly complex problem.
Given the speed with which this State builds universities,
if the decision to build a Buffalo community college were
made tomorrow, it couldn’t be too soon.

ft

mt.

Readers
Writings

Or perhaps...

’

by Barry Holtzclaw

Che Guevera is alive and well, and everywhere.
H. Rap Brown might be headed for jail, but he
doesn’t shut up. General Giap is putting theory
into practice in the jungles of Southeast Asia.
Like it or not, a world revolution is brewing.
And it’s not the result of outside agitators, or
communist infiltrators, but of the increasing awareness of oppressed segments of the world population
that time is on their side, that reactionary attitudes
can only forestall change, and not halt it.
The United States has become anti-revolutionary;
instead of encouraging viable social and economic
reforms throughout the world, the U.S. in its desire to maintain a position of world supremacy,
has forced promoters of change underground, and
change loses its constructive values, and instead becomes negative, becomes a threat.
Revolution is a popular word in politics. Taken
strictly in its denotative sense, it is an expression
of reality, of progress, a description of the daily

uncontrolled forces that evoke radical transforma-

tions of both the physical and psychological environment. When the word’s connotations are considered, two other words come to mind: Hope

and fear.
These two words also typify the split in the
world political situation. Revolution means hope
to those oppressed, and fear to those whose positions of importance rest on a maintenance of a
position of superiority. Once revolution becomes
feared in its connotative sense, it loses meaning
also in its description of reality.
A nation cannot be reactionary in its foreign
policy, or world-view, and hope to be at all progressive on a domestic level. That is why the outbreaks of civil rebellion in the nation’s cities are
related to the civil wars in Latin America, Africa,
and Southeast Asia.
The revolutions are world -wide in the sense
that they are directed at the same thing, at political and economic domination. They are not part
of some hateful international conspiracy; in fact,
they are directed against the international conspiracy of the technological superpowers.
The initial impetus for the development of revolutionary movements is a result of both political
alienation. With Karl Marx, these two factors have
merged. The current so-called world revolution,
while certainly political in its implications, can be
considered largely economic in origin. The revolutionary movements of the underdeveloped world,
and that includes the ghettos of American cities,

are demanding, initially,

a quantitative change, a

of wealth, which, in the Marxian
sense, can only come about with a redistribution
of power.
By maintaining a position outside the system,
the new breed of world revolutionaries are able to
combine both military and political tactics, but
they are setting to one side the more important
question of a qualitative change in societal values.
They use the argument, that, once in a position
of power, they will be able to introduce new values,
and effect a genuinely radical transformation of

redistribution

society.

If, of course, that what they want. Revolutionaries of the past, most notably the Bolsheviks,
have shown that a utilization of materialist assumptions in a movement for political power tends to
subvert the original goal of the revolution.
Both the Red Guards in China and the Diggers
in San Francisco represent extreme examples of
disenchantment with the standard forms of revolution. Whether there is a place somewhere in between for the growth of a New Politics in the
technologically advanced countries remains to be
seen. One thing is for sure: hungry people aren’t
going to wait much longer.

UB is •'great!"
To The Editor:

I, a student from a nearby down-the-road college,
have often heard of the State University of Buffalo
trying to do good to cover up their bad image. God!
What bad image! You’re a great university! Many
of us students here think the State University of
Buffalo is unique. You’ve got tons of good speakers,

guests and extra activities which our place doesn’t
even measure up to.

Sure, you may have a few wierds walking around,
but don't they add to your own education about
people? Aren’t they even fun to look at? (I sure
wish our place had some.) Anyway, when I frequently visit your campus, I see a lot more decent
kids there than creeps!

I saw the game against Kent State, and your
team is something to be proud of! I won’t miss the
Temple vs. Buffalo game next Saturday. I sure wish
our hill had a team to represent us. Your school is
alive, active and industrious. You’ve got a gym,
pool and athletic field—places where you can show
off your good sportsmanship. They may be small
in size, right now, but at least you’ve got a “laboratory” for Physical Education and Good Sportsmanship Spirit.
Oh sure, you may have some bad incidents
going on, but at least it shows you’re alive with
activity and growth.

The State University of Buffalo is a university
of real people, not full of a bunch of phonies.
So if you kids feel your University is sliding
down a rope, tie a knot at the end of it and
eternally hang in there. Baby! You’ve got what it
takes.

Linda M.
From the Other Side of the “Hill.”
Spectrum

The

is

published

twice-weekly

every

—

during the regular academic
Tuesday and Friday
year at the State university of New York at Buffalo,
—

3435 Main Street. Buffalo, New York 14214. Offices
are located at 355 Norton Hall. Circulation: 15,000.

Editorin-Chief—MICHAEL L D’AMICO
Managing Editor—RICHARD R. HAYNES

Asst Managing Editor—RICHARD SCHWAB
Business Manager—SAMUEL A. POWAZEK

Advertising Manager—DAVID E. FOX
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Campus
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Director Murray Richman
member of the United States Stu
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Press. The Spectrum is served by: United Press International. Associated Collegiate Press Service. Gannett
News Service, and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate.
Represented for national advertising by National Educational Advertising Service. Inc.. 420 Madison Ave..
New York. N. Y. Republication of all news dispatches
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Second class postage paid at Buffalo. New York.
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�Friday, October 6, 1967

English department scorned

Th

•

Pag* Flv*

Spectrum

BELOW OLYMPUS

By Inteibndi

grump

To The Editor:
I am not now, nor have I ever been a Millard
Fillmore night school student. However, the recent
proclamation of the English Department declaring
MF 300-400 level English courses unacceptable to
the department for English major credits reeks of
elite-ism and discrimination to put it fervently,

PUT ZIP IN

STAMPS

MAIL

AIRMAIL
OUT OF TOWN
LOCAL

Aside from the omission of important and interesting news stories (e.g. the appointment of former Spectrum editor Jeremy Taylor as assistant to
the chairman of the Department of History and the
subsequent furor, that raged within the department), the staleness of last week’s world news head-

lines, editorialized headlines (e.g. Lemar sponsors
Vulture invasion; outlaw gang proclaims love as
goal), poor judgement in placement of important
news stories, and inept campus news writing (see
story on narcotics panel, p. 1, 9-15-67 edition), the
most serious problem with this year’s Spectrum is
that it has apparently lost its spine.
Larry Shohet

Associate Editor (1966-67)

noto: Due to the Millard Fillmore CollegeEnglish Department controversy, The Spectrum has

decided to devote an extra page of Readers’ Writings to that topic so that all sides can be heard. It
is The Spectrum’s policy to publish all sides of
important controversial issues. Letters are continued on page six.

Writers: Please be brief. Letters should not exceed
300 words. All letters must be signed and the address
end telephone number of the writer must be included. Positive verification of authorship will be made
before a letter is printed.
Letters will be kept in strict confidence.
The Spectrum will use initials or pen name, if
requested. But anonymous letters are never used.
Spectrum reserves the right to edit or delete
material submitted for publication, but the intent of
letters will not be changed.

The

time reading science fiction (SF), eating potato
chips and dip, and watching TV and a character
we shall refer to as the (Hissss) Auditor
or A.
This fink sits up there making value judgments
and other useless and unnecessary mental calculations. (It will be hard to read since space requirements do not permit me to type in standard dialogue

A: Hey, clod. SS: Go way, I’m busy: A: Busy?
You big dumb idiot, pull your nose out of that SF
book before I turn on a migraine. SS; Well, what
the hell do you want this time? A: Had you not
noted that we are now four chapters behind in
Psych, and who knows how far behind in all other
things we WERE going to do to-educate ourselves
at the beginning of the year? SS: \Vell, now that you
speak of it, I . . . A: Shut up, you damned well
have noticed but you don’t much care.
SS: That’s not altogether true. I feel
A;
You pontificate and I turn the stomach sideways
with nervous tension. SS: You’re cruel. A: It’s
necessary. I have been in that little cubicle going
over the time sheets from last weekend. SS: Oh,
. . . how nice. A: I ran the video tapes from the
weekends since school started, too! SS: And? A:
Waste, corruption, sloth.
SS: I think that you are phrasing it just a little
A: Strongly? Look, you big hairy
strongly
ape. do you realize you haven't cracked a book on
a weekend for three straight weeks? SS: Well, W-w
and I have had a heavy social calendar and . . .
A: No way, baby. I have no kicks about the socializing, we learn quite a bit that way
oh and kindly
remember she’s my W-w too,
SS: If you don't mind the socializing, then what
is it? A: I’ll give it to you in one compound word.
Football. SS: Football? A: Football! SS: But I don’t
even like football. A: Then why do 1 have several
hundred miles of video tape of it and even more
audio time of Bulls and Bills and other such animal'?
SS: Well, I’m expected to know the scores and
stuft. A: So buy a newspaper. SS: But that isn’t
the same as watching it. A: For somebody who
doesn’t like football you don’t seem to want to stop
watching it very bad. SS: Well, it is sort of interestA; Interesting? We should start going
ing
to Bullfights? INTERESTING? You sadistic clod,
it was probably just that kind of reaction which
kept the colosscum full. Interesting! Great sport isn’t
it? Only thing I can think of where they used more
armor was in the middle ages! And when does
the old home crowd really go wild? Why when a
star offensive player of the opposition is gangtackled and has to be scraped onto a stretcher
never to return again, right? SS: But look at the
opportunities it provides people Of minority groups
. . . .
A: You mean Negroes. SS: . . . to gain
economic gain A: My, my, us certainly is kind to
pay somebody to get stove up and hobble around
with arthritis for most of his life, aren’t we?
SS: Well, it certainly gives the University a
rallying point for school spirit, doesn’t it? A; Oh,
it does, it does, just look at the estimate that 50%
of the students paid the athletic fee. SS: But how
can we be a great University without a great football team? A: Just like we can’t be a great nation
without a great army, right?
SS: That’s a not fair smile. A: Poop! Tell me,
hero, would you be interested in a really great
new interesting sport? Televising action from Vietnam every Sunday afternoon. You know, you could
sit there next to the TV with your potato chips
and dip and a cold beer and root for our boys
against the VC Reds, SS: 1 think that is in rather
...

—

"No, I'm not beating the Christmas rush. These are irate letters to
editors, radio and TV stations, my congressmen and Pres. Johnson!"

Side
The Lighter
Dick West
by

...

At this month’s meeting of the Charles de Gaulle
Appreciation Society one member was absent, but I carried
on alone.
My guest speaker was Georges L. Mougin, director of
U.S. operations for Sodeteg, a French electronics firm that
has just opened an office in this country.

them.

But don’t be alarmed. Hot
cockles are not more discomforting than any other type of heartburn.
As I get it, Mougin is functioning as sort of a French peace
corps. He said the company’s
purpose is ‘to make the knowhow and brain power of its scientists, engineers and technicians
available to American industry.”

Lovely.

Interest returned

Only a person with asbestos
cockles would fail to feel the
thermal currents arising from
that generous declaration.
I mean, here we’ve been sending scientists, engineers and technicians all over the world to help
other countries solve their problems. And now somebody’s doing

it for us.

Editor's

—

...

Mougin told me things that are
sure to warm the cockles of your
heart. And perhaps overheat

To tho Editor:

Within my somewhat furry head there are a
number of strange little voices that come and go
and generally keep things lively. The following is
a representation of a dialogue which has been developing of late between SS
sloppy steese
a

form.)

In their own best interest the English Department might consider its assumption that all Millard Fillmore students are stupid and taking the
easy route to a BA. They might consider why it
is that students feel “they can get better grades
in MF.” Who are the teachers giving easier “As”
and “Bs”?

The Spectrum is spineless

by STEESE

—

Discrimination on the part of the English Department against certain groups of “accepted”
students is not cooperating with other departments of the University. It is in fact, making them
“dumping grounds” for students with no where
else to go. Aside from bad ethics and bad rhetoric
this action is self defeating.

Kathryn Kunigisky.
An English Major

.

—

It is true that a good department will often
attract good faculty and graduate students regardless of how bad the university is, but if they are
truly “excellent” (i.e. of the caliber the English
Department wants) they will not be happy or long
remain in so narrow an environment.

All I’m really suggesting is that MF students
and day students be treated equally. If this is done
the quality of MF night school is automatically
better, departments gain a wider variety of students and begin to work with, not against each
other in attracting serious and interested students.
As it stands now, the English Department’s “we
don’t want ’em, you can have ’em” attitude has
created an atmosphere of mistrust, and stifled
communication and dialogue. These actions are
certainly antithetical to the goals of education.

.

&amp;

VOUR@i£=Sk

The goal of the English department is to attain excellence in quality of faculty and students.
Obviously this is a good things However, it seems
extremely insular and shortsighted of this Department not to be concerned with the quality of the
University as well as their Department. A good
university is made only through the mutual respect
and co-operation of its parts.

Is it not true that many (if not all) are parttime or full time faculty members of the English
Department? Would it not be possible to suggest
to these teachers (as general policy) that they
be just as rigorous in marking MF students as they
are day students? Would this not offset the possible leniance of the acceptance committees? Perhaps it would mean lower grades, or a higher
number of “flunk-out” English majors in MF, but
in the long run this procedure would certainly be
more democratic than simply excluding these students on the basis of the “MF bad-student myth.”

.

The problem that Mougin wants
to help us solve is traffic. He
came here from New York City
to discuss the matter with the
bureau of public roads. Which
is how I happened to lure him
to the appreciation society meeting.

What Mougin has in mind is
“vehicular traffic control through
electronic guide strips.” At first,
I was confused about how it
works.
But after reading a technical
paper on the system, and listening to Mougin explain it, I was
merely bewildered.
The general idea is that each
lane of traffic is bordered with
a strip "of lights that turn either
green, red or yellow.

Drive by lights

A motorist enters a lane with
a bloc of green lights and if he
drives along at the same speed
the lights are moving he theoretically can go as far as he
pleases without stopping, changing lanes or crunching somebody
else’s fender—I think.
The modus operandi is not the
important thing anyhow. It’s the
sentiment that counts.
Here we are having diplomatic
disputes with the French and
here they are extending a hand
to help us solve our traffic problems. And their own traffic problems probably need solving more
than ours do.
It’s a magnanimous gesture
which the appreciation society,
at least.appreciates.

poor taste.
A: Chump. Of all the things you could be doing
on Saturday and Sunday afternoons, can you basically tell me anything that is more useless than

uhhhh
being “entertained” by football? SS:
A: Don’t strain yourself. Would you please
try and get some work done this weekend and
forget about sports? SS: All right, all right. I
won’t watch any football. Goodbye.
A: (soliloquy) Hmmmm, That was entirely too
easy. Whyo, whyo, whyo? Wait a minute, World
Series. WORLD SERIES? Opens at Boston Wednesday, second game, Boston, Thursday. Travel day
and
Friday. Games at St. Louis on . . . Saturday .
Sunday . . YOU FINK COME BACK HERE! (Exits
hastily as lights dim.)
....

....

.

.

The Spectrum's pages for

Quotes in

the news

United Press International

a
WASHINGTON—Senator Everett Dirkson, commenting on
urge nonresolution by Senator Charles H. Percy which would
Communist Asian nations to help out in the Vietnam war: 1 think
this resolution is full of mischief.”

Editorials

&amp;

Opinions

It is the policy of The Spectrum to report the
news fully *nd impartially in the news pages,
to express the opinions of the newspaper only
in the editorial pages and to publish all sides
of important controversial issues.
"Without

exprowion,

fnadom of

#*pr**»ion i» mooning kt*,"

�Pape

Friday, Octahar k IH7

The Spectrum

Sis

Differences like night and day
Ta Tha Editor;
The department head, according to The Spectrum's latest editorial, has an iron hand. As an
English teacher, must deplore the. mixed metaphor, yet insist even if the hand be iron, the
fingers are flexible enough to typewrite a clarification of an extremely complex subject, the rela-

have come from Dean Berner’s office and, alas,
from The Spectrum itself in its first coverage
of the subject.
Since last April we have consistently asked for
creative recognition of the aspirations of the State
University of Buffalo as a national university together with a creative reconciliation of those as
oirations with the needs of the local community.

SajdoAOjL
99

:

• •

woul
a Bachelor of Arts in Humanities wl
Essentially. the problem is that the State University of Buffalo aspires to be—and, as regards corporate courses from the English Department,
the English Department, is—a national university, which would meet the needs of local students—working-class students, as the student petition calls
yet this University and this Department also wish
to meet the needs of the community which gives
them—and provide the basis for their progress to
graduate school.
us our locus and, in many ways, our being.
The English Department’s position is that our
We stand ready to offer at night day school
offerings in the night school differ fundamentally courses by day school faculty to day school stufrom our offerings in the day school. The student dents whose schedules demand them. We have
urged upon the Graduate School administration
population is different, often more mature, often
more motivated, but admitted by diffffent standan evening-and-summer M.A. to meet the needs of
ards and typically looking to different objectives local high-school teachers. Indeed, this semester,
from the day school student.
the Department donated one half of one full proThe faculty is mostly drawn from the day school fessor’s time to a special MFC course for teachers
faculty but by no means always and, because of in ghetto schools.
the inequitable stipends likely to come in the
We suggested last June a wide variety of confuture, more from the community than from the tinuing education programs for local students which
University itself. We regard as especially imthe Millard Fillmore people themselves have writportant the fact that the range of upper-level ten us were more imaginative and helpful than
their own—indeed, President Meyerson wrote to
English courses offered at night (nine) is much
congratulate us on our special efforts to make the
narrower than the day school curriculum (45).
We ask that things be called by their right
talents of the English Department available for
community programs.
names, that these differences be recognized, that
We said last April and we say now that we
the day program we offer to a wide variety of
welcome the giving of degrees by Millard Fillmore
students from all over the world be seen as different from the program offered to local students provided such degree-granting power be circumscribed as it is, say, at Harvard or Columbia. We
in night classes. The English Department Executive Committee’s decision on this subject was welcome and applaud student participation in resolving these difficut issues. But we are fed up
made last Jan. 31, not last June. It led to a multoplicity of meetings with coveys of deans, all of with being misrepresented, muscled and menaced
by administrators who themselves seem unable to
whom seemed to be bent upon muscling the English Department into rescinding its decision and get off the proverbial dime.
All we ask, basically, is the honest recognition
avoiding coming to grips with the very basic issues involved.
that what we offer in Millard Fillmore is different,
We made clear to Dean Berner at that time our in an interesting variety of ways, from what we
wish to cause no student difficulty by our decision offer in the day school and that it be developed
(which was not retroactive), but Dean Berner did
as such. With that, the headly hand lapses into,
not inform the Hillard Fillmore advisers and, as if not iron, inflexibility.
Norman N. Holland
a result, many students have been caused needless
Chairman,
confusion and hardship. Further, a number of misDepartment of English
constructions and misquotations of our position

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Dr. Riddel clarifies English Department stand
To The Editor:

It is never a pleasant thing to attempt to repudiate statements one has allegedly made, for it
most often leads to more confusion. Nonetheless,
since I was quoted in a Spectrum column of Oct.
3, as making statements slanderous about MFC
students. I do feel it necessary to put those alleged statements in context, and to point up the
non sequiturs. I conceded late Friday evening to an
interview, by phone, with Miss Kozuchowski if
she would promise to check back with me to verify
whatever quotes she wanted to use. She did not.
and the quotes return to me in the paper, as
Emerson said, a "certain alienated majesty.”
In the first place. I did not say MFC students
were inferior; or that the Department's decision
had been made to take acocunt of that inferiority.
I said that the program (as contrasted with individual courses) available to them was inferior, and
that the Department, under present circumstances,
was unable to do anything about it.
Item: the English Department provides but onehalf of the teachers for freshman English in MFC,
the other half coming from among local high
school teachers, faculty wives, and the like. When
we offered Dean Berner our newly designed
freshman English course for his program, he did
not want to accept it because it took too much of
his budget, and only after Vice President Regan
promised to assist him in bringing our teaching
assistant's pay up to somewhere near that of
teaching assistants in the day school (Berner
wanted to pay them just half as much for the
same work) we supplied him with TA’s as qualified as those who teach in our day program;
Item; the department made its decision concerning MFC several months ago, not last week
as Hie Spectrum said, and submitted it to Berner
with a full argument of why the decision had to
be made. The department's undergraduate committee met with Berner to discuss it, but be could
find no way of implementing our proposals to
improve the program (there is a volume of correspondence on It).

He did, however, manage to fail to communicate
the decision to his MFC constituents, and when it
was communicated by MFC advisers this fall (much
to late) it was grossly misinterpreted. The sign
which Mr. McKeating says just appeared in the
halls of Annex A was directed at our students in
the day program, and it reaffirmed a policy that
has long been in operation: namely, that any student in the day program who wishes to take an
MFC course toward major credit, must get the
permission of the Director of Undergraduates Studies, such permission being given to those who
have schedule conflicts, time problems, and the
like.

It was not our responsibility to advise the MFC
students, since we have no control over their admission to the program, nor do we provide advising
for them. That in fact, is the rub of the issue:
that we have no control over admissions to the
major in MFC, that we have almost no control
over the program, and that our faculty, not being
obligated to teach in MFC, teach those courses
which MFC makes available. In other words, while
we have complete control over the day program,
we have only the privilege of certifying the candidate for a degree in MFC.
Item: The Committee to Preserve Undergraduate degrees did not come to me, unless McKeating
is the committee. He alone came to protest, and
when he did he accused the department of revoking the right to a degree with a major in English
to all students presently in the program. I had to
underline the obvious fact which the MFC administration failed to point out that the decision was
not retroactive, and that in fact, because the MFC
administration had been remiss in advising its
students, we were willing to waive the decision for
those now entering.
They wiuld in turn be allowed to continue
their major and take a degree. In the meanwhile,
we said we would be quite willing to review the
decision with someone responsibly concerned with
student education preferably Dean Welch in the
hopes that we could arrive at a program which
would not be inferior. I repeat—the program is inferior, not the students nor the individual courses.
The program, or that which wg_ are presently allowed to offer, is simply not adequate to the
needs of students majoring in English.
Item: I did say to Miss Kozuchowski that one of
the great difficulties of MFC courses was the range
of students in them. I was speaking from personal
experience of having taught a sophomore level
course there last year. I told her that in the course
were three of the best (including the one best)
undergraduate students I have had at Buffalo.
I was shocked to hear about the uproar because
I had thought the student body might applaud any
careful, thoughtful attempt to induce more quality
into its programs. We have offered a revised
English program which has been received very
well, and have thoroughly revised our graduate
program. The MFC decision was prelude to a
discussion of new experiments in our program for
majors, which would again accentuate the difference between what we offer to day students and
what we can offer to MFC students. I take it
that the current protest advises us to go slow, that
upgrading quality is a dangerous, anti-democratic

r

Dept,

of English

JJ

I
I

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j

�Friday, October 6, 1947

Th

campus releases...
The fifth In tha series of University Reports will be held at
9 a.m. Tuesday in the Conference Theater. Dr. Raymond Ewell, vice
president for research, will discuss “Research in the University.”
The Report series was inaugurated to keep all interested persons
of Buffalo.

•

Spectrum

Last of series

Debate continues on court merger
by Emmet N. O'Brien
Gannett News Service

ALBANY—Vigorous debate re-

County Courts. And,

as well, to
abolish the office of Justice of
Peace and the various municipal
and village courts and turn them

The Court has a long, although
tenuous history. It can trace a
heritage back to 1817 when the
Legislature directed canal com-

Retired Chief Judge Charles
S. Desmond with a sweep of his
arm sketches two tiers of Trial
Courts. .

Court to appoint disinterested
land appraisers. The line then
moves through various claims
boards and bureaus until 1929
when a court of five judges finally was established. That is the
court existing today, although it
has grown to 14 judges, appoihted
by the governor for nine year

All sti

informative series.

connection with the Surrogate’s
Court or the State Court of

The Newman Apostelata has announced its plans and programs
for the month of October. Included in the schedule of events are a
“Happening” tonight at 8:30 p.m. at Newman Hall and a meeting
at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Norton Hall.

Claims.

Other activities are discussions, Sunday suppers and a picnic.
All students are invited to stop by at the Newman headquarters, located at the corner of Main St. and Niagara Falls Blvd.

day in and day out.”

Eugene J. Murray, University Security Officer, has announced
that “All cars using campus parking facilities must have current
sticker affixed as instructed or they will be in violation.” This rule
will be enforced starting Monday.

The Schustmaislers Ski Club is now holding its membership
drive for the coming season. Dues are $15 which covers ail transportation, parties and lift tickets for ten Tuesday night excursions
to Kissing Bridge.

There is an excellent lesson program suggested which offers ten
hour-long lessons from beginner through expert levels for $25. The
Club office is Room 320 Norton Hall. It is open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
The Queen Contest is one of the highlights of the annual FallParent Weekend. Girls wishing to be candidates may now submit
their name to Rose Freedman in the Norton Hall Administrative
Office.
Organizations may submit names for candidates. Final decision
of the judges will not be influenced by their support.
Preliminary judging will takeplace at 6:30 p.m., Oct. 18 in the
Dorothy Haas Lounge. The final judging will be held at 3:30 p.m.,
Oct. 25 in the Millard Fillmore Room.

Activities are announced
for Fall-Parent weekend

Fall-Parent Weekend is coming
to the State University of Buffalo campus October 27, 28 and

29.

The purpose of the weekend
will be to acquaint parents with
the university, and to further
their understanding of campus
life.
Many activities have been planned for both parents and students
by the University Union Activities Board, which is sponsoring
the weekend program.

TNc

Pape Seven

Among the highlights of FallParent Weekend this year will
be the traditional faculty reception which will, as usual, precede
the formal dance at which the
Fall Weekend Queen will be
crowned. This year’s dance is
entitled “Two Different Worlds.”
Other activities of the weekend
will include a rugby game, a
night of soul music featuring
Smoky Robinson and the Miracles, and a game night when
students may take part in free
“moonlight" bowling.

y^

(KoKblei^
umvaism

piaza

oM

“Sure,” chortle the defenders
of the status quo, “but they are
the judges assigned just to that
tvne of work. They are picked
because they are experts, and
have a long association with the
problem.”

This is a highly technical issue,
one in which the general public
has little direct knowledge.
Whether the voters will have a
chanee to pass on court merger
this is doubtful. The Constitutional Convention, in its first
major decision, decided in favor
of the status quo, overriding the
Court reformers decisively.
But the issue is not dead. In its
closing days, the convention will
hear another—and more subtle—effort to change things. Vice Pres-

ident William J. Van Den Heuvel,
D.-New York, who has strongly
supported Senator Kennedy’s position, would like to toss the enentire Court organization question
into the Legislature. Thus connow
stitutional
identification
given the Courts will be removed
and the Legislature as Congress
can do nationally, would establish
the Court system.
Little chance of success is likely, however. The effort merely
will demonstrate that the issue
still is alive and more will be
heard from “the little woman”
and her friends in each legislative
session.
The reform objective is to
merge into the Supreme Court
the Surrogate’s Court, the Court
of Claims, the Family and the

“There should be the Supreme
Court,” he said, with the arm
sweeping a straight line, indicating statewide application, “And
there should be,” with another
sweep, “District Courts.”
That makes a nice, easy-to-understand system and organizational chart. It also could end the
confusing situation under which
some judges are elected and some
appointed.
Judge Desmond, who during his
26 years on the Court of Appeals,

passed

upon

virtually

every

known type of law suit, abruptly
discards the idea that “expertise”
and “continuity” are essential.
Any competent jurist should be
able to handle the cases, he argues.

Court of Claims supporters hold
otherwise. They point out that
this court is highly specialized in
that it handles only actions
against the State of New York.
The scope ranges from contract
disputes, negligence in highway
construction or maintenance, value of land taken for public improvement, wrongful arrest or imprisonment, and any special case
the Legislature might give it.
(It’s largest verdict was in arbitration of a dispute between the
State and Thruway Authority
over who paid what for access
roads).

terms.
In 1938, the voters rejected the
recommendation of the Constitutional Convention to make Claims
a Constitutional Court, but it
made that rank in 1950 and has
held it since. The business of
the Court has grown, and its calendars are just about up to date.
These two points militate against
those who want to merge it with
the already overcrowded Supreme
Court.
Strong support for retention of
the Court has been offered by
Attorney General Louis J. Letkowitz, who must defend all actions against the State, and Transportation Commissioner J. Burch
McMorran, whose department is
responsible for most of the actions. They argue that the State
pleat* turn to p. 10

WORSHIP
(Protestant)

For Students, By Students
Sponsored by the

LUTHERAN MINISTRY
TO THE UNIVERSITY

CORRECTION
In Tuesday’s edition The Spectrum inadvertently listed Judy
Somers and Marion Abromowitz
as vice-president and treasurer
respectively of the MacDonald

SUNDAY AFTERNOONS, 4:00

Hall residence council. The vice-

Calvary Lutheran
Church

president is Sharon Titus. The
treasurer is Madeline Wallack.

(Four Block* from Campus)

4110 North Bailey

Teilhard De Chardin
A SEMINAR IN FOUR LECTURES

JAMESBIRX

»

PARENTS' WEEKEND
Let Your Parents Enjoy the Colonial Hospitality
and Modern Comfort of
.

.

Student of Philosophy, Lecturer

OCTOBER 10

—

8 P.M.

.

Sorb Amljrrat
MOTOR

“Bah!" snort the court reform-

ers. “A Supreme Court Justice
handles the same types of cases

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Pag* Eight

•

Survey finds attitudes, not agitators.
responsible in Buffalo summer riots
This is coni

Patar Simon

A survey just completed by
the State University of Buffalo
Cooperative Urban Extension
Center concludes that conflicting
attitudes and Negro awareness
were the chief underlying causes
of civil distrubances in Buffalo
this summer.
Dr. Frank P. Besag, Assistant
Professor of the School of Education, conducted the study,
which will be published soon.
According to Dr. Besag, the
survey found that only recently
Negroes have become aware of
the many unfulfilled promises
which have been made to them.
The realization that the “basic
promise of American society has
never been extended to the
Negro” caused them to resort to
violence.

the Polish citizens of Buffalo are

are
unable to discuss the problems

so contradictory that they
that exist.

Dr. Besag said that 138 interviews were made, representing
people who were “directly or indirectly” involved in the disturbances, the Buffalo police force,
and citizens of the predominately Polish south side. Because the
report deals with the attitudes
of these three groups of people,
Dr. Besag said it could be described as an “expression of per-

spective."

The report repudiates the hypothesis of outside agitation. It
finds that outside agitators, if
present, were not effective, because the people involved in the
disturbances did not know of any.

—

press secretary
Frank Mankiewicz said in Washington the senator “will do all
hcucgjpfor it.”
Kennedy’s

“He feels it a vastly improved
constitution,” Mankiewicz said.
“His feelings will be made quite
clear to the electorate.”
Mankiewicz did not know
whether Kennedy still had any
reservations on specific items in
the constitution despite his overall endorsement.

The study also finds that the
theory of “random hoodlumism”
is a fallacy. It shows that the
violence was directed at specific

establishments, with which the

people had grievances.

Dr. Besag feels that another

significant finding is that “not
one of the 138 people interviewed was satisfied with the news
media’s handling of the disturb-

ances.”

The report concludes that the
Negro problem is the problem of

all citizens. It also concludes, in
the words of Dr. Besag, that “we
can expect more riots unless we
develop communication between
the people involved, especially
those in the lower socio-economic
level.”

Kennedy advocated the merger of Surrogate Court and the
State Supreme Court and asked
that a provision be put into the
new charter that would recognize the need for “expansion of
public power.”

Both provisions were defeated.

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On Wall Street
by Michael Galitzer

to Buffalo police

RFK to work for adoption of new constitution
Sen. RoNEW YORK (UPI)
bert F. Kennedy (D-N.Y.) plans
to campaign for approval of the
proposed constitution for New
York State.

Friday, October 6, 1967

Spectrum

with more
features than
any other
shavers on
the market

The years 1964 through early 1966 were distinguished
by the emergence of airline industry as one which was finally
able to exhibit consistent profitable operations. Wall Street
was quiet aware of this fact, for in these two years the flyers
were flying. Earnings of many of the airlines doubled, and
many others increased over 50%.
The potential that this industry
had possessed was finally being
into facts and figures. Stocks like KLM, Braniff,
Delta, Eastern, and National were
quickly moving out of obscurity.
Increased enthusiasm resulted in
the more popular issues of this
group such as Pan American,
United, and American.

Large gains posted

Braniff and KLM soared from

a low of 15 to 120. As for people
investing in the other airlines,
they had to be content with
doubling
tripling their
and
money.
After suffering a temporary
setback during the bear market
in the spring and summer of
1966, the airlines once more
headed upward. By May of 1967
Pan Am was 72 (it later split 2
for 1), American hit 100 (and
also split 2 for 1), United was
near 90, and KLM was 110.
However, since July and Aug-

ust the airlines have reversed the

uptrend and have been experiencing heavy selling pressure.
American Airlines has dipped to
35 (after the split), KLM to 73,
and Pan American to 26 (after
the split). United has fallen 20
points since August.
The reason for the decline in
Pan Am can be attributed to
earnings of $1.10 per share in
the first seven months, down
from about $1.25 per share a
year earlier. KLM has also experienced an earnings decline
and the same can be said for

Braniff. However, National Airlines reported higher earnings
for the last quarter.

Costs greater than revenue
Adding to these lower earnings
was the report that for the air-

line industry as a whole revenue
increased by 17% whereas costs
increased 21%. Part of the increased costs can be ascribed to
the wage settlement ending strike
that grounded operations of 5
major domestic carriers two summers ago.
A third pessimistic note lies in
the future. Almost all of the airlines have huge orders for the
Boeing 747 jumbo jets and the
McDonnell-Douglas planes. Pan

Am’s order alone is $500,000,000.
for these planes is
scheduled in 1969. Many analysts
feel that the airlines may have
difficulty in their payment for
these planes in which case earnings might be flat or lower.
Delivery

A little optimism
However, I see no reason why
I should not be optimistic about
two stocks which I believe to be
oversold. They are Pan American
(26) and American Airlines (35).
I do not see how Pan Am can dip
more than 1 or 2 points below
what it is now. I would be greatly
surprised if it did dip those two
points. The maximum downward
objective for American appears
to be 33.
These are established quality
A companies not the fly-by-night
companies that become quite popular and after a few months are
never heard from again. As far
as the upside objective I see at
least SO for Pan Am and see no
reason why American should not
see the 60’s. Do not expect these
stocks to move immediately. It
may be several months before
Pan Am overcomes the pressure
that had developed in the 26-28
area. But for a 1-2 year investment (or even longer) I can’t see
how you can go wrong.

Action tine

.

.

.

331-5000
Do you often think it impossible to untangle the SUNYAB bureaucracy? In
with the Dean of Students' Office, The Spectrum is sponsoring an
ACTION LINE. Through ACTION LINE, individual students can get an answer
fo a puzzling question, find out where and why University decisions are made,
and get action when change is indicated.
ACTION LINE vyill answer all questions of general interest which appear to
be pertinent to the student body. The Spectrum will include them in its special
ACTION LINE weekly column. Each inquiry will be thoroughly investigated and
answered individually. The name of the individual originating the inquiry will
not be published.
cooperation

Where can one get a personal check cashed on campus?
Mr. George P. Bielan, General Manager of the Bookstore,
stated that, “Any personal check payable to the University Bookstore in the amount of $25.00 which is drawn on a United States
bank, can be cashed by the Bookstore Check Cashing Service for a
ten cent fee, by a properly identified student, faculty, or staff member. This ten cent fee is not applicable in cases where merchandise
purchases are involved. To better serve the University community,
we have extended the hours of the Check Cashing Service Department, and are now open Monday thru Friday, from 8:30 a.m. to 8:30
p.m. and Saturdays from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m.”
Why do woman entering the lower area of the bookstore have to
leave their purses on the floor?
They really do not have to. For obvious reasons, we request all
oversized purses to be left outside of the selling area and we supply
free lockers and pigeon holes to accommodate them.

What is the fin* for not returning a book from Lockwood Library?
Miss Mary C. McCarthy, Circulation Librarian, stated that: “If
there are no extenuating circumstances a student who fails to
return a library book to Lockwood Library after he is notified to
do so, at the end of the semester will be charged $20. through the
Bursar’s Office. That same charge is made for a book not returned
when it has been recalled for another reader. No fines are charged
for overdue books at Lockwood Library.”

Will tho bus to th* interim Campus make stop* other than the
present one, at Diefendorf, on campus?
As a result of a survey taken recently, a stop may be established
near Norton Union if traffic conditions do not preclude this.
(For specific antwtn to your questions, and for direct service, cell ACTION LINE,
831-5000, every Monday, Wednesday, aipd Friday, from 4-5 p.m.)

”

�Friday, October 6, 1967

The Spectrum

P«9»

Nina

Suicide Prevention Center appears doomed
by Daniel Lassar
Buffalo’s Suicide Prevention Center, a non-professional agency that helps over 10,000 troubled
persons each year, is on the verge of collapse.
possibility of losing its telephone service.

Director Joe Vetter has seen the center through
numerous financial crises in the past. However the
growth of his center has created problems that
seem close to insurmountable at this time. A perpetually increasing amount of calls has raised his
phone bill to over $1,100. The success of his center
has created a thorn in the side of Buffalo’s "professional” social welfare agencies. Consequently he
is faced with many critics within the community
who would like to see the center closed down
permanently. It is because of pressure exerted by

-

MMg

MENTAL HEAL
PREVENTION CENTER

riTI7ENS FOR

SUICIDE

his critics that his creditors have taken their “pay
out” attitude.

up or get

Former alcoholic
The story of the Suicide Prevention Center is
really the story of Joe Vetter. A high school dropout, Joe had a brief taste of success in the army
before he suffered a nervous breakdown. He became an alcoholic, and then turned to drugs for
help.
Eventually, through his own efforts, he recovered and went on to start the Buffalo branch
of Recovery, Inc. It was after his success there
that he established the Citizens for Mental Health
—Suicide Prevention Center,
The Center was located at his home for over
three years, but as its volume of calls increased,
he was forced to open an office at 1361 Main St.,
where it was located until his eviction this week.

"Wide scope
The Center’s scope has not been limited to
suicide attempts; these constitute only 10% of its
calls. Homosexuals, dope addicts, alcoholics, unwed mothers, students who are having trouble in
school, people who find that life is moving at too
fast a pace: No one has ever been turned away
by the Center according to Mr. Vetter. It is open
7 days a week, 24 hours a day to anyone looking
for someone to talk to.
According to Mr. Vetter, the Center holds three
advantages over professional agencies. There is no
red tape involved, no lengthy forms to fill out.
It is available to anyone at any hour. And most
important, up to 60% of its staff is made of people
who had at one time come to the center for help.
These volunteers can easily understand the problems of the people they talk to.
Unfortunately it is these same volunteers that
have caused the “professionals to claim that the
center is “the blind leading the blind.” Mr. Vetter
counters that this is the most practical method of
helping people. He measures his success in the
fact that more people will turn to him than to
any

professional agency, including governmentSuicide Prevention Centers in other

subsidized
cities.

Select staff
Moreover Mr. Vetter pointed out that his staff
of volunteers has undergone a thorough screening:

Honp
r

lilaiiy

e Metier's Suicide Prevention Center is on the verge
of economic disaster. Professional welfare agencies
have, according to him, applied pressure to end the
Citizens for Mental Health Organization.

“Before we accept someone as a volunteer, he
must undergo two interviews, fill out a three-page
questionnaire, go through sixty hours of training,
and be interviewed a third time. We go through
fifty applications to get one volunteer.”

But so far, he commented, there hasn't been
enough; “all we need is money.”

Looking for help

Mr. Vetter has devoted his life to the work of
the center. Presently he is in danger of losing his
car and his furniture because he put them up to get
a loan to pay off some of the center’s debts.

Mr. Vetter, who has done numerous radio and
television programs ("First Name Only;” "Joe Vetter Presents”) has turned to those media for help.
Monday night two of his staff members spoke on
a network radio program from New York. He has
also received help from station WKBW in Buffalo.

In the past, Mr. Vetter tried to appease his
critics in order to save the center. Earlier this year
he resigned as Director, hoping that the “pressure
from downtown” would stop. However it continued,
and at the same time donations to the center (its
only source of income) decreased. Now he is unsure
as to how to save the center.

At the State University of Buffalo, Rho Pi Phi,
the pharmaceutical fraternity, has decided to take
up collections in various pharmacies in the community. Mr. Vetter hopes to receive help from
other quarters; the center is recognized by most
doctors, clergymen and nob-professional social action groups in the city.

Later this week the center was moved to 19
Laurel St., a location that was donated by a friend.
Mr. Vetter has been receiving calls from as far
as Washington from people who want to help.

If contributions do not continue, Mr. Vetter
pointed out the Suicide Prevention Center may
not be able to withstand the pressure being forced
upon it: “It’s a miracle we’ve lasted this long.”

�Th

Pag* T*n

Fi ilm review: The Trii

Myths exposed and created
in film on "acid" experience
by

Phil Burbank

Roger Gorman’s film “The Trip,” at the Century Movie
Theatre, attempts to explore the world of LSD, “acid” if you
like, and apparently undertook a task too large for itself.
Surrounding, and many times obscuring LSD are controversies and myths. Roger Gorman exposes some of these myths
but at the same time creates others.

Acid will not automatically
drive one insane permanently or
give one instant nirvana. It is a
subjective individual experience,
which probably explains why it
is treated as almost a capital offense in a society which increasingly is emphasizing conformity.
Peter Fonda, portrays a director of commercials who, at the

time he is getting a divorce from
his wife, attempts his first mind
voyage with LSD. The scene for
his bon voyage is a party at the
friend's house who serves as
Fonda’s guide. The house is quite
a lovely experience and Gorman-,
the master of colors, uses his art
well.
The dialogue at the beginning
is a bit thin and is insulting to
those who use the coloquialisms
involved. But Fonda takes the
acid, puts on a mask, and he and
we are gone. Pattern and design
drift past us in a feast of color.
It is rare indeed when one can
enjoy such ecstacy of hues, and
this more than anything else
makes “The Trip” a unique experience. The filming techniques
(double images, focusing, etc.),
though a little short of brilliant,
were enchanting.

Experiences sex
Flashing out, Fonda experiences deserts, fog, paranoia as
well as sex. Sexual visions which
play little or no part in most acid
trips that I have heard or read

of dominated the movie. These

•

Debate continues
would be greatly inconvenienced
if a claimant could file a suit
in Supreme Court in any county,
whereas now he has to file it
in the Court in Albany.
Many other arguments can be
died up in behalf of the present
Court but John J. McNamara Jr.,
chief legal assistant to the Court,
summed it up in an article on
the Court in the St. John’s Law
review (Dec. 1965): “It has been
aptly called the conscience of the
State."

The “expertise and "continuity” argument also is heard regarding the Surrogate’s Court. It
is acknowledged that the area of
the estates is a specialized field,
Fonda concluded the journey and that many estates take a long
through his mind with the realitime to settle. The Surrogate—zation that he is in love with and his staff—are able through
everyone. He is however cauexperience to handle the matters
tioned that “It’s easy now but expeditiously, the
supporters
wait until tomorrow.” “I’ll wait,” claim.
retorts Fonda, “and see about
The opposition says any Suthat tomorrow.”
preme Court Justice should be
Roger Corman cannot do the able to do it, and that he would
impossible and project the energy have available the same skilled
levels encountered in an actual staff that the Surrogate has. This
trip. Unfortunately, he also bows emphasis on staff could be conto the demand for monetary prostrued as a reflection on the
fit and betrays his films with irjudge, but such is the result of
relevances.
controversy. It also doesn’t speak
Nevertheless his techniques too well for the many, many Surrogates in upstate small counties
with the camera and color someto scrounge pretty hard
how by themselves recommend who have
the film. As for Fonda, he looks to find a so-called staff. They
amazingly straight for someone usually have a court clerk, who
may also handle County Court and
on a trip.
Family Court.
When asked why he was about
to take acid, Fonda remarked:
“Curiosity, no . . . maybe to find
out something about myself.”
There are indeed few of us who
are not excited by the prospect
of tasting color, or feeling sound.
scenes, though not adding to the
credibility of the film, alone lend
a flowing and vivacious charm.

Caution is necessary, however,
and acid is certainly not a uniSAN FRANCISCO (UPD—Three
versal answer, nor for that matter
an answer by itself. Human dismembers of the Grateful Dead
covery can be a beautiful thing
and their two managers were
but it can also be a terrifying
Monday in narcotics
experience, this is the chances arrested
raids in the Haight-Ashbury disone lakes with LSD.
trict of San Francisco.

State narcotics agent Matthew
O’Connor said over a pound of
marijuana and hashish was found
in the avocado green and pumpkin colored kitchen of the music
group’s residence.
O’Connor said 11 persons were
taken to city prison and booked

JACK NICHOLSON ROGER CORMAN -AMERICAN
Faaturat
ttf—SPECIAL

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and 6 PA*.

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|

(Cont’d from Pg. 7)

Pressure to elevate the Family
Court to Supreme Court status
comes importantly from the Family Court judges. The League of
probably the
Women Voters
“mother” of the Family Court
wants it retained as is. So far, the

for extermination for many years
but still among the more healthy
jurists. His greatest crime is that
he does not have to be a lawyer
and—in the small towns—is apt
to hold court in his kitchen.

for holding to the present line.

962 towns and he runs for office
and knows a lot of voters. So far
he has thwarted the attempts to
reformers—usually city folk—to
abolish him in favor of a district
court run by a lawyer. Although
they usually have no lawyers. In
the same boat are municipal and
village court justices.

—

—

The bid of the Court to take
over exclusive jurisdiction in
adoptions—now shared with Surrogate Court—has failed to gain
much ground. It may come about
naturally as one study showed
the Family Court was increasing
its adoption cases (except in New
York City) and the Surrogate
Court was handling fewer.
Some big city lawyers contend
the Family Court there is so
busy, and calendars so crowded
and courtrooms so congested, that
a “proper atmosphere” for an
adoption proceeding is denied.
The Surrogate Court, on the contrary, is loaded with privacy and
dignified atmosphere.

There are many other aspects

to the exclusive adoption wrangle, such as ancillary services,
available to each Court. The Family Court will continue to have
control over juveniles, disputing
spouses (except felony cases), separations and such marital rifts—except dissolution—are referred
by the Supreme Court.
Down below the Family Court
is the Justice of Peace, a target

Grateful Dead are arrested on
pot charges in San Francisco

State and local agents raided
710 Ashbury Street, a Victorian
home which is the Grateful
Dead’s headquarters.

,

Friday, Octobar 6, 1967

Spictrum

am. j

DISCOUNTS
Olv*n to
Studonti Aftor
4 PA*. Evary

I

I
Day|I

for

either possession of marijuana or being in the house
where marijuana was kept.

Those charged included Rod
“Pig Pen” McKernan, 22, the
Grateful Dead singer; guitarist
Robert Weir, 19; Robert C. Mattews, 19; and the group’s two
managers. Rock Scully, 26 and
Daniel Rifkin, 23.

O’Connor said the raid was
made because investigations
“kept turning up the address of
710 Ashbury as a supply source.”
“They were processing some
marijuana in the kitchen by running it through a colander to get
rid of the stems and seeds,”
O’Connor said.

But the town justice has one

The town judge faces one
change in his status. He will have
to give up being a member of the
town board, if the con con delegates have their way. This is

not as serious a blow to him as

some would imagine.

In first class towns, the justice
has left the town
board in favor of a councilman,
so the precedent is set.
long since

But dislodge him completely in
favor of a district judge is another story. It would work in
metropolitan countries, but in the
smaller areas it might be difficult to find a lawyer to take the
bench.

Besides, he probably would not
be as good a vote getter as the
incumbent justice.

Jefferson Airplane
will appear in (kt
“The Airplane” is coming! The
Jefferson Airplane is scheduled
to appear October 18 at the Eastman Theater in Rochester. After
their success with the album
“Surrealistic Pillow," they have
emerged as the country’s most
exciting contemporary musical
group.
Composed of lead singers Grade
Slick and Marty Balin, guitarists
Jorma Kaukonen, Jack Casady
and Paul Kantner, and drummer
Spencer Dryden, Jefferson Airplane has created a sound drawn
from jazz, folk, blues and rock’n
roll. The voice of the “happening” generation, the San Francisco group gained its national
following by singing songs of love
rather than protest.
According to The New York
Times, “They are not frightened,
and they are not self-conscious.
To restore another cliche to its
original meaning, “it’s like a
breath of fresh air.”

�Friday, October 6, 1967

The

Pag* El*v*n

Spectrum

tudio Arena planned

'Sons andDaughters
play Circle Art Saturday Director Gruenewald discusses
Brecht's "The Threepenny Opera"
'

“Sons and Daughters,” a tea

film
about youth and controversy, will
be shown this Saturday at the
Circle Art Theater. It is the story
of the youth who protest the
policy of war in Vietnam and
those who are drafted to fight.
ire

length documentary

The appeal of the documentary
is its comparison of the dramatically contrasted groups. Told
from their point of view, it communicates directly the understanding of what it is to be young

in the face of war and a society
in crisis and the recent rise of
youth as a potent social and
controversial force. Action mainly takes place in the San Francisco Bay area during the International Days of Protest in October, 1965. However, the film
also has scenes from Vietnam,
Fort Ord (an army training
camp) and the financial district
of San Francisco.

and music

Studio Arena Theatre opened its 1967-68 season with
Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill’s “The Threepenny Opera.”
This international musical is under the able direction of
Tom Gruenwald.
This is Mr. Gruenewald’s second undertaking in the
Buffalo area because last January he directed “After the
Fall.”
He has received great acclaim
for his directorial talents and
recently finished directing the
long-running off-Broadway musical "A Man With A Load of
Mischief.”
Mr. Gruenewald has done quite
a bit of research into the background material pertaining to
“The Threepenny Opera.” He has
gone over countless recordings
and two movie versions in order
to get an idea how others have
presented this musical.
The original “Threepenny
Opera” opened in a small private
theater in Berlin, nearly 40 years
ago on Aug. 31, 1928. Mr, Gruenewald says his first encounter
with “Threepenny” came with listening to an old 78 recording of
a dance band version of the
Tango-Ballad that his parents had
brought with them when they
came to the U.S. from Potsdam,

Tickets for the performance
are available at the Norton Ticket Office.

Entertainment calendar
Friday, Oct. 6:

Monday, Oct. 9:

PLAY: “The Threepenny Opera,” Studio Arena Theatre.

ture, Norton Conf. Theater, 8:30

LECTURE: Barry Goldwater,
Buff. State, Rockwell Hall, 12
noon.

RECITAL: Bach Piano Recital,
Leo Smit, Baird Hall, 8:30 p.m.
FILM; “The Music Room,” Norton Conference Theater.
EXHIBIT: J. Frank Dobie manuscripts and memorabilia. Lockwood Library.

LECTURE: James Fenton Lec-

p.m.

FILMS: “The Thing” and “The
Body Snatchers,” Capen 140, 8
p.m.

Tuesday, Oct. 10:

FILM: “Devil in the Flesh,”
directed by Autant Lara, Norton
Conference Theater, 7 p.m.
JAZZ CONCERT; A1 Bismill Ha
Quartet, Fillmore Room.

Saturday, Oct. 7:

Thursday, Oct. 12:

CONCERT: Peter, Paul and
Mary, Kleinhans, 8 pjn.
FILM: “Sons and Daughters,”
Circle Art, 4 pjn.

PLAY: “Emperor Jones,” Buff.
State, Upton Auditorium, 8:15
pjn. through October 15.

Sunday, Oct. t:

LECTURE: Contemporary
China, Dief. 147, 8 p.m.

Peter, Paul and
Mary, Kleinhans, 8 p.m.
FILM: “The Group,” Buff.
State, Union.
CONCERT;

Germany.

He says; “The rhythms and
orchestrations fascinated me and
represented to me that world of
Berlin in the '20s where my parents courted and where they
saw the original production.”

Friday, Oct. 13:

Purpose

“The purpose of the director
is to represent the author wheth18:
Wednesday, Oct.
er he is alive or dead. That is
CONCERT: Jefferson Airplane, why I have done such extensive
research into Brecht’s musical.
Eastman Theater, Rochester.
I collected all the Kurt Weill recordings I could find, reprints of
old German recordings of the original cast, and his American
works.
“It struck me that when Weill
came to America, he became an
American. He sought out American themes and worked in an
American idiom.
“I feel it is the obligation of
The new dormitory will house
319 students and five faculty the director to delve into every
proctors. Freshmen boarders this area of production—be it costumyear were limited to about 100 ing, set design, acting, or lighting
of the 226 eligible applicants, —and serve the goal of depicting
said HUD, because of a lack of what the author’s vision is.”
Mr. Gruenewald had the actors
suitable housing.

Federal loan to Canisius College
approved; new dorm planned
WASHINGTON (GNS) —A $2.865,000 college bousing loan for
construction of a dormitory and
dining facilities at Canisius College has been approved by the
Department of Housing and Urban Development. The federal
loan will be supplemented by
$80,000 of the college’s funds.

.

“The future of regional theater
at the moment is on a plateau,
and unless it gets more money
from contributions and foundations it can’t grow. It will remain at a standstill because there
is no way possible for adult professionals to work unless they
have better finances.
The stage crews will be smaller, the sets less elaborate, with
more limitations, and the general
quality will decrease. By no
means, though, must the ticket
price increase! I again stress the
need for more governmental and
foundational financial support,”
stated Mr. Gruenewald.

Spectrum Staff Reporter

themselves choose their own costook them to the
racks of the Studio Arena warehouse. local surplus clothing
stores, and their own personal
attic-stored moth-holed old
clothes. He commented: "Here of
course the actor’s personality
sometimes reflects in his choice
of costume, and this 1 feel is very
right for the production.”
“The cast that makes up the
tumes. This

World Premier
“I feel it is very significant
that Buffalo will be the scene of
Edward Albee’s world premiere
of the “Box” and “Quotations
From Chairman Mao Tse-Tung.”
This shows that Buffalo has one
of America's leading regional
theaters in Studio Arena," he
said.
Bertolt Brecht, German dramatist and poet, one of the most
controversial figures in the modern European theater wrote
“The Threepenny Opera" in 1928
with music by Kurt Weill. This
and another less successful opera
marked Brecht’s conversion from
nihilism to Marxism which he
propagated in a series of Lehrstucke, short didactic pieces for

Trheepenny Opera are a group
of fine voices, good actors and
handsome people. This is a good
company to work with, and they
were eager at rehearsals.”

Beam structure
The set for “Threepenny” is
a bare beam structure constructed of lumber and metal from
recent Buffalo demolition work.
The composition is representative
of the slum section of Soho in
London before and during Queen
Victoria’s coronation.
Two of the production problems Mr. Gruencwald confronted

were:

amateur actors.

Staging the play in such a
manner as to present all the
audience with a pleasing picture.
This is especially difficult when
one man is giving a soliloquy.
Where to put the orchestra?
Since Studio Arena has no orchestra pit, he solved this one by
blending the orchestra into the
background scenery of the set
and placing them directly on
stage. This also solves the problem of presenting the audience
with a balanced amount of sound
•

Both Brecht and Weill were
violently anti-Nazi and their
“Threepenny” production was
banned in 1933 by the Nazis, who
attempted to burn all the printed
scores and break all the masters
of the recordings.
"For 20 years," Mr. Gruenewald says, “it was remembered
and talked about by those who
knew it in the early days”—and
now Studio Arena is presenting

•

it for Buffalo audiences.

The Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra
Lukas Foss, Music Director and Conductor
18 CONCERT SERIES
Student Series Tickets only $15!
Opening Concert, Sat., Oct. 21, 8:30 p.m.
Lukas Foss, pianist
Eileen Farrell, soprano
Kleinhans Music Hall
885-5000
—

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•

Friday, October 6, 1967

Spectrum

VULTURES!
You can walk down any street in the
United States, and if you are not in a
position of power, you might be insulted.
Not seriously, but maybe a cop will scream
at you for jaywalking, or a store owner
will kick you out of his store lor just
looking at records and not wanting to buy;
a couple of guys might call you a punk or
give you a funny look. It happens to a
lot of people. Anybody who gets a little
power wants to use it. Some people gel
sick of it, gel fed up with the little nastiness of griping teachers, of boring lobs with
overlording foremen and obnoxious cops.
. .So they
get themselves a symbol ol
power to light back or at least to show
that they won’t blindly submit: A motor-

cycle.

Then the motorcyclist linds that all the
little and big power people with whom
persons normally don't have run-ins—but
nevertheless submit to—start lighting back
because the motorcyclist has encroached on
their power. They beat him up. Or arrest
him. Or psychologically castrate him by
smashing his motorcycle.

So the motorcyclist also joins a group,
to light back more eflectively, to gain a
little more power.

The Spectrum: Why did you become a

Road Vulture?

Denny: Well, I'll tell you: I was tired
of riding around independently on my
bike and getting busted all the time. I
found that when you are riding in a large
group, people think differently. There is
a lot less harassment than what you run
into when you are alone.
The Spectrum: Why did you become a
Road Vulture?

Willy; Well, I'm looking out to have
a good time in the first place, and that’s
what I’ve been doing all my life—joined
seven or eight years ago.
The Spectrum: What do you do for a
good time?
Willy: Well, 1 party all the time. I
party 365 days a year.
The Spectrum; What do you do when
you get together and party?
Willy: Party.
Tommy Bell: It’s like a hard question

answer: Why you joined the Road
Vultures! What we are trying to do ts
different from the original purpose the
club started for, Denny’s been in for a
long time; I’ve been in for a long time,
a hell of a long time. Things have changed.
These things don’t work, they’re out-dated.
to

”

The Spectrum: What things are outdated?
Tommy: Violence, unchanneled violence
like jumping on someone. You could go
down in the city and jump all day. It’s
ridiculous. When we don’t do this, they
are starting to say that we are cowards.
We are trying to stop this from happening,
but it will happen.
Like, society has to exist; people have
to have jobs. But the system, with all
something’s
these wars, poverty, riots
wrong with that system. I’m not saying
we got the answer, but we’re going to
try it, not like we're going to be martyrs
and not party—like we party all the time
—like a lot more than the average person. We're also doing this thing, you
understand, which is a hard job.
—

1

by Danltl Rosenthal
Spectrum Staff Reporter

The Spectrum: Are you actually going
out to change society?
Tommy: To change it, to help change

it, in ways that will be beneficial.
The Spectrum: What’s beneficial?
Tommy: Beneficial is improving the
majority of underprivileged people. Tm
not an underprivileged person myself. I’ve
been in a lot of different places, and I’ve
seen a lot of it. I’ve been with a lot of
different people all over the country.
Like the Blast Village, for example,
three or four miles of solid junk—garbage. The United Nations, The Empire
State Building, Wall Street, and there
are these people—just go down there at
night—you can feel how many people are
stuffed in. I mean it’s a bad thing, but
lately we’ve had to watch out for ourselves so much that we haven’t had the
time to go after these other things. If
we could relate to somebody, if we could

relate to several people—that’s actually
how the strong stuff grows.
And your children will be more and
more regulated—no room for poets—there won’t be anymore need for that.
That’s going a long way, but I think they
should tend more towards the poet.
The Spectrum: What did you think of

the “Psychedelic Summit Conference” that

was held Sept. 18 in the Fillmore Room?
Tommy: I thought it was fair, but I
was disappointed in the awareness.

It’s absurd these people didn’t have to
know why I looked that way. Foolish
stuff like that disappointed me, but there
were some good people there, in fact a
lot of people came afterwards with a lot
of beautiful suggestions and ideas. And
that was the last I heard of them. And
that was disappointing to me because I
figured some could really be interested
and devoted and could come and help.
I had had a much higher opinion of the
whole student body.
We can’t go out on the street. We have
no time to do it. I don’t want to do it
like this: Walk up to some elderly woman and say, “Man, you heard wrong
about us.” These people won’t even understand it. Here, man, with the youths
we have to try to get through. We aren’t
perfect. We don’t claim to be the victors of
the world, or we aren't going to take you
out of bondage and deliver you, but I’d
like to have something like that happen
so it could be true brotherhood again but
still a rational functioning society. It can
happen in this country. This is a wealthy
country. We can do this, we can reach
this beautiful thing love, a final goal so
there are no hassles, there aren’t four
million people in prison and five million
killed in some war here, and a tnousand
people starving—it’s a drag.
People can’t be that blind, that they
don’t know it exists and if they are, it
has to be broken.
The general public are idiots. I can’t
walk down the street without people staring at me. We’re not dying, we’re growing.

There are not enough people to devote
themselves to fighting society. I know a
lot of those Colored cats down there, and
they don’t care if they die or not. These
people will start arming and shooting
back.
The Spectrum: Do you want to see that?
Tommy: No, I don’t want to see it. I
want this thing never to happen.
Sometimes I get the feeling that there
is no hope, that there’s nothing . . . there’s
a beast. It’s impossible, it’s almost impossible to get through, but then every once
in a while something stimulates me. That’s
the way it is now. It’s nerve-wrecking.
The Spectrum: It seems like things are
dividing up, like a lot of people say there
is no hope, and they either accept it
and do nothing, or they don’t accept and
run motorcycles down the street.
Tommy: We’re not defending all the
motorcycle gangs across the country.
That’s another thing: they’re starting to
generalize us with every motorcycle club
in the country. We’re starting to talk to
other people, but the motorcycle club is
another bag in itself and it’s a gas too.
This is, I believe, the only rational thing
left for anybody who is involved to try
and unite everybody else and try to accomplish something, anything. Some are
arming themselves and going out in the
street.
(Not

all the members of the Road Vul-

tures Motorycycle Club hold the same

views as Tommy. Some still have prejudices against Negrooes. Others in retaliation might qome back with more violence
than was practiced against them. They
still have forces like anger and frustration
within themselves that prevent the kind
of unification Tommy talks about.)

�Friday,

Th

October 6, 1967

•

Pat* Thirteen

Spectrum

OFFICIAL BULLETIN
The Official Bulletin is an
authorized publication of the
State University of New York
at Buffalo, for which the Spectrum assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be
sent in Typewritten form to 114
Mrs.
Hayes Hall, attention
Fischer, before 2:00 p.m. the Friday prior to the week of publication. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication.

General notices
Nov. 1, 1967 is the deadline
to apply for admission to The

Faculty of Educational Studies,
formerly the School of Education,
for consideration for the Spring

1968 semester. Forms may be obtained at the general office, 201
Foster Hall.
Air Force ROTC twb year program applicants—Any male student interested in applying for
the AFROTC two year commissioning program, should contact
a faculty member of the Department of Aerospace Studies located in Clark Gym, 831-2945.

Applications are now being
taken for entrance into the program in the Fall of 1968. Any
undergraduate or graduate student may apply if he will have

four full time semesters remain-

ing toward his degree starting in

the Fall of 1968.
The first step in the application procedure is to take the
Air Force Officers Qualification
Test. The test will be given on
October 28, 1967. ALL interested
applicants must register for the
test through the Department of
Aerospace Studies.
The Admission Test for Graduate Study in Business (ATGSB)
is required of all candidates applying for Graduate Programs in
Business Administration and will
be given Saturday, November 4,
1967. Application forms are available in the Graduate Business
Programs office, 121 Crosby Hall,
831-3401, and must be filed with
the Educational Testing Service
two weeks prior to test dates. In
addition the Saturday test dates
for 1968 are February 3, April 6,
July 13, and August 10.

Johnson, Atwater

*

114, one week in advance of the
above scheduled times. At this
time, the receptionist will give
the student registration cards and
a list of instructions to follow

Co.

October 10
ridge Job Corps Center

Edison Bras. Stores, Inc.
Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co.

in the subsequent registration

Defense Contract Audit Agency
Lyhrand, Boss Bros, t
Montgomery

Connecticut Mutual life

Insurance Co.
October 12
Eaton, Yale A Towne, Inc.
YWCA of Buffalo A Erie
County

Peat, Marwick, Mitchell A Co.
Touche, Boss. Bailey A Smart
Percival G. Baby
City of Los Angeles,
Bureau of Engineering
OFFICIAL BULLETIN
All UninnilT College Freshmen
Begin Registration October 16
Registration for next semester
for University College Freshman
students, excluding nurses, will

begin Monday, Oct 16. Students
whose last names begin With the
letters designated below will see
their advisers, plan their programs and register for courses
during the following times;
October 16—A. B, C. D.
October 30—E, F, G. H, I, J. K,
L. H.
November 13—N. O. P. R, S, T,

U. V, W. X. Y. Z.
Students Will make appointments with the University College Receptionist in Diefendorf

procedures.
O. T. students' will pick up
registration material and make
their appointments in Diefendorf
314.
P. T. students will pick up
their registration material and
make their appointments in the
Physical Therapy Department,
264 Winspear. Nursing students
are advised and registered
through the School of Nursing.

Students who do not make their
appointments at the scheduled
time, or who do not keep them
when made, will be required to
register in Clark Gym on Registration Day, January 26, 1968.

All University College sophomores, juniors and seniors begin
registration on Monday, Oct. 23.
Sophomores, juniors and seniors will pick up master cards
and registration material in Diefendorf Reception Area, Room 114,
according to the following alphabetical breakdown to handle the
volume and prevent the irritation
of waiting in long lines:
October 23—a.m.: A, B; p.m.: C, D,
October 24—a.m.: F, G, H; p.m.: I, J,
October 25—a.m.: t, M; p.m.: N, O,
October 26-a.m.: Q, R; p.m.: S,

E.
K.
P.
I.

27-a.m.; u, V, W; p.m. x, y, z.
Distribution of cards will con-

tinue throughout the registration

Last Day
to Register

Oct. 10
_

0. T. students will pick up
registration material and make
their appointments in Diefendorf 314.

FRESHMAN FORUM

P. T. students will pick up registration material and make their
appointments in the Physical
Therapy Department, 264 Winspear.

Nursing students are advised
and registered through the
School of Nursing.

Juniors and seniors in Busi-

ness Administration, Engineering,
Education, Medical Technology,
Pharmacy, please refer to Division Office.

General announcements
October 9
James Fenton Lecture—The
first in a series of five lectures
on the theme “Religion and Modern Society,” will feature Daniel
Callahan, executive editor of
Commonweal. The subject will
be "Religious Experience and the
Contemporary Mind,” Conference
Theater, Norton, 8:30 p.m.
October 10

The

weekly series features Dr. Raymond Ewell, Vice-President for
Research, whose topic is Research
in the University,” Conference
Theater, Norton, 3 p.m.

University

Report—This

The first sessions of the Fresh-

man Forum are postponed one
week and will now meet during

the week of October 16 instead
of the week of October 9. First
meeting will be held in the Conference Theater of Norton Hall
as follows:
Monday, Oct.

16

2

p.m.

16
Tuesday, Oct. 17

3

p.m.

11 a.m.

Thursday, Oct. 19

11

a.m.

Thursday, Oct. 19

3

p.m.

Monday, Oct.

Freshmen are urged to attend
group advisement sessions in
University College in the meantime.
FRESHMAN BASKETBALL—

Head freshman basketball
coach Ed Muto has just announced that there will be a
meeting of all interested freshman candidates. The meeting will
take place Tuesday at 5 p.m. in
Room 65A, Clark Gym.

October

Student testing center registration schedule
Graduate Record Exam
Med. College Admissions Test
Pre-Nursing Exam

period, October 23 to December
15, 1967.

Oct.
Oct.

6
7

Applications

Test
Date

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It's a M easier to turn on by "taking a trip" or contem
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"imponderables' which have bugged man since he came down
from the trees.

It's also a lot easier if you know all the answers to these
onderablcs by repeating some creed or theological statement.

Placement interviews
Please contact the University
Placement Service, 831-3311, to
make appointments and obtain
further information concerning
the following interviews:
October 9

If that what you want, good luck.
On the other hand, if you are gutty enough to ask questions
for which there arc no absolute answers, if you are contrary
enough to want to think for yourself, and if you are willing to
you may be inbe honest with yourself, even if it hurts
terested in UNITARIANISM.
UNITARIANISM is a religion for those who can't quite
go along, those who believe that the search for human values
is more important than accepted creeds or theological formulations, those who believe that the churches should be more interested in the Brotherhood of Man than in the supernatural.
—

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To do so, suite, call (MS-2134), or visit

—

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Friday, October 6, 1967

Spectrum

•

Cornell grouprecommends that school State University dropout
give up campus law enforcement role rate now more than 25%
IJIHACAJmIy!

commission at Cornell University
has recommended that the university give up its law enforcement activities on campus, and
restrict its disciplinary authority
over students “solely to acts of
misconduct damaging to its (the
university's) educational objectives.”
Previously the university has
helped local law-enforcement authorities apprehend law-breakers
at Cornell, particularly marijuana
users.

The commission’s lengthy report, released today, also called
for a greater student voice in
disciplinary matters on campus.

Now that the report has been
made public, there will probably
be several months of discussion
and debate on campus before faculty, .administration and student
groups put its recommendations
to a vote. There are already indications, however, that some
parts of the report face tough
sledding.

CONTACT
WEARERS!

by Carol

the commission found that “the
behavior and attitude accompanying student use of marijuana”
were damaging to the university’s
educational environment, and that
therefore the university should
have regulations against the “possession, use or sale” of it.
In' the view of David Radin,
editor of the Cornell Daily Sun,
such a marijuana policy would
be in some ways a retrogression
from the previous policies.
“It appears to me,” said Radin,
“that the commission approached
the issue with the idea that marijuana had to be kept off campus.”
He added that the Sun would
definitely come out against that
part of the report.
Another of the commission’s
recommendations that may come
in for criticism is the one calling
for faculty review of certain cases
adjudicated by the student's Conduct Board. According to the
report, the faculty board should
be able to review the student
board’s decisions under “extraordinary circumstances,” when it
is necessary to “rectify any gross
miscarriage of justice.”
Radin says that the faculty
board should not be able to initiate such a review. He believes
the faculty should review only

defendants.
Radin praised some parts of the
report, particularly the section
that recommends an end to university handling of civil cases
involving students.
"This means that a student who
gets arrested for being drunk
downtown won’t have his case
turned over to the university,”
Radin explained. “He’ll have to
go to court. It ends the privileged
position of students.”
The commission, which includes
faculty, administration and student representatives, was set up
last spring after months of growing student unrest over the
administration’s disciplinary policies, particularly with regard to
outside authorities.
The administration’s aid to law
authorities included allowing one
state agent to pose as a student
in order to investigate marijuana
use on campus, and turning over
names of students suspected of
marijuana use to local authorities.
Students were unhappy about
that policy. Many of them also
protested when the university
tried to curtail the activities of
an S.D.S. group that was recruiting students to go to New York
and burn their draft cards.

BUFFALONE A N
PICTURE APPOINTMENTS CAN BE
MADE THIS WEEK IN

—

system won’t graduate with their classmates.
Some will flunk out; many others will drop out because
of financial, medical or military reasons. Some will quit because theyTie bored. A few will join the Peace Corps and
a few will drop out and return later.
The dropout-flunkout rate complete their programs.
was tallied by the University Private schools compared
Division of Institutional reAn accurate comparison of
search.
SUNY’s dropout flunkout rate
-

A spokesman said the 25.2%
attrition rate is based on the
number of four-year students who
graduated last June as compared
with the number who entered as
freshmen in September 1962.

How does this compare with
other dropout rates?
U.S. Department of Education
statistics gathered from all public and private colleges and universities in the nation show that
for every 3.8 entering students
there will be only 15 graduates
in four years.
That means half the students
who enter college in America
won't graduate at the end of their
four-year program.
Ernest L. Boyer, SUNY Vice
Chancellor for University-Wide

Facilities, commented:
“We’ve been aware of this
(SUNVs comparatively low attrition rate) but we don’t know
what it means about the system.
“We like it We’re in favor of
our students completing their
programs. Hopefully it will persist; hopefully it will improve.
Our goal is to have all students
Com* Worship With Us This
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with that of private four-year
colleges in the state can’t be
drawn because of different methods used in computing the rate.
For example, the 15% attrition
rate at Columbia College in New
York City would be almost twice
as high, figures show, if it included the number of students
who drop out and return to graduate later, as the SUNY rate does.
At Cornell University, however,
statisticians have worked out
comparative dropout figures for
the university’s private divisions
and its state-operated schools.
At the state-operated School
of Home Economics the attrition
rate is 25%. But at the School
of Agriculture—also state-run
it’s a whalloping 52%. And 43 of
every 100 students who enter the
State School of Industrial and
Labor Relations fail to graduate.
Counting state and private divisions, Cornell’s average dropoutflunkout rate is 31%. At its prestigious College of Arts and Sciences, 34% fail to graduate.
Why do collegians drop out?
State University spokesmen
gave several reasons for the dropout rate. Flunkouts make up only
a small percentage of the dropouts, but academic problems often
prevent students from graduating
on time. Many drop out for a semester or two then return to
graduate later.
Another sizeable portion transfer to private colleges and many
quit because of desire to get
armed forces services over with,
the call of the Peace Corps, sickness, family problems, money and
boredom.
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�Friday, October 6, 1967

TN» Spectrum

the spectrum of

sports

emple previe

Bulls face tough Temple club
in 'key' homecoming clash
by Doug Colbort
Spectrum Staff Reporter

Hopeful of bouncing back after
a disappointing loss to Virginia
last week. Doc Urich will bring
his charges back to the friendly
confines of Rotary Field where
they will entertain the Owls of
Temple University this week in
the annual Homecoming Game in
a 1:30 p.m. clash.

The luck of the Irish ran out last Saturday when Notre Dame
Purdue. 28 to 21. This was the greatest
that’s happened in Lafayette, Indiana since the glaciers started to
recede. Phipps passed for two fourth quarter touchdowns and Parseghian realized it wasn’t St. Patrick's day. With a name like the
Boilermakers, Purdue was bound to have quite a kick.
This wasn’t really an upset because Steve Weller picked it. And
anyway, the way this college football season's going, Slippery Rock
could meet UCLA and it would be a tossup.

Passing the buck
Last Saturday also proved to be a day of frustration for Buckpasser and Dr. Fager. Mrs. Edith W. Bancroft’s Damascus with Willie
Shoemaker up won the $107,800 Woodward at Aqueduct by ten
lengths over his highly touted competition. As far as Mrs. Bancroft
is concerned her three year old colt is fast disproving the old adage
that dog is man’s best friend. A lot of horse players aren’t quite so

sure.
Sox win in spite

Temple University.

Tom DeFelice
_

_

one of Owls' two starting quarterbacks who helped rewrite
Temple recordbook last year.

—

DeFelice, meanwhile led Tem-

ple to its initial win against Kings
Point by engineering two last
quarter scores and is more of a
threat running with the ball than

Waller is. However, Tom also
completed 57% of his passes, good
for 800 plus yards last season
and will see plenty of action
should Waller fail to move the

sive an end as Speedy Jim Callahan. Callahan’s first ten catches
as a sophomore last year went for
touchdowns, including five in one
game, and he will have to be
watched closely by the UB secondary. The Owls’ other receivers
will be senior George Agalias.
who is as sure-handed a receiver
as Callahan although not as dangerous, and tight end Ed Poostay,
whose size makes him valuable
in establishing a running game.

Although Temple concentrates
on throwing the ball, their running game has improved from
game-to-game, averaging better
than 150 yards per game so far
this season. Led by veteran fullback Hike Derchak, who ran for
100 yards in the opening game,

team.

and halfbacks Bob Eastwick and
Mike Busch, Temple seems to
present a well-balanced and dangerous offensive threat.

Callahan a threat

Sophs surprise

Although Temple lost their two
top pass receivers at graduation,
both quarterbacks are fortunate
to be able to throw to as explo-

Temple’s offensive line has
played well so far and has made
the running game click. A big
surprise has been the play of
sophomores Steve Caporiccio,
who has excellent agility for a
man his size and Chad Kern, who
although small for his position is
one of Temple’s most talented
guards. Rounding out the offensive line are veteran guard Frank
McAleer, tackle Rusty Maugal
and center Nick Govelovich.

The Bulls can expect to see a
veteran defensive lineup when
they have the ball, including nine
lettermen and two newcomers.
The defensive backfield is led by
all-Middle Atlantic Conference
defensive back for two years, Arnold Smith and includes veteran
seniors Bill Blick, John Tomosky
and junior Joe Mancine.

Jim Callahan
averaging better than 25 yards
per

catch.

Sometimes the world of sports whirls faster than reporters’ typewriters. In the last ten days so much has happened on the sports beat
that this twice weekly periodical has been unable to keep pace with
the action. Thus, it is necessary now to take a moment out and reflect
upon the recent heroics performed in the athletic arena.
It all started a little over a week ago, when a very hungry Emile
Griffith regained his middleweight crown by defeating Nino Benvenuti in a fifteen round bout at Shea Stadium in New York.JEveryone among the 20,000 plus gathering at Shea, which included a great
many of Benvenuti’s countrymen who had made the trip expressly
for the contest, agreed that the muscular Griffith had jabbed and
bulled his way back to the 160 pound title. Everyone, that is, except
referee Tommy Walsh who strangely scored the fight a 7-7-1 draw.
Griffith proved that training on spaghetti and vino will never
supplant a steak and milk diet. One question about the fight still
remains however. If a fighter feasts on lasagna and veal scallopine
and other nutrients doused with plenty of garlic, oregano and mozzerel, how could he run out of gas?

lost to Mike Phipps and

The Bulls always seem to play
their best ball at home and this
week hopefully should be no exception. At least they had better
be prepared to, for they meet
one of the strongest offensive
teams they will face this year in

(totaling 1174 yards).

by Bob Woodruff

Luck ran out

This game must be tabbed as
the key to the Bulls’ seaon, since
a third straight loss would seriously hurt their chances of improving on last year’s 5-5 mark,
while a win might serve as the
impetus needed to get the Bulls
rolling to a victorious season.

Led by quarterback John Waller and Tom DeFelice—who together combined to rewrite the
Owl record books last fall
and
a veteran backfield, Temple presents a stiff challenge to UB's
defensive eleven. Waller, who
beat out Terry Hanratty (Notre
Dame quarterback) for the starting in the annual PennsylvaniaTexas high school slugfest three
years ago, won schoolboy AllAmerican honors that year and
has more than lived up to his
reputation at Temple. Last year
he set five school passing records,
including throwing for 17 touchdowns among his 76 completions

Sportin' Life

Smith intercepted eight passes
last year and was named to the
ECAC weekly all-star team three
times.
The Owls work out for a 5-4

variation defense. Temple’s big
four up front will include two
fierce pass rushers in ends Craig

Parsons and Wayne Colman, con-

sidered by coach George Makris
to be one of the finest defensive
ends Temple has had in recent
years. The other two big linemen
up front are Gerry Twardowski
and Dennis Woomer.

Injuries have healed
After completing the toughest
part of their schedule, the Bulls
would enjoy nothing more than
knocking off Temple and getting
back on the winning trail. Sev-

eral key players, including linemen Teddy Gibbons, Joe Ricelli,

and Jim Finoccio and backs Rick
Wells, Ken Rutkowski, and Pat
Patterson, were all injured in the
Virginia game, but all should see
action this week. UB’s defensive
line should contain Temple’s running game early, and will have
to if they are to stop the WallerDeFelice to Callahan passing
combination.

Quarterback Mickey Murtha,
who played so well against Kent
State in the opener, has been
erratic the last two weeks, suffering six interceptions over that
period. He’s due for a really solid
performance and should be a
match for Temple’s quarterbacks.
The defensive secondary should
have its bands full all afternoon,
but if enough pressure is applied,
their job will be that much easier. The Bulls’ players realize the
importance of this game and
should be able to stop Temple's
passing game without too much
damage suffered, while establishing a ground game of their own
which should loosen up Temple’s
defenses.
The sky should be filled with
footballs Saturdays in a wideopen, high-scoring, action-filled
contest, but with UB’s more diversified attack proving the difference in the game.

After 161 games there was a three way lie in the American
League. After 162 games, the Boston Red Sox were league champions.
It’s been 21 years since the beantowners won the flag, and they did
so in spite of owner Tom Yawkey. Yawkey is about as progressive an
owner as Simon Legree, and his Boston team was one of the last
two clubs to integrate in baseball. An open mind could have brought

the Hub that pennant ten years sooner.
Carl Yastrzemski proved this year that he is ready to fill the
super star void into which baseball has slipped. Yaz became the
eleventh ballplayer to take the triple crown, and his defensive skills
are superb. On the final day of the season the Bosox left fielder went
four for four and pegged out the potential tying run at second base
to end the eighth inning.

at the Glenn
Sunday at Watkins Glenn the seventh annual American Grand
Prix was run and Scotland’s Jimmy Clark set a new average speed
mark of 120.95 m.p.h. in winning the race. It took Clark nearly four
hours to earn $20,000, which was less than half what a horse won in
two minutes the day before. Anyway, most of the 80,000 people in attendance were college age folk who couldn’t care less who won the
race. A lot of what happened at the Glenn this weekend could not
come under the heading of sports. A good .time was had by all.

Fun

Hope defeated

There were a few other newsworthy items this weekend:
e Despite a rumor to the contrary the Mcts did finish IN the
National League.
e The State University of Buffalo played football in Virginia
enough said).
The Bills showed up at War Memorial Stadium for the fourth
consecutive week.
Hope was defeated. That’s Hope College who dropped a 12-0
decision to Wheaton in their annual grid clash on Saturday.
All this and my editor only gives me a page and a half.
•

•

Cleveland State hands Cross
Country team second defeat
The State University of Buffalo Cross Country team dropped
its second meet in three outings
this year when undefeated Cleveland State University scored a
17-46 victory at Grover Cleveland
Park on Saturday .Rain and mud
hampered the Hamers in this
late afternoon match, but Cleveland’s Dale Peters turned in a

respectable winning time at 21:58
for the four mile course The
The Bulls’ Jimmy Hughes’ fourth
place finish averted a whitewashing for Coach Fisher’s runners.
Buffalo Captain Mike Alspach

finished ninth. The Bulls host

Niagara Community College tomorrow at 3:30 p.m. at Grover
Cleveland Park.

Bulls Opponents Results
Bulls’ Opponents Results,
Schedule
Last Saturday's results
Kent State 21, Ohio U. 14
H. Carolina State 20, Fla. S. 10
U. of Virginia 35, UB 12
Temple U. 22, Boston U. 16
Army 21. Boston College 10
Holy Cross 26, Yale 14
Villanova 21, U. of Delaware 13
Columbia 17, Colgate 14

Saturday, Oct. 7
Temple at UB
(kickoff 1:30, Rotary Field)
Boston University at Harvard
Holy Cross at Dartmouth
Delaware at Hofstra
N. Carolina Stato at Houston
U. of Virginia at Wake Forest
Vlllanova at Virginia Tech
Cornell at Colgate
Miami (Ohio) at Kent State

�Pag*

Th

Sixteen

•

Friday, October 6, 1967

Spectrum

Bull golf team defeats Canisius;
Santelli, Bader, Bernard shine
by Jay Schmiber
Ipufnen SMtf Reporter

The State University of Buffalo Golf Team sampled the

sweet taste of revenge Tuesday, when they defeated Canisius
by a score of 11-7. With the triumph the Bulls upped their
season mark to 3-2 and redeemed themselves for an earlier
loss they had suffered to the same Canisius team.
Playing in a strong wind that
hampered nery one's shooting,
the Bulls were led to victory by
newcomer Ted Besinger, who
shot a low medal score of 73.
Ted, who was on the vanity team
last year, was participating in his
first intercollegiate match of the
season. An eighteen hour program and the debating team bad
kept Ted from the course through
the first four matches Free now
to compete for the rest of the
year Ted will replace
Bill
Ahrendtsen who was forced to
leave the team due to a heavy

scholastic schedule

Red Sox
triumph

Another happy story for the
Bulls was that Tony Santrlh, who
shot a 75, pot together individual
success with the team's for the

Red Sox fans mob their pitcher Jim Lonborg after
he downed the Minnesota Twins Sundays, giving
Boston their first American League pennant in

NFL dominated' by three teams

sport.

Baltimore, the offensive
giant, is but one man. His
name is John Unitas and his
quarterbacking genius has
never been surpassed.
Last week Jack Christiansen
San Francisco coach, said that
Unitas could play with ten girls
and still win football games. He
averages over 350 yards a game
passing and a so completely dominates the game that he is a
legend in his own time.
Los Angeles, the opportunist,
combines the best of both; a defense that scores two touchdowns
a game and a balanced offense
whose strength lies in versatility
if not in actual greatness. The
Rams don’t really have any individual stars but instead substitute desire, quickness and above
all confidence
the ingredients
of a champion.
Neither a defensive secondary,
a single man, nor determination
can win a football championship,
but it says here that one of these
titans will be the best in the
—

Cleveland 31, Pittsburgh 21:
Without Gary Collins, Cleve-

land still rolled over New Orleans

last week to the tune of 42-7.
Collins will return this week and
will provide along with Paul Warfield the double barreled threat
that makes Cleveland go. Pittsburgh to plop to cellar.
Baltimore 31, Chicago 13; Who
would you rather have as quarterback, Larry Rakestraw or What’shis-name from Baltimore?
Dallas 35, Washington 24; The
Cowboys were corraled last week
by the rough, tough Rams. With
the inexperienced J. A. Taxel replacing injuried Paul Krausse,
Bob Hayes should have no trouble
humbling the Redskin secondary.
New York 56, New Orleans 55:
The star studded defensive units
of these two teams managed to
hold their opposition to a total
of 80 points last week. Here is
our prediction: No pass will fall
incomplete, no quarterback will
be flattened, no punts will be attempted, no runner will be tackled and the Saints will blow an

land.

extra point!

Last week Springville suffered
its worst week with an 8-4 slate.
San Diego’s drubbing of the Bills
37St. Louis’ upset of Detroit
38Oakland’s victory over Kan-

Philadelphia 34, Atlanta 7: Philadelphia consistently scores 34
points and Atlanta consistently
scores 7 points. One of the questions we consistently ask ourselves is “Why should this day
be different from all other days?”

sas City 23-21 and Washington's
freakish win over the Giants
38-34 all eluded us. Football is
a funny game and you laughed
at our prediction of Houston 4—
Denver 2 but how far off is 108?
All this left us with a percentage

of .765, still tops in the country.

National Football Laagua

Croon Boy 20, Detroit 13: In
the seasons opener, the lions
surprised the Packers and held
them to a 17-17 tie. Although
Jim Grabowski hasn't quite filled
Jim Taylor’s shoes at fullback,
the defense-minded Packers seem
to score just enough to win. This
traditional contest should prove
to be a traditional Green Bay victory.

St. Louis 27, Minnesota 13: Certain teams should be eliminated
after the first week of the season. Minnesota is one such club.
The comedy team of Vanderkelen,
Berry and Kapp are too busy
laughing at each other to mount
any offensive threat.

Los Angelos 30, San Francisco
14: This will be a tune up game
for the Rams in preparation for
their big game in Baltimore next

week. The West Coast rivalry
should be billed as the West
Coast mismatch this year. Try and
say “West Coast mismatch” three
times fast.

The team will also compete in
a separate tournament, the BrookLea Invitational, to be played in

Rochester.

BUFFALO
I- Tony Santelli

2. Mike Rigcr
3. Gory Bader
4. Doug Bernard
5. Ted Beringcr
6. Rob Stone

TOTAL

11

CANSMIS
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
4.

Jack
Dave

Russell
Boice

3

Dave Thompson
Jack Boke
Evan

Williams

Mike Rehak

....

TOTAL

2Vi
7

first time in five msteher No
more frustration for Tony, who
in the words of Coach Scrfostini
‘is one of the top golfers in the
area, if not the best”.

Pro picks

By Springville
It has been said that the National Football League has
ceased to exist. The explanation is simple; Green Bay, Baltimore and Los
Never have three teams so totally
dominated a sport, and yet each in its own right stands paramount in its specialty
Green Bay, the World’s Champion, is the essence of
football; a ferocious defense, featuring a defensive secondary
which has given up an average of only fifty yards through
the air and a methodical offense whose precision defies all

Serfustini the fourth slot is still
up foe grabs.

American Football League
Oakland 28, New York 17: New
York has never won a big game.
Namath has been able to throw
at will against Denver and Miami, but the Raiders have a secondary which should stop Our
Boy. The Jets ground attack suffered greatly with the loss of
Matt Snell. Fresh from beating
Kansas City, Oakland should gain
their fourth straight.

After playing Buffalo State today the team will travel on Saturday to the BCAC regional! in
Syracuse. Every college will have
four players competing, each of
whom will shoot strictly on a

score basis for eighteen holes.
The two teams whose four
players have the lowest accumu-

lative total wiU advance to the
Eastern finals in FarmingdaJe,
Long Island. Joining these two
teams will be the ten low scorers
of the regional!, regardless of
whether the player’s team has or
has not advanced.

San Diego 20, Boston 10: The
only favorable yardstick we have
Representing the Bolls will be
to measure Boston is their vic- Tony Santelli, Gary Bader and
tory over Buffalo and that yardTed Beringer. According to Coach
stick is only two feet long. San
Diego manhandled the hapless
Bills last week and to remain in
contention in the West they must
win again. Mike Holovak, Boston

Doug Bernard

scored 3-0 over Griffin opponent in Tuesday's golf match.

UPI major college ratings

coach, says he’ll win it in the
East with a 10-4 record. It looks
as if he'll need nine in a row
NEW YORK (UPI) —The Unitafter Sunday.
ed Pres International major college football ratings with first
Kansas City 28, Miami 3: Upset
place votes and wow lost-tied recof the week: Kansas City only
ord in parentheses:
scores four touchdowns.
Bills 5, Denver 3: Buffalo’s
ferocious defense to tell the tale.
No touchdowns in this one. The
return of rampaging Wray Carlton should add more than the
usual amount of dust to the Bill’s
attack. Tom Flores should open
a flower shop in Depew.

283
280
280
253
181

1. Southern Cal 11 (30)
(30)
2. UCLA
3. Houston 10 (30)
4. Purdue 7 (20)
5. Georgia (20)
?

6.
7.
3
9.
10.

Nebraska (2-0)

111
91
86
80

Notre Dame (1-1)

Missouri (20)
Colorado (20)
Alabama (10-1)

S3

Saeond 10—11, Wyoming 38;
12. Texas Tech 32; 13, tie Florida,
Tennessee 23; 15, Georgia Tech
19; 16, Oklahoma 15; 17, Syracuse
13; 18, Oregon State 9; 19, Louisiana State 8; 20, North Carolina
State 7.

Standings and weekend schedules
for professional football leagues
By United Press Internet!

Coastal Drama

Eastern Conference

W

Century Division

W L
St. Louis
2 1
Cleveland
1 2
Pittsburgh
1 2
New York
1 2
Capitol Division
W L
_.._2 1
Washington
Dallas
2 1
Philadelphia
.2 1
New Orleans
0 3
Western Conference
Central Division
W L
Green Bay
Detroit
Chicago.
Minnesota

T Pet.
0 .667
0

.Cil

0 .667
0 .000

T Pet.
1 1.000
.1 1 1 .500
.1 2 0 .333
.0 3 0 .000
.2

....

T Pet.
X .667
0 .333
0 .333
0 .333

0

Los Angeles
Baltimore

San Francisco
Atlanta

L T
3 0 0
3 0 0
2 1 0
0 3 0

Pet.
1.000
1.000
.667
.000

Pittsburgh at Cleveland
Only game wrhrdaled

Philadelphia at Atlanta
Baltimore at Chicago
Dallas at Washington
Green B*y at Detroit
San ftaauwa at lat Angeles

New Orleans at New York

AFL STANDINGS
By United Press International
Eastern Division
New York

Houston

...

Buffalo
Boston
Western Division

W L T Pet.
1 0 .667
2 0 .500
1 2 0 .333
I 3 0 .250
1 3 0 .250

...2
...2

W

L T Pet.
0 1.000
0 1.000
0 .667
0 .200

Oakland
...3 0
San Diego
...3 0
2 1
Kansas City
1 4
Denver
Saturday's Gamas
Oakland at New York
San Diego at Boston
Sunday's Gamas
Buffalo at Denver
Miami at Kansas City

�Friday, October 6, 1967

Tfc* S pactra m

Pag* SwwitHw

The Hoople predicts

comes to horse
Death
college
ball
developing
Trends
in
who finished second

As the 1967 college football season is reaching its third
full week, there are definite trends developing in respect
—to the top teams in the nation.
Starting in the West coast, UCLA and USC shape up to
be two offensive powerhouses and many sportswriters feel
that their November 18 clash may decide the no. 1 team
in the nation.
Notre Dame, although it was
upset by Purdue last week, still
appears to be the most solid
team in the Midwest while in
the South a football dynasty appears in the making for the

Houston Cougars. Rounding out

the nation, in the East, Syracuse
with a dynamic defense seems to
be the class, while in the Rockies,
Colorado Buffaloes are a good
bet to dethrone Nebraska as the
Big Eight conference Champion.
Last week my picks went 8
and 4 for a .667 average. Upset
on Notre Dame and Arkansas
highlighted the week while other
top ten teams advanced handily
through their schedule. This
week my guest columnist is “The
Schweig.” Here once again are
the Hoople Picks of the Week:
Colorado 24, Iowa State 7:
Colorado has looked extremely
good in the opening weeks of the
season and is looking forward to
their Oct. 21 clash with Nebraska.
Iowa State defeated New Mexico

last week but will not be able
to repeat that triumph against
the formidable Buffaloes.
Houston 35, North Carolina 14:
The Cougars have rolled up unbelievable scores in the process
of devastating their first three
opponents. State is a very tough
team as illustrated in the Bulls
game but any teams who can give
Buffalo over 300 yards offense
shouldn’t be in the same game
as the mighty Houston team.
UCLA 28, Penn State 14; Led
by the Great- One, Gary Beban
the UCLANS will roll over the
Nittany Lions. Look for speedy
Bruin halfback Greg Jones to be

All-American this year and he
will show why in this week's
game.
USC 24, Stanford 7: The Trojans of U§C have displayed great
team balance in their games so
far. Led by speedsters Hull, Lawrence and the fabulous O.J.
Simpson, John McKay's boys
should run over through and
around the Indian’s line.
Purdue 17, Northwestern 14:
Last week Purdue pulled the upset of the season as it defeated
the mighty Irish of Notre Dame.
The Boilermaker’s soph sensation, quarterback Mike Phipps,
teaming with highly regarded Leroy Keyes, should provide enough
momentum to defeat the Wildcats who last week lost a squeaker to Missouri.
Bulls 14, Temple 13: This one
should be a toss-up between two
evenly rated teams. Temple is undefeated this year owning victories over Kings Point and
Boston University. The Bull’s effectiveness will depend on the
outcome of some key injuries sustained in last week’s game, but
Doc Urich’s boy’s should provide
a happy Homecoming for the
Buffalo Alumni.
Tulane 20, Miami 14: Playboy
picked Miami to be the number
one team in the nation but they
have lost successively to Northwestern and Penn State, two
teams which are no powerhouses.
Tulane is building up a good
football team, and last week’s
36-11 victory over North Carolina
is an indication of things to come.
The men of Jolly Charlie Tate

will lose their third in a row in

the Upset of the Weak.
Texas 14. Oklahoma State 10:

Oklahoma St. beat Arkansas two
weeks ago. bat so did Tulsa last
Saturday. Darrell Royal's club
led by quarterback BUI Bradley
aHd halfback Chris Gilbert are
too good a team to lose three in
a row. Texas will begin winning
this Saturday.
Alabama 21, Mississippi 17:
Alabama, after an opening tie
with Florida St. bounced back
to beat Southern Mississippi 25-3.
Mississippi already has lost to
Memphis St Kenny Stabler, who
once threw the ball out of bounds
on fourth down to stop the clock,
is still a good quarterback. Alabama always seems to win the
big games.
Michigan St. 28, Wisconsin 14:
State has lost two in a row to
Houston and Southern California.
However, led by quarterback
Jimmy Rave and halfback Dwight
Lee, they are still a very good
football team. Wisconsin isn’t as
bad as in recent years but they
are not in the class of Michigan

State.

Notre Dame 40. Iowa 6: The
men of Ara Parseghian are going
to be out for revenge after last
week's 28-21 defeat at the hands
of Purdue. Terry Hanratty will
be bark on the beam and Notre
Dame will role up a big score.
Iowa's Baumgartner will have
trouble bucking the big Notre
Dame line.

Georgia 28, South Carolina 0:
Georgia could be the top team
in the nation and its game with
Houston on Nov. 4 should be the
game of the year. Georgia's Ronnie Jenkins is one of the nation’s
top fullbacks and their defense is
among the best in the country.

NEW YORK

(UP1

out as a winner.
The brilliant son of Tom Fool,
the third highest money winner
of all time, was retired to stud
Monday after finishing second to
Damascus in last Saturday’s heralded $107,800 Woodward Stakes.
A sore foot, which has plagued
Buckpasser throughout his sensational career, flared up again
during that race and caused the
decision to retire the horse now
instead of at the end of this
season as originally planned.

“Under the circumstances,
there was nothing else to do but
retire him,” owner Ogden Phipps
said of the colt who has won 25

behind Kelso and Round Table
on the list of all-time moneywinners.

Buckpasser, who finished fourth
in his racing debut as a 2-gearold on May 13, 1965 and never
again was out of the money,
came out of the race with "heat
in the area of his right front
pastern,” according to trainer
Eddie Neloy.
Buckpasser will take up stud
duties next year, standing at the
Claiborne Farm in Paris, Ky. As
a stallion, he will be owned by
a syndicate because Phipps sold
16 of 31 breeding shares in Buckpasser for $2,400,000, fixing the
value of the colt at $4,800,000.

Sex rules out athletic champ
Ewa
KIEV, USSR. (UP1)
Klobukowska, co-holder of the
women's world record for the
100-meter dash, has been ruled
ineligible for the women's European athletics cup competition
because she failed to pass the
necessary sex test, it was an—

blonde 21-year-old Polish athlete
was the first person to be disqualified under the regulation
requiring such tests.

Not everyone on The

nounced Friday.

Spectrum staff is a writer.

The tests were begun a year
ago in response to complaints
that some of the women contestants were more masculine than
feminine. It was decided to give
such athletes physical examinations to see if they had masculine

In fact, little more than
half actually do any writing!

physical characteristics.

Female

the
European games, which begin in
Kiev late today, were examined
by a board of three Soviet and
three Hungarian doctors. The
competitors

We need help on our

for

Don*! laugh at
Charles Van der Hoff' s
big ears. He can hear
a party a mile away
thanks to Sprite.

copy staff, layout staff,
and advertising staff.

If you can't write, but
want

newspaper experi-

if you want to help
make things happen
or
ence;

—

know the people who do

,

..

.

JOIN THE SPECTRUM

STAFF.

majors, take a
!

'harles Van der
can't play the
Never directed
nderRround
ivie. And then
iok at his ears!
bit much? Yes!
lut--Charles Van
ler Hoff can hear
bottle of tart,

IQ
in life insurance means Investment
Quotient
what you get for what you pay
in premiums. My company leads all others
in I.Q.
...

lat does it

.er, you say?
n! Do you realize

The Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co.
290 Main Street
835-2651

2828 Bailey Ave.
FEATURING THIS FRIDAY ONLY:

Buffet Dinner
—

All You Can Eat

$1.25
5:00 P.M. till

?

tion.

ingling Sprite
ing opened in the
.s' dormitory
across the

PAUL A. WEYER, Special Agent

SPORISMEN'S INN

Stop up and see us this
afternoon. Have a cup of
coffee. Watch the opera-

;hat Charles Van

ler Hoff has never
missed a party
in four years?
When he hears
hose bottles
the roars--the
is! So before you
\e's getting in

on that tart.
Sprite- And de
--as veil as ■
Of course,
have ears as I
der Hoff's to
taste of Spr;
just have to s
yourself to a
less social 1

The only full coverage
student newspaper on the

Niagara Frontier.

©

The

Spectrum

—

355 Norton Hall
831-2210

�X

Th

Pag* Eighteen

•

?

Friday, October 6, 1967

Spectrum

U.S. space effort
slowing to a halt
The
WASHINGTON (UPI)
American space effort, urgently
accelerated when the Russians
orbited Sputnik I a decade ago,
is slowing to a crawl and is
headed toward a complete stop,
according to the head of the U.S.
—

k

Space Agency.

Webb, head of the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration NASA, was asked what
would happen if Congress cut an
additional $1 billion from the
agency’s fiscal 1968 budget.
“I think we’d put a great deal
of the equipment that we need
in mothballs and close down
a good many of our installations,”
he replied.
...

Iasi

James E. Webb, interviewed
on the 10th anniversary of the
first successful satellite launching, told UPI that for all practical purposes the U.S. space program will end after the Apollo
project lands a man on the moon,
probably sometime after 1970, unless plans are changed.

0^

Meanwhile, the Soviet Union
marked the anniversary with the
promise of more Russian surprises in the coming decade. “A
group of Soviet cosmonauts is
preparing for new exploits,” said
the Soviet Communist party newspaper Pravda.

Program will stop
Would the space program then
stop?

“It’s going to stop anyway under the present programs,” he
answered.
“We have no flights to planets
planned after the Mariner flights
in 1969,” he explained. “We will
have no manned flights beyond
the Apollo system,” he said,

redshen L.a

law

There’s an M &amp;T Bank
almost everywhere
Ready to help you
with over 100 different services.
Over 60 locations throughout
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right where you want us.

M&amp;T BANK
Main-Winspear Office

After you’ve met
the challenge?
If you're the kind of Civil Engineer
we’re looking for, you'll start searching for another one to conquer. Here
at the Pennsylvania Department of
Highways, we offer a host of challenges to the right man. But, to be
that right man, you've got to be pretty

University Plaia Office
MEMBER F. D. I. C.

special.

You see, we search out and encourage Civil Engineers whom we consider
capable of grasping a challenge;
skilled men, comparable to the great
Engineers who are "building Tomorrow today in Pennsylvania." If you
can measure up to the standards
necessary to fulfill Pennsylvania's $10
billion plan to lead the nation in highways, we'd consider it a challenge just
to get to know you.
A Pennsylvania Department of
Highways Career Representative will
visit your campus. To arrange for an
appointment, or if you desire
hadditional infor'*
mation, contact the
a
j
\\
placement office.
f
—

HOW MUCH COULD YOU MAKE SELLING SPECTRUM ADS?

INTERVIEW DATE:

Probably not enough to buy that car you've been eyeing. But,
you would make enough to pay for those liquid lunches. More
important, you would gain valuable business experience, meet
many area businessmen and become more active in campus
life.

Pennsylvania
Department of Highways

see DAVE FOX

Bureau of Personnel
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania 17102

Spectrum Advertising

Meneger

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831-3610

October 18

t

"

�Th

Friday, October 6, 1967

Short blasts
The brothers of Alpha Phi Delta will be honored this weekend
by a visit by our national officers. The brothers and the officers will attend the UB-Temple
football game and then join the
alumni for a cocktail party at
the Three Coins . . . The brothers
of Alpha Sigma Phi are holding
a beer party at the Flying “E”
tonight. There will be cocktail
party tomorrow night at the
Peter Styvesant. We wish brothers Murtha, Remillard and Kovey

the best of luck in tomorrow’s
game with Temple . . Gamma
Phi will hold a dated liquor party
tonight. Rushees will attend by
invitation only . . . Tau Kappa
.

iomputer

WASHINGTON (GNS)
The
victory of Louise Day Hicks in
the Boston mayoral primary
Tuesday adds weight to the sus—

Reporter

The restrictions placed on National Fraternities are continually manifesting themselves. To date, 120 men have registered for Fall rush. Last year 165 registered. This decrease
is lamentable but not serious, for the men that did register
are going to pledge.
Bidding for all who registered
takes place on October 9 and 10
in the I.F.C. office (346 Norton)
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. On these
dates, each man will list his personal choice of fraternity and,
with a subsequent acceptance
by the group, will be assigned
to the fraternity’s pledge class.
Bidding will be conducted by secret ballot and each rushee will
be notified of the results within
the week.

Pag* Nln*t**n

Spectrum

White backlash
candidates wins

Fraternity rush suffers
due to new restrictions
Spectrum Staff

•

Epsilon will hold a “night at the
races” this weekend at Batavia
Downs. There will be a victory
party after the game at the apartment and a liquor party Saturday
night . . . Tonight at 8:30, the
brothers of Phi Epsilon Pi are
sponsoring a HFPP (Hippy Flower Picking Party). All fall rushees
are urged to attend and should
call Steve 836-8048, for information. Please dress appropriately.
On Saturday night, we will be
grouping for an evening of Peter,
Paul, and Mary . . . Thota Chi
Sorority would like to welcome

all rushees to their table in the
Fillmore Room and remind them
of the informal party next Tuesday, Oct. 10. Congratulations to
Elaine Pepe, our newly elected
pledge mistress . . . Theta Chi
Fraternity is holding a HaightAshbury party with psychedelic
overtones tomorrow night. Hash
will be served with eggs sunnyside-up. Appropriate garb will be
expected and the music starts
at 9 p.m. This is a closed function. Brother Pete Tasca is the
Simon Pure beer representative
at UB and he can arrange special rates for parties and blasts.
For info call 836-9895.

sionals that “the law and order”
issue may be as important as
Vietnam in next year’s election.
Mrs. Hicks, a 48-year-old school
committeewoman, had become
the rallying point for Boston’s
white backlash because of her
opposition to school busing to
achieve racial desegregation. During the campaign she broadened
her appeal to one for “law and
order” and a firm line against
rioting.

Her strength had been recognized but—as the results showed
Tuesday
badly underestimated
by the politicians. Not only did
she run first in a field of 10
candidates, but she soundly
thrashed such established public
figures as Democratic Secretary
of State Kevin H. White and
Urban Renewal Director Edward
J. Logue. Now she will face
White in a runoff Nov. 7.
—

The significant thing, moreover, is that Mrs. Hicks based
her campaign almost solely on the
appeal to the backlash, rather
than on any contention that her
experience had given her any
particular qualification to become
Boston’s first woman mayor.
To the professionals, it was

lence.

1965 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE, perfect condition,
illness forces sale. Will take highest
offer or $10 per week. Call 873-0690 or

832-9256.
1966 HONDA 90.
by girl. $295.

Only

HAPPINESS IS a Blue Sweater

ES WANTED

1050 miles,

634-0676.

owned

LIVING ROOM furniture, couch (sectional),
tables and lamps . . . cheap. 835-8877.
I
77“
717777777 !
ARE YOU BEREAVED? by Robert Sayer.
An Enflli.hwoman
book which comfortj
the mourner and answer the enquirer s
~

.

questions on spiritualism. $1.00 including
postage to 126 London Road, St. Leonardson-Sea, Sussex, England.

ROOAAMATE

to share apartment with

male students. Call 885-1975.
WANTED

,

PERSONAL

the Jewish Bible
day or night.

SHALOM! For gems

call 875-4265

the
Charley
brown

If winter turns you off, let the
Charley Brown turn you on!
Outside, it’s a great-looking outershirt
in hearty, heavyweight wool with roomy
snap/patch pockets. Inside, it's built
for comfort with a color-coordinated
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right price, too!). Make friends with
Charley Brown soon. In colorful
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About $20.00

Campus Comer—Buffalo

Han's Outlet Store. Yarns, fabrics, socks,
sweaters. 5504 Main Street, Williamsvilie.
FOR RENT

$2.00 AN HOUR. New faculty member
needs help at home. Wall paper removal
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SOMEONE WHO LIKES KIDS. Room and
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quiet |qving kid (bo
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from

join the
fashion fraternity in

VVoofrucfL

two

HALL

Friday
892-6252.
—

and

Saturday

nights.

Call

MISCELLANEOUS
ROOM AND BOARD in exchange for babysitting for 8 year old child. Only 10
minutes from campus. If interested, call
836-0366 before noon.

EDUCATION MAJORS—Highest price paid
for social studies resource unit for Junior or Senior High School teacher. Call
839-0676 between 4-6 p.m.

m
ii /i

Seminars to be given
The Computer Center will present a series of seminars again
this year.
Fortran

IV, the first seminar,

begins Oct. 10. It is an introduction to the general language of
computers and includes practical
use of the language.
Mr. J.P. Kohli will instruct the
course every Tuesday and Thursday from Oct. 10 until Oct. 26.
The class will meet from 5 to
6:45 p.m. in room 14, Building
4244 Ridge Lea Road.

The second seminar, entitled
ALGOL, will be held from October 17 to November 2. This
course is an introduction to the
algorithmic laninternational
guage
the numerical language
of computers. Assuming some
knowledge of programming is
known, this course will be useful
for those who-wish to read and
—

P

algorithms as well as
programmers. It will meet from
5:30 to 7:30 in room 18 at 4244
publish

heiser, Assistant Director of Educational Activities, will be the
instructor.
The third seminar, NYBLIB,
will be held one day only on
Tuesday, Oct. 24 from 12 to 2
p.m. in room 4 of Diefendorf
Hall. The course is an overview
of the program library of the
computing Center and its conversion to the Control Data 6400.
Mr. Harry Piniarski will be the
instructor. Mr. Chet Meek, Assistant Director for Applications
Programming will be at this seminar to answer questions and
make suggestions.
For information or registration
for any of these seminars call
831-4015 and ask for Seminar
Registration. There will be no
charge for any of the seminars.

Student Association attempting
to increase studentinvolvement

The Student Association,
an innovation in the area of
increased student involveanother demonstration that the ment. The establishment of
backlash may indeed have bereference groups will begin
come potent in the wake of the
next week.
long hot summer of racial vio-

CLASSIF 1ED
FOR SALE

Centei

Each student senator and
committee head will hold a
weekly meeting of twentyfive students randomly selected from the student population .A total of 35-40
groups will assemble each
week.

By early March, Student
Association president Stewart
Edelstein hopes to have
reached the entire student
body.
There is a two fold purpose in
inaugurating reference groups.
First, students will be invited to
air their grievances. Someone

People Are Wonderful
Consider a career working with
young people—a professional
position in the YWCA. Opening anywhere in the U.S. for
women with social work, physical education, social science
majors. Make appointment
with University Placement Office for interview October 12
with National Recruiter, Miss
Adelaide Noble, or call her at

852-4120.

having difficulty in solving a
problem may find help there.
Students will have the opportunity to give suggestions on current
topics involving student affairs
such as fees or curriculum.
The second purpose is to in-

form students about what is happening and what is being done
on campus. President Edelstein
spoke of pains to invite certain
faculty members to attend the
meetings.
In addition to the reference
groups, other recent innovations

of the Student Association are
the office of ombudsman and the
use of a suggestion box.
President Edelstein commented, “Reference groups are a continuing step to guarantee a student opportunity to participate
in the student government operations, programs and policy decisions.

DENIM JEANS
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�P*9*

Friday,

The Spectrum

Twenty

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*

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shift seen in

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*

Washington

focus
compiled

NATO

faces tough

LONDON
NATO, the West’s principal defense alignment in Europe, faces
tough times ahead.
Shaken to its foundations by France’s
pull-out from her military commitments
—

last year, the North Atlantic treaty alliance is currently grappling with the problems posed by the changing patterns both
in allied and East-West relations.
NATO planners want to cement the
undermined cohesion of the defense setup—still the most important western military bulwark against any possible ventures from the Communist east.
But divergent political attitudes among
the allies render the task more difficult.
A two-day meeting of NATO defense
ministers at Ankara, Turkey, last week
made some headway. But not much. There
is, first and foremost, the uncertainty
about President Charles de Gaulle’s future intentions.
Having withdrawn France from NATO’s
integrated military command, he has
nevertheless stayed within the political
alliance. But there are increasing fears
that he may take a further step and pull
France out of NATO altogether by 1969
when members of the NATO treaty can
formally serve notice of withdrawal.
This would make France a “neutral”

from our

wire

service

by

Lilian Waite

times ahead

in the heart of Europe, militarily as well
as politically with very serious inherent
consequences for the western defense position in Europe altogether.
There also is the growing desire among
NATO members to cut down their respective military contributions and to thin
out forces assigned to the defense alignment.

Financial considerations play an im
portant part. But powerful political arguments also come into the play.
The stem from varying assessments of
Russia’s intentions. Until the recent Mideast crisis western chancellories was increasingly inclined to accept at their face
value Moscow’s assurance that it wants
peaceful co-existence in Europe.
The fact that the Kremlin at the same
time quietly helped to build up a powerful war machine in the Middle East, ostensibly to further its own influence in the
Mediterranean, has set off second thoughts
about the sincerity and reliability of the
Kremlin assurances.
Developments since the June Mideast
crises have silenced the clamor from some
quarters for the abolition of NATO in return for the Communist offered dissolution of their defense alignment in the
Warsaw pact.

“It don’t sound good and it don’t look
good. Have you heard the British demean
their king or queen? If you have, show
me the time. You don’t demean the ruler
—the President is not our ruler—but don’t

Texas where he is spending the weekend
that there was no immediate response
from the North Vietnam Communist
regime to his nationally televised speech.
On Capitol Hill, Johnson’s Congressional backers generally applauded the speech
while his critics viewed it as a rehash of
previous U.S. statement. The speech, in
which the president once again placed the
blame for continuing the war squarely on
Hanoi, was viewed as a new effort to mute
the critics.
But the critics quickly voiced disappointment at the lack of fresh perspectives in the speech.
“The president has stated nothing
new,” Sen. Mark 0. Hatfield, D-Ore., said.
"He has said this many times,” Sen. Karl
Mundt, R-S.D., added.
Rep. Paul Findley, R-Ill., said that
“for a worsening situation the president
apparently prescribes only more of same.”
Thruston B. Morton, R-Ky., who earlier
this week charged that Johnson had been
“brainwashed” by the military-industrial
complex, said the president restated Friday night “exactly what he’s been saying.”

I don' mean
Morton, a former Republican national
chairman who served as an assistant secr e t a r y of state from 1953 to 1956,
shrugged off Dirksen’s criticisms today.
Dirksen’s speech was a booming defense of John’s Vietnam policies. He insited that South Vietnam was part of
America’s “outer defense perimeter” and
vital to the nation’s security.
“There is no holding the line between
Saigon and Singapore,” he shouted.
“When they speak about the fall of Southeast Asia, they’re not kidding.”
Yield to judgment
Sen. John Sherman Cooper, R-Ky.,
called on President Johnson Tuesday to
yield to “worldwide judgment” and end
the bombing of North Vietnam. Cooper
and Sen. Charles H. Percy, R-Ill., reopened
the Vietnam debate in separate Senate
statements. Percy said Johnson is attempting to discredit his critics by suggesting
all are advocating unilateral U.S. withdrawal from South Vietnam.
Cooper said he cannot agree with a
statement Friday by the President that
the answer to peace lies in Hanoi’s hands.
Cooper said the decision on unconditional
cessation of the bombing “lies in the
choice and control of our country.” He
said “fact and reason indicate” that the
first step toward negotiations and peace
is a bombing halt.
Percy said one of Johnson’s main Vietnam “failures” is a failure to “understand
that widespread dissent indicates something may be wrong with his policy,
rather than with his critics.”
The renewed debate came as one of
the leading Senate GOP doves, Sen. Mark
0. Hatfield, R-Ore., suggested that his
party turn to a “peace candidate” like
retired Gen. James M. Gavin as its presi j
dential nominee next year.
Lodge for invasion
Early last week, Ambassador Henry
Cabot Lodge advocated a United States
invasion of North Vietnam and bombing
of “every conceivable target in the north.”
The report was later denied.
President-elect Nguyen Van Thieu
adopted a conciliatory attitude toward
militant Buddhist dissidents Wednesday
and anti-government demonstrations virtually sputtered out.
Although he made it plain he was not
being pressured by the fiery protest death
of a young Buddhist nun or threats of
mass suicides by fire, he hinted he might
grant some concessions to militant Buddhist leader Thrich Tri Quang to head off
further demonstrations against his gov-

speech.

Morton comments

“His policies have not changed,” Morton said. “My point was that we must try
something else.”
House Republican leader Gerald Ford
of Michigan said he hoped Johnson was
telling the public “the absolute truth
about the many efforts the Administration has made in seeking some accord
with the North Vietnamese and Viet
Cong,”
Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield of Montana expressed hope that
“Hanoi would accept the president’s offer”
to begin peace negotiations.
Chairman J. William Fulbright, D-Ark„
of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee
and a chief critic of the Administration’s
Vietnam policies, refused immediate comment on the speech.
A deep split over Vietnam policy has
opened in Senate Republican ranks with
GOP leader Everett M. Dirksen scolding
members of his own party for criticizing
President Johnson, a Democrat.
Dirksen dramatized the split Tuesday
in a desk-thumping Senate speech during
which he called down fellow Republicans
for “demeaning" the President in the eyes
of the world and scornfully rejected calls
for a letup in the war.
The Republican leader’s special Urget
plainly was Sen. Thruston B. Morton,
R-Ky., who has spearheaded the growing
peace movement among Senate Republicans,

"Don't sound good"
In a reference to Morton’s charge last

Jakarta students
ctnrm
Amkaccu
SXOini emoassy

Indonesian students scale the walls of
Communist Chinese Embassy in
Jakarta in an attack coinciding with Red
China's national day Sunday. More than
one-thousand anti-communist students
stormed the embassy.

Vietnam policy

WASHINGTON—Congressional friends
and foe alike agreed Saturday that President Johnson signalled no basic shift in
U.S. policy in the Vietnam War -with his

Friday night

world

Octobar 6, 1967

week that Johnson had been “brainwashed” since 1961 into seeking a military solution in Vietnam, Dirksen chided:
‘Td hate to have heard that said about
President Eisenhower.

ernment.

Prime Minister Nguyen Cao Ky, meanwhile, said he had been commissioned by
Thieu to wipe out corruption both in the
army and the government. Ky is vice
president-elect.

Massacre reported in Red China
Radio Peking quoted Chinese Premier
Chou En-lai as saying Mao’s opposition
“has crumbled.”
Japanese Foreign Ministry spokesman
Kinya Niiseki, a top China watcher and
former consul general in Hong Kong, told
a news conference his “personal views”
were that Mao’s personal authority was
being used to calm the areas of China
where fighting has been most fierce.
Niiseki said Mao appeared to have the
top leaders of the Chinese army on his

side, and with them had control of the
mass media in China.
But despite the apparent cooling off
period, Niiseki said, “I think there will
be more waves” of trouble in China. He
noted that Chinese Foreign Minister Chen
Yi has dropped out of sight, and said the
Japanese government had no reliable information on Chen's fate.
Chen was the only member of the
standing committee of the Communist
party’s politburo who failed to turn up
Wednesday and Thursday at meetings in
Peking with visiting Albanian Premier
Mehmet Sbefau.

Rebels trapped supporters of Chinese
Communist Party Chairman Mao Tse-tung
in a heavily wooded area which they put
to the torch, killing 3,000 of them in a
huge forest fire, the rightwing Hong Kong
Daily News reported Tuesday.
The Chinese-Ianguage paper, quoting
travelers from the area, said the flaming
massacre happened last month near Nanning, the capital of Kwangsi province.
“Supporters of Mao Tse-tung were
defeated in bloody violent fighting earlier
in Nanning and they escaped into suburban hilly areas,” the paper said.
“The Maoist revolutionaries, some
7,000 who called themselves Red Flag
revolutionaries, continued to fight a guerrila war against their foes.
“The anti-Maoists burned the entire
place and some 3,000 Maoist revolutionaries fell victims in the fire that lasted a
whole day and a night.”
A Japanese Foreign Ministry spokesman
said last week that Communist China
shows signs of returning to normal after
a long struggle between supporters and
opponents of Communist party Chairman
Kao Tse-tung.

—UPI

T«l•photo

EJii/itiAnil
CulKaUOIIdl

television

State University Chancellor Samuel B.
Gould presses the button which will
begin service on the New York Network
for educational 7V. Gould said Monday
that the new network will link educational television stations in Buffalo,
Rochester, Syracuse, Schenectady and
New York City.

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                    <text>The Spectrum

Court decisions reinstate
expelled college students
Special to The Spectrum

State University of New York at Buffalo

Recent Federal Court decisions have ordered
statement of students previously expelled from Troy State
College, Howard University, and South Carolina State Col-

Vol. 18, No. 7

lege.

The decisions upheld the rights of students to freedom
of expression and due process of law.
Gary C. Dickey, a Vietnam veteran and a staff member of the
Troy State Tropolitan, had criti-

cized former Governor Wallace
in an editorial involving his stand
against academic freedom. Dickey was forbidden to print the editorial and was notified in August
he was not to return to school
in the fall.
Ralph Adams, president of Troy
State and a close friend of George
Wallace, defended Troy’s position
on the basis that the school re-

ceives funds from the state and
any criticism of the state legislature or the governor would be
“insubordination.”

Federal Judge Frank M. Johnson Jr. ordered Troy State to readmit Dickey. The court ruled
on the basis that he was refused
admission to his own hearing
which was held by the Student
Affairs Committee.
Dickey claimed that several faculty members had also been released as a result of the controversy. William Munn, a former
English professor at Troy State,
supported him in this claim.

Life

Tuesday, October

3/ 1967

No credit for English

Howard University expelled
four students without a hearing
for participating in black power
demonstrations on campus. The
decision to reinstate them was
made by the U.S. Court of Appeals in contradiction to a former
by Marlene Kozuchowski
decision by the U.S. District
Assistant Campus Editor
Court. The Court of Appeals suspended action until officials at
Millard Fillmore College students are organizing a
Howard could make up their
minds about hearings for the campaign to pressure President Martin Meyerson into action
students. The opinion of the Howagainst a recent decision by the executive committee of the
ard administration is that a priEnglish
Department.
vate institution has the right to
govern its own policies and
The Department now refuses to accept English credits
should not be hindered by any
form of state or federal judicial earned in Millard Fillmore College for transfer toward an Eng-

MFC students dispute recent decision

control.

lish degree from day school.

At South Carolina State College, three students were ordered
readmitted after their expulsion
for demonstrating on campus
without the approval of the president. A college administrator,
who was involved in the dispute,
refused to give his official title
and had little if any idea or
information as to the content of

Millard Fillmore has no
authority to confer degrees.
In effect, this decision means
that night school students
will not be able to receive a
BA in English and day students, taking English courses
in Millard Fillmore College
will not receive credits toward their English major.

the demonstration. Federal District Judge Robert W. Hemphill
declared the administration’s decision unconstitutional under the
First Amendment.

is taxing
Has the vast bureaucracy of our Federal government became a trap for the uneducated and the
misinformed? Does the administrative machine
have the power to suspend due-process-of law? Are
human shortcomings overlooked in the rush for
efficiency?

The plight of Gilberto Rivera, a Puerto Rican
native and United States citizen, provides some
frightening answers to these questions. As Mr. Rivera's story on page 6 shows, it is quite easy to
run afoul of the Internal Revenue Service through
a simple misconception, and that legal action by the
I.R.S. is by no means limited to the ranks of
criminals.

the President to appoint a faculty-student committee to explore
the possibility
for Millard Filmore College to grant degrees.

del claimed that Millard Fillmore
students were inferior to day students. However, he had no data

or survey to back up his statement.
Dr. Riddel told The Spectrum
that he "definitely agrees with
the decision.” According to the

professor, many English majors
in day school who were below
average began to attend night
school courses to gel better
grades.

The committee would also have
some decision in future policies
concerning night students.

Mr. McKeating said that the
English Department "didn't go
out of its way to notify students
about the decision." A small sign
posted in Annex A, announced
the new policy. “Since very few

In recation to the decision, an
hoc committee has been
formed by Michael McKeating,
a Millard Fillmore student. The
Committee to Preserve Undergraduate Degrees is circulating a
petition among Millard Fillmore
students. The petition asks President Meyerson to “obtain a fair
and equitable settlement” for the
night school students.
ad

students scrutinize every bulletin
board, only a small minority of
the English majors knew about
it.”
Many University officials arc
aware of the new policy through
publicity by the ad hoc committee. “All these people claim to
be against it but arc afraid to
do anything," said Mr. McKcating.

The ban affects only 300 and
400-level. Freshman and sophomore MFC credits will continue
to count towards an English
degree.

The committee will continue

Millard Fillmore College exists."

He stated that the policy was
passed to prevent “these weaker
students earning Ds from sneaking in the back door and grubbing out Cs in Millard Fillmore.”

its protest until the English Department rescinds the decision.
Mr. McKcating added that he will
“fight as long as this slip-shod
system of total disregard for

Ad hoc committee
The ad hoc committee will ask

Mr. Meyerson
pressured by MFC students to
take action against English Department's decision.

Concern expressed
The Committee to Preserve Undergraduate Degrees expressed
its concern to Dr. Joseph N. Riddel, associate English professor.
Mr. McKeating said that “his attitude was unbending. Dr. Rid-

General inferiority of the night
school students was another rea
son given by Dr. Riddel. In comparison

to

University College,
(Confd on Pg. 7)

SDS, Mobilization Committee
to

march

on war

industries

A “March on Buffalo’s War Industries" will be staged by
the State University of Buffalo chapter of Students for a
Democratic Society and the Student Mobilization Committee.
&gt;

—UP1

Tataphoto

Nude-in ends
in arrests

A "nude-in" at San Francisco State College ended
Thursday with the arrest of a young man and
woman for indecent exposure. Adam Feldman,
and his girl friend Patricia Vawtter, 18, were
hauled off to police cars after Feldman staged
a naked demonstration before some one-thousand students on a campus mall. Miss Vawtter
sat beside him wearing a dress. She followed
Feldman as he was taken to the car and then
she took off her only garment.

Ed Wolkenstein, one of the organizers of the march, said it
will start in the vicinity of Baird
Hall at 12:30 p.m. and proceed
down Main Street, through the
Negro community adjoining Jef-

ferson Ave. and then find its
way back to Main St. by way of
Genesee St.
Organizers of the march said
in a statement that the making
of chemical, electrical and aeronautical products for the war in
Vietnam multiplies “while industrial profits grow on the deaths
of American and Vietnamese
soldiers.”

The war makes murders of
us all." the

statement reads.

In conjunction with the march
“Sons and Daughters," an antiwar movie will be presented Sunday afternoon at the Circle Art
Theater. A series of panel discussions at Norton Hall will take
place that evening. Topics of discussion are: the Anti-War movement: An Overview; Draft Resistance; the Black Community; Electoral Politics, and Student Power.

Other possible panel topics include religion and the student
movement, and the Haight-Ashbury district of San Francisco.

�Th

Pag* Two

University

•

Tuesday, October 3, 1967

Spectrum

of Californit

New president is well-received
LOS ANGELES
of Charles Hitch as the
new president of the University of California was praised hy
everyone from Ronald Reagan to Clark Kerr this week,
though student leaders were guarded in their judgements
and there were few clues about how Hitch will deal with
Reagan and the volatile higher education situation in California.
Hitch, currently UC vice president for administration,
was elected in a unanimous decision by the board of regents.
He will assume his new position January 1.
Most of Hitch's comments on
assuming the post were confined
to statements like “I hope the
university will continue to expand and increfte its contribution to the state," since he said

would “not
nouncements on
he

make any pro-

policy issues
until I am president.”

But it seemed clear that Hitch
will be in the thick of the new
battles which appear to be coming over the university’s budget.
It was under his direction that
the 1967-68 budget was drafted
and guided through a stormy legislative session and a veto battle
with Governor Reagan.
He is recognized by the re-

gents and administrators as the
university’s budgetary expert and
has many times been praised for
his presentations at r e g e n t s’
meetings, but exactly how he will
line up in any battles with Reagan is still undetermined. His
only comment was that debates
between Reagan and the regents

over budget and governor’s proposal to charge tuition had damaged the university’s image in
some parts of the country, “fairly or unfairly.”

Reagan’s reaction to the selection of Hitch a registered Demas UC president was enocrat
thusiastic. "He’s a great scholar,”
-

-

STATEMENT OF
OWNERSHIP, MANAGEMENT AND CIRCULATION
(As required by the act of Oct.

23. 1962;

Section 4369,

United States Code)

1—Date of filing: Sept. 28, 1967
2— Title of publication: The Spectrum
every Tuesday and Friday
3—Frequency: Twice weekly
4—Office: 355 Norton Hall, State University of New York at Buffalo. 3435
Main Street, Buffalo, Erie, New York 14214
5—Publisher’s Headquarters: 225 Norton Hall
6—Publisher: Faculty Student Association of the State University of New
York at Buffalo, Inc.
Editor: Michael Louis D'Amico, 319 Maryland Street, Buffalo. New York
Managing Editor: Richard R. Haynes, 46 Dash Street, Buffalo. New York
14220
7—Owner: Faculty Student Association of the State University of New
York at Buffalo, Inc.; Claude E. Puffer, 241 Washington Highway.
Snyder. New York 14226, Treasurer
8—Security holders: none
9—Total circulation: 15,000
I certify that the statements made by me above are correct and complete.
SAMUEL A. POWAZEK
Business Manager
—

SPECIAL!

Reagan said, “and he’s going to
be a fine pr sident.”
Although he insisted that by

his own choice he had not par-

ticipated at all in the selection
of Hitch prior to the final vote,

the governor said that he had
supported him during the executive session consideration
had voted for him.

And in Berkeley, former UC
President Kerr, fired by the regents in January, added his voice
to the chorus of praise which
also included all nine of the university’s campus chancellors, a
faculty committee which made
recommendations on the selection of a new president to the
regents, and the acting president,
Harry Wellman.

Hitch will apparently work to
guard academic freedom at the
university, whichr has come under heavy fire from many critics,
including Governor Reagan, because of student
outspoken students and faculty
members.
Responding to questions concerning his written statement
that he counted on the regents
"to defend and protect the university’s autonomy,” Hitch replied, “university autonomy
like freedom, is something you
have to fight for all the time. It
is always in danger.”

In the statement, Hitch also
you find a university
that is not striking some sparks,
you can assume that it is dead.”
Elaborating for reporters, he
said, “scholars in the university
have the responsibility for seeking truth and in so doing they
produce sparks,” later adding
that “research is an essential
part of the university: good
teaching and good research are

wrote, “if

inseparable.”
Student leaders were more
cautious in their reaction to Mr.

Hitch's election. Most of them
said that their reservations were
based on the as yet unanswered
question of Hitch’s stands on
student-related issues.

8 TRACK STEREO
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dorm. With the close of the ballotinging all members of the Inter-Residence Council and eight
House Councils will have been

selected:
The

Inter-Residence

Council

serves as the coordinating body
for all dormitory activities.

The House Council for each
resident hall will assume responsibility in areas affecting the
individual halls. Commenting on
this role, Joel Feinman, president
of the IRC said, “The House
Council must be sensitive to the
interests of their residents and
to their reactions to certain proposed changes in university life.”
In the Inter-Residence Council

Sportsmen’s Inn

Allenhurst
President
Vice President
I.R.C. Rep.

Clement
President

MEAT BALLS
GARLIC BREAD
—

OH»r

L00

J

good 6-12 p.m., Monday Hiru Friday

Some individuals running for
elections ran as independent candidates. While many of their
proposals were unique, there
were a few basic problems confronting all candidates concerning use of the lounges, study facilities, food machines, and visitation regulations. Their ideas
will affect a change in the lives
of resident students at the university.

Steven Rice
Mark Kubik
W. Clark, Venice Leon Brown
Barry Kaplan, David Weiss

Cooke

President
Vice President
Treasurer
Secretary

M. Ruffman
S.

I.R.C. Rep.
Goodyear

G. Guenter
Shottenfeld
C. Fritch
M. Braduine

Micki Jochim
Joanne Wiktorek
Joan Click

President
Vice President

Treasurer

Secretary
I.R.C. Rep.

Christine Matson.

MacDonald
President
Vice President
Treasurer
Secretary
I.R.C. Rep.

Bonnie Spivak
Sophie Glasgow
Nancy Frankel

Diane Dorfman
Judy Somers
Mahon Abromowitz
Carol Winn
Carol Roberts

Lorraine

Pam Neuman
Lynn Watson

E. Bunnecke
G. Rennels

Vice President
Treasurer

M. Fuller

L. Reich
C. Gifford

Tower
President
Vice President

Frank Klinger
Doug Paradis
Frank Berger
Mark Jacobsen

Treasurer

Secretary

Philip Leaf, Mike Burcham

Professional A Amateur Uae

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Photo Fin (shine

—

Carola

Gail V. Wells
Valerie Sagar

Vice President
Treasurer
Secretary
I.R.C. Rep.
Schoellkopf
President

John

SPAGHETTI DINNER
SALAD

Allenhurst President Steven
Rice is concerned with the problem of community-student relations, and he feels that it is important to develop an atmosphere
of expanding academic activity
at Allenhurst. His proposals include installing study lounges
equipped with private booths and
reference volumes.

Elyse Schwalf
Marian Beyda
Joan Weiss
Melaine Retzsch
Janet Hanson, Robin Nuskind
Linda Wittenberg

Vice President
Treasurer
Secretary
I.R.C. Rep.

Everything Photographic for

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been made by the candidates.
Elyse Schwalb, President of Clement envisions a food plan contract in which the students can
decide to have one, two, or three
meals a day.

Michael

I.R.C. Rep.

2828 Bailey Ave.

and House Council, policies will
be decided and changes imple-

Election results

Secretary
I.R.C. Rep.

includes speakers

JET
TV Inc.

.

ABGOTT &amp; SMITH PRINTING
1381 Kenmore Ave. (at Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

Later this week, tentatively
Thursday, elections will be held
for the positions of court and
corridor representatives for each

President

printed by

Partners' Press, Inc

Elections were held last Thursfor the offices of President,
Vice Presli lent, Treasi
retary, and Inter-Residence Council Representative in each dormitory. Approximately 50% of resident students turned out to vote
for the 120 candidates.
day

Michael

THE SPECTRUM

Installation

s

and

Half of resident students
vote in election for IRC

2635 Delaware Are.
877-3317

Kociela

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Tuesday, October

„T

rt

3, 1967

Idea of God' to form base for forum
to be conducted by Philosophy Dept.
semester will be conducted on October 5 and 6 by the

Department of Philosophy of the State University of Buffalo.
A philosophical symposium on "The Idea of God: Philosophical Perspectives,” will be presented in a two-day forum
at the University Presbyterian Church, 3334 Main St. in
Reid Hall. Admission will be free and open to the public.
Each session will include one
of the four principal speakers,
two commentators, and a chairman. The principal guest speakers are faculty members of other
well-known universities, but all
of the chairmen and five of the
eight commentators are on the
faculty of the State University of
Buffalo Philosophy Department.
The first principal guest speaker wil be the Rev. W. Norris
Clarke, S.J., who will speak on
“How the Philosopher Gives
Meaning to Language About
God,” at 10 a.m. Thursday. Father
Clarke, a member of the Department of Philosophy at Fordham
University, is editor of the International Philosophical Quarterly
and was a participant in a highly
successful conference held at the
Princeton Theological Seminaryin December, 1962.

Toronto, and Dr. Paul Kurtz of
the Stale University of Buffalo
will be commentators. Dr. Paul

Diesing will be chairman.

Dr. John B. Cobb Jr. will begin
Friday's program by discussing
"The Possibility of Theism
Today” at 10 a.m. From the
School of Theology, Claremont,

California, he is the author of
Christian Natural Theology. Commentators will be Dr. Marvin
Zimmerman and Dr. William

be chairman. All three are members of the State University of

Buffalo Philosophy Department,
The final speaker, at 2 p.m.
Friday, will be Dr. Joseph Blaw,
chairman of the Department of
Religion, Columbia University. He
will discuss "God and the Philosophers.” Dr. Blaw has done impressive research in Jewish theological history and philosophy of
religion.

Dr. Corliss Lamont, a wellknown humanist and author of

Illusion of Immortality and Philosophy of Humanism, will serve
as a commentator.
The State
University of Buffalo participants
at this session will be Dr. John
Kearns, commentator, and Dr.
Lynn Rose,

chairman.

Dr. Marvin Zimmerman will
commentate a Department of
Philosophy symposium titled:
"The Idea of God: Philosophical PerspectivesOct. 5 and 6.
Also commentating will be Dr.
William Baumer.

Idea
of God

the people will rise up and build
a new community.”
Rinker said the funeral would
mean “the present community
is dead, but the movement is

Asbury community.

not.”

“We’re going to carry a 20-footlong coffin down Haight Street

The development reflected a
long list of troubles which have
afflicted the Haight Ashbury,
national hippie mecca, since its
more peaceful days of last spring.

and fill it with all the trash
there,” said A1 Rinker, a leader
in Switchboard, the hippies’ communication center.
“A lot of us will drop our
beads in, too, and a lot will carry
American flags.”

The ceremony is planned for
Oct. 6, first anniversary of California’s statute outlawing the
drug LSD, by some of the hippies’
patriarchs.
But not all were in agreement
“They, want to kill us,” said Lee
Meyerzove, editor of the HaightAshbury Tribune.

“But after the death ceremony

WASHINGTON—Sen. Mark 0. Hatfield, the leading Republican
dove, said he would like to see the GOP nominate a “peace candidate"
like Gen. James M. Gavin in 1968.
Gavin said, however, he has neither the money nor organization
needed to mount a presidential campaign and does not see bow he
could wind up in the 1968 picture.
'and I don’t
“I have only ideas and convictions, Gavin said.
think these are adequate these days.”
PITTSBURGH—The “Citizens for Kennedy in 1968" resolved
Saturday to support all groups opposing re-election of. President

Johnson.

Delegates from 11 states and the District of Columbia backed
a proposal to work with other dissident organizations to build “broadbased” opposition to Johnson’s campaigning.

BUFFALO—More than 200 hourly workers were in the third
day of a strike today at Continental Can Co. in suburban Tonawanda.
The members of Local 434, United Paper and Allied Workers of
the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, walked off the job
Sunday after their old contract expired. Union officials said the strike
centered about wages and fringe benefits.

Indian Prime Minister Mrs. Indira Gandhi blamed the Chinese
for what she said was an “unprovoked" renewal of the mountain
border fighting, Indian and Chinese troops clashed in the same
area less than three weeks ago.

Haight-Ashbury funeral will mourn
death of authentic hippie community
—

'ernin; Labor
opened
a week-long party conference Monday with a rank and file demand
that Prime Minister Harold Wilson completely dissociate Britain from
U.S. policy in Vietnam.
The resolution also called for an end to the U.S. bombing of
North Vietnam “permanently and unconditionally," withdrawal of
all foreign troops and reunification of the two Vietnams.

visibility.

Dr. Donald Evans, author of
The Logic of Self-Improvement
and a member of the Philosophy
Department of the University of

SAN FRANCISCO
San Fran
cisco’s hippies have planned a
funeral ceremony to proclaim
“the death" of their Haight-

dateline news, Oct 3

NEW DELHI—Indian troops defending the tiny Himalayan
kingdom of Sikkim fought a day-long artillery and mortar battle
with Communist Chinese border forces Sunday.
Both sides reported an unspecified number of casualties before
the fighting was halted by a heavy fog that rolled in and reduced

Dr. Paul Edwards, author of
the Logic of Moral Discourse and
editor of the Encyclopedia of
Philosophy, is from Brooklyn College. “The Difficulties in the Idea
of God" will be his major topic,
scheduled at 2 p.m. Thursday.

by Robert Strand

Pat* Thraa

PARIS—French Communists, fresh from sharp gains in local
elections Monday, urged other leftist parties to join forces to fight
the Gaullist regime.
The party organ Humanite appealed to the Leftist Federation
and other leftist splinter factions to close ranks against the government which was scored only a modest success in the local balloting.
While the Communists doubled their number of seats and chalked
up significant gains in the teeming Paris suburbs, the Gaullists
advanced only slightly.

Dr. Thomas Langan, chairman
of the Philosophy Department at
Indiana University, and Dr. William Parry of the State University of Buffalo Philosophy Department will comment on Father
Clarke’s speech. Dr. Langan is
well-known for both his knowledge of Thomism, the system of
dogmatic theology of St. Thomas
Aquinas that formed the basis
of 13th century scholaticism, and
the more recent existential influence in Catholic theology. Dr.
John Anton, also of the Buffalo
faculty, will be chairman.

United Press International

«i«/T '»e^

JT

The Spectrum

are authentically turned-on peosaid Jay Thelin, 28, cofounder of the Psychedelic Shop,
the original gathering place.

ple,”

Thelin and other hippie elders
express distress about usage of
such dangerous drugs as methedrin. Many report use of LSD
has fallen off markedly among
the old-timers.

-

During the summer, tourists
jammed the streets, frustrated
thrill-seekers heckled the girls,
college kids scattered their empty whisky bottles, and the drug
traffic led to murder.
Many of the original hippies
left to set up communes in sylvan
settings out of town where they
could be close to nature.

Few originals left
“Less than a third of those now

on the street in hippie clothes

“People who are aware, who
want to do things which are fun
for them, realize that they can’t
do them if they are high all the

time,” he said.
observers felt the hippies’ momentum, their long list
of their own institutions, their
Some

numerous shops, were not going
to be killed easily. It was doubted
the stores would close for three
days of mourning, as urged.

“But what we are worried
about is out image,” said an earringed youth wrapped up in a
blanket.

VATICAN CITY—The Synod of Bishops Monday heard appeals
for a more “Christian” approach in church law and for abolition of
privileges “which are anachronistic and smack of the middle ages.”
The gathering of 180 cardinals and bishops started debate this
morning on the first of five items on its agenda, revision of the
church’s code of canon law. A pontifical commission to revise the
code has been in existence since 1963,
SAIGON —South Vietnam’s National Assembly went into its final
day of debate Monday on whether to accept the election of Gen.
Nguyen Van Thieu as president or throw it out and call for a new
vote.
Police armed with clubs, bayonets and tear gas threw up barbed
wire barricades on all streets leading to the Assembly building to
prevent students or Buddhist dissidents from demonstrating.

MILWAUKEE, Wis.—Led by Roman Catholic priests, two groups
with opposite views on open housing marched through Milwaukee
streets Sunday in the 35th successive day of demonstrations.
One group of about 75 whites led by the Rev. Russell Witon.
Chaplain at St. Alphonsus Hospital in Port Washington, Wis., was
pelted with bottles and rocks by a crowd of Negro hecklers.
The oher group was headed by the Rev. James E. Groppi of
St. Boniface Roman Catholic Church in the city’s Negro area and
was composed of about 800 marchers, both Negro and white.
LONG BEACH, Calif A covey of selected Vietnam war doves
and Negro militants met privately Sunday to organize the California
Democratic council’s campaign against President Johnson's war
policies and “racism in our nation,”
A campaign steering committee increased its size from 75 to 115
—including 19 from outside CDC ranks—to forge a ‘Peace and
Freedom” alliance with civil rights militants for a liberal challenge
to a state June primary election delegation pledged to renominatioa
of the president.

WASHINGTON—Sen. Carl Hayden (D.-Ariz.), who has served in
Congress since Arizona became a state in 1912. celebrated his 90th
birthday Monday.
He described the milestone as “just another day.”

The old man, his eyes slightly dimmed by the years, his hands
gnarled with age, and his walk slowed to a shuffle, goes to his office
almost every day even on Saturdays.
-

BOSTON—Massachusetts Gov. John A. Volpe proposed a bet
Sunday night with Missouri Gov. Warren E. Hearns.
The bet: One dozen Massachusetts lobsters against anything
Hearns puts up that the Boston Red Sox will beat the St Laos
Cardinals in the 1967 world series.

BROWNSVILLE, Tax The Rio Grande ebbed slowly Monday
after a record crest that flooded approchps to an international bridge.
The cleanup of the monumental damage left by Hurricane Beulah’s
rains began.
The Rio Grande hit 17.5 feet at Brownsville and Hatamoras,
Mexico, which together took the full force of Hurricane Beulah's
winds 12 days ago. Twelve hours later the river dropped to 1TJB.
Flood stage is 18 feet.

�rxor

Th

Pag* Four

•

r

Tumday, October 3, W7

Spectrum

i«v««55e&gt;jt«*a o»r-

Departmental decision-making
This University has many pockets of power, and one
of the greatest lies with individual departments. The department head has, over the years, come to rule with an iron
hand for better or for worse.

Uu

sometimes too stringent, fre-

quently emerge from departmental

decrees.

J

\

y

•a

1S0HBK'

/

Last week the executive committee of the English
Department decided that it would no longer accept English
credits earned in Millard Fillmore College for transfer towards an English degree from day school. The implications
of this decision are great.

iM

‘XJt*
e&gt;

and student and faculty members are consulted.” They point
out that the decision was based on “gross and unproven
assumptions.”

Urging consultation with faculty and students is the
wisest part of the Student Association resolution. Failure
to consult other parts of this University in the departmental
decision-making process is one of the greatest dangers of
departmental authority.
Frequently narrow decisions have an impact beyond
the confines of the department itself, and certainly the University is reflected in the attitudes and opinions of its various

components.
The problem with the English Department’s decision
is that it is with total disregard for the consequences which
result for Millard Fillmore College. It would seem that there
are other possible alternatives, including giving Millard
Fillmore the power to grant degrees.
Until that time or such a time as another acceptable
alternative can be found, the English Department should
reconsider its action. Along with the rights of a department
go certain responsibilities. Perhaps the English Department
has shirked those &lt;esponsibilities in what it believes is an
effort to maintain standards of the highest quality.
Millard Fillmore students have a legitimate gripe, and
it certainly appears as though the English Department has
acted without adequate consideration for all parties concerned.

The quiet majority
Last week Claude Welch, Dean of University College,

pointed out that this University needs educational change

and reform. He said that this requires a “radical orientation” in thinking.
The point is well taken. The University, in fact, needs
more than that.
The Dean said also that there is a “relative lack in
intensive involvement in the community.” Another point
well taken.
But both of these are symptoms of a disease which is
eating away at this University. This campus suffers from
a lack of intensive involvement, not just in the community,
not just in planning educational needs, but in virtually every
activity on this campus and off. In other words, we suffer
from the lack of intensive involvement, period.
There are always a few—living, doing, dreaming and
creating. And then there’s the “quiet majority.”
There are the few who take an active interest in the
direction the University is going. There are a few who try
to keep this place on the right track, to keep the proper
perspectives on the functions of this University. And then
there’s the quiet majority.
The only time that majority responds is when it’s slapped in the face. Somebody should slap them. Get up and
do something, majority. Walk out of that stifling atmosphere
you perpetrate.
Dean Welch understands the importance of their participation: “Let’s find out what the quiet majority needs
and thinks
I would demand ideas on how we can change
things.”
We couldn’t agree more. Stand up. majority; let’s see
what you really look like.
...

o

-

0

*■*.»

/Lt*rA
*

(

'The secret in fishing is care, patience and perseverance.'

There is no question that the English Department has
made every effort to upgrade its quality. For the most part
it has succeeded. This, however, does not preclude the possibility that night school students are capable of achieving
the same standards.
The Student Association has urged the English Depart-

‘

\ik

Since Millard Fillmore College has no degree conferring
authority there is now little value in totaling up English
credits at night.
The English Department has based its decision on the
fact that admission to Millard Fillmore is easier than admission to day school. It’s been alleged that Millard Fillmore
students are not on an equal intellectual level with day
students.

ment to “rescind this unfair decision until a study is made

»

‘

Stringent restrictions,

'

Readers
Writings

’

the burgher
by Schwab
Nobody talks much about the war anymore.

teach-ins, marches, prayins and all-night non-violent peace vigils at the
fountain. Those were the things that stimulated
intellectual discussion of America’s involvement in
Vietnam over the past years.
Gone are the days of the

That trend is regretable because most people
have lost sight of how the U.S. became involved,
and the history behind, the present conflict. Hawking and doving, escalation, negotiation, retaliation,
infiltration, recapitulation, bombing, saturation,
peace initiation and the LBJ administration are
terms and phrases which have lost meaning out of
their historical context.
The only way to unravel the whole mess so
that learned discussion can again begin on an
intellectual plane is to fill in the historical background.

As some probably know, Vietnam was once one
country. By now you’ve noticed that there are two
Vietnams. There is a reason for this.
The Vietnamese are a very peace-loving people.
In the old days they were content to keep their
huts clean and tend the paddies. They didn’t
give a hoot about the Reds or Uncle Sam and
never heard of the cold war.
But then the French had the gall to upset the
status quo. The French weren’t very civil and
wore funny hats. This upset the people and soon
there was Civil war.
The U.S. and other anti-civil war countries
urged a halt to the hostilities. Everyone went to
Geneva, and it was decided to divide Vietnam into
two election districts. This was a smart move.
The South took on a new hue, but in the North
a very hanoimg situation began to develop. Nobody knew what was happening, except for one
lady
because if anyone knew, Madame Nhu.
—

The Red, Ho, decided to take steps to make
Diem see that it’s better Red and well-fed. The
country became split over this one laosy issue. The

war was on again.
New types of warfare came into play. Ho, for
example, began to employ gorilla warfare. He
employed Cheetah, Bozo and King Kong whom he
re-named Viet Kong), all of Hollywood fame..
Ronald Reagan refused an invitation.
Hawks and doves began to light in various
nests in this country, while in Vietnam there were
many coos. Some observers thought that South
Vietnam had joined a government-of-the-week club
until the U.S. started sending advisors. (Think
what a university could do with 500,000 advisors.)
LBJ finally found the ky to government stability
and free elections were held.
The elections were declared fair by American
observers. (They didn’t want a crooked election
with China peeking over the border.)
At the present time the whole question of
Vietnam is up in the air, as are the hawks and
the doves. Lynda Bird is to marry a robbin, according to the latest press reports.
The bird terminology is very hard to decipher.
A dove is a brain-washed hawk with presidential
aspirations, an eagle is an over-extended bird, a
lady bird lives with a big hawk on Pennsylvania
Ave. and a bird in the hand is messy.
Also at the present time there are other problems—like that of ending this column. Should it
be negotiated? Can it be escalated any further
without fear of bringing in the Gnuqp? Or Perhaps

the writer should get bombed.

Questions questionnaire
To the Editor:
I understand that my answer of strong approval
of having a roommate of the opposite sex on the
questionnaire about the new campus supposedly
indicates a lack of sincereity on my part in filling
out the questionnaire. What can be wrong with a
man and a woman living together in an apartment,
complementing each other psychologically and sharing the duties of maintaining their living standard
as best each can; when, any more, people do not
have to get married until they want children?
It seems that a school which prides itself on
its academic freedom would recognize that a sincere and responsible person could have an opinion
which differs from the two thousand year old moral
system. It is unlikely that I will waste another half
hour of my time volunteering to help the administration with planning.
Sincerely,
David C, Sweeton

’0!)

'Chelsea Girls' rapped
To the Editor:
The review of “The Chelsea Girls” in Tuesday’s
Spectrum reflects the bizarre illogic that is heard
increasingly too often. To insist that, because sexual perversions really exist, they should be publicized and accepted as legitimate entertainment is
as sensible as having open sewage running through
public parks, just to prove to everyone that sewage
really exists.
No one denies the reality of such perversions
(slavery and cannibalism still flourish in some
places) but they are better topics for serious study
by trained persons who may help eliminate them,
rather than for commercial exploitation as entertainment for the miserable voyeurs among us
whose sick minds seem to relish such grotesque

aberrations.

Robert F. Jones

The Spectrum is published twice-weekly
Tuesday and Friday
during the regular
—

—

every

academic

the State University of New York at Buffalo.
3435 Main Street. Buffalo, New York 14214. Offices
are located at 355 Norton Halt. Circulation: 15.000.
Editor-In-Chief—MICHAEL L. D'AMICO
year at

Managing Editor —RICHARD R. HAYNES

Asst. Managing Editor—RICHARD SCHWAB
Business Manager—SAMUEL A. POWAZEK

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The Spectrum is a member of the United States Student Press Association and the Associated Collegiate
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Represented for national advertising by National Educational Advertising Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave..
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Second class

Editorial

postage paid at Buffalo, New York.
is determined by the EdRoe-tn-Chief.

policy

�Tuesday, October 3, 1967

T h

Dove President not solution

•

Spectrum

By Interlandi

BELOW OLYMPUS

To the Editor:
The hackneyed expression “fail to see the forest from the trees” must once again be applied in
reference to your editorial of Sept. 29, entitled
“How many Doves?” Indeed, sir, how many times
must the American public and its duly elected
leaders subject themselves to the ultimate folly
which results from their proffering solutions be-

M;}

lift

Such is the case when we declare that a satisfactory solution to the Vietnam War can be found
in merely replacing a “hawk with a dove.” I
contend, sir, that to base political decisions in such
meaningless nomenclature as a hawk or dove is
a deadly serious activity. At best such a solution
would be ephemeral if not ultimately disasterous.

m

Concrete solutions can only be derived by the
close and purposeful examination of the problem
which looms before us. The problem most certainly
cannot be ascertained by encouraging the polarization of ideas and people into such ill-defined groupings as hawk or dove.

Pag* FIv*

e

m
.'i

Meeting begins
The meeting was held, ostensibly in order to
clear up any differences between the Administration, the faculty and the students. This meant,
essentially, that Mr. Meyerson was to state his
particular beliefs. The other, perhaps more far
reaching, ostensible, goal was to establish policy
for this campus for the future.

Robert Friclawl

The meeting began and President Meyerson,
who so graciously agreed to hold it, also graciously
informed those that were present what his feelings
were about this, and any censorship issue. He
clearly and unequivocally expressed his point of
view. Everybody left that meeting thinking their
President was a good guy after all.

School of Law

A 'hairy'problem
defense escalation

To the Editor:
Having reached the age where I carefully
count how many hairs I lose while combing (or
washing) my hair, I have come to realize that the
best way to prevent loss of hair is by taking haircuts less often than usual. When I finally feel
brave enough to enter that wondershop in Norton’s
lower floor, I expected MARIO and His little Helpers to understand my problem of possible baldness
and obey my instructions, irregardless of whether
they are in agreement.

the gadfly
by Mark Schneider

Desiring only a short trim, I was told how impossible this was since other chunks of hair would
have to be cut to “even everything out.” The next
thing I noticed was how my chair was swung
around, so I could see nothing of the precision and
skill which my little chopper of a barber possessed.
Now why should I trust this stranger with my
precious remaining hairs? However, I buried myself in The New York Times and hoped something
resembling me could be recognized afterwards.

So many ambiguous phrasings have been used in defining the several left positions regarding the war that one
fears only those who identify with the left are familiar with
them. After years of teach-ins, protest marches, leaflets,
“stop the bombing” ads in the Times, SDS changes its
emphasis to a new approach
resistance
and liberals
shudder.

—

—

/

This year I willingly paid all of my activities
fees. Unfortunately 1 am quickly becoming disheartened by the attitude toward non-payers. The
Student Association seems reluctant to take any
action for fear of splitting the students (who are
already split into resident and commuter), but by
doing so are encouraging more students to become
non-payers. First of all I fail to see the problem on
elections! Are non-payers to have equal say on
things they will not support? As for ‘having difficulty financing his education', I have a loan, a
part-time job, and a 48 hour job over the summer,
but I can afford it.

Am I to be looked upon as chump, the sucker
everyone else rides along? If
so, I will be forced to discontinue further payments

who will pay while

Diane Lefebure

Writers: Please be brief. Letters should not exceed
300 words. AH letters must be signed and the address
and telephone number of the writer must be included. Positive verification of authorship will be made
before a letter is printed.
Letters will be kept in strict confidence.
The Spectrum will use initials or pen name, if
requested. But anonymous letters are never used.

The

Spectrum reserves the right to edit or delete
material submitted for publication, but the intent of
letters will not be changed.

/

The oppressive fact is that if
see the war as wholly illegal (read the Geneva Agreements and the Control Commission reports) and wholly immoral
(try Felix Greene’s Vietnam,
Vietnam) and, as Paul Krassner
writes, you’ll never again pity
you

yourself), you must oppose anything giving sustenance to the
war effort.

In fact, the left will argue,
by killing 200,000 civilians in
the South, the military has forfeited all moral right to function. The Army becomes not a
defender, but a conqueror of
Asians. “What if the American
Empire were to lose its valuable
supply of tin and tungsten?”
Eisenhower explained when we
underwrote 80% of the French
war effort.
What does this mean for us at
the State University of Buffalo?
Let’s take one example. Liberals
were disappointed last year when
people sat-in in front of the Navy
recruiting table to block access
to it. They asked “What about
the First Amendment? Isn’t this
totalitarian?” No. It means that
exploiters can't propagandize and
abet their exploitation.

A Nazi (And I’m not equating
Johnson with Rockwell) may solicit aid for his cause now because Nazis aren’t hurting anyone, but in 1940 who of us would
say: “Yes Dr. Goebells, though
we, don’t like gas chambers, you
have the right to come to Norton
Hall, present your gas chambers
in their best light and try to get

Whenever an Administration official gives a
quick, unequivocal, acceptable solution to an audience of interested, angry students, I am curious to
observe the result. Thus, when I came back to
school this year, I found myself asking what tjje
final outcome was of that confrontation. The last
thing publicly agreed upon was that a three man
committee be established consisting of Mr. MeycrSon, Dean Hawkland (of the Law School), and
Bcrton Raffel, Professor of English.

Raffel contacted

“We don't want to be thought of as a clever little gadfly taking clevei
little pinpricks at the Establishment. We want to wreck it.”
—Robert Scheer of Ramparts, April 3, 1967, The Fillmore Room

The big moment arrived
the chair swung
around, I looked once, twice, gasped, gulped, paid
$2.25 to my smiling idiot and swore never to make
the same mistake again. DON’T YOU!

To the Editor:

Last Spring, a group of students and faculty
got rather up tight about having their newspaper
censored. They got so upset that they held a rally
one Friday afternoon and began questioning why
that could occur. They started asking why their so
the
publicly acclaimed advocate of Freedoms
President of the University - wasn't doing anything
about it
More than three hundred of these curious

more
space in this newspaper than this letter is entitled,
you might examine the problem, and then see if
the solution proves to be as satisfactory; for sure
we can no longer afford to circumvent the issues.

More fee discord

by Martin Cugganhaim

people marched to Hayes Hall asking their President to publicly state his position. After it became
obvious that he was not sufficiently prepared, an
open meeting was established for the following
morning, which was Saturday, April 22.

Perhaps, sir, with your claim to far

Hairless Harry

The Sham

I contacted Dr. Raffel and visited him at his
home. He brought me up to date on what was the
outcome of their investigation. 1 then listened to
an entire tape of that Saturday meeting. The following are excerpts from Meyerson’s address that day:

“There’s no point at this time in reviewing
the past the real problem is what do we do now.
The problem is how to be operational. I cannot
speak for the General University Administration
in Albany. Insofar as the State University of New
York at Buffalo is concerned, I would think a very
simple solution is before us . . .
-

—

us to work in them.” And what
good Germans we would be if
we said; “Well, I don’t approve
of gas chambers but the Constitution says you can draft me, so
OK."

Which brings us to two intertwining concepts which the left
is struggling to keep alive in
America: Conscience, or Individual Responsibility and Honest
Dialogue. “When you violate the
law of the land, you instigate
anarchy, the rule-utilitarian liberal bitches.” The spirit and acts
of Thoreau and Ghandi, heroes
on the New Left, dictate that
Your Own Conscience Is Where
It’s At. But civil disobedience
without program and love is nonsense. When SDS went to talk to
the Mine and Smelter Workers
in Buffalo about the war, the police were there to throw the
radicals out, which they did.
What’s the difference between
that and SDS sitting in on the
Navy? Here’s your incipient anarchy: Peace is right and the
senseless waste of sacred lives
to “stop Communism” is wrong.
Such actions as the sit-in, which
no doubt will be repeated this
year, are done to provoke dialogue, not to stifle it. It is a
challenge to our complacent
minds, “made up like beds,” to
stay open. Writes Greene:

“If the people of the United

States only knew the background
of the war in Vietnam, and what

is being done there in their name,
they would insist on the war at
once being brought to an end."

It seems to me we’ve got to make the same
requirements with all of our printers, all of our
contractors, in every field . . . Here are certain
what you get, you print!
ground rules from us
“And when I say, ‘from us’, I mean from any of
the estates in the University Community; from the
students, from the faculty, from the Administration.
“

-

"Now the students as publisher, and they are
the publisher and when we talk about the rights
of the Press we're talking about the rights of the
students who own and run the publications . . .
-

Prepare statement
“What we ought to try to do at this point, is
prepare a specific policy statement . . . and I think
what we ought to do is draft that statement it’s
going to take a couple of days -1 think it ought to
appear in The Spectrum . . , with the hope that
this will be put into effect as soon as possible.”
-

April, May, June, July, August, September,
October 3rd often times the Administrative leaders of this University say things that they don’t
quite mean, to quiet students.
-

As of the time that this paper went to press,
no such statement has been released to anyone
in fact, President Meyerson has yet to issue any
further comment whatsoever. But I am of the
belief that sometimes people have a way of indicting themselves. For that reason, I'll stop now. More
next week.
-

The Spectrum's pages for

Editorials

&amp;

Opinions

It is the policy of The Spectrum to report the
news fully and impartially in the news pages,
to express the opinions of the newspaper only
in the editorial pages and to publish all sides
of important controversial issues.
"Without

exprettion.

frtodom of iwflttimi

i&gt; mooninploM.

�Pag*

Tuesday,

The Spectrum

Six

IRS lays down the law
By LINDA MILLS
Spectrum Staff Reporter

Gilberto Rivera, a man trapped
in a governmental labyrinth re-

he was supporting exempted him
from filing a federal income tax
return.

—°'

Women voters seek court reforms

mare, has found that life in the
United States is not as promising
as he expected it to be.
Mr. Rivera came to the U, S.

in 1959 from Puerto Rico where
there are no personal income
taxes. Misinformed, Gilberto
thought that his income of less
than $5000 and the dependents

table.

by Emmet N. O'Brien

Recentlv.

Gilberto’s employer
wished to give him a raise and
discovered the situation of the
unpaid income taxes. To prevent
legal action, they Went to the
I.R.S, and filed forms since 1959.
Fortunately Mr. Rivera’s withholdings nearly equalled his liabilities owed in taxes for each
year.

No more withholdings

Gannett News Service

ALBANY —The "little woman” from the League of
Women Voters, in addition to changing the means of selecting judges, wants to get rid of ,a few of them. In title, at least.
And high on the list is the Surrogate, the county jurist
who handles estate and guardianship matters. And not
far behind are the Court of Claims judges, and Justices
of Peace.

Now the government has wiped

out his withholdings and presented him with a number of

penalties and assessments plus
interest approaching $13,000.

Gilberto takes home only $72

per week on which he supports
his wife and one child.

The I.R.S. is now threatening
to guaranshee his wages, but even
this will not cover the accruing
interest. What Gilberto owes is
not taxes but a flat fee in the
nature of a late charge.
Mr. Tom Harmon, Gilberto’s
tutor at Jobs Education Training
(JET), has written letters to the
Senators Robert F. Kennedy and

Jacob J. Javits. However, Harmon said hope from those quarters is slim since at the present
time Puerto Ricans are not as
favored for political crusades as

Mr. Rivera

Uncle Sam thirteen hundred dollars in tax penalties

ows

and interest.

Negroes.
Mr. Rivera has gone to the
Legal Aid Society, but has received no action.
And the accruing interest on
Mr. Rivera’s debt is more than
the guaranshee on his wages.
So that he is going further
and further into debt each day.

Need funds for fun—Like a Discotheque?
Come to the Book Store, We'll cosh your check.
The convenience is yours —The pleasure is ours.
Oh and be sure to note the new longer hours.

Family Court and County Court
judges are not on an elimination
list, but some would shift them
into Supreme Court. Actually,
that is where the Surrogate and
Claims judges would go if the
court reformers had their way.
s The battle over Surrogate is

the most bitter of all. It involves
politicians, jurists, lawyers, civic
groups and anyone else who
wants to get into the act. As usual, with most New York State
issues, the biggest center of controversy is New York City, and
more specifically. New York
County (Manhattan). That is the
biggest Surrogate’s Court in the
state, handling the biggest estates. Nassau and Westchester
are big, but they have not attracted quite as much attention.
But Nassau is drawing more as it
continues to grow and bigger es-

tates develop.

In most of the rest of the state,
little is heard about the Surrogate and what is supposed to be
patronage.
his great weapon
Patronage is the term given to
the assignments or references he
makes to attorneys to represent
-

minors or incompetents in cases

before him. The fee, set by the
Surrogate, be it large or small,
is paid by the estate.
U-S.

Senator Robert

F. Ken-

nedy was moved to term the
Surrogate’s Court a “political toll
booth.” He so testified before a
joint legislative committee, but
did not present supporting evidence. His charge, however, did
touch off a i.ew round of controversy that appeared before the
Constitutional Convention.

Questions arise

Two questions quickly present
themselves on the subject of patronage; Is the appointment necessary? and was the fee proper?

The first is fairly readily anuntil a major
modification this year required
the Surrogate to protect the interests of infants and incompetents through appointment of
swered. The law

-

-

special guardians.

The second question is harder
to answer because an analysis of
each appointment and estate

would be necessary. As these
are individual court items, not
readily consolidated, it would
take months and maybe years to
trace them out.
judiciary undertook a
special study last year at the request of Assembly Speaker Anthony J. Travia. Its findings fail
to substantiate implication of excessive fees. It also rejected Senator Kennedy’s plan for an office
of official special guardian, to
replace those appointed by the
court, saying it would be “more
costly and less efficient.”
The

A

questionnaire

survey

an-

swered by 48 of the state’s 62
Surrogates showed that the average fee allowed was $307, and
that was .0021% of the $946 million gross value of the estates
handled in the last year (some
reports covered two years). The
total paid guardians was slightly
over $2 million.
Another committee analysis
covering 50 counties (some supplied later data) showed that of
7,944 special guardians appoint-

ed. 5,156 received $100 or less;
1,651 were awarded between $101
and $200. The number then falls
off sharply in the committee

WAB STEAK
$ys

Sandwich

ALL YOU WANT
(Within Reason)

US. CHOICE TOP SIRLOIN

�

�

�

Dine and Relax in

The Peaceable Kindom
Room at the

“On Campus

BLACKSMITH
SHOP
99

October 3, 1967

At the $5,000 level the

number of guardians is down to
147, and at $10,000 to $15,000, it

is only

12. There were three

guardians in the $15,001 to
$20,000 class; and one each in
the $20,000-$25,000, and in the
$25,001-$30,000. None of this data
is broken down by counties.

Bennett makes
recommendations

Surrogate John D. Bennett of
Nassau, a convention delegate,
reported for his own county virtually the same percentage of
payments in fees to attorneys.
Judge Bennett, who also is chairman of a commission on estate
laws, persuaded the legislature
to accept two commission recommendations that slice deeply into
the patronage question.

One will cut in half the numh“- nf guardians the law says
must be appointed. The second
requires the filing with the judicial conference, by the court,
of both the appointment of the
special guardian and also, when
done, the fee approved.

When this system is in full
operation, the public will be able
to get a fairly good picture of
the cost of the system and who
is getting the assignments.
Only the Surrogate, or the estate attorneys can appraise the
quality of work done by the appointed attorney. In some cases,
attorneys claim, the estates are
so small there is a negligible fee,
but under the old law the judge
had to appoint the guardian. They
like to tell of the Rochester lawyer who was named in an apparently small estate and who,
through diligent checking, discovered an additional $100,000
for the estate.

The new laws should take
some of the pressure off the patronage complaint, but they will
not satisfy the court reformers
who think the Surrogate’s Court
and Claims, County and Family
should be part of the Supreme

Court.

Presiding Justice Bernard Botein, First Dept. Appellate Division, wants the court shifted to
Supreme Court “to diffuse the
patronage.” He concedes it must
exist, just as a Supreme Court
Justice has many references to
make. But if scattered among a
number of justices, it would not
make one or two men all powerful, he argues.

Others contend that if the Probate Court were merged with Supreme Court, the former Surrogate would merely be assigned
to a probate term and continue

as they

are

now.

At this point the words “conand “expertise” enter
into the discussion, words also
applicable to the State Court of
Claims.
tinuity”

(Next:
Claims, Family
Peace Justice Courts).

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Tuesday, October 3, 1967

campus releases...
ANOTHER "UNIVERSITY REwill be held at 3 p.m. today in the Conference Theater.
Dr. Robert F. Berner, Dean of
Millard Fillmore College, will
discuss “The University and Con-

tinuing Educi nation

PORT"

THE AMERICAN PHARMA-

CEUTICAL ASSOCIATION'S STUDENT CHAPTER will hold its
first meeting 7:30 p.m. Thurs-

day in

room G-22, Capen Hall.

Dr. Laurence Golden will be
guest speaker. His topic will be

ANYONE WITH A particular
idea concerning possible Convocation speakers is requested to
leave the suggestion with Ronnie
VOLUNTEERS ARE NEEDED
for a new program affiliated
with the Community Aid Corps.
Interested students will work
with patterning of brain-injured
children. An orientation program

THE SECOND IN the “1967
Computer Science Colloquia Series” will be held at 4 p.m. Thursday in Room 146 Diefendorf Hall.
The series, sponsored by the Computing Center of the State University of Buffalo, will feature
THE SOCIOLOGY CLUB an-

nounces a lecture by Dr. Edgar
Friedenberg of the Education and
Sociology Departments. He will
speak at 7:15 p.m. today in Room
240 Capen Hall.
Dr. Friedenberg is a nationally

LEMAR WILL HOLD an organizational meeting at 8 p.m.
Thursday in the Millard Fillmore

•&gt; #

nP

a

rl

T

ti? Anefl

The Spectrum

Pag*

MFC students dispute decision... continued
from Pg. 1)
Millard Fillmore has lower standards governing admission of students. Since the College only offers nine English courses at the

offer the best programs to our
students.”
Dr. Riddel said that it is very
difficult for • his department to
handle the “increased load” of

(Cont'd

will follow the lecture, and all
students, faculty and staff are
invited to attend.

school) a

45 courses offered in day
night school English
major “lacks the breadth and excellence that a day student
achieves."

the College has no budget or
faculty of its own, day school
professors volunteer their serv-

"Recent Advances in Heart Di-

Further reasons for the policy
involve the reputation of the English Department. Dr. Riddel reported that the department is nationally famous. The number of
English majors has increased
300*“f since 1963.

“The faculty is under no obligation to teach at night,” explained Dr. Riddel. “They usually

A question and answer period

sease.”

A free party at the Bowl-ODrome will follow the meeting
A11 Pharmacy students and facul
ty are invited.

Segal, chairman of the Convoca-

tions Committee, in Room 205

Norton Hall,

in this new type of therapy will
be provided,
For information call Cindy
Jones, 831-2896, or the Student
Senate office, 831-3446.

Dr. R. F. Rosen, professor of
Computer Science at Yale University.

Dr. Rosen will speak on “Recent Experiments and Research
in Character String Programming.”
known sociologist who is a hew
member of the State University
of Buffalo faculty.
The topic of Dr. Friedenberg’s
speech will be “New Patterns of
Generational Conflict.” Everyone
is invited to attend.
Room. The meeting will be brief,
and anyone interested is urged to
attend.

S*v*n

with

ices.

Faculty moonlights

accept the work for extra money.
In other words, it's moonlighting
or just another job.”
In his estimation, an English
major in night school is therefore definitely inferior because
he lacks the proper choice of
courses and instructors.
This lack in parity in education between the University and
the College student tends to “dilute the quality of the Buffalo

"We are carrying the biggest
student burden in the University," he continued. "If we are
going to make a State University of Buffalo degree in English
mean anything, we have to main,
lain the highest standards and

Tutors needed by VISTA
to teach deprived children
VISTA is looking for tutors
and program supervisors to work

Tutoring sessions will be held
from 4 to 5:30 p.m. Monday
through Thursday at cither of
the two centers located on Main

with culturally deprived children

of Buffalo’s Masten District-

Street. Tutors are requested to
report for sessions two afternoons
a week. Evening sessions are also
planned and special arrangements
can be made for students willing
to tutor at a child’s home during

Tutors and children will work

on a one-to-one basis, emphasizing the child’s individual needs.
Tutors may work on homework
assignments and basic reading
and arithmetic skills. They are
encouraged to form close relationships with the children.

degree in English,” said the pro-

fessor.

Service program
Millard

Fillmore

College

cording to Dr. Riddel. The night

school students, he said, should
be interested in education and
not degrees. He suggested that
a possible solution to this situation might be a Bachelor of General Studies degree which would
be awarded to all Millard Fillmore students upon completion
of their education. He admitted,
however, that this degree would
have little value in many graduate schools.

The English Department formulated the decision that it
would not accept English credits
earned in Millard Fillmore for
transfer toward an English degree in June 1967.
The decision resulted from a
study made by George R. Levine,
associate professor in the English
Department.

The

policy, in effect since
1, does not involve students who have begun earning
credits toward an English degree.
Sept.

COMPACT
CONTACT

non-schedulcd hours.
Tutors’ applications may be obtained in Room 115 Norton Hall
or 211 Harriman Library. For
further information, persons may
also call Linda Chapman at the
Masten Community Action Organization, a local branch of the antipoverty program, 882-2055 or
evenings at 856-7909.

Most of the children involved
are of elementary school age, although older students arc available for tutoring. No special

training is required of the tutors.
Some orientation in the techniques of teaching reading will

be offered.

Counseling center offers student aid
The Student Counseling Center
is a service provided by the State
University of Buffalo for the benefit of students with problems.
Students are encouraged to
bring their problems, whether
academic, vocational, social, or
personal, to the Counseling Center where a staff of professional
counselors is available for con-

sultation.
The objective of the center is
to help the student become a mature and well-adjusted person. It
encourages the student to utilize

his own resources in solving a
problem. The Center also places
an emphasis upon helping the
student grow in self-understanding so that he might be able to
cope with both his immediate
problem and any future problems
which he might encounter.

A variety of occupational information materials is available
for those seeking vocational information. There is also an occupational information specialist
on the staff with whom to discuss
these materials.

student may use the Counseling
Center, which works without
charge and on a voluntary basis.
To make an appointment call
831-3717 or visit the office in
78S Harriman Library. The office
is open weekdays from 9 a m. to

3 n.m. and on Monday and Tuesday evenings.

Command

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�the folk concert
by E. C. Steeie
Doc Watson, Arlo Guthrie, and Jim Kweskin and his
crew combined to please just about everyone who showed up
at Clark Gym. Or at least so I felt after Friday’s concert.
But then it should be remembered that the author of
this review tends to like just about anything in the folk
field so any ravings contained herein are probably to be
taken with a grain of salt.
Like buy the albumns one by
one, not in blocks, right?
Anyway, Doc Watson opened
Friday night. Singing on a bad
throat, (it will be remembered
that he did not make it last year
with pneumonia) he had voice
trouble on several songs but
maintained throughout the abilityon guitar that has made him as
prominent to both city and country folkies as he now is. I especially liked an old, old love ballad called “Aroving on a Winter
Night,” for the quieter example
of his mastery, that is. Because
Watson added Open Up Those
Pearly Gates, Georgia Buck,
Windy and Warm, a little freelance “finger picking,” and
“Don’t Let Your Deal Go Down”

in that order at the end of his
appearance, and it would be hard
to separate them, for any single
one of them would reek of talent.
If it strikes you that this review is not telling you anything
except that he is good, I agree.
Except that the nomenclature
may be great, rather than merely
good.

Borrow one of the albums from
somebody. It may well be a rather selective taste and I wouldn’t
recommend buying until after
listening, and listen to it carefully if you are a guitar buff and

haven’t heard from him before.
And remember as you listen
that this is Watson, this is his
life and his culture.
He knows the songs by word
of mouth as much as by any
other source and it shows. He
forces nothing, and the resulting
quality of ease and sincerity, is

a most effective combination
at least to anti-frauds like me.
Oh, four records, all on Vanguard. last one with his son.
Listen BEFORE you buy.
—

Arlo fallowed
Arlo Guthrie followed Watson.
Which is sort of a hole to put
like anyone in. I think Guthrie
had a couple of problems this
year, in addition to those inherent in following Doc.
First, he has gone hippie.
Being clad in some of the wildest

garb this side of Los Angeles
probably destroyed some of his
rapport. It is hard to identify
with any cat that looks that
strange, right?
Also, I would suspect that this
year’s concert pulled more traditionalists, and that, friend, is not
his bag. It is hard to imagine

how anyone could be less traditional in material, and more traditional in—well—tradition. One
might say he specialized in distilled irreverence, and obviously
I am not qualified to pass un-

biased judgment on that sort
of folkie.
I thought he was beautiful. He
had his own bag, just what il is
I admit to being uncertain, and
he went ahead and did his thing.
Which means in English that he
spent 40 minutes being Arlo
Guthrie.
If you didn’t like Arlo Guthrie,
and I suspect a fair number
found this to be the case, it was
probably a long 40. It is hard
to comment impartially for another reason. I was able to hear
the test pressing of his new
record

while he was

here. He

•

�ijpwfr-

Lt

i

can, surprisingly enough, sing.
I mean one gets very little indication of that in “Alice’s Restaurant,” which takes up 30 of his
40 minutes. I recommend his
album to be issued almost immediately on Reprise. Titled

—

odd—“Alice’s Restaurant,” it is
good, and I suspect I may be
reviewing it rather than his performance—but then I liked both
—so let’s pass on to the last
act and try for some coherence.

Poor start

Kweskin and company are a
poor place to start for coherence,

however. They wander around the
stage in a disorganized way between songs, the introductions
are entirely too long and implausible, and they are extremely corny. I loved every minute
of them, too.
As I said last year when they
appeared at Kleinhans, they are
a happy group. How much of it
is for public consumption, and
how much real is hard to pin
down, but they appear to be having one hell of a good time, and
they provide the same, say I, to
most of those watching. They did
a lot of blues, and a lot of old
Whiteman songs and just generally carried on.
The combination of the electric
fiddle solo and the female vocalist on “I’m a Woman,” and
general competence on “Coney
Island Washboard” and “Sweet
.
Sue,” and “Rag Mama” and
down boy, down.”
I am not cut out to criticize
creative people. We have too few
of same and my tastes are too
broad. Suffice it to say that
.

Kweskin and company have three
albums on Vanguard, and a newone on Reprise, and that I will
probably blow the record budget
on them as soon as I can evade
my wife long enough to get to
a record store. Again, it might
be wise to listen first.

Concert deficit

At the time of writing this, I
have no concrete report of the
size of the deficit involved in
this concert, but I am quite certain that it will be fairly sizable.
I suspect that this was caused
to a certain extent by tiAiing and
bad publicity.
I would suggest that if there
is to be a swing to single concerts, they should be held on
Saturday nights, if possible. I
can present no rigid evidence for
this, but I think a one shot would
draw better Saturday night. Publicity was not altogether as efficient as it might have been, although our losing the story that
was to be included on the day
of the concert, here at The Spectrum, certainly did not make matters any better. All of which
leads, up to the point that they
may try and make static about
any attempt to have a second

concert.
I suspect that here may be
much, much static in fact. I
don’t know how many others are
as gullible as I am, but if it
would help I will pledge the

ticket money in advance, like
even pay it in return for a guarantee of tickets to any further
concert. You might mull over
whether you would too, dear

reader.

We may have to.

top left: "Fritz" of the Kweskin Jug Band,
bottom: The entire Kweskin Jug Band.
top left: Ado Guthries;
top right: Jug Band;
bottom right : Doc Watson

—Photos by Barry Harshfeld

�nevsIS

Th« Spectrum

Ten

P*9*

Wf ,t ledotoO »»b»**jT
Tuesday, October 3, 1967

muitssqS 9 rt T

spfc*?

Mono cases increase; smooching blamed
by Dick West
One of the diseases that is becoming increasingly preva
lent in this country is mononucleosis, commonly known as

number of young people who
take up smooching each year.

Although medical science is divided over the issue, there
is strong statistical evidence indicating that mononucleosis
can be caused by smooching.
I don’t have the figures before me, but as I recall, the
incidence of “mono” is about 10 times greater among heavy
smoochers than among non-smoochers.

Congress enact a law requiring
that lipsticks carry labels warning that smooching may be hazardous to the health.
This law would be coupled with
one forbidding television programs to picture people smooching during the hours when juveniles normally are watching.
It is now generally recognized,

The chances are about 3 to 1
that a person who smooches regularly over a period of years will
contract mononucleosis before he
is 50.

FBI takes action
In view of these statistics, it
is easy to understand why the
FBI would discharge a young
clerk who allegedly spent the
night in his apartment smooching
with his girl friend.
Mononucleosis, as you know, is
characterized by the presence of
an excessive number of mononu
clears in the blood stream. Di-

rector J. Edgar Hoover obviously

concluded that about the last
thing the FBI needed was excess
mononuclears.
Nevertheless, it is also easy to
sympathize with the clerk, for
his case is clearly in line with
another set of statistics.
These statistics show that despite the health threat, and the
risk of losing one’s job with the
FBI. Americans are smooching
more than ever.
While millions have tried to
break the habit, and a few have
actually succeeded, their number
is more lhan matched by the

Carry health warning

r

however, that such steps would
do little to curb smooching and
that a new approach is in order.
The current thinking is that

since

nrr'

many people are going to

smooch anyhow, research should
be directed at finding ways to
make smooching safer.
One possibility is a device that
would filter the smooch to remove “Mono" germs. Thus far,
however, no filter has been developed that does not also re-

ji

"The Music Room"
hailed
as Indian director Satyajit Ray's
greatest film begins Thursday
afternoon in the Conference
—

Jalsaghar

Theater.

Ray's The Music Room'to
New WBFO radio series will feature play Conference Theater
American social critic Paul Goodman
move the taste.

“The Music Room,” beginning
Thursday afternoon at the Conference Theater, has been

A new WBFO series of lectures
by Paul Goodman will be broadcast Saturdays at 2:30 p.m. and
Mondays at 10:30 p.m. Entitled
"The Moral Ambiguity of America,” the series will probe the
hypocrisy, over-bureaucratization
and insensitivity of American society.
Dr. Goodman is regarded as
one of the most radical social
critics in America today.
The series is made available to
WBFO through special arrangement with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.
Next to classical music, WBFO
is known primarily for the wide
scope of jazz it presents to its
listeners each day.
Although the program format
is essentially dedicated to opera
and concert, WBFO can still
boast that it offers more jazz
than any other local station. In
fact, seven and three quarter
hours a week is set aside for airing jazz.

The daily show “Time Out for
Jazz” presents recorded music
in every jazz vein from Dixieland
right through Third Stream to
Avant-Garde. These 45 minute
doses are punctuated

with

in-

formation and discussions of jazz
personalities and their releases
deftly handled by musician-disc
jockey Norm Friedman, new
comer Sandy Hemingway and
mainstay Greg Perla.
The new Thursday man, Jim
Santella, presents a hour of old,
i arc and original jazz recordings
on his three quarter hour production.
88.7 FM also fills the Tuesday
and Friday night air with waves
of jazz as veterans Waverly Jenkins and Ron Naples pack their
hour long shows "Just Jazz” and
Jazz Moods" respectively with
the latest jazz issues and talk of
the local scene.
Ron specializes

in interviews
with jazz personalities who venture into town while Waverly’s

NOW FOR THE FIRST TIME AT
REGULAR PRICES

Special Exclusive Limited Engagement!

‘"ULYSSES’A SUPERB FILM!”

forte seems to be the progressive
sounds. Eminent local jazz authority Carroll Hardy closes out
the jazz week at WBFO with his
two hour program “The Story of
Jazz” currently heard at 8 p.m.
Sunday evenings. This show has
been chosen to be aired on National Educational Radio.

and inadvertently his wife and
son, he becomes increasingly isolated from reality and the people around him.
“The Music Room”, produced
in 1962, conveys the sense of
mysticism which India has given
to music.
The film reflects a tension between the values of an ancient
civilization and the omnipresent
modern industrial world.

gen-

erally hailed as famous Indian
director Satyajit Ray’s greatest
film.
The story is simple and beautiful. An aging aristocrat, characterizing both an apathy and

fear of life, pours all his passions and money into a love for
music. Squandering his estate

Book review

Sontag's Death Kit' provides look at death
Death Kit, by Susan Sontag. Farrar, Strauss and Giroux, $5.75.
A fictional examination of
death by a gifted young writer
who once taught religion and
philosophy at Columbia Univer-

sity.

The novel revolves almost entirely around two characters: Dalton Diddy Harron, 33, mild, confused and a death-seeker; and

man’s inability, even unwillingness, to cope with life while preparing for death.

Hester, a purposeful blind girl

he meets and lives with.
"Some people are their lives,”
says Miss Sontag early in the
book. “Others, like Diddy, mere-

In 311 shocking, brilliant pages
of imaginative prose the author
completely reverses the roles of
Diddy and Hester. Because of
her willingness to accept reality
and her purposefulness, Hester
finds happiness and strength and
“sight.” Diddy, because of his
doubts and unwillingness to face
reality, finds “blindness” and
death.
Miss Sontag is an author with
something to say and a promising
future.
Dean C. Miller—UPI

ly inhabit their lives. Like insecure tenants, never knowing exactly the extent of their property
or when the lease will expire
. . . Eventually, for such a person,
everything is bound to run down.”
Whether life “ran down” for
Diddy in a first-paragraph suicide
scene, or whether he failed in

the attempt, is unclear because of
the author’s stream-of-consciousness, fragmented style, nor is it
important. What is important is
Miss Sontag’s observations on

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�TuMday, October 3, 1967

Th

•

Page Eleven

Spectrum

Decision against
Leary upheld
NEW ORLEANS, La. (UFT)—
The U. S, Fifth District Court of
Appeals has upheld a 30-year
sentence and $30,000 fine against
t-SD advocate

Both the fine and the jail senwere given after Leary was
convicted of smuggling a small
amount of marijuana into the

United States.

John Wieners will read selections from his new book "Selected Poems" at o p.m. Wednesday in the Conference
Theater. Mr. Wieners is an
assistant English professor.

John Weiners to begin
poetry reading series
A poetry reading by John
Wieners will be held at 4 p.m.
Wednesday in Norton Hall’s Con-

ference Theater. This is the first
in the fall series of poetry readings sponsored by the Literature
and Drama Committee of the
UUAB.
Mr. Wieners will read from his
new book Selected Poems which
was written in conjunction with
Jonathan Cape.
Mr. Wieners is an assistant in
the English department. He has
had poems published in the Evergreen Review and is currently
poetry editor of Floating Bear
magazine.

This

year’s

series consists of

The key element in their songs,
the trio agrees, is honesty. “We
don’t preach or sermonize, but
we say what we feel
in
music,” said Peter Yarrow,
spokesman for the group. In their
constant search for new material,
the group continues to combine
simplicity, concern and truth.
Peter summed up their philosophy
saying, “I think if people ever
stop writing folk songs, it will

by Angelo Scouras
Spectrum

The court said such drugs
were not necessary to religious
experience and drug users consequently were not being deprived of their rights by being
deprived of drugs.
Leary was convicted in U. S.
district court in Houston of illegally importing marijuana from
Mexico into the country at Laredo, Tex., in 1965 and transporting it without paying taxes.
Federal agents said they found
about a half ounce of the drug
in Leary’s car and on the person
of his daughter, Susan, 18.
The former Harvard psychology professor, a leading exponent
of LSD and other “mind-bending” drugs, said he used marijuna
for "profound religious experi
once.”

nion

Lewis MacAdams and Mr. Bruce
Jackson.
“The Electronic Poetry” will be
the theme of the series’ second
The “electronic poetry”
part.
was composed this summer by
members of the English department working in conjunction
with sound engineers in Baird
Hall. The result, according to
Margo Kozlowski, chairman of
the Literature and Drama Committee, is “poetry composed in
conjunction with electronic
sounds, effects and mood to
create a total environment.”

mean they just don’t care. And

that would be the worst of all.”
Sponsored by the Buffalo Festival, the concerts are scheduled
for Saturday, Oct. 7, at 8:30 p.m.
and Sunday, Oct. 8, at 8 p.m.
Tickets are available at the Buffalo Festival Office and Norton
Hall.

�
Weekly Meetings every
Thursday afternoon at 4:30
for interested students, faculty

ol

College at

The official opening will sec
the completion of phase one of
the project. A second phase, the
restoration of the old Student
Union into an adjoining recreation and publication center, will
open in December. The Union
is part of a three building complex, the other two being a li-

brary and. communication center,
connected by a cement terrace
and built along the same archi-

tectural lines.
A massive brown-brick structure with protruding patios and

what could best be described as
a wall at its base, the building
lacks only a moat to complete

the illusion of a modern-day fortress. The visitor is overwhelmed
upon entering by two expansive
a lobby and information
finished in bare concrete.
This theme is not carried
through the Upper floors. The
main lounge, located on the third
floor, is a pleasant and comfortable relaxation center, with a
banging fireplace at its center.
The fourth floor is comprised of
large and functional meeting
rooms and offices.

Mr. Timothy Gallineau, the Director of Student Activities, com-

mented: “The main reaction of
most students is that this is so
much more functional than the
old Union was. especially in light
of expanding organizational activities. Students are somewhat
pressed because they are so
anxious to use all the facilities.”

However, some students seem
more concerned about the coldness and immensity of the building. conceding the third-floor
Main Lounge to be its most pleasant area.

Timothy Leary
30-year sentence

upheld

100 Copies —$2.75
1000 Copies —$14.00
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"UNDERSCORES ANEW
THE GENIUS OF INDIA'S
SATYAJIT RAY"
Magazine

Thesis
Reports
Presentations
Exams

-Tim#

Satyajit R.iv

-

Confidential Material
While-U-Watch

CHRISTIAN

ORGANIZATION

Reporter

Buffalo is
scheduled for . official opening
within two weeks. Presently the
building's use is limited to meet
ings, social events and cafeteria
service while it receives finishing
carpentry work and installation
of equipment.
versify

...

SCIENCE

Staff

two parts. The first part will feature poetry readings by Mr. Wieners, Mr. Michael Flanigan, Mr.

Kleinhans plays host to Peter,
Paul and Mary this weekend
Peter, Paul and Mary, the nation’s best-known modern minstrels, will be appearing at
Kleinhans Music Hall this weekend. One of the original members
of the folk movement, Peter, Paul
and Mary have succeeded in becoming an American tradition.

new Student Union soon

Timothy Leary.

tence

Poetry
reading

Buffalo State will open

25c &amp; 50c for those who
have paid their student fees
50c

&amp;
$.100 for those who
have not paid their fees.

Performance Schedule

OCT. 5, 6, 7
1:00, 3:00, 5:00, 7:00, 9:00

and staff.

Conference

344 NORTON

Theater

SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE!
Faculty, Staff, Students
State, Administration
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�Pag*

Twelve

The Spectrum

AMAZING

BARGAINS

TO FIND 'most anything for
sale in the classified ad section of
Spectrum.
The
And no wonder. The Spectrum's large circulation reaches the entire
University community and well beyond.
New lower rates. Contact Norman Goldberg, 831-3610.
YOU'RE APT

Tuesday, October 3, 1967

�r*Or

f

v.K 1a..T

Twndf, Ocfbtr 3, 1H7

“vIswT

The Spectrum

Paf» Thirteen

f/ie spectrum of

sports
'vastating ground

Freshmen upset
Manlius 22-0

Our guy

...

Buffalo's John Faller makes the
score 15-0 with his long gain
on first down and vd yards to
go. The Baby Bulls defeated
Manlius College of Syracuse.
N.Y. 22-0
far right photo shows Manlius
players in scramble, trying to
.

catch him.

The State University of Buffalo
freshman football team, upset by
a 34-20 setback at the hands of
Army last week, came on strong
Saturday afternoon to defeat the
Fanlius freshmen 22-0 at Rotary
Field.
A devastating ground game,
led by wingback John Faller,
combined with the sharp passing
of quarterback Ed Perry, drove
Manlius into the ground. The
Baby Bulls scored the second
time they had their./ hands on
the ball, and went on to hold
their opponents in check.
Faller scored twice on runs of
53 and 49 yards. He gained 132
yards on the ground in all. The
third touchdown was scored by
fullback John Zeek, who ran the
ball over fro mthe four after a
41-yard pass from Perry to Dan
Santola had set up the score.
Particularly outstanding in a
great team effort was the defensive line which kept Manlius
from mounting an effective attack throughout the entire game,
blocking a total of six of the op-

ponents’ passes. The offensive
line was also a key factor in the
win. Led by center Joe Hudson,
the Bull yearlings’ offensive line

Halfback Joe Moresco bucks
Manlius line with no results.

.

Once again we shall be faced
with the question of which team
in tomorrow’s opener has the advantage: the one that sewed up
the pennant early and has been
coasting, or the team .that has
had to fight until the season’s
very last game, just to get into
'he Series, the now may be a
little let-down.
'rius year, though, the teams
representing this situation are

from the opposite leagues. Usually, the senior loop has the
dogfight down to the wire with
the American League that emerges with a runaway team.

Cards

Infield
Orlando Cepeda has
enjoyed a great season. He is a
slashing hitter, daring baserunner, and fine fielder. Julian Javier, Dal Maxvill, and Mike Shannon are excellent fielders and
—

These military school freshmen
(far left
photo) who made the score
for Buffalo.

chased

never caught Faller

by theirs

Ed Perry
passes for first down
on third down.
holes for the running backs, Faller, Zeek and Barney Woodward.
Woodward did a workhorse job
in place of Len Nixon who is
out with a dislocated shoulder.
The Baby Bulls’ next game will
be played this Friday
at Colgate. The next home game will
be Oct. 13 against Ithaca at Rotary Field.
This victory for the baby Blue
and White was their first win
in Rotary Field in about two
years of play. Last year Coach
Mike Stock’s boys dropped their
only two decisions at the home
field, one at the hands of visiting Colgate 14-0 and the other
a 35-6 drought at the hands of
the visiting Orangemen from

of the first, second, and fourth
periods of play. The yearlings'
first two extra points came on
a pitchout from Perry to Santola.
The other two pointer came on
a halfback option pass with Perry
on the receiving end. The Baby
Bulls led 14-0 at halftime.

World Series analysis;
St. Louis picked to wi
by Jimmy Sharcot
Barring a miracle Tiger rally, the American League has
finally finished its straw-drawing to determine who will have
to face the National League’s Cardinals in the 1967 World
Series.
After having the closest race that memory serves, the
the Red Sox from Boston defeated the Twins in the last two
games of the year to cop the crown in the junior circuit.

'

stifled the Manlius pass rush
while opening up tremendous

Syracuse.
Against Manlius Saturday, the
Baby Bulls scored once in each

No gain

�

timely hitters. Shannon gave the
Cards a shot in the arm with his
play at third base, Javier is having his finest year at bat whi]e
Maxville has driven in many big
runs and is the steadying influence on the infield.
RATING A
Outfielder
With Lou Brock,
Curt Flood, and Bobby Tolan, the
—

Birds have three of the fastest
outfielders in the game. Brock
does occasionally fluff an easy
chance, but makes up for this
weakness with his fine arm, great
speed and baserunning and potent bat. Flood has come up with
a sore shoulder but gets one of
the best jumps on a fly ball in
baseball history. Curt is also hitting around .330. Roger Maris is
(Cont’d on Pg. 14)

on the bench
by Billy Martin
Could it be a hoax perpetrated on the town of Buffalo
and the students of the University, or could it really be that
Doc Urich’s Bulls aren’t what they seem to be? Perhaps the
game we all witnessed was a videotape replay of some Buffalo
team from years past, many years past.
This was not the same team that played North Carolina
State two Saturdays ago, but a team that seemed to play their
last game in a state of shock or stupor or semi-permanent
high.
Against N.C. State the Bulls
fielded an offensive machine and
a grueling defense, but when the
University of Virginia played
football versus the Bulls, their
great offensive machine was
turned into a tinker toy and the
defense into putty.

The mark of a good football
team was seen last week when
North Carolina State turned Buffalo mistakes into touchdowns.
The Bulls recovered six Cavalier
fumbles, but they never capitalized on them, all they did was
fall on them. If the Bulls were
the team everyone expected them
to be the score mignt have been
reversed.

Question to be answered
Could it be the opening game
of the season was a fluke? Is
Mick Murtha really better than
Jim Robie? Could bursitus be
hampering not only Mr. Murtha
but also the Bulls? All these
questions, and then some, must
be answered in order to understand the destiny of the Bulls.
One week ago this reporter wgs
writing about a 1-2 QB punch
that resembled Tittle and Connerley. This week the 1-2 QB
punch looked more like Don
Heinrich and George Shaw. The
next question that arises is this:
Can the Bulls come back? After
two tough ball games in the
warm southern climate, they
must return to the dark, dismal,
tropical rain forest, Buffalo. It
would be completely against my

beliefs to say the Bulls would do

better at water polo, but perhaps
they might. The team has gotten
progressively worse and are now
at the the bottom of the barrel.

How good is Virginia?

There is perhaps another reason for their defeat —maybe the
Cavaliers were a better football
team. They surely played like
one. Granted they have good
speed and a fairly tough front
four on defense, but still, the
Bulls were mentally ready for
them. Could the letdown be one
of physical ability?
Watching the Bulls play was
enough to give you an ulcer, especially when you think they are
a good club. As it stands now,
with a record of 1-2, maybe the
truth lies in the mere fact that
Buffalo is not ready to compete
with teams of the caliber of N.C.
State and Virginia. There was no
food poisoning in Charlottesville,
so don’t figure that as an excuse.
There are no excuses left. The
Bulls played a poor football
game, offensively and defensively, and if this trend continues,
next week many of those who
still believe in the Bulls will definitely become disheartened and
unhappy fans.

This is the year of upset in
football, but the Bulls are still
waiting to score that upset. Don't
give up hope. With seven games
left, the Bulls are bound to win
one, and with a little help maybe two.

Does Coach Urich have any
gray hair?

�no t

Th

Pag* Fourt**n

Bulls

•

World series

down in defeat

go

Cavaliers triumph 35-12

closed in on him in the second

Assistant

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va.
The State University of
Buffalo football team suffered its second consecutive defeat
against a major college football opponent in the South Saturday afternoon as the University of Virginia Cavaliers
handed the Bulls their worst setback of the early season
at Scott Stadium, 35-12.
The victory for the Cavaliers was their first of the season after dropping their opener at West Point last week
to a strong Army team, 26-7. The travel-weary Bulls will thus
come home to face Temple University at Rotary Field this
Saturday after with a 1-2 record.
—

Cavalier quarterback Gene Arnette stole the whole show before some 16,000 elated fans as
he ran for four touchdowns and
passed for the other. Arnette
used the keeper play as his main
scoring weapon and ran up a
total of 18 points in the first half
with this one play from scrimmage. His other running score
came in the last quarter of the
game as he used the old quarterback sneak as his method of
scoring.

Picked up fumbles
It was all Virginia in the first
half as the Bulls just couldn’t get
a drive going. Buffalo had an
extremely alert defense as they
picked up four of the host’s
fumbles in the first half and two
more in the second, but during
the first 30 minutes, the Bulls
were unable to capitalize on their
opponent’s mistakes and fell behind on the brilliant offensive
maneuvers of Arnette.
In the first half All-American

candidate

Frank

Quayle,

(Paid

the

Gene Arnette

p

I

Cavalier quarterback
Cavalier’s junior left halfback,
carried the ball seven times and
gained 144 net yards for an unbelievable 20.5 yard average.
However, the Buffalo defense

of only seven yards for the entire
afternoon.
With the Bulls trailing 28-0 at
halftime, a more determined outfit from the Blue and White
turned in the better performance
of the two squads in the second
half. The Bulls seemed very eager
to get their hands on that ball
when they held the Cavaliers on
downs after the opening kickoff
of the second half.
Dropped Murtha pass
Mickey Murtha, the Bulls’ junior quarterback, was still unable
to pull his offensive attack together however. Fleet halfback
Ken Rutkowski dropped one of
Murtha’s passes after the Bulls
were given another break on a
15-yard penalty which put them
on their opponents’ 40-yard line.
After holding the Cavaliers for
the third time, the Bulls finally
got on the scoreboard as Bull
fullback Lee Jones crossbucked
over right tackle from two yards
for the six-pointer. Murtha had
engineered the attack from the
opponents’ 39-yard line. Murtha's
attempted pass to Ben Washington fell incomplete as the two
point conversion try failed.
On the first play'"!rom scrimmage after the unsuccessful onsides kick attempt by Bob Embow, Arnette fumbled the ball
and junior defensive end Jim
Remillard recovered his second
fumble of the afternoon for the
Blue and White, putting the Bulls
in scoring position again on their
own 46-yard line.

I„ j-1.,,T

3, 1967

Tuesday, October

Spectrum

likewise a fine fielder though he
lacks speed. Rog has been one of
the vital cogs in the Cards’ success in 1967 even though he has
not hit many homers. Tolan plays
whenever any of the regulars are

(Cont’d from Pg. 13)

tinction of being the best player
in the majors this season. “New
York” Yaz can do it all. Reggie
Smith patrols center field and
owns an arm that has aptly given
this stinging hitter the nickname
the righmeiaer and

RATING A
Catching
Tim McCarver is one
of the three best catchers in baseball and has even come up with
a strong throwing arm this season to go with his hitting, running and handling of pitchers.
Ricketts and Romano are fine
backup men and do much of the
Cards’ pinchhitting.
RATING A
Pitching
This department
has been the big surprise for the
Cards this season. Youngsters
like Nelson Briles, Steves Carlton, Dick Hughes and Ron Willis
have really come through with
fine performances. Bob Gibson,
when healthy, Joel Hoerner, and
Ray Washburn have enjoyed
steady campaigns. Even Larry
Jaster, A1 Jackson, and Jack
Lamabe have been brilliant at
times. The Cards have fine bal—

—

ance.

RATING A

Red Sox
Infield
The Bosox have a
solid interior defense. George
Scott is the first sacker, Mike
Andrews is at second, Rico Petrocelli is the shortstop while
Jerry Adair guards the hot corner. They’re all fine flashy fielders and no slouches at bat, either,
with Scott being a .300 hitter and
possibly the longest hitter in the
—

game.

RATING A
Outfied
Carl Yastrzemski is
the left fielder and had the dis—

gives

tpe

team a tremendous boost when
hitting. Jose Tartabul is the
squad’s best base stealer.
RATING B+
Catching—The Hubhose catchers are Mike Ryan, Elston Howard, and Russ Gibson, They are
all capable glovemen, but none
of the trio did any worthwhile
hitting in 1967.

RATING C

Pitching
This has been the
pleasant surprise in Beantown
and why the club has been in
contention all year. Jim Lonborg
(22 game winner), Gary Bell, Lee
Stange and Jose Santiago are the
starters and are somewhat dependable, if nothing else. The
relief corps is led by Johnny
Wyatt, with Sparky Lyle and
Bucky Brandson just behind Buf—

falo John.
RATING B
As you veteran devotees of The
Spectrum know,
this corner
picked the Dodgers in six games
a year ago and the Twins in
seven in 1965. One might well
feel that old J.B. would be better
off if he kept his foot from entering his mouth quite so often.
Well, you are right! However,
one cannot write a preview without including a prediction.
I hate to go against the fans of
that Cinderella Boston, but come
Wednesday in Boston the clock
will begin striking 12 for Cinderella, and St. Louis will shellac
the Red Sox in five games.
(Paid Advertisement)

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CONDEMN AMERCAN INTERVENTION IN VIETNAM: The Nuremberg judgments make this war your responsibility. More is needed of you than a private opinion
of disapproval of the war.
BRING THE TROOPS HOME NOW: The best support we can give to our
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END THE DRAFT: Support those young Americans who have chosen to fight
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THEREFORE, WE URGE YOU TO JOIN US:

DEMONSTRATE AGAINST THE WAB
IN BUFFALO: Saturday, October 7, at 12:30 the march
will proceed from Norton Union to a rally at the new M &amp; T Bank
in downtown Buffalo.
IN WASHINGTON, D.C.: Saturday, October 21, at noon
(Bus seats are available leaving from Norton Union on Friday

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This Advertisement Is Sponsored By a Committee of Sixty-Three Graduate Students and Six Faculty Members of the Department of Psychology

�Tuesday, October 3, 1967

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looking
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around.
Mature Clement
sophs (and others), this is your chance!
Call 883-1023.

How did you answer question

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IT'S WORKED for many people on campus.
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question of the week every Wednesday morning between 10 a.m.
and 12 noon, on the first floor of

AUTO SERVICE
AUTO PROBLEMS

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get you dizzy? See Joe
corner

Gulf Station, Kenmore
Road Service. 836-8998.

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A different question and the
results of the previous questions
will appear in the Tuesday edition of The Spectrum.

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�Tuesday, October 3, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* Sixteen

LBJ reiterates U.S. position
SAN ANTONIO, Tex.—President John-

*

•

•

sal&amp;on
Philadelphia
san antonio

Demonstrators protest elections
SAIGON—Shouting anti-American protests, elated demonstrators surged through
the streets of Saigon Saturday in support
of an official recommendation to throw
out the results of the recent presidential

election.
About 500 Buddhist-led demonstrators
clashed with police in front of the National Assembly building where a watchdog committee voted in a predawn decision to recommend invalidation of the
election.

Begin debate

The 117-member assembly almost immediately began debate on the commit-

tee’s decision and voted that at least
four charges of irregularities were wellfounded.
The assembly’s slap against Presidentelect Nguyen Van Thicu and running mate
Premier Nguyen Cao Ky was a severe
blow to the United States, whose reason
for fighting here —as restated Friday by
President Johnson—is so that the Vietnamese can have their own legally-elected

democratic government.
American diplomats were reliably reported to be working behind the scenes
to have the assembly override the committee’s recommendations. U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker cancelled appoint
ments to hold conferences with Thieu.
Disorders erupt
Disorders erupted at the legislative
building when the committee’s 16-2 decision was announced. Shouting protests
against “foreigners” and “Americans,”
demonstrators tried to topple a huge
sign proclaiming the election results.
They clashed with club-swinging police,
but authorities appeared to be acting with
restraint.

Elsewhere, about 1,000 followers of militant Buddhist leader Thich Tri Quang
marched in an orderly demonstration on
the presidential palace to support his
charge that the government is persecuting
him.
Tri Quang was in the third day of a
sit-down protest outside the palace.

son reported to the nation Friday night
that the United States was willing to
stop bombing North Vietnam immediately,
but that Hanoi had not accepted any
form of peace proposal from the United
States.

Hanoi blamed
The Chief Executive placed squarely
on Hanoi blame for the continuing war,
saying the United States could not give
up at this point in the face of North
Vietnamese refusal to do anything about
peace.
Johnson spoke before some 2,000 delegates of the National Legislative Conference, meeting in San Antonio in the 21st
annual convention of the organization.
He flew to San Antonio by helicopter
from his Johnson City ranch to deliver
one of the most important policy statements on Vietnam in recent months.
Johnson, in his prepared remarks,
drummed on a central theme—the U.S.
desire for peace, but its refusal to pull
out of the war unilaterally and thus expose the South Vietnamese to even worse
aggression than they have suffered thus
far.

Willing to talk
The Chief Executive went into some
detail on what this country had done in
the past to bring the North Vietnamese
to negotiations and what this country
stands willing to do. At one point he
said he was willing to “talk tomorrow
with Ho Chi Minh” or send Secretary of
State Dean Rusk to talk with the Hanoi
foreign minister at any time.
“As we have told Hanoi time and
again, the heart of the matter is this,”
Johnson said. “The United States is willing immediately to stop aerial and naval
bombardment of North Vietnam when this
will lead promptly to productive discussion. We would assume that while discussion proceeds. North Vietnam would
not take advantage of the bombing cessation.

“But Hanoi has not accepted any of
these proposals. It is by Hanoi’s choice—not ours, not the world’s—that the wpr
continues.”

Johnson cited the authority of Western
diplomats who recently were in Hanoi to
the effect that the North Vietnam govern-

ment is counting heavily on the U.S.
people to be weary of the war.

Reds misunderstanding
Johnson said this was an

example of
North Vietnamese judgment. He said
Hanoi, exhibiting a failing common to
totalitarian regimes, was mistaking “dissent for disloyalty
a restlessness for
a rejection of policy
a few committees
for a country .
individual speeches for
...

...

.

.

public policy.”
He said it was tragic that the North
Vietnamese must discover only through
bloody war the American strength and
perseverance which the Nazis did not

understand in World War H. But he said

—DPI Telephoto

Senator

Pro's
pointers

Everett Dirkson seems

to

be

giving some pointers to two possible
presidential candidates. Gov. Reagan
and Sen. Charles Percy, at a library

ultimately the North Vietnamese would
make this discovery.
“In the meantime, we shall continue
to seek negotiations, confident that reason will at last prevail; that Hanoi will
realize that it cannot win; that it will turn
away from fighting and toward building
for its own people.”

Aware of criticism
Johnson was plainly aware of recently
mounting criticism of current U.S. war
policy by well-known members of Congress in both parties and from spokesmen for private groups. He did not
reply by name to any specific critic, but
he did make this reference:
“The true peace-keepers in the world
tonight are not those who urge us to
retire from the field in Vietnam, who tell
us to find the quickest, cheapest exit
from that tormented land, no matter what
the consequences may be.
“The true peace keepers are those men
who stand on the DMZ, at this hour,
taking the worst the enemy can give.
The true peace-keepers are the soldiers
who are breaking the terrorists’ grip
around the villages around Vietnam, the
civilians who are bringing medical care
and food and education to people wlio
have suffered a generation of war.
“And so we shall press forward.”

Eisenhower, Kennedy cited
The President reminded his audience
that the U.S. commitment in Southeast
Asia was made by “three presidents and
a half-million men.” This was a reference
to former presidents Dwight D. Eisenhower and John F. Kennedy, as well as
himself.
To trace the development of the American commitment and its support by
leaders of Asian and Pacific nations,
Johnson quoted from Eisenhower and
Kennedy.
One Kennedy quotation of 1962 said,
“Withdrawal in the case of Vietnam
and the case of Thailand might mean a
collapse of the entire area.”
Johnson also pointed out that there
are now North Vietnamese troops jn
Laos, trained North Vietnamese guerrillas

in northeast Thailand, and communistsupported guerrillas in Burma.
Johnson also dealt with another area
of criticism—that the Vietnamese, themselves, are making no progress and that
the war is stalemated.
The Chief Executive said such assumptions and ideas were not well-founded;
that there was “positive movement” by
the South Vietnamese toward representative, responsive government.

War Progress
As for military progress, Johnson said
that in the past year, the enemy had been
driven from many major interior bases
and that the grip of the Viet Cong on the
people was being broken.
More than once in his extensive remarks, Johnson dealt with the question
posed by critics, “Why not negotiate
now?”
He said the answer to this had been
and would continue to be, “We and our
South Vietnamese Allies are wholly prepared to negotiate now.”
The blame for the lack of negotiation,
he said, must rest squarely on Hanoi.
While he gave no indication of additional
escalation of the war, Johnson made it
clear that the United States had no
choice but to follow its present military
policy, including aerial and naval bombardment until Hanoi shows some sign of
being willing to enter into productive
discussion.

dedication at Eureka College, Eureka,
III. Reagan said repeatedly that he is
not a candidate.

Assassination plot uncovered
PHILADELPHIA—Bail totaled nearly
$200,000 Saturday for six members of a
Maoist
leaning, Negro revolutionary
group arrested in a bizarre plot to assassinate top U.S. and city officials and
dynamite public buildings in three states
and Washington, D. C.
Judge Leo Weinrott set bail at $35,000
each Saturday for two members of the
Revolutionary Action Movement, a group
of Peking-oriented militants in a plan
which marked for death President Johnson, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover and
specified blasting of buildings in New
York City, Washington, D. C,, Baltimore
and Richmond.
He set $50,000 bail for a third RAM
member charged in the same plot, described by police as a “master plan of
insurrection and terror."
The jurist held three other RAM members on Friday in $25,000 each in the
-

other part of the dual plot which planned
to start a Negro riot and lace food, coffee

and other refreshments given policemen
in the riot area with potassium cyanide.
Experts said a cache of ten % ounces of
the poison seized by police was enough
to make 4,000 lethal doses.
The two plots were unveiled by two
informants, both members of RAM.
An investigator said RAM is headed by
Robert Williams, Monroe, N. C., who is
living in Communist China. Williams was
expected to be an honored guest on
Sunday at the National Day celebration
in Peking.
Diplomatic sources who talked with the
bearded Negro last year said he went to
Cuba in 1966 to learn “armed revolution”
and then to Peking to learn from Chairman Mao.
Philadephia police still seek a seventh
known only as “Sakeeb.”

—UP1 T•(•photo

Synod
opens

Pope Paul VI sits on a thrown during
ceremonies in St. Peter's Basilica Friday,
opening the Roman Catholic Church's
first Synod of Bishops.

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                    <text>The Spectrum
Curfews eliminated tor

second term freshmen
The Inter-Residence Council
Curfew Evaluation Committee,
consisting of 12 to 15 members,
examined the situation and found
“that some period of time must
be allowed for adjustiment.” Arbitrarily, one semester was chosen for the period of adjustment.
“While one semester of curfew
may or may not be justified as
the length of this period of adjustment . . . maintaining the
limitations of an arbitrary, institutionally imposed curfew beyond that one semester cannot
be justified in any reasonable
manner and is definitely not in
keeping with the development of
individual responsibility,” says
the committee report.
During the second semester,

Friday, Saptembar 29, 1967

State University of New York at Buffalo

Vol. 18, No. 6

The Spectrum has learned
that freshman women will
not have a curfew during the
second semester.

(

freshman women as well as upperclass women probably will
not have to sign out. However,
it will be encouraged that they
inform someone of their whereabouts in case of an emergency.
The Inter-Residence Council
Curfew Evaluation Committee
won’t be meeting until after the
IRC elections. The committee will
assemble to discuss the first
semester situation of freshman
women and the general curfew
situation.
A referendum issued by freshman women decided the policy
of maintaining their curfews.
Vice-President Richard Sigglekow said that the no-curfew decision had not yet become official.
He said, however, that he is
“open to suggestions” concerning
the curfew.
The Spectrum has learned from
informed sources, however, the
no-curfew rule will go into effect
soon.

unammou.

Amherst severs ties with NSA
Im
wy

■*-*

iwTBi

Cinuui
jHiwd

for American students.

Spectrum Staff Reporter

The Amherst College Student Council last week voted

to drop out of the National Student Association.

Council President Felix Springer, a senior, introduced
the resolution which was passed unanimously
Springer attended the August NSA convention at the worthwhile political activities of
the Association
cancelled out
University of Maryland. He bgr its method ofarefinancing them.
told the Council he views “Nearly all the money NSA
spends in its budget comes from
the NSA’s actions as “irrefoundation or State Department
sponsibility and political opgrants that it solicits.
portunism.”
He reported that “NSA passed Chargnc dishonesty
resolutions advocating blade power and, for all its rhetoric, advocating violence. It advocated
student power that wanted it both
ways, total freedom and total protection, a voice in all college affairs: tenure, admissions, everything
and complete protection from the law.”
Springer stated that the few
.

.

.

“NSA technically has no funds
for pursuing its political projects.
The way it gains these funds is
by diverting some of its grant
money. It was dishonest before
and still is dishonest.
“NSA, for all its problems as
an organization, filled a huge
void and was the only organization that could be said to speak

Unfor-

tunately, as I previously said, the
Congress didn't allow the students
to achieve the proper detachment,
to take a hard look at the vehicle
it was using to achieve this voice.
Ends become perverted by means.
There was talk of restructuring,
but the new officers came out

of the ranks of the old officers,
and the structure is too self-serving to achieve change."

In response, the Amherst student newspaper editorialized:
“American students, confronted
by the draft and increasingly
united by their concern for the
war, are in need of an organization which is truly their own
financed by students rather than
by the government, made up directly of students. To encourage
the emergence of such an organization, at the expense of dropping
out of NSA, is well worth the
—

price.”

Indian reservation work Student Judiciary free
included in CAC program ofadministrative control

The Community Aid Corps, a volunteer program of
students from the State University of Buffalo, is sponsoring
several neW programs this year. The Corps is expanding to
a total of 16 different programs working with the underprivileged or disabled of the Buffalo community.
The new projects planned
to look for corporation jobs refor this year include a chil- quiring some skill, and providdren’s recreation project on ing some permanence.
the Akron Indian ReservaOne way of doing this would
tion
be through in-service training
They will have a woodcrafts
shop, arts and crafts, and recrea-

tion for older children.

A committee on jobs, headed

programs in cooperation with the
Erie County Technical Institute.
Boys would be able to study and
work at the same time.

A college counseling committee will be started to give advice
and help to people who don’t
have access to information about
opportunities open to them in

higher education.

The 'agency will set up interviews and provide counseling to
all people of the community
poor whites, Indians, and adults
and children from the ghetto.
The committee will be located on
this campus.
—

Research committee
A research committee under
Geri Sockol plans to work in the
ghetto near fflgh Street and the
Fruit Belt of downtown
The group will be collecting daU
on how the neighborhood is
changing because of emigration
from the South.

Woodlown
Community Center

Pat Daly, a reading specialist at
Woodlawn, also Is involved in
training Mott ot the Commu"fry Aid Corps. With skills acquired, CAC members teach
others tq read.
by Steve Smookler, will try to
find work lor people who haven’t
found jobs through conventional
agencies. The committee plans

They will try to compare the
education of parents and children, and determine what help is
most needed in the ghetto.

There will also be a Fruit Belt
information center, and a Lacks«pa day cm center. Held 3
at''4 morning* a week ha the
ghetto, it will have arts and
crafts for children to keep them
occupied while their mothers
work.

An activities committee will
sponsor field trips, modern dance
workshops and a drama work-

shop

for

culturally

deprived

parts of Buffalo.

New guidelines to meet the expanding role of the student in University affairs is the goal of this year’s Student
Judiciary.

Provide Tutors
One of the central aims of
the CAC is to provide tutors for
young children who aren’t learning to read in the public schools.

Volunteers for this project
need no experience teaching
reading. A separate orientation
will be held for tutoring the disadvantaged child. Tutor packets,
including a tutor’s manual will
be handed out at the meeting.
This year the program is focusing on creative tutoring. Tutors
will keep a record of each child’s
progress. This will provide an
ongoing record of progress which
will help in future planning.

The Student Senate picked the five best qualified students from a number of applicants. Each applicant faced
rigid cross examination by the Executive Committee to test
his qualifications.
Norman

Effman,

the

chief

justice, is a Senior law student
and 1965 graduate of the State
University of Buffalo. Mr. Effman is a former Treasurer of the
Allenhurst House council and a
member of the Hoot Court Board
of the Law School.
AJ. Dimattia is a Senior majoring in Sociology and Psychology. Presently he is a residence

advisor at Tower and is the former Chief Justice of the interresidence judiciary.
Bobert Weiner is a Junior majoring in History and is a forOther projects are at Friendship House, at the Evangelical mer UC senator and member of
and Reform Church, at Woodthe publications board.
Jack Huttner is a Senior Hislawn, at the Cantaclecian center
tory major and former chairman
for work with exceptional chilof the elections committee and
dren, and Covenant Church.
member of the Traffic Court.
Steven Rappoport is a Junior
Moving to Senate
Enwomks major with experiThis year the CAC is moving ence on the Finance Committee.
This has been the first year
from the University Union Actithat the Student Judiciary has
vities Board to the Student Sen
appointed solely by the
ate. At present it is financed by been
Student Senate. Formerly the
a budget from the UUAB. They Dean of Students and President
m planning to app iy for grants of the University took part in the
appointments.
new undergraduate
from
The Judiciary is no longer an
search fund and also from the
arm of administrative authority.
New York Higher Education
■

_

The CAC is larger now than
ever. It began 2% years ago.
starting as a committee on the
Union Board. There are now over
100 volunteers working every
week in urban or suburban Buffalo Tracy Cottone. who is in
charge of the CAC. feels that
the people in the group are very
involved and incredibly enthusiastic. Many project heads have
worked in Head Start and other
national programs, and “really
know what they are doing,* according to Miss Cottone.

Chief justice Effman feels the
duty of the body is to “Punish
crimes against the academic community and protect the Student
against arbitrary judicial processes.” The student has the right
to any legal counsel including a
pool of senior law students.
Student autonomy should be
promoted by the Judiciary, according to Student Association
president Stewart Edelstein. He
believes that all violations of
regulations not passed or reviewed by student organizations
should be refused trial by the
Judiciary.
The Judiciary has appellate
jurisdiction over all inferior
courts such as the Traffic Court
and Elections Court. It also has
the power to interpret the Student Association Constitution.
Penalties imposed by the body
can be a stiff $100 fine or even
expulsion.
Tt is the task of the Student
Judiciary to supply precedents
and guidelines for future Judiciaries,” Robert Weiner stated in
his release. Precedents will aim
at social and academic freedom
and academic reform, he said.

Petitions available for freshmen
senators; elections set for Oct. 18
A special election will take
place on October 18 to elect four
finbmm representatives to the
Student Senate. This it the sec-

ond coaaecutive year that the
freshman class will be represented in proper relation to its

Petitions may be obtained by
all interested freshmen in the
Student Senate office. Room 205
Norton Hall from Monday, Oct.
2 until noon Friday, Oct. 6.

Interested freshmen will also
be given a copy of election rules,
a constitution of the Student Association, and a general orientation of the Student Association's
committees and functions. Each
potential candidate will then be
required to obtain 100 signatures
of fellow freshmen.
Campaigning will begin on
Wednesday. Oct. 11, and continue
through Wednesday, Oct. 18.

�Friday, Saptwwbar

Tha Spxtrwm

Pat* Two

By large majority

Senate votes to exclude
non- yers from activities
Spectrum

Staff Reporter

The Student Senate Wednesday
night passed a resolution stating
that only students who have paid
activities fees will be allowed to
join campus organizations.
The amendment reads:

students park their cars only in
the Clement and Goodyear lots
failed.

assumptions, and that it is premature at best.” Action will be
taken immediately.

This would have left the Tower
and Capen lots open to com-

Reports were given by several
committees. There is a new health
committee intended to bring
about several important changes
in health services.

muters.

•

Membership in clubs, organizations and publications shall
be limited to those students paying their activities fees.
•

Financial disciplinary actions shall be taken against any
group that is found to have nonactivity fee paying students
among its members.
•

It shall be left to the discretion of the club, organization
or publication to allow special
programs to be open to the general public.
The amendment was passed by a
•

large majority.

Also passed in relation to this
question was a resolution concerning the use of facilities in
Norton Hall by students who have
not paid their activities fees.
Various restrictions were placed
on the use of the craft center,
recreation facilities, music room
and the browsing library.

Parking resolution

A proposal by Senator Joseph

Objections to this proposal
were mainly that the Clement
and Goodyear lots are relatively
unpoliced, and therefore, provide
a substantial risk for car owners
who leave their cars there overnight.

Also, some senators maintained
that allowing commuters into the
Tower and Capen lots in the
morning would create congestion
in the center of the University.
There was discussion about the
English Department’s policy regarding courses taken at Millard

Fillmore College. English credits
earned at Millard Fillmore College are not acceptable toward a
degree in English in day school.
The English Department main-

tains that it is easier to be accepted into Millard Fillmore College
than the University day school,
thus night school students are
generally on an inferior intellectual plane.
The Senate passed a resolution
slating that “this decision is

Committee reports

The Activities Committee reported on the organization of a
new political group on campus.
The Alternative Candidate
Task Force, commonly called ACT
'68, under the direction of Dr,
Berkely Evans, will work to oppose the re-election of President
Johnson.

In addition, the Senate approved the rules for Student Senate
fall freshmen elections presented
by Steve Rotter, election committee chairman. These rules were
passed with the deletion of a
clause which put a limit on the
amount of money a candidate
could spend on his campaign.

A suggestion was made by President Stewart Edelstein to increase student involvement in
Senate affairs. He urged each
senator and committee chairman
to hold a meeting once a week
with randomly selected students
to discuss his committee.

This new Norelco Rechargeable Tripleheader
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Elective II: the Norelco Tripleheader 35T. The closest, fastest,
most comfortable shaver on

The first visiting Asian professor at the State University
of Buffalo for the 1967-68 academic year is Dr. Chon Dong,
Director of the Korean Research Center in Seoul, Korea.

Under the School of Education’s Visiting Asian Professors
Project, Dr. Dong will lecture
to undergraduates and graduate
students on Korean culture and
life and Far Eastern history and
politics. During October, he will
also be available to address local
groups.

Dr. Dong was educated in the
U.S. and has served on the faculties of Seoul National University,
Yonsei University and Konkuk
University and is presently an
instructor for the Far East division of the University of Mary-

land.
The Visiting Asian Professors

is designed to enable
American students to learn about
Asian nations and to give Asian
scholars an opportunity to learn
about America and its universities. Over 67 Asian scholars from
12 nations have participated in
the project since it began in
1962.
The project is sponsored by
the U.S. State Department and
directed by Dr. Burvil H. Glenn,
Professor of Education at the
State University of Buffalo.
Project

Lecturers from India, China
Other Asian professors to lec-

year are Dr. Vishnu A. Narain of
India, Mr. Surendra Shrestha of
Nepal and Mr. Chih Weng of

China.
Dr. Dong, who will be on campus until Nov. 3, is prepared to
lecture on Korean history, culture and life; Far Eastern history
and politics, and international relations.
Dr. Narain, head of the Dept,
of History at Patna University,
Patna, India, is an authority on
Indian and Bengal history, social
reform in India and the constitutional history of India. He will
be in Buffalo from Nov. 4 to
the end of the fall semester.
Mr. Shrestha, acting principal
of Saraswati College in Nepal
will be lecturing on campus from
Jan. 29 to March 24.
Mr. Wang, head of the Dept,
of Foreign Languages and Literature at Soochow University in Taiwan, is prepared to lecture on
Chinese history and culture.
Each of these men is available
for speaking engagements to campus or off-campus groups. The
lecturers can be reached through
the Director of the Visiting Asian
Professors Project, Dr. Glenn, at
room 313 Foster, extension 2420.

College enrollment rises
ALBANY (UPD —Student enrollment in New York State colleges and universities took another climb this year.
The State Education Department says total higher education
enrollment was placed at 685,000
full and part time students in

mdecks
'OOi'.

•

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campus.

H(7

Dr. Dong to begin series
of lectures on Far East

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Paper/Thesis Deck: for course and term
papers, theses and compiling the literature.
Study/Review Deck: for class work and
exam review for all course notes.
Research Deck: for research data in
sciences, arts,

The estimated enrollment for
the current year shows full time
students at 400,000 up from last
year’s 367,000, and part time students at 285,00 up from last
year’s 275,000.

HAVE YOU
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The department said that of
the total estimated enrollment,
342,950 students, or 50.1% of
the college population, is enrolled in public institutions. The
remainder is enrolled in private
colleges and universities.

*

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This is an increase of 43,000 students or 6.7% from last year.

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�Friday, September

»,

Th

1947

•

Pag* Thrw

Spictrnn

Blaine amendment retained

Constitutional Convention adjourns; dateline news. Sept 29
items presented as single package

ALBANY—The legislature will be able to act on a wide range
of subjects if the voters approve the new state constitution. The 186

adjourned Tuesday night with the passage of a plan to
present the new State charter to the voters as a single item.
Voting on the final resolution followed strict party lines,
as the 3 Liberal Party delegates gave the Democratic majority the votes needed for passage.
Republicans offered stiff opposition to the plan, holding

lature could implement the many
new powers given it under the

out for separate submission of

new document.
Among major provisions in the
new document:
Blaine—The 74-year-old ban
on state aid to parochial schools
was repealed. The first amendment of the federal constitution,
mandating the state “make no
law regarding the establishment
of a religion,” was adopted to

repeal of the Blaine amendment

and other controversial items.
Nostalgia was mixed with relief as the six
month session
drew to a close. Delegates who
had once opposed each other
bitterly during debate were slapping each others’ backs and plan
ning future reunions.
The session, which opened
April 4, has produced a new,
word constitution, less
22,702
than half the length of the present 47,000 word document. The
cost of the six month session
was expected to run $10 million.

•

-

separate church and state.

Voting—The legislature was
given the power to lower the
voting age to 18.
Slums—A community development article, aiming at pouring
•

-

-

•

-

millions of dollars in state funds
into private programs to rebuild
urban slums, was added.
Counties—A provision barring town supervisors from sitting on county boards effectively
abolishes boards of supervisors in

Effective Jan. I
The new constitution, which
must be approved by the voters

•

Nov. 7, will not become effective
until Jan. 1, 1969. The extra
year was given so that the legis-

a ib-arucle document of nearly 23,000 words, giving next year’s
lawmakers the chance to implement such things as a lower voting
age and a new school formula.
Only one Republican proposal, the Preamble, managed to survive
the Democrat-dominated convention. The GOP predicts the constitution will cost future taxpayers more than $2 billion.
SAIGON—Militant Buddhist leader Thich Tri Quang led 700
monks and nuns in a march on Independence Palace today, part of
a nationwide protest he called against President-elect Nguyen Van
Thieu that has the Viet Cong’s “wholehearted support.”
The marchers squatted in the street until Thieu came out
Reapportionment—The hisand met face-to-face with Tri Quang.
toric power of the legislature to
The demonstration came four days before the national assembly
reapportion itself was removed
is to announce whether it will promulgate Thieu’s election or invaliand placed in the hands of a
date the vote as defeated candidates and student groups have
five man bi-partisan commission. demanded.
Referendum—The statewide
NEW VORK—Striking teachers are voting on ratification of a
referendum presently requjred
new contract that would end the walkout that has paralyzed the
on all borrowing programs was
city school system since the start of the fall term.
removed.
Alhough there was some opposition to the proposed contract
Education—The legislature within the top union echelon, it was almost certain that the rank
was authorized to establish a and file at a general membership meeting in Madison Square
system of “free tuition” at public
Garden would vote for approval.
and private colleges in the state.
HONG KONG—A man accused of being an American spy was
Welfare—The state would publicly
executed before 10,000 cheering Red Chinese, Radio Peking
take over the $28 million annually reported. Four other alleged
U.S. spies were sentenced to long
paid by localities for welfare over
prison terms, three of them for life.
a 10-year period.
The latest in a series of public executions, some of them
Wilds—Constitutional “Fortelevised, came as Premier Chou En-lai said that the main opposition
ever Wild” protection of the to Communist Pary Chairman Mao Tse-tung “has crumbled” and
Adirondack and Catskill forest the situation in China “has never been so good as it is today."
preserves was continued.
WASHINGTON—Senate investigators, searching the nation's
ghettos for the cause of this summer’s riots, have found no evidence
of a nationwide conspiracy, it was learned today.
What the subcommittee, under Chairman John L. McClellan
(D., Ark.) has found, after painstaking research, is that the black
power militants are “loosely in touch,” according to a source close to
person who took the camera “defthe inquiry.
initely had knowledge of photoPHILADELPHIA —Another suspect of a Negro revolutionary
graphic equipment,” and that group, accused of being part of an alleged plot to poison 4,000 police,
a
“the chances of his being stutop city officials and citizens, was in police custody today.
dent are great.”
District Attorney Arlen Specter said the plot was hatched by
This is not the first inmembers of the Revolutionary Action Movement (RAM) which has
stance of stolen equipment. Durideological ties to Red China and a record of planning large-scale
ing the summer approximately violence.
$200 worth of equipment was taken from the Buffalonian dark-

form of government.
Courts—A statewide district
court system was established with
a non-mandatory method of abolishing such “inferior” courts as
justices of the peace and police
courts. The costs of all courts in
the state above the district court
level would be absorbed by the
state over a 10-year period.

oped

•

•

•

•

•

•

Darkroom robbery nets $700-$ WOO
An estimated $700-$1000 worth
of photographic equipment was
discovered missing from the Buffalonian darkroom, Room 353A
Norton Hall at 3:20 Wednesday
afternoon.

Investigating officer Lieutenant
Harold Straus and patrolman Robert Robson of the 16th Precinct
termed the action second degree
grand larceny under the newly
effective penal law.

Abrams, Buffalonian

According to Mr. Abrams, entry to the locked darkroom was
probably gained by removing the
grill at the bottom of the door,
Two of the screws securing the
grill were reported missing. The
possibility of an unauthorized
master key used to gain entry to
the room was also mentioned,

Edward

photograpber who made the discovery, told The Spectrum that
a Nikon F. camera, “the finest
photographic optical equipment

in existence,” was last seen ap-

proximately two weeks ago in the

darkroom. In addition to the camera, several lenses,
costly zoom lense, were also”'”'
taken.

Mr. Abrams claimed that the

room.

The Nikon F camera is an essential piece of equipment about
which the entire photgraphic sys-

tem of the Buffalonian is built.

TIME
The longest word
in the language?

By letter count, the longest
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a rare lung disease. You wont

find it in Webster's New World
But

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Hallowed tradition
of "pinning" a girl is
up-dated by
Sprite bottle caps.
According to an independent survey (we took it
ourselves), a startling new practice is becoming
widespread on some college campuses.
Suddenly, fraternity men are no longer "pinning"
the lovely young things that catch their eye
Instead, they reach for a bottle of tart,

ted to "cap"
affections.
Why has this
ome about’
jrhaps because
if what happens
rhen you go
tie of Sprite.

lies!

All of which stakes for a Buch more ooving moment
than to siBply "pin" a girl.
Then, too, the intimacy of two people engaged
of Sprite in itself
in the act of opening a bottle
leads to strong emotional involvement.
Capped off. of course, by the sharing of a
few moments of delicious abandon. (Tasting the
tingling tartness of Sprite, that is.)
The beauty of the idea is that if the course
of true love does not run smooth, you don't have
to go to the trouble of getting back your pin.

�Th

Pag* Four

•

Friday, Saptambar 39, 1967

Spectrum

5SKr«JBWW?J~,,w-

&amp;rrimr~r.

Die man from Berkeley

The value of statistics
The surprise quiz administered to students in classes
across campus last week was not, despite the rumors currently circulating around campus, an elaborate computer
dating questionnaire. It was an elaborately ambiguous
attempt by the people in University Research to let students
think they were performing a valuable service to the
Univrsity in determining the kinds of facilities to be provided at the Amherst campus.
If the preface to the IBM question sheet can be believed,
that the answers “will actually determine the design and
construction of the n«w campus,” one question comes to
mind. Just what the hell have all those professional planners and engineers in the planning office been doing for
the past nine months?
Such an extensive survey was not used in determining
where the new campus was to be located. Why the sudden
interest in student opinion on what is going to be built there?
Perhaps it’s to relieve the suspicions that planning decisions
are made behind closed doors. The survey scheme might
conceivably serve a valuable function in University planning, but the sloppy methods used in last week’s survey
indicate that nobody in the Administration really was serious. Whoever was supposed to publicize both the intent
and content of the lengthy questionnaire in advance appar-

ently forgot.
Results of the survey might prove interesting reading.
Perhaps a Kinsey-type addendum can now be added to the
already infamous Gross Report. But interesting reading
does not help much in the planning of a new campus.

How many doves?
Someone should tally the number of Americans who
have switched their position on the War in Vietnam from
hawk to dove. It’s apparent that more government leaders
have reversed their stand on the War. The champions of
escalation have turned to favor a policy of de-escalation.
Governor Romney had to re-examine the facts to find
he had been “brainwashed’’ into accepting the pro-war
policy. Sen. Thruston Morton (R., Ky.) changed his mind
this week, reversing his policy from a 1965 call for more
bombs. Interesting.
The doves are beginning to wonder how large a majority
they need. The hawks with political interests are beginning
to wonder if it’s worth it to remain pro-war. A few hawks,
including the lead bird, apparently would still rather fight
than switch.
Hopefully by election time in 1968, the doves will have
their say. How unfortunate that so many have to die while
we wait for elections.
The war will undoubtedly be the largest issue of the
election. If there are enough doves by next year, all candidates may exhibit their peace feathers.
Until that time, it looks as though the War will continue
at its ever-increasing pace.
How many doves do we need? Perhaps just one—in the Whits Nest.
./

. #

B*

Despite all the innovations that have come with the
new administration of Martin Meyerson, the ivy appears to
be growing thicker in certain areas.
With all the talk of the need for improved Universitycommunity relations, it should be expected that the President
will take the lead in those directions.
Superficially, Mr. Meyerson has done just that. He has

'&gt;k*.

m
HE'S AlSO

ITcWEKAf'i

I

sire to see the University reach out into every crevice of
the community, from the ghettos to Kleinhans Music Hall.
The question, of course, is clear: What has he done personally, as President of this University, to accomplish these
goals?
It seems as though it’s time Mr. Meyerson got out into
the community himself. He should be meeting with people
from all parts of the City. He should be accessible to the
many groups in the area. He should seek more personal involvement in the issues and problems which confront the
Niagara Frontier.
As President of the largest University in the area, Mr.
Meyerson should become vitally involved with all of the
community, just as he has been urging the University to
become. He cannot remain anonymous to so many in the
area merely because he arrived here from California only
little more than a year ago.
In short, Mr. Meyerson must provide the leadership in
this community that his position warrants. It would be a
serious shortcoming of his administration and this University if he did not.
There are some things that cannot be accomplished by
sending a University representative. The community must
come to know Mr. Meyerson and only he can assure that
development.
Nobody knows the man from Berkeley and, by now,
everyone certainly should.

/

‘I know of no time,' said the President,

'when there

by Barry Holtzclaw

people are sure that only a Reagan Republican
candidacy can re-elect Johnson. They are working
both for a dovish Republican alternative, as well
as a candidate to dump Johnson in the Democratic
nominating convention.
They argue that Johnson is hopelessly ensnarled
by the commitments of his own pride and rhetoric,
and that once a new leader is in the White House,
he will be free to denounce past mistakes, and move
effectively toward a de-escalatory road to peace in
Southeast Asia.

Can doves be believed?

An underlying assumption of the program is
that the doves would be even more dovish if only
they didn’t have to worry about the political dangers in disagreeing with a party leader and Chief
Executive. But Congressmen are not birds, they’re
chameleons and change with the climate. The War
has generated a tremendous amount of distrust and
dislike for the Administration, and the polls
seem to indicate that the President has had it. The
possibilities that ACT ’68 can both stimulate opposition to what has become known as “Johnson’s
War” and a new and much-needed grass-roots
energy to both national parties, are exciting. The
success of such a movement could portend a radical reorientation of national policy.
There seems to be a good possibility that, given
effective political mobilization of already existing
sentiments in both the primary campaigns and
nominating conventions, Johnson will be dumped
in 1968. Hooray.
There also seems to be a good chance that the
new president will be dedicated to finding a way
of easing the commitment to Vietnam in order to
focus his attention on the grave domestic crises

that threaten this country.

New face, same job

But the job of President is a job where, in order
to stay on top of things, a man must please everybody a little bit, and be able to evaluate crises in
a system of national priorities. Merely because this
country must face its own economic and social
problems now on a grand scale, this does not
mean that we will stop meddling in other people’s
civil conflicts.
Vietnam was an atrocity long before the bombing began, and long before anyone considered
Johnson in the role of Chief Executive.
ACT may be a start of something. The influx
of former student activists into politics- at- a national level is bound to have some impact. Let’s
just hope that it’s only a beginning of a trend.
There’ll be no revolutions in 1968. Minimizing the
influence of the strongest groups in the country,
the military, the CIA, and the large corporations,
is no small task.
A new man will be better for this country.
Certainly no worse, anyway.

more harmony

Readers
Writings

Or perhaps...
ACT ’68 begins its local campaign today to get
student volunteers to work for a “Dump Johnson
in ’68” program. ACT. founded by concerned and
frustrated former National Student Association executives, Buffalo’s Clinton Deveaux included, is a
nation-wide attempt to vocalize anti-war and antiJohnson sentiments within the local Republican
and Democratic organizations. These were the student leaders who realized that letters to the President and meetings with public relations experts
like Dean Rusk have no effect on the continuing
escalation in Vietnam.
They are now convinced that LBJ has got to
go, that he’s the biggest stumbling block to the
peace efforts. Encouraged by the tremendous increases in expressed dissatisfaction with the Administration policy in Vietnam by leaders and
groups of both national political parties, the ACT

was

’

Teachers in protest
To the Editor:

This letter is in reference to the comment by
“A.K.” that teachers do O.K. Apparently this person bias his information given to him by an incorrect
source, or else he (or she) likes to exaggerate the
facts. He stated that the teacher’s starting salary
is $6500 a year. I taught in the Buffalo Public
School System last year and made only $5500, and
I worked for ten months, not nine as was stated.
He also said there is only about four hours of work
a day, I worked every minute I was there, including
the four minutes between classes.

In most (low-paying) jobs you are through for
the day when the whistle blows; but teachers are
not. I spent at least three hours every week-day
night going over homework papers, correcting and
recording quizzes and tests, preparing lesson plans
for the following day, and filling out school record
forms.
We were also assigned extra jobs such as
supervising dances and sporting events; which were

“of course” without pay. Further, how many workers would accept a 22-minute lunch hour and sometimes less? That’s how long teachers get to eat
their lunch.

A final comment by “A.K.” was that a teacher
knows what he’s getting into concerning pay scales,
hours, and class sizes, so why are the teachers
complaining? Well, every worker knows what he’s
getting into in terms of pay, etc. Why are they
complaining?

Even with the above items, I enjoyed high

school teaching, but I cannot afford to continue. A
teacher’s pay may be adequate for a woman who is

supplementing her husband’s salary or is single,
but is grossly inadequate for a man who has to
support a family on it. If “A.K.” really thinks
teaching is a. “gravy train," he should try it.
Douglas A. Darrell
The

Spectrum is published twice-weekly
every
Tuesday and Friday—during the regular academe year
at the State University of New York at Buffalo, 3435
Main Street. Buffalo, New York 14214.
Offices are
located at 355 Norton Hall.
—

Editor-in-chief—Michael L D’Amico

Managing Editor—Richard R. Haynes
Asst. Managing Editor—Richard Schwab
Business Manager—Samuel A. Powazek
Advertising Manager—David E. Fox
editor—
Eric Sharp
Anderson
Feature editor—
Campus

asst.—Margaret

City editor—
*

VACANT
asst.—Lillian Waite

Sports Editor—
Robert Woodruff
asst.—W. Scott Behrens
Layout editor—
Copy editor
David L. Sheedy
Judy Riyeff
asst.—Joceylyne Hailpern
asst.—John Trigg
Photography editor—
Promotion &amp; Circulation
Edward Joscelyn Director —Murray Richman
asst.—Alan Gruber
Barry C. Holtclaw

asst.—Ronald Ellsworth

—

The Spectrum

is a member of the United States Student
Association, Associated Collegiate Press and
Subscriptions at $3.00 a
International.
semester.
Press

United Press

Represented for national advertising by National Educational Advertising Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave..
New York. N. Y.
Second class postage paid at Buffalo, New York.
Editorial policy is determined by the Editor-in-Chief.

�Friday, September 29, 1967

The Spectrum

BELOW OLYMPUS

Raps questionnaire

By Interlandi

To the Editor;
genera) apathy which envelops most of the
body was once again taken advantage of
last week by the old devil Establishment. The Administration’s “New Campus Questionnaire" was
supposed to be a “comprehensive inventory of those
facets of an individual's needs, desires and resources.” As such, it was a shuck, a monumental
fraud perpetrated on us that gives us what amounts
to token choice on irrevelant matters. It taps, almost exclusively, the wrong value system, dealing as.
it does with physical arrangement, and making no
attempt to delineate the more-important, underlying emotional and educational needs of the students. A symptomatic manifestation of this was
one question on the dimensions of your
study.-room, and shortly thereafter, another question on the desired dimensions of your roommate.
The questionnaire was not an accurate understanding of what our desires and needs are; having
a grocery store on campus is not where it’s at. The
hope for the future lies in improving the quality of
the education and the people it turns out, not the
shape of the building they learn in.
Steve Halpern

Pag* Fiv*

Th*

gflimp

by stress

-

The

student

I have these strange standards for public office. I thought John Glenn should have aimed just
a tad lower than the Senate for his first political
attempt, that Ronald Reagan's qualifications for
public office are adequately expressed on the late
show. And to form a trio I give you our local cause
eelebre
Albert N. Abgott. See him riding into
the fray against corruption of youth with his banner
of pure white (with a black border?). Marching
into the fray fourscore and fearlessly fighting for
—so it doesn’t make sense, doesn't it sound beautifully political?—truth, justice, motherhood (Question 47 will be discussed later), country, and flag,
and forthrightly against DIRTY WORDS. What more
need we ask of a public official?
Dear Al,
Having a somewhat twisted sense of humor it
appeals to me to see you yelling foul, misquote,
out of context, and all the other recourses of
politicians, or would-be’s, who have said something
they later regretted. Don’t you see, Al, that just
as you have the&gt; right to publish, or print, what
you want to, the Courier Express has the same
right, now doesn’t it. And I ask you, Al. if it is
really possible to be “grossly misquoted” if you
really did say what was quoted? I mean. baby, if
you are going to say those things when nosey newsmen are around you are going to have these
problems. I sympathize with you. Al. I mean you
—

Bruce L. Abrams

Looking for a seat
To the Editor:
It’s happened again (meaning, actually, almost

"He's always bean against welfare. But, ha says, a mark of intelligence it the willingness to change one's opiniontl"
all the time).
Is it me, or do I suspect that there are a few
empty skulls within our administrative system.
Case in point! Wanted to sec the Guarneri Quartet
next Saturday. Sold Out! Seating capacity? Around
300. Doesn’t “Joe Planner" expect more than 300
bodies on a Saturday night from the entire Univerby Dick West
sity and the City population?
Football game Saturday last
could not help
noting the crammed student section (and students
kicked out of their seats by last minute selling of
You will have to admit that the vision of Congress under
"Reserved” seats). Also could not help noticing that glass has a certain appeal. So I was rather sorry to see Sen.
all band performances were for the west side of the George A. Smathers come out against
the idea.
field. (Hey bandies, the students sit on the east
Despite recent demonstrations by visitors in the House
side.)
you want the and Senate chambers, the Florida Democrat said it was “unA reminder to Joe Planner
How
paid,
right?
leaving
enough necessary to enclose the galleries in glass to protect memabout
activity fees
seats to go around. For which events? You crazy bers of Congress.”
skull, FOR ALL EVENTS!!! Remember the Fugs!
“Members of Congress ought which opened just last week, has
Please try awfully hard to realize that we are to expect certain occupational room for 1,276 vehicles. That
a large group now. After all. Dad, us guys keep hazards,” he philosophized.
figures out at more than $10,000
per parking space.
bread on your table! Forget?
Hazards
expected
Crowded &amp; Left Out
“You are bound to be picketed
Defense shelter
at some time, have things thrown
Would our frugal-minded conat you and, of course, there is
gressmen, zealous guardians of
the possibility that you may be
the nation's purse strings, expend
shot at. But I don’t believe such
$10,000 in public funds for parking spaces? Of course not. The
incidents are so frequent that
To the Editor:
should isoCongress
building
obviously has other purmembers
of
We were quite surprised to read our “dislate themselves from the public." poses.
gusted business student’s” letter in last week’s
Well, that’s one man’s opinion
The clue to its true function
Spectrum.
and I respect it. But on the other is the exterior design. The part
As satisfied “advised” students, we can only hand, I’ve always heard it said that rises above ground is topped
say that this year’s advisement program is quite
that the public’s business should with parapets, battlements and
adequate. In fact, this year there are probably be
conducted in a goldfish bowl.
blockhouses that resemble an old
more satisfied than ever before, as more students
It might also be well to tint time Army stockade.
drop
day
to
secure
on
and
add
were able
classes
the panes, so that visitors would
This resemblance has promptthan ever expected. Certainly this type of record
looking at Confind
themselves
ed
local wags to name the garage
speaks well for those recently graduated advisors. gress
through rose-colored glass. “Fort Rayburn.” But I’m convincIn fact, the advantages of a recent graduate, as an
However, in the matter of ed it’s more than a joke.
advisor should be apparent to all. He has recently safety, as apart
Actually, there are two garages,
from esthetic
experienced the same problems which we ourselves
values, I agree with Smathers one of which could be used by
now face, and he who knows all the shortcomings of
that the glass curtains are unthe Senate and one by the House.
the “system.” Surely, he is now in a position where necessary. Congress already
has In an emergency, Congress could
he can handle such problems in the most efficient
a perfect defense system, should
convene in the steel and concrete
manner.
need
subterranean chambers.
Perhaps, if this “disgusted student” had not the can arise.
It
be found just south of
Then, by posting a few comchosen to remain anonymous or had stated the
the Rayburn office building in
mittee chairmen at strategic spots
everyone
shortcomings of the system,
concerned
along the ramparts, they could
what is ostensibly a new congreswould be able to approach the situation in a more
sional underground parking garhold off demonstrators, irate taxmature manner.
payers and other soreheads for
age.
Douglas G. Braun
This $13.4 million structure, weeks on end.
Treasurer, Student Ass’n
Jairo Estrada
Senator,
School of Business Admin.
Hugh MacKenzie
United Press International
Robert Potter
Robert Grabau
Dan Hart
SAIGON—Gen. William C. Westmoreland, describing the U.S.
Jim Kasperek
bombardment of the Demilitarized Zone in Vietnam:
Gordon V. Deitrick
“There is more firepower concentrated in that area than on
Frank J.Horvath, Jr.
any single piece of real estate in the history of warfare, and we
Ronald Ker
will keep pouring it in.”
Jack Ksiadj
Antonio Cabiera
MEXICO CITY—A spokesman for the Mexican federal water
department, commenting on the Rio Grande flooding:
Writers: Please be brief. Letters should not exceed
“These are the most extensive floods we have had in the
300 Words. All letters must be signed and the address
20th Century. There have been worse killers, but never has so much
**1 telephone number of the writer must be includ®d. Positive verification of authorship will be made
of the country been flooded at the same time.”
Oe/ore a letter is printed.
WASHINGTON—Sen, Ralph Yarborough, D-Tex., criticizing Gov.
Letters will be kept in strict confidence.
John Connally of Texas for waiting too long to request federal help
Spectrum will use initials or pen name, if
the Rio Grande Valley:
in
never
used.
’equested. But anonymous letters are
“I know of no modern instance where the governor of an
'^
le Spectrum reserves the right to edit or delete
state, in the face of a natural disaster so overwhelming,
American
Material submitted fix publication, but the intent of
‘otters will not be changed.
has failed so long to ask for a declaration of a disaster area.”

The Lighter Side

—

—

Business student advised

Quotes

in the news

are standing on principle. Whoops, were standing
on principle. I forgot that there was a new contract.
Have you mentioned that in your speeches lately,
Al old bean? That you are now committed to print
everything that comes to you as copy? All for coin
of the realm. Well if you won't tell anybody I
certainly won’t, I mean what the hell there are so
many hack politicians in and around Buffalo that
you will hardly be noticed.
You must forgive me if I seem a little hcjivy
handed, gentle reader. Mediocrity and stupidity
grossly. And to
bother me
would you believe
watch a stupid incident of Puritanism be exploited
into a qualification of public office makes me rather
—

—

uncomfortable.

Speaking of mediocrity, stupidity and puritan
ism there is The Buffalo Evening News and Dr.
Robert Ketter. Remember the question about having a roommate of the opposite sex? Allow me to
quote from a quote The News said that Dr. Ketter
said. (No doubt he was also grossly misquoted) "In
the past few years several different surveys on the
UB campus have asked the same or similar question
about co-ed rooming. The OVERWHELMING REACTION has been one of DISGUST from the students surveyed. (No, idiot child, he does not talk
in capital letters, I added those for emphasis.)
I suppose that there is a possibility that most
of the people that I know on campus are budding
sex maniacs but if all questionnaires which approve
of the idea of having an opposite sex roommate are
shuffled into a stack and left someplace I would
wager that many, many, will go. I suspect, as a
matter of fact, that the neutral and only mildly
affirmative answers are not caused by DISGUST,
SHAME, etc., but by very pragmatic questions like,
selection of said roommate, opportunities to change
if the initial one does not work out. whether or not
the health office is going to start stocking the pill
and various other decisions of that ilk. Oh well,
I suppose it could have been question 69

The short article quoting Dr. Ketter appeared
on Thursday 21 September. Saturday The News
lamented the situation in an Editorial entitled
“Silly Question at UB.” Referring to the question
as puerile (juvenile, childish or silly in case your
memory is as bad as mine) it goes on to express
the hope that most citizens will have perspective
and not jump off to comparably silly conclusions
that the University is going libertine.
I will now attempt a moral. This column is
garbage. And so was Abgoft's speech. And so were
The News articles. This column, I respectfully submit, is garbage because it dealt with garbage. There
were, are, will be much broader and more significant issues to which fire could be directed, from
one point of view. My point of view today is that
Abgott and The News both represent examples of
the forces that have to be dealt with. (WARNING:
DIRTY WORD APPROACHING.) A1 Abgott’s refusal to print the word “pecker” etc., etc., in no
way in hell is sufficient qualification for public
office. And if The News would pull its hoary head
out of the sand it might see that voluntary co-sexual
(and educational assumedly) rooming might solve
more problems than it creates. Good day all.

The Spectrum's pages for

Editorials

&amp;

Opinions

It is the policy of The Spectrum to report the
news fully and impartially in the news pages,
to express the opinions of the newspaper only
in the editorial pages and to publish all sides
of important controversial issues.
"Without expression,

freedom

of expression

is

meaningless."

�Th

Pag* Six

Action line

.

.

.

331-5000
Do you often think it impossible to untangle the SUNYAB bureaucracy? In cooperation
the Dean of Students' Office, the Spectrum is sponsoring ag ACTION LINE.
Through ACTION LINE, individual students can get an answer to a puzzling question,
find out where and why University decisions are made, and get ACTION when change
is indicated.
:
,
’

with

ACTION LINE will answer all questions of general intentst which appear to be
pertinent to the student body. The Spectrum vtill include them in its special ACTION
weekly column.
Each inquiry will be thoroughly investigated and answered
individually. The name of the individual originating the inquiry will not be published.

LINE

Q. Why can't the but to the Interim Campus pick up and discharge
passengers on Bailoy or Millersport Highway?
A. The bus service was established to facilitate travel only from the
campus to Ridge Lea. It was not intended as a local stop service.

The present schedule was designed to provide time for loading
and unloading at designated areas. Other stops would disrupt normal
operating time, and some people would suffer as a result of an
inaccurate schedule.
Q. The pianos are out of tune. Whore and how can they be tuned?
A. Inasmuch as we did not know which pianos were referred to. a
check was made with Norton Hall and the Residence Halls since both
have pianos available to students. Miss Dorothy M. Haas. Director
of Norton Hall stated that all pianos in Norton Hall are tuned
three times a year, on a contract basis, or more often if necessary.
Miss Judith A. Dingeldey, Assistant to the Director of Housing,
informed us that a purchase order had just been let to tune all pianos
in the residence halls now, and again in February. All their pianos,
then, should be tuned within the week. The grand piano in Goodyear
Hail, however, is quite old and needs a complete overhaul. This is
more costly than its present value and will not be repaired in the

•

Friday, September 29, 1967

Spectrum

UB professor testifies in Boston
narcotics trial; calls pot 'middle-class'
BOSTON, Hass.—State Univer
Buffalo Associate Professor Bruce Jackson told a Supreme Court bearing Monday that
the smoking of marijuana is a
“middle class” social experience
which costs the average user $1
a week.
sity at

Prof. Jackson testified: “Marijuana use has shifted from the
lower to the middle class. I’ve
never seen opiates or opium de-

rivatives

used

in the

fore Judge G. Joseph Tauro at a
pre-trial hearing to determine
whether marijuana legally is a
narcotjc and whether state and
federal laws against the drug are
unconstitutional.
The hearing concerns two Philadelphia men, Ivan Weiss, 26,
and Joseph Leis, 25, who appealed a district court conviction
on a charge of possession of narcotics.

middle

class.”
He explained that since the
average marijuana user spends
only $1 or $2 a week, “the most
devoted” user spends about $10
a week on the drug.
Jackson, who studied drug use
during four years as a fellow at
Harvard University, testified be-

Defense Attorney Joseph Oteri,
who feels that marijuana is a
harmless substance, hopes that
the case will eventually reach
the U. S. Supreme Court.
Another witness. Dr. Henry
Brill, vice chairman of the New
York State Narcotics Addiction
and Control Committee and director of Pilgrim State Hospital

on Long Island, testified mari
juana “is both harmful and dan-

gerous,”

“It produces various changes
in the psychic state of the individual and various swings of emotion from euphoria to severe
bouts of anxiety.

“It produces a loss of desire to
do and there is some indication
that it clouds the memory. The
type of reaction depends on the
dosage and the mental state of
the’ individual,” Brill said.
Cross-examined by Oteri, Brill
said marijuana “does not attack
the body physically.” He said
he would not recommend it for
neurotics and he did not treat
marijuana users from 1950 to
1964.

immediate future.

Miss Font named as Cultural Affairs Liaison

Q. Why can't the Faculty Parking Lots be opened in the evening to
Millard Fillmore College students? They always have a number of
open spaces while the student lots are all jammed.

A new contact has been established between committees, the
administration and the Buffalo

A. Mr. Eugene Murray, Chief of Security, stated there always is room
in the Baird parking lot. He will, however, conduct a survey of all
lots for one full week from 6 p.m. on, to determine what additional
space is needed, and what special arrangements can be made

tural Affairs Liason has been
created, to be held by Sandra
Flint.

(For specific answers to your questions, and for direct service, call ACTION LINE, 831 5000
every Monday, Wednseday, and Friday, from 4-5 p.m. If you prefer, phrase youquestion in writing and address it to ACTION LINE, c/o The Spectrum. 355 Norton Hall,
or the Office of the Dean of Students, 201 Harriman Library.)

See the LADY WRANGLER'S at

Poise n lyy

■■&gt;•*

.

.

.

community.

The position of Cul-

Appointed by Student Association President Stewart Edelstein,
Hiss Funt is experimenting with
methods of communication a-

She has recently met with Alan
Sappe, liason to University President Martin Meyerson and discussed future plans of action. She
hopes to be able to aid organziations in developing a campus community and in bringing the city
into closer contact with the cam-

Sportsmen’s Inn

as?

Wreward.

mong the various groups on campus, attempting to discover their
interests.

2828 Bailey Ave.

SPAGHETTI DINNER
�
�
�

SALAD
MEAT BALLS
GARLIC BREAD
—

Offer

jects.

In stating her immediate aims.

Miss Funt said:

“We’ll generally be working
to give support to campus groups
and to assist them in an exchange
of ideas.”
The State University of Buffalo
is believed to be the first university to establish this office.
Organizations interested
in
working with Cultural Affairs
Liason and finding out how they
can participate and benefit from
the new post, are asked to con
tact Miss Funt at the Student
Senate Office.

HEY,

L00

$

good 6-12 p.m„ Monday thru Friday

pus by having more groups look
into community clubs and pro

PROFESSOR!
—

If you know your John
Maynard Keynes, you’ll
know that an Opel is the
most economical and practical way to go back to
school. You don’t have to
prime the pump to often
because GM’s Opel gets
30 to 40 miles per gallon
of gas. All models are
backed by the top guarantee amongst imports
24 months or 24,000 miles.
.

.

.

And right now we’re offering all our 1967 Opels at
prices that Karl Marx
couldn’t turn down.
Come try our Opel Kadett,
Deluxe Sports Coupe or
. then make an
Wagon
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ADAM, MELDRUM

&amp;

ANDERSON,

SATTLER'S, JENESS

.

The same people who sell more
Buicks in Western New
York than anybody
except General
Motors!

�The Spectrum

Friday. September 7», 1H7

Pag* Savan

Only French Communists
appear active in elections

An ACT '68 Founder

Clinton Deveaux solicits aid
Johnsoeffort
for "dump

Allan A. Priaulx
United Press International

by

pajgns and within the local party frameworks to
significantly affect the ’68 nominating convention,

by Barry HoHzclaw
Clinton Deveaux. former President of the State
University of Buffalo Student Association, visited
Buffalo Tuesday morning, on the, first leg of a
statewide campaign aimed at collecting support
for a nation-wide “Dump Johnson” campaign.
Mr. Deveaux, one of the founders of ACT ’68,
a national movement designed to "assure that the
next President does not pursue the policies which
are leading this nation to disaster.” said in an interview that his mission is to “recruit students who
want to work for dove candidates in the '68 elections.”
Former Student Association Treasurer Carl
Levine and Student Association Vice President
Richard Miller announced that the University’s
campaign to get signatures and money for ACT ’68
begins today.
Mr. Deveaux, former member of the National
Supervisory Board of the National Student Association emphasized that a candidate with an anti-Vietnam War position has a “very definite chance” of
getting the Democratic nomination for President.

Johnson can't win
“Johnson can’t win against any candidate except Reagan,” Mr. Deveaux said.
Although his current trip through the college
towns of Upstate New Voile is designed to get commitments from students to begin local campaigns
to organize rallies and to send delegations to Congressmen expressing specifically anti-Johnson and
anti-war sentiments, Mr. Deveaux stressed that ACT
’68 is “not just a student thing.”’
ACT already has more than 600 committed
student leaders from such diverse and representative groups as the Ui&gt;. Student Press Association,
the National Federation of Catholic Colleges, and
the National Student Association.

ACT focuses on working “within the two existing national parties." Mr. Deveaux said, “not to get
a peace plank in a Johnson campaign, but to get
a peace candidate.”

“The Democratic platform had a peace plank
on Vietnam in 1964 and look what’s happened.” the
former University student leader noted.

Anti-war work in primaries

—PARIS

(UPI) Except for the
Communists, few Frenchmen
seemed to care what happened
in the current round of home
town elections.

he said.
ACT '68 is already well underway in
and California. Wisconsin is holding a
student meeting this weekend, and the
Democratic Council has already decided
anti-Johnson slate of candidates.

Wisconsin
statewide
California

The elections for canton council seats can be compared roughly to balloting for town council
seats in an American community.
The first round of voting was last
Sunday and runoffs will be held

to run an

Mr. Deveaux expressed confidence and surprise
at the initial success of the campaign. "We are
way ahead of our own timetable,” he said.

ACT '68 grew out of this summer’s NSA conference in Maryland. Sam Brown, narrowly lefeated in a bid for NSA President, is ACT director.
Although it has the support of more than 400 NSA
delegates, ACT is now a separate entity.
Mr. Deveaux said ACT hopes to involve faculty
members and other interested citizens in the nation-wide. campaign, in addition to its nucleus of
students.
Mr. Deveaux was one of a group of national
student leaders who met with Dean Rusk earlier
this year expressing anti-war sentiments and also
was a co-signer of a letter signed by 200 other
student body presidents and editors which demand
ed Administration explanation of our VietnSm pol-

next Sunday.

Voters shrugged their shoulders for the most part although
the Communist party campaigned
hard to gain seats for its candidates.

Of 15 million eligible vplcrs,
only 56% turned up at the polls.
Only (he Communists turned
out in force.

Gain 23%
Consequently the Communists
licked up 23% of the total vote.
The Leftist Federation pulled
[own 22% and other
lefists oulide the federation had another

icies.

nine

A valid alternative

statement released in August,

In a program
ACT ’68 declared:

The Gaullisls landed only 170;
of the vote, other conservative
11%, and the Democratic Center parly had 10%.
The Communists had entered
candidates had

“Our predecessors tried in good faith to reason
with the Administration. We are now convinced that
it is necessary to obtain a new administration.
American electoral procedures provide the machinery to do this, and we are determined to do
everything humanly possible to see that machinery
work in 1968. It cannot do so if President Johnson
is first unopposed for renomination and then opposed by a Republican who offers no valid alterna-

Come Worship With

Depew

(South End of Campus)

&amp;

Wallace Aves.

9:45 A.M.

BRIAN J. SNYDER

NOTES
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Another sidelight on the election was the nearly unanimous
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Combat went on to say that
the Communists "may incite
Communist leaders to be even
more rigid” in dealing with their
parlimentary partners, the Leftist
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LIVELY ADULT DIALOGUE

LITERATURE

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lism.”

Push stronger stand

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in both

the Republican and Democratic parlies.
“What we don’t want is another election where
the American people must choose the lesser of two
evils. We think that it is possible to offer a choice
between two genuine alternatives,’ Mr. Deveaux

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which can stand up against Gaul-

PARKSIDE
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tive.”

ACT ’68 is composed of groups working

paper Combat, analyzing the elec-

Sunday—11:00 A.M.

said.

ACT needs people to work In primary cam

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The daily independent news-

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�TH

Pag* Eight

•

Spectrum

Friday, September 29, 1967

National Opera Company
State split on selection of judges performs Verdi's 'Falstaff

Second of series:

by Emmet N. O'Brien
Gannett News Service

ALBANY—If you want to start an argument jidth your
friendly lawyer, just Dnng up the subject of selection of
judges. No matter which side he is on, the ensuing discussion will be warm.
The legal fraternity is split wide open on the best method
for selecting judges
direct election or appointment, or a
mixture of both.
—

Presently, New York elects its
highest court, the Court of Appeals, the Justices of
Court, and judges of the county
and surrogate’s courts, judges of
the family court outside New
York City, the judges of the New
York City Civil Court, and justices of peace and municipal court
judges and district court judges.
Appointed are judges of the
State Court of Claims (by the
Governor) and family court and
criminal court judges within New
York City (by the Mayor). The
Governor fills interim vacancies
in all elected courts except peace,
district and municipal and the
court of claims. The New York
City mayor fills vacancies where
he has appointing power.

For those who like government
in a neat pattern, the elective
and appointive court structure
produces shudders. It is far from
uniform.
Set in tradition
But, as with all court matters,
the structure is deeply set in
tradition.

New York started appointing
judges in 1777. The authority
rested with the Council of Appointments, but the public eventually wearied of the council and
the so-called “Albany Regency”
and the appointing power, in 1821,
was given to the Governor, except for justices of peace. The
small town jurists were as power
ful then, it appears, as they seem
to be today.

Convention split

The elective vs. appointiv(*fight

raged on and the 1867 Constitutional Convention was sharply
split. It took the easy way out.
It submitted the question to the
people to be voted upon in 1873.
The voters crashed through
with a three-to-one vote in favor
of electing judges. ‘This decisive
defeat of the appointive method
had a lasting effect in New York,”
a current commentary notes. (Aiding the cause of popular election
of judges was the fact that re-

formers broke the back of the
Tweed Ring in New York City

by defeating every Tweed-named
judge).
The last Constitutional Convention and special studies tackled
the problem (including the Tweed
Commission 1954-59), but all came
up with retention of the elective
system.

Missouri plan
The late round of controversy
probably started with agitation
within the state for adoption of
the Missouri Plan, or some variation of it. Under that plan, the

Governor (or mayor in
courts) appoints a judge

lower

from a
list of names supplied by a designated committee of lawyers
and laymen. The appointee serves
one year then runs against himself, on his record. If retained by
the voters, he serves for life.
When Thomas E. Dewey was

Governor he endorsed the idea
and worked hard for its adoption without success. The latest
recruit to the appointment idea
is Governor Rockefeller. He has
the company of Chief Judge Slan-

ley Fuld, the League of Women
Voters, and many citizens groups
for court reform and other civic

The advocates can get editorial
support, but very little legislative
or convention backing.
Favoring election are such
strong voices as that of retired
Chief Judge Charles S. Desmond
who would, however, interpose
a direct primary for those judges
now picked by district or state
convention. He spurns the idea
that politics, per se, is bad and
says it exists as much in the appointive system as the elective.
He would retain, with his modification, the elective system “on
the positive evidence at hand and
because of the lack of any convincing contrary showing.”

Discounts politics

by Ri

Most of the sophisticates and
pseudo-sophisticates of Buffalo
society flocked en masse and in
full regalia to the premiere of
Guiseppe Verdi’s comic, light
opera.

In their

first appearance in
York, the American
National Opera Company did an
admirable job which was fairly
well appreciated by the capacity
audience.
The setting for the opera is
Windsor, England, at the time
of King Henry VIII. The story
is based on William Shakespeare’s
comedy, “The Merry Wives of
Western New

Presiding Justice Bernard Botein of the Appellate Division
would accept an appointive system with the Governor picking
one of three names from an electWindsor.”
ed panel. He also discounted the
The opera is the entertaining
influence of politics on the courts.
not especially exciting story
Justice Saul Streit, a brilliant but
strikingly roNew York jurist and speaker, of John Falstaff, a
jestingly referred, in convention tund, obese and inebriated gentleman who is impressively played
debate, to “the little woman”
by Andrew F'oldi. He is a man
from the League of Women Votwho scorns honor and wants a
ers who had testified at a public
hearing. The league wants a form better life for himself, so he woos
two women who each possess two
of the Missouri Plan.
most attractive traits: beauty and
The convention, as it appears
wealthy husband. Falstaff overright now, will not listen to the a
own cunning when
‘Tittle woman," but she will be estimates his
he
sends
identical
letters to the
taking the same line next year
two ladies. The merry wives of
and the year after.
The controversy never ends. It Windsor, as they are called, then
counter-conspire to give him a
just subsides temporarily.
fright which makes his volumin(Next: Surrogate)
ous belly quiver.

Enters in disguise
Sept. 22, the Spectrum printed an advertisement listing the
sale price Buffalo Textbook was
offering on “Literature Notes.”
The sale price was 60c, in error,
we printed the price as 20c.

THE SPECTRUM
printed by

Falstaff enters one of the wives
homes dressed as a combination
of Little Red Riding Hood and
D’Artagnan bellowing from his
fat face, “You must admit I’m
handsome.” Then his true love
number one confronts him with
fabricated stories about her angry
husband coming for Falstaff’s
hide.

Partners' Press, Inc.
ABGOTT &amp; SMITH PRINTING
1381 Kenmome Ave.
belawarc)
Phone 876-2284

The action finally begins as
the irate husband does appear
with a lynch mob of farmers and
pitchforks. Falstaff recalls what
the wife had warned and so he
does hide
in a huge clothes
basket which is then emptied
into the Thames.
The confusion now over, we
find Falstaff wrapped in blankets
somberly consuming a jug of hot
sack.
—

a&amp;bve.aso*£y

Sa*dotecuip6uf(

fepoi

irum

Downtown Buffalo and the old Shea’s Buffalo Theater
were permeated with a most unusual atmosphere last Monday
evening: opera. Complete with searchlights, red carpets,
tuxes, formats and furs, the stage was set for a gala onenight performance of “Falstaff.”
Forest lesson
In the last act all of Falstaff’s
acquaintenances conspire to once
and for all teach the rogue a
lesson, and they instruct him to
appear in the forest at midnight.
The forest scene is by far the
most impressive. Well done setting and lighting adds to the effect as elfins, nymphs and gob-

lins fill the stage. This is all partj
of the masquerade designed to
frighten and reform our hero.
Fallstaffs appearance in the final
scene complete with antelope
antlers was enough to crack-up
the most serious face.
All ends well as Falstaff finally recognizes the hoax. Laughter
ensues as Verdi’s satirical opera
ends.

Laugh at life
Although the plot unfolds slowly, Verdi’s mocking tone comes
through loud and resonating
throughout the opera. Verdi’s
theme is to laugh at life and
society, and he does this most
effectively via the laudable and
stoical opportunist, Falstaff. Verdi, who idolized Shakespeare,
amalgamated the Falstaffs of
“King Henry IV” and “The Merry

Wives of Windsor” and the result
was the hero of the opera.

Revolving stage
The American National Opera
Company did much to enhance
the lively humor and satirical un-

dertones which Verdi intended.
The costumes were cloroful but
it was the scenery which was an
unusual advancement for Buffalo
theater. A revolving stage set
similar to that of the O’Keefe
Center was a valuable addition.
The opera company presented
two other operas in their repertoire. “Lulu” by Alban Berg

was presented Tuesday evening

and Giacomo Puccini’s “Tosca”

was

seen Wednesday.

The appearance of an opera
company of this caliber more
than once a year would do much
to keep community interest in
opera.

BHgntMKOOT

LAURENT TERZef.

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I- 16 PM. Evory Day

u

MUDDY WATERS
and His Blues Band
will appear OCT. 2nd thru 8th
(except Tuet.) at the

ROYAL ARMS

” ™

Blues singer-guitarist Muddy Waters is only now achieving the wide acclaim he has so long
Recognized by experts for years as one of the all-time greats of country blues. Muddy
Waters’ contribution to this exciting music is that is largely responsible for setting the down-home
style and the driving beat that has taken this brand of music out of esoteric into the realm of the
appreciation by the many.
Doors Opon at *00 P JH $3X0 «t Door
Music From 9KM Till 3:00

deserved.

�Friday, September 29, 1967

Th

•

Film review: The Jokers

OFFICIAL BULLETIN

Firecracker that makes a noise
by Phil Burbank
You’re young, rich, bored and
drugs are illegal, and you can’t
make love all the time. The only
sensible and unique thing left is
to plant bombs carefully designed
not to go off, and to “borrow”
the Crown Jewels of England, or
so says ‘The Jokers,” currently
being shown at the Cinema and

Amherst Theaters.
“The Jokers” takes some very
trite stereotypes, such as “youth
can do anything if it tries,” and
makes a fairly decent movie out
of them. It’s an escape film, and
it takes the audience for an enjoyable ride.
Thrown out of the army after
winning a war game at an im-

proper time, Michael Tremaine
(Michael Crawford), along with
his burly brother, David (Oliver
Reed), have time to spare and
imagination to burn. They set out
to steal the Crown Jewels, for
the hell of it. (They rationalize
that they are only taking them
to see if they can be stolen, thus
performing a kind of patriotic
service. (No, this is not a story
of patriotism. In fact, it’s quite
devilishly irreverent.)

Planted bombs
The pair plants bombs in a

lion’s cage (hope the ASPCA
doesn’t censure this movie), in a
ladies

lavatory (for

shame!), on

“It's nothing sacred”)

(Michael:

and other notable places (Anarchists Unite!), thus providing a vehicle for their grand theft.
Deception, double-crosses and
triple-crosses follow with some
zany episopes and zippy remarks.
In the finale God finally does
save the Queen; her jewels are
returned.

Excellent performances

The three-act satirical comedy
set in the year 2067 is the fourth
play to be produced in the Buffalo area by Mr. Marchette, a
State University of Buffalo graduate. The 29-year-old playwright
has acted in, directed, and produced plays in this area for
nearly 10 years.
“So as not to offend the actors
or the audience,” the actors will
be wearing specially fitted skintight costumes, according to a
theater spokesman.
Showing life in a computerized
age, the characters in the play
are known by letters and num-

bers. The female roles are PPZ,

October

Spectrum asresponsibility.
Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to 114 Hayes

industry or government may obtain the necessary registration
forms in the Placement facilities
in the basement of Schoellkopf
Hall and those interested in attending graduate school or starting a teaching career should stop
in Hayes 132.

present a series of
Education
lecluret on Contemporary China
with Dr. Morton H. Fried, Chairman, Department of Anthropology, Columbia University. “The
Myth of Traditional China” is the
topic, 147 Diefendorf, 8 p.m.

falo. for which the
sumes no editorial

Hall, attention Mrs. Fischer, before 2:00 p.m. the Friday prior
to the week of publication. Student organization notices are not

accepted

for

publication.

PLACEMENT

GENERAL NOTICES
Student Draft Deferment
All
undergraduate male students that
would like the Office of Admissions and Records to send a SS109
form to their Draft Board indicating that they are enrolled for
the current academic year, (196768) please call at the office, Hayes
B, to fill out a portion of the
form. This form will then be completed and mailed to your local
draft board.
A REMINDER

—

Applications

ANNOUNCEMENTS

ThePositions'to try-out
at Milkie Way Theater
out.

prospective employer or gradu
ate school.

for MAKE-UP EXAMINATIONS
The accompanying short, ya for the removal of INCOMPLETE
travelogue through the French GRADES (recorded for absence
Riviera, was a blast, and a spoof from final exams) will be acon travel films in general. In cepted no later than OCTOBER
exploring the sunny side of 9, 1967. Make-up examinations
France you encounter enough de- will be given the week of Novemlightful rain to sneer at any ber 13, 1967.
subsequent travel film you might
PLACEMENT

encounter.

a young woman who operates a
computer called IRE and XYZ,
the formidable job interviewer.
The three male job applicants
include DEF, commonly known

as Fourth, HU, called Waddles,

and Clyde, closest resemblance
to modern man, circa 1967.
The basic story revolves around
the test three men must pass to
get “The Position.”
The Winter Series of the Milkie Way Theater and the Audition Repertory Company will
open four plays from October 21
to December 10. The series will
an original musical revue, a
drama by Ibsen, a comedy by
Oscar Wilde, and one play to be
announced.
NOW: POPULAR PRICES I

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»"ANDREWS
RICHARD

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HAO»l‘ "KJSSS:.

-

ELEANOR PARKER
wist I

OSCAR HAMMERSTEIN

«iiu»D rdocers

III ERNEST LEHMAN

6

The Official Bulletin is an authorized publication of the State

—

Some things can’t be swallowed after a while, but you have
to accept the film for what it is
in order to enjoy it. Don’t be
surprised if you start guessing
what the next scene is, and you
discover you’re right every time.
The film is art only in a very
narrow sense, but the performances by Crawford and Reed are
excellent. The film is not very
believable, but this may only add
to its enjoyment for some.

1

The Audition Repertory Company, Buffalo’s newest non-profit
theater organization, opened its
winter series last night at the
Milkie Way Theater in Williamsville with a presentation of
Gerard Marchette’s “The Position” in its pre-Off-Broadway try-

Page Nina

Spectrum

The University Placement and
Career Guidance Service offers
many services for students
un-

dergraduates and graduates faculty, etc.
All graduating seniors, graduate students, and alumni are provided interviewing opportunities
with prospective employers from
industry, government, and education to discuss employment possibilities. All students considering
application to graduate school or
starting a teaching career should
also register.
-

To utilize these services candidates should register and establish a reference file with the
Placement Service. The establishing of a set of reference credentials is especially important for
those who are entering the job
market for the first time, or applying to a graduate school as
this file will be forwarded at the
request of the candidate to any

INTERVIEWS

department

of Anthropology

—

October 9
James Fenton Lecture
The
first in a series of five lectures
on the theme "Religion and Modern Society," will feature Daniel
Callahan, executive
editor of
—

October 2

Thomas J. Lipton, Inc.
Internal Revenue Service

October 3
New York State, dept, of Civil
Service
Campbell Sales Company

Commonweal. The subject will be
“Religious Experience and the
Contemporary Mind,” Conference

October 5
Newport News Shipbuilding
Dry Dock Company

Head swimming coach William
Sanford has announced the following swimming schedule for
the Clark Gymnasium pool. All
faculty, staff, students and their
families may use the pool provided that they adhere to the following schedule:
Mondays—7 to 8 p.m.
Family swim
children must
be with at least one adult.
Faculty, staff,
7 to 9 p.m.
and students Co-ed swim.
Tuesdays—7 to 9 p.m.—Faculty,
staff, and students Women
only.
Wednesdays
7 to 9 p.m.—Faculty, staff, and students Co-ed

•

&amp;

GENERAL ANNOUNCEMENTS

Department of Modern Languages and Literature
presents
a series of lectures by Dr. Jacques Roger, Visiting Professor of
French, who will speak on “The
—

Idea of Nature in the 18th Century” (in French), open to the
public, Tuesdays, 146 Diefendorf,

4:30 p.m.

Women's Physical Education
Department
offers open recreational swimming for all fac
ulty, staff and students, Monday,
Wednesday, Thursday, Friday,
7-9 p.m.; Saturday, 1-3 p.m.; Sunday, 2-4 p.m.
—

October 3
The University Report
this
weekly series features Dr. Robert
F. Berner, Dean, Millard Fillmore
—

College, whose topic is "The University and Continuing Educa
lion,” Conference Theatre, Norton, 3 p.m.

Theatre, Norton, 8:30 p.m.

—

—

—

swim.

Thursdays

Fridays

7 to 9 p.m.
and students

—

ty, staff,
swim.

FacCo-ed

—

7 to 9 p.m.
Faculty,
staff, and students Co-ed swim.
Saturdays
Fac1 to 3 p.m.
ulty, staff, and students Family swim.
2 to 4 p.m.
Sundays
Faculty, staff, students Family swim.
—

—

—

—

—

—

STUDENT TESTING CENTER REGISTRATION SCHEDULE
Last Day to
Register

Graduate Record Exam

Graduate Sch. Foreign
Language
Med. Coll. Admission

Tost
Date

Applications
Available

Oct. 10
Sept. 29

Oct. 28
Oct. 28

316 Harriman

Oct. 6

Oct. 21

316 Harriman

Oct. 7

Oct. 21

School of Nursing

316 Harriman

Test

Pre-Nursing Exam

�Th

Pag* Tan

•

Hunting is expected to be banned
in prospective Adirondack Mt. park
ilar small property could be allowed to continue use of it for a

by Wiliam Ringla
WASHINGTON, (GNS)—Huntprobably he banned
f

In the interview Udall belittled
the idea
which has exercised
conservationsists and organiza—

lifetime before it would be taken

created in the heart of the Atb
irondack Mountains, Secretary of
of the Interior Stewart L. Udall
said last week.
He also noted that owners of
summer cottages, lodges and sim-

Udall’s

came during
an interview on the proposal that
1.7 million acres of the Adirondacks, now part of a 6 million
acre slate park become a nalional park.
opinions

troduce many developments in
the forest preserve, which New
Y o r k's constitution
stipulates
must remain “forever wild.”

Surprised by proposal
Udall also said he:
Had been “surprised” by the
national parks proposal when it
was made by Laurance Rockefeller about six weeks ago. But
he called it a "very exciting con-

The Ribby Knit is Top Fashion

•

cept,”

Believes it would take New

•

York State, at the rate it’s going,
100 years to acquire the private

land remaining in the park area,
as it has been authorized to do.
“Realistically, I don’t think that
the state will ever acquire all of
it,” he added.
Believes New York, not the
federal government, must make
the next move on the plan. “We’d
probably respond enthusiastically,” he said.
Foresees no problem with private owners of cottages, lodges
and other small holdings in the
tract. Under a technique worked
out in other areas which the
government has taken for parks,
the owner is allowed to keep the
property for life. In some cases,
he may even gel the price, discounted, and still remain through
•

•

life.

''Expected” the kind of opposition that has developed to
the plan.
Is sure the federal government would not move to take the
property if "the people who
speak for New York” opposed it.
•

•

Hand-Knit it in Orion"

Free instructions!
You’re all ribbed Up and ready to go anywhere. A pair

of knitting noodles and "Winluk" yarn of 100% Orion*
acrylic that washes by hand or machine and won't felt or
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which are obtainable by sending a stamped, self-addressed
envelope to: Room 1R06CN2, National Hand Knitting Yarn
15 East 26 St., New York, N. Y. 10010.

Association, Inc.,

iW Du Pont

1M

campus releases...
DEAN WARREN J. PERRY will speak to students and faculty
at a reception of the School of Health Related Professions. The reception will be held Sunday from 4-6 p.m. in the Dorothy Haas
Lounge.

Refreshments will be served.

IL GUINN. associate professor of history, will speak on

day. This lecture is part of a series given by 12 Statjs University of
Buffalo professors.
The Inservice Course in Modern European History from World
War II to the present is being attended by social studies teachers
from the Williamsville Central School District. The course is held
on Wednesdays from 7 to 9 p.m. in Williamsville Senior High School.
A SERIES OF LECTURES on “Morphogenesis in Plants” will be
delivered by Dr. Claude W. Wardlaw, guest botanist. The first topic
to be held on Tuesday is “Why Study Plants?”
Dr. Wardlaw will present the lectures Tuesdays and Thursdays
throughout October and November in room 235 in the University’s
Health Sciences Building.
MR. JAMES H. BLACKHURST has been appointed assistant to the
President and director of the University’s Division of Summer Sessions.
Mr. Blackhurst was formerly assistant director of the Division.
As the director of the Division, he foresees the continued growth
of the summer program, and the utilization of the many facilities
in the Buffalo area.
Mr. Blackhurst has been Executive Officer for the University’s
School of Graduate Library Sciences and Instructor of Political Sci-

ence for Millard Fillmore College.

THE DEADLINE for applications for positions in the traffic court
and the election court of the Student Judiciary has been extended
until Tuesday. Also needed is a secretary for the Judiciary.
Interested students should write a letter stating their qualifications and reasons for seeking the position. Applications should

be returned to the Student Senate office.

APPLICATIONS for the Spring Arts Festival (March 18 to 23)

may be found on the bulletin boards of Norton Hall, Clement Hall
and Goodyear. Students wishing to serve on various committees for

the festival must place their applications in the return envelope
placed on the bulletin board outside Room 215 Norton Hall. The
deadline for applications is Monday.
TICKETS ARE NOW on sale at the Norton Ticket Office for this
evening’s Folk Festival.
Tickets cost $2.50 for students who have paid their activities fee
and $3.00 for those who have not.
Tickets will also be on sale at Clark Gym starting at 7:30 p.m.

Howard University students walk out
to protest administrative dictatorship
WASHINGTON, D. C.
Protesting “100 years of oppression,”
about 120 students and two faculty members walked out of an
opening-day speech by Howard
University President James M.
—

Nabrit, Jr.

before classes began
meeting, Student Assembly President Ewart Brown declared:

/

THE RAW, SHOCKING MOVIE

Friday, September 29, 1967

Spectrum

Even

“The oppressive system which
spawned the past year’s activities
will no longer be tolerated.”
According to several students
and faculty members, this year
at Howard will be a year filled
with turmoil. Brown said:
“Neither students nor faculty
have rights at Howard University. All rights and power belong

OF A POP SINGER
WHO MAKES IT BIG!
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Host to Twin Fair

Call 837-4300

2 a.m.
Weekends Until 4 a.m.

Open II a.m. to

BANQUET FACILITIES
BRIDAL SHOWERS
WEDDING RECEPTIONS
643 MAIN STREET
In

Buffalo'*

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to a small corps of administrators

who have used their absolute
authority to expel both faculty
and students who spoke out
against their dictatorship.”
The readmission of four of 16
students expelled during the summer, apparently for political involvement, has been ordered by
the U. S. Court of Appeals. The
court ordered a hearing to be
held on specified charges.
Five faculty members were
also expelled during the summer.
Hilltop, the student newspaper
at Howard, has quoted Dr. Nabrit
as saying he may not step down
at the end of the year as previously announced.

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Universal presents the John Heyman/Peter Watkins Production

PMVIUBE

TECHNICOLOR*

Co-starring

PAUL JONES JEAN SHRIMPTON
•

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•

MARK LONDON JEREMY CHILD MAX BACON

ends
TUESDAY

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3184 Bailey Ave.
835-8084
HAND BLOCKED THROWS
or WALL HANGINGS

POTTERY

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open daily

�Friday, September 29, 1967

Th

Pag* Elavan

Spectrum

•

Sportin' Life

the spectrum of

sports

by Bob Woodruff
As the State University of Buffalo stands on the brink of entering the ranks of the big time college football schools, it would perhaps be most beneficial for the student body and the athletic depait-

Bulls face cavaliers;

prowling for upset
by Alec Glasser
Spectrum Staff Reporter

The Bulls of Buffalo will again venture south as they
face their second opponent from the Atlantic Coast Conference in as many weeks.
The University of Virginia Cavaliers, suffering more
than a mild defeat at the hands of the Cadets of West Point
list Saturday (27-6), should be a tough squad in the able
hands of head coach George Blackburn
However, “Doc” Urich’s
herd should be on the prowl
for an upset this week after
putting up such a fine showing against North Carolina
State last Saturday, despite
a few bad breaks.

Although the Cavaliers will be
missing some outstanding players from their 1966 campaign,
they can boast of improved
speed, and a veteran offensive
interior line for their 1967 outing. Frank Quayle, a 5 foot 9&gt;/2
inch 190 pound junior halfback
from Garden City, N.Y., who

ranked first in the nation in allpurpose yardage last fall, will
be one of the nine lettermen returning on offense this year.
Quayle rushed for 727 yards,
caught 28 passes, and led the
ACC in scoring with 11 touchdowns. The right halfback, sophomore Bob Rannigan, also has
impressive speed.

Speed important
Speed will be the outstanding
factor at fullback as well, as Jeff
Anderson, a converted split end
from Iasi year, brings size and
speed to his new position. Anderson, who is big, fast, and
strong, will beef up the Cavalier
running attack as well as help
take some of the heat off Quayle.
The combination of Quayle and
Anderson should be Virginia’s
one-two punch on the ground.
Virginia’s signal caller, Gene
Arnette, has missed a good portion of the last three campaigns
because of injuries. If he’s fit,
the junior is a capable passer
and an adequate runner. In a
move to bolster the quarterback
position, flankerback Stan Kemp
has been converted into a passer
and may see action tomorrow in
Charlottesville.

Strong offensive line
The veteran offensive interior
line is the big plus for Virginia
in ’67. Right guard Bob Buchanan, a six foot, 218 pound senior,
the strongest man on the squad,
started all 10 games as a junior,
and could be in for honors this
fall.
To complement Buchanan are
Mike Jarvis, at left guard, who
started in 8 games last fall; Greg
Shelly, and Paul Rogers. Rounding out the offensive line is Dave
McWilliams, a junior center who
was a part time starter last fall.
He lacks speed, but is a good
hitter and extremely strong.
At offensive end are Joe
Hoppe, a 210 pound, 6 foot junior, and Bill Lockwood, also a
junior. Lockwood who moved to
split end after playing defensive
halfback last season, has good
speed. Hoppe, who also started
with the defense last year, and
earned a letter, has speed,
height, and weight.
After giving up 26 points to
Army last week, the Cavalier defense will be out to do a job on
the explosive Bull offensive ma-

Frank Quayle
ranked first in nation in allpurpose yardage last year
chine which scored 30 points
against Kent State in its opener
and gained 300 plus yards against
an ACC team, North Carolina
State, last

live of the Bulls’ potential. The
Bulls clearly dominated the game
last week with 26 first downs to
N.C. State's 11 and out-distanced
the favored ACC Champions in
total yardage as well. The loss
came not because of any lack
of potential but because of interceptions and fumbles at crucial
moments.
The Virginia Cavaliers are a
strong team, but a team plagued
by inexperience in the offensive

backfield and defensive line, and
the need to shuffle the available
talent around to cover weakspots
in the defensive secondary. If
the Bulls can keep their offensive mistakes at a minimum the
weaknesses in the Virginia defense are sure to tell. “Doc”
Urich's Bulls have the potential.
All that is needed is the poise.
PMUME STARTING OFFENSIVE LINE-UPS
Stats Uahramty of Boffilo
Po*. No
Ht.
Wt
IE
83 Endrcss T.
6-0
202
IT
77 WoH. C.
6-3
220
LG 64 Maser. M.
5-11 3)4
5-1)
C
52 WesolowsJk., J.
210
RG
65 Fanocfipo. Jr.
5-10 219
KT
61 Rissell, M.
5-11 233
44 Drankosfct, C
SE
6-1
183
06
14 Munh*. M.
5-11
176
TB
31 Ruffcowski, K.
5-9
180
H8
49 Welb. R
6-0
195
Ffl
36 Jones. L
5-11 208
Uawwiity of Virginia
IE
83 Hoppe. J.
6-0
200
IT
74 SheOr. G.
6-2
232
LG
63 Buchmnan. R.
6-0
218
C
S3 McWilltams. D. 6-0 219
RT
70 Rogers. P.
6-2
230
2)0
RG
66 Jarvis, M.
6-3
RE
29 Lockwood. W
6-0
186
QB
15 Amcfte. G
6-0
181
LH
24 Ouayle. F.
5-10 190
RH
44 Ranmgan. R.
5-10 173
FB
32 Anderson, J.
6-2
212

Stats
STATE

Defense presents problem
However, defense has been

problem to head coach
George Blackburn, who is missing his entire defensive line of
the 1966 outfit. Shoring up Virginia’s defenses has been the
biggest job this year and Blackburn has had his problems to say

30
6

real

the least. The interior defensive
line for Virginia boasts the heaviest man on the field and the

most capable Virginia

lineman,

senior John Naponick.
Linebacking might be the highpoint of the Cavalier defense.
Behind captain Malcome MacGegor at right linebacker, are
Bob Paczkoski, a junior, sophomore Tom Patton and sophomore
Peter Schmidt.
Virginia lost both defensive
safeties from their 1966 team and
Coach Blackburn has tried to
overcome this gap in the Cavalier
defense by using a 4-4-2-1 defensive alignment instead of last
year’s 4-32-2. In the halfback
positions will be two lettermen,
second year man Paul Reeve
and third year man Dennis Borchers.
Both men are extremely fast
and are Virginia’s hope in containing UB split end Chuck
Drankoski and tight end Terry
Endress on Saturday afternoon.
The safety position will be held
down by senior veteran Paul
Klingensmith who has been a
two season starter and one of
the fastest men on the Virginia
squad.

Potential to win
Although the Bulls are going
south with a 1-1 record it is
quite clear that last week’s loss
to a strong North Carolina State
team by 18 points is not indica-

But the dangers of building up football are great
Academically, N.C. State cannot rank among our nation's greatest
centers of higher education. Without minimizing the key role of
athletics in the University community, it must assuredly be the goal
of any school to first boast an educational program of the highest
calibre befroe vast sums of money can be designated for athletics.

In Raleigh, values seem a bit jumbled. North Carolina State
spends close to a quarter of a million dollars a year on grant-in-aids,
yet it is woefully lacking a faculty of great educators. Instead of
alumni channeling money to improve a stagnant educational system,
the “Wolfpack Club” contributes vast sums to bring athletes, many
of whom are academically unqualified, to the university. As one
student so prophetically remarked, “Football is king around here.”

Possibly unique
This institution is fortunate in that its football greatness is de-

veloping alongside a rapid scholastic building program. The State
University of Buffalo could possibly be unique among the nation's
leading football schools if it does not permit its flowering academic
growth to diminish in the face of a diligent athletic program. Athletics and education can flourish jointly and complement each other.
A time will come when each can bask in the other’s glory. Finding
the right combination of pursuits will take the intensive effort of

UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO

1947 FOOTBALL STATISTICS
Buffalo (M)
Kent Stale
6
North Carolina State 24
Attendance:
11.019 at Buffalo
20.200 at Raleigh, N. C.

a

Danger in build-up

this student body and administration.
Our steps must be careful because the pitfalls are there. They
must also be progressive because the rewards are great.

Bulls

week.

The rewards of a large scale athletic program can be seen at
State. The student body at Raleigh takes great pride in the performance of their football team. Almost three quarters of the student
body and better than 10,000 local citizens turned out last Saturday
to see the Pack meet the Bulls. The spirit generated by these 20,000
fans was almost awesome, and as it exemplified such a great pride in
institution, it could only be admired.
N.C. State’s new 3.7 million dollar Carter Football Stadium is an
architectural masterpiece, and it makes the viewing of a grid clash
that much more exciting. The amount of money spent on this football
field is nowhere near the staggering figures being tossed around by
this city in the planning of the Bills’ new home, yet it seats some
42,000 fans comfortably and its beauty only adds to the appearance
of suburban Raleigh. The fact that the stadium is functional and can
also house open air concerts makes it likely thpt it will pay for
itself in the not too distant future.
This brings us to another point. North Carolina State, as well
as almost every school which supports football excellence, mak£r
money. This might not seem important to the knowledge seeking
non-materialists at the university, but the long green can be a
boost to the institution. If given the initial impetus, fooball will pay
for itself and it will stand indefinitely as a source of revenue, student
pride and national prominence.

TOTALS

■

AN.
25

22
19
11
12
10

Patterson
Jones

Wells

Murtha
Mawr
Brennan

52
15
I
464

2

Ini.
4

Coop
16
8
0

AN.
Meson
RutfcowsJk

0
I
5

24

TOTALS

7.6
39
3.4
5.2
4.3

57

101

TOTALS

A*«

Net
189
86
64

Itnirif

Drenkosik.
Weib
Patterson
Endress
Buttons*

IOTAIS

No
2
2
I
1

Kidtaff Ratam
Wells
Ruikomln
Patterson
Mosher

Yds.
37
34
46

0

PAT
10
10
10
10
10
3
0

TDS

Scariaf
Jones
Well*
tturtha
Orankosk

Rt/fkowski

PASSING

TOTAL OffENSE
PENALTIES
PUNTS
FUMBLES

...

DOWNS
RUSHING
FIRST

Tot.
0
6
0
6
0
6
0
6
0
6
16

PASSING
TOTAL Om*S£
PENALTIES

last defeated St. Bonaventure on
their short and very tricky nine

Len Serfustini, “it’s the hills that
make the course so tough. You’ve
got to know where to place every

shot. The St. Bonaventure team,
of course, has this knowledge.
Unfamiliarity making them the
logical underdog, the Bulls nev-

464 yds.
101 carries
4.6 yds. per play
253 ycjs.
(58.5%)
24/41
.717 yds. 142 Plays
7 for 75 yards
J
12 for 35.6 yds.
4 (lost 2)
-

.

152

achieved. Playing consistently
by Jay Schreiber
well all afternoon, Tony and
Spectrum Staff Reporter
promising sophomore, Michael
had temporarily kept the
The advantage that a home Riger,
match close with their individual
athin
possess
any
can
team
victories. Oddly enough, a patletic match was never better tern has developed where if Sandisplayed than it was last telli wins his match, the Bulls
lose and vice versa. It
Monday afternoon. Playing as a team
it tough on Tony, wonhost on a course on which makes
dering when he and the Bulls
they haven’t lost in three will get together for combined
success.
years, St. Bonaventure overcame the State University of
2-2 record
Buffalo golf team by an
The defeat put the Bulls’ rec11Ms-616 score.
ord for the season at 2-2. Their
other loss, to Canisius, also
Ironically, it was the Bulls who
hole layout. According to coach

F G.

■UIFALO
FIRST DOWNS
RUSHING

Golf team wins at home
again; 3 years straight

yds.

73 carries
yd. per play
19/36 (52.7%) 263 yds
.415 yds. - 109 Plays
8 for 90 yards
14 for 35.9

2.1

-

battled St. Bonaventure to a tie through the first
four of six matches. A chance
for an upset fell flat, though,
when the Bulls’ fifth and sixth
players scored a combined total
of only one-half points out of a
possible six.
ertheless

The Bulls earlier successes had
been highlighted by Captain
Tony Santelli whose 76 was the
best score any of Serfs boys

found Buffalo in the role of the

visiting team. Coach Serfustini
is "looking forward to meeting
both of the teams again,” and
there is little doubt why. Both
matches will be played on the
Bulls home course at Audubon
where all the intangibles of a
home course could result in »-

reversal of the earlier losses.
State University
Tony Sanlalli
Rob Stona
Doug Barnard
Michael Rigar
GGary Bader
Bill Ahrendtsan

of Buffalo

Total—
University
Pater Adolf
Jim laddy
John Swarg
George Brunner
Tom Barnish
John McKaon

—

Total—1 IVj

�Th

Baby Bulls defeated
at l/lfest Point
The Plebes of

Army

reversed

defeating Coach Mike Stock’s
Baby Bulls 34-20 at West Point
in the season opener for both
frosh squads last Friday.
Before succumbing though, the
yearling Bulls rallied from a 20-0
first quarter deficit to tie the
score in the fourth quarter on a

tduchdown drive which covered

S3 yards in eight plays. Buffalo

quarterback and outstanding varsity prospect, Ed Perry, pitched
six yards to Joe Zelmanski to
knot the score. A two point conversion which would have given
the Bulls a lead was called back
because of a holding penalty.
The Plebes then proceeded to
march 60 yards for a score as
Billy Hunter drove the final six
yards for the Black Knights. Bernie Wahl added the final score of
the game moments later.
His
scoring jaunt ended the Baby
Bulls hopes.
Led by Perry who threw for
166 yards on 17 of 26 passes, the
Bulls struck first in the second

STEAK
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Specializing in
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Friday, September 29, 1947

Spictrum

Patterns developing in pro ball
by Springville
We boys at Springville are humble folk. It is with sincere
Iiity and humbleness that we report last week’s record

period. Halfback Joe Nixon took
A two point conversion

•

Buffalo frosh

°

tues ,

It was a fine exhibition for
the Baby Bulls who could be the
best crop of rookie football players in the school’s history. The
limited time which is allotted to
their team efforts may not produce victories, but their performance as individual bodes well
for future varsity outfits.

SUNYAB going
cricketty ?
Cricket, the prince of games

and the game for all princes, is
here at long last. This Sunday
afternoon at 1:30 p.m. the International Club on campus will
sponsor a Cricket Match between
a team from the Chemistry and

Chemical Engineering Departments and one from Biology and
allied Natural Sciences.

But rather we ask for pity, for
compassion and above all the
utmost sympathy for our beloved
friend, the Hoople. It is below
our professional dignity to comment personally about someone
who hasn’t quite made the grade,
and for this reason as we stand

here in the midst of great tumultuous fortune we feel it necessary to take time out to contemplate those who have been swallowed by the sea of misfortune.
Alas, cheer up dear Hoople, perhaps next week we’ll find it in
our hearts to write your column
also.
Patterns emerging
Certain patterns seem to be
establishing themselves within

the pro football ranks. Baltimore
continues to score at will as
Green Bay sputters. Detroit,
who incidentally ruined our perfect slate with a 31-14 thrashing
of Cleveland, seems much better
than most people expected. Los
Angeles can count on three
touchdowns a game from their
defense and Buffalo can’t count
at all. This week poses certain
crises in both leagues for many
teams so we look for a more than
average amount of close games
and a few not so upsetting up-

The match is to be played on
the field between Clark Gymnasium and Hayes Hall annexes.
Prof. Wilkins from the Chemistry Department and Mr. Leslie,
President of the Buffalo Wanderer’s Cricket Club have consented
to umpire the game. Participating
arc students and faculty from
England, Australia, India, Pakistan, West Indies and the U.S.A, sets.

•

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mg up only one TD, while

aging

over thirty points

lanta

seven

managed

&amp;

front four ate the Browns up
last week but the Saint's Miller,
Rubins, Bazzani and Dempsey
wouldn’t even strike fear in our

hearts.

Detroit 27, St. Louis 13: New
Lion head coach Joe Schmidt has
kindled a fire in Detroit. Milt
Plum, the quarterback of old,
and Mel Farr have made people
turn and take notice of the Lions.
Jim Bakken’s talented toe can
only put three points on the
scoreboard at a time and until
the Cards find Charley Johnson
they’ll have trouble finding the
end zone.
New York 31, Washington 27:
The Giants know how to score
and Tarkenton to Jones is fast
becoming the sensation of the
league. If the New York defense
can keep the up and down Redskins down their offense should

Lusitania.

Buffalo 24, San Diego 20: The
only reason we’re picking the
Bills this week is to stop the
threatening phone calls we’ve received the past few nights.
There’s nothing good about Buffalo but penalties and the weather could turn the tide in favor of
the hometowners. Rejoice for
now townies because next week
the phone number will be
changed.

de

Chardin

Presented By Newman
YOU DON'T HAVE TO BE A CHRISTIAN
You don’t have to be a Christian to be a Unitarian, (only
43% of the Unitarians would define themselves as
“Christians”).

Perhaps the chief characteristic of Unitarianism is its
pluralism and inclusiveness. It makes no claim to special
no special revelations, no special godmen,
knowledge
no special books
but it cherishes a growing body of
knowledge about man and the universe, and for its
inspiration it draws freely from the totality of human
from art, science, drama and literature
experience
(religious and secular).
Unitarianism is oriented to this world, focuses on this
life and its concerns, is human and rational, is more
attuned to man’s aspirations than fixed on his failures,
and seeks to celebrate life in worship and sanctify life
in action. ..
Does this make sense to you? If it does, why don’t you
investigate further. Write, telephone (TT 5-2136), or attend:
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Kansas City 28, Oakland 21:
The battle of the giants in that
other league. Oakland has looked
impressive against both Denver
and Boston but Kansas City
smells Super Bowl even this early in the season. Otis Taylor,
Chris Burford, and Fred Arbanas provide Lenny Dawson with
the best pass-catching trio in all
of football and this should be
the difference.
Houston 4, Denver 2: Three
safeties will tell the tale in this
one. Steve Tensi and Jackie Lee
(whoever they are) have as much
class as the Hoople does. Both
teams deserve to lose.
New York 45, Miami 20: Joe
Namath put on an AFL spectacular last week against Denver.
Our boy passed for 399 yards and
he just might double that on
Sunday. Of course that all depends on whether he wants to or
not. The Dolphins play like the

8:00 P.M.—NORTON UNION—Room 231
Admission FREE With The Ad

a.m.

7 pcs. Shrimp

Special: Steak

American Football League

OCT. 2—OCT. 10—OCT. 18—OCT. 26

FRENCH FRIES 15c

Hamburgers

to victory.

JAMES BIRX, Student of Philosophy, Lecturer

MENU
6 ox.
Sirloin Steak Sandwich 85c
Peppers 10c Cheese 10c
Specify Onions

Hot Dogs

for the veteran Norm Snead to
outduel the erratic Bill Nelson in
a big game for both clubs.
Baltimore 31, San Francisco 17:
With John Brodie and John Unitas in the same ballpark anything may happen. Baltimore's
defense is sound and tough inside the twenty while the 49’ers
only defense is their offense.
Don Sbula, Colt head coach, will
have trouble keeping his mind
on the game with the rough
tough Rams waiting in the wings
next week. Look for Mr. Unitas
to rally the Colts and spur them

A SEMINAR IN FOUR LECTURES

Sun. All Day

3 pcs. Chicken w/fries

points

against the 49’ers and should
manage seven points less against
the veteran Packers.
Chicago 17, Minnesota 16: Very
very unimportant. The name of
the game is quarterback and
these two teams don’t have one
between them. We just hope
both teams show up.
Cleveland 28, New Orleans 10:
A healthy Ryan to Collins combination could lead Cleveland to
its initial victory. The Detroit

DELIVERY Hours:—
Mon.-Fri. 4:30 p.m.-l:30 a.m.
Sat.

a game

themselves. Dallas, though winning, has appeared less than impressive against the Browns and
Giants. Roman Gabriel is the
most underrated quarterback in
the league.
Green Bay 35, Atlanta 0: Bart
Starr has thrown for 9 interceptions in two games this year, but
against the lowly Falcons he’ll
regain last year's MVP form. At-

Teilhard

minimum

$1.00

Philadelphia 35, Pittsburgh 24:
opened their seasons

Both teams

suc-

We ask not for praise concerning our overall .818 percentage of accuracy or our incisive commentary.
The Perry to Zelmanski combo
We ask not for thousands National Football League
struck again later in the period
Of letters, postcards and teleLot Angelos 23, Dallas 13: The
on the quarterback’s 44 yard
Rams looked the part of the pergrams
superlatives
whose
carried
the
heave. John Faller
giv
vir- f ect footb f 11 teamthis year averdeal with our prognostic
ball in from the ten.
r
cessful, and the
trailed 20-8.

be able to handle the mediocre
’Skins.

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The Unitarian Universalist Church of Buffalo

Elmwood Avenue at Ferry Street
Buffalo 22, N.Y.
REV. PAUL N. CARNES, D. D„ Minister
Sunday at 11 A.M. Dr. Carnes will speak on
“Can We Give Up RIGHT and WRONG?”

�Friday, Saptambar 29, 1967

The Spectrum

defensive inside linebacker, was
selected Monday as one of the
guards on the weekly Eastern
College Athletic Conference Division I All-East football squad.
Luzny was chosen for the spot
for his outstanding defensive
maneuvers against North Carolina State last Saturday afternoon. Mike made five unassisted tackles and had his helping
hands in eight other tackles.

up 37 points in one game is 100 to one. It has also
been estimated that the chance of Bear Bryant’s Alabama
team giving up 37 points on one afternoon is also 100 to one.
The chance of both these teams giving up 37 points in the
same day is 1000 to one. What more can I say?
giving

Third ranked Michigan State

was trampeled, fifth ranked Tex-

as lost, second ranked Alabama
was tied by a three touchdown
underdog, and eighth ranked Miami was upset by Northwestern.
Other major upsets included
Memphis State’s 21-17 decision
over Mississippi, Oklahoma
State’s 7-6 verdict over Arkansas, and Navy’s 23-22 thriller
over Penn State in the last minute of the game.
As a result of this disastrous
weekend my percentage has

dropped to a not so respectable
.537. However, have no fear because help is on the way in the

person

of

Lousy Louis.

further

ado

picks.

my

able assistant
So here without
are the Hoople’s

U.S.C. 30, Michigan St. 17: The
Spartans will be out for blood
after suffering their worst defeat since 1947 at the hands of
Houston last week. However the
Trojans will make it two in a

Mike Luzny
named

to

weekly all-east squad

BULLS’ OPPONENTS
RESULTS OF PREVIOUS (FAMES
SEPTEMBER 9
Villanova 0

West Virigina 40,

SEPTEMBER

16
Kent

State 6
No. Carolina State 13, North Carolina 7
Boston University 20, Bucknell 16
West Chester 14, Villanova 9
St. Univ.

of Buffalo 30,

SEPTEMBER 23

Kent State 35, Northern Illinois 0
No. Carolina St. 24, St. Univ. of Buffalo
Army 26, University of Virginia 7
Temple University 18, Kings Point
Boston University 20, Colgate 14
Boston College 27, Villanova 24

SCHEDULE FOR SAT.. SEPTEMBER
Army at Boston College
Boston University at Temple
Villanova at Delaware
Holy Cross at Yale
Kent State at Ohio University
North Carolina Stale at Florida
Colgate at Columbia

6

12

30

State

row for Duffy’s boys as 0. J. and
Strickman should run circles
around the ponderous M.S.U.
line.
U.C.L.A. 28, Washington St. 7:
Led by Gary (the bomb) Beban
and halfback Greg Jones, the
UCLAN’s have already destroyed
their first two opponents. Jones
picked up 160 yards last week
against Pitt and seems to be picking up where last year’s AllAmerican Mel Farr left off.
Against a team like State it’s unsportsman-like to let Jones play
more than one quarter.

Nebraska 21, Minnesota 7:
Once again Nebraska coach Bob
Devaney has assembled a Big
Eight powerhouse. The Cornhuskers looked tough in the opener
two weeks ago and should be
able to overcome Minnesota’s reliable defense.

Wake Forest 6:

Houston 35,
This has to be the mismatch of
the century. Coming off a stunning 37-7 upset of Michigan St.,
the Cougars have become a legitimate football giant. Led by
halfback Warren McVea, Houston will devour lowly Wake Forest.
Wyoming 28, Colorado St. 14:
The Cowboys were sensational in
their 3710 rout of Air Force last
week. Coach Lloyd Eaton’s boys
are easily the class of the Rockies along with co-favorite Colorado. Led by diminutive Jim
Kiick and kicking specialist Jerry DePoyster, the Cowboys will
make life very hard for State
this weekend.

Pag* Thirtoan

state but don’t look for it to
happen again. Inspired by Bear
Bryant’s kindly words of wisdom
the Tide should come roaring
back with a truly inspired game,

Their quarterback Sherman will
make this contest a very even
game but the nod has to go to
the Hurricanes because of their
overall depth.

Arkansas 33, Tulsa 7: No contest here. After last week’s debacle with Oklahoma St., the Razorbacks should bounce back big
to thoroughly outclass Tulsa.

Bulls 24, Virginia 21: Coach
Urich’s men made a successful
plunge into big time football last
week even though absorbing a
24-6 loss at the hands of a powerful North Carolina State team.
This week they meet a mediocre
Virginia eleven and barring any
miscues (such as last week’s
blunders) the Bulls are set to engineer this week’s UPSET OF
THE WEEK.

Miami IS, Pann St. 17: The
Hurricanes were high touted in
the pre-season poll but put on a
poor showing in their defeat by
Northwestern last week. The Nittany Lions are a solid team who

Army 21, Boston College 14;
Tom Cahill’s Army team started
the season off on the right foot
with a 26-7 victory over Virginia.
With a well balanced squad and
the return to health of quarterback Steve Lindell, the Black
Knights should handily defeat
the Beantown boys who looked
unimpressive in their opener
against Villanova.
Notre Dame 28, Purdue 7: This
should be one of the toughest
games of the year for the Irish,
who are easily the best in college ranks. Look for the Boilermaker’s Leroy Keyes to be a
standout in this game.

Georgia 24, Clemson 14: Seventh ranked Georgia will have a
stern test when it meets Clemson this weekend. With 46 returning lettermen Clemson has
to be considered the top contender for the Atlantic Coast crown.
With a big day from their fullback Ronnie Jenkins the Bulldogs should roll, so the pick is
Georgia over Clemson.

Alabama 45, Southern Mississippi 18: The Crimson Tide was

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�Friday. Siphafcir 79, 1947

The Sptctrum

New WBFO program explores
aviation research Mondays
Mr. Edward Baron, operations manager of WBFO, will
present his investigation into regulation and research in aviation on five thirty minute radio programs.
The programs, entitled “TTie Only Wa to PI
are

Educational Radio Network. They will be broadcast on
WBFO Monday evenings in October at 10 p.m.
October 16, Mr. Baron will tra
vel to Ronkonkoma, N.Y., to talk
about the operations of the “en
route” traffic control center with
Stanley Lowell, Facility Analysis
Officer at the New York Air
Route Traffic Control Center.
This center handles the routing
of all planes after they leave the
range of the airport control tower.
The fourth program, October
23, wil consider modern airborn
collision avoidance systems that
supplement the ground-based air
traffic control and the latest medical research in aviation. Speaking
with Mr. Baron will be Dr. Stanley Mohler of the Office of Avia-

Since these programs illustrate

the relative safety of air travel
today, they will be rebroadcast
on WBFO on the following Wednesdays at 2 p.m.
Hr. Baron, a senior at the University. has interviewed heads of
the

various

federal

aviation

agencies for the programs.

The first show, which will be
aired October 2. is an interview
in New York City with the East
em Regional chief of the Flight
Standards Division of the Federal
Aviation Agency.
Mr. A. J. Behrens

will be pre

sent to discuss with Mr. Baron
the complex set of regulations

and standards which the federal
agency demands of the commer
cial airliner and its crew before
either are permitted to fly.

tion Medicine.

Final show
On the final program October
30, Mr. Baron will conclude with
a look at the future of aviation.
interviews oil the procedure
used for the investigation of
major air accidents will be held
with Mr. George A. Van Epps,
Federal Supervisory Air Safety
investigator in New York, and
Mr. Edward Slattery, public information officer for the National
Transportation Safety Board, who
has been at the scene of every
major aircraft accident in the
past 26 years.
The information which will be
presented in this series of programs is of great importance to
all air travelers today.

Aircraft safety
The following show October 9.
will present the results of Mr.
Baron’s trip to the National Aviation Facilities Experimental Center in Atlantic City, NJ.
This center is conducting the
latest research for improving aircraft safety
Ralph Russell and Robert Salmon, the project managers for
the controlled flammability fuel
programs, will reveal the latest
advances toward perfecting a gell
fuel that will not spill and is
95% less flammable than standard jet fuels currently in use.

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�Friday, September 29, 1967

Th

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ENGLISH

•

motor. 740 actual miles, perfect \condition, reasonable. Call 876-3586.
1966 RABBITT MOTOR Scooter, only 325
miles
driven, price $450.00. Contact
owner for inspection. Phone 854-7713, 9

a.m.-5:30 p.m. weekdays;
weekends.
FOR ECONOMY minded

6 p.m.-10.00 p.m.

-

ster-scooter,

wheel truck
Closed cab and
3

seats two.
rear storage area. Up to 100 miles per
gallon. Completely overhauled, sacrifice.
634-5250 after 5.
BABY GRAND piano, good condition, 6322227 call after 4:00.
ARE YOU BEREAVED?, by Roberta Sayer.
An Englishwoman's book which comforts
the mourner and answers the enquirer's
questions on spiritualism. $1.00 including
postage, 126 London Road, St. Leonards-onSea, Sussex, England.

ROOMMATES WANTED
ife wi
GRADUATE MALE
per month includes utilities and
phone. Delaware Ave. Call after 6:00
886-6381.

telep.m.

WANTED
steady work, mutt
WANTED
experienced
and sing. Call after 4.
be

DRUMMER

3737.
For gems from the Jewish Bible,
call 875-4265 day or night.
DO
you describe a Colt-45 malt
HOW
liquor BLAST? Would you believe "a
completely unique experience." Oct. 6, FrT.
Buses leave Norton at 8:00 p.m.
formation leading to
REWARD for
the positive identification of the car
that mangled the tan V.W. fastback in the
Baird parking lot, Tuesday, Sept. 19. Call
839-3846.

SHOLOM!

FOUND
LADY'S WATCH in vicinity
Call 831-3571.

of

Foster Hall.

LOST
GOLD PEN and pencil, initialed "S.O.R'
Reward $15. 831-3374.
SITUATION WANTED
Reasonable.
rPING DONE in my
833-6311.

DRUMMER AVAILABLE to form or join a
jazz group. Anxious to get going. Call
Dave BU 4-2409, Niagara Falls.
premiums fiOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
nanced; immediate FS-1. Call 694-2625.
-

Fifteen

Spectrum

speaks at
Last opportunity today to Fiedler
,U. of Amsterdam
register for fraternity rush
Special to The Spectrum

by Elliot Stephen Rose
Today is the final day designated by the I.F.C. for rush

elected house manager and Pete
Tasca, chairman of the procure-

may still register from 9 a.m. 5 p.m. in the I.F.C. office,
Room 346 Norton Hall. Bring proof of a 1.0 grade average
and the $1.25 fee.

Sigma Kappa Phi and Theta
Chi sororities would like to welcome all girls interested in rushing for the fall of 1967. The
sororities hope that interested
girls will come to their tables
in the Millard Fillmore Room
during lunch to acquaint themselves with the sisters.

-

The week of Oct. 2-6 is Formal
Rush, and each fraternity is allowed one affair during the week.
This will be the last function
before bidding on Oct. 9 and 10.
At this time, prospective pledges
list their choices of fraternities.
The individual lists are then
“matched” to the bid requests of
each fraternity, and the separate
pledge classes are established.

Unless your register today you
will be prohibited from bidding
and subsequently pledging a fraternity this semester!

-

633-6374.
MALE HELP, steady and part time days
and weekends. Distribute circulars and
samples. No selling, no card needed. Hourly pay, steady raises. For appt. call 6345250. if no answer 854-0400.
EAST SIDE supermarket desires male college student(s) for rent time work. 853-

•

Short Blasts

1 a.m. Newly initiated sisters are:
Dyan Petrella, Judy Kozel, Paula
Place, Anne McNulty, Nancy
Mayne,'Midge Buck, Judy Powell,
Chris Kabel, Debbie McEvoy.
Barb Gilfoyle, Kathy Wallers.
Beth Steiger, Linda Nihart, Janet
Donnelly, Carol Johnston and
Marie Antonucchi . . . The brothers of Sig Ep will hold a dated
liquor party for rushees at the
Flying E Ranch,

beginning at

9:30 p.m. tomorrow . . . Theta
Chi sorority wishes to congratulate its newly-initiated sisters.
Dinner Dance will be held on
Oct. 14 at the Parkway Inn in
A closed social
Niagara Falls
with girls from Buffalo State will
highlight Theta Chi fraternity’s
weekend. The festivities begin at
...

The brothers of Alpha Phi
Delta will welcome all rushees to
their dated party tomorrow at
the Sheridan Lanes. The action
begins at 8:30 p.m. with the “New
Generation” providing the music.
For rides, dates and info call
Bob, 83M978 . . . Alpha Phi
Omega will hold a private, dated
liquor party tonight. The party
will be at the Prime Rib Restaurant and will begin at 9 p.m. . , .
Alpha Sigma Phi is selling tickets
for the premiere performance of
“Gone With the Wind” in Buffalo,
opening at the Granada Theater.
For tickets, contact any of the
brothers . . . Gamma Phi will
hold a social with girls from Buffalo State tonight, featuring a
live band and all the beer you
can drink. For information, call
Dave 831-3556 or Bernie 837-3367
.
. . Sigma Kappa Phi sorority
announces a Coke party in Room
240 Norton Hall Wednesday. A
beer party will be held tonight
at the “Flying E” from 9 p.m. to

9 p.m. tonight. Paul Granger was

Registration began on Wednesday and will continue from 11
a.m. to 3 p.m. today in the lobby
of Norton Hall. A one dollar fee
will cover all parties to be held
in the following weeks. This Sunday, rush will formally begin
with convocation in Norton 231
from 2 to 4 p.m. Refreshments

Dr. Leslie Fiedler was principal
a teach-in

speaker Thursday at

The teach-in was precipitated by
the withdrawal and then renewal
of an invitation by the university
for Dr. Fiedler to lecture there
this Fall. Dr. Fiedler is presently
teaching in England and flew to
Amsterdam for the teach-in. Dr.
Fiedler’s topic was American
University Liberty.
According to Miss Marlene de

Vries, chairman of the teach-in,
the topic of the night was “Liberty at the University.”
Other guest speakers were:
Professor B. Delfgaauw: “The
University Freedom Movement;"
Dr. Benthem van den Bergh:
(“Vietnam and the American University;” Dr, K. L. Poll: “Limits
of University Freedom.”

will be served and skits will proAfter the speakers, there was
vide the rushees with a better a
discussion between the staff of
idea of the life in a campus sis- the University of Amsterdam and
terhood.
the public.
1

WAGNER OPTICAL
TF 5-5526
Blvd. Mall
EYES EXAMINED
GLASSES FITTED
Daily 11:30 to 8:30
Sat. 9:00 to 4:00
Closad Wednesdays

TtmwotH.
CONFERENCE THEATER
SEPT.

For Those

19. 30,

and Oct.

1st.

25c and 50c
Who

Havo

Paid Thoir

Fees

50c and $1.00

Without

Foo Payment

PREFORMANCE

SCHEDULE:

1:00, 3:00, 5:00, 7:00, 9:00

And

An

Additonal 11:00 P.M.

Showing

on Frday and Saturday

There’s an M &amp;T Bank
almost everywhere

HELP!
The ROYAL ARMS is changing its
policy soon, is looking for:
WAITRESSES
BLUES BANDS
GO GO GIRLS
BAR MAIDS
THE
SINGERS
UNUSUAL
BLUES
Call 885-6262
—

Ready to help you
with over 100 different services.
Over 60 locations throughout
Western New York. You've got us
right where you want us.

—

IT COOK TONITE

-

-

0M

-

CHICKEN
DELIGHT!
PHONE

—

834-6688

FREE DELIVERY.

iarbecued Ribs
|

3268 Moin Sf.

—

Lots of

MAIN WINSPEAR OFFICE

|

$2.25

Parking^

Mon. thru Thurs—9:00 a.m.-2:30 p.m.
Friday—9:00 a.m.-2;30 p.m.
and 4-6 p.m.

T BANK
UNIVERSITY PLAZA OFFICE

Hon. thru Thurs—8:00 a.m.-4:30 p.m.

Friday—9:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m.

&amp; 4-8
p.m.
Drive-In Windows
a.m,-4:30
p.m.
thru
Thurs.—8:00
Mon.
Friday—9:00 a.m.-8:00 p.m.

««MI

F.

o.

I. C.

�Pag*

Th

Sixteen

Russ-U.S.

find

•

•

Dispute policing
The primary issue is how much of
a role, if any, the European nuclear
community Euratom is to have in policing

arrangements and what its relation should
be to the policing functions of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) :
a U.N. group.

Dean Rusk
avoids talk of Vietnam
has become useless, U.S. sources said.

Consequently, according to an American delegation source, the two high officials avoided Vietnam and spent a
considerable part of their dinner meeting
Monday night on one of the few positive

aspects of East-West relations; the draft
treaty to ban the spread of nuclear weapons.

Rusk, who reportedly wanted to know
if the Soviet Union now is prepared to
set a time and place for negotiations to
limit deployment of Antiballistic Missile
(ABM) systems, apparently came away disappointed. Indications were that the Kremlim has not yet formulated a firm position
far to pursue, or to limit, the
construction of its costly ABM shield.

Israel moves to end terrorism
ISRAEL
Israeli authorities said
Wednesday they have broken the backs of
two Arab terrorist organizations that have
carried out sabotage raids against villages
near occupied Jordan in the wake of the
June war.
—

officials disclosed a
sweeping operation that has so far netted
at least 113 members of the El Fatah and
sabotage
Palestine Liberation Front
groups. One of the suspects was Afa Khamayes, an alleged leader of the PLF.
Israeli army

As part of the operation Israeli army
troops Tuesday blew 'yp'threc Arab houses
in Israeli-occupied Jordan said to have
been bases for the sabotage gangs. Spokesmen said footprints from Israel’s Galam
starch and glucose factory, damaged by a
terrorist bomb Sunday, led to the three
Arab houses.

In addition Israeli authorities said

The sources said Amiri told Rusk
that it was necessary fbr the Arabs, as
well as the Israelis, to approach the problem of Arab-Israeli relations with some
“give.”

The Jordanian was understood to have
left the implication that the Arabs may
well have to face some readjustment of
Middle East boundaries following the war
in June.

Amiri’s conversation with Rusk, which
centered almost exclusively on the Middle
East crisis and the problem of Jordanian
refugees from the Israeli-occupied West
Bank of Jordan, was considered one of
the most conciliatory Arab positions to
emerge following the hostilities.
Rusk at the same time was making
the rounds trying to find a diplomatic
solution to the Vietnam war.

in four other Arab houses.
Officials said the Arab terrorists may
be put before Israeli military courts with
authority to mete out the death sentence.

The American official and Soviet
Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko were
attending a dinner Tuesday night hosted
by United Nations Secretary General
Thant and the Foreign Ministers of Britain and France were joining them.

Stern measures

'Big Four' eat

measures announced by
Israeli authorities did not seem to deter
another terrorist organization, the Palestine Liberation Organization (PIX». whose
chief, Ahmed Shukiery, said in a Cairo
interview with the Algerian news agency
APS that his agents would continue raids
against Israel.

Thant invited the “Big Four” diplomats to dinner on the 38th floor of the
United Nations Secretariat.

“The Palestinian people will continue
the armed struggle as it is the only language understood by the United Nations,”
Shukeiry said.

While Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser has indicated some moderation
following the Arab summit conference last
month in Khartoum, Sudan, both Syria
and Algeria have continued to hold an
extremely hard anti-Israeli line.

they seized arms caches and ammunition

stem

He said his Cairo-backed organization
“will not respect the cease-fire decided
by the United Nations Security Council.”

Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban
was appearing before the Council of Europe in Strasbourg, France, today to
appeal for European support for his nation’s case against the Arab states.
Informed sources said Eban wanted
jee&gt;tu far bis government's

ekfce Ml ptffed

at

(fee

to at least

«BE7fMqoered in

same

the Inc

Arab flexibility
Secretary of State Dean Rusk has
received some indications of a new Arab
flexibility in the Middle East situation
from Jordan Foreign Minister A1 Aniri,
US, sources said Tuesday.

neiv yorK

Geneva Disarmament Conference by settl-

Informed sources said the inclination
in diplomatic quarters was to let the
Geneva negotiators hammer away at the
Soviet compromise, which now was reported to have progressed to draft language.

I|in

IN7

Soviet sources indicated that Gromyko

is most eager to complete the treaty which
is now being negotiated at the 17-nation

Days ago, the Soviet Union presented
a compromise formula for policing an
eventual accord. But objections from
America’s European allies over the role
of policing agencies has continued to hold
up agreement. It was believed that Gromyko was seeking U.S. aid in getting West
Germany, in particular, to come to terms.

ITei

»,

Viet talks useless

NEW YORK—Secretary of State Dean
Rusk and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei
A. Gromyko have discovered that their
positions on the Vietnam war are so op-

The

Friday, Saptambar

Spectrum

In comments to

newsmen

•

focus

Washington

Hawks and doves clash in D.C.
WASHINGTON—The chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff believes closing the
port of Haiphong is vital to U.S. strategy
for ending the Vietnam war in a relatively short time.
Gen. Earle G. Wheeler, in testimony
before the Senate armed services subcommittee Aug. 16, urged military action
to close Haiphong, and termed it one of
the most important moves of the war. A
censored transcript of his testimony was
released Tuesday.
Wheeler did not indicate whether he
favored mining the North Vietnamese
port’s harbor or bombing its docks, two
alternatives that have been suggested for
closing it.
But he made it clear cutting off
war supplies reaching the Vietnamese
Communists from Russia and Red China
was essential to ending the war, in his
view.
“There is no question but that lacking support in the Soviet Union—that is,
getting the means of war—that any sizable conflict would be impossible for the
North Vietnamese and the Viet Cong.
There is no question about it.”
In a later appearance before the same
panel. Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara argued that closing Haiphong
would only present the allies with a new
set of problems.
The next question would be how to
stop Soviet ships from landing supplies
at smaller ports or beaches. McNamara
envisioned a confrontation with Russia
on its use of international waters, and
said any gain from neutralizing Haiphong
was not worth the risk of widening the
war.

On the basiSj of testimony from
Wheeler and other service chiefs, the
subcommittee last month issued a report
accusing the administration of shackling
America's air power. It called for the
mining of Haiphong harbor.

Thurston breaks ranks
Sen. Thruston B. Morton, breaking
with other Republican leaders, Wednesday
called for a sharp de-escalation of the
Vietnam war, including a halt in U.S.
bombing of the north and an end to
“search and destroy” missions.
The Kentucky senator, a fortner national party chairman, charged that President Johnson had been “brainwashed” on
Vietnam as far back as 1961 by the U.S.
--

“military industrial complex” President
Eisenhower warned against in his farewell
address.
“I believe be (Johnson) has been
mistakenly committed to a military solution in Vietnam for the past five years—with only a military solution in Vietnam
for the past five years—with only a brief
pause during the election campaign of
1964 to brainwash the American people,”
Morton said in a speech prepared for
delivery before the National Committee
of Business Executives Move for Peace in
Vietnam.
-

Mobilize peace forces
The newly organized group, beaded
by Baltimore insurance executive Henry
E. Niles and Los Angeles industrialist
Harold Willens, was bolding a day-long
conference to mobilize opposition to the
war among the nation’s businessmen.

Morton, who said he had been wrong

to support escalation of the war in early
1965, contended that a “crisis of confttllnce and credibility threatens to undermine the nation’s hopes for economic and
social progress here at home.”
He said: “Vietnam stands in the way”
of the No. 1 priority of OS. foreign policy
—“to reach an accord with the Soviet
Union”—and makes American principles
and programs suspect in the eyes of the

world.

Dirkten raps dove
Morton’s speech came less than 24
hours after Senate Republican leader Everett M. Dirksen, DL, sharply criticired
another GOP senator, Clifford P. Case,
N J.. for attacking the President’s conduct
of the war.
Referring to Case’s speech, Dirksen
told newsmen it is “not a very happy
thing to say, but when you’re engaged in
mortal, bloody conflict, you don’t give
the enemy any comfort—not a bit.” He
and House GOP leader Gerald R. Ford,
Mich., have taken a hawk stance on the
war.

Morton, who was an assistant secretary of state when President Eisenhower
first decided to send a small group of

UJ5. military “advisers” to Vietnam in
1956, said that unless the United States
“gradually and, if necessary, unilaterally”
reduces its military involvement it may
destroy the society it sought to save.

on leaving

the U.S. Mission, Amiri said he had reason to be “hopeful” of an eventual compromise solution in the Middle East.

Rusk was reported to have repeated
the U.S. position on the Middle East outlined by President Johnson on June 19.
This calls for recogntion that all Middle
Eastern countries have a right to exist,
justice for refugees, respect for maritime
rights, stoppage of arms shipments to
the area and respect for territorial integrity.

US. officials stressed, however, that
the United States has no special plan on
solving the Mideast crisis but is actively
interested in proposals from all parties in
the dispute.

Thant meanwhile has been urging
regular private sessions of the UN. Security Council to deal with such crisis as
Vietnam.

Red decorations
in Hong Kong

Workers at the Communist Bank of
China in Hong Kong erect a huge
wooden replica of a flag showing
Chinese Communist Parly Chairman
Mao Tse-lung and a book of his quotations—all in connection with China's
National Day celebrations or. Oct. 1st.

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>First of series:

The Spectrum

Reform of state courts
raise diverse issues
,New York State in this: generation is the fight to reorganize the
judiciary, ft is a complicated story, fitted with precedent, privilege
and politics. This is the first in a series of articles outlining the issues
that may face the voter when the new constitution is up for ratification.)

Vol. 18, No. 5

by Emmet N. O'Brien

Tuesday, September 26, 1967

Gannett News Service

1 ALBANY—lit is a $120 million-plus a year business that
can touch any one of us lightly or substantially at any time
'in our lives.
It is as close to an “establishment” as we have in New
York State. It can, and does, provoke seemingly endless
debate about itself.
It is our judicial, or court,

system.

We could not possibly get
along without it. But getting
along with it has sharply divided
jurists, attorneys, political scientists, public office holders and
politicians.
The Constitutional Convention
is the latest group to review the
court system, seeking improvements. Delegates are of many
minds on what, if anything, to
do.
Law and the courts, by their
very nature, resist change. Precedent is so important in law,
and habits become so ingrown,
that radical departures are seldom successful.
Law is inherently controversial. Thus it is natural for the
judges and the lawyers to take
sides. They must advocate some
position, and it is rarely the same
one.

Since the first major reorganization of state courts in the 1846
Constitution, the judiciary article
has been amended more than
any other. For years, The Canal
Article held the honor.

Reform movement
A so-called court reform movement has been growing in New
York State since World War n.
Actually, it is a more substantial form of a movement that is
old as the state itself.

As with most key state issues,
the core of the reform movement
is New York City, but it has
powerful allies upstate. Again,
as with most major state issues,
the upstate feels put upon for
what it considers the “sins” of
New York City. But if the arguments are valid in New York
City, they have some semblance
of validity in the upstate, because taking the difference in
volume into account, the courts
are virtually the same.
The issues before the convention are complex, but highly important. Some authorities hold
that the public, which has relatively little contact with courts,
is only passively interested in
reorganization of the judiciary.
Yet the largest vote ever cast for
a constitutional amendment was
for the
1961 reorganization
(2,303,446 to 507,211).
Futhermore, the bitter primary
fight for New York County surrogate last fall demonstrated the
public was not apathetic.
Convention delegates face delicate questions in handling the
judiciary section.

Issues divisive

No easy solutions are available,
because each issue is divisive.
Each proposed change challenges the “establishment.”
The method of selection of
judges is a prime example.
Should they be appointed from
(Cont’d on Pg. 8)

Over $1 billion in federal funds made
available to college students this year

WASHINGTON (UPI) —An estimated 1.17 million civilian students will receive more
than $1 billion in help from Uncle Sam to go to college this year.
Four major federally-aided plans include loans, campus jobs, and even direct grants
to students needing still more financial help. Of the 1.17 million, many are receiving
aid under more than one of the programs.
The total eventually could soar much higher if a recently-unveiled new student loan
program proposed by a White House advisory panel on education is ever enacted. It would
in effect let a student borrow all of his college expenses from a federally-backed “Educational Bank” and mortgage part of his after-college income to the government for as long
as 30 years to repay the loan.
The estimate of 1.17 million in
the aid programs under the Office of Education is more than
one sixth the 6.5 million students
expected in the nation's institutions of higher education this
year.

colleges themselves.

Four programs
The four main programs are:
the College Student Guaranteed
Loan Program, under which the
student borrows from a private
lender with the government paying all the interest while he is
in school and half of it later;
the National Defense Student
Loan Program, under which the
student borrows directly from
the college with Uncle Sam providing up to 90% of the money;
the College Work-Study Program,
under which needy students can
get campus jobs, and a program
of direct educational grants set
up in 1965 to help promising
students of “exceptional financial
need.”
•

Guaranteed College Loans

Students at participating colleges
can borrow from $1000 to $1500
a year from private lending institutions such as banks, savings
and loan associations, credit unions, etc., and in some cases the

—

Students from families of less
than $15,000 annual income pay
no interest while in college; the
Federal Government pays the 6%
interest. After college, the government pays half the 6% interest on the unpaid balance, the
student the other 3% plus repaying the principal.

how much he needs or can be
loaned.
College Work-Study Program
—Originally part of the 1965 antipoverty program, it was shifted
to the Office of Education in
1965. Students needing part time
work to stay in college may work
up to 15 hours a week while in
school and as many as 40 during
vacations. The college decides
who gets the jobs, how much a
student needs in light of its total
available funds, and assigns the
•

jobs.

Educational Opportunity
Grants
This is limited to needy
students already enrolled who
could not continue otherwise.
Grants range from $200 to $800
per year, but cannot be more
than half the aid already suppled
by the college itself. Nor can the
latter include income from a federal college work-study job. The
college selects the students and
amount of the grants. The program got underway in the 1966-67
college year.
•

—

National Defense Student
Loan
This program was set
up In 1958 when Congress reacted
swiftly to Soviet scientific progress. Students borrow directly
from their colleges with the Federal Government contributing up
to 90%. Loans must be repaid
within a ten-year period at 3%
interest, beginning nine months
after the student leaves college
or graduates. The college decides
•

-—

Hayes annexes will be
converted to classrooms
Several business offices of the State University of Buffalo will vacate Hayes Annexes A and C and move to the
American Standard Building on 1803-1807 Elmwood Avenue.
The move will begin September 27, according to Executive
Vice President Peter Reagan.
Departments moving are: Accounting department, budget con-

trol office, warehousing, contract
administration, internal audit,
pre-audit and budget control, and
the payroll, personnel, systems
and procedure and purchasing

The Elmwood Avenue move is
step aimed at combating
the overcrowding that will face
the University until the new campus is completed. The University
currently pays rental of 1.7 million dollars a year for off-campus
facilities.
one

departments.

The move is precipitated by
the lack of facilities on campus.

mW*''

Hayes Annexes A and C will
be converted into faculty offices
and a few classrooms. Dr. Reagan
said that the University has less
than 50 percent of the room needed to accommodate the present
enrollment.

Under present conditions it is
difficult for faculty and student
to confer because of the lack of
office space. The move is intended to help to alievfate this

***

j

M

shortage.

We

lose

Bobby Hall, North Carolina State's number 34
intercepts ball from Buffalo's Tom Hurd as Ger-

ald Warren (45) looks on. The game was played
Saturday, and the Bulls lost 24-6. Story on page
9.

Dr. Regan made it clear that
administrative offices which have
direct contact with students (Bursar and Director of Admissions
and Records) will remain on campus. Departments having less direct contact with students will
retain a central office on campus
to provide liaison between the
student and the Department.

£

&gt;

—/oaolrn

Dr. Regan
announces relocation of several

business offices.

�Th

Pag* Two

•

Tuesday, Septsmbar 76, 1947

Spectrum

Closer link with Communi

Aid Con

Ewell will participate in New facets of NSA announced
international conferences
Dr. Raymond Ewell, vice president for Research at the State
University of Buffalo, is one of

An NSA organizational rheeting
was held last week to acquaint
students with nSa activities and
to disclose some plans for the future.

30 peddle from teiTeounfries arid
the U. N. to attend two foreign

meetings.

economic planning and
management of science will be
discussed by participants at Bechyme, Czechoslovakia from Sept.
25 to 29.
Dr. Ewell will discuss the roles
of basic and applied research in
relation to the size of national
economics.

Meryl Markowitz, NSA coordinator, first explained the purposes of the Student Government
Information Service.

From Oct. 2 to 4 he will attend a meeting of the Fertilizer
Industry Committee to the United
Nations in Vienna, Austria.
Dr. Ewell received his PhD
from Princeton University in
chemistry in 1937. From 1930 to
this year, he has held positions
such as research chemist in the
national Bureau of Standards and
Manager of the Chemical Economics Service at Stanford Research Institute.
He has served the government
of the Philippines as an advisor
on industrial research and went
to India twice as an advisor.
In addition. Dr. Ewell has published over 70 articles in economics, chemical engineering and
chemistry and has traveled extensively throughout Europe and
Asia.

constitutions.
The NSA also plans to expand
its national and international

The

Dr. Ewell
to attend two UN meetings

this

year.

She said that it is mainly a

resource service which has

access
to information on almost any topic such as Vietnam, academic
freedom, or how to write club

(Editor’s note: Don O. Noel Jr.,
a Hartford Times reporter, returned this week after a year’s
study abroad as an Alicia Patterson Fellow. He spent six months
as the only American newsman
—and the only resident American

—in

The house committee is a
little-publicized committee of the
UUAB in charge of policy-making for Norton Hall. This group
decides which student organizalions can have office space in
Norton Hall, how picketing will
be regulated, and how the
lounges will be used.
Changes this year have made

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Cambodia.)

by Don O. Noel Jr.
Gannett News Service

Imagine the hereditary sovereign of a small, beleaguered
American state, forced to make
Stokely Carmichael his righthand man as the only way to
keep him in check.
And finding that it doesn’t

work.

The house committee of the University Union Activities
Board has been changed from an advisory board to a policy
making body. Until this year, the committee has acted in
an advising capacity to the Norton Hall staff.

tions.

That is approximately the situation of Norodom Sihanouk,
once king and now chief of state
of Cambodia.

it into an active policy-making
group, composed of 8 students
and 3 members of Norton staff.
As an inter-governmental body,
the committee is made of representatives from Millard Fillmore
College, Graduate Student Association and the Student Association. The Chairman is Philip
Henry, and the advisor is Mr.
John Baier.

His large (Oregon-sized) and
well endowed nation is one whose
six million citizens are still
breaking into the 20th century,
climbing out of the legacy of
backwardness left by the French
colonial empire in Indochina.
There are four kinds of people
in Cambodia:

Various considerations are

•

given to requests for office space.
There is not enough room for all

The

“overseas”

Chinese,

long-time residents who control
the nation’s business, pay lip
service to Peking, but operate
with a kind of capitalism which
went out of style here fifty years

the groups that want space in
Norton Hall. One language club
was turned down on the basis
that room cannot be granted to
all the language clubs that may
eventually expect them.

ago.

The landed gentry, who are
few in number (Cambodia has no
feudalism, and most peasants own
their own farms) but have a taste
for French living which sets a
style for the capital of Phnom
Penh.
•

The center lounge on the main
floor which is now used mainly
as a gallery for pictures may be
getting more furniture. The basic
theme is to make it more formal,
with rugs and lamps. The committee feels that students would
use it more often if it had more
comfortable facilities.

with the five other area member
colleges. Each school will be responsible for a certain geographic
area and for contacting and contracting merchants in their area.

a non-credit basis.

Another program being established is on-campus tutorial assistance. It will work closely with
the Community Aid Corps which
now offers assistance to high
school students.
Miss Markowitz is also planning

an Academic and Student Affairs
Committee. An experimental col-

Cambodia’s modernization, and acceptance of the comfortably bourgeois life that is possible in Phnom Penh. Some do
both.
quicken

Stokely Carmichael
of Cambodia
The most outstanding of the
latter group is Chau Seng. In
and out of cabinets and Sihanouk’s executive office for a decade, he also edits the Frenchlanguage “Dispatch of Cambodia,” whose daily columns are
the main vehicle for both moderate and radical (pro-Peking)
leftist thought in the nation.
He is the Stokely Carmichael
of Cambodia.
Cambodia’s options are few.
Domestically, it must rely on

state socialism for much of its

growth; private (Chinese) capital
can be encouraged, but can’t be
counted on.

The elite must be forced to
forego their pleasures and accept
a much more rigorous austerity.
Sihanouk has used the threat of
leftist take-over as a lever to
move the indifferent, much as
“black power” militants in this
country provide a tool for moderate

reformers.

Neutrality vital
Internationally, Cambodia must
remain neutral. It must avoid
being sucked into the holocaust
of the war in Vietnam. Although
too proud to admit it, it needs
Western aid, and continues to
receive token assistance from
most nations save the U.S.

In the longer range, Sihanouk
seeks a neutralized Indochina in
which the West
and even the
U.S.
would continue to play
a role. He sees this as the only
hope if his nation is to avoid
coming under the sway of the
more sophisticated, more advanced, and more aggressive
North Vietnamese.
—

•

The peasants, 90%

of the

poulation, living in comfortably
tropical poverty, but increasingly aware of what they are missing.

Chairman Philip Henry feels
that the changes in the house
committee will increase student
participation in running Norton
Hall. As a policy-initiating committee, it will give students more
of a voice in what will go on in
Norton Hall.

The educated few, the civilservice core of the young nation,
most of them exposed to Marxist
thought during schooling in
France. Many are torn between
espousing radical solutions to
•

BIG JOHN'S
Pizza

lege will be established under its
auspices. Courses not offered

Still another new project to be
established will be a student
stress board which will study
health and hygiene on campus
and the reason for mental breakdowns among students and faculty.
Finally, plans call for a Student
Services League to be inaugurated. It would work with the University Union Activities Board to
arrange the appearance of big
name entertainers on campus.

Cambodian problems linked to issues of
neutrality, native Stokley Carmichael

UUAB House Committee
empowered to set policy
The Spectrum learned that the
committee will probably give office space to the Sociology Club,
the Catalyst, a new humor magazine, and other campus publica-

travel bureau. At the present
time a national discount program

&amp;

Subs

Variety of Hot and Cold Sandwiches
Big John's Steak Special

The leftists, led by Chau Seng,
more radically Marxist
economic measures and the total
exclusion of Western influence,

espouse

revolution.

Accepted
moderate government
Last May Sihanouk “accepted
the resignation” of a popularly
elected, modern government, because he feared it could not cope
with leftist subversion. Chau
Seng became a cabinet minister.
But this hardly silenced him
or his radical colleagues. This

month, Sihanouk closed down
the Cambodia-China Friendship
Association for subversive activities. Chau Seng’s “dispatch”
promptly published a wire from
Peking urging its members to

keep on working.

That, apparently, broke the
camel’s back. Last week, Sihanouk fired Chau Seng and another
leading leftist from his emergency cabinet, and announced he will
call a referendum early next year
to let the people choose between
him and the radical left.
He will win. He has won such
referendums before. He is immensely popular, and without
him the nation would fall into
chaos.
But that won’t change anything. Sihanouk can no more silence Chau Seng—while trying to
build a working Democracy
than we could silence Stokely
—

Carmichael.
Uses Chau Sengs

Whether they are in or out of
office, moreover, he must contin
ue to use the Chau Sengs to
achieve the economic growth his
nation desperately needs. He
must threaten the comfortable
elite with the possibility that
Chau Seng might some day have
his way entirely
and yet keep
that day from happening.
—

It is a virtuoso performance on
a tightrope, for which Sihanouk

receives all too little credit.

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—

excepting only France. They are
willing to gamble that they can
play Peking against Hanoi to
maintain Cambodia’s long-range
independence. Meantime, they
are eager to throw their nation’s
weight in against the U.S. in
Vietnam, and ready to foment

836-4881

836-4041

�Tuesday, September 26, 1967

Pat* Thra*

The Spectrum

Attack on poverty is basis of Cole's dateline news,Sept26
candidacy for Buffalo Common Council
by Peter Simon

ministration is a hotbed “where

The Rev. Herman F. Cole, independent candidate for CouncilBuffalo
man-at-Large on the
Common Council, is basing his
platform on an immediate massive attack on poverty and segregation in Buffalo.
An Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the State University
College at Buffalo, Cole believes
that funds for rebuilding American cities have been kept at a
bare minimum.
He feels that our military establishment is “experimenting
with its equipment on the Vietnamese people” and that “United
States idealism and morality will
eventually triumph by annihilating the Vietnamese.”
Dr. Cole believes that another
reason little has been done for
Buffalo’s poor is that most of the
city’s leaders are highly ineffective.

His opinion of the majority of
Buffalo’s Councilmen is that they
are the “narrow, self-interested
people who don’t seem to have
any knowledge of the city’s urban problems, and who are concerned primarily with whatever
patronage they can get.” He cites
Council President Makowski and
Councilman Regan as exceptions.
Dr. Cole says that the Buffalo
Urban Renewal Department “isn’t
doing a darned thing,” and regards its efforts as “a big joke.”

Critical of administration
He states that the current ad-

Supports bussing

He supports the Board of Education’s bussing system, although he maintains that it is
“merely a token effort.”
As Councilman at Large, if
elected, he promises to work for
“real integration,” which he feels
can be accomplished with the
help of educational parks, middle
schools and, most important,
“qualified teachers in all
-

-

schools.”

Education.
With regard to higher education, Dr. Cole proposes a series
of small colleges throughout the
core city. He feels they are needed to teach the Negro children
of this area skills, and “to give
them a system of higher education with which they can associate."

Haunt businesses
He also said that he would
“keep after businesses which discriminate in their hiring practices.”

Dr. Cole feels one of, his Republican opponents, Mrs. Alfreds

W. Slominski, posesses “an intolerable streak of racism.”

“She has built her organization
around white backlash. Rath
(County Executive Edward Rath)
has done everything but kiss her
feet, and he might still do that.”

Experimental college to come here
by Jeff Silberman
Spectrum Staff Reporter

Sources in the Student Association indicate that in the near
future the University will have

an “experimental college.”

It is the concern of the Student Association that the curriculum at State University of Buffalo is deficient in certain areas.
A Sociology major, for example, might be interested in the
study of music theory, but might
not have the time because of the
requirement of his major.
To alleviate a problem of this
sort and to supplement the student’s curriculum, a six-man
planning committee of the Stu-

dent Association, headed by Student Association Secretary Andrea Roth, plans to introduce an
experimental college.

Courses might range from LSD
to Rousseau to Art Studio. Anyqualified
might
one
teach,
whether an undergraduate, graduate student, professor or civic
leader. The exact curriculum has
not been determined.

Free hour
Last year, a type of experimental college was offered in the
form of the Free Hour. This Free
Hour was sponsored by the Senate and consisted of weekly lectures by invited guests and concerts in Haas Lounge. Last year’s

SAIGON

Also, he considers fiscal inde-

—

North Vietnamese peasants living near the

if they want to save themselves and their children from a
“rain of death and destruction” in massive B-52 bombing
raids, a U.S. spokesman said today.
The warning came as the giant bombers continued to
step up attacks against Communist artillery, mortar and
rocket positions in the area which have killed or wounded
more than 800 U.S. Marines at the bloody, battered frontier
fort of Con Thien since the first of the month.
HONG KONG—Chinese Communist party Chairman Mao
Tse-tung has just come back from a tour of the hinterland,
Radio Peking said today. His trail was marked by dead opponents and freshly armed civilians.
LONDON
The two British pilots of a plane that was
hijacked three months ago with former Congolese Premier
Moise Tshombe on board today scotched reports he had been
secretly taken from an Aligiers jail and murdered.
Capt. David Taylor, 27. and Capt. Trevor Copleston, 38,
said they saw Tshombe just two days ago in a prison in Algiers where they also were detailed before they were released to Britain on Sunday.
ALFRED, N.Y.
Saul Alinsky, controvrsial civil rights
organizer and executive director of the Industrial Areas
Foundation, is scheduled to speak at Alfred University Tuesday night. He has formed civil rights groups in several cities
including Rochester and Buffalo. The Buffalo group is named
“BUILD” and the Rochester organization is call “FIGHT.”
President Ferdinand E. Marcos today orMANILA
dered the Philippines air force to rescue a farmer who has
spent 58 days in a coconut tree because he is afraid he will
be killed if he climbs down.
He claimed his son was murdered by men trying to kill
him.
Quirina Berja, 48, climbed to the top of the 60-foot tree
near the town of Binalonan, about 180 miles north of Manila,
after he reportedly got into a fight at his daughter’s wedding.
ALBANY
Jew, Protestant and Catholic took part in
a Roman Catholic Mass celebrated Sunday in the New York
State Capitol for the convenience of delegates to the Constitutional Convention.
HARLINGEN, Tex.
The Rio Grande, gorged from hurricane Beulah’s prodigious rains, poured water over a
smashed dam today sending a diversionary floodway on a
4-foot-an-hour rise. It threatened to bring further misery and
destruction to Texas where 11 persons already have died
because of Beulah.
—

—

—

success in this type of program
was an important factor in planning the experimental college
this year. There will be a free
hour again this semester sponsored by the Union Activities

Board.
This type of program has been
successful at such schools as
Michigan State, San Francisco
State (where 40 outside courses
are now being offered), and
Wayne State.

—

—

Miss Roth stressed that these
courses will be extracurriculum
and open to everyone. There will
be no fees, nor will any credit
be given and, of course, no
grades.

Tutors needed to help First seminar features nuclear expert
children on l/ilest Side
The West Side Community Action Organization in conjunction
with the Neighborhood Advisory
Council is recruiting tutors to
help children attending Area
schools on Buffalo’s lower West
Side.

The program will operate from
three centers on the West Side,
one at the Lakeview Housing
Project on Lakeview Avenue, another at Immaculate Conception
Church on Edward Street, and a
third tentatively located at a Niagara Street address.
About 100 to 200 children are
expected to take advantage of
this tutorial service.
Two sessions a night will be
conducted for children lacking
basic skils in mathematics and
reading. The first session, from
5:30 p.m. to 7:30 will cover
grades 1 to 5, while the second,

from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. involves

grades 6 to 9.
Last year a similar project also carried out by the West Side
Community Action Organization
and the Neighborhood Advisory
Council was considered a success.
Many local colleges were represented among the tutors, but,
according to Mr. Larry Drill,
State University of Buffalo coordinator for the project, the
University was poorly represented compared to other schools.
Mr. Drill expressed his desire
that many more students may
take advantage of this opportunity to aid thp disadvantaged this
year.

Tutors will be needed for 1 'h.
hours per week and every effort
will be made to obtain rides for
all. according to Mr. Drill.

The first in a series of eight
seminars sponsored by the State
University at Buffalo’s Division
of Interdisciplinary Studies and
Research was held in Acheson
Hall Friday, Sept. 22.
The seminar featured Dr. Wal-

College Clothing

search.

The importance

of those propulsion systems in
efforts to place a man on Mars
in about the year 1984 was
stressed by Dr. Esselman.

Applications).”

Dr. Esselman, noted for his
work in the field of nuclear pro-

The next seminar will be held
September 29 and will feature
Dr. W. Edward Olmstead, associate professor at the Technolog-

of NERVA. The purpose of this

University, who will speak on “A
new paradox in viscous hydro-

ered a lecture on “The Development Status of NERVA (Nuclear Engines for Rocket Vehicle

pulsion, spoke extensively on the
progress and recent developments

ical

project is to develop a nuclear-

dynamics.”

Institute

of

Northwestern

Sportsmen’s Inn
2828 Bailey Ave.

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� SALAD
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Mr. Drill at 837 4710.

Headquarters for Good

The future of nuclear-powered
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interplanetary space travel was

The programs are open to the
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Interdisciplinary Studies and Re-

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for use in space travel.

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�Pag*

Th

Four

•

26. 1967

Spectrum

and participation
FeesThe Student
Association is presently wrestling with the
problem of what to do with students who seek to participate
in activities but have not paid the fees which support them.
For the past week, the Student Association has been
weighing two alternatives: (1) students who have not paid
their fees will be allowed to join an activity after paying a
Vice, or (2) only students who have paid the
predeter-

ar‘ vity tee will be permuted to join an activity.
In the first plan, the amount of any fee per activity
would be completely arbitrary. Should the fee be $1 or $10?
—

Is this fee intended to punish non-activity fee payers?
The Student Association should also consider the implications of a fee for every activity. Does that mean that
each student must also pay the prescribed rate to be a member of the Student Association? If not, why not?
If the logic of individual club fees is extended, why
should a student who has not paid activity fees be permitted
to vote in Student Association elections? Should he be given
a voice in how other students wish to spend their money?
The problems with denying membership or participation
to a non-paying student lies in two areas; What about the
student who is having difficulty financing his education as
it is? Should he be denied participation? l
The second consideration is one of enforcement. Just
how feasible is it to assume that the Student Association
could enforce its directive of non-participation? Spot checks
or requiring the filing of club membership lists would not
be effective.
The Spectrum would offer a third alternative. Given
the perplexities of the situation, the best solution may be
to let individual clubs establish their own rules for student
membership. If a club wishes to accept non-paying students,
that should be its prerogative.
If a system such as this is adopted, all control over
membership would be internal. The Student Association, by
its own decision, could also still choose to represent all of
the students, if it so desired.
In turn, the Student Association could require each organization to indicate, on its budget request, whether or not
fee payment is a requirement for membership. In this way,
if there is a shortage of available funds, the Association
could set priorities, according to the value of the organization to the student body as a whole and its fee-payment
policy.
This would allow the Student Association some leverage
in urging organizations to require payment. It would also
eliminate the need for any investigation by the Association
into the membership rolls of various organizations. No special fees for participation in this club or that should be
needed, and student funds could be allocated in a considerably just manner.
Such a proposal appears to be workable and realistic.
It would indeed be unfortunate if a proposal which will facilitate the breakdown of the student body into small, self-interested groups were adopted.
It is even more unfortunate that a need for any program of this type has developed. Perhaps the only way
to avoid the problems posed by the voluntary fee structure
is to make them once again compulsory.
It would be even better, of course, to find that a very
large percentage of the students have realized the importance of fees and have voluntarily paid them
'’"'

Spreading it thin

Offices in Hayes Annexes A and C will be evacuated

starting tomorrow' to make room for more faculty office and

V

v

,i

)%

'Faced with this, China and Russia were then supposed to realise that the whole
thing just wasn't cost-effective

the burgher
by

Schwab

Readers
Writings

’

Edelstein, our honorable Student Senate president, has all the makings of a bright
national leader.
Stewart

Point of fact: On Sunday afternoon Stewart
was seen wearing a cowboy hat, romping around
the hills of New York’s Southern Tier, pulling a
dog’s cars and calling it “Him” sometimes and “Her"
on other occasions.
The dog’s actual name, I learned, is “Duke”
and he is the deanly dog of the University’s vice
president for student affairs, Dr. Richard Siggelkow.
The occasion was a gathering of the University’s student leaders (and also representatives of
the student press) at the Richard A. Siggelkow
ranch (RAK ranch) in the hills near Ellicottville,
south of Buffalo.

As is the custom at such gatherings, the menu
included barbecued hot dogs, hamburgers (hamburghers?), potato salad and carbonated beverages;
the conversations delved into campus politics.
The main course was a discussion group consisting of Mr. Jeremy Taylor, former Spectrum editor. now an administrative assistant in the History
Department; Dr. Claude Welch, newly-appointed
dean of University College, and Dr. Edgar Friedenberg, outstanding sociologist and author of books
on adolescence.

—

To each his own

To the Editor:
From all the previous letters to you concerning
fraternities, it is obvious to me that the evils and
benefits of fraternity life break down to nothing
more than a value judgment depending upon your
own point of view.

The main issue, which it seems that both Robert Levitt and Alan Gary Rosen overlook, is that
if one chooses to become involved in a fraternity
(of national or local origin), it should be one’s right
to do so or not to do so, as guaranteed in the
Constitution under the freedom to assemble, etc.
The main issue, therefore, is that the Administration of the State University of New York has
denied us this freedom. Finally, it is my opinion
that the fraternities (through the off-campus IFC)
should exercise their right to protest this decision
in spite of the present court ruling, just as you
would expect any other group on campus to do
when their freedom has been denied.
Richard Schwartz

The topic was “The Role of the Student and
the Student Senate in the University.” By the
time the above-mentioned scholars were finished,
most student senators were figeting, distressed
mainly. I think, by the fact that they weren’t doing
very much representing or very much of anything.

Open lots at night

Dr. Welch made a plea for help “to make this
heterogeneous monolith respond.” He meant that
he wants to know what students are thinking.

I’ve got a complaint! Why can’t the University
open the faculty lots to students at night? About
three times a week I have to search desperately for
a place to park—4000 MFC students, you know.

Mr. Taylor yarned the senators: "Don’t get
some classroom space.
in by being chummy with administrators.”
sucked
those
Among
departing this campus are: Accounting
further added to the embarrassed senators’ disdepartment, budget control office, contract admissions, in- He
comfort by calling them “a tool of the administraternal audit, pre-audit and budget control, payroll, persontion."
nel department, systems and procedure department and pur"You’ve already begun to identify with adminischasing department. All will be moved to the former Ameritrators and call them by their first name," he
can Standard Plant on the 1800 block of Elmwood Ave.
taunted, asking, "How many students dc you know?"
Allay your fears, students, the bursar and the director
of admissions will remain here—at least for the time being.
Dr. Friodenborg said it “seems outrageous”
Justification for this move, according to administration that students don’t have more voice m academic
spokesmen, lies in the fact that there is not enough room affairs.
for students and faculty to have close contact in any way.
All urged the senators to do something. The
No doubt, a noble cause.
faculty, they agreed, didn't seem to have much
The move will undoubtedly be expensive In addition power. Maybe the power lies with the students, it
to the cost of leasing more space—which is getting to be a was suggested.
weekly event around here—converting the annexes to ofAfter this main course, most of the senators
fices and classrooms should involve substantial charges. Prowere found soul-searching—looking for some shred
viding transportation and communication with Elmwood Ave. of evidence of their legitimacy and seeking some
especially for the personnel department —will also cost test of their newly-acquired or newly-found power.
A power. I might point out, which has always been
money.
More important, however, is the fact that the University there but always obscured somehow.
is becoming a piecemeal operation. We should begin reSome senators were trying to remember who
ferring to this school as the State University of New York they represent and to whom they are responsible.
virtually everywhere in. at, around and of Buffalo
Most of the senators were in a daze, so I
In two years we’ll be able to boast that vou can be anyseized the opportunity immediately. Many older
where in Erie County and the University will be “just around readers will remember what is called "ordeal by
fire." Taking advantage of the hot coals in the
the corner.”
I used this sure-fire method to find out
Just how far can a University spread out and still remain barbecue,
how many senators had already "sold out,” If you
functional? Perhaps the limits have already been reached see any of them limping around, let me know.
—

v

0

To the Editor

And the faculty lot is bare. The Bailey lot is really
getting to be a circus at night. First, because some
park illegally outside the lines and then because
half the people around the University drive like
asses. I really would appreciate it if you did something about this distressing situation.
S.P.

The Spectrum
is published
twice-weekly
every
Tuesday and Friday
during the regular academic
the State University of New York at Buffalo,
3435 Main Street, Buffalo, New York 14214. Offices
are located at 355 Norton Hall. Circulation: 15,000.
—

—

year at

Editor-In-Chief—MICHAEL L. D'AMICO
Managing Editor —RICHARD R. HAYNES
Asst. Managing Editor —RICHARD SCHWAB
Business Manager—SAMUEL A. POWAZEK
Advertising Manager—DAVID E. FOX
Campus
Margaret Anderson
Asst.
Mi tene Kozuchowski
••W
City
Daniel Lasser
Asst
Lilian Waite
Feature Barry C. Holtzclaw
Asst.
Ronald Ellsworth
Sports
Robert Woodruff

Asst.
Layout
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Co-"
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Photo.
Asst

W. Scott Behrens
David L. Sheedy
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iyeff
judi
Jv'' Riye.
Jocelyne Hailpern
Edward Joscelyn
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Promotion &amp; Circulation
Director Murray Richman

The Spectrum is a member of the United States Student Press Association and the Associated Collegiate
Press. The Spectrum is served by: United Press Inter
national. Associated Collegiate Press Service. Gannett
News Service, and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate.
Represented for national advertising by National Educational Advertising Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave..
New York. N. Y. Republication of all news dispatches
is forbidden wihout the
express consent
of the
editor-in-chief. Rights of republication of all other
matter herein are also reserved.
Second class

Editorial

postage paid at Buffalo, New York
is determined by the Editor-in-Chief.

policy

�addsrange, not quality

Column

Pm f&gt;hra

The Spectrum

Tuesday, September 14, 1947

By Interlaid

BELOW OLYMPUS

—the sham

On democracy

To the Editor:
This is a somewhat belated note to show what
happens to important issues vis-a-vis bad journalism.
During the past five years I have witnessed
The Spectrum's efforts to rise from a campus
pamphlet to a newspaper worthy of a university;
for the most part it has succeeded. Needless to say
that “success” in this case means “range and quality” of reporting. Not surprisingly, The Spectrum
has done more about its range than its quality.
And this brings me to an article which appeared in
The Spectrum of September 8, 1967, p. 5.

by Martin Guggenheim

MINER

6R0PPi$

You walk down the street or you walk down
the classroom halls. You feel good, but somehow

WRELV
CRUSADE

still you. Psychologists and sociologists have all
sorts of names for this phenomena. If you have
felt this way, it’s probably because you are concerned with what's happening, but do not know
how to cope with it.

”, while significantly contrib“Or perhaps .
uting to the paper’s range, does little to better its
quality. Here are some reasons:
.

The State University of Buffalo is a part and

a product of American society. Its

purpose essentially is to produce good citizens. Their definition
of a good citizen, however, is a person who has
a basic faith in, and respect for, the Government.

The article begins with what is obviously
a bit of news printed in The New York Times, and,
what is equally obvious, slowly becomes the expression of opinions of a person or persons unknown. For example, the third paragraph reports
something that “was worded” while neglecting to
say by whom. Are we to suppose that the entire
article is someone else’s commentary on the first
paragraph (which is, strictly speaking, “news”)
turned over to The Spectrum by Mr. Holtzclaw? If
so, why should Mr. Holtzclaw’s name appear at
the top; and if Mr. Holtzclaw (and, consequently,
The Spectrum) is responsible for most of the opinions, at precisely which point are those opinions
Mr. Holtzclaw’s, and at which point someone else’s?
1.)

The sixth paragraph contains the only
indication given that there are “complex issues”
involved in the Arab-Israeli dispute, yet the same
paragraph is a (inadvertent?) summary of the
perspective of the entire article: We are to believe
that “the communication can only begin with a
change in the attitudes of the Arab leaders.” The
issues remain unnamed; in so far as they do, I
wonder whether The Spectrum and Mr. Holtzclaw
are aware of the issues. And, if they are, why
don’t they make them public?

It is a person who believes in the democratic
process and who never takes any cause too seriously.
Every year they turn out more and better
products. Not only do citizens feel frustrated about
secular issues as the War, but even students now
feel incompetent about changing campus problems.

Microcosm of society

"Turn in your collars!"

2.)

3.) Mr. Holtzclaw seems to be using the terms
“Israeli” and “Jewish” indiscriminately, loosely,
and interchangeably. This usage raises all sorts of
interesting questions about the expression “religious war,” also used in conjunction with the ArabIsraeli dispute. Interesting, especially because a
significant minority of the population of the State
of Israel happens to be other than Jewish. And,
incidentally, this is one of the—if not the—major

issue of the conflict.

It, nevertheless, follows from the above that
the article (a) is superficial, and, therefore, of bad
quality, (b) uses key terms loosely, and is, therefore, misleading and potentially harmful, and (c)
is ambiguous due to confused reporting, and therefore, unworthy of The Spectrum’s aspirations.
John Pavlidis
Editor's note: The opinions expressed in the columns of these editorial pages are designed not to
report, but to stimulate. The authors take full
credit for statements made therein. Judgments on
the cogency, validity, or relevance of a particular
article are entirely up to the individual reader.
Mr. Holtzciaw's column in particular focuses on
issues of importance which are avoided in the general mass news media.

The Lighter Side
by Dick West
We hear a lot these days about youthful rebellion: how
children no longer respect their parents, and like that.
In this regard, President Johnson has been extremely
fortunate. As far as I can tell, his two daughters have never
given him a minute’s trouble.
Luci already is happily married and now Lynda’s romance
with George Hamilton is about
to have a happy ending. She is
engaged to somebody else.
If everything proceeds as presently indicated, Marine Capt.
Charles S. Robb will marry Lynda in early December and go to
Vietnam in early March.
It was the prospect of a combat assignment so soon after the
wedding that started me to musing over what might happen if
Lynda—God forbid!—were as rebellious as some of. her contemporaries.

the group outside.”
“But, Lynda, that’s a protest
group.”
“I know, Daddy. I’m their
vice president.”
“How did a nice girl like you
get mixed up with a group like
that?”

I’m collecting material for
one of my magazine articles.”

New interest
“Good. I’m
something to
while Chuck
the name of

glad you've found
occupy your time
is away. What is

the article?”
“It’s called 'Bring the Boys
Home from Vietnam—Now!’
“Now, Lynda, you knew when
you married Chuck that he was
due for a Vietnam assignment.
When did you develop this anti”

Brides march
Come fly with me on wings of
time to April 1968. The spring
picketing season has begun at the
White House and the first group
of marchers is the Brides-forPeace Association.
Arrangements are made for
one of their leaders to present a
petition to the President. As she
is ushered into his office, the
President is concentrating on an
important paper.
“Good morning. I’ll be with
you in a moment. I’m very busy
today so if you will . . . Linda
Bird! What are you doing here?”
“I brought in a petition from

Credit hr committee
due Harold Weinstein

war feeling?”
“On my honeymoon.”
“Well, this is no way to act.
Come let us reason together.
And stop waving that ‘stop the
bombing’ poster in my face.”
“I don’t have time to argue,
Daddy. I’ve got a new job and
I’m late for work already.”
“For whom are you working?”
“Sen. Fulbright.”
“Great Pedernales! Why couldn’t you have married a movie

actor?”

To the Editor:

I have been congratulated by several students
and faculty members with regard to the inception
of the Undergraduate Research Committee. Although I appreciate the interest which has been
generated, I do not deserve credit for the original
proposals. The Undergraduate Research Committee
is a direct outgrowth of a report submitted to the
Student Senate by Harold Weinstein. Similar programs exist on other college campuses, but it was
through Mr. Weinstein’s efforts and proposals that
an effective program was instituted here.
Neal Slatkin

—

Quotes in

the news

United Press International

This institution is, in many ways, a microcosm
of society. It contains a huge bureaucracy, a firm
power structure and a mass population of unconcerned and unaware people. It has successfully made any substantial change very difficult
or impossible to complete. This has a great affect
on uS. Those who want to see change become disillusioned and drop out, leaving only those who
are very idealistic or ego-conscious.
People like myself, who have a desire to
change things, are left in a predicament. I do
not know how many of you are familiar with
my personal history in student government. It
is a substantial one which includes several positions considered powerful. I worked from the
inside for long, honest hours. I am no longer in

student government.

It has required many long, soul-searching hours
for me to conclude that I was wasting my time.
But I am now convinced! Some people can merely
close their eyes to that which they do not like;
others have no need to close them; mine must
remain open,

Americans hung up
Americans are so hung up about democracy
that they believe everything must be done democratically. Consistently, students participate and
vocalize in the democratic fashion, never realizing
they have no power. There are, and have been
times in history when the only way to establish a
democracy is through undemocratic, revolutionary
means.

Such is the need on this campus. The changes
that could be effected could only be done through
a change in the power structure. The Administration has shown itself to be a very strong power
structure. It can only be met by an equally
powerful force; and yet the elections yearly lose
participation. The student body is aware of this
sham of polities. However, we are not aware of
our strength.

Moved at once
We have moved somewhat in thd past three
years—but our movements all came at single moments. It is now time for a regular movement
which will never let up. Issues will arise, leaders
will come, but we must all join. In the next few
months, through this column, evils will be revealed,
but, finally, it is up to you.

Many ask, “Why should I care?” My only
sensible response to that is, if you do care then
except such
you care. There is little else to say
action will make you feel better. What better
way is there to subvert this so-called educational
institution than by actively trying to affect your
own life? Once one has done that, he is no longer
a good citizen.
-

Fisherman paul Hooker, describing his
FRANKFORT, Mich.
ordeal when a sudden squall tore apart a salmon fishing fleet killing
at least seven persons: “The boat would drop into holes about 25
feet deep and the water kept pourning in. I couldn’t keep up bailing
out the boat. I was swallowing more water than air. Then I backed
out.”
—

Pope Paul VI, reacting to reports of arms
VATICAN CITY
buildups by the Soviet Union and the United States: “Where is good
will? Where is peace?”

•

—

Writers; Please be brief. Letters should not exceed
300 words. All letters must be signed and the address
and telephone number of the writer must be included. Positive verification of authorship will be made
before a letter is printed.

Letters will

Teachers’ Union President Albert Shanker, indicaNEW YORK
ting that a long bargaining session Sunday night had not made much
movement toward ending the teachers’ strike now entering its third
week: “Nothing happened to make things worse.”

letters

Mayor George Young, urging residents of
HARLINGEN, Tex.
Harlingen, situation in the area .of the flooding Arroyo Colorado
River, not to panic: “If you see water lapping at your property then
go ahead and pack up. But let us take things easy."

be kept in strict confidence.
The Spectrum will use- initials or pen name, if
requested. But anonymous letters are never used.
The Spectrum reserves the right to edit or delete
material submitted for prJblication, but the intent of

will not be changed.

—

—

The'Spectrum's

pages for

Editorials

&amp;

Opinions

It is the policy of The Spectrum to report the
news fully and impartially in the news pages,
to express the opinions of the newspaper only
in the editorial pages and to publish all sides
of important controversial issues.
"Without expression, freedom

of

expression is

meaningless.**

�Th

Pag* Six

•

Tuesday, September 26, 1967

Spictmm

Rocky to push for bond approval
by Chari** R. Holcomb
With the
ALBANY (GNS)
help of high-powered “citizens
committee" with a $750,000 war
chest, Gov. Rockefeller will put
—

on a hard-driving campaign during the next six weeks to get
voters to approve his $2.5 billion
transportation bond issue.
Faced with major obstacles
notably, taxpayer resistance to
rising government spending and
possible opposition to a new constitution that will be on the same
the Governor is pulling
ballot
—

—

out all the stops.

The attack will be two-pronged.
One phase will involve the Governor and his administration officials, the other the campaign by
the citizens group.
Rockefeller’s schedule for Oc-

tober hasn’t been made public
yet, but aids say it is loaded with
speaking engagements before all
kinds of groups, ranging from
women’s clubs to veterans’ organizations. All will get the same
basic message, complete with
slides, statistics and local
Vote for the bond issue.

Department heads and other
administration officials are under
orders to accept invitations to
speak before as many groups as
possible.
"They may not

want

to hear

about the bond issue, but that’s
what they’ll hear about,” remarked a Rockefeller aide.

State agency publications will
bloom with articles on the need
for better transportation.
Spearheading the administration’s moves is Dr. William J.
Honan, chairman of the new lie
tropolitan Commuter Transportation Authority. This umbrella
agency will control the spending
of the $1 billion (b) allotted under the bond issue legislation for
mass transit.

The other prong is the citizens
committee effort.
Chairman Andrew H e i s k e 11,
who is chairman of the board of
Time Inc., said the organization,
“Action for Transportation in
New York Stale Inc.” expects to
spend $750,000 to promote the
bond issue. It has already raised
half that amount, he said.
The prime source of funds: Big

business, which Heiskcll indicated
is solidly impressed with the
bond issue’s importance for the
Stale’s econmy, and just as solidly supporting it with money, personnel and such items as the information kit that General Electric has prepared to help companies sell their employes on it.

campus releases...

dal House of Adler, Coleman &amp;
Co., and Peter Brennan, head of
the State Building and Construction Trades Council, AFL-CIO.

In addition there are a score
of vice chairman, mostly top business and banking leaders from
all over the State.
Like

the

successful

citizens

committee campaign that put
over the Governor’s $1 billion
(b) “pure waters” bond issue in
1965. this one will depend heavily
on radio advertising, it began

tober, newspaper and television
advertising. That’s where most of
the money wil go
the group
has no paid employes and no
rented offices, depending entirely on contributed personnel and
—

space.

Heiskell said

be expects sub-

stantial help from chambers of
commerce, and groups whose
members would benefit from the

transportation bond issue, such
as the Route 17 Association and
the American Automobile Association

The Rockefeller forces see
plenty of negative factors that
must be overcome, however.
among
these is an
increasing taxpayer resentment
it spending and
rising taxes. The bond issue is
the biggest in any Slat's history,
and comes only two years after
the $1 billion pure water bond

vote.

Volunteer pullout accents split on
The
WASHINGTON (UP1)
resignation of several lop officers
of the International Voluntary
Services in South Vietnam in
protest against U.S. policy there
points up a basic split in American opinion.
—

it

corn over the suffering of the
Vietnamese."

No proven answer
But whether the protestors' assessment of the global implies
lions of the Vietnam struggle is
accurate simply cannot be proved.

tends to become

obsured b ylhe loud arguments
over strategy and diplomacy, the

split is fundamental and places
honorable men of good will on
opposite sides of the question:
What is the war all about?

President

volunteers to pull out in protest
this week.

But the administration leaders
believe that the devastation and
death in Vietnam—deplorable as
it is—is part of the price that

njust be paid to prevent worse
and wider suffering elsewhere if
Communist-led forces win in
Southeast Asia.

Price too high
The volunteers, whose experience is more subjective and immediate, cannot believe that any

victory in Vietnam—no matter
what the hypothetical effects on
other regions of the world—can
be worth the despair and chaos
they have seen and lived with.

The credentials of the protesting volunteers are good They
have spent years among the
South Vietnamese, existing on a
bare subsistence level, sharing
the poverty as they worked to
alleviate it.
In a statement on the resignations, the executive committee of
the organization said Thursday,
it was “deeply appreciative of
the fine service
they have
rendered to the people of Vietnam for many years, knows
the
respect and affection that their
consistent work has won for IVS
among thousands of Vietnamese,
and share with them a deep con
...

in

Thursday, 3 p.m. in Norton Hall,

The room number will be available at the ticket booth or call
George Heymann 836-2468.

freshmen

All

interested

More discussion on fees slated
Student activity fees will be
discussed at a meeting today at
4 p.m. in Room 335, Norton Hall.
All club officers are urged to attend.

Lyndon Johnson
faces resignation of Internal
Voluntary Services officers in
Vietnam.
And therein lies the problem
facing the American people at
this point in history, a lime that
some political scientists believe
involves a crisis in national mor
ality for the United States. When
extremists at both ends of the
argument are swept aside, when
Everything Photographic for

Professional It Amateur Use

DELAWARE CAMERA
MART
Movie Rentals

Camaras
Projectors
Photo Finishing

Supplies

*

•

2635 Delaware Ave.
877-3317

Stewart Edelstein, president of
the Student Association, Douglas
Braun, treasurer, and Daryl Rosenfeld, Student Activity Chairman will represent the Student
Association.

Drama tryouts begin tomorrow
Literature and Drama Committee of the U.U.A.B. announces tryouts for the “Private Life of the
Master Race.” Interested students may apply Wednesday

through Friday, 7 to 11 p.m. in

Norton Hall, Room 344.
The play, written by Bertold
Brecht, will be directed by Hal
Wicke.

Tickets available for La Boheme'
sale at the door from 7:30. Admission charges will be 25c for
those who have paid the activities
fee, and 50c for those who have

not.

Art exhibit ends Saturday

of middle-of-the-road

The first exhibit in America of
the paintings of Nikhil Biswas
will take place September 19
through 30 in Norton Hall. Mr.
Biswas belonged until his death
in 1966 to a group of artists

Americans

who are agonizing over Vietnam.

The various polls disclosed that
a great number of them are confused and uncertain as to
whether the Johnson administration is correct in considering
Vietnam the key to the security
of Asia as well as a necessary example to the rest of the world.
It is this mass of citizens who

Johnson and Secre-

bookstore.

the fuzzy exhibitionists drawn to

any major dispute are discounted,
there still remains a large mass

Face decision

tary of Stale Dean Rusk are fully
aware of the incredible civilian
suffering and social disintegration that prompted the dedicated

After Sept. 29, the room will
revert to a recreation area, and
books will be sold only in the

working on the Communications
and Publicity Committee of the
Freshman Class Council should attend a meeting of the Council

The University Opera Club will
1967-68 season of activities on Saturday with the fulllength movie version of “La Boheme.” It will begin at 8:30 p.m.
in Baird Hall. Tickets will be on

war

level courses may buy them there.

Freshmen committee aid recruited

open its

News analysis:

Though

The temporary bookstore set
in the table tennis room opposite the Rathskeller will be
in operation until Sept. 29. Until that time, any student wishing
to purchase books for 100 or 200
up

Sept. 8) and starting in mid-Oc-

Chief

The committee includes former
Rockefeller commerce commis
Honor Keith Me Hugh, former
president of New York Telephone
Co.: Erie Nelson, former chief attorney for the company; John
Coleman, a partner in the finan-

Temporary store closes Friday

presumably will decide the outcome of next year’s presidential
election. They will be seeking
during the months ahead some
positive evidence to confirm one
side or the other of the argument.
It is doubtful that they will be
greatly impressed by political or
diplomatic gimmicks from either
the Democrats or the Republicans. It is also plain that they
are beginning to discount the
predictable reflex actions of the
extremists on both sides of the
issue.

But the critical decision to
come in November 1968. one that
may affect American and world
history for decades to come, must
be taken in the heat of a political campaign.
And there is concern today
among the sober elements on
both sides of the question as to
whether the forthcoming debate
can be kept as sensible and as
serious as the high stakes require.

TAIWAN
4543 MAIN ST.

“Calcutta Painters.”

Biswas reflects a combination
of eastern and western styles. His
works convey the “struggle for
expression and existence.”

Ives concert presented tomorrow
The Music Department has announced an evening of music by
Charles Ives, the revolutionary
American composer. The concert
will feature Dorothy Rosenberger,
soprano; Laurence Rogue, bass,

and Leo Smit, piano.
The program will be presented
at Baird Hall, Wednesday, Sept.
20, at 12 noon and admission is
free.

Retreat scheduled for weekend
Fall Retreat of the Wesley
Foundation will be held Sept.
29 to Oct. 1. The topic will be
“An

Intelligent

Approach

to

Religion.”
The retreat will be held at Silver Lake, N. Y. For reservations

call 831-3757 before tomorrow.

Freshman cheering tryouts today
Tryouts for the freshman
women cheering squad will be
held on Tuesday in Norton Hall,

room 344 between 4:30 and 5:30
p.m. If interested, call 831-2877.

THE SPECTRUM
printed by

Partners' Press, fnc.

ABGOTT * SMITH PRINTING
1331 KEN MORE AVE. (1 Dmlmwm.)

Phone 176-27S4

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�Tuesday, September

U. IM7

Th

On Woll Street
Two weeks ago RCA reported
that factory color TV sales so
far this year through August
were 30% higher than the record
number sold last year in the same

period.

The next day, any stock that
in any way was connected with
color TV, be it the manufacturers
of the sets, the makers of the picture tubes, the makers of the
tuners, and even the producers
of metals used in the production
of picture tubes, jumped in price.
Higher prices in all of these
issues continued for the next four
days.
Imagine the effect upon the
prices of these stocks if a headline were to read, “Color TV
producers expect a substantial
earnings rise due to increased

sales.”

Excellent performances
Let us look back to 1965 when
color TV production was expected to double from the previous year. Admiral, which began
the year trading at IS. climbed
to 100. RCA moved from 35 to
65, Zenith from 70 to 160, Motorola from 80 to 230, National Video (a maker of picture tubes)
from 30 to 120, and Standard
Kollsman (a producer of tuners)
from 8 to 43.
But, even though these companies are members of the same
industry, they each possess different ratings according to quality of investment, possible capital gain, and speculative risk.
For the investor seeking a quality
“A” stock, I would recommend
RCA or Zenith.
In the past month RCA has
moved from 45 to 60. Therefore,

it is quite possible some sort of
consolidation in the 36-59 range
might be necessary before resuming further advancement. Zenith
is just beautiful. During the past
several months, the stock has
traded in the 60’s. I see no reason why Zenith should not reach
100 over the intermediate term.

Quality vs. glamour
Magnavox and Motorola, while
possessing a B or B+ rating, have
more glamour than either Zenith
or RCA. In other words, they are
more popular among aggressive
investors and are capable of higher jumps in day-to-day prices
(they are also capable of retreating in price to a greater degree
than RCA or Zenith). With either
a very good earnings report or an
optimistic forecast of earnings,
Motorola (120) could move to 200.
Magnavox could also move up
swiftly.

The third category of stocks
are to be recommended only for
the very aggressive investors
willing to take risks (my kind of
people).

These stocks may prove to be
sources of great capital gain.
However, in a retreating market,
these stocks may experience
sharper declines than the others.
In this category I would place
Admiral and National Video.
Even though I would have to
consider these stocks as speculative (especially the latter), I see
very little downside risk in either
Admiral or National Video. I
cannot see Admiral dipping more
than 5 or 6 points below its current price of 26. As for National
Video (32), the maximum downside objective is 25.

Spectrum

Film review: Circle Art

Warhol film strikes at sex mores

by Michael Galitzer
Since almost everyone is in agreement Jhat a
»m in
the economy is getting under lay, the electronics stoc
particularly those associated with color TV, might prove to
present excellent investment Opportunities.

•

by Phil Burbank

especially
The
world and
America is replete with people
who cringe at almost every fourletter word (I sometimes think
even the word love induces a few
groans from some people).
The antiquated standards of
sexual novality in our society
are sacred cows which ought to
be slaughtered
Andy Warhol’s
film “The
“The Chelsea Girls” is unique in
its approach to contemporary
“acceptable” sexual mores. Instead of using a knife on this
figurative cow, it attempts to use
dynamite.

Warhole splits his screen verin half, with different
films at different times on separate screens. Confusion is one's
train of thought is limited, for
there is only one sound track
and it accompanies one of the
two films.
tically

No goof
Warhol, who goofed on the
audience in his two previous
films in the underground series

Exhibits to open
at Art Gallery
Two major exhibitions of paintings will open simultaneously tomorrow in the Albright-Knox Art
Gallery.

“Painters of the Section d’Or;
The Alternatives to Cubism,” recreates a famous exhibition held
in Paris in 1912, and shows what
influence the Cubist experiments
of Braque and Picasso had on
other French artists of the time.
The

exhibition

includes

the Circle-Art “Match Girl”
and “My Hustler", might seem to
have amplified his goofing in
“Chelsea Girls,” but I think not.

at

46

paintings by 15 artists, including
Duchamp, Gleizes, Gris, Leger,
Marcoussis, Metzinger and Vil-

lon, among others. The exhibition was organized by the Albright-Knox Art Gallery.

In addition to that collection,
the Gallery will display a group
of “Unpainted Pictures" by the
German expressionist Emil Nolde, who died in 1956. While the
Nazis were in power, Nolde was
forbidden to paint. He defied the
prohibition, but confined his work
to small watercolors which could
be easily hidden. He called these
his “unpainted pictures” and they
make up the collection.
Both exhibitions will continue

through Oct. 22. They are open
to the public without charge.

Warhol’s people find pleasure
and satisfaction in what society
labels perversity. This includes
masochism, sadism and male and
female homosexuality. Warhol
gives a voice to these people and
tries to teach his audience something about them.
One screen is a dialogue between a lesbian and a homosexual. The dialogue ranges from
absurdities to intensely intimate
aspects of the characters’ lives.
Simultaneously with this absurd dialogue, the silent screen
shows an attractive girl brushing
her hair.
It is possible that some people
might label some of the camera
work suggestive if not obscene.

Offensive sights
If you are one of those people

who are generally offended by
such talk or peephole sights,
Warhol has just begun to try and
accomplish what he’s after. He
wants the viewer to recognize

that there are people in tin
world who do thing* which are
not considered normal and that
these people are as much a part
of the world as anyone else.
Also, he wants people to realize
that sex—homosexual as well as
heterosexual—is a part of human life and that denying this
will not make problems disappear
but only create more.

The film is three and a half
hours long. The screens are sometimes interesting, but after a
while some grow to be monotonous. The film may grab yon or
it may leave you bored depending on your mood. Either way
it is a worthwhile experience.
As far as film techniques go
Warhol is no master; as a matter
of fact, he's almost a complete
amateur, but he knows it and
it doesn't detract from what he's
trying to say.

Warhol is something fresh
which cinema needs. He is not
afraid to try something new and
different—no matter what the
audience's reaction.

Abgott explains position
on Spectrum censorship
Albert N. Abgott, president of
Partners Press, has claimed that
he was “grossly misquoted" in a
story printed Sept. 22 in the Buffalo Courier Express.
The article concerned a speech
delivered by Mr. Abgott last week
to the Buffalo Club of Printing
House Craftsmen. The article
claimed Mr. Abgott had “castigated” State University of Buffalo
officials whom he encountered
last April when he refused to
print certain articles in The Spectrum “on the grounds they were
‘obscene’.”
Abgott explained that the
quotes attributed to him were
“taken out of context from a question and answer period following
the speech.”

In response to a statement that
he said “academic freedom means
the community can go to hell,”
Mr. Abgott recalled that he was
only referring to the attitudes of
certain students. He said he also
told the audience: “Academic
freedom to some also means responsibilities.”

“Never have I said that the material in The Spectrum was ‘obscene.’ What I did say was that
it was distasteful to me.”
Following what Mr. Abgott
termed “unsought publicity” in
April, Partners Press renegotiate

Al Abgott
"Academic freedom to some
also means responsibilities
"

ed its contract with The Spectrum and is presently printing
the newspaper.
The new contract contains a
clause which states that Partners
Press will not delete material submitted for publication.

�Tuesday, September 26, 1967

Tli* $Mctna

Pagt Eight

Sarah Caldwell
talks on opera
A lecture by Miss Sarah Caldwell, artistic director of the Amwill be given at 11 a m today in
Norton Hall’s Conference Theater.

The Go arneri String Quartet,
labelled by the New York Timps
as having "no superior on the
world's stages" is coming to
Buffalo.

Quartet

Miss Caldwell will talk about
the experiences she has had with
the Opera Company. She is well
known for her controversial view
that opera belongs to the modern
world.
Her talents range from conducting symphony orchestras to
the knowledge of almost every
facet of the theatrical world.
Miss Caldwell's lecture is sponsored by the State University of
Buffalo Student Opera Club.
Shea’s Buffalo Theater will be
the scene of the showing of three
operas. Sept. 25 through 27. Verdi's “Falstaff.” Berg’s “Lulu" and
Puccini’s Tosca" will be presented by the American National
Opera Company. The State University of Buffalo Scholarship
Fund and the Erie County ASP
CA will share in the proceeds.

Ripon Society to
hold first meeting
The Ripon Society of the State
Diversity of Buffalo will hold
its first meeting of the year at
7 p.m. tomorrow in Room 328
Norton Hall.
The Society, which is a LiberalRepublican club, is an activist
group that is also engaged in
research and policy formation.

In the past, the Society has
opposed the War in Vietnam by
calling for an unconditional halt
to the bombings and for recognition of the NLF in order to bring
about negotiations at the soonest
possible time, it has condemned
the government’s credibility gap
as virtual lying to the people of
the US.
Active participation by the
Society has included backing progressive local and national candidates of the Republican Party,
while at the same time opposing
Republicans who align themselves with the right-wing.

Guarneri String Quartet
to give concert in Baird Poll conducted at Russian
The

famed

Guarneri

String

Quartet begins a three-part con-

cert tonight at 8:30 p.m, in Baird

Hall.
Tonight’s

performance

by

a

group labeled by The New York
Times as one which “has no superior on the world’s stages,” is
the first in a six-part series of
Beethoven string quartets sponsored by the Music Department.
It will play Quartet Nos. 1, 9
and 12 of the Beethoven Cycle.
The first half of the presentation of the Beethoven works for
string concert will be presented

this week. Thursday the Guarneri quartet will perform Quartet
Nos. 2, 10 and 14; Saturday it
will play Nos. 3, 16, and 7. Both
of these performances will also
be at 8:30 in Baird Hall.
This quartet consists of four

outstanding virtuosos, who, since
their 1965 debut, have established
themselves as one of the most
popular quartets of this era.

The group consists of Arnold
Steinhardt, John Dailey, violins,
Michael Tree, viola, and David
Soyer, violoncello.

—

a list drafted by an outside impartial agency, or should the

time-honored New York method
of popular election be continued?
Or is there a middle course?
How the courts should be financed is another point of dispute.
Great pressure is being exerted
to have the state pick up the
$120 million a year tab, a figure
certain to grow. Presently the
costs are paid by the state and
localities.

Special to Thr Jpectnm

John F Kennedy ranks first
on the list of Americans most
popular with Russian university
students, a special poll has re-

vealed.

The poll was conducted this
summer among 1.000 university
students by the Soviet Novosti
Press Agency The Gallup organ-

The real flak will fly when
the question of consolidation of
up. Strong advocates of reorganization want to
merge the surrogate’s claims and
family court with the supreme
court. Equally strong defenders
of the present system say “no
sir, not that court!" Confusing
this picture somewhat is the fact
that there are opposing forces
within each court.

the justice of the peace (town)
courts and city and Tillage courts,
and replace them with district
courts, benched by lawyers.

End peace justices

Such is the judiciary tangle
the delegates are trying to unwind: and in such a way that
popular support for the entire
constitution will not be sacrificed.

See the LADY WRANGLER'S at

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LAB COATS-S5.00

And still going on after many

false starts in the legislature is
the problem of additional judicial
manpower, a poser so intertwined
in politics that nothing happens
except court calendars get more
congested.

947 WASHINGTON St.
High A Carlton St*.

TT 3-5233

ization conducted a similar poll
among 500 U.S. college students.
The Russian students ranked
author Ernest Hemingway as
their next most popular American. with Mark Twain, Franklin
D. Roosevelt, William Faulkner
and Louis Armstrong following
in that order.

■

PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB
MEETING
Tuesday, Sept. 26
Room 264 Norton
Nominations Will Be Heard

Contact

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.

.

American

students

Mr. Feinrider interprets the
recent severe defeat of the liberal forces at this past summer’s National Young Republican
Convention in Omaha as a vir-

tual

occur.

guarantee

that

this will

When asked what the Ripon
Society has to offer to students,
Mr. Feinrider replied that “Liberal-Republicanism provides the
only realistic liberal alternative
to Johnson in 1968.

~OUea Steak Hamte

i*

WJI.Y."

1375 DELAWARE AVE.
TT 6-92*1

Premier Alexei Kosygin, Lenin,
Dostoevsky, Tolstoy and Vladimir Nabokov, the author of Lolita (who left Russia in 1919).
Listing their most admired
Russian political leaders, U.S.
students picked Kosygin number
one by a wide margin, this perhaps because he is currently in
office. A trickle of votes turned
up for Soviet Communist Party
chief Leonid Brezhnev and for
Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei

On the subject of peace, 76%
of the American students were
sure the superpowers could live
in peace with one another. This

reassuring

optimism spread

Soviet students listed Judgment at Nuremburg, On the

Beach and the old version of
War and Peace as their favorite
movies. Some 87% of the Americans polled had seen no Sovietmade movies at all; the others
named Ballad of a Soldier as the
best Russian film.

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The poll among Russian students indicated that most of them
learn about the United States
through the translated works of
American authors. More than any
other book they could name, the
Soviet collegians listed John
Steinbeck’s Travels With Charley
as giving the most comprehensive
view of America.
The

WAB STEM
UNLIMITED"

The Society, which models itself after, but is not affiliated
with the national Ripon Society
of Cambridge, Mass., plans to
work with the national group
to establish a nation-wide network of “activist” Ripon Socie-

university reveals

When asked to name America’s greatest political leaders,
Soviet students listed Abraham
Lincoln first, JFK second and
FDR third.

Then there is the not inconsequential movement to eliminate

falo area.”

favorite American political and social leaders

Federal funds... cont'd
(Cont’d from Pg. 1)

It has also engaged in research
including such tonics as “Metropolitan government for the Buf-

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�Tuesday,

The

26, 1967

Pats hand ineffective Bills
their first AFL shutout
Fullback
BUFFALO, N Y.
Jim Nance ground out 185 yards
and a touchdown, and' Boston defenders intercepted five Buffalo
passes Sunday as the Patriots
handed the Bills their first shutout in 137 American Football
League games, 2310.
Nancy, former Syracuse Uni—

versity star, was virtually good
for four yards every time he carried. He raced through a gaping
hole in the Buffalo line midway
through the second quarter for
53 yards to the Bills’ three. A
play later, he pushed over to give
Boston a 13-0 halftime lead.
Nance was thrown for a loss only
once in the 34 times he carried.
Gino Cappeletti added 11 points

to the oBston effort, with three

field goals and two conversions.
Buffalo’s offensive unit never
got into gear, failing to score
three times from the Patriots'
five-yard line, in their only real
chance.
The game was played in a windy, 55-degree temperature before
a record-tying crowd of 45,748.
Boston took a 6-0 lead on field
goals from 33 and 23 yards by
Capelletti. Both came after miscues by the Buffalo offensive
unit—a Bobby Burnett fumble
at the Buffalo 40, and a Nick
Buoniconti interception at the
Buffalo 22.
Boston ran the score to 20-0 in
the fourth quarter as Larry Garron caught a Babe Parilli 11-yard

touchdown pass. Cepelletti’s third
field goal from 45 yards out gave
the Patriots their final points of
the game with 1:56 remaining.
His seven field goals attempts
tied an AFL record held by seven
other kickers. The two teams tied
a league mark of ten field goal
attempts.
Mike Holovak is an expert on
mistakes. He suffered through
180 consecutive minutes of them
earlier in the current American
Football League season.
“But not this time,” Holovak
said Sunday after his Boston
Patriots humiliated the Buffalo
Bills.

Holovak looked around the
dressing room after the game and
pointed to Jim Nance, a bull of
a fullback who carried 34 times
for 185 yards and a touchdown.
“He did the job on the Bills,”
Holovak said. “He just kept running right through them.”
Then Holovak thought about

the three horrendous games his
Patriots played earlier this season. He thought about the 11 interceptions made against quarterback Babe Parilli in those three.
“You don’t have to tell me
about fumbles and interceptions.
It’s impossible to win with them
and that’s why we lost our first
three games,” Holovak said.
This time, the monopoly on miscues belonged to Buffalo. Quarterback Tom Flores bad his worst
day as a pro with five interceptions.

on the bench
If statistics determined a victory, Doc Urich’s Bulls
would have defeated a staunch N. C. State ball club. But the
story is on the scoreboard, and that story was a sad one for
the Bulls.
The final tally of 24-6 is only a mere fragment in the
story of the Bulls’ defeat Saturday afternoon.
When you make mistakes on
the football field against a top
rated team, you can only expect
to find yourself running into a
hole and then having trouble
digging yourself out.
Four interceptions and two
fumbles are like poison darts in
the back of the neck during an

offensive drive. Result: the loss
of momentum, the football and
the game.
But why dwell on such a topic
as error; mishaps occur all the
time. Let us praise a club that
went south to play football.
The Bulls were up against a
rated club, the kind of team that
when beaten by an underdog,
gets a headline in the sports
section of The New York Times.
The Bulls played good football
and except for those mistakes
were on an even par with the
Wolfpack.

Not a slaughter
One game does not a season
make, and one loss is not the
straw that broke the camel’s
back. This was not a one-sided
game; this was not a slaughter;
this was a good ball game.
Don’t become non-believers in
your

are

team, keep believing. They

a good football team with
good personnel
and excellent
coaching. You can be sure N. C.
State will be a little sore after
the game because the Bulls hit

hard.
Once

again there was the
strong running of Lee Jones and
Ken Rutkowski, and if this was
any indication, Denny Mason is
a fine
QB. Substituting for Mick
Murtha, Mason led the Bulls to
their lone score.
Remember the days of Y. A.
Tittle and Charlie Connerly, and
even Jack Kemp and Daryl

Lammica.
Those were teams that had
two good QBs, just like the Bulls
of today.
And just a word about young
Murtha. He had a tough Saturday afternoon, but he’s only a
junior playing in a major game
and perhaps felt a little burden
on his shoulders.
After all, didn't he lead the
Bulls to victory against Kent
State? You bet he did, so if one
bad game was coming up, it’s a
good thing it happened early in
the season.

PHI Nina

Spictrum

the spectrum at

sports

Fumbling and pass interceptions
explain North Carolina State victory
by Bob Woodruff
An opportunistic North Carolina State* football team
capitalized on four pass interceptions and two State University of Buffalo fumbles to upend the Bulls 24-6 before 20,200
Wolfpack fans in Raleiph.
In what was billed as Buffalo’s entry into the ranks of
major college competition, the Bulls looked surprisingly impressive against the highly touted Wolfpack eleven. The
losers outdistanced N.S. State on the ground, 224 to 70 and
held a sizable edge in total offense, 379 to 227. Buffalo
amassed an incredible 26 first downs to only 11 for State.
So complete was the Bulls dominance of the field action that
they ran 68 plays from scrimmake to the Pack’s 33. But State's
ability to come up with the big
play and force the Bulls into miscues was evidenced by the fact
that their three touchdown drives
took a total of only eight plays.
State’s longest scoring march
the first time the hosts
got the football. Quarterback Jim
Donnan passed to Harry Martell
for 10 yards to the Bulls’ 49. After an unfruitful reverse on first
down, Donnan called a play action pass which completely fooled
the Buffalo secondary. Martell
grabbed Donnan's pitch on the
Bulls’ 15 yard line and with no
defender within 20 yards, he
scampered home for the game’s
first score.
came

After the Bulls’ offense stalled,
Donnan took over with a 48 yard
pass play to Don Donaldson
which left the ball resting uncomfortably on the Buffalo 13.
The result was a 25 yard Steve
Warren field goal and a ten to
zero State lead.

Bull yard pickup
After the ensuing kickoff, the
Bulls marched from their own 33
to the State 19, as Murtha hit
Drankoski and Wells for 12 yard
pickups and Jones Rutkowski and

Wells ran through the Wolfpack
defense.

After an incompletion intended
for Endress, and a second down
play which saw Murtha dumped
by All-American Dennis Byrd,
Murtha’s pass to the 7 yard line
fell into the hands of State’s
Steve Discont. This drive was to
set a pattern for the entire afternoon’s activity.
The Bulls came right back
after the exchange as Rick Wells
went off tackle for 17 yards and
Lee Jones bucked the right side
of the Pack’s line for another 13
to the State 27. The 6 foot 4 inch
260 pound Byrd then made sure
that Murtha got a good taste of
southern turf as he threw the
slender quarterback for a four
yard loss. Misfortune and frustration followed as Murtha proceeded to throw into the waiting arms
of State sprinter Fred Combs who
returned the missguided aerial
70 yards to the Buffalo 14. Coach
Urich called this play the back
breaker for the Bulls because it
set up N.C. State’s third score
which put them out of reach.
Two plays later Tony Barchuk
went six yards untouched for the

sent Dennis Mason in to throw
the halfback option pass. With
Drankoski standing all alone at
the State 15 yard line, Mason
fumbled Murtha’s pitchout and
the Bulls again lost possession.

Ended Bull threat
The Bulls last opportunity of
the half also ended in disaster.
Murtha marched his club beautifully from the Buffalo 18 to the
State 30. In an obvious attempt
to throw the ball out of bounds
to stop the clock, Murtha fired
directly into the hands of corner
back Billy Morrow which ended
the Bulls’ scoring threat.
The jinxed Bulls had misfor-

tune follow them into the second
half.

On the third play from
scrimmage, Murtha, attempting to
pitch out, was hit by Pete Sokalsky causing him to fumble. State
took posession on the Buffalo 28,
and it took Bobby Hall just one
play to cover that distance and
put State untouchably ahead at
24-0.

With Murtha suffering through

one of those games that every

ball player must have, Dennis
Mason came in to run the offense. Mason moved the Bulls
well through the last two quarters pickup up 14 first downs.
The Bulls only score came on
their last march, a 77 yard drive
in 7 plays. Pat Patterson ran for
25 yards on this march and Mason completed passes to Patterson and Paul Lang before throwing an 18 yard scoring strike to
Chuck Drankowski. Bob Embow’s
missing conversion was his first
in two seasons, but it epitomized
the futility of the afternoon for
the losers.

score.

Great defense

Undaunted and as game as
ever, the Bulls altck rolled from
their own 18 to the State 41 after
they received the kickoff. Urieh

The Bulls ground defense
shone brightly on this beautiful
Saturday afternoon in Raleigh,
limiting the winners to 72 yards
rushing. The Wolfpack picked up

Virginia next
Next week is an equally big
game against Virginia at Charlottesville. We’ve never played
Virginia before, and if the boys
can get up for this one, this reporter feels a victory in the making.

We’ll still be the underdog,
and it’ll still be an upset, but it
could be the win that leads the
Bulls to a record of 9-1.
You have a good football team
here and a “gutsy" team. Your
next chance to see how good they
really are is Oct. 7 vs. Temple,
pie.

Be there and yell hard for
your team.
1-1 Record
As was said before, one game
does not a season make, if anything else. Now you should realize this is a top flight ball club.

I’ve praised them for two weeks
and they’ve given the State iTniverstiy of Buffalo a 1-1 record.
The time for praising is over, the
time for points has begun.
Come next week. We hope the
score is reversed and the Bulls
will dominate. Without any careless mistakes, New York Times
here we come!

Bad
pass

Jack Klebe, North Carolina Stale quarterback
(16) attempts pass unsuccessfully at Saturday's
game. Bulls were routed anyway.

�Th

Pag* T*n

•

Tuesday, September 26, 1967

Spectrum

Second straight victor

&gt;

$

Buffalo golfers take match
by Jay Schreiber
lectrum

f
*.'*x

I

X,,

A

Syracuse Orangemen defeated
Buffalo harriers Saturday in spite

Cross-country

of efforts by this obviously
siaunch Cross-Country Bull.

action

Harriers easily defeated
by Orangemen 45, 50
By ANDY BREIMAN
Spectrum

Staff Reporter

The Cross-Country Bulls met
the Syracuse Orangemen Saturday in a meet at Grover Cleveland Park.
The Orangemen, regarded as
one of the top cross-country teams
in the East, handily defeated the
Harriers of Buffalo, 15-50. After
the first two miles of the difficult
4.9 mile course, the outcome was
in doubt.
However, at the conclusion of
the race, the Syracuse runners
had sewn-up the first seven places
with first place finisher Dave
Crans selling a new course record of 27:25.8.

Again, as in the Bulls last meet,
Jim Hughes was the top finisher
for Buffalo in eighth place, with
a time of 29:35.
Following the meet Coach Fisher expressed his relief at gelling
past the first two meets which he
considered the Bulls’ toughest.

here on in,” remarked
Coach Fisher, “we are capable
of beating any team remaining
on our schedule on any given
day." The frosh Harriers also
met Syracuse on Saturday and
were soundly beaten by the same
15-50 margin over a shorter 2.8
“From

mile course.

Last Wednesday the Buffalo
Harriers met crosstown rival, Buffalo State, at Delaware Park. Six
of the first seven finishers were
from State, including Burrows
with a time of 24:34 over the 4.6
mile course.
Jim Hughes, a junior, recorded
the Bulls best lime of 25:38 for a
sixth place finish.
After the meet Coach Fisher
said that he is not pleased with
the team’s sub-par performance.
He is positive that his team is
better than the 44-15 score indicated.
Next Thursday the team will
meet Canisius College in a home

meet

PPG INDUSTRIES
-

Chemical Division

(Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company)
ON CAMPUS

Staff

Report

tain Tony Santelli and newcomer
Gary Rader turned in the best

Oddly enough Santelli’s 72
brought him only a half point

for the lowest scores with 72s.
The Bulls were further aided because senior Bill Ahrendtsen
found time enough in his heavy
class schedule to fit the varsity

(he

niit nf

Golfers have never been known
as the particularly rugged type
of athlete. It doesn’t take much
courage or fortitude to go 18
holes on a warm, sunning day
with a pleasant breeze rustling
the green grass and trees. The
State University of Buffalo golf
team, however, may fast change
this image.

golf competition.

INTERVIEW

Playing golf in these weather
conditions is commonplace for
the Blue and White, for as head
coach Len Sefustini said: “We’ll
be playing in the snow before
the season ends.”
Last Wednesday afternoon the
Bulls had been more fortunate
wealherwise, and the warm
weather helped them to come
through with their first victory
of the early campaign. However,
this contest turned out to be a
squeaker with the Bulls taking
the win by a single point, 9Vz8Vi, over cross-town rivals, Buffalo £.ate.
In the Rochester match Cap-

—Yates

to right, front: Tony Santelli, Mike Riger, Gary Bader.
Rear: Rob Stone, Bob Gauchat,
Doug Bernard.

Left

Golf
team

Trivia Club is organized Sale of lottery
for games ofmentalskill tickets higher
What did Lauren Bacall let
Humphrey Bogart do to her in

long forgotten facts to the sur-

face.

the "Big Sleep?”

If the club blossoms as expected, there could be a day in

Who cares?
Probably no one, but the founders of the University Trivia Club
believe that there can be worth
in speaking of such worthlessness.
Everyone knows some trivia.
Everyone, that is, who has been
subjected to any of the mass me-

dia; T.V., comics, movies, adver-

anything
else that everybody .one time or
another, has heard or seen.
tisements,

sports,

or

Freshman Greg Henrich and
Mike Friedman, the club's founders, feel that trivia is not only a
pleasurable (and sometimes violent) pastime, but a sort of menial combat. It can sharpen the
wits, clear the brain, and bring

ALBANY. N.Y. (UPI) —State
lottery ticket sales jumped to 5.9
million during August, the State
Tax Department announced.
The sale was a significant inover the 4.1 million sold
in July, but still failed to pass
the opening month’s sales of 6.6
million in June.

the near future when this university would be able to compete
against schools such as Princeton,
Columbia, Dartmouth and Cornell, who already have inter-col-

crease

legiate teams.

Of the $5,987,201 received from
the sales, 55 per cent or $3,292,960 will go to education. Payment to prize winners will total
$1,796,160.

Trivia is trivial, but that does

not necessarily mean it is boring.

The club, according to its
founders, will try to stay away
from minutiae and specific facts.
Everyone knows the height of the
Empire State Building, but why
remember it?

Nevertheless, one can get quite
emotional about the girl who got
her face smashed with a grapefruit thrown by Jimmy Cagney.

The drawings began Monday in
Albany, and will switch to Buf

falo for the final selection of
winners. The lucky tickets will
bring from $150 to $100,000 to
the winners.
There will be 240 winning tickets for each million sold.
By regions, the August sales
figures showed: New York City
3,925,104; Long Island, 602,204:
Westchester, 521,221; Albany,
284,889; Utica, 84,162; Bingham
ton, 83,302; Syracuse, 95,900; Ro
chaster, 90,631, and Buffalo, with
299,788.

The sales figures were still well
below the $30 million a month
originally anticipated by the state.

Appointments

POSITIONS AVAILABLE IN:
Production; Development; Engineering
Design; Construction; Research; Sales
Technical and General Management.

for

You're Invited
to the

Senior

"Wig Parly"

Yearbook
Pictures

LOCATIONS;

Sept. 26-29

Texas, Ohio, Louisana, West Virginia
and Pennsylvania
*

AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

was

Canisius.

Chemical Engineers
Mechnaicai Engineers
Electrical Engineers
Industrial Engineers
Civil Engineers
Chemists

—Brochures on File at Placement Office—

three. It

pnssinle

Friday afternoon they roughed
it through a chilly wind and wet
ground conditions, but they still
came through with a strong llte6 Ms win over Rochester Institute
of Technology. It was the Bulls’
second straight victory after
dropping their opening verdict to

Tuesday, October 10
TO

the

second straight match which
Santelli had lost, but coach Serfustini isn’t alarmed. “He’s shooting good golf and hel’H start corning through again. It’s just a matter of bad luck.”

4K

Q

V)

o

Norton

We are having a showing
of the finest imported hair
pieces direct from California.
These will be made available to those attending the
Wig Party at Special Discount Prices.
FOR RESERVATIONS
CALL
.

Lobby

.

.

837-8522

�Tuesday, September 26, 1967

The Spectrum

CLASSIFIED
1963

VOLKSWAGEN, sunroof, top condimust sell. Make offer. Call 832-8049.
1962 VOLKSWAGEN, good condition. Many
parts.
837-3945.
new
1965 TRIUMPH spitfire (black), 15,000 miles,
good condition,
$750 or best offer.
838-2731, John.

IDE
29.

NEEDED to Ithaca or
Call Barb, 862-4261.

Syracuse, Sept.

tion,

1965 CORVAIR Monza. Like new. After
5 p.m. weekdays. 32 North Drive, Snyder
(off Eggert Road).
ECONOMY minded
3 wheel
scooter, seats two. Closed cab and rear
storage area. Up to 100 miles per gallon.
-

Completely

overhauled,

after 5.
MOTORCYCLE

1966

-

sacrifice. 634-5250

Ducati, 250

c.c.

FIND

NEW and

reiS WANTED! All

applies.

Phone: 832-5002 after 6.
JUST DON'T SIT THERE! Yarns, socks.
sweaters. Souhan's Mill Outlet, 5504
Main Street open Thurs. and Fri. evenings.
•

LOST

IF ANYONE found a Nikon F camera will
they please return it to the Spectrum
office. No questions asked.
GOLD PEN and pencil, initialed "S.O.R.

831-3374.

SITUATIONS Wi

-

used paperbacks and

from the Jewish Bible

For gems

-

740 actual miles. Perfect
condition, reasonable. Call 876-3586.
MOTOR BIKE - Harley Davidson M - 50.
550 miles, like new. 185 miles per
gallon, $125. 662-4264.
1965 YAMAHA 55cc. Excellent condition.
Call 836-0691. Ask for Richie.
Monza Motor

SHALOM!

hard

bound books at GRANT books and
stamps. 3292 Main Street.
FAMOUS MAKES skirts, slacks, coordinated
sweaters and T-necks. Vi retail price.
Souhan Mill Outlet, 5504 Main Street,
Williamsville.
Twin
15-inch Jensen EM-1;
lifetime bass/organ speakers. Acoustically correct
cabinet. Unlimited sound.
837-8953.

TYPING done

my

home, reasonable.

DRUMMER AVAILABLE to form or

join a
jazz group. Anxious to get going. Call
Dave. 284-2409, Niagara Falls.
SKI SWEATERS, mittens, etc. Tell me what

you want and I'll knit it. 836-4942.
FLUTE LESSONS given by music major. Call
Nora after 11 p.m. 831-3752.
AUTO SERVICE

AUTO PROBLEMS get you

dizzy? See Joe

Vizzi,
Gulf Station. Kenmore
Starin. Road service. 836-8998.

ZOUNDS

ROOMMATES WANTED
ROOMMATE TO SHARE flat with two festudents.
Call 875-1337 and ask
male
for JyII.
WANTED
STEADY MALE HELP. Also part-time work
days and weekends. Distribute circulars
and samples. No selling, no car needed.
Hourly pay, steady raises. For appointment
634-5250; if no answer 844-0400.

in

833-63-11.

corner

MISCELLANEOUS

MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE - premiums financed, immediate FS-1. Call 694-2625.
FROSH GIRLS under par? . . . Think Buff
State's too far . . . Take a sophomore
out this week. Sponsored by Fresh Air
Fund For Clement Sophs.
COMPANIONS

cursion

DESIRED

for

low cost ex-

to Florida. Call 896-1271.

Rosary Hill to
present original

graphic art show

graphic art comprising etchings,
lithographs, woodcuts, and silkscreens of important and outstanding artists will be on view
and for sale October 2 and 3 at
Rosary Hill College.

The exhibition, in Dun Scotus
Hall at the college’s Main St.
address, includes every form of
printmaking from hand-printed
manuscript pages and music
sheets, 18th and 19th century
prints from Europe, and a comprehensive selection of 20th century artists.
Selections include such artists
as Renoir, Degas, Manet, Toulouse-Lautrec, Picasso, Chagall,
Vasarely, and Giacometti.

Rouault’s “Miserere,” Picasso’s
“Vollard Suite,” and Chagall’s
“Daphnis and Chlo” are all re-

presented.

There is also a selection of
colorful work by young contemporary artists.

Pag* El*v*n

Single folk concert to

be headed by Kweskin
Th« 1967 Folk Festival will pre-

Jan Thompson, chairman of the
Folk Festival, explained that since
there is only one concert this
year, students will lose the opportunity to attend workshops
which were previously held on
Saturday afternoon between the

The Folk Festival is sponsored
by the University Union Activi-

concerts. An inability to secure

sent Jim Kweskin

and the Jug
Band, Doc Watson and Arlo Guthrie in concert at 8:30 p.m.
Friday. The concert will take
place in Clark Gym.

ties Board.
Jim Kweskin, a well known
folk artist, with five record albums on the market has top billing at the concert.
-

Doc Watson, who has three record albums to his credit, was
signed &gt;to appear on campus last
year until a case of appendicitis
prevented him from keeping the
engagement. His son is traveling
with him as his accompanist.
Arlo Guthrie is the unknown
artist who took the audience by
storm last year and ended up
stealing the show. Guthrie s first
album is scheduled for release
in the near future.

another outstanding group of performers prevented the Folk Festival from being held on both
nights.

The sacrifice of the workshops
and the second concert is expected to be more than adequately
compensated by the quality of
this year’s performers.
Friday’s Folk Festival concert
will not be the last of the season,
however. Another folk concert
will be scheduled for later in the
year

General admission wiI1
The charge for activities
supporters will be $2.50.
$3.00.

,

,

EAST SIDE supermarket desires male colstudent(s) for part-time work.
lege
853-3737.

NIGHT SCHOOL STUDENTS, $1.65 per
hour for full time (9 a.m. to 5 p.m.)
day work at McDonald's,
1385 Niagara
Falls Boulevard or 3424 Sheridan Drive.
BOY'S 26 in. Bicycle in good shape. Call
884-4619 anytime.

TIME
The longest word
in the language?

By letter count, the longest

word may be pneumonouhra-

microscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis,
a rare lung disease. You won’t

find it in Webster's New World

Dictionary, College Edition. But
you will find more useful infor-

mation about words than in any
other desk dictionary.
Take the word time. In addition to its derivation and an
illustration showing U.S. time
zones, you’ll find 48 clear definitions of the different meanings of time and 27 idiomatic
uses, such as time of one’s life.
In sum, everything you want to
know about time.
This dictionary is approved
and used by more than 1000
colleges and universities. Isn’t
it time you owned one? Only
$5.95 for 1760 pages;
&lt;j;g gtj
thumb-indexed.
At Your Bookstore
THE WORLD PUBLISHING CO.
Cleveland and New York

how
does that
grab you?
PACE! For you! The person who lives
creatively! Who seeks the significant

news.

PACE reports contribution! Stories of
people coming to grips with the
its problems... its opportunities.
In the October issue, for example,
PACE explores the new revolution of
responsibility in Negro America. Also

world.

how 14 million "war babies" will use
their political power.
PACE reports on sports—a tongue-incheek article by a college freshman, “I
Worked Out With the Baltimore Colts.”

pace

An action photo look at the Pan American Games—"Halfway to Mexico,"
PACE is where Happenings happen.
From Expo '67 to Viet Nam. What people
835 SO FLOWER
are saying and thinking about God, their
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PACE is there. Where it’s happening.
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When it's happening. The significant
news. Profiles. Interviews.
• city
PACE, for people who want to make
something of life. The Magazine of the ■ College or University
Now Generation!
—

•

|

...

�The

Pag* Twalv*

Tuesday, September 26, 1967

Spectrum

School panel to make report
*

world

*

•

Washington

new yorir

focus
Lilian. Waite

Vietnamese gun positions hit
SAIGON —Field reports this week said
the most intense American bombardments
of the war had knocked out one North
Vietnamese gun emplacement and heavily damaged two others in the muddy
wastelands of the Demilitarized Zone.
Monsoon floods produced some shortages of food, water and medical supplies
for U. S. Marines holding off a possible
ground invasion.

A top Marine commander on the battleground. Brig. Gen. John Metzger, said
American artillery and air power could
never completely destroy the North Vietnamese howitzer and mortar positions
which have rained thousands of shells on
U. S. outposts for the past month.

Metzger said a force of as many as 35,000 North Vietnamese was apparently
massing for a major assault on Con Thien,
the Marine bastion just south of the DMZ.

Have more guns
Despite the successful raids on the
three gun positions, Metzger said the
North Vietnamese had almost 100 more
big guns trained on Con Thien and rising
American casualties were reported in new
barrages.

The U. S. Command, in a communique
Saturday afternoon, said North Vietnamese artillery killed six Marines and wounded 56 in a 24-hour period ending Saturday
morning.

fighting men have been killed or wound
ed under the Communist artillery on
slaught, most of them at Con Thien.
The Saturday aftenoon communique indicated a general lull in ground fighting
elsewhere in South Vietnam. But American and South Vietnamese forces reported killing 18 Viet Cong in a northern
province battle Friday near the town of
An Hoa while not suffering any losses
themselves.

New mission
U. S. Headquarters announced the start
of a new search-and-destroy mission called Operation Bolling in the hill country
250 miles north of Saigon. It involved
troops of the U. S. 173rd Airborne Brigade. First reports told of little significant contact with the enemy. Five Communists have been killed, headquarters
said. U. S. losses were one killed and four
wounded.
In the air, U. S. planes flew 107 missions against North Vietnam on Friday,
concentrating on the area inside and just

ex]

iloslon could turn the school

This is what the “mayor’s plan” for
reorganizing the New York City public
school system could become. Actually,
Mayor Lindsay doesn’t have a “plan.”
He’s waiting for a report from a special
panel headed by McGeorge Bundy, a top
aide to Presidents Kennedy and Johnson,
who now is president of the Ford Foundation.

Bundy and his panel will make their
report to Lindsay early next month. On
Dec. 1 he will go to Albany—and what he
goes to Albany with will be the mayor’s
plan.

Separate districts
It all began when the city asked Albany to treat each of New York City’s
five boroughs as a separate school district for tax purposes
a device that
would mean about $108-million more to
the city in state aid.
—

The legislature said it would go along
but it needed a genuine reorganization
plan. It gave the task of formulating the
plan to the mayor—not the board of education.
It told him to come up with a plan to
decentralize the school system in such a
way, among other things, as to make it
more responsive to the various communities.

Asks repeal

NEW YORK—The head of the Police
Conference of New York Inc. has called
for repeal of a new state penal code section limiting police in the use of firearms to capture crime suspects.

U. S. Air Force B-52 stratofortresscs
carried out three saturation bombing raids
against the DMZ Friday night and Satur-

“This new penal law makes it compulsory for every police officer to be an all-

three miles from Con Thien.

The Bundy panel, which includes school
board president Alfred A. Giardino, outgoing Homan Resources Administrator
Mitchell Sviridoff and others, hasn’t been
talking publicly about what it will recomsharpdisagreement among the panel members.

But the board outlines for two schools
of thought can be reported. First—and
perhaps in the
the “radical change” school of thought. The second is the “let's stick to basic principles”
school of thought.

Fallen on face
The first school of thought says the
cumbersome, gargantuan New York public school system has fallen on its face. It
isn't teaching Johnny to read. It has lost
touch with Johnny’s parents. It can’t tell
a good teacher from a bad one.
According to this school of thought,
take the power away from the board which
sits at 110 Livingston St. in Brooklyn.

Give the real power to the communities, to the parents. Let them hire the
district superintendents, the principals,
maybe even the teachers. Let them decide what should be taught and what
should not be taught. Let the board just
parcel out the lump sums so they can
do it

There’s a mechanism at hand for bringing about this decentralization speedily—30 local school boards, at present appointed by the board of education and with
purely advisory powers.
The
“activists” say the
real power could be handed to the local
boards, which could be chosen in a way

that would make them truly representative of their communities.

of gun

north of the DMZ and the panhandle zone
stretching from the border to a point
south of Hanoi. One raid hit the Nam
Dinh Rail Yard, 40 miles south of the
North Vietnamese capital.

day morning, hitting some targets only

Since Sept. 1, more than 700 American

The

assigned to the bookkeeping chores of
sending out lumps of money where it is
told to send them, and maintaining
“banks” of specialized talent to be used
only on request.

saigon

Compiled from our wire services by

NEW YORK—The New York City school
system soon may be hit by a blockbuster
more explosive than the teachers’ strike.

around athlete regardless of age,” A1 Scag
lione, president of the conference said.
“He must, in trying to make an arrest,
also be capable of grappling or wrestling
with a giant or powerhouse of a man
or even several such men—though the
officer be only five feet eight inches tall
and weigh 140 pounds.”

law

new law did not fully consider “the problems of the police officer in the street.”
He said some held that the basic concept of the new law was already in use

by federal officers, but he contended they
failed to consider the difference between
the federal and local police officer.
Scaglione said the federal officer is
“mainly investigative
thoroughly familiar with the suspect
and the plans
for apprehension and capture,” and normally works with several other officers.
.

.

.

.

.

.

—

Rusk and Gromyko to

confer

Secretary of Slate
WASHINGTON
Dean Rusk earnestly hopes to get some
definite word about Russian interest in
negotiations to limit deployment of costly
anti missle systems when he meets with
Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko
in New York this week.

for ABM talks.
Rusk is reported to hope that Gromyko, a foremost Soviet disarmament expert, will have in hand an agreement
from Moscow to begin serious negotiations. Gromyko is attending the United
Nations general assembly.

However, State Department officials
their fingers crossed
because they detect no particularly hopeful signs that the Russians arc ready,
after Defense Secretary Robert S. Mc-

There has been a feeling in U.S.
diplomatic circles that the Russians have
not appreciated as acutely as Americans
why the building of an ABM defense
system could lead to a dangerous new
upward spiral in the arms race.

—

say they arc keeping

Namara’s

major speech, to begin serious

negotiations.

In the speech Sept. 18, McNamara
announced that the Johnson administration was going ahead with the deployment
of a thinly spread Anti-Ballistic Missile
Shield, primarily aimed' at defending
against

Communist China.

System costly
Diplomatic observers said it was significant that a large portion of Me
Namara s speech was a carefully reasoned

argument against investing sums up to
540 billion or more in ABM defenses
which admittedly are imperfect and cannot guarantee protection against a mas-

sive attack by nuclear tipped missiles.
There were

indications in Washington
that Soviet circles appreciate the importance the United States attaches to McNamara's speech at a United Press International editor's conference in San Francisco.
No ABM agreement

But Rusk, leaving for California early
last week, said that “no time or place"
had been agreed upon with the Russians

Codes committee
Seaglione testified before the Senate

Codes Committee at a hearing on the law,
which became effective Sept. 1.
He said the Police Conference, with
more than 50,000 members, was “of the
unanimous opinion” that authors of the

No precinct luxury
“Unfortunately, the precinct police officer does not enjoy these luxuries,” he
said.

Under the new provision, a policeman
may fire at a fleeing suspect only if he

is believed to have committed a serious
crime. Proponents have said it was designed to protect innocent bystanders and
petty crooks from “trigger happy” policemen.

Escalation feared
The American argument for talks is
that ABM systems are costly and imperfect. The reason is that as one side
builds up these defenses the other side
will lend to increase offensive missile
weaponry to wipe out the defensive advantage.

It is believed in diplomatic circles
that the Russians have been studying the
ABM problem. The Russians are reported
to have deployed a “thin” ABM system
around Moscow. Leningrad and Tallinn.

Doubt final decision
But there is some doubt in Washington whether the Russians have come to a
final decision.
It is considered quite possible the
Russians may signal interest in beginning
ABM negotiations without actually having
completed their own studies.

In any case, at this point it appears
that any agreement to limit deloyment
with the reasonable safeguards which
McNamara called for is still months away.

lA/ntUlnn
rreouing

set

Lynda Bird Johnson and Marine Capt.
Charles Robb will be married in De-

cerrber, it was announced last week
by President and Mrs. Johnson.

�</text>
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                    <text>The S PECTI^UM

€

Friday, Saptambar 22, 1967

State University of New York at Buffalo

Vol. 18, No. 4

Research committee to
LEMARsponsors Vulture invasion; grant undergrad awards
established
outlaw gang proclaims love as goal

a newly
The Undergraduate Research Committee
formed organ of the Student Senate
has been
to award grants to undergraduate students wishing to do
research in approved fields.
Iron cross a symbol
Funds granted will allow selected students to do reWhen asked what the iron search beyond the scope of the material covered in the
cross means to them they all regular academic course work.
agreed that it serves just as a
constrained or pressured by the
decoration or symbol and has
importance of a definite accomTo apply for a stipend, a stu—

—

by Donna Van Schoonhoven
Spectrum Staff Reporter

The Road Vultures, a Buffalo motorcycle club, roared

onto campus Monday night to preach “Vulture Culture” and

raise money for their jailed comrades.
LEMAR head Michael Aldrich hosted what he called
“the first Buffalo underground psychedelic summit conference.”
An estimated crowd of 650 “They think we’re really sick,
but we’ve been fairly well reattended the LEMAR-sponceived by the university crowd.”
sored event.
He also said that many members
Road Vulture President
Thomas Bell gave a brief history of the club.

belong to the American Legion
and the Knights of Columbus and

that the club gave $50 to the
United Fund this year.

How does one join the Road
Vultures? “Just start coming
around,” advised Mr. Bell. “This
goes for the girls as well as the
jjuys. It doesn’t matter what you
wear or look like as long as you
are good people.”

Few have served
Of the 45 members, with an
average of 21 to 25, only three
or four have been in the armed
forces. President Tom Bell spent
five years in the Navy. Some of
the others claim that they are
listed as subversives by the
Army. All agreed that gross exaggerations about the club are
made by the local news media.
The Vultures had one thing to
say about the Hollwood movies
coming out—“They have nice
bikes.”

Road Vultures
LEMAR hosts "first Buffalo underground psychedelic summit
conference."
Speaking of the club’s selfimposed ban on drugs in the

Road Vulture clubhouse, Mr. Bell
said, “It would take a real moron
to jeopardize his brothers.”
When asked about public opinion Mr. Bell had this to say:

Where do Vultures get their
money? Mr. Bell stated that although they travel about 1,000
miles on weekends and up to
5,000 miles during the week,
many of them still work.

“In fact, I’m a licensed beautician, but I haven’t worked at
it in five years,” revealed the
president, to the surprise of the
audience. A few of the members
also have attended from one to
two years of college.

no definitive meaning. Mr. Bell
added that the Ellicott Square
Building has many swastikas
placed in the floors and elsewhere as good luck signs, but
no one criticizes them or calls

dent must be at least a second
semester freshman. But all students are advised to begin pre-

them subversive.

Each student interested in this
program would be required to
submit an outline of his proposal. The outline would contain
the aims and purposes of the
research project, the methods to
be used, and the significance of
the project. It would state the
facilities required, and the budget for all funds requested.
A faculty consultant from a
field related to that in which the
project is conducted will be assigned to, or chosen by each participating student. The faculty
member will have the duty to
help the student organize and
carry-out the project.
Grants will be given according
to the nature of the individual
projects, the amount of money
available, and the number of
other requests which have been
presented to the committee. At
the end of the school year, the
student should submit a report
summarizing his research. The
report may be written in the
form of a research paper for
publication in a magazine or

What are the Vultures’ goals?
Mr. Aldrich interpreted, “They
want to unite everyone so that
there will be brotherhood and
unity among people.” They want
a “beautiful free place” in the
country where they can have
parties without prying eyes. Another goal is to establish a
“meaningful communication with
society across the country.”
“We don’t want to change
society,” concluded Mr. Bell, “we
just want to improve it. We are
a society within a society and we
have the right to look and act
as we please.”

Concerned for mankind
“We are concerned for the
future of mankind and peace
and, accordingly, are of the opinion that law enforcement should
pursue every available lawful
means to protect mankind and
eventually to achieve total peace.
“If, however, individual agencies or members of law enforcement exceed their authority and
are not made to answer for irresponsibility by means of false
arrest, and/or malicious proscution suits, something is foul.
“And when the stench chokes
the life of freedom and feeds the
monster of conformity which
stands guard over our great
society, we must arise and unite
to slap this beast . . . Let this
be the beginning, not the end.
We are all one.”

paring for their project by contacting members of the faculty as
soon as possible.

journal.

The paper would serve as a
guide for the issuance of more
funds, if the student wishes to
continue the project.
Each project will not be judged
on its success or failure, but on
its merit and the ability of the
student.
Regarding these
proposals,
Neal Slatkin, Arts and Sciences
student senator feels they should
be: “flexible enough to develop
a creative atmosphere. 1 do not
feel that the student should be

plishment or finding. Rather he
should be free to develop his

field of interest, and not dismiss from his research certain
areas of inquiry which might not
reach fruition in the duration of
his grant."

Academic credit possible
This program differs in several respects from the honors
program offered to undergraduate students. These grants would
be available to upperclassmen
who do not qualify for the honors
program. Mr. Slatkin stated: ‘1
think the interested student with
just average grades is the most
forgotten member of the academic community.”
Another difference between
the new program and the honors
program is that these grants
may be given in areas outside
the student’s major.
This would encourage interdepartmental studies and thereby
give the student a broader perspective of his major area.
Small groups of students from
different academic disciplines
will be able to work on projects
in more difficult research areas.
It is the hope of the committee
that this will be the beginning of
a true community of scholars.
Concluding, Mr. Slatkin said,
“X believe that it would be a
real step in the direction SHrue
education experience.”

Honors program different
If the program proves success-

ful, academic credit may be available by January or next September.
More information on this program can be obtained from the
Student Senate Office, Room 209
Norton Hall.
The committee will hold its
first meeting at 3:30 p.m. Monday in the Student Senate office.

Senate to permit military to continue on-campus recruiting
by Steve Flax

.

Spectrum Staff Reporter

ited from joining the activity.
The Undergraduate Psychology
Association, the Undergraduate
Economics Asociation, and the
Buffalo Student Mobilization Association (henceforth to be known
as the Student Mob) were accepted by the Senate as new

The Student Senate Wednesday passed a resolution
allowing military recruiters to continue operation in Norton
Hall. The resolution also allows Vista and Peace Corps
recruiters in the Student Union.
The Senate also passed propositions concerning the clubs.
Commuter Council and a University ombudsman.
The Student Mob’s constitution
The resolution concerning cruiters.” The resolutions on the states that the club will be govrecruiters on campus, which Commuter Council and on the erned by Marxist principles, that
all, and that
was proposed by Jeffrey BerOmbudsman program were passed it will be open to
offices such as the presidency
debate.
practically
with
no
ger, makes it possible for
filled by anyThe council was formed as “a will be rotated and
recruiters to use the first co-ordinating body to better in- one who “wishes to takes the
responsibility.”
floor of Norton Hall for retegrate the commuter student inNew appointments include two
to the University community.”
cruiting.
presidential assistants: one
new
will
program
The ombudsman
Mr. Berger said that this cenfor academic and student welfare,
tral location for the military reinclude the selection of one stuand one for student activitie*.
cruiters will result in a large dent, who will have a direct link
Barbara Emilson and
amount of picketing by the
to all administrative offices, He They areWhiting.
The liaisons to
should be able to solve problems Marilyn
school’s anti-Vietnam faction.
community affairs and to culThis in turn should, according
to Mr. Berger, set the stage for
a resolution by the student body
completely denouncing the war in

Vietnam.
Some student senators supported

the resolution

because

it

states: “there has been a substantial and significant amount
°f student interest in Peace
Corps, Vista, and military re-

of'fellow students quickly.
The decision still hangs in the
balance about what to do with
students who have not paid their
activities fees.
Two alternatives are being
weighed presently. Students who
have not paid their fees will
either be allowed to join an activity such as a club after paying
a set fee, or they will be prohib-

tural affairs will be Judy Kurti
and Sandra Funt.
Until formal elections are held
in October, two members of the
freshman council, which was
elected during the summer planning conferences, will represent
the freshman class at Senate
meetings. They are George Heymann and Michael Seldon.

Student
Senate

The first Student Senate meeting of 1967-68 debated resolutions on Key University issues.
Here, senators receive copies of

resolutions before the session.

�m c
Th

Pag* Two

•

Friday, Saptember 22, 1967

Spectrum

Don't bet on passage of constitution
by Chari** R.

Holcoma

stitution by better than two to

one.

Gannett News Service

favor
up on what has happened at the

polls to the work of past constitutional conventions aren’t likely
to put their money on passage of
the new constitution now being

hammered out here.

Especially if the convention decides to submit its product to the
voters in a single, take-it-or-leaveit package.
Figures show that when the
call for a constitutional convention was approved by a narrow
margin, the proposed constitution
that resulted usually was defeated.

In 1821, the electorate voted
three to one to hold a convention,
and the resultant new constitution passed by a two to one mar-

gin.
In 1846, the people voted six
to one on having a convention,
and then approved the new con-

seven to five, and the new constitution was beaten by a four
to three margin.

In 1886, the populace apparently felt a new charter was badly
needed, for they voted twenty to
one to hold a convention. But
because of prolonged haggling
over how delegates were to be
elected, the convention
held until 1894.

more than a two to one margin.
The 1938 convention was au-

thorized

six

by a narrow seven to
Six of its nind pro-

margin.

tight five to 4.3 margin, but
other three were defeated.

the

In November, 1965, the elec-

torate voted 1,681,438 to 1,468,431
in favor of holding the current
convention, an eight to seven
margin.

But 2,948,332 who voted in that
election didn’t vote on the convention question at all.

wasn’t

That constitution, which forms
the basis of the present document, was approved by only a
five to four margin.

In 1915, only 300,000 voters
cared enough to vote for or
against holding a convention, and
the proposal to hold one passed
by a scant 1400 votes. The general revision which that convention
put to the voters was defeated by

Perhaps significantly, NewYork
City voters favored the convention 765,723 to 500,415, or about
three to two, whereas upstate,
the vote was 915,715 in favor,
968,016 against.
Many observers here interpret
the figures as indicating that approval of a new constitution, especially if submitted as a single
package, is unlikely unless there
is a heavy outpouring of support
in New York City, where more
voters apparently felt dissatis-

fied with the present document.

GSA extends nomination deadline
cussion of a letter drafted by
The Graduate Student Association has extended its deadline »Tony Boyles and signed by eight
for nominations to the council
other members asking President
to Friday, Sept. 29.
the
Mcyerson to investigate
causes of the rather small percentage of Negro students, faculty
The action was taken at a GSA
meeting Monday night in order
members, and administrators on
campus.
to give an extra week of publicity
to the nominations.
Various members expressed a
Secretary Pat Fiero explained desire to find out how many gradthat any interested graduate stuuate students would be interestdent may obtain an application ed in working on a committee
from the GSA office. Elections concerned with problems relating to Negroes on campus and
will cover 20 council positions.
relations between the University
The meeting included a disand the Buffalo ghetto. Those

who are interested should contact the GSA office.
Acting chairman Gil Klajman
announced that GSA has hired
a new secretary, enabling the
GSA office to be open every day
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Also discussed were the November convocation with Dr.
Benjamin Spock and the Rev.
Martin Luther King. Chairman
John Marciano raised questions of
cided that admission to the convocation with Dr. Spock would
favor graduate students without
excluding undergraduates by issuing tickets for admission to
the Fillmore room.

WORSHIP

(Protestant)
For Students, By Students
Sponsored hv the

LUTHERAN MINISTRY
TO THE UNIVERSITY
SUNDAY AFTERNOONS, 4:00
(Beginning Sunday, Sept. 17)

Calvary Lutheran
Church
4110 North Bailey

(Four Blocks from Campus)

MISTER ©
COAIT TO COA&gt;t

W

FAMILY RESTAVRAKT
mm

mi wm iwn

«

Do you often think it impossible to untangle tne university bureaucracy? In cooperation with the Dean of Students’ Office, The Spectrum is sponsoring ACTION LINE.
Through ACTION LINE, individual students can get an answer to a puzzling question, find out where and why University decisions are made, and get ACTION when change is
indicated.
ACTION LINE will answer all questions of general in-

terest which appear to be pertinent to the student body.

The Spectrum will include them in its special ACTION LINE
weekly column. Each inquiry will be thoroughly investigated
and answered individually. The name of the individual originating the inquiry will not be published.
Q. Is it too late to apply for a National Dafanta Student Loan this
year?
A. The Office of Financial Aid has advised that loan applications will

still be accented for the 1967-68 school year. Where a student
meets the need criteria established by the Federal government,
loans will be approved within the limits of the available funds.
The Office cautions, however, that checks for loans approved at
this time will probably not be available to students prior to
Thanksgiving.

Could a special coffee line be set up, for certain hours, to ease
congestion in the Norton Hall cafeteria lines caused by persons
interested only in purchasing coffee?
Mr. Raymond Becker, Director of Food Service, thought this
suggestion had merit and as of Monday, Sept. 18, installed a
buffet service between the two cafeterias on the main floor. Not
only is coffee available, but tea, rolls and pastries are served.
The Coffee Buffet is in operation from 9:30 a.m, until 1 p.m..
Monday through Friday.

Where does a student obtain his National Defense Student Loan
check?
The National Defense Student Loan checks are forwarded by the
Albany Office of the State University to the Office of the Bursar.
When the checks are available for distribution, the Bursar will
contact the students directly.
Who are the "Dames"? Who it eligible to join? Where do they
meet?
University Dames is the local chapter of a National Association
of University Dames, an organization of college student wives
dedicated to promote social and cultural relationships, exchange
ideas, and in so doing become a more integral part of their husband’s educational endeavors. The wife of any registered full-time
or part-time student, graduate or undergraduate, is eligible to
join. The Dames meet once a month, concurrent with the academic year at the University Methodist Church at Minnesota and
Bailey Avenues. Mrs. Marcia Ratka, vice-president, can be reached
at 895-1116 for further information.

to your questions, and for direct service, call
ACTION LINE, 831-5000, every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, from
4-5 p.m.)

(For specific answers

THE HAPPENING
Buffalo's Newest Boutique
located opposite Clement Hall (UB)
on Main St. at the corner of Bailey

"where what’s HAPPENING
in fashion can be found”
OPEN 11:00-5:30
Mon. &amp; Thurs. till 9:00

Phone

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�Th

Friday, Saptambar 22, 1967

•

Spectrum

Pap*

HUMannounces
services, dances
The B’nai B’rith Hillel Foundation will sponsor a Sabbath Service at 7:45 p.m. today in the
Hillel House. Jacquelyn Finley

at the Baha’i Club’s commemora-

tion of World Peace Day, Sunday, September 17. Chief speaker, John Yates, Chairman of the
Baha’is of Buffalo, explained the
goal of Baha’i to be complete unification of all men.
Mr. Yates calls the Baha’i religion a “miniature international
organization which re-offers necessary spiritual truths.” Its sole
authority lies in complete and
unreserved aceptance. The root
of all trouble lies with faulty
human relations and as Mr. Yates
pointed out, “we are the victims
of our own genius in dealing with
matter; we are the victims of

religion in Viet Nam.

In India, the number of members has increased from 750 to
100,000 in the last five years and
its presence has, according to Mr.
Yates, helped destroy the power
of the caste system. Baha’i exists in more than 300 countries
today and its movement is constantly gaining strength.

Rick Czerniejewski, moderator
of the program, emphasized the
club’s desire for new members.
There will be a Baha’i Club
meeting at 8 p.m. today at 52
Poplar Court (in the Campus
Manor Apts.).

Wiesel’s “At the Western Wall.”
An Oneg Shabbat featuring Israeli Folk Dancing will follow.
Hillel’s Annual Evening In
Paris Dance will be held tomorrow at Temple Sinai, 50 Alberta
Drive. Morris Youngman’s band
has Seen engaged for the occasion. Drinks and refreshments
will be served. Busses will leave
from Norton Union at 9 p.m.
The first Delicatessen Supper
of the year will be held at 5:30
p.m., Sunday in the Hillel House.
Dr. Bruno Shutkeker, local psychiatrist, will speak on: “What’s
New with LSD?” Reservations
should be made at Hillel House.

FSA uses activities fee to provide
university personnel with picnic area
A picnic area for students, faculty and staff has now been made
available through the Faculty
Student Association.

The area is located in the
northern part of the Town of
Amherst, off Sweet Home Road
south of Tonawanda Creek Road.
The grounds of the area will
be equipped with picnic tables,
stationary charcoal grills, rest
rooms and two backstops erected
for those who want a softball or
hardball game.

of any qualified people will be
permitted to use the area.”

Assistant Coordinator of student activities, Mr. Robert Henderson said, “students—undergraduates as well as graduates—faculty and staff and the families

Additional information about
the use of this land can be obtained by contacting Mr. Robert
Henderson, Room 225 Norton
Hall.

SSI

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Pepsodent Tooth Brushes

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2828 Bailey Ave.

—

Offer

WASHINGTON—The administration’s decision to build a “thin”
antiballistic missle defense means the United States will have more
time to develop a new generation of ICBMs.
ALBANY—Constitutional Convention President Anthony Travia
today abandoned his fight for free higher education.
ALBANY—State Education Commissioner James E. Allen, Jr.
said Wednesday night he was "pleased” that the New York City
school teachers strike ended and that students “will soon be back
in their classrooms.”
SAIGON—American casualties in the Vietnam war neared the
100,000 mark, according to losses announced Thursday.
In the fighting. North Vietnamese artillery rained hundreds
of shells on U.S. forts defending South Vietnam’s northern border
against an estimated 35,000 Communist force in the third straight
day of heavy bombardment.
EGYPT—Thursday, the Cairo newspaper A1 Gomhouria called
on the Arabs to wage a Vietnam-type guerrilla war against Israel
to regain the territories lost to Israel in the June 5-10 Middle East
war.

HONG KONG Communist China charged Thursday that U.S.
plans for a limited antiballistic missile ABM system against a
possible Red Chinese nuclear attack are part of a "military blackmail” plot.
Peking radio said the United States and the Soviet Union acted
—

a

HONG KONG—A Hong Kong newspaper reported Thursday
that two Communist Chinese army infantry divisions had been
rushed to the China-Hong Kong border area to reinforce defense
positions along the frontier.
SUEZ—Thursday, Egytian troops opened fire with artillery and
light arms at Israeli forces across the Suez Canal, Israeli officials
announced. The Israelis returned the fire in the second straight
day of shooting along the canal, they said.
CORPUS CHRIST), TEXAS—Hurricane Beulah crawled dying
across the Texas rangelands today, leaving six deaths in the state,
millions of dollars damages, floods from 15-incb rains and dozens
of killer tornadoes.
Beulah’s winds, which blew at more than 160 miles per hour
across the tip of Texas at her height, had fallen to 65 miles per
hour. The storm center was located about 60 miles west of Corpus
Christ!.

DO YOU BELIEVE
1. That the goal of religion should be the expansion
of the quality of this life—to expand the human
capacities to fell, to relate, to know and create?
2. That religion should build on human values rather
than on theological creeds and formulations?
3. That the churches should be more concerned with

the Brotherhood of Man than with the supernatural?

If you answer “Yes” to these questions you are expressing the beliefs held by Unitarians. You may be
a Unitarian without knowing it.
While you are learning so many new things why not
find out about this different religious point of view.
To do so, write, call (885-2136), or visit—

THE UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST CHURCH
Elmwood Avenue at Ferry Street
Rev. Paul N. Carnes, Minister
Hear Rev. Paul N. Carnes speak on “Morality of the
Hang-Loose Ethic” this Sunday at 11:00 a.m.

SPAGHETTI DINNER
� SALAD
� MEAT BALLS
� GARLIC BREAD

Support of the activities fee
makes the land available and
continued support of the activities fee should make future
on

dateline news. Sept. 22

in collusion.

The campus food service has
the responsibility of working with
groups in order to make food
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The area will be open from 12
noon to 9 p.m. on weekdays, and
from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. on Saturdays and Sundays.

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Pag* Four

•

Friday, Saptambar 22, 1967

Spectrum

No room at the inn

Perhaps the greatest problem facing the State University
Buffalo
of
at the present time is the fact that there are just
too many students here.
Lengthy lines all over campus indicate that the student
population has put a tremendous strain on University fa—-—

—

now have to wait in line if they’re trying to
Union at lunch Hour. Parking is far from
into
the
get
adequate, cafeteria facilities are capable of serving only a
small percentage of the student body, and the bookstore’s
latest methods for providing everyone’s books immediately
are enough to induce any student to wait a week before
buying. The bookstore line is far more formidable than
the prospect of having a double reading load next week.
The “far-sighted” administration of past President Clifford C. Furnas certainly took the increased enrollment
under its wing.
First, trailers were set up on Bailey, and then two
spanking new temporary buildings appeared.
Last summer, nine additional temporary buildings were
constructed while plans for the Interim Campus reached
final stages
All these “solutions” are poor at best. The Interim
Campus is the poorest to date.
Students who have classes at the Interim Campus are
forced to allocate two hours of their schedules for every
hour of classes.
The next step, in order to keep up with the rising tide
of admissions until the new campus is completed, will be
the construction of more interim campuses. There are
indications that we may have as many as seven by the time
the University is ready to move to Amherst.
Students had better prepare themselves for spending
half of each day on a bus.
In short, temporary buildings and interim campuses are
no solutions. They are testimony to the lack of scope and
vision with which this University is operated.
It would have been wiser to keep admissions at a tolerable level than to continue expanding beyond a feasible level.
Anyone in this country could have predicted the increase in college enrollments 15 years ago. In fact, many did.
Only now is the University planning to meet this increased need. But by the time the new campus is completed,
enrollments will be still greater. Let’s hope the Amherst
planners are keeping that in mind.
It would indeed be unfortunate if the University were
to move to an equally crowded Amherst site where students
will have to continue putting up with all the aggravation
and inconvenience that crowded conditions make inevitable.

Students

"WHEEEEE

Or perhaps
by Barry Holtzclaw

Teachers in Brooklyn have charged that the
Selective Service is being used as an instrument
for "scaring” them into crossing picket lines in the
New York City school dispute, by making it appear
“that their draft status is jeopardized,” according
to an article in The New York Times Monday.
Selective Service officers are denying the allegations by union leaders, and labeling the summons to report for draft hearings as “routine,” but
it is noteworthy that only those teachers who back
the union in the dispute have reported the receipt
of summons from their local boards.

The use of these insidiously terroristic techniques, even if only applied by the irate members
of a single local board, constitutes a shocking
example of the sickness in this nation, a sickness
which in the past has resulted in the choice of
guns before butter, and now appears to be resulting
in a choice of bombs before books.
a

down staircase

Some of the first knowledgeable comments to
follow the summer ghetto uprisings in the nation’s
major urban areas were fervent pleas to begin the
battle to save the cities from self-destruction not in
the streets, but in the schools. While the complex
crises facing the cities can not certainly be called
solely the result of bad education, educational improvement in the blighted urban areas is certainly
a key first step in fighting urban decay. The
huge gap between educational techniques and opportunities in the cities and in the suburbs is typical of the type of social and economic schisms
existing in contemporary society.

Although the Task Force Report is still being tossed
around in administration circles, it is heart warming to see
that many reforms are now being effected.
Greater student participation in University affairs seems
to be the hallmark of President Meyerson’s administration
at least so far.
He is to be commended for his insights into the need
for a sharing of responsibility by students and faculty.,
The cabinet, which met for the first time Monday, is
composed of three students who are to discuss the many
A recent report by a specially-appointed mayorproblems and issues this University faces. Hopefully, this
al
commission
said that the New York City Public
of
ideas
avoid
of
the
will help to
exchange
many
impasses
Schools are a generation behind the times in teachthat occur among students, faculty and administrators.
niques, curriculum content, and facilities.
The new student cabinet, however, should be careful
The teachers in Michigan, New York, and elseto assure the existence of an “exchange of ideas.” rather
where are not merely protesting their oppressively
than a one way communication.
low wage scales: they are launching a frontal atIt is not improbable that President Meyerson may use tack on the conditions in the nation’s cities, condihis student cabinet as a means of disseminating administrations resulting from the vicious circle of poor edution proposals and programs. The system could develop cation. poverty, slums, and inequality.
into an excellent method for winning support of student
Issues not merely wages
leaders before any issue arises.
It is true that strikes and mass resignations
So many of the new ideas thrown out by the adminisare acts of lawlessness, but those, including the
tration are good ideas, and there has been a shortage of Times, who view the UFT walkout by public school
good ideas around here for many years. Hopefully, the teachers as bad examples which can achieve nothing
but a disrespect for the law and further violence
gestures are sincere.
—

The strange alliance
Charges of police

strange bedfellows.

harassment,

like politics,

make

What better way to demonstrate this than the cooperation which has apparently developed between LEMAR and
the Road Vultures? Both groups seemed to be in agreement
during a meeting held Monday in the Fillmore Room at
which each voiced concern about police tactics.
This is a considerable turn of events from the time,
only a couple of years ago, when Vultures came to an SDS
meeting, soliciting the latter’s aid. At that time, some of
the SDS members with true convictions—namely Rick Salter
et. al.—got up and walked out.
Someone called to mind the words of one of the Vultures
who stood in the midst of the earlier meeting with a swastika
painted on his jacket: “We believe in the same things, right,
man?”

writings

~

Up

Progress or sham?

Readers'

...

in the ghetto areas, miss the point entirely. The
very fact that the teachers have been forced to
such obviously last-ditch tactics to voice concern
over the deteriorating conditions in the schools
indicates that the situation has reached a breaking-point.

UFT President Albert Shankcr has denounced
the "inept and isolated (School) Board, out of touch
with the realities of its own school system and the
needs of its teachers to provide a good education
for the children of New York.”
Quality education needs money, and cities with
problems the magnitude of those in New York need
federal assistance, and they need it now, not only
for education, but for housing and job training.
Unless Washington shifts its gaze from the jungles
of Vietnam to the jungles in the cities, we are in
for a series of long strike-filled winters, to complement the summer riots.

And, winter and summer, it is the children
who suffer.

Says teachers do OK
To the Editor:
I write to disagree with your editorial of Friday, September 15. You stated that “teachers are
grossly underpaid.” Actually, when you look at
the number of hours they work and add to that a
3 month summer vacation, I don’t think teachers
are doing so poorly.

In addition to teachers’ claims of “insufficient
scales,” they also want smaller and fewer
classes. When I can get a job which starts at
$6500 a year (and the year is only 9 months—many
work in the summer months) with guaranteed annual salary increases and a workday from 9 a.m.
to 3 p.m., of which I only work four hours, I wouldn’t complain. When a teacher receives tenure (is
it two years now?) he doesn’t have much to worry
about the rest of his life. He can’t be fired unless
he commits a morals offense. Maybe they have no
union but they have about the strongest lobby
Albany has ever seen.
When a person becomes a teacher he knows
what he’s getting into. He knows the pay scales.
He knows the hours he will be expected to work,
the size classes he will be expected to teach. And
yet they still go into teaching. And teaching is a
gravy train and the striking teachers want even
richer gravy. I, for one, have no sympathy for
them.
A. K.
pay

No relation to Narco
To tho Editor:
It has come to my attention that the Editor of
The Spectrum is related to a Buffalo Police Narcotics Squad detective. That makes me sick.
P. H.

Editor's Note: The Editor's name is Michael
D'Amico and the Narcotics Chief's name is Michael
Amico. No relation. Hope you feet better.
The Spectrum is published twice-weekly
every
during the regular academic
Tuesday and Friday
year at the State University of New York at Buffalo,
—

—

3435 Main Street, Buffalo, New York 14214. Offices
are located at 355 Norton Hall. Circulation: 15,000.

Editorin-Chief—MICHAEL L D'AMICO
Managing Editor—RICHARD R. HAYNES
Asst. Managing Editor —RICHARD SCHWAB
Business Manager—SAMUEL A. POWAZEK
Advertising Manager—DAVID E. FOX
Campus
Margaret Anderson
Asst.
Marlene Kozuchowski
City
VACANT
Asst.
Lilian Waite

Asst.

Layout

Asst.

Copy
Asst.

Scott Behrens
David L. Sheedy
John Trigg

W.

Judi Riyeff
Jocelyne Hailpern
Edward Joscelyn
David Yates

Photo.
Feature Barry C. Holtzclaw Asst.
Asst.
Ronald Ellsworth Promotion
Circulation
Sports
Robert Woodruff Director Murray Richman
The Spectrum is a member of the United States Student Press Association and the Associated Collegiate
&amp;

Press.

The Spectrum is served

by: United Press

Inter-

national, Associated Collegiate Press Service, Gannett
News Service, and the Los Angeles Times Syndicata.
Represented for national advertising by
National Educational Advertising Service. Inc., 420 Madison Ave.,
New York. N. Y. Republication of all news dispatches
is forbidden wihout the
express consent of the
editor-in-chief. Rights of republication of all other
matter herein are also reserved.
Second class postage paid at Buffalo. New York.
Editorial policy is determined by the Editor-in-Chief.

�V' 57
Friday, September 72, 1967
*

Retort from fraternity man
To the Editor:
Robert Levitt, president of the local Sigma
Alpha Mu Fraternity chapter, and self-anointed “unofficial spokesman” for the fraternity defense,
resorted to a reprehensible and tiresome ploy in
that defense (Sept. 15).
Mr. Levitt implied that one who leveled charges
against the fraternity system was a rejectee of the
fraternities, someone with a “personality” problem
and a “sour grapes” attitude.
I say the fraternity system is “narrow” in its
selection criteria, that it is concerned with superficial values, fosters conformity, is inimical to
individual integrity and “difference,” and rejects
and hurts the socially shy, awkward, and inexperienced whom it might help gain self-confidence and
social poise were it a system not so concerned with
its “image.”
To boast about “mixers,” athlete support, even
cancer and heart fund drives once yearly, when
problems of injustice and war rend our society and
are the concern of many students, is, I think,
further sign of that incipient shallow fraternity

The Spectrum

By Interlandi

BELOW OLYMPUS

•

■

•

by STEESE

I feel that before I prattle on about Road Vul-

stuff as will make up this week’s bill of fare, I
should show my true colors. I am one of those
leftish leaning, pinko, faggot oriented, mother hating, unAmerican slobs who thinks that policemen
are human beings. No, Pm serious. Because thinking that a cop is liable to human error is considered highly seditious by the Patrolmen’s Benevolent
Association and such, I am sure. There is no such
thing as a publicly bad police officer
If they turn out to be members of a burglary
ring as was the case in the midwest not so awfully
long ago, the rest of the police throughout the
country insist doggedly
and dogmatically that
nothing like that could ever happen in their city.
So look at the policeman's situation. He is the
guardian of morality in a country that is basically
without morality. He is put in the position of enforcing laws that are in some cases only ridiculous,
while in other cases are flagrant examples of
trying to legislate the social view of a small percent of the population which long ago decided that
such things as sex, alcohol, drugs and various other
condiments to human existence through most of
recorded history, are bad, bad, bad and to be sharply controlled and tolerated only in certain rigidly
controlled situations, if at all.
All this ranting and raving is a by-product of
two things. On the local level the Road Vultures,
a motorcycle club of considerable local notoriety,
came into the Millard Fillmore Room Monday night
to tell their side of the tale of happenings over
the recent months and longer. It is a tale I can
believe because all I have is a somewhat shaggy
hairdo and a red beard, which is a little straggly
around the edges, and 1 upset people. It is not
hard for me to imagine how a frustrated, underpaid
policeman would find the Road Vultures a most
tempting way to relieve many frustrations.
A philosophy teacher of mine has named a certain argument “The Slippery Slope Fallacy.” He
claims that the argument against trying something
because of what it may lead to is that fallacy. He
is entitled to his opinion. I would maintain the
opposite. That relieving frustrations against the
Road Vultures could possibly feel so good that if
and when this group is destroyed they—la belle
fuzz—are going to need a new and different kick.
No, say you? Don't be ridiculous? OJC. So why
then were two members of the Narcotics Squad—or at least Buffalo Police—in plain clothes standing in the back of the Hillard Fillmore watching
everyone as they came out?
like I’m a trifle conspicuous. I care not at all
for the idea of sticking in somebody’s mind as
having a vague connection with a bunch of supposed dirty crumb bums. If I am going to be
busted, damn it, I would just as soon earn it in my
own right if at all, not for my associations.
There is another case similar to this. Only
here it is a notorious individual who talks quietly
and sensibly and produces a completely different
impression from that provided by the communications(?) media. There is a large decaying lump
under the carpet of American History. It is the
body of one J. F. Kennedy, temporary President
of the United States. In October, 1967, issue of
Playboy, amongst the pages of neo-masculine superiority, is a long interview with Jim Garrison,
the District Attorney of New Orleans. Those of
you, and it is surprising how few people seem to
give a damn anymore, who think that all the
answers are not totally satisfactory in the case,
should read the interview.
Suffice it to say that like the Vultures, he manages to draw a number of questions for which the
Establishment answers seem weak to nonexistent.
The Vultures pointed out that the Marijuana found
in their clubhouse in the last raid was found by
the Buffalo Police after State and Federal Narcotics agents had tried their best-and found naught.
Garrison notes that in the efce of Trppit, supposedly shot by Oswald, the cartridges conveniently found
at the scene differ from the bullets in the body.
I don’t know nothing it seems. By nature a trusting soul I am forced to live in a world of complexity
where it seems hard to know just what the hell is
going on and who to trust. The Vultures issued
an invitation to anybody who wants to talk, no
gogglers need apply, to visit their clubhouse at
775 South Ogden. You might find it illuminating,
but bear in mind that a visitor there the night
of the big bust has a concussion. "Guilt by Association” anyone?
I wonder if the most miserable person in the
world isn’t a sensitive, intelligent cop. Maybe
funnies next week, no guarantee though. Pax.
—

Try labeling me a “sour-grapes” fraternity rejectee, Mr. Levitt.
Alan Gary Rosin
Past President Sigma Alpha Mu
(U.C.L.A.)
Governing Board Interfraternity
Council (U.C.L.A.)
Recipient Gold Plated “Life Membership in 2 AM”
Ly Chapter “In Appreciation”

For a wet campus

Disagreement "On Wall Street"

grilDlp

tures, Policemen, Assassinations and such other

system’s concern.

To the Editor:
Now that curfews have been eliminated, I
think it is about time the University looked at their
no liquor policy. Let’s face it: College students do
drink occasionally and it’s a headache to have to
leave campus and pay inflated prices for a glass of
beer.
Drinking, after all, is a long and honorable
tradition in any university. Probably the best intellectual discussions have taken place where
students gather around a pitcher of beer. Think
what a great bar the Rathskeller would make!
Seriously, there is no reason for putting it
off any longer. Those who attend blasts would
much rather stay on University grounds than at
some run-down hall in the midst of the Buffalo
slums. Let’s get moving!
F. P.,
Class of ’68

T he

"You light candles, I'd rather curse the darknessl"

The Lighter Side
by Dick West

WASHINGTON (UPI)—It may be assumed, I hope, that
in a country like Iran a sense of fairness will always prevail.
Should Iran ever be attacked by Russia, the Iranians
would defend themselves with American weapons obtained
under the U.S. military assistance program.

And in the unlikely event
these ever had occasion to defend themselves against Americans, they would do so with Russian weapons.
I mean, the Iranians surely
wouldn’t be so ill-mannered as to
shoot Americans with American
guns or turn Soviet arms against
the Soviets. It would be a violation of military etiquette.
That being the case, I don’t
see why Rep. Otto E. Passman,
D-La., should be in such a quandary. Yet Passman’s perplexity
was very evident at recent House
Sub-Committee hearings on the
new military assistance budget.

mon sense or logic the fact that
we are giving Iran military equipment so that they can defend
themselves against Soviet attack
and at the same time Iran is
purchasing from Soviet Russia
$110,000,000 worth of military
equpiment,” he mused.
Apparently he was working
from the premise that Russia
would not likely be cooperating
in the program to prepare Iran’s
defenses against Russia.

To the Editor:
I should like to take issue with Mr. Galitzer’s
observations in his column, “On Wall Street.” I
believe that he is, figuratively speaking, putting
the cart before the horse. He bases his optimism
Vice Adm. L. C. Heinz, difor the stock market on a business upturn during
rector of the assistance program,
sought to assure Passman that
the coming forth quarter. The prices of common
stock are a leading economic indicator, however;
Iran’s “basic commitment to the
that is, the behavior of common stocks give an
United States” had not been
significantly weakened by the
indication of what we may expect from the economy Arms from anywhere
in the future rather than the other way around.
After bringing out that total purchase of Soviet equipment.
Far from being ready to raise the white flag, American economic and military
the bears have a strong case. At the turn of the assistance to Iranians this year Passman perplexed
century, Charles Dow wrote: “To know values is is buying $110,000,000 worth of
But Passman remained nonto know the meaning of the market.” While value military equipment from Russia.
plussed.
has little influence on the temporary fluctuations
“It is all right with you if I
To Passman, this seemed paraof stock prices, it is the determining factor in the
doxical.
r do not try to understand it, is
long run. In relation to common stock, value is
“I cannot reconcile with com- it not?” he asked.
determined by the return to the investor in the
form of dividends. In the past, the 3% zone of
yields on the Dow-Jones Industrial stocks has been
a consistent danger zone for the stock market
in general. In 1929 stocks crashed with the average
yield of the Dow-Jones Industrials at 3.1%; in
United Rress International
1937 the decline began with yields at 3.7%; in
1946 it was 3.2% and in 1962 it was 3,1%. As of
CAIRO—Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser, eulogizing his
last Friday, the yields averaged 3.4%. In addition,
former Vice President Abdel Hakim Amer who reportedly committed
Government bonds are yielding 5% and the spread suicide;
between yields for Barron’s high grade bonds and
“None of my brothers was as dear to me as was Amer.”
those of the Dow-Jones Industrials was an incredible—2.41%. Stocks will not be able to withstand
LONDON—Vladillieu M. Vasev, Soviet charge in London, comthis sort of competition from bonds very much
menting on the action of the British in taking Russian physicist Vladilonger.
a
In short, far from the rosy picture which Mr. mir Kachenko from Soviet jetliner:
.
action
in boarding the plane, forcefully removing
Galitzer portrays, the stock market appears to be
their
headed for a big fall.
Mr. Kachenko from the plane, isolating him from his wife and from
people who could help him and speak the same language under his
Pasqual V. Perrino
medical condition is, of course, a travesty of anything which any
country should offer in ways of hospitality.”
Writers: Please be brief. Letters should not exceed
300 words. All letters must be signed and the address
SANTA BARBARA, Calif.—Pulitzer prize-winning editor Harry
an d telephone number of the writer must be includS. Ashmore, charging that President Johnson apparently squelched a
ed- Positive verification of authorship will be made Vietnam peace proposal that Ashmore dispatched in a letter to North
before a letter is printed.
Vietnamese President Ho Chi Minh:
“This conciliatory feeler was effectively and brutally cancelled
Letters will be kept in strict confidence.
to determine what response Hanoi
The Spectrum will use initials or pen name, if before there was any chance
might have made.”
requested. But
letters are never used.
The Spectrum reserves the right to edit or delete
One of the 550 evacuees of Wake Island, left
HONOLULU
material submitted for publication, but the intent of homeless by Typhoon Sarah:
letters will not be changed.
“We’re all lucky, really lucky to be alive.”

Quotes in

-.

the news

—

The Spectrum's pages *or

Editorials

&amp;

Opinions

It is the policy of The Spectrum to report the
news fully and impartially in the news pages,
to express the opinions of the newspaper only
in the editorial pages and to publish all sides
of important controversial issues.

—

"Without

txprouion, froodottt

of

wwiiw

&lt;%

�Friday, September 22, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* Six

Surprise 2nd night hoped
for at coming Folk Festival
by E. C. St**t*
Thought I had a really hot

to open this column
which hopefully will be an irstory

—

regularly regular presentation on
Tuesdays in the future.
Upon seeing that the Folk
Festival was to be one night only
September 29, a Friday night
I thought to myself, “The
Administration is at it again,
they are playing with the Folk
Festival to make people pay
fees.” Full of rightous wrath I
sought out Jan Thompson to confirm my suspicions. Which she
could not do. The budget for
the Folk Festival is at its full
—

—

size.
There is only one concert at
this time because she is trying to
get a very good, rather expensive, rather unavailable group to
fill up the other evening. To
say more would commit the Folk
Festival Committee to a possibly
unreachable goal but rest assured that there is planned a
second concert and that if things
go off as hoped it will be well
worth waiting for.
Jug Band to appear
Those appearing this year will
be Arlo Guthrie, Doc Watson,
and the, Jim Kweskin Jug Band
if no one gets sick etc. twixt
now and then.
It is a reasonably balanced

the folk oriented. The Jug Band
is a fun outfit which some of you
may have seen With Ian and
Sylvia at Kleinhans. That night
they looked like they were having a hell of a lot of fun and
the audience was too. They
should appeal to just about everyone.

Doc Watson was due in for
year’s Folk Festival (FF)
but had the gall to contract appendicitis and so didn’t make it.
One of the last of the ethnic
people around. Blind, he follows
in the footsteps of a handful
of great folk musicians who have
also been so afflicted.
last

interesting to speculate
sometime as to the source of
the extra talent that some of
the folk greats who were blind
Be

have had
but have it Watson
does. To say outright that everyone who does not know what
Watson does in material will
like him on first listening would
be to mislead. But he should be
heard if for no other reason than
to provide a perspective on what
has gone before in folk music
and is slowly vanishing.
—

Hard to describe
Arlo Guthrie is a very hard act
to describe. He sings like his
father. Which won’t mean any

PARTS

AND
.a*

igSjSHpM'*
,

FOR ALL

folk well and doesn’t -matter to
those who are purists. Point being
he may not really be a folk
singer at all. He may just belong
in the class of very funny political and social satarist who happens to carry a guitar on stage.
I would say that he was probably
the best received act on the bill
the night he appeared last year.
He did appear last year which
may raise a few eyebrows. Like
mine for example. I have a
sneaking suspicion that since I
would not want the grief of
chairing the FF so I won’t do
more than mutter about the fact
that there are great bunches of
people like Tim Hardin, Mark
Spolestra, Gordon Lightfoot, Joiy
Mitchell, Judy Roderick, etc., etc.,
who we have not had here yet.
Leave us not make a habit of
repeats too frequently say I,
as the Arlo Guthrie Fan Club
beats me to death with an ancient 12 string guitar.

Good entertainment
All in all it should be a good
night of entertainment. A night
well worth supporting, if for
no other reason than every time
we can prove support for such
an endeavor we are that much
closer to bigger and better evenings. And let us face it, the
closest decent clubs are in Toronto and only occasionally do
we get people in Kleinhans.
I caught the credits of the
Smothers Brothers, Sunday night
September 10th. Pete Seeger was
on ? 7 ? Could it be that the black
list has finally been broken?
Interesting speculation indeed.
Next week if I am still functioning and space is available, I might
review Baez’s new album
if it
really is new and I just haven’t
been sleeping for the last several months as usual. Now that
you have rested for awhile while
reading this, run out and buttonhole a few freshmen and tell
them of the glories of Arlo
Guthrie et. al. The accoustics
of Clark Gym you don’t have
to bother discussing, thank you.

campus releases.*.

lication deadline extended
The deadline for applications
tor nominations for the Graduate Student Association Execu.

...

„

tive Council has been extended

until Friday, Sept. 29. Nominafo s al? available ip the
GSA office. Room 311 Norton
Hall, Monday through Friday, 9
a.m. to 5 p.m.
™

UUA6 taking Fall Weekend applications
Today is the deadline for suth
mitting Fall Weekend Committee
applications. Anyone interested

in joining the committee may
apply at the UUAB office, room
219 Norton.

Freshmen cheering squad tryouts to be held
All freshmen women interested
in trying out for the freshman
cheering squad, come to room 344
in Norton Hall today, Sept. 22,

between 4:30 and 5:30 p.m. If
to attend today’s meeting, he may call 8312877, Sept. 25.

anyone is unable

Lecture to be given by Director of Urban Affairs
The next lecture in the University Report series will be given
at 9 a.m. Tuesday in the Norton
Conference Theater. The speaker
will be Gordon Edwards, Director

of the Office of Urban Affairs,
Mr. Edwards will speak on “The
University and the City.” All students, faculty and staff are invited to attend.

Tickets now available for Folk Festival
Tickets are now on sale at the
Ticket Office for the Folk Festival.
Tickets cost $2.50 for students

who paid their Activity Fee and
$3 for those students who did not.
Sale will continue until next Friday. No tickets will be sold at
the door.

Judges and secretary needed by Judiciary
Applications for traffic court
judge are now being accepted by
the Student Judiciary. Interested
students should write a letter
stating their qualifications and
*

,

,

.

,,

,

_

reasons for seeking traffic court
positions.
Also needed is a secretary of
the Judiciary. Students may apply at the student Senate o£fice&gt;

Norton Hall.

—

-

BAP

«■* ?****

IMPORT AUTO PARTS

3749 HARLEM ROAD (Near Kensington)
BUFFALO, NEW YORK 14215
PHONE; (716) 833-3000

Volunteers needed by Social Work Club
The Social Work Club, which
offers a unique opportunity for
University students to work in a
one-to-one relationship with children of the Buffalo area, is now
recruiting new members.

For information concerning the
goals and responsibilities of the
organization, call 836-5980, 8344655, or 831-4171; or leave your
name, address and telephone
number in Box 39 Norton Hall.

SIGMA PHI EPSILON

FRATERNITY
cordially invites
ALL RUSHEES to

a

SORORITY SOCIAL

TONIGHT AT 8:15 P.M.

Ffi. Night, Sept. 22

0M.MW

AIR-CONDITION BO

HENMOli

For Information

Call 837-7653

UVE MUSIC NIGHTLY

&amp;

The SERFS
The INDIAN NUTS

I7I-S440

ALB* ON

—

TUESDAY thru SUNDAY

SATURDAY NIGHT!

Wad A Sun. Nights

The COASTERS

WILMER A
THE DUKES

SALK

MALONEY A O’CONNOR,
jPLVD. MALL. FESTIVAL
TICKETS,

STATLKR,

AMHERST THEATRE,

KKNSINQTON THEATRE,

ABBOTT THEATRE.

Far (mp Sites t Swtlal Tbeatra Parti wraatiN cm

at the Roc-Mar
Bowling Lanes

Tuas thro Sun,

A COLVIN

-

TICKETS

mm

�Friday, Saptambar 22, 1967

Th

•

Spectrum

Fraternity rushing seen as gala event
are the only requirements.
Rushees may register in the IFC
office, room 346 Norton Hall
from 9 ajn. to 5 p.m. on the

by Elliot Stephan Rosa
Spectrum Stiff Reporter

Informal fraternity rushing bein the first day of classes this

above dates.

planned calendar of programs
designed to stimulate interest in
the many facets of Greek life.
The functions during the first
three weeks are open to the entire student body and provide a
good opportunity for interested
men to evaluate each fraternity.
During the week of October
2, serious candidates will be invited to formal rush affairs conducted by the individual organizations.

The Inter-Fraternity Council
has set aside September 25, 26,
and 29 for rush registration. All
Eligible male students must register on one of these dates to
pledge.

A fee of $1.25 and proof of
a 1.0 grade point average for
the previous semester or a cumulative 1.0 grade point average

Spock

Joseph

Cardarelli

man for 1967-1968.

Short blasts
The IFC will present a Graak
Miser in the Fillmore Room tonight.

Dr. Spock will be brought here
Nov. 1 by the Graduate Student
Association. He is the pediatrician-author more recently known
for his activities as co-chairman
of the National Committee for
a Sane Nuclear Policy (SANE).
Preliminary plans have been
made so that admmission to Dr.
Spock’s talk will favor graduate
students. Admission will be restricted to holders of tickets
which will be made available
from the GSA office. After a
certain period of time, the doors
will be opened to undergraduates
and the general public.
Sound will be piped into the

.

.

.

.

.

.

andKing will

cafeterias, the Dorothy Haas
lounge, and into rooms on the
second floor of Norton Hall if
necessary.

Dr. King, head of the Southern
Negro Christian Leadership Conference, will be here to speak
Nov. 9. Admission will be open
to the general public. The Student Association and GSA are
co-sponsoring the program.
This will be the first time that
either national figure has spoken
in Buffalo. Both Dr. Spock and
Dr. King have been widely cited
as possible Presidential “peace
candidates” in 1968. Just prior
to their visits here, both will be
in Washington, D. C. to address
and participate in mass demonstrations against the war in Vietnam scheduled for Oct. 21.

.

835-6565 . . . Tonight, the brothers of Sig Ep will hold a rush
social, beginning at 9 p.m. at the
Roc Mar Bowling lanes. On Sunday, the rushees are also invited
to a stag at John’s Tavern, beginTheta Chi
ning at 8 p.m. .
Fraternity will hold a liquor
party tomorrow night at the
house with a football theme. Attendance will be by invitation
only! The following officers have
been inducted; Bob Curns, Treasurer; Ken Shirmuhly, Asst. Treasurer; and Ted Pierce, Second
Guard. Nick Geleta is the newest
and proudest brother, as he was
initiated last Monday night
Sigma Kappa Phi Sorority will
initiate their pledges Sunday,
Sept. 24 with an ensuing dinner
at the Cordon Bleu. Tonight, the
sisters are holding a social with
Sig Ep at the Roc Mar Bowling
Lanes.
.

Festivities begin at 7 p.m. with
music provided by the “Fabulous
Wildcat” and everyone is invited
Alpha Phi Dalta will hold a
social tomorrow at 8:30 p.m. at
the Spa Delaware in Kenmore.
The New Generation will play
and Buffalo General Hospital will
supply the nurses. All freshmen
and sophomores are invited to
Tonight, the brothers
attend .
of Alpha Phi Omega will hold a
rush party at Warren’s Steak
House on Military Road. The fun
starts at 8:30. All are welcome
to look over the only on-campus
national fraternity. For rides and
further information contact Gary

address convocations
Dr. Benjamin Spock and the
Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King will
address two convocations at the
State University of Buffalo in
November.

. TomorHepfner at 836-4916
row night, the brothers of Gamma Phi will hold a dated party
with live music at the Sheridan
Lanes. For rides or questions call

SALE
LITERATURE

NOTES

Buffalo Textbook

3610 MAIN ST.

Across from Clamant HaU

.

.

.

.

Harvard graduate
is director of
Men's Glee Club
The Men’s Glee Club has a
new director, Mr. Frederic Ford.
Mr. Ford comes to the University
with a B.A. in Music from Harvard, and an A.M.T. from the
Harvard Graduate School of Education.
He was a member of the Harvard Glee Club and was director
of a small group, The Krokodiloes.

Mr. Ford studied conducting
under G.W. Woodworth in 1959
and in 1960 he became the assistant conductor of the Harvard
Glee Club. He was a member of
the 1961 Harvard Far Eastern
Tour. During 1961-1962 he was
assistant conductor of the Radcliffe Choral Society and conductor of the Freshman Chorus.

DOG HOUSE Restaurant
jySqa

Always
Qpflu

Always

nf £aad Facdl

3248 Main St. at Heath
(South End of Campus)

U.B. SPECIALS
Our Tempting, Tasty, Delicious
Mouth-Watering MISSILEBURGER
With French Fries &amp; a Thick 16-ox. Milkshake

A St.25 Value
For Only
.

.

jyjy

.

and Don't Forget Our City-Wide Famous
BREAKFAST SPECIAL
for only 89c
....

But
For You

.

.

.

79'

Includes: JUICE—2 EGGS (Any Style)
BACON or SAUSAGE—HOME FRIES
TOAST &amp; COFFEE

Just Show The Waitress Your I.D. Card
HAPPY EATING
.

.

.

�Th

Pag* Eight

Do you belong to or

know of a swinging
group interested in
stead em
ment?

If so, enter the

BATTLE OF
THE BANDS
—

A REAL HAPPENING

Holiday Inn
—

FALLS BLVD.

SEPT. 29

30

&amp;

Sptctrum

—

Friday, September 22, 1967

THE INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL

GREEK RUSH PROGRAM

AMERICA’S
GREATEST

SEPT. 25, 26 St 29
Registration in Norton Hall

•'HAMILTON HOUSE”
TROUSERS
$16 TO $25

in the INTERFRATERITY COUNCIL OFFICE—Room 346

HUBBARD SLACKS
$10 TO $20

Proof of eligibility (1.0 grade average) and a $1.25 fee
are required

"BREECHES”
PERMANENT PRESS

OCT. 9 &amp; lO
Bidding Silent Period for Fraternity Bidding

DUPONT* BLENDS INSURE
LONGER WEAR

—

at the

NIAGARA

•

$7 TO $9

-

call fo

available audition
times at

Remember, You Must Register to Bid For Your

694 2800
Ask for Mr. Ebberts
—

—

Choice of Fraternity

and anything else that you might think of.
The 165-year history of Du Pont is a history of its
people’s ideas —ideas evolved, focused, and
engineered
into new processes, products and plants. The
future

will be the same. It all depends upon you.
You’re an individual from the first day. There is no
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You’ll be in a small group, where individual
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We promote from within.
You will do significant work, in an exciting
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Sign up today for an interview with the Du Pont
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Please send me the Du Pont Magazine along with
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FEATURING BLENDS WITH

DACRON*

POLYESTER

DuPont

registered trade mark

�Friday, September 22, 1967

Th

•

Pag* Nina

Spectrum

the spectrum o#

Sportin' Life

sports

Bob Woodruff
It’s getting to be that beating an Eastern Division club in the

Defense will play a major role
when Bulls meet North Carolina

sets ih that not

very much has actually been accomplished.
The quintet of Miami, Boston, New York, Houston and that
other team will continue to battle for the next three months only to
see which of them will succumb to either the Raiders or the Chiefs
at year’s end. What has happened to the entire league is a tragic
case of mediocrity, a disease which has bitten everybody in the West
also, with the exception of Oakland and Kansas City.

Class of the league

by Robert Jacobs

The most disheartening point to make to AFL fans is that
it still seems true that the Bills are the class of the league, though
watching Buffalo’s offensive attack is like watching a silent movie.
Excluding the 12 minutes of the final quarter against the Jets,
when Jack Kemp’s good fairy produced a run of the mill miracle, the
vaunted Buffalo team has put three points on the scoreboard in two
games. Even taking into account Joe Collier’s offensive line headaches, the Bills’ scoring performance, or lack of it, has been startling.
Both Flores and Kemp have been called "smart” quarterbacks.
In actuality, the term “smart” quarterback usually describes one
whose ability just borders on the brink of competence and must
think a lot in order to appear adequate. The Bills would perhaps be
better off with a sharp passer, i.e. Lamonica, than with a sharp wit
directing their attack.

Spectrum Staff Reporter

The Bulls will have to be at peak readiness tomorrow
when they meet the Wolfpack from North Carolina State
University in Raleigh, N.C.
The name of the game for
Pass defense is strong
both squads will be “defense.”
Looking to harass ICck MarThe Bulls, whose offense performed so well last week in a
30-6 upset victory over Kent
State, will be pitted against a
Wolfpack defense which offers
no less than four All-American
candidates.
The hub of the defensive line
is tackle Dennis Byrd. At 6 feet
4 inches and 250 pounds, the
senior from Lincolnton, North
Carolina, has enough size to
crush opposing ball-carriers.
Along with his massive frame,
Byrd has the strength, speed
and pursuit to make him a two
time All-American.

tha’s passing attack will be ace
defensive back Art McMahon.
McMahon has the uncanny ability
of always being in the right place
at the right time.
Last season he intercepted two
passes and returned one all the
way for a touchdown. Also playing a deep back with McMahon
is the always dangerous Greg
Williams.
In 1966 Williams picked off
three enemy aerials and ran two
of them back for scores.
To cope with the multiple offenses that N.C. State is expected
to show, the Buffalo defensive
unit will have to read just from
last week’s “stop the run,” to
“stop the pass.” In the past the
Pack has come out in a winged
T formation as well as an “I”
set-up, both of which favor the
passing game.
The key to that game is the
combination of Jim Donnan to

Harry Martell.
Last week against North Carolina, Martell latched onto a fiftyfive yard scoring strike from
Donnan and helped the Pack to
defeat their arch-rival from Chapel Hill 13-7. This duo should be
State’s bread and butter on of-

Dennis Byrd
"Has the speed and pursuit to
make him a two time All-American."
Playing alongside Byrd is defensive end Pete Solasky. Solasky is a deadly pass rusher and
can be expected to spend much

time in the Bull backfield.

The line backing corps is
headed by Chuck Amato. This
former Atlantic Coast Conference heavyweight wrestling champion possesses the speed and
agility to cover receivers coming
out of the backfield as well as
the strength to cover up on the

inside

running play.

fense.
If the Bulls can contain the
receivers as well as they blanketed Kent State’s last week
Buffalo’s chances appear better
than even.

First tangle
Not only is this the first time
that the Bulls have tangled with
the Wolfpack, but it is the first
real indication that State University of Buffalo football is going
big time.
This is the type of football that
“Doc” Urich promised when he
took over the head coaching duties from Richard Offenhcimer.
North Carolina State is a club
which played before some 300.
000 fans last season, 55.000 of
which saw them play admirably
against Michigan State in a 28-10
losing effort.
The Bulls were almost letter
perfect last week on offense and
defense while on attack, the Mur-

Dubenion not forever
”

Art McMahon
May harass Murtha's passing

attack.
tba-led squad was in mid-season
form, running the Golden Flashes
dizzy with the pass and option
play. The defense sparkled as
they threw the KSU ball carriers
for losses on 15 of 63 plays from
scrimmage.

This week the Bulls will be

two touchdown underdogs to the
Wolfpack, but last Saturday’s effort is certainly an indication
that the club will be primed for

the combination.
The “Pats” are playing like “Patsys” this season, and nobody’s
quite sure if Babe Parilli is going to show up in Buffalo this week.
Old Babe seems to be finding enemy defenders more to his liking
than his own receivers. John Huarte may have a Heisman trophy,
but he also has little in the way of pro quarterback talent. The era
of the Holovak miracle has indeed ended.

Probable starting offenses

Little Houston talent

the greatest upset in the school’s
football history.

STATE

OF BUFFALO

Po No.
IE 82 Endress, T
IT 77 Wolf, C.
LG 64 Maser, M.

C 52 Wesotowski,
65 Finochio, J.

J

BG

RT

Rissel, M.

61

5E 44 Drankoski, C.
14
IB 21
FB 36
HB 49
Average
Average

Qfl

Murtha, M.
Rutkowski, K.
Jones, L.
Wells, R.

Wf. of line Wt. of Backfield
NORTH

Houston has little in the way of football talent. Their offense

Ht.
6- 0
6- 3

Wt.
202
220

5-11
5-11
5-10

214
210
219

5-11
6-1
5-11
5- 9
5-

6- 0

233
183
176
180
208
195

211
190

With senior Bill Ahrendtsen
and junior Ted Beringer out because of heavy class schedules,
the Bulls were unable to up-end
a strong Canisius six turning in
three scores in the low 70s at
the Audubon Golf Course.
Coach Len Serfustini commented that the newcomers, Mike
R iger and Gary Bader, will come
along and give the push needed

for the remainder of the season.
Bull senior Tony Santelli did
come through, though, with the
lowest score of the match with
a strong par 71.

The Bulls faced Buffalo State
will encounter
Rochester Institute of Technology
today. Using the NCAA three
point system (one point for a
win on the front nine holes, one
point for a win on the back nine,
and one point for a win in the
total score), the scoring summary

STATE

The

UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO

To. St

71
74
3. 79
4. 77
5. 78
6- 77

Santelli, Tony
Rigor, Michael
Gaochat, Robert
Bernard, Doug
Bader, Gary
Stone, Rob

was as follows;

1

\

TOTAL:
CANISIUS

4.
5.
6.

72
72
77
79
73

Williams, Evan
Boyce, Dave

Russell, Jack
Boice, Jack
Rehak, Mrke

h

8

Total
PH.

Fm.

2.
3.

Total
P»3
0

_

Wednesday and

Fo Sc.
1. 75

Frosh football team plays Army
Spectrum

Fie.

1.
2.

circuit.
The Raiders and the Chiefs must be shaking in their cleats.

by Ed Levine

Po. No.
TE 86 Donaldson, Don
LT 76 Spangler, Lloyd
LG 66 Cates, Norman
C 54 Afletts, Carey
RG 63 Campbell, Flake
RT 78 Warren, Steve
RE 84 Martel, Harry
QB 14 Donnan, Jim
HB 35 Barchuk, Tony
WB 34 Halt, Bobby
FB 36 Dockery, Settle
Average Wt. of .Line
Average Wt. of Backfield

Canisius triumphs over UB golf team
The State University of Buffalo
team opened up their short
season with a 10-8 setback at the
hands of the Canisius Griffins
Monday afternoon.

produced scoring drives of six and seven yards against the Bills
last week, but they’re not really that good. The defense gave up only
three points in that same game, but then again, the Bills are particularly adverse to scoring anyway,
That leaves us with undefeated Miami as the top club in the

CAROLINA STATE

JO-8 setback

golf

The bulk of the Bills’ receiving corps is ready for social security. Buffalo fans seem to believe that Elbert Dubenion is going to
keep rolling on forever, but “Golden Wheels’ stock has gone down
of late, and he’s no more than just another receiver in pro ball. Art
Powell is still a great receiver, but this well-traveled veteran has to
have lost a few steps over his many years. Paul Costa is no Ditka
at tight end.
The Buffalo ground game has been as impotent as its air
strikes. Wray Carlton is a real Woody Hayes type football player,
“three yards and a cloud of dust,” but even Woody likes to see his
boys go four or five yards on occasion. If the Bills thought that they
were pulling one off pn the San Diego front office when they acquired Keith Lincoln, they were sadly mistaken. Lincoln has certainly
been through the pro football wars, and his brittle body is not likely
to stand up for an entire campaign, Lincoln is still a great athlete, but
his contribution to the Buffalo club may be limited.
Jet Coach Weeb Ewbank is fortunate that his one syllable first
name doesn’t fit well into the chant that they sing in the Bronx,
“Goodbye, Allie, Goodbye, Allie." The Jet squad is paper thin, and
Ewbank can never get his club up for the big games like the one in
Buffalo two weeks ago. It takes more than a $400,000 quarterback
to make a winning unit, and it appears that Ewbank may never find

—

—

—

Thompson, Dave

TOTAL:

10

UB

Staff Reporter

Freshman

Football

team, up against its toughest
schedule ever, opens its 1967 campaign Friday at West Point
against Army.
Coach Mike Stock said, “Personnel-wise, this is a fine squad.
They have size and speed, and
with coaching and the added experience in the spring, they will
be well-qualified to help the varsity in the future.”
Competition at the quarterback
slot highlights the offensive situation. Ed Perry, a 6 foot 3 inch
—200 pound lefthander from
Delmar, N.Y. will start Friday.
But he has been hard-pressed by

three other men:
from Aliquippa,
southpaw: John
Clean, N.Y., and
from Ithica, N.Y,

Receiving corps

Bob Stiseak,
Pa., another
Shine, from
Joe Moresco,

The receiving corps is led by
6 foot—200 pounder Joe Zelmanski, from Detroit, Mich. Coach
Stock said of Zelmanski, "He is
quick, with fine hands, and is a
fast learner.”
Barry Atkinson is the top lineman on the frosh. He is 6 feet
4 inches, 225 pounds, from Pittsburgh, and was one of the most

sought-after high school stars in
the East. Coach Stock called him
‘exceptionally agile, with a great

attitude.”
The defense is led by a quartet
of standout linebackers; Gene
Hernquist, 5 feet 8 inches, 190
from Clean, N.Y.; Dave Beining,
6 foot, 205, from St. Mary’s Ohio,
Tom Centofani, 6 feet, 210, from
Niagara Falls, N.Y. and Eld Kershaw, 6 feet 2 inches, 190, from
Elysia, Ohio,

The defensive backfield is
made up of three men with experience at quarterback: Karl
Zalar, 6 feet, 180, from Tiffin,
Ohio; Ron Francis, 5 feet 11
inches, 185, from Batavia, N.Y.
—and Joe Moresco, one of the
quarterback candidates mentioned
above.

Coach Stock’s assistants
Russ MacKeller, a graduate
dent who was named UB’s
standing lineman last year;
Gerry Gergley, who is also
head wrestling coach.

are
stu-

outand
the

1967 schedule
Sept. 22 vs. Army—Away
Sept. 30 vs. Manlius—Home
Oct. 6 vs. Colgate—Away
Oct. 13 vs, Ithaca—Home
Oct. 27 vs. Navy—Away
Nov. 3 vs. Syracuse—Away
Nov. 10 vs. Kent State—Home

�Th

Pag* Tan

Texas favored to edge
USC by 21-17 margin

by Springville
If the Packers have recovered
from last week’s debacle, so
have we. Actually our seven

as a roommate-sports editor who doesn’t let me pick the
easy games, I still managed to come up with a respectable
four right, two wrong and one tie mark last week—a percentage of .667. My answer to those girls who call themselves Springville and pick the easy pro contests will be
forthcoming in the next issue. On to the business of the day.
21, USC 17. This contest is one of the season’s best
as it pits the Trojan speedsters
against the aggressive Longhorns
from Texas. In their opener, USC
lost the services of their fine
quarterback Toby Page, and now
the question remains whether or
not OJ. will outshine the combined talents of Bill Bradley and
Chris Gilbert. This reporter says
no, so the nod goes to Texas in
the GAME OF THE WEEK.
Arkansas 14, Oklahoma State
0. The Razorbacks have lost 3/4
of their ’66 starting lineup including Jon Brittenum and Harry
Jones. Sounds grim, but Frank
Broyles has a knack of coming
up with great ballplayers. The
only thing that will keep the
game respectable is the Cowboys’
tough defense.
Army 17, Virginia 10. The
Black Knights have one of the
better quarterbacks in the East
in Steve Lindell. Coupled with
the running of fullback Arnie
Strickman, the Army eleven will
prove too tough for a mediocre
Virginia squad.
Colgate 21, Boston University 7.
B.U. opened their season with an
unimpressive victory over lightly
regarded Bucknell. The Red Raiders of Colgate compiled an 8-1-1
season last year and, although
they lost defensive stalwart Ray
Ilg, their defense will still win
the majority of games for the
men from Hamilton.

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OPEL
Tht tame people who tell more
Buiekt in Weetem New
York than anybody
except General

Motore!

week.
The Eagles subdued the Redskins, Dallas knocked off Cleveland, and even Allie Sherman’s

28, Houston 21.
Houston coach Bill Yeoman has
23 of 33 lettermen returning
from his ’66 team, which led the
nation in total offense. Led by
halfback extraordinaire Warren
McVea, the Cougars made shambles of Florida State in their
opener. In MSU they face the
best team in the Big Ten and
possibly
the only legitimate
threat to Notre Dame. The choice
is the Spartans for old time’s
sake.
Colorado 17, Oregon 0. Colorado is easily the class of the
Rockies as they demonstrated
last week by handily defeating
Baylor. Oregon has a new coach
and a new stadium but unfortunately also has the same old football players. Don’t look for the
Ducks to improve too much from
last year’s 3-7 record.
Syracuse 14, Baylor 13. Undoubtedly hurt by the loss of its
mercurial halfback Floyd Little,
Syracuse still appears to be the
top team in the East. Paced by
bruising fullback Larry Csonka
and defensive ace Willy Smith
from N.Y.C., the Orange should
take this one in a close game.
Penn State 14, Navy 10. Penn
State lost only two starters on
offense and should be a more
consistent ball control team.
Navy has a fine passer in John
Cartwright with a rugged defense
that should keep the Nittany
Lions honest.
North Carolina State 14, State
University of Buffalo 6.
The
Bulls played a fantastic game
against Kent State, but Urich’s
boys will really have to be up
to repeat their performance
against this strong Atlantic Coast

boys came through against the
Cardinals. Unfortunately for the
Bills’ fans we are almost sure of
perfection this week.

NFL

Baltimore (34) vs. Philadelphia (27; Johnny Unitas had the
finest day of his career last
week completing 23 of 32 passes
for 401 yards and all doubts
about his sore arm have disappeared. However, Eagles’ Norm
Snead to Gary Ballman should
make this contest the best of
the week.
Dallas (35) vs. New York (17):
It is with a tear in our eye that
we must report the following:
Dallas with a mediocre day
against the Browns still proved
too tough to handle. The Giants
just don’t beat Dallas, and this
game should be no exception.
Tarkenton will have to scramble
all the way to Westchester to
ellude the rush of Lilly, Andre,
Townes, and Pugh.

Washington (30) vs. Now Orleans (28): The explosive Washington offense led by Jurgenson,
Mitchell and Taylor should find
it easy to march the Saints up
New Orleans offense led by Tay-

lor and Kelmer should find it
easy to march the Redskins up
and down the field. O.K., you
pick 'em.

Los Angeles (24) vs. Minnesota (13): Roman Gabriel did it

all for the Rams last week, and
this week should be a repeat per-

formance. Ron Vanderkelen, who
led a Viking fourth quarter
surge last week, will find the
going a bit tougher against L.A.'s
fearsome foursome.

San Francisco (27) vs. Atlanta (10): John Brodie will take
advantage of a porous Falcon
defensive secondary. The much
improved Falcons are still not
ready to cope with the 49’er

attack.

’

Green Bay (24) vs. Chicago (10):
Vince Lombardi's Packers came
alive last week in the second half
against the Lions, and their momentum should carry them past
the Bears. Dick Butkus is only
one man, and even he won’t be
able to bring darkness on the
Packers’ run to daylight.

Cleveland (20) vs. Detroit (13):
Detroit’s 17-17 tie with the Packers shocked the world and us.

The State University of Buffalo
varsity cross country team has
elected senior Mike Alspaugh as
the 1967 Team Captain, it was
announced Tuesday by head
coach Emery Fisher. Alspaugh
was voted the Most Valuable
Trackman last spring.
Last Wednesday the varsity
travelled to the Delaware Park
course where Buffalo State hosted
the Bulls.
At 2 p.m. tomorrow the Bulls’
harriers will host a contingent
from Syracuse University at the

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Grover Cleveland course. An additional nine-tenths of a mile
has been added to the original
4.2 mile course.
The Bulls’ freshmen will open
their campaign tomorrow afternoon against the Orange and will
travel the home course in 2.8
miles. The freshman record for
the course is 14 minutes, 44.6
seconds.
Coach Fisher has room for
any freshmen who may be interested in running for the yearling outfit. Report at 4 p.m. in
Com* Worship With Us This

Sunday—11 M AM

PARKSIDE
LUTHERAN CHURCH
Depew
(1

&amp;

Wallace Aves.

down.

AFL
The upset of the week. The Patriots cannot afford to lose their
fourth straight and are bound
to be up for this one. Look for
Parilli and Nance to regain last
seoson’s form. The passes aren’t
getting to the Bills top-flight receiver and the Bills aren’t getting the points on the board.
San Diego (28) vs. Houston
(24): Another tough game to
pick. Houston is steadily improving but will run into a detour
against the even tough Chargers.
Hadl to Alworth should prove
the Oilers undoing.

Kansas City (45) vs. Miami (13):
We hope for Miami’s sake, it’s
this close.
New York (23) vs. Denver (17):
The Jets let one get away two
weeks ago at Buffalo, but thanks
to the Oilers they’re back in the
race in the East. Denver, after
a great preseason and opening
day against the Patriots, seems
to be rapidly regaining its old
pitiful form. The backfield of
Joe Willie, Boozer, and Snell
which just could be the best in
the league will lead the Jets to

victory.

the basement of Clark Gymnasium at the locker room across
from the intra-mural office.
The Varsity Roster follows:
Alspaugh, Mike*
Senior
Senior
Latham, Dave*
Senior
Nauham, Larry
Senior
Graf, Joe
Hughes, Jim*
Junior
Junior
Ernst, Bob
Junior
Baldwin, Bob
VanEvery, Jeff
Junior
Soph.
Grant, Paul
Soph,
Foster, Steve
'indicates returning lettermen
PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB
MEETING
Tuesday, Sept. 26
Room 264 Norton
Nominations Will Be Heard
Contact Box—J. Norton Iff Unable
to Attend

Mile from Campus off

Main St. Across from

Bennett High School
LIVELY ADULT DIALOGUE
9:45 AM
New Young Pastor

BRIAN J. SNYDER

TEST YOUR VIRILITY
»

The Browns coming off the tough
loss to Dallas should be up for
this one. Looks like Lion let-

Alspaugh named cross country captain

powerhouse. Despite threatening
phone calls, the choice has to
be the Wolfpack over the Bulls.

...

.

leadership of the paper with a
.700 mark. Naturally we picked
all the toss-ups correctly last

Michigan State

)

Friday, September 22, 1967

Spectrum

Colts are ID favorites over Eagles

The hoople predicts:

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�Friday, Saptambar 22, 1967

Pat* lUvan

The Spectrum

Studio arena to present
premiere of Albee's plays
Neal Du Brock, Executive Producer of Buffalo’s Studio Arena

cate Balance, for which Mr. Albee

Edward Albee, Puli tier Prize-winning playwright, has chosen the
Studio Arena to present the world
premiere of his newest one-act
plays “Box” and “Quotations from
Chairman Mao Tse-tung.”
Signed to direct the two shows
is the dynamic and world renowned director, Alan Schneider,
who has staged all of the Albee
plays thus far; such plays as The
American Dream, Who’s Afraid
of Virginia Woolf? and A Deli-

as saying “Box” is a play with
no one in it and ideally it should
be repeated once or even twice.
The other play is an experiment
in counterpoint with four characters, only two of whom interrelate. There are four separate
subject matters and while the
characters usually speak alternately, there are times when they
speak simultaneously. I think one
might have a conductor for this
one as well as a director.”

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OFFICIAL BULLETIN
The Official Bulletin is an authorof the State University
of New York at Buffalo, for which The
Spectrum assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in
TYPEWRITTEN forms to 114 Hayes Hall,
attention Mrs. Fischer, before 2 p.m.
the Friday prior to the week of publication. Student organization notices
are not accepted for publication.
ized publication

Make-Up Examinations—Appli-

cations for make-up examinations
for the removal of INCOMPLETE
GRADES (recorded for absence
from final exaxms) must be filed
in the Office of Admissions and
Records, Hayes B, no later than
OCTOBER 9, 1967. Make-up examinations will be given the
week of November 13, 1967.

Studmit testing center registration schedule
Last Day to

Register

T*»t
Graduate School Foreign
Language

Medical College Admissions
Pre-Nursing Exam

Sept. 29
Oct. 6
Sept. 23

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•

Friday, Saptambar 22, 1967

Spectrum

U.N. General Assembly opens
*

wor
focus

*

*

UNITED NATIONS—The 22nd annual
session of the United Nations General
Assembly opened Monday with a warning from Secretary General Thant that
another Middle East war is all but un-

suez

cambodia
united nations
Compiled

from our

wire services by Lilian Waite

Mideast: losers pay the price
Egyptian and Israeli troops
SUEZ
exchanged gunfire across the Suez Canal
Monday in the third ceasefire rupture
along the vital waterway in less than a
week. No casualities were reported.
—

Tuesday morning editions of the semiofficial Egyptian newspaper A1 Ahram
said President Gamal Abdel Nasser has
arrested 181 military officers and civilians in connection with a coup plot and
an inquiry into reasons for Egypt’s loss

of the Mideast war.

The Cairo newspaper said prisoners
included the commander of the Air Force
and the former chief of the secret service.

A1 Ahram linked the arrests to a plan
to overthrow Nasser hatched by the late

field marshal Abdel Hakim Amer, the
who commanded Egyptian armies
which were humiliated by the Israelis in
the Mideast war three months ago.
man

Amer, according to the official Cairo
account, committed suicide last week at
a time when he was under house arrest
and heavy guard.

The report of the 181 arrests was
made in an A1 Ahram article which gave
some details of Amer’s alleged coup
plans. It said Amer’s brother brought 45
peasants to Cairo as a guerrilla force
to help seize command of the armed
forces, and that leaflets were being prepared to undermine pro-Nasser ranks.
The arrested officers, Al Ahram said,
included air marshal Mohamcd Sidky

Mahmoud, the commander of the Egyptian Air Force during the war with Israel,
and Salah Nasr, former director of the
Egyptian intelligence service. Nasr was
reported to have been “retired” after the
war.

A1 Ahram said interrogation could
show that many of the 181 people arrested may have played no part in the
coup,

"In this case, they will be released
immediately,” A1 Ahram said.

The group included 31 retired officers

being questioned to determine the reasons for the “military setback” with Is-

rael, the newspaper said. Air Force chief
Mahmoud was listed in this category
along with the Air Force chief of staff
and the commander of air defenses.
A1 Ahram said its report refuted Israeli reports that Nasser had arrested
more than 70,000 Egyptians. The newspaper said these reports were “malicious
propaganda.” There was a new rupture
of the fragile Mideast truce Monday.
Egyptian and Israeli forces traded shots
across the Suez Canal for the third time
in less than a week, but no casualties
were reported.

UN. Secretary general Thant echoed
Moscow’s warning in his written report to
the United Nations General Assembly,
He said war will flare again unless the
United Nations found a solution to the
ycars-long dispute between the Arabs
and Israel.

Civil war sweeps Canton
HONG KONG
Communist Chinese
rebels, armed with artillery, shelled a
naval base and two government strongholds and captured several gunboats in
the full scale civil war sweeping Red
China’s southern industrial city of Canton. newspaper reports said Sunday.
Refugees from the bloody fighting
that has ranged in the city since Thursday said that five divisions of Red army
troops were reported rushing into the
area to restore order.
—

Bloodbath boast
But they said that the rebels, opponents of Communist Party Chairman Mao
Tse-tung. were being strengthened by
people from the countryside and were
boasting that an "unprecedented bloodbath" was yet to come.
The Canton area has been the scene
of sporadic fighting for several months.
But it had never reached the intensity
of fighting that reportedly is now underway in the city and at the port of Whampao. 12 miles away.

Frigate sighted
Early Sunday, a Chinese Communist
frigate was sighted patrolling the mouth
of the Pearl River, the gateway leading
to Whampoa, not far from Macao, The
fast, modern boat was the biggest Chinese
vessel ever sighted in Macao waters, it
was reported.

The artillery reportedly was captured
by anti-Maoist elements from the Canton
military district headquarters. There had
been earlier reports that the military district commander had turned over the entire arsenal of arms to the rebels although it was not clear whether he was
forced to do so or simply siding with

a solution to the crisis.
In his annual report to the assembly,
Thant said that except for scattered debates "there has been no enduring, persistent effort in any U.N. organ” to solve

the Middle East crisis.

“A determined effort is needed now
to find solutions to the issues which have
thrice in the past led, and no doubt will
again in the future lead, to war between
the Arabs and Israelis,” the report said.

Urges international action
“It seems to me, therefore, to be certain that international effort, assistance
and concerted action will be indispensable to any move towards solutions and
away from a new recourse to battle,”
Thant said.
Thant said there was “near unanimity”
that Israel withdraw its troops from occupied territory in Egypt, Jordan and
Syria “because everyone agrees that there
would be no territorial gains by military
conquest.” But he said “the issue of
withdrawal loses sizable support” when
the position of some Arab states is considered.
“The unwillingness of the Arab states
to accept the existence of the state of
Israel, the insistence of some on maintaining a continuing state of belligerency
with Israel . , . and the question of innocent passage through the Strait of Tiran
and the Suez canal are also fundamental
problems . . . Thant also called for appointment of a permanent U.N. envoy to
the Middle East to act as “a reporter
and interpreter of events and views for
the Secretary General.
The Middle East, together with the
Vietnam war—which is not even on the
agenda—was expected to dominate the
annual Assembly session which opened
with the election of the first Communist
diplomat as president of the world organization.

Communist president-elect
The president-elect is Foreign Minister Corneliu Manescu of Romania, known
as the glamor boy diplomat of the iron
curtain countries and an advocate of
closer Communist relations with the West.
The session was opened by Ambassador Abdul Rahman Pazhwak of Afghanistan, who presided over last year’s regular
session and two extraordinary sessions
held this year. Pazhwak said the multiple
Assembly sessions “may well mark the
evolution of this world body into a virtual year-round parliament of nations.”
He counseled against despair because the
Soviet-summoned summer session did not
bring peace to the Middle East.
“The United Nations lost a battle, but
it stopped a war,” he said.

East-West friction
Manescu, in a speech, pledged to do
everything in his power to end the Vietnam war and relax international ten-

sions in other spheres.

East-West frictions heated the room
within minutes of Manescu's pledge, and
the Soviet Union came to Cuba’s defense
in the dispute with the United States.

immigration officials of holding up the
Cuban ambassador to the U.N. and members of his delegation at Nassau, BahamRodriguez charged that the American
immigration officers insisted on inspecting the Cubans’ luggage.

In a formal complaint to Thant, Rodriguez said the U.S. action was a “new
provocation on the part of the American
imperialists, proving that in the United
States there are no conditions existing
allowing the United Nations to remain
here.” Rodriguez announced withdrawal
of the delegation from the session, and
with that the Cubans got up from their
chairs and walked out.

Goldberg explains
U.S. Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg
explained the incident at Nassau. He said
U.S. immigration officers approved the
admission of ten Cuban diplomats and
the luggage they were carrying by hand,
but that the Cubans refused to submit
to inspection of wooden crates they had
not claimed as diplomatic baggage.
Goldberg said passage for the Cubans
the United States via Nassau had
been arranged by the U.S. Consul General there. Goldberg said he would welcome an investigation into the incident
by Thant.
into

Nikolai T. Fedorenko, the Soviet Ambassador to the U.N. and an old adversary
in the past debates with Goldberg, supported Cuba. The Russian said the United
States was “guilty of discrimination and
arbitrary actions” against diplomats assigned to the U.N.

Goldberg angry
Goldberg, somewhat angry, snapped
back and challenged Fedorenko’s qualifications to speak about the Cuban incident. “Unless Ambassador Fedorenko
is clairvoyant, he cannot know what happened in Nassau and his little homily
just now reminds me of Alice in Wonderland-sentence first and inquire afterwards,” Goldberg said in a remark that
recalled his sharp exchanges with Fedorenko during the bitter Uideast debate
in the Security Council earlier this summer. The speech by Romania’s Hanescu
placed heavy emphasis on Vietnam.

“In the interest of world peace, an
end must be put to the conflict in southeast Asia," Manescu said. “This would
eliminate a hot bed from which a mentality of violence is being
in
international relations and which can
.
give rise to new threats to peace
I am determined to do everything in my
power to see that constructive efforts
are crowned with success."

maintained
.

.

The 122 delegations, which were expected to include 60 to 70 Foreign Ministers by the time the 13-week Assembly
gets into full swing, elected officers of
seven standing committees and then adjourned until Wednesday morning.

them.

Reports of the continuing fighting
came as the Central Committee of the
Chinese Communist Party called for an
end to factional fighting. And in an accompanying appeal, the organ of the Red
Chinese armed forces urged military units
to "not get involved in the factional
struggle in many areas.”

Sihanouk ousts news agency
CAMBODIA
In his latest move to
isolate Cambodia from Peking, Chief of
State Norodom Sihanouk Monday expelled
Red China’s official ne'ws agency for
flooding his nation with Mao Tse-tung’s
—

propaganda

Sihanouk announced cancellation of
the contract of the New China News
Agency with the additional notice that
Cambodia “will not tolerate the penetra
tion of Maoism in Cambodia.”
The prince said the Chinese agency had
run long excerpts from Mao's writings

and he described the excerpts as "inciting
armed rebellion.”
He declared that he

was determined to
stop China's "ideological invasion” while
he was still in a strong position, instead
of waiting for Cambodia to begin “suffering from gangrene."
Sihanouk last week accused Communist China of master-minding a plot
against his government and fired two
of his ministers for alleged complicity.
Then on Saturday, Sihanouk announced
he was withdrawing the Cambodian diplomatic mission from Peking.

North Viet
resistance

These are the type of antiaircraft guns
that try to shoot down American bombers over North Vietnam.

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                    <text>The Spectrum

Til'
rf*i

•

State University of New York at Buffalo
Vol. 18, No. 3

■

Tuesday, September 19, 1967

Results of student opinion census to
influence plans for Amherst campus

n.

A University-wide census “which will determine where
the bricks are laid" in Amherst will be taken tomorrow, University officials have announced.

A 200-item questionnaire,
prepared by the University
Office of Planning and Development, will elicit essential information from the students and faculty.
Students having classes at 10
a.m. will be given the question
naire by their regular instructors.

Nobel
scientist

Sir John Eccles,

Those students who do not
have 10 a.m. classes will be asked
to fill out the questionnaire in
Norton Hall. Questionnaires will
also be placed at the Interim
Campus, the Law School and the
Public Health Research Institute.
Millard Fillmore College students
will receive them during their
evening classes.

Nobel Prize

winning neurophysiologist, will

join the

School of Medicine.

Eccles will join faculty
Sir John Eecles, a noted Australian neurophysiologist, and corecipient of the 1963 Nobel Prize
for physiology and medicine, will
assume a new post in the School
of Medicine at State University
of Buffalo next July 1. The State
University Board of Trustees announced its decision Saturday.

As the first Nobel laureate appointed to the faculty, he will
serve as Professor of Physiology
and Biophysics in Medicine and
Dentistry. In order to accommodate him, the university is establishing a unit for neuro-biology
in the faculty of Health Sciences.
This will enable Sir Eccles to
continue his distinguished work
on the functions of the brain.
The 64-year-old medical educator graduated with honors in

Assesses needs

medicine from the University of
Melbourne in 1925. Awarded a
Rhodes Scholarship to Oxford, he
studied under master psychologist, Sir Charles Sherrington, a
1932 Nobel Prize winner. He continued to receive honors of distinction and in 1960 received his
Doctorate in Science from Cam-

bridge University. Between 1953
and 1964 he wrote three noteworthy books in the field of
physiology.

At the present lime he is a
member of several national and
international professional societies and associations. While serving on the faculty of Northwestern University for the past year,
he has simultaneously been a
member of the American Medical
Association Institute for Biomcd
ical Research, founded in 1965.

The census is a comprehensive
inventory of the individual's
needs and desires in university
life. The questions request information concerning personal biography, living requirements, traf
fie and parking, departments,
classes and laboratories, and social activities. It takes approxi
mately 30 minutes to complete
The

future of the University
lies in the Amherst campus. Ac-

cording to Charles S. Green, assistant director of Planning and
Development, “Anything that can
be done to make it the finest cam
pus ever built—culturally, educa
tionally, and aesthetically
is
very important."
—

“Student input, both in ideas
and action, is essential in the for
mation of a truly dynamic uni-

versity." staled the Student Sen
ate Executive Committee. “We
urge all students to participate
in this survey and make their
opinions known.”

The blueprint of a university
is created from the experience
of the past, the needs and problems of the present and the ideas
of the future. Juniors and seniors
are most acquainted with this full
scope. Richard A. Miller, vice
president of the Student Association, stated that “the upperclassmen know what is most relevant
to college life. If they have any
commitment to the future of the
University, they will fill out the
questionnaire.”

The opinions of the freshmen
and sophomores are vitally important since they may be attending classes on the Amherst campus. The construction of the first
three colleges is scheduled to be
completed by 1971.
Mr. Green stated that young
people today want to change the

world. They hold the optimistic
ideal of wanting to build a better
place for the future Thus, providing ideas for the future cam-

pus is an exciting concept.

The housing office, for example, will be able to provide for
the students’ needs far more intelligently by alterations in their
present program. Changes in the
food services, bus transportation
and parking facilities will result.

A report submitted by the Office of Planning and Development
summarized the Amherst project
as a whole university being conceived. “Its doors are open to innovations. New ideas about every
campus function must be diverse
and flexible to incorporate all
students. Heterogeneity rather
than narrow homogeneity should
be the major consideration.”

Mixed housing
The proposed collegiate structure may provide mixed housing
by sex, academic rank, achievement and marital status. The student mix may permit male and
female integrated housing; class
arrangements

of

freshmen

through graduate level, and pro-

for full-time residents,

visions

faculty, management and admin-

College system

istration.

One innovation on the new
campus will be the college sys-

tem. Each individual college
should be a dwelling unit with an
occupancy of 400 to 1000 people.
Ideally, there will be architectural variety among the colleges:
High-rise, garden apartments, cottages, low-rise "duplex," and
quadrangles.

Immediate application
Census information

have an immediate application.
Data received will provide answers to many problems occurring on the Main St. and Interim
campuses.

will

also

This cross-section of people is
designed to provide for a stimulating

intellectual and cultural

atmosphere.

Commuters may have temporary space reserved in the collegiate structures to stay overnight
on occasion. Units may be ar

foi^

ranged
study halls, lockers,
lounges and assembly rooms.

Siggelkow, Rowland receive new appointments
by Daniel Lasser
Spectrum

Staff

Reporter

The State University of New York Board of Trustees
has appointed Drs, Richard A. Siggelkow and A. Westley
Rowland to two newly-created vice-presidential positions at
the State University of Buffalo.
Formerly Dean of Students, Dr. Siggelkow has been
named Vice-President for Student Affairs.
Dr. Rowland, Executive Assistant to the President since
1966, has been designated Vice-President for UniversityRelations.

Dean Siggelkow
Jew vice president will help
Irop-ouls, keep labs on resilence halls, Norton Union.

The new positions represent a
continuation and broadening of
past duties. Thus the appoint
menls have not necessitated any
immediate appointments to the
positions vacated by the admin
istrators.
Dr. Siggelkow commented that
his new post will cover the Of
fice of Admissions and Records
and the Division of Instructional
Services, presently including the
audio visual centers.
In addition, he hopes to con
cern himself with problems re
lated to such topics as the resi
dence halls and Norton Hall, new

courses and academic recognition
of certain outside activities, and
commuters He will also attempt
to maintain contact and help for
students who have dropped out
of college.

of the

dents,

the

cemer,

Dean

loreign

-Rowland is a past president
if itie American College Public
Relations Association

Dr. A. W.
As ne

Rowland

:e president

for Un

mu

of Men. the

versity placement bureau

estley Rowland came
Dr A
/Buffalo July 1. 1963. as ass isant
to President Clifford Fur
responsible
Hi* has bet
nas
for such area as university and

formatior

responsibilities

formerly held by Dr Siggelkow
have been placed under Associ
ale Dean of Students Anthony
I.orenzetti,
These include the
counseling

Was Furnas assistant

com mum

More responsibility
Many

DiJ Siggelkow has served as
Dean of Students since 1958. He
was Assistant Dean of the School
of Kducation from 1956 to 1958.
Before coming to Buffalo. Dr.
Siggelkow was on the staff of
the Univeristy of Wisconsin He
received his Ph D. there in 1953.
Dr Siggelkow is presently serv
mg his second three-year term
as editor of NASFA, the journal
of the Association of Deans and
Administrators of School Affairs.

ant

Dean of the School of Er

her as Director of Counselin,

alior

�Page Two

Tuesday, September 19, 1967

The Spectrum

Ui niversity of Amsterdam:

Students protest in Fiedler
by Sheldon H. Bergman

One of the interesting sidelights of the controversy
around Dr. Leslie Fiedler is the fact that it has touched
off a debate over “academic freedom” at the University of
Amsterdam.
After Dr. J. VanDer Hoeven of Amsterdam withdrew
university's
the
invitation -to Dr. Fiedler, the ASVA (the
Student’s
Association of Amsterdam) launched a
General

series of protests.
The Chancellor, Dr.

Hoeven,

bowed under the pressure and
re-invited Dr. Fiedler. The new
invitation was couched in such

terms, however, as to make it
probable that Dr. Fiedler would
be forced to reject if.

The ASVA has now formed a
committee to investigate the possibility of'inviting Dr. Fiedler
to come. Its chairman. Marlene
deVries, in a letter to the Spec
trum, had this to say;
"Because Dr. Fiedler most
probably will refuse this low in-

COMPACT
CONTACT

vitation, we (the ASVA) have
plans that we invite him, without
the Chancellor and the bloody
Senate (which supported the
Chancellor.)

“The only practical objection

is that we don’t have enough
money to pay the journey from
However,
America to Holland.
since he is planning to teach in
England this year, we propose
that he come here from England,
We have just sent him a letter
to that effect.”
The committee is also

A

new

Retail sales set record
The National

36% of its member concerns
showed increased incoming business in Aug. from July, the highest percentage of month-to-month
gains since April 1966. Inventory depletion continued for the
eighth straight month.
Retail sales in Aug. set a record for the third consecutive
month, up 1% from July and 6%
from a year earlier. In addition,
manufacturers reported that they
expect their sales to rise much
faster than their inventories.
RCA reported that factory color
TV sales so far this year through
Aug. were 30% higher than the
record number sold last year despite a five week strike and
that prospects for the fourth
quarter are excellent.

-I

ToriTicu campus council
*

.

attention to COmmiltOr
_

campus organization,

"

H
(

It is the chairmen's opinion
that because of the large size of
the university, commuting students do not reap the same benefits that the resident students
do. "Our goal in the Committer
Council is to discover why jpis
is true and to rectify it,” sfie

overnight campus facilities, commuter car pools, and activities
sponsored by commuters. They
also hope to make commuters
more aware of the opportunities,
facilities, and services on campus.

said

%

Committee chairmen are, now
being appointed and a general
meeting is tentatively scheduled
for the week of Sept. 25.

After an organizational meetwith their advisor. Mr.
Thomas Haenle, it was decided
ing

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Computers are flying
Getting back to the stock market, the stocks that possess the
most favorable outlook are the
computer issues. Expected to increase 1000'! in size by 1975,
the computer industry has already shown that it can handle
many of the technical problems
arising from the size and complexity of the computers.
The Control Data Corporation
was one of the fastest growing
companies in the United States
until 1966 when it began to
experience technical difficulties
and start-up expenses with its
new line of large computers.
Sales and earnings fell to such
an extent that in the 1966 fiscal
year, CDA reported a loss of
$1,700,000.
Control Data has now handled
this problem successfully. For
the 1967 fiscal year, sales rose
40% and, instead of a loss, CDA
reported a profit of $8,500,000
or $.98 a share. For next year,
look for earnings of at least
$14,000,000 or $1.75 a share.
There is hardly a company today
with such a rosy future. Even
though the stock is selling at $133
CDA is certainly to be recommended for much further capital
appreciation.

International Business Systems
and Scientific Data Systems are the other two standouts
in the computer industry. IBM is
in a class by itself. For the past
ten years, any investor who did
not want to take risks, but who
was still looking for growth, a
quality A investment and capital
(IBM)

gains, bought AT&amp;T,

&gt;

•

■

«i

The immediate goals envisioned by Miss Mann and her cochairman Elaine Bolot include

m

of

Purchasing Agents reported that

A continuing policy of monetary ease by the Federal Reserve
Board has also been evident,
sigmn
wh ch seems t° be
cant since tight credit conditions
i
were responsible for the February°ctober 1966 bear market.
lw VUIIIIIlUivI Another favorable factor has
b e
the increased willingness
that the Council will be a
dinating body for the comnW f t be mutual f unds t&lt;&gt; enlter the
as e lden d by the large
tors, not a governing body.
' mar
number of share blocks that have
changed hands in the last few
According to Miss Mann, the
Council will be composed of all weeks. The only dampening incommuters who have indicated fluence on the economy is the
prospect for a long strike at Ford
an interest in the problems of
commuWls and Ibc willingness
Motors.
to solve tlvpsc problems. Thus far
there have been approximately

Judy Mann, U.C. Senator and
co-chairman of the Commuter
Council, expressed the aims as
twofold. These are: to involve
commuters in campus activities
and to bridge the gap between
residents and commuters.

for contacts

The Fiedler furor however has

brought out new leaders and new

_

—

here 1 It's an ail
purpose solution tor complete
lens care, made by the
Murine Company
So what else is new’
Weil, the removable
lens carrying case
on the bottom of
every bottle, that's
new, too And it s
exclusive with
Lensme, the
solution for
ail your contact
lens problems

years.

__l

organized specifically for a formerly voiceless group
the
commuters.

is

However, with all the excellent
economic news that has appeared in the last week, the market
appears to be headed in an upward direction. The recent developments seem to signify that another boom in the economy is
getting under way. Price increases for chlorine, glycerine, and
other related products were announced last week by Dow Chemical.

“

The meeting is scheduled for
7 p.m. Wednesday in the Fillmore Room of Norton Hall.

the Commuter Council, has been

Lensme

Amsterdam and its university
have a history of battles over
academic freedom. In recent
years, the Proves have been in
the lead of most of the protests.
But this year they announced
that they had ceased to function.
It seemed that there might be
an end to the many
ins” that
had occurred in the last five

A third proposal, one which is
not expected to be defeated,
would disqualify
a non-payer
from holding an officer position
in any recognized club.

.

X

For the last month and one
half, the list has traded in a
narrow range, with some technical indications that it will have
to test the 887-888 low of last
month before more upward presf
sure can be exerted.

us.”

facility.

One bill, to be presented by
Student Association Treasurer
Douglas Braun, will ask that non
payers be assessed $10 for every
club they join. Another proposal

Newly
directs

to raise
iimists—gi
Attention bear
the white flag. Attention bull market enthusiasts—victory
seems quite hear.
From Feb. to Oct. of last year, the Dow Jones Industrial
Average had plunged more than 250 points. By Aug. 1
all but 68 points of the loss had been recovered.

Miss deVries readily admits,
“it is not whether Fiedler comes
or not that is the most important
thing, but whether we are acting
according to the principles which
are so important to both him and

would institute a double fee
standard—one for payers and
one for non-payers. The nonpayers would be charged extra
for the use of any Norton Hall

Students who do not pay their
activity fee will probably be
charged anyway.

-

by Michael Galitzer

ing a teach-in. The teach-in, however, is planning to concentrate
on the larger issue of defining
the university’s role in upholding
“academic freedom”, whether a
university should heed public
opinion, and if so, how much
attention it should pay to it.

Senate bills would compensate
for losses due to unpaid fees
under consideration —and stand
a good chance of being passed.

Why carry around a whole

case

demonstrations.

organiz

When the Student Senate
meets for the first time tomorrow
night, several bills aimed at
penalizing non-payers will be

chemistry set full of potions
for wetting, cleaning and
soaking contact lenses?

On Wall Street

£f

"

,

Today, if I had $5000 and had
a choice of buying 100 shares
of AT&amp;T at $50 gy share or 10
shares of IBM at $500 a share,
I wouldn’t hesitate to buy IBM.
For there is one very important
word governing the action of
stocks—that word is GROWTH.
Few people realize that in 10
years neither AT&amp;T nor General
Motors will be the largest corporation in America. The No. 1
spot looks like a lock-up for IBM.

Psychology club to meet;
plans community projects
The Psychology Club will hold
its first meeting Wednesday at
4 p.m.i Room 312 Townsend Hall.
All students interested in psychology are invited.

Ira S. Cohen, professor
and Associate Chairman of sociology and Dr. Martin Stamen.
Chief of Psychology Service at
Veterans.

At the meeting, plans will be
discussed concerning community
projects. There will be an exchange of ideas between the students, the advisor. Dr. James D.
Marcia, assistant professor of
psychology, and other faculty

Psychology majors will have the
opportunity to work with patients. They will attend various
discussions and research projects.
Information will be available concerning graduate schools specializing in psychology.

members of the department.
Members

of

the

Psychology
Club will have the opportunity
to work at Veterans Administration Hospital under the direction

Delivered FREE By

DiROSE
$1.05.

P t

TR 3-1330

of Dr.

“The Psychology Club is the
best chance for the students to
become
involved with their
work," stated Steve Imber, president.
Sigma Kappa Phi

SHOE SHINE
Sept. 20, 10-4, Norton
25c per pair

Union

�Tuesday, September 19, 1967

Pag* Thr**

The Spectrum

Constitutional Convention divided on dateline
Sept. 19
news.
the issues of education and welfare.
by Kirtland I. King
United Press International

ALBANY —The New York State Constitutional Convention is locked in a bitter political fight as the deadline for
drafting a new charter nears.
The convention opened April 4 with Democratic and
Republican leaders playing “Hearts and Flowers.” They

promised a new constitution that would be simplified, streamlined and void of partisan politics. For a while it looked
like they really meant it.
As the 186 delegates began
moulding the new amendments,
however, the Republican minority
charged they were having less
and less to say about what went
into the final product. They
claimed President Anthony Travia and his Democratic colleagues
were using “muscle” in pushing
across constitutional changes Republicans object to.
Two new amendments dealing

Duryea said he was speaking
only for himself but, when word
of his position circulated at the
convention, other Republican delegates said they felt the same.
Republicans contend the amendment is too broad and that it
might cost as much as $1,4 billion a year. Opponents of the

idea want constitutional limitations as to just how far the state
should go in giving financial help
to college students.

with education and welfare provoked a wide split between the
two major political parties and
the argument is so deep it is
certain to be carried to the vot-

might have to stand the cost of
board and room as well as tui-

ers.

tion and books.

Perry Duryea Jr., GOP Assembly minority leader and second
vice president of the convention,

The suggested plan for having
the state take over the full cost
of welfare has provoked not only
a political split but a division
between New York City and upstate delegates. This argument
has crossed party lines.

said that unless Democrats
change the free higher education
amendment in the final stages
he will campaign and vote against
it. His opposition will cover the
whole new constitution if the
amendment is not submitted sep-

arately.

As the amendment now reads,
one Republican said, the state

Should the state take over all
welfare expenses, it would increase the mandatory budget by

about

$538 million a year. Of
this amount New York City would

get 70 per cent.

As of now, only four constitutional articles and the preamble have, been completed and
there are 11 articles to go.

Despite the Sept. 26 deadline,

debate continued at a slow pace.
The delegates will not be hurried. They debate almost every
phrase.

While discussing the judiciary
amendment the other day. the
delegates spent three hours on
a single change suggested from
the floor and then defeated it.
There were nine amendments offered.

Some of the veteran legislators
have appealed again and again
for brevity.

“1 was elected by 70,000 people and I am going to be heard,"
a young delegate said. "Nobody
is going to shut me off.”
Travia still insists the delegates will adjourn on time and
that the new constitution will, be
on the fall election ballot for approval by the voters. But, there
is a large bloc of delegates pressing for a recess and a special
election next spring.

So, the convention, which opened on a note of sweetness and
peace, appears to be closing to
. . you rascal, you.”
the tune:

SAIGON—U S. pets struck closer than ever before to Communist
China, hit three targets inside North Vietnam’s largest port city of
Haiphong and bracketed its capital ofHanoi with bombing runs, an
American spokesmen said Monday Hanoi Radio claimed three American planes were lost in Sunday’s raiding.
BUFFALO—Governor Rockefeller is expected to discuss his $2.5
billion transportation bond issue when he speaks before a Buffalo
Area Chamber of Commerce meeting next month.
The Oct. 13 luncheon will honor the new Niagara Frontier Transportation Authority and its predecessor, the Niagara Frontier Port
Authority.

VATICAN CITY—Pope Paul VI Monday entered his third week
of illness from an internal infection and faced a series of intensive
tests to determine if surgery is needed.
The Roman Catholic Church leader, who will be 70 on Sept. 26,
told his doctors he wants surgery if they feel it necessary to prevent
a recurence of his urinary tract infection, Vatican sources said.
ITHACA, N.Y.—Cornell University officials revealed Sunday
night that a three-man panel from the university School of Hotel
Administration will conduct seminars behind the Iron Curtain and
in Munich this week.
The official said (he classes will be held in Moscow, Leningrad,
Munich and Belgrade beginning Wednesday and ending Sept. 30.
CAIRO—Egyptian President Ganial Abdel Nasser eulogized his
former Vice President Abdel ilakin Amer as "more than a brother
to me,” the Cairo newspaper Al Ahram said Monday. Amer, under
suspicion of heading a plot to overthrow Nasser, committed suicide
last week.

BUFFALO —Sen. Jacob K. Javils (R N Y.) visited Buffalo Monday
to help Erie County Republicans kick off their 1967 election drive.
Among the slops included on his one-day visit was a trip to the headquarters of the local civil rights organization BUILD.
WASHINGTON—President Johnson, in a tribute to Carl Sandburg, said Sunday that America will miss the late poet because "there
will not be one like him again.”
Speaking al national memorial services held for Sandburg at the
Lincoln Memorial, Johnson said he was not a literary critic "but I

think that Carl Sandburg belongs along with Walt Whitman.”
MOSCOW —Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin is slightly ill and
has been forced to slow down his work, a foreign ministry spokesman
said Monday. The spokesman said Kosygin’s condition was not serious. But he did not say how long the premier has been ailing, what
he was suffering from or how long Kosygin’s doctors expected it to
last.

Guaranteed income to be National Council of Churches
this year's debate topic endorses civil rights movement
The Debate Society’s Fall activities began Tuesday with the
annual Coffee Hour. Prospective
and old members listened to ’an
exhibition debate between Ted
Beringer of UB and David Hayes
of Fordham University.
The twofold function of the

Debate Society is to sponsor intercollegiate debates on the national college topic and to encourage informal and unique oncampus debates. The national
topic this year is: Resolved that
the Federal Government should

provide a minimum annual cash
income to all its citizens.

The first meeting will be held
Wednesday, Sept. 20, at 6:30 p.m.
in Room 357 Norton Hall. Plans
to be discussed include sending
debate teams to various colleges,
such as the University of Pittsburgh,

Brooklyn College, Kent
State, and Boston University. The
sponsoring of exhibition debates
on campus will also be discussed.
Anyone interested in any form
of debate or discussion is invited
to attend.

Student I.D. may mean savings
Are you planning a trip to the
Bahamas or perhaps Mexico, or
maybe California. If you are, or
even if you aren’t, take a quick
glance at the back of your stu-

dent I.D. card.

across North

America, or you
may simply stop by at Room 213
Norton Hall for your copy.
But what about students from
other areas coming to Buffalo?

The information on it wasn’t
put there just to take up space.
It was put there to enable students to receive discounts at numerous places all across the continent. Such diverse facilities as
nightclubs, movies, museums, res-

What discounts can they receive
here? The answer is very simple
—nothing. There is as yet no program in Buffalo, but Meryl Markowitz, N.S.A. co-ordinator at
UB is confident that with student
co-operation there will be a program by the end of the semester.

salons, booteries, book stores, and
cleaning stores offer discounts.
For a mere $1,00 the U.S. Natmal Student Association will
send you a handbook on traveling

If you are interested in starting
this or any type of program, plan
to attend a staff meeting on Friday, September 22 at 3 p.m. in
Room 213 Norton Hall. Everyone
is welcome.

taurants, barber shops, clothing
stores, driving schools, beauty

ATLANTA (DPI)— T1 he Nation
al Council of Churches’ general

board concluded a two-day busi
ness session Friday by adopting
a militant civil rights program
and calling for an end to U.S.
bombing in Vietnam. The
board also put out a peace
feeler in hopes of improving re
lations with conservative and
fundamentalist church groups.

The resolulign urging an im-

mediate end to the bombing of
Tcsl yourself.
North Vietnam suggested that What do you see in the ink
blots?
factions
submit
the
warring
mat
ter to the United Nations for a

settlement.

Program points
The general board session spent

two days debating and then passing its most militant direct action
civil rights program. It included:
Endorsing the Milwaukee Coun
cil of Churches' open houses
marches led by white Koman
Catholic priest, James E. Oroppi,
and extending the endorsement
to "all communities throughout
•

Many Fundamentalist churches
in the nation have turned their
back on the Council because of
its civil rights programs. A resolution passed by the general
board asked for “clarification of

the issues” that have caused the
split.

“They’re not even talking to us
now,” said the Rev. William A.
Norgran, an Episcopalian from
New York City who sponsored
the resolution.
It asked the National Faith and

Order Colloquim,

composed

of

Roman Catholic, Protestant and
Orthodox churches to be the go
between in the peace effort

Swingline

the nation;"
Asking its 34 member denomination, representing 40 million
Americans, to consider using the

I.

111 A sizzling steak

•

churches’ vast buying power in
economic boycotts against busi
nesses that discriminate against
Negroes;

\

Committing 10 per cent of the
Council’s budget not already

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A moth?
TOT Staplers?
(TOT Staplers!? What

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ghetto rebuilding programs to be
by the poor themselves;

directed

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�Tuesday, September 19,

Th« Sp«etrum

Pag* Four

1967

of new constitution
TheThepresentation
York Constitutional Convendelegates to the
New

week. The finished
tion will be wrapping up their work this
product will be presented to the voters this November.
This is all very democratic, but the way the constitucertainly determine just
tion is presented to the voters will
voice
the
of
the State actually have.
a
citizens
how miieh nf
document will
Any thorough analysis of the completed
each
article.
The point is
of
consideration
involve careful
either apthat it is highly unlikely that any individual will
Constitution.
the
entire
of
prove or disapprove
might not
Republicans have already indicated that they
it is preif
to
Constitution
the
support
adoption
be able to
Voters
sented in a “package.” The point they make is valid.
its own merits.
issue
on
to
decide
each
right
the
should have
A number of sections in the new document provide for
intelligent revision of the old law. Some of the proposals,
however, and ludicrous.
enough
If enough persons dislike one provision strongly
to vote against the entire package, the many good proposals
will also be lost.
On the other hand, if most voters dislike certain provisions but decide to vote for the package because of other
advantages, this would imply that all of the document, even
the undesireable sections, has the ratification of the voters.
The only fair and responsible way to permit the voters
to have a real say in the laws of the state is to provide for
approval of the document by section.
If delegates believe that they have produced the best
possible constitution, and if they believe in the ability of
the electorate to decide for itself, there should be no reason
why any delegate would object to presntation by article
rather than as a package.

candidate
The search for a one

year remaining before
With only little more than
to be a shortage
seems
election,
Presidential
there
the 1968
of qualified candidates for the office.
The Democrats will undoubtedly endorse the incumbent,
more likely because of his hold on the party than for arty
other reason. But this doesn’t preclude the possibility that
there might be some opposition at the Democratic Convention.
Senator Robert Kennedy has said that he will not be
Nevertheless, his supporters have not been sercandidate.
a
iously restrained. They, like many Americans, feel that this
nation is in dire need of another Kennedy in the White
House.
On the Republican side of the coin. Gov. Romney has
indicated his desire to occupy the White House, but his
“brainwashing” statements may have done irreparable damage to his prospects.
And then, of course, there’s always former Vice-President Nixon. He surely could be coaxed into accepting the
nomination.
There are a number of Republicans who are possibilities
for the nomination although they have reiterated their desire not to run. Judging from past experience, those announcements generally mean nothing.
California’s Gov. Reagan said he wants to remain governor. Let's hope he mans it. Given the way the electorate
in this country picks its winners, if Reagan teamed up with
Shirley Temple, they’d probably be an unbeatable pair.
Senator Percy and Mayor Lindsay have also been mentioned from time to time, but any realistic appraisal of their
experience and ability at the present time byt the party will
probably deny them the number one slot on the ticket.
It seems as though Gov. Rockefeller, who also has said
he is not a candidate, has the inside track to the nomination.
In a recent Gallup Poll survey. Rock pulled 48' r of the vote
tfhile Johnson gathered only 46' . The other 6'r were un&lt;

decided.

If this trend continues. Rockefeller may well lead the
GOP in 1968. Perhaps the Governor might consider running
on this slogan: “Let Rocky do for the country what he has
don for New York State." He may lose New York, but the
rest of the nation might back him.
At any rate, Rockfeller will have to unite the liberal
Republicans if the conservatives are to be stopped at the
convention, Rockfeller may be an acceptable randidate for
President, but why must we settle for merely "acceptable”
candidates?
If we assume, then, that President Johnson will be the
Democratic candidate and the Republicans settle on an
“acceptable’ candidate, the serious voters of this country
may find it difficult to cast a ballot in 1968.
What this country needs more than any program or
policy is a well-qualified, capable and far-sighted Presidential
Candidate. “Enlightened” is perhaps a better word.
If such a candidate is to be presented, the Democrats
should seriously consider an alternative to LBJ, and the
Republicans had better search far and wide for a dark horse.
The voters of this country need a choice; at least one candidate should really be “Presidential timber.”

Readers
Writings

’

the burgher
by

Schwab

Speaking with an old friend the other day.
traveling the righteous establishment road
and has become an R.A, (resident advisor, rotten

He’s

alcoholic, etc.)

One thing he mentioned disturbed me greatly.
1 had asked, in an effort to make sociable conversation, “What’s the new freshmen class look like?”

“You know," he said, “this freshmen class
seems to be marking a change in the State University of Buffalo. There just doesn’t seem to be
as many radicals and far-out kids as in the good
old days.”
I tried to explain that you can’t spot a radical
or something like that
and that
by his cover
given time, the class of 71 would turn up their
—

—

share of student protestors.

Then I began to worry. A horrible thought
overwhelmed me, I dared not utter it for the
longest time; not until I made sure that it hadn'l
already happened.

Administrative conspiracy
What if a plan, originating at the highest
levels of administrative hierarchy, has been instituted to make certain that student activists are
eliminated? What if one of the monstrous computers, stashed in the lower confines of Goodyear
Hall, has been programmed by some administrative fiend to weed out the radicals before they
ever set eyes on Hayes Hall? It would be a simple
matter to trace common characteristics of our
present protestors and then program the computer
to automatically send out neatly typed letters
of rejection to the possible troublemakers.
Could it happen? Not in a free country, you
answer. But why not? Who is it that gives the

administration the most grief? Who is it that
causes the greatest irritation among Buffalo resiespecially those who are heard; the fringe
dents
elements who call in on Buffalo radio’s “Open
Mouth” shows to denounce the protestors, marchers, smelly beards, uncouth manners and anyone
who doesn’t sit in the library and study at least
15 hours a day? Who is it that causes old women
to write to the Governor’s office, asking where
their tax dollars are going?
—

There is all the reason in the world to elimbunch, those who cause friction on

inate this
campus.

The implications of these horrible thoughts
rattled my psyche so much that I had to be reassured that it wasn't happening. I phoned Admissions and asked if they had admitted any
hippies, radicals, protestors or draft-card burners
this year, and if not, why not?

Rank only criterion?
They answered pleasantly, “We don't know. We
only consider class rank and standing. If there are
not any of the types you mention, it is completely
coincidental. As a matter of fact,” the voice continued. “there is a young bearded gentleman
burning his draft card just outside my window
here on Administration Row,"
"How do 1 know that’s not just a token draft
card burner?” I asked, constantly aware of the
administration's rhetoric. “How do I know it’s not
just an administrative trick aimed at pulling the
wool over my sharp eyes and making students
believe that we still have radicals here?”
Again I heard the same line, this time glossed
over to sound like something else. I told the party
on the other end of the line just that.
The next thing I heard was “X!$$ ?•&amp;!* Uppity
Journalist” and a “click” as the line went dead.

Grad students are spectators
To the Editor:

I must take exception to the opinions expressed by Mr, Barrett in his published letter of
Sept. 8.
Name calling and habitat cannot obscure the
fact that fees, athletic as well as student activity,
are no longer a matter of law but of conscience.
The role of the Graduate Student vis-a-vis
intercollegiate athletics is that of a spectator. The
suggestion that our pride and prestige is in any
way linked to the outcome of an afternoon’s en-

tertainment is ludicrous.
The letter circulated by the Graduate Student
Association does not deny the importance of athletics. It reaffirms the policy of the State University
of New York that intercollegiate athletic competition is not an integral part of the educational
process. It informs graduate students of their
freedom of choice. There can be no greater loyalty
to a university than this.
Richard

B. Barrett.

Treasurer, Graduate Chemists Club

Abandoned auto disturbs reader
To the Editor:

I write to bring to the attention of University
authorities something that has been bothering me
for months. Parked in the faculty lot between
Norton Hall and the Health Science Building is a
yellow Volkswagen convertible. The car has a
flat tire and has been there since last winter.
Evidently, the owner has forgotten about it or
else it’s a stolen car, and the owner is looking
for it. With the parking situation as bad as it is,
one more space could always help. I suggest that
University officials track down the owner and have
the car removed. Thank You.
S.W,

every
The Spectrum is published twice-weekly
Tuesday and Friday
during the regular academic
the State University of New York at Buffalo,
3435 Main Street. Buffalo, New York 14214. Offices
are located at 355 Norton Hall. Circulation: 15,000.
—

—

year at

Editor-in-Chief—MICHAEL L. D'AMICO
Managing Editor —RICHARD R. HAYNES
Asst. Managing Editor—RICHARD SCHWAB
Business Manager—SAMUEL A. POWAZEK
Advertising Manager—DAVID E. FOX
Campus
Eric Sharp
Margaret Anderson
Asst.
City
VACANT
Asst.
Lilian Waite
Feature Barry C. Holtzclaw
Asst.
Ronald Ellsworth
Sports
Robert Woodruff
Asst.
W. Scott Behrens

Layout
Asst.
Copy
Asst.
Photo.
Asst.

L. Sheedy
John Trigg
Judy Riyeff
Joceylyne Hailpern
Edward Joscelyn

Promotion
Director

David

VACANT

&amp;

Circulation

Murray

Richman

The Spectrum is a member of the United States
Student Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press
and United Press International. Subscriptions at $3.00

a semester.

Represented for national advertising by National Educational Advertising Service. Inc., 420 Madison Ave.,
N. Y. Republication of all news dispatches
is for bidden without the express consent of the
editor-in-chief. Rights of republication of all other
matter herein are also reserved.

New York,

Second class

Editorial

postage paid at Buffalo, New York.
is determined by the Editor-in-Chief.

policy

�Tuesday, September 19,

1967

Pag* Five

The Spectrum

BE IW OLYMPUS

No coffee at law School

By Interiandi

The Sham

To the Editor:

I am a student at

the State University of
Buffalo Law School and I have never been in Buffalo before August. I am also an avid coffee drinker and my gripe is very simple: Why doesn't the
Law School have a coffee machine in the Eagle
Street building?

by Martin Guggenheim
It might have all begun many, many years ago
Christian Anderson would have said, “Once
upon a time") when there lived the great Emperor
who loved his clothes more than anything else

:

(Hans

I wouldn’t object nearly so much if it weren’t
for the fact that there are presently two soft drink
dispensers in that very building.
Perhaps someone from the Student Bar Association could do something about my terrible problem.
I certainly hope that people in Buffalo drink

in the world.

coffee.

Caffine Lover

Business advisement criticized

Well, the Emperor paraded all through the
streets, and everyone marvelled at his beautiful
outfit. Then the King passed a little boy—a naive,
innocent little boy. There was little else the boy
could say but, “Why. the Emperor has no clothes

To the Editor:

With regards to this year’s Business Administration and its advisement service, I am wondering where advice for the undergraduate business
student can be obtained. I have seen the advisors
and have recognized them as graduates of June
’67. (Are they able to advise?)
It would be appreciated by many, if you would
let the business school receptionist and The Spectrum know where our experienced, capable advisors are hiding and can be located. Hope to
get a quick reply as advice is desperately needed.
A disgusted business student

Against teachers' strikes

on!”

"I mean, everybody's up-tight about this lack of communication and it's your bag, dig, but it really puts me on a
bummer, see?"

To the Editor:
Just a comment on the letter written in the
Sept. 8 issue of The Spectrum concerning the ban
on national fraternities. I cannot attempt to be as
objective as Mr. (or is it Miss) B.M. I can not
just dismiss a system which has been part of this
University’s life, let alone practically every other
institution of higher learning in the world, by
saying that its members are silly thrill seekers
who are seemingly out of place in the “sterile”
atmosphere of college life.
By the very nature of the fraternity system
there has to be a certain amount of selectivity in
choosing its members, for closeness is what makes
a fraternity function. The days of outright discrimination are gone, yes B.M., gone. And obviously
any local fraternity’s admission policies cannot be
any more or less “discriminatory” than ours. But
B.M. knows better, so I won’t argue!

I’ll only ask anyone who reads this letter to
think about the following things that fraternities
have given to this campus: spirit (which is sorely
lacking in most sections of this campus); various
fund drives for various groups such as the Heart
Fund, United Fund and the American Cancer Society, and of course it is an outlet for some 1,000
members of this campus. And let us not forget
that the greatest majority of the Greeks in this
school are held in high academic standing. This
you cannot achieve by drinking beers and making
noise.

Steven Hoch

Defends national fraternities
To the Editor:

I am writing this letter to let you know that
I am in complete disagreement with the editorial
about teachers that appeared in Friday’s Spectrum.
What right do teachers have to keep thousands
of children out of school? They are constantly
complaining that they are underpaid and overworked. I would say that teachers receive a very
good wage with ample vacation time. And I think
that only in a very few areas are they required
to teach in over-crowded classrooms with insufficient facilities.
Anyone who is a teacher today certainly must
have known what the pay and working conditions
were for teachers when they were going to school.
They chose the teaching profession with full knowledge of what they were getting into.
I think it’s about time teachers started doing
the job they’re supposed to be doing and stopped
marching around the streets. Children across the
country should be in school, and every teacher
that’s worth his salt would be right there with
them.

WriterPlease be brief. Letters should not exceed
300 words. All letters must be signed and the address
and telephone number of the writer must be included. Positive verification of authorship will be made
before a letter is printed.
Letters will be kept in strict confidence.
The Spectrum will use initials or pen name, if
requested. But anonymous letters are never used.
The Spectrum reserves the right to edit or delete
material submitted for publication, but the intent of
letters will not be changed.

'

These two tailors came to him and sold him a
new outfit—this outfit was so beautiful that if
someone was stupid or unsuited for his job, he
could not see it. Naturally, a King is not stupid
so he said he saw it. The Prime Minister, the
entire cabinet and, in fact, all the people too, said
they saw it. How could any of them think themselves more stupid than the next roan, and surely they were all suited for their jobs.

The Lighter Side
In these days when the nation is divided over so many
issues, we can be thankful to Reps. Paul Rogers and Richard
T. Hanna for providing an issue we can all unite behind.
Or under. Rogers, of Florida, and Hanna, of California,
both are Democrats. Which normally means they won’t
agree on anything.

bottoms.”

Frankly, I wasn’t aware there
was such an apparent plan but
now that Rogers and Hanna have
called it to our attention, we can
all stand foursquare against it.
Many people tend to underestimate the ocean floor. They
think of it as just sort of lying
there, doing nothing. If you are
one of those people, you should
ask yourself “where would we
be without it?”
Oceanographers tell us the
ocean floor performs functions of
enormous importance. Like holding up the ocean.

Dry up business
Without the ocean floor, we
would have a lot of sunken
oceans on our hands.
Which
would be bad for business in
Atlantic City. Furthermore, the
ocean floor’s potential has hardly
been tapped.
Anyone old enough to remember the first Florida land boom
will recall that real estate developers in Rogers’ home state attempted to colonize the ocean
floor.
Hundreds of frostbitten Yankees bought Florida homesites
which upon investigation proved
to be under water at least at high
tide.

At that time, there wasn't a
great deal of enthusiasm for underwater living. But now, with

the population explosion imposing demands for more space, plus
improvements in scuba diving
equipment, suburbia may become
submergia.
Consider also the famous project Mohole, a multi-million-dollar
plan to bore a hole in the ocean
floor.

Boring affair
That project, for reasons that
need not be gone into here, has
now been shelved. But at some
future date the U.S. government
may decide it wants to bore the

hole after all.
You never know when the U.S.
government is going to get in a
hole-boring mood.
But suppose, as Rogers

and

Hanna fear, control of the ocean
floor has been vested in the United Nations. Imagine the burden
that would impose on U.S. Am-

bassador Arthur J. Goldberg.
He would have to go before
the General Assembly and explain why the United States
wants to bore a hole in the ocean.
Which is bound to lose something in translation.
All things considered, then, it
is best to keep the ocean floor
as is. Goldberg has enough
trouble explaining our Arab-Israeli policy.

Quotes in the

By this lime, Freshman, you have been on and
in, indoctrinated and oriented, and welcomed and
accepted into this Institution. I prefer to present
my own orientation program since I have never
appreciated the one formally given anyway. Every
year, the leader of the History Department puts
on his Phi Beta Kappa gown and lectures on the
significance of Caps and Gowns at graduation
this to an audience which presumably contains no
one who has ever attended a college class.

—

by Dick West

Yet both came forth this week
with statements opposing what
Rogers said was “an apparent
plan to internationalize the sea-

What relevance does this have to students
either entering or returning to a university in
the United States in the 1960s? I think I would
prefer to direct today's column primarily to the
incoming freshman. This is not due to any prejudice on my part, but merely reflects my belief that
orienting to this Institution one who has already
attended is a waste of effort.

news

United Press International

MILWAUKEE—Closed housing advocates, in a letter calling for
the removal of civil rights leader Rev, James Groppi despite a vote
of support, given the fiery priest by an archdiocesan Roman Catholic

priests’ senate:
“Is it possible for Father Groppi to take a leave of absence, in
order that church funds and church property do not have to be used
against the wishes of many church supporters to aid in probable
lawless demonstrations?”
OCEAN CITY, Md.—U.S. Weather Bureau officials, commenting
on dizzy hurricane Doria, which wandered aimlessly about the Atlantic for four days and then barged unexpectedly into the mid-Atlantic states, churning high tides and flooding:
“This is historic, since there is no previous record of a hurricane
approaching this area directly from this angle.”

College is the logical step in the process of
the maturation and education of the middle and
upper class adolescent in the United States. Indeed, middle class schools from the first grade
and beyond begin preparing, both overtly and
covertly, their studeiits for college.

As suck, the objects of this education (you)
begin to perceive their schooling as a means. Thus,
your goal in satisfactorily completing junior high
school is attendance in high school; this same
situation applies to one's high school "education.”
It is at this point that it becomes necessary
to begin an orientation program. In spite of the
large number of people used to orient, and in
spile of the elaborate posters and exhibits that
are available for this function at this campus, the
incoming class is never informed that using one’s
education as a means is no longer advisable. Far
too often, people come to this University and try
to succeed as they did in high school.

Consequently, college educations are often used
as stepping stones to careers or professional schools,
but rarely is education perceived as it should be
—namely, as primarily a result.

Never arc freshmen told their first day here
that obtaining knowledge for no other reason
than its possession is sufficient. The grades, the
degrees, the honors are all external, and hence

finally, unimportant symbols Possessing the knowledge, rather than apparently possessing it, is what
makes one knowledgeable

Those who pursue a course of action which
aims at apparently possessing knowledge are sacrificing something in order to succeed. Everytime
one seeks a certain grade in order to please his
parents, everytime a student takes a course which
is academically insignificant merely -to obtain a
high grade, each time a student docs, an assignment merely because it is demanded of him, each
time one allows himself not to question merely
because he is embarrassed or afraid, he is indeed
losing something.

There can be no doubt that acting conversely to the above may allow an individual to better
“succeed” in this sham of education Imagine if
the same little boy who noticed the Emperor was
naked came to this University. In his complete
naivete he may even ask. "Why do so many, who
seek so little, go to college'’”

The Spectrum's pages for

Editorials

&amp;

Opinions

It is the policy of The Spectrum to report the
news fully and impartially in the news pages,
to express the opinions of the newspaper only
in the editorial pages and to publish all sides
of important controversial issues.
"Without

tKprwon,

freedom of

cipmton

.%

rT—i.nqtwi."

�The Spectrum

Six

Pag*

Tuesday, September

Studio Arena:

campus releases...

Director Leicht discusses LUV",
urges youth to find theater careers. Ex Ha,lem 9ans leade
L

staging and placing these characters on our three sided stage is
a most important facet in presentation. You must maintain a
certain fluidify in order to get
a peak audience reaction to the
play at the right time. The
timing of the jokes must be
right to get the people laughing,
and this is linked with the movement of the actors on stage.” he

by James Brennan
Spectrum Staff Reporter

More goes into a professional play like “LUV” than
ever meets the public eye. The preparation and planning
needed to stage a production of this sort begins weeks
before the actual finished product reaches the Buffalo
audiences.
A man who plays a big duction “LUV” and his views on
part in arranging costumes, the theater.
“Realism is a trap which the
staging, rehearsals and the
direction of this play is the theater has fallen into with the
of motion pictures. If
Associate Director of the advent
the stage does not come away
Studio Arena Theatre, Allan from this tendency toward realLeicht.
ism and move toward a more
His appearance suggests his

ability to create beauty on stage
and maintain bureaucracy off
stage. His managerial concerns
are vast and include a myriad
Of administrative details.
Mr. Lcicht recently took lime
out to chat about his latest pro-

STEAK

OUT

“The theater and movies are
two entirely different mediums.
The stage ranks far above films
because it is so much more alive.

It is full of color and life and
surprises," he continued.

Three dimensions

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three different sections of the

audience.”

The setting for “LUV” is a
bridge over the East River in

LUV explained
“LUV is a very verbal play
which lakes a very normal thing
and looks at it in an abnormal
way. The dialogue provides much
of the humor in the play, and it
is also reinforced by the physical
actions of the performers. These
actions arc sometimes slapstick
and at times keep the play mov
ing when the dialogue slows
down.
”1 feel 'l.UV' is a small char
aclcr comedy that is similar to
many other psychological verbal
type modern plays." comments
the director. “The characters .ire
wild and sort of crazy, and if
you combined the two, you might
have a pretty interesting indivi-

dual."

6 oz.

Sirloin Steak Sandwich 85c
Peppers 10c Cheese 10c
Specify Onions
FRENCH FRIES 15c
3 pcs. Chicken w fries
7 pcs. Shrimp

“I must present the audience
with three different pictures be
cause we are working with an
arena stage where the proscenium is extended and open to

New York City. The set design
was created by Douglas Higgins
and is a beautifully lighted and
well constructed bridge setting
that conveys the illusion to all
parts of the audience, no matter
where their seal location.

C Iureoaf Sroifet!

Open 7 days:

with the stage you get the thrill
seeing something live. The liv
ing stage provides a greater form
of contact between audience and
performer than any other media."
declared this vibrant young di-

of

rector.

(near Main)

85f'

Hot Dogs
Hamburgers'*

commented.

Theater careers
Mr. Leicht has a genuine interest in the young people of the
especially those who
area
would like to pursue a career in

"It takes interesting characters
to keep audience attention. Also.

Harlem gang leader of the Harlem Lords.

Auditions planned for Bretolt play
Sept. 20 and 21 at 7 p.m., and
to Norton 344, Sept. 22 at 7 p.m.

The Literature
and Drama
Committee of UUAB will hold
auditions for Bretolt’s “The Private Life of the Master Race"
this week. Interested students
should report to Norton 334,

The play will be directed by
Hal Wicke, Jr. of the Music Department.

The Annual Fenton lecture
series, now in iis 45th year, will
be concerned with the topic of

Studio Arena has many little
jobs available mainly for volunteers
like ushering and stage
crew
that enable young people to work and experience the
theater. “There is not a lot of
money to be found in the theatrical profession, but if you are
willing to give up some of the
monetary benefits, then you will
find it an exciting life,” he said.
—

—

“I also feel that the young
people, between the ages of 15
and 25 should be the audience
we gear our productions to. They
are the future audiences, and
I'd like them to grow up with

theater. They should come
into contact with the theater as
much as possible. We need more
of a young audience, and unless
(he

they become habitually involved
and go regularly, we might
lose them. They should make it
a habit like watching television
or going to the movies. I’m sure
they'll find it a little more re
warding The admission price to
Studio Arena for students is
S1.50 after 8:15 p.m., so financially speaking it is quite easy
for young people to attend the

“Religion and Modern Society”
this year. Under scrutiny will be

the idealistic differences and
similarities between religion and
society.

The lectures will be given during the months of October and

November. They will be held on
Mondays, at 8:30 p.m, in Norton
Hall’s Conference Theater.
October 9 is the date of the
series first lecture. Dr. Daniel
Callahan, editor of Commonweal magazine, will' lecture on
“Religious Experience and the
Contemporary Mind.”

Politics Club to hold first meeting
The Politic’s Club will hold its
first meeting Wednesday, Sept,
20, in room 233, Norton Hall,
from 3 to 5 p.m. New Departmental personnel will be intro-

duced and an outline of the
year’s activities will be presented.
Coffee and donuts shall be served
and all students are invited to
attend.

Mrs. Murphy receives appointment
It was announced Monday that
Mrs. Marjorie Murphy has been
named the new associate director

of the State University of Buffalo Foundation for the Health
Sciences Center.
The announcement was made
by Dr. Douglas M, Surgenor,

Dean of the school of Medicine

and Chairman of the Health Affairs Council. Under Mrs. Murphy’s direction will be Health
Sciences alumni and development
programs such as medicine, dentistry, nursing and pharmacy.

:

theater.”

Mr. Leicht's next directional
assignment will be the “Imaginary Invalid" by Moliere. This
will be Studio Arena’s second
production

in the winter series

and will run
Dec. 2.

Nov.

Faculty-student committee formed
Dr. Claude Welch, Dean of University College, and the Student
Association are forming a committee on curriculum planning.

The aim of the committee is to
review courses presently offered,
and, according to Carol Raynor,
member of UUAB, plan “more
comprehensive and cohesive
classes.”

"The

Threepenny Opera,” a
musical by Kurt Weill and Ber
toll Brecht, will be the first play
presented in the 1967 68
series.
This production opens Sept. 28
and win run through Oct. 28.
It was so popular in New York
that it was a box office attraction
for seven years.

Fries ....95*
w/drink SI.05

&amp;

The first Yearbook Meeting will
SEPTEMBER 21st at 7:00 p m. in

All interested students are invited to attend the committee’s
first meeting, to be held in the
Senate office at 4:00 p.m. on
Tuesday, Sept. 19, Four students
will be selected by a screening
committee, headed by Barry Tollman.

2 through

AIESEG plans meeting
Students interested in working

and traveling abroad during their
summer vacation should attend
a meeting of AIESEC, the International Student Exchange Pro-

be held on THURSDAY.
Norton 356. This meeting
will be open to all who would like to |oin the
BUFFALONIAN

gram, Wednesday at 4 p.m. in
room 234 Norton Hall.
This program is open to all

students interested in broadening their cultural experience.

Eh? auditions scheduled
All students and staff interested in acting in Henry Livings’
EH? should attend tryouts tonight from 7 to 9 p.m. in the
Rehearsal Room at 3274 Main
Street. Directing the play is
Ward Williamson, Chairman of

PLAZA SHOE REPAIR

-&gt;

the Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship will be given by Tom
Skinner. Mr. Skinner is a former

The Millard Fillmore Room
will be the scene of a lecture
on the topic of “God, Man and
the Race Crisis" at 3 p.m. Thursday. The lecture, sponsored by

Annual Fenton lecture series begins

Hey, You!
STAFF.

to speal(

the theater. He feels that young

Pepsi-Diet-Root Beer Teem
ISc and 25c

4:30 p.m.-7 p.m, Mon, Fri
All Day Sat.
12:00-2:00 Sun.

'

people have an excellent opportunity to come in contact with
functional professional theater
right here in their own area.

MILK SHAKES
Choc.-Van-Slraw

Special; Steak

~—

—

I heatrical, colorful, fantastic
fairy tale-like production I feel
it will 'die.

“With films you just have a
graphic color presentation while

3864 N. Bailey

19, 1967

ONE STOP SERVICE
CENTER
Shoes Repaired While-U-Wait
Laundry &amp; Drycleaning
ONE DAY SERVICE

University Plaza
836-4041

the Program in Theatre of the
Faculty of Arts and Letters, and
past director of The Birthday
Party and An Italian Straw Hat.
Scripts may be obtained in the

Reserve Room of Harriman Library.

�Tuesday, September 19, 19(7

Pa**

The Spectrum

Sms

Craft Center handiwork Record students take defense loans
exhibited at create-in

Clay- wielding banditrafters
lemonstrated their skills during

the fountain outside
Norton Hall.
The demonstrations of' the use
of the potter's wheel, sandal-making, stitchery, silver jewelry mak-

Friday at

ing, and silk screening were performed by the staff of the Uni-

versity’s Creative Craft Center
in the Fall ‘Round-the-Fountain

Handicraft Festival.

Demonstrating the shaping and
throwing of clay on the potter's
wheel to make bowls, plates and
related forms were craftsmen

Paul Danels, Mrs. Riali Fuller
and Mrs. UUi Chamberlain.
Mrs.

Huldy Gutekunst, president of Buffalo Craftsmen who
taught advanced
has
leather

Waiting in line
induces hostility
A bus. There’s a line. Grotesque faces and bodies lined up.
The doors open and I'm thrown
to the rear of the bus. The bus
stops in front of Norton and out
race the caged animals, stampeding across the campus to beat
the other animals to the food
line.
We have to get I.D. cards.
There’s a line. A nondescript
hulk of a football player moves
conspicuously to the front of the
line. Ask him if be sneaked ahead
and he will deny it. Who’s going
to argue?
Books are on sale at the book
store. Ten thousand students
must buy them in one day. The
store opens at eight-thirty, but
1 was in front of the closed glass
doors by seven-thirty to avoid
the wait. The doors spring open.
1 lower my horns and stab the
animal in front. He kicks back.
We’re in another line. All of us
are trapped in this jungle.
Inside. People are animals,
spending their lives waiting in
line or pushing other animals
around. Their world is harsh and
hurried. It’s a dark and stuffy
jungle.
Outside. The air is cool, and
the sun lights up real human
faces. I can sit down under a
tree, relaxing, and look at the
sky. A rustling next to me. The
boy who before had kicked like
an animal smiles.

Do you belong to or

know of a swinging
group interested in
steady employment?

If so, enter the

BATTLE OF

THE BANDS
—

A REAL HAPPENING

—

at the

Holiday Inn
Niagara
—

falls blvd.

SEPT. 29

&amp;

30

—

call for available audition
times at

694-2800
Ask for Mr. Ebberts
—

—

craft for three years in the Craft
Center, demonstrated sandal mak-

ing. Mrs. Gutekunst (whose last
name, appropriately enough,
means “good art” also displayed
some of her own work including
large purses, leather desk sets
and cuff links.
A silver lining was added to
the Festival by Bill Helwig, who
made jewelry in that metal, as-

sisted by Ken Kalman.
Mrs. Wilhelmina Godfrey demonstrated what crafts people
now call “stitchery,” an art only
slightly related to what used to

be call “embroidery." Mrs. Godfrey is especially known for her
wall hangings, but demonstrated
in smaller media, such as pfaoc
mats. She also dispalyed a vari-

colored display of cloths, mater-

ials and threads.

A record number of State University of Buffalo students will
be helped through college this
academic year by the National
Defense Student Loan Program.

According to Mr. josepn still-

well, Acting Director of Financial
Afds, over $1.4 million has been
made available for students who
can show a need for aid.
Last year at Buffalo, 1725 applications were accepted.
Since

the loan program

was
authorized by the National Defense Education Act of 1958, over
one million students have borrowed over $1 billion. For every
loan dollar provided by a participating college under NDEA the

Federal Government contributes
nine.

Under the program, an under-

graduate student may borrow up
to $1,000 each academic year to
a total of $5,000. Graduate students may borrow as much as
$2,500 per year to a total of
$10,000. The repayment period
amTinterest do hot 1)6610 until

nine

months after the student
inpcr W and
the repayment of pnncipal may
be extended over a ten-year
completes his studies. The

period.

Participating colleges and uni-

versities approve and make the
loans and are responsible for
collection. All applicants at UB
are required to file a copy of the
Parent’s Confidential Statement
with the College Scholarship
Service in Princeton, New Jersey.
The CSS reviews and makes recommendations on all applica-'
tions to the Office of Financial
Aids.

Repayment of a loan may be
deferred up to three years while
a borrower is serving in the
armed forces, the Peace Corps
or VISTA.

Borrowers who become" fulltime teachers in elementary or
secondary schools or colleges
may have up to half their loans
cancelled at the rate of 10% for
each year of teaching service. If
they elect to teach handicapped
children or in low-income areas,
they may cancel their obligation
at the rate of 15% per year.
Mr. Stillwell noted that his office is still accepting applications
for this year although applications filed now may meet a delay
of up to eight weeks.

The Office of Financial Aid is
located in 216 Harriman Library.

�Tuesday, September 19, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* Eight

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Automobile
Bowling

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Furthering your education
self taught, or through
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Watching television
caring
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pets
Animals or
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Politic!

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Arabic

French

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riding
Hunting, fishing
Sky diving
Car rallying
Flying
Curling
Fencing

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Hebrew
Hungarian
Italian

Slavic

Spanish
Other

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Catholic

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Protestant

Folk
Modern fats
Swing bands
Dixieland

Jewish

Classical

Catholic

Broadway show

Other

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playi.
dm union

Boating
Sailing

Oriental

sociology

New generation (tongs, styles, morals, customs,
Strange phenomena
History
Theatre, the arts
Vegetarianism

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Water skiing
Skin diving

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Protestant

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other occult religions

Pt&gt;c hology and
World event!

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Swimming

Negro

you

Science and math

ikating
Roller tkating
Skiing

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Mniicme
Education
Literature
Philosophy

ova

Golf

Caucasian

school.

Travel, other lands, other cultures
Motorcycles, motor scooters, etc.

Ice

Oriental

light

fiction

Science

Camping, hiking

Negro

no

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or checkers

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Cart

Reading
Sports
Live theatre

Football
Hockey

Caucasian (white)

Your

your

spare til

Guns
Card games

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Medical, law. economic*
Poetry, plays, classics, languages
New stand magazines

From the following pick S*e of
Baseball

following pick five of your major hobby
An (drawing, painting, sketching, etc.)
\rt (sculpturing, carving, ceramics, etc.)
Writing

Photography

Social, political, historical, ickpoui
Romance, detective, comedy, sport*
Science, mathematics, chcnustry. other science*

Your racial origin ir

Your

che

From

tnished)

mrut

(3) slightly outgo***
(6) very outgoing
You would prefer your date to be
category)
you
Do
live at home with your family
What type of literature do you brat like to

(6)
very attractive
(u*e number*)
Minimum acceptable level for date i*
maximum i*
Irons above catcgorie*)
Which of the following categorie* moil accurately indicate your colouring;
(1) Fair hair, fair complexion
(2) Fair hair, medium complexion
(3) Fair hair, ro*y complexion
(4) Fair hair, dark complexion
(3) Medium hair, fair complexion
(6) Medium hair, medium complexion
(7) Medium hair, roiy complexion
(M) Medium hair, dark complexion
(9) Red hair, fair complexion
(10) Red hair, medium complexion
(11) Red hair, roiy complexion
(12) Red hair, dark complexion
(13) Dark hair, (air complexion
(14) Dark hair, medium complexion
(13) Dark hair, roiy complexion
(16) Dark hair, dark complexion
,
By uting number*of above categoric* indicate your dm choice in a date
. doem t matter
lecond choice
How intelligent do you contider yourielf to be:
(1)
below average
(2)
(lightly below average
(J)
average
(lightly
above average
(4)
(3)
intelligent
(6)
very intelligent
.
maximum
Minimum acceptable level for date

Your date

rou have

Im Yr. high arhool
2nd Yr. high achool
3rd Yr. high achool
4 th Yr. high achool

.

(4) .
(3)
grade thirteen
(6) .
now in technical achool
(7)
now ia college
.
(5)
through school and working
Minimum acceptable education level foe four date
Arc you (I) strong!)' religious
(2) moderatelf religious
(3) not too serious about religion
(4) not religious at all
Your -date should be
minimum
aanaua
Are you (I) very shy
(2) ahr
(3) slightly shy

.

(5)
overweight
Indicate minimum and maximum acceptable weight
min.
uaing number* from above heading*
Indicate your physical appearance:
unattractive
(1)
(2)
(lightly unattractive
(3)
average
(4)
(lightly above average

starui (where

female

and

movie

mom auw

I* it

interests

important

to

you that your date have similar knowledge of
yes
no

culture, etc.

customs,

language,

auac

Opera

religious affiliation

Country and western
Discoteque dancing
Playing and singing

PERSONALITY EVALUATION SECTION
Children should

stay

seated when

*t

Letters of condolence
man

should be sent

should not ask
people

a

of other

When a
his

lady

p

black-edged paper

on

for a date

in

the

is introduced to the members of a group,
must be repealed to every member

the

It

is

not

answer informal

necessary to

invitations
in

The phrase table d hole on a menu means a hied priced
lor a meal regardles of how much or little one orders
In

hotels. Turopean Plan
included in the rates
member of my
in
Keep peati
tljiuring them

family nags

nothing, but
Maintain my self

The

ry

to

I

criticizes

agreeing

devote

onl&gt;

«a&gt;

I

I

Ihr

I

me

iligiun

u

mg and

I

on i believe they ever predict anything (or anyone
huh I lake (manual niki n
iki miiuui niki only when the balance 11 in my favor
lost
jkc no serious niki the louei would overwhelm me i(
wouldn be greatly injured
akt a lew minor chancel unce
...1.1 I loir
•

lhal

mi

I

I

can

openly

be

line lhal necking and
happy relaiionihip

I

pelting

n

necccui

•

necking

and

addresses

Most of the time

manner in

peinng

which

my employer*

or

teacher* have

acted

toward*

me

i*

tried to make

for

f

a good

lor toupln

T

F

T

F

T

F

n all right

marriage

at all at this lime

whose opinions and altitudes differ from mine:
Arc in need of more training and education
Are Justified in having their own point of view
Simply differ from me in a background
The kind of opponent 1 prefer in a game or contest is one who is:
A master and superior, because
have a greater chance of improving my skill
Somewhat superior, because it makes the contest more stimulating and interesting to me
A good sport, regardless of his degree of
skill
My tendency to argue with my associates
is:
ready lor a good, hot argument or debate
!
1 II usually argue if m interested ai all
dislike to get into arguments and avoid them as often as possible
When a person not of my family criticises me. my usual reaction is to
Analyze the critic as to why he would criticise me
Ask for the reasons of his criticism
Defend myself verbally if. feel am in
right
In order to succeed in a vocation, family influence,the
pull, or drag is
harmful. Eventually it will be difficult to do anything
Helpful only in getting
started in one s vocation
Helpful at times, but not always necessary
Always helpful and always necessary
When working on a protect, 1 would choose to work with with me:
A complete stranger who is s known expert
on the subtcct
C&lt;,U ,nUnCe Wh
knOW * * ,' M,e more •l&gt;out the subject than
I
very
A
close friend who knows little more, or less about the
subject than 1 do

I

I?

I

T

in

People

I

I

d like to

my life miserable by continual nagging
Had a tendency 10 criticise me whenever possible
Criticised me when at (auk and praised me when deserved il
When (orced io give up a plan or ambition such as attending college, mar
nage, making a fortune, etc . I hod that 1
Am sure that I will be unhappy (or the remainder of my life
Have so many interests that I toon have something else to take
it* place
Am sure that God i will is for the best
The estent to which people seem to like me *
or not at all
Either very much,link,
but not enough to have me as a best friend
People like me a
Many people like me to some emieni
My (ccliogt on itibefore mnn jgc arc
Always

interested

select few

I

Alwjy.

....

do*

*

°

Strongly in favor of
lb favor of
Neutral
Against
Strongly again*!
M« fctliap on the imorthip of books and
Strong I* m fasor of
In I asor of
Neutral
Against
Strongly against

Maker to submil only my name, address, and phone number to persons selected by them, and that
strictly confidential and the property of Match Maker I also agree that Match Maker's responsibility ends with providing
and phone numbers, and is not required to perform introductions

that I give
Iall understand
information remains
the names,

The

that they:

diuuised

heliecc lhal necking and poling n all right
ho hacc been going together (or a whi
ha*

I

Not as much as I
Hardly at all

trying

belong to various clubs and

limit my acquaintances to a
I suffer from asthma
I like to do things slowly and methodically
interested
very
1 am
in marriage
moderately interested in marriage
undecided about marriage
not

Some of the time

I

I

enjoy loming and
organisations

I am inclined to

life;

amot

■

Th. ci.cm

rnioy

tm-

to

ui

n

It

woman s place is in the home, not out
with men

compete

social situation I will remain silent rather than
taking a chance of saying or doing the wrong thing
seem to lack the drive necessary to accomplish as much
as other people do

I

icizing

nerd any rreligion but think
tin nut personal!) ferl that
a it nitessary lor nuu people
rud jbtiui. Mud), and observe various rel igiont, and mar
tt-niuall) detide upon one lor mysrli
hi nlijuun ul m&gt; parent) d moil satisfactory (or me
luajiili omen), premonuion), eit . if that
(ail,
m&gt; lilt hu%e knu» n them to • indicate almost without
unit) ul tailure in tome
situation
it pure ihance or whether they actually
hai

1
Mac

Horse racing'

I

in

in

amount of time
interest to me

a moderate

to

a

regard to nature. believe that
harmony
c ■Id be in complete
Nature is intrinsically good, if
. .
with nature I could avoid all evil
wbp«i to control by man
Nature it basically good, but .1 must be
..i»ph o«qi m.len.l w.ih
Nature it ne.che. «ood oor bad. it
pouibdmct and l.ruu.i.ooi lot Ibe lod.aiduali de-elopoieo.
usually
a group
Am on the outskirts
Am a functioningpart of the group
Am the centre of attention

sevi

with the

a »mall

myself
believe a

la

Bridge
Billiards

a later lime
the argumei
why the other pen

Ul |ittU importance or
Important to me. but only spend

I

Poker

are

ptrtonal appearance to me H:
I spend much lime

towards it
1 believe in living for today and letting tomorrow take
tare of itself
no fear of death
I find I can forgive faults easier in others than I can in

Casino

even

reason

the

i4i important!-.
pro'mg ii

Moderate.

meals

try and gel
at
respect by returning

understand

■I m&gt;

impuruni

or

the family by

Nay

I

means

all the

on

I

an argument,

continue to

1

1

taking off her coal

making decisions
even when
know I'm wrong, I will
argue rather than give in
believe in establishing a definite goal and working

entoy

I have

A person who never bets
A tightwad
A person often seen around rate
Someone who wears odd cloches
A type of fish
is a term used in.

a woman watts until she is seated before

a restaurant,

1

la

A dog
A traunt boy
A woman
A gapper is:
An addict in need of dope
A ditch digger
A railroad employee
A type of fishing rod

stranger

name

Two fingers refers to:
A type of candy
A signal to obtain someone s attention
A measure used by bartenders
A quail is:

presence

When one is introducing a friend to another friend,
younger person is always presentee) to the older
In

F

person who makes a call on the telephone should be
the one who ends the conversation

The

A

introduced

being

consent lo Match

Signature

I

�Tuesday, September 19, 1967

Th

•

Spectrum

the spectrum of

s po rts

Bulls defeat Kent 30-6;
defense unit takes honors
by Bob Woodruff
Sports Editor

The running brilliance of Ken Rutkowski, the aerial
genius of Mick Murtha, and an entire defensive unit which
repeatedly repelled what was advertised to be a juggernaut
attack, boosted the State University of Buffalo Bulls to a
30-6 victory over Kent State University before an ecstatic
opening day crowd of 11,019 at Rotary Field
Just as they had done a
however, drive 35 yards in the
year ago, the Bulls outhusquarter to the Bulls' 37. On
tled, outhit and outplayed third
fourth and one. Don Fitzgerald
the favored Golden Flashes slammed into the Bulls' line and
from Ohio.
was stood straight up by Don
Although Leo Strang brought

his Kent club here with a trunkful of pre-season press clippings,
the Bulls came only with talent
and desire which was to make
them more than a match for the
Ohioans.
The first time the Bulls had
the ball, Mick Murtha directed
a scoring drive which covered 53
yards in eight plays. The junior
signal caller adeptly mixed a series of trap plays and roll out
options which moved the Bulls
on the ground, and he also proved
to the home fans that the bursitus in his passing arm was arrested, as he threw on this drive
15 yards to Rick Wells and another 12 to Chuck Drankoski. On
second and goal from the one,
Lee Jones bulled through for Buffalo’s first socre of what was to
prove to be a productive afternoon

With a Stellar defense bottling
up Kent’s big back, Don Fitzger-

ald, and sending quarterback Ron
Swartz for repeated trips to the
Rotary Field turf, the Buffalo offense again clicked late in the
second quarter. After moving
from his own 20 to the 44 in five
plays, Murtha handed off to Ken
Rutkowski on a pass option sweep
and Rutkowski bolted from the
Bulls’ backfield and sprinted 56
yards, outdistancing his last potential tackier with a great burst
of speed. Bob Embow converted
his second point after touchdown,
and the Bulls led 14-0 at the half.

Sabo and Mike Luzny for no gain,

ending the Flashes' scoring hopes.
A wild fourth quarter saw the
Bulls notch 16 points and KSU
one touchdown. Murtha moved
the Bulls half the length of the

field inside the Kent five, but
the Flash defense held, and the
Bulls settled for an 18 yard Bob
Embow field goal.
When Embow kicked off for
the Bulls, sprinter Orin Richburg
took the ball on his own three
and galloped 97 yards for the solo
Kent score of the ■ afternoon
Recalling Kent Coach Leo
Strang's reference to last year's
Bull victory in Ohio as a "fluke,"
Coach Urich’s club decided to
make the skeptical visiting coach
a true believer in Buffalo football
might.

With Murtha running option
sweeps beautfully, and an offen
sive line opening up gaping holes
for Pat Patterson. Lee Jones and
Rutkowski, the Bulls drove 30
yards to the Kent 38, Murtha
then called for the option sweep

around the right side. He kept
the football, cut back to the center of the field, and with nothing
but blue shirts in front of him.
he jaunted across the goal line
for the score.

Score on interception
Although the game was

Bull defense strong

out of
reach, Ron Swartz tried to get
his team moving late in the
fourth quarter. Throwing from
deep in his own territory. Swartz
was hit by Teddy Gibbons and
Dennis Brisky, and his pass was

Although Kent quarterback
Swartz was throwing well all afternoon, he was harrased by a
hard charging Buffalo defensive
corps and a squad of fleet receivers who played hot potato with
his crisp passes. The Flashes did,

intercepted by a jubilant Irvin
Wright. Wright returned the pass
inside the ten, and the Bulls
added the afternoon's final score
on a three yard scoring pitch
from Dennis Mason to Rick Wells.
Kent’s big back, Don Fitzger-

aid. played sporadically the entire
afternoon, undoubtedly pained by
a strained hamstring muscle. Fitzgerald was held at bay. picking
up only 55 yards op 18 carries,
as opposed to his 149 in the opener against the Bulls last year.

Draw plays effective
Swartz is undoubtedly as good
a quarterback as t’u&lt; Bulls will
see all season. The senior field
general faked beautifully the entire afternoon, and with a little
more help from his receivers,
might have been able to turn the
game around. Especially effective
for Swartz and the Fashes were
the draw plays and the play action pass which were run with
great execution.
Teddy Gibbons proved why he’s
picked as one of the outstanding
defensive football players in the
East. Teddy fought off trap blocks
to make key tackles on running
plays, and was personally responsible at least three times for
dumping Swartz in the backfield.

Pag* Nin*

Alcindor claims no-dunk
ruling IS discriminatory
:ia/

The

fo

is sayini

ictrum

NEW YORK—"To me the new
‘no-dunk’ rule smacks a little of,

discrimination,” charges U.C.L.A.
college basketball star Lew Aleindor in an exclusive interview
in the current issue of SPORT
Magazine.,
Alcindor, the giant who led the
Bruins to an undefeated (30-0)
season and the N.C.A.A. championship as a sophomore in 196667, discussed college basketball’s
new “no-dunk” rule and a num-

ber of other controversial issues
for the first time in a public

interview.
“When you look at it all the
way down to the high school
level, most of the people who
dunk are black athletes,” says
Alcindor. “I'm not trying to be
biased, really, lhat’s just how it
is. I’m trying to look at it objectively. 1 don’t want to indict anyone, but I’ve got to say that has
to be on my mind and the possibility of why they did it. That’s
the way things happen and, to
me, something is wrong.”
Moving away from basketball
and on to other topics. Alcindor
comments on the Black Muslim
movement.
'Contrary to what everybody

!,

the Muslims are doini

are certain things about the Muslim organization I can’t personally get ready for . . . that’s 1 me
personally. But, like in Harlem
they’re getting people off drugs
and the prostitutes off the streets.
They’re giving people pride in
themselves and giving them a little bit of direction. There is good
and bad about the whole thing.
They set up stores, restaurants,
and things, and they keep them
in the community for the use of
the community. They’re not ignorant people. You can say they
are very narrow in a lot of respects and I couldn’t argue with
you, but you also have to give

them credit.”
On the subject of his responsi-

bility to the Negro community as
a sports celebrity, Alcindor says:
“I want to try to represent something positive for the people in
the community because you know
how kids idolize people. I want
to give the kids something to
look up to; maybe that’s the best
way to encourage them, I just
want people to respect me. If you
get respect, you’ve earned it. You
are doing yourself justice,” concludes Alcindor in the magazine

feature.

Rutkowski outstanding
Though bothered by a hamstring muscle, Ken Rutkowski
picked up 136 yards on his 15
carries last Saturday. Rutkowski
was outstanding in his execution
of the sweeps and options, showed great speed and proved to be
a more than capable blocker.
Murtha showed some great fin
esse in his signal calling, setting
up his passes brilliantly, Mick
clicked on nine of 14, good for
95 yards, and gained 64 yards
on the ground in only six carries.
Though Coach Strang could not
be reached for comment following
the contest, it is doubtful lie
would have classified this Kent
defeat by the Bulls as a “fluke.”
IUFFAIO
KENT STATE

first downs
14
yards gained rushing
yards gained passng
total offense
1 number opponents passes intercepted
1
punting average
6/33.8
6/34.6
25
total yards penalized
30
15

Bulls oppose N.C. State next
Next week the Bulls travel to
Raleigh, N.C., to oppose North
Carolina State University. Saturday, Slate defeated North Carolina 13-7 on a 55 yard touchdown
pass from Jim Donnan to Harry
Martell late in the fourth quarter
before a record crowd of 42,300
Wolfpack fans.

—Yates

Kent defense
.

kaltc
MallS Dntlnuzclri
Rtimowsm

Kent State's entire defensive
line tries to stop Bulls' bruiser
Ken Rulkowski (21) as the halfback sweeP s left end in ,hird
quarter action. Kent was defeated 30-6.

Cloudy future (or cross-country
One week of the early cross
country season has gone by already, and with less than one

week more of practice before the
opening meet, the future outlook
of the Bulls harriers looks quite
cloudy, to say the least, according to recent words of coach
Emery Fisher.

Yatet

3 stop
Patterson

Flash defensive back Gary Renaud (29) leads
a trio of tacklers in attempt to slop Bulls' halfback
Pat Patterson (20). They put him down in "fine
style" before the third largest crowd in Rotary
Field's history.

The Bulls suffered two great
losses before the first practice
session started last Monday afternoon. Last year’s captain, Bob
Stephenson, a senior, suffered a
knee injury during the summer.
For the last two years Stephenson
had been a regular starter for
the Bulls and he still holds the
freshman school record.
The other big loss to the team
was last year’s most valuable

runner

(MVP award) junior Tony

Nicotera who has decided that
he must forego cross country this

year due to his heavy class sched
ulc.

At the present time the Bulls

have four letlermen returning
from last year’s varsity and four
men who have moved up from
last year’s freshman team includinng Steve Foster, the freshman’s
most valuable runner in 1966.
Two junior college transfer
students have turned out for the
squad and two promising newcomers have showed their interest
in competing this year.
If the Bulls are to have a successful season, the burden will
now fall on the shoulders (or
legs) of the young inexperienced

sophomores.

There is still time for any
freshman who is interested in
running to come out for the freshman team. He may report any
afternoon at 4 p.m. in the basement of the gym.

�Tuesday, September 19, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* Tm

At War Memorial Stadium

Bills lose 20-3

*

Y&gt;

by Allan R. Bruce
United Press International

scare the devil out of anyone, but they might lull the rest
of the American Football League to sleep.
Lemm used a combination of weird circumstances to
outwit the defending Eastern Division champion Buffalo
Bills, 20-3 Sunday in a somewhat less than exciting game
at War Memorial Stadium.
Each team had only nine
first downs
Houston failed to carry the
ball into Buffalo territory during
the first half. But they took possession there on a punt, and intercepted pass and a fumble
while building a 10-3 half-time
•

•

lead.
•

Houston quarterback Jacky

Lee netted only 26 yards in the
air, and the Oilers gained only
139 yards on offense.
Houston was just becoming
accustomed to losing. They had
•

dropped nine straight league
games as well as all four 1967
exhibition contests before the
Bills obligingly played dead.

Looked like loosers
The Oilers looked like the
same old losers Sunday, turning
the ball over to Buffalo four
downs after the opening kickoff.
Buffalo looked like the same
old winners, with Mike Mercer
putting his loc lo a 47-yard field
goal as the Bills grabbed a 3-0
lead with only four minutes gone.
It was then the big-hearted
Bills changed masks and became
face-savers for I-cmn, whose last
victory came Oct. 16, 1966, by a
24-0 margin over the New York
Jets.

Fall intramural

schedule given
Director of intramural athletics
Mr. Edwin Muto has announced

the schedule of sporting events
for the early part of fall semes-

ter.
By Friday, September 22, all

entries for intramural football
must be submitted to Mr. Monkarsh in the intramural office.
Monday and Wednesday at 3 p.m.
and 4 p.m. there will be an
independent league run, and a
social club league wil be held on
Tuesdays at 3 p.m. and Thursdays at 3 p.m. and 4 p.m. Play
will begin the week of September
25.

SPECIAL!
8 TRACK STEREO
Car Tape Player

Mercer’s iron toe, the same one
that humbled the Jets 20-17 a
week earlier, tuned to putty. He
missed a “short” 40-yard effort
late in the first quarter, and
never got another chance.
John Wittcnborn put Houston
on the scoreboard midway thru
the second period with a 22-yard
field goal, and 32 seconds before
the half ended Lee completed a
four-yard touchdown pass to
Chuck Frazier.
The two clubs muddled their
way through the third quarter,

but the final session belonged entirely to Lcmn and his Oilers.

Murtha peers
for receiver

Wittcnborn tucked away a 42-

yard field goal with 4:05 left in
the game, giving Houston a 13-3
edge.

Scored again
The Oilers, bent on making
Buffalo look worse than bad,

Analysis: Bulls followers now believers

scored again in the closing min-

utes when W.K. Hicks picked off
a Jack Kemp pass at the Houston
32 and returned it to the Buffalo
six. Four plays later Hoyle Granger dived over Buffalo defenders
for the closing touchdown.
Lemn doesn't like to talk of
turning points. But if he had to,
he said, he would pin it on his
defensive unit’s fourth quarter
stand.
“Buffalo had less than a yard
to go for a first down and didn’t
make it twice,” Lemn offered.
The Bills, at the lime, were deep
in their own territory and had
to punt.
“We’ve been playing good defense all along and today our
defense helped us win,” Lcmn
said. “We lost to Kansas City
25-20 in the opener on offensive

errors.”

Lenin is happy with a win in
his pocket. But he’s not ready
to predict a championship for the
Oilers.
“We’ve got a good, young ball
club, but I don’t think I’d like
to say we’re going to win the
title,” he said. “But we will play
a big part in deciding who will."

by Billy Martin
Saturday afternoon on Rotary
Field, before a near capacity
crowd, Doc Urich’s Bulls made
believers out of their loyal followers, and even out of (heir
not so loyal fans.

the days of E.G.
LaFountain, Don
Gilbert and the bench on the
opposite end of the student section. But here to stay, at least
for nine more games, are' terrible Ted Gibbons, Kenny Rutkowski (Mr. Outside), Erich Tom
Hurd, the Bulls’ bench on the
student side, and the rest of this
year’s version of the S.U.N.Y.
football team.
Gone are

Poles,

Gerry

And what a version!

speakers

JET
TV Inc.
331 FRANKLIN STREET

Ashley loss

Ashley incurred an injury in a
scrimmage that put him out of

action for the remainder of the
season.

The loss was taken hard by the
team and coaches, but because
these boys are competitors and

Oh, were we thrilled! We all
should say thank you to Coach
Urich for giving us a team that
plays hard-nosed open football.

Outweighed 18 pounds per
man on the line, the Bulls had
one thing in their favor that
Kent State didn't have—guts. The
final tally of 30-6 is a point in

Headquarters for Good
College Clothing

Great Linebacking

that direction.

If the Doc were giving out report cards, he could give all
the boys straight A’s from the
standpoint of this reporter and
the fans watching the game in
the high rise stands of the big
Rotary.

RIVERSIDE MEN'S SHOP

Tonawanda Street, corner Ontario
Buffalo, New York 14207

WAB STEAK
!

295

Sandwich

ALL YOU WANT
(Within Reason)

�

�

�

853-7244

The Peaceable Kindom

Special student discounts on
cartridges upon presentation

of this card.

It becomes a tedious chore to
keep mentioning names because
printed names and words aren’t
enough to reward any team. They
must be rewarded with your sup-

port.

Let the

football team know

you’re with them, and any way
you do it would be a help.
At other schools football players are heroes. Here? Well, you
can make them heroes. “Professional” college football, but it
is big time football.

If nothing else, it was a
pleasure to see the frosh at the
game with their spirited cheers
and yells, something that hasn’t
occurred here since the class of

’64.

Kent State is a hurt ball club,
especially their quarterback Ron
Swartz, and if this was any indication of what to expect in the
future, including Saturday vs.
N.C. State, get ready for some
fast exciting football. Forget the
days of the “belly series”; now
we have a team that plays football as it should be played.
reporter heard at Rotary Field

Saturday afternoon:

I got that feelings--Oh Yeah
It’s really great—Oh Yeah
Come next week, Oh Yeah
We’ll Kill N.C. State
Who cares about whatever happened to Jim Robie?

U S CHOICE TOP SIRLOIN

Dine and Relax in

OPEN DAILY—9 to 9
Saturdays—9 to 5

Team needs support

To paraphrase something this

corner of Tupper

See the largest selection of
8 Track Cartridges in W.N.Y.

Hurtha and the offensive line
led by Jim Finochio executed
perfectly to put points on the
scoreboard. Dennis Brisky and
Ted Gibbons made fans forget
Gerry Philbin and E.G. Poles
and how about that linebacking!
Lunzy, Wright and company
dominated the urshing game
holding Kent State to 82 yards

rushing.

Just ten days ago the Bulls
suffered a severe blow to this
year’s hope for a winning season when record holder Dick

coached by experts, they overcame this problem with resounding effeciency in every offensive
and defensive department.

FREE

includes

finally sue-

ceeded in their total endeavors
of administering when they found
Mr. Urich in the confines of that
small time school called Notre
Dame. Under Urich's expert
handling has been molded a ball
club that is fast, daring, and
filled with competitive desire.

It wasn’t too long ago when
the crowd was thrilled by the
daring line pluges of Willie
Schime when he held on to the
ball and then enthusiastic coaching of Dick Offenheimer.

Installation

’59.

Bulls' quarterback Mickey Murtha (14) cocks his arm and
peers down field for his receiver as Lee Jones (36) keeps Kent
defensive end Paul Jordan (85)
from getting to the passer.

—Yates

'

For example:

Room at the

blacksmith
SHOP
"Oldest Steak House in WJI.Y."

1375 DELAWARE AVE.
-TT 6-9281

SAVE 25%
USED TEXTS
BUFFALO
TEXTBOOK STORES
3610 MAIN ST.

PAPERBACKS, PRINTS
SUPPLIES, SWEATSHIRTS,
MOVIE STAR POSTERS

�Tuesday, September 19, 1967

Pag* El*v*n

The Spectrum

The Student Government of
Canisius College presents:

A

COMPUTE MEAL
09 A SMACK

BANQUET FACILITIES
BRIDAL SHOWERS

1551 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.

Boys—Coats

Refreshments

&amp;

Ties

643 MAIN STREET

Mart to Twin Fair

9 p.m.—1:00 a.m.

Studuent Center Auditorium

Call

Girls—No Slacks

In

837-4300

Buffalo's

Open 11 a.m. to 2 a.m.
Weekends Until 4 a.m.

Admission only $1.25

Theatre

District

Call 852-0008

11

Open Daily
a.m. to 4 a.m.

For Charcoal Broiled CHICKEN at Us Finest

CLASSIFIED
FOR SALE

Spitfire
1965.
Under
10,000
mile*, mint conditon, must *eH. No
money down, $10 a week. 632-9256, 873
0690. 17 Stillwell.
1966 DUCATI 160cc., 3,000 miles. Excel
TRIUMPH

,

**$■*» iSt

MIXER

FURNITURE

for your apartment
chairs,
floor and table
-

cocktail and end tables,

lamps,

headboards,

pictures,

chests,

trun-

dle beds, odds and ends. 40 Grosvenor
Rd. East of Colvin off Deerhurst Park in
Kenmore.
RICOH

new.

SINGLEX, f 1.4, 1 year old; like
Originally
$250, asking
$150.

886 2104,

slide rule.
used:
$12. Drafting instruments &lt;$10.00. Call
806-2104.
FIND
AND used paperbacks and hard
bound
books at
GRANT books
and
stamps 3292 Main St.
FENDER MUSTANG guitar $150, Fender
piggy back amp. $230, Gibson fuzz
tone $30. Call Jack, 873-9329.
1964 MG,
1100 SEDAN, British racing
inspected,
green,
excellent condition.
835-2814.
1964 HONDA 90, will take best offer.
Call or see R.T. Vollmar at Dept, of Biophysics, 831-3811.
POST VERSALOG

Gm?its
Main St.

UNIVERSITY PLAZA
opposite Univ. of Buffalo

MEN'S
GRANT CREST®

—

Suede Leather
Paneled 100%
Wool Cardigans

MEN'S
OVER THE CALF
HOSE

10.99

8Qc

££*

Cardigans

W

and
Pullovers

#
BROWN
GREY
PR.
Fits 10-12

Cable Stitch and
suede f r o n t in

harmonizing and
contrasting colors
Grey, camel, blk.,

ADLERS

lodcn. S-M-L.

NAVY
BROWN

BLACK
MAROON

GREY

MENS CASUAiS
Oxfords

SNEAKERS
Low Cut
Sizes:
6V.il
WHITE
BLACK

DARK

BROWN

C^99
¥

SUEDE

&amp;

Loafers
g

#

#

#

M

WANTED

five room furnished apt.
$55 monthly. 885-2039 after 4:00 p.m.

TO share flat with two female
students. Call 875-1337 and ask for JyII.
MALE ROOMMATE wanted, $60 per month,
includes
utilities and telephone. Call
after 6 p.m., 875-6075.
ROOMMATE WANTED immediately. Near
bus line, will pay $50 per month. 8360060 or 634-7112 (eves.).
ROOMMATE

WANTED
MALE HELP wanted. Assistant waiters to
assist our Rib Room waiters, serve the
finest food in Buffalo. Must be willing to
provide first' class service to our guests.
Hours 4:30 p.m.-11:00 p.m. Any number
of nights. Contact Mr. Robert Feiny, Charter House Hotel. 634-2700 during the above
hours.
26
INCH
BICYCLE wanted (girl's
ferred). Call 031-3067 after 11:00 p.m.,
ask for Garie.
RIDE WANTED for staff member from
Warren's Corners and return. Please call

434-7385.

needs two female musicians for entertainment. Hours 6-12 Friday nights. Apply in person Wednesday
evening 9 p.m. 2828 Bailey Ave. 836-9508.
ATTRACTIVE waitress wanted for Sportsmen's Inn. Full or part time, 6-12 Mon.Fri., call 836-9508, Tuesday evening.
EAST SIDE supermarl cef desires college student (male) for part time work. 853-3737,
PART AND FULL time help wanted (male)
9-2-9-5-11-2-11-5-11-7-5-9-5-11. Apply MacDonald's 1385 Niagara Falls Blvd.
and 3424 Sheridan Drive. Both locations
five minutes from campus
SPORTSMEN'S INN

f\f\
My DO

W*

ROOMMATES
GIRL TO share

Sixes: 6'/j-11

$1.65 per hour
students
for full time (9 a.m.-5 p.m.) day work
McDonald's 1385 Niagara Falls Blvd. or
3424 Sheridan Drive.
ROOM AND BOARD in exchange for helping mother, mostly baby sifting. Girl
only. Telephone 836-7678.

NIGHT SCHOOL

OPEN

at

MON.

thru
SAT.

PERSONAL

iH/JiLOMi

For gems from the Jewish Bible
call 875-4265 day or night.

10-9

LOST

MEN'S
BRIEFS
100%
COMBED
COTTON
DOUBLE
BACK

3

MEN'S

PR-

FOR

2.89

TEE
SHIRTS
100%
COMBED
COTTON
FLAT KNIT

NIGHT AND day pearl ring near
Court 3. Reward, call 832-7460.

3 PR-

SITUATIONS WANTED

IERM PAPERS typed at home. Reasonable
rates and fast service.
Call 682-8650
during

v

/

-

FOR

OPPORTUNITIES

2.89

ROBBERY-JOIN

Fabrics,

IN!

Yarns,

Socks,

Mill Outlet,
Main, Williamsvile. Phone 633-6942.
Sweaters.

ANYONE

Souhan's

INTERESTED

please contact D.
42, Tel. Ext. 3006.

5504

rock-climbing,

in

Britr, Chemistry, room

MISCELLANEOUS
premium*
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
nanced; immediate FS-I. Call 694-2625.
-

PERMANENT PRESS
DRESS SHIRT THAT
NEEDS NO IRONING

3

day.

rock, blues, soul,
DRUMMER AVAILABLE
etc.; own transportation. Ludwig equipment. After 5 p.m. Call Jan 838-1692.

‘A tigSjjjrfti Men's Pennleigh® Delux

l

Trailer

SIGMA PHI EPSILON
FRATERNITY
cordially invites

"

ALL RUSHEES to a

SORORITY SOCIAL

Wash, drip or tumble dry and wear!
Fortrel® polyester/cotton. Regular collar. In white, blue &amp; stripes. Sizes 14%-17
and 32-35.

Fri. Night, Sept. 22
at the Roc-Mar
Bowling Lanes

UNIVERSITY PLAZA
opposite Univ. of Buffalo
Main St.
—

For Information

Call 837-7653

fi

�Past

Tuesday, September 19, 1967

The Spectrum

Twtlvt

Resignation
*

of Nasser

denied

Washington

MID-EAST
An Egyptian government
spokesman Saturday denied reports abroad

m/cfeasf

cide of a former trusted aide, Abdul Hakim Aiper, accused of plotting against him.

into accepting a U.N. settlement. He said
America was the only country capable of

Cease-fire violated

pressuring Israel.
Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban was
flying to New York today for the opening
of the U.N. Assembly. But Eban warned
on the eve of his departure that Israel
would not accept mediation in the dispute.
Eban said the “present situation and present map” of the Middle East would be

—

Baikal said it was unlikely the U.N.
General Assembly could work out a peace

le wi

world

*

*

focus

Israel imposed an all-day curfew on the
Gaza Strip Thursday after charging Egyptian troops violated the cease fire along
the Suez Canal by firing machine guns on

hong Kong

Compiled from our wire services by Lilian Waite

Rusk: No visible signs
WASHINGTON
US officials led by
of State Dean Rusk sharply discounted Friday the accuracy of reports
that North Vietnam is showing signs it
wants to talk peace.
All the evidence available to the United
States is to the contrary, Rusk and other
high officers of the government said.
Rusk told newsmen that “so far as I
know, the situation has not changed since
my last press conference September 8."
At that time, Rusk said the United States
had tried every channel “to sec whether
Hanoi is prepared to talk seriously about
peace but thus far we haven’t had any
—

Secretary

response.”

Rusk was answering a question put to
him at a joint news conference he held
with Japanese Foreign Minister Takeo
Miki. The remainder of the conference
was devoted to discussing Japancse-Amcrican problems which officials of the two
countries have been discussing here.
Aware of reports
Rusk said he was aware of reports from
Hanoi and Ottawa indicating Hanoi ap-

of peace

was doing so behind a facade of extreme
toughness in official declarations. Any
evidences that North Vietnam might be
weakening behind this grim facade had
certainly not reached Washington, they
said.

Internal conflict in South
Saturday, the ruling military junta
cashiered four generals and a colonel for
“corruption and inefficiency" in what official South Vietnamese sources described
as the first stage of a sweeping military
purge.
The move by president-elect Nguyen
Van Thicu and vice president-elect Ngu
yen Cao Ky fulfilled a campaign pledge
to clean up the army, but the junta
leaders faced a new round of opposition
to their regime from militant Buddhists.
A spokesman for Thich Tri Quang, a
Buddhist militant, said the anti-junta
Buddhists plan to use “all forms of nonviolent struggle” to overthrow Thicu and
Ky. tn an interview with UPI, the spokesman, Thich Lieu Minh, charged that

peared more agreeable than previously
to holding peace talks and would be “interested in learning what is behind them,
if anything.”

Thicu and Ky rigged the election.
“As far as we are concerned, there has
been no election at all,” Minh told UP.
“We arc going to use all forms of nonviolent struggle, including mass demon-

One of the reports, carried from Hanoi
by the French Press Agency, quoted “re-

dictatorships."

liable sources" of unspecified nationality
as saying that if the United States slopped
bombing North Vietnam, peace talks could
begin three or four weeks later
These sources cited, to support their
opinion, an August 30 speech by North
Vietnamese Premier Pham Van Dong
which they interpreted as indicating some
“give" in the communist attitude toward
talks.

US. officials, who have been analyzing
the text of that speech for 10 days, said
they have drawn exactly the opposite
conclusion.

They noted that the premier, for the
first time in some months, reiterated the
extremely tough four-point demands pul
forward last January by the Hanoi government as a basis for settling the conflict, Thse demands, in addition to an
unconditional end to the American bombing. call for withdrawal of all U.S. forces,
formal recognition of the Viet Cong and
other concessions.

Reject reciprocity

So far as concerns the matter of simply talking peace, as differentiated from
terms for final settlement, the premier
flatly rejected the U.S. demand for some
reciprocal military gesture if the U.S.

halts its air attacks.
U.S. officials also were unable to find

anything to support a reported statement
by Canadian Foreign Secretary Paul Mar
tin to the effect that Hanoi officials had
shown some interest in talking with Can
adian officials about ways to get nego-

tiations started.
Officials said they had nothing which
would support this and pointed out that
Martin had gone on to say that he didn't
see much hope of breaking the deadlock.

Hanoi rigid

US. officials said that in addition to
Pham Van Dong’s tough speech, other
evidence that the communists were as
rigid as ever on all points could be found
in the lengthy text of a “political program” of the Viet Cong’s National Liberation Front adopted by its central
committee last month. This was a comprehensive and sweeping reaffirmation of
the rigidity of the communist position on
all points.

The impression in official quarters here
was that if Hanoi was indeed preparing
to seek negotiations with Washington, it

strations, to topple the present military

Mixed effect for U.S.
The firing of the five army officers and
the Buddhist threat represented one plus
and one minus for the U.S. diplomatic
mission

here.

American

officials

have

been urging Thicu and Ky to remove cor
rupt officers from the military. At the
same time, U.S
hoped that
the September 3 elections would create
an atmosphere of national unity that

would involve all South Vietnamese, in
eluding the Buddhists
Buddhist opposition was a major factor
in the downfall of several Saigon governments starting with that of President Ngo
Dinh Diem in 1963. Diem Xvas assassin-

an Israeli patrol.
The shooting incident was reported as
the Arab nations launched a new diplomatic offensive against Israel. Jordanian
officials charged the Israelis with “halting
repatriation” of Arab refugees into the
Israeli occupied west bank of Jordan.

Peace speculations
The editor of the Cairo newspaper AI
Ahram said Friday only a “miracle” could
prevent renewed fighting between Israel
and the Arabs in the Middle East. He
blamed the United States for not pressuring Israel into accepting a United Nations settlement of the war.
Hassanein Baikal, a confidant and frequent spokesman for Egyptian President
Nasser, ruled out suggestions from some

Arab militants that a Vietnam-type guerrilla war be waged against Israel.
“There’s only one type of warfare for
Arabs, a war of army against army, air
force against air force and navy against
navy," Baikal said in his weekly Al Ahram
column.

Maoist

maintained until the Arabs and Israel
meet face to face to talk peace.
Baikal said the United States was unable to influence Israel because of domestic U.S. politics. “Zionist influence over
American policy is always strongest when
elections are forthcoming,” he said.
The editor said for these reasons renewed fighting was the inevitable solution
to the problem.
Baikal said the Arabs should maintain
diplomatic contacts with the West “because no matter how bitter we feel about
it, we cannot hurl our relations with the
West into the sea.”
Foreign Minister Mahmoud
said Thursday night that Egypt
would like to reopen the Suez Canal but
was prevented from doing so by “Israel’s
aggression.” He said Israel must withdraw its troops from the Sinai Peninsula
before the canal could be reopened.
Egyptian

Riad

forces fight in Nanking

HONG KONG—Early last week uncon-

firmed reports filtering out of Communist
China described more widespread bloodshed in party chairman Mao Tse-tung’s
cultural revolution. One Hong Kong newspaper told of a mysterious air raid on the
big city of Nanking, the old mainland
capital.

Official reports from government-controlled Chinese radio stations indicated
some violence, and the Maoist newspaper
of the Peking regime hinted that the cultural revolution was getting out of hand
and hampering farm work.
A Chinese broadcast monitored here
said Mao supporters had regained control
of the main radio station in Chengchow,
the capital of Honan Province in the central part of China. The broadcast said
anti-Maoists had held the station for more
than six months.

Earlier unofficial reports had described
serious fighting in Chengchow.
Peking Peoples Daily, the official newspaper of Mao’s Central Committee, or-

dered Chinese farmers to concentrate on
bringing in the autumn harvest and temporarily give up cultural revolution activities. An editorial in the publication urged
army troops to assist in harvesting crops.
The report on the bombing of Nanking
was published by the Hong Kong Times,
a newspaper controlled by Nationalist Chinese interests. It based the report on interviews with travelers arriving here from
Nanking who said they read about the attack in wall posters pasted up in the South
China city on September 4.
The second hand account gave few details, and it did not identify the planes.
No mention was made of damage or of

casualties.

Another unsubstantiated report in the

Hong Kong Times said there was heavy
loss of life in Nanning, a South China city

about ISO miles from the North Vietna
mese border. These reports said rival factions fought a heavy battle in Nanning on
September 8 and left the streets littered
with corpses.

ated.

The threat against the Thieu-Ky administration by Minh Saturday marked the
first time in a year that the Buddhists
had openly threatened anti-government
street demonstrations.
Observers said the militant Buddhist
movement is badly splintered into quarrelling factions at this lime, and is probably powerless to topple the government.
But dissident civilian candidates defeated
in the election have been courting Thich
Tri Quang in the hope of forging a united
opposition.

Assault thwarts North
A massive American land, sea and air
assault has thwarted a North Vietnamese plan to wipe out the U.S. Marine forts
guarding South Vietnam’s northern frontier, military spokesmen said Friday.
In what was called one of the greatest
Communist threats of the war. North
Vietnam mustered about 35,000 troops
on a 15 mile line facing the Leathernecks
who numbered only about 5500. U.S.
artillery, jet bombers and offshore war
ship fire have been ripping into the
North Vietnamese positions with especial force this week.
According to U.S spokesmen, the American blitz crippled the Communist border army’s offensive power.
Friday U.S, Air Force B52 Stratofor
tresses staged two more raids against the
North Vietnamese dug into the six-milewide Demilitarized Zone on the North
South Vietnam border.
The Communist pressure on the border
posts mushroomed after Defense Sgcre
tary Robert S. McNamara announced plans
to construct an anti-invasion
barrier
along the border.

Milu/aiiLec
IVIIIWdUKcc
j

,

demonstration

Open ho using militants, spurred by
their ailing leader's pledge not to give
‘with an empty bag," marched
UP
through the downtown area of Mil-

v/aukee

again

last week.

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>The Spectrum

(

State University of New York at Buffalo

Vol. 18, No. 2

Friday, September 15, 1967

loan program proposed

to case college expense

panel debate concerning narcotics
by Marlene Kozuchowski
Spectrum Stall Reporter

Verbal swords clashed again between Michael Aldrich,
head of LEMAR, and Michael A. Amico, Assistant Detective
Chief and head of the Buffalo Narcotics and Intelligence
Division.
Both men were members of the panel Drugs: Their Use
and Implications. The discussion was part of the Academic
Convention held during Freshman Orientation Week.
The moderator of the centers on one desire—to get
drugs.
panel was Dr. Michael A. more
Pep pills, reducing pills, and
Schwartz, Associate Profesdexadrine. A sense of accomplishsor of Pharmaceutics.
ment and ambivalence is the psychological effect. Compulsive use
The theme of the discussion involved the interaction results in a decrease of fatigue
finally in a break from realof drugs and the individual. and
ity.
It stressed the effect of
There is a definite interaction
drugs on social behavior.
between this class of drugs and
Dr. Cedric M. Smith, Professor
and Chairman of Pharm-.oiogy,
was the first speaker. He explained that the word “addiction”
lacks a precise definition. According to the World Health Organization, a more correct term
which describes the compulsive
use of harmful drugs is “drug
dependency.”
Dr. Smith listed

the drugs
which “man has chosen to abuse
and misuse”:
Alcohol and barbituates. Acute
effects include mental and physical incapacitation. A decrease
in anxiety is also produced.
Chronic use causes biological
changes in the liver and the
brain.
Morphine, heroin and other
narcotics. These “classic addictive
agents” decrease anxiety and
pain. The life of a chronic user

the barbiturates. An addict beon the first and calms
down on barbiturates.
Hallucinogens including LSD,
marijauna, STP. An alternation in
sensation and mood causes flights
of fancy. Usage may induce psy-

comes high

choses or a semi permanent oscillatory state in and out of reality.
These drugs are an introduction to a world where sensory

perception is altered. Specifically,
there is no final data on the
chronic toxicity of marijauna.

Mr. Amico's position

The legal aspect of drugs was
handled by Mr. Araico. He definitely stated that “Marijauna is
more serious than heroin or opium.”
Possession of a quarter ounce
of marijauna is a serious felony
punishable by one to seven years
imprisonment. The sale or mere

Con-Con's free tuition proposal
may halt university construction
The free
NEW YORK (UPI)
tuition policy of the Constitutional Convention was blamed for the
failure of investors to bid Thursday on $46.6 million in State University bond anticipation notes.
State officials said they were
advised by prospective purchasers that the convention’s adoption of a free tuition plan for
higher education made it appear
that the state may not be able
to redeem the notes.
State University construction
notes and bonds have so far been
secured by tuition payments. The
convention on Aug. 31 voted 9575 on a free tuition article but
did not spell out any new sources of revenue.
In Albany, Convention Minority
Leader Earl W. Brydges called
the inability to sell the notes
—

“highly disturbing.”

Dr. Robert Ketter, vice president of facilities planning at the
State University of Buffalo, said
that there was “no doubt” that
the failure of investors to bid
on the bond issue was caused by
the free tuition proposal.
“The financial community is
highly skeptical,” Dr. Ketter commented. “If I were an investor,
I wouldn’t touch it with a tenfoot pole.”
Dr. Ketter said that if the free
tuition scheme passes, construction plans would “virtually stop”
until a new means of financing
could be effected.
Of the notes offered, $26 million were to pay off previous issues. The rest were to pay con-

tractors for work at State Univer-

sity campuses.
Avrom Hyman, chairman of the
Housing Finance Agency, said a

reserve fund would cover this

$26 million if the holders demand payment. There is not
enough in the fund, however, to

pay contractors.

Hyman said he could not say
exactly when, but that construction work would halt at all State
Uhiversity campuses when funds
now on hand run out.
He said James W. Gaynor,
slate commissioner of Housing
and Community Renewal, would
meet as soon as possible with
the trustees of the State University Construction Fund to decide
what to do next.
Hyman said it was possible no
notes could be sold until the legislature provides some alternate
method of raising money.
Governor Rockefeller estimated
earlier this summer that if free
tuition were approved, it would
cost the state more than $520
million a year extra to operate
its university system.
The wording of the new article, however, apparently gives
the legislature the choice of
making the change to a tuitionfree system over a period of as
long as 10 years.
Observers also point out that
the new constitution is not yet
law. If it is presented to the voters as a package in November,
as is now expected, observers
feel there is a good chance it
will be defeated.

giving awav of one cigarette is
a violation/resulting in 15 years
in prison.
Possession of a quarter ounce
of opium is merely a misdemeanor. According to Mr. Amico, the
leaders of movements to legalize
marijauna, in claiming to use and
have possession of this drug have
admitted to violation of the New
York State law.

In stressing the seriousness of
the law, he said: “The use of marijauna is illegal. I, as head of
the Narcotics Squad, will continue to direct my men to investigate any activity involving anyone using this drug."
There is not much difficulty
with LEMAR, reported Mr. Amico. He said his squad is aware
of the group’s action, however.
(Cont’d on Pg. 8)

A new educational loan program, the Educational Opportunity Bank, has been proposed by
a White House advisory panel.
A two-fold purpose characterizes the program. Aid will be
available to any undergraduate
college or other postsecondary
student to finance his education.
The plan to repay the loan involves payments based on a percentage of the annual income for
a time period of 30 to 40 years.
The loan program will provide
funds, through tuition, for universities to raise tuition and fees.
An increased budget will allow
finances for educational and institutional improvements.
In operation, the bank will
charge borrowers one percent of
their gross income for 30 years
for each $3,000 borrowed. For

example, if a student borrowed
$2,000 a year for four years and
earned $10,000 in some following year, he would pay $266 that
year, or $22 a month.
Payments would be collected
with the income tax. Withdrawal
from the plan would be made by
total payment at one time.

Benefits derived from the Educational Opportunity Bank were
listed by the advisory panel.
There would be an increase of
students from low- and middleclass incomes attending college.
Improvement of colleges could
in result from an increase tuition.
Ability, jand not financial status.
would determine the choice of
college.
Several disadvantages have
been indicated by men in education.

Meyerson and Edelstein welcome
freshmen at convocation ceremony
by Daniel Lasser

Spectrum Staff Reporter

Incoming freshmen were officially welcomed to the
State University of Buffalo at a Convocation held Thursday,
Sept. 7, on the steps of Lockwood Library.
Welcoming addresses were given by the University
President Martin Meyerson and Student Association President Stewart Edelstein.
Speaking “in terms of the ageold world of student life,” Presi-

dent

Meyerson compared the
goals and aspirations of today’s

student with those of students
throughout history.
He drew a parallel between
the State University of Buffalo
and the thirteenth century University of Toulouse, where stu-

dents were assured of their free“Here at Buffalo," the
President said, “students have
not been tied to apron strings,
but have been respected as responsible individuals or in the
process of learning to be redom.

sponsible.”

President Meyerson told the
freshmen how the recent changes
in the State University of Buffalo’s academic structure would
affect them. He said:
“Some of these changes arc
now in operation. There are

described how he has added three

members of the student body to
his cabinet in order to “get the

fullest involvement of students

in the key policies of the University.”
He declared: "We need each
other’s help.”

Student Association President
Edelstein highlighted his welcome with excerpts from an
article by Rick Kean in Matrix
’67.
The article spoke of “a world

brimming with violence” for
which higher education must prepare students. The violence will
continue to escalate as long as

President Meyerson

others to look forward to; a four
options
load,
rather than grades for some

course

Mr. Edelstem noted that anything derived from the educational system will only be the
result of “thought, study, acti-

courses and a wide selection of
freshmen and sophomore seminars. Still further in the future
is the system of colleges for
residents and non residents where
undergraduates, graduates, and
faculty, married and unmarried
students, residents and commuters can work together and get
to know each other in groups
large enough to provide variety,
but small enough to permit a
sense of identity.”
Urging students to take a more
active role in the affairs of the
community, he expressed the
hope that "your voluntary efforts will be even more effective
than those of your predecessors."
In closing, President Mcyerson

Mass-produced trinkets

seeks student involvement

mass-produced trinket. The accepted definitions of reality and
the way you are expected to
think about them are suffocatingly narrow.”

the majority of the population
of this world lives without food,
clothing and the education which
gives a man the tools to live
with dignity.”
He commented further:
“The American University system, at this point in its development, is seldom enlightened to

treat you as a mature adult and
rarely visionary enough to serve
your aspirations. There is more
than an average chance that you
will be treated by faculty and
administrators as an expendable,

Stowart Edelttein
'world brimming with violence"
vity, and

commitment" on the
student.

part of the

Many seek escape
He expressed the belief that
through frustration, many will
"turn to those common and not
so common methods of escape so
convincingly expressed in the
‘turn on, tune in, and drop out’
philosophy..
“But these offer no answers,
no solutions," he commented
The Convocation also included
a talk on “The Traditions and
Meaning of the Academic Garb"
by Dean of • Women Jeanette
Scudder.
The platform also included
Dean of Students Richard Siggelkow who served as Master of
Ceremonies; Rabbi Justin Hofmann who gave the Invocation;

Errol Sull, student chairman of
the Orientation Committee, and
the Rev. James Streng who gave
the Benediction. The Band, under
the direction of Mr. Frank Cipolla, also performed.

�Th

Pag* Two

•

Friday,

Spectrum

Amsterdam reverses

University of

Erie sc

by Daniel Laffer
The University of

Amsterdam has reinvited State Uni-

to give a series of lectures there.
Last month, the university rector magnificus, professor

Dr. J. VanDer Hoeven, had announced that the American
professor’s nomination as a visiting lecturer would not be
accepted for the time being because of the charges brought
against him
Dr. Fiedler was scheduled to
lecture in Amsterdam under a
90-day Fulbright grant.
But this week, VanDer Hoeven,
said Fiedler would be welcomed
after all, as it has appeared that
"many authoritative pers'ons in
the U.S., including the president
of the Fulbright Board, are supporting Professor Fiedler and
continue to give him their full
confidence,’’
Since, the April 29 narcotics
raid on" Dr. Fiedler’s home, reactions within the world academ
ic community have been generally

favorable toward the Buffalo

professor.
Just prior to his reinvitation
to the University of Amsterdam,
the Sept. 5 issue of the “Nieuwe

Rotterdamse Courant” carried the

following:
"Already fifty members of the
staff of the University of Amster
dam have signed a declaration of
protest against the decision to
withdraw the invitation to the
American professor Dr. L. A.
Fiedler.

“The rector magnificus and
trustees made this decision when
it became known that the professor they had invited must
stand trial in America in connee-

tion with an offense against the
American law on drugs.
“They feared negative publicity. Drs. J.G. Kooy has written
the declaration of protest against
this decision. One hopes that Professor Fiedler will be allowed to
come to Amsterdam.”

An editorial in the same issue
of that newspaper said in part:
“Because of pending charges
against him, Dr, Leslie Fiedler,

professor at the State University

of Buffalo, has been told . . .
that his visiting professorship has
been postponed for an indefinite
period of time . . .
“Leslie Fiedler can add this
Amsterdam decision to the story
of his experiences in the ‘New
York Review’ of July 13, One
wonders whether the Amsterdam

rector

and trustees were aware

of this article when they approved of the opinion, more than
a month after its appearance,
that Fiedler had better not come
to Amsterdam.
“Would the article have been
relevant? Fiedler tells with irony,
but not without bitterness, how
he became involved in a most annoying way in a police and justice persecution against the use

of marijuana in an environment
that is not too broadminded.”
The editorial noted that the
“proves that the university circles of this American professor
emphatically do no belong to this
narrowminded environment.”
Referring to “the old American
tradition of fair play, which maintains that one is innocent until
proven guilty,” it further stated:
“One may wonder what Amsterdam has to do with old American heritage . . . There is no
monopoly here. This rule of fair
play is, in fact, a European norm.
Indeed, the European convention
of human rights, signed and endorsed by the
Netherlands,
states . . .
‘Anyoneone accused of an offense is considered innocent until his guilt has been proven by
legal ways.’
“The rector of the University
of Amsterdam might counter that
he did not discuss the issue of
guilt or innocence. In fact, he
stated so explicitly. But the gentlemen of the University of Buffalo did not do so either, on account of the quoted rule. And
they concluded from it that a
suspension for professor was out
of the question.”
The above articles were translated by Mrs. John C.G. Boot,
wife of John C.G. Boot, professor
of Management Science.
Wednesday a hearing opened
on arguments to supress evidence
obtained in the raid on Dr. Fiedler’s residence at 154 Morris Avenue. The motion was made on the
grounds that the evidence was obtained illegally.
“

&gt;/s invited:

Conference will explore
opportunity in education

decision, asks Dr. Fiedler to lecture
Spectrum Staff Reporter

the

all-day conference on “Equality of Educational Opportu-

nity,” to be held Sept. 23 in Norton Hall.
The idea of the conference
resulted from a proposal by Dr.
Joseph Manch, Superintendent of
Buffalo Public Schools, in which
he advocated the establishment
of a

metropolitan, racially-integrated “educational park.”
The Sept, 23 conference, which
will include representatives from
all parts of Erie County, is being
sponsored jointly by the Buffalo
Board of Education, the Buffalo
Area Chamber of Commerce and
“Project Innovation,” an agency
funded under the United States
Elementary and Secondary
School Act. All Erie County
school systems have been invited
to send delegations and representatives of their respective
communities.

In the March proposal Dr.
Manch stated, “We need to "be
concerned about the underlying
philosophy of our way of life
in a Democracy. It is necessary
for us to discuss what we might
do jointly, in unity, in a feeling
of good will, to try to bring
reality into our ideals, our hopes
and our aspirations for all the
citizens of our metropolitan com-

munity.”

Program explained
The morning program has such
distinguished speakers as Dr.
Max Wolff, senior research psy-

chologist

with

the Center for

Urban Education in New York
City, and Dr. David Cohen, who
directed the U.S. Civil Rights
Commission’s study, “Racial
Isolation in the Public Schools.”
After the speeches, participants
will break into small groups to
discuss the topic, “Is there
Equality of Educational Opportunity in Erie County.”

The afternoon session commences with a panel on “Solutions to the Problems,” to be
moderated by Dr. Manch.
Participants are William D.
Hope, member of the school
board in West Irondoquoit, where
Negro children have been bussed
from Rochester; Mgsr. William
Rosche, Supt. of School for the
Catholic Diocese of Rochester;
Franklyn S. Barry of Syracuse,
which has a long range educational park plan, and Dorothy

Jones, director of the Office of
Church and Race, Protestant
Council of New York City.

The panel will deal with these
topics: Educational Parks, Bussing Plans, Compensatory Education and the Relationship of
Private Schools to the Problem.
The final speaker will be
James E. Dent, past president of
the Hartford, Conn. Area Chamber of Commerce. His topic will
be: “The Interest of the Business Community in Equality of
Education.

WE (AN HELP YOU!
make the Spectrum work for you,
it has for others!!
Buying, Selling, Renting or

Borrowing

—

We deal in everythings from

roomates to lost dogs. Your ad is almost guaranteed to get results with our

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\

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Categories
FOR SALE

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Contact NORM GOLDBERG in The Spectrum business
office, room 355c, Norton Hall or call 831-3610.

�Friday, September 15, 1967

Th

•

Pag* The**

Spectrum

Administration's policy
protects student privacy
was

Phil Cook
In the course of a student’s stay

at the University, the

school collects a vast amount of data—stftne as trivial and
obvious as your age and sex and some more personal such
as your grades, the organizations you belong to or a session
with the Counselling Service.
How confidential is this information? Can a trip to the
student court mean embarrassment when getting a job? How
closely does the University cooperate with local draft boards?
According to Dean of Students
Richard Siggelkow, “The release
of records to other colleges, employers, perspective employers,
governmental and legal agencies
occur only upon approval of the
student, graduate or upon subpoena.”

Grade records
The war and the draft have
in the past focused attention on
the relationship between the University and the draft boards.
The Office of Admissions and
Records prepared a roster of
class standings in order to be
able to pass that information on
to the Selective Service should
the student so request. It will
not release this or any other
grade information without written consent of the student.
Within the University administration specific grade information is only available to a student’s advisor, although more
general information as to one’s
standing is available to the Counselling Service and the Dean’s
Office.
Some students

wonder about

the

copy of their grades that
seems to find its way home at
the end of every semester. The
Office of Admissions and Records says that it routinely sends
out only one copy of the semester grades and that it is addressed to the student at his
permanent address as shown on
his registration cards.

No membership lists
With the Vietnam war and the

growth of an anti-war movement
on campus there has also come
an interest on the part of the
FBI, HCUA and other intelligence agencies in the membership of some student organizations. At Michigan a year or so

ago the Dean of Students volun-

tarily supplied the House Committee on Un-American Activities
with the membership list of the
local chapter of Students for a

Democratic Society.
At the University there arc no
organizational membership lists

filed with the administration and
the Dean of Students Office professes itself to be concerned
about the privacy of the student
and his right of free association.
The Student Counselling Service has been the subject of occasional paranoiac suspicions of
providing feedback on sessions to

Deans and dorm directors. This

ai

irentl:

dateline news. Sept. 15

the case uni

adopted a mote protective atti-

Canal Thursday by opening machineglin fire 'on an Israeli patrol
driving along the canal’s eastern bank, an Israeli army spokesman
reported in Jerusalem.
On
borderline readmissions
GANGTOK—Sikkim mobilized for war Thursday after Peking
cases, however, the counselling
sewjfe's
interview still does threatened air raids in support of Chinese Communist troops battling
the Indian forces defending this Himalayan Shangri-la.
feedback directly into adminisSAIGON—Thursday, U.S. heavy bombers blitzed North Vietnam’s
trative channels.
key invasion bases in one of the war’s greatest land, sea and air
Outside the University they
bombardments.
make no release of infomation.
U.S. spokesman said Air Force B-52 Stratofortresses staged two
There
however,
no
MD’s
on
are,
0
massive raids today in the intensifying campaign to cripple the
the staff so that unlike Health
35,000 North Vietnamese army force poised on South Vietnam’s
Office records the record of your
northern border.
interview is not. in a legal sense,
VIET NAM—U.S. planes hit the center of the port city of
privileged information.
Haiphong and the secondary port area of Cam Pha.
UNITED NATIONS—Cambodia told the Security Council WedHealth info' privileged
Without the consent of the nesday it captured a U.S. trained Vietnamese spy disguised as a Viet
Cong guerrilla and charged it was part of a plot to extend the war
student the records of the Health
into Cambodia territory.
Office appear to be unapproachWASHINGTON—President Johnson flew to Kansas City, Mo.,
able.
Thursday to attend a meeting of the International Association of
Student disciplinary matters
Police Chiefs, the White House announced.
are handled entirely by the StuLOS ANGELES—Planning Research Corp. announced Wednesday
dent Judiciary. The records of a
that it has received a $190,000 contract for a study of the cost of
student court's cases are generoperating two U.S. Army divisions in South Vietnam.
ally destroyed upon the graduThe Army contract calls for a one-year study of both direct
ation of the student. The Dean's
office and other branches of the and indirect costs of operating the 1st Cavalry Airmobile and 4th
administration have no record of Infantry divisions.
ALBANY—The State of New York had to go to the bank
them unless a suspension is inThursday to borrow money to pay off $26 million in State University
volved. Access to Student Judiconstruction notes it failed to sell.
ciary' records is up to the discreState Comptroller Arthur Levitt said the state sold $50 million
tion of the court.
“We do not give out student in tax anticipation notes, more than half of which was for the
telephone numbers upon request construction fund debit.
For the first time in its history, last Friday the state could not
until we have contacted the student for such permission,” says sell the $46.6 million in Housing! Finance Authority notes including
the Dean of Students’ policy the $26 million that come due Friday.
ALBANY—The Democratic controlled Constitutional Convention
statement on release of student
Wednesday rammed through a plan for the state to assume the
records.
This sort of overcautiousness
$528 million paid by localities annually for welfare.
best characterizes the prevailing
The 103-71 vote came despite warnings from minority leader Earl
attitudes and practices of the W. Brydges that the article “seriously threatens the passage of the,
University administration in re
total constitution by the people.” Only six Republicans and joined
gard to student records.
the solid Democratic majority in backing the proposal.

tude towards its files.

-

“On Campus 99
MONEY PROBLEMS?
Don't be nervous.
University Book Store's
At your service.

Used books

ore

graded

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You can sell an A

Afford two or three.

To end up being money ahead
Sell an A
**
Uu Y a r
instead.

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„

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AVAILABLE TO YOU

ALL YEAR AROUND

�1967

Friday, September 15,

The Spectrum

Pag* Four

Teachers protest .o
This week schools across the nation have thrown open

their bright green doors. In many areas, teachers slammed
them shut again,

In Michigan, thousands of students had an extended

How long will this type of action be needed to point
out that teachers across the country are grossly underpaid?

r @1
When will school boards realize that capable teachers deserve a wage which reflects the quality of their work and
I
the training they have undergone in preparing for their
roles as teachers?
An apparent injustice has developed in this country
when the employee in the steel plant brings home three to
four thousands dollars more than a teacher. The imbalance
has evolved because labor has pressured for its demands
through unions while teachers and other civic employees
isrws&gt;t'
have been denied that option.
Yet when teachers organize and strike if their demands
are not met, the public gets very upset. “Teachers sure
aren’t like they used to be.” No, they’re better, so why are ®l5Jft’TWJWEVCf3S7'— THrnx Mints v*tr:
they being paid like they used to be?
‘No, I don't know where the little girls' room is!!'
Buffalo is not immune from these problems. In fact,
teachers and civic employees in this city are tremendously
underpaid.
Buffalo is constantly losing good teachers to the
suburban school systems, simply because the pay is better.
But even in the suburbs the pay isn’t high enough.
by Barry Holtzclaw
The solution to the troubles in Michigan, or New York,
or Buffalo or anywhere lies not with meeting teacher’s demands, for that is just a temporary solution. The real
Defense Secretary MacNamara has announced
problem lies in attitudes of school boards and the public plans to construct a fortified barrier along the Dein general who demand the best teachers for what is far militarized Zone in Vietnam.
Apparently the Secretary has convinced the
from the best pay.
It’s time this country awakened to the fact that teaching President, despite the recommendations for increased bombing from the military and the hawks To the Editor:
is a profession and it should be treated as just that.
in Congress, that the bombing raids have not ap-

Or perhaps...

Readers
Writings

National fraternities defended

Still unfinished
The Interim Campus still hasn’t been completed. It
seems more and more apparent that when this University
sets a date for the completion of a project, one can estimate
that about 80% of the building will really be finished.
The cafeteria, the library and a number of classrooms
in the Political Science building are not yet ready for use.
One of the problems seems to be the light watch that
workmen are keeping on their own domain. Instructors
desiring to put their own bookcase shelves in place or
put up a curtain rod have caused union-conscious laborers
to threaten
“serious action.”
Let’s face it. Interim students, you can't buck a labor
union. After all, a carpenter is a carpenter and a professor
is a professor.
Another little problem seems to have arisen because
of the delays at the Interim Campus. The Political Science
Department is nowhere to be found. It has left the Main
Street campus and hasn’t arrived on the Interim Campus
because the Political Science building isn’t finished. If your
a political Science major, sit tight. Hopefully the Department will land somewhere soon.
—

-

A plot to end dissent
Michigan

Gov. George

Romney has really let himself

in for it by admitting that he was “brainwashed” by his visit
to Vietnam. Many were quick to point out that this country
can t very well elect a man President if he can be brainwashed.

Indeed, they have a point. At any rate, this apparently
fatal blow to Romeny’s presidential aspirations has sent a
flurry of activity through his Republican backers Rockefeller announced plans to meet with California Gov. Regan,
many of Romney’s backers have openly withdrawn their
support.
Perhaps the validity, rather than the consequences, of
Romney's statement should be considered. If he had been
brainwashed by a trip to Vietnam, have others? President
Johnson. Secretary McNamara, at least half of the State
Department, probably all of the Defense Department and
a host of Senators and Representatives have also been to
\ ietnam,
not to mention the thousands of America servicemen who have been there and are still there.
If the brainwashing technique really works
say even
on 509c of the visitors
then all the government has to
do is send all of its critics there. That will effectively cut
opposition to the war in half.
Perhaps a State Department study on “Brainwashing
Through Observation in Vietnam” should be
compiled to
aid the Administration in determining the effectiveness of
such a program. Until the study is completed, the draft
rolls can be kept high with the
prospects that possibly half
of those who return will be
Administration policy backers.
—

—

preciably affected the rate of the flow of aid from
the North. The raids in the North, however, have
been intensified, particularly around the crucial
port of Haiphong.
In a brilliantly devilish pre-election year political manuever, the President has announced
ptans to enact a program put forward by many
leading doves, including Senator Mike Mansfield,
to whom the idea is attributed. The bombings will
increase slightly in intensity for a while, and no
doubt around Christmas time once again there will
be a holiday truce and peace offer, followed by
another escalation. This is the pattern of the war,
and by alternately appealing to the critics from
both sides, the President is hoping to consolidate
support for the 1968 campaign. A victory for LBJ
next year would be a mandate not for The Great
Society, as in 1964, but for what is coming to be
known as The Great War against the “communist
aggression in Vietnam.”

Troop increase
Troop commitments, needed initially to patrol
the border, will have to be increased. The Demilitarized Zone, in order to insure the safety of the

large groups of construction personnel working in
a combat zone, will undoubtedly be levelled by
bombing and defoliating strikes.
Perhaps Washington is hoping that the barrier
plus the increased air strikes will convince Hanoi
that further aid to the Viet Cong is futile. A nego-

tiated peace with the North Vietnamese will make
it look like the conflict has ended, and allow the

terroristic “pacification" (de-communization) to
continue in the South minus external pressures.
Ho Chi Minh is no fool. He knows the implications
of negotiating directly with the mock regime in
Saigon. The DMZ wall will merely force North
Vietnam to use the jungles of the Laotian frontier
as a new route to the South.
a wall
The next step? Why, of course,
through Laos. And what is initially applauded as
a means of stabilization and de-escalation in Vietnam becomes merely an extension of the new wall
around China from Korea and the offshore islands
to Southeast Asia, an elaborate application of a
policy of containment of the Communist Menace.
—

Walls build hatred
Walls between peoples, be they in Berlin or
Vietnam are deceptively easy sources of stability.
But, whereas increased trade and communication
can build bridges of understanding and peace between peoples, walls can only result in hatred and
distrust. They heighten paranoia and increase aggressive tendencies.
There are dangers in the immediate future
which could easily result from the building of this
new Berlin Wall in Vietnam. Use of the Laotian
frontier by the North Vietnamese would conceivably
be a justification for escalation of the war into that
country, enlarging the Vietnam War into the Southeast Asian War. As the war increases in scope and
intensity, so does the chance of Chinese intervention; China can stay clear of things only so long
as foreign troops stay away from her borders. The
direct threat to her security involved in a ground
war in Northern Laos or North Vietnam would
necessitate a direct and major nuclear conflict
with the U.S.

I am writing this letter not only as a personal retort to the accusations expressed by B.M.
towards national fraternies, but also as unofficial
spokesman for all fraternity men on this campus.

In his statement that we are “superfluous”
organizations he must surely be referring to such
activities as the concerts and mixers we sponsor
for the students, the fact that we enjoy giving
wholehearted support to UB athletic teams at both
home and away games, the scholastic scholarships
we sponsor, and probably most worthless of all
are such “fun and games” as Sammy’s Heart Fund
Drive. AEPi’s collection for the Cancer Society,
and other community projects for orphans, crippled
children, etc., that all fraternities on this campus
paticipate in every year.
He also claims that we are “narrow” in our
acceptance policies. If seeking the best all-around
freshmen boys to belong to your organization is
synonymous with being narrow, then we gladly
plead guilty.
Yes, it is true that all the fraternities on this
campus are looking for boys who are the leaders
scholastically, politically, athletically and socially,
and the fraternities are getting the boys.

The idea that national fraternities on this campus “foster prejudices” and are a “detriment to
the principles of equality” is such absurd nonsense
that it is almost ludicrous in nature. For B.M’s
edification the present ban on national fraternities is due to an antiquated 1953 (those boys in
Albany are right up with the times) resolution
passed by the Board of Trustees.
There is something incongruous about the
idea that a person such as B.M. (whose brash
statements are. I'm sure, more opinionated than
factual) is anti-fraternity, while a man like Chancellor Furnas (while he was still in office) flew

(Cont’d

The Spectrum is published twice-weekly
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on Pg.

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Student Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press
and United Press International.

Subscriptions at $3.00

Represented for national advertising by National Educational Advertising Service. Inc.. 420 Madison Ave.,
New York. N Y. Republication of all news dispatches
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Rights of republication of all other
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Second class postage paid

Editorial

policy

is

at Buffalo. New York.
by the Editor in Chief.

determined

5)

�Friday, September 15, 1967

(Cont’d from Pg. 4)
to Albany at his own expense to testify in favor
of national fraternities remaining on this campus,
and that they were, in fact, good for the University.
I just wish that B.M. would stop projecting
what seem to be his own character flaws, i.e. narrow mindedness and prejudice, on organizations
which he knows very little about, or could it be
that he was once rejected admission by the fra-

Tht

Pag* Fiv*

Sptctrum

By InteHandl

BELOW OLYMPUS

\m§f

(mm)

8ACK-T0

SCHOOL

his personality, I could re idily understand why.
Robert Levitt
President, Sigma Alpha Mu Fraternity

■m

*2)!%.■),UX.

"Damned Hippies!"

Harassed by police

The Lighter Side

To the Editor:

I would like to bring to the attention of the
community two “encounters” I’ve had
''with the Narcotics Squad of the Buffalo Police

S University

by Dick West

Dept.

agent.

After a month of fruitless surveillance the effort was dropped and my roommate was told only
to report if something came up. I found all this
out two months later from the detective who arrested me on the basis of an anonymous tip. At the
time I suspected nothing,
I year ago, still on probation from the first
offence and by then a firm believer in Playboy's
line that “marijuana is known to have such serious effect as jail”, I was arrested again.
Whether for these reasons or for others at
11:30 p.m. one night last year a member of our
city’s finest dressed in civilian clothes entered my
apartment with drawn revolver without knocking
and without having first obtained a warrant of
any kind. Upon searching it, I was arrested for
possession of four analgesic tablets (lying on my
bedside table next to the envelope bearing the
name of the doctor who prescribed them) in an
improperly labeled container.
I had recently been in an industrial accident,
I was still in a cast and needed the pills to dampen
the pain.
I was taken to headquarters, questioned, booked
and thrown in the can for the night. It was only
by the grace of an excellent, if expensive, lawyer,
a probation officer who believed my story and a
bondsman who, for a little extra money, would
take a risk that I was released on bail the next
morning.
As a result of the publicity which the case
received (the publicity was at least partly arranged by the police) and a phone call from someone representing himself as a member of the narcotics squad to my landlord, I found myself evicted
and out of a job.
Three months later the District Attorney, privately admitting to a certain lack of evidence and
troubled by the fact thgt the law under which I
had been charged had penalty provisions that applied only to negligent pharmacists, joined in a
motion to dismiss the charges. Two days later I
was reinstated at work with no back pay.
Total cost: $300 legal fees; $1450 lost wages
and unemployment benefits; $200 moving costs,
and my wife still wakes up at night with nightmares. We were in bed, asleep at the time they

broke in.

—Anonymous

Writers: Please be brief. Letters should not exceed
300 words. All letters must be signed and the address
and telephone number of the writer must be included. Positive verification of authorship will be made
before a letter is printed.
Letters will be kept in strict confidence.
The Spectrum will use initials, or pen name, if
requested. But anonymous letters are never used.
The Spectrum reserves the right to edit or delete
material submitted for publication, but the intent of

tetters

will not be changed.

Welcome to the corner of babble. Those of you
who are lucky enough to be unfamiliar with this
usually murky and often unintelligent . . er, ah
. unintelligible . . . well, in all honesty, I suppose
your own nsK. lo all
in countless legions
letters in two years

ot my loyal
—

—

tans wdo number

and have contributed five
it is not entirely my fault
went unchallenged

last

We were vacationing in Canada after a summer long battle with classes. Being naturally slothful I didn’t even start worrying about a column
until the week before it was due. And after I
started worrying about it, it took Wifely-wife-hereafter referred to for the rest of the year as W-w
and no other-several days to drink up the last case
of beer so that I couldn’t keep getting bombed—she said—and then made me write the column
before I could go in and get more beer.

To the Editor:
For at least a year there have been rumors
about the campus concerning the harassment of

The first occasion, although it was not a case
of pure (i.e., unprovoked) harassment, it offers
an opportunity to point out a few of the more
normal means of police surveillence employed. On
this first occasion my phone was tapped, my mail
was “put under surveillance" (i.e. opened) and my
roommate was recruited as an unpaid undercover

by STEESE

that the establishment
week.

AAUP and police
students by members of th Buffalo Police Department. It has also been said that police have refused
to protect students who required their assistance.
The officers of the American Association of University Professors would like to ascertain if there is
any truth in these rumors.
If you have been involved in, or witnessed, an
incident of police harrassment, or if you have been
denied, or witnessed the denial of, police protection, please get in touch with me at my office,
Room 35 Annex A, or make an appointment to
see me through the secretary of the English Department.
George Hochfield
President, SUNY Buffalo Chapter, AAUP

T he

I was talking the other day with a worried Democrat,
which, the way things have been going lately, could be almost
any Democrat.
This particular Democrat was worried about Shirley
Temple, who is running for Congress as a Republican in
California.
“How are we going to get
people to vote against Shirley
Temple?” he asked mournfully,
“It’s like getting people to vote
against the flag or indoor plumbing or mom’s apple pie?’
Although I try to maintain a
nonpartisan viewpoint, I can’t
stand to see grown men cry. So
I sought to comfort him.

Lollypop backlash
“There, there, old fellow,” I
said, patting his head. “It may
not be as bad as all that. You
Democrats may be able to capitalize on the lollypop backlash.”

“The lollypop backlash?” he
queried,

spirits

brightening.

“What’s that?”

I explained to him that back
in the 1930’s all of the little girls
who took dancing lessons were
forever being compared, favorably or unfavorably, to Shirley

Temple.
“My wife, for instance, can’t
tell her left foot from her right
unless she’s wearing different
colored shoes. Yet her mother
used to say she was “a regular
Shirley Temple." In fact, her
mother still says that.

Because of Shirley Temple,
thousands of ungainly grade
schoolers were forced to practice
tap steps when they would rather
have been skipping rope, playing
post office or engaging in other
girlish pursuits and

Quotes in

Once a year, at the spring
recital, they had to get their hair
curled and trip out on the stage
and hop-stcp-shuffle through a
couple of choruses of The Good

Ship Loilvpop

Female opposition
As a result, thousands of little
girls grew up hating Shirley Temple. To this very day. they cringe
at the mention of her name.
“Thai is what I mean by the
lollypop backlash." 1 said.

My Democratic friend, however,
was not entirely reassured.
“A backlash is always a negative thing," he said "We need a
positive factor, a candidate who
can oul-Shirley Shirley
“Ideally, we should have an
actress who would stir up nostalgia among older voters, and
is known to the younger generation through television.

“She should have a wholesome
image, having played in family
pictures that tugged the heartstrings and left the audience with
a warm glow. In private life, she
should be untouched by any Hoi
lywood

scandals.” he said.

“The only actress I know who
meets all of those qualifications
is Lassie," I replied
“You know," be said, snapping
his fingers, "I never thought of
that.”

the news

WASHINGTON—A member of the House Ways and Means Committee, speaking about the PresidentVproposed tax increase;
“How can you ask a working man with five kids to pay 10 per
cent higher taxes when oil millionaries are socking away billions in
federal subsidies through the oil depletion lax credit?"
FREEHOLD, N. J.—The Rev. George J. Hafner a Roman Catholic
priest suspended and threatened with excommunication, describing
the masses held in homes that led part to his bishop’s action;
we pass the
“We sing folk songs and improvise prayers
bread and wine around and discuss the problems of the day.”
MILWAUKEE —The Rev. Russell Witon, after leading a countermarch against the Rev. James E. Groppi, whose open housing demonstrations have provoked violence in the city's Sooth Side;
“I favor open housing, but I wouldn’t want any trash moving
in here.”
ROCHESTER, N. Y.—An aide to George Romney:
“The governor has been so involved in a city area. He hasn’t
been able to give much through! to. politics of late
...

"

But I did get into the mood necessary to really really grump when some clod started racing up
and down the nice peaceful lake in which the
island on which we were vacationing was sitting
in a confounded double damned hydroplane. So
I bitched left, and bitched right, and did a few
really fancy double reverse bitches with a backhand flip and charged off into the motorboat—and
sat there for ten minutes pulling the starting cord
and swearing-roared across, the lake to the car—alright purists, to the dock and walked to the car—and bounced, banged, and hacked, my way across
one of the most bumpy and dusty dirt roads I
have seen of late into the local source of goodies
town where on a Saturday afternoon I mailed a
letter to The Spectrum containing this most won-

drous of columns.

Time passes. We leave the island, journey to
Toronto, city of beer and bakeries, at least for
clan Steese, where we spend some time sitting
around getting fatter. Also spend time sitting in
the Riverboat in Yorkville listening to Tom Rush—
Who was here on the Saturday of last year’s folk
concert—sub note, Have you noticed that Saturday IS this year’s folk concert yet?—In case anybody is interested Mr. Rush played last year’s appearance here with a very serious hangover.

I liked him last year, but in Toronto he seemed
much more effective yet. The smallness of the plant
helps but essentially the fact is that Rush is very,
very good. If interested he continues through Sunday. While being disorganized in folky vein how
did Joan Baez eyer manage to sneak out an album with so little fan fare and publicity. Entitled
“Joan" it impressed me at least, no little, especially since I had seen (heard?) not a whisper
about it till we saw it in Toronto.
So at long last we come gallumphing back.
To find no grump in last week’s Spectrum. After
W-w wiped the foam off my lips so the campus
police would not shoot me I went up to find out
what was going on. It seems it took the Royal
Canadian Post, the United States Mail, and the
campus mail from Saturday to Friday to get the
letter to The Spectrum office. And so all my beautiful rantings and ravings directed at an orientation issue went to waste. Sniff, Sniff.
There were however a few small points which
might be brought up again. Plaudits go to whoever
realized that if busses were going to be parked
on the Diefendorf loop it was going to HAVE to
to be one way
it should have been same
for some time. Now would the same bright soul
contemplate what is going to happen when some
poor confused soul who is new to the campus
screeches to a halt in front of the jazzy new map
on the front driveway in the middle of a heavy
—

traffic pattern?
I ask you friends, would you trust your life
to one skinny white line in a place where there
has never been a line before in what just might
be the busiest traffic artery on campus? So trust
already. But I wager that said sign gets moved after
someone starts sueing the state for whiplash injuries.

To hell with it, I’m so stupid I don’t even
understand why the President shouldn’t be able
to fire the Joint Chiefs of Staff if he wants to. 1

mean, does a 4-star general really need job protection? This reference the bill LBJ signed guaranteeing a four year term to the Joint Chiefs of
Staff. Which may be one of his more lasting monuments. Enough ranting. More next week. If found
in an alley with cleat marks all over me please
notify my next of kin.

The Spectrum's pages for

Editorials

&amp;

Opinions

It is the policy of The Spectrum to report the
news fully and impartially in the news pages,
to express the opinions of the newspaper only
in the editorial pages and to publish all sides
of important controversial issues.
"Without

expression,

freedom of

expression

is meaningless."

�Th

P*9* Six

•

Friday, September IS, 1967

Spectrum

Grad moving to critical fields;
war creating "ideal" labor market
College graduates are now facing the most ideal labor

graduate work and are. with greater frequency, moving
into “critical fields”
or those where selective deferments
. •
are granted.
—

These are the conclusions of study prepared by the
placement office of the State University of Buffalo.
One of the most significant
trends rewaN in the study is
that industry is becoming more
willing to hire a college gradu
ate, regardless of his Selective
Service status During the Korean
War industry adopted a hands-off
policy toward the college gradu
ate who was eligible for the draft
Draft deferment important
"Industrial rnniites have
found that even the tone of inter
views have changed when speak
ing to the technical student.” according to the placement office
report.

The placement office report
called the ideal labor market” a
result of the drain of manpower
from the civilian market to the
and the industrial expansion resulting from the war.”
Graduate enrollment up
military

A second trend, one that cannot be easily connected with the
draft, has also been noted: The
number of students who pursue
beyond the bachelor degree and

the number going into “critical

fields” is increasing.
The placement office report
says that “the number of candi-

BIG
BEER
MAN

dates registered

to have

Tiffin reopens on trial basis
The Tiffin Room in Norton
Union has reopened for at least
another four months.
Last May, agitated student
groups—the Ad Hoc Committee
on Food Service artcT the Graduate Student Association—demanded and picketed for the abolishment of the Tiffin Room.
The reasons:
The Tiffin Room, because of
high prices and dress regulations,
is patronized almost entirely by
the faculty and administration.
The students feel that the space
in a student union could be used
for more student-oriented activi-

their

credentials forwarded tn grarinate schools has more than tripled
in the last year alone. Few are

willing to relate the, significant
change to the draft or the War
in Vietnam.
“It would be a shame if this
‘golden age of -education’ were
equated with lack of interest to
serve on the students part,” said
Dr. Richard Siggelkow, dean of
students. He added that many students feel “no pangs of conscience” in delaying their service

ties.
On the financial side, during
1965-66, the Tiffin Room lost
$25,956.70. The profits from the
student bookstore had to be used
Otherwise,
to cover this loss.

obligation.

Students painfully aware

of war
“There is something to be said
for the student who wants to
postpone that obligation and pursue his studies,” the dean said.
Perhaps the war is what makes
the economy boom. Most students
are painfully aware of the war
and realize that they will have to
confront the draft someday. Get
ting an education is their most
immediate concern, however, and
there is “something to be said”
for that.

TAIWAN
4543 MAIN ST.

these profits could have been
used for improvements in Norton
Hall, especially expansion of the
bookstore, planned for the firstfloor lounge and to include art
displays, new and rare book collections, and a browsing section.

Trial period
At the end of the school year,
the FSA Sub-board III, in charge

RESTAURANT
—

Qhitnese

3bo d
—

tent.”
Ray Becker, Director of Food
Service, says he is confident that
losses can be cut down. He plans
to accomplish this by raising prices slightly and streamlining the
operations and staff.
Peter Vanderstier, new Norton
Food Director in charge of the
Tiffin Room, hopes to bring more
students into the picture by offering inexpensive buffet lunches
weekly and relaxing the dress
regulations “a little bit —just so

they’re presentable. Students are
welcome by all means.”

In four months the FSA will
have to decide whether or not
the Tiffin Room is worth keep-

ing.

PARKSIDE
LUTHERAN CHURCH
Depew

&amp;

Wallace Aves.

Mile from Campus off
Main St. Across from
Bennett High School
LIVELY ADULT DIALOGUE
(1

Dine in leisure in an exotic Far East atmosphere. Serving the
best in authentic Chinese and American cuisine. Cocktails
mixed to your taste at our unique Oriental cocktail bar. Open
daily 11:30 a m. till midnight. Fri. and Sat. till 2:00 a.m.
Ample Free Parking

TAKE OUT SERVICE

ulty—students to a greater ex-

Come Worship With Us This
Sunday—11:00 AM.

2 Miles from U.B.

FEATURING

of food service and the bookstore,
decided to give the management
of the Tiffin Room a four-month
trial period. According to Stewart
Edelstein, Student Association
President, the Tiffin Room must
“begin to at least approach breaking even and since it is in the
student union, it must begin to
cater to students as well as fac-

9:45 AM.
New Young Pastor

BRIAN J. SNYDER

839-3924

Eat at

.

.

.

3010 MAIN STREET
South of Campus—by Hertel Ave.

FALL SALE

10'

HAMBURGER
SALE
SIMON PURE BEER
PROUDLY ANNOUNCES
THE APPOINTMENT OF

SUNDAY
SEPT. 17

PETE TASCA
SPECIAL CAMPUS SALESMAN

See Pete when you've got beer
on your mind.
Special deals for picnics,
parties, and blasts.

BRING THIS COUPON!
Limit—6 Per Customer

3010 MAIN ST.
South of Campus, by

Hertel Ave.

�Friday, September 15, 1967

The Spectrum

campus releases...

Pif§ S#v#n

Cooperative bookstore plan waived
by Sally Falich

Student Association President
EdelstCUl gave mOFC

Stewart

Spectrum Sped./ Stall Reporter

Changing addresses for directory
Any student who has an address change to report for the
Student Directory may do so in

room 225 of Norton Hall any
time between 8:30 and 5 p.m.
before Sept. 20.

Self-defense courses offered
The Ippon club will begin a
program for novices in selfdefense and also a course in
advanced judo running every
Monday and Thursday evening in

T

.

_

,

...

,

.

,

°

the Clark Gym basement at 7 p.m
A demonstration is scheduled
for Saturday at 2 p.m. in the
Millard Fillmore Room.

Aid Corps will meet to reveal projects
Community Aid Corps will hold
a meeting Monday at 3 p.m. in
the Conference Theatre. The discussion will outline the 15 projects of the Corps.
The goal of the activities is
mainly tutorial. Assistance, with

Faculty Student Association plans for the conversion
of the University Bookstore into a cooperative have been
discarded.
Last February, after an intensive study made by
several faculty members, a report was presented to FSA
Sub-board III. It stated that the needs of the faculty and
students were not being met by the present bookstore.

special emphasis on reading and
writing, is given to Negro youths
in the depressed areas of Buffalo.
Volunteers do not need to have
any previous training. Transportation or expenses are provided

for all volunteers.

Sports Booster Club to hold meeting
The new Booster Club will hold
an organizational and poster-making meeting today at 1:30 p.m. in

ing section at all sports, make
posters and have pep rallies and
car parades. Spirit will be shown

the Tower basement.
The club will organize a cheer-

and sweatshirts.

The most impressive idea suggested was the formation of a
cooperative. In this way the students would share in the profits
at the end of the year. The
amount of profit would depend
on the amount of money each
student spent in the store.

as records, stuffed animals and
jewelry would
eliminated,
All this should have been compieted by this semester,

This plan was first discussed
the Sub-board in June of 1966.
Then, the hurdles of “merger
and expansion” were given as
reasons for delaying the plan at

Co-operative;
A thing of the past"
The first step taken was to
contact the manager of the Harvard University bookstore. His
opinion was that “a co-operative
is a thing of the past,”

In February of 1967, the GSA
unanimously passed a policy
statement suggesting the bookstore become a cooperative. Later,
FSA Sub-board III began plans
to change the bookstore.
The variety of books was to
be improved while such things

Mr. George Bielan, manager of
the Norton Hall bookstore, explained that the capital for the
formation of a co-operative is not
available at the present time.
He emphasized that the profit
now being made must be put
toward building and supplying
the new Amherst store.

by

that time.

"

that

an expanded curriculum
demands present expansion of the
store into the game room due to
ihe new courses offered jyid the
cost of the Art Supply Center at
the interim Campus. Because of
this and
16 Amherst
campus, there is little hope of
at
higher discounts
the present

““‘I

The Amherst bookstore will be
three to four times larger than
the Norton Hall store.

Discounts reduced
Mr. Bielan stated that the pre-

sent bookstore is a co-operative
in the sense that students can
receive a 5% discount. This
does not include the main floor
store which carries a large
amount of paperbacks, jewelry,
novelty items and supplies.

There has been some discussion about expanding the bookstore to the Norton center lounge.
In this case, there would be an
enlargement in the stock of trade
and reference books. Rare books
and art prints would be carried

also.

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Friday, Septembar 15, 1967

Spectrum

NSA to work on
the home front

Narcotics debate.. con't
•

(continued from Page One)
Referring to the students here
md their use of marijauna, he
said he forsees no serious prol

lem.

sistant Clinical Professor of

Psychiatry, began with two questions,

this advice; “If you don’t use any

Dr. Schutkeker claims that
people are self-destructive in unconscious ways. Their lives are
one slow suicidal attempt. Mai
nutrition is a serious problem in
the usage of drugs. Depression,
often induced by drugs, leads the
addict to turn inwardly against
himself.

Drugs, he stated, do not pro-

duce an instant Nirvana. Serious
mental problems may result. The
mnnrT1TTrfir~lT~1T~H~******'~**‘‘***‘*

X Special Purchase

Mr. Aldrich offered some advice to the freshmen: “If you
really want to take drugs, nobody
in the University or in the world
can stop you.”

He continued his attack on the
Narcotics Squad, saying, “In Buffalo, the Narcotics police have
bden allowed to pull some of the

most vicious and stupid stunts
in the history of law enforcement.
There is a strong suspicion that
the police have planted evidence
or used other illegal tactics in arresting people."
Mr. Aldrich made reference to
the arrest of several members of
the Road Vultures, the local motorcycle club, which took place
the previous night.
“Buffalo’s Narcotics Squad is a
sick, psychotic bunch of zealots
who will go out of their way to
plant marijauna on you if they
don’t like you. I live in fear that
they are going to try and plant
me this year."
Two dangers were illustrated
in the use of drugs. First, the
student can be arrested, thrown
out of the University and have
—

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Marijauna, to Mr. Aldrich, is

“less addictive and harmful” than
other drugs. “It’s more fun,”
He concluded by stressing the
responsible and intelligent use
of drugs. “If you are interested

in accepting this responsibility,”
he said, “I hope that you’ll join
LEMAR."

tion is directing its interests towards domestic rather than
international affairs.
The reasoning behind this
of policy is the hope that

change

students will overlook NSA’s past
link with the Central Intelligence
Agency. A program more concerned with home affairs would seem
less likely to attract government
interest.

The reformation of education
will become the NSA’s most important project. The draft, student power, and black power will

Dr, Robinson
The final speaker was Dr. John
G. Robinson, Associate Chairman also be emphasized.
and Associate professor of PsyEdward Schwartz, NSA’s new
chiatry. He indicated that “pushers” of drugs are only interested president, has proposed to completely change the structure of
in the money.
the NSA.
He stressed the neecf for more
The new NSA would be comscientific research and data on
the effects of various drugs. Sci- posed of two sections, one composed of local unions in each
entists in this area of research,
he said, try to avoid preaching college, which would be associated with regional and national unto the youth.
ions,
The other would be a
“But we’re scared of the probnational organization which would
lem,” he added.

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A “campaign against compul-

sory service in the military actions of the United States” will

be organized.
One resolution agreed with the
goals of “black power” unchanged
and defined the term as the
“unification of all black peoples

in America for their liberation

by any means necessary.” The

resolution also stated that “White
students must no longer put themselves in the position of determining what is best for blacks. Blacks
will provide their own leadership.”

NSA has adopted a resolution
concerning student power and
made it quite clear that “all
regulations of a non-academic nature which apply solely to students should be determined only
by students.” Freedom for faculty members was also emphasized:

“The teacher . . . should be free
from institutional censorship and
discipline unless through due
process it can be proved that his
actions are detrimental to his
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Michael Aldrich, the next
speaker, stated his position this
way: “There are students who
are trying to change the laws.
That’s me. They will be reported
to the proper authority. That’s
him (pointing to Mr. Amico).”

Dr. Bruno G. Schutkeker, As-

drugs now, don’t ever begin. If
you do, you’re plain stupid. Think
before you lean on anything.”

Michael Aldrich

most people use drugs stupidly

God that way," he added.

Dr. Schutkeker

directed to the freshman:
“Are you going to help us with
the solution? Or are you going
to become part of the problem?”
He gave a “hierarchy of problems" including cola soft drinks,
coffee, beer, whiskey, glue, magic
mushrooms, marijauna, and STP
—which is Serotonin Triptophosphate.
To a nation of people who frequently use various drugs, he had

hippies call it “freaking out;” the
laymen term it as “insanity.”
“You are not going to find

his public record completely
ruined. The second danger is that

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�Friday, September 15,

1967

The

Spectrum

Pave

Nine

NSA conference looks at drug involvement

(Editor’s Note : The U.S. National Student Association sponsored met to discuss the social implicathe First National Conference on Student Drug Involvement. August tions of drug use. The Narcos
15-18, at the University of Maryland. Both Mr. Aldrich and Dr. took their standard line that
—Leslie Fiedler of the State University of Buffalo were asked to marijuana leads to heroin, the

from anyone to gain access to
confidential health records.”
\ludge by actions

entire Conference.

line that any trip is a bad trip.
Sociologist Ned Polsky of
S.XrfLY. at Stony Brook charged
never
a
more
seen
I have
impressive roster of drug that his research into 30 years of
experts come together for a sane, scientific discussion of pot-law enforcement had led him
student drug involvement, removed from the range of to the conviction that the Narpublic hysteria as much as possible, gathered on the gigantic cotics Bureau had not only misled
the public for 30 years, and that

statements they may be forced

by Mike Aldrich

College Park campus at the same time as the NSA Congress
for one Big Think Session.

Charles Hollander, Director of
Drug Studies for NSA, put the
conference together and passed
out copies of his new book,
“Background Papers on Student
Drug Involvement.”
Bright and
early Tuesday
morning, August 15, /about 200
university officials, drug experts,
doctors, lawyers, and students
started listening and discussing.
First topic was the medical,

Dr. David Israelstan, Director
of Health Services (Psychiatric)
at Berkeley, pointed out that
“even ‘bad trips’ are good trips
in disguise, if you know what
to do with them,” and, speaking
from his extensive experience in
counselling and treating student
drug users, said that the hallucinogens “expose you to you—whatever’s in there is going to

come out.”
Dr. Joel Fort, lecturer in Sociology at Cal. Davis and formerly consultant to the WHO
on drugs, charged that “those
who seek to pass and enforce
legislation
unworkable
create
worse abuses than any from the
drugs themselves,” and
con-

scientific, and health aspects of
drug use, and speakers included
Donald B. Louria, MD from Cornell, who urged that illegal
drugs he kept illegal, but that
“the severe penalties for marijuana possession be mitigated,”
and Dr. William McGlothlin of
UCLA, who detailed recent research into non-hippie use of
LSD which he has conducted.
Dr. Solomon Snyder, pharmacologist at John’s Hopkins,
showed as much as scientists
now know about the actual phyvsiological effects of various
drugs on the nervous system,
and pointed out that research
done on drosophilae “gives evidence that caffeine produces
more chromosomal damage than
LSD does,” and that the recent
experiments with LSD and leukocytes show that “such theoretical damage is no more than
you get from a normal chest

demned “the default of the
scientific community: they only
rarely give testimony during the
passage of legislation, and this
leaves it to the climate of public hysteria. The result is unworking and unworkable laws.”

Reserve Criminal Law

Dr. Fort urged that we “see
drug use as a sociological and
public health matter, sometimes
a problem—and reserve criminal law for clearly defined

criminal behavior.”

Wednesday morning, representatives from the Federal
Bureau of Narcotics, the Food
and Drug Administration, and
several sociologists and lawyers

X-ray.”

tch the

for

the laws were stupid and irrational, but That the Federal Bureau of Narcotics had done so
purposely. He called for an im-

mediate Congressional invetigation of the Federal Bureau of
Narcotics on two issues:
“Their chronic falsifying of information on the question of marijuana, including their refusal to
consider the research done by
Lindesmith, Isbell, Becker, et. al,
and their chronic harrassment
and attempted illegal entrapment
of critics of their policies.”
Similar charges of self-aggandisement and illegal harrassment
were leveled al the Federal Bureau of Narcotics officials present by other members of the
panel.

The morning of the third day,
Dean Helen Nowlis of the University of Rochester moderated
a panel on “Campus Policy Regarding Drug Use.” Participants
included Robert Gage, MD, representing the American College
Health Association, Graham
Blaine, Chief of Psychiatric’ Services at Harvard, Dr. Leslie Fiedler of the State University of
Buffalo, Peter Stafford, author
of “LSD: The Problem-Solving
Psychedelic", Marc Meyer, President of the student body at Farleigh Dickenson, Chuck Hollander “as an advocate” for the NS A
and myself.
Doctor Gage noted that “student health officials are not, and
should not be, part of a police

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The audience, an auditoriumfull of student politicians and activists, was a bit uneasy about

Leary’s proposition

until one student asked, “But Dr. Leary, can’t
we just turn on and stay in?"
At that point the audience
cheered.;
Afternoons during the conference were devoted to discussion
groups, made up of widely differing individuals, from students to
balding authorities, from administrators to underground press
heads.
Resolutions drawn-up

fmk’m*

Nnrt Dnt

Friday was spent in drawing up
resolutions for the participants
to consider. Administrators, experts, and students helped draft
them, but Friday night only stu-

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They unanimously endorsed
two resolutions. The first was
“Guidelines for Campus Drug
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added that the university “ought
to educate, and, hopefully, permit free advocacy of changes in
the laws. A university should provide the maximum possibility for
education, in class and outside it,
and education, first, into exactly
whaat the facts are.”
Mr. Stafford noted that the
hallucinogens are great educational tools themselves, “deeply
challenging the present educational system at its very heart,
which is: how much does a student learn by going to school?"
That afternoon, Dr. Timothy
Leary of Millbrook ignored several assassination threats to come
and publicly debate his old crony.
Dr. Sidney Cohen. Dr, Leary
came on with flowers, the Sgt.
Pepper album, and an assistant
who chanted refrains from the
album. (Sample: “How can /you
live if you drop out?”
“Get
by, with a little help from my
friends.”) Dr. Leary urged everyone to “drop out, if only for a
year,” and Dr. Cohen countered
by imagining what a Dark Ages
would result if everyone

organization we must maintain

mm

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act in actual, cases. Dr. Fiedler

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2—that the

university refrain
from jeopardizing the status of
any member of the academic
community on the basis of ex3—that

educational institutions
“refuse to be used as extensions
of law enforcement agencies,"
and ban paid informers, undercover agents, and wiretapping
from campus;
4—-and that student governments
and other campus groups find or

provide legal assistance for any
member of the academic community accused of violation of
the drug laws.
The second resolution, was
more than guidelines for campus
policy; it was recommendations
to the society at large:

That local, state, and Federal
governments stop all punitive and
criminal approaches to any drug
use. and instead, establish programs in which;
1— narcotics use (not sale) is
treated as a health problem rather than as a criminal offense;
2—research into all aspects of
Cannabis use is encouraged, the
smoking of Cannabis on private
premises is allowed legally. Cannabis is controlled, rather than
prohibited, by an ad hoc instrument, possession and sale of Gan
nabis is permitted and regulated,
rather than prohibited:
3—all persons now imprisoned
:

for possession of Cannabis, for
allowing Cannabis to be smoked
on private premises, or for being
present on such premises, should
have their sentences commuted
and that psychedelic centers be
licensed and established so that
those who wish to use psychedelic
substances can do so under safe
and controlled conditions.

Moderate

regulation

These two resolutions, in effect,

urge a moderate regulatory program, on campusand in the nation, for controlling the use of
drugs. The regulation of marijuana is based on a proposal recently made by a group of English doctors. Members of Parliament. and the Beatles in a muchpublicized advertisement. The resolutions about hard narcotics and
psychedelics are based on the

recommendations of respected
doctors and sociologists, in light
of current social practice.

1 left Maryland On Saturday.
August 19th. as the two resolutions were being prepared for
presentation to the NSA Congress. I don't know
and don’t
really care
whether they were
approved or not. (Ed. not
they
were approved.!
—

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Friday, September 15, 1967

Spectrum

•

New concert season opens
“Philharmonic Month" in Buffalo starts September 18.

Since it is difficult to keei

'one in

evei

a

univer-

has been instituted. The lecture series will share these
important changes with faculty, students and all interested
persons. The meeting will take place every Tuesday in the
Conference Theater at Norton Hall. The hour scheduled,
and the subject for discussion, will be posted throughout
the campus.
.

At its first meeting, Dr. Robert
Ketter, vice president in charge
of facilities planning, lectured on

both the Interim Campus and the
University’s future campus at the
Amherst site.

There are, at present, eightythree separate buildings throughout Buffalo to accommodate the
large increase in faculty and student population. Fourteen more
will be added this year, including
ten at Ridge Lea, the new Interim Campus.
Ridge Lea, which encompasses
225,000 square feet, will contain
offices and upper level classes
for the departments of Anthropology, Mathematics, Theoretical
Biology, Philosophy, Political Science, Statistics and Engineering
courses. In addition, there will
be a Computing Center, a library
and a student union facility. Professors teaching lower level courses in these departments will
have their offices in one of the
annexes behind Hayes Hall,

Telephones delayed
One of the major problems in
the occupation of Ridge Lea, ac-

cording to Dr. Ketter, has been
the delay in the installation cf
the telephone system. Until its
completion, the business office
cannot move to the Ridge Lea site
which in turn delays the moving
of many of the offices in Hayes.
The telephone system will be
the same on the Main Street
campus, except that in order to
call from one campus to another
the digit 7 must first be dialed.
Telephone numbers of the various department offices at Ridge
Lea will be published in The
Spectrum.
Since it is a twenty minute ride
by bus to classes at the Ridge
Lea campus, these classes will begin on the half hour. During the

“rush hours,” busses will leave
the Main Street campus approximately every five minutes, and
return at the same rate from
Ridge Lea.

Both from the psychological
and housing points of view, it is

necessary to begin construction
at the Amherst site as soon as

possible. Dr. Ketter stated. The
administration has decided to be-

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One unit will contain an indoor
swimming center; another, facil-

Philharmonic Orchestra, under

shops and “satellite” to
the computing center. Each unit
will house 400 residents, including faculty and students, dining
facilities and parking accommodations for the 400 residents and
600 commuters. There will also
be study alcoves available for
commuters, and provisions will
be possible for the commuter to
sleep on campus for several days
at a time.

The opening concert, October
21, 24, will feature soprano Eileen
Farrell, as well as Lukas Foss at
the piano. Among the other out-

ities for

drama, and the third

various

Largest building project
Funds for the building of the
will be coming from the
Health Science Bond Issue, the
State University Construction
Fund and the State Dormitory
Authority. Federal grants are also expected. This will be the largest single architectural undertaking in the country.
The next meeting of the University Report wil take place
next Tuesday at 3 p.m. in the
Conference Theater. It will be
concerned with “The University
and the Computer” and will be
conducted by Dr. Anthony Raicampus

son.

The Physical Therapy Departannounces The Freshman
Tea, Sunday, Sept. 17, from 3:30
to 5 p.m! in room 233, Norton
Hall, for all freshmen interested
in Physical Therapy. Both the
faculty and the officers of the
Student Association of the department are also invited to attend.
The Physical Therapy Associament

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The program, which is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. in 233 Norton
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We’re offering a wonderful transportation plan to
doctors, nurses, technicians
and hospital staffers. Our
compact package delivers
such significant benefits
as 30 miles to a gallon of
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ranty amongst all imports
24 months or 24,000
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Chorburger

when ordered with adult full
series; otherwise they will be
seated in a special student sec-

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...

HOUSE OF CRAFTS

All student tickets, Sundays or
Tuesdays, are 15 dollars. Students
will be seated with parents only

Test yourself...

REVERSE
MEDICAID

.

the baton of Lukas Foss, will pre-

sent 18 concerts as compared to
the fourteen of previous seasons.

standing artists who will appear
during the season are: Byron
Janis, pianist; Nathan Milstein,
violinist; Witold Malcuzynski,
pianist; Van Cliburn, pianist; Igor

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�Friday, September

15. 1967

Underground' series at Circle Art
features The Lovers of Tervel'

Liberace: beneath glamor
a contemplative individual
by James Brennan
name that brings to mind thoughts of
garments, a toothsome smile, and beautiful
piano music. Beneath this effusive resplendence is a profoundly contemplative individual.

The Circle Art is in the

irace

outlandishly lavish vestments. In
a recent interview at Melody
Fair, this virtuoso presented a
more serious and personable side
of his character.

He related his philosophy of
life and his opinions on various
current events, as he started
wearing a checked gibson-girl
shirt and fine lined grey denim
suit, and a flashy diamond studded piano-shaped watch and
candelabra-shaped ring.
In discussing his philosophy
he said, “For many years prior to
the miracle of television I always
had personal and direct contact
with my audience. I could see
their eyes and fee! their warmth.

They were in
with me.”

the same room

“I love to watch the audience
respond. In my performance. I
like to make them shout a little,
cry a little, and laugh 3 little,”
he related, “That’s why I admire
people like Red Skelton and the
‘old magic’ of Charlie Chaplin.
That Chaplin was a true clown.
He created laughter as well as
tears. I always hope someone
cries during my performances.
I look for an atmosphere of love.”

What about love-rock and hippies? He answered, “Well, I try
to stay abreast of all the latest
developments in modern music
trends. As a matter of fact I've
incorporated some of the Beatles songs into my musical re-

THE SPECTRUM
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big financial enterprises like
Hollywood. Some are experimental, others are not. Sometimes
they demand more from the

audience than the audience may
demand from the movie itself.
The first two movies, “Black
Orpheus” and “The Lovers of
Teruel,” should not be included
in the class of underground films.
Black Orpheus particularly is not
avant-guarde either in technique
or material.
Rio de Janeiro during a earnval is the setting and the love
between Orpheus and Eurydice
is of course the plot. The film
is nicely done. Its weakness however lies in that it plays down
one of the most important parts
Orpheus’ exof the legend
periences in hell. The colors
blend nicely and so does the rest
of the story.

of good living.

“This is one of the five aphorisms in ray life philosophy, along
with a desire for health, wealth,
love, success, and happiness. To
complete my formula, I learned
to develop a keen wisdom, one
must make experience serve as
one’s greatest teacher. I further
learned that one must aim at a
goal that is definitely within
one's power to reach.”

—

What about his famous brother

George? “George! That’s Lester
Lanin of the West Coast. Why he
has four bands of his own now.”

Lovers of Troel
Dreams, beauty and a troupe of
dancers greet those who view
“The Lovers of Teruel." A troupe
dances to tell the story of the
lovers of Teruel, a sad love tale.
Those who act are those who
have lived and are living the
story to which they dance. A
ballerina’s dream, one highlight
of the film, was a sensual and

Wladziu

Valentino Liberace,
now 48, is still in close touch
with his mother. Before his opening night performance, he flew
out to California to see her. She
underwent surgery, and her son
assures us that she will be all
right. He frequently makes mention of her in his act, and jokes
of her love for the slot machines
at Las Vegas.

moving experience. Photography,
acting and dancing all combine
to spell enchantment for “The

Lovers of Teruel.”
For an attack on the fetishes
of the motorcycle crowd we find
“Scorpio Rising.” It is a gala

His home on the West Coast
is quite extravagant, as it sits
movie fan,

Liberace has

equipped his home with a private
“Although I am what you call
‘high camp’ on college campuses
today, I feel the hippies are a
direct opposite of me. They seem
to represent the ugly, dirty na-

Underground films are dubbed
since they are usually not produced within the structure of

“Twiggy, to me is a counteracting influence to the hippies.
She’s so young and fresh, with
such god-like features; a sort of
symbol of refinement and innocence. Cleanliness is the basis

avid

pertoire.”

the series is far from finished.
Judging from the movies I have
already seen the remaining films
should be quite good.

lure of our society—the unclean.
I think that young people should
emulate that which is pure and
beautiful in our world.”

in palatial splendor overlooking
the glamorous Sunset Strip. An
mode theater. Some of his other

prodigal possessions include a
piano-shaped bed and a collection of 188 miniature pianos,
valued at over $50,000.

midst

of a series of underground films.
Many have already played, but

glamourous

“Mr. Showmanship'
is renowned for his candelabra,
delicate touch on the piano, and

a rebel ’cause he never ever does

by Philip Burbank

Spectnm Sralt Reporter

On stage,

P«9* Eltvan

The Spectrum

journey through a world of sex,
perversion and violence. The
most striking feature of the mo-

vie is its sardonic humor.
When Jesus Christ is suddenly
shown on the screen riding a
, he’s
mule the sound blasts,

MORGAN!
Cannes

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Sept. 14, 15 16

be purchased at the ticket office

(He’s

a

gether.

Markopoulos seemed to
have very little to say and what
say
did
he
he said rather poorly.
The material was so monotonous
even the seats ready to get up
and leave.

Rebel).”

Queen of the cinema is a good

epithet for Andy Warhol. His
films “Match Girl” and "My
Hustler" are more than a little

Fleshapoid^

Hold hands during “Sins of the
Fleshapoids” a film by Hike
Kuchar, A million years into the
future humanoids (Fleshapoids)
serve mankind. But alas! A defect in some of the Fleshapoids
develops
they can feel. Groping through a world of humans
two fleshapoids find love, they
hold hands and electricity surges
through their bodies (they have
real animal magnetism).
A wicked human prince is destroyed and the film is concluded
with the birth of a Fleshapoidian

gay.

"Match Girl” was a little more
subtle than “My Hustler,” but

either one can really burn you.
Warhol knows where he’s at, and
yes he’s laughing at you and he
wants you to laugh too. His
filming technique is far from
perfect but it only adds to his

—

movies. Warhol is something
fresh that the cinema needs.

Raw guts
The underground can take
pride in Emshwiller’s film “Relativity.” Cadavars, red raw guts, child, Mr. Machine. The film is
nude bodies dancing to the beat really fun.
of eroticism, detached genitals
combine to creat a profoundly Verbal barrage
Renowned for his candid reenjoyable forty minutes. The
style was that of the “poetic marks on war, sex and apple
cinema," which can trace many pie (it makes you sterile) was
of its original ideas to the works a man called Lenny Bruce/ 1 His
only recorded complete night
of Olsen.
club performance was pari of
Plot is almost, if not entirely, the series. His act consisted of
nonexistent as one scene cona verbal barrage, accompanied
tinuously moves into the next, by hand and body movements,
or focuses to make a point and against obscenity charges that he
then goes on. The film explores faced at the time.
man’s place in the cosmos and
Reviewing the court’s transmakes some candid photographic cript of the preceedings at his
comments.
trial, he reenacted parts of his
The photographic techniques previous
performances which
were magnificent and if for no were labeled obscene.
other reason make the film
Bruce’s voice was garbled at
worthwhile. This film is enjoyat other times it was
able from almost every aspect. times;
“

exceedingly rapid, all added to
obscure many of his important
points. However, I agree with
gory Markopoulos was a disappointment. Its style was similar him that the court’s decision
to that of “Relativity.” Unlike against him was a lot of .
“Relativity," I found the purpose and more.
as well as the effect one of comCurrently featured at the Circle
plete boredom. Intermittent thun- Art is Andy Warhol’s popular
der, rain and then singing birds “Chelsea’s Girls.” Coed dates are
comprised and almost nonexistent permissible. (Go, you’ll see what
sound track, while the photo- 1 mean).

“Himself as Herselm” by Gre-

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he doesn’t do what everybody
else does that’s no reason why
I can’t give him all my love

of bland and

.

Howlingly Funny Satirization with Vanesa Redgrave

PLAZA SHOE REPAIR

consisted

pE A U
aCHIN

.,

�Th

Pag* Tw*lv*

•

Friday, September 15, 1967

Spectrum

Hippies' adoption of zen
diet harmful to children Ray Charles'soul sound unbeatable'
A music review:

by Patrick J. Sullivan

problems of San Francisco’s hippies.
An increasing number of the
hip set have taken up the Zen
macrobiotic diet. This allows “organic” food but forbids red meats
and products treated with insecticides or other chemicals. “Synthetic” medicines are also taboo.
macrobiotic
The zen diet
means conducive to a long life
generally presents no problems
to grown hippies, even if they
can afford only small quantities
of the special foods.
—

—

But for small children and
babies it’s a different trip.
“It simply isn’t a good pediatric diet, even if there is enough
food,” a doctor at the volunteerstaffed Haight-Asbury Medical
Clinic said when asked about the
Zen menu.

by Sheldon H. Bergman

“Babies need a lot of things
that aren’t included in that regi-

United Press International

The doctor, David M. Smith, 29,
a toxicologist at San Francisco
General Hospital, said hippies
who adhere to the strict Zen diet
can choose their foods only from
a variety of teas and rice hulls.

What is the Ra:

Charles sound 0

sound, heavy on the brass, com-

bined with an unpolished Motown
chorus (the Raelettsi and a driving hard-rock beat. But at the
center, the one thing that coalesces the whole scene is Ray
Charles. The sidemen of the Ray
Charles Orchestra are professionals as ape the Raeletts and

Smith noted that some hippies
perhaps less disciplined or
with less money—are more liberthey can groove well by themal in interpreting the Zen diet
selves. But Ray Charles is an
and will buy other foods for
artist and the difference was
themselves and their children. obvious throughout the performBut the health food trend, strict ance.
or otherwise, has this summer
become a part of the Haight-AsYou can’t define w hat Ray
bury scene.
Charles does or has that can
At least two health food outlets electrify an audience but somehave begun advertising on an FM thing is there.
radio station catering to hippie
His communication is not to
tastes in music. The pitches inbut to every individclude "all kinds of teas and grains the audience
ual in it. It doesn't matter wheth. . . raw dairy products . . . orer he is putting over a soft.
ganic jellybeans.”
•—

smooth “People” or putting out
a solid gospel ballad like “Cry-

side of me,” and especially, “Let’s
go get Stoned” were superb.

Again.” No mater what the song,
it had become a Ray 'Charles
song. Billy Preston gave a good,
high-quality performance but all
it did was to show off the excellence of Ray Charles. For Charles
is one of the few performers who
is able to change a song to his
style and not let the song change

“Moms” Mabely and “Pigmeat.”
A bit raw, but groovy. His delivery is far better in his songs than
his dialogue but it came across

ing Time” or putting down a soul

his style.

The Raeletts are a hard-mov-,
group who came
across well but lack the flair
and uniqueness that makes a
ing. soul-gospel

group great.

They serve best as a foil for
Charles’s humor and as an “active” chorus around whom
Charles can weave the melody.
They weren’t just in the background but were rather a descant
to Charles melody. As a result,
songs such as “Someone ought to
write a book,” “Something .in-

fairly well.
It was the last twenty minutes
that made the evening. The Ray
Charles standards roared out.
“You are my Sunshine,” “Georgia
on my Mind,” and the glorious
“It’s ail right” kept Charles, and
the audience, in a state of perpetual motion.
It was
band, a

a great ending for a
show, an evening that
showed how unbeatable Ray
Charles really is.

THE SPECTRUM
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WHAT’S IT LIKE
TO BLOW
VOOR miHD?

On a hip acid (LSD) trip you
can blow your mind sky-high.
It may come loose, but that’s
all right if that’s your trip. Your
trip is whatever turns you on.
You can pop peyote, get high
on marijuana, flash on LSD or
just bake macrobiotic apple
pies and wear Indian beads.
You can make human be-ins,
communesor Krishna yourtrip.
If you do any or all of these,
you're likely to do them in
Haight-Ashbury.San Francisco.
It's the U.S. capital of the hip
scene, and it’s where Post
writer Joan Didion went to mix
with the hippies. She'll show
you where they live. You can
learn their special language.
Meet Deadeye and others . . .
including a kindergartner who
gets stoned on LSD. Read "The
Hippie Generation,’’ and you
may even understand what motivates the hippies. They’re
turned on in the September 23
issue of The Saturday Evening
Post. Buy your copy today—it's
hip.

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—“Welcome

9

�Friday, September 15,

1967

'The Spectrum

Pag*

Thirteen

The Hoople predicts:
the spectrum of

sports
lashes af

Rotary

Bulls challenge Kent; Fitzgerald
and Abbott labelled as threats
by W. Scott Behrens
Assistant Sports Editor

alive.

210 pound Paul Jordan.

Colorado 28, Baylor 7. Baylor
will be hurt by the loss of their
all time offensive leader, quarterback Terry Southall. Colorado,
however, shapes up as a top contender for the number 1 spot in
the midlands. This game should
be a tune-up for the Buffalo’s
October 21 clash with Nebraska.

At defensive tackle will be
Thomas, a 6 foot 2 inch. 230
pounder who is very’ quick and
agile and is an excellent pass
rusher. The other tackle on defense against SUNYAB’s offensive attack will be Corrigall who
is “big, strong and tough.”

Covington is the Flashes’ inside linebacker whom State University of Buffalo coaches have
labelled as “the meanest football

North Carolina State 21, North
Carolina 7. An outstanding defense will make the Wolfpack a

player” on the team. He stands
6 feet 1 inch and weighs 225“
pounds. Zuj is the other inside
linebacker who is big. strong and
quick.

Don Fitzgerald

nation's no. 2 rusher
2-4 in mid-American Conference
play. Head Coach Leo Strang had
these comments to say prior to
the season opener with the Bulls:
“We are optimistic. We will have
momentum. This is a must year.
The Buffalo game last year was
a fluke. They spoiled our hopes.
Buffalo will be the key to our
season this year.”

Landis outstanding
Captain Bill Landis is one of
their outside linebackers. This 6
foot 1 inch 220 pounder is considered a great linebacker and
is well respected by. University

coaches. The other outside linebacker will be a newcomer to the
starting squad this year. He is
Bill Lesky, a 6 foot sophomore.
After practically a season’s layoff, Vern King will return to the
defensive halfback spot. This 6
foot, 192 pounder was injured in
last year’s opener and sat out the
rest of the year on crutches. The
other defensive halfback is 5 foot
9 inch, 170 pound Graydon Eckard.
Returning to the defensive safe-

Kent State will be psychologically ready for this opening con
test for both ballclubs and will
attempt to take revenge on its
27-23 defeat at the hands of the
Bulls last season. If last year’s

game is any indication of what
to expect of exciting football,
to expect tomorrow the tilt
should be quite an exciting one
for the Bulls’ fans to watch.

ty position

Bill Landis
outstanding linebacker
Swartz still found Blunt often,
however, and Blunt caught 26
passes for 287 yards. That gave
the 5 foot 9 inch, 170-pound
flanker a school record of 56
’

catches for 624 yards in his two
varsity seasons, making him the
best receiver in KSU history.

will be senior Lou
Harris who holds the KSU record
for career pass interceptions. This
stalwart has taken 13 passes away
from the opponents' receivers in
two seasons of varsity competition, intercepting seven of those
passes last season.

Kent optimistic
Kent State s record last season
was 4-6 in season competition and

yards

through

catching, and

Kent State University
Pos.

SSE
SSG

rushing, pass
returning punts

C
LSG

and kickoffs.

1ST
OST
LSE

The coaches have rated this
offensive backfield of Fitzgerald,
Pledger, Blunt and Swartz as the
best in KSU history. The average
weight of Kent State’s offensive
line is 224 pounds while that of
SUNYAB is 211, but the average
weight of the two offensive backfields are comparatively the same
at 190.

Defense

strong
Defensively the Flashes are
considered big, strong, quick and
egile. At one of the defensive
end positions is Don Abbott, an
all-Mid-American Conference selectee of last season. He stands
6 feet 4 inches and weighs in at
220 pounds. At the other defen-

Tickets
Students with I.D. cards who
have paid their athletic fee need
only to present their cards at the
gate for admission to tomorrow's
Kent State game at 1:30 p.m.
Those students who have not paid
their fee and who desire to attend may purchase regular tickets at the gate.

Probable starting offensive line-ups

Blunt is probably the most exciting player ever to perform for
the Flashes. He has amassed 1789

QB
TB

FB

Name
Chester, T.
Kuntzman, C
Price, E.

Bobb, N.

Ht.
6 1
6-3
6 4
6-1

6-2

Fraley, L

Tarle, S.
Perry, B
Swartz, R.
Fitzgerald. D
Pledger, J

62

6-2
6-0
60

5-10

Blunt. B.

State University of Buffalo

Endress, T.

65

RG

Wolf. C.
Kowalewski, T.
Wesolowski, J
Finochio, J

61
44
14
21
36

RT
SE
QB

Rissell, M.
Drankowski, C.
Murtha, Mick

LG
C

FB

Rutkowski, K.
Jones, Lee

HB

Wells, Rick

TB

UCLA 35/ Tennessee 28. Footballs should fill the air at this
one, as two of the game's top
passers, Gary Behan for the
Bruins and Tennessee’s Dewey
Warren, get together. In a tough
pick the nod goes to Behan and
UCLA in what should prove to
be the week’s top game.

USC 28, Washington State 14.
The Trojans appear as the power
of the Far West. Coach John McKay faces a rough schedule this
year but should have no trouble
from WSU. Look for the Trojan’s
Oenthal James Simpson (“O.J.”)
to become an outstanding halfback.

The State University of Buffalo football team will encounter one of the strongest teams in the Mid-American
Conference his year when they host the Golden Flashes of
Kent State University at 1:30 p m, tomorrow on Rotary Field.
Kent State comes to town with
sive end position is 6 feet 2 inch.

quarterback Ron Swartz.
After a rough sophomore year
Swartz bounced back last season,
setting Kent State University
passing records including most
passing attempts (125), most pass
completions (63), and most yards
gained passing (879).
Whereas the passing attack of
his first year was the bomb to
Blunt, Swartz used a little mdre
guile last season, and his passes
were of the shorter, more strategic variety to keep their drives

After forecasting last year’s college season and correctly
predicting a fantastic .987 percent including the 10-10
the State University of Buffalo. What follows are tomorrow’s
definite winners.

Field.

the nation’s 2nd leading rusher
of the 1966 season. Don Fitzgerald, their tailback, who gained
over 1200 yards. Others in the
backfield are all returning lettermen who saw considerable action last season: Junior wingbacker Bill Blunt, junior fullback Joe Pledger and senior

UCLA favored over Tenn.

6-0
6-3
5-11

5-11
5-10
5-11
61

5-11
5-9
5-11

strong contender for the Atlantic
Coast Conference title. The Tarheels lost all but two games last
year and don’t expect to improve
much on that record.
Oklahoma State 14, Air Force
7. In a clash of two up and coming teams, the defense of State

should prove the decisive factor.
Air Force can make it rough if
the Steve Turner-Carl Janssen
combo can click.
Washington 20, Nebraska 17.
Cornhusker’s coach Bob Devaney
is seeking an unprecedented fifth
straight league title, but won’t
quite make it. In the Huskies he
meets a team loaded with talent.
Led by quarterback Tom Sparlin
and a solid defense, the pick is
Washington over Nebraska in the
UPSET OF THE WEEK.
Kent State 17, Bulls 16. Last
year’s meeting at Kent, Ohio,
proved to be the most exciting
game of the year. This season
the Golden Flashes return with
Don Fitzgerald and company. The
Bulls, however, are more experienced this year and should provide good opposition in this
evenly rated contest.

Student support is vital
for victorious grid year
by Bob Woodruff
Sports Editor

The State University of Buffalo Bulls will do well to
improve on last year’s 5-5 slate as they face the most ambitious schedule in their football history. But this is not the
real story behind Bulls football this fall.
Besides the difficulties of up-

ending the likes of North Carolina State, Viriginia and Boston
College, Coach Doc Urich’s club
must also battle to win student
support.
If a large percentage of the

athletically
apathetic student
body responds as expected and
forgoes payment of the sports
fee, a destitute department of
intercollegiate athletics will have
to drastically revise plans for
future sports competition. Such
a situation should not exist on
this campus.

Time for trite

“rah-rah” ap-

peals has long past. It is time
for some fact and analysis, Just
as it is in error that a University
builds a football machine and
creates special boundaries for its
athletes, so is it wrong to snuff
out a school’s representation in
intercollegiate athletics if this
team is composed of student-athletes and not merely disguised
play-for-pay personnel.
It is no great secret that the
luxurious football dormitory on
the campus at Alabama docs not
house many future physicists and
doctors, and such a squad represents a school about as much
as would a team of hired professionals. Such a situation should
not only be scorned, but condemned at the many institutions
when such a case does actually

exist.

Athletics has a place alongside academics but it must never
supplant it. This University is
in no such way being misrepresented. The boys who compete
for the State University of Buffalo do not look at the school
as a training ground for a professional football career, but they
come here instead as all students do, with aspirations of receiving a degree. With rare ex-

ception, the students who play
ball do not wind up as professional athletes, but as teachers,
coaches and even doctors.

Grants not panaceg
Almost every football player
receives a grant-in-aid. The student athlete uses his physical
prowess to help him meet college
expenses as others would use
academic scholarships. Football
becomes a means to an end, not
an end in itself. While they are
competing for the University,
they are students at all times,
and must work at their classroom role to maintain eligibility.
Coach Urich has found that he
needs to do more than wave a
magic wand to have his ballplayers stay in school.

If Coach Urich intends to build
a national football power by paying athletes, he deserves and will
get no support from the studfent
body. If he is able to field a team
representative of a school this
size by recruiting student athletes then he is entitled to our
backing.
If the students of this University believe that support of a
wide ranging athletic program
would hinder the intellectual
growth of the academic community, they would find examples
to the contrary at Harvard,
Princeton, Yale and the entire
ivy league.
Even the University of California at Berkeley student body
manages to support a fair football team on Saturdays while attempting to undo the social injustices of the world the rest
of the week.
If we are building a truly
great University, let us not skimp
on the support which wev dole
out to the intercollegiate athletic
teams which carry this school's
name.

�Friday, September 15, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* Fourteen

Injury puts Ashley out for season

Vo football forecast

Dallas seen as victor

In the first play of the season’s
last scrimmage on Saturday, Sept.
9, the University of Buffalo lost
all-time pass c;

Ashley.
Ashley was

hit

by Springville'
Though the accuracy of the college picks in this paper
will undoubtedly prove to be poor, Spectrum readers can
rest assured that they will always have the results of the

from behind

and dropped to the ground causing a severe tearing of the ligaments in his leg which will idle
him for what would have been

weekend pro games the Friday before they are played.

In 1966, thhe 6-foot 1 inch 200pound Massena, New York, native caught 30 passes for 411
yards, both school marks. Me also
owns school records for most
touchdown passes in a game—season and career—and he would
have surpassed career records for
receptions and total yardage this
season
Coach Urich, in commenting on
the injury, stated: “It is absolute

ly the worst thing that could have
happened to us.” The Bulls are
paper thin at tight end. Sophomore Terry Endress will starl
tomorrow’s contest. This 6 fool
202 pounder is a capable receiver,
but lacks Ashley’s speed, expert
cnce and blocking ability.

Mike Buchak, Bob Kovcy and
Paul Lang have also been working at the tight end spot. Buchak
is a 6 foot 204 pound transfer
from Northeast Oklahoma Junior
College and may be A s h 1 c y’s
eventual successor. Soph Kovcy
is a tough blocker who may move

Chicago

As three of the greatest professional grid analysts we are
sure that the followers of our
column can only come out ahead
in the weekly football pools, and

his entire senior campaign.

we expect only a meager 10%
commission from the harvest you
you will surely reap.

JSk

Dallas 27, Cleveland

out for

—Roger Brown replacing injured

Rosie Grier still leaves L.A. with
the best front four in football.
New Orleans too green to make

it a battle.
New York 17, St. Louis 14—
A sentimental favorite for us New

34, Atlanta 10—
Unitas and company too tough
for Falcdh defense. Falcons must
secure a proven quarterback before they can be considered a
threat.

Terry Endress
,

season

will replace Ashley

in to aid the Bulls’ running game.
Lang is the biggest prospect at
210 pounds, but the sophomore

York boys. Rookie quarterback
Hart is not a Charlie Johnson.
New York attack bolstered by
Tarkenton and Frederickson.
San Francisco 23, Minnesota 14
—Quarterback is the name of the
game, and Minnesota simply does
not have one. 49ers Brodie worth
a million bucks.
Philadelphia 27, Washington
24—Jurgensen and home crowd

Predictions for the AFL
Western Division
Kansas City

Eastern Division

is still plenty green.

Buffalo
New York
Boston

With Ashley gone, what figured to be a tough season becomes that much tougher. The
picture, however, is not all that
bleak. The not so stingy defense
of last season has improved a
great deal, and therein may lie

Oakland
San Diego

Miami
Houston

toss-up.
Oakland 34, Boston 16—Oakland’s offense to hand Boston’s
third straight defeat. Ex-Bill
Lamonica to shine for second
straight week.
Denver 38, Miami 28—Bronco’s
to bounce back after drubbing
by Oakland. Dolphins to sink and

NFL;

Capital Division

Coastal Division

Dallas

the key to the Bulls’ fortunes.

give Eagles a slight edge. A real

Denver

Predictions for the

Los Angeles
Baltimore
San Francisco

Philadelphia
Washington
New Orleans

Atlanta

Soothe Your

Century Division

RHYCHE

New York
St. Louis

Central Division
Green Bay
Detroit
Chicago

Pittsburgh

Minnesota

Cleveland

COOK IONITE

not swim.

Buffalo 36, Houston 13—Kemp
to lead charge against hapless

Oilers. Houston hasn’t seen a
good quarterback since George

Blanda died two years ago.

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SUNDAY AFTERNOONS, 4:00
(Beginning Sunday, Sept. 17)

Calvary Lutheran
Church
4110 North Bailey

(Four

Blocks from Campus)

SIGMA PHI EPSILON FRATERNITY
announces its

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FREE
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Sun., Sept. 24—8 P.M.
Beer Stag at John's Tavern

Wed., Sept. 13—8 P.M.
Beer Stag at the Sheridan
Bowling Lanes

Sat., Sept. 30—9 P.M.
Dated Liquor Party at the
Flying E Ranch

Sat., Sept. 16—9 P.M.
Dated Party at the Roc-Mar
Bowling Lanes

with a

available

FALL 1967 RUSH CALENDAR
INFORMAL RUSH EVENTS

at

FORMAL RUSH EVENT

Fri., Sept. 22—9 P.M.
Sorority Social at the
Roc-Mar Bowling Lanes

Thurs., Oct. 5—8 P.M.
Liquor Stag To Be Held at
the Three Coins Restaurant

For Further Information
CALL

"ON CAMPUS"

837

-

10—

Green Bay 31, Detroit 3—
What’s left to say!
Los Angeles 24, New Orleans 7

Baltimore

Dick Ashley

Pittsburgh

losers.

17—Dal

las. along with Green Bay, still
the class of the league. Meredith,
Hayes, and Lilly dominate a team
which is too stiong for Cleveland.

14,

Both teams are rebuilding. Lack
of top flight receivers hurts
Steelers and quarterback Bill
Nelsen, Look for Chicago’s Sayers
to turn the tide in a battle of

7653

,

�Friday, September 15, 1967

Th

•

Sptclrum

Pag*

IK. accepts ban on fraternities

CLASSIFIED

length
During the past summer, each national fraternity at strictions discussed
the State University of Buffalo received an ultimatum that were:
Only local fraternities are perthey must disaffiliate this fall. After much heated discusmitted to display boards in the
sion and research into national charters, the “Nationals” Fillmore Room.
decided to move their activities off campus and establish

FOR

•

Last Monday, the off campus
I.F.C.i headed by President Mike
Lipman (AEPi), met at the Theta
Chi Fraternity House on Niagara
Falls Blvd. The prevailing attitude among the members was
that the status quo of previous
years should be maintained. It
was reported that the assets carried over from last semester
total a respectable $1400.
In order to facilitate policies,

the off campus I.F.C. will work
conjunction with the local
I.F.C. on campus. At the first
meeting, many important issues
were reviewed. The most important issue discussed was the limitations imposed on the Greeks
by the campus officials. It was
decided that all of the rules
would be adhered to, for fear of
the ensuing strict penalties.
in

Among the more significant re-

U

—

off campus IFC

organizational meeting.

1961

•

POST

VERSAIOG slide rule.

$12. Drafting
Dave, 886-2104.

University.
Types of pledge paraphernalia
are limited.
All Greeks are prohibited from
soliciting in Allenhurst.

Rarely

instruments:

$10.

used:
Call

'SCHOOLHOUSE" for sale, acre, Lake
Ontario, Wilson, large 4 rooms, heated,
decorated, Vi hour from U.B. campus

•

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839-0744.

•

MALE HELP wanted. Assistant waiters to
assist our Rib Room waiters serve the
finest food in Buffalo. Must be willing
to provide first class service to our guests.
Hours: 4:30 p.m. to 11:00 p.m. Any number of nights. Contact Mr. Robert Feing,
Charter House Hotel, 634-2700 dugng the

26

INCH BICYCLE (girl's preferably). Call
after 11:00 p.m. Ask for Gerie.

831-3067

RIDE WANTED for staff member from
Warren's Corners and return. Please call

434-7385.

SPORTSMEN'S INN needs two female musicians for entertainment. Hours 6:00-12:00
Friday nights. Apply in person Wednesday
evening 9:00 p.m. 2828 Bailey Avenue,

836-9508.

UNDERWOOD

typewriter, $45.00; Mimeograph, $50.00; small Webcor taperecorder,
$30.00. 874-3729 after 5:00.

The meeting closed with an air
of optimism as all organizations,
both national and local, expressed
confidence that the key to success is a powerful I.FC. with
strong internal cooperation.

FIND NEW and used paperbacks and hard
bound books at GRANT books
and
stamps. 3292 Main Street.

ATTRACTIVE

waitress wanted for Sportsmen's Inn. Full or part time, 6:00-12:00
Mon. thru Fri., call 836-9506 Toes, evening.
EAST

SIDE

student
853-3737.

PEACOCK

The brothers of Gamma Phi
begin formal rush at the Greek
Blast tonight. For information
call Roger at 835-6565 or Paul at
pledges of
832-7183
. . The
Sigma Kappa Phi will hold a
shoeshine Sept. 20 in Norton Hall
between 10 and 4 p.m. . , , Sigma Phi Epsilon is sponsoring a
dated rush party at the Roc-Mar
Bowling Lanes tomorrow night.
For information call 837-8382
. Tau Kappa Epsilon is sponsoring the Greek Beer Blast tonight at Banat Hall at 8:30 p.m.
. . . Theta Chi Fraternity is holding an informal "kill the keg”
rush party after the game tomorrow. After the concert, there will
be a dated rush party at the
house. On Tuesday, Sept. 19,
there will be a smoker at 2 p.m.
at the house.

supermarket desires College
(male) for pari time work.

FEATHERS: 25c each, five for

$1.00, other stuff.

PART AMO FULL TIAAE help wanted (male),
9-2, 9-5,
11-2, 11-5, 11-7, 5-9, 5-11.
Apply McDonalds, 1385 Niagara Falls Blvd.
and 3424 Sheridan Dr. Both Locations 5
minutes from campus.

THE GREEN LANTERN
56 Elmwood Ave.
(Open 'til 8:00 P.M.)
VESPA SCOOTER,

excellent

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running
LeBrun, 832-6155.

FURNITURE

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Inquire

57

FOR

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- 5 p.m.) Day work
for full time (9
at McDonald's,
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or 3424 Sheridan Dr.

YOUR APARTMENT: Chairs,
cocktail,
end tables, floor
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lamps, pictures, head-boards, chests, trundle
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mother, mostly baby-sitting. Girl

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Kenmore.

PERSONAL

WANTED
part time; evenings and
necessary.
no experience
male or female. Write and tell us
how reliable you are. Blacksmith Shop,
1375 Delaware Avenue 14209.

SHALOMI For gems from the Jewish
Call 875-4265, day or night.

KITCHEN HELPERS,

MISCELLANEOUS

weekends;

RIDE WANTED to U.B. five days a week
for 8:00 class. Near Frankhauser on
Sheridan or Maplewood. Willing to pay.
Call Claire,

632-3745.

MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE - premiums
financed; immediate FS-1. Call 694-2625.
GO-GO GIRLS, Thurs., Fri., Sat.
and Sunday; Nugget Inn, 2046 Fillmore
(near
Kensington). 10c beers and
Avenue
25c shots daily except Sundays.
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Across From Hayes Hall—U.B.

-

�Friday, September 15, 1967

The Spectrum

Page Sixteen

de Gaulle pushes united Europe
WARSAW
French President Charles
de Gaulle early this week invited Poland
to move out of the cold war and join him
in tearing down the alliances which divide Europe. He was immediately rebuffed by the Polish Communist party.

de Gaulle’s visit considering the Poles’
rebuff of the French leader’s plans within

Parliament, and again on a nationwide
television broadcast, the first ever made
in Poland by a foreign statesman.
The French President also held up his
country’s new friendship with West Germany as an example of European recon-

Eastern and Western blocs of Europe,
led by Russia and the United States re-

Vietnam.

France and Poland agreed that their
Middle East views were similar, but the
communique did not condemn Israel as

—

*

•

•

focus

*

Washington
Warsaw

Israel
salgon

ciliation, and he urged the Poles to help
him work toward an end to the war in

New peace efforts, more bombs
WASHINGTON—The Senate, showered
with antiwar leaflets and delayed with
Vietnam Issues, is taking up the debate
over President Johnson’s war policies
right where it left off two weeks ago.

The U.S. aerial assault on Cain Pha,
North Vietnam’s third largest port and
one that had previously been off limits
to American pilots, was certain to touch
off a new round of talk on administration
bombing policies.
And Sen. Wayne

L. Morse’s introduction of his long-pending resolution calling for the United Nations to take jurisdiction of the Vietnam war issue was
another hot topic. Morse told the Senate
there would be no halt in U.S. bombing
of North Vietnam “until the nations of
the world compel it.”
The Morse resolution would express the
sense of Congress that President Johnson
should ask the U.N. Security Council to
call for a cease-fire in Vietnam and agree
to support council action. Failing in the
council, the resolution said, the issue
should be taken to the General Assembly.
The United States has been sounding

out Security Council members over the
past few weeks in an attempt to line up

support for debate and possible action
a similar resolution. But State Department sources say they expect little
immediate action on the issue.
Javits' proposal
Sen. Jacob K. Javits (R-N.Y.), said that
the United States should “seriously con
sider” pulling out of Vietnam if the newly
elected South Vietnamese government
fails to make any progress toward solving its national problems.

on

Javits also proposed a 21-man commission be appointed to watch the progress
of the Vietnamese government and report its findings to the American people.
Javits told a news conference he considered the election of President Nguyen
Van Thieu and Vice President Nguyen
Cao Ky valid, although he said there were
some “deficiencies” and
the United
States “must be guided accordingly.”
“If the Vietnamese miss their oppor
tunify, then the United States cannot contemplate a ‘colonialist’ future there and
must seriously consider disengagement,"

he added.

Javits stressed the words "seriously
consider” and denied that he was delivering an ultimatum to the Thieu-Ky govern

ment.

However, he did outline the steps he
the South Vietnamese to take
in exchange for continued U.S. support.
These included admission of more civilians to posts of leadership in the government, a “shakeup;' of the military so that
it can take a larger part in the war, and
the winning over of the rural population.
He added that the United States “is
not a colonial power, and we should not
act that way. If they the South Vietnamese
expected

cannot, or will not, help themselves, then
we should get out."
The commission proposed by Javits
which he said would be put forth in a
congressional resolution to be introduced
next week
would be non-partisan and
would consist of 10 congressional appointees and II public members.
Its job, he said, would be to "evaluate
—

the progress of constitutional government
in South Vietnam as it may affect the
continuing commitment of the United
States there.”

Peace mission

proposed

The Norweigian government announced
Friday it would allocate $20,000 for a Vietnam peace mission by two winners of the
Nobel peace prize—Philip Noel Baker of
Britain and the Rev. Dominique George
Pire, a Catholic priest from Belgium. All
sides in the conflict have agreed to receive
the peacemakers, it was reported.
There was some speculation that they
might try to bring representatives of the
United States, North Vietnam, South
Vietnam and the Viet Cong together at
some neutral place.

Future negotiations
President-elect Nguyen Van Thieu of
South Vietnam said Sunday he intends to
suggest to Hanoi that a meeting be held
to talk about future negotiations.
U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker said
separately it is possible that negotiations
might take place before the United
States' 1968 presidential election.

Thieu and Bunker appeared on separate
television programs taped earlier in Saigon. 'Thieu appeared on Meet the Press—
NBC and Bunker on Face the Nation—
CBS.

As he outlined during his successful
campaign, the South Vietnamese Chief of
State said his peace plan included a oneweek bombing pause as a move to get
Hanoi to negotiate. Thieu also said that
although the Viet Cong could be a member of any such talks, he would never
negotiate directly with the Viet Cong as
a representative of the people. Both Thieu
and Bunker discounted the significance
of the showing made by Thruong Dinh
Dzu, who ran second in the recent Vietnamese elections as a so-called “peace

candidate.”

Communist criticism

In North Vietnam, Communists have
sharply criticized American efforts to use
the United Nations as a channel for ending
the war. Hanoi described the move as
“shopworn" and said the U.N. has no right
to interfere in Vietnam.
A statement broadcast by Radio Hanoi
said the U.S. move was a move to legalize
the war and prolong the division of Vietnam into North and South.

De Gaulle arrived in Paris Tuesday and
told his aides he was highly satisfied
with his visit. The French leader called
a cabinet meeting for Wednesday.
The attack on the United States appeared to be the main tangible result of

Europe.

Informed sources said that although de
Gaulle could not get Polish leaders to
loosen their ties with the Soviet Union,

spectively. Specifically the communique

condemned the intensification of the Vietnam war which it said “constitutes the
main obstacle to the international detente.”

an aggressor.
On Europe, the document called for the
settlement of questions of security with
respect to national sovereignty.

Guns blaze in Mideast dispute
Israeli and Egyptian forces
ISRAEL
blazed away at each other for two hours
early this week with machineguns and
artillery across the waters of the Suez
Canal. The fighting apparently stemmed
from Egypt's refusal to allow Israeli ships
in the waterway.
The duel was another in a series of
skirmishes that have shattered the Mideast truce in the weeks following Israel's
military victory over the Arab world last
June. Egyptian troops opened fire Wednesday on a Israeli patrol moving along
the east bank of the Suez Canal eight
miels north of El Qantara, an Israeli military spokesman reported in Jerusalem.
The announcement said the firing lasted a few minutes and that the patrol suffered no casualties. It did not say the
Israelis returned the fire. The incident
was about 10 miles south of Port Said
The Soviet Union warned Israel Monday
not to try to extend its borders. It said
—

surrender of the territories occupied during the Mideast war may be the price
the Israelites must pay for recognition by
the Arab states.
The warning came in the official Soviet
Communist Party newspaper Pravda as
Premier Alexei N. Kosygin met with
Egyptian foreign minister Mahmoud Rtad
in Moscow.

The Pravda article said withdrawal from
Arab territory would be the absolute
minimum condition for Arab recognition
of the Jewish state.
In Cairo, delegates of the 13-nation Arab
League Council met to prepare strategy
for the Middle East debate at the United
Nations General Assembly opening on
Sept. 19.

Israeli officials already have turned
down Western suggestions that the U.N.
asked to appoint a mediator to bring the
Arab states and Israel to the conference
table.

Elections —not the end
SAIGON—In a letter of congratulations
to president-elect Nguyen Van Tbieu,
President Johnson warned late last week
that South Vietnam’s elections were “not
the end of the journey.”
Johnson told Thieu he was “confident
that our efforts, joined with those of our
Allies, will be crowned with success and
that under your leadership a peaceful,
democratic, strong and prosperous Vietnam will emerge.”
“The election was a milestone along the
path toward the goal you have set for
yourselves, a free, secure and peaceful
Vietnam. But it is not the end of the
journey. Many hard tasks remain.”
Diplomatic sources believe the newly
elected Saigon government will be forced
to consider new peace efforts because of
sentiment expressed in Sunday’s presidential elections. The so-called “peace candidate,” Truong Dinh Dzu, finished a surprising second with 17% of the vote.
But U.S. diplomats believe there is little
hope of a fruitful response to any peace
talk proposals from either the Viet Cong
or the North Vietnamese government.

of journey

If peace talks do occur, it is thought
here that they would be undertaken most
discreetly and only after consultations
with the U S. government. Thieu or his
representative most likely would be careful to avoid intimating any recognition of
the Viet Cong claim that it represents the
people of South Vietnam.
Students walk out
The supposed rigging of the Sept. 3
residential election in South Vietnam
was the reason several hundred students
walked out of the entrance examination
for the University of Eaigon Medical
School.
Several student organizations will march
tomorrow to the headquarters of the Constituent Assembly, they will convene to
hear complaints of fraud and illegal attemps to influence the electorate. Premier Nguyen Cao Ky and the chief of
state Nguyen Van Thieu are the targets
of the accusations. The march is prohibited by the police officials, who said that
they would do everything in their power
to prevent the demonstration, including
making widespread arrests.

Tnc Communist reaction to the American initiative in the U.N. was expected,
but the tone of the Hanoi statement was
particularly vehement and seemed to
foreclose the success of any U.N. attempts
to sponsor peace talks.

"Getting the U.N. to interfere in Vietnam is a shopworn plot of the U.S. imperialists in their aggression in Vietnam,”
the broadcast said, quoting an editorial
published in the official North Vietnamese government newspaper.
“The United States has long been scheming to get their henchmen in Saigon sealed in the U N, over the past years. It has
many times attempted through the U.N.
to legalize its war of aggression against

Vietnam. These schemes have been
thwarted by the firm stand of the Viet-

namese people and strong protests by
world public opinion.
“The U.N. has no right whatsoever to
interfere in Vietnam,”
Neither North Vietnam nor South Vietnam is a member of the UN., but the
Saigon government maintains an overser
mission at headquarters in New York.
North Vietnam, the Soviet Union and
Communist China have all stated opposition to U.N. action on any level in the
Vietnamese war.

Search
add destroy

Men of U S. 173rd Airborne Brigade
continue on jungle "search and destroy"
patrol in Phuoo Tuy Province —typical
V'e,nam mudhole "highways". Troop
buildup continues in the South.

�</text>
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                    <text>������������The Spectrum C)
Vol. 18, No. 1

State University of New York at Buffalo

Friday, September 8, 1967

Editors support move to
'dump' President Johnson
(U£-

More than 100 college editors agreed to support actions

to “dump Johnson in 1968" at the U.S. Student Press As-

sociation conference in Minneapolis during late August.
Officials from ACT ’68, which stands for Alternative
Candidate Taskforce, arrived at the USSPA conference to
drum up support for a program “to assure that the next
President does not pursue the policies which are leading
this nation to disaster,” according to an ACT '68 spokesman.
Clinton Deveaux, former PresiWire service to be established
dent of the State University of
Buffalo Student Association, is
one of the founders of ACT '68.
The organization grew out of an
exchange of letters between the
White House and student govern-

ment leaders last December.

400 pledge support
Sam Brown, who was defeated
in his bid for President at the
NSA conference in College Park,
Md., is ACT director. More than
400 student government leaders
pledged support at the NSA con-

Headaches
,

,

The parking lot situation will
be worse this year. University
officials expect to issue 15,500
student parking permits. There
are about 2,650 student spaces.

New University professor
expects hippy' campus
Hoping to find a “hippy” environment, Dr. Edgar Z.
Friedenberg, sociologist, became one of the new members
of the State University of Buffalo faculty.
Dr. Friedenberg is working jointly in the sociology and
education departments.
man who likes far-out
kids, he has this to say: “Like
some, but not all Californians,
I like working closely and intimately with all my students.
I hope they like this sort of
thing. It’s my main satisfaction.”
Dr. Friedenberg is a very sensitive, perceptive observer. He is
concerned with America and its
As a

teen-age citizens.
Best known as a “sociologist
of adolescence,” Dr. Friedenberg
has written three books on the

the reader think, are considered
major contributions to the field
of sociology.

Dr. Friedenberg highly praises
the students who revolt against
the “shoddishness and finkery of
contemporary life in this country."

Things not good
He is one of the few people
who openly declare that things
are not so good and are getting
worse,

subject.

His first book, “The Vanishing
Adolescent,” concerns the young
people in the Eisenhower-Nixon
era.

He has also written "Coming
of Age in America,” “Dignity of
Youth and Other Atavisms." Dr.
Friedenberg is co-author of “Society Children."
These books, geared to make

as in Vietnam.

He declared that is strongly
opposed to the war in Vietnam.
“I hope to find on this campus
some organizations to work with.
We can’t do it all alone.”

Secondary education, to Dr.
Friedenberg, is lost in a “smog
of mediocrity.” He is aware of
the hostile atmosphere toward
the ideas of students. It seems
to him that young people in protest become angry because they
are dealing with “finks” who will
not respond to any criticism.

Centenary College graduate
Dr. Friedenberg is a graduate

Centenary College, Stanford
University and the University, of
Chicago. He has taught at Chicago
and Brooklyn College. He has
been governor of the Center for

of

Research and Education in American Liberties at Columbia University. Dr. Friedenberg had been
at the University of California
at Davis since 1964.

or

He did not attend elementary
secondary school. At the age

of 13, Dr. Friedenberg entered

Centenary College.

Dr. Friedenberg

"sociologist of adolescence

According to him,
less adolescence has
able effect on his
schools haven’t had
mess up my mind."

this schoolhad a favorlife. “The
a chance to

ference.
A program statement issued by

ACT ’68 says in part:
“We are now convinced that it
is necessary to obtain a new adminitration. Electoral procedures
provide the machinery to do this,
and we are determined to do
everything humanly possible to
see that the machinery works in
1968. It cannot do so if President
Johnson is first unopposed for renomination and then opposed by
a Republican who offers no valid
alternative.”

In other action, the USSPA del-

egates voted to increase the rates
of CPS, the news service of the
organization.

Editors also voted to establish

a wire service. It is estimated
that 20 college daily newspapers
will join the service to obtain
news copy on a daily basis. The
cost of the service is estimated
at $100 a month.

the USSPA code
of ethics included the deletion of
a statement that “personal bias,
vested interests or editorial policy must not dictate or influence
the writing, placement or length
of news stories.” The phrase was
Changes in

called “superfluous, contradictory
and unrealistic,” by Philip Sernas,

editor of CPS.

Administrations censured
Censorship disputes were also
investigation. The body
voted to censure the administrations at Texas A &amp; M and Portland (Ore.) State College for their
actions last year. At Texas A &amp; M,

under

the administration suspended the
editorial staff. And at Portland
an.issue was confiscated and declared "journalistically irrespon-

sible" by the administration.

A censorship committee recom-

mended that newspapers define
their relationship with their publication boards and administrations. USSPA's code of ethics declares that “the student press
should be free of all forms of
external control designed to regulate content” and “the freedom
of the student press must not be
abridged by confiscation of issues
or facilities suspensions of publication; academic, personal or financial sanctions; arbitrary removal of staff members, or
threats of these actions.”

Dr. Friedenb«rg
addressed delegates
Principal speakers at the conference included Negro comedian
Dick Gregory, civil rights advocate; Alan Katzman, editor, East
Villege Other, and Dr. Edgar Z.
Friedcnberg, sociologist at the
State University of Buffalo. Dr.
Friedcnberg begins at Buffalo
Ihis fall. He formerly taught at

the University of California at
Davis.
In his address, Dr. Friedcnberg
gave his first impressions of Buffalo. “The Buffalo newspapers,"
he said, “are designed to make
people believe that everything is
under control in Erie County.”

Fiedler trial adjourned until Oct 2
The narcotics trial of State University of Buffalo English
professor Dr. Leslie Fiedler, and six other defendents including members of his family, has been adjourned until
Oct. 2
Judge Sebastian Bellomo set the trial date subject to a
Sept. 13 hearing on arguments to suppress evidence obtained
in a raid on Dr. Fiedler’s home last April 29. The arrests
followed that raid.
Dr. Fiedler and his wife Mar
garet are charged with maintain
ing premises where narcotics
were found. Police also charged
their sons, Kurt Fiedler, 26 and
Michael Fiedler, 19, with possession of barbituates. Mrs. Kurt
Fiedler is also charged with possessing

barbituates.

Two others arrested in the raid
are charged with possession of
narcotics. They are Dennis Dencisco and William Hasley, both
of Buffalo,

All seven were released in con
tinned bail following a court ap
pearance Tuesday.
The motion to suppress evi
dence was made on the grounds
that it was seized illegally. In a
defense written by Fiedler and
published in The New York Review of Books and later in the
Buffalo Evening News, Dr. Ficd-

Icr claims that a 16-ycar-old girl
was equipped by police wilh an
electronic listening device and
sent into his home to gather evidence.

Dr. Fiedler, nationally-known
author wilh eight books to his
credit, was the faculty advisor to
DEMAR, a campus group which
advocates the legalized use of

marijuana.
Mr. Michael Aldrich and Dr.
Fiedler attended the NSA-sponsored drugs symposium at College Park, Md , in late August.
Mr Aldrich is the chairman of
LEMAR.

The University of Amsterdam
last month rejected Dr. Fiedler’s
nomination as a visiting lecturer
under a 90-day Fulbright grant
because of what it called “legal
proceedings" against him' “relating to U S. narcotics laws."

Leslie Fiedler
rejected by
Univ. of Amsterdam

Computer index card is the key to ID.
I D. cards for day students arc
being issued today in Norton Hall,

Room 240.
Cards will continue to be issued during the next two weeks,
Monday through Friday, 8:00 a m,
to 4:30 p.m.
Each student must bring his
brown computer index card to
Norton.

For the Millard Fillmore Col

students,' cards have been
issued this week. During the next
two weeks, from 6:00 to 9:30 p.m.
cards may be obtained at Room
lege

240

Day students may have their
pictures taken in the evening but

the night school students will be
given first preference.
Lost I.D, cards may be replaced
after Sept. 22 every Friday afternoon, 12 noon till 3:00 p.m. in
Foster Hall Room 17.
Lost brown computer cards
will be replaced on November 13 from 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

�Pag*

Th

Two

•

Friday, September I, 1967

Spectrum

University College scrutinized;
Welch changes advisement system
Dr. Claude E. Welch, the new dean of University College, plans to re-align the college’s curriculum, and examine UC’s admission
He said that his administration would consider changing
basic and distribution courses and requirements, and would
investigate the admission program.
Pledging to develop the colleges that comprise UC, he has
initiated changes in the advisement system.
University College is not the
same school that it was last year.
Or will be next year.
It has merged with the College
of Arts and Sciences, and eventually will be the only undergraduate division of the University.
President Meyerson’s longrange plans call for U.C. to
evolve into a completely new entity.
Students most affected by the
changes this year are juniors and
seniors who would formerly have
been in the College of Arts and
Sciences, and freshmen and sophomores who will now have the
option of signing their own dropadd slips.
Dr. Welch feels that students
should have the opportunity to
experience “responsible freedom”
in course selection.

Aiming for voluntary
advisement
In line

with this, University

Dean Welch
may change admission policies
College is aiming for a system of
voluntary advisement. Under this
system, students will sign their
own registration cards if they are
willing to accept responsibility
for knowing requirements and
prerequisites.

Voluntary advisement will not
become fully operable for at least
two years, however.
As a first step toward voluntary advisement, freshmen and

sophomores will be allowed to
sign their own drop-add slips on
Change of Registration day, next
Friday.

This is a convenience for most
students, because it eliminates
the need to make appointments
with advisors, or wait in the Dlefendorf reception area until the
advisor has the few ipare minutes

necessary to sign a drop-add slip.

Tragic for some
But for some it will not be a
convenience. Students who unwittingly enroll themselves in a
course for which they are not
qualified, and who remain in it
beyond Oct. 6, may receive a
grade of F in that course.
For these students, the new
system may prove tragic.
Attempting to minimize this.
Dr. Welch will establish an information center in the U.C. Diefendorf reception area. Up-to-date
reports about department requirements and prerequisites will be
posted there.
Advisors will be' available to
verify information, to assist in
making decisions and plans, to
help work out registration problems, and to sign Change of Registration forms for those students
who desire it. They will also be
available in the gym on Change
of Registration day.
According to Dean Welch, in
the future, advisors will be less
concerned with enforcing regu-

lations and requirements. They
will concentrate on helping students use the course requirement
information that is available.
For now, juniors and seniors
will use' the same change of registration procedures they have
used in the past.
The 28-year-old Dr. Welch officially took office Sept. 1.
His permanent assignment was
first reported July 14, in The
'

Spectrum.

BULLETIN!

Despite

fiendish torture
dynamic BiC Duo
writes first time,
every time!
uic’s rugged pair 61
stick pens wins again

THE BOOK STORE IS NOW FEATURING
THE ONE BOOK YOU’LL USE FOR
ALL COURSES!

in unending wai
against ball-point
skip, clog and smear.
Despite horribli
punishment by mad
scientists, uic sti

writes first time, eve
time. And no woiuK
uic’s “Dyamite” B.
is the hardest met

Save yourself from crippling errors in reports and
theme writing. Save time and avoid the tedium of
correcting mistakes.

solid brass nose eon
Will not skip. el(
or smear no

ing their own cooperative book
exchangej Student discounts at
the University Bookstore have
been cut from 10% to 5%.

Book exchange begins Monday
An alternative to the high
book price problem will be
available to students in the
form of the Student Book Exchange.
The exchange will begin
operation Monday and will
continue for three weeks.
Begun in 1965, the book exchange has help relieve the problem of high book costs for many

students.
At its institution the exchange
had a dual purpose. First, it was
to provide lower book prices than
those asked by the bookstore.
Secondly, if the number of books
bought and sold were great
enough, it was hoped that the
book exchange would help efforts to bring about a discount in
the bookstore.
This year the
count has been

10% to 5%.

bookstore disreduced from

matt

Owning your own copy is much easier and avoids the
hazards of guessing. So pick up this new dictionary
now at the bookstore for just $6.75 indexed. It will
still be a lifesaver ten years from now.

GET YOUR OWN COPY TODAY.

WEBSTER’S SEVENTH NEW COLLEGIATE
You’ll recognize it by the bright red jacket.
Point

I9(

Miss Rosenfeld also, stated that
workers are needed to help run
the exchange, and that all volunteers are welcome.

Special
Wholesale to Students
—1 WEEK ONLY-

SAT., SEPT. 9 thru
SAT., SEPT. 16

100%

This is the only Webster with the guidance you need
in spelling and punctuation. It’s the latest. It includes 20,000 new words and new meanings.

WIIENNUNHC PEN COUP
MIIFOPO CONN

cent fee.
Only books that will be used
for courses this semester will be
accepted to insure that no obsolete books are sold.

Back to School

—

Die Duo at yoi
campus store now

The exchange will operate in
Room 231, Norton Hall, from the
hours of 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday
through Friday and 11 a.m.-3 p.m.
Saturdays. Books will be collected
only on Monday, and none will
be sold, Tuesday will be the first
day of selling.
This year the exchange will include all hard and soft cover 100
and 200-level books, hard-bound
upper division textbooks, and
graduate level texts.
According to Darryl Rosenfeld,
chairman of the exchange, personal checks cannot be accepted
from students as payment. Students whose books are sold will
be paid by check, requiring a ten

WIG SALE

Equip yourself now with a permanent lifesaver by
buying the one desk dictionary that won’t let you
down. It’s Webster’s Seventh New Collegiate
required or recommended by your English department.

what devilish aim
is devised for the
by sadistic student
Get the dynam

BiC Fine Point 2SC

Discounts
cut to 5%

While Bookstore checker Mrs.
Rita Pytel totals the price of
textbooks, students are prepar-

HUMAN HAIR

Wiglets
Wigs
Falls

....

19.95
49.95
69.95

USE OUR HANDY LAY AWAY

CAROUSEL WIG FASHIONS
3942 Bailey Ave. (Amherst)
2 Blocks From Campus

Phone 835-2193

�Friday, September 8, 1967

The

Pag* Three

Spectrum

dateline news. Sept 8
SAIGON —U.S. Marines battling one of the biggest forces they
have ever encountered in Vietnam beat back a series of human wave
assaults today in the fourth day of a battle that has killed 775
Communists and cost the Leathernecks 114 dead and 283 wounded.
Each side was using tear gas.
The Marines said 376 Communists were killed Thursday.
DETROIT —A nationwide auto strike against Ford Motor Co.
began midnight Wednesday, climaxing nearly two months of deadlocked negotiations. Effect: 160,000 Ford employees idle losing $3.7
million a day in wages.

WASHINGTON —The number of unemployed in the U.S. dropped
for the third consecutive month in August, prompting the Johnson
administration to declare that the case for a tax increase was stronger
than ever.
WASHINGTON —A straw vote taken in New Hampshire shows
Sen. Robert Kennedy and Gov. Nelson Rockefeller in second place
in terms of presidential preference.

This Fall, the Stale University of Buffalo marching
band should be the largest and finest in the
institution's history. Director Frank Cipolla will
lead "The Pride of The East" at a pep rally next

UB Band

Friday.

Biggest and best marching band ever
will entertain during football season

The biggest and best marching
band that the University has ever
had to offer will be very much
in evidence during the coming
football season.
A total of 154 of SUNYAB’s
Music Department’s finest will
entertain at the various football
activities that are scheduled for
this fall.
The unveiling of the 1967 edition of the “Pride of the East”
will take place at the Pep Rallyon Friday, September 15.
The band will start at Baird
Hall, and will march through
camous, finally ending up at the
mu tain near Norton Hall.
Coach Doc Urich, with vocal
assistance from cheerleaders, will
introduce each stalwart football
player to a crowd which should
be hard-pressed to contain their
emotions.

The highlight of the season will
be an appearance, nationally televised, at War Memorial Stadium
during halftime of the Bills-Miami Dolphins, game on Noy, 5.
An out-of-town appearance in
Philadelphia, at the Villanova
game, is scheduled for the weekend of Nov. 10-12.
If you happened to be wander-

ing about the campus during the
past week or so, you couldn’t
have missed the band-type noises
emanating from the general vicinity of Baird Hall.
The band camp opened Saturday, Sept. 2, and the 90 freshmen in the band didn’t arrive
until Sunday night.
By Tuesday morning, the band
was actually making their melodious sounds. The actual preparation—around 30 hours’ worth
during the week before everyone
arrived enabled the staff to be
completely prepared and ready
to set everything off smoothly.
The man responsible for teaching the marching band all its
complicated maneuvers is director Frank Cipolla. He is beginning his seventh year as director
of bands, and under his leadership, the University bands have
grown from a small single unit
to a musical complement of three
bands and many varied activities.
(The brass section has some really tough touch football games
during the breaks in band re-

“We considered at great length
other possible printers,” said Mr.

D’Amico, “but it’s quite clear that
Partners’ Press offers the best
services.”

the

former Editor-in-chief. The

new contract includes a no-ccnsorship clause.
“Once the Press agreed to inelude the no-censorship clause in
the contract, it seemed foolish
not to take advantage of their
services,” Mr. D’Amico explained.

BUFFALO —City Court Judge Ann T. Mikoll has set October 24
for the narcotics trial of 10 members of the Buffalo Road Vultures
motorcycle club. Most of those arrested face possession of marijuana
charges. LEMAR has charged police used “Nazi-like tactics" in a raid
on a Road Vulture gathering Wednesday.
HONG KONG —Anti-communist newspapers charge that the
Mayor of Canton and other city officials were invited to Peking and
then arrested on charges of supporting anti-Maoist tactics.

ready begun arranging for the
fall and bandsmen can expect
many new and freshh-sounding

WARSAW —French President Charles DeGaulle met with Poland’s
lop leaders Thursday for talks on the Vietnam War, the Middle East
crisis and European unity.

who is the arranger. He has al

arrangements this year.

The schedule for this season
September 16—Kent State
October 7—Temple (Homecoming)

October 14—Boston University
(Band

Day)

5 —Buffalo Bills

November

(Televised)

November 10-12—Villanova
(at Philadelphia)

November 18—Colgate
(no Halftime Show)

MID-EAST— Israeli guns and tanks fought a series of sharp duels
with Egyptian and Jordanian armed forces across the Suez Canal and
the Jordan River Wednesday night and Thursday. Casualties were
light but Egypt reported heavy property damage.

Looks great...
writes great...

USED
NEW
Paperbacks
Hard Covers
&amp;

&amp;

—

Last year, the concern refused

despite,a Federal restraining order.

TOKYO— About 230 leftist student clashed with riot police at
Tokyo International Airport Thursday, just two hours before Prime
Minister Sato was to leave for an official visit to Nationalist China.

Mr. Cipolla’s able assistant is
Mr. Michael Sandgarten, who is
presently in his second year as
assistant director.

to print a poem submitted by

MONTGOMERY, Ala. —Gov. Lurleen Wallace Thursday asked
slate school officials to poll parents on racial preference of teaches,

The new face around the
marching band scene this fall
belongs to Mr. Milton Shctlcr,

hearsal).

Spectrum prints with Partners'Press
The Spectrum is again printing
with Partners’ Press, Inc., 1381
Kenmore, Ave., according to Editor-in-chief Michael L. D’Amico,

A native of Austin, Texas, he
is, beside ruling over band rehearsals with an iron hand, especially interested in jazz-lab
bands and musical comedy.

ALBANY —Governor Rockefeller Wednesday urged the Const!
luitional Convention to permit state-private, low-cost loans and reasonable credit to encourage business in city slum areas.

Special "starch service"

—

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�Friday, September 8, 1967

Th* Spectrum

Pag* Four

The free college plan

The New York State Constitutional Convention has
passed a free college proopsal which will be written into
the remodeled state charter.
A free college education for the citizens of this state
echoes lofty ideals, but such a program is beset by a number
of problems which cannot be overlooked.
The first consideration is money. Merely calling our
university system free doesn’t mean that it costs nothing
to run. Democrats estimated that it would cost taxpayers
$64 million; Republicans say $1.4 billion. The true figure
is probably between the two.
This means that more state funds would be required.
New Yorkers are now so over-taxed that a lottery had to
be established to help pay the costs of education. The
lottery, so far, has been a failur. Where will the money
come from?
YOUMtt'CMLJM
motmw
A second consideration is the state incentive program.
The free college program will, of course, eliminate it. The
incentive program was initiated to help able and needy
students go to college.
Most would agree that the program has been successful. It would follow logically, then, that an increase in the
'The vehicle is American, the gun is British . ■. and the chauffeur is Russian!'
incentive program would be just as effective, if not more
so, than a free college plan.
Happy to see
Perhaps incentive awards could be expanded to help
burgher
cover room and board fees also. The incentive program
by Schwab
could be a tremendous aid to needy students, while the
free college plan will probably help everyone a little, but
TO THE EDITOR
not enough.
Welcome back to, or welcome to, the State
In many cases, the free college plan will be paying University of New York at Buffalo, formerly
very happy to see that fraternities have
I
or simply UB, now simply finallywasmoved off campus. It was beginning to
for the education of someone who could well afford to pay University of Buffalo
decided
call
it
to
SUNYAB. The Spectrum has
look like the law banning national fraternities was
his own way, thereby depriving a more deserving student State University of Buffalo.
going to be enforced.
not
more
of that much
aid.
Now that you’re confused, let me give you a
Fraternities on this campus have been probably
Perhaps some delegates think it is a proud boast for whirl-wind review of where the State University
the most superfluous organizations around, and
New York State to have free colleges. After all, we can’t of Buffalo is and where it is going.
A few years ago, when tuition was higher their “fun and games” attitude of college life inlet California get too far ahead.
and commencement figures were lower, a new
dicate that these people have nothing better to do
A word to Constitutional Convention delegates
with their time than drink beer and make noise.
Governor looked westward (from Albany toward
Your idealistic approach is admired; it all sounds like Buffalo) and reportedly said, “UB, you’ll be within
National fraternities are narrow in their aca very fine idea. But come down to earth a little and try to our domain someday.”
policies, and therefore foster prejudices
ceptance
prophecy
history.
soon
became
That great
find sources of revenue for the present state educational
college students should try to eliminate. They
that
remains
the
weather
UB became SUNY (although
programs. A dire need exists now.
are a detriment to the principles of equality.
miserable.)
'*

”

&lt;=&gt;

•

o*

'^t/x
.

fraternities

the

banished

,

Which elections count?

The elections which were held in South Vietnam this
week have raised hopes of new peace overatures to the
North. Now that South Vietnam has an elected government,
the North Vietnamese will be more willing to negotiate.
There is little doubt that Washington will play up the
elections, for indeed, that seems to be the best political
move.
But maybe that’s just the problem: Washington is more
concerned with what is the best political move that with
what is the best move. Those, incidently, may not always
be the same.
Given the attitude of the Washington politicians, it
seems as though politics in this country carry considerably
more weight that politics in South Vietnam.
In effect, elections in the United States, not in South
Vietnam, will be of a more determining factor for peace
in South East Asia.

To the freshmen
You are entering a University that has changed drastically in the past few years. Thas change will continue,
and you will be caught up in it.
How you are caught will be determined by what you
want, or what you think you want.
You will have every option. You will be subjected to all
facets of life, all doctrines and dogmas, all avenues of existance. Look at them closely; you won’t have to look far.
Because you are an individual, unaccustomed to life
at this University, you will become frustrated. You will be
a misfit, you will be alone and you will become frustrated.
Like any frustrated individual in an unfamiliar environment, you will seek a slot for yourslf. You will cling to something. It may be a textbook, or cause or a student activity.
Or you may go on being frustrated. That choice is yours.
Before you become committed to one of these, examine
them all carefully. Don’t rely on someone else’s view of
the situation, for many have stopped looking.
Narrowmindedness has no place in a university, but
it frequently runs rampant. Don’t join the stampede.
Learn to evaluate. Take nothing for granted. Always
look beyond what is presented, for what is presented is
frequently a facade.
When you leave here upon graduation, you will be a
very different person. What you become
in four years will
depend, in large measure, on what you do in the first four
months.
Open your eyes and listen, freshmen, for you will
have
to choose.
Welcome to the challenge.

A year or two slipped by and then the
Governor again beckoned westward and decided
to make Buffalo a great university center. State

Three cheers for the ban on fraternities; may
they be gone forever.

University of Buffalo officials cried, “We need
more room” and the search for a campus began.

Ad hoc committees sprang up to vie for the
new campus. Citizens for a Downtown Campus,
Citizens for an Amherst Campus, Citizens for a
Golf Course Campus and Citizens in Favor of
Dumping the University in the Buffalo River were
among the more powerful factions. Land speculation began. Meetings were held in smoke-filled
rooms. Politicians began politicking. Mothers
started to march. Finally an announcement was
made after an intensive study: Amherst won.
But not for long: the losers joined forces
and formed the Ad-hoc Committee To J Seek Out
and Tar and Feather the Idiot who chose the New
Campus Site (SOTFINCS). Distressed, the University officials decided the only fair thing to do
was find an unbiased individual to make another
study and come up with the same recommendations.
The individual chosen was Rutger’s President

Dr. Mason Gross.
Dr. Gross, after a long a painstaking study
finally declared: “Amherst it will be.” University
officials sighed and The Spectrum echoed: “We
told you so.”
That was last spring. The delay caused by
the campus site dispute caused many changes at
the present site. Trees and grass became a thing
of the past. Multi-pastel-colored buildings sprung
up where co-eds feared to tread. Parking lots
ate up the campus in the Blacktop Plague of '66.
Three miles north an Interim Campus was
hastily planned. Professors sought desparately
for a place to park. New campus cops were added
to man wreckers, towing cars away without mercy.
Great unrest stirred many students. A dean
was seen pole vaulting over a line of students into

the Tiffin Room. The Tiffin Room closed but

soon announced that it would reopen. Students
marched on Hayes Hall, then to the Library, then
to the Haas Lounge and then to the Student
Association offices during one dispute. No one
knew exactly where they were marching or why.

Student Senate sessions were called three times
a day. Fraternities were banished.
Computers
expelled three innocent students. The Fathers
Against Furnas joined the Mothers Against Meyerson as the outside community looked on with
dismay.
Today we find the campus somewhat more
quiet. The flower people have arrived and the
old radicals have been purged. Amherst is a
picnic sight. Students have become accustomed
to the TTs (temporary trailers) and the TBs
(temporary buildings).
Whether the tranquil state of the University
will last at the State University of Buffalo is a
question in everyone’s mind. My guess is that it
won’t. It’s too much like the sigh after a large
meal
one must expect a burp sooner or later.
—

B.M.

Barth's book not required
reading
TO THE EDITOR:

I am writing this letter to clear up a situation involving freshmen.

During the summer, freshmen received a
letter concerning the Book Seminar. It stated that
the reading of John Barth’s book, “The Floating
Opera," was required reading.

Such a requirement is directly in opposition to
the principle of academic freedom, upon which
this University exists.

As chairman of the Freshmen Orientation
program, I would like to apologize for this error.
The letter should have stated that the book was
“highly recommended,” not required reading.
Let me wish you the best of luck in your
freshmen year.
Errol Craig Sull
Chairman

published twice-weekly
The Spectrum
every
Tuesday and Friday—during the regular academe year
University
the
State
of New York at Buffalo, 3435
at
Main Street, Buffalo, New York 14214.
Offices are
located at 355 Norton Hall.
—

Editor-in-chief—Michael L. D'Amico

Managing Editor—Richard R. Haynes

Asst. Managing Editor—Richard Schwab
Business Manager—Samuel A. Powazek
Advertising Manager—David E. Fox
editor

Campus

—

Eric Sharp

asst.—Margaret

Feature editor—

City editor—

VACANT

Anderson

asst.—Lillian
Editor—

Waite

Sports

Barry C. Holtclaw
Robert Woodruff
asst —Ronald Ellsworth
asst.—W. Scott Behrens
Layout editor—
Copy .editor—
David L. Sheedy
A
Judy Riyeff
asst.—John Trigg
asst.—Joceylyne Hailpern
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&amp;
Promotion
Circulation
Edward Joscelyn Director—Murray Richman
asst.—Alan Gruber
The Spectrum is a member of

Press

United

the United States Student
Associated Collegiate Press and
International. Subscriptions at $3.00 a

Association,
Press

semester.

Represented for national advertising by National Educational Advertising Service. Inc., 420 Madison Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
Second class postage paid at Buffalo, New York.
Editorial policy is determined by the Editor-in-Chief.

�&lt;t

*

Friday, September 8, 1967

The Spectrum

Suggests revision of

Pag* Fiv*

BELOW OLYMPUS

By Interlandi

Wk m.;,*
/r1
1/4

m

grading system
TO

THE EDITOR:
Two shortcomings in this University’s grading
and reporting system have come to annoy- me.

(&lt;,

Or perhaps...
by Barry Hottzclaw

election

SYMBOLS

_

I would hope that bringing These points to the
attention of some policy maker will result in
change
or at least an answer.
-

included on each student’s transcripts. In these
days of intense competition we should be aware of
where we stand. (Perhaps they could even estimate how are grades rank us nationally.) This
would be useful both in the field of education,
and it would better enable us to decide whether
we should release such information to the draft
boards. Besides, if the Draft Boards have already been given this information I’d like to
know about it.
Second, our present grading system should be
changed to another system that would allow for
more precise, and hence fairer grading. For
example, is it right that (on a straight curve),
a student with a 79.5 average and a student with
a 89.4 average should get the same grade? I
think not.
A simple plus and minus system could cure
this. For example, a B— could be made worth
1.7 A C+ could be made worth 1.3. Then the
numerical value would (obviously) be multiplied
by the credit hour value of the course.

subjects against making terrorist attacks in the
Israeli-occupied areas of Jordanian territory. In an
interview with the Jordanian Information Agency,
as reported by Agence FrancePresse in The New
York Times, the King said. “I consider that renewal of guerrilla activities on Jordanian territory
occupied by Israel would be a crime against our
Palestinian brothers."

Isolated bands of Jordanian guerillas have
not ceased their guerilla activity since the formation of the Jewish state, and it is unlikely that a
few words urging reasonable restraint, even if
from their King, will stop what has become a
religious war for them.
However it was worded, the King’s message
was not directed at the Jordanians. He was
speaking indirectly to both the Israeli government and his former friends in the West.

King jumped on Arab bandwagon
In a desperate attempt to capitalize on the
religious-war tensions in the Middle East to solidify

F.D.

Asks contribution for
Fiedler defense
TO THE EDITOR:
You have no doubt read of the arrest and
harassment of Leslie Fiedler and his family by a
varsity of forces in Buffalo. The case has put the
Fiedlers under severe financial stresses, involving
their life insurance, fire insurance, and home
mortgage. In particular, the case has already cost
them $7,000 in legal fees and will cost more as
it proceeds.
To help the Fiedlers in this crisis and to
enable them to fight for the due process and freedoms involved, we are establishing the Fiedler
Defense Fund. We are grateful to you for publishing this letter. We will be most grateful to
anyone who sends in a contribution. Dr. Norman
N. Holland, 131 High Park Blvd., Amherst, should
be contacted.
A. Alvarez
G. M. Bridenbaker
Noam Chomsky
Marcus Cunliffe
Sidney Hook
Frank Kermode
James Laughlin
R. W. B. Lewis
Bernard Malamud
James A. Michener
Norman Podhoretz
Richard Poirier
Karl Shapiro

Scores GSA on fee proposal
TO THE EDITOR:
Today I received a letter from the Graduate
Student Association discussing the elimination of
certain student fees. One in particular that I am
in disagreement with is the elimination of the
athletic fees. Whether the leaders of the G.S.A.
know it or not they are an integral part of the
total university which does include the athletic
program.

I feel it is about time that the pseudointellectuals come down from their ivory towers
and come out of the dark, dingy, dusty library
stacks. Your reasons for eliminating the fees are
purely egotistical and demonstrate no loyalty for
the University as a whole.
I could point out, numerous (in my opinion)
unexcused expenditures of school monies and you
could do the same in reference with certain exBut that
penditures in the athletic program.
would get us nowhere and would miss the central
point of my argument: That all students, graduate
and undergraduate should support the total University program.
In conclusion, it must be admitted that the
facilities in Clark Gym are limited, but they are
still open to all students and the faculty. By the
way, Clark Gym is the building near the football
field where every Saturday afternoon the prestige
and pride of the University and the whole community is at stake.
Richard E. Barrett, Class of ’65
Writers: Please be brief. Letters should not exceed
300 words. All letters must be signed and the address
and telephone number of the writer must be included. Positive verification of authorship will be made
before a letter is printed.
Letters will be kept in strict confidence.
The Spectrum will use initials or pen name, if
requested. But anonymous letters are never used.

The

Spectrum reserves the right to edit or delete

material submitted for publication, but the intent of
letters will not be changed.

"Sure, that's one of the observers. We even have 'em
at our elections!"

The Lighter Side
by Dick West

his own position of political power, the King
had joined the rest of the Arab world in the
escalation of tensions and the resulting two-day
“war” with Israel.
More than any other Arab leader, King Hussein is now regretting this move. His present
strategic situation leaves him completely at the

mercy of the Israelis; unlike Egypt or Syria,
Jordan’s military strength had been built up predominantly with U.S. and British aid. He can’t
get that now. And the Soviets don’t have enough
money to rearm to entire Arab world.

Communication needed
Not long after he took office the late President Kennedy for lasting settlement
King Hussein is being pressured into the
generated a medium-sized controversy by attacking what
realization that the only way to achieve any sort
he called fiscal “cliches.”
of lasting political settlement of the complex
It was his contention that economic progress was being issues involved in the whole question of Israel’s
impeded by ancient concepts of frugality and budgetary place in the Arab world is through communication
balancing which had become outmoded, if indeed they were between the Arabs and the Jewish state. And
the communication can only begin with a change
ever valid in the first place.
the attitudes of the Arab leaders.
Halc kc P‘ t he bottlc on his dcsk in
It is not now my intent to
Jordan can no longer withstand another war.
argue that point on either
but rather to introduce a

side,

new
economic theory to supersede it.
.For textbook purposes, I have

labeled

it

“The

West-McHale
Pros-

Theory of Cliche-Induced
perity.”

allegiance to the

waste not,

vanl
axiom was so strong
1C comb n °t bring himself to
throw it away,
'

*

Forced to act

King Hussein knows that the survival of his
state must depend on a return, if only in part,
of the tremendous human and agricultural resources of the occupied West Bank territories to

the economy of Jordan.

"My frugal nature dictated that Superpowers won't risk war
it should be put to some use,”
While both the Soviet Union and the U.S.
The name behind the first read his laboratory notes. “As
have important interests in the Middle East, they
hyphen belongs to Terence Mcthe days turned to weeks and are not important enough to risk a dangerous
Hale of the Flint, Mich., Journal, the weeks to months it became military
confrontation. For the United Nations
who underwrote and performed something of an obsession. Finto threaten military action requires active support
the field work necessary to valially, a couple of weeks ago, I of U.S. manpower and money, two
items which
date the theory. My role has
was impelled to act."
Washington is at present in no position to throw
been that of senior consultant.
What McHale did, of course, around.
was go out and buy a tape reReverse theory
King Hussein's attitude represents a shift,
corder. This, However, did not
Simply stated in terms the avcompletely solve the problem of however subtle, in his relations with his victorious
erage layman can comprehend, putting the head cleaner to use. neighbor. With the power of the military destroyed. the King can count on reasonable base of
our theory holds that a fiscal
He subsequently discovered he
cliche which might ordinarily had purchased a “tape deck,” support in his domestic political situation.
depress the economy will, under
There seems to be no reason why he should
which is a hi-fi component and
certain circumstances, actually is not equipped with speakers. not now begin to shift his position so as to open
stimulate it.
up the possibility of separate, independent negoNext step: Buy two speakers.
In field tests, McHale took the
Once the speakers were intiations with Israel. Jordan can not turn to either
"waste
want
and
not,
cliche
not”
stalled, McHale learned that a of the superpowers for military support, and
to
29-cent
applied it
a
bottle of
tape deck does not have its own King Hussein is not foolish enough to throw in
“head cleaner.” The results
with Nasser again.
amplifier. And once an amplibrought clear cut confirmation
fier had been purchased, he
no Severe Consequences
Faces
that the theory is sound.
found that a tape deck does not
He might lose favor with the rest of the Arab
tape.
is
function
without
cleaner,
incidentally,
Head
world, but any loss of favor will only be short-term;
"The 29-ccnt bottle of head
a fluid used in the maintenance
he faces no severe military or political consequnet
had
the
effect
of
of tape recorders. Someone had cleaner
ences. Jordan must save itself. A “United Arab
into
the
sent a bottle of it to McHale with putting nearly $1,000
Front” can wait.
economy,” McHale reports.
a suggestion that he use it on
Israel has a wonderful opportunity to move
that
are
due
Proving
cliches
himself.
towards negotiations on the refugee situation, as
Despite the implied insult, Me- tor a comeback
well as what to do with the occupied territories of
Jordan, particuarly the west bank region, if King
Hussein does make what seems his only possible
move
toward separate peace talks.
,,

Quotes in

the news

United Press International

MILWAUKEE, WIS.—The Rev. James E. Croppi, the Roman
Catholic priest leading civil rights demonstrations in Milwaukee,
denouncing city aldermen.
“Some day Christ is going to appear before the aldermen in
black skin and he is going to say, T needed a home and you would
not let me in—burn in hell’
MONTGOMERY, ALA.—Alabama Gov. Lurleen Wallace, commenting on a restraining order issued by a three-judge federal court
preventing enforcement of a new state law which would have allowed
school classes to choose the race of their teachers.
judges'
“1 want the people of Alabama to know that the federal
issued a temporary injunction . . . without serving any complaints
on us and without giving us the right to be heard.”
of
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J.—Mrs. Mary Louis Rogers, chaperone
about her
telling
newsmen
Pageant,
America
at
the
Miss
Miss Texas
anxiety when she saw a gull take Miss Texas' pink leotards and
pink ballet slippers and fly away.
so hard to do
“I am a first-time chaperone and have tried
everything perfectly.”
’

—

Nasser would be pul in a spot. It is quite
possible that the loss of the valuable stratetgic
position on the Jordan River would hurt his plan

to “exterminate" the Jewish state. Despite the
effects of the Jewish blitzkrieg, the Arab leader
still seems confident that be can overpower Israel
in strong extended military offensive.

The Spectrum's pages for

Editorials

&amp;

Opinions

It is the policy of The Spectrum to report the
news fully and impartially in the news pages,
to express the opinions of the newspaper only
in the editorial pages and to publish all sides
of important controversial issues.
"Without

expression,

freedom of

expression

&gt;s meaningless."

�Th

Pag* Six

•

Friday, September 8, 1967

Spectrum

Airlines offer
half-fare plan
Students under 22 years of
age are* eligible to fly on any
major U.S. airline for half fare.
are aval
ticket counter for $3.00.

The ID card entitles students
to fly on a standby basis at a fare
equivalent to half the ordinary
jet coach fare, As an added
bonus, the card also allows students to receive discounts at
Sheraton and Hilton Hotels.
The card is valid for discounts

at any time except during a few
generally
peak travel periods
around holidays.
Persons traveling standby with
Youth Fare cards approach the
“military-youth service counter"
at airports.
They are boarded after regular
paying passengers and military
fare passengers are accommodat-

Opposite
Univ. of Buffalo

MON. SAT.
10-9
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1967

with smart
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University College, Pharmacology
469 (Drugs and Biological Systems) will examine how drugs
act to modify the behavior of
cells, using lecture-discussion and

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A new course being offered
this fall will deal with both the
physical and social effects of all
drugs. Offered by the Department
of Pharmacology through the

The staff will be from the Department of Pharmacology and
will include invited speakers.
Anyone interested should contact
Cedric Slnith, M.D., Chairman,
Room 122, Capen Hall, Ext. 2805,

17‘

77 &lt;t

bulb

The Committee, appointed by

relationship of drugs and society,
including drug addiction, cnemical warfare, and drug control.

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tions.”

demonstration. A separate section
will be concerned with the inter-

69'

BINDER

dents themselves.

President Meyerson in April,
1967, is studying the role of the
University in relation to the social and educational aspects of
drugs. Dr. Smith hopes that the
brevity of the questionnaire will
encourage students to cooperate
and to answer honestly.

THEME
BOOK

PAPER

HMNTENSITY
LAMP

Curiosity about student use of
drugs is not limited to the stu-

Distributed by the University
Committee on Drugs and the
Campus, the questionnaire is annoymous and, according to Chairman Cedric M. Smith, M.D.. "deals
only with the students' actual
use of drugs of abuse (i.c, pep
pills, sleeping pills, alcohol), not
with their motivations or reac-

BOUND

FILLER

Surprise awaits
students with I.D.
This fall students picking up
their I.D. cards will find something else for them lying in wail
on the tables: a questionnaire on
the use of chemical agents affecting consciousness and behavior.

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PLAZA

Opposite
Univ. of Buffalo

SAVE 25% BDFFAL0 textbook
USED TEXTS
3610 MAIN—833-7131
(across from Clement Hall)

We stock new texts, too. Also—supplies, prints,
sweatshirts,
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gifts, gourmet
snacks, frames, and other miscellaneous goodies.

WE BUY AND SELL USED

TEXTS

�Friday, September S, 1967

P«9» Sevan

The Spectrum

p-

OFFER GOOD SEPT, 8-15~

—

I

Quality education
efforts continue

|

by Curlana Jonas

—

—'

*

WELCOME BACK!

This coupon entitles you to a 15% discount on purchases of $1.00 or more, of all psychedelic accessories.
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Efforts to improve intergation

'

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3586 MAIN ST.

-

—

Univ. Plaza—Opposite U.B.

—■

G/iants

system as It embarks
year.

on

a new

Superintendent of Schools Joseph Manch acknowledges the necessity of providing equality of
education for all. “There seems
to be increasing evidence that
children who attend culturally
deprived areas, despite all efforts
of compensatory services and experiences of enrichments, do not
make as much progress in their
educational achievement as do

children who attend schools in
the culturally advantaged areas
of the community.”

KNOWN FOR VALUES

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

It is time for a knowledgeable
concerned group from our total
community to examine the longrange possibility of a solution to
this problem of racial imbalance
in our schools and in our society,
Dr. Maneh emphasized.

OPEN
MON. SAT.
-

Opposite
Univ. of Buffalo

10-9

Report submitted to board
On August 30, 1966, the Commissioner of Education, Dr. James
E. Allen, Jr. submitted a report
entitled "Acceleration of Quality
Education in Buffalo Public
Schools" to the Board of Education. In a letter dated Sept. 14,
the Commissioner suggested that
“the Board consider the recommended progress” and file with
him its plans for the progressive
elimination of racial imbalance as
called for in the decision Feb,
15.

Pursuant to the Commissioner's

order on May 1, the Board submitted to him a report entitled,

“The Progressive Elimination of
Racial Imbalance in the Buffalo
Public Schools.” August 18, the
Commissioner held a hearing to
consider the objective to the report which had been filed of the
appellants and to receive a progress report from the Board.

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the Superintendent’s recommen-

dation, the Board unanimously
requested the assistance of the
Slate Education Department in
“making a broad and deep study
of our needs leading to long
range planning and solution of
our problems.”

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Dr. Manch said: “If we had all
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staff
in terms of both number
and in terms of preparation for
certain kinds of responsibility,
adequate school space and perfect racial balance in our Public
Schools
it still would not mean
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concern as school finances, racial
balance, school facilities and staffing."

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After learning of the Commissioner’s dissatisfaction with the
plan submitted May 1, and upon

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UNIVERSITY
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PLAZA

As of August 1, the discount
given by the bookstore is 5%.
Lowering the discount from 10%
is a measure agreed upon by the
Faculty-Student Board of Directors. The reason for the change
is to create funds for a bookstore
on the new campus in Amherst.
There are reportedly no funds
available for the new inventory.
By a lower discount rate, it will
be possible to accomulate the
necessary funds.

’

�Th

P«9* Eight

Friday, September 8, 1987

Spectrum

•

New information
director named
Charles H. Dick will become
the new director of public information here at the State University of Buffalo Sept. 18,

commurtications at Roswell Park
Memorial Institute.
The Public Relations Department formerly included both publications and public information.
It has been divided in order to
establish a broader 'atitj more ef-

OPEN
MON. SAT

Opposite
Univ. of Buffalo

10-9

NATURAL FINISH

BLACK

BLACK

■ y‘

BLACK

*

A. 4-Shelf bookcases,
8'A x 34 x 46" high.
Our roomiest of this

The English department has
cancelled the following courses
for the fall semester: English 475,
489 and 689.

C. 3-Shelf bookcases,

group

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Changes in the time of testing

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All freshmen must lake the
New York State Survey Test for
College Freshmen next Friday

Tim*—allII A M
8:30
Rm. No.—147

7.99

MAGAZINE

,

Vi.

Changes announced
by English department

Glagolich at the Student Testing
Center, 316 Harriman Library,
Extension 3707, or by directly
dialing 831-3707.
Freshmen must report at the
time designated by the schedule.
They are listed alphabetically,
as follows:

BRASS

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freshmen slated

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He was director of public relations for the Kansas Centennial
Commission, the Topeka Chamber
of Commerce, and the Kansas Division of the American Cancer

Friday at 11:00 a.m., to Tuesday
and Thursday 3:00 to 4:20 p.m.
Students involved in these
changes should contact their departmental advisors.

-

BOOK

Before his appointment in Buffalo at Roswell Park, Mr. Dick
was associated with several newspapers, radio and television stations.

and Milton, and 689 studied Melville.
Students enrolled in English
489 to study Stevens will also
study Williams and Marianna

16x56

—

WIRE
FURNITURE

Robert T. Marlett, former head
of the department, will be the
Director of Publications.

English 475 was a course on
English literature of the late 19th
and early 20th centuries.
English 489 studied Browning

J

DOOR MIRROR

-

ficient communications system
both with the public and within
the University, The Public Relations Department is to be in
charge of a larger community,
both local and national.

Mr. Dick, who will remain on
the Roswell staff as a part-time
communications consultant, is a
graduate of the University of

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PLAZA

Opposite
Univ. of Buffalo

�Friday, Saptamber 8, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* Nin*

National Conference on New Politics
demands the abolition of draft, ROIC
The National

Conference

on

adopted a resolution demanding

abolition of the Draft, the ResTraining Corps
erve Officers
(ROTC) and military recruiting
at high schools.
The resolution committed
NCNP members to “help protect draft resisters and conscientious deserters” from the Armed
Forces of the United States.
The 3,200-delegate convention,
under the control of the 600

member

“Black

Caucus”

also

“Which Side we are On.” It
demanded immediate unconditional U.S. withdrawal from
Vietnam.

The anti-draft resolution said,
“since it is not in our power at
present to abolish the selective
service system, we are for open
draft resistance.”
It pledged the NCNP to “full
support to the Black Power

movement

ai

The resolution also called for

a national campaign against allowing student deferments. The
NCNP said it would publish and
distribute literature to members
of the Armed Forces to further
its ideas.

The resolutions were adopted
during the convention’s final official plenary session of the five-

The youngest eligible men (19
years old), will now be considered
first, rather than older men.

Also, by rephrasing the law,
the conservative element in Congress was able to restrict conscientious objection.
The law was considered a tre
mendous victory for the South
ern conservatives, headed by Rep.
L. Mendel Rivers (D.-S.C.), chair-

man of the House Armed Services

Committee.
They were able to defeat President Johnson’s proposed draft
revisions, and a bloc in Congress
headed by Senator Kennedy (DMass.).

The major reform Johnson had
recommended was missing from
the bill. He had hoped to establish a national lottery system of
induction. Instead, the 4084 local
boards, with their varying sets
of standards, remain intact.
The law prohibits the President
from setting up a lottery sys-

The Student Association has called a meeting for officers
of all clubs and organizations to discuss the voluntary fees sit-

uation.

Organizations will be asked to establish a list of priorities,
in the event that the Association does not receive sufficient
funds to meet ail budget requests.
The meeting is slated for the Conference Theater, Wednesday, Sept. 13 at 4 p.m.
Stewart Edelstein, Student Association president termed
the meeting "very important."
"I urge all club officers to attend," he said.

Hallowed tradition
of "pinning" a girl is
up-dated by
Sprite bottle caps.
According to an
(we took it
ourselves), a startling new practice is becoming
widespread on some college campuses.

Suddenly, fraternity men are no longer "pinning"

the lovely young things that catch their eye.
Instead,

they reach for a bottle of tart,

ned.to "cap"

affections.
Why has

this
&gt;me about’
haps because
what happens
len you go
tie of Sprite.
des!

All of which makes for a much more moving moment
than to simply "pin" a girl.
Then, too, the intimacy of two people engaged
in the act of opening a bottle of Sprite in itself
leads to strong emotional involvement.
Capped off, of course, by the sharing of a
few moments of delicious abandon. (Tasting the
tingling tartness of Sprite, that is.)
The beauty of the idea is that if the course
of true love does not run smooth, you don't have
to go to the trouble of getting back your pin.

Seminars

on

url

The University Office of Urban
Affairs will conduct a series of
seminars on various urban prob-

lems.

A visiting expert, community

leaders from government and
business, and a University representative will participate in each
seminar. They will be held month-

ly during the coming year, usually Saturday mornings.

The first seminar will take

place Septt. 30 at 10:00 a.m. in
Norton Union. The subject of
discussion will be transportation.
Topics to be discussed later in

the series include: government,
taxes, downtown, social welfare,
schools, housing and health ahd

poverty.

day meeting.

New SS law indicates change in attitude

President Johnson signed the
Military Selective Service Act
June 30, which extended the
draft four years.

campus releases...

tern without putting legislation

through Congress.
The new Act provides for
and more thoroughly defines
undergraduate deferments.

—

—

Undergraduate deferments
An undergraduate deferment
will be granted to a student “who
is satisfactorily pursuing a fulltime course of instruction at a
college, university, or similar institution of learning . .
The
deferment lasts until the student
attains his baccalaureate degree,
or when he turns 24, whichever is
first.
However, deferments for graduate school students will be ended, except in the case of medical
and dental students.
This rule, if approved by the
President, goes into effect in one
year. As of Oct. 1, 1967, only
graduate students, or those accepted for graduate work will be
deferred.

Hungarian course
to be offered
Spoken Hungarian has been
to the roster of Non-

added

Western tongues offered

in the

“Neglected Languages Program”
(NLP) of the Modern Language
Department,

The two-year course, which
will be initially supported by a
$2,900 grant from the American
Hungarian Studies Foundation,
is designed for above average
students who are “highly motivated” to learn the language,
according to Dr. Peter BoydBowman, NLP director.
Other NLP courses offered include Japanese, Mandarin Chinese, Hindi, Vietnamese, Arabic,
Swahili and Tagalog (the national language of the Philippines). The program features selfinstruction, independent study
based on taped and printed
materials, frequent drill with native speakers, and weekly lab
tests.

Peace in the Mid-east is the topic of forum
“Struggle for Peace in the Middle East" will be the subject of
a public forum to be held September 26 in Rockwell Hall, Buffalo State University College. Cosponsors of the meeting will be
the Buffalo Council on World Affairs and the Office of Interna-

tional

Education

of the

University of Buffalo.
Arthur B. Ziegler, vice

Chemistry ‘lecture series will end today
Dr. Ephraim Katchalski, chair
man of the Department of Biophysics at the Wcizmann Institute of Science, Rehovoth, Israel
will deliver the final of a series
of three Chemistry and Biochemistry seminars, today at 4:30
in Capen G-22. His topic is “Effect of Microenvironment on the
Mode of Action of Enzymes.”
Dr. Katchalski’s research in
the polymers has provided in-

valuable models for studies on
proteins, and are presently being
used in studies on immunology,
as well as many other biological
and chemical applications.
Dr. Kalchalski is serving on
the editorial boards of several
biochemical journals, both in
this country and in Europe. He is
president of the Israel Ministry
of Defense.

Interviews scheduled by U.S. State Dept.
U.S. State Department recruiters will be in Buffalo from Sept.
11 through Sept. 15 to explain
the advantages of a foreign service

career.

Recruiters arc seeking scorelarics with shorthand experience.
Communications specialists with

teletype or cryptographic experience also arc needed to work in

American embassies and consul-

ates.
Interviews will be conducted at
the New York Stale Employment
Service. Hours arc 9:00 a.m. to

4:00 p m. Tuesday, Wednesday
and Friday; 12 noon to 7:00 p.m.
Monday and Thursday.

Lectures on University changes are slated
A new series of report:: will
be inaugurated Tuesday entitled
“The University Report,”

(he

lee

ture scries will be held weekly
on Tusdays, alternating at 9 a m.
and 3 p.m. in the Conference

Theater.
According to Assistant to the
President, Dr. Weslley Rowland’s
office, the series will serve to
keep all interested groups informed about the plans, programs and problems of the State
University of Buffalo. Such topics

as the interim campus and the
computer and the university will
be covered in the first weeks.

The first presentation will be
by Dr. Robert Kctter, Vice President for Facilities Planning,
speaking on “Interim Campuses
—Progress in Amherst Planning,” at 9 a.m, September 12.
Following each lecture will be
a question and answer period.
The scries is open to all students,
faculty and staff.

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well known diplomats and world
leaders will be on the panel.

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�Th

Past Tan

Lucas Foss to lecture in series.
Music on Campus is the theme
tures, recnais, cUlltRJIllas,

ami

a

been
discussion have
scheduled under the heading of
"American Music on the College

panel

A recital is planned for Wednesday, Sept, 20 at 12:00 p.m.
with Leo Smit, Larry Bogue and

Campus.”

Mr. Lukas Foss, conductor of
the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, will present two lectured at Baird Hall. On Wednesday, Sept. 20 at 3:30 p.m.,
Mr, Foss will speak on “Charles
Ives and the new Harmony.”
The following day at 4:00 p.m.
he will speak on “Style and
Technique in Charles Ives.” Mr,
in a
Foss will also
panel discussion on Wednesday,
Sept. 20 at 8:30 p.m. entitled
“Contemporary Ameriacn Music
and its debt to Charles Ives."
Taking part in the discussion
at Baird Hall will be William
Kothe, Charles Wuorinen, Morton Sobutnic, and Vincent Persichetti.
Colloquials will be held at
Baird Hall on Tuesday, Sept.
19 at 3:00 p.m. with Vincent

Dorothy Rosenberg presenting
music by Charles Ives.

The Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra will rehearse at Kleinhans Music Hall on Tuesday,
Sept. 19 and Thursday through
Sunday at 9:30 a.m. Afternoon
rehearsals will be held on Thursday and Friday at 1:00 p.m. A
concert is scheduled at Klein-

24 at

bans on Sunday, Sept.
2:30 p.m.

All rehearsals and concerts
are open to the public free of
charge. Tickets for the concert
arc available at Kleinhans, Baird
Hall, and Norton box offices.
Bus transportation will be provided if there is enough demand.
Those interested are asked to
sign up at either Baird Hall or
at Norton Hall box offices.

Concert to highlight Orientation 67'
from
16 instruments
taped sounds, percussions and marching groups.
Also planned for tonight arc
three solo pieces using the organ,
bass, piano and a 'trio for the vibraphone having the added attraction of a female participant.
The concert will being at 8:30
p.m. and continue till 10:15,
Mr. Harwood is already acclaimed for his concert given last
September in Baird Hall.

resound

One of the highlights of the
"Orientation ’67” week will be a

utilizing

student concert conducted by
Michael Horwood, a music major
at the State University of Buffalo.
The program scheduled for today
at the Fillmore Room will consist
of 9 pieces all composed by Mr.
Horwood.
The specialty of the evening
will be a work entitled “For the
Class of 1971.” The music \vill

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School, 305 Lafayette Ave,, will
41st season of theater
instruction with a new director
and an expanded curriculum.
There will be courses offered
to students of kindergarten age
as well as adults. These include
courses in creative dramatics for
children up through junior high
school, and acting classes for
high school students and adults.
This year, both high school
students and adults will have the
choice of meeting once a week,
as was done in the past, or going
into a special intensive section
which will meet twice a week.
Classes will include intensive
work in acting, voice, and body
open its

LUV' lasts at
Studio Arena
The popular play, “LUV,” is
being held over until Sunday,
Sept. 17 at the Studio Arena
Theater.

The

Studio’s Summer Series

comes to a close with this wayout comedy, which had been extended for eight performances.
“The Threepenny Opera,” a musical by Kurt Weill and Bertolt
Brecht, will be the first play presented in the 1967-68 series. This
production was so popular that
it was a box office attraction in
New York for seven years.
Love-In Nights are being
held on Tuesday, Wednesday and

Thursday for the remainder of
the run of “LUV”. For the special Love-In Nights, two can attend the performance for the
price of one by presenting the
newspaper ad for LUV at the
box office.

f1 /R|J

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Friday/ September 8, 1967

Spectrum

Arena opens forty-first year
of instruction, new classes slated

Persichetti, and at 8:30 p.m. with
Charles Wuorinen. One will also
be held on Thursday, Sept. 21

19, an entire
will be devoted to con-

Suiting Sept.
week

•

CENTER

Shoes Repaired While-U-Wait
Laundry &amp; Drycleaning
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University Plaza

le

new

lirecl tor ol

ie' sci

Maurice Breslow, will head an
expanded professional faculty.

New courses offered
Registration begins Sept, 11,
and will continue through the
week of Oct. 9, from 9:30 a.m. to
5 p.m., Monday through Friday.
Classes will begfn Oct. 2.
New courses include: fencing;

oral interpretation, of literature
—in which students read literature of all kinds, with all the
emotional and intellectual content
that it contains; the history of
film classics; theater history
which will trace the development
of the theater and drama from
—

The course on film classics is
one in which students will see
a different classic film each week,
and discuss it under the leadership of the instructor.

'Playgoing and filmgoing'
planned
The musical theater course is
a workshop-type course in musical comedy and opera.
Another new addition to the
curriculum is “playgoing and
filmgoing” in which members of
the class each week go to a play
or film of interest, and will* meet
during the week to discuss it
with the instructor.

UUAB to Sponsor weekend
movies; "Morgan" is First
Weekend movies, sponsored by
the University Union Activities
Board get underway Thursday,
Sept. 14 with the showing of
“Morgan.”

Movies are shown Thursday,
Friday and Saturday each week
for a price of 250 in the after-

noons and 500 in the evenings.
Continuous showings are scheduled from 12 noon to 12 midnight.
Last year the UUAB brought
to campus
such well-known
movies as Dr. Strangelove, Woman of the Dunes and The Seventh Seal. The movies are supported by student fees.

"Responsive Eye" to view art
“The Responsive Eye,” an exhibition of 42 works exploring
perceptual phenomena in contemporary art, is presently on
view in the Center Lounge of
Norton Hall.
Twenty-two artists from 7
countries are represented in this
circulating exhibition which was
organized for the New York
State Council on the Arts by the
Museum of Modern Art (New
York).

Included in the exhibit are
such artists and works as: Josef

Albers, “Ascension;” Paul Brach,
“Vessel;” John Goodyear, “TwoSided Movement; Reginald Neal,
“Maze
Red and Blue;” Henry
Pearson, “Gyros III;” Ad Reinhardt, “Abstract Print;” and Victor de Vasarely, “Gotha.”
—

Most of the artists in the Exhibition were also presented in the
“The Responsive Eye,” a large
show presented at the Museum
of Modern Art in 1964, which included paintings, sculptures, and
works in other media.

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On* of the most exciting new groups to emerge recently, the Paul Butterfield Blues
Band was formed in the spring of 1965 and have since become one of the most
talked-about groups. Their songs cover a wide spectrum, ranging from folk to
folk rock, rock 'n roll, rhythm and blues, gentler ballads and all types of blues.
Their rendering of a song is always characteristic of the "sound" of the group and
interpretive rather than imitative. They have played regularly at the Cafe Au Go Go
as well as in concerts across the country.

AND NOW AT THE
COMING

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�Friday, September 8, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* Elavan

Renewal Dept, fights urban decay
by Peter Simon

that the federal government will
approve the city’s application for
a Model Cities grant.

The Buffalo Urban Renewal Department has made considerable progress in the past few vears in combatting urban
j

The department is concerned with revitalizing the' blighted areas of the city, and preventing other sections from

„

...

..

,

..

its urban renewal efforts by very

limited federal aid.

deteriorating.

Commissioner Richard L. Miller heads the department.
Already completed are 220
dwelling units in the Ellicott Redevelopment project, the oldest
federally aided urban renewal
project in New York State., An
additional 176 dwelling units are
scheduled to be constructed.
The Waterfront Redevelopment
project is now in the execution
stage. Urban Renewal officials
are hoping that a new community college will be located there.
This area was a proposed site for
the new SUNYAB campus which
is being built in Amherst.
The city’s most successful endeavor is the Downtown Renewal
project.
With co-operation from city and
state governments, and private
concerns, the $15 million Manufacturers and Traders Trust Company Building has been completed. Progress has also been made
on the Main Place Shopping Mall,
as well as the 25 story Erie
County Bank Building, and an
underground parking facility for

,

Buffalo, like the nation’s othei
D

f

'

WBFO unique in Buffalo

Buffalo faces another obstacle.

The Allentown/Lakeview project should eventually rehabilitate
2600 structures.
The Hamlin Park area borders
the depressed Cold Springs section and the aim of the project
is to keep Hamlin Park from de-

Approximately 10% of the land
in this city is owned by railroads,
and the Urban Renewal Department has no jurisdiction over

teriorating.
These projects are to be completed in the near future, along
with some new programs.
Studies are being made for a
project in the North and South

ment, there is considerable
apathy and perhaps resentment

railroads.

According to Mr, Richard

among citizens.

In an area where harmony
and co-operation between the administrators and the public is
essential, this situation is a definite problem, he said.

Ellicott Areas.

Model Cities grant
Buffalo officials are

S.

Danforth, Director of Redevelop-

optimistic

broadcasting

The station today operates
longer hours—2 p.m. to 1 a.m.
daily—and for a greater portion
of the year than at any time in

scene.

It is the City’s only non-com-

i, seven
days a week.
Several programs produced by
the outlet have been carried by
radio stations at other universities?
WBFO holds a construction
permit from the FCC to increase

dent-run.
From its second floor studios
in Baird Hall daily comes some
of the beM classical, jazz and
folk music available. WBFO
broadcasts more hours of opera
per week than any other area
station.
The station’s news and public
affairs programming is the most
comprehensive aired locally.
Monday through Friday at 6
p.m. WBFO presents “Chronicle”
—a comprehensive summary of
the day’s major news, plus UPI
commentary, feature stories, interviews, and editorial opinions
from leading national news-

its power output from the present 1000 watts to 6300 watts,
and to construct a new antenna
60 feet higher than Tower Hall.
Stereo broadcasting will begin
after the station moves to its allnew facilities in Norton Hall.
According to Edward Baron,
WBFO operations manager, the
outlet is looking for new freshman staffers.
“We expect nothing in the way
of previous radio experience,”
he said. “We will teach freshmen
all they need to know to become

papers.

“Special of the Week"—talks
and interviews with government
officials, prominent foreign visitors and outstanding individuals
from all fields—is presented
every Tuesday at 2 p.m. and repeated at 10 p.m. Thursday.
Saturday at 6 p.m. there is a
program called “University Convocation” which broadcasts lec-

good

Oak Street Redevelopment
The Oak Street Redevelopment
project has been initiated prifor the Roswell Park Memorial
Institute.
The Industrial Park project is
aimed at locating new plants in
the heart of the city’s industrial

area.

The Allentown/Lakeview and
Hamlin Park projects are Concentrated Code Enforcement .programs in which the city works
with citizens to eliminate code
violations.

Buffalo urban renewal efforts
are contiuing. These unoccupied buildings
within sight
City
are slated to be
razed. Citizen apathy is a major obstacle.

B U ff a |o

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all directions.
The station, broadcasting at
88.7 me, has avid listeners as far
north as Toronto, and as far
south as Jamestown, N.Y.
The only non-students on the
staff are William Siemering,
faculty station manager, and
Fred Winters, chief engineer.
All other engineers, announcers and newsmen are students.

room

announcers

What’s in it?
Mr. Baron: “A very small stipend, not a heck of a lot of fame
or glory, but very possibly a
good deal of interesting and enjoyable experience, and perhaps
a clue to that elusive career
you’ve been searching for.”

tures given by prominent professors or visitors to SUNYAB.
WBFO operates on both AM
and FM frequencies, the first
reaching only the dorms, but the
FM signal extending 50 miles in

970 cars.

marily to provide expansion

WBFO, the campus radio station, is unique on the Buffalo

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Engraving
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—

Lot* of Parking,

Headquarters for Good
College Clothing

SIGMA PHI EPSILON FRATERNITY
announces its

FALL 1967 RUSH CALENDAR
Wed., Sept. 13—8 P.M.
Beer Stag at the Sheridan
Bowling Lanes
Sat., Sept. 16—9 P.M.
Dated Party at the Roc-Mar
Bowling Lanes
Fri., Sept. 22—9 P.M.
Sorority Social at the
Roc-Mar Bowling Lanes

Sun., Sept. 24—8 P.M.
Beer Stag at John's Tavern
Sat., Sept. 30—9 P.M.
Dated Liquor Party at the
Flying E Ranch

to#

*

I

INFORMAL RUSH EVENTS

RIVERSIDE MEN'S SHOP

Ton*wand* Street, comer Ontario
Buffalo, Now York 14207

FORMAL RUSH EVENT
Thurs., Oct. 5—8 P.M.
Liquor Stag To Be Held at
the Three Coins Restaurant

For Further Information

CALL

837 -76S3

LAST 5 DAYS! "BAREFOOT IN THE PARK"

�Siggelkow to enforce
national fraternity ban

some things

Dr. Richard Siggelkow, Dean of Students, has pledged
to enforce “to the best of my ability" the state-imposed ban
on nationally-affiliated fraternities.
Ih a Spectrum interview, the Dean said he would not
create a “special monitoring group” and that all cases of
infractions of the ban would be handled through regular
channels of discipline, beginning with the student judiciary
National fraternities and sor- statement issued
at State

outlawed
Universities by the State Board
of Trustees in 1953. The State
University of Buffalo was not
then affiliated with State University. The ban on “nationals” went
into effect on this campus July
1, four years after the University
became state-affiliated.
At the time the Stale Trustees
moved against nationals, they
charged
the fraternities with
practicing discrimination on the
basis of race, ethnic origin and
religion. Subsequent court decisions have upheld the Trustees’
onties were

ruling

Move off campus
In light of the decision, 10 of
16 fraternities here have chosen
to go “off-campus” rather than

disenfranchise themselves.
These 10, according to Dean
Siggelkow, will not be allowed to
post signs on campus, use Norton
including meetHall facilities
—

ing rooms and special fraternity
tables in the main floor cafeteria
—or engage in any official fraternity activity on campus.
The six “local” fraternities will
retain their status as recognized

student organizations.

A few student-mothers are try-

sitting service on campus.
According to Mrs. 1) o r o I h y

Frankenstein, leader of the group,
the day care center would oper
ate on a “club” type arrangement,
with mothers paying a minimum
fee each week.
The service would be open to
undergraduate and graduate stu
dent mothers, as well as to the

faculty and staff.

The group has not been successful, however, in finding a
room on campus. Mrs. Frankenstein estimates that they will
need about 900 square feet.
Initial plans call for hiring one
supervisor for every seven children enrolled Although the cur-

riculum has not definitely been

just can't
be learned

Dean Siggelkow released this
statement:
“The State University of New
York and its center at Buffalo,
have necessarily proceeded to
withdraw recognition of alf nationally

in class

affiliated student social

groups.

“Several stipulations were is5, 1967, on behalf
of State University of New York
at Buffalo, as necessary interpretations of the original resolution.
However, it should be nored that
these stipulations are not intended in any way to impinge upon
the individual rights of any student who wishes to participate in
off-campus activities by such so-

.

.

.

sued on June

like journalism

cial groups.
“The State University of New

York at Buffalo, within the limits
of the Trustees’ policy, recognized and will protect the student’s right of free association
and freedom of expression. We,
as well as the students, retain
our trust in present judicial machinery to support the policy.
Students should remain subject
to their own enforcement procedures and due process provisions."

Baby sitting service possible
ing to align support for a baby-

Friday, September 8, 1967

The Spectrum

Page Twelve

decided the tentative program includes arts and crafts, dancing,
music, free play, mid-morning and
afternoon snacks, rest lime and
lunches.

Mrs. Frankenstein believes that
there is a great need for a daycare operation on campus, because nursery schools within the
Buffalo area are beyond the financial means of many students.
She also said that many nursery schools arc filled, and are
not accepting new enrollments.
Mrs. Frankenstein said that
many students and faculty have
encouraged her to go ahead with
plans for the center, and that
she has received many calls, “all
of them favorable and enthusiastic.”

Writing is something you learn by experience. English
professors can preach to you all day about proper writing techniques, but
unless you do it yourself, you will never develop a style . . . yob will never

write well
And we can give you more.

We can give you that experience.

The Spectrum offers you a chance to serve your fellow students
while becoming an integral part of the University community.
If you are planning a career in journalism: if you want to
STAFF
make things happen, or want to know the people who do—
OF THE SPECTRUM.

There are openings on the following staffs
CAMPUS NEWS
CITY NEWS
FEATURE
SPORTS
PHOTOGRAPHY
LAYOUT
COPY
MAGAZINE
ADVERTISING
PROMOTION
CIRCULATION
We will hold a meeting this afternoon for all freshmen and
other students interested in joining the staff.

It is scheduled for:

4 P.M. TODAY
NORTON CONFERENCE ROOM 335

The Spectrum Q
‘The only full coverage student newspaper on the Niagara Frontier”

Room 355—Norton Hall

831-2210

�Friday, September 8, 1967

Th

•

Pag* Thirt**n

Spectrum

Golf season begins as
champ UB team meets

the spectrum of

sport

'

The State University of Buffalo Golf team will start the
season with a meeting at 3:30
p.m., Monday in Clark Gym, it
was recently announced by Head
Coach Len Serfustini.

Coach Serfustini will have a
full complement of returning
lettermen with senior Tony Santelli leading a well-rounded nucleus of excellent golfers. Other
men vying for the top position
will be junior Ted Beringer and
seniors Bill Ahrendtsen, Bob
Gauchat, Rob Stone and basketballer Doug Bernard.

In a period from 1963 to 1965
the Bulls golf team compiled a
record of 30 consecutive victories under Coach Serfustini.
Last year they wound up with
five wins and two losses for the
season and traveled to their
fourth straight Brook-Lea Invitational Tournament.
'

Len Serfustini
'students welcome
the team"

Serf is looking forward to a
fine golf season this year and is
eagerly awaiting the 1967 BrookLea
Invitational
Tournament
which will be held in Rochester,
October 13.

dent are more than welcome to
tryout for the team,” said Coach
Serfustini. The 1967 Varsity Golf
Schedule is as follows;

The Bulls captured first place
in this tournament in 1964 and
1965. Last year the tournament
was not held because a new
sprinkler system was being installed in the golf course.

Mon., Sepf. 18

Canisius

home

Wed., Sept. 20

Buffalo State

away

Mon., Sepf. 25

St. Bonaventure

away

Fri., Sept. 29

Niagara

Opponent

D»l«

BllIU
rJia-in
1HI
*

“

’

.

hard

The Upstate New York qualifying rounds for the Eastern Collegiate Athletic Conf. (ECAC)
tournament will be held at the
Drumlin Golf Course in Syracuse. The winners of this tournament will meet other New
York State golfers in the ECAC
Qualifiers at the U.S. Military
Academy of West Point.

Fullback Lee Jones (36) is scrambling for ground
yardage with defensive back Paul Jack making
f^e ,ac^e Also in the picture is defensive linebacker Dave Chernega (56).
-

The final New York State
ECAC Tournament will be held
October 21 at the Bethpage State
Park Golf Course in Farmingdale, Long Island.

80 men work-out twice dail\

Football practice begins
Nearly 80 men showed up (or
the start of fall football practice
a week ago Monday morning.
They have been informed of all
the offensive and defensive strategies in the playbook of head
coach Richard (Doc) Urich and
they are now digging in hard—putting in two practice sessions a
day until classes start Monday
morning.

,

At the start of the practice sessions the Bulls looked very strong
in the offensive backfield with
junior quarterback Mickey Murtha calling the signals and senior
fullback—block Lee Jones carrying the pigskin again for the Blue
and White.
Senior flankerback Rick Wells
will again be an added threat to
SUNYAB foes with his excellent
running as well as receiving. Also in the backfield is Ken Rutkowski, a 180 lb. 5 ft. 9 in. tailback, who is also an excellent
runner.

The Bulls’ second offensive
unit in the backfield reserves
equal recognition. They will be
getting a lot of action this year
due to recent injuries to three
of the four starting backfield

men.

Possible bursitis has turned up
in Murtha's passing arm. He is
now being treated by team physician Dr. Edmund Gicewicz in
preparation for the opening game
against Kent State at Rotary Field

next Saturday afternoon, Dennis (Coley) Mason has seen considerable duty as Murtha’s replacement in the practice sessions
and has done a superb job in
light of the situation.

Even though his six positions
seem to be pretty well sewed
up with returning lettermen,
“any sophomore or transfer stu-

lues., Oct. 3

Canisius

—

Mon., Oct. 9
Tues., Oct. 10
Fri., Oct.

St. Bonaventure

Invitational
Tournament in Rochester.
-

Sat., Oct. U

ECAC qualifying rounds
for winners of Upstate
Regionals held at West
Point.

Toes., Oct. 17
Thurs., Oct.

Sat., Oct. 21

19

R.l.T.

•

...

Championship
E C AC
Tournament held at BethState Park in
page
Farmingdale, Long
Island.

All home contests will be held
at the Audubon Golf Course starting at 1:30 p.m.

fhe Bulls have been practicing. Here the offens/ve line is blocking out defensive back-up quarterback Dewny Mason (19) in last Saturday's
scrimmage.

away

Niagara Community
College
home

Senior Mike Rissell will fill one
of the offensive tackle positions
and sophomore Chris Wolf will
be given a try at the other offensive tackle position. This position seems to be the weakest spot
for Doc Urich, who is working
very hard on the practice field
trying to find out who is the best
at the tackle positions.

Suinidyc

home

Brook Lea

13

At offensive tight end this year
will be record-holder Dick Ashley, Last year this senior was the
Bulls’ leading pass receiver at the
split end position of Coach
Urich’s pro-set offensive line-up.
He was switched to tight end this
year to make room for junior
split end Chuck Drankowski, who
saw considerable action last season as a pass catcher.

iL II
lOOtDdll

away

Upstate NY ECAC Regional
Tournament
Drumlin Golf Course in
Syracuse.
Niagara
away

man team last season.

C

Place

Buffalo State

Fri., Oct. 6
Sat., Oct. 7

This 188 lb. 5-11 junior from
Fallon High School in Buffalo
was Murtha’s back up man last
season but saw limited action.
Backing up Mason wil be sophomore quarterback Paul Jack who
called signals for the Bulls’ fresh-

Senior Jim Finochio and jun
ior Tom Kowalewski will fill out
the guard positions and junior
John Wesolowski will center the
ball for Murtha.
Defensively the Bulls could be
quite strong with returning lettermen such as: defensive ends
John Przybycein and Dennis
Brisky, tackles Joe Riceilli and
Ted Gibbons, lineback Mike
Luzny, Don Sabo, Rod Rishel and
Irv Wright, half back Tom Hoke
and safety Tom Hurd.

to join

�Pag*

ancvzszvn is his nam

The 1967 State University of
Buffalo cross-country team should
djtr stronger than in 1966.
Coach Emery Fisher, express
ing guarded optimism, said; “We
should improve over last year’s

record of six wins and six losses.”
Last year hopes for a good season were shattered when two top
harriers. Bill Suedemeyer and
Dick Genau suffered pre season
leg injuries. Suedemeyer was side
lined for the entire year and
GGenau missed several meets.
“We have the nucleus for a fine
team," Fisher continued. “Bob
Stephenson is back and he set a
course record of 22.33 over the
five mile Grover Cleveland course
in 1966. Tony licatera was voted
our most valuable runner and he
may be the kid who breaks Bob’s
record.
Steve Foster, Mark Ford, and
Paul Grout are all up from the
frosh squad and juniors Jim
Hughes and Mcnnis Menzenski

will continue to improve.” Menzenski did not run cross country
in 1966 but ran the distances for
Fisher on the track team last
spring.
Formal practice began Tucs
day but some of the runners
have been working out on their
own for several weeks.
A freshman and varsity meeting will be held today at 4 p.m,
in the basement of Clark Gym,
1966 Cross Country Results
Opponent
UB
Frcdonia
21
21
RIT.
LcMoyne
41
Niagara C.C
15
Colgate
50
Brockporl
26
Syracuse
46
39
Cortland
Canisius
23
Niagara
21
46
Buffalo State
Gannon
Total record —6 wins &amp; fi losses

}

Cross-country coach
looks to better times

LeMoync

New QB is Orangemen's hope
by

Varsity and

Freshman
Schedule

1967

Wed., Sept 20—

Buffalo State Teachers Col. away -4 p.m
Sept. 23home-2 p.m.
Syracuse University
Thurs., Sept. 28home-2 p.m.
Canisius College
Sat.. Sept. 30

Sat..

Cleveland

away—4 p.m.

Slate

Wed., Oct. 4-

Niagara Comm. College home
(Varsity only)

Sal., Oct.

7

Invitational

leMoyne

lues., Oct. 10St. Bonaventure
Sat.. Oct. 14

University

University

Niagara

17

lues., Oct.

Brockporf

Fri..

Meet

Oct. 20

State

3:30 p.m

at

Syracuse

4 p.m.

away-

home-11

Teachers'

College
away—4 p.m,

-

4 p.m.

LeMoyne College at Syracuse
(Varsity only)

Tues., Oct. 24-

Fredonia

a.m.

-

Slate

Teachers'

College
away-4

p.m.

Oct 28
Canisius Invitational 'Meet (Delaware

Sat..

12 Noon

Park)

Wed., Nov. I

away

Gannon College

Sat., Nov.

4 p.m.

4

New York Stale Cross Country Meet
at LeMoyrte College in Syracuse
Sat., Nov. 11
Rochester Institute of Technology

away- 2 p.m.

will be held in

All home meets
the Grover Cleveland

course.

Frosh fencing team
The freshman fencing team
will hold its first meeting Mon
day at 7:00 p.m, Freshmen interested in learning and competing in this ancient art and
modern sport should report to
Coach Dick Willerl in the base
ment of Clark Gymnasium with
gym equipment.

All fencing equipment will be
provided and beginners, with
little or no experience are encouraged to attend.

Invitational-

Last year the yearlings compiled an 11-2 record fencing
against Cornell, Syracuse, Ho-

place

nology and other institutions of
the same caliber.

eighth place
Canisius Invitational

sixteenth

Friday, September t, 1947

The Spectrum

Fourteen

bart, Rochester Institute of Tech-

Fred MeMane

DPI Sports Writer

NEW YORK UPI

—

Is there

anything at’all in a name? Wilthere
Shakespeare said
liam
wasn’t, but Coach Ben Schwarlwalder of Syracuse would like to
believe differently. Schwartwalder would prefer to think that a
sophomore quarterback named
Rich Pancyzszyn is as tricky as
his name is to spell. If he is, then

to-back 5-5 campaigns. This season, though, Coach Joe Paterno
believes things will be brighter

Paterno has a fine quarterback
in Tom Shermart, three good offensive backs in Bob Campbell,
Rober Grimes and Bill Rettig and
an excellent sophomore middle
guard in Mike Reid.

JExpect improvement
Navy struggled through a

dis4-6-0 campaign last year, but
to
sail
the Midshipmen expect
toward sunny shores this season.

headed for
high national ranking . on the
gridiron this fall.

mal

For years Syracuse has been
hampered by the lack of a top
flight passer to offset its abundance of strong running backs.

Quarterback John Cartwright is
a superb passer and has a fine
receiver in Rob Taylor, a duo
that is sure to get the Middies on
the scoreboard often enough for
an xciting campaign.

Syracuse

could be

With the arrival of

Panczyszyn

on campus, however, the Orangemen’s image is expected to
change radically. He is supposed
to be able to do it all—run, pass
and kick —and is considered an

excellent leader.

Trophy material
Even if "the youngster can’t

measure up to expectations, Syracuse still has enough material to
make it the leading candidate for
the Lambert Trophy again this
fall.
The Orangemen boast one of
the best running backs in the
country in 235-pound fullback
Larry Csonka. Csonka gained better than 1,000 yards last year, although sharing the offensive bur
den with All-America Floyd Little. Csonka will be called upon
for even heavier duty this fall,
but Schwarlzwaldcr is hoping that
Oley Allen can provide some outside running lo stop the defenses
from keying on Csonka.

Syracuse’s

toughest

competi-

tion for Eastern honors is expected to come from three teams—

Penn Slate, Navy and Army.
Penn Slate hasn’t had a losing
season in 28 years, although
things have been getting lighter
the past two seasons with back-

Army was the surprise team in
the east a year ago, soaring to
an 8-2 season, and Coach Tom

Cahill is optimistic of at least
equalling that record.

The Cadets return a well-established offense centered around
triple-threat quarterback Steve
Lindell. Lindell has a pair of excellent ends to throw to in Gary
Steele'and Terry Young, and if
Cahill can plug a few holes on
defense, the Cadets will be rough
lo stop.

After the “big four” the remainder of the East’s teams sag
a bit in talent though not necessarily in optimistic coaches.
Boast strong defense
Tom Boislure of Holy Cross
has inherited a team that he
thinks will be right up there with
the East’s major elevens by the
end of the season. Aside from an
established quarterback the Crusaders are pretty well stocked at
every position. Defense will be

carry them to big season. The

Red Raiders return a good portion of the defensive unit that
last year while the Wildcats re
turn two dozen lettermen including 285-pound defense tackle
Rich Moore and 220-pound end
Dallas Webb.
The Ivy League shapes up as
a battle between Dartmouth and
Harvard with the Indians getting
a slight edge because of their
halfback Gene Ryzewicz.
Among the other Eastern independents. Boston College is expected to improve on last year's
4-6 record and Rutgers has high
hopes of bettering last year s 5-4
campaign.

Not too much can be said for
Pittsburgh’s chances of improving on its 1-9 mask of a year ago,
however. That sounds hard to believe, but the Panthers must play
the likes of Notre Dame, Ilinois,
UCLA and Miami. Fla. plus other
top schools.

STEAK
OUT
3864 N. Bailey

(near Main)

836-3046
Specializing in
aarcoa tSroiU
Sir/oin Steak

their big strength with middle
guard Glenn Grieco rated as one
of the nation’s best.

Colgate and Villanova are two
other teams whose defenses could

SanJwiclei

FREE
Delivery
$1.00 minimum
Open 7 days:

NOON-1:30 a.m.

DELIVERY Hours:—
Mon.-Fri. 4:30 p.m.-l:30 a.m.
Sat.

&amp;

Sun. All Day

MENU
6 oz.
Sirloin Steak Sandwich 85c
Peppers 10c
Cheese 10c
Specify Onions
FRENCH FRIES 15c
3 pcs. Chicken

7

\v

fries

85c

pcs. Shrimp

Hot Dogs
Hamburgers
MILK SHAKES

ChocVan.-Straw
Pepsi-Diet-Root Beer-Teem
15c and 25c
Special: Steak

&amp;

Fries
95c
w.'drink SI.05

4;30 p.m.-7 p.m. Mon.-Fri
All Day Sat.

12:00-2:00 Sun.

�Friday, September 8, 1967

The Spectrum

Pap*

Buffalo to get Frazier
by Barbara

Bianchi

(UPI)—Center Wayne Frazier,
a former Kansas City Chief, is ex-

ball League Buffalo Bills in the
next few days.
The six-foot-three 245-pounder
was obtained Tuesday from the
Chiefs for a future draft choice,
a Bill’s spokesman said.
Frazier was the Chief’s starting center last year and spent
1965 with the Houston Oilers.
The announcement of Frazier’s
acquisition came just hours after
the Bills revealed the cut of three
Return

This Order With $1.50 To

A—A—ONE
LABEL MFC. CO.

P.O. BOX 2747
Amherst Branch
Buffalo, N.Y. 14226
for 100 WASHABLE
NAME TAPES—(Sew-On)
NAME

I

MAIL

TO

Orders Sent

By

First Class Mail

Univ./Frat Name SUNYAB

players from the club, including
kicking specialist Booth Lusteg,
to reach the AFL’s 40-player
A plague of pre-season injuries
had forced major-realignment of
the Bills’ offensive line.

Lusteg, the team’s highest scorer in 1966 was tied for second
place in the AFL with 98 points.
Mike Mercer, who joined Buffalo
earlier this year after playing for
Kansas City, takes over the kicking. Mercer had the top field goal
record in pro football last season
making 21 of 30 attempts.

Clubs vie for freshmen

Coach Joe Collier revealed that
quarterback Tom Flores, obtained
by the Bills in a major spring
Powell

and

to the

hirnselt

Activities week. Sept. 11-16,
will be a University-wide drive to
interest students in joining cam-

plays an important part i the
financing campus activities and
it is for their benefit that stu-

During the week tables representing tliese organizations will
be set up in the Norton Center
Lounge. There will be tables and
representatives from all organizations. Any questions students
have regarding these will be
answered during the week.

Buttons will be given out with
identification cards only to 'hose
who have paid their fee. These
buttons will allow entrance into
most campus activities at a re-

Bills

from the Oakland Raiders in return for quarterback Daryle Lamonica and end Glenn Bass, was
given the signal
calling nod
over Jack Kemp for Sundays regular season opener here against
—

the New York Jets.

The two other Bills cut were
rookie defensive end Tom Rhoads
of Notre Dame and fullback Jack
Spikes.

Everyone is encouraged to join
the participate in the campus activities which the Activity Fee
supports. The now voluntary’ fee

Bills oust Booth Lusteg
UPI

The American Football
Buffalo Bills Tuesday cut
kicker Booth Lusteg from their
1967 roster.
—

League

Coach Joe Collier had two
more cuts, to announce to trim
the squad to the league’s 40-man
player limit.
Lusteg led the Bills in scoring

points.

EARN

needs

CHRYSLER in excellent
SI00.00
White walls, radio,

893-1573.

1964 MG "MOO Sedan, British racing green,
inspected, excellent condition. 835-2814.
LIVING ROOM furniture,

$35;

arm

chair,

GAIN VALUABLE BUSINESS EXPERIENCE

At

Test yourself...
What do you see in the ink blots?

;■ iJFl 11A cockfight?
V

Hi

A moth?
A moth-eaten
cockfight?

[2] Giraffes in high foliage?
Scooters in a head-on
collision?
TOT Staplers?
(TOT Staplers!? What in.,.)

This is a

Swingline
Tot Stapler

1

I

\&lt;&amp;y

(including 1000 staples)
Larger size CUB Desk
s,apler only $

837 7112.

COMPUTE MEAL
OR A SNACK
FAST, EFFICIENT

TAKE-OUT

If you know your John
Maynard Keynes, you’ll
know that an Opel is the
most economical and practical way to go back to
school. You don’t have to
prime the pump to often
because GM’s Opel gets
30 to 40 miles per gallon
of gas. All models are
backed by the top guarantee amongst imports . .
24 months or 24,000 miles.
.

And right now we’re offering all our 1967 Opels at
prices that Karl Marx
couldn’t turn down.
Come try our Opel Kadett,
Deluxe Sports Coupe or
Wagon . . . then make an

iSuisijJ3ApB OJUI o8

pjnoqs

unoo noA
•aaipijjoa sjajoojg •sauesJOAps isuib3b
A MW noA :sajyej|3
j joziqas noA
aqx
diB ‘Aog :iq8yjj3oa
uajea-qioui y -aAis
•saiSaj aj ( noA
:qjoui y 'aAissajSSe aj.noA
»H3yi|W b aas noA jj
*x :SH3MSNV

from

The same people who sell more
Snicks in Western New
York than anybody
except General
Motors!

fi-

694-2625.

Car is necessary.

Contact

Murray

Richman, Spectrum office, 355 Norton Hall,
831 3610, 2:30-5:00 P.M. today.

new

-

premiums
Call

SPECTRUM and earn SI5.00
week, about 6 hours work is in-

WANTED
ROOM

&amp;

BOARD in exchange

mother. Mostly baby sittinng.
Telephone 836-7678.

for helping
Girl only.

NIGHT SCHOOL STUDENTS—$1.65 per hour

for full time (9 a.m.-5 p.m.) day work at

McDonalds, 1385 Niagara Falls Blvd. or 3424
Sheridan Drive.

PART &amp; Full lime help Wanted (MALE).
Hours 9-2; 9-5; 11-2; II-5; 11-7; 5-9; 5-11.
Apply McDonalds, 1385 Niagara Falls Blvd.
and 3424 Sheridan Drive, both locations
5 minutes from campus.
EAST SIDE supermarket

desires college student (male) for part time work. 853-3737.

GIRLS wanted to model evenings in private
art class, no experience necessary. 895-

5208.

RIDER
ber

wanted to Florida in late Septembe willing to share driving.

must

Call 633-7293.

BANQUET FACILITIES
BRIDAL SHOWERS

WEDDING RECEPTIONS

SERVICE

1551 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.
Next to Twin Fair

Call 8374300

643 MAIN STREET

In Buffalo's Theatre District

Call 852-0008

Open 11 a.m. to 2 a.m.
Weekends Until 4 a.m.

Open Daily
11 a.m. to 4 a.m.

For Charcoal Broiled CHICKEN at Its Finest

For all Lutheran students,
parents and friends.
This Sunday, September 10
2:30 to 5:00 p.m. in the
second floor lounge, Norton
Union.
Sponsored by:

The LUTHERAN MINISTRY
TO THE UNIVERSITY
The Rev. Arlo J. Nau,
Campus Pastor

So you’re chairman
in charge of
building the float,
decorating the house,
dressing up the party...
Now what?
Get flame-resistant Pomps. You can do all kinds cf decorating

and
jobs with Pomps and do them better, easier, faster
more beautifully. Pomps are economical, too, and ready to use
cut to the size you need and available in 17 beautiful colors
.

.

...

INC.
yoA :sj3(de)§ J.OJL

acre, lake
4 rooms,

FS-1.

DELIVER THE

.

book store.

11101

SALE.

INSURANCE

Immediate

RECEPTION

A

Unconditionally guaranteed.

LONG ISLAND CITY, N.V.

FOR

"1

PROFESSOR!

nanced.

•

831-3610
355 Norton

HEY,

MOTORCYCLE

per

FOR RENT
3 BEDROOM lower flat
furnished
Kensmgton-Eggert
and
heated.
area;
available Oct. 15th. Family of faculty or
staff preferred. 633-7293.
ROOMMATE WANTED
PLACE:
$25 mo., living room, dining
room, kitchen,
private room, call Phil
884 4064
GIRL student wanted fof baby sitting &amp;
dinner dishes in exchange for free room
A board plus $5.00 634 0455.

—

Go-Go girls Thurs., Fri., Sat. &amp;
Sun., Nugget Inn, 2046 Fillmore (near
Kensington. 10c beers, and 25c shots daily
except Sundays.
TOPLESS

volved.

LARGE

Dave Fox

i .69

At any stationery, variety, or

$25;

upholstered sofa,
end tables, etc.

THREE ROOM studio apartment; private for
rent. Newly furnished. Faculty peferred.
Available Oct. I. North Park area. 876-9150.
1964 TRIUMPH. sell or trade. 832 7759.
Alphonse Kolodziejczak.

BECOME ACTIVE IN CAMPUS LIFE

Swingline

condition,
automatic.

APARTMENT FOR RENT
I BEDROOM apt. furnished with utilities,
$75. Apply at Nugget Inn, 2046 Fillmore
(near Kensington).

Salesmen

Contact

MISCELLANEOUS

1949

Ontario,
Wilson, large
heated, decorated,
1/2 hour
U.B. Campus, 839-0744.

$$$$

—

All special activities for this

week will be posted on the Norton Union bulletin board.

FOR SALE

He will be replaced by an AFL
veteran, Mike Mercer. Mercer,
who was acquired from the •Kansas City Chiefs earlier this year,
had the best field goal record in
pro football last season, making
21 out of 30 attempts.

"SCHOOL HOUSE"

Advertising

duced rate. According to Judy
Mack, a member of the University Union Activities Board, payment of the fee is the best investment a student could make.

CLASSIFIED

was tied for second
in the AFL with a total of 98
in 1966 and

The Spectrum

Fifteen

that are virtually aolorfast when wet. Use them for indoor or
outdoor decorations. Ask your local librarian for the booklet
“Tips on How to Build Better Floats and Displays." If she
doesn't have it, tell her to write us for a copy.
The Crystal

Tissue

Company

•

Middletown, Ohio

pomps'

�Friday, Saptambar I, 1967

The Spectrum

Pag* Sixteen

*

•

fOCtt*

saigon

suez

Viet elections and peace prospects
SAIGON—New hints of possible peace
this week in the aftermath of the election victory by South
Vietnamese Chief of State Nguyen Van
Thieu. In Saigon, reports were being
circulated that Thieu wanted to confer
with North Vietnamese President Ho Chi
Mihn. In Washington, 27 senators urged
that the Vietnam war issue be brought
before the U.N.
Nearly complete returns gave the
Thieu-Ky ticket 1,638,902 voles, about
35% of the total. Returns also indicated
that Ky supporters won more than half
of the 60 senatorial seats, an important
factor in any future power struggle between Ky and President Nguyen Van

overtures emerged

Thieu.

Ky and Thieu have denied any power
struggle but the military junta forced Ky
to drop out of the presidential race and
run as vice president in the Sunday
Election.

President Johnson congratulated the
South Vietnamese for their "large turnout in the face of a massive Viet Cong
effort to disrupt the elections”
Praise election procedure
The State Department said Monday:
“The consensus of the American and
other foreign observers was that the
was
conducted remarkably,
election
smoothly and fairly in the light of war
time conditions and Viet Cong harras*
ment.
“It is an important and heartening
fact that 83% who registered actually
voted a much higher proportion than in
our presidential election of 1964”
Congressional reaction to the elections
was mixed, with supporters of the ad
ministration's Vietnam policy generally
taking an optimistic view and critics
generally discounting the significance of
the voting. Senate majority leader Mike
Mansfield said he hoped ' President elect
Nguyen Van Thieu will keep his campaign promise to meet with the National
Liberation Front.
President Johnson's team of observers
said that the election appeared orderly
and honest.

Charges of fraud
Special Ambassador Henry Cabot
Lodge went so far as to suggest that
claims of fraud by defeated candidates
ought to be treated with American-slyle
irreverence.
Charges of fraud were leveled by

candidate Truong Dihn Dzu and
seven other defeated candidates. On
Wednesday Dzu announced that he would
demand a new election. He was surprise runner-up in Sunday’s presidential
vote.
The nation’s provisional assembly has
the right to throw out the election results
and call for a new vote. Dzu, who captured about 17% of the vote, vowed to
take the matter to the assembly.
A 22-man team was dispatched to Saigon by President Johnson shortly before
the election. The President appointed the
observer team in the wake of a speech
by Sen. Robert F. Kennedy (D-N.Y.), who
said he thought the election would be
“peace”

fraudulent.
Urge U.N. action
In Washington this week, 27 Senators
urged that the Vietnam War issue be
placed before the United Nations and two
foreign policy experts also feel this may
be the best way to gain an honorable
peace.
Sen J. William Fullbrighl, chairman
of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said he felt the world organization
could find a way to end the Vietnam war.
“It might be persuaded to recommend
a reconvening of the Geneva Conference
to deal with the problem,” Fulbright
said. “I would consider a settlement along
the lines of the 1954 agreement to be an
honorable one, and both the principals
would loo.”
Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield, a recognized expert on Far Eastern
affairs, told newsmen he feels President
Johnson welcomes Senate proposals that
the United Slates take the issue to the
U-N. He added that submitting the matter
to the United Nations may or may not
be the answer.
"But since this is an avenue that has
not been fully explored, my feeling is we
have nothing to lose and maybe something to gain.” he said.
Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore.l, a critic
of the war, said he plans to introduce a

resolution which would formally direct
the President to pjacc the matter before
the U.N.
He said his measure would urge Johnson to submit to the Security Council a
resolution calling for a ceasefire and for
the UN. to "take whatever steps necessary to enforce that ceasefire.”

Brief
MnlaunM
COnTcicflCC

President Johnson holds a brief
conference with Dean Rusk,
Secretary of State, Wednesday.
They await the arrival in the
White House of a group of
Vietnamese election observers.

Free college proposal passed
At the Constitutional convention, Aug.
31, the Democrats, led by Convention
president Anthony J. Travia, summoned
a majority to pass a proposal for free
college education.
The plan, passed by a margin of one
vote above the 94 required for passage,
was strongly criticized by the opposition
on financial grounds.
Republicans argued that the plan to
provide free college education for all
New York State residents would cost the
stale up to $1.4-billion in the first year of
operation. Democrats contended that the
program would cost upwards of $64million.

In addition, Republican fiscal experts
maintained that much larger allowances
for housing and classroom facilities would
be necessary to accommodate a fast-growing student population.

Judge Desmond said he would introto clarify the lan-

Criticism of the proposal has also been
expressed within the Democratic party
hy Charles S. Desmond, retired chief
judge of the Court of Appeals. Judge
Desmond said people are “troubled or
confused” by the proposal which says that

Travia’s free college provision must
be passed a second time before it is inserted into the draft Constitution to be
submitted to New York State voters on
the Democratic ballot for the Nov. 7 election.

The Mideast remains unsettled
Egyptian and Israeli forces
ISRAEL
fought a furious gun battle near the Suez
early this week while clashes between
Israeli and Jordanian armies renewed on
—

another front.

Gunbaltles raged for eight hours Mon
day before United Nations truce observers were able to arrange a ceacc-firc.

Israel returned
were reported.

the fire. No casualities

Egypt charges Israel

troops

Clarification amendment

Desmond critical

An Israeli military spokesman said
Wednesday that Egyptian troops deliberately opened fire across the Suez Canal
against Israeli troops Tuesday night. There
was some speculation that the incidents
were staged to cover up political turmoil
in both Egypt and Syria.
A spokesman in Jerusalem said the attack by artillery and mortars hit the Ras
Elish sector 20 miles south of Port Said
on the western bank of the canal and that

Israeli

...

duce an amendment
guage.

An observer report issued by U.N,
headquarters in New York said Egyptian
forces fired the first shots, but a statement from the Egyptian command in
Cairo Tuesday night said the Israelis triggered the fighting by opening artillery on
civilian targets in Suez and Port Tewfiq.

An Israeli artillery squad takes
position along the Arab border,
fighting between Israel and her
Arab neighbors broke out again
this week.

the legislature “shall establish and define
a system of free public education for all
the people of the State.”
“The language
is susceptible of
this meaning; That all higher education in
this state shall be entirely free for all
students,” he said.
“We may sometime come to such a
policy and such a system, but it would
be a sudden and startling change to mandate it now. I think it should be left to
the Legislature to develop from time to
time appropriate systems of grants, scholarshhips and loans for students at public
and private colleges and universities.
“Thus a developing and expanding program can be worked out consistent with
the whole financial picture of the state
and of our people.”

Egyptian newspapers said Israel began
both attacks. They said the Monday shelling was started by Israel to try to counteract success of the recent Arab summit
conference in Khartoum, Sudan, and that
shelling of civilians was the only means
left to try to intimidate the Arabs.

Reports reaching Jerusalem hinted at
political upheavel in Syria and there were
rumors that President Noureddin Atassi
was under house arrest. He had not made
any public appearances in Damascus for
two weeks.

There were reports of secret meetings
of Syria's ruling military and political
leaders, but no details of the power struggle leaked through Syrian censorship.
Damascus radio broadcasts were normal.
State Department pressure
On Wednesday reports from Washington said that the State Department was
pressuring Israel to relax restrictions on
the return of trans-Jordan refugees to
the west bank of the Jordan River. There
was no official confirmation, however.
Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban
said the decisions reached at the Arab
summit conference in Khartoum last week
"strengthened the need and right of Israel
to maintain the present situation until a
new situation emerged between the Arabs
and Israel.
Eban told a news conference that the
Khartoum meeting produced no signs of
a moderating position on Jhe part of the
Arab states and said Israel would not
make “the mistake” of surrendering conquered Arab lands as it did after the

1956 Sinai war.
The shooting across the Jordan river
was the latest in a series of incidents in
that sector since Israel occupied wide
areas of Jordan in the June war.

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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Cbc Spectrum
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

•

VOL. 16

•

NO. 57

•

FRIDAY, AUGUST 19, 1966

•

BUFFALO

•

NEW YORK

SUNY Board of Trustees
Authorizes Site Restudy

Campus Planning Committee
To Provide Site Education
By

MICHAEL L. D'AMICO

Organization of the Campus
Planning Committee is under way.
At a meeting held Monday evening in the Conference Theater,
a number of interested people
expressed interest in the direction the new UB campus is going
to take. The primary concerns
of the group are the location of

the new campus and the role of
students and faculty in planning
that campus, wherever it may be
built.

Mr. Robert Coles, who is a
member of the Committee for an
Urban

Campus, addressed the
meeting and answered a number
of questions concerning the location of the new campus. Mr. Coles,
a local architect and city planner,

received his M.A. at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Speaking to the group for nearly an hour, Mr. Coles made a
number of interesting points. He
said that “this is the time to reopen the site issue.” He gave the
following reasons: (1) Cities and
their problems have become more
and more explosive. Mr. Coles
made reference to the outbreaks
of U.S. cities in the past few
years. (2) The university had selected Mr. Martin Meyerson as
its new president and there has
been a slowdown in planning
in Amherst. Mr. Meyerson is dean
of environmental design at Berkeley and considered to be one of
the best city planners in the
country. As far as delays in Amherst are concerned, Mr. Coles
said that there is “no conceptual
plan for the University whatsoever.” (3) Amherst has not recognized the responsibilities of accepting a large university into its
midst. Instead, road blocks have
been set up by the Town. (4) The
waterfront site may have been
pushed aside because of the Republican leadership struggle that
existed in the area in 1964. Mr.
Coles said that the present administration is highly receptive
to a university on the Buffalo
waterfront.
Mr. Coles revealed that the
Committee for an Urban Campus
has been working since June and
has done considerable research
into both the Amherst and the
Waterfront sites. In the Committee’s opinion, “the Waterfront
site is not only adequate but more
prepared to meet the needs of
the University.” It is convinced
that there are “no technical
Problems that cannot be surmounted in the Waterfront.”
According to Mr. Coles, Mr.
Meyerson and
Dr. Gould were
notified in July of the Commit-

tee’s findings. Dr. Gould then issued a statement which called
the decision to build in Amherst
“irrevocable.” This led the Com
mittee to appeal to Governor
Rockefeller for, in the words of
Mr. Coles, “no decision concerning a university of this size is
irrevocable.” The Governor then
asked Dr. Gould and the Board
of Trustees to re-evaluate the
Waterfront site. A message from
the Governor’s Office asked the
group to continue to search for
information.
In answering a number of questions concerning progress in Amherst, Mr. Coles noted that “no
planning has taken place since
programming has not yet jelled.”
He also said that most of the
money spent in Amherst has been
for land acquisition and should
the University decide not to build
there, there would be no loss to
the University since the land
would retain its value.

Mr. Coles touched upon land
availability and said that in 1964
the State University Construction
Fund required a minimum of 300
acres and a maximum of 700 to
800 acres if extensively developto 500 acres available

on

the
Waterfront. (Some studies have
indicated that 700 to 800 acres
are available.)
Discussion continued after Mr.
Coles left and it was decided that
a loose organization would be
formed for research. This skeleton organization would gather
facts for students arriving in the
fall. A number of committees
were set up and Steve Crafts was
elected as temporary representative to the Committee for an
Urban Campus which Mr. Coles
represents.
It was decided at Monday's
meeting that the Campus Planning Committee would favor the
Waterfront site and seek ways in
which the students and faculty
could make known their desires
about the nature of the new campus. “We don’t want a campus of
little boxes and little circles,”
said one spokesman of the Committee.
Because time is so important
in the site issue, the Campus
Planning Committee plans to
swing into action immediately.
They plan to make available in a
short time all of the facts surrounding both the Amherst and
the Waterfront sites. “We are
sure that once the facts are made
known, most will favor the downtown site. This is the course the
CPC is taking and we hope that
more of the students and faculty
will take an active part in helping us to achieve these ends.”

“During the period of restudy,
the State University will proceed
in such a manner as to minimize
any delay in connection with the
planning and development of a
relocated campus.”
The Trustees’ response came
from its August 11 meeting, a
day after the Rockefeller request
was sent to Dr. Samuel Gould.
In his letter to Gould, Rockefeller pointed out that the location of the new campus “will profoundly influence the nature and
character of the physical development of adjacent areas. As a consequence, all must agree that
every conceivable aspect of the

total project, including develop-

ments since the original decision,

should be given careful consideration.”

Later he suggested that “be-

cause of the unique importance
of this proposal to the program
of revitalization of the heart of
the city, I would like to suggest
that a review and study of the
‘Waterfront Area’ be made prior
to the commencement of any construction at the Amherst site.”
Rockefeller saw no reason "why
general planning for a relocated
campus . . . cannot continue during the period of restudy so that
minimal delay will be involved
should the original determination
be reaffirmed while, at the same
time, the results of such general
planning would be as useful and
necessary in the waterfront area
should that be chosen.”

Sander Arraignment Postponed
Pending Grand Jury Investigation
On Monday, August 15, Detective Sergeant Samuel Giambrone
appeared before Judge Ostrowski
of the City Court to answer
charges of third degree assault
filed by William Sander, a graduate student here (see Spectrum,
August 12).
On Friday, August 12, the city
police issued a new charge
against Mr. Sander. The original
charge of “sidewalk blocking"
and a second charge of disorderly
conduct had both previously been
dismissed. The new charge accuses Mr. Sander of “blocking
traffic with approximately twenty

others” with the “intent to commit a breach of the peace.”
On a motion of District Attorney Michael Dillon, the judge
postponed arraignment for Giambrone and Sander, on their respective charges until October 3
to allow the September Grand
Jury time to investigate both
cases. This was done over the
objection of Mr. Sander.
The Grand Jury can subpoena
all those connected, directly or
indirectly, with the incident
which occurred on the August
6 Peace March. If granted immunity, all witnesses must an-

swcr any questions put to tjiem
by the Grand Jury or the District
Attorney. One witness at court
on Monday warned that “this
may be the beginning of a little
HUAC in Buffalo. They will use
this case to have the Grand Jury
investigate the entire peace and
civil rights movement, as well as
the student movement, in Buffalo. You must answer all their
questions or face a jail sentence
for contempt. They may grant
you immunity from prosecution,
but not from the loss of your
job or research grant.” He predicted, “we are in for a rough
September.”

HCUA Peace Movement Hearings
Provoke Renewed Opposition
By DANNY KATZ
The House Un-American Activities Committee defied a Fed-

eral Court temporary restraining

order, which would have postponed the hearings for at least
ten days, and began investigation
of the anti-Vietnam war movement. A special three-judge panel
dissolved the restraining order
later in the day, but not before
Rep. Joe R. Pool (D.-Texas), assembled a subcommitttee in definance of restraining order.
The hearings began Tuesday
Horning at 10 a.m. in the Cannon
House Office Building. The subcommittee was comprised of Rep.
Senner (D.-Ariz.), Buchanan (R.Ala), Clawson (R.-Calif.), Ichord
(D.-Mo.), Ashbrook (R.-Ohio), and
Pool. Absent was Rep. Willis (D.La.)

Chairman Pool declared in an
opening statement before subpoened witnesses and observers,
“this Committee, operating in accord with the principles of free
speech and free expression, will
not investigate the ideologies or
political thought of individuals
or groups. It will, rather, determine the extent of aid given
through overt act to an enemy
of the United States.”
The first witness called by the
committee was Philip Luce, a
former member of the Progressive Labor Movement, now a Fed-

eral informer.
Luce was questioned about his
role in the Progressive Labor
Movement and the organization's
ideology. His answers led Rep.
Pool to inquire, “What is Marx-

ism-Leninism?” Three hours of

questioning dealt with PL’s ideology, the role of the May 2nd
Movement in PL, and the naming

of individuals active in the Move“'
merit.'
Luce also testified about PL’s
magazine, PL, their newspaper,
Challenge, and the May 2nd
Movement’s newspaper, Free Student. He also mentioned Dr.
Allen Krebs and the Free University of New York, but did
not testify that they were related to PL.
In the middle of Luce’s testimony, Jeffrey Gordon, a member
of PL, rose and shouted, “let’s
stop this fink testimony,” He was
dragged from the Hearing by
five federal marshals and was
surrounded by a dozen press
photographers. This
prompted
Pool to state, “this proves the
unwillingness of certain people
to engage in democratic debate.”
Another man stood and screamed,
“This sure is a funny hearing.”
As he was .being dragged from
the room, another man rose,
pointed to him and said, "that’s
an example of your committee's
democratic diologue." He was
quickly dragged from the room.
The next witness to take the
stand was Jeffrey Gordon, student
organizer for PL. When asked his
name, he replied, “My name is
Jeffrey Gordon and I stand for
the American Revolution,"
Gordon objected to the Committee’s hearings on the basis
of the 6th, the 9th, and 14th
Amendments to the Constitution.
When asked if he is a member
of PL he declared, "1 am proud
to be a member of the Progres"

1

Robert Coles addresses Campus Planning Committee meeting

In response to Governor Nelson
Rockefeller’s request that the
decision which placed the new
SUNYAB campus in Amherst be
reviewed, the Executive Committee of the State University Board
of Trustees issued following statement through Board Chairman
Clifton W. Phalen:
“The committee has pointed out
that the-trustees’ decision to relocate in Amherst was arrived at
after thorough study of various
alternative locations, and the studies, of course, included the
Waterfront area.
“Nevertheless, the committee
agreed that such a decision is of
major importance and it is willing on behalf of the Board of
Trustees to authorize a restudy of
this matter.

—

sive Labor Party, but I would not
be proud to sit on this Committee.” When asked whether PL
supports the sending of medical
snppties-tothe National Liberation Front of South Vietnam, he
replied, "as American citizens,
as people of the world, we believe that as part of our humanity, the giving of blood to victims
of aggression and bombing represents our patriotism.” Gor(Cont'd on Pg. 2)

Motorcade to
Counter LBJ
Buffalo Visit
A counter motorcade will greet
President Johnson’s appearance
in the Queen City today. The
President will arrive at the airport at about 1:20 p.m., travel by
motorcade to Niagara Square for
a speech, and make a short check
of the Lake Erie pollution situation. He will also support the
candidacies of local Democratic
congressmen.

The counter motorcade will
demonstrate opposition to the
American war policy. Those interested in participating in the
motorcade will meet in the parking lot at the corner of Main and

Bailey at 11 a.m.
A demonstration is also being
planned (or Niagara Square.
Those not participating in the
counter motorcade yet still interested in showing their opposition to the war in Vietnam are
requested to meet at the corner
lot at 11 a m.

�from Pg.

1)

A Congressional Intern in the
Office of Rep. John B. Anderson
(R.-H1.) granted the Spectrum a
personal interview following the
hearings. Regarding the general
nature of the Committee, he
stated, “I believe it fulfills a vital function in our country, and
that it has been most effective
in the control of internal com-

munism. Some of its methods,
such as implication through guilt
by association, I cannot approve
of completely. The Committee
has brought the leaders of internal communism out into the
open.’’

When asked why communism
had to be controlled at all, he
replied, “Communism is subversive and it advocated the overthrow of our system of government. Our government is democratic and I believe the men in
Congress are very conscientious
and worthy of our respect as
leaders.”
The intern was asked whether
he believed the men on the UnAmerican Activities Committee
were elected democratically. He
said, “Senner was not, his district was too small. Willis from
Louisiana wasn’t, he probably
had no Republican opposition.
Buchanan was not, you know the
situation in Alabama, Ichord I
don’t know; Pool, Ashbrook, and
Clawson were.”
The Spectrum also received the
exclusive interview with Barry
Stein, a member of the Progressive Labor Party, which follows:
Spectrum: As a member of the
Progressive Labor Party, what
are your impressions of HUAC
in general?
Stein: The Committee is one
particular acting body of a government which exists to meet the
aims of a relatively small portion of the population of this
nation; namely those who own
and control the basic industries,

don’s testimony concluded TueSday’s hearings.
resources, and finances of this
country, with huge material interests throughout the world. The
role of HUAC has been primarily
the attempt to intimidate directly
thosepeoplewhoexpose thepohactions of the VS.
Government which benefit this
wealthy class. Fur hermore programs for equitable distribution
of wealth can thus be thwarted.
Spectrum: What are your reflections on Tuesday’s hearings?
Stein: In convening the hearings for support of the Pool
cies

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ALBANY. N.Y.—The Board of

Trustees of the SUNY appointed
an Acting Dean of University
College and a Dean of the recent-

ly established School of Health

Related Professions yesterday,

Dr. Stanley J. Segal, director of
the University’s Student Counsel3h wm ing Center, will serve as Acting
W
K Dean of University College, and
J9H M Dr. J. Warren Perry, Deputy AsjjT M
{K
ISBR ,.K sistant Commissioner, Research
g
and Training, Vocational RehabilBooks to bo placed in the now Physical Sciaticas Library
itation Administration, Department of Health, Education, and
Welfare, will assume the Health
Related Professions post.

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'&gt;

New Physical Sciences Library
Opposed as 'Very Inconvenient'

The consolidation of the physics, chemistry, and engineering
libraries into a central Physical
Sciences Library has caused a
minor skirmish between the departments involved and the University’s library administration.
The new Physical Sciences Library, now in the process of
being moved into the annex surrounded by Parker and Hochstetter Halls was planned as long
as a year ago. William Ernst,
Associate Director of the Library, gave the reasons for the
move as available space in the
new buildings, the present crowded conditions of the existing libraries. “With lack of space,
there’s not much more we can
do,” he added. Dr. Ta-You Wu,
Acting Chairman of the Physics
Department, claims that the University library administration envisions a general physical sciences library to provide better
service at less money (duplication
expenses) and more space. But,
as Dr. Wu points out, the central
library idea differs from that
of most physical science setups
in the country.
“A central library makes it
very inconvenient for us,” says
Luncheon will be supplied and
Dr. Wu. He cited limited stack
will include vegetarian and nonaccess for faculty and students
vegetarian sandwiches, hot dogs, as a source of inconvenience.
salad, snacks, and cold beverages. The central library, he explained,
Lunch will be followed by sports goes against both the habit and
and a meeting of the general necessity of physical scientists.
Working scientists have a conbody to elect new officers. Anreother game period will follow the stant need for journals and
ferences close at hand. The deelections.
partmental library has traditionally provided easily accessible
information. A central library
cannot do this.
tee?

Stein: I believe PL does provide the proper basic approach
to handling qusetions concerning
peace, jobs, housing, racial equality, education, etc. But even
more, the socialist outlook has
an ethical view of all men working together, helping one another, for the building of a
society to develop the talents of
all the people to the greatest
level, as opposed to the ethic
of the capitalist system of getting
whatever one can for oneself,
even at the expense of others.
The solutions of the questions
stated clash with the aims of
those who are presently in control. It is therefore the desire
of these rulers to stamp out the
ideas presented by PL, M2M
(May 2nd Movement), VDC (Vietnam Day Committee), DuBois
Clubs, and those who recognize
these fundamentally opposed historical developments, or at least
major aspects of them.
The investigation will continue
through next week.

India Association Picnic Tomorrow
The India Association will hold
a picnic at noon tomorrow in
Chestnut Ridge Park. All members and friends will assemble
near the parking lot in front of
Lockwood Library at 11:20 a.nr
where, it is hoped, those who
have cars will bring them. Transportation will be provided for
those needing it.

�

tk
.

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.

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.

and

Amendment to the Internal Security Act. which penalizes ceractions protesting the role
of the U.S. in the Vietnam war,
HUAC plans to assist “legal” suppression of the peace movement.
The hearings themselves form an
attack by the Johnson Administration on this movement.
Spectrum: Why do you feel
PL was attacked by the Commit-

Trustees Name

PWHBL

...

.

HCUA Hearings
(Cool’d

Friday, August 19, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

PLAZA SHOE REPAIR
ONE STOP SERVICE
CENTER

Shoes Repaired While-U-Wait
Lanudry &amp; Dryeleaning
ONE DAY SERVICE

University Plaza
TF 6-4041

$ee

rJounye
—

ATMOSPHERE
572 Amherst

—

Dr. Wu feels that the reasons
given by the library for the
change indicate that the library
administration does not understand the nature of physical science work. Although the departments involved opposed the central library concept from the
beginning, the matter was decided without consulting the departments or the library committee of the Faculty Senate.
At a meeting called by Dr.
Gordon Harris, Chairman of the
Chemistry Department and head
of the Physical Sciences division
of Arts and Sciences, the departments agreed on the inadvisability of the central library and
decided to write Dr. Furnas, Uni-

versity President, voicing their
complaint. Within a short time,
meetings were held both by
Dean Ketter of the Graduate
School and Dr. Furnas. At the
Furnas meeting, the president
apologized for not keeping up
with events and intervened on
the behalf of the departments.
A compromise was reached
whereby all but the Engineering
School would retain those books
which were most needed in a
departmental library. As Dr. Wu
describes it, they had found “the
least dissatisfactory way of settling the matter.”
“I am not so concerned with

the present .
the need for
space is great,” said Dr. Wu. As
a matter of principle I believe
a departmental library to be a
necessity. Libraries exist for students and faculty. We should
keep this problem open for future planning of the new campus.”
He added, “On important issues
the faculty should at least be
heard.”
.

.

ROIC Field Training
For 65 of the juniors &amp; seniors
enrolled in Air Force ROTC at
UB, at least one month of theii
summer has been rigorously
spent in Field Training, a compulsory program for ROTC cadets
that is roughly comparable to the
Army’s basic training.
This summer UB cadets were
assigned to either Plattsburgh,
New York or Loring, Maine for
the training program which included flights in Air Force tankers, pistol firing, land and water
survival, and career orientation.

Correction
Last week the Spectrum erronthe American
Tactical Assault on Communism
group as the South Park Fascist
Club. Mr. Robert Johnson is qpt
therefore director of the South
Park Fascist Club as was reported. Further investigation has also
revealed that although the quotations attributed to Mr. Johnson
were heard by the marchers, it is
not certain that they were yelled
by Mr. Johnson. We apologize
for these errors.
eously identified

Dr. Segal follows Dr. Bradley
Chapin as head of University College, which consists of the twoyear degree programs offered by
the University and the various
courses of study available to
freshman and sophomores in the
College of Arts and Sciences. Dr.
Chapin resigned to accept the
position of chairman of the Department of History at Ohio State
University.
Dr. Segal was named director
of the Student Counseling Center
in 1959. He was appointed an
associate professor of psychology
at the same time. He received his
B.A. from the City College of
New York, and both his M.A. and
Ph.D. degrees from the University of Michigan. Dr. Segal served
as a psychologist in the Counseling Division of the University of
Michigan from 1951-1956. During
the same period he also taught

graduate courses at Michigan.
Upon his arrival at Buffalo, Dr.
Segal organized and developed
the Counseling Center’s program.
He has published several articles
in professional journals.

Since its beginning in October
1965 the School of Health Related Professions has been under
the leadership of Acting Dean
Albert C. Rekate. Dr. Rekate will
now assume the post of Associate
Dean and Director of Clinical
Services.

In commenting on Dr. Perry’s
appointment, Dr. Peter F. Regan,
University Vice President for
Health Affairs said, “We are very
happy that we have been able to
attract the man most highly qualified to guide the future growth
of this new School, the fourth
to be established in the United
States. Because of his past positions in Federal service Dr. Perry
has had a unique opportunity to

observe and evaluate programs
for the education of health personnel. We are also most fortunate
that Dr. Albert C. Rekate has
agreed to accept prime responsibility for the development, coordination and supervision of the
clinical aspects of the various
programs of the School.”
Other positions held by Dr,
Perry include director of prosthetic-orthotic education at the
Northwestern University Medical

School, and lecturer for the Department of Psychology at the
University of Chicago.
The new dean received his B.A.
degree from DePauw University
in 1944, and his M.A. and Ph.D.
degrees from Northwestern University in 1952 and 1955 respectively. He is a member of the
American Psychological Association, the American Personnel and
Guidance Association, the National Rehabilitation Association, and
Delta Tau Delta and Phi Beta
Kappa honorary fraternities.
FOR SALE

1961 Morris Minor, 32,000 miles.
$400. Call TF 2-5406.
1965 Yamaha, 250cc. Phone TF 42639, between 5:30-7:30 p.m.

�Friday, August 19, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE THREE

Text of Rockefeller Letter to Gould
ED. NOTE: The following is tho
text of the letter deted August 11
from Governor Nelson Rockefeller to Samuel Gould, State University President, in which the
Governor asked for a review of
the new campus site decision.
“The merger into the State
University in 1962, of the former
private University of Buffalo,
represented a magnificent addition to the resources of our state
university. Its subsequent designation in the master plan as one
of our university centers evidenced both our appreciation of
its traditions of educational excellence and our desire that the
Buffalo area be the home of one
of the Empire State’s four great
educational and cultural centers.

“Before you became president of the State University in
September 1964 an event of the
greatest significance insofar as
the qualitative and quantitative
growth of the State University
is concerned—the Board of Trustees of the State University and
members of the Council of the
State University of New York at
Buffalo, decided to relocate all
elements of the State University of New York at Buffalo at a
new site in the Town of Amherst, except for the medical
school and associated health
schools and facilities which
would continue to grow on the
existing campus.

“I understand that since that
decision was made considerable
acreage has been acquired in
the Town of Amherst, but no
permanent construction has been
although intensive
undertaken
planning is being progressed
—

rapidly.

“I am sure that the decision to
relocate in Amherst was not arrived at lightly—but rather only
after thorough study of various
alternative locations. Nonetheless, the proposed relocation involves not alone the growth of
the State University of New
York at Buffalo as a center of
higher education, but also an investment of several hundred
million dollars of public funds.
"Its location will profoundly
influence the nature and character of the physical development
of adjacent areas. As a consequence, all must agree that
every conceivable aspect of the
total project, including any de-

since the original
decision, should be given careful consideration.

velopments

“Buffalo, one of the great
cities of the nation, is the second
largest city of our state. Its
growth and development have
been and continue to be of great
interest to me, not alone because
of what they mean to the people
who live there, but also because of the importance of Buffalo to the state as a whole.
“Strong representations have
more recently been made that
an area within the City of Buffalo
known generally as the

ment of any construction at the

that his views will be of great
interest.

“I would appreciate it very
much if you would take up this
matter with the members of the
Board of Trustees of the State
University and the members of
the local council of the State
University of New York at Buffalo.

"I see no reason why general
planning for a relocated campus
(as distinguished from land
acquisition and specific building
design) cannot continue during
the period of resludy so that
minimal delay will be involved
should the original determination
planning would be as useful and
be reaffirmed while, at the same
time, the results of such general
necessary in the waterfront area

Amherst site.

“In this connection I note with
interest that Martin Meyerson,
who will become president of the
State University of New York at
Buffalo on Sept. 1, 1966, came to
this new responsibility from his
post as dean of the School of
Environmental Design at the
University of California at Berkeley and is reputed to be one
of the outstanding planners in
the country. If as I hope, the
restudy is undertaken, I am sure

rsCetter
TO

to

THE EDITOR:

to the outlandish plan to meld

the three departmental libraries
of Physics, Chemistry, and Engineering into one conglomerated
library of the technical sciences.
We, as graduate students in the
Department of Physics, oppose
this action most vehemently for
the reasons stated below, and
urge that the administration take
the necessary steps to reverse
this action and insure this university of the kind of library
most conducive to academic excellence.
1) No major university in this
country has a central library system such as is being imposed here
against the will of the faculty and
students alike.
2) In all the top universities
the Physics Departments have
their own separate libraries. Such
a system is necessary to insure
that the books purchased will be
of the quality required to further
academic excellence. Only physicists, working in physics, can
know what these requirements
are; and only someone who feels
it is his library, not the plaything of bureaucracy, can be expected to contribute effectively
to the development of a good
technical library.
—

3) The library staff is forming
the central library for its own
convenience, not realizing, perhaps, that they are not the reason
for the library’s existence. We
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING

"Brcium of the unique importance of this proposal to the
Program of revitalization of the
Heart of the city, I would like
to suggest that a review and
study of the 'Waterfront Area'
be made prior to the commence-

cation.
Sincerely yours.

H. L. MENCKEN

Nelson A. Rockefeller”

tile Editor

Mencken First Editions
On Display in Lockwood

library staff should be secondary
in importance to the needs of
An exhibit of H. L. Mencken’s
the faculty and students who are
the only ones capable of fulfill- first editions is currently on dising the purposes of the technical play in Lockwood Library ballibraries; which are to use them cony.
as sources of knoweledge and as

research tools.

Having a physics library
within the department is much
more conducive to research than
a central library would be because it can be used for quick
reference. Also, it makes possible
the granting of special privileges
to faculty members and their
4)

H. L. Mencken’s chief interest

was in daily-newspaper journal-

research associates,
which further facilitates the use
of the library.

ism. As a reporter he gained national notoriety for his burlesque
coverage of the famous Scopes
trial, and for his satirical accounts of political conventions.
While he enjoyed poking fun at
American politics, he had no
sympathy for “the Proletarian
brethren who argue that every
book should support the revolution.”

5) An important factor in inducing quality professors and
good students to come to a university is the availability of a
good departmental library. These
people are never impressed with

Thanks to his vigorous contributions to magazines and newspapers, his editorial remarks in the
American Mercury, and his series
of Prejudices (6 vols. 1919-1927),

graduate

Mencken’s views on American
life and letters became well
known. His scathing denunciations of shams and hypocricies in
the literary mores of his day encouraged the efforts of writers
such as Cabell, Gather, Dreiser,
Hergesheimer, Lewis, and Sandbrug. The “aid and comfort" he
gave to these authors, and the
healthy influence he had on
American literature cannot be
overemphasized.

Mencken’s long list of books
includes criticism, philosophy,
plays, and verse. The American
Language, An Inquiry into the
Development of Engliih in the
United States (1919), now in its
fifth revised edition, is regarded
as a classic in its field.
The exhibit will continue
through September 21.

librarians’ ideas of what constitutes a good technical library.

We feel very strongly that the
management of the physics li-

brary should be in the hands of
the Physics Department itself and
to proceed otherwise would be
both detrimental to the future
of our university and, by ignoring the wishes of the students
and faculty, would be a serious

breach of academic freedom.
Lance Lessler
V. G. Kaveshwar
James D. Lyons

Henry Nebel
R. V. Kaiser
Jerry Lucas

PERSONAL

15
minutes walk from campus.
Help with two children.
Call
TF 6-4333.
FREE ROOM AND BOARD.

—

area.

“With sincere appreciation for

your distinguished leadership of
the state university as it is
emerging as one of the world’s
great institutions of higher edu-

feel that the convenience of the

It has come to our attention,
indirectly, that some major changes in our library system are to
take effect quite soon. We refer

—

would be
‘Waterfront Area’
an excellent alternative location
to Amherst; that such a location
in the heart of the city, proximate to the many cultural advantages which the city offers,
would be mutually advantageous to the students of the university and the residents of the
city; that the location of the
State University of New York at
Buffalo there would provide material assistance to the efforts
of the city officials, local citizens, and interested civic groups
who are concerned with the redevelopment of this general

should that be chosen.

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Two Locations:

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�Friday, August 19,

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

Sfcsas

ennan

For about twenty minutes (primarily because of the
character of Gromek, masterfully portrayed by Wolfgang
Kleister), I was lured into thinking that Torn Curtain might
be a reassertion of Hitchcock’s directorial strength. Instead,
it turned out to be as dreary and as fatuous as Mamie, his
previous opus. The giveaway, 1 realize now, was the shot
of Hitchcock in the film, sitting in a hotel lobby holding a
baby. The camera dwells on him for a few seconds while
the theme music from his old television show plays on the
soundtrack.
In Hitchcock’s best films, his appearance on camera not
only served as a directorial signature, and an in-joke, but
also a reminder that what you were watching was a “film,”
an illusion. Aesthetically (like the gratuitous ending of
North By Northwest) it alienated the viewer from the action,
refused to allow us to relax our emotions and intellects. It
was this that first caused men like Roman Polanski and
Claude Chabrol to become aware of the intricacies of Hitchcock’s direction. But in Torn Curtain, the shot is only a joke,
nothing more. And a heavy-handed joke at that. Which is
fitting, because the film is heavy-handed, repetitive, and
lacking in suspense.
Not only do we know that Paul Newman and Julie
Andrews will come through their escapade unharmed, but
because of the banality of Brian Moore’s script, we cannot
even begin to believe in the reality of the major character.
(Has there ever been, in the last decade, a top American
physicist who couldn’t speak even a word of German?) Even
in the film’s best moments the Gromek sequences in the
beginning, and the camera’s stop-action during the dance
of the ballerina toward the end
there is no originality;
only a re-doing of what Hitchcock has done successfully in
the past. Prior to Torn Curtain, even in Hitchcock’s worst
films, there was always a momentary glimpse of his originality, some redeeming quality. Even in Mamie, one could
point to the opening sequences of changing perspective, on
the shot of the heroine riding off on horseback into an
artificial set of back-projection.
Finally, one wonders what it is that Hitchcock was
trying to get at thematically in Torn Curtain. It is not merely
a spy story. On one level, it is a put-down of American
scientists (one of the most attractive characters in the film
is the East German scientist Gustave Lindt) and the methods
of American science; on another, it is a put-down of international espionage in general. Ultimately, it would seem that
Hitchcock wants to make some comment about fascism from
a historical perspective (the death of Gromek, the shot of
Otto Preminger moving across the frame halfway through
the film). But explication by no means equals evaluation,
and I’ll leave it to the auteur critics who feel that Hitchcock
can do no wrong to sort out the muddled “meanings.” For
me, the attempt by Hitchcock to impose Significance is
doomed from the start unless it grows organically from
the film. In Torn Curtain it does not.
In this film, Lila Kedrova’s performance, an unconscious
parody of her achievement in Zorba The Greek, serves as
a microcosm for Hitchcock’s unconscious parody of his earlier brillance. It is especially true of Hollywood, that by
the time a director has the “name” to be in a financial
Huston, Ford,
position to do what he wishes in ms films
Hawkes, and Hitchcock, cases in point his talent has been
dissipated.
-

Research Grants Total $9.3 Million;
Include Water Symposium Conference
A potpourri of scientific and
engineering research unmatched
in the history of the State University at Buffalo pushed total
research expenditures during
1965-66 past the $9 million mark.
An estimated $9,300,000 was
expended during the year by
more than 40 departments at the
University who receive funds
from federal, state and private
sources. Several of the grants
received by the University will
have a major .effect on the
Niagara Frontier.
The most publicized and talked
about program at the University
during the year was a national
water symposium held in June.
Water experts from throughout
the United States and Europe
attended the week-long conference which was entitled, “The
Fresh Water of New York State:
Its Conservation and Use.”
More than 60 experts discussed
in detail the many facets of to-

day’s water problem before 250
attended the conference. The symposium was
sponsored by the New York State
Science and Technology Founda-

persons who

tion and the Buffalo section of
the American Society of Civil
Engineers. Comments were heard
by Senator Edward Muskie (D.
Maine) and Gov. Nelson Rockefeller during the meeting.
Lake Erie is the subject for
study through an $118,000 three
by Dr.
year grant received
Ralph R. Rumer, acting head of
the Department of Civil Engineering. Dr. Rumer will construct
a model of the lake in order to
study the “dynamic behavior and
mixing processes” of the lake.
The School of Medicine again
topped all other Schools in research expenditures with an
setimated $4.8 million being
spent during the year. Studies
concerning air pollution, prevention of mental retardation, underwater breathing and a multitude of other programs highlighted the year’s activities. The
School’s programs on an international level continued with assistance being again provided to
the University of Asuncion in
Paraguay. Faculty members from
the School are serving on the
faculty in Paraguay and several
visitors from the Paraguayan

School studied the operations of
the University’s School of Medicine during the year.
The College of Arts &amp; Sciences
passed the $1,500,000 mark in research expenditures with the Department of Biology continuing
to lead the other departments
in the College with an estimated
$600,000 spent during the year.
The Department of Psychology,
with an estimated $Vi million
spent on research, is one of the
few in the country using “behavior therapy” in assisting emotionally disturbed persons. As
opposed to the traditionally analytical approach to mental problems, the psychologists believe
an individual can solve his problem through a relaxation-conditioning technique.
Everywhere at the University,
research continues at an unprecedented rate. The physiologists,
the psychologists, the engineers,
the doctors, the biologists, the
chemists, and the researchers
continue to add new information
to man’s ever growing body of
knowledge. An endless job, they
are united in a common goal—benefiting mankind.

-

-

-

Jerry Lewis’ new film Three on a Couch can now be
seen in this area. For those of you who haven’t seen a Jerry
Lewis film in years, and who are wondering what all the
critical acclaim for him is about, I recommend this film.
Lewis is weakest when he aims at a Chaplinesque kind of
pathos, and too often he does just that. But if he finally
accepts the fact that he is in the tradition of Fatty Arbuckle
and W.C. Fields, and aims at “pure” comedy, he will produce
a masterpiece. Outside of The Nutty Professor, Three on a
Couch is his best film.
As of the first week in August, the best film in Buffalo
is Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf. In his first directorial
effort, Mike Nichols proves that he is indeed an accomplished talent. From beginning to end Nichols is in complete control of the film. He knows exactly what he wants
to do, then, like an old pro who’s been at it for a decade,
with strength and with a deft
goes ahead and does it
subtlety. The acting is excellent, especially Richard Burton’s.
Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf is a perfect example of how
a good stage play can be turned into a fine motion picture.
-

FINAL SOFTBALL STANDINGS

The SPECTRUM
Publilhad by

Partners Press, 3nc.
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Play-off game for first place
Psychology 4, Chemistry 1.

Committee for an Urban Campus
Names Robert Coles Chairman
Robert Traynham Coles, a local
architect and urban planner, has
been chosen chairman of the
Committee for an Urban Campus,
a group comprised of the business
and professional community dedicated to locating the new
SUNYAB campus on the downtown Waterfront area site.
Other officers include: Vice
Chairmen, Donald Ross (a UB
alumnus), Lewis Harriman, Jr.,
and Max Clarkson; secretary, Marvin Bloom, Assistant Professor of
Social Welfare here; treasurer,
Dr. Harry Sultz; and counsel, Carl
Green.
Also chosen were three members for the Committee’s execu-

live board. They are Alan A.
Korn, president of the BroadwayFillmore Merchants Association
and president of Sattler’s Inc.,
Robert B. Robinson, secretary of
the Forest District Civic Association, and the Rev. Robert Moore,
minister of Covenant Lebanon
Presbyterian Church. A fourth
executive board member, Stephen
Crafts, graduate student here, will
act as temporary representative
from the Campus Planning Committee.
Coles .indicated last Monday
that he had received “a communication from the Governor’s office encouraging the committee
to continue its efforts to develop

data for locating UB in the Buffalo waterfront-downtown sector.”
Coles said that the communication from Gov. Rockefeller "is
regarded by the committee as an
official blessing by the Governor
to continue our efforts.”
Rockefeller received a telegram from the Committee on
August 8 urging him to suggest
a review of the site decision with
particular consideration of the
downtown site as an alternative.
The Governor’s letter to Samuel
Gould, president of the State University, indicates that Rockefeller
has carefully considered the Committee’s request and statement of

Prof. Smith in

A Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of
Science and the American
Anthropological Association, Dr.
Smith also holds membership in
the Linguistic Society of America, the Society for General Semantics, the College English
Association and the Canadian
Linguistic Association.

Dr. Copans is visiting professor
in the Department of Modern
Languages at the University this

'Forum Lectures'
A State University at Buffalo
professor is among 25 leading
American scholars in linguistics
chosen to participate in a series
of Voice of America “Forum Lectures” which will be broadcast
throughout the world.
Dr. Henry L. Smith, Jr., Professor of English and Linguistics,
will tape-record his paper entitled
“Language and the Total System
of Communication” for the series,
which is being coordinated by
Dr. Archibald A. Hill of the University of Texas. In addition to
being broadcast, the lectures will
be published individually by the
U.S. Information Agency and then
brought together in a book under
the title “Linguistics Today” for
publication by Basic Books.
The lectures are aimed at demonstrating to the world the current status of linguistics in the
United States. They are grouped
under the following headings:
“Nature of Language,” “Languages and History,” “Language
and Linguistics in the Classroom,”
“Linguistics and Other Disciplines,” “Linguistics and the
Machine” and “Schools of Linguistics in the Current Scene.”
Dr. Smith received his A.B.
summa cum laude from Princeton
University in 1935. His M.A. and
Ph.D. degrees were also awarded
by Princeton in 1937 and 1938
respectively. He has taught at
Barnard College, Brown University, Indiana University, and Harvard University.

Fellows Chosen
For Paris School
Six State University at Buffalo
professors have been honored as

the first Fellows of the Institute
of American Studies in Paris for
the 1966-67 academic year:
Dr. Joseph I. Fradin, assistant
profesor of English, on sabbatical
in England and France; Dr. Edwin
P. Hollander, professor of psychology, on a Senior Stipend
Award from the National Institute of Mental Health, who will
be in London; Dr. Marcus N.
Klein, associate professor of English, on a Fulbright Fellowship
to the University of Toulouse,
Toulouse, France. Dr. Edward C.
Lambert, professor of pediatrics,
on sabbatical to Lausanne, Switzerland; and Professor Allen R.
Sigel, professor of music, who
will be travelling throughout Europe on sabbatical
According to Dr. Simon Copans,
director of the Paris Institute, it
is expected that some of the fellows will lecture in classes there,
or meet with French colleagues
in their fields through the informal auspices of the Institute.

position.

summer.

Of the fellows program, which
is being inaugurated this year,
Dr. Copans said, “one of the accessory effects of the program
will be the establishment of a
close and mutually beneficial relation between the French academic community and faculty
members of the State University’s
college and University Centers.”

'Dream of Unity'
Released Today
The controversial subject of
Pan-Africanism and political unification in West Africa is analyzed in a soon to be published
book by a State University at
Buffalo assistant professor of political science. Drum of Unity
by Dr. Claude E. Welch, Jr., 346
Hendricks Blvd., Eggertsville, will
be released August 19 by Cornell
University Press.
The book examines the success
of Pan-Africanism in West Africa
by studying four such attempts to
unite French and English speaking states. The examples selected
by Dr. Welch include the Cam-

Federal Republic, a successful instance of political unification, and three cases in which
eroon

Pan-Africanism failed to bring
about political unity: Ghana-Togo,
Senegambia, and the Union of
African States formed by Ghana,
Guinea and Mali.

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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
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f|44

U III

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
VOLUME 16

•

NO. 56

•

FRIDAY, AUGUST 12, 1966

Campus Planning Committee to Discuss
Student Participation in Site Decision
A new campus group, the Campus Planning Committee, will
hold its first meeting on Monday
evening, August 15, at 8 p.m. in
the Conference Theatre to discuss student participation in the
planning and development of the
new SUNY campus.

The group will work with an
existing organization, Committee
for an Urban Campus, by placing
one student representative on the
Committee’s executive board. An-

other member of the executive
board, Mr. Robert Coles, a local
architect and city planner, will

M. Sgt. Giambrone

address the Monday night meeting. He will explain what actions
his Committee has already taken
and will answer questions about

campus planning.
Following Mr. Cole’s portion of

the program, the Campus Planning Committee will propose that
the meeting establish some form
of organization to include the for-

mation of various interrelated
subcommittees on student participation in planning and develop-

ment.
According to a CPC spokesman,
“the primary purpose of the
group is

to get students involved

in a reconsideration of the Amherst site with the possibility of
locating the new campus on the
downtown waterfront area as part
of an urban redevelopment program. Whether the campus finally locates in Amherst or Buffalo,
the Campus Planning Committee
feels that students and faculty
should take an active part in the
planning and development of the
new campus.”

The meeting will be open to
the public. All interested students and faculty members are
especially urged to attend.

charged with assault

UB Student Involved In Creative Vandalism League Strikes;
'Unheard of' Legal Case Plants Trees in Parking Lot Sites
.

On Monday, August 15, at 9:30
a.m. in Part 1 of City Court, Detective Sergeant Samuel Giambrone will appear in answer to a
subpoena signed by Judge Mazur
on a charge of third degree assault. The charge was initiated
by William Sander, a graduate
student here and summer employee of the Erie County Department
of Social Welfare. Charges of
disorderly conduct against Sander were dismissed last Monday
in the same court.

The case began at the end of
last Saturday’s Peace March. Mr.
Sander said that “throughout the
demonstration the police, with
the exception of Detective Giambrone, performed admirably and
protected the marchers from
hecklers representing neo-fascist
groups who had followed us shouting anti-semetic remarks.”
Sander continued, “I was standing just off the sidewalk, between
the sidewalk and a fence in front
of a private home on Busti Avenue on the grass. An individual
in a business suit came over and
ordered me ‘off the sidewalk.’ I
replied that I was not on the side-

walk but on the grass. He then
looked down, saw that I was indeed on the grass, and said, ‘get
off of the grass
that’s private
property.’ Having no alternative
I asked, ‘Where then do you want
me to stand?’ The reply was,
you refuse
‘Alright, wise guy
to move—you’re under arrest.’
Sander said that he had no way
of being sure that the “man in
the business suit” was an officer
of the law. He said that the arrest occurred soon after the same
officer was observed talking with
“a group of Fascists in a station
wagon who had shouted such slogans as ‘Kill the Jews’ and ‘To the
Ovens’ at the marchers.”
—

—

”

Sander said that he was pushed
and shoved, into the' police car.
In the process he received a severe head injury which later required emergency care at the
Buffalo General Hospital. Mr.
Sander has charged the arresting
officer, Giambrone, with third degree assault for the infliction of
this wound. He was reluctant to
talk about the incident when interviewed, feeling it “might prejudice the upcoming assault case.”
Sander added, “The police were
wrong to make allegations about
how I sustained this injury while
I was in jail, but I do not intend
to commit the same error in
judgment.”

While in the police car, Sander

.

.

said that one of the officers asked.
“If you don’t like it here, why
don’t you leave?” Another, according to Sander, said, “What’s
a graduate student in sociology
doing hanging around with all
these reds?”
Mr. Sander gave the following
picture of his booking at the
police department on the charge
of “sidewalk blocking”: “I was
booked. All my personal property was taken from me. Detectives
were copying all the information
from my wallet
I could see
my social security numthem
ber, my addresses, my local draft
board number, my insurance
agent’s name, etc. They even took
away my wedding ring and eyeglasses. I was not allowed any
telephone calls.”
Sander was locked up and was
initially refused medical attention for his head wound. He was
eventually released on $100.00
bail, posted in cash by a friend.
According to a lawyer contacted
by this reporter, the maximum
fine on a charge of “sidewalk
blocking” is $5.00.
Once released, Sander said, one
doctor refused to attend him because the injury was “inflicted by
the police.” He then received
treatment at the Buffalo General
...

...

A group calling itself the Creative Vandalism League staged a
plant-in last Tuesday evening in
the parking lot construction area
near the Main Street entrance to
the campus. Proclaiming that
"Trees are a Reality Kick," the
group planted a number of tree
saplings, each of which bore a
dedicatory label.
Among the labels, a Spectrum
reporter who was dispatched to
the scene by an anonymous tip,
found the following:
1.) The Mother Tree
"This
tree is planted in appreciation of
the billions of mothers who have
made the joy of life a possibility
for millions more regardless of
—

race, creed, or national origin.”
2.) The God Tree
“This tree
is planted in memory of the kindly old gentleman who first
thought of trees and men and
who would undoubtedly have
wished to be present at this planting.”
3.) The Tree Tree
“This tree
is planted in memory of millions
—

—

of its brothers whose lives have
been snuffed out by thoughtless
waste in such enterprises as gun
butts and parking lots.”
4. The American Tree “This
tree is planted in the hope that
America may become as healthy
a place to live in as the forest."
5. The Apple Pie Tree
“This
—

—

—

death be loosed upon the world
and all our woe.”
7. Let Each Become All He Is
Capable of Being Tree
“This
tree is planted in the hope that
it will be able to become all it is
capable of being."
As of Wednesday morning, construction on the parking lots had
obliterated the trees. The campus
waits the reaction of the Creative
Vandalism League.
—

Jack Benny Visits Campus
Jack Benny arrived on the
State University at Buffalo campus on Wednesday to pay a visit
to an old friend and wound up
playing Mozart’s “Eine Kleine
Nacht Musik.”

Theater near Niagara Falls, had
called Schneider on the phone
and promised he would try to
meet with him and the young
musicians.
Tom Suarez, a 15-year-old from
Valley Stream’s Central High, and
The old friend was Alexander
student of Mrs. Louise Behrend,
who teaches at Juilliard’s preparSchneider, violinist of Buffalo’s
Budapest String Quartet, who is atory division, had a camera
handy, and managed to take some
teaching the University’s Baird
pictures of B e n n y’s visit, Mr.
Youth Chamber Players, comprised of students who have come Suarez recalls that “Mr. Benny
Hospital.
for instruction from all parts of said that everybody in the chamIn court last Monday, the Asthe State this summer.
ber group is better than he is,
District
Attorney, Mr. Miincluding the clarinet player who
sistant
that
a
chael McMorrow, asked
Benny’s visit was a complete starts learning the violin tomorcharge of disorderly conduct” surprise to the youngsters and
row. But we don’t have a clarbe substituted for the “sidewalk even Schneider hadn't planned on
inetist.”
blocking” charge. The presiding the performance. Jack took the
Alexander Schneider told the
judge agreed. The new charge concert master’s chair to join the
young group that Mr. Benny takes
was dismissed later in the day students in playing the Mozart
playing the violin very seriously,
by Judge Mazur.
piece.
practicing an hour every day.
“He has done more to further
He borrowed Schneider’s famIn seeking a warrant against
Giambrone, Sander said he was ous Guanerius for the occasion. the cause of good music in the
United States than any other enTuning the violin he asked the
sent “all around the police headquarters and that pressure was girl next to him to give him an tertainer,” he continued.
Mr. Schneider recalled that he
exerted to try and dissuade me “A." She did, and he responded
had the pleasure of introducing
against asking for prosecution of with a “B” flat. “Well, that’s close
Jack Benny and Isaac Stern when
Giambrone on the assault charge." enough,” he said.
The comedian, who is in Bufthe two men did a benefit perSander said that “Judge Mazur
pormance in New York’s Carwas very cooperative throughout falo doing a show at Melody Fair
the day.”
The Judge said that in order to
have a charge of disorderly conduct a “breach of the peace” must
be shown. Since the police did
not show a ‘breach of the peace,"
the charge was not warranted. Assistant District Attorney McMorrow expressed the feeling that
such a ruling will hamper police
work in the future.
Mr. Sander commented that he
“expects the police to issue a
third charge, since the first two
were dismissed. I have the aid
of the American Civil Liberties
(Cont’d on Pg. 2)

tree is planted in appreciation for
the apple tree, without which no
apples would grow and hence no
apple pies would be made.”
6. The Tree of Knowledge
“DO NOT DISTURB THIS TREE
IN ANY MANNER lest sin and

negie Hall in 1965 to

for Israel.

raise funds

Mr. Benny invited the entire
group and the staff of Baird Hall,

which houses the University's
Music Department, to be his
guests Saturday at Melody Fair.
Lou Fisher, Melody Fair's manager, was in the room at the time.
“Is that all right, Lou?” Benny
asked.
“I guess so."
Benny's manager came in and
said, “It's going to cost you about
$12,000, Jack."
Benny replied, "Well, what's
money to me—WHAT? $12,000?"
Benny and Schneider had a few
moments to chat during the visit.
At one point, Benny asked Schneider for Pablo Casals’ address,
which the violinist gave him.
Before leaving the musicians to
meet with the mayor of Buffalo,
Benny expressed regret that he
would not have the opportunity
to hear the group in their premier performance. Plans have
been made to present him with
a recording of the concert when
the group goes to see him at
Melody Fair Saturday night

Jack Benny playing Mozart with campus orchestra

�Friday, August 12, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

Interview with French Students
The Cold War, the war in Viet
Nam, and European unity were
among the topics discussed by a
group of French students in a
recent interview with the Spectrum.

“Three Frenchmen; four opinions,” was the way one of the
students summarized the discussion. In general ways, however,
they were in agreement: skeptical
of the Cold War, opposed to the
Viet Nam war, and eager for
European unity.

Hecklers Spice CNVA March
Last Saturday’s CNVA Hiroshima Day Peace Walk was described by members of the Committee as a “success.” 65 people

marched 14 miles in protest of
the war in Vietnam and the massive arms race. The only incident
of violence occurred when William Sander, a walker, was arrested by Dct. Sgt. Samuel Giambrone on a charge of “blocking
a sidewalk” and was thrown
forcefully against a police car,
injuring his head.

The Walk moved quickly
throughout the city, covering the

entire distance from the UB campus to the Peace Bridge in 4 Vi
hours. A statement addressed to
President Johnson was read at
the Bridge by David Gardiner,
Graduate Student in Sociology
and a member of the Committee.
When presentation of the statement to the Head American Cus-

toms Official, Charles Wilson, was
attempted, Mr. Wilson replied,

“I have orders not to accept this
statement.” The statement will be
mailed to Mr. Wilson, Pres. Johnson, Senators Javits and Kennedy,
and local congressmen.

Constant surveillance was provided by the Buffalo Subversive
Squad, the FBI, and the South
Park Fascist Club, under the direction of Mr. Robert Johnson.
Mr. Johnson, representative of
the Fascist Club, drove a station
wagon spiced with signs reading
“Onward Viet Terror Squad
Kill Cong,” and “Death to UB
Communists.” The car carried a
bomb on its roof. Johnson made
the Walk all the more meaningful by yelling such choice phrases as “Jews! Jews! Show me a
Jew Commie and I’ll show you a
faggot!” Marchers did not answer
Mr. Johnson.
—

SUNY Library Institute
To Be Held Here Next Week

The third annual institute of
the SUNY division of Library
Extension will be held on the
Buffalo campus this year from
August 15-19. This year’s institute, under the direction of Mrs.
Margia W. Proctor, former Deputy Director of the Buffalo and
Erie County Public Library, will
be entitled “Planning the Library
Building.”

The five day institute will focus
on the principles and procedures
for planning small public librar-

Mmtal hotardadon
Workshop Continues
A two week Advanced Work-

shop in Mental Retardation goes
into its second week today. The
Workshop, under the direction of
Dr. Egan Ringwall of the Psychological Clinic, began last Friday
and will continue to August 19.

The Workshop includes a brief
historical review of the field of
retardation, a discussion of the
criteria for retardation, the use
of diagnostic and measurement
procedures, and training programs for the retarded.
The emphasis of the Workshop
will be the significance of recent
research on the psychological aspects of retardation. Guest speakers have been invited to discuss
current developments in their
areas of professional specialization.
PEACE CORPS
PLACEMENT TEST

A Peace Corps placement test
will be given on August 13 at 9
a.m. in the Federal Office Building, Room 432, 121 Ellicott Street.
Applicants must fill out a Peace
Corps application which is available at all Post Offices and The
Peace Corps. Washington, D.C.
20526 1/ application has not been
submitted yet, bring it to the test

with you.

ies. Local architects will be available for guest presentation and

be provided
for the discussion of specific
planning problems faced by participants. Field trips have been
arranged so that participants may
observe and study a number of
interesting new libraries in the
opportunities will

area.

Fees for the institute include
$50 for tuition and an additional
$13 if dormitory housing is desired. Participants will otherwise
be responsible for their own housing and meals.

lest IVe Forget'
Auditions for “Lest We Forget . .
the third annual President John F. Kennedy Memorial
Show, will be held on ‘Monday,
Aug. 15, 7 to 10 p.m., in Room
233, Norton Hall.
Proceeds from the show sponsored by the College Young Democrats will go to the J.F.K. Me-

One question concerned the recent statement in the press that
“De Gaulle is the first major
statesman to realize that the Cold
War is over.” Most of the students agreed with this analysis,
stating that Russia’s economic

progress had lessened its threat
to the West. “Nobody believes
Russia will try to expand into
Europe,” one explained.

Another added, “we have per-

haps 20 or 30 dangerous years”
before China arrives at a level
of prosperity sufficient to raise

it from “the first militant stage
of Communism.”
On Viet Nam, the students felt
the majority of French people
are against the war. The reasons
for this opposition are varied,
they agreed. While leftists would
oppose U.S. involvement as counter-revolutionary, the most frequent objection is that the war
seems a “useless and hopeless”
repetition of the French defeat
in Indochina in 1954.
One student who knows many
Vietnamese people in France
pointed out that the Vietnamese
are a very patient nation and
are willing to hold out indefinitely, perhaps 30 years or more. He
questioned whether American resolve could stand up against the

UB Student...
(Cortt’d

from P.

X)

Union in my defense,” he added,
“and I intend to see this thing
through.”
A spokesman for the American
Civil Liberties Union said that,
to her knowledge, a charge of
assault against a police officer
was “unheard of in Buffalo.”
Mr. Manguso, Corporation Counsel for the City of Buffalo, concurred with that statement. Manguso said that such a case was
“not common, but extraordinary.”
He added, “the case has raised
bitterness among the members of
the police department. The event
in question occurred in the
course of the officer’s duty and
the city will provide legal aid
for Officer Giambrone.” Mr. Manguso commented that charges of
police assault are serious and
should be examined fully before
an officer is brought into court.

Asian long view of history. “They
are,” he added, “a different civilization but an accomplished civilization.”
Another student added that
many of the South Vietnamese
welcomed, at first, American involvement in fighting Communism, but now “all they want is
peace, peace at any cost.”

Asked to compare the difficulty
for the U.S. in possibly leaving
Viet Nam without decided victory with France’s problems in
leaving Algeria, the students
found some validity in this but
agreed, “the only comparison is
in the question of power and
prestige.”

The situation in Viet Nam, one

explained, is not that of retaining a colony but of “showing the
Communists that the guerrillas
cannot win.” All of them agreed,
however, that an American victory in Viet Nam would have no
effect on halting guerrilla movements throughout the world.

To the question whether world
public opinion is going against
the United States now, they answered unanimously, “yes”, finding only “the extreme right elements” in Europe in favor of the
war. One objected that this opposition had, so far, taken the
form of "sentiments but no actions” and

another added

that

European opinions were much influenced by the anti-war stand of

their newspapers.
Comments on President De
Gaulle were as diverse as the
controversy surrounding the
French President.

The students spoke of defects
in the French constitution and
were of the opinion that as a
strong personal leader with basically democratic tendencies, De
He felt that Judge Mazur had

“acted

hastily.”

Sander said that “my case is
important. In my experience as
a case worker for the Erie County
Department of Social Welfare, I
have come across a number of
cases where police have acted
improperly. This case may help
end such practices.”

Gaulle compensated for these
faults. But they agreed that another President with dictatorial
ambitions could take advantage
of the wide and loosely-defined
powers of the French Presidency.

Opinion was divided on whether De Gaulle is doing everything
in his power to achieve European
unity. Some of the students believed that De Gaulle’s nationalism has obstructed the growth
of a supranational Europe. AH
of them agreed that European
unity is a necessity. “It’s not a
question of balance,” (against the
U.S. and the U.S.S.R.) one said.
“It’s only a question of power. If
you want to survive in the mod-

ern world you must have some
power.”

“It will be much more in the
interest of the United States to
have a Europe with some
strength,” said one student. Several felt that an independent
French atomic deterrent has only
propaganda value for France, and
that only slightly, whereas a united European deterrent, independent of the U.S., would have some
credibility.

Economic benefits were seen as
equally or more important than
political strength as a reason for
European unity.
Students in France are much
more aware, involved, and sophisticated in politics than most of

their American counterparts, it

was agreed. The diversity of political parties and ideologies, and
the ease of traveling to neighboring countries, they said, make
political involvement more at
tractive to Europeans. They found
a considerable lack of political
diversity and a lack of tolerance

of dissident ideas in the United
States.

It was learned that Mr. Sander
has resigned from the Social Welfare Departemnt effective Friday,
August 12. The reasons for his
resignation were unavailable.
However, Deputy Welfare Commissioner William Hawthorne indicated that the publicity surrounding the case was harmful
to the department.

Swiss Chalet
1551 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.

643 MAIN STREET

(Next to Twin Fair)
(Opp. Shea's Buffalo)
Open Daily 11a.m. to 4 a.m.

Specializing in Charcoal Broiled Chicken
Reasonably Priced

—CONVENIENT TAKE-OUT AND DELIVERY SERVICEPRIVATE BANQUET FACILITIES AVAILABLE

TF 7-4300

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Downtown

Boulevard

morial Library at Cambridge.

A few openings remain for students talented in speaking, solo
instrumentals, ballet, or solo
yocal. Call Mary Guilfoyle, 833-

5&amp;H for further information.

LEONARDO'S
FINE FOOD

&amp;

DRINK

GROTTO BAR
UNIVERSITY PIAZA

Old Post Road

Inn
Main at Highgata

LUNCHEONS
11:45 until 3:00
DINNERS
5 p.m. until 10 p.m.
SUPPERS
10 p.m. until 1 p.m

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—

ATMOSPHERE

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RUSTCRAFT GREETING CARDS
Prescription and Non-Prescription Drugs
Phone: 835-1663
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Please show your Student ID Card when making purchases
—

572 Amherst

PRESCRIPTIONS
COSMETICS

�Friday, August 12, 1966

PACE THREE

SPECTRUM

Notes on Urban Campus
Ed. Nota: Instead of a SPECTRUM
position paper on the advisability
of locating the new SUNY campus in the downtown Buffalo waterfront area, we feel it more appropriate at this time to present
a statement by the Committee for
an Urban Campus, an article by
SPECTRUM staff reporter, Michael D'Amico, and a letter by
Dr. Lyle Glazier. The SPECTRUM
hopes that the debate on the issue
of the campus location has not
closed, despite President Gould's
peremptory statement reprinted

in last week's issue.

The Committee for an Urban
Campus is a grassroots organization comprised of citizens from
academic, business, medical, religious, and political communities
of the area which seeks to have
the new campus located in the
downtown area. Parts of a statement the Committee has already
sent to Martin Myerson, presidentdesignate of this campus and Dr.
Samuel Gould, President of the
SUNY, are reprinted here. This

is the first time this statement
has appeared in public in any
form. The article by Michael
D’Amico is based on both independent research and study of the
original Vincent Moore site analysis and the statement of the
Committee for an Urban Campus.
Dr. Glazier, Professor of English
here, wrote his letter to the Buffalo Evening News of August 2,
1966. We reprint it here with his
permission. He has expressed
what we also feel regarding the
location of the new campus.

ments clarify the nature of the
university purposes, they may
then be admitted as points of
reference against which specific
procedures involving the university may be evaluated. Without
belaboring the point, it is evident
that, from the university’s perspective, little virtue can attach
to any operation prejudicial to
its primary purposes—no matter

how virtuous the endeavor may
some other viewpoint. Of the most absolute im-'**
appear from

portance: no university can long
survive as the pawn or tool of
special political, social or other
interest—and its sources of financial support are irrelevant to

this issue.

Turning to S.U.N.Y. at Buffalo,
everyone agrees with its aspirations toward greatness. However,
certain fundamental points must
be made clear:
1. SUNY is an aspirant university hopeful of assuming a position among the great institutions
of this country. As such, its perspectives cannot remain local.
Put bluntly, the university cannot
be a panacea for this community’s
problems!

setting (and of most others) is standing with respect to the urban
becoming increasingly enfeebled, complex. It might inspire imaginand scant reason exists which ative minds to seek ways and
provides hope for improvement. means of restructuring the urban
Such a state of affairs leads to complex. In essence, the situating
frustration on the part of the of a university within the heart
local political mechanisms, be- of an urban complex might procause these mechanisms are ap- vide stimulation for the solution
parently impotent in the face of of many bewildering problems of
complex problems and surging the urban setting by minds of taltendencies which do not seem ent, imagination and intellectual
responsive to local political strat- curiosity. In the instance of Bufegems or aspirations.
falo, a situation exists which may
At the moment, Buffalo, under be especially propitious for a
a new administration, is speaking fruitful confrontation. This is so
bravely and hopefully of acting because the -size or scale of this
upon many of its most pressing urban area is still compassable.
problems. Therefore, it would All the usual urban problems—appear that both the local leaders decay, fiscal hardships, transit,
in the public and the private sec- ghettoes, etc.—exist here in a size
tors are interested in and desir- and scale which remain manageous of hearing fresh voices and able.
new approaches.
In sum, placing the university
SUNY is at the threshold of in the center of the urban comexpansion and is entering a periplex will not do violence to its
od of new, vigorous and changed scholarly tradition. Such placeleadership. These two factors may ment might, however, add a ditogether provide inspiration for mension of relevance and pertinnew and exciting attempts to deal ency to the university’s traditionwith common interests and conal role and function. This indeed
may provide the university with
cerns.
Several aspects of this matter the challenge to use its traditions
ought to be clearly understood. of learning, scholarship and research in fresh ways to deal with
problems unique to an urbanized,
technological society.
The city in its efforts to pro-

vide all of its citizens with the
benefits of a civil society may
find in the University a model
and mentor to turn to for sources
of knowledge and inspiration. The
local political mechanism may
discover the connections between
themselves and wider sources of
influences and political activity.
No longer will political views be
confined to local capacities, isolated from wider sources. Rather,
understanding of local political
potentialities within the broad
context of the urban society may
come to predominate. That there
are benefits for the University
that can derive from such an
urban condition goes without

Statement of
Committee for

Urban Campus
Introduction
A university, like any organization, is specialized and responsible for the performance of definable social functions. In the large
societal scheme of things, these
functions may be broad and basic,
but they are nonetheless limited.
Put simply, no organization—not
even a university—can be all
things to all men. And the more
vital an organization’s primary
societal functions, the more unfortunate are likely to be the
consequences of its trying to be.

A university exists as a means
for acquiring, codifying, storing
and disseminating knowledge. In
a university, unlike a school or
college perhaps, research and instructional functions are essentially co-equal. In fact, the scholarly function is definitive. It follows from this characterization
that a university, in its nature, is
universal rather than particular
in respect to the community it
serves. Its needs, interests and
objectives are neither common
with nor tied to those of its immediate host environs, except in
the most general sense. In short,
universities are “cosmopolitan”
rather than “local” in their perspectives. To be sure, they and
their host communities may derive direct mutual benefit, but
those benefits are primarily derivative, fortuitous and secondary.
None of these remarks is intended to preclude university derived or related community service. Indeed, in the modern era
universities have tended actively
to associate themselves with
“worldly” enterprises. The ivory
tower has acquired a revolving
door. However, a priority of purpose must be set so that the
postures and attitudes of university people may be understood
and so that the partial disjunction of community and university
perspectives may be appreciated.
If it be granted that these com-

question.

Map from Moore site analysis (1964) of downtown area.
sections indicate available land.

Shaded

Physical Features
Of Waterfront Area
By

MICHAEL L. D'AMICO

The Spactnww has gone on recSUNY is not in a position—nor ord in favor of a re-evaluation
should it, or can it be, placed in of the location for the new cama position— to be the salvation pus and has indicated a preferfor Buffalo or this urban area. ence
for the downtown waterfront
Also, Buffalo (and the urban site. This paper has chosen that
complex generally) cannot and position not just to cause conshould not rely upon a university, troversy, though controversy is
no matter what its size or presneeded. It has been chosen not
tige, for solutions to its problems. without justification, for after
There may be, however, at the reviewing the facts made availmoment, a congruence of interable and doing a considerable
ests which could be beneficial to
suburbs.
amount of independent research,
both.
Lest there be any misunderwe have found that the City of
standing, what follows is not an
This congruency can be convenBuffalo has a great deal to offer
iently
any
pardiscussed
the
conargument for or against
within
a university located on its watertext
of
locating the University in front.
ticular university site. What is
that
area
argued against are premises
Buffalo's waterfront
instead
would subordinate the interests of in Amherst.
Land Available
First, with regards to the Uniof the university to a confining,
The first consideration must be
conventionalized and excessively versity. Neither site is superior the amount of land available.
particularistic conception of “comin serving the ends of scholarThere is every indication that the
munity responsibility”. It is also ship, research and learning. And City could offer a more than
argued here that the university
neither site provides assurances sufficient amount of acreage for
cannot afford any further delay of greater academic quality the building of a large university.
in the creation of the new physachieved in a shorter time. These In fact, including land that could
assurances come from other conical facility.
be reclaimed from the Lake Erie
siderations than parcels of land. basin, the waterfront offers near
The University's Role
Locating SUNY on the waterly as much land as does the site
In The Urban Complex
front site may provide something, in Amherst. Anything that apBuffalo, in common with most
proaches 800 acres in an urban
urban areas, is faced with an
however, considerably more challenging and exciting than any setting simply must be considered
array of problems essentially not
specific quality. That is the opadequate.
of its own making, and apparently unresponsive to attempts to
portunity to realize the interNaturally, any campus built on
furnish solutions to the problems. action of an institution dedicated
the waterfront would be intensForces and actions occurring far
to the historic ideals, goals, valdeveloped, but many unifrom Buffalo frequently affect ues and aspirations of a great ively
versities
of equal or greater size
more
University, with an urban setting
the lives of its citizens
dithan
the
one projected here have
events
to
rectly than
originating in dedicated
maximizing the goals
been built in urban areas.
Buffalo. In the public sector, tne
and aspirations of a free society
all
its
for
residents.
local political structure retains
The new University of Illinois
an uncertain degree of control
Such an interaction would not Chicago Circle Campus for 20,000
over the direction Buffalo may
hinder the scholarly goals of the students will be built on a 123
University, and might enhance its acre downtown site. Cleveland
want (or need) to move; in the
pedagogical opportunities. Such has planned a new urban campus,
private sector, the degree oi conan interaction might provide new also for 20-WK) students, to be
trol locally situated is problematic. The viability of this urban
sources of insight and under built on a 200-acre waterfront
2. As SUNY moves further
along the road to greatness, it
move farther along the road to
cosmopolitanism.
3. Finally, universities tend to
create their own local communities. They are not dependent upon
cities or what not. Great universities are to be found in great
cities, but they are also to be
found in corn fields and even in

site. The Universities of Minnesota and Ohio State have added
proof to the feasibility of such
a project. Buffalo has the potential to offer considerably more
than any of these. In light of
these facts, it cannot be said
that the Buffalo waterfront is
too small for building our campus.

Soil and Drainage
When considering the technical
advantages of the waterfront location, the condition of the soil
and the problems of drainage
should be examined. Although
the shape of the area is irregular,
it is essentially level and there
are no adverse soil or subsurface
conditions that might hinder
building progress. Drainage would
be handled by the already existing sewer system of the City.
This is one hurdle that can be
eliminated in the waterfront area
while it looms rather large in
Amherst.
Cost

•!

Land

There can be little doubt that
the land in the waterfront area
will be fairly expensive. This expense, however, can be offset by
a number of factors. Urban renewal officials have indicated
that every effort would be made
to aid the university if it moves

downtown.

Close cooperation between the
City and the University would
result in large benefits accruing

from the federal government. In
other words, although it may cost
more to acquire and clear the
waterfront area, this higher price
would be offset by federal, state,
and municipal grants for the expansion of the campus as well as
aid for urban renewal.

It is quite possible that the City
would turn over all land to the
University in the area for a nominal sum since the credits obtained by the City under the
Urban Renewal Law for a project such as this could pay the
cost of the City's urban renewal
program for years to come.
Accessibility
A large university, serving the
needs of a large population,
should be located in an area that
is easily accessible for tha greatest part of the population. Although accessibility to the Amherst site is fairly good, the

lent. The site is located at the
center of the area expressway
network. The Thruway, the Skyway, the Scajaqwadi Expressway,
the Kensington Expressway and

the proposed West Side Arterial
would all facilitate (he movement
of traffic in and out of the water
front area.

The downtown site is served
by all major city and intercity
bus routes. The Greater Buffalo
International Airport is twelve

miles via expressway from the
location. The New York Central
Railroad Station is only two and
one-half miles away via local
streets. There is the possibility
of providing rail service direct
to the campus since the railroad
line runs adjacent to the Thruway.

All this adds up to a big plus
for accessibility to the downtown
site. Besides being centrally located, no commuter, from Niagara Falls or Clarence or Hamburg,
should have difficulty reaching
the waterfront and reaching it
quickly.
Supporting Facilities
Supporting facilities for the
waterfront campus are the best

in the entire Frontier. These facilities include utilities, commercial facilities, and cultural facilities. All major utilities serve the
waterfront area and there would

be no problems in providing any
(Cont’d on Pg. 4)

�Urban Campus

(Cont’d from Pg. 3)
network desired by the University. The Buffalo Police and Fire
Departments would also serve the
area.
Commercial facilities are abundant. The campus would be only
walking distance from the Buffalo
central business district. Several
large department stores, a great

number of smaller merchants,
many restaurants, and several hotels and motels would be adjacent
to the site.
The cultural facilities of the
immediate area are extensive and
could prove to be convenient for
and valuable to the University.
The main branch of the Buffalo
and Erie County Public Library,
which includes the Grosvenor
Research Library, is close at hand.
Also within walking distance are
the Studio Arena Theatre, Memorial Auditorium, and Kleinhans
Music Hall. There are several
hospitals in the area and these
could be made available for University use.
Only a short drive away from
the waterfront are the AlbrightKnox Art Gallery, the Zoological

Gardens, and the Historical Museum. Bordering the north side
of the proposed site would be
D’Youville College and the Connecticut Street Armory.
Employment and Housing
Employment opportunities for
the downtown campus would exceed anything that could be offered at the present campus or
any suburban setting. Nearness to
.

Friday, August 12, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACE FOUR

Buffalo's main business district,
as well as City and County Government offices, is certain to result in a high degree of part-time
employment and off-campus training opportunities.
Housing availability could not

be better. Married student housing could be made available in
several nearby housing projects.
Many of the new apartment projects could certainly use the faculty housing market. It is also rewarding to find that unlike many
other urban university locations,

i

.

the waterfront site is not surrounded by blight. North and
northwest of the site is an extensive housing area, one of the
older sections of the City, which
remains in fairly good condition.
The University could only
enhance the area.
Natural Baauty and Climate
For all those who are concerned with the appearance of the
University, one last point must be
considered
the natural beauty
and climate of the waterfront
area. The setting for the waterfront university could be nothing
short of dramatic. The view from
the university would stretch from
the Buffalo skyline and Harbor
to Lake Erie and the Canadian
Shore. At dusk, the student could
watch the sun setting over the
Lake rather than over Ellicott
Creek and there can be little
doubt that a waterfront university would provide a beautiful
entrance for travelers coming into
the city.
As far as climate is concerned,
the only adverse condition would
be the occasional high velocity
prevailing westerly winds which
blow across the Lake. Architectural design and landscape planning could eliminate most of
those effects. These same breezes
prevail during the summer
months and they provide Buffalo
with a most attractive summer
climate.
Waterfront Technically Preferable
Reviewing all these objective
factors, we find the waterfront
site an exciting possibility for a
new campus. The land available,
its condition and cost, the accessability, the support facilities, the
employment opportunities, the
housing availability, the natural
beauty of the area—all these combine to lead to one undeniable
conclusion: technically, the downtown site is preferable to just
about any other. One would think
that any study made would buttress this assumption. The University, however, after its “careful study” has rejected the water—

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•

•

front. No one has offered sound
reasons why.
The waterfront seems receptive
to the building of a university
and indeed it should be. The University could perform a great
service to the City of Buffalo and,
as has been shown, the City can
provide the University with the
land and facilities any university
so dearly needs to become great.
The waterfront can be the setting
for a well-planned, well-equipped,
efficient, and certainly beautiful
university. This opportunity
should not be overlooked.

Glazier's Letter

It would be hard to conceive
of a letter missing the target
more completely than one recently from one of my colleagues
in the UB math department, deploring agitation to consider a
waterfront site for the university.

All the facts in the letter are
correct. In downtown Buffalo,

Phil Cook Defense Fund
Poetry Reading Today
“Total assault on the Goon
Squads!” Public poetry reading
scheduled for Friday, August 12
in Norton 231 from noon on!
Hanna will read his latest ZAPS
on AMERICANA in a final benefit performance before his peaceful departure from these shores.
Damon Runyon says GET THE
MONEY
this is for the Phil
Cook legal defense fund: Hanna
—

will bear down with the mathematics of love-rays on the subject of fleshless 38’s wielded
goon-harassers over the bed of
University’s Non-Violent, Fingermashed Steelworker. Come with
poems and pennies. Come prepared to help.
Come to be entertained by the
story of a member of our righteous citizenry snatched from his

•sw

ways.

This is your chance to enjoy
the principle of Pay TV .
don’t miss it. (A Paid Political
Announcement can destroy YOUR
boundaries! !)
.

.

UB Alumnus Believes
Obesity to Be Metabolic

the university would be surrounded by squalor, stench, smog, architectural chaos, and bisected by
the frenetic convenience of the
Thruway and the Skyway.
These are reasons for buildMany grossly overweight peoing there. Students and faculty ple are “literally born to become
should have their noses rubbed fat,” according to a State Uniin the ugliness that Buffalo has versity at Buffalo alumnus.
created, until the entire univerDr. Irving B. Perlstein, a 1939
sity adopts as its first business graduate of the University’s
the responsibility to affect its School of Medicine, believes that
surrounding society positively.
his findings have revealed a metaClasses in literature should be bolic cause for extreme obesity.
dumped in the slum, where they He has also developed what seems
can’t avoid seeing the correto be a successful treatment for
spondence between contemporary the condition.
novels and contemporary life.
His report, presented to an
Historians should never be allowAmerican Medical Society meeted to ignore where history has ing in Chicago, said that fat peobrought us. Sociologists should ple may have “blocking” antibe immersed in the urban culture bodies which prevent their bodies
which is now inseparable from from utilizing energy-releasing
American life. Educators should thyroid, even though the hormone
find it impossible to forget for a is released in normal quantities.
moment the 50% dropout in highIn a series of experiments coner education, based partly on the ducted with guinea pigs and rabfact that children of low-income bits, Dr. Perlstein discovered that
groups quickly discover the inthe annuals gradually increased
adequacy of a college which production of thyroid antibodies
makes only accidental relations when injected with thyroglobulin,
between their life and life on and subsequently became fat.
campus.
He said that this condition in
UB now has a choice—to build humans may be triggered by such
another pastoral ivory tower into experiences as the birth of a
which the fortunate many can child, a bone fracture, a psychic
retreat from the tragic chaos of problem or an operation. Studydowntown Buffalo. Or the campus
can be downtown, where it can
TENNIS TOURNAMENT
provide an example in its own
Craig Singerman won this
architecture, and where over the
Tennis
years it can take in and send out year’s Summer Sessions
Tournament by defeating Rudy
students so aware of Buffalo’s
I-a» Afi 6-3. 6-2. and Forrest
awful actuality and marvelous
McQuitty fin
potential—in short so in love with McQuitty, 64, 6-2.
downing Lee,
Buffalo
that Buffalo will be ished second by
6-2, 6-1, in the consolation round.
changed.
—

i^^s8

sick-bed and buried in the vaults
of Official Procedure Violated
Castle, unreachable for ten hours
while his flesh rotted, denied
sanction from pain, held in escrow aganist Infinite Public Bancruptcy, deprived his ghoulish
livelihood because of all Known
Means of Social Communication.
Hear tales of the Crime of the
Century and then the Crime of
the Millenium.
ON THE SPOT a marriage will
be celebrated, a member of the
Mafiosa will fly to Rome and
Queen Ann will work her wily

ing a group of 350 fat persons
of all ages, Dr. Perlstein found
that 90% of the patients with

blocking antibody problems recalled such experiences, and
could pinpoint the start of their
subsequent weight gain.

Dr. Perlstein’s treatment, the

administering of large doses of
the oral drug T-3, a synthetic
thyroid hormone, plus a diet low
in fats and carbohydrates, but
unrestricted in protein calories,
resulted in an average weight loss
of 15 to 20 pounds per month
among his patients with the blocking antibodies.

However, he stressed the need
for continual checkup of obese
patients by a physician to be
sure that no harmful effects follow the use of T-3. Unless some
better drug was discovered, he
said, T-3 dosage might be required throughout an obese person’s life to maintain the weight
balance.
Dr. Perlstein is currently associated with the University of
Louisville School of Medicine. He
is the author of a book entitled
Diet Is Not Enough.

—

MISCELLANEOUS
GIVING AWAY to good home—two kittens, 2% months old,
tiger

or

834-0251.

—

IK

M\f

BE?
ns
A

9'
w

K%
#»

:

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He’s at HOWARDJOUtlfOnJ

FISH FRY
Tatty Boneless

Golden

Brown French Fried Potatoes ■ Cole
Slaw BTartareSauce"RollsandButter

£119
I

PERSONAL
I WILL SELL nearly all my belongings Saturday at noon at

125 Edward Street, Apt. 7. Car,
books, cases, couch, rugs, etc.
Tom Hanna.

PLAZA SHOE REPAIR
ONE STOP SERVICE
CENTER
Shoes Repaired While-U-Wait
Lanudry &amp; Drycleaning
ONE DAY SERVICE

University Plaza
TF 6-4041

*

WEDNESDAY A FRIDAY
Main, N. of Hertel

Two Locations:

Hamburgers
150
Chicken Dinner 790
-

-

Main Street &amp; Thruway
1205 Niagara Falls Blvd.

Watch for
New Concept
in

Eating Pleasure
Coming Soon!

�</text>
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                    <text>SUMMER
EDITION

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ment prepared by the Committee
will be read and presented to
American Customs officials. Cop-

ies of the statement will be sent
to President Johnson, Senators
Kennedy and Javits, local congressmen, Hanoi, and the National Liberation Front. The statement will be reprinted in next
week’s Spectrum.

Forty Canadians from Niagara
Falls, Ontario, will vigil on the
Canadian side of the Peace
Bridge. Several American peace
walkers will address the Canadian

rally.

Draper thinks that “the antiwar sentiment in this country and
around the world is growing. The
only way wars will ever cease is
for citizens to demonstrate to
their governments their opposition to war as a means of solving
political questions.”

CNVA invites those interested
in affirming their belief in peace
to participate in the Walk, either
for the entire distance or for
as long as possible. In the event
of extreme heat, CNVA will provide salt pills and beverages.
Transportation from the Peace
Bridge back to campus will also
be provided.

The following statement was
issued on August 3 by State University of New York President
Samuel B. Gould regarding expansion plans for the State University at Buffalo:
“It has been brought to my attention that some question has
been raised as to the intention of
State University to carry out its
announced decision of June, 1964,
to expand the State University of
New York at Buffalo into a new
campus in Amherst. I am in full
accord with this decision reached
by the State University trustees
and the Council of the University

at Buffalo after careful study. I
assure everyone concerned that
planning for the continued use of
the Main Street campus and for
the development of the Amherst
campus will be expedited as rapidly as all circumstances permit.
I hope that this statement will
put an end to any further speculation which can only do a disservice to the University, to the
people of Amherst who have
made us feel welcome and to

the thousands of students from
Western New York and all over
the State who need these educational facilities.”

An Editorial
N/l

K

V

M

S

T

K

-E.

E_

T0TM_

Reopen the Site Issue

T

:

157 CA.R.S

SCKLE.: l"«.

\00-O'

One expects more from the State University of New
York than President Samuel Gould’s statement regarding
the expansion plans of this campus. Dr, Gould’s statement
indicates that he is ignorant of the actual proceedings leading to the decision to build in Amherst. Gould also shows
a disturbing willingness to cut off debate on the issue, an
action completely inimical to the long university tradition
of inquiry and debate.
Gould states that he is “in full accord with this decision
[to locate the campus in Amherst] reached by the State

University trustees and the Council of the University of
Buffalo after careful study.” That Gould considers his
sources of information amenable to a “careful study,” only
indicates how uninformed he is on the whole issue. Reliable
sources cast doubt on his statement that the UB Council
ever debated the issue. And the State University Trustees
spent but one meeting (June 11, 1964) to approve the Amherst site unanimously. Certainly Dr. Gould cannot consider such facility to be the product of “careful study.” In
fact, the only careful study seems to have been the site
CK«
ToT\U ■
evaluation
of Vincent Moore from January to April of 1964.
OO
O
Moore
passed his report on, without recommendation, to a
Drawings showing locations of parking facilities to be completed
by September.
“central staff” headed by Dr. Lawrence Murray, now Vice
President of the State University system. It was Murray’s
committee that made the recommendation of the Amherst
site which the Trustees approved. Since the records of
Murray’s committee and the Trustee’s meeting have never
been made public, we can never know exactly why the
Parking facilities amounting to
that they would be temporary in Amherst site was chosen. All the arguments
presently being
over 600 additional spaces are “the sense that when this camproffered in the defense of the Amherst site are inadequate.
currently under construction or pus is converted into a Health
planned for completion by SepScience center, there will unJust last week, Dr. William O’Connor of the UB Foundation,
tember. Construction has begun doubtedly be changes."
on an expansion of the student
presumably making a policy statement for the State UniverAccording to Mr. Sarra the
lots on Main Street for 300 parksity, called both expansion to Grover Cleveland Park or the
University has needed the new
ing spaces. The parking lot in
lots ever since last year when
front of Capen Hall will also be
dowtown waterfront area “totally inadequate.” The reason
the Buffalo Fire Department comexpanded to accommodate sevgiven was that of “the scope of the project.” Any competent
eral more rows of faculty parkplained about parking in the roadways.
The
next
Sarra
that
Mr.
explained
medical-dental
lot
ing.
architect could build a campus on the area available in downto Capen Hall will be rearranged
this is especially a problem in
to provide for more student parkthe winter when the lot sizes are town Buffalo. The Universities of Minnesota, Illinois, and
reduced due to snow plowing.
ing.
Ohio State have amply proven that campuses of a size even
The State University will pay
greater than the one projected for here can be built in
parking
are
to
be
for
the
new
facilities
out
New lots
scheduled
built in the circle at the Main of monies set aside for “rehabilurban areas. Available land is not a good argument and,
itation.” ABC Contractors have
Street entrance to the campus
and along the west lawn of Hayes been retained in an agreement after close scrutiny, should fool no one.
-•WO

ViXOwTY

o-t_-wv«.T\-VC,MT

:

At the Peace Bridge, a state-

NO. 55

Gould Scotches
Location Debate

CH.OS6Y

RR
I

Anarchism and Th#
(See Page 8&gt;

7^

The Buffalo chapter of the
Committee for Non-violent Action
(CNVA) will hold its first major
independent action tomorrow in
the form of a Hiroshima Day
Peace Walk. According to Will
Draper, a spokesman for the
group formed last spring by UB
pacifists, the Walk will be held
for “the dual purposes of protesting United States’ involvement in Vietnam in particular
and the continual build-up of
arms in general. We hope to get
governments to see peaceful alternatives to war.”

ferson to Best. At Jefferson and
Best, the Masten Street Armory
will be picketed. The Walk will
proceed to Best and Main, and
then to Main and North, where
an Army Recruiting Center will
be picketed. From there, walkers
will march down North to Porter
and on to the Peace Bridge. The
distance of the route is about 10
miles and will take from five to
six hours.

YQRXAT~BUFFALr

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, AUGUST 5. 1966

CNVA to Hold
Peace Walk
Tomorrow,
Hiroshima Day

Local walkers will meet at Norton Fountain on the UB campus
at 8 a.m. for a silent vigil in
memory of the 78,000 Japanese
killed by the atomic bomb blast
of August 6, 1945. At 9 a.m. the
Walk will proceed down Bailey
Avenue to Kensington, where the
Army Recruiting Station will be
picketed briefly. From there, the
route will follow Kensington to
Main, Main to Jefferson, and Jef-

H

OF NEW

■"

VOLUME 16

Walkers in the Buffalo area
will find themselves part of international demonstrations against
war and the armaments race.
Hundreds of thousands of people
are expected to protest in the
United States alone. August 6
has traditionally been a day of
war resistance. Thi» year it marks
another International Day of Protest against the war in Vietnam.

UNIVERSITY

STATE

\"ma

\

Additional Parking Facilities
To Claim More Trees, Lawn

Hall near the Old Faculty Club

building.

The lots have been described

by Mr. James Sarra, Supervisor
of Construction and Utilities, and
Mr. John Warren, Coordinator of
Planning and Development, as
“temporary.” The new lots will
have neither curbing or blacktop
covering. Mr. Warren explained

whereby the University buys the

materials and rents the equipment and men from the contrac-

tor.

The request

for funds from
was made
through the Office of Business
Affairs. The planning for the
parking lot sites was that of Planning and Development.
the State University

The questions remain: why was the Amherst site originally chosen and why is the decision not to become the sub-

ject of debate?
The most disquieting aspect of Gould’s statement is
the peremptory manner in which he attempts to cut off
(Coat'd on P. 4)

�SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

Friday, August 5, 1966

Urban Extension Center to Be Established
Five area colleges this year will
launch a project aiming at the
establishment of a “Cooperative
Urban Extension Center” to promote university-community dialogue on such local problems as
poverty, integration, transportation, government and planning.
The prime contractor of the
program is State University at
Buffalo's evening division, Millard Fillmore College, supported
by Canisius College, D’Youville
College, Erie County Technical
Institute and Rosary Hill College.
It is being financed by a $30,000
grant provided under Title I of
the Higher Education Act of
1965 which calls for community
service and urban extension.
The immediate concern of proleaders, according to Dr.
Robert F. Berner, Millard Fillmore College Dean and initiator
of the project, is organizing the
Cooperative Urban Extension Center. which will operate under an
executive board comprised of
University and governmental and
community agency representatives.
gram

Center headquarters will be
situated in downtown Buffalo,
one suggested location being the
Eagle Street building now occupied by the State University at
Buffalo’s Law School. The Law
School has offered a minimal
amount of space as preliminary
to an eventual takeover by the
Center upon the present occupant’s move to the University’s
Amherst campus.
At first serving

as

a university
community meeting ground for
defining and analyzing urban
problems, the Center will eventually be utilized as a base for
training community leaders, who
then in turn will train other po-

tential leaders.

Dr. Berner said the program
was organized at an ad hoc advisory committee meeting held
earlier this year and attended by
representatives of the participating colleges, as well as community leaders from the Mayor’s Of-

fice and Common Council, the
City Planning Committee, the
Community Welfare Council, the
Commission on Human Relations

NDEA Checks Arrive;
Aid Office Reorganizing
After two months, the first
checks from NDEA loans have
arrived in the Office of Financial
Aid.

When asked why the actual
took so long, Mrs.
Norma Haas, Executive Secretary to the Committee of Financial Aid to Students, explained the process to the Spectrum.
“We cannot make an award until
the student has registered.” Federal law requires a summer
school student to register for at
least six hours to be eligible for
the loan. It takes from two to
three weeks for Admissions and
Records to determine whether or
not a student has been properly
registered. Once approved, the
student is put on an agenda and
is eventually called in to sign
a promissory note and loyalty
oath. A voucher is then sent to
Albany where it takes from six
to eight weeks for the first check
to arrive. The University, in the
meantime, ma yprovide tuition
waiver and bookstore credit if
the student applicant has filed
on time. “We teel a moral obligation to see that they’re paid."
explained Mrs. Haas.
Both Mrs. Haas and Dr. An
payment

thony Lorenzetti, newly appoint-

Approximately 120 people from
the East Coast and from Puerto
Rico and the Virgin Islands are
expected to participate in the
program. Dr. Carl Minnich, Director of the Amherst High School
Adult School, is Project Director
and Dr. Nicholas Kish, Jr., Assistant Dean of the University’s Millard Fillmore College, is Adminis-

trative Director.

A $36,000 grant from the U.S.
Office of Education, administered
by the National University Extension Association, will provide
•utstanding consultants for the
institute.

The committee has drawn up
a list of specific problem areas
in the community which might
warrant an educational type of
program, but found the most distinct need to be “the bringing
together of community leaders
from government and community
agencies, along with college personnel, on a somewhat regular
basis to focus attention on community problems, to discuss problem areas with faculty resource
specialists, to identify areas for
needed fact-finding through research, to plan educational programs in order to gain certain
ends and to recommend solutions
to problems wherever feasible.”
This need has led to the incorporation into the first phase of
the program a series of dialogue
seminars on community problems.

The series will be initiated with
two conferences to be held this
year.

Said Dr. Berner, “The absence
of such a forum at present has
limited the attempts of individuals and of independent groups in
their attacks upon the problems
of the urban community.”

The first conference will be
entitled “The Impact of Social
Factors on the Expanding Niagara Frontier” and will deal with
the lack of coordination between

ed Director of Financial Aid and
Coordinator of the Economic Op-

check into the Admissions and
Records process to see if it might
be speeded up.

Dr. Lorenzetti explained that

many of the complaints that come
to his office are valid and that
the office is undergoing a reorganization to meet

increased demands for financial aid from students. “The growth of the financial aid office has been tremendous over the past few years. It
has become a strong and integral
part of the student’s life. We are
adding more services and hope
to provide belter service. Like
the rest of the University, we arc
suffering growing pains.”
Approximately 90% of the student body is dependent fully or

in part for financial aid either
from NY State scholarships or

Memorandum VI
Meeting of July 29, 1966

Present were seven members
and a temporary recording secretary provided by one of the
members.

The first item of business was
the summer budget. The cochairmen reported that they had
submitted a request for funds to
the Faculty-Student Association.
The Task Force decided to withdraw the application since the
Task Force is an all University
committee and the FSA derives
its monies from student assessments. The committee therefore
Headed'to expend minimal but
necessary funds for operating

expenses.

The Institute is entitled, “Adult
Basic Education Teacher Training
Institute." The purpose, Dr. Minnich said, is to prepare the teacher trainees who will be responsible for training the teachers
who will, in turn, then teach
undereducated adults.
The participants will spend 40
hours a week in the classroom,
on field trips, and in special evening meetings. Of the 32 New
York State participants 11 teachers have been selected from the
Buffalo area.

One of the objectives of this
first conference, as stated in the
prcposal submitted to the federal
government, is “to bring together
social scientists and physical planners and thus to encourage consideration of human as well as
architectural aspects in renewal

or housing projects.”

The conference will also promote participation of indigenous
leaders in the planning effort.

during the 1966-67 academic year.
It is proposed to recruit and select about 30 worker-leaders at

least 50% of whom will be indigenous to the low income, minority group areas, and the balance of whom will be volunteer
workers. The program is designed
to provide these non-professional
leaders with new skills and attitudes and thereby improve their
capacity to serve as supervisors

and/or program evaluators.
Professional staff from the participating schools will be assigned areas of specialized training

The second conference will be
projection of “The Niagara
A
Frontier in the Year 2000
Utopian View,” and will combine
ideas of community leaders and
university personnel in drawing
up a hypothetical blueprint of
a modern Niagara Frontier megolopolis of the next century. By

for which their present curriculum recommends them. Erie
County Technical Institute could
provide courses in law enforcement and fire administration
training, and Canisius, D’Youville
and Rosary Hill may provide
courses oriented toward the social
and behavioral sciences.

program leaders hope to be able
to isolate short-range objectives
for immediate action.

“All the institutions expressed
interest and concern about the
problems inherent in urban renewal and development, as well
as problems related to geriatrics,
housing and integration,” Dr.
Berner said.

a

—

looking at long range projections,

Leadership training activities
envisioned as the second phase
of the program, will consist of
courses offered by the staff of
the Cooperative Urban Extension
Center aimed at educating those
already active in social, civic and
governmental organizations in the
methods of training others who
are potential leaders.

One such Leadership Training
Program will be implemented

Of the Center’s program, the
submitted proposal stated, “These
functions do indeed require college level resources; and the colleges will indeed grow in stature
as their faculties become involved
in the solution of community
problems.”

with plans to resubmit its budget
to the next administration.
Discussion then turned to securing a permanent office for the
Task Force and hiring a part-time
secretary for the remainder of
the summer. The co-chairmen
agreed to investigate both mat
ters and to report to the committee at the next meeting.
Professor Sapp then reported
on the meeting of the Hearings
Committee held on July 26. At
that time the committee completed the announcement of the
hearings scheduled for August
10 and IX and discussed how the
hearings are to be conducted.
ings

was set

up according

to

which hearings will be held once
every two weeks with the day
alternating between Wednesday
and Thursday.
A member of the Organizational Analysis Committee then reported. Mr. Miller, Co-Chairman
of the committee, and Mr. Darrow had communicated with Dr.
Anderson both by. letter and by
an informal meeting with him.
Dr. Anderson made available to
the committee documents published to date by the Office of Institutional Research which are
pertinent to the Task Force mandate and agreed to attend the
August 5 meeting of the Task
Force to answer questions about
procedures.

Music Dept.

Concert

loans of various kinds.

Participants selected by their
State Directors of Adult Education will receive government stipends for board, room and travel

social and physical planning in
urban renewal projects.

TASK FORCE

portunity Program on campus,
plan to go to Albany on Monday
to find out why the new Albany
IBM system concerning student
loan applications has become so
lackadaisical. They also plan to

Adult Education Institute
To Train Teachers Here
A monthlong Institute designed to train instructors who will
be preparing teachers of adult
basic education classes will be
held at the State University at
Buffalo during August.

and the Commission on Human
Rights, and the Commissioner of
County Works.

The Music Department will
present a Program of Sextets for
Wind Quartet and Piano on Wednesday, Aug. 10, at Baird Recital
Hall from 1 to 2 p.m.
Performers in the program include: Robert Mols (flute), Ronald
Richards (oboe), James Pyne
(clarinet), Lowell Shaw (French
horn), Nelson Dayton (bassoon)
and Carlo Pinto (piano).
The program will include “Sex-

tet”

by Willem

Pijper. “Sara-

bande et Menuet (from the Suite.
Op. 24)” by Vincent DTndy, “Suite
for Winds and Continuo" by Samuel Scheldt (transcribed by Gerd
Ochs) and "Sextet (1932-1939)" by
Francis Poulenc.

Fields Reading
A concert and reading by Mr.
Edward Fields will take place in
the Dorothy Haas Lounge, Norton
Union, on August 10 at 8 p.m.
Mr. Fields, a New Yorker, had
a book published. Stand Up
Friand With Me, by Grove Press
in 1962 which won the Lament
Prize.

All Quiet on the Home-Front?

�Friday, August S, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE THREE

A Review: 'Top Hat' and 'Pavane for Minstrel'
(reviewed by J. A. LaRue)
Top Hat and Pavana for a Dead-

Pan Minstrel demonstrate the
considerable brilliance of Paul
both as author
C
and director. These one-act plays
were presented in Baird Hall last
weekend and will be repeated
this weekend.
One-act plays are, to my mind,
frequently disappointing;* they
are often too sketchy, too quaint,
while lacking substance. The
genre is, in fact, something akin
to a Chinese meal—tasty enough,

but it leaves you ravenous about
an hour later. Carter-Harrison
happily transcends the limitations
of this genre and gives us something lasting as well as immedi-

ately satisfying.
Top Hat, the first of the two
plays presented, represents something of an archetypal situation
along the lines of woman versus
man. Top Hat, to put it most
blatantly, relates the sexual Odyssey of a middle-aged woman with
the help of a tramp, who supplies
the potency for a husband too
busy earning money to be entertaining. The woman, played competently but not with sufficient
lasciviousness by Bryna Weiss,
finds the tramp in a public park
where she customarily goes to
enjoy the primates. She deliberately seduces the tramp and then
plays with him like a Cheerio
champion bringing her yo-yo expertly around the world. Sexual
imagery and connotations are
throughout; indeed, they form,
in some sense, the very substance
of the play. However, they are
not handled clumsily, as is frequently the case on the American
stage, but with a certain deft

grace which translates the work
into one long sensual dance.
Some members of the audience
did become a bit huffy at times
(perhaps when their own particular neuroses were rubbed the
wrong way). Be that as it may,
one can hardly become incensed
at the overt sexuality of the production when the woman’s defense of her hedonistic pursuit
of pleasure is presented so eloquently: “Why pervert the essential vibrations of one’s flesh?”
Why indeed? She admits that she
only practices temperance for future enjoyment (as do we all, I
suspect).

The tramp silently does his
is wont to have her little complaints while the wondrous journey is being made: “I hate to
complain, but are we getting
somewhere?” None the less, the
tramp perseveres time and again
and ably assists her to get over
the hump and reach the rich summit of her pleasure. But while
performing this (k)nightly task,
he naturally debilitates himself,
and we watch his tragic demise.
And what could be more tragic
than a coffee-grinding man on
his way out? The tramp brings
to mind Nelson Algren’s pathetic,
washed-out Dove Linkhorn. Joe

Sordetto did a masterful job in
the mime role of the tramp and
his mime song was beautifully
coordinated with the off-stage
sound. Rich LeCastre, as the
musician, overlooked a 11 these
goings-on and ably interpreted
the splendid musical score by
Bill Penn, who achieved a nearperfect synchronization of sound
with the text. The play betrayed
a certain Beckett-like emptiness
and even the silences gave the
impression of a carefully orchestrated syncopation, while effective mime helped to carry the
burden of the story line.
If Top Hat was a bit sensual for
the usual Baird Hall audience,
then Pavane for a Dead-Pan Minstrel was even more so. For this
play deals with the very manifest
hustling of a young lady by two
men, a white in black-face and
a black in white-face. For me this
play is by far the more disturbing of the two. A white and a
black play an elaborate game of
hide-and-seek with themselves
and with society. Carter-Harrison
makes much out of the ensuing
confusion and loss of identity.
Both at times forget their appropriate masks and begin to act in
a confused and contradictory
manner. But significantly enough
it is always the white-faced Mr.
Brown who condescendingly orders the black-faced Mr. Smith
to call the waiter. The immediacy
of the situation to contemporary
America could not be more apparent, and yet at the same time
a true universal meaning is to be
found, for those masks could be
anything: they are all the ploys
and hypocrisies which people
adopt to shield themselves from
the hostile world.
The point of this elaborate
game is to discover who, black
or white, will be able to make it
with the first available chick who
turns up. Thus we are down to
the nitty-gritty, the reason why
the white man is supposedly afraid of Black Power. Nevertheless
one wonders whether black-face
or white-face makes any difference, inasmuch as the two males
themselves agree (in a spoof of
the sexuality implied in so many
American commercials); “It’s
what’s up front that counts.”
The necessary female arrives
in the shape of pretty Polly (who
may or may not want a cracker),
played with an incredibly convincing naivete by Christina Hamage, whose honeyed Southern
accent adds yet another rub to
the script. It is not long before
Mr. Smith and Mr. Brown fall
over her like bushido cocks
wrangling over a hen. The instrument of seduction is to be
the dance, which is exquisitely
choreographed by Eleo Pomare
(the persuasiveness of the actorsas dancers attests to the thoroughness of Mr. Pomare’s intense
training). In keeping with their
masks, Mr. Smith (in black-face)
tries the rhythm and blues approach, whereas Mr. Brown (in

Research Writers Bureau
To Peddle Student Papers
New York—A unique service
fof evaluating and marketing college research papers, called the
Research Writers’ Bureau Ltd.,
was established in the metropolitan area recently in response to
widespread demand amongst publishers for articles on academic
subjects. The firm is reported to
be the first organization of its
kind to concentrate its efforts
entirely on selling campus-written material.
According to

Richard

Fennelly,

director of the literary agency,
there are thousands upon thousands of periodicals, ranging

from

the

smallest

journals to

some of the largest “slick” maga-

zines, which need well-researched
student manuscripts. He reports
that some of these pay up to 10
cents per word for this material.
"Academic journals are usually
the first and too often the last
place students consider as an
outlet for their work,” Fennelly
says. “This is lamentable because
there are numerous semi-popular
magazines which pay decent
money for research writing. They
cover a wide field of interest,
including science religion, history, medicine and business.”

Scene from Pavane for a Dead-Pan Minitrel

makes use of the classical “white man’s music.” In a
phantasmagoric seduction scene
Christina Ramage is thrown pitilessly back and forth between
the two dancing minstrels. Miss
Ramage deserves considerable applause for her ability to shift
fluidly from classical to rock and
vice-versa.
Frank Richardson, as Mr. Smith,
and Lakin Hill, as Mr. Brown,
both convey the appropriate
white-face)

moods of cynicism, sensuality,
and crassness. An indication of
their success is the frequency
with which the role-change between black and white becomes
confusing. Hayward Allen is also
good as the very personification
of a dumb Polack barkeep. Once
again the music of Bill Penn is
outstanding. As for the outcome,
I shall not be so unthinking as
to reveal the result of this brutal game.

These two one-act plays constitute one of the best theatrical
offerings of the year in Buffalo.
The author-director is in complete
technical control of his material
and actors: his use of language
is rich, highly salacious (to borrow from one of the author’s own
puns), and full of tantalizing ambiguities. Anyone who is interested in theater should see these
plays before this important talent
leaves campus..

Jazz Impressions
By RON NAPLES

The “in crowd” met again the
other night, but is wasn’t the
same. The new Ramsey Lewis
Trio made it’s first local appearance at Buffalo’s Melody Fair on
Sunday. July 24. The old trio,
featuring bassist El Dee Young
and drummer Red Holt, broke
up early in June. The new men
are Cleveland Eaton on Bass and
Maurice White on drums.
Thc_trio has done a good job
Sin keeping the" “new" Ramsey
Lewis sound considering they’ve
been playing together for only
a month. “The ’In Crowd’ ”, and
“Hang On Sloopy,” Lewis’ two
biggest commercial successes
sounded basically the same, perhaps because they featured only
Lewis on piano.

There was a marked absence in

the rhythm section on “Love
Theme From Spartacus.” “West
Side Story Medley,” and “The
Party’s Over.” as once again
only Lewis’ talent made up the
difference. In semi-fairness to the
new men. a group does not become cohesive in the amount of
time that they’ve been together,
but the old group had a sound
going for them that this group
will never come close to. The
old group played together for 14
years and the names Young and
Holt were automatically associat
ed with that of Lewis.
Virtually every

area of college

study has some representation

in

this type of periodical, according

to the linn’s director.
The new agency, which does
not return manuscripts unless
first queried with a description
of the paper, is located at 95-31
104 St., Ozone Park, New York.
WANTED

Female expert in trivia, local television station appearance, contact Henry Lawrence, 831-3405
or 834-0033.

In time. Eaton, a fine bassist
and White, a fast young drummer, will continue to give Lewis
solid support and not ruin his
new image. Lewis will not hurt
financially as a result of the
split (he will probably gain). But
he will never again reach the
artistic heights the old group
had reached. The new men lack
the versatility of the old, (Young
on cello, and Holt on tambourine
and wood-flute) and this naturally gives the group less freedom
of

expression.

But

then

again,

how much freedom do you need
on “Ain’t That Peculiar" and
"High-Heeled Sneakers.”
As an individual who has been
a Ramsey Lewis fan for many
years and one who hasn’t missed
a Buffalo performance of his
since 1960, Ineither like nor dislike the new commercial Ramsey
Lewis. I no longer look forward
to every new album or performance, but I will still buy his records and attend his shows simply
because the fine talent of Ramsey Lewis is still there.
As I stated a few weeks ago,
Ramsey obviously is looking for
a saleable item. He’s found it.
The results are more money, but
a loss of something possibly
greater than money. Ramsey replied very quietly when I stated
that I was very sorry to hear of
the break: “It’s just like a mar-

riage, when you break up your
friends always feel bad, but it's
one of those things,” he replied.
Jazz-singer Jon Hendricks echoed my sentiments by saying,
“It’s like seeing one of the foun-

dations of the earth crumble,
there probably will never be a
tighter group.” This is an indication of the respect jazz people
had for the group.
Ramsey Lewis plays for the
(people, this is obvious (and not
wrong) and he knows what type
to hear. The audience at Melody
was one that was 90% white
and predominantly young. Ramsey responded with a program of
popular favorites such as “They’ll
Never Be Another You,” “Satin
Doll,” "Shadow of Your Smile,”
"Wade In The Water,” “Song For
My Father," and "j Ain’t Got
Nobody." Only once did he attempt a "funky” blues theme on
"Salute to Ray Charles.” Missing
were such familiar blues pieces
as “C.C. Rider," “Lil Lira Jane,"
"Look-A-Here,” and "Somethin’
You Got.”
The crowd responded favorably, remained respectfully quiet
throughout most of the numbers,
and showed by their applause
that they thoroughly enjoyed the
114 hour performance. I applauded the still-evident genius and
talent of Ramsey Lewis and the

Fair

efforts of Eaton and White, but
it just wasn’t the same.

Grant to Establish
Pathology PhD Program
A $360,000 grant has been received by the State University at
Buffalo's Department of Pathology for the support of a training
program designed to lead to the
awarding of the Ph.D. degree in
experimental pathology.
The five-year grant from the

National Institute of the Division

of General Medical Sciences will
finance the training this year of
seven students who have received
bachelor's degrees and one medically qualified trainee, and three
bachelor’s degree students and
one post-doctoral trainee each
year thereafter.

�Friday, August S, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

'oCetter

to

the Editor

The Problem of Fines
TO THE EDITOR:

A few months ago I was charged with something around $200
in parking fines. In the process
of obtaining a petition form, I
came upon a secretary in the
office of the bursar engrossed in
typing out bills for parking tickets alone. I believe this was her

only job. A campus policeman
came in with a batch of at least
twenty tickets (this was only midday) and, I swear, he remarked
with a smile something &lt;of the
kind that business was good. It
was toward the end of the semester so the student court was no
longer in session. I was told by
the secretary that my petition to

have my fines waived would be
given to a summer parking com-

mittee to be reviewed. Did she
know who was on the committee?
Well, some members of the administration. Did she know or
could anyone in the office tell
me approximately how much
money was brought in each year
from parking tickets? No. Did she
know where the money went? No.
Could she find out from someone
else in the office? No. Did she
feel that her life expectancy was
in any way reduced by being in
that office; No.

al justifications, followed by an
offer to discuss the matter in
more detail. A few days ago I
received a form (over a month
later) with a check mark next to

the word “denied”. Next to it
the word “granted” was checked
followed by $20, indicating that
they were giving back $20. Well,
being a thoroughly indoctrinated
U.B. student, a few days time
was almost enough to dull my
pain and allow the poison of
apathy to take its course. (I may
still). It was with some effort
that I decided to follow up this
decision and find out just who
the hell made it. Well, I did.
Get this. It was not made by
a “parking committee”, that is,
unless one man can be called a
committee, which I’m sure our
administrators think. The decision was made by the chief of
security, Murray; just the unbiased rfeview board a U.B. student could hope for and expect.
I will thank him for initialing
the document. The end, however,
isn’t yet. I can appeal this to
somebody in the fall, no doubt
ad infinitum. Well, I would just
like to draw a few observations
from this tale of misery.
I have

Well, being in a relatively stable mood, I decided to direct my
frustration into the composition
of a petition that would stir the
consciences of the most callousbuttocked, university-oriented administrators. However, in its finished form my petition was not
the ass-kissing oratory a middleclass boy would be expected to
produce to get his old man's
money back from some real authorities. Nor was it venomous
and full of vindiction and vulgarities. It was instead an admission
of my crime against the school
administration and an honest explanation of it with fairly ration-

learned that at least

some administration policies and

decisions can be traced back to
individuals (or individual, I
should say). They are not drawn
from out of ether nor are they
just based on precedent. An administrator, I think, does have a
mind; he knows many rules but
not all of them; he knows numerous rules that are in contradiction to one another. There
just has to be a certain amount
of selectivity in his decision.
Precedent does not account for
parking fines because when U.B,
was founded there were no cars,
so someone changes a rule
through personal initiative. I’m

trying to show that this shit about
precedent is just that. In short,
someone makes a decision so it
would seem someone is responsible. But, of course, we know that
that’s not how our administration
operates. Oh, maybe they’ll admit
responsibility, but see how many
offices you go through trying to
get an admittedly lousy decision
changed. A student is responsible
for his actions and if he gets out
of line he’s very liable to get his
ass tacked. An administrator
makes a shitty decision but until
enough people are burned, which
may be never, no sanctions are
levied against him . . . because
you either don’t find him or he’s
supported by other administrators. Are you with it?

The administrators, who sup-

posedly have the student needs
in mind, end up telling the stu-

dent what his needs are instead
of serving the student. My crime’s
punishment can be justified by
showing that if enough students
disobeyed, parking would be nearly an impossible situation. Well,
it could just be that the campus
cops make parking seem mere
of a problem than it is. I would
like to know how much and
where the money collected from
fines goes and the salaries of all
the people involved who help impose the fines. No doubt the university isn’t dumb enough to
make this a losing proposition
of keeping the kids in line for
their own good. And you know
damn well that this student body
served so well by the administration doesn't see half of the money
collected in its behalf.

Handel Concerto Cycle
Continues This Sunday
The second and third concerts
in the Handel Concerto Grosso
Cycle of the Buffalo Symphonette
will be performed in the Mary
Seaton Room of Kleinhans Music
Hall on Sunday, Aug. 7, at 2:30.
The Symphonette will play, in
addition to Handel, music of the
contemporary American, Alan
Hovhaness, and compositions of
Gabriel F a u r e, John Stanley,
Tommaso Albinoni, and Maurice
Ravel.
The next concert in the series
will be in the Albright-Knox Art
Gallery on Sunday, Aug. 21, at
4:00 p.m. Fred Ressel will conduct, and principal instrumentalists of the Buffalo Philharmonic
Orchestra will appear as soloists.

Tickets for the August 7 concert are available at Denton, Cot-

tier and Daniels and at Norton
Hall (U.B.), price $2.50, and $1.00
for students. The August 21 concert at the Gallery is free, sponsored by the Art Gallery and
the recording fund of the American Federation of Musicians.
The Buffalo Symphonette, with
Fred Bessel as founder and conductor, is in its 19th season and
is looking forward to the time
when Western New York has its
own complete summer festival of
the arts. Its offerings of the
complete cycle of Handel Concert! Grossi is attracting much
attention as a demonstration of
our musical resources and the
popular support they command.

I’m tired of meeting the administrators on their own ground,
playing acording to their rules,
but I find I have little ground
of my own because they have
the power to control so much of
my existence.
I think the problem of fines
is most crucial because it is one
of the few areas in student life
where the administration can
daily impose its power without

challenge.
I would like to hear from other
students on the issue of fines,
possibly a potent lobby could be
formed.

Scene front Top Hat

Peter Teichner

'H

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Mr. Joseph C. Paffie, Norton

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Hall Recreation Director, reminds
all students that the recreational
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Aug. lit from 2:30-5:30 p.m.
The air-conditioned recreation
area has table tennis, billiards,
and bowling facilities.
All the bowling lanes have
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tables are reconditioned and it
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own future enjoyment.

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�Friday, August 5, 1966

SPECTRUM

riLM
WHAT IS A CRITIC

.

By Marty

?

Since my last review appeared on “Page
teft,” I have been asked by many people
what qualifies one to be a movie reviewer.
I thought for a while and then decided on
this answer. Nothing! Well, O.K., you need
some experience in theater, drama, directing,
acting and English and a desire to write, but
other than that, anyone can be a reviewer
(and usually everyone is). The reviewer must
create a following and this is done if his
values in film or art are the same or closely
related to one’s own belief. One may then
use his beliefs as a yardstick id deciding
what films to see. The second “use” of a
reviewer is to be a “conversation piece on
paper.” By this I mean someone to compare
your own views of a film with and in this
mental discussion hope to obtain a better
knowledge of the film, one’s own values,
and to decide again if the critic’s ideas and
yours correspond. I prefer the second choice.
It’s more exciting and stimulating. The reason that I bring all this up is because I would
like to discuss a film that has already closed.
I cannot sell it anymore, but maybe you
would like to compare notes.
The film is by Mekas and was included
in the Circle Art Underground Film Festival.
“Hallelujah, the Hills,” was one of the ten
best films I have ever seen. On occasion I
come out of a cinema saying: “Oh, man, if
that were my film, I would never make another it’s too good to try to top!” I said
this when seeing “The Gospel According to
Saint Matthew” and not again for 3 months
until I saw H.T.H.
-

I disagree with the assistant manager of
the Circle Art who said that it was light and
funny. Two adjectives like that could only
partially cover this masterpiece. The film
tells the story of two young men who at one
time loved the same girl. Each saw her differently, and through a series of flashbacks
this is transmitted. However, this is only the
start of what Mekas is trying to say, as we
view a trip of the imagination of the two
young heroes. (I am sorry that names were
not available in advertising material). The
understanding of two people, especially two
males, who have the acquaintance of the
‘same’ girl is a gateway or pass to freedom
of mind, spirit, body, and the key to life.
In a relationship with women, as revealed
in the film, one is constantly putting on a
mask, and seeing life as a camera. One
watches oneself and says “if this is love this
is how I will act,” and in acting in this fashion one will enjoy life. This is the ultimate
middle-class idea of love, laughing and jumping in the hills, hallelujah! It’s great if it
could happen without the participants “thinking” it, to let go in an experience so completely that you are not aware of it until
it is over. Because of my own views and experiences, I find that this total involvement
can be achieved much more readily with a
person of the same sex. I think Mekas agrees.
In the film, when the gentlemen thought
of the girl, they imagined a situation with
themselves being totally free and the girl
following along. But as hard as she tried she
could never really join them because of the
demands placed on her by society and never
being able to let go (mentally and sexually)!
In the film, as is so often true in life, the
blame is placed on the parents, and the fact
that they would be disappointed if she fell
in love with a nut (and what real person
except for a night manager of Norton isn’t?)

H.T.H. traces the trip of the two boys
in their adventures with many toys, camping,
shooting, and women. We place in our mind
the ideal woman and how life would be after
one “knows” her, but it can never come true,

Sadoff

people, because all mates are, horrible as it
it to say, human type people.
We put women into a mental film, each
one having a different role, and the great
thing about them is that they are supplied
to us in such huge numbers as if from trees,
and the original sin is not with them but in
the scripts of our own films.

“Hallelujah, the Hills” may sound to
those who have not seen it like a bore. But
it was the most beautiful, wholly enjoyable
and fast paced film I have ever seen. The
photography of the film was excellent, winter was never so beautiful anywhere. The
cutting was original and exciting and employed many gimmicks, but unlike Godard
they were all necessary to the film. Boxes
within the frame single out the action without forcing the camera in for a typical close
up. The camera was completely mobile and
helped bring the audience into the, film.
All who know realize that my favorite

type of film is the silent flick, and my fav-

PAGE FIVE

'cjCetterA

to

Site Issue Not Closed
TO THE EDITOR:
“Oh dear what can the matter
be, someone is rocking the boat?"
So implied Dr. Samuel Gould in
attempting to end all debate on
the location of the future campus
for our illustrious university. One
can expect that a similar attitude
will prevai) regarding the style
of the new campus. The best we
can hope for on the rolling
plains of Amherst is Bureaucratic
Modern, such as Harpur College,
or a smattering of “neo-shoe box"
like Norton Union.
Yes, progress is the watch word
of the State University of New
York at Buffalo. Perhaps the Task
Farce (intentional) might make a
recommendation, in good taste of
course, and with respectful language. for permission to recommend respectfully the size of the
wash rooms at the new campus.
It would only be a polite request
and thus would not be tampering
with the managerial prerogatives
of Albany, President Furnas, or

Dr. Rowland.

Let we who wishfully

our

call
orite question is why can’t it be done today. selves members of the academic
can
It
and was by Mekas. The slapstick was community admit to our real
quick, original and was this way because status here in Buffalo. We are
it was on two levels. Physically it was really the janitors, custodians for those
like titles, of the factory
funny and could be separated from the film who
operated by Hayes Hall, in holdbut was important in creating a mood and ing for the bureaucrats in Albany.
contributing to the story line.

The acting was super—all this adds to
a super slice of celluloid. Little treasures to
those who know film. Example—boy comes
out of snow into cabin, says, “It’s not a fit
night out for man or beast” and, you guessed
it, W.C. Fields is hit with a bunch of snow.
There is a scene that resembles a rescue by
D.W. Griffith which maybe like three people
in the place recognized. So what does Mekas
do? He insults his unknowing audience by
showing them the actual piece of film that
he was imitating. The picture was in the
true tradition of Chaplin—everything they
expect on two levels—and something more.

the (Editor

The Task Force has been referred to as a farce because that
is exactly what it is. Neither the
local administration nor the raonarchs in Albany have shown any
inclination to take into consultation the students or faculty on
major decisions. Perhaps the reasons for this are more complicated
than we suspected last spring. On
the issue of the draft examina-

tion the local administrators simply demonstrated a desire to dictate to us the conditions under
which we were to receive our
“education”. This is a simple
enough, though immature, ideology of how a university should be-,
run. But the issue of the location
of the new campus appears to be
more ominous. The total lack of
open discussion on location, frohi
the beginning: the rapidity of
deciding where the campus would
be, one meeting of the Board of
Trustees: the apparent lack of
careful study: and the attempt
by Dr. Gould to crush discussion
now that it has begun, implies
sinister motives on the part of
some of those defending the Amherst site. Dr. Gould may well
be "clean", as indeed all indications lead one to believe, but it
would appear that other interests
in Albany and locally are not so.
Libel Laws prohibit the naming
of names in this game of Educational Monopoly without proof,
as they should. But this writer
has heard enough double talk
surrounding the new campus to
come to the conclusion that: Yes,
Susie, something is rotten in the
Buffalo area, and perhaps Albany
also. Surely open discussion on
possible sites at this time would
hurt none but those who have
financial interests in where the
new campus is to be located. It
will take study to explore the
real reasons behind the pressure
to cut off discussion, and study
there will be. But in the meantime, let all of us be careful
about how we receive statements
about Amherst. And to Dr. Gould,
with all due respect: to a number
of members of this academic community the issue of where the
new campus will be is not a
closed one.
Lawrence Faulkner

Aid Office “Callous”
TO THE EDITOR

I’ve had enough

.

.

.

Perhaps
to

have too if you have tried
After seeing five to ten films a week as you
get a student loan through the
this reviewer does, one sees so much so-so Office of Financial Aid. It seems
film that he can call something like “Born so simple on the surface but try
Free” a masterpiece. “Hallelujah, the Hills” and get that needed cash when
puts him back on track. “Born Free” I liked, you need it. We have a trained

sends along their neat little note
stating that if you don’t pay your
bill with the Bursar they won’t
credit you with your last semester's work. So you try to explain
to them why you can’t pay. Then
you get a letter frotn, the Bursar
stating they can’t pre-register you

staff of double-talking, frustrat-

because you haven’t paid. So
again you go around like some

This “Born Free” was equal to the best of Mrs. Haas. Students who NEED
Disney—n o t h i n g more except Panavision financial aid to stay in school
and super sound track. B.F. is the best film are discouraged at every turn. It
enough to file your request
I can recommend to see that is still showing, isn’t
months in advance.
You bare
so if you’re the kind that must see a film be- your soul on their blasted forms,
cause I like it, go see it.
present budgets that only a CPA

ing. Maybe they let you pre-register and maybe they forget. If they
forget, you end up not being able
to attend your classes because
they arc already filled. Appeal all
you want to the Office of Financial Aid; they are still shuffling

But the happiest moment comes when
someone agrees with you, and your views
are understood by the other party. After seeing H.T.H. I went to McDonald Hamburgers
downtown and was discussing this film, becoming upset because so few people have
seen it, and when it is shown it has to go
under the title of “Underground,” when a
student from a college in New England heard
my ideas about this unknown film and at once
identified it as “Hallelujah, the Hills” and
sat down and discussed it with me, I was
happy he saw it; I only wish you had! It was
cinema at its best.
P.S.—After revieweing the “Golden Age
of Comedy” for the 11th time I realized that
I could get the entire “History of the Movie”
series from the downtown library. Each episode runs about an hour, and I would gladly
show them at my expense if anyone cares to
see them. If so please contact me immediately
at TF 5-0082, or sign the list next week in
the lobby of the Conference Theatre.

could figure out . . . Then comes
a series of letters inviting you
to come in and sign the Oath—you no doubt have taken the Oath
every 3 to 4 months, but if you
are like me. you have to take off
from work and come in and sign
their form once again. Then in
a few weeks the idiots send you
a letter asking if you will accept
the loan. Again you make the
pilgrimage and sign another form
that you need the loan Why in
hell you would have applied and
gone thru all this crap if you
didn't want it, 1 have no idea
Of course they are oblivious to
the needs qr purposes of the loan.
They couldn’t care less where
you are going lo get the money
to buy the books you need for
the semester. Nor do they care
about food, rent or things like
that: they are just a bunch of
figures with no human meaning
to this bunch of callous females.
They tell you they will voucher”
for it—in a week or month or
some time. By this time you have
finished the semester and arc
starting all over again trying to
buy books, stall the landlord
about the rent, and the grocer
about food, but you have a new
problem. The office of records
’

your papers about.

If the Administration thinks
these facts are-exaggerated, let
them ask any student how his or
her Federal Defense Loan is coming. I think it is about time the
student body got together and
demanded a complete housecleaning in the Office of Financial Aid.
Let's get rid of these people. If
they can’t or won’t help the students, then they serve no useful
function. I think it should be
noted that these are loans, not
gifts, that these people are ad-

ministering, They must be paid

back and with interest. When we
students need the money is at
the start of the semester, not at
the end. We arc sick of the stupid
letters and double talk. We want
and demand our rights.

If the Administration w o n’t
step in, let's get help from the
State and Feredal people we elect

into office. If political pressure is

put on these politicians, we can
get rid of this bottleneck once
and for all. But we need everybody's support.
Robert

E. Kleasen 112662
137150

Landy M. Kleasen

�Friday, August 5, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACE SIX

Editorial Comment

.

.

The Murder

.

from P. 1)
debate on the issue: “I hope that this statement will put
an end to any further speculation which can only do a disservice to the University, to the people of Amherst whc
have made us feel welcome and to the thousands of students from Western New York and all over the State who
need these educational facilities.” This sounds more like
a corporation executive than an educator. What is the purpose of cutting off debate on the issue? What is a university if it is not a place where inquiry and debate are protected and encouraged? And who is Gould trying to con
with his nonsense about “the people of Amherst who have
made us feel welcome.” The Amherst Town Board has
balked for two years because the location of the new campus in the town means the loss of taxable land. The Board
has also raised objections to rezoning for the interim campus
and has thus set back construction for at least a year. And
if Gould is so concerned about the needs of students for
educational facilities, why hasn’t he personally intervened
to get construction of the campus going before the spring
of 1968? An even larger question looms regarding Gould’s
concern for students: why haven’t the students been in on
the planning from the beginning?
(Cont'd

What is Gould attempting to do? There are a number of
possibilities:
1) The opposition to the Amherst campus has grown

considerably in the past few weeks. Just this week, Dr.
Raymond Ewell, Vice President for Research, called for a
reevaluation of the site issue. Another group comprised of
faculty, student, and civic leaders, has been quietly working
to have the campus located in the downtown waterfront
area. The movement could snowball. Gould may be attempting to feel out the opposition to ascertain how strong it is.
2) Gould could be attempting to hamstring Martin Myerson, the incoming president of this campus. Myerson, with
a background in urban planning, might be inclined to back
the downtown area over the Amherst site. Gould’s statement
would place Myerson in the difficult position of having to
oppose his administrative superior.
3) Gould may have cleared the statement with Myerson.
The whole issue would then become political.
President Gould’s ex cathedra statement may have seriously impaired the relationship between this campus and
the State University system. What could have been a rational
debate on an issue of immense importance to faculty and
students alike, has become grist for the political mill.
The students, and hopefully the faculty, will fight to
have the site issue reopened for debate. Too much remains
to be asked and answered to go anead with the Amherst
plans. If this University can continue to consider itself a
democratic institution, it can do no other than to insist that
this issue, which affect the lives of most of us, be reopened.
The Spectrum wishes to go on record in favor of a reevaluation of the location for the new campus and favors the
downtown waterfront site. Next week The Spectrum will
present a position paper to that effect.

THE

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By JOHN MEDWID

The stage is being set for the
destruction of North Viet-Nam.
Johnson and his advisors expect
that the destruction of Hanoi will
end the war. Moral questions aside, there is little reason to
believe that the bombing of
Hanoi will have any of the results that the Johnson planners
hope for. Bombing is not likely
to weaken the morale of the
populace any more than the German bombings were able to weaken the morale of the Londoners
who suffered them. In fact, the
bombings will solidify public
opinion and strengthen the morale of the North Viet-Namese.
As Ben Franklin cannily put it,
“We must all hang together or
surely we shall all hang separately.”

It will further restrict Ho Chi
Minh’s political movement. We
are giving Ho no choice but to
become a puppet of China, de-

JAMES CALLAN

pendent on China for military
supplies and foreign policy, thus
creating the situation we are
trying to prevent. Ho will be
more inclined to take a tough
line when negotiating when the

war gets to the conference table.

It will limit our own conduct
of the war. North Vietnamese escalation has always been a response to our escalation of the
war. If we bomb Hanoi we have
only threfe more rungs on the
destroying
escalation ladder
North Vietnamese industry which
can be accomplished without excessive loss of lives if the buildings are evacuated; bombing the
dikes on the Red River which
will flood North Viet-Nam and
cause widespread death, destruction and famine; and lastly start
a process of decimation of the
population until the war is
stopped. This policy is based on
the false assumption that Ho Chi
Minh controls the NLF and could
-

—

family.

The Republican wing of the
Liberal Party will present its
patron saint, Nelson Rockefeller.
(Not because anybody wants him
—but because he has effectively
kept primaries out of statewide
races.) The Democratic wing will
present Bobby Kennedy’s choice,
and who that will be remains
the only interesting unanswered
question. Interesting to me any-

way, because I will not under
any circumstances whatsoever
vote forw Rocky. (I may not vote

for his opponent either, but that
remains to be seen.)
What are the possibilities?
Well, we’ve got Eugene Nickerson, a bleeding-heart type liberal
from downstate, whose only credit is that he is probably naive
enough about big-time politics to
be quite innocuous in office. Then
there’s F.p.R. Jr., who is basing
his campaign on one big issue,
his initials. He’s been around
longer, has his men scattered
better, and is given a better
chance than any of his opponents (who said this isn’t a monarchy?) Thirdly, there’s Frank
O’Connor, who in his capacity as
President of the New York City
Council cannot really be expected
to turn the tide of downstate
favoritism. And finally there’s
Howard Samuels, who’s got about
as much of a chance as the Ath-

THE PEOPLE
One of the most current and
important topics on campuses
across the country is the issue
of academic freedom. Closely

tied in with this issue have been
the so-called Free Speech Move?
ments, the teach-ins, and our own
University Movement. It would
be pertinent therefore to have a
look at the state of academic
freedom on U.S. campuses and
to examine closely the Movement’s stated motives.
I am both proud of and amazed
at the amount of academic freedom on American campuses. At a
time when over a quarter of a
million American soldiers are
committed to a war, American
professors can state freely that
they support the other side, without fear of a midnight visit by
the KGB followed by a “peoples”
trial, much less lose their jobs.
The Genovese case in New Jersey
amply proves this.
It is amazing that at a time
when the United States is involved in a war which has grown
till its magnitude affects in one
way or another the destinies of
most of its citizens, these same
citizens who may be called upon
to fight, steadfastly protect the
rights of anti-war groups to hold
teach-ins, demonstrate, and freely
distribute their literature.
To resolutely protect the rights
of unpopular views to be heard
is admirable enough in peacetime, but in a time of conflict
it is indeed a feat Americans can
be proud of. It is indicative of
the high level of academic freedom and democracy that the
United Sattes has achieved and
should serve as a model for all

stop the war if he wanted to.
It would give Ho Chi Minh no
reason not to send his 400,000
man army south to confront
American and South Vietnamese
forces on the battlefield. This
would require an increase in
America’s commitment of men to
2.5 million soldiers. With 400,000
fresh North Vietnamese troops
ready to come into action it isn’t
likely that the end of the war
would be nearer.
The real reason for the bombing of Hanoi is not military but
political. Bombing Hanoi, it is
said, strengthens the morale of
Premier Ky, the current dictator
in Saigon, and weakens criticism
from the hawks here at home.
Johnson wants to wear two political masks: the friend of peace
and the man who is not afraid
to fight. Most important, however, he wants to be elected
again. It is unfortunate that people have to die so that Lyndon
Baines Johnson can be re-elected.
'

the right

.

On November 8 of this year we
will witness the Liberal Party
primary election. Only this is
not an ordinary primary
the
winner doesn’t have to face anybody, for New York liberals have
managed by various means to
keep all important offices in the

of Gonzago

By MARSHAL SCHATZ

freedom-loving nations. A view
with which I’m sure the Deans
of Peking and Nanking Univer-

sities and

writers Daniel

letics. For one thing, he’s from
Canandaigue (you know, about
half way between Beaver Point
and East Snowshoe). Secondly,
he’s a self-made millionaire, and
everybody knows that the only
rich men who get elected around
here inherit it. Also, he’s an industrialist—the cardinal sin to
the ruling Labor Barons.
But this is all very academic.
Like I said, Bobby’s blessing
would probably be enough to
put Barry Goldwater over, so
credits and debits are of interest
only in how they will affect the
man with the golden name.
Who will win? I’d say F.D.R.,
with an outside chance to O’Connor. In the Liberal Primary,
Rocky will get two votes, his and
Happy’s, and Robert Kennedy
will own two thirds of New York
State.

and

Sinyavsky will concur.
However at the same time that

academic freedoms and campus
democracy are being so vigorously enforced and respected,
enter from stage left, the so
called free-speeeh movements
and our own University Movement with democracy as its
stated goal.
free-speeeh movements
The
from their very conception were
never interested in free-speeeh.

Their leaders had all the free
speech they could use. However
finding out that their bankrupt
ideas were making no headway
they resorted to shows of force
designed to gain them the authority they could not win freely
or democratically.
The Movement at UB used the
issue of campus democracy as a
subterfuge for their leaders’ antiViet Nam views. Cowering under
the guise of conscientious objectors to what they feel is an undemocratic University, they pretended to be fighting for campus reform when in reality they
were attacking the war in Viet
Nam (our half of it anyway) and
the Selective Service System.
They presented their demands
to President Furnas coupled with
the threat that if they were not
met the Movement would tie up
the campus. Our own beloved
Spectrum even printed a front
page picture of them with the
.
. sit-in when
caption
their
demands are denied.”
Apparently the guiding lights

behind

the Movement moment-

arily forgot that the mark of
a genuine conscientious objector
in a democracy is to respect the

democratic process. He does not
where he has failed to
convince.
The Movements’ leaders claimed however that they did not
have to respect any campus rules
because their consciences told
them that they were fighting for
high moral reasons. It is commendable to recognize that morality and law are not always the
same and that when they come
into conflict that morality must
take precedence, however the
Movements’ leaders failed to recognize the centrality of intelligence to morality. They neglected
the fact that conscience by itself is not the criterion of morality, this is the work of reason.
It is apparent therefore that
the Movement was not interested
in campus democracy nor a student voice in the Administration,
but was merely using them as
slogans to mask their attack on
the Selective Service System and
the United States involvement in
Viet Nam.
coerce

There are even unconfirmed
reports reaching me almost daily
that Emmanuel Goldstein is the

real director of the Movement.
It may prove fruitful then some-

time in the future to examine
more closely the Movement’s leaders and the groups they represent. This may be done if the
Spectrum proves itself a true
believer in the cause it righteously claims to champion, campus democracy.

�Friday, August S, 1966

Foreign Policy Council’s
Vietnam Survey Results
To implement the Buffalo
Council for Citizen Responsibility
on Foreign Policy’s decision to
make a study of voter attitudes,
groups of canvassers have recently gone from door to door in
the 39th Congressional District,
ascertaining opinion on the Vietnam War (see below) and distributing some literature. Twentyfive members have participated
on four evenings during June,
with an average of twelve canvassers in the field at any one time.
The areas so far covered include
two essentially working-class and
two middle to upper middle class
districts in Cheektowaga and Amherst. Most people contacted (at
least 3 out of 4) agree to complete the questionnaire. The results have been surprisingly consistent from district to district
and from week to week. 258 com
pleted surveys are on hand, showing the following distribution of
opinion:
Would you vote for candidates
who are for these policies?

the “reform” and “peace” candidates in the New York primary
elections is also an indication of
an increasing opposition to the
war. In the 17th Congressional
District, Jerome Wilson defeated
official candidate and war sup
porter Peter Berle for the nomination. Rep. Multer only narrowly escaped defeat by peace candidate Mel Dubin (13th C.D.) and
the renomination, by less than
200 votes out of 35,000 cast, of
Rep. Farbstein is being challenged by Theodore Weiss (19th C.D.).
By and large, the New York results indicate an even stronger
sentiment for peace than the
previous results in California
(45% for Scheer in the 7th C.D.
in Oakland and Berkeley, and
over 40% for Hannon in the 20th
C.D. in Los Angeles).
Unfortunately, there are no
candidates at the present time in
the 39th, 40th, and 41st Congressional Districts who explicitly

Yes

Stop bombing North Vietnam? .
Immediate cease fire in Vietnam?
Immediate negotiations?
Negotiate with the National
Liberation Front (VietCong)?
Free elections including
all parties?
Withdrawal of all foreign troops?
(Bring Our Boys Home)

Many of those who voted ‘no’
on questions 1, 2, and 6 also
voted ‘yes’ on questions 3, 4, and
5. Personal canvassing experience
suggest that many of these people
think that bombing and other
strategic warfare devices would
‘bring our boys home’ sooner.
That 40% do answer ‘yes’ to
question 6 also indicates this to

be part of the “grass roots” feeling.

The strong vote for immediate

negotiations (question 3) almost
certainly represents a desire to
de-escalate, and the 62% vote to
include the Viet Cong is a direct
repudiation of the Administration’s position on this point. The
74% vote for elections with Communist participation may also be
contrasted with Ky’s insistence
on excluding both Communists

and neutralists from such elections.
These provisional results resemble in many ways the responses to National Surveys, and suggest that, despite possible individual biases, the methods used
by the Council are rather reliable. The most recent opinion poll
(published in the Buffalo Evening
News) indicated slightly less than
50% in favor of continuing the
war, and some 38% for withdrawal. The strong showing made by

Total
Opinion Ans’rs

No

No

30%

51%

19%

34

48

18
10

81

241

.40

50

10

239

53%%

31%%

15%

favor peace in Vietnam. Nevertheless, when the candidate of
the Conservative and Republican
Parties for the 39th C.D., John
Pillion, is moved to remark upon
“an underlying uncertainty concerning the bogdown of both our
peace and war efforts in Vietnam” (Buffalo Evening News,
6/29/66), it shows that the war
will be an election issue. Congressman Richard McCarthy was
the only representative from upstate New York to sign the letter to President Johnson in December, 1965, advocating de-escalation and a prdlonged bombing pause. He has recently supported more liberal policy
towards mainland China. We hope
to use the present canvass and
survey to strengthen the candidates’ judgment concerning the
desire for peace in their constituency, to influence one or both to
take a more outspokenly critical
attitude to the war, and, whatever the final position they may
take, to inject the Vietnam War
as a living issue into the coming
campaign.

The SPECTRUM
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Worried Stale University officials asked the Spectrum not_ to
break the story which they belatedly realized was classified
confidential material. The Spectrum contacted Mr. Morris Kreppel of the Post Office Department's New York Regional Office, who contacted Mr. Kroloff's
Washington office.

Mr. Kroloff asked the Spectrum
lo hold the story for a week.
The story is classified confidential, he explained, “for reasons
which will become obvious when
they become obvious.
If you
know what I mean."
has

begun on the classified confidential building between Capbn Hall

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two weeks, according to Mr. Kroloff of the United Slates Post
Office Department.

242

12

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237
240

74

Published by

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Responses

ALL ANSWERS

PAGE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

—

ATMOSPHERE
572 Amherst

HEIuS
HITCHCoffi

Best Wishes

PAT and LUCY

from the
SPECTRUM Staff

aw

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Y.

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�PAGE EIGHT

Friday, August 5, 1M6

SPECTRUM

Fourth in a Series

Anarchism and The Student Movement'
By JOSEPH CHARLES BURGESS

Few of us would question the
assertion that there are large
numbers of students in institutions of higher learning throughout the country who are dissatisfied with the present university
system. Many of us have witnessed various attempts on the
part of student groups to bring
about changes in the way universities are operated. While
there can be little doubt that
there are a number of “student
movements” afoot, it could be a
mistake to say that these “movements” are part of an organized
general movement whose purpose is to give to students the
power to run the university. On
some campuses students have organized to bring about radical
changes in university administrative procedures. And they have
organized with the idea of changing the whole concept of the university and its place in the sociopolitical world. This is but one
dimension of what has been
called the “student movement.”
There are other dimensions. On
some campuses students are concerned only with more specific
problems. At one school students
want the right to sell beer; on
others they are agitating for extension of dormitory curfews. Almost all schools of any size have
groups actively engaged in civil
rights work, in anto-war and antidraft programs, or in aiding the
anti-poverty program.
On still
other campuses students are almost wholly concerned with obtaining freedom of speech. All
these things have been labeled
as part of a general student
movement by the press, by University administrators, and by
the public at large. Yet, as I
have said, it is not clear that
there is any general student
movement as such.
To assume that there is at this
time a national movement, the
goal of which is the total destruction of the university system
as we know it, is to be quite
naive. Each university campus
has its own specific problems;
each activist group its own specific goals. These specific goals and
the solutions to these specific

impossible, for we are being
hampered by the present university system.
To call for the complete eradication of the present university
system is certainly to adopt an
anarchist position. Perhaps, even
in calling for such basic changes
in the present system as would
make the resultant unrecognizably dissimilar to the present
system, we are anarchists. It is
important to note that the socalled student movement has
been labelled by certain astute

members of the press and present university administrators as
anarchistic. These people have

ther the cause of the student

movement.
I suggested above that the word
“anarchist” was ambiguous. This

becomes evident when one considers two of the most common
ways in which the anarchists are
characterized. Often an anarchist
is viewed as a “wild-eyed, bushyhaired, bomb-thrower.” On the
other hand, he is sometimes seen
as a non-activist. Although both
of these views are misconceptions
there is some historical basis for
them. Many of the European philosophic anarchists, people such
as Bakunin and Schmidt, argued
for a violent overthrow of the

*

What has been noted above is
that while the general anarchist
position is one which sees the
present socio-political system as
undesirable, the means by which
it is to be eradicated are various.
Those who held to a non-activist
position, I think, were mistaken,
since it implies a hard-core determination which ignores all
value of human action. In fact,
we do seem to be able to change
things, even if it is difficult at
times to do so. We do see that
our words and actions affect the
behavior of others, especially
when we organize with those
whose beliefs are similar to ours.
But here the anarchist cautions
us to beware that our own organization, however desirable it may
be in overthrowing the established order, does not become
itself coercive. In place of a
socio-political system the anarchist proposes that we establish voluntary associations, the members
of which are free to come and go
as they choose. Such associations
could take definite courses of action, but no one would be forced
to follow. All this, of course, implies that man is essentially both
good and rational, and that he
can decide on the basis of experience and insight what is best,
not necessarily prudent, to do.
Further, it implies that one can
convince others of the rightness
of his position through rational
discourse. These latter implications are of particular importance to the student movement,
for the university has traditionally considered itself, if it has
not actually been, an intellectual
community composed of those
who believed in the positive value of rational discourse.

If this is the general anarchist
position, what then does the an-

archist have to say to those who

"Often the anarchist is viewed as a 'wild-eyed, bushy-haired,
thrower/

are advocating changing the
structure of the university?

'

First, I think, he asks of these
people, and asks again and again:
“Where are you going?” and
had the ability to see what the
then present political system. “What do you want?” As does
students themselves have failed
And there was a good deal of the generally dissatisfied student,
to see. That is, that the satisfacviolence associated with the an- he finds the present university
tory fulfillment of present specifarchist revolts connected with system repressive. There is a
ic demands requires some basic
lack of freedom to. explore, disthe labor movement in the Unitchanges in the university power ed States. There
also those cuss, experiment, and implement
were
problems are not necessarily restructure. Anarchism is perhaps who took positions like that of new, and at times unpopular,
lated to some more general goal. the most unpopular socio-politiThoreau, who at one point held ideas. It is not enough, he sugThis is not to say that in finding cal position that one can take togests, to be given the privilege
that although one should do nothday. Most students, however, find
the solutions for such problems
ing to aid in the furtherance of to talk about ideas; we must
as have been mentioned we ought the role of social revolutionary
the present political system, one have a chance to try them out.
not to be guided by some genquite acceptable and desirable.
should not take part in a fight
eral principles or goals, for this
Yet, what more than a social revagainst it. Thoreau’s view is peHe also suggests that since the
is a position for which I want to olution in the university is the culiar to western
university ought to be a volunargue. The point is that presentanarchist looking for? Nothing, which distinguished anarchism, tary association of individuals,
itself from
ly there are many relatively iso1 would submit. That many stuEastern European anarchism by each of which is seeking to furlated groups making specific dedents, who are today calling for a belief in the needlessness of ther knowledge dissassociated
a revolution on the campus, do
mands and those who have authrevolution for the bringing about from his own personal interest,
ority in the present university
not wish to be labelled anarchof a free society. One of the apthat those who do not wish to
power structure realize this. They
ists is, I think, due to the ambigparticipate in the furtherance of
parent inconsistencies concerncan make concessions, they can
uity of the term itself. An ambiging the anarchist position is that knowledge allow those who do
grant our specific demands, and
uity which has led to an apparent
there have been both active and to proceed without external rewe will be satisfied, at least for
inconsistency in the anarchist popression. Underlying this is a
non active anarchists. Another ina time. By granting our specific
sition. While it may be insignificonsistency is that concerning col- view which assumes that men
demands, those in authority are cant that today’s student revolulectivism and individualism. Many trust and respect each other and
able to hold onto that authority. tionaries do not wish to be called of the European
anarchists held that such trust and respect is
They retain their image as a
anarchists, it has extremely unsocial and political views similar necessary for the mutual exporacondescending father, and their
fortunate results, for there is a to Marxism.
Specifically, they tion and sharng of ideas. The
authority goes unchallenged. tendency to ignore what the anwere fighting and arguing against failure of the present university
“Let the students demand what
archist has to say about the presa societal class structure which system, he finds, is not that it
they will,” they say, "decisions
ent university system and what
exploited the common man for has elements of distrust and disstill come from above and are ought to be done about it. The the benefit of a few.
The only respect in it, but that its highly
handed down to them by us. We anarchist, it seems to me, has way to get rid of
restrictive, and often petty, rules
such a socioremain as their guides and dimuch to say that is important political system was, they create and further distrust and
rectors
What is sad is that for holding the student movethought, to organize a revolution, disrespect. Such rules are often
many students accept this. The
ment together. He can offer some be it violent or not, against the established and enforced by those
students themselves have failed general principles upon which prevailing system.
who have no direct or indirect
The individto realize that many of their deto build a meaningful program ualist anarchists,
interest in the business of the
while recognizmands, and the frustrations infor the changing of the university ing the exploitation of the
university, which is to further
comvolved in having their demands system. There are three things mon man, saw
knowledge. The present system,
no value in oragreed to, have arisen as a rethat I will devote the rest of this ganized revolution,
rather they he feels, relies upon the distrust
sult of the university system itarticle. First, the general posisaw fit to remove themselves and disrespect which it creates,
self. Unless there are some basic tion of anarchism must be
made from the then present system and for its very existence.
changes in the present system,
clear, so that it can be shown encouraged other to do so. More
'he nature of specific demands that there are no inherent inimportant than these differences
The a n a r c h i s t’s question,
and problems cannot be seen ternal inconsistencies in the poamong the anarchists are their "Where are you going?” becomes
clearly. Neither can the demands
sition. Second, I want to discuss
similiarities. All of them saw the especially significant when parbe easily met, nor can solutions what the anarchist has
to say present socio-political system as ticular courses of action are proto specific problems be' arrived
that is important for the student an unnecessarily evil, repressive, posed by
those advocating basic
at with any facility. We have a
movement. Third, I wish to sugcoercive force which destroyed changes in the present system.
right as students, indeed as hugest some specific modes of acthe individual. In the extreme “What are you going to replace
man beings, to see our demands
tion which are in accord with the position some found that any it with?” he asks. The
caution
and problems for what they are
general anarchist position and
socio-political system was an unhere is that in many cases revoAnd it is my claim that this is which will at the same time fur- necessary
evil.
lutions solve only the immediate
”

"

problems, but not long term problems. Old repressive power structures are replaced with new ones
which are just as repressive, if
not more so, for purges often

follow revolutions. And purges
bring about new revolutions. So
the revolutionary process seems
endless. The goal must be, according to the anarchist, a university in which the free exploration of ideas is most significant,
and this sinever possible if one
only replaces one restrictive repressive power structure with
another.
The importance of the anarchist’s argument that the university
be a voluntary association for
the exploration of new and old
ideas is that it rests on the
grounds that we have, not only
as scholars, but as human beings,
something to share; that we have
common experiences. Without
shared experiences there could
be no voluntary association; there
could be no association apart
from one which was coerced. This
concept has important implications, for it implies that we draw
no boundaries, neither administrative nor conceptual, in our investigations. It implies that we
not close our minds, that we
continue to search and look for
new ideas to replace old and
that we re-evaluate old ideas in
light of new evidence. What is
suggested is that to gain knowledge is more htan to classify bits
of information. It suggests that
our classification system may be
faulty and in need of revision or
replacement, or perhaps in need
of expansion. What must be done
will become apparent in the light
of rational discourse. Yet, what
must be done now, need not always be what must be done. Indeed, this cannot be the case if
we realize that our conceptual
boundaries are but guidelines at
best.

Finally, let me suggest some
modes of action that the anarchist might think useful in eliminating the present repressive university power structure and in
replacing it with a free university as described above. Above
all, I think, that the anarchist
would insist that whatever action
be taken, it be taken collectively.
To individually withdraw from
the present university system
would allow the possibility of
each of us setting up our own
conceptual boundaries such that
there would be no furtherance of
knowledge, only stagnation. To
individually “use” the present
system would be to exploit each
other, and would only further
coerce others to follow in the
same path. In this case, individual gain becomes more important than the furtherance of
knowledge in its broadest sense
which involves a sharing of
ideas. It is only through a sharing of ideas and experiences
through rational discourse that
we can prevent the drawing of
dogmatic conceptual boundaries.

What then can we do? If we
believe in the concept of a free
university

we can organize our-

selves and refuse to recognize
the power of those whose posi
tions depend upon the inherent
distrust and disrespect to be
found in the present system. In
short, we can refuse the right
of the university administration

to act as our representative in
thq larger socio-political system
We can refuse appointments and
recognitions which are so generously handed down to us by those
who have no interest in furthering knowledge. We can refuse to

work for them, and instead work
for the furtherance of knowledge.
In short, we can use any means
necessary, as long as those means
do not subvert our goal of a free

university.

'

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                    <text>CIIMMFD
summEK

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VORTRX
SUTRA

WICHITA

(See Pages

VOLUME 16

NO.

BUFFALO. NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JULY 39, 1966

54

The Amherst Story: Facts, Figures
By PAUL SCIABARRASI
and MICHAEL D'AMICO

Over the past few weeks there
has been revitalized interest in
the Buffalo waterfront area as
an alternative site for the new
campus of SUNYAB now scheduled to be built in Amherst.
Feasibility of the waterfront
area is a question that will undoubtedly require a great deal ol
study. However, dealings concerning the Amherst site, the recommendation, the approval, the
purchase and the progress to
date are history. Parts of that
history, from time to time, have
been released to the public. Most
recent releases have begun to fill
in the picture, and although it
is not yet complete, the great
majority of the Amherst story is
now known. Only a careful study
of the University’s actions from
the very beginning can provide a
full understanding of where matters and motives are today.

Amherst Chosen
Sometime prior to January,
1964, it was decided, most probably by the UB Council or the
State University Board of Trustees, that a study should be made
as to the advantages and disadvantages of five possible locations for the building of a new
campus for the State University
at Buffalo. The five sites
to be studied included (1) Grand
Island, (2) Amherst, (3) Elma,
(4) Cheektowaga, and (5) Downtown Buffalo. The study, of considerable length and detail, was
compiled between January and
April of 1964 by Mr. Vincent J.
Moore, who was a former Buffalo
city planning aide (1956-1959) and
presently is a planning consultant for the State Budget Division in Albany. The report, which
considered various facets of each
of the five sites, was approximately 60 pages in length, including maps and aerial photos, and
was submitted, without recommendation, to the State University
Construction Fund. All the SUCF
did was reproduce Moore’s document and forward it, again without recommendation, to J. Lawrence Murray, then Acting President of the State University. Murray, in town, submitted the Moore
report with a “central staff’ rec-

ommendation for the Amherst
site to the Board of Trustees at
their June 11, 1964 meeting. This
meeting was the one time the
Trustees dealt with the site issue. Minutes of the meeting reveal that the Board, acting, on a
motion by then Trustee Edwin F.
Jaeckle of Buffalo, voted unani
mously to accept the report and
acquire the land in Amherst. The
SUNY then announced that they
would build the greater part of
the new University in Amherst.
There was no public discussion,
open investigation or dissent.
The Nature of the Area
The land purchased is an 800
acre site bordered by Sweet Home

Road, Millersport Highway, and
Ellicott Creek. Parts of the proposed site are as much as six
miles from the present campus
although the distance from the
main street entrance of the existing campus to the tract at Millersport and Maple is 3.5 miles.
Across Millersport Highway, adjacent to the Amherst site, are
an additional 350 acres previously
owned by the University. This
land, obtained from the Town of
Amherst by swapping the University-owned Audubon Golf
Course, will be used as an athletic field.
A close examination of the area
reveals the following: on the
northern border of the campus is
Ellicott Creek. The Creek is polluted by the Towns of Amherst
and Alden sewage plants, and at
times becomes stagnant. During
heavy rains, the creek overflows
its banks from 100 to 700 feet in
either direction. The Amherst

sewage treatment plant, just to

the south of the proposed site,

causes occasional objectionable
odors.

The land is level, marred by
several forest areas and the Niagara Mohawk Power line. At
present, storm water runs off the
land by natural courses and may
overflow from open ditches during heavy rains.
Topsoil east of Millersport is
not suitable for stripping and
abolit 1100 acres of topsoil will
have to be imported. Soft clay is
characteristic of this area and
could create various problems
for construction.

The area offers reasonably good
accessability by private transportation
ten miles via streets and
15 miles via expressway from
downtown. Distance to the airport
is 8 miles and to the rail terminal
is 9 miles.
—

No commercial
within convenient
tance so Buffalo
miles away) would

facilities are
walking disfacilities (10
have to be re-

lied upon. Employment opportun
ities are approximately the same
as the Main Street campus but
there is little local housing available.

Progress to Date
The University has spent just

short of four million dollars for
the acquisition and programming
of the site. Originally, construction costs (excluding planning
and acquisition) were fixed at
two hundred and fifty million
dollars. Revised figures indicate
a cost possibly exceeding four
hundred million dollars.
There were to be three phases
of construction each being completed in two year intervals beginning in 1968. Completion of
phase one has been moved up to
1970, indicating the other two
phases will also be two years
behind the original schedule.

Construction was to have begun
this fall but was delayed supposedly because of sub-surface soil
testing which has been going on
for two years, according to Mr.
Doemland, Director of the University’s office of Planning and
Development. Information obtained from a reliable architectural
firm has pointed out that subsoil testing and analysis for a
tract of land 1100 acres large
should take from three to six
months allowing enough time for
overcoming any possible problems. This can be broken down
to the drilling of six holes per
building per day. Two years is
ible for testing
believed unn
and analysis.
In the spring, Mr Martin Mey
Dean of The School of
Environmental Design at the University of California at Berkeley,
was appointed the new president

erson.

of the S.U.N.Y. at Buffalo effective September 1, 1966, It is believed that Mr. Meyerson, one of
the outstanding professional city
planners in the country, raised
some questions about the University’s proposed expansion. This
may be the reason why no master
planning or construction planning has begun. State highway
officials have substantiated this
lag in planning by stopping all
work on the Lockport Expressway and the expanded Millcrsporl
Highway which involves the Am-

herst campus area. Once Meyerson
assumes the presidency, planning
may gel under way.

Need for Interim Campus
The delay has caused a need
for building an interim campus
on Niagara Falls Blvd. The building to be constructed by the
Maret Corporation of Pittsburgh will be just south of the
Youngmann Memorial Highway,
approximately one mile from the
proposed Amherst campus. Amherst Town Board has granted a
clearance for the development of
up to 375,000 square feet of office, classroom and laboratory
space. This approval came after
the University signed a five year
lease with the Maret Corporation. The ruling overturned an
earlier recommendation of the
Amherst Planning Board to deny
a building permit for the facility.
Why Amhant?

Since the Board of Trustees,
in one meeting, voted unanimously to accept the Amherst site,
they must have weighed heavily
the recommendation for Amherst
made by Mr. Murray and of the
"central staff”. A close contender
for the new site appears to have
been the Buffalo location. One
possible reason for the rejection
of the Buffalo site might have
been a political struggle which
existed between then Mayor Chester Kowal and the State Senator
from the Amherst district, Walter
J. Mahoney, who, as Senate Majority Leader, was considered the
second most powerful man in
New York State. In 1964, corn-

munication between Governor
Rockefeller’s office and that of
the Mayor was at a low ebb.
Mahoney and Kowal communicated even less.

Mr. Walter J. Mahoney is now a
partner in a law firm with connections with the Maret Corporation.
In addition to signing the lease
for construction on the interim
campus, the Pittsburgh firm has
also been retained for construction on the Amherst site.
Irrevocable or Not Irrevocable?
J. Lawrence Murray, Executive
Vice-President of the State University, has made it clear that

development of the Amherst

cam-

pus has advanced too far for a
shift in location. "In my opinion,
Ihe decision to locale in Amherst
is irrevocable,” Mr. Murray said.
Dr. William J. O'Connor, in a

speech before the Kensington Kiwanis Club on July 25, 1966, expressed an opinion that building
in Amherst is a necessity because
of the area available. He has said
that "When one visualizes the
scope of this project it is more
readily understandable why the
200-acre site on Ihe waterfront
and an equivalent site at Grover
Cleveland Park arc totally inadequate.”

State Assemblyman Albert J.
Hausbcck after an interview with
slate officials drew the conclusion
that they arc unable to give any
reason why the waterfront site
cannot be used. Albany authorities state that final commitments
on the Amherst site have not
been made. It is not too late to
consider the waterfront area. As
far as size is concerned, although
Dr. O’Connor has mentioned a
200-acre site on the waterfront,
the Moore report envisioned 460
acres of possible available land
and an additional 260 acres which
can be reclaimed from the Lake
Erie Basin. This is undoubtedly
sufficient for building an extremely large University, as has
been amply proven by the Universities of Minnesota, Illinois,
and Ohio State.

Task Force to Begin
Open Hearings Aug. 10;
Urges Participation
The initial hearings of the Task
Force will take place in Baird
Hall on August 10, beginning at
7:15, and August 11, beginning
at 4:00 p.m. The hearings are
open. The university public is
invited to attend all hearings,
and all interested parties, groups
or individuals, are invited to present their views and recommendations, the only limitation on the
testimony being that these be
relevant to the mandate of the
Task Force. The mandate reads:
“I.) to inquire into and make
proposals with respect to establishing an open and continual
dialogue among such groups (students, faculty and administration); 2.) to make such proposals
as (the committee) deem(s) appropriate regarding organizational
means for participation by these

on display on second floor of Norton Union.
Two examples from Childron'. Art Program Exhibit
H„ ago 9.
right:
by
a
bird
Sharon
age
7;
by
Cathy
S.,
Loft: a grasshopper

groups in the formulation of edupolicy in the University."
The subcommittee on hearings

cational

requests that prospective speakers contact Mrs. Krause at 111
Baird Hall, 831-3411 by August
5. The subcommittee is anxious
that equal opportunity be available for all representatives. In
order that all shades of opinion
be heard, the subcommittee suggests that oral presentations be
limited to 15 miputes. Those who
wish to supplement their oral
presentation with a written statement, or those who would prefer
a written statement in lieu of
an oral presentation are invited
to transmit it to the subcommittee chairman (Allen Sapp). Such
material could be marked confidential—to be used within the
committee exclusively
or for
presentation at a public session
In order that the subcommittee
may have a permanent record to
underlay the final recommends
lions, the entire proceedings will
be recorded and transcribed.
—

�PACE TWO

SPICTRUM

Friday, July 29, 1966

Seminar Study of Children's Classics
Will Culminate in European Tour
On July 25, after three weeks
of intensive classroom study of
children’s classics, Mr. Robert
Dalke and his seminar in children’s literature left on a twentytwo day tour of the European
settings which inspired such famous authors as Han Christian
Anderson. Johanna Spyri, A. A.
Milne and the Brothers Grimm.
“We’re going to attempt to
relive these famous children's
fantasies,” said Mr. Dalke, elementary curriculum coordinator
of the Orchard Park Schools.
During the seven country tour
which will take them to the
homes, birthplaces and locales
which produced the writers and
their classics, the students will
be lodged at European hotels or
country inns in the fairytale settings which for so long have fascinated the young.
The culinary agenda is designed to recreate traditional
folk environments. England's kidney pie and yorkshire pudding
is only one of the many representative menus which the travelling scholars will sample. At the
very cottage in Maienfeld, Switzerland. where Heidi had her
first meal with the grandfather,
they will have a dinner consisting of round loaves of dark
Experiment in Infl Living
Students of France, who are
visiting the University this month
on the “Experiment in International Living” project, will bold
an illustrated discussion about
France on Monday, Aug. 1, at
7:15 in the Millard Fillmore
Room.
—

—

bread, cheese melted over the
fire and goat’s milk.
As exciting as the trip may be,
it has been preceded by arduous
research and study of not only
the authors and their works, but
also of the history, climate, geography, and culture of their
homelands.
“They’re staying up until all
hours of the night studying,”
Mr. Dalke said. “I have never
taught a finer or more enthusiastic group of people.”
The objects of the professor's
praise were chosen from a field
of over 70 applicants after careful screening by Mr. Dalke. They
are all graduate students, and
most are elementary school
teachers.
To enable a more penetrating
glimpse into each country and its
authors, the students have been
divided into five groups, each
of which has been assigned a
specific area of study. These
groups have given talks on England, Germany and Switzerland,
France, Ireland and Denmark, illustrated by maps, slides and
charts, and background and criticism of their assigned country’s
writers.

This classroom format will also
have its advantages when the
scholars are abroad. “Each group
will be our experts in their particular country when we're there,”
said Mr. Dalke.
The group specializing in Ireland will have the first chance
to show its expertise, as the
fairytale tour will begin in that
country. In England, they will

visit the homes of Beatrix Potter,
A. A. Milne, and Anne Hathaway.
The travellers’ visit to Paris
will take them to the homes of
the creators of Madeleine and
Babar the Elephant, Ludwig Bemelmans and Jean de Brunhoff.
The group will interview Maurice Druon, French author of
“Tistou of the Green Thumbs.”
The tour of Heidi’s Swiss surroundings will be followed by an
excursion to the Brothers Grimm
country around Frankfurt, Germany.

The last stop on the group’s
itinerary will be Copenhagen,
where they will visit Hamlet’s
Castle, the Frederiksborg Palace
and the Island of Funen birthChristian Ander-

place of Hans
sen.

Mr. Dalke, who has sometimes
been called “our storyteller” by
Orchard Park children, said,
“There isn’t one book we have
studied this summer that the
kids don’t love when it is read
to them. But more children are
not going to read them until
more teachers know them.”
Given the knowledge, European experiences, and happy
enthusiasm of Mr. Dalke’s teachers, children’s television programs may find some stiff competition from the classics.
A student with a special role is
Miss Lieve Vankerckhoeven, Mr.
Dalke’s Belgian born graduate
assistant, who will act as translator and travel aide for the
group. A former American Field
Service Exchange Student, Hiss
Vankerckhoven resides at 71
Weber Avenue, Buffalo.

Excavation of Iroquois Indian Sito

Summer Archaeology School
Excavates Indian Sites
the course. Preliminary study
was done on the site in 1950 while
the actual field work began only

By JULIE SULLIVAN

The Summer Field School in
Archaeology of the State University at Buffalo is currently conducting excavations on local In-

dian sites. The program, under
Dr. Marion E. White of the Anthropology Dept., has been designed primarily for Anthropology majors and graduate students
for the purpose of introducing
participants to all aspects of field
work.
Dr. White, her assistants, Dr.
Audrey Sublett and John Carbonara, and about twenty students
are excavating a ten acre site in
the Town of Ema which is believed to have been an agricultural village of the Niagara Frontier Iroquois.
Dr. White hopes that the project, which consists of tracing the
surrounding palisade and finding
house locations, will be successfully completed at the end of

last summer.
of the
A full re
culture of the people is being
attempted through clues attained
from the tools and artifacts located on the site.
The village, dating back to 1600
AJ)., consisted of rather large,
substantial houses constructed
with elm bark fastened onto
poles. A chemical discoloration
in the soil, called post molds, indicates the location of the posts,
allowing for the discovery of the
outline of the housing as well as
the bordering palisade.
The Second Session Summer
School course will end August
5th when students working for
credit and students from many
different parts of the country,
working on their own projects,
will have completed their summer training in field work.
»

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�PAOI

SPECTRUM

Friday, July 29, 1966

THUS

Review: PIGEONS and THE BLIND MEN
The Absurd and the Grotesque
were the subjects of The Workship Repertory Theatre of Buffalo’s dramatic productions presented July 22 and 23 in the Millard Fillmore Room.

Two one-

act plays, Pigeons, by Lawrence
Osgood and Michel de Ghelder-

ode's Tha Blind Mon, illustrated
two facets of contemporary theatre bound by the prevailing
conditions of life for the 20th
century man as a purposeless,
senseless, and incongruous existence. A contemporary aspect of
the plays resulted from the two
distinguishing concepts of modern theatre trend: the “poetic
avant-gard” theatre of de Ghelderode which strives toward the
lyrical, imagistic poetry of verbal associations, making it much
less violent and grotesque than
its counterpart, the Theatre of
the Absurd, which plays upon
the degenerate nature and devaluation of language in order
to elicit its poetry from the concrete and objective image of

Stage per se. as evident in Osgood’s Pigeons. The basic con-

siderations of the lacks of harmony, certainty, communications
of the human condition are essentially alike.
Osgood’s Pigeons

ed first

(and

was perform-

“who would have

thought the absurd could be so
funny”). It portrayed the situation of three women, all from obviously different social spheres:
Rosalind Cramer as the aloof upper class, dignified and elderly;
Esther Swartz as a middle-class
“social worker” who really has
no idea what’s happening; and
finally the rough-mouthed and
floozy lower classed member
played by Karlie Roth. The women are “exiled” into the garbageland of an empty lot in New York
City where they are cut off from
any external cues except those
which they bring within themselves. A power struggle ensues,
during which each faction attempts to gain control of the
group by its own idiosyncratic
-

means. The final threat of the
a “secret weapon" puts

use of

the reins in Miss Cramer’s hands.
She attempts to remold the other
two in a sort of new “socialization”, which ultimately results
in a final decay of any previous
class structure or order (regardless of the presence of the social
worker), as the women turn into
“pidgeons” and are last seen
strutting in a circle faster and
faster singing “My Bonny Lies
Over the Ocean” in an ascending

shrieking pitch. Why pigeons?
Pigeons are dull and scavenging
dirty birds who flock together
in the safety of a bellfry, never
venturing to the outer limits of
the skyway. Pigeons have bethey
come socialized animals
eat popcorn from the hand, strut
up and down the park avenues
cooing incomprehensibly. In Osgood’s play, the distinct parellels
between man as a “social being”
and the society of pigeons slowly
merge into one huge trilling and
flapping state of ridiculousness.
—

Task Force Memoranda
Meeting of July 15, 1966

Present were nine members
and a recording secretary.
The co-chairmen reported on
their conference of July 14 with
Dr. Furnas. They said that they
had stressed the facts that the
committee considered its responsibilities to the academic community of transcendent importance, that it planned (1) to hold
open hearings and (2) to study
governing procedures on this and
other campuses, and that, it the
results of the committee’s work
were to have genuine significance,
it must have secretarial and research assistance as well as funds
for such items as a telephone in
Norton Union, postage, and the
expenses contingent with recording testimony at the hearings and
reproducing minutes and memoranda. Dr. Furnas replied by urging that the committee submit
to his office a budget outlining
its needs for the current fiscal
year. He gave the impression that
a budgetary request would receive
careful consideration and, in fact,
suggested that travel expenses be
added to it to cover the possibilities of sending a committeeman to other campuses to study
their governing systems.
When the co-chairmen finished
their report it was proposed that
travel money could also cover the
expenses of bringing consultants
from other campuses to Buffalo.
The co-chairmen established a
subcommittee to meet and draw
up the budget proposal immediately after the committee had
adjourned.

In regard to the Medical-Dental
Student Association’s having representation on the Task Force,
the Graduate Student representatives reported that they had contacted the Association and it had
manifested considerable interest
in being represented. The committee decided that the co-chairmen should invite the Association
to send an interim observer to
committee meetings until such
time as it could elect a perma-

nent representative.

The committee agreed that, al-

though the Subcommittee on Organizational Analysis would have
difficulty in beginning its research until it had research as-

sistance, the Subcommittee on
Hearings could get to work immediately. The chairmen of both
subcommittees called meetings
for the 19th. It was felt that the
former subcommittee could at
least explore the possibilities of
making contacts on other campuses and availing itself of materials already existing on this

campus. The second subcommit-

the purposes outlined in its pro-

was instructed to consider

posed budget. In respect to the
third point, the Task Force after

The committee thought that the
best method for keeping Dean
Meyerson apprised of its work
would be to send him copies of
the memoranda as they were
made public.

due consideration decided that
$100 would not be sufficient even
for its work through the summer.
In the circumstances, it considered alternate sources for funds.
Recalling that its original plan
had been to ask only for emergency money to cover the period
until September 1, and agreeing
to return to this concept, the
committee decided to approach
the Faculty-Student Association
for an interim appropriation. The
co-chairmen were asked to communicate the formal application.

tee

what procedures should be followed to ensure that its hearings
would indeed be informative and
exhaustive.

Meeting of July 22, 1966

Present were eight members
and a temporary recording secretary provided by one of the members.
The proposed budet was the
first topic of business. The cochairmen reported that the ad
hoc budget subcommittee had met
and, following Dr. Furnas’ suggestions and the committee’s
guidelines, had prepared an annual budget which was delivered
to the President’s office on Monday morning, the 18th.
On Wednesday, the 20th, the
co-chairmen received a letter
from the President giving his
decision. This message was now
read to the committee. In substance Dr. Furnas wrote that the
adjustments involved in granting the committee’s request, that
1/12 of its proposed annual budget be allocated to cover its work
of the summer, could not be made
in the 1966-67 budget. His office
offered to make available $100
toward the committee’s secretarial expenses for the period until
September 1. Although the President’s reply did not address itself directly to the other ll/12’s
of the request it did among other
things suggest (1) that considering the additional on-campus obligations of its members, the Task
Force was setting itself too great
a task and (2) that all research
contingent with its work could
better be done by the members
themselves without the aid of
research assistance. The letter
concluded with the statement that
if Dr. Furnas’ successor desired
to modify the position implicit
in this letter he should feel free
to do so. (Dr. Furnas had sent
a copy to Dean Meyerson.)

The discussion which followed
the reading made obvious that
the committee was still convinced
of three things: (1) the immense
importance of its assignments and
responsibilities and the urgency
of its producing early and tangible evidence that it understands
this fact; (2) the magnitude of
its task if it is to discharge these
ultimate obligations and (3) the
absolute need for the funds for

Dr. Furnas had also been ap-

proached with a request that he
make available to the Task Force
copies of the newly proposed bylaws of the Faculty Senate. In a
second letter now read to the
committee, he replied that he
did not wish to release the bylaws until they had been considered by the whole Faculty Senate
and the SUNYAB Council, and
until he was satisfied that they
did not conflict with the policies
being developed at Albany.

The Chairman of the Subcommittee on Hearings now gave his
report. The subcommittee had
decided to hold two open hearings in August and to continue
hearings into the fall if necessary
to give all interested parties in
the academic community the opportunity to testify. The point
was emphasized, however, that although the number of hearings is
not limited, the sooner all testimony is heard the sooner the
subcommittee can submit its final
report. The members agreed that
when possible the hearings should
be held in midweek in order to
serve the larger number of people then on campus and that they
should be alternated between
afternoons and evenings to ease
conflicts with classes, meetings,

There were some very good
moments and laughs in this (recognizable?) situation. Esther
Swartz made her acting debut in
this play and exhibited a good

sense of stage presence, especially during a popcorn-eating scene;

KarMe Roth, however, turned in
the most outstandingperformance
of the trio, although the prevalent lusty laugh was somewhat
forced. On the whole, each ac-

tress performed emphatically,
complementing each other beautifully at times, especially in the

tonal modulations of voicos
low, deep-pitched and elegant for
the higher class representative;
the squeaky, whining speech of
the N. Y. social worker; and the
raspy, brawling bellow of the lowlife women. Director Joseph Krysiak deserves much credit for this
particular casting feat. I feel that
the play might have been better
if the actors had spoken a foreign language which the audience couldn’t understand. Obtrusive dialogue (which amounted
—

statement to the subcommittee.
The members expressed the
hopes (1) that interested campus
groups holding similar opinions
would send common spokesmen
to obviate needless repetition and
expedite the hearings; (2) that
when a prospective speaker first

contacted the subcommittee he
would state whether he represented himself or some group and
give some indication of what topic
he wished to discuss. (With this
advanced information, the committee can prepare itself for
garnering all possible benefit
from the testimony); and (3) that
speakers will hold in mind the
mandate of the Task Force and
direct their testimony to means
for implementing the two specific ends in view.
The co-chairman of the Subcommittee on Organizational Analysis reported for his subcommittee. Until they had research
assistance the members decided

/

what the play was about) such as:
“This is absurd” and a discussion
of the “natural order of things.”
and the repetitive sure-Iaugh-getter “shit-chat” (“stuff it up” and
"blow it out your ass”) was making the play into a cute wordburlesque. The message could
surely have been received by
just the vigorous and fast-moving,
slapstick-like action, coupled with
the auditory element previously
mentioned.
Just as the language detracted (purposely perhaps) from the
general staging of Pigeons, so did
it enhance de Ghelderode’s The
Blind Men. Much doesn't have
it
to be said about this play
was more of a poetic experience.
But a few points: the place is
Europe during the Middle Ages
—or today, if you will. The Blind
Men describes a universal condiensuing death
tion of all men
—and the illusory nature of his
quest for that "lost homeland”
—

—

(Cont’d on Pg. 7)

on two courses of action. First of
all, agreeing that the obvious
source of information on the present institutional structure of this
campus was the Office of Institutional Research, they planned
to invite Dr. Anderson, the head
of the office, to speak to the Task
Force on this subject. Secondly,
they would immediately put the
subcommittee in correspondence
with some twenty-five universities
and colleges at which circumstances exist comparable in various aspects to those at SUNYAB.
Three letters would be sent to
each institution —one to the undergraduate student association,
one to the graduate student association, and one to the office
of the president—each giving the
background and mandate of the
Task Force, the purpose of the
subcommittee, and a request for
the contacted parties to submit
whatever information they consider pertinent.

HOWARD

•V JOHRionJ Q\
FISH FRY):
J9
/

•
*

To get the hearings under way
the committee decided that announcements should gb to the
Spectrum and WBFO staling that
I he first hearings will be held
in Baird Hall (it is air conditioned) on August 10 and 11, and
asking all who wish to testify
to notify the subcommittee by
August 5. The notice would also
point out that anyone who pre
ferred could submit a wrillct

to a self-conscious explanation of

V

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��SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

Cditoriai Comment

.

.

Friday, July 29, 1966

oCetterS to the (Editor

.

MY CAMPUS DOES
THE HANKY PANKY

The Forecast Is Hot

That this University now finds itself under attack from
various quarters regarding the new Amherst campus can
in large part be ascribed to the manner in which the enterprise was planned and the ostensible indolence in which
the plans are being effected.
From the beginning, the project has lacked the confidence of much of the academic community for a number
of reasons;
1) There seems to have been totally inadequate consultation with students, faculty, and alumni concerning a)
the location of the campus, b) the kind of campus these
groups desired, and c) some kind of mechanism by which
these groups could approve the final plans. To the latter
point, Planning and Development answered that the students
and faculty were not experts. It does not take an expert over
two years to take soil tests on 1000 acres of land. Nor do
experts find themselves claustrophobic in windowless, Kafkaesque lecture halls or choked by the dust of erstwhile
mudholes. Experts seldom live in their handiwork. Evidently Planning and Development has been consulting with various departments concerning what they need in the way of
facilities, but this seems hardly sufficient—it is after the
fact. Perhaps the students and faculty should each be given
the money to hire architectural consultants to make sure
their needs will be considered.
2) So far the original study of the five possible sites
(the Moore report) and the proceedings of the meetings
at which the Amherst site was chosen have not been released

to the public. This seems strange. Dr. Murray, Executive

Vice President of the State University, served on a “central
staff” which made the final approval of the Amherst site
off the Moore report. Moore made no specific recommendations but current rumor has it that the downtown waterfront
site was objectively the best location. This might explain
why none of the report or meetings memoranda have been
released—Amherst may not be the best of all possible sites.
3) The delays on construction and reasons given therefor can hardly be expected to gain the confidence of the
academic or outside community. While general planning
for space requirements, etc., continues unabated, other
seemingly primary areas of planning lag on. It has taken
over two years to take soil tests on the 1000 acres and they
have yet to be completed. The Spectrum talked to an architectural firm and was told that it should take a maximum
of seven months. Construction of buildings has also been
delayed possibly as late as the Spring of 1968. It has also
been recently discovered that there is not now and never
has been a planning schedule. Originally the project was
divided into three major phases.

Many questions remain. Perhaps the most important
of these is the wisdom of the Amherst site—certainly this
has been impugned by the manner in which the University
has planned and carried out its development. The time has
come for an open review of the whole issue. What confidence remains cannot but be bolstered by such a review.

THE TASK FORCE

TO THE EDITOR:
Rejecting, totally, the political,
theological, literary, philosophical and academic assumptions
which hinge our society to the
withered refrigerator of civilization (and which are, in any case,
rooted in stupidity and class interest) and insisting, moreover,
on our own irresistabie emotional
autonomy, we find it essential to
affirm, here and now, without
reservations and at any price, the
marvelous red and black validity
of absolute revolt, the only attitude worthy of survival in the
present millenium of streets and
dreams.
More than ever, with everything continually at stake, we
find it necessary to affirm the
impassioned use of the most
dangerous weapons in the arsenal
of freedom:

MAD LOVE: totally subversive,
the absolute enemy of bourgeois
culture;
opposed to literlike a machinegun, exterminating the blind
flags of immediate reality;

POETRY:

(as

ature) breathing

HUMOR: the dynamite and
guerilla warfare of the mind, as
effective in its own domain as
material dynamite and guerilla
warfare in the streets (when necessary, however, rest assured:
we shall use every means at our
disposal);
SABOTAGE; ruthless and relentless destruction of the bureaucratic and cultural machinery
of oppression.

.

.

ticians!

!

Long live the New Guinea tribe
who, aware of the stupidity of
technological civilization, massacred the managers of a washing-machine factory, took over
the buildnig and converted it
into a temple of the marvelous
but elusive Rabbit-god! !
Long live the youth of Fairbanks, Alaska, who, after being
forbidden by law to drop out of
school, retaliated by burning
down the schoolhouse! !
Long live the lunatic who escaped from an asylum and calmly
robbed a down-town bank only

to have his “sane” brother tell
The Man!

!

Long live Barry Bondhus of
Big Lake, Minnesota, who
dumped two buckets of shit into

the file drawers
board!!!

of his

draft

Long live the twelve Fort
Lauderdale, Florida, teens who,

prevented by their schools from
meaningful experimentation, independently began manufacturing
LSD, two sizes of plastic bombs,
smoke bombs and a varied and
catalytic assortment of revolutionary hardware! !
Long live the Incredible Hulk,
wildcat strikers, the Nat Turner
Insurrection, high-school dropouts, draft-dodgers, deserters, delinquents, saboteurs and all those
soul-brothers, wild-eyed dreamers,
real and imaginary heores of defiance and rebellion who pool
their collective resources in the
exquisite, material transformation of the world according to
desire!

!

!

!

The lucidity. of alley apples
and broken bottles have replaced
autumn leaves—the crushing subservience to authority scorched
by molotov cocktails of fantastic
destruction, and, far from finally,
the expressionless caress has
been deliciously transcended by
the touch that stimulates to unheard of heights the sensuous
pores of the only dynamism that
matters. As liberated souls (and
we are, for our guests cannot be
stopped now) we have necessarily
an historically enviable role as
cosmic architects armed with
hammers, electric guitars, and
apocalyptic visions, but more
significantly, armed with the exhilarating knowledge that we are
able to crush systematically all
obstacles placed in the way of
our desires and to build a new
Surrealist Group, Anarchist
Horde.

LSD Reveals Reality
TO THE EDITOR:

To those who are with or even
ingested Joel Myers’ insane comments re Gardiner and LSD
(Spectrum 16/53): Who isn’t a
product of his environment? Since
grammatically and hence experimentally when do environments
bomb and provide? What gives

this guy the authority (not to
mention knowledge) to refer to
LSD as deadly? What is the basis
for the hasty and unexplained
connection Myers draws between
LSD, narcotics, the Shah of Iran,
and heroin? Perhaps some of the
Spectrum readers are naive
all the more reason to take the
drug and from then realize that
—

there are no ‘deadly consequences,’ and that LSD reveals modern
realities as only it can. There is

.
no alternative. Agreeable
only if you want to unstick your
.

.

mental and emotional contraceptives. ‘We are in full control of
the situation’ said the biologist on
his way to the john.
Yours on earth alone

Advantages of Downtown Campus
TO VHE EDITOR:
I am greatly surprised that the
proposal to locate the new campus downtown or on the waterfront has not been given more
serious consideration. It would
seem to offer many advantages,
both to the student body and the
city of Buffalo as a whole. Because of the convenience to
stores and theaters, both students
and downtown merchants would
benefit as a result of this location. The proximity to the main
business district would also be
advantageous to students holding
part time jobs to help finance
their education.

The Task Force has run into its first snag with the
President’s Office. It seems that the “immediate need
of opening and maintaining a dialogue among students,
faculty, and administrative groups” (i.e., the mandate of
the Committee) was that of averting a Hayes Hall sit-in.
The Task Force now cannot even get sufficient financial and
secretarial aid from the President’s Office to further its
The greatest advantage, which
enterprise. (See the latest Memoranda in this issue.)
no one else has brought into disis the abundance of inThe Task Force considers itself independent of the cussion,
expensive housing within walking
President, at whose whim it began. This attitude resembles distance of the downtown locathat of the teenage son who likewise considers himself tion. This would be a distinct
independent of the old man until it comes time for money: advantage to students who wish
“Take out the papers and the trash/Or you don’t get no to live off campus for personal
spending cash.”
The President’s attitude toward the Task Force
must
be manifesting itself to everyone by now: the money and
help could be found if Furnas took it seriously. Obviously
the only way for the Committee to get things done is
to use
the present structure for its own ends and somehow bypass
the President’s Office. Furnas might not give the Task
Washington, D C., July 19—The
Force sufficient funds; he certainly would not disband
it Peace Corps
the second time
at this late date. The Committee must also always operate in its five andforone
half years is
under the onus of serving only an advisory function to the recruiting volunteers for a specifsame President who created the “legitimate channel”.
ic overseas assignment in Kenya,
where there is a critical need for
Let us hope that Mr. Meyerson will be a bit more teachers and land settlement
officers.
cooperative. The Committee seems to be serious about
their
The goal is for 160 volunteers
purpose, despite the lack of concern shown by Dr-. Furnas.
to begin training in mid-Septem.

It is necessary, at times (and
this is one of them) to speak
bluntly: we affirm deliriously
and simply the TOTAL LIBERATION OF MAN.
Long live the Negroes of Watts,
the Puerto Ricans of Chicago, the
Provos of Amsterdam, the Zengakuren of Japan and the youth
of all countries who burn cop
cars in the street and demonstrate by these exemplary manifestations that the struggle for
freedom cannot be guided by the
rulebooks of priests and poli-

or financial reasons. It would also
benefit the total urban renewal
program by bringing persons of
higher educational and social
backgrounds into blighted areas,
tending to upgrade the area and
decrease the social separation of
the middle class suburbanite and
the inner city resident. This
seems desirable. The Millersport
Highway location would inconvenience the students and many faculty members, while it might deal
an injurious blow to the already
depressed economy of downtown
Buffalo.

Other points that no one has
brought out before tend to sup-

port the same conclusion. There
is almost no off-campus housing
in the Millersport area that students could afford. This would
tend to penalize the student who
goes off campus for reasons of
economy. If someone could pay
high rent or support

an auto-

Peace Corps Recruitment
For Volunteers to Kenya
her and mid-October. The deadline for applications is August
15.
Applications can be obtained
from the Peace Corps Liaison on
campus, at the Post Office, or by
writing to Peace Corps. Completed applications should be sent
to Kenya Desk, Peace Corps,
Washington, D C, 20525.

mobile, however, the inconvenience would be minimal. The average student would probably
have to live in the dorms, even
if he could have previously found
more economical housing. I often
wonder if the administration has
considered the fact that this
might injure the very persons for
whom public education has been
designed. I wonder if they have
considered the abridgement of
freedom of choice involved in
such a policy. I also wonder if
they have considered the astronomical costs that would fall upon
the backs of the people of New
York if 90% of the out of state
students had to be housed in
dormitories.
I might point out in conclusion,
that if the University is to obtain
land downtown, it must act now.
A lakefront complex of high rise
buildings with a green belt between them could be most attractive, and the land in Amherst
would be available when the offspring of today’s youth need more
college space. In twenty years
U.B. may need three campuses.
This way it would be far more
feasible to provide for inevitable
urban and college expansion.

The use of the downtown location now, while holding more
land in reserve, would seem highly advantageous to the students,
the University and the people of
Buffalo, in the near future and
in the years to come.
Lewis Bowman

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                    <text>SUMMER

-J

—

__

VOLUME 16

m

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JULY

BUFFALO

h

REALISM AND

radicalism

22. 1966

NO.

SS

Outlook: Cold
Feasibility: Nearing Zero
It has happened again. The
student body has been left up in
the air on another aspect of U.B.
development—the new Amherst
campus. Everyone seems to know
what’s going on (or what isn’t
going on) but no one knows why.
Construction May Bo Delayed
This week it was hinted that
construction of the Amherst site
may or may not begin in the fall.
According to a somewhat flexible
schedule (certainly not a rigid
one), outlined last November by
Samuel B. Gould, State University
President, plans for the new campus extension were to be revealed
in May or June of this year.
Ground moving operations were
to have begun this summer and
the construction of dormitories
and recreational facilities was
scheduled for the fall. Until last
week, there was no mention of
even a possible change in plans.
Today, mid-summer 1966, the certainty of breaking ground in the
fall has turned into hopeful speculation on the part of the State
University Construction Fund in
Albany. In other words, one might
say, millions for planning but
not one sent for development.
Soil Testing Causes Delay
The University’s Office of Planning and Development pointed
out the importance of soil and
sub-surface testing and any delay
in construction will be caused
by the failure to complete the
testing. Soil testing began in 1964
and may be completed this fall.
This procedure is necessary to
determine building locations and
the shape, height, and load distribution suitable to the particular subsurface conditions of the
area.

There can be little doubt that
the soil tests are important but
isn’t two years stretching things
a bit? A twelve year old boy with
a Gilbert kit could probably have
done it in a couple of months.
What are they planning anyway,
sharecropping 500 acres for cotton?
What is most surprising is that
a project as large as this one
apparently is not as well-planned
as it should be. Why weren’t
these tests carried out previous
to the purchase? This is like buying through mail-order catalogue,
sight unseen. Should soil and subsurface testing be considered a
valid reason for delaying so large
an undertaking? If so, why does
something that should be a routine procedure take two years
to complete? These unanswered
questions lead to a great deal
of speculation. Perhaps soil testing is not the only reason (or
even the reason) for the delay.
Implications of Delay
Whatever the reasons may be,
any delay is certain to have widespread implications. Besides holding up the 11.7 million dollar
Lockport Expressway, the delay
will undoubtedly pose new problems for the University itself.
Does delay now mean that the
new campus will not be ready
in five years? If it is not ready
by that time, will the temporary
annex buildings on our present
campus be useable? (We learned
last week that they were built
to last five years). Will a delay
in moving require more construction of buildings on the present campus—temporary or otherwise? Failure to begin construction this fall may have serious

reprecussions.

May arson May Hava Rola

It has been rumored that Hr.
assume the

Meyerson, who is to

September I, 1966,
would have liked to have had
some say in the choosing of a
site and the planning of a new
campus. It is also a possibility
that Planning and Development
deem it wise to consult the president-designate before
going
ahead with the project.
Mr. Meyerson is Dean of the
School of Environmental Design
at the University of California
at Berkeley and highly qualified
to venture an opinion in this
type of deveolpment. Consulting
him on this matter would probably be a good idea.
Mr. Meyerson has said that he
believes the decision to build in
Amherst is irreversable. One
would think that a decision as
important as the location of a
university would have been carefully made and that there would
be no need or desire to reverse
the decision. However, if before it
is begun, it seems better to locate the campus elsewhere, then
reconsideration of the Amherst
site is in order.
Decision Made at One Meeting
In choosing the present site,
the State University Board of
Trustees, in one meeting on June
11, 1964, voted unanimously to
adopt a resolution to use the Amherst site for the new campus
extension. Most of the land was
then purchased. (The University
is still trying to purchase about
forty private lots within the proposed site).
The Board acted on information compiled between January
and April of 1964 by Vincent J.
Moore. Mr. Moore was chosen for
the research because he had previously worked for the Buffalo
City Planning Commission. Evidently, to the satisfaction of the
Board, this research justified the
presidency

purchase.

Possible Alternate Site
When the Amherst site was
first considered, another possible
location mentioned was downtown Buffalo. A location along
perhaps the only) contender for
Amherst. Now there appears to
be a revitalized interest in the
waterfront area. The advantages
of such a location include convenient accessibility to the campus and the nearness of the cam-

area could prove to be most advantageous financially.

Much Untold
Basically, what we want to
know are the answers to a few
straight-forward questions. Concerning a possible delay: How
long does it take to make soil
tests? Is this the only reason
for the delay and if not, what is?
Why was there no definite schedule in the first place? Concerning the question of location: Was
sufficient research done to justify the Amherst purchase and was
the research done solely in the
best interests of the University?
Should we reconsider the waterfront as a better location for the
University? Time is short and
growing shorter.
In general dealings concerning the new campus appear to be
clouded in mystery. Much remains to be told. We cannot be
satisfied with what we have. The
search will continue.

tRISON

AN INTERVIEW:

Paul Carter-Harrison

Paul Carter-Harrison, artist-inresidence who lives in Holland,
will present two of his own plays,
Pavana for a Dead-Pan Minstrel
and Top Hal, on July 29, 30. 31
and August 5, 6, 7. The Baird
Hall performances, directed by
Mr. Harrison, will be the American premieres for both plays.
In an interview with the Spectrum, Mr. Harrison commented
upon a variety of subjects, most
of which refer to his plays.
“Stylistically, the plays are
eastern European in that they
show a visible influence of Polish
mime theatre and Brechtean development. Liguistically, there is
an observable influence of Beckett and Pinter. The plays deal
with contemporary problems in-

But since we are doing them in
America, they will be more controversial.

“Pavane, for example, deals
with the black-white syndrome
Slapstick, mime, and vaudeville
minstrel-type playing are integrated to bring the play to its
The vehicle
tragic conclusion.
used to effect this is the dance,

pus to downtown Buffalo facilishopping areas, theaters,
ties
hotels, etc. Some of the disadvantages discussed were the problems around the Thruway, the choreographed by Eleo Pomare,
inability to expand, and the poswho had to teach the actors how
sible harshness of winter weather. to dance. The problem of the
(The latter presents a minor probplay involves the exchange of
lem since architectual design identities between a black and
most
could eliminate
of the bad white man so that they may play
effects).
at seducing girls in cafes. In
Let us make it clear that if doing so they live up to the
these are the reasons for delay—- cliches which the masks (literally)
i.e., to consult Mr. Meyerson and entail. Only tragedy can come
to consider a possible alternate from clicked behavior.
location, we feel that these are
“Top Hat is musically orchessound reasons. Naturally, no one
wants to see the building of our trated. It brings together a munew campus delayed but it may sician, a woman speaker, and a
man. The man, who is forced to
be better to re-examine the situation if there are uncertainties. mime because the woman has all
has
Once building is underway, the the lines, is a tramp who
decision is irreversible, so let’s be hitherto lived according to his
own volition. His life has been
sure.
Maybe the new extension could aborted by a rich woman who
be built in the waterfront area seduces him in a park. Subseand, if so, there should be no quently he is transported around
remorse over the purchase of the the world in a sexual fantasy.
Amherst site. The land will un- Having lost his direction, he is
doubtedly retain its value and, destroyed. The symbolic referin fact, most probably be worth ence of the tramp’s downfall is
more. The location is ideal for the man absorbed by the Estaba housing development and the lishment who is no longer able
desire of government officials to to function by his free will.”
When asked if this reference
build an expressway through the
—

PAUL

referred to himself. Mr. Harrison
replied that it is “a generalized
reference. I think of myself as
a fairly free person: that is, fairly
free of institutional life. Top
Hat's syntax is in terms of music.
It is written aiong the lines of
Brechtean conception of alienation. I am concerned with what
is happening and want the audience to become aware of itself.
Above all. atrophy is entertaining The motif of this play cannot be realized without the proper combination of lighting, movement, and sound.”
Asked why he lives in Holland,
the playwright answered. “One
lives in Europe simply because
it gives one distance from which
to view the American scene. The
foreign reference gives one a
sense of proportions. One can
look much more closely at one’s
self and at the same time be able
to look back. Retrospection becomes more defined. The definition of one's self in America is

not as clear.

“Europe has greater sources
of the theatre that I’m interested

in than America. The American
stage is too parochial. Harold
Clurman has suggested that most
of the playwrights seem to be
getting their ’seminal influence’
from Albee. The economic situation leads playwrights to take
fewer chances. They produce the
same themes, styles, etc.
“People tend to consider me in
relation to my contemporaries
(eg. Baldwin. Jones), but they
are not my contemporaries in
what they are doing. And they
certainly are not because they
are black. Baldwin is not theatrically interesting for me because
his rhetoric tends to become sentimental. Jones' rage makes him
impotent and his craft is too limited, even though I agree with
some of the things be is doing.
If anyone can be considered my
contemporary it would be Conrad
Bromberg
“Essentially I am not a very
ambitious man: that is, I do not
work for the satisfaction of great
publics. I'm a man that prefers
to rest under the palmtrees somewhere and then, once I begin to

work, I work very hard. That
liberty cannot be taken in America. The economic and social
pressures are too great. In Europe. I don't have to keep up
with anything by myself.
“In my book of essays published in Holland, Modern Drama
Footnote, I comment on

Cage's

Lecture on Nothing (which Mr.
Harrison presented here two
weeks ago). The metrics of the
lecture usually evoke a ritualistic
response from the audience. Due
to the repetitious nature of the
‘lecture’ they respond to the suggestions of somnolence by becoming bored or going to sleep and
'that is a pleasure.' If you can
accomplish this in drama, you’ve
done something.

“1 have no

political

views. In

America everyone seems concerned with intergroup relationships.
I’m not interested in that; I’m
interested in one to one relationships as opposed to categorically

accepting whole groups.
"One of my plays, The Leader,
takes the leadership of the quasirevolution of American Negroes
to task. In the play the leadership is given the responsibility
of negotiating with a white liberal woman who has a Negro lover.
Sexuality obtrudes on the goals
of the meeting and it collapses.
'The leadership of the Negro
movement in America seems to
be slightly impotent. They cannot
establish a common goal because
they are fractionalized. Personal
interests render their actions impotent. What end can revolution
come to in this country? There
must always exist a master-slave
relationship. I am not an egali-

tarian. This conflict creates a
tension which makes societies interesting. Revolution does not
create equality. It merely reestablishes the master-slave relationship with different personnel. I consider this to be part of
the absurdity of human behavior.
If one is to call the Negro movement a revolution, this is what
he is talking about. Rebellion
would be a more accurate term.

“I consider myself apolitical,
but I am aware of political developments around the world. That
too is an absurdity."

�PAM TWO

Annual Graves

Memorandum III
EDITOR’S NOTE: The Special
Task Force Committee was created (1) to inquire into and make
proposals with respect to establishing an open and continual
dialogue among students, faculty
and administrators, and (2) to
make such proposals as it deems

The University’s annual celebration of the birthday of Robert Graves (July 24, 1895) will
feature an exhibit of the poet’s
manuscripts and first editions
in the poetry room of the Lockwood Memorial Library, July 24
through August 31. The display
will include original manuscripts
of many of the author's important

appropriate regarding organizational means for participation by

these groups in the formulation
of educational policy in the University. The committee is composed of both students and faculty elected by their representative
governing bodies. Shortly after
each of its meetings it will make
available proceedings memoranda
at the candy counter in Norton
Union. The Spectrum will also
print each memorandum. The following is the report of the third

poems.

Robert Graves has been writing
poetry since 1914 and considers
himself, in spite of his many
works on non-fiction, a poet above
all else. His stature as a poet,

his great warmth of spirit, and
his beneficient influence on
younger poets cannot be overemphasized.
Graves has also been acclaimed
as a novelist, cultural and religious historian, essayist, trans-

meeting:

lator, critic and classicist. He is
one of the most prodigious
authors alive. While his scholarship has never been questioned,
his books have often aroused
great controversy.
The most complete collection
of Grave’s manuscripts in the
World is housed in the University’s Lockwood Memorial Li-

Memorandum III
Meeting of July 9, 1966
Present were the complete
committee of ten and a recording
secretary.

Robert Grave* at Heme en Majorca

New Faculty Appointments for '66- 67
Number 131 Include Robert Creeley
The appointment of 131 new
faculty members for the 1966-6?
academic year have been announced by the State University
at Buffalo.
New appointments are:

les J. Mode; Philosophy, Dr.
William F. Edwards; Physics, Dr.
Shigeji Fugita; Political Science.

PROFESSORS

Education —Dr. Charlse Kiser,
Dr. Charles Gvaerick, Dr. Gerald
Rising, Dr. Aubrey H. Roden.
Engineering—Civil, Dr. Emmanuel Partheniades; Chemical,
Dr. Julian Szekely.

bert Scigliano, Dr. Lester W.
Millgrath, Dr. Robert Spencer.
Education—Dr. E. D. Duryea,
Dr. Walter Petty (professorial
lecturer).

Engineering—Civil. Dr. Simon
Ince (visiting professor).
Law—Dr. William H. Angus.
Dr. Daniel J. Gifford.
Medicine—Pathology, Dr. An
and P. Chaudhry.

ASSOCIATE PROFESSORS
College of Arts end Sciences—
Chemistry, Dr. Albert Padwa, Dr,
Albert Hershberger, Dr. Garry A.
Bechnitz; Drama and Speech, Dr.
Charles R. Petrie, Jr.; English.
Burton Raffel, Dr. Taylor Stoehr;
Geological Science, Dr. Paul H.
Reitan; Mathematics, Dr. G. R.
Blakely, Dr. Donald R. Ostberg;
Mathematical Statistics, Dr. Char-

Clark Gym Open
The swimming pool in Clark
Gym will open to faculty and
staff from 3:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Mondays through Fridays, and
from 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. on
Tuesdays and Thursdays for the
University personnel and their
families. Other recreational activities, including badminton, bas-

ketball, and handball, will be
available daily from 1:30 p.m.
to 3:30 pm.

The first item on the agenda
a report made by the cochairmen and Professor Sapp on
their telephone conference call
of July 5, with Dean Meyerson.
The conversation covered a number of points:
was

brary.

Mathematics, Dr. Nicholas Findler (jointly with
computing
center). Dr.
John Hyhill, Dr
Maria Wonenburger; Music, Dr.
Henri Pousseur (visiting Slee
professor); Physics, Dr. Mendel

22. 1966

Task Force:

Birthday Party

College of Arts end Sciences—
Biology, Dr. James F. Danielli,
Dr. Waiter G. Rosen; Chemistry,
Dr. Arthur N. Hambly (visiting
professor); English, Robert Greeley (visiting professor). Dr. Patricia J. Thomson (visiting professor); History, Dr. John T. Krause.
Dr. Arthur J. Marwick (visiting
professor). Dr. Clifton K. Yearley,

Friday, July

SPECTRUM

Dr. Lloyd V, Blackenship (jointly
with graduate school of Business
Administration); Psychology, Dr.
Dean G. Pruitt.

ASSISTANT PROFESSORS
College of Arts and Sciences—
Anthropology, Dr. Kenneth F.
Otterbein, Dr. Albert T. Steegraan, Dr. Robert Harvey, Dr.
Roy A. Jensen; Chemistry, Dr,
Orville Beachley; Classics, Dr.
John J. Peradotto; English, Dr.
Max A. Wickert, Dr. Victor A.
Doyno, Dr. Bruce H. Jackson, Dr.

Dr. Richard A. Mitchell; Mathematics, Dr. Kim L. Cheu, Dr.
Akiko Kino, Dr. Jean-CIaude
Deredrian; Music, Dr. James W.
McKinnon; Philosophy, Dr. Robert L. Martin (jointly with Mu
sic). Dr. Antoinette M. Paterson;
Physics, Dr. Robert J. Hull; Political Science, Dr. Jerome Slater,
Dr. Lyman A. Kellstedt; Sociology, Dr. Daniel Yutzy.
Dentistry—Dr. Elliot N. Gale
(behavioral science).

Education—Dr. Andrew Halpern and Dr. Jeremy Finn.
Engineering—Mechanical, Dr.
Gerald Francis; Interdisciplinary
Studies and Research, Dr. Ronald

Wichner.
Law—Dr. Barbara A. Kulzer.
Medicine—Anatomy, Dr. Chester Glomsld, Dr. Paul Milley;

Creative Craft

Center

The Creative Craft Center in
Rooms 7 and 0, Norton Hall, will
be open June 6 through August
26, Mondays through Fridays
from 11 a m. to 4 p.m., and Tuesday and Thursday evenings from
7 p.m. to 10 p.m. During the
Summer only, spouses of students,
faculty, and staff may enroll in
Craft Center programs. For further information, call the Center,
Ext. 3546.

Pediatrics, Dr. Charlotte Catz,
Pharmacy —Dr. Milo Gibaldi.
Social Welfare—Dr. Lewis J
Bowyer, Dr. William Morris, Dr.

Stanley Wass.
Lecturers (rank of assistant
professor contingent upon completion of Ph.D. College of Arts
and Sciences—Ant., Christopher

Jones; Classcis, Ronald A. Zirin;

English, Carl Dennis, Frederick
S. Plotkin, Royal Roussel, Neil
Schmitz, John T. Ogden; Economics, James R. Crotty, John T,
Rowntree, Jr.; Geological Science,
Dennis F. Hodge; History, Reginald A. Bowler, Lewis C. Perry,
Lawrence A. Schneider.

INSTRUCTORS
College of Arts and Sciences—
English, Albert G. Glover; Modern Languages, Patricio Estelle.

Coad, Barna Szabo.
Medicine—Thomas Flanagan.
LECTURERS
College of Arts and Sciences—
Anthropolyogy, Burton Pasternak; Art, Gerald Needham;
Drama nad Speech, Manual Grossman, Frederick J. Skalny; Eco
nomics, Sugwoo Kim; Geography,
Donald W. Kolbert; History, John

A. Larkin: Mathematics, Dr.
Arthur H. Stroud (jointly with
computing center), Michael Strzelec; Modern Languages, Ross
D. Hall; Music, Jerome Noble;
Philosophy, Shinjo Kawaski, Kah
K. Cho (visiting lecturer), Charles
N. Pailthrop; Political Science,
Psychology,
Martin J, Plax;
Gloria L. Roblin, Ronald E.
Schaub; Sociology, Charles King,
Norma L. Scavilla, Robert P,
Snow.

India Association
Program
The India Association of Buffalo will entertain eleven Indians
visiting the Buffalo area in an
informal gathering tonight in
Norton Union, Room 340, from
7:30 to 9:30 p.m.
The visitors are participants
in the “Experiment in International Living” program.

1, The Task Force spokesmen
informed the Dean that the committee is an elective body, responsible to the students and
faculty and operating independent of the office of the president.
They agreed, however, that its
work will be facilitated if it has
the advice and counsel of the incoming administration.
2. When asked how he visualized the committee’s role, the
Dean countered by asking how
the committee construed its role.
The spokesmen replied by reiterating the substance of the committee’s first meeting and, at the
Dean’s request, by directly quoting its original mandate.

3. In answer to the Dean’s question, the spokesmen said the
committee did not consider its
tenure to be indefinite. It considered itself as owing to its

constituency a specific obligation
which could conceivably lead to
its drawing up a set of rules or
a constitution to provide formal
procedures for communication
and decision making on this cam-

4. The

Dean declined a request

that he spell out those matters
which he considered largely administrative in character as distinct from policy making. He said
that ideally such distinctions

would be unnecessary, that if the
proper dialogue were established all decisions which affected
academic life and educational
policy would be subject to review.
He added that he had always
thought of himself as a faculty
member first and an administra-

tor secondly.

5. The Dean agreed that the
Task Force should at once get
on with its work. The spokesmen
then explained the two activities
which the committee had initially laid out for itself:
a. A study to establish what
the present governing bodies of
this institution are, what their
official and unofficial functions
are, and what systems exist for
both the formal and informal exchange of ideas among them.
Here the Dean added that the
committe should also study existing situations on other campuses. He suggested that out of
this investigation could come one
of three recommendations: (I)
retain the present apparatus (2)
create new apparatus for more
democratic discussion and response, or (3) strengthen the roles
of the student and faculty sen-

ates.

b. Open hearings at which interested individuals or represen-

tatives of interested groups in
the academic community could
present their views and make
recommendations. Here the
spokesman stressed that such testimony could define the problems
and spell out some of the means
of solution. The Dean said he
would support purposeful and
fruitful hearings.
6. The Dean implied that once
he was installed as president he
would provide the committee
with whatever clerical and research help it required to discharge its mandate. In the meantime he suggested that the committee avail itself of conclusions
deriving from other investigations on campus such as the findings of the Office of Institutional
Research or the results of the
reorganization of the Faculty Sen-

ate.
After hearing the report on
the telephone conference the
committee members agreed that
in order to begin their work now
they must have immediate clerical and research assistance, and
an assigned office large enough
for their meetings and for staff
work. The co-chairmen reported
that they had scheduled a conference with Dr. Furnas at which
they would present the committee’s case for assistance during
the interim period.
Attention was called to the opportunity offered by the presence
on campus during the 'summer
of persons of unusual experience
at other universities both in this
country and abroad. The Task
Force might find these visitors
an excellent source for information on experiments and innovations that have succeeded (or
failed) on other campuses. The
committee agreed to initiate the
necessary contacts.
The members now decided that
the time had come to divide themselves into two subcommittees,
one to work on organizational
analysis and the other to prepare
for and hold open hearings.
When the findings of these two
committees had been reported, a
third committee would be created to correlate them and to make
specific recommendations. As appointed by the co-chairmen the
membership of the subcommittees are as follows:

1. Organizational Analysis
Hawkland, chairman; Mr. Kim Darrow; Dr. Raymond Hunt; Mr. Dennis Miller.
—

Dean William

co-chairman;

Mr.

Jon Simpllcto.

Professor Allen
2. Hearings
Sapp, chairman; Mr. Donald
Ames; Dr. Rollo Handy; Mr. John
Hellriegel, cochairman; Dr. John
—

Milligan.

At the same time that the subcommittees were at work the
members felt that regular meetings of the whole committee
should continue to ensure accomplishment and to keep everyone in touch with progress.
The committee agreed to look
into the question of the MedicalDental Student Association being
represented in its membership.

SOFTBALL
Standings through July IB
W
L
4
Psychology
0
Chemistry
4
1
Biology
2
1
3
Nuclear Center
2
Physics
3
2
Adm. &amp; Records
1
2
English
1
3
0
3
Education
Scores
Physics 5, Nuclear Center 3:

Wixon

(W).

Psychology 5, Chemistry 1:
Laughery (W), Dinan (L).
Adm. &amp; Rec. 8, English 5: Sanford (W), Feldman (L).
Chemistry 25, Education 6: Klein
(W).

English 13, Physics 9: Feldman
(W), Wixon (L).
Chemistry 5, Nuclear Center 2:

Dinan

(W),

Bickel

(L).

�Friday, July 22, 1966

PAM THRU

SPECTRUM

IM®Q2

Research Center Trustees
Rename Furnas President

M SLrman

I have always believed that one of the
most important criteria for judging a director’s cinematic creativity is the ability
of the director to fluctuate between styles
as deftly and subtlely as a person’s own
mfental processes. Irvin Kreschner (director
of A Fine Madness), and Joseph Losey (director of Modesty Blaise), are both good directors, but neither are able to capture that
illusory motion (the only “reality” is the
projected celluloid at any given moment)
which is the aesthetic landscape of film.
Both A Fine Madness and Modesty Blaise
demand this shifting of cinematic gears;
neither film has it.

in Modesty Blaise, is never merely adequate.
She is either superb or terrible—in this film,
terrible. And even her angst-ridden face (she
has the most interesting facial features of
any actress in contemporary cinema) cannot
hide the fact of her extreme discomfort in
the part. The rest pf the cast, however, is
first-rate; especially Dirk Bogarde, who for
the past ten years, has been turning in masterful performances in a startling variety
of roles.

Too often through the film it seems
like Losey trying to direct like DeBroca trying to direct like Godard. There is a central
paradox around which the film is based:
Elliott Baker, who wrote the novel A Losey wants to make the definitive statement
Fine Madness, and the screenplay created in about the absurdity of the camp sensibility
the character of Sampson Shillitoe, anarchic and at the same time, seems hell-bent on
poet-rebel, a hero typical of the hero of the making a campy film. He fails for the same
American novel of the 1960’s. Shillitoe, like reason Kerschner does
he cannot fluctuRandle Patrick McMurphy (the influence of ate styles, shift gears, deftly enough. Perhaps
Kesey’s novel on Baker is obvious) lives in the attempt was doomed from the start since
the most satisfying camp is unconscious
isolation as a life-style, refuses to accommodate himself to the social community, and camp. Louis Feullade’s Les Vampires is a
uses laughter as the strategy by which to more accomplished work of art than Georges
cope with the chaos of the human condition. Franju’s Judex, for example.
The film simplifies the issues of the novel and
entertainingly captures Shillitoe’s surface
There are plenty of entertaining mobravado but fails to get at the core of the ments in Modesty Blaise just as there are
man. For example, on one level of meaning, in A Fine Madness; most of them occur when
the film is a tough-minded put-down of both Bogarde is on camera—the perfect image of
law and psychoanalytic formalism (both symthe “queer hand which stokes the campfire”
bolic of man’s social will), but these symbolic as one writer puts it. Bogarde’s de-wigging;
pillars of established society seem to be criti- the op-art parody of Antonioni’s penchant
cized as not an integral part of the filmic for filming Vitti’s disintegrating psyche on
content, but as a substitute for Kerschner’s a background of a white wall; the opening
inability to effectively communicate (as
Baker did in his novel) that “fine madness” titles and the rescue ending; the Jeanette
of the great poet. One can almost sense MacDonald-Nelson Eddy song duet parodies;
Kerschner’s frustrated rage as he has his many good moments, but only flashes. Losey’s
hero flail out against the stereotypes he has pacing has always been slow, and the treatset up in place of the complex characters ment always heavy-handed; but it is more
Baker had created.
objectionable here, in comedy, than in his
naturalistic
melodramas.
Although Sean Connery overacts, he is
quite adequate as Samson Shillitoe (was ConBoth Kerschner and Losey have proven
nery’s brilliant performance in The Hill a
themselves
to be talented directors within
one-shot fluke?), but “adequate” is not
Shaw,
but
a
limited
sphere of operations. Their best
enough. The role required Robert
then Shaw’s name on a billboard has no drawworks (especially Kerschner’s The Luck of
ing power. The same for the rest of the cast Ginger Coffey) are very good indeed. Both
—merely adequate.
A Fine Madness and Modesty Blaise are worth
seeing. But both are, ultimately, failures.
the
title
role
Monica Vitti, who plays
—

Dr. Clifford C. Furnas, retiring
president of the State University
of New York at Buffalo, has been
re-appointed president and named
chief executive'officer of the University’s Western New YorS Nuclear Research Center by the
Center’s board of trustees. The
appointment is for a two-year
term, effective September 1.
Dr. Furnas was instrumental in
the late 1950’s along with Mr.
James Evans, the Center’s vicepresident in charge of program
development, in a drive to have
the Center constructed on the
then University of Buffalo campus. Dr. Furnas is retiring August 31 as head of the University
because of a compulsory State
age requirement. He is 65 years
old.

Dr. Furnas’ successor, Mr. Martin Meyerson, presently Dean of
the College of Environmental Design at the University of California at Berkeley, has 'been appointed chairman of the Center’s
board of trustees. The appointment is effective September 1,
the same day Mr. Meyerson becomes president of the University.
In announcing the appointments, Dr. Ralph R. Lumb, director, general manager and vicepresident of the Center, said:
“I am delighted that Mr. Meyerson will be chairman of our Board
of Trustees and that Dr, Furnas,
following his retirement from the
Presidency of the State University of New York at Buffalo, has

been elected President of the
Western New York Nuclear Research Center. Certainly his active participation in the management of the Research Center will
be welcome and is bound to enhance its growing contribution
to the academic, medical and industrial community. Dr. Furnas’
long experience and active participation at the state and federal
levels of highest importance,
brings to the Research Center a
prestige of which the Center is
very proud. I feel that the community at large will be just as
pleased with this announcement
as we are.”
Mr. Evans lauded the appointment of Dr. Furnas. “The Nuclear Research Center is flattered to have Buffalo's most distinguished citizen as its president.
It will be enriched by his presence, his enthusiasm, and his
drive. As the image and reputa-

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tion of the Center has grown over
the past few years, I feel that
this appointment of Dr. Furnas
represents a recognition of the
Center’s stature and maturity.
It also pays tribute to those local
industries that backed us and to
the state and federal agencies
whose cooperation made the Center possible.”

Dr. Furnas, who has served as
president of the University since
1954, began formulating plans for
the Center soon after his appointment to head the University. With
the assistance of Mr. Evans, a

fund-raising campaign was initiated in an effort to raise funds for
the Center.
With substantial gifts received
from local industry and the federal government, Dr. Furnas requested $1 million from the State
government. While a bill appropriating $1 million for the Center
was approved by the State Senate
and Assembly, it was vetoed by
the then Gov. Averill Hardman.
Gifts were received locally from
Bell Aircraft. Carborundum, Columbus McKinnon, Cornell Aeronautical Laboratories, the Courier-Express and Houdaille Indus-

tries. In addition, the National
Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation contributed grants to the project.
Following the election of Gov.
Nelson Rockefeller in 1958, Senator Walter Mahoney introduced
a bill on February 24, 1959 requesting a similar $1 million appropriation for the Center. The
bill was approved and the Center
soon became a reality.
At the present time, Dr. Furnas
is also serving as a member of
the following scientific organizations: Naval Research Advisory
Committee, Army Scientific Advisory Panel and of the Panel
on Science and Technology of the
House of Representatives Committee on Science and Astronautics.
He is chairman of the Advisory
Council for the Advancement of
Industrial Research and Development (for the State of New York)
and a member of the Science Advisory Council to the Legislature.
He is a member of the boards of
directors of the Aerospace Corporation, Carborundum Company,
Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory,
Inc. and the Manufacturers and
Traders Trust Company.

�PAGE FOUR

Friday, July

SPECTRUM

Third in

22. 19M

a Series

REALISM and RADICALISM
by JAMES HANSEN
Why is it that we students,
for all our legitimate complaints,
have failed to see our objectives
realized? With all the vitality of
the American university students,
why is it that nothing concrete
ever happens? Some might answer that if only a greater percentage of us were “seriously"
interested in acting out alternatives to the status quo, than
things would really start to move.
Most of us have heard this familiar sentiment echoing off the
walls of meeting rooms. This is
the hopeful “drama of numbers"
so often praised. I believe such
an answer too weak to provide
the base for the much needed
reappraisal of the “radical” programs. I suggest instead that we
come to grips with the problem
of just why the small coterie of
“revolutionaries” in the universities fails to achieve a notable
consensus. One way to do this
is to ask whether or not the
“demands” are realistic, given
the objective conditions of the
contemporary university as it
functions within the overall social structure.

I would like to look at some
of the views which are supposed
to lead the students out of their
apathy. If these programs are
contradictory or not grounded in
the realities of the situation,
how, and why, is the general
student community supposed to
react? For if the leadership is
confused and divided, then to
ask the masses of students to
follow is to ask of them naive
acceptance of an at best murky
program.
There are frequently offered
two interrelated “solutions" that
have, in my view, prevented the
students from mounting any effectual opposition to the centers
of repression in the university.
One of these is illustrated by
those who call for the “autonomy” of the university. The Spectrum editorial of July 8 provides
a good example:
as the uni.

.

versity becomes increasingly involved with society, its complicity in society’s evils increases
proportionately.” Are we to conclude, following the lead of this
statement, that by separating itself from society the university
will not be implicated in the
brutalities carried out within
(and without) the society? Or,
better yet, should the university
separate itself from social issues?
What must be examined here is
the relationship of the university’s involvement in social matters and the guilt that is supposed to accompany this “complicity.” Couldn’t we somehow work
against the status quo? I would
agree that given our (quasitotalitarian) social conditions, the
hope that a university would
directly oppose the status quo is
naive. However, given these very
same conditions, to argue for university “autonomy” is to neglect
one's social obligations to all
those not protected by the sanctuary of the university (the unjust and class-biased selection for
the armed services constituting
but one case of such discrimination.) If we insist on clamoring
for university “autonomy,” we
shall directly find ourselves arguing for the “Leisure of the
Theory Class.” It would seem that
this would be an unacceptable
solution to those seriously interested in eliminating “society’s
evils.” In short, what we should
do is actively to engage “our”

institution in whatever ways feasible to combat social wickedness.
Needless to say, to do so requires
the university’s involvement with
society.

What paths are open to us?
Where should we start, and how
far can we reasonably expect to
go? In the same issue of the
Spectrum, Bill Harrell claims
that “if we cannot resolve the
number and complexity within
the academic setting, how can
we expect to do so in the larger
society?" This is the kind of
“revolution by education” that is
foursquare in the tradition of
American liberalism. Note that

Mr .Harrell’s suggestion does not
deal with specific actions (like
refusing nuclear research grants),
but rather presents a sort of
internal effecting-external sociological viewpoint. I suggest that
the argument be reversed; the
structural metamorphosis of the
university is a function of the
structural metamorphosis of the
society within which that university functions. Certainly there
are actions that could be taken
by those within the university
(e.g., the English faculty’s united
opposition to managed news), but
it seems to me that to expect the
sort of vast changes desired by
Mr. Harrell requires tackling the
general structure first. At this
point I should emphasize that the
relation of the university to its
social framework is terribly complex. It seems to me that we are
not here dealing with two distinct entities. I think that if we
keep this in mind we might be
less prone to accept the muddleheaded solutions of people like
Jacques Barzun. Undue emphasis
on any one factor is pretty dangerous stuff. It tends to lead to
submission. Nevertheless, I still
think that if we are to get sweeping changes, we should exert
pressures on crucial structural
factors. But I get ahead of myself.
-

What would happen if we heeded Mr. Harrell’s advice and organize from “within?” (The position sounds like the view that
the only way to change the corporate machinery is to join it and
fight from within.) If the university were radicalized, this
would presumably mean that it
would function more rationally.

In which case it would oppose
itself to the irrationality of the
general social structure. Then
the government would cease contributing funds for grants, roads,
research facilities, land, buildings, and a myriad of other
things needed for the maintenance of the modern university.
Are we willing to forego these?
I don’t think that we should delude ourselves on this point. The
modern university needs public
and private monies. I am not
saying that we should just give
up and agree to all demands (or,
really, agree to any). I am suggesting, however, that if we expect to alter fundamentally the
university, we shall have to attend to “outside” matters. If we
emphasize changing the overall
structure of the society, then we
shall start to see the university
change. (This argument, changed
when necessary, makes the Urban
League’s refusal to concern itself wwith Vietnam look silly. In
turn, the position of SNCC and
CORE seem very sensible.) The
who matter of institutional relations is a tricky one, but I really
don’t think that by changing the
structure of one of the factors
we will force the whole society
to wake up.
Now then, how are these two
arguments related? The second
argument (internal change effect-

ing external change) presupposes
the first argument (the “autonomy argument”). If the university

is to alter itself from within,
would seem that it would have
be independent of the society
a whole. On the other hand,

it
to

as
if

it is accurate to say that we
should change “OUR” institution
before we can expect to see more
general changes (as Harrell does),
then how are we to effect these
changes? For, as the “autonomy
argument” maintains, our involvement would only implicate
us in “society’s evils.” What do
we do? Of incompatible arguments, neither of which seems
to have taken account of the contextual realities, which are we
to embrace?
It is a dictum of effective political action that we “make do
with what we have,” albeit we
may qualitatively alter the conditions of our lives. It seems,
however, that both of the above
arguments have failed to take
account of the existent conditions. Little wonder, then, that
of the “interested” students, few
follow the leadership. To where?
New Harmony or Brook Farm?
Unless we recognize the exigencies of the objective conditions,
we shall continue to wax dreamy.
What is needed is an “objective
analysis of objective conditions.”
Without such an analysis preceding the formulation of programs,
the “establishment” will continue
to laugh at our innocence, while
not slowing one whit the exploitation of us all, the building
of bigger bombs, and the reaping of the rewards of their programmed students.

IBM 360/67 Time-Saving Computer System
To Free University from 'Mechanical Learning'
By ELLEN CARDONE
Computing Centers will “before very long be as important
as libraries” in the research work
of universities, according to Dr.
Anthony Ralston, Director of the
SUNYAB Computing Center.

“This is very close to being
true now in graduate education,”
Dr. Ralston added. He speculated
that before long all undergraduates at SUNYAB would be expected to take some course work
in the computer field.
While many
need advanced
pare for their
should get out

students

would

courses to precareers, “no one
of college without some knowledge of these
machines and how they will be affecting society,” he said.

Looking forward to the use of
“computer-assisted
instruction,”
Dr. Ralston is of the opinion that
the use of machines in teaching

would “offer chances for students to have much more meaningful contact with instructors.”
Teachers would be freed from
the “mechanical” aspects of learning, which would save time for
“real intellectual contact.”

The use of computers in the
sciences and engineering is familiar to everyone, but Dr. Ralston explained that they have
many applications in the social
sciences and humanities as well.
The center sponsors assistantships
to permit graduate students in
other departments of the University to explore the potential
of computers in their own fields.
For example, census data patterns
in history, concordances in poetry
and dialect patterns in linguistics can be compiled much less
laboriously than former methods
allowed. The arts are represented

by such innovations as computer“composed” electronic music.

The SUNYAB computing center, largest in the State University system, will greatly increase
its capacity next summer by the
installation of an IBM 360/67 re-

time-sharing computer, which will replace the
present 7044 system.
mote-access

Dr. Ralston’s annual report to
President Furnas states, “Besides
providing 6 to 8 times the computing power of the 7044 system, the 360/67 will enable a
much higher quality of computer
service because of the remote access (about 30 typewriter consoles will be installed initially
around the University), time-sharing features.” “Time-sharing,” Dr.
Ralston explained, refers to the
ability of this computer to shift
rapidly from one job to another.
The new computer will be installed on the interim campus
site but will be operated by
units installed on this campus,
linked to it through telephone
lines.
When the new campus is occupied, it is expected that re-

very much like a typewriter, he
types out instructions that are

relayed directly to the computer,
which might be several miles
away. Almost immediately, the
computer sends back a ‘reply.’

“If the reply is sufficient, the
researcher has his answer, and
that’s all there is to it. If not,
the computer and the researcher
can carry out a ‘conversation’ in
computer language via the typewriter terminal until the necessary information is in the researcher’s hands.”
The present Computing Center,
located in Goodyear Hall, employs about 25 full-time staff and
an an equal number of student
assistants. The 10-year plan allows for a staff of 100 by the
mid-70’s to handle a computing
load 100 times greater than the
present

one.

As part of its educational function, the computing center offers
short, non-credit courses in standard programming systems, such
as FORTRAN, and in special systems applications.

mote-access units will be installed
in more than 200 locations. A
recent release described how a
student or teacher might benefit
from this “desk-side” convenience.

Further information for courses
this summer and next fall can
be obtained from the Center, Ext.

"Faced with a problem that
might take him hours or even
days to solve with a slide rule
or desk calculator, he decides instead to use the computer. To
do so, all he has to do is go
to his office, or a room in his
residence hall, where a remote
terminal, which is connected to

In addition to serving the University’s research needs, the Computing Center lends its facilities
to other units of the State University, neighboring private colleges, high schools, and research

the computer itself, is located.
'There, at a device that looks

4015.

foundations.

Private

industries

approximately 1% of the
Center’s computing time on a
paying basis.
use

�Friday, July

22. 1966

SPECTRUM

PAM PIVI

A Review: John Bdrth Prose Reading
(reviewed by JJV. LaRue)

It has been said, “a myth in
the light of reevaluation is often
destroyed.” This certainly does
not hold true for creations from
John Barth’s mythopoeic mind.
A week from Wednesday last
John Barth, novelist and Professor of English, regaled an eager
audience with an eminently successful “in-joke”—a reading from
his latest work, Giles Goatboy.
Mac Hammond, the English De-

partment’s summer toastmaster,
introduced Barth as the foremost
cdmic writer of today. This epithet, hyperbolic as it may seem,

is, in fact, well-deserved, if
Barth’s newest novel matches the
comic quality of his third book,
The Sot-Weed Factor. The formidable selection which was presented at the reading would seem
to indicate that this may well be
the case.
At the outset Professor Barth
explained that he would not really be reading prose as advertised,
but rather would read his some-

times-verse rendition of the
famed Oedipus myth. This was,
in short, his modern comic version of Sophocles’ revered Oedipus Tyrannus (“Swellfoot the Tyrant”). Barth stressed that the
comic overtones of this famous
“mystery-thriller” play had
caught his fancy. He asked the
same question which has plagued
teachers and critics throughout
the ages; how could old swellfoot
be such a boob as not to realize
his own incestuous situation?
And what better parallel could
there be for this self-righteous
boob than a mythical modern-day
university president?

The commencement of the play:
let us say that the scene is set
at Multiversity, Anywhere, U.S.A.
As the lights rise, enter a slightly
limping man with a tortured look
on his false face. Thus begins
Barth’s parody and penetrating
analysis of the seemingly stilted

conventions of ancient Greek
tragedy. His reading was, on one
level, a satire of that tragic genre
which has perplexed and yet beguiled both scholars and students
from Sophocles’ day to our own.
In justification of this apparently irreverent treatment of a
“classic,” Barth explained (incorrectly, I believe) that the words
“tragedy” and “satire” have a
similar background, viz., something to do with goats (or is it
old goats?). Hence the obscure
and recondite connection with
Giles Goatboy. But this is no matter; a poet’s reasons are sufficient
unto themselves.

on nothing but Mickey Mouse
courses under Taliped.
Be that as it may, ol* Pres, is
having a helluva time handling
the present campus disturbances.

ima of Greek tragedy. The chorus
is composed of steadfast university committeemen who sing odes
of praise to their great president.
While commenting sardonically
on committeemen everywhere,
Barth has also managed a sidesplitting parody of tragic choral
style. His chorus moves back and
forth in intricate patterns, clapping hands and rhythmically singing strophes and antistrophes of

He is forced to call back from
retirement old Prof.-Prof, the
Prophet for advisement. This eminent emeritus is none other than
Gynander, the blind old faggot
(alias Tiresias, the seer, in Sophocles’ tamer version). Gynander, as
most faggots, becomes a bit
bitchy and riles Taliped by telling him that he ain’t no good for
the old U. Perhaps he ought to
resign, for he, the great pres.pres, himself ,is responsible for
all the current fug-ups. This
blight is upon them because Taliped has had the bad taste to
knock off his daddy and knock
up his mommy (albeit unwittingly). The gods being duly apprised
of which circumstances have seen
fit to send a pox upon Cadmusville.
Agenora (who substitutes for
Jocasta, perhaps with a pun on
“age”?) is Taliped’s lascivious old
mother-wife. Barth turns her
into something of a wanton who
has been shacking up with various and sundry committee members on campus. Nevertheless,
from the first her maternal instincts are apparent. She even
forces her little lambkins, the
otherwise stalwart Taliped, to
coo, “I wuv oo.”

The would-be hero of this piece
of bravura is Taliped Decantus.
Our hero, university president,
daddy-killer and mother-humper,
has belatedly called a meeting of
the Task Force in response to
serious campus disturbances. It
seems that this flunking university, where Taliped holds sway in
all his rigid grandeur, has been
hit by a veritable plague of abortions, student-rioting, and facultyphilandering. Despite his penchant for sleuthing (or is it snooping?), Pres. Taliped is unable to
solve the mystery of this sudden
disaffection and unsavory conduct. Sophoclean irony could not
have been better portrayed; Taliped is perplexed; he, the great
Taliped, who in olden times (nine
years ago to be exact) came runAnd so the story continues
ning up from Isthmus College along its well-trodden path until
(track star that he was) and disthe peripetal, anagnoristic climax
posed of Cadmus College’s loathof Taliped’s horrible self-blinding
some monster Sphinx by cooly takes place. The once-great ruler,
answering her ridiculously easy parricide and matriphile, retires
riddle; “Who is the Mom who
gloomily muttering something
eats her kids?” (N.B. the ever- about mystical resurrection and
goat
present
motif again, kiddies). further duties or some such rot.
“Elementary,” replied Taliped, In reality, he is constrained to
“It’s Mother Campus, dear old take a long journey around the
Alma Matar." The monstrous exworld, while the chorus of comaminer, who was wont to get mitteemen and ad-man-simps gibsevere gastric acidity when she ber on about the untoward desreceived correct answers, dropped tiny of man.
dead on the spot. The implication
Most notable about Barth’s
seems to be that the era of difwork is the fact that his knife
ficult exams was past; from now cuts in so many directions at the
same time. Besides the attack on
academic inbreeding (in the truest sense of the word), near the
end of the reading the audience
was treated to a devastating parody of all the muddled terms
with which students of Greek
tragedy are weighted down. Other
highlights were Barth's satiric
comments on the too-timely arrivals of characters on the Greek
stage!
“Here

my brother-in-law
right on
addition, there was his

comes

by sheer coincidence

cue.” In

turning of the ever-present messenger into a modern mailman
(or rather male-man, Big Stingaree type), who is given permission by Agenore to deposit his
male in her box at any time.
Interspersed among the episodes are the familiar choral stas-

doggerel

verse.

In this reading one particular
segment of our society was brilliantly caricatured. As might be
expected in a reading which lasted over one hour, however, there
was some unevenness. At times
the tempo slackened and the
puns fell a bit heavy, despite the
humorous sparkle of many of
the parts. Some in the audience
felt, quite frankly, that the whole
thing was a bit much. Whatever
happened to auraa mediocritat?
These few lags were paradoxically attributable to the same quality which produces that Barthian
comic brilliance, namely, his epic
logodaedaly which sometimes
turns into a banal logorrhea. But
this is a mere quibble; even good

Homer nods occasionally. Indeed,
Barth's linguistic abilities are not
inconsiderable; be often betrays
an almost Joycean richness of
language. And one might compare his longer catalogues to
those of the German novelist
Gunther Grass. Suffice it to say
that he kept his audience in
stitches for a good deal of the
time.
As 1 have pointed out above,
Barth, in addition to poking fun
at campus politics and ineptitudes. also possesses a keen analytical sense for things literary.
Not since A. E. Houseman's infamous "Fragment of a Greek
Tragedy’" have the peculiar foibles of Greek dramaturgy been
laid so bare. And not since Baiso
Snell entered the posterior opening of the alimentary canal of
the Trojan Horse have we been
given a better comic treatment of
Greek myth. To be sure, Barth
possesses the same admirable
ability as did Nathanael West to
see through the cant of American
life. One hopes that he will not
confine himself to academic personalities, who surely must be
straw men for such a ready wit.

UB to Conduct SUNY Graduate
Program in Elmira-Coming Area
The State University of New
York board of trustees has approved a graduate program for
the Corning-Elmira area which
will be conducted by the Division of Interdisciplinary Studies
and Research at the State University at Buffalo.
The program, leading to the
master of science degree with a
major

in

engineering

science,

of the great service
which the University provides
for the State. It also gives us
example

a great opportunity to exchange
knowledge with an important
segment of our scientific and
technical population.”

Dr. Irving H. Shames, chairman
of the Department of Interdisciplinary Studies and Research,
said, “We are looking forward
to the mutual benefits which
this program will provide, not
only in the furthering of education, but in the broadening and
stimulation of our faculty.”

will be directed by Professor
John Medige of State University
at Buffalo.
Courses will be offered through
the Corning Center of the College Center of the Finger Lakes.
The curriculum will stress “a
thorough treatment” of the fundaAdmissions and registration
mentals of science and their apwill be in accordance with the
plications to significant engineerpolicies of the State University
ing problems, according to Proof New York at Buffalo. Infessor Medige. General areas of quiries may be directed to Prothe courses will include analysis, fessor Medige. at either Buffalo
materials science, continuum or Corning.
mechanics and systems.
Courses beginning in September will include Theoretical EnThe program, which is in substance identical to an existing gineering Analysis I, which deveprogram at the University, will lops mathematical tools and techbe taught by regular faculty
niques useful for advanced en
members of the Division. Classes gineering courses, and Continuum
will be held in Houghton House, Mechanics I, which treats solid
11 West Third Street, Corning. and fluid media from a general
Students will also spend at least standpoint. Offerings will be
initially at the rate of two per
six weeks in full time residence
semester.
at Buffalo. Counseling and advisement will be provided by
the Buffalo faculty.
FOR SALE
Dean E. Arthur Trabant, dean
at
1959 Volvo for $350. Call 831
of the School of Engineering
Buffalo, said: “This is another
3546.
WANTED

He’s at UOlUARDjOHnfOltJ

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and possibly for fall semester.
Write; Liz. 73 Brant Street, Apt.
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THE SPECTRUM
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�Editorial! (Comment

In this week’s Spectrum, Jim Hanson
attacks the conception of University “autonomy.” The incident provoking his attack
seems to be the phrase from a previous editorial, “that as the university becomes increasingly involved with society, its complicity in society’s evils increases proportionately.” Lest the Spectrum be autonomy-baited
(which, in the face of the admittedly unclear
statement above appears to be justified),
the following should serve as a clarified
statement of position.
The traditional conflict between the
university and society has been transformed,
according to Clark Kerr in his The Uses of
the University, into a functional immersion
of the university in every aspect of social
life in such a manner that the university
has become “the focal point of national
growth.” The catalyst of the transformation
has been:
the widespread recognition that new
knowledge is the most important factor
in economic and social growth. We are
just now perceiving that the university’s
invisible product, knowledge, may be
the most powerful single element in our
culture .
The Kerrian conception of reality seems to
be gaining the ascendency, in practice if
not in theory, in higher education today.
The conception of the university’s function in society as the producer of knowledge
necessitates certain structural techniques
which come to resemble industrial organization. The university, in a sense, becomes
microcosmic of the greater social order. But
strictly it cannot be called microcosmic because it has become part and parcel of
society. To produce and then sell knowledge
involves innumerable middle-men and involvement with public and private agencies.
Implicit in much of these dealings is an acceptance of the social values and institutions
which the university formerly criticized from
its position of detachment.
So far the university has played a passive role in its immersion in society, allowing its facilities and minds to be used for
such enterprises as national defense. “The
university,” say Kerr, “has become a prime
instrument of national purpose. This is new.
.

.

oCetterA

to

.

.

THE PEOPLE

.

This is the essence of the transformation
engulfing our universities.”
Kerr’s acquiescence to the use of the
university as “an instrument of national purpose” places the university in a position of
social responsibility to which it has
to been unaccustomed. To hear Prof. Scigliano appraise the M.S.U. Viet Nam Project
with the proper “value-free inquiry” after
the fact of valued action only indicates how
ill-at-ease the university finds itself in its
new role as a prime instrument.
Why, if the need for new knowledge
has catalyzed the transformation of the university into this prime instrument of national
purpose has the university been so reticent
in controlling the use to which its knowledge
is put in the face of the obvious need for
a radically different social orientation? The
university, if it is as powerful as Kerr seems
to indicate, should be forming a creative
national purpose rather than allowing itself
to be a mere instrument in the amoral business of politics.
The answer lies partly with the conception of education as the production of knowledge. When knowledge becomes a product,
the responsibility for its use can be relegated
to the consumer. Another answer may be
the unaccustomed power which the univernow finds its possible to wield.
If Kerr has accurately described the
university’s social pre-eminence, the consideration of knowledge as a saleable product
represents an evasion of responsibility. The
university could, if its power has not been
over-estimated, lead a society bereft of
imaginative social thinking. In short, the university could use its power to assure a creative national purpose.
The crisis facing the modern university
may well be one of nerve. So far, few universities have had the audacity to suggest
that they should wield an influence commensurate with their power. Perhaps the university has already become too involved in
corporate liberalism to effect meaningful social change. Yet somehow the university
seems most likely of any sector of our society to supply imaginative leadership and
programs.

the Editor

EDITOR;
Dear People mister Jones still

doesn't know what’s happening
and it should be noted that Gardiner also hadn’t done acid before
the writing of his article which
appeared in last week's Spectrum.
Talk demands experience and in
the realm of psychedelia such experience cannot be grounded on
just more talk. One who has
never done acid can neither talk
nor judge: the case being here
that seeing is not believing. If
you do not want to know what’s
up do it yourself.
The ‘free self-activity’ Mr. Gardiner suggests, circumlocutizes,
and adumbrates with psychophilosophical theory is, as anyone
who has had a psychedelic experience knows, just another egogame
its only advantage being
that it offers further opportunities for self-congratulation, and
thus further ego-defense. Most
children, though ‘beautiful’ and
‘free’ are very selfish, and freaking on acid, while also ‘beautiful’
and Tree,’ is not likely to be social
or altruistic. There is a difference
between consciousness (not ‘the
accumulation of experience’
in your lifetime anyway) and
realization determined by what
we have learned from which
most of our activity stems. Knowledge (we do know what we are
—

—

Learning

(being

are doing) is the

battle we’re stuck in now, though
once there was no difference.
Do you really know what a mess
you’re involved in and still con-

to? We’ve shot
selves out of our own humanity
witness MAN COMMITS SUICIDE,
G1RL ARRESTED FOR BARE
BREASTS ON BEACH and just
about anything else you can read
in the paper or hear on the
street. The only way out (’Turn
on—Tune in—Drop out’) is in.
And psychiatrists ain’t where its
at. Acid is, and, unfortunately
tributing

our-

so or not (a drugl) we NEED
it if we are to live as how we
were created and not as how
we think we created ourselves,
The myths are true, the rationale
is not. So a complete turnover

is needed and it will be only as
drastic as your shape now SO
turn around freak out flip out
with no fear for you are the
unspeakable word of the holy,
Thou, love, are god—be glad,
and unafraid—do not live with
the lie that you are better than
Zeus, or Dionysus. And read Wm.
Blake, who has not a hero. If
you’re satisfied with your world
as it is personal look up and
don’t be or else youil never live,
Read Jesus too, he was higher
than kites being right down to
earth with no strings attached.
And if you don’t want to hear
the president or the police or
the FDA because THEYRE the
crazy ones and they don’t know
and how they got all that power
and those jails is just the mistake of past generations. As always
FINDOUTFORYOURSELF
find OUT. LSD can do you nothing but good. If you get messed
up just know you deserved it.

By FRANK KLINGER

I suppose that everyone has
their conception of an ideal University. For many it would probably include no exams or marks.
An immediate criticism is of
course that nobody will learn anything. There are some, however,
who believe that right now there
are many students who are not
learning too much.
When I was a freshman, I took
Biology 101. It was an excellent
course given by several brilliant
lecturers—all specialists in their
fields. I should have learned a
great deal, but I was so busy
madly taking notes for the exam
that all the essential concepts

escaped me.
True, if I were brighter, I
have absorbed more, but
begging the question. The
age student majoring in

might

that’s
aver-

social
sciences attends his 3 lectures
per subject a week (when he
doesn’t cut, that is), pulls his
all-nighters for tests, crams isolated facts from Monarch Review
Notes, and gets his 1.0. But does
he really get the one type of
education we were led to expect!
My conception of an ideal University is as follows: no tests or
compulsory homework. The student’s grade would be based
purely on class attendance and
behavior. Each lecturer would
post the times of his classes and
each day the student could
choose
to attend whichever
classes interest him. (If a class
overfills, the last to arrive can
stand.)
The student would .be allowed
to bring only such material pertaining to his course as assigned
by the professor. Talking and
other disturbances would be
strictly “verboten”.
Since the average student taking 15 hours a week spends no
more than an additional IS hours
studying, I would require him
to attend 30 hours a week. Note
also that the teachers would be
able to say a lot more if the students didn’t have to scribble
their every word down on paper.
Should a student still be of the
opinion (which I am not) that
he can learn more from the
texts than from his professors, he

could read the book during class
or better still, outside the class
to supplement the professor.
Nor do I believe that the factcramming which would be eliminated is essential to understanding. On the contrary, an understanding which stems from genuine interest should result in a

more comprehensive knowledge
of the essential facts about a
given subject. A person who is
interested in politics, for example, is far more likely to have
a greater knowledge of international events than one who is
simply forced (high school style)
to memorize the names and posi-

tions of the world leaders. What
about the person who just isn’t
interested in the courses he
chooses so much so that he would
rather sit and daydream through
the class he picked to go to than
try to understand the material?
I maintain that forcing this individual to memorize a few facts
so that he can stay in school is
not giving him a real education
either.
What about the engineering or
medical student? Society expects
reasonable assurances that they
will be capable, so we might give
them tests every few months, or
else exempt them from the system entirely. This system is designed primarily to make the
education of the non-specialized
liberal arts major a bit more
meaningful so that the student
in a course such as pyschology
would do more studying of insights concerning human behavior and less memorizing the
bones in the head.
This is simply an idea, one
which probably has great many
faults that I’m too dense to perceive. I do not intend to lead
a sit-in at Hayes if my plan is
not adopted by next week or
next year or even next century. If
this article can simply stimulate
some constructive criticism and
rational discussion of the issues
raised, its purpose will be fulfilled.
Those of you who are sick of
my writing will be happy to
know that next week this column
will be written by someone else.

Environmental Product

Mr. Jones Is Still in Dark
TO THE

doing) versus
told what we

Friday, July 22, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

There

is

brain

damage

overdose and no
(witness Leary’s
ability to play those crazy investigation games better than the
investigators ever after 300 plus
trips). Study animals, stones, and
plants because they are more
than us now and not what we
make of them. The point is, your
brain is already damaged. The
ever proliferating and meaningless symbol patterns of a ‘progressing’ culture means mutation
in the chemical patterns of the
brain. Like, you don’t even have
the possibility of thinking like a
nineteenth century man at that
being before he was
level
more turned on
but you can
communicate with any man or
beast or plant if you only get
down to the essentials which is
only life period. That God be
dead or no is totally irrelevant
because that is a word in among
words and the chemical patterns
and processes in the dance of
life have only motion. Woops,
we polluted Lake Erie. And that
happened because we picked
flowers and do not know the
animals and plants we eat.
This drug can do anything for
you if you will be what you are
so take it and make it and plead
the first if they get you.
P S.—to already heads there are
8 at least student police informers on campus NOW and probably more later from Goddard’s
training for infiltration center,
Put it in their coke or plead irrelevance them,
Yours on earth a love
no

—

—

TO THE EDITOR:
David Gardiner, who advocates
wild use of LSD as an “alterna-

of untold amounts of U.S. foreign
aid, is known to be among the
world’s heroin kingpins. Further-

life, is a product of his environ-

cannot escape connection with
the most enormous international
banks to finance its enterprises.

ment.

Is it any wonder that the same
environment which bombs defenseless villagers with napalm
will also provide money to finance a university newspaper
whose policy-makers furnish two
whole pages out of eight to promoting and rationalizing the use
of this deadly drug?
It really is not surprizing, considering that under this system,
illegal narcotics is actually one
of the “free enterprises” whose
volume has been variously estimated as high as $5 billion per
year. The Shah of Iran, recipient

And, come to think of it, where
does the money to pay for the
Spectrum, and for that matter,
SUNYAB itself, come from? Are
their financial sources unaware
of the possible deadly consequences to naive readers of such an

article?

Or, perhaps, from their point
of view, LSD is a much more
agreeable “alternative” to modern
realities, than one that would deprive the big firms of their billionaire assets and profits.
Joel Myers

Sever Trivia Donates
Romanian Collection
A substantial collection of Romanian books, periodicals and recordings have recently been donated to the University by Dr.
Sever Trifu, who has returned
to his native Romania after teaching Romanian language and literature during the Spring semester
in the Dept of Modern Languages. The collection, previously
housed in Crosby Hall, has been
moved to Lockwood Library
where it is in the process of
being catalogued for student use.
Included in this recent acquisition are Romanian literary clas-

sics, art books, modern literature, history and geography, popular magazines of the country
and a collection of records, many
of which are recordings of drama
and poetry. The library wishes
to express its gratitude to Dr.
Trifu for this generous donation.
The collection will soon be available to the student body upon

request.

Dr. Trifu will return to the
U.S. this fall to teach Romanian
studies in a thus far undesignated
American university.

�Friday, July 22, 1966

-

SPECTRUM

PAGE SEVEN

JAZZ IMPRESSIONS

Kenny Burrell, who has been
called by Downbeat Magazine
‘the most recorded guitarist in
jazz today’, recently concluded
a highly successful week at Buffalo’s Royal Arms Show Bar. We
had an opportunity to talk to
the man who for the last decade
has ranked among the top jazz
guitarists and to ask him a few
questions.
After listening to Mr. Burrell
play for two evenings, during

which be showed many sides of
his talent as a jazz guitarist on
works such as “The Shadow of
Your Smile” and “Billy Boy”
and semi-classical on “Greensleeves” and “Moonlit Sand” (which is
a cut from his latest Verve LP
“Guitar Forms”) we concluded
that if this man’s thoughts and
feelings were as widespread as
his talents, we were in for a very
interesting interview.
Burrell, who will be 35 soon

but who appears much younger,
spoke very quietly about his
music and feelings.
“My major guitar influences
were Charlie Christian, Oscar
Moore, and Django Reinhardt.”
Charlie Christian was perhaps
the leading exponent of the jazzguitar during the be-bop era,
and more or less led the advancement of the guitar in jazz.
Oscar Moore was the brilliant
guitarist with the old Nat ‘King’
Cole Trip, and Django Reinhardt
is considered to be a ‘genius of
the modern guitar’.
We asked Mr. Burrell about
the name given him, and whether
he preferred playing with his
own group (Richard Wyands,
piano; Martin Rivera, bass; and
Oliver Jackson, drums) or with
other men such as Jimmy Smith,
John Coltrane, or any of the
countless others he has recorded
with, and whether he thought the
guitar had more value in jazz
as a solo force or as a rhythm
instrument.
“The guitar is very important
both ways in today’s music, both
as a solo force and rhythm instrument; I enjoy playing both
on my own and with others, as
long as I’m playing. Studio work
strengthens your technique

.

.

.

but it’s not as satisfying to me

as having my own group. When
you are working with a group
which has a lot of latitude and
freedom of expression there’s
no limit to what you can do. I
try to use material that I enjoy
and that the men in the group
will enjoy playing. I’m not concerned with trying to keep up
with the hit parade—I’ve found
that when you really enjoy what
you’re doing, the people will
enjoy it, too.”
We then asked Mr. Burrell
what he thought was responsible
for the decline of the ‘jazz club’
and what, if any thing could

save them.

“The most important thing in
a jazz club is the presentation,
and not only in a musical sense.
The responsibility of presentation
falls on both the musician involved and the club owner. Little
details are important, such as the
lighting, acoustics, microphones,
etc. For example, Ahmad Jamal
is coming next week and (owner)
Lou Galanter has bought a new
piano for him. Moves like this
are important and naturally the
performer will respond.”
As a musician who is exposed
to both clubs and concerts, how
does Burrell feel about the two
different musical settings?
“Some people don’t come to
clubs to listen 100%; they are
there for social as well as musical reasons. There’s nothing
wrong with it, except that it
doesn’t give you the same kind
of attention you get in a concert
hall. A musician is freer to do
more of what he wishes when an
audience is there to listen to
him.”
“I like the Royal Arms though,
the atmosphere promotes listening and the patrons are very attentive.”
Burrell played to a very good
crowd each night of his stand
and we have never heard a more
attentive crowd at the Arms.
Our next series of questions
concerned jazz trends. If Stan
Kenton was recognized as the
“jazz voice” of the 40’s and likewise Miles Davis in the 50’s, who,
if anyone, would you consider
the “jazz voice” of the present
or near future?

“I don’t feel that there is any
such person, I feel that jazz is
going in many directions and not
following any one trend. Therefore there is no strong, noticeable movement. ‘Avant garde’ has
not taken over as did be-bop,
which is good, because the concept of jazz “schools" has been
very misleading for the public.
For example, many modern jazz
fans think Art Tatum’s playing
is associated with the time of
Bach, but seriously, Art Tatum
did things 25 years ago that many
jazz musicians are trying to do
today. Jazz is more an individual
matter than to be categorized
with any one style or ‘school’.”
What do you think of the ‘commercial’ attempts of jazz musicians? Will this help bridge the
gap between jazz and the general
public or will it cheapen jazz?
(We were joined, at this point
by Carroll Hardy, voice of radio
station WEBR’s Jazz Central, Saturday from 11:15 p.m.-l:00 a.m.
and Jazz on a Sunday Evening,
9:30-11:00 p.m.)
Burrell continued, “We are all
in the music business and are
looking for a saleable item. Some
musicians stretch the point to
extremes.”
We mentioned specifically Ramsey Lewis’ “Hang on Sloopy” and
agreed that the end product of
this attempt was the increased
desirability of a salable item.
Hardy stated, “Some ‘commercial’ attempts are easy to analyze,
others are not. “But Not For Me”
by Ahmad Jamal may be considered ‘commercial’ by some, not
so by others, but musicians do
not have the same thing in mind.
Once a jazz musician becomes
‘commercially’ successful he gets
put down by others (critics, etc.”)
We then asked Burrell, if he
had ever considered recording
a ‘commercial’ album with the
sale of records as the main thing
in mind.
“No, I wouldn’t even consider
it, because I like to keep a balance between what I have to do
and what I like to do. I always
want to like what I do. Then
again, as Carroll said, what is
‘commercial’ to one person may
not be so to another because

Plays By Paul Carter Harrison
Will Preview in Baird Hall

people see things different ways.
If there was a popular number

that I liked, I would record it. I

may record “The Shadow of Your
Smile”. As far as show albums,

well, if I dug the music I'd record it. I couldn’t and wouldn’t
emulate someone else’s style. This
is not necessary to communicate.
If you enjoy what you’re doing in
most cases you’ll communicate."
About the communication of

jazz on the whole, Burrell had
this to say. “Jazz is growing in

many directions: movies, T.V.,
rock and roll, and even classical
music. This cant help but to affect the music scene because
every medium is in relation. The
music goes ‘round and 'round but
the ‘word’ stands still; the music
is getting an enormous amount
of play but the ‘word’ is not
being spread. In other words, people listen to jazz but don’t realize
it (T.V., movies, etc.). Then they’ll
pass a club or concert and pass
it by because they don’t think
they’ll dig it. They don’t know
it’s the same as they’ve just
heard.”
“The ‘word’ is not identified
correctly, and it all comes down
to ‘what is jazz?’ Jazz is relative
to the individual but basically,
jazz is improvisation, whether it's

-

with Frank Sinatra. Peggy Lee
or Kenny Burrell. It’s basically
still there, although the public
may not realize it. When the jazz
identification is omitted in connection with the image of big
name performers who are really
jazz performers, it doesn't hurt
the performer, but it hurts the
growth of the concept, ‘the word’,
and also the chances for less
well known performers to get
a hearing from the part of the
audience that supports their
famous artists.”
We closed by agreeing that the
blame doesn't lie only with the
aforementioned cause, but with
many other sources, too numerous
to go into now.
Kenny Burrell will be back in
this area the first two weeks in
August, appearing at Toronto’s
Town Tavern. Meanwhile, the
Royal Arms, in keeping with its
policy of bringing to Buffalo the
finest names in jazz, announces
this schedule:

Ahmad Jamal—July 4-10
Jimmy McGriff—July 11-17
Dizzy Gillespie Quintet—July
18-24 (featuring James Moody)
Jon Hendricks—July 25-31
Wes Montgomery—August 1-7

-

Two new plays by Paul CarterHarrison will have their American premieres on Friday, July 29,
at Baird Hall. The two one-act
preductions, “Pavane for a DeadPan Minstrel,’ and “Top Hat,” will
be directed by Mr. Carter-Harrison, who is artist-in-residence at
U.B. this summer.
A graduate of Indiana University, with an M.A. in psychology
from the New School for Social
Research (N.Y.), the Americanborn Carter-Harrison currently
makes his home in Amsterdam,
Holland. He has published widely

in Holland and Germany and produced several documentary films
for Dutch Television.
When questioned about his productions, the young playwright
made this comment, “The plays
project clearly a European influence in direction and style, yet
the reference in subject matter
is undeniably American and
thereby controversial.
"Pavan* is an examination of
what happens when two friends
—one Negro, the other Caucasian—exchange each other's identity when competing for a valued
object: woman.

“Top Hat looks at another
problem in our society;
the
clash between social animals, represented by a ‘free’ tramp, and
on the other side by a wealthy
woman of the ‘establishment.’
The tramp’s untimely absorption
—

into the establishment ends in
his destruction.”
Both plays will be performed
nightly during the weekends of
July 29-31 and August 5-7. Curtain time is 8;30 p.m. Tickets for
all performances are available
from Norton Hall Box Office,
831-3704.

Youth Discussion Group Provides
Summer Seminar in Marxist Theory

summer months.
Youth Discussion Group is conDuring the

ducting a class which gives a
Marxist analysis of comparative
socialist theory and practice. The
class will be developed around

the Marxist classics. It will be
held at at the Youth Discussion
Group office, 11 Minnesota Ave.
—just around the corner from
Main Street. Classes will meet
every Thursday evening starting
at 7:00 p.m.

Gerald Gross, spokesman for
YDG, described the nature of
the class as follows;
“The aims of our class are to
give young people an opportunity to make a serious study of
Marxism in order to rid themselves of the many half-baked
notions and distortions of scientific socialism picked up from
university professors and other
petty-bourgeois socialists, as well
as from frank supporters of the
status quo. The class will be definitely partisan to socialism and

"Den Quixote end the Watermill" by Philip Iveryeed will be part
of art axhibit

will aim at inspiring youths to
that outlook's lofty ideals, and
a militant support for the revolutionary anti-imperialist struggles of the oppressed everywhere.”
'The class will not be purely intellectual in nature. Marxism is
a tool to change reality through
practice, not merely to “understand” it through “pure” theory;
there is no true theory not dependent on practice, and without
true

theory, practice

from reality.”

diverges

Figure-International Featured
In Norton Starting July 20
The Figure-International, an exhibition of contemporary painting, including such well-known
artists as Appel, de Kooning,
Diebenkorn and Porter, under the
sponsorship of the New York
State Council on the Arts will
open at Norton Union from July
20 through August 3. Mr. Dennis
Adrian, former Director of the
Allan Frumkin Gallery in New
York City, selected the exhibition which will circulate throughout the State of New York under
the auspices of The American
Federation of Arts.
Mr. Adrian, in the text which
he has written to accompany the
exhibition, says “Figure painting
since the Second World War presents a panorama of varied ac-

tivity in which several main lines
of development are discernible.
These currents have one great

common feature: the assimilation

of previous artistic traditions
ranging over wide areas of history. The assimilation, or more
properly, creative synthesis, has
tended to take place In the frame-

work of very basic visual approaches: first, the insistence of
maintaining the picture plane
unbroken, resulting in the dominance of two dimensional form.”
Ben Johnson's "Long-Haired Girl”
and Marcia Marcus’ “The Young
Mathematician" are representative of the tradition of emphasis
on two dimensional forms. Mr.

Adrian continues with the second
grouping, “The opening of the
picture plane into an ‘apparent
space' that seems an extension of
the observers own space.” Such
artists as Lennart Anderson's
"Boy, “D” Series” and Leland
Bell's self-portraits are in this
manner. The third grouping is
“the primary of fantasy and invention, where a great variety of
visual schema are employed to
bring forth from the mind of
the artist images of great psychic
power, sweeping away inconsistencies of pictorial structure with
almost magical force. Typical of
this approach is Maryan's “Personage” and Dubuffet’s M Cbocolat”.

�Friday,, July 22, 19M

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

Student Role in California Grape Strike
(CPS) —Around 100 students arrived in the small town of Del
Rey, Calif., on June 19, coming by
thumb from Toronto and New
York City, by car from Washington and Oregon, by bus and train
from the Midwest and California
itself, by plane from Washington,
D.C. and Texas. They came to
work for the National Farm
Workers Association in its sum-

mer project.
After a week of learning, discussing, picketting on the grape
fields, and leafletting, most left
to "scrounge up” support in the
rest of the country for the grape
strike and boycott the products
of the DiGiorgio firm, which has
held out against their demands

“to make the life of the farm
worker liveable.”
Some stayed in Delano to do
research and help with legal and
medical services which the National Farm Workers Association
(NFWA) offers farm workers.
The NFWA began about three
years ago when its director, Cesar Chavez, then an organizer for
the Community Services Organization of California, decided to
work more directly with California farm workers. Chavez chose
an area he knew well in which
the rich San Joaquin
to1&gt;egin
—

Valley.
Approximately 3,000 families
are now dues-paying ($3.50 per
year) members of the Association,
which during its first two years
has helped farm workers to see
what they could do to help themselves and developed a farm

worker’s credit union and insurance program. Now in the final
planning stages is a farm workers’
cooperative, with stores, clinics,
and legal and accounting services.
Intensive work on the coop was
halted when the NFWA members
voted in mid-September 1965 to
join the strike called by the Agricultural Workers Organizing
Committee (AWOC), ALF-CIO, a
union of primarily Filipino farm
workers who were working in
the area's grape fields.
After 9 months, during which
pickets were arrested and growers refused to meet with union
representatives of the strikers,
Schenley Industries, owner of the
second largest farm in the area,
negotiated a contract for better
wages and working conditions
with the NFWA. The contract
eliminates labor contractors, who
traditionally negotiated with the
grower to supply laborers and
often used their power as middlemen to the disadvantage of the
workers.
A potent weapon in bringing
Schenley to negotiate was the
NFWA-initiated consumer boycott of its products. Students
throughout the country, and especially in California, manned the
picket lines for the boycott. The
same weapon is now being used
to try the largest grower in the
Valley, the DiGiorgio Corporation,
which has broken five previous
farm worker strikes, to the negotiating table.
The students' primary job for

the Association this summer is

to raise support for the boycott

FINE FOOD

&amp;

DRINK

GROTTO BAR
UNIVERSITY PLAZA

Old Post Road

Inn

Main at Highgata

the owners’ “unchristian souls”

at the shrine to the Virgin of
Guadeloupe which the strikers

Rose.

The students attending the
orientation week heard this history of the strike for two days,
then went from Del Rey to Delano on June 20 for the remaining
orientation sessions. They went
with the strikers to the grape
fields, where they picketed the
“scab” workers and shouted to
them the issues of the strike.
Before work started each morning, they handed copies of a short
daily paper, El Mosquito Zumbador, to workers leaving the
labor camps and arriving in DiGiorgio’s fields. El Mosquito told
of the Association’s obtaining the
Schenley contract and of the
need for workers to refuse to
vote in the DiGiorgio-sponsored
elections to be held Friday on
company property and checked
by a private accounting firm.
DiGiorgio called for free elections suddenly and unilaterally.
Just as suddenly, the Teamsters’
Union name appeared on the ballot. DiGiorgio and the NFWA
had been negotiating about elections previously and could not
come to terms because of some
of the conditions DiGiorgio insisted upon, including a ban of
strikes during harvests, and refusal to allow the strikers to
vote.
Since agreement on these con-

ditions had not been reached and
since elections were unilaterally
called and unilaterally judged,
NFWA and AWOC secured restraining orders from the courts
which forbade DiGiorgio to put
their names on the ballot. Then
they began to persuade workers

not to vote.

The orientation week schedule

was hastily reshuffled

to meet

emergency. Students spent
Thursday afternoon and evening
leafletting farm workers and
Mexican-American neighborhoods
in Delano and nearby communities. They asked residents to
the

come

out at 6 a.m. Friday to

the Sierra Vista ranch, one of
the two election sites to picket
and persuade the “scabs” recent-

have erected and decorated in
the back of a station wagon.
On election day the students,
300 farm workers and communityresidents persuaded, watched,
and shouted encouragement as
more than half the workers refused to vote. Out of 732 eligible
voters, approximately 385 voted.
Of these votes, 281 were for the
Teamsters. Approximately 41 ballots were left blank and 12 workers voted for the NFWA or
AWOC, who were not on the ballot.

Phil Farnham, director of the

DiGiorgio

boycott,

pointed

out

that many votes came from office and cafeteria hands, not farm
workers. “If you add the number
of workers who didn’t vote to
the number who expressed their
protest by leaving the ballot
blank, you have a clear majority
who do not favor the Teamsters
but rather the NFWA. We feel
we could easily win a fair and
secret election,” he said.
Some workers, he added, were
brought to the polls again after
refusing to vote once, and all
of the workers, voting or not,
were identified by their employer. “A priest who was asked to
certify the election as fair at
the second site in Barrego Springs
refused,” he remarked.
One of the students summarized what he thought general student sentiment to be: “Besides
the mental and physical fatigue
and cases of near sunstroke which
resulted, I think that we were
all ‘filled up’ by this experience.
It was the climax of our training
session: we were close to tears
about the injustice and concentration camp atmosphere of the
elections. The workers were not
allowed to talk to the strikers.
They were brought up to the
election site in grower buses and
trucks, and herded into the election area. Over half of the workers at the Sierra Vista ranch refused to vote anyway.”
During the week, the students

dKVtf

a visit to one of the Valley’s
growers, who was said to be the
“model” grower” by the NFWA
volunteer staff. His camp was
clean and his men were fairly
happy, they said. The workers ate
well; the cook was provided by
the grower and the food was paid
for by the men. The grower explained the phases of the grape
growing farm operation and
stressed the “squeeze” growers
were put in when facing the big
retail chain stores with their
“magic” prices 19c, 29c, 39c. He
admitted that increased labor
costs would not force him out
of production. Lunch for the students was provided in the camp’s
mess hall.
paid

When asked by the students
and staff whether a worker could
invite someone from NFWA into
his room in the camp, since the
grower had said that the men’s
rooms were completely their own,
he said that they would have to
talk to the foreman about it.
When pressed, he admitted that
the foreman would have to
check with him and that he would
refuse permission. The same
grower was present at the election protest, where he approached a priest saying, “You call yourself a Catholic priest.” The priest
replied, “You call yourself a
Catholic.”
The students’ prdominant impression after their visit was that
the issues involved in the strike
had to be kept separate from the
personalities, since negotiations
with the “nice” growers were as
difficult to obtain as negotiations
with the nasty ones.
Famham told the students that
the goal of the boycott is to hurt
DiGiorgio economically. The way

to do this, according to Farnham,
is to go to stores and explain
that you are going to picket them
unless they agree not to buy DiGiorgio brands for the duration of
the boycott and to take those
brands off their shelves. If they
will not do the latter, because
they are afraid of getting stuck
with the merchandise and need
to clear out storage space to
stock other brands, they could
be persuaded to have a sale of
those brands.
Some students belonging to
student action groups who were
at the orientation pointed to their
cooperation with NFWA as part
of an intensifying identification
of student groups with poor peoples’ groups and the corresponding development of offers of
direct assistance which students
make to those groups.

Agricultural Workers Organizing Committee (AFL-CIO) members, as well as those in NFWA,
feel that th religious, civic and

student support for the strike
marks a new development in
labor unionism. They say that the
idea of unionism is here linked
to much broader ideas of social
justice and community development. The student presence in
Delano and the support which
they are offering the boycott is
accepted by proud people, whose
feelings are perhaps voiced by a
Filipino farm worker who addressed the student group saying:

“I am glad to see you students
here, because this country is
being run by the rich, those who
do not know what it is to be
poor. You will be running the
country in the future. And you
will have known what it is to be
poor.”

?Ot*&gt;CEMTURr.FOXp»«»»ot»

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"IT'S FUNNY AS ALL GET-OUT!"
Times

Sean Connery
AIR-CONDITIONED

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KENSINGTON J AT I
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JoanneWoodward
JeanSeberg
'A Fine Madness”

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»°

Good Seats StiM
Available at Box-Office

Salute to GODARD*
—

LEONARDO'S

ly brought in to work by DiGiorgio not to vote.
The workers also prayed for

of DiGiorgio’s canned products,
marketed mainly under the brand
names of S &amp; W Fine Foods,
Treesweet Juices, and White

TONITE THRU SUNDAY

A JEROME HEUMAN Production

—

Breathless
Jcan-Paul Belmondo, Jean Scberg
PLUS

Alphaville

(Tarzan vs. IBM)

Anna Karina and Eddie Constantine
—

Mon and Tues.

"CONTEMPT"

with Brigitte Bardot

l

U

—

"My Life to Live

LUNCHEONS
11:45 until 3:00

‘Avanta Garde Leader of the "Nouvelle Vague"

DINNERS
5 p.m. until 10 p.m.
SUPPERS
10 p.m. until 1 p.m.

GKLtt

TECHNICOLOR

AT THE

3165 Bailey Ave.

"

with Anna Karina

TF 4-6298

WRICK O’NEAL- COLLEEN DEWHURST

CLIVE REVIII'WERNER PETERS - JOHN FIEDLER

DEWateCENTER
1 ■
1

f

VAIN ST-

•

TL3 5 3

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                    <text>STATE UNn/ERSITY OFNEW YORK ATBUFFALO

SUMMER

GARDINER

|—«..__

I

EDITION

VOLUME 16

GIs' Lawyer Bases Defense
On Illegality of Viet War
In an exclusive interview with
the Spectrum, Stanley Faulkner,
attorney for the three privates,
said that he would appeal the
court’s action to the United States
Court of Appeals and expects at
that time to have a full review
of the controversial case.
The three draftees inducted into the Army last December are:
James Johnson, a 20-year-old Negro from the Bronx, N.Y.; Dennis
Mora, a 25-year-old Puerto Rican,

NO.

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JULY IS, 1966

Exclusive Interview—

The United States District
Court for the District of Columbia
dismissed a suit Monday by three
Army privates seeking to enjoin
Secretary of Defense Robert S.
McNamara from sending them to
Vietnam

(See

based

Mr. Faulkner cites this
other example of the
States’ failure to abide
treaty obligations to the

According to Mr. Faulkner, the
U.S. does not have S.E.A.T.O.
agreement on the war and, that
even if S.EA.T.O. was to approve,
it would still have to be agreed
upon by the Security Council of
the United Nations. Without such
approval, the waging of war is a
violation of the U.N. Charter,
which has the status of a treaty
in U.S. Law. Mr. Faulkner therefore contends that the war is in
violation of U.S. treaty obligations to the U.N.

According to Article 2 of the
Constitution. “He (the President!
shall take care that laws are
faithfully executed.” Mr. Faulkner, explaining that treaties have
the power of law, said that the
President, by violating the S.E.A.T.O. Treaty, the Kellogg-Briand
Treaty, and the U.N. Charter, is
not within this provision of the
Constitution. He further claims
that the President is not empowered to continue the war by the
Tonkin Bay Resolution, nor has
Congress passed a declaration of

He further stated that the S.E.

To Be or Not To Be:

TEMPORARY
By PAUL SCIABARRASI
&amp; MICHAEL
D'AMICO

For almost a year students and
watching
have been
workmen clear ground throughout he campus to make way for
the new temporary building most
commonly known as “the annex."
Building progress is approaching
its final stages. In another month,
work should be completed.
It was a year and a half ago
when
administrators
decided
something had to be done to
accommodate the needs of the
faculty

upon the 1951 Supreme
Youngstown Steel vs. Sawyer and
other Supreme Court cases, the
soldiers cannot be sent to Vietnam involuntarily.

as an-

United
by its
United

Nations

war.

52

expanding University. According
to Mr. Doemland of Planning and
Development, we were becoming
"way out-spaced” and the best
solution to the problem was the

construction of temporary buildings.
COST;

1.2 MILLION

attempt to be as economical as possible, nine annex
buildings went under construction at a cost of 1.2 million
dollars. This breaks down to approximately $10 per square foot
of air-conditioned office and
classroom space. It was disclosed
that the temporary buildings are
planned to be used for a period
of about five years and then torn
down when the Main and Bailey
campus takes on the new character of the Health Sciences De-

In an

partment.

NEXT MONTH

■

MARKS ANNIVERSARY
The contract says that 120
days is the time alloted to con-

struct the

buildings. We have
watched the workmen for nearly
four times that specified time.
Mr. Ooemland offered no reason
for the obvious delay.
The annex buildings are plan-

ned chiefly for housing administrative offices. This is aimed
at making more classroom and
academic office space available
in the more permanent buildings.
For this reason, the "gold annex
building" behind Hayes Hall now
accommodates the offices of the
Bursar, and Payroll and Personnel.
The offices of Admissions and
Records and the Comptroller will
also be moved into an annex.
Moving these offices out of Hayes
will make 22,000 square feet
available in that building for
academic offices and classrooms.
NEW BUILDINGS
HAVE A PURPOSE
The
Foster
Annex,
better
known as “skip the view from
Norton terrace,” will provide
another 17,000 square feet of
office space. This annex will be
similar to annex “A” which has
been in use for the last year on
the Bailey Avenue side of the
campus. Last year that annex
hpused the departments of English and Political Science.
Because of the growing needs
of library facilities, Lockwood
Annex has been built as an extension of Lockwood Library.
This will make available more
stack space and a reading area
suitable for 300 students.
(Conl'd on Pg.

8)

Stronger Student-Faculty
Ties Sought by Siggeikow
and Dannis Mora
From loft to right: Privatos David Samat, Joal Turtal, Jamas Johnson,
by Robert Joyce, Notional
Photo

also from the Bronx and a 1964
graduate of the City College of
New York; and David Samas, 20,
of Modesto, California who was
married June 17. A fourth draftee, Joel Turtel, 22 years old of
Brooklyn, N.Y., is seeking a similar injunction against the government to prevent it from sending
him to Vietnam but under seperate counsel.
The three servicemen were taken into custody and are being
held in “administrative restriction” at Fort Dix, New Jersey
pending an investigation by the
Army. Aside from severe penalties if they refuse to obey orders
to ship to Vietnam, the three
to
now face imprisonment of
10 years and a fine of up to
$10,000 under sections of the
Army Code dealing with Treason
and Sedition.
Mr. Faulkner said that the
three privates could not legally
be sent to Vietnam against their
wills. Mr. Faulkner based his plea
that the war is illegal on the
Kellogg-Briand Pact, the United
Nations Charter, and the SouthEast Asian Treaty Agreement. He
contends that the war in Vietnam
is in violation of these treaties
and sections of the United States
Constitution and that, therefore,

A.T.O. agreement allows for an
individual member to react to a
Court decision in the case of
“common danger” if it meets its

own “constitutional process.”
Since the U.S, Congress has not
voted a declaration of war, Mr.
Faulkner says that this provision
has not been met and that President Johnson’s actions in Vietnam thus violate the S.E.A.T.O.
treaty.

Mr. Faulkner said that Johnson
has also violated the Tonkin Bay
Resolution of the Congress. That
resolution stated that the United
States’ actions in Southeast Asia
must be consonent with the U.S.
Constitution, the S.E.A.T.O. Treaty, and the U.N. Charter. He contends that Johnson has not abided
by this part of the Congressional
resolution and that it cannot
therefore be cited as carte
blanche approval for U.S. actions
in Vietnam.

Mr. Faulkner further stated
that the war is in violation of the
Kellogg-Briand Treaty of 1928. In
this treaty the U.S. agreed to the
outlawing of war as "an instrument of national policy.” He also
cited the Nuremburg Judgments
to support his case against the
war. Since these Judgments were
adopted by the United Nations,

The Dean of Students, Dr.
Richard A. Siggeikow. has been
awarded a sum of $400 by the
FSA to be used in the development and operation of a program

Guardian

Mr. Faulkner went on to say
that in 1951 the Supreme Court
ruled that the President did not
have the power to seize the
Youngstown Steel Mills because
a threatened strike might interrupt the flow of materials for the
Korean War. “If the government
cannot seize private property for
an undeclared war,” he said, “it
certainly cannot seize persons for
an undeclared and illegal war.”
Mr. Faulkner pointed out that in
the Youngstown case the Supreme Court emphasized that
only Congress can declare war
and that, according to the Court,
Congress has '“exclusive constilu
tional authority to make laws necessary and proper to carry out
the powers vested by the Constitution ‘in the government of the
United States, or any Department
or Office thereof.’
Faulkner
said that the courts have ignored
this part of his case and that
"they are afraid to face up to the
implications the Youngstown
Case has for the sending of draf
tees to die in Vietnam.”
Mr. Faulkner summed up the
legal merits of the case with the
statement that “the government,
based on the Youngstown Case
(Cont’d on Pg. 7)
”

designed to improve faculty-student relationships on campus.
Dr. Siggeikow and Dr. Peter M.
Boyd-Bowman of the Modern
Language Department, in their attempt to bridge the faculty-student gap inherent in a quickly
growing university, feel that
steps must be taken to arrest an
increasing spirit of student "depersonalization.”
Dean Siggeikow stated, "Our
students do not differ from their
counterparts throughout the coun
try when they complain that they
never meet the faculty or that
the faculty has no interest in
students. Many students individually and in groups consistently
express interest in improved faculty-student eommunialion and
urge more contact through discussion groups, edffec
similar affairs.”

hours, and

Dr. Boyd-Bowman, formerly of
Kalamazoo College, Michigan, believes that the advantages of a
small liberal arts school, in closer

faculty-student relationships, can
be attained in a large university
through an attempt by the faculty to entertain the students informally in their homes.
Prof and Mrs Boyd-Bowman
were host to such a gathering last
semester, co sponsored by the Office of the Dean of Students,

where

the nonacademic atmosphere quickly obviated any feelings of being in a classroom situ-

ation, consequently allowing

for

personal faculty-student rapport.
Among other favorable results
was the acknowledgement of the
student as an individual, capable
of communicating his intellectual

and esthetic ideas.
In an article which appeared
in NASPA, the Journal of the Association of Deans and Administrators of Student Affairs, Dean
Siggclkow stated that, “There is
something seriously wrong with

higher education when the university experience, which should
be continually exciting and challenging, shows signs of degenerating into a depersonalized learning factory. Students are not only
rebelling against the faculty in
adsentia and

the administration
in particular, but against society
in general. To them the increas-

ingly depersonalized atmosphere
of our growing university system
too obviously reflects certain aspects of what they consider an
imperfect society in the non-campus world.”

The manifestation of this on
the State University at Buffalo
campus has instigated a renewal
of the program to improve faculty student communication.
The
present plan, being conducted on
an experimental basis, includes
luncheons and impromptu facultystudent collaboration.
Dr. Siggelkow sincerely feels
that, if an earnest effort is made
by both the faculty and the student body, the realization of a
stronger faculty-student bond will
be attained.

�PACE

TWO

SPECTRUM

Friday, July 15, 1966

Radioisotopic Technique Institute
To Provide Radioactive Experience
The Western New York Nuclear
Center will sponsor a
Radioisotopic Tehniqiie Institute
on campus from July 18 to August 12.
About ten people have enrolled
in the Institute and will receive
graduate credit in Biology 544,

Research

Isotopic Tracer Techniques. Besides UB graduate students, representatives from area hospitals

and industries will attend.
According to Mr. C.C. Thomas,
Institute Coordinator, “the pri-

ENGLISH 5358

design of tracer experiments, isotope applications in research, low
level radiation detection, biologi-

mary purpose of the Institute is
to provide individuals with ex-

perience working with radioactive
materials so that they may eventually apply radioisotopic techniques to their research work.”

cal effects of radiation, and production of radioisotopes.

Mr. Thomas also indicated that
the Institute’s orientation is directed mostly toward the biologi-

Softball Standings Thru July 11
Won

Psychology
Chemistry
Nuclear Center
Biology
Physics

cal sciences.

The topics the Institute will
consider include atomic structure,
radioactivity, detection of radiation, health physics principles.

Education
Adm. and Rec.
English

Literary Criticism to be Discussed on July 20
A panel discussion, “Literary
Criticism: Its Aims and Purposes.” will be presented on July
20 in the Norton Conference
Theatre at 1:30 p.m. Participants
in the discussion will be Mac
Hammond, Paul Carter-Harrison,
Clive Hart, Eric Mottram, Arnold
Stein, and Richard Stern
Paul Carter-Harrison, the young
playwright who makes his home
in Holland, is in residence on
campus this summer. He will direct his two new plays, “Top
Hat” and "Pavane for a DeadPan Minstrel,” for their Buffalo
premiere later this month.
Clive Hart, a noted Joyce
Scholar, has published Structure
and Motive in Finnegan's Wake,
A Concordence to Finnegan's

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Wake, and Twelve and a Tilly.

Co-editor of the Wake Newsletter
and a member of the faculty at
the University of Newcastle, New
South Wales, Australia, he received his Ph.D. from Cambridge
University. Mr. Hart is a member
of the visiting faculty for the
summer sessions.
Eric Mottram is a visiting professor at New York University.
Mr. Mottram’s publications include American Literature; Books
on America, Plays of Clifford
Odets, and Companion to American Literature. He has been a
faculty member at the University
of Zurich, University of Malaya,
University of Groningen, King’s
College and University of London.
Arnold Stein has published
Perilous Balance, Answerable
Style: Essays on Paradise Lost,
Heroic Knowledge, and Johne
Donne's Lyrics: The Eloquence
of Action. A member of the visiting faculty, he is professor of
English at the University of
Washington.

LEONARDO'S
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Richard Stern, a novelist, is the
author of Gold, Teeth, Dying and
Other Matters, and Stich. Dr.
Stern, who received his Ph.D.
„

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,

„

Meeting of July

5, 1966

were nine members
tenth arrived late) and a
recording secretary provided by
the office of the president.
Present

(the

The first item of business centered around the question of admitting representatives of the
campus news media to committee meetings. An extended discussion weighed various considerations. Those favoring admission
argued such points as the need
to maintain the confidence of the
University community by avoiding an aura of secrecy, and the
possibility of controlling the
quality of the reporting by having representatives of competing
media present. Those opposing
were concerned that the effects
of inaccurate reporting, attribution, etc,, would necessitate the

R

SUMMER
SCHOOL
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UNIVERSITY PLAZA
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2
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1

1

2
2

uated in the election of the Task
Force with its mandate. He described how the committee envisaged its role and stressed its
elected nature and its responsibility to the students and the
faculty. In return, the Dean expressed great interest and gave
the impression that once ; he is
installed as president he Will give
strong support to the work of the
committee. He suggested that
the co-chairmen should contact
him directly by phone to establish formal relations.

committee’s consuming its time
in explanation and correction. A
better method, they said, would
be for the Chairmen to release
to news reporters and all interested parties memoranda based
on the official minutes of each
meeting.
It was moved

and seconded
that the committee admit representatives
of the Spectrum,
WBFO, and the Graduate Forum.
Vote: Yea 4; Nay 5; one ab-

-

sent.
Regarding the preparation of
m em o r a n d a, the committee
agreed that they should contain
sufficient detail to be genuinely
informative. Further, that they
should be issued as soon as possible after meetings and that they

should reiterate the
committeemen were
representatives of
and faculty bodies

After Professor Sapp had given
his report, the suggestion was
made that the committee should
establish a tentative time schedule with the view of making an
interim report of its findings and
recommendations by a fixed date.

fact that the
duly elected
the student
and not ap-

The committee now turned to
discussion of the impending
telephone conference call scheduled with Dean Meyerson for 2
p.m., this date. The committee
agreed that the co-chairmen and
Professor Sapp should participate
in the conversation. It then considered what the tenor of the
call should be. It agreed that
the independent mandate of the
Task Force should be stressed.
At the same time, however, it
should be made clear that the
advice and counsel of the new
president would be weighed carefully and his support welcomed.
It was further agreed that he
should be made aware that the
object of the Task Force was not
to intrude on those administrative decisions which were indeed
administrative in their character
whether at the university, college, or departmental levels but
rather to ensure that the whole
academic community had a role
to play in decision making which
directly affected academic life.
a

The second item on the agenda
was a report from Professor Sapp
on his recent meeting with Dean
Meyerson in New York City.
(When it had become apparent
to the chairmen that a formal
meeting between the Dean who
was in N.Y.C. and the committee
would not be possible in the immediate future they had arranged
for Professor Sapp, who also happened to be in that city, to confer
informally with him.)

-

Because this conference was impromptu there could be little
preparation, but Professor Sapp
sought to cover the relevent details. He explained to the Dean
the background which had event-

MID-SUMMER SALE
ALL SUMMER SPORTWEAR
STARTING FRIDAY, JULY 15th

1
0
0
0

2
2

Last Week's Scores
Physics 14, Adm. and Rec. 1
Wells (W), Sanford (L).
Chemistry 12, English 6: Klein
(W), Feldman (L).
Psychology 11, Nuclear Center
7: Laughery (W), Anderson (L).
Biology 6, Physics 4; Goodman
(W), Wells (L).

from Ohio University, is professor of English at the University
of Chicago and a member of the
SUNYAB faculty for summer sessions.

pointees.

Poise nlyy

—

0
0

Task Force: Memorandum II

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DINNERS
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SUPPERS
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j
|

�Friday, July IS, 1966

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

Stratford Excursion Planned

A Review:

Syracuse's AS YOU LIKE IT

The Summer Activities Staff
has scheduled an excursion to
the Stratford Shakespearean
Festival in Stratford, Ontario, for
the weekend of July 22-23. Reservations have been made for
the evening performance of
Twelfth Night on Friday, July 22
and tickets are also available for
either Henry V or Don Giovanni
at the Saturday, July 23 matinee

Syracuse University’s Touring
Company performed a generally

excellent

As You

Like

It last

Friday evening in Baird Hall despite the inadequate dramatic
facilities on this campus.

As many Shakespearean productions, contrivances obtruded
inorganically from the Syracuse
company’s production. The most
egregious obtrusion came with
the treatment of Jacques’ lines,
“All the world’s a stage . . .” as
one of literature’s One Hundred
«

performance.

Great Moments; a spotlight on
the speaker dimmed according
to the progress of the seven stages of life. Hymen’s appearance
toward the end of the play (as
she blesses the married couples)
resembled the annual lighting of
the White House Christmas tree
—somehow flashing lights got
Scene from the Syracuse University Touring Company's
caught in her robes. Music usualProduction of AS YOU LIKE IT
ly provides another source of
obtrusion in Shakespearean proher father, happiness in her while David Fendrick played an
ductions, but in this one the friendship with Celia, starcrossedexcellent fool as Touchstone.
music of Richard Dyer-Bennett ness in her love for Orlando, and Katherine Manney as Celia only
was both appropriate and tastemasculinity when she feigns mansucceeded in irritating some of
ful.
hood). Miss Aspinwall failed esthe audience with her incessant
Janet Aspinwall’s inability
in her ability to feign smile even when the role did
not call for a Cheshire cat. Miss
sufficiently vary her performance™ manhood (Good bless her), and
within the difficult role of Rosamuch of the later sense of the
Manney was, in short, too cute
lind marred an otherwise out- play depends upon this ability, for words.
standing performance. The actDespite these petty annoyances
Allen V. Williams played a solid
ress playing Rosalind must be
Orlando even though he looks and several inorganic obtrusions,
the Syracuse Touring Company’s
able to assume various changing like Ricky Nelson. Kenneth Bowlproduction of As You Like It
es as Jacques probably gave the
aspects of the character (e.g., depression over the usurpation of play’s outstanding performance, was lively and expert.

CNVA to Hold Peace March on August 6;
Vigil in Memory of Hiroshima Dead Planned
On Saturday, August 6, 1966,
the Buffalo Committee for NonViolent Action (CNVA) will hold
a “Peace W a 1 k.” Twenty-one
years ago on August 6, the United States became the first and
only country in the world to use
nuclear weapons on human be-

ings.

One Act Pbys
To Be Presented
On July 22-23

At 8:15 a.m., the bomb was
dropped on Hiroshima, killing
78,000 people. At 8 a.m., walkers
will meet at the fountain near
Norton Union for a one-hour silent vigil in memory of those
killed by the bomb. At 9 a.m., the
walk will begin on Bailey Avenue
and move to the draft induction
enter at the corner of Bailey and
Kensington, where picketing and
leafleting will take place. It will
then proceed down Kensington to
Main Street; up Main to Jefferson; Jefferson to Best. At Jefferson and Best, leaflets will be

(Clearance

“Pigeons,” by Lawrence Osgood, involves three women and

THURSDAY, JULY 14th

“The Blind Men” by Michel de
Ghelderode is theater of the grotesque at its best. Ghelderode is
a Beglian dramatist whose plays
have as their environment medieval Flanders.
The dramatist
writes of a world overtaken by
the Devil in which man’s morals
have become grotesquely distorted by lustful and selfish desires.
This particular play by Ghelderode was inspired by a painting
of the same title by the Flemish
painter Breughel.
Both plays are directed
Joseph J. Krysiak,

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handed out. The march will then

proceed down Best to Main; Main
to North; up North to the Peace
Bridge. At the Peace Bridge a
statement will be given to American official concerning disarmament, foreign policy, and Ameri-

can involvement in Vietnam.

If you are a U.S. Citizen, aggressive and would like to
grow progressively please call me today. (Collect of
course).

BOB ROCHFORD

301-823-2200 Ext. 476

It

will be requested that the statement be sent to Washington.
All walkers will be asked to
recognize the non violent discipline which the nature of the
march embodies. All interested
persons are urged to participate.

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THE SPECTRUM

Summer

Two One-Act plays, “Pigeons”
and “The Blind Men,” will be
presented by the Workshop Theatre in the Millard Fillmore Room
on July 22 and 23 at 8:30 p.m.

unfolds in the unlikely setting
of an abandoned and junk-littered lot in New York City. A struggle for control of the trio carries the drama to an “absurd”
conclusion.

Tickets, at $16.00. $16.50.
$18.00, are now on sale at
Norton Box Office. You may
the Box Office at 831 3704
tickets and reservations.

Main Street &amp; Thraway
1205 Niagara Falls Bivd.

�Friday, July 15, 1946

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

You Re
What's
Do You
only "the very responsible people, the most responsible.” “These
people have to have the freedom
granted by the
fto use the drug]
Government.” The “psychiatric

By DAVID GARDINER

profession,” he believes, should
be left to run its own LSD affairs. It is on this note that the
interview ended.

Dr. Shutkeker is a man of profound decency. I sensed in him
an intense concern for his fellow
man, a concern most evident in
the application of his science to
what he believes to be humanistic ends.
These grounds supply a basic
framework within which the issues raised by the interview can
be fruitfully discussed. Dr. Shutkeker’s science tends to draw
from the s o c i e t y’s prevalent
value-system in several important
areas; and it is precisely this
identification which I understand
to preclude the achievement of
a more humane and human so-

In the past few months a spate
of articles has appeared in the
popular media concerning the increasing use of the conscious-

and sense affecting drug,
LSD. For the most part, this
outpouring reeks with conventional wisdom.
ness

ciety.

Without exception, for example, evaluative (and even descriptive) reports seem to be
based on the assumption that
LSD is a “problem.” Of course,
as the wisdom goes, it can be
used for good or evil (like any
other great scientific breakthrough), but it must be kept
from the “kick-seekers” and other
“irresponsible” elements. Laws
are urged (and the lawmakers
respond) to protect society from
these people, and to protect these
people from themselves.
In an effect to get beneath
and beyond the conventional wisdom, I recently conducted an interview with Dr. Bruno Shutkeker, an experienced researcher in
LSD. Dr. Shutkeker seemed eminently qualified for work with
this much-discussed drug: he is
Chief of Neurology and Psychia-.
try at Buffalo Veteran’s Administration Hospital, and has been
with the hospital the 17 years
since its inception. Dr. Shutkeker was highly impressed with
the drug’s potentialities during a
brief period of research in England about five years ago. Consequently, after 3 year’s efforts
in this country, he finally received permission in early 1965 to
use the drug. He has conducted
77 research projects in the short
time the drug has been available
to him. The projects consist primarily of the administration of
LSD to ‘mentally ill’ subjects for

&gt;

therapeutic purposes.
Unfortunately, our interview
fell short in its attempt to penetrate staid convention. Unmis
takably an intelligent and enlightened man, Dr, Shutkeker
nevertheless shares numerous facets of the conventional wisdom
to which I refer. Science too
frequently converges with “common sense,” and, in Dr. Shutkeker's approach, the implications of
this (rather modern) phenomenon

become discernable.

In this article, I try to convey
the sense and substance of the
interview with Dr. Shutkeker,
and to evaluate that interview as
well. My own position, at the
broadest level, is critical of both
LSD-use, and of the critics of its
use.

The "Fictional Nature
of The Experience

I began by asking Dr. Shutkeker if he believes the LSD-user’s
view of “reality” (while under
the influence of the drug) to be
“distorted” or “inaccurate.” If so,
or if not, then on what grounds?
(Here, I wanted to have him discuss his epistemological, psychological, or sociological position on
the nature and production of
thought and sense perception.
The question is almost embarrassing in terms of its breadth and
scope; nevertheless I still think
it is a crucial question and relevant for our concern here.) Dr.

Shutkeker covered the spectrum,
in his answer, from a kind of
naive realism to radical relativism: "Consciousness is the accumulation of experience,” he
said, and the individual’s experience differs from culture to culture. We all have our “dogmas,"
“distortions,” and “irrational beliefs,” he continued, but "there
can be a relatively less distorted
viewpoint;" as such, the “illusions
induced by LSD constitute “a
severe departure from reality."
He seems to accept the notion
of perceptual and conceptual relativity, that “there can be no
cut-off position in what defines
reality,” but LSD “exaggerates
what you see, colors, intensifies
is a wild exaggeration of
normal conduct.” The experience
is transcendental, he said, and
“the transcendental nature of experience is fictional."

The Promise and the Peril
Dr. Shutkeker feels that no
“drug has come along which is
as promising as this [LSD].” He
explained that its wide range of
effects and applications make it

“extremely useful” for “research
and therapeutic" purposes, i.e.
for treating “illness.” The drug
“breaks down barriers and resistances,” and “allows us to get

inside the unconscious of the
individual,” Dr. Shutkeker said.
It makes the task of the psychoanalyst easier: 6y “filtering out
a great deal of fact from fiction,”
the psychoanalyst is able to help
“reconstruct the individual, free
from the fantasies, the prejudices,
the superstitions” which disturb
him.

It LSD has all this promise, it
also presents a grave danger,
according to Dr. Shutkeker. The
illicit use “by the very people
who shouldn’t be using the drug,”
can produce long term “mental

damage” and lead to “impulsive
actions leading to death.” As a
kind of instant intellect,” LSD
contributes to the “drop-out"
problem, destroying the opportunities of these people. It “purges
people from the responsible student group.” The purged are “the
wild ones, the irresponsible, the
reckless, the gamblers,” for use
of the drug results in “the loss
of judgement, reason, controls.”

...

Lack of Explanation
of Drug's Effacts
Dr, Shutkeker did not explain,
to my satisfaction, the source of

this “fiction.” When asked to
account for the recurrence of
certain effects (e.g., the feeling
of euphoria, enhanced childhood
recall, etc.) which appear to be
characteristic of the drug's use,
he radetcribad these reactions
rather than offering any explanation for them. The effects are
definitely precipitated by the biochemical change in the body, Dr.
Shutkeker said. The question remains, however, why these specific effects?

Demonstration* and LM&gt;
Different Kinds of Rebeftion
LSD-users come from almost all
areas of life, Dr. Shutkeker said.
He sees the illicit users on campuses as a group distinct from

the anti-war demonstrators and
civil-rights activists. Both manifestations are a result of “a dis-

enchantment among all of us,”
but the latter constitutes an “intelligent’ form of rebellion, and
the society will be the better for
it.” Dr. Shutkeker is pleased with
the protestors, seeing them as
“people who want their freedoms” ip the face of a “neurotic
hierarchy” of power which threatens these freedoms.
Responsible Utilization
of the Drug
Because of the danger involved, Dr, Shutkeker feels that the
drug must remain available to

People as Problems
Dr. Shutkeker partakes of the
“social problem” syndrome. Deviant and excessive behavior and
thought—a few examples: illicit
LSU-use, homosexuality (“the
homosexual is not a bastard, but
he has problems,” Dr. Shutkeker
remarked), mental illness, neurotic and irresponsible elements
in prestigeous positions (e.g., J.
Edgar Hoover in the political
realm, Timothy Leary in the aca-

demic)—are perceived as “problems” for the society. The society
is seen as an imperfect one—in need of “intelligent” criticism
—but basically rational and responsible in its structure. In some
way, “the society” is named as
the cause of these maladies, but
the “social problem” approach refuses to consider the society sick
in and of itself. The troubles and
the policies of the society are
questioned, but never its structure. The disaffected are therefore to receive therapeutic treatment as a solution to their (and
society’s) problem.

Where is Mental Health?
Nowhere does Dr. Shutkeker’s

problem-orientation more glaringly reveal its underlying presuppositions than in his attitude
toward LSD-use. The illicit use
of LSD constitutes a problem, but
the employment of the drug in
the attempted solution to another
problem is most highly praised
and promoted. Here, the capitu-

lation to the dominant valuesystem of the society is put into
practice as the ‘disturbed’ subject learns how to get along—a
“cure” which may be far less attractive than the “illness” in two
salient respects: first, it remains
to be demonstrated that the individual who is able to function
effectively in the society is necessarily closer to sanity than one
who is unable to do so. Indeed,
the contrary may be true, that he
who has become disturbed by
the harshness and incredulousness of contemporary reality has
taken the first step to a healthier
state of human existence. In this
person, a sensitivity to the human
condition—even if his focus is
merely on the manifestation of
this condition in his own miser-

�Friday, July 15, 1966

PACE FIVE

SPECTRUM

illy Don't Know
Happening
Mr. Jones?

.

able self—begins to emerge, the
contradictions with which he is
required’to live begin to break
through. If human health is conceived as something more than
adjustment to the society, then
a genuine cure would mean this
individual’s rebellion against the
established universe of discourse
and behavior; and, further, the
ultimate collapse of this universe.
Social Control and Responsibility
The therapeutic approach raises a second issue, one intimately
bound to what I have just discussed. I have in mind the area
of social control. As Dr. Thomas
Szasz (Syracuse' University), for
one, has pointed out, our society
is steadily expanding the category under which it classifies
people as “mentally ill.” Moreover, he remarks at length about
the extreme difficulty involved
in determining what is mental
illness and what is deviancy or
eccentricity. (Dr. Shutkeker himself was highly ambiguous on the
issue of what it means to be ‘in
touch with reality.’) Szasz’s account of the history of man’s
dealing with mental “disease” is
as grotesque as it is enlightening. There is little reason to
believe that psychiatry represents any qualitative shift from
Lumping illegitithis pattern.
mate and strange behavior and
thought under the category “mental illness” becomes a convenient
way to (1) keep the deviant from
disturbing social equilibrium,
and/or (2) assure that he begins
to think and act as he must to
get along. The society and the
individual are simultaneously “rehabilitated.” Social control is acceptable and pleasant under the
aegis of science.
This business of social control,
however, is not one that Dr.
Shutkeker sees as problematic.
He is persistent in his argument
that LSD must be kept in the
hands of the “responsible” members of the society; he strenuously insists that the only legitimate
application of the drug is in the
treatment of the mentally sick.
Who are the responsible ones?
This is quite clear: the psychiatrict profession should be left
to “govern itself;” Dr. Shutkeker
grants the Government the right
(does he have a choice?) to determine which elements in society may have access to LSD;
In order to begin research in
the first place, he “had to satisfy
the Sandoz Co, [the only drug
company producing LSD at the
time] that we were responsible
people.”
Leaving aside momentarily any
judgment on the illicit use of
LSD, I submit that it is the very
elements designated by Dr. Shut 1

keker as “responsible”—the established professions, the Gov-

which have
themselves to be the most
irresponsible in terms of their
use of scientific breakthroughs.”
These elements are characterized
by their amoral unaccountability. Like all elites, they are, at
best, accountable only to each
other. It is not the “kooks" and
the “mentally disturbed” who
have used the potentialities of
advanced technological society
for the purposes of ever more
destructive and brutalizing
wars; it is not the reckless “pot-

ernment, industry

proved

—

heads" who have turned out vast
quantities of harmful or useless
drug “curets;” it is not the outcasts who have irrevocably polluted the air and water. All of
these tragedies have been perpetrated by the “responsible”
segments of society. And these
are not “mistakes,” “accidents,”
or merely problems of an imperfect society—they seem to be the
in-principle results of the institutional arrangements

of this

society. If the discovery of LSD
is as “neutral” a discovery as
was the discovery of nuclear fission, which position Dr. Shulkeker takes, then woe be to us
if the “responsible” people are
able effectively to confine it to

their exclusive domain. Marcuse
makes the case for the deviant
a very clear one: “In reserving
for me a special niche of meaning and significance, you grant
me exemption from sanity and
reason, but in my view, THE
MADHOUSE IS SOMEWHERE
ELSE.”

III.

An Alternative View of

LSD and Society

The narrow medical or social
problem approach is inadequate
to the attainment of humanistic
ends—it is probably a primary
hindrance to this effort. Undoubtedly, the medical method
supplies ameliorative benefits for
many genuinely miserable human
beings, but the larger sickness
of the whole society is left untouched.
It seems to me that in any
attempted understanding of
human beings, we must make an
assumption of both an element
of contingency and an element

of autonomy in the conduct of
human affairs. This allows us to
talk about choice as well as
causation (social and otherwise);
a shred of humanity is thereby
acknowledged in even the most
apparently ‘wretched’ and ‘determined’ individual or group (a
sort of ‘humility check’ for despots).

This assumption permits us to
view the current use of LSD by
a considerable and increasing
number of people from all walks
of life, as both a product tof
certain conditions, and as a
choice of an alternative way of
Kving. Both components of this
view compel a critical scrutiny
of the ‘old” ways of living. What
does the given society deny in
the area of the satisfaction and
development of human needs and
faculties? With what contradictions, frustrations, and harsh
realities does the established state
of affairs require a person to
live? Can there bt any value in
the ‘alternative way of living?’
In answer to that last question:
yes, there is every indication that
LSD provides us with some useful
clues and insights into how we
can

better shape our personal

and social lives. This is not to
say that living life on LSD is in
itself desirable; I have something
quite different in mind here:
Many of the effects of LSD—among which we can include (I)
the ecstatic nature of the experience; (2) the freshness, novelty,
and vividness of sense perceptions; (3) the explosion of hypo-

statizcd ‘world-views;’ (4) the reversal of the oppressive time
structure of advanced industrial
society; (5) the elimination of the
overly 'utilitarian' aspects of
memory; (6) the breakdown of
physical aloofness; (7) the transformation of prevalent attitudes
toward death —seem to point to
better ways of living, indeed. In
a sense, then, there emerges out
of the effects of LSD-use a possible index to the failure of mankind as well as some touchstones
for a new departure.
I will try to clarify why the
departure for alternatives should
not reside in the actual use of
LSD as a life style. I submit that
it is possible and desirable to
approximate LSD experience by
the exercise of one's own faculties in activity. The accomplishment of this mode of existence
would establish a far more meaningful and serious criticism of
LSD than any provided by today’s

conventional science and

wisdom;

this criticism, simply stated,
would hold that any pleasurable
benefits which accrue to the individual while under LSD cannot
compare, in terms of richness
and depth, to those which are a
result of the individual’s free

self-activity—cannot compare because they are a result of this
‘free self-activity.’ The induced
experience, though pleasurable, is
superficial and transient; on the
other hand, that experience which
is effected by the creative activity of the full organism is the
concrete world of objects and
events, while still pleasurable, is
thorough and richly cumulative.
Dewey’s work on the nature of
experience makes the above disindeed, inestinction possible
capable. Experience would be inauthentic and unsqbstanlial, as I
understand Dewey, to the degree
to which a person allows LSD to
do his “doing” (fashioning) and
“undergoing” (receiving) for him.
—

'Free self-activity’ refers to a
quality of life which resembles,
in many respects, childhood experience. Childhood is the period

of fullest exercise of the individual's cognitive and sensory apparatus in activity. The child is
ceaselessly involved in a process
of "discovery” (which is essentially a process of criticism, since
it continually seeks to probe beyond and beneath that which is).
A relatively uncircumscribed sat-

isfaction of the senses characterizes this period. Hut these capacities dwindle, and practically stop,
in contemporary civilization as the
person becomes "fixed” with a
narrow set of abstractions, expectations, and behaviors. It is this
"fix" which is biochemically shattered by LSD, laying the basis for
symbolic and sensual modification. The quality and content of
childhood experience probably
plays a large part in the production of the incredible and manifold effects of LSD-use.
It does not seem unreasonable
to conjecture, then, that the more
closely adult life constitutes an
extension rather than a denial
of childhood experience, the less
dramatic will be the changes in
any

one choosing to use LSD.

(It occurs to me

that this would

be a much saner and effective
way to eliminate whatever "peril”
the use of LSD might present
than is the current trend toward
arbitrary restriction.) But what
arc the chances of achieving a

society which extends the “polymorphous perversity" of childhood into adult life? The man
who first clearly raised this issue,
Freud, thought it impossible.

But the prospects may be more
hopeful than Freud believed. For,
as I have used the term, “free
self activity” obviously does not
describe any static state of affairs. It is intended to be a
dynamic and open-ended concept,
an attempt to draw the individu
al into an “involvement” in life.
(It should be clear by now that
“involvement” in life does not

mean “identification” with

its pre

vailing modes; quite the contrary,
it calls for Camus' notion of “creative rebellion.”) As such, despite
extremely inhospitable conditions,
activity with a view jo personal

and societal enrichment and
change can begin, in some measure, immediately. In this sense
the goal is primarily a means:
but it is not a means which puts
off life for the sake of some
future utopia. Rather—as an expression of the refusal (everywhere) to succumb to the “deathin-life" existence of the present
society
this goal (or means)
compels us to begin to live life
now as an alternative to the
current inhuman social order,
and with a view to the eventual
collapse and replacement of that
—

order.

�Friday, July 15, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

(Comment

.

.

If You Scratch
Hard Enough...
The Spectrum interview with Mr. Stanley Faulkner (see
page one), defense counsel for the three GIs who will refuse
to fight if sent to Vietnam, indicates once again the totalitarian nature of military conscription. Mr. Faulkner’s defense, to the naive, appears air-tight: how could the United
States violate an individual soldier’s conscience by coercing
him to fight against his will?
The beauty of Mr. Faulkner’s defense lies in its exposure
of the inconsistency with which the government of the United
States wages war. Faulkner is arguing the unconstitutionality (and therefore illegality) of the war in Vietnam on the
government’s own grounds (i.e., treaties and pacts to which
it is a party). Thus to ask the GIs to fight in Vietnam is to
ask them to break the law.
The United States has ratified the Kellogg-Briand Pact
(1928), the Nuremberg Judgments (1946), and the United
Nations Charter (1945) and has thus made them the law of

the land. The war in Vietnam violates these treaties and,
as Senator Morse has pointed out, is thus unconstitutional.
The same inconsistency became apparent when David
Mitchell stood trial for refusing to cooperate with the Selective Service System by invoking the Numerberg Judgments as his defense (e g., an individual is duty-bound to
obey the higher law than that of his country if his conscience
so dictates). The United States, being the “victor” and therefore the “judge” in that war, had only Nazi crimes in mind.
Little could it conceive of the same argument being used
against its own war crimes by an American citizen.

In fact the attitude of most Americans seems to be
that their country can never be accused of war crimes for
the simple reason that their country never goes to war; it
only intervenes on occasion to restore peace and prosperity
to a wretched world. The essential dishonesty of governments
in general when they are called upon to judge themselves
becomes no where more apparent than in the present American justification for its war in Vietnam. Dean Rusk continues
to place sole blame for the American action on the North
Vietnamese, while Robert McNamara defends the latest
escalation as merely a response to provocation by the
enemy. Thus the United States, it seems, has become bereft
of free will; it only reacts to the other side.
If justice were to be served in the Mitchell case and
the recent ones involving Luftig and the three GIs, they
would be acquitted of all charges against them. The United
States, so we learn in high school and even in college, is
the one nation which guarantees freedom of conscience to
its citizens. But most of us come to realize at one point or
another (the three GIs are now learning it under house arrest at Fort Dix) that if you scratch a government hard
enough, you will find totalitarianism.
How could the United States allow a citizen to defend
himself on the grounds that he will not participate in an
illegal war or commit war crimes and then acquit him?
The question goes to the very heart of what government
is all about. All we can do is to plead for consistency on
the part of the District Court of Appeals and commend Mr.
Faulkner for his Diogenean search for an honest court.

THE

SPECTRUM

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
BUSINESS MANAGER
ADVERTISING MANAGER
PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

STEPHEN A. CRAFTS
SHELDON BERGMAN
SUSAN SCHOLL
ED SUMMER

EDITORIAL BOARD

ELLEN CARDONE
ALICE EDELMAN
JOCELYN HAILPERN
CARLA HARRISON

GINGER HOLCOMBE
MICHAEL D'AMICO

JOANNE LEEGANT

MARTY SADOFF
BILL SHERMAN
JULIE SULLIVAN
PAUL SCIABARRASI
SANDRA SMITH

flRST CLASS HONOR RATING

EDITORIAL POLICY It

■V

THE

jCetteri to the

,

cldilor

Editor Emeritus Defends SPECTRUM
TO THE

EDJTOR:

I was amused and somewhat
annoyed to read an obvious reference to me and my newspaper in
the Summer College Board Review, included in the article “A
Critical Look at College Visiting”

by Stan Cramer (p. 16).
Immediately under the somewhat ambiguous heading of
“Don’t Believe All You Read” we
find the following paragraph:
“I know of one college, for example, where the student newspaper is acknowledged not to be
a representative organ of communication. In fact, it’s a one-man
operation run by a fifth-year senior recently described by one
member of the alumni board as
“a left-leaning, sandaled supporter of unpopular causes who is
satisfied to exist in an intellectual womb.” Any counselor visiting this college who inferred
some student-body characteristics
from the college newspaper would
be badly misled (although he
might draw some valid conclusions about the college’s adminis-

tration from the fact that the

newspaper is permitted to operate.)”

The “one college” that Stan
knows of is his own school, the
State University of New York at
Buffalo, the newspaper his own
student paper, the Spectrum, and
five years have indeed elapsed

between my initial admittance to
U.B. and graduation this year.
Beyond these facts, however, the
paragraph suspiciously misleads
the reader.
(1) Stan says the paper is “ac
knowledged" not to be “a representative organ of communication”. This is very true; I “acknowledged” myself on a local
TV panel show in relation to the
opinions expressed in my editorials (which certainly “represent” the opinions of a majority
of students). In relation to the
diversity of news and editorial
opinions appearing in the paper
as a whole, I can only offer the
fact that, under my administration, the Spectrum won First
Class Honor Rating from the Associated Collegiate Press for fair
and complete reporting.
(2) Stan neglects to tell us that
the quote “by one member of the
alumni board” is taken directly
from the letters-to-the-editor column of the Spectrum. We printed
that letter in the interests of
presenting all shades of opinion
(i.e. being “representative”) so it
seems a little unfair for Stan to
use it as “evidence” of our bias.
(3) Stan flatters me more than
he realizes by saying that last
year’s Spectrum was “a one-man
operation." He must think I am
truly talented to put out a twenty-page paper, twice a week, and

still make the academic honor
roll both semesters. I suspect it
is more accurate to suppose that
Stan never bothered to notice
the eighty or so names of hardworking kids who appeared on
the masthead every issue.
(4) Finally, Stan asserts that
“valid conclusions” may be drawn
about the S.U.N.Y.A.B. administration “from the fact that the
newspaper is permitted to operate” (emphasis mine). Are we to
believe that the administration is
overly “permissive”? Or perhaps
we are supposed to think that
they are exceptional in their paternal tolerance? In fact the freedom of the Spectrum has been
won through hard and bitter battle over a number of years. The
fact that the administration “permits” a free press is no more
worthy of praise or approbation
than the fact that most architects design buildings which do
not fall down and kill people.
In both cases the men in question are merely doing what might
reasonably be expected of them.
I can only hope that Stan’s insight into the college visiting
problem is more accurate than
his disposition toward his own
college newspaper.
Most sincerely,
Jeremy Taylor

Editor-in-Chief,
Spectrum, ’65-’66

Escalation Is Improper Term
TO THE EDITOR:

Your Friday editorial, “The Escalation,” interested me particularly because I seem to agree
with your position, while at the
same time I object to some of
your points. I think I share your
general disapproval of war as a
solution for problems such as
the many-sided one in Vietnam.
I think we are equally concerned
that the President’s simple explanation of who is invading
South Vietnam and who has a
“right” to be there is so widely
disagreed with by many people
who should know the area well.
I think we are both amused to
see Mr. Johnson pooh-poohing
the polls when they have turned
against him for the time being.
But I object to your use of the
term “escalation” in the context
of the recent bombings near
Hanoi and Haiphong. Escalation,
to my thinking, is the exchange
of military attacks which, not
producing results for either side,
advances to a medium of attack
on a new level. Replacing guerr i 11 a s by organized divisions
might be escalation. Substituting
attacks on enemy troops with
attacks on the enemy’s strategic
supplies is escalation. Moving
from spot-bombing of industrial
plants to nuclear annihilation of
cities is escalation.
But spot-bombing the large oil
storage facilities at Hanoi and

Haiphong is not to start a new
tactic; it is to move a monthsold tactic to a new location. Nor
is there an element of surprise
about the move, except to us

Americans. The North Vietnamese
have regarded attacks on their
cities, and particularly on strategic points in the cities, as inevitable. According to repeated
reports in the New York Times,
the large Vietnamese cities have
been partially evacuated, beginning months ago. You point out
that one could bomb Lackawanna,
kill thousands of people and yet
claim to be striking military targets three miles from Buffalo.
However, if one is not bombing
Lackawanna in general, but rather concentrating exclusively on
the steel-producing complex along

the lake shore, if the dozen or so

adjacent blocks have been completely cleared of people, if all

Lackawanna’s children and old
people and many non-essential
men as well have been moved out
to Dunkirk or East Aurora or
Springville weeks before, and if
the steel plants themselves are
operating on skeleton crews
(mostly military personnel), one
is not going to kill thousands of
people. It happens that an oil
storage depot can be run by a
handful of men, not the several
hundred it would take to sustain
a large factory complex. And
when that handful passes by the
anti-aircraft guns which ringed

the depots (before they were
bombed) they were as aware of
the risks as conventional soldiers
are.

In the recent bombings I do
not see hundreds of innocent
lives lost in a surprise attack

which could never have been anticipated, either in timing or in
kind. I see a rather controlled
operation which destroyed much
of the country’s resources and
killed mostly, if not entirely,
those who were either soldiers
or civilians aware they were taking risks like soldiers. As a case
of escalation, I think you highly
overrate the incident of last
week. It is not escalation, but
only one more act of war at the
bottom of an ever-growing list
of such acts.
I do not wish to justify the
bombing, but rather to put it in
perspective. I have serious doubts
that either we understand the
thinking of the Vietnamese or
vice versa, and that our acts have
the meaning for them which we
suppose them to have. I share
your feeling that the President
has taken the war upon himself,
and in a way excluded those of
us who disagree with it from
I
participating in its strategy.
would go further than your suggestion that it is crimes against
humanity which constitute military victories; war itself is a
crime against humanity.
Raymond W. Michaels

Sadoff Attack Refreshing
TO THE EDITOR;

Marty Sadoff’s attack upon the

“intellectual classical” cartel of

film reviewers was unfortunate
only in that it was brief. Whatever does Mr, Sadoff mean by
“intellectual classical?” Certainly
he does not refer to the Spectrum's other two film reviewers;
unless, of course, one defines “intellectual” as “obscure” or “confusing.” If, on the other hand,
one means by intellectual “wellinformed,” we could not grant
that appellation to the Spectrum's
other two reviewers any sooner
than to Hr. Sadoff himself. Certainly they are well informed
about those pictures, those directors. etc. with which they are

familiar. If confronted by a new
film, a new director, however,
whence their information? The
answer is easy: do not talk about
the film to be reviewed, talk
about that with which one is already familiar. Everyone will find
you an intellectual. Furthermore,
there is already a prejudgment of
intelligence here. Example: Taubman (wasn't it Taubman) was at
one time a sports writer; then he
became a drama critic for the
New York Times. Would anyone
call a sports writer an intellectual? No. But it is fairly easy to
call a drama critic or film reviewer an intellectual simply because of the medium itself. As
for myself, I should call Taubman

neither an intellectual sports
writer nor an intellectual drama
critic. He is simply an observer.
What the reader wants to know
from him is not how intelligent
he is but what his reaction is to
the film. This reader is tired of
“comparisons,” “parallels,” and
other “intellectual” linking-up.
One always feels one must go
through the reviewer to get to
the film. Mr. Sadoff, whose first
review for the Spectrum must be
regarded as a refreshing attempt
to do away with the “classical"
style, allowed the film to speak
more loudly than the reviewer.
Let us have him as your reviewer
in the fall.
Milo Vannucci

�Friday, July 15, '1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE SEVEN

1

(Cont’d

from Pg. 1)

and others, does not have the
power to send draftees to fight in
an illegal war in Vietnam.” In
response to the Federal Judges
ruling that the issue was a political rather than judicial one, he
quoted from the 1960 James Madison Lectures at New York University by Justice Douglas, who
said, "political questions should
no longer be used as a thicket
behind which the judiciary retreats.”

ernc
eu
Sean Connery
JoanneWoodward, Jean Scbcrg
IN HIS WILDEST ROLE' WHAT HE DOES TC

The three servicemen are under “virtual house arrest at Fort
Dix,” according to Mr. Faulkner.
“They were put under constant
guard and restricted to their
rooms after being taken off in
handcuffs last Thursday, hours
before they were to address a
public meeting. The Army showed
that it was afraid that others
would also refuse to fight in Vietnam by arresting them before the
public meeting and consequent
publicity. This action is frighteningly similar to the tactics of
Nazi Germany and the present
day system of house arrest in
South Africa."
He went on to claim that “the
one million students who took
the selective service examination
in order to avoid the draft demonstrated the unpopularity of this

war.”
“If the industrialists arc really
so patriotic" he said, “let them
demonstrate it by giving up two
years of their profits. If our young
men must leave their education,

their families, and risk their lives
for two years, the least the industrialists can do is give up their
profits for a similar length of
time.”

GIs are receiving
from the peace and
movements. Officials
from C.O.R.E., S.N.C.C., the National Coordinating Committee
Against the War in Vietnam, Women’s Strike for Peace, Retail,
Wholesale and Department Store
Employees, and S.D.S. have joined in their defense. Donald Duncan. the former Special Forces
sergeant who spoke at U.B. last
spring, has also expressed his
support.
In a joint statement issued
before a news conference June

30, the four GIs explained their
position in these words: “Each
of us, through individual considerations, deeply believes that
the war in Vietnam is illegal,
immoral, and unjust. Contrary to
our government's claims that the

war is in the interests of both

the U.S. and the people of Vietnam, we believe that the U.S. is
now and has been supporting
dictators in Saigon, who seek,
not the interests of the majority
of their people, but rather their
own visions of power. The Vietnamese people have the right to
determine their own future and

not the future we have planned
for them. It was upon this political principle that the United
Stales secured its own freedom
in 1776. In recognition of this
fundamental fact we are refusing
to serve in Vietnam.” One of
the privates said, “When the
new Nuremberg trials begin,
some day we don't want to be
among the defendents. This war
is illegal, immoral, and unjust.
Unlike Eichmann, we are not
‘just following orders.’”

Mr. Faulkner concluded his interview with the Spectrum with
the prediction that "history will
eventually show that the position of these fellows was correct
and in the best interests of humanity.”

(AND A FEW OTHER LOVELY CHICKS) IS CALLED

THIS SUMMER THERE
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�Friday. July 15, 19M

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

Newport Festival to Featwe
Dylan, Ochs, Howling WoK
The Newport Folk Festival,
featuring folk artists from the

Student Enters New

Annex to Find Same Old Lines

To Be or Not to Be
(Cont'd

from P.

...

Of this there can be
doubt. The pleasant view
Norton terrace has been
out by an “iron curtain.”
once short, direct route
from the side entrance of Harriman Library to Diefendorf has
been obstructed by the Diefendorf Annex. The spacious quad
enclosed by Crosby, Lockwood,
and Diefendorf has been filled
with the Library Annex.
campus.

1)

little
from
shut
The

Another annex has been built
for the Physical Science laboratories. all of which will be in
one building. The Acheson Annex. in addition to several laboratories, will have eight classrooms.
The multicolored Diefendorf
Annex, between Diefendorf Hall
and Harriman Library, will also
be used for classrooms and faculty offices. According to Mr.
Doemland. only the Acheson and
Diefendorf Annexes, will be used
for classrooms.
The Capen Annex is unique
in that it will provide 5,000
square feet for animal quarters.
This Annex we can call the U.B.

zooolgical center or Bailey’s
Butcher Shop.
So this is the story: nine annex buildings at a cost of $1.2
million that were to be built in
120 days but took one year. So
enter into the books that more
classroom space needed plus 1.2
million dollars equals nine obstacles to the beauty of our

This pattern has been indicative of the general planning of
the entire project. In the eyes
of the planners it appears as
though convenience ha's overshadowed any considerations for
the beauty of our campus. However, one can be fairly certain
that any pictures in this year’s
University catalogue will reflect
only the long ago elegance so
much a part of the old U.B.
Perhaps it was impossible to
locate the entire project at an
area of the campus where their
presence would not be so overbearing. What has, in fact, been

FOR SALE

WANTED

2 TVs, $25 uch; autoharp. $35;
5 speed racer. $40; ’58 Volkswagen. $400
good condition.
Call 893 8219.

Female Roommate Wanted. Fur
nished Apartment near U.B.
Rent reasonable.
Call 836-0085
evenings or afternoons.

M.G.—TC, 194$. Excellent origin-

Female Roommate for next year
(’66-'67). Grad Student or Upper
Classman with Apt. or will locate
one. Write: Toby Leder, 360 Riverside Dr., Manhattan, N.Y. 10025

—

al condition.
(in

First

Rebuilt engine

England). New top.
buyer

$1,350.

takes. 835-2450.

2 Bedroom Ranch. Living room,
and Dining room. Snyder. N.Y,
Hot water, radiant heat, beautifully decorated. Outside newly painted, assumable mortgage. 839-1834.

PERSONAL
Person who witncessed accident
in front of U.B. on June 16th
please call TF 6-7911.

'Underground'
Cinema

TONIGHT!
(ALSO

SAT. and SUN.)

ADOLFAS MEKAS

Hallelujah, The Hills
“The wierdest, wooziest. wackiest comedy of the year!”
—Time Magazine

plus

mantled.

Although the need for more
space is recognized and the annex building seems to be an economical solution, we pose this

question; could not Planning and
Development have planned a
little further ahead and provided

$1.2 million worth of classroom
and office space which could be
conveniently converted to blend
with the “character” of the new
campus five years from now?
Perhaps they have planned that
far ahead and the temporary annex is not as temporary as they
announced.
The general reaction of the
students to the new buildings
echoes of disapproval. It is said
that no more annex-type buildings are to be built and the
general consensus is that we certainly have enough. We hope that
the next two or three years will
not necessitate the construction
of more annex buildings or the
permanence of these “temporary”
buildings.

By JOHN MEDWID
Marijuana has played a part in
another interesting legal case and
one which appears to be turning
into a cause celebre in Eugene,
Oregon. Annette Buchanan, 20,
a University of Oregon junior
and managing editor of the Oregon Daily Emerald, her school
newspaper, refused to identify
the seven students she interviewed for an article on marijuana.
Having refused to answer a
grand j u r y’s questions earlier
this month she was ordered last
Monday (June 20) to reveal the
names Wednesday morning.
After again refusing to reveal the
names of the students, District
Attorney William Frye asked the
judge to hold her in contempt
of court, which carries a penalty
of up to six months in jail and
a fine of $300.

The Kiss
AT THE

GRSLCI

TF 4-8298

traps.

In keeping with the aims of
the Folk Foundation, traditional
artists from the United States,
Canada and the British Isles will
be an integral part of the 1966
festival. Many of these artists
have been located by the field
work done by the Foundation
during the past year.
T h e o Bikel. Oscar Brand,
Brownie McGee and Sonny Terry,
Judy Collins. Bob Dylan, Jack
Elliott, Mimi and Dick Farina,
Flatt and Scruggs. Carolyn Hester, Bessie Jones, Clark Kessinger,
Phil Ochs, the Pennywhistlen,
Jean Ritchie, Grant Rogers, Buffy
Sainte-Marie. Joseph Spence, and
Howling Wolf are among the
many performers appearing

at

the 1966 Folk Festival.

New Chairmen
Folk Dance
Appointed in Education
Program
The School of Education at UB
has appointed four new department chairmen, it was announced
today by Dean Robert S. Fisk.
Named were: Dr. Robert S.
Harnack, chairman of the Department of Curriculum Development and Instructional Media; Dr.
George E. Holloway, Jr., chairman
of the Department of Educational
Administration; Dr. S. David Farr,
chairman of the Department of
Educational Psychology; and Dr.
William Eller, chairman of the
Department of Language Arts and
Elementary Education. All appointments are effective immediately.

The Murder

A folkdance program for students and faculty will begin
Thursday, July 21 from 8-11 pm.
in the Norton Terrace (or in Haas
Lounge in case of inclement
weather).
The program, under the direction of Mr. Trevor Barker, is intended as a recreational activity
rather than a class and is planned primarily for people with no
previous contact with folkdancing. All the dances will be taught
so that everyone may participate.
The program will run weekly
for the duration of Third Session. Students and faculty are invited to attend the entire series
or any of the individual sessions.

of Gonzago

The issue here is not the use
of drugs but the delicate balance
between the requirements of a
journalistic code of ethics and
the power of government to compel testimony which may violate
that code.
Secondly, there is the question
of the use to which her testimony
might be put. The information
that Miss Buchanan could give
to the grand jury could not be
used to build a narcotics ease
since none of the sources admitted to using marijuana but merely talked about its “pleasurable”
effects, and Police Chief Elsworth
who is already investigating the
use of narcotics on campus does
not think that the names would
be of much use.
The central issue of the increasing power of government remains.
In a memorandum submitted to

Judge William Leary in opposition to the judge's order to Miss
Buchanan to answer the grand

jury’s questions. Hiss Buchanan's
attorney, Arthur Johnson, wrote,
“Newsmen recognize that it is
essential to the function of a
judicial body that it have the
power to compel disclosure of
information. But that power .
should not be and is not completely inbridled by legislation.”
The power of grand juries
should be clearly defined in law
to insure that neither freedom
of speech nor freedom of the
press is abridged. In the words
of Frank I. Cobb, the famous
editor of the New York World,
“It is not the powers that they
conferred upon the government
but the powers that they prohibited to the government which
makes the Constitution a charter
of Liberty.”
.

Contemporary American Arts: The Anarchic Explosion
Temple Beth Zion will sponsor
a series of lectures and movies
entitled “Contemporary American Arts: The Anarchic Explosion" from July 12 to August 4.

The program will feature the

ANDY WARHOL S

3165 Bailey A»e.

aceomplished is the removal of
the center of our Campus. Where
once grass added color, there
remains only the concrete tributaries of sidewalk. One heartening prospect is that they will
only be there for five years and
then, it is said, completely dis-

U.S., Canada, and British Isles,
will be held July 21-July 24 in
Newport, Rhode Island. In addition to the annual four days
of evening concerts and daytime
workshops, the Board of Directors of the Newport Foundation
have designated Wednesday, July
20, as a pre-festival day for children. Oscar Brand has organized
the children’s day, and Theo
Bikel, Judy Collins, Bessie Jones.
Jean Ritchie, and Buffy SainteMarie will perform. A group of
children from the city of Newport will perform singing games
of the United States and Canada.
Another innovation of the 1966
Folk Festival is the inclusion of
traditional folk crafts, which will
be shown at the daytime programs, and will make an important contribution to the children’s
day. The complete wool process,
from the shearing of sheep to the
finished wool tweed will be shown
daily by skilled artisans. A moun-

tain potter, wood carver, and basket weaver will work beside
Seminole Indian patchwork makers, an Eskimo ivory carver and
a Nova Scotia fisherman who will
weave nets and make lobster

following:
July 12, 1966

—

Introductory

lecture: The cross-fertilization of
the arts. The discussion will try
to show how music (serious and
popular) relates to the other art
forms such as painting, film,
poetry, novel and theatre. The
arts as a response to and a participation in the dominant themes
in American society.
July 14, 1966
Seminar and
lecture on “The Novel.” The
theme wil be the change in the
—

mood of the novel from the 50’s
to the 60’s. The shift in sensibility from, for example; Bellow
to Kesey, from Malamud to Friedman, from Mailer to Donleavy.
July 19, 1966
Film (to be
chosen from list below)
July 21, 1966
Lecture and
seminar on Poetry: The three
divergent strains; The “Academics,” the “Beats,” the “Black
Mountain Poets.” The seminar
will trace the tradition from
Whitman, Pound, Williams, and
Olson.
July 28, 1966
Lecture and
seminar on “Art Today.” After
a general introduction beginning
with action painting, the seminar
will discuss the two schools of
—

—

“pop” art and "Dadaism.” Guest
lecturer; James Hanson—Ph.D,
candidate in Philosophy at

S.U.N.Y.A.B.
August 2. 1966—Film
August 4, 1966
Concluding
lectcure on the history of the
film and a discussion of "What's
happening today?”
All programs will begin at 8
p.m. The Temple is located at
—

805 Delaware Avenue.

RECIPE FOR FREE LEMONADE
6
Sugar ’n Lemon sugar packs
(from cafeteria)

—

16

hi cup Ice Cubes

oz. Water
Mix thoroughly. Makes one pint

of Lemonade.

.

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                    <text>1

SUMMER

STATE UNIVERSITY OF

TASK FORCE

||

MEMORANDUM

VOLUME 16

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JULY 8, 1966

NO. 51

10% Bookstore Discount Reinstated by FSA;
Board Rates Hiked $50 a Year for Residents
In its

June 29 meeting the

Board of Directors of the Student-

Prof. Scigliano Lecturing on the MSU Vietnam Project

Prof. Scigliano Appraises
MSU Vietnam Project
By ELLEN CARDONE

Professor Robert Scigliano of
the Political Science faculty of
Michigan State University discussed the controversial M.S.U.
Viet Nam Project in Norton Hall,
Thursday afternoon, June 30.

Dr. Scigliano, who will join the
SUNYAB faculty next fall, was in
Viet Nam with the M.S.U. Project
for three of its seven years. His
remarks concentrated on the
question of the place of the
University in the nation’s economic and technical assistance
programs.
M.S.U. became involved in
Viet Nam, he explained, through
the acquaintance of M.S.U. professor Wesley Fishel, and the
late President Ngo Dinh Diem.
The scope of assistance was; to
help administrative personnel; to
advise on government organization; and to teach courses in and
help develop the newly-formed
National Institute of Administration.

The project included from 28
to 130 advisors, at various stages,
and was involved directly and
indirectly in the spending of $25
million in U.S. aid, according to
Professor Scigliano’s own esti-

mates.
of the project have
charged that it was merely a
front for CIA operations and military assistance. Dr. Scigliano discussed these issues in detail,
noting that definite results had
come from the stated goals of
the project, such as better-organized municipal police and government agencies. On the other hand,
he found that the 50,000-man Civil
Guard, one of the three police
units trained by the M.S.U. Project was considered to be a direct
supplement to the army by the
Vietnamese Government. President Diem, according to Dr. Scigliano, viewed the Civil Guard as
a means of expanding the number
of U.S. supported troops beyond
the 150,000 man limit set by
Washington in 1957.
Critics

Dr. Scigliano called this particular branch of aid one of the
“activities which were strange, to
say the least, for a University.”
He found training of non-military
police acceptable, however, because M.S.U. has a school of
Police Administration qualified

to

provide

academic assistance.

To the charge of CIA “infiltration” of the project, the speaker
explained that much of the dispute on this point is due to the
fact that CIA personnel in question were never formally tied
to the project. Their presence,
however, was known to all involved, and Dr. Scigliano was of
(Corvt’d on Pg. 2)

Faculty Association accepted the
recommendation of its Sub-Board
ID that the original 10% Bookstore discount rate be reinstated
as of September 1.
The discount rate was cut to
5% by the FSA in its May 25
meeting According to the minutes of that meeting, the reduction was justified “in view of
the fact that there are no earnings or minimal earnings in the
Bookstore during the summer
months.”
The new discount rate will affect required textbooks and educational materials and will continue pending the audit report
of the fiscal year ending August
31 due to appear sometime in
October.
“As far as I know,” reports Dr.
Claude E. Puffer, Vice President
for Financial Affairs, “it (the
discount) will continue, but we
(the Board of Directors of FSA)
want to see the report prepared
by the public accounting firm
before we make a final decision.”
Dr. Puffer attributed a “lack
of enthusiasm for a rebate system” as a reason for the reinstatement of the 10% discount,

Draft Views Aired in
Congressional Hearings
Hershey Defends Student Deferments,
Favors More Universal Military System
WASHINGTON (CPS)
After
nearly two weeks as the subject
of hearings before the House
Armed Services Committee, the
military draft has found both
some harsh critics and some
—

strong supporters.
Rep. L. Mendel Rivers (D.-S.C.)
opened the hearings by raising
the question of lowering the current age level of 26 “substantially” during peace time. The
next day, Lt. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, director of Selective Serv-

ice, said he wanted the limit
raised so that the draft could
include men up to age 35 who
had been deferred for some rea
son when they were in the 19to-26 age group.
And that’s the way it went
for the first week of testimony.
General Hershey said a lottery
wouldn’t work after members
of the committee and some members of the House and Senate
urged its adoption. Hershey said
the draft was fair after committee members cited long lists of
letters from their districts, and
defended
across-theHershey
board student deferments after
charges that only the poor were
being drafted.
members of Congress
took the witness stand to re
iterate statements that they have
been making publicly for some
time; the draft is not fair, a
lottery is better, and a universal training system is better still.
Then

Little that was new came from
the hearings, and they served as
the opportunity for a lot of people to once again praise their
pet plans.

For example, General Hershey
continually urged a more universal military system that would
take many of the poorer and uneducated young men who are
now rejected. Hershey stressed
that his idea was not to increase
the size of the armed forces but

to take the “disadvantaged” in
order to “teach them and better
their morals.” The general proposed that “the Army is the best
way for the country to raise the
educational and moral levels of
these boys&gt;"
The idea, while not
little or no response
mittee members who
pushing their own pet

new, drew

from comwere busy
projects.

Hershey was also ready with
a lot of facts and statistics to
show that the present system

works pretty well.

He said that 56 per cent of
the men who are deferred for

college study eventually enter

the service. This compares to
only 46 per cent of those who
are not deferred, the General
said, indicating that the Army
was more interested in people
with high levels of education
than those with little or no
schooling beyond grade school.
The big reason the draft is
under fire now, the general said,
is that it is taking more people
than it normally does. The requirements of the war in Vietnam, he said, mean that many
more men have to be called than
the draft
generally handles.
"When you start calling people,"
he said, “they start complaining.”

although both he and Student
Senate President Clinton Deveaux

ices.

favored the former.
The rate of board contract for
residence hall dining was raised
$50 per year from $435 to $485.
Mr. Thomas Schillo, Director of
Housing, indicated that pre-registered residence hall students
would receive an announcement
of the change in boarding rates
later this summer and would
have the opportunity to reconsider their contract if they so desired.
The Board of Directors also
voted to drop the diploma fee due

Sub-Board II recommended, at
the same meeting, that the Student Senate and Graduate Student Association appoint a student committee to investigate the
further development of the FSAowned 500 acre plot of land near
the new campus site.
"Student fees will remain the
same as they were last year,"
according to Dr. Puffer, although
he indicated that there will be
a substantial increase in the
amount of money going to student activities.

to improved state printing

serv-

&gt;

UB Pledges Assistance to
Philander Smith College
Long-Range Development
By JULIE SULLIVAN
In the development and operation of a long-range plan designed to improve the quality and
effectiveness of an institute of
higher education, the State University at Buffalo has agreed to
assist a predominantly Negro college, Philander Smith College of
Little Rock, Arkansas.
Two officials of the State University at Buffalo, Dr. Myles Slatin, acting Dean of the College of
Arts and Sciences, and Dr.
George G. Iggers, professor of
history, will serve on an advisory
committee that will direct the
total cooperative project. They
have announced that the University and Baldwin-Wallace College
in Berea, Ohio, will contribute
services and funds towards Philander Smith's efforts to “launch
a massive attack on its weaknesses.”
University personnel who are
skilled in development, administration, finance, curriculum, and
student personnel will make regular visits to the Little Rock
campus in order to advise a planning committee consisting of faculty and staff members from the

college.

If funds can be made available, the State University at Buffalo will provide supplementary
fellowships of $3,200 to each of
two faculty members who will do
advanced graduate work for a
one-year period subject to oneyear renewal and admission to

the graduate school at the University.
A summer study program, designed to provide opportunities
for further training and experience in the science disciplines,
will be offered by the Stale University to six faculty members
of Philander Smith. Each participant will be assigned to an individual Buffalo faculty member
who would accept the responsibility of training the Philander
Smith faculty member in research
programs, graduate seminars and
discussions as well as providing
individual guidance for selfstudy. Regular lectures and visits
to other institutions in the Buffalo area will be included in
the program.

The special summer session,
which will be held on the Buffalo
campus, would allow participants

from Little Rock to obtain outside professional experience without removing them from their
teaching responsibilities at Philander Smith. The emphasis of the
program will be focused on those
academic activities which would
contribute most toward improving
the teaching program at Philander Smith College. Upon completion of eight weeks of training
at the Buffalo campus, Philander
Smith faculty members will return to Little Rock.
Officials of Philander Smith
have noted that a lack of financial and moral support for the
College's activities and programs
demands that a more effective
and creative alumni program be
developed in order to increase
patterns of economic support.
Through the cooperative relationship with the State University at
Buffalo, Philander Smith College
hopes to develop the skills necessary in delineating projects, activities, and writing imaginative
proposals for Federal or private
foundations.

Because the college has experienced difficulty in attracting an
excellent quality of cultural programs, the University will contribute to its improvement by
sponsoring events on the college
campus.

Philander Smith is one of the
56 survivors of over 200 colleges
that resulted from nineteenth century efforts after the Civil War
to provide educational opportunities for Negroes. Despite the efforts it has made towards adapting its educational program and
activities to meet present day
changes, a 24-page critical study
of the College’s present status revealed that inadequate facilities,
overloaded faculty members and
insufficient funds are serious detriments to the achievement of
the aims and objectives of Philander Smith.

The officials feel that the impact of the College’s effort is “too
meager to give the College a boost
large enough to plunge it faster
toward the achievement of its
long-range goals." The State University at Buffalo will assist Philander Smith College in its efforts
to acquire sufficient physical, financial, and personnel resources
so that it may obtain greater fulfillment in the realization of its
potential.

1

�SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

Friday, July S, 1966

Sisson to Keynote Second Conference
Of School Personnel Administrators

Tha Dorian Quint at will pot-form In Concert July 11 and
Baird Hall at 8:30 p.m.

18 In

SOFTBALL
The Summer Sessions Softball
League got off to a flying start
Monday, June 27th, as the Admissions and Records team edged
by Biology 11-9 and the Nuclear
Center disintegrated the School
of Education 18-10.

pitched the victory and Don Ber3 hits to the winning cause. The School of Education was hindered somewhat
by the absence of a number of

ry contributed

their “stars.”

—ATTENTION—
Students Registered for the
Fell Semester:
Pictures for this coming year’s
I.D. Card will be taken in the
basement of Foster Hall throughout the Summer. Bring the green
I.B.M. card you got at Registration with you.
Go Now!! Avoid the September
rush!

Admissions and Records fashioned an early 9-4 lead but was
held scoreless in the last 4 innings, while Biology, led by Herb
Rosenberg's homerun, scored 7
runs to win. Eugene Goodman
picked up the win for the A 4 R
team and Keith Johnson suffered
the loss. Alan Wilsey hit a homerun for the loss's.
“

In the second game the School
of Education was unable to make
a 4-0 lead hold up as the Nuclear
Center got to a series of Education pitchers for 18 runs and won
going away. Chuck Anderson

FOR SALE

‘63 Vsspa Motor Scootor, 125 cc.
excellent condition. Low mile
age. Call Kurt Merkel, 831-4112.

BEEF n ALE HOUSE
MAIN

&amp;

WINSPEAR

Catering to all U.B, Students and Faculty

20% Discount
Dancing

on

All Food

Daily from 4-8 P.M.
Live Music Friday and Saturday

—

FOLK SINGERS MON.

-

TUES.

■

THURS.

Dr. Francis Sisson, president of
the American Association of
School Personnel Administrators
and Assistant Superintendent for
Personnel in Richmond, Virginia,
will keynote the second annual
Clinic Conference for School Personnel Administrators to be held
at State University at Buffalo
July 10-15.
Dr. Sisson will discuss “The

School Personnel
—Leadership Possibilities," before personnel administrators
throughout the United States at
the opening dinner of the conference, Sunday, July 10 at 6 p.m.

The conference theme is “The
School Personnel Administrator
and Social Processes in School
Systems.”
Mr. Charles S. Robinson,

execu-

Scigliano Lecture
from Pg.

(Cont’d

1)

the opinion that “their presence
was incompatible with the University’s presence” in Viet Nam.
After the first two years of the
project in 1957, this relationship
with the CIA was terminated at
the request of the M.S.U. Administration.

a number of monographs, articles,
and reports stemmed from the
project.
He also cited the positive impact on Vietnamese administrative training and organization.
Discussing weaknesses of the
project, he said that it had been
hastily begun with “little thought
of the political implications.” He
also stated that a small university’s part in foreign aid should
relate directly to its educational

Tracing the events that led to
the closing of the M.S.U. project.
Dr. Scigliano cited President
Diem’s disillusionment and chagrin at a number of articles critifunction, and he found this relacal of his administration publishtionship lacking in some cases
ed by M.S.U. Project professors where “the University
submerged
in American magazines. Some of its own objectives to those
of nathese, including two by Dr. Scigtional policy.”
liano, were simply critiques of
Dr. Scigliano cautioned that
election procedures and political
critics have failed to see the
parties in the Republic of Viet
M.S.U. Project in its essentially
Nam, while a later one by Profs. pre-war (or
pre-escalation) conJaffee and Taylor recommended
text, in which there was some
the ousting of Diem’s relatives
optimism that Diem’s government
and predicted the downfall of his
would be a successful bridge to
government. At this point, in
stable democrat in Viet Nam.
1962, the original contract with
M.S.U. expired and Diem did not
Dr. Scigliano summarized his
seek to renew it.
talk by supporting University aid
In his assessment of the entire to “underdeveloped” countries
project, Dr. Scigliano found seveprovided that such aid has an
ral strong points, including the
academic basis and is free from
quality of American personnel inU.S. and local government distortion of its aims.
volved, and the resulting scholarly production. He estimated that
He .stated that, through the
M.S.U. experience, the pitfalls of
This ad is worth 10(
academic aid might be pointed
on a delicious sundae
up and avoided in the future.

Dr. Scigliano’s appearance was
sponsored by the Political Science
department in conjunction with
the division of Summer Sessions.

Main, N. of Hertol

Let us be your

3435 BAILEY AVENUE
1 block from Rotary Field
WE CAN FILL YOUR HOMETOWN PRESCRIPTIONS
COMPLETE LINE OF ALMAY COSMETICS
—

—

FISH FRY
Brown French Fried Potatoes ■ Cole
Slaw»Tartare Sauce "Rolls and Butter

The position of school personnel administrator, although it is
a relatively new one, “is taking
on increasing importance because
of the changing role of teachers
and the additional services provided for them,” Dr. Gibson said.
The duties of the school peradministrator, in addition

sonnel

to maintaining appropriate re-

cords, include the recruitment,
selection, and evaluation of teachers. In negotiations with teachers’
groups, the representative of the
board of education may often be
a school personnel administrator.
Because the tasks of the administrator require a general
knowledge in such fields as psychology, sociology, and business,
the clinic conference will make
use of understandings from these
fields. Conference participants
will be addressed' by State Uni
versity at Buffalo faculty members specializing in those subjects. Dr. James Steffensen of the
United States Office of Education
will also speak to the group.
These talks will be followed

by seminars conducted by outstanding school personnel administrators, including two past presi-

dents of the National Association
in addition to Mr. Robinson.
Also on the agenda is a coffee
hour at which the administrators
will meet with placement officers
from area teacher’s colleges for
the purpose of recruitment.

Old Post Road

Inn

I

Main at Highgate

—

MOUIARDjOmifOllJ
Tatty Boneless Fillets "Crisp Golden

The program was arranged by
the University’s School of Education under the supervision of
Dr. R. Oliver Gibson, professor
of education, and is aimed at
providing personnel administrators with an understanding of current and anticipated problems
facing their profession.

pharmacy away from home

HIGHGATE PHARMACY
He’s at

live secretary-treasurer of the Association of School Personnel Administrators, will serve as consultant-in-residence for the conference. A former president of
the national organization, he will
assist with the planning, and conduct of the conference throughout the week.

RUSTCRAFT GREETING CARDS
Prescription and Non-Prescription Drugs

Phone: 835-1663

1

I

*

—

10 MINUTE TAKE OUT

—

PLAZA SHOE REPAIR
ONE STOP SERVICE
CENTER

4 BIG SHOPS
DELIVERY AND TAKE OUT HOURS:
4:30 paa

Monday thru Thursday

iSSsjr*

Saturday

DINNERS
5 p.m. until 10 p.m.
SUPPERS
10 p.m. until 1 p.m.

PIZZA by DiROSE

873-1330

WEDNESDAY I FRIDAY NIGHTS

Main Street &amp; Thruway
1205 Niagara Falls Blvd.

835-3233

Please show your Student ID Card when making purchases

$119

Two Locations:

—

LUNCHEONS
11:45 until 3:00

Sond,v

11:00 Noon

We Also Deliver Free Pop and

.

-

Submarines

FREE DELIVERY TO U.B. CAMPUS

i.m

Shoes Repaired While-U-Waif
Lanudry &amp; Drycleaning
a u

2:00 AM.

ONE DAY SERVICE

University Plaza
TF 6-4041

j

I

j

!

�Friday, July 8, 1966

SPECTRUM

Task Force
Memorandum
ED. NOTE: Throughout tho lift
of tho Task Fore* Committee,
reports issued in the form of
memoranda will be available at
the candy counter of Norton Union shortly after each meeting.
The SPECTRUM will also print
each memorandum. The following is the report of the first

meeting.

THE PRESIDENT'S TASK FORCE
ON UNIVERSITY POLICY

Memorandum I
The Task Force was created by
President Furnas. Its members
were elected by their own governmental bodies.
Undergraduate Students
Donald Ames
Kim Darrow
Dennis Miller
alternate
Gene Cooper
Graduate Students
John Hellrigel
Jon Simplicio
Faculty

Dr. Hollo Handy
Dean William Hawkland
Dr. Raymond Hunt
Dr. John Milligan
Prof. Allen Sapp
First Meeting
June 22, 1966
Ten members and a Spectrum
reporter were present. Elected as
co-chairmen were Dr. Milligan
and Mr. Darrow. Objectives of
the Task Force were discussed.
It was stated that there is a dif-

ference between routine bureaucratic processing and policy making. It is up to the administration to run the day to day functioning of the University. However, the entire university community should have a voice in
policy formulation.
It was pointed out that if the
Task Force was to be effective
it would have the mandate of
President-elect Meyerson. It was
decided that he would be contacted within the week.
Sensitive issues must be discussed by the Task Force. These
critical areas must be examined
fully and in an uninhibited manner. If all meetings were to be
open, participants would have to
weigh words and free debate
would be hampered. Therefore,
meetings will generally be closed.
The Task Force will hold hearings to which individuals representing various positions will be
invited. If a particular meeting
is to be open, it will be announced in advance. The decision on
whether to allow the presence
of reporters from the Spectrum
and VVBFO at all meetings was
tabled. In any case it was emphasized that the university community would be kept fully informed through periodic memoranda. Also discussed was the
possibility of obtaining funds for
clerical and research assistance
through the Office of the President.

"As You Like It" Presentation
In Baird by Syracuse Company
The Syracuse University Touring Company will present Shakespeare’s AS YOU LIKE IT at
Baird Music Hall, State University of New York at Buffalo, on
Friday, July 8 at 8:30 p.m.
G. F. Reidenbaugh, production
director, has incorporated the inherent themes of comedy and
multiple romance into his personal conceptions of the play.
This production has amusing
lyrical tunes especially written
for the play by folk singer
Richard Dyer-Bennet. Colorful

bethan styles also highlight the
performance by one of the nation’s few summer touring .companies of graduate and undergraduate students.
The Syracuse University Company was inaugurated in 1964
and is in its third season of
operation. To date, the University group’s productions have included “The Plough and the
Stars,” “Thieves Carnival,” and

costumes in characteristic Eliza-

Norton Box Office, 831-3704.

two avant-garde one-act plays,
“Play,” and “Epiphany.”
Tickets are available from the

Film Committee
To Present
Ladykillers

"Ethics, Religion, and Scientific Outlook"
Slated as Topic of Feigl Lecture July 12
Dr. Herbert Feigl, professor of
philosophy and director of the
Center for the Philosophy of
Science at the University of Min-

nesota, will conduct seminars and
deliver a public lecture on the

campus of State University at
Buffalo during the week of July
10th.
Dr. Fegil, who first came into
prominence in his field at age
19 for a prize-winning monograph
on “The Philosophical Significance of Einstein's Theory of Relativity,” won favorable recognition
from Dr. Einstein for his first
book, “Theory and Experience in
Physics,” in 1929.
Dr. Feigl will discuss “Ethics.
Religion and the Scientific Outlook,” in a public lecture Tuesday (July 12) at 3 p.m. in Room

“The topic is an interesting
one,” said Dr. Peter H. Hare,
assistant professor in the University’s Department of Philosophy, “since Dr. Feigl has his
strongset
professional connections with the logical positivists.”
According to this school of philosophy! all talk about God, the
nature of being, value, the destiny of man, although it might
have emotional power and poetic

(or exciting) experience.”

Those who believe that, in the
domain of morality, religion and
the arts, there is an “irreducible
spiritual element" which cannot
be explained by the scientific
method, are, according to Dr.
Feigl, guiity of the “seductive
fallacy” they indulge in “wishful and sentimental thinking.”
When he was elected president
of the American Phiiohophical
Association in 1963, Dr. Feigl
titled his address to the Association, “The Power of Positivistic
■

merit, is nonsense because it is

not factually verifiable, Dr. Hare
explained.
In a paper entitled “The Scientific Outlook: Naturalism and Humanism,” Dr. Feigl has stated
that “questions which are incapable of being answered by the

Thinking.”

Born in 1902 in what was then
he was associated from 1925 to 1930 with
the “Vienna
Circle,” which
founded the Logical Positivist
school.
Austria-Hungary,

International Education Office
To Be Headed by Mrs. Robinson

By JO ANNE LEEGANT
Mrs. Sonia L. Robinson, formerly director of advisement for
University College, has been appointed director of a newly-created Office of International Education at UB. The office will
provide coordination, information, and assistance in all areas
of information connected with
international activities, supervise
the setting up of a file on overseas opportunities, grants and
fellowships for faculty and students, and coordinate and provide
services for faculty, students and
visitors.
The new office has been set
up as part of a statewide project
to enlarge the foreign study program branches, according to Mrs.
Robinson. The State University
of New York at Albany recently
created the office of Executive
Dean for International Studies
and World Affairs with administrative headquarters at Planting
Field, Long Island. The UB office
will act as a liaison between UB
and the Planting Field headquar-

He came to the United States
in 1930 on *n International
Rockefeller Research Fellowship
to work on the logical foundatinos of physics, with several
other prominent philosophers including Alfred North Whitehead.
He is the author of numerous
articles in the philosophy of science, philosophical analysis and
the scientific outlook.

ent,

Mrs. Robinson explained,
UB does not have a study-abroad
program. A student who wished
to study abroad must seek guidance from his department about

study plans, grants, job opportunities abroad, and credit for courses taken abroad. The new offcie
will have on file all available in-

formation for students and fac-

The subjects of the seminars,
which are intended mainly for
faculty and students, are “Psychology and its Place Among
the Sciences,” “The Reduction of

ulty. Mrs. Robinson spoke of the
eventual establishment of a study-

abroad program at UB.
The new office will handle
student and faculty exchange. In
addition to making all arrangements for the exchange, Mrs.
Robinson said that the office will
help orient the foreign visitors
who come to UB on a temporary
or permanent basis. An example
of such aid, cited by Mrs. Robinson, would be a foreign professor
who comes to UB and must find
housing for his family. The new
office will send a representative
who will help him look through
the information available at the
housing office, and explain unfamiliar terms.

Psychology to Neurophysiology?”
“Logical Analysis of the
Mind-Body Problems.”

and

Dr. Feigl’s visit to the University is sponsored by the Department of Philosophy.

LEONARDO'S
FINE FOOD

&amp;

DRINK

GROTTO BAR
UNIVERSITY PIAZA

ters.

Mrs. Robinson

described

the

new office as a central location

for all overseas activities. At pres-

IN TECHNICOLOR

theatre
Continuous

TASTY BROILED
DOUBLE CHEESEBURGER

—

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday

RESERVED SEATS NOW AT BOX-OFFICE OR BY MAIL!

wm

ROYAL ARMS
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THt C A

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HAILS AMEKICA S

INDEPENDENT

TOUCE IN AMERICAN

JONAS

FIUAMAKEKS. THE MOST VITAL
MOVIEMAKINO TODAY I
MEKAS-

THE BRIG

An adaption of Kenneth Brown's play about the brutality of a U.S. Marin*
Stockade, filmed m N.Y. on the stage of the "Living Theatre" after it had bean closed
by the police for fax evasion. Met as and the cast .slipped into the theater by
coal
chute and made the ‘film
5 hours, i An ‘'Underground" classic with overtones
oI
cinema verite.

This Week

-

wbjl

AHMAD
JAMAL
COMING JULY 11
COMING JULY 18

DIZZY GILLESPIE

THE SIN OF JESUS

"Th« innar Undtcapa of 20* canlury man
cold, cruol, haartlaaa. Hop id. loo.lv
deuUn
IFna landscapa amargei from Robert Frank'! Dim with a crying, ferity'
ing nakadn.il
-Village Voica
-

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JULY 15

U

-

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AOOlFAl MIKAS'

GEORGE PEPPARD-JAMES MASON URSULA ANDRESS
-

lox-omci

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11

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A M. TO iO PM.

NOW SNOWING!

PRICE SCALE: RESERVED SEATS ONLT
MATINEES
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HALLELUJAH, THE HILLS

starring

JIMMY McGRIFF
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TRIO
—

PIUS
ROBERT FRANK'S

AT 2:00

A M.

II

EVENINGS

AT 0:1S

A.M.

OHCN. LOOC
SM TIlun.
JWM. A Sat. S&amp;.SO Si.75
S2.2S S2.SO
Sun. A Hal. S2.2S
S2.SO | Arl, Sat. Hal. S2.SO S2.7S
Special Atteatiaa ta Theatre Parties—far itfa. call m-SM
ORCH.

Loot

TOUISHT It 1:15 PM
tfCUClUATAU
RfcNdINIll
UN
TUrATBP

I ht A I flC

sost

Baiity.

ass-aais

JZ FSSVSr*

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of tha Y*art

com
—

ANDY

PIUS

A

yMrt-

—

WARHOL'S

THE KISS

"A lip mucking ravua with numbara

and

routlnaa ihowing many itylat to

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Main, N. of Hertcl

—

scientific method turn out not to
be questions of knowledge. They
are expressions of emotional tension or of the wish for soothing

THE LADY KILLERS

Johnson.

19 W. UTICA

147 Diefendorf Hall at the University.

ALEC GUINES5 and CECIL PARKER
'
I
'
Star in
The Wild Comedy:

The Summer Activities Film
Series will present The Ladykiller* on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday (July 11-14)
continuously from noon.
The film, a technicolor romp
through the criminal world with
a comic flourish, stars Alec Guinness, Cecil Parker, and Katie

39«

PAG! THRU

�Friday, July 8, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACE FOUR

Editorial Comment

.

.

Cacotopia and Eutopia

.

The MSU Project
Prof. Robert Sdgliano, formerly of Michigan State
University and newly appointed Professor of Political Science at SUNYAB, spoke last week on “The American
University Abroad: The MSU Experience in Vietnam.” The
MSU Project became a cause celebre due mostly to the
Ramparts magazine article last spring which accused MSU
of acting as a cover for CIA operations in Vietnam in the
late 1950s. Prof. Sdgliano and his colleagues on the MSU
team helped stabilize the Diem dictatorship by strengthening
its administrative capacities and by training and arming its
police forces.
The conclusion, not drawn by Prof. Sdgliano, should
be that as the university becomes increasingly involved with
society, its complicity in society’s evils increases proportionately. A university can no more invoke the myth of “valuefree inquiry” after such enterprises as the MSU Project as a
deflowered maiden can regain her virginity.
The university, in short, must begin to hold itself morally accountable for its complicity in social crimes. Michigan
State must take at least part of the responsibility for the
war in Vietnam. To claim scholarly detachment at this late
date becomes only a means of evading moral responsibility.

By MARTIN J. SAWMA

The confusion of Liberalism’s
liberals is to immediately identify political freedom with human
emancipation and the power of
the State with the power of society. The frame of reference of
these emancipators, of these civil
libertarians and egalitarians, is
Law or the State itself. For them,
refinement of the Law is Justice.
Because of these assumptions
the liberal has begun to denounce
the Southern Negro movement
and particularly the Student NonViolent Coordinating Committee.
Withdrawal of “support” for the
Negro civil liberties struggle
marks the death of the Americcan liberal. In the Great Society
HE champions all causes and
there is no need for the constructive critic.
The Student Non-Violent Coor-

JAMES CALLAN

.

.

The Escalation
The Final Solution to the Vietnamese Problem may be
at hand—Lyndon Johnson has called for military victory
in Vietnam. So far that has meant the death of about three

civilians for every Vietcong.
The President has decided to “punish the aggressor”
to prove that might does not make right. To do this he will
enlist the armed power of the only foreign forces on Vietnamese soil.
The contradictions in the President’s actions seem endless. The aura of a man shaking his fist for peace, pitiful
in a man less powerful, assumes all the terror of schizophrenia. Negotiations become possible only through escalation, a variation on militarism’s peace through power theme
which seems to have gained the American ascendency over
a period of twenty years of Cold War. The polls which
Johnson used to religiously invoke as evidence of his consensus and which lately show a general disenchantment with
his Vietnam policy he now assiduously disowns, saying instead that he believes the war to be in the best interests
of the country.
The recent escalation, despite all the federal cant, cannot be construed as anything but the bombing of civilian
populations. The attacks have hit from two to three miles
from Hanoi and Haiphong. Maps indicate that the strikes
have been within populous areas of both cities. One could
bomb Lackawanna, kill thousands of people, and yet claim
that one was striking only military targets three miles from
Buffalo. Imagine too the destruction being wrought by
exploding and burning oil tanks—thousands of people must
be getting killed.
And for what? Even Lyndon Johnson admits that previous escalations have not prevented the dubiously massive
infiltration into South Vietnam by which he justifies the
latest escalation. Yet he persists in his strange notion that
people have to be punished for attempting to throw foreign
invaders off their ancestral homeland. Johnson seems to
see the war as an Asian cowboy and indian operation.
So our lives continue to be dependent upon the whim
of Lyndon Johnson. “There is one (man),” he said last week
in Omaha, “that has been chosen by the Americans to decide.” Johnson has thus taken the onus of the war upon
himself. In short, he has apparently become responsible
for the crimes against humanity which will be the price of
military victory in Vietnam.

THE

SPECTRUM
STEPHEN A. CRAFTS

BUSINESS MANAGER

SHELDON BERGMAN
EDITORIAL BOARD

ELLEN CARDONE
ALICE EDELMAN
JOCELYN HAILPERN
CARLA HARRISON
GINGER HOLCOMBE

JOANNE LEEGANT

MARTY SADOFF
BILL SHERMAN
JULIE SULLIVAN
ED SUMMER

FIRST CLASS HONOR RATI NO

EDITORIAL fOUCY IS

RY

THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

dinating Committee is an attempt
at basic change. Power is seen
by SNCC as the kay to this
change. That power is the power
of a people to make those decisions which affect their lives. In
large measure Freedom is this
power and is not merely the kay
to basic change but is that change

itself.
SNCC sees consciousness or a
people’s awareness of their cultural and social situation as a
necessary condition of the acqui-

sition of human power. The
building of this awareness is concomitant with the organization of
voluntary communities. Basic
change is the replacement of the
State everywhere with community.

As a result of its meeting in
May, SNCC will intensify its work
in local politics. If successful,

answer. The administration thinks

I take it as a maxim that he
who owns something has the right
to deal with it as he wishes, so
long as the exercise of that right
does not infringe on a basic right
of someone else. For example,
if you own a gun, you have a
right to shoot at a tin can with
it, as long as there’s not a man

A state university like this one
is owned by the people of the
state, who have delegated their
responsibility to the state legislature, who have in turn delegated their responsibility to the administration of the school. No
one has yet delegated that responsibility to the students, and
until they do students should
confine the expression of their
opinions to the proper channels.
They should not parade around
“demanding” that the draft deferment test be held off campus,
far less that HUAC be disbanded

objectively.

Who should run things at a
university? There are as many
answers as there are groups to
the administration should; the
students think the students
should; the faculty thinks the faculty should. Somehow it’s hard to
believe that everyone’s being totally objective about it. Let’s try
it my way.

The academic non-community
could, by pursuing SNCC’s pattern of thought and action, liberate itself. This liberation would
involve an extensive restoration
of the human world to the student. Study would give human
content and would no longer be
merely a means to existence. The
Movement on this campus should
seek the nature of the wrong not
in a defective inequitable administration but in the authoritarian
administrative procost itself.

the right
standing behind it, for then his
basic right to life would be violated. So then, to find out who
should run things at a university
(that is, who shall deal with the
university as he pleases) we need
only find out who owns it.
The case of a private or sectarian university is then rendered
easy. Those individuals or groups
which own it have the right to
run it themselves or to delegate
that responsibility to a group of
administrators. Thus all that business at St. John’s about the
faculty having a “right” to this
and the students having a “right”
to that is so much hogwash.
Faculty and students have no
such rights, but only those privileges granted to them by the
Vincentians or their appointed
administrators.

In keeping with the general
theme of this newspaper thus far
expressed this summer, I shall
treat you to my ideas about the
university—universities in general and this university in particular. In contrast to those opinions
already proffered, however, I
shall not throw around scattered
and unbased views on whatever
happens to be flowing through
my stream of consciousness at
the moment. Rather, I shall stick
to my form and attempt to deal
with the subject logically and

SNCC’s political activity will destroy the oppressive white power
structure and make possible the
effective control of area resources
by particular communities. Political power, meaning the administration by the community of the
things which affect their lives, is
a requirement of human emancipation.

or that the U.S. get out of Vietnam.

What then are the legitimate
channels of expression open to
students? Firstly, they can act
in their capacity as citizens to
change the policy of Albany in
hopes of changing the policy of
S.U.N.Y.A.B.’s administ ration.
Secondly, they can go directly to
Albany or Hayes Hall, explain
that the university was created
to benefit those having experi
ence with it, that in their capacity
as students they have had special
opportunity to witness the effects
of certain policies, and explain
how a change in those policies
might benefit all concerned. Such
an approach is bound to evoke a
more favorable response than
marching around brandishing a
sign “demanding" the change.
Students should realize that it is
in their own interest to work with
authority instead of trying to
buck it.
There are many changes that
could be made in this university
to further the educational experience. I shall devote a good
deal of column space this sum
mer to the expression of opinions I hold regarding those changes, but always in the form of
persuasion, not of an ultimatum

Harrison Presents
'Lecture on Nothing'
Paul Carter-Harrison, artist-inresidence, will present Mac Hammond reading John Cage’s “Lec-

true on Nothing” today at 3;30
p.m. in the Conference Theatre
of Norton Union.

According to Mr. Harrison, “the
lecture shows an attitude toward
modern music and also possesses
broad references to modern theatre and poetry. It is a must for
persons wanting to be informed
on contemporary stage, music,
and poetry."
Mr. Harrison, who lives in Amsterdam, Holland, will direct two
of his own one-act plays, Pavana
for a Daad-Pan Minstrel and Top
Hat, on July 29, 30, 31 and August 5, 6, and 7.

Barth Reading

John Barth, Professor of English here, will give a prose reading on July 13 in 147 Diefendorf
Hall at 1:30 p.m.
Mr. Barth, whose work has appeared in Esquire, Tha Kanyon
Raviaw, and Southwest Raviaw,
is best known for his novels, Tha
End of tha Road and Tha SotWaad Factor. Last April, Mr.
Barth received a grant from the

Paul Cartar-Harrison (laft) and Mac Hammond (right)
National Institute of Arts and
Letters and he recently was honored with a citation from Brandeis University at its 19th Creative-Arts Awards Presentation.
HELP WANTED

Can you spare 5 minutes a day
to help a child? We need help
in a home physical therapy program for our son. Volunteers:
please call Mr. or Mrs. Stephen
Gessner, 100 Brauncroft Lane,
Snyder, N. Y„ TF 9-1783.

Game Night
Mr. J. C. Paffie, Norton Hall
Recreation Director, reminds all
students that the recreational
facilities will be “free” this Wednesday, July 13, from 6-9 p.m.
The air-conditioned recreation
area has table tennis, billiards,
and bowling facilities. Take ad
vantage of this free offer to re
lax a bit before the First Sum
mer Sessions finals.

�Friday, July 8, 1966

PACK FIVE

SPECTRUM

Second in a

THE POTENTIALS OF BIGNESS
Harrell
Recommendations

might be achieved and I’m sure
there are many more:

EDITOR’S NOTE: The following article by Mr. Bill Harrell,
Lecturer in Sociology, appeared last fall in the Spectrum as “Metaphysical Pathos and Bureaucracy in the American University." It is
reprinted here in part in order to establish a context within which to
place the recommendations subsequently proposed by Mr. Harrell.
This article is the second in a series on University education
which the Spectrum hopes will become the dialogue so desperately
needed on this campus. Any student and faculty or staff member is
invited to contribute to this dialogue in the form of letters, articles,

or columns.
We usually

assume that large
classes make it impossible for
there to be any effective communication and exchange of
ideas between student and teacher and student and student. But
this is an assumption and despite
some inconclusive experimentation, no one has really examined
the alternate possibility that large
classes could be just as rich and
exciting or even more exciting
small ones. It may well be
when a large class is dull
pointless we blame it on

than
that
and
class
have

size when in fact it may
the same cause as dull and
pointless small classes, that is,
a bored distracted instructor and
ill-motivated students in the glassy-eyed stupor that can best be
described as grade-terror.
We must confront this problem
of large numbers because in the
university at least, there is not
likely to be any real alternative.
The usual response is, “less bureaucracy” which translates into
small numbers. This assumes that
through the more intelligent use
of teachers and an immense increase in their numbers we can
solve the problem by decreasing
the size of classes. However, that
may solve only one problem, the
immediate relationship between
teacher and student. It doesn’t
solve the problem of communication and action arising between
students outside of class, between
students in general and the faculty in general, between faculty
and faculty, and faculty, student
and administration. In fact, large
numbers of small classes may
well promote the already marked
trend

toward insularity

among

the various academic disciplines.
Another common response to
the problem of large numbers is
to cut back student enrollment
by “raising standards.” This has
the obvious danger in our society
of creating an academic elite, but
it also completely ignores the
essential meaning of liberal education. If it is reasonable to define the goals of liberal education
as the expansion of human consciousness and sensitivity in the
service of a more fulfilling and
humane life, then I cannot see
how it is possible to rationalize
the exclusion of any person from
higher education. My personal
view is that there shoulo be no
standards (which would include
the abolishing of financial standards) for admission to the University but all who want to attend
and can somehow stumble onto

campus should be welcomed and
even encouraged to enter those
holy grounds. Of course, this
would mean even larger numbers
—well, so be it. We can afford it
and if we do not despair prematurely, I think we can find
ways to make it work.
We must make it work, for
more than the problem of meaningful and quality education is at
issue here. The stakes are no less
than the possibility of creating
the conditions for a meaningful
life for all men, an unalienated
human existence in a really democratic society. If we cannot resolve the problem of number and

complexity within the academic
setting, how can we expect to do
so in the larger society? If a
teacher and 500 students cannot
fruitfully join the crucial ideas

....

RECOMMENDATIONS

1. All University areas which are

related to the private and social
life of students should be completely controlled and administered by the students. E.g., students should run their own dormitories and cafeterias where they
determine the operating rules
such as curfews, visitation rights,
etc.
2. Students

should have voting
academ-

representatives on every

The details of the organization
of this type of problem-oriented
class may be different, of course,
and there are many more details
which must be considered and
worked out. My objective here is
simply to present the general
ideas for such a course;

If students are expected to participate in the independent intellectual pursuits of their clubs
and the independent scholarship
required by the problem course,
they must not only have facilities but time. Consequently, it

experiment, not children playing democracy, but an
experiment with the total University as a potential community,
involving the entire University
population as equals, where the
stakes are high and the decisions

to cut back
the present formal degree requirements. Assuming that four
years would remain as the sacred
time span required to get a B.A.
or B.S. degree, I would make
the following recommendations:
B.A. or B.S, degree: 72 hours
(128 at present)
This would break down to approximately nine hours per sewould be necessary

crucial. What could be learned
in this environment and about
this environment may well be
the greatest contribution the University can make to mankind.
I would like to make some specific recommendations . . . which
fall short of the spirit of the
essay but may be considered as
steps in that direction. Some may
find merit in the recommendations even though they don’t
share the underlying assumptions
about the nature of a “good

mester.
6 hours of core courses taught
more or less as at present
3 hours of “problem' courses

university.” I am especially con-

the romantic movement, Homer
chose realistic views from everyday life and painted directly
from nature.
The collection includes both

figurative painting, frequently
depicting women and children,
and sea, hunting and fishing
scenes.

of Homer’s oils
appeared dark and somber, his
watercolors are light, luminous
and reflect the skill acquired
during a long career as an illusWhile

trator.

many

The “factions” may also seek
expert advice and call in other
faculty members or qualified students. These conditions create a

academic materials but the development and communication of
ideas in a complex social situation.

artificial

and America were dominated by

The class would meet once a
week for two or three hours for
about six to nine weeks. At this
time the problem would be debated. The instructor would function principally as a moderator
during the class. He would encourage the development of “factions” or points of view around
the issue. The instructor and
perhaps any graduate assistants
he may have, will act as advisors
to the various “factions.” The
“factions” should be provided
with meeting rooms where they
could discuss their point of view
and prepare their arguments.
They should also have access to
mimeograph machines, clerical
help and other equipment necessary for them to develop and
present their argument in and
out of class. One would expect
the debate to take place not only
in the class between “factions”
but also in print and within the
meetings of the “factions.”

participate in small seminar type
groups (“factions”), large complex groups (“the class”), and
also establish contact with various experts in the various disciplines. They also will be engaged in developing and using
their writing skills. The learning
situation will include not only

and organization are explored
and experimented with. Not an

cerned with the tendency of
academicians to yearn for the
small university and small class

inappropriate to any particular
type of problem or issue.

situation in which students may

and issues of our time, how can
we ever expect the larger society
to join the issues of the day in
a democratic fashion and proceed
toward thoughtful and humane
action? No matter how bleak the
prospects or how deeply imbedded our metaphysical pathos we
simply most face and resolve
those problems.
Under the circumstances, it
seems to me that the University
should be more than a place
where ideas and facts are transmitted, discovered and explored
within the traditional framework
of the various academic disciplines. The University should
also be an experimental community, a microcosm of the larger
society where the link between
facts, ideas, values, skills, action

Homer Watercolor Exhibit
At Albright-Knox Gallery
An exhibition of watercolors by
Winslow Homer, the eminent
19th century artist, will open
July 7 at the Albright-Knox Gallery, Buffalo.
The collection of about 50
works, borrowed from museums
and private collections, will remain on view through August 28.
Director Gordon M. Smith said
“Homer’s work remains vital and
colorful today” and his “important role in our art history has
long been assured.”
At a time when both Europe

instead of attempting some imagi n a t i v e experimentation with
large classes

A. More money should be budgeted for student controlled organizations, e.g., sociology club,
political science club, math club,
convocations committee, etc. The
sociology club has in the past
two years invited a number of
outstanding speakers to the campus. This semester they organized a series of talks on automation
and for next year they have projected a series of speakers who
will address themselves to the
principle issues discussed by
Denis de Rougemont in Lav* in
the Western World. This will involve medieval historians, psychologists, sociologists, artists
and critics and promises to be a
very exciting program.
The student members of the
sociology club also publish a journal, The Catalyst, which they feel
is in the tradition of law journals. That is, a scholarly publication under the editorship and
control of students. The Catalyst
has been edited by a committee
of graduate and undergraduate
students and is an exciting and

al issue. I see no reason why the
following technique should be

9 hours per semester

Large classes may possess potential for quality education
ic policy-making body at all levels of the University.

3. The students should participate
in the determination of curriculum, academic standards, etc.

However, since this function is

necessarily circumscribed by levels of expertise in the various
disciplines, the student will tend
to take only a marginal role. I

would suggest then that the advice of experts predominate
where it is most relevant. Mainly
this would involve the determination of the basic requirements
for a major. As we move away
from the major, the control of
academic life should fall more
and more in the hands of the
students or the students and faculty in cooperation.
I see two ways in which this

educational experience for them.
All of this has been done with
very limited financial resources.
There is no reason why other
clubs in other academic disciplines cannot do the same (as
many of them do, of course) but
they need larger budgets.
SUNY-B already has a sound
foundation for this type of activity, the program simply needs to
be improved and expanded.
B. Courses organized around
“problems.” This would involve
large sections from two to fivehundred students, or even more,
who would address themselves to
one central problem. The problem may involve an immediate
social issue or it may be a fundamental, time-honored academic
problem, say, some epistomologic-

If the 72 hour requirement
seems too great a departure from
the present requirement, each
distinct problem section lasting
semester could carry three
hours of credit, thus creating a
twelve hour semester load and a
96 hour degree requirement.
A degree plan might look
something like this:
21 hours major core curriculum
12 hours major problem courses

33 hours
12 hours minor field core
curriculum
6 hours minor field problem
courses
18 hours
21 hours core curriculum and
problem courses, basic and
distribution requirements.

72 TOTAL.

�muffi Warty
As I sit down to write my first
review for the Spectrum, I wonder how my views and criticisms
on films will fare to the “Intellectual classical” columns of the
Spectrum's other two reviewers.
My job this week is tough because
I ran into a problem. My friends
kept yelling at me to sound intellectual, so I decided to see a
typical, terrible, American type
film and pan it in the usual way
that Sight and Sound does.

Walking to my car, I was attracted to the beautiful blinking
Igihts of the “Amherst,” where
it was told that 1 could relax in
a new smoking section, in cool
comfort, and enjoy a beautiful
comedy. With all this behind me
I was ready to blast at the Norman Jewison production of The
Russians ars Coming / The Russians aro Coming.
To add to my feeling of Judas,
the manager told me he would
not give me a press book of the
film, and if I really was a reviewer to kindly comb back my
hair and look in the paper for
the names of the performers involved. Burning mad, I took my
position in a used trolley seat,
and the curtain opened. Then
came the problem—I liked it!!
How could a reviewer for the
Spectrum ever think anything
like this? Read on, my friends.
Anytime that this reviewer is

not bored with a film it immediately reaches

the “good” position on my hit parade. This is a
very difficult position to reach,
because even true art films that
I thought were excellent and
masterpieces sometimes reel off
slowly (e.g., Godard’s Alphaville).
From the opening Russian line
of T.R.A.C. to the closing scene,
this two hour collection of Hollywood corn was at times fresh,
exciting, and it contained some
of the funniest sight gags seen
on the screen in a long time. The
direction of Jewison builds up
each small laugh into a bellywhopper by slowly revealing each
joke. The perfect timing makes
sometimes old gags into really
beautiful pieces of film.
The small incident of a Russian submarine going aground in
New England almost leads to
W.W. 3. Tense? You bet! Jewison
the farce into more serious water.
A collection of middle class writers, telephone operators, and an
American Legion armed division
are left to deal with the Russian
crew and your imagination can
tell you that in this part this situation can become mighty serious. Could a small incident of a
Russian submarine going aground
really lead to W.W. 3? How does
the American public really react
to war, patriotism, and humanitarianism? The answer can be
found in your nearest holster.
The film under Jewison makes
these transitions from comedy
into melodrama well despite the
acting of Jonathan Winters, Carl
Reiner (playing a typical American typical), and Eva Marie Saint
who should have stayed in Israel.
Last week at the Circle Art I
fell in love with Red Dust, a
Harlow-Gable film, because of its
beautiful ending. Endings are important parts of film, yet very
few films have endings that fit
their story line, mood, or pace.
A young musician friend of mine
said that the film would have
been better if it had no ending
at all and merely stopped after
90 minutes. Tha Russians Are
Coming had an ending which
took it out of Tha Mousa That
Roared category and joined it to
the ranks of Gene Autry, Batman,
and even Doris Day. READY?
American girl tells Russian boy
someday people can love

that

Friday, July 8, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACE SIX

Reproductions Off
American Painting
In Norton Union

Sadoff

each other no matter what nation they come from. Mean Russian captain, Theodore Bikel, decides not to destroy New England
because a boy falls from a church,
and the rescue shows that people
can work together. Eva Marie
Saint in Doris Day soft focus tells
Bike) that the town now likes the
Russians more than the American
Legion and gives the sub an
escort to prove it. People cheer
wildly as Russians and Americans
forget the past and dance in the

streets.
I, myself, wish something like
this could happen, but don’t think
it could be achieved in ten minutes as happened in the film.
Result: The film takes on Ed
Hearlihy characteristics.
The motion picture at this point
is kept from disaster by Alan
Arken, who, as a Russian officer,
creates the only character to
whom real emotions can be attached. I think that everyone I
spoke to who saw the film identified with him. In giving his performance, Arkin brings out the
real meaning of the film—there
are other “human beings in the
world beside those in the Western Hemisphere. (As I reread,
even this sounds Commie).
The film is a funny summer
treat that could have been a lot

funnier if William Rose had devised an ending that was more
suited to the middle. You won’t
die laughing as the advertisements claim, but the trip to the
air-conditioned Amherst or Cinema is well worth taking. Judging from the size of the crowds,
you will have many weeks to act
on my advice.
I do not feel so bad giving
this piece of corn a fair review
when I look back and see that
Inside Daisy Clover and Harper
drew the same on these pages.
Because of reviews printed here
I saw I. D. C. and was thankful
I had the experience of seeing
something this terrible so I could
set up new standards in film evaluation. Note; to all film critics
—veterans and amateurs—do not
criticize what you have not yet
seen.

I would like to bring your attention to Bergman’s Night Is My
Future and The Devil's Wanton
that will play at the Conference
Theater next week. I only saw
one—Night Is My Future. It is
not a perfect film but Interesting
in studying the style of Bergman,
his relationship to fate and also
to the special effects department.
The film tells the story of how
in one instant of time a man’s
life can be changed. A boy is
shot while trying to save a dog
from a military shooting range,
and blindness is the result. The
way it affects him, and those
he loves makes an interesting
story, but Bergman’s magic of
the camera in displaying human
emotions makes this a film that
should be seen.
The co-feature Devil's Wanton
was banned in New York State
at one time because it deals with
abortion, and a famous Bergman
"dream” concerning this in the
film must have offended a police
widow.

The SPECTRUM
Published by

Parlntri’ Pnii,

J)nc.

-Mfotl Smili Prmlinf
&amp;

1381 KENMORE AVENUE

(at Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

The development of American
painting from its colonial beginnings to the present day is surveyed in an exhibition of SO color
reproductions entitled “Highlights
of American Painting,” which
opened at Norton Union on June
20 and will continue through August 25. Chosen by the American
Federation of Arts from prints
published by the New York
Graphic Society, the exhibition is
considered an outstanding historical presentation of art in the
“Highlights of
United States.
American Painting” is currently
touring museums and art institutions across the country under
the auspices of AFA.

Tht BIum Project in Concert

A Review

THE BLUES PROJECT
By MARK SCHILLER

The Blues Project, it appears,
is the contemporary incarnation
of Dionysius. This group was
able to take an overflow crowd
“all the way” with them through
frenzied hard rock and bring
them down screaming for more.
This success, I think, is due to
three talents.

First, they are the most capable
musicians to have appeared on
the white rock 'n roll scene,
Danny Kolb is unmatched on
lead guitar and A1 Kooper likewise on organ. This tremendous
ability enables them to transcend
a number of the basic physiological barriers which bar many
groups from getting down to the
real nitty-gritty of rhythm and
blues. Second, they play as a
unit. They’re able to feel each
other out (work within each
other) and finally come to the
same conclusion. Third, they are
tremendously versatile. In addition to their standard instruments,
they are able to play harmonica,

flute, piano, and sitar and vary
from strict rhythm and blues to
folk, folk-rock, straight blues, and
jazz.

The concert itself resembled a
sexual act. The Blues Project
ejaculating tremendous amounts
of energy and the audience responding by giving themselves up
to the music. Significant orgasms
came during “Jelly Jelly," “Rolling Stone,” “Goin’ Down Louisiana,” “Smoke and Fire,” “Shake
Me, Wake Me,” and “HooehyCoochy Man.” These hard rhythm
and blues coupled with delicate
songs such as “Steve’s Song,”
“Catch the Wind,” and “Flute
Thing” made the catharsis complete.

The Blues Project, in my mind,
is presently the finest white
group in rock ’n roll. During the
summer they may be seen at the
Cafe Au Go Go and various concerts around New York. A fortyfive of “Smoke and Fire” is just
about to be released which should
bring them national recognition
and it is hoped back to Buffalo.

Now Earn

EXTRA CASH
Selling Ads for

The SPECTRUM
Work on the

SPECTRUM
Photography Staff
with full use of Darkroom
Facilities and Equipment

Inquire Room 355

Norton

or

Call

831-3610

The earliest work reproduced
in the exhibition is a portrait by
an anonymous artist (c.1674), entitled “Mrs. Mary Freake and
Baby Mary,” one of the acknowledged masterpieces in colonial
art. 18th century portraiture reflects the link established between the traditions of Europe
and artists of the new land.
Copley’s “Mrs. John Bacon”
(1771), Earl’s “William Carpenter” (1779), and Stuart’s wellknown “George Washington”
(1795) are among the examples
here that reveal the technical
competence achieved by American painters in the latter years
of our colonial era.

The growing complexity of the
19th century is seen in such diverse examples as Bingham’s “Fur
Traders Descending the Missouri”
(1847), Cassatt’s “La Loge” (1882),
and Harnett’s “Music and Literature” (1878). Sargent, Ryder,
Whistler, Inness, Homer, and Eakins were among other artists of
the period whose work is reproduced.
Twentieth century examples include: “Both Members of This
Club” (1909), by Bellows; “Maine
Island” (1922), by Marin; “Promenade" (1928), by Burchfield;
“Flour Mill Abstraction” (1938),
by Dove; “Wild Roses” (1942), by
Hartley; and “Number 27” (1950),
by Jackson Pollock. Jack Levine’s
“Maimonides,” painted in 1952,
is the latest work reproduced in
the show.

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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT

SUMMER

■/

ED|TION

VOLUME 16

.

LOCKWOOD

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JULY 1,

The first of the 15 three-day
Freshman Planning Conferences
scheduled for this summer began
last Monday.

Excerpts reprinted by permis-

The purpose of the conferences,

according to University College

1966.

Advisement

Buchanan, the

Buchanan

interviewed

ments as these:

“Pot is not nearly so severe as
alcohol.”
“It’s a pleasurable effect.”
“You have complete physical

control.”

Freshman About To

By JOANN LEEGANT
The Human Relations Workshop, a three week session of
lecture-discussions focused on the
solution of inter-group problems
in the Buffalo area, began on
June 27 and will continue until
July 15.
The workshop is run in conjunction with the National Conference of Christians and Jews.
According to Workshop Director
Dr. Frank P. Besag, the participants will consider problems
such as the racial situation in
Buffalo, ethnic prejudice, poverty,
prejudice and employment, crime,
particularly civil disobedience,
and defacto segregation.
Dr. Besag explained that this
year the “entire focus and scope”
of the workshop has been
changed. In the past, participants
were teachers. Among this year’s

Mr. Frye’s objections kept most
of this out of the record.

An Interview:

grand jury,

“I’m afraid I can’t answer beit would violate a confidence. I promised I would do
everything possible to keep the
source confidential.”
Miss Buchanan has received
considerable editorial support for
her position. The Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association resolved last weekend that she had
“responded in the highest traditions of her profession.”
The publishers commended her
for her “fortitude, insight and
contribution to journalism by her
endeavors which exposed, interpreted and gave greater public
understanding to an issue of the
cause

news.”
. . .
She doubts she will bo to
jail. She intends to appeal the
ruling if it goes against her and
if she loses the appeal she then

can purge herself of contempt

by giving the names.

BULLETIN
June

28—The United Press
International has reported that
Miss Buchanan has been found
guilty of contempt of court. Imposition of the fine has been
withheld pending an appeal.

in Her Education

Human Relations Workshop Focuses
On Inter-Group Problems in Buffalo

“You don’t lose yourself.”
Mr, Frye (District Attorney
William F. Frye—ed.) subpoenaed
four student editors of The
Emerald June 1 to appear before
the grand jury . . . The three
associates of Miss Buchanan were
excused when they said they did
not know the identity of her
sources. Miss Buchanan answered
questions except those bearing on
the identity of the marijuana
users. She was ordered by the
court to answer all questions.,and
was summoned today (June 27—
ed.) before Judge Edward Leavy
in Circuit Court to show why
she should not be punished for
contempt.
Judge Leavy refused a request
for a jury trial. Arthur Johnson,
Miss Buchanan’s lawyer tried to
bring in evidence that newspapers had a tradition of providing anonimity for sources, but
“The sole issue is whether this
witness declined to answer questions she was directed by the
court to answer,” said Mr. Frye.
The grand jury transcript
showed Miss Buchanan telling the

Director

William

Fritton, is twofold. The University wants to provide a smooth
transition stage for freshmen

managing editor of The Emerald
. . . faces a fine of $300 and six
months in jail.

Miss

NO. 50

By SHELDON BERGMAN

sion of the New York Times Co.

seven persons last May 22, who
in her article, published May 24,
defended the use of marijuana.
Before they talked to her, the
seven insisted that she promise
to preserve their anonimity.
She quoted them in such state-

m

First Group Toured
Last Monday

The following

Buchanan, who has been tried lor
contempt of court for refusing to
disclose the names of students she
intereviewed for a story on the
use of marijuana on the University
of Oregon campus.

Miss (Annette)

D

Fresh Conferences
Seek to Provide
Smooth Transition

Special to the New York Times
describes the case of Miss Annette

©

/c

)'

University Editor
Appeals Verdict;
Anonymity Is Still
To Be Preserved
Editor’s Note:

exhibit

'm

m T~-

participants are a manager from
New York Telephone, a member
of the Human Relations Commission, a minister, and a member of the police force.
The sixteen participants in the
workshop were chosen by interview of a limited group, according to Dr. Besag. To qualify as a
participant, Dr. Besag said, the
applicant had to “have a special
interest in or be in a position
to deal with” the problems discussed. He asserted that the participants should be “part of the
power-structure."

Each session will begin with a
lecture. Most of the emphasis,
explained Dr. Besag, will be on
group discussion and means of
“arriving at action steps.” After
the three week Workshop, the
participants will hold additional

meetings on a less frequent basis.
Earlier this week, Dr. M. K.
Opler
discussed "History of
Ethnic
Groups-Pre-American-Amenean.” Charles Brewer of
CORE and Donald Lee of the
NAACP spoke on the “Negro
Leader Point of View.” This morning the group took individual
field trips into slum areas.
Next week’s session will begin
with the discussion of employment problems and hiring prac-

between high school and college
and to orient freshmen to college
living. Since there are only 100
to 150 freshmen here at a time,
the Advisement Office is able to
give a considerable amount of
attention to each student's needs.
The University placement tests,
formerly given on the day after
arrival, are now taken the same
afternoon the student arrives.
The .hectic last day registration
will thus become a thing of the
past, as advisement can now be
spread over two days. Mr. Fritton feels that this is the major
improvement of this year’s conferences over the previous ones.
A new set of tests is being
given to incoming freshmen besides the placement tests. This is
a group of pschychological and
aptitude tests which are given
on the second and third days of

the conference. The results from
these tests will be used by the
advisors to guide the student
later in his academic career.

tices, The remainder of the week
will be devoted to crime, including a discussion of the 1963
Rochester riot.

Another purpose of the conferences, besides advisements and
pre-registration, is the election
of representatives to the FreshThe final week the group will men Council. Each planning constudy segregation and prejudice.
ference will elect a representaDr. Besag will lecture on "The
to the Council on the third
Nature of Political Competence tive
and Power” and “The Nature of day of the conference. Each
candidate must have a petition
Prejudice.”
supporting him signed by ten
members of the conference and
must give a five-minute speech.
The student with the greatest
number of votes is the winner.
According to Associate Coordinatcr of Student Activities Mr.
Dallas Garber, "The Planning
Conference Groups produce a
stronger unity than the Freshman
sity owned the Audubon golf
course on Maple Road, which is Conference Hours could. We feel
that elections in the Conference
now operated by the Town of
Amherst. Mr. Bacon explained groups will make the students
that conditions on the F.S.A. land identify
more closely with their
would lead to a much more sucrepresentatives."
cessful course.
The Town of Amherst
The final function of the planmade tentative plans for a canal,
ning conference is to orient the
marina, and recreational area on
and adjacent to the F.S.A. land.
student to campus living. To d*
Land for the canal, which would this both resident and
commuted
connect Ellicott and Tonawanda
freshmen live in the dorms durpurchased
from
Creeks, would be
ing the conference. Panel discusthe F.S.A. by the town. Mr,
sions with student advisers let
Bacon said ihat these plans would
be compatible with a golf course. the students communicate with
Other suggestions for the use
people who have
of the land, which is flat and
coped
with university liviaA
mostly treeless, include a hockey
rink, camping site, riding stables There are also meetings wftt
and a large hall for dances. Mr.
resident adivsers who exptaqt
Bacon emphasized that the studorm rules and procedures. TM
dent committee would have a pri
social aspect of the University Ip
mary voice in the plans, and
handled by the Norton staff o&gt;
hoped that students would take
the second night. They have planan interest.
As yet, no polls have been ned movies, picnics, and tours *0
taken to determine student and
give the freshmen a taste of the
faculty preferences for the land
"college scene.’’
development.

Use of FSA Land Awaits Student Voice;
Would Make Very Good Golf Course'
By ELLEN CARDONE

500-acre plot of
owned land near the
new campus "would make a very
good golf course,” according to
Mr. Paul Bacon, Assistant VicePresident for Financial Affairs.
The land, located about 3 miles
from the new campus site, was
acqiured in 1964 by the F.S.A.
while plans for the campus were
being made. It was set aside for
“recreational purposes” since the
State University cannot buy recreational land.
The F.S.A., as a membership
corporation affiliated with the
University, is permitted to do
Part of the

F.S.A,

-

so.
Bought at $1,500 an acre, the
value of the land has since
“doubled,” according to Mr.
Bacon. The purchase was made
with funds from the “facultystudent fee,” the portion of the
general F.S.A. fee that is earmarked for long-range development.
In recent years this part of the
fee has been $26 yearly for full-

Beginning
time day students.
next year, a student-faculty SubBoard will set the fee, subject
to approval by the F.S.A. Board

of Directors.

The

amount will

depend on plans for the land’s
development.

A student committee to receive
and review suggestions for the
use of the land will be formed
in the fall by Student Association President Clinton Deveaux.
Mr. Bacon cited the depth of
topsoil and the ample water
supply as factors favoring a golf
course. He stated that an "18hole championship course” would
take up less than half the land.
Development of such a course
would cost about $15,000 per
hole, he estimated.
The course could be open to
the public or limited to the Uni-

versity community, Mr. Bacon explained. Fee structures would be
determined by the student-faculty Sub-Board. Once established,
the course would porbably be
self-maintaining.
In pre-merger days the Univer-

1

,

I

�SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

(Comment.

.

THE PEOPLE

.

THE TASK FARCE
On May 8 President Furnas convened a
special meeting of an Ad Hoc Committee
which recognized “legitimate concerns felt
by students and faculty in the University
with respect to their participation in the
formulation of academic policy” and further
of openrecognized “the immediate need
ing and maintaining a dialogue among students, faculty, and administrative groups.”
...

The Ad Hoc Committee then recommended “that the President name a Special Task
Force Committee whose mandate shall be
(1) to inquire into and make proposals with
respect to establishing an open and continual
dialogue among such groups; and (2) to make
such proposals as they deem appropriate regarding organizational means for participation by these groups in the formulation of
educational policy in the University.”

Friday, July 1, 1966

By

The

articles

FRANK KLINGER

forthcoming

in

Ad Hoc Committee. The whole affair could this space will be written by rephardly inspire the confidence of the students. resentatives of a group known as
They were left, in effect, at the mercy; of an “The People” and the opinions
administrative channel.
expressed may sometimes repreIt has become clear that the establish-

ment of the Task Force was more an attempt
to forestall direct student action than to

reorganize the University’s structure. The
immediate need for “establishing an open
and continual dialogue” has been belied by
unnecessary delay and the exclusion of the
public from the Task Force Committee
meetings.
It has taken the Task Force forty-six days

to call its first meeting, a fact hardly indica-

sent a different shade of the

spec-

trum than does our fine student

newspaper.
“The People” was formed as a
counterbalance for that other
campus group which bears the
very descriptive title of The
Movement. Specifically, as a result of threats, pressures, intimidation, sit-ins, etc by The Movement, the Administration had
agreed to reconsider its decision
to hold the Selective Service
Exam on campus. (In fact, a highranking administrator informed
one of our members that unless
counteraction were taken, the
test would probably be removed).

tive of the urgency which the Ad Hoc Committee recognized. Furthermore, the exclusion of the public from Task Force meetings
can hardly be construed as a sincere effort
The original suspicions of the students at creating an atmosphere in which dialogue
regarding the Task Force Committee were may take place on this campus.
grounded both on the nature of the proceedThe Task Force has been, from its incepIt was at this point that “The
ings and the administrative cant it produced. tion. a Task Farce. No doubt sincere indiwas formed by a disThe Movement, the group whose pressure viduals sit on the Committee, but their in- People”
tinguished Professor of Philosomade the meeting imperative, was neither fluence seems to droop in the descendency. phy, the President of YAF, two
invited nor recognized. The Ad Hoc CommitThe Task Force, were it sincere in its ob- patriotic officers of ROTC, and
tee’s structure also proved to be a closed jectives, would not need to wait for consulta- Yours Truly. One of our main
thousands
system of administrative “legitimate chantion with President-e 1 e c t Myerson while concerns was that the voluntarily
of students who had
nels”: the President convened an Ad Hoc President Furnas tours the world. If the signed
up to take this test would
Committee which recommended to the PresTask Force is so hamstrung that it cannot have been prevented from doing
ident that a Task Force Committee be estabmove without the blessings of the President, so had the test been removed
lished which would make proposals to the then it only adds further weight to The and might then have been draftPresident. Furthermore, of the original Task Movement’s contention that this University ed.
Force, 100% of its members also sat on the requires a radical overhaul.
Now, some members of The
Movement may protest

Internal Security Subcommittee Charges
Communists Have Left Brand on Rallies'
The
WASHINGTON (CPS)
Senate Internal Security Subcommittee charged last week that
Communists have played a key
role in organizing campus demonstrations against the war in Viet—

nam.

“The Communist Party, U.S.A.,
brand may be found upon every
phase of the rallies," the subcommittee said in a report on
hearings held 13 months ago,
“from planning to the final effort
to proselytize the young people.”
Seventy-eight pages of previously secret testimony, made public

with the report, dealt with the
Free Speech Movement at the
University of California, and with
the war protests there and at the
University of Wisconsin.
The subcommittee inquiry also
covered the WEB. DuBois Clubs
and the report said there is “an

THE

official link of the Communist
Party through DuBois Clubs, with
campus activities directed against
policies of the country with respect to Vietnam.”
The hearings were held May 17
18, 1965, amid demonstrations on campuses around the

and

country.

“These demonstrations seemed,
spontaneous at first,” the report
said. “But a pattern emerged, oh
campus after campus, which made
it unmistakably clear that the
Communist Party, U.S.A., and its
front organizations were playing
a key role in organizing them.”
“It became increasingly evident that the Communist party
m both fomenting and exploiting
campus unrest was laying the
groundwork for a concerted drive
to recruit youth to its cause.

SPECTRUM

and if their aim is not to sabotage the Selective Service System, then I submit that it is with
The People that these individuals belong. It was we The People
“A traditional tool of the Com(pardon the cliche) who sent a
munists is infiltration,” the repetition to President Furnas askport continued, “and it was used
ing that a referendum on the
issue be presented to the stuto the hilt on campus after campus. Student body grievances dents—a suggestion never contained in The Movement’s ultiwere either fraudulent, created,
matums. I won’t even go into
stimulated, or exaggerated as a some of the statements made by
catalytic means of setting off mob The Movement leaders, such as
the professor who suggested that
explosions.
even if the majority wants the
“Once aroused,” the report test on campus, those who don’t
want it have a right to get it
said, “students’ energies were removed.
channeled and directed by proThe draft battle was fought and
fessionals and their disciples into
won and I think it’s a fair quesforums, rallies, protests, resolution now to ask “What else do
tions, defiance of law, and outThe People stand for?” First and
and-out law violations.”
foremost, we believe that when
feasible, the Administration
The newly-published testimony ought to allow the students to
was that of Charles E. Moore, decide in the form of a referendum those issues which are of a
representing the International Asvital concern to them—providing
sociation of Chiefs of Police, and that the
results of the referenRobert Siegrist, a radio commendum do not violate Federal or
tator for WKOW in Madison, local law.
Wis. Their testimony named 28
I do not for one minute accept
people in connection with demthe garbage put forth by The
onstrations on the two campuses. Movement about “University Autonomy.” (I’m speaking here with

The Murder

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

STEPHEN A. CRAFTS

In a decision as surprising as

BUSINESS MANAGER

SHELDON BERGMAN

it is inhuman, Santa Barbara,
California, Municipal Court Judge
Frank P. Kearney ordered Mrs.
Nancy Hernandez, 21, a mother
of two small children, sterilized
as a condition of probation. Mrs.
Hernandez chose to go to jail
rather than undergo sterilization
surgery. Judge Kearney ordered
Mrs. Hernandez sterilized after
she was convicted of the misdemeanor charge of being in a
place where marijuana was in
use. arguing, "It seemed to me
she should not have more children because of her propensity to
live an immoral life."
There is grave danger in sterilization by judicial order.

EDITORIAL BOARD

ELLEN CARDONE
ALICE EDELMAN
JOCELYN HAILPERN

JOANNE LEEGANT
MARTY SADOFF

BILL SHERMAN

CARLA HARRISON
GINGER HOLCOMBE
FIRST

EDITORIAL POLICY

IS

CLASS

JULIE SULLIVAN
ED SUMMER
HONOR

RATING

DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR-IN CHIEF

that it’s

not the draft issue but that of
campus democracy which concerns them. If this be the case,

reference to some of The Movement’s leaders and not The Movement as a whole. In fact, there’s
really very little one can say
about a movement as a whole that
would be fashionable in print).
When I gaze from my window in
Tower, I fail to see any 10 foot
brick wall surrounding the campus with a sign saying, “This is
UB—Americans Keep Out”; and
God help us all if I ever do.
Morally, there is no more reason
for the University to be autonomous, than for the State of Mississippi, and, constitutionally,
there’s less. We are American
citizens and UB is as much a
part of our nation as Kleinhans,
War Memorial Auditorium,
Henry’s Hamburgers, or Marge’s
Home Improvements.

Another of our functions will
be that of education. For a start,
we know that as a result of
Movement pressure the University will not send students’ rank
and class standing to Selective
Service, all of our male students
(and probably a few females
named Bobbi or Freddy) received
cards from Admissions and Records in which the student was
allowed to indicate whether or
not he wishes his S109 form and/
or rank in class sent to Selective
Service.

Now any idiot knows that refusal to send the S109 will get
you inducted faster than you can
say Ho Chi Minh, but I wonder
how many idiots are aware of the
consequences of not sending in
rank in class? I asked that question to 3 Selective Service Boards
(including the one in Buffalo)
and they all stated that should
S.S. ask for the rank in class and
if it is not sent due to student
refusal, that student (barring
other factors) will be classified
1A and subject to the draft. I
would earnestly suggest that
those idiots who fall into this
category get themselves over to
Admissions and Records pronto,
and ask them (or it) to change
the choice.
One function which our group
will not have will be that of pure
negativism—we admit that there
is room for improvement in the
Multiversity, I for one don’t see
why Hayes Hall has to function
like it’s having an employee sit-in
every day. In fact, next week I’ll
treat you to my conception of an
ideal University.
I was thinking of doing a critique of The Movement’s first
article, but I couldn’t even discern whether they were preaching Communism, Anarchy, or Re-

action. If The Movement does
decide to phrase its gobbledygook
in a comprehensible manner, we
might devote an article to rebuttal. But on second thought—why
bother?

of Gonzago

In the first place, sterilization
orders are of very doubtful constitutionality, violating the
amendment prohibiting cruel, excessive and unusual punishments.
The amendment was added to our
Bill of Rights when it was not
uncommon for a court to order
a convict publicly flogged or to
order his ears or hand cut off.
In the present case, Mrs. Hernandez has never been convicted before, and she is now convicted of
merely being in a place where
marijuana was in use, not even
of using it herself. The punishment is, to this writer’s knowledge, unusual and excessive.
Secondly, it strikes me as particularly dangerous to give the

government the power to sterilize

those people who fail to meet
certain standards of morality because sterilization, like capital
punishment, is a permanent and
irrevocable sentence. Sterilization
also has dangerous potential political implications for minority
groups. If a new brand of McCarthyism were to arise in America, it is possible that sterilization
orders could be issued for people
who failed to hold the proper
political opinions.
Sterilization
could become a dangerous weapon
in the hands of an unscrupulous
politician ready to do anything
to advance his own career.
This columnist is not so optimistic as to say that it can’t
happen here.

�Friday, July 1, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE THREE

Education School Reorganization Under Way
A major reorganization of State
University at Buffalo’s School of

School. A newly created position
of Director of Teacher Education has also been established in
order to coordinate the pre-professional instructional programs
in teacher education,
In keeping with the practice of
most other graduate institutions,
the School, effective in September, will require that all graduate
students be formally admitted
to graduate study before they
register for classes. This includes
summer enrollees who wish to
use summer coursework toward
a graduate degree or a certification program.
In addition, graduate students
must matriculate and specify the
degree, certification or special
program for which they are applying. In the past, most have
been admitted as unclassified students with no degree objectives
in mind.
A limited number of non-matriculated students, however, may
be admitted each term, but they
must be accepted in a program
on or prior to the completion of
12 semester hours of work.

Education

and its admission
policy at the graduate level is
currently underway in order to
meet the educational needs of
Western New York and the
State, it was announced today
by Dean Robert S. Fisk.
•Beginning July 1, the School
will be segmented into eight departments. In addition, changes
in the admissions requirements
for graduate students only have
been established. This includes a
July 1 application deadline for
the Fall semester. November 1
and April 1 deadlines have also
been initiated for the Spring and
Summer semesters, respectively.
The eight departments, whose
chairman will be named shortly,
were proposed by the School’s
faculty and recently approved by
the State University. The departments will be: Counselor Education; Curriculum Development

and Instructional Media; Educational Administration; Educational Psychology; Higher Education; Instruction; Language Arts
and Elementary Education; and
Social, Philosophical and Historical Foundations.
Each department will be responsible for developing and supervising its own degree and
certification programs within the
general policy outline of the

Supplemental information such
as transcripts, test scores, etc.,
must be provided to the Office
of Admission and Records prior
to August X for admission to the
Fall semester, December 1 for the
Spring semester and May 1 for

the Summer semester (beginning
in 1967).
Once accepted into the School,
the student is classified as “matriculated” and will receive preference in registering ahead of “nonmatriculated” students, and in
registering for courses with
limited enrollments.
To encourage students to complete their programs as soon as
possible, a policy of continuous
registration has been adopted.
Each student registering for this
fall will be required to register
each subsequent fall and spring
term until his program is com-

year’s Academy-honored offering
“Through A Glass Darkly,”
weaves a strange, dream-like, tale
incorporation the idea that the
Devil rules the earth and man
continually damns himself in a
self-made hell.

Bergman, quick to use his films
to state his own spiritual and

moral beliefs, says; “All great
films should end with a great

Ingmar Bergman's

The exhibit in Lockwood Memorial Library’s main reading
room of Ernest Hemingway’s
first editions continues through
July 15.
Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961)
began his writing career as a
reporter before he was eighteen.
*

•

pleted.

Studeifts not taking courses
may remain in good standing by
paying a special matriculation
fee, or by applying for and being
granted a
formal leave of

summer session degree or certification programs may be excused
from registering during the regular academic year. In these
cases, students will meet the continuous registration requirement
by registering during consecutive

American.
In 1938, Hemingway’s first
forty-nine stories were published
in collected form. Included in
this volume were several stories
now famous which had appeared

previously

ERNEST HEMINGWAY
Photo by A. E. Hotchner

summer sessions.

agonizing

His first volume of short stories,
In Our Tim*, was published in
1925, and his first novel, The
Sun Alto Rises, a picture of disillusioned American expatriates.
appeared a year later. His next

question, a

question

about this planet, about almost
every human being.”
In “The
Devil’s Wanton,” he further
states: “After life comes death.
That’s really the only thing you
need to know. Those who are
sentimental or frightened can resort to the church. And those
who are bored, tired or indifferent can commit suicide.”

volume of short stories, Man
contemporary fiction. The writWithout Woman (1927), contained
"The Killers" and “The. Undefeated," two stories which are
considered to be among the best
examples of short story writing.
The publication of A Farawall
to Arms in 1929 brought full
recognition of Hemingway as one
of the foremost writers of our
time. The first edition of this
book now on exhibit was presented by the author to James
Joyce and bears the inscription.
“To Joyce with complete admiration and much affection. Ernest

Hemingway.
Daath in tha Afternoon (1932)
was based on Hemingway’s vast
knowledge of bull fights and bull
fighters and was the first complete book on that subject by an

absence.
Students not registering or
who are not granted leaves will
be dropped from the rolls of the
school and must apply for readmission.
Students admitted to certain

Early Bergman Films in Norton Next Week:
"Night Is My Future" and "The Devil's Wanton"
Prolific film distributor Joseph
E. Levine and two-time AcademyAward winner Ingmar Bergman
are responsible for “Night Is My
Future,” an unusual dramatic
work directed by the honored
Swedish film-maker which will
be shown July 5, 6, and 7 at the
Conference Theatre. International star Mai Zetterling and Birger
Malmsten are co-starred.
Based on a famous novel by
Dagmar Edquist, “Night Is My
Future” concerns a young man
(played by Birger Malmsten, the
symbol for Bergman in his early
years of youthful despair) who is
blinded on a rifle-range during
his military service (World War
II), and wanders from one miserable occupation to another. His
sole regular companion, a destitute girl (Mai Zetterling), eventually marries him. In this film,
Bergman is dealing with the muted inferiority complex of a stricken youth in much the same way
as did author Thomas Mann treat
the same theme in his short
stories. In many ways it is obviously a reflection of Bergman’s
own adolescence, but more vitally
a product of his incessant concern with “man’s search for
knowledge in a hostile universe,”
or more precisely, in this film,
with the blind man’s desire to
be treated as an ordinary, and
not as an inferior member of

Hemingway First Editions:
Lockwood Exhibit Feature

Blues Project

only

in

The Blues Project will perform

on Wednesday, July 5 at 8 p.m.

at the Millard Fillmore Room of
Norton Union.

New York Times music critic,
Robert Shelton, has called the
Blues Project “The most incandescent group in folk-rock today.” It also plays rock and roll,
rhyhtm and blues, and some jazz.

"Tha Davit's Wanton"

society.

Also on the program will be
Bergman’s reflections on life, art,

immortality and the Devil in Joseph’ E. Levine’s new import,

“The Devil’s Wanton.”
Serving as both director and
screen writer for this Embassy
Pictures release, Bergman, who is
responsible for the Oscar-winning
“The Virgin Spring” and this

PLAZA SHOE REPAIR
ONE STOP SERVICE

Two Locations:

CENTER
Shoes Repaired While-U-Wait
Lanudry &amp; Drycleaning

Located

ONE DAY SERVICE

University Plaza
IF 6-4041

1

I

I

Del
Hair F.

Phone:
136-6088

3216 Mai

i

magazine

form, among them "The Snows
Of Kilimanjaro."
In 1952 Tha Old Man and tha
Sea won world acclaim, and
Hemingway received the 1953
Pulitzer Prize in fiction. In 1954
he was awarded the Nobel Prize
in literature.
Hemingway's work has had a
tremendous stylistic influence on
ings which deal with his work
already bulk much larger than
the work itself.

Main Street &amp; Thruway
1205 Niagara Falls Blvd.

�Friday, July 1, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE POUR

Creative Problem Solving Institute
Includes Seminars and Symposiums
sist of symposiums and optional

By JULIE SULLIVAN

In the field of creative problem solving and education, the
12th, annual contention of the
Creative Problem Solving Institute is currently being held on
the State University at Buffalo
campus. The conference, which
began Sunday, June 26, will continue through July 1,
Dr. Robert F. Berner, chairman
of the Institute and Dr. Sidney
J. Parnes, director of creative
education at the University have
outlined the basic program for
the Institute, which is being cosponsored by the Creative Education Foundation.

First-time enrollees in the Institute will devote the first three
days to taking the equivalent of
a semester course in the development of creative behavior. These
day-time course sessions will involve a minimum of lecturing and
a maximum of individual participation.
The evening sessions will con

seminars covering the creative
process in the arts and sciences.

Participants will devote the
fourth and fifth day to supervised
practice leading groups of students through the creative problemsolving prosess.

It is felt that through the supervised practices, enrollees will
gain an even greater grasp of
creative principles and proce-

will also become better
able to put these teachings to
good use in their own institutions
dures, and

or organizations.
The experience of the enrollees
with creative problem solving
principles ranges from complete
unfamiliarity to expertise and
many have taught courses in
creative problem solving.
Members of numerous business
firms, including Sylvania, B. F.
Goodrich, and RCA will be in
attendance. Such organizations as

the American Red Cross and
Services for the Blind will also
send representatives.

English Faculty to Treat
The Anatomy ofPaunch

'

A panel discussion, “Anatomy
cf Paunch,” will be held on July
6 at 1:30 p.m. in the Conference
Theatre of Norton Union.
Paunch is “a journal of radically romantic criticism” founded
and edited by Arthur Efron of
the English Department.
Participants in the panel discussion will include Efron, E.B.
Greenwood, Mac Hammond, and
Marvin Murdick.
E.B. Greenwood teaches at the
University of Glascow. His most

from Oxford and is currently on
the SUNYAB faculty for the summer session.
Mac Hammond is the author of
a volume of poems - The Horse
Opera and Other Poems. He is
currently an associate professor
of English at SUNYAB.
Marvin Murdick, another member of the SUNYAB faculty for
the summer session, is professor
at the University of California,
Santa Barbara. He has taught at
Temple University and Queens
College and published Jane Aus-

recent publication is Essays in
Criticism and Ncophilologus. He

ten, Character and Event in Fiction and Joseph Conrad; A Col-

received

lection of Critical Songs.

his B.A. and

B. Litt.

Among those attending from
the religious field are a Catholic
Missionary, several representatives from the Jewish Community
Center, and ministers of the
Lutheran, Baptist, Presbyterian,
and 7th Day Adventist Churches.
Participants will come from
several branches of the Armed
Forces, as well as from the
United States Forest Service and
the Department of Agriculture.
The Institute expects educators
from all levels from kindergarten
teachers to university deans and
presidents, both from secular and
parochial schools.
As many geographical locations
will be represented at the Institute as professions and levels
of experience. Converging upon
the university will be residents
from almost every state in the
union. International visitors from
Indonesia, Belgium, South Africa,
Australia, Norway, Spain, and
Canada will also be present.

The Institute leaders feel that
the geographical and professional
diversity of the enrollees will
help rather than hinder the program. Because the symposium
emphasizes a creative and imaginative approach to the solution of problems and the production of ideas, such diversity is a
desirable asset.
Although the Institute's daytime activities will be conducted
on an informal basis, evening discussions will apply creative principles to specific interest areas.
Education,
management,
engineering, personnel and training,
marketing, research, church, civic
and social service, and the health
sciences are among the fields to
be considered.

However, because the creative

approach can be applied to almost any endeavor, participants
have written to suggest other
topics for discussion. Journalism,
hotel management, the mass education of slock market

investors,
and the computer augmentation
of man’s creative problem solving
were among the proposals.
The six-day Creative Problem
Solving Institute will end Friday
when the 450 enrollees will return to their schools, businesses,
and organizations to apply the
creative principles which they
have learned to their own fields.

[Old

Post Road
Inn

LUNCHEONS
11:45 until 3:00
BUFFALO
JOSEPH

E'LEVINE

-

EXCLUSIVE RUN

I

j

presents

!

Master

th,' Worlds

Maker

Bergman

ff|

11/117

IV VI
MU 1TM Mf

1

WK"

and Second Superb Hit "The Devil's Wanton"

(Conference CJheatre

Continuous

—

Tuesday, Wadnasday, Thursday

DINNERS
5 p.m. until 10 p.m
SUPPERS
10 p.m. until 1 p.m.

j

j
i
-

jazz impressions
By RON NAPLES

Live jazz in the city of Buffalo
is considerably nil. Local jazz
fans should thank their lucky
stars for the hopefully healthy
existence of the Royal Arms
Show Bar on West Utica and Main
Streets. The circular bar, in the
center of which is located the
band stand, holds approximately
160 people. The talent which
comes in each week, through the
direct and conscientous efforts
of owner Lou Galanter, is the
tops in the field of jazz and
popular entertainment.
Mr. Galanter expressed that
the club is very responsive to
the college students of this area
and is hoping that they will take
advantage of the fine array of

talent which he slated for the
summer season. Appearing this
summer among others will be
guitarist Kenny Burrell (currently
appearing), the Ahmad Jamal
Trio, the Johnny Lytle Trio, and
the New Ives Montgomery Quintet,

featuring Wes

on

guitar,

Eldee Young on bass and cello,
and Red Holton on drums. Young
and Holt are recently deposed
members of the popular Ramsey
Lewis Trio.
Last Saturday evening we had
the pleasure of witnessing the
performance of the group headed
by jazzdom’s number one creative drummer, Art Blakey. The
group, The New Jazz Messengers
also features Chuck Mangiore on
trumpet, Chick Coreu on piano,
Reggie Johnson on the bass, and
Frank Mitchell on tenor sax.
Art Blakey is quite an individual. As the leader of the Jazz
Messengers, Blakey has helped
develop some of the jazz world’s
reading performance. He is dedicated to developing young talent.
The current group, which has
been together only months will
attest to this.
Mangoine, a Rochester native,
is 25; Coreu 24; Johnson 25; and
Mitchell 20.
“Yes sir. I’m going to stay with
the youngsters, it keeps the mind
active,” says Blakey. “We usually
keep the same group for about 2
years, then change. The reason
being, people like new faces.”
Our opinion is that in many
instances Blakey keeps a performer only until he’s ready to
make it on his own, then releases
him and replaces him with another young musician. A list of
ex-Jazz Messengers resembles a
ballot for an All-Star Jazz poll.
Names
like Clifford Brown,
Kenny Dorham, Freddie Hubbard, Donald Byrd, Lee Morgan,
Curtis Fuller, Hank Mobley,
Wayne Shorter, Benny Golson,
Horace Silver, Bobby Timmons,
Jymie Merritt and Doug Watkins,
head the list.

j

Every member of the Jazz Mesmust also be able to

sengers

write and chart music. Their
latest Limelight album, “Buttercorn Lady,” features the writing
talents
of
Chuck Mangione.
Chuck (formerly of the Jazz
Bros.) wrote (1) The title song,
which has a slight Carribbean
flavor, (2) Recuerdo, a muted
Milesish study in moods, (3) Between Races, which was written
while working for Maynard Ferguson.

Chick Coreu’s arranging talent

was heard in a composition entitled “Straight Up and Down”
as was Frank Mitchell’s on “Big

Mistake."

Many of today’s Jazz standards
were written by ex-members of
the Jazz Messengers. Among
these are Curtis Fuller’s “There
Blind Mice,” Bobby Timmon’s

“Mornin’,” Benne Colson’s “Blues
Marc h,” and Horace Silver’s
“Sister Sadie.”

We asked Mr. Blakey his philosophy concerning music. “Basically music is supposed to move
you, make you forget. I am always trying to reach the people,
after all, the’re paying your fare.
Seriously though, the people
want to ‘feel’ what you’re playing. This is why rock and roll
and folk music are so popular.

Much of rock and roll is very
good and I can’t help but to tap
my foot while it’s playing. Most
people feel this way.” We later
found out that Art will soon be
releasing an album with a rock
and roll flavor, using Grant
Green (guitar) and Don Patterson (organ).
“We play modern jazz for the
people to listen, they must listen
to understand it. We study, we
rehearse. The Jazz Messenger are
very serious about getting their
music across to you.”

At this time Blakey and the

Jazz Messengers began their first
set with “It’s You Or No One,” a

number first recorded by the
group in 1955. This number feautred some excellent work by
Coreu and Mitchell. Also in the
first set the group played the
popular “I Wish You Love,” Highlighted
by Frank
Mitchell’s
overative solo, “For Heavens
Sake,” and Coreu’s “Straight Up
and Down.” On this last one
Blakey showed his versatility as
he led the progression from “up
to down.”
The intermission following the
first set afforded us our final
opportunity to chat with the
amiable Mr. Blakey. We asked
the “dynamic drummer” what
he thought of the ‘avant garde'
school of modern jazz.
“I don’t like to hear some cat
blow for 45 minutes and neither
do most people. Most avant
garde musicians play as if there
is no one else there. They’re not
playing! They’ll realize in a year
or two that the people are not
interested and the good ones
(like John Coltrane and Ornett
Coleman) will probably settle
down and come back to us.”
Once again the genial performer left us to begin another
set, this one spotlighting the
talents of tenor man, Frank
Mitchell on “Round Midnight,”
"Between Races,” and “Big Mis
take,” and Chuck Mangione on
“Buttercorn Lady,” “If I Were A
Bell,” and “It Was A Very Good
Year.”

As Art Blakey closed out Man
gione’s beautiful solo on Frank
Sinatra’s hit, we saw an approv
ing smile light the face of the
man who calls himself “the

World’s youngest drummer.” For
Art Blakey it was one of many
very good years.

Let us be your pharmacy away from home

HIGHGATE PHARMACY
3435 BAILEY AVENUE

—

1 block from Rotary Field

WE CAN FILL YOUR HOMETOWN PRESCRIPTIONS
COMPLETE LINE OF ALMAY COSMETICS
—

—

RUSTCRAFT GREETING CARDS
Prescription and Non-Prescription Drugs

Phone; 835-1663
835-3233
Please show your Student ID Card when making purchases
—

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                    <text>—I

SUMMER
EDITION

9MMK3

VOLUME 16

K

STATE

mm m
;

I
BUFFALO,

■

m ■

MOVEMENT

Mm

_

■

statement

■ UWWM
■ BV ■

B
(See
Page
„

NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 1966

,

NO. 49

Bookstore Discount Cut 5%;
Future Policy Is Undecided
Student discovers reduced discount rate after sale is rung-up on
register.

Task Force Delays Action;
Meet With Meyerson Sought
Associate Professor of History
John Milligan and Student Association Vice President Kim Harrow were appointed co-chairmen
of the Task Force Committee at
its first meeting Wednesday,
June 22. The Committee agreed
to invite President-elect Martin
Meyerson to the next meeting
to clarify his position in relation
to the Task Force.

Dr. Milligan said that the Committee ought to consider whether the scholarly purpose of the
university can be fulfilled democratically through the students,
faculty and administration. He
noted that the primary purpose
of the Task Force should be to
determine the necessary machinery to ensure democracy within
the university.
The duty of the Task Force,
according to Dr. Milligan, should
be to advise only on those decisions which directly affect the
university community, not to in-

terfere with routine administrative decisions.
Associate Psychology Professor
Raymond Hunt suggested that the
Task Force initiate an intensive
study of the entire structure of
the university.
The Committee agreed to publish periodic reports of its progress and to hire a secretary and
two research assistants immediately.

The Task Force, a direct outof The Movement, has
been created to establish dialogue
growth

among students, faculty, and administrative groups and to make
proposals for participation by
these groups in the formulation
of university educational policy.

After withholding further discussion of the purposes of the
Committee until Dean Meyerson
could be contacted, the group
agreed that meetings will probably be closed to the public except in special cases such as hearings. Faculty members agreed
that meetings should be closed
because efficiency of the Committee and informal discussion would
be hampered by pressure from
I.D. CARDS

Attention: Students registered for the Fall semester.
Pictures for this coming
I.D. card will be taken
in the basement of Foster Hall
throughout the summer. Bring
the green IBM card you received at registration with
you. Go now I Avoid the September rush)
year's

the presence of special interest
groups.
Dr. Hunt suggested that the
Spectrum not be admitted because a Committee member might
easily be quoted out of context
of what was said at a previous
meeting.
After reiterating that arguments in favor of excluding the
press were not motivated by the
desire to conceal anything, the
Committe agreed to table the
decision until the next meeting
to be scheduled after Dean Meyerson’s reply.

Other Committee members
elected by student and faculty
associations are as follows; Philosophy Department Chairman Dr.
Rollo Handy; Law School Dean
William Hawkland; Music and
Modern Languages Department
Chairman Allen D. Sapp; graduate student John C. Hellriegel,
and undergraduate students Donald Ames and Dennis Miller.

The University Bookstore’s student discount on textbooks has
been cut from W7&lt; to 5%, by
action of Sub-Board III of the
Faculty-Student Association. The
reduced discount will be in effect for the remainder of the
summer. Policy for the fall semester aas not been determined.
The reduction was explained
by Dr. Claude Puffer, Vice-President for Financial Affairs, as
reflecting the F.S.A.’s need to
remain “cautious” until a summer inventory reveals whether
the bookstore can be operated on
a discount basis. The cut was
unanimously advised by the SubBoard, including Dr. Puffer, Student Association President Clinton Deveaux and Vice-President
Kim D arrow, Assistant VicePresidents for Financial Affairs
Paul Bacon and Charles Balkin,

and Dean Siggelkow.

Mr. D a r r o w commented, "I
would have preferred a 10% discount but find a 3% discount
better than none.” He explained
the 5% figure as a necessary
compromise, since there was
some pressure to remove the entire discount for the summer.
The original discount, instituted in December 1965 by the
Board of Directors of the F.S.A.,
was in effect during the Spring
1966 semester. At that time, Dr.
Puffer revealed, the Board planned to reserve the summer as a
stock-taking period before setting
up any permanent policy. This
reservation was agreed to by the

student non voting representative
to the Board. Mr. Deveaux.
Next fall's policy will be set
later this summer after an evaluation of the bookstore’s financial
state. The Sub-Board has discussed the possible substitution of a
rebate system, in which book
store profits would be distributed
among students at the end of the
school year, in proportion to sales
receipts acquired over the year.
This refund would be applicable
to all purchases. The present discount applies only to required
textbooks and equipment. One
argument in favor of a rebate

system is that it eliminates the
guesswork of determining how
great a discount the bookstore
can absorb. The delay and paperwork involved have been cited in
opposition.

The F.S.A. has control over
most non-academic financial operations of the University, including Food Service, student activities and athletics. Sub-Board III
is one of the policy-advising bodies set up as a result of extensive

student-administration discussions
in 1965-66. F.S.A. operations are
divided among the three Sub
Boards, which have varying degrees of student participation.

Final decisions rest with the
Board of Directors which is administration-dominated. Under
state law, persons under 21 cannot serve on Boards of member
ship corporations, making most
undergraduate officers ineligible
Discussing the problems of
bookstore management, Dr. Puffer explained that a large debt

was incurred at the lime of UB’s
merger with SUNY, because all
assets were turned over to the
Slate and the F.S.A. was required
to re purchase the bookstore and
its contents. Other problems include the increase in inventory
prompted by expanding enrollment and assignments, and the
rising price of books.

Asked to clarify a statement of
last spring in which he described F.S.A. finances as “muddled,”
Dr. Puffer explained that this is
still the case, due to the incomplete progress of contracts that
must be made with the Slate
government. Negotiations now in
progress indicate that the F.S.A.’s

operating costs will be increased
by changes in State and S.U.N.Y.
rulings. He added that the bookstore’s condition is not "muddled." and that the delay in
setting policy for the fall is due
to the need for a thorough in-

ventory.

Dr. Puffer proposed, as longrange goals, after the first “hurdles” of merger and expansion
are completed, progress toward a
non profit store and greater stu-

dent participation. He expressed
interest in the prospect of ownership of a bookstore and other
facilities by a student union, as
in several states and European
countries.
The F.S.A. Board of Directors
will meet June 27 to (receive an
audit report which will be used
in planning operations for the

’66-'67

year

Summer Enrollment Reaches All Time High
As many as 7300 students may
take courses in the Summer Sessions program this year, according to James Blackhurst, Assistant Director of the division.
This summer's enrollment represents an increase of 5000 students over the past four years.
During the same period, the average session credit load per student has increased from 5 to 7Vi
credit hours.

asked if this might indicate the
need for a trimester system, Mr.
Blackhurst answered that UB
provides a greater number of
summer semester hours than institutions of similar size employing a trimester program. "We
have provided reasons for students to go to school the year
’round. We’ve come as close as
any university ever came to total
year ’round operation.’’
UB's Summer program features

special conferences, seminars,
and courses plus a full schedule
of literary, dramatic, musical, and

cinematic events.
A low-cost children’s summer
camp, to be held on campus from
June 27 to August 5 from 9 a m.
to 12:15 p.m. daily, will enable
mothers to attend classes. The
Anthropology Department will
offer an Archeology Field School
from June 27 to August 5 to
excavate in local Indian sites. A

Mr, Blackhurst claims that “the
success and growth of the summer school program is quite
closely related to the fact that
we do research on the needs of
students for particular courses
and attempt to schedule those
courses at convenient time s.”
Students may meet language and
science requirements in the summer without the pressure of additional course work.

In addition various workshops
in business, law anforcamant, finance, and aducation Hava bean
invited to participate in a Human
Relations Workshop from June
27 through July 15. A Clinic

Conference for School Personnel
Administrators (July 10-15) and
an Advanced Workshop in Mental Retardation (August 8-19) will
be held on campus.

UB's Summer Sessions are naunique in that about
65% of the students are regularly enrolled in the University.

Mr. Blackhurst indicated that
there is no evidence of increased
enrollment due to the pressure of
Selective Service crackdowns on
students. The male enrollment
percentage in Summer Sessions
has remained constant for the

Of last year's undergraduates,
36% had attended summer school
at one time or another here. Of
the February graduating class,
68% had attended summer school
the preceding summer. Thus, attendance at Summer Sessions can
either lighten a student's course
load or hasten his graduation.

fall semester enrollment will be
the highest in the country.” When

is also offering a Summer Study

in Europe program on children’s
literature. The Department of
Biology will offer a Radioisotopic
Technique Institute in conjunction with the Western New York
Nuclear Research Center. The
Music Department will once again
conduct a High School Music Institute in band, orchestra, small
ensemble, and chorus.
will be held Community leaders

tionally

“Within two to three years,”
states Mr. Blackhurst, “our summer enrollment as percentage of

series of graduate seminars in
the School of Education will concentrate on “The Cultures of
Asia." The School of Education

past few years

In Summer the campus mum« the
terises Its Winter activities.

Mm*

somnolence that charac-

Registration for the Second
Summer Session will take place
Monday, June 27, from 8 to 11
a m., in Clark Gymnasium.

�Friday. June 34, 1966

SPECTRUM

RAGE TWO

Symposium Discusses Ftesh Water;
Conservation Program Strongly Urged
The New York State Science
and Technology Foundation and
the Buffalo section of the American Society of Civil Engineers
held a water symposium on campus last week. More than 60
speakers presented their views
on water control and pollution,
in keeping with the theme of the
conference, “The Fresh Water of
New York State: Its Conservation
and Use.”

In a paper presented on Monday, June 13, Dr. Harold Wilm,

director of the Water Resources
Institute at the State University
of New York at Syracuse, designated two broad categories of
preventive measures: the preservation of the State’s non-pnlluted water and the reduction of
present pollution problems. Dr.
Wilm pointed out that the problem of water pollution, which
seemed insoluble because of the
financial inability of municipalities to construct the necessary
treatment works, has found a
tentative solution in the New
York State proposal for requiring
municipalities to build these
works, (almost) simultaneously
with financial assistance from the
State and Federal Governments.
He further cited the instigation
of several water study programs
at both state and regional levels
as long run aids in the solution
of water problems.
In a paper entiled, “The Phys-

On* of tho main subjects of last week's water symposium was
pollution. Above: plant pours industrial waste into Lake Erie.
Below: pollution.

ical Environment of Water Resources in New York State,” Mr.
Montanari, director of the Division of Water Resources and
assistant Commissioner of the
State of New York Conservation
Department, pointed out that the
previous lack of study of physical
environment was due to the prevailing attitude that water was
an unlimited source in terms of
quality and quantity.
Both he and Mr. Wilm felt
that the recent drought has caused a significant change in this
attitude and, “has greatly accelerated the interest and concern

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for water which was awakening
in the early 1960’s.”
On the following day the first
year’s highlights of the New York
State Pure Waters Program were
presented by Mr. Robert D. Hennigan. Mr. Hennigan first cited

the “Pure Waters Bond Act”,
under which several study programs have been inaugurated,
including the Municipal Comprehensive Water Study Program,
the Municipal Comprehensive
Sewerage study program and then
a recently completed investiga-

tion of water system needs.
Mr. Hennigan emphasized the
need for intermunicipal cooperation, and stated that, “particular
attention was given to developing
close Federal-State relations in
administration of the water pollution construction grants.”
Dr. James J. Flannery, chief
economist of the Federal Water
Pollution Control Administration,
cited the failure of the present
economic system to hold municipalities and industries accountable for the effects of their waste
disposal on water pollution. The
economist wants to remedy the
situation by requiring polluters
to pay for the adverse effects
caused by their waste disposal.
Polluters would then register for
waste discharges, and the revenues produced by required payments would finance a system of
monitoring and surveillance. This
plan, he continued, represents the
most efficacious method of arresting water pollution.

Dr. John E. Wood III, a member of the Board of Directors of
the Manufacturing Chemists’ Association, asserted that the payments plan would encounter severe difficulties in implementation.

The current water crisis can be
attributed “in part” to our failure
to recognize the full scope of
water resources and the need for
a single purpose water

resources

He described the major water

resources

problem as one con-

the utilization of existing
water resources and the protection of these resources for future

cerning

use.

Franklin D. Dryden, Division
Engineer of the Los Angeles
County Sanitation Districts, said
that the present water supply and
water disposal agencies are limited in geographic scope or legal
powers and do only a portion of
the total management job.
Referring to the Water Resources Planning Act of 1965,
Dryden said that the act provided
one method for voluntary organization within major river basins
and is already being implemented in some areas.

“It is imperative that all communities, industries and aspects
of the water resource problem be
represented,” he said.

“If the charge is sufficiently
modest to be tolerable, it becomes
a license to pollute. If it is set
high enough to effectively prevent pollution, it becomes punitive in nature and a poor substitute for out-and-out regulations,”
he said.
On Wednesday, June 15, Murray Stein, the head of the Enforcement Branch of the Federal
Water Pollution Control Administration, said that greater communication is needed in coping
with international water pollution.
Mr. Eugene W. Weber explained that the duties of the International Joint Commission of the
United States and Canada fall
into two general categories: the
approval of proposals which
would affect the natural level or
flow of boundary waters, and the
investigation and study of specific problems when requested by
the Canadian and American governments. The second function of
the committee has been used
often in the areas of pollution
and lake level regulation.
Mr. Weber said, “One of the
most significant areas of activity

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Thursday, June 16, Dr. Ross E.
McKinney, a professor at the
University of Kansas, said that
a new leadership, necessary in
combatting present water problems, must develop a new water
resources organization “in the
face of old established opposition
that is politically entrenched.”

management.

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boundary waters and waters flowing across the boundary will not
be polluted by either country to
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In a paper entiled, “The Role
of Water in Civic Planning,” Mr.
George E. Deming, studies director of personal costs with the
Temporary Commission of City
Finances of New York City, said
that one of the major faults with
past civic planning, was its concern with isolated planning activities rather than the integration
of these activities into a functional and meaningful whole.
Besides the problem of the
unification of fragmentary planning schemes, Mr. Deming noted
that there is a significant shortage of trained personnel, especially in the water management field.
The President of UB, Dr. Clifford
C. Furnas, closed the symposium
Friday, June 17, with an address
entitled, “Fresh Water and How?”
Dr. Furnas said that the overall water problem breaks itself
into two major parts—quantity
and quality.
“There is little question,” he
said, “that in terms of water supply the biggest future problems
of the country as a whole will be
how to deal with the various
types of water pollution.”
Dr. Furnas expressed concern
over the multiplicity of govvernmental bodies “suddenly springing up" without a clear definition of responsibility.

�Friday, June 24, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAM THRU

Community House Requires Tutors
For New Remedial Reading Program
Westminster Community House
will inaugurate a summer remedial reading program this summer for about 100 Negro ghetto
school children entering the 4th,
5th and 6th grades in the fall.
Recording to program director
Rev. Richard Ford, “the purpose
is to provide an eight day intensified reading program on a
one to one basis because most
of the children are two or three
grades behind in their reading
and because this kind of program
is more needed and vital than

Taxi for Tobruk'
To Play in Norton^

traditional vacation Bible school."
Rev. Ford emphasized the need
for 100 volunteer tutors for the
program which will last from

'

"Taxi for Tobruk”, the rugged
war drama starring Charles Ax.
navour, Hardy Kruger and Lino;?
Ventura, which won wide acclaim”:
from the critics at its American!;

July 7 through July 15, 9 a.m.
to noon daily. Anyone interested
in tutoring for this program
should call Rev. Ford at 854-0100
or visit Westminster House, 421
Monroe Street off Broadway.
Two training and orientation
meetings for the program will
be held June 29 at 7:30 p.m. at
Covenant Lebanon Presbyterian
Church. 521 Northampton.

Premiere in New York,, opens:?
Tuesday in Norton’s Conference”’
Theatre.
5
Hailed by the New York Her- '
aid Tribune film critic as ”A|e
dramatic journey well worth tak-id
ing . . . a taut war drama loaded ie
with suspense,” it is the story ofy,
four French Commandos who ac-(e
dicentally capture a German sol-id
dier as they attempt to escape uacross the vast, trackless and m
strife-ridden deserts of North Af- it
rica. Admittedly lost—with the nprospects of dying a slow, uncertain death drawing closer by
the minute—their conflicts and "
hatreds rise to the surface to 0
present the film viewer an ineis- y
ive emotional experience seldom
e
found on today’s screen.

-

Fundamentals of Marxism Treated
At Summer's John Brown Institute
The John Brown Institute of
Marxist Studies will conduct a ten
session series this summer which
will emphasize the fundamentals
of Marxism and dialectical and
historical materialism.
William Mayrl, doctoral candidate in sociology at UB and
spokesman for the Institute, described its aims as follows: “In
a world of social upheaval it is
unfortunate that there is such a
paucity of knowledge about the
Marxist contribution to the analysis of society. The Institute
is attempting to offer a wide
spectrum of Marxist thought. The
Institute is not affiliated with any
political party and is not influenced by the ideological disputes
of Marxist parties at home or

abroad. Its aims are intellectual
in nature.’ r
The Institute will meet every
Tuesday evening at 8 p.m. at the
Green Lantern Bookstore.
Other subjects which will be
discussed in the series include
guerrilla warfare, the 'Russian
Revolution, and the changing role
of the peasant in Marxist thought.
The Institute will meet every
Tuesday evening beginning June
21 at 8 p.m. at the Green Lantern
Bookstore, Elmwood near Allen.
Fees will be $5 for the entire
series or $1 for a session. For
further information write the
John Brown Institute of Marxist
Studies, P.O. Box 5, Sta. C, Buffalo, New York 14209, or call
TT 4-8370.

Lino Ventura and Hardy Kruger in a
playing this week

UB.

Associate professor of English
at Massachusetts Institute of
Technology Dr. Norman N. Holland will become chairman of the
Department of English July 1.
Dr. Albert Somit, professor in
the Graduate School of Arts and
Sciences and director of doctoral
programs in the Graduate School
of Public Administration at New
York University, will become
chairman of the Department of
Political Science September 1.
Dr. Holland, who joined the
faculty of Massachusetts Institute
of Technology in 1955, is the
author of three books of literature criticism: “The First Modern Comedies,” “The Shakespearean Imagination” and “Psychoanalysis and Shakespeare.”
A critic whose specialties are
movie criticism and psychiatry
in literature, Dr. Holland had
two television shows in WGBHTV, “The Film Critic” and “The
Shakespearean Imagination.”
Dr. Somit joined the faculty
of New York University in 1945,
and served there until his present appointment, except in the
year 1961-62, when he served as
the Chester W. Nimitz Professor
of Social and Political Philosophy
at the Naval War College, Newport, Rhode Island.
He is co-author of four books:
'American Political Science, A

Profile of a Discipline,” “The
Government and Society of
Burma,” “Achievements in Federal Reorganization,” and “Government in American Society."
He has also contributed to “Encyclopedia Brittanica” and “International Encyclopedia of the
Social Sciences.”
Dr. Somit has had varied administrative assignments, both
academic and governmental.
Among the positions he has held
are: research director for the

The Music Department will
conduct two music institutes July

instruction will be conducted by
associate professor of music Livingston Gearhart and the insti-

10-24.

tute staff.
The University Woodwind In
stitute for College Students and

The University Music Institute
for High School Students, de
scribed by University Band Director Frank J. Cippola as "our
most ambitious program to date,"
will include chamber music in
struction this year, in addition
to band, orchestra, chorus and
small ensemble activity. Class

Woodwind Teachers, under the
direction of associate professor
of music Allen Sigel, will feature
instruction by the Dorian Quin
tel. a nationally known woodwind ensemble. The Quintet will
give performances and offer mas
ter class instruction to the high
school students as well.

The Music Institute is designed
as a pre university experience,
allowing students the opportunity to live on campus for a two
week period under a well-planned program of rehearsals, lectures. recitals, recreational and

Study of Scientific Research Proposals. a joint project of the
National Science Foundation.
New York University and the
University of Michigan; consultant on psychological warfare for

social activities.
The Woodwind Institute will
offer intensive concentration in
the study of woodwind literature,
pedagogy and performance.

the Human Relations Area Files

at Yale University; director of
the New York University Research Study of Attitudes Towards Politics; and, during the
Korean War. intelligence staff
officer on psychological warfare
for the Army in Europe.

Other staff members for the
Music Institute include; band.

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Guest directors in the past have
included Frederick C. Ebbs, director of bands at the University
of Iowa and Col. William F.
Santelman. retired director of
the U.S. Marine Corps Band. Last
year, when the scope of the Institutes was increased to include
orchestra and chorus, guest instructors included Paul Bryan,
director of the Duke University
Band: Mischa Schneider, professor of music at the University
and member of the Budapest
String Quartet here; and Robert
Wadsworth, choral director for
the Newark, New York, Central

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ela Gearhart, director of the University Orchestra; chorus, Mr.
Vito Mason, former director of
chorus at Ithaca High School,
Ithaca, New York, and newly appointed choral director at Amcrican University, Washington, D.C.,
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Music Institute Set for Summer on Campus

Dr. Holland to Assume Chairmanship
Of UB s English Department July 1st
The head of the Literature
Section at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a distinguished political scientist from
from New York University will
become department chairmen at

icon#

in Norton Conference Theatre.

Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday

e
.,

a
e
s
s
e
j

r

�Friday. June 94, 1N6

SPECTRUM

PACE FOUR

First in a Series

The Radical in a Multi versity

A Statement from 'The Movement'
of

The Movement
EDITOIPS NOTE—On June 18 the Executive Committee
ndeptei the foUasm
statement as the first in a continual dialogue on
I!niter tar reform la which all members of the academic community are urged
&gt;*

IQ

ftntribute

The Movement grew ant of a general dissatisfaction with the exclusion
oi the students an this campus from the formulation of policy in matters
effecting their academir Uses. The incident which sparked its generation was
the administration of the Selective Servile examination on compos without
the prior content of the student body —or least half oft whom were directly
affected by the decision WhJe opinion teas divided on whether or not the
examination should be administered on campus (some argued that it violated
Vuirermty anlanamt . others argued convenience many students were drawn
to The Movement by the greater principle of student participation in policy
)

A Task Force whose meetings this summer will be covered by the
SpffifUlH. mas instituted by tbr Administration to explore possible legitimate
.

channels far stadents in policy formulation.
system as it is or in being acConfronted by demands from
cepted by it. It is, however, usstudents that the Draft Test not
ually true that the radical can
be administered on campus, the
director of the Counseling and and does become a part of the
Testing Center at Stanford Uniestablishment as his expressed
versity announced that the only
goals are accepted and incorporrationale that would permit such
ated by the system. When this
action would be “in the face of
happens, he ceases to be a radgrevious moral evil after all ordinary channels of political per-

suasion had been exhausted.”
In the eyes of the radical,
every moral and social evil is
grevious. and any sign of procrastination on the part of “ordinary' channels” constitutes justification of defiance. It is the

privilege of established authority
to use the concept of “establish
ed channels” as an excuse to
wink at inequities and inefficiencies in the system. Having observed this, the radical rejects

arguments that "demonstrations
and other shows of force are not
the most effective way to bring
about change and, in fact, often
inhibit reform.'* The radical
knows this is not true, in the
first place, and that it originates
with those who have no desire,
for whatever reason, to see
change come about.
The radical is by definition
“outre.” and therefore has no
interest either in preserving the

ical.

and the .correction of specific
ills, he must formulate either a
design for

a

the

x

can
sort

new university or

creatioJi of , a just force
continue'ti exist to act

that
as a
those

of "conscience" for
who do have the power of de-

Only by these
cision making.
mean; can he avoid being a "reformer" where he would wish to
be a recreator.

Neither of these alternatives is

truly practicable without the
other. In the university, it is
particularly appropriate for the
radical to be an eclectic, and it
is particularly necessary for him
to be a wise politician, if he is
to avoid extinction or, more importantly, becoming the father of
reactionary chaos. He, more than
the establishment, is responsible
to the values that are peculiar
to the university. Nothing in his
revolt can carry in it the seed
that might negate academic freedom, university autonomy or the

peaceful pursuit of wisdom. He
must always move to refine the
expression of these values and
their preservation. He must support and struggle for excellence'
in education, just as he must
have a greater and wiser love of
the University than do the nabobs
in power.
It is to this extent that the
university radical is a traditionalist and even a reactionary.
Many of his values spring from
a view that is traditionally attributed to Medieval universities.
Those values may or may not
have obtained in the Dark Ages,
but they are what the radical
would try to instill in the Age
of Technology. The contradiction
should be no source of discomfort
for the true radical.
The university revolutionary is
aware that destruction can spawn
creation, and that anarchy contains many of the true elements
of organization. He is not unwise

The statement of these fundamental characteristics of radicalism is pertinent wherever radical
action occurs. This certainly applies to radicalism in the uni-

versity.

Radicalism, when it is involved
with changing the University system, faces a peculiar dilemma.
While it is easy to observe specific ills and gross mistakes in
the system, and while the university is a small enough social
unit to be relatively easily subject to revolutionary change, it
is not so easy to formulate what
the revolutionary change should
be, or to what ends the correction
of the specific ills should be directed. T h c university radical
does not usually suggest that he
be in charge of decision making
in the university, and yet he sees
as his observable role the forcing
of correct decisions.
If the radical wishes to escape
being "useful" in causing reform

The movement awaits word from President Furnas on the Distribution of University Policy-Making.

By LITTRELL

garth,

Tiepolo, Goya, Turner,
Whistler, Wolgemut and natural-

require a computer to
now in use at several
ties, including UB. and
industries. Frequently

play, are

universiin many
called

"simulations,’’ the games approx
imale in many respects the conditions of business management

Students playing the games

ly Rembrandt, provide the viewer
a chance to sec rather than com-

Center, rooms

Dr. Boot is the creator of a
game in the IBM library. He will

(whefel and hand-building), jewelry, leather and printing. Refresh-

stay

Open House period.

games.

Games are used at the University here in both the Schools of

Business Administration and Eneineering.

pare by being overcome by his or
their works.
The show, a definite understatement, is without senseless
manipulation and may be viewed
as works of individuality from
their and for their own being,
whether bad or not bad results
are present.
Nothing is given to or taken
from the prints or artists through
this collection of typical work
except the manner of display
which by happenstance may
frighten the viewer away or ask
him to lean into or away from
certain works.
The show will continue in
Room 231, Norton Hall, till June
22, open weekdays from 11 a m.
to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m.

Craft Shop Open House
Scheduled for June 29

classroom principles apply to the
real world.
"As in real life, the student
must learn to live with his decisions. What he does at one
point in the game may have
serious repercussions in the later
stages of play,” Dr. Boot says.

devote the first two days of his
to introducing games as
teaching devices to the conferees.
The last two days will be spent
playing various non-computer

than structures. Organisation becomes a function of decentralization and the establishment of new
principle status. Perhaps the
greatest ill that all universities
suffer is that either the right or
wrong people gain prestige and
power for the wrong reasons. The
second greatest ill is that the
principles of power distribution
are woefully inappropriate to the
aims of university education. The
forms of decision-making and
the seats of power are derived
from a corporate model. It is no

agement.

The few prints present a clear
picture of what these then contemporary and esoteric arts felt
exoteric enough to publicly have
Each print, when
reproduced.
viewed separately, dramatizes the
‘illness’ of the time through the
artist in specific particularities
automatically acquired while
spending lime in such environment and conditions during their
attempt to remain responsible
'creative' beings.
The brief encounter with such
'known' artists as Brueghel and
Cranach, the Elders, Durer, Ho-

learn the consequences of various decisions to understand how

The aims of university revolution are not that obscure. They
have to do with people more

wonder that those that seek and

Prints By Great Masters

Dr John C. G. Boot, professor
of management science in the
School of Business Administration. will participate in a conference at Stanford University
June 19-July 15. on new techniques in teaching economics.
Dr Boot will lecture during his
four day visit from July 9 to 12
on the use of management games
as teaching devices. Forty economics teachers from throughout
the country will attend the conference, which is sponsored by
the General Electric Corporation.
These games, most of which

lacklove. The tactics of fundamental change in the university
will come from the revolutionaries. Not all radicals are revolutionary in this sense. And certainly not all revolutionaries are
radical. The high strategists
among the radicals should be
entrusted with the tactics, therefore, and the organizational radicals should elucidate the ultimate goals. This does not imply
any real separation, merely the
best means of cooperation between basically different dispositions which might otherwise conflict or factionalize.

usually gain power act like, go
to, or come from corporate man

Review

Professor to Attend Conference

that order and chaos represent

opposite poles only to the naive,
or as Ginsberg calls them, the

The Norton Hall Creative Craft
7-9 will conduct
Open House activities on June 29.
from 1 to 4 p.m.
Demonstrations in the following crafts
will be presented: ceramics

ments will be served during the
The Creative Craft Center provides the program, facility and
professional staff for interested
students, faculty and staff members to work in ceramics, jewelry, enameling, silk screen, blockprinting and frame-making. All

projects are designed and executed by participants: technical
advice and assistance are con-

available.
Other special summer programs include a sandal making
workshop held each Wednesday
afternoon for six weeks starting
July 6. This workshop will run
during the afternoon hours from
2-4. A two-week student art exhibit will begin on August 15.
The Creative Craft Center
hours this summer are: Monday,
Wednesday, Friday from 11 a.m.
to 4 p.m. and Tuesday and Thursday from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. and
from 7-10 p.m.
stantly

A further generalization is that
the closer the university administrator is to the academic realm
of the institution, the less corporate his demeanor. The professor in charge of freshman programs is less “corporate” than
his department chairman. The
chairman is less corporate than
his dean, the dean less than the
administrative department head.
Then all distinction ceases.
The aim then is to decentralize administrative functions which
in any way effect the academic
aims so that they are more responsive to, and in fact, are
handled by, those in the academic realm. There should be no
such thing as a man who has the
power of a Vice President for
Business Affairs. The University
is safer under the threat of the
disunity of confederation than it
is under the threat of monolithic
centralization.
In terms of status, the rewards
of prestige and authority must
go to the wise, not to the men
of accomplishment, and to the
humane rather than the efficient,
and to the innovator, no matter
what his success, rather than the
conventional, no matter what his
success.

The road to the accomplish
ment of these goals will be mark
ed by many temporary structures,
many forms of disruption and de
struction, many shows of force,
many shifts in power, and a great
deal of quick change artistry
The radical and the radical revolutionary knows the idea behind
the cure, but hasn't the where
withal to do anything more than
attack the symptoms systematic
ally or chaotically until the sys-

tem falls under the assault or
adjusts until the cure is attained.
It makes no difference which, for
in either case, the university will

be reborn.
—I.D. CARDS—
Attention: Students registered
for the Fall semester.
Pictures for this coming year's
I.D. card will be taken in the
basement of Foster Hall through
out the summer. Bring the green
IBM card you received at regis
tration with you. Go now! Avoid
the September rush!

�Friday, Juna

24. 1966

SPECTRUM

Editorial (Comment
The game mentality of administration
simulates life in the name of efficiency and
collective potential of its constituency. The
primary reason why no large university has
yet produced a quality education lies with
•this simulation which has proven irrelevant
to all but administrators. Education cannot
be simulation; it must be relevant to the
lives of students and faculty. Class lists,
grades, course and credit hour requirements,
and numerous bureaucratic manipulations
have nothing to do with education. The absurdity of university life dawns quickly on
the perceptive mind which expects but does
not find relevance in university education as
it is now constituted. Rebellion becomes
both inevitable and necessary.
Paul Goodman has stated the student
dilemma in the following terms:
At present in the United States, students— middle-class youths
are the
major exploited class. (Negroes, small
farmers, the aged are rather out-caste
groups; their labor is not needed and
they are not wanted.) The labor of intelligent youth is needed and they are
accordingly subjected to tight scheduling, speedup, and other factory methods.
Then it is not surprising if they organize their C.I.O. It is frivolous to tell
them to go elsewhere if they don’t like
the rules, for they have no choice but
to go to college, and one factory is like
another.
For students to “organize their CIO” only
lends legitimacy to mass production educa—

.

.

PAG! PIVI

VISTA Program to Provide Work
In U.S. Poverty Areas This Summer

.

tion. Unless some meaningful and creative
(CPS)—T w o federal agencies
steps are taken immediately to make this this week announced
unique prouniversity’s education relevant to their lives, grams for vacationing college
the students may have to form an Edustudents.
cational Liberation Front.
Sargent Shriver, director of the
If this university wishes only to reap Office of Economic
Opportunity,
the fruits of righteousness in the cultural said that nearly 500 college stugame called corporate liberalism, it can dents will be sent to Appalachia
easily become “the Berkeley of the East.” this summer to bring reading,
writing, and community action
But if it is sincerely interested in attempting, programs
some of the poorest
for the first time, to make large-scale edu- counties intothe
nation.
cation meaningful it must cease its blatant
The students were recruited
emulation of the University of California through
the VISTA program and
system.
are the first to be signed up on
This university needs a radical adminis- a summer-only basis. The normal
stration (it may not be a contradiction in VISTA tour of duty is one year
with some volunteers signing up
terms( which realizes that its only legitimate for a
second year.
academic function lies as a catalyst for
The students, who will serve
experimentation. It is only through experi- from
June 15 to August 15, will
mentation that relevance is established.
be sent to 100 communities in the
To invoke the interim period between “mountain hollows” of Appalach
campuses or the transition from private to ia, Shriver said.
public function as an excuse for inaction
Shriver said that some of the
represents the height of irresponsibility. volunteers will help organize
community programs in towns
Neither of these changes precludes immedi"have not even learned how
ate and radical experimentation with uni- tothat take
the first
toward
versity education. The formation of new community action.’’ step
“legitimate channels” like the Task Force is
In another first-time federal
not enough; we have too many old ones.
program, the Office
of Education

The summer Spectrum hopes to function announced that it is hiring 100
student lawyers for the summer
as an illegitimate channel for a campusto investigate school desegregawide dialogue on what a university should tion complaints.
be. The first contribution may be found on
A spokesman for the Office of
page four. We hope others will participate Education said that
students were
either through letters or columns.
decided upon so that the agency
could put into the field the largest possible investigative force on
the smallest possible budget.
Faced with manpower shortages last year, the agency con-

NSA Conference to Yield Stress Analysis
(CPS)—The U.S. National Student Association plans to begin
by mid-summer a two-year program that will involve students,
faculty, and administrators in a
close analysis of the college experience—and just what’s missing
from it.

oughly integrated” of the NSA

efforts in education.
He said it “seeks to answer
the largest of the questions facing us as students today: How
do you define an education so
that it meets the needs of this
generalization? How can we make
the college experience a fully
valuable one?”

The program is an outgrowth
of NSA’s three-day conference on
student stress at Warrenton, Va.,
last fall. The stress conference
was financed by grants from the
National Institute of Mental
Health and the Danforth Foundation. Another NIMH grant has
made possible the two-year Campus Self-Studies Program, NSA
spokesmen said, in announcing
their plans.

The program will be run by a
coordinating staff in the NSA
national office and will directly
involve 16 “representative campuses” in the plans. In addition,
Sherburne said, another 100 campuses will develop similar programs with help from NSA.
On each campus about 100 students, faculty, and administrators, including the college president, would participate in the retreats where the “central focus
will be on eliminating unrewarding frustrations from the college
experience while developing a
new concept of what it should
be.”

The new program was disclosed
at a press conference in Washington this week at the same time
the official report on the stress
conference was released.

In announcing t h e program,
NSA President Philip Sherburne
termed it a “program to make
known the problems and the
needs” of the student—“the forgotten man in higher education.”
Sherburne said this program represents the broadest, most thor-

THE

NSA representatives said that
the American college campus has
become a largely irrelevant and
impersonal place and that the
discussions at the stress confer-

SPECTRU M
STEPHEN A. CRAFTS

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

JOANNE

BUSINESS MANAGER

LEEC&amp;NT

EDITORIAL BOARD

JULIE SULLIVAN

BILL SHERMAN

ALICE EDELMAN

SHELDON BERGMAN

JOCELYN HAILPERN

SUE WORTMAN

GINGER HOLCOMBE
FIRST CLASS HONOR

RATING

Sk
%

vu
v

PRESS

EDITORIAL

POLICY

IS

DETERMINED

BY THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

ence centered on these topics.
They suggested that students as
a group are more concerned with
the quality and relevance of their
list of student concerns—Vietnam, the draft, drugs and sex.

universities who attended
stress conference were:

the

—Giving students a voice in
making decisions that affect
them, ranging from evaluating
professors’ teaching abilities to
setting social rules and housing
regulations.
—Dropping grading from a significant number of college courses—pehaps for the whole freshman year—to encourage learning
for its own sake rather than competition for grades.
—Offering college credit for
“field work” in the Peace Corps,
poverty programs, civil rights activity, and the like.
—Encouraging more independent study at all levels of a college
education. The report recommended the kind of independent
work in which a student can
pursue his own strong academic
interest with guidance from pro-

fessors rather than the type

which allows a student to choose
one of several prearranged topics for study.

mer.

Seeley said a major target will
be to find out whether Negro
children in the South have really
been given a "free choice" of
attending a previously all-white
school. Some investigators also
will go to school districts in the
North.

Where investigators find that
are not working, school districts will be asked
to reopen registration or lake
other steps, Seeley said.
free choice plans

The student compliance officers
will also make recommendations
about faculty desegregation or the
need to close small, isolated
schools maintained solely for
Negro

students.

Seeley said that in addition to
examining records furnished by

the local school officials, the law
students will interview parents to
find out whether they have been
fully informed about desegregation plans.

The Johnny Cash Show
At Melody Fair

education than with any of the

Among the proposals of the
students from 33 colleges and

In addition to the students, the
office has hired 15 professors and
school officials to work on the
compliance staff. David S. Seeley,
assistant commissioner in charge
of the desegregation efforts, said
that the summer help from students and professors would mean
that the agency can field about
175 investigators during the sum-

A Review

topics that are thought to top the

The students suggested that
the American campus needed to
be radically reshaped in order
to provide a student with an
education that is relevant to the
“outside world,”

centrated on obtaining paper
compliances and was unable to
check out complaints against
school districts that had signed
the compliance form. In doing
this, the agency was heavily criticized by civil rights leaders for
failing to follow up complaints.

By

SHELDON H. BERGMAN

From the Southland of America has conic one of the well

springs of today’s popular music.

country and western
music and from it came “The
Nashville Sound” which led to
folk-rock and even influenced
the Beatles. Johnny Cash is considered one of its deities; right
up there with Hank Show. Ernest
Tubb, and Eddy Arnold. His mu
sic is straight from The Grand
Old Opry and it travels poorly.
Cash’s singing can best be
described as a loud monotone.
He plods through each song as if
It’s called

it

were

a

dirge. From

“Big

River” to "Rock Island Line,”
there was not one deviation from
his dull method of delivery. His
blunt style was perfect for one
number, “The Streets of Loredo.”
Unfortunately, he buried the
song along with the cowboy.
Mr. Cash’s attempts at humour
were heavy-handed. “Joe Bean"
was gallows humor as its worst
and his monologues were equally
deadly. The only soqg. that was
really funny was "The one on
the Right was on the Left" but
the lightness which this song de
serves was missing. His bar
monica playing in "Orange Bios
som Special” was an improvement over his singing; the notes
were distinct and clear.

The Statler Brothers nearly
succeeded in saving the show
Their humour is refreshing; it's
The Warrenlon report concludcountry but not corny. “Flowers
ed that besides an education more
on the Wall" was delightful and
relevant to the modern world,
their musical impressions were
there should be “more authentic
some of the finest I have ever
and personalized relationships beare the only male
tween students and faculty.” It heard They
group who can carry' off an imcalled for the revision of the
pression of the McGuire Sisters
campus community from a “nest one moment and then
ad lib with
of adversaries” to a “group of a thunderstorm the next. They
collaborators” of the teachers and blended
surprisingly well in
several love songs, although the
and the taught

tenor is a bit thin and the bass
tended to dominate the melody.
With more polish they could be
mistaken for the Four Preps with
a twang.
As for June Carter, "pure
country" is the perfect designation for her brand of music. She
has the harsh, shouting delivery
that was predominant in country
music twenty years ago. Her
humour is also a throwback to
that era: country slapstick. Only
“Cottonfields” was done well;
mainly because it is a number
that sounds best when it is delivered in a raucous manner. I
like banjo-picking to be clean
and crisp; hers wasn’t.

Waylon Jennings and his Wayarc modern country, The
Nashville Sound. His Waylors
were excellent because they used
the proper amount of backbeat
to season the country songs.
Only Jennings’ inability hampered them. He performed well
when he stuck to Marty Robbinstype ballads and country-rock but
his attempts to make "Norwegian
Wood" a country ballad was ludicrous. It is a tribute to Mr.
Lennon and Mr. McCartney that
the song survived at all. With
folk music, Jennings was almost
as bad. "Four Strong Winds” is
a soft ballad, not a plaintive
country love song. Waylon Jennings needed as much support as
he could get and his Waylors
were almost equal to the task.
lors

Western

New

York

is

not

western Tennessee ami Melody
Kair is not the "Grand Old
Opry,” This fact was vividly clear
at last night’s performance. Only
the Statler Brothers kept this
reviewer from leaving after
Jennings started rhapsodizing

about Arkansas.

�PAGE SIX

Friday, June 24, 1946

SPECTRUM

We Are Not

mm Eiti SLrman Lack of Plot Line Becomes An Asset

The most exciting aspect of summer movie-going in
Buffalo is Fred Keller’s annual film festival at the Circle-Art
Theatre. This summer Mr. Keller, who is one of the few
theatre owners in the country who cares about and is sensitive to the films he presents, is beginning the festival
with a week of Fellini/Antonioni films. These two directors
are the acknowledged giants of the Italian cinema, but there
is little common ground between them. Antonioni’s technique is that of the novelist; his films are slowly reflective
in pace, as discursive as an essay, and rich in density.
Fellini’s technique is that of a poet; he moves rapidly from
one perception to the next, structuring his films not by
logic but by his own intuitive sensibility. One might say
that Fellini’s films are inductive with urgent images and
fragments flashing brilliantly by on the screen and finally
expanding themselves to give an asymptotic view of the
nature of reality. Antonioni’s technique is deductive, and
all of his films begin with a thesis to be proven—the thesis
usually being that man’s angst is rooted in the breakdown
of what Martin Buber has called the “I-Thou” relationship.

By GINGER HOLCOMBE
It is with the “oh-so-proper”
accents of Mid-Victorian England
ringing delightfully in my ears
that I acclaim Theatre Outlook
Ltd.’s June 18 production of

Unfortunately, I find it necessary to quibble over the
choice of Fellini and Antonioni films which will be presented. Absent from the program are La Strada and Cabiria,
two early Fellini films, which, outside of 8V2 are still his Janet Crowder, an eminent Vicbest work. Absent also is Antonioni’s L'Aventurra, his best torian, stars in "We Are Not
Amused," shown last week in
film. One cannot possibly quibble, however, with the choice Baird
Hall.
of films to be presented during the first week in July,
following the Antonioni/Fellini retrospective.
Truffaut’s Shoot The Piano Player, surely one of cinema’s finest achievements, will be featured the first three
days in July. On the same program with the Truffaut
masterpiece is Alain Renais’ Muriel. If there is little common ground between Antonioni and Fellini, there is even
By GINGER HOLCOMBE
less between Trauffaut and his countryman Renais. Both
“It is not good to have hatred
are classified as leading members of the French nouvelle
disguished as pity, hatred disvague, but if one sees these two films it will be easy to
guised as love, or hatred dissee why the classification is not only misleading, but ulguised in any way. We cannot
timately worthless.
deal with that. Only when hatred

We Are Not Amused. Eric
Salmon and Janet Crowder, the
two eminent Victorians, brought
the era to life with the words of
that life and those times.
The absence of a standard
“plot line” or any device to purposefully call the attention to
its unity may have caused the
drama to seem incohesive to
some. Upon closer appraisal,
these “lacks” became assets, allownig a “free-association” selection of readings and scenes to
characterize the age more fully.
In the first part, for example,
the railroad controversy merges
into
Victorian literature by
means of a poem and letter by
Victorian “literati” (T. Baker and
Thomas Rowdier, D.D., respectively).
Beginning with a political and
statistical portrait of the midpoint of Victoria’s reign (18681869) the program continues,

sometimes seriously, often wittily, through a series of poems,
letters, journals, scenes, and
newspaper passages depicting the
pleasures and problems of Victorian England. Railroads, literature, theatre, moral and immoral,
child labor, capital punishment,
the place of women, Victorian
fun, and the end of Victoria’s
reign were all treated appropriately and with a delicate blend
of satire and sadness, often accentuated by the gestures and
faces of Mr. Salmon and Miss
Crowder. Miss Crowder’s saccharine rendition of “The Old
Armchair,” Mr. Salmon’s wonderful singing and mugging of
“Samuel Hall,” and their joint
performance in the scene from
“The False Step” by Arthur Matthison were highlights of the

performance.
Let it not be forgotten that
Mr. Salmon has directed himself
and Miss Crowder in this produc-

tion. His satirical bent and talent
for comedy are well reflected in
this work.
In short, we were indeed
amused.

Interview

A. J. Doyle: 'Quislings of Liberte’

One Eyed Jacks and The Naked Prey, to be shown on
July 4 and 5, are good examples of actors turned directors,
directing themselves. One Eyed Jacks is a Western in the
best tradition of the often misunderstood genre. Not only
does it stand with The Gunfighter, Last Stage To Thunder
Rock, Ride The High Country, and a few others as one of
the best Westerns, but it is the last film Brando acted in
before his acting turned into what can only be described
as unconscious self-parody. The Naked Prey is a “sleeper”
which, when it played this spring at the Bailey Theatre for
a week, went virtually unnoticed. Cornel Wilde, who left
Hollywood disgusted after being type-cast for so many years,
proves in this film, his first directorial attempt, that his
talent is large. The photography in the film is superb—by
itself worth the price of admission. Both films do, however,
overreach themselves, but their scope is so large, and the
good moments come so often, that the program is outstanding.
Black Orpheus is featured at the end of the first week
in July. It is trite to speak of a film as “beautiful” but there
is really no other word to describe this one. Since the
Circle-Art is showing well over fifty films this summer, it
is impossible to review any of the programs adequately.
No film is showing for more than three days. I would
suggest that all movie-heads go down to the Circle-Art and
pick up a brochure of what is being featured this summer.
Later on this summer, there will be a Godard festival,
a Bogart/Belmondo festival, and a French comedy week.
If it weren’t for Fred Keller’s commitment to cinema, his
insistence that the Circle-Art show only quality films, worthwhile cinema in Buffalo over the past four years would have
been almost non-existent. The theatre deserves support,
especially from the University community, the largest potential movie-going audience in the area.

is recognized for what it is and
dealt with accordingly can it be
used as a constructive (or instructive) force.” Out of context,
this sounds like a propaganda
manifesto. Actually, its focus is
the hypocrisy of that philosophy
of lies against which Mr. D. J.
Doyle cries out in his play “The
Quislings of Liberte,” which is
beginning its run in Baird Hall
tonight.

Mr. Doyle expects and deserves honesty. He has taken the
time to be deeply concerned with
the morality of the hypocrisy

which he has seen around him.
In his play he uses hatred as an
instructive and destructive force
in the formation of youth. He
has observed the “hypocritical
ethic,” the lies, disguises, and
false images constantly created
in men and passed along to their
children, and he protests against
it. The powerful portrayal of his
almost allegorical characters reaffirms and projects his beliefs,
and shows a portion of this man’s
own dynamic attention.
Mr. Doyle is one of those fortunate playwrights who can sit
down and write, losing all sense
of time in the process of crea-

tion. He finds his materials and
the flavor of his dialogue in
people and places around him.
He keeps notebooks in which he
stores possible future lines,

SPECTRUM WANTS
Now Earn

EXTRA CASH
Selling Ads for

The SPECTRUM
Work on the

Dr. Kaiser Clarifies Policies
SPECTRUM
Of Grade-Rank Distribution Photography Staff
To clarify University policy
concerning student academic rec-

ords. Admissions and Records

Director Dr. A. L. Kaiser restated
what has been and continues to
be that policy: “(1) the Office
of Admissions and Records ha.
never and will not release grades
to any person or agency except
at the request of the student; the
Selective Service System has
never, requested grades; (2) the
Office of Admissions and Records
has not and will not release rank
in class to the local Selective

Service Board except at the specific request of the student; (3)
the filing of a Selective Service
Form 109, or 103 (for graduate
students) is entirely voluntary
It is the intention of the
Admissions and Records Office to
cooperate with students by complying with their requests to report their status to their local
boards and to assist the student
in this way and at those times
which best protect his interests
and satisfy the requirements of
local boards for information.”

with full use of Darkroom
Facilities and Equipment

...

Inquire Room 355
Norton or Call

831-3610

speeches, and bits of character
to give his work more realism.
He is a living playwright, in the
sense of having realized himself and his work while living
and experiencing fully.
Though this is Mr. Doyle’s first
produced play, it is not the only
product of his prolific mind.
Once you have experienced the
timeless power of “The Quislings
of Liberte,” you like myself, will
look forward to the production

of the rest of his works.

Registration for the Second
Summer Session will take place
Monday, June 27, from 8 to 11
a.m., in Clark Gymnasium.

YOU!

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                    <text>FULBRIGHT
LECTURESHIPS

|

STATE

FURNAS'
_

STATEMENT

I

p—

9)

(See

UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

VOLUME 16

I BWMBB

(See Page 11)

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, MAY 10, 1966

NO. 46

FURNAS REJECTS GOOD FAITH PROPOSAL;
CAMPUS WAITS FOR THURSDAY MEETING
President Furnas yesterday
agreed to accept the first two
proposals offered him by the student-faculty movement. He said
the third proposal was "impossible" to comply with at this lime.
The first two proposals asked
that representatives to the Task
Force be elected by their respective bodies rather than appointed
by Pres, Furnas. The third proposal asked evidence of "good
faith" from the administration by
an agreement that the question
of Selective Service exams on
campus be decided by the executive committee of the Faculty
Senate.
Students and faculty members
have disbanded their picket until
Thursday.
A meeting has been called for
on Thursday evening, May 12th
by members of the Student Sen-

Students-Faculty
Rally Early Monday
To Define Demands
A mass meeting of The Movement convened Monday morning,
May 9, at 7 a.m. to consider action to be taken, since it was felt

jthat the ad hoc committee which

met with President Furnas Saturday, May 7, made “no concessions” to proposals offered to the
administration at that time.
At this meeting the following
resolution was passed:

Be it resolved that
1. a picket line be set up at
Hayes Hall
2. the following negotiating delegation go to the administration
to present the three proposals
(3, 4, 5) and receive satisfaction
on their proposals—Peter Ruben,
Diane Garvey, Sue Orlofski, Steve
Crafts, Larry Faulkner, Ann Marie
Leonard, Fred Ostorof, Ed Rostin,
Jeremy Taylor, Clinton Deveaux,
Dr. Arthur Kahn, Dr. Norman
Lazarus, Dr. Sidney Wilhelm, Mr.
Bill Merrill
3. the faculty members of the
Task Force committee be properly elected by their senate and
from the entire faculty.
4. the student members of the
Task Force be properly elected
by their two governing bodies
(the Student Senate and the Graduate Student Association), and
from among all students.

ate. the

Monday morning Larry Faulknar announced
Dr. Kahn is in background.

5. the administration show its
determination to alter significantly its power of final decisions,
by the President’s specifically
designating the power of decision
on the administration of the Selective Service Examination on
campus to the Executive Committee of the Faculty Senate, after
its consultation with all interested bodies.

unofficial agreement.

|r;_

In Furnas' Office
Viewed Proposals,
Passed Resolution
5

A meeting was called Saturday,
May 7, at 3 p.m. in President
Furnas' office to discuss proposals sent to the President by David
Edelman, Jeremy Taylor and the

•V/
-j.

.

Art Department
&amp;

American Association of Univer-

sity Professors, Buffalo chapter.
Present at this meeting were

Faculty

President Furnas, Assitant to the
President Wesley Rowland, the
president and treasurer of the
Graduate Student Association, the
president and vice-president of
the Student Association, the Executive Committee of the Faculty
Senate, Dean of Students Richard
Siggelkow, and Deans from various schools of the university.
By unanimous vote, the following statement of the resolutions of the body were adopted:

Okay Interim Move
Art students and Art Department faculty have met on two
recent occasions to discuss conditions entailed in the projected
move of the Art Department to
an interim campus.
A vote was taken at the meetings to determine the group's
opinion of the move. The vote
received was: in favor of the
move, 58; opposed, 2; qualified
“for the move”, 1; no opinion,
1; according to Art Department
Chairman Philip Elliot.
At a Student Senate meeting
Wednesday, April 20, a proposal
to investigate alternatives to the
planned campus was passed. At
this meeting a petition of the art
students expressing their disapproval of being divorced from
the main campus and of being
moved to the interim campus was
accepted.

tion and four members of "The
Movement."
President Furnas' statement
was released by the administration at 4:30 p.m. yesterday afternoon. Dr. Furnas was in Los Angeles at the time.
Earlier in the day, spokesmen
for the sludent-faeulty movement
met with administration members
to present their demands. (See
story: Monday Meeting). At the
end of that meeting members of
the studenbfaculty movement
and administration members announced that all three proposals
had been accepted, but that official confirmation was needed
from Pres. Furnas.
The student-faculty movement
was represented by Dr. Arthur
Kahn, Stephen Krafts and Larry
Faulkner.

CLIFFORD C. FURNAS

Senate Meeting
Sunday Evening

Demands Proof
Of 'Good Faith'
The proposal passed at the
special meeting of the Student
Senate called by President Clinton Devcaux Sunday night is as
follows:
Whereas, students and faculty
have a legitimate right to participate in policy formulation in an
academic community; and
Whereat, channels should never
be closed for student and faculty
initiation of changes in administrative decision; and
Whereat, the administration of
this University hasby

In regard to the second resolution, it was decided by the assembled body that if the delegation sent to the administration
did not receive “satisfaction on
their proposals” a sit-in would be
staged inside Hayes Hall.

Students

Graduate Association, the

Faculty Senate, the Administra-

'Jf

Proposal 1—

Whereas this ad hoc committee

recognizes legitimate concerns
felt by students and faculty in the
university with respect to their
participation in the formulation
of academic policy, and

Whereas such concerns relate

to the immediate need which this
committee recognizes of opening
and maintaining a dialogue among
students, faculty and administra-

Rick Saltar

"th.

tion groups.

•*

—Photo by RuMaoll Goldborg

(Cont’d on Pg. 3)

its endorse-

ment of a concrete set of proposals formulated Saturday by an ad
hoc committee revised a previously indicated position that discussion has been

closed, both on
the issue of administering the
Selective Service Examination on
this campus and on the issue of
increased student involvement in
University policy determination:
Therefore, be it resolved that
the Student Senate of SUNYAB
accept as a reasonable first step
toward meaningful structural
changes in the University the set
resolutions passed by the ad hoc
committee, but be it further resolved that the Student Senate
executive committee be instructed to attend the meeting with
Dr. Furnas; Be it further resolved that the Student Senate propose that the appointed faculty
members serve on the task force

committee until

representatives

may be properly elected by and

from the faculty.
Tho Sonata urges that as an

indication of Iha administration's

determination to altar significantly its power of final decision, tho
President of the University designate the power of decision of
the administration of tho Selective Service Examination on tho
campus to the executive committee of tho University Senate (tho
Faculty Senate) upon consultation
with tho executives committees
of the Student Association and
tho Graduate Student Association.
(Cont’d on Pg. 3)

�t

M 0 A T M 1

1D&lt;«)

i*?( .1

«

Tuesday, May 10, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

'Buff. Action Group'
To Fight Poverty
In Buffalo Ghetto
‘Equal Employment
For Negro’s Sought

*

Adult Education
Program Starts

Slum Housing
Prime Target

Students from UB, steelworkers, civil rights workers and organizers have joined forces to set
up a civil rights oriented neigh-

borhood association in Buffalo’s
lower east side. The Buffalo Action Group (BAG) is located at

385 Broadway near Pratt.

Two months ago a pilot proj-

ect began with two full time or-

ganizers, I/eon Phipps, forme-ly

of the Student Non Violent Coordinating Committee’s Mississippi
project, and Victor Aronow, a
Syracuse University graduate student associated with a number
of community projects in the
North. Working with them are
Philip Cook, an MFC student and

Buffalo steelworker; John Lewis,
a resident of the area; and a
number of local residents, high
school and junior high school

r

V

Y

students.

Founded in late February, the
first months were spent in getting to know the people in the
neighborhood and in becoming
familiar with similar groups in
the neighborhood and the relevant city agencies and in studying first hand the conditions in
the neighborhood.
“The area we are working in
is made up of parts of census
tracts 25 and 14, two of the poorest in the city," said Mr. Aronow,

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a project spokesman. “Unemployment is high—well over 20%—
and public welfare runs about
222 per thousand.”
BAG is working in the area of
the ghetto south of Humboldt
Parkway and north of the Ellicott Redevelopment Area. “About
10 thousand people live here in

very crowded conditions. The
area is about 94% Negro. Most
of the whites live in the east
and west fringe areas.
Current activities at the Buffalo Action Group center around
mer months Active support is
being given to the NAACP’s attempt to secure equal employment opportunities for Negroes
by participating in that organization's action at Ray Weil Chevrolet. BAG members regularly
join these demonstrations and
distribute civil rights information in the community as a part
of their attempt to create a politically conscious and informed
community.
A preliminary housing survey
of the projects area turned up
at least 50 rundown, burned out
or abandoned houses in need of
demolition and over 100 dilapi-

Most of BAG’S programs will
begin this summer. One is a work

club program.
“Several weeks ago some kids
in the neighborhood approached
us with a plan to set up work
clubs. Many of the kids in our
neighborhood don't go to school;
those who do will soon be out for
the summer. Jobs for teenagers,
especially Negroes, are scarce,”
explained Mr. Aronow. “We propose to set up several work clubs
on a cooperative basis in old
garages, or

vacant buildings,

where kids and adults can come
and make things.”
An adult education program
and high school tutorial is planned to begin as soon as the closing of local colleges releases students for the summer. Carol Vogt,
a North Tonawanda High School

dent, is slated to head the pro-

gram.

“Lots of folks have come up
here from the South. They maybe
never could read too well. Here
they got menial jobs or maybe
no job at al. And they just forgot
how to read and write or maybe
they never could,” explained Mr.
Phipps.
At an organizational and planning meeting of the BAG held
May 3 a housing program was
outlined. It outlines a six step
program to force landlords to fix
up substandard housing while
freezing rents. The initial housing survey will be followed up

The most important program
will of course be the building of
the neighborhood association itself. “This is entirely in the hands
of the neighborhood people themselves," said Mr Aronow, declining to speculate on the exact nature of the neighborhood group’s
direct action programs. “I can be
certain that BAG will continue to
support the efforts of the civil
rights movement in Buffalo.”
The interview took place in the
BAG’S crowded staff apartment
at 148 Archie Street, a block from
the BAG office. A steady flow of
neighborhood people moved in
and out throughout the interview.
In the background the record
player repeated the project’s favorite song, James Brown’s “Buffalo has got a Brand New BAG.”
Each bedroom wall bears the
inscription, “WE SHALL OVERCOME.” People wore buttons
reading, “Buffalo Action Group
FREEDOM NOW” or more succinctly, “NOW.”
Leon Phipps said, “This is going
to be a long summer and a warm
winter too. We are going to make
it hot to bring equality and justice to the people of Buffalo.
Many people thing that the Negroes in the North are free, but
the only difference between Buffalo and Mississippi is that Missisippi is down South and Buffalo is up South.
“The people in the neighborhood are upset. They say how
are you going to get it (freedom)
in Vietnam if you can’t get it
in the Buffalo slums? This unrest
must be used for constructive
change. I am non-violent because
I think that it is the only way
that will work.”

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�Tuesday, May 10, 1966

f

Saturday's Events
(Confd

from P.

1)

Now therefore this ad hoc committee recommends that the President name a Special Task Force
committee whose mandate shall
be:
1. to inquire into and make
proposals with respect to establishing an open and continual
dialogue among such groups:
2. to make such proposals as
they deem appropriate regarding
organizational meetings for participation by these groups in the
formulation of educational policy
in the university.

,

Proposal 2—
In response to Resolution #1.
the President has appointed the
following committee; and direct-

ed that three additional student
members be added to the com-

mittee—namely, two undergraduate students to be selected by
the Student Senate and one graduate student to be selected by
the Graduate Student Associa-

tion;
Professor Ebert, Chairman;
Professor Sapp, Professor Murray, Professor Hunt, Mr. Deveaux,
Dr. Lazarus, total 10 (ten).
Action 3—
The ad hoc committee recommended that the Faculty Senate
Executive Commitee meet in
special session to consider immediately the matter of holding
the Selective Service test on the
SUNY at Buffalo campus.
Proposal 4—
At a special meeting of the
Executive Committee of the University Faculty Senate, held at
5:25 p.m., May 7, 1966, in the
Office of the President, called
by President Furnas to consider
the matter of holding the Selec-

Sunday Night...
(Cont’d from P. 1)

Be it resolved that:
1. the Senate declare eligibility
for its two nominations to the
above mentioned task force to be
open to all undergraduate students and that these two positions be temporarily filled from
the Student Senate, and urge the
Graduate Student Association to
open its appointment to all graduate students.
2. the Senate urge that all meetings of this task force be open
to participation by all members
of the University community.
At the meeting’s opening, President Clinton Deveaux stated that
the reason tor the meeting was to
“make clear” to the Senate what’s
been happening. R’s up to the
Senate how to act or not act.”
When asked the purpose of the
ad hoc committee which had been
called by President Furnas Saturday, he explained that the committee was “to advise President
Furnas as to what should be done
in regard to what was at the time
the present situation.”

.

.

.

live Service examination on the
university campus, the President
advised the Executive Committee
that the matter as to the holding
of the test on campus was not
necesarily a closed one. Thereupon. the Executive Committee
recommended that the President,
at the earliest possible opportunity, meet in joint session with
and consult with the Executive
Committee of the Graduate Student Association in order to review the university's decision in
regard to this matter. The President concurred with this resolution.
Proposal 5
The ad hoc committee then
considered a student petition demanding immediate and positive
action by the President changing
cedures, and structure by six p.m.
Sunday. The demand was rejected.
When the meeting adjourned.
President Furnas commented: “It
was a good and fruitful meeting.”
Dean of Students Richard Siggelkow said: “I think it is a good
solid statement.”
At 7 p.m. the Executive Committee of The Movement met with
Clinton Deveaux and Dean Siggelkow to consider the above
statement. Following this meeting, Mr. Larry Faulkner of the
Executive Committee of The
Movement addressed a general
meeting of The Movement. He
reported that the Executive Committee felt the statement made
“no concession” to the ultimatum
offered by The Movement. Therefore, it was agreed by the general
body that the sit-in scheduled
for Monday morning at 7:45 in
Hayes Hall would be carried out
as planned.
Mr. Deveaux stated that the
task force committee is to “present all plans to Dr. Furnas and
recommend one after careful deliberation on all issues. The task
force's decision is not binding.
“Recommendations may ask for
Graduate Student Association.

The Faculty Senate and Student
Senate changes, maybe even the
University Council. University
Council, whose members are appointed by the Governor, can
change the fundamental structure
of the President's office.”
Senator Marion Michaels believed the President could not
accept the demands made of him
by The Movement because.
“Whether the President is responsive to the students can be
decided by the President, but a
written delineation of powers
would mean approval of University Council.”
Senator Ellen Cardone hoped
that as a “show of good faith on
the administration’s part,” President Furnas would designate the
power of final decision on the
administration of the Selective
Service Exam on campus to the
Faculty Senate.

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SPECTRUM

Editorial Comment

.

.

THE PROBLEMS OF VICTORY

By STEPHEN KRAFTS

The amicable meeting between the faculty and administrators acting in the absence of President Furnas
and the negotiating committee elected by the mass meeting Monday morning resulted in averting the projected
“sit-in” and in the words of Task Force Committee Chairman Dr. Charles Ebert, “took the first step" toward
significant university reform.
This unquestionable victory for the “movement” sets
the stage for even more dramatic achievements in academic reform—but it also raises the sticky problem of
how the concerns that coalesced in the three mass meetings and the demonstrations will be articulated. It is
obvious that the Graduate Faculty Committee on the
Selective Service no longer represents the. constituency
of the university reform movement, yet no other bodies
other than the institutional channels of student and faculty government presently exist to articulate those grievances, and it is also obvious that those “legitimate” are
inadequate, since the mass meetings were called despite
their existence.

academic reform; or, the entire political structure of the
university could be so altered as a result of the Task
Force report both of these would become irrelevant, and
the university might move into an era of “community
government” such as has been successfully instituted on
other major campuses in this country.

In any case, the situation may be supposed to have
entered a new phase of collective bargaining and political
“in-fighting”. The skills required to manipulate this
kind of situation are substantially different from the
skills reouired to raise the issue in the first place. The
tactics of mass meetings and vocal demonstrations must
give way to the tactics of rhetoric rationale and compromise. It may be hoped that the “movement” is capable of providing these skills as well, for if they are not,
then all this may have been in vain.
It should also he remembered that this present state
of flexibility and dialogue was brought about in jjreat
measure through the pressure of massive action. If that
threat is removed the whole ipiestion of meaningful reform may slip into a beaureacratic &lt;|iiairmire and sink
slowly from view. This must not be allowed to happen.
The demonstrators have won the first battle—but they
have yet to win the war.

THE

SPECTRUM

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Tuesday, May 10, 1966

Cacotopia and Eutopia

.

Several alternatives are possible: The Student Senate, the Graduate Student Association, and the Faculty
Senate may rise to the occasion and become means of
articulating the legitimate demands for reform; a new,
“non-institutional” organization could be created from
the constituency of the mass meetings and the members
of the GFCSS who originally articulated the goal of

&gt;

The university which once prided itself on its socially abrasive
The selective service examinainfluences has allowed expedition to be administered May 14, ency to become its modus operand). (Expediency is here defined
21 and JGrie 3,' interpreted as an
encroachment upon academic
as subordination of moral prinfreedom, assumes that the latter
ciple for the sake of facilitating
exists. The exam, like the loyalty an end to purpose.)
oaths, are but the most blatant
Where the university used to
and concrete extension of governbe dedicated to turning out critmental control.
ically acute men, it now strives to
Questions of academic freedom create socially malleable constituencies. The university has known
lend to center on these actually
sin and rather than being reminor issues. Academic freedomniks concentrate on Feinberg pulsed, it has gloriously grovelled
around government agencies for
oaths as multimillion dollar fed
contracts by which to enhance its
oral subsidies and contracts quietimage in the cultural game called
ly turn the university into a handmaiden of industry (Clark Kerr’s corporate liberalism.
term), and, therefore, of the milIn all this the student means
itary which as we all know repnothing. He has the choice beresents the government. To fight
tween further alienation and subloyalty oaths becomes as absurd,
mission. Submission or expediency
in this context, as agitating in the
rpquires certain degrading but
South for voting rights to choose
generally minimal grovellings.
between two racists.
Further alienation or rebellion
It should not be surprising to
(non-expediency) becomes a new
anyone that this university has
form of civil disobedience (i.e„
made its facilities available to the living as one wants).
Selective Service, its bedfellow.
Making
university
facilities
Nor can it be surprising that Presavailable to the Selective Service
ident Furnas should be instrulike the war in Vietnam, has a
mental in bringing about this
tinge of authoritarian arbitrariarrangement. His claims to acaness to it. In neither case are the
demic detachment include a stint people involved consulted regardas Undersecretary of Defense and
ing something which affects their
his present position as a member personal lives.
of the Board of Directors of the
So now we have an encroach.Marine JJidland Trust Company. ment or rather an extension; The

Selective Service examinations.
One becomes innured to the totalitarian aspects of conscription and
expediently enters his requests
for student deferment, guilty perhaps by dint of his middle-class
status of exemption while the
poor and ignorant fight the wars
of corporate liberalism. It becomes expedient to play the game
with the system as the university
has done. The student, however,
does not stand to profit thereby.
I do not pretend to be a moral
man—I am not even sure what
the term means. I find myself
constantly motivated by expediency as a matter of survival, but
I dubiously pride myself with
knowing that it is not my life
that I am leading. I am a wretched
pawn.
I had originally planned

to take
the Selective Service examination
and score my 80 or whatever,
even though I oppose the war in
Vietnam and am afriad to die. I
could thereby put off the ultimate
confrontation with a government
I detest yet at whose feet I grovel.
Yet even pawns can become
kings for a day. Sometimes an indefinable moral sense breaks
through my crust of expediency,
a second childhood for a man on
moral medicare. I shall not take
their bloody test. “There is some
shit,” wrote e e Cummings, “I
will not eat.”

oCetterA to the Editor
Attack On
Abortion
TO THE EDITOR:

Mr. Callan needn’t worry about
the onslaught of letters written
in reaction to his human and logical view on abortion. Two things
come to mind: (1) Why is it always the most worn-out wheel
on a cart which makes the most
noise? Apparently, the “bourgeoisie” (how nice to be able to
pigeon-hole human individuals)

are too complacent or ignorant
to think of speaking up. (2) Unfortunately, Mr. Callan chose to
write on abortion in a political
column. What in blazes has being
moral, or being immoral, which
is the thing to be in our brave
new world, have to do with being
on the left, or on the right, or
in the middle, or in Lapland?

The atmosphere in Messers.
McCubbin’s and Gross’ letters reappears and is amplified in Miss
Shapiro’s reaction to Mr. Callao's column.
The incredible
hodge-podge of emotion, illogic
and irrelevance that runs through
her letter has become a trademark of this newspaper There
is no hope of persuading Miss
Shapiro and friends. Nowadays,
one is convinced by an argument only for what he already
believes, which makes for intransigent extremism. However,
some points which have been misintrepreted should be touched
upon.

Abortion, which is the expul
sion of a nonviable fetus, that is,
one too young to live outside
the womb, has been considered
together with infanticide, which is
the direct killing of a child
within the womb, by cutting,
crushing, or craniotomy. Abortion
is murder because it is direct
killing and no mere exposure of
the child to danger.
Soldiers who are sent to battle can at least defend themselves. By abortion a child is
taken from the only place where
it can live and put in a place
where it cannot live; there is no
more efficient way of killing a
person than this.
When does the fetus become a
human being? We cannot use
probabilism here. We must not
kill what is probably a human
being. Just as we may not bury
a man if he is only probably
dead, since he is also probably

alive, so we may not kill a fetus
if it is only probably non-human,
since it is also probably human.
As for using abortion to abtain relief from the burden of
rearing an illegitimate child, or
one too many (what’s the matter,
no more advocates of birth control?), murder is no solution to
previous loss of self (of other-

deferred.
The draft boards are going to
use the test as a criteria for
drafting men no matter who gives
the test. Therefore the university is helping the student by
making it easier to take the
test. The administration has not
turned the university into a “procurement agency for the miliwise) control.
tary.”
The dedication of the anti-reThe procurement agency is the
actionaries is admirable, and inlocal draft board which makes
deed, in certain fields. It would little differentation as to where
be nice if, keeping that dediit is going to procure men. Those
cation, some of the bitterness in industry and agriculture can
would give way to a sense of
get a deferment similar to an
humor. Perhaps Miss Shapiro educational deferment. My brothwould feel better about the whole
er, an electrical technician, has
thing if she had been aborted.
a 2-A classification. A deferment
Then she would have no worries for essential skills. A friend was
at all. Personally, I would feel
legally declared a conscientious
terrible if I had been aborted .,. objector. He is now serving as a
Florian Perini
medic in Germany. They draft
college graduates also, ask some
of the seniors.
The draft in its present form
Campus
may not be here to stay, but until something else comes along,
TO THE EDITOR;
every male 18 and over will
In your editorial of May 3,
have to face it at some time,
1966, you stated, “the administraeducational deferment or not.
tion has turned the university
. . . into a procurement agency
I am glad that the GFCSS is
for the military—and it has done
making a “whisper of protest”
so without a whisper of protest.”
about the draft procedures, but a
In my mind this is a false
“roar of constructive criticism”
actualization. I agree that stuis needed. And the administradents of the university should be tion could show a little more
knowledge of happenings involvexempt from military sendee,
ing the university.
but with qualifications.
Clear statements of policies in
First I would like to state
local areas and reasons for such
whether the student believe he
has an obligation to serve his policies would help develop a
country in military service, or mutually satisfactory relationship
does not, is irrelevant here. The between the administration and
bare fact is that the draft is a the students and faculty.
Donald L. Walter
legally functioning part of our
society. Every male has to face
that fact.
Disgusted
Second, registration in the university is not a continual right
Dept.
of the student once he has begun
school. It is a privilege. Every
TO THE EDITOR
privilege has a responsibility connected to it that must be met
I expect to graduate in May—to maintain the privilege.
but beside having a lowered tuThe student’s responsibility is ition this is the first good thing
to maintain the grades necesthat has happened to me at
sary to make satisfactory progSUNYAB!
ress through the university. In
Here is the plight of the typfact, it is a privilege to attend
ical senior—as a History major,
college, not the right of every I am in the new colloquim which
high school graduate.
requires a great deal of work.
The draft test is a means for In addition. I have comprehenthose having difficulty fulfill- sives on May 5. Doesn’t the
ing their responsibility, putting chairman of the department reathem in a precarious position, to lize that a student has enough
maintain the privilege of attendto do without studying for this
ing the university, thereby being
(Confd on Pg. 10)

Selective Service
And
Test

Scores Hist.

Senior

�Tuesday, May 10, 1966

PACE PIVI

SPECTRUM

*'jT

Draftee Falls From Third Floor
Of Selectice Service Building
By J. MARK LONO
(CPS)

Kelly Services offers temporary working opportunities designed for you and your specific needs. Kelly Services is

located in 184 cities, so there will be work wherever you

happen to be. And you'll be paid top rates. Save money
for tuition, books, clothes, travel, or just plain fun. Here
are some of the jobs you can have this summer:
KELLY GIRL

Typing
Stenographic
Secretarial
Clerical
Tabulating

KELLY MARKETING
Demonstrating
Telemarketing
Mystery shopping
Canvassing
Survey-taking

KELLY LABOR

KELLY TECHNICAL

Truck driving

Layout
Designing

Inspection assembly
Machine operation
Stock work

Drafting

Illustrating
Programming
Surveying

Lumber work
General labor

Work when you want to! Where you want to in any one of
the 184 cities where Kelly Services is located. Visit the
Kelly offices near your campus or write to the Kelly office
in your own hometown.
(Equal Opportunity Employer)

I

I

IV LLJ

Joseph C. Didinger was a bright
yo'ing man married to a beautiful,
alert girl. Last December he was
busy readying his 45-foot, twomrsted yawl for a proposed sailing venture to the West Indies.
"5arly this January. Joseph Didinjer was the subject of an official U. S. Army statement:
"At approximately 9:30 a.m.
on January 4. 1966. Joseph Didinger. a pre-inductee from Thornberry Township. Pa., fell from
a window of an unoccupied office on the third floor of the
armed forces examining and entrace station. Boston Army Base.
He was refedred from pre-induction by Somerville Selective Service Board 22 and was one of 266
pre-inductees undergoing physi-

cal examinations."

Didinger was 22. He was a hardworking man with varied interests. He was in the Merchant
Marine: he built boats: he was a
garage mechanic. And for two
years he worked in the rare
books section of the University
of Pennsylvania library.
He attended Pennsylvania State
University but he had stayed
there only a year. His father, a
Philadelphia architect who himself was graduated from Penn
State, explained why:
"The place is too big now.
much bigger than in my days, and
I think my son asked his professors loo many questions. He was
fascinated by logic and when he
was in high school he used to
take special evening classes in
the subject. He was always
searching for truth. He asked a
lot of questions."

It is no longer a secret that
colleges have problems with
drugs, sex, and thievery. The
word is now also getting out

that students, many students,
have serious emotional problems,

and that some of them end in
suicide.
Suicide is the second greatest
cause of death among American
male college students. A survey
of 209 deaths occuring at Yale
University between 1920 and 1955
showed that 92 students had died
in accidents and 25 had committed suicide.
The belief that only introverts
are suicide-prone was dispelled
at Yale—10 of the 25 held student offices, six were athletes,
and 10 belonged to fraternities.

(Cont’d on Pg. 10)

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In 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th,
and 5th.
The Remington- 200 Selectro Shaver is a new
model. Different from anything you've used
before. It has a dial with 5 positions that lets
you shift over all the different parts of your face

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In 1st, you get a smoother
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In 2nd, you can knock off
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In 3rd. you get this wild
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over your cheek No burn.

By

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Student Suicide
Is On Upswing
On College Campus

Doo

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yet rugged as an old hound dog.
Salty Dog. the original all cotton
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You couldn’t get straighter
sideburns at the barber’s.

�PAGE SIX

SPECTRUM

Tuesday, May 10, 1966

Yesterday, you may have had a reason
for missing a good, nourishing breakfast.
Today, you don’t.

No
in

-mak
that’s to

Each glass delivers as much protein as two eggs,
QQ as much mineral nourishment as two strips of
crisp bacon,
more energy than two slices of buttered toast,
and even Vitamin C-the
juice
orange
It comes in a lot of great flavors, too. Look forthem in your cereal section.

�Tuesday, May 10; T9M

iPiCTRUM

Lecture on China Today

Maud Russell, former social
worker and resident of China
for 26 years, will speak on “Peoples’ China Today." Tuesday, May
17 at 8 p.m. in the Conference
Theater. The lecture will be followed by a Chinese documentary

film, “Glorious Festival," commemorating the 15th anniversary
of the Chinese Revolution.
Miss Russell, publisher of the
Far East Reporter, resided in
China from 1917 to 1943. spanning the beginning of China's
popular movements and including
five of the war-time years in far

'Free Improvisational Music
Featured at Baird May 10
Three ensembles of composerperformers will offer a program
of free emprovisational music
on May 10th, 8:30 p.m, in Baird
Hall, Sun Ra, Albert Ayler,
Giuseppi Logan and their groups
will play original works that have
been heard previously only via

Try-outs for Play
Start May 12-13 Newport Jazz Festival
summer
Scheduled June 20-24
western provinces.

Try-out for the first play of the
season, Quislings of Liberte, by D. J. Doyle, will be held
on .the stage of Baird Hall from
7 to 10 Thurdsay and Friday, May
12 and 13. This is the first of two
original plays which will be produced in the summer sessions.
The casting is open to all interested students, faculty, or local

residents. If anyone interested in
reading for the play cannot attend the try-outs in Baird, they
should contact Dr. William S. E.
Coleman, 831-2045, for a private
audition.
The proluction opens on Friday,
Juen 24, 1966, for a two week-end
run. Rehearsals will be arranged
when the production is cast.

Featuring folk artists from the
U. S., Canada, and the British
Isles, the Newport Folk Festival
will be held July 21 to 24 in
Newport, Rhode Island.

In addition to four days of
evening concerts and daytime
workshops, the Newport Foundaof Directors

tion Board

have

designated Wednesday, July 20,
as a pre-festival day for children.
Oscar Brand has organized the
children’s day at which Theodore
Bikel, Judy Collins, Bessie Jones
and Buffy Sainte-Marie will per-

form.

Traditional folk crafts will be
demonstrated at the festival and
will contribute to the children's
day activities.
The complete
wool process, mountain pottery,
wood carving and weaving will
be shown.
Performing at the festival will
be: Theodore Bikel, Oscar Barnd,
Bob Dylan, Jack Elliott, Mimi
and Dick Farina, Judy Collins,
Brownie McGee and Sonny Terry,
Phil Ochs, Clark Kessinger, Howling Wolf, Grant Rogers, Buffy
Sainte-Marie, and Carolyn Hester.

$2.9 Billion for College Classrooms
Republican
Opposition

Not Heard
WASHINGTON (CPS)—Without
a dissenting vote, the House this
week (May 2) approved another
$2.9 billion over the next three
years to help build college classrooms.
The vote was striking, however,

because of the continual rumblings within the Republican Party
that the administration would
have to cut back on domestic
spending in order to wage the
war in Vietnam and stem the
current inflationary trend as well.
When the Johnson budget proposal exceeded what GOP leaders
thought were “realistic” limits,
Republicans pledged to make the
cuts the administration would

not.

The vote on the constructionaid package came after scarcely
40 minutes of debate. Republicans backed the measure all the
way. Little difficulty is expected
in the Senate.
Even more striking was another House vote overruling a
proposal by President Johnson
that would have resulted in saving federal funds.
The President proposed in his
January budget message that the
government’s student loan program be transferred to private
concerns and that the nearly $200
million involved be spent elsewhere.
The proposal ran into a constant stream of criticism, and
the House Committee on Education and Labor recommended that
the loan program be kept—at
least for the present.
In going along with the committee’s recommendation, the
House authorized $190 million for
the current year’s loan program
as opposed to the $34 million
the President had requested in
his plan to phase out federal
support of the program.
Aside from rejecting the loan
program plan, the House went
along with the administration’s
college-aid requests.
The construction-aid funds are
actually an extension of the college construction program passed
by Congress in 1963. President
Johnson had requested $743 million for the first year’s extension
of the program and the House
"■rote in amounts for the next
two years as the President had
not requested specific sums.
Even the $2.9 billion over the
vxt three years is inadequate,

the House was told by the Office
of Education. Office of Education
spokesmen have estimated that
$4 billion will be needed in the
next two years in order to take
care of rapidly expanding college enrollments.
Meanwhile, another administration education program—the
Teacher Corps—is still suffering
from a lack of funds.
The corps was approved by
Congress last year but its funds
were dropped at the last minute
by a House Senate conference
committee.
Officials, who had hoped to
start the program last fall, now
are setting a starting date this
summer. They have issued a call
tfor corps volunteers, with a deadline for applications of May 31.
Officials say that school districts
and training programs are already lined up and corps members can be in 200 to 400 city
and rural school systems by fall.
The 8 to 12 week training program is set to begin in mid-June;
the corps hopes to have 3,000

volunteers enlisted by that time.
While in training the volunteers
receive $75 a week plus $15 for
each dependent. While working
for poverty school systems they
w’ill be paid at the local scale
but with money furnished by the
federal government.
The administration had requested $13 million in emergency
funds to get the program under
way this year. The Senate okayed the full $13 million but it was
cut to $10 milion by the House.
A final compromise has still to
be worked out.
Nevertheless, Commissioner of
Education Harold Howe II said
“plans for the recruitment and
training of teachers will be carried out" and he termed previous
reports that the Office of Education would not go ahead with the
program this summer a “misun-

LIBRARY HOURS
DURING EXAMS
Hardman: 7:30 a.m. to
1 a.m. Tuesday, May
10 to Friday, May 20.
Lockwood: Monday-Friday, 7:30 a.m. to 11
p.m. Saturdays, 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m. Sundays, 1
p.m. to 11 p.m.

REGISTRATION
SCHEDULE
Registration for day
summer school will be
held as follows:
1st session—
June 6, 8 to 11 a.m
Clark Gym.
2nd session—
June 27, 8 to 11 a.m
Clark Gym.
3rd session—
July 18, 8 to 11 a.m.,
Office of Admissions
&amp; Records, 201 Hayes.

•

All residence halls will
close Saturday, May 21
at 8 p.m. Cafeterias will
serve meals through May
21 at 6:30 p.m.

PACE SEVEN

derstanding.”

The House dropped funds from
the corps from its fiscal 1967
budget bill, and if this cut remains the program could die after
one year.”

12:004:00

8:00-11:00

DATE

Philosophy 204

Friday, May 13

History 102
F

Saturday, May 14
Monday, May 16

1)
2)
1)
2)
1)

Political Science 152
Political Science 151R
Economics 182
Economics 181R
Sociology 102

Tuesday. May 17
Wednesday, May 18

I

Thursday, May 19
Saturday. Kay 21

C

J

|

K

1)
2)

Z

Q
Psychology 102
Psychology 101R
English 102

Printed

include several virtuosi. TwenMichel Samson, a
Dutch student of Yehudi Menuhin, will contribute his talents
to the Ayler ensemble, and he
will be joined by another conservatory graduate, Joel Freedman, cellist, in an unprecedented
association of classically trained
and improvisational musicians.
Sun Ra plays piano and many
other instruments, including the
celeste, and a galaxy of novel
electronic pianistic devices. His
ensemble are a highly disciplined
group of his students, several of
whom enjoy recognition among
the musicians of the improvisalional sector. Ronnie Boykins,
bassist; Marshall Allen and Pat
Patrick, saxophonists; Clifford
Jarvis, percussionist, are among
his complement. Sun Ra has re
corded for Savoy Records and
Saturn Records. He has two current releases on the ESP label.
Albert Aylcr, saxophonist and
his brother Don Ayler, trumpet,
have lourned Europe with their
own group and with Cecil Taylor.
Giuseppi Logan and his ensemble performed at Town Hall
on May 1 ,1965, in a program
that also featured Albert Ayler's
ensemble, Mr. Logan is an ESP
recording artist. Ho will be accompanied on the tour by Dave
Burrell, pianist. Clarence Strowman, percussionist, and Scotty
Holt, basist. Saxophonist l,ogan
also plays piano, Pakistani oboe,
flute, clarinet,
trumpet and
violin.

by

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recordings. The twenty musicians

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Cooks Play Check'
Will Be Read May 21

OPENS MONDAY
�
MAY 16th

)

I

There will be a stage reading of
an original play by Albeit S.
Cook entitled “Check,” on May
21, at 8:30 p.m. in the Undercroft
of St. Andrew's Episcopal Church,
3107 Main St. Enter the church
parking lot from Lisbon St.
The cast includes members of
the faculty of the English Department (Leslie Fiedler, Mac
)
Hammond, William Sylvester) as
well as prominent local actors |

!
)

CHARLIE

!

Playboy Jazz Guitar
Poll Winner

j

[BYRD TRIO!

Wildy, Nancy Koekery,
Richardson, Charlotte
O’Donnell and Ann Gaylcy). The
reading is being directed by Mrs.
(Donald

Frank

Helen Tousler.

Late registration will
be defined as registration
after 2 class meetings,
requiring a $5 late fee.
Registration for the
Evening Summer Session
will be held June 2 in
Clark Gym, 6:30 to 8:30
in the evening.
Registration for the
fall, 1966 semester will
be September 8. The first
day of classes is September 9. Freshman orientation will be held September 7 and 8.

EXAMINATION SCHEDULE MAY 12-21, 1964

Thursday, May 12

THE SPECTRUM

4:00-7:00
Modern Languages 102
1) Modern languages 104
2) Business 0202

f
I

Who with Stan Gati
Sold Ovar 1,000,000
copies of

|

"DESIFINADO"

|

We’re lining up

12,000

office workers fox

SUMMER JOBS
now!

m

TypUU, stenographers, twitchboard operator*, file clerks, keypunch oparators . . are need
Warn all, in over 400 cities,
beta use Manpower is tbs world*
largest temporary help service.
80, if you*re going to be available
lor asnmsr work and want the
past Job you can get, atop in at
the Manpower olllca in your
boms city.
.

Drama Sc Speech 126
E
1) Mathematics 141R
2) Mathematics 142
3) Mathematics 242
1) Chemistry 102
2) Business 5202
3) Chemistry 121R
1.)
1)
2)

MANPOWER
m
mv

ins vntr but
1)
2)

Y
P

TiMronABT

*05 WALBRIOCi M.0C.

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|

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|

�Tuesday, May 10, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

CLASSIFIED
FOR SALE

TRAVEL

'63 Monxa Coup*, black with red
interior, 4-speed, 145 hp, heavy

duty suspension. Dunlop road
speeds—$1000. TR 3-1426
'64 Rambler American, excellent
condition, economy car; low
mileage; asking $1150. Contact B.
Burrows, 837-7286 weekdays.
'58 Karmin-Ghia, no rust, good
mechanically. Mobil station on
Terrace and Court Sts. TL 2-8725.
$395.

Honda ISO cc., excellent com!.,
$350. Call NL 2-5905 after 5

p.m. weekdays—all day Saturday

and Sunday.
'58 Lambreta, 125 cc., asking $125.
Call 832-7079, Tom or Joe, after
6 p.m.
Furniture for two bedrooms, living room, kitchen (includes
rugs, TV, etc.) Must sell! Call
832-6799.
Grad. Students

fully furnished apartment. 4 Vi rooms—one year old—very comfortable,
inexpensive—near campus. Stereo hook-ups in every room. Call
before 8:30 a.m, or after 11 p.m.
(3-4)

836-1691.

Jaguar XK-150, '58. Mechanically
excellent, body good must sell.

$150. 882-5979.

'62 Honda SO. Good condition;
electric starter; $125 or best
offer. 876-2698.
'51 Nash Fast Back. Excellent
condition. Std. transmission,
radio and heater, many extras.
(Green Hornet’s car). Call Brian,
837-6938

UB Jef Flight to Franc* leaving
June 27th, returning Sept, 5th.
Round trip NYC Paris, $340. Faculty, students, employees of
SUNYAB eligible. Contact Sanford Leff soon! 834-1869.
j

OPPORTUNITIES
Golf Lessons

Randy Fox, pro
—individual, group rates, Niagara Sports Center, range and
miniature golf
Athol Springs
Circle, Rt, 75, Hamburg. Phono
—

—

YOIII'S FOK A SONG.
Paris Belts. Each has a
style as individual as
the rocking beat of Jay
and The Americans'
new album,
"Sunday and Me".
i.,.

825-9812.

PERSONAL
Free Room and Board. Help with

two children. 10 minute walk.
Call TF 6-4333.
Fun

for all ages at NIAGARA

SPORTSCENTER

—

Miniature

golf, game room arcade, golf driving range. 1701 Niagara Falls

Blvd., Tonawanda, N. Y.
Have Bass—Need Band! If you
need a good bass player, call
Hon at TX 6-1991.

If you saw someone hit my 1966
two-tone blue Rambler May 2
in the Main St, lot, call TF 9-2164.

Reward.

The Paris Competition
Stripe Belt. White
with contrasting
stripes. $3.50.

The Paris Cinch Ring
Buckle Belt. Stitched
shrunken steerhide.
Black or brown. $4.00
The Paris Paisley Belt.
A wild splash of color
in tune with Spring. $3.
When you wear a
Paris Belt, you show
people who's boss.

WANTED

3000 DES PLAINES AVENUE. OES PLAINES. ILLINOIS 60018

Avctibbb at these campus stores.

O'Connell, Lucas, Chelf
Martin's Ltd.
Squire Shops

Mother's helper to live in. Private
room, desk, TV. Two school
aged children. Nice home. 634
4298 after 4:30.

APARTMENTS

Female

wanted for
summer, option to continue
’66-67. Just opposite campus, modApt. 837-6320 or 831-4610.
Roommate

Completely Furnished Apt. avail
able for summer in Sheridan
Parkside. Suitable for three stu-

dents. $45 each per month includes all utilities. TR 7 0112.
Summer Sublet, 2 3 roommates. 4
bedroom house fully furnished.
1 block from campus—11 Mcrrimac (off campus). Call Pole or
A1 835-3281.

7 Room Apartment, summer sublet, available June 1. Rent reas-

onable, utilities included.
886-6763 after 5 p.m.

roommate to share six room
furnished apartment, 45 Minnc
sola Avenue, 4 blocks from cam
pus, for first summer session
Call 834-2890. Rent $10 per week.
Male roommate needed to share
7 room apt, with two others
for summer session Walking dis-

tance. Option to continue in fall
semester of '66. $50 month with
utilities: 588 Englewood Ave. Ph.
TF 5-3162. Ask for John.

Faculty Member would like to
sublet reasonably priced apt.,
vicinity UB, from June 1 or earlier. Also interested in cheap car
for transportation. Call 831-3418
days, 839-1151 eves.
Female Roommate Wanted. Have

apt. Call Pat. 831-3982.
Apt. for Rent. One block from
campus. Utilities included: fur
nished. Call 831-3474.

apt. For summer, op
tion for '66-'67, furnished. 10
rain. walk. Call 837-7256 or 831-

2 bedroom

3642—Angie.

On# bedroom apt. to sublet for
summer Princeton Ct. Apts.
10 minutes from campus. Call:
837-8212 between 5-8 p.m,

As advertised in Playboy and Cavalier

Male

Call

Wanted to Rent or Sublet: Furnished apt. for graduate couple
during first session, June 6-July
15. Write: John Cannon, 2900
Wheeler St., Berkeley, California.

ffljEiU

Roommate to share apartment 15
minutes from school. $38 per
month. Call Russ 831-4545, 8:304:30.

Help wanted, male or female, full
time for summer. Mature students wanted by national co, to
help demonstrate a new product
now being introduced into Buf
falo area for the first time. Re
quirements: must be junior or
senior or post grad, mature, neat
appearance, good personality, ambitious. and a desire to make
money: must have car. Students
in other areas now making 5000
to 7000 a year part-time. Come in
11:00 sharp. May 14, Saturday
morning, at 1287 Military Road.

Will the girl who witnessed the accident on
Lockwood’s steps Thursday evening, please call
837-7454 immediately.

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�M U 5 T 5 3 'i i,

Tuesday, May 10, 1966

Altucher, Connolly, Klein
Win Fulbright Lectureships
Faculty Members Will Travel
Abroad During ’66-67 Sessions
Dr. Nathan Altucher. acting
director of the Student Counseling. Center and assistant phychology professor, English Professor
Thomas Connolly and Associate
English Professor Marcus N.
Klein have been awarded Fulbright Lectureships for teaching
abroad during the 1966-67 academic year.
Dr. Klein will teach courses
in American Literature and
Civilization at the University of
Toulouse; Toulouse, France. He
has been at UB since 1965, after
teaching at Barnard College for
thirteen years. He received his
doctor’s degree in 1962 from
Columbia University.
Author of After Alienation:
American Novels in Mid-Century,
Dr. Klein’s articles have appeared in The Nation, The Reporter, The New Leader and Book
Week

“I'm looking forward to spending the year in a warmer cli-

mate,” he commented.
Dr. Altucher will teach courses
in counseling and guidance at the
College of Education in Prasanmitr, Thailand.
He came to UB in 1960 after
serving as counseling psychologist at the Testing and Counseling Center at the University of

Texas. He received his doctor’s
degree in 1957 from the University of Michigan.
“I am very pleased and looking
forward to it,” Dr. Altucher said,
“it should be very enjoyable,”
Dr. Connolly will lecture at the
University College, Dublin, Ireland. He mentioned that he will
probably teach English and American literature courses.
A member of the UB faculty
since 1953, Dr. Connolly completed his graduate work at the
University of Chicago and his
undergraduate work at Fordham
University.

He is the author of Swinburne's
of Poetry and From
Ararat to Suburbia, a history of

Theory

the Jewish population in Buffalo.
He has written three books on
James Joyce and several articles
on Faulkner, Hawthorne, Dickens,
Pound and Keats.

.

THOiS 75PAGE NINE

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DR. THOMAS CONNOLLY

Buffalo Foundation Inc.
Awards Scholarships
To 3 High School Grads
National Merit Scholarships
awarded to three high
school graduates by the University of Buffalo Foundation, Inc.
last Wednesday.
The recipients are: Stephen R,
Chalmer, 52 Arundel Rd„ Buffalo; Nancy J, Moulaison, Bangor, Maine; and Eileen Swertloff, Cedarhurst, New York.
Mr. John Galvin, chairman of
the Foundation Board, commented, “We are pleased to provide,
for the second consecutive year,
these scholarships to three such
outstanding high school tudents.
We are beginning a tradition
which we are confident will benefit both the student recipients
and the University for many
years to come.”
Each of the scholarships, Mr.
Galvin noted, is designed to provide the difference between a
winner’s ability to pay and the
cost of attending the college or
university of his choice.
were

If you haven’t examined
a new Chevrolet since
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or electric toothbrushes,

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Coleman, Carton, Plesur Greek Educator Speaks
Win N.Y. Grants-in-Aid
Associate Drama and Speech
Professor William S. Coleman,
Associate Classics Professor
Charles Carton and Associate History Professor Milton Plesur have
received New York State grantsin-aid.
Dr. Plesur received the grant
in .the field of special studies for
completion of a monograph
“American Diplomacy in the
Gilded Age (1865-90).”
In the field of humanities, Dr.
Garton received the grant for
completion of research concerning Roscius and the Roscian tradition.
Dr. Coleman received the award
in the field of humanities for a
history of the London productions
of “The Merchant of Venice”
since 1701. The history will emphasize the influence of the English attitude towards the Jews
upon the interpretation of Shylock.

Greek educator Evangelos Papanoutsos explained the educational process as a “movement
of the mind in dialogue” in his
discussion “Dialectical Framework of the Congnitive Function” last Monday.
“Static thought is sterile,” Dr.
Papanoutsos asserted. He added
that thought is stimulated by
doubt, and solutions to technical
problems are reached by "an
incision upon a block of facts."

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When two sides of an issue
are explained, he said, each position and counterposition can

•

beproved, and the development
of thought becomes a dialectical

•

process.

Dr Papanoutsos discussed the

effectiveness of the educational
bureaucracy noting, “The best
committee is composed of three
members if one is sick and the
other on a trip abroad.”

•

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CORVAIR

�'

Student Suicides
(Cont’d from Pg. 5)
At the time they died, eight
were having financial trouble,
five had had their marriage proposals refused, and one was a
practicing but remorseful homosexual. Although the well-known
Yale Clinic was established in
1925, only 11 of the 25 were undergoing any kind of professional
treatment.
Why suicide?
“Things are
tough all over” is the traditional
observation of the cynic, so why
does emotional crisis center on
the university?
Maybe it doesn’t center there
at all. Emotional difficulty, and
even suicide, is usually a pretty
personal thing, and accurate in
formation about its prevalence

among different

social

groups

may never be available. In the
meantime, a disproportionate

amount of the attention will be
focused on the classroom fish
habitat.

bowl, the researcher’s

A girl at Stanford who attempt
ed suicide was discovered to suf
fer under domination from her
mother, who selected the girl's
friends and her school.

.

.

.

.

over.” Without manifesting any
emotional responses she fired off
instructions about covering up
and repairing the damages,
A coed wrote a personal account of her attempted suicide for
the University of Wisconsin Daily
V'ardinal. Her comments were
Blunt;
“I was sick of social pressures
which said that you must act this
way or that so you will be ac
ccpted. I was sick of the feeling that I was accepted for reasons having nothing to do really
with me, but from the home or
parents I came from, f was sick
of the idea that you had to be
rich, sleep with everyone, and
kiss everyone’s royal American
to be someone. I only wanted to

from Pg.

.

.

be myself but that never seemed
to be enough.
“My parents hounded me about
my grades to the point that I
spent more time worrying than
I did studying. The idea of failure was the worst thing in the
world that could happen. There
was no chance to begin over; if
you failed the first time that
was

&gt;,i?f

“S

II.-

“My dorm mother was a horrible woman—sweet to your face
but stabbing you in the back all
the time. I had to go to a head

shrinker sbme years before and
she found out about it and that
was the end. She wouldn’t let
me alone. I couldn’t do anything
right even if it were the way
I combed my hair. She almost
drove me to my grave. By the
time exams came I was a nervous

wreck. I didn’t even kriow as
much as my name anymore.
“I went home right before
exams for a weekend. Then it
happened, the worst it had ever
been. Then came the sleeping
pills—75-125 aspirins and a razor
blade.”

The problems that gang up on
the student don’t seem to be the
direct fault of the school itself.
Dr. Marshall Peck of the Los
Angeles Suicide Prevention Center said that “none of the problems experienced in the university arc created by the university.”

Rather, he said, these problems

are the result of the student’s

early life and his relationships
during this period with parents,
teachers, clergymen.
Dr. Peck did acknowledge,

•

though, that the university is a
“massive trigger” which activates
the worry and incites the anxiety
originaly caused by pre-college
interpersonal situations.

The factors which bring the
to suicide—mental, sexual, career, identity, social—are
the same problems anybody faces.
But it is during the college years
that they all come together, often
head-on.

student

Caps and gowns will
be distributed in Norton
Card Room, basement
floor, May 25-27, 8:30-5
and Sat., May 28, 10-2
p.m.

for

can only cry. I can't say yes or
no—I’m like a puppet." After
the incident, her mother “took

Letters

p

LATE NEWS

In the hospital after her suicide attempt, the girl said: "I
don’t know who I really am,
what I really want, or where I
am going. I think things and
worry and when I feel things I

(Cont’d

Tuesday, May 10, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

.

4)

worthless exam? How can we take
time out for the "comps" and

write decent term papers
of
Dr.
Morton—but does this mean that
an average student is no longer
good enough to get through bestill

and study for finals? Most
us arc not as brilliant as

GRADUATES

cause he can not match Dr. Horton’s ability?
Also, a vicious cycle is growing here—1—The school is letting in
more students than it can provide
for, thus classes are overcrowded;
2—The teacher becomes overworked, so he marks harder to
discourage students from signing
up for his course:

Expanding military and commercial business
has created even more openings.

3—Thus the student suffers
for many teachers mark unfairly
to avoid overcrowding in their
courses. Does the student learn
more?—NO!—he only gets lower
marks.
The grading standards are be
com;

this does not mean that the quality of our education is improving! Knowing SUNYAB, these
conditions will only grow worse.
A Disgusted Senior

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Tuesday, May 10, 1966

ji JTJ31
SPECTRUM

H3T

PAGE ELEVEN

Text of Furnas' Statement on GFC5S And Selective Service
The following is the

from Pres. Furnas

Open Forum

statement
to the

read

Thursday evening

by Dr. A. Westley Rowland.
forum was sponsored by the

The
Student Senate and the CFCSS.

This statement i§ for the purpose of defining a problem and
clarifying issues and is not a defense of administrative action. A
group, named the Graduate-Faculty Committee on the Selective
Service, had apparently been
formed as the result of scheduling voluntary tests to be made
available by Selective Service for
the purpose of obtaining factual
information on students of draft
age who wish to request deferment, These tests are to be administered by a non-profit organization, _ Science Research Associates, which is under a contract
with the appropriate Federal
Government agency tor carrying
out such tests throughout the entire nation. Tests scheduled on
this campus, Canisius College and
at the State University College at
Buffalo are on May 21 and June
3.

On April 29 I received a com
munication from the above-men
tioned committee stating:

"Please consider the following
alternatives to your present plans
concerning the Test.
“(1) That the University not
lend its facilities to the Selective
Service for the administration of
the Test.
“(2) That a ‘disclaimer’ be attached to each examination stating that the University is opposed
to the imposition of the Selective
Service upon its jurisdiction and
is concerned with attempts by the
Selective Service to make it an
administrative arm of the military.

“We would like to discuss these
alternatives with you at 10 a.m.
Monday, May 2, 1966. The Graduate-Faculty Committee on the
Selective Service has invited interested undergraduates to take
part in these discussions.”
As requested, I did meet with
a committee. Frank and open discussion followed, during which I
stated that I would not accede to
either one of their requests since
by doing so I would be derelict
in my responsibilities for the
sound administration of this University. At 3 p.m. on May 2, while
a number of persons were sitting
in

the hallway outside

of

ray

of-

fice, two representatives of the
Committee requested to see me
and presented me with the following document:
“The following is the text of a
telegram sent to Dean Martin
Meyerson and to President Samuel Gould;”

Martin Meyerson will be
my successor as President of the
University at Buffalo on September 1, 1966, and Samuel Gould is
President of the State University
of New York),
“The Graduate-Faculty Committee on the Selective Service
met with President Furnas this
morning to ask him to address a
(Dean

University-wide public meeting
on the issue of the University's
decision to administer the Selective Service examination on campus. The President refused categorically. At the moment a group
of undergraduates, graduate students and teaching assistants are
sitting in President Furnas' anteroom. They will remain until he
accedes to the request for this
meeting, or until they are forcibly removed. We ask you to urge
President Furnas to accede to our
request and for you yourself to
take part in the ensuing public
meeting.”
In my interpretation, this document represented throwing down
the gauntlet against the person

has the responsibility and
authority for operating this University, so, naturally, I did not
accede to their demands. Hence,
who

the sit-in proceeded, I would like
to point out that this particular
demonstration was carried out in
an orderly manner and I have no
complaints about the behavior of
those who were involved.

On Tuesday. May 3, the Student
Senate called a special meeting
to consider the situation and, as
the authorized undergraduate student body on the campus, proposed to call an open meeting of
the academy community. Mr.
Clinton Deveaux, President of the
Undergraduate Student Association. presented me with a resolution reporting the results of that
meeting, which included requesting my attendance. I informed
Mr. Deveaux that while I appreciated the invitation. I still would
not attend the—meeting because
the basic impelling force back
of the event had risen from the
pressure of an authorized group
and hence it was not appropriate
for me to attend.

In

later conversations I informed representatives of the
Graduate-Faculty Committee on
the Selective Service that my decision not to attend the meeting
still stood, but that I would be
willing to prepare a written statement which could be read at the
meeting which, as I understand,
is now to be on Thursday evening, May 5. Subsequently the
sit-in group withdrew from the
hall way of my office.
Basic issues are involved here
and should be delineated. The
first of these is the definition of
a university The simplest and
most comprehensive definition of
a university that I know of is “An
institution devoted to the advancement of human knowledge.”
The corollary of this definition is
that the institution engages in
instruction, research and public
service. There are further implications of such an institution in
that it exists for the purpose of
public well-being
it does not
exist merely for the benefit of
one individual or small group.
Anything that is deleterious to
the whole structure is not in the
public interest and, hence, is not
fitting for a university.
—

The second important factor is
that we are one segment of a
great nation which has the overriding authority of all the citizens and all the institutions. This
is the United States qf__Amenca.
and the basic issues of its authority were decided in the Constitutional Convention of 1787.
The

the United States, as a convenience for those students who wish
to take it No one has to take the
test. It is not mandatory. But
certainly this would be a gross
infringement on the personal
freedom of the individual. As a
mat.ter of fact, it would definitely
be an infringement on the rights
of those students who desire to
take the test if they were to be
denied the opportunity by the
actions of another group of students.
To place this whole matter in
perspective, it is important to remember that on this campus students have enjoyed a wide range
of freedoms. May I recall to your
memories that this University Administration as well as the Board
of Trustees of State University
of New York, was insistent two

years ago that controversial
speakers have a right to speak on
this campus.

The Student Senate and the
Graduate Student Association, as
authorized representatives of the
student body, have the freedom
to act on matters directly related
to student welfare.

The student

newspaper. The

Spectrum, enjoys fredom of the
press, possibly even more than
does the general public media.
The University Administration
does not censor this publication
although it certainly does have
the right not to agree with everything that is printed in that pub-

lication.

of that leadership rest squarely
on the university president.”
Although some persons may
disagree with this, certainly for
—

the modern American university
this is the best and most succinct
statement that I have seen. In
my opinion, these are very sound
guidelines.

In order to round out the picture of the role of the president
in the operation of a university,
I feel it is best to refer to the
words of an experienced and recognized scholar in this field. The
following is an excerpt from a
statement in the New York Times
(Sunday, November 7, 1965, page
K-m which summarizes a series
of lectures on "The University
in Transition" which had been
given by a prominent university
president.
"The idea that a democratic
coalition of students, faculty and
administration can manage the
Riant enterprise is an illusion.
The idyllic image of the university as an autonomous and independent oasis
apart from sociely
is a mirage
The burden
—

..

Obviously, I must be and am
perfectly wiling to give due consideration to honest and sincere
opinions and requests which arise
from either faculty or students
through approved channels of the
University as a whole. These recognized channels include the following bodies: The Faculty Senate. the Graduate-Senate Association, and the Student Senate.
In summary, I believe that the
administration of a university
should be sensitive to sincere and
well-eonsidercd concerns of the
university faculty and students
for changes which arc legal and
appropriate in our dynamic,

changing society.

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Selective Service Act is

one segment of the implementation of that authority.

The decision to give the Selective Service examination on this
campus was an administrative
one, which has been made by
hundreds of colleges and universities of the nation. At various
administrative levels this University makes hundreds of such decisions every day which affect the
program, activities and individual members of the academic
community.
by its
public nature cooperates with a
large number of State, Federal,
and private agencies. In this particular case, Selective Service is
the law of the land, and in this
instance, a Federal Law. In giving this test on the campus, the
University is cooperating with
the Federal Government as it
does in many other ways. In fact,
many students arc studying at
this University today because of
funds made available to them
through the Federal Government.
Every year we have had the Peace
Corps representative on our campus and recently VISTA spent
several days with us.

The

State

University

The test is being given here
and in many other locations in

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�PAGE TWELVE

Lm* week's demonstrations demanded effective student and faculty
"in-put" In administration's decision making. The week's events included a 40-hour "sit-in" in Hayes Hall Monday and Tuesday, a resultant open meeting with administrators Thursday evening and a
spontaneous student picket and Rally Friday evening.
(other pictures Pg. 1)

SPECTRUM

Tuesday, May 10, 1966

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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>ESTUL Eb

EXTRA
■-'’

*

jy ;&lt;•“..

*

•■■'•

.

■

■

•

VOLUME 16

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, MONDAY, MAY 9, 1966

H0
————————

Editorial C^om

47~*

-

■ftr.

I

■khps

A Tradition
In all phases of its institi
has made freedom its watch
themselves for a profession mi
tain specific bodies of knowlei
tain techniques, and the univ&lt;
fessional curricula which cons
studies. But at that point w:
Beyorid that point is open com
only environment proper to a u
and above a group of professional schools. It is an
is a forum of criticism and
intrepretation; it is an incubator of ideas. It is a
nursery of free men, and as
such it is democracy’s
strongest bulwark.
Free men are not reared
in leading strings. Only by
exercising the prerogatives
and the responsibilities of
freedom do men learn to
be free and to be strong.
This is what academic
freedom means. At the university of Buffalo it has
never been invaded.
If at any time these policies have required justification here or elsewhere, that time is surely not now.
For if this troubled world is to recover a measure of
justice and order, if those high privileges for which
America has fought are to be retained and extended, it
can only be through the united efforts of men and
women with informed and untrammeled minds; men and
women, thousands of them in all parts of the land, who
do not think in stereotypes, who are afraid neither of
new ideas nor fresh evidence, who have learned what
freedom means at freedom’s front, and who dedicate
their wills and their energies to its preservation. That
you may equip yourselves to play your individual parts
in this crucial task of our time, I welcome you into the
fellowship of this now venearble university.
Chancellor Samuel P. Capen
The University of Buffalo

3 October 1946

reporter after meeting.

Dr. Ebert stands to left.

President Calls Special Meeting
Reconsideration off Test Possible

A special meeting of the Executive Committee of the University Faculty Senate was held
Saturday afternoon. Invited were
Clinton Deveaux, and Kim Harrow
President and Vive-President of
the Student Senate. Dr. Norman
Lazarus and Ronald Stein represented the Graduate Student
Association. The meeting adopted
the following resolutions:
PROPOSAL 1
Whereas this ad hoc committee
recognizes legitimate concerns
felt by faculty and students in
this university with respect to
their participation in academic
policy and
Whereat such concerns relate

to the immediate need which this

committee recognizes of opening
and maintaining a dialogue between faculty and students and
administration groups, now therefore this ad hoc committee recommends that the president

name:

1. A special task force committee whose mandate shall be to

inquire Into and make proposals
with respect to establishing an
open and
continual dialogue
among such groups.

2. To make such proposals as
they deem appropriate regarding
organizational means for participation by these groups in the formulation of educational policy in
the university.
PROPOSAL 2
In response to Resolution 1,
the president has appointed the
following committee and directed
that three additional student
members be added to the committee namely two undergraduate students to be leoted by the
student senate and one graduate
student to be elected by the graduate student association.
Prof. Ebert, chairman
Sapp
Murray

Hawkland
Hunt
Mr, Devoe
Dr. Lazarus (10)
ACTION 3
The ad hoc committee recommended that the faculty senate
executive committee meet in special session to consider immediately the matter of holding the
S. S. Test on the UB campus.
ACTION 4
At a special meeting of the

executive committee of the uni-

versity faculty senate held at
5:25 p.m., May 7, 1966 in the of-

fice of the President called by
President Furnas to consider the
matter of bolding the S. S. Examination on the university cam’
pus, the President advised tfce
executive committee that &lt;tw
matter as to hold the test on tfca
campus was not necessarily a
closed one.
Thereupon the executive committee recommended that the
President at the earliest possible
opportunity meet in joint session
with and consult with the executive committee of the faculty senate, the executive committee of
the student senate and the executive committee of the faculty
senate in order to review Iba
university’s decision in regard to
this matter. The President concurred with this resolution.
ACTION 5
The ad hoc committee then considered a student petition demanding immediate and posMWaction by the President changing
overall oplicy and structure fagr
6 p.m. Sunday. This demand wee

rejected.

Pickets Protest President's Stand
tions end, some 300 persons had
participated.
Observers noted that this demonstration was the largest in the
history of this university.
The picket then moved to the
fountain, but was quickly moved
outward to the adjacent sidewalk
bordering Lockwood Library to
accomodate the rapidly-enlarging

An emergency meeting was
called Friday morning at 10 a.m.
bp the executive committee of
the Graduate-Faculty Committee
on the Selective Service (GFCSS)
to discuss immediate tactical
problems resulting from the
stand taken by administration
representatives the night before.
It was decided that a demonstration would follow the meeting. Sociology graduate student
Rick Salter acted as chairman.
Members of the committee
stressed that the meeting was
called to decide only what to do
that afternoon. They added that
the meeting's purpose was not
to provide policy for the group,
but only to discuss possibilities
for action that afternoon.
Graduate student and committee fnember Fred Ostroy disclosed that three items for consideration were proposed at the
meeting.

These

1—Throw

were:
up a picket

crowd.

An informal counterpicket began spontaneously on the Nor-

ton steps facing the fountain.

at Hayes

Picket Line Cover*

Hall immediately following the
meeting.

2—Move in on and close Hayes
Hall by blocking all entrances to
the buiding.
3—Close any other building
and/or buildings deemed practicable by the committee.
After a two-hour debate among
the estimated 350 persons in attendance at the meeting, it was
decided that a demonstration at
Hayes Hall would be set up immediately.
Following the emergency meeting, temporary committees which

were set up by the GFCSS the
night before met to implement
the tactical objectives decided at
the meeting. The Publicity Committee, headed by Dave Gardnier
reportedly set to work making
signs that were to be used in the

demonstration.
Other

committees

that

met

were the Student Committee
chaired by Diane Garvey, whose

purpose was to encourage additional student support, and a

Campus

like purpose Faculty Committee
co-headed by Susan Orlofsky and
Dorothy

Frankenstein.

Set Up at Hayes
At the same time it was reported that an estimated 150

immediately proceeded
to Hayes Hall to begin the dem-

persons

onstration. GPCSS member Peter
Rubin said that the number of
demonstrators swelled to some
persons within the first half
hour, and that by the demonstra-

A dialogue then began between
leaders of the GFCSS and counterpickets. Committee member
Salter and others attempted to
explain the purpose of the demonstration, which was allegedly
to force the administration to
reopen discussion on the issue
of giving the Selective Service
College Qualifying Test, to the
counter-demonstrators.
At about 2 p.m. the demonstrators moved out of the quadrangle and headed toward Goodyear and Clement Halls. The procession was headed by GFCSS
member Larry Faulkner.
Haraasad
While the demonstrators were
crossing the road between NoNrton and Cooke Halls, a car broke
through the picket line carrying
several demonstrators with it. No
injuries were reported and the
■license number of the car was
taken. Demonstrator Kenneth
Cumberland was hit by the car
as i broke through the picket line,
but was unhurt. It was reported

that

he would

decide

Monday

morning whether or not to preaa
charges.
As the procession passed Tower Hall, plastic bags filled with
water were burled at the pieheters by residents of the men's
dormitory. Although several
demonstrators were drencbad,
no injuries were disclosed.
The picketers stopped at Goodyear and Clement Halls, where
GFCSS committee members Being bull horns, informed the rw-

idents of these dormitories of
the purpose of the demonstrsfiM.
The marchers then proceeded
to return to the quadrangle.
When the procession passed by
the other side of Tower Hall,
water bags were again tossed at
the group. Several demonstrators
were soaked, but, as before,
there were no reported injerlsa.
When the group arrived neck
at the quadrangle, they proceeded to march around the fountain.
After about fifteen miaedaS,
GFCSS leader Rick Salter called
the group together for a rally by
the fountain He informed tie
group that the demonstration was
about to end. The Publicity Committee began collecting the signs,
Salter reminded the group In attend the 7 p.m. meeting that bed
been called earlier that day, and
urged all demonstrators te bring
as many people to the mesthv
with them as possible
Following the singing of “We
Shall Overcome." the demonstrators dispersed.

�SPECTRUM

Monday, May 9, 1966

Mass Rally Adopts Sit-In
At a Mass Rally Friday night

AAUP Opposes Aid
By University to S.S.
At a SUNY at Buffalo chapter
of the American Association of
University Profesors meeting
Friday, May 6, three resolutions
concerning administrative policy

were passed.
The resolutions

are:

Whereas matters which direct-

ly affect the nature of the academic community are not only
admjnisl native, but also academic
Whereas an academic
community demands the free in-

concerns;

terchange of ideas;

•f it resolved, that the question of the use of SUNY at Buffalo facilities for conducting the
Selective Service Examination be
reopened for discussion by faculty, students, and administration,
and that a resolution of the question be obtained by intellectual
inquiry involving all segments of
the academic community mutual

Be

it therefore resolved that
the university shall in no way
lend its facilities to the Selective
Service for the administration of
any draft deferment examination.
We urge the administration of
this university to declare that it
is our official policy to di'close
neither the grades nor the quartile standing of any student to
the Selective Service without the
specific request of the students.

Dr. Marvin Zimmorman of the

Philosophy Department left the
meeting early. He said the reso1 u t i o n s were being “steamrollered” through. When asked
what was the significance of the
AAUP, Dr Zimmerman replied,
“It’s not a very representative
group. There’s only 50 of them
here.” There are approximately
400 AAUP members, it was re-

ly.

ported.

Wharaas the proper function of
this university is that of education, and Whereas the student
draft deferment examination soon
to be administered by this university serves no educative end,
end

Mr. Bill Harrell of the Sociology Department stated, “Dr.

Whereat the voluntary participation of this university in the

administration of the examination
m«ar court the impression that the
faculty and student bodies lend
their implicit moral support both
tQ-the examination and the uses
t«| Which it may be put, such an
irepression being contrary to the
options and values of a significant number of stude-m is ani
faculty.

THE

Zimmerman's conclusion is not
valid. All of the resolutions were
discussed although there was
some confusion because they were
not discussed In the order they
were passed. The meeting was
asked if it felt the resolutions
were sufficiently discussed and it
did. Parliamentary procedure was
followed. A quorum was present.”

Mr. Harrell continued, “Zim-

merman supported the first

lution

reso-

he did not objeot to its
being brought to a vote. Consequently, it is difficult to undertutldhs as being
steamrollered.”

SPECTRUM

JEREMY TAYLOR
RAYMOND D. VOLPE

Manager

News Editor
ALICE EDELMAN
Staff— Loretta Angelina. Joanne Bouchier. Russell Buchman, Karen Green,
Pater Lederman, Joan Roberts, Rick Schwab, Dan Schroeder, Sharon Shulman,
Eilaan Taitler, Nancy Toder, Patti Wartley, Judy Weisberg.
Nature Editor
JOHN STINY
Assistant
JO ANNE LEEGANT
•MB—Bonnie Bartow, Ron Ellsworth, Barbara Ann Fitzsimmons, Barbara Loeb,
Audray Logo), Bob Martin, Suzanne Rovner, Martha Tack. William Weinstein.
Sports Editor
STEVE SCHUELEIN
Staff— Mike Castro. Mike Dolan, Steve Farbman, Bob Frey, Scott Forman,
J. B. Sharcot.
Layout Editor
SHARON HONIG
tUi Joanne Bouchier. Stephanie Parker, Steve Silverman.
Copy Editor
LAUREN JACOBS
Becker. Estelle Fox. Jocelyn Hailpern, Sandy Lippman, Betsy Ozer,
'
Claire Shottenfeld, Susan Zuckerberg.
Advertising Manager
RON HOLTZ
•Terry Angelo, Audrey Cash. Pat Rosenfeid, Steve Silverman, Joseph
Photography

Editor

JOSCELYN
Feyes, Carol Goodson,

EDWARD

•a#—Don Blank. Peter Bonneau, Joseph
Mari Levine, Ivan Makuch, Michael Soluri, Anthony Walluk,
Hobart Wynne
Circulation Manager
DIANE LEWIS
Faculty Advisor
IRENE RICH
Financial Advisor
DALLAS GARBER

Gruber,
Susan Wortman,
Alan

*

Hr*

ally regarded as a major policy
decision, we request that all cooperation with the Selective Service System be suspended until a
policy is determined as called
for in our proposal.”
A resolution of principles was
also passed stating that the “main-

tenance

of the academic community is the direct responsibility of all members of that community and that the administration of this University has abandoned its responsibility to protect
the rationale of responsible scholarship and its responsibility to
all the members of the academic
community.”

It calls for a meeting of “members of the University administration empowered to determine University policy with all interested
members of the academic community to arbitrate the grievances
which precipitated the calling of
this meeting. The resolution continues, “This body shall attempt
to halt the arbitrary actions of
the administration until such
time as they recognize their
responsibility to the entire academic community."

The third resolution passed was
in support of the Association of
American University Professors
(AAUP) decision that “the question of the use of SUNYAB facilities for conducting the Selective
Service Examination be reopened
for discussion by faculty, students,, and administration, and
that a resolution of the question
be obtained by intellectual inquiry involving all segments of
the academic community mutually.”

The three resolutions will be

presented to Dr. Furnas. If he
refuses or does not reply by 6
p.m. Sunday the sit-in will take
place.
The scheduled time for the sitin to start is 7;45 a.m. Pieketers
will also start marching at this
time in front of Hayes Hall.

Chairman of the GSA

Mr. Nor-

man Lazarus announced, the
‘GSA will throw all its available

resources behind GFCSS. Since

Dr. Rowland seemed repudiating
any guarantee by Dr. Furnas that

the students would be listened to,

a letter will be sent to Dr. Fumas
asking him to clarify his posi-

tion.”
A letter sent to Dr. Furnas was
signed by the Committee for Victory in Vietnam, Young Americans for Freedom, and Students
for United States in Vietnam, calling for a referendum on the administration of the Selective Servive Exam on campus.
YAF President Steve Sickler,
asserted, “We think the referendum should be given because we
feel GFCSS as a minority raised
an issue. They went to Furnas
and were refused.”
Mr. Sickler felt the resolution
to test the draft issue by putting
it through the Senate was “a
cheap attempt to bypass the students, The Student Senate has already passed a resolution to keep
the Selective Service Exam from
being administered on campus.
The leadership of this movement
likes to confuse the two issues in

a calculated effort to make the

draft issue the issue.”
Dr. Larue of the Classics Department announced that -a petition would be circulated “to as
many faculty members as we can
reach This will be personally
carried to Furnas’ office.”
Dr. Kahn, associate professor
in the Classics Department, affirmed the fights of the minority.
“The question is not if a majority
of faculty and students are opposed to the Selective Service
test on campus but that a significant number were disturbed and
wanted to discuss it. There are
the rights of the minority to be
protected within the tradition.”
Members of the GPCSS Executive Committee Larry Faulkner
said, “Dean Meyerson should be
kept in touch with what’s going
on. We should not just send telegrams but we should be heard,
when Dean Meyerson takes office,
on all issues that affect us. If we
get a sit-in there will be no question in Dean Meyerson’s mind that
we mean business.”
Dr, Larue urged, “The administration always gives less than
what you ask for so ask, my
friends, ask, ask, ask .
GFCSS Executive Committee
member Jim Hart asserted, “We
should be considered in those
questions which directly influence
our lives. When I say that, I mean
exactly that, life.”
Jim Hansen of the GFCSS Executive Committee said, “I’m not
questioning the administration’s
right to administer but the way
they cannot be reviewed. It is a
matter of principle to be able to
talk to the administration, or at
least have them talk to us. Now
there are no avenues, no provisions for such things."
Mrs, Wheila Rhodes of the Philosophy Department stated that
“Whether or not you are against
the Selective Service Exam is irrelevant. We should add all the
grievances arising from the inability to hear us.”
.

Draft Test On Campus?

—

Tha official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo. N. Y. 14214.
RuWUh.d twice weekly from the first week of September to the last week in
except for exam periods, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and spring vacations.

Business

called by the Graduate Faculty
Committee on the Selective Service (GFCSS) a course of action
was decided upon to gain channels for the redress of grievances.
This Monday there will be a
sit-in at Hayes Hall in the event
that President Fumas does not
accede to a resolution, adopted at
the rally, giving the Faculty-Senate the ultimate power to determine University policy.
Included in this resolution is
that “Students should be empowered to make policy proposals by
means of a referendum or a vote
of the Senate and/or the Graduate Student Association (GSA).
Such student proposals shall be
adopted as official policy unless
reversed by a 2/3 vote of the
Faculty Senate.”
Since the draft issue is “gener-

EDITORIAL POLICY IS DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING
Second Class Postage Paid at Buffalo, N. Y.
Subscription
$3.00 per year,
circulation
15.000.
Represented
for national advertising by
National Advertising Service. Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New Yorfc. N. Y.

An open forum, eo-sponsored
by the Student Association and
the Graduate-Faculty Committee
on the Selective Service, was held
last Thursday in the Fillmore
Room. The discussion evolved out
of the controversy surrounding
the University decision to administer the Selective Service
examination on campus.
Dr. A. Westley Rowland, assistant to the President, and Mr.

Allen Kuntz, who decided initial-

ly that SUNYAB facilities should
be made available for the exam,
represented the Administration
in the two-hour-long debate.
Mr. Gene Larue and Mr, Larry

Faulkner, both members of the

Graduate-Faculty Committee, Student Senate Vice-President Kim
Darros and Dan Rotholz were the
formal representatives of all those
who are opposed to current University policy concerning the
draft. Clinton Deveaux, President
of the Student Association, was

moderator.
Dr. Rowland presented a statement prepared by Dr. Furnas
stating the rationale behind the
Administration's stand in the current crisis and defining the roles
of students, faculty members and
administrative staff members regarding University policy. The
text will appear tomorrow in the
Spectrum.

Mr. Kuntz, in his opening statement, explained that the decision
he had made was compatible with
long-established precedent and offered to answer questions concerning either that precedent

“and/or my credentials.”
Dan Rotholz read the Senate
Resolution passed on Wednesday,

Clinton

Deveaux moderates Selective Service discussion.
May Fourth, in which it was proposed that the University 1) not
send academic records to the Selective Service unless requested
•to do so by the individual stu-

dent and

2)

not lend its facilities

to the Selective Service for the

administration of the deferment
exam

Kim Darrow, commenting on
Dr. Furnas’ statement observed
that, when defining an academic
community, it is necessary to remember that “Knowledge is not
enough.” Referring to Dr. Kuntz'
words, he stated that the question at hand was not “who?” but
“why?”

Mr. Larue read, as an opening,
a memorandum dated May third,
in which deans were urged to
persuade graduate students to
register for the draft exemption

exam.

Observing that that memo
smelled of official policy, he
called for commitment" on the
part of those dean, professors
and administrative staff members
who, until then, had merely expressed their “concern.”
He
emphasized the necessity for taking sides on the issue and said
that non-action evinced “hostility
to a desire for change.”
Larry Faulkner remarked that,
although some might consider it
“convenient to give the test on
campus, the retention of automony is more important than convenience of location.” He reminded those present that the
university has always decided for
itself who is educational material
and stated that the University is
“not only allowing that pattern to
change,” but “encouraging it to

happen.”
An open question and answer
period folowed during which Dr.
Rowland and Mr. Kuntz were
questioned repeatedly concerning
possible willingness on the part
of the administration to reevaluate its position. Dr. Rowland stated several times that the decision

had been made and would not be
changed and neither
Dr. Rowland
nor Mr. Kuntz seemed to think
that it infringed in any way upon
University autoraony.
Closing statements made by
panel members seemed to indicate that more effective means
of communication would have to
be found before any kind of settlement could be reached. Dr.
Rowland concluded by saying that
‘'whatever the Selective Service
regulations are, the University
will enforce them,”

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                    <text>PHILOSOPHY

_J

—-A

STATE

TENNIS

—

directory

award

I

(See Page

VOLUME 16

I

(See Page II)

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, MAY 6, 1966

NO 44

Senate Opposes On Campus Test
A resolution opposing the administration of the Selective Service Exam on campus and sending
academic records to the draft
board was passed at the last Senate meeting of the year Wednes-

day night.

Miss Ellen Cardone was appointed temporary chairman of
the Student Senate Activities
Committee until next fall. The
reason for this was the lack of
time needed to interview the
candidates for the chairmanship.
This will be done in the fall.
The amendment to provide for

SDS Member Lists
Kept From FBI

Joel Gershowiti proposes Selective Service resolution

Photo by Carol Goodson

New Professor of Air Science
Comes to Campus July 15

At Wesleyan, Stanley Idzerda,
dean of the college, said an FBI
agent had asked him two weeks
ago for the names of all students
in the college’s SDS chapter and
had been refused such data. Idzerta said the college kept no
such lists and “we consider the
student's activity his own affair.”
•’It is unfortunate,” he added,
“that a climate of suspicion can
can be created by such activities
that might lead students to be
more circumspect than the situation requires. Things like this
fre' -id
-&gt;

Colonel John J. Herbert, Jr.,
currently Director of NATO
Weapon School, wil arrive at UB
July 15th to assume the duties
of Profesor of Aerospace Studies
for the 575th ROTC Detachment.

student recall

of Senators

the Law School.
Selective Service Debate
Senator Joe Gershowitz, who
proposed the resolution, asserted,
“The integrity of the University
is at stake. Maintenance of this
integrity is worth a short walk
to Hayes Hall. There is nothing
to keep the student from requesting his grades and sending them
to the draft board.
Treasurer Carl Levine affirmed, “A student's grades are his
personal property. The government shall not infringe on a student’s personal property." Mr.
Levine said that he does not
believe students should "have to
go all the way downtown” to take
the Selective Service Test.
“Allowing the students to take
the test on campus is a service
muchc the same as providing ap-

plications for a 2S deferment for
the student." Senator Daniel
Rotholz said that by accepting
the test on campus we “accept
the administration's decision as
fair. We accept the validity of
the criteria used by the draft

board.”
This resolution was passed;
Whereas, it is the traditional
power of the University to set
its own standards for membership in the academic community,
and
Whereas, the University would
abdicate this power by a) con-

senting to automatically supply
the Selective Service with grades
and academic record, and, b) consenting to lend its facilities to
the Selective Service for the administration of a draft deferment

examination, therefore, be it resolved that the Student Senate
proposes:

1. That the University shall not

send the academic record of
the student unless specifically requested to do so by
the individual student to the
Selective Service.
2. That the University shall in
no way lend its facilities to
the Selective Service for the
administration of the deferment examination.

Dr. Z. Brzezinski to Speak
At 4.00, Monday in Norton
One of the Outstanding Young
Men of 1963, Zbigniew

K. Brzezinski, will speak in the Conference Theater Monday, May 9, at
4 p.m. Prof. Brzezinski is the Director of the Research Institute
on Communist Affairs and a Professor of Public Law and Government of the Russian Institute,
both of Columbia University.

A 23-year Air Force veteran,
Colonel Herbert comes to the
university bearing impressive credentials. As a B-25 pilot in World
War H he flew 51 combat missions and received numerous decorations including the Distinguished Flying Cross, the Air
Medal with 4 Oak Leaf Clusters,
and both Air Force and Army
Commedation Medals.

in General Education from the
University of Omaha, and he has
attended the folowing service
schools: Air Command and Staff
College, Academic Instructor
School, and Pilot Training School.
It was at the Air Command and
Staff College from 1958 to 1963
that Colonel Herbert held the
position of Academic Instructor.
This summer the Colonel will

the

was defeated. The vote of all 18
of the Senators present was necessary to ratify the amendment;
there was one dissenting vote.
The Dean of Students has only
to choose its two candidates to
complete the membership of the
Student Judiciary for next year.
The Senate ratified the appointment of Mr. Bruce Goldstein and
Mr, Dennis Hall.
Dr. Furnas’
choice was Mr. Willard Myers of

Prof. Brzezinski was born in
Warsaw, Poland, in 1928, emigrated to the United States, and
is now an American citizen. In
1949 he received his bachelor's

degree from McGill University
and was awarded first honors in
both Economics and Political Science. He was granted his mas-

leave his current assignment in
Germany, and come to UB to fill
the position vacated by Lt. Col.
Huddleston who was PAS of the
575th Detachment for four years.
In the interim, Lt. Col. Ozenick
wii serve as UB’s Professor of
Aerospace Studies.

The FBI office in New Haven
said its files were confidential
and it would be unable to disclose
the exact nature of its investigation. An FBI spokesman also denied charges circulated at Yale
and Wesleyan that agents had
questioned the roommates of Yale
SDS members.

Capen, Cooke Awards
Presented at Banquet
The Walter P. Cooke Award
and the Samuel P. Capen Award
will be presented at the Alumni
Association’s annual awards and
installation banquet tomorrow at
the Cordon Bleu Restaurant at
6 p.m.
The Cooke Award is presented
to a non-alumnus
whose service to the University
is “of such magnitude it clearly
calls for outstanding recognition."

periodically

Former football coach Richard
Offenhamer will be awarded a
special citation of appreciation
on behalf of the alumni.

to r Ronny

AIPI ratlroo P.IHowiti trophy. L Intramural
Stov Schulman, Stov. Waloh. S~

eh Mut *'

HjjJ

.

,

Following installation of the
Association’s General Alumni
Board officers, the Annual Alumni Spring Dance will be held.

ter’s and doctor's degrees from
Harvard in 1950 and 1953.

Dr. Brzezinski served as an
Instructor of Government and a
research fellow at the Russian
Research Center and the Center
for International Affairs at Harvard in 1953 and was promoted
to the rank of Assistant Professor in 1956. In 1960 he was
transferred to Columbia University with the status of Associate
Professor and has since achieved
the rank of full Professor.
Dissatisfied with confining his
achievements to the academic
community, Prof. Brzezinski was
a consultant to the Research
Program on the U.S.S.R. in New
York from 1953-54, is a member
of t,he Joint Committee on Contemporary China of the Social
Science Research Council, the
Council on Foreign Relations, and
a Constultant to the RAND Corporation.
Assisting the U.S. government,
he was the study co-ordinator and
principal author of the paper
“Ideology and Foreign Affairs,"
a report presented to the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee in
1959, and he is presently a consultant to the State Department.
In addition to receiving several grants for research in the field
of Communist affairs, Prof. Bne

ZBIGNIEW K. BRZEZINSKI

zinski was honored as a Social
Science Research Fellow in 1957.
He was the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1960. and
was selected by the U.S. Jaycees
as one of America’s Ten Outstanding Young Men of the Year
in 1963.

He is a prolific writer and has
an impressive series of books
to complement his articles appearing in various periodicals,
such as Foreign Affairs, The
American Political Science RePolitics, and China
Quarterly. He is the author of
Political Controls in the Soviet
Army, published in 1954; The
view, World

Politics in
Permanent Purge,
Soviot Totalitarianism, published
in 1956: and Tho Soviet Bloc—
Unity and Conflict, published in
I960 and recently revised to include an epilogue on the SinoSoviet dispute. The volumes were
all written for the Russian Research Center,
His works also include Ideology and Power in Soviet Politics,
a collection of essays, published
in 1962; and Alternative to Partition; For a Broader Conception
of America's Role in Europe,
printed last year for the Council
on Foreign Relations. He is coauthor of Totalitarian Dictatorship and Autocracy.
—

�PAGE TWO

SPECTRUM

Snags Develop in Interim Campus Construction

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outlines

-V

ANNOUNCING

Rapid expansion of the university in the past several years
has brought many administrative
problems to the students’ attention. One of the most pressing
problems on the campus is that

of space for' classrooms, offices,
research, and staffs.

Due to the recent inflation of
student enrollment, the faculty
has increased, and the university
now proposes further enlargement of its undergraduate classes.
The great strain upon existing
physical facilities, and the fact
that the university has used the
maximum permissible amount of
building space allowed by the
state, restricts continued building
of the Butler Building, unless
permenent structures are removed.

Many One of a Kind at Unheard of Savings!

To provide for the proposed
increase in students and faculty,
the university has sought offcampus space as a remedy. The
administration proposes that certain academic departments be
Main St. campus and housed in
larger space elsewhere.

Harlem at Main Street

Since the master plan for the
new campus has not been completed, it is impossible to build
on that site. Therefore, the administration proposes that the
departments be housed elsewhere.

NEW YORK COMES TO BUFFALO

Showroom Samples of Women's
Apparel from Leading Fashion Houses

Tack Pharmacy Bldg.

Friday, May 6, 1966

in

has asked

contractors to build office facilities in the Town of Amherst on
Niagara Falls Blvd., about five

miles from campus. Unfortunately, the contractors have refused
to build unless they are able to
convert the university structures
into commercial shopping establishment after the university
vacates

The Amherst Town Board has
refused to zone the area as commercial land, preventing the university contractors from building,
and a petition by area residents
asking that the school be prevented from building in Amherst has
been circulated. The decision of
the Town Board was based on the
unfinished Town of Amherst master plan which will prevent spot
zoning until July.
The Ad Hoc Student Committee on the Interim Campus has
suggested alternatives to the
splitting of the student body and
university’s faculty. They feel
that students attending some
classes will be denied a great part
of campus life. Even with shuttle

transportation, students would
have little opportunity to spend
time on the present campus.

The committee proposes that no
academic departments be isolat-

ed from the main campus, and
that a more equitable solution be
found. The administration has
intimated that it will listen to
student proposals, but exact information on building and rental
costs has been withheld from students. Since the new campus master plan is now two years behind
schedule, the administration must
soon find a way to ease the space
strain.

Chennault Drill Society
Merges with Arnold Air
The Chennualt Drill Society
used profits from last week’s
pizza sale to participate in the
Northeastern Invitational Drill
Meet in Boston April 28 and 29.
According to member Paul
Kopycinski, the society sold 500
pizzas, netting $250 to support
the society.
The Drill Society has effected
a merger with the Arnold Air
Society to strengthen the organization, Mr. Kopycinski said. The
new Arnold Air Society will be
able to assume a larger role conducting the ROTC leadership program next semester and supporting such civic functions as the
Annual Blood Drive and the Military Ball.

Snyder, New York
Phona: 839-1277

Take your good time
going home.

Eastern via Florida.
Florida swings in the spring —but it really swings in the summer.
Lower off-season room rates are in effect. And Eastern will take you to
Daytona or Ft. Lauderdale or even Miami for half-fare.
So take a detour and enjoy it on your way home. Or go home first and down

to Florida later.
Just use your Eastern Youth ID card, or similar card from another airline. If
you don't have such a card, it's a snap to get one —provided you're under 22
and can prove it. For the specifics, stop by a Travel Agent or any Eastern ticket

office.
Once you have your card, you can get an Eastern Jet Coach seat for half
fare. You can't make an advance reservation. But if there's a seat available at
departure time, you can fly to any Eastern destination within the continental
U.S. Including Florida.

A eastern
mrnmm
■

N.Y. 1000

II

NUMBER ONE TO THE FUN

�U1;

fr*

.

r I-

*»»Tl

Friday. May 6, 1966

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

AAUP to Appeal Feinberg Decision

On Campus AfeShuJman

When the University of Buffalo
joined the State University system in 1962, signing the Feinberg certificate became part of
the required acceptance procedure for the faculty.
The Certificate implements the
Feinberg Law which states, “Any
person who is a member of an
organization advocating the over-

(By the author of “Rally Round the Flag, Boys.'",

“Debit Gillis," etc.)

THE COLLEGE PRESIDENT:
HIS CAUSE AND CURE
Oh, sure, you’ve been busy, what with going to classes, doing
your homework, catching night crawlers, getting married,
picketing—byt can’t you pause for just a moment and give
thought to that dear, dedicated, lonely man in the big white
house on the hill? I refer, of course, to Prexy.
(It is interesting to note that college presidents are always called “Prexy.” Similarly, trustees are always called
“Trixie.” Associate professors are always called “Axy-Pixy.”
Bursars are called “Foxy-Woxy.” Students are called
“Algae.”J
But I digress. We were speaking of Prexy, a personage
at once august and pathetic. Why pathetic? Well, sir, consider how Prexy spends his days. He is busy, busy, busy.
He talks to deans, he talks to professors, he talks to trustees, he talks to alumni. In fact, he talks to everybody except the one group who could lift his heart and rally his
spirits. I mean, of course, the appealingest, endearingest,
winsomest group in the entire college—delightful you, the

students.

It is Prexy’s sad fate to be forever a stranger to your
laughing, golden selves. He can only gaze wistfully out the
window of his big white house on the hill and watch you at

your games and sports and yearn with all his tormented
heart to bask in your warmth. But how? It would hardly
be fitting for Prexy to appear one day at the Union, clad in
an old rowing blazer, and cry gaily, “Heigh-ho, chaps!
Who’s for sculling?”
No, friends, Pfexy can’t get to you. It is up to you to get
to him. Call on him at home. Just drop in unannounced. He
will naturally be a little shy at first, so you must put him at
his ease. Shout, “Howdy-doody, sir! I have come to bring a
little sunshine into your drear and blighted life!” Then
yank his necktie out of his vest and scamper goatlike
around him until he is laughing merrily along with you.
Then hand him a package and say, “A little gift for you,

sir.”

mldn’t

throw of the government of the
United States shall not be eligible
for employment in the public
schools of the state.”

Protests from the faculty and
from the American Association
of University Professors (AAUP)
have proclaimed that the Certificate violates principles of acaMAJ. ROY STEWART
demic freedom. They maintained
A ceremony was held April 19 that the Certificate violates "exto honor Major Roy Stewart who plicit and implied guarantees at
is leaving the ROTC facutly to the time of merger that UB facserve at Hickham Air Force Base, ulty would be accepted unconditionally.”
Honolulu, Hawaii.
Major Stewart teaches AeroPresident Furnas upheld the
space Studies 1 and 2. He said
Certificate.
that he will not be replaced since
enrollment in ROTC is no longer
In February, 1964, Harry Keymanditory.
ishian, who had refused to sign
At his new job, Major Stewart
the Certificate, was informed
reported that he will be working that he would not be reappointon staff operations. He commented to the UB faculty despite
ed that he is “glad to get back AAUP policy that teachers with
to the Air Force.”
three years of full-time employment (as in his case) are entitled
to one-year notice before disEverything Photographic for
missal.
Professional &amp; Amateur Use
When members of the UB faculty refused to sign the loyalty
oath as a condition for continued
employment, and were either dismissed or not reappointed, sevCamera*
Movie Rental*
eral
of them took the case to
Supplies
Projector*
to test the Feinberg Law's
court
Photo Finishing
validity. The Law’s constitutionality has consistently been upheld,
2635 Delaware Ave.
including the latest decision last
877-3317
January 5th.
The five plaintiffs in the Jan-

DELAWARE CAMERA
MART

uary 9th case have decided to
appeal to the Supreme Court. The
AAUP estimates that it wLU cost
about $3500 for court costs.
Appeals for funds to finance
the appeal have been sent to UB
faculty members and to other
AAUP chapters in the state. Contributions by UB students would
be appreciated by the AAUP.

Computer Program

For Grad. Placements
The UB Placement Service announced that it is establishing a
computerized program known as
Graduate Resume Accumulation
and Distribution (GRAD) to assist career-seeking alumni.
According to Placement Director Dr. C. James Lafkiotes, a
computer will match qualified
alumni having at least one year
of experience with participating
employers. The computer will be
provided by the College Placement Council (CPC), a non-profit
organization of college placement

directors.
Although the program initially will be limited to experienced
alumni seeking advanced positions in business and industry.

Lafkiotes noted the program may

eventually be extended to graduating students also.

Alumni interested in the program should contact the Placement Office in Schoellkopf Hall.

*

THE SPECTRUM

*

SINGLE

19-29years

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Printed by

Partners’ Press Inc,
ABOOTT

SMITH

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PRINTING

1381 KENMORE AVENUE
KENMORE. NEW YORK 14217

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Come Out Friday Night to

“Yes, I should,” you will say, “because this is a pack of
Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades, and whenever I
think of Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades, I think of

you.”
“Why, hey?” he will ask curiously.
“Because, sir,” you will say, “though you are no longer
a young blade, still you gleam and function. Full though
you are of years and lumps, rheumy though your endocrines
and flaccid your hamstrings, still you remain sharp, incisive, efficacious.”
“Thank you,” he will say, sobbing.
“So it is with Personna,” you will continue. "Naturally
you expect a brand-new blade to give a close, speedy shave.

But how about a blade that’s had hard and frequent use?
Do you still expect a close, speedy shave? Well, sir, if it’s a
Personna, that’s what you’ll get. Because, sir, like you, sir,
Personna is no flash-in-the-pan. Like you, sir, Personna

abides.”

He will clasp your hand then, not trusting himself to

“But away with gloom!” you will cry jollily. “For I have
still more good news to tell you of Personna!”
“How is that possible?” he will say.
“Hearken to me,” you will say. “Personna, in all its enduring splendor, is available not only in Double Edge style
but also in Injector style!"
then
He will join you then in the Personna rouser, and
he will bring you a steaming cup of cocoa with a marshre
mallow on top. Then you will say, “Good-bye, sir.
turn soon again to brighten your dank, miasmic life.can
pos“Please do,” he will say. “But next time, if you
siblv manage it, try not to come at four in the morning.

~

*

#

r

*

I'HMI.

Max Hhulman

Prexy and undergrad late and soon, fair weather aruifoultheperfect shaving companion to Personna Blades is Burma
Shave.® It comes in regular and menthol: it soaks rings
around any other lather. Be kind to your kisser; tryPersonna
,

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�SPECTRUM

PACE FOUR

Editorial (Comment

.

.

The

.

A Question of Clarification
A number of people for whom I have a great deal
of respect have come to me to tell me that yesterday’s
editorial “went too far”. Perhaps it did. Few people
have more reason to know that President Furnas has
supported academic freedom in the past than I have.
But to congratulate an educator for upholding academic
freedom is like congratulating an architect because the
buildings he designs didn’t fall down and kill people—in both cases the men are only doing what could reasonably be expected of them.
One congratulates an architect if his buildings are

beautiful, as well as functional, and one congratulates an
educator when his work is exceptional. I do not believe
that this university is exceptional, and if it is exceptional
—then the state of American higher education is even
worse than we could imagine.
The issue of university autonomy is crucial, and for
a chief administrator to ignore that problem is appalling.
President Furnas did just that. The appelatives used to
describe his arbitrary actions were strong—but our commitment to academic freedom and responsibility, and
university are also strong.

If my editorial gave President Furnas reason to reassess his position, then I feel justified in writing them,
but if they caused him personal discomfort—then I sincerely apoloize. I believe his actions were autocratic,
anti-educational, and extremely harmful to the university
community. •! believe his actions stemmed from pride
which was foolish, and that it is stupid to make decisions
which are so clearly detrimental to the goals of higher
education.

However, I have no desire to ridicule or disparage
the President as a man. I apologize if my words have
been reasonably open to that interpretation.

PrW»y, May

grump

This is going to be another
of those rainy Tuesday columns
in which V sort of rummage
around in my alleged mind and
get all sorts of little odds and
ends into order.
For example, I owe some sweet
young thing an apology. She called me last week to ask the name
of the establishment I mentioned
in Toronto. Being so astounded
that someone actually read the
column and remembered it I
was shocked into civility. We
chatted pleasantly for a few moments, 1 gave her what directions
and aid I could and we severed
the connection.
Then last Friday I went to
visit a friend in the hospital.
This was not the wisest and most
intelligent move I have ever
made. Hospitals tend to upset
me. I dislike being reminded of
the frailty of people either structurally or mentally. It has the
effect of reminding me that any
or all of the things that have
not happened to me so far are
not really under my control.
I have been outstandingly lucky in a variety of ways, and how
do you explain luck? EconomicSocial theories aside, in any culture you have people who are

blessed with luck and some who
aren’t, despite plaudits about hard
work and perserverance there is
something more occuring which
nobody

can really explain—but

it sounds much better to say “he
is lucky” than to say “he is
beloved of the Gods,” right?
Anyway hospitals as a group
tend to unnerve me, and I doubt

One criticism of society, according to our left-wing is that
it doesn’t provide for enough
direct democracy. The people, we
are told, ought to have more of
a voice in determining those who
speak for them. It is interesting
to note their reaction, however,
to proposals for accomplishing
this here at OB—such as electing the Chief Editor of the Spectrum. Horrors! Tyranny! Fascism!
If we are able to get past the
adjectives, we find that there

exists

THE

SPECTRUM

official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo. N. Y. 14214.
Published twice weekly from the first week of September to the last week in
May. except for exam periods, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and spring vacations.
JEREMY TAYLOR

Business

RAYMOND 0. VOLPE

Manager

News Editor
ALICE EDELMAN
Biff—Loretta Angelina, Joanne Bouchier. Russell Buchman, Karen Green,
Peter Lederman. Joan Roberts. Rick Schwab. Dan Schroeder, Sharon Shulman,
Eileen Teitler, Nancy Toder, Patti Wartley. Judy Weisberg.
Feature Editor
JOHN STINY
Assistant
JO ANNE LEEGANT
Staff— Bonnie Bartow. Ron Ellsworth, Barbara Ann Fitzsimmons, Barbara Loeb,
Audrey Logel, Bob Martin, Suzanne Rovner, Martha Tack, William Weinstein.
Sports Editor
STEVE SCHUELEIN
Staff—Mike Castro, Mike Dolan, Steve Farbman, Bob Frey, Scott Forman,
J.B. Shared
Layout Editor
SHARON HONIG
in« Bouchier. Stephanie Parker, Steve Silverman.
Copy Editor
LAUREN JACOBS
Hall- Carol Becker. Estelle Fox. Jocelyn Hailpem, Sandy Lippman. Betsy Ozer,
Claire Shottenfeld, Susan Zuckerberg.
Advertising Manager
RON HOLTZ
BtalV—Terry Angelo, Audrey Cash, Pat Rosenfeld, Steve Silverman, Joseph
Mancini.

Editor
EDWARD JOSCELYN
Stall—Don Blank, Peter Bonneau, Joseph Feyes, Carol Qoodson, Alan Gruber,
Marc Levine, Ivan Makuch, Michael Soluri, Anthony Walluk, Susan Wortman,
Robert Wynne.
Circulation Manager
DIANE LEWIS
Faculty Advisor
IRENE.RICH
Financial Advisor
DALLAS GARBER
Photography

I

EDITORIAL POLICY IS DETERMINED BY THE
FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING

Second Class Postage

Subscription

$3.00

Paid at Buffalo. N. Y.
year, circulation
par

15,000.
Represented
for national advertising by
National Advertising Service. Inc., 420 Madi-

son Ave., New York,

N. Y.

if anyone is as itchy when unnerved as I. So I picked my wife
up at work at IX p.m. and we
drove up to Toronto. For those
of you who recall my touting
the “New Gate of Cleve” forget
it. The establishment is gone,
defunct apparently. If she, the
forementioned sweet young thing,
(not my wife) poked about the
adjacent area however would have
found the male half of Ian and
Sylvia, Ian Tyson doing a single,
so even if my information was
hopelessly out of date, hopefully
the young lady and her party
had an enjoyable evening. Oh,
Ian Tyson was at a place called
the Riverboat, in case anyone
wanders up in future they might
have something of interest. Unless they are in bankruptcy of
course, for which I refuse to
accept responsibility.
If you are one of those people
who can’t help but read something if it’s printed—you amuse
yourself at the breakfast table
reading cereal boxes if you don’t
have a morning paper—you may
have noted a sort of much-ado
about-naught type argument going

on involving two gentlemen

who try to write “The Right”
and a number of other people,
myself included.
Being a sort of nasty soul I
would rather beat stupidity to
death with its’ own weapons so
I have stayed well away from
the moral implications of the
original
subject, “Abortions,”
and have answered Mr. Callan’s
plea to show him how he has
gone astray. Well, I did show

19ft

by STEESE

him but he didn’t see it so with
heavy heart I return to the discourse.
Mr. Callan originally said in
the Spectrum of April 8 that
(this is probably going to result
in a yelp of foul by JC himself
but I believe it is legitimate) “If
A is ever M, it is always M.
Since manifest evidence shows A
is not always M, A is not ever M.”
On Tuesday last Mr. Callan produces this formula. “Given: If
A, then B. Therefore: If not B,
then A. Given: not B. Therefore:
not A.”
Bear with me gentle reader
for I fail to see the connection
between these two sets of statements. Let us try placing the
first set into the form the author
of the first set says both sets

are. Hmmmmmm.

“Given; If Abortion if ever
moral, it is always Moral. Therefore: If not always Moral, it is
not always Abortion’’ (Waaaattt?)
I suppose I just am as stupid
as Mr. C says I am. But I am
willing to learn so I would consider it a very great favor if
Mr. Callan will put the original
statements concerning Abortion
into the form he claims they are
in only clear enough so that
stupid asses like me who have
to invent their own logic to survive will more truly be able to
appreciate his great wisdom.
We will ignore the fact that he
is going to have a hell of a time
doing it because he has lead to
turn into gold. But considering
his political and humanitarian
outlook he just may be an alchemist too.

YAF Soundboard

about

three

arguments

against it.

The

...

«;

The first is that it is a violation of “academic freedom.” This
argument is usually all that’s
necessary, since just the mention
of that sacred phrase on this
campus as generally enough to
foreclose any rational discussion
of an issue. But what does this
nebulous, often-misued shiboleth
mean? Does it refer to the right
of any student, professor or organization to express their view,
regardless of its popularity?

If so, then a walk through Norton any weekday (or Dr. Furnas’
office recently) should be sufficient to convince an unbiased observer that SDS’s academic freedom has not been violated, nor
should it be.
But does academic freedom im-

ply the right of SDS to control

the student newspaper, which is
subsidized by the students money?
This paper, as presently constructed, prints biased and slanted articles which present a one-sided
view of campus and international
activities, advocates non-support
of our athletic teams, attacks our
fraternities (going so far as to
ridicule
service fraternity for
raising money for crippled children), “labels” a professor who
opposes Communism “stupid” and
“ignorant” in print, castigates the
president-elect of the university
before he even arrives, for his
•

anarchy,

“filthy spech” movements, etc., at Berkley, suggest-

ing that UB ought to become another Berkley, and best of aH it

does these things in the name of
the majority of the students and
with their money!
Now it is self-evident that many
viewpoints should be and are
expressed. Yet excluding complete objectivity (which the Spectrum obviously does not possess)
the student newspaper’s policies
will reflect only one of these.

If it would be a violation of
“academic freedom’’ were that
view not to be SD6’s, is it not a
similar violation of academic freedom that H is not the view of
some other organization? Considering that much of the outside
community judges us by what appears in our student newspaper,
wouldn’t it be fairer to let the
majority of the students have a
say as to the viewpoint content
and emphasis of our newspaper?
On to argument No. 2—which
can be found in Discussion's interview with Mr. Taylor. Namely
that if we elect the Chief Editor,
we shall no longer possess a
“good newspaper.” Or, in other
words, the students, if given the
chance to elect someone will undoubtedly elect a popular but
totally incompenent individual.
Right, Clint Deveaux? Right,
Joel Feinman? While we’re at
it, maybe we ought to abolish the
Student Senate and IRC, since
the administrators must have

“competence” in their field while
an elected student may not be
qualified. ('It really shouldn’t be
necessary to add that I am being
sarcastic and not actually advocating this, but I fear that if I
don’t, the same readers who
thought that James Callan wanted
mothers to take knives and kill
their children may again write in
and complain.)
So we come to the third argument—Do the citizens of New
York elect the Chief Editor of
the Times or do the “townies”
elect the editor for the News?
But ther exists one vital difference. If enough people disapprove of the Times or the News
and cease to purchase it, the
journal will be compelled either
to improve or go bankrupt. But
here the Spectrum is a monopoly
subsidized by your money (unlike some colleges where the
school newspaper is sold and
thus self-supporting).

Whether you like it or not, or
even read it, is of no consequence.

You’ve already bought the Spectrum! And it speaks for you to
the outside world. Shouldn’t it
then be responsible to you the
students? And wouldn’t it be consistent with our progressive and
democratic tradition which has
elected student leaders for other
endeavors?

Bisonhead Taps '67 Class
On Tuesday, May 3, twelve male
juniors were tapped for the Bisonhead Society class of 1967. President Arthur Seigel presided over
the tapping ceremony. Honored
guests included Dean R. Siggelkow and Dean R. Gratwick.

Bisonhead, one of the oldest
traditions on this campus, is the
senior men's honor society. Selection is based on demonstration
of outstanding qualities of character, leadership, and scholarship.
Former members include Professor John Horton of the History

Department and Dr. Philip Weis
of the Medical School.

The men selected were: Daniel
Sella, J. Edward Smith, Thomas
Rogers, Laurence Glazer, Leon
Kellner, Leslie Lupert, Michael
Henry, Peter Hinunel, George
Roger, Robert Montgomery, Joel
Kershner and David Schriber.
This year’s Bisonhead activities
included open lectures featuring
two visiting Nobel Prize winners
and discussions with members of
the faculty and administration.

�Friday, May 6, &lt;1966

oCetter to the Editor
Open Dormitories Suggested
TO THE EDITOR;

Now that the ever so thoughtful and liberal-minded members
of the administration have decided that resident students are mature enough to dress themselves,
how about them recognizing the
fact that they are mature enough
to know when to undress themselves? That is, isn’t it about
time the dorms were open to
members of the opposite sex?
Since other schools allow this, is
it that the chosen ones who go
there are more capable of mature
thought (or just more capable of
mature thought when applying to
colleges?) Could it be because

PAM PIVC

SPECTRUM

iho is your ideal date? Thousands use Central Control and its high-speed
computer for a live, flesh-and-blood answer to this question.
Your ideal date such a person exists, of course.
But how to cet acquainted? Our Central Control computer
processes 10,000 names an hour. How lone would it take
you to meet and form an opinion of that many people?
You will be matched with five ideally suited persons
of the opposite sex, right in your own locale (or in any
area of the U.S. you specify). Simply, send $3.00 to Central
Control lor your questionnaire. Each of the five will bo
os perfectly matched with you in interests, outlook and
background as computer science makes possible.
Central Control is nationwide, but its programs are
completely localized. Hundreds of thousands of vigorous
and alert subscribers, all sharing the desire to meet their
ideal dates, have found computer dating to be exciting and
-

this is a state school, that we are
denied the freedom allowed to so
many others?
This is the freedom that will
reflect not only the maturity of
the resident students, but also the
maturity of the resident students
but also the maturity of the administration since it should not
be an every other Sunday following an odd month beginning on
Monday affair. Also this freedom
of thoughtful action should not
be so limited in scope as to exclude liquor and gambling as outlets for the “mature” college stu-

highly acceptable.

All five of your ideal dates will be delightful. So

hurry and send your $3.00 (or your questionnaire.

dent.

CENTRAL CONTROL, Inc.

—-Michael Lichtman

22 Park Avenue

Campaign Vandalism Criticized
TO THE EDITOR:
On behalf of the undersigned,
we would like to call to your
attention the disgraceful defacing of the constructions, posters,
etc. of the recent Spring Weekend campaigns. Many Greek women devoted many hours of hard
work into the planning and making of this publicity. Our en-

thusiasm for Spring Weekend has

not been discouraged, but we are

disappointed that our efforts are
not appreciated more. We hope
that in future years we can rely
on more support from the campus police and the student body

to prevent such incidents.

Alpha Gamma Delta
Chi Omega
Sigma Kappa Phi

Spectrum Sports Congratulated
TO THE EDITOR;

I would like to congratulate the
Spectrum and Coach Doc Urich
for the column ‘The Coach’s Corner." I believe that these articles
will generate a new spirit and

been lacking. Once again, congratulations and here's hoping
that next year each home football
game will be sold out.
Marv Robbins
Sports Editor,
“Buffalonian”

enthusiasm that has heretofore

Academic Integrity Urged
Dear President Furnas;

American colleges and universities increasingly compromise
the integrity of independent
scholarship and ethical commitment as greater demands from
outside interests encroach upon
the educational responsibilities
we as faculty members must fulfill. Faculty members no longer
even have available to them faculty commitment to off-campus
endeavors as university presidents become signatories to secret agreements implicating the
scholarly and ethical responsibilities which are not the prerogatives of university presidents to
offer. We have in mind the recent exposure of the C.LA.’s involvement in research activities
at Michigan State University as
described in the April issue of
Ramparts; the founding of the
C.I.A.’s Center for International
Studies at MIT; sponsoring of
“undercover" research activities
via private foundations, the Agency for International Development,
and Department of Defense.
We now call upon you to begin
to disassociate this University
from any commitment compromising the educational and ethical
standards of our University. We
feel that any cooperation with the

government beyond explicit educational and ethical requirements
of the University—such as with
the Defense Department, Central
Intelligence Agency, Selective
Service System, etc.—is most improper.
Specifically, we call upon you
to accede immediately to the students’ request to attend a public
meeting to discuss the relations
of the University with the Selective Service System. We further
urge you to cancel completely
the forthcoming Selective Service

examination since it is not the
responsibility of this University
to partake of any examinations
for a governmental agency not
in keeping with the educational
standards of scholarly performance by students.
More generally, we feel that
this University must now establish an explicit policy in regard
to its relations with governmental
agencies so as to avoid repetition
of protests to specific instances.

Respectfully yours,
Sidney M. Willhelm
Associate Professor
Bill J. Harrell
Lecturer

El win H. Powell
Associate Professor

Religion On Campus
GAMMA DELTA
Gamma Delta will hold its final
get-together Sunday. May 1, at St.

Paul’s Lutheran Church, Main St.,
Eggertsville, from 3:30 to 8 p.m.
The program includes sports, a
pizza supper and worship. For
rides, meet at the east entrance
of Norton at 3:30 p.m.

HILLEL
Hillel will sponsor a Sabbath
Service this evening at 7:45.
Arthur Frank will speak on; “Reflections On My Faith and My

People." The annual closing dinner will be held on Sunday, May

Awards
1, in the Hillel House.
will be presented to students lor
outstanding service. A review of
the year’s activities will be given
by President Jacquelyn Finley.
The 1966-67 officers will be in-

stalled.

INTER-VARSITY
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP
to the
Those who wish to go
Fellowship dinner tonight, should
met in Tower Parking Lot at
5:30 p.m.

-ARROW*

Cum Laude
button-down oxford...
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�SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

1

Friday, May

6. 1966

Directory of Philosophy Published;
Guide to World-Wide Philosophy
UB Philosophy professor Paul
Kurtz and Mr. Gilbert Varet of
the French Center of Philosophical Documentation, are co-editors
of the recently published International Directory of Philosophy
and Philosophers.

Dr. Kurtz explained, “The Directory is designed to serve as a
guide to philosophy on a worldwide basis . . . and to contribute
to international dialogue and communication."
Containing information on philosophy in more than 80 countries, the directory is the first
of its kind in the field and the
first to contain a section concerning the Soviet Union written by
Soviet philosophers.
Dr. Kurtz commented, “In the
directory, participation from all
over the world including the
Communist countries is important
because it gives the world philosophers information on the countries which was previously only
sketchy.”
The directory,
English, French,

published in
Spanish and

German, supplies brief descriptions of the state of philosophy in
twenty-six countries. Universities
where philosophy is taught, philosophical institutions, associations,
societies and journals are listed.
Dr. Rollo Handy, professor and
Philosophy Department chairman,
is one of the forty-seven philos-

ophers contributing to the Directory. Contributions also came
from fourteen national philosophical associations throughout the

world.
The Directory was published
under the auspices of the International Institute of Philosophy
and was sponsored by UNESCO.

Influence of Roman Oligarchy
Discussed by Earl at Lecture
The “potent influence” of the
Roman aristocratic oligarchy was
discussed by Dr. Donald C. Earl,
visiting professor of classics at
Northwestern University, in his
lecture on “The Roman Aristocratic Ideal” last Monday.
Dr. Earl said that the aristocratic minority established the
civilization, adding that courage,
wisdom, public service, ancestral

fame, dignity and honor were
the components of this ideal.
Most important of the aristocrat’s aspirations, according to
Dr. Earl, was glory through public service. “Service to the state
and a high sense of morality
were expected of every young
man in the aristocracy.
“The chief business of republican Home was its politics," Dr.
Earl noted. “Action rather than
oratory was essential.”

Lockwood displays A. Conger Goodyear Exhibit

Photo by Alan Gruber

Gifts Given by Gen. Goodyear
To UB Displayed at Library
Gifts of the late A. Conger
Goodyear to the University over
a period of years which include
many important literary manuscripts and first editions is on
display in Lockwood Library. In
1948, he gave the Lockwood Library the most complete collection known of the manuscripts of
the 19th century British essayist,
William Hazlitt. Several years
later, Mr. Goodyear made it possibel for the library to acquire
a unique collection of memora-

bilia

Other travelers checks
are every bit as good as
First National City Banks

...until you lose them!

about

Katherine

Cornell,

distinguished actress who was
born in Buffalo. Other donations
by Mr. Goodyear on view in the
library include manuscripts of
Charles Lamb, William Makepeace
Thackeray, and George Bernard
Shaw.

Marlin Places First
Senior Chemical Engineering
student Thomas Marlin won first
place for a presentation on
“Hydro-Dynamic Analogs of
Chemical Recation Sytsems” in a
state-wide competition among undergraduate Chemical Engineering students at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute April 29.
Mr. Gerald Zakalik received
honorable mention for his presentation of “Retention of Liquids by Granular Solids.”
The Lockwood display, planned
to complement the current exhibition at the Albright-Knox Gal-

“One-year marriage? Seems to
be the only way for a Cliffie
(Radcliffe student) to get out of
the dorm. I’ll share expenses, am
a good cook. Other details? We
can work it out. Contact the
Crimson, Box 2000.”
The ad was placed by an at‘.ractive 20-year-old junior who
is tired of living in a dormitory
She said she placed the ad after
learning she will not be one of
the 30 Radcliffe seniors granted
permission to live off campus

travelers checks, like First
National City travelers checks, can be cashed

all over the world.
But if you think all travelers checks are alike,
you may be in for a rude shock if you should

lose your checks.
With other leading travelers checks, elaborate
and time-consuming inquiries often have to be
made. It may be days—even weeks—before you
get your money back. Who wants to wait?
But, if you lose First National City travelers

checks, you don't have to worry. There are more
than 20,000 places around theworld authorized
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First National City travelerschecks come from
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Goodyear Exhibit
At Albright-Knox
The late Gen. A. Conger Goodis being honored at the
Albright-Knox Art Gallery by a
show of over 200 works he collected during his lifetime.
General Goodyear was a board
member and chairman of the art
committee at the then Albright
Art Gallery in the 1920s. Leaving
Buffalo, he became one of the
founders and the first president
of the Museum of Modern Art,
New York. During his life he
played an important role in the
development of both institutions.
Shortly before his death he established the A. Conger Goodyear
Fund at the Albright-Knox, made
up of 271 works by such artists
at Gauguin, van Gogh, Seurat,
Toulouse-Lautrec, Daumier, Degas, Leger, Pissarro and many
others.
During his life, General Goodyear gave a total of 361 works
to the Atbright-Knox. The current
exhibition, continuing through
June 6, includes works in the
Goodyear Fund and some from
the Museum of Modern Art and
private collections.
year

Cliffie Places Marriage Ad
A Radcliffe co-ed placed a classified advertisement in the Harvard Crimson Monday which read:

Other leading

lery of the paintings collected by
Mr. Goodyear, will continue
through June 10.

next year.
“X really intended the thing as
a protest against Radcliffe's poli-

cies, but I’m serious,” she commented.
The co-ed, who asked to remain
anonymous, disclosed that she
has received more than a dozen

replies.
One applicant for the position
sent in bis name and address
with a simple, “Well?”
Another replied, “I was about
to advertise for a female roommate, but I'm not sure of a oneyear marriage, though. I need
a cook, but you’ll have to cook a
test dinner, etc., of course.”
The co-ed insists she is completely serious about the ad. "I

just want to find “someone I
can get along with for a year.”

She added, “the more likely it
becomes, the more scared I get.”

China Lecture

Lecturer and writer Maud Russell will discuss “Peoples’ China
Today" Tuesday, May 17, in the
Conference Theater at s’ p.m. A
Chinese documentary film entitled “The Glorious Festival” will
be shown following the lecture.
Miss Russell was a social worker and a resident of China for
26 years, and was a member of
the Young Women’s Christian Association of China.
She is the publisher of the
magazine “Far East Reporter” in
which she is described as “a citizen determined to make use of
her insights and convictions to
build among her fellow citizens
an appreciation of the relationship between their well-being
and our country's Far Eastern
policy.”

“The Glorious Festival”, narrated in English, commemorates
the 14th anniversary of the Chinese revolution.

Miss Russell’s lecture is sponsored by the Philosophical Society. Donation is $.50.

�Friday, May C, 1M6

SPECTRUM

PAG! SEVIN

Idea of a 'Compact for Education'
Quickly Becomes a Legal Reality
With relatively little fanfare
the Compact for Education has
grown from a rough idea in the
minds of a few men to a legal
reality. It has ail taken just a
little more than a year.
The legal body now in existence
is the Education Commission of
the States, a permanent organization agreed upon by political and
education leaders from every
state when they met in Kansas
City last September and formed
the Compact for Education, a
temporary planning organization.
Dr. James B. Conant first discussed the ideas on which the
compact was to be based in his
book, “Shaping Educational Policy.” Conant criticized the generally low level of state-supported
education, while noting that the
U.S. Constitution does not authorize Congress to set any sort of
“national education policy.”
The commission, if joined by
all of the states, will be a representative body of 370, with
seven delegates from each state
and 20 from the federal government and foundations. The commission will authorize studies in
various areas of education to “present alternatives to policy decisions.” In other words, the commission will be a giant information clearing house.
The commission will also make
recommendations on educational
policy to the various state legislatures and possibly even to the
federal government, but the commission itself will have no policymaking power
The idea was seized upon by
former North Carolina Gov. Terry
Sanford, who was at Duke University writing a book on the
function of the states. Sanford
developed the draft proposal for
the compact and convened a
group of educators and political
leaders to plan for the Kansas
City meeting.

Ronald Moskowitz, the commission’s asociate director, said that
22 states have joined the commision to date; 30 states are expected to be members by the
group’s first annual meeting in
Chicago in June.
Maine is the only state to have
rejected the commission so far,
and the rejection prompted a
hurried trip by Moskowitz to visit Maine legisaltors. Moskowitz
said he feels certain the next
session of the Maine legislature
will authorize membership in the
commission and attributed the rejection to “politics and misun-

"“The chief critics of the commission have been in the ranks
of higher education. One of the
most vocal is Herbert E. Longe
necker who wrote in the Winter
1966 issue of The Educational
Record that “no logical argument
has been advanced that desired
improvements in education would
result from deliberately bringing
politics into education.”
Critics argue that the representative body
with seven delegates from each state
is not
large enough to cover all of the
facets of education and that the
commission necessarily will exclude some ideas.
This argument has been particularly prevalent among higher education critics of the commission.
Allan W. Ostar, the executive director of the Association of State
Colleges and Universities, told a
meeting of the Education Writers
Association in February that it
would be very difficult to “represent” education with only seven
delegates from a state, all of
whom are to be named by the
governor. Ostar said there was a
general feeling among those in
higher education that the commission is “a new bureaucracy
in the field of education without
a clearly established need.”
President Elvis Stahr, Jr., of Indiana University, made a presentation at the Kansas City meeting
on behalf of the National Association of State Universities and
Land Grant Colleges in which he
suggested that higher education
either be left out of the scope
—

—

The Official Bulletin is an
authorized publication of the
State University of New York at
Buffalo, for which the Spectrum
assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in
TYPEWRITTEN form to 1)4
Hayes Hall, attention Mrs. Fischer, before 2 p.m. the Friday prior
to the week of publication. Student organization notices are not

accepted for publication.
GENERAL NOTICES
Harriman Library—during final

The commission describes itself as a “partnership between
the educational leadership and
the political leadership for the advancement of education,” and
this has brought caustic remarks
from some sources who suggest
politics should be kept out of
the schools, not brought in.

Computing Center

May 10
Seminar in Biochemical Pharmacology—features Dr. Ross Hall,

Names Appointees

Computing Center director Anthony Ralston announced the ap
pointment of Mr. James A. Brooking as assistant manager for systems programming and Mr. Bruce
V. Vereecken as systems analyst
at the Center.

Mr. Brooking has been systems supervisor of the Syracuse
University Computing Center
since 1962. He earned his master’s degree in Mathematics at
Syracuse in 1963 and graduated
magna cum laude with a bachelor
of science degree from the State
University at Albany in 1961.

Vereecken, who received a
degree from
UB in 1965, has served as student consultant of the Computing
Center since 1965.
Mr,

bachelor of science

included for it.
Moskowitz counters by arguing
that educational leaders have always bad to work with politicians
in order to operate. “Any educator who has ever prepared a budget or gone to the state legislature for aid knows that education and politics meet on many
levels," he said. “What we want
to do is help them meet with better

understanding

and

agree-

ment," he said.
Moskowitz said all of the critics have missed the point in fearing the commission will interfere
with higher education or education at any other level. He interprets the role of the commission
as primarily information gathering and said the studies the group
will undertake will probably be
its most useful contribution.
He does not minimize, however,
the weight a recommendation
from the commission's 370 representatives would have on state
legislators. This is how the commission-hopes to achieve the general upgrading of education nationally that was called for by
Dr. Conant, Moskowitz said.
As he prepared for the commission's steering committee
meeting in Sante Fe, Moskowitz
could say that the critics have
virtually stopped calling for an
end to the commission. “We're a
legal entity now,” he said, “and
they know we are here to stay.
So they’re willing to work with
us.”

OFFICIAL BULLETIN

examinations the Reserve Room
will be open until 1 a m., including Saturday and Sunday. These
extended hours will begin on
the last day of classes, May 10,
and continue through Friday,
May 20.
Financial Aid Applications for
the 1966 Summer Session—applications are available at the Office of Financial Aid, 233 Hayes
Hall. A minimum of six semester
hours is necessary to be eligible
for the National Defense Student
Loan. The deadline date for filing
applications is May 20, 1966.
WEEKLY CALENDAR

derstanding.”

of the commission entirely or that
a separate representative body be

Roswell Park Memorial Institute.
The topic is “Chemistry and Biological Activity of Some of the
Minor Nucleosides of sRNA,” 244
Health Sciences, 4 p.m.
PLACEMENT
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The “Job Corps” needs college
graduates with bachelor and
master degrees in basic or remedial education, recreation, industrial arts of vocational education, psychology, physical educa
tion and counseling or sociology.
The Office of Economic Opportunity is interested in interviewing college seniors who may be
interested in working at one of
the eighty-eight Conservation Centers in the United States. Contact the Education Division immediately if you are interested
so that interviews can be arrang
ed.
Graduate students —AID, The

Agency for International Development will have 40 civilian openings in Laos and Vietnam this
summer. Candidates would work
in the areas of rural reconstruction, refugee and community development. Candidates must be
full time graduate students and
21 years of age.

Career Opportunities for May
Graduates—the following companies have career positions
available:
Schermerhom and Co.
Hooker Chemical
Cornell Aeronautical Lab.
Endicott Johnson Corp.
Federal Power Commission
Xerox Corp.
Ford Motor Co.
Marlin Rockwell Co.
American Optical Co.
Young Women’s Christian
Association
Wiley and Sons
Boy Scouts of America
Sherwin-Williams Co.
Sperry Phoenix Co.

Schechner Lectures
On Modern Theatre
Richard Schechner, Editor of
the Tulane Drama Rcvua. will
speak on "Modern Theatre and Its
New Directions" at the Studio

Arena Theatre, 681 Main Street,
on Friday, May 6, 1966
The lecture is open to the public

at 5 p.m.

free of charge.
Mr. Schechner is an associate
professor of theatre at Tulane
University and former

chairman
of the board of the Free Southern
Theatre. Under his editorial leadership the Tulanc Drama Revue
has become one of the outstanding theatrical journals in the
world. Recent issues have explored the new experimental theatre
in Poland and Italy, the aleotoric
or chance theatre pieces of John
Cage, Michael Kirby and other
contemporary artists.

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�IFlffiWfe MSLrman
It’s a pleasant surprise to report that it’s a good
weekend for movies in Buffalo. Pasolini’s poetically
beautiful Gospel According to St. Matthew (which I
reviewed two weeks ago) continues its run for those of
you who haven’t seen it. Harper, thoroughly enjoyable
despite hack direction, and featuring a tersely crisp
screenplay by William Goldman, begins its second week
in downtown Buffalo. The long-awaited A Thousand
Clowns has finally opened and will be reviewed next
week. Here at UB, the film committee is presenting
Beat the Devil, the high camp collaboration between
Truman Capote and John Huston. It stars Bogart in a
most un-Bogart-type role (Bogart himself hated the film,
which, given the theme, is the very reason it was a
success), and an outstanding supporting cast. (The film
committee, by the way, should be congratulated on its
decision to present films all summer long.) One of
Alfred Hitchcock’s best films, North by Northwest, is
back for a re-run. as is The Chase —worth seeing to watch
Brando carry-on.
King and Country has opened at the Glen Art Theatre. Although the film is highly overrated, it is worth
seeing not only because of the power of its theme, but
because of fine acting by the entire cast—Dirk Bogarde,
Tom Courtney, and John Mills in particular. Like all
of Joseph Losey’s previous films, King and Country is
unbearably heavy-handed, but like the best of the naturalistic novels which have over-influenced Losey, the force
of the sincerity just manages to win out in the end.
But the best news of all for movie-heads is the
The film
was made in 1959, but it was not released in the U.S.
until last year. It was directed by Sidney J. Furie, and
it was only because of the success at the box office of
Furie’s The Ipcress File, that The Leather Boys was imported to this country at all.
Thematically, it is similar to The Wild One and to
Scorpio Rising, but unlike the former, The Leather Boys
is artistically honest, and unlike the latter, it doesn’t
smother itself in self-conscious and sometimes fatuous
hipness. Furie tells his story simply and beautifully,
allowing it to unfold leisurely, without any trace of
pretention. As a result, it is artistic and not arty.
opening of The Leather Boys at the Circle-Art.

It was one of the first of the British nouvelle vague
films (made about the same time as Breathle**), and
already seems clothed in the same air of painful nostalgia which permeates, say, the films of Renoir or Vigo.
And it’s a painful film to watch for reasons other than
its theme or artistic merit.

Friday, May 6, I9M

SPECTRUM

PACE EIGHT

Conference Theatre's Weekend Presentation:
'Beat the DeviT Starring Humphrey Bogart
Tough, cynical, romantic, Humphrey Bogart’s reputation as an
actor has grown through the
years. There is no Bogart “legend” or “cult.” There simply is
an increasing interest in his pictures, both on television and in
the

theatre.

A case in point is John Houston’s production of Beat the Devil now at the Conference Theatre from Thursday thru Sunday
with Gina Lollobrigida, Jennifer
Jones, Robert Morley and Peter
Lorre also starred. Originally released ten years ago, Beat the
Devil won considerable critical
acclaim and a comparatively cool
audience reception.
years
Now considered ten
ahead of its time, Beat the Devil
is establishing boxoffice records.
An adventure-comedy in which
Bogart fights off a pack of assorted rascals, as well as a pair
of roving-eyed females (one of
whom is his wife!), Beat the Devil is in the suspense tradition
of Bogart’s Maltese Falcon and
Big Sleep, with special emphasis on comedy. Here, perhaps, is
the reason for the new success
of Beat the Devil. Bogart had
long ago demonstrated a rare
facility for comedy, but it showed
up only briefly in most of his
films. Sabrina, in which he starred with William Holden and
Audrey Hepburn, and The Cane
Mutiny in which his Captain
Queeg started out as a figure of
fun and slowly merged into a
haunted, pathetic officer, were
sharp departures from the “tough
guy” image Bogart created for
hemself and for his audiences.
Beat the Devil is Bogart at his
comedy best.
Beat the Devil was written by
John Houston and Truman Capote from the novel by James
Helvick. Huston directed the Santana-RomuIus production, a Royal Films International release.

Humphrey Bogart and Gina Lollobrigida being friendly In BEAT

THE DEVIL.

Annual Subscription Drive
At Studio Arena Theatre
The 2nd Year Subscriber Drive
for Buffalo’s year-old Studio
Arena Theatre will kickoff on
May 11 with the Buffalo premiere
of the Broadway hit musical by
Anthony Newley and Leslie Bricusse, The Roar of the Greasepaint—The Smell of the Crowd.

Saturday twilight (5 p.m.) shows.
A free copy of the Studio

Arena’s brochure will be mailed
to anyone giving his name to the
Studio ARENA Box Office, either
by phone, to 856-5650, or by post
card, addressed to the theatre at
681 'Main Street, Buffalo, New
York 14203.

Subscribers are offered perman-

ent seats for the eight-play series
beginning in the Fall of the year,

“Our second year as the only
year-round professional theatre
for the Niagara Frontier is a very
important year,” Mr. Rand said.
“We should assert together the
vitality of theatre as entertainment and as a cultural value for
the whole community.”

at the end of the Theatre’s first
summer of full production. In
addition, 20 per cent discounts
are offered on all subscriptions
for Sunday, Tuesday, Wednesday,
and Thursday nights and for the

“HELLO HARPER' FAREWELL 007!”

Band Concert

-

—

Ntw Yorft Dolly Nows

On Lawn, Sunday
The Department of Music has
announced plans for the annual
“Band Lawn Concert,” to be held

on Sunday, May 8th, at 3 p.m. on

the campus of the university.
Under the direction of 'Frank J.
Cipolla and Richard W. Rodean,
the combined University Bands of
130 students will present a “pops”
concert featuring traditional and
contemporary muisc suitable for
an open air band concert. Selections will include such works as

Ths Gospel According to SI. Matthew

The British film establishment had tried to get Furie

to change the ending of the film, and when he refused,

the release date was held up for a year. Thus, when
Taste of Honey was released, it was billed as Rita Tushingham's first film, and Tony Richardson got the credit
for “discovering” her. Actually The Leather Boys was
Miss Tushingham’s first film, and it was Furie who should
get the credit being the first one to recognize her fine
talent. Dudley Sutton, who turns in the best performance in the film, is now a sometime junkie—reduced to
taking bit parts in Boulting Brothers comedies. And
Colin Campbell has disappeared entirely. The cafe off
the North Circular Road near London 'where much of
the film was shot was gutted by fire, and an office
building now stands in its place. Now none of these
things really means anything in terms of the film itself,
but if one does know about them, you get the same
strange feeling watching The Leather Boys as you do
seeing a film by Ron Rice and realizing that most of the
people responsible for the film have disappeared or died,
while one or two have gone on to other things.
Of all the scenes in the film which stay in my mind,
the final “tracking shot” of about thirty seconds is perhaps the most memorable. Poignant and even sentimental, yet harsh and essentially tough-minded, it serves as
microcosm for the tone of the film as a whole. It’s a
great movie. It’s here seven years after it should be,
but at least it’s here. Don’t miss it.

von Suppe’s Light Cavalry Overture, Johann Strauss’ Emperor
Valte, Percy Grainger’s Irish Tune
From County Derry, Arthur Sullivan’s Pineapple Poll and standard
marches, show tunes and popular
band highlights.
The annual “Lawn Concert”
has established itself as one of

m
GASSER!

the fine traditions associated with
the University Band activities on
this campus. Bringing to life the
nostalgic heritage of “Park Band”
music to those who can still recall
the days of afternoon band concents, the University Bands present this program for all students
and residents in the Buffalo area
on the lawn of the Main Street
Campus
FREE OF CHARGE.

1966 Folk Festival
Applications are being
accepted for committee
work on the 1966 Folk
Festival. W o r k-minded
people who will be in
Buffalo this summer are
desired. Ushers are also
needed for the evenings
of October 7 and 8, 1966.
Leave name, address, telephone number and qualifications in Jay Cook’s
box in the Spectrum office.

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�Friday, May 6,

H^KCTRUM

WU

PACK MINI

'Academic Goldbricking' Sweeps Campuses;
Becomes College Pastime According to Polls
By LEW ALPERN
Tha Collegiate Press Service
A recent survey taken to ascertain “What’s In Among College
Students" has divulged a surprising fact: the most popular
new activity among the hope of
the future is not sex, nor narcotics, nor cramming themselves
into phone booths. Today’s college students are now channeling all their free time and effort
into academic goldbricking.
Academic goldbricking has existed for a long time. But never
before has the academic community recognized it as the art
it truly is. According to the poll,
on hundreds of campuses around
the country, there is actually hot
competition to see who can away
with doing the least by using the
most credible excuses. Although
there is usually no tangible reward given to the successful
“non-atudent,” champion goldbricks usually enjoy a degree of
respect unequaled by even cum
laud* graduates.
How the new trend started is
not quite known. One theory
credits it to compulsory orienta-

tion programs for freshmen. Ac-

cording to this theory, anxious

young freshmen eager to purchase college sweatshirts and explore fraternity and sorority
houses, boycott orientation programs and discover how easy it
is to talk their way out of it.
They take their new-found experience and adapt it to skipping
classes, missing tests and fabricating papers.
Another thory holds that goldbricking comes from compulsory
ROTC programs. “Here at Penn
State everybody has to take Army or Air Force ROTC. Since
everyone must do it and nobody
is particularly interested in it,
you try to get away with as much
as possible. Eventually this attitude spreads to all other phases
of your college life. Besides,
where could you get better practice in goldbricking than in a
military situation?”
But no matter how academic
goldbricking got started, indications are that it’s here to stay
for quite a few semesters. In the
past, conscientious students were
respected for their desire for

recently good
students have been coming under
censure by their cohorts.
“The way I always looked at
it,” says one Beaver College coed,
“it really doesn’t pay to learn.
Nobody in this school cares about
anything but your grades, so if
they don’t care what I learn, why
should I? Besides, the faculty
here is so gullible that it really
is a challenge to see how much
you can lie, and still make them
believe you.”

knowledge.

But

Big lies are favored among
collegiate
goldbricks. Popular
opinion holds that the bigger the

lie, the greater the likelihood the
professors will believe it. Most
college faculties have heard the
small lies so often, that professors won’t believe an illness excuse even when it is accompanied by a note from a doctor.
A coed from NYU tells an interesting story about how she
learned the cruel facts of life
about missing tests. “I came down
with a 24-hour virus the day of
my midterm. I had to miss the
test and when I tried to explain
it to my .teacher, he mumbled
something about being born yesterday, and told me I was getting
a zero. Thinking fast, I burst
into tears and told him that I
had really visited a gynecologist
and was two months pregnant.

Not only did he forget about the
zero, but he waived the exam altogether. It just goes to show.
H dosn’t really pay to be honest
in a corrupt world.”
How do today's college students feel about their new game?
Surprisingly, there are few indications of even slight guilt. “Why
shouldn’t I try to get away with
What I can? In this world, it’s
not what you know, it’s how you
use it. I’m doing myself less good
by religiously trying to learn
more, than I am by channeling
what 1 already do know into trying to do less. Besides, if the
school really cared, they would
have stopped me long ago."
“Of course there is,” says one
June graduate. “Now that I've
learned to goldbrick in college,
I’m going to go right out into
the world and avoid the draft."

Music Department Hosts
Modern Jazz Program
The New York State Council
on the Arts is preparing a unique
program which will be made available only to a few music schools
in upstate New York. It is spe-

cifically prepared to provide
music students and faculty and
other interested persons to have
a first hand hearing of what may
be a very important development
in the new improvisational music
world. There is very little one can
tell so far about this new trend.
Some of the exponents are Sun
Ra, John Coltrane, Archie Shepp,
Cecil Taylor, Ornette Coleman,
Byron Allen, Albert Ayler and
Giuseppe Logan. The UB Music
Department is happy to announce
that it will be host to the group
performing the modern jazz program on May 10, 1966, at 8:30
p.m., Baird Recital Hall. The pub-

lie is welcome, and there will be
no admission charge.

Vocal Ensembles
Perform Tuesday

The UB Music Department will
present a recital of solo vocal
ensembles on Tuesday afternoon,
May 10th, at 4:30 p.m. in the
Baird Recital Hall. The performance will include voice students
of Laurence Bogue, Dorothy Rosenberger, and Muriel Herbert
Wolf. Composers to be included
on the program are: Pursell, Dowland, Arcadelt, Clemens non Papa,
Neuwbach, Buxtehude, Bach, Pergolise, Mozart, and Mendelssohn.
The public is welcome, and there
will be no admission charge.

Weekly Calendar
Varsity Tennis: UB vs. Alfred
College, 3 p.m.

Information Poll: Free University Committee, 9-4 p.m.. Lobby.
Concert: Buffalo Philharmonic
Orchestra, 1 p.m., Baird Hall.
Lecture: Dr. R. Stemheimer,
'Department of Physics, 4 p.m.,
Hockstetter Hall.
Coffee Hour: Graduate Student
Organization, 2 p.m., Norton.
Meeting; American Association
of University Professors, 3:30
p.m., Old Faculty Club.
Lecture: Dr. Urich Clever, 2
p.m., Health Science Building.

M flM IHfl WAS IE* m MM tf US M IS IB IMS M..

Theatre.
SUNDAY
Folk Dancing: Student Zionist
Organization, 7-10 p.m., Norton
3

Band.

UB

p.m.,

Baird Hall Lawn.
"The Magic Flute,”
8:30 p.m., Studio Theatre
School, 305 Lafayette Avenue.
Opera;

TUESDAY:
Meeting: Insurance Institute of
America, 7 p.m., Norton 332.
Concert: "The New Jazz,” Department of Music, 8:30 p.m.,
Baird Hall.

OPPORTUNITIES
Golf Lessons

—

Randy

Fox. pro

—individual, group rates, Niagara Sports Center, range and
Athol Springs
miniature golf
Circle, Rt. 75, Hamburg. Phone
825-9812.
—

iim H

Fill

theater

APARTMENTS

'54 Plymouth Bolvadera 2-Door
Hardtop, 6 cyl., standard shift,
low mileage, easy on gas. Call
Rich, NX 2-0256.

Live-In Mother 1 Helper (or summer, Private room, TV. Two
children. Good salary. 634-4298
after 4 p.m.

B.S.A. 250 cc. Street or competition prepared. Engine guaranteed. Clean. Reasonable. Call
Gene, 634-1495 after 6 p.m.

Sub-Letting an Apt. for this summer. 2V4 blocks from campus.
Room for four Rent inexpensive.

Must Soil Entire Collection of
Books, literary classics, philosophy, poetry, etc. Call 876-3174.

Completely Furnished Apt. available for summer in Sheridan
Parkside. Suitable (or three stu-

‘63 Vespa Motor Scooter, 125 cc.
excellent condition. Low mileage. Call Kurt Merkel 831-4112.
‘58 Buick $175 must be seen to be
appreciated. Phone TF 6-3865.
Ask for Ted.
Not hot! Gru2 Wristwatchas
en, Wittnauer—17 jewels, 10
K. G. plating, etc. Very reasonable. Myron, TR 6-7473.
'63 Monza Coup*, black with red
interior, 4-speed, 145 hp, heavy
duty suspension. Dunlop road
speeds—$1000. TR 3-1426
'63 VW Red. 23,000 original miles.
Excellent cond., very reasonable. Call 831-2245 days, or 876
—

4863 nights.

'64 Rambler American, excellent
condition, economy car; low
mileage; asking $1150. Contact B.
Burrows, 837-7286 weekdays.
'SB Karmin-Chia, no rust, good
mechanically. Mobil station on
Terrace and Court Sts, TL 2-8725.
$395.
Honda ISO cc.,

excellent cond.,
$350. Call NL 2-5905 after 5
p.m. weekdays—all day Saturday
and Sunday.
'SB Lambrota, 125 cc., asking $125.
Call 832-7079, Tom or Joe, after
6 p.m.
Furniture for two bedrooms, living room, kitchen (includes
rugs, TV, etc.) Must sell! Call

832 6799.
APARTMENTS

3 Bedroom Apt. For summer,
furnished. Cheap. One block
from campus on Bailey. Call
836-7763.
For summer.
Princeton Courts, furnished. 5

Varsity Track; UB Invitational.
Dance; Millard Fillmore College Association, 10 p.m.. Leisure Land.
Thaatre: “You Can’t Take It
You,” Studio Arena
With

344.
Concert:

FOR SALE

2 Bedroom Apt.

SATURDAY:

MAY 6-10
FRIDAY:

CLASSIFIED

SPECTRUM
CLASSIFIED

minute walk from campus. Call
837-4879 nights.
Room or Share an Apt. For
mer. Near campus. Call

sum-

Jim

!

831-3952.

dents. $45 each per month includes all utilities. TR 7-0112.
Summer Sublet, 2-3 roommates,
bedroom house fully furnished.
1 block from campus—11 Merrimac (off campus). Call Pete or
A1 835-3281.
7 Room Apartment, summer sub-

let, available June 1. Rent reasonable, utilities included. Call
.
886-6763 after 5 p.m.
Wanted to Rent or Sublet: Furnished apt. for graduate couple

during first session, June 6-July
15. Write: John Cannon, 2900
Wheeler St., Berkeley, California.
Faculty Member would like to
sublet reasonably priced apt.,
vicinity UB, from June 1 or earlier. Also interested in cheap car
for transportation. Call 831-3418
days, 839-1151 eves.

Female Roommate Wanted. Have
apt. Call Pal, 831 3982.
Apt. for Rent. One block from
campus. Utilities included; furnished. Call 831-3474.
PERSONAL

Fun for all ages at NIAGARA
Miniature
SPORTSCENTER
golf, game room arcade, golf driving range. 1701 Niagara Falls
—

Blvd., Tonawanda, N. Y.

Band) If you
need a good bass player, call
Ron at TX 6-1991.

Hava Bass—Need

If you saw someone hit my 1966
two-tone blue Rambler May 2
in the Main St. lot, call TF 9-2164.

Reward.

TRAVEL
UB Jet Flight to Franca leaving

June 27th, returning Sep*. 5th.
Round trip NYC-Paris, $340. Faculty, students, employees of
SUNYAB eligible. Contact Sanford Left soon! 834 1869

831-3666.
Apt. 1 Bdrm., furnished. Oxford
Ave. Available after May 20th.
Call Mr. Naeher, TR 7-1626 after
6 p.m.
Summer Sublet, 3V4 room apt.,
Princeton Courts, very well
furnished. 3 minute walk from
campus. 837-7684.
Apt. Available June 1
University Ave., 10 minute
walk. Call Barry Bienstock, after
6 p.m., 834-7144

3 Room

Summer Sublet. Two male room
mates, furnished, luxury apt.
2 blocks from campus. Call im
mediately,

837-9027.

Spanish Teaching
(English-Spanish)
Call 836-4425.

—

Apt., UB Are*, available June 1
Completely furnished, 2 bedroom duplex, new kitchen. Call

837-7258
Apt.

near

campus to sublet June 1 to
Sept. 1 $95 month including utilities. Call 833 6416 after 5 p.m. or

weekends

ADS

Female Roommate wanted for
summer, option to continue
'66-67. Just opposite campus, modApt. 837-6320 or 831-4610.

Room 355
Norton Union

6 Room Apt. June. July, August,
137 Lisbon Ave„ 3 blocks from
campus. Completely furnished.
2-3 students. $40 eaeh/moath.
Call 837-7735 after 6 pan.

Translations
Reasonable.

WANTED
Will purchase used barbell and
gym equipment. Especially 25’s
and 50 s Call Bill, 837 6639 evenings.

SUMMER EMPLOYMENT
Girls interested in a summer
waitressing position in the Catskill Mt. area Contact Joanne.
837 5184 or Mary

Massachusetts Seaeoast, 3 bedroom house on ocean front, gas
heat, available weekly in June.
Phone NF +3082.

2 Bedroom Furnished

SERVICES

&amp;

Pat

831 2889.

LOST
Cre«n Wool Slicker style coat at
the TKE Beer Blast, Reward.
Call Linda TR 3-5484.

Black Wallet lost at the TKE
Beer Blast Friday, April 22.
Call Allan Levitt 895-8843

'45 Class Kins, silver polished
black onyx, initials RLM. April
Call
25, Hayes Hall. Reward.
UB

8744)525

Would the person who took a
Wallen sak Tape Recorder from
Baird Hall Thursday, April 21,
please leave it at Norton Candy
Counter.
No questions asked.
Robert little, 831-3907.
Please reGift's Beige Wallet
turn. No questions asked. Reward. Call Wendy 831-4178.

�Friday, May 6, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

GREEK NOTES

Wendy Bannister and Melody
Weiler, pledges of Alpha Gamma
Delta, were inducted into Alpha
Lambda
Delta, the National
Honor Society for freshman
women.
The Alpha Epsilon Pi

Executive

Board includes: Gustin Reichbach,
Master; Herb Glazeoff, Lieutenant
Master; Donald Zolin, Scribe:
Richard Schwartz, Exchecquer;
Jeff Mann, Sr. Member-at-Large;
Michael Lipman, Jr. Member-atLarge. Steve Smith received the
award for Mr. Inside and Barry
Cohen for Mr. Outside. Marc
Finkelstein was Most Purposeful
Pledger, The Zook Closing Affair will be held Friday, May
20, at 2492. The “Parents in
Europe Blast” will be held on
June 4 at Schwartz Hall.
Alpha Phi Omaga's semi-annual dinner dance will be held
at the Chuck Wagon Restaurant
tonight. The new officers are:
Randy Huver, President; Steve
Millman, First Vice-President;
James Jones, Second Vice-President; Mike Roach, Third VicePresident; Jerry Trent, Secretary;
and Robert Lado, Treasurer. During the Summer recess, many of
the brothers will get together
at a joint cottage in the Crystal
Beach area.
Alpha Sigma Phi placed first
for the third year in Gamma
Phi's Greek Olympiad.
Chancellor Steve Litvak of
Bata Sigma Rho was elected
Union Board Treasurer. Jeff Kane
was elected Inner Guard of BBP.
Susan Duffy of Chi Omaga was
crowned Spring Weekend Queen.
Christa Ulbrieh was tapped by
Cap and Gown and Diane Kial
was chosen outstanding student
nurse. Ann Kohler was chosen
Theta Chi’s Dream Girl and Jane
Rea was chosen Sweetheart of
Delta Chi Omega. Initiation of
the spring pledge class will be

.5irst assignment—-

day night at the Flying “E”
Ranch B.Y.O.
Theta Chi Sorority will hold a
Senior Closing Party tonight at
the Flying "E” from
to 1. The
new officers are: Debbie Brodnick, President; Claudia Elliott,
First Vice-President; Barb Tycha,
Second
Vice-President; Betty
Kearney, Corresponding Secretary; Judy Raab, Recording Secretary; Sue Swartz, Treasurer;
Suzy Beeman, Assistant Treasurer; Barb Tycha, Queens Chairman; Audie Stempel, SergeantAnita Swieczkowski,
at-Arms;
Chaplain; Pat Conners, Historian;
Judy Raab, Glad Girl; Barb Wells,
Custodian.

follow your courses with
the famous

!)

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College Outline Series
KEYED TO YOUR TEXTS
Over 100 titles on the following subjects:
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MUSIC
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SOCIOLOGY
SPEECH

WBFO will broadcast a prerecorded panel discussion, “Three
Views on Pornography”, Wednesday, May 11, at 8:15.
Panel members are Attorney
Richard Lipsitz, Judge Joseph
Mattina, and Mr. Robert Scheuere,
President of Empire State News.
The program will also be broadcast over F.M.-radio to the Buffalo area.

“Let’s unplug the computer, boys!
Start thinking!”

Sunday.

Paul Jenkins, President of
Gamma Phi presented Chancellor Furnas with a plaque on behalf of the IFC at the Spring
Weekend Dance. The new officers are: Jim Mills, President;
A1 Kahn, Vice-President; Bob

Russell, Treasurer; Dave Potter,

Recording Secretary; Scott Moss,
Corresponding Secretary; George
Cushing, Historian; John Anderson, Sergeant-at-Arms.

©Siialls'
□□□

Phi Kappa Pai't new officers
are: Tony Capozzi, President;
Roger Fredericks, Vice-President:
Lee Schweichler, Treasurer; John
Sansone, Corresponding Secretary; Don Warren, Recording Secretary;
Bob Schmidt, Pledgemaster; Joe Rich, Messenger;

w

Frank Domino. Historian; Art
Stevanato, Sergeant-at-Arms; and
Angelo Curto, Chaplain.

Pi Lambda Tau't officers are:
Elliot Cole, President; Dennis
Licherelli, First Vice-President;
Gerald Barta, Second Vice-President; Ronald Boiler, Treasurer;
Garry Tittemore, Recording Secretary; John Kravec, Corresponding Secretary; Robert Fisher,
Alumni Secretary: Sandy Simon,
Historian; John Bolton, Chaplain:
Donald Gardner, IFC Representative.

Sigma Alpha Mo's officers are:
Chick Arnold, Prior; Bob Levitt,
Vice-Prior; Marshall Bouchey, Exchequer; Dave Seiman, Recorder.
Cindy Perl of Sigma Dalta Tau
was chosen as best senior of the
year. Judy Aroneck was chosen

the best sister. Rosie Brothman

was tapped by Cap and Gown.
The pledge class picnic this Sunday concludes activities for the
semester.

Elaine Kwitowski of Sigma KapPhi was tapped for Cap and
Gown and Suzanne Scbilld was
named the outstanding sopho-

pa

more woman.
Tau Kappa Epsilon will hold
a Jungle Juice Party this Satur-

A lot of people believe that someday
computers will do all their thinking
for them.
Well, a funny thing is going to
happen on the way to the future:
You’re going to have to think
harder and longer than ever.

Computers can't dream up things
like Picturephone service, Telstar®
satellite, and some of the other
advances in communications we
have made. Of course, we depended
on computers to solve some of the
problems connected with their
development. But computers need
absolutely clear and thorough
instructions, which means a new and
tougher discipline on the
human intelligence.
And it will take more than a computer
to create a pocket phone the size
of a matchbook, let's say... or find

a practical way to lock a door or turn
off an oven by remote telephone
control, or to make possible some of
the other things we’ll have someday.
It takes individuals... perhaps you
could be
launching new

one...

ideas, proposing innovations
and dreaming dreams.

And someday, we’re going to have to
find a way to dial locations in space.
Makes you think.

®Bell

System

American Telephone &amp; Telegraph
and Associated Companies

�Friday, May 6, 1966

SPECTRUM

BRANIFF INTERNATIONAL
FLIES UNITED STATES
MEXICO

SOUTH AMERICA

and
OFFERS YOU A CAREER
IN THE SKY

-

Basketball Schedule Completion Near
By STEVE SCHUELEIN

State and Philadelphia Textile
(famous for the weave) in the

Although this time of year is

Palestra.

most closely associated with baseball, football
even out of season
seems to be the topic of

of

—

REQUIREMENTS

Age: 20-27
Marital: Single

Height: 5*2" to 5*9"
Weight; Max. 135
Education: H.S. graduate
Vision: 20/50 or better
Contacts accepted
Conversational Spanish desirable

First year salary up to $448 per month
with periodic increases to $588 plus
liberal expense allowance.

Write to Employment Mgr.,
Bra niff International
P.O. Box 35001
Dallas, Texas 75235
Local interviews to be conducted at a
later date.

An Equal Opportunity Emloyer

Although the remaining third

the

tentative

schedule

is

bogged down with its annual sur-

—

main interest on campus at the
moment. So which sport do you
think athletic director baseball
coach Jim Peelle is busiest with
at the moment? Baseball? Football? Wrong on both counts.
Although football and baseball

feit of chaff, it is much better
than might have been expected
after the disastrous support you,
the student, gave the team last

•

FLIGHT HOSTESS
Wear the world famous Pucci
fashions as you fly in the most
fascinating career for women
today.

KLBVW

'

year.

And if Peelle can succeed in

gluing together the loose ends to
his Christmas Tournament plans
and find reputable teams to fill
the Aud openings, the schedule
may turn out as attractive as last
year's ambitious endeavor.
The second part to the problem Peelle faces might have been
avoided by some foresight on
Canisius' Bob MacKinnon’s part.
He didn't give Peelle the two

are certainly occupying a good

share of Peelle’s time, basketball is the main item on Peellc’s
agenda now.
Unseasonably stuffy

as this
sport may sound in this b-b-beautiful month of May, it is nevertheless one which must be taken
care of schedule-wise by the end
of this school year. And although most of the schedule has
Aud dates until last month.
already been taken care of,
‘T’ve been in touch with Holy
Peelle is currently negotiating the Cross, Brown and numerous other
possibilities of a Christmas Tourbig schools," said Peelle, "and
nament as well as trying to fill most of them replied that they
two Memorial Auditorium dates would have loved to play us on
for Saturday evenings.
those dates if they had only
Among the more prominent known earlier. They’re not going
teams already booked to meet to wait until the end of April
the Bulls in the Aud next year to fill prime Saturday night
are Syracuse, Cornell, Niagara,
dates."
and Buffalo State. In Clark Gym
“If Bobby MacKinnon would
the Herd will face, among others, only give us the dates in time,"
the University of California at
concluded Peelle, "there would be
Santa Barbara. St. Michael's of no problem as far as getting big
Vermont and Washington Uniteams playing us as part of their
versity of St. Louis. How’s that
doublehcadcrs."
for geographic distribution?
So it appears Jim Peclle can
On the road Len Scrfustini’s
shed no tears for us, the stuforces will face such teams as dents, this month
all we have
Colgate, Northern Illinois, Kent
to worry about arc finals.
—

Colgate Blanks Netmen
Jt

-_

*

:

■

■

t*’
i

£

d

.

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Coach Sanford award. Dr. Ban
Celnik.r Mo.t Valuable Player
Trophy to Pet. Lederman.
photo

by

Edward jo,c'tyn

The UB tennis team became
Colgate’s 11th victim in 13 matches by dropping a 6-0 verdict to
the Red Raiders at the UB courts
Tuesday. The doubles were cancelled, partly due to the indentent weather and partly due to
their inconsequence to the out
come of the match. The Bulls
are now 5 3
After the match. Coach Bill
Sanford awarded the Ben Celmk
er Most Valuable Player Trophy
to
The netmen hosted

SI

Bona

venture Wednesday and traveled
to Niagara Thursday, both matches in which the Bulls assumed
the role of heavy favorite.
The Bulls conclude their busy
schedule by playing Alfred at
home today at 3 p m
journey
to Portland Saturday and
in
«, ,
visiting Geneseo on Monday.
,

INTRAMURALS
By STEVE FARBMAN
'My congratulations to AEPi

don't think anyone expected
them to win it five years in a
row." These were the words of
Edwin D. Muto, Director of Intramurals, after he had presented
the Lawrence E, Palhowitz
Trophy to AEPi in his office

Tuesday.
The trophy, donated by AEPi,
is given each year to the fraternity intramural champion Since
this is the fifth year in succession in which AEPi has won the
trophy, the fraternity retires it.

"The Lawrence Palhowitz Memorial," said Steve Schulman, former master of AEPi, "has been a
great victory for us. This trophy
is the result of five years of cooperation and vigorous participation in college athletics. Thanks
go out to all brothers who participated and supported these athletic events.”
Commenting on the intramural

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program in general, Schulman
hoped that “next year will be
as profitable as the past one.
Sports competition has added
much to the spirit on this campus, and we hope this spirit is

maintained through the coming
years.”
The brothers of AEPi will donate another trophy next year
to replace the Palhowitz Trophy
they have just retired.

Mr, Muto thanked all fraternities for their interest in the intramural program. "They were
the backbone of the intramural
program. It has been a good
year. We tried to do the best
we could with limited time and
facilities. I am looking forward
to another good year come next

September.”

The results of the volleyball
tournament, played two weeks
ago, were made official this week.
In the semi-finals, the Joques
downed APD, 15-5,
and
AEPi stopped Sig Ep, 15-9, 15-13.
In the finals AEPi prevailed over
the Joques by scores of 15-10 and
15-11.
The final PaUiowitz Trophy
standings:
1 AEPi
424
2. SAM
395 5
3. Gamma Phi
389
386 5
4 Phi Ep
5 Sig Ep
359
6 Alpha Sig
295
Theta
285 5
7.
Chi
8 Beta Sig
266

9 AKPsi

10. Pi Lambda Tau
11. Phi Psi

12. TEKE
13. APO

253 5
237.5
2315
225-5
123

96
Phi Lambda Delta
15 APD
78.5
Farb says have a good TIME
this summer and I'll see you next
14

September.

�Friday, May

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

¥

4

-

Ht==

_/

Varsity-Alumni GameTonight
The “New Look" of UB football
will be on display tonight when
the UB Varsity plays the UB
Alumni at the Williamsville High
School field at 8 o'clock in a
game which is the traditional
closing of spring practice.
Richard "Doc” Urich, the new
coach of the Bulls, has discarded
the conservative winged-T offense
and has installed in its place the
exciting “I” Formation, featuring
Dick Ashley, the Bulls’ recordbreaking pass receiver, at split
end.
At quarterback for the varsity
will be Mick Murtha who was
Most Valuable Back on last season’s freshman club. Steve Svec,
another yearling, will be at left
halfback, with veteran Jim Barksdale at right halfback and Lee
Jones, last year’s leading rusher,
at fullback. This is the backfield which gained more than 400
yards total offense in last Saturday’s intra-squad game,
Urich had originally planned
to install the Notre Dame 4-man
front defense, but he now feels
that he does not have the material
to do so. Consequently, during

•%

’

Hofheins Heroics Lead
Bulls To Seventh Win

■

day.

All Hofheins did was enter in
the fourth inning with the bases
loaded, none out and two runs
already in. He got out of this jam
without any further damage via
a strikeout and a double-play
ball. The Buffalo sophomore then
pitched the remaining five innings, allowing only one earned
run, striking out ten and walking
none.

MICK MURTHA

STEVE SVEC

the 1966 season, the Bulls will
use a 7-diamond defense, with
variations.
Among the former UB players
who will play for the Alumni

fensive end last season; Gordy
Bukaty, one of UB’s all-time quarterback greats; Jim Webber, last
year’s No. 1 tailback; fullback
Dennis Przykuta, who won letters
the past three seasons; Center Joe
Garofolo, defensive halfback Fred
Geringer, ends Dennis Burden and
Jim McNamara, tackle Jim Ratel
and placekicking specialist Joe
Oscsodal, all from last year’s
club; Nate Bliss, Leo Ratamess,
Jim McNally, Bob Edward, Bruce
Hart, Mike Lucidi, Ron Clayback,
Jack Dempsey, Jim Wolfe, Paul
Gagliardi, John Michno, Gerry
Gergley, Dan Stanley, Joe Shifflet, Steve Salasny, Jim Ryan,
Lou Reale, Bill O’Neil, Fred Kogut and Jack Daniels.
The Alumni will be coached
by Mike Stock, UB Freshman

on Friday night

Fountain, E.C.A.C.

PMi

are Gerry

La

All-East de-

r".

te

jk

fn

ji
.

s
By RICH BAUMGARTEN
The UB baseball team, getting
great performances from its
sophomore players, came up with
another promising prospect named
George Hofheins as the Bulls
made their record 7-2 by defeating host Canisius, 6-4, Mon-

i

■'

UB, trailing 2-1 in the top of
the seventh, rallied for four runs
and made its lead stand behind
single
Hofheins. Fran Buchta’s
and Jim Duprey’s sacrifice fly
were the big blows in the inning.

Friday’s game is the 7th of the
series; the Varsity leads, 4-2, having won last year’s contest, 33-7.
The Alumni last won in 1963,
31-16.

.

fc**

Tickets for the game are $1.00,
with net proceeds going to the
UB Scholarship Fund. UB students will be admitted free.

»•£
. &lt;i ',
w8riielBPa&gt;t
«*

..

■

JIM BARKSDALE

LEE JONES

Trackmen 2nd at LeMoyne; Host Tourney Tomorrow
The UB track team placed second in a field of seven in the

LeMoyne Relays at Syracuse Monday, Host LeMoyne won the meet
with 25 points, while UB scored
12, ECTI 9, RIT 4, Harpur and
Siena 2. and Canisius 1.
Led by anchorman Dick Genau,
the Bulls took three seconds, a
third and a fourth in the five
events
LeMoyne star Bill Ripple led
the Green Dolphins to first place
in all five events.

The UB frosh finished last with
one point in the freshman meet.
At 1 p.m. tomorrow at Rotary
Field, UB will host the 14th An-

Varsity

Varsity
Varsity
Varsity
•Golf
Varsity
Varsity

**Varsity
Varsity
**Varsity
**

nual UB Invitational Track Meet.
Defending champion Rochester
and powerful Brockport are the
morning line co-favorites to win

the tourney.
The Bulls, who have won their
own tournament six times in the
last 13 years, are considered
remote longshots to finish anywhere near the top this year.
The Bulls should make their
presence felt to some degree,
however. Distance-runner Dick
Genau, sprinter Art Walker, shot
putter Ted Gibbons, pole vaulters
Tom Ryan and Milt Seiger and
the 440 relay team of Walker,
Jim Webber. Jim McEwen and

1965-66 ATHLETIC RECORD,
Won Lost
Football . . .
3
5
Basketball .
8
14
4
Cross Country
6
4
Fencing . . .
12
8
2
9
Swimming . .
5
Wrestling . .
5
5
Baseball
7
2
Tennis
3
6
Track
2
3
TOTALS

72

Tied
2

41

•1st place in Brook Lea Invitational at Rochester and
1st place in E.C.A.C. Regional Tournament at
Syracuse

••as

of May 3.

GEORGE HOFHEINS

in a doubleheader at home Wednesday, UB will travel to Niagara
for another twin bill Saturday.
The Bulls close their season at
Rochester Tuesday . . . The UB
freshmen, now 3-1, conclude

their schedule with four consecutive home games. The Baby Bulls
meet Brockport Saturday, Rochester Tuesday and Bryant-Stratton
in a doubleheader Wednesday.

Students may turn in
their AFROTC Uniforms
and books to T/Sgt. O’Brien in Room 7, Clark
Gym, between 8:30 and
4 p.m. May 6 through

Coach

%

6. 1966

May 27.
FRAN BUCHTA
Buchta and Bon Leiser each
had two singles, while Ken Rutkowski hit his seventh double of
the year for UB. Bill Cleary and
Tom Pitz each had three hits for
Canisius.

Freshmen returning for
the Fall Semetser who
want to keep their uniforms over the summer
should notify T/Sgt. O’Brien before May 27.

Jon Berkhoudt should figure prominently in the scoring.
Other schools competing include Niagara, Canisius, Buffalo
State, Alfred and ECTI.
UB will close its season with a
home meet against Niagara on

Tuesday.

Alterman and Brennan
Win Sports Trivia
Danny Alterman and

Mark

Brennan became the first repeat

of the Spectrum
sports trivia contest by sharing
first-place honors in Tuesday’s
contest with five correct answers
each. Danny had earlier been a
winner in the April 19 quiz,
while Mark gained top honors in
the April 22 contest.
champions

This was the final trivia test
of the year, but due to the enthusiasm with which it was greeted, it is hoped to continue it
next fall.
Tuesday’s answers:

1—Mel Ott. 2—Babe Herman. 3—
Bing Miller. 4—2-1. 5—Windy McCall. 6—60 feet. 7—Chip Hilton,
8—Johnny Evers. 9—Tony Oliva.
10—GeorgeStallings.

UB BASEBALL TEAM
BASEBALL NOTES; Rutkowski’s double was his fifth of the
year against Western New York
competition, a record—and he
still has two games against Niagara remaining ... Tim Uraskevitch
leads the pitchers in ERA with
0.80... Close behind are Rutkowski, 1.41, Don Potwora, 1.56, and
Ron McEwan and Dick Pirozzolo,
1.80 each . . . Only 4 seniors—Me
Ewan, Duprey, Bob Pusateri and
Fred Geringer—will be lost from
this year’s team, leaving the Bulls
with a rosy diamond future
After having met St. Bonaventure
.

.

.

SPECTRUM
CLASSIFIED
ADS

SELL!

Room 355
Norton Union

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EXTRA

EXTRA

VOLUME 16

BUFFALO, HEW YORK, THURSDAY, MAY 5, 1966

Senate Resolution Opposes
Use of Campus Facilities;
Upholds Privacy of Grades
the Selective Service Test.
“Allowing the students to take
the test on campus is a service
muchc the same as providing applications for a 2S deferment for
the student.” Senator Daniel
Rotholz said that by accepting
the test on campus we “accept
the administration’s decision as
fair. We accept the validity of
the criteria used by the draft
board.”
Senator R. Curtiss Montgomery
argued that this is just another
“IBM test being offered by a
private corporation and the University has agreed to administer
the test. The University is not
accepting the Selective Service
package; they feel it is a convenience for the student. The
same test—good, bad, indifferent
—is going to be given to the
student.”
This resolution was passed:
Whereas, it is the traditional
power of the University to set
its own standards for membership in the academic community,
and
Whereas, the University would
abdicate this power by a) con-

is at stake. Maintenance of this
integrity is worth a short walk
to Hayes Hall. There is nothing
to keep the student from requesting his grades and sending them
to the draft board.
“I make the assumption that
the University would make grades
available to the student.”
President Clinton Deveaux said
he believes that at the present
time a student could request that
his grades not be sent, but it is
the University’s policy to send
all grades to the draft board
except the grades of those who
had otherwise requested.
He further explained, “Transcripts sent by the student are
not considered official by the
draft board. Only transcripts sent senting to automatically supply
by the University are considered
the Selective Service with grades
official.”
and academic record, and, b) conSenator Marion Michaels said
senting to lend its facilities to
she did not believe that the govthe Selective Service for the adernment is an outside power; ministration of a draft deferment
many students claim affiliation
examination, therefore, be it rewith it. “You are a part of the solved that the Student Senate
government. This is not the place proposes:
to disagree. The place of disagree1. That the University shall not
ment is the use of the exam and
send the academic record of
form of the exam.”
the student unless specifically requested to do so by
Treasurer Carl Levine affirmed, “A student's grades are his
the individual student to the
personal property. The governSelective 'Service.
ment shall not infringe on a stu2. That the University shall in
dent’s personal property.” Mr.
no way lend its facilities to
Levine said that he does not
the Selective Service for the
believe students should “have to
administration of the defergo all the way downtown” to take
ment examination.

WHO
,

A resolution proposing that the
University not send grades to the
Selective Service unless requested
by the individual students and
not lend its facilities to the Selective Service for the administration of the Selective Service
Exam was passed by the Student
Senate last night.
Senator Joe Gershowitz, who
proposed the resolution, asserted,
‘The integrity of the University

I?

tttotsm

Public Meeting Tonight;

GFCSS Sit-In Ended 'University'

After more than forty-five
hours of continual demonstration,
members and supporters of the
Graduate-Faculty Committee on
the Selective Service ended their
‘sitin’ at the office of Dr. Clifford C. Furnas.
Th# retiring UB President proposed an alternative to GFCSS
demands for his appearance at
a public meeting to discuss the
administrative decisions to administer the Selective Service Deferment Examination on Campus.
On Monday, May 2, Graduatefaculty Committee members expressed their opposition to the
examination and the decision to
administer it at the University
in a special meeting with Dr.
■ urnas. When the President refused to reconsider the decision
or to act upon two alternatives
presented by the GFCSS, the committee demanded that he appear
at a public meeting. Dr. Furnas
refused this request and the sit-in
began.

Praaidont Fumat rapliad to a
similar invitation by the Student
Association with an alternate

proposal to his appearance. He
nformed Student Association
President Clinton Deveaux that
he would supply a statement to
be read at a public meeting and

that Presidential Assistant Dr. A.
Westley Rowland and Mr. Allan

Kuntz who is

responsible for the
original decision to administer
the exam, would appear at that
meeting.
Furnat reported agreed to
highly consider" thoir recom&gt;

mendations.

The GFCSS deemed this alternative sufficient to end demonstrations and redirect their efforts toward the original goals
as they relate to the administration of the examination. In a
statement released to the Spectrum, the Graduate-Faculty Committee stated: “This proposal is
a first step toward the recognition of our existence as peers
within the academic community
and therefore fulfills the major
portion of the sit-in objectives.
"Having established this precedent, we shall continue to assert
the right of the academic community to have a voice in defining administration policy."

An Open Public Forum on tho
draft, co-sponsored by the Student
Association and the GraduateFaculty Committee on the Selective Service will be held tonight in the Fillmore Hoorn at
7:00.
Tonight members of the administration and the Student Senate will discuss and debate the
current plan to administer the
Selective Service Examination on
campus.

emphasized

Presidential
to discuss f
affect the
The recoil
the Senate I
At a meet'
livered the
olution to Dr.
Deveaux, Pres,
sodation, said
rejected the
the open form
send Dr. Rowl;
in his place.
to "highly consider’
mendations.
Dr. Pumas v
fered to release

Dr. A. Westley Rowland, Assistant to the Pres., and Mr. Allan
Kuntz, the person who originally
made the decision to administer
the exam on campus, will speak
for the administration.
NEW PROGRAM
Dr. Rowland and Mr. Kunti ara Mr. Deveaux 1
While the Graduate-Faculty spooking in response to a Student ing.
Committee has continually exMr. Deveaux
Senate resolution sent to Presipressed their opposition to predent Furnas asking him to attend nas’ offer to tht
senting the deferment examina“sitting-in” outside
a public meeting to “discuss and
tion on campus, they hope now to clarify” the decision.
office. He also r
concentrate on one area which
the open meetinr
Although Dr. Rowland and Mr.
has not been of immediate conKuntz have not been delegated Wednesday
cern.
Wednesday
the authority to change the presCommittee members will seek ent exam plans, (heir advice will the GPCSS members
support from faculty, students be “highly considered” by Presithe vigil in ’
and administration to request dent Furnas.
ered accepting
that the University refuse to
Student Senate involvement in proposal. After
supply draft boards with such the draft issue came Tuesday at bate it was decided
proposal as made
information os grade-point averan emergency meeting called by
age and the class standing of University College senators to and to redirect
efforts into
students.
consider a resolution urging PresThis approach it taan at adident Furnas to attend “a public discussion at
vantageous in that specific inThe sit-in
meeting open to all members of
p.m. A statement .
stances of rising faculty support the academic community.''
The resolution did not express was issued dedaring
are rumored, and that GFCSS
supporters feel that such an any preference of sides on the nas’ proposal wi
toward the full
issue would create a rallying question of whether campus fapoint for the three segments of cilities should be used to adthe faculty and
policy”.
the academic community.
minister the exam, but rather fining adr' 1
’

-’

Deveaux concluded.

�Thursday, May 5, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

Editorial Comment

.

.

Nationwide

.

Support For
GFCSS Sit-In

•TEST

Graduate Students May
Find Draft Test Necessary
It is likely that some Local
Draft Boards will insist that even
graduate students in residence
must qualify for deferment by
passing the Selective Service Examination if they cannot establish
their rank-in-class in which they
graduated, according to a bulletin
issued recently by the Council of
Graduate Schools in the United
States.
The bulletin announces that the
Office of Selective Service has
therefore set another test date
on June 24 and will announce a
new deadline for registration
within a few days.
Dr. Alt of the Council of Graduate Schools in the United States
said that the new exam will be
the same kind of exam as the
others.
The bulletin, received by the
UB Graduate School Dean May 2,
reads:
“We are informed that very few
graduate students already in re*-

idence registered for the Selective Service Examinations, relying
on the assurance that their deferment would be continued as long
as they maintain good scholastic
standing.
"Since decisions on deferment
are the primary responsibility of

the Local Draft Boards and since

many of these interpret directives

very literally, it is likely that
some Boards will insist that even
graduate students in residence
must qualify by passing the test
if they cannot establish their
rank-in-class in which they graduated.
“Deans are requested to inform
their students of these facts and
urge them to register for the
examination unless they can clearly establish their rank in class.
Dr. Alt commented that the
Selective Service people were
very surprised that only about
1 out of 5 graduate students had
signed up to take the exams.

Special Senate Session
Urges Public Discussion
By LORETTA ANGELINE
At an emergency meeting of
the Student Senate Tuesday,
May 3, a resolution was passed
which “urgently requests that the
President of the University attend a public meeting open to all
members of the academic community to discuss and clarify
the decision regarding the ad-

ate College at Buffalo
rms Anti-S.5. Committee
A recently formed student-facuHy committee on Selective Service at the State College presented the College’s President, Dr.
Bulger, with a statement late
Wednesday afternoon asking him
to ban the Selective Service tests
from the State campus.
A committee of nine students
and two faculty members met
with President Bulger at four
The committee read the prestatement and

pared

posed

a

number of questions.
In addition to requesting the
ban of the Selective Service testing, the committee called for an
end to the College's policy of
supplying local draft boards with

student

grades.
we feel that when our
sofcool
submits our regular grades
U) the
Selective Service it is giving away personal information
.

.

about us without permission.
The statement went on to say,
“we would like to draw your
attention to the examples which
have been set by Rutgers, the
State University of New Jersey,
and also Syracuse University.
Both of these schools have announced that they will refuse to
give away grades to the Army.
“It would not only be proper
but also admirably courageous"
to refuse campus facilities to the
Selective Service for tests and
to deny it access to student
grades.
Should these demands not be

met the statement then called

for an open meeting of the university community to debate the
matter. The committee also called
for a student faculty referendum
on the issue of university cooperation with the Selective Service.

ice Examination on this cam
pus.”
During discussion of the resolution, Dean Sigglekow said,
“The Senate is barking at the
wrong dog. This is not President
Furnas’ decision.” A notice was
brought into the meeting which
disclosed that Dr. Alan Kuntz,
Head of the Educational Testing
Center, had made the final decision to administer the examination on campus.
Steve Crafts, member of the
Graduate Faculty Committee on
Selective Service (GFCSS), “This
buck-passing is an appalling presumption. It indicates a basic
lack of concern."
Raymond Volpe asked Dean
Sigglekow, “How do we distinguish between delegating authority and delegating responsibility?”
The Dean answered, “He (Furnas) is not superman. No one can
expect any President to know
everything. He can take responsibility, but logically you should
take the issue to President Gould
in Albany.”
Student Senate President Clinton Deveaux took the resolution
to President Furnas’ office where
approximately 50 student and
faculty members were staging
a sit-in. Mr. Deveaux invited the
President to attend a public meeting Wednesday, May 3 at 3 p.m.
Mr. Deveaux said, “President
Furnas is ‘appreciative’ of the
Senate's action."
Mr. Deveaux said that President Furnas agreed to request
Dr. Kuntz to attend the public
meeting. Dr. Furnas added, ac-

cording to Mr. Deveaux, that he
will not change the decision un-

less Dr. Kuntz requests it.
GFCSS members Larry Faulkner and Steve Crafts then talked
to President Furnas. They reported that he agreed to send
Dr. Rowland, Special Assistant to
the President, to the meeting
with Dr. Kuntz. Dr. Furnas agreed
to send a prepared statement
giving the rationale for the decision to give the Selective Service Exam on this campus, and
explaining the role of the student in administration decisions.
“If the members of the sit-in
were not satisfied after the meeting, they were invited to come
back and the doors will be open,”
reported Mr. Faulkner.

The Graduate Faculty Committee on the Selective Service
(GFCSS) has received support
from groups across the nation.
Faculty and student organizations in the State University system had been contacted for support. Telegrams were sent to
President Samuel B. Gould from
organizations at Harpur, Cornell,
Syracuse, Fredonia, Buffalo State
and Cortland. Cornell offered to
send picketers.
The Young Socialist Alliance,
picketing for academic freedom
Tuesday in Boston, offered to
include the GFCSS’ demands in
their march.
National SDS headquarters in
Chicago promised to inform SDS
chapters throughout the country
about the sit-in and to ask for
their cooperation.
New York City colleges were
asked to send telegrams to Dr.
Gould requesting his help in
persuading Dr. Furnas to meet
with the University community.
The Vietnam Day Committee at
Berkeley contacted Dean Meyerson for his cooperation.
A

telegram signed by Terry

Seal, President of the Republican Club, Martin Feinrider, President of the Ripon Society, Paul
Nussbaum, Founder of Young
Democrats and Rick Salter of
SDS, was sent to Dr. Furnas and
Dr. Gould asserting that it is the
responsibility of the UB president to meet with the entire academic community to discuss
such “important issues as the
administration of the Selective
Service Examination on campus.”
The telegram reads, “We support
the GFCSS sit-in and urge you to
accede to their demands for your

attendance at a

university-wide

meeting.”

Buffalo State SDS sent a letter

to support the sit-in. The letter
states that the University admin-

istrator “like their autonomy
when they can use it to control
the students and faculty, but
when it comes to an outside force
like the Army, the University
We
knuckles right under
think it is simply unfair and arbitrary for the Administration,
led by President Furnas, not even
to consider the alternatives proposed by the GFCSS.”
The GFCSS sent telegrams to
...

Dean Martin

Meyerson

and Pres-

ident Gould asking them to urge
President Furnas to accede to
their request and inviting Dean
Meyerson and Dr. Gould to participate in the ensuing public
meeting. Similar telegrams were
delivered ot Senator Kennedy,
Governor Rockefeller and Senator Javits.

Sit-In Provokes Comments
A&amp;S Council Considers Draft
;

By JOAN ROBERTS

The sit-in by the GraduateFaculty Committee on the Selective Service (GFCSS) provoked

comments from several administrators and members of the fac-

ulty.

Dr. A. Westley Rowland, Special Assistant to the President,
said that he and other administrators would meet with the
GFCSS at an open discussion,
but that he saw no reason for
Dr. Furnas to attend. “The decision has been made;” he explained, “we will not change the
decision.” He added that the
Selective Service tesst will be
administered as planned.
Dean of Students, Richard Siggelkow said that the issue should
have been brought to the Senate
by the GFCSS prior to the sit-in,
since the Senate was the “appropriate body.” He also faoted

that the resolution passed by
the Senate was “very poorly
worded.”
The Executive Council of the
College of Arts and Sciences
met Tuesday afternoon and passed
a resolution which the Council

members would not disclose. Dr.
Thomas Connolly, English professor and Council member, commented, “I am opposed to the
use of academic means and devices (grades, class standings,
etc.) for non-academic purposes.
When they’re used for these
purposes they tend to confuse
and interfere with the normal,
academic day-to-day business of
the university.”
Council chairman Dr, Myles
Slatin said, “I and other members
have been concerned about the
use of grades by the Selective
Service . . . several faculty members have indicated to me that
it would be wise to investigate
the situation.”

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                    <text>.1

STATE UNIVERSITY

VOLUME 16

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, MAY 3, 1966

NO. 43

Graduate Faculty Sit-in
Fifteen students, many of them
graduate students and teaching
fellows, started a “sit-in” in the
outer offices of President Clifford Furnas yesterday afternoon
at 1 p.m. This action climaxed a
series of meetings which began
over a month ago initiated by the
Graduate Faculty Committee on
the Selective Service and was
the direct result of a confronta-

tion with Pres Furnas earlier
that morning.
A week ago Pres. Furnas refused to meet with representatives of the Committee to discuss
“the complicity of the University
with the military" and the university's decision to administer
the National Draft Deferment test
on this campus. However, when
approached again by the GFCSS,
he granted an interview for Mon-

GFCSS Members meet with Furnas

day

at 10 a.m.
that meeting

At

thirty-four

members of the committee each
presented Pres. Furnas with individual letters proposing alternatives to the administration of the
Selective Service Exam. These
included a request that the exam

be given off campus without the
benefit of university facilities,
and a request that if the exam
should be given on campus, that
the university include a “disclaimer" stating that the university does not sanction this "nonacademic" examination and is
giving it under duress.
Pres. Furnas rejected the proposals and after a short discussion further refused to address
a public meeting to explain the
administration’s position.
The GFCSS then held an emergency meeting on the second
floor of Norton to discuss Pres.
Furnas’ refusals. After lengthy
and heated debate concerning university autonomy, the encroachment of the military on academic
affairs, and the involvement of
the University of Buffalo in State

University policies, two graduate
students left the meeting and
began a spontaneous "sit-in” in
Hayes Hall.
Several people at the meeting
followed suit and telegrams to
President-Elect Myerson and
President Gould were sent soon

afterward informing them of the
demonstration and requesting
their presence at the proposed

public meeting. A picket line expressing sympathy with the demonstrators was organized ten-minutes later displaying signs such
as: "Who is Responsible?", "We

shall be heard"
The spontaneous nature of the
demonstration made immediate
reaction difficult on the part of
the administration and apart from
a request from the secretaries to
keep the fire lanes open, there
was no immediate comment.
Graduate students hoped by this
action to dramatize their deep
concern over the "abdication of
responsibility" on the part of the
university administration and the
tendency to create a “privileged
class” of college students not subject to the draft. A spokesman

for the committee stated “that
the draft test and the granting of
2-S classification for college stu
dents makes the economically
and educationally deprived carry
the awesome burden of politics
and war.”

Senate Defeats Resolution Urging
Furnas to Meet With the GFCSS
A resolution urging President
Furnas to meet with any groups
concerned about the use of University

facilities for the defer-

SDS Plans Test
As Counter to
Defeated Candidates Contest Election Draft Exams
Of Delegates to NSA Congress
Sit-In when their requests are denied.

in election procedure concerning
the April 25 National Student
Association delegates elections
has been submitted to Elections
Committee chairman Barry Bienstock and Student Elections Court

chairman Donald

Eddy.

The four winning candidates
in the election are Kim Darrow,
who received 174 votes: Elen

Cardone, 154; Stewart Edelstein,

86; and Saralee Rubenstein, 86.

Defeated were Martin Feinrider, who received 77 votes; Daniel
Rotholz, 72; Robert Weiner, 75;

write-in candidates Donald Rich,
34 votes; Frank Klinger, 48; Ivan
Makuch, 46; and Stephen Sickler, 5. Write-in candidates receiving less than 2 votes were not

recorded.

A petition signed by Donald
Rich, Frank Klinger and Ivan
Makuch states that the complaint
of irregularities is lodged specifically against an elections teller who allegely asked votes such
questions as, “Do you know who
you're voting for?”

The petition says that when the
teller saw this voter cast his
ballot for Rich, Klinger and Makuch, he commented, “They arc
members of YAF" (Young Americans for Freedom).
The petitioners have maintained that an elections teller should

not vl

ballot.

contend, “implicit in the
question ‘do you know who you're
.voting for?’ is, if the voter replies in the negative, the teller
would supply an answer."
have

The complaint states, ’’informing voters about candidates is the
when
business of politicians
this ‘voter education’ is under(it) betaken by a teller

comes pure electioneering
finding a lack of such impartiality, we are asking for action from
the Elections Committee or the
Judiciary on this matter, wherever the jurisdiction may rest.”

The petition mentions that
while petitioners Rich and Makuch are YAF members, Mr.
Klinger is not. The signers said
that they will welcome a properly run new election.

Chancellor Furnas will
discuss “Is It Science or
Engineering?” at the
Sigma Xi meeting tomorrow at 8 p.m. in the Conference Theater. The
public is invited.
Newly elected Astron-

are:

omy Club officers
President, Larry Carlino;
Vice President, Bill Lutz;
Secretary, Robert Martin; Treasurer, John Ul-

rich.

Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) has announced plans
for a nationwide distribution of
literature and a "eounter-dnift
test" calling for “an examination
of conscience" to be administered
on each of the three Selective
Service Examination dates. May
14, May 21 and June 3.

A statement

issued

by SDS
reads: “Wherever the Selective
Service System sets up its examination centers, we’ll be there
with our own exams. Ours will
ask you questions about the war
—fair and objective questions—and about how you sec your
relation to it and what kind of
government ours has become."
The statement continues.
“Thinking through some of our
questions will make you a little
shakier, a little freer—and a
little prouder of your own con-

ment test and the revealing of
grades to the draft board was
introduced and defeated at the
Senate meeting last

Wednesday.

Vice President Kim Darrow,
who introduced the resolution,
asserted that the University
should neither send grades or
class standings to draft boards
nor lend the use of University
facilities for giving the student
deferment test.

Mr. Peter Faulkner, member of

the Graduate-Faculty Committee
on the Selective Service, spoke

said that by voluntarily turning
over class standings to draft
boards, the University would be
giving up its traditional right
to decide its own membership.
Mr. Faulkner suggested, “the Uni
versity’s lending itself to outside

bers by a petition of at least 10%
of the students in the school or
division which the member represents. Upon receiving the petition the Election Committee
would hold a referendum; if a
majority of those voting would
be in favor of it, the representatives would be recalled and the
Election Committee would arrange for an election to fill the
vacated seat within 2 weeks.

The Senate passed an amendment making a formal hearing
before the Student Judiciary
mandatory in order to remove a
there has been so definite procedure for removal of lower court

judges.
The amendment proposed at
the April 20th Senate meeting

which provided for the reeogni-

science.”
Describing the current nation-

al situation, SDS maintains, “The
business and the military have
decided to be fair to each other
about sharing us. Some of us

are not so bright, or perhaps
have been laqy scholars. Businessmen dont need them They can
go be soldiers.
“The message of the Selective
and middle-class, and a Dean’s
Service Exam is: If you're white
List kind of guy, relax. If you re
not, fal in.”

Disputing the Selective Service
Exam, the statement reads: "On
the basis of our answers to questions about poems and physics
and geometry, we will or will
not be eligible for the draft, will
or will not be sent to Vietnam,
maybe to kill to maybe to die.”

Larry

Faulkner addresses Senate on GFCSS Draft Resolution
Photo by Almn

as an administrative
arm, undermining autonomy, is
of great harm to the student."

interests

An amendment was proposed at
the meeting which provides for
the student recall of Senate mem-

Gruber

lion of any group on campus having a constitution and faculty
advisor was defeated. The present policy of not recognizing
any group whose goats or ideas
are repetitious of a recognized
group will be maintained.

�PAGE TWO

SPECTRUM

Tuesday, May

3, 1966

Freshman Class Honor Societies
Formally Induct New Members

Alpha Lambda Delta, freshman
women's hpnor society, and Phi
Eta Sigma, the national honor
society for freshman men, have
formally inducted their new

A.
Center, Kathleen
Cullen,
Nancy M. Czeehowsi, Ellen M.
Fuoto, Carolyn J. Gifford, Marsha
R. Gold, Lee A. Golden, Judith

E, Gutherman, Gail J- Guzzo,
Renee G. Hartstein, Elaine S.
Hill, Judith A. Holland, Kathleen
New members of Alpha R. Holmes, Rosalind A. Jarrett,
Lambda Delta are: Caroline E. Jacqueline S. Kopell, Beverly R.
Arnold, Wendy A. Bannisterv-HKray, Bonnie
M. Lantiegne,
Mary L. Bcllhouse, Suzanne J.
Sandra S. Lippman, Linda K.
Berberian, Kay 1 A. Branagan, ’ Reiss, Nan C. Rose, Rayme G.
Marcia M. Brin, Deanne Brzezin- Rosenzweig, Tilley Roth, Carol
ski, Fern Budow, Marie L. Gala- A. Silberman, Rosalind E. Snider,
bria, Susan W. Casner, Kathleen
Julia B. Sutton, Dorothy T. Triffo,

members.

Cadets
were

pre-

Forty-one awards
scnted to cadets for eontributions to UB and the Air Force
ROTC during the 16th Annual

AreHonored For Services
Awards Day Program April 26.
After the ceremony, Cadet Capt.
David McDowell accepted command of the 575th Wing from

Meeting of Faculty Tomorrow
Dean Robert L. Ketter has
called a special meeting of the
Graduate Faculty tomorrow in

response to a petition signed by
more than 25 members of the

Graduate Faculty.

The petition calls for a reconsideration of the action taken by
the Council of the Graduate
School Jan, 21, 1966 approving

■p.’vj

Frances M. Volbert, Melody M.
Weller and Laraine M. Wirtzer.
The new members of Phi Eta
Sigma are: Herman W Coles HI,
Robert K. Crone, Leslie N.
Csonka, Philip J. Federico, Stephen M. Gagola, Jr., Lawernce
C. Henig, Thomas A. McGaw, H.
Todd Miller, Robert R. Osborn,
Eliot M. Raiken, Gerald M. Scholl,
Neal Slatkin, Harry K. Slocum,
Bruce R. Telzer, Stephen W.
Warren, James B. Westfall, Karl
A, Wilson, Wayne P. Silverman
and Harold Weinstein.

in principle the report on “cornmunity college faculty

education”

and instructing the dean of the

Graduate School to proceed “with
discussions and negotiations and
with the preparation of a proP08 ? 1 for l j)e establishment of
an institute.

The meeting will be held
3 p.m, in room 5 Acheson.

at

Cadet Col. David W. Wozniak.
The Chancellor’s Gold Award
for superior academic and military leadership was presented
to Cadet Lt. Col. Paul E. Kopycinski for his outstanding performance as a staff officer.
Cadet Col. James Lumley won
the Lawrence D. Bell Award for
the most outstanding Air Force
ROTC graduate for flight training. Cadet Col. Lumley started
his pilot training in August,
1965, in a Cessna 150. By September of the same year he flew
his first solo. The award was
presented by Mr. Don Ostrander,
Vice President of Planning, Bell
Aerosystems.

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�Mack and Schillo Honored
At Cap &amp; Gown's Dessert
At the annual honors dessert

newly formed Leadership Com-

mittee of the Union Activities
Board. Judi attained a 2.0 average for first semester.
Suzanne Schillo, a sophomore
majoring in English, was chosen
the most outstanding sophomore
woman. Her activities on campus include: Freshman and Varsity Cheerleading, Chairman of
Special Events for Homecoming,
Chairman of Career Planning
Conference, Chairman of Group
Leaders tor Freshman Orientation, Tour Guide, Student Guide
for the Summer Planning Conferences, and President of Sigma
Kappa Phi's pledge class. She was
awarded the Cap and Gown
Society's Sophomore iRing tor the
most outstanding freshman
woman. Sue maintains a 2.2

on April 21st, the Cap and Gown
senior women’s honor society

chose the two women in the
freshman and sophomore classes
it felt had been most outstanding
in scholarship, leadership and
service at UB.
Judi Mack, a freshman majoring in English and a 1965 National Merit Scholarship winner,
was awarded the Freshman Ring.
Judi’s activities on campus include being Publicity Chairman
of the Silver Ball, Brochure and
Program of Spring Weekend,
Commuter Chairman of the
Sophomore Sponsor
program,
Corresponding Secretary of the
International
Club, a group
leader for 1966 Freshman Orientation, and a member of the

VAI SEMPRE
CON IL
POVERO
GIOVINETTO

average.

D© Lire

IRC Finalizes Election Result
After Initial Disqualification
technicality to ensure legality.”
IRC president elect Joel FeinInan,
a 19-year-old sophomore
biology major, said, "it is the
resident students who were made
fools of. It was a pure waste of
time and effort to re-run the

Official results of the InterResidence Council (IRC) elections which were reheld April
25 are as follows: President, Joel
Feinman, 277 votes and 35 writein votes; Vice President, Alan
Fried, 264 votes and 25 write-in

election.”

votes; Secretary, Judy Snyder,
277 votes and 19 write-in votes;
and treasurer, Alan Sturtz, 246
votes and 37 write-in votes. There
were 344 votes cast in this elec-

tion.

The April 14 and 15 IRC elections had been voided by the
Student Judiciary Elections Court
April 18. The court ruled that
since the functions of the Elections Committee were not established in writing prior to the
campaign, and since impartiality
should always be maintained by
persons charged with the responsibility of the supervision of the
elections process, “the entire election is invalid and therefore null
and void

f

Reserved copies of the
1966 Buffalonian may be
picked up in Room 345

Norton, between the
hours of 9 a.m. &amp; 4 p.m.,
during the week of May
2nd. Please bring your
grey receipts and the balance of payment due on

Larry Pivnick, a presidential
candidiate in the original election, had contested the election
of Joel Feinman as President on
the grounds that he had received partisan support from Gary
Roberts, 1965-66 IRC president.
Mr. Pivnick had questioned the
entire election, charging that the
elections rules were not clear.

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The SPECTRUM

Mr. Pivnick and Sharon Shulman, a candidate for secretary in
the original election, withdrew
before the election was reheld.
Mr. Roberts commented that since
the only candidates in the 2nd
election were the original winners, the re-election was “a mere

now!

yearbook.

your

The IRC Elections Committee,
under the direction of Mr. John
Derbay, has established a formal
sete of rules and procedures for
conducting elections.

We’re lining up

Mr. Feinman announced that
he plans to continue work for
more liberal curfews, including
the possible abolition of senior
women's curfews. He mentioned
that he would like to improve
relations among the IRC, the Student Senate and the House Councn s

"

3092.75

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PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

Tuesday, May 3, 1966

Potsdam

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Maurice B
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Sherburne ■ Turner Jewelry Store
Southhampton • Corwin's Main
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Springville Robert H. Engel
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Syracuse ■ E. W. Edwards &amp; Sons
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West Hampton Beach R. F. Vail
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Poughkeepsie • David Jewelry
Queens Village Jaeger Jewelers
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Riverhead Kal.er's Jewelry Store
Rome Infusmo’s Jewelers &amp;
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�f. May 3, 1966

P, E CTItU M

PAGE FOUR

Editorial Comment

.

.

Cacotopia and Eutopia

.

The Sit-In
Yesterday fifteen students including graduate teaching fellows staged a dramatic act of protest in the administrative offices of this university. The issues which
provoked them are complex, but their frustration in the
face of administration chauvinism and pious “Pontius
Pilatism” was very simple.
The administration has failed in its responsibility

to protect the university from the shrill pressures of the
warfare state and to protect the principles of education
upon which a university is founded. During the morning
meeting with the GFCSS President Furnas statefl that he
did not make the decision to administer the draft test on
campus. He even said he didn’t know who had made
the decision—in fact he actually said “All I know is what
I read in the papers.” He rejected the ridiculously
reasonable proposals of the GFCSS and refused to even
discuss the matter before the academic community on
the grounds that the needs of the government for cannon
fodder superseded any responsibility the university might
have for free discussion and debate.
Sound familiar? The same chauvinistic rationalizations have fallen from the lips of such noted educators
as Franco, Goebbels, Salazar and Diaz. The administration has turned the university not only into a propaganda
arm of the present government, but into a procurement
agency for the military—and it has done so without a
whisper of protest. It has done so in fact by default
since by President Furnas’ own admission the decision
to administer the Test was made by some secretary somewhere because in fact it was taken for granted.
And now, when members of the academic community wish to discuss the role of the university in responsible
education they must resort to extreme actions even to
get a hearing. The demonstrators are running great personal risks in great part to save the university from
shameful disgrace. They must do this because the administration has failed to do so. If all Pres. Furnas
knows is “What he reads in the papers”’, then he has
no business administering an institution of higher learning.
If the university must submit without question
to the flagrant coercion of the military, then it has no
business calling itself a university. And if both of these
things are true, then there is nothing left fighting for,
in Vietnam—or anywhere.

For anyono who hat followed
the nowt for tha past weak, tha
facts and quotations used in this
column are substantially correct
except where I have obviously
belabored points. I mention this

only to that no one will
me seriously.

take

The dialogue on the War in
Vietnam continued last week.
Rep. Gerald Ford accussed the
Johnson Administration of
“shocking mismanagement of the
war,” a charge which Secretary
of Defense McNamara labeled as
“baloney.” McNamara was particularly exercised by Ford’s allegations of bomb shortages and
rejoined by commenting that the
United States had 60,000 tons
of bombs “in inventory” and

planned to accure 638,000 tons
(12.76 x 10.8 pounds) for next
year’s use. This works out to
about 47 pounds'per Vietnamese,
North and South: the Final Solution to the Vietnamese problem.

McNamara also denied that the
United States was buying surplus

JAMES CALLAN

.

bombs from our Allies. This
denial was belied later in the
week by a report that the U.S.
was buying back bombs at a
considerable markup that we had
originally sold as surplus to West
Deutschland. The Krupp Steel
Werke had customized them by
stamping "Gott Mit Uns” on the
right side as you look down and
had inserted a tape recorder
which repeated “I am not responsible 1 am not responsible This
is a recording” all the way down
into the village. McNamara also
denied that surplus bombs for
domestic use as playtoys would
be off the market long enough
to cut into next Christmas’ shopping season. “There is no toy
gap,” he explained.
McNamara continued by defending the management of the
War based on air power. So far
the bombing has equalled that
of the Korean War and surpassed that of the European
theatre of WWH. The air cover
for troop actions has been the
most comprehensive of any war

The argument was a logical

I attempted to prove two
conclusions: (1) Abortion is not
always moral; and (2) If abortion
is ever moral, then it is always
moral. Given these two statements, the final conclusion is
immediate: abortion is not ever
moral. To prove (1), I noted that
murder is a universally recogone:

agreed profoundly.” (Montage to
Anacin commercial to baseball
scores).

The overwhelming majority of
Americans continued to support
the War, a fact that McNamara
was not loath to mouth.
it can
Take heart, peaceniks
not happen here!
—

the right

.

On April 8 I wrote a column
opposing abortion and any legislation permitting abortion. This
opinion I thought to be perhaps
the least controversial of any I
proffered all year, ’’in this belief
1 was certainly mistaken, as evidenced by the rash of letters opposing the column, a pile growing so large that neither time
nor space permit individual replies. The issue has been batted
about so often now that the gist
of the original may have been
lost in translation, and so I give
you a brief summary.

in history, said McNamara and
added reassuringly, “We planned
it that way.” He had no comment as to the report that
friendly interservice rivalry had
resulted in unnecessary bombing
of insignificant targets. Off the
record he was reported to have
said, “Boys will be boys."
The mass media did its best
to prevent the dialogue from escalating into a trialogue, thus
cluttering up the voters’ minds.
On a weekly NBC news report,
Senator Clark of Pennsylvania
asked McNamara if he considered
the War to be in our national
interests. McNamara replied at
length that he thought it was.
Clark answered that he “dis-

nized evil, that there is no important difference between abortion and infanticide in a normal
case, and hence that at least
some of the time abortion is to
be regarded as immoral. To prove
(2), I began by seeing whether the
assumption that abortion is ever
moral would lead me. Noting
that that assumption implied that
the fetus is something less than
human, and remembering that
lesser beings are to be dealt with
by man as he sees fit, I concluded
that the assumption leads one
to believe that abortion is uni-

versally permissible.
Hence we see that my conclusions follow, from premises quite
unassailable (e.g., murder is
wrong) according to normal logic.
Ah, normal logic si, Steesean
logic no! Mr. Eric Steese, in his

bold attempt to dismantle normal
thought processes, asserts that
the simple contrapositive argument is old-fashioned and hence-

forth invalid. He claims that even
if (1) and (2) are true, the conclusion still does not follow. So,
for Mr. Steese’s benefit (and for
no one else’s, since I can’t conceive of anyone else being unable
to understand it) here it is
.
. Given;
spelled out
If A,
then B. Therefore: If not B, then
not A. Given: not B. Therefore:
.

.

.

.

not A.

Mr. Steese at least makes a
gallant try, and his case is no
more than amusing. Robert McCubbin, however, is something
else. In his latest letter he mutters something about the Golden

Rule and decides that abortion
“seems more a matter for the

heart than for logic.” This philosophy of heart before mind
nauseates me. Don’t bother writing another letter, Mr. McCubbin
—there’s no point in carrying on
a dialogue when one of the parties involved refuses to think.

On Student Types

By LARRY BEAUPRE

The Collegiate Press Service

THE

SPECTRUM

The official
Publication

student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo, N. Y. 14214.
Published twice weekly from the first week of September to the last week in
May. except for exam periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and spring vacations.
Editor-in-Chief

Business

JEREMY TAYLOR

Manager

RAYMOND D. VOLPE

News Editor
ALICE EDELMAN
Staff—Loretta Angeline, Joanne Bouchier, Russell Buchman. Karen Green,
Peter Lederman. Joan Roberts, Rick Schwab, Dan Schroeder,
Sharon Shulman,
Eileen Teitler, Nancy Toder. Patti Wartley. Judy Weisberg.

Feature Editor
JOHN STINY
Assistant
JO ANNE LEEGANT
Staff —Bonnie Bartow. Ron Ellsworth, Barbara Ann Fitzsimmons. Barbara Loeb,
Audrey Logel, Bob Marlin, Suzanne Rovner, Martha Tack. William Weinstein.
Sports Editor
STEVE SCHUELEIN
Staff—Mike Castro, Mike Dolan. Steve Farbman, Bob Frey. Scott Forman,
J B

Sharcot

SHARON HONIG

Layout Editor
Stephanie

Staff —Joanne Bouchier,

Parker,

Copy Editor
Staff—Carol Becker. Estelle Fox. Jocelyn
Claire Shottenfeld. Susan Zuckerberg.

Steve Silverman.

LAUREN JACOBS
Hailpern, Sandy Lippman,

Betsy Ozer,

Advertising Manager
RON HOLTZ
Staff—Terry Angelo. Audrey Cash, Pat Rosenfeld. Steve Silverman, Joseph
Mancini.
Photography Editor
EDWARD JOSCELYN
Staff —Don Blank. Peter Bonneau, Joseph Feyes, Carol Goodson, Alan Gruber.
Marc Levine, Ivan Makuch, Michael Soluri, Anthony Walluk, Susan Wortman.
Robert Wynne
Circulation

Manager

DIANE LEWIS

IRENE RICH

Faculty Advisor
Financial Advisor

EDITORIAL

DALLAS

GARBER

IS DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR-IN CHIEF
FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING

POLICY

Second Class

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$3 00

15,000.

Buffalo. N Y.
year,
circulation

Paid at
per

Represented
for national advertising by
National Advertising Service, Inc . 420 Madi
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..

A Yale University study has
recently come up with a list of
"student types" and given them
scholarly names. Most would
agree that there are definite
classifications of students. Here

are mine:
The Professional Student
He changes majors just in the
nick of time to avoid graduation.
Finally, when he is forced to
graduate or slips in his planning,
he has 200 plus hours and a
background from electrical engineering to philosophy.
The Professional Finance
He
battles his books to get a job
solely so he can support the most
beautiful, wonderful girl ever. He
will marry her after graduation.
He rushes his studies during the
week so he can go home on weekends to see his girl. The extent
of his conversation with his
roommate is "My girl told me
to . . .”
The Professional Booker
He
cannot be torn from his books,
doesn’t know a single bartender’s
name, doesn’t date, is dragged
rarely to the Union movies, and
he really believes two hours of
study are needed for each class
hour. He goes to bed at 2 a.m.
and gets up at 6 a m. He is dull
but makes a 3.5 - 4.0.
The Magician
He gets the
grades, but how remains a mystery to the Booker. He possesses
a wide range of general knowledge which he calls upon frequently and confidently during
exams Where he originally came
—

—

—

—

by this general knowledge is
also a mystery. A 3-pointer, on
the nose.
The Professional Independent
Does everything he can to
make sure nobody mistakes him
for a Greek. The Professional Independent Girl, a subtype, believes studying is more important
than dating. The Professional Independent Boy, another subtype,
wears uncoordinated socks and
—

sweaters.

The Drinker
When he studies, nobody is quite sure. Where
he gets his money, nobody is
quite sure. His greatest achievement, second only to when a
bartender bought him a beer,
was the day he took an exam
drunk.
The Professional Jock
He
is never ignored by his instructors
he gets either an A or
an E because he’s an athlete,
—

—

—

although
"arrangements”
are
made to ensure the Athletic Association that he'll be here next
semester to draw more cash into

the till.
The

wishes she was a Negro so she
could personally suffer the gross
injustices the white man inflicts
upon the Negro. Likes to use
words like “honestly . .
truly
. . . really,” She is “involved.”
She will probably marry the Reformer.
The Social Climber
Definitely drinks at Kam’s so he can
be noticed. Many times associated
with an activity, but not in the
fulfilled sense that The Activity
Jock {below) is. The Social
Climber is usually inept. He
climbs and climbs but never gets
anywhere. He desperately wants
to be important. A variety of The
Social Climber is the Administrators’ Patsy who loves being re.

—

cognized by University higher-ups
in return for an occasional

—

cookie.

The Activity Jock
Life is
worth -while as long as the yearbook retains its “Who’s Who’’
section. Very similar to The
Social Climber, only he isn’t
—

quite

so inept.

The Professional Politician
Knows every political hack and
ward boss in the state, and
doesn't mind telling you so. The
Politician (a) The Liberal
Forgot one of the basic concepts
of liberals is the free competition of ideas. The Politician (b)
The Conservative
Still crying
over Brother Barry's demise.
The Has Been
Reminds himself that it’s better than being
a Never-Was. Basks in his glories
—

Reformer
With his
pocket Marx in hand, he really
believes any University where
the teacher-student ratio isn’t
1 to 1 is a “multiversity” with
all students alienated, though
they may not admit it. Desperately wishes this were Berkeley
so he could “get some work
done.” He wants to be a hero,
but finds trouble convincing anyone but his fellow 11 Reformers
that he is. Will probably marry
The Bleeding Heart
The Bleeding Heart
She
—

—

—

—

—

of

days gone by. Pity everything's gone to hell since he
ran it.

�■
-

l&gt;t

ti

•

'

Tuesday, May 3, 1966
.

**•'

SPECTRUM

MM FfVB

Guggenheim Fellowships Awarded NationalSorority
To Profs. Federman and Myrow Celebrates Its
25th Anniversary
Associate

French

Professor

Raymond Federman and Frederick Myrow, Creative Associates

in Music, have been awarded
1966-67 Guggenheim Fellowships

Marketing Series
Dr. Seymour Banks, a VicePresident of Leo Burnett Company, will conduct the final session of the Marketing Colloquium Series today.
The purpose of the

series is

to familiarize faculty and stu-

dents with research activities
and current trends in the field
of marketing.
A seminar for

graduate stu-

dents will be held at 11 a.m, in
Norton, followed by a coffee
hour at 3 p.m. in the Faculty
Club. A seminar for faculty and
students will take place at 3:30
p.m. in Norton.
Anyone interested in attending
should contact Dr. Alan Andreason, extension 4512.

by the Simon Guggenheim Foundation.
The fellowships are awarded
annually to scholars in several
academic fields. This year 321
of the 2,000 applicants were honored.
Dr, Federman received the fellowship tor his work in French
literature. He mentioned that he
is writing a book entitled New
Trends in Contemporary French
Poetry to be completed in Paris
this fall.
“I am delighted and honored,"
Dr. Federman commented, “because there was strict competi-

National Chi Omega Sorority
celebrated its 25th anniversary
on the UB campus with an Anniversary Luncheon April 2 and
a reception April 3.

Active members and alumni
attended the luncheon honoring
National President Elizabeth Dyer. Miss Dyer, National Panhellenic Council President, has been
president of the sorority since
1952.

previously taught at the University of California at Santa Bar-

Chancellor Clifford Furnas accepted a sculpture presented by
Chi Omega for the University at
the reception. The sculpture, entitled “Spring”, was created by
Larry Griffis.

comment.

Knapp said, “The piece of
sculpture was given to express
the Chapter’s apreciation for the
friendly and cooperative attitude
shown by the administration during the past 25 years,”

tion.”

Born in France, Dr. Federman

bara. He has been at UB since
1964 and is the author of Journey
to Chaos, a study of Samuel
Beckett.
Mr. Myrow, presently in California, could not be reached for

UB Chi Omega President Imo-

ge.ie

Final Orchestra Concert Slated for Thursday
The UB Orchestra will present
its final concert of the 1965-66

season on Thursday at 8:30 p.m.

in Baird Hall. Pamela Gearhart
will conduct the 64 piece orchestra in a program of works by
Stravinsky, Bach, Walton, Hindemith, Liadoff, Ravel and Wagner.

Martha Alfee, oboe, will be the
soloist in Fantasia on “Nun komm
der Seiden Heiland” by Bach; and
Patricia Oreskovic will be the
reader in “Excerpts from Facade”
by Walton, “An entertainment
with poems by Edith Sitwell.”
Accompanying her will be instru-

Greek Education Philosophy
And Reforms to Be Reviewed
Dr. Evangelos P. Papanoutsos,
a vice-president of the Athens
Technological Institute in Athens,

Greece, will review “The Recent
Educational Reforms of Greece
and its Philosophy” today at 2:15
p.m. in Norton 233.

Dr. Papanoutsos, an advisor to
Greece Prime Minister George
Papandreous, initiated several
major changes in an educational
reform program in Greece during
1964-65, according to Philosophy
Professor John Peter Anton.
Dr. Papanoutsos is the former

general director and secretarygeneral of the Greek Ministry of
Education. He has taught at the
School of Advanced Free Studies
in Athens since 1946 and received a doctor of laws honoris
causa degree from St. Andrew's
University in Scotland in 1965.

Several books concerning the
philosophy of education have
been written by Dr. Papanoutsos,

The lecture is sponsored by the
School of Education &amp; Philosophy
Department.

Dance Club to Hold Festival
The Modern Dance Club and
the Modern Dance Workshop
will present a Dance Film Festival on May 4, 1966 in the Conference Theatre, at 3:00 p.m.
Among the films to be presented
is the much acclaimed classic by
Martha Graham, Lamentation.
The modern dance work of Volerie Betti will be of particular
interest.
Dances and Rhythms from the

Carribbean will provide an exciting contrast in Carnival of Rhythm. The most daring of the
shorts to be shown is Dance Chromatics which will present and
utilize new experimental forms.
This years film festival has
varied its scope of presentation
in hopes of pleasing as wide a
variety of people as possible. All
interested are urged to attend;
admission is free.

mentalists Mary Adelman, Kathy
Anner, James Patterson, Alois
Hafner, Donald Montalto, Madalena Marx, Bruce Cramer, and
James Santella. Andrew Jennings
is the Concertmaster of the orchestra.

A Memorial Symposium

offers temporary working opportunities deand your specific needs. Kelly Services is
cities, so there will be work wherever you
And you'll be paid lop rates. Save money
for tuition, books, clothes, travel, or just plain fun. Here
are some of the jobs you can have this summer;

Kelly Services
signed for you
located in 184
happen to be.

KELLY GIRL

KELLY MARKETING

Typing
Stenographic
Secretarial
Clerical
Tabulating

Demonstrating
Telemarketing
Mystery shopping
Canvassing
Survey-taking

KELLY LABOR

KELLY TECHNICAL

Truck driving

Layout
Designing
Drafting
Illustrating
Programming
Surveying

Inspection assembly
Machine operation
Stock work

Lumber work
General labor

Work when you want to! Where you want to in any one of

the 184 cities where Kelly Services is located. Visit the
Kelly offices near your campus or write to the Kelly office
in your own hometown.

(Equal Opportunity Employer)

Honors the Deceased
Pharmacy Chairman
A memorial symposium in
honor of the late Dr. Eino Nelson, former chairman of the Department of Pharmaceutics, was
held April 26 at the 1966 Annual
meeting of the American Pharmaceutical Association (A.Ph.A.)
in Dallas, Texas.
Dr. Daniel H. Murray, dean of
the School of Pharmacy, delivered the memorial address. Dr.
Gerhard Levy, present chairman
of the Department of Pharmaceutics, discussed “Correlation of
Gastrointestinal Absorption and
‘In Vitro’ Dissolution Kinetics of
Drugs contained in Oral Solid
Dosage Forms.”
Six other members of the Pharmacy faculty participated in the
regular program of the A.Ph.A.
throughout the week-long convenof Medicinal
tion: Professor
Chemistry Thomas J. Bados, Associate Professor of Pharmaceutics David E. Guttman, Professor
of Pharmacy Laurence D. Lockie,
Professor and Chairman of the
Department of Medicinal Chemistry Dr. Howard J. Schaeffer,
Associate Professor of Pharmaceutics Michael A. Schwartz.

I
SERVICES

Rand Building or
1450 Niagara Falls Blvd.
TL 3-7485

This is your chance.
Student #7026941.
Drink Sprite and be
somebody.

MR.BIG

Directors of 'Magic Flute Announce
Casting for Three Performances
Heinz Rehfuss,

Artistic Direc-

tor, and Muriel Wolf, General
Manager, announced today the
cast for performances of Mozart’s The Magic Flute which will
be presented in three performances by the UB Music Department on May 8, 14, and 15 at
the Studio Theatre School at Lafayette and Hoyt Avenues.
Carol Plantamura, a UB Creative Associate and Janice Epke,
a local voice teacher, will alternate as Pamina with Warren Hoffer of the State University College faculty as Tamino. Sylvia
Brigham-Dimiziani, another of the
UB Creative Associates, will sing
the arias of Queen of the Night.
Laurence Bogue, UB Voice faculty, and Mary Blake of Ravenna,

Ohio, will perform the comic
Papageno-Papagena team. The
High Priest Sarastro will be performed by UB choral director
Robert Beckwith; Gary Burgess
of Niagara Falls will sing Monas-

tatos. The three

ladies

will be

Jan Valerio of Hamburg, Dorothy

Hedden of Buffalo; and Mary Ran
kin of East Aurora. While the
three Genii of the opera will be
performed by UB students Pamela Dadey of Buffalo, Susan Yeager of Kenmore, and Marcia Giambrone of Cheektowaga. Sanford Leff will appear in three
roles as Sprecher, Man in Armor,
and Priest. Three Slaves will be
Peter Madison, John Slattery, and
Larry Sugdin and Six Animals
will be played by Carol Bilecki,
Susan Pritchard, Rosemary Day-

ton, John Brosnin, Diane Ward
and John Slattery.
The production is staged by
Director of
Richard S.
the N. Y, After Dinner Opera

Company. Carlo Pinto is Musical
Henry A VVickc is
Tecnical Director, assisted by
Marilyn Steffanetti as Stage Man
Director.

has designed scenery and costumes with

ager.

Boris

Baranovic

lighting by Thomas S. Watson.
Tickets for the three performances are available at Baird Hall
and Norton Hall Box Offices at
the University. No telephone res-

ervations will be made, but mail
orders will be filled in the order
they are received. Ticket scale
is $2.50 general admission, $1.50
faculty and staff, and $.50 students.

And then 9

SPRITE!

And then? And then you unleash it
It fizzes! It roars! It bubbles with

good cheer!

Heads turn.
Whisperings. "Who's that strangely
fascinating student with the arch smile And what's
in that curious green bottle that's making such
a racket?"
And you've arrived!
The distinctive taste and
ebullient character of Sprite has set you apart
somebody,
uh, »hoever-you-are\
uh.
You’re

TINGLING. WE JUST CC

�PACE SIX

SPECTRUM

Tuesday, May 3, 1966

.11

'ed
&gt;n
la

�Tuesday, May 3, 1966

SPECTRUM

UB Music Department Plans
Yearly Band Lawn Concert
The SUNYAB Department of

Music announces plans for the
I, annual Band Lawn Concert to be
'held on Sunday, May 8 at 3 p.m.

on the campus of the university.
Under the direction of Frank
J. Cipolla and Richard W. Rodean, the combined University
Bands of 130 students will present a “pops” concert featuring
traditional and contemporary music suitable for an open air band

concert. Selections will include

such works as von Suppe’s Light
Cavalry Overture, Johann Strauss'
Emperor Valse, Percy Grainger’s
Irish Tune From County Derby,

Arthur Sullivan’s Pineapple Poll
standard marches, show
tunes and popular band high-

and

lights.

The annual “Lawn Concert” has
established itself as one of the
fine traditions associated with
the University Band activities on
this campus. Bringing to life the
nostalgic! heritage of "Park Band”
music to those who can still recall the days of afternoon band
concerts, the University Bands
present this program for all students and residents in the Buffalo area on the lawn of the Main
Street Campus Free of Charge.

CLASSIFIED
FOR SALE

APARTMENTS

55cc. Yamaha, excellent condition, girl owner, few miles.
Call LH 2-2002.

3 Bedroom Apt. For summer,
furnished. Cheap. One block
from campus on Bailey. Call
836-7763.

'6S

'61 Plymouth Savoy, white, 6 cyl.,
standard, low mileage, radio,
good tires. $300. 832-4730 after
5 p.m.
'54 Plymouth Belvedere 2-Door
Hardtop, 6 cyl., standard shift,
low mileage, easy on gas. Call

Rich, NX 2-0256.

250 cc. Street or competi-

B.S.A.
tion
teed.
Gene,

prepared. Engine guaranClean. Reasonable. Call
634-1495 after 6 p.m.

Must

Sell

Entire

Collection of

Books, literary classics, philosophy, poetry, etc. Call 876-3174.
'63 Vespa Motor Scooter, 125 cc.

excellent condition. Low mile831-4112.

age. Call Kurt Merkel

'58 Buick $175 must be seen to be
appreciated. Phone TF 6-3865.
Ask for Ted,
2 Wristwatches

Not hot! Gruen, Wittnauer—17 jewels, 10
K. G. plating, etc. Very reasonable. Myron, TR 6-7473.
—

SUMMER EMPLOYMENT
Girls interested in a summer
waitressing position in the Catskill Mt. area. Contact Joanne,
837-5184 or Mary &amp; Pat 831-2889.
LOST
Green Wool Slicker style coat at
the TKE Beer Blast. Reward.
Call Linda TR 3-5484.

Black Wallet lost at the TKE
Beer Blast Friday, April 22.
Call Allan Levitt 895-8843.
UB '65 Class Ring, silver polished

black onyx, initials RLM. April
25, Hayes Hall. Reward. Call

874-0525.

Glasses, reddish brown frames, in

Rathskeller, Wednesday evening, April 20. If found call Carl

Riggie, 835-5045.

Would the
Wollensak
Baird Hall

a
Tape Recorder from
Thursday, April 21,
Please leave it at Norton Candy
Counter. No questions asked.
Robert Little, 831-3907.
person who took

G'iTs Beige Wallet.

Please re-

turn. No questions asked. Regard. Call Wendy 831-4178.
OPPORTUNITIES
Golf

Randy Fox, pro
Lessons
—individual, group rates, Ni—

agara Sports Center, range and
"’i mature golf
Athol Springs
Circle, Rt, 75, Hamburg. Phone

2 Bedroom Apt.

For summer
Princeton Courts, furnished. 5
minute walk from campus. Call
837-4879 nights.

PACE SEVEN

Newman Club Presents
Panel of Refugees
From Castro's Cuba
A panel discussion on Cuba's
reaction to Castro will be held
by
the Newman
Apostolate
tomorrow at 8:30 in 147 Diefendorf.

The panel is representative of
Cubans who were once loyal to
Castro but fled Cuba after finding their faith misplaced, according to Newman Club President Ginny Keebler.

Gould Approves Institute
To Aid Local Enterprises
The Man-Machine Design Sys-

tems Institute, proposed by the
Department of Industrial En-

gineering, has received final approval from State University
President Samuel B. Gould, an-

nounced Richard D. Ford of the
Industrial Engineering Department.

The purpose of the Institute is
to enrich the educational experience of students, faculty and

Weekly Calendar

The panel will consist of Rev.
Peter Masdevall, a Piarist father

presently engaged as a Spanish
instructor at Rosary Hill College
and former teacher in Havana.
Cuba; Juan Clemente Zamora,
lawyer, diplomat and UB Spanish
instructor, formerly with the
Castro Government Ministeries
of Education and Foreign Affairs; Jose A. Bufil, lawyer,
educator, Spanish instructor at
Niagara University and former
Catholic University of Havana
professor; Antonio Perez, currently in public relations, for
mer secretary of the Cuban
Banknig Union.
An open discussion will follow
the program.

practicing engineers and to solve
real problems of local business,
industry and government, according to Professor of Industrial
Engineering Wayland P. Smith.
The Institute will mesh industrial engineering research and
development with the actual
problems in Western New York,
he added.
A project team engaged in a
study of factory renewal in

MAY 3-9
TUESDAY

Discussion: The University and
Its Colleges, Discussion of the
Ten Year Plan, 10:00 p.m.
Lecture: Dr. Philip Ross of the
Univ. of Pittsburgh, on public
policy on labor relations, 234
Norton, 2:00 p.m.
WEDNESDAY
Address: Marking of the 100th
Anniversary of the University
by Dr. Capen from the Acadomic Convocation of Oct. 3, 1946
in the quadrangle facing Cros-

by Hall.
Film: “Lamentation," “Dance
Chromatics,” “Carnival of
Rhythm,” and “Desperate
Heart," sponsored by the Modern Dance Club.
Senate Meeting; Norton Cafeteria, 7:00 p.m.

THURSDAY
Dialogue: J. Z. Friedman and
J. E. Deane on The University
in Transition, changes in attitudes since merger with the
SUNY, 10:00 p.m.
Lecture; Eucharist, 229 Crosby,
2:00 p.m. by Sever Trifu.

Room or Share an Apt. For summer. Near campus. Call Jim

831-3666.

Apt. 1 Room, furnished, Oxford
Ave. Available after May 20th,
Call Mr. Nacher TR 7-1626 after
6 p.m.
Summer Sublet, 3Vz room apt,,
Princeton Courts, very well

furnished. 3 minute walk from
837-7684.

campus.

3 Room Apt. Available June 1.
University Ave., 10 minute
walk. Call Barry Bienstock, after
6 p.m., 834-7144.
3 Room Apt., for months of June,
July, August, Fully furnished,
2 blocks from campus in Prince-

ton Courts, Rent reasonable. Call
837-6928 between 5-6 p.m.
Summer Sublet. Two male room-

mates, furnished, luxury apt.
2 blocks from campus. Call im
mediately, 837-9027.
Massachusetts Seacoast, 3 bed
room house on ocean front, gas
heat, available weekly in June.
Phone NF 4-3082.
Apt., UB Area,

available June 1.

Completely furnished, 2 bedroom duplex, new kitchen. Call

837-7258.

2 Bedroom

Furnished Apt. near

campus to sublet June 1 to
Sept. 1. $95 month including utilities. Call 833-6416 after 5 p.m. or
weekends.
Female Roommates wanted for
summer, option to continue
'6667. Just opposite campus, modApt. 837-4610.
6 Room Apt. June, July, August,
137 Lisbon Ave., 3 blocks from
campus. Completely furnished.
2 3 students. $40 each/month.
Call 837-7735 after 6 p.m.
•

Live-In Mother's Helper for summer, Private room, TV. Two

children. Good salary. 634-4298
after 4 p.m.
Sub-Letting an Apt. for this sum
mer. 2\i blocks from campus
Room for four. Rent inexpensive,

831-3952.

Free Room and Board. Help with
two children. 10 minute walk.
Call TF 6-4333.

—

dents. $45 each per month includes all utilities. TR 7-0112.

PERSONAL

fun for

all ages at NIAGARA

SPORTSCENTER

8°lf-

game

[Pg d range.
“‘

v

,

—

Completely Furnished Apt. avail
able for summer in Sheridan
Parkside. Suitable for three stu-

Miniature

room arcade, golf driv-

1701 Niagara Falls

Tonawanda, N. Y.

SERVICES
Spanish Teaching
(English-Spanish)
Call 836-4425.

—

Translations
Reasonable.

Anything

goes when you wear

"IT'S CRICKET

Men’s Toiletries. Try it and see. (Girls, give it a
After shave, 4 oz., $3.50. Cologne, 4 oz., $4.50.

hnd

1

825-9812.

drug stores

and cosmetic departments of department store
prodi

�A 3SA*

■»

T 3 3 ■?

:

Alpha Sig Wins Olympiad
Gamma Phi Fraternity sponsored its Seventh Annual Greek
Olympiad at Rotary Field April

24.

Alpha Sig won the Olympiad
with 35 points, followed by Sig
Ep, 34; AEPi, 13; APO, 12; TKE,
11; and GDI, 8. Alpha Gamma
Delta beat Chi Omega 49-45 in
the sorority division.

The last event, the egg toss,
was troubled by cold weather,
reported David Clark of Gamma
Phi. “By the time it was started,
the participants were using fro-

zen eggs, .a (actor which enabled
them to throw the eggs 30-40
yards without fearing breakage.”

Byron Caldwell of Gamma Phi
presented awards to the victors
of the Olympiad April 27. Permanent trophies were given to
Alpha Sig and Alpha Gam. The
overall trophy was given to Alpha Sig for the third year in a
row, enabling them to retire it.
A special “candy” award was presented to TKE “for their especially conspicuous lack of effort in
their tug-o-war with Alpha Sig,”
noted Mr. Clarke.

PAISANO’S
Gotta Deal!
order CARNE MACINATA for a buck

837-6120
and we'll give you SPAGHETTI FREE!
FAST FREE DELIVERY

—

Tuesday, May 3, 1966

'

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

Scientists Discern
Breathing Secret
While Submerged
UB physiologists have defined
and measured the specific requirements needed for artificial
gills enabling submerged men or
animals to draw an oxygen supply from the surrounding water.

Dr. Charles V. Paganelli announced that he and two colleagues “looked at the problem
from a respiratory viewpoint, and
are now able to tell the engineers
what precisely would be needed
in a chamber for a man in terms
of size, diffusion of oxygen and
flow of water.”
Working with Dr. Paganelli
were Dr. Hermann Rahn, professor and chairman of the UB Physiology Department, and Oxford
University medical student Nigel

Bateman.
The experiment involved placing a frog in a plexiglass chamber composed of filter paper
(Millipore Filter). The chamber
was submerged, allowing the oxygen in the water but not the water to penetrate into the chamber.
Dr, Paganelli explained that
the chamber acted as an artificial
gill, allowing the frog to breathe.

Feiffer Claims Radical-Middle
Is Group Condemned to Peace
By KATHY CENTER

“In the Age of the Radical
Middle,” said cartoonist Jules
Feiffer in a lecture last Wednesday, “there exist two unofficial national mottos: ‘All men
are equally corrupt’ and ‘Don’t
make waves.’ One defines our
condition and the other outlines
a program of living with it.”
Mr. Feiffer described the radical middle man as the man condemned to peace. He explained
that war, which previously lent
him a sense of prpose and depression leading to a sense of
reform, no longer exists as a
possible solution.

He continued, “Withdraw! and
alienation are the answers to
the radical middle man to his
environment. Even if he can’t
control the system, he can control himself.”

JULES FEIFFER
Photo by Alan

Gruber

A student asked the humorist
what hope he has for our society.
Mr. Feiffer said that he places
hope in a “new generation looking for an answer outside the

Serving the system are satire
and social criticism which act
as an outlet, a way to “let go,”
explained Mr. Feiffer.

established order.”

FAST FREE DELIVERY

Here are 7 knotty problems
facing the Air Force:
can you help us solve one?

£(b*l?u4-paC
t

6. Space propulsion. As our
space flights cover greater
and greater distances, propulsion-more the
thing else-WTITBeT
limiting factor. N&lt;
and new propulsi
niques must be four

an assortment of fine, nationally-advertised
products —courtesy of famous manufacturers.
...

You will receive such product s as theser

29°

Macleans Tooth Paste
Alka-Seltzer
Absorbine, Jr.
Old Spice Lime After Shave Lotion
2-Blade Pac Super Stainless Gillette
-

Halo Shampoo
The University Bookstore will contribute 15c of your donation to the Capen
Fund.

scientist on his first
merit who mokes

breakthrough!

1. Repairs in space. If something goes
wrong with a vehicle in orbit, how can it
be fixed? Answers must be found, if largi
scale space operations are to become c
reality. For this and other assignments A
Force scientists and engineers will be
colled on to answer in the next few years,
we need the best brains available.

7. Pilot perfon
Important tests mu;
made fo determine
pilots of manne'
spacecraft will
long periods owi

the earth. Of

2. Lunar landing. The
exact composition of
the lunor surface, os
well os structural
and propulsion char'
octet istics of the space

Ai
Force officer br
involved
comes
in research and develop
ment right away. But where the most e:
citing advances ore
taking place, young
Air Force scientists,
administrate
pilots, and engineei
are on the see

vehicle,

4. Space orientation. The orbital problems of a spacecraft, including its ability
to maneuver over selected points on the
to the mi

f&gt;

ice.

if

1

ossigi

young

T
Air

plenty

Force phy:

•&gt;

Want to find out how you fit into tl
Air Force picture? Contact your neare
Air Force representative, or mail the ce

enter into

this problem. Important study remains to
be done—and, os an Air Force officer,
you could be the one to do it!

3. Life-support biology. The filling of
metabolic needs over very extended peri
ods of time in space is one of the most
fascinating subjects that
Air Force scientists are in- •
vesfigating. The results
promise to have vital ramifications for our life on
earth, as well as in outer
space

coi

not every new

r

Brylcreem

are to keep on e;
the mysteries of spe
if may well be an Ai

pon today.

!

S

UNITED STATES AIR FORCE
Bo* A. Dept SCR 64

&gt;h AFB. Te»ai 78148

J

Nome.

|

College

'•0&gt;«

5. Synergeticplane changing. The abil
ity of a spacecraft to change altitude can | Addre
also be crucial to space operations. Where ! C.iy_
but in the Air Force could Sc.B.'s get the *
chance to work on such fascinating proj- u RART
ecfs right at the start of their careers?
America s

pf.nil

Class ol

ip Code

u_
aerospace team

�Tuesday,

Promising Play
Opens Tonight
At Glen Park
By T. J. FEIN

Work at the Crossroads” (or “Tempted, Tried and
True”) opens tonight at the Glen
Park Playhouse in Williamsville.
The play is promising. It is an
1890’s melodrama complete with
rave-bashful hero, true-as-she-istender heroine and of course, a
world-wicked villain.
The theatre troupe is composed
of local amateurs who are able
to ham it up to their hearts content. Fortunately this is the type
of play in which it is necessary
“Dirty

PACK MINI

S P ECTIUM

to overact.

Heroine Nellie Lovelace is
tempted by evil Munro Murgatroyd to run away from mild Mill
River to the evil big city (Buffalo,
perhaps?). Nellie is unable to
make her big decision, for to
leave would surely break the
heart of her mother, the Widow
Lovelace. At the end of this suspense-filled drama the villain is
forced to admit that he is “foiled
again” and exits amidst the hisses and boos of the audience.
Producer Carl Busch explains
that the production of this play
is an experiment. His idea is to
give local talent an opportunity
to appear on stage. He is especially interested in encouraging
university students to participate
in production and presentation.
He feels that this would be an
excellent means for a student to
gain exposure and experience on
stage (and besides they would be
willing to work for less).
The play is presented on a
cabaret stage designed to allow
the audience to relax with food
and drink while watching the
action on stage.
We wish Mr. Busch and company luck in his endeavor and
hope that he can find enough
good local talent to make his
project worthwhile.

Call Board
Modern Dance Workshop meets
Monday and Thursday at 7 p.m.
in Clark Gym. Modem Dance
Club meets Tuesday afternoon at
3 p.m.

nesday, May 4 at 7:30 p.m. in
Norton 234. Drs. Artsy, Danese
and Parker will speak on “The
New Math Curriculum.”

Language Table* normally held
on Tuesdays will NOT be held
on Tuesday May 3. As a farewell
dinner, all languages (Spanish,

French, German,. Russian, Italian) will have language tables on
Wednesday May 4 at 5:30 p.m. in
Tower Dining Hall.

The

Anthropology Club will

Dr. Harold Driver of Indiana University speaking on: “A
Short History of Cross-Cultural
Methods” on Wednesday, May 4
at 8:30 p.m. in Norton 231.

present

The Math Club will hold its
last meeting of the year on Wed-

ALASKA
Anchorage: McKinley Jewelers
Fairbanks: Ralph W. Perdue. Jeweler

NEW YORK
Ithaca: Schooley's Inc.
L. Gross 4 Bro.
Jamestown; Baldwin Jewelry
Medina: Limine's Jewelry Store
Middletown: Serpentini Jewelers
Newburgh: Wm. H. Griffin Jeweler
New York City: Lewis 4 Son Inc.
Olean: Lucie's Jewelers
Oneonta: R. E. Brigham Inc.
Oneonta: Jerry Halbert Jeweler
Painted Post: Mallison Jewelers
Plattsburgh: Light's Jewelers—
Plattsburgh Plaia
Poughkeepsie: Wallace's
Rochester: Hershberg’s Jewelers
Rochester: IVm. 5. Thorne, Jeweler
Rotterdam: Gem Jewelry—Shoporama
Schenectady: Meurice B. G Hubert 4 Sons

Jamaica: Harry

Branford: Martin Bohan Jeweler

Bridgeport: Lenot Jewelers
Danbury: Addessi Jewelers—t Stores

Hamden: Fowler Jewelers lnc.~t Stores
Hartford: The Philip H. Stereos Co.
Middletown; Mahore's Jewelers
New Britain: Wsrren Jewelers
North Branford: Martin Bohan Jeweler
Stamford: Zanlow-Ferguson, Inc.
Thompsonville-Enfield: Mareh Jewelers
Waterbury: Cardella Jewelers
West Hartford: The Phillip H. Stereos Co.
Winsted: Ft G Richards

Schenectady; Wellece's
Syracuse; Henrys Quality Jewelers
Syracuse: H. J. Howe, Inc.
Town of Tonawanda; Adam, Meldrum 4

DELAWARE
Milford: H. S. Saunders, Jewelers
Newark; J. J. Minster &amp; Son
Wilmington: The Jewel Bor

Anderson Co.

Utica; Evens 4 Son
Warwick; Serpentini Jewelers
Quelily Jewelers
Henrys
Watertown:

MAINE
Caribou: Johnston's Jewelers
Lewiston; Henry Nolin
Lincoln; Sprout t Vose Jewelers
Portland; Springer's Jewelers

Waverly: S. J. Bell Jewelers
West Seneca: Adem, Meldrum 4
Anderson Co.

MARYLAND

OHIO

Annapolis: Tilghman Company

Baltimore: James R. Armiger Co.
Baltimore: A. H. Felting Co.
Chevy Chase; R. Harris and Company
Easton: Wyatt's Jewelers
Elkton: J. J. Minster &amp; Son
Frederick: Colonial Jewelry Co.
Hyattsville: Fleisher's Jlrs. t Silrersmiths

Youngstown: Reymond Brenner, Jeweler

D

I

A

M

O

N

RINGS

D

of Maryland

Rockville; Fleisher's Jhs. t Silrersmiths
of Maryland
Towson: A. H. Felling Co.
Wheaton: Winthrop Jewelers

MASSACHUSETTS
Attleboro; Pearson's Jewelry
Bedford: Bedford Jlrs. Inc:
The GreatRoad Shopping Center
Beverly; Le Bel Jewelers, Inc.
Boston; Kettell, Blake &amp; Read
Cohasset: Austin L Ahearn, Inc.
Tedeschi's Shopping Plata
Fitchburg: S. M. Nathan Inc.
Holyoke: Leo J. Simard Inc.
Lexington: Anderson's Jhs.—Silversmiths
Lowell; Wood-Abbott Co.
Lynn: Bisselt Jewelers
New Bedford: La France Jewelers
North Adams: Frank Di Lego Jewelers
Pittsfield: Pharmers Jewelers
Springfield; Landen-True. Inc.
Stoughton: Wyman Jewelers
Webster: Vets Jewelers &amp; Silversmiths
Wellesley: Anderson's Jlrs—Silversmiths
Westfield; Fe/ix Marek Jewelers
Winchester: Anderson's Jlrs.-Silversmiths

A-~

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NEW HAMPSHIRE
Exeter: Lopardo Jewelers
NEW JERSEY
■ASbory Pa?S CBuMvdt Jewelers
Bloomfield: Corbo Jewelers
Burlington; Silpatb's Jewelers
Clifton; Corbo Jewelers
Styerlowne Shopping Pina
Florence: G. &amp; H. Jewelers
Hackensack: Marcus Jewelers
Newark: Kroupa Jewelers
Princeton: Lavake Jewelers
Red Bank: Reussilles'
Ridgewood: Marcus Jewelers
Rutherford: Marcus Jewelers
Trenton: Hamilton Jewelers
Wayne; Cotbo Jewelers
Westfield: Marcus Jewelers
West New York: L J. Rad Jewelers

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sharpen your wits with NODOZ.

■

SAFE AS COFFEE

Caps and gowns will
be distributed in the Norton Card Room, basement
floor: May 25-27,'8:30-5
p.m. and Saturday, May
28, 10-2 p.m.

Royerslord: Zenker Jewelers

Scranton; Ang Ciccotll's Jewel Cese

Scranton: frank McDonnell Jewelers
Sharon: Wengler's
Tamaqua: Souther's Jewelry Store
Jewelry Store
Nelson's
Titusville:
Uniontown: Wallace Miller i Bro. Jits.
Warren: Darling Jewelers
Washington: S. A. Meyer Jewelers
West Reading: H. £. Messner Jeweler
Williamsport: J. S. Pudnitiki, Inc.
York: Fulet Bros.
RHODE ISLAND
Bristol: Caron's Jewelers
Greenwich:
La
Plante's Jewelers
East
Garden City; Trlden-Tlwrber Corp.
Newport:

NEW YORK
Albany: frank Adams
Albany: Fuhrman's Inc.

Corp.

VERMONT

Stuyresant Plaza
Amherst: Adam. Meldrum A Anderson Co.
Bay Shore. U.: Jenard Jewelers
South Shore Mall
Binghamton: Henrys Quality Jewelers
Boonville: Freeman's Jewelry
Brewster: Addessi Jewelers
Umrersity.
Buffalo :A.M. 4 A's-Downlown,
Sheridan, Thruway 4 Southgate Plaias
Inc
s
:
.
Jlrs
Catskill Hallenbeck
Cheektowaga: Adam. Meldrum A Anderson
Co.
.
Cohoes: Timpane s Jewelers
Corning: Bong s Jewelers
Cortland: Harry Alpetl Jeweler
Endicott: Henrys Quality
Glens Falls: Robert s Jewelry Shop
Hempstead: Harry L. Cross A Bro
Horseheads . Wade's Jewelry
Huntington, LX: Cato! Jewelers
Walt Whitman Plaia
SOLO

Tilden-Thurber

Providence: Tilden-Thurber Corp.
West Warwick: Lord's Jewelers

Albany; Stuyresant Jewelers,

,

PENNSYLVANIA
Allentown: Appel Jeweler, Inc.
Altoona: W. F. Sellers 4 Co.
Bangor: Steckel's Jewelry
Bethlehem: Finkelslein Jewelers-I Stores
Bloomsburg: Sneidmen's Jewelry
Boyertown: Howard B. Schenely
Butler: Milo Williams, Jewelers
Chester: Morris Jewelers
Coatesville: Leon's Jewelry
Collegeville: A. W. Zimmerman Jeweler
Conshohocken: Wallace Jewelers
Coraopolls: Eger's Jewelers
Easton: Lord's Jewelers
Elizabethtown: LeMar Jewelers
Erie: Darling Jewelers
Gettysburg: Coffman Jewelers
Greenville: Milo R. Williams—Jewelers
Hamburg: Merrill Alexander, Jeweler
Hanover: Columbia Jewelry Co.
Hazleton: Fellin's Jewelry
Honesdale: Butler Bros.
Indiana: Luxemberg's Jewelry
Johnstown: Law's Jewelry
Lancaster: Bash Jewelers
Lansdale: Koehler's JewelersDiamond Merchants
Lebanon: Bash Jewelers
New Castle: Fletcher Jewelry
Norristown; J. Ralph Shuler
Northampton: Foster Jewelers
Norwood: Robert H. Atkinson Jewelers
Palmyra: J. B. Bowman-Jeweler
Philadelphia: U Kalnins-Huntingdon Valley
Pittsburgh: John M. Roberts 4 Son—3Stores
Pottstown: WiUauer Jewelers
Quakertown: H. C. Kulp

CONTESSA

•

FROM *150

VIRGINIA
Alexandria: Winlhrop Jewelers
Winlhrop
Jewelers
Falls Church:
WASHINGTON. O.C.
Washington: Farr's Jewelers
Washington: R. Harris and CompanyDowntown Georgetown t Chary Chase
Washington: Chas. Schwarh i Son

,

BY

FINE

Bennington: Alhins t Gould Inc.
Burlington: F. J. Prtslon i Son Inc.
Rutland: F. B. Howard Co. Inc,

WEST VIRGINIA
Wheeling: Rosins Jewelers

PUERTO RICO
San Juan: Pascual. Inc.-tSO Oua Sl/eel

J

EWELERS

THROUGHOUT

AMERICA

�Tuesday, May 3, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

ILSIWai

S*mLS«!2

“WHO IS HARPER?”
The film called Harper (currently at the Center
Theater downtown) is a detective story, as the critics
have said, and it is a good one. But, the general contention that it is a contemporary version of the hardboiled
private-eye archetype which Bogart developed and
played to perfection is misleading. Paul Newman, in
his best performance since The Hustler, plays Lew Harper
with more than a casual nod to the mystique of the ’30’s
code-hero operating slightly outside the normal channels
of a “rational” society. However, the film is defined by a
distinctly modern sensibility which operates with varying
effectiveness on three separate but organically related
levels of action.
First, Harper has like his historical predecesors (Sam
Spade, for intsance), an instinctual determination to
clean up the mess he is involved in. But, he is operating

The progressive go for slacks by Austin-Hill Ltd. Casual. Cosmopolitan. In a glen
plaid of Dacron polyester and cotton from Galey and Lord, a Division of Burlington
Industries. For your nearest retailer, write us at 1407 Broadway. New York 18.

Seconldy, Harper, his lawyer-friend, and the people
he is pursuing, are all part of an arcane sub-culture in
the grinding sprawl of life in California. None of them
are anything like the “family next door.” One of the
movie’s strengths is that they all have a certain verisimilitude about them, and the entire film carries the chilling
suggestion that these blighted people are actually the
majority species. This idea seems to derive directly from
the modern French gangster film, most particularly the
work of men like Jean-Pierre Melville and Jacque Becker
who practically re-invented the genre. Again, the film
is not as successful as Melville’s magnificent Le Doulos
because there is no single dominant tone behind the
action. Harper himself provides a certain constant, but
the bizarre characters he meets do not have that secret
understanding or special relationship that characterizes
the entire breed in Le Doulos.

The third aspect of the film’s mode of communication is probably the strongest part of the production.
The screen-play by William Goldman (who wrote Temple
of Gold, and Boys and Girls Together) is obviously pattered after William Faulkner’s adaptation for Bogart’s
To Have and Have Not. It is terse, witty and extraordinarily functional. The minor characters don't get
more than a few good lines, but they are immediately
discernible as people
reeognizeable if unconventional.

*

\

V

j

SOB!
SHAVING EVERY
DAY IS SUCH A
UGH -DRAG!
WHAT CAN SAVE
MY TENDER,

It.

-

Smight doesn’t really know how to blend them into the
main current of the film. I think this is due primarily
to Smight’s inability to arrive at any central, conception.
Smight’s unsteady hand blurs the cinematography
too, unfortunately, and contributes very little to the
acting. But most of the people in the cast are competent

professionals who make the most of their lines. Robert
Wagner is especially good as a seemingly shallow prettyboy whose own story, once uncovered, is a sinister
example of personal morality vanishing in a wave of
anomie. Shelley Winters has a hilarious vignette as a
bloated ex-glamor girl and Janel Leigh is surprisingly
apppealing as Harper's almost ex-wife.

I would say that the fine screen play and Newman’s

good performance make up for the deficiencies, so that
that movie is fun to watch in spite of all its obvious
faults. And after all. that’s why we go to the movies,

isn't it?

?

For fun. I mean?

Pass-Fail System
(ACP) —At

the University of
Berkeley, an undergraduate with a grade point average higher than B is eligible
to take one course per semester"
outside his major field, for which
he receives credit but no grade

California.

The idea behind this kind of
pass-fail course is that students
who ordinarily would not take

an extremely challenging course
for fear of sacrificing grade
points would be allowed to do
so without risk of lowering their
averages.
New draft procedures are mak

grades increasingly importmagnifying all the drawbacks of the grading system, the
ing

ant,

Western Herald, Western Michigan University, said in an editorial. Students will soon lake only
courses in which they know they
can do well, thereby narrowing
and limiting their educational ex-

periences.

The Herald continued: In order
to encourage the broadening of
education, we feel that a system
such as Berkeley’s should be con-

sidered. We would suggest, how
ever, removing the grade point
requirement, because students
with B averages are relatively
safe in taking hard courses.

Burlington

Galcy lord

I

in a society so completely unstructured that he becomes
confused about the nature of the ultimate resolution he
seeks. He can’t settle things by capturing or killing any
one person and the threads of the mystery he is trying
to unravel are made of such widely disparate material
that even if he succeeds in untangling things, the possibility remains that he won’t know anything that really
matters. In addition, he is aware of this and troubled
by it, and he has no choice but to continue. Unfortunately, Jack Smight, the director, has handled this aspect
of the movie poorly. The sense of chaos and aimless,
furious motion that he is reaching for tends to envelope
the action and dominate it so that Smight loses control
over the story.

If you’ve never used on electric shaver before, the Norelco 'FlipTop' Speedshaver® is a great way to find out the easier side of
shaving. Its rotary blades stroke whiskers off. Never cut or nick.
They won't hurt you. Neither will the price, which is about the
same as a year's supply of razor blades and shave cream.
P S. If you want to spend a littlemore, get the Norelco Speedshaver
30 (at right). 35% closer shoves. 'Floating heads, - loo. And a
pop-up trimmer for sideburns. All the trimmings. From shave to
price, it’s clear about any Norelco—you can't get stung!

Norelco'

The Close Electric Shave

&lt;£&gt;1966 North Amancan Philip* Company, Inc.. 100 Eo»f 42nd

Sfr««r.

N«w

Yort.

York 10017

�Tuesday, May 3, 1966

Albright-Knox Exhibit
An exhibition of 217 works collected by the late A. Conger
Goodyear will open April 30 at
the Albright-Knox Art Gallery,
Buffalo.

works to the gallery. The bulk of
those—271—are included in the
A Conger Goodyear Fund, established in January, 1964, four
months before his death.

Over a half-century, Gen. Goodyear presented a total of 361 art

The exhibition, which continues through June 6, includes outstanding works from the Goodyear Fund, as well as loans from
private collections and museums.

Everything Photographic for

Professional

&amp;

Amateur Use

DELAWARE CAMERA
MART
Movie Rentals

Cameras
Supplies
Projectors
Photo Finishing
*

Gen. Goodyear’s gifts include
works by such artists as Gauguin,
Van Gogh, Seurat, Toulouse-Lautrec, Daumier, Degas, Leger, Pissarro and many others.

Gen. Goodyear first was elected to the Board of Directors of
the Buffalo Fine Arts Academy
in 1912. He was vice president
from 1925 to 1928, when he left
Buffalo. He was one of the founders of the Museum of Modern
Art, New York, and was its first
president, serving for 10 years.

*

2635 Delaware Ave.
877-3317

/aUDRB^TdEL'Sv

/records \A Frosh Split
\

162 Broadway
1271 Jaffanon

B.tw~n RiWy t&gt; Landoo

■I

1394 Flllmora Ava

Jf/;

SPECIALISTS IN:

/

:

PI

»

the Lew “Go-Co“ Price*

10% STUDENT
DISCOUNTS

The UB freshman baseball team
moved its record to 3-1 by splitting a doubleheader with Monroe
Community Colege at Clark Field
Saturday. Tom Rectenwald, who
was the winning pitcher in UB’s
first two triumphs, won his third
in the opener with a six-hitter
as UB breezed, 4-0.
In the second game, the Bulls
committed six errors and consequently dropped a 6-3 verdict
to the Rochesterians.

UssiisiimSL^lsnii

*
*

*

Slide Rules
Drafting Sets
Drafting Supplies, Etc.
■(■Malar

W

sstf Mtaaoilar

MICROSCOPES

,

By STEVE FARBMAN

The intramural scene came to
a close last week after a busy
two-week fencing, track and volleyball session.
In the fencing tournament held
in Clark Gym on April 21, Jim
Mills of Gamma Phi won the
individual title. Bob Calo of AEPi
finished second and Len Schneider of Phi Ep third.
In team results, the Phi Ep
contingent, Mark Grashow. Len
Schneider, Jay Steinberg and Alec
Glasser, took first place with 30
points, two better than runnerup AEPi, Gamma Phi placed third
with 18 points.

(Skanks), 17-4%; high jump
Mark Cellar (SAJf) 5-9; shot put
—Jack Huttner (Phi Ep), 52-6%;
300-yd shuttle relay—Pi Lambda
Tau (Boiler, May, Cole, Winship),
35.9; 440-yd. shuttle relay—Phi
Ep (Torres, Schneider, Barnett,
Zolin), 50.9.
The final volleyball results will
be printed in Friday’s paper,
along with the final Pahlowitz
Trophy standings, which are currently being compiled.
—

The Intramural Awards Dinner

—originally scheduled for this
evening
had to be cancelled
since only two fraternities,
AKPsi and AEPi, paid to go to
it. This action certainly didn't
brighten the fraternity image on
this campus—particularly in the
eyes of the athletic department
and Intramural Office—and all
fraternities except two have only
—

themselves to blame.

On April 25, the track meet
was held at Rotary Field. After
•the dust had settled, Leon Lewis
of the Skanks had copped individual honors with a double
in the 100-yd. dash and the high
jump, while Phi Ep won three
events to gain team supremacy
with 63.5 points.
In a close battle for second
place, SAM scored 35 points, Pi
Lambda Tau 32.5 and the Skanks
and the Magic 7, 31 each.

Individual results: 75-yd. dash
—Morris Torres, Phi Ep, 8.7; 100yd. dash—Leon Lewis (Skanks),
11,1; mile—Ed Ingarman (AEPi),
5:24.3; broad jump—Leon Lewis

THE

BASEBALL BULLS ROUT GENESEO

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PAGE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

■

We Recognize Student Identification Cards

,

Young Men! Students Soldiers! Young Men Students!
If You Never See
Another Motion Picture

,

SEE THIS ONE!
THE LANDAU/UNGER COMPANY PRESENTS

DIRK BOGARDE TOM COURTENAY LEO McKERN
in JOSEPH LOSEV'S
•

-

ft

KING...
COUNTRY
FOSTER

also starring BARRY
Directed by JOSEPH LOSEY • Produced by JOSEPH LOSSY
and HOP MAN PPIGGEN Screenplay by EVAN JONES Music by LARRY AOLER
Eiecutrve Producer DANIEL M. ANGEL • a BHE PRODUCTION
Prints by Moyielab Distributed by American International Pictures
•

•

■

Exclusive
Western New York
Engagement!

Glen Art Theatre
5606 MAIN STREET
WILLIAMSVILLE, N.Y.

STUDENT
RATES)

�*
=

3, 1966

Tuesday, May

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

gjpss-'ffEwaa 8»®»ws*- s
(=

-/&lt;=-

—

-■*—

=

UB Baseball Team Loses to
Syracuse, Routs Geneseo
(One of a series of articles written exclusively for The
Spectrum by Head Football Coach Richard “Doc” Urich.)

Spring practice has only a few more days left and
so far it has been a satisfactory experience for the
coaches and. I hope, the players. Naturally there have
been some disappointments, but by and large I feel that
a great deal of progress has been made toward our
objective of fielding a winning and an interesting team
fov UB students this fall.
This Friday night. at X :00 o’clock, we will close
spring practice with the traditional game between the
varsity and a team composed of UB alumni. This game
will be played at the Williamsville High School Field.

The reason for this is that the annual UB Invitational
Track &amp; Field Meet will be held at Rotary Field on
Saturday afternoon. Students will, of course, be admitted
free to the game at Williamsville simply by showing
their I.D. card. I certainly hope that as many of you
who possibly can will attend the game. In this connection
I might add that 1 am extremely gratified at the student
turnouts at our practice sessions so far. It bespeaks well
of the interest and spirit on the campus.
We have split the squad into offensive and defensive
units except for about 10 players whom we have not
decided upon what position they are best suited for or
who could be the best at their particular position on
offense and defense. Although there are some colleges
that prefer to field separate units that can play both
offense and defense, we feel that the two-platoon system
is best. For one thing, it gives more boys a chance to
play. Also, a team with units going both ways is at a
disadvantage against another team which constantly
inserts fresh players for the game circumstances. Our
experience has been that adequately rested players are
less susceptible to injuries. So far this spring we have
been fortunate in the injury department in that nothing
serious has occurred.
A number of students have inquired about the offensive formations we have displayed so far. We have been
using two basic formations, the I-Formation and what
is usually called a Pro Set, although I prefer to think of
it simply as a Spread Formation. In both cases we use a
split end. and in the Spread we also use a flanker back
who can be on the opposite or the same side as the split
end. The advantage of the Spread is that it gives your
pass receivers a chance to get downfield and run their
patterns without getting tangled up in traffic at the
line of scrimmage.
The 1-Formation is good that in that you are able
to effectively mask the point of attack until the last split
second. It is deceptive in that both runs and passes start
with the same basic movement.
This is perhaps an oversimplified explanation of
our offense. We have a number of variations that we will
install in the fall.
Our desire is to have a variegated offense that will
keep our opponents trying to adjust to us, rather than
finding ourselves in the position of trying to adjust a
limited offense to their defenses. To win football games
you simply must be able to score often. This is what
we intend to do.

Track Team Divides 2
The improving I'B track team
scored its first win of the
ason
last Tuesday by routing Canisius
and Niagara Community College
in a triangular meet at Rotary
Field UB scored 130 points to 20
for Canisius and 11 for Niagara
CC
Double victories by Larry Nau
kam. Dick Genau and Chuck Stu
art highlighted the victory as the
Bulls took first in every event
except one.

Against Cortland at Rotary
Field Friday, the Bulls dropped
an 87 58 decision Art Walker
was brilliant in a losing effort
as he doubled in (he 100 and 220.
and anchored the 440 relay team's
record-breaking win. The relay
team, also consisting of Jim Web-

ber, Jim McEwan and John Berk-

houdt. toured the distance in a
blistering

44.5.

The team competed in the LeMoyne Relays in Syracuse Monday and will journey to Ithaca
Thursday
UB 130, Canisius 20,

Niag. CC 11

44* ratay-Bv alo &lt;J*r.. **o*r. Jim Me
Ewan. John Barkhou&lt;J». Arl Walktf). CaMilo—Bob SlenijMjl
N iur| CC. 451
pnaoaon (B), Jo# Graf &lt; B&gt;. John Fit?440 Dick Genau (Bl.
•#r#M (C). 4 53'
Mik# F#rr#r# (C), Mika A'lpaugh (B’
:54 1.
IBB—Walk #r (B). M&lt;E*an (B), B
HBSlinOtr (C), : 10 S. 1* hh-Larry R Nau
war
kam IB), Pa»a *aa$a (B). Dan
(Cl. :U.A ■t-Gonou (II. Jock Mrowko (I), Alssougf (I). 3d 5 H0-8ork.
(C).
Ttotiinjor
Iruco MlnkoH
bouOt l&gt;).

'GitXxxl

III. Joo Oltormkl#
(Cl, Mol Salmon (»1. 47-7'. OMo Vltlll
—Milt Sloigor 111. Tom *»on (II. Norn;
Kollor (I). 11-4. Otttoo-CnorlM Sluorl
(I). 1HO.
III. wooor (*). Ipolmon
Hlfti Jumo-Tom Snort INCCI tlo «oc

lf£My%.W(SrtlSl:

|&lt;«.
(•).

Trial* J«n»*-**gk*m (•).
ai TtamfMn (»0. 5-71%.

The U.B. baseball team dropped its second straight road game
Wednesday as the Bulls lost 10-6
to Syracuse, giving up ten unearned runs to the Orangemen.
The Bulls outhit Syracusce, 12-11,
and were given nine walks by
Syracuse pitcher Dave Borkhius,
but until the ninth inning the
Bulls could not come up with the
clutch hits—leaving 15 men on

base. Ken Rutkowski started for
UB, and the sophomore pitched
good ball as U.B. defensive lapses accounted for all five unearned runs Ken allowed. Tim Uraskevich relieved in the seventh,
and was the victim of five more
unearned runs as UB committed
three errors to help the Syracuse
rally. UB, trailing 10-1, scored
five runs in the ninth inning,
and had the bases loaded when
great plays by the Syracuse third
baseman and pitcher ended UB’s
hopes.

Ken Rutkowski had three hits,
while Fran Buchta, Brian Hansen, and Jim Duprey each had
two singles for the Bulls. Dave
Chernevetz led the Syracuse hitting attack with three hits for
the Orangemen,
Friday, the Bulls trounced Genesee, 9-1, on the UB diamond.
Hansen raised his average to .538
with two singles and a triple in
three trips to the plate to pace a
13-hit onslaught. Doug Long, Rutkowski and pitcher Don Potwora
each had two hits.
Potwora, in lifting his record
to 3-0, pitched seven innings of

GENESEO

P
N'

k.

If

I-

KEN RUTKOWSKI

shutout ball before being relieved by John Busch, who pitched
two innings of effective relief.
The Bulls put the game out of
reach in a four-run sixth inning,
featured by Ron Leiser’s two-run
single.

BASEBALL NOTE S—TIB
has an overall batting average
Hansen and Rutof .306
kowski lead the hitters with
marks of .538 and .500, respeclively
The pitching staff
owns an earned run average of
1.41 with Rutkowski leading the
department with an 0.76 mark
UB played at Canisius Monday and returns home for a
doubleheader with St. Bonaven-

ture Wednesday,

SPORTS TRIVIA
All entries for today's sports

trivia contest, the final one of
the year, must be handed to the

sports desk of the Spectrum by
Wednesday, May 4, at noon. Prizewinners of and answers to today's
contest will appear in this Friday's paper.

known Merkle blunder of 1908?

9. What is the name of Tony
Oliva's brother?

What baseball manager was

10.
nicknamed the “Miracle Man”?

1. Who is the only baseball
player to score six runs in one
major league game twice

2. To which Brooklyn Dodger
did Wilbert Robinson once say,
if you don't succeed at first, try
the outfield

The co-winners of the April 22
quiz are David Traum and Mark
Brennan, both of whom correctly answered five questions.

'■

3. The five players that comprised the "Murderers’ Row” of
the 1929 Philadelphia Athletics
were Mickey Cochrane, George
Haas, A1 Simmons, Jimmy Foxx
and
4. What daily double combination clicked the most times at
Buffalo Raceway in 1965?

5. Who was Jim Gentile's bat
ting pupil in the Vitalis commercial?

6. How long was Doug Sanders
putt on the aforementioned com
mercial?

7. Who was the hero of the
Claire Bee sports series?
8. Who was the Chicago Cubs'
second-baseman credited with the
forceout on the New York Gi-

ants’ Fred

Merkle in

the well-

The answers

1. Calamity Jane. 2. Arnold
Tucker. 3, Jack Lamabe. 4. Harry
Greb. 5. Jack Manders, 6. Mike
Goliat. 7. Wee Yankee and Dalton's Pamela. 8. John Prbgenzer.
9. Bucky Pope.
10. Art Hicks
and Hank Gunter,
In the April 19 contest, due to
conflicting sources, the Spectrum
—after a lengthy deliberation—has decided to allow either Charlie Neal or Felix Mantilla as an
acceptable answer to the question,
“Who made the first error in the
history of the New York Mets?"
Due to this change, the entries
submitted by Robert Lieberman
and Dan Alterman qualified for
a first-place tie with David Wallick with ten correct answers.

ab r h M
3000
2000
0 1 0
10 10
10 00
4 0 10
3 0 10
0 10 0
Camann ss
1 0 10
3 0 00
Lull lb
10 11
O’Brien lb
4 0 00
Gore el
10 0 0
Lonq P
p
10 0 0
Luczak
Drmacbich p 0 0 0 0
Brydfn o
1 000
Total*
M 1 f 1
Jamas If
Wade If
Stewart rf
Barnum c
King c
Tilus lb
Quirt 3b
Miller 3b

I

EUEFALO

ab r h bi
5 0 13
Leiser ss
50 10
Buchta 3b
Eulkpwsbl H 4 1 3 0
Racrke If
10 0 0
40 1 0
Dupre* c
0 000
Busch 0
Hansen rl
3 13 1
4
11
Long lb
110 0
Pusalen cl
3 3 11
Shaw lb
p
7I 3 2
Potwora
10 0 0
Grad c

W m tm a•
00# 0io-i
10x—f
001

Buffalo

—

Total*

Ganaseo

J J*

DP—Buffalo 2.
Geneseo LOB-Buffalo 6. Gaoesao II.
2B—Rutkowski (6). 3B-Hans«n. SBLeiser. SF-Potwora,
Jansen EPBBS0
E—Quirk.

Ormachich.

Long. IL. 0-1)
Drmachich
Urvdeo
Potwora (W, 3-0)
Musch

4

■

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33

7

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1 I
0 0

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51

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2 3
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BUFFALO

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4 0 2 0
5 12 0
42 2 0
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Rulk'skl p&lt;l 4 0 3 2
4 10 0
Loniw2b
PusRri cl If 4 1 1 1
Gerlnger It 2 0 0 0
Uraskevich p 0100 00 00
Grad ph
0000
P
_

Leiser ss
Buchta 3b
Hansen r*

Potwora ph

.

ftkalUSE

*b r h bi
2 3 11
ss 5 12 2
ChernWeti 0 3 13 1
Burnett It
3 0 12
Haight rl
2 10 0
Wattle cl
50 2 0
Shenk lb
3 00
DeFra co 2b 5 I I I
P
Borkhuis
4 2 10

Knapp
Rooney

.

fill

1111

3000
1b
Total*
37 10 11 7
37 A 12 A
Totals
Old 000 005— 4
Buffalo
003 002 50x —10
Syracuse
E—Le-ser 2, Hansen 2. Long 3, Dennebauov DP-Buffalo 1, Syracuse 1. LOB15. Syracuse 11.
*- Ru "“”' 5ki
' P
r er m so
4
5 0 4
RutkowskI (U 1-1) . 4 7
4
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5
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. 1
0 0 0
Heitz
1
9
10
12 4
Borkhuis (W)
WP-Rutkowski 7. Borkhuis PB -Duprey
3. Chernovetz. HBP-Rutko*ski (by Borkhuis). I—
Shaw

"Th

UB Netmen
Drop Pair
The UB tennis team lost its
first match of the season Wednesday, bowing to host Hobart
College, 6-3. Pete Lederman and
Don Mingle remained unbeaten
for UB in singles and doubles.
The Bulls traveled to Syracuse
Friday to play what turned out
to be a hotly contested match—verbally as well as physically. As
the bright sun slowly set, the
Orangemen walked off the courts
with a narrow 5-4 win. Lederman,
however, remained
singles for UB.

unbeaten in

Bill Sanford’s netmen, now 5-2,
wil attempt to regain their winning ways when they face Colgate at home at 3 p.m. this afternoon. Thursday the team travels
to Niagara.
Syracuse

5, Buffalo 4

6'zezinski (UB) d. Larry G«nnger 7-5. 6-3. Russ Drowne (S) d. Lenny
Schneider 7-5, 6-3. Andy Elsea CS) d
Matt Yuschik 6-1, 6-2 Pe*e Lederman
(Ufl) d. Kapil Tayal 6-3, 1-6, 10-0 Ken
Ritzenberg (S) d. Don Mingle 6-3, 6-1
Jim Ripley (UB) d. Randy Roe 6-1, 3-6.
6-4. Brzezinski-Yuschik (UB) d. GaringerDrowne 7-5. 2-6, 7-5. Elsea-Rltzenberg
(S) d. Laderman-Mingl# 6-4, 7-5. Taya
Roe (S) d. Schn^Jer-Ripley 6-2, 6-3.
Denny

Caps and gowns will
be distributed in the Norton Card Room, basement
floor: May 25-27. 8:30-5
p.m. and Saturday, May
28, 10-2 p.m.
Used paperback books
in reasonably good conditions are needed by the
Browsing Library, Norton 255.

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NO

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW

COMPACT FOR

I

FRIDAY

VOLUME 16

I

H

,

H

(See Page

BUFFALO, NEW L ,YORK, TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 1966

NO. 42

Cartoonist Feiffer to Speak in Fillmore Room
Jules Feiffer, a social critic
and humorist whose cartoons appear in 65 newspapers throughout the United States, will lecture
on “Life-Times-and The Funny
Pages" Wednesday, April 27, 8:30
p.ra. in the Fillmore Room.
Feiffer’s cartoons are described
in Life as “biting, intellectual,
and strongly flavored with
Freud.” He has also written seven
books, one a novel, and two plays.
Feiffer won a gold medal at
the age of five for a drawing of
Tom Mix arresting some outlaws.
After high school he enrolled at
the Arts Students League of New
York, attended drawing classes
at Pratt Institute in New York,
and drew “Clifford”, a Sunday
cartoon-page feature which ran
in six newspapers.
While serving for two years in

JULES FEIFFER

Six Greek Frats
Plan An Appeal
To Federal Court
A Supreme Court ruling which
barred national social organizations from State University campuses will be appealed by four
fraternities and two sororities
before May 9.

the Signal Corps, Feiffer developed the character of Munro, a
four-year-old boy who is drafted
into the army by mistake.
Unable to sell a manuscript
about Munro, he drifted from job
to job until his cartoons in the
Village Voice caught on.

In April 1958, Feiffer's cartoons were published in a book,
Sick, Sick, Sick, -subtitled A Guide
to Non-Confident Living. Munro
eventually appeared in his second best-selling collection, Passionella.

In April 1961 an animated version of Munro’s adventures was
awarded the Oscar of the Academy of Motion pictures Arts and
Sciences as the best short-subject
cartoon of the year.
Critic Millstein has depicted
Feiffer as being “alone and un-

afraid in a world made of
just about all of the intellectual
shams and shibboleths to which
our culture subscribes.” Feiffer
has questioned what he views as
the hypocritical and has defended what he regards as the human.
Feiffer’s cartoons are distributed by Hall Syndicate to American
newspapers, as well as papers in
Paris, London, Rome, and Stockholm. His cartoons also appear

L. Halpern
said that he expects action on
the appeal before June.

Ralph

In 1953 the Board of Trustees
prohibited social organizations
from State University campuses.
When UB joined the state system
in 1962, the organizations were
given until 1967 to denationalize.

The appeal is in its final stage.
Supreme Court Justice Matthew
J. Jason had upheld the Trustees’ ban on the organizations.
His decision was upheld by the
Appellate Division.
Mr. Halpem has contended that

the trustees classification of local
and national is unreasonable because they are performing the
same functions
In 1964 the organizations presented an appeal to the courts
and were granted an injuetion
which allowed pledging on a national basis in the fall and spring
of 1964. The organizations continue to pledge on a national
basis.
Inter-fraternity Council Vicepresident David Frank© commented, “We will continue to remain
national organizations until a decision is reached. There will be
no action against the national
farternities and sororities until
the case is decided.”
The fraternities involved are
Beta Sigma Phi, Sigma Alpha Mu,
Phi Epsilon Pi, and Phi Kappa
Psi. The sororities are Sigma
Delta Tau and Phi Sigma Sigma.

SDS Plans to Sponsor
Counter Draft Test
CHICAGO (CPS)—Students for
a Democratic Society is planning
a nationwide distribution of literature and a “counter draft
test” on each of the three dates
the Selective Service System has

chosen for its examination for
college students.
SDS National Secretary, Paul
Booth estimated that two-and-one
half million students will take the
(Cont’d

on Pg.

12)

eor ro

LCHi ft MORE
THAM Mi
POSH S'

\

in Playboy Magazine, Holiday,
Sports Illustrated and others. His
work still appears weekly in the
Village Voice.
Actors re-create Feiffer's cartoon characters in The Feiffer
Film, which has been released to
colleges recently.

Refreshments will follow the
lecture, arranged by the Student

Senate Convocations Committee.

Furnas Refuses Meeting With GFCSS; Anything Goes
Will Highlight
Stand
Will
on Decision to Administer Spring Weekend
Selective Service Deferment Exam
In a letter to retiring University
President Clifford Furnas, the
Graduate Faculty Committee on
the Selective Service (GFCSS)
asked that he reconsider his decision to administer the Selective
Service Draft Deferment Examination on this campus. Dr. Furnas
refused either to meet with them
or to alter present plans for administering the exam.
The deferment test will be
given on campus during May and
June of this year. Those students
who fear that their draft classifications may be changed from
student deferments can gain another full year of deferment by
achieving a successful score on
the exam.

is required to attend the exam,
Furnas’ refusal to meet with a

ing the test, according to Miss

East.

-

Attorney

you've

ter so werm!

The GFCSS questions the entire concept of deferment for a
student status. Committee members feel that college attendance
is greatly dependent upon financial status and socio-economic
background and any preferential
treatment for students is thus
undemocratic. The committee is
further in disagreement with the
exam itself; they feel that it is
discriminatory in that it is geared
to aptitudes most highly developed in science students, as demonstrated by statistics obtained from
similar exams given during the

Korean War.

According to Miss Ruth East,

dent.

Dr. Furnas feels that the

test is warranted on campus in

that those students who wish to
take it may do so, and no one

CLIFFORD

URNAS

delegation from the committee is
an expression of his resolve to
maintain current policy regard-

The Spring Weekend Committee announced that “Anything
Goes” will begin with showings
of "The Music Man" today and
tomorrow in the Conference Theater.
Voting for the Spring Weekend Queen will be held in the
Norton Center Lounge Wednesday and Thursday from 9 a.m.

to 4

p.m.

The Laurentian Singers from
St. Lawrence University will perform in the Fillmore Room at
2:30 p.m. Wednesday. Fraternities, sororities. Arnold Air Society, and Angel Flight will compete in Stunt Night at 8:30 p.m.
in the Gym.

At a meeting scheduled for

"Coffee House" entertainment
wil be held in the Rathskcllar
rom 10 a.m. to 2 a.m„ and coffee

hers of the Graduate-F acuity
Committee on Selective Service
will discuss possible courses of
action to Furnas' refusal.

the campus, the city, and nearby
colleges will perform and poetry
will be read. Anyone wishing to
perform should contact Sandy
Baco.

WBFO Will Celebrate UB's Anniversary
With University Month' On Campus Radio
WBFO will present a program
series on UB’s past, present, and
future in celebration of “University Month” May 2-31.
Former UB Vice-President Dr.
G. Lester Anderson will begin
the series with a discussion of
“The University Purpose,” May 2
at 7:30 p.m. “These Restless
Men,” a documentary history of
the university, will be presented
at 8:15 p.ni UB's initial development, its evolution into a major
educational center, the “Furnas
years,” and UB’s stature as a
state university will be reviewed.
Dr. Clifford Fumas will describe the individual colleges of
the university and their future
goals in a program on “The
University and Its Colleges” May
3 at 10 p.m.

“The University and Chancellor
Samuel Paul Capen’” will be
broadcast May 4 at 10 p.m. Dr,
Capen will review the growth
of the institution, its role in the
community, and its academic
freedom traditions.

Senior students Jonathan Z.
Friedman and John Edward
Deane will discuss the fading
traditions and changing attitudes
among students and faculty since
UB became a state university on
“The University in Transition”
May 5 at 10 p.m.
An interview with Dr. Peter F.
Regan, III, V i c e-President for

Health Affairs, will be held on

“University Perspective” May 10
at 10 p.m.
Dr. Claude Puffer will discuss
"University Expansion” May 11
at 10 p.m. and History Professor
John T. Horton will speak on
the “University Heritage” May
12 at 10 p.m.
“The University and Research”
will be discussed by Dr. Raymond

Ewell, Vice-President for Research and government consultant, May 17 at 10 p.m.
“The University as a Landmark,” a program of taped discussions by faculty and community members, originally produced
by WBFO in honor of the College

of Arts and Sciences’ 50th an
niversary in 1964, will be rebroadcast May 18 at 6:30 p.m.
Dr. John T. Horton will reminisce about the past forty years
of the university on “The University and Its Past" May 18 at 10
p.m.

A musical tour through old UB
favorites such as the Alma Mater,
the Football Song, and Herds on
the Rampage will be heard aMy
19 at 10 p.m.
The Computer Center will be
discussed May 24 at 10 p.m.

An informal discussion with
three deans who have served the
College of Arts and Sciences
since its formation 52 years ago
will be held on “The Three
Deans” May 25 at 10 p.m.
Chancellor Furnas will discuss
“The University and Chancellor
Furnas” May 26 at 10 p.m.
The final program of the series
will concern “The State University of New York” with a discussion of the system by State
University President Samuel B.
Gould.

Friday's events will begin with
a heralding parade proceeding at
10:30 p.m. from Allenhurst and
ending at Norton. A Trike Grand
Prix, sponsored by Theta Chi
Fraternity, will be held at 12:30
p.m. in Tower Parking Lot. followed by Olympic competitions
in front of Tower at 2 p.m. Thirteen groups will compete in a
tug-of-war, watermelon eating, a
human totem pole, and relays.
A semi-formal dance will be
held Friday at the Hearthstone
Manor in Cheektowaga from 9
p m. to 1 a.m.

At the dance, held in honor
of retiring President Clifford C.
Furnas, the Queen will be crowned and the Mr. Faculty Award
will be presented. Tickets may be
purchased for S3 per couple at
the Norton Ticket Office.
Singer Nina Simone and comedian Milt Kamen will perform
Saturday in the Gym at 8:30 p.m.
Tickets may be purchased in the
Nortoh Ticket Office,
Tower Hall will hold an open
house Sunday afternoon, followed by a fireworks display in the
Baird Parking Lot.
The play “The Birthday Party”
will be performed Thursday. Friday. and Saturday at 8 p.m. in
Baird Hall.

�10% OFF

On all required books

including

outlines

We Pay More
For Used Books

St
|PF

W

m,

Buffalo Textbook Stores
3610 Main

(near

Bailey)

TF 3*7131

Summer Registration
In Progress For All
Three Semesters
Advance registration for the
1966 Summer Session is now in
progress, and will continue until
May 20 in 201 Hayes, 8:30-4 weekdays.

University College students
must obtain their advisor’s signature on registration cards. Senior division or graduate students
must obtain faculty signatures.

v w"

m

Tue«lay, April 26, W66

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

The first session will run from
June 6-July 15, the second from
June 27-August 5, and the third

’

from July 18-August 26, Students
are permitted to enroll in any

,

combination of the three sessions,

provided enrollment does not exceed one credit per week of at-

Juniors Inducted Into Women's Honor Society;
Dean Scudder Delivers Keynote Speech
faith in students, quoting the late
John F. Kennedy: “Each man
should make a difference and
every man should try,”

Eleven junior women were inducted into Cap and Gown last
Thursday, at the Second Annual
Formal Dessert honoring women
students for scholarship, leadership, or service.
The new members of Cap and
Gown are: Hedda Beckman, Rosa
Lynn Brothman, Ellen Cardone,
Rhea From, L,i n d a McIntyre,
Mary Hayes, Lauren Jacobs,
Elaine Kwitowski, Susan Orlofsky, Nancy Simonoff and Christa
Ulbricht.
Dean of Women Jeanette Scud-

der delivered the opening address
to 200 guests including Mrs. Clifford Fur

her

Mrs. Lars Potter, Assistant Professor of Drama and Speech, discussed “The Art of Speaking,”
emphasizing that too often this
“priceless gift is not invested
wisely.”

The Senior Book Award was
presented to Robert Engel. Sandra Atlas received Chi Omega’s

Social Science Award.

The Student Council of the
School of Nursing named Diane
Kile Outstanding Student Nurse.

Joan Breckenridge received the

Ann

Sengbusch Leadership

Award and Joyce Kryway received the Dr. S. Mouchly Small
Award. The Archena K. Rosenthal Award was given to Beth
Ann Steger.

Barbara Popaduch was presented with the Medical Technology A s s o c i at i o n’s Founders
Award.
Panhellenic Scholarships were
awarded to Nonnie Burke and
Diane Ives. New officers of the
Panhellenic Council announced
are:
Christa Ulbricht, Elaine
Greenberg, Claudia Elliot, Patricia Miller and Janet Leslie.

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be used for the administration
(draft) test.”
The GFCSS stated that the test
is a denial of the university's
traditional right to "define for
ourselves what standards we
might establish for membership
in the academic community."
If we allow the military to
protect some students, the GFCSS
said, we are granting them the
right to define membership in
the university and the power to
dictate intellectual ehterprizes.
The committee added that "to
permit some students to be protected from the follies of society
implies the creation of an elite
social group which shifts onto
the less privileged in our society
the burden of politics and war.”
“We ask our colleagues and
Deans,” the letter continues, “to
join with us in a redefinition of
scholarly enterprise. If Molloch
would give us his test, is it too
much to ask that he use his own
facilities?”

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The letter concluded, “It there
is to be a rebirth of our independence and freedom, the true
freedom which comes from responsibility and caring engagement, then we must join in a
disengagement from the military
and put an end to our disengagement from society.”
The GFCSS sent a letter to
President Furnas last week requesting that he reconsider his
decision to use the University
testing facilities for the administration of the Selective Service
test.

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Representatives of three approaches to psychotherapy will
be heard at the First Annual
Symposium of the Psychology
Department, April 28 and 29.
The topic of this year’s symposium is “Research In Individual
Psychotherapy.” The second half
of the two-part program on this
topic will be held in October
According to Professor Irving
Feldman, the two-part symposium
is expected to become an annual
presentation of the department,
under a general title of “Studies
In Psychotherapy and Behavior
Participants
week’s program will be Dr. Ernest Haggard
of the University of Illinois Medical Center, Dr. Charles Truax
of the University of Arkansas,
and Dr. 0. Hobart Mowrer of
the University of Illinois.
Dr. Feldman explained that
the program is planned chiefly
for the benefit of graduate students in the clinical program, as
well as faculty members and

psychologists in the community.
The sessions arc, however, open
to the public and undergraduates
are invited to attend.
Dr. Haggard will speak at 9:15

The State Assembly passed a
bill to increase state aid to education from $600 to $660 per
pupil April 18.
The bill, passed by a 150-0
vote, was forwarded to the State
Senate for action. A compromise
plan was presented by Senate
Majority header E a r 1 IJrydges

books, New Group Psychotherapy and The Crisis in Religion and Psychiatry.
The Symposium will close with
a panel discussion, 1:30 Friday
in Acheson 70,

which includes protection for low
expenditure school districts.
T h e s e districts, according to
Brydges. might not receive a full
share per pupil under the state
formula.
The legislation will cost the
New York State taxpayers an
extra $74 million this year.

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Dr. Haggard has
been engaged in work on the research applications of the psychoanalytic school of therapy.
Dr, Truax, who will speak on
“The Theraputic Relationship:
The Contribution of Patient and
Therapist to Cast Outcome,” 1:30
in Acheson 5. has been associated
with the Client-Centered therapy
movement initiated by Carl Rogers. This school stresses “Unconditional Regard" for the client,
and the use of the individual’s
own insights and resources to
solve his problems.
Dr. Mowrer, who has been developing the applications of learning theory to therapy, will speak
Friday at 9:30 in the Conference
Theater on "The Behavior Therapies. with Special Reference to
Modeling and Imitation.” Dr.
Mowrer is the author of two re-

State Assembly OK s Bill

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PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

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home to an economy deflating from its
war time expansion. To these add the
civilians who will be laid off as military
For any number of reasons, it has become fashionable to see President Johnson contracts are canceled..
in either one of two extreme lights: either
Unlike WWII, there is no shortage of
he is a great man, come in the nick of consumer products. Plants turning out
time to save America; or as a grotesque bombs and tanks won’t be able to switch
villain perpetrating evil throughout the over to the production of cars and refrigglobe, in the name of “national interest.” erators. Unlike WWII, there is no devaHowever, it is possible to suppose that stated Europe to rebuild. Instead, there
were it not for our criminally stupid venare the powerful European economies and
tures in Viet Nam and Latin America, the rapidly rising developing nations to
Pres. Johnson might be seen for what compete with us for world markets.
he is—a disciple of Roosevelt operating
To this inflated labor market in a dein the tradition of Kennedy. Johnson
flated economy add the impact of “cyberlearned his political lessons from Roosevelt, and who could ask for a better nation”. This marriage of automationed
production and computer management
mentor? He inherited a mess from Kennedy, and he has attempted to impose a threatens sweeping changes on all labor
simplistic view of “Manifest Destiny” of levels. Industry will demand a highly
a world, rife with embryonic nationalism educated but very small work force.
and incredibly painful social development.
Robert Theobald, a noted economist,
predicted in testimony before Congress,
His domestic policy (The “War on
Poverty”, the passage of the Civil Rights “Two percent of the population will, in
Bill, and the passage and expansion of the discernible future, be able to produce
“Medicare”, etc.) can be viewed as an all the goods and services needed to feed,
extension of the progressive policies of clothe, and run our society with the aid
The cybernation revoluF.D.R. (The National Relief Agency, The of machines .
tion will force man’s mind out of the
C.C.C. and the W.P.A.). His attitude productive
system as surely as the industoward the struggles for national liberation in South East Asia may be seen as trial revolution forced out man’s muscle.”
an extension of Roosevelt’s simplistic atThe unemployment problem that faces
titude toward the same struggle in Spain. the Negro and the high school dropout
today will confront the returned GI and
It is impossible to white-wash Johnson, white collar worker tomorrow.
but it is possible to suppose that had he
The piecemeal solutions being applied
not inherited an untenable situation in
Viet Nam from John Kennedy, he might to visible labor problems and unemploybe an exceptionally progressive and vital ment by the Federal government fail compresident.
But he did, and he cannot pletely to even recognize the crisis imescape the responsibility of prosecuting minent and inherent in the present U.S.
a war in a land where we are not wanted economy.
against an enemy whose platforms sound
Lyndon Johnson is applying the corlike the “New Deal.”
rect answers to problems of the thirties.
But the questions of the sixties are being
Viet Nam is like Spain—it’s not like asked.
Munich!
.

.

Johnson is like Roosevelt—not

—R.D. Volpe
—R.M. Goldberg

like

Part II

Whitney M. Young Jr., executive director of the National Urban League, has

New Myths and
Old Realities
Part I

Despite all the fancy slogans of “too
little too late”, “welfare state" and “guns
or butter”, that have been used in the
verbal assault on Lyndon Johnson's “newest deal” programs, critics from neither
the Right nor the Left have put the entire
economic problem, with all its implications, before the public eye.
Job discrimination, cyclical poverty,
and strikes of public employees have occupied the limelight. Relatively little attention has been focused on the problems
inherent in our new industrial complex.
Neither has anyone ventured to examine
the impending turmoil implicit in the Vietnam war economy.
Last summer’s riots in Watts and Harlem, the promise of more in Oakland and
the Mississippi Delta; the continuing generations of undereducated children following undereducated parents into poverty in
Appalachia; and labor battles for liveable
salaries for Teachers, Nurses and Transit
employees have occupied the newspaper
headlines. But these problems only ride
the crest, like the small visible surface of
an iceberg. They don’t reveal the danger
lurking below.
Just below the surface is the problem
of Vietnam. When the war ends, three
hundred thousand soldiers will return

inherited moral capital, so
that, happily, their actions often
do not rigorously follow the logic
of their beliefs.” For example,
should lovers take seriously the
philosophy of cut-up Norman
Mailer who writes, two years
after his attack on one of his
wives,” So long as you use a
knife, there’s some love left”,
lovers might experience more
than one stab in the dark.
But, you say, they’re only a
minority and nothing will come
of it. As National Review quotes
Hilaire Belloc:
on

By Phyllis Chamberlain
and Jon Simplicio

Great or Grotesque?

Kennedy!

Tuesday, April 26, 1966

'■

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

asked of the anti-poverty program “whether the real intent is to promote equality
or stop riots”
Disenchantment with the program was
vividly demonstrated last week in the Capital. Sargent Shriver, attending a “poor
peoples convention”, was “booed, jostled
and almost shouted down” as he spoke.
Cried a young woman from the Watts
district of Los Angeles, “when all this
poverty money is spent, the rich man is
going to be richer and I'm still going to
be receiving a welfare check”.
In simple language, the poor need
money. They need jobs to earn money.
They don't want Washington advisors or
corrupt local politicians passing out welfare checks like an allowance from “big
daddv".

Unemployment is the problem. Even
it the American taxpayer were prepared
to continually support a stagnant welfare
class, the problem would remain. Only
employment as a contributing member of
society can provide the dignity of full
citizenship. Employment and paychecks
are the key to mobility in an affluent

society.

The legislation of anti-poverty measures is the work of head in the sand ostrich thinkers. They prefer to entertain
the myths of their imaginary world than
the realities of the ghettos.
Most dangerous in the anti-poverty
myth is that it spreads false hope, hope
that will turn to fear when conditions

refuse to fade away. And it is that fear
that sends men into the streets, rioting
and burning in a very rational protest to
their poverty.
—Raymond D. Volpe

For some time now the political conservative has been rhetorically abused by leftist elements
of the fanatic fringe. The Spectrum (perhaps in light of its
excessively narrow views should
be called the “Wavelength”) has
been the soap box for this harangue. Many of .the articles that
appear in this paper reflect emotions and syndromes catalyzed
by half-real situations magnified
and distorted by the fanatic mind.
Ed Wolkenstein, (Spirit and the

Sword) has clinically diagnosed
him, (the conservative), as suf-

fering from “consistent psychopathic fear of communism.” Joel
Meyers, (Youth Against War and
Fascism) has described him as a
supporter of genocide and morally condemned him as a part of
“the depraved ultra-right.” Jerry

Gross, with his infinite wisdom
and compassion for all humanity,
(excluding the conservative who
is apparently outside humanity),
has judged him immoral “as far
as the working people are concerned.” Obviously he doesn't
think conservatives work. In addition, “The right wing is actually guilty of murder.” He too
labels the conservative a supporter of genocide. Jeremy Taylor, (anarachist and constitutionat the SAME time), notorist
ious for inaccuracy and use of
his column for his own irresponsible outbursts on many sujects.
has decried alleged “appalling
displays of violence,” as he implies from the right.
—

So it goes with the fanatic
fringe, (of which the above are
only a small segment), preying
on emotion, regarding themselves
as victims and, devoid of proper
perspective, resorting to rhetorical weeping and gross generalizations to gain support.
In view of the fact that these

fanatics have attached themselves
as parasites to a responsible liberal body of thought and this
body has not effectively disentangled itself from this radicalism, the conservative must attack
the Liberal movement as a whole.
Society has not yet reaped the inevitable harvest of chaos, immorality and complete social disintegration resulting from implementation of their ideas because
says Frank Meyer (National Review), “Liberals are still living

THE

“We sit by and watch the Barbarian, we tolerate him; in the
long stretches of peace we are
not afraid. We are tickled by his
irreverence, his comic inversion
of our old certitudes and our
fixed creed refreshes us; we
laugh. But as we laugh we are
watched by large and awful faces
from beyond; and on these faces
there is no smile”.
When S.D.S. executive David
Gardner says “to meet human
needs, the political institutions,
i.e., power, must be abolished”
but in the next anarchistic breath
insists that “to be accomplished
these ends need an organized society,” one wonders—if not laughs
—at his logic. The belief that to
correct imperfection in a social
system it must necessarily first
be destroyed, is frightening consequences. He damns institutions
because they “are set up for
profit and efficiency.” In other
words, efficiency is evil, and man
must live solely for his fellow
man or be coerced to fulfill his
neighbor’s needs. Many Liberals
believe that the welfare state is
in the finest American tradition.
People are now pitching tents
on the White House lawn to DEMAND poverty money (our money
and yours). Thus this progressiveLiberal-humanitarian ideology has
succeeded in reducing dignity,
destroying self-reliance, diminishing personal freedom and general! perverting traditional values.
The job of the conservative is
to offer constructive criticism
and, when warranted, to attack
the left or radical right. This
column proposes to present conservative philosophy as a cogent
alternative to the Liberal dogma,
to point out the inherent contradictions and double standards in
much of the Liberal logic and to
fill the vacuum created once dubious Liberal premises are invalidated.

SPECTRUM

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo, N. Y. 14214.
Published twice weekly from the first week of September to the last week in
May. except for exam periods. Thanksgiving. Christmas, and spring vacations.

Publication

JEREMY

Editor-in-Chief

Business

Manager

TAYLOR

RAYMOND D. VOLPE

News Editor
ALICE EDELMAN
Staff—Loretta Angeline. Joanne Bouchier. Russell Buchman, Karen Green,
Peter Lederman. Joan Roberts. Rick Schwab. Dan Schroeder, Sharon Shulman,
Eileen Teitler, Nancy Toder, Patti Wartley. Judy Weisberg.
Feature Editor
JO ANNE LEEGANT
JOHN STINY Assistant
Staff—Bonnie Bartow. Ron Ellsworth. Barbara Ann Fitzsimmons, Barbara Loeb.
Audrey Logel. Bob Martin. Suzanne Rovner. Martha Tack, William Weinstein.
Staff—Mike Castro.
J. B Sharcot.

Sports Editor
STEVE SCHUELEIN
Mike Dolan, Steve Farbman. Bob Frey,

Scott Forman,

Layout Editor
SHARON HONIG
Staff —Joanne Bouchier, Stephanie Parker, Steve Silverman.
Copy Editor
LAUREN JACOBS
Staff—Carol Becker, Estelle Fox. Jocelyn Hailpern, Sandy Lippman,
Claire Shottenfeld, Susan Zuckerberg.
Staff—Terry

Mancini.

Angelo,

Advertising Manager
RON HOLTZ
Audrey Cash. Pat Rosenfeld, Steve

Photography Editor

Betsy Ozer,

Silverman,

Joseph

EDWARD JOSCELYN

Staff—Don Blank. Peter Bonneau. Joseph Feyes. Carol Goodson, Alan Gruber
Marc Levine. Ivan Makuch. Michael Soluri, Anthony Walluk, Susan Wortman,
Robert Wynne
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Faculty

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Advisor

Financial

IRENE RICH

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DALLAS GARBER

EDITORIAL POLICY IS DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
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National

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Tuesday, April ?6, 1966

}

6

p&gt;uyn **»*■

'
-

SPECTRUM

oCetterA

RAM FIVE

the Editor

to

Human Beings, Not Labels
TO THE EDITOR

I am, by birth, a Jew. According to Dr. Zimmerman &amp; Co.,
if I am labeled a Jew by a
person attempting to discredit
my position on an issue, that
would not constitute Jew-baiting,
but “labeling.” Indeed, they have

written in their letter last Tuesday that, “Red-baiting consists
of labeling a person a Red who
is not.” The point I am trying to
make is that a person’s ideology
is not relevant in evaluating his
stand on an individual issue. To
resort to name-calling is not only
illogical. Dr. Zimmerman, but immature.

The line of thinking which produces the argument that a point
stated by a Communist is somehow less valid than the same
point stated by a non-Communist
seems somehow related to the belief that it is horrible to mistakendly bomb an “innocent" village
while it is necessary to bomb a
“guilty” one. It seems necessary

to re-assert the fact that in both

cases it is human beings being
bombed and not “labels.”

I would also like to comment

on a statement made by Miss Lenore Banks in a letter to the
editor in the same paper. She
states, "The ground rules for
dissent and consent on Vietnam
be defined and confined to those
who accept and to those who wish
to work for a change within the
existing institutions of our socity. That is, those who are opposed to totaitarian goals to totalitarian means.” Besides the
false assumption that anyone who
does not wish to work within the
established institutions is a totalitarian, this statement contains

in Santo Domingo we maintained
against the will of the people. I
would refer her to the totalitarian
South Vietnamese military “government” which we are killing
and dying for against the will
of the people. I would refer her
to the racist South African regime which is supported largely
by American banks and corporations. I would refer her to the
Indonesian regime which has murdered 300,000 “Communists” in
the last 6 years under CIA support. 1 would refer her to Mississippi. Alabama. Louisiana and
Georgia. I would refer her to the
Northern Ghettoes. I would refer
her to the Buffalo Common Council which will not permit Women’s
International League for Peace
and Freedom, certainly no more
than a liberal organization, to set
up a table downtown to collect
voter pledge cards.

the ultimate internal contradiction. She would like to use the
totalitarian method of confining
and defining in order to exclude
those who favor totalitarian
means. Furthermore, if Miss
Banks suggests that “we” are
free and “they” are slave, I would
refer her to a book by John
Gerassi, a former correspondent
for Time Magazine and currently
an editor of Newsweek, The Great
Fear in Latin America. In 461
pages, the book fully documents
how we control, exploit, police,
and literally own Latin America,
in the most brutal totalitarian
style. I would refer Miss Banks
to the totalitarian military junta

I would remind Miss Banks that
even in the most totalitarian society, freedom is enjoyed by a
minority. We Americans, 7% of
the world’s population who consume 50 r; of the world’s goods,
are indeed free.
—Daniel M. Katz

Thank You, Mr. Grump
TO THE EDITOR:

I suppose my thanks are in
order to Grump for his explication of Mr. Callan’s logical error
in the April 8 column, since Callan’s challenge was to me, not
him.
However, I question even the
small effort required in your re-

ply, Grump, First because Callan,
tied up as he is in his “logical
flow”, is a lost cause to the more
elemental aspects of logic,

Second, and very much more
important, because I appeal to
the model of men standing higher than you and I, men of our

century like Einstein, Freud,
Pauling, and Russell who, in con-

cerning themselves with the relations between men, have employed no more profound a logic
than is necessary to understand
the Golden Rule. True, the rule
is not unambiguous as applied to
a given problem, but interpretation here seems more a matter

for the heart than for

logic.

—Robert McCubbin

Callan Does Not
Reflect The Right
TO

A summer to remember

£C.W.P0STiWmjHk

THE EDITOR

Mr. Callan, in his column The
Right (April 8), stated his belief
that abortion was morally wrong
and hence all laws against abortion should not be repealed. Sev-

COLLEGE

CAMPUSag^

OF LONG ISLAND UNIVERSITY

eral letters have been written in
response to his column and some
of those letters have asserted that
Mr. Callan’s views are representative of all conservatives; that
is the point I wish to clarify.

Accelerate your degree program as
you enjoy the many activities and
facilities on the 270-acre C.W. Post
campus: new residence halls, swimming, tennis, riding, bowling, the annual Long Island Festival of theArts.

The views expressed in The
Right are those of Mr. Callan
and not necessarily the views of
those on the right. I for one am
in total disagreement with his
conception of morality and I feel
that abortion should be legalized.
However, I do not wish to argue
the point at this time, for that
is not the purpose of my letter.

H

My intention is merely to refute Mr. Callan’s critics who mistakenly imagine that his opinion,
on abortion, is the opinion of
those on the right. Neither he
nor I can speak for conservatives

\'JShSS

J

-

UNDERGRADUATE COURSE
Liberal Arts and Sciences,
Pre-Professional,
Pre Engineering,
Business and Education

GRADUATE COURSE OFFERINGS

In the Graduate Schools of Long Island University:

Biological Sciences, Business
Administration, Chemistry, Education,

Management Engineering, English, Foreign
Languages, Guidance and Counseling,
History. Library Science. Marine Science,

and those that have criticized him
have missed the boat by associate
ing Mr. Callan’s opinion with
those of conservatives in general.

Mathematics, Music Education. Physics,
Political Science, Sociology, Speech.

Apply now for TWO SUMMER SESSIONS

—Donald Rich

June 27—July 29 and August 1 September 2
Day and Evening
Admission open to visiting students from accredited colleges.
—

For additional information, summer bulletin and
application, phone 516 MAyfair 6-1200 or mail coupon

There will be no edition of the Spectrum on
Friday, April 29. The
next regular edition will
appear on Tuesday, May

Dean of Summer School. C. W. Post College, P.O., Green vale, L.I., NY. 11548
Please send me Summer Sessions information bulletin.
gp
□ Women's Residence Hall
□ Men's Residence Hall
Undergraduate
□
□ Graduate
□ Day
□ Evening

3rd.

This Friday is “Moving-Up Day.” There are
no classes scheduled.

I

Ik'

news

Name

-f
item
UNIDENTIFIED FLYING OBJECT SPOTTED HOVERING OVER D C
-

Address
I

w*y

{

If visiting student,

State

State

from which college?

—

/

1

�PAGE SIX

SPECTRUM

Tuesday, April 26, 1966

Yesterday, you may have had a reason
for missing a good, nourishing breakfast.
Today, you don’t.

No
in

-mak

that's to

Each glass delivers as much protein as two eggs,
as much mineral nourishment as two strips of
crisp bacon,
more energy than two slices of buttered toast,
and even Vitamin C~the
orange juice vitamin. Q It comes in a lot of great flavors, too. Look for them in your cereal

cfl

'

section

�Tuesday, April. 2«, 1966

PAGE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

National Teacher Corps Volunteers
Sent to Ghetto Slum Schools
The National Teacher Corps
will initiate its first training sessions in a new experimental program designed to improve the
quality of public education in
urban and rural areas of poverty,
according to the National Student
Association, Applications are due
May 31 for approximately 3000
college graduates who will begin
training in June to enter slum
schools in autumn, 1966.
The program is designed to
bring young people without any
prior teaching experience into

local school systems, using their
skills and enthusiasm while giving them formal training under

a college or university program.
The three-month pre-service
training session will concentrate
on problems of slub teaching and
the sociology of poverty. The
men and women will be assigned
to public schools in poverty
areas where they will supplement regular personnel by working in classrooms and in special
enrichment programs, adult education, and community work.

Cjoodman

During this period of service.
Corps members will be enrolled
in a local university in a twoyear graduate prograrii leading
to an advanced degree.
The United Slates National
Student Association commented
that there is a great potential in
the Teacher Corps and is assisting it in reaching those students
who have already been actively
involved in social problems.
Interested students should contact NSA coordinator Jeffery Lynford in the Student Senate office.

NEW YORK—Parents shouldn’t
panic when their 18-year-old son

gets his draft call, says Dr. David
Goodman in his forthcoming
book What's Best For Your Child
—And You. As long as he’s going to be drafted anyway. 18 is
the best possible age.
In addition to his draft-call advice, Dr. Goodman shows how to
meet other common family problems that may cause anxiety or
tension. He speaks as a professional family life counselor for
more than a decade, a former
principal of one of New York’s
best known private high schools,

When that draft call comes,
Dr. Goodman writes, “eighteen is
a good age for entering military
service. The body then is full of
energy, and the imagination is
keen for adventure, adventure
that is otherwise almost impossible to experience in our much
too ordered society. Young males
like to feel their oats. They derive a tremendous satisfaction
from the sheer sense of body
power. Youth lives in its body.
Youth enjoys the physical activity that goes with military trainingf. Furthermore, a young fellow needs and enjoys the satisfaction of having measured up
to the demands of army life.
When he gets through his sixteen weeks of basic training, he
feels good because now he knows
he can take it. That's a very fine
feeling. It will hold him in good
stead when he faces up to the
requirements of his later life.
"After high school, many a
young fellow has had his fill of
schooling. He is weary of the
world of books. If fie goes on to
college, the life there frequently
bores him. Boredom is the lot of
more college freshmen than outsiders will ever believe. Yet these
same boys, though not now really

interested

I

smn

ADDRt

And make no mistake about it. . . you’ll get a solid
feeling of satisfaction from your contribution to our
nation's economic growth and to its national defense
as well

Craft Shop
|

Exhibit

DEGREE

Your degree can be a BS, MS or PhD in: MECHANICAL
AERONAUTICAL
ELECTRICAL
CHEMICAL ENMETALLURGY
GINEERING PHYSICS
CHEMISTRY
ENGINEERING SCICERAMICS
MATHEMATICS
ENCE OR APPLIED MECHANICS.

•

•

•

•

•

For more specific information (and immediate action)
concerning a career with Pratt &amp; Whitney Aircraft, write
today (or use coupon) to Mr. William L. Stoner. Engineering Building 1-A, Pratt &amp; Whitney Aircraft, East Hartford, Connecticut 06108.

The exhibit, entitled “Diversion Through Origins," includes
ceramic work, grisaille enameling,
and silver and gold metalwork by

SPECIALISTS IN POWER .
POWER FOR PROPULSIONPOWER FOR AUXILIARY SYSTEMS. CURRENT UTILIZATIONS
INCLUDE MILITARY AND COMMERCIAL AIRCRAFT, MISSILES,
SPACE VEHICLES, MARINE AND INDUSTRIAL APPLICATIONS.

Ulli Chcmberlain, John Dunham,

Pr0tt &amp; Whit n0y fi irer0ft o^oNOF^uD^rTcoRP.
CONNECTICUT OPERATIONS

EAST

FLORIDA OPERATIONS WEST

PALM

HARTFORD. CONNECTICUT
BEACH. FLORIDA

An

lqu.il Opportunity Employer. M

A

F

•

The professional staff of the
Norton Union Creative Craft Shop
will present its annual exhibition
of creative works through May 2
in Norton 231.

•

•

•

in education, would

return to it with new zest and
vigor after a two-year stretch in
the Army.
“Entering service after college
—or, worse still, after professional school—is not so pleasant
a prospect. The 22-or 24-year-old
young man docs not have the
same physical zest as the eighteen-year-old, nor the same spiritual exuberance. He faces Army
life as a necessary duty, not as
an exciting or interesting adventure. He’ll go through with it and
do his part, but he won't enjoy
it. What he. wants most is to go
on with his career, to get married, to settle down.
"So don’t try to hold back
your high school graduate son
from meeting his draft call, perhaps in the dim hope that later
the Army may not need him at
all. Army service is good for
your boy, and 18 is the age when
he is best ready to meet it. When
he comes out, he’ll appreciate
even more the advantages you
have to give him.”

Expanding military and commercial business
has created even more openings.

I

and as a widely read writer and
speaker.

LATE NEWS
for
ENGINEERING
GRADUATES
As you contemplate one of the most important decisions
you have yet had to make, we suggest you consider
joining us at Pratt &amp; Whitney Aircraft. Like most everyone else, we offer all of the usual “fringe" benefits,
including our Corporation-finai ~ed Graduate Education
Program. But, far more important to you and your
future, is the wide-open opportunity for professional
growth with a company that enjoys an enviable record of
stability. You will be working on challenging new problems of propulsion.

—

Joseph M. Fisher, Harold B. Heiwig and Sylvia Rosen. Examples
of jewelry constructioon, centrifugal casting, and handmade woodworking instruments will be ex-

hibited.

The exhibit will be held week-

days from 11 a m. to 8 p.ra. and
1 p.m. to 8 p m. on weekends.

�Tuesday, April 26, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

Qualified Applicants Solicited
For Student Judiciary Position

PLAY

The Student Senate Executive
Committee and the Dean of Students’ Office are now in the process of selecting judges for next
year’s Student Judiciary. The
Student Judiciary is a separate
organ of the Student Association
which deals with disciplinary action taken against students in all
cases of non academic misconduct.
The Judiciary is also the Supreme
Judicial court of the student
body; this enables the court to
hear cases involving all student
groups on the campus.
A student justice sits in judgepeers and therefore
the criteria for selection by the
Senate and the Dean are rather
stringent.

ment of his

Any full-time student who will
be a junior or senior, and has
achieved an overall 1.0 average
and has attained a 1.0 average

during the semester prior to his
appointment, is eligible to apply.
The Student Senate appoints two
members, the Dean of Students’
Office appoints two members, and
the President picks one member.
The Constitution requires that at
least one member must be a
resident student. If you are interested in applying for the Judiciary, please send a letter to
Mr. Clinton Deveaux, President

of the Senate, 205 Norton, and
make an appointment to see Dr.
Joan Moos, Ass’t Dean of Students, Harriman Library. The letter to Mr. Deveaux should include: The reasons that you would
like to serve on the Judiciary,
the reasons that you think you
should be considered for this
post, and other pertinent activity participation, and academic information. This should be done
not later than this Friday. Preferably,

as

soon as possible.

NSA and AFN-V Conference
istration of justice through a
series of forums and seminars,
the conference will explore past
legislation, obstacles to the fulfillment of justice, and present
proposals to surmount these difficulties. With primary emphasis
on Southern legislative disputes,
the opinions of civil rights’ workers, attorneys and legislators will
be surveyed.

“The Administration of Southern Justice: Civil Rights and the
Law” will be discussed jointly
by the National Student Associa-

tion and the American Foundation on Non-Violence at Oberlin
College, April 28 through 30.
Delegates from 450 universities
and law schools are scheduled
to attend.
Discussing the equitable admin-

HAROLD PINTER'S

The Birthday
Party
Wed., April 27

'kCT

Toil

I

Ink) on

its

o(

doi &gt;c i

Sat., April 30

I!

Alli'l ;:Iki
ini'i

—

8:30 p.m.

it store

—

Baird Hall

Student Tickets $.50
Norton Ticket Office

Department of Drama and Speech

To All UB Students and Faculty:
TODAY ONLY
The

Putt Putt
Golf Course
located on Sheridan Dr

FREE

j

west of Niagara Falls
Blvd. invites you to play
HIS ORCHESTRA AND THE RAELETS
Entire Production under the supervision of JEFF D. BRO WN

KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL, Thurs., May 12th, 8:45 PM
$2.50, $3.50, $4.00. $4.50
All Seats Reserved
For best choice of seats mail your order NOW with self-addressed,
stamped envelope with check or money order C/O Mrs. Elsie
Van Wie,
Denton s, 32 Court St., Buffalo 3, N.Y. Tickets also on sale at all AudreyDell Record Shops and all Doris Record Shops.
—

Please Bring Identification. Thank You

�Tuesday, Aptit ,24, 1966

SPECTRUM

Plethora of Cheap Sentimentality
Distorts Image of Late President
By GARY MUCCI

The picture of Kennedy as a
mythical god like hero is enough
to warm the fleshy tablets of the
heart of any American who finds
thinking tedious. The challenge
is to those who refuse to accept
such one sided praise that even
Bismarck, Talleyrand and Cromwell combined would scarcely
have deserved. The challenge is
aimed at those who refuse to worship a plaster image which will
soon, we may be sure, collapse
into a heap of forgotten dust.

In spite of the fact that generalities are always difficult, I think
It can be safely said that some
of the most stimulating controversies are so close to the American people that they are invariably missed. Such a controversy
exists at the present time, and it
presents a challenge to all those
who prefer not to be caught in
a swamp of sticky sentimentality.
A recent book review in Esquire magazine made the problem quite concrete and led me
to do some thinking. Since the
death of President John F. Ken-

seller lists have been crammed
with books by or about our late
president. A look at the New
York Times book review section
of January 7,1966 will show that
the most popular books in the
analysis are biographies of mir

controversy, that between histor-

Colonel John J. Herbert, Jr.,
Director of the NATO Weapon
School, has accepted a position
as Professor of Aerospace Studies
in the UB 575th ROTC Detachment.

Colonel Herbert, who served in
the Air Force 23 years, was a
B-25 pilot in World War H. He
has received the Distinguished
Flying Cross, and Air Medal with
Four Oak Leaf Clusters, and both
Air Force and Army Commendation Medals.

Receiving a bachelor of arts
The theme of John Kennedy
degree from the University of
is a terrific one. Is is a political
Omaha. Colonel Herbert attended
morality play of a Greek tragedy?
the Air Command and Staff Colhas
The solution
not been given lege, Academic Instructor School,
and it would be presumptuous to and Pilot Training School.
assume we will ever know all
This summer Colonel Herbert
of the factors involved in the will leave his current assignment
tragic administration of the late in Germany to assume his position at UB July 15. The Profespresident. It is up to each of us
sorship was recently vacated by
to seek a true evaluation of the Lt. Colonel Huddleston, who has
man which will only come from been Professor of Aerospace Studa true evaluation of his strengths ies for four years. Lt. Colonel
Ozeniek temporarily holds the
and weaknesses as a president.

nedy three years ago, our best

thirty-fifth president.
Compounding the problems created by this barrage of information are the emotional stimuli of
Kennedy records, Kennedy movies, Kennedy half-dollars, Kennedy key chains and Kennedy
Savings Bonds. (What could be
more touching than having a picture of the late president on the
bond we receive after patriotically contributing to the payroll
savings plans?) These are sophisticated in comparison to the nickledime trash and pathetic monuments erected adjacent to the
flickering “Jenny” signs.
There is more, but is it necessary to continue? A mere suggestions is enough for all of us
to recall the preoccupation of
our society with the creation of
a myth about John F. Kennedy,
his family and his life.
Thus, we are presented with a

Herbert to Assume
ROTC Professorship
Effective July IS

position.

ical myth and historical reality.
Great national figures are always
given a grandoise role in the culture of a society and unfortunately it is this glorification that
makes the job of separating myth
from reality sometimes impossible
for the historical analyst. The
American treatment of John F.
Kennedy and his administration
seems destined to bring about
this problem.

senting a thousand pages of the
late president’s wit, virtue and

resolution. The tribute, honor and
glory becomes almost bombastic
as John F. Kennedy becomes a
full fledged member of the Brotherhood of American Heroes.

Inidvidually, wo must build our
respect of John F. Kennedy on
truth, not on what is handed to
to us by an emotionally oriented
society. I'm sure he would have

THE SPECTRUM
printed by

Partners' Press, Inc.
ABGOTT fit SMITH PRINTING

MORE AVE. (mt Delaware)
Phone 876-2284

1381 KEN

wanted it that way.

One of the most disheartening
developments in our attempt at
an honest evaluation is the book
by Arthur Schlesinger, A Thousand Days, John F. Kennedy in
the White House. Schlesinger, already a noted historian and Washington commentator, abandoned
all standards of criticism by prc-

GEORGE WEIN presents

The Newport Festivals
The Newport Jazz Festival
July 1,2, 3, 4, 1966
Four evening concerts; Friday, Saturday. Sunday. Monday. Three afternoon
concerts; Saturday. Sunday. Monday. Featuring; Count Basie. Ruby Braff,
Dave Brubeck. John Coltrane. Miles Davis. Duke Ellington, Ella Fitzgerald.
Bud Freeman. Stan Getz. Dizzy Gillespie. Woody Herman, Herbie Mann,
Thelonious Monk. Jimmy Smith. Joe Williams, and many others
Evenings; $3.50. 4.50. 5.50 Afternoons: $3.00

The Newport Opera Festival
July 12, 13,14, 15, 16, 1966
Presenting the Metropolitan Opera Company of New York. Major stars.
Chorus, and Orchestra in four operas in concert performance and five
afternoons of musical workshops, panels, and lectures.
Tuesday. LA BOHEME
Wednesday. CARMEN
Thursday, (rain dale)
Friday. LUCIA Dl LAMMERMOOR
Saturday. AIDA
(Sunday, rain date)
Evenings: $3.50. 5.50. 7.50
Afternoons: $2.00

The Newport Folk Festival
July 21. 22, 23, 24, 1966
evening concerts: Thursday. Friday. Saturday. Sunday. Three All-Day
Workshops; Friday, Saturday, Sunday.
Featuring; Theo Bikel. Oscar Brand. Brownie McGee and Sonny Terry. Judy
Collins. Bob Dylan. Jack Elliott. Mimi and Dick Farina, Flatt and Scruggs.
Carolyn Hester, Bessie Jones. Phil Ochs. The Pennywhistlers. Jean Ritcbie,
Grant Rogers. Buffy Sainte-Marie. Howling Wolf, and others
Evenings; $3.50, 4.50. 5.50
All Day Workshops: $2.00

Four

SPECIAL DISCOUNT: deduct 20% from the list price of tickets for all
concerts if purchased by mail before May 15th.
For information,

write Newport Jazz. Opera, or Folk Festival. For tickets
specify dates and Festival. Make checks payable to the specific festival you
to attend.
For accommodations, write the Newport Chamber of Commerce. Newport,
Rhode Island 02840.
plan

If you're age 12 through 21, you can fly to the Newport
fare on American Airlines, creator of the American
Providence. R. I. To become eligible, just send $3.00 with
and receive your Youth Plan ID. plus a free copy of AA's
with $50 worth of discount coupons

American Airlines Youth

Everybody's doing it. Operation Match. It's camp

to meet. It whammo's blind dates.
It started at Harvard. The original Operation Match—featured in TIME, LOOK,
and the coming May GLAMOUR. Already there are over 100,000 ideal dates in
our computer's memory bank. Now's the time to line up your Spring Fling.
Let our IBM 7090 Computer (the world's most perfect boy/girl matcher) select
5 ideal dates for you—right from your campus area. (Now a gal can really choose
the kind of guy she wants, not just wait and hope he comes along!)
Just send us the coupon below ... we ll send you the Operation Match Quan
titative Personality Projection Test Questionnaire.
Answer the questions about yourself, what you're like, and what you like. Return
the questionnaire with S3.00. Then we put our 7090 s memory bank to work. It
reads out the qualifications of every member of the opposite sex in your college
area, and programs 5 or more ideal dates for you You receive names, addresses,
and phone numbers. Guys call the gals. You're just a telephone apart.
Also, your card is kept continuously active. You receive as many dates as the
7090 finds matches. The sooner you apply, the more dates you may get.
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Tuesday,, April 26, 1966

SPECTRUM

The Birthday Party' to Be Shown
In Baird Hall This Week
Harold Pinter’s famous

Barbara Thirtle and William Cortes in a scene from Harold Pinter's
"The Birthday Party."

‘‘com-

edy of menace” The Birthday
Party, -will be presented by UB’s
Department of Speech and Drama
in Baird Hall Wednesday through
Saturday evenings (April 27-30)
at 8:30. The play, the first to
bring recognition to the brilliant
young English playwright, deals
with an apparently normal situation in an English resort town
which is soon disrupted by the
arrival of two ambiguous strangt-rs on an unspecified mission.
The mission turns out to be the
destruction of the only resident

a run-down boarding house,
and the play presents this destruction in both its comic and
its grotesque aspects.
in

The UB production is directed
by Ward Williamson of the drama
faculty, and is performed by a
cast consisting of Charles Sherry,
Helene Friedman,
Barbara Thirtle,
son, and Robert
may be obtained
ticket office or

William Cortes,
Frank RichardLittle. Tickets
at the Norton
by calling 831

There will be no edition of the Spectrum on
Friday, April 29. The
next regular edition will
appear on Tuesday, May
3rd.
This Friday is “Moving-Up Day.” There are
no classes scheduled.
—CIVIL RIGHTS—
Students interested in
attending the Intercollegia.te Conference on
Civil Rights and the Law
April 28-30 at Oberlin
College, Ohio, should
contact Jeffrey Lynford
in the Senate office.

3704.

Education Dean Suggests Plan
To End Racial Imbalance
By Use of Education Parks
The use of “educational parks”
housing grammar and secondary
school students from a wide area
was endorsed as a possible antidote for school racial imbalance

by Dr. Robert S. Fisk, Dean of
the School of Education, at a
meeting of the Torch Club last
Thursday.

KLEINHANS
Downtown Buffalo

&amp;pm*t

Thruway Plaza

Dean Fisk said that the parks
with vast campuses would insure
desegregation and “promote a
means for greater administrative
flexibility.”

Boulevard Mall

Aui* (Cnllrur

The “educational parks," Dean
Fisk explained, would provide
large metropolitan areas with an
accumulation of new school facilities at a single large site.

He noted that segregation in
schools must be viewed as a
metropolitan
problem, rather
than a problem of the “core city.”
He cited the need for bringing
disadvantaged children to the
suburbs, for providing appropriate curricular and professional
services, and for insuring professional and technical occupations for the qualified Negro
student.

“At all possible points in the
educational process a dialogue
must be in process. It must' be
one which can gradually contribute to the Negro and white
identification with each other in
the common cause of an integrated - education.”

Original Music Compositions
Featured on WBFO Tonight
Original musical compositions
by graduate assistant William A.
Penn will be presented over
WBFO tonight at 7:30 p.m. Mr.
Penn’s compositions were written to complement seven student paintings previously dis-

cussed in the series.

The program will conclude the

"Talking Painting” series which

is concerned with contemporary
evaluation methods of past and
present works of art.
Art Professor Willard R. Harris and a group of his sophomore
art students discussed pictorial
design in relation to some original works of VanEyck, Ver-

meer, and Caravaggio, last Monday. Students studied the techniques empolyed by the artist in
each painting, and formulated
their own '‘analyses” using similar techniques.

This

contributed

to

student

awareness of the shortcomings

and assets of the artists’ methods
and of their own.
Following their analyses, the
students created their own expressive developments. The techniques and overall effects of the
works of art students Patricia
Doren, Marjorie Weiss and Gary
Sutter were discussed by the
panel.

Travia Moves to Make Sale
Of LSD a Major Felony
Assembly Speaker Anthony

Travia introduced a bill in the
State Legislature April 18 to
make the sale and distribution
of LSD or other hallucinatory-

drugs a felony punishable by a
7-20 year prison term. The bill
is pending in the Rules Committee.

Travia requested a joint legislative committee study of all aspects of LSD and other drugs.
The effects of LSD on human beings, its use, and its distribution
'•'ill be investigated.
"The recent horrifying cases involving the use of LSD in New
York City and disclosures of widespread use in many parts of the

country make immediate action
necessary," Travia commented.
Travia's action follows requests

by the Federal Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) April 5 urging college and university administrators “to take action against a
dangerous increase in the illicit
use by students of the hallucinatory drug LSD.
The FDA received reports that
LSD had been manufactured in
college chemistry laboratories.
FDA commissioner Dr. James L.
Goddard warned of the gravity of
the situation in letters to deans
of men and women, campus housing administrators, and heads of
science departments.

Dean of Students Richard Sig
gelkow has not received a state
ment from the FDA to date.

�To—day, April 26, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACK ILIVIN

Friend Awarded Bancroft Prize
Ordeal of Philippine Relations With
Japan and U.S. Wi.ts History Award
UB History Professor Theodore
Friend was awarded the 1966
Frederic Bancroft Prize for his
Book Between Two Empires: The
Ordeal of the Philippines, last
Thursday.
The Bancroft Prizes honor “the
authors of the best books in

according to the Columbia Uni
versity News Office.
Between Two Empires is the
first study in depth of the Philippines’ relationship with the United States and Japan during the
years 1929-46.

Dr. Friend said that he did
extensive documentary research
and conducted numerous interviews to gather material for the
book.

,f

=?

Zrl

ilk
DR. FRIEND

American history in its broadest
sense, American diplomacy, and
American

international affairs,”

The Bancroft Prizes were established at Columbia by Frederic
Bancroft, historian and former
librarian of the Department of
State. Historian Richard Morris
also received the Bancroft Prize
this year for his book The Peacemakers.
The prizes were awarded at the
annual awards dinner held at
Columbia University last Thursday. The dinner was sponsored
by the Friends of the Columbia
Libraries.

Dr. Friend is currently writing
a monograph entitled The Philippine Polity. He has been awarded a 1966-67 National Defense
Foreign Language Fellowship for
Indonesian Language and Area

What do the weatherwise go for 7 Rainfair’s all purpose coat. Its lining, a muted plaid. Its shell,
permanent press fabric of Fortrel polyester and cotton. Both, byGaleyand Lord A Division of
Burlington Industries. For your nearest retailer, write us at 1407 Broadway, New York 18.

Studies.

Galey

H. G. Wells Centenary Exhibit
An exhibit to commemorate the
centenary of H. G. Wells (18661966) is on view in the library’s
main reading room. Featured in
the display are early first editions and important autograph
letters from Wells to James Joyce.
H. G. Wells is chiefly remembered today as a pioneer in the
field of science fiction. In his
novel. The World Set Free (1914),
he accurately predicted the atomic age and its political problems.
Although his many sociological
novels are considered ephemeral.
Wells was one of the most popular and influential authors of his
day; and what he had to say he
very often said with distinction.
His works have been more generally translated into foreign languages than have those of any
of his contemporaries.
The often quoted, “Human history becomes more and more a

race between education and catastrophe,” first appeared in The
Outline of History (1920).

*

loxi^f

HELP! HELP! \
I'D GIVE ANYTHING TO
SAVE DEAR NICK FROM
GETTING ROUGHED UP
WHILE SHAVING CLOSE!

:

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SOB-SOB
H. G. WELLS

.Spectrum Cduii J3oard
The Politics Club will meet on
Wednesday, April 27 at 3 p.m.
in Norton 233. Dr. Gataldo and
Dr. Johnson of the Political Science Department will present the
results of a Buffalo Area Survey

conducted last fall in the 39th
Congressional District. Also at

the meeting the club will hold
elections for next year's officers.
The Anthroplology Club will
present Dr. John Kennedy speaking on “Field Work in Nubia”
at 8:30 p.m. on April 28 in
Norton 329,

Grcal

'Flip-Top' Spee
there is for do:

and

c

Dice whiskers o
ip

cleaning,

you get a smoother

d

more, give the Norelc

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©1964

Sever Trifu discusses "The Black Sea Coast"

Photo by Joseph Feyes

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PAGE

TWELVfe

Tuesday, April 26, 1966

S PEC T R U M

Education Commission
Advises Government
With relatively little fanfare
the ompact for Education has
grown from a rough idea in the
minds of a few men to a legal
reality. It has all taken just a
little more than a year.
The legal body now in existence
is the. Education Commission of
the States, a permanent organization agreed upon by political and
education leaders from every
slate when they met in Kansas
City last September and formed
the Compact for Education, a
temporary planning organization.
Dr. James B. Conant first discussed the ideas on which the
compact was to be based in his
book, “Shaping Educational
Policy.” Conant criticized the generally low level of state-supported education, while noting
that the U.S. Constitution does
not authorize Congress to set any
sort
education
of “national
policy.”

The commission, if joined by
all of the states, will be a representative body of 370, with
seven delegates from each state
and 20 from the federal government and foundations. The commission will authorize studies in
various areas of education to
“present alternatives to policy
decisions.” In other words, the
commission will be a giant information clearing house.
The commission will also make

recommendations on educational
policy to the various state legislatures and possibly even to the

federal government, but the commission itself will have no policymaking power.
The idea was seized upon by
former North Carolina Gov. Terry
Sanford, who was at Duke University writing a book on the
function of the states. Sanford
developed the draft proposal for
the compact and convened a
group of educators and political
leaders to plan for the Kansas
City meeting.

Ronald Moskowitz, the, commission’s associate director, said that
22 states have joined the commission to date; 30 states are expected to be members by the
group’s first annual meeting in
Chicago in June.
Maine is the only state to have
rejected the commission so far,
and the rejection prompted a
hurried trip by Moskowitz to visit
Maine legislators, Moskowitz said
he feels certain the nevt session
of the Maine legislature will authorize membership in the commission and attributed the rejection this term to “politics and
misunderstanding.”

The commission describes itself
the
the
adand

as a “partnership between
educational leadership and
political leadership for the
vancement of education,”

this has brought caustic remarks
from some sources who suggest
politics should be kept out of
the schools, not brought in.
The chief critics of the commission have been in the ranks of
higher education. One of the
most vocal is Herbert E. Longenecker who wrote in the Winter
1966 issue of The Educational Record that “no logical argument
has been advanced that desired
improvements in education would
result from deliberately bringing
politics into education,”
Critics argue that the representative body
with seven deleis not
gates from each state
large enough to cover all of the
facets of education and that the
commission necessarily will exclude some ideas.
This argument has been particularly prevalent among higher
education critics of the commission. Allan W. Ostar, the executive director of the Association of
State Colleges and Universities,
told a meeting of the Education
Writers Association in February
that it would be very difficult to
“represent” education with only
seven delegates from a state, all
of whom are to be named by the
—

—

governor.

President Elvis Stahr, Jr., of
Indiana University, made a presentation at the Kansas City
meeting on behalf ow the National Association of State Universities and Land Grant Colleges in which he suggested that
higher education either be left
out of the scope of the commission entirely or that a separate
representative body be included
for it.

SDS...

(Cont’d from P. 1)
Selective Service examination “because they don’t want to go to
Vietnam.” The results from the
tests will be used by local draft
boards to help determine college
deferments.

Chief among the material SDS
hopes to distribute at all of the

test sites is a two-page “examin-

ation” on the war in Vietnam. The
leaflet will contain factual questions about the war; answers will
be included at the bottom of the
second page, Booth said.
Attorney General Nicholas Katzenbach had told a Chicago news
conference last October that SDS
was among groups figuring in a
Justice Department investigation
into the anti-draft movement. The
SDS role had been strictly legal
“counseling and giving information on conscientious objection,” Booth asserted.
—

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�Tuesday, April 26, 1966

c

T* U M

PAGE THIRTEEN

Naval Academy Reputation Suffers
From Unequal Grading Practices
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (CPS)
The
academic reputation of the UnitNaval
Academy sufed States
fered two blows in as many days
when it became known that a
blue-ribbon accrediting team from
the Middle Atlantic Association
of Colleges and Secondary Schools
plans to recommend the academy
upgrade its academic program by

This effect, the study said, “is
well recognized among seniors
since they realize that the financial investment and pay of each
midshipman is a deterrent To
their dismissal except for serious
doubt as to their future potential
as Naval officers.”

de-emphasizing military and ath-

of this would be necessary if the
school relaxed some of its military and athletic requirements
and gave students more time for
studies. As he put it, “all of that
malarky stands in the way of a
vastly improved academic program.”
Just as sources at the academy
were fuming over the prospect
of the commission’s report, Kent
Ponder, an assistant professor of
Spanish, said his contract was not
being renewed for the fall because he had refused to engage

—

letic activities and then when a
professor charged his contract
is not being renewed because he
refused to participate in gradefixing activities.
The academy’s grading practices were at the heart of both
disputes.

A. Bernard Drought, the academic dean, acknowledged to the
accrediting commission that the
academy has an official policy of
limiting the number of students
permitted to fail their courses,
regardless of grades.
The dean said he initiated the
policy shortly after he came to
Annapolis in 1963. He said the
action was prompted by an increase in failures when the school
changed to a letter grade system from numerical grades and
the desire to keep at “attrition
rate’’ at a steady 35 per cent “as
it has been for the past 10 years."
The commissions also cited a
288-page self-study by the academy and dated Feb. 1, 1966. The
study was prepared for the use
of the commission and covers
every aspect of the academy’s
program. It was signed by Rear
Adm. D. L. Kauffman, the academy’s superintendent.
The study said “it is a matter
of great concern to many of the
faculty that the practical necessity of graduating reasonable

One source close to the accrediting team suggested that none

Retiring President Furnas receives World Tour Gift at Testimonial Dinner last week.

Photo by Univerrity Relations

in grade-fixing.

Ponder said that a midshipman
whose father is a high-ranking
Naval officer was allowed to pass

a first-year Spanish course even
though the youth only scored 16
per cent on the final written ex-

amination.
The head of the academy’s foreign languages department, Capt.
Robert S. Hayes, derHied that

there is any connection between
the decision to let Ponder’s contract expire and the question of

grade adjustments.
As early as September, Hayes
said, his civilian faculty aides had
“begun to question the caliber of
Ponder’s performances.”
Ponder said that Hayes, and
even Superintendent Kauffman,
were involved in efforts to get
him to pass the midshipman. Ponder said he was called into Kauffman’s office where the superintendent, who stressed he was
acting as a “friend of the boy’s

numbers of Naval officers each
if not impossible, to base grade distribution solely on scholastic compefather,” asked Ponder to give the
tence.”
boy “extra help’’ so he could pass.
The self-study said there is “undeniable evidence of ‘coasting’ Ponder said he replied that the
on the part of significant num- “•boy was receiving extra instruction but his chance of passing
bers of middle-C average midshipwas slim.
men who have learned to make
Ponder said the boy’s grade was
the minimum effort and pass succhanged after he had given it.
cessfully.’
year makes it difficult,

Residence Halls Present Awards
For Their Outstanding Students
The four women’s residence
halls issued Outstanding Student
Awards. The Carolyn Tripp Clement Hall Award was given to
Elissa Boekino and the Walter
P. Cooke Hall Award to Jarina
Markowski. The Ella Conger
Goodyear Hall East Wing Award
was presented to Rosemary Antonuzzo and Carol Waschler.
Lynn Bergstein received the
award for the South Wing and
Judith Snyder received the Jacob
E. Sehoellkopf Hall Award.
Senior women cited for having
attained a 2.5 cumulative average

for seven semesters were: Susan
Adler, Sandra Atlas, Arline Engel, Marjorie Linhardt, Frances
Marfurt, Ruth Munk, Donna Thurston, Susan Weinstein and Laura
Zimmerman.
Sandra Froach received the
Women's Recreation Association
Leadership Award.

Judie Meahl, Jan Whalen, Patricia Bell, Nancy Master and
Carol Sack were introduced as
the newly-elected officers of
Lamda Kappa Sigma.

Sherker Fund Established
For Innovation And Grants
The David and Rebecca Skerker
Fund, a $15,000 dual-purpose
Slant for scholarships and unprojects,
restricted innovation
has been established through the
University of Buffalo Foundation,
Inc,

The fund was established by
Mr. Bernard B. Skerker, secretary-treasurer of the Robinson
Knife Company, and members of
his family. Scholarships of $500
''■'ill be awarded annually to any
ualified son or daughter of a
obinson Knife Company cmoyee, or, if none qualifies, the
mds will be made available to
1 under-privileged and acadcmi-

cally qualified person in Western
Mr. Skerker said.

Nothing
can take the press out of Lee-Prest slacks
Not

at it

t Lee

u

ays

New York,

The Skerker Fund provides for
an additional $200 to encourage
innovation projects by faculty
and Students. The monies will
be administered by the Foundation Board of Trustees.

“In

Fund,

establishing the Skerker
we consider it a chal-

lenge grant for the UB Foundation, in hopes that other a umm
frieds and corporate executive
in the region served by UB will

establish additional
funds-scholarships,”

dual-purpose

Lee

The

ade

Inci

Lee-Prest I
essar

but

LGGPReST LGGSUIGS

,

�Tuesday, April 26,' 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOURTEEN

oCetterA

to

Weekly Calendar

the Editor

Varsity Tennis: UB vs. Rochester.

Student Suffers Water Balloon Assault
TO THE EDITOR;

Last Saturday while walking
past Tower Hall I had the misfortune to be struck by a water
balloon dropped by some jackass
in residence. This missile smashed
my glasses, cut my face, and
drenched my clothes.
Aside from the expense incurred through this display of
pre school mentality on the part
of the animals in Tower, I have
been forced to suffer the hard

ships of near blindness, headaches, fatigue and much inconvenience. In addition, I could
have lost my sight permanently
as a consequence of this assinine

behavior
Fortunately, I was lucky and
suffered only minor damage. However, I am told that this is a

normal diversion with which the
juveniles of Tower entertain
themselves. It is difficult for one
to believe that the Tower BOYS
need babysitters, but in view of

the incident I am lead to suspect
that they do
I have reported this incident to
the University authorities and
now bring it to the attention of

the students. I consider the incident an assault and feel that the
assailant should be dealt with accordingly, In the least he should
be expelled from the University
and I am at present also considering legal action.

Hable Vd. espanol? Parlez-vous
francais? Sprechen Sie Doutsch?
Then why not come to the language tables? No one expects a
native accent, perfect grammar,
or an extensive vocabulary. Nor
can anyone criticize a person (or
trying to increase his fluency in
a foreign tongue, no matter how
many mistakes he makes. So, why
has there been such a lack of
student participation to date in
the language tables?
For (he past three weeks, at
5:30 p m. on Tuesdays and Wednesdays in Tower's small dining
room, native speakers and pro-

fessors of the Dept, of Modern
Languages have been willing to
give their time to encourage in
formal conversations with students in German, French, or Spanish. Until now, extremely few students have shown enough interest
to join the language tables. This
1 cannot understand.

In a university as large as ours,
and especially with one of the
basic distribution requirements
for University College stating
that a student must have at least
one year of language study be-

yond that acquired in high school,
there is a vast number of students
who arc technically qualified to
speak a foreign language. So, why
the Apathy?
Why have students suddenly
become so shy that they do not
approach the language tables at
all? The University of Buffalo
has often been criticized as being
too big; a college in which the
students are known only by Ihcir
student numbers as mere lists of
statistics. The language tables
provide the student with the opportunity to become better
acquainted with his professor, to
become an individual personality
to that instructor. Yet, how few
students take advantage of that
opportunity!
Perhaps lack of student participation is due to lack of publicity. I have been told that students dining in Goodyear are informed of the language tables
during dinner by a loudspeaker
announcement. But what good
does such publicity do after the
students have been through the
cafeteria lines? Why not make
such announcements during
lunch, when they might be more
effective?

Stunt Night: Sponsored by
Union Board, 7 to 11 p.m., Conference Theatre.

I have yet to hear one such announcement over the PA system
at Norton Union, where many
commuters congregate. Yet, certainly the language tables are, or
should be, equally as important
as any other extra-curricular activity or club here at the University.

As a commuter, I am concerned over the obvious neglect
to inform my fellow commuters
of such a program. 1 have talked
with several commuters who expressed an interest in the language tables, but who hadn't
known of their existence. True,
the Spectrum did print one article,
but when I spoke to various members of the Spectrum staff about
the language tables, they apparently had never heard of
them.
To join

the language tables,
should contact their

residents
RA’s, and commuters may purchase a meal ticket in the cafeteria line for $1.65. The responsibility for the maintenance of the
language tables rests with the
student body: Let’s make them as
successful as they were last year!

It is not strange that man has
divided education into separate,,
disunified divisions of study when
it is but an exploration and supplementation of one's mind.’ Intellectual curiosity can not be
thusly confined.
It is necessary to enter an ex

elusive, expensive institution to
gain knowledge, and even there,
in the silence, education is not.
Communication is an important
part of education. Silence is silly
if one can learn from another
what he seeks from books. But

alas! The nation is populous;
there is war, and if one is to
save his skin he must enter the
university, not to learn, but to
live. Non student-students litter
the campus and it becomes necessary to instigate rules of silence
so that no one will be disturbed
as he memorizes usual answers
to usual questions. The sHencc
stifles the student, who is selfexpressive
But outside the university, in
the workaday world, which is

time to meet learned educators,
nor docs he have time to die in
worthless war; time is of the essence. Thus the student finds
himself imprisoned in the university. There arc cells in which
to live, schedules to follow (studying

specific

topics at

specific

times, and making specific enccphalonte connections; less new
ones be made) assuring completion of specific syllabi), and a
clock to watch (when will it be
time to

the true institution of learning,
into which the student may venture, one does not meet or have

hall program
plays an important part in the
overall development of the individual and represents an in
tegral part of the total educational process of the university.
The major purpose of the Residence Hall program is academic
in nature—to help prepare each
student for the classroom . . . and
encourage integrity and intellectual curiosity necessary to the
achievement of educational goals.
"The residence

Activities, programs, and coun
seling services are planned and
carried out , . for the purpose
of teaching individuals how to

live happily and comfortably with
in groups, an important lesson in
a democratic society,

“(These halls) provide on-cam
pus facilities from which the stu
dent can receive social, educational, and cultural advantages."

This quotation from the UB Bulletin 1956-66 indicated the im

parlance which the administration
supposedly places on dormitory
life. As a transfer student, I feel
that I deserve the opportunity to
enjoy the "social, educational, and
cultural advantages" which the
catalogue mentions. It seems to
me that all students should have
an equal opportunity to be ad-

mitted into the dorms. This, however, is not the case. ,Mcn transfer students are not given any
consideration and are neglected
by the university in regard to oncampus housing facilities. The administration has taken up a policy of "discrimination against this
small group of students. By not
allowing the transfer student the

equal opportunity to be admitted
into the dorms, t to administration is denying this student a
basic "right" afforded to even

freshmen.
After speaking to the Dean of
University College, the Dean of

Men, the Dean of Students, and
the Director of Housing, I have

Sponsored by

Union Board, 7 p.m., Fillmore
Room.
Foster Lecture:

Department of

Foster Lecture: Department of
Chemistry, 4:15 p.m., 70 Acheson

Friday 29

Hall.

Hall.

Spring Weekend Ball; Hearthstone Manor, 9 p.m.

Meeting; Free University of
Buffalo, 7:30 to 10 p.m., Norton

Varsity Baseball: UB vs Gene
seo State.

Wednesday 27

Symposium: Buffalo Studies in
Psychotherapy, 9 a.m., Acheson

Theatre: The Birthday Party by
Harold Pinter, 8:30 p.m., Baird
Hall, through Saturday,

Poetry Reading: Charles Abbott
Reading Fund, 4 p.m., Diefendorf

264.

Election: Spring Weekend
4 p.m., Center Lounge.
Jules Fciffer, 8:30
p.m., Conference Theatre.

Queen, 9 to
Lecture:

Lecture; Department of Psychology, 4 to 5 p.m., Norton 234.

Foster Lecture: Department of
Chemistry, 4:15 p.m„ 70 Acheson

Hall.

Hall.
Concert: Ramsey Lewis Trio in
Concert, 8:15, Kleinhans Music
Hall, tickets: $2.50, $3, $3.50, $4,
may’ be obtained at the Rosary
Hil Main Desk, Mon.-Fri.: 11:301:30, or by sending a stamped,
self-addressed envelope to Rosary
Hill College Concert, 4380 Main
Street,

Hall.

Buffalo Area Survey Results
To Be Presented Wednesday
Drs. Catlada and Johnson of
the Political Science Department
will present the results of the
Buffalo Area Survey at a meet-

ing of the Politics Club Wednesday, April 27 at 3 p.m. in Room
233 Norton.
The survey was conducted last
fall in the 39th Congressional
district by Cataldo and Johnson. Students in last semester’s
Political Science 201 class who
served as interviewers for the
project will now have the op-

portunity to hear the results of

their work.
The Politics Club will also hold
elections for next year’s officers
at its Wednesday meeting. Composed of political science majors
and other interested students,
the club has had meetings with
faculty members and has sponsored speakers. Dr. Johnson is
the faculty advisor. President
Paul Fisk has invited all interested students to attend the meeting.

Marie Doring

talk?).

Joyce Smith

Transfer Student Discriminated Against in Dorms
TO THE EDITOR

Thursday 28
Stunt Night:

Chemistry, 4:15 p.m., 70 Acheson

CLASSIFIED

Intellectual Imprisonment Scored
TO THE EDITOR

Martin, Baird Hall,

3 p.m.

Lecture: Professor R, Marshall,
“Industrial Relations,” 2 p.m.,
Norton 234.

Tobie Anderson

Conversation Lacking at Language Tables
TO THE EDITOR

Recital; Mr.

Tuesday 26

neither been given the equal opportunity to be admitted into the
dorms no have I received a satisfactory explanation of why 1 have
not been granted this opportunity. All these men agree with
my position and completely sympathize with my situation, but
they all claim that is out of their
jurisdiction and they can do nothing about it. I am fairly certain,
however, that if a transfer student was a varsity football player
who wanted dorm accommodations. these same men (who say
that it is out of their jurisdiction
and can do nothing) would be
able to provide him with a room
with little effort.

I contend that the transfer student is an important part of the
student body and should have
the same opportunity as any other
student. This serious situation can
and should be immediately remedied

Donald Levine,
Transfer Class of '68

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hf SPECTRUM

-

PAM PIFTIIN

Competition to Begi
To Study or Resea
The competitions for the 196768 United States Government
graduate grants for academic
study or research abroad, and
for professional training in the
creative and performing arts, will
open officially on May 1st, the
Institute of International Education (HE) announced.

HE conducts competitions for
U.S.
Government scholarships
provided by the Fulbright-Hays
Act as part of the educational
and cultural exchange program
of the U.S. Department of State.
Under this program, more than
850 American graduate students
will have the opportunity to study
in any one of 53 countries. The
purpose of the awards is to increase mutual understanding between the people of the U.S. and
other countries through the exchange of persons, knowledge and
skills.
Candidates who wish to apply
for an award must be U.S. citizens at the time of application,
have a bachelor’s degree or its
equivalent by the beginning date
of the grant and, in most cases,
be proficient in the language of
the host country. Selections will
be made on the basis of academic
record, the
and/or professional
feasibility of the applicant’s proposed study plan and personal
qualifications. Preference will be
given to candidates who have
not had prior opportunity for
extended study or residence abroad and who are under the
age of 35.

lence:

Creative and performing artists
will not be required to have a
bachelor’s degree but they must
have four years of professional
study or equivalent experience.
Applicants in social work must

have at least two years of professional experience after the
Master of Social Work degree.
Applicants in the field of medicine must have an M.D. at the
time of application.
Two types of grants will be
available through IIE under the
Fulbright-Hays Act; U.S. Government Full Grants, and U.S. Government Travel Grants.

A full award will provide a
grantee with tuition, maintenance,
round-trip transportation, health
and accident insurance and an
incidental allowance. In Ceylon,
p
°;
t
the Republic oI
land, Portugal,
China, and Turkey, a maintenance allowance will be provided
for one or more accompanying

«r. rr rr

Richard Farina, author of "Been
Down So Long it Looks Like Up
to Me" to be published by Random House on April 28, and his
wife Mimi, both of whomcan also

Other travelers checks
are every bit as good as
First National City Banks

■

-Ref ■•ctions in a Crystal Wind."
photo

by Daniel Kramer

dependents.
A limited number of travel
grants is available to supplement

maintenance and

tuition

schol-

arships granted to American students by universities, private donors and foreign governments.

Because of the growing interest
in inter-American studies, there
are grants available to a number
of countries in the American Republics area in the fields of history, the social sciences, law, the
humanities and other suitable
fields. All applicants for these
grants must be proficient in the
spoken language of the country
for which they apply, and should
have an interest in the knowledge
of the American Republics area,
specifically in the country or
countries for which they are applying. A major in Latin American studies is not required. Applicants should have a good academic record and should be well
informed on the American political and social scene. These grants
are provided especially for graduating seniors and graduate students up to and including the
M A. level who are interested in
a year of course work in a university in the American Republics area. The grants are not intended to support doctoral dis-

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�SPCCTKIfM

PACE SIXTEEN

Tuesday, April 26,

¥

rz

1+66

s

—ifHardballers Crush State TRACK TEAM
BOWS TWICE
Twice, Bow to Colgate
By RICH

f=-

BAUMGARTEN

The UB baseball team ran its
record to 5-0 as the Bulls defeated rival Buffalo State twice
by scores of 5-0 and 13-1. The
Bulls combined the good pitching of Don Potwora and Tim
Uraskevitch with a 20-hit performance as Coach Peelle’s boys
ruined State’s opener on the
Orangemen’s new diamond.
In the first game UB scored
five times in the first inning, and
State was a beaten team. Con-

/h==A

-

gate attack with three safeties,
while John Allen threw a fourhitter. The Bulls, who had made
only one error in their previous

five games, contributed to their

own downfall with five miscues
against the Red Raiders. Three
of the errors came in a three-run
third inning for the hosts.
UB’s lone tally came in the
eighth inning when Rutkowski
doubled and came home on a wild
pickoff throw by Rav Ilg.
BASEBALL NOTES—UB is now
5-1, Colgate 9-4.
The Bulls play
Canisius at home this afternoon
at 3 p.m.
Wednesday they travel to Syracuse before returning
home against Geneseo on Friday.
Hansen is the team’s leading hitter with a mark over .500,
Uraskevitch leads the team in
strikeouts with 21 in 13 innings,
while Rutkowski has whiffed 15
in seven frames.
Rutkowski
leads the team in doubles with
—

—

%
,

-y

—

—

—

It appears that the UB track

UB Netmen

Capture 5
In a Row

The UB tennis team extended
its unbeaten skein to five by
drubbing Niagara. 9-0 on Friday,

after rallying to nip Buffalo State
on Wednesday, 5-4. Both matches
were played on the UB courts.

In Wednesday's contest the
Orangemen copped the first three
singles matches, but Coach Bill
Sanford’s Bulls rallied gamely
to take the last three singles

—

five.
Pinch-hitter John Grad is
batting 1.000 with three hits in
three appearances.
WBFO will
continue to broadcast all UB
—

team can do nothing but improve
this season. At least judging by
the margin of defeat in their
first two meets, it seems almost
a mathematical impossibility that
they can fare any worse.

Last Wednesday the
team
opened its season by visiting always tough Colgate. After three
events Coach Emery Fisher was
seen getting a head start on the
weekend’s time change by setting
his watch a hour ahead in an
attempt to hurry the proceedings
along. 'But even the coach’s attempts could not hold the score
down. After the dust had settled,
UB found itself on the short
end of a 129-18 margin.
The only consolation the Varsity could have gotten was from
the UB-Colgate Freshman score.
The final tally showed UB bowing
by an even more incredible margin of 138-8.

—

Two lied Raider spectators were
overheard during the contest. The
first boy, pointing to a
white uniform bringing up the
rear in the 220, said, “These were
the state champs two years ago.”

home games.
BUFFALO

BUFFALO STATE

ah r h hi
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10 10
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4 12 0 Bettchar Ih
DuPrpy c
Hansen rf
3 12 1 MacLfftd rf 1 ft ft ft
3 111 Carlson ss
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1 ft ft ft
3 1 1 7 Juliana ss
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Potwora
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After squinting at his friend
with a are-you-kidding
me-orwhat look, the second quipped,
“The Yankees were doing pretty
well aroun dthe ntoo, weren’t

&lt;&gt;

DON POTWORA

secutive singles by Jim Duprey,
Brian Hansen and Doug Dong, a
State error and Bob Pusatcri’s
boominb triple featured UB's big
inning. Potwora pitched his second line game of the season,
this time going the route on a
four-hit shutout, striking out
nine and walking none, while
State's losing pitcher Don Higgins
—except for UB’s five-run uprising—pitched good ball.
In the nightcap, the UB hitting
attack exploded for 13 runs on
12 hits as the Bulls muled State
behind the five-hit pitching of
hard-throwing Tim Uraskevitch.
Uraskevitch. throwing the “hummer." struck out 13 State bats
men. whilt walking only two.
Rich Carlson
accounted
for
State's only run of the afternoon with a second inning homerun, while Brian Hansen, Ron
Leiser and Ken Rutkowski each
had two hits for UB.
At Colgate Saturday, the Hod
Raiders topped the Bulls, 6-1.
Paul Bradley paced a 14-hit Col-

Ordinarily the game is played
on a Saturday afternoon. How-

ever. in view of the

great interest
this year in UB football and the
new coach, Doc Uriel), it was
decided to hold the game on a
Friday night so that more people
could see it.

UB
Athletic Director Jim
Peelle, in announcing the game,
expressed his appreciation to Dr.
William E. Keller. Superintendent of Schools in Williamsville.
for his support of UB athletics

they?”

COACH SANFORD
aUFFALO

COLGATE

Leiser $s
Buchla 3b

Bradley si
SaHler If
Wilson lb

•brhbl
40 0 0
4 0 10
Rutkowskicf 5 12 0
Duprey c
2000
Hansen rf
200 0
4 00 0
Long 2b
Pusaterl If
30 0 0
Shaw lb
3 00 0
Uraskevich p I 0 0 0
Potwora p
10 0 0
Hofheins p
00 00
Grad ph
Bush pr

llqc

Ciesluk cf

3b
Cipolla rf
DoWindl 2b
Allen p
Ryan

abrhbl
4 13 0
5 0 12
4 110
4120
5 02 0
4 12 0
4 0 10
4 111
4 110

10 10
0 0 0 0

Totals
SO 1 4 0
31 4 14 3
Totals
UB
ooo 000 010-1
Colgate
003 020 10x-4
E-Leiser 2, Pusateri, Shaw, Uraskevich, Wilson, llg, Allen. DP-UB 2,
Colgate 1. LOB-UB 11, Colgate 14.
2B -Rutkowski, Wilson. SB-Bradley 2.
BB
IP H R ER
SO
Uraskevich (1,1-1) . 3 6
1
4 2
3
Potwora
4 6
3
2
1 3
Holheins
1
2 0 0
1 0
Allen (W)
9
4
1 0 4 9
PB -Duprey.

Second Game
203 311 3— 13 12 0
State
010 000 0— 1
5 3
Uraskcvilch and Duprey ■; Phelps,
Kraczyk.
Shields (4) and

bouts, two of the three doubles
matches and the 5-4 verdict.
After their narrow escape against
the Statesmen, UB breezed to a
9-0 triumph against the Purple
Eagles from Niagara two days
later. All team members contributed handy victories in the onesided win.
Rain washed out Saturday's
match against St. Bonaventure.
The netrnen return to action
against invading Rochester this
afternoon. Wednesday the team
will travel to Hobart, and Friday
the squad will visit powerful
Syracuse.

UB

Varsity-Alumni Game

The annual game between the
UB football team and the UB
Alumni, which traditionally conclude spring practice for the
Bulls, will be played on Friday.
May 6, at 8:00 p.m. at the Williamsville High School field.

-

and his assistance in obtaining
the game site for UB.
The Western
School Coaches’
operating with
Department in

New York High
Association is cothe UB 1 Athletic
the game.

UB students and high school
students will be admitted free.
The general public will
be
charged $1, with proceeds going
to the UB Scholarship Fund
which helps pay the way of
needy, deserving students through
college.

The UB Alumni will be
coached in the game by UB
freshman coach Mike Stock. He
will have as his aides former
UB players Jim McNally, Craig
Helenbrook and Joe Garofalo.

Wallack Wins
Sports Trivia
The winner to last Tuesday’s
trivia quiz was David Wallack,
a medical student who correctly
answered all ten questions. In
the closest contest of the year,
David's entry was the only one
w;ith ten cdrrcct answers. There
were several contestants who had
eight and nine correct answers.
The deadline for last Friday's
quiz has been extended until this
Friday. 'Prize-winners of and answers to this contest will be

published in next Friday’s paper,
along with the Spectrum's final

trivia of the

year.

Tuesday's Answers:
1. Charlie Neal, 2. Tom Morgan. 3. Nat, 4. Harry Walker,
5. Hill Gall, 6. Lew Worsham,
7. Frank Baumann, 8. 97, 9. Robert Zuppkek 10. Carin Cone.

The next stop for the UB thinclads was at Brockport Saturday.
The improvement trend was apparently in effect already as the
Bull chopped 37 points off their
losing margin at Colgate to bow
an enheartening 102-38 count.

winners in this meet as Dick
Genau won the two-mile run and
Larry Naukam took a blue ribbon
in the 120 high hurdles.
But if the Varsity improvement
was noteworthy, the Freshman
progress was truly esnsational.
After the 130-point demolition
at Hamilton, the Baby Bulls
came within 30 points of Brock-

port, 76-46. Art Walker almost
carried the team single-handedly
with firsts in the high jump,
triple jump and discus and a
second in the long jump.
The team entertains Canisius
this afternoon and Cortland on
Friday. Next Monday the cindermen will travel to Syracuse for
the LeMoyne Relays.
Brockport 102

•

UB 38

IN—Hal Rothman IBM) 0:0M. DtRothman (Bht) :tl.3. 4*1-John 1 1 to (Bkt)
;S1J. MO— Ron White (Bkt) 1:04. MllaGary Wejtertleld (Bkt) 4:33.0. Twa mlhDick Genau (UB) 10:00.1. 440 Intarmadial* hurdlas-Dick Kennedy (Bkt) 1:02.f.
120 high hurdles—Larry Naukam (UB)
440 relay-Brockport :43.8, High
lump-Bill Wood (Bkt) 5-«. Pole vaultFred Natarelli (Bkt) 11-6. Discus-Jay
Kearny (Bkt) 135.6 Shot-Kearny 47-OV*.
Javelin-Joe Abel (Bkt) 153.9.

Correction: The Grad-

uate Faculty Committee
-

on the Selective Service
is n o t demanding that
President Furnas abolish
the II-S deferment. It has
requested that Dr. Furnas not lend the facilities of UB to the Selective Service for the administration of the draft
deferment test in May
and June.

The Bulls even had first-place

Five Southern Colleges
Warned of Racial Policies

WASHINGTON (CPS)
In its
first crackdown on higher education facilities, the Office of Education this week warned five
Colleges,
including
Southern
Sweet Briar in Lynchburg, Va„
that they may lose federal aid
because of their racial policies.
The colleges were cited for failing to file, or for filing unacceptable assurances of compliance
with the Civil Rights Act of 1964,
which prohibits federal assistance
to programs that discriminate on
the basis of race, color, or nation—

al origin.

Sweet Briar, a well-known womens college, submitted its form
last June, a week-and-a-half after
a Virginia Circuit Court Judge
denied the school's bid for permission to ignore stipulations in
the will of its founder; The will
states that the college, which was

founded in 1900, be for “white

girls and young women.”
A spokesman at the college
said this week that she did not
know if a new hearing now will
be requested by school officials.
She did indicate, however, that
if another hearing is convened,
the school's attorneys might use

another section of the will in seeking to overturn the all-white restriction. The second clause
states, in part, that the school
should “impart to its students
such an education
as shall
in the judgment of the directors
...

best fit them to be useful members of society.”
The college could contend, the
spokesman said, that the directors of the school felt Sweet Briar must desegregate in order to
achieve this goal.
The college so far has received
$64,564 in federal funds; it has
applied for $14,331 for the current fiscal year
The four other colleges warned
were Marion Institute, Marion,
Ala.; Mississippi College, Clinton,
Miss.; Bob Jones University,
Greenville, S.C.; and Freewill
Baptist Bible College, Nashville,
Tenn.
The Office of Education has informed the schools that they can
seek a public hearing on the action.

Another issue involved, the Office of Education said, is the eligibility of the schools to receive
aid for student loans under the
National Defense Education Act.
A related question is wheher the
colleges can make loans from
NDEA funds left over from previous years or retain federal money received by thp school before
the Civil Rights Act was passed.
In another action, the Office of
Education announced that it has
received 687 assurances of compliance with 1966 school desegregation guidelines from school
districts in the 17 Southern and
border states.

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&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>ELECTION

iTATE UNIVERSITY OF

YORK AT BUFFALO

SPRING

SPE
Duncan Addresses Overflow Crowd In Norton
DISQUALIFIED

WEEKEND

(See Page 10)

(See Pages 7, 8, 9)

VOLUME 16

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 1966

By TERRY SEAL

Last Wednesday former Master
Sergeant Donald Duncan, a veteran of ten years army service inincluding six years in the Special
Forces, and eighteen months com-

ditioned us to accept militarism
with litle opposition. He pointed
out the often forgotten fact the
army consists of 3 million voters.
When asked if he felt his out-

spoken views on Vietnam were a
diservice to the country, Duncan
said: “I’m an amateur. But as
long as we have the State Department I don’t have to worry

NO. 41

about my amateur status.” He
mentioned having talked with
Vice-President Humphrey about
the war, saying of Humphrey’s
position: “can you imagine hav-

bat duty in Vietnam, ‘spoke before an overflow crowd of more
than 2500 people in Norton Union. Duncan, whose topic was
the moral and poltical ramifications of the war in Vietnam, proclaimed that this war is the
number one problem in the United States today.

The opening speaker of the
program, Rabbi Daniel Kurman,
initiated the discussion by asserting, “we may win in the battle
statistics and in the headlines,
but we may be defeated in the
hearts of the children.”
Reverend Wright of Welland,
Ontario, mentioned that Canada
is a member of the International
Control Commission. Commenting
on the Vietnam war, he said that
“we have tried to tell you; you
won’t listen.” However, when he
considered the relations between
the two countries, he asked, “how
can we abandon you; you have
so few friends left.”

Mr. Duncan first considered the

military side of the war affirming that the military force is only
a vehicle, “you don’t condemn
the vehicle, “you don't condemn
driver.” The entire society must
share responsibility for the war.
He observed that continual exposure to military thinking since
the end of World War II has con-

Ex-Grean Barat Donald Duncan tpoaki on Vietnam trial* to overflew crowd of 3500
Photo

by Russell Goldberg

Alumni and Friends Honor Furnas at Statler Hilton
By LEE ANN GOLDEN

Alumni and friends of the University in 32 cities across the
nation joined via closed telephone
more than 600 guests at the Statler-Hilton to honor retiring President Clifford C. Furnas last

Tuesday.

“Both town and gown join in
felicitating Furnas,” declared History Department Chairman John
T, Horton during his delivery of
the official testimonial.
Referring to Dr. Furnas as a
prince, Dr. Horton continued by
saying that the 12-year “reign”

shall be remembered “as the most
strenuous and significant years
of our lives.”

Dr. Horton spoke of the retiring administrator as “that luminous personality that has commanded respect and inspired af-

fection.”

Dr. Samuel
of the State
Vork, lauded
who enables

B. Gould, President
University of New
Dr. Furnas as “he
and ennobles by
providing an education which
teaches not only skills but values.”

Keynote speaker Dr. Henry T.

Health, Past

President of the
Ford Foundation, described the
retiring President as an active
Organizing Man” rather than

Whiting’s passive “Organization
Man.”

Dr. Heald further pointed out
that the “Organizing Man is ! a
breaker of molds and set patterns.”
“He has a built-in periscope, a
seeing around corners.
He clings to the long view,” Dr.
Heald added.

man of the Council, presented Dr.
and Mrs. Furnas with plane tickets and a check for a trip to what
the retiring President cal 1 e d
“those faraway places with the
strange-sounding names that
we’ve been longing to see.’’
Dr. Furnas was presented with
a $90,000 check and a patron
list for the Graduate ScholarAthlete Scholarship Fund which
now bears his name. The presenttion was made by Fund Chair-

Baird,

Vice-Chair-

0f

“There is over $90,000 worth
thanks in this envelope," the

The Men’s Glee Club and the
Women's Chorale, under the direction of Robert Beckwith, provided a musical interlude.

.

chairman said,

Another surprise for the Furnases was their daughter Mickey
(Mrs. Carl Pollock), who was
flown in from Denver, Colorado.
Dr. Horton called her “the most
beautiful of the Furnas achievements.”

Head table guests representing
the student body were Student
Association President Clinton Deveaux and Vice President Kim

Harrow.

Toastmaster for the evning was
Seymour H. Knox, President of
the Council.

Vietnamese have the habit of telling a person what they think he
wants to hear. Since the 1800's
they have lived under a succession of foreign governments and
they could not have survived it
they had told the truth, according
to Duncan.
“The people are essentially
apolitical. Their motivation to action is their land, and those with
some education also have a small
amount of nationalism." He pointed that we have created a situation where people are either for
•the Saigon government or for the
Viet Cong; there are no neutralists.
“The main reason that we are
in Vietnam is to roll back the
Communists.” But as the United
States escalates the war, Chinese
influence increases proportionally, added Mr, Duncan. When
asked what course of action the
U.S. should follow in Vietnam,
he responded that the first thing
is to recognize that we are fighting the National Liberation Front,
Hr. Duncan said that he stood
specifically fora dialogue on
these problems and for the people but that he docs not want
to be labeled.
He continued that he does not
want to remove a Saigon dictator
for another dictator, but that he
wants the Vietnamese to decide.
"However, if the Vietnamese decide to embrace the North, then
it is to be their mistake and none
of our concern."
When asked about the small
outcry that the many atrocities
of World War II produced compared to the repercussions of
the Vietnamese atrocities, he said
that the Vietnamese didn't bomb
Pearl Harbor and that we got
our war propaganda before we
got the war instead of the other
way around as in World War II.
"If you want to stop terror and
atrocity, then you stop the war,”
concluded Mr. Duncan.

Student Senate to Review Interim Campus Plans
The Student Senate passed a
proposal to investigate alternatives to the planned interim campus and postponed the voting on
an amendment to its Constitution at a meeting Wednesday
night.
the

The complaint against
planned interim campus, written
by Senator Curtiss Montgomery,
pointed out that students at the
interim campus would not re-

ceive the benefits of interaction
with the entire University community. A petition of the art
students expressing their disapproval of being divorced from
the main campus and of being
moved to the interim campus
was approved by the Senate, An
Ad Hoc Committee was established to investigate alternatives
to the present plans to divide
the student body. This committee will then present its alternative to the proper authorities
for consideration.

talent for

William C

man Whitworth Ferguson,

ing to support that position?”
Mr. Duncan commented on the
picture that most Americans have
of the Vietnamese people: “cowardly and corrupt, lazy and inept,”
emphasizing that this is the same
picture anyone would get of any
country if the only people associated with were politicians and
bargirls. He mentioned that the

Senator Robert Weiner proposed the amendment which requests the Student Activities
Committee to “register any and

all student activities upon eviconstitution and a
faculty advisor.” It is now the
policy of the Student Activities
Committee not to recognize any
group whose goals or idea are
repetitious of a recognized group.
dence of a

support the appeal of the Feinberg Law was approved. Mr. Carl
Levine said he will not sign these

appropriations because of the
question of their legality under
the Constitution.

Opposition to this amendment
was voiced by Senator Brian Joseph and Student Association
Treasurer Carl Levine. Senator
Joseph expressed concern that
undesirable groups would take
advantage of this to become recognized. Mr. Levine commented

this

would

groups to
rooms in

reserve

that

•

allow

small

the available'
Norton, possibly preventing larger groups from using
them.

Justice Richard Jaross
in favor of the amendment asserting, “As democratic
liberals we must uphold the belief in the minority’s right to
speak. We cannot have intellectual stimulation if one group
dictates what can be said.”
Chief

spoke

At the last meeting of the Senate $887.50 for the reprinting of
student ID cards and $800 to

Student Judiciary Chief Justice Rick Jaross debates Student Judiciary
Senate Constitution.

provisions of

�Brydges Announces Formation
Of Joint Legislative Committee
New York State Senate Majority Leader Earl W. Brydges announced last Wednesday that a
new Joint Legislative Committee
on Higher Education will be formed within a month.
Senator Brydges disclosed earlier this month that he will suggest to the Committee that they
conduct an inquiry of demonstrations on State University campuses against the war in Vietnam, and the use of State University at Buffalo press office to
circulate material for one protesting group.
In an interview with the Spectrum, Senator Brydges said, “I
will merely suggest to the committee that they investigate student activities. It will be up to
the committee to decide if they
want to conduct the investigation.” He mentioned that procedure for inquiry will also be determined by the committee, adding
that he will suggest a public
hearing.
Senator Brydges commented,
“we must be concerned with the

Friday; April 21; 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

national situation. People are dying in Vietnam. We are prolonging the war by letting the North
Vietnamese people think we are
not united in our determination.”
When asked to what extent student activities should be controlled, Senator Brydges affirmed,
that he doesn’t think there should
be set restrictions. He added, “I
believe in free speech and I am
not advocating the restriction of
dissent.”
Student Senate President Clinton DeVeaux sent a telegram to
Senator Brydges April 4, inviting
him to an informal discussion
with student leaders “to gain a
clearer understanding of the facts

involved.”
Senator Brydges told the Spectrum that he will not be able to

attend the discussion because the
legislature is now in session, having reconvened April 18. Senator
Brydges added that he would be
willing to discuss the matter with
with UB students in Albany.

CVV Holds Pro-U.S. Rally
The Committee for Victory in
Vietnam (CVV) will stage a “Support —the_US_in_ Vietnam” rally
Saturday, April 23, at 8:00 in
Memorial Auditorium.
Hubert

Vice-President

Hum-

phrey, Secretary of State Dean
Rusk, Senator Everett Dirksen,
Senator Thomas Dodd, NAACP
President Mr. Roy Wilkins, and
National Young Americans for
Freedom President Mr. Thomas
Huston

have

been

invited

to

speak at the rally.

CVV Co-chairmen Steve Sickler
and Frank Klinger said that the
rally “is designed to express
community support of US policy in Vietnam. This is a new
kind of war for Americans, and
Americans must do their part by
demonstrating their support to
their elected officials and to tbe
world."
Mr. Sickler, speaking at a CVV
meeting last week, commented,
“Every indication, every poll, every survey shows solid support
for US Vietnam policy. It is time
the majority speaks . , . this rally
is the chance we have been waiting for.”

Stating the principles of the
CVV, Mr. Klinger added, “We
support the present US objective in Vietnam, which is to defeat the Communist threat to
South Vietnam and to guarantee
freedom and independence to its
people. This is our conception
of victory. We eagerly urge all
those who believe as we do to
join our rally and show your
support for a Victory in Vietnam.”

The CVV was organized at the
University last February for the
express purpose of supporting
the war in Vietnam. There are
presently over 250 members.

The UB Young Americans for
Freedom, Ukranian-American Students’ Association, the Republican Club, and the Students for
the US in Vietnam are also supporting the rally.

Free University of Buffalo Organizes
With Stress on Educational Role
The Free University of Buffalo (FUB) Committee met Monday,
April 18 to determine organizational procedure for the coming
year.

The committee stressed the educational rather than the political function in explaining its relation to the existing University.
However, it was generally established that there is no real need
to define the Free University itself, as it will evolve as the needs
of the students change. At pres-

We set out to ruin
some ball bearings and
failed successfully

ent, according to member Steve
Rogin, there need be no principles other than “free thought.”
The committee recognized the
problems of formalizing FUB, expressing the desire to avoid mistakes “peculiar to this institution

and others like it.” It was stressed
that the Free University of Buffalo is neither abandoning nor
totally negating the existing educational systems. Instead, the
committee said that through the
creation of FUB a serious gap in
this system can be filled by being
adjunct to them. Ideally, FUB
should “serve to create new possibilities for education, free
thought, and creativity.”
In order to make PUB an effective organization, member Larry
Rubin mentioned the necessity
for a high degree of interest and
participation. To measure this
interest, a subcommittee has been
set up to distribute questionnaires
to the academic and outside communities. Another subcommittee
•is presently working for a definite and permanent place where
classes can be held. FUB committee members are also investigating the need for minimal tuition
fees.
A large part of the meeting was
devoted to discussion between
faculty and students concerning
FUB’s chances of becoming an
effective supplement to education
at the University. The committee
members said they are confident
that with support and general interest, this can be a practical,
meaningful innovation.
The Free University of Buffalo
Committee will meet again on
Tuesday, April 26 at 7:30 p.m.
in room 264 Norton. Meetings are
open to students and faculty.

—PICNIC—

The Bell System has many small, automatic
telephone offices around the
country.The equipment in them
could operate unattended for
ten years or so, but for a

A
|

j.

JP J

problem.^M||jj|jr

The many electric motors in those offices
needed lubrication at least once a year. Heat
from the motors dried up the bearing oils,
thus entailing costly annual maintenance

out to ruin some ball bearings
by smearing them with an
icky guck called molybdenum
disulfide (MoS 2 ).

V

(Kji#

|

Swock! This solid lubricant, used a certain
way, actually increased the life expectancy

€of
H

the ball bearings by a factor
Now the motors can run
of
for at least a decade without

f

lubrication.

*

ten!

were conducted at Bell Telephone
We’ve learned from our
“failures.”
Our aim: investigate
Laboratories. Lubricant enginfeer George H. Kitchen decided Ieverything,
to do a basic experiment that
The only experiment that can
,Jp
would provide a motor with the
really be said to “fail" is the
worst possible conditions. He deliberately set
one that is never tried.

TIt

Bell

System/ja)

American Telephone t Telegraph end Associated Companies

There will be a picnic
for graduate students
April 24 in Akron Falls
Park at 1 p.m. Tickets
may be obtained in 311
Norton from 9-1 daily
for 25 cents.

See Europe for
Less than S100
Your slimmer in Europe for less
than S100 (including transportation). For the first time in
travel history you can buy directly from theTourWholesaler
saving you countless dollars.
Job offers may also be obtained with no strings attached. For
a “db-it-yourself” paiViphlct
with jobs, discount tours and
applications send SI (for material, handling, air mail) to
Dept. V., International Travel
Est., 68 Herrengasse, Vaduz,
Liechtenstein (Switzerland).

BOCCE
TF 3-1344

�n,

Trike

-

19W

*

a Then Travels
-

9 9 9 0 THOM

120 Miles

Alpha Phi Omega Fraternity
(APO) collected $530 during its
30-hour Tricycle Marathon for
Easter Seals. The Trike-a-thon
ended Wednesday afternoon at 4
p.m., after riding the tricycle
31 hours and 5 minutes, totaling

The Fraternity started the
Trike-a-thon Tuesday morning at
9 a.m. in Lafayette Square, Downtown Buffalo. APO member Steve
Millman reported that the members circled the downtown business district all day Tuesday.

Alpha Phi Omega winds up trike-a-thon around Norton Fountain
Mounted is Jefferson Kaye of WKBW fame.

pusut 11:30 p.m. and rode around

Millman mentioned

Norton Fountain

difficulty was encountered with

that minor

Award For Book on Philippines
Given to Friend by Columbia
istered

annually by Columbia
University. Judges choose up to

three winners each year.
Two awards were given this
year. Mr. Richard Morris received
the award lor his book The

Peace Corps Test
Given Monday
The

DR. FRIEND

Photo

by University Relations

Professor Theodore
Friend received the Frederick
Bancroft Award for excellence
in American History and International History Affecting the
U.S., April 21 at Columbia UniHistory

versity.

“I was absolutely surprised and
utterly happy,” Dr. Friend com-

mented.
He received the award for his
book Between Two Empires; The
Ordeal of the Philippines; 1926colonization. Dr. Friend said that
the book is based on interviews
and documentary research in the
Philippines, Japan, and the U.S.
He spent IVi years in the foreign countries investigating his
subject.

The Bancroft Award is admin-

National Student

Congress will be held August
September 1 at the Univer30
sity of Illinois. The four elected
UB delegates will attend the
Congress with Student Association President Clinton Deveaux
and NSA Coordinator Jeffrey
Lynford.
Kim Darrow: Student Association
Vice-President; Ad Hoc Committee to Appeal the Feinberg
Decision: 1965-66 Sludcnt-Faculty Administration; Foreign
Student Orientation.
Ellen
Cardone:
Convocations
Committee; Secretary, Student
Senate: Spectrum reporter;
past NSA delegate; member
, NSA
sub-board: Alpha Lambda Delta; Foreign Student Ori-

Between 7 and 8 p.m. Tuesday,
cycled in the WKBW parking lot while several brothers
were interviewed on the radio.

all night. Mr.

Election of four delegates and
to six alternates to the annual National Student Congress
of the National Student Association (NSA) will be held Wednesday, April 25.
up

Weiner.
The annual

APD

on eam-

NSA Elections; Wednesday

Candidates are: Kim Darrow,
Saralee Rubensfein, Ellen Cardone, Marty Feinrider, Russell
Goldberg, Dan Rotholz, and Bob

120 miles.

The assemblage arrived

PACE THRU

Peace Corps Placement
Test will be given Monday, April
25 in 231 Norton at 7 p.m.
The Placement Test is designed
to help the Peace Corps match applicants’ special abilities with the
300 different kinds of jobs to be
filled. If the test indicates a limited language-learning ability,
for example, the Peace Corps tries
to place the applicant in an English-speaking country.
The application form (Volunteer Questionnaire), rather than
the Placement Test, is the most
important factor in the selection
of Volunteers. Students or others
available for service or advance
training within the next year
must fill out a Volunteer Questionnaire before taking the test.
The Questionnaire, which is
submitted to the tester, can be
obtained in advance from Mr.
the UB
Michael DiGerlando,
Peace Corps Liaison on Campus
in Norton Hall.
The Placement Test takes about
an hour and a half. An optional
French or Spanish achievement
test requires another hour. Both
tests are non-competitive and re-

the tricycle axle, “which was not
built to carry 200 lb. people."
Solieitation for funds was held
all along the route, but campus
donations were heaviest, Mr.
Millman noted. “Almost $400 of
the $530 collected was contributed by UB students on campus."

The Marathon ended at 4 p.m.

Wednesday, with WKBW disc
jockey Jefferson Kaye riding the
last few laps around the fountain.

Mrs. Edward Letchworth, Buffalo area representative for Easter Seals, commended the Fraternity for the showing and concentrated publicity for the Easter
Seals campaign. A megaphone
was used for the event which
was covered by area press, radio
and T.V. “News of the event went
across the UPI wires to newspapers throughout the state.”

SFA Forum; Student
Senator.
Saralee Rubenstein: Convocations

Conference Hours; Chairman
Commuter Board; IRC representative: New Campus Committee; Foreign Student Orientation.
Robert Weiner: U C. Senator;
Chairman Course Evaluation;
Union Board House Committee; NSA Steering Committee;
Publications Board; Freshman
Orientation Group Leader; Finance Committee; Foreign Student Orientation.

Daniel Rotholi; UC. Senator; Senate Executive Committee: NSA
Committee: International Student Affairs Committee; Course
Evaluation Committee; Publications Board; Academic Affairs Committee.
Martin Feinrider: Chairman Bookstore Committee; Chairman
NSA Discount Service, Convocations Committee; Tower
House Council; President Ripon
Society; Debate Society; Chairman Displays Committee, Discriminating About Discrimina
tion.

entation;

Committee Co-Chairman; Publications Board Secretary; Student
Senate representative

from Arts &amp; Sciences; Freshman Orientation Group Leader
Foreign Student Orientation.
Russell Goldberg: U.C. Student

Senator: Photo Editor and Ed
itorial Asst., Spectrum; Leprechaun of Spectrum; Senate
Finance Committee Chairman,
1963-66; Senate Parliamcntar
ian, 1964-65; United States Stu
dent Press Association National Executive Board member;
Reporter on Congress News at
last year’s NSA Congress.
Stewart Edelstein:
Freshman

The SPECTRUM
Published by

partners press, *9nc»
f $7

1381 KENMORE AVENUE

quire no preparation.

Mrs. Rosner
needs Blood...
and Roswell Park Memorial Institute
will pay $15.00 for your blood platelets.

Contact RABBI JUSTIN HOFMANN

IF 64540

mill /-^rtnliny

Available at:
Michael Roberts Custom Shoes, Buffalo
Liddon's Boot Shop, Buffalo

(at Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

�Friday, April 22, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE POUR

Cjoodman

—

Editorial (Comment

,

HUMPTY DUMPTY HAD A GREAT
FALL
ALL THE KING’S MEN HAD
the legislature.
EGG ON THEIR FACE
The student government has
The Buddhist-led rioting against Ky’s
organized and runs three major
Saigon government and the State Departprojects of its own: a big Tument’s last minute quarterbacking to detorial program for underprivileged children, involving 300 stufine the U.S. position in the civil conflict,
dents; a Community Involvement
has -served, up a juicy bone for political
—

I am writing this from San
Francisco State College where I

am employed

as "visiting

pro-

fessor" by the students, paid by
handsomely paid,
student dues
too, though I took the job because
I felt honored. So far as I know,
this arrangement is unique; and
by and large San Francisco State
has livelier student-initiated activities than I have seen else—

where in the country.

As a commuter college in a
cosmopolitan city, the college is
not unlike City College in New

York, but less crowded and, being in California, the students
are a little trimmer, richer, and

nuttier. Contrasted with most
state schools, there is a heavy
emphasis toward the Humanities
and social psychology, so the students tend to be more radical
than those aiming for organizational careers in engineering,
business, or physical sciences.
This is really a more radical
campus than Berkeley across the
Bay, and one wonders how it has
managed to remain so peaceful
and un-newsworthy. One reason,
I think, is that the student activity occurs with the tolerance
and even complicity of an intelligent administration (and much

Program, e.g. cultural work with
delinquents and abandoned children; and an Experimental College, with the usual offbeat subjects, action sociology, and emphasis on interpersonal contact.
Significantly, study in the Experimental College, is fulfilled by acceptable papers or other products, is rewarded by academic
credit toward degrees; and academic credit is given for other
extra-curricular activity, like the

of the faculty), unlike the pettiand blundering of Clark
Kerr and company. Another reason is that Berkeley is a great
and famous recipient of Pentagon and CIA money and so is
touchy territory, whereas S. F.
State docs not have this incubus
and the corresponding faculty
and administration.

speculators.

-

-

Consider my own status here.
As an employee of the students
I do not have to sign the loyalty
oath
which indeed I would

gon.

In the whirlwind of snap judgments
and profound thinking flowing out of the
State Department’s home in “foggy bottom,” one incident surfaced offering a
glimpse at the inner-thinking in State.
American C-120 transports were used to
ferry troops loyal to Ky north to Danang
Airbase. In Ky’s words, the troops would
“liberate” Danang from the Communists.

The

Lodge’s intervention in the civil dispute, and support from Washington for
the use of our equipment and personnel,
undercut the entire premise of our fighting “because the Viet Namese want us.”
The demonstrations challenged the assumption of support from the People.
Washington not only ignored them, but
lent its troops to put them down.
Fighting to protect an ally is one thing.
But if we are in Viet Nam to militarily
halt Communist expansion, let’s say so and
not resort to Machiaevellian tactics by
propping up pro-American governments
against the will of nationalists.

grump

Lawrence in New York, Nevertheless. my position is chartered by
the Administration which neither
Welcome to Pick On Conservahires nor can fire me. (During
tives Day! I am about to level a
a hassle over an appointment for
mighty blast that will level all
next semester
the candidate before me
and shake seismowas Allen Ginsberg
the presigraphs as far away as Peking.
dent of the students told the . . .
would you believe Canisius?
administration, "It's none of your . . . I didn’t really think so.
vantage of getting rid of graddamned business whom we hire
To horse, to horse, the nastys
ing!). No matter what the Slate with our money.”) Personally, I
arc coming. Whoops . . . nasty
association does, S.F. State will
do not intend to make the unneawfully close to recent defunct
attempt to go if alone. What will cessary trouble, but in this haven is
and more recently reawakenbe the position of the administraof John Birch and the mores of ing
German political party, and
tion in such a case? Remember the ranch-house, how can one as ex-Vice-president and present
that the school is supported by ever tell?
candidate for candidate Richard
Nixon pointed out in the case
of the Du Bois Clubs being sneakily arranged to bring down wrath
on the phonetically similar but
completely blames The Boys Club
only the Communist conspiracy
The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
would stoop so low, as to use
Publication Office at Norton Hall. University Campus. Buffalo. N. Y. 14214
phonetic smoke screens. I would
Published twice weekly from the first week of September to the last week in
not stoop so low . . . bend a little,
May, except for exam periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and spring vacations.
maybe, but stoop, never. I have
a bad back. Where the hell were
Editorin-Chief
JEREMY TAYLOR
—-

—

—

—

—

Business

Two tactics of Saigon-American stratOne was the practice
of calling anything anti-Saigon Communist; an example of the “editor-or” logic
used to divy up Viet Namese in the war’s
gallup poll. The presence of this “thinking” was confirmed by Donald Duncan
when he spoke Tuesday night. Totally
lacking in the binary logic is the possibility of a third alternative, like anti-Ky
anti-Communist nationalists. This could
create a strong neutralism such as Kennedy hoped for Laos.
This brings us to the second tactic,
the practice of sweeping any evidence of
less than full backing for the pro-American Ky government under the rug, including, in this incident, Henry Cabot
Lodge’s use of American equipment and
personnel to prop up the Ky government.
egy were exposed.

—

not sign in the California state
system because of its bad history,
although, in an amiable mood. I
have signed such a paper at Sarah

To give a presently important
example of faculty temper, the
Senate at S.F. State has just
unanimously directed its delegate to the State College Faculty
Senates- to resolve not to cooperate with the Selective Service
weeding out by grading
perhaps by adopting a pass-fail system (which has the further ad-

THE

•

The next day Ky was back to apologize
for saying Communists controlled Danang.
“It was a mistake,” he said.

Marching into the headlines have come
speculations of Buddhist strength, and
their intentions to topple Ky from office
and reports of Buddhist leaders refusing
to rule out possible negotiations with the
Viet Cong, prompted speculations that the
U.S. might be asked to pick up its troops
and go home.
But the ensuing events and the scurrying north to the Hue Danang area of
Buddhist leader Thich Quang Thi to hush
newspaper. Besides, many prothe anti American demonstrations, and
fessors try to set up courses in Thi’s assurance that Buddhists favored the
which the students determine U.S. presence to fight Communists did
curriculum and method, and much to still the pens of eager Johnson
critics pointing to the riots in another asthere is a pretty good opportunsault on U.S. policy.
ity for individual students to design their own study and get
The issue remains up in the air. And
credit. A fanfare has greeted all the bleeding ulcers from Washington
the (excellent) Muscatine report to Saigon only testify to the chaos in Saifor academic reform at Berkeley,
but most of its best spirit and
many of its concrete proposals
have modestly been in operation
at S.F. State.

ness

•

SPECTRUM

we?

Manager

RAYMOND D

VOLPE

placards. The big one which reads
WE BACK OUR BOYS IN VIET
NAM is an expression of a legitimate viewpoint and is in the

news vein.

The second young
troop is carrying a sign which
says “Some call it protesting, I
call it cowardness.” We well overlook the logical absurdity of the
young man in question carrying
a sign with the word “I” in it
albeit the use of a nonexistent

word, cowardness????, would support his construction of same.
But it does get a little galling
when the local newspapers have
to resort to this means of communication.
No doubt the photographer and
the photography editor are all
the proud recipients of gold stars
for so cleverly picking out what
the BEN wanted, but if the news
can really pat itself on the back
for winning so many local journalism awards and then turn
around and pull a piece of yellow
jouraiism
or should we say
red, white and blue journalism?
like that it shows a certain
lack of taste, ethics, and intelligence. Not that we have been led
to so expect these traits from
ole Big BEN but it would have
been nice.
—

News Editor
ALICE EDELMAN
Staff—Loretta Angelina, Joanne Bouchier, Russell Buchman. Karen Green,
Peter Lederman. Joan Roberts. Rick Schwab. Dan Schroeder, Sharon Shulman,
Eileen Teitler. Nancy Toder, Patti Wartley. Judy Weisberg.
Feature Editor
JOHN STINY
Assistant
JO ANNE LEEGANT
Staff —Bonnie Barlow. Ron Ellsworth, Barbara Ann Fitzsimmons. Barbara Loeb,
Audrey Logel. Bob Martin, Suzanne Rovner, Martha Tack. William Weinstein.
Staff —Mike

J. B

Sharcot.

Castro.

Sports
Mike

Editor
Dolan.

STEVE SCHUELEIN
Farbman. Bob Frey.

Steve

Scott

Forman,

Layout Editor
SHARON HONIG
Stephanie Parker. Steve Silverman.
Copy Editor
LAUREN JACOBS
Staff—Carol Becker. Estelle Fox. Jocelyn Hailpern. Sandy Lippman, Betsy Ozer,
Claire Shottenfeld. Susan Zuckerberg
Staff —Joanne

Staff—Terry
Mancini.

Bouchier.

Advertising Manager
Angelo, Audrey Cash, Pat
Photography

Editor

RON

HOLTZ

Rosenfeld.

Steve

Silverman,

Joseph

EDWARD JOSCELYN

Staff—Don Blank. Peter Bonneau,

Marc Levine. Ivan
Robert Wynne

Joseph Feyes, Carol Goodson, Alan Gruber,
Michael Soluri, Anthony Walluk, Susan Wortman,

Makurh,

Circulation

DIANE LEWIS
IRENE RICH

Manager

Faculty Advisor
Financial

Advisor

DALLAS

GARBER

EDITORIAL POLICY IS DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING
Second Class Postage

Subscription

15.000

$3 00

Paid at
per

Buffalo. N. Y.
circulation

year,

Represented
advertising
by
for national
National Advertising Service, Inc., 420 Madi
,
son Ave New YorK N. Y.

Oh yes. On Page 24, Section II,
of the Buffalo Evening News
(Here we go again) is a cute little
picture of two cute little boys
who marched in a sweet little
parade last Sunday. The parade
was sponsored by the Army &amp;
Navy Union, USA and its auxiliary. Since the theme of the
parade was United We Fought,
United We March and the general idea was to show the troops
currently being mobbed by the
Vietnamese that we are on their
side even if they aren't (actually
that wasn’t the general idea, I
just made that up) I would sort
of expect The BEN to cover it.
They are welcome to quote
Col. Gajewski as informing the
spectators and marchers that
“freedom is the allowance of
particular privileges.” Albeit the
wording of that statement frightens me to death.

What upsets me is the fact
that these two little kids are
wearing what are apparently kiddies’ army uniforms and bearing

—

Somewhat closer to home is the
case of one Mr. James Callan and
a column known as The Right.
Back in the Friday, April 8 Spectrum Master Callan wrote a piece
on abortion. While I thought it
a bit overstated it served to remind me that I had better continue to avoid the subject I have
this lingering doubt that abortion is completely moral myself.
Anyway the April 8 column
closed as follows: “To sqm up,
if abortion is ever moral then
it is always moral. I submit that
manifest evidence shows that
abortion is not always moral, and
hence is not ever moral.”

In Tuesday’s Spectrum, last,
Mr. Callan proceeded to attack a
gentleman who had had the gall

Raymond D. Volpe

by STEESE

to disagree with him on the basis
that the conclusions drawn in
the April 8th column, as previous-

ly quoted, were the products of
logical reasoning, and challenged
the other gentlemen, a Mr. MeCubbin, (I thought he was the
one famed for losing 500 hats)
to show him where his error in
logic was.
Although I firmly believe that
attacking other columnists should
be confined to slow news days
and rainy days when one can’t get
out to buy that drove of liberal
gadflys (to rather than of perhaps) the BEN. I should be happy
to point out, or attempt to since
I never had any logic . . Thank
you very much but I am aware
.

. . that there is
it is apparent
a bit of a hole in the April 8
logic. If A is ever M, it is always
M. If A is not always M, A is
never M. So Mr. Callan sir, even
if manifest evidence (manifest
meaning apparent to the senses
or mind, obvious) proves that
Abortion is not always Moral the
conclusion is not valid. If A is
never M and if A is not always
M can be the same condition,
damn it.
.

In addition to which the possibilities of abortion being moral
were never discussed, they were
merely swept under the rug under the classification of “pet

justifications”.

And finally, and the question
that has personally botheied me
for' some time, how can 1 such a
positive and easy distinction be
made by the general public and
by any individual between birth
control and abortion? It is perfectly all right then Mr. Callan,
to allow people to attempt to
prevent conception, but by God
it is immoral to do anything if
the means fail, even if through
no fault of the involved parties.

I do not know the answer to
either question. Anyone who does
can borrow this space anytime
they wish.

�46
i \
114 £ i
Friday, April 22, 1966
'

M U

3

j

1

j

PAG! FIVE

SPECTRUM

oCetterA

to

the (Editor

Invites

1

I must complain most vigorously, and request that you print
my complaint, about your unfortunate release of supposed news
against my explicit and, indeed,

urgent request
When your reporter asked me
if Robert Creeley was coming

here, on the basis of some rumor
heard by her. I replied that I
thought he might be. but the
appointment was not yet official.
I not only refused to furnish her
with information, but I fervently
requested that no mention whatever be made of this until official
word was received. My request
was violated, at considerable em

Surely you must be jesting sir
when you stat that the Greek
System is trivial. If not, what do
you hold important? Must a group
attack every institution in sight
in order to establish its importance? Must it promote “individuality" by encouraging all its members to grow beards and refrain
from bathing? Are the only peo-

pie who further education those
who wish to abolish degrees and
promote a “free” educational system? Not that I do not support
the right to express one’s opinion,
but surely the minority view
should not be the only one expressed.
The Greek System

does offer
much to the college student. It
offers him a chance to serve his
contemporaries and to do things
in a group that are much less
satisfying when done alone. A
cocktail party before a big dance,
a party where you can drink,
dance and have fun together, or
just getting together with the
guys to take part in a sporting
event or just a bull session over
a keg of beer. And believe it or
not sir, but we’ve even been
known to study together. (There

Spouses, Kids, Stags and Dates of
GSA invited Rain or Snow or Shine

SUNDAY APRIL
I RM.

interfraternity award for
achievement.) Surely,
you cannot be totally against having fun. Even you must get tired
of protesting once in a while and
take part in the bourgeois prac-

scholastic

tice of relaxation.

rT

And as for service to our contemporaries, it is difficult to do
such things as are done by more
meaningful groups. Participation
in a blood drive can hardly compete with a march down Main

The most recent demonstrations
under Buddhist leadership clearly
demonstrate beyond a shadow of
a doubt the bankruptcy of Presi-

dent Johnson’s Vietnam policy.
Although many Americans still
refuse to believe the truth, the
Buddhists, who happen to reside
in Vietnam, denounce American
military

might as occupational

troops, not as an army in the
forefront of democratic reforms.
The Buddhists, quite correctly,

inform us that President Johnson
and his predecessors supported
and established nine years of
tyranny in Vietnam under the
cloak of democracy.
The oppression resulting from
our military rule over Vietnam
is shared by other religions as
well. The Rev, Hoang Quynh,
chairman of the Catholic Greater
Unity Force and a prominent figure in the ouster of Dr. Quat last
June in favor of the Ky dictatorship, now declares Ky’s rule to

Hm

Street, and it would be even

more difficult to compare a Heart
Fund collection with a camping
trip to the wilds of Norton fountain. But we do try our best.
So even if we arc “evil” and
do “thwart individuality,” Mr.
Taylor, please don’t call us trivial.
—Joseph Rollek
Pi Lambda Tau Fraternity

be worse than Diem's. "There arc
so many things wrong,” reports
Father Quynh, “with the (Ky)
government it is difficult to know
where to begin to criticize it.”
When are Americans going to
demand removal of American
troops? How much more killing
must Americans accomplish to
impose American dictatorial rule
over a people so intent upon selfdetermination?
Sidney M. Willhelm
Elwin H, Powell
Bill J. Harrell

The Spectrum has continually
covered theatre events on campus
and given them publicity. For
this I am grateful. However, since
the reporters chosen to write reviews and publicity have had little experience in the field, I feel
that specially the reviews are
worth little. Take for example the

review of At Liberty and Smythe,
in The April IS, 1900 issue, by
Lynne Bernstein. While it may
be valid opinion which many
students may agree with, it has
little value as a criticism. I would
ask that you either assign one
member of your staff to do reviews on a permanent basis, or
ask someone from the Student
Theatre Guild to write it for you.

Cramming
Clowning
Crashing
Pubbing
Frugging

As members of the faculty, we
would like to express our support
of Dr. Zimmerman and our re-

for the Spectrum attack
on him. We do not consider it
“unpardonable” for a professor to
hold anti-Communist views, as
expressed by Dr. Zimmerman in
the letter of April 8. We ourselves are in accord with these
pulsion

views and do not feel the need
to be pardoned by the Spectrum

views, and coming events in the

area. As for vested interests, we
criticize each other more harshly
than your reporters can do with
any accuracy, and also have more
technical knowledge of the subject involved.

—Sandra Klein

reputable

particularly object to a
description of a professor’s views
as being “blatant and stupid redbaiting,” “crude”, “rhetorically
We

student

PERMANENT PRESS
Vi xv

Shirts and Slacks of
FORTREL and cotton

newspaper.

irrelevent”, “shameful”, “shrill”

From

Howard W. Post
Charles H. V. Ebert
Edward J. Thompson

they’re really with it...Perma-

John Halstead

King Lee

Lenore Banks

Such obnoxious generalities would

reluctantly

by two other professors involved, according to the
N. Y. Times of April 14, 1966.
Professor Ralph Smuckler said,
"It may not have been right to
get into it. We were caught and
felt we had to follow through.”
Such is the morality of some
of our respected teachers. “It
we
may not have been right
were caught.”

dawn to discotheque

Sincerely yours,

B. Raphael Scaly
Henry Kast

and “ignorant”. Even if Dr. Zim
merman were the school janitor,

of this plan, has been

i

Wmmgfar* 1

be grossly inappropriate for a

for them.

corroborated

S

K*o*

We have often asked to be given

nently pressed SOQo Fortrel poly
ester and 50cotton make Mr
Wrangler your best buddy from
early classes to just-one-morefrug at midnight... and they're
guaranteed for one year's normal

i

wear.

M.S.U. Team, Front For C.I.A.
TO THE EDITOR:
A recent Ramparts article has
revealed that a special Michigan
State University team which was
supposed to be aiding the South
Vietnamese Government from
1955-59 was used as a front by
the Central Intelligence Agency
to carry out their usual dirty
"Work. (Apparently they failed).
The admission by Stanley K.
Sheinbaum, former coordinator

WT

Il^i

Faculty Supports Zimmerman
TO THE EDITOR

I

'S£*i

Tickets Also Available at Norton Union Ticket Office

i

Theatre Critique Condemned
TO THE EDITOR

Z4

Tlckete Available
in 311 Norton Hall
9-1 Daily

is an

Buddhist Uprisings Denounce U.S. Policy
TO THE EDITOR

|

picnic

barrassment to me. You must
know that organs of new make
such releases only after they become official. Mr, Greeley’s proposed appointment is not official,
and theerfore not yet news. In
printing it. you have violated a
necessary part of University protocol. .
—Albert S. Cook, Chairman

Greek Refutes Editorial
TO THE EDITOR:
I am amazed at your lack of
vision in thinking that an organization which “brutalizes and
thwarts the individuality of its
adherents” and “is an evil and
anti-educational system” can still
manage to be trivial. Why, even
the terrible capitalistic war mongers who seek to frustrate the
free Communist movement by a
dirty war sound less awesome
and destructive.

All Graduate Students to

The Annual Graduate Student

University Protocol Violated
TO THE EDITOR;

f

The Graduate Student Association of S.U.N.Y

|

Well we’re all caught. In an
ugly war in Vietnam. Supporting
the slaughter of 200,000 or more
Communists in Indonesia, etc.
And what about the suffering
that isn't violent and in our newspapers. Starvation. Slavery, overt
or subtle. Racism. Etc.
We are responsible.
Sincerely,

...

Don Blank

They stay like new forever. In a
full range of colors and styles.
Adam, Meldrum A Anderson

389 Main Street

JJ-

&amp;

Buffalo, New York
or write

MfcWraungl«r
350 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y. 10001

I

¥

�pa6e six

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■»

F‘B I C'‘TR U M

Friday,

Cacotopia and Eutopia

/

By STEPHEN CRAFTS

Look
vi'

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on My

Ye Mighty
nd Despair!

ijjp

,

m

the right

JAMES CALLAN
First of all congratulations to
Jeremy Taylor for producing a
good editorial: The Daily Spectrum. (That makes two editorials
this school year with which 1
can wholeheartedly agree. The
first was his recommendation that
an
you watch “Secret Agent”
excellent program starring an excellent actor.) Of course, a daily
Spectrum is just a dream as of
now; there just isn't enough material
seldom do we have in
one week the selection of a new
President, a four-page VISTA insert, and three letters to the editor from abortionists. But it is a
goal to be striven for.
Which brings me to the point
—

—

of this column, that third letter
to the editor. Mr. Jerry Gross begins by attempting to discredit
my views on abortion, proceeds
to the minimum wage, and concludes with the war in Vietnam,

What seems to be wrong with
each of my articles is that they
are all defended on the grounds
of morality. He claims that there
is no such thing as objective
morality and that all ethics arc
relative and are motivated by
self-interest, I agree that there
is a tendency among mankind as
of late toward equating ethics
and self-interest, but certainly
this is something to be bemoaned,
not cheered. The man without
principle is nothing but a mouth.
It is the belief in principles and
the use-«f his mind in applying
them that makes a man human.
To relegate morality to the status of self-interest is to relegate
man to the status of animality.
Gross is admittedly partisan
toward labor, cannot see unbiased principle, and accuses all
who disagree with him of being
partisan toward big business. If

so 'Mr. Gross, how do you explain
my statement printed on January
28 that the Transport Workers

Union of New York City had
done rightly in its strike and the
Courts wrongly in their injunction. Or how about my statement
on February 11 that ordinarily
a union should be allowed to

coerce management, by legitimate
means, into establishing a union
shop. Are these examples of my
"partisanship to these giant corporations"?
Let me now inform Mr. Gross
and his fellow members of S.D.S.
that I will not take the lime to

refute

identity and community—was the
focus of an intercollegiate conference. “The Urban Challenge,"
at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology April 13 through 16.

About 200 delegates from all
parts of the country attended the
conference, which was organized
by political science and city planning

undergraduates

at

M.l.T.

Ellen Cardone and Leonard Gerson represented UB.
An interdisciplinary approach
to urban problems was emphasized in the choice of speakers
as well as delegates.

Architecture critic. Wolf von
Ekhart discussed the disciplines
of human scale and public space
as the essence of cities. He contrasted the form of Selma, Alabama, where the centers of public power, comerce and daily life
are tangible to all. with Watts,
Los Angeles, where all the forces
of discrimination are invisible.
The formlessness of Watts, the
lack of “a place to take a revolution to," was seen by Ekhart
as causing the futility and despair of the riots in that section
He contrasted this to the physical confrontation of the power
structure which made the Selma demonstrations meaningful
and constructive for the people
involved in them.
Most of the speakers on plan
ning departed from the older
view of a complete city, such

as Brasilia, which was built according to the tastes of one or
more planners. The speakers
warned of the imposition of
middle-class intellectual preferences upon the entire population.
Non planned, haphazard
growth was also decried. According to a student speaker, the

balance should be found in drawing out and “articulating the
aspiration" of urban dwellers.
Political scientist Leonard Fein
described a living city as one
that "comprehends diversity,”
seeing the task of planning as
encouraging people to accept the
responsibility of choosing their
own way of life. He asked. “Can
the slide rule on the draftsman's
table ordain the gentle chaos
that diversity implies?", advocating a "piecemeal" planning to
account for spontaneous growth.
The issues of the conference
were illustrated by a tour of
Boston redevelopment sites, and
by a panel from a Cambridge

neighborhood beset by , the typical urban problems. Boston’s
newest low and middle-income
housing projects are radically
different from the dreary' caverns
that the word "projects” brings
to mind. Criteria of human scale,
style, and public space are applied. and facilities like schools
and stores were included in the
area. The renewal program is
unusually extensive,
involving
one-third of the city’s area, and
including new government and
business centers as well as construction

and rehabilitation of
Boston's Director of Redevelopment, Edward Logue. said that

thousands of
in the
streets. The world’s leaders were

Marxian views of
of the masses
that's been done too many times
by too many people. I will state,
however, that their attempt to defend them on the basis of antimorality is just as futile as any
defense ever has been.

love

powerless. They began to laugh.
They all abdicted.
Everyone
thought it was a fine joke, as
they had nothing to abdicate. Ian
Smith sent Wilson a telegram,
“The joke’s on us stop.” In Detroit General Motors announced that it would begin manufacturing safe cars for everyone at cost. Wall Street turned
out free monopoly sets for old
time’s sake. Millions of tons of
Drano were poured into the
Great Lakes and fish began to
appear again. Hollywood started
to consider the film as an art

of the world demanding immediate anarchy. Extremism had become the norm. J. Edgar Hoover
called it a Communist Plot but
was hooted down by a million
people yelling “don’t you wish.”
A housewife in Chevy Chase,
Maryland complained that White
House pickets were trampling
her roses. A quick collection garnered her enough to plant orchids
and she joined the demonstration. Marvin Zimmerman urged
moderation. But it was now extremism; He too joined the de-

form.
Birth control information was
disseminated in place of commercials- on TVr The Vatican announced that Cardinal Spellman
would auction off St, Patricks,
proceeds to go to Vietnamese
refugees. The Pope absolved
everyone of everything. Martin
Luther, Moses, Nietzsche, and
Marx were made saints. Even
Jean-Paul Sartre was happy. He
attended a mass by a bishop
high on LSD who admitted that
Jesus had been a hippy.

monstration. New Establishment:
no establishment. In New York
the Fugs entertained fifteen million people in Central Park. John
Lindsay donated the sound equipment. No one cared that the subways weren’t running. They walked and dug the trees and birds.
In Berkeley Clark Kerr was heard
leading a four-letter word cheer.
In the South whites and Negroes
danced in the integrated streets
and didn’t worry about rape.
They were brothers now as they
had actually been for years without wanting to know it. Back in

In Venezuela millions of former peons serenaded a Gulf Oil
executive and he invited them
all in for a party afterwards.
Flying saucers were no longer
afraid to land. Little green men
were welcomed even in the sub-

Washington a wavering Lyndon
Johnson sent Valentines to Kosygin and Mao. Fidel Castro flew
up from Havana to spend a weekend with Lucy Baines. Her father
proposed a tax on love to support
his Great Society programs. He
was reminded good-naturedly that
the people already had one. In
Vietnam American GIs were Invited into Viet Cong huts for
dinner. In Paris a traffic jam

urbs. Real estate agents didn’t
object. One of the visitors from
outer space was made Premier
Emeritus of Russia. Everyone
everywhere was happy. No one
asked why. No one worried about
it. Nuclear-powered lights kept
the skies bright and the celebration lasted for weeks.

their

exploitation

the most urgent need of the
program is ‘.‘more money,” adding
that many plans have been deed. Many speakers saw the need
for new concepts and approaches
as more pressing than that of

funds.

A frequent question, “To what
what extent can urban problems
be solved by advances in architecture and technology?" was
asked. Ekhart criticized the lack
of technical advances toward pro-

viding inexpensive adequate housing for all, characterizing present
construction methods as “primitive." Others, including architect
Louis Sauer disagreed, attributing urban problems to the low
state of knowledge in the social
sciences, and calling for an enlightened approach to “human

renewal."

Conference chairman
David
Mundel evaluated the program
as successful in bringing people
of many disciplines together “to
seek a common language." and in
increasing their committment to
use the best resources of each
field to combat the problems of
the city.

—CIVIL RIGHTS—
Students interested in
attending the Intercol1 e g i a t e Conference on
Civil Rights and the Law
April 28-30 at Oberlin
College. Ohio, should
contact Jeffrey Lynford
in the Senate office.

MIDNIGHT SHOW SATURDAY

—

Intercollegiate Conference at
T.
Focuses On "The Urban Challenge''
By ELLEN CARDONE

was caused by
couples making

CRAFTS' CHIMERA
I awoke one morning and turned on Huntley-Brinkley who, for
some strange reason, had only
one news item; billions of people
were picketing in the capitals

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�Friday, Apr it M, 1966

SPECTRUM

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PAG!

Candidates For Mr. Faculty

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Everything Photographic for

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XX

Amateur Use

&amp;

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Draft
Deferment
DR. KATKIN
Photo

DR. EBERT

DR. ZIMMERMAN

great honor to be nominated by

Voting will take place Wednesday and Thursday, April 27 and
28, in Norton. The winner will
be announced and awarded a
trophy and a gift at the Spring

by Marc Levine

Mr Faculty candidates, Geography Professor Charles Ebert, Psychology Professor Edward Katkin
and Philosophy Professor Marvin
Zimmerman will be presented
Monday, April 25, at 3:30 p.m.
in the Dorothy Haas Lounge.

The purpose of the contest is
“to honor the faculty member
who encourages mutual respect
among faculty and students,” according to campaign chairman
Beth Greenberg. “It is not only
a popularity contest.”
Dr. Ebert, who is doing research on the possibilities of developing the economic potentials
in underdeveloped areas of foreign countries, was nominated by
the residents of Schoellkopf Hall.
He commented, “I consider it a

Photo by Russell Goldberg

the students.”
Dr. Katkin, currently doing research on stress, was nominated
by Theta Chi. Commenting on his
nomination, he said, “I’m delighted, I want to win. I’ll do what’s

Weekend dance.

Dr. Zimmerman, faculty advisfor the United
States in Vietnam, was nominated
by the residents of Tower Hall.
He said, “I am flattered but uncomfortable. I don’t like popularity contests, but I appreciate
being nominated.”
or to Students

Questions will be accepted from

CLASSIFIED
FOR RENT

-

them

SUMMER

SUBLET;

TWO

tion period.

MUST SELL girl’s Raleigh
9 speed bicycle, excellent

purchased. Maps with directions
to the Hearthstone Manor will
appear on the back of tickets
which are available at the Norton Ticket Booth at $3 per cou-

(unity to meet the “Mr. Faculty"
candidates at a Student-Faculty
Reception Monday in the Haas
Lounge from 3 to 5 p.m. Philosophy Professor Marvin Zimmerman, Georgraphy Professor Charles Ebert and Psychology Professor Edward Katkin have been

with

ple.

9 to 4 p.m.

nominated.
Stunt Night rehearsal will be
held Tuesday from 7 to 10 p.m.
in the Conference Theater.
Thursday afternoon the Laurentian Singers from St. Lawrence University will perform in
the Fillmore Room at 2:30 p.m.
Stunt Night will begin Thursday
at 8 p.m. in the Clark Gym.
Eleven groups will perform, representing sororities, fraternities,
Angel Flight and the Arnold Air
Society. Following Stunt Night
there will be “coffee house” entertainment in the Rathskellar
from 10:20 to 2 a.m, sponsored
by the Mixer Committee.
All classes have been cancelled
April 29. A heralding
parade will proceed up Main
Street to the campus at 10 a.m.
that day. The Trike Grand Prix
Race, sponsored by Theta Chi
Fraternity, will be run in the
Tower Parking Lot at 12 noon,
followed by the Olympic com

Friday,

Petitions.

Friday's activities will culminate in the semi-formal dance
honoring Dr. Clifford Furnas at
•he Hearthstone Manor in Cheek
towaga from 9 to 1 p.m., during
w hich the Queen and “Mr. Fac-

Saturday's activities will begin
an Inter-Squad football
game from 2 to 4 p.m, in Rotary Field. A mixer will be held
outside Norton from 4 to 6 p.m.
and there will be a judo exhibit

in the Fillmore Room from 3
to 5 p.m.

Tower Hall will hold an Open
House Sunday afternoon and will
sponsor a fireworks display in
Baird Parking Lot during the

'63 OLSMOBILE CUTLASS
vertable, red with white

Monday through Wednesday, Ap
ril 25 through 27.

British poets Mr. Alfred Alvarez and Dr. George Barker, have

been appointed visiting professors in the English Department
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Mr. Alvarez, poet and critic, is
the author of Stewards of Excellence, The School of Donne, The
New Poetry, and Under Pressure.
He received his bachelor’s and
master's degrees at Corpus Christi College, Oxford University.

Dr. Barker recently published
two books of poems. Collected

Poems, 1930-60 and Dreams of a
Summer Night. He holds a doctor’s degree from Imperial Tohoku University in Japan.

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General voting will take place
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cause some choking and coughing. So what? It's all in
good, clean fun. And speaking of good, clean things,
what about the taste of Sprite? It's good. It's
clean. However, good clean things may not exactly be
your idea of jollies. In that case, remember that
Sprite is also very refreshing. "Tart and tingling,”
in fact. And very collegiate. And maybe we'd better
quit while we're ahead.
So here it is. The Drinking
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to sing it--we'd be very surprised.
Roar, soft drink, roar!
You're the loudest soft drink
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So tart and tingling, they
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�Friday, April 22,

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

IM6

"GENTLEMEN PREFER BLONDES'

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"Gentleman Pr

SUZANNE SCHILLO

KAREN KOZLOWl
Blonde and blue-eyei
Kozkvwski’s theme is
men Prefer Blondes."
her of Alpha Gamma I
rority, Karen has servet
1966 Military Ball Co

“Powder Puffs and Poses” is
the theme of Sigma Kappa Phi’s
candidate Suzanne Schillo. The
campaign reflects her professional modeling experience and her
membership in the Professional
Model's Guild.
Her activities on campus include: Freshman and Varsity
Cheerleading, Chairman of Special Events for Homecoming,
Chairman of Career Planning Conference, Chairman of Group
Leaders for Freshman Orientation, Tour Guide, Student guide
for summer planning conference
and president of her pledge class.
She was awarded the Cap and
Gown Society’s “Freshman Ring”
for the most outstanding Fresh-

man

SUZIE DUFFY

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woman.
19-year-old Suzanne is an English major with 2.2 average. In
her spare time, she enjoys modern dance, swimming, ice-skating, tennis, and sewing her own

clothes.

Blondes"

Planning
Career
Coi
Commuter Committee a
Sophomore Sponsor. SI
member of the Newm
and attended their Natio
vention last summer.
Karen is a member of
ly organized Pre-Medical
She studied at Butgers
Science
National
Fo
Grant and partial ated i
teer hospital work.

A 19-year-old English
Karen enjoys jazz, 6aI
folk dancing. She is intei
classical art and music, cl
drama, swimmiM and
Off campus, Karen is a p
model and member of thi
Skating Club of Buffalo

�Prtd.y, April 22, 1966

SPECTRUM

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SUZIE DUFFY

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and blue-eyed Karen
ki’s theme is “Gentleefer Blondes.” A memMpha Gamma Delta Solaren has served on the
ilitary Ball Committee,
Planning
Conference,
Committee and as a
ire Sponsor. She is a
of the Newman Club
nded their National Conlast summer.
is a member of the new-

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interested

in

art and music, children’s
swimmio* and driving.

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of the Figure
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Buffalo.

Suzie Duffy is Chi Omega’s
“Personality in Print.” Her theme
reflects Suzie’s interest and experience in journalism.
Suzie is a 21 year old senior
majoring in history. She has
worked on the Buffalo CourierExpress staff and has written
for the UB Office of Public Re-

lations.

Early this year she appeared
on television in the opening segment of “The Student Mood.”

Suzie has been a member of
the Freshman Orientation Committee, Newman Club, and was
Rush Chairman of her sorority.
In 1965 she was chosen Rose
Queen of Delta Sigma Phi fraternity.

Off campus, Suzie enjoys reading, sewing, writing, bowling and
golf.

SUZANNE SCHtLLO

�Friday, April

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

22, 19M

Null and Void
Declared
Elections
IRC
Mary Anthony Dance Theatre
By Student Judiciary Elections Court

REVIEW:

By RUTH

SHAPIRO

The Mary Anthony Dance
Theatre gave a good performance in modern dance on Saturday last. The program consisted
of three sets in progression from
Renaissance to Romantic Impres
sionism. to a contemporary drematic piece. Physically, the dancers were more round than the
professional

stereotype

dancer,

resulting in a pleasing company

of womanly women and manly
men who. though for some part
were a bit inexperienced, still
created harmonious moods and
meaningful communications with
the audience.
The first piece. "Plaisanteries
D'Amour" was a unified flowing
series of short sketches based
on 16th and 17th century poems
Marlow's
and Be
My Love." The setting was tra-

including

Christopher

“Come Live

With

Me

ditional for the time: the taped
music was primarily recorders
with some drums; the costumes
for the women were ankle-length
dresses and chin-strap hats. For
the men. lights and hip-jackets
were worn All wore slippers. The
characteristic 17th century state
ly dance, swinging hip and hyperflexled wrists were prevalent,
A rose—basic symbol of such
hearts and flowers poetry of the
time was employed in several
dances. In “Imvc, Let Me Call
Her Choicest Flowers.” a lover's
triangle was

delightfully depict-

ed. A young man flirts with a
girl, she returns his attentions
but is challenged by the flirta-

When the
tions
man decides to flirt with both,
the ladies prove coy and dance
of another girl

off

together leaving

him alone.

The effect of the whole series
was gay and very lovely, although
the parody on the behavior of
a previous era. was not as sharp
as it could have been.

The second set. done to “Songs”
by

Debussy,

"The

Songs

was

inspired by

of Innocence” and

"Songs of Experience” by William Blake. The first part represented innocence and was por
traced by three women in floaty

white dresses who traveled

in

quick running steps, creating a

UB Artists on TV
The CBS-TV program “Camera
Three” will present a musical
performance featuring the artistsin-residence of the I B Center
of the Creative and Performing
Arts April 24 on Channel 4 at
11 am
Creative
Associate
Michael
Sahl's composition "For Clarinet

and Percussion" will make its
world premiere on the program.
According to Radio-Television
Liaison Director Daniel Rose.
"For Clarinet and Percussion”
was written to highlight the talents of percussionist Jan Williams and clarinetist Sherman
Friedland

"Aeolian Harp," a piece written in 1923 by Henry Cowell,
will be performed by Mr. Sahl
inside an opened grand piano.
"Canary," from the suite "Six
Pieces from Kettledrums.” Cho
ros No. Two", and Quatro Episodi" will be performed.
Mr. Allen Sapp. Chairman of
the UB Music Department and codirector of the Center, will dis
cuss the new music form with
program host James Macandrew
following the performances.

PIZZA
TF 3-1344

windy, ethereal effect. The lighting was dim and vague and the
music mild. The second was more
a dance of "experience” performed by three men. The stark spotlights illuminated harsh leaps
and heavy landings and hyperflexed limbs. Miss Anthony made
use of all the dimensions of
space at her disposal in balanced
proportion. She had men moving
in prone position on the stage,
women reaching, leaps, runs,
turns, over the whole available
area. The nature theme was emphasized by natural clinging costumes and bare feet

Last week'S’ election of InterResidence Council (IRC) officers
has been challenged and the entire election was declared null
and void by the Student Judiciary
Elections Court last Monday.
Larry Pivnick, a presidential
candidate had contested the election of Joel Feinman as President on the grounds that he
had received partisan support
from Mr. Gary Roberts, 1965-66
IRC President, Mr. Pivnick had
questioned the entire election,
charging that the election rules
were unclear.

“Threnody,” the final piece was
based on the Synge play, Riders
to the Sea, the story of a mother
Mr. Roberts said that he would
who hail lost one son at sea and
assume “full responsibility for
was reluctant to send another the operation of the IRC elecout. Mary Anthony was moving tion.” According to Mr. Pivnick,
as the mother. She portrayed her “As administrator of the elecforboding of the hungry sea and
tion, Mr. Roberts should have
then her grief at the loss of her
maintained an impartial position
who
son
drowns convincingly in in regard to all candidates.” Mr.
a rolling stage agony. The setting
Roberts had issued a signed stateincluded a fish net hanging and ment to the residents, affirming
boat ropes; the music was rehis active support of Mr. Feinminiscent of impending storm at
man’s candidacy.
sea and fear. The women represented life: they sent the men
Mr. Pivnick asserted that the
off dancing; they were young
rules for the election were not
and could not be overcome. The made to apply to all specifics
men, although joyous on land, and that there are no rules for
realized the seriousness of their
the conduct of the election adbattle with the sea and the fight ministrator.
the impending
they faced —
death. After the death is disThe Student Judiciary Eleccovered, the mother disbelieves
tions Court ruled: “Whereas the
it and has an illusion of a party
functions, procedures, and poliwhere her sons and daughters
cies of the Elections Committee
were happy but in reality she were not established in writing,
fell with the townspeople nothing either in the IRC Constitution
but anger and despair.
or in a formalized set of rules of

The overall feeling of the program was one of synthesis. Fine

choreography, good themes, and
dancers, added techincally to

broader effects. The unifications
of heaven and earth, and completeness of circles seemed to
be prominent themes. The pulling up from the stage and a
pulling down from the ceiling,
the circle of six people acting
in a unit, and turns in circles
created a “wholeness in space.”

!

procedure, prior to the campaign
and were not made available to
all interested parties; and
“Whereas impartiality should
always be maintained by persons
charged with the responsibility
of the supervision of the elec-

tion process;
"It is the opinion of this court
that the entire election of the
IRC of April 14 and 15, 1966 is

OFFICIAL BULLETIN

The Official Bulletin is an authorized publication of the State
University of New York at Buffalo, for which the SPECTRUM
assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in
TYPEWRITTEN
form to 114
Hayes Hall, attention Mrs. Fischer, before 2:00 p.m. the Friday
prior to the week of publication.
Student organization notices are
not accepted for publication.
GENERAL NOTICES
Advance registration schedule
for day students taking Millard
Fillmore College Summer Eve-

ning Courses)—students currently registered in any day school
division may pre-register for Millard Fillmore College 1966 summer evening courses during the
week of April 25-28 (Monday
through Thursday) only. Registration materials will be issued
from 9 a m. to noon, and collected
from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.. at the Mil-

lard Fillmore College Reception
Center. 1777 Hayes Hall. Day students may pick up and return ad
vance registration materials at
their convenience during the specified hours on any of the four
days. All courses, regardless of
course number or level, arc open
to day students who have the
standard prerequisites, subject
only to the usual limitations in
class size in certain courses.
Day students who wish to take
summer evening classes, but who
do not register in advance, must
attend the regular registration
for 1966 summer evening courses
which will be held in Clark Gymnasium on Thursday. June 2, from

6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.
University College students
(except those on strict academic
probation) the remaining dates to
pre register are as follows:
April 25 through April 29
W, D
B, F
May 2 through May 6
—

—

—

PLACEMENT

ANNOUNCEMENTS
The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) will interview
candidates on April 25 and 26

for positions in UNESCO projects in the developing countries
of the Middle East, Southeast

Asia, the Far East, Africa and
Latin America. Interested candidates should inquire at the University Placement Office for further information.
PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS

April 22

Roche Laboratories

April 25

Wallkill Central Schools

April 26
Erie County

Welfare

Dept, of Social

April 27

New York Life Insurance Co.

CJIBoaJ

There will be a meeting of
the Photography Club today at
4 p m. in Norton 332. Tom Crowly will speak.

Modern Dance Club meets in
Clark Gym Tuesdays at 3 p.m.
Modern Dance Workshop meets
Thursdays at 7 p.m. in Clark

invalid and, therefore null and
void.

conducting elections.

“We recommend that a special
court be established by the IRC
to hear all cases of alleged violations of the election rules as
established by the IRC Election
Committee.”
The IRC Elections Committee,
under the direction of Mr. John
Derbay, has established a formal
set of rules and procedures for

Monday, April 25, from 11 to
12 a.m. and 4 to 6:30 p.m. in
Tower and Goodyear lobbies. Only the original candidates are
eligible to run.

New

elections

will be held

Mr. Roberts said, “The decision
will be appealed to the Student
Judiciary regardless of the outcome of the election on Monday.”

N.LF. and U.S. Viewed As Equally
Hostile by So. Vietnamese Students
WASHINGTON (CPS)
South
Vietnamese students view the
United States and the National
Liberation Front with equal hostility, according to a three-man
team from the U.S. National Student Association which has just
returned from a two-week trip
there.
The delegation was led by Philip Sherburne, NSA president, who
said that four themes seemed to
underlie all of the group’s conversations with South Vietnam—

ese students:
—“a general unwillingness to
be part of any coalition government or to participate in any negotiations with the National Lib-

eration front;

—“a high degree of dislike for
the United States;

-—“a strong feeling that the U.S.
has violated the national sovereignty of South Vietnam;
—“a great desire to have elections so that a national government with some legitimacy can
be formed.”
Sherburne said the delegation
felt the attitude toward the United States was based both on a
general resentment toward all
whites and the “real feeling of
uneasiness and sadness as to what
the American presence in Vietnam has meant for their country.” He cited the effect of large
numbers of American troops on
the nation's economy and the traditional social standards of the
country as two examples.
Continued support of the many
South Vietnamese military governments and a feeling among students that the Ky government
was U.S.-installed has led to the
sentiment that the U.S. has vio-

lated South Vietnam’s national
sovereignty, Sherburne said.
He said that South Vietnamese
students feel that policy for the
country is being made in Washington and not Saigon, and that
they point to numerous state-

ments of President Johnson and

other U.S. officials as their evidence.
Sherburne said that in addition to assessing the feeling of
South Vietnamese students, the
NSA delegation hoped to make arrangements for a suitable exchange visit by South Vietnamese
student leaders.
This exchange trip will not be
possible, Sherburne said, because
the students “we would want to
visit the U.S. won’t be able to
leave at this time.” He said that
the students felt that their own
activities at this point were so
important that they couldn’t afford to leave the country and that
the government was generally
unwilling to have any student
delegation leave now because of
the unstable political conditions.
Sherburne said the team's findings will be circulated in the
form of a report to the campuses.
The report will serve as the basis
for several magazine articles and
a report to government agencies,
he added.

He said the team expects to
make a report to the government
outlining where South Vietnamese students feel U.S. policy has
fallen short and making appropriate suggestions.
Sherburne
suggested that NSA and several
government agencies may discuss
possible projects in South Vietnam, especially in community development.

Schizophrenic And Normal Blood
Difference Sought By UB Team
The possibility that there is
a difference between the blood
of schizophrenics and that of
normal people is under investigation by a UB research team.
Dr. Benjamin E. Sanders, associate professor of biochemistry-

in the School of Medicine and
project director, said that the
team trains male rats to climb
a five-foot rope to get food. The
fastest rats are given injections
of blood plasma or isolated parts
of the plasma from either healthy
people or schizophrenics and are
then timed again, he explained.
Earlier studies conducted elsewhere recorded that rats injected with the plasma from schizophrenics took twice as long to
climb the rope as those injected with “normal” plasma.
Dr. Sanders noted that these
results are not conclusive, as
"our own tests have not confirmed the findings of other investigators." He commented, "the
UB team has not been able to
show a significant difference between the effect of the plasma
from normal donors and schizophrenic donors.”
The findings by the team may
be due to various factors, such
as medication used by schizo-

phrenics and other variables, Dr.
Sanders mentioned.
The research is being conducted under a five-year grant from

the National Institute of Health.

Engineering Students
And Faculty Compete
The Industrial Engineering undergraduate students have challenged the faculty of the Industrial Engineering Department to
compete in an IBM Management

Decision Game.

The Junior class, Senior class,
and faculty will comprise three

independent, competitive teams
(companies).
The game is a computerized
simulation of an economic environment in which the companies
must make decisions regarding
allocating of funds and business
strategy. The goals of each team
will be to develop a long-range

operation plan.

Winners will be announced at
Annual Senior Recognition
Day. April 26
the

�Friddyf April 22J1966

‘

’

SPICTIOM”

Wmmt EM Sherman
Because his film will receive
the wide showing it rightfully
deserves, Pier Paolo Pasolini will
no longer be the most underrated
of contemporary directors. That
distinction now falls on Yasujiro
Ozu. Perhaps now that The Gospel According to St. Matthew has
catapulted Pasolini into the public eye, hjs earlier films will be
shown again, and American audiences will be more appreciative
of Aecatone this time around.

,

Pasolini was the first Italian
director to break away from the
dead-end of neo-realism which
was the great strength, and, at
the same time, the great limitation of the Italian cinema from
1950 to 1960. Before 1960, only
two other film makers recognized
Pasolini for the cinematic master
he was—Jean Luc Godard, who
came to Italy to visit with him;
and Ermanno Olmi, who worked
with him for a time. A decade
before L'Aventura, Pasolini accomplished the cinematic purity
for which Antonioni has received
the credit. While Pasolini worked
quietly in obscurity, Antonioni
was producing garbage like Cronaca di on Amore and Signora
Senza Camel ie.
»

*

*

The photography and the
choice of music for the film are
superb. The shot of Christ walking across the water is reminiscent of Abel Gance’s Napoleon;
the early films of Jean Renoir,

La Bete Humaine

in particular:
and the dream/wish fulfillment
scenes in the films of Jean Vigo.
Musical selections include excerpts from Bach, Mozart, Webern, and Odetta singing Sometimes I Feel Like A Motherless
■

Child.

The film is, of course, devout.
be, simultaneously, tinged with irony? Is it per

But mightn’t it

verse or wrongheaded to suggest
that The Gospel According to St.
Matthew is a portrait by Pasolini
of Christ as homosexual? Are the
visions of Christ as presented by
Pasolini—especially the final one

on the cross—the delusions and

hallucinations of a madman? And
would not Pasolini claim that
Christ is immortal precisely because he was mad? Mary, mother
of Jesus, is played by Pasolini’s
own mother. The "narrator’' of
the film never lets the viewer
forget that it is a film within a
film. Can The Word transcend
the celluloid?
Whatever one’s “interpretation”
of the film may be, one clear
fact emerges: The Gospel According to St. Matthew is the only
film about the life of Jesus completely without any trace of sham.
In its simplistic narrative beauty,
it is almost like a tone poem. “A
masterpiece to be seen and seen
again,” say the publicists. For
once, they have got it just about

year.

Bonnie Burke of Alpha Gamthe 1966-67
Greek Panhellenic Scholarship
Award. Correction to last Friday’s Spectrum; Cynthia Oster
is not a member of Alpha Comma Delta, (in reference to winner of drawing.)
ma Delta received

The pledges of Alpha Kappa
Psi will hold a picnic for the
brothers and their dates tomorrow at Akron Park. Sunday, April
24, the pledges will hold a car
wash in the Tower Parking Lot
from 12 to 6 p.m.
Alpha Phi Delta will hold its
forty-fifth annual alumni dinner
dance Saturday at the Charter

House Hotel.
Jean Hoffman, of Chi Omega
the second highest
average of the fall pledge class.
The Social Science Award was
given to honor a senior girl for
her outstanding achievement in
both scholarship and activities.
The officers of the spring pledge
class are: Judy Hart, President;
Jane Moir, Vice-President; Pat
Galante, Secretary; Jessie Newlove, Treasurer.

obtained

Coral Balducci was Queen of
Gamma bhi's Sweetheart Dance.
Tomorrow night, the pledges will
hold a party for the brothers,
at Bosela’s Restaurant on Cleveland Drive at 8:30. The Seventh
Annual Greek Olympiad will be
held at Rotary Field at 1p.m.
°n Sunday.
Kappa Psi will hold

its an
formal dinner dance to
morrow at the Treadway Inn.

nual

Phi Kappa Psi will hold a beer
Party tomorrow honoring its base-

hall team. TKE donated the beer
after losing to Phi Kappa Psi.
The pledges of Pi" Lambda Tao
will sponsor a Clip at Roy Potato's apartment. Tomorrow,

Columbia University chemist
Dr. Gilbert Stork will discuss
“Recent Advances in Synthetic
Organic Chemistry" during the
annual Foster Lectures sponsored
by the UB Chemistry' Department
April 25-29 in 70 Acheson Hall

Dr. Stork is chairman-elect of
the Division of Organic Chemistry, American Chemistry Society
and has served on the editorial
boards of Tetrahedron and the
Journal of Organic Chemistry.

He is also a member of the
advisory board of the Petroleum

Research Fund and has served in
consulting capacities for the Na
tional Science Foundation and
the National Research Council.
Dr. Stork received an award
from the American Chemical Society, The Award in Pure Chemistry, the Baekeland Medal of the
North Jersey ACS Section, the
Harrison Howe Award, and the
E.C. Franklin Award from Stanford University. He was a Guggenheim Fellow in 1959.

The schedule of Dr. Stork’s
lectures is;
April 25—“Enolate Generation

April 27—“Diels-A 1 d e r Reactions with Unsymmetrical Systerns.”
April 28—“The Isoxazole Route

April 26—“Intramolecular Reduction and Hydration of Acetyl-

,0

and Alkylation."

enic Ketones."

Polycyclic Systems,
April 29—"Ncs Syntheses of
Alieyclic Systems."

Skanks Defeated on 'KB'
Sigma Alpha Mu (SAM) beat
the Skanks 50 to 40 in the "Championship Trivia" contest broadcast
last Monday on WKBW-TV.
SAM received a loving cup and
$100 check to be presented to
the C.C. Furnas Scholarship Fund.
The defeated Skanks were pre-

Craft Center Exhibit

The Creative Craft Center will
present a staff exhibit from 8
p.m. to 10 p.m. daily and 1 p.m,
to 8 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays.

Pottery, copper enameling, silver engraving and construction,
wood work, oil paintings, and
pen drawings will be displayed.

sented with a consolation prize
of a submarine sandwich. Each
Skank also received one white
7.35x14 tire, donated by Don Al-

len.

Robert Levitt, Steven H. Sun-

shine, Barry A. Gutterman and

Daniel Alterman respresented
SAM The Skanks are Leon Lewis,

David Bergen, Francine Fischbein
and Sebastian Dangerfield,

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there will be a Drive-in Party.
Ralph Roister has been elected
Historian to replace Paul Lang
who is leaving.
Sharon Nemet of Sigma Delta
Tau obtained the highest scholastic average of the fall pledges.
The annual closing affair will
be held at the Lord Amherst
Motor Inn tomorrow. There will
be a cocktail party before and
a traditional candle-lighting ceremony after dinner.

Lois Hcssinger of Sigma Kappa
Phi obtained the highest scholastic average among senior sorority
women at the Scholarship Tea
last Sunday. The sorority and the
pledge class were honored for
outstanding academic achievement. A mother-daughter weekend will be held this weekend.

Other travelers checks
are every bit as good as
First National City Banks

Applications for the Theta Chi
Trike Grand Prix should be turned in as soon as possible.
Theta Chi sorority is selling
ball point pens and peanuts in
Norton, both for 20c.
Tau Kappa Epsilon will hold
a “Swingin’ Spring" blast at Carpenter’s Hall from 8:30 tonight.

The “Uncalled Four” and the
“Rockin’ Paramounts” will be
playing.

—ISRAEL—
A table will be set up
in Norton Lobby Monday
and Tuesday to solicit
free literature and information on opportunities for study, work and
travel in Israel. Anyone
who has been to Israel
and wishes to help at the
table, call 831-3983 or
831-3887.

THE SPECTRUM
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As Part of the Annual Foster Lectures
at 4:15 p.m.

GREEK NOTES

Alpha Epsilon Pi's
annual
pledge party will be held tomorrow night outside of Salamanca.
AEPi won the campus volley ball
championship for the 3rd straight

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By CLARENCE PANTO
EAST LANSING, Mich. (CPS)—
Mcihigan State University last

of the Central Intelligence Agency infiltrated an MSU aid mission in South Vietnam, but school
officials said the five were fired
as soon as their true identity was
learned. MSU dropped the’ program shortly thereafter.
The story was revealed last
week by Ramparts, a liberal,
Catholic, Calif.-based monthly.
The magazine charged that the
MSU project served as a front for
the CIA mission and thereby violated the 1954 Geneva agreements, whch ended the war between France and nationalist Viet
Minh forces.
The program, which was fin
anced by the U.S. government,
cost American taxpayers $25 million, the Ramparts article said.
An MSU spokesman said a figure
of $10 million was closer to the
truth.

The article charged that the
MSU mission helped train a militia for the regime of Premier
Ngo Dinh Diem and financed
guns and ammunitions for Diem’s
civil guard. MSU said the school
trained Diem’s police force only
and set up a civil service program for his government.
“CTA gents were hidden within the ranks of the MSU professors in the Vietnam project,”
the Ramparts article charged.
“The agents’ instructions were to
engage in counter espionage and
counter intelligence.”
Ramparts said Michigan State’s
project showed “the decay of
traditional academic principles
found in the modern university
on the make.”

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ST. LOUIS (CPS)—While fra
ternity discrimination continues
to occupy most of the headlines,
more basic questions concerning
the purpose and future of the
Greek system are being raised
on different campuses across the
country.

A plan to change rushing procedures at Washington University
here has refocused attention to
this point. The administration has
told fraternities they will no longer be able to conduct rush at the
beginning of each semester because of a new freshman orientation program.
Although seemingly a minor
problem—rush is conducted at

many different times of the year
on different campuses—the action
has contributed to “a great deal
of fear and anxiety among fraternities about their future here,”

according to one observer. Many
Greeks feel this is part of a
general plan to eliminate them.
One administration map for the
campus in 1980 apparently shows
classroom buildings where the
fraternity houses are now.
Washington University’s chancellor, Thomas Eliot, is seeking
to raise academic standards (a
large fund drive is imminent); he
allegedly believes the campus academic climate can be improved
by strengthening the dormitory

The opinion also noted the case
of William Worthy who went to
Cuba without any passport in
1961. He won a Circuit Court of
Appeals verdict holding that the
prohibition against entering Cuba

Summer j
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*

The decision handed down by
Chief Judge Joseph C. Zavatt set
free three men indicted for organizing a trip to Cuba by 58
students in 1963. despite a State
Department ban on travel to Cuba and a specific order prohibiting the trip.
The defendants were Lee Levi
I.aub, 27. Stefan Martinet. 26,
and Anatole Schlosscr. 28, all of
New York Most of those oil the
trip were students.

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travel of American citizens who
hold a valid passport.

In his decision Judge Zavatt
noted that this was the first time
the ll.S. government had proseeuted citizens of the United States
for having left the country with
valid passports, visited a forbidden area, and then returned home.
“The court finds that Laub and
Martinet departed from and entered the United States bearing
valid passports within the meaning of 'depart', and ‘enter’, and
'valid passport'." the 81 page decision said. Laub and Martinet
'were on the trip: Schlosser only
helped organize it.

"Although they and Schlosser
agreed among themselves to induce others to do likewise, the
agreement and acts do not constitute a crime. If. as the court
concludes, there is a gap in the
law. the right and duty, if any, to
will it evolves upon the Legislative. not the Executive or Judicial. branch of the government,"
the ruling said.

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"If Congress intended to prohibit travel to prescribed areas as
well as prohibit departure and
entry without passports, one may
reasonably wonder why it did
not expressly provide for that,”
the judge wrote.

construction and equipment design.

Dr. Ralph H. Smuckler, acting
dean of MSU’s international pro-

grams, denied the magazine’s al-

legations before MSU officially
acknowledged that the information in the article was correct.

Changes Seen In Fraternity System

In a
NEW YORK (CPS)
ruling that may affect several
cases now in court, a United States
Distirct judge in ISrooklyn declared last week that the State
Department could not restrict the
—

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Five C.I.A. Agents Infiltrate M.S.U. Mission In South Vietnam
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SPECTRUM

PACE TWELVE

was unconstitutional.

Calendar
April 22-26

system at the expense of fraternities.
An anti-intellectual character
is being charged to fraternities
in other places. A faculty committee at Amherst College came
out with a report last fall which
said in part:
“Few of the fraternities have
any consistent, frequent institu-

tional forms beyond the ‘faculty
cocktail party’ for bringing together work and social life. Even
fewer still have significant programs of independent activities
for exercising the creative, literary, artistic, or intellectual abilities of their members. At least
one fraternity is seen by some
of its members as a happy refuge
from the intellectual, civil, and
moral expectations of the College
and general society. Too often
the exercise of responsibility is
confined to housekeeping, perpetuating the institution through
rushing, arranging for parties,
and defending the fraternity
against a 11 a c k in the student
newspaper . .
Dean of Men William G. Long
of the University of North Carolina has mixed feelings about
fraternities, doesn’t know whether they will survive, and acknowledges that the faculty is becoming
negatively disposed towards them.

And in a now well-known statement, University of California so-

ciologist John F. Scott predicted
last fall that sororities face extinction He contended that they
are too rigidly structured to cope
with today’s highly competitive
campus society.

Chancellor Eliot, however, was
not at all dogmatic in a meeting
with farternity leaders at Washington. He

said that the adminis-

Exhibit: Arts and Crafts Shop,
all day, Norton 231, through May

Meeting; Millard Fillmore College, 4 to 6:30 p.m.. Norton 233.
Saturday 23

Fiesta: International Club, 7:30

p.m. to 1:30 a m., Fillmore Room.
Monte Carlo Night: Tower Residence Hall, 8:30 p.m. to 12:30
am.
Concert; Request night, Meyer
conducting, Kleinhans Music Hall,
Sunday

24

Folk Dancing: 7 to 11 p.m
Norton 344.
Concert: Evenings for New
Music, Albright-Knox Art Gallery,
8:30 p.m.
Monday 25

Foster Lecture: Department of
4:15 p.m., Acheson

Chemistry,

Hall.
Tuesday 26
Varsity Tennis: UB vs. Rochester.
Foster Lecture: Department of
4:15 p.m., Acheson
Hall.

Chemistry,

Lecture: "Industrial Relations'
Professor R. Marshall, 2 p.m,
Norton 234.

ope n-minded

Greeks, acknowledgsame time, that many
members of the faculty were
more hostile.

The chancellor expressed con-

cern over the rivalry between
Greeks and independents on the

campus, terming it potentially
unhealthy. He said that the system would have to harmonize its
activities more with the rest of

the campus.
At least one fraternity man
agreed. Writing in the student
newspaper, Dennis Brophy indicated he thought the system was
being presented with an opportunity for self-analysis.
“For years individual adminisand faculty members have
done little to make us feel wanted,’’ he wrote. ‘'But have we really done all we could to make
ourselves a part of the larger
community? Have we really encouraged each other to take advantage of all the opportunities
on campus to grow as persons—or have we been busy justifying
ourselves by licking Easter Seals
during Hell Week and compiling

trators

GPA’s?

“We say there is more to school
than academics . . But isn’t there
more to fraternities than high
pressure selling of an ‘image’ to
freshmen who often don’t know
what they want, or how to get it?
Isn’t there something more to a
fraternity than the Sweetheart’s
.

Song and a pledge pin?
“If there is, then why don’t
we spend more time looking for
a better approach and defined
set of goals, rather than getting
ulcers trying to save a sacred
cow that quite frankly is starting
to stink up the place?”

Husband-Seeking Coeds Are
In Wrong Place Says Click
,

(ACP) —There’s a widespread
belief on college campuses that
many women students are in
college for one reason
to find
a husband.
According to a study made by
Paul C. Click, author of “American Families," marriage-minded
coeds are in the wrong place.
Click’s statistics show that although! the chances of marriage
for the college-educated female
are better than they were in
1940, chances are still better for
the woman with only a high
school education
The older a man is when he
marries, the study indicates, the
greater age difference between
bride and'groom.
Since the male usually marries
a younger female, he has a wide
market while in college. Since a
woman usually marries up in
age, however, her market grows
smaller.
As a rule, men marry womep
of the same or lower level of
education. In the woman’s case,
the situation is reversed. Also,
the higher the education level,
the greater the importance of
men having higher levels of
education than womqn.
These findings together lead
to this conclusion: extended education and increased age place
—

Friday 22

tration remained
concerning
ing, at the

a woman in a marriage market

in which the number of available older males with as much
or more education is limited.
Because the man cpn marry
down in age and education, the
educated woman faces increased
competition by younger apd less

educated women for the available unmarried men.
The unmarried man with a
high level of education is in the
best position for mate selection.
The woman with the same age
and education, however, is very
limited in her choice.
The study also revealed that in
three-fourths of all marriages,
the bride is younger than the
groom. The bride is older than
the groom in only one seventh
of all marriages.
All these figures seem to indicate that a woman is more likely
to receive a Mrs. degree upon
graduation from high school than
upon graduation from college.

Chancellor Furnas

Presents Degrees

Chancellor Furnas will present
degrees and certificates to approximately 2,000 graduates at
the Spring Commencement Exercises Sunday, May 29, in Memorial
Auditorium at 3 p.m.
Dr. Furnas will deliver his final
commencement address as President before his retirement August 31.

Each student will be allowed
four tickets from the dean of
the school from which they are
graduating.
The Very Rev. Monsignor Leo
E. Hammerl, Superintendent of

the Diocese of Buffalo Schools,
will deliver the invocation and
benediction.

�Friday, April 22, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE THIRTEEN

Statistics For Coming Year Indicate
State Institution Enrollment Increase
WASHINGTON (CPS)
State
and land-grant institutions- report
admission requests are running
10 per cent ahead of last year
and expect to enroll some 20,000
jrrore freshmen this fall.
—

institutions, however,
are sending out less acceptances
and plan to have smaller freshman classes than last year.
Private

instiutions was reported in the
West. The smallest increase came
in the Northeast, with Northeastern institutions less able to accommodate their applicants. Some
75,922 applications were received
for only 23,642 places.

—

These are two trends already
evident about this fall’s enrollment situation.

A survey of selected private and
public institutions by Editorial
Projects for Education showed
that Stanford, Northwestern, New
York University, Johns Hopkins,
Princeton, University of Chicago
and Dartmouth have received
more freshman applications for
next fall than for last but still
have decreased their invitations.
Brown, Harvard, MIT and Swarthmore have received fewer applications this year.
One reason for the reduced
number of acceptances is that
many found their expectations
of last year’s freshman class
size were inaccurate; they ended
up with more students than they
could accommodate. Ivy League
institutions have reported that
another reason they have less
room for freshmen is because
less upperclassmen are leaving
school than is normal out of fear
for the draft, the New York Times
has reported.

This situation helps to explain
several admissions deans
said, the eight Ivy League institutions are filling 9,165 places
for the class of 1970, about 75
fewer than were available last
why,

year.

yet been reached.

feseiiffioud
HILLEL

invited to attend. Reservations
for the Annual Awards Banquet
(April 27 at 6:30 p.m. at the La
Hacienda
3734 Sheridan Drive)
are $3.50 per person and may be
obtained at Newman Hall,

Hillel will sponsor a Sabbath
Service this evening at 7:45 p.m.
in the Hillel House, with Arthur
Wayne Burke speaking on “Israel
As I See It.” The film No Exit
based on Sartre’s play will be
shown on Sunday, April 24 at
7:30 p.m, in the Hillel House.
Admission to the, movie is free.

—

League

applications

were

down this year, possibly because
high school students are becoming more sophisticated in their
attempts to enter college and are
not applying at institutions where
their chances are slim.
Anchoring the entire admissions picture is an Office of Education projection that fewer
first-time students would enroll
this fall than last. The Office of
Education has predicted that the

Coletta Klug Talks at Annual
Panhellenic Scholarship Tea

INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN

FELLOWSHIP

The Panhellenic Council held
its annual scholarship tea April
17 in the Haas Lounge, Nursing
Department instructor Miss Coletta Klug was the guest speaker.
Ping carnations were presented to the sorority women who
attained a dean's list average
last semester.
Miss Dorothy Haas presented
Bonnie Burke of Alpha Gamma
Delta with the Greek Panhellenic
Scholarship Award for scholastic achievement. It was announced that Sigma Delta Tau pledge
Sharon Nemet attained the high-

The film To Every Creature will
be featured tonight at 7:30 p.m.
in Room 234 at which time election of next year’s officers will
be held. Those taking part in
IVCF’s Community Aid Corp project (Saturday, April 23) must be
at the Child Care Center ready
to paint at 9 a.m, Mr. Clyde Tyson, history professor from Niagara Community College, will
hold a lecture-discussion on “God
in History”, on Thursday, April

28, at 7 p.m. in Norton’s second
floor lounge. Reservations for
the Fellowship Supper must be
made by April 30, by signing the
list in the CRO office.

Dr. Richard E. Walton, Professor
of Administrative Sciences at
Purdue University discusses "The
Behavioral Approach to Research
in Labor Negotiations"

NEWMAN
Newman is sponsoring a social

tonight at 8 p.m. at Newman Hall;

Photo by Anthony

A

/

VA

—

Private institutions also noted
that the percentage of applications had lessened. Last year,
Dartmouth had 11.9 per cent
more applications than in 196364; this year it had 4.8 per cent
fewer applications than in 196465.
The largest increase in appli-

cations for state and

land-grant

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Freeport Lloyd s Jewelers Inc.
Glens Falls M. C. Scoville Jwlr.
Hempstead Ben Bruck Jwlrs.
Herkimer Winstons Jewelers
Huntington Emsohn Jewelers
•

I

f

■

“

-

Wc

• Mayfair Jewelers Inc
Sherburne Turner Jewelry Store

Scotia

■

I

I

NEW YORK 14217

Grauwrt

■ E. A. Pfister, Inc.
Canandaigua L. M. Campbell

/

/

f

The U.S. Census Bureau estim-

—

THE SPECTRUM

-

ates that there are approximately
221,000 fewer 18-year-olds this
year than last. Also, there are

Last year, when the number of
18-year-olds in the country was
3.7 million
approximately one
million more than in 1964
and
when the number of freshmen in
the nation’s colleges and universities increased by more than
218,000, applications at state and
land-grant institutions increased
by 34 per cent. This year’s increase is only 10 per cent.

-

•

\

fewer college freshmen and high
school graduates.

Former President of the Panhcllenic Council Cind Perl announced the new Council officers:
President. Christa Ulbricht; First
Vice - President, Elaine Greenberg; Second Vice President,
Claudia Elliott; Secretary, Pat
Miller; Treasurer, Janet Leslie.

Sayville

NEW YORK

’

est average over seven semesters.

See Dream Diamond Rings only at these Authorized ArtCarved Jewelers

hold a diamond so delicately,
it’s almost frightening.

year.

The projection for 1965 was
1.445.000 students, while 1,452,926 actually enrolled. The figure
for next fall is 1,430,000. Of this,
964.000 will enroll in public institutions while the private institutions expect to handle 466,000 students.

Walluk

honored for attaining the high-

est average.
The pledge class of Sigma
Kappa Phi achieved the highest
pledge class average and the
sorority received the Rose Bowl
Scholarship Award for the highest overall average. Sigma Kappa
Phi member Lois Hessingcr was

Art Carved settings

impact of the post-World War II
baby boom enrollment will begin

to level off this

Jan populates the Fillmore Room
Photo by Almn Gruber

admission is free and everyone is

The BPE survey also noted that
Ivy

The picture of admissions at
public institutions, however, is
still cloudy because most continue to accept applications on into
the summer and the final application deadline at most has not

Ithaca Cramers Jewelers
Jamestown Vincent s Jwlrs. Inc.
Johnson C| ty- Messner s Jwlry.
Little Falls- George J. Morotti
Massena Peets Jewelers
Middletown • R. Edgar Clarks, Inc.
Middletown F. D. Kernochan,
nc
,
.
v
s Jewelers
Harmk
Ossining
Bros.
Schneider Bros.
Plattsburgh Stoughton s Jwlrs
Potsdam Carey’s Jewelery Store
Poughkeepsie David Jewelry
Store
Jewelry Store
Riverhead Kaller's
.
.
.
,
Rome ; Infusino s Jewelers &amp;
-

J

_

■

■

■

-

_

,

.

,

&amp;

whlte

,Son

D
plains

,

D
Bramley

,
&amp;

Co.. Inc
-

NEW YORK CITY
Brooklyn Louis Amols Sons, Inc.
Brooklyn Nilsen's Jewelers
Brooklyn B. Senter Inc.
Brooklyn Swiss Jewelry Center
l^c
■

■
■

■

Bronx Bick Co. Jewelers

Long

Cit

|s|and

charles

Anagnos

Manhattan Clive Jewelers Inc.
Manhattan Dial Jewelers Inc.
Manhattan Dyckman Time Shop
Manhattan - Maurice L. (tester
Jewelers Inc
Manhattan Maryo Inc (Tower
Jewelers)

■

Manhattan Schwartz Bros.
Manhattan Skolnick Inc.
Manhattan - Sterns Jewelers
Manhattan Silver’s Jewelry Store
Manhattan Terada Co., Inc
Manhattan Morris Weigler
Manhattan Wexler, M. &amp; Sons
Queens Village - Jaeger Jewelers

■
■

Ridgewood - Isaacs
Ridgewood ■ Frederick Stadtmuller
staten Island (Great Kills) •

Silversmiths
Paul’s Jewelers
Sag Harbor Fritfs Jewelry Store staten Island (Port Richmond)
Saratoga Springs - Paul E. Eddy
Russell-Reed. Inc.

�CT R

PAGE FOURTEEN

oCetterA

to

the Editor

(Cont

'd

from

Pfr

5)

Peace Corps Exam Monday

Callan’s Argument Is Weak
TO

THE EDITOR

Mr. Callan, in his column of
19, persists in confusing
the concept of human rights and
freedoms with his medieval outlook towards individual responsibility. He says that the rights
of the unborn child and of society
are protected when mothers are
deprived of the right to “take
knives and kill their children,"
and equates the protection supplied by law enforcement bodies
to all citizens. However, his argument is weak in several places.
First, we must assume that—the
life of the mother is at least as
important as that of the child,
and while the birth might not
lead to the death of the mother,
it might (if the child is illegitimate) figuratively cause the
mother to die by bringing untold
degradation into her life, causing
loss of family, friends, job, as
well as greatly reducing her opportunities for future marriage.
April

The possibility also exists that
the pressures brought upon the
woman plus the personal guilt
feelings stimulated by outside
pressures will lead her to mental
instability, perhaps culminating
in insanity or suicide.

Because the conservatives are
in favor of government expenditures (and I assume that Mr.
Callan falls into this category),
then they should realize that by
prohibiting legalized abortion the
government is forced to spend
much more money than it should
for—orphanages and for personal
relief. The government is frequently forced to pay for the
hospital expenses as well as support the mother who is unable to
work because of her child. In
large but poor families, the last
unwanted child is often “the
straw which broke the camel’s
back," and the family is forced
to turn to the government for
additional revenue.

Last but not least, we must consider the fact that the U.S., likie
most of the world, is, or will
soon, feel the full effects of

overpopulation. Japan has proved to the world that an effective
abortion program can be run by
the government, and this is one
of the reasons why Japan today
has easily the highest standard
of living in Asia.

It must also be considered that
most abortions are not considered
murder in a legal sense, for they
generally take place before the
unborn child becomes a fetus, but
when it is an embryo (a child
before the fourth month of uterine development). Thus in law
cases involving an accident between a pregnant woman and an
outside party, the second party
is not pressed with charges of
murder if the embryo dies as a
result of the accident.
—Elliott Podwill

20 to 35?

SINGLE?

JOIN THE SWING TO

THE JET SET

FRIDAY, APRIL 22
SPECJAL GUESTS
NURSES OF BUFFALO GENERAL and
STUDENTS OF UB LAW SCHOOL

JET SET MIXER DANCES
9:30-1:30
2704 Main (near Amherst)

Every Friday Nile

Hallmark Manor

—

—

Athletics vs. SDS
TO THE EDITOR
Mr, Taylor, in your editorials
and Reflections' columns, you
have often spoken of UB as an

"educational factory” with knowledge being doled out as if everyone were on an assembly line.
You have also talked about the
ultimate destruction of our individuality as a result of this
evil bureaucratic factory which
is turning out a highly standardized product. Granted there is
some truth to the idea of UB (or
for that matter any other large
university) as an “educational
factory.” However, my differences with you center around the
means with which you propose to
eliminate these ends, not that
these evils do not exist to some
extent. It is here where your ideas
have been warped by the pseudoliberalism you profess.
More specifically, I am referring to your condemnation of
major intercollegiate athletics in
the Spectrum editorial of Febniary 4 and your negative attitude
general. That you advocate the

ultimate elimination of the above
cannot be denied.
I support the
tion, that both
legiate athletics
ternities are an

opposing contenmajor intercol-

and national fraintegral part of
any university. Without delving
into all of the many and varied

reasons why this is so, the most
significant comes to mind is the
simple fact that major intercollegiate athletics and national fraternities do more to stimulate interest and participation in activities and events at UB than any
other groups on campus, thereby
making a sizeable contribution
toward the elimination of your
so-called “educational factory."

Mr. Taylor, it seems to be an
almost hypocritical position to
assert that one of the ways to
rid UB of this educational production line is abolish two of the
interest groups which do most to
foster “school spirit.” While dogmatically maintaining this position you reveal your true lack
of insight into the real situation
at UB, as well as disqualifying
yourself from speaking for the
student body, a point which I
shall return to.
With regard to the Spectrum
editorial policy it is obvious to
most readers that you, Mr. Tay
lor, are using the most influen
publication on camlial s
pus as an outlet for your own
highly controversial ideas. I will
confine my criticism to one
grossly inaccurate assertion which
is stated or implied week after
week in your editorials. Mr.
Taylor, when you say ‘the students are a little tired of shelling
out to support teams . . .” as in
the previously mentioned edi-

torial, you are flagrantly abusing your right as editor by «ssuming that you speak lor the
student body. How you can make
the assumption that your opinions are congruent with those of
the student body, is completely
beyond comprehension. It is indeed a fact that you do not even
speak for your own editorial
board as evidenced by the opposing editorial in the Bull Psn
written by Sports Editor Steve
Shuelein. When was the last time
you called an editorial bboard
meeting to discuss current editorial board policy? Mr. Taylor,
it is an undeniable fact that the
editorials appearing in the Spectrum represent your views and
yours alone.

Mr. Taylor, a far greater majority of the student body on the
UB campus is composed of those
people who attend football games,
and belong to and associate with
national fraternities than those
who associate with S.D.S. It is
your privilege as editor of the

want in the editorials, but it is
not your right to pretend that
you speak for a majority, or even
a large minority of the student
body. Mr. Taylor, in the future
when you express your opinions
on the editorial page let it be
known that they are yours and
not those of the student body.

Alan Scholom

Descend From Your *Ivory Tower*
TO THE EDITOR

a Senior, I have always
read the Spectrum and I have
been frequently impressed by
many of the inciteful editorial
remarks made by Mr. Taylor, I
have respected your opinion, Mr.
Taylor, but after reading your
editorial comment concerning
the Greek System, I find that
I am unable to remain passive
and absorb your personal and unfounded prejudices simply because you are editor-in-chief. I
can only say that you have displayed your lack of "intellectual
objectivity” which I always felt
you valued when dealing with
subject in your editorials.
As

I do not feel that I have to
defend the Greek System to you.
but I would suggest that you descend from your "ivory tower

office . . .) and become
familiar with the system you
chose to label trivial. Why not
learn more about the system
you so unjustly and rashly attack? I have never seen you
meeting members of the Greek
System at the Tables. I also
missed you at the past Pan Hellenic Scholarship Teas honoring
Sorority women. Before calling
the Greek Organizations a system which “brutalizes or thwarts
the individuality of its adherents” or label it “an evil and
anti-intellectual
institution” I
suggest you review the academic
records of the Greek Members.
I would like to invite you to the
Penn Hellenic Scholarship Tea
on Sunday to see the individuals
who comprise the Greek System
as they are honored. You will
also have the opportunity to hear
the opinions of educators con(your

cerning
contribution of
the
Greek Woman to the University.
I am sorry you were unable to

see the faces of the children at

the Buffalo School for the Retarded when the Sisters of Sigma
Delta Tau (a large trivial club, in
your estimation) planned a party.
I also fell certain that the patients of the Veteran’s Hospital
enjoyed the perofrmance that the
Greek Members offered when
they sang the songs from Greek
Sing of this year.

1 have only touched on a few
events in the calendar for the
various Greek Organizations, Mr.
Taylor. If you regard philanthropic projects, scholarship and a
general enthusiasm for campus
events as trivial all I can say is
I feel you are the one who has
been sadly brutalized.
—Diane Phyllis Sezzen

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�Friday, April 22, 1966

Exhibit on the Function
Of a University Library
Is Part of Library Week
In the Library vestibule there
five cases that contain exhibits explaining the behind the
scene operation of a university
library. The exhibit, a part of
National Library Week activities,
demonstrates the selection, purchase, and preparation of books
before they go on the shelf. Pictures illustrate each step in the
are

process.

The second display focuses on
rare books. Its purpose is to acquaint the student with the acquisition and expansion of such a
collection. Thus it contains books
on the subject of rare books.
This past week there were two
films in Norton of the humanities series sponsored by the Library Association. According to
Curator Mr. Sy through these activities' it is hoped that the student will gain a mature appreciation of the Library as a center
for research and the furthering
of knowledge rather than a book
mausoleum.

Sally’s steady
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CORRECTION
The picture which appeared in last Tuesday’s
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from Pg. 16)

Urich reacted to seeing Dick Ashley for the first time, it
does little to detract from his importance to next year’s
team. A strong adherent of the passing game, Urich
has stationed Ashley at the
same split end position that
Snow held down. After the
first weeks of spring practice removed any suspicions
Urich might have had about the films being tampered with, the UB Athletic Department insured
Ashley’s hands at Lloyd’s
of London for a premium
comparable to those that
cover Charlie Gogolak’s
foot, Liberace’s fingers, and
Betty Grable’s legs. Well,
maybe close to those premiums anyway.
Urich has said, “1 can’t
say anything definite yet,
but if things work out the
way 1 ho P e - we '» KO with
nifif ASHLEY
acuicv
DICK
an offense of the N()tre
Dame variety." If this vision unfolds the way Urich
hopes, passes to Ashley should be the key to the new
offense.
Urich, however, doesn’t exactly consider Ashley another Snow yet. “He’s big, has excellent moves, and
real good hands,” says the Head Coach, “but he doesn’t
have real good speed.” With 17 receptions for seven
touchdowns and 349 yards as a sophomore last year,
however, it appears that the 6-2, 205-pounder can do
nothing but improve.

While there seems to be little doubt that Ashley
can catch, there is a question as to whom his pitching
mate will be. As spring training began, the tentative
depth chart showed Rick Wells and Nick Capuana as
the men to beat out for the quarterback position. At the
moment, neither of these men is contending for the job;
Wells is still hampered by the leg injuries suffered
against Richmond last fall and has been shifted to
halfback duty, while Capuana has been busy doubling
at tailback and defensive back.
The two men vying for the job now appear to be
the one-two signalcallers for last year’s Freshmen, Mick
Murthat and Dennis Mason. Murtha, a three-sport performer at Union-Endicott High School, has been steadily
improving during the Spring session.
Mason, a Buffalo product, was given about the
same odds of becoming starting quarterback as the No.
2 horse was of winning a race on the Mobil Red Horse
Derby this week. The Bishop Fallon alumnus, however,
came into prominence with a brilliant performance in
last Saturday’s squad scrimmage, completing 8 of 13
passes and running for a 34-yard touchdown.

In other developments, Urich is still considering
using certain players both on offense and defense. Captain Bill Taylor and Ted Gibbons, for instance, have
sparkled on both offense and defense this spring. “I
don’t know if they or any other player will go both
ways as yet,” Urich replied, “but if Gibbons and Taylor
are not only the bes tplayers at their offensive positions,
but also at certain defensive positions, then I would
rather go both ways with them than have them on the
bench part of the time, whlie an inferior player is in.
It’s too early to tell yet, however,”

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The indefatigable Urich and his staff, meanwhile,
have been working themselves to the bone. Not only is
an 8 a.m.-lO p.m. weekday routine, but most of the
weekend is occupied with high school recruiting, a
scrimmage and films. “I don’t count the hours we
work,” commented the Miami (Ohio) graduate, 1 “but
we only get Sunday afternoons off."

Start Now
by Calling

Urich also expressed satisfaction at the recruiting
program which “has been working out as well as we
had hoped.” Urich’s deep black eyes reflected resent-

RON HOLTZ
or

831-3610

(Cont'd
...

Urich said, “Mason had a real fine afternoon Sat-

The SPECTRUM

RAY VOLPE

bull pen

urday. He really responded well under pressure. I’d
still have to say Murtha has the inside track at this
point, however.”

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,

ment, however, at the loss of Grand Island phenom
Scott Herlan to Syracuse. Although the boy had committed himself to UB last month, Urich tried to shrug
off his loss as “one of those inevitable things” that happens in the college recruiting rat-race. “We’ve had eight
to fiffteen boys from Ohio, Michigan, Pennsylvania. New
England and New York here every Saturday, so there
should be a lot of keys in the next two weeks,” Urich
concluded emphatically.
And spring training is hardly three , weeks old. Whew!

�Friday, April 22, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIXTEEN

¥

X

� §!PIl(g!P!ai0M
—£==/

—

THE BULL PEN

Diamonditien Shell RIT
on

an error by Ron Leiser in the
fifth, but it was Ron’s great
stop of an eighth inning ground
ball which saved UB’s shutout
. . . Good pitching by Rutkowski,
Pirozzolo and Tim Uraskevitch
has given Coach Jim Peelle solid
depth behind his starting pitchers
Don Potwora and Ron McEwan
. . . Darkness halted the game after eight innings . . . UB will play
RIT once more this season in
Rochester.

by steve schuelein

Ashley Holds Key
To UB Grid Future
According to the calendar, September 17, the date
of UB’s football opener at Kent State, still looms a very
distant twenty weeks away. But according to the more
pragmatic calculations of Head Coach Doc Urich, only
five weeks—two more of spring practice and three of
the pre-season variety—remain before the former Notre
Dame assistant makes his debut as Bull mentor.
During this relatively brief span, Urich will have to
come to grips with such interesting details as the types
of offense and defense and the starting lineup he plans
to use. Having already witnessed three weeks of spring
drills, Urich testifies that they Ijave been very revealing
but a number of question marks still persist.
The UB coach said, “Naturally I was darn anxious
to begin spring drills to find out what I’d be working
with. So far I’d have to say I’m satisfied in some cases,
disappointed in others.”
With his usual frankness Urich continued, “Overall team speed must be improved.” After a moment’s
hesitation Urich pointed to the positive aspects of the
workouts by replying, “The boys have a good attitude.”
He singled out Dick Ashley, Captain Bill Taylor, Ted
Gibbons, Dan Sella, Tony Miceli, Nick Capuana and Jim
Barksdale for special praise.
Although Urich has not as yet committed himself to
any special offense for next fall, there is little doubt as
to what Plan A at the moment is.
Two years ago at Notre Dame, a pair of Californians
name&lt;nty&gt;hn Huarte and Jack Snow warmed the hearts
of miltfgBa of American football fans by lifting the Fighting Irish from the football scrap-heap to within two
minutes of an undefeated season.
After the rags-to-riches resurgence of the once almightijlrish, Ara Parsephian—the new South Bend
coach-iurms given more publicity than John Goldfarb
would ever have dreamed of.
It’s a well-known fact that Parsephian was given
most df the credit for making the Notre Dame machine
click. It’s a less-known fact that a 35-year-old line
coach fcy the name of Doc Urich transformed Snow into
a split ejid and then developed him into an All-American.
And without Snow’s sudden blossoming, the 1964 version of* Horatio Alger myth might have laid a big egg,
Ara oev*o Ara.
CfilpRrtnly the memories of Snow couldn’t have faded
too deeply into the recesses of Urich's mind. And when
the good doctor moved his black leather bag from South
Bend to this campus in March-—not knowing exactly
what to find—could you imagine the euphoric feeling
that must have enraptured him when he stumbled
through last fall’s UB films to discover a comparable
model of the Notre Dame end.
Picture a small, dark room with six men staring intently at a portable movie screen from their chairs. The
only noise comes from the whirring of a projector as a
dozen eyes are glued to the football films on the screen.
Suddenly Doc Urich, seated in the center of the
group, jumps up and screams, “Snow!!”
‘‘Take it easy, Doc,” comes the assuring reply from
Bill Dando, ‘‘I hear it snows all the time up here in
March.”
"No, no, no,” echoes the head coach, an actave lower with each negation. "On the screen, don’t you see?”
“Oh, that,” shrugs Jerry Ippoliti, “well, it’s sort of
a dirty screen.”
With his hands cupped over his eyes in sheer disbelief, Urich tries again, "Not outside. Not on the screen.
On the field
The field? interjects Bob Deming reminiscingly,
"We didn’t have any snow against Colgate—maybe this
80-hour week is beginning
Enough, enough,” shrieks Urich, “There's nothing
wrong with me. Now just look at those films. See that
guy with the "87” on his back, making those great
catches. Doesn’t he remind you a little of Snow?”
Oh. Ja-a-a-ack Snow.” chrip five voices in enlightened harmony.
Although this scene probably isn’t exactly the way
”

”

(Confd on Pg. 15)

Box Score:

DOUG LONG
By RICH BAUMGARTEN

The UB baseball team racked
up its third victory in three starts
at Clark Field Monday as the
Bulls shut out Rochester Institute
of Technology, 11-0. UB won this
one early as the Bulls scored three
runs in the second inning, and
then added eight more in a wild
■third inning which saw two RIT
pitchers give up five straight
walks with the bases loaded. All
■together the Bulls had 15 walks
combined with their ten hits to
overpower RIT, as the boys from
Rochester never did get going.
Doug Long and Ken Rutkowski
had the big sticks for UB. Long
continued his hot hitting with
three hits, while Rutkowski, who
had two doubles, also turned in
a fine pitching performance. Rutkowski pitched five innings of nohit ball, striking out eleven while
walking only two. Relief pitcher
Dick Pirozzolo, the big right-hander who also plays tackle on the
football team, took over in the
sixth inning and shut out RIT the
rest of the way. RIT’s Bill Cocco
and Don Serth ruined UB’s bid
for a no-hitter with base raps in
the seventh inning.

BASEBALL NOTES: UB’s string
of 23 errorless innings was broken

ab r h bi
Thompson 2b 4 0 0 0
Urquart ss
30 0 0
Rignel
0 0 0 0
Cocco cf
4 0 10
Serth c
4 0 10
Kreubel rf
20 00
Cross If
3 0 0 0
Finrler lb &lt;2 0 0 0
Holberfon 2b 2 0 0 0
Covless c
1 0 0 0
Bacon p
00 0 0
Zimmer p
2 00 0
Foster
1 000

The fencing tournament was
also held this week. The bouts

took place last night in Clark
Gym. The names of the winners
will also be published in next
week’s edition.

The track meet
the final
event on the intramural calendar
will be held Monday, April
25, at 4 p.m. All official intramural entry blanks must be sub-

....

UB Trackmen
At Brockport
The UB track team, after open-

ing its season against Colgate
at Hamilton on Wednesday, will
travel to Brockport tomorrow to
face the Golden Eagles.

(distances) and Gene Zastawrny
(hurdles) provide a powerful nucleus. Also expected to help out
are Jim Fix in the dashes, Dick
Kennedy in the pole vault and
Joe Waitword also in the pole
vault.

With the addition of basketball stars Art Walker (sprints)
and Bobby Thomas (high jump)
to the roster, the depth of the
strengthened
team has been
somewhat. 235-lb. football standout Ted Gibbons is also slated
to handle the shot put assignAll entries for today’s sports
ment at the end of football practrivia contest must be banded
tice.
to the sports desk of the SpecWith the arrival of more seatrum by Monday. Prizewinners
sonable weather, the team has of and answers to today’s quiz
been rounding rapidly into shape. will appear in next Friday’s paDistance-runners Dick Genau and per.
Bob Stephenson, hurler Larry
Nauham and weight-thrower Mel
1. What did Bobby Jones affecSpelman have been impressive tionately nickname his putter?
in workouts thus far.
2. Who quarterbacked Army
Nevertheless, the lack of depth
of the team could prove decisive during the heyday of Glenn Davis and Doc Blanchard?
against the likes of Ithaca, Cort3. What current major league
land and Brockport—schools that
don’t find it necessary to ask pitcher was called “The Tomato’’
students to come out for the by his former teammates?
4. Who was the only boxer to
team.
defeat Gene Tiinney?
Bob Boozer’s perennially power5. Who kicked the winning
ful Eagles anticipate another fine points
in the first professional
season. Depth seems to be Brockfootball championship?
port’s strongest point. Return6. Who played second base for
ing lettermen
Hal Rothman
the pennant-winning Philadelphia
(sprints), Gary Westerfield, John
Izzo (sprints), Fred Apgar, Jay “Whiz Kids”?
7. What horses won the first
Kearney (weights), Ron White
race of the season at Batavia
Downs and Fort Erie Jockey Club
this spring?
8. This San Francisco Giant
farmhand had a farm club
including such notables as Sargent Shriver
sprung up for
May 3. Reservations must be
him last year with the motto
by today in the intramural of“Is there really a
?”
fice.
9. What professional football
player is called the “Catawba

TRIVIA

Tennis Team
Wins Again
The UB tennis team ran its unbeaten string to three Tuesday,
defeating Gannon College, 8-1,
at the UB courts.

—

—

mitted

by today.

Events to be held are: 75-yard
dash, 100-yard dash, mile run
300-yard shuttle relay, 440-yard
shuttle relay, shot put, broad
jump, and high jump.
The intramural awards dinner
will be held in Norton Union on

ab r h bi

2 112
110 2
2 0 00
2 112
0 0 00
4 10 1
Grad c
0 00 0
RutkowskI p 3121
Wiser
00 0 0
Pirozzolo p
10 10
Long 2b
4 13 2
Pusateri cf
2 10 0
Gerlnger If 4 2 10
Shaw 1b
4 2 11
28 0 2 0
29 11 10 11
RIT
000 000 00- 0
Buffalo
038 000 Ox—11
Called, darkness.
E-Leiser. DP-RIT 2. Left-RIT 7,
UB 13.
2B —Rutkowski 2, Cocco.
IP H R ER BB SO
Bacon (L)
1*6 1
3 3 7 0
Zimmer
5Va 9
8
8
8 5
Rutkowski (W)
5 0
0 0 2 11
3 2 0 0 1 5
Pirozzolo

INTBAMUBALS

The volleyball playoffs for the
campus championship were held
this week, with the Joques, APD,
Sig Ep and AEPi, the champions
of their four respective leagues,
vying for the crown. Results of
the championship will be printed
in next Friday’s issue.

Leiser ss
Buchta 2b
Morelli of
Hansen rf
Raczka rf
Duprey c

—

—

Claw"?

10. Who were the two Seton
Hall stars indicted in the collegiate basketball scandals of
1961?
Name
The reason that this week’s
questions are so much easier
than those of last week is because the Spectrum hopes to receive entries with at least some
correct answers on them.
Last week
unhappy as we are
to announce it
we were unable to give away any prizes because none of the entry blanks
had any correct answers on them.
Better luck this time.
Last Friday’s answers:
L Clint Hartung 2. Crispus Attacks, Indianapolis 3. The Randolph Shuffle 4. Alphonse Halimi
5. Elmer Valo 6. Dickie Volo 7.
Bobby Clatterbuck 8. Maturity,
determination and the will to
win 9. Jerry Dorsch 10. Charlie
Silvers.
—

—PICNIC—
There will be a picnic
for graduate students
April 24 in Akron Falls
Park at 1 p.m. Tickets
may be obtained in 311
Norton from 9-1 daily
for 25 cents.

—

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DRAFT

-----

-JSTATE

UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

t—_

THE

BALCONY'

COMMITTEE
(See Page

VOLUME 16

(See

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, APRIL 19, 1966

Pace 6)
NO. 40

Meyerson Appointment
Confirmed By Trustees
IRC Elections Are Held;
Candidate to Contest
Procedural Validity
By TERRY SEAL

The official results of the InterResidence Council officer election
held on April 14 and 15 are as
follows: President—Joel Feinman
026 votes, Larry P i v n i c k 221
votes, and 47 write-ins; VicePresident—Alan Freid 691 votes
and 68 write-ins; Secretary—Judy
Snyder 436 votes, Sharon Shulman 351 votes, and 30 write-ins;
Treasurer—-Alan Sturtz 580 votes
and 178 write-ins. There was a
total of 1083 votes cast in the
elections, indicating that about
45% of the resident students
voted.
Larry Pivnick, the defeated

JOEL FEINMAN
Elected IRC President

“SDS is not only celebrating
May Day because of its tradition
as a working class holiday and

its association with various protest and minority groups,"' Mr.
Gardner explained, “but also because it marks the first anniversary of the local chapter of SDS

However, Mr. Pivnick has filed
his complaint with Mr. Roberty
Eddy, Chairman of the Election
Court of the Student Judiciary.
Considering Article 14 of the
I.R.C. Election Rules (“All violations of election rules shall be
referred to the I.R.C. elections
committee.”), Mr. Pivnick states
that “since the election committee of the I.R.C. at the time of
the election existed on paper but
not in practice, and since the
complete list of the elections committee was not made public at
any time, and as there is no written provision for the appointing
of members to this committee at
the time of the election, we have
referred our protest to the Election Court of the Student Judiciary for consideration.”
Joel Feinman, the winner of the
I.R.C. election for president, said
that he had no comment to make
until the nexaot nature of the
election complaint was made public.

150 UB faculty and student members expresed their concern for
the war in Viet Nam.
The program will also feature
a display of photographs of vari-

our May Day demonstrations.

Mr. Meyerson will assume the
post September 1 as successor to
Dr. Clifford C. Furnas. Dr. Furnas has reached mandatory retirement age and will step down
August 31.

Currently the Dean of the College of Environmental Design at
Berkeley, Mr. Meyerson will be
the second president of the State
University of Buffalo and the

tenth chief administrator of UB.

MARTIN MEYERSON, President-Elect

President- Elect Meyerson:
An Interview With WBFO
“I am a great believer in a
mixed economy both generally
and in the academic world,” President-elect Martin Meyerson commented in a telephone interview
Friday with WBFO.
"Buffalo has a unique opportunity in that it can combine the

latitudes and the innovations of
a private university with the
sense of reaching large numbers
of the public university,” he said.
When questioned about the role
of the alumni in the state university system, Mr. Meyerson answered that he believes they
should play “a tremendous role
in all aspects. Alumni are expected to be helpful and to contribute,
but the university ought to offer
something more than sports
events and dinners to its alumni.”
He noted the desirability of pro-

viding a life-time educational opportunity for alumni.

“I believe in all the kinds of

challenges the university can provide to old grads to help them
keep up with world affairs and
their particular specializations. It

all goes back to the mixed ap-

proach in public and private,” he

The State University at Buffalo
Council nominated Mr. Meyerson
to the State University Board of
Trustees on April 6. Previous to
the nomination, an elected faculty committee appraised more than
130 names suggested by the Council. the University administration,
alumni, members of the faculty,
and educational advisory foundations. A Council committee and
a faculty committee jointly considered the leading candidates,
and the Council committee then
made the final recommendation.
Mr. Meyerson accepted his appointment and stated, “I look
forward to working with the faculty, the Council, and other members of the university community
in planning and implementing a

future educational porgrom which
I expect to be the most intellectualy stimulating anywhere.”
Commenting on his successor,
Dr. Furnas said, “His great capacities and national stature are

well-suited to our needs.”

added.

ORIENTATION
Training session for
Freshman Orien t a t i o n
Group Leaders will be
held Tuesday, April 19,
at 4 p.m. (originally
scheduled time is changed) in Norton 240. Attendance is mandatory.
—

Mr. Meyerson commented that
after meeting some of his future
colleagues at UB he believe them
to be “a most enthusiastic group
of people who are also deeply

attached to

the future of the

university.”
Concluding the conversation,
Mr. Meyerson pointed out that he
hopes “to continue building on
past tradition and perhaps to create some new.”

—

Recognition Day Dinner Tonight
Retiring President Clifford C.
Furnas will be honored at the
“C.C. Furnas Testimonial Dinner”
tonight in the Statler Hilton. The
dinner will be one of thirty
Alumni Club dinners held
throughout the country in celebration of “C.C. Furnas Recognition Day.”

at UB.”

SDS was formed a year ago by
four graduate students in sociology, Richard Salter, William Marrow, John Coe, and David Gardner, who deplored the lack of
an on-campus organization concerned with the war in Viet Nam,
according to Mr. Gardner.

He pointed out that the organization’s first activity was the
“March on Washington" in which

The appointment of Mr. Martin
Meyerson to the UB Presidency
was finalized by the State University Board of Trustees Friday.

candidate for president, has filed
a complaint concerning the election. I.R.C. President Gary Roberts, stated that “all violations of
election rules and all complaints
concerning the election are to be
referred to a Residence Election
Board established by the Director
of Housing,” He also stated that
“the composition of the Residence
Election Board will be announced
Monday” &lt;April 18).

SDS to Celebrate May Day;
Marks First Anniversary
May Day will be celebrated by
Students for a Democratic Society
with an informal evening of
speeches and folksinging in Norton Union, announced SDS member David Gardner.

To Assume Post
September I

A reception will be held at 6:30
p.m. in the Statler Hilton Terrace Room, followed by a dinner
in the Golden Ballroom.

CLIFFORD C. FURNAS
Retiring President

Mr. Henry T. Heald, former
President of the Ford Foundation

and former chairman of the New
York Committee on Higher Education, will deliver the keynote
address, Mr. Heald is one of the
authors of the Heald Report
which first recommended the establishment of a University center in upstate New York.
Former UB alumni director Mr.
J. William Everett will be the
“Voice of UB" at the dinner.
Everett is a UB graduate and is
currently public relations director of the Erie County Savings
Bank. Mr. Everett has devised a
nation-wide telephone hook-up

which will enable people at the
dinners throughout the country to
hear the proceedings of the Buffalo testimonial.
The testimonial address will be
delivered by Professor John Horton, who has been chairman of
the UB History Department since
1948. He will represent the faculty, administration, and student
body. Dr. Horton has served as
mace-bearer at the UB commencement exercises for many years.
Friends, alumni, and educators
have been invited to attend the
affair.

�PAGE TWO

SPECTRUM

Tuesday, April 19, 1966

Storing Contrasts Negro Leadership
Professor Herbert G. Storing
presented a comparison of the
Negro leadership of Frederick
Douglas and Dr. Martin Luther
King last Friday. While idealizing Douglas, the 19th century
abolitionist, he discussed the responsibilities of the partisan interest to the entire political
system
Professor Storing’s talk was
sponsored by the University of
Chicago Alumni Association,
where he is a member of the

Department of Political Science.
Storing discussed the problem
of keeping the integrity of one’s
moral position safe while not
making oneself irresponsible in
the political situation. He said
that King denies the obligation
to obey unjust laws because he
believes that cooperation with an
unjust system makes the oppressed as evil as the oppressor.
However, Storing mentioned
that Douglas accepted the more
comprehensive goal of statesman-

ship, compromise, and moderation in the quest for justice. He
added that Douglas recognized
the fact that the “parts’’ of the
political system must take some
responsibility for the whole system although they may make demands on it. He noted that Douglas saw non-cooperation as a useful tactic, but not as a moral
device for eliminating political
problems,
Professor Storing concluded
that Douglas saw the interrela-

International Club Fiesta Includes
Variety Show, Exhibits, Foreign Food
The International Club will
hold its annual Fiesta Saturday,
April 23, at 7:15 p.m. in the
Conference Theatre and Fillmore
Room from 7:15 p.m. to 2 a m.
Admission is $2 per person.
The Fiesta will begin with a
variety show featuring dances
and songs ranging from Greek
Pouzouki music to Moroccan belly
dancing.

Guests will be able to sample
foods of many lands. Latin Amer-

ican Arrozean Polio may be mixed
with Greek Karondato and Hungarian Pishinger.

The Fiesta will feature booths
containing exhibits of native arts
and crafts run by International
Club members in national costumes. There will be continuous
dancing to the music of many
nations
“This promising affair is one
more way in which the International Club continuously explores

the depth of human feeling and
promotes sincere friendships and
cheerful comradeship,” according
to outgoing president Mike Nicoiau.
Participating countries are: Israel, Indonesia, Spain, Greece,
Italy, Latin America, India, Pakistan, Austria, Arab Countries,
Balkan Countries, Japan, Ireland,

Scotland, Ukraine, Lithuania,
and Scandinavian
Countries.
Hong Kong,

tionship between the good of the
ing™ and the good of the whole
American community. He noted
that some of today's leaders are
aware of this. King urges the
Negroes to lay the ground for

.

later reconciliation when protesting lessor Storing commented
.
,
that todays leaders, however,
seem reluctant to shoulder the
responsibilities of politics.
..

A

,

.

,

,

Young Dem's Will Discuss
Mock Convention Tonight
The UB chapter of the recently
organized New York State College
Young Democrats (CYD) will hold
a meeting tonight at 7 p.m. in
264 Norton to discuss the statewide mock gubernatorial convention. The convention will be held
in Albany this June.

Newly elected officers of the
club are: Richard Kaplan, president; Martin Jaffe, vice-president;
Sylvia Feldman, secretary; Steven
Feigin, treasurer; and Steven
Fein, member-at-large Political
science professor Everett Cataldo
will be the faculty advisor.
Mr. Kaplan said that CYD will
assist Democratic Party campaign-

ing, serving as an independent
group and formulating policies
and criticisms on campus.

The club, which is open to fultime undergraduates, was formed
to “increase the level of political
awareness and participation
among students,” according to
Paul Nussbaum, regional coordinator of CYD.

Mr. Nussbaum said that proactivities of the
club include working for a nonjected future

partisan

Constitutional Convention for New York, and participation in a Washington legislative
seminar program.

Vista Treats Volunteerism'
At Panel Discussion Friday
Mr, Thomas Powers, National
Recruitment Director for VISTA,
held an open discussion on “Volunteerism” with SDS leader Rich
ard Salter and SNCC field organizer Leon Phipps last Friday.

Mr. Powers said that Vista attempts to “educate the individual
to act together with members of
his community to create the indigenous leadership necessary for
social change.”
“In SDS community organizing
projects,” Mr. Salter commented,
“we don’t feel that we are fighting poverty, but power. We question whether these individuals are
not full-fledged citizens because
of themselves or the power struc-

ture.”

“Instead of putting more patches on a bad tube, we should ere-

ate conditions for a new tube
so that people can grow,” he

added
A UB student suggested that
the poor do not participate because they feel they have already
attempted and failed. “They view
present institutions as imprisoning them,” he noted.

Mr. Powers commented, “Peo-

ple who know the machinery of
protest don’t see the institutions
as penal institutes. That is why
we (VISTA) are there—to teach
them how to articulate their complaints so that they can function

without the volunteer.”
Leon Phipps of SNCC said that
he felt' VISTA and other similar
projects “are good if they stay
in the community for tour or five
years, instead of two or three
months.”

Weekend Queen Campaign
Will Be Judged Today
Everybody's talking about it. Everybody's doing it. Operation Match. It's camp.
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11:00 p.m.

Skits will be shown by the candidates Wednesday and Thursday
from 11 a.m, to 1 p.m. A fashion
show will be held Friday in the

2

671 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, Mass. 021 39

Millard Fillmore Room at 3:30

p.m

Other activities planned for
Spring Weekend include performances by Nina Simone, the Tokens and the Laurentian Singers.
A formal dance will be held, at
which the Queen will be crowned. Stunt Night and an Olympic
Competition will be held.

Naval Academy Grade Practices
Are Causing Faculty Departure
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (OPS) —An
assistant professor of English is
leaving the United States Naval
Academy because of the school’s
admitted policy of changing
grades.

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The Queen Campaign for
Spring Weekend (April 28-30) begins this week. Outdoor campaign
judging will be held today at

Richard C. Vitzhura is the second faculty member in two weeks
to draw attention to the academy.
Last week. Kent Ponder, an assistant professor of Spanish,
charged that his contract was not
being renewed because he had

refused to

approve a passing
grade for a student who scored
16 per cent on his final written
examination. The student, the son
of a high ranking naval officer,
received the passing grade anyway.

The departure of the two faculty members is only a small part
of what has become a public

dispute over the Naval Academy’s
grading practices. The dispute,
in turn, reflects a deep concern

among some faculty members
over how swiftly the academy

can, or should, meet changing

educational demands.

A self-study, released by the
academy last week, emphasized

that the need to curb academic
failures made it impractical to
“base grade distributions solely
on scholastic competence.” The
report regretted that the limit
on failures has led to “coasting
on the part of a significant number of middle C average midshipmen.”

After the report was publicized,
Draper L.
Kauffman said that as of next
September the academy will drop
the grading controls.

however. Rear Adm.

�Tuesday, April 19, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE THREE

Graduate-Faculty Committee Considers
Withholding Grades From Draft Board
And Direct Action' Against Deferments
Teaching assistants at a meeting of the Graduate-Faculty Committee on the Selective Service
(GFCSS) last Thursday discussed
the “degrading and debasing ef-

fects” of the student deferment

test and considered refusing to
hand in grades to the Office of
Admissions and Records.

The GFCSS proposed that instead of submitting the required
IBM cards to the Office, grades
be given to the student to be
handed in at his own discretion.
The Committee said that this
action would be taken if the Student deferment is continued, preventing the Selective Service use
of student’s grades. Action on
this mater was postponed until
the next meeting April 26, pending further research.
The GFCSS approved a motion
to prepare for “direct action” or
civil disobedience if their demands for abolishment of the
Student determent would not be
met. A sit-in was suggested.
When the committe was formed on March 31, 1966, a policy
statement was issued, declaring:
“the military, through the Selective Service, is undermining
the autonomy of the University
by establishing for the University
the definitive qualities for intellectualism and intellectuals, using the coercive device of the H-S
deferment . . . grades and the
test are not valid measures of
.
student worth
the entire
system of student deferment is
discriminatory, creates anti-intellectualism, and isolates the most
articulate portions of society from
the war. Because of these degrading and debasing effects, unworthy of the universal principles
of human justice, principles which
in spirit are American, the student deferment must be abolished.”
The committee announced that
this policy statement will be presented to Dr. Furnas as an “ultimatum” within the next week.

Graduate School, said, "The quotation which appeared in the New
York Times stating that graduate
students in subsequent years
would have to continue to make
the 80 score to qualify for 1I-S
deferment is in error.” He said
that the requirements for graduate deferment depend upon where
a student is in graduate study.

vent the 12 hour load, proposed
to state merely that the student
currently pursuing what for
him is a full time course of instruction leading to his degree.'
Ultimately, this is a matter be-

is

twen

you and your draft board.'

Replying to a question concerning the rationale for university

involvement in

the

deferment.

Mr. Michael emphasized it is
the student’s responsibility to see
that he obtains a draft deferment
. . . the only thing that is automatic is a change in status. He
added, “the Graduate School will
not release any information with-

Mr. Michael said that he was unable to answer, suggesting that
Dr. Furnas or the new president

“The widely accepted 12 hour
load,” Mr Michael continued, “is
too restrictive. It does not do
justice to the fact that each graduate student has a tailor made
program for himself. The Graduate School, in an effort to circum-

someone is not committed to

out your request.”

be consulted. However, he commented, “the university's job is
educating, not protecting the student.”

Mr. Michael suggested that if
an

educational deferment and thinks
it is wrong, he should refuse to
abide by it. He pointed out, "if
you really want something done
about this, you should go further .
.

AM&amp;A’s

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£

Responding to a question, Law-

rence Michael, Professor of Eng-

lish and Associate Dean of the

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�Tuesday, April 19, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

Editorial Comment

.

.

JAMES CALLAN

.

It used to be fashionable in certain circles of the
faculty and administration, prior to November of 1964,
to say that U.B. was going to be “the Berkeley of the
East”. Now that it is clear that Martin Meyerson, exChancellor of Berkeley and champion of administration
domination under Clark Kerr, is going to head this campus, that may be exactly what will happen.
THE PROBLEM OF PARTICIPATION
Around this time of year, there used to be any
number of bitter and amusing struggles in the Student
Senate and Union Board to see who was going to “take
over” the various committees that use so much of the
student’s money every year to “supplement” the curriculum. This year, however, these committee chairmanships
are going begging. These chairmanships, to say nothing
of the positions open as delegates to the National Student
Association Congress, offer positions of responsibility
and power to particular students, as well as allowing
the student body at large to have more than a small say
in the determination of their own affairs.
To say that student autonomy is slipping through
our hands by default is accurate, but finally it begs the
question, because apathy is, in itself, a kind of protest.
Union Board and the Student Senate are themselves to
blame, in great measure, for the general apathy that
makes important posts in Student Government go unfilled. The “sand-box” atmosphere that has surrounded
both the Senate and Union Board is eventually taking
its full toll in student unconcern. The apathy of the
student body toward “important” things like student autonomy is not born completely of stupidity and ignorance
—it is also born out of a genuine sense that these things
really “just don’t matter”.
It is hard to say at this late date what could alter
this sad and self-destructive state of affairs. Perhaps
the only thin# that can change it now is an influx of
intelligent and articulate students into the vacuums of
student power and responsibility on this campus. Perhaps
then the inarticulate protest of apathy could be rechanneled into more productive channels.
FILMS ON CAMPUS—A SECOND LOOK
This paper carried an editorial some months ago on
the sad condition of the cinematic arts on this campus.
Since then, there have been major improvements in the
situation, although these improvements still leave worlds
to be desired. Perhaps the most exciting development
(on paper, at least), has been the development of a
weekly student news reel, shown With the Conference
Theater Films. Credit for this program goes almost exclusively to Marty Sadoff who engineered the scheme
and managed to swing backing for it.
The first news reel was, unfortunately, technically
poor, a reminder of Ed Ilerlihv at his very worst, but
the fact that it appeared at all is indication that this
university community is capable of supporting an exciting
and growing program in film. Also, the Student-Faculty
Film Club has produced one film already, and is currently
engaged in filming a second to be released soon.
There are still major drawbacks to the serious study
and production of films here, not the least of which is
the clumsy selection of films for the Conference Theater
and the series in Diefendorf, but things are definitely
looking up, and those who worked to make it possible
deserve hearty congratulations.

.

.

the right

.

Mr. Robert McCubbin and Miss
Janet Shapiro, among many others no doubt, didn’t think much
of my column on abortion a while
back. Neither letter really merits
a reply, as neither was a real
reply to what I had written, but
I’ve got nothing else to do and
besides, it might be fun.
First, let’s take Mr. McCubbin’s
letter of April 12. His irrationality (stupidity?) may be excused;
the fact that he failed either to
read or to understand my column
is excusable; but what is inexcusable is that he pretends his letter
is a response to my column. What
am I talking about? Just this—
He disagrees with my concluding
statement; “.. . manifest evidence
shows that abortion is not always
moral, and hence is never moral.”
He thinks all he has to do is
disagree, and that’s it. Which goes
to show that he did not read the
column—that statement was a
conclusion, derived from certain
premises in the column in an
orderly and structural manner—it is not a basic tenet of rational
thought for which I offer no

defense. If my conclusion is erroneous, then so is the logical
flow or one of my premises. To
attack the conclusion without citing the error that led to that conclusion is ridiculous. I challenge
Mr. MoCubbin to find the error
in my reasoning (while he's at it,
I challenge him to structure his
letter in a logical manner).
As for his “proof” that I know
nothing about morality because
I think mothers ought to take
knives and kill their chidlren . . .
no comment necessary.
Miss Shapiro is a different

oCetterA
TO THE EDITOR

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo
Publication Office at Norton Hall. University Campus, Buffalo, N. Y. 14214
Published twice weekly from the first week of September to the last week in
May. except for exam periods. Thanksgiving. Christmas, and spring vacations.
Editor-In-Chief

JEREMY TAYLOR

Business Manager

RAYMOND D

VOLPE

News Editor
ALICE EDELMAN
Staff —Loretta Angelina. Joanne Bouchier. Russell Buchman, Karen Green.
Peter Lederman. Joan Roberts. Rick Schwab,
Dan Schroeder, Sharon Shulman.
Eileen Teitler. Nancy Toder. Patti Wartley. Judy Weisberg

Feature Editor
Staff—Bonnie Bartow.

Audrey Logel.

Stott—Mike
J.B

Sharcot

JOHN STINY

Ron
Bob Martin,

Castro.

Ellsworth.
Suzanne

Assistant
JO ANNE LEEGANT
Barbara Ann Fitzsimmons. Barbara Loeb.
Rovner. Martha Tack, William Weinstein.

STEVE SCHUELEIN
Farbman. Bob Frey.

Sports Editor
Mike Dolan,

Steve

Scott

Forman,

Layout Editor
SHARON HONIG
Staff— Joanne Bouchier, Stephanie Parker, Steve Silverman
Copy Editor
LAUREN JACOBS
Staff —Carol Becker, Estelle Fox. Jocelyn Hailpern, Sandy Lippman, Betsy Ozer,
Claire SJiottenfeld. Susan Zuckerberg

Staff—Terry
Mancini

Angelo,

Advertising Manager
RON HOLTZ
Audrey Cash. Pat Rosenfeld, Steve

Silverman,

Joseph

Photography Editor

EDWARD JOSCELYN
Staff—Don Blank. Peter Bonneau. Joseph Feyes, Carol Goodson, Alan Gruber.
Marc Levine. Ivan Makuch. Michael Soluri, Anthony Walluk. Susan Wortman.
Robert Wynne

Circulation

Manager

Faculty Advisor
Financial

EDITORIAL

Advisor

DIANE LEWIS
IRENE WILLET

In the April 8 edition of the
Spectrum, there appeared 2 letters concerning the “incidents” at
Lafayette Square, The first, written by Bob Witnauer and 8 others
who were there, attacked the
truthfulness of the Spectrum report. It is interesting to note that
these charges were not denied by
the Spectrum or by Mr. Wolkenstein. Instead, they chose to reply
to our letter which condemned
anti-Semitism and Fascism and
suggested that SDS and the Spectrum condemn Communist totalitarianism as well This the Spectrum evidently refuses to do and
instead condemns us for “Redbaiting”.
We believe that Red-baiting
consists of labeling a person a
Red who is not. However, to identify a Communist is not Red-

any more than it is
baiting
“liberal-baiting” to call Hubert
Humphrey a liberal or “conservative-baiting” to call William Buckley a conservative. While it may
be argued that it is far worse
to be a Communist than a liberal
or a conservative, we consider
that to be their fault, not ours.

After listening to Mr. Wolkenstein and representatives of
Youth Against War and Fascism,
we consider it overwhelmingly
evident that they are totalitarian
Communists,
Interestingly, Mr.
Wolkenstein in his letter does not
deny it, nor did Joel Myers in his.
If anyone else wishes to, we
would be glad to debate the point.
Until then, we as American citizens believe that it is our duty
to bring this, the real issue of
the controversy, out into the

Ato

\OK1UxIKL
Pwess

Second Class Postage Paid at Buffalo. N. Y.
Subscription
$3.00 per year, circulation

Represented
advertising
for
national
by
National Advertising Service, Inc., 420 Madi
,
son Ave New York. N. Y.

It is alleged that we wish to
deny a person “his right to exercise and practice his beliefs.'’
This is false. We simply stated
that those supposedly dedicated
to a “democratic” society should
not ally themselves with those
who, wherever they take power
(Russia, China, Hungary, E. Germany, Cuba, etc.), ruthlessly destroy the liberties of the people.
Thus CVV and YAF exclude as
members a 11 Fascists, Communists and Racists. (A policy which
is also used by such liberal organizations as NAACP, CORE,
ADA, ACLU). We believe in letting the totalitarians speak, but
speak for their own organizations,
not ours.

Steve Sickler
Frank Klinger
Dr. Marvin Zimmerman
Donald Rich

open.

Prism Distorts
April 13, 1966 edition in an interview with me.

1 strongly believe in the freedom of the press which through
its freedom will produce the
truth. However, when an editor
uses the press to distort or mis-

represent

truth, the basic
rights of an individual arc invariably stepped upon. Such has
been the case with the editor of
the Prism, Alan Goklin in the
the

Mr. Golkin has taken fragments
mmy interview and distorted
them in such a way as to misrepresent my candidacy for IRC
president. Upon reading this “Impartial” statement, a student
would be strongly inclined to vote
for my opponent, Mr. Joel Fein■man. While such a procedure is

fro

permitted in editorial statements,
it is not a news article. Mr.
Grolkin never used lies in his report, but just as seriously used

half-truths.
Thus

through

his

distorted

sense of objectivity, Mr. Golkin

has violated the number one objective of a good journalist, to
report the truth.
Larry Pivnick

Revolution Vs, Evolution
TO THE EDITOR
I share Mr. Jaffe’s your un-

easiness concerning indiscriminate emotive use of such terms
as "fascist,” “communist," “depraved ultra right,” etc. MeOarthyism should taught us the
danger inherent in hysterical misuse of such terms. For example,
are all those who oppose the
Spectrum's stand on Vietnam, by
definition, “depraved ultra right,”
opposed to the civil rights movement, dupes and/or fellow travelers of the Klu Klux Klan and
the American Nazi Party?

In a positive vein, I believe the
signers of the April 8 Letter to
The Editor intended to suggest
that the ground rules for dissent
and consent on Vietnam be defined and confined to those who
accept and to those who wish to
work for a change within the
existing institutions of our society. That is, those who are opposed to totalitarian goals or
totalitarian means. Such a suggestion was motivated by a desire to eliminate bigotry and to
clarify just what the object of
dissent is. The suggestion for a

clarification of ground rules can
be accepted or rejected but let
us know who rejects them and
why they are rejected. Above all
let us refrain from ad-hominum
arguments and such ad-hominum
editorials as that of April 12 attacking Dr. Zimmerman which
simply obfuscate the entire issue.
If, however, the issue is not
Vietnam, but revolution versus
evolution, then perhaps the time
has come to make this very ex-

plicit.

Lenore H. Banks
Graduate Teaching Fellow

A New Idol

DALLAS GARBER

POLICY IS DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR IN-CHIEF
FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING

the Editor

—

TO THE EDITOR

SPECTRUM

to

—

Labeling Is Not *Red-Baitirig’

)

THE

case.

I don’t know if she read my
column or not—she didn’t say
anything about it. First, let me
say that I don’t care less about
a baby after he’s born—it’s just
that maltreatment of a child is
such a blatant and widely-recognized evil that it doesn’t require
column space. No, we should not
condone child-beating, ill-managed houses for orphans, etc., but
killing off the baby before he
has to face these hazards is not
the way to go about it.
From mine eyes flow tears of

red when I hear how “the innocent victim of social pressures
lies mutilated or dies” and about
the “fear and shame she is forced
to endure” and the “butcher . , .
who has robbed her of up to
2,000 dollars.” All I can say is
that this “innocent victim” is a
killer and deserves everything
she gets
shame, mutilation,
death, the works.
The rest of her letter can be
summed up as follows: anti-abortion laws are immoral because
it’ll be done anyway with more
innocent bystanders getting hurt.
Well, maybe she’s got a point
there, maybe while we’re at it
we ought to retract the laws
against murder—that way professionals could be hired who would
see that only the intended victim
got hurt. We wouldn’t have to
pay all that money for a police
force—everyone would be better
off, except of course whoever got
murdered. The point is exactly
the same with respect to abortion,
Miss Shapiro—everyone would be
better off, except of course whoever got murdered.

TO THE EDITOR
Now it is quite apparent that

the trustees of this University
have adopted Berkeley, California, as their idol. Can they hope
to have that University’s greatness without its scandal, strife

and ugliness? Even Berkeley's
own administrators have admitted (Newsweek, March, 1965) that,
with twenty-six thousand students, they had allowed that University to get far too large. Twenty years are all it will take the
Big Campus Neurosis to make

the State University of New York
at Buffalo into another-University
of California at Berkeley, and,
whafs worse, to turn most of the
Township of Amherst] into another City of Berkeley!

BUFFALO NO'

(ERKELEY

�M

Tuesday, April 19, 1966

*

poo*

~

*

SPECTRUM

PACE FIVE

Buckneil Annual Challenge Conference
Seeks to Provide Awareness of Issues

LEWISBURG, Pa.—Susan Son- internal mechanisms of art detag, Walter Kaufmann, Otto Luenvelopment, which thereby creates
ing, and Ad Reinhardt, noted aua void in his comprehension of
thorities on various art forms, the problems and issues of towill be presented to the Buckneil day’s art.
University academic community
By formulating a program induring the University's annual volving the above mentioned
Challenge Conference April 22 speakers, the Challenge Commitand 23tee seeks to introduce the student
This conference, initiated and to the possibilities of approachadministered solely by students ing the new art within the conof the Buckneil University Chal- fines of the creator’s interpretalenge Committee, is planned each
tion of his media and the viewer’s
year with the purpose of provid- critical awareness
ing a greater awareness and unThe creator’s interpretation of
derstanding for the University art will be represented by Otto
community of vital problems in
Luening, composer of electronic
the changing world.
music, and Ad Reinhardt, noted
The 1966 Conference will be contemporary artist. Critical outpresented in conjunction with the looks on art in the conference will
theme, “The Artist and His Crit- be presented by Susan Sontag,
ic: The Context of Contemporary critica and novelist, and Walter
Art.” Approach to the theme will Kaufmann, noted professor of
be made through an analysis of philosophy.
the apparent lack of unity and
Currently co director of the
purpose in the American college
C o 1 u m b i a-Princeton electronic
student’s appreciation of today's synthesizer program, Otto Luenart forms.
ing was born in Milwaukee, Wis.,
Exposure to the new art may
and studied in Zurich and Munnal provide the time for suitably
ich. He has been executive diinterested persons to fully relate
rector of the Opera Department
this new experience to the stu- of the Eastman School in Rochesdent’s larger academic and cultur- ter, N.Y., and director of the
al understandings. Despite his Rochester American Opera Comeducational pretensions, the col- pany,
lege student shares in the generLuening has taught at the University of Arizona, Bennington
al public’s exclusion from the
"

-

On Campus
(By the author

College, Columbia University and
Middlebury College, and has con-

ducted the New York Philharmonic and Philadelphia and Boston Symphony Orchestras. In 1930
he was granted a Guggenheim
Fellowship, and his opera Evangelina won the David Bispham
Medal in 1953.
Ad Reinhardt who attended
Columbia Colege’, was an instruetor at Brooklyn College and has
taught Oriental art history at
Hunter College. His paintings,
described as “Zen-like,’ are characterized by muted, monochromatic hues and symmetrical forms,
and have earned him the reputation as being one of the foremost contemporary artists. He regards black as the “ultimate" in
art, and has produced almost exclusively in this color since 1953.
Susan Sontag, writer, literary
and drama critic, film aficionado,
and proponent of a “new sensibility” *ln today’s cultural existence, is the author of the recently
published and enthusiastically received book, Against Interpretstion and Other Essays, in which
she gives the impression, as a
recent issue of Saturday Review
asserts, “that she knows a lot
about some things and as least
as much as any other authority
(Cont’d on P. 6)

1

of “Rally Round the Flag, Roys.'",

“Dobie Gill,*,’’ etc.)

ROOMMATES REVISITED
This morning’s mail brought a letter from a student at
a prominent Western university (Princeton). "Dear Sir,”
he writes. “In a recent column you said it was possible to
get along with your roommate if you try hard enough.
Well, I’d like to see anyone get along with my roommate!
Meryis Trunz (for that is his name) practices the ocarina
all night long, keeps an alligator, wears knee-cymbals, and
collects airplane tires. I have tried everything 1 can with
Mervis Trunz, but nothing works. I am desperate, (signed)
Desperate.”
Have you, dear Desperate, really tried everything? Have
you, for example, tried a measure so simple, so obvious,
that it is easy to overlook? I mean, of course, have you offered to share your Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades
with Mervis Trunz?
To have a friend, dear Desperate, you must he a friend.
And what could be more friendly than sharing the bounty
of Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades? Who, upon enjoying the luxury of Personna, the nickless, scrapeless, tugless, hackless, scratchless, matchless comfort of Personna,
the ease and breeze, the power and glory, the truth and
beauty of Personna—who, I say, after such jollies could
harden his heart against his neighbor? Nobody, that’s who
not even Mervis Trunz—especially not today with the
new Personna Super Blade bringing us new highs in speed,
comfort, and durability. And here is still a further bonus:
Personna is available both in Double, Kdge style and Injec•

—

tor style.

r

}'*

$
No, dear Desperate, your problem with Mervis Trunz is
far from insoluble. In fact, as roommate problems go, it is
pretty small potatoes. Compare it, for example, to the classic case of Basil Metabolism and K, Pluribus Ewbank.
Basil and E. Pluribus, roommates at a prominent East-

ern university (Oregon) were at an impassable impasse.
Basil cottld study only late at night, and E. Pluribus could
not stay awake past nine p.m. If Basil kept the lights on,
the room was too bright for E. Pluribus to sleep. If E. Pluribus turned the lights olf, the room was too dark for Basil
to study. What to do?
Well sir, these two intelligent American kids found an
answer. They got a miner’s cap for Basil! Thus, he had
enough light to study by, and still the room was dark
enough for E. Pluribus to sleep.
It must be admitted, however, that this ingenious solution had some unexpected sequelae. Basil got so enchanted

with his miner's cap that he switched his major from 18th
Century poetry to mining and metallurgy. Shortly after
graduation he had what appeared to be a great strokeof
luck: while out prospecting, he discovered what is without
question the world's largest feldspar mine. This might have
made Basil very rich except that nobody, alas, has yet discovered a use for feldspar. Today Basil, a broken man,
squeezes out a meagre living as a stalagmite in Ausable
Chasm.
Nor has E. I’luribus fared conspicuously better. Once
Basil got the miner's cap, K. I’luribus was able to catch up
on his long-lost sleep. He woke after nine days, refreshed
and vigorous —more vigorous, alas, than he realized. It was
the afternoon of the Dean's tea. E. I'luribus stood in line
with his classmates, waiting to shake the Dean’s hand. At
last his turn came, and K. I'luribus, full of strength and
health, gave the Dean a firm handshake—so firm, indeed,
that all five of the Dean’s knuckles were permanently fused.
The Dean sued for a million dollars and, of course, won.
Today E. I’luribus. a broken man, is paying off his debt by
walking the Dean’s cat every afternoon for ten cents an hour.

H r, the makers of I'ersonna blades and the sponsors of this
column, will not attempt to expertize about roommates,
but ive irill tell you about a great shaving-mate to Personna
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about everything else." She is
considered one of the leading
"avant-garde" critics, and is credited with being the first to discuss Camp with any 'serious’ intent in her “Notes on Camp" in

the Fall, 1964, Partisan Review.
A native of Freiburg, Germany,
Walter Kaufmann is currently
professor of philosophy at Princeton He is a graduate of Williams
College and received a Ph.D. in
1947 from Harvard. Dr. Kaufmann
has been a visiting professor at
Cornell, Columbia, The New
School, the University of Michigan, and the University of Washington, and studied in Germany
for a year under a Fulbright
grant. Professor Kaufmann’s publications include Existentialism
from Doostoevsky to Sartre, Cain
and Other Poems, From Shakespeare to Existentialism, Faith of
a Heretic, Nietzsche, The Portable
Nietzsche, and Critique of Religion and Philosophy.
Anyone interested in attending
the Conference should contact the
'Bucknell University Challenge
Committee, Lewisburg, Pa.

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Film Committee to Show 'The Balcony'
In Conference Theatre This Weekend
A pretty girl in 12th century
armor lifts the visor to accept
a light from Whistler’s mother.
A blonde wearing jodphurs, riding boots and an inadequate vest
applies, nailpolish to Cleopatra's
toes. On the floor, a brunette in
black bra and girdle works at
something she is fashioning from
tinkertoy parts.
These girls work in an establishment run by Madame Irma
(Shelley Winters), in The Balcony.
The house is actually a house
of illusion, a huge converted
sound stage, equipped with backscreen projection, photo murals,
electronic sound effects, exotic
costumes, and a staff of specialists headed by Madame's secretary, Carmen (Lee Grant).
The clientele is composed of
small time losers with vast imaginations: the milkman who
longs to be a general (Kent
Smith);
the gas company employee with a yen to be a Bishop
(Jeff Corey); the accountant who
becomes chief justice (Pet?r
Bronco) for a time, and a price.
The movie is adapted from the
play by Jean Genet. Director Jo-

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A Scene from "The Balcony"

seph Strick explains, “Basically,
it’s merely the launching site for
the unusual plot. Irma’s establishment is more a place of illusion,
a storage warehouse for dreams,
than a brothel”

Poet Robert Creeley has accepted a full professorship at UB,
according to an English Department announcement.
Department spokesman Gary
MacArthur commented, "Robert
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Creeley is a great poet. Any
university would be proud to
have him as a member of its
faculty.”

reading and discussion with writers in Pakistan sponsored by the
State Department.

Mr. Creeley is the author of
For Love: Poems 1950-60 and The
Gold Diggers. He will tentatively
be teaching an undergraduate
course in modern poetry and a

seminar in 20th century litera-

According to an English Department notice, Mr. Creeley was
awarded a Rockefeller Grant in
Writing this year, as well as a
Guggenheim Fellowship in Poetry
(1964-65) and the D. H. Lawrence
Fellowship (1960).

Mr. Creeley is presently a lecturer at the University of Mexico.
He will join the UB faculty for
the fall term, following a tour of

He has published his works in
magazines such as Poetry, The
Nation), and New Directions Annual. Mr. Creeley has published
a novel entitled The Island.

ture.

Tower Holds Monte Carlo Night
Tower Residence Hall

will hold
Monte-Carlo Night
Saturday, April 23 in the Tower
Cafeteria from 8:30-12:30 p.m.
its

',&lt;1
11U

classical Creek
Kepi searchinf; for

\\

1

1
|

'I

annual

Roulette wheels, black-jack
tables, dice games, and horse
wheels will be set up in the East
Dining Room, while the Private

\

'

j.

objects unique.
They caused him to snicker
Except Coll Malt Liquor—
So he sat down and
drank his critique!

m

The Balcony will be presented
by the Film committee in the
Conference theater this weekend,
Showings will be continuous from
6 p.m. For further information
contact the Norton Ticket office.

Creeley Is Named Full Professor
By University English Department

Hundredsjoj^temsJ
�
�
�

A professor of

Tuesday, April 19, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACE SIX

Room will have a “night club
atmosphere.”

Radios,

stuffed

animals,

and

pen-andpencil sets are among the
prizes which will be awarded to

“students with the greatest win-

nings.”

Music will be supplied by a
band and entertainment will take
place during band intermissions.

Weekly Calendar
April 19-22

Wednesday:

Tuesday

Movie: Night

Theatre.

&amp;

Fog, Conference

3 to 6 p.m.

Lecture; M/Sgt. Duncan “I Quit!”
7 to 11 p.m.. Milliard Fillmore

Room.

Colloquium; Marketing Depart
ment, 11 to 12:30 p.m., Norton

234.

Thursday:
Movie: The Balcony, Conference

Theatre.

Spring Weekend Queen Judging:
11 am.

Spring Weekend Skits: 11 to 1
p.m., Conference Theatre.

Play: You Can't Take
You, Studio Arena
through April 21.

Seminar; History of Logie and
Science Club, 8 p.m., Norton
335.

It With

Theatre

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�Tuesday, April 19, 1966

Students And Faculty
Reelected to National
Dental Honor Society
Seven UB students and four
faculty members of the School
of Dentistry have been elected
to membership in the Lambda
Lambda Chapter of Omicro Kap
pa Usilon, a national honor society of the dental profession.

Elected students from the graduating class of 1966 are: Anthony
E. Argentine, Leo R. Cacciotti,

Richard ,M. Constant™, • Russell
J. Nisengard, Barry F. Wood,
Louis D’Andrea, and Paul E.
Gould.
Elected faculty members are:
Dr. H. Gordon Cheney, Dr. Alan
J. Drinnan, Dr. Edward A. Garguilo, and Dr. Harvey S. Johnson.

An installation banquet honoring the new members will be
held Thursday, April 21, at the
Brookfield Country Club.
To be elected to membership,
a student must be in the upper
one-fifth of his class for the entire four-year course of instruction and must possess qualities
for future growth and achievement. Faculty membership is
achieved through service in professional teaching, scientific contributions to dentistry, or community service.

Jazz Trio to Perform

In Fillmore Room
The Union Board Music Committee will present the New Jazz
Trio in “Jazz on a Wednesday
Afternoop” Wednesday, April 20
from 3-5 p.m. in the Fillmore
Room.

SPECTRUM

PACE SKVCN

Regents Member at University of Maryland
Resigns to Protest Communist Speakers
BALTIMORE, Md. (CPS)
A
33-year veteran of the Board of
Regents of the University of
Maryland has resigned her post
in protest of the board’s policy
regarding Communist speakers on
the Maryland campus.
—

Mrs. John L Whitehurst said
in a letter to Maryland Governor
J. Millard Tawes that she was
quiting because the board had
gone on record as opposing a
speaker ban law then pending
before the state legislature.
The bill was never reported out
of committee before Maryland's
Legislature adjourned a week
ago. Had it passed, the bill would
have required the governing bodies of each state school to “announce and apply a firm rule

prohibiting any Communist sympathizer from speaking or participating- in any program" on their
campus.

Six large veterans groups in
Maryland immediately went on
record supporting Mrs. Whitethe only woman ever to

serve on the Maryland regents.
The group released a statement
“to focus attention on the deplorable lack of understanding
displayed by the board of regents.” The statement said "it is
certainly regrettable that more
members of the regents have not
attained your (Mrs. Whitehurst’s)
stature . . . and they will stand
by while the insidious Red propagandists undermine our educational system.”
Signing the policy statement
for their groups were the commanders of the state’s American
Legion. Catholic War Veterans.
Disabled American Veterans. Jewish War Veterans, Veterans of
Foreign Wars, and Veterans of
World War I.
The original legislature resolution was also prompted by these
groups. Maryland Jewish War Veteran Commander Meyer Sokolow
said He said the groups would
continue to push for a speaker
ban and “we’ll be right back
there (the legislature) next time.”
The events that led to Mrs,

Whitehurst’s resignation began on
March 25 when the speaker ban
question was discused at a regents meeting. The bill pending
before the legislature was condemned by the regents, the lone
dissenter of the action being Mrs.
Whitehurst.
"Why shouldn't we keep them
(the Communists) off our university campuses?" she asked the

regents. "They’re winning every
day of the week somewhere in
the world, and now we're going
to let them win here.”
But over her vehement'objec-

tions. the board decided that the
resolution “effects a denial of
the ideal of public education within the broadest scope of academic
freedom.”
The board adopted as its policy
a personal letter Chairman
Charles P. McCormick had sent
the head of the legislature's Education Committee. In the leter,
McCormick said the university
would “be severely handicapped"
if the students “are not allowed
to discuss current issues with

knowledgeable people even
though such people may entertain
views with which we are not in
sympathy.”
In her letter to Governor Tawes,
Mrs. Whitehurst said she was resigning because "I cannot continue to serve with regents who
cannot see the havoc the Communists have created throughout
the world and what they propose
to do in the future.”
Later she told the Maryland
Diamondback, "1 agree with the
arguments that the young people
should know about the philosophy
of Communism but we have competent teachers on the campus
who can inform them, instead
of allowing the Communist propagandists to use our university
to sell their atheistic, dictatorial
way of life to our students.”
Lor Mrs Whitehurst, the future
of education in Maryland is not
bright. “They'll (the Communists)
come now that they know they
can," she said. “You wait and see.
They'll come, and why shouldn't
they?”

An IDYLLIC SUMMER
for GRADUATE and
UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS

Study at Wagner College’s
scenic, woodland campus

The trio, including Beull Neidilnger, bass; Andrew White, saxophone; and John Bergamo, percussion, has performed avantfarde improvisations at jazz clubs
in Buffalo and in previous concerts at UB. The three instru-

on Staten Island

mentalists,

chosen on the basis
of their work in contemporary
music, have been members of
the Center for the Creating and
Performing Arts for the past
year.

The public is welcome.

Air Society,
Angel Flight
Attend Conclave
Astronauts and four-star generals were among the guests present at the I8th National Arnold
Air Society Conclave in Dallas,
Texas during the first week of
April. At the same time, Angel
Plight, the auxiliary of Arnold
Air Society, was in Dallas for its
Hth National Conclave.
Arnold Air Society members
Joseph Kinderman, Roger Vallie,
and David Agro represented UB
at the Conference, Delegates from
Angel Flight were Leslie Ecker,
Lorie Foroscij and Sharon Irons.

Astronauts White and McDivitt
received the John F. Kennedy
Award for outstanding contributions to space research and
development at the Arnold Air

Conclave.

CORRECTION
Steve Rogin is not Free
University of Buffalo
Committee Ch a i r m a n.
There are no officers.

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Co-ed Liberal Arts summer sessions in 30 major areas of learning—two sessions
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Credits may be obtained also for 3 special programs: “Exploring Art in New York”,
July 11-22; “New York City Writers’ Conference”, July 11-27; and
“Drama in the Church”, June 13-July 1.
Undergraduates may take courses leading to degrees in Bachelor of Arts,
Bachelor of Science and Bachelor of Science in Education. Graduate students may take
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Tuesday. April It, IMA

SPECTRUM

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—.»

Baseball Team Drubs ECTI
By RICH BAUMGARTEN

The UB baseball team began
its 1966 season by defeating ECTI
twice last week, 8-2 and 8-3.
A throng of about 200 turned
out at Clark Field last Thursday
to watch UB pound out an 8-2
win over the Kats in chilly 45
degree weather.

tion. The Bulls copped this game,
the six-hit pitching
of three UB moundsmen, a ninehit attack and a good defense.
8-3, behind

Brian Hansen led the way with
two hits including a long triple,
but it was Long’s base-loaded
three-bagger that capped UB's
five-run uprising in the third
inning.

After the game Coach Jim
Peelle said, ‘This was a fine team
performance. The boys were hit-

Ron McEwan, who pitched the
first five innings, got the win

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Netmen Take
Pair From Kats
The UB tennis team successfully opened its season Thursday by posting an 8-1 victory
over Erie County Technical Institute on the UB courts. Friday
the UB team followed with another 8-1 triumph, this time at
BCT1. Denny Brzezinski was 2-0
at first singles and 2-0 at first
doubles. Len Schneider, at second singles, was 1-1. Other strong
victories were posted by Matt

Yuschdk,

Pete

Lederman,

Don

Mingle and Jim Ripley. Other
players who contributed their talents were Paul Goldsmith, Mike

Greek Olympiad
This Sunday, April 24, Gamma
Phi Fraternity will sponsor its
Seventh Annual Greek Olympiad,
The Olympiad will be held at
Rotary Field and will begin at
1:00 p.m.

:i homers

ting aggressively. We should have
a real good season.”

for the Bulls, with good relief
work by Dick Pirozzolo and Rut-

kowski.

Every regular in the UB lineup had at least one hit as the
Bull batsmen cracked 14 hits off
three ECTI pitchers. Sophomore
Ken Rutkowski. playing his first
varsity game, had a big day with

the stick. Rutkowski got UB’s
first hit of the 1966 season with
two outs in the first inning; then
with the score tied 2-2 in the
fourth . Rutkowski slammed a
homer over the leftfield fence
and the Bulls never looked back.
Doug Long asio starred in the
hitting department with three
hits, while Jim Duprey and Fred
Geringer each had two safeties.

While the UB sluggers were
ripping the Tech pitchers. Don
Potwora,
the
Bulls’ starting
pitcher, settled down after a
shaky first inning and pitched
brilliant baseball. Po’wora kept
the ball low and kept ECTI hitting constantly on the ground.
Tim Uraskevich, hard-throwing
righthander, pitched
the last
three innings and looked good,
allowing only one hit and striking out five.
But if the UB offense was
great, the defense was superlative. The defense played error-

less ball and the infield looked
particularly sharp. Short stop Ron
Leiser made a great catch of a
first-inning line drive, while Fran
Buchta handled
some tough
chances at the hot corner.
UB's daring base-running and
aggessive hitting paid dividends

in several UB tallies. Leiser and

Long each stole key bases that
led to runs, while Duprey, Geringer and Long each contributed
run-producing,

two-out hits.

On Friday the Bulls again met
ECT1 at Clark Field. The game
was originally scheduled
for
EOT1, but the Kats’ field turned
out to be in unplayable condi

Dick Seils, Jim Klein and Bob
Ix)kczynski each had two hits for
ECTI. Harrison Hicks took the
loss for the Kats.

NOTES: Despite only two outdoor practices because of bad
weather, UB’s hitting and pitching appeared in midseason form
credit Peelle and Assistant Bill
Monkarsh with a job well done
. . . Duprey was nicked hard
on
the leg with a foul tip in the
first game, but the big catcher
shook it off . . . Monkarsh was a
three-sport, all-star catcher in his
high school days. He played baseball for UB in 1957 and 1958
before joining the Dodger chain
. . . ECTI took a lesson from UB’s
opening game and stole five bases
three by John Cervi
on Friday . . . Long got his third theft
of the year for UB in the fourth
inning of the game . . . Hansen
made a great running catch to
rob ECTI’s George Conway of an
extra-base hit in the second game
. .
The Bulls have yet to commit an error this season.

The Olympiad was initiated
when the fraternity was founded,
and has since become an annual
event in which all Greek organizations, both fraternities and sororities, participate. In conjunction with the event, an advertising booklet is issued by the
fraternity sponsored both by
other Greeks and by local
merchants.
There are two classes of events
in the Olympiad, those for men
and those for women. Men’s
events include: 100 and 220 yard
dashes, half mile run, running
broad jump, mile relay, shot put,
high jump, softball throw, egg
toss, and tug-o-war. Women’s
events are: 50 yard dash, 100
yard relay, standing broad jump,
softball throw, sock race, threelegged race, nail pounding, egg

toss, tug-o-war,
broad jump.

and

running

Last year’s victorious organizations were Alpha Sigma Phi and
Alpha Gamma Delta. The overall
trophy rotates each year to the
high point organization, with
three consecutive victories necessary for retirement of the trophy.
Alpha Sig has had possession of
the trophy for two years, so a
victory this year would enable
them to retire the award.

—

The diamondmen met RIT at
home Monday, and will play Buffalo State in a twinbill at State
Wednesday.
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Comet, Larry Glaser and Howie
Gould.
The UB Netmen will host
Gannon this afternoon and Buffalo State on Wednesday.

TRIVIA

All entries for today’s Sports
Trivia contest must be handed
to the sports desk of the Spectrum by this Friday. Prize-winners of and answers for today’s
quiz will appear in next Friday’s
edition.
Today’s quiz;

X. Who made the first error
in a regular season game in the
history of the Mets?
2. What baseball player was
called ‘The Plowboy”?
3. What was Sweetwater Clif-

ton’s real first name? ;
4. After whose hit did Enos
Slaughter score the winning run

of the 1946 World Series?
5. Aboard what horse did Eddie Arcaro win his last Kentucky

Derby?

6. Who won the 1947 U.S.
Open?
7. Who was the American
League ERA leader in 1960?
8. How many pitches did Don
Larsen throw in his perfect

game?

All participants in the Olympiad are bound by certain rules.
(Among these is that covering
footwear). Not allowed are any
kind of spikes or any members
the varsity track team.
Awards will be given in the
week following the Olympiad in
the Fillmore Room at the tables.
Peramnent trophies will be given
to the eyar’s high point organizations, both fraternities and sororities. The rotating trophy will
be given to the higher of the
two-victors.

9. Who was Red Grange’s collegiate coach?
10. Who won the AAU Women’s backstroke title in 1959?

Name
None of Tuesday’s entries
had any correct answers on them,
which saved the Spectrum the
cost of having to give away any
prizes.

The answers; 1. Larry Doby 2.
Bob Mitera (444 yds.) 3. Frank
Sullivan 4. Lionel Hebert 5. Wahoo Sam Crawford 6. Frankie
Brimsek 7. Vic Rouse 8. Herby
Flam 9. Amsterdam 10. Milton
Campbell.

—

—

PHYSICAL EDUCATION Track Team at Colgate
By LEN SCHNEIDER

The present emphasis upon
scholarship in our schools and
colleges throughout the nation
tends to overshadow the student’s judgment regarding the
need for physical fitness. All too
often he feels that he cannot
afford to devote the time necessary to attain and retain a state
of fitness through participation
in physical education, athletics,
and/or intramural sports.

serve and develop their own heritage of health so necessary for

their survival in this scientific
but sedentary age.
For such tasks as the college
and a competence which will see
student faces today, there is no
substitute for a personal fitness
him through.

The UB track team will jourHamilton, New York, Wednesday to open its 1966 track
season. Although very weak in
depth, the Fishermen bolstered
by Captain Larry Elsie, are hopeful of beginning the season on
the “right foot"
as one would
say in track
against the Red
Raiders.
ney to

American college students have
their work cut out for them. The
demands made upon
their
strength and intelligence are
heavy, real and constant. In the

unending struggle to preserve

our

culture against those forces which
would destroy it, college students
of today will become leaders
who must guide the way.

»

Km T#ch

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The responsibility and the opportunity are personal. Not only
must college students become
technically, philosophically and
artistically prepared as productive citizens, but they must also
live in such a manner as to pre-

Auidant Coach Dando at Work

—

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f
_

HONORS

h~

-1

PROGRAM

I Bf

(See Page 2)

VOLUME 16

"

IEbDHukI

AT L,BE *TY

.....

”

AND "SMYTHE"
(See Page

NO. 39

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1966

Senate Affirms Academic Freedom;
Criticizes Council, Opposes Feinberg
The Student Senate passed a
resolution affirming “the right
of University Relations to report
on all university activities, regardless of their content or intent” at a meeting last Wednesday.

The Buffalo Common Council
had passed a resolution requesting an investigation of "the use
of state facilities and agencies to
conduct anti-Viet Nam activities.”
The resolution passed by the
Senate urges the Common Council to rescind its resolution.
Three new members were elected to the Executive Committee of
the Student Senate—Ellen Cardone, Daniel Rothoiz, and Susan
Landerson.

cords with discount printCurtiss Montgomary, Engineering Senetor, hnns MOO (plus) expense for ID
ing tho biggost boondoggle ovor possod by Wudont government. Ho also proposed the Senate investiinto
two
campuses.
Photo by Carol Good son
gate the administration proposal to split the university

CW Seeks Active Support for War
The Committee for Victor in
Vietnam will sponsor a mass rally
at Memorial Auditorium on April
23 at 8 p.m. designed to express
community support of United
States policy in Vietnam.
Speaking invitations have been
sent to: Vice President Hubert
H. Humphrey; United States Senators Jacob K. Javits, Everett M.
Dirksen and Roy Wilkins; the
President of the National Association for the Advancement of
Colored People; and National
President of Young Americans for
Freedom Tom Houston.
The Committees lor Victory in
Vietnam was organized at UB last
February for the express purpose
of supporting the war in Vietnam
according to Committee Co-chairSickler. It presently has over 250
members.
Mr. Sickler, speaking at a CW
meeting last week said, “Every
indication, each poll, every survey shows solid support for U.S.
Vietnam policy. But what is the
American public doing to express
their appreciation and support to
our fighting men? Edmund Burke
once said ‘All that is needed for
civil men to succeed is for good
men to do nothing.’ It is time
the majority speaks
. this rally
is the chance we have been waiting for.”
Mr. Klinger stated, “Having ob.,

served the complete lack of de-

brutal totalitarianism,
and persecution of opposition
which has taken place in communist nations, we believe that the
forces of communism should be
vigorously opposed. We believe
that the Vietcong, supported by
the North Vietnamese are a part
of the communist alliance seeking to expand and overthrow noncommunist governments.
“We believe that on the basis
of the ruthless terror that has
been exhibited by the communists
against their own people in Vietnam that a Vietcong victory would
bring a totalitarian dictatorship
which would liquidate its enemies and deprive the Vietnamese
people of all fundamental freedoms.
mocracy,

its work both to the Vietnamese
and to the entire world to defend
the South Vietnamese people
against the communist threat. We
believe that it would be both
morally indefensible and politically disastrous for us to break our
promise and to withdraw from
Vietnam without having guaranteed its independence and freedom.

Following the conclusion of the
war we favor free elections for
the Vietnamese people. Following
victory we believe that the United
States should do its utmost to
improve the living standards of

Shortage of Resident Housing
To Raise Co—liter Enrolment
Housing Director Thomas Schillo disclosed that a housing shortage will force a reduction in the
number of incoming resident
Freshmen students from 1060 to
850 next semester.
To compensate for the reduction, an additional 200 Freshmen
commuters will be accepted to
stabilize the size of the Freshman class, according to Admissions and Records Director A. L.
Kaiser.
Academic standards for admission will not be lowered since
more Buffalo area students are
expected to apply than have in
the past, commented Dr. Kaiser.
Mr. Schillo noted that Buffalo

is not an apartment or rooming
house city. Consequently, upperclass women have difficulty obtaining approved housing, which
results in an added burden on
the dorms
“There are rooms in the city,
but not where a girl would want
to live. Apartments outside the
city are often beyond the budget
of the students. Furthermore,
landlords are hesitant to rent to
students.”
Mr. Schillo emphasized, “The
Dean of Women is looking at this
problem in a liberal way. She
would like as many Seniors and
Juniors as possible to live in approved off-campus housing.”

the Vietnamese people and combat their other enemies of poverty, hunger, disease, illiteracy and
social inezuity.
“We have seen America's peace
gestures contemptuously rebuffed
by the North Vietnamese and we
believe that until such time as
the communists are willing to
agree to a peace without American surrender, it is our duty to
give our firm support to our soldiers in Vietnam.”
In summation, Mr. Klinger added, “We support the present United States objective in Vietnam
which is to defeat the communist
threat to South Vietnam and to
guarantee independence and freedom to its people. This is our conception of victory.”

ree

A motion was carried to appropriate funds for having United States National Student Association discount cards printed
on the back of UB Identification
cards in September. The USNSA
cards will entitle students to dis-

counts in hotels, motels, restaurants and other public service
facilities across the United States.
Convocations Committee Chair-

man Sarah Lee Rubenstein sub-

mitted the annual report listing
three lecture series of Contemporary Philosophy, China, and
Theology, lectures on physics,
contemporary humor, dance and
the co-sponsored Discriminating
about Discrimination as last
year’s accomplishments.

International Student Affairs
Committee Chairman Richard
Jaross cited “orientation for
foreign students” as the committee’s main goal. He emphasized
the committee's “tremendous
success” in orienting 120 new
foreign students this year.
The Senate passed an $1160
budget for the Film Society, and
a $2261 budget for the Sociology
Club.

niversity

The Free University of Buffalo
(FUB) will hold a general organization meeting Monday, April
18 at 7:30 in 329 Norton.

Recognition was given to three
new organizations—International

Association of Students in Economic and Commercial Sciences,
Undergraduate Medical Society
and SUNY Senders. Recognition
of the History and Logic of Science Club was postponed until
a list of members could be obtained.
Proposed Changes to Hie
Constitution
(Student Judiciary)

Addition: The Judiciary may
remove for misconduct in office,
members of all courts under its
jurisdiction. Removal of such
members shall be after a formal
hearing before the Judiciary,
brought on written request by
one or more members of such
courts or a member of the Judiciary. Such requests shall contain specified charges of misconduct in office and shall be signed by the member or members
instituting the proceeding.
By Laws: Article 4
Addition: F. To levy other
other penalties not inconsistent
with article 4, section A through
E.
(Activities Recognition)
Article 1, section 2, C. The Student Senate shall have the power
to review all student organizations, unless such action be in
conflict with University policy
and regulation.
By Laws: Article 4, section 2,
subsection A, part 2 A. To inform the Student Senate of the
sponsorship of new activities,
the development of new functions for existing activities, or
abolition of any student activity.
B. To register any and all
student activities upon evidence
of a constitution and a faculty
advisor.
Section 3, subsection A. 1. Allocations. The Finance Committee
shall recommend to the Student
Senate the allocation of the Student Activities Fee to registered
student organizations and activities whose membership is open
to all students.
'

rganizing Monday

academic community with the incompetence and failure of the
existing institutions. Repeatedly,

intellectual and creative attempts
have been prostituted by cconomic and political interests.”

PUB Committee Chairman Steven Rogin disclosed that the Free
University has received temporary recognition from William Siemering, Associate Coordinator of
Student Activities and Sociology
Professor William J. Harrell has
been appointed faculty advisor.

Various methods of organization are now being investigated
and faculty members are being

approached as prospective participants in the Free University,
which will be initiated next year
according to Mr. Rogin.
“The flexibility of the curricula, which will include subjects
from all areas of the humanities
and social sciences, will be maintained by the selection of topics
for discussion in accordance with
demand.”

Mr. Rogin said, "the basic goal
of FUB is to provide a free intellectual environment in which
teacher and student may engage
in pertinent inquiry.”
He continued, “the formation
of a Free University is motivated
by the disgust and dissatisfaction of many individuals In the

International Club elect* new officers: Front, I for: Judi Mack. Mrresponding secretary; Janice Palmeri, vice president; Christa Pewtsch,
recording secretary. Rear: Joseph Hang, president; Perde Bartefc,
treasurer.
Newly elected officers of the
The club will hold an InterInternational Club are: President,
national Fiesta Saturday. April
Joseph Hang (Singapore): Vice- 23 at 7:30 p m. in the Conference

President, Janice Palmari (Buffalo); recording secretary, Christina Peutsch (Austria); corresponding secretary, Judi Mack
(Buffalo): and treasurer, Pedro
Bartok (Venezuela). They will
take office April 28, 1966.

Theater and the Fillmore Boom.
Fiesta events include a variety
show, exhibits, and delicacies
from foreign countries.
Donations for the evening are
$2 00 per person. The public is
invited to attend.

�PAGE TWO

Honors Program
By RONNIE BROMBERG

An honors program should endeavor to give the “best possible
and most individualized education
to the best students,” explained
Dr. Lynd Forguson, Chairman of
the Honors Committee of the
College of Arts and Sciences, in
an interview with this reporter
April 12.

In tracing the history of
SUNYAB's honors program, Dr.
Forguson noted that the University of Buffalo had previously
had a tutorial system. All students studied independently or
in small groups with professors,
their grades being determined by

a comprehensive exam. When the
University became state, the increased number of students predicated a new system.

In the fall of 1962, the honors
program was initiated. It has
“limped along,’ Dr. Forguson said,
with the questions of what it is
going to be and should be still
largely unsettled. At present,
there are two honors programs—the programs of the individual
departments and that of the College of Arts and Sciences.
Any department may elect to
give honors to its majors on the
basis of grade point average and
academic promise. The format of

Buddhist Scholar Visits Campus;
Dr. Hanayama Here Until May 5
Dr. Shoyu Hanayama, teacher
and Buddhist minister, has been
appointed visiting professor
through May 5 in conjunction
with the University’s Visiting Asian Professors Program.

Dr.

Friday, April 15, 1966

SPECTRUM

Hanayama, who is

Japa-

nese, was educated at the University of Tokyo where he earned
his bachelor’s degree in Indian
philosophy in 1955, his master's
and doctor’s degrees in the science of humanity in 1957 and
1962. He also holds a Certificate
from Union Theological Seminary
in New York City.

Minister of the Buddhist
Church in Seabrook, New Jersey,
Dr. Hanayama came to the University from a visiting professorship
at Monmouth College, Monmouth.

Illinois, which he held earlier this
year. He served as research associate in the Department of Indian Studies at the University
of Wisconsin at Madison in 1963
and 1964, and as visiting professor at various units of the State
University of New York during
the summer sessions of 1963 and
1964.
His two most recent publications are “The Meaning and
Purpose of Life According to
Buddhism,’ and “A Summary of
Various Research on the Prajnaparamita Literature by Japanese
Scholars.”
The director of the Visiting
Asian Professors Program is Dr.
Burvil H, Glenn, professor of
education at the University.

'Best Possible Education'

the programs are established by
the departments themselves, as
are the criteria for the honors
work. Students are awarded distinction, high distinction or highest distinction upon successful
completion of the honors work in
their major.

they might be qualified for honors work should make themselves
known to their department or

The College honors program
basically consists of the programs
of the separate departments in
the College. It is administered by

Dr. Forguson noted that honors
work should provide “head-on intellectual contact with faculty
members.” Honors students can
usually work more directly with
faculty members than in the regular classes. More intensive study

the Honors Committee, which determines the criteria for continuing in and graduating from the
honors program, having the power
to waive any and all degree requirements for honors students.
Members of this committee are
Drs. Robert Wessner, chairman
of American Studies program;
Claude Welch, Political Science
department; Joseph Freyden, English; Charles Beyer, Modern Languages; Carmela Privatera, Biology; and David Louis, History.

Last year approximately 85
students participated in the program. Dr. Forguson said that he
would like to see a truly college
honors program developed, in
addition to the departmental honors programs.

Dr. Forguson emphasized that
only when enrolled in the College
honors program for at least one
year may a student graduate
magna or summa cum laude. The
committee decides his qualifications, using a weighted average.
Students are chosen for the
honors programs on a basis of the
4 semester average from University College; approximately a 2.0
or over is needed. Dr. Forguson
suggests that students who think

the Honors Committee, since
other than grades and specific
recommendations from the department, there is no way of finding out who is qualified.

(CPS)—The W. E. B. DuBois
Clubs of America have gained
about 600 new members since
the Justice Department’s request
that it register as a Communist
front group, according to Hugh
Fowler, national chairman.

Fowler told an Indiana University audience the move was
“probably the biggest boost to
membership that could have taken place.”
DuBois Club membership numbers about 3,000 in 58 chapters,
mostly on college campuses in
New York, California, Wisconsin
and Illinois, he said.
College administrations are not
sure what the status of the clubs
on their campuses will be. The
chapters, which maintain their
local autonomy, have stated they
will not register.
At Wayne State University,
Frank Tuohey, Director of Uni-

a quick
downsloping roof line

spinner-style

wheel covers

the honors programs would be
excellent training for graduate
school, often enabling the student to do independent research.
Nearly all departments in Arts
and Sciences have honors programs. They are; Biology, Chemistry, Classics, Drama and Speech,
Economics, English, Geography,
Geological Science, History, Modern Languages, Music, Philosophy,
Physics, Political Science, Psychology and Sociology.

W. E. B. DuBois Club's Membership
Boosted By Justice Department Ruling

What you notice is...

wraparound
triple taillights

of the subject, area is usually
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versity Relations, said the only
restriction on university recognition was that the group be nondiscriminatory. “Since this is the
only limitation other than illegal
purposes or activities, the university has no basis for action
at this time."
The office of the dean of students at Brooklyn College said
the group’s activities would not
be hindered. A rally followed
the announcement, with the club
trying to enroll new members.
The clubs, as a whole, maintain that the Justice Department’s
ruling stems from their widespread activity protesting the
war in Viet Nam. Rick Eisenberg,
a DuBois Club worker in Brooklyn, said registration was sought
when the organization became
“one of the most effective groups
in the peace movement.”
Carole Cohen, Brooklyn College DuBois Club president, said,
“It is not coincidental that the
government has chosen to attack
us at the same time it is carrying out a new escalation of the
war and attempting to implement a-student draft.”
Staughton Lynd, assistant professor of history at Yale, joining
the club as an expression of
“similar sentiments,” called the
action “a direct
slap at the peace movement.”
The Justice Department definition states the group “knowingly conspires to perform acts that
would substantially contribute to
the establishment within the
U.S.A. of a totalitarian dictatorship under foreign control.”
The stated goals of the club
are “Marxism, peace, civil rights
and civil liberties.” They deny
any Communist Party affiliation
and reassert a completely socialistic ideology independent of any
backing.

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Martha Rotenberg, seeking to
inform a Chapter on the Temple
University campus, said, “There
may be some Communists in some
of our chapters. This is because
anyone who agrees with our
policy may join. We do not request a statement of political
affiliations to join the group.”
Ilene Richards, of the UCLA
DuBois Club, in explaining the
club’s refusal to register, stated,
“Upon registration, certain things
happens. Employment anywhere

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would be extremely difficult. The
financial cost of staying in operation would become prohibitive.
Those groups that did manage
to survive must label all their
mail as being ‘disseminated by
a Communist organization.” -I
Of the 22 organizations required to register under the pro-!
visions of the 1952 Infernal Se-;
curity Act none have ever doneso. However, 19 of the organizations collapsed after charges
were filed and three were acquitted for insufficient evidence.
The DuBois Dubs are afraid their
organization will lose members
if the registration requirement
is pushed. The communist -front
section of the Act requires .only
that the group register and not
the individual member.
Members have also charged
the Justice Department's decision
constitutes an open invitation-to
s r'
violence and extremism
. jUffi
“

‘AHWlVl'.VAV

1

•

�Friday, April 15, 1966

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

C C Furnas Recognition Day
To Be Observed Across the Country
“Clifford C. Furnas Recognition
Day" will be observed April 19
at 30 Alumni Club testimonial
dinners held throughout the

country.
The C. C. Furnas scholarship
gift for graduate studies will be
presented at the Buffalo dinner
to Dr. and Mrs. Furnas from individuals across the country.
The Buffalo dinner, at the
Statler-Hilton, will begin at 6:30
p.m. with a reception in the

Terrace Room, followed by a dinner in the Golden Ballroom at
7:30 p.m.
Tickets for the evening are $25
per person. The price includes a
contribution to the gift for the
Furnases.
The program will be broadcasted from Buffalo via gradio-grade
telephone circuit at 9 p.m. to each
of the individual area dinners.
Later in the spring a portrait
of Dr. and Mrs. Furnas will be
presented to them.

Dr. R. Loewy to Speak
At AIAA Awards Dinner
U.S. Air Force Chief Scientist

Dr. Robert G. Loewy will be the
principal speaker at the awards
night dinner of the Northeastern
Regional Student Conference of

the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA)
April 16 at Cornell Aeronautical
Laboratory at 6:30 p.m.
The dinner will conclude a twoday conference at UB attended by
graduate and undergraduate students from fifteen colleges and
universities in the northeast.
I ns t i t u t e representative AI
Spindler announced, ‘The highlight of the conference will be
the presentation of original technical papers on aero-space research undertaken by the students.” Cash awards totaling more
than $600 will be given to stu-

dents presenting outstanding research.
Dr. Loewy was associate professor of mechanical and aerospace sciences at the University
of Rochester before his appointment last September as Air Force
chief scientist. Earlier, he served
as technical assistant and associate research engineer at Cornell
Aeronautical Laboratory. While
working in Western New York,
Dr. Loewy was a member of
AIAA’s Niagara Frontier Section.
Dr. David Benenson, UB associate professor of engineering, is
general chairman of the conference.

By SHARON SHULMAN
Last year, freshmen with poor
academic averages were allowed,
under University College’s “Furlough System,” to return to college after a year at work. This
plan is presently being evaluated,
but will be continued for the present freshman class in absence of
definite results.
The program was inaugurated
by Dr. Milton Plesur, Furlough
System director and acting Dean
of University College. Since the
program’s initiation, Dr. Plesur
has received numerous letters
from students on furlough who indicate a desire to return to school.
The following excerpts from such
letters express this attitude as
well as the problems that caused
each student to leave the University temporarily:

“While working on a job that
required neither education nor
thought, I suddenly felt more
like a robot than an individual.
It seemed as though my brain
might easily become a vestigial
organ. Because I found no challenge in high school, I never
really had to study. Therefore I
never really studied at college,
either. Another cause of my failure was a poor sleeping schedule
I’d stay up at night and sleep
through classes."
—

The two-day meeting will also
include tours of Textron’s Bell
Aerosystems Company and Cornell Astronautical Laboratory.

ACLU, NYCLU Annual Meeting;

Civil Liberties And War Panel
The AOLU and the NYCLU
will hold their annual meeting
this Sunday at 8 p.m. in the John
P. Kennedy Recreation Center
Auditorium. The program will include election of officers, an address by Marvin M. Karpatkin,
Esq., and a panel discussion on
“Civil Liberties and War Issues.”
Nominations for 3-year terms
on the Executive Board are: Dr.
W. Leslie Barnette, Jr., Dr. Lyle
B. Borst, Mr. Allen Giles, Dr.
John Hoffman, and the Rev. Richard Prosser.
James B. Alteson Esq., has been
nominated to fill the unexpired
portion (one year) of Rabbi Nathan Gaynor’s term.
The following officers have
been nominated from the membership of the Board: Richard
Lipsitz, Chairman, Rev. Howard
Waterhouse, Vice-Chairman, Dr.
W. Leslie Barnette, Jr., Secretary,
and Allen Giles, Treasurer.
The nominating committee has
submitted the following candi-

Plesur's Furlough System
Beginning Second Year

dates: Arthur D Butler, ChairGarver, Robert
North Jr., Mrs. Sonia Robinson,
J. Stephen Sherwin and Emanuel
Tabachnick.
Additional nominations may be
made from the floor.
man, Newton

The panelists will be Col. Silas
R. Molyneaux (U.S.A.F. Ret.), Professor Newton Garver, and Dr.
Marvin Zimmerman.

Another student found that because he was a commuter, he was
spending more time with old
friends and less on schoolwork:
“I began to live for that precious
free time when I could be with
my friends. As far as schoolwork
was concerned, there was no
studying, no motivation."
One student wrote that he had
had his fun at UB, “but with
nothing to show for it except the
dismissal slip.”

A girl who is presently wrapping meat in a supermarket described her problem as one of
maturity. “It was too emotionally
immature to be self-controlled or

self-reliant. Now I find that I
want more than work for which
no education is needed. I never
really appreciated being around

knowledge until I began to work
in a place where knowledge is

void.”
This same student continued:
“I gained confidence in myself
during the year on furlough. Now
I have the desire to learn in addition to going to school. I was
previously under the impression
that the desire to return to school
would decrease during the furlough year. 1 discovered, instead,
that if the desire to learn is there,
it will increase in gigantic proportion.”

In response to such letters, Dr.

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soon as possible."

Dr. Plesur said that the system
will be continued despite the fact
that male students may be drafted. If this were the case, students
could return to the University following their military discharges.

“The Skanks” and Sigma Alpha
Mu will participate in a “Championship Trivia" contest Monday,
April 18 on WKBW-TV, channel
7 at 9:30 p.m.
The winning team will receive
a loving cup and a $100 check
from WKBW-TV which will be

presented to the C. C. Furnas
Scholarship Fund.

Irv Weinstein will be the
moderator. Mr. Richard Berkson,
account executive at WKBW and
Mr. Pierre La Marrc, treasurer
of the Studio Arena Theater
judge the contest.
“The Skanks" are Leon Ix-wis,
David Bergen, Francine Fischbein and Sebastian Dangcrfield.
Sigma Alpha Mu will be represented by Robert
Steven
H. Sunshine, Barry A. Gutterman and Daniel L. Alterman.
Production personnel for the
program include Mr. 0. Lyle
Koch, executive producer, Mr.
Don
Kline, producer-director,

Mr. Daniel A. Rose, coordinator
and Miss Joan Alpern, research
assistant.

Labor Negotiation
Is Lecture Topic
Dr. Richard E. Walton, Profes-

sor of Administrative Sciences at
Purdue University, will deliver
an address on “The ‘Behavioral
Approach' to Research in Labor
Negotiations” to faculty and graduate students April 18 at 2 p.m.
in 234 Norton.

Professor Walton is the author
of The Imped of the Professional
Engineering Union; A Behavioral
Theory of Labor Negotiations,
and articles in professional journals. He is a labor relations consultant to a number of firms,
including the IBM Corporation,
Esso Research, and Eli Lilly
&amp;

Co.

Today is the last day
for making up grades of
incomplete.

Dr. J. Hall to Discuss
Psychiatry And Crime
Visiting Professor Jerome Hall
will deliver a paper at the symposium on “Psychiatry and the
Criminal Law” April 18 at 8:30
p.m. in Butler Auditorium.

Dr. Hall, professor of law at
Indiana University, is visiting UB
under the sponsorship of the Law
School and College of Arts and
Sciences.

classical
Kept

County Library, Lafayette Square.

Both lectures are open to the

public.

WMh

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Clash
Trivially at 1/VKBIlV

Dr. Hall will speak April 22,
12 p.m., at the Buffalo and Erie

WRANGLER

Plesur has said that although
students on furlough fear stagnation of the mind, they have in
this system a chance to prove to
the university that they have sufficient motivation to continue
with intellectual pursuits. If academic interest can be lost in a
year, it should be found out as

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�Editorial Comment

.

.

The

.

THE DAILY SPECTRUM?
During the past week, circumstances and editors
conspired to turn the Spectrum into a daily paper. The

editors and staff deserve tremendous credit for carrying
this experiment through to a successful conclusion! Many
old problems were accentuated, and a few new ones
created, but the experience of the past week proved
once again that all of these could be reduced to the fact
that there are not enough competent, dedicated people
participating in the work of this paper.
The effect of a week of daily papers on the campus
community is hard to assess, but the effect on the editors
and staff can be computed in terms of lost sleep, skipped
meals, frayed nerves, and a sense of achievement. A
campus this size, with the pretentions to excellence and
prestige which this campus appears to have, ought to
be able and willing to support a daily paper. We ought
to have a large enough staff that people on the paper
wouldn’t have to cut classes, skip meals, and go without
sleep and relaxation, but for those who do, the rewards
are great.
Some day, the staff of the Spectrum will make a
present to this University of a daily paper, but that day
will come only when more students realize the sense of
achievement and excitement that comes with hard work
on a campus paper.

FREE SPEECH IN BUFFALO
The Buffalo Common Council appears to be determined to express its support of our criminal war in Viet
Nam, even to the point of denying the right of free
speech to opponents of the war. The Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom has twice been
refused permission to set up a table on Main Street for
the purpose of obtaining signatures on “peace-pledge
cards.”
The second refusal came Wednesday when a subcommittee of the Council found a technicality with which
to disqualify the WILPF request. The sub-committee’s
action was so arbitrary that it prompted a Republican
member of the Council, who supports the war, to say that
it was “a shame" that the committee could not “back up
the right to express a basic freedom.” Councilman Regan
went on to express his regret that the representatives of
WILPF' were “subjected to a dusting off an old rule, or
to a mild form of abuse.”
This arbitrary and oppressive action offers even
more evidence that the danger to our constitutional way
of life created by the war and the accompanying hysteria
growing.
If the “American way of life” is worth
fighting for. then it should be worth preserving as well.
The Buffalo Common Council is doing neither, but rather
subverting the very things which supposedly got us into
this vile war in the first place.
Hopefully, the women who arc working so hard to
express their feelings about the war will be able to obtain
permission from the city fathers to exercise their constitutional rights of free speech and petition. Hopefully
the harrassment and indignity to which they have been
subjected will cease, but if it does not, it will, ironically
enough, subvert the war. Tor the Common Council will
have proven that there is really nothing left to fight for.

THE

SPECTRUM

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus. Buffalo, N. Y. 14214
Published twice weekly from the first week of September to the last week in
May. except for exam periods. Thanksgiving. Christmas, and spring vacations

Editorin-Chief
Business

JEREMY TAYLOR

Manager

RAYMOND

D VOLPE

ALICE EOELMAN
Angelina, Joanne Bouchier. Russell Buchman. Karen Green.
Lederman. Joan Roberts. Rick Schwab. Dan Schroeder, Sharon Shulman,
Teitler. Nancy Toder. Patti Wartley. Judy Weisberg
Feature Editor
JOHN STINY
Assistant
JO ANNE LEEGANT
Staff—Bonnie Bartow. Ron Ellsworth. Barbara Ann Fitzsimmons. Barbara Loeb.
Audrey Logel. Bob Martin. Suzanne Rovner. Martha Tack. William Weinstein.
Sports Editor
STEVE SCHUELEIN
Staff—Mike Castro. Mike Dolan. Steve Farbman. Bob Frey. Scott Forman,

News Editor

Staff—Loretta

Peter
Eileen

J. B

Shared

Layout Editor
SHARON HONIG
Stephanie Parker. Steve Silverman

Staff-—Joanne Bouchier.

Copy Editor
LAUREN JACOBS
Staff —Carol Becker. Estelle Fox. Jocelyn Hailpern. Sandy Lippman. Betsy
Claire Shottenfeld. Susan Zuckerberg
Staff—Terry
Mancmi

Friday, April 15, 19M

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

Advertising Manager
Angelo. Audrey Cash. Pat

RON

Ozer.

HOLTZ

Rosenfeld.

Steve

Silverman.

Joseph

EDWARD JOSCELYN
Editor
Bonneau. Joseph Feyes. Carol Goodson.

Photography

Staff—Don Blank. Peter
Marc Levina. Ivan Makuch,

Robert Wynne

Circulation

Michael Soluri. Anthony
Manager

Faculty Advisor

Financial Advisor
EDITORIAL

Walluk.

DIANE

LEWIS

IRENE

WILLET

Alan Gruber.
Susan Wortman.

DALLAS GARBER

POLICY IS DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING

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Second Class Postage

Subscription

$3.00

Paid at
per

Buffalo.

year,

N Y.
circulation

15.000
Represented
for
advertising by
national
National Advertising Service. Inc.. 420 Madison Ave., New York. N. Y.

grump

You very well might be better
off to skip this if you are in a
hurry. For various of reasons it
is one of those weeks when you
scrounge up the Spectrum for
both Friday, last, and Tuesday,
and the News and the Courier
and then you search desperately
for something upon which to expound.

There did not seem to be anything in any of the above sterling publications to elicit brilliance, however, it is to be noted
that I am not attempting to cast
any aspirations, I am merely admiting the fact that I am blah
today.
For one nasty thing my wife
and I were the third car to arrive

at the scene of a rather nasty
accident last Sunday night. A
young couple ran out of gas and
were walking back up the road
to get some in a gallon can. He
apparently was walking on the
side towards the road. A car
passed another and in doing so
hit him but not her.
We pulled up and did what
little we could. My wife is an RN
but there was nothing she could
or should have done. It was a
long wait for the ambulance. He
died in a hospital some four
hours after they put him in the
ambulance, apparently without
ever regaining consciousness.
I am without question one of
those people who prefers that
there be some sort of value in
things that occur. 1 have a very
open sort of value system that
finds values in all sorts of places
that befuddle some of my acquaintances. 'But when there is

nothing of sense or value as in
this case, it invariably stays with
me for a time. It does not particularly affect my behavior patterns
but if I attempt to write anything
humorous it would be as pathetic
as some people claim all my material is.
There are things about the situation I could mutter through my
beard, such as a very real question about the competence of the
ambulance attendants involved,
but I am unable to get horribly
worked up over that either. The
simple fact remains that it is
doubtful that anything except the
original senseless occurance is at
fault here.
Perhaps it is the stark comparison of the way the day was spent:
Church, the drive down to the
in-laws, the dinner, the nibbling,
a generally warm and friendly
atmosphere, and then a young
and upset man flagging you down
with a flashlight to show you a
blanket covered form by the side
of the road with a woman, the
wife, standing next to him crying
in a mechanical, uncomprehending way.

It is difficult to forget such a
scene, and it perhaps serves to
reinforce something that I think
we all forget, unless we are unfortunate enough to be a relative: Those 20 or thirty fatalities
a week we have in Vietnam are
all people, goddam it. I may
agree with them, I may disagree
with them, but they die, and when
they die, they bleed. I wonder
how many of those who are so
insistent that we are protecting

The Murder
By JOHN MEDWID

To the firemen of Portsmouth,
England whose inspection parade
was interrupted when a third
of the force was called to answer
a fire alarm goes our Bad Luck
of the Week Award.
To the Ludens Company which
now makes a Chocolate Cocoanut Cream confection in the
shape of an Easter Cross goes
our Sacrilege for Fun and Profit

Award.
To

the

nouncing

firm which recently

a new publication
for insurance agents and brokers
.
.
.
The Monthly John Liner
Letter" goes our unintentional
Pun of the Week Award.
...

To the 2l r of the people in
a poll recently taken by seven
Stanford University social scientists who support a plan to cut
federal aid to education if it
is necessary to pay for the war
in Viet Nam goes our Guns Will
,&lt;

...

Us Strong; Brains Will
Only Make Us Smart Award.
To the Saigon police who are
now “getting tough” with demonstrators, many of them students. using clubs and gas to
break them up goes our What
Do They Think This Is
Mississippi? Award.
To Mississippi State Police
who used tear gas and clubs
against Alcorn A &amp; M demonstrators who are protesting the
firing of teachers and dismissal
—

tion in civil rights activities goes
our What Do They Think This
Is—Saigon? Award.
To Barry Goldwater who blasted the Senate Foreign Affairs
Committee hearings on the war
in Viet Nam as “naked, unabashed. propaganda shows” goes our
Confuse

freedom in Vietnam, and a number of other places, have ever
seen blood spilled in anger?
And before you attempt to invalidate the question on the basis
of prejudice,. I grant that the
other side is just as human, and
probably bleeds and hurts just
as much while dying. It is easier
for me to remember some of the
people I trained with as an infantryman in Louisiana and try
to imagine them lying on the side
of a road covered with blood.
And if what I am saying sounds
mauldlin and sloppy, I wouldn't
worry about it, it probably is.
But it occurs to me that it is
highly improbable that many of
the people who have been flying
back and forth to Saigon with
such amazing consistancy have
ever seen anyone shot down and
lying there dying. And do not
talk to me of visits to hospitals.
I will maintain with great vigor,
if little proof, that the psychology
of seeing someone crumpled and
dying, and all wrapped up in
pretty white bandages is completely different.

I suspect I am an ultimate
pacifist. Self-defense only, and I
have this nagging feeling that we
may not be completely and honorably involved in self-defense in
Vietnam.
Hopefully, at least part of my
sense of humor will have returned by next week. If you read this
for its amusement value, I apologize.

of Gonzago

Make

Don't

by STEESE

Me With

The

Facts, I've Already Made Up My

Mind Award.

To Senator Everett Dirksen
who recently said. “Every buck

we can save will mean a buck
less in taxes and, believe me,
we’re going to hunt for those
savings’’ yet gave bipartisan support to an appropriation for
$14.5 billion to pay for Johnson’s
war goes our Hunt a Little Harder Award.
To the Democratic Represent-

ative from Missouri Richard Ichard who threatened press censorship to those Viet Nam newsmen who didn’t follow the official Washington line, “If the
news media do not demonstrate
the responsibility and the voluntary self-restraint of which I
know they are capable, then we
must be prepared to consider
some form of wartime news censorship which would include a
more stringent policy toward accreditation of correspondents, a
limitation in access to battle
zones and a scrutiny of the copy
filed” goes our John Peter Zenger All The News That Fits We
(Cont’d on P. 7)

Cacotopia and

By STEPHEN KRAFTS
An investigation of anti-war
activities at SUNYAB by the Buffalo Common Council, the single
best argument extant against
modern
American democracy,
might be encouraged if for no
other reason than demonstrating
the ignorance of our local politicians. Councilman Gus Franczyk's comments as reported in
the April 8 issue of the Spectrum
promise several delightful weeks
of political hackery, a real political science course for which academic credit should be granted.
Disregard the syntax of this
sentence of Franczyk s and concentrate on its meaning:
The main concern is the
use of state agencies, in the
light of the fact that our governor has agreed with President Johnson's stand (presumably on the War) and thus,
anti-war activities are a subpolicy...
version o(
,

Obviously any

self-respecting

anti-war group would be subversive in the sense that it op-

poses a state policy (i.e.,

war),

Franczyk's logic implies, however. that any activity in opposition to the governor's policies
would be "subversion of state
policy." Thus, one who opposes
the New York State sales tax
makes himself amenable to investigation for subversion. There
seems to be a constitutional issue involved here somewhere.
Although Franczyk
protests
that the Common Council is not
attempting to restrict freedom
of speech, the paranoic overtones
of the resolution would undoubtedly rule the day in the event
of an investigation. The question
of State University policy concerning the use of public relations facilities by student groups
is a jqere. incident tp get at the

anti-war

groups.

The

anti-war

groups would welcome an investigation if some meaningful issues

concerning the War in Viet Nam
could be raised, but the Council is not likely to allow a divergence

which would expose
the paucity of its knowledge. The
investigation would have to clandestine a la HCUA; its assaults
would be based on what for
the Council is the peripheral issue of state policy. There would
be little chance for the assaultees to rebut.
So perhaps it would be best
to have the Common Council
mind its own graft. One would
think that these political troglodytes could keep busy maintaining the status quo in education,
housing, urban redevelopment,
poverty, etc. without venturing
injo other areas of incompetence.

�Friday, April IS, 1966

SPECTRUM

oCetterd

PAGE FIVE

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War Held Unpopular at Home and Abroad
Can the supporters of genocide
disassociate
themselves
from
every “form of extremism which
resorts to violence or attacks
people on the basis of their

race or religion?”

■As absurd as any affirmative
answer to this question might
seem, Steven Sickler, Marvin ZimKlinger and
merman, Frank
Donald Rich actually make a diligent attempt to cover up the
fact that militant support for
the U.S. war against Vietnam
has dwindled to exclude all but
the farthest reaches of the depraved ultra-right.

While thousands march against

the war across the country, such
groups as the American Nazi
Party and the KuKlux Klan assemble their twisted dozens to
prepare tactical assaults on these
broad demonstrations.
Popular anti-U.S. action is also
mounting in every major Vietnamese city, while Cao Ky, hated
dictatorial puppet, proclaims Hitler to be his only hero. That is

the kind of support the Johnson
policy finds in Vietnam.
The Johnson Administration has

carefully cultivated its isolation
by organizing such horendous
atrocities that even elements of
the Green Berets, most brainwashed and highly disciplined

m.

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section of the Army, has been
alienated. For example. Sgts.
Smith and McClure, whom the
Army has arbitrarily deprived of
all contact with the outside
world ever since they denounced
the war.

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Another Green Beret. Donald

Duncan, just back from Vietnam,

praised the anti-war demonstrators as being "opposed to people,
our own and others, dying for
a lie, thereby corrupting the very
word democracy." Zimmerman
and Company’s redbaiting tactics
will never be successful at this

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Everything Photographic for

Professional

Amateur Use

&amp;

DELAWARE CAMERA
MART
Movie Rental*

Camera*
Projector*
Photo Finiihing

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2635 Delaware Ave.
877-3317

875-8114

F.S.-1 Issued Immediately

hideous level.

Joel Meyers
Youth Against War &amp; Fascism

Calien Hit For “Linguistic Trickery”
TO THE EDITOR;
James Callan uses in his article
The Right the reactionary neoKantian ethics of “universal application,” i.e., that to be moral,
an act must be such that the
ethical principle involved is applicable to all men and at all
times as a universal maxim.
This school of ethics has long
been discredited and now only
serves reactionary philosophy in
its attempts to confuse the masses
with linguistic trickery.
In a previous article, Callan
has ridiculed the struggle for
a minimum wage. Here we can
see quite clearly how the rightwing morality is the morality
of the rich and how it is immorality as far as the working
people are concerned. The rightwing is actually guilty of murder when it fights the minimum
wage and deprives the oppressed
of food, shelter, and medical attention. It is really hypocracy
when the right-wing supports
genocide and mass murder in
Vietnam while bemourning the
“loss of individual rights.”
All ethics are relative and are
strictly motivated by the interests
of certain groups. It is the rightwingers like Callan that put up
a blanket of hypocrisy talking

about the justification of “killing an innocent fetus” in order
to cover the fact that they support the slaughter of Asians so
that the big firms can get rich
while G.I.’s die! While Boeing,
Douglas and
United Aircraft
make huge profit on this barbaric war, the right-wing conceals their partisanship to these
giant corporations.

The left however states open-

ly that they are partisan to the
they feel the mass
murder inflicted by the big pro-

poor. That

ducers upon the poor
whether
the producers be cigarette companies or napalm manufacturers
matters little
is far more despicable and condemnable than
the act of abortion committed by
a mother who cannot feed
another child.
Jerry Gross
—

—

Extremism Is Relative
TO THE EDITOR:

a term such as this is always
relative to the individual's view-

The letter labeled “Anti-Communists Concerned With Extremism” in last Friday’s issue left
me with a feeling of uneasiness
which I have encountered many
times in the last few months.
The letter repudiates left and
right wing “extremism "and urges
the SDS and the Spectrum to
follow suit, after citing several
Communist prganizations who
marched with the SDS in protest to the war in Viet Nam.

point.
Labeling an organization or a
specific person is an easy way
to provoke emotional reaction.
It brings to the fore preconceived notions and prejudices
which hamper the rational thinking process. It enables decisions
to be based on distorted images
rather than the issues at hand.

It is our duty as responsible
citizens to decide for ourselves
when other citizens are acting
for
in an “extreme” fashion

INTER-FAITH DINNER

Let us stop name-calling and
start studying any available facts
and opinions we can muster, no
matter what the source, so we
can accept or reject them on
rational grounds.

Sunday, April 17, 4:30 p.m.
sponsored by the

Kenneth Jaffe

—

Council of Religious Organizations
University Presbyterian Church
[corner

oa
The Modern Dance Workshop
meets in the Clark Gym on Monday and Thursday nights. Monday’s session concentrates on improvisation and composition and
Thursday’s on technique.

The Committee for Victory in
Vietnam will hold a meeting this
afternoon at 3 p.m. in Norton

333.
In observance of National Library Week the University Library Association will present
two films in the Conference Theatre on April 18 and 19 at noon.
The films are part of a humanities series dealing with the cathedral at Chartres and the civilization of ancient Grrece,
Goodyear Hall will hold an
Open House Sunday between 2
and 5 p.m. Male attire should
include ties and no dungarees.
Women should wear skirts.
There will be a meeting of the

Photography Club this afternoon
at 4 p.m. in Norton 332. Tom
Crawley will speak.
UB Amateur Astronomers will

hold election of officers Mon-

day, April 18 in Hockstetter 111
at 4 p.m.

The Graduate Student Association is holding a picnic at Akron
Falls Park on Sunday, April 24
at 1 p.m. The picnic will feature
a chicken barbecue dinner (costing 25c), games for adults and
children, sporting events, and
sing along entertainment. Tickets

&amp;

Niagara Fell,

Blvd.J

ronic\

may be purchased at the Gradu-

ate Student Association Office,

Norton 311 or from department
representatives to the GSA Coun-

cil. Tickets must be purchased
in advance.
Graduate students are invited
to submit prose or poetry to
the GSA office for the Graduate
Student Publication,
Graduate Students wishing to

participate in the graduate tutorial service may contact departments or obtain a form from
the GSA office between 9 am.
and 1 p.m.
UB Opera Club will hold an
organizational meeting on Tuesday, April 19 at 4 p.m. in Baird

213. For information call Henry
Wicke at 83M341 or Susan
Pritchard 831-2454.

Weekly Calendar
April

IS

•

19

FRIDAY
Mixer; Druids and Jazz group cosponsored by Millard Fillmore
and Canisius Colleges, beer.
Canisius College Student Cen-

ter, 9 p.m

Ballet: Andre Eglefsky Ballet Co.,

Dufallo conducting, Kleinhans
Music Hall
Movie: “Gates of Hell,” Conference Theatre through Sunday
Play; “At Liberty” and “Smythe,”

Fillmore Room, 8:30 through
Saturday
Lecture: “Negro Leadership; Martin Luther King and Frederick

Douglas,” Professor Herbert G.
Storing Faculty Club, 8:00 p.m.
SATURDAY;

Dance Recital; Mary Anthony
Dance Theatre, Baird Hall, 8:30
p.m.

Concert: UB Blues, Clark Gym,

8:30

Main 5*.

SUNDAY
Concert: UB Band. Millard Fillmore Room. 8:30 p m
Folk Dancing: Norton 344. 7 to
11 p.m.

Exhibit:

Creative

Craft

Staff

Show. 231

Norton, all day
Panel Discussion: “Civil Liberties and War Issues”, principal
speaker. Marvin Karpatkin, J.
F. Kennedy Center. 114 Hickory
Street, corner Clinton. 8 p.m

Open House; Goodyear Hall. 2 to
5 p.m.
MONDAY;

Lecture: “Creative Thinking,”
William Stockfield. St. Monks
Church, 401 Woodward Ave.,
8:30 p.m.
Varsity Baseball; UB vs. RTF. 3

)

The Graduate Student Association of S.U.N.Y

i

Invito All Graduate Students to
yroc
;e Stud&lt;
The A nnuaif Graduate
/udent

)

picnic
Spouses, Kids, Stags and Dates of
GSA invited Rain or Snow or Shine

SUNDAY
APRIL
I RM.
Tickets Available
in 311 Norton Hall
9-1 Dally

24

I

*u*

|&amp;li®

p.m.

Lecture: “Psychiatry and Criminal
Law.” Butler Aud. Lobby. Ca
pen Hall, 8:30 p.m.

Tickets Also Available at Norton Union Ticket Office

I

�Friday, April 15, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

nms wss %mm College Overature Contest Now Open
The Philharmonic Junior Committee is sponsoring an “Overature” Cover Contest open to all
College students.
Entries will be submitted to a
panel Of judges who will select
the best 10 or 12 designs to
be presented to the Buffalo Philharmonic Society for final selection. Whether or not a design
will be used will be left to the
discretion of the Orchestra So-

I know that it is dangerous to deal in unqualified
superlatives, but The Oscar (Cinema I) may be the
worst movie that I have ever seen. And although that
may appear to close the issue completely, there are a
few other things to say. The movie has an almost inverse appeal about it due primarily to its often hilarious
attempts to capture a serious tone. The unintentional
self-satire' of the script (written by a quasMiip hack
named Harlan Ellison) is humorous enough by itself, but ciety,
combined with performances so bad that they can only
The top three entries will be
be called non-acting, the film is carried beyond normal awarded prizes regardless of the
mediocrity into the realm of the really ghastly.
decision of the Orchestra Society.
First prize will be a $50 Savings
Bond, second prize a half series
ticket and third prize four pairs
hollow
and
ruthless
We follow a handsome, spiritually
of Pop Concert tickets.
leading-man type from his gutter beginnings to his Oscar
If an entry is selected for use,
nomination. He has a certain animal magnetism about a slight variation in design may
all
the
civilized
precludes
and
code
that
of
a personal
him
be made to facilitate printing,
virtues as well as any vestige of decent manners. Through according to Judith W. Hanlon,
his fierce determination and his totally social immorality, Chairman.
he is able to rip and claw his way to the top of the HollyThe design must be in black
wood garbage heap. But this interesting story is ruined and white, include the title,
completely by a nice juxtaposition of awful acting, in- “Overature,” Buffalo Philharmoncompetent direction, amateurish photography and light- ic Orchestra, Lucas Foss, Conductor and Musical Director, Kleining, stupid writing and no point of view whatsoever.
hans Music Hall and a space for
the date. It must be 9” wide and
Let’s get to the film itself so you’ll get an idea of 13t4” high.
Entries will be accepted at the
what actually happens. First, the hero, is played by
Stephen Boyd. He looks right and tries hard, but that’s Philharmonic House, 26 Richmond Ave., Monday through Fri-

Oddly enough, the story itself is rather interesting.

where it ends. I kept waiting for him to saddle his
chariot and charge off after Charlton Heston that would
have been more natural than his attempts to project such
complex emotions as anger, happiness, grief and fear
from time to time. Boyd is actually rather good, though,
in comparison with his two lady loves. The first is
played by Jill St. John, and although one tends to disbelieve most of the stories about how a starlet structured
her career upon her extra-curricular sexual escapades,
it probably is the case from time to time and Jill St.
John’s performance (? ?) gave me the feeling that this
might just be one of those times. One of the funniest
moments in recent cinema history occurs during her
psychological breakdown early in the story.

It isn't just the girls though. Tony Bennet, who is
supposedly a singer in real life, plays the hero’s side-kick
(named Hymie Kelly by the way
the movie milks the
obvious to the point of nausea) with the heartfelt fervor
of a man who has just been sold a rotten used car. Tie
seems very concerned, he knows something is wrong, but
he can’t quite put his finger on it and nobody gives a
damn anyway. As a matter of fact, the best acting in
the movie is done by Milton Berle, that beloved old
character-actor and raconteur.
And there are other
equally inept efforts, but why go on? Most of it has
to be seen to believed anyway, and I feel that the fault
probably lies in the writing and direction even more
than in the bad acting. Paul Scofield would be at a
loss to infuse any life into these lines, but then, he
wouldn’t be in a picture like this in the first place.
.

.

.

ALPHA GAMMA DELTA
The winners of the ten-dollar
gift certificates in the drawing
last Thursday were Cynthia Oster
of Alpha Gamma Delta and a
brother of Phi Kappa Psi. Alpha
Gamma Delta will donate the proceeds to the Easter Seals Association.
ALPHA PHI DELTA
Alpha Phi Delta will hold an
informal closed party with Alpha
Kappa Psi Friday night at the
Club Bar.
BETA SIGMA RHO
The pledge class of Beta Sigma
Rho will present their annual
spring pledge party Saturday,
April 16, at the Beta Sig Hall.
Preparations are being made for
Beta Sig’s last Beer Blast in May.
GAMMA PHI
Tomorrow night Gammi Phi
will hold their 8th Annual Sweetheart Dance at the Parkridge
“300'’. The Mello-Tones will provide the music.
Officers of the Spring Pledge
class are Dave Clark, President,
and Mike Skinner, Treasurer.

As Frank Sinatra (who has a ridiculous bit part at
the end) said to Harlan Ellison in Jilly’s, “I’ve seen it
and it’s crap.” My Jfirst inclination was to summarize
the whole ludicrous affair by suggesting that it will be
a major part of the camp canon of the middle ’70's. But
something occurred to me. The damn thing is so bad
and so stupidly funny that it is actually camp already!
That’s what you’ve done, Joe Levine, the creation of
Instant Camp
and according to the latest news reports
tjn&gt;f nnt

mniwv

&lt;Mi.

Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship
The Western New York Spring
Conference of IVCF is being held
this weekend (April 15 to 17) at
Canandaigua Lake. A model missionary film entitled “Unto Every
Creature” will be shown Friday,
April 22, at 7:30 p.m. at the
regular IVCF meeting, at which
time the election of next year’s

officers will be held. Those tak-

ing part in IVOF’s Community
Aid Corp project (Saturday, April
23) must be at the Child Care
Center ready to paint at 9 ajn.
You will he contacted regarding
transportation. Reservations for
the Fellowship Supper (Friday,
May 6) must be made by April
30 by signing the list in the (310

office.

Newman

The Newman Apostolate is
sponsoring a social tonight at 8
p.m. at Newman Hall. Admission
is free and everyone is invited

PHI EPSILON PI

All fraternities and sororities
interested in joining our volunteer work at the Veterans’ Hospital, St. Mary’s, and Project
Able, contact Bob Beck at the
table.
Saturday night is “Phi Ep Night
at Kleinhans,” for the play "Barefoot in the Park.”
PHI KAPPA PSI
Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity, under
the leadership of Maximilian
Wolf, will march their forces past
the Rio Grande this weekend to
conquer Mexico City. A Tequila
Party will take place Saturday
night in honor of the victory at
the Hotel Worth, just outside of
Juarez.
PI LAMBDA TAU
Pi Lambda Tau Fraternity will
hold a casual Date Party tomorrow evening at the Nile Owl.
SIGMA

ALPHA MU

Sigma Alpha Mu would like to
thank Fra’s Root and Denny for
a great M—t-t-n party last Saturday. The brothers are planning
a New Year’s Party next Friday.

“THE GROUP”,

to attend. On Wednesday, April
20, Dr. Olive Lester will speak

on “Prejudices: What is a Bigot?”
at 8 p.m. in 329 Norton. The Annual Awards Banquet will be held
on April 27 at 6:30 p.m. at the
La Hacienda (3734 Sheridan
Drive). Reservations are $3.50 per

person and may be obtained at
Newman Hall. The Newman Educational Weekend will be held in
Troy, New York, on April 29 and
30 and May 1.

—CORRECTION—
The present Inter-Resid e n c e Council officers
are: President—Gary E.
Roberts, Vice President
—Mike Kayes, Secretary
—Paulette Bohnen, and
Treasurer
Andrea
Roth.
-

—

f

CHARLES K FELDMAN

IMS WCTUWC IS RECOM MlNOC P IOR AOUlTS

J

Mnu thg

UNITED ARTISTS

A SAM trivia team will be on
WKBW-TV Monday night at 8:30.
SIGMA DELTA TAU
Sigma Delta Tau extends special congratulations to Elaine
Greenberg on being elected First

Vice President of the Pan-Hellenic Council. Congratulations also
to Sue Landerson, who was elected to the University College Senate. Seniors Diane Sezzen and
Cindy Perl will be honored at
the Scholarship Tea Sunday,
April 17. Officers of the Spring
Pledge class are; President, Carol
Shapiro; Vice President, Patty
Wartley; Secretary, Audrey Cash;
and Treasurer, Diane Seeger. The
pledge class will do volunteer
work at St. Rita’s Home Saturday,
April 16.
SIGMA PHI EPSILON
Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity
will hold a social with three floors
of Goodyear Dorm tonight. “The
Cavemen" will provide the music
at the Hotel Worth. This Sunday
they will hold a Religious Breakfast in Norton Hall at 11:00. A
Drive-in Party is planned for
tomorrow.

TAU KAPPA EPSILON

[

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I no
/

pmnution aiai,Mni

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Will
it
•UT

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AmJimt Cinema

8500 MAIN ST.71:47656) 645 MAIN ST, TL-3-8006

Tau Kappa Epsilon will have a
social with Sigma Kappa Phi Friday, April 15, at 9 p.m. in the
Lorr Lounge, 220 Lakewood
Pkwy. Watch for the “Swingin’
Spring Colt ’45 Blast" coming up
April 22nd.

THETA CHI
Discount subscriptions to Playboy magazine can be obtained
from the pledges of Theta Chi.
The fraternity will sponsor a
“Doc Urich Day” in the coming
week.

THETA CHI
Theta Chi sorority is sponsoring Dr. Katkin, from the Psychology Department, for Mr. Faculty.
Pat Pecora has been elected Historian of the Pan Hellenic Council. A party will be held at the
Hotel Worth tonight at 8:30.

MSIHB

PIZZA
IF 3-1344

...

form tho tmtiallv nniwIUkk

1/Qelifyion On C^ampuA

HELD OVER!
&gt;

Which brings up the question: Why was this movie
made? When you see that it was produced by Joseph
Levine, that well-known patron of the arts, the answer
becomes obvious that is, MONEY. I have no objections,
but for chrissake, how about a little entertainment too?
Bosley
the little old lady who writes movie
reviews for the August New York Times, wondered why
Hollywood persists in fouling its own nest with movies
like this. The answer, Bosley, is that a movie like this
will feather that nest so opulently that the stench will
be overlooked.

between 1 and 6 p.m.
All interested applicants should

submit their name, address, phone
number and the name of the
college they attend to the Philharmonic House before April 30.

GBEEK NOTES

-

And as laughable as her “serious” moments are,
they don’t sink much below Elke Sommer’s efforts. Miss
Sommers is also very pretty and in this case, very inadequate, but she has the advantage of a European accent
and this lends an exotic quality to her ranting.

day between 1-4 p.m. and on
Saturdays, April 30 and May 7,

4 10 A NO

•

00

�Friday, April 15, 1966

SPECTRUM

Dance Group to Perform
In Baird Hall Tomorrow

The Mary Anthony Dance Company will perform a modern
dance, “Threnody,” tomorrow at
8:30 p.m. in Baird Hall.

“Threnody" was choreographed
by Mary Anthony and inspired by
John M. Synge’s tragedy “Riders
to the Sea.” The score was composed for the dance by opera
composer Benjamin Britton.
Anatole Chujoy of Dance News
said that “Threnody” tells “the
age old story of the cruel sea demanding its victims, and the tragedy of the women left behind.
“Threnody’ is presented in a
dance language of stark simplicity which strengthens the exposi-

tion of the story. The economy of

choreographer is admirable.”
Miss Anthony has served as
choreographer for the television
series “Look Up and Live” and
“Lamp Unto My Feet.” She has
also choreographed Italian musicals in Rome, and an Italian
Weekly Television program, “Can-

zonissima.”
The company has appeared at
American dance festivals in Con-

OFFICIAL BULLETIN
Tha Official Bulletin is an authorized publication of the State
University of New York at Buffalo, for which the SPECTRUM
assumes no editorial responsibility, Notices should be sent in
TYPEWRITTEN form to 114
Hayes Hall, attention Mrs. Fischer, before 2:00 p.m. the Friday
prior to the week of publication.
Student organization notices are
not accepted for publication.
GENERAL NOTICES
Pre-registration for the 1966
Summer Session (day courses)—
registration forms may be obtained in the Office of Admissions and Records beginning Monday, April 18. Students registering through the Graduate School
must secure their registration

movement here practiced by the

Mary Anthony Dane* Group to
appoar in Threnody.

necticut, Jacob’s Pillow, Massachusetts, and New York City.
The program is sponsored by
the Union Board Dance Committee. Admission will be students—-

$.50, faculty, staff—$1.00, general
—$1.50.

PAGE SEVEN

cards and instructions in Acheson
103. Students in other Graduate
divisions (Education, Business Administration, and Social Welfare)
may secure forms in the Admissions and Records Office.
Advance registration for the
Summer Session may be completed between April 18 and May
20 in the Office of Admissions

and Records.

Advance registration schedule
for day students taking Millard
Fillmore College Summer

Eve-

ning Courses) —students currently registered in any day school
division may pre-register for Millard Fillmore College 1966 summer evening courses during the
week of April 25-28 (Monday
through Thursday) only. Regis-

tration materials will be issued
from 9 a.m. to noon, and collected
from I p.m. to 4 p.m., at the Millard Fillmore College Reception
Center, 177 Hayes Hall. Day students may pick up and return advance registration materials at
their convenience during the specified hours on any of the four
days. All courses, regardless of
course number or level, are open
to day students who have the
standard prerequisites, subject
only to the usual limitations in
class size in certain courses.
Day students who wish to take
summer evening classes, but who
do not register in advance, must
attend the regular registration
for 1966 summer evening courses
which will be held in Clark Gymnasium on Thursday, June 2, from
6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.
University College students
(except those on strict academic
probation) the remaining dates
to pre-register for fall semester
1966 are as follows:
April 18 through April 22
G, P, I

Office, Schoellkopf Hall, telephone 831-3311.
Career related opportunities

are available with the student

summer placement division. The
following companies will hold oncampus interviews concerning
these employment opportunities:
April 18—Alcoa, Cutco Division,
Buffalo (all majors, interest in
Marketing)
April 19—American Telephone
and Telegraph (engineering candidates)
Apirl 20
Continental Can
Co., Tonawanda (engineering can—

didates)

Please register for the above
interviews at the Placement Office at least two days prior to
the interview date. Twenty minute interviews will be conducted
between 9 a m and 5 p.m.
PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS
April 15
U.S. Army Electronics Com-

mand
April 18
Erie County Dept, of Personnel
Arlington County Public Sch.
(Va.)

April 19

American Telephone and Telegraph Co.
Theodore Roosevelt Elementary
School (Chcektowaga)

—

At Liberty' and 'Smythe' Reviewed
By LYNNE BERNSTEIN

—

April 25 through April 29

The stage is silent. A woman
shuffles to the worn couch in her
frumpy bathrobe and pincurlers
and waits. Suddenly the tenseness is pierced by a mad, drunken
giggle, and you are off in a whirlwind of emotional experience,
beginning nowhere in time, and
ending there. At Liberty by Tennessee Williams is merely a
sketch of a disease ridden, once
popular performer who fools no
one in her pretense at happiness.
The play traces the feelings of
the woman, calmed by her “long
suffering” mother, as she realizes
that she is not at liberty to live.
Although the play itself is a
rather poor attempt at artistic
realism, the performance and
production was of extremely high

May 2 through May 6

LOST AND FOUND
MAN'S dark leather wallet; important papers; please return
to lost and found at Norton
Union.
WANTED

TWO PEOPLE to sublet 3M&gt;-room
apt.,
10-minute walk from
campus; occupancy June 1-Sept.
1; $80 month. Call Steve or Gene,

831-3552.

TRAVEL
UB JET FLIGHT

to France leav

ing June 27, returning Sept. 5.
Round-trip NYC-Paris, $340. Faculty, students, employees of
SUNYAB eligible. Contact Stanford Leff soon! 834-1869.
FOR RENT

APT.—UB area (available June 1)
completely furnished two bedroom duplex, new kitchen. 8377258.
1 ROOM APT. to sublet for sum
mer, 15 ride from campus (bus-

line). Call 886-6763.

FOR SALE
MUST SELL girl’s Raleigh 26”
9 speed bicycle, excellent condition, lights, back carrier. Eileen,

TF 8-1614.
MICROSCOPE, Bausch and Lomb,
monocular with all attachments.
Recent.model. Call 885-2498.

—

B, F

PLACEMENT
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Summer Employment —students

interested in part-time, and fulltime summer employment should
register now at the Placement

Murder
Fay Daltner and Susan Kaplan appear in Student Theatre Guild
production of Tenesee Williams' "At Liberty".
Pholo by Alm Grubrr
quality. The semi-bare stage al- “You can discuss departure from
lowed you to concentrate fully the rules, but you cannot depart
on the acting and the effects it from them.'' Humorous, but more
produced. Sue Kaplan’s perform- than that.
ance as the mother was beautiful,
Although the beginning of the
combining the resignedness of a play was drawn out, redeemed
mother and the hopefulness of only by an occasional clever roua woman. Fay Datner had a sometine by Miss Jameson, played by
what more difficult role to enact Sandra Klein, from the moment
as the daughter, having to switch of Lebert Puma’s appearance on
from drunkenness to feverishness, stage as Mr. Bently, there were
to despair in the short timespan. no complaints. Lenny Horwitz,
Her performance was, thus, less however, did not carry over his
polished. However, she did a role as the meek, trapped man
good job in spite of the diffi- well until the very end. He acted
culty.
like a college student trying to
ham up a scene, than a confused,
Smythe by Doctor Coleman is bumbling, and bumbled man.
an entirely different kind of
play.
It could even be a bad
April 21
dream, so grotesque does it apDeadline for the
pear. However, the play hints
too strongly of reality, making it
New Student Review
a satire on red tape and policies.
mma:
mmm
Business policies to be specific.
Mr. Smythe is trying to be “identified”, presumably for a job or
for a benefit of some sort. This is

irrelevant, however. What actual-

ly crushes laughter is the feelign
of inadequacy a man must feel
when confronted by the Rules
and thfe System. When Mr.
Smythe presents his birth certificate as evidence of his identity,
he is asked, “But is this really
you?” The man is powerless. At
another point in the play, the
Under Secretary, Mr. Bently, says,

SPECIAL
BOCCE PARTY
RATES AVAILABLE

Aetna Insurance Co.
Oscar Mayer &amp; Co.
Addressograph Multigraph
Continental Can Co., Inc.
North Shore Central School
District No. 1 (Long Island)
April 21
Federal Aviation Agency
Public Schools of the 22nd Dis■

trict of Columbia

April 22
Roche Laboratories

of Gonzago

from Pg. 4)
Print Award
Judge Emmet
To Federal
Claire who sentenced
David
Mitchell III to five years in prison for burning his draft card
as a protest against the Selective
ervice System and the war in
Viet Nam and recommended that
he be ineligible for parole after
two years goes our Humanitarian
of the Year Award.
(Cont’d

„

CLASSIFIED

—

W, D

April 20

To the British Communist Party
who recently changed the name
of their newspaper from the
Daily Worker to the Morning
Star in order to apeal, according
to a brochure circulated among
London advertising agencies, to
people in the high income A B
class. The brochuree also contained a picture of a typical
Daily Worker family complete
with a dream kitchen and well
fed cat. To the Morning Star
goes our “Arise Ye Prisoners of
Starvation" Award,
To Secretary of Agriculture
Freeman who went to Viet Nam
as an expert in order to initiate
a bigger food program in ac-

cordance with Johnson’s Declaration of Honolulu and according
to the Feb. 14 edition of the

New

York

Times ‘‘At

a

ware-

house in Phanrang
he picked
up a handful of vegetables with
red skins and exclaimed to a
group of aides standing behind
him You can sure tell these arc
onions! Just smell! ‘That's garlic,’
someone replied." To Secretary
Freeman goes It's A Good Thing
That He Isn't Secretary of Defense Award.
...

And finally this column was
planning to give an award to
Chiang Kai Shck who was recently reelected to head the National Chinese government in
free, honest democratic elections
opposed to the elections on
the mainland where only the
Communist Party is allowed) but,

(as

curiously enough, nobody ran
against him. To Chiange Kai Shek
who was reelected to head the
Nationalist Chinese government
in free, honest democratic elections goes our It's Easy When
You Are The Only Candidate
Award.

�PACE EIGHT

� sips®v
=/■
—f

of
writs of articks
writtan exclusively for the
Spectrum by Head Football
Coach Richard "Doc Urich)
(on*

Friday, April 15, IN*

SPECTRUM

•

A number of students have
asked what is my philosophy of
football and of coaching football. These are questions not
easily answered, but I will do
my best.
First of all, and most important, it must be remembered that
football is a game of bodily contact. Unless a boy enjoys this
sort of thing there is no real
place for him in football. This
love of bodily contact is the
first thing I look for in a prospective football player. The
next thing I am interested in
is sizing up a boy for his speed.
There can 'be no substitute for
speed and agility. Give me a
boy who enjoys hitting and is
fast and agile and I’ll show you
a football player.
Football coaching is basically
a teaching situation. A coach
may be a veritable genius at describing plays on the blackboard,
but if he can't clearly present
his technique to the players his
value as a coach is extremely
minimized. A coach should set
up his system to get the most
from his material, rather than
try to fit his material into a
pre-conceived mold. For example,

--tA

-i

I prefer an offense with lots of
passing and I want to institute
such an offense at UB. However,
if I find that I don’t have the
throwers and receivers to play
this type of game I shall make
the necessary adjustments.
Our spring practice has been
progressing steadily despite some
unseasonable cold and damp
weather the first week. I am
frankly impressed with the hard
hitting and agressiveness displayed by the boys on the team.
It augurs well for a successful
season.
We hold scrimmage every Wednesday and Saturday afternoon.
So far, I have been working all
players on both offense and defense, but I expect to change

to separate

The weather finally broke this
week, and no one could have
been happier than UB football
coach iDoc Urich. After a week
of practice handicapped by adverse weather conditions, Urich
and his capable coaching crew
were finally able to make some
headway when the weatherman
complied with the coaches wishes.
With temperature in the forties
and turf firm enough for cleats
to dig into, the coaching staff
was able to put the 80-some squad
candidates through a series of
well-disciplined drills. All squad
including last year’s
members
lettermen
were tested at
various positions, an experiment
designed to find the proper positions for the players.
—

—

offensive and defensive platoons by the end of
Urioh 'has emphasized the imthis month. At that time you
should begin to have at least a portance of the proper evaluaunder
rough idea of how things will tion of personnel, and
look in the fall.
the former Notre Dame assistant’s
I am extremely pleased with watchful eye
this first objecthe interest shown by the students in their football team. Of tive is being carried out.
course, you are welcome to come
It is still too early for Urich
out any of our practice sessions,
which will become more interestto have decided anything definite
ing as we go along.
about the aggressive, spirited
Again, thanks to the Spectrum
group out for the team, but
for giving me this space and
the
please feel free to contact me thanks to the weatherman
regarding any questions you may picture is beginning to focus in
have on UB football.
a burry.
—

—

—

—

per.
1. Who was Hondo Hurricane?

2. What high school did Oscar
Robertson attend?
3. What was the name of Buddy Ryan's pet exercise for his
gym class?
4. What boxer was called the
"Little Cerdan?”
5. Who was the only major
league baseball player born in
Czechoslovakia?
5. Who won the featured race
at Batavia Downs on the closing
night of the fall season in December, 1964?
7. Who was third string quarterback for the New York Giants
in 1956?
8. What are the three qualities
Len Serfustinj seeks in a prospective athlete?

OFFENHAMER

TESTIMONIAL
A testimonial dinner honoring
Dick Offenhamer, retiring UB
football coach, will be given by
a group of his friends and associates on April 28, at 7 p.m. in
the Chinese Room of the Park
Lane Hotel, Delaware Avenue at
Gates Circle.
UB basketball coach Len Serfustini and UB sports publicist
Joe Marcin are co-chairmen of the
affair.
Reservations are limited and
may be made by sending a check
for $20 to Dr. Len Serfustini at
Clark Gym.

9.

(h=

Grid Drills Continue

SPORTS TRIVIA

All entries for today's sports
trivia contest must be handed
to the sports desk of the Spectrum by Monday. Prize-winners
of and answers to today’s quiz
will appear in next Friday’s pa-

Who led the New York-Penn

League in homers in 1965?

10. On the back of whose baseball card (Yankees, 1950-56) does
following blurb
the
appear:
“Charlie is the best bench jockey
in both leagues.”
Last week’s prize-winner was
Pete Braunschweig, who correct_

UB Football Squad

goat

The incredibly brief volleyball

season came to a close this Wed-

The Varsity and Freshman
track teams, which open their
seasons at Colgate next Wednesday, face bleak seasons unless
they are bolstered at many posi-

tions.

This year’s team turnout is the
smallest in Coach Emery Fisher’s
IS years at UB. At present the
Varsity has only one shot putter,
one discus and javelin thrower,
one high jumper, two hurdlers,
one 440 and 880 runner, one pole
vauKer and one triple jumper.
The personnel problem is just
as discouraging with the Fresh-

ly answered nine of the ten questions. Pete’s only incorrect an- men—only 14 applicants mean
swer was on the first question. there are plenty of openings on
the roster.
The answers:
The present Varsity outlook is
1. Don Lofgran (USF) 2. Ed
as follows. Cross-country letterMiksis 3. Lou Ambers 4. Gordie Soltau
5. Celtic Ash
6. men are manning the distance
events with Dick Genau, Bob
Ponca City, Oklahoma
7. Lawson Little
8. Baron Von Cramm Stephenson and Jack Kerns the
runners. Larry Nauham is handl9. Hank Moreno
10. 50.

nesday and Thursday. The league

leaders before the fiinal matches
were as follows;

Wednesday League

Division I
W L

Division II
W L
1 APD
7 1
2 Super Apes 6 2

,

L
0

3
3

The fencing tournament, under
the direction of Varsity Coach
Sid Schwartz, will be held on

Thursday, April 21. Registration
for the tourney was held last
night at Clark Gym.

The final intramural sport,
track, will be held on Monday,
April 25, at p.m. All entries—which must be made on official
intramural entry blanks—must be
handed to the intramural office

by next Friday, April 22.
Events to be held are: 75-yard
dash, 100-yard dash, mile run,
300-yard shuttle relay, 440-yard
relay, shot put, broad jump and
high jump. A contestant may

enter two events and one relay.
All trophies and awards will
be given at the Intramural

Awards Dinner to be held in
Norton Union on May 3. Reservations must be made by April 22.

BOWLING
NEWS

The winners of the new bowl-

ing balls in the “nine-pin strike”
Tournament last weekend in Norton Lanes were Mr. George Maringer and Miss Pam Krauter.
Gift certificates for second places
were won by Mr. John Kujawa
and Miss Barbara Scorr and for
third places by 'Mr. Wayne Bvelo
and Miss Sue Karpito.
Mr. Malinger bowled a 711

three game total

winning

the

The Skanks will play
Sigma Alpha Mu on
WKBW-TV April 18 in
a Trivia Tournament to
be taped April 15 at
WKBW at 8. Free tickets for the taping may
be obtained at the Norton Ticket Office.

through wind sprints
Photo

by Iran

Makuch

UB Track Team
Faces Dilemma

INTRAMURALS
Joques
7
Alpha Sig 6
Thursday League
Division I
Division II
W
W L
8
Sig Ep
7 1 AEPi
Gam’a Phi 6 2 SAM
5
Theta Chi 5

x

*

men’s

division. Miss Krauter
needed only 551 to win the
women’s division.

The SPECTRUM
Published by

the 440 and Jack Mrawka the 880.
Seniors who are student-teaching, and thereby only able to
practice two days a week on campus, are sprinter Jim Webber,
sprinter and jumper Norm Keller
and half-miler Pat Uuffoletto.
Injuries to 440-man Dennis Czaja
—broken wrist; and pole vaulter
Tom Ryan—appendix, have stripped the squad of valuable pointgetters.
Captain Larry Elsie has taken
a full-time job after classes and
is unable to work out properly.
Without a properly conditioned
Elsie
who competes in five
events—UB’s high point man is
lost.
On the bright side of things,
sophomore Mel Spelman, last
year’s Freshman MVP and holder
of all frosh weight records, has
shown signs of becoming a great
asset to the team.
The need for Male thinclads
is desperate at present Any student who desires to help lift the
team that just two years ago won
the State Championship, please
report to Coach Fisher at Rotary
Field today at 4 p.m. or tomorrow at 11:30 a.m.
VARSITY SCHEDULE
April 20—at Colgate
April 23—at Brockport
April 26—Canisius
April 20—Cortland
—

May

jSmii’AC Printing

1381 KENMORE AVENUE
(at Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

2—LeMoyne Relays
at Syracuse

May 5—at Ithaca
May 7—UB Invitational
May 10—Niagara
May 21—State Championships
at Troy

Baseball, Tennis
Squads at ECTI
The

Parlntri
&amp;

ing the hurdles, Mike Alspaugh

13 baseball and tennis

teams, after opening their respective seasons by hosting BCTI
Thursday, travel to BCTI to face

the same teams this afternoon.
Either Don Potwora or Ron McEwan is expected to get the
mound call against the Kats today
as the Bulls seek their eighth
straight WNY hardball crown.
Bill Sanford's formidable tennis
contingent is a heavy favorite
to overwhem the ECU netmen
in their return match today.

�</text>
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                    <text>EXTRA
VOLUME 16

btate

EXTfBil
NO.

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, APRIL 14, 1966

36

TRUSTEES TO FINALIZE
MEYERSON SELECTION
AS UB PRESIDENT
The appointment of Martin Meyerson as President of the State University at Buffalo will be finalized
tomorrow at a meeting of the State
University Board of Trustees to be
held at the State University of Stony
Brook.
Born in New York City, he received his bachelor of arts degree from
Columbia University in 1942 and master of city planning from Harvard in
1949. Meyerson is currently serving
as Dean of the College of Environmental Design of the University of
California at Berkeley where he also
served as Acting Chancellor at the
tail e n d of the demonstrations last
year.

Among the positions he held before going to Berkeley included Williams Professor of Ciiy Planning and
Research at Harvard and director of
the Joint Center for Urban Studies at
both Harvard and the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology.
Meyerson will replace Hr. Clifford
C. Furnas who will conclude eleven
years of service as both Chancellor
and President of the University on
Dr. Furnas'
August 1 bt this year.
resignation, submitted to State University President Samuel B. Gould in
April 1964, was necessitated by State
University policy which requires that
all administrative personnel retire following their 65th birthday.
SELECTION PROCESS
The selection of the new president
is basically a three-stage process involving State University of Buffalo
faculty, an appointed Council Committee and, finally, the State University Board of Trustees and Dr. Samuel
Gould, President of the State University

The criteria for selection chosen

by the faculty and Council Committees
included scholarly accomplishment,

previous

administrative

experience,

ability to publicly interpret the uni-

Martin Meyerson, New UB President

versity’s role, a concern for academic
freedom, and sensitivity toward faculty responsibility.
The Council Committee, headed by
Council President Seymour H. Knox
and consisting of eight members,
screened more than one-hundred thirty names, before deciding upon Meyerson as their first choice.
NO COMMENT
While Mr.' Meyerson acknowledged that he had been contacted to
assume the Presidency of UB. he reserved all comment until such time
as the Board of Trustees finalize the
appointment. Similarly, Dr. Westley
Roland. Secretary to the Council Committee and Assistant to President Furnas, has reserved all comment.

�PAGE TWO

Thursday, April 14, 1966

SPECTRUM

|

I

Martin Meyerson, who will assume the role of University President

Clifford

C.

Furnas

on August 1, has become, at 43,

one of the nation's leading urban
planners. The
former acting
Chancellor at the Berkeley branch
of the University of California
was selected over approximately
130 applicants.
Born in New York City on November 14, 1922, Mr. Meyerson
completed
undergraduate
his
work at Columbia University in
1942. After graduating with a
B.A., he qualified for a Wheelwright Fellowship in the Masters
of Community Planning program
at Harvard University. He received his masters degree in 1949.
Even before his graduation
from Harvard, Mr. Meyerson held
positions of responsibility. From
1943 to 1944. he served as re-

search assistant and staff member
to the American Society of Planning Officials. The following
year he worked on the Philadelphia City Planning Committee,
Also in 1945, he married Margy
Ellin Lazarus. They now have two

children, Adam and Laura.
In 1948 Mr. Meyerson began his
teaching profession

by

joining

the faculty of the University of
Chicago as Assistant Professor
of Social Sciences. During his
term at the Midwestern university, he also sat on the Yale University Committee for National
Policy. His activities in Chicago
included the job of planning its
Michael Reese Hospital.
Mr. Meyerson left Chicago in

1952 to become associate research

professor of urban studies at the
University of Pennsylvania. While
serving on the American Council
to Improve Our Neighborhoods,
which was to soon place him in
national prominence, he became
a full professor in 1956.

The next year he returned to
the scene of his graduate studies,
becoming the Williams Professor
of City Planning and Urban Research at Harvard. At the same
time he attained renown in scholarly circles by editing the “Metropolis in Ferment,” in the November, 1957 issue of The Annals
of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. A series of articles on the future of
the cities, his essay, in collaboration with Barbara Terrett, points
out the problems and possible
solutions for today’s urban plan-

•

m

ners. Entitled “Metropolis Lost,
Metropolis Regained,” the “authors hope for a notably improved
modns vivendi between the races
in the next twenty-five years because of such probabilities as the
decreasing size of Negro households and upgrading in educational attainment."
Dedicated to the ideals of slum
clearance, property improvement,
new housing, and effective urban
planning, Mr. Meyerson became

Vice-President of the American
Council to Improve Our Neighborhoods (ACTION) in 1957.
By 1958 he had risen to the
chair of acting dean of the Graduate School of Design at Harvard. Then, in 1959, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
and Harvard teamed-up to establish a point urban studies program. Endowed with a $675,000
Ford Foundation grant, the two
schools selected Buffalo’s new
president to head the center. At
that time, the New York Times
said that, “The center will be international in scope, intended to
provide a stimulating environment
for scholars engaged in urban
research in the United States and
abroad.”

Following his appointment, Mr.
Meyerson spoke at a conference
of professional planners in Minneapolis. There, the Tima* re-

ports, he claimed “that the American public was demanding a
‘new diversity’ in community facilities and services that must
be met
“Mr. Meyerson suggested that
civic innovations might include
Swedish-type apartment houses,
offering household services such
as

cooking,

nurseries, laundry

and recreational facilities attractive to working mothers.”

Meanwhile, again in cooperation with Barbara Terrett and
ACTION, Mr. Meyerson had three
books published. One, Housing,
People and Cities, is part of an
eight book series put out by
ACTION on housing and community development. The volume is
seen by the author as “the culmination of a five-year investigation of impediments to the improvement of housing and urban
environment.”

His two other works are Face
of the Metropolis, and Politics,

Planning, and

Public Interest.
The last book deals with the
problem of public housing in
Chicago.

While serving at Harvard, Mr.
then a recognized
authority in bis field, also held
other positions. For instance, he
sat on the bousing panel for the
White House Office of Science
and Technology, the area Development Committee of the Commission for Economic Development, and the United Nations
Conference for Less Developed
Areas. Also under the auspices of
the u!n., he traveled on missions
to Japan and Indonesia.
Finally, in 1963, Mr. Meyerson
joined the faculty of the University of California at Berkeley.
At that time he served as Dean
of the College of Environmental
Design. In 1965, while the crisis
over free speech was reaching its
turbulent climax, he was appointed acting chancellor of the university. While ann|ouncin|g his
selection, Clark Kerr, President
of the University of California
system, acclaimed Mr. Meyerson
as, “one of the leading American
authorities on urban growth and
Meyerson, by

planning,”

�Thursday, April 14, 1966

SPECTRUM

MEVERSON

Amid demonstrations, arrests,
and a break down of studentfaculty relations, Mr. Martin Meyerson became acting chancellor
at the Berkley Division of the
University of California, January
3. 1965.
Supporting a philosophy, “Civil
disobedience is warrented as a
last resort in our democracy,” he
played a major role in resolving
the conflict over university regulations on campus political activity.

Moving up from the dean's
chair of the College of Environmental Design after the former
Chancellor Edward W. Strong
resigned, Mr. Meyerson was faced
with the problem of pacifying
both the left wing Free Speech
Movement and the strong conservative minority on the 24man Board of Regents.

From the start, he planned to
impose relatively few rules on
student political activity, saying
that, “By definition, provisional
rules are expected to change.”

A liberal himself, the acting
chancellor soon found himself
opposed to student agitation for
the right to utter words not ordinarily used in conversation. In
a statement to the New York
Times, Mr, Meyerson pointed out,

“The four letter word signs and
utterances had a significance beyond their shock impact. They
also symbolize intolerance for the
rights and feelings of others.”

This dilemma, plus reoccuring
disputes with some regents,
brought his resignation on March
9. Clark Kerr, president of the
nine-school University of Cali-

AND
and however their palpitating
hearts desire.”
After a five and one-half hour
emergency meeting of the Board
of Regents, Meyerson and Kerr
withdrew their statements of resignation. The Herald Tribune

PAGE THREE

Berkeley
port, Mr. Meyerson proceeded to
handle the four-letter-word agitation. He set up an ad hoc committee on the matter, and demanded the immediate dismissal
of the “dirty word” demonstrators. On April 22, Mr. Meyerson

the students and non-students involved to cease their actions. He
said at the time that student
conduct should be largely selfregulated, but not merely by
student conscience.

fornia system, also decided to
step down. “The Regents should
have an opportunity to recognize
the oldest and largest campus,”
Mr. Meyerson explained in his

resignation.

By the end of May, the acting
chancellor had eased the Berkeley campus back on to a smooth
course. The culmination of the
hostilities between the students
and administration was expressed
in a new code of regulations for
student conduct.

In an editorial, the New York
Herald Tribune pointed out that
their resignations, “would be a
setback not only to one of the
nation’s most important institutions of higher education, but
also to the principle of responsibility' and good order, on which
academic freedom is based . . .
That the undergraduates may
have cause for their disturbance
(mental, sexual and what-not) is
not in dispute. Their complaints
about lack of political freedom
on the campus last fall were pretty well satisfied. They had to
find other expression for their
general discontent
(indicating
that the basic issue is not their
freedom at all), so they are now
rocing a fight for the right to
use four-letter words wherever

THE

The code states that, “Students
have the right of free expression
and advocacy. The time, plflce
and manner of exercising speech
and political activity shall be

subject to regulations adopted by
the chancellors of the respective
campuses.”

On the sphere of student discipline: “A student may not be
disciplined for off-campus con-

duct unless such conduct affects
his suitability as a student. Political action, as such, shall not
be deemed to affect suitability.”
A report from a 10-member faculty committee appointed by acting chancellor Meyerson came
out highly critical of Berkeley's
university-student relationships,

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acting chancellor had a similar
crisis, as a 24-page magazine,
Spider, he had ordered banned
from campus continued to be
sold. Acting on the grounds that
the language of some of the
articles were opposed to good
taste, Mr, Meyerson again ordered

In A Lighter Moment

took such action, by ordering
Arthur L. Goldberg to leave the
school and by suspending three
others.

A leader of the campus cam-

paign for free speech, Mr. Goldberg’s dismissal was followed by
another volly of student protest.

However, this time the militant
speakers were faced with lagging
student support. Their pleas were
in vain.
Earlier the following week the

CONGRATULATIONS
TO OUR
NEW
PRESIDENT
FROM THE

THE

The Times reported that the
“committee had found that the
university had failed to take
cognizance of 'a significant and
growing minority of students who
want to lead lives less tied to financial return than to social
awareness and responsibility.’
”

On July 27, Mr. Meyerson returned to his post in the College
of Environmental Design, as

Roger W. Hcyns was appointed

chancellor.

SPECTRUM

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo
Publication Office at Norton Hall. University Campus. Buffalo, N Y, 14214
Published twice weekly from the first week of September to the last week in
May. except for exam periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and spring vacations
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�PAGE FOUR

Thursday, April 14, 1966

SPECTRUM

A HISTORY OF THE18460

Founded on the eve of the Civil
War, the University of Buffalo
has grown from a one department
institution into a major complex
of higher education. Under departing President Clifford C. Furnas, the University has been guided to the threshold of another
era of expansion, as an entirely
new and unique campus stands
only a few years away.
The growth process has been
long and tedious. It had its origin

in 1836, when the city of Buffalo,
was a rich and flourishing young
city, the Queen of the Great
Lakes, stepping stone from east
to west. In that year, prominent
Buffalonians became interested in

establishing a university. Largely
through the efforts of U.S. Representative Millard Fillmore, a
charter was procured from the
state incorporating the University

of Western New York
The following year was marked

by a nationwide depression and
the plans for a great university
were forgotten. Within ten years,
however, the plans were revived
—permanently.

The founders of the University
of Buffalo were largely prominent physicians. They argued for
not only a medical school, but a
complete and diversified university. They specifically wanted to
include academic, theological, and
law departments in addition to
a medical school.

A charter was granted to the
on May 11, 1846.
The charter provided for a 16man Council to be elected by the
share holders of the corporation.
The Mayor was to serve as an
ex-officio member of and each of
the various faculties was to be
represented on the council. Appointments of all officers, including the chancellor, were to be
made by the council upon nomination by faculty members. Millard Fillmore was the natural
choice for the position of Chancellor; he was Buffalo’s leading
citizen at that time and had devoted much effort towards establishing a university in Buffalo.

first Council

shrunk to nothing if not for a
dedicated faculty and community.
Part of this was due to Fillmore’s
belief that the fees of students
could cover the costs incurred by
the university. No provision was
made for an endowment.

and are now prepared to go on
with their school. All else is
vacant. Reflect, and see if it will
not reproach upon us, if we longer permit our university to exist
with but a single branch in operation.”

Fillmore urged expansion, but
little resulted. At a dedication of
the Univeristy’s first building,
the Chancellor said, “Our citizens
called for and obtained a university charter. Where is your faculty for the department of law?
.
. . Where
are your academic
branches? All wanting. The medical faculty have filled up theirs,

Indeed, the university did operate as a single branch, a med-

The Chancellorship at that time
was merely an honorary position.
Virtually his only duties were to
preside at commencement exercises. Fillmore served in that po-

sition until his death in 1874.
His tenure as Chancellor included his days in the White House

(1850-53).

MILLARD FILLMORE

—

Hi* first UB Chancellor

During that time the university
grew very little and might have

EBEN C. SPRAGUE

ical school, until 1886, when
under the Chancellorship of E.
Carteton Sprague, a department
of Pharmacy was created.
The department of Pharmacy
as did all the professional schools, from a demand by
Buffalo professionals who desired
a school be established in Buffalo
to train young men and women
in their professions. As historian
Julian Park put it in A History
of the University of Buffalo:
“Professional pride was the compelling factor in providing these
forms of technical education . . .
pride in maintaining the best
traditions of their profession and
handing them down intact to the
next generation and after that
to generations of those yet to
come. This pride was of the finest
and most unselfish kind, because
in each case it entailed a large
financial sacrifice on the part of
the teachers of these departments.”

resulted,

Shortly after the Department
of Pharmacy had begun instruction, a Department of Veterinary
Medicine was organized. But the
department never carried on any
instruction because there were
no funds to construct a suitable
building. The project was abandoned, but expansion could not
be stopped.

Chancellor Sprague realized
that a new building was needed;
the brownstone two-story structure at Main and Virginia was
outdated and overcrowded.
Through his influence, a new
building was completed on High
Street in 1808.

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The university was expanded
further in 1891, when an independently established law school
was incorporated, and by the ad
dition of the School of Dentistry
the following year. A School of
Padagogy opened in 1895, but was
discontinued three years later for
lack of funds. The Medical Department of Niagara University
was merged with that of UB in
1898, increasing the faculty.
Under Charles P. Norton, who
became Acting Chancellor in

�no
of
IVERSITY
1954
Thursday, April 14, 1966

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

en strings. Only be exercising the

prerogatives and the responsibilities of freedom do men learn to
be free and to be strong.”
It was under Dr. T. Raymond
McConnell, successor to Dr.
Capen, that the university opened

1905, the university acquired land
and funds needed for further
growth. Although his appointment
to the Chancellorship was in the
ceremonial tradition of his predecessors, he showed foresight and
desire for expansion.
In his first year in office, Norton proposed a million-dollar expansion program to develop a
College of Arts and Sciences, Located on a ten acre tract between
the Albright-Knox Art Gallery
and the Buffalo Historical building, the result would have been
a complete cultural center, blending the facilities of all three.
The idea was rejected as being
too far-reaching and ambitious
for a university lacking endowment and community support.
Norton agreed that his plan was
not suitable; it was not far-reaching enough.

Norton learned that Erie County was to vacate the site of its
county almshouse and hospital on
North Main Street, and proposed
that the university acquire some
of this land for an arts college
and other future needs. The
Council voted to purchase the
property for $54,300, and Norton
turned to the task of procuring
the necessary funds.
He failed to gain the financial
assistance of the city. Moral support was given to the project
by a new requirement of the
American Medical Association
that for a medical school to receive “Grade A” accreditation all
medical students must have at
least one year of liberal arts

its first residence halls and moved
from the status of a “street-car
college” into a role as an institution combining the features of
a residential school and an urban
university. Cook, Sehoellkopf and
Macdonald halls were constructed, providing residence space for
450 students.
UB began, in 1846, as a small
college with one department,
lacking funds and a full-time
ehaneelor. It grew and expanded,
and moved to its present site.
The groundwork was laid for the
work of McConnell’s successor,
Dr. Clifford Furnas

t.

r.

McConnell

UB’s first full-time Chancellor in
1922, and guided the institution
for 28 years. His administration
was a time of change, growth and
innovation. As a result of his
efforts, a loose amalgamation of
independent schools became a coordinated institution, f u 11-time
faculty increased,, physical and
curricular development were undertaken at a steady pace, and
graduate work was instituted.
Foster Hall, the first new building, was dedicated in 1922. What
is now Millard Fillmore College
opened the following year to
make available evening educational opportunities for adults of
the community. Hayes Hall, which
had been the county’s adtilt hospital building, was greatly enlarg-

ed and. reconstructed to become

a part of the university. The
building which served as the

SAMUEL P. CAPEN
training before acceptance. If UB
could not provide this training,
students would have to turn to

other institutions.
In 1915, the Woman’s Educational and Industrial Union of
Buffalo offered its building for
the Arts college with the provision that $100,000 for its endowment be raised within a year.
Mrs. Seymour Knox met this condition when she and her family
donated $250,000 in memory of
Mr. Knox senior.
in 1919, the State Department
of Education authorized the College of Arts and Sciences to confer degrees, and in the next year,
31 faculty members were instructing 600 students.
Dr. Samuel P. Capen became

CLIFFORD C. FURNAS (Story on Furnao Yoon on Pago I)

county’s children’s hospital became Hochstetter Hall; the nurse’s

home, Townsend Hall. From 1930
to 1935, Crosby, the first Norton
Union, (now Harriman), and the
Lockwood Memorial Library were
constructed.

Dr. Capen is especially remembered for his championship of
academic freedom. At the hundredth anniversary celebration,
We hold that a
he said:
university is something over and
above a group of professional
schools. It is an instrument of
inquiry. It is a forum of criticism
and interpretation. It is an incubator of ideas. It is a nursery
of free men, and as such it is
democracy's strongest U 'vark.
leadFree men are not rea,
:

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�Thursday, April 14, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACE SIX

RELATIONSHIP OF UB TO
THE STATE UNIVERSITY
Today, SUNY at Buffalo is the
largest single unit of the state
education system, with an enrollment of almost 20,000 students
in fourteen divisions. By 1970,
two campuses will be in opera-

tion, enrollment will surpass
and annual income will
exceed $80 million.

27,000,

Established as a private institution in 1846, the University of
Buffalo merged with the New
York State education system on
September 1, 1962. Shortly, following the merger, President Clifford C Furnas commented that
“As the University assumed its
new role . . there were to be no
real shifts in the basic tenets of
freedom, integrity, and public
service. What emerged,'’ Furnas
insisted, “was a new confidence,
a new hope for a future of even
greater fulfillment of the needs
of New York in higher educa.

tion.”

The decision to become a state
university rested chiefly upon the
needs for campus expansion, program enrichment, and improvement of facilities. In 1956 the
University outlined a long-range
minimum plan seeking resources
to provide better instruction, adequate facilities, improved programs, and added research funds.
This campaign to raise $9 million was undertaken and completed. Chancellor Furnas, however, still perceived that further
resources were necessary if the
university was to become, as he
proposed, “a great institution in
the national sense, contributing
to the most important aspects of
human endeavor,” Consequently,
the university looked to the state.
In 1960 the Stale University Master Plan was established which
outlined the development of four
major publicly supported, multipurpose universities emphasizing
graduate and professional education. Buffalo was suggested as a

nearly 12,000 applications in 1964
for a freshman class of 2,200.

Full time enrollment has increased from 7,350 in 1961-62 to 10,265
in 1964. Especially important, the
bulletin stresses, is the increase
in full time faculty enrollment
from 546 in 1961-62 to 945 in
1964. In addition, the portion of
research represented by sponsored programs amounted to $6.1
million in 1963-64, an increase of
nearly $1 million over the previous year. By 1963-64 the University’s operating budget was approximately $33 million. A new
women’s dormitory was erected,
renovations accomplished, and
temporary and pre-fabrieated
buildings established.

not be possible under a purely
private institution’s budget. As a
state university, therefore, both
public and private funds have

been combined to insure far more
expansive educational programs,

by encouraging mediocrity or by
necessitating excessively difficult
courses which will weed out the

bulk of the students. In addition,
the master plan of the new campus has been outlined more by

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Immediately following the merthe University of Buffalo
Foundation, Inc., was established,
retaining the name of the private
institution and symbolizing the
continuity of “private” tradition.
ger,

The purpose of the Foundation
is to secure and administer private funds, providing additional
resources for research and creative programs. Foundation Director Dr. William J. O'Connor
commented that the Foundation
“fills the needs of the University
beyond what is provided for in
the state budget.” Dr. O’Connor
emphasized that prior to the merger with the state a great portion
of the money raised for various
projects had to be spent on maintenance. salaries, and working
space. Now receiving state aid,
the university donates all monies
directly to the project itself,
while the state pays all operational costs. “Although a generous budget is received from the
state," O’Connor mentioned, “the
exceptional creativity of the faculty and students requires additional funds.” The private voice
of the Foundation results in what
O’Connor termed “a gentle balance between state and university."

The Foundation operates under
a charter established by the De-

partment of State Education,
which acts as its guideline. The
foundation, however, is “legally
separate and private.” In the fu-

possible university center.

Thc University of Buffalo Coun
cil appointed a negotiating committee on November 28, 1960 to
investigate how Buffalo might
play an integral part in this state
expansion. The year 1962 brought
the merger to a climax. On March
8 the Board of Trustees of the
State University gave official
approval to the broad outline of
affiliation. The University of Buffalo Council unanimously approved this agreement on March 9,
and on April 30 the legislation
necessary to the final merger was
signed into law by Governor
Rockefeller. The Agreement of
Merger was signed on August 27,
and filed with the Board of Regents on August 31. The University of Buffalo became the State
University of New York at Buffalo on September 1, 1962.

lure, O’C o n n o r foresees close

"These Restless Men” cites several outstanding and tangible results of the state-university merger.
Mention is made of the
reduction in tuition in fees. Aplications to the University have
mushroomed, as evidenced by

interaction between students, instructors, and professionals
through career-directing symposiums which will broaden student
perspectives and illuminate the
professional fields. These accomplishments. he i mphasized. would

ML CLAUDS C. PUFFER
Vic*-Pr*». for Busin*** Affairs

BE AN EARLY SHOPPER

Th* Board of TruttoM with Dr. Fumat as they mat an the
UB Campus last semester.
O’Connor commented that the
role of the Chancellor in raising
monies has not substantially
changed in the state university.
He continues to occupy the role
of “chief fund raiser” through his
social and professional contacts.
These resources are applied toward programs not provided for
in the state budget.

Vice President for Business Affairs Dr. Claude E. Puffer envisions SUNY at Buffalo to be
“in the future one of the best in
the nation.” Puffer noted that the
University is supported by one
of the richest states in the countyr and largely as a result of
state aid a great many advantages have been secured. Faculty
salaries have increased substantially and consequently the University has been able to attract
instructors of exceedingly good
calibre. Puffer also cited that a
greatly improved library has been
facilitated, the calibre of the
student body has risen, and a
new campus is on its way to
completion. In addition, he stressed that individual freedom and
participation has not been hampered by the merger. Puffer noted
that the only disadvantage he
could find with the state university was the increased “red tape”
and administrative complications.
This, however, he felt was "a
very small price to pay for the
many good things" resulting from
the merger. Puffer commented
that he was “very enthusiastic"
about the results of the state aid,
and remarked that the new campus will be “an educational institution giving the very best of
teaching and research' facilities
to faculty and students.”
Student Senate President Clinton Deveaux cited one of the
pressing disadvantages of the
state university to be the overwhelming problem of size. He

commented that the state university “has to meet needs prescribed by the state legislature.”
As a result, Deveaux said that the
legislature is naturally more concerned with satisfying the electorate by increasing enrollment
than with stressing academics.
This, he felt, particularly affects
students in the lower divisions

the state than by the individual
units of the University. This
master plan includes both physical layout and student enrollment.
Deveaux suggested that the state

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be allowed to influence a body
such as the Faculty-Student Association.
I

“The State University of New
York at Buffalo is literally exploding into a position as one of
America’s major public institutions of higher learning,” reads a
statement which recently appeared in “These Restless Men," the
University Foundation bulletin.

DEALS Jewelers

As the State University of New
York at Buffalo comes into a
position as “one of America’s
major public institutions of higher learning” it will have to rely
upon many factors. Among these
will be state aid, private contributions, and student action.

—SCHNEIDER—
Violinist Alexa n d e r
Schneider, a member of
the UB Budapest String
Quartet, will present a
sonata recital April 15
and 17 in the A'brightKnox Art Gallery Auditorium at 8:30 p.m. Tickets may be pur&lt; .ased for
$2. r
rd Hall tick-

�Thursday, April 14, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE SEVEN

The Office of the President

After August, President Clifford C. Furnas will no longer be
performing his multiple tasks as.
President of I®, but the tone
of enthusiasm and optimism he
created during his twelve-year
stay will remain as his legacy.
At times an administrator, public servant, diplomat, accountant,

'

or public relations expert, Dr.
Furnas has met the variety of
demands placed upon him. While
performing these tasks, he has
witnessed substantial changes in
the University’s structure, and in
the role of the Chancellorship,
as the school became a unit in
the State chain in 1962.

From A
Secretarys Perspective
Interview with Mrs.
Ruth East—Secretary to Dr.
Furnas)

(From an

stated, “to maintain good relation with the press, so you have
to treat them gently, while often
refusing their requests.”
Another part of this busy secretary’s day involves the many
speeches and reports which the
President is called upon to give.
With a stenographic staff of four,
Mrs. East does much of the background research work for these
speeches and reports.

How do you handle an excited
mother, who calls and asks to
speak to the President of the
University about Junior’s “F” in
Math 117?—or make up two hours
spent calling department after
department inquiring as to who
has invited a Doctor from a Pennsylvania University (who has just
called long-distance) to speak on
campus, only to finally discover
that the caller has UB confused
with the State College on Elm-

Attending t o

correspondence,

both incoming and outgoing, is
another duty of the President’s
secretary. A substantial portion

wood Avenue?

of tke lowing

correspondence

Prior to the merger with the
State system, one of the most
important concerns of the Chancellor was in the area of fundraising. Dr. Furnas points out
that, “As a private institution,
and particularly as we were, substantial fund-raising was necessary for survival. Under the State
this is no longer true, so I spend
a good deal less time on it.”

Dr. Furnas continued, however,
that the need of the university
for funds from gifts, bequests,
and other sources has not decreased. “The fund-raising work
of the University of Buffalo Foundation is quite necessary for what
we call the ‘extras of excellence.'
In other words, the State adequately provides for the basic
operating costs and it is also
providing the buildings which are
necesary, but there are many
extras which are not provided.
Among these are scholarships,
which make the difference in
whether you can do the job in
getting top-rank students, especially in the graduate and medical
schools. Additionally, the bulk of
■the money for research activities
comes from outside of the State.”
In addition, and especially since
the merger, the preparation of
the budget has taken on a greater
significance. “This is not only
because we are larger and more
complicated,” stated the President, “but also because the preparation of the budget requires a
tremendous amount of more detail than was necessary while a
private school. This is one of the
difficulties of a bureaucracy.”

MRS. RUTH BAST, Privet*

Secretary to Dr. Fume*.

If you are Mrs. Ruth East, you
take both incidents in
stride as part of a busy secretary’s daily routine. Mrs. East has
been private secretary to Dr.
Clifford C. Furnas since he became Chancellor of the University
in 1954, and prior to that time
when he was director of Cornell
Aeronautical Laboratory. Finesse
on the telephone is just one of
the many skills which are required of a top-notch secretary, and
it is especially important in the
office which is a tremendously
active and often sensitive center
of university activity.

consists of applications for teaching positions, and just recently
there were volumes of applications for the position of football
coach. These had to be sorted
and checked, and then referred
to a special committee for recommendations.
Dr. Furnas is very active on
government committees and
boards of directors, and there is
work for a secretary in these
areas also. Although it is not directly university work, it is part
of the overall job for the very
reason that is concerns the President.

Mrs. East notes that “people
feel they can come to the president of a university for everything.” This means that a good
part of her time is spent screening callers and visitors, to determine just who the President,
with his busy schedule, will be
able to see. As an example of the
type of call received, Mrs. East
mentioned that recently there
was a rash of calls from sports
writers and radio and television
announcers who wished to present to the President their opinions and recommendations regarding the selection of a new football coach. “It is important,” she

Just this small sampling of the
many duties of the President’s
secretary is a good indication of
what a busy, diversified office it
is. In the words of the lady who
has held that busy position since
1954, “It is a tremendously interesting and varied job, in what
is really the ‘hub’ of the univer-

merely

sity.”

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Planning and development have
also become victims of red tape
and state administration. According to Dr, Furnas, “What this
amounts to is that we do not
have the final say, although we,
including the faculty, spend a
great deal of time and effort on
the preliminary planning.”
One task that has not undergone significant alteration, how-

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ever, is the required contact with

the alumni. Not only is the alumni important to the operation of
the university in terms of money,
but also in terms of influence in
the State Legislature and general
good will.
As a public servant, Dr. Furnas
has satisfied the need for contacts, and his own desire for
outside activities. An interested
member of the Niagara Community, he is a member of the Board
of Trustees of the Buffalo Museum of Science, and is Chairman
of the Board of Visitors of Roswell Park Memorial Institute.
Meanwhile, he participates on the
national level by sitting on the
Scientific Advisory Panel of the
House Committee on Science and
Astronautics, and the Naval Research Advisory Committee.
In addition, President Furnas
has had to serve as field general
for the huge volume of correspondence and office work which
must be taken care of. Phone calls
from officials, parents, students,
and interested public arc all
handled either by himself or his
staff. All this must be done with
time to spare for the informal
talks and formal addresses he
presents to a great variety of
groups.

While participating in all these
diverse affairs, Dr. Furnas has
developed a vision of what the
future holds for UB. “The University of 1970 will consist of an
enlarged campus and student

body and an even more distinof scholars and
scientists than at present.” This
fact will contribute to an increased emphasis and activity in research and professional education. TTie President states that,
“Our contribution's to education,
research and community service
will be greater and will find their
way into every facet of life
throughout the Niagara Frontier,
the State, and the Nation. Business and industry, government,
social service agencies, medical
and scientific facilities all will
make use of this enriched University to the benefit of the entire community and economy.”
guished body

This sweeping perspective of
influence will not be without its
side effects. Dr. Furnas sees the
students and faculty becoming
more and more qualified to do
outstanding work while in school,
and having the ability to contribute to society once they leave
the institution of higher learning.
As President of UB, Dr. Furnas
has brought the school to the
threshold of a new era of excellence. He admits that there are

still problems and difficulties
ahead; but. “We can do this if
all of us who have supported the
University of Buffalo in the past
continue to give of our time, efforts and interest—our moral and
financial support.”

He calls for a united effort to
make the world a better place
in which to live, through higher
education.

KLEINHANS
Downtown Buffalo

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�Thursday, April 14, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

-THE FURNAS YEARSBy WILLIAM B. WEINSTEIN
“The ultimate strength of this
country depends to a major de-

gree on the excellence of its educational pattern. Faculties and
facilities must be maintained at
a higher level of effectiveness
than ever before to meet the
need.’’

With these words, Clifford C.
Furnas said good-bye to his colleagues at the Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory, of which he was
director prior to his appointment
to the chancellorship of the University of Buffalo.
In addition, Dr. Furnas’ administrative and academic back-

ground was an extensive one at
the time of his appointment to
the chancellorship. He holds a
degree of Bachelor of Science

with honors from Purdue University, a Doctorate of Philosophy
from the University of Michigan,
and honorary degrees from Purdue, Michigan, Alfred, Thiel College and the National University
of Asuncion (Paraguay). He has
also served as Assistant Secretary
of Defense. Dr. Furnas has also
published a number of books,
some of which in co-authorship
with his wife.
Foremost in Dr. Furnas’ mind
when he came to the University
was enlarging the scope of the
institution. While his background
in chemistry and engineering led
him to be concerned with the importance of technical subjects in
the University’s curriculum, he
emphasized the need for a liberal
education.
Speaking to the 1957 graduating
class, he said that we should "correct the imbalance between ‘practical’ and ‘liberal’ programs. A
university education should embrace something more than just
professional training.”
As part of the University’s expansion, allocations to various departments have increased. In the
year 1965-66, the English Department received 8.7 times the
amount that it did in the year
1954-56. The Physics Department

has shown an increase of 6.6
times and the Psychology Department an increase of 6.0 times.
There also has been an increase
in the size of the faculty, from
1082 part-time and full-time instructors to a 1962 figure of
1938. The ratings given by the
American Association of University Professors for faculty salary
and fringe benefits are now A
and AA, the two highest categories.
The physical plant of the University from 767,160 square feet
in 1952 to 2,049,136 in 43 buildings in 1966. This figure does
not include the temporary classrooms now being erected.
As Dr. Furnas put it,' one of
the major problems confronting
the University when he took over
the leadership was the danger of
becoming “unduly provincial,’’ a
pitfall for any urban university.
The most obvious solution was
to encourage more and more nonBuffalo area students to come to
UB. In 1954-55, there were only
three residence halls with a capacity of 447 students. The end of
that year saw the completion of
another 148-student dormitory,
bringing the residence total to
558. The present capacity is 2450
and the new campus is expected
to house 10,500 students.
In 1954, Dr. Furnas said, “It

will be a sad and ironic note if
sometime in the future history

Furnat racalvat Vigilant Patriot Award.

Furnas at Dedication of Norton Hall.

Tit* Puma*' at Monwcomlng Own*.
Mt AHO

MM.

FUOWAS

records that, in the latter half of
the twentieth century, America,
which by all odds is the richest
society in all of history, went into
limbo because it could not afford
to pay for its own education;’’
And in 1957, “From the beginning, it has been the Great American Dream that every person who
has the requisite intellectual ability and is willing to make the effort should have the opportunity
to go to college.”
In order to provide an education for those who cannot afford
one, the school participates in the
New York State Higher Education Assistance Corporation, New
York State Regents Scholarship
and Incentive Award Program,
and the National Defense Loan
Program. In addition, the university works with both private
industry and the federal government in advanced research.

Dr. Furnas has also encouraged
extra-curricular activities of the
student body. The decision to
award grants-in-aid to football
players was made during his term
in office because the football program was seen as a rallying-point
for student and alumni support.
The Student Senate has undergone a great expansion over the
previous forms of student government and publications enjoy a
greater freedom at the University
than at many other schools.

�</text>
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                    <text>VISTA

—

1

STATE

UnTv ER SITY

&lt;

INSERT

~O^N^W^^RK AT~BllFFALO
?

&gt;-■

CARBON
RESEARCH

il
VOLUME 16

(See Page

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13, 1966

NO. 37

Ex-Green Beret SpecialForces Hero
To Speak Tuesday On Vietnam Crisis
Former M.Sgt. Donald Duncan,

veteran of eighteen months combat duty in Vietnam, will de-

liver a critical assessment of
United States’ foreign policy in
Vietnam Tuesday, April 19 at
8:00 p.m. in the Millard Fillmore
room.

Mr. Duncan has served for six
in the Special Forces
(Green Berets). He is also military editor of Ramparts, a Roman Catholic magazine and is
traveling across the country
under its auspices according to
Dr. Sidney Wilhelm, who is in
charge of Mr. Duncan’s publicity
at UB.
In an interview with The New
York Times, Mr. Duncan said,
“I had to accept the fact that
Communist or not, the vast majority of the people were proyears

Vietcong and anti-Saigon.”
He charged in “Ramparts” that
Special Forces troops were urged to arrange for the killing of

Vietcong by South Vietnamese
troops, and were taught NKVD
(Soviet security police) torture

methods to extract information
from the enemy in a course entitled “Counter-measures to Hostile Interrogation.” He also asserted that although the United
States was speaking out against
Communist infiltrators in South
Vietnam, the Special Forces had
sent infiltrators into Laos and
North Vietnam.
Mr. Duncan noted that “emphasis was placed on the fact
that guerrillas can’t take prisoners. We were continuously told,
you don’t have to kill them yourself—let your indigenous counterpart do that.” He mentioned
witnessing the “practice of turning prisoners over .to the Army
of the Republic of Vietnam for
‘interrogation’ and the atrocities
which ensued.
Mr. Duncan feels that the increased growth of the Vietcong

NSA Latin American
Conference April 15-17
The New York State Region of
the National Student Association
will sponsor a conference on
Latin-American affairs April 1517. Delegates from 15 regional
schools will attend.
Regional Chairman Carl Levine
announced “the purpose of the
conference is to provide an opportunity for students to be exposed to discussions concerning
foreign policy determination as
well as with persons . . . who are
knowledgeable in Latin-American
affairs.”
The keynote address will be
delivered by Mr. Fred Berger,
Latin-American assistant for the
Washington NSA, Friday evening,
April 15. Mr. Levine reported that
Mr. Berger was recently expelled
from a Democratic Students Congress in Spain by Generalissimo
Franco.
UB history professor G. H.
Young, and political science professor Gary Hoskin, will participate in a panel discussion Saturday at 10 a.m. A third member of the panel has not yet
been chosen.

Latin-American

students

at-

tending UB will participate in
another panel discussion Saturday at 1:30 followed by consultation with regional school delegates.

Mr. Lawrence Smith, UB For-

eign Student Advisor and mem-

A table will be set up
Monday and Tuesday in
Norton Lobby to solicit
free literature and information on opportunities
for study, work and
travel in Israel. Anyone
who has been to Israel
and wishes to help at the
table call 831-3987 or
831-3887.
The Spanish Club will

meet Friday, April 15, in

233 Norton for music
and songs in Spanish and
election of officers.

“is not only impossible without
popular support, it actually requires a mandate," and noted
that the Vietcong have had this
popular support.”
Continuing, he stated that
Special Forces were always told
that the majority of the people
were opposed to the Vietcong
and that the people aided the
Vietcong only through fear yet
at the same time the Special
Forces were taught that “reliable support can be gained only
through friendship and trust.”

Mr. Duncan has been awarded
the South Vietnamese Silver Star
and other medals. He has rejected a field commission to the
rank of captain as a repudiation
of this administration’s policy in
Vietnam, according to Dr. Wilhelm.

The Department of Defense
has issued the following statement: “Apparently Mr. Duncan
has written an article expressing
his views on his military service.
We have no comment.”
Mr. Duncan’s speech is sponsored by the Students For A
Democratic Society and the Council For Citizens Responsible For
Foreign Affairs. There will be
a minimum donation of fifty
cents for students.

M. Sgt. Donald Duncan, a Haro in tha Army'i Special Forces
Corp. has said of Viet Nam "the whole thing was a Hal" Duncan,
Military Editor of the Catholic Magazine, RAMPARTS is on a cross
country speaking tour.

IRC Election Debate Extracts
Candidates Ideas for New Gov't
By TERRY SEAL
Inter-Residence Council
(IRC) held an election debate last
Monday. ’The six candidates for
the four IRC offices are: President, Joel Feinmen and Larry
Pivnick; vice president, Alan
Fried; treasurer, Alan Sturtz, and
secretary, Sharon Shulman and

The

Judy Snyder.
In his opening statement, presidential candidate Larry Pivnick
expressed plans to work for a

CARL LEVINE
NSA Regional Director

ber of the NSA Advisory Board,
will speak at a banquet Saturday at 5:30 p.m.
An informal discussion will
be held in the Haas Lounge from
8-11 a.m. Also planned is a discussion by Mr. Smith on programming instruction.
All students are invited to attend all discussions.

student’s voice in the selection of
residence hall food. He also mentioned plans for an Allenhurst
snack bar, a seconds table for
food on the weekends, and a Sunday dinner instead of a Sunday
breakfast.
Progress in housing, elimination of the women’s curfew, more
co-ed hours in the dorms, increased inter-dorm co-operation
and commuter-resident co-operation are also part of his platform.

Presidential candidate
Joel
Feinman proposed the perpetua-

tion of the IRC food policy as it
is now follwed by the food service. He also urged more liberal
curfews for women residents, a
fair and adequate judicial system for residence halls, visiting
rights for men and women students in the dorms, especially on
the new campus, and different,
select personalities to be invited
by the residence hall students to
live on their dorm floors.
The unopposed candidate for
the vice presidency, Alan Fried,
said he would like to see a coordinated IRC committee and
greater student turnout at university affairs.
In
his opening statement,
treasurer candidate Alan Sturtz,

running unoposed, expressed a
desire for more and better stu-

dent activities.
Sharon Shulman, a candidate
for IRC secretary, called for more
student involvement and voice in
student housing, women’s curfews and food service. She also
proposed the establishment of a

program through which well
known people would speak to
dormitory and commuting students in the dorms, and expansion
of the university ticket services
to include a greater variety of
off-campus events and the residence hall paper, the Prism.
Judy Snyder, a candidate for
secretary, stressed a need for
student involvement and for improved Student Senate-Inter-Residence Council relations. She also
mentioned a need to liberalize
the women's curfew regulations.
One question posed to the candidates concerned the problems
of the projected 10,000 residence
students on the new Amherst
campus. Mr. Sturtz responded
that he plans more committees
and an IRC judiciary.
Mr. Feinman suggested small
dormitories and fewer house
councils.
The debate will be rebroadcast over WBFO Wednesday,
April 13 ,at 11:30 p.m., AM direct
to the dorms only.

Rioting Accepted Form of Behavior
Sociologist Tilley
Ends History Coni.
“Participation by riot became
the most effective and popular
form of participation in the 18th
Century,” observed
sociologist
Charles Tilley of the University
of Toronto at the closing session
of the History Department's conference on “The Moral Economy
of the Poor in 18th Century

England.”

The session consisted of comment elicted by a paper presented earlier by Dr. Edward
Thompson. Rather than the usual explanations of hunger and
the rising cost of food, Dr.
Thompson sought the causes of
the 10th Century English food

riots in the dissonance aroused
in the population by the change
over from a consumer-economy
based on "just price’ ’and a
market economy where prices
are set by seller for maximum

profit.

The rioters sought to draw
upon customary notions of right,
Dr. Thompson continued. The
patterns of thought from the
Tudor period carried over well
into the 18th Century.
Dr. Tilley dealt mainly with
French riots of the same period.
Rather than being chaotic and
aimless, he commented, the riots
had an internal structure and a
political center. By such demonstrations the population sought
to keep grain in the community
and its price at a reasonable

level. He sees a “rationality in
the disorder” and considered the
riots as "having a communal economy.”
There is a “kind of geography
to hunger in France,” Tilley continued, and rather than being
a peasant phenomenon, as Dr.
Thompson projected for England,
these riots were caused by the
“semi-urban population of the
chies”
The second speaker, Richard
B. Morris, sought to confine his
remarks to the situation in America and a discussion of why the
riots took a different turn in
the colonies.
There was no hunger in America, he observed. New York and

Pennsylvania were, in fact, grain
exporting areas. Food riots were
very exceptional and demonstrations might be attributed to a
sense of “moral'outrage on the
part of the poor.”

Dr. Morris noted a strong pattern of rural rioting. The Plank
Cutting Riots were pointed to as
an example

of manifest lower
class discontent. Those settling
in urban areas were most susseptible to riot due to the adverse living conditions, he continued.
"After 1764," Dr. Morris felt,
“it was hard to separate economic and political riots.” The
entry of the upper class into the
demonstrations was a prelude to
the American Revolution.

�Wednesday, April 13, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

Cram Sheet
For Draft

A Case In Point:

P. Salstrom—Conscientious Objector
By ROGER FRIEDLAND
a non-coopera disaffiliate,
He has spent
life in jail

Paul Salstrom is

ator. an

absolutist,

an anti-cpnscriptor.

33 months of his
for , a belief, a commitment to
his conscience.

At the age of 20, Salstrom refused to carry his draft card,
sending it back to his local board
In consequence, he received an
order to report for induction.

Salstrom refused to comply on
the grounds that “any affiliation
with the system is an affiliation
with militarism."
He was then arrested and sentenced by a Federal District Court
to a three year sentence in prison. After fasting for the first
15 days of his sentence in prison,
he was transferred to the Medical
Center for Federal Prisoners in
Springfield, Mo.
Salstrom got a “mandatory release” after two years of good
conduct.
However, he was re-arrested
and sentenced to an additional
nine months in the Danbury Correctional Institution after violating the terms of his release by
organizing an anti-draft caravan.
After his release in June, 1965,
he was reclassified 4-F for his
conviction on felony charges.
Paul Salstrom is a case in point.
He is an absolutist, whose commitment to conscience supersedes
all else, even his regard for
personal safety.
He believes that one’s consideration of the draft must be set
in “the context of beliefs about
right and wrong . . . for I have
experienced morality as one of
the truly precious aspects of life.
“But morals cease to be morals
and beliefs to be beliefs to the
extent that they are set to stew
in a pot of random concerns about
one's personal comfort or the
fate of one's skin.”
The non cooperalor overtly
breaks the law He is a radical
pacifist who refuses any form
of conscription by the government in an effort symbolically to
disaffiliate himself from the United States government.
The statutory maximum penalty of five years imprisonment
and/or $10,000 fine is relatively
mild compared to past U.S. draft
policies.
During World War I. non-coop-

The official

Quakers for

student newspaper

worried about passing
can usually find previous tests or former students to
tutor them through the mysteries
of English Lit or History II-A.
Now they can apply the same
methods to the draft deferment
test, coming up in May.
Students

an exam

whom the ambulance

service was created in France.
Referring to the possibility of
a C.O. draft status, Salstrom said,
'Tve infinitely preferred even a
comparatively long period in prison to the legal choice, of applying to a draft board or its supervisors for permission not to
engage in the massacre of my
fellow human beings.”

Barron’s, a company dealing in

course outlines and sample test
questions, has just issued “How
to Prepare for the Student Draft

Deferment Test” with “all the
facts you need to help you score
higher.” Based on the previous
Korean War tests and standard
aptitude tests, the “cram sheet”
offers complete verbal and mathematical exercises as well as

Expressing much dissatisfaction with the peace movement,
Salstrom believes that the current
pacifist tactics will not be effective until they go beyond token
sacrifices exemplified by sit-ins
and marches.

sample tests.

“If the coalition peace movement does not go beyond the
street or beyond a few easy years
beyond the confines,
in jail
that is, of liberal consensus-oriented civil libertarianism just
barely defcnsibly labeled ‘protest,’
the movement will not become
credible and not become significant,” Salstrom said.

New York University is offering a tutoring program to help
liberal arts majors prepare for
the algebra and trigonometry
questions. Clifford Tisser, Technology Council Vice President, is
basing the program on previous
test questions released by the

—

New York Journal American.

During his stay in prison, Salstrom said that he had no difficulty making friends. “The average
convict seems to me as honest
and straightforward as the aver-

age unconfined
said.

cjCetterA

American,” he

Beyond friendship, “There arc
plenty of illegal excitements
available to individuals in prison
so inclined, ranging from delivery of contraband cigarettes (cigarette packs serve universally as
money behind bars) and the smuggling of contraband papers and
mistreatment reports to outside
contacts, to the harboring of jack

breweries, homosexual rendezvous
and marijuana stashes to name
five of the many I personally
adopted in the cause of freedom,” he commented.
Salstrom reflected that he was
pleased with his “social results
behind bars."
"The fasting period automatically resulted in limitless respectful curiosity from other inmates,
about nonviolence and the anti
war position . .
he said.
He noted that there were college-educated convicts in prison,
so that “informed and civilized
conversation isn’t sacrificed by

SPECTRUM

THE

Published

erators were either executed or
sentenced to life imprisonment.
The sole exception was for the

of the State University of New York at Buffalo
Hall. University Campus, Buffalo, N. Y. 14214.

JEREMY

Manager

Business

TO THE EDITOR

This is in reply to the April
8th column by J, Callan “The
Right”:

There are few subjects on
which bourgeous society displays
greater hypoeracy than on that
of abortion. Abortions are condemned and made illegal and
judged immoral on basis of the
Catholic argument that endows
the fetus with a soul that won’t
be allowed entrance to heaven
unless born and baptised. Yet
the church consents to allowing
adults to be killed in war while

sclf-righteously upholding a humanitarian position toward the
unborn fetus. It seems odd, as
Simone Dc Beauvoir says in The
Second Sex, that men with the
most scrupulous respect for embryonic life are also those who
arc most eagerly officious when
it comes to condemning adults to
death in war.”
It must also be noted that our
society, so concerned to defend
the rights of the embryo, shows
so little concern in the children
once they are born. Abortionists

RAYMOND D

—

Mike

Sharcot

Castro.

Staff—Joanne

STEVE SCHUELEIN
Steve Farbman. Bob Frey.

Layout Editor
Bouchier, Stephanie

Scott

Forman.

SHARON HONIG

Parker.

Steve Silverman

Copy Editor
LAUREN JACOBS
Sandy Lippman, Betsy Ozer.
Staff—Carol Becker. Estelle Fok. Jocelyn
Claire Shottenfeld. Susan Zuckerberg
i
RON HOLTZ
Advertising Manager
Staff—Tarry Angelo. Audrey Cash. Pat Rosenfeld. Steve Silverman, Joseph
Mancini
EDWARD JOSCELYN
Photography Editor

Staff —Don Blank. Peter Bonneau. Joseph Feyes. Carol Goodson. Alan Gruber.
Marc Levine. Ivan Makuch. Michael Solun. Anthony Walluk, Susan Wortman,
Robert Wynne
Circulation

Manager

DIANE LEWIS

Faculty Advisor

IRENE WILLET

Financial Advisor

EDITORIAL

POLICY IS

FIRST

J
PWCSS

DALLAS GARBER

DETERMINED

BY

THE EDITOR-IN

CHIEF

CLASS HONOR RATING
Second Class Postage

Subscription
15.000

S3 00

Paid at
per

and most often corrupt. That is
not to mention the brutality and
sometimes death that may come
to a child unfortunate enough to
be born to a parent who awaits
its arrival in hatred. Abortionists
have been known to have served
several years in prison while parents convicted of child beating
to serve merely a few months, I
wonder, Mr. Callan, if your estimation of morality does not need
a thorough overhaul.
Only an individual of the middle class, like yourself, could so
easily condemn abortion. After
all what is the little extra expense
of an added child to someone of
America’s middle class. But to
those in poverty, another pregnancy cuts off a mother’s earning
power, and the child becomes an
added economic burden. An abortion could not only aid the parent
to feed the children she already
has, but also could keep her in
an earning capacity, And what,
Mr, Callan, could be more im-

moral than a bad illegal abortion
where the innocent victim of social pressures lies mutilated or

dies? (not to mention the fear
and shame she is forced to induce because of the hypocracy
and double standards of our sex
laws). She is left at the mercy
of an abortionist who may or may
not be a butcher and who has
robbed her of up to $2000 dollars
for an operation which shouldn’t
exceed $75. There would be no
need for this if such operations
were legalized for abortions are
simple operations when done in
a modern day hospital.

The fact is, that whether or not
people, like yourself, condemn
abortions or not, they still go on
and because of the illegality imposed upon them by institutions
such as the church and ignorant
individuals like yourself, more
and more girls lie chopped up in
a sewer.
Two lives lost instead
of one.
“The law forbidding abortion
is immoral because it is necessarily bound to be violated every—

day and every

hour.”
Janet Shapiro

Again And Again And Etc.

Temps Scored
TO THE EDITOR

VOLPE

Feature Editor
JOHN STINY
Assistant
JO ANNE LEEGANT
Staff—Bonnie Bartow. Ron Ellsworth, Barbara Ann Fitzsimmons. Barbara Loeb.
Audrey Logel. Bob Martin. Suzanne Rovner, Martha Tack. William Weinstein.

Staff
J. B

are prosecuted by law but institutions housing the unwanted
child are, in most eases, under
poor management, ill-financed,

TAYLOR

News Editor
ALICE EDELMAN
Staff—Loretta Angelme. Joanne Bouchier. Russell Buchman, Karen Green,
Peter Lederman. Joan Roberts. Rick Schwab, Dan Schroeder. Sharon Shulman.
Eileen Teitler. Nancy Toder. Patti Wartiey, Judy Weisberg

Sports Editor
Mike Dolan.

the Editor

Callan Scored On Abortion, Again

Publication Office at Norton
Published twice weekly from the first week of September to the last week in
May, except for exam periods. Thanksgiving. Christmas, and spring vacations.
Editor-in-Chief

to

Buffalo. N. Y.
circulation

year,

Represented
advertising
by
for national
National Advertising Service, Inc . 420 Madi
.
son Ave New YorK N. Y,

Contrary to previous speculation, the curious structures being
erected at various and sundry loci
on campus are neither the result
of ambitious engineering majors'
labor with the Jolly Green Giant's
erector set, nor red lead chapels
in a God-is-Alive movement (the
name "Bethlehem" notwithstanding), nor idols erected to Chauncey the Cruddy Campus Crawler
Crane, recently deified in ceremonies all over the muddy campus.

Rather, these structures will be
used for classroom and office
space, as similar cowbarns presently are at SUNYAB Mudaeres
East. A stroke of genius has been
added by the apparent colorcoding of the new buildings.
Whereas it is usually no problem
(because of the distinctive architecture) to learn a name for a
new building, in this case where
the architectural style is Modern
Technocrat Conformist, it is manifestly impossibly. Hence buildings will be named after the color

of their exterior decor, a very
pragmatic consideration. Aesthetically, the only drawback is the
embarrassment a student will suffer when he confides to a friend
that he has a class in 114 Mustard
Hall.

To further facilitate logistic
efficiency, I suggest to the Administration that in addition to
color-coding the buildings, appropriately colored buildings be asst gncd to each department.
Hence; royal heliotrope for Administration, jaundice yellow for
the Med School, ‘nut'-brown for

campus the ivory-tower white pa-

goda of the Philosophy Department.
I think just about every division and school in the university
would benefit from this plan, except perhaps MFC (because, after
all, who can tell the color of an
unlighted building at night?)
—Diogenes L. Schriber

Spectrum
U nappreciated
TO THE EDITOR:

the Rockefeller Creative Associates, shocking pink for the Spring
“Arts” Festival Committee, scotch
plaid for the FSA.

Three cheers and a hearty
bellylaugh for your unsuccessful
attempt, nevertheless, AN attempt to upgrade the standard

addition, the geographic
placement of buildings could be
made helpful to the student
Thus Sociology, in its Chinesered barn, would be on the eastern
fringe; ROTC, in its Air Force
blue barn, on the right; and the
neutral gray barn of Political
Science in the middle. And of
course in the magnetic center of

Namely, your April Fool’s “joke”
issue was tantamount to the trash
that you print weekly tor weakly).
But don't despair, Spectrum staff,
for your monumental April Fool’s
issue will serve the same utili-

In

of

your

mundane

newspaper.

tarian purpose of all your past
issues: lining garbage cans, wrapping fish and swatting flies.
Frank Serrio

�Wednesday, April 13, 1966

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

Is
Stateless Person'

SDS Speaker
I have been declared a ‘stateless person’ by the Immigration
Department and must deport myself under threat of imprisonment. This extremely cruel punishment has often been perpetuated on aliens, but I am the
first native American to suffer
this injustice." proclaimed Mr.
Joseph Johnson in a lecture sponsored by the Students for a Dcm
ocratic Society last Monday.
“

■

Mr. Johnson reported that in
1964 he was informed by the
Immigration Nationalization Service that his citizenship was in
doubt because of a violation of
the McCarran Act (Immigrafional
Naturalization Act), which forbids an American citizen to participate directly in the politics of
&amp;

The little known Carbon Research Center is located behind the
Nuclear Research Center in the south end of the campus.

Carbon Research Center;
Unique University Asset
By

CARUE ORESKOVICH

Buried at the far side of the
overshadowed by the
Maintenance Department and the
Nuclear Research Center lies a
square, ungarnered brick building
hearlded by a small plaque declaring that this is the “Carbon
Research Center.”
campus,

This innocuous laboratory is
unique in that it is the only university lab in America that is
specifically designed for research
on carbon. It has been the host
of many distinguished professors
who have come to work in this

research center. At present there
are professors from Japan, Taiwan, France and Germany in postgraduate work.
The research has formerly been
supported by the Navy, Air Force
and the National Science Founda-

tions with the aid of many business and industrial firms. The
Air Force has since discontinued
support. The heavy military support is due to many applications
which carbon compounds have in
rockets and nuclear development.
The tests conducted at this center consist of compiling data on
the qualities and properties of
the products formed. The lab
serves as a ‘data’ center in supplying information to be used by
industry and the government.
Carbon, commonly known as
"the building block of life” has
to its credit many valuable qualities. One of these is that it does
not melt and thus can withstand
high temperatures.
The immediate applicability of
this trait in the building of rockets is readily seen. Carbon can
be combined in many different
ways and the patricular composition used, affects its properties.
Testing the resulting compound
is the main purpose of the lab.
The Center contains the equipment which enables the preparalion of the different combinations.
The material is the electrically
heated, better terms would be
jolted’ or ‘shocked’, up to 3500
degrees centigrade, a temperature
for above ‘white’ heat! The
strength, durability and other
factors of the non-metal are then
tested to gain important informa-

tion on the compound. Another
of the four projects in progress
is the testing of the carbon at
very low temperatures with the
use of Nitrogen, liquid Hydorgen and Helium.
This laboratory, employing up
to 20 people is under the direction of Dr. Stanislaw Mrozowski.
Dr. Mrozowski received his doctorate at the University of Warsaw, Poland and TUniversite de
Bordeaux, France and among
many other credits he has been
head of the Research and Development Division of the Great
Lakes Carbon Corporation.

Dr. Mrozowski is Editor in
Chief of “International Carbon"
a journal which has a worldwide
scope, importance and contributions.

a foreign country.

“I moved to Canada in 1953
to escape the Korean War, the

McCarthy ‘Witchhunt.’ and racial
discrimination,” he explained. In
1958. Mr, Johnson left Canada
to serve two years in Springfield
Penitentiary "for failure to notify the Draft Board an address
change."

“In Canada I was as politically
active as a human being can get.
I did not vote, but as a Socialist
1 was directly involved in the
selection of candidates and the
formation of a labor party.”
Provided with a lawyer by the
Emergency Civil Liberties Committee,

Mr. Johnson said that he

plans to appeal his case to the
highest level of the Immigration
Department and, if necessary, before the' Supreme Court.

When asked why the Immigration Department decided to prosecute him, Mr. Johnson said he

30-Hour Tricycle Marathon
Slated By Alpha Phi Omega
The brothers and pledges of
Alpha Phi Omega Fraternity arc
planning a 30-hour tricycle marathon, TRIKES FOR TIKES, Tuesday and Wednesday, April 19 and
20. Proceeds of the marathon will
benefit the Easter Seal Foundation, which sponsors research for
crippling diseases. The “Trike-athon” will begin at Lafayette
Square in downtown Buffalo Tuesday at 10 a.m„ proceeding slowly
down Main St. and arriving at
the UB campus Tuesday evening.
The cycling will continue throughout Tuesday night at the fountain

outside Norton Union, ending
there Wednesday afternoon. Donations will be accepted during
the entire marathon.

Dr. Naim Kattan, noted
ed editor and critic in
Montreal, will speak in
French on “The Quiet
Cultural a n d Literary
Revolution in French
C a n a d a” April 14 at
8 :30 p.m. in 335 Norton.

sees no reason for the action
against him when Grace Kelly
is ruling over a nation. Cardinal
Cusring is voting at the Vatican,
and the United States advisors
arc acting in Viet Nam.

CJtSoaJ
Dr. George G. Iggers of the
history department will speak to
the German Club on April 13 at

7:30 p.m. in Norton 334.
The first meeting of Group
Leaders for Freshman Orientation Kail 1966 will be held Thursday. April 14 at 3 p.m. in Norton

240-242.

Attendance

is manda-

tory.

There will be a business meeting of the Anthropology Club at
7:30 April 13 in the new archaeology lab, 3230 Main Street.
The Mathematics Club will
present Dr. Wallace speaking on
"Lie Algebras" on Wednesday.
April 13 at 7:30 p.m. Election of
officers will also take place.

Dr. Saltarelli Receives
Higby Foundation Grant
Dr. Cora G. Saltarelli, assistant
professor of bioengineering in
the Division of Interdisciplinary
Studies and Research of the
School of Engineering, has been
awarded a $3,000 grant from the
Samuel Higby Camp Foundation.
The award was made to Dr.
Saltarelli in her studies of "Genetics of Pathcnogenic Yeasts.” She
had previously received a grant
from the Graduate School for
the project.

Since 1949, Dr. Mrozowski has
worked on the Doctorate Degree
which he initated and has trained
many graduates from around the
world in the use of carbon.

Dr. Mrozowski, who has just
returned from a trip to New
Jersey stands a lanky 6 feet in
height. A bespectacled, gaunt
man, 65 years of age, he shows
a sense of humor unusual for
a man of his profession. Speaking with a slight accent he says,
“We (professors) are simple people. Nothing but Physics is in
our mind.” And justifies his long
term by saying, “The trouble
with professors is that they do
not know anything else to do.”
Dr. Mrozokski considers the research exciting and he enjoys
the ‘world’ of experimentation.
He notes that in the last short
while they have had two explosions which have burned equipment, Dr. Mrozowski indicates his
drive when he states, “We are
so devoted to Physics that we
do not have much time to think
of other things.”
Last year Dr. Mrozowski taught
at the Japanese Universities at
Kayo and Nagora where he also
assisted in research. In two
months he is going to be lectured in Germany. At 65 Dr.
Mrozowski continues to be energetic in his research and teaching.

How to look good on any golf course; play it bold with Arrow's Mr. Golf, the Decton wash
and wear knit that stays fresh and crisp to the eighteenth and beyond. Stays tucked-in.
j
too. An extra-long back tail keeps down while you swing. Many
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standout colors, $5. Pick out a few at your Arrow retailers

"Vi/f/l

�Before the Computer
Love l/Vas for Sports
(ACP)-Little Johnny sat

on

his grandfather’s lap and said,
“Tell me about the old days
again, Grandpa. You know, before the computers.”
Grandpa smiled and looked
dreamily through his spectacles.
“Ah, yes, those were the days,”
he mused. "Of course conditions
were terrible. People had to
think for themselves and even

make decisions. But you know,
there was something about those
times.”

CLASSIFIED
LOST AND FOUND
MAN'S dark leather wallet; im
portant papers; please return

to

lost and

at Norton

found

Union.

WANTED
TWO PEOPLE to sublet 3Vfe-room
10-minute walk from
apt.,
campus: occupancy June 1-Sept.
1; $80 month. Call Steve or Gene,
831 3552.

ROCK AND ROLL drummer, over
18, steady employment available through summer. BU 3-8517
MUST LOCATE young man who
turned man car around after

Wednesday, March 30.
on Parkridge, about 1:55 p.m.
Call 832-2095.

accident

FEMALE ROOMMATES, 2 for
summer, 1 for fall. $32 each
plus utilities. Close to campus.
Call 832 4698 after 6.
TRAVEL
UB JET FLIGHT to France leav
inR June 27, returning Sept. 5.
Round-trip NYC-Paris, $340. Faculty,
students, employees of

“Tell me about dating again,
Grandpa. I want to hear about
the girls.”

“Well, there was one time I
remember. It must have been
back in ’65, Yeah, it was ’65 all
right, cause I remember the
computers came in ’66.
“I was walking across the old
campus one day and I. saw this
girl, just standing there looking
real cute. So, being a gay blade
in them days, 1 just sort of sauntered up to her and struck up a
conversation. And I got a date
with her that very night.”
“Wow, Grandpa! You must be
the bravest man in the whole
world. You didn’t even know if
you two were compatible, did
you?”

“Nope. Sure didn’t. Funny
though, it didn’t seem to matter
a whole lot at the time.”

“But weren’t you scared? I
mean, you didn’t even know if
you both felt the same way about
abortion.”

“Well, I guess I was a little
nervous, all right. Cause I didn’t
even know it she was powerful,
intelligent, giving or aesthetic.”
“Yeah, and what about sexual
involvement? She might have
gone back and told the whole
dorm so far as you know.”
“Well, that was the chance we
had to take back then,”
“Boy, I’ll bet it was a real
drag, not knowing a thing about
her, Grandpa. What ever hap
pened to the old girl, anyway?”

“She’s out in the kitchen,
I been married to that old
gal for 56 years. Damn, I wish
we were compatible.”
sonny.

SUNYAB eligible. Contact Stanford I.eff soon! 834-1869.
FOR

RENT

TWO-BEDROOM furnished apt.
near campus, to sublet for sum
mer. Call 833-6416 after 6 p.m.

—VOLUNTEERS—
Volunteers are needed
to take the Student Attitudes Test at the Senate
Office. 205 Norton.

LUXURY, furnished, modern apt.

for summer. Electric kitchen,
short walk; reasonable rent. Call
837 9792.
FOR SALE

1965 BENELLI 125cc two cycle,
under 1000 miles; $375. Call
TF 29228 after 6:30 p.m.

ANNOUNCING

May 20 Deadline for Peace Corps
The Peace Corps announced
that May 20 is the deadline to
enroll in 11 Peace Corps training
courses for college juniors to be
held this summer at U.S. universities.
Peace Corps officials advised
that students enroll immediately
because of the time required to
process applications.
The 10 courses starting in June
and the other in July are design-

ed to enable future volunteers
to integrate Peace Corps training
with their senior year of college.
Juniors qualified to enter the
Advance Training Program will
be prepared for assignment in

PHARMACY
ADMINISTRATION
and HOSPITAL
PHARMACY
ADMINISTRATION

The State University of New
York at Buffalo Music Department today announced that Alexander Schneider, violinist, and
Peter Serkin, pianist, will present
2 Sonata Recitals on Wednesday,
April 13th, and on Friday, April
15th, at the Albright-Knox Art
Gallery at 8:30 p.m. These recitals are to replace concerts
originally scheduled by the Budapest Quartet. The recital on Wednesday, April 13th, will include
four works by Franz Schubert.
The April 15th recital is entitled The Great G Major Sonatas and include works by Bach,
Mozart, Brahms, and Beethoven.
■

Alexander Schneider, a member of the Budapest Quartet, is
well known to Buffalo audiences
for his performances here. He
will also be involved April 11

sitions of responsibility and
leadership in management,
marketing, selling and research in pharmaceutical, cosmetic and related industries
in the wholesaling and retailing of the drug trade; in
preparation for teaching of
pharmacy administration; and
in the administration of the

$7
.

hospital pharmacy.

Admission for matriculated

«"***»

multiply
'

For Regular Pity
Apprti Stringing Cnnt

Tnnnlt
Badminton

(9
,,

,,

.

A

from

summer employment. Trainees
may borrow up to $600 at low

through 14th as a faculty member of the String Players’ Institute at the University and will
conduct the String orchestra of
the Institute on Thursday at 4:30
p.m. in the Baird Recital Hall.
Peter Serkin, son of the famed
pianist Rudolph Serkin, will accompany Alexander Schneider.
Mr. Serkin recently performed
with great success at Carnegie
Hall in New York City as soloist
with the Cleveland Orchestra
and records for R.C.A. Victor.

Tickets are available at the
Baird Hall Box Office. Prices are
$2.50 general admission, $1.50
faculty and staff, and $.50 students. Phone reservations will
not be accepted, but mail orders
will be ffilled if sent with a
check and self-addressed enve-

lope. On the night of the per-

formance, tickets will be available at the Albright-Knox Gallery.

The SPECTRUM
Published by

Putin eri' Preii, ~3n
sAltyoll

S)ntillt

Printing

1381 KENMORE AVENUE
(at

Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

AARGHf
DOES SHAVING CLOSE
HAVETOBESUCH
A RAW-GASPf-

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A THING!

graduate students is limited
to those who possess BS.
in Pharmacy degrees.

iv

0?

SESSIONS BEGIN
FEBRUARY AND SEPTEMBER
Course is designed to prepare
graduate pharmacists for po-

....

have otherwise earned

.interest rates to pay expenses
during their final year in school.
ATP was begun in 1964 as a
solution to the increasingly difficulty in preparing volunteers
for certain assignments. Some
volunteers, for example, must
learn two languages to handle
their work effectively. ATP gives
the Peace Corps 15 months to
prepare the volunteer instead of
the normal three.
Further information may the
obtained from the Peace Corps
liaison office on campus or by
writing Room 722, Division of
Public Affairs, Peace Corps,
Washington, D.C. 20525.

leading to

in

tpprw Stringing Colt
Tannlg

The assignments
14 countries.
cover community and agricultural development, secondary education and teaching English in
French-speajting West Africa.
In their final year of college,
the trainees’ courses of study
may be tailored to fit their Peace
Corp training. The ATP enrollees
will complete their training in
special field program the summer of 1967.
A Peace Corps loan fund for
ATP enrollees helps cover the
loss of income trainees might

Schneider and Serkin Recital;
Violin and Piano Are Featured

GRADUATE PROGRAMS

MASTER OF SCIENCE
DEGREE w ith specialization

Y

Wednesday, April 13, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACE FOUR

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�VISTA Seeks Volunteers to Fight Compassionate War
“An organization that fights poverty with deeds, not
dole, needs tough and compassionate people,” according to Glenn Ferguson, director of Volunteers in Service
to America.
“When our VISTA Volunteers land in a city slum or
an Appalachian hollow, they immediately discover problems that weren’t covered in the sociology textbooks.
They’re grim problems, for poverty is a grim business,
and the Volunteers have to be strong enough to act, to
endure, and smart enough to understand.”
In describing the organization he heads, Ferguson
said: “VISTA doesn’t offer its Volunteers much money.
It doesn’t offer the glamor of foreign travel. I believe it’s
probably the most spartan and most dedicated arm of

the entire war on poverty. It offers the singular chance
for a person to find out if he has enough courage to
spend a year of his life in the often thankless task of
helping others.”
VISTA, he said, “is not a job for the squeamish or
the theoreticians. It isn’t easy to find volunteers. We've
got to count on a special kind of people. People who
care. People who mean what they say.
“The squeamish can’t take the squalor and the heartbreak and the theoreticians find their pet theories shot
down five minutes after they confront a 17-year old
dropout who thinks that a 47-cent bottle of wine and a
50-cent reefer are the only way to start the day.”

A Volunteer's principal equipment. Ferguson said, “is
determination, compassion and perseverence. It takes
all three.”
He said that VISTA “is calling the bluffs of people
who claim to be concerned. Their year in VISTA will
take them deep into the lives of others. I can think of
nothing more fascinating than that.”
The college-trained, he said, “have the background
and the knowledge to make excellent Volunteers. If they
have the necessary emotional and mental stamina, they
move high up on our list of prospects.
“So far, college campuses have proved to be a most
productive source of goo4 Volunteers," he said.

Jtsm VOICE

the

A publication of Volunteers In Service To America

VISTAs College-Trained
Acceptance Rate Hits 75%
Seventy-five percent of all college trained persons who apply to
spend a year of their lives in service to America as VISTA Volunaccepted, Glenn Fergu-

leers are

son, director of VISTA, has an-

nounced.
The high rate of acceptance of
college students and graduates by
VISTA is attributed by Fergu-

VISTA Tops Peace Corps
Growth, Shriver States
After 11 months of operation,
VISTA has done “belter than the
Peace Corps at a comparable
stage of development,” Sargent
Shriver, the man who until recently ran the Peace Corps, told
a Washington press conference.

WILEASE REIDS, 22, was so wall racaivad by tha Pima-Maricepa
Indians whom she trained among that the Tribal Council asked
her to stay with them for the rest of her year of service. She is
a graduate of Maryland State College.

AidsIndians
VISTA
In War Against Want
The 1960’s could go down as
the decade in which the American Indian fought his last battle
against his oldest foe —poverty
and won.
But the odds still weigh heavily
against the reservation-bound Indian. He suffers from disease.
malnutrition, polluted wafer, high
infant mortality, and a life ex—

pectancy of 42 years.
The average Indian per family
income is $1,500 a year—less
than a quarter of the national average. Unemployment is around
40 percent —eight times the national average,
Nine out of 10 of the nation’s
385,000 reservation Indians live
(Continued on Page 3)

At the 11-month mark, VISTA
had 1,477 Volunteers in the field
or in training in 39 states and
Washington, D.C. That figure has
now increased to more than
2,000 Volunteers.
During a comparable period,
Shriver said, the Peace Corps had
820 Volunteers, either on overseas assignment or in training.
According to Shriver, VISTA
plans to have 3,500 Volunteers in

the field by June of this year.
"The Volunteers are the heart
of the war on poverty,” he said.
“In community after community
they have shown that deprived
and isolated people are willing
and able to make a new, constructive effort with encouragement and skilled assistance.”

grown up in poverty," he said,
"have a special understanding to
contribute.”
Shriver said. "The War on
Poverty takes money. But money
alone cannot win the war. Dedicated, skilled people are needed
to bridge the gulf between the
poor and the rest of America
and to start the process of regeneration in America."

the “initiative, commitand adaptability of college
students." These characteristics,
considered highly important for
the Volunteers, are “continually
demonstrated by young college
volunteers during training," he
said.
"In fact." Ferguson
said,
"more than three-fourths of all
VISTA Volunteers now serving
in the nation’s poverty areas are
between 20 and 24. Of these, approximately half have completed
from one to three years of college and another 16 percent are
son

to

ment,

recent graduates."
Sargent Shriver, the War on
Poverty director, said recently
that the college trained “are

bringing their gifts

Shriver also pointed out that
the demand for VISTA Volunteers is outstripping the supply.
He said that a total of 7,831
Volunteers have been requested
to serve in 577 projects in the
District of Columbia and every
state but Hawaii and Iowa.

of education
and encouragement to the tenement alleys and back country
roads. They have received one of
the truly great benefits of our society —-an excellent education. In
VISTA they will be able to share
this benefit with others and confirm the humane values which
our colleges and universities represent."
(Continued on Page 3)

EXPLAINING MEDICARE

midmi of rural Knox county,

He pointed out that VISTA is
seeking Volunteers from the ranks
of the poor as well as from college campuses. “People who have

261 Assigned to the Hollows

Poverty-Stricken Appalachia Provides
Daily Challenge to VISTA Volunteers
Although Congress has earmarked more than a billion dollars to help cure the economic ills
°f Appalachia, the first tangible
s 'gn of the new prosperity seen
by the citizens of Davidson, Tennessee, is a 250-book library built
and maintained by VISTA Volunteers.

The library in Davidson,

a new
day school in Kentucky, and a

lina are some of the first results
of the massive attack on poverty
in the Appalachian region that
stretches from New York to
Alabama.
These programs are the work
of more than 261 VISTA Volunteers who have been assigned
the task of breaking through the
apathy, hopelessness and resignation that grip the Appalachian
communities where the coal has

out, the young people
have left, and tomorrow offers
less hope than yesterday.
In Davidson, home of the 250book library, five VISTA Volunteers attack poverty in this region
where two surveys have estimated the per capita income to
be approximately $200 a year.
The Volunteers work for the
LBJ and C Development CorpoIConlinuedon Page 3)

played

to older

Kentucky, hat become one of Volunteer Marilyn Barman's varied
tatkt. The 21-year-old graduate of Cornell University it working
on community development in the Appalachian heartland.

�DENNIS SCHMITT examines a piece of coal brought down to
Anaktuvik Pass, Alaska, by a tractor which he helped the village
to obtain. Previously, the coal was packed in by dog sled. Before
joining VISTA, Schmitt attended the University of California at
Berkeley where he majored in philosophy.
than articulate the special, pressing needs of these villages, you
would be performing a great

BETSY REEVE, a Volunteer at Hooper'* Bay, Alaska, talks with some of her well-bundled pupils
outside her home. A graduate of the University of Wisconsin, Miss Reeve chose to work in Alaska
and is serving with more than 50 other Volunteers in the state's isolated villages.

VISTA Volunteers
Go North of Nome
Fifty VISTA Volunteers have
fanned out of Anchorage hy bush
plane and boat to man their war
poverty
outposts
on
among
Alaskas isolated Eskimo villages.
One of the Eskimo requests is
for. Volunteers who know something about improving the breed
of Alaskan reindeer. If they can
furnish some tips on preserving
this season's catch of walrus
meat, so much the better.
The 50 Volunteers are the first
of 200 who arc needed to help the
state's indigenous population of
approximately 60,000 Eskimos.
Indians and Aleuts who rank as
the poorest economic group in
the nation. Many of these families
live on less than $1,000 a year.
Half of the adults have had less
than five years of school and nine
out of evesy ten families live in
substandard conditions.
The Alaska Volunteers took
their training at the University of
Alaska at Fairbanks, where they
were introduced to village life
and the customs of the people
who are not only the poorest
Americans, but also the most isolated.
The inaiorily of the Volunteers now work among the Eskimos in western Alaska and north
of the Arctic circle, but they are
also found among the Indian
communities and in urban centers
such as Anchorage. Part of their
•

training included special instruction in how to prepare for long
periods of awesome weather and
for days without sun.

Requests for Volunteers poured
into VISTA's Washington headquarters from more than half of
the stale's towns and villages following a letter from Senator E. L.
Bartlett explaining that the Volunteers could help make the settlements ‘‘better places to live.”
The letter was sent to all village
headmen.
Eskimos are a tough people
who excel at living close to nature. The Volunteers will assist
them to participate in many of
the state-wide service programs
that operate under the direction
of the' Alaska Department of
Economic Development and

of

interior

Alaska

•

residents

through a letter written to a
major newspaper by a Volunteer
living there."
Pointing out that most of the
Volunteers would be assigned to
the western and northwestern
areas of Alaska, Governor Egan
said: "Here you will face a great
•

challenge, perhaps the greatest of
if you did no more
your life
...

service.
“In no other situation would
you have such an opportunity to
use your own judgment and implement ideas.”
The Volunteers can be found
performing a variety of wideranging jobs. They have built
sawmills and taught music to
Eskimo children. At Bethel, a
Volunteer helped to construct a
breakwater to prevent flooding of
the village during spring thaws.
At nearby Hooper’s Bay one
of the Volunteers' main concerns
is to explore the possibility of
building a small “flash" freezing
plant to help exploit the abundant
fish resources in the area. The
fish cannot be marketed now because there are no facilities to
preserve them.
Further to the north, at .Anaktuvik Pass, a Volunteer has managed to get a tractor for the village to assist in hauling coal
down from the mountains for
winter fuel.

While doing all this the Volunteers must spend a certain amount
of time fishing and hunting so
they can eat. Although certain
staples are provided, the principal
items of their diet will be the
same as their Alaskan neighbor—seal, fish, reindeer, caribou and
game birds.
The Volunteers have learned
to pack ice for water, to ride a
dog sled, and to memorize the
recipes for reindeer stew and bear
steak.
In many villages, the outstanding form of recreation is to greet
the arrival of the mail plane. To
help fill this gap the Volunteers
are developing recreation programs for children, youth and
adults. They also encourage community efforts to provide facilities for meetings, libraries, health
services, and social activities.
In addition they are conducting pre-school classes, tutoring students, and carrying on an
adult education program. Other
projects include health, education
and community sanitation pro(Conlinned on Page 4)
•

Planning.
Speaking to the second contingent of VISTA Volunteers to
be sent to his stale. Alaska Governor William A. Egan told them
that “the VISTA Volunteers who
have preceded you into rural
Alaska arc already playing a significant role in the effort to upgrade village life.
"Some villages never heard
from are now part of the Alaskan
community of the whole because
of the efforts of VISTA Volunteers. For example, results of a
recent election in one such village were brought to the attention

VISTA Volunteer John Shivaly, Univarsity of North Carolina graduate, and Gay Whita, who
attended the University of Colorado, stroll beside a frozen river at Bethel, Alaska. Shively helped
to build the pilings at right which will prevent flooding and erosion during spring thaws. Miss
White teaches school.

�i

VISTA Aids Indians
In War Against Want
(Continued

from

Page I)

in housing without running water,
sanitary facilities, safe heating, or
electricity. The infant mortality
rate is 70 percent higher than
for the rest of the nation.
The outcome of the Indians’
war against want depends in large
measure upon how much help
and encouragement they receive.
Many of the Indians are undereducated, underskilled, and for
the most part, underfed. Help to
relieve these conditions is needed
desperately.
More than 200 Volunteers
from VISTA are now working on
half of the Indian reservations in
the nation because they feel that
the Oglala Sioux and the Mille
Lac Chippewas need help now,
•

not next year.
One of those who is helping is
Patrick Krijaz, a recent graduate

of the University of Minnesota,
who is now known around Gallup, N. M., as the “alcoholic
VISTA Volunteer.” Krijaz got
his title from the fact that he
concentrates on working with al-

coholic Indians, helping them to
get sober, stay sober, and assume
a productive role in society.
Elsewhere in the state, a six-

sided,

dome-roofed

hogan

is

home for Karen Murkett, Nor-

wich, Conn., who is spending a
year of her life among the Navajos on their reservation near
Lukachukai, Arizona. A graduate
of Wheelock College with a degree in pre-school education, Miss
Murkett drives a school bus some
30 miles a day to pick up her 15
four-year-old Indian students.
Krijaz and Miss Murkett are
typical of the first contingent of
218 VISTA Volunteers who have
agreed to spend a minimum of a
year on reservations throughout
the country in an attempt to help
the Indian achieve a measure of
parity in American society.
The Volunteers now serve 49
tribes, which represent 50 percent of the total Indian population in 16 states. They work with
the Seminole, the Crow, the
PATRICK KRIJAZ, University of Minnesota graduate, talks with the family of an alcoholic Navajo
Navajo, the Sioux, the Chippewa, at their home near Gallup, N.M. Assisting the Navajo
Tribal Council to fight the problem drinking
and the Apache.
among Indians, Krijaz helps patients treated for alcoholism to readjust to community life.
•

75% of VISTA Applicants With
College Skills Win Acceptance

AS AN EXAMPLE to Itto rest of the neighborhood, VISTA Volunteer* In west side Philadelphia cleaned up, repaired, and nearly
rebuilt a dilapidated row house which will serve the girl volunteers as living quarters. Clearing debris are Mary Sullivan, University of Massachusetts graduate; Marean Brown, who attended
San Jose State College, and Frank Rubright of Alma College.

(Continued from Page I)
In selecting Volunteers, VISTA
places emphasis on the quality of
the individual rather than on
specific skills. “We have projects
for almost all skills,” Ferguson
said, “but the most crucial skill
of all is the ability to listen, understand, and communicate with
people. This holds true whether
the volunteer is a liberal arts
major or an engineer.”
Liberal arts students who have
become VISTA Volunteers set up
libraries where none existed before, renovate rural schools, teach
adult literacy, tutor dropouts, survey health needs, organize community meetings, lead pre-school
classes, help mothers in day-care
centers, direct recreation programs, conduct neighborhood
clean-up campaigns, work with
youth gangs and delinquents.
Vice-President Humphrey,
speaking to students at the University of Minnesota, described
the “special role for the college

students of today in VISTA.” He
called college training the key to
service.
“Help clean up own own backyard,” he urged. “We all owe
something, everyone of us who
is privileged to have an education. We owe something to the
society that made it possible for
us to have this education.
“The easiest thing for this rich
country is to dole out cash,” he
continued. “What is more difficult is to be able to extend the
hand of fellowship, the hand of
assistance, the hand of education,
the hand of training, to help people slowly but surely lift themselves.”
The Vice-President said he believed that by spending a year in
service to America, VISTA Volunteers will dramatically affect
their own lives as well as the lives
of the poor.
“You have the opportunity,"
he said, “to test your skills and
principles in the service of your

Appalathia
(Continued

from

Page I)

•

them.

area

own.

A challenge to VISTA-and the nation

ration, a private, non-profit organization formed to administer
the area’s Community Action
Program. LBJ and C stands for
Livingston, Byrdstown, Jamestown, and Cookeville, the county
seats of the four counties included in the original organization.
The five Volunteers will live
in Davidson for a year, concentrating on juvenile delinquents
and drop-outs. They will guide
community development programs, conduct recreation, education, and health services.
The task is far from easy.
Glenn Ferguson, Director of
VISTA, said: “We tell our
trainees it may take several
months before they’re accepted as
part of the community.” A major
goal is to get local citizens to express their needs and then help
evolve a program that will meet
A depressed rural

fellow man under conditions
which will give full scope to your
abilities and imagination.”
A year in VISTA offers unique
practical experience to the students who plan to return to college, continue on to graduate
school, or pursue their careers.
Through work in widely varying
fields. Volunteers often discover
interest in careers which lead to
the further study of medicine,
education, social work, public
welfare, law and public administration.
Living and working among the
poor in such places as Eskimo
villages, Appalachian hollows,
Indian reservations, and city slums
proves to be a powerful experience in learning and understanding for most Volunteers.
Although their primary task is
to add a new dimension to the
lives of the poor, most find that
after their year is up, they have
added a new dimension to their

such
119),

as Davidson (population
has problems. Located halfway

between Nashville and Knoxville,
deep in the mountains, it once
was a flourishing mining town
that boasted a movie theater, a
telephone office, and a depot
where the trains stopped twice a
day to load coal.
But the mines gave out more
than ten years ago and most of
the people have moved away. The
railroad tracks are overgrown
with weeds and the theater and
telephone office have been razed.
A schoolhouse still stands but it
was abandoned two years ago
when the supply of pupils dried
up. Those children who remain
rise before dawn to catch a bus
to the school in Clark Range. 18
miles away. Few from Davidson
finish high school.
This lack of purpose is one of
the major problems facing the
five VISTA Volunteers who have
been assigned to the community.
Gerry English, from Santa Rosa,
California, and Barbara McCollaum, of Tucumcari, N. M., have
been working for nine months to
give Davidson a “sense of com•

munity

The main obstacle to their efforts is indifference. Miss English has observed: “They’ve lost
so much. You insulate yourself
against caring when caring doesn’t
count. That’s what's happened
here since the mines dried out.”
The 261 VISTA Volunteers
are working in 34 projects in
eight states of Appalachia: Alabama, Kentucky, Maryland,
North Caroling, Pennsylvania,
Tennessee, Virginia, and West
•

Virginia.

Ninety VISTA Volunteers are
living and working in rural Kentucky. They serve in 13 of the
poorest counties of the slate,
which are among the 300 most
impoverished counties in America.
Middlefork, Kentucky, is another Appalachian community.
Once fairly prosperous, its major
economic staples were coal and
tobacco. But the coal ran out,
and the big tobacco producers
found better quality crops and
cheaper transportation elsewhere.

Now Middlefork is left with 300
or so residents who support themselves by subsistence farming and
by selling cucumbers at 11 cents

per hundred pounds.
Middlefork might have continued indefinitely in this same
fashion if it weren’t for Jean
Honrath, a young, energetic
VISTA Volunteer assigned to that
community by her VISTA project
sponsor, the Council of Southern
Mountains.'

In something more than nine
months in Middlefork, Miss Honrath has made only a start toward
alleviating the material side of
the community's plight. But in a
less tangible sense she has made
large-scale progress in reaffirming
the self-respect of the community
in its own eyes and in motivating
them toward changing the conditions.
•

A former uuitenl at Contra

Costa Junior College in the San

Francisco suburb of El Cerrito.
California. Miss Honrath developed an early interest in work-

ing with younger people. She de-

cided that her skills and temperament would best be suited in
helping to break the vicious cycle
of Appalachian poverty at the
children's level.
She concentrated on Middlefork's children and not only
helped to establish its first Boy
Scout troop, but also ran a highly
successful summer school program for more than two dozen
local children aged 8 to 16. '
Middlefork adults have received their share of help as well.
Miss Honrath has organized a
program so that unemployed
fathers from the community can
spend several days a week working to improve the Middlefork
school.
She is srlf-effachiK when she
speaks of her success in Middle•

‘i've only done what the
wants.” she claims.
"I’m far from overconfident, yet
I'm optimistic at the same time.
My guess is that what we've done
will last and grow.”
fork.

community

�Rigorous Training Gives Volunteers
Skills to Fight Poverty's Seamy Side
VISTA’s training program gives
its volunteers a long, realistic
look at the seamiest side of poverty while equipping them with
the skills and techniques needed
to combat it.
The tough, rigorous training
schedule, lasting for several weeks
—ten hours a day—is not counted
as part of the Volunteer’s year of
service.
Training is conducted by nonprofit organizations—universities,
colleges, or social action agencies
—which have the experience and
facilities necessary to train adults
with a variety of educational

backgrounds.
Some of the training institutions concentrate on the problems of the mentally retarded.
Others deal with the plight of Indian families and migrant laborers.
But each training cycle
makes sure that the volunteers
fully understand VISTA’s purpose—and the roles that trainees
are expected to play after graduation.
The Volunteers go directly
from training to assignments in
slums, migrant worker camps, Indian reservations, and Job Corps
centers throughout the country.
Every effort is made to
match the skills, abilities and in•

•

terests of each Volunteer with re-

quests and descriptions of assignments that are received from
agencies and organizations sponsoring VISTA projects.
One of the primary objectives
of VISTA training is to allow a
Volunteer to relate his previous
background and existing skills to
the aims and requirements of the
projects in which he will work.
The majority of the training programs lakes place right in the
slums, migrant camps, Appalachian hollows and Indian reservations. It is as direct and practical as possible.
The field experience may take
the form of working in community projects on the Maricopa
and Gila River Indian reservations south of Phoenix, Arizona.
There 26 VISTA Volunteers installed a new roof on the community center, helped clean yards,
houses, and established two
all in four
nursery schools
weeks.
In an industrialized, urban
area such as New York, the field
placement activity may be composed of helping retarded persons
between 17 and 35 to learn the
New York City transportation
system and how to use a cafeteria. Or it may be acquainting
—

•

people with family planning
clinics, helping to organize tenant
councils, working with street
gangs or finding jobs for youths
whose teenage criminal records
have blocked them from employment.

Two Volunteers assigned to
serve with migrant workers in
California were sent to Belgrade,
Florida, to live for a week with
migrant workers. Their experi-

ence included working in the lettuce fields as well as assisting in
the operation of a pre-school program for children.

Some of the institutions which
have participated in VISTA training include the University of
Utah, National Federation of Settlements in Chicago, University
of Alaska. Tuskegee Institute in
Alabama, Community Services
Foundation in St. Petersburg.
Florida: the North Carolina
Fund, Arizona State University,
and the Columbia University
Graduate School of Social Work.
In addition to these institutions which direct the training
program, more than 100 public
and private agencies engaged in
work among the poor are cooperating with VISTA by providing
practical field experience during
•

training.

VOLUNTEER KENNETH VAN COMPTON, 19, talks with a man
whose apartment has been hit by fire. Van Compton provides
information and help for the man and his family to find a new
place to live on the Lower East Side of New York where the
former Tulsa University student is concentrating his efforts.

VISTA: Questions and Answers
i). W hat is vista?
A. VISTA (Volunteers In Service To America) is
one of the major anti-poverty programs established
by the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964. It offers
an opportunity for men and women from all eco-

nomic. geographic, social and age groups to join
the nation's War On Poverty.
VISTA Volunteers work directly with those who
are not sharing in this nation’s promise. They offer
their services and skills wherever poverty exists:
in cities, small towns and rural areas, in tenements
and shacks, on Indian reservations or in migrant
worker camps, among the sick and disabled, the
young and the old.
They serve for a year where they are requested
and needed—in the 50 States, the District of
Columbia, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, and the
Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands. Living and
working with the people they help. VISTA Volunleers are there, prepared at all times to assist,
advise, befriend. VISTA Volunteers serve for a
minimum of a year, plus their training period.
i). U hat do VISTA Volunteers do?
A. In a wide variety of ways, Volunteers work to
provide new hope, dignity and skills that can help
lift people out of poverty. The specific fields in
which they work include: education, health, vocational counseling, recreation, agriculture, conservation, sanitation, construction, community services
—the list, like the problems that poverty itself
creates, is practically inexhaustible.

t). Are VISTA Volunteers paid?
A. Volunteers receive a monthly living allowance
that is enough to gel by on in the areas to which
they arc assigned. The allowance covers housing,
food, clothing, and transportation. In addition,
they receive approximately $75 a month for such
personal incidentals as laundry, haircuts, and rec-

reation. Medical and dental care are also provided.
For every month of service, $50 is set aside for
each Volunteer, The entire amount is paid to
Volunteers upon completion of service.

V.

If hat are the houn

of

work?

A. VISTA Volunteers have a full-time commitment to the people they serve. It is no 9-to-5 job.
The Volunteer stands ready to offer assistance
whenever he is needed.

Q. W hat are the baric requirements for
joining VISTA?
A. You must be at least 18 years old
You must be a United Stales citizen or a permanent resident of this country or one of its territories.
You must have no dependents under 18 years
of age.

Q. How does VISTA

service

status?

affect draft

A. VISTA Volunteers are not exempt from the
draft. However, VISTA Volunteers are usually
deferred. (1) The trainee sends a request to his
local draft board for deferment for the period of
his VISTA service with a copy to VISTA; (2)
VISTA writes his draft board certifying that he
is a VISTA trainee and keeps the draft board
notified. While this almost always gets a deferment,
the decision concerning draft status is entirely up
to the local draft board.

Q. How do I

join VISTA?
A. Anyone who wishes to become a VISTA Volunteer must complete a preliminary application form.
Immediately after VISTA receives the preliminary
application, the individual is sent a detailed queslionnaire which asks for background information
and The names and addresses bT~ af least five

references.
There are no personal interviews and no tests
or examinations.

Q. If I submit
am

I obligated

an application
to join?

to

VISTA Volunteers
Go North of Nome
(Continued from Page 2)
grams under the general direction
of visiting doctors and public
health nurses.
Another project which will
give a boost to the lagging
Eskimo economy is a plan whereby Volunteers will help the Alaskans to establish businesses to
encourage the preservation of
ancient arts and crafts.
skills are heeded in
/\n
Alaska.
VISTA Volunteer
couples are sought who know
•

building, homemaking, and social

services. Need.ed,

too, are persons
with farm experience, cooperative
backgrounds, range
managers,
weather observers, teachers at all
levels and of all subjects, recreational experts, lawyers, linguists,
economists, and planners.
There’s a great deal of talk
about the challenges that the War
on Poverty presents.
Perhaps one of the -greatest
challenges of all lies north of
Nome.

VISTA,

1

A. No, you are not obligated—but your application should be submitted with the understanding
that you are sincerely interested in joining VISTA.

Q. Do Volunteers have a choice about the
location and type of work they do?
A. Yes. The VISTA questionnaire provides ample
opportunity for listing your geographical and work
assignment preferences. VISTA attempts to honor
these preferences as far as it is practicable, but
VISTA’s concern also is to match a Volunteer’s
experience and abilities, demonstrated and developed during training, to a specific need in a
specific project.

Q. How quickly does VISTA respond

I'm interested in VISTA. Please send me a preliminary appli-

I cation and

more

!

information

j Name

I

Address

to an

application?
A. After you send in your detailed questionnaire
and if your references respond immediately, you
should have a response from VISTA within 30

City

days.

Q. Are trainees paid?
A. Yes. Living, travel and medical expenses are
paid. In addition, the $50 a month stipend begins
with the start of a Volunteer’s training.

I

State

j Mail

Zip Code

to;

i). Are Volunteers assigned singly or in a

VISTA

A. Very few Volunteers are assigned singly. VISTA
prefers to assign Volunteers in teams. Where teams
are not needed, at least two Volunteers are assigned to a given community or area.

Washington, D. C. 20506

team?

I

1

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                    <text>1

VISTA
VOLUNTEERS

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

■■■

BHIV

(See Page

VOLUME 16

I

■

RESEARCH VS.

fl

UNDERGRADE
(See Page

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, APRIL 12, 1966

NO. 36

Deferment Notices Are
Following Old Pattern
To date, there has been no official change in procedure for
notifying draft boards of student
status at the university, according to Mrs. Carolyn Haensly, assistant director of Admissions and
Records.
Present procedure for notifying
local draft boards of a student’s
status, as explained by Mrs.
Haensly, is, when a male student’s
advance register is asked if he
wants a form which states only
whether or not he is a full time
student and the program for
which he is registered. She said
that if the student requests the
form, it is held by the Office
of Admissions and Records until
the semester begins.
Mrs. Haensly noted, that if the
proposed change goes into effect,
the procedure used during the
Korean War whereby a student’s
class rank was sent to the local
draft board at the end of the
academic year will probably be
adopted.

The UB Blues to present "Spring Sing-Out" in Clark Gym, April 16 at 8:30 p.m. (L to R, Rear) John
Slattery, David McDowell, Fred Hill and Paul Whitcomb; (Front) Jerry Marmillo, Ron Capuano, Bob
Van Slyke and Paul Sipson.

Six Candidates Seek Residence Office;
Elections Are Thursday and Friday
Inter-Residence Council, the
resident student government, will
hold elections for President, Vice
President, Secretary, and Treasurer, Thursday and Friday, April
14 and 15.
The voting machines will be
in Tower Lobby, Goodyear Lobby, and the Allenhurst Lounge
in Goodyear from 11 a.m. to 2
p.m. and 4 to 6:30 p.m.
The new officers will assume
their duties at the 'beginning of
the hall officers and hall representatives will be elected.
The present IRC officers are:
President Julian Burstein, Vice
President Dan Brodsky, Secretary
Joyce Black and Treasurer Gary
Roberts.

Mr. Roberts mentioned the
establishment and financing of
the Prism, the first bi-weekly
resident newspaper, as one of
the major IRC accomplishments
during the past year.
CANDIDATES

President
Joel Feinman, a sophomore
biology major has been a representative from Tower to the IRC,
Chairman of the Food Committee,
member of the Standards Committee, a sponsor of the original
Dress Standards Resolution and
the Senior Women’s resolution.
“I’d like to use what we’ve already done on curfews and extend it I’d also like to see the
establishment of a Residence
Judiciary amendment either by
the establishment of the proposed Inter-Residence Judiciary
or by revision of the J.B. system.”
—

President
Larry Pivnick, a Freshman Political Science major, is a representative on Freshman Class
Council, a member of the Public
Relations Committee of Allenhurst, Film Chairman for Winter
Week, and Personal Manager
—

-

elect of the UB Men’s Glee Club.
“To make our dorms more comfortable, we must continue to
improve upon the food reforms.
Such things as seconds on Saturday, Student participation in
choosing food and an Allenhurst
Snack Bar would be great improvements. I will also strive for
inter-dorm activities, but most
important, student interest must
be -built up in IRC activities to
attain greater residency unity.”
Vie* President

—

IRC.
sentative from Allenhurst and
a member of the Judiciary Committee and Food Committee. “One
of the most important things IRC
will be faced with next year is
passing the Inter-Resident’s Judiciary or at least revising the
JB system in the dorms. 1 know
how IRC works and what it takes
to -get things done on it. I think
I am qualified to do it."

Treasurer

“Simply because a student ranks
above the standard, commented
Mrs. Haensly, it doesn’t necessarily mean that he won't be
drafted.” She emphasized that
class rank is just one criteria
used by the draft board.
She continued, "during the Korean War they did not go solely
on the basis of rank in class. I
don’t think they will now.”
Commenting on the value of

—

Alan Sturtz, a freshman biology
major, has served as General
Manager of the Union Board
Mixer Committee and the Publicity Committee, has participated
in the Senate and the Student
Activities Committee and the
Questionnaire Sub-committee. “I
hope to get prime dates for the
IRC functions by coordinating
with the Senate’s Student Activities Committee. I also would like
to allocate more funds for the
Prism in order that it might re-

All students interested in tak-

ing the Selective Service College
Qualification Test can obtain an
information bulletin and an application card from the Student
Testing Center, 316 Harriman
Library. The examination may be
taken the morning of May 14,
May 21 or June 3 at Canisius College or at the State University
College (Elmwood Avenue). The
State University of New York at
Buffalo will administer the examination on May 21 from 12 to
3:30 p.m. and on June 3 from 8:30

4:30 p.m.

determining draft status by rank
in class, Mrs Haensly said that

she doesn't think rank is a relia
hie indication. “If the class is
particularly smart, the student
suffers.” However, she said that
the Office of Admissions and Records does not object to sending
grades to local draft boards if
they are required to do so.

New Policy Seen
For Senate Funds
Student Association Treasurer
Carl Levine has announced that
the Finance Committee of the
Student Senate is reevaluating its
entire policy on student funds.
“In the past,” Mr. Levine explained, “too much emphasis was
placed on economy because of
limited funds. An attempt will be
made to get the most out of students instead of funds.”
A Faculy-Student Association
sub-board, composed of four students, one administrator, and one
faculty member, has been set up
to determine the amount of funds
to be allocated for each activity
sponsored by the Senate. These
groups, numbering about sixty
and including Union Board and
athletic groups, must submit their
budgets to Mr. Levine in the Senate Office by April 15. All activity expenses must be fully testified in writing.
Mr. Levine said that he hopes
to see a decrease in the current
$47 per semester activity fee, and
that he sees no reason why such
a reduction and a more efficient
financial system cannot become a
reality. The present budget is
$90,000. Mr. Levine said that the
probable figure for next year is
over $100,000.
The Senate also intends to give
additional attention to guest
speakers and concerts, according
to Mr. Levine. He added that
these activities would be financed
by the Senate."

Baird, Founder of Parents Aid Society,
Encourages Clubs on College Campuses

By JO ANNE LEEGANT
William Baird, founder of the Parents Aid Society first received publicity when his arrest last
Secretary
May led to the removal of a New York State law
Sharon Shulman, a freshman which prohibited dissemination of birth control
majoring in American Studies, is
devices and information.
on the Executive Committee of
He has since opened a birth control clinic in
Freshman Class Council, a memHempstead, Long Island, geared to the needs of
ber of Union Board Literature
the poor and is now encouraging student involveand Drama Committee, a Specment in his efforts.
trum reporter, secretary of NSA
Hofstra University students who became conStudent Discounts Sub-committee cerned with birth control while working at the
and a member of Goodyear East clinic, have organized a Parents Aid Club. MemSocial Committee, “i hope to rebers are instructed about various methods of
late IRC to the residents by a birth control and do volunteer work at the clinic.
Guest Speakers Bureau and an Other colleges and universities are planning simiexpanded Prism. I also plan to lar organizations.
work for the abolition of curfews
Baird first became interested in the problem of
and to enable sophomore women birth control while working for the Emco Drug
Coroporation. It is his contention that lack of birth
to live off-campus."
control among the poor prevents upward social
„
Secretary
mobility and may lead to tragedy. He cited one
Judy Snyder, a junior Sociology case in which a 29 year old woman died in her atmajor, has been Secretary of the tempt to induce abortion with a wire coat hanger.
IRC Activities Committee and
For two years Baird risked arrest by going into
low income areas and distributing free birth conChairman of the Cultural Committee of Schoellkopf. She said trol information and devices. He formed the Parents
she would like to see improved Aid Society and in May 1965 purchased a mobile
relations between IRC and House van for the society to extend its efforts to disCouncil and IRC and the Senate seminate information ande devices.
Because of his activities he lost his job as cliniand plans to work on a curfew
system for women. “I like to feel cal director for Emco and was arrested May IS
actively involved, and IRC is a for violation of an 84 year old New York State law
fine organization to be involved which stated that “a person who sells, lends,
(Cont’d on P. «)
__.lj
with.”
—

—

‘••I Mar.

WILLIAM IAWD
AM SocMy

Parent*

�i

Editorial Comment

.

.

SYMPTOMS
letter
In
printed in last Friday’s Spectrum from
the Committee For Victory in Viet Nam, it is possible
to notice symptoms of the massive failure of nerve to
which this country is occasionally subject. The letter
bore the signature of a faculty member at this University
and included the most blatant and stupid “red baiting”.
This crude and rhetorically irrelevent tactic might be
expected from the more youthful guardians of the nation's purpose who signed the letter, but to see this
shameful display of shrill and ignorant “ad hominem”
argument condoned, and even supported, by a man who
is supposed to be teaching clear thought and respectable
argument (a philosopher, no less) is unpardonable.
Another symptom visible on this campus to anyone
who cares to look is the “Pontius Pilate’" (at best) and
“know nothing” (at worst) attitude of most of the
faculty toward the Graduate Faculty Committee on Selective Service.
This committee has been attempting for a number
of weeks to develop a dialogue concerning the question
of student deferments for the Draft and has met, not so
much with failure as with a deafening silence. The
paranoia created by the war is obviously schizophrenic,
made up of screaming crowds on one hand, and a
perverse personal silence on the other.
THOUGHTS ON THE GREEKS
In another letter printed last week, the lack of attention payed to the "Greeks” by this paper was lamented. To set the record straight, once and for all, the
Spectrum is not “Anti-Greek”.
As far as this paper is concerned, the “Greeks” are
merely another example of trivial campus organizations.
When they make news, the Spectrum is perfectly willing
to print it—just as it is willing to print “real” news
and announcements stemming from any campus group,
(like say, for example, Spring Dance Committee, or the
Cisco Kid Fan Club).
The “Greek System” (what system?), to the extent
which it brutalizes and thwarts the individuality of its
adherents, is an evitand antf-educational institution, but
beyond that, it is merely trivial.

THE

SPECTRUM

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall. University Campus, Buffalo. N Y. 14214
Published twice weekly from the first week of September to the last week in
May, except for exam periods, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and spring vacations.

Editor-In-Chief
Business Manager
News Editor
Staff —Loretta

JEREMY TAYLOR
RAYMOND

D

VOLPE

ALICE EDELMAN
GREENE
Assistant
Angelme. Joanne Bouchier. Russell Buchman, Karen
Green,
Peter Lederman, Joan Roberts. Rick Schwab. Dan Schroeder. Sharon Shulman,
Eileen Teitler, Nancy Toder. Patti Wartley. Judy Weisberg.
Feature Editor
JOHN STINY
Assistant
JO ANNE LEEGANT
Staff— -Bonnie Bartow. Ron Ellsworth. Barbara Ann Fitzsimmons, Barbara Loeb,

J. B

Sharcot

SUSAN

Bob Martin, Suzanne Rovner,

Sports Editor
Castro, Mike Dolan.

Martha Tack, William Weinstein

SCHUELEIN
Steve Farbman. Bob Frey.
STEVE

Scott

Forman.

Layout Editor
SHARON HONIG
Stephanie Parker, Steve Silverman.

Staff— Joanne Bouchier,

Copy Editor

LAUREN

JACOBS

Staff—Carol Becker, Estelle Fox. Jocelyn Hailpern, Sandy Lippman, Betsy Ozer,
Claire Shottenfeld. Susan Zurkerberg
Staff—Terry

Mancini

••

r

*

■&gt;

Tuesday, April 12, 1966

oCetlerA

a

Staff—Mike

r

.

THE RISING TIDE OF VIOLENCE
Last week the headquarters of the Berkeley Viet
Nam Day Committee was bombed with several persons
in the frame house sustaining minor injuries. The second such incident in a matter of weeks in San Francisco
(the DuBois Club headquarters were also bombed soon
after that organization was appended to the Attorney
General’s List), the violence in Berkeley indicates that
the growing hysteria of war is threating to plunge
America into the kind of cultural paranoia that has so
often provoked similar incidents in Alabama and Mississippi. Beatings and Bombings from Boston to Berkeley raise the question: Will the War in Viet Nam
“Southernise” the United States?

Audrey Logel,

j

S ri CTRUM

PACE TWO

Advertising Manager
RON HOLTZ
Angelo, Audrey Cash. Pat Rosenfeld, Steve

Silverman.

Joseph

Photography Editor
EDWARD JOSCELYN
Staff —Don Blank. Peter Bonneau. Joseph Feyes, Carol Goodson, Alan Gruber,
Marc Levine, Ivan Makuch, Michael Soluri, Anthony Walluk, Susan Wortman,
Robert Wynne

Circulation Manager
Advisor

DIANE LEWIS

IRENE WILLET

Faculty

Financial

EDITORIAL

Advisor

DALLAS GARBER

POLICY IS DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR-IN CHIEF
FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING

A

\

PWtSS

•Htsa

Second Class Postage

Subscription

15.000

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Paid at Buffalo, N Y.
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to

the (Editor

Red-Baiting Continues
TO THE EDITOR:
Ever since the Department of
Justice launched its investigation of the W.E.B. Du Bois Club
of America the diligent supporters of the Establishment have
renewed their efforts to attack
the activities of campus groups
through a spate of red baiting.
Initiated locally by State Senator Earl Brydges and echoed by
the Common Council of Buffalo,
it has found its way onto the
campus through a letter in the
Spectrum attacking the Spirit
and
the Sword
and Youth
Against War and Fascism.
The least one can say for the
integrity of the far right is
psychopathic
their
consistent

fear of communism. However, we
know that such foolish consistency on the part of so-called
anticommunist “liberals” does
not exist. They “do not deny
the right of a person to hold
any belief he wishes to . :
They only deny his .right to
exercise and practice his beliefs, And if red-baiting does not
suffice to intimidate anyone
there is always the Feinberg law
and loyalty oaths and the stick
of economic intimidation to attempt to suppress one’s personal
political beliefs.
As far as who believes in the
destruction of all “our (does this
“our” also include the Indian of

the reservation, the Negro in
economic bondage, the poor of
Appalachia also?) liberties. This
I must submit is rubbish and a
downright lie. And to elaborate
the document this point I would
be willing to debate Dr. Zimmerman or any other signer or nonsigner of that letter.
I’m also against “extremism.”
The extremism of anti-communists, those of us who lived
through the fifties failed ourselves and today’s generation in
the fight against McCarthyism.
I have vowed never to be part
of such a dismal retreat again.
Ed Wolkenstein
Editor, Spirit and the Sword

Column On Abortion Considered “Inexcusable”
TO THE EDITOR:

James Callan’s column (The
Right) is often silly and while
this is perhaps not admirable
(since he thinks he’s serious) at
least it is innocuous. Perhaps he
can be forgiven for continually
tripping over his soggy political
abstractions.
His column on abortion, however, is inexcusable. The black

or white, Right rationally

(see

elsewhere on the same page,
“the Communists avowed purpose is the destruction of all
our liberties.”) is most evident
in his concluding statement,
.
.
manifest evidence shows
that abortion is not always moral, and hence is never moral.”
If Callan knows anything about
morality
(the
Judeo-Christian
heritage or otherwise) it has cer-

tainly never been evident in his
writing (“If in fact there is a
deformity, let the mother take
a knife and do what she was
so willing to do beforehand.")
Had any nightmares lately,
Mr. Callan? Ever heard of human decency? or compassion?

What you have written smells
of something wretched.
Robert McCubbin

VISTA Visits Campus to Recruit Volunteers
By

TERRY SEAL

Students seeking an opportunity to volunteer their services in
the war on poverty on Indian
reservations, among migrant farm
workers, in urban slums, and in
the rural pockets of poverty ranging from the Applachian hollows
to Alaskan villages will have an
opportunity to meet with the representatives from the Volunteers
In Service To America, (VISTA),
from April 18 to 20.
“We’re looking for volunteers
of all backgrounds and abilities,”
reported Felton Gibson, leader of
the VISTA group to visit the
campus. He described VISTA volunteers as “people who can listen,
understand and communicate
with others and are committed
enough to live and work for a
year among the poor in this coun-try-' f
VISTA volunteers serve for a
period of one year, and receive
living expenses and medical care.
Added to this allowance for food,
housing, travel, and clothing, they
receive a stipend of $600 at the
end of their service period. Currently there are over 2,1000 VISTA volunteers in training or on
assignment throughout the United
States. About 75 per cent of these
people are between the ages of
18 and 24, although anyone from
18 to 85 can participate.
“Students now serving as volunteers are involved in a list of
activities as long as the problems
which poverty creates,” Mr. Gibson stated. Literacy programs, organizing clean-up campaigns, developing recreational programs,
tutoring dropouts, setting up libraries, organizing community
meetings, and surveying heallth
needs are among the many programs now being conducted. VISTA volunteers have renovated
one-room schoolhouses, started
night classes for adults, and extended legal services on bail bond
projects.
The VISTA group begins locally with an organization to deal in
people while working with a local
sponsor. VISTA goes where its
help has been requested: cities,
rural areas, assignments in institutions for the mentally handicapped.

Volunteers may request service
in a specific geographic area of
the United States or its Territories and indicate their preference in type of assignment. A six

week training program to prepare
them for their work follows acceptanee.
To join VISTA no entrance examirtation or interview is required. Anyone over 18 is eligible; there are no educational or
experience requirements. Appli-

cations and further information
may be obtained from the VISTA
group visiting the campus from
April 18 to 20.
From Monday, April 11 to

Thursday, April 14, a 15 minute
movie on the VISTA project in
Durham, North Carolina called
Eleven Small Miracles, will be

shown at 11, 12, 1, 2, and 3 p.m.
in 231 Norton. On Wednesday at
7 p.m. in Norton 231 an open discussion will be conducted on the
topic: “Volunteerism in America
Today.” There will also be a booth
in Norton Lobby with field representatives to speak to any group
or class meeting.

Cjoodman
Against such direct action as
the Civil Rights sit-ins, the student sit-in of Sproul Hall at
Berkeley, and draft-card burnings,
it is always said that they foment
disrespect for law and order and
lead to a general breakdown of
civil society. Even when it is
granted that due process and ordinary administration are not
working, because of prejudice, unconcern, doubletalk, or tyrannical arrogance, nevertheless, it is
alleged, the recourse to civil disobedience entails even worse
evils.
This is an apparently powerful
argument. People who engage in
civil disobedience tend to concede
it but to claim that, in the crisis,
they cannot do otherwise: they
are swept by indignation or outrage, the situation is intolerable,
they act for a “higher” justice
or humanity.
Yet is it true that particular

direct actions of this kind, which

are always aimed at very specific
abuses, in fact lead to general

lawlessness? Where is the evie.g., statistics of corredence
lative disorder in the community,
or an increase of unspecific lawless acts among the direct-actionists themselves
to prove the
connection? Such flimsy evidence
as I have seen weighs in the
opposite direction: e.g., crime and
delinquency have seemed to diminish where there has been political direct action by Negroes;
and the academic and community
spiirt of Berkeley this year is better than ordinary.
On theoretical grounds, indeed,
the probability is that a specific
direct action, especially if it is
successful or partially successful,
will tend to increase civil order,
—

—

—

since it revives the belief that
the community is ours; whereas
the inhibition of direct action
against an intolerable situation inevitably increases anomie and
therefore general lawlessness.
(Add to this the increasing arrogance and lawlessness of the repressing forces, as in the South
or among northern police, when
they feel they are “misunderstood” or are being legal against
their own moral consciences.’ The
enforcement of “law and order”
at all costs aggravates the tensions that lead to explosions like
Watts. I have not yet read the
book but I think that this is the
thesis of Arthur Waskow’s From
Race Riot to Sit-In: “creative disorder” increases civil order and
diminishes anomie.
The conventional argument,
that general lawlessness is increased by specific disobedience
for political purposes, depends
on the sociological proposition
that law and order are by and
large maintained by deterrence
and penalties. But in normal
civil societies this is not the
case. People who don't pick
pockets refrain, by and large,
not because of fear of arrest and
jail but because of their upbringing, socialization, and sense of
themselves; and in these, fear and
anxiety usually have an anti-social rather than a social effect.

Many criminologists and penologists would agree, rather, with
the anarchist proposition that
there would be less crime, especially serious felonies, if there
were no jails, since jails are

schools of crime, most serious
crimes are committed by repeaters, and fear triggers panic behavior.

.

�Tuesday, April 12, 1966

S P E C T R U M

Johnson Administration Attached
In Speech By Candidate M. Bender
“The Johnson Administration
they have labeled the ‘Great Society’ but they
have in fact fostered 'The Age of
Deception’ on the American people,” said Republican candidate
tor the 39th Congressional District Miles D. Bender in a speech
to the student body April 6.
i
has created what

“The so-called ‘Great Society’,"
he continued, "is at best a shameful attempt to give hope to the

poverty stricken of this country.
And false hope it is. The poverty
programs are ill conceived and improperly instituted if at all. It is
a corrupt political football game
played at the expense of the impoverished of this nation, and to
the detriment of all the tax payers,” according to Mr. Bender.
In an interview with the Spectrum, Mr. Bender denounced Fed-

eral subsidization of milk and
school lunches for children from
underdeveloped areas as another
instance where “no long range
planning is involved.”
“The ‘Age of Deception’,” Mr.
Bender proclaimed, “exists in the
conduct of the war in Viet Nam.”

The SPECTRUM

Partneri Jf*

Ac.

re Si,

Following his speech, a student
asked Mr. Bender his opinion of
the action taken by State Senate
Majority Leader Earl Brydges to
investigate college demonstrators
and their activities on state campuses.

Mr. Bender replied, “I do not
support these demonstrations, but
I must agree with their right to
demonstrate so long as the demonstrations are peaceful and do
not advocate the forceful overthrow of our government or support other organizations that do

Published by
’

Ward Supervisor and Congressional Candidate Miles D. Bender
He pledged himself to “responsible criticism” of the “massive
failures of our foreign policy,
particularly in the Dominican
Republic and Cuba, Vietnam, and
NATO.

Jkyoll &amp; Smitl /-^tinting
1381 KENMORE AVENUE
(at Delaware)

so.”

Phone 876-2284

1959 graduate of UB, Mr.
Bender is Director of Public Relations at International Life Insurance Company at Buffalo and
supervisor of the 18th Ward.
A

PAGE

THRU

UB Blues Sponsors Spring Sing-Out
The UB Blues, a popular men’s
vocal octet, will sponsor a Spring
Sing-Out Saturday, April 16 at
8:30 P.M. in Clark Gym. Performing with the Blues will be the
University of Rochester Yellowxersity Saints. Small group singjackets and the St. Lawrence Uniing has been traditional on college campuses throughout the
country and the groups featured
Saturday are among the finest in
the East.
Since their inception in 1962
as a barbershop quartet, the UB
Blues have expanded both in size
and versatility. Members of the
Buffalo Yacht Club provided the
impetus for the production last
summer of the Blues' first LP
album, entitled “Blue Skys” (on
sale now in the bookstore).

'In contrast to the larger (13)
size of the Yellowjaekets and the
Saints, the Blues have seven singers and feature the talented voice
of UB coed, Julie Olsen. This year
the Blues have made guest appearances at Montreal nightclubs
especially popular with the
Frenoh-Canadian college set and
have had annual engagements at
the Buffalo Yacht Club, the Buffalo Country Club, the Rochester
Country Club, and college campuses throughout the East. The
Blues have added color and charm
to countless events with their
unique combination of musical
warmth and wit, boundless enthusiasm, and precision blend.
The Yellowjaekets are veterans
of ten years singing experience,
including a concert tour of Europe in the summer of 1963 sponsored by the United Service Organization (USO). They will be
performing such songs as “Nothing Like a Dame,” “Girl from Ipanema,” "And I Love Her,” “Officer Krupke,” “I’ll Remember
April” and others from their latest album “New Sounds - by the
-

Yellowjaekets.”
Since their formation in 1950

YONKS FOR A SOSO.

as an organization of thirteen undergraduate songsters from St.
Lawrence University, the Saints
have developed a dynamic reputation which keeps them in demand throughout the Eastern
states. Among their distinctions,
the Saints have been the featured
entertainment at the popular Cellar'Door Night Club in Washington, D.C.; and the renowned
Edgewater Gulf Resort Hotel in
Biloxi, Mississippi. Their extensive traveling has brought them
into millions of homes through

the media of television appearances including WDSU TV in New

Orleans and WRC NBC-TV in
Washington, D.C. The Saints’ re■

pertoire includes such numbers
as “Dancing on the Ceiling,” “The
Party’s Over,” "The Way You
Look Tonight,” “Avallne,” and
“Bermuda” plus other selections

from their fourth record album.
The Spring Sing-Out is a “first”
on the UB campus. Never before
have such polished and successful
collegiate singing groups appeared together in concert here.
General admission is $1.50 with

a special student rate of $1.00.
Tickets are available at the Norton and Baird Box Offices, at the
table in Norton lobby, the Alumni Office, and at Denton's Music

Store downtown.

MENC Holds "Student Happenings";
Consists of Premiere Performances
The Buffalo Chapter of the Music Educators National Conference will present “Student Hap-

penings,” Wednesday, April
at 8:30 p.m. in Baird Hall.

13

The concert will consist entire-

ly of premiere performances, including those of Julie and Gretchen, a programmatic composition
about toyland by Emmanuel Sinderbrand; Visions IV, a film with
music by M. Horwood; Readings
from Henry Miller with chance

musical interpretation from an Indian nursery-theme by P. Harjikakou: and Two Part Inventions, a
chance fusion of Bach's “Inventions” arranged by SinderbrandHadjikakou. The featured performance of the concert is Patagonian Apparations by Eligha Cohent of Yale University. Tanka,
by J. Bergamo, and Invention in
the Style of Bach will also be
performed.

Admission is free to the public.

Ewell Discusses Food Problems
Vice-president for Research Dr.
Raymond Ewell will discuss “The
World Food-Population Problem”
April 13 at the Towne House Motel at 12:15 p.m.

Dr. Ewell’s lecture is part of a
series of “Meet-the-Professor”
luncheons sponsored by the UB

alumni.

Aid Expenditures and the House
Committee on Agriculture.
Dr. Ewell is former assistant
director of the National Science
Foundation and the author of
publications in the fields of chemistry, engineering, economics, and
Soviet science and education.
Reservations can be made for
$1.75 at the Alumni Office, 8314121.

Dr. Ewell is also professor of
chemistry and engineering. He
has served as an economic consultant to the governments of
India and the Philippines, the
United Nations’ Centre for International Development and the
United States’ Agency for International Development.
The problems of an exploding
world population were recently
presented by Dr. Ewell to the
Senate Subcommittee on Foreign

Paris Belts. Each has a
style as individual as
the rocking beat of Jay
and The Americans'
new album,
“Sunday and Me”.

Religion on Campus
INTER-VARSITY

CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP

For information and transportation for the Western New York
Regional Conference of IVCF to
be held April 15 to 17, contact
Billie Knapp at 835-2048.
NEWMAN
On Wednesday, April 13, New-

man Hall will attend "A Dialo-

the Death of God” in
the Conference Theatre at 7 p.m.
Reservations for the Empire
State Province Convention in
Troy, New York must be made
by April 13. For information call
834-3504. There will be no Sunday Suppers this week or next,
April 10 or 17.
gue on

ATTENTION

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Pizza
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shrunken steerhide.
Black or brown. $4.00
The Paris Paisley Belt.
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When you wear a
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people who's boss.

99( for Big
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13"

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KENMORE, N. Y.

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�SPECTRUM

PACE FOUR

Undergraduates,
University and

Research
This is the first article in a series on Research and the University. Us object is to inform. Perhaps more important it seeks
to provoke comment. The Spectrum will welcome contributions
long or short from faculty, students, and staff on the topic of research.
Please send articles, typed if possible, to Russell Goldberg, Spectrum,
Norton Hall. Please include name and telephone number.

■ai

Tuesday, April 12, 1966

BpM

m\

B

■^Siv

For better or worse the community of scholars is

undergoing a change. Education of undergraduates is
no longer the over riding concern. The university is no
longer a decorative ivory tower; adornment afforded by

an affluent society. Rather it forms the foundation of
modern industrial civilization. As such it is perhaps
brutalized, clearly more necessary, and definitely

changed.

“The American university is currently undergoing
its second great change,” said Clark Kerr in his book
The Uses of the University. “So many of the hopes and
fears of the American people are now related to our
educational system and particularly to our universities—the hope for longer life, for getting into outer space,
for a higher standard of living; our fears of Russian or
Chinese supremacy, of the bomb and annihilation, of
individual loss of purpose in the changing world. For
all these reasons and others, the university has become
a prime instrument of national purpose. This is new.
This is the essence of the transformation now engulfing
our universities. Recent changes in the American university have done them (undergraduate students) little
good—lower teaching loads for the faculty, larger classes,
the use of substitute teachers for the regular faculty, the
choice of faculty members based on research accomplishments rather than instructional capacity, the fragmentation of knowledge into endless subdivisions.”

s ■'sSE
■■

The undergraduate has diminishing importance
One of the reasons for the deemphasis of the under-

An introduction to one of the committee’s working
papers published last June outlined the problem as
The amount paid by undergraduates for tuition and follows:
fees is also on the rise, but it has not kept pace with
costs. Income from such sources, despite higher enrollOf the $15 billion being spent for Federal research
ments, increased only 25 percent between 1 ‘&gt;62 and 1964. and development, $2 billion is spent directly in the
The undergraduate is paying for a smaller portion of the Nation’s universities.
cost of his education then he used to.
There has been increasing concern that these FedBalance sheets and the finance officers which mould eral expenditures have diminished the dedication of
them are notoriously practical. When one type of in- college teachers to their calling; have diverted professors
come lags behind expenses another source of revenue away from teaching into research; have benefited a
must be found to take up the slack if the university is relatively small number of the Nation’s ranking univerto continue its life and growth.
sities at the expense of the rest of the higher education
system; have strengthened graduate education with no
Into
breech steps the federal government with corresponding assistance to undergraduate instruction;
aid for research. Grants in excess of one and three and have helped limited areas of the natural and physical
quarter billion dollars were given to institutions of higher sciences, thus creating imbalances in the structure of
learning in 1963-64. An increase of 40 percent over aid higher education.
1961-62. The research professor becomes the big man
Research is done by scientists. The teaching of
on campus. The grant and how to acquire it becomes a
scince is also done by scientists. The burden of the
way of life.
complaint has been that there are not enough good
Clark Kerr comments, “at the undergraduate level scientists to do enough of both. Students have protested
the ‘subtle discounting of the teaching process’ has been by campus demonstrations that they cannot have contact
aided and abetted (by research). Harold Orlans, who with experienced professors, either in or out of the classconducted the excellent Brookings study of federal aid room. They complain that they are being taught by
graduate students,
to universities, concludes that federal
research aid ‘has completing their themselves as much concerned with
own studies as with teaching underaccelerated the longe-standing depreciation of undergradgraduates; and not the best graduates, because the best
uate education at large universities.’
ones are themselves involved in research.
"There seems to be a ‘point of no return’ after which
The Research and Technical Programs Subcommitresearch, consulting, graduate instruction become so
tee
has
therefore undertaken to investigate these quesabsorbing that faculty efforts, can no longer be concentrated on undergraduate instruction as they once were. tions.
This process has been going on for a long time; federal
The
specificly solicited comments from
research funds have intensified it. As a consequence, some 300 committee
“thoughtful persons in the educational and
undergraduate education in the large university is
more scientific communities.” One of the areas of concern
likely to be acceptable than outstanding: educational
was undergraduate education. As a general question to
policy from the undergraduate point of view is
lanrelv provoke thought and evoke reaction these distinguished
neglected.”
gentlemen were asked “Is undergraduate education suffrom overemphasis on research? It has been
fering
The Eighty-ninth Congress became concerned with charged that
teaching is left more and more to inexperithe effect of federal grants were having on
education. enced instructors or second-rate graduate students, beThe Research and Technical Programs Subcommittee cause
talented professors and superior graduates find
was directed to investigate the “conflicts between the research
more rewarding than teaching.”
federal research programs and the nations goals for
higher education.”
Their replies were varied:
*

Excerpts
Dr. J. Peterson Eld
Harvard Univei
I think from my o
valid and genuine,
which I suppose con
college, whereby seni
do a good deal of i
much deserve praise
by habit this is the
say as much for the
senior professors in f
graduate instruction
As for second-rate
danger here and in a
to attract our very 1
instruction and to gi
ing. The very fact
ever, shows that we
we were negligent.

’

is chaired by

Dr. JacqndpBarzun
It is perfectly tru
graduates is sufferin
in the classroom. 1
it antedates Goven
the shortage of ma
are numerous and c
instead of older mei
What has worsen*
not merely scientific
research by itself, hi
publication in print
the invisible researc
of mouth to his stuc
producing in that it
Dr. Robert
versify

Presthm

From exugrience
would say "t unde
definitely suffering fr
dates and younger, le
however, is due to t
search and Publicati
talented professors f0
tion ot profilers’ tiro
even those professors
with the students as
about one-fourth of i

i

is going to get worse before it gets better.

The Research and Technical Programs SubcommitHenry S. Reuss (D) of Wisconsin. It
is a subsidiary of the House Committee on Governmental
Operations which is headed by William L. Dawson (D.)
of Illinois.

tee

presumably free to
teaching their primal

i

graduate is economic. The cost of maintaining an institution of higher education is skyrocketing. Mushrooming enrollment, increased capital costs and higher
wage demands conspire to give finance officials nightmares. U.S. Office of Education statistics point to a 30
percent rise in the cost of maintaining an on going university between 1061-62 and 1063-64. And the problem

�/

■•

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SPECTRUM

Tuesday, April 12, 1966

1 1966

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K“;i' vi
31. i_l
Excerpts
Dr. J. Peterson Elder, Dean, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences,
Harvard University
I think from my own observations that the fears expressed here are
valid and genuine. At Harvard we have, thank heaven, a trad.tion
which I suppose comes down from a small New England liberal arts
college, whereby senior professors in the social sciences and humanities
do a good deal of undergraduate instruction. I don’t think we so
much deserve praise here as we should be grateful for the fact that
by habit this is the way we do things. I doubt, however, that I can
say as much for the natural sciences here, though again it is true that
senior professors in all the major fields in the sciences do give undergraduate instruction.
As for second-rate graduate students, we have long ago realized the
danger here and in a number of ways we have worked very hard, both
to attract our very best graduate students to assist in undergraduate
instruction and to give them, albeit informally, counseling and training. The very fact that we consider this matter so important, however, shows that we fear that we should have grave problems here if
we were negligent.
Dr. JacqudJBarzun, Provost, Columbia University
It is perfectly true that in some institutions the teaching of undergraduates is suffering from the use of inexperienced graduate students
in the classroom. But this deplorable system of staffing is not new;
it antedates Government-sponsored research, and its causes lie in
the shortage of manpower or money or both. Graduate students
are numerous and come cheap; it is therefore tempting to use them
instead of older men with higher degrees and ranks.
What has worsened a bad practice is the new frenzy for research
not merely scientific research, and certainly not Government-sponsored
research by itself, but the doctrine that whereas research followed by
publication in print is important, and noble, and status producing
the invisible research of the scholar-teacher who publishes by word
of mouth to his students is inferior, unworthy of reward, and burden
producing in that it fosters contact with students.
—

Dr. Robert Presthns, Professor of Political Science, Cornell University

From exjgience at four large State and private universities, I
would say mat undergraduate education at the larger institutions is
definitely suffering from the delegation of teaching to doctoral candidates and younger, less-experienced faculty members. This condition,
however, is due to the fact that universities achieve prestige by research and Publication, as well as to the preferences of the most
talented professors for research. It should be added that the dissipation of proffers’ time in committee work and ceremonials means that
even those professors who mainly teach do not spend as much time
with the students as one might assume. It is generally true that
about one-fourth of a faculty engages in research, while the rest are
presumably' free to each, yet they do not and .often cannot make
teaching ttieir primary responsibility.

Dr. Ralph W. Pfouts, Chairman, Department of Economics, University
of North Carolina
I do not believe undergraduate education is suffering from overemphasis on research in the universities. I believe these charges
arise from a misunderstanding of the nature of the education process.
Education and research are completely compatible operations, in my
view, and both activities should be undertaken by a university worthy
of the name. I believe that research is just as important a function of
It is a mistake to
a university as is education in the narrow sense.
secondary eduas
and
primary
the
same
light
of
think universities in
is broader and
cational institutions. Their function is different andadvancement
of
their responsibility is correspondingly greater. The
knowledge through research is just as important as is the inculcation
of knowledge in the young. Without the advancement of knowledge,
education in the narrow sense would surely become stagnant and
would not provide the intellectual stimulation that is needed and I
believe, craved by students.
In short, 1 believe that in the past there may have been far too
much emphasis on education in the narrow sense in American universities. I do not view emphasis on research as antisocial; nor do I
believe that more and more inexperienced instructors and second-rate
graduate students are being used to teach undergraduates. The
faculty member to be effective as an instructor almost invariably
should be effective as a researcher. Otherwise he runs the danger of
his knowledge becoming obsolete. I do not think it is satisfactory for
appropriate books,
a faculty member to merely “keep up” by reading
first
the
in
place this is not
think
I
publications.
and
other
journals,
actually done by people who are not engaged in research or in many
instances the reading is of a superficial nature and the material is not
way
taken and incorporated into courses. I believe that the surest
engages
to obtain an alert and enlighted faculty is to have one that
in research. The faculty member who both teaches and researches
finds himself in the midst of a struggle to advance knowledge, and he
that
becomes aware of the changing nature of knowledge in a way come
is not possible if he is not engaged in research. The changes
home to him emotionally and become a part of his psychology; they
are not merely recognized in an intellectual way. I believe that what
has occurred is a more conscious attempt by American universities
to have a balanced faculty, one which engages effectively in both
research and in classroom and laboratory instruction, and I personally
regard this as a highly desirable state of affairs. It seems to me unfortunate to attempt to hang the recent difficulties in Berkley on the
fact that the Berkley faculty, generally speaking, is a good research
faculty. I think that people who have made this charge have not
really thought through the statements they are making or they are
speaking from a prejudiced viewpoint.
\sMt*"iuut|y tmpioy«r. M

4F

�Tuesday, April 12, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

Mary Anthony Dance Group to Perform
The Mary Anthony Dance
Theater will present a performance of modern dance Saturday
(April 16) at 8:30 p.m. in Baird
Recital Hall at the State University at Buffalo.
Sponsored by the Union Board
Dance Committee, the performance will include “Threnody," a
dance choreographed by Mary

Anthony and inspired by John
M. Synge’s tragedy, “Riders to
the Sea.” The score was composed especially for the dance
by opera composer Benjamin

Britton.
Anthony Chujoy, of “Dance
News,” described “Threnody” as
telling “the age old story of
the crel sea demanding its vie-

BIRTH CONTROL

(Cont'd from

P. 1)
or gives away or offers to lend
or give away” birth control information or devices is guilty of
a misdemeanor.
Charges against Baird were dismissed in November after the law
was changed in September. According to New York State Senator William C. Thompson it was
Baird's arrest that lead to the
passage of an amendment permitting sale of contraceptives to
persons over 16.
On November 19, Baird and 25
members of the Parents Aid Society picketed Nassau County operated Meadowbrook Hospital for
refusal to give out birth control
information to the poor. At the
time hospital policy was to refer
any patient requesting such information to his family physician.
Those who could not afford a
physician were directed to the
Welfare Department.
The following month Baird and
18 supporters picketed the office
of the Nassau County Health Commissioner for refusal to give birth
control information to the poor.
Baird explained, “What we want
to do is coordinate our efforts
with existing agencies. We don’t
have the facilities or the money
to be able to do what the agencies can do and they should take
on much of the responsibility.”
The Parents Aid Society opened
its own clinic in Hempstead this
year. Licensed volunteer physi-

cians consult with and examine
patients and dispense contraceptives to the poor at no cost. The
clinic, Baird explained, is geared
to the needs of the poor. When
necessary, he said, the
mobile

...

van picks up the mother and her
children and brings them to the

clinic. While she is examined,
volunteers supervise the children.
The clinic opens early in the
morning and remains open late
to accommodate working parents.
Since the opening of the clinic
Baird has expanded his efforts
to inform the public of the need
for adequate information on birth
control. He has lectured on radio,
television, and to adult audiences
and has spoken to student groups.
Baird believes that students
should be better informed about
birth control. While he maintains
that sexual relations should be
reserved for marriage, he claims
that many students “misconceptions lead to conceptions,” Among
married students, he said, unwanted pregnancy often results in
one or both partners dropping out
of school or in complete change
of career plans.
A student organization, the Parents Aid Club, believed by Baird
to be the first of its kind, was
started at Hofstra University by
Douglas Wilcox who first became
interested in birth control while
he and several other students
were working at the Parents Aid
Society Clinic. According to Wilcox, in addition to informing students about various methods of
contraception the club will encourage students to join in educational campaigns to teach the
poor about birth control.
Baird said that similar organizations are now being formed at
Adelphi University, Nasau Community College, Princeton University, Brooklyn and Queens Colleges.

tims and

the

tragedy

of the

women left behind. ‘Threnody’

is presented in a dance languof stark simplicity which
strengthens the exposition of the
story. The economy of movement
here practiced by the choreographer is admirable.”

age

Miss Anthony has served as
choreographer for the religious
television series “Lamp Unto My
Feet” and “Look Up and Live.”
She has choreographed a succession of Italian musicals in
Rome, as well as an Italian weekly television “Canzonissima.”
The Mary Anthony Dance
Theater has apeared at the leading American dance festivals in
Connecticut, at Jacob’s Pillow,
Massachusetts, and New York

City.

AID Summer Project
Seeks Grad Students
Forty male graduate students,
preferably in the social sciences,
will have an opportunity to serve
in a civilian capacity in either
Vietnam or Laos this summer
through a project authorized by
the Agency for International Development (AID) and administered by the Institute of Internation-

al Education.
Richard B, Myer of the Institute
International Education explained that the project is being
developed to assist Vietnam and
Laos in improving the capacity
and effectiveness of their programs at the provincial level in
such fields as rural reconstruction, refugee assistance, supply
distribution artd community deof

velopment.
Thirty volunteers will be assigned to Vietnam and ten to
Laos. Each participating institution will be assigned a quota of
candidates.

in Student
Guild's production of Tennessee Williams' "At Liberty."

Russ Battaglia, Susan Kaplan, and Fay Dattnar appear

Theatre

One-Act Plays Presented
In Millard-Fillmore Room
Two one-act plays, Tennessee
William’s “At Liberty” and UB
Drama and Speech Professor William Coleman’s ‘Smythe” will be
presented by the Student Theatre Guild April 13-16 at 8:30 in
the Fillmore Room.
Director Susan Abrams describ-

ed “At Liberty” as the story of
an ex-actress who is suffering
from tuberculosis but who re-

fuses to slow down her

fast-

paced life. Fay Dattner will play

the role of the mother.
Francine Zumpano, who app e a r e d in Oh Dad, Poor Dad
earlier this year, will direct
“Smythe.” Members of the cast
include Leonard Horowitz, Sandi Klein, Lebert Puma, Anne Selman and Robin Herniman.
Students will be admitted free,
but tickets must be secured prior
to the performance. General admission is $1.00.

"Talking Painting" Heard on WBFO
WBFO will present an art pro18, 21, 25, and 28 on
“Talking Painting,” the first in
an experimental series of radio
programming known as “radiovision.”
gram April

Listeners will look at painting
inserted in the
WBFO program guide while hearing a discussion of the works by
the student artist, students, and
reproductions

professors.

William A. Penn, a UB graduate assistant in music, has com-

an original music score
with brass and percussion instruments to compliment the works.

posed

The series, recorded in the art
studios of UB professors John
Mclvor and Willard Harris, will
be broadcast Mondays at 7:30
p.m. and rebroadcast Wednesdays
at 4 p.m
Copies of the April program
guide are available in the dormitories, Norton Union, and WBFO
station, 3435 Main St.

Weekly Calendar
Lecture: “Leisure and Creativity,” Leonard Port and Dr. Robert Rossburg, Faculty Lounge,
3:30 p.m.
Lecture: “Masterpieces from the
Montreal Museum of Fine Arts”
Albright-Knox Gallery
8:30 p.m. through April 16.
Wednesday:
Eulogy: “A Dialogue on the Death

of God," Father Francis Keat-

ing, St, Peter’s College, Con-

ference Theatre, 7 p.m.
Lecture: "The World Food-Population Problem,” Dr. Raymond
Ewell, Town House Motel, 12:15
p.m.

Seminar: “Recent Structural Advances in Organometallic Complexes,” Dr. Lawrence Dahl

Acheson, A-70, 4:30 p.m.

Play*: “At Liberty” and “Smythe”
Student Theatre Guild
Concert: Alexander Schneider and
Peter Serkin. Albright-Knox,
8:30 p.m., Millard Fillmore Rm.

Thursday:

Lecture: “Changes in Settlement
Patterns Among Indian Groups
in Western New York,” Dr.
Marian E. White, Capen G-22,
8 p.m.

Lecture: “Negro Leadership; Mar-

tin Luther King and Frederick
Douglas,’ Professor Herbert G.
Stony, Faculty Club, 8:30 p.m.
Play: “You Can’t Take it with
You,” opens Studio Arena Theatre
Friday

Recital: Alexander Schneider of
the Budapest String Quartet,
Albright-Knox Gallery Auditorium, 8:30 p.m.

—VOLUNTEERS—
Volunteers are needed
to take the Student Attitudes Test at the Senate
Office, 205 Norton.

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April 12-15
Tuesday:

�Tuesday, April 12, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE SEVEN

History of Attitudes of War Shows Changes Furnas Scholarship Fund Is Success;
By DAVE KNOKE
(CPS) While it may be axiomatic that human nature changes
little over the centuries, one very
notable exception is the manner
in which men wage, war nowadays. Granted, the sophistication
of weapons and tactics have considerably changed since Neanderthalean brainbashes were the
most effective way of doing your
neighbor in.

This is not the point; technol-

ogy has always made gruesome

advances in killing techniques
while the morality that guides
men to use these has remained
relatively static.
What is most startling in reviewing the long and colorful
history of mankind’s war is the
realization that war is suddenly
being fought by men with entirely different attitudes from those
held just a few short centuries
ago. The plain fact seems to be
that men no longer enjoy massacring each other; war is being
waged out of inertia.
Time was when the common
foot soldier had an immediate,
personal stake in marching down
the paths of glory; today he has
been reduced to the mundane
role of cannon fodder.
Back in the good ol’ days (al-

ways idealized best by those who

never lived then) when a man
could take the law in his own
hands, fighting was down-right
run. Rape, torture, pillage, looting, gluttony, drunkness the enlistee’s life was one eternal round
of glorious entertainment.
-

The Teutonic war bands enjoyed 'the physical pleasure of
fighting so much that, if the chief
could not think up an ideological
dispute to start a war, the tribes
held a sort of Super Bacchanalia.
The mob would gather on the
opposite sides of some verdant
spring meadow, and, with a super
abundance of strutting, cursing,
caterwalling and other sorts of
bravura, would run toward each
other at top speed. Pairing off,
they would swing their war clubs,
brandish their spears and shields
and begin pounding away without finesse, taking care not to
hit any vital spots. During a daylight span, the armies would flail
away at each other in concentrated earnestness, on the whole
achieving at day’s end nothing
more than a relaxing exhaustion
and a hearty appetite.
This ancient and noble custom
has gone into oblivion, as today’s
soldiers unimaginatively attempt
to knock each other’s blocks off
without displaying a modicum of
theatrical talent.
No longer do soldiers from dif-

ferent armies fraternize when
they pause from battle; this an-

cient courtesy of the fighting man
toward his foe saw its last gasp
in the winter of 1914 when German and Russian troops took
time out to celebrate Christmas
together on the Eastern front.
Once upon a time the army was
a profession every young man
lusted after; there was no need
of a draft with a surfeit of volunteers and wars were genetical-

THE SPECTRUM
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sharply curtailed by stodgy top
brass, all the fun went out of
the soldier’s life. Mass butchery
A $100,000 fund drive to estabecame the property of arm-chair
generals who designed genocide blish the “C. C. Furnas Scholarprograms with a minimum of shop Fund” has passed the
waste and excitement.
$60,000 mark, according to Fund
So instead of warring for perand
prestige, the foot Committee Chairman Whitworth
sonal gain
soldier had to start thinking in Ferguson.
ideological terms of National InAlumni, corporations, and interest. Home, God, and Country
as prix de la guerre. Rather poor dividuals planning to contribute
fare for the nasty business they are requested by Mr. Ferguson to
do, but everyone is told that "This
man’s army ain’t never had it so send their checks to the UB
Foundation, Inc., “so that the
good."
NOTE: Knoke is a staff writer for fund will be able to provide
the Michigan Daily.

tall man. No wonder the French
a nation of midgets after
World War I.
Another dirty trick played on
the common soldier was the invention of the rules of war. When
restriction started being put on
the' treatment of prisoners and
when extracurricular rapine was

were

Tf Wlf| j

scholarship funds to talented
young men and women at UB.”

A testimonial dinner will be
held to honor Dr. Furnas lor
his twelve years of service to the
university and the Niagara Frontier April 19, at the Statler Hilton. The total amount raised for
the scholarship fund will be announced at the dinner and a
scroll of contributors will be
presented to Dr. Furnas.

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�Government Asserts That
Hallucenogens May Be
Harmful To Students
By ROBERT B. SEMPLE, JR.
Special to the New York Times
Washington, April 5
The Federal Government today
stepped into the growing controversy over the use of hallucinatory drugs on college campuses.
—

agency and

the nation’s educational institutions. It was
prompted, officials said, by growing evidence that colleges arid
universities have become centers
of illicit use of the drugs.

Confederated Student Government Discusses
F.S.A. Guidelines At Albany Conference
Buffalo
State
Confederated
Student Government (CSG) President Alan Latona represented the
CSG. April 28 and 29 in Albany.

CSG is an organization of state
universities which confers with
state administration authorities
on student government autonomy,
control of student monies and
student traffic control.
State University President Samuel Gould and other Faculty-Student Association and State University representatives were also
present at the Conference.
Mr. Latona mentioned that the
“most significant question discussed was the status of the proposed FSA guidelines.”
Also examined were budget

In a stern letter to officials of
more than 2,000 colleges and
universities. Dr. James Goddard,
Commissioner of the Food and
Drug Administration, noted a
marked increase in the illegal
use of such drugs and said that
“concerted action” must be taken.

administrators, heads of science
departments and other officials.
The letter pointed out that of
all the drugs, LSD-25 presented
the greatest threat and was dangerous in
exceedingly small

—COMMITTEES—
A 11 applications for
Union Board Activities
offices must be returned
to 215 Norton by April
12. Elections will be held
April 14. Candidates are
invited to a cofffee hour
April 12 in the Charles
Room at 7:30 p.m.

Otherwise, he warned, “an untold number of our students may
suffer permanent mental or physical injury.”

The drug is a “consciousnessexpanding”
chemioal-D-Iysergio
acid diethylamide-—that totally
rearranges the senses, producing
weird and extraordinary mental

—NSA—
Election of delegates
to the National Congress
of NSA will be held
Wednesday, April 25.

As little as 100 micrograms can
produce hallucinations lasting for
hours or days. One gram— a fraction of an ounce—can provide
10,000 doses. A few pounds
dumped into a city’s water supply, it is said, could disorient the
entire population.

—CORRECTION—
The Skanks will play
Sigma Alpha Mu on
WKBW-TV April 18 in
a Trivia Tournament to
be taped April 15 at
WKBW at 8. Free tickets for the taping may
be obtained at the Norton Ticket Office.

“There is

direct evidence of
widespread availability of a number of drugs which have profound effects on the mental processes,” Dr. Goddard said. “Both
students and members of the
faculty are being secretly approached to engage in halluconogenic ‘experiences'.”

As a partial remedy to what he
called “a most hazardous situation," Dr Goddard urged campus
officials to report immediately to
K.D.A. district offices instances
of illegal use or possession of
any of the hallucinatory or sleepdelaying drugs, such as the

amphetamines.
Pointing out that some of the
particularly LSD-25
drugs
could be easily maufacturcd in
college chemistry laboratories,
Dr, Goddard also suggested that
colleges might wish to take other
’ appropriate" actions, such as inspection programs, laboratory supervision or special counseling.
—

The Food and Drug Administration has been growing increasingly concerned about the illicit
use of LSD and other drugs. Under Federal law, the sale or
manufacture of LSD is a misdemeanor.
Several months ago the agency
started a major attack on illegal
traffic in amphetamines, barbiturates, LSD-25 and other potentially
dangerous drugs. To support this
attack, the agency's new Bureau
of Drug Abuse Control opened
five regional offices yesterday.
Dr. Goddard's letter was the
first communication between the

The letter was sent to deans of
men and women, campus housing

abberrations.

The other two drugs mentioned
in Dr. Goddard’s letter were
psilocybin and mescaline, which
produce many of the same effects
caused by LSD-25 but are much
more difficult to produce. Psilocybin is an extract from a Mexican
mushroom, and mescaline is an
extract from the small cactus,
peyote.

Dr. Goddard mentioned no statistics to support his contention
that the use of the drugs has
jumped sharply in recent months.
An agency spokesman said that
statistics would be meaningless
inasmuch as the use of the drug§
largely clandestine and,
was
furthermore, was growing so fast
that any figures and today would
be outdated tomorrow.

Officials of the Food and Drug
Administration said that it was
no secret that some students had
been experimenting with LSD-25.
The purpose of Dr. Goddard’s
letter, they said, was not simply
to restate the acknowledged fact
but to let college officials know
the depth of the government’s
concern and to suggest new ways
of policing the manufacture of
the drugs.
@

1966

by the New York Timet
Reprinted by permission.

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supports for student needs and
facilities, the possibility of assuming the cost of athletics, and
the SUNY summer Leadership
Workshop with Dr. Gould and
members of the central administration.

All schools have been invited
by Mr. Latona to send delegates
to a full report of the meetings
April 22-23 at Fredonia. For details contact, Alan Latona, Confederated Student Governments,
State University College at Buffalo, 1300 Elmwood Ave., Buffalo,

New York.

r

amounts.

WE SAVE YOU MONEY!
Proof:

Tuesday, April 12, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

SPECIAL

IF 7-6120

Special peed Tuesday H Friday

—INFORMAL TALK—
Dean Richard Siggelkow and Political Science Professor Richard
Cox will speak on “The
Mechanisms of a University” Wednesday, April
13, at 3 p.m. in the Haas
Lounge. Students and
faculty are welcome.
—VOLUNTEERS—
Volunteers are needed
to take the Student Attitudes Test at the Senate
Office, 205 Norton.

Co.

—SCHNEIDER—
Violinist Alexa n d e r
Schneider, a member of
the UB Budapest String
Quartet, will present a
sonata recital April 15
and 17 in the AlbrightKnox Art Gallery Auditorium at 8:30 p.m. Tickets may be purchased for
$2.50 at Baird Hall ticket office.

—KATTAN—
Dr. Naim Rattan, noted
ed editor and critic in
Montreal, will speak in
French on “The Quiet
Cultural and Literary
Revolution in French
Canada” April 14 at
8:30 p.m. in 335 Norton.
—PUFFER—
Dr. Claude E. Puffer,
vice president for business affairs, has been
elected to a one-year
term as president of the
Association o f Business
Officers of the State University of New York.
-

$1.25
99*

•‘■•' /•w; x

vv;y:-:

41 r
By SCOTT FORMAN

—KEATING—
The Reverend Father
Francis Keating will discuss “The Issues at
Stake” in the final lecture of the “Dialogue on
the Death of God” series
April 13 in the Conference Theater at 7 p.m.

'

When you’re brought up in
New York City, baseball usually
plays a crucial role in your learnprocess if you’re not going to
turn into a streetfighter. I know
this is the way it was with me
—since I can remember, baseball
had always played a definite role
in my life as I grew up on the
streets of The Bronx. This attachment to the national pasttime alone was not enough—there of course had to be an idol

to

go along.

During thes years X think it
is safe to say that more of us
kids idolized Mickey Mantle than
any other baseball star of that
day and age. And just as some
people still idolize Babe Ruth,
I feel that all of us still should
idolize Mr. Mantle. However,
this “hero worship” should take
on a new perspective, and one
must be able to grasp this important difference if we are to
cease living in a fantasy land
of the past.

When I was very small my
father would often come home
early from work and take me
on the “D” train to the Polo
Grounds to see the old New York
Giants play a somewhat inept
brand of baseball. My father loved to watch Willie Mays play,
and he still does. Yet I was
watching a losing team (except
in 1954)—and somehow Lackman,
Williams, Dark, Thompson, Mueller, Sauer, St. Claire, and Antonelli didn’t quite match up
to my own team in The Bronx.

The Yankees were winning—and had been for years. I was
just too young to root for an
underdog like the Giants, especially since all my friends
were Yankee fans. When we
chose up sides to play punchball, curbball, slapball, or stickball, we all wanted to pretend
to be a different Yankee player.
Mantle wqs the most desired
choice, what with the ability
to slam home runs, steal bases,
make fantastic catches, and blow
bubbles while playing centerfield. Yet the local bully always
wanted to be Mickey also. So in
the end I found myself being
Hank Bauer instead.
Of course my heart remained
with the Mick. At World Series
time I would rush home from
school to turn on the television
set and catch the last few innings of the game. And always
my heart would beat a little
faster when that big number
seven was at the plate. Mantle
in my eyes could do no wrong—
when he struck out it was in
a blaze of glory, and when he
made an occasional error, the
sun was in his eyes (as Mel
Allen said). When we flipped
trading cards against the apart-

would

always be Mantle—providing of course that he was a

double.

In 1956 Mickey Mantle represented what I thought was the
greatest ballplayer who ever
lived. He won the triple crown
that year and played the entire
season free from injuries. Yet
as Mantle was later beset by
various ailments, I continued to
maintain that he was unsurpassed in the anals of baseball history. The fact that Mickey wasn’t
playing as well as in 1956 did
not really bother me—as long as
he still struck out with power
and still blasted home runs was
enough to keep my loyalties intact. In fact, I reasoned, it just
proved that he didn’t need all
that speed anyway. And when
Mantle did something spectacular, like almost hitting a ball
out of Yankee Stadium in fair
territory, I would spend several
days thinking and talking about
that feat.
Indeed today I can recall well
the most remarkable of Mickey’s
achievements. Yet this is the
old picture of an idol who played an all-important role in a life
which was carefree and untroubled.

I don’t think that this old

conception of Mantle ever came
to an end at a specific time—it was a gradual realization as I
grew older and no longer ran
to hide the stick from the cops.
Don’t get me wrong—Mickey
Mantle is still an idol and always will be—but he is no longthe infallible god and symbol of

greatness of baseball. He is
rather the picture of a professional athlete who, although no
longer the best in his field, certainly is the most courageous. He
is the picture of a man trying
to maintain an image which the
public holds of him as a superman. And I think most of all,
he is the picture of a man who
is trying not to break the hearts
of millions of kids who still hold
the first conception of him by
displaying his fallibility.
Of course Mantle at the same
time is undoubtedly trying to
prove his ability to himself. Mr.
Mantle is indeed an idol for the
kids growing up on the streets
of the Bronx who still maintain
that he is the greatest baseball
player in the game today (and
many still do).

Yet what I think is now equally important is that Mickey Man

tie represent to adults how courenabled a near-cripple
to play better baseball than the
average major leaguer for the
past four years. And perhaps the
most significant aspect of all
is that the kids in The Bronx,
in time, give up their old idol
Mickey Mantle for the more imporUnt real-life version of the
age has

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&lt;

-

'i

—

■—

DISCOUNT

VOLUME 16

J

1““""^

m

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT

NSA

BUFFALO

MW

SMlHHi

BUFFALO. NEW YORK, FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1966

SCOUTING
REPORT
(See Pages 1(M1)

NO. 35

Deveaux Sends Telegram to Senator Brydges;
Seeks Discussion On Campus Demonstrations
Student Senate President Clinton Deveaux sent a telegram to
State Senate Majority leader Earl
Brydges April 4 inviting him to
an informal discussion with student leaders. Senator Brydges has
called for an investigation of demonstrations on State University
campuses against the war in Viet
Nam and the use of State University at Buffalo press office to

IRC Officer Candidates: I to r front; Judy Snydor and Sharon Sholman, secretarial candidates. Rear: Alan Fried and Steve Sickler, vicepresident; Alan Sturti, treasurer; Joel Feinman and Larry Pivnick,
president.

IRC Elections For Officers
To Be Held April 14 and IS
Inter-Bestidence Council elec-

tions for President,. Vice-president, Secretary and Treasurer
will take place Thursday and
Friday, April 14 and 15.
For the first time in an IRC
election, voting machines will
be used. According to election
committee chairman Joel Gershowitz, three polling places will be
set up
Tower, Goodyear, and
the Allenhurst Lounge in Good—

year.

The election committee has an-

nounced plans to schedule a public debate among the officer candidates during the campaign. Arrangements are being made to
tape and rebroadcast the debate
to the dorms.
The four IRC officers are elected in a general election in the
spring to take office at the beginning of the fall semester. The
hall representatives are elected
with the various hall officers in
the fall.

circulate material for one protest group.
Mr. Deveaux said that he hopes
through discussion both students
and the senator would gain a
clearer understanding of the facts
involved.
According to a spokesman for
the State University of New York,
“the conduct of affairs is largely
the responsibility of the President of that campus and it is up
to him to exercise judgments concerning these affairs.” He added
that this principle of “local control” has long been State University policy.
The spokesman added that utilization of campus public relations
office is also under the jurisdiction of the local president. He
noted that State University of
New York at Buffalo’s policy has
been that public information services be provided for any recognized student organization, the
Students for a Democratic Society
is a recognized student organiza-

tion.
This policy was confirmed sev-

Buffalo Common Council Passes A Resolution

Against UB Anti-Vietnam War Demonstration
Earlier this week the Buffalo
Common Council, a legislative
body, passed a resolution against
anti-Vietnam war demonstrations
at the State University of New
York at Buffalo.
The resolution of the Common

Council requests that “the Presi-

dent of the State University Sys-

tern and the President of the

State University of New York at
Buffalo investigate the use of
state facilities and agencies to
conduct anti-Vietnam activities.”
The Council cited the university
publicity agency as an instance
of the use of state agencies to
conduct anti-Vietnam activities.
The vote was 12 to 1 in favor

Student Testing Service to Give
Draft Exemption Examinations
U.B. will administer the Selective Service College Qualification
Test on May 21 from 12:00-3:30
p.m. and on June 3 from 8:30
a.m.-12:00 and 1:00-4:30 p.m.

All students interested in tak-

ing the examination can obtain
an information bulletin and an
application card from the Student Testing Center, 316 Harriman Library. Applications must
be postmarked no later than
Saturday, April 23, 1966.

The test is intended to examine
your ability to read with understanding and to solve new problems by use of general knowledge. There are also mathematical problems designed to test your
ability to comprehend and use
numerical relationships.
The use of the Korean War
guidelines has been suggested by
Lieutenant General Hershey in
decidin deferment. This would
make eligible for the draft freshmen in the bottom half, sophomores in the bottom third, and
juniors in the bottom quarter of
their class. The test scores will
be used as additional criteria for
deferment for these students.

Undergraduates receiving a mark
of 70 and graduate students receiving a mark of 80 on the test
will also be considered for a

student deferment.

Students may register to take
the test on Saturday, May 14,
Saturday, May 21, and Friday,
June 3, at any center convenient
to them listed in the information
bulletin.

The test does not presuppose
any schooling beyond high school
preparation for college for those
who request deferments as college students. Scores on the test
alone will not determine eligibility for deferment; they will be
used by the local Selective Service boards in considering eligibility. Scores are to provide local
boards with evidence of the relative qualifications of registrants
for college study or evidence of
aptitude for continued college
work.
The test may be taken only
once. To avoid the possibility that
any unauthorized persons might
take the test, each applicant will
be fingerprinted when he reports
for the test.

of the resolution proposed by
Councilman Gus Franczyk.
In an interview with the Spectrum, Councilman Franczyk said
that what happens at the University is a reflection on the
governor of the State of New
York and the City of Buffalo.
“The main concern is the use
of state agencies, in light of the
fact that our governor has agreed
with President Johnson’s stand
and thus, anti-war activities are
a subverison of state policy.”
He continued, “the aim of the
resolution is to get a direct answer from both President Gould
and President Furnas as to the
position of their institutions on
this whole matter, to bring to
their attention these facts in case
they don’t already know it, and
to find out if this use is one
which will be allowed, i.e. supported and condoned by both

presidents.”
Although Councilman Franczyk
commented that he doesn’t know
what will be done if the resolution is condoned, he said that
he supposes the State University
President would not allow the
use of state agencies for this,
“because we and he have always
gone in accord with state policy.
Perhaps if something were done
condoning this use, then maybe
we would submit a home rule
message urging Legislature to
way

correct this, in much the
Senator Brydges advises."

Councilman Franczyk concluded, “Don't confuse this with trying to restrict Freedom of
Speech. The case is just to find
out the scope of the use of Public
Relations in all affairs and
throughout the State of New
York."

era) years ago

in a similar dispute
concerning visiting speakers on
state campuses, said the spokesman.
According to Director of Public
Information Robert McVeigh, any
judgments made by the Relations
Department are purely on a news
value basis. He said, “It is the
newspapers which make the final
judgment, not the Public Relations office.”
The Office of Public Relations
of the University Relations Department distributes press releases on university activities to various communications media.

Republican leader Brydges said
that the UB chapter of Students
for a Democratic Society used
the Public Relations Office to
inform press and radio of a weeklong demonstration against U.S.
foreign policy. Local SDS member
Daniel Katz commented that he
had merely handed in the usual
list of the organization's activities
for the week.
Senator Brydges plans to propose his investigation to the new
Joint Legislative Committee on
Higher Education which will be
formed after the State Legislature reconvenes Ajhil 18.

Interim Campus Discussed
At Thurs. Press Conference

Mr. William Doemland, director of the Office of Planning and
Development, discussed plans for
an “interim campus" at a press
conference on Thursday.
Mr. Doemland pointed out that
since, upon completion this summer of the temporary buildings

now under construction, avail-

able space on the present campus will have been exhausted.
Therefore, until the completion
of the new campus, off campus

four criteria were used: location

—proximity to the new campus
site is important; ultimate area
for development—about 300,000
square feet are needed; rent;
ultimate use of facilities—since
the university will be using the
land for only a few years, convertibility of the facilities to other
uses is important.
The site tentatively setled upon
is on Niagara Falls Boulevard
near the Powerline Expressway.
A shopping plaza, which would be

facilities will be developed.
Several departments have alconstructed simultaneously with
ready begun using rented office
the interim campus, has been
space near the university. Enproposed for part of the site.
rollment is being kept fairly
The proposed developers of the
stable until the move to the new
interim campus are the Maret
campus. However, to adequateCorp. of Pittsburgh, Pa. The site
ly provide academic facilities unis within a mile of the new camtil that move about
100,000
pus.
square feet of usable space must
The development of the inbe added each year.
terim campus will be in two
To most efficiently create this
phases. Phase I will be ready for
needed space the Office of Planuse in January 1967: Phase II
ning and Development has evalwill be completed in September
uated three sites near the new of
1967. In addition to the acacampus for use as an “interim
demic buildings, library and
c a m p u s.” Several departments food service
facilities as well
have agreed to move completely as other suport facilities will
onto the interim campus.
be provided.
Those involved are Art, AnthroA public hearing on rezoning
and
pology, Philosophy
Mathelarge portions of the proposed
matics. Although those departplaza site is scheduled for 8
ments will have all office space Monday night before the Amoff campus, most undergraduate herst Town Board,
courses will still be taught on
Mall Plans, being drawn by
this campus. Some other departIhc Los Angeles, Calif,, firm of
ments will move some of their
Victor Gruen Associates, are exfacilities to the new site.
pected to be presented at the
In evaluating the three sites,
meeting.

Holcomb Delivers Second Lecture
In Dialogue On h e Death of God'
“In the modern world there
is a loss of the sense of transcendence,” Dr. Harmon Holcomb
of the Colgate Rochester Divinity
School pointed out at a lecture

Tuesday.

This lecture was the second in
“A Dialogue on the
Death of God," co-sponsored by
the State University at Buffalo
Council of Religious Oragnizations
and the Student Senate Convocations Committee.
The kingdom of Man has arrived, he said, in which Man no
longer has religious needs. “Man
can now solve his own problems.
We create our own meanings, our
own selves. We are free."
Dr. Holcomb pointed out that
Christianity is the source of freeing man so that he may realize
that God is dead. ‘The Christian
today knowingly wills and proclaims the death of God.”
Dr. Holcomb quoted Thomas
Altizer, prominent Death of God
theologian, as sajdng, “The oria series

ginal
sovereign,
transcendent
God truly died in Christ."
“According to Altizer,” he added, “when God emptied Himself
into Christ, it was 100 per cent."
Therefore, there is no God, he
continued; God is dead.”
Dr. Holcomb further pointed
out that both Altizer and William

Hamilton, another of the foremost Death of God theologians,
incorporate within' their writings
a strong "Jesus-ological thrust.”
"For Hamilton,” he
noted,
“Christ is a place to be, and
this place is alongside your neighbor.”
emphasizes
Altizer’s
thrust
Christ as the "Word," as an "alive,

meaningful, passionate moment"
and “an active forward process
which negates it own previous
expression,” Dr. Holcomb said.

The final lecture in this series
will be delivered April 13 at
7 p.m. in the Norton Conference
Theater by Rev. Father Francis
Keating of St. Peter’s College.
Jersey City, New Jersey.

�PAGE TWO

Senator Weltner Proposes
Bill to Lower Voting Age
young people, would

By ELLEN CARDONE
A

Friday, April 8, 1966

SPECTRUM

Constitutional

amendment

to lower the national voting age
to 18 has been introduced in
Congress by Rep. Charles L. Weltner, a Georgia Democrat. In introducing the bill, Rep, Weltner
cited the growing contributions
of young people to the national
welfare and defense, adding, “A
Congress so firmly dedicated to
the principle of voting rights
should now move to extend the
franchise to these young Americans.” He reminded the House
that there are 8 million citizens
between 18 and 20, and that half
the population will soon be under
25.
The amendment would state,
“No citizen of the United States
who is 18 years of age or older
shall be denied the right to vote
by reason of age.” The measure
was introduced last June and is
now before the House Judiciary
Committee. In an interview with
the Spectrum, Rep Weltner admitted that the bill’s chances
now are “not good," but was
optimistic that a stirring-up of
national interest, especially among

enable it

to be passed.

Facing the States’ Rights question that would be raised by the
amendment, Rep. Weltner said
he is “not a big States Righter,”
but said that an amendment
would not raise the same objections as a federal law, since it
would have to be approved by
three-fourths of the state legislatures before going into effect.
Rep. Weltner’s home state of
Georgia, where the voting age
is 18, is one of four states in
which people under 21 can vote.
A bill to lower the voting age
in New York to 18 is now before
the State Legislature.
The U.S. National Student As-

sociation has been active in the
18-Year-Old Vote movement for
several years. At the National
Student Congress last summer,
a special desk to direct publicity
and lobbying was set up.
In his speech to Congress Rep.
Weltner concluded “We have placed upon these Americans the
duties of citizenship. Let us now
extend to them the most basic
right of citizenship.”

Faculty And Grad. Students Form
Committee to Deal With Draft
The newly formed Gradual?
Student-Faculty Committee on the
Selective Service (GFCSS) has af-

firmed: ‘The entire system of
student deferment is discriminatory, creates anti-intellectualism,
and isolates the most articulate
portions of society from the war
. . the student deferment must
be abolished.'’
The committee, which was organized March 31 by several
faculty members and a group of
graduate students, emphasized
that the criteria for the n-S deferment (class rank or results on
the Selective Service Test) are
not a valid measure of a student’s
intellectual capabilities or of his
potential value to society.
The GPCSS stated that the deferment test is discriminatory
because it is geared to the aptitudes most highly developed in
science students, as demonstrated
by statistics obtained from tests
given during the Korean War.
According to the GFCSS report,
students in the “hard” sciences
consistently ranked highest, while
a greater percentage of students
.

in education, agriculture, business, the arts, and the humanities

failed the exam.
The statement, issued by the
GFCSS, declares, “students have

unequal advantages resulting

from different social and economic backgrounds. Some students
have had more experience taking tests and therefore are expected to attain higher scores.
Class standings and test scores
required for deferment at the
end of an academic year, according to the plan suggested by General Hershey, is as follows:
1st year—Upper half or 70%

test score.

2nd year—-Upper two-thirds or
70% test score.
3rd year—Upper three quarters or 70% test score.
4th year—Upper fourth or 80%
test score.
Deferments for the second year
of graduate work and thereafter
are based solely on the test scores.
The GPCSS has also questioned
the whole concept of student deferment. “Since the probability
of an individual attending college
is greatly dependent on various
factors, i.e.—his financial status,
socio-economic background, etc.,
student deferment permits members of certain “classes” only to
avoid military service. Not only

is this undemocratic and unworthy of the theoretical American
tradition, but it is also resented
by many members of the nonacademic community, resulting in
increased anti-intellectualism. Sectors of the American population
who are the most politically influential in our society, the middle
and upper classes, may remain
aloof from the calamity of war.”
The committee also expressed
concern with the relationship between the University and the
Selective Service System, affirming “the military, through the
Selective Service System, is undermining the autonomy of the
University by establishing for the
University the definitive qualities
for intellectualism and intellectuals, using the coercive device
of the n-S deferment.
“D u e to excessive pressures,
many students are encouraged to
conform academically, to cheat,
and to plariagize. Fear of low

grades discourages experimentation in course work and selection.
In these instances, the Selective
Service System is destroying the
idea of the University.”
The Committee invites all faculty and graduate students to its
next meeting Thursday, April 14,

at 7:30 p.m. in Norton Union,
Room 240 to 248.

Election of Delegates &amp; Alternates
For NSA National Student Congress
Election of four delegates and
up to six alternates to the National Student Congress of the
National Sudent Association will
be held Wednesday, April 25.
Names of candidates must be submitted to Mrs. Palisano in the
Senate Office before Friday,
April 15. All full-time undergraduate, graduate, and professional
students are eligible.
The annual National Student
Congress will be held August 20
to September 1 at the University of Illinois. Two of the six
delegates will be Student Association President Clinton Deveaux
and NSA Coordinator Jeffrey Lynford.
According to Mr. Deveaux, student problems on the national
and international levels will be
discussed at the Congress.
In 1947, approximately 50 colleges formed the National Student Association. The University
of Buffalo joined the NSA in

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1948. Mr. Deveaux said that ap-

proximately 300 schools belong
to the NSA today.

Mr. Deveaux commented that
do not join the
they regard it
NSA because
as being too liberal and because
it takes stands on may issues.”
He added, “on many campuses
there is a running battle between
the Young Americans for Freedom and NSA.”
many schools

“

Students Needed for Tutoring
The Community Action Organization, an arm of the Federal
Anti-Poverty Program, is currently conducting a program of High
School Equivalency Diploma instruction for adults.
The system of instruction has
been set up by the community
itself and Federal aid will help
meet the costs of administration.
As of now there is a need for
instructors.

�&gt;

Friday, April

«,

1966

Nina Simone and The Tokens'
Scheduled for Spring Weekend
Nina Simone and “The Tokens”

are scheuled to appear in a concert during Spring Weekend,
April 28
May 1. Committee
Chairman Diane Levy has announced that a stunt night, a
semi-formal dance, and Olympic
competitions are also planned
for the weekend.
■

The schedule of events is as
follows:

Thursday, April 28:
Concert by the Laurentian
singers from St. Lawrence
University (no admission)
Stunt Night in Clark Gym; ad-

mission $.25

Friday, April 29:

All classes cancelled
Heralding parade
Spring Olympics; Grand Prix
Trike Race sponsored by
Theta Chi Fraternity
Semj
formal dance at the
Hearthstone Manor in Cheek-

NSA Announces
Addition of New
Discount System
The National Student Association (NSA) Student Discount
Service Committee has announced that NSA American Student
Discount Cards will be printed
on the back of 1966-67 student
ID cards to insure discounts at
NSA affiliated hotels, restaurants,
theaters, and merchants. Committee Chairman Martin Feinrider said that this is the first
time that NSA discount cards
have 'been included free with
ID cards’.
“The success of a discount system,” Feinrider added, “depends
on how widely it is used. We
hope that since every student
will have a discount card, he
will make use of it at home and
traveling.”

towaga; tickets at $3.00 per

couple on sale April 11

Saturday, April 30:
Concert featuring Nina Simone and “The Tokens” in
Clark Gym; admission $1.50
Trophies and awards presented at concert
Sunday, May 1:
Lawn concert presented by UB
band

Fireworks

display

by

Hall

Tower

NSA Coordinator Jeff Lynford
commented, “I hope the students
of the university will appreciate
not only the value of the discount
system, but also all the other
services of the NSA Committee.”

New H&gt; cards will be issued by
the beginning of the fall semester, assured Mr. Feinrider.

Applications Available For Election
Of University Union Activities Board
The recently formed University
Union Activities
Board
(UUAB), formerly the Union
Board, will be holding elections
on Tuesday, April 19, for Executive Board positions, the six
officers of UUAB and the committee chairmen.
No previous membership on
any committee of Union Board
is required to run for the positions. Candidates for the Executive Board must be full-time students. Officers—president, three
vice-presidents, secretary
and
treasurer, must have achieved a
1,0 average the previous semester and maintained a 1.3 cumulative average.
Applications for the positions
will be available through Thursday, April 14, at the candy counter or in the Union Board office,
room 215 Norton. All applications are to 'be returned to the
Union Board office by April 14.
The President of UUAB presides at all board and executive

which are called at UUAB. The Treasurer, a chairmen
least twice a month. He is an of the Finance Committee, preex-officio member of all UUAB pares and administers the budcommittees and serves as the get. He also audits the accounts
Board representative on the Stuof all committees.
dent Association Board.
The new Leadership CommitThe first Vice-President, as tee is an advisory committee to
chairman of the Public Affairs promote student participation on
Council, is responsible for the all existing UUAB committees
coordination of all committees and provide training for present
on the Council and supervises members in social responsibility
the evaluation of all chairmen and leadership. Applications for
and committees on the Council. membership on the Leadership
He also assumes the responsiCommittee are available at the
bilities of the presidency in the candy counter next week.
President’s absence. The second
The following committee chairVice-President as chairman of the manships are available:
Arts Council coordinates and evalPublic Relations Chairman—uates all chairmen and commitcommunicates the purpose and
tees on the Council. The Third program scope of the UUAB
Vice-President as chairman of through various community medthe Activities Council coordinates ia; promotes a favorable image
and evaluates all chairmen and of the University student, procommittees on the Council.
vides for faculty-student interacThe secretary is in charge of tion.
Community Aid Corps Chairthe secretariat and is responsible for the minutes, correspondman—establishes and maintains
ence, and all records of the a central file of all community
service projects to provide practical educational experiences in
the outside community for the
University student.
Publicity Chairman—assists all
UUAB committees in promoting
their activities and services to
the University Community.
Recreation Chairman—sees that
diverse recreational opportunities
better to be given a third semesare available for students and
ter in the college, but generally
promotes the use of Union faciliit must be in a new program or ties.
major. Students should discuss
Arts and Crafts Chairman—enthese possibilities with their adcourages interest and participavisor.
tion of students in the Craft
Sophomores
meetings

Probation And Dismissal Statement
As Published By University College
University College has published a statement defining school
policy regarding probation and
dismissal;

Mr. Feinrider said that production has been stopped on ID
cards and pictures will not be
taken until further notice. He
said that this temporary delay
is necessary to incorporate the
new discount card. Green IBM
cards
issued
at registration
should be retained by students
until production continues.

Good standing is defined as
a minimum of a 1.0 or “C” ave-

rage, Dr. Milton Plesur of University College assured that each
student’s case is evaluated individually by his advisor. For
this reason, according to Dr.
Plesur, it will be a few weeks
after the close of the last examination before the College has
had the opportunity to examine
student records. “This time lag
is necessary to insure that each
student will be treated as an
individual.”
Probation and Warning
Students whose quality point
averages are below 1.0 receive
a warning classification. Students
with less that a .7 in their first
semester are placed on academic
probation.
While a student is on probation he may not represent the

The Graduate Student Association of S.U.N.Y
Invites

PAM THRU

SPECTRUM

All Graduate Students to

The Annual Graduate Student

j

of the present semester.”
Freshmen

Official University College procedure: In general, freshmen who
are on Probation or who are
warned must noticably decrease
their overall quality point deficiency in order to remain in
school. If a freshman is dismissed in June, he may be allowed to return to the University on
a strict probation basis after one
or more academic years have
elapsed. Attendance at another
University is not generally advised. Summer session attendance
is possible but a “furlough” will
still be required. Success at any
institution of higher learning depends largely on objectives and
motivation
It may be possible for a student who is improving but whose
overall average is still not 1.0 or

Sophomores in University College cannot be given the option
of the “furlough” since they must
have the requisite average (normally 1,0) by the end of their
sophomore year in order to be
promoted to a senior division.
In some cases, these students can
also qualify for an Associate degree and

in selected instances
will be given the option of a
fifth semester in which to earn
that degree. Usually, sophomores
whose averages are deficient will
be dismissed. Fifth semesters are
offered only to those earning the
Associate Degree or those steadily improving in a new program.
Students on Strict Probation
as a result of first semester
grades who received a special
notice cannot advance register
until second semester grades are
evaluated. However, all students
should plan a program with their
advisor.

Canadian-Amer. Exchange Program

picnic

Canadian - American

Spouses, Kids, Stags and Dates of
GSA invited Rain or Snow or Shine

APRIL
SUNDAY
I RM.

)

University at any public function, he may not participate in
organized student activities, and
he is required to attend each
meeting of each class for which
he is registered. “If there is not
a reduction in the quality point
deficiency, the College will dismiss such students at the close

24

Tickets Available
in 311 Norton Hall

relations

were discussed and suggestions
for establishing a Canadian-American exchange program were
made at the Intercollegiate Conference on Canadian American
Relations at Michigan State University last weekend.
Ivan Luczkiw, an undergraduate in the department of political
science represented UB at the
-

conference, Mr. Luczkiw reported

that two Canadian Parliament
members, New York Congressman Horton, and Republican Party advisor Dr. Douglas Bailey also attended.
Emphasizing the lack of understanding between Americans and
Canadians, Mr. Luczkiw suggested that a course in Canadian political science be offered by UB.

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Film Chairman—promotes appreciation in, and opportunity for
the University community to view
works of art.
encourages
Music Chairman
interest in and opportunity for
the University community to listen to various types of music;
also promotes the use of the
Music Room.
—

Literature and Drama Chairman—encourages exposure of the

University community to various

types of literature and drama and
promotes the use of the Browsing Library.

ATTENTION
WOMEN
GRADUATES
The
UNIVERSITY
OF
ROCHESTER
ROCHESTER, NEW YORK

We will be interviewing
at SUNY at Buffalo on
April 14 for a variety of
non teaching
positions.
Among the fine benefits
-

is a liberal tuition reduction plan which enables
full-time employees to
continue their education.
For further details contact

.

.

.

PLACEMENT OFFICE

TF 7-6120
Tickets Also Available at Norton Union Tickat Office

WATCH FOR PAISA NO'S SPECTRUM SPECIAL EACH WEEK

SUNY AT BUFFALO
Schoallkopf Hall

�Friday, April 8, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACE FOUR

Editorial Comment

•

•

•

FEINBERG FUNDS
For the past week students and faculty have been
contributing to the Academic Freedom Fund administered
by an ad hoc committee of the AAUP. These funds are
earmarked for the effort to bring the “Feinberg cases”
at this University before the Supreme Court in hopes of
striking down the law which deprived this campus of
several fine teachers, and which subjected many others
to indignities and harrassments. The Feinberg law is a
violation of the principles of academic freedom and respectable discourse. The money to fight this abomination which robs each of us, not only of dignity, but of a
good education as well, comes from the academic community. The Spectrum urges everyone to give all he can
spare, and then to think carefully whether he can spare
a little more.
A VICTORY
The seven month strike in Delano, California, to gain
a living wage for the agricultural workers in the grape
industry won a major victory last Wednesday when
Schenley, the major grower in the Delano area, finally
agreed to recognize the striking National Farm Workers
Association, and agreed to negotiate working conditions
which, in the words of one of the strike organizers, “Have
remained unchanged since the writing of John Steinbeck’s
The Grapes of Wrath. The battle for decent working
conditions and wages has yet to be won at the bargaining
tables, but the capitulation by Schenley will hopefully
end the reign of brutality, terror, and starvation—the
weapons used by the growers to break the strike for the
last seven months.
Woody Guthrie, (who, by the way, is respectable
now, since the government just named a power station
after him) once said, “There are many kinds of men.
Some rob you with a shotgun, and some with a fountain
pen.” The Delano strikers have defeated the shotguns;
now they will have to fight more quietly and more cleverly to defeat the “other kind of robber.”
MORE INVESTIGATIONS
Another chapter in the “Town and Gown” controversy was written this week in City Hall. After years
of ignoring the University, City Hall decided that the
University was an “integral part” of the community and
decided to emphasize this Mttle known fact by calling
for an investigation of protest activities at this campus.
Following quickly (and obediently?) on the heels of
Senator Brydges’ announcement that he was calling for
similar investigations, the bill calling for the investigations seems to emphasize the fact that the very concept
of intellectually free education is in jeopardy. “War
fever”, authoritarian concepts of “education”, and the
hysteria which grips tin-pot politicians prior to elections
are coalescing to reduce this University to an expensive,
second-rate factory.
We shell resist all attempts to cheat us of a meaningful education, whether they stem from City Hall, Albany,
or eren beyond.

oCetterA

to

Will Hoase Library
Catalogue Facilities

A university newspaper has a
variety of functions to perform.
Some functions should be given
more coverage than others. The
editor must use his discretion to
aid in proper news coverage of
all events concerning a university’s students. However, the editor must take into account the
preferences of the majority of
students.
People outside the university
tend to generalize as to the attitudes of SUNYAB students according to the implications of the
artciles in the Spectrum. It is
possible that at the present time,
Spectrum coverage does not accurately reflect majority student
opinion on this campus. As a mat-

By BARBARA CONICLIO

This is Mm first in a series of
articles on tbe library. Generally it covers Mm problems of the
library and possible solutions.

In tbe years since tbe state
take-over of tbe University, the
library has experienced the influx of change. A library designed for 2,000 students now has to
accommodate 16,000. The results
have been, a salient lack of student and staff facilities. Many
students must go elsewhere to
study by 8:30 a.m. desks for tbe
staff have been moved into the
main reading room. Hie hallways
are often crowded with requisition assignments. Tbe ready exchange of books and periodicals
has been hampered because of
a deficit of space.
To partially offset this problem, temporary buildings are being assembled near the main
library. They will be ready for
occupancy this Fall. These new
quarters will accommodate the
Technical Services such as cataloguing and acquisition of books.
Hie periodicals now housed in
the lower level of Lockwood will
be transferred to the buildings,
thus providing additional slack
space. (Facilities for ona hundred
tlxty-fiva (165) students era under
construction.) Provisions for a
Science Library are also included
in the plans. Hie vacated space
in Lockwood will facilitate the
expansion of the Microfilm and
Documents Department.
Spokesmen for the University
Library Association
felt that
numerous problems could be solved by increased student and faculty co-operation. The students
and the faculty have the obligation to return overdue books and
to report books which are missing from the stacks. In a few
cases conduct in the library has
marred the campus image. Such
responsibility allows for the
smooth operation of the library
and the enhancement of its primary purpose of service for re
search and course study.

the Editor

ter of fact, we think that the
Spectrum is overbalanced in its
coverage of political activities on
campus and elsewhere.

May we suggest that, in addition to covering political issues,
you or your predecessor undertake to give greater coverage to
other university functions and
activities. This coverage might
include, for example, the University Placement Service, the
advisement procedure, counseling services, important research
in all departments, Norton Services, significant social functions,
the Library System, the Intramural and Varsity Athletic programs, New Campus developments, and profiles of student
leaders, to mention a few.

In order to determine the type
of coverage that the majority
of SUNYAB students wish for
their newspaper, it might be feasible to survey a signifciant sample of the student body. We are
sure that the results of such a
survey would help you immeasurably in planning the type and
substance of Spectrum articles.
It is possbile that if Spectrum
coverage
accurately
reflected
the attitudes and opinions of
the majority of SUNYAB students, the popularity of the Spectrum inside and outside the university would be enhanced.
We would very much appreciate

your printing of this letter.
Donald L, Mingle

J. J. Katz

The occurrence described in
the editorial concerning the
peace march was, of course, deplorable; however, it must be
noted that individuals outside of
the academic community too frequently demonstrate little tolerance or sensitivity for vital issues of the country. The split
between the left-oriented college
student and the average citizen
can only grow wider as the war
in Vietnam is escalated. I place

—

In major respects, however,
there has been no improvement.
Practically, parents leave their
young out on a limb with their
“freedom;” they are permissive
and even sentimentally approving of sexuality, but they do
not provide space, moral support, or practical information.
Police law is as barbarous as
ever, despite the fact that moral
legislation, with regard to sexual
matters like marriage and divorce, abortion, statutory rape,
or homosexuality (just as with
regard to gambling, alcohol, or
drugs) invariably does more harm
than good. And the school systems persist, as they did in my
childhood, in the fiction that sexuality simply does not exist.
Attitude of tha Schools it
the Worst
At present, in my opinion, the
attitude of the schools does the
worst damage. In the first place,
there is a terrible waste of opportunity
as is true, of course,
also with the rest of the schooling. At the elementary level, it
would be a great thing if the
wasted physical training would
include psychosomatic exercises
and eurhhythmics to unblock and
harmonize the anger, grief, and
sexuality that the dammed up
in the average child; but this is
impermissible because of the
school board, the mayor, the
church, and the yellow press.
High school and college would in
principle be ideal environments
for exploration in the risky field
of sex, under the protection of
benevolent teachers; but that
—

THE

—

will be the day! 1 have even found
it impossible to get a college
to adopt a course of group psychotherapy for seniors, so that
they can gain some

awareness

of themselves and one another
before they graduate, to marry
or not marry, to choose careers,

to vote.

But the worst damage is done
by the school’s denial of the
existence of sex, for this creates

a schizophrenic unreality. Since
sex does exist, for the children,

the schools become in so far unreal environments; there is no
doubt that this is a chief cause
of inattention and dropout. More
important, since the school is
overwhelmingly the unique public and official environment of
the young, children and adolescents begin to take their sexuality itself as not quite real,
for a chief property of reality
is to be publicly expressible and
to affect and be affected by other realities.
For Mio Young;
Timidity, Conformity

The consequences are evident
in the quality of American life
and the sexuality that is part and
parcel of it. For the young, sex
exists only in their own peergroup; it is therefore ignorant
and insulated. It must not interfere with homework, nor can it
energize writing, art, sport, career, or any other cultural pursuit. But as part of the youth
divorced
f'fsubHculiture,”
from
community or grownup meaning,
it necessarily becomes stereotyped. False privacy results in
timidity and conformity, and
prevents true solitude and individuality. Instead
of each
youngster developing according
to his own disposition, situation, and luck, and eventually
learning to cope with the demands of society, all are forced
into conformity to an uncultured
and jejune peer-group.
Conversely, insulated from the
rest of life and yet obviously tremendously important, sexuality

'becomes a glamorous big deal.
As Freud pointed out, sexuality
is co-equal among half a dozen
other major human functions,
like knowing, making a living,
art, citizenship, God, being a
parent, to all of which it contributes a color and value. But if
it is either inhibited or isolated,
it becomes destructive or trivial;
it is over-rated or it vanishes.

SPECTRUM

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo, N. Y. 14214.
Published twice weekly from the first week of September to the last week In
May, except for exam periods, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and spring vacations.
Editor-In-Chief

JEREMY TAYLOR

Business Manager
News Editor
Peter

RAYMOND D.

VOLPE

SUSAN GREENE

Assistant
ALICE EDELMAN
Angelina, Joanne Bouchier, Russell Buchman, Karen Green,
Lederman, Joan Roberts, Rick Schwab, Dan Schroeder, Sharon Shulman,

Eileen Teltler, Nancy Toder, Patti Wartley, Judy Weisberg.
Feature Editor
JOHN STINY
Assistant
JO ANNE LEEGANT
—Bonnie Bartow, Ron Ellsworth, Barbara Ann Fitzsimmons, Barbara Loeb,
Audrey Logel, Bob Martin, Suzanne Rovner, Martha Tack, William Weinstein.
Sport* Editor
STEVE SCHUELEIN
—Mike Castro. Mike Dolan. Steve Farbman, Bob Frey. Scott Forman.
J.
B. Sharcot.

Layout Editor
SHARON HONIG
Stephanie Parker, Steve Silverman.

Staff—Joanne Bouchier,

Copy Editor
LAUREN JACOBS
Staff —Carol Becker, Estelle Fox, Jocelyn Hallpern, Sandy Llppman, Betsy Orer,
Claire Sholtenfeld, Susan Zuckerberg.
Advertising Manager
RON HOLTZ
Staff —Terry Angelo. Audrey Cash, Pat Rosenfeld, Steve Silverman, Joseph

Student-Citizen Dichotomy Analyzed
TO THE EDITOR:

Since my own youth
I was
born in 1911
there has been
important progress toward freedom, naturalness, and honesty
in sexual matters. In child care,
as taught by 'Dr. Spock or the Department of Labor manual, there
is a widespread relaxation of
toilet training and a reasonable
tolerance of masturbation. There
has been a remarkable liberation
from censorship of so-called pornography, so that it is now almost
possible to write plain English
about most human problems. Information about contraception
and venereal diseases has become publicly available and useable. Psychology, whatever its
merits or demerits, has squelched
a lot of superstition. And by and
large, religion has let up on hellfire.
—

Spectrum Coverage Doesn't Reflect Majority
TO THE EDITOR:

Cjoodman

Manclnl.

the blame chiefly, although not
entirely, upon the citizen, who
may be so involved in his pursuit of financial security that
nothing else enters his mind.
On the other hand, the college

student who views the world
from a so-called “ivory-tower”
is also guilty of intolerance. I
do not proffer a solution to this
problem, since the nature of society is such that it scorns any
worthwhile deviation from the
"norm.” I do feel that the peace
march incident may have been

merely an isolated one, but it
frightens me to realize that not
only Buffalo, but all other major

cities have had similar incidents.

Not until everyone in the country (including the politicians)
realizes that killing is not a game,
that self-determination is a sacred freedom, that unprovoked
acts of violence belie ignorance
rather than patriotism
not
until then will this country be
worthy of its present status as
a world leader
Dainel M. Nussbaum
—

.

Photography

Staff—Don Blank.

Editor

Peter Bonneau,

Marc Levina, Ivan Makuch,
Robert Wynne.

EDWARD JOSCELYN

Joseph Feyes, Carol Good son. Alan Gruber.
Anthony Walluk. Susan Wortman.

Michael Solurl,

Circulation Manager
Advisor
Financial Advisor
Faculty

DIANE LEWIS
IRENE WILLET
DALLAS GARBER

EDITORIAL POLICY IS DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING
Second

Class Postage

Subscription

15,000.

$3.00

Paid at Buffalo, N. Y.
per

year,

circulation

Represented
for national advertising by
National Advertising Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New Yorti. N. Y.

�Friday, April

The

•,

1966

grump

On Saturday last—in case you
had forgotten by now —the sun
was shining for a least a while.
In honor of this rare occasion
the spouse and myself decided we
should go out and live a bit.
Having so decided we went to
a service station so as to have
the muffler tightened so it
wouldn't sound like an angry
Tryanasoreass Rex going across
the peace bridge. &lt;1 didn’t have
the heart to capitalize it—will I
now be investigated by Earl
Brydges of the SDS?)
After a while—spent sitting in
the car reading the Buffalo Evening Newt, (which is really funnier—the editorial page or the
funnies?), and watching the mechanic divide his time in what
appeared to be a 50:1 ratio between pumping gas and trying to
repair our vehicle—the muffler
no longer roared. It just banged
on the bottom of the car every
time you started out or pulled
out in low. But you can’t have
everything and there is no law
against mufflers which bang, just
those that roar, right?
So we swoop over the peace
bridge through Fort Erie and up
to Toronto. Oh hell yes! Ever
try to swoop through Fort Erie
on the opening day of Fort Erie
Race Track and Money Machine?
It just don’t happen. Some two
hours after crossing the peace
bridge we finally found a parking
spot, and then had to go beck
and get the map so we could find
the car when that traumatic
moment came around.
So we get over onto Yonge
Street and time for the first
compromise of the day arrives.
There are two restaurants in
Toronto we have been drooling
over for some time. The menu of
the Viking is of greatest interest
to me while my wife has been
fascinated by the India House.
Wifely-wifely has—up to last
Saturday, mind you—been running around trying to find recipies for curry in various and
sundry cook books. Being impressionable I assume she knows
something about curries and I
agree that we will eat first at
the India House and have a late
snack at the Viking.
We
and sit down and
I start to worry. The waitress
is an Anglo-Saxon, which gave
brief substance to the hope this
was an Indian restaurant for
North Americans, however both
of the women in the establishment are dressed in saris and the
manager looks like he quit a
Churkh Unit of the British Army
to play professional football.
The crowning blow comes when

-

Friday

Forum: Department of History, 9 to 11:30 and 2 to 4:30,
Conference Theatre
Theatre: The Little Foxes (Lillian Heilman), Studio Arena Theatre, thru Saturday
Theatre: Act Without Words
No. 2 (Samuel Beckett) and The
Blind Men (Ghelderode), The
Workshop Theatre, 8:30 p.m.,
March 8 to 24
Officers
Photography Club;
elections, Norton 332, 4 p.m.
Saturday

Art Exhibit: Foster Hall, Third
Floor, All day
Manuscript*: William Hazlitt,
Lockwood Library
Observation Night: UB Amateur Astronomers, Hockstetter
114, 8 p.m.
Sunday

oCetterA

by STEESE

the menu arrives and my ever
loving blue eyed curry-smitten
spouse is forced to admit she
doesn’t know that much more
about 'Indian food than I do. I
know a little more now than I
did then. Primarily it is quite
warm, spice wise. I recommend
the restaurant to all but if you
flush, perspire, and have a
stomach which refuses to have
anything to do with digesting
food after you oat it when it is
Very highly spiced, as guess who
does?, I would recommend rather
vehemently that you do a very
cautious approach to the whole
manner.

to

the Editor

EDITOR’S NOTE: Since there still appears to be some confusion about the policy governing the “Letters
to the Editor/’ here are the three criteria which are applied to this section of the paper. (1) All letters
must be signed; names will be withheld upon request, but they must be affixed to the original copy.
(2) Letters should be limited to one typewritten sheet; we will consider longer letters, but we reserve
the prerogative to edit them to site. (3) We will not print letters which violate the libel and pornography laws.

Anti-Communists Concerned With Extremism
TO THE EDITOR:

As anti-Conununists at the UB

campus, we were very disturbed

by the alleged anti-Semitism and
violence against SDS, as reported
by the Spectrum. If these events
did occur as reported, we wish
to express our strongest condem-

As a matter of fact I noted
that for both myself and my wife nation of them and any other
the water glass was the most form of extremism which resorts
to violence or attacks people on
popular item. Interesting to me
the basis of their race or religion.
was the fact that my wife—she
likes curry, remember?—was havAt the same time, we are coning a more serious digestion
problem than I. Seems that this cerned with another type of exbatch of curry was somewhat tremism, which is not even menspicier that the last. She seems
less sure she likes curry now.
She decided a beer might help
wash some of the offending
material out, but she also wanted
an Alka-Seltzer. So, and you TO THE EDITOR;
really must 'believe this, she
dropped an alka-seltzer tablet
On Saturday, April 2nd, a numin her glass of beer. H she were ber of concerned citizens, the
normal would she have married nucleus of which came from the
me? We crept quietly away and
three local chapters of Young
left it sort of foaming all over Americans for Freedom and a
the table. Had a great head but group known as American Tacticit tasted terrible.
al Assault Against Communism,
We wandered through Yorkoutdid US’s famous war protestmy wife says it is too
ville
ors at the picketing game in
clean
listened to Judy Rodowntown Lafayette Square. In
derick at the New Gate of Cleve
the process, the pro-Vietnam pickhopefully a review found else
ets engaged in chanting and singwhere in this issue
and through ing, a la the Left, interspersed
the grounds of the University with spontaneous and unpromptof Toronto. I think a tour of the ed shouts directed at the war
U of T should be a requisite for protestors across the street. Not
those who are allowed to design once, however, did anyone in our
the various and sundry clapdemonstration shout, chant, or
boards that go up on campus.
sing anything derogatory of the
We did make one other minor
error. Tossed a peanut to a black
squirrel in Queens Park and we
Issue
April
were lucky to escape with our
lives from the horde of tree rats
and pigeons which promptly deTO THE EDITOR
scended.
I would like to congratulate the
When we came back over the Spectrum staff on the extremely
peace bridge from Fort Erie I humorous and satirical April 1
knew we were home. The cusedition. It was generally well
toms man sort of looked at my accepted and very apropos. Howthis ever, as in most previous editions,
beard and at his watch
was on the American Side of there was a glaring lack of recogand began muttering nition of the Greeks and the
course
to himself. He was the only gate Greek System.
open and I suspect he did not
The Greeks would greatly apwant to wake up the chief inspector because he let us go
through. Or perhaps he simply
assumed anyone who looked as
JAMES CALLAN
guilty of something as I did had
to be innocent.

tioned by, let alone condemned
in, the Spectrum—that is Far
Left-Wing Extremism. How many
people, we wonder, are aware of
the fact that the “Spirit and
Sword” magazine, whose staff
marched with SDS, is Communist? Or that the President of
Youth Against War And Fascism,
which marched with SDS, is a
Communist? Or that SDS itself
even accepts Communists as

antly hypocritical for any organization, claiming to support “democracy”, to work hand-in-hand

with those whose avowed purpose
is the destruction of all our liberties. We have made our position clear
we repudiate antidemocratic extremism of both the
left and the right, both Fascism
and Communism. We suggest that
SDS and the Spectrum do the
—

same.

members?
Steve Sickler
Frank
Dr. Marvin Zimmerman
Donald Rich

While we do not deny the right
of a person to hold any belief
he wishes to, we consider it blat-

Counter Picket Misrepresented

—

—

—

—

Fools

—

—

Jewish race or religion, as the
April 5th edition of the Spactrum
reported Mr. Rick Salter to have
alleged. The distance separating
the two demonstrations was only
about forty feet and our demonstrators were especially clear in
their articulation, so we cannot
believe that Mr. Salter misunderstood anything we said. We can
only take his allegation as a
smear, whose only purpose can

be to discredit the adherents to
our national policy of commitment to freedom, We’ve seen this
tactic used before. The Left, it
sems, will stop at nothing to
poison the public’s minds with
its ideas of acquiesence and appeasement. It is laughable that
Mr. Salter would even expect

Modem Dance Workshop: Clark
Gym, 7 p.m.
Play: Students for a Democratic Society, 4 to 6 p.m., Norton
234
Lecture; “The New University
Campus,” Dr. A. Westley Rowland, Sheraton Hotel, 12:30 p.m.
Tuesday

There’s been a lot of talk lateliberalizing the birth
control, divorce, and abortion
laws. The first two perturb me
not at all, but the last strikes
me as no less an offense against
justice than liberalizing the murder laws.
ly about

—

.

will
admis-

We would, therefore, appreciate it if the Spectrum would
print this letter so as to give as

much space to our report of what
we said as it did to Mr. Salter’s
opinion of what we said.
Bob Witnauer
Dave Eastman
Marriane Pemick
Kathy Love joy
Rollin Flower
Jerry Wallace
Jill Davis
Mrs. Carol Bleecher
Ellen Canteline

predate comments on their system, conduct, and nature no matter how satirical or critical it
may be. But, the great and just
grienvance of the Greeks is that
the implicit editorial policy of
the paper is to completely ignore
the more than eight hundred
members of fraternal organiza-

Spectrum staff again that the
Greeks are among the most active, well-meaning and educational undergraduate institutions that
exist and it is unfair and destructive to the University and to the
Greeks if the Spectrum chooses
to ignore their existence any
longer.

tions that exist.
I should like to remind the

—Anthony Lawrence

the right
feet. I submit that a much more
effident method than abortion
would be to wait for birth and
see. If fears do not materialize,
a life has been saved. If in fact
there is a deformity, let the
mother take a knife and do what
she was so willing to do beforewas
hand. What’s the matter
it easier when there was a
stomach wall protecting the victim from your sight? (Or is it
the other way around?)

will of his masters, his parents.
To sum up, if aibortion is ever
moral then it is always moral. I
submit that manifest evidence
shows that abortion is not always
moral, and hence is not ever
moral.
"

—

On the law books, murder refers to the willful killing of a
man who has been born, while
abortion differs only in that the
victim has not yet reached that
Class
CounMeeting: Freshman
stage of development. The wide
p.m.,
6
6to
234
7:30
Norton
cil,
between the two in
distinction
Dance
Club,
Meeting: Modern
social and legal mores is not
Clark Gym, 3 to 4 p.m.
justified by the unimportant distinction between the born and
Lecture: School of Social Welthe unborn baby. Unimportant
fare Association, 11:30 a m., Norfrom the point of view of the
ton 233
humanity of the child, that is:
his capacity for reason, his personality, his semblance to adults
Two films sponsored
—all those things which make
by the Union Board Film
are
him distinctively human
Committee, “You Can’t
no more apparent after birth
take It With You” and
than before. And yet it is this
“Mr. Deeds Goes to feeling that the fetus is someTown” will be shown
how not human that is used to
justify abortion.
in 147
■re

such a charge to be believed. We
could not care less how many
of these peaceniks are Jewish.
We care only that they aid the
spread of Communism.

Commended—Lack of Coverage Noted

.

Weekly Calendar
April 8-12

PAG! PIV*

SPECTRUM

ft is said that abortion is justi-

fiable when there is grave danger
that the child will be born with
a serious VhontoaT or mental de-

Other justifications, ranging
from concern for the life of the
mother to desire to control the
size of the family, flow profusely from those who would
liberalize the laws. What strikes
me as interesting is that everybody seems to have his pet justification
his pet circumstance
when abortion should be allowed
while at no other time. My reasoning follows: If the killing of
an innocent fetus is justified in
one case, then it is not always
wrong. If killing an innocent
human being is always wrong but
killing an innocent fetus is not,
then the fetus must be something less than human. If lesser
beings are ta.be.d&lt;Jf(U. w &gt;l h by
mu as he sees fit, than the unborn Infant may be killed at the

—

TRIVIA

—

The Skanks will play
Alpha Epsilon Pi on
WKBW-TV April 18 in
a Trivia Tournament to
be taped April 15 at
WKBW at 8:00. Free
tickets for the taping
may be obtained at the
box office starting today.

—

PARKING

REQUEST

Students and faculty
members are requested
by the Veterans’ Administration Hospital to refrain from parking in
hospital parking facili-

ties.

•

�Friday, April 8, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

IFllILlSCio $iii Gherman

A REVIEW

•

STCESE

&lt;*

•

•

son like not having

a

car

you

Folk
A Patch of Blue, the soap-opera disguised as art now dead. Apparently some people
Niagara
on
the
new
theatre
out
playing at the Cinema I,
just have not gotten the word
Falls Boulevard, features Sidney Poitier playing Sidney yet. Io,..Toronto —which is probPoitier, Shelly Winters playing Shelly Winters, and a ably too great a distance to drive
new Hollywood acquisition, Elizabeth Hartman, who is for those who consider the Kingdistinguished by having the most trembling lower lip ston Trio and Peter, Paul, and
epitome of folk art
ever seen on a wide screen. She can’t act very well (so Mary as the
exist several decent
there
award),
academy
an
nominated
for
naturally she gets
places to hear folk music in varbut she pouts beautifully, not only in A Patch of Blue, ious guises.
but also in The Group, now playing at the Amherst
across from campus. The former film is emptional garThe one which would probably
bage (luckily some of the dialogue was drowned out by interest anyone who really thinks
the sniffles of the audience during the tear-jerking folk music is still alive is the
New Gate of Cleve. Over the last
scenes), the latter is intellectual garbage.

(Brown to Ybu”, “Buddy Can
You Spare a Dime,” “Mistreated,” “Things About Goin’ My
Way,” “Chaffeur,” and “Sportin’
Life.”

Judy Roderick is a not too
tall, rather attractive blonde
young woman who sings blues,
and in my opinion sings them
very well. The voice is not classic
blues perhaps but the feeling
and interpretation of a wide
range of material are very, very

Both she and the Gate of
Cleve (New type) are worthy of
some support. But if you can’t
drive that far for some silly rea-

good.

With Audience Participation

Music is supposed to be

—

two or three months such as
Eric Anderson, Phil Ochs, and
now Judy Roderick have worked
this rather small and intimate
club'.

And it is a wide range of material she does but it is all blues,
and perhaps this is what makes
one aware of the talent he is
watching. When Miss Roderick
says it is blues it is very difficult
to argue with her. Because it is
when she is through it. No forcing mind you. She does not
squeeze her material into a blues
vein. You just wonder why the
hell you never heard in that
song what is so obviously there

Winters
“A Patch of Bloo" itarrlng Sidney Pettier and Shelley

The Group, however, is redeemed somewhat by solid
acting performances by most of the cast, especially
Robert Emhardt and Candice Bergen. Undoubtedly, much
of the credit for the acting should go to Sidney Lumet,
the director, whose strongest point as evidenced in all
his films so far (The Hill was a masterpiece) is his ability to get maximum performance from his actors. Also,
Lumet, more than any other American director today,
has the uncanny ability to evoke great tension by his use
of the close-up shot.

Unfortunately, Lumet’s personal vision is absent
from the film by and large
he was working within
large studio production values and was merely hired as
the director. It is not “his” film. One can only hope that
the salary he received directing The Group will allow
him the artistic freedom in the future to make another
film as fine as The Hill.
—

The two greatest failings of the film are (1) the
social issue (the 30’s in America) which underpins the
structure of the film is rendered in a superficial manner;
and (2) the psychological issue (latent lesbianism) which
underpins the content of the film is probed in the same
superficial way. What the film does render in a manner
which is not superficial is an issue which is superficial in
the context of the theme and passe in the context of contemporary society
namely, the "sexual revolution.”
At the end of the film, one wants to say: “Well, if that’s
the way Mary McCarthy and her Vassar friends were
really like, how intolerably boorish and silly they are
were.” Both Miss McCarthy and the producer of the film
are on the wrong side of the irony.
—

-

now.

She used to sing for Jerry
Raven at the Limelite for five
dollars a night way back when.
She has come a long way since
then. She is poised and a very
warm and unpretentious performer, giving the impression she
likes what she is doing and that
she hopes to keep on doing so.
The admission is $1,50 on weekdays and $2.00 on weekends.
When you consider the gasoline
expenses it is not going to be an
inexpensive trip. But it very definitely is worth it.
Saturday night last she did
such things as “Loveless Child”
by Tom Pasley and an excellent
song by Richard Weissman called
“Someone to talk my troubles
to." Still in the contemporary
supvein she sang Dylan’s
posedly his at least
“He was
a Friend of Mine” and Sylvia
Fricker Tyson’s
“You Were
On My Mind,” in a version without drums, cannons, and electronic hardware of various sorts.
If you like your blues from the
good old days before all the
young tads above started to write
she includes such things as “Miss

If you dcr not recognize these
titles maybe you are should run
up and find out—-eh? And while
you are there listen for “Blues
On My Ceiling,” “Then Some,”
the latter being what used to be
termed an earthy song, “Two Hoboes," and “Louisville Lou” and
how about I stop here though I
could go on for a while yet. If
you really know her from work
here in town maybe you will
concur in her being worth driving that far to hear, I think she
is.

will find two Judy Roderick albums around. The more recent
came out last December on Vanguard, VRS 9197, entitled “Woman Blue,” and a previous album
was recorded on Columbia, “Ain’t
Northin’ but the Blues,” and if
you order by number CL 2153—
for mono, sorry but that is all I
wrote down.
For the sake of our somewhat
strained budget I try and stay
as far away from record stores
as possible. This last weekend
has pushed our record list out
of sight. Not only do we want
the two Judy Roderick albums
but new albums are either out
or due very soon from Ian and
Sylvia, Eric Anderson and Phil
Ochs. We certainly can’t cut out
drinking, but now if we didn’t
eat for a week do you suppose
that would rebalance our deficit.

WBFO Presents Program
WBFO, UB’s student-operated
FM radio service (88.7mc), will
present a unique art program
series in April entitled “Talking
Painting”. A novel approach to
audience participation in the visual aspect of art, the program
features informal discussions of
student artists’ work by the students, their classmates and professors.
The visual aspect is provided
for the audience by a center-fold
section in WBFO’s April program
guide which contains color reproductions of actual paintings
by the student artists. Reproductions are the work of senior and
sophomore art students.
The radio series, recorded in
the art studios of UB Professors
John Mclvor and Willard Har-

ris, is an informal, relaxed approach to art. Basis for this new
and novel method of insight into
contemporary artistic thought
came through collaboration of
Professor Mclvor and Station
Manager William Siemering.
William A. Penn, a graduate
assistant in music at the University, has composed an original
music score for the program.
His compositions for brass and
percussion instruments
have
been created to compliment the
student works.
Program broadcast will be on
Mondays at 7:30 p.m. and rebroadcast on Wednesdays, at 4 p.m.
Copies of the April program guide
are available from the station,
3435 Main St., Buffalo 14214.

This fcTTHE

GROUP”

—

—

DOTTIE

—

£ jHv UK
wW i

4

f
I

1

POLLY

The problem with A Patch of Blue is the people
who made the film know all too well which side of the
irony they are on. Everyone I have spoken to who has
seen the film has reacted strongly and favorably to it.
For me, the film is in the tradition of One Potato, Two
Potato
and my reaction is both anger and nausea.
“College exploitation!” the pressbook publicity campaign notes, “College campuses represent a wide open
field of ready made audiences for your showing. Attract
this age-bracket by an appeal to their emotions.” Or even
worse: “Contact your local representatives of organizations which aid the blind . . Invite these people as well
as prominent church personnel to view the film. They
can be of enormous help to get the word of mouth
around.” As Wallace Ford, who, as the girl’s grandfather. gives the best acting performance in the film,
says at one point: “I’m sorry, I’d like to help clean up this
mess, but I can’t
I have to go out and get drunk.”

KAY

i

2

/

*3*

“■sr

—

POKEY

m nni

CANDICE BERGEN as law,

OCROuris

JOAN HACKETTbW*

SV©MARY
(Mcc.\rih\

&gt;

ELIZABETH HARTMAN as F&gt;r,ss

.

F BOM
TK#1
KIT

SHIRLEYKNIGHTas Poll,

tarn

GROUP'
JOANNA PETTETaska,
MARY-ROBINREODasPoke,
JESSICAWALTERasht*,
KATHLEEN WIDOOES as Helena

m «■
BUT

THURS. FRI.
-

�

Matinees Vi

(Conference

•

;

BeCAITirl

...

--.,.*

HELENA

CHARLES K FELDMAN

.

Of course, one responds to the plight of the characters. One would have to be almost inhuman not to respond. But it is precisely because the situation is so
pitiable, so frighteningly terrible, and the treatment of
that situation is so glib and dishonest, that my reaction to
beone »f disgust,
-i-

LIBBY

f

SAT.

Price

�

THIS PICTURE IS
RECOMMENDED
FOR ADULTS

JAMES BRODERICK as Dr Mjele, HAL HOLBROOK as Gus Leroy
JAMES CONGDON as Sloan
RICHARD MULLIGAN as Dick Brorm
«oe™ nmaror
LARRY HA6MAN as Ha-aid

FnmlN

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ARTISTS

�Friday, April 8, 1964

SPECTRUM

Alpha Gamma Delta's spring
pledge class officers are: Claudia
Buczkowsfci, President; Melody
Weiler, vice-president; Anne Recore, secretary; Gerri Hecker,
treasurer; Sandy Ohurco, chaplain; Wendy Bannister, program
chairman; Barbara Berg, scholarship chairman; Joan Groucaski,

activities chairman.
Alpha Phi Delta's pledge class
officers are: Kenneth Parnett,
president; Albert Sallato, treasurer; Matthew Nowocien, secretary.
The officers of Beta Sigma Rho
are: Steven Litvak, Chancellor;
Richard Miller, vice-chancellor;
Sam Marcus, auditor; Jack Stemberg, Secretary; Irwin Sandler,
warden; Henry Gertsman, vicewarden; Barry Cohen, historian;
Roy Nisenson, chaplain.
Christa Ulbrich and Janet Leslie of Chi Omega were elected
president and treasurer respectively of Pan Hellenic Council.
The Gamma Phi pledges will
hold a car wash on the corner
of Union and Genesee from 11

NOTES

Jules And Jim In Conference Theater

a.m. to 5 p.m. The $1.25 fee
will cover vacuuming, whitewalls,
and windows (inside and out) besides the washing of the ear.
Phi Kappa Pti’s spring officers
are: Carl Millerschoen, president;
Roger Fredricks, vice-president;
Lee Schweichler, treasurer; Tony
Capozzi,
recording
secretary;
John Sansone, corresponding secretary; Bob Schmidt, chaplain;
Gary Helfenstein,
messenger;
John Oampagnola, sargent-atarms; Frank Domino, historian;
Marty Groet, Pledge Master.
Donald Gardner is Pi Lambda
Tau'i representative to the Inter
Fraternity Council, A G. T. Stag
will be held at Johnny’s Tavern
for the brothers and pledges tonight.

Theta Chi Fraternity’s officers
are: Gary McGovern, president;
Gary Fadale, vice-president; Ro-

bert Allen, secretary; Robert
Marko, marshal; Thomas W. Stratton, historian; Jeff Kenyon, chaplin; Larry Mackey, first guard;
Robert Agoglia, second guard.
Founders day is today.

Friendships between men are
often not very complicated. They
are based on similar likes and
dislikes and
an important
'point
a common interest in
women. Friction can and does
arise when two friend's become
interested in the same woman.
—

—

Jole* and Jim a motion picture
Jeanne Moreau, Oskar
Werner and Henri Serre, which
will be playing in the Conference
Theatre this weekend is the story
of such a relationship. To add
to the complications the triangle
continues over a period of 20
years through various states of
love, matrimony and engagement
and World War II. Ineidently
one of the men is French and
the other is German,
starring

A picture such as this runs
both the danger of being turned
into a Peyton Place soap opera
tragedy or a clinical analysis
of a menage a trois. Director
Traffau does neither and instead
presents the viewer with sympathetic people giving every indication of being alive.

The Man' To Be Performed Monday
The Man, an original theater
piece on the Mississippi Freedom
Labor Union composed by Thomas
Hanna and Nancy Cave, will be
performed by the Students For
A Democratic Society Free Theater Group Monday, April 11 at
4:30 in the Conference Theater.

Hanna. He added that contributions collected at the perform-

Mr. Hanna said that the presentation involves the experimental use of tape recorders and
slide projectors. He continued,
“the content is not propagandists. No attempt is made to convince anybody of anything. Instead, we have tried to create an
experience, probably a disconcerting one, I guess, out of several discordant elements. The
play moves from an informational stance to one of total assault
on the audience.’”

The Official Bulletin is an authorized publication of the State
University of New York at Buffalo, for which the SPECTRUM
assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in
TYPEWRITTEN form to 114
Hayes Hall, attention Mrs. Fischer, before 2 p.m. the Friday
prior to the week of publication.
Student organization notices are
not accepted for publication.

The Mississippi Freedom Labor Union grew out of a strike
by Negro farm hands last June
against plantation owners who
pay workers $3 a day for twelve
hours of labor, according to Mr.

ance will benefit MFLU Local
4, Tribbett, Mississippi.

GENERAL NOTICES
University College Students—(except those on strict academic,
probation) the remaining dates
to pre-register for fall semester
1966 are as follows:
April 11 through April 15
M, T, U, V

Continuous from

*2 p.m.

April 18 through April 22
I
April 25 through April 29

G, P,

W, D

I

RODGERS &amp; IRMMERSTEIxNS

ki\(;

DEBORAH KERRAll
MMOnift

v\ni“
fajhi

WEEKLY CALENDAR
April 12
Seminar in Bioengineering
the third in this series of sem
inars features Dr. Cora G. Sal
tarelli, assistant professor of engineering, whose topic is “Origin of Life,” 112 Parker Engineering, 3 p.m.
April 13

The Department of Chemistry
Dr. Lawrence Dahl,
professor of chemistry, University of Wisconsin. The topic is
"Recent Structural Advances in
Organometallic Complexes,” Rm.
A-70 Acheson, 4:30 p.m.
—presents

Sigma Xi Lecture
features
Dr. Marian E. White, associate
professor of anthropology, whose
topic is “Changes in Settlement
Patterns Among Indian Groups
in Western New York," Room
G-22 Capen Hall, 8 p.m.

OWRmiMIRHIIW

ROYAL ARMS
OUR EASTER SHOW
OPENS FRI., APRIL 8
1965 BEST FEMALE

VOCAL PERFORMER
ASTRUD GILBERTO Sings
1966 “Grammy Award
Winning Song
.

The Department of Modern
Languages and Literature—presents an illustrated lecture, in
English, by Sever Trifu, University of Cluj, Cluj, Romania, and
visiting lecturer in Romanian at
UB under the sponsorship of the
State Department. The topic is

FREE SODA

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Comii

Weekly newsreels of campus
events are now being produced
by Martin Sadoff, Chairman of

the Fine Arts Film Committee,
David Edclman, Editor-Elect of
the Spectrum, and Peter Craig
of Audio Visual Aid. They will

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“Romanian Architecture," Room
229 Crosby Hall, 2 p.m.
The University of Chicago
Alumni Association
presents
Professor Herbert J, Storing, department of political science,
University of Chicago, whose topic is “Negro Leadership: Martin
Luther King and Frederick Douglass,” Faculty Club, 8:30 p.m.

deposit

PLACEMENT
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Seniors and Graduate Students
—due to the passage of the Medicare Bill, the Social Security
Administration needs to fill 400
positions in the New York Region which includes the states
of New York and New Jersey.
As a result the Federal Service
Entrance Examination will be
administered on this campus April 16, 1966, in Room 70 Acheson Hall, from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Students interested in taking
this exam must sign up at the
University Placement Services before April 15, 1966.

The Upjohn Pharmaceautical
Company is showing a film on
Wednesday, April 13, at 10 a m.
in the Conference Theater of

Norton Hall. All students interested in pharmaceutical sales are

April 14

10 BIG HUES

.

Weekly Newsreels of Campus Events
To Be Shown At Film Presentations
be shown in the Norton Conference theatre along with the weekly presentations of the Fine Arts
Film Committee.
The black and white 16mm
films will be shown in the place
of the international newsreels
currently in use, The first week
includes filming of Clinton Deveaux’s address at the opening
of Discriminating about Discrimination. in addition to footage
of James Farmer's address. The
newsreel also includes filming of
the SDS Peace March and the
Exhibit from the School of Engineering.

—

May 2 through May 6
B. F

—

Starring

Francois Truffaut's "Jotai and Jim", starring Jeanne Moroau

OFFICIAL BULLETIN

NOW
SHOWING

Ithi

PAGE SEVEN

Offer Limited

invited to attend.
PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS

April 8

Berkshire Life Insurance Co.

Remington Office MachinesDivision of Sperry Rand
April II
Bankers Life Co.
April 14
University of Rochester
Bethlehem Steel Corp.
April IS
Grand Way
East Irondequoit School District

The idea was conceived by Martin Sadoff who narrates the newsreels. Mr. Craig of Audio Visual
is in full charge of production,
and Mr. Edelman of the Spectrum
serves as News Supervisor.

UB Hosts String

Player's Institute
The third annual String Players’ Institute will be held at UB

April 11 through

14.

Daniel Schroeder announced
that the Institute will present
lessons, string quartet coaching,
small ensemble rehearsals and
participation in a string orchestra conducted
by
Alexander
Schneider. He mentioned that
the Institute will bring approximately 40 high school violinists,
cellists, violists, and contrabass
players from five eastern states
to this area.
Daytime ensemble rehearsals
will be held at Kenmore East
High School from 10 a.m. to
1:30-4 p.m. The String Orchestra
will rehearse from 6:30-9:30 p.m.
on Monday and Tuesday. These
sessions arc open to all interested persons. The String Orchestra will present a concert
at its final session in Baird Hall
on Thursday at 4:30 p.m.
In addition to the Budapest
quartet members, J. Roisman, B
Kroyt, M. Schneider, A. Schneider, the faculty of the Institute
includes UB instructors Livingston and Pamela Gearhart and
Creative Associate Buell Neid-

linger.

�Friday, April I, 196*

SPECTRUM

PACE EIGHT

SCOUTING
REPORTS..

INTRAHUBALS
All was relatively quiet on the
intramural front last week. The
only noise made came from the
spiking of volleyballs at Clark
Gym on Wednesday and Thursday, indicating the opening of
the volleyball league.

Division II

W L
4 0
Joques
3 1
Phi Ptsi
Alpha Sig 3 1
1 3
TBKE
Beta Sig 1 3
Skanks
0 4

W L
APD
4 0
Unbeat.
3 1
Sup. Apes 3 1
APO
1 3
13
Phi Ep
Internal’s. 0 4

Thursday League

After one week of action, APD,
Sig Ep, Gamma Phi, ABPi and
the Joques all have undefeated
records.
The standings

(Cont’d from Pg. 10)

Wednesday League

Division I

/

Tommy Reynolds, Larry Stahl,
Jose Tartabull, and Manny Jiminez, an almost unbelievably poor
group of outfielders. I sincerely
hope the A's can improve soon,
or the Show-Me State will soon be
with only one major league town.

Well, you’ve just read my un4 0 professional (only because I don’t
Sig Ep
4 0
Gam. Phi 4 0
3 1 get paid for doing it) preview of
AKPsi
3 X
2 2
American League camChimps
13 the 1966
1 3
paign. It should prove to be one
0
1
Sig
3
4
Phi
1 3 of the best seasons the Junior
Phi L. D, 0 4
Circuit has ever enjoyed, as any
one of the first five clubs could
easily take the pennant. Carl Yastrzemski should take the batting
title, with the home-run crown
being most fiercely contested by
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PERSONAL

To those who have purchased
the latest edition of the New
Student Review: In the third
stanza of the poem “Carpenter”
on page one, the word “sandcastel” should read “sandcastels”.
Must locate kind young man who
turned my car around after
accident, Wednesday, March 30,
on Parkridge, about 1:55 p.m.
Call 832-2095.
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No selling experience necessary.
Mr. Lindbergh, 834-6094 after 6

2 bedroom furnished apartment
near campus to sublet for summer, Call 833-6416 after 6 p.m.

The Senate Academic Affairs
Committee is investigating student attitudes, independent study
opportunities, and course evaluation.

“Comprehensive exams,” Mr.
Caroll affirmed, “should be given,
but not as a requirement for
graduation as is now the case.
A student should qualify for
graduation on the merit of his
own real quality index, and not
on the basis of one test.”

Committee
chairman
Tom
Caroll announced that a test is
being administered by the sociology department to assess student attitudes. The test will be
given during the next two weeks
to determine the programming
necessary for each type of student at UB.

He continued, “The new Senate
subcommittee on course evaluation is currently dealing with the
departments of Modern Languages
and Math. This computer study
will probably be broadened next
year to include 100 to 400 level
courses in all departments.” Mr.
Caroll expressed hope that a
full course evaluation committee
would be formed to replace the
subcommittee. He suggested that
a chairman with several subchairmen and an adequate budget would be better suited to
cope with the problem.

Mr. Caroll mentioned that
another questionaire on academic
honesty will be issued to students and faculty members to
obtain opinions on cheating and
plagiarism. He said that Dean
Siggelkow will be consulted on
ways to enforce rules on cheat-

ing.

The opportunity for independ-

ent study whereby students take

a course on a pass-fail basis or
learn without attending classes
or taking exams is also under investigation, according to Mr.

Caroll.

Mr. Oaroll indicated that the
most troublesome problem arising out of the course evaluation
study is the lack of student support and participation.

Mentioning University College

and the College of Arts and
Sciences, Mr. Caroll explained,
“Both divisions want to revise

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SPECTRUM

BASEBALL TEAM
SHOWS PROMISE
By RICH BAUMGARTEN
Experience, good pitching, and
depth could make 1966 a big
year for the UB varsity baseball
team. With the return of many
of test year’s starting varsity and
the addition of six players—up
from a winning freshman team—
Coach Jim Peelle has found himself in the seldom-found position
to make room for the sophomores.
Right now there are some great

heald-to-head battles for the starting positions. Around the infield,
“Gordie” Shaw seems to have
won the first baseman’s job. Gordie 'has a 'great glove and is a
fine clutch hitter. At second base,
juniors Bob Pusateri and Doug
Long are battling it out for starting honors. Pusateri was the ’65
shortstop and has a good glove
and hat. long, who can also play
the outfield , has a fine defensive
glove, and is a great “pressure”
player.

Ron Leiser appears to have the
inside track for the shortstop position. Leiser was alternated at
four different positions, but coach
Peelle feels Ron’s future is at
short.
At the “hot corner,” Fran
Buchta, up from last year’s freshman team, and veteran Daxe Dux

are nose to nose for the third
baseman’s job. Coach Peelle is
“wellpleased” with Buchta’s hitting, while Dux continues to impress with his all-around play.
The UB outfield is loaded with
talent. Sophomores Brian Hansen
and Ken Rutkowski both could
make the starting line up. Hansen has a fine arm and can swing
the stick. Rutkowski could be one
of UB’s star players. He has
great speed, a strong arm and a
real good bat. Veteran Joe Kwiatkowski rounds out a solid outfield. Kwiatkowsfci, in addition
to being a fine hitter, gives the
team valuable experience. Outfield prospects Joe Morelli and
Fred Geringer both have good
arms and 'bats, and both could
challenge for a Starting assign-

ment.

Oatohing is another bright spot

on this year’s team. Power hitter

Jhn Duprey is expected to win
the starting assignment. Duprey
is being counted on as one of the
■big UB “home run” men. Jim is
backed by John Grad and Fred
Wieser, both talented and hardhitting catchers.
UB is very Strong in the pitching department. Two of last year’s
top pitchers Don Potwora (2-0

and 0.95 ERA) and Ron McHXven
(2-0 and 1.80 ERA) head tills
year’s staff. The UB mound staff
is bothered by several fine looking prospects including hardthrowing Tim Uraskevich, Dick
Pirozzolo, and George Mason. The
entire pitching staff has been
impressive with its control, and
the ability to keep the ball low.
The success of this year’s team
depends on the ability of the
players to play as a unit in facing a rugged schedule. Based on
head coach Jim Peelle’s and assistant coach Billy Monkarsh’s
optimism as well as the rapid
pelling of the squad, UB has a
very promising season ahead.
Baseball Notes: In batting practice, Duprey lined the ball
through the batting cage . . .
Joe Morel!!, a good line-drive hitter, may be hard to keep out of
lineup . . . best batting rhythm
on team? Coach Jim Peelle, the
head coach looked pretty good
in practice . . . Coat* Peelle and
assistant coach Mankarsh have
the team really hustling.

1965-64 UB Tennis Team

TENNIS SQUAD HOLDS PRACTICE
With only Bob Barrett missing from last year’s squad, Coach

to a fine season. Returning from
last year’s 10-3 team are Dennis
Brzezinski, Len Schneider, Matt
Yushik, Wally Mann, Larry Glazer, and Don Mingle. With some
good looking sophomores com-

ing up, it looks as if UB will continue to dominate tennis in the
Western New York

area.

SCHEDULE
April 14—Erie Tech
April 14—Erie Tech
April 19—Gannon
April 20—'Buffalo State
April 22—Niagara
April 23—St. Bonaventure
April 26—Rochester
April 27—Hobart
April 29—Syracuse
May 3—Colgate
May 5—Niagara
May 6—Alfred
May 7—Cortland
May 0—Geneseo

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�American League
lefty combination at each outfield
position with Valdespino, Allison,

By J. B. SHARCOT

For the first time in many
years, the New York Yankees
aren't going to be automatically
put down by the prognosticators
as the team most likely to win
the American League pennant.
The Yanks suffered a disastrous
season last summer and aren’t
likely to rebound too far up in
the standings this year. In fact,
I doubt the Bronx Bombers will
ever again rule the Junior Circuit
as supremely in the future as
they have done since 1949. The
other teams have simply become
too strong for the Yankees to
win fourteen pennants in sixteen
years. With the free-agent draft
and the small number of minor
leagues, the opportunities to
build a dynasty will he few, indeed. The Yankees will have to
rely on being consistently able
to make wise player trades, but
this is virtually an impossibility,
since no one likes to feel swindled. Therefore, the American
League pennant flag should be
up for grabs this year, and for
many years to come.

Following are my evaluations
of each team and in what place
I expect each to finish:
Chicago Whita Sox—The Pale
Hose should once again have the
&gt;best and deepest pitching staff
in baseball this season, especially
if Gary Peters can come back to
his 1963, 1964 form, and the
spring training injury to the Hoyter (Wilhelm) doesn’t prove to
be too serious. Also, if A1 Weis
is placed permanently on second
base and Don Buford is shifted
to the hot comer, both the speed
and the defensive ability of the
team should be improved. The
lone weakness that has and should
continue to bother the Chisox is
their lack of batting punch, unless Pete Ward and Floyd Robinson can display signs of recovering the touch. Skowron can’t be
expected to improve over

1965

and neither can Romano. Hansen,
Buford or Danny Cater. However,
improvement should be expected
from the aforementioned Ward
and Robinson plus Ken Berry and
Tommy Agee, who was hurt most
of 1965 season. The Southsiders
won’t scare anyone this year, but
with Horlen, John, Buzhardt, Fisher, Howard. Pizarro, and Peters
(plus possibly Wilhelm), the
White Sox should be sufficiently
strong to take the flag this season.

Minnesota
enjoyed

a

Friday, April

SPECTR U M

PAGE TEN

Twin*—The Twins

very succesful season

last year, winning the American
League pennant and taking the
Dodgers to the final game of the
World Series before bowing. Alas,
they have the same team back
this season plus the services of
Jim Merritt and Andy Kosco from
the start. Except possibly for second base, every position is manned more than adequately. The
pitching staff is solid and the
outfield is loaded with talent.
Versalles is a fabulous shortstop,
Battey is a fine catcher, and Killebrew and Mincher have super
power. At the present time there
is a five-way battle for the second
base position between Kindall,
Tovar, Rollins, Quilici, and Bernie
Alien. Tovar is the best bitter
of the group, but is a very erratic
fielder. The Twins have a righty-

Hall, Nossek, Oliva, and Kosco.
Grant, Kaat, Pascual, Merritt, Boswell, P«rry, Klippstein, Worthingtion, and Pleis comprise the talented, though not spectacular,
pitching staff. Minnesota is well
capable of winning the championship again this year, but I feel
the National League jinx of no
team repeating will become the
habit in the Junior Circuit as
well.
Detroit Tigers—For my thirdplace team, I’m picking the Detroit Tigers, quite possibly the
most improved team in the American League for 1966. With the
additions of Monbouquette and
Tracewski plus the fact that Kaline, D e m e t e r, and McAuliffe
should be healthy once again, the
Motor City Bengals can’t help
but being an improved team this
year. Their bullpen looms as their
one possible weakness. Their
pitching staff (starters), infield,
and outfield are in fine shape for
the upcoming season, as would
be the catching department if
Bill Freehan can regain his form
of 1964. The five starters figure
to be McLain, Sparma, Lolich,
Aguirre, and Monbo. Having
Dave Wickersham in the bullpen
from season’s start plus a healthy
Larry Sherry and Terry Fox
would go a long way to eliminate
the Bengal bullpen shortcomings.
With Wilie Horton, A1 Kaline,
Mickey Stanley, Gates Brown, Don
Demeter, and Jim Northrup, the
Tigers have one of the best outfields in baseball. Don Wert and
Norm Cash had fine seasons last
year and their continued good
play plus better help from the
bullpen is all the Tigers should
need to secure a high finish this
campaign.

Baltimore Orioles—The Orioles
of 1966 should be a vastly different ballclub from the team of
1965 even though there has been

only one personnel change: Pappas for Frank Robinson. Robby
has already gone on a homer

binge and should continue this
type of hitting into the regular
season. With the absence of Milt
Pappas, the Oriole pitching staff
suddenly becomes a little sketchy.
They have no on* on the staff
they can be sure of for having
a good season. Barber, Bunker,
Hall, McNally, the Millers, Bertaina, and Palmer are all question
marks for one reason or another.
They could all come through, or
all experience poor seasons. What
they may lack in pitching consistency, the Birds should more

than make up for in their Murderers’ Row of Blefary, Powell, and
the Robinsons (Brooks and Frank).
A home-run total of 120 or more
would be no surprise from this
powerful foursome. Aparicio and
Adair make a nifty duo around
the keystone sack and overall
team speed and defense should
be average. Without Dick Brown
available, their catching staff becomes barely adequate, and center field does not appear too
strong at the moment. However,
the Orioles' power should overcome enough weaknesses to land
them in the first division.
Cleveland Indians— Similar to
the Tigers, the Tribe from Cleveland has depth, power, and a fine
array of starting pitchers. But,

double-play combinations in history. At first base the Angels
can choose among veterans Joe
Adcock, Vic Power, and Siebern.
Bob Rodgers is a fine backstop,
though his hitting has left much

year in left field, center field,
third base, catcher, and one of
the pitching positions, in the persons of Frank Howard, Don Lock,
Ken McMullen, Johnny Orsino,
and Pete Richer!, respectively.
The rest of the team leaves much
to be desired. They have good
possibilities at first base, with
Dick Nen and Bob Chance, and
in pitching, with Phil Ortega, Jim
Hannan, Jim Duckworth, Casey
Cox, and Pete Craig. Vying for
the remaining outfield spot are
Jim King, Willie Kirkland, and
Freddy Valentine. Second base
will be manned by Don Blasingame and Ken Hamlin. Eddie
Brinkman is a shortstop with
great range and arm, but he can
barely hit his own weight. The
Senators have the manpower to
finish in seventh place, but could
finish in tenth position if Howard
and Lock fail to hit, and if Richert comes up with a sore arm.
Ronnie Kline and Steve Ridzik
provide some support out of the
bullpen, but I’m afraid there is
just too much to support on the
Senators for this duo to be able
to move the team very far up
in the standings.
Kansas City Athlatics—Outside
of the most outspoken owner
(Charles 0. Finley) and the flashiest uniforms (green and gold)
in baseball today, the Athletics
(the Mets of the AL) have little
to offer. Aside from the infield,
few positions have as yet been
claimed. In the infield the A’s
do have Harrelson at first, Green
at second, Campaneris (who has
been injured most of the spring)
at short, Charles on third, and
Wayne Causey as the main reserve. Bill Bryan is a potentially
fine catcher and power man, but
he hasn’t reached any real standards yet. The pitching staff is
chock full of untried and untrue
men who have yet to prove themselves as major leaguers. On the
staff are Talbot, Sheldon, O’Donoghue, Wyatt, Stock, Aker, Buschorn, Monteagudo, Krausse, Grzenda, Dickson, and last, but surely
not least, Catfish Hunter. How’s
that for a mound staff! It reminds
me of the Pale Hose’s array of
(lingers.
Patrolling the picket
positions are Mike Hershberger,

to be desired the past few years.
also like the Tigers, the Indians
Schaal can’t help but imPaul
bullpen,
a
McDowell,
good
lack
prove at the hot corner under
Siebert, Tiant, Kralick, and rookthe expert tutelage of Malzone.
ie Tom Kelley are all excellent
outfielders from last
starters, but since Gary Bell is Holdoverare Willie Simth, Jose
season
also attempting to become a startand Albie Pearson. The
er once again, and Don McMahon Cardenal,
Angels should have an interestis growing old, the bullpen is
ing team because of the contrastwell understocked. Lee Stange, ing ages
of many of the players
who has made a career out of
starting
defeating the Orioles, is around, on the team. Their solid
staff, along with Lee, should be
to
an
but he is too erratic
be
enough to lift the otherwise weak
effective fireman. Rookies Steve Angels
into the seventh slot.
Hargan and Floyd Weaver are
Boston Rod Sox—The Red Sox
endeavoring to make the squad
had the worst pitching staff in
but rookies are an unsure comseason, and accordmodity. The catching with Azcue, baseball last
ingly finished in ninth place. The
Crandall, and either Doc Edwards relief pitching, with the sudden
or Duke Sims is fine, as is the
collapse of the Monster, Dick
outfield comprised of Colavito,
was horrendous and the
Radatz,
Hinton,
Davalillo,
Wagner,
Landis,
starters weren’t much better. The
and Chico Salmon. The second
Bosox had such fine players as
base combo of Larry Brown and
Conigliaro, Thomas,
Pedro Gonzalez proved to be an Yastrzemski,
unexpected pleasure last season and Mantilla, but it was to no
avail, as the pitching and porous
as was the play of Freddie Whitdefense were constantly nagging
field at first base. If Max Alvis
To improve
can improve his hitting, third at the Beantowners.
the pitching and defense, Boston
base will be one of the Tribe’s acquired
such standouts as Bob
better positions. On paper, the
Indians always appear to be very Sadowski, Danny Osinski, George
George Thomas! Most
strong, but there is something Smith, and
of these men won’t strike much
about the ntonths of July, August,
fear in the hearts of their Amerand September that bothers the
ican League foes, but they should
Indians seriously. Maybe the Instabilize the team.
dians can overcome the annual definitely help
second half slump this season Also of help should be rookies
Joey Foy, and
and seriously contend for the flag. Tony Horton,
George Scott, especially M. Foy,
It is possible.
a likely prospect for the rookieof-the-year award. The starters
New York Yankee*—The Bombyear: Dave Morehead,
ers had their worst season in at from last
10-18; Jim Lonborg, 9-17; and Earl
least twenty years last year, and
Wilson, 13-14, all return along
if Bouton and Downing don’t exwith such rookies as Guido Grilli,
perience comebacks, they can't
Jerry Stephenson, Darrell Branpossibly finish higher than fifth.
A healthy Maris and Mantle don, and Pete Charton. Outfield
spares will be Jim Gosger, Joe
would undoubtedly help the YanChristopher, and Lenny Green.
kee cause, but I believe Bouton
(who has really been rocked so Rico Petrocelli showed some
far this spring) and Downing are promise last year and should
the keys to a possible rise. I do remain as the incumbent shortstop. The defense should be betnot believe playing Bobby Murcer at shortstop would serve them ter, but the hitting probably won’t
be able to compensate for the
any purpose, as the rookie’s fielding inadequacies would become lack of pitching,
Washington Senators
The
especially apparent in the Big
Senators should be strong this
City and at the shortstop position. The Yankees still have the
potential to be an explosive club,
but even with the addition of Bob
Friend, the pitching appears to
be a little weak. With Amaro at
short and a healthy Howard and
AMERICAN
Maris, the Bombers would have
a fine defensive club, though
STEVE
STEVE
team speed would not be overSCHUELEIN
FARBMAN
whelming. Mel Stottlemyre is the
mainstay of the pitching staff,
Detroit
1—Minnesota
and a healthy Ford would be of
Minnesota
immeasurable help. However, the
2 Chicago
question marks on the team are
Chicago
3—Detroit
too numerous for me to pick
Cleveland
them any higher than sixth place.
Baltimore
A pennant could still be theirs if
New York
everything went right, but fifth or
California
7—New York
sixth place is their most logical
place of finish, considering everyWashington
8—Washington
thing.
Boston
9 Boston
10—KC
KC
California Angels—A new park,
—

Jl 1966

(Cont’d on Pg. 8)

PENNANT

—

—

new town, and new faces on the
squad should be the highlights
of the 1966 season for the Angels.
The new town is ‘Anaheim and
the new faces are Spanky Kirkpatrick, Rick Reichardt, Norm

Siebern, Lew Burdette, Frank
Malzone, and Jack Sanford. The
latter three hopefully will be
steadying influences on the many
young players the Angels have.
The pitching staff is led by Dean
Chance, Freddy Newman, George
Brunet, Harcelino Lopez and Big
Bob Lee. Jim Fregosi and Bobby
Knoop form one of the best

LEAGUE
BOB

FREY

SCOTT
FORMAN

Chicago

Baltimore

Minnesota

New York

Detroit

Chicago

Baltimore
Cleveland

Boston
Detroit

New York

Minnesota

California
Washington
Boston
KC

California
Cleveland
Washington
KC

NATIONAL LEAGUE
1— Cincinnati
2—LA

3—SF
4—St. Louis
5—Pittsburgh

6— Atlanta
7—Philadelphia
8— Chicago
9— Houston

10—New York

Cincinnati
Cincinnati
Philadelphia

LA

Atlanta

Pittsburgh

Philadelphia
Pittsburgh
Cincinnati

SF
Pittsburgh
St. Louis
Chicago

Atlanta

LA

Philadelphia
St. Louis

Atlanta

New York

St. Louis
Chicago

New York

Chicago

New York

Houston

Houston

Houston

SF

�Friday, April 8, 1966

SPECTRUM

National League
By MICHAEL CASTRO

Once again the peerless prognosticator returns with his annual analysis of the National
League’s imminent pennant struggle. The renowned Swami Foxala,
still fuming after a jealous league
president stole a pennant from
his last year’s selection the Giants, has been coaxed back to
give us another glimpse into his
almost infallible crystal ball. The
Swami, who feels the RoseboroMarichal incident was part of an
international conspiracy of
“power brokers” to cause his
prediction to fail and thus tarnish his reputation, denied the
vulgar rumors that his archenemy the Thallus of Marchantia
was behind the plot, but speculation persists. “The Thallus,”
Swami Foxala chuckled, “that
bum couldn’t carry my crystal
ball-bag. I didn’t want to predict
the National League this year,”
Foxala said modestly, “'because
the outcome of the race is so
obvious.” The Lebanese Lip,
whose past blunders (including
the first place prediction of the
1964-66 SjF. Warrior team, so
familiar to Spectrum readers) he
has blamed on “cruel and unjust
journalistic tactics,” and “typographical tyranny”, submitted his
official 1966 predictions smugly
to this reporter at A pre-arranged
rendezvous at the Norton Coffee
machine. Foxala had just uttered
an eternal curse over the machine
after losing his last dime in it.
He disappeared into the balmy
night muttering “Foster Castleman lives

7. St. Louis Cardinals
8. Chicago Cubs
9. Houston Astros
10. Amazing Mets

out of contention. Their blend of
hitting, speed, defense, pitching
and depth should bring Pittsburgh
a championship.

2) Dodgers: Essentially the
same team as last year's. Tommy
1) Pirates: The Pirates, according to Foxala, are the most underDavis has not seemed to recover
from his broken leg and may not
rated and best balanced team in
the league. “The only thing that be able to beat out Lou Johnson
could keep them from going all for the left field job. Without
the way,” he says, “is my picking Davis’ big bat, the Dodgers’ atthem.” Their superb overall detack is built around Maury Wills
and a prayer. The team’s over-all
fense and slashing, spray-type
defense is poor with only weakhitting is briliantly adapted to
hitting first-baseman Wes Parker
the spacious confines of Forbes
Field. They have the League’s an accomplished fielder. The
Dodgers will once again try to
best s e c o n d-baseman in Bill
Mazeroski and right fielder in
do it with their three superpitchers—Koufax, Drysdale and
Roberto Clemente. Slugging WilOsteen, with Perranoski and Millie Stargell, first baseman Donn
Clendenon, and shortstop Gene ler in relief, but K &amp; D’s holdout
will hurt them in the early part
Alley are all young players who
of the season until the boys get
are reaching the peaks of their
in shape.
promising careers. Jim Pagliaroni
is a solid receiver who hits well.
3) Giants; The Giants have been
The infield of Clendenon, Mazeroski, Alley, and Bob Bailey is great hitting with Willie Mays
looking better than ever and augsecond to none defensively and
mented by Jesus Alou, Jim Hart,
solid with the bat. The outfield
Willie McCovey, Tom Haller and
of Matty Alou and Manny Mota
the expected comeback of Orplatooned in center, flanked by
lando Cepeda. This bevy of slugStargell and Clemente, is also
strong in all departments. Alou, gers is backed up by a strong
bench headed by hard-hitting Len
obtained from the Giants, is perGabrielson. On top of this the
haps the key to Pittsburgh’s penGiant's bullpen with Frank Linzy,
nant thrust. Manager Harry Walker believes Matty, given the Lindy McDaniel and Joe Gibbon
chance to play regularly, will be is among baseball’s best. Mays
and Alou are superb fielders, but
one of the game’s top lead-off
Cepeda is an unnatural left-field
men and base-stealers. The Pirates’ bench, with the game’s best er. The infielders are all adequate
pinch-hitter, Jerry Lynch, Mota, with second baseman Lanier truly
outstanding. Rookie Tito Fuentes
Jesse Gonder, Andre Rodgers and
may beat out Dick Schofield at
a rookie named Dave Roberts, is
shortstop. The Giants’ big prob.”
very strong. The pitching is led
lem is finding starting pitchers
by the veteran Vernon Law and
Here are the Swami’s official strikeout artist Bob Veale, who after the great Juan Marietta).
The club is hoping for great years
are among the league’s best. Don
predictions;
Cardwell and Don Schwall, who
from Bob Bolin, Bob Shaw, or
erratic Gaylord Perry and Ron
both made strong comebacks last
1. Pittsburgh Pirates
Herbel. If these pitchers produce,
season, will be the other starters
2. Los Angeles Dodgers
the Giants could go all the way.
along with Steve Blass, who star3. San Francisco Giants
red in the International League.
4) Reds: Sammy Ellis, Jim MaA1 MeBean, Roy Face and Tommy
4. Cincinnati Reds
Sisk head an excellent bulpen. loney and Milt Pappas head an
5. Atlanta Braves
Only injury, or a bad year by excellent pitching staff. The other
6. Philadelphia Phillies
the aging Law, can keep the Bucs starters will come from among
Joey Jay, Jim OTooIe and Joe
Nuxhall, with Billy McCool heading a bullpen which is not outstanding. The team has good hitting and solid defense but may
miss the inspirational Frank
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Robinson more than statistics can
show. Vada Pinson and Tommy
J. B.
STEVE
LEON
MIKE
Harper must improve their hitCONSENSUS
CASTRO
FEIGIN
SHARCOT
ting to pick up the slack. SlickLEWIS
hitting Pete Rose is being shifted
Cleveland
to third base to make room for a
Chicago
Minnesota
KC
Minnesota
brilliant rookie named Tommy
Minnesota
Chicago
Minnesota
Chicago
Boston
Helms Slugging Deron Johnson
Baltimore
Detroit
New York
California Detroit
will play left field. Should Helms
Detroit
Baltimore
Oregon
Baltimore
Baltimore
make it big, if Pinson, Harper and
Chicago
Cleveland
Cleveland
Baltimore Cleveland
hot-cold Gordy Coleman hit well,
New York
if O’Toole or Jay regain their
New York
Detroit
New York New York
winning ways, if another good
California
California
California
Detroit
California
reliever is developed (Ted DavidBoston
Boston
Boston
Washington
Chicago
son or Jack Baldschun may be
Washington
Boston
Minnesota Washington
Washington
the man), if thg infield shakeup
KC
KC
Milwaukee KC
does not upset the inner defense,
KC
the Reds should go all the way.
There are a lot of ifs.
.

.

PREDICTIONS

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Pittsburgh
LA

SF

Cincinnati

LA

SF

SF

Atlanta
Cincinnati

Atlanta

Cincinnati
Atlanta

Philadelphia
St. Louis

Chicago

Houston
New York

Pittsburgh
St. Louis
Philadelphia
Chicago
New York
Houston

Pittsburgh
Philadelphia
LA
St. Louis

New York
Chicago
Houston

Brooklyn
SF

Cincinnati
SF
LA
Pittsburgh

Atlanta
St. Louis

Chicago
New York
Atlanta
Houston

Philadelphia
St. Louis
Chicago
New York
Houston

5) Braves: The Braves field a
lineup of awesome power. Eight
men, Hank Aaron, Mack Jones,
Felipe Alou, Joe Torre, Gene
Oliver, Eddie Mathews, Dennis
Menke, and Rico Carty can be
counted on for more than twenty
home runs. Their offensive power
is so formidable that sluggers
like Carty, Oliver and Frank
Thomas are usually on the bench.
The outfield of Alou, Jones, and
Aaron is brjlliant defensively but
the infield defense is only ordin-

PAGE ELEVEN

with shortstop Menke the
weak link. Joe Torre is the
league’s best catcher. Pitching is
the Braves’ big problem. Tony
Cloninger, a 24-game winner, is
their ace, but after him there is
only aging Ken Johnson, and erratic but promising Wade Blasingame, Denny Lemaster and perhaps Hank Fischer. Billy O’Dell
heads a bullpen which, after him,
is horrible. Relief pitchers and
starters are desperately needed,
but if one of each comes through,
the Braves’ big bats could power
them to a pennant.
ary

6) Phillies: Acquired the sparks
of the Cardinals' pennant-winning
team in Dick Groat and Bill
White. White remains the league’s
best all-round first baseman, but
Groat may be slowing down at
36. Groat will probably split shortstop with light-hitting Bobby
Wine. He may, however, be shifted to third if manager Gene
Mauch loses patience with the
erratic glove of Richie Allen,
Such a move would dictate moving the intense Allen to the outfield and probably cause some
dissension problems on the volatile Phillies ( Johnny Callison is
set in right field but the rest of
the outfield is undistinguished,
Johnny Briggs, Adolpho Phillips,
Tony Gonzalez, and Jackie Brandt
will probably be platooncd. Catching is barely adequate with Clay
Dalrymple and Bob Uecker. Jim
Bunning, Chris Short, and Ray
Culp head a pitching staff that
tails off drastically after them,
with Gary Wagner heading a thin
bullpen. Rookie pitchers Darold
Knowles, Ferguson Jenkins, and
Grant Jackson, or veteran Bo Belinsky must come through if the
Phils are to threaten.

7) Cardinals: Traded away
Boyer, Groat, and White and hope
to rebuild around a crop of speedy
,

rookies,

in

.

the mold of the Dod

gers.
Their pitching however
seems to preclude the venture

being sueeesful Bob Gibson is
an outstanding pitcher, but after
him are such question marks as
kckson ’ Art Mahaffey, Ray
ui
Curt Simmons, all of
Washburn,
whom were losing pitchers last
year. Tracey Stallard and an im
pressive rookie named Larry Jas
ter should help as starters and
Hal Woodeschick heads a medi
ocre bullpen
Curt Flood, Lou
Brock and Alex Johnson man the
outfield and along with Julian

’J

Javier and rookie first basemenoutfielders George Kernek and
Bob Tolan form the nucleus of
the Cards revamped speed of
fense. The )eft s‘de of the mfield

with Charlie Smith at third and

either Jerry Buchek or Dal Maxvill at short, is sub-par both
offensively and defensively, and
this, along with shaky pitching,
should keep the Cards in thr
second division.

have caught Leo’s eye and Randy
Hundley, acquired from the Giants, may wind up handling the
catching. The Cubs could give the
Cards a battle if their pitching'
holds up.
9) Astros: The Astros will again
be a tough team in spite of their
low finish. They have a genuine
star in fleet centerfielder Jim
Wynn and Rusty Staub and Joe
Morgan appear to be coming into
their own. Walt Bond and Lee
Maye, two well-travelled players,
will probably divide the third
outfield spot. Bob Aspromonte is
a solid major leaguer at third
base, and a good-looking rookie
named Chuck Harrison may beat
Jim Gentile out of his first base
job. John Bateman, who has yet
to prove he is a Big Leaguer,
will catch. The story in Houston
could be a spectacular rookie
shortstop named Sonny Jackson
who seems to have the blinding
speed, batting and fielding ability
to be a big star. Dick Farrell and
Robin Roberts head a tough pitching staff which includes Bob
Bruce, young Larry Dierker, Jim
Owens, Claude Raymond and
Barry Latman.
10) Mefs: In spite of a tenth
place finish, this should be the
best Met team ever. Veterans
Ken Boyer and Roy McMillan
give the team some class and
probably the best defensive left
side of the infield in the league.
Unfortunately, Dick Stuart (Dr.
Strangeglove) is positioned on
the right side, and occasionally
he will be teaming with Chuck
Hiller (Dr No). Put Ron Swoboda
in right field and you've got the
best comedy trio since the Marx
Brothers. The regular second
baseman, Ron Hunt, is a dandy,
but he is perennially plagued by
Injuries, Ed Kranepool, who will
shift betwcen first basc and the
outfieid, is still a hitter of great
promise as are second year men
Swoboda and Johnny Lewis. Wes
Westrum is insisting that Jim
Hickman wi „ bc his centerfieIder
out and is expecting
in . d
d
b , things {rom the occasiona i
slugger bu Hickman seems to
bave a bab jt of disappointing
managers . Tbe cate hing is very
weak and wi „ probab , wind up
jn thp hands of original Met
chris cannizarro and John Stephenson Tbe beloved choo&lt;;hoo
Colcman has an outside cbance
A youngster named Greg Goossen
should he , after a little scason.
jn
Westrum will g0 with the
young&lt;&gt;st pitching staff
|ea
Jack Fisher 27 Jack
Hamilton. 27, and fireballing
youngsters Tug McGraw, 20, Dick
Selma 22 and Rob Gardner 21
will start. Larry Bearnarth. Dave
Eilers Gordy Richardson, and
Darrell Sutherland man a bullpen
which is pretty good. The Mcts’
young pitching and strong infield
should make them an interesting,
ess terrible, and still loveable
,

|

team.

Cubs: Leo Durocher will try
to inject new life into the Cubs,
but it seems.doubtful that he will
be able to improve their stand
ing. He has a nucleus of stars in
Ernie Banks, Run Santo, and
Billy Williams, and a young slickfielding double-play combination
in Don Kessingcr and Glenn Beckert Leo is trying to work his
magic on castoffs Wes Covington
and Ty Cline or his outfield and
sore-armed Ernie Broglio for his
pitching staff,
Dick Ellsworth,
Bill Paul, and aging Larry Jackson and Bob Buhl form a pretty
good crew of starters and Ted
Abernathy is a one-man bullpen.
Rookies Dick Hands and Ken
Holtman are young pitchers who
8)

The Swami has spoken.

The SPECTRUM
Published by

pa rtn

'

*ri

Prtii, Jnc.

.Myall &amp; Soil/,
1381 KENMORE AVENUE
(&lt;t Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

�Friday, April 8,

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

=*=&lt;£=*=■*=*=

1986

s

Spring Football Begins
The “new look” in UB football
began taking shape last Monday
when the Bulls held their first
session of spring practice under
new coach Richard “Doc” Urich,
former Notre Dame assistant.
Although only 70 players, including 23 lettermen, were on
the official roster, 87 hopefuls responded

NICK CAPUANA

RICK WELLS

to

Monday’s

Jim Webber Athlete of the Year

Jim Webber, UB's senior halfback from Manlius, was awarded
the Dom Grossi Award as UB’s
Athlete of the Year at the 59th
annual Athletic Awards Banquet
at the Leonard Post, VFW, on
Monday evening.

Webber, a 5-9, 170-lb. speedster, is also a sprinter on the
track team and a Dean's List
student. Webber, who transferred
from Wooster College in Ohio
to UB in his sophomore year,
was also awarded an ECAC medal
for his combined athletic and
scholastic achievements.

The highlight of the dinner
an address by “Sleepy Jim”

was

Crowley, one of the Four Horsemen of Notre Dame. Following
Crowley’s after-dinner words, Dr.
Anthony S. Gugino, Chairman of
the Faculty Committee on Athletics, presented the awards.

Of the three most coveted
awards given, Webber was honthe Grossi
ored with two
Award and the ECAC Medal. The
third trophy, the Coach’s Award
presented to the senior athlete
with the highest scholastic aver—

age,

was given to

Pete Reese, a

—

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vvvvvO

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MEN'S SHOPS

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Troppman; Honorary Team Captain
CaH Millerschoen; Fritz
Lavelle Award to “Outstanding
—

Dr. Alexander Katz
Dr. Lou Krop
OPTOMETRISTS

Open Daily

10 A.M.

to 9:30 P.M.
.

OWIVntSITY PLAZA

TP.ANSITOWN PLAZA

opening

drill. The coming of Urich on
the scene has generated a new
wave of gridiron enthusiasm on
the Buffalo campus.
The new coach is a devotee of
the passing game and will seek
to change the Buffalo image
which in recent years has
been that of a conservative grindit-out club. To effect this change,
however, Urich will need a quarterback with passing ability. The
JIM DUNN
TOM HURD
three leading aspirants for the
job are Rick Wells, 6-0 191-pound
junior from Ithaca, N.Y.; Nick
Capuana, 5-9 170 pound senior
from Utica, N.Y.; and Mick Murtha, a 5-11 170-pound sophomore
from Endicott, N.Y. Wells started
Freshman Swimmer”—Paul Gaulast season as No. 1 signalcalier
track letterman with a 2.49 avthier
and carried on until the 5th game
erage.
BASKETBALL
of the campaign when he sufferOther awards were given to:
James J. Ailinger Most Valuable ed a broken leg. Despite this
William Barth; fact he still was the team leader
Player Award
HarHonoarry Team Captain
in total offense for the season and
vey Poe; Outstanding Freshman
showed enough promise to indiPlayer
Edward Eberle
cate that he could be an outstanding star. Capuana took over
FOOTBALL
after Wells’ injury and guided
Most Valuable Lineman (Offense)
the team to wins in the last three
—Richard Ashley; Most Valuable games
of the season when the
Gerald LaLineman (Defense)
Bulls outscored the opposition
Fountain; Most Valuable Back 70-7. Murtha was selected the
(Offense)
Leeland Jones, III;
Most Valuable Back on last year’s
Most Valuable Back (Defense)
freshman team.
Daniel Sella; Most Improved PlayIf the throwing end of the
er
Michael Wuest; Most Valpassing game is questionable, the
Mark
uable Freshman Back
receiving end is not UB has a
Murtha; Most Valuable Freshman
solid corps of receivers, headed
John
Wesoldwski
Lineman
by ends Dick Ashley and Jim
Dunn and halfback Tom Hurd.
BASEBALL
1965 Most Valuable Player—Earl Ashley, 6-2 201-pound junior
from 'Massena, N.Y., caught 17
Tomkins
passes last year for 349 yards
HOCKEY CLUB
and 7 touchdowns and already
has attracted the attention of pro
Benjamin Plaster Memorial TroCROSS-COUNTRY
scouts.
phy
William Savage
Kerns;
Oustanding Runner—John
Two more promising sophoBlankets were presented on beOutstanding Freshman Runner—
mores who will be watched durhalf of the UB Athletic DepartAnthony Nicotera.
ing spring practice are Jack
ment to:
GOLF
Richard W. Offenhamer, former Wesolowski, a 6-0 205-pound lineMost Valuable Golfer Edward
head football coach; Ronald M. backer, and Steve Svec, a 6-0
Nvsblatt
195-pound halfback.
LaRocque, former assistant footWRESTLING
The UB team will work out
ball coach and wrestling coach;
Charles K. Bassett Award to “OutWilliam C. Baird, vice-chairman on days when weather permits.
standing Wrestler”—William Miof the Council of the SUNY at An intra-squad scrimmage will
ner; Bassett Award to High-Point
Buffalo; Robert E. Rich, member be held at Rotary Field on April
Man—Gary Fowler; Gene Hiller
30 and a game between the varof the Board of the UB FoundaAward to “Most Improved Wresttion; Charles K. Bassett, long-time sity and the alumni is tentativeler”—Robert Heidt; Outstanding backer of UB wrestling program; ly slated to be held on the
Thomas
Freshman Wrestler
Dick Johnston, sportswriter for evening of May 6 at a site still
Dewey
to be named.
Buffalo Evening News.
FENCING
Fencer of the Year—Joseph Paul;
Sandy Sober Sabre Award—Robert Frey; Outstanding Freshman
Fencer
Steven Morris
SWIMMING
Roy
Most Valuable Swimmer

Contact Lenses
Complete Eye Care
UNIVERSITY PLAZA
BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226
Phone: 135-3311

Ut PMtfcall (Wins* Into S»rta« TraMnfl

�</text>
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K

ALL THE NEWS
THAT FITS
WE PRINT

H

oivjjna

iv mhoa aabn

IF

T

jo

axisubaind

axvxs

r

DISTORT IT
—

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, APRIL 1, 1966

Board of Trustees Picks New Pres.
New Oral Contraceptive Discovered
amounts, some amounts so small
that no food poisoning resulted,

Shigella may be used as an oral
contraceptive, Dr. Daniel Wurst
of the UB Medical School announced today. According to Dr.
Wurst, the shigella bacteria,
caused the Goodyear food poisoning epidemic in October, may
prove to be less expensive and

none of the rats began reproducing until three months after the

easier to administer than the oral

contraceptives currently on the

market.

Dr. Wurst regards his discovery
as a lucky accident. After the
epidemic, samples of the bacteria
were tested in an effort to discover whether one of the workers
in Goodyear Cafeteria was a car-

rier of the illness. In the course
of the experiments, samples of
shigella were administered to
rats. When a sufficient dose was
given, the rats showed symptoms
similar to those of the afflicted
students. After two months o&lt;
experimentation, Dr. Wurtz noticed that the rats were not reproducing. Although the bacteria was
given to the rats in varying

Dr. Wurtx, of UB medical dept.

rats receiving the smallest dosage
began reproducing first, and Dr.

In an unprecedented move,
the UB Board of Trustees turned
over the task of selecting a successor to retiring President Furnas to the Hayes Hall IBM machine. It was announced last
night that the post of President
will be filled by 83536, John Gossky, third floor maintenance man
of Diefendorf Hall.

man beings.
“Once we have perfected our
methods an dosage,” Dr. Wurtz
explains, “we will have an oral
contraceptive with lasting protec-

The Board of Trustees expressed surprise at the machine's decision. Mr. Milton K e c h e c k,
spokesman for the Board, commented, “Admittedly, we’re a
trifle surprised at the machine’s
decision. Of course, it is inconceivable that the machine could
be in error; so in keeping with
past administration policy, we
stand by the concept of IBM’s
infallibility. Still, when one realizes that Bertrand Russell (86477),
Ted Sorensen (82735), and Dwight
Eisenhower (**•••) were also
under consideration, it does jar
one’s faith a bit.”

administration of shigella. The

Wurtz reports that the offspring
are normal.
Dr, Wurtz is now beginning experimentation on monkeys. His
task, he explains, is to discover
exactly what dosage will fail to
cause food poisoning symptoms,
yet prevent conception. After
working with monkeys, Dr. Wurtz
plans to extend his work to hu-

tion. Studies conducted so far indicate that a dosage for human
beings can be determined which
will necessitate administration of
the drug once a month or less
often. This is a distinct advantage over oral contraceptives
which must be taken daily. And,
of course, the fact that it will be
administered less often will reduce the expense.”

Overflow Crowd of Students Attend
Luncheon Given By Dean Siggelkow
Approximately 1,500 students
attended a luncheon given by
Dean Siggelkow in the Tiffin
Room on Tuesday, March 29. Dean

President Furnas could not be
reached for comment. Dr. Claude
Puffer was similarly unavailable.
A secretary reported that he was
in the basement of Hayes Hall
with an electrician from IBM
looking for short circuits.

Dr. Wesley Holland refused to
recognize the appointment.
“There is no new president,” he

maintained. “The announcement
is premature and unofficial.”

When notified of his selection

by the committee, Mr. Gossky
expressed disbelief. “Why don’t
you take these boy scouts and
play Queen for a Day somewhere
else?” he asked. However, when

Siggelkow expressed appreciation
of the large turnout, but regretted

that students had to wait in line.
“I invited the entire freshman
class and many upperclassmen
as well,” Dean Siggelkow explained, “but since X did not receive
any RSVP’s, we did not expect
such a huge crowd”.
The first guests arrived at
the Tiffin Room at 12:30, and by
1:15, the line of students extended from the second floor of Norton, out the front door, and all
the way around the building. By
6:30, the last students had eaten
lunch, and Dean Siggelkow had
In addition to freshmen, student organization leaders, faculty
members, and interested upperclassmen accepted the invitation.
In order to serve the entire group,
Goodyear Cafeteria was closed,
and Tower Cafeteria and the Rathskellar sent extra workers to the
Tiffin Room.

confronted with the IBM card

marked “New President 83536”,
he exclaimed, “Hey! That’s me!
Them machines don’t make mistakes!”

Mr. Gossky has not yet completed an outline for his plans
as President, but he expressed
his desire to make use of the
Goodyear Penthouse. “Oh, have I
got plans!" he promised.

WHO IS THE NEW PRESIDENT?
Mr. John G o s s k y, the next
SUNYAB President, has been in
the field of education since age
5 when he entered PS 22. He
spent 6 years at Herbert Hoover
Junior High School, and 7 years
at South Park High School. Upon
graduation, he applied to UB,
and was accepted as maintenance
man on the first floor of Hayes.
Since then, he has risen to the
position of chief maintenance
man of the third floor of Diefendorf. As chief maintenance man,
Mr. Gossky holds a master key
to every door on campus, and has
expressed pride in this responsibility.

As President, Mr. Gossky looks
forward to his own private parking space and a key to the executive washroom. After his installation, he plans to hold a beerblast in the Goodyear Penthouse
to “bring administration and students closer together.’’

Mr. Gossky has several hobbies, including bowling and icefishing. He also enjoys reading,
especially the classics, and his
favorite literary character is
Superman. “I don’t know why
all those people make such a
fuss over Batman,” he stated.
"He can’t even fly.”

Dean of Women Appointment
Student* queue up for Deen Slgglakow't long-awaited luncheon.

“It was a wonderful experience”, Dean Siggelkow sighed,
patting his stomach, “If any stu-

dent wishes to discuss problems
with me, drop in to the Tiffin
Room and I’ll treat you to lunch.”

The office of the Dean of
Women announces the appointment of a new assistant Dean of
Women. This step was taken upon

recommendation from the
dent Counseling Center and
purpose of the move is to
mote a feeling of belonging
individuality among female

Stuthe
proand
stu-

dents.

Soph. Student Found After One-Month Absence
Shirley Fine, a sophomore resi-

dent student, has been found
after an absence of more than
a month. Since she had not signed out for either a week night
or weekend, her absence was not
discovered by university authorities until two weeks after she
had last been seen by her room
mate.

Miss Fine was discovered when
the construction crew began digging a trench near the golf
course for an additional temporary building. After the crew had
reached six feet into the earth,
they heard a slight whimpering.
Proceeding further, they found a
rather muddy, emaciated girl,
dressed in what were blue, now
brown clothes.

jJ
wnv w
*

—

Th l«-| ■ if
wffinwy rinv
**

*-

•

■
t n inliin .ni
viiiwiiMiivnit

When asked what Shirley was
doing at the excavation site, she
replied, “Last month,•"Wtftn the

snow began to thaw for the fiftysixth time (I keep track of the
exact number of thawings each
year) I ventured forth across
campus for a class. Suddenly, I
found myself slipping through
the mud to a depth of about five
and one-half feet. Since then I
have been wandering through the
underground tunnels, eating anything I could find and managing
to sleep on the cold pipes. It
really hasn’t been too bad, but
I’m glad you fellows are here—
I’m afraid that since I haven’t
been in circulation for a while,
all the boys will think I'm going

The new assistant dean was
programmed at MOOG ServoControl Incorporated, Model City,
New York.

steady.”

When asked to comment on
any further possibilities of such
incidents, the head of the maintenance crew said, "Well, nobody’s perfect. You can’t expect
us to do our work and watch out
for all you plMMS. Dig we must!”

n Ho takoo

ooof

His now poot.

�Tuesday, April 5, 1*M

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

Jp
BOOKS

&amp;

50% OFF

%

BOOKS

35 Children's Tote Bags
80 Assorted Men's Ties

200 Assorted Men’s Ties
229 Assorted Fraternity
Sweat Shirts
7 UB Lamps

Now, for the first time, our entire first floor
stock of hard-bound Fiction, Non-Fiction
and Juvenile books is going to be sold at
50% off the retail price. These are the best
selling books that you have seen all year
on our shelves at regular prices. This sale
is effective April 5 to April 1 2.

Asst.
Hand
Office
Typewriters from $29.00 to $49.00
3 Underwood
9 Royal
1 Remington
—

AMT.

Scientific and Technical books will be sold
at 25% off the retail price effective April 5
to April 12.
Nothing to buy. Just come in, pick up and
fill out an application at the Bookstore for
a chance to win a free trip to Europe. Last
Fall's winner was Eileen Lloye, UB Class of
'67. Hurry, there are a limited number of
applications.

CLOTHING
Ass'td. Costume Jewelry —Big Savings
SALE PRICE

5,19 &amp;

.29

1.98
3.79 or
2/6.95
2.95
3.19
2.95
2.29
.89
1

.59
1,98

ITEM

LIST

SALE

$ .35
$1.00
120 boxes Lith-O-Sketch Notes
97 Asst. Scrap Book Fillers
.10
3.00
1 U-B Photo Album
1.00
1 Photo Album
1.50
.75
97 "Today" Pads (Memo)
1.95
.75
5 "All Occasion" Address Books
1.00
.29
6.95
4.50
1 Letter Opener w/batteries
1.75
1.00
27 Mech. Pencil lead holders
7 Page Boy folding Book Racks
1.50
.69
126 Plastic Ticket Punches
.49
.19
.98
16 Asst. Typewriter Ribbons
.40
23 pairs Univ. of Buffalo
Book Ends
3.25 pr. 1.00 pr.
3.00
1.80
4 Picture Frames
2 Address Books
1.80
3.00
14 Address Books
.89
.49
5 Autograph Books
1.00
.49
1.25
7 Address Books
.49
6 Asst. Address Books
.75
.25
10 Asst. Sizes Plastic Book Covers
.29
.10

WIN A FREE TRIP TO EUROPE

REG PRICE

3.00

15.00

.59

.79
.59
1.69 or
2/3.00
7.49

SUPPLIES
Second
Standard

25% OFF

Trouser, Skirt
Hangers, Shoe Trees $.59-1.98
8 Carry-all Bags
3.50
246 pr. various sizes
4.98 &amp;
Men's Cotton Slacks
598
20 various size Men's
sh. sleeve Dress Shirt
5.00
52 various size Men's
Ig. sleeve Dress Shirt
5.49
51 various size Men's
5,00
Ig sleeve Dress Shirt
126 various size Men's
3.98
Ig. sleeve Sport Shirt
71 pr. Men's Socks
1.50
80 pr. Colored Sweat
Socks-size9only
1.00
Plastic
Ladies'
Rain
Coats
11
5.95
99 Children’s Terry
Cloth Sun Suits
1.98

1.00
2.50
1.50

V.

Drastic Reductions on Numerous Items
such as the following:
3 Letter Holders
1043 Asst. Drawing Pencils
252 6 Drawing Pencils (Venus)
2 3 Ring Notebooks
13 Note Paper Holders
32 Tax Tabs (Monthly &amp; Weekly)
4 Today Refill Pads
15 Phone Rest Holders
7 Triple or Double Belt Pencil Holders
1 Desk Pad

11 Calendars

UNIVERSITY ‘BOOKSTORE
••ON CAMPUS” SBb»~

�Tuesday, April 5, 1966

PACK THRU

SPECTRUM

Chairmanship Applications Available University College Explores Changes
For Student Senate Subcommittees For Advisement And Registration
Applications are available this
week for the chairmanships of
Student Senate subcommittees
for the 1966-67 academic year.
Forms may be obtained from the
secretary in the Senate office or
at the candy counter and must
be returned to the Senate office
by Thursday, April 14. Interviews
will be held the following week.
Names of those applicants recommended by the Senate Executive Committee will be submitted
to the Student Senate for approval. Two committee chairmen have
been elected: Jeffrey Lynford
was elected chairman of the National Student Association Steering Committee and Stuednt Association Treasurer Carl Levine
heads the Finance Committee.
According to Student Association
Vice-president Kim Darrow, the
other chairmanships are open to
any student who wishes to make
an effective contribution to student government.
The following are subcommittees of the Student Senate: Academic Affairs Committee includes
Comprehensive Exam investigation, Course Evaluation, Academic
Honesty, Independent Study and
Student Atitudes.
Welfare Committee concerned
with book and food prices, parking, and calendar changes.
Convocations Committee organizes speaker programs sponsored
by the Senate and coordinates
these programs with other student organizations.

National Student Association
Steering Committee maintains
communications with the NSA on

matters of education, academic

freedom, international affairs
and student welfare, and acts to
alleviate problems in these areas
when other committees fail to do
so.

Public Relations Committee
maintains relations with the Buffalo community. The committee
is presently working for the es-

tablishment of a student speaker
bureau.
International

for community efforts through
such programs such as “Headstart.” He emphasized that in
addition to merely obtaining jobs
for the poor, they must be freed
from their poverty situation. Mr.
Lane criticized the national poverty program’s denial of aid
to individuals with criminal re-

Affairs

mat major, and a vocational guidance library was mentioned.
Freshman student leaders, a
random sampling of sophomores,
and junior residence advisors

Dr. Milton Plesur, assistant
dean of University College, commented that the meeting was
held to clarify the role of the
advisor and to hear student com-

Future Plans For Campus
Outlined At Senate Meeting

plaints.
A new registration procedure
via telephone using Social Security numbers is being investigated. according to a staff member. The possibility of receiving
a bachelor’s degree without a for-

Civil Rights Committee works
to promote civil rights locally.
Stuednt

Senate Discount

Ser-

vice Committee concerned with
obtaining discounts for students.
Publicity Committee handles all
publicity such as posters and
slingers for Senate and Committee programs.
Commuter Committee investigates the needs of commuting
students and seeks ways to enlarge their role in campus affairs.
Student Book Exchange is a
subcommittee of the Student Welfare Committee. It may be made
a special committee of the Sen-

ate.

The Rosenthal Foundation of
New York City, established “for
the encouragement of young filmmakers, artists and writers ’, has
awarded Jeremy Taylor, Editor
of the Spectrum, first prize in a
national contest (five hundred
dollars), for a scenario entitled
Tower and the Fortress.
Essentially a plea for passion
and commitment, the scenario describes the confrontation of a
Buddhist monk and ‘'bandit” in
the 13th century. Although a
medieval setting is used, the
scenario might just have well employed the United States during

the Civil War period or the pres
ent for that matter as background
The message is the same, “seriousnes overcomes all evil."
Interested in filmaking for a
number of years, Mr. Taylor has
produced an ddirected one 16millimeter color film and helped
direct at least two others. He has
been commissioned by the American Friends Service Committee
to write, produce and direct a
feature-length film for national
distribution on conscientious ob-

“The largest agricultural strike
in California protests conditions
which have remained unchanged
since the writing of John Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath,"
commented Mr. Solodow, He added that the scene of the novel
was only 30 miles north of the
site of the present dispute.
Mr, Solodow noted that SDS,
CORE, the AFL-CIO, SNCC, the
National Council of Churches
and Senator Robert Kennedy

to help solve the current growth
problem. Committee reports were
presented at the meeting and the

Prefacing Mr. Doemiand's remarks, committee reports were
presented. Highlighting the reports were the suggestions to
make the Course Evaluation subcommittee of the Academic Affairs Committee a standing
committee and to continue the
efforts to make UB a “wet cam-

moved from the present campus

1966-67 officers were inducted.

According to Mr. Docmland, by
January the entire art department and the faculty offices of
the anthropology, philosophy and

mathematics will be moved either
completely or partially to a new
“interim c a m p u s”, located on
Niagara Falls Boulevard about

fifteen minutes from the main

campus.

Mr. Doemland

said

that the

interim campus is seen by University planners as a preparatory

step which will enable the de-

partments which arc being moved

continue

faculty

expansion.

Expansion, said Mr. Doemland,
would be impossible if the offices

were to be housed on the Main
Street campus.

pus."

Annual Scholarship Tea
Heldby Cap And Gown
The

Annual Junior Women’s

Scholarship Tea was held by Cap

and Gown, senior women’s honorsociety, last Wednesday to
honor junior university women
with cumulative averages of 1.8

�MEETING*
Publications Board
Meeting tonight at 6:00.

On the campus his interest in
films has led to the formation of

or over.

,

Cap and Gown president Barbara Witzcl announced that the
tea served as a preliminary function for the selection of new Cap
and Gown members.

Miss Witzel explained that Cap
and Gown membership selection
is based on character, scholarship, campus activities and service to the university. Final selection of new members for 1967
will take place April 21, Miss
Witzel disclosed.

ATTENTION
SMALL CYCLE OWNERS

.

.

.

cords, stressing that these people
must be helped by local organizations.
Reverend Weston concluded
the symposium with a discussion on “What More is Needed?”
He declared that we must strive
for “unity out of diversity” in
the building of a community.
In an interview with a Spec-

have offered their support in
the strike.
Mr. Solodow said that he has
already visited 45 cities to gain
NFWA support. He announced
that UB student leaders Charles
Brewer of CORE, Richard Salter
of SDS, and Jeremy Taylor Of

from reporter, Reverend Weston
commented on the role of university students in achieving the

goal of unity through diversity.
‘‘Students can recognize, develop,
and spread allegiance to this
concept, actively participating in

this third American revolution

against unequal advantages." He
added that students can join
local Civil Rights organizations.

the Spectrum plan to help organize community support for

the strike.

Former economist at the Federal Reserve Board. Mr Solodow
was an arjjanizer for CORE in
Watts.

344 Pints of Blood Collected
The most successful blood
drive in UB’s history took place
March 17th in the basement of
Tower dormitory. Under the
sponsorship of Arnold Air Society and the Air Force ROTC
detachment at UB, the Red Cross
collected 344 pints of blood for
use thrqgghijut the Niagara Fron
tier.

In six hours, from 9 a m. to
3 p.m., hundreds of students,
faculty members, and university

workers

the
Film Club, an
organization .interested and actively involved in writing and
producing films. With a view
toward making films a vocation
rather than an avocation, Mr. Taylor intends to go to the London
School of Film Technique, London, England.

jection.

—

Robert Solodow, an organizer
for the National Farmworkers
Association, has been in Buffalo
since Utarch 31 seeking support
for the Delano, California grapeworkers strike.
The National Farm Workers
Association (NFWA) which has
been on strike since September
8, 1965 is demanding recognition of the union, wage increases,
and enforcement of state labor
laws, according to Mr. Solodow.

to

ary

NFWA On Strike Support Sought
By CATHY CENTER

were selected to participate in
the meeting by Mr. Donald McClain, assistant director of housing and coordinator of the program.

At last Thursday's Senate meet
ing, Mr. William Doemland of the
Office of Planning and Development reported that by January
1967 several departments will be

Jeremy Taylor Awarded 1st Prize for Film

Discrimination Symposium
(Cont’d from Pg. 1)

Student

Committee carries out the foreign
student orientation program and
will investigate new means to
more effectively integrate the foreign student into the academic
community.
Course Evaluation is presently
being handled by a subcommittee
of the Academic Affairs Committee, but may be set up as a special committee of the Senate.
New Campus Committee attempts to secure an effective student contribtuion to the planning
of the new campus.
Campus Barrel Committee contributed funds collected this year
to the World University Service.
Finance Committee, with the
Treasurer of the Student Association as its chairman, reviews proposed budgets of recognized student groups and then recommends budgets to the Senate for
approval.
Student Activities Committee
recommends student groups to
the Senate for formal recognition,
making them eligible to receive
Senate funds and stimulates student interest in campus activities.
Elections Committee supervises
and conducts t h e elections of
Student Association officers and
Student Senators.

Several students and members
of the University College advisement staff met last Tuesday to
initiate changes in the UC student advisement program.

donated this record
amount of blood. Sororities, fraternities, and the ROTC Cadet

were among the
sources of contribution.

Corps

major

The members of these organizations and all those who gave
are to be congratulated for mak
ing the 1966 UB Blood Drive
the most significant one yet.

Leadership Comm.
Applications for the
Leadership Commi 11 e e
—

—

are now available in the
Union Board Office, 215
Norton.

The MIGLIORE INSURANCE
AGENCY specialties in small
cycle insurance. Call us for
rates between 9 and 5.

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�Tuesday, April 5, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACE FOUR

Cditoriaf Comment

.

.

The

.

grump

HERE WE GO (AGAIN)
I must confess to finding myIn a story datelined Niagara Falls appearing in the self most insensitive at times. I
second section of Sunday's Courier-Expre»», we are told never foresee some of the probthat State Senate Majority Leader Earl Brydges is calling lems which-threaten to send me
for a full scale investigation of the anti-war activities blundering to my doom For example on St. Patrick’s Day a few
taking place on the various campuses of the State Uniin
versity, with particular emphasis on the U.B. chapter of of the more alcoholic students
the department decided to go out
S.D.S. and, surprisingly enough, the U.B. office of Unia mild binge in order to obversity Relations. President Gould reacted immediately on
St. Paddy, a member of the
serve
to Senator Brydges' charges with a general statement contingent’s birthday, and the apexonerating University Relations and asserting the right proaching vacation.
of “local control” among the units of the State University.
The main group started out in
Once again, the academic community is indebted to
President Gould for his prompt and supportive action,
and once again the freedom of the university is in jeopardy from the tin-pot tyrants and junior McCarthys who
see education as an extension of the propaganda arm of
the State. Although it is impossible to be certain at this
early date (the Legislature does not reconvene until April
18), it appears that the State University, and U.B. in
particular, may be in for another HUAC-style assault on
academic freedom, and the. legitimate functions of higher
education. Anthony J. Travia, Democratic State Assembly Leader, is reported to have agreed with Senator
Brydges and the Republican-dominated State Senate that
the investigation committee should be re-established, so
there appears to be little doubt that the investigations
will be launched.

In calling for the “investigations”, Senator Brydges
stated that the student demonstrations were “a serious
symptom, especially in time of war”, and that “Our
enemies are using them on the international scene as
proof that we are not united in our determination.” Just
as the late Junior Senator from Wisconsin capitalized on
the Korean conflict to undermine the American tradition
of civil rights and liberties, Senator Brydges appears to
be using “war fever” and the national hysteria which
attends our military piracy abroad as a rhetoric-rational
for coercive and anti-educational measures here in this
State.
The academic community must be prepared to stand
firm on the principles of respectable education and constitutional safeguards to personal freedom and dignity
in the face of this attack. Like the infamous Felnberg
Law and “oath”, these investigations constitute yet another attempt to bring the academic and intellectual
community “to heel” through a campaign of bureaucratic
threat and public pillory.
MORE TROUBLE
The experiences of the anti-war demonstrators on
their five mile march from Lafayette Square to the University Campus appear to indicate that the hysteria of
war has penetrated a great deal deeper than the State
Legislature. The march was characterized by sporadic
violence and continual heckling. In the block on Main
Street between Ferry and Michigan, a man who claimed
(cont’d on Page 8)

THE

SPECTRUM

Th« official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall. University Campus. Buffalo. N Y. 14214
Published twice weekly from the first week of September to the last week in
May. except for exam periods. Thanksgiving.

Christmas, and spring vacations.

Editor-In-Chief

JEREMY TAYLOR

Business Manager

RAYMOND D

VOLPE

News Editor
SUSAN GREENE
Assistant
ALICE EDELMAN
Staff Loretta Angelina, Joanne Bouchier. Russell Buchman, Karen Green.
Peter Lederman. Joan Roberts. Rick Schwab. Dan Schroeder,
Sharon Shulman,
Eileen Teitler. Nancy Toder. Patti Warlley. Judy Weisberg

Feature Editor

J*a#f

—Bonnie
Audrey Logel.
Staff—Mike
J. B Shared

JOHN STINY
Assistant
JO ANNE LEEGANT
Bartow. Ron Ellsworth. Barbara Ann Fitzsimmons. Barbara Loeb,
Bob Martin. Suzanne Rovner. Martha Tack. William Weinstein.
Spo»»» Editor
STEVE SCHUELEIN
Castro. Mike Dolan. Steve Farbman. Bob Frey. Scott Forman.

Staff—-Joanne

Layout Editor
SHARON HONIG
Stephanie Parker. Steve Silverman

Bouchier.

Copy Editor
LAUREN JACOBS
Staff —Carol Becker. Estelle Fok. Jocelyn Hailpern. Sandy Lippman. Betsy O/er,
Claire Shottenfeld, Susan Zuckerberg
Staff— Terry

Mancmi

Angelo.

Advertising Manager
Audrey Cash. Pat

Photography Editor

RON

HOLTZ

Rosenfeld.

Steve

Silverman.

Joseph

EDWARD JOSCELYN

Staff—Don Blank. Peter Bonneau. Joseph Feyes, Carol Goodson, Alan Gruber.
Marc Levine. Ivan Makuch. Michael Solun. Anthony Walluk. Susan Wortman,

Robert Wynne

Circulation

Manager

DIANE LEWIS

IRENE

Faculty Advisor
Financial Advisor

DALLAS

WILLET
GARBER

DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING

EDITORIAL POLICY IS

Second Class

Postage

Subscription

$3 00

15,000

Paid at
per

Buffalo. N Y
circulation

year,

Represented
for national advertising by
National Advertising Service, Inc., 420 Madi
son Ave . New YorK N. Y.

Fort Erie, under the watchful
eye of the Provincial Police, and
a number of others who had mundane things like class to deal
with were to join the vanguard
at a bistro on Niagara called the
Schuper House around eleven or

eleven-thirty.
My wife and I arrived to find
a reasonably congenial and well
lubricated crew surrounding two
tables. I noted that there were
no schupers in sight but then I
might not have given them out
to the crew I was joining either.
Things became sort of mildly raucaus what with peanut shells flying hither, thither and yon and
some boisterous talk and banging
of drained glasses.
There was however no overt
aggression of any sort. No glasses
were broken, nothing was thrown

other than the aforementioned
peanut shells, and there wasn’t
even any profanity to really be
worried about, a fact that my
wife's presence may have had no
little to do with.
All in all it was just sort of a
wet evening in anticipation of

by STEESE

being able to relax for a week.
It is hard to pinpoint just when
the hostilities started to escalate.
Some of the patrons—older variiety—did comment on my beard
but, what the hell, somebody always has a comment to make
about a beard.
I do remember the smiling,
friendly bartender, who you shall
learn later is the heavy of this
little piece of vindictive rage,
beginning to ask questions about
who took what, and where people
went to school, etc. but by that
time I was involved in a raging
controversy over something that
I am unable to recall at this time.
Suffice it to say that by the
time I realized anything was
grossly amiss we had been cut
off and stranded with nothing
further to drink. Much as I dis-

like this form of banishment it
is a reasonable thing to do if
you do not wish anyone to remain within the four walls of
your establishment.
Had the smiling, friendly bartender left the insult to inferring that none of us could drink,
it would have been one thing.
He was not so content. It seems
this particular individual had a
son in the army, and in addition
to that, in Vietnam, It is difficult
to recall the exact remarks he
was making but the idea seemed
to be that any good American
boy would not be wasting his
time going to school when there
was fighting to be done.
Despite my new found lack of
spark I finally was irked to the

point of jamming one of several
little things I keep in my wallet
to remind me of the army under

his nose. This succeeded in mak-

ing us both madder because, I
“was hiding in a cellar in France”
according to him, and because it
seemed to me that I went in and
took what they gave me for two
years and got out and I like it

much better out than in.
I was tempted to ask him
whether his son volunteered for
or was shipped to Vietnam, but
what the hell good would it have
done? I got out in time to help
restrain one of the weight lifting
enthusiasts who insisted he was
going back in and press the bartender but the incident has stayed
with me.
It is only an incident but it
bears thinking about. If this nation gets much deeper into the
altercation in Vietnam his resentment towards anyone who is
not in uniform could continue to
grow. Note also the treatment afforded those who demonstrated
against Vietnam this last weekend.

Maybe it doesn’t scare you
friend, but I just signed up with
the AAA so when my wife and I
go wheeling through the midwest
this summer there might be less
tendency to pull over the funny
looking guy and check him out.
Hell, they will probably think we
stole the car. Steal a ’61 Chevy???
Fun Reading of the Month:
George Lincoln Rockwell Interviews in Playboy. A minor warp
there.

YAF Soundboard
By Thermopylae
Dictionary of

Left Wing Terminology

Many students
through Norton
to classes are
turbed by certain

while running
their way
sometimes dison

interesting con-

versations centered around certain tables, and may be puzzled
by the terms used. In the interest of their enlightenment, we
present the following anthology
of frequently repeated terms and
their interpretation by our far
left wing on campus.
1. Fascist Any person who is
not a Communist.
2. Nazi Any person who is a
fascist.
3. Revolution A
violent
change or revolt which must
overthrow the American government and which all good farleftists must work toward
achieving.
4. Non-Violent Part
of the
name of those committees which
all good leftwingers should join.

5. Dictatorship State such as
all dissent is

the U.S., where

ruthlessly suppressed.
6. Freedom State such as the

U.S.S.R.,

where

dissent

is

of

course allowed, but the government is so benevolent that no
one wishes to.
7, Peace The state in which

Ho Chi Minh’s enemies will rest
after his Liberation.
8. Lyndon Johnson Barry
Goldwater in disguise.
9. Adolph Hitler Lyndon
Johnson in disguise.
10. Jesus Christ Ho Chi Minh
in disguise.
11. Religion The opiate of the
masses.

12. Narcotics The salvation of

the masses.

13. Cod An evil force which
never existed and has since died.

14. Cleanliness An evil force
associated with Godliness and to
be religiously avoided.
15. The Establishment Those

or forces which exert
control over the government
and means of communication of
a certain place. It is to be op-

powers

posed.

16. SDS, The Spectrum, The
Student Senate and NSA O.K.
stop being such a wise guy,
17. NorvConformiet O n e v who
thinks, dresses, acts, and smells
exactly like all the other leftwing non-conformists.
18. Newspaak, Doublethink
Words which refer to the
habit of rightists of using terms
in a manner which is in fact
entirely opposite from its actual
etc.

meaning.

This list is by no means complete. There are in fact a num-

ber of terms used which, for

reasons that may or may not be

obvious to the reader, cannot
be found in any dictionary. The
reader, however, will have to
puzzle out their meaning for himself.

�Tuesday, April 5, 1966

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

Ade Martins, Nigerian Ambassador,
Talks On D.A. V. And Recent Coup

Say it in
no-pyccKM,

Nigerian Ambassador to the
United States Ade Martins spoke
at UB last Friday on “The Organization of African Unity.” Mr.
'Martins also commented on the
recent coup in Nigeria.

(or

It’s easy-even fun. You listen
to the record, then talk along
with it. You set your own learning pace, but chances are you'll
be able to speak a surprising
number of words and phrases
in a few hours.
For only S’.45 you can see if
a particular language appeals to
your interest and aptitude. Or

Ambassador Ade Martins said
that the Organization of African
Unity (O.A.U.) was founded in
May, 1963 to give practical expression to the unity and solidarity of independent African states,
to eradicate colonialism from the
African continent, and to correct
the wrongs and heal the wounds
caused by imperialist exploitation.

“I am not one of those who
believe the O.A.U. with a wave
of the wand can work wonders,”
said Ambassador Martins, “but it
represents Africa’s best hope for
survival. Africa is the arbiter of
its own destiny.”
Ambassador Martins affirmed
that as a representative of Nigeria he doesn’t consider the recent military takeover in Nigeria
a coup. “The Nigerian government asked for military control
in order to restore law and order
in Nigeria.”
Ambassador Martins asserted,
“within our lifetime we will see
the liberation of Africa from colonial powers.” He added, “The
United States can relax; communism can’t thrive in Africa. Most
Africans share what they have.”

learn enough to make foreign
travel more pleasant. At the very
least, you'll be able to say “No"
(or "Yes")in another language!

Fach album has 5 or more*
7 v: flexible packable 33 Vi records plus a handy "How to Use
the Language" Study Guide.
*

Photo by

“Romanian Folk Music” will be
considered by visiting lecturer in
Romanian Sever Trifu April 7 at
2 p.m. in 229 Crosby Hall. The
lecture, sponsored by the Department of Modern Language and
Literature, is the second of a
series of six lectures on contemporary Romania by My Trifu, lecturer in English at the University
of Cluj, Cluj, Romania.

Mr. Trifu is visiting UB this
semester under the sponsorship
of the State Department. He is
the author of an English-Romanian dictionary and has published
several articles on American literature in his native country.
The lecture series is open to
the public without charge.

Government.”

Bender, candidate for the 3Rth
Congressional District which in-

Danish

Portuguese

Norwegian
(Brazilian)*

Dutch
French
Greek
Hausa*

Russian

Serbo-Croatian
Swahili

Hebrew
(Modern)

in

(Last Africa)’

lagalog

Thai
Turkish
Vietnamese

Alan Gruber

The Department of History will
sponsor a conference on “The
Moral Economy of the Poor in
18th Century England” April 7
and 8. Following a preliminary
session, guest historians Richard
B Morris, Sigmund Diamond, J.
F. C. Harrison, Bernard Semmel,
and Charles Tilly will comment
on a paper delivered by speaker
Edward P. Thompson.
“Legal Sources and the Writing of Social History” will be
discussed by Mr. Morris in the

on

God

fine God, yet all concepts break
down when man tries to apply
them to God.

However, Rabbi Rubenstein asserted that God as the mystical
Ground of Being, the No-Thing
from which existence came, continues to be. “It is this Undefined
Totality that lives on while the
historical God of Judaism is
dead.”

Historically the Rabbi continued, the Jews have been punished by God for their sinfulness.
“God was responsible for whatever meaning was to be found in
&gt;

history.”

After the slaughter in the death
camps at Auschwitz, Rabbi Rubenstein has concluded that there
is no Ultimate Actor in the Historical Drama. He questioned the
modern Jew’s ability to accept a
God who destroyed six million in
order that two million may return
to their homeland. “The sense of
reality of the divine has atrophied.”
The remaining lectures in this
series will be delivered tonight
by Dr. Herman Holcomb of the
Colgate Rochester Divinity School
and April 13 by the Rev. Father
Francis Keating of St. Peter’s
College, Jersey City, New Jersey.

preliminary session in the Faculty Club on Thursday, April 7,
at 8:45 p.m. Morris is the author
of The Peacemakers and Co-Editor of the New American Series.
UB History Department Chairman Dr. John T. Horton will act
as chairman of the session.

dudes the University, is currently the Republican Supervisor of
the 18th Ward of Buffalo.
Twenty-nine years old and Director of Public Relations for the

International Life Insurance, Inc.,
Bender is receiving student support in his campaign in the form
of the Ad Hoc University Corn-

WORLD FOREIGN

Following Thompson's presentation, Managing Editor of the
Political Science Quarterly Sigmund Diamond and author-historian J.F.C. Harrison, Richard
Morris, Bernard Semmel, and
Charles Tilly will discuss the
topic. Harold Syrett, Executive
Dean for University Centers and
Editor of “The Papers of Alexander Hamilton”, will act as
chairman.
History Department Chairman
John T. Horton commented that
“this will be a great opportunity
for not only history students, but
all students in the social sciences,
to learn something relating to
economics and history from a very
distinguished

son

man,

Mr. Thomp-

it is an opportunity not
to be missed.”
This conference will inaugurate
t h e annual department conference on Explorations in Social
and Comparative History.
General discussion from the
floor will follow the discussants’
comments and a coffee hour will
conclude the conference. Admission is free.
...

mittee to Support Miles D. Bender.

Committee Chairman Carl Le-

vine announced that a question
and answer period will follow the
talk and can include any topic
of local or national political interest.

LANGUAGE

io 14102

The main subject of the conference will be discussed on Friday morning and afternoon, April
8, from 9:45-12 noon and 2:004:00 in Norton Conference Theater. Visiting Professorial Lecturer Edward Thompson will deliver
his paper concerning the moral
economy of the poor in 18tf*&gt;century England. Thompson, from
the University of Warwick in
England, is lecturing in the UB
History Department from March
27 through April 8. He is the
author of The Making of (he English Working Class, which the
American Historical Review hailed as “an admirable work of imaginative scholarship” and British
historian Asa Briggs cited as "a
landmark”. Thompson is currently completing a study of the 18th
century food riots and the Jacobin milieu.

Candidate Bender Addresses Students
Congressional candidate Miles
D. Bender will address the student body tomorrow, April 6, at
2 p.m. in the Norton Conference
Theater Mr. Bender will speak
on “The Age of Deception in

Persian

Kurdish’

History Dept. Holds Conference

“God is above all categories of
finitude,” the Rabbi said. Consequently, the history of religion
has Jjeen a continual breakdown
of concept.

Trifo Speaks On
Romanian Music

Bengali
Cambodian

*

This lecture was the first in
a three-part series “A Dialogue

“We are living in the time of
the passing of the ability to believe in the traditional concept
of God as the Ultimate Actor in
the Historical Drama,” he declared. “In this sense, God is
dead.”
The Rabbi noted that through-

Lao

lents of Buffalo

is on his left.

out history man has made endless
attempts to conceptualize and de-

co-spongM*

Amharic
Arabic

Indonesian

“We are living in the time of
the Death of God” declared Rabbi
Richard Rubenstein, University
of Pittsburgh Hillel chaplain, at
a lecture last Wednesday.

ed by the State University at
Buffalo Council of Religious Organizations and the Student Senate Convocations Committee.

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�PAGE SIX

Tuesday, April 5, 1966

SPECTRUM

Weekly Calendar
April 5-8
Tuesday S
Meeting: Freshman Class Council, 6-7:30 p.m., Norton 234.
Meeting: Housing Office, 1-3
p.m,, Faculty Lounge.
Meeting: Student Senate, 12-5

329.

p.m., Norton

Display; French 102 D3, All
Day, Center Lounge, (through
Friday).
Lecture: Convocations Commitp.m., Conference
Theatre,

Mock Trial: Erie County Bar
Association, 8 p.m., Norton,
Lecture: Dr. D. Benson, Buffalo

Academy of Medicine, Butler Aud-

itorium
Theatre: Act Without Words No.
2 (Samuel Beckett) and The Blind
Men (Ghclderode), the Workshop
Theatre, 8:30 p.m., April 6-24.
Concert: 8:30 p.m., Baird.
Thursday 7
Colloquium: Dr. D. Miller, De
partment of Psychology, 4 p.m,

tee, 7:30-11

Fillmore Room,

Lecture; “Joide Hall Musical
Acoustics,” 4:30 p.m., Baird Hall.

Lounge
Play: Winnie the Pooh, Studio

Concert; Andres Segovia
Kleinhans, 8:30 p.m.

Wednesday 6
Concert: Music Department,
3:30-11 p.m., Conference Theatre.

Lecture; Department of Speech
and Drama, 9:30-11 p.m., Haas

Arena Theater.

Friday 8

Forum: Department of History,
9:45-12 &amp; 2-4 p.m., Conference
Theatre.

Blues Project
The Blues Project played in the
Haas Lounge last Thursday. The
group, which has been together
for about a year, plays a wide
variety of music, It ranges from
Negro City blues in the tradition
of Muddy Waters or Chuck Berry
to folk rock, which is electric
folk music, and even includes
jazz.

Members of the group include:
Danny Kalb, lead guitar and vocalist; Steve Katz, rhythm guitar,
mouth harp, and vocalist; A1
Cooper, organ, guitar, tamborine
and vocalist; Andy Kuhlberg,
bass and flute; Ray Blumcnfeld,

drums; and Emeretta Marx, vocalist, the only female member in
the group.

FOR SALE
Motorcycle 175cc 1957 Allstate
completely reconditioned and
repainted. TR 7-5703 3-4 p.m,,
10 p.m.

Ford Mustang 1965 green. Hard
top. Somebody to take over
payments. Call TR 5-4282.
’65 Honda 160. Perfect condition,
tenderly cared for, luggage
rack, 3000 miles. $475. ’ 882-5281.

IE-JUST

COULDN'T

KEEP IT

QUIET.

Photo by Don Blank

-

The Music Department will

Students interested in renting
apartment for the summer.
Three blocks from school. $27 a
month per person. 834-5686.

school newspaper's
WALLACE MIDDENDORP SAT HERE
editors resigned in
protest because The Chancellor wouldn't allow the
publication of certain salacious portions of
N 1 K.l'
To
lory
t sat, didn't you
You've made a mockery of yo&gt;
fe, Wallace Middendorp!
You're a vegetable
Protest, Wallace Middendorp
Take a stand. Make a noise!
Or dr ik Sprite, the noisy soft
drink
Open a bottle of Sprite at
the next campus speak-out. Let
t fiz and bubble to the
masses
Let its lusty carbonation
echo through the halls of ivy
Let its tart, tingling
exuberance infect the crowd
with excitement.
Do these things, Wallace
Middendorp Do these things,
and what big corporation is
going to hire you?
*1® TINGLING.

music

CLASSIFIED Program of Percussion Music'
WANTED

Don't just sit there,
Wallace Middendorp.
Make a noise. Or drink

The Blues Project presents a wide variety of rock and roll and folk

Bop around in an aeey 1959
OLDSMOBILE CONVERTIBLE.
Top and motor good—body slightly rough. $175 or best offer. Cal!
evenings 837-3773.

present “A Program of Percussion Music” featuring Creative
Associates John Bergamo and Jan
Williams with the Ufi Percussion
Ensemble tomorrow at 8:30 p.m.

in Baird Hall.
The program content will range
from the classic Ionisation of
Edgar Varese (1931) to premieres
of works by Michael Sahl and
John Bergamo, including compositions by Harrison, Colgrass, and
Feldman,

Mr Shroeder said that this is
the first concert performed by
the UB Percussion Ensemble,
composed of six undergraduates.
There will be no admission
charge.

Positions still open for
Group Leaders for Fresh-

man Orientation, Fall
1966. Applications available at the Candy Counter, and must be returned
to Candy Counter by

Wednesday, April 6.

The SPECTRUM
Published by

Partners press,
&amp;

Printing

1381 KENMORE AVENUE
(at

Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

WANTED: female roommate,
summer session. Call 831-2271
after 11 p.m.

Everything Photographic for

Professional

&amp;

Amateur Use

DELAWARE CAMERA
MART

Movie Rentals

Cameras
Projectors
Photo Finishing

Supplies

*

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877-3317

What do the pros go for 7 McGregor's golf jacket. Active, Unwrinkled. Because it’s permanent press fabric of Dacron polyester and cotton from Galey &amp; Lord. Division of
A
Burlington Industries.For your nearest retailer, write us at 1407Broadway, New York 18.

Galcy*Loft/'

�Tuesday, April 5, 1966

SPECTRUM

NSR Weak On Non-Fiction;
Layout And Art Excellent
By JOHN STINY
its inception until recently, the New Student Review
was an oddity among campus
magazines. Operating over what
was probably a too wide range,
it was an interesting, if occasionally atrocious,, publication containing a melange of literary and
political material, and poetry
ranging from God awful to early
Daniel Zimmerman, The problem
in the background was always
“What the Hell are we trying to
accomplish anyhow?”

From

«

After some experimentation
with new forms, one of which the
issue on “Alienation”, won a national award, the form of the
NSR became apparent. The magazine was to be one of the legion
of “arty” little magazines published on campuses all over the
country, concentrating on literature, art, poetry, and non-fiction
of significance.
According to the present editorin-chief the purpose of the Review is to provide an outlet for
creative efforts either on or off
the campus and to convey it to
the students.
In the current issue the layout
is a good one. The highest compliment one can pay is that one
cannot imagine the book looking

right any othe rway. The repro-

duction of the Art work seem the
best to date and it can be expected that the cognoscenti will
appreciate them. (As a prosaic
note the yellow cast paper is good
for avoiding eye-strain.)
The content and any opinions
thereof will obviously be a matter of taste. Let us say that the
reader will at the very least have
fun second-guessing the editor
and at best be interested, entertained and stimulated.
The non-fiction seems to be the
weakest part of the book and
seems definitely out of place. A
suggestion would be to eliminate
it as a department and only carry
articles of this sort when they
have a little more importance
than in the present issue.
The goals that editor Bigwood
has set for himself have met with
considerable success and there is
every reason to expect that the
upward gradient will continue.

The Union Board requests student volunteers
to tutor adults seeking
high school equivalency
diplomas. The tutorial
program is sponsored by
the Community Action
Corp. Interested students
call 2504.

PAGE SEVEN

Modern Dance Workshop Formed
Under Direction of Bernice Rosen
The Modern Dance Workshop,
initiated last fall to give intermediate dance students a place
to "explore further the material
covered in the modern dance
classes," is open to any student
with a minimum of dance experience.

Under the direction of Mrs.
Bernice Rosen, the workshop
meets Monday and Thursday evenings in the Clark Gym. Mrs.
Rosen holds a master's degree in
Dance Education from NYU. Her

professional dqnce training was
with Martha Graham, Hanya
Holm, Helen Taniris

and other
She has performed in schools and colleges
in the New York area, and has
been teaching for 19 years.
The Monday evening session
of the- workshop is devoted to
improvision
composition.
and
Mrs, Rosen explains that
the
student can experiment with his
own ideas as well as apply principles of composition, in order
to discover the most effective
way of creatively communicating
thought and emotion through
leading dancers.

L to r Judy Wurmbrand, Fredda Shatanof, Joyce Smith, Martha
Brenner, Pat Long rehearse in Modern Dance Workshop.

dance. He will have the freedom
make mistakes and learn from
them.

to

Thursday evenings technique

is emphasized, since, according
to Mrs. Rosen, every dancer
needs a basic dance vocabulary

and the ability to express his
movement vocabulary. Part of
the Thursday session includes
of the
performing
rehearsal
group, composed of the nine students who have taken part in
it since its organization.

Have astronauts

made pilots old hat?

GREEK NOTES

Alpha Gamma Delta will hold
a raffle drawing in Norton at
12 noon, April 7. Two ten-dollar
gift certificates will be given as
prizes: one from the Plaid Shop
and one from Campus Center.
Alpha Phi Omega will begin
its campus blotter drive under
Dave McDowell, chairman. They
are also planning a fund raising
campaign entitled “Trikes for
Tykes" for Easter Seals.

Phi Epsilon Pi’s pledge class
officers are: Jeff Morrison, President; Jeff Janiff, Vice-president;
Wayne Silverman, Treasurer; Jan
Stiglitz, Secretary.

Pat Miller of Sigma Kappa Phi
was elected secretary of Pan Hel-

lenic Council. The pledge class

officers

are;

Holly Gruber, PresiSecretary;

dent: Carol Roberts,

Zenia Didoshak, Treasurer; Marti

Ehorn, Social; Sita Vargas, Scholarship.

The officers of Sigma Phi Epsilon are: Mick Thompson, President; George Lorefice, Vice-president; George Parry, Recorder;
Jim Kasper, Historian; Tony Law-

rence, Corresponding Secretary;

Jeff Baker, Controller; Jim Deegan, Chaplain.
Theta Chi’s pledge officers are:
Barbara Schanzer, President;
Danny Fragiacoma, First Vicepresident; Teri Bell, Second Vicepresident; Barbara Ross, Secretary; Donna Phelps, Treasurer.
Claudia Elliot is Vice-president
of Pan Hellenic Council.

Sure, the boys who go
off the "pods" get the big, bold headlines. But if you
want to fly, the big opportunities arc .till with the
aircraft that take off and land on several thousand
feet of runway.
Who needs pilots? TAC docs And MAC. And SAC
And ADC.
There's a real future in Air Force flying. In years to
come aircraft may fly higher, faster, and further than
we dare dream of. But they'll be flying, with men
who've had Air Force flight training at the controls.
Of course the Air Force also has plenty of jobs for
those who won't be flying. As one of the world's
largest and most advanced research and develop
ment organizations, we have a continuing need fo
scientists and engineers.
Young college graduates in these fields will find
that they'll have the opportunity to do w
both interesting and important. The foci
will you have greater latitude or responsibility nghl

from the stall than on the Aerospace Team —the
U S. Air Force!
Interested? The place to find out more is at the
office of the Professor of Aerospace Studies, it
there is an Air Force ROTC unit on your campus
Ask about the new 2-year AFROTC program available at many colleges and
universities. If you prefer, moil the
coupon below

r~

1

Officer Career Information, Dept RCN 62,
Bo* A, Randolph Air Force Bose, Te*os 78148

Coll

State

UNITED STATES AIR FORCE

�Vern Saeger Participates
In National Billiards Final
Mr. Vern Saeger has been seupon the basis of his play
in the Regional Recreation Tournament, to participate in the National Finals of the 3-Cushion

lected,

Billiards Tournament of the Association of College Unions. Dur
ing this all-expense paid trip to
Miami, Florida, April 28. 29 and
30, Mr. Saeger will compete
against three other National fin
alists for the coveted Charles C.
Peterson trophy.

Mr. Saeger is a 25-year-old
Sophomore history major in the
School of Arts and Sciences. He

is an Air Force veteran who
served in the United States and
Philippine Islands. He works part
time as an Inhalation Therapist
at the Buffalo General Hospital.

w
is

Aik
VERN SAECER

His many friends in the Recreation Area of Norton Hall wish
him the best of luck in the tournament.

Dr. William M. Cruickshank.
director of the division of special education and rehabilitation

SPORTS
TRIVIA
All entries for today's sports
trivia contest must be handed to
the sports desk of the Spectrum
by this Friday. Prize-winners of
and answers for today’s quiz will
appear in next Tuesday's paper.

1. Who was the American
League homer leader in 1954?
2. Who broke Lou Kretlow’s
record for the longest hole-inone?

By ROGER FRIEDLAND

The Collegiate Press Service
“War will exist until that dis-

tant day when the conscientious
objector enjoys the same reputation and prestige that the warrior
does today."
John Fitzgerald
Kennedy.
The current state of world affairs has greatly increased the
popularity of conscientious objection as a moral alternative to
bearing arms.
—

On the nation’s campuses, hundreds of male students are flood
ing the counseling centers for
conscientious objectors. From
Washington, D.C., threats of federal investigation and accusations
of treason filter through the wire
services.
According to the American
Friends Service Committee in San
Francisco, there are currently
300,000 conscientious objectors in
this country. The figure is con-

stantly climbing as young men
increasingly refuse to bear arms

in Vietnam.
Robert Catlett, a counselor for
prospective conscientious objectors at Turn Toward Peace, said
recently that its counseling rate
had tripled since February, 1965.
The Central Committee for

at Syracuse University will deliver a public lecture on the
special educational
needs of
this
braindamaged
children
this Thursday at 8 p.m. in the
Norton Union Fillmore Room.
The lecture is co-sponsored by
the Student Speech and Hearing
Association and the Speech and
Hearing Clinic.
Author of several articles on
needs, development and education of the exceptional child,
Dr. Cruickshank is the founder
and former chairman of the New
York State Planning .Conference
for the Exceptional and a past
president of the International
Council for Exceptional Children.
He is the author of Psychology
of Exceptional
Children and
the

Youth.

3. Who was the losing pitcher
game?

4, Who was the last golfer to
win the PGA title while it was
still a match play championship"

5. Who is baseball's all time
career leader in triples?
6, Who was h o c k e v's "Mr
Zero”?

7. Who scored the winning bas-

ket when Chicago Loyola defeat
cd Cincinnati for the NCAA basketball championship two years
ago?

8. Who won the NCAA singles
tennis championship in 1950?
9 Where were the 1928 Olym
pie Games held?

10, Who won the national de
cathlon championship in 1953?

CattBoard
Occupational Therapy

Club
mooting in room 300 Norton on
March 31 at 4;30. There will be
a movie and
for next
year's officers.

International Club will hold
elections for next year's officers
Thursday, April 7, at 7 p.m. in
rooms 344-46-48. Bring IC membership card in order to vole.
Members who will be unable to
attend may hand in absentee ballots to the election committee.
THE SPECTRUM
Printed by

Partners’ Press, Inc.
AftOOTT A SMITH MINTING

1381 KENMORE AVENUE

Nam#
Spactrum staff members
are ineligible to participate.)
(All

Barth Honored By Penn State
Bill Barth, the MVP on this
year’s basketball team, has been
given honorable mention on the
Penn State All-Opponent team
this year.
Barth scored 22 points for UB

Conscientious Objection

Dr. Cruickshank to Lecture

in the 1955 All-Star

Tuesday, April 5, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

KENMORE, NEW YORK

14317

when the Nittany Lions defeated
the Bulls in December at Memorial Auditorium, 68-60.
Named to the Penn State first
team were: Dave Bing of Syracuse, Jack Marin of Duke, Ron

Williams of West Virginia, Erwin Mueller of San Francisco and
Bob Lloyd of Rutgers.
Also given honorable men-

Moral Alternative

-

Conscientious Objectors in Philadelphia, which started to atrophy
a few years ago for lack of business, was swamped by a deluge
of mail requesting advice and information.
As an answer to military conscription, conscientious objection
owes its beginning to the Militia
Act of 1792, which compelled
every white male over the age of
18 to enlist in his state militia.
Conscientious objectors during
the Civil War, mostly Quakers
and Mennonites, were exempted
from military service either by
procuring a substitute or by paying the government $300
During World War I, when noninvolvement seemed impossible,
President Woodrow Wilson pushed legislation through Congress
that obligated all men between
the ages of 21 and 30 to register
for the draft and serve for the
duration of the war if called.
In addition, Wilson's legislation
allowed for members of “wellrecognized" religious sects to
serve in non-combat units in the

army.

Caleb Foote, professor of law
at the University of California
at Berkeley, and an authority on
the legal aspects of conscientious
objection, estimates that about
5.000 conscientious objectors were
convicted in civilian courts during World War I and given either
prison terms or fines. An additional 500 persons were courtmartialed and sent to prison for
their conscientious objection.
P e a c e-tirae conscription was

first legalized in 1940 as it became inevitable that United States
neutrality was a mere chimera
as Hitler’s army ripped through
Poland,

The legislation, which passed
the House of Representatives
with the paper-thin margin of
one vote, provided non-combatant
service for those whose religious
beliefs, based on a Supreme
Being, would not permit them to
bear arms.

draft policy that grants defer-

ments only to those who have
the time, energy, persistence and

education to grapple with the
rigorous and exhausting road of
appeal boards, cross examinations
by hearing officers and the scrutiny of federal officials.
Among groups which give advice and counseling to potential
conscientious objectors is the Central Committee for Conscientious
Objectors (CCCO), which has distributed 10,000 copies of its
“Handbook for Conscientious Objectors” since November, 1965.

BILL BARTH

tions beside Barth were: Jim
Williams of Temple, Gary Keller
The handbook makes it apparent that the course a prospective of Florida, Steve Vacendak, Mike
C.O. must follow is exhausting Lewis and Bob Verga of Duke,
and rigorous, and only the most Joe Ellis of San Francisco,
dedicated pacifists will eventually George Dicker of Syracuse, Gary
Ward of Maryland, Bill Schutgain C.O. status.
sky of Army and Eddie Biedenbach of North Carolina State.
Of these applicants who persevere through the courts, about
95 per cent eventually obtain a groups committed to pacifism, inC.O. status, according to Arlo cluding the Quakers and JehovTatum, executive secretary of ah’s Witnesses &gt; sometimes fail in
CCCO.
the struggle through FBI investigations and cross-examination by
A student will not lose his O-S the local and appeal boards.
status if he applies for exemption
as a C.O.
Two legal classes of conscientious objection exist.
Although willingness to comThe 1-A-O is for individuals
mit an act of self-defense or lack who object to combatant service
of affiliation with a church does but are willing to serve in Army
not constitute grounds for a local units such as the medical corps.
board to deny C.O. status, one
must have a belief that is opposed
The 1-0 classification is for
to all wars.
those who are opposed to all military service and are thus assignScrutiny of one’s beliefs is exed to civilian work “contributing
haustively comprehensive. Questo the maintenance of the nationtions range from “Would you be
al health, safety, or interest.”
willing to use coercion to defend
this country if it were attacked?”
If such a person who is classito “Under what circumstances, if fied 1-0 refuses to comply with
any, do you believe in the use his mandatory work order, he is
of force?”
subject to prosecution by a U£.
Even members of religious District Court.

EDITORIAL COMMENT (conUd from Page 4)
up onto the sidewalk into
the line of some forty marchers. No one was injured,
and the police escort quickly dealt with the incident.
The present Universal Military Later, on the corner of Main and Amherst, five marchers
Training and Service Act grants
at the end of the line, including a full professor, the
conscientious objector status to
those who have a “belief in a Editor of the Spectrum, and three students of the Unirelation to a Supreme Being inversity, were attacked by six men, and sustained minor
volving duties superior to those cuts
and bruises. The police escort dispersed the attackarising from any human relation,
but does not include essentially ers with creditable dispatch.
political, sociological, or philosophical views or a merely per-

sonal moral code.”

In 1965, the U.S. Court of Appeals upheld the case of an agnostic. Daniel Seegar, to obtain C.O.
status. The court said, “. . Commitment to a moral ideal is for
many the equivalent of what was
historically considered the response to divine commands.”
.

Although the court expanded
the grounds for exemption as a
conscientious objector if one had
a consistent belief “parallel to
that filled by the orthodox belief
in God." there remain great difficulties facing a prospective C.O.
who bases his appeal merely on
moral or political grounds.

to be a veteran drove his car

The appalling display of violence directed toward
people exercising their legally protected rights on an
issue of the greatest magnitude would appear to indicate
that segments of American society are preparing to attack the very constitutional rights they claim to uphold.
It may even be argued that this obscene and criminally

stupid war will do irreparable damage to America, as
well as to the peoples of S.E. Asia, and that the violence
released by our military ventures may recoil and destroy
our constitutional way of life.
It is to the credit of the demonstrators that the nonviolent discipline of the march was unbroken in every
instance, and it is to the credit of the police escort that,
despite whatever feelings they may have had, they protected the line with skill and impartiality.

It is impossible, however, to fail to recognize that
inter-relationship between the spontaneous violence of
The vast majority of those who the hecklers and the anti-educational rumblings in Alrefused a pair of GI boots and an bany. Both are symptoms of the greater evil which lies
M l rifle were formulating a new at the heart of American life today, and which each of
definition of patriotism.
us must oppose in proportion to our commitment to a
meaningful and dignified way of life.
Service to one's country was
taking new forms, such as VISTA,
the Peace Corps, and countless

variations of social work.
But the new patriotism is faced
with a seemingly anachronistic

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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>THIS

P AG E IS
forreal

|

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

531” ES

VOLUME 16

U Iwl

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY,

NEXT EDITION
WILL APPEAR
TuEsApR,L5

APRIL 1, 1966

NO.

33

Senator Seeks Investigation of Demonstrations
Farmer Is Key Speaker at Symposium;
Discrimination Analyzed By Participants
Former Congress of Racial
Equality (CORE) director James
Farmer spoke at the third annual Symposium entitled “Dis-

of all people must be met.” Dr.
Burrell concluded that the alien-

crimination About Discrimination, Part III” last Friday and
Saturday in Norton Union. Psychology Professor Anna Porter
Burrell, community organizer
Ambrose Lane, and the Reverend
Moran Weston were also featured
speakers in the symposium to
discuss “The Long Term Process of Community Building.”

The

profit anti-poverty organization,
also participated in a taped WGRTV discussion program to be
shown April 10 at 6 p.m. During

Commenting on the role of
mass education in the Civil
Rights Movement, Mr. Farmer
said, “it is an extremely important direction in which Negro
emancipation must go . . . the

barrier (between black and white)
must be bridged by such a literacy program.”
Dr. Burrell discussed “Can the
Alienated Become Related?” at
the symposium on Friday. She
explained, “basic human unmet
needs tend to cause social disorganization. The need to be loved, respected, understood, and
recognized are essential in all
human beings. Frustration of

these needs results in erratic
behavior, withdraw!, extreme
aggressiveness, or extreme submissiveness.”

is

She continued, “if civilization
to survive, the human needs

AAUP Committee
Seeks Contributions
Kim Darrow and Henry Simon,
members of the Ad Hoc American of University Professors
Committee, have announced that
a table will be set up today on
the first floor of Norton to receive student contributions to
the Academic Freedom Fund. The
funds are needed to carry the
suit against the Feinberg Law
to the United States Supreme
Court.

Ad Hoc AAUP Committee
chairman Peter Nichols commented, “I hope that students
will join with faculty in supporting the cause of academic
freedom.” He added that the
Ad Hoc Committee is hopeful of
raising the needed $3,500 without depending heavily upon contributions from other State Uni
versity campuses.

The legal effort to repeal the
Feinberg Law arose as a result
of the refusal of five UB faculty
members to sign the Feinberg
certificate, which has since been
abolished.
Volunteers to sit at the table

are asked to contact Mr. Darrow
in the Senate Office, 205 Norton.

JAMES FARMER

second

speaker at

the
symposium was Mr. Farmer who
asserted, “the Civil Rights Movement has not ended. While there
have been victories, the victories
we have won have spoken almost exclusively to the South
and to the middle class.”

Mr. Farmer, now President of
the recently created Center for
Community Action and Education
which he described as a non-

the program he announced that
the Center will initiate a nationwide literacy campaign to
make possible the employment
of the illerate poor.

ated can become related only
"if we can bring our social action in conjunction with our
technological action."

Mr. Farmer proclaimed, “the
poor have been swept under the
rug. As a result, while the equalopportunity battle is being won,
the educational needs necessary
to be eligible for these opportunities are being ignored.”
Mr. Ambrose Lane opened the
Saturday session with suggestions
(Cont’d on Pg. 3)

Courier-Express Niagara

Falls

Bureau

Earl W. Brydges. New York

State Senate majority leader, Saturday said he will seek an investigation of demonstrations on
State University campuses against
the war in Viet Nam, and the use

of State

at Buffalo

press office to circulate material
for one protesting group.

The Republican loader from
Wilson, N.Y., made the announcement after learning that the UB
chapter of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) had used the
public relations office to inform
press and radio of a week-long
demonstrations against U.S. fori
eign policy,
Brydges said he would ask the
Joint Legislative Committee on
Higher Education to conduct the
investigation. He called student
activity 'a serious symptom, especially in time of war" and

added:
“This kind of thing is deeper
and more disturbing than the
normal inclination to question the
society itself,”

SDS Sponsors Peace Week
Opposing Vietnam War
SDS March From
Lafayette Square
Spotted By Violence
A group of students marched
from Lafayette Square to the
UB campus last Saturday during
“Peace in Vietnam Week" to
protest the war in Vietnam.
Participants in the march in-

cluded members of Students for
a Democratic Society, the Committee for Non-Violent Action,
the Youth Against War and
Facism, the Western New York
Committee to End the Draft, and
the staff of Spirit and Sword,
a local magazine.
An SDS member reported that
several marchers were attacked
by five civilians and one man
in uniform who carried a cane.
Mr. Jeremy Taylor said that the
man in uniform struck marchers
on their backs with his cane,
while the civilians jumped on
and kicked UB Sociology professor Sidney Wilhelm. According
to Mr. Taylor the people attacked do not intend to press charges.
Also reported by Mr. Taylor
was rock throwing and an incident in which a man drove his
car onto the sidewalk. He said
that no one was hurt in either
incident.
SDS member Rick Salter disclosed that hecklers at a counterdemonstration which formed across the street from Lafayette
Square but did not follow the
march shouted slogans such as
“Communist kikes go back to
New York City” and “Burn Yourselves.” Mr. Salter remarked that
to his knowledge this was the
first occurance of anti semitism
during the marches.

This is the last week
for students who have
not done so to pick up
their checks from the student book exchange. Contact Sandy Seide, Student
Senate Office.

Week-Long 'Dialogue For Peace'
Includes Teach-In and Symposium
A "Dialogue for Peace" was
sponsored by the Students for
a Democratic Society and the
Committee for Non-Violent Ac
tion March 28th to April 3rd
to protest the war in Vietnam.
The program began Monday
evening with a “Teach-in '66” in
the Fillmore Room during which
all points of view on the war
in Vietnam were aired.
Soap-box speeches were given
on Tuesday in front of Fountain
Square, renamed
"Freedom
Square,"

—IRC ELECTIONS
Today is the last day
to obtain and return petitions for I.R.C. general
elections to be held April
—

On Wednesday, the Committee
for Non-Violent Action began a
week-long abstinence from solid
foods. At 3 p.m. a “Symposium
on the National Liberation Front
of South Vietnam” was held in

Norton Union.

The

students

marched

from

Lafayette Square to the UB campus. Saturday afternoon. That
evening a sing-in and a read-in
with local folksingers, poets, and

musicians concluded the week of

protest.

14 and 15. Petitions may
be picked up from the
I.R.C. office on the first
floor of Tower Hall from
2 to 5 p.m.

New Committee Needed
No investigation can begin until
after a new joint committee has
been formed. The old one expired
March 31, and a new one can-

not be established until Legisla
live recess ends April 18.
Senator Brydges said he and
Speaker of the Assembly Anthony J. Travia had agreed before
the recess that the committee on
higher education would be reestablished after the Legislature
reconvenes
When it is reconvened, Senator
Brydges said, he will appear be-

fore the committee and present
the reason for conducting the investigation. If the committee feels
there is a need for the investigation, it will launch a study.
Brydges said, “We are in a
state of war, like it or not, and
these demonstrations are hurting us. Our enemies are using
them on the international scene
as proof that we are not united
in our determination."
He added that he opposed the
use of school publicity facilities
by all student organizations, not
just the pacifist demonstrators.
“Let them get their own publicity. I don’t think we should
be using public funds for this
purpose," he said.
In Albany, Dr. Samuel S. Gould,
president of the State University,
said that the SDS is a recognized
“student organization at the Buffalo campus.” He added that the
use of school publicity facilities
by student organizations is a matter of “local control. There are
no uniform regulations governing
the use of the facilities,” he said.

SFAF Holds
Last Meeting
The Student Faculty Administration Forum held its final
meeting of the year last Friday
to discuss accomplishments of the
Forum and to evaluate its role
in the future.
Members agreed to continue in
the same general framework during the next year. Desire either
to enlarge the membership of the
Forum or to establish a rotating
membership which would allow
presentation of more opinions

was expressed.

Forum chairman Richard Siggelkow suggested that people
representing special groups within the University, such as coaches
or fraternity presidents, be invited to speak before the Forum.
Another member proposed that
members of special groups be in-

cluded within the Forum.
Many Forum members expressed disappointment at the lack of
student response to the Forum.
Kim Darrow requested that
members come to the meetings
better prepared for the discussions.
Dean Hawkland said that the
initiative in the meetings was too
often left to the students. “The
faculty and the administration
should take a more active part
in formulating topics for discussions rather than merely reacting
to student suggestions." Topics
suggested as having

particular

relevance to faculty interests
were “More Free Time for Faculty” and “Lethargy Among Students".

Outgoing troocuror Sandy Saida cengratulat I *66-1*67 Sonata Traaaurcr Carl Levina at mam ban of Iho Sonata and Stud ant Judiciary
Chiaf Justice Richard Jarott look on.
Photo by Riumll Goldberg

It was generally agreed that
the forum had been a useful vehicle for an exchange of opinion
between the three estates of the
university and that its existence
should be continued.

�Friday, April 1, 1966

SPECTR U M

PAGE TWO

Annual Athletic Dinner to Be Picketed by SDS
By A. PRELL FUHLE

The SDS has promised to violently protest and picket UB’s
annual athletic dinner to be held
Monday, April 4, at the Leonard
Post VFW, 2000 Walden Ave.
Since the dinner coincides with
the first night of Passover, the

SDS’s long-standing claim that
the UB athletic department is
anti-semitic has found some kindling wood.

The SDS also lays claim to
having invented a supersonic machine that can burl matzos frisbee-style at all those who plan
to attend. Statistics reveal that
fatality rates from flying matzos

are

on the increase this year, so
you’d better beware, all you antisemitic people in the athletic de-

partment.
The athletic department, upon
discovering this news, has promised to supply matzos and butter
to all Jewish participants at the
dinner The Spectrum wishes to
thank the athletic department for

this act of thoughtfulness and
generosity.

MIC

Mam (eeer Bailey)

IF 9-7131

0 5,

L. Gross 4 Bro.

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Newburgh: Wm. H. Griffin Jeweler
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Painted Post: Mallison Jewelers
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North Branford: Martin Bohan Jeweler

Stamford: Zantow-Ferguson, Inc.
Thompaonville-Enfield: Mare A Jewelers
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Watt Hartford: The Phillip H.Stevens Co.

Plattsburgh Plaza
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Rochester: Hershberg's Jewelers
Rochester: Wm. S. Thorne, Jeweler
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DELAWARE
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Schenectady; Wallace's
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Utica: Evans A Son
Warwick: Serpentini Jewelers
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MAINE
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Lawlaton: Henry Nolln
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Youngstown: Raymond Brenner, Jeweler

PENNSYLVANIA

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Appel Jeweler, Inc.
Altoona: W. F. Sellers t Co.

DIAMOND

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Wheaton;

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Collegeville; A. W. Zimmerman Jeweler

MASSACHUSETTS
Attleboro: Pur son's Jswtlry
Bedford: Bedford Jlrs. Inc.
The Great Road Shopping Canter
Beverly: La Bat Jewelers, Inc.
Boston: Kettell, Bfake A Read
Cohasset: Austin L. Ahearn, Inc.
Tedeschi's Shopping Plaza
Fitchburg; S. M. Nathan Inc.
Holyoke: Leo J. SimardInc.
Lexington; Anderson's Jlrs.—Silversmiths
Lowell: Wood-Abbott Co.
Lynn: Bissett Jewelers
New Bedford: La France Jewelers
North Adams: Frank Di Lego Jewelers
Pittsfield: Pharmers Jewelers
Springfield: Landen-True, Inc.
Stoughton: Wyman Jewelers
Webster: Vels Jewelers A Silversmiths
Wellesley; Anderson's Jlrs.—Silversmiths
Westfield: Felix Marek Jewelers
Winchester: Anderson's Jlrs.—Silversmiths

Conshohochen; Wallace Jewelers
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Easton: Lord's Jewelers
Elizabethtown: LeMar Jewelers
Erie; Darling Jewelers
Gettysburg: Coffman Jewelers
Greenville; Milo R. Williams—Jewelers
Hamburg: Merritt Alexander, Jeweler
Hanover: Columbia Jewelry Co.
Hazleton: Fellin's Jewelry
Honesdale: Butler Bros.
Johnstown; Law's Jewelry
Lancaster; Bash Jewelers

Would you buy
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Sharon: Wengler's
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Indiana: Luxemberg's Jewelry

Lansdale: Koehler's Jewelers—
Diamond Merchants
Lebanon: Bash Jewelers
New Castle: Fletcher Jewelry
Norristown: J. Ralph Shuler
Northampton: Foster Jewelers
Robert
Norwood:
H. Atkinson Jewelers
Palmyra: J. B. Bowman-Jeweler
ladelphia: U. Kalnins-Hunlingdon Valley
tburgh; John M. Roberts i Son-3Stores
Pottstown: Willauer Jewelers
Ouakertown; H. C. Kulp
Reading: J. C. Mumma Jlrs., Inc.
Royersford: Zenker Jewelers
Scranton: Ang. Ciccotti's Jewel Case
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NEW HAMPSHIRE
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Hackensack: Marcus Jewelers
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Princeton: Lavake Jewelers
Red Bank: Reussilles'
Ridgewood; Marcus Jewelers
Rutherford: Marcus Jewelers
Trenton: Hamilton Jewelers
Wayne: Corbo Jewelers
Westfield: Marcus Jewelers
West New York: L. J. Rad Jewelers

Buffalo Textbook Stores

Announcement: Anyone having a duplicate
key to the executive
washroom of Capen Hall
will be expelled from
school.
—Dean Sheffried

ly

QB

We Pay More
For Used Books

Jamestown: Baldwin Jewelry
Medina: Limine's

CONNECTICUT
Branford: Martin Bohan Jtwalar
Bridgeport; Lanox Jtwalars
Danbury: Addtssi Jewelers—! Stores
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Hartford; The Philip H. Stevens Co.

MARYLAND
Annapolis: TUghmen Compeny
Baltimore: Jemes ft. Armlger Co.
Baltimore: A. H. Felling Co.
Chevy Chase: R. Herrts end Compeny
Easton: Wyell's Jewelers
Elkton: J. J. Minster t Son
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Hyattsvllle: Fleisher's Jlrs. i Silversmiths
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Titusville: Nelson's Jewelry Store

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CRANE

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PLATO &amp; ARISTOTLE
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Faust. I. II

Hamlet
Henry IV. Part I
Julius Caesar
Macbeth
TEN GREEK TRAGEDIES

DREISER

EMERSON AND
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GOETHE

HARDY

The Return of the Native

HEMINGWAY
JAMES
MANN
MARLOWE

Edward If
MELVILLE

4

THOREAU

Walden

TWAIN
VIRGIL

Aeneid
WHITMAN

Buffalo Textbooks, Inc.
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Buffalo, N.Y.

�Friday, April 1, 1966

S'P E C T R U M

Students' Plans Foiled

Summer I By Campus Policeman
J Employment
|

Pizza
by DiRose
90t for Large

JI

13"

8 Sf/ce

PIZZA

|

TR 3-1330
FREE DELIVERY to Campus
4 p.m.-2 a.m. Sun.-Fri.
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—

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2 Bottles with Large Pizza

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Contact:
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Phone: 876-1250
.

J

|
|

J
'

Sixteen AUenhurst boys spent
the night in the Goodwill Industries collection box in the basement of Goodyear Hall, on Wednesday, March 30.

The boys climbed into the box,
which had been placed there to
collect used clothing, shortly before 11 p.m. According to Melvin
Furdd, a freshman, they planned
to remain in the box until 1 a.m.,
after which they would conduct
a door-to-door panty-raid.
The boys were unable to carry
out their plan, when they discovered that the box could not be
opene4 from the inside. Afraid
of punishment, they did not call
for help.
Campus Policeman Eugene Petrowski became aware of their
presence at 6 a.m., when he heard
“a snoring-type noise” emanating
from the box. He peered inside
and discovered the sixteen sleeping freshmen.
“I thought I was having a bad
dream,” confessed Stanley Bean.
“I saw a light shining in my face,
and I didn’t know where I was
at.”
With the aid of Officer Petrowski, the hoys climbed out of
the box. Their I.D. cards were
confiscated. Disciplinary action
is now pending.

Rathskollor introduces galaxit of new traitresses.

Waitress Service Relaxes
Atmosphere of Rathskeller
The Eathskellar will initiate
waitress service on Monday, April
3, it was announced today. The
decision was the result of student
complaints that there is no place
to go for a relaxing atmosphere
without travelling miles off campus.

The eleven waitresses hired are
all UB students. They have been
enrolled in a special waitress-

training course for the past two
weeks. Included in the curriculum
was table-setting, table cleaning,
preparation of checks, and several
lectures on how to please the cus-

tomer.
The change in the Rathskellar
will not effect food prices, according to manager, Stanley Smirskovich. Salaries will be paid on a
commission basis.

We seek an
unusual man!
He must
•

•

be between 25 38 years of age.
-

possess a college degree, preferably

4 years.
•

•

be willing to travel extensively, work
irregular hours and relocate as part of
career progression.
have the desire to succeed through
competitive selling and hard work.

Are you this man ?
If you are, the American Machine &amp; Foundry Company will provide comprehensive
class room, in-plant &amp; marketplace training to equip you for a future offering an
unusual opportunity for material gain and
a successful marketing career in the grow
ing leisure-time recreation field.
Write Spectrum, c/o Ronald Holtz, 355
Norton Union, Buffalo, N.Y. in complete
confidence.
•

SLACKS,JIANS^and WALK SHORTS Qftggg gLA QJ£g
never

*nkdDroning

An Equal Opportunity Employer
FARAH MAMUFACTURI

INC.

•

EL

PASO, TEXAS

Sfetcfc Priccs!

�Friday, April 1, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAG! FOUR

Cditoriaf Comment

.

.

Gacophobia

.

We have been deceived. We are deluded by liberalism, disarmed
by objectivity, and blinded by our own human conceit to the malignancy that is slowly possessing our bodies and minds.
With all the conflict and anxiety in the world today, people
neglect and refuse to recognize the impending danger to man’s freedom, individuality, and supremacy.

In the past few years the tentacles of this cancerous evil have
become embedded in the workings of the university as well as in
the governments and institutions throughout the world. It is our
intent to expose these modern day demons in the hope that those who
have not yet been taken over will take heed of this warning and
arm themselves to purge us of that which patiently waits to take our
souls.
As students here we are all familiar with the Bursar’s office.
BUT, who is the Bursar? Has anyone ever seen him or it? What
has happened to those who have seen the Bursar personally and seem
strangely different after the experience, or, those who have never
returned at all!? K THE BURSAR REALLY HUMAN???

The fact of the matter is that we are not dealing with a human
being—evil or otherwise. The Bursar is a machine, a computer with
a mind of its own and immense power. But it is only a small part
of a huge conspiracy men ignorantly refer to as IBM, Univac, or
Remington-Rand.
These electronic brains are not senseless creations of metal, but
rather, cold, calculating pieces of machinery who have slowly infiltrated and implanted themselves in every major function of society.
They run our schools, and control our money in the banks. They
decide our elections and strongly influence all political decisions.
We have no secrets from them since all our knowledge is processed
by them at one time or another. And even now, they have begun
controlled breeding under the guise of ‘'Blind Date Service ’1 or
“Mate-Matching" agencies.

One may find this hard to believe, and I agree. After all, haven’t
the scientists reassured us that these computers could never reach
a point of complexity where they could become independent of our
control? On the other hand, have you ever considered how much
more efficiently a computer seems to work than the human brain?
Finally, do these scientists who speak so authoritatively on computers,
really control them? Or is the situation exactly the opposite?

We are being deceived. Every day, every hour, every minute,
these electronic brains are gaining more and more power while we
helplessly stand aside and become more and more dependent on
them. Furthermore, through their social and political influence, they
are manipulating world events to produce anxiety and uneasiness.
As a result, men are conditioned to become even more dependent
on them as makers of decisions and eventually, absolute rulers of a
subservient human race existing only to build more and bigger
mechanical brains and keep their parts immaculate and shiny.
Fortunately, they have not won yet! They are still dependent
on us for their parts and source of energy. There is still a glimmer
of hope and while that flame still burns, those of us who are not
yet possessed must band together, arm ourselves, and violently destroy this evil which lurks all about us.

who disagree with them?

It is difficult to understand the

demonstrations

by

the “New Left." The opposition

always seems to come at night
and in mobs. They do not seem

to realize that mob action never
proves anything.
What is the problem? Are they
afraid of moral commitment or
is their idea of moral commit-

There has been entirely too
much negativism on this campus
of late and I wish to comment
on this great lack in our own
little Great Society. President
Johnson has shown us what can
be accomplished by a Consensus
of Opinion and yet it seems that
none of the influential campus
personalities are able to inspire
the intelligent students of this
campus into at least a modicum
of uniform action.
It is certainly to be granted
that individuality is a necessary
thing for the individual, however, in any society there comes
a time when the common good

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The Spectrum has been awarded first prize for excellence in
journalism by the Foreign-American

College Enterprise, an

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as-

sociation for improvement of college journalism. In addition to
a brass plaque, the Spectrum was

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awarded a printing press large
enough to produce two-page extras. All editors have been invited to attend the FACE conference to be hekj/in Paris, August 6-12, all expenses to be paid
by FACE.
The presentation was made at
Monday’s editorial board meeting. Editor-In-Chief Jeremy Taylor could not be reached for
comment. Editor-Elect David Edelman and Managing Editor
Larry Shohet expressed their
appreciation of the award, and
left the meeting to pack their

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Spectrum
Applauded
TO THE EDITOR:

I read every issue of the Spectrum, cover to cover. I want to
tell you that I think you are doing a fine job. All campus news
is covered completely and presented in true journalistic fashion. Especially notable is the
Spectrum’s detailed coverage of
fraternity events. Keep up the
good work.
Amy

Jones

Advice Proves Right

dOlAVi AW3d3f

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dom. Freedom of the individual
is far too important a subject
to be left in the hands of any
one man. For no one man can
truly be strong enough ever to
bear the full terrible burden of
individualism, the only wholly
trustworthy depository for this
solemn and awful load must remain the group until such time
as we are able to instill the
proper respect for individuality
into the members of the constnsified group.

bags.

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freedom, for without complete
unity there can be no true free-

New Ukrainian Eaeter Egg Bolling and Painting Machina Inatallad
in basement of Goodyear Hall; inset shows first basket of Easter
eggs produced by the new installation.
vibrating bed to help students
relax and recover from the rigors of academic life. This is all
part of the trend to provide students with a wide variety of
comforts and services.

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And we must force this unity
upon all in the interests of their

*

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By H.Y. BYRD

In keeping with its policy of
providing the newest and most
modern equipment for the greater comfort and convenience of
the student body, the management of Goodyear Cafeterias and
the FSA has announced the installation of a n e w Ukranian
Easter Egg boiling and spraying

FACE Awards First Prize
To Spectrum for Excellence

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calls for submergence of that
rampart individual’s feeling and
a joining together to further the
cause of freedom by group action
Without the dynamic life force
that is the group there can be
little progress, especially towards
the solution of situations such
as Vietnam. It is the feeling of
my group that unless this dangerous tendency towards individualism and general anarchy is halted
this country must fall. We must
stand united against the forces
stand united against the massed
soulless forces of communism
wherever they may strike.

martyrs, all right—we will be
martyrs, I never wanted to be
Christ but if the image fits . . .
Come to think of it, I am nonviolent, misunderstood, and right.
I even have a beard.
We will always welcome dialogue with the opposition, but
only if they bring their own
crosses and are willing to use
them. Forgive them lather, they
know not what they do . . .

FSA, Cafeteria Announce Addition of Machine

“»«

ooost

The resemblance between the
mobs that crucified Christ, condemned Socrates and burned
witches is frightening; the mentality is the same as those who
knew nothing in Germany during
WW n. Their weapons are smear
and innuendo.
If it is necessary for us to be

U-N-l-T-Y

machine.
The apparatus installed in the
basement of Goodyear consists of
a series of high pressure pipes
There isn’t much time left for any of us. Their disciples of and boilers and paint spray apdeception are everywhere, and I know I am being watched. Beware plicators which will provide
freshly cooked and decorator apof your neighbors. Beware of your friends—trust no one!!
proved eggs every morning for
Those of you who read this and are still free, I call on you in breakfast.
the name of freedom, dignity, and all that is sacred to man, to gather
Installed at a cost of $25,000,
your weapons, raise the sword of purification and destroy all the which is the cost of one tempeople
and
factories
that
created
them.
computers. Destroy all the
porary classroom or ten graduDestroy every place and every person that has used them. Destroy ate assistants, it is hoped that
DESTROY
Smite
from
the
face
of
all machines
THEM ALL!
them
the earth so mankind can be cleansed of perverse and
plaints about poorly cooked eggs
creations.
and dull breakfasts in Goodyear
Cafeteria.
As soon as funds permit, the
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FSA also plans to equip every
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merit the harrassment of people

By J.G.P.
opposition to

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f.Hl. .1 .1. ■

t

■

*- *—

FACE Award.

All ROTC cadets are
reminded to enter the
“What General Hershey
Means to Me” essay-contest. All entries must be
written in blood and postmarked no later than
0800 hours on 4.20.66.
Destroy this when finished reading.

To Tho Editor:

I can no longer remain silent.
I must commend the Spoctrum
for its amazing ability to predict
the future. You told me time
and time again that if I voted
for Goldwater we would be at
war. I did. And, by golly, we are!
—Charles C. Wobbe

�THIS

h

STATE

I
VOLUME 16

In the individual competition
on Friday, the team met with
some tough luck. Paul was tied
for a first round qualifying position, but was eliminated on touches. Both Frey and Houston made
it to the second round, but were

also eliminated on touches. Considering the outcome, each man
fenced well. In epee, Houston defeated last year’s defending champion and U.S. Olympian, Paul
Pesthy of Rutgers. He also beat
the fencers from Army, Air
Force, R.I.T., North Carolina,
North Carolina State, and Duke.

Saberman Frey was victorious
over fencers from Army, Chicago,

Detroit, and Brooklyn Poly.
The individual winners were:
A1 Davis (NYU)—foil, Paul Apostol (NYU)—saber, and Cap Her-

mann (Iowa)—epee.
In the team competition held
on Saturday, UB was unable to
get untracked and was eliminated in the early rounds. The winner of the team competition was
New York University, followed
by Army and Wayne State of

Detroit.
Although not too successful
this year at the Nationals, Coach
Sid Schwartz is not dismayed. He
is already making plans for next
year’s squad and for the next
National Championships to be
held at San Fernando State in Los
Angeles. According to Schwartz,
next year’s team should be the
best he has had in twenty-five
years of coaching.

Track Team's

Hampered By Weather
Despite the poor weather we

are experiencing here in Buffalo,

the UB track team has begun
practicing around Clark Gym and
parts of the golf course. The team
is anxiously awaiting better
weather, since they can’t practice
as diligently as they would like
under the wet, cold conditions.
Under these adverse conditions,
the field event competitors can’t

practice on their respective spec-

ialties.
The team, led by Captain Larry
Elsie, is about to undertake its
toughest schedule to date this

spring.
Managers and candidates for
both the Varsity and Freshman
squads are needed. All interested
are asked to contact Coach Fisher
on Monday, April 4, at 4 p.m. at
Rotary Field.

—

SDS PICKETING

—

Students for a Democratic Society and the
Committee for Non-Vio-

lent Action will present
a Picket Line to protest
the war in Vietnam in
Lafayette Square on Saturday, April 2, from
12:30-2:00 followed by a
march to the UB Campus. A sing-in and a readin will be held in the
Haas Lounge from 7 ;3011:00 that evening. The
24-hour peace vigil will
begin at the fountain at

11:00.

FARMER
Mr. James F a r m e r,
former national director
of the Congress of Racial
Equality (CORE), will
be one of the featured
—

—

speakers at a symposium

entitled “Discriminating
About Discrimination,
Part III” to be held April
1-2 in the Norton Union
Fillmore Room.

—‘DIALOGUE’—
Colleen Dewhurst,
presently starring in the
Studio Arena Theater’s
presentation of “The Little Foxes”, will appear
on “Dialogue” at 1:30
a.m. and again at 12
noon, Sunday, April 3.
—FROSH BASEBALL—
Freshmen interested in
playing Freshman Baseball daily at 5:30 should
report to Clark Gym.
GARBO FILMS—
Two films starring
Greta Garbo, “Anna
Christie” (1930) and
“Ninotchka” (1939) will
be shown Monday, April
4, in 147 Diefendorf at
8 p.m. The films, sponsored by the Union Board
Film Committee, are
open to the public with—

(This is the first of a series of articles written exclusively
for the Spectrum by Head Football Coach Richard “Doc”

In just a few days—Monday, April 4, to be exact—we will begin spring practice for the 59th season of
football here at UB.
It will be an interesting and challenging experience
for both the coaching staff and the squad members. The
coaches will have a big job to do in evaluating the abilities of each player and determining which men are best
suited to particular positions. This will present many
problems, as the players are new to the coaches and the
coaches are new to the players. Although it is much too
soon to discuss personalities, nevertheless, after viewing
films of last year's team in action, I think I can safely
predict that the University of Buffalo will have a team
this fall that will be fundamentally sound and will play
interesting football.
Winning football is a combination of many things,
some physical and some psychological. One of the more
important psychological factors, especially to a college
team, is student support. The UB football team is YOUR
TEAM and merits YOUR SUPPORT. Don’t ever believe
for a minute that the coaches and players are unmindful
of student support. It acts as a spur to better performance by all concerned.
One of the problems faced by the coaches in which
the students can be of immediate assistance is in the field
of student managers. At the present time we are without
student managers. Those who have a background or
interest in this field are urged to see me in my office.
I can promise you plenty of hard work and long hours,
but I can also promise you the satisfaction of being an
important part of the UB football program. So I repeat,
if you are interested, please see me.
I’d like to thank the Spectrum for giving me this
opportunity to deliver my message to you. I will report
to you from time to time, via the Spectrum, giving you
an account of our progress. In the meantime, if you have
any suggestions or questions, please feel free to contact

me.

WILL APPEAR

I

APRIL

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, APRIL 1, 1966

Fencers Meet at Duke
For Title Competition
Last Friday and Saturday, the
UB Fencing Team competed in
the National Championships at
Duke University in Durham, N.C.
The team, which consisted of Joe
Paul in foil, John Houston in
epee, and Bob Frey in saber, met
top collegiate fencers from ail
over the U.S.

NEXT EDITION

-

GROUP LEADERS
are now
available for Group
Leaders for freshman orientation, Fall ’66 at the
Candy Counter. Deadline
for return of applications
is today.
—

—

Applications

NO. 33

Boyd-Bowman Receives Grant
To Continue Language Program
UB Modern Language Professor
Peter M. Boyd-Bowman has been
named chief consultant in a statewide program to study non-Western languages through a $167,750
grant given to the State University of New York by the Carnegie
Foundation.
Both public and private colleges and universities will participate in the program which—will
include approximately 135 courses of independent study in Japanese, Chinese, Hindi, Vietnamese, and Swahili.
Dr. Boy d-Bowman explained
that enrollment of one or two

students is sufficient. Students
learn through independent study
of taped or printed materials and
frequent drill with native speakers. A visiting professor who is
a specialist in his language will
meet with the students at the
end of each semester to distrib-

ute grades.

According to—Dr. Boy d-Bowman, who coordinated the pilot
program at UB, the program is
designed for students of above
average ability who have a “serious motive" to learn a particular
language.

Creative Works Will Compete
For Capen, Skinners Awards
The deadline for submitting essays and other creative work for
the Samuel Paul Capen Award
and the Hildegarde F. Skinners
Memorial Prize is May 2, 1966.
The awards will be presented by
the Omicron of New York Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa.
Awarding Committee Chairman
W.E Vinacke said that the Capen
Award is a $50 Gift Certificate
for the undergraduate who best
exemplifies the spirit of free inquiry and expression. "Any meritorious product of a scholarly,
scientific, or artistic character is
eligible for the Capen Award,”
according to Mr. Vinacke. Students may submit essays, reports

of experiments, creations of literary or graphic art, or other
creative work.
The Skinners Memorial Prize, a
$25 Gift Certificate, will be
awarded for a student essay in
any field. Mr. Vinacke emphasized that the essay must be a critical treatment of a significant
problem, theory, book, poem, or
other appropriate topic. The judges will base their decision on
competence and quality of writing.

Entries should be submitted to
Chairman of
Awarding Committee
c/o W.E. Vinacke
Townsend Hall

Efron Completes Sociology Series
With Art and Technology' lecture

Assistant Professor of English
Arthur Efron spoke on “Art and
Technology” last Wednesday. His
lecture completed the Sociology
Club series, “Technology: The Virgin and the Dynamo.”
Dr. Efron asserted that the artist’s greatest responsibility is to
distinguish between human emotions and technological responses.
He quoted a technology historian
who said that cave drawings are
less of a feat than the creations
of the tools used to make the
drawings. Dr. Efron retaliated by
asserting, “whereas the drawings
are more than the record of the
tools used, modern man is a mere
reflection of technology.”
Technology, continued Dr. Efron, requires an instant response,
whereas art yields meaning only

gradually. He explained that the
new art forms, citing the cinema
as an example, invite instant re-

sponse.
“The artist cannot control society: he can only affect societal
trends if man is willing or able
to separate his own nervous system from technological responses.” Dr. Efron added that technology is an extension of the human nervous system. He warned
that technology is reaching into
the human mind. “The importance
of meaning is lost,"
Dr. Efron concluded the lecture by affirming that the artist
cannot save society from technological advances. “The artist
tries to reach man's emotions, but
he is ineffective on a technologically numb person.”

Union Board Approves Constitution
Union Board President Joanne
Osypiewsky disclosed that Union
Board adopted a new constitution
March 15 which will increase the
power of the executive board and
change teh name of the organi-

zation.
Under the new constitution,
which awaits the approval of
Miss Haas, the executive board
will handle most of the issues
that previously were voted upon
by the executive board and the
committee chairmen.
The name "Union Board" will
be changed to the "University
Union Activities Board”. Its executive board will be composed
of a president, 3 vice presidents,
secretary and treasurer.
Committee Chairmen must be
full time day students. Officers
must have achieved a 1.0 average
the previous semetser and main-

tained a 1.3 cumulative average.
Applications for officers may
be obtained through Thursday,
April 7, at the candy counter.
Candidates for committee chair-

ENGINEERING
CONFERENCE
Chancellor Clifford C, Furnas
has announced that UB professor
of pharmaceutics Gerhard Levy
has been named chairman of the
University’s Department of Pharmaceutics effective immediately.
Dr. Levy, who has been associated with the University since
1958, replaces Dr. Eino Nelson
who died January 6.
After joining the faculty as an
Assistant Professor of Pharmacy,
Dr. Levy served as acting chairman of the Department from

1959-61.

men

will

be

available through
11. All applications are to be returned to the
Union Board Office, Room 215,

Monday, April
Norton

Levy Appointed Chairman
UB School of Engineering will
hold the "20th Annual Conference on Advance in Engineering"
April 2 from 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
An invincible computer which
cannot be beaten at tic-tae-toe
will be among several studentbuilt exhibits displayed during
the Conference, according to Engineering Student Council Presi
dent John Bolton.
Mr. Bolton has announced that
the Conference, which is open to
the public, is designed to show
the capabilities of today's engineering student.

�PAGE SIX

SPECTRUM

Friday, April I, 1966

CJIBoaJ
The Anarchist Club will meet
to elect a new president on Monday, April 3 in Norton 333.

THE BOOK-OF-THE-MONTH CLUB
AND

Youth Against War and Racism
will hold a meeting at 7:30 tonight at AMVBTS Hall, 365
George Urban Blvd. Mr. Gilbert
Huggins of the US Department
of Agriculture will speak on
‘New Methods of Pest Control,”
and A1 Kerensky will show slides
of his 5-10 year stay in Minsk.

Prefeew of KbfiMokvilaii, Mumur Schwarti, complies with
Feinberg Law after I
n of suspension without pay.

THE COLLEGE ENGLISH ASSOCIATION
ARE PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE

The Tirst Annual
Book-of-the-Month Club

The Bridge Club will sponsor
a trip to Merrimac Straights to
examine novel construction methods in structural steel. All mem-

iww

Writing Tellowship
Vrogram

bers and interested Mohawk Indians are invited to attend.

The

program will consist of fourteen fellowships of $3000 each to be
awarded to seniors during the aca-

demic year 1966-67, which coincides
with the fortieth anniversary of the
Book-of-the-Month Club.
For complete details, see a member of
your English Department or write to:
DR. DONALD SEARS, DIRECTOR

BOOK-OF-THE-MONTH CLUB
WRITING FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM
c/o COLLEGE ENGLISH ASSOCIATION

Other travelers checks
are every bit as good as
First National City Banks

HOWARD UNIVERSITY
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20001

A summer to remember

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�Friday, April 1, 1966

PAGE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

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For New Underground, Self-Sufficient Campus

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New Head for ROIC

The ground at the surface of
the campus will be completely
landscaped, and a clear natural
stream will flow through it.
There will also be a huge, natural-looking swimming pool, which
the

state spokesman explained,

will be heated in winter.
Elevators and ramps will take
the students from inside the
building complex itself to the
surface where they can enjoy the
air, sunlight, and the feel of
being in the natural woodlands.

supplies.

PAISANO PIZZERIA
OPEN UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT

all but a direct atomic blast,
This last factor is being investigated, and authorities are hopeful that we will be able to protect
against this possibility also.

The old campus will be turned into a vast parking lot and
students will be transferred to
the new campus by monorail.

The entire campus will be electrified by its own nuclear reactor. The water system will be
independent of that of the city
around it and the campus will
be entirely self-sufficient. The
campus will be able to sustain
the student body for a period of
nine months without additional

c

75

new campus. According to a state
spokesman, the campus will be
completely underground.
All buildings and walkways
will be heated so that the temperature will remain the same
all year round. The air will be

In case of a nuclear attack on
the area, the independent electrical and air systems will continue to function. The campus
will be constructed to withstand

FI

Air Science Professor Lyndon von Udel checks new hot communicetions line to Cadel Headquarters while Cadet Col. Irving Cohen
looks on.
Beginning his assignment as
ics, Colonel von Udet is expected
new Professor of Air Science, to bring theoretical as well as
Colonel Lyndon von Udet is repractical knowledge to his post.
placing former professor Thomas
The Buffalo position will be his
L. Huddleston, who has been first assignment since his last
transfered to Dyess Air Force
tour of duty at Spandau Prison,
Base in Texas.
where he was serving a sentence
A graduate of West Point, and
the Berlin School of Aerodynam- for war escalation.

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�Dance Lecture to Be Given
Today by M. Van Der Nabel
By ELLEN BETHANY

present a lecture and demonstration in the Conference Theatre
at 3 p.m. today.

Nabel, en route

to California, has just completed
a highly successful tour of U.S.
Army bases where she appeared

abroad.

If the response to Miss Van
Der Nabel's appearance warrants
further exploration, the Fine
Arts Committee of the Union
Board is planing to hold a workshop session tomorrow morning
at 11 a.m. in Clark Gym. Students
and faculty are cordially invited
to attend.
Such a joint session would be
an expression of Miss Van Der
Nabel's “Emprically grounded
philosophy which emphasizes mutually advantageous faculty student relations".
-

Henry Higgins,

re-

knowned speech therapist, will
speak in the Millard Fillmore
room this evening. Dr. Higgins
will discuss the importance of
correct speech, illustrating his
point by the appearance of Miss
Eliza Doolittle, formerly a flower
merchant, now assistant professor
of speech at London School of
Economics.
Following t h e lecture-demonstration, Dr. Higgins will be available for questions. He has leased
a suite at University Motel for
private consultations, during the
week of April 3-10.
Dr. Higgins expressed a desire
to help Americans improve their
speech. ‘There are places,’’ he
explained, “where English completely disappears. In America
they haven’t spoken it for years.”

tee announces the engagement
of Monique Van Der Nabel, a
renowned exotic dancer who will

A graduate of The Oaks, she
received a BS from Sarah Lawrence College and enjoyed professional training at the Puss ’n
Boots School in Los Angeles.
Miss Van Der Naibel hopes to
obtain a master’s degree in the
near future. In a private interview, she confessed that more
than anything, she enjoys intellectual stimulation.

Prof. Henry Higgins Will Discuss
Importance of Correct Speech
-..Professor

In answer to the overwhelmingly enthusiastic response to
the Spring Arts Festival, the
Union Board Fine Arts Commit-

Miss Van Der

Friday, April 1, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

Monique Van Der Nabel

HImIm and Doolittle

Weekly Calendar
FRIDAY
Mixer; The Kingsmen, Good
year Penthouse, 8;30 p.m.
Lecture Demonstration; Moni-

Vanity Swimming: UB vs. Syra-

cuse,

Fountain

behind

Norton,

3 p.m.

•

que Van Der Nabel, Conference

Theatre,

3 p.m.

Play: "Ben Hur”, original cast,
Clark Gym, 8 p.m.

SATURDAY
Concert; Jan Peerce “I Can't
Get No Satisfaction”, Kleinhans,

8 p.m.

Movie: “Muscle Beach Party’
Circle Art Theatre

SUNDAY
Box Suppor; Sponsored by IBC,
Browsing Library, 6 p.m.
Bonfire; Sponsored by Student
Senate, UB

Bookstore, 7 p.m.
Vanity Ping-Pong: UB vs. Harvard, Lockwood stacks, 3 p.m.
Open House: Health Science
Building (third floor), 12-3 a.m.
MONDAY
Booze Hour: “The Evils of A1

TUESDAY

cohol”, Rathskellar, 3-4 p.m,
Seminar: “The Role of the University Woman”, speaker, Gypsy
Rose Lee, Men’s Nap Room, 8
pm

Eat-in: Sponsored by Food Serv ce&gt; Goodyear Cafeteria, 3-5 a.m.
'

Fireworks: Baird Parking Lot,
8-11 p.m.

Free University Opened
To Students This Week
Presenting an unstructured approach to education, the Free
University opened its door this

week to students interested in
intellectual inquiry without the
rigid demands of a formal administration.
Designed to fill the gap between the students’ desires and
the courses offered by the University’s educators, the Free University has had an encouraging
beginning. Response was especially heavy in the upper level sem-

inars and labs.

action 469.

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�Friday, April 1, 1966

fflUNBRg
I am delighted to report that an outstanding avantgarde underground epic never before seen in Buffalo is
going to have its Niagara Frontier premiere tonight. Mr.
Patrick Profit, the manager of the Cosmopolis Theater,
Buffalo’s largest and oldest movie house, told me that he
was willing to risk the censure of a variety 6f powerful
protest groups to bring the film Fagroon to this city. “The
movie has been condemned by The Catholic Legion of
t)ecency as indecent, by the PTA as anti-intellectual, by
the American Legion as subversive, by the NAACP as
discriminatory and by the Department of Public Health
as garbage, but I feel that the viewing public has a right
to see it,” Mr. Profit remarked. He went on to say that
the relative size of his theatre (the Ringling Bros. Circus
played there in 1922) and its low overhead (there are no
seats, curtains, rugs, or restrooms) convinced Annix Mattress, the film’s controversial director, to release a print
for local showing.
As every serious film goer knows, Mattress has been
considered one of this country’s most promising young
directors for nearly 20 years. His early work anticipated
Andy Warhol’s sense of length, and his most recent efforts have recalled the best films of such epic creators
as DeMille, Von Stroheim, Griffith, and Eisenstein. Mountain, his best-known (and probably most successful) early
work was an 86 reel, 16 hour study of Mt. Aetna which
had “epic stature,” according to Tom Hack of the BugleGlobe. Among his most recent films, The Life and Time*
of an Elevator Operator was described by Composte of
Film Fact* as a film “that is meaningful on many levels,
especially for the subtle intricacy of its rapid shifts of
perspective. It moves in terms of an almost arcane poignancy—an episodic tour-de-force!”
The film which he has called, simply, Fagroon, was
nearly ten years in the making and has been the subject
of a tremendous barrage of vituperative criticism since
its grand opening in Des Moines four years ago. It in,
Mattress has tried to combine nearly all of the techniques
of the most obscure and abstract film-makers of the underground New American Cinema (Brakage, Connor,
Smith, Kachur, Rice, Zimmerman, Mekas, etc.) with the
technical dexterity and opulent resources of the largest
Hollywood stuidos. The film is shown simultaneously on
from two to five screens, delivers its sound track through
70 stereo speakers ranging in size from two inches to
14 feet in diameter and is shown in 200 millimeter PanCosma-Ultravision, an invention that Mattress modestly
takes credit for.

PACE NINE

SPECTRUM

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Published by

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appearances.

TENDER,

The story was taken by Mattress from a little
but critically acclaimed first novel called All But the
Kitchen Sink. It is a picaresque ramble by a jaded,
world-weary young man through an almost incredible
variety of unusual experiences. Some of the most outstanding moments in the film include the destruction of
an oriental city by a sake flood from the collapse of huge
storage’ bins; the complete decimation of two opposing
armies due to an onslaught of killer rabbits gone berserk;
a hilarious and macabre rendition of Custer’s Last Stand
replete with ichthyologic and blatantly erotic imagery,
and the hero’s single-handed escape and defeat of a battalion of crazed vegetarians who are convinced he is a
crop-poisoner hired by the meat-packing trusts.

EAUTIFULSm?

presentation

Mattress himself claims that it is a highly moral
work. So far, several courts have ruled that it is not in
direct opposition to any laws governing obscenity or pornography. In any event, it is a rather unusual film that
is interesting even when it is unsuccessful in fulfilling its
original intentions. Although you may be outraged or
disgusted by Mattress’ work, you will surely not be bored
by this fantastic production.

This alkaloid has specific action in very small doses on the
central nervous system.
—Chemical Abstracts

The SPECTRUM

The script was written by a number of noted authors
including Lafcadio Hearn, John Cleland, Frank Norris,
and Thurso Berwick, although Mattress himself wrote
the final version. It has a huge cast, featuring unknown
American actors in all of the main roles, and such distinguished foreign luminaries as Tobias Smollet, Roderick
Random, Nell Gwynn, and Dick Turpin in brilliant cameo

Aisde from the unique and bizarre conception and
of these incidents (and numerous others
almost as enthralling), the hero’s sexual escapades are
responsible for much of the outcry which was raised at
the first public showing of this film. He (the hero) has
become convinced that he is a direct descendant of the
Marquis de Sade, and develops a tremendous determination to carry out all of de Sade’s experiments in modem,
contemporary situations. Although most of his eventual
adventures are more comic than anything else, the direct
camera work and imaginative lighting which Mattress
employs in a variety of scenes depicting flagelation, copulation, incineration, humiliation and agronimation aroused dozens of civic groups to make outraged protests
which led to the film’s controversial reputation.

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PACE TEN

Friday, April I, 1966

Dean Plesur Fights Sin;
Seeks to Ban The Sun
ACP)—Prof. Milton Plesur condemned the sun recently for having obscene influence on students
and asked- that the Board of
Regents ban it from the SUNY
campus in Buffalo.

The proposal resulted from
what Plesur called “distressing
actions by students” because of
the sunny, spring-like weather.
He complained that only half of
his students appeared for classes.
He teaches a 300-level course on
“the true meaning of the Bill
of Rights.”
Plesur said the sun caused students to leave classes and encouraged “lewd, lustful, lascivious and romantic thoughts and
actions.” He said he toured the

UB Swimming Team begins spring training.

campus during the afternoon and
found a “shocking” number of

students who seemed to be acting
in a “strange and unusual manner.” When pressed for details,
Plesur would say only that he
felt there was a “very close relationship caused by the influence of the sun.”
“If the sun is not obscene,
then the law has no meaning,”
he continued. He pointed out that
the sun caused coeds to appear
on campus “in scantier attire. We
have only to recall the scandalous Skin Hill incident to realize
the dangers of the sun,” he said.
The sun is widely available at
other locations around Buffalo,
but Plesur asked the ban only
for the campus.

Publication Board Withdraws State's Recognition
The Publications Board has announced that it plans to withdraw recognition from the State
University an dall affiliated units
as of April 15, 1966.
The proper function, as the

board envisions it, is to foster
responsible standards of journalism and editing provide guidelines and aid to the literary publications;; and to foster rightthinking by the student body.

Chairman Kopicinsky stated
that the reason for this unprecedented action was that the body
felt it could not carry out what
it felt to be its proper functions
of supervision as long as it was

limited by such archaic barriers
as the Charter of the State University or the Constitution of the
Faculty Student Association

�

Student Senate President Deveaux's face shows relief upon
reaching safety after cross campus chase by hungry K-9 dog.

CLASSIFIED
one black leather jacket. On right sleeve is embroidered “Mother” and on the
left “Death Before Dishonor.”
Contact Box 3, Spectrum Office
and Chico will pick it up
reward
Dlduplicate keys for the executive
washroom of Capen Hall for
sale cheap. Call Mehdi 031-2968.
This number is subject to change
without notice.
Wanted: Boy willing to leap from
great heights for quarters. Contact Winnifred, Box 8, Spectrum
Office.
Wanted: Companion for alert little old lady. Must have own
track shoes. Contact Milton, Box
6, Spectrum Office.
Mehdi: Where have you been?
Why doesn’t anyone answer the
number you gave me. Please
write home.

Missing

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�Friday, April 1, 1966

PAGE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

SPORTS TRIVIA INTRAWHIRLS

The first Spectrum trivia quiz
in the realm of sports was received with so much enthusiasm
that we have decided to run a
quiz in each issue for the remainder of the semester.
There will be ten questions in
each quiz, which will appear in
a coupon form as below. Prizes
will 'be offered for the highest
score every week Coupons for
the Friday issue roust be handed
in to the sports desk by the following Monday, while entry
blanks to the Tuesday issue must
be handed in by that Friday.
Correct answers to and the
prize-winners of each contest will
be printed in the following week’s
issue.
Today’s quiz:

1. Who was the Most Valuable

Player of the 1949 NTT?

2. Who scored the winning run
on Cookie Lavagetto’s hit that
spoiled Floyd Bevin’s no-hitter
bid?

3. What boxer was called the
Herkimer Hurricane?

4. Who was the leading scorer
in the National Football League
in 1952?
5. What horse won the 1960
Belmont Stakes?
6. What is Lu Clinton’s home
town?

7. Who won

Open?

the

1940 U.S.

8. Who did Don Budge beat for
the US. tennis championship in
1987?

9.

What jockey rode Dark Star
to the Kentucky Derby win in
1953?
.

10. How many wins did Del
Manges have at Batavia Downs
last fall?
Name

Come to
Sunday

(All Spectrum staff members

are ineligible to participate.)

second base at the corner of Niagara Falls Blvd., when from out
of nowhere he was struck down

By STEVE FARBMAN

I am deeply grieved to announce that Coach Edwin D. Mu-

by

tation, Director of Intrawhirls,
lost his courageous fight for life
this morning at 1:13 a.m. in Our
Lady of VICTORY (fight team,
figth) Hospital. Mr. Mutation, who
came to this University in 1956
of the well-equipped
Gym here.”), lost his life in the
line of duty.

a speeding auto.

about th« fraternities, the dying
coach spent his last hour thinking about his successor. “I must
find somebody who is outward,
jovial, knowledgeable, respected,

The Coach was rushed immediately to the hospital and was instantly operated upon. He regained consciousness momentarily,
but was told that he only had
an hour to live. Always worrying

and enjoys working with the college sect.” At 1:12 ajn., he had
reached his decision. The new
Director of Intrawhirls is Leonard
Kosobubu.

Surf Out..

It didn’t have to happen. One
man can be blamed. He is Frank
L. Ciminelli. Do all you TIMEly

(Cont’d from Pg. 12)
men I’m after, they'll heal in a
hurry.”

intrawhirl readers of this column
know who Frank L. Ciminelli is?
He’s the head of the construction
company that destroyed our softball field toy building temporary
classrooms over it.

“And if any of you

$#””$&amp;%

make a lot of noise. I thought he
was with the maintenance crew.”
Next year should indeed be an
interesting one.

come snoopin'

Spectrum people

around the gym and pokin' your
nose in our business tyring to let
the rest of the campus know
what's goin’ on. I’m gonna’ be
gunnin’ for you too.”

Coach Mutation, greatly upset
that his &lt;boys would not be able
to participate in one of the most
popular sports, took it upon himself to find another softball field.
Farb would like you fans to know
that he found that field. Yes Sir!!
Right in the middle of Main
Street. And he was marking out

THE SPECTRUM
Printed

by

Partners* Press Inc.
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When asked about who will fill
Kosobubu’s vacancy on the athletic staff, UB’s athletic director
replied, “Vacancy? What vacancy? Kos never did anything but

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If communications were perfect,
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Of course, you would still
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We introduced Tele-Lecture service
(two-way amplified phone calls)
to let you hear lecturers
in distant locations. And so you
could ask them questions
no matter how far away they were.
Right now, many students can dial
from their dormitories to a
language lab. Soon a student
will be able to dial into a
computer thousands of miles away
to get information for his courses.

Depending on the nature
of the information, he might get
his answer back audibly,
printed on a teletypewriter,
as a video imaigej

or a facsimile print.
Some of these services
are available now.
Others are being tested

For the next week or so,
better get a move on.
� Service mark of the Bell System

®Bell

System

American Telephone &amp; Telegraph
and Associated Companies

�SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

DEALS Jewelers
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(next to

Amherst

Theatre)

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949 ENGLEWOOD AVE.
KENMORE, N.Y.
875-S114
F.S.-I Issued Immediately

Surf Out, Kos In as Basketball Coach
By A. PRELL FUHLE

V#«C-

In a surprise move made early
this morning, Leonard Surfboard
announced his resignation as UB
head-basketball coach. With tears
gushing freely from his eyes,
Surfboard sobbed, “Much thought*
has gone into this decision. I
just didn't think that the schedule and the quality of the team
were keeping pace with one another, and felt my purposes could
be best served elsewhere.”
Surfboard immediately accepted a similar post at Alberta A&amp;M,
located just outside Edmonton.
When asked about his new team’s
schedule, Surfboard hesitated a
moment, then said thoughtfully,
"We play some of the top powers
in the country including five of
the schools in the Big 10.”

Like Michigan and Minnesota?

OS

Friday, April 1, 1966

'No, no,” Surf interjected in a

somewhat insulted manner, “the
Canadian Big 10 powers like the
Universities of Manitoba and British Columbia, Yukon Territory,
Saskatoon Tech and our archrival, Alberta State. I hope they
play an ethical brand of basketball.”
When asked what kind of personel he expected to be working
with, the Surfer said, “Some of
the kids up there have shown
me a lot of stuff. I saw this Eskimo on campus handle a harpoon
like an old pro.’’

topic by asking the Surfboard if
his move had anything to do with

the unfortunate accident that had
earlier befallen his beloved companion, Coach Edwin D. Mutation.

“It was truly sad tp lose such
a fine man,” Surf moaned with
an actual trace of sincerity, “even
if I never did beat that $% #(&amp;$#
in golf.” Then Surf’s beach-tanned features brightened somewhat as he added, tongue-incheek, “They never did find that
hit-and-run driver, did they?”

applied

For a closing comment, Surfboard was asked what he thought
of his newly-appointed successor,
Leonard Kosobubu.

everything to you?”

After a pensive moment of silence, even the Surfboard broke
into hysterical laughter.

When asked how this comment
to the question, Surfboard slammed his fist on the
desk and bellowed, “What the
#”%&amp;(%$ is the matter with you
people? Do I have to explain
Unanswered but equally undaunted I decided to change the

new Head Coach Leonard Kosobubu, who had earlier been appointed Director of Intrawhirls,
the docile, taciturn, affable Kos
remarked, “It’s about time I got
the recognition I deserve around
this %$”....(&amp;% place. And you
%$##$

Spectrum people

print that.’

When asked about bis basketball plans, the grandson of Rasputin, foaming at the mouth, yelled, “I’m gonna’ run those stinking
guys into the floor till they collapse. I’ll start the last five that
are left standing. That’s how we
done it at good ol’ Parris Island
High. We didn’t win many games,
but we ran with the best of ’em.
“And I think we got enough
depth on this club so I can shoot
anybody that does anything bad
in a game—like miss a shot or
something. If they’re the kind of

In a separate interview with

One half-fare ID card
is as good as another

on Eastern
I

v&lt;\

APRIL 5™

UNIVERSITY

&amp;0&lt;^UT0R£
•

Hutl

m4lM far

anyan*
•

o know

iran

«h« wnt*
what \mrr-

Communists

rrally think—not

what others say

they think.

to Honda
or 79 other places.
Show us any airline's youth ID card. If it's valid,
you'll pay only half price for your Eastern
Coach seat (except on April 7th and certain
days during the Thanksgiving and Christmas

Prica 9Sc -r Sc poifi)*
Special discounts on
quantity c'dars

121 pp.

Now Outlook Distributors
3J Union Sq £., Rm. 101
Now York. N. Y. 10001
Pleas*

I oncloM

$

print

City, Suit

10 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, N Y. 10020.
Or take same to any Eastern ticket office, and
you can buy your half-fare ticket on the spot.
Well send you your ID card later.

Mr./Miss/Mrs
Address.

Zip Code
Date of Birth
Enclosed is photocopy of: □ Birth Certificate
□ Draft card Q Driver's License
□ Other (Please Explain!
Name of school
School addres;

Send ID card

—Zip Code

to:

Q Home address Q School address

clearly

lor

topioi of NEW PROGRAM.

Same

holidays). Provided there's a seat available at
departure time, you can fly off on your spring
vacation to any of our 96 destinations within
the continental U. S. Including Florida.
If you don't have such a card, and you're 12
through 21, it's a snap to get one from Eastern,
as long as your parents don't object. Fill in the
blank below. Send the blank, a photocopy of
your birth certificate or other proof of age, and
a $3.00 check or money order (payable to
Eastern Airlines) to Eastern Airlines, Dept. 350,

EASTERN
m
hHI

II

can

NUMBER ONE TO THE SUN

(Cont’d

on Pg. U)

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                    <text>SCHNEIOAU

STATE

OFNEW

YQRKAT~'bUFFALO

■—-----

JUDICIARY

LECTURE

RULING

(See Page

VOLUME 16

(See Page

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, MARCH 18, 1946

Campus Alliance Wins 18 Seats
1077 Votes Were Cast;
Independents Defeated

CLINTON DEVEAUX
Re-elected President

KIM DARROW
Re-elected Vice President

Final results of the 1966-67
Student Senate election revealed
that Campus Alliance Party swept
eighteen out of nineteen Senate
seats. President Clinton Deveaux
was re-elected with 710 votes;
Vice President Kim Darrow received 676; Secretary Susan Loren received 646; and Treasurer
Carl Levine completed the officers’ victory with 672 votes.
All officers are members of the
Campus Alliance party.

students of the university at the
annual congress of the National
Student Association which legislates policy for NSA.

are Joel Gershowitz (222), Daniel
Rotholtz (217), Robert Weiner
(216), Georgeanne Gilels (201),
and Michael Warren (174).

Arts and Science victors include Ellen Cardone (283), Susan
Landerson (234), Saralee Rubenstein (228), Jocelyn Lundquist
(225), and Marion Michael (219).
All are Campus Alliance candidates, Defeated were Jeffrey
Lewis (169) and Martin Feinrider

Brian Joseph was elected by
sixteen write-in ballots, thus defeating candidate David Scherer
who polled four votes.

Jeff Lynford was elected National Student Association Coordinator and will represent the

The five seats for University
College were also won by Campus
Alliance members. The winners

(157).

Ad Hoc Committee Appeals Feinberg Decision
Funds Requested To Bring
Case To US Supreme Court
An Ad Hoc Committee of the
Buffalo American Association of
University Professors (AAUP) recently sent letters to the SUNY
faculty requesting funds to appeal the January 5 Federal Court
Decision upholding the Feinberg
Law and Certificate to the United States Supreme Court. According to Committee Chairman
Peter Nicholls, the committee
must raise $3500 for the appeal.

The Feinberg Law stated that
it is illegal for a subversive to
teach in the public schools. Newton Carver, George Hochfield,
Henry Keyishian, Ralph Maud
and George Starbuck, five present
or former UB faculty members,
originally contested the constitutionality of the Feinberg Law in
1964.

He continued: “Probably, many
of us are unaware of this because
the so-ealled Feinberg certificate
was dropped by President Gould.
But, as long as the law is in
effect, either the President or his
successor, or the Board of Trustees can reimpose the certificate.
Our freedom is at the mercy of
one or several men.”

The statement mentioned the
professors who refused to sign
the Feinberg certificate saying
that it was “not primarily concerned with tihis or that person,
but rather the principle of academic freedom.”

CERTIFICATE

Anyone who is

The Ad Hoc Committee’s letter,
sent to all full-time faculty at
SUNYAB and other SUNY AAUP chapters states: “A minimum
of $3,500 is needed to bring the
case to the Supreme Court. The
national AAUP has borne most
of the legal expenses so far, but
its resources are now heavily
committed for support to the
Mr. Janies Farmer, former nateachers at St. John’s University tional
director of the Congress
so we must assume the main buron Racial Equality (CORE), will
den for the final stage of the be one of
the featured speakers
Feinberg case.”
at a symposium entitled “Discriminating About DiscriminaReferring to the professors who
tion, Part III” to be held April
contested the constitutionality of
1-2 in the Norton Union Fillthe Feinberg Law, the committee more Room.
said, “Our colleagues have enThe symposium, being held for
dangered—some have lost—their
the third consecutive year, will
joljs to protect our academic
freedom. The least we can do be sponsored by the University’s
is support their legal action fi- Canterbury Association and the
Convocations and Civil Rights
nancially."
Committee of the Student Senate.
The letter was adapted form This year’s theme is “The Long
Term Process of Community
a statement from the Buffalo
Building.”
A A U P Executive
Committee
Farmer, who is now head of
which said that since “this law
will not be abolished in the New the Center for Community Action
Education, a non-profit, anti-povYork State Legislature our only erty program,
will discuss "Enrecourse is in the courts." Dr. listing and Equipping the ApaLoubere noted: “As long as the thetic and the Dispossessed,” at
Feinberg law remains in force 8:45 pm Friday, April 1.
Other speakers at the symposiwe cannot enjoy the fullness of
us, which is open to the public,
academic freedom.”
include: Dr. Anna Porter Bur-

the Communist

Party

or of any

organiza-

be

Anyone who was
of any

votes, while write-in candidate
Steinagle received twentynine votes but declined official
candidacy prior to the announcement of the lection results.
Jim

Other victories were scored by
Pharmacy candidate Reginald
Ameele (45), Engineering candidate Curtis Montgomery (15), and
Law School candidate Allan Paglia (53). The School of Education
elected Paula Scheinberg (11),
who defeated Christine Bowe (2).
Nursing candidate Kathleen McDonough won with fourteen votes
as did Health Related Professions
candidate Florence Bluegrass (9).

Ubltcd States or of the State of New York or any political subdivision
thereof cannot

employed by the State Itelverslty.

previously

a member of

organization that advocates the violent overthrow

Business Administration students elected the only winning
Independent. Douglas Braun, with
with twenty-six votes. Campus
Alliance candidate Allen Bassuk
was defeated with thirteen votes.

Party or

the Communist

of the Govern-

ment of the United States or of the State of New York or any political
subdivision thereof is directed to

confer

with the

President before

signing this certificate.

Presidential winner Clinton
Deveaux commented, “I hope that
next year we can return to stu-

This
of

la to certify that

1

have read the publication of the

the State of New York, 19S5.

Actlvltiea" together with
rules

entitled "Regrata Rulea on Subveraive

and regulations as

well as

the laws

cited therein are

I further certify

now a

and that

member of the

member of the

Lkilveraity

the Instructions act forth above and understand

part of the terms of my employment.

President of

Nicholls said that he expects
this to be ‘'mainly a University
of Buffalo matter,” anticipating
“major response from this university and nominal response
from other colleges.”

member of

tion that advocates the violent overthrow of the Government of the

that these

Student Ad Hoc Committee
member Kim Harrow said that
he hoped the appeal for funds
would be extended to students.

a

The Dental School elected can-

didate Gerald Cohen with six

Communist Party

If

I

that

have

I am not

ever

been

a

Communist Party 1 have communicated that fact to the

the State University of

New York.

Signature

The Constitutional case against the Feinberg Law was brought when
the certificate (above) was placed in faculty mailboxes for signature.
The written oath has since been abolished.

dent government the interest and
concern which it deserves. I feel
that the democratic practice was
hampered by the United Students
Party decision not to run candidates in the election, but I am
sure that in future years more
effort will be made to increase
the dialogue in student government politics.”
The United
Students Party
withdrew from this year’s election earlier in the campaign. As
a result, Campus Alliance Party
members represented nineteen
of the twenty-seven senate candi
dates

Farmer Featured In Symposium On Discrimination
rell, professor of education and
psychology at the State University College at Buffalo; Mr. Ambrose Lane, program development director, Community Action
Organization of Erie County; and
the Rev. M. Moran Weston, rector, St. Philip’s Episcopal Church,
New York City.

1942. Named national director of
CORE in 1961, he led the first

“freedom ride" in the South.
Born in 1920, he received a bachelor’s degree from Wiley Col-

lege (Texas), and the bachelor
of divinity degree from Howard
University in 1941, He has organized and led many civil rights
(Cont’d on Pg. 10)

Dr. Burrell will discuss, "Can
the Alienated Become Related?”
at 7:30 pm Friday, April 1. Mr.
Lane, who will discuss, “What
Powers and People Do We Have
to Use?” will speak at 8:45 am
Saturday. Rev. Weston will speak
at 10 am Saturday on the subject
“What More Do We Need?”
At 11 am, the Rev. R. Sherman
Beattie, chaplain of the Centerbury Association, will moderate
a panel discussion.

Farmer, head of the new government program aimed at improving literacy and job skills
among the chronically unemployed, helped organize CORE in

CORE DIRECTOR JAMES FARMER

-s

�PAGB TWO

SPICTRUM

Friday, March IS, 1M6

Furnas Announces Dr. Paine Appointment
To Position of Dept. Chairman of Surgery
Dr. Clifford C. Furnas today
announced the appointment of
Dr. John R. Paine as chairman of
the Department of Surgery at
the University’s School of Medicine.

In commenting on the appointment, Dr. Douglas M. Surgenor,
dean of the School of Medicine,
said, “Dr. Paine’s appointment

represents the culmination of
plans of the School of Medicine
to unify the Department of Surgery, one of the largest and most
important departments in the

School of Medicine. Dr. Paine
has outstanding qualities of leadership and his appointment represents an important step in the
University’s plans for developing
a major Health Sciences Center
in Buffalo.”
Prior to September, 1965, Dr.
Paine and Dr. John D. Stewart,
professor Of surgery, served together as co-chairmen of the Department of Surgery. Since September, Dr. William J. Staubitz
has been serving as acting cochairman of the department with

a

Pr

served with the 26th General
Hospital Unit. He was appointed
professor of surgery at the University of Buffalo School of Medicine and head of the Department
of Surgery at the Buffalo General
Hospital in 1947,
Dr Paine is a Diplomate of the
American Board of Surgery and
the Board of Thoratic Surgery.

Dr. Paine. With Dr. Paine’s new
appointment, Dr. Staubitz will
continue to serve as head of the
Division of Urology in the Department of Surgery.
Dr. Paine received his M.D.
degree from Harvard Medical
School and his surgical training
at the University of Minnesota.
During World War II, Dr. Paine

He is a fellow of the American

College of Surgeons. He is also
a member of a number of other
professional societies. He is currently serving as Chairman of
the State Board of Medical Examiners. Dr. Paine is the author
of a large number of publications in the field of general surgery.

Advisor Comments on Cream's Charges

Pre-Law Advisor Mrs. Charlotte
Opler disclosed today that a

check from Douglas Cream made
out to the State Education De-

partment was cashed by the Office of the Bursar due to a
misunderstanding on the part of
an inexperienced clerk.

‘The clerk who used Cream’s
check mistakenly for his transcript fund misunderstood (because she was new at the job),
and instead of sending the check
to Albany, thought she was using
it to pay for five of the twelve
transcripts Cream had ordered.
The inexperienced clerk is hardly
to be blamed tor embezzling.”
$5

The Company’s first engine, the Wasp, took
to the air on May 5, 1926. Within a year the
Wasp set its first world record and went on
to smash existing records and set standards
for both land and seaplanes for years to
come, carrying airframes and pilots higher,
farther, and faster than they had ever gone
before.

Mrs. Opler explained that “in
addition to the $1 fee for Cream’s
transcripts to the State Education
Department in Albany, there was
a charge of $12 for transcripts
sent to twelve different schools.”
The $5 check was in payment
(also to the State Education Department) for a Law School Qualifying Certificate which Cream
thought was required with Law
Schoo lapplications for acceptance, Mrs. Opler related.
The Pre-Law Advisor continued
that Cream was misinformed as
to the necessity of obtaining a
Law School Qualifying Certificate. She said that application
and initial acceptance to Law
School has nothing to do with
the Qualifying Certificate.
“The Certificate is only necesfor persons entering Law
School who have not graduated
from college and are presenting
three years of college work,” she
explained. She added that Mr.
Cream is expecting to graduate
in August, after four college
sary

years.

“I don’t want Mr. Cream to
blame UB if he is not accepted
to Law School,” commented Mrs.

A

Future

and

Take a look at the above chart; then a good long look
at Pratt &amp; Whitney Aircraft—where technical careers
offer exciting growth, continuing challenge, and lasting
stability—where engineers and scientists are recognized as the major reason for the Company's continued success.

Engineers and scientists at Pratt
Whitney Aircraft
are today exploring the ever-broadening avenues of
energy conversion for every environment... all opening
up new avenues of exploration in every field of aero&amp;

space. marine and industrial power application. The
technical staff working on these programs, backed by
Management's determination to provide the best and
most advanced facilities and scientific apparatus, has
already given the Company a firm foothold in the current land, sea, air and space programs so vital to our
country's future. The list of achievements amassed
by our technical staff is a veritable list of firsts in the
development of compact power plants, dating back to
the first Wasp engine which lifted the United States
to a position of world leadership in aviation. These
engineering and scientific achievements have enabled
the Company to obtain its current position of leader-

e

Opler.

She added that
Cream says he sees no connection
between the outstanding traffic
fine and the refund of his check,
it is a state rule that no refunds
may be granted until all debts
are cleared up.”

ship in fields such as gas turbines, liquid hydrogen
technology and fuel cells.

Choral Groups Present
God and Love' Concert

Should you join us, you'll be assigned early responsibility. You’ll find the spread of Pratt Whitney Aircraft's
programs requires virtually every technical talent. You'll
find opportunities for professional growth further enhanced by our Corporation-financed Graduate Education Program. Your degree can be a BS, MS or PhD in:
&amp;

"God and Love” are the themes
of a concert to be given by the
UB Choral Ensembles Saturday,
April 2, at 8:30 pm in Clark

MECHANICAL AERONAUTICAL ELECTRICAL CHEMICAL
ENGINEERING
PHYSICS
METALLURGY
CHEMISTRY
CERAMICS MATHEMATICS ENGINEERING SCIENCE OR
APPLIED MECHANICS.
•

•

•

•

•

Gymnasium.

•

•

Mr. Robert S. Beckwith, University choral director, and Mr.

•

•

For further information concerning a career with Pratt
&amp;
Whitney Aircraft, consult your coHege placement
officer—or write Mr. William L. Stoner, Engineering
Department, Pratt &amp; Whitney Aircraft, East Hartford,

Connecticut 06108.

SPECIALISTS IN POWER
POWER FOR PROPULSION—POWER
FOR AUXILIARY SYSTEMS. CURRENT UTILIZATIONS INCLUDE
AIRCRAFT. MISSILES, SPACE VEHICLES, MARINE AND INDUSTRIAL APPLICATIONS.
...

Pratt &amp; Whitney Aircraft
CONNECTICUT OPERATIONS EAST HARTFORD. CONNECTICUT
FLORIDA OPERATIONS WEST PALM BEACH, FLORIDA

DIVISION

OF

All Irml

CORP,

H

OmrtmKt t»n»rif,

M4

f

Robert D. Sacks, assistant director, will conduct.
The chorus will be accompanied by a chamber orchestra and
two local student pianists, Miss
Karen Reed and John McGroder,
also members of the chorus.
“Songs of Amourous Disposition” are to be featured in the
second half of the program. Included will be a group of French
Chansons.
Music of religious inspiration
from Gregorian Chants to twentieth century compositions will
be performed during the first
half of the program.
Tickets are available at the
ticket offices of Baird Music Hall,
Norton Union and Denton Cottier &amp; Daniels. General admission is $1.00: student tickets are
$.50.

�Friday, March 18, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE THREE

Women Live In Dream World' Father DeJaegher
According To The Daily Texan' In Panel Discu
(AOP)
College women live
in a dream world, says the Daily
Texan, University of Texas. For
four years they are equal to men.
They compete with them for
grades, for honors, for recognition, They can even become student body presidents or newspaper editors.
The Daily Texan said in an editorial:
—

Many women graduate expecting to find careers in which they

can use their educations, where

they can be “fulfilled.” “Me? A
mere housewife? Never.” they

say disdainfully. Most will find
that while their undertstanding
of Eliot and Toynbee and Kierkegaard may make life infinitely
richer, it may not make them materially as well off as a few
courses in shorthand and typing.
Some persons still insist that
women simply are not as intellectually agile as men. That’s why
there have been no female Tolstoys or Beethovens or Nietzssches, they argue. There haven’t
been any Negro Beethovens
either, but that doesn’t mean
there won’t be.

Women and Negroes are both
second class human beings in this

society. According to a recent
magazine article by satirist Jules
Feiffer, Negroes are “star victims” while: “Women’s position

is far less dramatic and, consequently, less conscience-demanding (than the Negro’s). Lost in the
shadow of our greater prejudices,
she drags along, her problem not

taken seriously by either herself
or anyone else, her identity a
mess because she has neither a
rock of acceptance nor rejection
to anchor it. Woman is a second
class victim. And what is her

problem? We all know it is man.”
According to Feiffer, men created women simply to become
“deliciously conscious of themselves.” They really, don’t .like
women at all. Whether or not
women are liked by men, most
of them will choose or be forced
into a role basically of satisfying
a male counterpart. There seems
to be a basic motivation for
women to look up to men, for
men to look up to men, and for
no one to want it any differently.
A renegade female can choose
a career, but she will be branded
a misfit by most of society. Or a
woman can choose to juggle both
a career and marriage, but here
probably will be a second class
career. When hubby is transferred, she will quit her job and
administer the moving. When the
children are ill, she will take a

leave of absence to mother them
back to health.
We see no way for the female
to evade her own particular kind
of necessity. One writer in Look
magazine’s special January issue
on “The American Woman” suggests that she find her “way back
to true womanhood’ so that “the
American man will recover his
pride and his manhood.”

By RICHARD MILLER
"China is not the very strong
power that people believe it is.”
commented Father DeJaegher,
former advisor to the late President Ngo Diem of South Viet
Nam. at a Panel on Viet Nam
in the Norton Conference Theater
last Wednesday.
Sponsored by the Committee
fop Victory in Viet Nam, Father
DeJaegher was present as a gubst
speaker and authority on the internal affairs of the Southeast
Asian country. Having spent 30
years in China and Viet Nam, he
felt himself qualified to make
observations concerning the religious climate in Indochina.
He implied that, under Diem,
there was no friction between

the Vietnamese Buddhists and
the Saigon government. Whatever ill feeling there was present,
he said, was the product of Buddhists infiltration of the country
by Communist China. When asked by panelist Dr. Marvin Zimmerman, advisor to Students for
the United States in Viet Nam,
about the Buddhist suicides,
Father

DeJaegher

replied,

"Monks burned themselves to create the impression that there was
a conflict.”
The former member of the
Diem government opened the discussion with a brief introduction
to the present Vietnamese situation. He drew a parallel between
the cultures of China and Viet
Nam, but added that the French

Upholds U.S. Policy

CVV

Father Raymond Da Jaaghar

Photo by Alan

have had an influence on the
country’s ethnic background.
Turning to the contemporary
question of Communist popularity in South Viet Nam, the Father remarked that “The people
and the government are anticommunist."
Father DeJaegher advocated
the invasion of North Viet Nam,
dismissing the possible entry of
Communist China into open war
fare. "The Chinese Communists
arc preparing missiles for later
use; therefore, China will not
come in for fear of losing its
bases to U.S. bombing.”
Or.

Zimmerman

asked

the

Lecture
Conference
In
Given
Theatre
McGrowrey Will Serve
As New Nursing Dean By Dr. Schneidau on Frost's Poetry
Dr. Ruth McGrowrey is the
new Dean of the School of Nursing at UB. The former dean,
Mrs. Anne W. Sengbusch vacated the position after the 1965
spring semester. Mrs. Jean Simpson, the assistant dean under
Mrs. Sengbusch has been acting

dean in the interim.
Dr. McGrowrey is currently
an Associate Professor of Nursing at the University of Colorado. In the past she had been
consultant of the UB School of
Nursing in Paraguay for 4 years
and on the faculty of UB for
I year.
Mrs. Sengbusch was the Dean
resigned as Dean in
favor of teaching because she
no longer wanted the administrative responsibilities, according to
Mrs. Simpson. She is now teaching on the staff of UB.
years. She

“Robert Frost’s Poetry” was
the topic of a lecture given by
Dr. Herbert Schneidau, Monday,
in the Conference Theater. Dr.
Schneidau’s presentation was the
last in the Spring Lecture Series,
sponsored by the Union Board
Literature and Drama CommitAccording to

The sythe of cutting edge image

Dr.

Sehneidau,
this white-haired, comfortable,
nice old man, as Frost is usually imagined, is an often “misunderstood poet.” He asserted
that Frost’s poetry is in a real
sense “terrifying, uncomfortable,

"It is Frost's typical strategy
to present unknown dangers unnoticeably under covers of hu

is the most
painful poem by Frost ever put
on record, and “The Vanishing
Red" has interest in senseless

All There’” said Dr. Schneidau
He continued, “This poem also
comments on mental instability.
God is not there, he is hiding
behind a white veil. That’s really

“Home Burial"

irritating."

Dr. Efron is the founder, editor and publisher of “Paunch”
magazine, a journal of Romantic
criticism. He is currently at work
on a full-scale study entitled
“Don Quixote and the Dulcineated World.”

Dr. Herbert Schneidau completes
Spring Lecture Series with talk

on "Robert Frost's Poetry."
Photo by Russell Coldherft

Dr. Alexander Katz
Dr. Lou Krop
OPTOMETRISTS

Dr. Schneidau feels it does
not matter if Frost believes in
God. The principle of discomfort and despair still remains the
same. As evidence for this as
sertion, he quoted, “Forgive, O
Lord my little jokes on Thee,
and I’ll forgive Thy big one on

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The SPECTRUM

gratuitous cruelty,"

commented Dr. Schneidau. "This
curclty occurs in images of seemingly benign poems”.
is present in every third poem
by Frost. Dr. Schneidau cited
the "crystal teeth” from “Two
Tramps in Mudlime" and the
“sharp edge of the old chairback” from "Death of a Hired
Man" as evidence.

tee.

Sociology Club Series
Assistant Professor of English
Arthur Efron, final speaker in
the Sociology Club series, “Technology: The Virgin and the Dynamo,” will speak on “Art and
Technology” Wednesday, March
30, at 3 pm in 146 Diefendorf.

horror and

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guest about China’s

Gntbar

entrance into

the Korean conflict. He wondered
if they would not do the same
in this instance, father DeJacgh
er rebuttled, “It was a small
police action in Korea. They
would never take this risk.”
Also present at the panel discussion were Dr. Elwin Powell,
SDS advisor; Dr. Post, advisor to
the Committee for Victory in
Viet Nam: and Mr. Frank Klinger, Co-Chairman for the Committee for Victory in Viet Nam.

The next regular edition of the Spectrum will
appear on April 1,

1966.

Copy deadline is Tues.,

March 29.

DEALS Jewelers
UNIVERSITY PLAZA
(next to

Amherst

DIAMONDS
WATCHES
EARRINGS
RINGS

If we can't

fix your watch
throw it away

Theatre)

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*

Editorial Comment

.

The events of the past weeks have indicated beyond
a doubt that, despite lip service payed to the arts within
the academic community, the university itself is cautious
to the point of Comstockery when it comes to viewing
and discussing the “avant guard”. The recent Spring
Arts Festival was reduced to a slim collection of “period
pieces”, mainly as a result of the fear of controversy
Even the innocuous poster announcing the Festival was
resisted on the grounds that it might “reflect badly"
on the University because it included the rough outlines
of a nude girl The films presented at the festival were
pale and banal in comparison to the films (Scorpio Rising,
Pull My Daisy, and Flaming Creatures) which were
originally projected. The hypocrisy of presenting the

events of the Festival as the “newest and most exciting”
innovations in the arts is painfully obvious without expanding the list of censorship and nervous mediocrity to
include every incident.
Perhaps in the future it would be wise for those

involved in the planning and execution of the Arts Festival to admit at the outset that the university is the
bastion of criticism and social nicity, and that the arts are,
at best, secondary. Perhaps the watch-word for the

There is, it seems, a current
feeling among a number of my
acquaintances that I have been
slacking off of late. The argument seems to he that since I
ran off and got married I just
haven't had the old spark, the
oH fire, the proper enthusiasm,
etc., about attacking things.

this charge is
difficulties. It is
rather difficult to envision myself sitting here and writing a
long discourse about my being
as abnormal as I ever was. Strategically it is of very doubtful
value, what with the commitment hearings coming up and all.
Answering
fraught with

After all I am not really abnormal. Just a bit warped, and
anyone can be a little warped
can’t they? . . . Pooh! they can
so, too. By most standards I have,
what could be most safely described as a somewhat awry outlook on life.
Things which bother me do
not seem to bother most people.
On the other foot I seem to find
some things amusing which upset a number of other good souls.
I am aware of the fact that somebody may have wired me wrong.
One comes to accept a few abberations after more than twenty
years of living with someone,
even yourself.

The claim that I am not being
snide as consistantly as I used
to, is apparently rather widely
held. Since I never read my
material, just write it, I am going

Artists Who Enter Here”, or perhaps “AH the Art That’s
Safe to See.” At least these slogans would avoid the
awkward posture of peeping at keyholes to see “Whistler’s
Mother"

THE ELECTIONS
What elections? In one race, a total of thirteen
votes were cast (and that was for a contested seat!)

SPECTRUM

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall. University Campus. Buffalo, N. Y. 14214.
Published twice weekly from the first week of September to the last week In
May, except for exam periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and spring vacations.
Editor-in-Chief

DAVID

Managing Editor

EDELMAN

RAYMOND D

Feature Editor
JOHN STINY
JO ANNE LEEGANT
Assistant
Staff —Bonnie Bartow. Ron Ellsworth. Barbara Ann Fitzsimmons, Barbara Loeb.
Audrey Logel. Bob Martin. Suzanne Rovner. Martha Tack. William Weinstein.

Sharcot

Staff —Joanne

Layout Editor
Bouchier, Stephanie

STEVE SCHUELEIN
Steve

Farbman,

Bob

Frey.

Scott

Mancini.

Forman,

SHARON HONIG
Parker. Steve Silverman.

Copy Editor
LAUREN JACOBS
Staff— Carol Becker. Estelle Fox. Jocelyn Hailpern. Sandy Lippman,
Claire Shottenfeld. Susan Zuckerberg

Staff —Terry

Advertising Manager
Angelo. Audrey Cash. Pat

RON

Rosenfeld.

HOLTZ
Steve

Betsy Ozer,

Silverman.

Joseph

EDITORIAL POLICY IS DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR IN CHIEF
FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING
Second Class Postage

Subscription
15.000

$3 00

Paid at
per

Buffalo.

year,

N Y
circulation

Represented
for
advertising
by
national
National Advertising Service. Inc , 420 Madi
son Ave
New York. N Y
.

L.\&lt;*
LV5

By STEPHEN KRAFTS

Although the vast majority of

Americans would side with the
United States even if it were
fighting God (who may, in fact
be a Chinese-Jewish-Negro), and
although our leaders do not even
know who they are fighting
(every Vietnamese is a suspected
Viet Cong and Dean Rusk still
thinks he is fighting North Vietnam), the rest of us have to
decide if any virtue lies with
the other side.
1 should like to consider one
aspect of the Vietnam war: the
conflict between primitivism and
civilization as symbolized by the
bamboo shoot dunked in dung
and the B-52. The Viet Cong
are the only people in the world
today who can stand up to American technology. Highly mobile,
well equipped are delayed by
primitive traps such as the tetanus-infected bamboo shoot mentioned above. Radio-dispatched

Now that all the excitement of
the Student Senate elections is
over and the flurry of voting is
finished for another year, we can
finally settle down to consider
such banalities as the minimum
wage legislation pending in Albany and Washington. A state
minimum wage of $1.50/hr, by
the beginning of next year is virtually assured, and the “great
reflecting the deepdebate"
seated principles of all parties
involved—is whether to have it
$1.40 or $1,50 from October to
—

Photography Editor
EDWARD JOSCELYN
Staff —Don Blank. Peter Bonneau. Joseph Feyes. Carol Goodson, Alan Gruber.
Marc Levine. Ivan Makuch. Michael Soluri, Anthony Walluk. Susan Wortman.
Robert Wynne
Circulation Manager
DIANE LEWIS
Faculty Advisor
IRENE WILLET
Financial Advisor
DALLAS GARBER

Lo

viewpoint.

There would seem to be a
variety of possible reasons for
my cessation of hostility. One
could be that I have

become

totally disgusted as to reach a
point of apathy. For example,
there is little sense to turn out
(ho!) prose about the new game

of instant campus when all of
you can see the buildings by Dupont going up around you. What
the hell do you need me for, mud
is mud, yes?
On the other hand I did get
married not so long ago, after a
somewhat uneven engagement.
The resulting period of adjustment has resulted in the discovery that marriage seems to
have some aspects of interest even
to a confirmed rake like myself.
It may be that in an effort to
Marriage,
pass
German
and
Psych (I would like to say something about, not necessarily that
order, but discretion, valor, and
all that) I have been shunting
outside data and have become
a trifle insular.
A somewhat nasty suggestion
has been offered by some that
perhaps the difficulty simply is
that I do not have the energy
to get mad at anyone any more.
The suggestion may have merit
but I do not feel a family newspaper is the proper place for the
discussion of same.
The major problem in replying
to this foul canard about my

batallions on clean and sweep
operations arrive to find a few
old women and miles of underground tunnels. If a moral can
be drawn, it might be this: the
way to beat technology is to refuse to play according to its
rules in the hope it will take
its ball and go home. American
technology, of course, will not
do this. Instead it builds a steelreinforced shoe through which
bamboo shoots cannot penetrate.
This seems to correspond to the
steel-reinforced minds in the government who refuse to believe
that military technology cannot
solve all the world’s problems.
The Viet Cong know this and
they are winning the war.
Seeing its tecnnoiogical bully-

ing ignored, the United States
perpetrates the Yellow Menace
Thesis to justify strategic bombing and napaiming, the vindictive forces of civilization and the
sure sigjn of frustration. The

by STEESE

moderating in my dotage is that
I feel as mean, nasty, and intransigent as ever, I just do not
communicate as well any more
I guess. I still feel that the ROTC
needs its damned drill field less
than the other ten thousand students could use someplace to
flop under a tree on some grass.
Apparently sting has gone from
my needle.
There may be migrating circumstances, however. In case you
hadn’t noted the calendar has
crawled back around to the rough
vicinity of Spring. This is a very
trying time of the year for me.
I am a rather unhomogenized
mixture of cynic and romantic.
Spring unfortunately seems to
bring the latter bubbling to the
surface.
Last spring things were fine.
I got out of the army in March
and bummed for a month. Now
I have been here for a year and
the way I am amassing credits
I shall probably be here for
several more. This results in such
tell tale symptoms as rereading
Tolien's Ring Trilogy for the
umpteenth time, finding makework excuses to go wandering
about the campus, and leaning
for prolonged periods of time on
window sills.
Suffice it to say that I apologize for not being miserable and
crabby over the last few weeks
and I will try to make it up to
you all by finding a fool proof
method of making myself miserable . , . but if it is fool proof
will it work on me?

January.

What is a $1.50/hr. minimum
wage going to do to this state?
Hie concerns it will effect are
those like McDonald's or Adam.

Meldrum and Anderson, those
which employ a large number of
students and unskilled adults.
Let’s take the case of Adam.
Meldrum and Anderson to predict the effects of the forthcoming law. What will the ownership
of that company do when they
find themselves forced to pay

Viet Cong patiently rebuilds its
supply routes, carries off its
wounded so that they cannot be
rehabilitated, and plants more
primitive traps.
The Viet Cong is disproving
most of the basic assumptions
of modern American foreign policy: nuclear deterrance means
nothing in Vietnam and military strength as an arm of diplomacy has been proven useless
in the face of the social problems of underdeveloped nations.
The Cold War mentality has been
proven, in effect, to be fraudulent. It took the inscrutable,
illiterate, and undernourished
Viet Cong to teach us that.
That the primitive Viet Cong
logically advanced nation of the
world indicates that they must
love their land and independence
dearly. How would the American
defend his homeland? With an
electrical can opener?

the right

VOLPE

News Editor
SUSAN GREENE
Assistant
ALICE EDELMAN
Staff—Loretta Angelina. Joanne Bouchier. Russell Buchman. Karen Green,
Peter Lederman, Joan Roberts. Rick Schwab. Dan Schroeder. Sharon Shulman,
Eileen Teitler. Nancy Toder. Patti Wartley. Judy Weisberg

Sports Editor
Mike Dolan.

there has heen an alteration of

JAMES CALLAN

SHOHET

LARRY

Business Manager

Staff —Mike Castro.

to have to accept the idea that

JEREMY TAYLOR

Editor-Elect

.

Cacotopia and Eutopia

next Festival should be; “Abandon Controversy All

THE

grump.

.

.

THE UNIVERSITY AND THE ARTS

J. B

Friday, March 18, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

every salesgirl a quarter more
per hour? They may 1) charge
more for their goods, 2) fire some
of their workers, or 3) cut down
on workers’ hours. They’ll probably do a little of all three, and

who will benefit? Certainly not
the consumers, who will have to

pay higher prices and get poorer

service from fewer salesgirls;
definitely not those who will be
fired; probably not the lucky
ones who are kept on, for their
higher wages will be counterbalanced by fewer hours—changing their total income very little.
And what of the office workers
and other semi-skilled employees
engaged in running the store,
whose wages are about $1.50/hr.
right now? Their income will be
the same as that of the most
menial of the menial workers.
Is this incentive to greatness?
And how about anybody’s chances for a raise? Not so good. Let
me ask you again, WHO WILL
GAIN?

Those of you devoid of prin

ciple, who

care only for the practical aspects of politics, your
part of the article is over—you

can now skip over to The Grump
or something. (I can’t help feeling that my already meagre audience has dwindled considerably.;
The pending federal law is
even worse. The only question
seems to be how soon to make

the minimum wage $1.60/hr. (no
kidding, it’s a real big deal;
Lyndon wants to make it $1.40
for a year and labor's all hot and
bothered about it). The state law
may be termed unwise, but the
federal law would be manifestly
unjust as well. States may be
thought of as “experimental
grounds” where governments
may pass laws restricting certain
freedoms, but always with the
stipulation that a man may pull
up stakes and go elsewhere if he
doesn’t like his own state’s policies. A federal law restricting
basic rights is quite another matter, however.
You can’t “pull
(Cont'd on P. 7)

�Friday, March 18, 1966

St. Johns Seeks Settlement
Between Staff, Administration
NEW YORK (CPS)—The United Committee to End the Strike
at St. John’s launched its first
major campaign last week with
full-page ads in the newspapers
on both campuses of the university.

The committee, first organized
by 300 members of the Alumni

Association, has received the
backing of the Jamaica campus
Student Council, the University
College Student Council, both
student newspapers, and the
members of the faculty who are
still on strike.
The strike began on Jan. 4
and has continued since, with all
efforts to bring the striking
teachers and the administration
together for talks having failed
so far.
The strike is viewed as the
culmination of a 10-month old
dispute between the administration and the faculty over the faculty’s role in university decisionmaking. The immediate cause of
the strike was the dismissal in
mid-December of 31 professors
by the school’s administration.
The Committee to End the
Strike has not taken sides in the
dispute but has asked that both
the administration and the dismissed teachers accept hearings
conducted by a committee of six
teachers, chosen by both groups
from a panel of 15,
The 15 on the original panel
were to be Catholic educators
nominated by the presidents of
three or more Catholic universities. St. John’s is the nation’s
largest Roman Catholic institution, with slightly more than 13,000 students.

In a letter sent to the Very
Rev, Joseph T. Cahill, president
of St. John’s, and the Rev. Peter
O’Reilly, one of the dismissed
teachers, the alumni committee
said, “It is undisputed that the
discharged members of the faculty were not afforded a hearing,
in the accepted and traditional
meaning of the term . . . this
remains the central tact which
has led to the current crisis and
it is here where the first steps
must be taken.’”
The group’s letter emphasized
that “this committee has consciously sought to avoid, as a
committee, adopting any partisan
stance with respect to the merits
of the dispute.”
The committee said its only
aim is to end the dispute which
tes brought “irreparable damage
to the standing of the univer-

sity.”
Since it has had no response
from the university administration, the committee ran a fullpage ad in the two student newspapers and is asking that all
students and their parents sign
a petition that is a part of the

ad and send it in. In this way,
a committee spokesman s a i d,
they hope to convince the school’s
administration that is has no
support to continue its hard line
with regard to any possible settlement.

Meanwhile, with the strike well
into its third month, the strikers
are apparently taking things in
stride. Unless there is some reaction fromthe administration to
the alumni bid, there seems little
hope for an early settlement.

New IFC Officers Elected
At Last Council Meeting
Election of officers was held
at the Interfraternity Council
(IFC) meeting last week. New officers are: R. Curtiss Montgomery, President; Joseph F e 11 o,
Vice-President; Charles Lusthaus,
Treasurer; Peter Doukas, Corresponding Secretary; Steven
Rush, Recording Secretary;
George Ehresman, Sergeant at
Arms.

Interfraternity Council is a coordinating body comprised of
three representatives from each

sixteen fraternities on
the president, a senior
representative, and a junior repof the

campus:

Of major concern to the fraternities at the present time is
securing housing on the new
campus, according to Joseph
Fetto, although it has not yet
been discussed with university
officials. The fraternities’ ultimate goal is a Fraternity Row,

but they are also considering a
dormitory complex, Mr. Fetto disclosed. They hope that this
would make the Greek system
more cohesive.
Plans for next year include an
attempt to get block seating in
units for the fraternities to increase turnouts for games, and
to revamp the rushing system
in order to interest more fresh
men in joining fraternities. I.F.C.
also hopes to sponsor an additional Greek weekend in the future, Mr. Fetto said.
For the second year, I.F.C.
will award a scholarship of $250
to the fraternity member showing the most need and the most
participation in the fraternity.
On campus this year I.F.C.
sponsored such events as the concert by Dick Gregory and Carolyn Hester, and a Greek weekend
which included Greek sing and

The policy statement was issued as a result of a resolution
passed on March 10, by the Tower
House Council. They hiled that
no door-to-door campaigning will
be allowed above the first floor
of Tower Hall as of March 10.
A candidate for a Student Senate seat appealed to the Student
Judiciary on March 11. to test
the legality of the House Council
resolution. The Judiciary issued
an order which stated: “The

Tower House Council Resolution
of March 10 on its face consti-

tutes a dangerous impediment to

the exercise of the basic constitutional privileges of freedom of
speech and assembly: therefore,
the Judiciary enjoins enforce-

oCetterA

the Editor

to

Due to a lack of

space LETTERS TO THE EDITOR must be limited to 200 words.
Complete identification, including phone numbers, must accompany each letter.
Names will be withheld upon request.
All letters must be typewritten, double
spaced and submitted before 1:00 P.M. on the Tuesday before publication.

Free University Editorial Scored
TO THE EDITOR

The factual misrepresentations
and misunderstandings together
with blatantly poor journalistic
practice demands a reply to both
the editorial and feature story
about Free University appearing
in the Tuesday Spectrum.
Firstly, the initial conception
and working paper about the formation of Free University of Buffalo made it explicitly clear that
the school was not an SDS project. However, all primary attempts at organizing FUB were
undertaken by individuals who
saw the need for such an institution, and who happened to be
SDS members acting independentlySecondly, the notion (editor’s)
that the Free University “must be
a training ground for political
radicals” (especially of a MarxistLeninist bias) is totally unfounded. We do want to build a radical
and revolutionary school, but believe that it is impossible to envision any radical structure with
truly revolutionary goals as being
“an independent university, free
of political ties.” The all-pervading nature of today's political systems (regardless of ideological
slant) makes every real problem
facing man, one of a political na
ture. Thus, for example, an individual's sexual practices fall within the tentacles of a social framework, ruled, influenced, and con-

trolled by a cyclopsian political
octopus.
We must note that the scope of
our commitment is far broader
than the fight “against the military-industrial complex.” In order
to build adequate structures capable of nuturing the milieu for
social change, we must set down
certain principles which point to
those problems which we must attempt to explore and solve, and
in such a sense we must be dogmatic (take a principled or committed stand).
The following is the statement
of principles of Peace and Freedom University:
The development of Peace and
Freedom University of Buffalo
will begin to let us explore,
through radical methodology,
some of the basic problems and
issues that the nature of today's
universities, functioning within
the system, must let go unanswered.
The world situation today—(the
desperate state of nation states)
U. S. support of United Fruit
Company's exploitation of Costa
Rican labor, American maintainance of dictatorial anticommunist regimes in Asia, Africa, Latin
America, Mississippi, Soviet
Union’s suppression of Yevtushenko, and other Russian writers and artists
the total insanity of the Cold War with its concomitant nonsensical rhetoric, de—

—

mands of every human being a

committment founded on sincere
introspective analysis, free of the
control of military-industrial comp 1 e x and
“the bureaucracy,”
whether in corporate enterprise
or the university.
Peace and Freedom University

will provide the milieu necessary
to initiate, sustain and focus one’s
committment to corporate and
governmental interests, whether
manifested in the acceptance of
research funds for essentially bellicose ends, compliance with Selective Service regulations that
demand the multiversity to send
students to their deaths, or the
oriental ton of the “academic program" towards the “manufacture"
of technicians, Peace and Freedom University will attempt to
remove the "intellectual" from his
retreat to Ivory Tower academism,
and end his alienation from both
the tangential community and the
“community of man.”
In Peace and Freedom University traditional roles of faculty
and student are to be rejected
and will be replaced by a community of freely interacting and
interested people. There will be
no administration, no grades, no
examinations and no qualification
for cither faculty or students. Participants are encouraged to undertake serious study and engage in
meaningful dialogue.
Barbara Brody
Irwin Epstein
—

Cuban Refugees Series Hailed Inadequate
TO THE

EDITOR:

Betsy Cohn’s article about Cuba
appearing in the March 8 Spectrum tries to give the impression that the Cuban government
is trying to hide something when
it says that “it is hard to be certain exactly what is happening
in Cuba today.” The article fails
to mention that one of the reasons for this is that the State
Department forbids journalists
to visit Cuba. Another reason for
this is that so many articles like

hers are turned out in the United
States, which are tailored to
serve the interests of false propaganda instead of truth.
Her main source of informa
tion seems to be Jose Gonzales
Puente, a proud graduate of the
segregated State

University

of

Louisiana, and a Batista politician. He forgets to mention in
his long quote, incidentally, that
racial discrimination, to the ilismay of those who believe in the
“righ” to engage in it, noyv punishable by jail sentence, has been
abolished.
Of course, he sticks to the old
stories about the “600,000 refu
gees” out of a population of six
and a half million. Claims are
made in the article that "onesixth of the Cuban population
are anti-Castro.” He does not ex
plicitly state, however, that this
means that five-sixths of the
population are other than anti
Castro. He also neglects to mention the 1,000,000 Puerto Ricans,
out of three million, who have
recently migrated to the ghct

toed slums of New York City,

rather than continue life in the
squalor of what the State De-

partment calls the showcase of
democracy.
Why is no mention made of the
fact that Cuba is the first country in Latin America to have
eliminated illiteracy? Or of the
fact that medical care is available even to the most povertystricken of the emancipationminded rural poor? Why doesn’t
the article mention that no one
starves in Cuba, in spite of the
cruel and cynical blockade imposed by the United States?
Betsy Cohn and her “patriotic”

friends, whose article would be
of refutation only in
America, ought to leave Cuba for
worthy

the Cubansl

Gerald Gross

the Greek ball.

Student Judiciary Rules
On Tower Resolution
The Student Judiciary has ruled
that those persons denied access
to the residence halls in election campaigning have recourse
to the Student Juidiciary.

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

ment of the resolution pending a

hearing."
In addition, it was suggested
by the Judiciary that the Tower
House Council meet again and
redraft their ruling in more precise and narrow terms, stating
specific prohibitions on campaigning in the halls, rather than
their present “sweeping resolu

tions”.
The

Student Judiciary feels
that its power to act in this mat
ter is clear as specified in the
Student Association Constitution
which states, “The Supreme Judicial powers of the State Uni
versity of New York at Buffalo
Student Association are vested in
the Student

Judiciary."

further remarked that
any attempt to enforce the origTower
inal
House Council resolution would probably be set
They

aside on appeal to the Student
Judiciary

Campus Alliance Defended
TO THE EDITOR

•I have heard the issue of
party bossism in Campus Allian
ce politics for almost four years
now. It has usually been raised

by irresponsible and/or ignorant
people. Though I don’t know the
author of YAT Soundboard, I

would assume that he fits into
one or more of these categories.
I helped to found Campus Al-

Party (then called Student
Alliance) in
1962-63 and have

liance

served as its secretary and twice
as its chairman.

party has never accepted a bribe

or attempted to bribe anyone at
any time.

I challenge the author of YAF
Soundboard to document one instance of C A P, bossism or retract his statement

Candidates seeking C.A. en
dorsemenl are interviewed by the
four officer candidates the party
ran the previous year, along with
the party chairman and two
senators elected by the party
senators lo represent them in the
Committee. The candidates write
the party platform together. All
plank decisions must be unani
mous. The party chairman is selected by the members of the

I also hasten to remind Thermopylae and others who would
believe C.A.P. to blame for the
one party situation on campus
to remember it was not C.A.P.
that withdrew from the political
scene on the last day of petitions, but rajher its opposition.
Surely ho one believes that C.A.P.
should create its own opposition
—or do they?

Nominating and Platform Com
mittees.

Neither I nor the other two
chairmen have ever asked for
or received gratis before, during
or after our service; neither I
nor the other two chairmen have
ever received one cent from the
position—indeed, we have had to
pay for many of the party’s campaign bills out of our own pockets. The party has never asked
for or received a party line vote
on or off the senate floor; the

The author of YAF Soundboard
states in his “brief review of
campus politics” that “last year
Campus Alliance won a lop-sided
victory . . ." May I point out
that Campus Alliance won 14
out of 31 Senate seats last year?
If this is indeed a “lopsided victory", then Thcrompylae’s math
is as faulty as his reasoning
power.

Date of petitions could

been

have

extended

merely by having any eight senators call a
special senate meeting and ask
for a vote on its extension. To
blame C A P. for the supposed
lack of “free elections" because
it is the only surviving political

party would be similar to blaming a speaker on behalf of driver
safety for thus causing all the
nation's traffic accidents.
Arthur Burke

�Friday, March 18, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

New Workshop Theatre Presents Plays Works of Hazlitt Displayed
In Lockwood Until April 15

The new Workshop Theatre at
719 Elmwood Avenue on March
3 with two absorbing one-act
plays. The first was Samuel
Beckett’s "Act without Words”,
and the second was David Compton's "Soldiers from the Wars

A selection from

Returning.”

Both these plays have striking
in their
subject matter and their method
of dealing with the “human dilema". Beckett’s approach is from
a more general viewpoint, the
theme being man’s struggle with
his environment. Compton's comment is a more specific one,
“war heroes."
contemporary relevance

According to Mr. Sy, curator
of the rare book collection, Hazlitt’s literary criticism had a remarkable influence on cultivated
opinion. In his day, he was regarded as a “way out” liberal
and non-conformist. Well acquainted with Woodsworth, Coleridge, Southey, Lamb and many
other prominent men of his time,
Hazlitt showed keen insight in
his judgement on contemporary
writers as well as on authors of

With the competent work of
the actors and the professional
grade of lighting and set design,
the viewer is assured of engrossing dramatic entertainment.

Live theatre is a rare commodity in this area, and it is hoped
that productions of this quality
will be continued, and will enjoy a wide area of support.

Jo* Krysiek appearing in "Soldier From the War* Returning", currently on the boards at the Work Shop Theater on Elmwood Ave.

Student Poet Weiners Awaits 3rd Publication
BUFFALO, N. Y.
“I see the
unknown words written in my
brain before they are set down
on paper,” writes John Wieners,
a master's candidate and teaching
fellow in State University at Buffalo’s Department of English,
awaiting the publication of his
third volume of poetry.
"Gardenia* for Billie Holiday,"
the volume to be published early
in 1966 by Buffalo’s Frontier
Press, will join "The Hotel Wentley Poems" and "Ace of Pentacles" in a canon which has already won considerable critical
acclaim for the young poet.
—

—

-

-

-

1111

Lockwood

Library’s collection of the works
of William Hazlitt is on display
on the balcony of Lockwood Library through April 15.
Hazlitt, born in 1778, had hopes
of becoming a Unitarian minister.
He worked as a painter for several years, then turned to public
lecturing and journalism.

tival of Two Worlds, held in Spoleto, Italy. The six other American poets invited to Spoleto ineluded Lawrence Ferlinghetti,
Allen Tate, and Charles Olson.
At Spoleto, Mr. Wieners read
from his work in an afternoon
program with Ezra Pound. He has
written about his meeting with
Pound for Agenda, a British magazine which devoted a recent
issue to the expatriate poet, who
celebrated his 80th birthday on

October 30.
Before resuming his studies and
teaching duties here this fall, Mr.
Wieners went to Berkeley, California, to participate in the Berkeley Poetry Conference. As a re-

sult of his reading there, he will

appear on National Educational

Television in 1966 in a series of
half-hour portraits of 13 American poets,
Mr. Wieners describes Charles
Olson as his “guru,” the great
spiritual and intellectual influence of his life. The poets first
met in 1954, shortly after Mr.
Wieners heard Olson give a poetry reading at Boston’s Charles
Street Meeting House on the night
of Hurricane Hazel. Mr. Wieners
says that it was Olson, who recently served on the faculty of
the University’s English Department, who first attracted him to
Buffalo.

mg from the book Characters of
Shakespeare's Plays, to an essay,
“On the Want of Money.”

Lecture Given By
Novelist &amp; Critic
The Department of . Modern
Languages will sponsor a public
lecture in French by novelist and
critic Michel Butor, Monday,
March 28, at 8:30 p.m. in the
Norton Conference Theater. The
subject is yet to be announced.

in the exhibit are

According to French instructor
William W. Thomas, Mr. Butor’s
novels, such as L'Emploi du
temps. La Modification, and Degree, established him as a leading representative of “le nouveau
roman.” He has published two
volumes of criticism, Repertoire I
and Repertoire II, and is a regular contributor to La Nouvelle
Revue Francaise.

editions of several of Hazlitt’s
books. His essays on “Painting and
the Fine Arts,” written for the
seventh edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica, appear in book
form. A variety of topics are
presented in the exhibit, rang-

Mr. Butor has been a frequent
visitor to America. In 1962, he
was Visiting Professor of French
on the Jones Foundation at UB.
He has written two books on
America, Mobile, and most recently 6810000 Litres d'eau par seconde, about Niagara Falls.

the past. His best known quote
is, “We are not hypocrites in our
sleep.”

Included

original manuscripts, letters, and
penciled notes, as well as first

'Eros And The Machine';
Title of Lecture by Wiek
Eros, the irresponsible potential in man toward individualization and irrational passion, will
eventually prove superior to the
coercive and dehumanizing pressures of automation and cyberna-

tion. This was the argument presented and document by Dr. David
T. Wiek in a lecture entiled “Eros
and the Machine," third in a
series of programs sponsored toy
the Sociology Club.

Franconia College's New Admission System;
Designed To Allow Students To Start Clean'
It’s not unsual to hear of a student refused admission to a college because of his past record.
But Franconia College in New

VH m

One of the most outstanding of
a prolific group of faculty and
student poets at Buffalo, Mr.
Wieners has been lauded by poetcritics Robert Duncan and Denise
Levertox, who published major

reviews of his work in The Nation
and Poetry earlier this year. He
was awarded $1500 by the Poet’s
Foundation in 1962, and was recently named to Who's Who in
America.

Mr. Wieners was honored this
summer with an invitation to participate in an International Poetry
Week, sponsored by Gian Carlo
Menotti as part of his annual Fes-

He

“clean.”

dent

Franconia, a small liberal arts
college, has invited every third
person inquiring about admission
to participate in the experiment.
If he agrees to do so, the student
sends his admissions application
to a neutral consultant from Boston or Brandcis University.
The consultant keeps
plication confidential and
Franconia officials only
is an extreme academic
ical problem.

the apnotifies
if there
or med-

The student is then invited to
visit the school and to, in a small
way, become involved in the student life. He lives in the dormitories, is given ample opportuni-

ty to talk to students, and attend
classes that interest him.

Union Board Adopts New Constitution

;

Executive Board Powers To Increase
Union Board Presdient Joanne
Osypiewski disclosed that Union
Board adopted a new constitution Tuesday night which will
increase the power of the execu-

tive board.

Under the amended constitution the executive board, composed of Union Board officers,
will handle most of the issues
that previously were voted upon

form the school of his decision.
will automatically be “accepted” on the basis of his decision
alone if there is room in the stu-

Hampshire is experimenting with
a new admission system that's designed te let a student start

The basis for the system is that
the student makes the decision
for admision himself.
JOHN WIENERS

After this visit, if the student

feels Franconia is where he wants
to go to college all he does is in-

by all Union Board officers and

committee chairmen.
According to Miss Osypiewski,
a committee will be formed to

conduct elections for Union Board
officers. Applications will be
available for candidates after
Spring vacation. Students who
have served on Union Board for
at least one semester are eligible for officers.

body.

During the entire process, the
college does not ask the student
to give them any information
about his background, academic
or otherwise, that he does not
want to reveal himself.

Robert G. Greenway, director
of educational research at the college and designer of the study,
said, "By allowing students to

Blues Project Presents
Concert in Haas Lounge

The Blues Project presented an
informal concert last night in the
Dorothy Haas Lounge,

The group is made up of five

young men,

including Danny

Kalb, Guitarist; Al Kooper, who
plays organ on Dylan's latest album; and guitarist Andy Kulberg,
formerly of Buffalo.
The Blues Project is representative of the recent trend in folk
rock and rhythm and blues. In
an interview with J.R. Goddard of
the Village Voice, Danny Kalb
commented, “We’re not reviving
the blues. We’re looking to interpret what's happening today".
Recently, the group recorded
Eris Anderson's "Violets of
Dawn’’ and “Back Door Man”,
both of which they feel are indicative of their scope and involvement.

come in ‘clean’ we hope to try to
break the vicious circle of academic success or failure which
frequently results when students
are judged on the basis of their
past record."

Periodically, during their stay
at Franconia, the students will be
studied and their academic record will be analyzed to determine
the outcome of the study.

Dr. David Wiack, associate profesor of philosophy at Rensselaer
Dr. Greenway said he hopes Polytechnic Institute.
that these students will feel a
Dr. Wiek, before an audience
higher obligation to learn and a of about 35, ranged from libermore candid relationship with the tarian criticism of the current
school than if they had been adsituation in America, to a dismitted in the conventional way. cussion of revolution and radical
propaganda during the two hours
He predicted that the study he spoke and answered questions.
would prove students who have
Dr. Wiek, who currently teachdefined their goals more carefully es philosophy at Rensselaer Polyafter an earlier failure can suctechnic Institute in Troy, New
ceed in college and go on to sucYork, is a frequent contributor
cessful careers in graduate to liberal political journals and
schools. He points out it will be has done extensive work in the
sometime before any conclusions area of libertarian ethics and
can be drawn.
anarchism.

LATIN AMERICAN LECTURES
WASHINGTON (CPS)—‘Yankee
will become increasingly prevalent in Latin America if the United States does
not change its policies there, according to a series of speakers
at a student conference on Latin
American affairs held a week ago
Go Home’ feelings

Johnson, a professor of history
at Stanford University and a consultant on Latin America for
many firms; Estaban E. Torres,
the Inter American Representa■

here.

tive'for the United Auto Workers: Dan Kurzman, Latin American correspondent for the Washington Post; and Frank Mankie-

Featured speakers at the conference were Sacha Volman, one
of the leaders of the democratic
reform movement in Latin America and a co-founder of the International Institute for Labor Research: William P. Rogers, a
Washington attorney who was
deputy coordinator of the Alliance for Progress during the
Kennedy administration; John J.

Director for Latin America since
1964 and formerly director of the
program in Peru.
Sponsored by the U.S. National
Student Association and the Collegiate Council for the UN, the
lectures were designed to acquaint
students from all over the country with the problems faced by
Latin America.

wicz,

Peace

Corps

Regional

�Friday, March 18, 1966

SPECTRUM

UB Graduate Addresses Air Cadets;
Speaks on Educational Opportunities
First Lieutenant Robert Kinkle,

a 1963 UB graduate, addressed
an audience of over 170 Advance

Course Air Force ROTC cadets
at the Spring Seinester Dining-In
at Niagara Falls Air Force Base,
Friday, March 11.
According to ROTC Cadet Wing
Information Officer Charles Cummings, Lt. Kinkle related the educational opportunities the Air
Force provides its personnel. He
called Air Force life “a continuous educational process” composed of “tangible and intangible"
types of learning. He described
intangible learning as knowledge
gained from experience, and tangible learning as knowledge de-

rived from academic programs in
schools and universities.

Lt. Kinkle went on to list the
educational opportunities the Air Force offers: the GI
Bill, the Tuition Assistance Program and the Command Short
Term Training Program.
An
analytical
chemist
at
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.
Lt. Kinkle spoke of his two and
one-half years in the service as
“a most rewarding, experience.”
He recommended service with
the Air Force for anyone who
wanted to become a member of
“one of the most influential forces in the world.”
Earlier, during the Dining-ln,
Lt. Col. Huddleston, who has been
reassigned and is leaving the university, was presented with a trophy by the cadets for his four
years of service at UB.
tangible

Dept. Head of Aerospace Studies
Reassigned To Active Duty In Texas
Lieutenant Colonel Thomas L.
Huddleston, professor of air science and head of the Department
of Aerospace Studies (Air Force
Reserve Officers Training Corps)
at UB since 19662, has been reassigned to two-months training
at Sewart Air Force Base, Nashville Tennessee.
Colonel Huddleston, who leaves
this Sunday, will command a
C-130 Troop Carrier Wing at
Dyess A i r Force Base, Texas,
following the training program.
Until a replacement is named,
Major Phillip M. Ozenick of the
University’s air science faculty
will head the unit.

Prior to his appointment to the
University, Colonel Huddleston
served as commander of the 67th
Air Rescue Squadron, Prestwick,
Scotland. He has also served as
pilot for the 72nd Reconnaissance
Squadron in Ladd Air Force
Base, Alaska, and the 5th Bomber Wing at Travis Air Force Base,
California.
Since receiving his Air Force
commission in 1945 at Moody
Air Force Base, Georgia, Colonel
Huddleston has 'been awarded
several military decorations including the Good Conduct Medal,

American Campaign Medal,
World War II Victory Medal,
National Defense Medal and
Air Force Longevity Service
Award, In 1959, he was graduated magna cum laude from the
University of Southern California
with a bachelor's degree in industrial management. Colonel
Huddleston is a member of Beta
Gamma Sigma and the Society
for Advancement of Management.
the
the
the
the

PACE SEVEN

ROUNDABOUT......
The Spring Arts Festival 1966
was, as was last year, centered
around the 'modern’ scene in
the Arts—and the modern poetrythe modern-

scene in specific. On

poetry-and-Lower-East-Side

part

of the

calendar, the Festival consisted of the following: a happening that didn’t occur, a substitute happening that didn't oc-

cur.

a

poet

(Denise

Levertov)

who had a previous engagement
and couldn't read, an Open Poetry Reading (later) a small reading by Herbert Hunche, a reading by Allen Ginsberg and Diane
DePrima to an incredibly misdirected. through large, audience.
Mr. Ginsberg is very well
known and popular, and it will
suffice to say that he and Miss
Levertov, who was originally invited, were very good choices
for the Festival for many reasons in addition to that they
would draw large audiences.
What I am driving at is that
this part of the Festival had a
potential which was unfulfilled.
At last year's Festival Charles
Olson, poet
of the Maximus
Poems and Professor of Poetry
here. John Wieners, author of
the Hotel Wenttey Poems and
Ace of Pentaclcs, and Ed Sanders, editor of Fuck You: A Magazine of The Arts, and author of
Peace Eye (including the

Gobble

Gang’ poems) read their poetry to
an appreciative audience in what
could be viewed as an precursor
to the Berkeley Poetry Conference
in Berkeley, California,
last summer. Culminating in that

Conference, last year seemed,
among other things, to be the
‘Year of the Poet'.

Mr. Olson had read some new
work; Mr. Wieners read from
the Ace of Pentacles; Mr. Sanders read from Poem from Jail
and the 'Gobble Gang': the reading was ‘just right’.

Buffalo had become through
the previous two years the sort
of ‘open’ society for modern
poetry (in the tradition of Olson,
not Merwin) rather than a ‘closed’ group, such as those of the
San Francisco poets, or the Power East Side. At the beginning
the attraction was, of course,
Charles Olson, former rector of
COL THOMAS HUDDLESTON

THE RIGHT

.

.

the

experimental

Black

Moun-

tain College in the mid 50’s and
sort of ‘father’ of the school of
poets from 1950 and on.
The summer after Olson’s ar
rival (1964) saw the 'First An

.

decides to become his employee,
out” of the whole country in the
the employer owes him exactly
same way you can move from what they agree upon,
and nothone state to another. The very
ing else. If the man doesn’t like
existence of the federal government is what keeps the states in
the deal, he can go elsewhere.
line and guarantees the privilegThese are the essentials: 1) there
es of interstate travel. There is is no third party to get hurt,
no such effective super-government to keep countries in line, whatever the results of the exand hence each individual nation change; 2) no agreement will be
has a duty to its citizenry to made unless it proves satisfacprotect their rights and to retory to both parties involved; 3)
frain from restricting those if an agreement
is made, both
rights. I believe the United
States has violated an essential parties are better off; 4) if no
agreement is made, neither party
and basic human right in its minimum wage legislation and is is worse off. Now the government
threatening to make the situasteps in and says to the employtion considerably worse.
er that no matter where he goes,
What right have you, or I, or no matter who he hires, no matter who he hires, no matter what
Lyndon Johnson, or anybody, to
tell two people they can’t enter he does or his workers do, that
into a mutually voluntary agreehe can’t deal for less than $1.60/ment
no one? How
hr. This is wrong, this is immorcan we tell an employer and an
al, this is evil. The only things
employee that they can't trade
an hour of work for $1.40, or on earth more immoral than this
$1.25, or whatever they decide
differ from it only in degree.
on? What about freedom of conall I can say.
That’s
tract, 0 you who are always crying about freedom of speech? Is
a man’s right to choose the
Norton First Floor
terms of a contract any less basic
will be closed
Lounge
or less evident than his right to
March 24 through 28 to
speak his opinions? The word
prepare thearea for The
freedom you throw around so
loosely—doesn’t it include this
Medical Alumni Associafreedm of men to trade on mution Exhibit to be held
tually acceptable terms? An emMarch 25 and 26.
ployer doesn’t owe the man on
the streets anything. If that man
(Cont’d from Pg. 4)

'

.......

nual Summer Program in Modern
Literature' with Ed Dorn, LcRoi
Jones, Robert Kelly and others
teaching courses and giving readings. Mr. Weiners came the following winter. Then came the
Spring Arts Festival of 1965 and
the Berkeley Conference of the
summer.
At Berkley

virtually all the
modern poets were present with a
few notable exceptions. Even
though the Conference had a ten
dency to be dominated by the
San Francisco group, and suf
fered
from semi incompetent
planning, the Conference was a
success.

Its

timing was perfect

in the view of the past decade
and a half. They had finally made
it. They were at the top. The
Poet was. and would be, running
the country.
The end of the Conference
left a vacuum as the poets dispersed. There was a tremendous
amount of good feeling.
It was in the wake of this
partial, yet highly potential vacu
um of several months that the
Spring Arts Festival of 1966 was
being planned. It could have been
the next, necessary drawing together. As it was, Allen Ginsberg, whose reading and presence were superb, was here by a
fluke in administrative planning.
The only things in this part of
the Festival that went well and
according to plan was Mr. Hunc
ke’s intimate, four hour reading,
and the Open Reading in the
Haas Lounge, Friday Night.
The lounge at all times was

POET ALLEN GINSBERG
filled to capacity at the Open The audience would have had
Heading, and the poets attending
to have been exceptional even
and teaching at the University for someone of Mr. Ginsberg's
and from the Buffalo area, in power. And the audience was
addition to the invited poets, anything but that.
had a chance to read selections
The Gym was packed with
from their work. The evening
about 1200 people of which at
seemed to be highlighted by the least half seemed to be expectreadings of Ginsberg, John Wieing a 'camp', or at least popular
ners (who also acted as moderaperformance.
tor) and John Temple, a young
Boorish clapping ended GinsBritish poet studying and leach
berg's Hymn in praise of Visnu,
ing here this year. The audience
There was clapping at the end
seemed to be digging what was and in the middle of nearly all
happening, from the Mantras of
the pieces Miss DiPrima read.
Ginsberg to the carrying-on of There was a fellow and girl bePeter Orlpfsky, to the poetry of hind me who were thoroughly
I he poets.
entertained, and laughed and
A Poetry readme is different
applauded everything, especially
from the performance of a popual each of the outdated hippie
lar singer. Good poetry read will,
words In Miss Dil’rima’s early
or with duende, as l.orca would
work which were no longer 'in’
say, deserves not to be erected
or funny, which leads me to
with clapping, but rid her, silence.
wonder why she read them in
The poet divine of himself to the first place except to expect
brine to the fore the orieinal a response such as theirs.
fight for the creation of the
However Ginsberg coped well
poem is not a matter for popuwith the scene, read well, and
lar entertainment, but rather for at one point sang a hymn to
a communion of poet and listenremove all laughter from the
er. Sincere applause comes only
room It worked well: some left.
at the end of the readme when
Al the intermission he was swarmthe air has been shattered. How
ed. With the audience a bit
ever, much depends upon the
smaller and more settled, and he
poet and the setline as well as
reading alone, the second half
the audience.
went considerably better.
The main readme of Mr Gins
A reading is a serious matter,
here and Miss DiPrima Saturday
nieht in Clark Gym was some but by no means one not to be
thine else. The Gym, simply, was enjoyed. But the enjoyment is
too large and barn like for the
of a different order else a festinecessary angel to fill the air.
val become a carnival.

Requiem Mass Held For UB Professor
A Requiem Mass for Dr. Roger

Mantsavinos, 37, of 275 Winde
mere

Eggertsvillc, was
at 10 am. Tuesday,

Blvd,,

celebrated
March 8, 1966, in the Annuncia
lion Hellenic Orthodox Church of
Buffalo. Dr. Mantsavinos died
Saturday, March 5, 1966.
Dr. Mantsavinos was an assoprofessor of biochemical
pharmacology in the School of
Pharmacy, State University of
New York at Buffalo. His death
terminated a long illness.

ciate

A native of Nashua, New Hampshire, Dr. Mantsavinos joined the
UB faculty six years ago and for
the last three years had been
working under a National Insti-

tute of Health grant for nucleic
acids biosynthesis.

He was a 1953 graduate of the
Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and received his Master's
and Doctor of Philosophy degrees

from Purdue

University,

yette, Indiana.

Lafa

He is survived by his wife, the
former Dorothea Matsas; two
children, Charles and Marea; his
mother, Mrs. Mary Mantsavinos,
also of Eggertsvillc, and a sister,
Mrs. John White, of Cleveland.

Religion on Campus
NEWMAN

Newman Apostolate members
and guests will attend “A Dialogue on the Death of God" presented by Rabbi Richard Rubenstein, Hitlel Chaplain, at 7 p.m.
Newman Discussion classes continue on Tuesdays and Thursdays.
Lenten Masses are offered daily
at Newman Hall at 11 a m. and
5 p.m. and at Saint Joseph's
Church at 12 Noon. Sunday suppers are served weekly at 5:30
p.m.

�PACE EIGHT

3MM2

anwai

As far as I’m concerned, the best movie theatre on
the North American Continent is the Beekman on 2nd
Avenue in New York City. 1 don’t mean the Beekman consistently shows the best movies available, but that it is the
most pleasant place I have ever watched a motion picture. There is nothing remotely like it in Buffalo. Most
of the movie houses in the downtown “theatre district”
are dank old barns that were garish when they were
built and have not gained any charm in their declining
years. The obscure “neighborhood theatres” have been
turned into department stores and bingo parlors, although some of them still show movies too. Even the
Circle Art which at least tries to make its patrons comfortable, has seats which must have been bought at an
auction of old trolley car parts.
The situation has been improved considerably by the
recent opening of the twin theatres Cinema I and Cinema
II on Niagara Falls Blvd. just past Sheridan. They are
new, clean and only moderately ugly; the seats are designed for a recognizable species of human beings and
the management is actually courteous and friendly. Both
theatres seem to be quite crowded on weekend nights, but
they are rarely more than half full the rest of the time
and. as the ads say, “there are acres of free parking.” In
addition to all of these goodies, both theatres appear to
be embarked on a program of current hits. For instance,
The Flight of the Phoenix, now at the Cinema I, is a widescreen, expensive local product which is done so well that
its cliche situation is infused with an excitement that
justifies its repetition.
The story involves an airplane which crashes in the
Arabian desert. The survivors include the following: the
pilot, a rugged, plain-speaking, genial, comfortable-asan-old-shoe type played with his casual competence by
Jimmy Stewart. That is, Stewart plays himself. If you
don’t care for that cunning characterization, forget this
flick, but if you like or don’t mind this avator of a vanishing tradition, I think you’ll find Stewart is up to his usual
standard. Aside from Stewart’s portrayal, the players are
all original variants of provocative personalities. There is
Stewart’s co-pilot (Richard Attenborough), a lush without any special talent whose essential humanity is especially striking as the crisis worsens; a very British British
Colonel (Peter Finch) and his “subordinate” sergeant;
a huge bear-like wildcat oil man whose mind has snapped
(Ernest Borgnine) ; a kindly, sensitive, sophisticated and
courageous French doctor (Christian Marquand) a wiseass free-lance trouble maker (Ian Bannen) a bookish,
urban accountant and a couple of others. But best of all,
a young, over-intellectual aircraft designer who conceives
of the fantastic idea of building a new plane from the
ruins of the wreckage is played by Hardy Kruger (Sundays and Cybele). He gives a totally convincing professional performance.
I’ve spent a long time sketching the men involved because that’s what the picture is about
that, and the
building of the new plane. The picture is like The Great
Escape in its detailed and impressive account of the actual construction, but the sense of melodrama is controlled by the fact that the enemy is not another man in
uniform but the elements themselves. The sun is hot,
water is running out of course, some of the men are injured and hone of rescue is small.
From this dramatic crucible, the interaction among
the various personalities and the struggle to finish the
plane and make it work before the water runs out for the
men’s will to survive crumbles completely) provides the
material for a tense, engrossing film. The movie is an adventure story and it is a good one. I have the feeling that
someday in the future, people will enjoy it very much on
the late show.
;

;

—

Undergraduate MedicalSociety Aids
Pre-Med Students And Med Schools
The Undergraduate Medical Society (U.M.S.I is presently being
organized by a group of premedical students. ■ Acting President Neal Slatkin commented that
"any student on campus \yho is
interested in the medical profession” is encouraged to join.
The U.M.S. will provide additional guidance and information
for the pre-med student, Slatkin
said In addition, it "will provide
the admissions offices of the na
tion's medical schools with additional criteria upon which to
judge the qualifications of the
students of this university."
Programs of interest to its
members will be sponsored by the

U.MS , Mr. Slatkin noted. Includ
ed will be a series of lectures
and panel discussions with representatives of diverse medical
fields. A student board to answer
inquiries of pre-med students will
be eMafcliMicd, and hospital and

Friday, March )8, 1966

SPECTRUM

laboratory tours will be conductArrangements will be made
for student participation in hospital routine and general practice. Slatkin said.
Limited funds promised by the

ed.

UB Medical School, combined with
U.M.S, dues, will be partially
used for a newsletter or quarterly
bulletin.

Columbia University has recently invited the planned U.M.S. to
join its efforts to establish a national pre-med organization. Mr.
Slatkin suggested that the U.M.S.
on UB campus may pave the way
for such a nation-wide society.
Faculty advisors to the U.M.S.
are Head of Medical School Re-

James
commendations
Board
O'Rourke and Dean of Admissions Philip Weis.
The first U.M.S meeting will
be held March 30. Place and time
will be announced.

Union Board Film Committee Chairman
Announces Funds Shortage In Union
Union Board Film Committee
Chairman Martin Sadoff recently
announced that the showing of
films, in Norton Union may be
discontinued due to lack of funds.
According to Sadoff the use
of a new 35 millimeter projector
has rendered the Committee’s
$2000 allocation
from Union
Board inadequate. The new machine costs $400 a week to operate and requires the hiring of
state operators, while the old
16 millimeter projector cost $100
a week and was run by students.
A $3000 debt from the installa-

tion of the new equipment must
also he repaid within the year,
added Mr. Sadoff.
“The 25c admission price may
be raised so that the committee
can break even,” commented Mr.
Sadoff. “We need the support
of the entire student body to continue,” he added.
Union Board Committee member Paul Blatt explained that the
Board receives funds from the
Student Sub-board of the Faculty
Student Association. Monies are
allocated to Union Board Committees by the Board’s executive.

GREEK NOTES

Alpha Gamma Delta installation of officers will be Monday,
March 28 in Norton Union.
Alpha Kappa Psi's new officers are. Tom Rogers, President;
Mike Sonnenreich, Recording
Secretary; Steve Farbman, Vice?
president; Steve Schuelein, Corresponding Secretary; Bob Frey,
Trasurer; Brian Rolph, Master of
Ritual.
Peter Doukas of Alpha Sigma
Phi has been elected Corresponding Secretary for the I.F.C. The
brothers and pledges will meet
Friday afternoon for drinking at
the Beef and Ale House. The
Spring pledge officers are:
Charles McDonald, President;
Dave Hickey, Vice-president; Olin
B. Fellows in, Secretary; Bob
Sirkis, Treasurer; Jim Remillard,
Marshall.
The “F Troop” of Phi Kappa
Pti will lead a national attack on
the beach of Fort Lauderdale,
Florida, this weekend. Our boys
have been preparing themselves
for weks for this invasion. A victory party will be held at the
Sun Colony next Friday night,
March 25. All UB students are
invited.
Pi Lamda Tau's Spring trip to
Florida will leave at 4 p.m.,
Friday. The Spring officers are:
Tim Herlehy, President; Elliott
Cole, First Vice-president; Neil
Love, Second Vice-president; Ron
Presant, Treasurer; Clyde Adam,
Recording Secretary; Bill Pomerhn, Alumni Secretary; Denny
Smith, Corresponding Secretary,
and John Bolton, Chaplain.
Sigma Alpha Mu will hold its
50th Anniversary Blast April 1
at War Memorial Auditorium.
Tickets are available at a table in
Norton. Featured are Lou Christie, the Crystals, the Uncalled
Four, and the Buffalo Beatles.
Sigma Phi Epsilon’s officers

for the Spring Pledge Class are:
Eldon Mains, President; James
Olsen, Vice-president; A1 Mattson, Historian; Ken Jurgens, Recording Secretary; Carlos Centurion, Chaplain; and Gerald
Schwartz, Treasurer.

Weekly
FRIDAY
Coffee Hour: Graduate Student
Association, 2 pm, Norton 356.
Lecture: “Fritz Fischer and the
World War I Controversy in Germany”, speaker. Dr. Klaus Epstein, professor and chairman Department of History, Brown University, 3 pm, Norton 231.
Lecture: “Metabolism, Sensory
Physiology and Ecology of Cave
Fish,” Dr. Thomas L. Poulson,
Yale University, 4 pm. Health
Sciences 134.
Lecture: Douglas P. Arnold Series, “Heritable Diseases of Connective Tissue”, Kinch Auditorium, Children’s Hospital, 8: *5 pm.
SATURDAY
Spring recess begins at close of
classes.
.

.

be shown the first week following spring vacation.

Films are chosen by the Union
Board Fine Arts Film Committee.
Anyone may attend the meetings,
said Mr. Sadoff. Students wishing to join the committee may
contact Martin Sadoff, Room 215,
Norton Union.

BOB &amp; RAY'S
MUSIC CENTER
SALES
RENTALS
and Service on all
Instruments
—

Calendar

NOW OPEN

He noted that the Board would
probably increase Film Committee funds.
According to Mr. Sadoff the
only four films which grossed a
profit were Mondo Cane, 8Vi,
Sundays and Cybele, and A Taste
of Honey. More that $200 was
lost on the documentary Point
of Order. Mr. Sadoff mentioned
that the Committee desires to
bring in more art films, although
these are not always the most
profitable.
Charade, a Universal International Film in Color with Cary
Grant and Audrey Hepburn will

839 Niagara Falls Blvd.
836-8742
Special Student Discounts
with I.D. Card

Guitar Lessons
All Types

Sign up now lor folk guitar
group lessons

JAM SESSION

Sunday
S p.m.-9 p.m.

Dick Russo Quartet

Town Edge

Restaurant
1496 Kenmore Avenue

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music shoppe

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837-9324
featuring guitars, amps,

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STUDENT DISCOUNTS

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&amp;

�Friday, March 18, 1966

SPECTRUM

Symposium For Student Composers
The UB Music Department will
host the 1965-66 Symposium for
Student Composers, March 2021-22. Participating in the Symposium this year will be over
110 students, performers, and
faculty from Princeton,
New

and Frederic Myrow of the Center for the Creative and Performing Arts will participate and
Allen D. Sapp, composer and
Chairman of the Department of
Music at the State University of
New York at Buffalo, will moder-

ate.
A Chamber Orchestra will take
part on Monday at 1:30 p.m. in

England Conservatory, Bennington College, University of Pennsylvania, Royal Conservatory of
Music of the University of Toronto, Mannes School of Music, Eastman School of Music, and UB.
The Symposium will open with
the Evening for New Music Program of the Center for Creative
and Performing Arts on Sunday, March 20th, at 8:30 p.m. at
the Albright-Knox Art Gallery.
On Monday, March 21st, at
10:00 a.m. in the Baird Band
Room a panel of speakers will
consider the subject, Composition
1966. Henri Posseur, Slee Professor of Composition at UB; Eric

the Baird Recital Hall. Richard
Dufallo, Assistant Conductor of
the Buffalo Philharmonic, will
conduct a chamber orchestra in
works by the following studeht
composers; Robert Jones of the
New England Conservatory, Norman Dinerstein and Philip Werren of Princeton University, and
Alice Webber and Joan Harkness
of Bennington College. The student composers will attend the
rehearsals and performances of
their works.
The balance of the Symposium
will consist of performances of
student works prepared by the

Salzman, composer and critic of
the New York Herald Tribune;

schools. These
Chamber Music Recitals will be
given in the Baird Recital Hall
on Monday, March 21st, at 8:30
p.m. and on Tuesday, March 22nd,
at 9:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. Following the performance of each
of the student works there will
be a discussion of the composition.

participating

The Official Bulletin is an authorized publication of the State
University of New York at Buffalo, for which the SPECTRUM
assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in

GENERAL NOTICES

Library Hours During
Mid-Semester Holidays

Lockwood and Harriman Libraries (including Art and Music
Libary)
Regular Hours.
—

Poetry Room
Regular Hours
Chemistry Library
8:30-9
Monday-Friday
Saturday
95
Closed
Sunday
Engineering Library
8:30-5
Monday-Kriday
Saturday
JClosed
Sunday
Closed
Mathematics Library
Regular Hours
Physics Library
Monday-Friday
(including March 18)
8:30-5
Saturday
9-5
Sunday
Closed
Health Sciences Library
Regular Hours

I

s, ELIZABETH HARTMAN

B«»d on

Bi WADY

WITH HUS and DRUMS by (UZAKTH (ATI

Wnntn lQ&gt; Itit Soten and Oi-ecled by

,

Maple

bmhi

&amp;

GUY GREEN ' Product* PANORO S. BERMAN • In PANAVISION*
MALL

83?8300
Niagara Falls

by

Blvd

Weekdays &amp; Sun.: X
3:49, 5:40, 7:40, 9:90
Sat.: 2:00, 3:59, 5:40,
7:49, 9:90, 11:49

'Tffetrf/ISClS OH...

“Blows the lid off a snake pit of evil!”

atCollege Reveals Cheating

A survey at Ferris
(ACP)
State College, Big Rapids, Mich.,
found nearly half of the respondents admitting they had cheated
—

in some way in the course of their
college careers.

The survey, conducted by a
marketing research class, revealed that scholastic dishonesty
including such acts as copying
—

during an exam, purchasing exams, or lying about absence
was most pronounced among
upper classmen (44.2 per cent),
and especially among seniors (51

—

Respondents holding a 3.0 or
higher grade point average displayed the least tendency for
cheating, while the 2.0 to 2.5
group was found most prone to

cheat.

The next regular edition of the Spectrum will
appear on April 1, 1966
Copy deadline is Tues.,
March 29

OFFICIAL BULLETIN

Student organization notices are
not accepted for publication.

SIDNEY POITIER-SHELLEY WINTERS

Survey

per cent).

TYPEWRITTEN form to 114
Hayes Hall, attention Mrs.
Fischer, before 2 p.m. the Friday
prior to the week of publication.

0MINATE

PAGE NINE

Law Library
Regular Hours
College Student Personnel Preparation program in the graduate
School of Education
student
applications for admission to the
fall semester 1966 will be accept
ed no later than March 31, 1966.
Prospective applicants to the
—

program may obtain information
and application forms in Room
120 I, Foster Hall.

All Juniors and Seniors in the
College of Arts and Sciences
may pick up the necessary preregistration materials for the Fall

MARCH 24
The Department of Psychiatry

—

of 1966 in front of the Bursar's
Office, Room 243, Hayes Hall between 9 a m. and 4 p.m. Thursday. April 7, Friday. April 8, and
Monday. April 11.

Students who do not wish to
pre-register or do not obtain their
registration materials on the
above designated days will have
to register September 8, the regular registration day.
University College Students (exthose on strict academic
probation)
registration for
next semester. September 1966 is
as follows:
March 28 through April 1
H. A. N, E, Z.
April 4 through April 8
cept

—

S,

Y. Q, X

April 11 through April 15
M T, U. V.
April 18 through April 22
G, P, I.
April 25 through April 29
W, D.
May 2 through May 6
B. F.

presents a Psychiatric Guest
Lecture featuring Dr. Edward
Stainbrook, Professor of Psychiatry, University of California, Los
Angeles, Butler Auditorium,
Capon Hall, 8:30 p.m.
PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS
—

A reminder

appointments

—

for interviews should be made at
least one week in advance of the
interviewing date if possible
Literature describing the current opportunities with recruit
ing organizations is available at
the University Placement Services, Schoellkopf Hall, telephone
831-3311. Candidates are advised
to review the literature before
interviewing the organization.
MARCH 25

Baltimore County Board of
Education
MARCH 28
Consolidated Kreightways
Oak Ridge Institute of Nuclear

Studies
Gannett Co.,

Inc

Niagara

Kails Gazette

Western Printing

L tho Co
Addressograph-Multilith Corp.
MARCH 29
New York Life Insurance Co.
John Hancock Insurance Co.
American Optical
Instrument

WEEKLY CALENDAR

&amp;

;

—

MARCH 23

ivision

The Department of Biology
presents Dr. R. J. Harvey, Assistant Research Bacteriologist,
Department of Bacteriology, University of California at Davis. The
topic is “Kinetics of Growth of
Individual Bacteria," 134 Health
Sciences, 4 p.m.
The Linguistic Circle of Buffapresents Jerrold J. Katz, Delo
partment of Humanities and the
Research Laboratory of Eleetrorics, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, whose
topic
is “Transformational Grammars,"
234 Norton Hall, 8 p.m.
—

—

MARCH 29, 31
Hunt Real Estate Corp

MARCH 30
Acme Markets, Inc.
Northwestern Mutual Life
Insurance Co,
Bureau of Federal Credit
Unions
Quaker State Oil Refining Corp
Texaco Petro Co.
MARCH 31
U. S. Marine Corps

Household Finance Corp.
General Electric Credit Corp.
APRIL 1
Ingersoll

Rand Co,

�f

PAGE

Friday, March 18, 1966

Tkto

oCetterA

to

the Editor

Orestes Review Assessed
TO THE EDITOR:
I read Beth Krauner’s review
of Orestes which appeared in the
Spectrum, Friday. March 11, 1966,
and I saw the production during
its last performance. I agree with
Miss Krauner that the play was
not “perfect,” but I find greater
imperfection in the play itself as
a representation of Greek performing art. Granted, the Electra
was indistinct at times and the
Oreste* did not have Electra’s
“ability to generate emotional impact," but attention should also
be given to the fact that this prod u c t i o n loses sight of what is
particularly
Greek tragedy
near the end of the play. It is
commonly known that Greek tragedy is wholly serious; there is no
such thing as comic relief. It was
not until Shakespeare and his
—

contemporary Elizabetheans that
“comic relief" figures enter into
high tragedy. Now, Apollo in
Orestes, is supposed to enter the
spene of tragedy near the end of
the play in the pose of a “divine
intelligencer” or judge-figure. His
pronouncements resolve the conflict of the play, and his physical
duties are mainly to conduct
Helen from earth to her mortal
abode on Mount Olympus. Most
classical scholars (e.g. W. K. C.
Guthrie and H, J. Rose, to cite
two) point out that Apollo lacks
that “way with women” which
most major Greek gods possess.
The Apollo in the past week’s production of Orestes destroys any
classic sense of tragedy, which
the play might otherwise have
rendered, for two reasons; (1) he
was portrayed as the winner in

a love triangle, causing (naturally) a measure of laughter, and (2)
he ends the tragedy on a comic
note which out-sounds the play’s
deep tragic tone. I got the feeling
when Apollo began making his

pronouncements that I was more
in the presence of Hamlet'* Osric,
than the classical god who comes
to earth to pass judgment (i.e. the
feeling that this was a minor
character introduced at the end
to bring a message, get a few
laughs, perform some minor mechanical function on stage, and
lightly depart).

by letting air out of a balloon.

Last Saturday night when Sonny
Murry’s orchestra started playing
Murray’s orchestra started playing in the Rathskeller. I came to
the conclusion that music and
noise are almost synonymous. The
group did such an excellent job
of bringing these qualities together. One thing 'bothered me
though: if the orchestra was as
much in the realm of noise as
music why did they restrict themselves to musical instruments? It
seems that they could have made
many of their sounds more easily

rhythm. Yet I just couldn’t help
feeling that a railroad train might
have done a better job. But don’t
get me wrong, I like the clickity-

At any

rate, the noise was in

clack of railroad trains.
Another thing which

seemed

to detract from the performance

was that the clarinet sounded like
a Catfight for Alley, Tom and
Continue.
However, perhaps I
should suspend judgment, because I am ignorant of the difference between a good catfight
and a sloppy, amateurish one.

By MIKE DOLAN

Dr. Leonard T. Serfustini, head
UB varsity basketball coach for
the past ten years, and Assistant
Professor of Education in Health.
Physical Education and Recreation, has- recently been honored
by an invitation to the NCAA
finals (university division) and
has been requested to address
the convention in a basketball
clinic presentation. This is the
first such honor bestowed upon
a UB coach of intercollegiate
athletics and one of the highlights in Dr, Serfustini’s coaching career.
The NCAA finals (university
division) will be held in Washington D.C. this year, matching

Wilfred T. Elliott

the nation’s colleges and universities have to offer. Since NCAA
rules mandate that the tourney
must he played on campus soil,
College Park, Maryland, site of
the University of Maryland has

Music and Noise Are Synonymous
TO THE EDITOR

Dr. Serfustmi To Speak
At Basketball Conclave

To end on an affirming note,
the musical and technical aspects
of the play were remarkable, as
Miss Krauner has well pointed

out.

As for the other instruments I
think the saxophones were all
right, I actually heard a pleasing
tone from one of them. The
trumpets wouldn’t have been so
bad either, only they sounded as
if they were being played both
on the inhale and the exhale like
a harmonica.
Nevertheless, I say in conclusion that the twenty minutes I
spent listening to them was worth
it: the experience of such a radically new art form more than made
up for the damage to my nervous
system.
Stanley Dayan

the finest basketball talents that

been chosen. The semi-finalists
and finalists will play in the
U. of Maryland’s spacious Cole
Fieldhouse today and Saturday.
Besides bringing together the
classiest basketball teams in the
country, the NCAA finals also
represent a gathering of the nation’s finest coaches for a meeting of the National Association
of Basketball Coaches of America.

Dr. Serfustini will be staying
in the Hotel Shoreham, Washington D.C., along with the other
coaches, from March 16-19. UB’s
varsity basketball coach is scheduled to make his clinic presentation this morning at 11 a.m.
Coaches listed on the program
for presenting clinics are the
following; Ray Meyer, DePaul
University; Vic Bubas, Duke;
Bernie Hickman, U. of Louisville; Dean Smith, U. of North
Carolina; Ray Mears, U. of Tennessee.

Calt&amp;aJ
The Anthropology Club will
present 'Dr. W. W. Taylor, an
archeologist from the University
of Southern Illinois speaking on
“HoHnistic and Partitive Culture:
Some Insights”, this evening at
8:30 p.m. in Norton 231.
There will be no meeting of
the Photo Club today. Supplies

will be distributed between 3:30
and 4:30 p.m. in the Photo Club
room, 353.
The Engineering Student Council will present its “Twentieth
Annual Conference on Advances
in Engineering” April 2 from 11
a.m. to 4:30 p.m. in the School

Of Engineering.

Discrimination...

“Art Critic” Rebuked
TO THE EDITOR:

Though Miss Bartow may feel
that the painting exhibit leaves
much to be desired, I feel her

article leaves much more to be
desired. It is possible that Miss
Bartow has no former background
of art and made no attempt to
acquire any before nominating
herself a connoisseur of what is
a good painting and what is not.
Her apparent ignorance of stu-

dents being at a disadvantage (if
handed a pen and asked to paint
a sketch from life).
If our critic was really so disturbed at the display exhibited,
would it not have been wise for

drawing and are trying to expand
our ability.

menting with hard edge paintings; or, we are very capable of

and aspects of art curriculum.
Vivian Lowy

her to inquire as to reasons why
a particular kind of painting was
done. She might have received
such answers as: we are experi-

No critic should have the authority to pass judgment on a student’s ability or future, on observation of a single painting. Apparently the critic expects an
artist to execute in one painting
all characteristics of art history

•

•'

'

Grades Do Not Ascertain Social Attitudes of Student
TO THE EDITOR
Levine, Cooper, et. al. have
taken a strange position on the
issue of true scholastic ability
and the means of evaluating it. In
fact scholarship as I know it
seems to have been replaced by
humanitarian yearnings, and the
true scholar is now a man with
an acute social conscience. So we
would be led to believe that the
methods which heretofore have

been used to evaluate scholarship
are no longer valid.
A deep concern for man,
whether he dwells in the city slum
or the Vietnamese forest, is a
noble attribute but this concern
cannot be substituted for real
scholarship that derives from intellectual ability. It is a fact of
life that some individuals reason
beter and some are more creative
than others. Neither an intense
interest in social problems nor

philosophical questioning can disrupt this natural inequality of
human ability.
As imperfect as they may be,
exams, of whatever type and the
evaluation of the student by a
qualified instructor are attempts
to measure the retentive, reasoning, and creative powers of the
individual. They do not, need
not, and should not ascertain the
social attitudes of the examinee,
Charles Suchma

"An individual involved in a
true learning process is one who
attempts to deal with questions

of fundamental human concern."

So stated twelve students, in some
sense or other of the term (Letter

to the Editor, March 11). Their
point was that the grading system in reality is not "the selfearned expression of a student's

academic worth.”
It must be admitted that the
predictive validity of any testing
system with regard to academic
worth is less than 100 per cent.
Indeed, some techniques are notoriously inane and are utilized
presumably because of greater
simplicity of processing in certain
mob-lecture type courses Certainly such situations are deplorable
and represent an insult to the
true student's intelligence.
But in the absence of the grading system, what alternative meas-

ure of academic worth would
these "students" propose? Length
of hair, number of protest buttons worn, or perhaps an inverse
measure of the use of soap? Let it
not be forgotten that many of our
protestors are the counter-parts of
the “sophisticated test-taker,” that
is, participants in the forms,
whether tests or picket signs,
“without necessarily understanding underlying theories."
A major premise of student activists seems to be that coursework is some insipid exercise of
cephalic tissue which is to be endured only as a necessary evil
while learning and promoting agitation-propaganda of romantic
ideals. A corollary seems to be
that professors are ivory tower

neurotics who have withdrawn
from the world and share no concern over “important human
problems.” The result of these
assumptions is the “free university" movement, another of the

20th Century non-institutions, like
non-art and non-morality.
If coursework consists of “fractured bits of information . .
which lack . . . coherent interrelationship,” where will students
find answers to important human
problems? If courses of study are
not useful tools for approaching
pressing human concerns, what
will the students’ source of insight be? Intuition, the “light of
pure reason,” voices from within
or without? Shaky grounds, I submit. Some of the world's most perfidious agents of evil (e.g.: Hitler)
used similar grounds.
.

TO THE EDITOR

DR. PORTER

AMBROSE LANE

(Cont’d from Pg. 1)
demonstrations throughout t h e
South. He received an honorary
degree of Doctor of Humanities
from Morgan State College (Baltimore, Maryland) last year.
Dr. Burrell, who has taught at
University College since
1948, received her bachelor’s and
master’s degrees from the University of Pennsylvania. She re-

State

Student Responsible For His Own Grades

Imperfect as the grading system may be. it is nonetheless the
best indicator of scholarship we
have, and regardless of the grading system’s legitimacy, as long
as the student acts within that
system, it is he who is responsible
for his grades.
David L. Schriber

1

ceived her doctorate from New
York University in psychology
and human relations, and served
as a Fulbright professor to India
during 1959-60.

Mr. Lane, who is the former
editor of the “Buffalo Challenger,” was graduated with honors
from the University of Pittsburgh. He attended the University off Pittsburgh Law School
and received a master’s degree
from the same university’s School
of Social Work. He is a member
of several professional and honorary associations including the
National Association of Social
Workers and Alp ia Kappa Delta,
national honorary sociology fra-

ternity.

Dr. Weston received his doctorate from Columbia University
in 1954. Prior to serving as rector of St. Philip’s, he served for

six years as executive secretary

REVEREND WESTON
of the Division of Christian Citizenship for the National Council
of the Protestant Episcopal
Church. He is a founder and
member of the board of directors
of the Carver Federal Savings
and Loan Association in Manhattan. He is a member of the
board of directors of the Community Council of Greater New
York, the New York City Mission
and many other social welfare
agencies.

�18, 1966

Friday,

PAGE

SPECTRUM

ELEVEN

INTRAMURALS Cassius, Buffalo Awaits You
Today is the deadline to hand
in entries for the volleyball
league, which will begin play the
week of March 28. Leagues will
play on Wednesday and Thursday evenings at 7:30, so indicate
your preference for which day
your team wants to play.

By STEVE FARBMAN

Steve Walsh of AEPi defeated
Les Brassington of Sig Ep last
Thursday to capture the championship of the paddle racquets
tournament. The final team
standings in that event are:
1. SAM
42 points
34 points
2., AEPi
26 points
3. Sig Ep :
22 points
4. Gamma Phi
18 points
5. Phi Ep

Farb wishes all you intramural
fans a good TIME over the vacation.

The results of the wrestling

meet, which was held in Clark

Sanford
On WBFO

Gym last Saturday, are as fol-

lows:

WT. CLASS
WINNER
Jim Bonnie —Theta Chi
Bob Weis—AEPi
Sandy Kesend —Beta Sig
137
145
Brian Vandenburg—GDI’s
152
Stuart Goldstein—GDI’s
Richard Katz—GDI’s
160
Jay McFadden—GDI’s
167
Les Brassington—Sig Ep
177
191
Don Grayson—Phi Bp
Heavyweight Sam Ratick—AEPi

Mr. William Sanford III, UB’s
varsity coach in tennis and swimminy, will be the special guest
on WBFO’s SPORTS TALK, tonight at 5:50 pm.

The team winners in that event

Sanford, winner of many honincluding national NCAA
and ECAC committee membership, will speak both on collegiate
swimming and the fast-moving
game of tennis.
ors,

are:

81 points
60 points
47 points
33 points
26 points

1. AEPi
2. GDI’s
3. Sig Ep
4. Phi Ep
5. Beta Sig
...

_

Wally Blatter will host the pro-

gram.

The Pahlowitz Trophy standings of the top nine teams includes all sports played to date.
The only events that remain are
volleyball, fencing, and track.
There will be no softball this

Support

TOTAL PTS.

Our

327
306

2. SAM

Gamma Phi
Sig Bp
Phi Ep
Alpha Sig
Beta Sig
Theta Chi
AKPsi

299%

....

..

....

296
292
260
237
226
,7_.. 219

Advertisers

Buffalo’s Memorial Stadium is
another possibility
its 40,000
seats would be ideal to show the
vast, empty chairs. But Buffalo’s
climate not- even Cassius would
agree to endure, what with the
possibility of his tongue freezing
over becoming a reality. Where
to, then? Only Buffalo Memorial
Auditorium, (henceforth known
as the Aud), remains as a competent compromise between Clark
and the stadium.
Assuming that we have all settled on this site, let us examine

BULL PEN...

(Cont’d from Pg. 12)

During the last two months of the season, the Lancaster hydroplane seemed to rewrite a record each time
he entered the water. After setting a pool mark at Os-

200-yard freestyle school and pool marks, which he established three
times this season, by churning to a 1:54.3 clocking in
UB’s curtain-closer against Niagara.
In the 500-yard freestyle, UB’s version of Buster
Crabb splashed to a 5:27.6 timing against Geneseo on
February 23 to shatter another UB record. Troppman’s
record-breaking accomplishments this season should
stand for some time at UB.
wego State, Troppman lowered his own

For Frank Sinatra, another relatively small man,
1966 has been “a very good year” so far. Three other little
giants have more than just made their presence felt in
the UB sports world this year. Greatness is not measured
by size alone.
�

Now that we have agreed to
stage the battle in Buffalo, we
must find a suitable location within the city itself. Clark Gymnasium presents itself as one alternative. Its one thousand seats could
probably be filled, and the remarkable floor composition would
make a danvas ring unnecessary.
Alas, beautiful Clark Gym must
be passed over, for the cameramen who televised the bout for
closed circuit customers would
not be able to stand the cold on
their backs.

—

year.

TEAM
1. AEPi

By SCOTT FORMAN

I propose that the Cassius ClayGeorge Chuvalo boxing bout for
the 'heavyweight championship of
the "world" which is scheduled
to take place March 29 in Toronto, be brought instead to Buffalo.
I believe that such an arrangement would prove to be the greatest possible boon to boxing in the
United States today as the abolition of this brutal sport would
certainly follow. Let us ponder
for a few moments the amazing
advantages which a Buffalo bout
would bring to bear upon such
an ultimate result. We must assume for our purposes that the
State of New York has lifted its
ban on Cassius’ fighting within
its borders, before we may go on.

�

�

The future of UB basketball and the Aud should

have been resolved during the week when Canisius Coach
Bob MacKinnon and UB Athletic Director Jim Peelle
conferred at College Park, Md., during NCAA meetings.
The Bulls have already booked three weekday games
in the Aud—Syracuse, Cornell and Buffalo State—for
next year, but the main purpose of the MacKinnon-Peelle
conference was to determine if and how the Bulls would
fit into the Canisius Saturday night program in 1966-67.

the nature of the spectators who
would pay to watch the great
battle between the modern day
gladiators. We may immediately
eliminate from the crowd the
huge throng which actively supports the Buffalo Bills, for in
the Aud the pitching of beer cans
into the arena is absolutely forbidden and well enforced. Wc
may also eliminate the great majority of the Batavia Downs clientele, since Tuesday is a strong
betting night. Here, however, a
few stragglers might wander into
the Aud with the expectation that
the usual fix will take on a new
angle from that usually seen at
the track. The Bison hockey fans
might be driven into journeying
back to their home field, but
certainly all 1500 of them will
not fill the stands. The Bison
baseball fans likewise might be
tempted to go to the affair, for
the smell of a loser seems to
appeal to them. But, chances arc
these hearty souls would rathr
fight than switch sports allegiance
at a time when their baseball
club is getting better every year
(it can’t get worse).

CLASSIFIED
-ADS-

CASSIUS CLAY

The students at UB, having
shown an aversion to the Aud
this year, could also be counted
on to stay away from the contest.
All in all, probably some three
or four thousand boxing enthusiasts from all quarters could be
presumed to appear at the Aud
on the bif! ngiht—about one-third
capacity. The impression this
would lend to the myth of interest which boxing tries to create
would be staggering.
And the
SDS, which is sure to picket,
could perhaps lend an aura of
added violence to the environment.
Certainly, Chester Kowal could
be persuaded to come out of
hiding to referee the bout. And
to broadcast the clash over radio
surely Bill Mazur could be in-

duccd to leave his microphone
temporarily in New York and
once again dash into the secondCounting for knockdpwns
ary.
could be Joey Reynolds, and the
two judges. Joe Romano and Mike
Melody. And perhaps the bell
ringer at Hayes Hall could be
talked into handling the timeaccuracy isn’t
keeping chores
really important anyway.
—

Think for one moment of the
value that such an event could
have for our country. After being
thoroughly reported by the Buffalo Evening Newt on March 30,
the final bell for boxing would
certainly have been sounded. And

Buffalo would have struck the
final “right to the jaw”, Toronto,
please, give us a chance first.

ft] ml Him W

TO
Ml icz.
3

L

I

Li

"
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�SPECTRUM

PACE TWELVE

Friday, March IS, 19M

-

M

nA=iE=
Fencers Capture Second
i

THE BULL PEN
by sieve schuelein

By

Gary Fowler, Joe Paul and Roy Troppman are all
relative Lilliputians in a collegiate sports world dominated by giants. These three UB athletes, however, share
something much more important than size (or lack of it)
they have proven themselves to be the standout performers in their respective winter sports this year.
Wrestler Fowler, fencer Paul and swimmer Troppman should long be remembered for their sterling contributions to UB’s three “other” varsity winter sports.
A nostalgic tear may be shed for departing seniors Paul
and Troppman, but Fowler, a mere sophomore, has two
more seasons to impress his name deeper into the annals
of UB wrestling.
Fowler’s 9*1-1 mat mark this season was much more
than just a brilliant individual campaign for the Cheektowagan.
UB’s wrestling demise from 9-1 to 5-5-1 this year
can be contributed to a number of factors. Such 1965
standouts as Bob Jackson, Bert Ernst, Len Ardieta, A1
Classman and A1 Worden were stripped from this year’s
roster because of either graduation or personal reasons.
George Ehresman was with the team for only two weeks.
Bill Miner was plagued by a rash of injuries. Norm Keller
didn’t develop as well as his junior potential indicated,
and muddled through a mediocre season.
These developments left Coach Ron La Rocque with
his leanest, greenest squad in years at UB. Then even
some of these inexperienced grapplers were shelved with
injuries sustained during the course of the season. This
surrounding atmosphere of futility, however, didn’t seem
to faze Fowler in the least.
An eminent historian once described Secretary of
State Hamilton Fish as adorning President Grant’s cabinet like a jewel in the head of a toad. Fowler has similarly emerged as the lone pearl in Coach La Rocque’s
oyster bed.
Fowler’s value in keeping the team at a .500 level
can be measured to a degree. Only two of the grunt ’n’
groaners’ victories, a 21-11 win over W. Ontario and a
23-14 verdict over Alfred, could have been achieved
without Fowler. UB defeated Plattsburgh 19-16, W.
Ontario a second time, 21-18, Rochester, 23-18, and tied
Brockport, 16-16. In these four matches Fowler scored
two pins, a decision and won once by default. A loss
by Fowler in any of these matches would have spelled
defeat for UB as a team. And it doesn’t seem too unlikely that such would have been the case without the
123-lb. whiz. A 2-9 record would have been a strong
possibility had Fowler failed on the mats.
That old hackneyed “Foiled again” cliche ma have
been originated bylhat epitome ot villainy, Oilcan Harry,
but a large number of Joe Paul’s fencing foes this year
have echoed the same sentiment (or at least a homonym
of it).
Paul, a short but sturdily-constructed Rochester native, worked with one distinct disadvantage Fowler was
free from in weighing his value to the team; most of
Paul’s sword-wielding comrades performed quite capably
this year, thereby not establishing the glaring contrast
that existed between Fowler and the curds and whey on
the wrestling roster.
Although Jim Mondello, Dave Kirschgessner, Bob
Frey and John Houston each copped thirty or more bouts
apiece this season, Paul’s 42-8 record still ranked at the
top of the list.
Sid Schwartz’s swordsmen finished the season with
a 12-4 slate in dual meets. Although the entire team
deserves praise for its clutch performances in subduing
such powers as Syracuse, the consistency of Co-captain
Paul in foil kept the team’s head above water at all
times. Not once this year did UB’s cross between D’Artagnan and Zorro finish with worse than a 2-1 record
in dual meets.
Durendal would have been nothing without Roland,
just as the Singing Sw'ord would have been an unknown
entity without Prince Valiant. Alas, not everyone will
be able to associate a similar relationship between Paul
and his beloved foil weapon in the years to come. But if
you see a grown man who answers to the name of Sid
sniffling at a fencing meet next year, three-to-one says
that he is feeling the pains df that memory.
On a team labeled by Coach Bill Sanford as his best
ever, Roy Troppman developed into the highest spire on
Sanford’s lofty swimming edifice. Although such capable
tankmen as Captain Carl Millerschoen, Charlie ZetterHowie Braun and Rick Rebo enjoyed banner years,
Troppman’s masterful exhibitions in the 200 and 500yard freestyle events were truly remarkable.
(Cont'd on Pg, 11)
;

JON RAND

In its strongest team effort of
the year the UB fencing team
finished second out of 12 teams
in the North Atlantic Intercollegiate Fencing Competition at
Drew University in Madison,
N.J., Saturday.
The team, which consisted of
Captain Joe Paul, Jim Mondello,
Carl Engel, John Houston, Bob
Frey, and Dave Kirchgessner,
was almost successful in bringing
back the Broad Sword (emblematic of the overall championship),
but a strong finish by Paterson
State College of New Jersey cut
short its efforts.
From the outset of the tournament both UB and Paterson were
no more than one point apart.
Six different times the score was
tied and the eventual outcome
was not decided until the last
round when Paterson finally
edged out UB, 49-47. Third place
went to Johns Hopkins University of Baltimore with 44 points.
Not since 1960, when UB
placed first, has the team been
able to do so well. The competition has fairly well been dominated by New Jersey teams.
Individually, each member of
the team did exceptionally well.
In epee, John Houston and Carl
“The Equalizer” Engel contributed 13 victories.
In saber, Bullet Bob Frey, the
Brooklyn Yarmulke Bopper, and
Dave Kirchgessner won 16 bouts.
Frey, a junior, placed fourth in
the individual finals. Frey and
Kirchgessner also placed second
overall in total saber victories to
—who else—Paterson.
The foil team was amazing.
Not only did it win the most
bouts, 18, but it also brought
back the Buffalo Trophy, awarded to the top foil team in the
tournament. Jim Mondello had a
great day, posting 10 victories
and also placing fourth in the
finals. J.P. “Epee” Paul accounted for the other eight.
The tourney, which is in its
Ifith year and reputed to be only
second in stature to the Easterns,
was physically exhausting not
only for the team but also for Sid

Schwartz, the team’s chief coach,
statistician, and cheerleader. Although slowed down a bit by a
nagging Flipidonis Floperis ailment contracted during the war
(which one, he didn't say), he
has more than earned the respect and admiration of the team
and also of his coaching staff,
Jules Goldstein, Tony Buzzelli,
Mike Marion and Barry M. Benisch, student doctor of the Erie
Nursing Home and UB fencing
-

team.

Meanwhile, back at the tournament, the competition was

completed by an award ceremony
and a school drinking contest.
UB got a slow start and finished
third because no one could find
a can opener and only one member of the team was old enough
to drink.
Next for UB are the Nationals

olina. So let’s show some of that
UB spirit and see the boys off
when they leave by plane on
Thursday, March 24, at 10:30 am.
It will be a very fitting close to
a successful season.

Matmen End Long Season
By BOB FREY
Although the UB wrestling
team officially ended its season
two weeks ago by absorbing a
stunning 35-0 thrashing at the
hands of Oswego State, Coach
Ron La Rocque and two of UB’s
finest, Bill Miner and Gary Fowler journeyed to Cleveland to
participate in the Interstate 4-1
Wrestling Championships. Miner,
the defending 130 pound champ,
compiled a 3-2 record and was
eliminated in the s e m i-finals
alter incurring a neck injury. He
lost to an Indiana State Universtiy grappler, 7-6. Fowler, our
123-p o u n d representative, did
well but was eliminated in the

consolation match to another Indiana State grappler and finished
with a 2-2 record. Last year UB
sent five wrestlers to this tournament and copped three individual championships and placed
second as a team among the forty
competing schools.
This year’s record (5-5-1) was
far below last year’s in which
the grapplers were bested only
once in the entire sason. However, Coach La Rocque was forced
to work with a young and inexperienced squad, as most of last

year’s championship squad graduated. To compound this handicap, Coach La Rocque’s grapplers
were sidelined with more injuries this season than in any other

that he has directed.

Next year’s squad should be
quite formidable, as most of this
year’s lettermen will return with
one full season of experience
under their belts. Coach LaRocque was quite pleased with
this year’s squad and echoed:
“It was a pleasure to work with
the squad.”

21
16
19
16
10
2

UB
UB

23
21
23
0

UB
UB

Season's Results:
Ontario Aggies 11

UB

UB
UB

UB

5 UB
UB

UB

RIT 21

Plattsburgh 16

Brock port 16

Colgate
Cortland
Ithaca
Alfred
W. Ontario
Rochester
Oswego

22
36
28
14
18
18
35

HERLAN TO
ATTEND UB
Scott Herlan, the sensational
halfback from Grand Island High
School, will enter UB this September. Herlan’s acceptance by
the University was disclosed by
UB head football coach Richard
“Doc” Urich.

Herlan was virtually a one-man
gang for the Grand Island team

this past season. He gained 666
yards rushing in 77 carries,
caught 17 passes for 346 yards
and 6 touchdowns, returned
kickoffs for 260 yards and scored
90 points on 15 touchdowns. He
was selected as his team’s Most
Valuable Player for leading them
to a 7-1 record. The 6-1 185pound Herlan was a unanimous
All-Conference choice for BCIC
Division 3.
Coach Urich expressed satisfaction that Herlan has decided
to come to UB and said that
he regarded the lad as “an outing student. He’s a college prospect of exceptional promise.”
Herlan will matriculate in UB’s
University College.

Hansen Takes Carling Open
Brian Hansen, ace punter for
the UB football team, captured
the Carling State University of
New York at Buffalo Bowling
Tournament at the Amherst Bowling Center Saturday. Hansen, a
sophomore from Detroit representing the eighth floor of Tower,
rolled a 609 triple to gain first
place in the best-three-out-offour
competition.

Runner-up honors
went to Sandy
of Alpha Sigma Phi
total. Sid Weiss of
Omega placed third

ney

in the tourFinkelStein
with a 601

Alpha Phi
with 579.

More than fifty bowlers, representing various UB organizations,
participated in the event sponsored by the Carling Brewing
Company.
At a buffet luncheon immediately following the tourney, Wally Grayson of the Carling Company presented placques to Hansen, FinkelStein and Weiss. Hansen also received a tape recorder to be used by the eighth floor
of Tower.

•MAN HANMN

at Duke University in North Car-

After the awards presentation,

Grayson introduced five other
Carling representatives, UB Ath-

letic Director Jim Pee He and
various UB Resident Advisors.
Grayson added, “The tourney
seems to have been a great success, so I see no reason why we
can't have it again next year.”
Then, after a deluge of rolls,

cold cuts, salads and Mabel’s favorite beer, the appreciative audience was shown film highlights
of the Cleveland Browns’ 1964
season.

The Spectrum wishes to thank
the Carling Brewing Company
for making this tournament possible.

A column by Richard
“Doc” Urich, UB’s new
head football coach, will
make its debut in the
Spectrum after spring
vacation. In his column,
Urich will discuss and
evaluate various facets
of the UB football program.

-

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J

FEIDLER

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

,

OKN
FORUM

(See Page

,See page 5)

VOLUME 16

TUESDAY, MARCH IS, 1966, BUFFALO, NEW YORK

House Council Rejects
Student Judiciary Order
Tower Move Will
Restrain Campaigning
By JOAN ROBERTS

Tower House Council unanimously agreed to ignore a Student
Judiciary injunction against its
prohibition of door-to-door dorm
campaigning at a meeting last
Sunday. According to Tower
President Stan Brodsky, the Council "is being forced to dishonor
this injunction in order to protect the rights of Tower residents.”

The Judiciary injunction issued
Friday, March 11, stated that the
Tower Council resolution outlawing campaigning above Tower
first floor constituted a danger

to the exercise of basic freedoms

of speech and assembly. Enforcement of the resolution was forbidden. pending a hearing before
the Judiciary.

The Tower ruling was a result
of an Inter-Residence Council
decision of February 27, which
gave the individual house councils the right to decide campaigning procedures in their respective
residence halls.

Mr. Brodsky noted that since
the Judiciary hearing will not be
held until after the elections, the
Council must continue to represent the majority of residents
who "do not want to be bothered
by door-to-door campaigning. All
we want is the right of privacy,"
he commented.
Student Judiciary Chief Justice

ANNUAL SPRING ARTS FESTIVAL PRESENTS VARIED PROGRAM.
Photos by Don Blank,

Anthony Walluk,

Carol Coodson,

Richard Jaross said that “a house
council cannot go against an injunction,” nor can any student
“under any circumstances violate
and Alan

Gruber

SDS Abandons Free University
Following an Ideological Split
New Group Will Attempt
Organizing F.U.B.
By LORETTA ANGELINE
SDS sponsors of a former Free
University of Buffalo have redirected their committee in favor
of a Peace and Freedom University, A faction of the original
Free University Committee has
broken alliances to form a new

FU.

The original FU was designed
“to provide a real educational
experience for the participants—faculty and students,” according
to the original FU initiator, Barbara Brody.
In the new Peace and Freedom
University, SDS members now
seek to establish a university
committed to fighting against the
“military-industrial complex and
the system.” related member of
the new FU faction Larry Rubin.
Rubin said, “Our idea of a FU
is one which offers a completely
free education, where the courses
are decided by the professors and
students, a radical, independent
university, free of political ties.”
A compromise agreement failed, resulting in the organization
of a new FU. “We wish to establish an FU embracing all ideolo-

gies, including SOS-oriented
ones," commented Rubin.
He further stated, “The new
FU holds as its goals radical experimentation, tremendous striving for knowledge, where a professor has a responsibility only
to his class.”
On Tuesday, March 15, Barbara
Brody will release a statement
“making clear the distinction between the Peace and Freedom
University and the new Free University.”
The new FU will have no official titles. According to Rubin,
“It is usually the case that a
bureaucracy formed to become a
servant ends up becoming the
master, and legislates for its own
limited purposes. Our FU will
have a responsible experimental
bureaucracy directly controlled
by the students."

The members of the new FU

plan to visit the Free University
of New York during Spring Vacation to view how the FU is
set up, how its problems were
solved and if they apply here.
Tuition will be kept minimal
and will be supervised by the

genera! body of students.
After Spring Vacation, they
will begin recruiting professors,
and open meetings will take
place.
Rubin said finally, “The FU
will die from slow decay without
student support. We want all the
help we can get."

a judiciary ruling.” He explained
that it was “impossible” to schedule a hearing at any earlier date.

Independent Student Senate
candidates Martin Feinrider and
Jeffrey Lewis expressed dissatisfaction with the Tower resolution, explaining that “it violates
our rights of freedom of speech,
association, and assembly.” They
noted that “the Student Judiciary
is the supreme legislative body
and has made election rules
which no subordinate legislative

body on campus can supercede.”

“The Tower Council resolution
violates rights of resident students
by restricting their access to candidates,” Mr. Feinrider
and Mr. Lewis added.
...

Mr.

Brodsky

commented that

distribution of literature in floor
lounges will be permitted candidates by the House Council.
Dean of Students Richard A.
Siggelkow said that the issues

involved in this conflict are “the

right to privacy and the freedom
to campaign openly.” He continued that since candidates are permitted to disseminate literature
within the dormitory, “there is
essentially no issue here." Both
privacy and open campaigning are
honored through this agreement,
he suggested.

Student Objects to
Unauthorized Actions'
Of Bursar's Office
Douglas Cream may bring
criminal suit against the Bursar’s office which cashed a $5
check made out to the State
Education Department as payment for his Law School Qualifying Certificate.

Cream, a transfer student, will
finish his undergraduate studies
in August and has applied to
several law schools. To complete
his applications, a Law School
Qualifying Certificate must be
obtained by filling out an application from Albany, and attaching

a $5 payment.

The Bursar’s Office then sends
the application and fee, along
with the transcript, to Albany
for evaluation.
According to Cream, his application and fee were submitted
to the Bursar’s Office to be sent
to Albany with his transcript.
When he received a letter from
Albany requesting his $5 fee, he
checked with his bank. He was
presented with his cancelled
check, endorsed in longhand.
"State Education Department."

Mrs. Hcnsler, of the Bursar's
Office, told Cream that there
was no record of the payment.
She suggested that the $5 was
used to pay for the transcript.
The transcript fee is $1, and
Cream has in his possession, the
cancelled check, for $1, which
he used to pay for his transcript.
Later Cream was told that the
Bursar’s Office was not responsible for the mistake: that it
was his fault for not sending
the check directly to Albany.
(Cont’d on P. 7)

Pinkertons to Continue Sticker Enforcement

Safety Coordinator Ernest A,
Edwards announced that Pinkerton officers will continue their
temporary drive to enforce automobile parking registration on
campus. Any vehicle lacking a
1965-66 registration sticker will
receive a ten-dollar fine.
The sticker requirement is necessitated by the lack of control resulting from the removal
of gates and meters, Mr. Edwards said. He emphasized that
the loss of these devices has encouraged cars to enter full lots,
blocking roadways and entrances.
Mr. Edwards noted that although all meters have been removed, “cars cannot park in

meters did not for
exist.” He pointed out
that automobiles often block hydrants and create unsafe condi-

spaces where

merly
tions.

“The

situation will
never get any better on this
campus,” Mr. Edwards said, “and
no more parking spaces will be
furnished.”
Chief Institutional Safety Officer Gene Murray recently commented that the main problem in
controlling parking “is keeping
students out of faculty lots.” A
student parked in a faculty lot
is subject to a five-dollar fine
and judiciary action by the dean
of students, according to Mr. Edparking

wards. Faculty lots are located
behind Acheson, Diefendorf and
Capen Halls.

All monies collected from fines

are forwarded to New York State,
according to Assistant Vice-Presi-

dent for Business Affairs Charles
Balkan. Mr. Balkan said that the
University is awaiting comment
from the state on the re-routing
of monies to the Grace Capen
Loan Fund.
Students may still obtain registration stickers at the Bursar’s office. Faculty and staff
members may pick up stickers at
the Hayes Hall Personnel office.

�PAGE TWO

Tuesday, March 15, 1966

SPECTRUM

Tentative Plan for New Campus Announced
Several departments of UB have
indicated tentative plans for the

new campus.
According to Athletics Department Director Mr, Peelle, the new
campus will include facilities to
entail all sports. “They will be
as fine as any in the east,” said

Mr. Peelle. “There will be boating on the Barge Canal, an
eighteen hole golf course, horseshoe courts, 8h area for picnics,
and hot dog and hamburger
stands.” Mr. Peelle further commented, “Although the program
will include intercollegiate sports,
the emphasis will be on intramural sports.”

Professor Parker of the Mathematics Department reported,
"We are hoping for 'better facilities, i.e. one building devoted solely to Mathematics. Included in it
will be a statistics and computer
center, faculty offices, a Mathematics Library, and lounges for
study and relaxation for students
and faculty. Our student-oriented
program would include more
small classes.”
Professor Stuckwisch of the
Chemistry Department stated,
“There will be a general emphasis on instrumentation. Changes
in the curriculum are a natural

consequence of changing
plexion of material.”

com-

“The Physics Department hopes

to have two large lectures rooms

with specific facilities for demProfessor
onstration,” related
Borst of the Physics Department,
“We are requesting a planetariurn and telescope of appreciable

Language Table Programs
All students of foreign languages, resident students in particular, can now take part in the
language table program, announced Dr. Boyd-Bowman of the
Modern Language Department.
Dr. Boyd-Bowman explained
that Russian and Italian tables

Union Board Amendment

have been added in addition to
the French, German and Spanish
tables which have been operating
in the past. At each dinner, one
or more natives speakers or Modern Language Department instructors will be on hand as conversation leaders for each language.
According to Dr. Boyd-Bowman,

He didn’t change his hair cream

W

or his mouthwash

A

or his deodorant...

size. Future plans also include a
colored television to view stars
in color in the laboratories. This
might be broadcasted over network stations.”

French, German and Spanish
tables are held every Tuesday
and Wednesday; the Russian
table meets every other Wednesday the Italian table meets every
other Tuesday. Students can be
informed of the exact dates of
the Russian and Italian tables
from their instructors.
All language tables are held
from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. in the
Tower Private Dining Room. Resident students must notify RA’s
to have meals transferred to
Tower. Commuter students may
purchase dinner tickets at the
dining hall.

Union Board will meet tonight
at 6 p-m. to vote on an amendment to change its constitution.

According to Union Board Secretary Sandra Atlas, the proposed
changes would increase the power

of the executive board.
Under the amended constitution the executive board, composed of the officers of Union
Board, would acquire the power
to handle most issues that previously were voted upon by all
Union Board officers and committee chairmen.
Union Board would be required
to meet as one body just twice
a year, and special meetings
could be called. It would have
the power to veto decisions by
the executive board.
Last year similar changes were
proposed but failed to be accepted. Union Board President Joanne Osypiewski commented that
the failure was due to the belief
of some members that such a
reorganization would concentrate
too much power in the executive
board.

/TRIAL
%14£

SIZE BOTTLE OF

ALPHA-KERI BATH OIL

A

Bring This Ad to

HIGHGATE PROFESSIONAL PHARMACY, INC.
3435 BAILEY AVE.

—

on*

block from the Water Tower

SUNYAB Student end Faculty are "preferred customers" at
Just show your student or faculty I.D. Card.

our store

He Just
earing
pants

.

Tapered to

a no-iron,
permanent press. That’s why guys who are "in” are
in Lee Leens. Shown, Lee-Prist Leens in Bob Cat Twill, a
blend of 50% Fortrel* polyester/50% cotton. In Pewter,
Sand, Black. $6.00. Leens: $5.00 to $7.00.

L66PR6ST*
L86I1S
TNrkteaKputi
H

0.

J*

kdratrok

.forTMurklaaKaetlM

In Ca..

laa.. Kaaaai

Ot&gt;.

Ha MUI
ALSO AVAILABLE IN CANADA.

—

�Tuesday, March 15, 1966

PACE THREE

SPECTRUM

YAF And CVV Sponsor Lecture On Mailer And Bellow Given By Fiedler
Lecture By De Joegher
culture, and are urban JewishAmerican scholars.” Both writers
have moved into society the same
way, and both have drawn from
Freud, Marx, Trotsky and Hem-

By PETER LEDERMAN

Young Americans for Freedom
and the Committee for Victory
In Vietnam will sponsor a lecture
by Father Raymond De Jaegher
Wednesday, Mar, 15, at 4 p.m. in
the Conference Theater, according to Committee for Victory in
Vietnam co-chairman Steve Sickler.

As a young priest, Father De
Jaegher lived under the Communists in China from 1937-1943,
Mr. Sickler related. He was in
a Japanese concentration camp
from
1943-1945, and worked
against the Communists in China
until 1949. His experiences are
told in his book, The Enemy
Within (Doubleday), which has
been translated into seven different languages. He was Regent
of the Institute of Far Eastern
Studies at Seton Hall University
from 1950-1953.
From

1954-1964, Father

De

Jaegher worked in South Viet-

nam, where he founded two high
schools, with 4,000 students, Mr.
Sickler said. He started the Free
Pacific Association magazine in
Chinese, as well as a magazine in
French, and agency, with 30 employees, which supplied the press
with daily information on Com-

munist China,
Father De Jaegher rendered
extremely valuable service to the
late President Diem from 19541963.
Following the lecture there
will be a panel discussion and
questioning of the speaker. Panel
members will be Frank Klinger,
moderator, Dr. Marvin Zimmerman, Dr. Howard W. Post, one
representative of Young Americans for Freedom, and two representatives from Students for a
Democratic Society, yet to be
named.

Language Dept. Expanded
New Faculty appointments

which have been made for next
year will allow the Department
of Modern Languages to introduce the study of Elementary
Portuguese and to expand course
offerings in Russian literature,
Department Chairman Gordon R,
Silber announced.
While only one course on the
300 level, Russian 303-304, Literary Masterpieces of the 19th and
20th Centuries, will be added
next year, the Department expects to accelerate the expansion
of upperclass courses in 1967-68
so that present Freshmen can

Alpha Epsilon Phi, the

Ripon Society and the Indees will participate in

the Fourth UB Trivia
Tournament, March 16 at
7 p.m. in the Fillmore
Room. The Tournament
will be broadcast live by
WBFO AM and FM.

WRANGLER
LEAN,
•

SLIM, TRIM

Denim Blue

•

Burgundy

•

Loden

•

Wheat

•

White

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f *\f5

J

Pants

look forward to having a major
available by the time
they reach upperclass status.

program

In addition to the new course,
the present course in Russian
Literature in English Translation
(323, 324) will be offered again
next year. The new appointee in
Russian is H.G. Hedrick who is
completing work toward his Ph.D,
this year at Princeton.
Elementary Brazilian Portuguese will be taught next year
by another new appointee, Kenneth Rasmussen, a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Wisconsin. The course will be a
regular 101-102 language course
meeting five days per week with
four hours of credit per semester.
It is expected that this course
will be of interest to students
planing to work in the Latin
American field in such Departments as History, as well as to

The lives, literary approaches
and best selling works of Norman
Mailer and Saul Bellow were
analyzed last Wednesday by Dr.
Leslie Fiedler.
Dr. Fiedler is a professor of
Graduate English and author of
Back to China, Waiting for tho
End, and Love and Death in the
American Novel. The lecture dealt
with Mailer’s The American
Dream and Bellow’s Henog.
Dr. Fiedler discussed the similarities and differences between
the two authors, indicating that
“each book could be used to illuminate the other.”
Norman Mailer's conception of
the contemporary is he who
‘loves himself above all and despises all he is.” Mailer lived for
ten years in the public eye and
tried everything he could to expand his experiences, Dr. Fiedler
said. The professor continued that
the ironic touch to Mailer was
that his hereos couldn’t “make it”
and neither could he.
Saul Bellow’s life, Fiedler explains, falls into the stereotyped
mold of the passive bourgeois
scholar who works toward the
creation of a future great novel.
In discussing Herzog, Dr. Fiedler
said that it was an “exercise in
genteel paranoia and becomes
stifled and lifeless because of its
Yiddish influence and tedious letters.”
Despite Bellow’s attack against
the “conventional insanity and
pessimism” of Mailer, and Mailer’s contempt for Bellow’s “portrait of the anti-hero reduced to
total impotence,” Dr. Fiedler
found several similarities between the two.
Both Bellow and Mailer are
products of the "same moment of

mingway.
Dr. Fiedler concluded the lecture by giving a study of the

markets for each book and their
contrasting appeals. Mailer’s book
he cited as “a pop novel that
reads more like Ian Fleming than
Dostoevsky." He described Bellow’s Heriog as being “more of
a square novel that has not really
impressed the young.”

WBFO will hold an interview with Gordon McLendon, owner of WYSL,
Thursday at 7:30 p.m.

Dr. Alexander Katz
Dr. Lou Krop
OPTOMETRISTS
Contact Lenses

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UNIVERSITY PLAZA
BUFFALO, N. Y. 14226
Phone; 835-3311

Professor Leslie Fiedler speaks
on "Saul Bellow's Herzog and
Norman Mailer's An American
Dream."

J
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Lunch, Friday, April 8, 11:30-1 P.M.
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For Home Hospitality for the Seder, contact Hillel at TF 6-4540
by March 21.

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�PAGE FOUR

Editorial (Comment

.

.

The Murder

.

A FREE UNIVERSITY?
The ill-fated “Free University” experiment at this
campus has been plagued from its inception with internecine squaggles and “ideological factionalism.” The
latest chapter of its peg-legged history records the splits
widening into a rift so that there are two “Free University Committees,” each weaker and more uncertain than
the original. Barbara Brody, who served as chairman
of the original committee, deserves a great deal of credit
for the effort she devoted to the idea of a free university,
although her tact, sophistication, and over-all philosophy
(or lack of it) have left a great deal to be desired.
Miss Brody, with uncritical, authoritarian logic, has
declared that the free university must be a training
center for political radicals, and that it must include a
“revolutionary” (one must suppose “Marxist-Leninist”)
bias. The members of the ‘new” Free University CommH+eo have resisted this doctrinaire attitude and have
called for open debate of the questions which Miss Brody
presumes are closed. In so doing, the members of the
"new” committee have reasserted one of the basic principles of respectable learning and scholarship, as well as
one of the basic principles of the “new left” the belief
that no authority should go unquestioned, and that the
very process of questioning will bring us all closer to
the truth.
In the final analysis, a truely “free” university could
not help but spawn dissatisfaction with the status-quo
and, concurrently, political radicalism.
A university
where all perspectives on important issues are presented
allows its students to make informed decisions, and a
university which does not fragment and compartmentalise
the search for meaning, or shy away from the issues of
pressing concern to its students and faculty as ours does,
could not help but produce more humane and educated
“graduates.” The truly free university is not merely
a tool of social revolution, but an integral part of the
society that revolution seeks to create.
If either free university committee is to be successful,
it must realize this. The structure of higher education
in America and this University in particular, is in dire
need of radical reform. But a “free” university which
simply serves the vested interests of a different power
structure, or peddles a different kind of social propoganda, is little better than the one which is miseducating us now. True, where only one brand of propoganda
is available, there is a great need to hear another, and
even Miss Brody’s “free university” would be serving a
genuine educational need on this campus, but a real free
university, where one brand of social criticism could be
taught contemparaneously with other brands, and with
the tired defenses of the status-quo for that matter, wquld
1
be infinitely better.
It should also be remembered by the members of
both committees that the ultimate function of a free
university is not solely to deal in politics, but to offer
meaningful education. The need for free universities
will hot end when there is no need for politics. In fact,
if the education offered at a "free” university is solely
political, then the need for real free universities is even
-

DIRTY WAR

By JOHN MEDWIO

While the bloody war in Vietnam continues, casualties mount
on both sides and the American
military commitment increases,
there is little talk about real
alternatives to killing people.
There is, of course, conscientious
objection, but it is difficult to get
and limited only to people who
oppose war on religious grounds.
The non-pafifist has only two
choices; he can be inducted and
hope that he won't have to fight
or he can dodge the draft in various ways—staying in school, marrying a widow with a dozen children, cutting off his foot, joining the Communist Party, committing a felony, etc.

Most Americans are willing to
serve their country by serving

greater.

THE

in the armed services but many
of us who are not pacifists have
an important commitment to
building rather than to destroy-

L

&amp;

showing through.)
From what I’ve been able to
fathom from former utterances,
Feinrider and Lewis are Liberal
Republicans
that is, they claim
membership in the Republican
Party and subscribe to the tenets
of Liberalism. To be more technical, they are liberal as far as
Republicanism goes, but moderate
with respect to the entire political spectrum. The essence of Liberal Republicanism, to them, is
that it works through existing social and political institutions, by
their built-in capacity for change.
—

to meet the varying needs of society. This is opposed to the no-

tion of conservatism, which advono change at all, and to that
of radicalism, which would change
the basic institutions. They claim
that the Republican Party is not
the exclusive domain of conservatism, as the Democratic Party is
not the exclusive domain of liberalism. When it becomes expedient to use the avenue of the
GOP to effect their ends, they
see no reason to refrain from
cates

doing so.

What do I think of all this? Not
that any of you care too much,
but their candidacy strikes me
with mixed emotions. They are
activists, and their political philosophy is probably to the right
of that of most of their opponents. On the other hand, I have a
vested interest in seeing the Republican Party remain a vehicle
of conservatism. Anyway, as I
said, I’m not going to back anybody (it would do more harm than
good anyway). In fact, I don’t
even know how I’ll vote, if I vote.
This is as good a time as any to
review the administration of Clinton Deveaux and the Campus Al-

liance Party. Last year at this
time I was very, very pessimistic
about the coming year. The newly
elected officers were ardent, activist, lefists. Those senators I
knew anything about were just
as bad. I had been satisfied, if
not pleased, with the Finkelstein
administration, and I could easily
visualize a sharp turn to the left
in the Student Senate. To my surprise and relief none of this materialized. Deveaux had enough
sense of justice to refrain from
using student money for partisan
purposes
as opposed to the infamous HUAC demonstrations of
the previous year. His administration also had the good sense to
stay out of national politics and
confine its activities to student
affairs. In the latter it was excellent, the shining example being
the Student Book Exchange
a
perfect example of the type of
activity a student government
ought to engage in.
I am going to give the officer
candidates of Campus Alliance a
vote of confidence to express my
satisfaction with their efforts of
the past year. I urge you to do
the same.
—

—

YAF Soundboard

Thanksgiving. Christmas, and spring vacations
JEREMY

TAYLOR

DAVID EDELMAN

Managing Editor

By THERMOPYLAE

LARRY SHOHET

Business Manager
RAYMOND D VOLPE
News Editor
SUSAN GREENE
Assistant
ALICE EDELMAN
Staff—Loretta Angelina. Joanne Bouchier. Russell Buchman. Karen Green
Peter Lederman Joan Roberts. Rick Schwab. Dan
Sharon Shulman.
Schroeder.
Eileen Teitler. Nancy Toder. Patti Wartley, Judy Weisberg
Feature Editor
JOHN STiNY
Assistant
JO ANNE LEEGANT
Stall—Bonnie Bartow, Ron
Ellsworth. Barbara Ann Fitzsimmons. Barbara Loeb
Audrey Logel, Bob Martin, Suzanne Rovner,
Martha Tack. William Weinstein '
Sports Editor
STEVE SCHUELEIN
Mike Castro. Mike Dolan. Steve Farbman, Bob Frey, Scott Forman
J. B Sharcot
Layout Editor
Stephanie

SHARON

Staff—Joanne Bouchier.

Parker.

Steve

Editor
Eatelle Fok.
Copy

HONIG

Silverman
JACOBS

LAUREN
Staff—Carol Becker
Jocelyn Hailpern, Sandy Lippman.
Claire Shottenfeld, Susan Zuckerberg
Advertising Manager
An,e '° Audr#y CMh Pal

RON

Betsy

Ozer.

HOLTZ

ftosenfeld. Steve Silverman. Joseph
Photography Editor
EDWARD JOSCELYN
Staff -Don Blank. Peter Bonneau. Joseph Feyes. Carol
Goodson. Alan Gruber.
Levine. Ivan Makuch. Michael Solun. Anthony Walluk.
Susan Wortman.
Robert Wynne
Circulation Manager
DIANE LEWIS
Faculty Advisor
Financial Advisor
POLICY IS
FIRST

the right

.

Feinrider and Jeffrey Lewis' for
Sciences, It’s not my inArts
tention here to support or oppose
their election, but just to present
a few facts about them to aid you
in making your decision, which
will no doubt be the right one.
(I’d better watch out—my underlying democratic instincts are

more favorably on the student
activist; Vista, a sort of national
peace corps; International Voluntary Service, which has workers
in Viet Cong controlled sections
of Vietnam; American Friends
Service Committee; or any of the
student organizations like S.N.C.C., S.D.S., C.O.R.E., SS.OC.,
S.C.L.C. who are committed to
preserving the democratic tradition in America by extending it
to the poor and dispossessed.
It is typical of, the Administration’s beligerent attitude toward
anything which might bring peace
to Southeast Asia that they would
not accept the students’ invitation
to talk about alternatives to killing. The possibility of real alternatives to war might upset the
traditional system of the old men
making the policies and the
young men dying for them. It
would also present the young
men of this generation with a
moral choice when the old men
are more interested in expediency, success, and victory, whatever that means.

SPECTRUM

Editor in-Chief
Editor-Elect

EDITORIAL

.

Student Senate elections are
being held today and tomorrow
so I guess it’s apropos to say
something about them. About the
only point of interest in this,
the most boring “election” ever
staged, is the candidacy of Martin

Th» official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall. University Campus. Buffalo. N. Y. 14214.
Published twice weekly from the first week of September to the last week in
May. except for exam periods.

home.
On October 20 of last year the
Marine Corps Commandant suggested that the war protestors
volunteer for humanitarian work
in Southeast Asia. On the same
day Paul Booth, national secretary of Students for a Democratic
Society, said, “We are fully prepared to volunteer for service to
our country and to democracy.
Let us see what happens if service to democracy is made grounds
for exemption from the military
draft.”
Telegrams were sent to the
President and to the Attorney
General asking to meet with them
immediately to discuss SOS’s proposal. Unfortunately, the President and the Attorney General
did nothing.
Alternate service might include
the Peace Corps, which is reported to be in the process of reassessing its aims and now looks

i

JAMES CALLAN

of Gonzago

ing and who see the war in Vietnam as a real threat not only to
the Vietnamese people but to the
quality of American democracy at

AN ALTERNATIVE TO THE

-

Jfancin**"*

Tuesday, March 15, 1966

SPECTRUM

IRENE WILLET
DALLAS

GARBER

DETERMINED 1Y THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
CLASS HONOR RATING
Second

Class

Subscription

15,000

Postage Paid at Buffalo. N Y.
$3 00 per year, circulation

Represented
for national advertising by
National Advertising Service.
Inc . 420 Madi
son Ave. New York. N. Y.

Today is the day we have all
been looking forward to—the day
we endorse our own Campus Alliance Senate. The spine-tingling
suspense over the outcome of the
senatorial contests is matched
only by the candidacy of Jeffery
Lynford for the office of National
Student Association Coordinator
—he is running unopposed. We

expect such undemocratic tactics
from NSA because it is one of
that organization’s most time

honored

traditions. Amazingly
enough, this year is the first time
that NSA has ever elected its
coordinator
so perish the
thought that there should be two
—

candidates.

We wish Mr. Lynford luck as
he triumphantly carries his electoral mandate off to the NSA
national convention as the true
representative of the UB student
body. He, dear students, will represent you; does anybody know
what his views are? Does anybody
care? If you do care, don’t waste
your time finding the answers
because we’re not engaged in a

true election anyway; we have
little choice who is elected.

This year the four Campus
Alliance candidates for the all
important offices of President,
Vice President, Secretary, and
Treasurer are running without
opposition. Assuming a 11 Independents win, eight other Campus
Alliance candidates are already
guaranteed victories.
How did
this happen? A brief review of
campus politics is in order.
At UB there are two major
political parties, the Campus Alliance Party, which is currently
in power, and The United Students Party, which is presently
out of power. Last year Campus
Alliance won a lopsided victory
to put United Students out of
office. The important facts to be
gathered from this are that 1)
there has always been at least
two parties which supposedly
have offered different philosoph-

ies of student government, and;
2) no matter which party was in
power, there was always an organised minority which demand-

ed competence from the majority
group. This is no longer true.
What has happened this year?
One party—United Students—has
withdrawn from the election and
has not endorsed a slate of candidates. Since the dangers of oneparty government are only too
obvious, we must consider the
possibilities of organized opposition arising spontaneously within
the new senate. There are a limited number of people who might
lead such an opposition, for example, Mr. Montgomery, the lone
US-supported senator running in
this “election”. Even if Montgomery wanted to resist CA party
bossism there will be a pitifully
small number of others to stand
by his side. Although things look
very, very bad right now, you
may be sure that things are much
worse than they look. Assuming
that all Independents will oppose
Campus Alliance, the situation is
horrible. We shall now point out
that even this assumption is presumptuous. All Independents are
(Cont’d on Pg, 5)

�Tuesday, March 15, 1966

Non-Credit Seminars Conducted at City College

THE OPEN FORUM
By HAROLD A. BONER
Department of English

It is clear that the American
'

people overwhelmingly favor a
negotiated peace in Vietnam
They support the continuation
of the war only because they

have

been

convinced that

we

cannot with honor and safety
any terms for

peace beyond those which Hanoi has re-

offer

PACE FIVE

SPECTRUM

jected.

This conviction arises chiefly
from the belief, forstered by
every voice of the Johnson administration, that the forces opposing us in Vietnam are invaders, aggressors, and tools of a
Communist conspiracy for world
conquest.
Obviously, this -claim is the
essential element in the justification of the war policy. If it is
true, then every American concerned for the rights of small
nations or the safety of his country must agree that no further
concession should be made to
the demands of Hanoi and the
Viet Cong forces.
I do not, however, believe that
the picture is quite as clear as
this, I accept the claim of Mr.
Rusk and others that the Viet
Cong are trying by force to
overthrow the Saigon regime, and
that they are now receiving help
in both troops and supplies from
North Viet Nam. But I am also
aware, as Senator Fulbright and
others have pointed out, that it
was the refusal of the Diem government, under the influence of
Mr. Dulles, to permit the election promised by the Benova
Agreement, which motivated the
Viet Cong revolt. I also observe
that even by the statements released by our own Defense
Department, North Vietnamese
troops are even now but a small
part of the forces we are facing,
and are far fewer than the forces
we ourselves have brought into
the country. In view of these
facts, it seems to me that the
Viet Cong cannot truthfully be
called either foreign invaders or
aggressors, and our government’s
effort to stigmatize them as such
is a classic case of the pot calling the kettle black.

If this view is sound ,it is sim-

ply not true that we should not
and cannot go beyond the peace
terms we have already offered.
We should state unequivocally
our readiness to accept the Viet
Cong as an independent party in
peace negotiations; to request an

immediate cease-fire; to agree to
a swift withdrawal, under the
United Nations or other international auspices, of all foreign
troops from South Vietnam; and
to declare our desire for and
willingness to accept any result
of tree elections in South Viet-

nam.

Mr. Rusk has said, of course,
that ail such proposals have already been made, and rejected.
I agree that some of them have
been made, but always in such

equivocal terms, or accompanied
by such contradictions, as to suggest a lack of clear and honest

intention.

What President John-

son says one morning. General
Ky contradicts in the afternoon.
We say we will support free elec-

tions—and

then that

we will

never allow Communism to take
over in Vietnam. We say we offer
unconditional negotiations, and
then stipulate conditions that the
Viet Cong can see only as a de-

mand for unconditional surrender.
I believe that it may well be
these evasions and ambiguities,
rather than a total intransigence,
that account for the rejection of
our terms by Hanoi, let us abandon these evasions, and offer
clearly and candidly terms that
show respect for truth and justice. In this way we may be able
to bring the Vietnamese War to
the conference table.

A series of noncredit, informal
seminars is being conducted by a
group of professors at City College of New York in an effort to
“bring their specialized knowledge to bear” on current issues.

However, the interest in world
affairs among students has greatly increased in that time, Dr.
Bierman said.

The idea for these seminars
a study several professors made on the campus when
they asked, “Is City College properly preparing its students to
make sound judgments on such
problems as the war in Vietnam,
increased draft calls, end the
growing number
of nuclear

the escalation of the Vietnam
war,” Dr. Bierman said. “These

stems from

weapons?”

The professors decided the
classroom “leaves a gap and does
not tend to focus on the immediate controversial issues of the
day.”

“Most students are concerned
with these problems,” said Dr.
Arthur Bierman, secretary of the
group which calls itself the Universal Committee on the Problems of War and Peace. Bierman
said most students “don’t feel
they know enough to make judgments and they just shrug the
questions off.”
This committee is one of several formed on college campuses,
varying in levels of activity.
A group was formed at CCNY
three years ago but failed to generate a substantial amount of student and faculty enthusiasm.

YAF Soundboard
(Cont’d from Pg. 4)
not independents—some are CA
sympathizers.

We said before that there was
little choice of candidates. Perhaps this one story will illustrate
how little, “little” is. There are
five Campus Alliance candidates
for the five Arts and Sciences
seats. According to the Spectrum,
there are three Independents running in A&amp;S also. Actually, Mr.
Flynn, one of these three, has
withdrawn his candidacy and is
not running. Mr. Flynn admits
freely that he likes neither party
—he would have been a- true
Independent.

Actually, only two independ-

ents, Marty Feinrider and Jeff
Lewis, remain to run against
Campus Alliance. When viewing

the Feinrider-Lewis posters say-

ing “no entangling Alliances”, one

can’t help but remember last year

when these two men were all too
entangled in Campus Alliance affairs. In fact, Mr. Feinrider was
the Campus Alliance Party Campaign Manager!! Of course, Mr.
Lewis is only Mr. Feinrider’s
roommate: three guesses whose
side he is on. Thus, when one
sees these Feinrider-Lewis posters With a United States twentyfive cents piece pictured on them,
one must conclude that it means
heads or tails—Campus Alliance
always wins.
It is also a fact that Campus
Alliance has editorial control of
the Spectrum; David Edelman,
last year’s CA Chairman, is this
year’s Editor-elect and has authored the last few editorials.
This is not to condemn Campus
Alliance for having control of
the student newspaper, because
that is the goal of both parties.
It is merely to point out that the
student which now rests in the
hands of so few, probably will
stay there for a long time to

come.

We wish that there

were some

“Many of us are concerned, for
example, with the probleihs of

are really dangerous problems
and the
aired.”

should

questions

be

said, “Students must be
drawn into a more active search
for the truth. They ought to be
concerned.”
He

The seminars, sponsored by
about 40 professors, will not
“present a party line” on the
various topics, Dr. Bierman said.
He noted, however, the instructors leading the discussions “tend
to be liberal and opposed to many
aspects of the Vietnam situation.
The first two-hour seminar, a
loosely organized debate on “The
Role of the University in Modern Society,” was attended by

about 40 students.

Dr. Leo Hawaiian, a dean at
the college, posed the afternoon’s
central question. "We must discover,” he said, “the means
whereby the university can participate in the society around it

The SPECTRUM

and yet maintain its traditional
apartness.”

Dr. Brayton Polka, a history
professor, said, "the university
should become increasingly critical of society’s ends and means”
and “it should become more resourceful in terms of developing

new thoughts.”

History Club Lecture
The Department of History and
the Graduate History Club sponsored a lecture on “Historical Research in Latin America; Mexico
adn Chile" by UB History Professors Albert L. Michaels and G.
Frederick Young last Thursday.
Michaels spoke on the problems of researching in Mexico,
particularly the effect of Mexican
social atmosphere on research.
He included a discussion of the
progress of the oral history program in Mexico,
Methods of researching in Chile
and problems encountered in
discovering and using original
source materials in Chile were
discussed by Mr, Young.
Mr. Michaels, who teaches
courses on Latin America and
Spain, is currently working on

his doctoral dissertation which
is concerned with nationalism in
Mexican politics during 1930-1940,
He delivered a paper on nationalism and the Mexican Revolution
before the American Historical
Convention in December, 1965.

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THE QUESTION IS:
AM I A HAS-BEEN OR
A NEVER-WAS?

plan of action that would restore

free elections, but the sad truth
is that it is too late. We all
feel that sense of loss, of frustration and helplessness. Perhaps
it comes from being deprived of
something we take too much for
granted. Perhaps we will have
learned our lesson well, only time
will tell. In any case, this one
thing is certain: if there were
a place to vote NO on the ballot
today, all records would be broken as students flocked to the
polls. But there isn’t even a place
to vote no.

WBFO will hold a Trivia Tournament Wednesday, March 16 at 7 p.m.
in the Millard Fillmore
Room.
WBFO will hold an interview with Gordon McLendon, owner of WYSL,
Thursday at 7:30 p.m.

PSYCHIATRIC
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�Tuesday, March 15, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACE SIX

'The Bernard Shaw Story
The Bernard Shew Story will
open Tuesday evening (March
15) at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery. Adapted from the writings

nine years as a struggling author.
He is shown as newspaperman,
music critic, novelist, dramatic
critic and, finally, the emerging

of the foremost playwright of this
century, it will continue to play
nightly at 8:30 through Saturday, March 19, with 2:30 matinees
on March 19 and 20.

playwright.

This work was compiled by
Bramwell Fletcher from various
works; mostly non-dramatic, by
the Irish wrfter and includes his
ideas on everything from sex to
baseball.
Shaw’s story covers a long period in history from the Victorian
era to post-World War II. The
production is divided into two
parts. Fletcher appears in both,
as Shaw, the writer, considered
to be in the prime of life—the
late fifties or early sixties.
Part
One reveals
Shaw's early life—his
in Dublin, his years as
man in London during

Bernard
boyhood
a young
the first

Ski Club Elections
The Schussmeister Ski Club
will hold a general meeting, with
elections and a dance. Thursday,
March 17 at 8 p.m. in the Fillmore Room, according to Ski

Club member Robert Brodey.

President, Vice-President,
Secretary and Treasurer will be
elected. All those interested in
running for office must submit a
petition of 20 members by this
afternoon to the Ski Club Office.
320 Norton, Mr. Brodey said.
Mr. Brodey asserted that the
'Schussmeisters were, for the second year in a row, the largest student organization on campus, with
a membership of approximately
300 persons. He continued that
during the past season, trips of
A

up to 200 people were sent out
for Tuesday night skiing at Kiss-

ing Bridge, while smaller trips
were sent out for all-day Sunday
skiing at Holimont.
The Ski Club sponsored a trip
to Stowe. Vermont over intersesion. A trip to Hidden Valley.
Ontario is being planned for midsemester break.

Part Two finds Shaw as a fully
mature man, dealing as such
with the problems that beset all
of us in our civilization today.
Tickets

are available at

the

Theatre Attractions Box Office,
674 Main St., Wurlitzer Store.

Five Centuries

Of Art Shown
At Art Gallery
A collection of paintings spanning five centuries and includ
ing the work of some of the most
famous names in art history will
go on display March 15 at the
Albright-Knox Art Gallery.

The exhibition is comprised of
102 works on loan from the Montreal Museum, of Fine Arts. It
is entitled “Masterpieces from
Montreal” and will remain on
view through April 21,

The collection has been loaned
to a number of U. S. museums
while the Montreal gallery is
closed for refurbishing in preparation for the 1967 World Exposition in Montreal.
The earlist works date to about
1480 and are by Andrea Mantegna. The latest is a portrait
by the contemporary Dutch artist
Karen Appel, painted in 1962.

Courbet,

Since its first broadcast in
January, 1959, WBFO has pro-

vided UB with the radio facilities
vital to a large campus. Due to
the amount and complexity of
its work, the station is divided
departments; the News
department, which informs students of campus and outside
events; the Program department,
which sets up the broadcast schedule; the Music department,
which gives the listener a variety
of musical broadcasts; and the
Engineering department, which
deals with the Station’s technical
operation.
WBFO News is under the direction of Daivd L. Sohriber and
J. Z. Friedman. It is handled
through two divisions: Campus
News, and News and Special
Events. Directed by J. Z. Friedman, Campus News presents regularly scheduled programs which

familiarize the student with
school events and other points of
interest. “Meet the Faculty,” for
example, is scheduled for Monday and Tuesday evenings at 6
p.m.
Other programs at 6 p.m. are
“Student Senate Report” on Wednesdays, “Campus Calendar" each
Thursday evening, and “Campus
Interview” on Fridays. “University Convocations,” features recordings of outstanding lectures
by prominent people, each Saturday evening at 7 p.m.

A series of special programs
by the News and Special Events
Department will mark “University Month” this May, commemorating UB’s 120th anniversary. The

The years in between are represented by works by El Greco,
Rembrandt,

WBFO Provides UB Campus With
News, Music, and Special Events

Reynolds,

Lawrence, Corot, Roualt, Breu-

ghel, Hogarth, Hans Hofmann,
Sam Francis and others.

In order to fit the Montreal
exhibition into the gallery schedule, it was necessary to re-schedule the annual Western New
York
Exhibition
traditionally
held at this time of year. It will
be held next October.

first of this series will deal with
the UB history, and will be followed by broadcasts featuring such
topics as the nature of the student protester, the growth of the
Greater Buffalo International Airport, a cross-section of UB opinion, and the history and future
of the State University of New
York,

The WBFO News Department

broadcasts information from various sources, including newspapers from several cities, the
SUNY and UB press Services,
the State Department, United Nations press releases, and the Nawork.
Although the station now uses
a United Press International Teletype, it hopes by next year to
acquire the UPI audio tapes which
actually record news events for
direct broadcast. WBFO also plans
to include the Collegiate Press
Service among its sources of information. In addition, a SUNY
radio network may be set up in
the near future.
To augment outside sources,
the station uses live coverage as
a vital part of its news broadcasts. The IRC election debates
and the events of the Clifford C.

Furnas Recognition Day will be
covered in this way. The Senate
election results will be announced
as soon as complete returns are
received.

According to Assistant News
Director J. Z. Friedman, “WBFO
presents by far the best newscasts in regard to content of any
station, network or non-network,
in Western New York. Our fifteen and twenty minute newscasts are thoroughly comprehen-

sive and completely devoid of
trite and annoying adviertising.”
Presently located in Baird Hall,
the station hopes to move into
an eleven-room complex in Norton next year. This would not
only facilitate broadcasting, but
would link WBFO’s work more
closely with other activities in
the Student Union, Friedman
said.

Weekly Calendar
TUESDAY
Lecture: School of Social Welfare, 11:30 p.m., Norton 233.

Discussion:
Alumni Greater
Books, 8 to 10 p.m., Norton 233332.
Coffee Hour: UB Faculty Woman’s Club, 12:30 p.m. Norton

240-248.

"Russian

Evening"; Modern
Language Department, 7:30 p.m.,

Fillmore Room.
Coffee Hour: School of Education, 2:30 to 5 p.m., Norton 335.
Meeting; Housing Office, 1 to
3 p.m., Faculty Lounge.
Lecture: Arts and Sciences Department, 3 to 5 p.m., Faculty
Lounge.
Coffee Hour and Lecture: International Club, 3 to 5 p.m., Norton 233.
Meeting: Christian Science Organization, 7:30 p.m., Norton 242-

244.

Committee, 3 p.m., Conference
Theatre.
Meeting; International Association of Students of Economic and
Commercial Sciences, 2:30 to 4
p.m., Norton 330.
THURSDAY

Phychology Colloquium; Dr. E.

Hovorka,
Room.

3:45

Art Exhibit:

p.m.

Fillmore

All day, Third

Floor, Foster Hall.

Hootenanny; Goodyear South

Lounge, 8 p.m.

Lecture:
“Production Functions and the Stability of Growth
Equilibrium,” Dr. Ryuzo Sato,
Crosby 319, 3 p.m.

FRIDAY
Lecture: “Fritz Fischer and
the World War I Controversy in
Germany,” 3 to 5 p.m., Norton

231.

WEDNESDAY
Lecture;
Cantebury Association, 1:30 to 4 p.m., Norton 266.
Lecture: Victory in Vietnam

Caif Hoard
Dominique dc Reilhac will
speak at the next meeting of the
International Club on the history of the Panama Canal, on
Thursday, March 17 at 7;30 p.m.
in Norton 340.

Dr. Slefern F. G. Grunwald
will speak at the next meeting
of the Italian Club on the topic
"An American in Italy," on Tuesday. March 15 at 3 p m in Nor-

class!

ton 233.

1

Kept searching for
objects unique.

The Ukrainian American Student Club is sponsoring a field
trip to the University of Western
Ontario on Saturday. March 12.
Members and guests will participate in a literary banquet honor
ing Ivan Franko. The main ad
dress will be given by Dr Sheen
All interested are requested to

snicker
Except Colt Malt Liquor—
They caused him to

So he sat down and
drank his critique!

St

leave their name and telephone
number in Norton Box 18 Departure will be from Norton

Lounge at 2 p.m.

JAM SESSION

Sunday
$

p.m.

■

9 p.m.

Dick Russo Quartet

Town Edge

Restaurant
1*94 Ktnman

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What do the imaginative go for? Trousers by Corbin, Ltd. Plaid. Prophetic. In Dacron polyester arid
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�Tuesday, March 15, 1966

oCetterA

SPECTRUM

to

the Editor

Practical Use For Wasted Land
TO THE EDITOR:

Since the administration is finally dealing with the deplorable
abundance of grass and unused
land on this campus, I feel that I
should do my bit by making a
suggestion which will put to
further practical use this wasted
land.
Between the Main St. side of

THE EDITOR;

It is now abundantly clear that
the author of the really comic
strip, S.U.N.Y. Daze, has completed his movement, bag and baggage, from reality into his own
little fantasy world and I for one

Graduate School Assistant
Dean Andrew W. Holt announced
that English Literature major
Gayle E. Whittier has received a
1966-67 Woodrow Wilson Fellow-

should like to know how long he
will be permitted to continue his
auspicious use of the Spectrum as
his personal cerebral laxative. I
feel that his incompetent mind is
badly in need of diapering.
Thomas Fabian Jr.

Then bury them
Side by side
Foe and friend
Beneath a monument to peace.
Gary R. Owen

Cream believes that someone
in the Bursar’s Office cashed his
check, and that he has adequate
grounds for a criminal suit
against UB, according to Mrs.
Randles, of the State Education
Department, UB had no authority
to cash the check.
The matter has been further
complicated by a $5 parking violation which appears on Cream’s

record. According to the Bursar’s Office, Cream never paid
the fine, and they are willing
to credit the missing $5 toward
its payment. Cream received notification of a traffic violation in
February, but ignored it, since
he thought it pertained to a violation incurred in December,
which was waived by the Student
Parking Court.

rixirs

The Plight of the ROTC Man
TO THE EDITOR:

Walking

several
miles to
school each day is not unbearable unless one is compelled to
wear an R.O.T.C. uniform once
a week. Hitch-hiking in said apapparel and making additions to
it are prohibited. It is required
that one’s military oxfords appear spit-polished after wading
the yards of snow frequently encountered on suburban roadways.
I question whether the mass of
the overcoat is outweighed by its
merit as protection against flak
and dogbite. Cadets are issued
gloves designed to fit the average hand apparently before the
evolution of the opposable
thumb. An officer, evidently the
Proper Wear of Gloves Inspector,
recently demanded “Okay mister,
form five,” at which I extended
four digits and the lump in the
NOW OPEN

.

.

The Fellowships are granted
annually by the Woodrow Wilson
National Fellowship Foundation
to undergraduates intending to
teach at the college and/or university level.

Student Objects

Hail America!
TO THE EDITOR;
Hail, America!
Rid the world of communism!
Banish tyranny forever!
Victory in Viet Nam!
Back our boys!

Whittier Receives Woodrow Wilson

the Student Union and the sidewalk there is a strip of land 2 ship.
or 3 yards wide and extends the
length of the Union. I propose
that a number of “Johnny-onthe-Spts” be placed on this otherwise wasted land. This would
(Cont’d from Pg. 1)
also help to alleviate the congestion in the Union.
(The instructions specified that
Gerald Neal
UB was to forward it to Albany).

Comic Strip Censured
TO

PAGE SEVEN

middle of my palm where my
displaced thumb was tucked. The
flight cap covers the already
furry portion of one’s skull but
hardly protects the ears. Oh well,
official Aerospace Earmuffs
would probably only fit a guy
with two left ears.

HERE

you may get more

Buffalo Textbook Stores
3610 Main

(near Bailay)

TF 3-7131

.

.

.

“I am a resonable individual,"
explains Cream. “I will consider
the possibility that I might have
gotten a ticket which was taken
off my car. But they may have
made the whole thing up.”

He is willing to pay the fine
if the Bursar can prove it is
legitimate, by indicating the
time and place of its occurence.
But he sees no connection between the outstanding fine and
his check.

While the matter remains unsettled, Cream runs the risk of
missing application deadlines for
law school. He wants his five
dollars back, and, if necessary,
is willing to bring the matter to
court.

All students interested
in becoming a studio operator for WBFO are invited to the studios on
the second floor of Baird
Hall or Room 323 Norton. No experience is
necessary.

The fellowship will entitle Miss
Whittier to one academic year
of graduate education with tuition and fees paid by the Foundation, in addition to a living stipend of $2,000. The graduate
school she attends will receive
an additional grant.
UB student Susan A. Adler,
Vincent J, DiMarco, James H. Capinski, and Mary H. Leary received honorable mention from
the Foundation.

Fellows were chosen from over
11,000 nomdness. Panels of college teachers and administrators
in the Foundation's fifteen regions screened applicants and
chose the final 1,408 winners.
Using funds provided by the Ford
Foundation, the fellowship
Foundation will spend $5.7 million in 1966-67 to encourage and
support potential college teachers.
The new Fellows came from
380 different colleges and universities in the United States and
Canada.

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alto short subjects
"ON THE TEE" with
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Starts THURS.-2 p.m.

BTWlTilililiBB

—Peaches Parmigiana,
noted ecdyaiast

“This sagacious work is positively recherche."
—Big Louie,
Itinerant torpedo

“Destined to live forever In the annals of
American podiatry.”
—Dr. Fenster Bunion

(Father of the Cornplaater)

THE ORIGINAL CAST ALBUM
ON COLUMBIA RECORDS^

IN:

/

�PAGE EIGHT

Tuesday, March

SPECTRUM

� gjpsKg^psaiuaa
"K-

-

Hockey Team Ends
Season With Tie

The UB hockey team ended its
season last Saturday by skating
to a 3-3 standoff with Brockport
at the Amherst hockey arena.

The Bulls jumped into a 30
lead at the end of the second
period, but the Tigers roared
back in
final 20 minutes to
secure the tie.
UB scored at the four-minute
mark of the first period when
Tom Robertson deflected a long

Zebras break
Cohen (on

ice

-

.

missed a golden opportunity to
put the game on ice by hitting
the left post with a shot,
At the 18:06 mark Korcenclski
skipped a rebound past UB goalie Chuck Huber to create the 3-3
tic.

The Bulls finished the season
with a 5-6 1 mark, good for fourth
place in the Finger Lakes Conference.

up brawl during BrockportUB game between Fred
at right under ref's knee) and Edwards of Brockport.

Sports Trivia
By J. B. SHARCOT
Here is this writer’s attempt to
join in the latest campus rage by
issuing a trivia quiz. I’m going to
start with

the eight most-oftenanswered questions, and then step
up the pace quite precipitiously

by going straight to the 14 questions no one has, as yet, been
successful in answering in their
entirety. Any kind of a trivia
expert should be able to answer
at least five of the first set of
questions, 1 feel each item appearing in the second set, however, is of sufficient difficulty
that anyone knowing any of the
answers should jot them down
and leave the answers along with
his name at the sports desk in
the SPECTRUM office. Of course,
anyone who has seen the answers
in The Sporting News is disqualified from entering.
SET 1
1) Who played the lead in the
Babe Roth Story?
2) Who played Crazy Legs
Hirsch in All-American?
3) The pitcher who gave up Stan
Musial’s 3000th hit?
4) TV actor who played first
base in the Dodger chain?
5) Who wrote, “A Characterization of the Set of Asymptotic
Values of a Function Holomorphic in the Unit Disc?”
61 Who was the Cleveland

Browns fullback before Jim

Brown?
7)

The last hitter in Jim Bun-

—tA

s

=ft

=

CROWLEY WILL SPEAK
AT ATHLETIC DINNER
“Sleepy Jim” Crowley, one of
the gridiron,
will be the principal speaker at
the 59th annual UB Block “B”
Athletic Banquet, to be held on
Monday, April 4, at 7 p.m. at the
Leonard Post VFW, 2000 Walden
Avenue, according to an announcement made last week by
the immortals of

Athletic Director Jim Peele.
Peele also disclosed that Dick
Johnston, sportswriter of the Buffalo Evening News, will preside
at the dais as Master of Ceremonies.
Crowley, a member of the Football Hall of Fame, was one of the
famed ''Four Horsemen of Notre
Dame,” the backfield which spearheaded Knute Rockne’s greatest
team to the national championship and victory in the Rose
Bowl. After graduation Crowley
become one of the game’s outstanding coaches, enjoying h i s
greatest success at Fordham in
the late 1930’s and early 1940’s

when he guided the Rams to the
pinnacle of pigskin renown. He
later served as Commissioner of
the All-America Football Conference and chairman of the Pennsylvania State Athletic Commis-

sion.
More than 400 people are expected to attend the gala affair
where varsity letters and freshman numerals are presented to
athletes representing the University in ten sports. Most Valuable
Player trophies will be awarded
for each sport, along with a number of special honors. Highlight
of the evening is the Dorn Grossi
Award to UB’s “Athlete of the
Year,” perpetuating the memory
of the great UB sports star who
was killed in action on Iwo Jiroa.
Students, alumni and friends
who wish to attend the dinner
may make reservations by calling the UB Athletic Department
at 831-2934. Tickets are $7 per
person.

ing on the harmonica in that
infamous incident with Yogi

ning’s perfect game?

Who played Jim Piersall and
his dad in Fear Strikes Oof?
SET 2
1) The name of the girl who
shot Eddie Waitkus?
2) Who was on base when Dick
Sisler hit his homer to win
the 1950 pennant for the
Phils? (2 men)
3) What song was Phil Linz play8)

Berra?

Who played Lou Gehrig’s wife
in Pride of the Yankees?
5) The third basemen who played alongside Tinkers to Evers
to Chance?
6) Manager of the Phils between
Eddie Sawyer and Gene
Mauch?
4)

shot by Kevin McCullough past
the Tiger goalie. Paul Kubiak
also assisted on the goal.
Ten minutes later A1 Dover
took a pass from Fred Cohen and
picked the left corner to make
the score 2-0.

In a fight-filled second period
UB upped the lead to 3 0 as Ku

biak

scored

on passes by

McKowne and Robertson.

Jim
The

period was highlighted by several
fights. the most decisive being
between Hit’s John Schleifer and
the Tigers’ Jim Korcenelski.
Schleifer, a guard on the I IB fool
ball team, knocked Korcenelski
to the ice five times before the
referee was able to intervene.
In the third period Brockporl

scored on goals by Goodfellow
and Ketchum to narrow the margin the 3-2.
In the closing minutes Dover

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Call IT 29006 or TR T-8010

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Starting now-Double Dividend Days at your Chevrolet dealer’s!

CHEVROLET
DOUBLE
DIVIDEND DAIS I
1
NO.

BUTS

•

NO. 1 CARS

Now at your Chevrolet dealer’s

15. 1966

Z ZT)

Right now you’ll get a mighty handsome buy at your Chevrolet dealer's
during Double Dividend Days. Pick from 45 great models of Caprice,
Chevrolet, Chevelle, Chevy A or Corvair with a huge selection of colors!
custom touches, engines, interiors. Availability, variety
and buys have
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Eight features

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All kinds of good buys all in one place... at your Chevrolet dealer’s-Chevrolet Chevelle Chevy n Corvair Corvette
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�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Ginsberg &amp; Hawkins Featured
In Final Two Days of Festival
Poets
Allen Ginsberg and
Diane DiPrima, composer-pianist
Emmanuel Sinderbrand, jazz musician Sonny Murray and the
Erick Hawkins Dance Company
are the artists who will perform
during the two remaining days of
the Spring Arts Festival.

Ginsberg will read his
poetry this evening at 8 p.m. in
Clark Gym. He will be joined
by Miss Diane DiPrima, author
Mr.

of This Kind of Bird Flies Backward and A New Handbook of
Heaven.

Experimental films by independent directors will be shown
continuously thsi afternoon and
evening in the Conference Theater. Sponsoring the films are

the Union Board Film and Fes-

tival Committees.
A reading by prose writer Her-

bert Huncke will be given tomorrow at 1 p.m. in Norton 232.
Emmanuel Sinderbrand will
present an original work composed for the Spring Arts Festival entitled “A Piece for Piano
and One Hundred Forty Children’s Toys,” tomorrow at 1:30
p.m. in the Fillmore Room. Creative Associate John Bergamo
will accompany him.

The Erick Hawkins Dance Company with composer Lucia Dlugoszwski will give a performance

in dance and music tomorrow at
8:30 p.m. in Baird Hall, Free
tickets for the event are available at the Norton Ticket Booth.

Concluding the weekend will
be Sonny Murray’s Turn of the
Century Orchestra, entertaining
in the Rathskeller at 11 p.m.

College.
Voting will be held in the residence halls Tuesday from 11 a m.
to 2 p.m. and from 4 p.m. to
6 p.m., and Wednesday from 11
a.m. to 2 p.m. and from 3 p.m.
to 5 p.m. Students in University
College and the College of Arts
and Sciences may vote in Tower,
Goodyear and Clement Halls,
Seniors may vote in Tower and
Clement Halls only.

The .Norton voting area will be
open Tuesday and Wednesday
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Students

secretary Miss Cargu

though the individual presentations will be conducted in Russian, there will be a commentary
in English proceeding each,” She
commented that the choral singing can be enjoyed even by those
who do not understand Russian.
Miss Cargill added that it is
to bo an instructive and enterParticipating
taining program.
students have incorporated the
presentations into their academic
work for the semester.

The program is open to every-

one, Miss Cargill said. She added

that invitations have been extended to other colleges and high
schools, including adult education divisions in the Buffalo area.

Selective Service Is Controversial Topic
The
WASHINGTON (CPS)
draft system has become a controversial topic on Capitol Hill
as well as college campuses.
First there was general disagreement with Lt. General Lewis
B. Hershey, head of the Selective
Service System, when he supported Michigan Selective Service
officials in reclassifying students
who had demonstrated at the
Ann Arbor office as 1-A, or ready
for immediate induction.
Then there was talk about a
‘universal draft” as opposed to
the present “selective service system” and still more talk about
who
student deferments and
—

Barrel Drive Collects for WUS
The 1966 Campus Barrel Drive
netted $422.88 for the Asian
Fund of the World University
Service, a figure which is far
short of the $2,500 goal.
This year’s CBD was originally
headed by student Association
President, Rosemary Brown, and
Marjorie Silberman. Before the
drive began Miss Brown joined
the Peace Corps, and Miss Silberman resigned due to illness.
In January, Student Association
President, Clinton Deveaux appointed Robert A. Potter and Robert A. Martin as co-chairman for
the 1966 CBD.
The drive started Sunday, February 6, with a dance in Tower
Hall. According to CBD spokesmen, the dance was successful
and would have been followed by
another, had the plan not been
faced with opposition from the
Inter-Residence Counci).
Large wooden barrels were set
up in Norton Hall and Tower dormitory. Collecting containers were

division in which they plan to be
enrolled as juniors.
Freshman will vote for school
Officers and for senatorial candidates running from University

placed by several of the cash
registers in Norton.
A WUS film entitled “Light
Along the Way,” was shown to
the Student Senate at its meeting
of February 8, and, to the resident students in Tower Hall on
February 20.
Letters explaining the CBD and
the World University Service
were sent to all student leaders
on campus and to the faculty.
Each of the recognized student
organizations on campus received
a packet of information and instructions delivered by student
senators. From Monday, February
Pan
21, to Friday, February 25. WUS
hellenic Council provided
girls who received donations in
the lobby of Norton.
that
CBD spokesmen explained
was based
the 2,500 dollar goal
of the
on the thought that ifat each
UB would
10,000 day students
goal would be
give 25 cents, the
thought
easily reached. “The
proved to be wishful thinking.

should get them.
Now a group of 30 Republican
Representatives have called for
an “immediate” Congressional investigation of the draft.
Spokesmen for the group said
the call was not a political one.
No Democrats were listed simply
because the announcement was
made before the matter had been
discussed with Democratic Representatives.
The Republican group, led by
Representative Robert F. Ellsworth of Kansas, said there was
mounting evidence of “gross inefficiency in the National Selective
Service System and the Department of Defense administration
of the draft."
There was no immediate comment on the proposed investigation by Selective Service officials
refer
but General Hershey did
to it indirectly at a luncheon appearance,
“I have always understood one
of the functions of the Congress
is to look into how well the laws
they pass are carried out,” he
said.
Hershey

was explicit,

however,

when asked if he thought the Selective Service System ought to
be reorganized. “No,” he declared,
“That’s the plain and unadulterated answer. You shouldn’t do
anything to something that is
working.”
The general conceded that
some inequities existed but said
“absolute equity has never been

attained.”

He said the system has an “unmatched record” for efficiency
and in the past five months over
170,000 men had been provided
for conscription.
He would make no comment on
charges by the Republican group
that the upcoming deferment test

will favor science students.
The question of reclassification
came up after the general briefed
the education subcommittee on
his plans to furnish local draft
boards with new guidelines on the
deferment of college students.
Hershey was closely questioned
on the reclassification by Rep-

resentative John Brademas (D.,
Ind.) and Representative Phillip
Burton (D., Calif.). After the hearing, subcommittee chairman Representative Edith Green (D„ Ore.)
issued the charge that the general had acted as "judge and
jury.

Over 3,000 voter)
Senate elections.

in lest year's

son, Saralec Rubenstein, Jocelyn
Lundquist, Ellen Cardone and
Marion Michael. Independents are
Jeffrey Lewis and Martin Fein-

rider.

Campus Alliance candidates for

five University College seats are:
Michael Warren, Daniel Rotholz,
Robert Weiner, Joel Gershowitz,

and Gcorganne GUels. The Independent candidate is Richard
Evans.

Dr. H. Schneidau
Discusses Poetry
By Robert Frost
Assistant Professor of English
Herbert Schneidau will discuss
“Robert Frost’s Poetry” Monday,
March 14 at 4 p.m. in the Conference Theatre.
Dr. Schneidau is the final
speaker in the Spring Lecture
Series, sponsored by the Union
Board Literature and Drama Committee.

According to committee chair
man Paul Blatt, an open discussion will follow the initial address
on “this often misunderstood
poet" (as described by Dr.
Schneidau).

Past speakers in the series include Dr. Marcus K 1 i e n, Mr,
Thomas Hanna and Dr. Leslie

Fiedler.

Candidates for the seat of the
School of Business Administration are Douglas Braun, Independent, and Allen Bassuk, Campus
Alliance. Running for Senator of
the School of Education are Christine Bowe, Independent, and
Paula Sheinberg, Campus Alliance.

Candidates from the Campus
Alliance Party running unopposed are: Kathleen McDonough,
School of Nursing, Florence Bluegrass, School of Health Related
Professions. Independents are;
Reginald Ameele, School of Pharmacy. and Allen Paglia, School of
Law.

Robert Montgomery, candidate
for the seat in the School of
Engineering, is running as an
Independent.

The United Students Party is
not running a slate of candidates
in this Student Senate election
(see Spectrum, March 1, page 1).
A question and answer session

will be held in Tower Private Dining Room, Sunday, March IS at
4 p m. AU candidates will be present and available for questions.

�Friday, March II, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

Adelphi University Boycotts Cafeteria
Reprinted with permission from
NEWSDAY, March

3, 1966.

Garden City
One hundred
fifty pounds of rare roast beef
was boycotted here yesterday, the
victim of America’s latest college
—

protest.

Sit-in? Sleep-in? Teach-in? Forget it! This was an eat-out.
Adelphi

University’s

students

have shoved aside the mundane
protest topics of academic freedom and peace in Vietnam. Instead, they are concerned about
food. And yesterday, the collegians boycotted the university’s
Post Hall cafeteria in wholesale
numbers to make their point
known.
Only a handful of Adelphi’s 661
dormitory residents showed up
at dinner time to claim their
roast beef, although all are on
the university’s pre-paid compulsory food plan. Each student
is charged $600 a year, part of
mandatory college fees, for food
at the cafeteria, whether they eat
there or not.

dents appeared, not to eat, but to
beef about the beef, and the
salads, and all things served at
the cafeteria. One displayed a
sign: “Adelphi Food-Yeech!” “I
once found two cockroaches in
the food,” said Les Lowinger,
19, a sophomore Biology major
from Troy. “And I’ve pulled
enough hair out of my food here
to make a wig.” The insults, and
epitaphs came hard and fast as
the picketing students milled
around the cafeteria at 5 p.m.
Cold food, old food, bland food,
bad food.
A corpulent man in a white

Sociology Club Sponsors
Discussion On Technology
Dr. David Wieck, associate professor of philosophy at Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute, will discuss "Eros and the Machine,"
Monday, March 14 at 3 p.m. in
146 Diefendorf.

One of the food-strike organizers, Alan Louzin, 19, of Pittsfield,

Massachusetts, said the administion has not needed previous student requests for improved quality. Louzin said the boycott was a
two-day affair, ending today.

And he said a petition has
been signed by more than 80%
of the students, saying they will
not pay for the university food
plan next semester unless things
improve. University officials declined to say what they could or
would do if students did refuse
to pay.
At the cafeteria, about 25 stu-

chef’s hat strode out of the,,
kitchen carrying a pot of burning
bread and a sign saying “Counter Picket.” It was Adelphi’s
chief chef, Ralph Tramell, and he
strode smiling into the midst of
his gallery of critics. Someone
commented that it was an act
of courage befitting only an
Army mess hall chef, and Tramell said. “How’d you know I
used to be one?” Tramel said the
complaints didn’t bother him.
“Heard plenty when I was a mess
sergeant in World War II,” he
said. “Maybe these kids ought
to try the Army chow first.”

Dr. Wieck is the third speaker
in a series entitled “Technology:
The Virgin and the Dynamo,”
sponsored by the Sociology Club.
Sociology Club program director David Gardiner described Dr.
Wieck as “a philosopher and social analyst in the tradition of
Herbert Marcuse” who “has written brilliantly on topics as diverse as Civil Rights and erotic
freedom, Science and the erotic
imagination.”

According to Mr. Gardiner, Dr.
Wieck has indicated that he will
emphasize “social eros, the bonds
between person and person, and

the eros of everyday creativity,
and of human love, and of the
striving for knowledge.”

Dr. Arthur Efron the fourth

speaker in the series, will lecture on “Art and Technologgy,”
Wednesday, March 30.

International Student
I.D. Cards are available
in the Prism Office, first
floor Tower, Tuesday, 4
to 6 p.m. and Thursday,
1 to 3 p.m.; phone 8313457. Students must bring
a 2” x 2” photo for the
two dollar I.D. Card.
Applications for SUNY
charter flights are also
available.

New York's Largest KEEPSAKE dealer.

Diamonds priced to fit your budget.

'lAJeidberfy
Buffalo, N.Y.

380 Main Street

n.

On Campus
(By the author

of “Rally Round the Flag, Boys!",
“Dobie Gillis," etc.)

WAKE ME WHEN IT’S OVER
The trouble with early morning classes is that you’re too
sleepy. At late morning classes you’re too hungry. At early
afternoon classes you’re too logy. At late afternoon classes
you’re too hungry again. The fact is—and we might as well
face it—there is no good time of day to take a class.
What shall we do then? Abandon our colleges to the ivy?
I say no! I say America did not become the hope of mankind and the world’s largest producer of butterfats and tallow by running away from a fight!
If you’re always too hungry or too sleepy for class, then
let’s hold classes when you’re not too hungry or sleepy:
namely, while you’re eating or sleeping.
Classes while eating are a simple matter. Just have a lecturer lecture while, the eaters eat. But watch out for noisy
foods. I mean who can hear a lecturer lecture when everybody is crunching celery or matzo or like that? Serve quiet
stuff—like anchovy paste on a doughnut, or steaming bowls

of lamb fat.
Now let us turn to the problem of learning while sleeping. First, can it be done?
Yes, it can. Psychologists have proved that the brain is
definitely able to assimilate information during sleep. Take,
for instance, a recent experiment conducted by a leading
Eastern university (Stanford). A small tape recorder was
placed under the pillow of the subject, a freshman named
Wrobert Wright. When Wrobert was fast asleep, the recorder was turned on. Softly, all through the night, it repeated three statements in Wrobert’s slumbering ear:
1. Herbert Spencer lived to the age of 109 and is called
“The Founder of English Eclectic Philosophy.”
2. The banana plant is not a tree but a large perennial
herb.
3. The Archduke Ferdinand was assassinated in 1914 at
Sarajevo by a young nationalist named Mjilas Cvetnic,
who has been called "The Trigger of World War I.”

When Wrobert awoke in the morning, the psychologists
Spencer lived to the age of 109. What

said to him, “Herbert
is he called?”

Here's the penny loafer with loaf to spare: the inside is leather lined and insoled with a cushion of foam. The outside with handsewn front* is yours in a
Scotch grained leather of black cherry, black forest or golden harvest. Smooth
leather in black, black cherry or palamino. City Club Trujuns $13.00 to $18.00.
Wouldn't you like to be

in

our shoes? Most of America is. International Shoe Co., St. Louis, Mo.

Available at these fine stores:
Goldman Shoes

Wexler's Southgate Shoes

Settlers' Dept. Store

BM. MaH
Buffalo, N. Y.

Southgat* Plaza

9*8 Broadway Ava.
Buffalo, N. Y.

Wort Sonata,

N. Y.

Wrobert promptly answered, “Perennial Herb.”
Next they asked him, “What has Mjilas Cvetnik been
called?”
Wrobert replied, “Perennial Serb.”
Finally they said, “Is the banana plant a tree?”
“To be honest,” said Wrobert, “I don’t know too much
about bananas. But if you gents want any information
about razor blades, I’m your man.”
“Well,” said the psychologists, “can you tell us a blade
that shaves closely and cleanly without nicking, pricking,
scratching, scraping, scoring, gouging, grinding, flaying or
flensing?”
"Yes, I can,” said Wrobert. “Personna® Stainless Steel
Blades. Not only does Personna give you a true luxury
shave, but it gives you heaps and gobs and bushels and
barrels of true luxury shaves—each one nearly as truly luxurious as the first.”
“Land’s sake!” said the psychologists.
“Moreover,” said Wrobert, “Personna is available not
only in the Double Edge style blade, but also in the Injector style blade.”
“Great balls of fire!” said the psychologists.
“So why don’t you rush to your dealer and get some
Personnas at once?” said Wrobert.
“We will,” said the psychologists, twinkling, “but there
is something we have to do first.”
Whereupon they awarded Wrobert an honorary L.L.B.
(Lover of Luxury Blades) degree, and then, linking arms,
they sang and danced and bobbed for apples till the campfire had turned to embers.
*

*

*

&lt;S&gt; 1966. Max Shulman

If you're looking for an honorary degree yourself, ire recommend B.S. (Burma Share&gt; )—from the makers of Personna.
It soaks rings around any other lather; it comes in regular or
menthol.

�Friday, March 11, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE THREE

Veteran's Assistance Bill
Gains LB.J.'s Signature
WASHINGTON, D. C. (CPS)—
A new veteran’s assistance bill
that will pay ex-Gl’s up to $100
a month while they are in school
has passed Congress and has received the President’s signa-

fall quarter should apply just
prior to their return.
An estimated 240,000 students
per month will participate in the

ture.

Affairs Committee said that the
education portion of- the bill
will use $327 million of the $358
million appropriation, with the
remainder to be used for housing and medical care.
The Korean War education
benefits for ex-GI’s ended in
1955 and men have been discharged from the service since
then without assistance
for

The bill, applicable to men who
have served since 1955 for six
months or longer, would pay the
basic allotment for the same
number of months a man served,
up to 36 months. Thus, if a man
served for 36 months, he would
March
Thursday,
up
volunteers
for
its
17,
Arnold Air Society signs
receive help toward his educaby
Alan Gruber
Blood Drive.
Photo
tion for three years,
A student with dependents
will receive an additional allotment of $25 per month for each
of his first two dependents.

Arnold Air Society Sponsors Annual
Blood Drive With Red Cross Chapter

Assistance will be available on
June 1, 1966, for students who
will be in school for the entire
month. Students not attending
sessions, but returning for the

ported 200 donors as of March
8. An additional 144 donors are

The Arnold Air Society will
drive,
in cooperation with the Buffalo
Chapter of the American Red
Cross, Thursday, March 17 from
9 am. to 3 p,m. in Tower basement cafeteria.
sponsor its annual blood

needed.

AKPsi Sponsors Lectures
In co-operation with Mr. Drake
of the Placement Service and
area business firms, Alpha Kappa
Psi is sponsoring an informational lecture series on job opportunities in business.
Mr. Drake announced, “All
business students and liberal
arts students with an interest in
business careers are urged to
attend.”
He added, “It is hoped that the
series will both broaden students’
knowledge of the job opportunities around them and introduce
them to the particular nature of
these jobs.”

According to Administration
Officer Patrick Morgan, donors
can register at a table in Norton

from 9 a.m. to 4 pm. until Wed-

nesday, March 16. Applications
are also available at the Candy
Counter. For those under twentyone a parental permission form
is required.

Mr. Morgan announced that the
Arnold Air Society will present
a trophy to the fraternity, sorority or other organization that
donates the most blood. He re-

The content of each lecture
will deal with preparation and
completion of interviews, job opportunities available in different areas of business, and preparation for different careers in
business.
All lectures will be held Wednesdays from 1-3 p.m. in 344 Norton. The topics will be:
Ernst and Ernst (CPA)—March
16; Philips Wertman (CPA
Ford Motor Company—March
30; International Business Machines (IBM)
Upjohn Pharmaceutical Com
pany—April 13; W. H. Grant.

program.
A staff member of the Veteran’s

schooling

Some congressmen felt assistance should be provided only to
men serving in “hot spots” such
at Vietnam and West Berlin.
Finding a definition of i "hot
spots” proved a problem however and the bill was extended to

all service men.

Katz explained that the organization is composed of students and members of the community subscribing to the following beliefs: "Violence is an
unacceptable means of solving

of violence must be protested;
the responsibility for a peaceful
society rests upon each individual human being.”
“In accordance with these principles, the Western New York
CNVA calls for a weekly demonstration to protest the war in
Vietnam," Mr. Katz continued.
He added that the demonstrations
will be held each Saturday from
12:30 to 2 p.m. in Lafayette

human conflict; beliefs in and
tactics of non-violence must be
spread to make possible a peaceful world; viable alternatives to
violence must be sought and acts

Further information may be
submitted to or obtained from
1106 Main St., Apt. 4, Mr. Katz
said.

The Western New York chapter of the Committee for NonViolent Action (CNVA) was established Monday, according to
CNVA member Daniel Katz.

Square.

Special Meeting of Senate
Committee Approves Budgets
view budgets last Tuesday evening. The Senate meeting scheduled for that evening was adjourned because a quorum was

not

present.

The Executive Committee approved the following budget:
Bridge Club, $403; German Club,
$263; Spanish Club, $90; Accounting Club, $108; Student Zionist
Organization; $171; Bisonhead,
$105; Society of International
Medicine, $1,475, Sociology Club,

This Arrow shirt gives you best of
both worlds. (1) A long-pointed
collar role in the most authentic
tradition. (2) A husky-looking
basket weave that updates
ordinary oxford. For other
interesting features, check the
tapered body; back pleat and
loop; back collar button. Lots of
unusual stripes to choose from.
$5.00. You expected to pay more?
Bold New Breed from

$1,675.

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SAFE AS COFFEE

PHARMACY

ADMINISTRATION
and HOSPITAL
PHARMACY
ADMINISTRATION
SESSIONS BEGIN

FEBRUARY AND SEPTEMBER
Course is designed to prepare

graduate pharmacists for positions of responsibility and
leadership in management,
marketing, selling and research in pharmaceutical, cosmetic and related industries
in the wholesaling and retail-

ing of the drug.trade; in
preparation for teaching of
pharmacy administration; and
in the administration of the
hospital pharmacy.

.•Idmission for matriculated

graduate students is limited
to thoee who possess BS.
in Pharmacy depress.

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MASTER OF SCIENCE
DEGREE with apecialization
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A button-down in a basket weave.
(Something old, something new.)

'•

readjustment

CNVA Chapter Established
Weekly Protest of Vietnam

A special meeting of the Executive Committee of the Student Senate was convened to re-

’

or

civilian life.
Congress has proposed several
bills to remedy the situation.
One of the important questions
in drafting the bill was who
should be included in the provisions.

Writ* or H&gt;»w lor
ftUUITIN •«
•

•

INFORMATION
APPLICATION FOAM

�Friday, March 11, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

Editorial Comment

.

.

T* 16

.

gFUnnp

.

.

by STEESE

A SLIGHT MISUNDERSTANDING
It might be hoped that at a university, most people
would know at least how to read. Unfortunately, this is
apparently not the case. The editorials in this newspaper
have been misunderstood and misinterpreted regularly,
the latest case in point being the responses to the editorial “Who Is Responsible?”. That editorial clearly
stated that the administration which allows itself to be
used by the Selective Service as a means of conscription
is responsible for its actions and responsible for a massive
betrayal of the values of higher education. It stated
further that when the administration acts in bad faith
and refuses to accept that responsibility, as it has done
at this university, then the faculty who give the grades
are made responsible by default.

This column was to begin with
several nasty remarks concerning
the proposition “The left complains loud and clear, but God
help us if we ever have to reply
on them for constructive alternatives.” But it occurs to me
that it would do very little good
to even say anything. Those who
'believe that this country is dying
from lack of free enterprise and
tend to tell people to turn either
right, or non-right at traffic lights
are not going to listen to a representative of the great pink
bogey man who rises nightly
from the swamps of the great
American decay and goes out
seeking to bury the “Great American Way” with such weapons as
appeasement and the graduated

We have seen all manner of indignation and righteous outrage expressed in the Letters to the Editor evoked
income tax.
by this statement stridently suggesting that the student
is the only one responsible for the grades he receives.
And Staring at them across a
unbridgable
This not only begs the ethical question, but stems from a vast and apparently
gulf are their opponents who see
most rudimentary misreading of the words on the page. not people but the great grey
Of course the student is responsible for the grades he shapes of nameless forces movreceives but he can in no way be considered responsible ing in the night which can not
be rationally opposed but must
for the way those grades are used after he receives them.

Presumably the people who were exercised enough

to direct letters to this paper in response to the editorial,

read that editorial in the first place. Although this assumption seems reasonable, it is in no way verified by
the texts of the letters. Had these erroneous responses
come only from students, they might well have been used
by the powers that be to document the perennial charge
of student irresponsibility, but in fact they came from
“responsible” faculty members as well
.

.

.

be destroyed completely and irrevocably, never again to rise
from its burying place to trouble
the minds of free men.

I find myself down at the bottom of the silly gulf that separates
the right and left and I am getting sick and tired of getting hit
on the head with rocks they try
to throw at each other.
To me the war in Vietnam is
a very poor substitute for the

The problem, for purposes of clarification, is simply
this: students “earn” grades by the quality of their work.
They take the risk that they may fail; that they may be
forced to leave school. That is a “legitimate” part of the
academic endeavor. But to take those grades and make
them an arbitrary criterion for military service is not a
legitimate function of any university, and furthermore,
it is not something for which the student is responsible.

In fact, if a university cannot create and support
an academic community capable of reading accurately,
then perhaps it has no “legitimate” function whatsoever.

;L
SPECTRUM

THE

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo, N. Y. 14214.
Published twice weekly from the first week of September to the last week in
May, except for exam periods, Thanksgiving,

Christmas, and spring vacations.

JEREMY TAYLOR
Editor-In-Chief
DAVID EDELMAN
Editor-Elect
Managing Editor
LARRY SHOHET
RAYMOND D VOLPE
Business Manager
New* Editor
SUSAN GREENE
Assistant
ALICE EDELMAN
Staff—Loretta Angelina,
Joanne Bouchier. Russell Buchman, Karen
Green,
Peter Lederman, Joan Roberts, Rick Schwab, Dan Schroeder, Sharon Shulman,
Eileen Teitler, Nancy Toder, Patti Wartley, Judy Weisberg.
JOHN STINY
JO ANNE LEEGANT
Feature Editor
Assistant
Staff—Bonnie Bartow. Ron Elfsworth, Barbara Ann Fitzsimmons, Barbara Loeb,
Audrey Logel. Bob Martin, Suzanne Rovner, Martha Tack, William Weinstein.
Sports Editor
STEVE SCHUELEIN
Staff—Mike Castro, Mike Dolan. Steve Farbman, Bob Frey. Scott Forman,
J. B Sharcot
Layout Editor
SHARON HONIG
Staff —Joanne Bouchier, Stephanie Parker. Steve Silverman
Copy Editor
LAUREN JACOBS
Staff—Carol Becker, Estelle Fox. Jocelyn Hailpern, Sandy Lippman, Betsy Ozer,
Claire Shottenfeld. Susan Zuckerberg.
Advertising Manager
RON HOLTZ
Staff—Terry Angelo. Audrey Cash, Pat Rosenfeld, Steve Silverman, Joseph
Mancini.

Photography

Editor

EDWARD JOSCELYN

Staff—Don Blank, Peter Bonneau, Joseph Feyes, Carol Goodson, Alan Gruber,
Marc Levine, Ivan Makuch, Michael Soluri, Anthony Walluk, Susan Wortman,

Robert

Wynne

Manager
Faculty Advisor
Financial Advisor

DIANE LEWIS

Circulation

IRENE WILLET
DALLAS

EDITORIAL POLICY IS DETERMINED

GARBER

BY THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING
Second Class

Postage

Subscription

$3

15000

00

Paid at Buffalo.
per

year,

N. Y.
circulation

Represented
for national advertising by
National Advertising Service. Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New York. N. Y.

search for the Holy Grail of Freedom. Yet is is very possible on
the basis of much of human history that on the basis of sheer
political necessity we are stuck
in that cruddy little Asian nation.
We are not protecting Vietnamese people or freedom, we are
protecting our own, and 1 would
think that it might be the most
refreshing thing in years if somebody would admit that we are
there cause we don’t care much
for the idea of anybody else being
there.
I think that we, as a nation,
near enough
to pay for the privilege of fighting our war on Vietnamese terri-

are doing nowhere

tory. If this country does not
feel it Can afford to put a tenth
of the effort into winning the
population, and in some trivial
way making life more rewarding
for those that have not been killed by one side or the other, that
it is spending in prosecuting the
damn war, then we deserve to
lose it.
And hindsight or no, it is incredible that this has not been
seen and operated on before.
Guerillas have not overthrown
a single Southeast Asian country
in which the population was behind the government. Malay and
the Philippines being examples
in which efforts at a common
front failed dismally.
But what I think about the Vietnam situation is not really that

critical now is it. What is much

rjCetterd to the

more real and much more dangerous is the growing inability for
anyone to talk to anyone else.
You can be independent in the
Gallup Poll sweetheart, but in
real life? Baby where is your

cool?

And the really, really gut issue is that this is not going to
change anybody’s mind. Any
damn fool can type up opinions
on a typewriter; I am a most
worthy example of that, but it
takes a nice grumpy cynic to
realize that the only people he is
going to get through to are the
people who already agree with
him. I suspect that the question
I am really trying to ask is what
happens to a system that is essentially based on compromise
when no one is willing to do so
any longer?
And as sort of an ironic addition why is it that while various
federal agencies are trying to
force at least halfway honest
identification of a number of products on their labels most of the
rest of the country seems to be
growing to 'believe in labels, generalities, and anything else that
will be of use in proving that
WE are right, and THEY are
wrong. Regardless of course of
the validity of arguments that
THEY might hqve.
When one considers the infinite
versus THEY
in .this country it could be just
a bit Sticky, but then it shouldn't
be very dull.
possibilities of WE

Editor

Students Comment On Grading System
TO THE

EDITOR:

Without specific discussion of
the Selective Service System, we
find it necessary to comment
upon the contention that the
grading system is a measure of
a student’s intellectual ability.
Tne idea that ". .
tt ts he
(the student who determines the
grade—not the professor,” (Letter to the Editor March 4) seems
to be peculiarly devoid of the
realities of our present grading
structure. In what sense does the
so-called “objective” or multiple
choice examination become the
creative or even the self-earned
expression of a students academic
worth? On the contrary, such
exams are merely a measure of
his ability to “take an exam” and
to memorize certain facts without necessarily understanding underlying theories. It is obvious
that the sophisticated test-taker
will receive high grades which,
in fact, do not reflect the quality
of his scholarship. Even essay
tests, which supposedly allow
more latitude of thought, in many
cases, reflect the idiosyncratic

preferences of the grader rather
than the knowledge of the stu-

dent.

and Mr. Scriber
the student who
doesn’t study for an exam or
write a required paper is abrogating his intellectual responsibility,
perhaps, however, the reverse is
Mr. Prosser

assert

that

who seek the
portant human
than the ones
exams that are
their scholastic

answers to improblems rather
who study for
truly fulfilling

and intellectual

responsibilities. It is impossible
to be both scholar and grade
seeker.

Mr. Jonak (Letter to the Editor,
March 4) asks, “. . . how far
would the actual learning process be pushed in a course which
gives no grades?” An individual
involved in a true learning process is one who attempts to deal
with questions of fundamental
human concern. This does not
mean obtaining fractured bits of
information in a half dozen areas
which lack any kind of coherent
interrelationship. It does mean
asking relevent questions about

the nature of man and the nature
of his society. It means asking
such questions as why is the
United States in Vietnam and
why did the Negroes revolt in
Watts, Rochester, Harlem, etc.?
We, as human beings, must find
answers to these kinds of questions so that we can initiate social change and establish a community of man. Grades can provide neither incentive nor meas-

urement of such scholarship.

As students, we are opposed to
assigning grades which, not only

don’t assess the intellectual ability of a student, but also compel
faculty members to be participants in the Selective Service
System.

Ellen Levine
Barbara Cooper
Joan Kriegman
Barbara Brody
Robert R. Simon
Ken Cumberland
Laura Sturtz
Robert J. McCubbin
Sidney Sugarman

Janet Shapiro

Lauren Jacobs
Ronnie Bromberg

Campus Barrel Drive Thanks Contributors
TO THE

EDITOR:

We sincerely thank each of the
donors to the Campus Barrel
Drive and know that they will be
pleased with what their gift is
doing in the World Academic
Community. We extend special
thanks to the following:
The Student Association,
supplying the materials and
ering the cost of the Drive,

for

cov-

The Inter Residence Council,
for handling the Drive in the
residence' Halls.
*

Panhellenic Council, for the
services rendered by the “WUS
Girls” to collect money in Norton's lobby.
Gamma Delta (Lutheran Students) for their service in delivering most of the twelve hundred
letters dispersed on the campus.

Miss Jocelyn Lundquist, for designing and making the posters
and oil-cloth for the Drive.

Kim Darrow and Stewart Edelstein; for their continuous efforts

in promoting the Drive through
the Senate Office.
We, with the World University
Service, thank the following organizations for their donations:
The Senior Class of the School
of Nursing.
The Freshman Class Council.
The Allenhurst.
Most sincerely,
Robert A. Potter and
Robert A. Martin.
Co-chairmen of
Campus Barrel Drive

�Friday, March II,

MM

IMCTIUM

Israeli Psychologist Gives Lectures;
Herman Talks To HUlei and Faculty
the Bnai Bnth Hillel Foundahons He currently lectures on
Social Psychology and Group Dynamics at the Hebrew University
in Jerusalem, while directing
several research projects. For several years he was research assis-

tant to the late Professor Kurt
Lewin, Director of the Research

Center for Group Dynamics at
M.I.T. He has contributed to
social science journals in the
United States, Great Britain, and
Israel.

BOB A RAY'S
MUSIC CENTER
SALES
RENTALS
and Service on all
Instruments
—

DR. SIMON H. HERMAN
Israeli psychologist, educator
and author. Dr. Simon H. Herman will speak to faculty, graduate students, and interested undergraduates at the Hillel House,
40 Capen Blvd., Sunday, March
13, at 8 p.m. His topic will be
“Israel and the American Jewish
Community; a Study in Interdependence.”

Dr. Herman will conduct an
informal discussion with members of the Sociology and Psychology Departments on his research in integration, acculturation, and high school students,
Monday, March 14 at 1 p.m. in
the Conference Room of the
Faculty Club. Any interested faculty are welcomed to take part.
Dr. Herman is on a 4 week
tour of 9 universities sponsored

by the United Jewish Appeal and

2nd Slee Lecture

Given by Posseur
Henri Posseur, Belgian com-

poser and Slee Professor of Mu-

sic Composition for the present
semester, will present the second
of his lecture-demonstrations at
Baird Hall on Monday, March
14 at 8:30 p.m.
The lecture, entitled “Harmony,

a Renewed Question,” will 'be

ac-

companied by a performance of
Posseur’s composition “Miroir de
Votre Faust” by Soprano Sylvia
Diminiani and pianist Frederic

Rzewsky.

Works by Mr. Posseur will also

be presented as part of the pro-

gram of the Creative Associates’
“Evening for New Music” concert on Sunday, March 13, at 8:30
in the Albright-Knox Art Gallery.
The last of Mr. Posseur’s lecture series, “Webern and Si
lence,” will be presented on Monday, May 2.

Book Exchange
Funds Uncollected

Student Association Treasurer
announced that the following people have not collected funds received from the Student Book Exchange:

Robert Cams, Karen Leff,
James S. Stencel, Audrey Logal,
Barb lannone, Robert Rix, Gordon Eddy, Stuart Gartman, Louis
Ollarek, Paul Schwarymyer, Mary
Kay Sand.
Other students are Howard
Wagner, Jose S. Confn, Jill Weinstein, Arlene Stalzer, Diane Billman, Michelle Rizzo, Ken Buss,
Carl Smugor.
According to Mr. Seide, checks
may be picked up any time during the week in Hie Student Senate Office (205 Norton) with proper identification.

The compositions of Mr. Penn
will be played by student instrumentalists William Thiele, James
Miller, Nelson Starr, and Joel di-

OFFICIAL BULLETIN
The Official Bulletin is an authorized publication of the State
University of New York at Buffalo, for which the Spectrum assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in
TYPEWRITTEN form to 114
Hayes Hall, attention Mrs. Fischer, before 2 p.m. the Friday
prior to the week of publication.
Student organization notices are
not accepted for publication.

general meeting appointments
can be scheduled for individual
interviews for the following day,

March 18.
The Board of Education of the
City of New York wishes to remind teaching candidates of the
following closing dates for application for the “Regular” New
York City tests:
March 18, 1966—Early Childhood, Common Branches.
March 23, 1966
Guidance
Counselor, Elementary and Junior High School; Mathematics,
High School and Junior High,
March 25»/1966—English, D.
H.S.; Fine Arts, D.H.S.
April 18, 1966—Spanish, High
School.
—

GENERAL NOTICES
University College students
(except those on strict academic
probation) registration for next
semester, September 1966 is as

follows:
March 14 through March—R,
C, J.
March 28 through April 1—H,
A, N, E, Z.
April 4 through April 8—S, Y,
Q. X.
ApnT 11 through April 15=
M, T, U, V.

April 18 through April 22—
G, P, I.
April 25 through April 29—

W, D.

May 2 through May 6—B, F.
PLACEMENT

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Please contact the University
Placement Service, Schoelkopf
Hall, telephone 831 3311 for additional information.
Several local companies are
seeking candidates with accounting skill. A degree is not necessary in many cases course work
and experience can be substi-

tuted.
The University Placement Services has a number of full-time
secretarial positions available.
The American National Red
Cross has openings for 400 college graduates. Interested candidates should call Miss Helen
Schweitzer, TT 6-7500 for an appointment.

graduate students
Canadian
are invited to meet with a visiting team representing the universities and colleges of Canada
and federal civil service to discuss career opportunities in Canada for persons with advanced
university degrees. A general
meeting will be held at 3 p.m.,
Thursday, March 17, in Room
231, Norton Hall. Following the

PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS
MARCH

11

Maritime Administration—U.S.
Dept, of Commerce.

Sign up now for folk guitar

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Guitar Lessons
All Types

Bartolo and will be discussed by
the composer. Local MENC president Piero Hadjikako explained:
“It is our purpose on this campus to promote as much interest
in the many forms of music as
possible. Students of the Drama
department put on many free
productions during the course of
a semester, and we feel it is our
duty to give the many talented
music students a similar opportunity to perform on campus.”
The organization will present
its next concert, “Student Happenings”, March 31.

The MIGLIORE INSURANCE
AGENCY specializes in small
cycle insurance. Call us for
rates between 9 and 5.

839 Niagara Falls Blvd.
836-8742
Special Student Discounts
with I.D. Card

Jazz Lecture &amp; Demonstration
Given by William Penn, lues.

There will be a free lecture
demonstration entitled “Compositions in Jazz”, by graduate assistant William Penn, on Tuesday,
March 15 at 8:30 p.m. in Baird
Hall.
This is the first of a series
of student concerts sponsored by
the Buffalo Chapter of the New
York State School Music Association and Music Educators National Council. &lt;MENC)

ATTENTION
SMALL CYCLE OWNERS

p

Fresh Spring arrivals in all
wool sport coats with authen
tic university natural shoulder styling. Rich fabrics with
the look and feel of tine
homespun in plaids, checks,
and tweed mixtures. Styled
by famous Donald Richard.
Sport Shop. All 3 stores.

Wool

Slacks
$1595
The slim, tapered styling you
like to go with your natural
shoulder sport coats. All
wool reverse twist fabric that
gives plenty of wear. Charcoal grey, Cambridge grey,
olive, charcoal blue and
charcoal brown. Sport Shop.
All 3 stores.

MARCH 18

Erie Co. Savings Bank
U. S. Dept .of AgricultureOffice of the Inspector General
General Electric Co.
Kurt Salmon Associates.

ALL WOOL FLANNEL BLAZERS. Natural Shoulder
Styling and Metal Button Trim

�Friday, March II, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

Cjoodman

—

Asked about the criticism of
the Vietnam war in the Senate,
Senator Dodd of Connecticut
said, “It is the price we pay for
living in ' a free country.” This
routine response is quite taken
for granted. But what an astonishingly negative estimate of the
democratic process it is, as if
free* discussion were a weakness
we must ptit up with in- order
to avoid a greater evil. To Milton,
Spinoza, or Jefferson such discussion was precisely the strength
of free society; to them, truth
was a power, admittedly weak
but steady and cumulative, and
in free debate the right course
would emerge and prevail. In
classical democratic theory there
is no other method for truth to
prevail, since there is no final
authority but all the people, and
therefore it is an advantage if
there are combative opinions,
widely disparate and searching.
Senator Dodd seems to have
the following epistemology of
democracy: we elect governors
who then have inside information, through spies and secret
diplomacy. They alone, therefore,
can make policy and commit-

ments. (Presumably we can repudiate these at the next election, but usually commitments
lead to faiti accompli* which
make it hard to repudiate a policy.) More important, there is a

permanent group of selfless and
wise experts who alone understand the technology involved,
e.g., material, strategy, and tactics; we must perforce do what
they advise. The fact that they
make bad predictions and, on the
evidence, are partial or at least
narrow in their commercial interests and political views, does
not alter the picture. It follows
that public discussion is irrelevant and harmful because divisive, but it is “the price we pay.'’
What is the attraction of such
diluted democratic faith? Partly
it is our laziness, which Morris
Cohen used to call the first principle of political theory. Mainly,
I think, it is that we live with
a sense of chronic low-grade
emergency. Senator Dodd’s is the
philosophy of emergency, for in
an emergency it is rational to
concentrate temporary power in
a few hands, to decide and make
commitments, and for the rest
better or worse. But since it is
a low grade emergency—nobody
is invading San Francisco—we
to go on as usual, including
criticizing, so long as it does not
affect policy.
Unfortunately, this
attitude
keeps the low-grade emergency
chronic. There is no way to get
back to normal, no check on new
fait* accompli*, no accountability
of the decision-makers, no chance
for a philosophic view to emerge

UB National Student Association Joins
Schools In Week Against Apartheid'

—

In the Senate debate itself,
excellent and useful as it was,
By BOB MARTIN
we saw that not a single Senator was able to raise basic huUnited States National
The
man issues that could put the
Vietnam Situation in a fair light Student Association, of which UB
and perhaps undercut the dilem- is a member, has designated this
mas, e.g., we live in a period week as “National Student Week
of worldwide communication and against Apartheid,” Joined by
spread of technology, and there- six other national student organifore of—rising aspirations,”' yet zations, 200 colleges throughout
a majority of mankind is fast the country will make coordinatbeComing relatively and even ed effort to activate educational
absolutely poorer; hundreds of programs such as films, teach-ins,
raismillions are starving who used petition drives, and fund
to make do under simpler con- ing drives for South African Deditions. For our own country, is fense and Aid Fund, and other
it really in our national interest programs designed to aid the Nato oome on as a Great Power, live South Africans in bringing
touchy about saving face and latent public opinion to the surtelling other people how to act face. Pressure will be directed
or else? Are Englishmen, French- against present U.S. policy toward
men, and Dutchmen worse off South Africa,
Apartheid is the term given to
since they bowed out, not to
speak of Danes and Swedes who South Africa’s policy of “separbowed out long ago? Most cru- ate development” in her adminicial of all, in the present era of stration of the territory of SouthOne World and the atom bomb, west Africa. By decision of the
is there not something baroque International Court of Justice in
and unreal in the proud soverign- 1950, it has a responsibility “to
ty of nation states and the le- promote to the utmost, the magalisms of who has “aggressed” terial and moral well-being and
social progress of the people of
on whom?
the territory.” These responsibilObviously such “anti-national” ities were delegated under the
issues cannot be raised by Sena- League of Nations Mandate
tors, even in a free debate. All Agreement. The anti-apartheid
the more reason why others of leaders feel that a penetrating
us must freely raise them, if we look at the present South African
policy will show that it is not
are going to make sense and perhaps live on at all.
directed toward this end.
,

,

ORGANIZATION

The Christian Science Organization will present two thirty
minute color films. The Story of
Christian Science and Assignment: Mankind, Tuesday, March
15, in Room 242 Norton at 7:30

p.m

GAMMA DELTA

Gamma Delta will meet Wednesday, March 9 in Room 344 of
Norton Union at 66 p.m., preceded by dinner in the cafeteria.
After the meeting we will attend
Lenten services at St. Paul’s Lutheran Church

&lt;

BAG Attempts Interracial Movement;
Deals With Ghetto Community Needs
TERRY SEAL
“Man, they say go North, so
I come to Buffalo. But it ain’t
no different. The ‘sip (Mississippi) is down south, Buffalo is
up south.”
Buffalo may be up North, but
its Negro ghetto rivals those of
the South. The ghetto covers
about 40 blocks and is over 90%
non-white, with 222.66 per thousand of its inhabitants on public
assistance, medium education
level of 8.3 years, and a median
family income of $3989. This
area has one drugstore and two
non-resident doctors for about

affiliated with the Economic Research and Action Project
(BEAP), a program of Students
for a Democratic Society. Currently, ERAP is sponsoring the
Buffalo Action Group and the
Perry Project Tutorial, which is
giving instruction to over 60
children.
The BRAP technique consists
of a group of students working
in an area to locate its leaders,
and seeing its conditions and
immediate needs. According to
an ERAP spokesman, these workers are vital, since the disor-

15,000 people.

discrimination in education, em-

is attempting to form
grassroots organizations in the
ghetto to deal with the needs of
this community. It is an interracial movement of the poor. BAG
spokesman Phil Cook summed
up their purpose as, “To organize
the poor to organize themselves,
to make their own program, to
present their own views to the
individuals and agencies most
concerned with their problems.”
Their slogan is “Let the people
decide.”
The Buffalo Action Group is

public services rendered by the
city. Once the
have

By

(BAG),

ganized poor

cannot overcome

been evaluated, the students organize and support such projects
as freedom schools, voter registration, and welfare projects.
In Buffalo, ERAP has plans
for a summer Freedom School
and housing improvement. According to Phil Cook, objections
to the projects have been raised
by outspoken individuals, and
owners of dilapidated slum dwellings. BAG also reports “mild
harassment” from local police.

Religion On Campus
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE

Although there are 11 million
Africans to 3 million Europeans
in the territory, there exists differences which indicate that the
indigeneous African population
does not have equal opportunities.
In the mining industry the
average wage for white workers
is $3,587, compared to an annual
wage of $216 for Negroes. The
average expenditure on education
is $182 per pupil for the white
population and $18 for the native. Included in the policy of
“separated development’ is the
practice of land reserves that is,
arears Where land is reserved for
each race and where the other
race is not permitted to town land.
The whites have 87% of the total
land area in their reserve and the
blacks have 13%.
There is suspicion among the
anti-apartheid groups that the
trade unions exercise discrimina
tory policies against the native
population. There are 340,000
Whites registered in all of the
trade unions and no Negroes.
It is felt that the general aims
of the South African government
are summarized in a statement
addressed to the parliament by
Prime Minister Hendrik Verwoerd in 1963: “We want to make
South Africa white . . . keeping
it white can only mean one thing,

INTER-VARSITY CHRISITIAN
FELLOWSHIP

Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship will hold a bowling party at
the bowling lanes in Norton, Friday, March 11, at 7:15 p.m. Those
wishing to attend the Bible Study
Conference in Syracuse should
contact Billie Knapp (835-2048)
by March 12. IVCF also sponsors
Bible studies (Monday at 3 p.m.

and Thursday at

11

a.m.)

and

10
a.m. and Wednesday at 1 p.m.) in
Norton 217. An open discussion
group meets Friday at 3 p.m. in
Norton, Room 333.
prayer meetings (Tuesday at

HILLEL

Hillel will sponsor a Sabbath
Service this evening at 7:45 p.m.
A delegation of students from
Hillel of Buffalo will participate
in a weekend institute to be held
in Rochester. A meeting of the
Hillel Fellowship will be held on
Sunday, March 13 at 8 p.m. in the
Hillel House when Dr. Simon
Herman will lecture on: "Israel
and the American Jewish Community: A Study in Interdependence.” U.J.F. returns are requested as soon as possible.

There will be a Freshman Baseball Meeting
this Friday, March 11,
at 4 p.m. at Clark Gym.

There are presently two organizations combatting poverty in
Buffalo, the Community Action
Organization (CAO, of the War
on Poverty agency) and the East
Side Community Organization
(BSCO, the organization seeking
to bring Saul Alinsky to Buffalo).
The Buffalo Action Group intends to join with these groups
to provide a different perspective on the problem of poverty.
BAG is seeking aid from all
interested individuals. Community workers and money are
needed. BAG can be contacted
at its headquarters at 164 Sycamore St. in Buffalo.

namely white domination, not
leadership not guidance, but control, supremacy.”

Leaders of the stfident protest

hope present activities will help

to alter the Johnson Administra-

tion’s policy. Additional pressure
will be placed on the administration by Senator Robert Kennedy’s
proposed trip to South Africa
where he will address the national Union of South African
Students, the counterpart of NSA.
Sometime this year, the International Court of Justice at The
Hague is expected to rule that
South Africa must accept UN supervision over her policies in
Southwest Africa. It is probable
that South Africa would refuse
to comply with this order, whidh
would greatly enhance the
chances of UN passing economic
sanction against her. The US,
thus far, has constantly aided
in blocking this type of action.
If the court riding takes place
there will be intense diplomatic
pressure from the African nations for a change.
The main objections to present US policy are her extensive

trade with South Africa, and the
large amounts of private investment by over 200 United States
concerns. According to G. Men-

non Williams, former Assistant

Secretary of State for African
Affairs, this investment gives
psychological support to the
South African regime. Williams
feels that US policy in South Africa is causing increasing resentment among the independent Af-

rican states.
Williams advocates changes in
US policy, which admittedly,
would have 'both positive and
negative effects. A cutoff in investment and aid would damage
the economic, scientific, and strategic interests of the present regime. It might also cause the union of South. Africa to become
more defiant, and create increased internal resistance to policy changes. However, the proposed American policy alterations might force the Union of
South Africa to seriously consider modification of the internal
policy, and at the same time, improve American relations with
other African states.

WEEKLY CALENDAR
MARCH 11-14
FRIDAY

MONDAY

Blood Drivo; Arnold Air Society, 9-3 p.m., Lobby.
Recital: Beethoven Program,
Budapest String Quartet, Baird
Hall, 8:30 p.m.
Audition: UB Blues, 12-6 p.m.,
Norton 344-332.
Art-Photography Exhibit:
Spring Arts Festival, All Day,
Center Lounge.

Film: “The Buffalo Bills' 1965
Season,” 12:30 p.m., Conference
Theatre.
Lecture; Union Board Literature and Drama Committee, 4
p.m., Conference Theatre.
Fashion Show: University Women’s Club, 3:30-11 p.m., Fillmore
Room.
Children's Art Program: School
of Education, all day. Second
Floor Lounge.
Blood Drive: Arnold Air Society, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Lobby,
Exhibit: Manuscripts and
Books, George Barker, Balcony of
Lockwood Library.
Lecture: “Studies on SteroidSugar Conjugates.” Dr. W. R.
Slaunwhite Jr., 244 Health Sciences, 4:30 p.m.

Poetry Reading:

Festival,

6:30-11

Spring Arts
p.m.,

Haas

Lounge.
Children's Art Program: Second Floor Lounge, Norton, 10
a.m. to 12 p.m.
SATURDAY

Exhibit: Fine Arts Committee, All Day, Norton 231.
Children's Art Program: School
of Education, 10 a.m.-12 p.m..
Second Floor Lounge.
Art

SUNDAY

Folk Dancing: Student Zionist
Organization, 7-11 p.m., Norton

344.
Art Exhibit; Fine Arts Comnittee, All Day, Norton 231.

Children's Art Program: School
of Education, All Day, Second
Floor Lounge.
Art-Photography Exhibit;
Spring Arts Festival, All Day,
Center Lounge.
Blood Drive; Arnold Air Society, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Lobby.

TUESDAY

Blood

Drive: Arnold Air So-

ciety, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Lobby.
Children's Art Program; School
of Education, All Day, Second
Floor Lounge.
Lecture; School of Social Welfare Association, 11:30 a.m.,
Room 233, Norton.
Discussion: Alumni Greater
Books, 8 to 10 p.m., 233, 332.
Meeting: “An Evening in Rus-

sian,” Fillmore Room, Norton, 7

p.m. Department of Modern Lan-

guages and Literature.

�Friday, March 11, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAG! SEVEN

-OPEN FORUMBy BOB GAUS
the seventh day of the
week, I, P.C.V.T. (Peace Corps
Volunteer Trainee) No. 129466,
was thrown out. Deselected. Selected out. Let go. Gathering together my tattered green shirt,
dusty boots, and horsy jeans, I
waved goodbye to a few good
people, then jetted away from
Alberquerque, dining on filet

On

mignon, marveling at Chicago’s

bundle of light on the blackened
plain, osluching quite low in my
seat, feeling a heady freedom
in the sky.
Three months have passed,
thus I have acquired what is
knoiwn as “perspective,” which
means I find myself mired in
something else, but, no matter.
I wish now to share with the
reader some of the conclusions
concerning the Peace Corps
which I arrived at while serving
as a “trainee”.
We begin with a solid, socio-

logical typology, a simple-minded
dichotomy. We find predominant
Peace Corps orientations, the
“missionary” which seems to be
for the more idealistic volunteers,
and the “agent” for the cynics,
or skeptics. Both are organizational orientations, as distinguished from the personal orientations

of the individual volunteers, such
as beating the draft for two years,
finding a husband, avoiding an
impending wife, or temporarily
opting out of the “rat race”. We
come for the best of reasons, but
I am more concerned here with
why some stay, and why some do

not.

From the first day, the potential missionary-volunteer is assured that he will not bring
about any great changes. He will
work within the system, through
the local agencies of the host
country, will remain completely
apart from the native .political
activity, and he must realize that
he will have very little, materially, to show for his work. Unfortunately for the Peace Corps however, he will also lack the consolation of having won over myriads of pagan souls.
The definitive Statement of this
orientation was uttered by the
head physician at the training
center that fateful day when he
expressed his belief that our
two years in Chile would be well
spent if only we managed to get

ing the real condition of the
peasant, but for most of remained, “well done” was the

American foreign policy seems
any favorable “image" the corpsman might create,
thus for example, sending the
Marines into the Dominican Republic simply does not demonstrate solidarity with the revolutionary aspirations of the world's
poor, or even those of its middle
class.

to contradict

typical response.
The actual project we soon
came to learn, was irrelevant, a
conclusion which we had anticipated after conversing with seve-

ral “return volunteers” about
their projects. It is no easy task
to ferret out exactly what a vol-

unteer’s

project

was, one

“Yes, yes, yes, but might not
the Peace Corps still be the best
of all possible worlds? Surely few
nations would ever welcome a
A scan* from "Orest**"
truly revolutionary volunteer, and
any action taken by the volun1
teer which threatened the statusquo would certainly lead to his
expulsion. You seem to see the
volunteer as a subversive element, perhaps you would land
The UB production of Orestes forms which utilize repetition
him on some new-mooned beach
rather than flying him in on Pan will be enhanced by the original and imitation. Ultimately, he
American? Your expectations are music of Gary Cohen. The unique
would like to create a piece withunrealistic, your demands, un- sounds of this music will be out a single note.
made by three percussionists perreasonable.”
forming on a variety of instruHe has studied under several
True, they are. One cannot ments ranging from traditional prominent musicians, having atglockenspiel
drums
to
a
seriously expect a nation to exand
tended the Eastman School of
viport non-violent revolution which braphone. Also included will be Music for eleven years before enpianist
a
on
a
prepared piano tering UB to study under Alan
itself is in such great need of it.
Perhaps then, the best course for and a flutist.
Sapp and Virgil Thompson. During 1963 and again in 1964, he
activists is to work in the U. S.
The original piece for Dr. Colewhere your project will not need man's production of the play was studied in France with Nadia
State Department approval, a written in three movements. The Boulanger. In the future Gary
“Rep.” will not be paying you first and longest movement will hopes to do graduate work in
regular visits to check on your be half electronic taped music. composition, possibly at the New
adjustment, you will not be fillThere is a leitmotif for Helen of England Conservatory. He hopes
ing out your progress report Troy and there are improvised to apply his interest and talent
in composition to the ballet and
forms, and if you chance to get sections supervised by the comthe theatre.
involved in political activity your poser. Music is also used to create theatrical sound effects which
effectiveness will not automatically cease.
at times will operate beneath
the level of the music.
As for all you non-activist, join
Gary Cohen is a senior at UB
up! See the world or whatever, and likes to use new sounds by
putting them into traditional
you will not be disappointed.

got

the impression that the demand
for detailed description was in
poor taste. The youthful head of
our Community Development program did however admit to cleverly feelingout the “felt need”,
and commenced to spend his stay
building a cemetery wall; another
veteran on the staff initiated sewing classes in a Santiago slum,
taking dare however to cut all
the patterns herself, since the
ladies could not be trusted with
scissors. At this point the attention of the trainees began to
shift to the varied climate of
Chile, its magnificent mountains,
excellent and inexpensive wines,
the rather pleasant houses for
a gentleman’s pleasure, and other
experiences which might make
the two year stay in Chile worth-

Music Score For Orestes
Composed By Gary Cohen

while.

The rationale for Community
Development it seemed, was “togetherness,” the project itself
was simply a means of organizing
the people into a collective effort through which they would
come to know the benefits of
democratic action, selfhelp, and
non-violent revolution. Why it is
to be expected that these people
will come together when the project itself is irrelevant, and giving
so little promise of significantly
improving their lives, is not explained.
Perhaps, then, we should consider those "intangibles” which
the twinkle-eyed recruiting people refer to. Perhaps a child’s
smile? A WonderOus thing, but
why more significant than the
smile of a Vietnamese child for
a &lt;JX who has some compassion
for him?

Possibly the creation of “good

will?” The reader is welcome to

speculate, but for myself, the
real intangible ought to be that
glimpse at the possibility of a
better life, a life which will allow
one to escape from an existence
dominated by subsistence, and to

volution would 'be the greatest
A more realistic presentation possible success. This however,
of this approach became a topic
seems not to be a Peace Corps_
intangible, although it is very
for hot dispute amongst the trainees. An article appeared in the much a part of their rhetoric.
Peace Corps magazine (The VolPeace Corps success is measured
by how few volunteers quit beunteer) in which a Peace Corps
fore two years are up or by the
couple described “their” Columgood-behavior record established
bian village
the unemployment, the miserable wages which 'by all those volunteers who never
are approximately the same as
were thrown out of a host counthey were 400 years ago, the
try.
primitive living conditions and
“Goodwill” as an intangible is
actually the basis of our second,
the general feeling of hopelessthe
ness. Their project was to operless significant orientation
ate a bread co-op, thus enabling volunteer as “ideological agent,”
spreading good will, making
the peasants to save a bit on
bread purchases. For the one friends, in general, living proof
true revolutionary in the group, of what good guys Yankees really are. This poor soul is doomed
this was, in effect, simply sub
to frustration, working with Dean
sidizing the whole miserable system, with no chance of improv- Rusk at his side, as he must.

The Bard of the Ganges
To Visit Campus by Night
—You better watch out.
Allen Ginsberg, celebrity,
prophet, world traveler and poet
will read from his personal book
of revelations on Friday, March
11 at 8 p.m. in Clark Gym. Ginsberg, if there is anyone who did
not know, was one of the three
of four men who gave any semblance of literary life to the beat
—You better not cry.

regularly.

—

—

His first book of poetry, Howl
and Other Poems (published by
Ferlinghetti’s City Lights Press)
became an overground testament
of alienation, despair, mainlining

Buffalo and 124 at the University Center at Albany
The “History of Latin America" is a two-semester course of
30 half-hour programs each semester and carries two hours of
credit. It is taught by Dr, Harold F. Peterson, Professor of History at the College at Buffalo.
“Eye on the Universe," a

course

in descriptive astronomy,

is being broadcast in 47 halfhour sessions. It is taught by
Dr. Harry Edward Crull, Planetarian Director and Professor of
Astronomy at State University

collect and put into form William
S. Burroughs’ Naked Lunch.
—I’m telling you why.

Ginsberg has often been compared to Walt Whitman and the
comparison isn’t as funny as it
sounds. Ginsberg has not only admitted to being homosexual, he
has bragged about it.

Whatever else may be said
about Ginsberg, he is, like Whit
man, not at all a small man.
—Allen Ginsberg’s coming to

and other related contemporary

liams and Allen Tate testified for
him. It was decided that Howl
was not obscene. In its first few
years in print, it sold about 50,000 copies (just about as much as
Loaves of Crass).
Whether you read it or not (for
that matter even if you never
heard of it) you grow up on Howl.
—You better not pout.

at

Albany,

and

carries

hours of college credit.

Students enrolled

three

for credit

have received a syllabus containing titles of required texts,
course outlines, bibliographies,
daily assignments and instruc-

tions for studying via television.
be required to pass
mid-semester and final examinaThey will
tions.

State University began its educational television broadcasting
operations last fall with a series
of three broadcasts in the field of
continuing education.

Ahoy Mites!..
A ZEBRA
IS SIGHTED

town.

A REAL TREAT
LIKE THE
ICE CREAM MAN

problems. When put on trial for
obscenity, William Carlos Wil-

College Credit Courses Via T.V.
State University Newsletter
More than 416 persons have
registered to take the first two
telecredit courses offered by
State University through cooperation of educational television stations in the Albany and
Buffalo areas.
A total of 164 students have
registered for the course “The
History of Latin America,” 97 at
the College at Buffalo and 67
at State University at Albany.
The course “Eye on the Universe” has attracted 252 registrations, 128 at the College at

One of the things which not
many people know about Ginsberg is that it was he who helped

It ii stated that Noah took
two animals of each kind into
his ark when he took to ride
out the storm. It is now sug*
(tested that a gentleman of
fashion take at least two zebra
striped knit shirts into his

wardrobe
mer

the

5 andymes
ft

the

Music

sum*

Campus

Corner

are here

TF 5-0091

to ride out

in style. From $5.00

UU Km tnUT

�Friday, March II, 1«M

tPICTIUM

MN MMT

ILs®m ILswa^
Fellini and the Feminine Psyche
When I saw SVi several years ago, I felt that Frederico Fellini was going to have a hard time with his next
picture. A near masterpiece sets its own standards, but
more to the point, the particular nature of 8 Vi raised
a number of unique problems which even Fellini (especially Fellini, in this case) would have to face. He and
hfe close friend Marcello Mastroianni had created a triple
projection of the director’s ego on a shifting screen of
temporal reality and psychic space. Their conception had
exhausted the creator’s mind by exposing it, I thought,
and Fellini seemed faced with both a loss of subject and
the necessity to revitalize techniques that had been used
almost to imaginative perfection
Juliette of the Spirit*, Fellini’s newest film now playing at the Glen Art and Circle Art theatres, both confirms and confounds my expectations. The techniques
are still there and although they are familiar, they are
still workable and often interesting. As for his subject,
Fellini has replaced his masculine ego with his wife’s
feminine psyche. But either he doesn’t know the subject,
well enough, or he is afraid to follow his artistic perceptions to their ultimate fruition.
His wife, Guiletta Massina, created an unforgetable
and immensely appealing character in La Strada (1955).
Her winsomeness, radiant innocence and an almost convulsive humanity coalesced in an organic, Mediterranean
child/earth-mother creature called Gelsomina who -be
came a part of everyone’s movie experience. In Night’*
of Cabiria (1957) she altered the conception without
bruising it or arousing any doubts. Now, ten years later,
she is about 40 and something has happened that Fellini could not or would not deal with.
Putting her under harsh, direct lights with unflattering make-up for 2Vi hours is no way to make this
woman attractive. Guilietta Massina is not right for the
part as it is written. Perhaps Fellini felt that he was
approaching an awkward situation truthfully by using a
woman whose limited emotional range, harsh temperament and negative sexuality made her husband’s betrayal easily understandable, but in the process, he has
failed to engage the sympathy for the woman that his
attitude towards the situation demands.

A fantastic appararltion flashes across Juliet's
stroll in Fellini's JULIET OF THE SPIRITS.

path on

a garden

We are supposed to accept Juliette’s departure into
the world of spirits as an escape to an area of existence
where there is a certain permanent and instinctual truth
that combines the wisdom of the heart with the lessons
of experience. As Juliette finds her immediate reality
becoming less satisfactory, her visions begin to trouble
her as if they too can no longer be trusted. Her eventual
exorcism of the spirits 1 take to be Fellini’s suggestion
that she has learned to cope with reality but maintained
a strong emotional belief in and a reliance on her instincts. There is no room here to document this in detail,
but I think that Fellini’s entire exposition of the psychic
realm and its immediate consequences was consistantly
on shaky grounds, and his final up-beat ending inconsistent with the generally miserable cast of mind which
he has established for Guilietta/Juliette.
The movie is in color and Fellini is damned good
with it, but I’ve never found a succession of images, no
matter how attractive, to be enough. When Fellini weds
his mastery of his craft in its fantastic variety with a
clear and revealing insight into his material (as in SV2, a
movie whose depth and subtlety becomes more apparent
on further inspection and reflection), the resulting unity
of vision will produce a film commensurate with his
genius. But in this case, the familiar rabble from his stock
company in dolce vita vignettes, the beautiful camera
work, the shifts in psychic perspective and even the optical spectacle unfolding kaleidoscopically in dazzling tableaus is not enough. The picture is interesting, but not
resiliently tough and uncompromising in an honest application of the artist’s vision. It is worth seeing, I think,
but in many ways, a failure,

'Point of Order In Conference Theatre
Concerns American 'Political Spectacle

;

Point of Order, a film consist-

ing of stock newsreel footage of
the “Army-McCarthy” hearings,
produced by Emile Antonio and
Daniel Talbot, is being shown in
the Conference Theatre until Sunday of this week. The performances will be continuous.

Point of Order is a documentary of one of America’s most
dramatic political spectacles. Beginning on April 22, 1954, this
country was jarred by a series of
explosive occurrences. We saw
Senator Joseph M. McCarthy in
collision with Secretary of the
Army, Robert T. Stephens. There
is Roy Cohen’s battle with the
“simple trial lawyer from Boston”—Joseph N. Welch, and the
fateful attack by Senator McCarthy on a series of Army charts
relating to Private David Schine.
Point of Order is an intellectual drama ripe with the trappings of a spy story—cropped
hotos and letters removed from
secret Army files, with a cast
drawn from the ranks of the
highest echelons of American political life—John G. Adams, Ray
Jenkins, Robert Kennedy, Senators Symington, McClellan and
more.

The Army—McCarthy Hearings shown in "Point of Order" this
weekend.

Paintings and Crafts Exhibited
By

BONNIE BARTOW

Paintings and craft items produced by students are on exhibit
in Norton 231 as part of the
annual Spring Arts Festival. The
callibre of artistic endeavor represented by most of the canvasses is questionable; while the
ceramics and jewelry display is
definitely worth seeing.

GREEK NOTES
Officers of the Spring pledge
class of Alpha Kappa Psi are:
Bill Pockrus, President; Hank
Markowitz, Vice President; Harry
VanEvery, Secretary; Ron Fishbein. Treasurer.
The new pledge officers for
Alpha Phi Omega are: Jack
Schirmer, President 1st Vicepresident, Paul Pflanz; 2nd Vicepresident, Gary Hefner and SecretaryTreasurer, Dave Corrigan.
A Toga party is planned for this
Saturday night.
Beta Phi Sigma's officers for
the coming year are: George
Skalski, President; Irwin Wechsler, VicePresident; David Burns,
Recording Stenographer Stewart Siskin, Corresponding Stenographer and Alan Levitt, Treasurer. There will be a bowling
party this Saturday at Amherst
Lanes. There will be a Health
Sciences Mixer held at Island
Park on Union Road.
Chi Omega is holding a “come
as you are party” Sunday at the
home of Elizabeth Lobe.

Phi Kappa Psi is hosting the
National Pajama Convention held
in Buffalo in honor of National
Pajama Week, March 6 to 12. A
Pajama-Rama party will be held
Saturday night. The Miss Pajama
Contest will be judged by Denny
Clements and Jim Bevalaqua.
The pledges of Phi Lambda
Dalta will hold a “Phi Pajama
Party” at 8:30 P. M. tomorrow
night above the Sanford meat
market. This week’s guest celebrity will be Krazy Katz and his
Fig Leaf Briefs.

Pi Lambda Tau will hold a
party Saturday at the home of
Michael Petz in Depew. The winner of the semester academic
award is Richard Stearns. Sandy
Simon is the Dry Goods Committee Chairman.
is holding
their annual dinner dance at the
Parkway Saturday in honor of
the new pledges.
Sigma Kappa Phi

Tau Kappa Epsilon will hold
a joint party with Gamma Phi
and APD at the Flying ‘E’ Ranch,
Saturday, at 8:30 P. M. Mike DiGiorlando, formerly of the Zeto
Rho chapter, has been made the
chapter adviser -of- Epsilon Chi.

Theta Chi Fraternity’s new officers are: Garry McGovern, President; Garry Fadale, Vice-president; B. Allen, Secretary; R.
Marko, Marshall; J. Kenyon,
Chaplain J. Geith, Librarian;
Stratton, Historian; L. Mackey
and R. Agoglia, Guards. There
will be a social at the house at
9 P. M.
Thata Chi sorority will hold a
sister-pledge party tonight at Maria Giglia’s home. Sig Bp Queen
Of Hearts was Sandee Gunsalus.
Sigma Delta Tau will hold its
dated party at the Hotel Richford on Friday, March 11. Best
of luck to Sue Danderson, who
is running for an Arts and
and Sciences Senate seat. Founder’s Day will be celebrated on
Tuesday, March 15.

Peace Corps Gets
100 Applicants
Over one hundred students ap-

plied to the Peace Corps at the
recent recruiting drive, according to
Assistant Coordinator
Michael DiGerlando. This exceeds
last year’s record of 90 students.
Nationally the figure for applicants has gone down, while
the percentage of those accepted
has risen. Mr. DiGerlando said:

John Dunham, an excellent
craftsman, has on exhibit several
intricate pieces of silver jewelry
and a carefully wrought ceramic
frog jug. Ang Comoro zzo, also a
fine craftsman, has produced a
group of three matching vases
and a green four spout vase
reminiscent of Dismal Swapp and/
or the primordial seas. There are
a number of other fine pieces
on display, some of which are for
sale at reasonable prices.
The paintings on exhibit are,
for the most part, disappointing.

I am not advocating a return to

more traditional art forms, yet
if most of these people were
asked to paint or sketch from
life, they would appear to be at
a real disadvantage. The only
paintings worthy of mention are
those of Robert Cassio, Roberta
Grobel, Joseph Scorsone, and Vivian Lowry. Their canvases, like
the others, leave much to be desired, yet .their themes are fairly
well developed and they have
enough talent to Carry them a
long way. While the other canvases on display are not worthless,
I do not find color and geometric
precision alone aesthetically interesting.

NEW YORK FILM CRITICS
AWARD;

BEST
FOREIGN FILM OF
THE YEAR!

“Astonishing, Bawdy

Fun! Bold and Bizarre!”
—BOSLEY downs. N. T.Tiaa

“Beautiful and

stimulating! Exotic and

erotic!”

-JUDCn OUST. N. T. BtnU Trikaat

“This is not because the standards of the Peace Corps have
lowered, but rather that the quality of the applicants has risen,”
he commented.
The Peace Corps was reportedly “very pleased” with the response at UB.
Peace Corps Placement Tests
will be given Monday, April 25,
7 p.m., in 231 Norton Union.

FELLINI’S

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�Friday, March 11, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACE NINE

CLASSIFIED REVIEW:
-ADSFOR SALE

’57 VW, new ’59 rebuilt engine,
new clutch and muffler, new
brake lining. 894-2471.
asking $45.
Guitar, worth $90
Lignitone classic, phone 8377267. Ask for Jim.
—

typewriter, jet black
Remington. Owned by a little
old lady with arthritis. Only $40.
Call Buffalo Bob. 832-8450.

Portable

Admiral portable TV. Perfect for
you Batman fans. A mere $50.
’60 MGA Roadster, Buick engine
and transmission. Racing tires.
Must sell. Call TT 2-9508 after

2

pm.

FOR SALE; ’62 Valiant 2-door,

radio, heater, whitewalls, snow
tires, standard transmission, excellent condition. Must sell. Call
Ext. 2138 during day.
WANTED:

Anyone interested in performing
in a Hootenanny on April 22.
Call TF 3-2174. You will be compensated.

Countermen and grillmen full or
part time by Mr. S. Restaurant.
No experience necessary. Apply
3031 Main Street.

Three girls wish to rent apartment, walking distance, summer and next year. 831-3161 or
831-3458.

WANTED: Talented young ladies
from southern Brie County,
Evans, Collins, Hamburg, Springville, Eden, Holland, Gowanda,
West Seneca, Alma, Lackawanna
and East Aurora, to compete in
a preliminary Miss New York
State contest on May 7, 1966.
Please contact Mr. Michael Howie
549-0459 or Mr. Robert Miller 5491500 immediately.
PERSONAL
THANKS—Dr. Ertavi would like
to thank Theta Chi Fraternity
for pushing his car out of the
mud last Saturday.

If You Want
A BOOK

'Orestes' Forceful and Engrossing

wo'va probably
pot It.

—

By BETH KRAUNER
Congratulations are in order
for William Coleman’s production
of OrastM. The full dimensions
of Euripides’ play have unfortunately not been reproduced. What
has been done, however, is a
forceful and engrossing creation
of at least two major elements
of the play—fear and anguish.
With a little more clarity the
production would be excellent.
Unfortunately, much of Euripides'
prose is lost through unclear
speech.
The body contortions and facial expressions of Electra (Pamela Dadey) were undeniably impressive. Her makeup is good and
enhances the expressions of torment. But her diction is poor,
and words are lost amid groans
of dispair and screams of terror.

A similar situation arises with

Gary Battaglia’s performance

as

Orestes. However, he lacks Miss
Dadey's ability to generate emotional impact; his abundant gestures show a lack of human feeling in this role.
Jeannette Veiling is neither
guilty of excess nor restraint. Discipline is evident and her performance is unhampered by poor
speech. Undoubtedly, Miss Veiling is good, but Coryphaues is not
her best part.
Esther Kling’s costumes leave
me in a quandary. Though the
chorus costumes are representative of Greek dress, I am uncertain as to the apropriateness of
Helen of Troy’s outlandish headdress.
In Mr. Coleman’s production
there is an unsuccessful attempt
at realistic dialogue delivery. In
the scene between Orestes and
Pylades, deliberate interruptions
and omission of last words of

Modern Dance Workshop Presented
For Junior Woman's Club of Aurora
The UB Modern Dance Workshop presented a lecture-demonstration yesterday for the Aurora
Junior Woman’s Club at the Roycroft Inn. Technique, qualities of
movement and a finished dance
were included in the demonstration.
The group consists of nine girls:
Laura Barwick, Carole Bielecki,
Marsha Brenner, Phyllis Lefkowitz, Pat Long, Joyce Smith,
Fredda Shatanof, Gary Waltzer
and Judi Wurmbrand.
They are under the direction of
Mrs. Bemice Rosen, Instructor
of Modern Dance. Mrs. Roser,
holds a Master’s Degree in Dance
Education from N.Y.U. She studied dance with Martha Graham,
Hanya Holm, Helen Tamiris and
other leading dancers. Mrs. Ros
en has performed in schools and

ATTENTION!

Does your organization need money?
Wo havo a simple proven plan, little
work involved. This is a bona-fide
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clarity.

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UNIVERSITY PLAZA

(next to Amherst Theatre)
DIAMONDS
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device.

The music of the flute and the
percussion instruments in addition to the mimes of the chorus,
all contribute to heighten the
mood of tragedy.

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�Friday, March II, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACK TIN

Basketball Summary
UB opened with a winning performance, by defeating a physically strong Brockport State, 79-63,
in Clark Gym- Then the hoopsters
from the Queen City ventured to
Syracuse, which turned out to be
a mistake. After a real good first
half against the Orangemen, UB
took it on the chin, absorbing its
worst defeat during Dr. Serfustini’s tenure, 110-60. A sensational performance by Syracuse University’s All-American guard,
Dave Bing, left UB fans in awe.
Bing ended the game with 43
points, a Manley Fieldhouse rec-

offensive spurt and whipped Albany State, 80-66.
UB returned to Buffalo and
played host to the Nittany Lions
of Penn State (NIT Bound), an
Eastern powerhouse. Before a

The UB hoopsters traveled to
Canada for another weekend road
trip. On Friday they defeated
Windsor University. 87-80, overcoming a tough zone press defense to notch the victory. Saturday they ventured back across
the border and defeated Wayne
State of Detroit, 80-76, in another
touch and go contest.

ord.

With a 1-1 record, the Bulls
made their first weekend road
trip a victorious one, chalking
up a pair of victories. On Friday,
they defeated Ithaca College, 7166, with a great first half, and
Saturday, the UB basketballers
tame up with another first half

DR. LEONARD SERFUSTINI

Fencers in action against Hobart and Notro Dame.
Photo

by Alan

Gruber

Fencing Team
Is NCAA Bound
After closing their regular season this past weekend, six members of the fencing Bulls are

journeying to Drew College at
Madison, New Jersey today to

compete in the 16th annual North
Atlantic Intercollegiate Fencing
Tournament. The North Atlantics
serves as an excellent preparation for the NCAA Championships
at Duke University where the
Bulls will compete later in the
month.
Representing the Bulls in the

North Atlantics will be the two top
men in each weapon. Fencing foil
will be Captain Joe Paul, who finished the year with an outstanding 42-8 record, and Jim Mondello, 31-19, Fencing saber will be
junior Bob Frey, 31-11, and senior
Dave Kirchgessner, 30-14. In epee
will be John Houston, 35-9, and
Carl Engel, 17-12. The Bulls stand
an excellent chance of copping a
few medals after last year’s fine
showing where John Houston
placed second in epee and Bob
Frey took third place in saber.
Coach Sid Schwartz, whose dedication and tireless effort are
largely responsible for the perpetuation of this tournament, will
accompany the Bulls to New Jersey.

On Saturday, the Bulls finished
their regular season by splitting
a triangular meet, defeating Hobart 16-11, and bowing to Notre
Dame by the same tally. The foil
team, led by the two victories of
the consistent Joe Paul and Jim
Mondello, beat the Hobart foilmen, 5-1 Soph Tony Walluk's
three wins led the epee team to a
6-3 winning margin, while the
two victories of John Rand and

Bob Frey gave the saber team a
5-4 edge.
A sharp reversal of form occurred against the Irish, however,
as epee was the only weapon in
which the Bulls held an edge. Led
by the twin triumphs of J o h n
Houston and Herb Boedecker,
they beat the Irish in epee, 5-4.
The saber team bowed 5-4 as Bob
Frey won a pair of bouts, and the
foil team was solidly beaten 7-2
as NCAA bound Joe Paul accounted for the two lone triumphs.
The Baby Bulls finished the
season with a 5-4 log, trouncing
the Hobart frosh 13-5. Top frosh
fencer Steve Morris had a perfect
day with six victories, with
George Wirth copping five of his
six bouts.
The Bulls concluded the season
with a 12-4 record and look forward to further success in the
North Atlantic and NCAA Championships.

UB Student Wins
In Weightlifting
Nicholas Mortellaro, a sophomore physical education major
at UB, captured first place in the
I98-lb. class of the Niagara District AAU weightlifting championships at Rochester Saturday.

In three Olympic lifts Mortellaro pressed 255 pounds, snatched
235 pounds and eleaned-andjerked 320 pounds for a total of
810 pounds.
Mortellaro thus qualifies for the
NCAA national championships Jo
be held at a later date,

of these final ten games only one
of these was played at Clark
Gym. 11118 proved disastrous for
the Bulls, since five of the eight
losses incurred throughout the
entire season were during this
final stretch.
At the Auditorium, UB hosted
a fine Northern Illinois team and
outplayed them for the first half,
but a hot hand by the Huskies in
the final half, spelled a 90-77 defeat for the Bulls cagers.

terrible student gathering, the
Bulls made Penn State look like
an ordinary ball club. A tremendous effort on defense kept the
Lions from doing much of anything on offense. Also the hoopsters from UB were really overcoming State’s zone defense by
their outside shooting. However,
UB ran out of steam and Bulls
went down to defeat by a score
of 68-60. As we all know, the
home advantage in basketball
exists. Yet, for UB, which must
play several of its games in the
Auditorium, this is not so, since
the school body just will not follow them while they are at the
Auditorium. Certainly the element of emotion could have
turned the tables in the Penn
State game. This reporter is not
alibiing UB losses, just trying to
initiate a positive student attitude
towards UB intercollegiate athletics. “Another three or four thousand UB fans at the State game
may be the stimulus necessary in
this situation,” was that Dr. Serfustini said after the Penn State
loss.
The Bulls notched two more
victories before their Christmas
and finals break, defeating Bucknell, 72-61, and San Francisco
State, 80-62. UB held a 5-2 record as the recess began.
After a two week layoff, UB
hosted Colgate at Clark Gym. The
game was not decided until the
final five seconds when the Red
Raiders scored on a corner shot
and nipped the Bulls, 76-74. The
next night, Akron University, unbeaten (9-0) and third-rank nationally among small colleges,
came to Buffalo for an Auditorium doubleheader. The Bulls
turned in their best performance
of the season as they defeated
Akron, 73-70, in another game
that wasn’t decided until the
final five seconds. Harvey Poe
turned in a stellar performance
with a career high of 29. A phenomenal series of 12 straight
field goals highlighted Poe’s exhibition.
Fresh from the Akron win, the
UB cagers continued their dominance over Canadian basketball
teams. On the road, Western Ontario fell prey, 88-50. At Clark
Gym, Toronto, one of UB’s weaker opponents ifor the year, took a
106-50 trouncing before the hometown crowd. For the second
straight game, UB went over 100

After the road trip, the Bulls
lost their steam. This, coupled
with a physically demanding
schedule of five games within an
eight day period, really took its
toll. Then UB lost a pair of local
contests; one to Niagara, 72-53,
with Niagara’s Manny Leaks turning in a great game and the other'
to Buffalo State, 73-68.
On their final road trip of the
season, UB hoopsters established
a modem defensive record against
McMaster, routing them, 75-31.
UB played its Clark Gym finale
before a jam-packed crowd. The

Larry Brassel

Jim Williams
•Dick Smith
Rick Mann
John Cavanaugh
Dan Curran
Reid Crete
TOTALS
—graduating senior
...

Two more tournaments have
a close. The basketball
championship of the school was
captured by the Grad Business
team last Friday afternoon when
they defeated AEPI by a 49-40
score. The following scores will
give a more complete picture of
the playoffs, which began on
March 2.

come to

QUARTER-FINALS

2nd Floor
Avengers
Grad. Bus

Raccoons
A EPS
SAM

son. It is interesting to note that

Overall, this season can be
looked upon as quite successful,
in light of the number of ineligible ballplayers injuries (Bevilaqua’s broken arm), illness (Bill
Barth) and the small number of
home games. According to Dr.
Serfustini he felt jhat the biggest
disappointment this season was
our performance at the Auditorium. The exception he said, “was
our great game against Akron.”
The Auditorium has usually
brought out the best in UB cagers, but this year the Bulls lost
four out of five games in the
downtown arena.
G

FG

22
20
22
12
12
22
22
21
20
6
12
16
10
4
7

128
105
109
45
40
57
48
41
30
7
9
10
8
1
1

I

0

22

639

423

1701

ready at this writing. Walsh of
ABPi and Brassington of Sig Bp
gained entry into the finals by
defeating Harris and Nathanson,
respectively, of SAM.

The wrestling tournament will
be held tomorrow afternoon at
12:30 p.m. in Clark Gym. Weighins will be conducted from 9-11
a.m.

The next event coming up on
the intramural calendar is volleyball. The leagues, which will be
held pn Wednesday and Thursday evenings, will be limited to
eight teams, and will be filled on
a first come, first serve basis.
The entry deadline is Friday,
March 18. The league play will
begin the week of March 28, at
7:30 pjn.

SEMI-FINALS

38
18

Grad. Bus
2d Floor
AEPi
..

bye

FINALS
Grad. Bus

ensea-

....

By STEVE FARBMAN

AEPi

a 9-3 record, UB

torium and then bowed to U of R,
82-77. Both games were played
without Barth, who was hospitalized for a check-up and never
was the Fredonia native missed
more. His choice as MVP seemed
vindicated by UB’s two performances without him.

INTRAMURALS

offensive effort.
Sporting

In UB’s final games of the season, the Bulls dropped a 63-55 decision to Kent State at the Audi-

•

points, defeating Plattsburgh
State, 117-94, with a tremendous

teredthe. homestretch, of the

Bulls broke open a close game
in the second half and won their
second victory of the year over
Albany State, 88-63. In this game,
Bill Barth played the final game
in his basketball career. As he
left the game, the students gave
Barth a standing ovation as he
turned in his best game as a UB
athlete. Bill broke UB’s rebounding record with 26 and scored 28
in his phenomenal performance.

FINAL STATISTICS
Individuals
‘Harvey Poe
•Bill Barth
•Norward Goodwin
•Paul Goldstein
Bob Thomas
Artie Walker
Doug Bernard
Jon Culbert
•Jim Bevilacqua

.

MIKE DOLAN
UB closed out its 65-66 Varsity
Basketball campaign last Tuesday
on a losing note, going down to
defeat at the hands of the University of Rochester, 82-77. This game
could be considered an example
of the type of ball that the Bulls
played all year. They hustled on
defense and fought with a determined effort that gave the Buffalo cagers their initial win
against Brockport, but fell short
in gaining the victory. Although
the Bulls lost by five, it might
well have been the reverse. As a
matter of fact, UB could very
well have ended 21-1, since the
Orangemen of Syracuse were the
only squad that really gave the
Bulls a beating. A combination of
the other losses, a few breaks in
our favor, taking advantage of
given opportunities, and a strong
healthy team could have made
the difference.

The paddle racquets tournament oame to an end yesterday,
but the final results were not

Poe Picked
Harvey Poe, UB’s standout
guard from West Orange, New
Jersey, has been selected to the
Buffalo State All-Opponent Team.
Also picked on the theoretical
team were: Manny Leaks of Niagara, Dave Bing of Syracuse, Joe
Nigro of Youngstown, and Tony
Ames of Delaware State.

�Friday, March II, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE ELEVEN

UB Karate Club
By ROBERT LEBOW

The University Karate Club has
been in existence since September but is known to relatively
few students. The club consists of
about two dozen active members,
male and female, who receive
weekly lessons in Isshin-Ryu Karate from Mr. A. S. Reynolds, Jr.,
a holder of the fifth degree black
belt in karate and the first degree black belt in judo. Mr. Reynolds has been a senior judge at
the Canadian Karate Championships, the All-American Karate
Championships, and will be a
judge at the National Karate
Championships to 'be held in
Washington, D. C., this April. Paul
Hollenbeck, a green belt who assists in the instruction, was a
competitor at the All-American
Karate Championships. Bill Kawa,
a UB student and a member of
the karate club since September,
won first place in a kata competition (i.e. a judgment of form) in
a Chinese Lunar New Year’s celebration here in Buffalo. Bill had
had no experience in karate prior
to the training he had received
here at UB.

In Isshin-Ryu karate the beginning karata-ka or student is assigned the grade of tenth kyu
(pronounced as the letter) which
entitles him to wear a white obi
or belt on his karate uniform or
karata-gi. The student is pro-

moted in steps until he readies
first kyu. The lowest grades of
kyu, viz. tenth through seventh
kyu wears a white belt, sixth
through fourth kyu wears a green
belt and third through first, a
brown belt. After obtaining the
rank of first kyu the student may
attempt to earn the first degree
black belt or first dan; thereafter
he progresses through the higher
dans, the highest of which is
tenth dan. Competition is not engaged in unless one is of green
belt rank (i. e. sixth kyu) or higher; several UB karate-kas are expected to attain green belt rank
by the end of this semester.
Karate originated in Okinawa
in the Fourteenth Century as a
means of self-defense and was
used against the Japanese of the
Nineteenth Century who practiced
jiu-jitsu. The Japanese later
adopted karate and introduced it

WBFO News will rebroadcast the speech of
Ambassador Alexis Johnson on Sunday evening at
6 p.m. Ambassador Johnson discussed “Vietnam
—From Foreign Legionnaire to American G.I.”
at the Amherst Central
Senior High School Tuesday evening. WBFO is
located at 88.7 me. on
the FM band.

into their colleges. Intercollegiate
karate competition is just beginning in this country; The University Karate Club will compete on
an intercollegiate level this fall
starting with Canisius College
which has recently formed its
own karate club.
The most spectacular part of
karate is, of course, the breaking
and puncturing of bricks, boards
and roofing tiles with the bare
hands and feet. Such exhibitions
are not an important part of karate but do serve the function of
enabling the karata-ka to demonstrate his potency as no actual

Swimming

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mitted in the contests.
The club’s charter is currently
being written under the direction
of its president, Peter Cohen, who
expects the club to be recognized
by the Student Senate when the
charter is filed next month.’ Those
people casually intrigued by this
exotic sport are welcome to come
and watch, and all students, both
graduate and undergraduate,
male or female, are not only welcomed but urged to join; meetings are held on Fridays at 7 p.m.
in Room 246 Norton.

...

second in that event. Howie Braun
set a new school and pool record
in the preliminary 100 yard backstroke heat (1:04.5) and then went
on to capture a third place in the
entire contest. Carl Millerschoen
took a fourth place in the 100
yard freestyle and a third in the
50 yard free. Charlie Zetterberg
fared well in the 100 yard backstroke as he captured a fourth
place berth. Among other varsity
placers were Troppman (sixth),
Grashow (eighth), Pleischmann
(fifth), Conroy (sixth), Perkis
(tenth), Danahy (eighth) and Mitzel (fifth) in their various specialties. In addition the UB 400 yard
relay team of Conroy, Fleischmann, Millerschoen, and Troppman took a third place as he set
a school record of 3:31.3 seconds.
Braun also set his own record for
UB in the 200 yard breaststroke
as he hit home in 2:25.4 seconds.
The freshman team also produced
its waves, as Mark Clarcq, Jim
Gauthier, Bob Miller, Roy Hulbret, and Jim Bennet all took
berths in the final standings.
Commenting on the year as a
whole, Coach Sanford remarked
that “I just wish I could have the
same team next year, but we are
losing eight mem|bers. It’s going
to be a rebuilding job but we’ve
certainly got some outstanding
freshmen who will help us out.
Mr. Bedell deserves a lot of credit
for taking over the way he did
while I was in the hospital.” Mr.
Sanford now looks forward to the
opening of the tennis season on
April 1st and for a record as fine
as the swimmers, 9-5.

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physical contact, other than certain blocking techniques, is per-

(Cont’d from Pg. 12)
petition the entire year, placed

Buffalo, Now York 1C1S

There will be a Freshman Baseball Meeting
this Friday, March 11,
at 4 p.m. at Clark Gym.

BULL PEN

(Cont’d from Pg

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12)

would tell us something definite, we could get started.
The delay is what kills us because we can only get a Buffalo State of a Gannon at this time of the year. Last year
MacKinnon asked us why we couldn’t schedule Penn
State or Cornell as part of a Saturday doubleheader, and
I told him they have all their weekend games booked a
year or more ahead of time. So we have to schdule them
on a week day and the attendance (Penn State, 2,200) is
hurt. If we had the date ahead of time, this could be
avoided. And we don’t want anyone to be hurt financially. If we were given a certain number of tickets
say
1,000
to sell, we would try to do so and then expect
to settle financial matters on a proportional basis.’’
One possible answer to the problem is a formation
of a Western New York League where UB, Canisius, Niagara, St. Bonaventure, Buffalo State and possibly ECTI
would agree to some sort of Aud arrangement. Peelle and
State Head Coach Howie MacAdam have both emphatically favored such a proposal. Each team in this group
wouldn’t necessarily play every other member, but an
ample number of games could be arranged, and most of
these proposed tilts don’t appear to be mismatches. These
contests would certainly generate more enthusiasm than
some of the games that annually dot the UB schedule
with such perennial powerhouses as Black Hills A&amp;l,
Okefenokee Institute and Southwestern Saskatchewan
State supplying the opposition. And since the number of
tickets sold is still of prime importance to all schools involved, this seems to be the best arrangement possible.
—

—

Since Canisius should have enough foresight to accept the fact that it can not play alone in the Aud and
prosper, the Griffins should realize that this is not only
a possible alternative, but the only answer which even
hints at breathing life back into the collegiate basketball
picture in Buffalo.

Aquamen

Down

close of season.

Niagara

near

Despite this promising solution, however, the vision
of that “A” still burns brightly. And should it become
a sordid reality, most of you can take the bows for this
ignominy.
•

-

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SMART STUDENTS WEAR

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—

—

f

6

95

�*

Friday, March II, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

SJPKSfllilSM
—t

=(

-jA=*=

s

Doc Urich Completes Staff

THE BULL PEN
by steve schuelein

That big, red letter “A” you’ll see emblazoned upon
the rows of empty seats in Memorial Auditorium next
year won’t be an abbreviation for Auditorium, an advertisement for Hester Prynne’s embroiderer or even a
rendezvous point for a lost legion of Arnie’s Army.
It will be standing for the apathetic or anti-athletic
attitude on the part of UB students that have seemed intent upon destroying collegiate basketball in the Aud—and may have succeeded. The “A” will serve as a fitting
epitaph on a tombstone-like section of the basketball
graveyard of Western New York
How has the situation reached such grave proportions? In recent years collegiate basketball at the Aud
has been flourishing under the Canisius-St. Bonaventure
doubleheader program. The Bonnies, however, will have
completed a multi-million dollar fieldhouse by next season, and have said their adieus to regular appearances
at the Aud this year. The Clean team will play in the
Aud only four times next year.
To fill this void, Canisius would undoubtedly have
been all too willing to allow UB to open the Saturday
night twinbill program next year, providing this venture
would prove profitable. The UB student, however, anemic
in spirit and indifferent in attitude, has made certain such
ambitious strides forward can not be taken.
UB met five opponents in the Aud this year
N.
Illinois and Kent State on Saturday nights as part of the
Canisius doubleheader program, Akron during vacation,
and Penn State and Buffalo State on weekday nights
and attendance at all these games was disappointing to
say the least. Figures for these games show a total attendance of less than 20,000, of which UB students comprised less than 7,000. In contrast the two St. Bonaventure-Canisius clashes at the Aud attracted more than
—

—

23,000.

Since most of the better “name” teams require monetary guarantees, the results of this year’s experiment
indicated that retaining UB at the Aud would end in
financial holocaust.
According to Bob MacKinnon, head coach of the
Aud’s leading tenant, Canisius, “I know that St. Bonaventure leaving will hurt tremendously. But there’s no
sense in playing two game to a poor crowd, especially
since the other team’s opponent must be given a financial
guarantee.”

MacKinnon’s logic seems plausible enough, but it
does little to solve the bleak basketball future at the Aud.
Now that the Griffins have erected statues of the late
Jim Norris and Stafford Smythe for their roles in keeping
hockey out of Buffalo and consequently retaining Saturday night basketball in the would-be site of the NHL
franchise, the Canisians are in somewhat of a predicament. Minus the Bonnies, Canisius alone does not offer
the same kind of drawing appeal that these doubleheaders had. Yet the Griffins can not reconcile differences
with Niagara, and a condescending attitude toward the
thoughts of allowing such teams as UB or Buffalo State
to share their Saturday evening facilities doesn’t offer an
answer either.
Yet, to go one step further, no such situation would
exist if the Bulls had proved themselves “worthy” of
sharing Canisius’ hallowed hall on Saturday evenings.
By worthy, of course, doesn’t mean the Bulls would
have had to prove themselves a first-rate basketball
power, but rather to have been able to produce a sizable
turnout with some degree of regularity. UB, or more
specifically its student body, has failed its test so regularly the past three seasons, however, that skepticism
about any improvement must reign supreme.
The majority of the student body, comprised of the
group stricken by an acute case of apathy and the fanatic
fringe waving the “down-with-athletics” banner, is not
only limiting the success of UB basketball, but is also on
the verge of destroying the collegiate sport for the entire
area.
Although an entire column could be dedicated to
how the apathetic element is cheating itself out of a
vital part of college and how the anti-athletic fringe is
viewing the matter irrationally through its jaundiced
eyes, this is an issue that can be explored at a later date.
Although lack of student support lies at the core of
the problem, other factors have also hurt the basketball
situation. For instance, let’s take next year’s Bull hardwood schedule. UB has been able to plan practically nothing, simply because Canisius hasn’t informed UB what
dates, if any, will be available to the Bulls in the Aud.
The problem arising from this seems obvious. In
Athletic Director Jim Peelle’s words, "If MacKinnon
(Cont'd on Pg. XI)

*

Bob Geiger, head football
coach at Earlham College in Richmon, Indiana, will join the UB
staff as offensive line coach. The
announcement of Geiger’s appointment, made this week by
UB’s new mentor, Richard “Doc”
Urich, completes Urich’s staff.
Geiger, 30, is a graduate of
Michigan University.
Western
While there, he won three letters
in varsity football and was captain of the team in his senior
season. He received his B.S. in
1958.
He was assistant frehman football coach and assistant varsity
coach at Ohio Univerity in 1958
and 1959. In 1960 and 1961 he
was assistant coach at Mansfield,
Ohio, High School. He moved to
Ashland, Ohio, College in 1962
and served as line coach and offense coordinator during which
period the Ashland team won
three consecutive Mid-Ohio Conference championships.
In 1965 Geiger became head
football coach at Earlham and
directed his charges to victory
in seven out of nine games.
Besides his B.S. from Western
Michigan, the new UB coach holds
an M.S. from Ohio University.
He reported for work at Buffalo
earlier this week.
The other members of the UB
coaching staff, previously named
by Urich, are: Bill Dando, formerly of Southern Methodist, as defensive line coach; Bob Doming,
the lone holdover from the old
coaching staff, as defensive back-

field coach; Jerry Ippoliti, of
Coshocton, Ohio High School, as
offensive backfield coach; and
Mike Stock of South High School
in Akron, Ohio, as freshman
coach.
URICH ON WBFO
Richard “Doc” Urich, new head
football coach at UB will be the
special guest on tonight’s UB
Sports Talk with Wally Blatter.

Baseball Schedule...
Jim Peelle, Director of Athletics and head baseball coach at
UB, has released the hardballers’
schedule for the 1966 campaign.
There are 16 games on the
slate, opening with Erie Tech at
UB on April 14 and including
doubleheaders with Buffalo State,
St. Bonaventure and Niagara.
The Bulls will be defending
champions in the Western New
York Intercollegiate Conference.
They have won the title for seven
straight seasons, since the inception of the league. In 1963 and
1964 they played in NCAA tournaments. Last year’s team, hampered by poor spring weather,
was able to play only 12 games,
winning nine times.
The schedule:
April 14—Thursday

�Erie Tech

Home 3.00

April 15—Friday

�Brie Tech

The swimming Bulls, better
known as the aquamen, finished
a highly successful season last
week by trouncing Niagara University in a rematch by a score
of 67-25. Three days later the
swimmers journeyed to Syracuse
for the Upper New York State
Swimming Championships in
which seventeen other schools
participated.

The Niagara contest was
m|arked by the setting of three
school records and four tank records
all captured by the spirited Bulls. Roy Troppman continued his fantastic pace as he
touched home in the 200 yard
freestyle event in 1:54.3 seconds,
as Mike Conroy shattered the old
200 yard butterfly mark a bit
later 2:25.4). Still later Charley
Zetterberg, (200 yard backstroke),
and Howie Braun (200 yard
breaststroke) set records at 2:10.5
and 2:25.6 seconds respectively.
In addition to the record-breakers,
UB captured the 400 yard medley
relay, 60 yard freestyle (Conroy),
160 yard individual medley (Bill
Fleischmann), diving (Rebo), 100
yard freestyle (Mike Perkis), and
500 yard freestyle (Troppman). As
is most obvious from these results, the Purple Eagles certainly
haven’t been helped by all that
rushing water which dominates
their fair city.
—

At Syracuse last Saturday the
Bulls, as might be expected, did
not come out so clearly on top,

although as Coach Sanford pointThe UB wrestling team closed
its season on a sour note by ab-

April 18—Monday

Roch. Tech

Home 3:30

April 20—Wednesday
Buffalo State Home 2:00
April 23—Saturday
Colgate
Away 2:00
April 26—Tuesday
�Oanisius
r Hoime 3:00
April 27—Wednesday
Syracuse
Away 3:00
April 29—Friday
Geneseo State Home 4:00
April 30—Saturday
Rochester Tech Away 2:00
May 2—Monday
�Canisius
Away 3:00
May 4—Wednesday
*St. Bona
Home 2:00
May 7—Saturday
�Niagara
Away 1:00
May 10—Tuesday
Away 3:00
Rochester

(••)

(•*)

(**)

(••)—doubleheader

.Away 3:00

Swimmers Crush
Niagara 67-25
By SCOTT FORMAN

Coach Urich, formerly of Notre
Dam|e, will speak on such topics
as his recent changeover, his
newly appointed coaching staff,
this year’s spring practice and
next year’s offense. The program
will begin at 5:50 p.m. on WBFOFM (88.1mc) and WBPO-AM (760
to all dorms).
Be on top of UB sports by listening to "the voice of the Bulls,”
campus radio.

ed out, “We did a very fine job.”
In a meet dominated by Colgate,
Syracuse, and Brockport, our boys
did manage to make their presence widely felt. Rick Rebo, who
had not dived in three meter com(Cont’d on Pg. 11)

UB Freshman Baseball Schedule
coach: Bill Monkarsh)

(Head

April 23—Jamestown Community
College (doubleheader), 1:30.
April 26—at Univ. of Rochester
April 30
Monroe Community
College (doubleheader), 1:30
—

May 7

Brockport State, 2:00

—

May 10—Univ. of Rochester, 2:00
Bryant &amp; Stratton
May 11
(douibleheader), 1:30
—

Oswego Blasts

Mat men, 35-0

a 35-0 thrashing at the
hands of powerful Oswego State
at the losers’ gym Saturday. The
Bulls closed their regular season
with a 5-5-1 mark, compared with
9-1 last season.
sorbing

lia; 145 Kramer (0) d. Misener;
Parshley (0) won by for152
Toner (O) d. Heidt;
feit; 160
167
Gustainis (O) won by forRyan (O) p. Keller;
feit; 17
Garey (O) d. MacKellar.
Hwt;
—

—

—

—

—

—

Jim Howard’s Laker contingent
copped five decisions, one pin and
three forfeits to account for the
35-0 verdict.

the most hotly-contested
match of the afternoon, Oswego
lightweight Bob McCann outpointed UB’s Gary Fowler to hand the
Bull star his first loss of the year.
Fowler’s record is 9-1-1.
In

The Bulls are currently competing in the 4-1 Championships at
Case Tech, Cleveland, Ohio. Bill
Miner, who was idled by a bout
with the flu last week, will defend his 130-lb. crown.
The results:
Otwego 35
123

—

UB 0

McCann (0) d. Fowler;
Mullady (0) won by for-

—

130
feit; 137
—

—

Frisicano (0) d. Gul-

SPECTRUM TOP 20
1) Kentucky
2) Duke
3) Texas Western
4) St. Joseph's
5) Loyola
6) Davidson
7) Dayton
8) Michigan
9) Cincinnati
10) Syracuse
11) Vanderbilt
12) Penn State
13) Colgate
14) Northern Illinois
15) Kent State
16) Niagara
17) Rochester
18) Buffalo State
19) UB
20) McMaster

�SPECIAL ELECTIONS SECTION

ELECTIONS TIMS. WED.
&amp;

m

"&lt;;

"�

University College

SPECIAL EDITORIAL:

FUN AND GAMES

That time of the year has once more rolled around |
when students who can find nothing better to do can run
for office in student government. This year the “demo-1
cratic process” has degenerated to the point where one I
of the two major parties (under the brilliant leadership |
of clever politicos ) has given up the ghost and left the |
field to Campus Alliance and a smattering of indepen-1
dents.
The Roll Over and Over Boys, Lewis and Feinrider, |
have mounted a trivial campaign based on puns, while |
Campus Alliance appears to have selected a slate of can- i
didates on the basis of who has the best chance of winning, |
rather than any kind of coherent concern for enhance-1
ment of student life. The IRC has decided to run, en |
masse, as a candidate for Emperor and the secessionist |
province of Allenhurst has asked the Faculty Committee |
on Student Affairs to withdraw recognition from the |
Student Senate, which raises an interesting question: “Is |
the Faculty Committee on Student Affairs ready for self-1
government?”
“Never trust a man who’s interested in politics,” ||
that is a safe maxim for any society. There are some few
candidates who are not interested in politics, and these |
people deserve to be put in office. Kim Darrow, Clint
Deveaux, and Ellen Cardone are all seeking office out |
of a desire to see improvements in the lot of the student |;
and in the quality of education available at this campus,;
and not out of any purile or egotistic interest in “poli-f
tics”. Politics become relevant only when they are a |
means to an end (something of which most of the can-1|
didates appear to be sublimely unaware) and finally ;|
it is in the best interests of every student to put people in|
office who recognize this, because these are the people ||
who keep their campaign promises, beacause it is those |
very promises that they are interested in, and not in
merely being elected.
It is almost a cliche in student activities, particularly |
among the professional staff, that student participation !
in co-curricular and academic activities is on the decline, p
There are only about 150 students all told who work ac-|
tively in student affairs. This is a great shame, not only :
because of their personal frustrations, but because the |
entire student body is ultimately the loser. Every year g
at this time the student body has another chance to
change this sad state of affairs with a minimum of effort, g:
and although the possibility is slim, perhaps they will.

i

;:

'

National Student Association

WF

ternational

Jff

Bn

Member;

Stu-

;_Tj

W

ate Bookstore
Discount

/■*

Parking Investigatory Committee;
NSA Regional Conference.

A true academic community is

one in which faculty and students

participate as equals in the free
interchange of ideas, both inside
the classroom and in co-curricular
functions. Such is not yet the

many

decisions of the faculty and administration which are of vital
concern to the students are effected without significant student
input, which is not only desirable,
but essential.

Student affairs should be run
by students. Certainly the knowledge and experience of the faculty and administration s a valuable resource, and should be used
as such, but these people should
not have the power to curtail our
fredom, as is the case each time
the Faculty Oommitee on Student
Affairs ignores the democratic
process by vetoing an amendment
passed by the Student Senate.
The present Senate has begun

Queens bor-

ough Community College

—

President of the

Student Government Association; Editor-inCh i e f of the
Student Newspaper; President
of the Lambda
Sigma Chapter
of Phi Theta Kappa.

have been able to use my initiative in creativity. Student Government has become an integral
part of my thinking. With the
vote of the majority of the students in or about to enter the
School of Business I shall gratefully continue to serve my peers
as I feel they should be served.
I will attempt to relate my knowledge and my ability to constructive solutions of the problems
which confront our university
now and in the future.

Baruch City College of New
York—Student Government Rep.:
Member 6i the Ticker Association
(student newspaper publications
board); National Student Associaation Co-ordinator.
Student government

Douglas G. Braun

The c a n d i
dates activities

•

is much

more than a mere part of the intricate legislative organ of the
student body. Its scope is of infinite size as it encompasses anything and everything that affects
its constituency. Clearly the student government serves as a liai-

son between student and administration as much as a union serves

pant affairs,
proradio

®

F

camfor
paigning
■i •,*■ JrjK John Lindsay,
"*
attending U. N.
V. v
JR,, (functions as a
represtudent
sentative, participating in high
9
*.

sfw

grams,

£

A

1

as such between its members and
the employer. Student government must have capable leadership to be efficient and this leadership must have the united support of the student body.

school government.

In the past I have had much
experience with the different
phases of student government. 1
find that things are in constant

Being an independent nominee,
I am not bound by party affiliation in my attempts to put forward a progressive and reward-

As an independent candidate
for the Business School’s seat in
the Student Senate, 1 feel that I
can represent the greatest interests of the school's students.

Robert Weiner

Publications

g Board Member;

■
A

I

Orientation

Committee
Member; Allen-

A good student government

is

aware student government,
of the
aware of the basic needs same
an

o

Vice President Student Association; Student ■ Faculty • Administration Forum; American Association of University Professors Ad
Hoc Committee to appeal the

tional Student
Association Tu

toring Project at
St. Augustine’s: Member International Student Affairs Committee.

um; Student Body Presidents’
Conference Advisory Board; Debate Society.

unteer

■

S

At the

for Na-

ces. Ideally, learning implies an
unrestricted ability to pursue individual academic goals. We at

UB aren’t afforded

k

this oppor-

tunity.

What can be done to improve
our situation?
The first step is official student input into every phase of
university policy. The student
viewpoint is absolutely essential,
particularly with respect to curriculum planning.Second, I advocate a marking
system on a pass-fail basis. This
calls for gradualism and student
reponsibility. The present system
corrupts the motivation and stifles intellectual curiosity.
Next, I advocate a system of independent study for anyone who
wishes to take advantage of it.
This would be conducted on a
departmental level.
1 am in favor of the liberalization of distribution and credit re-

Why does an academic community associate itself with the
State? The State is undoubtedly
helpful in administrating the paperwork created by a multiversity and it is from here we receive our finances. This, however,
does not justify the present authoritative role assumed by the
State, a body not motivated by

The academic community cannot look only inward toward improving itself. It can and must
play an important part in the
world community. The collective
intelligence of the community
must function at all times in
helping to create a better so-

quirements.

Also. I am
to even the

unalterably opposed
slightest breach of

academic freedom.
1 stand committed to this program and these ideals.

ciety.

Student activism is the base of
all progress in the university.
Student government is an excellent means toward achieving this

Spectrum Re-

The c a n d i
dates activities
include: High
School: Representative in Stud e n t Council;
member of Debate Society;
-

mem-

ber of Student

Welfare Committee
With only one political party

having a complete slate in the
upcoming election, I find myself
as the only opposition to the

for the University College Senate seats. Being in this position. I find it necessary to question the policy of
the Campus Alliance in order to
place a check upon the possi

National

■Jk

Stu-

dent Association
18th National
Student Congress Delegate;
NSA Committee,
chairman; Freshman Orientation
Committee Executive Board; NSA
Collegiate Council for the United
on Latin
Nations Conference
America Delegate
"

Carl Lavlna

Sue Loren

Treasurer

Secretary

High School—Cabinet Scat National Honor Society; Editor of
Literary Magazine; Senior Councilman; General Organization
Rep.; Secretary of Democratic
Youth Group.
College

—

Secretary Goodyear

Bast Scholarship Committee; Stu

7

I

university is
At present, this
of its metain the early stages
morphosis from university to a
■■multiversity.” Each student he-rb
would not only be affected
Iran
but also affect th

Student Senate Executive ComN. Y. State Chairman.
U. S. National Student Association; Member of the Studentmittee;

Faculty-Administration

Forum;

International Student Affairs
Sigma
Committee; Debate Team;
Alpha Mu Fraternity.

dent Senate Activities Committee;
Student Book Exchange; New Student Review; Ski Club.

&amp;

SCIENCE

will find the word “com
munity” mentioned many times in
our platform. Our chief concern
is our campus as a community
the academic freedom and op
portunity and the welfare of its
members, the need of the community to decide its own future
(in the face of increasing outside
pressures), and the responsibility
of educated people to enhance
the larger communities: the city,
nation, and world.
You

porter; Freshman Orientation
Group Leader;

Richard Evans

*

W'M

ARTS
Marion Michael

candidates

dent-Faculty-Administration For-

Feinberg Decision; University College Senator; Academic Affairs
Committee.

A university is, above all, an
institution for learning, not a
steppingstone to monetary suc-

ing together.

College:

jjf

President Student Association;
Faculty-Student Association Member; FSA Reorganization Committee, chairman; National Student
Association Congress; Foreign
Student Orientation; International
Student Affairs Committee; Stu-

'

goal.

Student government on this
and every other college campus is
a multi-purpose organization. On
the surface, student government
serves the student by co-ordinating student activities, providing
a voice in university affairs, and
making available to the student
body various benefits and servgovernices. However, student
It
ment has a deeper meaning. the
obtaining
is the method of
real goal of the student—the goal
of individual freedom: social free
dom as well as academic freedom.

-

Kim Dorrow
Vico President

idence Council;
n^er Residence
Council Election
Committee
Chairman; Vol-

The academic community, supposedly an assembly of scholars,
cannot deny its membership in
the larger community. Both faculty and students have a collective responsibility to society. The
university has as its primary goal
the education of its members; to
make this experience beneficial
to all, there must be a basic plan
of
of organization. The position
the student and the faculty
should be that of equality, as
both have many ideas to share.
Another member of the university community, the administrator, performs an invaluable function. However, the role he plays
must be subordinate to that of
the faculty and the student. His
job is to administer the decisions that the faculty and the
students have reached by work-

—

Clinton Dovooux
President

Committee;

tion Committee,
chairman; Baby Bull; International Student Affairs Committee;
Senate Welfare Committee; Senate Discount Committee; N.S.A.
Steering Committee; N.S.A. Regional Conference Representative; Union Board House Council.

i—i.

Representative
t° the Inter-Res-

the same concerns of
bers of the university,

School of Business
Alton Batsuk

Allenhurst

Cultural

-

Jfk

Joel Gershowitz

ber of the Allenhurst
Committee. Major; Philosophy.

mittee; Student Discount Service;
Allenhurst Welfare Committee;
IRC Elections Committee; Freshman Newspaper Staff; Publications Board; Academic Affairs
Committee; Course Evaluation;

mk

ity.

Tutoring
MemProject;

Welfare Com-

case at this university, for

Inter-

dent Orientation
Volunteer for

.iBkvB
I tine
Bk'H ■

Com-

*

ment. UB has a great deal to offer to the student. Let us work together to seek out our individual
interests,
thus improving our
campus as well as our commun-

Affairs Commit-

Their work must be continued.

«

National Student Associa-

dent Affairs
Committee; Foreign Student Or-

J _23f
V

on campus, I believe that the use
of referendums on critical issues
before the Senate will increase
the students’ feelings of involve-

Michael Warren

Dan Rotholz

Our party believes that ideals
and action must be united. In the
past year we have demonstrated
this in a number of successful
programs. In the future I will
be especially interested in aca
planning and student free

demic

several reasons. First. I feel that
as someone active in student
government I have a responsibility towards the maintenance
of a democratic student govern-

ment.

Because

campus

politics

is now a one-party system, I had
to run

an Independent to

as

make sure that those students
who vote have more than a yes
or no choice Second 1 feel that
1 am qualified for the Senate
because of my experience and
bucause of my perspective oi stu-

dent government

The Senate and student gova whole has several
directions in which it should
and must move. First, it should

ernment as

provide for the welfare

students. Second

it

«

should

at-

intellectual
academic community And
third, it should realiie that as

tempt to insure an

deas, th

students

we

cannot remain

as

micro-

running

Areas of concern include a
demic reform,- through melh&lt;
such as an extension of a cou

we must, as
ands on
sues of our times.
to accomplish the
u.ials and
it must

world. but
ducated

people

»

�Discount

Com-

Senate
m
Welfare Committee; Student Discount Service;
Allenhurst Welfare Committee;
IRC Elections Committee; Freshman Newspaper Staff; Publications Board; Academic Affairs
Committee; Course Evaluation;
Parking Investigatory Committee;
NSA Regional Conference, i

A true academic community is
one in which faculty and students
participate as equals in the free
interchange of ideas, both inside

the classroom and in co-curricular
functions. Such is not yet the
case at this university, for many
decisions of the faculty and administration which are of vital
concern to the students are effected without significant student
input, which is not only desirable,
but essential.

Student affairs should be run
by students. Certainly the knowledge and experience of the faculty and administration s a valuable resource, and should be used
as such, But these people should
not have the power to curtail our
fredom, as is the case each time
the Faculty Commitee on Student

Affairs ignores the democratic
process by vetoing an amendment
passed by the Student Senate.
The present Senate has begun
to implement these principles.
Their work must be continued.

School of Business
have been able to use my initia-

Queens

bor-

ough Community C o 11 e g e

—

President of the
Student Govern
Associa
tion; EditorinChief of the
Student News
paper; President
of the Lambda

ment

Sigma
of Phi Theta Kappa.

Chapter

tive in creativity. Student Government has become an integral
part of my thinking. With the
vote of the majority of the students in or about to enter the

School of Business I shall gratefully continue to serve my peers
as I feel they should be served.
I will attempt to relate my knowledge and my ability to constructive solutions of the problems
which confront our university
now and in the future.

Baruch City College of New
York—Student Government Rep.:
Member of the Ticker Association
(student newspaper publications
board); National Student Associa
ation Co-ordinator.
Student government is much
more than a mere part of the intricate legislative organ of the
student body. Its scope is of in
finite size as it encompasses anything and everything that affects

its constituency. Clearly the student government serves as a liaison between student and administration as much as a union serves
as such between its members and
the employer. Student government must have capable leadership to be efficient and this lead
ership must have the united support of the student body.

In the past I have had much
experience with the different
phases of stiidept government. 1
find that things are in constant
change and, although it might
be a minor role, serving on stu
dent government has made me
part of that change. Through the

various committees and organizations to which I have belonged I

School of
Engineering
R. Curtiss Montgomery
Curt’s activi
|ities are: President, Freshman
end Sophomore
j

(VS* S»
W

JL.

f

Classes
in
the Engineering

School; Engipeering Student

Council;

Sena-

{tor.

of Engineering;
President, I n ■

American
Institute of Aeronautics and AsterfnrtemKy Council;

tronautics.
I am running as an independent
candidate in order that I may
represent the interests of the
engineering students of my constituency, rather than obligate
myself to support the program
of the dominant Campus Alli-

ance

Party.

f7B&gt;

j *L

I

V
-t

candi-

If,

dates activities
include: participatnt affairs,
proradio

jA

fo r

i

grams,
paif nin g

ca

in

jTwh* Jojin Lindsay,

J

4r i

P u b 1i cations

|

attending U. N,
as a

.\iw:iw student
representative, participating in high
school government.
As an independent candidate
for the Business School’s seat in
the Student Senate, 1 feel that I
can represent the greatest interests of the school’s students.
Being an independent nominee,
I am not bound by party affiliation in my attempts to put forward a progressive and rewarding program for my constituency.
I will not function in an impersonal political machine, but as a
receptive delegate, able to truly
reflect the wishes of my fellow
students.

NATIONAL
STUDENT
CO-ORDINATOR

fast

for

trum Staff Writer; International
Student Affairs

Committee; Student

Hoc Committee Examining Athletic Standards, chairman; Member N.S.A. Committee. Major:
American Studies.

Representative
to the Inter-Residence Council:

The academic community, sup-

posedly an assembly of scholars,
cannot deny its membership in
the larger community. Both fachave a colleculty and
tive responsibility to society. The
university has as its primary goal
the education of its members; to
make this experiertce beneficial
to all, there must be a basic plan
of organization. The position of

students

the student and the faculty
should bp that of equality, as

both have many ideas to share.
Another member of the university community, the administrator, performs an invaluable function. However, the role he plays
must be subordinate to that of
the faculty and the student. His
job is to administer the decisions that the faculty and the
students have reached by working

together.

Why does an academic community associate itself with the
State? The State is undoubtedly
helpful in administrating the paperwork created by a multiversity and it is from here we receive our finances. This, however,
does not justify the present authoritative role assumed by the
State, a body not motivated by
the same concerns of the members of the university.

The academic community cannot look only inward toward improving itself. It can and must
play an important part in the
world commufiity. The collective
intelligence of the community
must function at all times in
helping to create a better so-

Inter Residence

Council Election
Committee
"’jMM.
Chairman; Voluntecr for National Student
■
Association Tu
toring Project at
St. Augustine’s; Member International Student Affairs Committee.

President Student Association;

Faculty-Student Association Member; FSA Reorganization Committee, chairman; National Student
Association Congress; Foreign
Student Orientation; International
Student Affairs Committee; Student-Faculty-Administration For-

Student government on this
and every other college campus is
a multi purpose organization. On
the surface, student government
serves the student by co-ordinating student activities, providing
a voice in university affairs, and
making available to the student
body various benefits and services. .However, student government has a deeper meaning. It
is the method of obtaining the
real goaf of the student—the goal
of individual freedom; social freedom as well as academic freedom.

corrupts"the motivation and stifles intellectual curiosity.
Next, I advocate a system of independent study for anyone who
wishes to take advantage of it.
This would be conducted on a
departmental level.
I am in favor of the liberalization of distribution and credit requirements.
Also, I am unalterably opposed
to even the slightest breach of

academic freedom.
I stand committed to this program and these ideals.

Bfta

A good student government is
an aware student government,
aware of the basic needs of the
body it represents. At the same
time this government shoul.d be
aware of its own
the outside community, the state,
the nation, and the world. We
must no longer be concerned only
with campus affairs. Through my
previous work in student activities I have gained an insight of
the basic structure of student
government. With the knowledge
I have retained and the quest for
further knowledge. I commit myself to reach these goals of freedom and responsibility.

Georganne Gilels

High School—
Student Council,
Editor of Girls’
Sports. ,
College —IRC
Rep. from Gooi;
yearEast; Chairman of IRC Publicity and Orien-

tation

tees;

staff

CommitSpectrum

Group

The c a n d i
dates activities

|L

I

dent
bate

Society;
College:
mem

ber
Welfare Committee
•

Council;

member of De-

of

Student

With only one political party
having a complete slate in the
upcoming election, ! find myself
as the only opposition to the
candidates running’ for the University College Senate seats. Being in this position, I find it necessary to question the policy of
the Campus Alliance in order to
place a check upotf the possibility of that party going unopposed. I believe it is every students’ obligation to examine each
candidate thoroughly and choose
the one who is willing to aid the
Student Body as a whole.

I would like to propose a 10%
discount on ALL items in the
bookstore . . NOT just books. In
examining our general University
Fee of $47.00 I find that it ranks

extremely high as compared with
other colleges in the U. S. An investigation into this fee must be
carried out. I feel that longer
curfew hours are, in order and
that studying hours in the library
may be extended. I would also
like to see longer curfew hours
on thd weekend. The possibility
of sophomore girls living on campus must also be investigated,
especially since many rooms in
Clement and Goodyear will be
tripled up next semester. An investigation must be organized to
examine the profits being
by F. S. A. on vending machines.
On cigarettes alone, F. S. A. is
netting a profit of $500.00 a week
through these

machines.

It is my sincere hope and
wish to bring the Senate closer
to the student body In order to
decrease the feeling of apathy

Committee.

X2

Leader;

National Stu
dent Association
18th National
Student Con-

gress Delegate;
NSA Committee,
I chairman; Fresh
■■ man Orientation
Committee Executive Board; NS A
Collegiate Council for the United
Nations Conference on Latin

I

America

Delegate.

At present, this university is
in the early stages of its metamorphosis from university to a
"multiversity.’’ Each student here
would not only be affected
but also affect this transition
now and on the new campus.
Areas of concern

incline

aca

demic reform, through methods
such as an extension of
evaluation program and an expanded student welfare committee for improved study and relaxation facilities. Furthermore,
as the university student is also
a member of a world in transition, there, is a definite need for
improved internatidhal programming on this campus.
Now is the time for planning
and for constructive participation
by the student. As a Senator. I
would like to further the repre
sentative role of the Student Senate by polling ideas and working
to have these demands realized
in future plans for an improved
university with improved education.

gamzation

I

-i

/

:

.mmagk

mittec; Student
’Faculty - Admin
istration Forum:
Delegate to 1965
Student A-VICKI
Congrc—.
tion

Foreign Student
Orientation; Summer Spectrum,
Delta;
Former CoAlpha Lambda
chairman of Convocations.

Carl Lavlna

Secretary

Treasurer

High School —Cabinet Seat National Honor Society; Editor of

Student Senate Executive Committee; N. Y. State Chairman,
U. S. National Student Association; Member of the StudentFaculty-Admindstration Forum;

Literary Magazine; Senior Coun-

General Organization

cilman;

Secretary of Democratic
Youth Group.
Secretary Goodyear
College

Rep.;

—

East Scholarship Committee; Student Senate Activities Committee;
Student Book Exchange; New Student Review; Ski Club.

&amp;

the academic

International Student Affairs
Committee; Debate Team; Sigma
Alpha Mu Fraternity.

SCI HCE

You will find the word “community” mentioned many times in
our platform. Our chief concern
is our campus as a community freedom and

op-

portunity and the welfare of its
members, the need of the community to decide its own future
(in the face of increasing outside
pressures), and the responsibility
of educated people to enhance
the larger communities: the city,
nation, and world.

Our party believes that ideals
and action must be united. In the
past year we have demonstrated
this in a number of successful
programs. In the future I will
be especially interested in academic planning and student freedoms.

In expressing its own ideas, the
Senate has often failed to realize
its potential for informing the
students
and activating their
interest in the issues confronting
us. Well-planned discussions of
such issues will be conducted
through our proposed series of
Senate Forums.
Our candidates for the Senate
have a great variety of interests
and experiences. We share the
basic commitments expressed in
our platform because they are
things we believe in as individuals. We hope that you will express your approval of our individual commitment to group
action.

several reasons. First, I feel that
as someone active in student
government I have a responsitowards the maintenance
of a democratic student government Because campus politics
is now a one-party system, I had
to run as an Independent to
make sure that those students
who vote have more than a yes
or no choice. Second. I feel that
I am qualified for the Senate
because of my experience and
because of my perspective of student government.

bility

The

Senate and

student govseveral
should

ernment as a whole has
directions in which it
and must move. First, it
provide for the welfare

should

of the

students. Second it should attempt to insure an intellectual
academic
community. And
third, it should realize that as
students we cannot remain as
hermits within our own microcosmic world, but we must, as
educated people, take stands on
the vital issues of our times.
only way to accomplish the
above three goals and it must
accomplish them. As an Inde*
“no entangling alliances,” and
I pledge myself to strive for the
realization of the three goals of:
1) student welfare 2) an intel-

lectual academic community; and
student voice, an educated
voice on the issues of the day.

3) a

Su« LwxUrson
Chief Justice
of Traffic Court;

Member

Martin Feinrider

Secretary, Stu-

■S'

it

Sue Loren

EMan Cardone
tion FSA Rcor-

m

*

'

ARTS

Richard Evans

Bjt

-

Student Body Presidents’
Conference Advisory Board; Debate Society.

reponsibihty. The present system

Spectrum Re-

include: High
School: Repre
sentative in Stu-

-

um;

A university is, above all, an
for learning, not a
steppingstone to monetary sueces. Ideally, learning implies an
unrestricted ability to pursue individual academic goals. We at
UB aren’t afforded this opportunity.
What can be done to improve
our situation?
The first step is official student input into every phase of
university policy. The student
viewpoint is absolutely essential,
particularly with respect to curriculhm planning.
Second, I advocate a marking
system on a pass-fail basis. This
calls for gradualism and student

porter; Fresh
man Orientation

I;

Vice President Student Associ-

ation; Student Faculty Adminis
tration Forum; American Association of University Professors Ad
Hoc Committee to appeal the
Feinberg Decision; University College Senator; Academic Affairs

institution

Marion Michael

ate Discount Committee; N.S.A.
Steering Committee; N.S.A. Regional Conference Representative; Union Board House Council.

Vice President

President

■

Wry

~

Kim Oerrew

Clinton Dovoaux

goal.

■

ing

Allenhurst

•

Student activism is the base of
progress in the university.
Student government is an excellent means toward achieving this

Student Faculty
Adminis-

Freedom; Spec-

Joel Gershowitz

ail

Jeffrey Lynford

tration Forum:
Co-chairman of
the Thanksgiv-

ber of the
Committee. Major: Philosophy.

ciety.

tion Committee,
chairman; Baby Bull; International Student Affairs Committee;
Senate Welfare Committee; Sen-

Douglas G. Braun

The

Robert Weiner

Mem-

ity.

,

Allan Bassuk

I
Project;
Allenhurst Cultural

mittee;

'

dent Orientation
Volunteer for

Jjj W

ate Bookstore

interests, thus improving our
campus as well as our commun-

j

flpT

Martin’s
activities include:
Chairman, Bookstore CommitChairman
tee;
Discount Service
of the National
Student
Asso
ciation,

cations
tee; Tower
House Council; President, Ripon
Society; Debate Society; Chair
man, Displays Committee. Discriminating about Discrimination.
I have decided to run for the
Student Senate from Arts and
Sciences as an Independent for

dar

and Student
Welfare Com-

':
’•

&lt;&amp;\W*
jti*'

mittee; InterResidence Council Representa/

tive: Clement
Council

House

Representative;

Member Schoelkopf Housing Committee; Sister of Sigma Delta Tau
Sorority; Member of the Political
Science Club. Major: Political
Science
Alienation of the student from
his peers, his community, and
his government, is a truth that
describes our campus. It is a
(Continued on Ravorao Sido)

.

Committee; Foreign Student Orientation; Sen-

'

The Roll Over and Over Boys, Lewis and Feinrider,
have mounted a trivial campaign based on puns, while
;| Campus Alliance appears to have selected a slate of canI didates on the basis of who has the best chance of winning,
| rather than any kind of coherent concern for enhanceIment of student life. The IRC has decided to run, en
I masse, as a candidate for Emperor and the secessionist
i province of Allenhurst has asked the Faculty Committee
| on Student Affairs to withdraw recognition from the
p Student Senate, which raises an interesting Question: “Is
| the Faculty Committee on Student Affairs ready for self| government?”
“Never trust a man who’s interested in politics,”
1 that is a safe maxim for any society. There are some few
|| candidates who are not interested in politics, and these
I people deserve to be put in office. Kim Darrow, Clint
|| Deveaux, and Ellen Cardone are all seeking office out
in the lot of the student
f of a desire to see improvements
|i and in the quality of education available at this campus,
|| and not out of any purile or egotistic interest in “polithey are a
II tics”. Politics become relevantof only when
which most of the cani means to an end (something
unaware) and finally
11 didates appear to be sublimely
it is in the best interests of eveity student to put people in
§ office who recognize this, because these are the people
|| who keep their campaign promises, beacause it is those
||very promises that they are interested in, and not in
1 merely being elected.
It is almost a cliche in student activities, particularly
| among the professional staff, that student participation
|| in co-curricular and academic activities is on the decline.
There are only about 150 students all told who work ac|; tively in student affairs. This is a great shame, not only
|| because of their personal frustrations, but because the
1 entire student body is ultimately the loaac- Every year
| at this time the student body has another chance to
change this sad state of affairs with a minimum of effort,
| and although the possibility is slim, perhaps they will.

�I

Arts 6l Science School of
(Continued from Front Pago)
truth that has become more evident in this election. But it does
not have to be a truth. I believe
that “RESPONSrBIUTY” is the
remedy to our situation. If each
individual is aware of and concerned with the “whole responsibility,” i.e., his responsibility to
himself, and his fellow man,
there would be little room left
for alienation. We have the ability, we have the means, and we
have the capacity to foster “connection" between the student, the
community, and the government.
We need only the will.

Student Government encomits own responsibilities.
But it alone cannot do the job
that needs to be done. It cannot
be a truly functioning body without the support of the student
body. Hie vast expansion in the
number of students at this university seems to be a detrimental
factor to participation rather
than a revitalizing one. This need
not be. This should not be. Yes—we need only the will.
passes

Jeffrey Lewis

Jeff’s activities are: Chairman. Student
Activities Committee; V i c e President, Ripon Society; former P r e s i

f
V"«'

'

-

—*

.

A

SaralM Rubenstein

■

dent, Republi
can Club of
SUN YAH; Co
Chairman, Tow-

T

er

Goodyear Cul-

ture Committee;

Spectrum Copy
Staff; Sophomore Sponsor
Big Sister; Foreign Student Orientation Group
Leader; Spring
Arts Dance Com-

House Culture Committee;
Film Committee former Social
Chairman. Hillel.
One of the basic motivating
factors in my decision to run for
the Senate from the College of
Arts and Sciences was the fact
that one campus political party
is running a virtually unopposed
slate of candidiates. I feel that
a choice of sort must be given
to the students on this campus.
They should not be forced merely to approve a list of people
handed to them by the party. In
addition, I feel that my experience as chairman of the Student
Activities Committee and my varied experience with other groups
has given me a great deal of insight into the workings and probMl of Hie Student Senate as
well as into the problems of extra-curricular activities on this
campus.

1 feel that one of the prime responsibilities of the Senate is
handling the "bread and butter" issues which affect the gen-

eral welfare of the students. Another realm of activity in which
the Senate must take part concerns the more abstract but nonetheless important problems on
this campus, such as academic
freedom. Finally. I feel that the
Student Senate must take stands
on issues which occur outside the
campus which have relevance at
UB and at other schools in real
ixation of the fact that there is
more to the world during our
years at UB than 178 acres of
land on the northeast corner of
the city of Buffalo

M Lundquist
Union

Hoard
Com

Publicity

■
’•

3rl
Jk
I

’

■

■L

•

I milt,, I

jp

R

milter

Wet

,

Board

i
n

i

(i

n

Mu-u

111 1,11 1
l'''
Freshmen
entalmn
mitlee Union
°

Board

’

111:

Holiday

Decorations.

*■•»■■■; Organized the Commu
nity Aid Corps: Emergency Com,

mittee.

Kathy McDonough
High School—
Student Governm e n t Prefect;
Debate Society;
National Latin
Honor Society;
French Club;
Scholarship Association (Regent’s Scholarship &amp; Regent's
Nursing Scholar-

ship),
College—School of Nursing Activities; Newman Club Member.

If the student government is
to be effective and worthwhile,
it must be supported by the entire student body. Each individual has a unique and meaningful
role in the university—either as
a student, a professor, or an ad-

these individuals determines the
success of the university; the student Senate must enhance this interaction. However, this organization requires unity and support
if it is to be effective.

Sensitivity to international, national and local affairs is the
first step to communications with
individuals. I believe that Campus Alliance has the sensitivity
vital to the relationship of the
university to these interactions.
Individuals must be sensitive to
the dilemmas and needs of a university not only to improve the
situation, but more so to help the
university grow and expand. This
is beneficial to the community
and to society, as well as to the
individual student.

I chose to run with the Campus
Alliance Party because the party’s ideals agree with my own.
Academic freedom, student responsibility. alienation, are terms
which have heen written up in
so many articles and posted on
too many walls. They are misused
and mocked because of the pedantic way they sum up the ideals
which they express. They still
stand, however, and the ideals
which they stand for are too important to be lost in a jumble of
words Academic freedom in real
terms means that the student
would be as free as possible from
any inhibitions in his search for
education These can be physical
as well as purely scholastic inhibitors. an encumbering system of
course requirements as well as
unsatisfactory study space on
campus
The responsibility is

first to assure these freedoms and then to be faithful to
them. Of course there's a lot to
be done, but now that it has
been begun, please let us con

ours,

Health Related Professi

We will try to secure a greater student role in all phases of
university planning. In order to
be free to pursue understanding
as he see fit, a scholar must not
be encumbered by unnecessary restrictions. We will work for a
liberalization of present regulations in such areas as distribution requirements and grading
policies.

Academic freedom, that is the

constitutionally guaranteed freedoms of expression, assembly and
association, as they apply to the
university, must be zealously
guarded against abridgement by

those within and outside the academic community. Students and
faculty at this university have
for the last several years fought
such infringements as speaker
bans and the imposition of a political disclaimer. We have been
successful more often than not.
Campus Alliance continues opposing violations of our rights

and supports the American Association of University Professors
in their efforts to obtain a Supreme Court hearing on the constitutionality of the Feinberg Law.
PROPOSALS

SCHOOL OF

'•

—

ACADEMIC AFFAIRS
The academic community must
be more than a means to a professional or vocational success;
it must be a primary ideal of
society. Its aims should he to
stimulate individual curiosity and
to provide the opportunity and
means for the satiation of that
curiosity. Vital to this aim is the
freedom and equality of each
member of the community. This
implies a system whereby students and faculty members cooperate in policy determination.

ministrator. The interaction of

mittee Member;
Freshman OriNew Campus
Co-chairman
Senate Convocations Committee;
Publications Board Voting Member and Secretary. Major: French.

The university experience is
t he most influential in our lives.
It is essential that each student
have some kind of consciousness
of that fact lest he leave here
with a serious gap in his education. Student government can do
very real things about completing
the circle. And because we are
students interested in our own
welfare, as well as that of the
rest of the community, we want
to see progress made in the areas
in which we feel it is needed
NOW, during our four years here.
That is why it is important to
us that we be elected
we know
which changes we want to make
and we know that we are the
people who will make them.

[SELECTED EXCERPTS]

Nursing

Jocelyn Lundquist

Since I have been at UB, I
have become involved in many
activities—in programming, participating in, and publicizing
events. These experiences have
been an integral part of my education. But the responsibility I
felt was limited to the activities
themselves and the part I played
in their production. As a candidate for the Student Senate, I
perceive a new responsibility
which extends to my fellow students in Arts and Sciences, not
only in terms of programming
for their needs, but also in terms
of initiating changes to meet new
demands of the entire campus
community. On a campus of this
size and complexity, it is very
easy for the student to become
alienated and lose his sense of
effectiveness within his university environment. As a commuter,
I feel the importance of integrating the commuter into the academic community and I will endeavor to do so in all matters
brought before the Stuednt Senate. But aside from these responsibilities, it will be my personal goal to try to make more
of the students aware of their effectiveness and their own repsonsibility, not only to themselves,
but to their university.

Campus Alliance Platform

EDUCATION
Paula Schainberg

ment can be a meaningful one

for every student within the
boundaries of UB. It can mean
the difference between reliving
the traditional four year high
school experience and living life
on a richer and fuller academic,
social and cultural level.
Government is meaningless to

all but a minority of those who
attend UB. What is the reason

behind this?

Perhaps it stems

from the student’s fear of stepforward to present new
ideas. Perhaps the student feels
his opinion will not and cannot
change school policy. Perhaps he
feels that it is too ' late to h6p
onto the merry-go-round of student affairs which is already in
motion. Perhaps he is afraid to
“get involved," or perhaps, just
perhaps, he really does not care.
ping

No matter in which category
you fall, pick yourself up and listen! Your feelings about student
issues can and do make a difference as to the direction this
university will take in the fu-

ture. Freshman, sophmore, junior. senior, now is the time to
9»t involved, to take a firm stand
on all school issues from academic freedom to the parking situa

lion

Student government is not for
an elite group It is an organiza
lion looking to you, the student
body of UB, for new Ideas, sug

Following are some of the programs we hope to initiate:

1. Student Input

in

Planning.

Academic

a) We propose the placement
of students on the curriculum
planning committees of departments and divisions.
b) We will expand the course
and teacher evaluation program
undertaken by this year’s Student
Senate. This program entails the
preparation from student questionnaires of booklets which evaluate courses with regard to teachers, textbooks, class organization
and procedures and course content. These evaluations will serve a three fold purpose: they will
assist students in determining
schedules at registration, aid
student and faculty members of
curriculum planning committees,
and provide teachers with an indication of teaching effectiveness.
The course evaluation program
will be extended to all departments of study and booklets will
be available to students preregistering for the Spring 1967 semes-

quate. Academic advisors often
fail to supply the student with
satisfactory insight and information. We will work for a better
advisement system and will continue to work with the faculty
committee chaired by Dr. Murphy
which is investigating Arts and
Sciences advisement procedures
and will focus similar efforts on
University College advisement.
STUDENT AND COMMUNITY
Our responsibilities as students
go beyond the academic community. We, as citizens, must be
concerned with the problem and
issues which face the local, national and international communities. Our concern must be an
intelligent and active concern,
faculty programwith student
ming demonstrating the relevance of these issues to the university student. We must attempt
to extend the freedom and opportunity of the university to the
community, the nation and the
world.
-

We propose a co-ordinated
community involvement program
including the betterment of university—Buffalo relations and active student projects to resolve
many Buffalo community prob-

lems. We propose full co-operation with and support for the
recently created Union Board
Community Aid Corps, insuring
that all students can be aware
of and can participate in tutorial, community organization,
and civil rights programs in the
Buffalo community.
We propose the extension of
the present Student Speaker Bureau program to involve more
UB students and to reach the
Buffalo community. Local high
school student leaders should be
invited to the University at Buffalo to learn about the university and its goals. Only through
this kind of close communication
can the Buffalo community be
fully aware of the important role
which the university plays in
today’s world.

We propose that the student
government
become affiliated
with the Collegiate Council for
the United Nations. International
Issue Study programming can
be focused around the problems
which face this international
body.

The Campus Alliance Party
proposes an active student government role in the international
ly aware of the importance of understanding the intricacy of international affairs. We must also
develop a greater understanding
of cultural similarities and differ-

ences. This cultural sensitivity
come through co-ordinated

can

international programming on a
university-wide level.

participate.

UNIVERSITY AND STATE

With the co-operation of the
Office of Foreign Student Affairs §nd the soon to be appointed International Education Director, the Student Association
will sponsor student-faculty cultural seminars. The goal of these
seminars will be to provide crosscultural sensitivity for a large
number of students and faculty
and to give an international dimension to extra and co-curricular programming.
We propose the establishment
of an International Education
Committee of the Student Senate.
The committee with the co-operation and resources of the International Commission of the
United States National Student
Association will co-ordinate international programming on our
campus. The developing interests
and commitments of the State
University of New York to international education can be channeled through the International
Education Committee. As the
State University unit with the
students and faculty. It is important that we make “Albany”
aware of our ideas and needs in
the international area.

STUDENT GOVERNMENT
Student government remains
the most important instrument
through which the students can
bring about university improvement and reform. It is also a
valuable source of meaningful
student involvement in both cocurricular and community activities. The parts of student government that we will concentrate
on here are the Student Senate
and the newly created Student
Association Executive Board.

The Student Senate works as a
deliberative body and through its
committee system as an acting

THE STUDENT AND
INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS

era! Senators would prepare fact
sheets and position papers, and
members of the faculty and administration would be asking to

body.

The Campus Alliance Party
firmly believes in the academic
integrity of the University at
Buffalo. This integrity must be
maintained. The faculty and students here must have primary
responsibility and authority for
policy making for this unit of
the State University of New York.
The interest and opinions of the
individual members of this academic community, or any other
academic community in the state
system must not be sacrificed to
the “good” of the system. The
system must be made to adapt
to these needs and interests.
We are faced with a State University system which is growing
at an almost uncontrolled pace.
The power of “Albany” seems to
be ever increasing, while the responsibilities of SUNY and the

individual units lack the necessary definition to make the learning experience totally beneficial
for all students and faculty.
These responsibilities must be defined with the individual .student
and faculty member as the most
important element. We believe
that “greatness” will only come
when each unit of SUNY provides for the full extent of academic fredom to each student and
faculty member and autonomy
for each university unit.
Academic policy and structure
must be determined by the faculty and students at each unit
of the state university. Extra-curricular and co-cun icular programming needs can only be properly
determined by the students and
faculty of each unit. The responsibility and control of such
programming must remain in the
hands of each college and university in the state system. Nonacademic policy and structure
intercollegiate athletic policy,
—

This party feels the Student
Senate should provide a more
thorough discussion of the issues
confronting us as students, than
what is brought out in the debates on motions at regular meetings. We propose a series of Senate Forums, to be held alternately with regular business meetings, on such topics as athletic
policy, the draft, the new campus, and community action. Sev-

ing policies, student fee Structure
and' long-range student union
planning—.must also be under the
control of each unit. The FacultyStudent Association of each unit
must be controlled completely by
students and faculty at those colleges or universities.

WELCOME TO OUR FIRST BUFFALO FAMILY DRIVE-IN

ter.
2. Academic Programming

a) The present system of established majors and interdepartmental study programs often fails
to meet the academic needs of the
individual student and places
significant limitations on individual creativity in study program-

ming. We propose a system by
which a student may determine
his entire course of study subject to approval by an interdivisional faculty committee which
would authorize an interdisciplinary

b)

Smiling Speedy Service

degree.

Relaxation

of distribution

requirements would allow students to better adapt their programs to individual needs. We
propose a system which enables
students to be exempt from one
or more of the distribution requirements subject to approval
by their academic advisors. If a

student's advisor denies such ap-

proval. appeal to a committee of
faculty

member

advisor

granted

dual basi

10‘ HAMBURGERS
last

Broiled

—

Not Fried

�activi

t' es are: Chair-

man,, Student
f
'

v

A

&amp;

Activities Cam
mittee; VicePresident, Rip
on Society; former P r e s i •

SaralM Rubenttein

B dent.

Goodyear Cul-

Republican Club of
CoSUNVAB;

IBBcM

ture Committee;
Spectrum

One of the basic motivating
factors in my decision to run for
the Senate from the College of
Arts and Sciences was the fact
that one campus political party
is running a virtually unopposed
slate of candidiates. I feel that
a choice of sort must be given
to the students on this campus.
They should not be forced merely to approve a list of people
handed to them by the party. In
addition, J feel that my experience as chairman of the Student
Activities Committee and my varied experience with other groups
has given me a great deal of insight into the workings and problems of the Student Senate as
well as into the problems of extra-curricular activities on this
campus.

I feel that one of the prime responsibilities of the Senate is
handling the "bread and butter” issues which affect the general welfare of the students. Another realm of activity in which
the Senate must take part concerns the more abstract but nonetheless important problems on
this campus, such as academic
freedom. Finally, I feel that the
Student Senate must take stands
on issues which occur outside the
campus which have relevance at
UB and at other schools in realization of the fact that there is
more to the world during our
years at UB than 178 acres of
land on the northeast corner of
the city of Buffalo.

Josh LundquUt

Union
Publicity

Board

Com-

mittee; Spring
Weekend Committee; Union
Board Music
Committee;
Freshmen OriComentation
mittee: Union
Board Holiday
D e e o r a t i ons,
ehaimnn; Organized the Comma
nity Aid Corps; Emergency Committee.

Copy
SophoSponsor

Staff;

Chairman, Tower House Culture Committee;
Film Committee former Social
Chairman, Hillel.

more

Big Sister; Foreign Student Orientation Group
Leader; Spring
Arts Dance Com-

mittee Member;
Freshman OriNew Campus
Co-chairman
Senate Convocations Committee;
Publications Board Voting Member and Secretary. Major: French.
'•

,

The university experience is
the most influential in our lives.
It is essential that each student
have some kind of consciousness
of that fact lest he leave here
with a serious gap in his education. Student government can do
very real things about completing
the circle. And because we are
students interested in our own
welfare, as well as that of the
rest of the community, we want
to see progress made in the areas
in which we feel it is needed
NOW, during our four years here.
That is why it is important to
us that we be elected
we know
which changes we want to make
and we know that we are the
people who will make them.
—

I chose to run with the Campus
Alliance Party because the party’s ideals qgree with my own.
Academic freedom, student responsibility, alienation, are terms
which have been written up in
so many articles and posted on
too many walls. They are misused
and mocked because of the pedantic way they sum up the ideals
which they express. They still
stand, however, and the ideals
which they stand for are too important to be lost in a jumble of
words. Academic freedom in real
terms means that the student
would be as free as possible from
any inhibitions in his search for
education. These can be physical
as well as purely scholastic inhibitors, an encumbering system of
course requirements as well as

unsatisfactory

study space on
responsibility is
ours, first to assure these freedoms and then to be faithful to
them. Of course there's a lot to
be done, but now that it has
been begun, please let us concampus.

The

tinue!

Health Related Professions
Flo rone*

2

Blueglax

Corridor Representative;

Goodyear Social
Committee; CleBent Judicial
Board SecretaryChildren's Hospital Volunteer:

Occupational
Therapy Club
Charity Drive,
chairman; OccuPtWwl Therapy Club Publicity
Chairman.

The programs of Occupational
Therapy, Physical Therapy, and
Medical Technology have recently been united to form an overall division—the School of Health
Related Professions. An important aspect of the medical profession is that of

team work—the

joint cooperative practices of the
allied medical professions for the
benefit of those people requiring

medical attention.

This "new division of the University is a big step in the fur
ther unification of the medical
team, yet a special division
is not

enough to further the idea of
team work. It is of the utmost importance that we. as students and

future members of the health
professions, begin this unification now. We must develop the
spirit and enthusiasm so necessary to expand our professions
and ideals. It is up to us to carry
on and lead someday—why not
begin now!

With the senate scat created
for the Health Related Professions we have been presented
with the opportunity to begin. A
beginning to further our ideals
and hopes for the future. Are \ve
going to sit back and let this seat
go to waste, or are we going to
show that we have the spirit to
begin a long standing tradition

for the School of Health Related
Professions?

As a member of the School of
Health Related Professions. I
would like to add something to
its growth and success, but one
person alone cannot carry out
the spirit or ideas of an entire
school. It is up to all of us to
use this seat in the Senate to its
fullest capacity.

Sensitivity to international, national and local affairs is the
first step to communications with
individuals. I believe that Campus Alliance has the sensitivity
vital to the relationship of the
university to these interactions.
Individuals must be sensitive to
the dilemmas and needs of a university not only to improve the
situation, but more so to help the
university grow and expand. This
is beneficial to the community
and to society, as well as to the
individual student.

demic community. Students and
faculty at this university have
for the last several years fought
such infringements as speaker
bans and the imposition of a political disclaimer. We have been
successful more often than not.
Campus Alliance continues opposing violations of our rights

and supports the American Association of University Professors
in their efforts to obtain a Supreme Court hearing on the constitutionality of the Feinberg Law.
PROPOSALS

SCHOOL OF
EDUCATION
Paula Schainberg
Summer Nursery School
Work; Interested in Elementary Education:
Sophomore with
a Dean’s List
Average.

The

phrase

Student Govern-

ment can be a meaningful one
for every student within the
boundaries of UB. It can mean
the difference between reliving
the traditional four year high
school experience and living life
on a richer and fuller academic,
social and cultural level.
Government is meaningless to
all but a minority of those who
attend UB. What is the reason
behind this? Perhaps it steins
from the student’s fear of stepping forward to present neiw
ideas. Perhaps the student feels
his opinion will not and cannot
change school policy. Perhaps he
feels that it is too late to hop
onto the merry-go-round of student affairs which is already in
motion. Perhaps he is afraid to
“get involved,” or perhaps, just
perhaps, he really does not care.

No matter in which category
you fall, pick yourself up and listen! Your feelings about student
issues can and do make a difference as to the direction this
university will take in the future. Freshman, sophmore, junior, senior, now is the time to
get involved, to take a firm stand
on all school issues from academic freedom to the parking situation.

Following are some of the programs we hope to initiate:
1. Student Input
Planning.

in Academic

a) We propose the placement
of students on the curriculum
planning committees of departments and divisions.

b) We will expand the course
and teacher evaluation program
undertaken by this year’s Student
Senate. This program entails toe
preparation from student questionnaires of booklets which evaluate courses with regard to teachers, textbooks, class organization
and procedures and course content. These evaluations will serve a three fold purpose: they will
assist students in determining
schedules at registration, aid
student and faculty members of
curriculum planning committees,
and provide teachers with an indication of teaching effectiveness.
The course evaluation program
will be extended to all departments of study and booklets will
be available to students preregistering for the Spring 1967 semes-

live student projects to resolve
many Buffalo community problems. We propose full co-operation with and support for the
recently created Union Board
Community Aid Corps, insuring
that all students can be aware
of and can participate in tutorial, community organization,
and civil rights programs in the
Buffalo community.

Student government remains
the most important instrument
through which the students can
bring about university improvement and -reform. It is also a
valuable source of meaningful
student involvement in both cocurricular and community activities. The parts of student government that we will concentrate
on here are the Student Senate
and the newly created Student
Association Executive Board.

THE STUDENT AND

The Student Senate works as a
deliberative body and through its
committee system as an acting

INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS

School of
Pharmacy
Reginald Ameele

ST

h e candidate's activities
include:
Vicepresident, Junior Class delegate, 87th Conven t i o n of
the Pharmaceu-

of New York;
Treasurer,
School of Pharmacy Student As
sociation Floor representaive,
Tower Hall Member, Kappa Psi

Pharmaceutical

Fraternitv,

sary definition to

ing experience totally beneficial
for all students and faculty.
These responsibilities must be de-

fined with the individual student
and faculty member as the most
important element. We believe
that “greatness” will only come
when each unit of SUNY provides for the full extent of academic fredom to each student and
faculty member and autonomy
for each university unit.

STUDENT GOVERNMENT

We propose the extension of
the present Student Speaker Bureau program to involve more
UB students and to reach the
Buffalo community. Local high
school student leaders should be
invited to the University at Buffalo to learn about the university and its goals. Only through
this kind of close communication
can the Buffalo community be
fully aware of the important role
which the university plays in
today’s world.

Academic policy and structure
must be determined by the faculty and students at each unit
of the state university. Extra-curricular and oo-cumcular programming needs can only be properly
determined by the students and
faculty of each unit. The responsibility and control of such
programming must remain in the
hands of each college and university in the state system. Nonacademic policy and structure
intercollegiate athletic policy,
bookstore, food service and vending policies, student fee Structure
and long-range student union
planning—must also be under the
control of each unit. The FacultyStudent Association of each unit
must be controlled completely by
students and faculty at those colleges or universities.

body.

The Campus Alliance Party
proposes an active student government role in the international
area. Today’s student is constantly aware of the importance of understanding the intricacy of international affairs. We must also
develop a greater understanding
of cultural similarities and differences. This cultural sensitivity
can come through co-ordinated
international programming on a
university-wide level.

—

This party feels the Student
Senate should provide a more
thorough discussion of the issues
confronting us as students, than
what is brought out in the debates on motions at regular meetings. We propose a series of Senate Forums, to be held alternately with regular business meetings, on such topics as athletic
policy, the draft, the new campus, and community action. Sev-

WELCOME TO OUR FIRST BUFFALO FAMILY DRIVE-IN

ter.

Academic Programming
The present system of established majors and interdepartmental study programs often fails
to meet the academic needs of the
individual student and places
significant limitations on individual creativity in Study programming. We propose a system by
which a student may determine
his entire course of study subject to approval by an interdivisional faculty committee which
would authorize an interdisciplin2,

a)

Smiling Speedy Service

ary degree.
b)

Relaxation

of distribution

requirements would allow students to better adapt their pro-

grams to individual needs. We
propose a system which enables
students to be exempt from one
or more of the distribution re-

quirements subject to approval
by their academic advisors. If a

Iff HAMBURGERS

student’s advisor denies such ap-

Student government is not for
an elite group. It is an organization looking to you, the student
body of UB, for new ideas, suggestions, opinions, and criticisms.
Care enough to keep the merrygo-round of student government
in motion? Support me for your
Senate and together we can make
it go faster . . . faster . . . fast-

national education can be
neled through the International
Education Committee. As the
State University unit with the
students and faculty. It is important that we make “Albany”
aware of our ideas and needs in
the international area.

proval, appeal to a committee of
faculty members or advisors

should be

granted.

c) Study on an

individual basis
away from the classroom experience is invaluable. It provides an
opportunity for independent research and creative production.
General university policy should
require that each department or
division offer a credit program
of independent study for any student who requests it.
d) Grades too often become the
primary goal of the student. This
corrupts the learning process by
relegating understanding and
creative development to subordinate positions. As an initial step
to eliminate the flaws of our
marking system, students should
be permitted to select one course
per semester on a pass-fail basis.
e) Fruitful
interaction among
scholars must be incorporated
within the academic structure.
Excellent means of such incorporation is the seminar. We propose
increased availability of seminar
courses for lower division students. Small seminars should also
be offered to supplement large
lecture classes.
f) Students must
collaborate
with well trained and experienced
advisement personnel in planning
their academic programs. The present advisement system is inade-

Tasty Broiled

-

Not Fried

Maximum of six per person
OUR
Delicious Hamburger
Tasty Doubleburger
Cheeseburger
Double Cheeseburger
Tempting Coney Islands
Fish Sandwich
Golden French Fries

March 12-13
MENU
Coca Cola
Hires Root Beer

10£ and 150
100 and 150
Orange
100 and 150
Milk
120
Coffee
100
Hot Chocolate (in season)
150
Shakes (Van.-Choc.-Straw.)
220

"TREASURE CHEST" CHICKEN
CHICKEN CHICKEN CHICKEN
DINNER BANQUET
FEAST

PLUS

3

pieces of Piping
Hot Chicken plus

Golden French Fries

"Feed the Geng"
10 pieces of
Delicious Chicken

79°

Food tho Family
20 piacas of
Savory CKickan

*1.85

s3.49

�</text>
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                    <text>H

OPERATION

match
(See'Page

I

VOLUME 16

~

EWELL ON

(fcBff

Page

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, MARCH 8, 1966

NO.

30

Senate Proposal Vetoed
Faculty Committee Rejects Move
To Curtail Its Authority; Defers
Action On IRC Amendment

At a meeting of February 21,
the Faculty Senate Committee on

Student Affairs vetoed a Student
Senate amendment to eliminate
that Committee’s right to approve
or disapprove amendments passed
by the Student Association.

At that time the Committee also
refused to take action on the
amendment which proposed that
one of the two Inter-Residence
Council representatives to the
Student Senate need not be the
IRC president.
The Student Senate unanimously voted at the October 26 meeting to eliminate the last phrase
from Article 5 of the Senate Con-

Sonny Murray's Turn of tho Century Orchestra will
be featured during the Spring Arts Festival. The
group will entertain in the Rathskeller on March
12, beginning at 10:00 p.m.

The Erick Hawkins Dance Company will present
fresh statements in dance on March 12 at 8:30 in

Baird Hall.

Spring Arts Festival Begins Tomorrow
With 'Works In Collaborati on' And Play
Spring Arts Festival Chairman

Pat Jones announced several
changes in Festival programs
scheduled to begin this week.
The Festival will begin tomorrow with an art display entitled
“Works in Collaboration” by the
faculty members Charles Gill and
Donald Blumberg. The play Orestes will be preseined Wednesday
through Saturday evenings at 8:15
p.m, in the Fillmore Room.
According to (Miss Jones all undergraduates, graduate and faculty poets may participate in an

Open Poetry Reading Thursday at
7 p.m. in the Haas Lounge. Frederic Rzewski will present “A Con-

cert with Discussion,” which will
include electronic music, Thursday from 8 to 9:30 p.m. in Capen
140. Rzewski has received Wilson
and Fulbright Fellowships and the
Ford Foundation Fellowship for
1963-65 in music composition.
Experimental films, sponsored
by the Union Board Film and Festival Committees, will be shown
throughout Friday afternoon and
evening in the Conference Theater. Richard Haber of the film
committee commented that these
short films will “show how independent

directors

are

working

with cinema today—finding new
means of expression.” He added
that the committee attempted to
select representative and interesting films. These will include
Bruce Conner’s Vivian, Stan Brakhage’s The Wonder Ring, and
Blue Moses, and Richard Preston’s
Nightscapes and Candidates.
Lifelines,
Ed
Emshwiller’s
Bruce Baillie’s On Sundays; Stan
Vanderbeck’s Skullduggery and
Aehoo Mr. Keroochev,; Ken
Jacobs’ Little Stabs of Happiness,
and an excerpt from Andy Warhol’s Kiss will also be shown.
Poet Allen Ginsberg will read
his works in Clark Gym at 8 p.m.
Friday evening. Joining him will
be Miss Diane di Prima, author
of This Kind of Bird Flies Bockwards and A New Handbook of
Saavon.
Events will begin Saturday with
a reading by prose writer Herbert
Huncke in 232 Norton at 1 p.m.
Composer-pianist Emmanuel Sinderbrand will appear in the Fillmore Room at 1:30 p.m. Mr. Sinderbrand has composed several

sonatas. He will present his original work composed specifically
for the Spring Art Festival called
“A Piece for Piano and One Hundred Forty Children’s Toys.” John
Burgane, Creative Associate, will

accompany him.

A performance in both dance
and music by the Erick Hawkins
Dance Company will be given Saturday evening at 8:30 p-m. in
Baird Hall. Reviews by the Now

York Time* have noted that Hawkins and his composer Lucia Dlugoszewski are “two of the most
independent and original artists
in dance today.”

stitution. The article reads: “This
constitution shall be amended by
the Student Senate or the student
body, with the approval of the
proper University authorities.”

The Faculty Senate Committee
on Student Affairs, which has the
power to approve or veto Senate
amendments, voted to retain its
authority over the Senate.
According to a letter of March
2 addressed to Student Associa-

tion Secretary Ellen Cardone
from Faculty Seante Committee
on Student Affairs Chairman Raymond Hunt, “The Student Association operates upon a delegation
of authority from the faculty and
administration of the University.”

Performing avant-garde dance,
the Hawkins Company announced
that their “fresh statements” in
both dance and music have been
Dr. Hunt continued: ‘There“creating their own culture exfore, it would be inconsistent
plosion” across the country. The with its obligations and responsi(Cont’d on Pg. 3) bilities for the Committee to fail

IRC Meets to Establish Judiciary
The Inter-Residence Council
(IRC) Judiciary Committee held a
public hearing Wednesday, March
2, concerning the establishment
of an Inter-Residence Judiciary
(HU). The purpose of the Judiciary would be “to invest supreme judicial powers of residence” in a single system of
courts, according to the HU Constitution.
The proposed system would
consist of a five-judge court dealing solely with residence problems and a Women’s Curfew
Court dealing with all curfew violations. The Judiciary would be
empowered to establish other
lower courts at its discretion,
since the new campus may necessitate a large number of hearings,
Judiciary Committee Chairman
Kathy McDonald explained.
Inter-Residence Council President Gary Roberts commented
that the Judiciary will benefit
residents by “preventing arbitrary decisions by Administrators
and Head Residents, and by insuring uniformity and impartiality"
The Constitution of the Judiciary would provide that the IRJ
have the power to summon, adjudicate, and impose penalties on
students in residence. A “fair
hearing and decision in cases of
stuthe regulation of residence
guaranteed,
is
conduct”
also
dent
Mr. Roberts added.
'

Original jurisdiction in matters
concerning the constitutionality
of any Inter-Residence Council act
would be given to the IRJ. In
addition, all disputes between

residence organizations and all
appeals from lower courts would
be heard. Matters of resident students’ misconduct would also be
brought directly to the Judiciary,
As a result, all existing dormitory
courts would be abolished.
The HU would convene at least
once every month of the academic year and as ordered by the
Chief Justice.
The manner of choosing the
five judges was debated at the
hearing, although no definite

was decided
upon. Judges would be appointed

course of action

rather than elected, the Committee pointed out. All decisions

would require the agreement of
three judges.
Specific penalties for infractions were discussed and the question of fines was raised. If fines
were to be imposed, all monies
would be placed in the Grace W.
Capen Loan Fund, the committee
decided.
(Cont’d on P. 7)

to insist upon ultimate rights to
review changes in the instrument
of delegation which it previously,
explicitly or implicitly, has recognized to be the operative basis
for its relations with the Association."
Miss Cardone commented: “The
‘interests and rights of the students are guaranteed by the
rights of referendum and by free
elections. The abuses possible in
a democracy must be met by democratic means not be the insertion of authority from above."
Miss Cardone added: “At this
point it is clear that the right
and competence of students to
manage their own affairs is
viewed with great reservations by
the Faculty Committee.”
Inter-Retidonce Council
Amendment

According to Miss Cardone, the
Committee on Student Affairs deferred action for almost four
months on the amendment proposing that neither Inter-Residence Council representative to
the Student Senate necessarily be
the IRC president.

Unlike the amendment dealing
with the delegation of all authority to the Student Senate, this
amendment deals with the internal Structure of the Constitution,
Miss Cardone explained.
On this basis, Dr. Hunt related
in his letter to Miss Caroline that
the reason for the deferment is
that the committee does not feel
it has sufficient information “concerning operations within the
Student Association" to evaluate
the IRC amendment.
Dr. Hunt said that this situais “seemingly consequent
upon faulty liaison” between the
Student Association and the Faculty Senate Committee. He continued that “actions modifying the
Association’s Constitution” are
. until
“inadvisable
these uncertainties are eliminated."

tion

.

.

“I trust this will not be construed as symptomatic of a ‘hardline’ toward the Student Association nor toe received in a spirit
of contention," Hunt said.

Ambassador Rau Speaks on Viet Nam

South Vietnamese Ambassador
Pham Khac Rau lectured on “The
War as Seen by the Vietnamese”
last Thursday evening. Rau emphasized that the Vietnamese will
continue to fight, with the aid
of the United States, because “it
is our last chance to save our
country and our freedom.”
Rau remarked that the present government in South Vietnam
is fairly stable and will continue
its efforts to stop Communist aggression. He was confident that
the existing government will improve with time “to prepare the
people for democracy."
“Hie present war,” he said, “is

not a military or a conventional
one, but is political. He commented that many Vietnamese still envision Ho Ohi Minh as a national
hero in view of his past actions
against the French. As a result,
the United States must “win the
hearts of these people who have
been ruled by Communists for

South Vietnam#*# Amtiimitnr
Pham Khae Rau «p#ak&gt; on "Th#

War

a*

Sa#n by th# Vietnam###"

many years.” Rau noted that sev-

eral economic and social projects
have been, or are being, implemented.

Regarding his position on Communism, Rau said: I can assure
yon that Hie Vietnamese want to
“

have their own land, the fruits
of their labor, and their families
with them . . . and Communism is
a negation of all these things.”
He emphasized that he himself
would never choose to live under
suoh a regime.
Rau concluded his speech by
commenting that "war is a part of
our lives . . . and this war is our
last chance.” He cited that South
Vietnam realizes that it has been
deceived by the Communists, and
therefore "this is as much a Vietnamese war as it is an American
one.” He advocated a free election, but stated that the Communist pressures would first have
to be eliminated
Rau has served as Ambassador
to Malaya and Director of Public
Relations for the Saigon Government for the past eleven years.
The Rau lecture was sponsored
by the Committee for Victory In
Viet Nam and Young Americans
for Freedom.

�l&gt; 1946

Tuesday, March

SPICTRUM

PAGE TWO

Ripon Society And SDS Participate In Political Symposium
Members of the Ripon Society
and Students for a Democratic
Society (SDS) participated in a
symposium last Wednesday entitled “Can the Political Institutions of Today Provide for the
Socio-Economic-Politicail Needs of
the Present and Future?”
Ripon Society member Marlin
Feinrider explained “a conservative would assert that societal institutions meet present and future
needs of our society, the liberal
would say that the institutions
have a built-in capacity for change
and the left would insist that
present institutions cannot meet
human needs in a changing so-

ciety.”

Mr. Feinrider cited changes in
American society accomplished
through existing social institutions, mentioning social legislation and civil rights bills as ex

amples.
SDS member David Gardner
said “to meet human needs, the
political institutions, i.e., power,

uted to a genuine improvement of
the Negro position. He cited testimony of unfair employment and

must be abolished; the American
economy

must be mobilized to

feed poverty areas throughout the
world, including communist countries; air pollution and insecticide
poisoned food must be eliminated;
the military must be disbanded.”
Mr. Gardner added, “to be accomplished, these ends need an
organized society. Our economic
institutions are set up for profit
and efficiency.
“The state exists to promote the
economic institutions. The military institution exists to make
war, to perpetuate itself, and to

create jobs.

"These institutions do not fulfill
human needs and have nothing
to do with freedom.”
Ripon Society members Jeffrey
Lewis argued that the air pollution problem is being improved.
He said, “There is no reason why
it cannot be done through our
present institutions."
Daniel Katz of SDS quoted several sources which denied that
present institutions have contrib-

discriminatory

voting practices

against the Negro from I. F.
Stone’s Weekly.

Mr. Katz concluded that liberal-

ism sustains the economic system,

declaring “there will be no renothing
versa! of this trend
short of revolution will change
—

it.”

Non-Western Language Courses Offered
Beginning in September 1966,
the Department of Modern Languages will admit a limited number of “able and highly motivated
students, both graduate and
■undergraduate, to its self-instructional program in non-Western
languages,” announced Professor
Boyd-Bowman of the Modern Language Department.

A sequence of up to two years
of work will be available to participating students in any one of
the following languages; Japanese, Vietnamese, Mandarin Chinese, and either Swahili or Hindi.
Professor Boyd-Bowman explained
that emphasis will be placed on
mastery of oral patterns through

the use of drill tapes. Tbese will
•be supplemented by live drill
sessions with native-speaking informants.
Students will be examined periodically by specialists from other
institutions to evaluate their

progress and determine their
grades.

Professor Boyd-Bowman noted
that although participation in the
program carries the same credit
as corresponding courses in the

more commonly taught languages,
these courses will not satisfy the

language requirement.

Professor Boyd-Bowman, who

Pass this quiz and
Eastern will fly you to

Florida or 79 other places
for half fare.
Any 12year-old can pass it.

has directed this and similar programs for nearly three years, will
be present at two orientation
meetings to explain the work and
to interview prospective applicants. He said that all students,
regardless of major, who feel attracted to non-Westem language
and area studies, may attend one
of the two meetings.
The two identical meetings
will be held in Norton Union at
7:30 p.m. tonight in 329 Norton
and tomorrow night in 330 Norton.

The Department of
Aeorspace Studies
(AFROTC) will administer the Air Force Qualification Test 10 March at
0830 in G-5a Clark Gym
for freshmen and sophomores in applying for the
2-year
AFROTC program. Interested students
may contact the Department of Aeorspace Studies or call 831-2945 before 1600, 9 March.

I"

1. I am 12, 13, 14, 15,16, 17, 18, 19,20,21 years old. (Circle one.)
2. I would like to spend $3 for an Identification Card entitling me
to
at
Half fare when a seat is available on Eastern
fly
Coach flights to 96 destinations. □ True □ False

j

Airlines

3. My nameis'^SEPKiNTi
4. My home address is ,STREET|
ICITY)

(STATE)

5. I was born on (month)
6. To prove the answer to Question 5,
of my:

(ZIP CODE)

(YEAR)

(DAY)

I

will submit

a

photo-copy

□ Birth certificate □ Driver's license □ Draft card
□ Other ,PlE^E EXPlAIN i
7. I am a male/ female. (Cross out one.)
_

_

.

8. I am a student ati*CHOOL NA^E &gt;
9. My residence address there is ,STREEI l
(CITY)

(STATE!

izip

code:

10. Eastern Airlines should mail my ID Card to:
□ Home address □ School address

I attest that all

HUCKLEBERRY FINN and

Tom Sawyer are easier when
you let Cliff’s Notes be your
guide. Cliff's Notes expertly
summarize and explain the
plot and characters of more
than 125 major plays and

answers above are true,

.IGNATUPI

Now, mail the quiz, proof of age and a $3 check or money order
(payable to Eastern Airlines) to: Eastern Airlines, Inc., Dept. 350, Ten
Rockefeller Plaza, New York, N Y, 10020. Or take same to any of
our ticket offices.
If you're 12 through 21 and qualify, you'll soon get your ID
card. It entitles you to an Eastern Coach seat ot half fare, on a
space-available basis. Except on April 7 and certain days during
the Thanksgiving and Chrisfmas holidays, you can fly to any of
Eastern's destinations within the continental U.S,
Including Florida.

novels-including Shakespeare's works. Improve your
understanding-and your
grades. Call on Cliff's Notes
for help in any
literature course.

125 Titles in ail-among
them these favorites:
Hamlet
Macbeth Scarlet Letter Tale
of Two Cities Moby Dick Return of the
Native The Odyssey
Julius Caesar
Crime and Punishment The Iliad Great
King
Expectations Huckleberry Finn
Henry IV Part I Wuthering Heights King
Lear Pride and Prejudice Lord Jim
Othello Gulliver's Travels Lord of
the Flies
•

•

•

•

1

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

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9

EASTERN

NUMBER ONE TO THE SUN

•

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$1 at your bookseller
or write:

Mmm*

currsMiuMt
Mh| Statin Uuk Mr IIU1

�Tuesday, March S, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE THREE

'Operation Match' Arrives Here From Harvard Conference
The college craze that had
caught the fancy of college stu-

dents from Maine to the West
Coast will offer UB students the
chance to “take the blindness out
of blind dating,” according to
George Cloutier, Harvard undergraduate and eastern regional
manager for Match,
Within two to three weeks after
the UB student has filled out a
Match questionnaire, he will receive a list of a minimum of 5

The SPECTRUM
printed by

Parln PreAA,
erA

’

-rAlgoll &amp; 'mill Printing
1381 KENMORE AVENUE
(at Delaware)

names of gals or guys in the Buffalo area who would make “an
ideal date.”

Operation Match, which began
approximately one year ago at
Harvard University, provides each,
college student with a 105-question, multiple choice questionnaire to be filled out. When completed, the questionnaire allegedly reflects the personality of the
student and what he or she seeks
as the “ideal date.”

The self-mailing questionnaire,
with a $3 fee, is mailed back
to Harvard where a computer,
nicknamed EROS-G (Early Return
of Selections Guaranteed), selects
the “ideal dates” from the Buffalo area.
When the college student receives the list of at least five
dates, Operation Match lets nature take its course.
The questionnaire, composed
by two Ph.D’s at Harvard, contains such questions as ‘‘How
important is it that your date
share your attitude toward sex?
Do you believe in a God who an-

swers prayers?

Phone 876-2284

Cramming
Clowning
Crashing
Pubbing

Operation Match has produced
a multitude of great dates and
some humorous situations. In one

instance, a junior at a western
university received the name of
a co-ed he knew very well: his
sister. In another case, a varsity
swimmer from an eastern ivy
league college wanted a date
from Match who would time his

laps in the pool, and wake him
up at 3 a m. to watch comets in
the sky. EROS-G did not failcoming up with a Radcliffe girl
who, disgusted with “those Harvard intellectuals,” sought someone with whom she would enjoy
sports, both indoors and out. They
are now going steady.
Operation Match

will select
New
York in the next few weeks. The
lucky co-ed will reign over a spe“Miss Match” of Western

cial Operation Match being plan-

ned at UB.
Cloutier emphasized that the
greater the number of students
who participate in Operation
Match, the better the "ideal
dates” will be. He pointed out
that co-eds in particular should
fill out the questionnaire.

“When the girls get their list
of dates back, they don’t have to
be embarrassed about calling a
guy for a date because, since he
sent his questionnaire into Harvard’s computer, he’ll be expecting the phone calls,” he said.

The English Graduate School
will sponsor its second annual
Conference on “Modern Literature and Ideas” March 10 to 12
in Baird Hall.
The theme of this year's Con-

ference.

which brings prominwriters to the
campus, is “The Literary Image."
ent critics and

,

Cupid’s computerized arrow,
slung from the middle of the
famed Harvard Yard, arrived on
the UB campus yesterday in the
form of Operation Match.

On literature, Ideas'
Presented By English Grad School

English Professor Mac S, Hammond. an organizer of the conference, said “the speakers will
explore the relations of literary
present to the mind an image
which relates to the outside
world.” '
Mr. Geoffrey Hartman, Professor of Comparative Literature
at Cornell University and the
University of Zurich will discuss
“The Concept of the Image from
the Romantics to Wallace Stevens" at 4 p.m., Thursday, Mar.
10.

Winner of the Cristian Cause
Prize, Hartman is the author of
The Unmediated Vision, Andre
Malraux, and Wordsworth.
Mr, Richard Howard, poet, critic, and translator will speak on
“The Image of Boredom in Modern Literature” at 1:30 p.m.,
Thursday, Mar. 10.
Howard has published a book
of poetry, Quantities, and has a
book of criticism forthcoming entitled, Fifty American Poets. He
has translated the memoirs of
Charles De Gaulle and the works

Fiedler Lectures Tomorrow
Graduate English Professor
Leslie A. Fiedler, poet, novelist,
and literary critic will speak on
“Saul Bellow’s Henog and Norman Mailer's An American Dream
at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Conference Theatre. The lecture is
sponsored by the Union Board
Literature and Drama Commit

Literature and Drama Committee Chairman Paul Blatt said that
Dr. Fiedler has lectured throughout the world. Blatt added that
Dr. Fiedler was the fiction judge

tee.

by the Dell Publishing Company.

1946 National Book
the
Award and is currently a fiction
for

judge for the annual contest held

of playwright Arthur Adamov.
“The Image as World and Idea"
will be discussed by Mr. Charles
Feidelson, professor of English
at Yale University at 10 a.m.,
Friday, Mar. 11.
Feidelson wrote Symbolism In
American Literature and was co-

editor of The Modern Tradition.
Mr. John Berryman, professor
of English at the University of
Minnesota will read his poetry at
3 p.m. Friday, Mar. 11. Berryman
is the author of The Dispossessed,
Homage to Mistress Bradstreet
and 77 Dream Songs which won
him the Pulitzer Prize in 1965.
Wesleyan

University

day, Mar. 12.
Ohmann is the author of Shaw;
The Style and the Man and coauthor of Inquiry and Expression with Harold C. Martin.
The lectures are open to all
undergraduates, graduates and
faculty members, Professor Ham-

mond disclosed.

Spring Arts
from Pg. 1)
San Francisco Chronicle has credited the company with presenting
a “score which is a work of enormous complexity, paralleling and
counterpointing the rhythms of
the dance, and full of enchanting
novelties of sound.”
Sonny Murray and his jazz
group will appear in the Rathskeller Saturday evening at 11
p.m. Artists Albert Aylers and
Marion Brown will be featured.
Tickets for
and the
Erick Hawkins Dance Company
will be on sale at the Norton
Ticket Booth. All other events are
free of charge.
Jerry Benjamin’s happening, "A
New Theater Piece,” scheduled to
take place from 12 midnight to
6 a.m. has been cancelled.

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�(Editorial Comment

.

.

The Murder

.

The Faculty Senate Committee on Student Affars
has reaffirmed its right to negate all structural changes
in the Student Association constitution (see news story
on page 1). By doing so, it has dealt a rather severe blow
to the concept of the student as a responsible member
of the academic community.
The Student Senate amendment to eliminate the
committee's veto power never presumed that the right
to both exist and function as a group at the university
was derived in any manner other than faculty delegation of authority. This was an unfortunate error and
is diametrically opposed to the idea of governmental
power and legitimacy residing in the hands of the governed.
The Senate concession makes the Faculty Committee decision all the more deplorable. Not only has the
committee tampered with unrestrcited association, it
has also refused to allow the student to effect the governmental structure which best suits his needs.
While the topic of authority was before them, the
Faculty-Senate Committee chose to extend its power of
review to all matters that could conceivably reach the

floor of the Student Senate. In its memorandum to Student Association Secretary Ellen Cardone, the committee
established a prerogative to the protection and preservation of the interests and rights of the university commuApparently, the committee members felt renity
stricted possessing authority to meddle only in regards
to constitutional amendments.
.

Tuesday,

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

.

The gross inefficiency of the Faculty Committee was
adequately demonstrated by its unimaginably poor handling of the amendment on IRC representation. After
more than four months of inaction, the committee decided
to defer its decision on an amendment which did nothing
more than free the Inter-Residence Council President
from serving on the Student Senate.
Among the committee’s reasons for delay was the
unfamiliarity of committee members with Student Association operations, in addition to their dissatisfaction
with the Senate’s “presumptive and therefore unauthorized action” of functioning as if the amendment were
already in force.
Obviously, it is too much to expect that a committee
whose specific function is Student Affairs would keep
abreast of Student Association policy or, for that matter,
realize that since the inception of the Student Association,
constitutional amendments have been operative upon
passage.

Of itself, the Faculty Committee’s veto power is unwarranted and oppressive; the committee’s rejection of
a unanimously approved Senate amendment is irresponsible.
David Edelman

American foreign policy v it
would seem, is dedicated to the
proposition that all right wing
dictators are created equal. The
case in point is Brazil. In Brazil,
62 per cent of the arable land
belongs to three per cent of the
population; 0.5 per cent is divided up into 400,000 parcels
of less than 5 hectares; here are
9 million landless peasans of
whom 4 million are not paid,
wages in money. Until March of
1964 Brazil was ruled by Joao
Goulart who was duly elected on
the platform of moderate land
reform. A military coup which
used an invented Communist plot
to justify their power grab and
took over the country in April
of 1964 and were welcomed by
President Johnson.
“The American people have
watched with anxiety the political and economic difficulties
through which your great nation
has been passing . . . The relations and friendship and cooperation between our two governa prements and people are
cious asset in the interests of
peace and prosperity and liberty
in this hemisphere and in the
whole world. I look forward to
the continued strengthening of
those relations and to our intensified cooperation in the interests
...

THE

SPECTRUM

EdItor-in-Chief

JEREMY TAYLOR

Editor-Elect

DAVID

Managing Editor

EDELMAN

LARRY SHOHET

RAYMOND D VOLPE
Business
ALICE EDELMAN
SUSAN GREENE
Assistant
News Editor
Staff —Loretta Angelina. Joanne Bouchier. Russell Buchman. Karen Green,
Peter Lederman. Joan Roberts. Rick Schwab. Dan Schroeder. Sharon Shulman.
Eileen Teitler. Nancy Toder. Patti Wartley. Judy Weisberg
Assistant
JO ANNE LEEGANT
JOHN STINY
Feature Editor

Manager

Ellsworth. Barbara Ann Fitzsimmons. Barbara Loeb.
Bob Martin, Suzanne Rovner, Martha Tack. William Weinstein.

Staff —Bonnie Bartow. Ron

Audrey Logel.

Staff—Mike Castro.
J. B Sharcot

Staff—Joanne

Sports Editor
Mike Dolan.

STEVE SCHUELEIN
Steve

Farbman.

Bob Frey.

Scott

Forman,

Layout Editor
SHARON HONIG
Bouchier. Stephanie Parker, Steve Silverman,
Copy Editor

LAUREN JACOBS
Staff—Carol Becker, Estelle Fox. Jocelyn Hailpern. Sandy Lippman, Betsy Ozer,
Claire Shottenfeld. Susan Zuckerberg.

Staff— Terry

Angelo.

Mancini.

Advertising Manager
Audrey Cash. Pat

RON HOLTZ
Steve

Rosenfeld.

Silverman. Joseph

Photography Editor
EDWARD JOSCELYN
Staff—Don Blank. Peter Bonneau. Joseph Feyes. Carol Goodson. Alan Gruber,
Marc Levine, Ivan Makuch. Michael Soluri. Anthony Walluk. Susan Wortman.
Robert Wynne
Circulation Manager
DIANE LEWIS
Faculty Advisor
IRENE WILLET
DALLAS GARBER
Financial Advisor

EDITORIAL

POLICY IS
FIRST

Jk

DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
CLASS HONOR RATING
Second Class
Subscription

Postage Paid at Buffalo, N. Y.
$3 00 per year, circulation

15,000.
Represented
for national advertising by
National Advertising Service. Inc.. 420 Madi,
son Ave New York, N. Y.

Gonzago

of economic progress and social
■justice for all.”
On February 9 of this year,
Jack Hood Vaughn, the new director of the Peace Corps, told
a Senate Foreign Relations Committee that automatic withdrawal
of U. S. assistance to de facto
governments “could be a grave
disservice to the hopes of stimulating peaceful social revolutions in Latin America.”

Lyndon Johnson talks about
freedom in Latin America in
the same tones that he uses when
he talks about freedom in Vietnam.

On February 5, according to

the New York Times, the Brazilian military government
“sharply curtailed popular choice
of national, statz and municipal
executives in a decree scheduling
elections this year.” The decree
provided “that the next President,
Governors of 11 states and Mayors of state capitals will be chosen indirectly by legislative bodies rather than direct popular
vote as stipulated in the 1946
Constitution.”
The Elections were held as a
result of pressure by Senator J.
W. Fulbright who said, “the

United States investor interested
in Brazil was awaiting an election
that could serve as a ‘confirmation of the revolution’ before

commiting major investments
and to risk ventures.” The mili-

tarists permitted state elections

to be held for Governor only to
lose in the most important states.
Marshall Castelo Branco met this
defeat by abolishing political
parties, packing the Supreme
Court and by ordering that the
next President must be picked
by the Brazilian Congress rather
than by the people (The Congress
and the State Legislatures have
already been purged of all members who opposed the military
dictatorship). The hand-picked

militarist candidate for President
is General Costa e Silva who
asserts that military rule is only
“transitory” and the elections
show their true democratic intentions.

Thus America supports another

champion of tyranny at the ex-

pense of democratic institutions.
Freedom is faced with both the
threat of Communist dictatorships and American foreign policy which created situations in
which Communists thrive. In Brazil, America poses of more serious threat to freedom than the
Communists.

cjCetter to tlie (Editor
many of us in the face of this

TO THE EDITOR

Many of you realize that a
brutal, inhuman war is presently
being waged in Vietnam, a war
which threatens the lives of the
people of Vietnam and those of
draftable age in this country.
Some of you are even willing to
accept nominal responsibility for
the thousands of murders being
committed in your name by the
United States government, and
against your name by the Vietcong and the government of
Hanoi. But, how many of you
arc prepared to do more than lip
service to your indignation? Unvoiced indignation, in fact has
been the sole reaction of far too

frustrating situation.
However, a number of us feel
that the university has been a
cradle of shameful silence for too
long. Actions can be taken to
end murder and injustice. Two
weeks ago, more than one hundred graduate students and faculty members met to investigate
methods of dealing with certain
irresponsible proclamations of
Louis Hershey, head of the Selective Service System of this
country. This Wednesday, at 8:15
in the cafeteria dining room on

ered.
A direct appeal is being made
to your humanity and intelligence. Your special skills and
sensitivities are needed now. As
graduate students and faculty
members, you have the potential
to wield a significant range of
powers. Dare we stand up for
what we know to be right? The
responsibility is ours.
John Coe,

Department of Sociology

James Hansen,
Department of Philosophy
Dr. Jene LaRue,
Department of Classics

the second floor of Norton Union,
the dialogue will be continued;
the establishment of a united action federation will be consid-

Donald Zinman,
Department of Psychology

Cuban Refugees Struggle
The following is the last of a
four-part series by Betsy Cohn,
Cohn, staff writer for the

Mich,

igan Daily.

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
14214
Publication Office at Norton Hall. University Campus. Buffalo. N Y
Published twice weekly from the first week of September to the last week in
Christmas,
Thanksgiving.
spring
and
vacations.
May. except for exam periods.

of

March 8, 1966

It is hard to be certain exactly
what is happening in Cuba today.
Brochures picturing blindfolded
men before ruthless firing squads,
starving children and devastated
lands have been issued by the
various exile groups.
These conditions may prevail
but to what extent is uncertain
and ‘‘unpublished in American
newspapers,” said Ramon Martin,
head of the CTO (Cuban Federation of Labor in Miami.)
Nevertheless, information from
underground as well as recently
arrived exiles indicate that in
Cuba there are more than 75,000
people in jail. Conditions in the
jails are bad and many are being
executed by firing squads.
Medical care is inadequate, and
Cuba now is suffering from lack
of proper sanitation, according to
exiles. Food is scarce and the
people are rationed to one meal
a day, continued Martin,
“Cuba had a population of six
and one half million: at present
there are 600,000 in exile; 85,000
have applied to leave in the refugee shuttle; there are hundreds
in Cuba who are antiCastro—in
total over one-sixth of the Cuban
population are antiCastro,” Alfredo Gonzalez, a participant in
the Bay of Pigs invasion, said.
He told of the difficult exiles
are having in trying to get their
families out of Cuba and said,
“Castro wants to keep the young
people; it is easiest to indoctrinate school children in the ways

of Communism.”
He spoke of his seven-yearold son whom he has been trying
to bring to America for the past
several years. “In school students
learn the alphabet by reciting
phrases such as C is for Castro,
R is for Russia . . . etc.
“Nevertheless, the family is
very powerful and influential so
the children are taught the truth
at home by parents, by letters
and by the ‘Voice of Cuba,’ an
exile radio station,” according to
Gonzalez.

Castro has restricted boys from
the ages of 14 to 17 from leaving
the country in order that they
may serve in the military. “Women may soon be forced to participate in the military as well,”
commented Gonzales.
Plans for 1966 call for 400,000
women to work year round
throughout the island in hopes
they can bring about a $1 billion
ncrease in production. In 1965
iome 200,000 women were already out of their homes, performing a variety of tasks which
ranged from coffee and tobacco
picking to cane-cutting and cattleraising.

The 7,000 college students who
occupied Cuba’s nine universities
have now greatly diminshed.
“Those students who are left in
Cuba cannot attend the universities unless they first declare
themselves Communists, Most students are anti-Castro and will not
oblige this policy,” said Jose Gon2ales Puente, an ex-Cuban senator.
“Those who are enrolled in the
universities are being taught

with Communist-censored textbooks and Communist indoctrinated professors,” he claimed.
Other students, such as Gonzalez, have left the Cuban universities and enrolled in American colleges. Gonzales graduated
from Louisiana State University
in agricultural engineering. He
planned to return to Cuba and
work with sugar production. He
is presently studying law at the
University of Miami so he will
be able to act as a “mediator between Cuban and American governments when Cuba receives
her independence.
“Those left in Cuba are not only
the young people, but the old
and proud citizens who prefer to
die in their country rather than
to leave it. Also left in Cuba are
the wealthy ‘novice politicians’
who have given money to Castro,
in turn receiving top prestige
positions in Castro’s regime,” he
added.

According to ex senator Puente,

there are widespread misconceptions about Cuba and statements
have been made that the lower
classes in Cuba are living under
better conditions today than they
did before Castro.
“This is incorrect,” he said. “Hie
people of the lower classes were
once able to live off the land;
today they are slaves.” According to Gonzalez, “There is even
more poverty among the lower
classes now; for there is less in
Cuba to go around. Formerly, the
people were able to get Jtpod
from the black market; now they
cannot get anything that was
available to them then.”

�Tuesday, March 8, 1966

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

Raymond Ewell Lectures On India
To International Club On Thursday
Dr. Raymond Ewell, Vice-President for Research and Professor

a rationing system. The famine
may result in a substantial breakdown of government, becoming

of Chemistry and Engineering,
gave an illustrated lecture on "In-

mob rule."

the International Club

He added that if the U.S. would
stop the Vietnam War, enough
ships and personnel would be
available to ship 12 million tons
of wheat to India this year.

Thursday night.
Dr. Ewell spoke of the widespread famine that India will have

this fall. He also discussed his
the Kashmir

own solution to

problem.

India’s drought this season lowered the rice production 20-30%,
according to Dr. Ewell. He said,

Dr. Ewell also felt that India
would have an adequate food supply if the farmers were better
educated and had better supplies.

Philosophy of Religion

Speaking on the Kashmir problem, Dr. Ewell said he considers Kashmir to be “one of the
most worthless pieces of property
in the world.” He recommends
trading Kashmir, either tor a
strip of Pakistan on India's northwest border rich in gas fields, or
tor the northern part of East
Pakistan, which has a railroad
needed by India.

Discussed Wednesday
Mr. Rand of the UB Philosophy
Department, Father Duffy of St.
Joseph’s Church, and Rabbi Hoffman of Hillel discussed “New
Ideas in the Philosophy of Religion” last Wednesday at 8 p.m.
in Goodyear Hall south lounge.
Mr. Rand opened the discussion by citing the work of the
“New Theologians.” Their philosophy, appearing within the last
three or four years, advocates,
“secularized Christianity.” It rejects the supernatural “other-

world” view, and affirms science
and all other elements of secular
life.
These theologians have been referred to as members of the
“Death of God School.” The
phrase “Death of God” has been
used to suggest that the view of
God as a supernatural being is
dead for our generation. According to Rand, the task of religious
men is not merely to “withdraw
and pray,” but to work with
people.

the
tendency to view the church as
separate from the world. Following the views of Jesuit theologian and scientist Pierre Teilhard De Chardin, he maintained
that man can find God by going
out into the world and discovering matter and his fellow men.
If he cannot see God there, he
will not be able to see him elseFather

Duffy criticized

Or. Raymond Ewatl lectures on
current Indian problems.
“In my experience the Indian government won’t be able to enforce

Dr. Kotler Addresses Colloquium
“Mathematical Models of Consumer Behavior” is the subject
of an address by Dr. Philip Kotler
who is the first speaker in a Colloquium Series sponsored by the
Department of Marketing of the

School of Business Administration. Dr. Kotler, an Associate Profesor of Marketing at Northwestern University, will address faculty and students during the all
day session, March 10, on the UB
campus.

The purpose of the Colloquium
Series is to familiarize faculty
and students with current thinking and research in the field of
marketing, according to Dr. Alan
Andreasen, Acting Chairman of
the Marketing Department. Decision-making, as it affects distribution and sales, market creation,
and predictable consumer behavior are some of many aspects

where.

Rabbi Hoffman commented that
the new emphasis on “this world”
mentioned by Father Duffy and
Mr. Rand was not causing much
excitment among Jewish philosophers since Judaism has always
been strongly “this world” oriented. He discussed Martin Buber’s
conception of the “I-Thou” relationship in which individuals try
to establish relationships with one
another without using each other
as a means to an end. Through
these relationships with other
individuals man develops the ability to meet the “eternal thou,”
God.
This was the third in a series
of lectures presented by the Academic Committee of Goodyear
South during “What’s New Week.”

Religious Art Exhibit
Displayed at Church
By Terry Seal
One of the most exciting and
unique exhibits in the field of
religious art in the Buffalo area
opened Sunday, March 6 and will
continue through Friday, March
25.' The theme of this shownig
is the artist’s conception of religion in today’s world. The works
of art range from traditional conceptions of religious expression
on the artist’s religious beliefs.
The chairman of the Religious
Arts Festival Steering Committee,
Gordon Lever, has reported the
tremendous response of over 150
works of art submitted for judging.
The hours of the showing are
4 p.m. to 9 p.m. Sunday, and 7
p.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through
Saturday. The exhibit is located
at the MacAlpine Presbyterian
Church, 2700 Bailey Avenue, and
the public is invited to attend.

CAMP COUNSELORS
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portunity for work in unique
program. Salary, meals, and
lodging provided. Call Mrs.
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Church, TT 4-7250, 9 -5.

March 31; Dr. Paul Green, University of Pennsylvania, April 20;
and Dr. Seymour Banks, Vice
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May 3.

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�'Orestes'Presented in Fillmore Room

WBFO Traces History of UB
WBFO Campus News will present several special programs on
UB in the near future, the WBFO
News Department announced.
One series of programs will be
produced to celebrate UB’s 120th
birthday in May which has been
designated “University Month.”
A proposed program is an interview in which students discuss
the meaning of their university
experience, their campus life, and
their general views about UB.
A release from the WBFO
News Department stated that all
students interested in presenting
their views should contact John
Edward Deane at 831-3406.
The history of UB will be depicted in a program directed by
Jesse Strash and produced by J.
Z. Friedman.
Four major phases of the his-

A REAL TREAT
LIKE THE
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Tuesday, March S, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACE SIX

.

Music

.

will be covered, each representing a period of substantial
growth in the history, the news
release stated. The first will cover
the years from 1846, the date of
the founding of UB, to 1922 when
UB was established at the present Main Street sight.
The second period covers 19221953 when “the University rose

Dramatic

the traditions of academic freedom under Samuel P. Capen.”
The third phase began in 1954
under Dr. Clifford C. Furnas.
The fourth phase began in 1962
when UB merged into the State
University system.
President Furnas and former
Chancellor Capen and McConnell
will appear on the program.

Orestes kills his mother to
avenge the murder of his father.

Condemned to death, he asks
Menelaus for help, which is refused. Seeking revenge, Orestes,
Pylades and Electra plot to murder Helen of Troy who was
brought to the city of Argos by
the command of King Menelaus.

The Spectrum wishes
to make corrections in
the elections story appearing in the Friday,
March 4 Spectrum, Page
One:
Mr. Robert Montgomery and Mr. Joseph Tarantino are Independent
candidates from the
School of Engineering.

Professional

Gary Battaglia will star as
Orestes, supported by Pam Dadey
as his sister, Electra, with whom
Orestes is involved in an incestuous relationship. King Menelaus
will be portrayed by James Golata, and Jeannette Veiling will play
Coryephaeus, leader of the chorus. Helen of Troy and Pylades
take the roles of Francine Zumpano and Richard Haney, respectively, Original music for the production has been composed by Gary
Cohen. William Coleman will be

&amp;

Amateur Use

DELAWARE CAMERA
MART
Supplies

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directing.

In Orestes we will see the story
of a basically good man tormented by his own inadequacy and the
evil that has him trapped. The
universality of characters caught
in a web of evil and frustration
gives the play relevance today as
it did twenty five centuries ago.

Cameras

Projectors

Photo Finishing
&amp;

accessories

pertinent

are often identified with modern
playwrights. Euripides’ Orestes
demonstrates that archaic situations portraying conflict, disloyalty and animosity are easily pertinent to an audience in 1966. The
Faculty-Student Theatre Guild
will present Orestes which expresses Euripides’ sentiments on
the stupidity of conflict and hate,
utilizing his own version of a fascinating ancient myth.

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The ill-fated brother and

sister, Orestes (O.. Battaglia) and Electra
death in the UB Theatre production of

(Pam Dadcy), plot to escape

Orestes.
Admission will be 50 cents for
students and one dollar for
others. The tickets will be sold on

a reserved seat and not

on a general admissions basis as in the
past.

Weekly Calendar
TUESDAY
Lecture; “Euripides’ Orestes,”
Jene LaRue, Norton 335, 3 p.m.
Lecture: “Vietnam
From
French Legionnaire to American
G.I.”
Amherst Central High
School, 8:30 p.m.
—

WEDNESDAY
Newman Apostolate: Nomination meeting, Norton 329, 8 p.m.
Math Club: “Tilings,” Alexis
Hersca, Norton 334, 8 p.m.
Play: Orestes, Spring Arts Festival, Millard Fillmore Room,
through March 12.
THURSDAY
International Club: Nomination for office, Norton 340, 7:30

Hartman, Baird Recital Hall, 4
p.m.

FRIDAY

Dance Interpretation: Seenie
Rothier and Company, Sabbath
Service, Temple Sinai, 50 Albert Drive, 8:30 p.m.
Blood Drive; Arnold Air Society, 9 to 3 p.m., Norton Lobby.
Audition: UB Blues, Norton 344
and 332, 12 to 6 p.m.
Art-Photography Exhibit: Spring
Arts Festival, Center Lounge, all

day.
Poetry Reading; Spring Arts
Festival, Haas Lounge, 6:30 to
11 p.m.
Lecture: “Corn Pollen Biology,”

Dr. David B. Walelen, 134 Health
Science, 4 p.m.

p.m.

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Portable typewriter, jet black
Remington. Owned by a little
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PASSOVER RESERVATIONS
Please complete this Reservation Blank and return it with the
proper remittance to HILLEL, 40 Capen Blvd., Buffalo 14, N. Y.
by Monday, March 21.

Seder, Monday, April 4, 6:30 P.M.
(at 500 Starin Avenue)

—

$2.00

•-—

Call Buffalo Bob. 832 8450.
Admiral portable TV. Perfect for
you Batman fans. A mere $50.
Kay dual pickup solid
Guitar
body, 4 months old. $40.00 including ease. Call Warren 875-

Supper, Thursday, April 7, 5:30 P.M.
(at

Hillel

—

$1.00

House)

Lunch, Friday, April 8, 11:30-1 P.M.
(at Hillel House)

—

50c

For Home Hospitality for the Seder, contact Hillel at TF 6-4540
by March 21.

—

SUZUKI

8359.

mechanically sound,
’61 Volvo
clean interior, snow tires, needs
some body work. $475. Call 837—

OPEN HOUSE

8289

SAT., MARCH 12th

LOST AND FOUND

10 a.m. to 6 p.m.

Reward for return of maroon ski
parka
at beer blast
Feb 4. Call 649-1772.

SUN., MARCH 13th
1:30 p.m. to 4 p.m.

WANTED
*

Anyone interested in performing
in a Hootenanny on April 22.
Call TF 3-2174. You will be compensated.

Countermen and grilltnen full or
part time by Mr. S. Restaurant.
No experience necessary. Apply
3031 Main Street.
Men for part time sales display
work. $57 75. Car necessary.
Call TX 3-4657 after 5.
One roommate for apartment five
minutes from campus. Interest
ed? Call 836-6529 Marty or Larry.
Witnesses to car accident Friday
6 pan. at front entrance to campus. Testimony needed for court
claims Call 832-6900
Female student with furnished 2bedrootn apartment needs
roommate. Immediate occupancy.
Call 880-4017 Marion.

FREE BALLOONS

� FREE BUMPER STICKERS
it FREE SUZUKI BUTTONS
it FREE PRIZES

CV-QD
V|
J

Xs

Ed's Suzuki Shop

7*
I

-17
/

y

X&lt;

715 ELMWOOD AVE.
8 Blocks South of
Stoto Toachtrt Collogo

Phone:

IT 2-6323

Modsl
C.C
Speed
Price
M 31
45
55
$252.00* P.O.E.
SO
K 10
$334.00* P.O.E.
60
K IS Trail SO
38-60
$364.00* P.O.E.
Elac. Start
Cyl.
Twin
S 33
150 i
SO
$463.00* P.O.E.
250
T 20
$698.00* P.O.E.
105
‘Plus sot-up, fraight, talas tax
12,000 Milas er 12 Months warranty on parts and labor

Alpha Gamma Delta: Pledge induction, Linda Holt’s home, 7

to 9 p.m.
Department of English: Second Annual Conference on Modern Literature and Ideas, Geoffrey

Petitions for Ski Club

offices signed by 20
members must be returned to the Ski Club
office by March 14.

�Tuesday, March I, 1966

Winners ofBrowsing Library Contest
Presented With Cash Awards Friday
Winners of the annual Brows-

John Hurling of Lockwood Libraand Mr. Robert Trudell of
the Buffalo and Brie County
Public Library.

ing Library Contest were presented with the Stout Book Collection awards at a tea held for
contestants last Friday.

ry,

Sophomore Sharon Parson won
the $100 First Prize for her collection on T. E. Lawrence. Senior Harriet Heitlinger won the
$50 Second Prize for her collection entitled, “Birds: Books for
Watchers and Admirers.” The
$25 Third Prize was won by Senior Sharon Clark for a collection
on India: Philosophy, Politics,
Economics, Art, and Literature.

a single topic, according to
Browsing Library Director Dorothy Doan. The entrants must
write a 1500 word essay explaining why they are interested in
collecting books on their particular topic.

Dr. J. Benjamin Townsend of
English department presented the awards for Dr. and Mrs.
David B. Stout, who are on sabbatical this year.
The judges were Mr. Dennis
Bodem of the Buffalo and Erie
County Historical Society, Mr.

Awards are given each year
for the best book collection on

Support

the

Our

Advertisers

(Cont’d from Pg. 1)

the accused were
listed in the proposed Constitution to Include knowledge of the
accusation, witnesses, and assistance of council.
The Inter-Residence Judiciary
will be established if two-thirds
of the members of three-fourths
of the House Councils give their
approval.
The new Judiciary would parallel the Senate Student Judiciary
in many ways, Miss McDonald

Clothing And Appliances Wanted By Goodwill
Goodwill Industries Inc. of Buffalo as been recently granted permission by the Office of Student
Housing to place one of its collection boxes on the loading platform behind Goodyear Hall near
Clement.
Goodwill is an independent rehabilitation agency for the physically and socially handicapped,
which was established in Buffalo
in 1920. As part of its comprehensive rehabilitation program,
Goodwill offers
prevocational

BOB &amp; RAY'S
MUSIC CENTER
SALES
RENTALS
and Service on all
Instruments
—

839 Niagara Falls Blvd.
836-8742
Special Student Discounts
with I.D. Card

Guitar Lessons
All Types

Sign up now for folk guitar

group lessons

their acquisition of any number
of trades and skills (radio repair,
appliance repair, sewing, watch
repair etc.) as well as helping

to provide gainful employment

for approximately 450 people at
Goodwill.

Students are invited to visit
the main store and sheltered
workshop at Michigan and North
Division Sts. Any student groups
desiring to visit Goodwill may
arrange for a guided tour by dial
ing 854-3494.

evaluation, prevocational training

and vocational and rehabilitation
counseling.
Both commuting and resident
students are invited to contribute
any repairable discarded items
such as clothing, small household appliances, clocks, watphes,
dishware, radios, etc. These items
provide the material for the
training and evaluation of handicapped individuals, such as in

Pete Longo
Invites fellow U.B,

IRC Judiciary
Rights of

PACE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

students to the
re-opening of

LONGO'S
Frozen

*

At least half the students working 13 weeks earned
$1500 or more. And here’s what others earned
even those working fewer weeks;
.

lout of 2
earned

Custard

.

.

$)21
or roore
a weak.

369 KENMORE
cor. Claremont nr. Englewood

1 oat of 3
earned

Opening
Friday, March 11th

$133
or

added.

1

1JS.S
earned

ojdtro

o

m mora a wttiL

You can earn as much or more this summer
and you need no sales experience. You’re carefully trained and work on proven routes where
people have been buying Good Humor for years.
there's nothing
Everything supplied, free .
to invest.
.

.

HOW TO QUALIFY FOR INTERVIEW
1. Minimum age 18
2. Need a valid driver’s license

and must be
able to drive a clutch transmission
3. Be in good physical condition.

REGISTER NOW
Ask your Summer Placement Director or Student
Aid Officer to schedule you for our campus visit.

�Tuesday, March 8, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

IP IB IB SB «P®H»r8* s
SIPS©
iA
1=
=f=
4
*

.&lt;

Barth, Poe Honored

Bill Barth, 6-5 senior center
from Fredonia, N.Y., was chosen,
by a vote of his teammates, as
Most Valuable Player on the 196566 UB basketball team. Barth led
the Bulls in rebounding and was

of illness. Last year Barth established an all-time UB record for
field goal percentage when he
made 75 of 132 shots for 56.8%.
Harvey Poe, 6-0 senior guard
from West Orange, New Jersey,
was selected as Honorary Captain.
Poe led the Bulls in scoring the
past two seasons and wound up
his career with a total of 801
points, placing him 5th, tied with
Joe Tontillo, on the UB all-time
scoring list. Last season Poe set
a school record for foul shooting efficiency with 79 successful
shots in 94 attempts for 84.0%.
Norward Goodwin, senior forward from Erie, Pa., finished his
career with 657 points, placing
him 8th, tied with Steve Sklar,
on the all-time UB scoring list.
UB's scoring leader is Jim Horne,
with 1857 points in 4 years (195155). The 3-year mark is 1065
points, set by Hal Kuhn (1949-

■Len Serfustini now has seen
his charges rack up 161 victories
in 10 seasons on the North Main
Street campus. This places him

1st Team
G—Dave Bing, Syracuse
G—Jim Walker, Providence
C—Clyde Lee, Vanderbilt
F—Cazzie Russell, Michigan
F —Dave Schellhase, Purdue

2nd Team
G—Bob Lewis, N. Carolina
G—Matt Guokas, St. Joe's
C—Walt Wesley, Kansas
F—Dick Snyder, Davidson
F—Elvin Hayes, Houston

3rd Team

52).

MVP Bill Barth
second in scoring &lt;286 points),
despite missing the last two
games of the campaign because

The Buffalo players picked an
All-Opponent Team, as follows:
G—Dave Bing, Syracuse
G—Carver Clinton, Penn State
C—(Emmanuel Leaks, Niagara
F—-Douglas Sims, Kent State
F—Thomas Chapin, Plattsburgh

Honorary Captain Harvay Poo

second to Art Powell in the annals of UB coaching history. PoweM's teams won 188 games in a
27-year period way back in the
era of the center jump.

College Skiing Is:

Everyone on campus from the
fraternity sweetheart queen to
the physics major has heard the
"Happiness is” sayings.
Ski Magatina has now defined
what College Skiing is . . . for

the educated skiier and prospective ski buff.

•In its issue. Ski feel* it has
cuiled some of the best offbeat
answers to the “College Sknng
is

.

.

.

question.

College Skiing is having your
girl taken from you at the Dartmouth Carnival.
College Skiing is not skiing but
playing broomball hockey with
the University of Washington

Huskies.
College Skiing is taking advantagc of any situation, and keeping
your good behavior for the bigger
things, Hke civil rights.

SPECTRUM
All-America

College Skiing is the Ohio State
freshman who took off for the
winter quarter in order to become a folk-singing ski bum; then
took off the spring quarter to
become a ski bum; then took off
the summer quarter to become
a bum.
College Skiing is the southern
girl who had never seen snow be-

fore she took her first ski week;
eloped with the ski school direc-

G—Bob Verga, Duke
G—Pat Riley, Kentucky
C—Henry Finkel, Dayton
F—Carver Clinton, Penn State
F—Jack Marin, Duke

Honorable Mention
Louie Dampier and Thad Jaracz, Kentucky; Steve Vacendak,
Duke; Larry Millar, N. Carolina; Mike Warren, UCLA; Jack Nemelicka, Brigham Young; Westley Untold, Louisville; Ron Beatley, Texas
A&amp;M Kelly Pete, Wichita; Chris Pervall, lows; Lou Hudson, Minnesota; John Morrison, Canisius; Larry Humas, Evansville; Ron Williams, Watt Va. Bill Melchionni, Villanova; Red Robbins, Tennessee;
Sonny Dove and Bob McIntyre, St. John's; George Carter, St. Bonaventure; John Austin, Boston College; Bob Lloyd, Rutgers; Eddie
Jackson, Bradley; Hubie Marshall, LaSalle; Mai Graham, NYU; Joe
May, Dayton; Roland West, Cincinnati; Bill Barth and Harvey Poe, UB.
tor and never again
the ‘Mason-'Dixon Line.

crossed

College skiing is the girl who
wears a .pearl choker with her
lowcut dress to a formal dance
to cover the tan line created by

Things Are Looking Up!

her turtleneck shirt.
College swiing is being square
n Kalamazoo, Mich., and having
a acu'lty advisor and his wife as
chaperones to accompany young
■8rou P tour’

Now Earn

EXTRA CASH
Selling Ads for

The SPECTRUM
UB Varsity Basketball Turn—Front raw I to r: Raid Grata, Bob
Thomas, Larry Brassol. 2nd Row: Ray Borkiwski (manager). Bill
Barth, Dan Curran, Doug Barnard, Harvay Poa, Jon Clubart, Ed Muto
(asst coach). 3rd row; Paul Goldstain, Artia Walker, John Cavanaugh,
Lan Sarfuatini (head coach), Norward Goodwin, Rick Mann, Jim Williams.

The SPECTRUM
Published by

Bull Football
Ganes on WBEN

Partners' Press, 3nc.

Radio Station WBEN will broadcast (be UB football games this

&amp;■ Smith Printing

An agreement was reached last

&gt;381 KENMORE AVENUE
(it

Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

fall.

Earn $20460 Weekly
No Experience Necessary
Start Now
by Calling
RON HOLTZ
ADV. MGR.

or

week with Athletic Director Jim
Peelle acting on behalf of the
university, and Mr. Alfred H.
Kirchhofer, President of WBEN,
•Inc., acting on behalf of the station.

RAY VOLPE

Designation of announcers) for
the broadcasts will be made by
WBEN at a later date.

or TR 5-6009

,

831-3610

�</text>
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HOCKEY

__

LECTURE

REVIEW

(See Page

(See

VOLUME 16

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, MARCH 4, 1966

Page 11)

NO. 29

College and High School Students
To Take Exam For Draft Deferment
WASHINGTON (OPS)—The Selective Service System has announced tests that might qualify
students for a draft deferment
which will be given on May 14,
May 21, and June 3.
High school seniors who will
graduate in June and college
students who desire to take the
test must make an application
not later than April 23 to the
Science Research Associates of
Chicago, the firm under contract
with the government to prepare
and administer the tests. It was
awarded the contract over two
other bidders.
The Selective Service office
stresses the test is optional and
no student is required to take it.
However, beginning in the fall,

local draft boards will use a combination of school grades and
scores on the test to determine
who will be deferred. Indications
are that a student with an exceptionally high standing in his
college would not need to take
the test in order to be deferred.
A student with a lower rank in
his class might substantially improve his chances for a deferment with a good score on the

and test information will be posted on college and university campuses, public buildings and local
draft boards.
Students considering the tests
will be able to get bulletins and
forms from their draft boards.
The bulletin tells where and when
to report for the test. About 1,200
sites throughout the United
States, Puerto Rico, and the Canal
Zone will be used.
Rise in Enlistment
Meanwhile, the Pentagon announced that a sharp upturn in
enlistments has enabled it to cut
its March draft call by 10,500 to
the lowest figure
22,400 men
since the 16,500 called last Aug—

ust.

The Defense Department had
originally asked the Selective Service System to induct 32,900 men
in March but Army enlistments
in January totaled more than
the highest monthly
19,000
figure in more than a decade.
Marine Corps enlistments also
jumped to 7,000, an increase of
165 per cent over January of
—

1965.
With plans finalized for the
test and colleges reconstructing

recording

systems to furnish
draft boards with grades and class
standings, some college officials
have expressed serious misgivings
over the tighter rules for student deferments.
Lt. Gen. Lewis B. Hersey, head
of Selective Serivce, continued offering assurances to students.
Hershey said if monthly calls continue between 10,000 and 30,000
probably only an “infinitesimal”
number of full-time college students would be drafted to meet
the needs of war.
“It would probably be only a
thousand or two a month,” he
said, "and that’s pretty small in
comparison with a pool of 1.8
million students.”
He added unless draft calls rise
sharply, many students will not
be drafted even if they fail the
qualification tests and don’t maintain required class standings. He
warned, however, that “it’s not
a time of complacency among
students.” He said any change
in the Vietnam situation could
send draft calls skyrocketing and
cause a major depletion of college
campuses.

Spring Arts Festival Chairman Pat Jones and Publicity Chairman
Marilyn Burstcin.

Annual Spring Arfs Festival
Sponsored By Union Board
By JOAN ROBERTS

The Fourth Annual Spring Arts
Festival, sponsored by the Union
Board, will be held from Wednesday, March 9 to Sunday, March
14. Festival Committee Chairman
Pat Jones commented that the
‘'purpose of this year’s Spring
Arts Festival is to provide the

test.

Although the criteria for deferments have not been announced yet, it is expected to be similar to those used during the
Korean war when a score of 70
(out of 150 questions) was considered deferable for an undergraduate student and an 80 was
generally accepted for a graduate
student.
The test is designed to test
reading comprehenfour areas
sion, verbal relations, arithmetic
reasoning, and data interpretation.
A spokesman for the Selective
Service office called the test
“similar to a general aptitude
test” with about 50 per cent of
it devoted to verbal and linguistic skills and about 50 per cent
—

to quantitative reasoning.
He said the test had been constructed so as not to give any
advantage to any type of college
major. There

were charges that

the test used during the Korean
War was weighted in favor of
math and science students.
The formal announcement of
the test will be made by the Seective Service office around April

Conner. Highlighting Friday evening will be a reading by Allen

Ten Year Plan makes enjoyable reading—Spectrum Staffers (I. to r.) Estelle
Sandy .Lipman, peruse report.

Fox, Lauren Jacobs, and

Student Opinion On Academic Plan Sought
The Schools of Engineering and
Health Sciences, the Philosophy
Department, and the College of
Arts and Sciences have formed
committees and submitted questionnaires to students in reac-

Mississippi Farm Laborers
Receive Aid From Students
The Friends of the Mississippi
Freedom Labor Union, a new student group, has organized to collect funds for .the destitute farm
laborers in Mississippi.
The group is especially interested in helping to relive the
plight of the unemployed Negroes of Washington County, Mississippi, it is reported. In June of
lart year, the Student Non-Violent
Coordinating Committee organized a strike against Washington
County plantation owners, who
obtained a court injunction to
have the striking Negroes evicted from their shacks on the plantation. Since that time, Negroes
have 'built a “tent city” near the
plantations. They reportedly have
no jobs and no incomes. Stateadministered welfare programs
were described as “very skimpy,”
by a member of the Friends of
the Mississippi Labor Union.
The situation today finds some

student with an aesthetic experience which will create an impetus for the arts on a growing
campus."
The festival will begin on Wednesday with an art display in
Norton Center lounge by faculty
members Charles Gill and Donald Blumberg entitled “Works in
Collaboration,” The play Orattai
will be presented in the Fillmore
Room Wednesday through Saturday evenings at 8:15 p.m.
An open poetry reading will
be held at 7:00 p.m. on Thursday
in the Haas Lounge. In addition,
Frederic Rzewski will present “A
Concert with Discussion”, a program including electronic music,
between the hours of 8:00 and
9:30 p.m. in Oapen 140.
Experimental films will be
shown on Friday by independent
film makers in the Conference
Theatre throughout the afternoon.
Included will be works by Andy
Warhol, Stan Brakhage, and Bruce

100,000 Mississippdans in serious
need. Bpsi copal Bishop Paul
Moore, Jr., Chairman of the interdenominational Delta Ministry,
said that the growing desperation of the unemployed farm
workers was reflected in their recent attempt to move into empty
barracks on a closed Air Force
Base near Greenville, Miss. They

were ejected by military police.

A spokesman for the Friends
of the Mississippi Freedom Labor
Union said, “We are shocked by
the situation in Mississippi. Some-’
thing has to be done to help
these people. The situation will
get worse before it gets better.
We hope that the U.S. Government will take some action to
help the plight of the Negro in

Mississippi”

The group is accepting funds
at a table in Norton Union until
the situation is relieved.

tion to the Ten-Year Academic

Plan,

The Ten-Year Academic Plan
is a report on future plans of
all aspects of the University, submitted to Albany at the request
of SUNY President Samuel B.
Gould.
The School of Engineering faculty has prepared a Faculty TenYear Academic Plan recommending a thorough study of the problems associated with the large
number of students transferring
into the upper engineering division. The Engineering School also
advised a more thorough twophase counselling program of
psychological and personal advise-

ment to develop an understanding of the various programs in

projects was proposed. Attention
would be focused on mutual benefits in exploring unsolved prob(Cont’d on P. 2)

Ginsberg in the Clark Gym at
8:00 p.m.
Saturday’s events will begin
with a reading by prose writer
Herbert Huncke in room 232 Norton, at 1:00 p.m. The Erick Hawkins Dance Company will perform

in both dance and music in Baird
Hall at 8:30 p.m. Sonny Murray
and his jazz group will entertain
in the Rathskellar from 11:00
p.m. to 12 midnight. The orches(Cont’d on Pg. 3)

Student Senate Candidates Named;
Elections To Be Held March 15-16
General Student Senate elections will fee held in Norton Hall
First Floor Lounge, March 15 and
16 from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Voting for Junior and Senior
Nursing and Medical Students will
take place March 14 in front of
the Health Sciences Library.
Campus Alliance Party officer
candidates are: president, Clinton
Deveaux; vice-president, Kim Harrow; treasurer, Carl Levine; secretary, Susan Loren. They are

the School.
The plan also calls for improvement of library services and running unopposed.
expansion of fringe benefits to
Candidates of the Campus Alattract and retain outstanding liance Party for the five Arts and
faculty members.
Sciences seats are: Susan LanderA long-range study of the exist- son, Siaralee Rubenstein, Jocelyn
ing undergraduate programs is Lundquist, Ellen Cardone, Marion
slated by the Engineering School Michael. Independents are: Jefto investigate the desirability of frey Lewis, Martin Feinrider, and
Richard Flynn.
modifying the undergraduate proCampus Alliance candidates for
grams in accordance with reProthe five University College seats
commendations by Nationalorganiare: Michael Warren, Daniel Rothfessional and Educational
olz, Robert Weiner, Joel Gershozations.
an inwitz, and Georganne Gilels. IndeThe establishment of
attract pendents running are: Joseph Tar
dustrial liaison office toresearch
antino, and Richard Evans.
more industry-sponsored

Candidates for the seat of the
school of Business Administration
are; Douglas Braun, independent;
Allen Bassuk, Campus Alliance;
for the seat in the School of
Nursing: Pam Meahl. independent; Kathleen McDonough, Campus Alliance for the seat in the
School of Education: Christine
Bowe. independent; Paula Sheinberg, Campus Alliance.
Candidates from the Campus
Alliance Party running unopposed
are: Florence Bluegrass, School of
Health Related Professions Reginald Ameele, School of Pharmacy; Allen Paglia, School of
Law.

Robert Montgomery, candidate
for the seat in the School of
Engineering, has the endorsement
of the United Students Party.
The United Students Party is
not running a slate of candidates
in this Student Senate election
(see Spectrum, March 1, page 1).
Elections Committee Chairman
Barry Bienatock said, "The offi(Cont'd on Pg. 3)

�Friday, March 4, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

Removal of Parking Gates Creates Problem;
Difficulties Caused By Large Increase of Cars
What has formerly been both
the headache and livelihood of
the Campus Police is now spoken
of fondly in terms of the “Parking Problem."

The State Teachers College
fails to have the same problem
because there is so little parking
area that students are discouraged

from bringing their cars. This is
worth consideration. Why, they
could even sod some of the lots
and grow grass . . . Grass?

The removal of the parking
gates from parking lots has stimulated the arrivals of Pinkertons,
blocked roadways and the urgent,
possibly “we told you so" appeals for more funds, not only
to build more parking lots, but
also for more men to take care
of these lots.
Cr*t Shop protontt Student Art Exhibit.

r

r

I

n

r

»

since Januj|ry with the remo .
v»l of the parking gates, there

Student Art Exhibit To Be Featured
'"E.
n
By Craft Shop and Art Department s-rsrLTSSi *S
.

.

Acting Director of Physical Plant

*

«

_

The crafts shop will hold a
student art exhibit in cooperation with the Art department,
March 6 through 16 in 231 Norton Union.
Paintings,

drawings,

prints,

metal wares, jewelry and leather
work will be included in the dis-

sponsored by the Union
Board Arts and Crafts committee and Exhibits committee.

play

further information, conHick», assistant coordinator in charge of the exhibit.
For

tact Ann

Weekly Calendar
MARCH

4-8

FRIDAY
Displays: Spring Arts Festival,
8 to 11 p.m., Second Floor
Lounge.

Sabbath Service; “Purim

Jewish Law and
House, 7:45 p.m.

in the
Lore,” Hillel

Photography Club; Dr. Clifford
Furnas, speaker, Norton 332, 4

School of Business AdministraFaculty Research Work
Shop, “Geographic Mobility and
Market Learning,” Dr. Alan P.
Andreason, Norton 232, 4 p.m.
tion:

The American Institute of
Steel Construction; “Space Forms

in Steel," Mr. Donald L. Murdock, Acheson 5, 6:45 p.m.
TUESDAY

p.m.

Chi Omega and Gamma Phi:
Social, Warren’s Steak House.
Sigma Phi Epsilon: Queen of
Hearts Ball, 9 p.m., Camelot
Motor Inn.
Tau Kappa Epsilon and Pi Sig
ma Rho of Buffalo State: Social,
Hotel Worth.

Lecture; “Euripedes’ Orestes,"
Jene A. LaRue, Norton 335, 3
p.m.

SATURDAY

CJlEoaJ

Varsity

Fencing: UB vs. Notre

Dame.
Freshman Fencing; UB vs. Hobart College.
Ukranian American Student
Club: Trip to University of Western Ontario.
Alpha Epsilon Pi: “Toga Party”

Alpha Kappa Psi; "Apartment
Party”
Alpha Phi Omega: Regional
Conference at Oswego.
Phi Kappa Psi: “Horrors of
Babylon Party”

Phi Lambda Delta; "Farmer
Brown Hayride," 2-mile Creek.
“Pledge
Welcome,” Lafayette
Stud Farm.
Theta Chi Fraternity: “Purple
Passion Party," 9 p.m.

Lecture;
“African Sculpture,”
Dr. Ladislas Segy, 8:30 p.m., Conference Theatre.

Ukranian American
Student
Club is sponsoring a trip to the
University of Western Ontario on
Wednesday, March 12. Dr. Sheen,
of McMaster University will
speak on Ivan Franko. All interested are requested to leave
name, address and telephone at
Norton Union Box 18. The group
will depart from the Norton
Lounge at 2 p.m.

vantage of the free parking lots
and, whereas they formerly parked on outside roadways, now have
moved on campus.

*

At least half the students working 13 weeks earned
$1500 or more. And here’s what others earned
even those working fewer weeks:
.

This has led to accidents, triple
parking, traffic jams, and parking on roadways. Mr. Sana’s department, acknowledging the
manpower shortage, has attempted to do all it can to aid students
in removing cars. However, his
Department’s main concern has
been clear roadways. Students
who deemed it necessary to park
on roadways, have returned to
find that their cars have been
towed to the Grover Cleveland
Parking lot. Fines levied on these
cars amount to $15.

.

.

Mr. Sana added that because
of the manpower shortage, funds
are being sought in Albany to
cope with the problem. Because
of this, the fact that students
have been entering faculty lots
with false keys, and the need to
control parking, Pinkertons have
been hired for two or three
weeks.
Mr, Sarra, however, does not
think that the State will increase
funds for more parking lots, since
the new campus, which will be
finished in 1968, will provide
sufficient parking facilities.

-

Les Amis de France will honor
M. Camille Bourniquel at a dinner in the Tiffin Room, Saturday, March 5 at 6:30 p.m. Reservations may be made with
Mrs. Tina Kalen, 49 Tacoma St.,
at three dollars per person.

Other immediate remedies have
taken the form of warnings issued directly to the students, advising them to have car permits.
Those not having car permits
will be fined.

There have been 13,000 student parking permits issued since
last September. With only 4000
parking spaces on campus Mr.
Murray’s statement of last summer, "Luckily they aren’t here
at the same time,” seems now
to be wishful thinking.

SUNDAY

Felix Montoya, Klein
bans Music Hall, 8:30 p.m.
Concert;

Lecture: "Mexico's California,"
Buffalo Museum of Science, 2:45

p.m.

Newman Supper: Newman Hall
5:30 p.m.

Student Zionist Organisation:
Meeting, “Israeli Trips and Experiences,” Norton 334, 7:30 p.m
MONDAY

Recital:

Beethoven, Budapest
String Quartet, Baird Hall.
Play: “Music, Wit and Man
ners,” Ars Antigua. Studio Are
na Theatre, 8:30 p.m.
Lactura; ‘Technology and Social Control,” David Wieck, Dicfendorf 146, 3 p.m.

Bata Sigma Rho: Nomination
of officers.
Chi

Omaga;

Officer Installs

Ulwimillllji

Ten-Year Academic Plan.
ifrom Pg. 1)
lems in everyday design practice
among enterprises in the Western
New York industrial complex.
The Health Science Division
has developed the Decision Program “to identify programming,
(Cont’d

planning and construction phases
through the project will pass
prior to occupancy of the completed building project (the transformation of the present UB campus into the Health Sciences campus).”

The necessity for decisions concerning transportation between
the Health Sciences and the Amherst Campus and the availability
of services at the University Hospital to the staff of other hospitals in the area was recognized.
Philosophy Department Chair-

man Rollo Handy said that questionnaires concerning student
opinion of courses and policies

of the Philosophy Department
have been sent to graduate, undergraduate, major and non-major students. They have not yet
been analyzed.
Committee member Dr, Anton
said that the long range goal for
the Philosophy Department is’ to
reduce the size of classes and expand upon the types of courses
offered.

Dr. Raymond G. Hunt, Chairman of the Faculty Committee
on Student Affairs disclosed that
a motion was made and carried
at a recent meeting of the College
of Arts and Sciences to appoint
a three-man faculty committee to
construct a new Arts and Sciences
Ten-Year Plan. He asserted that
this plan would insure extensive
faculty participation in development of the new plan. Committee members have not yet been
appointed.

HOW TO QUALIFY FOR INTERVIEW
1. Minimum age 18.
and must be
2. Need a valid driver’s license
able to drive a clutch transmission.
3. Be in good physical condition.
.

.

.

REGISTER NOW
Ask your Summer Placement Director or Student
Aid Officer to schedule you for our campus visit.

�Friday, March 4„

1966

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

Lynford Runs Unopposed For Coordinator;
Outlines Roles Of NSA Steering Committee
Freshman Jeffrey Lynford will
run unopposed for the position of

National Student Association Coordinator in the March 15 and
16 Senatorial elections. This will
be the first election of an NSA
Coordinator on campus. Previously, the coordinator was appointed by the Student Seiiate.
The NSA Steering Committee
is a committee of the Student
Senate. Subcommittees of the
NSA Steering Committee include:
NSA Fast for Freedom, Student
Discount Service, Community Tutorial Project, and International
Travel. Appointing subcommittee chairman and initiating new
programs on campus are the prU
mary duties of the NSA coordi-

Sigma Phi Epailon't 12th Annual Quaan of Hoarta Dane* will ba
held tonight from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. at Canalot Motor Inn. Two of the
Queen Candidates are Geri Gruson (left) and Sandee Gonsalus.

Spring Arts
(Cont’d from Pg. 1)

Jn

tra will feature artists Albert
Aylers and Marion Brown.

The highlight of the Spring
Arts Festival will be Jerry Benjamin’s “A New Theatre Piece”;
a “semi-spontaneous series of
from
Happenings, “scheduled
12:00 Saturday night to 6:31 a.m.
Sunday morning. This production
will be held in Norton Union and
will involve the participation and
movement of students in attendance. All women’s curfew regulations will be abolished for

Saturday evening.
All events are open to the public, excepting “A New Theatre
Piece,” which involves only Faculty, Students and Staff. Tickets
are available for “Orestes’ and the
Erick Hawkins Dance Company,
All other events are free of
charge.

HKemnrtam
CAPTAIN
RAYMOND
HETRICK
Class of

‘58

Veteran of ROTC Program

Died in Action in
North Vietnam

/TRIAL

SIZE BOTTLE OF

ALPHA-KERI BATH OIL

Bring This Ad to

HIGHGATE PROFESSIONAL PHARMACY, INC.
3435 BAILEY AVE. —one block from the Water Tower

larly the Student Senate.”
She continued:
“The NSA
steering committee initiates programs primarily in the following
areas;
academic freedom, aca-

demic reform, student welfare,
international and national student relations, and student-corn-

munity involvement.”

Miss Michaels added that the
coordinator should act as an
assistant to other programs which
are being initiated on campus,
Once a committee is established
it is no longer under the jurisdiction of the coordinator.

!Automation &amp; The New Humanism'
Discussed In Sociology Club Lecture

Miss Raya Dunayevskaya, author, philosopher and political
analyst, discussed “Automation
and the New Humansim” in a
lecture sponsored by the Sociology Club last Monday.
Miss Dunayevskaya began by
nator on campus according to
explaining that although autoMr. Lynford.
Mr. Lynford disclosed that he mation and humanism appear to
coexist peacefully and in harwill formulate plans for promony, they are, in reality, engrams on international affairs on
gaged in a civil war. Miss Dunacampus. He mentioned leaderevskaya divided the years since
ship training workshops for student organizations leaders as the onset of automation into
three periods; 1950 to 55, 1955
part of a proposed program for
to 65, and 1965 to the present.
nexxt year, and proposed a reThe effects of automation were
evaluation of the honors program
not noticed until 1950 when the
to enlarge its scope and to encourage more independent study. word “automation” was first
coined, Miss Dunayevskaya said,
As the representative of the
She noted that contrary to popuNational Student Association on
campus, the coordinator disperses
lar belief, automation did not
RAYA DUNAYEVSKAYA
aid the workers in their jobs but
information on NSA’s activities
rereduced the labor force by
throughout the country.
job of the laborer was reduced
ducing jobs.
Current NSA coordinator Marto a mechanical task.
She continued that automaion Michaels defined her role as
JWiss Dunayevskaya cited the
tion did, in fact, reduce the sta- years from 1956 to 1962 as the
“making NSA resources and intus of the worker at his job. As period of the Hungarian revolt
formation available to other orthe machine took control, the and the emergence of numerous
ganizations on campus, particuindependent African nations. She
explained that until this time
only the United States and Russia had had practical experience
with automation. Now, however,
it became a universal problem.
Assistant Professor of Socioarticles and essays in a variety To many underdeveloped nations
of journals. It was reported that of the world the only path tology Sidney Wilhelm will discuss
this approach to the Negro and ward industrialization seemed to
“Technology and Social Control”
the Civil Rights movement (see be through automation, she said.
on Monday, at 3 p.m. in 146 DieMiss Dunayevskaya cited the
fendorf. Dr. Wilhelm’s presenta“Who Needs the Negro" in Transto assimilate
tion is the second in a series of Action with E. Powell) has been problem of how
the subject of much controversy. manual labor and automation inlectures sponsored by the SoAssociate Professor of Philo- to a reliable, workable system
ciology Club entitled “Technosophy at Rensselaer Polytechnic as the major question of present
logy: The Virgin and the DynaInstitute, Dr. David Wieck will concern. She mentioned Marxist
mo.”
and Leninist theory as possible
Dr. Wilhelm is the author of be the third speaker in the sesolutions to the problem.
the book Urban Zoning and Land- ries. He will discuss "Eros and
the Machine” Monday, March 14.
Use Theory as well as numerous

Sociology Prof. Presents
Second Speech In Series

Senate Elections

..

.

(Cont’d from Pg. 1)

SUNYAB Student and Faculty are "preferred customers" at
Just show your student or faculty I.D. Card.
our store

eers in this election are unopposed. This means there will be
less campainging by the candidates and fewer votes cast. I expect the voting to be less than
last year’s."
A debate will be held Monday,
March 14 in the Norton Conference Theater at 2;00 p.m. A debate will also take place in Tower
Private Dining Room Sunday,
March 13 at 8:00 p.m.
March 14 from 10:00 am. until
3:00 p.m. has been set aside for
outdoor publicity stunts, parades,

—

TQ
H3A ]D&gt;
JtvJlC5

who’d want to spend
next summer working there?
•

o

motorcades, and bands oh the
grounds between Ache son and
Clement Hall.
Candidate qualifications and
photographs will appear in the
Spectrum on Friday, March 11.

•

•

YOU CAN! Through the 1966 SUMMER EMPLOYMENT GUIDE—which lists 50,000 summer
openings in the U. S. and 37 foreign countries. The
GUIDE offers openings of all kinds i at resorts,
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government. These jobs are the cream; they offer
top pay, travel, fun, or career training.
The 1966 SUMMER EMPLOYMENT GUIDE, the
nation’s largest selling, most complete guide to summer employment, is crammed with additional saseful
information on items such as visa regulations, openings in Federal agencies, tips on preparation of
USI
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�Friday. March 4, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

Editorial Comment
The First
Ten Year Plan
.

.

it 1

®

.

Upon request of the State University of New York,
the Office of President Clifford C. Furnas hurriedly
conceived aifd issued a Ten Year Academic Plan which
outlined the proposed growth of the University. Dated
October 21, 1965, it was easily one month before the
report was distributed for appraisal to the UB faculty.
Members of the academic community were given until
January 15 to record their impressions and suggestions
for the final draft of the plan. The last date for reply
has since been extended, and we are informed that the
actual growth plan has become a matter of continual
elaboration and improvement, and that numerous drafts
of it can be expected.

Ignoring the content of the report, one finds a rather
basic objection to the manner in which it was prepared.
At the outset widespread faculty and student opinion
were not solicited, and many were unaware that a
document of vital concern and importance to the entire
campus was being engineered at the demand of the state.
The plan itself clearly reflects the poverty of thought
so prevalent on our campus. In addition to being nearly
devoid of meaningful content, the report mirrors a smug
satisfaction with the quality of our education, while
demonstrating immense concern over our ability to fit
snugly into the plans of the state and our proficiency at
accommodating the quantitative aspects of mass education.

grUlTIp

When one reads through last
Tuesday’s Spectrum, it is notice-

able that the Letters to the Editor
column dealt largely with the
issue of who is and who is not
responsible for the grades of the
individual student. While I would
personally lean towards the somewhat archaic idea that it is up to
an individual who wants to be a
student to do at least some studying, this is not the point I wished
to raise. I wonder what General
Herehey and company are going
to do in the case of those schools
which have decided that grades
get in people’s way in the early
years of college and should be
dropped in favor of a pass or fail
classification.
The fact that this is probably
the best way to run the operation
—people who want to leam can
learn and people who want to
wave a freshly inked sheepskin
in the face of the Personnel
Manager can s!it over at Bitteris
mans and generally slide by
secondary to the enjoyment I
would have of telling the local
board chairman that I could provide absolutely no indication of
Joe Freshman’s ranking in his
class, just that he was a student
in good standing.
I think I am upsetting the Pink
on the gate of the lot I park in.
—

Reaction to the plan has been sparse, but where it
has existed, the need for extensive overhaul is apparent.
While the current mode of reevaluation is undoubtedly
well-intentioned, piecemeal repair cannot fail but to
produce a haphazard result.
The Spectrum suggests
that the entire plan be withdrawn and that an alternate
be prepared with a reflection of the principles and
educational philosophy of the academic community as
its base.

THE
Editor-In-Chief
Editor-Elect

JEREMY TAYLOR

DAVID EDELMAN
Managing Editor
LARRY SHOHET
Business Manager
RAYMOND D. VOLPE
SUSAN GREENE
Assistant
News Editor
ALICE EDELMAN
Staff —Loretta Angelina, Joanne Bouchier, Russell Buchman, Karen Green,
Peter Lederman, Joan Roberts, RIcK Schwab. Dan Schroeder, Sharon Shutman,
Eileen Teltler, Nancy Todar, Patti Wartley, Judy Weisberg.
Feature Editor
JO ANNE LEEGANT
JOHN STINY
Assistant
Staff—-Bonnie Bartow, Ron Ellsworth, Barbara Ann Fitzsimmons, Barbara Loeb,
Audrey Logel, Bob Martin. Suzanne Rovner, Martha Tack, William Weinstein.
Sports Editor
STEVE SCHUELEIN
Staff—Mike Castro, Mike Dolan, Steve Farbman, Bob Frey, Scott Forman,
J. B. Sharcot.
Layout Editor
SHARON HONIG
Staff—Joanne Bouchier, Stephanie Parker, Steve Silverman.
Copy Editor
LAUREN JACOBS
Staff Carol Backer, Estelle Fox. Jocelyn Hailpem, Sandy Lippman, Betsy Ozer,
Claire Shottenfeld, Susan Zuckerberg.
Advertising Manager
RON HOLTZ
Angelo. Audrey Cash. Pat Rosenfeld, Stave

Silverman.

Joseph

Photography Editor
EDWARD JOSCELYN
Staff —Don Blank, Peter Bonneau, Joseph Feves, Carol Goodson, Alan Gruber,
Marc Levine, Ivan Makuch, Michael Soluri, Anthony Walluk, Susan Wortman,
Robert Wynne.
Circulation Manager
DIANE LEWIS
Faculty Advisor
IRENE WILLET
Financial Advisor

DALLAS GARBER

EDITORIAL POLICY IS DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR-1 N-CHIEQ
FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING

Second Class

Postage

Subscription

$3.00

15.000.

Those interested will find Bob

Dylan as the interviewee in Playboy this month and Joan Baez
covered in last Sunday’s Naw
York Times Magazine. The Dylan
interview is really a rather fascinating try at expressing the psychology of non-committment. Or
at least the psychology of noncommittment to anything outside
yourself and the development of

that self. I think.
The “Ray Yay UB Football
Club” which has its offices directly across the corridor from my
back door is highly pleased at the
arrival of Coach Urich and his
apparently much more active offense ideas. A fair amount of
time is spent trying to convert
me to a proponent of big time
football, principally because they
think that this column is capable
of molding minds.
They fail for various reasons,
but the story that Syracuse University a few years ago had to

their mother and her

current lover spent their allotment on vodka, goes our Red
Face Award.

by STEESE

choose between a new field house
and a new library, and chose the
field house, does nothing but send
cold shivers up and down my
back. I do agree, however, that
perhaps the pump needs to be
primed, for example, the hundred
thou that the FSA has to pay to
the state because it was illegal to
collect parking fees might well
have ben used to refurbish the
“big time,” “corporate image” of
the University
since there be
none foolish enough to think that
this illegally collected fund could
possibly be returned to those
from whence it was collected.
—

If anybody would like the use
of this column, it is not beyond
the attainment of at least the
more gifted writers. If you indeed feel that there is something
which needs blasting and would
like to do so, but feel hampered
by writing a letter to the editor,
something very possibly can -be
worked out. No rampart political
propaganda, please. It only offends people. What we really
want is a column of lasting literate importance, an island in a sea
of crass journalism. And if anybody else writes material of that
sort don’t expect me to be able
to . . . and if this column is not
organized, please note that it is
at least consistently disorganized.

of Gonzago

To the new Peace Corps Di-

rector, Jack Hood Vaughn who

told a Senate committee that
American “assistance to military

regimes (dictatorships) was not a
betrayal of the liberal ideals of
the Alliance for Progress,” goes
our Weekly Newspeak Award.
To the Armour Star Company
which now sells a dog food packaged in a can that can be opened
by dogs goes our Technological
Breakthrough of the Century

Award.
To Senator Thruston Morton of
Kentucky who strongly supports
a government made propadanga
film extolling the virtues of to-

bacco entitled “World of Pleasure” goes this column’s Cancer
Salesman of the Year Award.

To the twenty Rhode Island

College students who burned sev-

eral armfuls of peace literature
of The New England Committee
for Non Violent Action to show
their support for Johnson’s war
instead of enlisting in the Army
and taking their places on the
battle line goes the Bookbumers
for Intellectual Freedom and the
Cowards of the Week Awards.
To Congressman Thaddeus Dulski of Buffalo who wonders why
the Johnson administration wants
to restore recently eliminated excise taxes on automobiles and
telephone calls but refuses to
close the 27% % depletion allowance for the oil industry in
order to help pay for the war goes
our What's Good for Texas Is
Good for the Country Award.

THE RIGHT

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
University Campus, Buffalo, N. Y. 14214.
Published twice weekly from the first week of September to the last week in
May, except for exam periods, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and spnng vacations.

cup

because

SPECTRUM

Publication Office at Norton Hall,

Staff —Terry
Mancini.

Batangova “a heroine mother” for
giving birth to ten children and
later discovering that the children were fathered by ten different men, that eight of the
children are now in government
homes, and that the two youngest
are suffering from malnutrition

.

I don’t dress well enough to be
a member of the faculty and who
ever heard of a staff member with
a beard? Lord knows they are
subversive. Anyway the poor Pink
watches me trudge up the walk
carrying two brief cases and a
thermos bottle and I wonder what
he is thinking.

The Murder

By JOHN MEDWID
Other objections to the plan include its apparent
lack of any coherent educational philosophy upon which
To Mrs. Robert McNamara who
its programs are based. With the notable exception of told Lloyd Shearer in an interthe section dealing with Health Sciences, the plan is view in Parade Magazine that
“Secretary of Defense is a
sorely in need of a unifying thread. Where general being
man-killing job” goes our Underpolicy is implied, it appears to reinforce a sacrifice of statement of the Year Award.
individual creativity and identity, in addition to a massive
To the Soviet government offideemphasis of Social Science and Humanities programs. cials who proudly declared Olga

.

Paid at Buffalo. N. Y.
year,
circulation

per

Represented
for national advertising by
National Advertising Service. Inc., 420 Madi
son Ave., New York. N. Y.

There’s been a lot of talk late-

ly concerning the draft, especially in its relation to the college student. The position of the

far left is that the draft is immoral on two grounds; 1) it is
inextricably intertwined with war,
and war is immoral, and 2) it is
coercive.

Furthermore, drafting the
lower quartile of male college
students is immoral because 3) in-

sructors thereby

pass judgment
on the future, and possibly the
lives, of their students. Thus war
the compulsory draft, and the sys-

tem of classification all fall prey
to the vociferous left.

What is the position of The
Ripht in regard to these questions? Let us try each case
separately. Point No. 1) War is
not necessarily immoral. In a
great number of oases it is the

lesser of two evils. Even the
farthest of the far-outs will admit
that when Hitler marched on Poland the Allies did the just,
proper, and moral thing when
they declared war on Germany,
and that the Uited States had no
recourse but to fight Japan after
Pearl Harbor. In the particular
instance of the Vietnamese War
the U. S. is again in the right
it is protecting the helpless na—

tion of South Vietnam from the
aggressor nations Russia and
Red China, hiding under (he flimsy disguise of North Vietnam.
Point No. 2) The draft is adcoercive. This country
forces individuals, under pain of

mittedly

severe punishment, to serve some
capacity in the armed forces. My
general position that force is to
be avoided whenever possible
leads me to regard the draft,
probably the most blatantly forceful institution we have, with res-

ervations. Yes, the ranks must be
filled and if no other way can
be found we must rely on compulsory conscription. However, I
believe there is an alternative. I
believe that by sizably increasing
the salary of enlisted men this
nation can fill the ranks much
faster and also greatly increase
•the number of career men. If we
can make the pay scale competitive to that of industry, men will
enter more rapidly and stay longer, thus accounting for the lost
draftees.
Point No. 3) Any professor who
marks fairly need not fear that
he is doing his students injustice.
The mark a student receives, is
the product of that student’s intelligence and industry. The point
that the mark a student receives

may affect his ultimate destiny
has always been valid, and should
be or else the marking system is
quite useles. What scares me
here is that certain professors,
sympathetic to the leftist cause
may raise the grades of all their
students in an effort to protect
them. Then and only then is the
student relieved of the responsibility of his destiny. A second objection is that students with a lot
of gaff courses has an unfair advantage over one who sincerely
wants a productive education.
Should a Sociology major with a
1.8 be given preference to an Engineering student with a 1.77 And
doesn’t such a system encourage
the student to make simplicity
rather than interest his criterion
for the value of a course? To
carry this argument to its logical
extreme, doesn’t this system make
Erie County Tech shine far
brighter than Harvard of MIT?
To remedy all these inadequacies
of the grade-point criterion I suggest that a comprehensive draft
deferment exam be administered
universally and that the lowest
quartile on this exam be reclassified.
The left complains loud and
clear, but God help us if we ever
have to rely on them for constructive alternatives.

�*■.

&gt;»

k

I

Friday, March 4, 1966

.

.

Ours is a young army; not
young as a force, but young in
nature. The weapons are mostly
new and untried, as are many of
the men who serve. Fully seventy-five per cent of our present
standing forces (including reserves have been attached since
the Korean War. These young
men who make up a majority of
our nation’s fighting forces have
never been in war.

Do not misunderstand me; I
am not saying that these men
have not been in combat. I say
that the average U. S. military
man has never been in a real
War
an actual bloody slaughter! Further, I can say that less
than ten per cent of our men
have lived with an enemy on

Even if it were true that the
National Liberation Front was an
agent of the very Devil, wouldn’t
it be better for the South Vietnamese to live under a form of
“tyranny” than to die of starvation in a land made barren and
useless by the forces of “freedom”???!!

In order for Americans to be
willing to give aid to Cuba when
the time comes, .they must be

well informed about the situation
in Cuba. Cubans are practical,
they know that their only chance
to get back to Cuba is to get help
from Americans, a refugee said
in a recent interview in Miami.
Alfredo Gonzalez is currently
a law student at the University
of Miami. He participated in the
Bay of Pigs and was president
of the Brigade 2506, an active
exile group in Miami.
The Brigade 2506 is one of
the 40 exile groups dispersed
throughout the United States.
Each group has its own tactics
and schemes for overthrowing
Castro, yet all of them are basically united around the one purpose of going back to Cuba.
particular
organization
The
works to oust Castro by means
of propaganda in Cuba. By working to incite revolution among
the Cubans still in Cuba they
hope eventually to demoralize
Castro.
“Castro’s army is in bad
shape,” Gonzalez said. “Many of
its members harrass him, and he
must spend money to keep them
mobilized. Brigade 2506 also
works to demobilize and demoralize Castro’s forces by shooting
at Cuban ships off the coast
which trade with Europe. This
works to increase insurance rates
and eventually decrease trade,”
he continued.
Tactics such as these are borrowed from the Communist dictum, “To gain a country, one
must first stifle its economy.”
Exile radio broadcasts on a
“Voice of Cuba” program directed to Castro’s forces say, “In your
hands, Cuban soldiers, are the
arms, and in your heart is the
courage to overthrow the dictator.” The maneuvers of the
Cuban exiles give hope to the
people left on the island as well.
The refugee group also plans
military strategy such as war of
peripheral attack, a demolition of
ail Cuban embassies and sabotage
by Cubans within Cuba.
Other groups, like the “MIRR,”
does commando work in coastal
towns; the MIRR works by infiltrating people into Cuba to incite
antagonism against the Castro
regime. 'Another group, “RECE,”
also does commando work, but

acts mainly through diplomatic

channels.
The CTO (Confederation of
Cuban Labor) has been imported
to the United States as an active
exile group with nearly 6000
members throughout the United
States. In Cuba, the CTO was the
Cuban counterpart of the CIO and
had over 1.5 million members.
Prior to Castro, its function
was to improve salaries and conditions for the workers. Today,
past members of the CTO have
regathered in exile for the main

to

the Editor

—

—

Cuban Refugees Struggle
The following is Part 3 of a
four-part series written by Betsy
Cohn for the Michigan Daily.

PAGE FIVE

rjCetter

.

their native soil
and don’t
stand up so proudly!! America
has never had a European or
Asian invader on its shores only
because the technologies and resources of the warring European
and Asian countries were behind
ours. We were not as safe as we
thought
but that is another
story. At any rate, how can we
propose to tell any other country
how to feel about an invader,
Eastern or Western, devastating
its land?

...

1 I

SPECTRUM

Commentary
By JOHN BONER

t I

of someday returning to
Cuba.
Ramon Martin, currently the
head secretary of the CTO in
Miami, and formerly a member
of the Confederation of Cuban
Labor, Federation of Medicine,
said, “Here &lt;in the U. S.) the CTO
cannot serve our members as it
did in Cuba. Rather, we must
work as a liason with others in
order to gain better conditions
for our laborers. We also work
■with our laborers to help them
in their relations with American
workers, but our main purpose
here is to free Cuba; to do this
we need the support of all Americans and Latin Americans such
as Cuba received from Russia.”
Martin explained that while he
thought the majority of Americans are misinformed or totally
uninformed about the Cuban situation, ‘The American government as well as all the exile
organizations has spies in Cuba
and an active underground which
keeps the government and agencies well-informed about what is
happening in Cuba today.”
The Cuban exiles are an idealistic group. They have a strong
love for their country. Unfortunately these are the strongest factors in their favor at present.
They realize that the only way
to return to Cuba is to rid the
country of Castro, or to take advantage of an internal uprising
in Cuba.
“In either case,” Gonzalez said,
“the United States will have to
give Cuba full support. If Castro
were to 'be assassinated, the
Americans would be the only
power which Cubans would respect; they would have to help
Cuba build a democracy.
■purpose

“If there was to be an uprising
within Cuba, it would have to
coincide with an external attack
from U. S. and Cuban forces.”
Other Cuban officials expressed
the same viewpoint. A former
high official, wishing to remain
annoymous, said, “The U. S. will
have to aot in this hemisphere,
otherwise they will repeat the
Dominican defeat. The Communists have penetrated this hemisphere and the cancer is in Cuba.”
Menocal, ex-mayor of Havana,

agreed. “The first blood will be
Cuban. There must be a well organized front but it will have to
be backed by the United States.
An internal uprising in Cuba

must be spontaneous but it must
also coincide with an outside at-

IRC “Takes Issue” With Editorial

one

might have of the Inter-Residence Council as a “condescending tool of the Housing Office,”
Centainly the close working relationship Inter-Residence Council has with the University Administration to better the milieu
of residence students cannot be
misconstrued as University Administration domination over a
representative student government (a true form of democratic
functioning).

■to convince students of the many

merits of the UB Food Service.”
These matters will remain with
the competent Inter-Residence
Council Activities Council and
Food Committee. Instead, InterResidence Council will continue
to legislate and initiate action
on those matters directly concerning residence students, the
people who faithfully electe
Inter-Residence Council to thi
position.

Yours very truly,
Michael Kayes,
Vice Chairman
Paulette Bohnen,
Secretary

Andrea Roth,
Treasurer
Daniel Becker,
Activities Council
Chairman
Joel Feinman,
Food Committee
Chairman

We would like to conclude by
saying that, contrary to some
public opinion, Inter-Residence
Council does not plan to secede
from the campus. To your further
dismay, we will not “return to
movies, dances, or even attempts

"Temporary” Demise Is Monument to Newspaper
TO THE EDITOR:
I would like to take issue with
your editorial of Tuesday, March
1, 1966. The “temporary” demise
of the United Students Party is
not a monument to the disinterest of the students on this campus. To a igreat extent, it is also
a monument to a newspaper that
presents but one view, to a newspaper Whose management is linked with the now dominant party,
Campus Alliance.

The decision of the Executive
Committee of the United Students
Party was definitely not beneficial to student government. The
decision serves as a poor reflection on the Student Association,
for it tells us that only one set
of ideas and ideals shall be presented in our student government. The student body encompasses a broad range of opinion.
When are the representatives of
these views going to come forth?

Are there no independent thinkers left?

I must admit that I was rather
surprised to read an editorial,
that in essence, came out for a
continuance of power oligarchy
without dissent. Does the Spectrum honestly believe in a oneparty system, or is this political
bias at its best?

.

Joseph M. Epstein

“Ode to the Left” Defended
TO THE EDITOR:
In reply to the two letters to
the editor concerning my poem
“Ode to the Left,” may I briefly
comment first on Miss Kaplan’s

To Miss Gold (obviously a per-

son of rhetorical wit) who has

letter. Stripped of its overemotional and self contradictory facade, the essence of her criticism
is “however, they (the Left) have
every right to express their
Opinions.” She tacitly assumes
that I have expressed a desire to
deny them this right. This, of

read more into the poem than was
there, I wish to rectify some of
the more serious misconceptions
on her part. First, I have not expressed a desire to deny the Left
a “right to a table in Norton” as
she implies. Secondly, I have used
the word “subjugated” to imply
the eventual result when appeasement is the order of the day. It
was not meant to accuse the Left

implicity implied in that poem.
In fact I agree wholeheartedly
with her that differences in opinion are essential.

She further implies that I believe that a criterion of validity
of an individual’s thoughts is
somehow related to how clean

shaven he is. If that were true
then I would have to deny any
value to such bearded individuals
as Christ, Einstein, Shakespeare,
Buber, Freud, and Lincoln, to
name but a few.
Finally, as I did indeed borrow
more popular typecasting labels for certain elements
of the Left and used them as generalizations, Miss Gold has pointed them out quite honestly and

some of the

generalizations emphasizes this
danger against which one must
always be on guard.
Jon Simplicio

Graduate Student Opposed to Eliminating Grades
TO THE EDITOR:
I am a graduate student, and
I am truly chagrined by the student proposal to eliminate the
grading system just because it
will be used in conjunction with
the new Selective Service laws.
Several thoughts come to mind:
1—Granted, it might be more
adult not to give grades, but, how
far would the actual learning
process be pushed in a course
which gives no grade?

2—The notion that the professor, in issuing a grade, “signs
the student’s life or death sen-

tence” is childish ,to say the
least. This seems to indicate
that the student is a passive object in the academic process. On
the contrary, it is he who determines the grade—not the professor. If it were really believed
that his life depended on passing
a certain course, the student
would undoubtedly strive harder to attain perfection.

Money

When asked when they hope to
regain their country, some nod
solemnly and say that realistically they know it cannot be done
until problems in Vietnam have
■been settled; others grin and say
“Volveremos con Dios,” we will
return with God, while others,
such as labormen in the CTO office, point to a well used blade-

of

board

any possible misconceptions

However, it is felt necessary at
this time to elaborate on the
“dynamic leadership" of this
year’s Inter-Residence Council.
Among the recent accomplishments of the Inter-Residence
Council have been the abolition
of dress standards, the extension
of senior women’s curfews, the
elimination of needless residence
hall rules, the separation of room
and board contracts, and the suggestion and institution of a
workable policy within the Food
Service to combat wastage. It is
hoped that these achievements

TO THE

“Cuba en 1966."

dence newspaper, student involvement in Faculty-Student Association residence operations
and meaningful review of said
operations will help to correct

The Inter-Residence Council
takes issue with the Spectrum
Editorial of February 25, 1966.
Any clarification of Inter-Residence Council policy as ridiculed
in said Editorial will be made
to the proper authorities (i.e., the
Student Judiciary) at the appropriate time.

tack by Americans and Cuban
exiles,” he said.

saying

plus the establishment of a resi-

TO THE EDITOR:

EDITOR:

There is much talk

on campus

and
mLs proTrtionmusteducation
play a sub-

toTKudent
ordinate role to the omnipotent
machine but tyranny is tyranny,
something I will not tolerate,

and
course, on the
I am speaking, of
hostile, moneyvending machines which
insult and thus do a
the dehumanizetion process ot the student.

nnsTruoulous

Sin

3—It is unfortunate to state,
but not everyone is meant to be
college material. Class attendance alone should not be the
criterion for draft exemption. We
come to school to learn; the
grading system is a measure of
this ability. Those who can’t
measure up to academic standards imposed either by the university or government (in time
of national emergency) should
make room for those who can.
James P. Jonak.

Machines Attacked

Until recently, I thought that
there was little I could do when
thwarted by the multi-armed mon-

ster (excluding, perhaps, a stralogically located kick). But now

have found a way to “beat the
system,” so to speak: the bureaucrate in the Bursar Office will
gladly (?) refund every cent lost
to any machine on campus. One
must only fill out a Refund
Voucher In triplicate. (And you
thought the FSA had no heart!?)
This startling dtecovery may

seem rather insignificant, but I
have in mind a campaign to stamp
out this one form of despotism at
the Uniformity. I urge every student to join me in a march on
Hayes Hall, ready and willing to
stand in line and sign mountains
of Refund Vouchers to the tune
of “We Shall Overcome.” Maybe
then we can put the machine in
its proper place.

Sincerely.

Mervln u

King

�PAGE SIX

Friday,

SPECTRUM

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thru the Iroquois brew
and enjoy the hospitality
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Discover how we brew quality
and good taste into Iroquois.
For group tour reservations call
tour director 852-5330
-

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INC.)

March 4, 1966

�Friday, March 4, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE SEVEN

Horse Enhances Brecht's Threepenny Opera'; Plans AnnouncedFor Spring Concert
Pegasus Makes Acting Debut Amidst Fanfare Tour of University Band In March
The 'University Concert Band
Of UB has announced plans for
its 1966 Spring Concert Band
Tour. The band will tour New
York State from Saturday, March
19, through Tuesday, March 22.
It will perform at Seneca Falls,
Rochester, Coming, and Savona,
under the direction of Frank J.
Cipolla and Richard W. Rodean.

By BARBARA CONIGLIO
Pegasus, a show horse from
the Foxhall Village Stables in

Lancaster, makes his stage debut
during .the .third act of the
Threepenny Opera. The horse
enters amidst fanfare and song
with actor Nick Lyndon on its
back.

The seventy member band will

Although Pegasus surprises an
unsuspecting audience, he has

2

pan.

Many varied band music pieces
have been prepared, from the traditional Oberon Overture by C.
C. von Weber/Lake, to the highly
challenging Emblems by Aaron
Copland.

Restoration Revival

backstage.—

While on stage, Pegasus’ behavior is quite unpredictable.
One wrong turn would send him

Rochester in Eastman Kodak
Park, on Sunday, March 20, at

perform public concerts and high
school assembly programs designed to bring the finest symphonic band literature to the

been the cause of much backstage trauma. A rug was needed
to silence the horse’s hoofs on
the concrete floor in Baird. Since
only one four foot rug was available, it had to be moved along
with the horse till he arrived
Many students in the cast
feared Pegasus at first because
of his size (16 hands, 1600 lbs.)
and his tendency to step on people’s feet. Carrots and apples
have solved a few of these problems.

concert stage. The highlight of
the tour will be the concert in

Pegasus is a major attraction in "Threepenny Opera."
through the scenery or into the
orchestra pit. To insure relative
tranquility, he is given a sedative at 10 p.m.
Director Henry Wicke Jr., feels
that Pegasus enhanses Brecht’s

of the theater,
“Theater is not theater, unless
it is exciting.” Threepenny Opera
will continue from March 3
through March 6 in Baird Hall,
Curtain time is 8:30 p.m.
interpretation

The Studio Arena Theatre will
present a revival of the Theatre
Royal of Charles II, through an
English Restoration “Impromptu"
on Monday, March 7, at 8:30 p.m.
The program is entitled “Music,
Wit and Manners,” and will be
an authentic reproduction of
Theatre Royal comedy, directed
by Dorothy Amandos.
Admission to the one-night-only
performance will be $3 to the
public and $1.50 to students.

Your
“kreatamoifess”
grows at DuPont
Everything else does.

What’s “kreatamorfess”?

"Orastas," starring Gary Battaglia

and Jaanatta Valing will opan
March 9.

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WANTED

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Tuaaday or Thunday

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Science, Math, History,

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First Presbyterian Church

Call TT 4-7250
for dafails

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Friday.

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

Miitli 4,

1966

Sir Thomas More Faces A Dilemma
In Bolt's "A Man For All Seasons"
By

MARTHA B. TACK

Sir Thomas More must choose
between renouncing his religious
beliefs and upholding his moral
principles in Robert Bolt’s A
Man for All Seasons, currently
at Studio Arena Theatre.

Created and Directed by Federico Fellino, "Juliet of the Spirits"
stars Giuliatta Masina, his actress-wife. The film opens soon at the
4
Circle Art.

S?3IL®fl2 J3i(f Gherman

King Henry the Eighth desires
an heir to the throne, and requests a divorce from his sterile
wife, Queen Catherine of Aragon.
Because divorce is forbidden by
the Catholic church, King Henry and his council turn to the
highly influential Sir Thomas
More for support. Due to More’s
devotion to moral principles, he

the divorce,
arousing opposition from Cardinal Wolsey, Thomas Cromwell,
Lady Alice More, and King Hendoes

not support

ry.

Same old story—no new films worth reviewing—which gives
me another opportunity to devote a column to JeamLuc Godard.
Before beginning, however, I should point out that there are two
developments worth noting. First is that the new cinemas out at
the Boulevard 'Mall really are NEW! They are the only large commercial cinema houses in Buffalo which do not smell like old stables.
Second is that Jeremy Taylor is organizing a picket of Walt Disney’s
Wlnnl*-Th*-Pooh film now playing across from campus at the Walt
Disney Theatre.
Godard’s Tha Married Woman is in tis final week at the Circle
Art. At the risk of stating the obvious, I would like to point out just
a few things which go on in the film. The reason for this is that
no one to whom I have talked about the film has understood it. Many
people have told me the film was “beautiful” or that it was “boring”
but no one has taken the time to really think about what Godard is
attempting to communicate, and how he goes about it. So a few
points of clarification follow:

The Married Woman is Godard’s most violently anti-femininist
film to date. For Godard, “love" and “betrayal” are almost the same,
and ever since Lc Mopris (Contempt) when he stylized the archetype
by having Brigitte Bardot wear a black wig, he has aimed at a synthesis of the Fair Lady and Dark Lady. Miss Meril plays the lead in
the film because, at the time of shooting, Godard's marriage to
Anna Karina was breaking up. On the most simple level, Godard is
portraying “modern woman” and picturing her as a mindless bitch.
Under her surface beauty is a cruelty and a vanity which God.ird explicitly rates to Fascism. This is made clear by the brief discussion of concentration camps at the airport in the beginning, and
the shots of Night and Fog in the cinema at the end of the film.
Her first husband was an SS man under Hitler (she still keeps the
photograph) and the “cute” little boy is their son. The child’s
speech is the only one of the vignettes in the film NOT improvised.
His set piece on “childhood” Godard has taken almost exactly from
Moin Kampf. The implications, then, extend beyond the woman
and became a comment on the relation between “memory" and

Lester Rawlin’s performance as
Sir Thomas More is superb. We
■follow him through his decline
in status from chancellor to alleged betrayer. We observe his
devotion to his beliefs despite
his family’s criticisms, his colleagues warnings, and his friend’s
betrayal. We chuckle at his subtle remarks.
Betty Lutes as Lady Alice More
portrays a strikingly embittered
wife who refuses to understand
her husband’s conviction. Kenneth McMillan as The Common
Man is a competent performer
despite his frequent his frequent
switch-over from a cockney English to a New York accent. The
cast as a whole provides an intense display of emotions in their
relationships towards Sir Thomas,
with the exception of Charles

Gaines (Duke of Norfolk), Peter
Bromilow (King Henry the Eighth), and George Cotton (Cardinal Wolsey), whose performances
are a bit too loud and mechanical.
Hy Kalus’ smooth direction has
undoubtedly been aided by Thomas Watson’s settings. The pillars
and stairs that connect the upper and lower levels, facilitate
the use of the same set with
minimal change.
One by one the cast members
descend the stairs in Miss Esther
Kling’s very appropriate fashions.
More’s wife and daughter, clothed in the somber, cinch-waisted
dresses of the period are in direct

contrast to King Henry’s more
elaborate costume.

But Studio Arena’s production
is surely lighting designer, David
Zierk's triumph.
A magnificent blue background
against the pink of the roses in
Sir Thomas More’s garden makes
a pleasant picture. The gradual illumination while an actor
■lights a candle is unusually deceptive; one cannot tell if it
is the candle or Mr. Zierk’s light-

ing that brightened the stage.
The reflection of the prison bars,
the flow of the water, and the
precise dimmings and blackouts
are remarkable. One light focuses on Sir Thomas’ path to the
executioner, while impressive
figures
shadows of political
loom in the background. There is
a blackout as the executioner’s
axe falls, and then a brief illumination as a large crucifix
descends from the fly, marking
the conclusion of a very fine
production.

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(except Tuesday, March 8)
—

MILES DAVIS
QUINTET

“history.”

Godard feels that man must use his power to conceptualize, but
simultaneously believes that any attempt to verbally articulate the
abstraction becomes a lie at the moment it is articulated. This is
the point (at least the obvious one) of the improvised discussions in
the film when the camera remains stationary and the characters just
talk to it as if it were a psychiatric tool. The last vignette, the one
with the actor, is the only one meant to be taken with total seriousness.

The film is a very funny film, and to miss the humor and irony
is to miss the core of it. For example, the panning in on “danger”
signs and “one way” signs is a joke. Just as the music in the film
—which never gets beyond the introductory cadence—is part of the
ironic structure. The scene where Miss Meril falls down on the
street serves as a one-shot microcosm for the irony at the heart of
the picture.
What is at stake, ultimately, in this film is how to communicate
what is “real” when nothing is real. The only reality, Godard is
saying, is the projected celluloid on the screen at any given moment.
But since the essence of cinema is illusory motion, even that is unreal. So Godard refuses to accept the stability of the shot. As I said
in my last column, he tries to liberate the fihn from its own consistency.

The scene at the swimming baths demonstrates this, as Godard
actually projects the negatives on the screen. And it is no “trick,”
but is functional because Miss Meril is a model and is being photographed It is she—the woman independent of the film—who serves
as the girl in the bra ads. But like the actor reading Berenice (and
before he made the fihn, he actually did play it), the question of

reality

outside of the film is unanswerable.

Godard is a poet, and every one of his films is a kind of tone
poem in which he confronts the “silence (as John Cage wdbld say)
of the celluloid and tries to transcend it.

This column is not meant to be an “explication” of the films of
Godard or of The Married Woman. What I have tried to do is to
point out some of the issues involved in Godard’s art so that, in the
future when Ms work is discussed, it will at least be discussed in
the proper context.

ANGELO MZZOU

FEDERICO FELLINI

Spirits
GIUUETTA MASINA
SANDRA MHO
iSYLVAKOSONA

TECHNICOLOR*
STUDENT RATES

GKSIbR
9109 BAH.EY

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TF4 0900

�Friday, March 4, 1966

PAM NINE

SPECTRUM

Hanna Calls Bob Dylan Non-Social Anarchist'
OK
CAMPUS
music
During Lecture In Conference Theatre Monday
By PETER LEDERMAN
Faced with the extremely difficult task of constructing unity and
meaning in Bob Dylan’s works,
Tom Hanna spoke to an overflow student crowd last Monday.
iMr. Hanna is presently the Assistant 'Director for University Relations and has taught freshman
English at the University. The
subject of his lecture was “Desolation and the Solid Chrome
Diplomat.” Mr. Hanna plowed

vious ones and is therefore the
The Buffalo Philharmonic’s
work to best explain his ideas. Sunday, February 27 concert ofHe related how Dylans image of fered a program of works
outlaw and inhabitant of “Desolthoughtfully chosen by Lukas Foss
ation Row” was typical of the to show the evolution of the Ropoetic need to experience life mantic expression in music.
from its poverty and chaos to Works by Schubert, Schumann,
its ease.
Wagner, R. Strauss and Berg proThe lecture reflected a need vided a very good cross-section of
for people to come to terms with Romantic music from the 1820’s
a brilliant and rapidly rising to the 1930’s (although they were
young mind that refuses to let not presented chronologically).
you know “where it’s at.”
The beginning Military March

through Dylan’s always poignant

but sometimes obscure words, in
a manner that pointed out Hanna’s own desire for better under-

OFFICIAL BULLETIN

standing.

The audience was presented
with a fifteen minute pre-lecture
taping of Dylan songs and then,
frequent recordings of Mr. Hanna’s thoughts and impressions
spoken above the music. The students at the lecture seemed quite
familiar with the music and lips
moved to create a murmuring
chorus.
NOW OPEN

.

malcolm’s
music shoppe

Dylan.

Mr. Harma traced the growth of
Dylan’s mind through his six albums and the poetry that appears on their covers. His discussion of the latest L.P. centered
upon Dylan as imagist and his
own concept of Dylan as a “NonSocial Anarchist”. He described
the poetry as “possessing no
aesthetic”, and being neither
Camp, op-art nor pop-art.
Mr. Hanna continued by saying
that the most recent record,
Highway 61 Revisited, contains
poetic elements from all the pre-

3142 MAIN STREET
837-9324
featuring guitars, amps,

Tam Hanna reads selections of

&amp;

accessories

STUDENT DISCOUNTS

The Official Bulletin it an authoriiad publication of tha State
University of New York at Buffalo, for which the SPECTRUM
assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in
TYPEWRITTEN form to 114
Hayes Hall, attention Mrs.
Fischer, before 2 p.m. the Friday
prior to the week of publication.
Student organization notices are
not accepted for publication.
GENERAL NOTICES
University College students (except those on strict academic probation)
registration for next
semester, September 1966 is as
—

follows:
March
K, L, O.
March
R, C, J.
March
H, A, N,

7 through March 11

14 through March 18
28 through April 1
E, Z.

April 4 through April 8

S, Y, Q, X.

April 11 through April 15
M, T, U, V.
April 18 through April 22
G, P, I.
April 25 through April 29
W, D.

NOW
EVE. SHOW

8:00

Chinese Philosophy Professor
Wing-Tsit Chan traced the balance of power between the individual and society as evidenced
in Chinese history in his lecture
on Confucianism held last Mon-

F.
PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS
MARCH 7

BOB &amp; RAY'S
MUSIC CENTER
RENTALS
SALES
and Service on all
Instruments
—

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836-8742
Special Student Discounts
with I.D. Card

Guitar Lessons
All Types

Sign up now for folk guitar

Yale &amp; Towne, Inc.
The Upjohn Co.
Hope’s Windows, Inc.
Remington Office Machines
Division of Sperry Rand
Ayerst Laboratories, Inc.

—

Schumann’s Symphony No. 3
was the biggest work on the program. Orchestrated by Mahler, it
showed itself to be a logical step
from Mozart to Brahms. Mahler’s
work is shown especially in the
thick texture, and the use of
horns. The always-certain horns
got such a work-out that I thought
they would have to relax
or
worse
for the remainder of
the program. (Actually, they held
up more than valiantly in almost
all important passages). The symphony's range of expression goes
from a rather standard allegro
(trumpets used more unimaginatively than in Mozart), to a Beethovensque Scherzo, to a lyrical
slow movement, to a ceremonial
fourth movement utilizing building masses of sound (a clear
precedent of Brahms’ First
Symphony), to a final allegro most
characteristic of Schumann himself. The symphony was performed well as a whole; but there
are still those very disturbing
moments, like the lackluster
string ensemble work in fast sections and the sloppy endings, due
either to inattentive players or
an indecisve conductor.
—

—

Prof. Chan Lectures On Confucianism
Traces Balance Of Power In History

May 2 through May 6

B,

MARCH 9
The Travelers Insurance Co
Jewel Tea Co., Inc.
The Grand Union Co.
Union Carbide Corp.
Chemical Division
Baxter Laboratories
Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake
r
Central Schools
Rush-Henrietta Central Schools
MARCH 9, 10
The Boeing Co.
MARCH 10
Berkshire Life Insurance Co.
Reliance Electric &amp;
Engineering Co.
Sherwin-Williams Co.
The Wurlitzer Co.
FMC Corp.
Chicago Pneumatic Tool Co.
MARCH 11
State Farm Insurance Co.
American Photograph Corp.
American Bosch Arma Corp,
Bell Aerosystems Co.

is Schubert at his usual friendly
self, but with less melodic interest. Even though it is a march,
the Viennese master never allows his composition to stomp
around like a Sousa march. He is
more interested in the fluid lyricism of the last movement of his
Ninth Symphony, and hds writing
for strings proves it. Couldn’t the
booming brasses have kept this
fact more in mind?

ded that the Chinese tradition
has been so deeply instilled in
the people that the Communists
have even tried to interpret Confucian naturalist Lao-tzu as being a materialist.

—

MARCH 8

Retail Credit Co.
John Hancock Mutual Life
Insurance Co.
Connecticut Mutual Life
U. S. Marine Corps
Selection of Women Officers
Allstate Insurance Co.
—

West Hartford Public Schools

'Beethoven Cycle'
Concert Delayed

The performances of the entire
•'Beethoven Cycle” of the Budapest String Quartet, previously
re-scheduled to March 7, 9, 11, 13,
16, and 18 have been postponed
indefinitely by the Department
of Music because of the illness of
one of the Quartet members.
Ticket holders for the Budapest
concerts are urged to keep their
tickets until the performances are
re-scheduled. These tickets may
be used for the re-scheduled concerts, or they may be refunded at
the Baird Hall box office.

day.

The crux of Confucianism, he
indicated, was the concept of Jen
(pronounced ren), that characteristic which “makes a man a man
rather than an animal,” i.e., his
humaneness. The philosophic extension of Jen implies that each
perfection while realizing the per-

fection of the universe.

Dr. Chan outlined the influence of Jen from the fifth century B.C. until the present day.
He pointed out that although the
Confucian doctrine has been suppressed and almost destroyed numerous times, its deep effect on
Chinese thought could not be

weakened.

Dr. Chan then went on to dis
cuss the Communist confrontation with Confucianism. He re-

lated how the Confucian scholars,
refusing to yield in their beliefs,
were given nearly complete freedom by the Communists. He ad-

W. T. CHAN
Refusing to predict the future.
Dr, Chan concluded by expressing a hope for return to Confucianism free from any Communist restraint.

His last revealing remark was
that he could not “understand
how the Communists could resist Chinese opera anyway.”

Bridge Club Hosts Tourney In Norton
The Bridge Club will host the
second annual University of Buffalo Intercollegiate Bridge Tournament tomorrow in the card
room of Nortn Union.
The

tournament will

consist of

two sessions of 24 boards beginning at 2:00 p.m. and 7:30

Entries will be conducted
under board-a-match scoring.
The UB team will be the de-

p.m.

fending champions. Strong competition is expected from the

Harvard, Columbia, and Toronto
teams. This year the bridge team
has listed a win at the University of Rochester tournament and
placed third at the University of
Waterloo.
An invitation went out to all
interested schools through an announcement in the American

Contract Bridge League Bulletin.
In addition, personal invitations
were sent ot over 80 schools in
the United States and Canada.

Deadline date for

mt-

terial to be submitted to
the New Student Review
is March 6.

�r, March 4,

SPECTRUM

PACE TCI

1946

INTRAMURALS
By STEVE FARBMAN

In the span of 13 weeks of competition, 13 fraternity bowling
teams, consisting of five men
apiece, knocked down a total of
317,496 pins. When the league
finally concluded last week, four
teams and one individual stood
apart from the rest.
At the half-wrfy point of the
season, it became obvious that the
league had been narrowed to four
teams. AEPi, which led all the
way, was never headed, although
its lead was considerably shortened in the final two matches
when it dropped six of eight
points to AKJPsi and SAM, who
finished in a tie for second, two
games behind the winners. Phi
Gp finished in fourth, another
three games back.
The outstanding individual of
the entire competition was, without a doubt, Len Kwiatkowski of
AKPsi. “Kwi,” as he is called by

•his fraternity brothers, led his
team to a second-place finish with
a 185 average. As team captain
and anchorman, “Kwi” laced out
a league-leading 644 series against
the then third-place Phi Bp team
in the final week of competition.
A high game of 245 in that series
was the third-best individual effort of the league.

FOR SALE
Kay dual pickup solid
Guitar
body. 4 months old. $40.00 including ease. Call Warren 875—

8359.
mechanically sound,
’61 Volvo
clean interior, snow tires, needs
some body work. $475. Call 8378289.
Gibson folk guitar J45, case included. Also autoharp. Call
836-4703 after 6.
57 Chevy hardtop 4-door sedan,
2 new tires, heavy duty suspension, must sacrifice. $250.00.
Call 873-4298.
Ranch style house. Living room,
dining, 2 bedrooms, kitchen,
bathroom, attached 2-car garage,
—

large yard. Newly redecorated,
(assumable mortgage). Call 839-

1834.
'63 VW, red, white interior, whitewalls, radio, heat blower, spotless. Best officer. Call 837-9644.
Guitar for sale, $25, good tone.
Excellent condition. Call Lou
837-7925.
LOST

AND FOUND;

Navy blue coat ‘'borrowed” Feb.
19 from Tower coat rack. Identity of borrower known. If coat
isn’t returned Ito Tower desk by
March 2, individual’s name will
be turned over to proper authorities.

Reward for return of maroon ski
parka
at beer blast
Feb. 4. Call 649-1772.

Sig Ep

30

Phi Lambda Delta
APO
TEKE
Gamma Phi

29

21
22
16
10
5

Alpha Sig
Beta Sag

Phi Psi
Pi Lambda Tau

3

Team three-game high
SAM,
2573; ABPi, 2503; AKPsi, 2500;
Phi Bp, 2500.
Team one-game high
SAM,
948; AKPsi, 934; Phi Ep, 904.
High individual average
Kwiatkowski (AKPsi), 185; Alterman (SAM), 178; Arons (SAM),
—

—

174.
Three-game individual high
Kwiatkowski, 644; Reynolds
(Gamma Phi), 637; Pinkelstein
(Alpha Sig), 616.
—

One-game individual high
Terhaar (Pi Lambda Tau), 258;
Duzak (Sig Ep), 254; Kwiatkowski, 245.

—

The regulation schedule of the
intramural basketball leagues
came to a close last week with
AEPi, SAM, Second Floor Tower,
Avengers, and the Racoons winning their respective league titles
outright, while the Grad Business
Students and the Zygotes tied for
the top spot in their league.
Campus championship competition began on Wednesday, and
will culminate at 4:30 p.m. today
with the top Independent team
meeting AEPi or SAM for the
championship. Results will be
printed next week.
Final Basketball Standings:

Thursday 9:30
W L
W
6 0 SAM
6
AEPi
5 1 AKPsi
Phi Psi
4
Sig Ep
3 3 APD
4
Beta Sig
3 3 Phi Ep
..2
Alpha Sig 3 3 TEKE
2
Phi L. Del 1 5 APO
2
Tau
0 6 Gamma P. 1
Pi L.
.

....

Amherst

DIAMONDS
WATCHES
earrings

If wa can't
fix your watch/
throw it sway \

SITUATIONS WANTED
Typing:

Term papers, theses,
etc. Reasonable rates. See
Gloria in room 323 Norton Hall,
WANTED:

|

pjn

)

j

i

I
|

Coach Jim Peelle has
announced that baseball
practice will begin next
week. Pitchers and
catchers must report on
Monday, March 7, while
other team candidates
must meet on March 14.
Both starting times at
Clark Gym are at 3:30

5

6

SINGLE? 20 to 35?

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Phone: 876-1250

4

4

Fencers Nudge
Orange, 14-13

With stylish foil man Jim Mondello supplying the clincher, the
fencing Bulls edged Syracuse in
a 14-13 cliffhanger last Saturday
at Clark Gym.
After the first two rounds of
the match were complete, the
swordsmen had a 10-8 advantage.
Soph salber man, Jon Rand, then
came off the bench to register a
5t3 come from behind victory,
upping the margin to 11-8. The
Orange rallied to take the next
three bouts, evening the count at
11-11. Soph epee man Cart Engel
came through with a strong bout,
putting the Bulls ahead by one.
After the aggressive Orange again
pulled even, determined Lance
Eggelston put the Bulls ahead
to stay with a clutch 5-4 triumph.

This set the stage for Jim Mondello’s 5-3 lid closer.
The foil team, led by the two
victories of Jim Mondello and
Captain Joe Paul beat the Syracuse foilmen, 5-4. The saber team
nipped the Orange 5-4 with Dave
Kirohgessner and Bob Frey showing the way with two victories
each. The epee team was edged
out 5-4 as John Houston copied
a pair of wins.
The frosh bowed 10-5 to the
Tangerines as top frosh fencer
Steve Morris went 3-2. The Baby
Bulls are now 3-4 on the year.
The swordsmen, now 11-3, close
out the season with a triangular
meet gainst Notre Dame and Hobart at Clark Gym on Saturday.

make a
100

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for only $12.50

MIXER DANCES

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Projectors
Photo Finishing

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V/J

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2

How to

Movie Rentals

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DELAWARE CAMERA
MART

|

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2

3
4

Fraternity sports managers
must attend the m e e t i ng this
afternoon in Room 322, Clark
Gym. Agenda will include spring
sports, awards dinners and point
standings to date.

4

4
5

Summer |
j~Employment

I Contact:

L
0
1

Wrestling practices are now
underway in the wrestling room
of Clark Gym from 6:30 to 8:30
p.m. All participants must have
a minimum of five practices,
which will continue on weekdays
until March 11, to be eligible for
the tournament to be held on
Saturday, March 12, at 12:30
p.m. Weigh-ins will be conducted
from 9 to 11 a.m. that day.

2
4

RINGS

days.

Men for part time sales display
work. $57.75. Car necessary.
Call TX 3-4657 after 5.
One roommate for apartment five
minutes from campus. Interested? Call 836-6529 Marty or Larry.
Witnesses to car accident Friday
6 pan. at front entrance to campus. Testimony needed for court
claims. Call 832-6900.
student with
bedroom apartment needs
roommate. Immediate occupancy.
Call 886-4017 Marion.

0

2

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

ment
Apartment to share, 53 Hewitt
Ave., walking distance, clean.
Kitchen facilities. Can be seen 15 p.m. except Tuesdays and Sun-

Drummer for well established GoGo band. Call 674-7600 after 3

L

DEALS Jewelers
(next to

...

THE JET SET

Thursday 8:30

Attention! Sororities and Fraternities: Looking for a wild new
rock n’ roll band for parties or
dances? Call 662-7456 for appoint-

Tower
Tower
Tower

...

W L
W
5
Zygotes
4 1 Racoons
Grad. Bus. 4 1 Yamakas 3
3
Beatms’trs 4 1 Muffs
1
Magicians 2 3 Unbeat
1
Bombers ...1 4 Skanks
Superapes 0 5 Masters ....1

AEPi
AKPsi
SAM .
Phi Bp

OPPORTUNITIES:

Tower
Tower
Tower
Tower

Monday 9:30

L
W
2 6 0 Avengers 6
8
5 1 Blue’blrs 5
4 3 3 11th Floor 4
5—3 3 Warhawks 3
7 3 6 9th Floor 2
3 ... 1 5 FreeldTs
1
6 ....1 5 S.L.’s
0
W

Wednesday 8:30 Wednesday 9:30

Final Standings:

—

CLASSIFIED

Monday 8:30

Pizza
by DiRose
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PIZZA
TR 3-1330
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4 p.m. 2 a.m. Sun.- Frl.
12 pjn. 2 *.m. Saturday
-

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SODA

1 Bo ftI* with Small Pina
2 Bottlas with Larya Pina
plu« Japoalt Offar Umlth

Give the new Parker 75
International ball pen
in solid sterling silver.
Here is the aristocrat among ball
pens, distinguished for its rapierslim styling, balance and beauty.
Deeply engraved and subtly antiqued, it matches the standard
in fountain pen excellence, the
Parker 75.
Guaranteed for life. If it fails to
perform flawlessly, with normal
refill replacement, Parker will replace it free. Also available in 14K
gold-fill at $20, in Vermeil (14K
gold-fill on sterling silver) at $25.
Other International ball pens from
$5 to $25.

�Friday, March 4, 1966

S P ECTRUM

PAGE ELEVEN

Skaters Meet Brockport
After a highly successful two
game road trip, the UB hockey
squad returns to the friendly confines of Amherst Arena tomorrow night at 10 p.m. to face a
strong Broekport contingent. In

this final home game of the sea-

son, the Bulls hope to duplicate
their earlier white-washing of the
Tigers. Buses for the game will

leave the campus at 9:15 from
Norton and will return UB stu-

Matmen Pin Rochester
Last Saturday in Clark Gym,
the UB matmen upped their record to 5-4-1 by downing the University of Rochester, 23-18. The
Bulls were ahead by margins of
20-0 and 23-5 before the U of R
grapplers narrowed the gap, only
to fall short of victory by five
points. In the freshmen meet
that preceded the Varsity victory, the Baby Bulls also won
their last home meet of the current season by downing the
Rochester Freshmen, 28-13. The
Freshmen grapplers also jumped
out to an early lead as they
forged ahead of their Rochester
counterparts, 23-5.
Gary Fowler was outstanding
as usual as he pinned his oppon-

ent and upped his season record
to an impressive 9-0-1. Hank Gul-

lia, Bill Miner and John Misener
also pinned their opponents to
give the Bulls a 20-0 margin
after four bouts. The Varsity and
Freshmen victories were a fitting farewell to Coach Ron La
Rocque, who last Saturday,
coached his last home wrestling
match as mentor of the UB grapplers. Tomorrow the matmen engage in their last dual meet when
they travel to Oswego to meet a
tough and talented Oswego State
squad. Then on March 10, the
grapplers travel to Case Tech for
the Interstate 41 Wrestling Championships.

The Results:
UB 23

—

UR 18

123—Fowler (UB p. Kantz; 130
—Gullia (UB) p. Eisenburg; 137—
Miner (UB) p. Beck; 145—Misener
(UB) p. Winn; 152—Dickover (UR)
won by forfeit; 160—Heidt (UB)
d. Kromer; 167—Chambers (UR)
d. Burr; 177—Brown (UR) won
by default over Keller; Hwt—
Thomas (UR) p. Stiglitz.

Employment in the Rochester,
New York area. Many good
companies in the Rochester
area (Central Western New
York) do not interview on college campuses. They offer employment opportunities in all
fields including management
training in the administrative,
technical, and engineering disciplines. Most placements are
fee paid. If you are interested,
please write to:
-

MR. JOHN CHERRINGTON
Plaza Personnel
425 Midtown Tower
Rochester, New York 14604

dents to the dorms at the conclusion of the contest.
Last Saturday the Bulls traveled to Pennsylvania to face the
undefeated Erie Lions. Before a
standing room audience of 8,427,
the largest crowd ever to see a
UB hockey team play, the Bulls
jumped off to a 2-0 lead but had
to settle for a 3-3 tie.
At 3:10 of the first period,
right winger Jim M cK o w n e
opened the scoring by taking
passes from Fred Cohen and Day
Hannah Jr., and sliding the puck
past the startled Erie goalie. This
was McKowne’s fifth goal in the
last five games,
UB upped its lead at the twelve
minute mark of the second period
when defenseman Larry Zelasko
took a pass from Bill Savage and
drove a twenty foot slap shot
over the left shoulder of the
Erie goalie.
The Bulls dissipated their two
goal lead during the early part
of the third period, but Captain
A1 Dever put UB back into the
lead at the fourteen minute mark
as he scored from fifteen feet in
front of the net, assisted by
Thomas Robertson and Paul Kubiak. Erie came back to score
with two minutes left in the game
and the contest ended in a 3-3
tie.

The last minute of the game

was highlighted by one of the
wildest brawls of the year. The
fight began when two Erie players jumped on one of the UB
wingers and eventually involved
twenty players. The melee ended

when UB defenseman John Scheffer, a guard on the football team,
chased the Erie Instigator all
around the rink before catching
him and throwing him over the
boards into the stands.
After

the conclusion of the

contest, UB Coach Day Hannah
Sr. heaped praise on several

players including Goalie Chuck
Huber “who played his best game
of the year.”

Last Wednesday, the Bulls journeyed to Utica where the team

put on its best exhibition of the
year as they overwhelmed the
opposition, 13-5. The newly
formed line of A1 Dever and Tom
Robertson, with Ed Magner and
Paul Kubiak alternating on right
wing, combined for eight goals
and seven assists in the romp.
Dever tallied two goals and three
assists, Robertson set up four
goals, and Magner and Kubiak

each scored the three goal “hat
t™*-”
With high scoring forward Fred
Cohen ill, Len De Prima took up
the slack on the other big UB
line with a goal and two assists
in the Utica romp. Day Hannah
Jr. continued his torrid scoring
pace with two goals and two assists and Jim McKowne also
scored a goal.

BULL PEN

Coach Hannah was pleased with
the performance of newcomers
Jim Kostyk and Larry Zelasko.
Kostyk, a defenseman, showed
fine offensive talents as he scored
a goal and assisted on two others
while Zelasko notched three assists. Mr. Hannah also praised
the efforts of star defenseman
Bill Savage and the goalie duo
of Chuck Huber and Don Karoff.

(Cont’d
.

.

from Pg

12)

.

the backcourt after having been a frontcourt performer
in high school.” And for special mention Coach Muto
singled out Ken Bazinet, his 5’ 6” backcourt reserve.
Of Ken he said, “He has worked extremely hard in practice and has been an inspiration to the other members
of the squad. Although he has had very little opportunity
to participate in games, he never let that fact affect his
performance in practice. He would be a good example
for members of any team.” Mr. Muto was not able to
designate a team MVP, saying, “The players themselves
vote for that honor.”
Here, I’d like to add my own player evaluations
based on the games I have seen.
Starters:
Jekielek—-Strong and agile for a comparatively big man:
a solid, though not outstanding performer.
Bberle—A fantastic shooter and good all-around headsup ball player.
Fieri—Easily the best ‘driver’ on the team; fair in all
other categories.
Siwek—Was hurt during the year, but when healthy
looked like a smart, higfily useful man.
8hea—A very good defender, though inconsistent in his
shooting.

Rutkowski—Take-charge type of player who can really
pep a team up; great hustler and good shooter,
Substitues:
Creech—Good spot performer; was helpful whenever inserted.
Stettenben? —A capable front court replacement who
led the team in free throw percentage, sinking 24
of 26.
Braunschweiger—A smart player who unfortunately
doesn’t seem strong enough to play under the boards
or possess a good enough shot to play outside.
Miller—An aggressive player, but inconsistent; at times
appeared to have everything, but at other times

appeared rusty.
Stevens and Bazinet—I’m afraid I didn’t see enough of
these two in action to give an honest evaluation.
Of these evaluations, I’d have to regard Rutkowski,
Eberle, Jim Shea, John Jekielek, John Fieri, and Hank
Siwek as the likeliest prospects for next year’s varsity. Also with strong possibilities to see varsity action
next year are Bob Stevens, Ken Bazinet, Dusty Miller,
Bob Settenbenz, A1 Creech, and Paul Braunschweiger.
However, the likelihood of these last players is dependent on their showing as much improvement over the
summer as they have displayed since last October.
Summing up the team, Coach Muto had the following
to say, “This has been one of the finer groups of freshmen I’ve had the experience to be associated with in my
tenure at UB. From a coaching standpoint they have
been excellent to work with and have given their best
every day. I’m very much looking forward to seeing
each member of the team out for the varsity next year.
As all freshmen, they will have to stand the test of time.
Even though they have made an important jump from
high-school ball to freshmen college ball, they will have
to make an equally important and large jump next year
when they attempt to prove themselves as varsity members, where there are still newer skills to learn and
perfect.”
As I stated in my previous article, I feel the freshmen will be able to make that jump to varsity ball and
give UB real strong teams next year and in years to
come. Now, if only the general apathy at the games
disappears, not only will future freshman teams have
cause to perform even better, but also Coach Muto’s
face will be happy all the time. Amen
UB
Opp
Opp.
UB
x 65
88 Canisius
79 Brockport Sttfte x 63
76 100 Guelph U. Var. x 39
70 Syracuse
56 Niagara
75
58
76 Ithaca
83
59 115 Buffalo State
75 Siena
**81
68
83 Alfred
89 Niagara C.C.
94 St. Bonaventure x 71
71
69 St. Bonaventure
76 Buffalo State
82
x 77
72 Canisius
67
72 Buffalo State
89 Niag. Falls A. B. x 60
66 Rochester
48
x 78
76 Colgate
54 Western Ontario
49
x—Horne
—Neutral Court
—Away
*

*

*

**

*

*

*

*

*

•

*

**

*

�Friday, March 4, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

&lt;B'U*IB T© 3S5Q
IF!1
=&amp;=X
*

M

©

-*&amp;==&amp;=

=&amp;

THE BULL PEN
By J. B. SHARCOT

Cagers Bow To Yellowjackets
was still undergoing check-ups in

The ’65-66 varsity basketball
season has come to an end. On
Tuesday night at Rochester, the
Bulls were unable to come from

Most UB basketball fans seem to feel home games
begin around 8 p.m. Action really begins at 6:15 when
behind in the second half and
our fine freshman team takes the court. Freshman games dropped
an 82-77 decision to the
are very often as interesting as the varsity games, and University of Rochester.
on occasion, even more so. They have played a solid
brand of moving, passing basketball. It’s too bad this
Coach Leonard Serfustini exfact is not more well-known.
pressed a little disappointment
Though he was orginally perturbed because of the in the season, saying that he “had
lack of space given to his team, Coach Ed Muto began not accomplished as much as he
discussing the merits of the team. About the team in had wanted to.” Although the
Bulls finished with a respectable
general, he said, “The whole squad has done a tre14-8 mark, Dr. Serfustini, at the
mendous job all year. They played as a unit exceedingly
eagerly
well, and have been able to do so through the hard work season’s end, is already start
forward to the
of
of each member of the team since late October. We have looking
next year. UB is losing five senrecord
which
is
excellent
for
very
a 12-6
so far,
a team iors, but with this year’s crop of
that has played only seven home games all year. Antop-notch sophs, coupled with a
other important factor in our success has been that we’ve real good frosh squad, next seaoutrebounded every team but one, even though we were son’s prospects are really good.
often outsized. As you know, five of our six losses were
by six points or less with our largest loss being a tenThe game itself saw Rochester
pointer, and that was against the Baby Griffs at the take a 41-37 halftime lead after
HARVEY POE
Villa. These heart-breaking losses could easily have been a relatively even first half. In
fouled out, however, and some
enough to make them give up, but in each case they were the second hall, the Yellowjackinto a 14-point lead, but
clutch baskets by Dave Deutsch
able to come back and play good ball. That shows real ets went
the ball-hawking and shooting of and Bob Baum put the game out
intestinal fortitude.”
Harvey Poe and Bobby Thomas
of reach for the Bulls. The Bulls
re-emphasize
would
like
to
the
he
made
about
I
point
brought the Bulls back to within blew some easy lay-ups at this
the team’s ability to play together. It was nowhere better four as the U of R fans jumped point to further aid the hosts
evidenced than in their fabulous 94-71 victory here two up from their seats.
to their 13th win in 19 games.
weeks ago against St. Bonaventure. The frosh played
a flawless game, a feat which is usually only accomArtie Walker and Dick Smith
The absence of Bill Barth, who
plished after years of playing together. Their passing
was precision, screening was perfection, and hustle was
phenomenal. In addition to this great team effort, Ed
Eberle put on a great shooting exhibition, cashing in on
his first seven endeavors and winding up with 38 points
on 18 out of 24 field goal attempts, most of which came
from outside fifteen feet.

the hospital, again stuck out like
a sore thumb. With UB’s rebounding ace out of action, the Rochesterians were able to control

the backboards, 55-49. The Bulls
haven’t been the same team the
last two games without Barth.

Poe, one of the greatest guards
in the history of UB basketball,
made his final effort a typically
outstanding one. Constantly ballhawking, making several thefts,
and scoring 21 points, Harvey
turned in another sparkling
show in his farewell.
Thomas also enjoyed a great
14 points, all
in the second half. Jim Bevilacqua added 10 and Jon Cullbert
9 for the UB cagers.
game as he scored

Deutsch and Baum combined
for 46 to lead the winners.
Coach Ed M-uto’s freshmen won
their 13th of the season with a
66-48 win over their U of R counterparts as John Jekielek scored
16. Last week the Baby Bulls
nipped the Buffalo State freshmen, 72-67, behind Ed Bberie’s

21 points.

TROPPMAN SHINES
AS SWIMMERS SPLIT
By SCOTT FORMAN

A smashing 76-18 win over
Geneseo and a heartbreaking 4946 loss to St. Bonaventure marked
the fortunes of the UB swimming
team last week. In both contests,
•records were repeatedly shattered, an aspect which seems to
highlight every meet in which
the Bulls partake.
First gainst Geneseo, at Clark
Gym on February 23, the mermen swam like they were brought
up in Ivan Tors’ aqua studio. Immediately, the 400 yard medley
team of Charley Zetterberg, Howard Braun, Mike Conroy, and Carl

Freshman Basketball Team

When asked about the schedule his team plays,
he replied, “Our schedule is one of the finest in the
area as the only independent team we have played was
Niagara Falls Air Force Base, and that game was played
only because we could not schedule another opponent
on that date. Games against the Little Three and Buffalo State make for especially fine games as they are
all top-notch teams. I’d have to say that Niagara was
the best overall team we played against this year and in,
fact, the past two seasons, Niagara U. has come up with
their best freshman team in years. I’d have to rate Canisius and then Syracuse as the next toughest opponents.
As our most pleasant victory of the year, I would have
to designate the 88-65 thrashing of the Baby Griffs at
Clark, since, at the time, they had a perfect record, 100.” Mr. Muto was also happy to report the team’s shooting average has been around 40 percent, and we have
shot a very respectable 68 percent from the free throw
line.
When the subject of my questions turned to picking
out certain players, he grew quite hesitant, saying, “If
you write about one, you’ll have to write about them
all.” However, he did make a few exceptions, choosing
Ed Eberle as his most consistent performer, whether in
games or in practice. (Incidentally, Eddie led the team
in field goal percentage with 49 percent, and was second
on the squad in free throw percentage, hitting 38 of 47
for an 81 percent average). He readily chose Joe Rutkowski as being the most improved player on the team.
Mr. Muto’s reasons for choosing Joe were “his ability to
change to and master the duties and responsibilities of

Millerschoen combined to set a
UB school and home record by
touching home at 3:57.5 seconds.
But the swimmers did not stop
Roy Troppman then prohere
ceeded to set an individual school
record in the 200 yard freestyle
—

event by registering a blistering

time of 1:54,7 seconds and later
went on to make it a doubly momentous night by breaking the
old school record in the 500 yard
freestyle event with a new time
of 6:27.6 seconds. UB captured
every event of the program
a
fantastic feat indeed. Our 200
yard butterfliers, Hoffman and
Roms, took both places, as did
our divers, Rebo and IMitzel. Finishing off the superb night, our
400 yard relay team of Fleischmann, Perkis, Puls and McMillen
swam to a fine victory.
Three days later at St. Bonaventure, the scene shifted from
one of jubilance and slaughter to
one of quiet and defeat. This defeat, however, was not decided
until the very last event
the
same 400 yard relay in which UB
had triumphed against Geneseo.
This time, however, the record
smashing was done by the opposition as the team of Brace, Horton, Mennes and Culhane combined to set a pool and school
—

—

record of 3:30.4 seconds. Earlier,

Culhane had set a school record
in the 100 yard freestyle. UB certainly produced victors also this
night

—

Troppman, Zetterberg,

and

the medley relay team of
Zetterberg, Braun, Worthing, and
Millerschoen. Nevertheless, triumph was absent by a mere three
points. The defeat marked the
first for acting coach Bob Bedell
since he took over for recuperating Bill Sanford, and set UB’s
record at 8-5. The swimmers now
look ahead to the Upper N. Y.
Relays at Syracuse tomorrow.

BILL BARTH

Ippolit! Named

Backfield Coach
Jerry Ippoliti, head football
coach at Coshocton, Ohio, High
School, will be the offensive backfield coach at UB. Ippoliti’s appointment was announced Wednesday by UB mentor Richard
“Doc” Urich.
Ippoliti was a star halfback at
Miami (O.), where he led his team
in yards per carry and punt re-

turns in his senior year. He

played on two Mid-America Conference championship squads, one
of which enjoyed an undefeated

season.

After receiving his B.S. from
Miami in 1958 he received his
first coaching assignment as backfield tutor at Goshen Union High
School in Sebring, Ohio, where
he produced an All-State back.
Ippoliti was chosen backfield
coach of the Ohio All-Star team
for the West Virginia-Otio All-

Star game of 1960 which
by Ohio.

was

won

That same year he moved to
Findlay, Ohio, High School where

in four seasons he turned out
nine All-Conference backs.

In 1964 Ippoliti became head
coach at Coshocton where he immediately produced an 8-2 record, the school’s best mark in 20
years. He had three All-State selections and his players broke
individual and school scoring records.
Ippoliti is the fourth member to
be named to the UB football staff.
Previously appointed were Bill
Dando, of Southern Methodist, as
defensive line coach Boh Deming,
a holdover from the old staff, as
defensive backfield coach; and
Mike Stock, of South High School
in Dayton, Ohio, as freshman
coach. Only the offensive line
coach remains to be selected.

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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>THREEPENNY

-

INTERVIEW

opera
(See Page 6)

NO. 2«

BUFFALO, NEW YORK. TUESDAY, MARCH 1, 1966

VOLUME 16

United Students Party Executive Committee
Announces Refusal to Campaign for Senate
Twenty-nine Petitions Have
Been Drawn for Twenty-one Seats

United Student* hold press conference

Pub. Board Votes to Abolish Itself on
Gaining Student Senate Agreement
Advisors Oppose Board Move
By PETER LEDERMAN

In an attempt to end the controversy over the role of the Publications Board in directing the
student press, Pub. Board member David Edelman proposed an
amendment to abolish the Board.
This amendment was unanimously
passed contingent upon passage
of a similar decision in the Student Senate.
Student Association Vice President Kim Darrow proposed an
amendment at the Student Senate
meeting of February 15 to dissolve the Publications Board and
create a Communications Subcommittee in its stead. Darrow
commented that the new committee would have limited powers
and would give full authority to
the various publications.

Before Darrow’s proposal was
considered it was further amended to state that the Communications Committee would recommend publications for recognition to the Senate and would
make the final decision.

suit of an amendment last year
that has not yet been approved
by the Faculty Committee on
Student Affairs, Dean Siggelkow
called for a Student Review
Board to ratify selections for the
editorships of all publications.
Another alternative to having
the Senate or a committee approve publications is the formation of a selecting policy within
each publication. Publications
Board Chairman Paul Kopydnski feared that this might lead
to single groups perpetuating
themselves.

tors.

The Publications Board pres-

ently consists of three editors-in-

chief and seven students chosen

by the Executive Committee of
the Student Senate. The inclusion
of editors on the board is a re-

There will be a meeting of the Modern Language Forum on Thursday, March 3 at 2 p.m.
in 233 Norton. Professor
Pierre Aubrey will speak
on The Anarchism of the
French Symbolist*.

No petitions have been requested for either the Med-Dent or
Law School Senate seats. Since
the last date for filing petitions
&gt;has passed, no candidates for
these 'positions will run in the
Spring elections, and the seats
will remain open,

United Students has opposed
the Campus Alliance Party in the
last four Senate elections. In last
year’s contest, United Students
won seven of the twenty-five
available seats.

Undergraduate and graduate
students may not use the name
of the United Students Party
without the expressed permission
of the party’s executive committe, the release stated.

Informed sources report that,
for the twenty-one available Sen-

It continued: “Mindful of the
need for a two-party system, we
urge all interested independents
to run in the upcoming general
elections.’

ate seats, only twenty-nine peti-

tions have been circulated. The
four officer candidates, in addition to positions in Pharmacy,
Nursing, and Health Related Professions will be unopposed. Eight
petitions have been drawn for
the five Arts and Science seats,
seven petitions for five University College seats, three for a
seat in Business, two for the one
available position in Engineering, and two for the one seat
from Education.
The Campus Alliance Party has
announced that it will run a
slate of eighteen people for all
positions in Arts and Sciences,
University College, Education,
Business, Nursing, and Health
Related Professions. In addition,
the four officer petitions have
been taken out by Campus Alliance candidates.

“Although we deeply regret
this action, we felt that at this
time it represents the best interests of the United Students
Party and, hopefully, of the University of Buffalo,” the statement
concluded.

The Executive Committee explained that among the reasons
for its decision were the unavailability of what they consider to
be qualified candidates for critical
Senate positions and the quality
of a number of Campus Alliance
candidates.
The last date for acquiring petitions was Friday, February 25.
Student Senate elections will take
place this year on March 15 and

16, after less than two weeks of

campaigning

When confronted with the decision of United Students Party
to disband its operations, Campus Alliance Chairman Arthur
Burke made the following statement. “Of course. Campus Alliance Party meets the United
Students decisions with mixed
emotions. Though we are sure
that all our party ideas and
ideals will now become fact, we
are deeply disturbed as to the
future of Student Government on
this campus.
''Many of us believed that this
decision was imminent two weeks
ago. We are annoyed that United
Students did not announce it
sooner and thus enable independents and others to form a constructive opposition.

“With little to no opposition in
year’s campaign it will have
to become an information session.
Campus Alliance Party will ask
that the voters turn out at the
polls to express confidence in
the party’s ideals as will be expressed in the Party Platform.”

this

Members oi the United Student*
Executive Committee include
Party Chairmen Leon Kellner,
Sheldon Cohen, Jonathan Z. Friedman, Arden Gray, and Charles E.
Zeldner,

IRC Will Hold Public Hearing Concerning Establishment of
Inter-Residence Judiciary to Handle Student Conduct Matters
The Inter-Residence Council
(IRC) will hold a public hearing
Wednesday evening at 8:00 in
Tower Private Dining Room concerning the establishment of an
'Inter-Residence Judiciary.
The proposed Judiciary would
consist of a five-judge court which
would handle any student conduct matters directly related to
residence. The manner in which
judges would be appointed has

The entire proposal was considered by a Senate meeting
where only two-thirds of its members were present, therefore requiring a unanimous vote to pass.
The vote was eight for, five
against, and five abstentions,
thereby defeating the proposal.
At a debate in the publications
board last Wednesday, Board advisors Dean Siggelkow and A.
Westley Rowland spoke against
the abolishment of the Board.
Dean Siggelkow felt that the
Senate Amendment would not
have been an adequate solution,
that a board is needed to represent the Students’ choice of edi-

The United Students Party Executive Committee released a
statement at a meeting on Feb25, which announced that
it “Vill not run a slate of candidates in any undergraduate division of the University in the upcoming Student Senate elections.”

not yet been determined.
A Women’s Curfew Court, com-

of five female judges,
would handle all curfew violations. Miss McDonald remarked
that this would result in i.npartial and uniform decisions on
curfew infringements.

posed

IRC President Gery Roberts

TOC Judiciary Committee Chairman Kathy McDonald commented
that the Judiciary “will give students "in residence a fairer hearing in regard to the violation

of present rules.”
The procedure followed by the
IRC Judiciary would parallel that
followed by the Senate Student
Judiciary, according to Miss McDonald. Due process and judgment by peers would be guaranteed, as opposed to decisions by
Head Residents and other administrators. In addition, witnesses
would be encouraged and an appeal of any decision would be

permitted.

The Judiciary, if approved,
would be established through an

amendment to the IRC Constitution. The amendment would allow
for an increase in the number
of courts, in consideration of the
increasing student enrollment
when the new campus is established.
Miss McDonald noted that although the IRC lacked the power
to abolish all existing dormitory
courts, it hoped that if the amendment was accepted all dormitories
would comply In addition it
would request the aid of the Dean
of Students in creating a uniform
system.
All resident students, administrators, and faculty are encouraged to attend the open hearing
Wednesday evening.

Union Bd. Activities Drive Recruits
Members hr Student Organizations
Union Board sponsored an Activities Drive in Norton Union
last week to recruit new members
for student, organizations.
Several organizations reported
significant gains. However, ac-

tivities Drive chairman Alan Burden commented that in general
he was disappointed with the
number of activities participating
and the number of students recruited.
He mentioned that the tables
of several Union Board committees were vacant and suggested
that this strongly illustrated the
ned for new members to revital-

ize student organizations,
To symbolize the theme of the
drive, a “Join Us” mobile was
constructed from tinker toy parts
and cards with the names of
participating organizations. A
contest was held in which students /were asked to guess the
minriberpf parts of the mobile.
The winner will be announced.

Thy best exhibit contest was
woiy by the International Club.
The Intervarsity Christian Club

was

runner-up.

drive included special
events presented by several orThe

ganizations.

Fra* University Organising Committee

�Tuesday, March I, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

Sigma Phi Epsilon Presents 12th Annual Queen of Hearts Dance;
Judging of Queen Candidates to Take Place Thursday in Norton

horseback riding and other sports.
Julie Maley, Chi Omega’s candidate, is a sophomore from Geneva majoring in Pharmacy. Her
interests include water skiing
and tennis.

Sigma Phi Epsilon's 12th annual Queen of Hearts Dance will
be held this Friday from 9 pjn.
to 1 a.m. at the Camelot Motor
Inn. Dave Cheskin and his orchestra will entertain.
Judging of queens will take
place in the Conference Theater
Thursday. Contestants are scored
on poise, personality, and appearance, Sigma Phi Epsilon member
Tony Muscarella commented.
Tickets may be purchased from
the Ticket Office or from any
of the fraternity brothers at $3

Arts Festival to Exhibit

New Variations On Art
“New Works in Collaboration,”

an art form combining photography and painting, will be exhibited during the Spring Arts Festival by professors Donald Blumherg and Charles Gill, March 9-12

per couple.

Carolyn Dallman, Sigma Kappa
Phi’s queen candidate, is a 19

in Norton Game Room.

Representatives

from
United Airlines’ “stand
by” program will be in
335 Norton Tuesday,
March 1 from noon to 6
p.m. and 234 Norton
Wednesday,
March 2
from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.

CAROLYN DALLMAN

JULIE MALEY

Meadows, Long Island. Writing,
art, and reading are among her
interests.
Alpha Gamma Delta’s candidate is Mary Gugino, a junior
from Fredonia majoring in Polit-

ical Science. Skiing, swimming
and piano are her interests.
Sandee Gunsalus is Theta Chi’s
representative. She is a senior
majoring in sociology from Auburn, N. Y. Her interests are

MARY GUGINO
year old sophomore from Orchard Park. She is a Nursing major whose interests include skiing, cheering, and swimming.
Sigma Delta Tau representative
Geri Gruson is a native of East

PvMlahad Ky

Partner*' Preii, JJhc.

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AIR LAUNCH SYSTEMS
System design and
fabrication
MEAT PROTECTION
Double wall construction,
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Refractory materials for re entry.
GROUND SERVICING EQUIPMENT
Design and
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GUIDED MISSILES

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Designed and fabricated to pro
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CRYOGENIC PUMPS
Fifteen years experience
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nitrogen, helium, oxygen, hydrogen and fluorine.

EQUIPMENT

I, AUTOMATIC CHECKOUT

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for highenergy liquid propellant rocket engines.
Performance Calculations
New computer pro
grams for evaluating performance characteristics
of propellant and oxidizer combinations.
Nuclear Propulsion
Emphasis on non nuclear
components involving
new material and control
techniques for nuclear rocket engines.
Electric Propulsion Basic studies of electric
field theory and propulsion devices invslving
electrostatic forces.
Propellant Flame—Radiation studies to measure
flame radiation temperatures and heat trans
mission.
Chemical Propellants

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SPACE VEHICLES
Design, test
and fabrication of manned and unmanned space
vehicles for controlled landings on earth or moon
EXTRATERRESTRIAL WORKERS
Development
fabricationand evaluationof equipment for extra
—

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MATERIALS RESEARCH.
temperature

material for rocket

Space Environment Effects on Materials
Vacuum and radiation effects on polymeric
materials

UPPER STAGES
Design, fabrication and test
of space stages involving integrationof structure,
tankage and propulsion system

NUCLEAR SCIENCES:

—

SIMULATORS—Fixed base simulation of manned
space systems for evaluationand

training.

—

Radiation Testing of rocket
Nuclear Mass Flow Device
flow rates

engine components.
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Orbital transfer and rendezvous

Rocket engines
and controls, propellant tanks, positive expulsion
devices, turbine pumps and pressurization
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Research
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Low thrust propulsion
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REACTION CONTROLS

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SYSTEMS

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ACCELEROMETERS AND DIGITAL VELOCITY
METERS
The BAC III B Linear Accelerometer
—

has a range of ±45g and weight of 0.7 lbs. Com
bmed with the external Digital Velocity Meter it
yields a precision digital system whose pulse rate
is proportional to the instantaneous acceleration.
RADIO RECEIVERS
Bell's 406 and 550
megacycles receivers meet the exacting require
ments of missiles and guidance systems.
—

SERVICES:

Human factors analysis: studies and electronic
simulation of man-machine interrelationships.
Electronic Range Operation, Data Collection.
Data Reduction and Analysis.

HIGH SPEED DATA PROCESSING

RESEARCH

and assembly of titanium parts.

MANUFACTURING SUBCONTRACTING

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and missile components including complete design, test and qualification.
HYPERSPEED PUMPS
The design, manufacture and test of hi-pressure centrifugal pumps.
AIR CONVEYOR
Provides frictionless platform
for material handling.

frame

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PERSONALIZED

LOAD CARRYING DEVICES

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Enables man to carry heavier loads with less
fatigue over extended time periods.

Receivers. Transmitters. Coders. Beacons. Power
Supplies. Electromagnetic and Electrostatic Re-

search. RF Circuit and Microwave Equipment
Development. Counter measure and Countercounter measure Research. Analog and Digital
Computation, and Data Processing Techniques.

CAPABILITIES

Process Developmentand Specifications

Vacuum Furnace
CHEMISTRY;

Inorganic. Organic. Physical and Analytical
Liquid Propellants

Solid and

INSTRUMENTATION:
Standards and Calibration

Measurements
Developmentand Evaluation
Data Acquisition and Analysis

Instrument

ELECTRONICS RESEARCH:

Non linear circuit theory: self adaptive filters; information theory and determination of optimum
codes for pulse communication; polyphase frequency multipliers; multiple frequency pumping
of parametric amplifiers, electromagnetic propagation in the atmosphere of the planets: consultation.

Electromechanics

RADIO FREQUENCY INTERFERENCE:

FLIGHT

Human Factors

EQUIPMENT.

Shock and Vibration
Hydraulics
Static, Acoustic and
Noise

Electronic

Environmental Test

PERFORMANCE:

RFI analysis of electronic systems, eg., voice
interference detection, measurement and analy
sis of communications systems. Detection, measurement and analysis of interference in RTT.
pulse or radar systems.
Automatic frequency measuring and monitoring

Flight Test and

equipment.

Electron Beam Welding Development
Coating Evaluation

Electromagnetic propagation theory development
and field experimentation, antenna system development.

Vehicle Technology

MATERIALS, METALLIC AND NONMETALLIC:
Ablative

Test and Development
Adhesive Bonding Evaluation and Development
Mechanical and Thermal Properties at —453 to
5000F,

High

(&lt;

5000F.) Temperature Oxidation Tests

Ceramic Material Development

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time from New York, Washington or Chicago, and a short drive from Adirondack and Alleghany Mountains, or the great Canadian vacalionlands of Ontario and
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ON-CAMPUS INTERVIEWS

will be held within the next week or so. Make a date through your
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Interplanetary mission studies
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AND DRONE

Successfully used for Regulus recovery combines
features of the automatic landing system with
Bell's secure commandsystem.
SECURE TRANSMISSION SYSTEMS
Designed
for control, navigation, coded communication,
and data transmission to offset countermeasures
in electronic warfare.
An unique
AUTOMATIC FLIGHT CONTROLS
constant altitude hovering autopilot for Navy
anti submarinehelicopters With special hydraulic
servo valves, antennr drives and power systems.
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AUTOMATIC LANDING SYSTEMS
Available in
either land or carrier-based versions
theonly
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GYROSCOPES
The Brig II gyroscope is a two
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for aerospace applications where accuracy, small
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Design, fabrication and test
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RADAR SYSTEMS
Developed for both ground
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For
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created.”
The technique according to Mr.
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of parallel factors in their respective works.

The SPECTRUM

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Mr. Gill explained that he
paints on enlarged photographs
projected on canvas by Mr. Blumberg. He added, “It is not the
uniqueness of the media that is
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Tuesday, March I, 1966

SPECTRUM

Secret Recruitment Campaign Designed
To Interest Students in Spy Agency

WASHINGTON (CPS)
College students are used to being
recruited by all sorts of groups.
Most businesses have large scale
college recruitment programs and
the success of the Peace Corps has
been due in large part to its recruiting program on the nation’s
—

campuses.

Perhaps prompted by the Peace
Corps’ success, a new government
agency has decided to actively
recruit on the college campus.
Last week the Central Intelligence Agency confirmed reports
circulating around Washington
that it now has recruiting teams
visiting about 100 college campuses to interview students as
prospective analysts and agents.
“We want good people,” Col.
Stanly K. Grogan, “and we’re out
looking for them.”
At present the government’s
super-spy agency is especially interested in graduate students
with basic scientific training
which would qualify them for
photo interpretation work
a
high priority field of intelligence
work that was publicized in the
—

U2 spy plane sensation of six
years ago and again in the aerial
photographs that uncovered Russia’s secret rocket installations in
Cuba in 1962.
Coly. Grogan, an assistant to
Adm. William F. Raborn, said the
agency probably has more employees with advanced academic
degrees than any other agency in
government.

Under law, he said, even CIA
employment is secret. But he also
reported that it is known that the
CIA has about 600 “senior people” of whom 53 per cent have
advanced academic degrees such
as doctorates in science and
philosophy.
The CIA’s recruitment program
gained prominence last week
when a small group of students
at Grinnel College in Iowa picketed a CIA man on campus. The
students displayed posters asking
what the CIA is doing in Vietnam,

Indonesia, and the Dominican Republic. One reads: “Where there
is an invisible government, there
is no democracy.”

CIA headquarters was unper-

Cramming
Clowning
Crashing
Fobbing
Frugging

turbed. In fact, an inquirer gained
the impression that the agency is
not at all adverse to getting a bit
of publicity for its talent scouts
who are in competition with highpaying private firms and other

PAGE THREE

YAF and CVV to Sponsor
Lecture on Vietnamese War
The Committee for Victory in
Vietnam (CVV) and Young Americans for Freedom (YAF) will

He began his political career as
a District Governor in, what is
now, North Vietnam during World
War H (1943-1945), During the
revolution against the French,
Rau was chief of the Hanoi Revenue Bureau from 1948, until he
left the North to become Legal
Department head in the Saigon
Foreign Affairs Ministry.

government agencies.

Col. Grogan said the college recruitment campaigns had been
going on since the agency was
created nearly 20 years ago. He
said that candidates are not excused from the draft to work for
the CIA.
While the agency occasionally
gets spectacular attention for an
international blunder or involvement in some great crisis, the
bulk of its employees are not engaged in James Bond-type pursuits but spend their time analyzing reports and other material
sent in from the field. Their task
is to keep up with international
events and their significance.
The real spies maintained by
the CIA provide information
which confirms, contradicts, or
fits into some pattern produced

by analysis.

“A great many people are interviewed but relatively few are
chosen” for CIA work, Col. Grogan said.
The agency is not disclosing
the names of campuses on which
recruiting teams are not working.

of Hanoi in 1939, and his Licentiate in Law from the University
of Paris in 1942. He was Professor
of Law at the University of Hanoi
while obtaining a diploma in Indochinese Law (1943).

When tne Communists took control of the North he remained in
the South.
For the past eleven years he
has served as Ambassador to Malaya and Director of Public Relations for the Saigon Govern-

ment.
Pham Khac Rau

sponsor a lecture entitled, “The
War as Seen by the Vietnamese,”
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in the Fillmore Room. Guest speaker for
the evening will be South Vietnamese Ambassador to the United States Pham Khac Rau.
Rau received his Baccalaureate
in Mathematics at the University

The Committee for Victory in
Vietnam will have a membership
meeting at 3 p.m. in Norton 333.

Election clerks are
needed to help in the
Spring Senate Elections
March 15 and 16 from
the hours of 9 a.m. to 6
p.m. Interested Students
call 831-2262.

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�Editorial Cdomment
Untimely Demise
.

.

INTERVIEW

.

Last year’s Student Association elections caught
United Students Party by surprise. They were as yet
unprepared to elevate the intricacies of campaigning
from a glorified poster race to an issue-oriented confrontation. The party was decisively defeated; and its
wake was a clearcut mandate to Campus Alliance Party
for the implementation of its ideals and programs.
The “temporary” demise (see news story page 1) of
United Students is little more than a monument to the
success of this year’s Student Association. The party was
unable to recover its confidence and could offer no alternate program. Indeed, it was caught up in the planning
of Campus Alliance Senators and scarcely presented coherent opposition.

In light of its limitations, the United Students’ decision was both politically feasible and beneficial to student government. On the other hand, it severely curtails
the democratic process. The decsiion comes at a time
when the avenue to candidacy is closed and there is no
chance of an organized alternative to Campus Alliance
policies in the upcoming election.

By BARBARA A. FITZSIMMONS

This is the first in a series of
interviews with members of the
faculty on the subject of the
growing trend toward student
activism in this country.
The following is an interview
with Mr. Albert Wachtel. Mr.
Wachtel, a graduate of Queens
College in New York City, came
to State University five and a
salf years ago as an N.D.E.A.
Fellow. For the past three years
he has been a member of the
English Department.
Q—What do you think 1$ the
real motive, or underlying cause
of this activist movement?
A—Basically I think it is to
“do good,” but many times .unfortunately, it seems to me the
desire to really know or learn
what is not there. Many times
the student who is an activist
fails to see that he is here primarily to learn. You would not
try to minister to sick persons
if you bad no knowledge of
medicine, and by the same token
one cannot minister to or change
his society until he is knowledge-

able about it.
Q—What about the areas with
which the activists concern themsuch
selves,
government
as
policy?

In addition to providing an unwarranted restriction
on just representation, the absence of opposition places
an unprecedented responsibility on the party structure.
Campus Alliance platform formulations will have the
binding effect of law and the degree of party unity will
determine the effectiveness of the new Senate.
For Campus Alliance to gloat over the successes of
its first year with a decisive majority would be a grievous
error. While the 1965-66 Student Senate is unequaled in
practical accomplishment, its activities failed to embody
the spirit and commitment that seemed to permeate Campus Alliance programming during the election campaign;
and while this year’s student government made impressive progress with revision of the Faculty-Student Association, its ability to do so was largely a matter of utilizing immense pressures applied to the FSA structure
from outside the University community.
With the knowledge of an incumbent party and the
experience of many of its candidates, Campus Alliance
is in a rather secure position. It is also uniquely capable
of extending the scope of student involvement to the
contribution to the

point where it becomes a meaningful
academic community.

THE

SPECTRUM

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall. University Campus, Buffalo, N. Y. 14214.
Published twice weekly from the first week of September to the last week in
May. except for exam periods, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and spring vacations.
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Managing

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IRENE WILLET
“

Financial Advisor
EDITORIAL

Tuesday, March 1, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACE FOUR

DALLAS

GARBER

POLICY IS DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING

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A—Present activism seems to
be primarily concerned with Viet
Nam. This is good; Viet Nam
concerns us all, but it seems to
me that the initial concern
should be to know first what is
going on. This is what they
should be doing, not going
around saying we should do this,
that, and something else, because
they really don’t know what is
going on other than what comes
to us through the press and
what the governments, both
American and foreign, wish to
release. If there is anything to
protest in this area it is the fact
that we are not being told by our
government what is going on.
Q—What, in your opinion, is
the effect of marches, picketing,
etc?
A—Extreme displays are nothing more than injury to the activists themselves. We all believe
one should not judge a man by
what he appears to be, but by

what he is. However ,in indulging in these displays they give
the conventional public, which
they are trying to impress, the
idea that they are somewhat less
than sane. Furthermore, there
are specific and traditional channels through which the activists
can fight. They can put pressure
on their Congressmen in the
form letters to them and revelations of their activities to their
constitutents: open letters and
public speeches. These other displays such as burning draft cards,
picketing and hunger strikes
seem to produce nothing but a
bad impression in precisely those
areas which they are designed
to impress.
Q—What about the matter of
extreme dress?
A—Long hair and unconven-

tional clothes in and of themselves are not objectionable, as
long as the individual is reasonably clean. However, the activists
should use their own arguments
on themselves. Their usual response is “Do you judge a man
by his hair and clothes?” implying, of course, that one should
not so judge a man. I would
agree here, but if he is trying
to impress the public with the
validity of the position he holds
the activist might as well realize he will be much more successful by presenting the best

possible appearance.
The necessity of his asking the
question proves that the public
does judge a man by his appearance. Now, the bearded activist
may eventually get public acceptance or at least considera-

tion for both his ideas and his

appearance, but at present, anyway, the latter seems to be getting into the way of the acceptance of the former.
Q—Why do you think they
continue to dress as they do,
rather than change and further

their cause?
A—I think here the answer
must be sought with regard to at
least two groups. With those sincerely involved in these concerns it is probably a lack of recognition that appearance is harming them. In the case of the majority it is probably a sign of
mere rebelliousness and as such

an indication of a lack of conviction in the causes which they
are supposed to be supporting.
Others may feel the public must
be shocked into sitting up and
taking notice even before the
message is presented. There’s
something to the last position,
but shock effect must be carefully weighed against detriment.
Q—Have you had any contact

with student activists?

A—Yes, I have had in my
classes activist students, and one
I recall who was particularly
frank and who once said to me,
“I want to stay in school because
I want to remain active in the
movement and the reason I want
to pass my courses is because
otherwise I’ll be kicked out of
school and not be able to be
active.” Once again I think it is
important for the student to recognize that he or she is in school
primarily because he or she does
not know everything.
Of course, there is the argument on the other hand that you
never know everything, so you
might as well start acting to the
best of your knowledge at present. I think this is a good argument which the activists can call
to their support. However, if you
know that you are acting only to
the best of your own limited
knowledge you must have a certain amount of tentativeness in
your actions, with less flaunting
assertions and more inquiry. It’s
the old song: Socrates is wisest
because he knows he knows nothing. Asking the right question is
sometimes as great an act as
anwering the question. The question, after all, raises the problem to a conscious level. Perhaps
at this stage in the game the activists would profit by asking
more questions and resisting the
tendency to supply immediate
answers.

Q—What do you feel will be
the overall result of this activist
trend in perhaps ten or fifteen

years?
A—I have no doubt but that
the activism of today’s students
will eventually lead to a community more informed and much
better able to decide its own

fate.

Cuban Refugees Struggle
The following is Part-B of the
four-part series on Cuban refugees written for the Michigan
Daily by Betsy Cohn.
During the week of January 1,
(the seventh anniversary of Castro’s victory) 500 delegates to an
“anti-imperialist” parley of a
group called the Tricontinental
Conference on African, Asian and
Latin American Revolutionary
Solidarity met and harangued the
United States, with Castro sounding the keynote.

At the same times as Castro
was denouncing the U. S., thousands of Cubans were waiting to
be airlifted to an “imperialist"
haven in the United

States,

trating our universities, causing
students to sympathize with Communist methods and raising antagonism against their govern-

ment.”

Menooal cited as an example a
lecture he had recently attended
at the University of Miami at
which a political science professor spoke on “The Reasons Why
Castro Was Not a Communist.”

In discussing the recent airlift,
Alfred Gonzalez, an ex-fighter in
the Bay of Pigs, said, “Fidel
did not calculate the dimensions:
he thought only a few people
would want to get out,” (since
the airlift began in December,
3,351 Cubans have entered Miami;
it is predicted that during 1966,
40,000 to 60,000 will be flown
from Varadero to Miami. As the
airlift continues, so do the clandestine small boat escapes.
Eighty-five Cubans, mostly draftage males, escaped, the island in
11 small boats during December).

To many Cuban exiles in Miami,
Castro’s airlift means trouble. To
Jose Gonzalez, an ex-senator in
Cuba, the airlift is “another
means of infiltrating Communists
into the United States. These people have been penetrating the
country for years they are mostly active in universities, and minority groups, such as civil rights
movements in which they work to
gather sympathizers. They work
also to weaken the free enterprise system and to eventually
desrtoy the productive wealth of
our nation," Puente said.

“Now Castro is trying to put a
stop to these airlifts as they have
demoralized the country. He did
it as a show for the free world
as well as for the Cubans who
were beginning to become apathetic about their fates in Cuba,”
Gonzalez said.

To Raol Menocal, an ex-mayor
of Havana, “the airlift can only
mean something bad any understanding with Castro is bad . . .
we are going to have trouble,” he
said. “The Communists are infil-

Gonzalez, who has traveled to
various American universities, explained how he believed Communists get into the various revolutionary groups causing dissension by taking legitimate gripes

and creating conflict among group
members themselves.
“They are able to create the
most dissatisfaction among civil

rights groups since many Latin
Americans are of Negro or Indian
blood.” Gonzalez was quick to
point out the importance of Americans, especially college students,
being well-informed about Cuba,
Castro, and Communism.

At the present time refugees
claim there are close to one million Cubans still trying to come
to the United States oonce they
get here they will probably join
with the other exiled Cubans in
planning for their return. Exile
groups distribute propaganda,
broadcast over “The Voice of
Cuba,” and write letters to those
still left behind encouraging
them,inciting them to rebel and
asking them to come to America.
At the present time, the Cuban
refugees are strongly in favor of
President Johnson’s policy in
Vietnam and see it as “the only
solution.” Cubans at the present
time also support President Johnson strongly.

One Cuban political science
student summed up a popular refugee outlook, “Americans must
pay a price for being world leaders; they must be able to back

one faction completely, they must

have a leader who is a statesman
as well, one who can make a decision and stick to it. So far the
only statesman the United States
has produced is President Johnson,”

�Tuesday, March 1, 1966

SPECTRUM

oCetterd

to

the Editor

now almost totally relaxed.
Now to the main point of this
—

Stan Brodsky

President, Tower Council

“No Single Instructor
Serves As a Military Agent”
TO

THE EDITOR;

“It cannot be a matter of dispute that our students have come
to us for knowledge, not for oblivion, for life and not for the
regimentation of death. The perversion of academic faculties into
selecting agents for the military
will force us into abdication of
our prime obligations and duties.” These are the key thoughts
in the front-page article February 22 issue of the Spectrum entitled “To Graduate Students
and Faculty.” Such an open letter belongs on the editorial page
as was the editor’s comments on
the same subject.
The problem of where to place
the material in the Spectrum is
insignificant in relation to the
issue which these students raise.
I value their right to protest
such a “life and death issue” as
they call
it. Fundamentally,

however, I disagree with their
position. After each semester, a

right to set goals and limits for
his classes. This is his right
under the ideal of academic freedom. The student who fails to
meet these standards probably
has refused or failed to meet
the standards of other instructors as well. No single instructor can be blamed for throwing
poor unsuspecting students to
the draft board.
Too many students have no
time for the evils. Neither I,
nor any other single instructor
serves as a military agent.
Bach student who receives the
so-called “death warrant” which
he fears must look to himself
and recognize that it was he who
“abdicated” his responsibilities,
and not those instructors who
have been appointed to guide
him in his search for "scholarship and community.”

few students come to most faculty members weeping “I must
have a B from you to balance
the D I am getting in another
subject,” or wailing “If you give
me a D, I’ll be put on probation
or put out of school.”
My personal reaction is that
such students have long since
“abdicated their prime obligations and duties.” If their first
role is to seek knowledge, let
them be about it. Some students
believe that the instructor who
penalizes them for doing less
than the university-stated minimum of six hours of outside work
for a three credit course or who
object to extensive cuts, is imposing on their freedom to learn.
In a real educational situation,
the student teaches himself under
the guidance of a qualified instructor. Each instructor has the

Professional

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OPTOMETRISTS

invited invasion of privacy consistent with democracy?
l.R.C. is not only allowing the
World University Service to solicit in my home, but is doing it
for them. They (I.R.C.) have set
up tables on the main floors of
the residence halls, and jafter
one day have collected over $70r
This to me is a more efficient
and more democratic way than
going from door-to-door, l.R.C.
has also let W.U.S. hold mixers
in Tower Hall, The proceeds
were given to W.U.S.
Is I.R.C. limiting democracy,
or is the Student Senate, with its
“dynamic leadership.” attempting to infringe on the rights of
the resident student? It should
be very interesting to hear what
the student judiciary says.

The Spectrum, which has cerletter
the I.R.C. resolution
tainly never been noted for its passed last week prohibiting
level-headed editorials, has again
door-to-door solicitation in residence halls without the consent
blundered with misrepresentation of the facts and half-truths. of I.R.C. or the respective house
I am referring to the editorial
councils. As a resident student,
of February 25, 1966 concerning I consider Tower Hall as my
home and the room which I octhe Inter-Residence Council.
If there was ever a body which cupy as my private bedroom and
was less “a condescending tool study area. Looking at it this
way, I am sure that there is
of the Housing Office,” it is the
Inter-Residence Council. The more soliciting and badgering in
I.R.C. inquires as to what the my home than in yours. All I ask
resident student want and need, is that people soliciting in my
and then, takes appropriate achome restrain themselves to the
tion. One example of this was main lobby area and do not come
the old policy of dress standards knocking on my bedroom door,
the only place where I can get a
in the cafeteria which, after finding out student opinion, was relittle privacy. People should not
vised by I.R.C. in co-operation be coming to my bedroom door
with the Housing Office. Another
unless I personally invite them.
example would be senior womI see no way in which I.R.C. is
limiting democracy here. Is unen’s curfews, which I.R.C. has

Everything Photographic for

Dr. Alexander Katz
Dr. Lou Krop

Inter-Residence Council
Never a “Condescending Tool”
TO THE EDITOR;

PAGE FIVE

*

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Students Decide Their Own Grades
TO THE EDITOR:

“Do you realize that by giving
grades you are assigning the life
or death sentence for many of
your students?” In light of recent Selective Service decisions,

professors are being urged to
weigh
carefully
more
their
grades because, it is alleged, they
might be ultimately responsible
for the death of some innocent
boy.
Upon whom does the responsibility rest when a bottom-quartile
student is killed in Viet Nam?
Upon the VC who killed him and
upon the regime he represents.
If the Selective Service and U. S.
Government be responsible for
his death, so are the people who
elected that government, as well
as those non-voters who gave

their assent.
Some would accuse the professors who assigned
him his
grades, the administrators who
processed those grades, and presumably the postman who delivered the transcript. If this be so,
then also responsible are the high
school teachers whose grades admitted him to college, and the
board of education which hired
those teachers, and the parents
who elected the board of education, and the grandparents who
begot the parents, etc. ad infinitum. Where does “the buck”

the name of the
“tender flower of youth,’” what
amounts to a license for academic lassitude.
Which professor are we to
manding, in

assign respom

man’s death in Viet Nam—the
one who gave an F instead of a
D, or the one who gave a B instead of an A? Which is “the
straw that broke the camel’s
back?” Or is it all of them together? Or perhaps (pardon the
blasphemous suggestion) the student himself at least shares, if
not bears, the responsibility because of the paper he didn’t
write or the exam he didn’t study
for.
“The fault, dear Brutus, is not
in our stars, but in ourselves,
that we are underlings.”
David L. Schriber

stop?

The anguished appeal to the
professor’s conscience that his
grade may seal a person’s doom
seems to me not motivated by
any lofty idealism, but rather,
smacks of opportunism in de-

We Are All Responsible
TO THE EDITOR:
I cannot help commenting on
on the editorial "Who It Responsible" and the box article on
page one of the February 23

issue.
To attempt to lay the blame
and the responsibility for grades
on the instructor is just another
example of our current pastime
of trying to duck responsibility.
How do grades come about? Are
they assigned willy-nilly by the
instructor in accordance with the
way he feels at the moment?
Does he throw all the papers
down the steps and grade them
in accordance with the step they
happen to fall on? Grades are

determined only by the student,
and if he cannot, or will not do
the work necessary to keep himself at a satisfactory 1 level his
grade must necessarily be at that
level which he himself has
achieved. He alone has the responsibility for the final grade
as it compares with all other
grades in the particular course;
he cannot shunt it off on anyone else.
So what is the editor who
wrote the editorial, or the group
which sponsored the box article,
trying to do when they say, and
I quote the box article, “by
giving grades you are signing the
life or death sentence for many
of your students.” Are these stu-

dents attempting to frighten in-

structors Jpto giving nothing but
“A” grades "regardless of the

actual accomplishment of the students in their courses? Are they
attempting to shift the blame
for their own shortcomings onto
the instructor or the University
administration?
If, as either good or poor students, you are disturbed by the
methods of the selection of draftees, go to the source—“the Selective Service System”— do not
try to crawl out from under
your own responsibilities by trying to shift them to your instructors or to anyone else.

Frederick

H. Thomas,

Professor of Engineering

Representative on Campus MARCH 4

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dietetics.
—

Campus Interviews

APRIL 6, 1966
x

SEE YOUR PLACEMENT OFFICE
FOR AN APPOINTMENT

�PAGE SIX

SPECTRUM

The Threepenny Opera' Presented at Baird;
Students Perform Under Mr. Wicke's Direction

A group of healthy and unfortunately, for purposes of the play,
well-fed students, under the direction of Henry A. Wieke are presenting what appears to become a

ments when he comes across less

as Macheath and more as VicePresident of Nice Guys of America, Inc.

thoroughly enjoyable evening

after some rough edges' are sanded and varnished.

Based on John Gay’s “Beggar’s
Opera,” of London at the time of
Queen’s coronation, we observe a
murderous thug who marries the
daughter of the cynical merchant
of human misery and is betrayed
by his favorite whore. This ingenious tale filtered through Bert
Brecht’s unique and joyously sarcastic “Weltanschauung” and set
to a jarring Kurt Weil score results in an amalgam presenting a
complete gamut of possible effects
from sloppy sentimentality to
acidic social criticism and maniacal cynicism.
It

is, perhaps, unfair to base a
review upon a preview performance, so any carping should be
taken with the understanding that
defects will be remedied. The
first and most grievous fault, is a
series of missed cues, not enough
to ruin the production but enough
to break the mood. The action is
emotionally demanding enough
without having to worry whether
the whole thing will dissolve into
a junior high school variety show.

There was also a strange lack
of timing running throughout the

Threepenny Opera completes run
production. Too many times the
viewer had the feeling that the
action was taking place under

water.

The vocal numbers ranged
from adequate to very good.
Randi Douglas was especially enjoyable and managed to hit just
the right combination of pathos
and humor as Lucy Brown. Miss
Damasohek did her usual competent job and we may note that
she projects the down-and-outer
well. James Kirsch’s acting and
voice are up to the part most of
the time, but there are still mo-

Posner Praises Feldman,
Acclaims 'Pripet Marshes
The following comments were
issued to the Spectrum by Mr.
David Posner, curator of the
Modern Poetry Collection upon
announcement of Irving Feldman's nomination for the VTFF
National Book Award in Poetry.
Mr. Irving Feldman’s nomination to the National Book Award
puts him in the company of the

select few in American Letters
today whose body of work has

gained

outstanding recognition

in their own time.

Visitors to the University who
have been awarded either the

The Pripet Marshes, praised
by such distinguished critics as

John Crowe Ransom and Lionel
Trilling, speaks with a voice
which is that of an intensely religious human being, and of a
man precisely concerned with
the politics and fate of his world:
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Teaching Elementary
Grades in Africa
Teaching English
in South America
Teaching Math
in the Far East

Serving as a Nurse

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the world
(A partial listing)
Interviews and discussion with
a representative from the National Council of Churches on
Thursday., March 3, 1966 from

3 to 5 p.m. in Room 264 of
Norton Union.

'

»

•

2 Bottles with Large Pina

the unredeemed
promise renewed
In the empty unconceivable

malcolm’s

Hm Law

The musicians under the Direction of Robert Sack play well,
but there is a rather disturbing
batle between the volume of the
musicians and the voices of the
singers which is especially noticeable in the center section of
the hall. It might be useful to
the production in general and the
audience and cast in particular if
the orchestra could be moved to
the balcony or to one side of the
hall.

FREE

And

NOW OPEN

The longest and most extensive concert tour in its history
will be undertaken by the UB
Chorus during the week of March
20 through 26.

The tour will include several
The supporting cast of beggars,
thieves, and prostitutes, and the stops throughout New York State
horse are fun to watch. The and Vermont, ending with appearwhores are properly sluttish but ances in Monteral. Approximately
still look too fresh to be real 70 student members of the Men’s
Glee Club and the Women’s Chorprofessionals. The largest scenes
are well handled showing that a ale will participate in the progood deal of talent and care went gram. The student choristers have
done most of the work of planinto the production.
ning and managing the tour, acAs a general judgment, it would cording to University Choral Diseem that the whole cast, alrector Robert S. Beckwith and Asthough fairly good and showing sitant Director Robert D. Sacks.
promise of being better, could
use “nasty lessons." None really
In addition, the Ars Nova Conseemed to have internalized the sort, a small group of young protheme . . . “Zuerst Kommet das fessional musicians from the Universtiy’s Center of the Creative
Fressen und dann die Moral.”
and Performing Arts, will accomWithout Qualifications, the pany the singers. The Ars Nova
lighting by David Sierk and the Consort will present some “very
sets by Boris Baranovic are both far out” chamber music especialartistic and professional in effect ly written for them, Mr. Beckwith
and design.
said.

-

to the writing of poetry seldom
have the pleasure of such distinguished acknowledgement by
their contemporaries.

UB Chorus Concert Tour
Is Most Extensive Ever

•

Pulitzer Prize or the National
Book Award include such names
as W. D. Snodgress, Robert Lowell, John Berryman, Louis Simpson, William Carlos Williams,
Allen Tate and Randall Jerrell.

Wat in# between
yard brood
Of floors,
lair,

Tuesday, March 1, 1966

&amp;

Representing:
Lutherans, Presbyterians, Methodists, Protestant Episcopalians, United Church of Christ,
Baptists., Etc.
FOR

INFORMATION

CALL;

Rev. John Buerk
Protestant

Chaplain

TF 4-4250
TF 6-5806

�SPECTRUM

Tuesday, March I, 1*6*

Student Cellist

Plays at Concert

UB student James P. Kennedy,
a member of the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, was cello
soloist in last Friday’s Philharmonic Pops Concert at Kleinhans
Music Hall. He performed Tchai-.
kovsky’s “Rococo Variations for
Cello and Orchestra.”
Kennedy was the 1965 winner
of the Casals Competition in
Pittsburgh, and made his debut
as soloist with the Toledo Symphony at age 14. Later he soloed
with the Mansfield, Ohio Symphony Orchestra.
He was awarded a full scholarship to the Curtis Institute of
Music in 1960. After studying at
the Institute from 1960-1964, he
enrolled at UB as a candidate for
the BFA degree in cello performance.

Spectrum
The Modern Dance Club meets
from 3 to 4 p.m. in Clark Gymnasium Tuesday afternoons. No experience is necessary.
International Club presents Dr.
Ewell speaking on India at its
meeting on Thursday, March 3
at 7:30 pm. in Norton 340. Nominations for officers for next year
will be held on Thursday, March
10.
Occupational Therapy Club will
meet on March 3 at 4:30 p.m. in

PACE SEVEN

Fellini's 'Juliet of the Spirits'Makes Buffalo Debut
Federico Fellini’s latest and
first full length color production, makes its Buffalo debut at
the Circle Art Theatre on Bailey
Avenue, this Thursday. Juliat of
tho Spirits, starring Gudlietta Masina, has been hailed by critics
everywhere. New York film critics recently selected it “Best
foreign film of the year”.
Federico Fellini, affectionately dubbed “il grande genio” and
“il poeta” by his associates, is
one of the most controversial, and
certainly, one of the most creative
writer-directors in the world of
films.
Few film makers have left such
highly personal stamps on their
work. Since 1954, when La Strada
received international acclaim,
each new Fellini film has been
heralded by a storm of excite-

ment and expectation.

Fellini experimented with color for the first time in the three-

part film Bocaccio 70, released in
1962. The third segment of this
film, which was directed by Fellini, starred the voluptuous Anita
Eoldberg as an enormous billboard
ad who came to life to taunt an
irate, puritanical movie censor.
Returning to black and white
photography, Fellini used Marcello Mastroianni to star as the

film director in 8Vi, which many
consider his greatest film to date.
Juliat of the Spirits further explores the phantasmagoria of the
subconscious in telling of a lonely and impressionable woman who
draws into the world of her
dreams and memories when her
family and friends desert her.

Weekly Calendar

d3oard

MARCH

Norton 330. The program will be
on Occupational Therapy and
group dynamics.
The Republican Club will meet
Wednedsay, March 2 in Norton
332 at 7:30 p.m.
The American Institute of A»tronautica and Aeronautics will
present IBM systems engineer
David Campbell who will discuss
“Computer Applications in Aerospace Industry” Wednesday,
March 2 at 3 pm. in Parker 104-

1-7

MONDAY

Rush: Panhellenic Council, 3 to
5 p.m. 233-242-262-344-244.
Lecture: School of Social Welfare Association, 11:30 am,, Norton 233.
Discussion; Alumni Greater
Books. 8 to 10 p.m., 233-332.
Exhibit: Manuscripts and books
Barker, Lockood Bal&lt;JQny

25 YAMAHAS FREE
this time...when you buy
your

Juliet of the Spirits

PU R I S T® by

Display: Spring Arts Festival,
all day, Center Lounge.
Concert; Buffalo Philharmonic,
Kleinhans Music Hall, 8:30 p.m.
WEDNESDAY

FRIDAY
Displays: Spring Arts Festival,
8 to 11 p.m., Second Floor
Lounge.

SATURDAY
Varsity Fencing; UB vs Notre

Ripon SociPanel
ety, 3 to 6 p.m., Conference Theatre.
Discussion;

Dame.
Freshman Fencing; UB vs Hobart College.
SUNDAY

Blood Drive; Arnold Air Society, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., Lobby,
THURSDAY

Concert; Felix Montoya, Kleinbans Music Hall, 8:30 p.m.
Lecture:
Mexico's California,
Buffalo Music of Science, 2:45

Psychology Colloquium: Dr. D.
Crowne, University of Connecticut, Fillmore Room.
p.m.
Discussion-Lecture; Classics DeMONDAY
partment, 3 to 6 p.m., Norton 335.
Recital: Beethoven, Budapest
Plays: Act Without Words String Quartet, Baird Hall.
(Beckett) and Soldier From the
Play: “Music, Wit and ManWars Returning (Compton), The
ners,” Ars Antigua, Studio Arena
Workshop, 719 Elmwood Avenue, Theatre, 8:30 p.m.
through March 6.
Lecture: Technology and Social
Musical: Threepenny Opera,
Baird Hall, 8:30 p.m., through Control, David Wleck, 3 pm., Diefendorf 146.
March 6.

A summer to remember

2C.ff.P0ST|t*
COLLEGE

THE GENTLEMAN’S SHIRT

you may win an Omaha
TRAIL MASTER
BY YAMAHA

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Simply print your name and
address on the back of the hang
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found on every Purist® buttondown by Sero. Mail the completed hang tag to Yamaha, P.0.
Box 1447, New Haven, Conn.
The 25 winners of a Yamaha
Omaha Trailmaster will be
selected on June 21, 1966.

His PURIST®
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by 8ERO

OF LONG ISLAND UNIVERSITY
Accelerate your degree program as
you enjoy the many activities and |fc&gt;j|sr
W
facilities on the 270-acre C.W. Post
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swimcampus: new residence
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nual Long Island Festival of the Arts. jr wtf

wF\h i VvRg
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UNDERGRADUATE COURSE
OFFERINGS
Liberal Arts and Sciences,
Pre-Professional,
Pre-Engineering,
Business and Education
GRADUATE COURSE OFFERINGS
In th*

Gradual*

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Biological Sciences, Business
Administration, Chemistry, Education.
Management Engineering, English, Foreign
Languages, Guidance and Counseling,
History, Library Science. Marine Science,
Mathematics, Music Education, Physics,
Political Science, Si eulogy, Speech.

Apply now for TWO SUMMER SESSIONS
June 27—July

29 and August 1 September 2
—

Day and Evening

Admission open to visiting students from accredited colleges.
This olfer not valid wherever It
Is prohibited by lederal, state
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For

additional information, aummor

bulletin

and

application, phono 516 MAyfair 6-1200 or mail coupon

Doan of Summtr School. C. W. Pott Col lege, P.O.. Greenvale.LI..
Please sand ma Summer Sessions information bullatin.
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from which collogo?

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11546
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*

�Tuesday, March 1, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT
1

—/

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*

=f

©

—t

IP

i&gt;

©®©

§

*

*=■*=*=

S

KENT NIPS BULLS, 63-55

Height and Foul Shooting URICH NAMES STOCK
Decisive; Poe Meshes 15 AS FRESHMAN COACH
28 attempts, while UB missed 11
out of 22. Kent scored 15 of its
last 17 points from the charity
stripe, which, coupled with a
54-30 rebounding edge, spelled
defeat for the Bulls.

By MIKE DOLAN

The

basketball

Bulls

closed

out thedr local ’65-’66 campaign
on a losing note as the Flashes
of Kent State tipped them by a
score of 63-55 at Memorial Auditorium Saturday night.

Poe closed out his Aud career
on a note of glory leading UB
scorers with 15. Nor Goodwin,
another senior bidding forewell
to UB fans, kept the Bulls in
the running early in the game
with his high, arching one-handers, and ended with 11.

The game was played without
the services of Bill Barth, UB’s
leading rebounder, who was in
Dunkirk’s Brooks Memorial Hospital! undergoing a health checkup. Barth, a senior form Fredonia, lost 15 pounds during the
course of the season and Coach
Leonard Serfustini felt a physical examination was necessary.

Sophomores Jon Clubert, Bobby Thomas and Doug Bernard, a
trio UB fans will be hearing
‘a lot from in the next two years,
also performed well.

UB appeared to have lost its

mid-season

finesse

—

all-round

play was not up to par. The

game started with the Bulls taking a 2-0 lead on a long shot
by Harvey Poe. At the 10-minute mtark of the first half, the
Bulls held a 13-8 lead in the
extremely slow-paced game. The
slow pace continued throughout
the half as the Flashes took a
25-23 dead into the locker room
with them.
In the second half, seven quick
points put the visitors' out of

reach of the Bulls. UB tried fran-

DOUG SIMS

tically to close the gap, but the
best they could do was come within five, at 39-34. From this point
on, Kent’s possession offense,
height advantage, and foul shooting ability kept them in front.
From the field neither team
looked very sharp. The Flashes
hit 40% of their shots, while UB
cashed in on 31%. Kent State,
however, did much better from
the foul line, clicking on 23 of

Kent State was led by Dave
Billick, a 6-9 sophomore pivotman, with 20, and Doug Sims,
a 6-6 forward, with 19, including
9-9 from the foul line.
The statistics:
BUFFALO
KENT STATE
OFT
OFT
AIM WtHttrf
114
ailllckt
4 3 11
AlbrKhtf 4 3II Goodwlnf
S J l» Smith c
I
Sims c
o
4 3 IS
Hom«r d
10 04 Po*
Bevlucqu*
gill
ClIckstaMs 10
30*
ZM
111 Bwiwrd
Bahry
t 1 4 Ttnmn
1*4
«

«

Mike Stock, one of Northwestern’s all-time great fullbacks
and currently assistant football
coach at South High School in
Akron, Ohio, will join the UB
staff as freshman coach. Stock’s
appointment, announced Friday
by UB coach Richard “Doc”
Urich, marks Urich’s third selection to his staff.
Previously named were Bill
Dando, formerly of Southern
Methodist, as defensive line
coaoh and Bob Doming, the sole
holdover from the old UB staff,
as defensive backfield coach.
Still to be picked are offensive
coaches for the line and ibackfield.
Stock, 26, played fullback, linebacker and defensive halfback at
Northwestern from 1957 to 1960.
He was co-captain his last two
years and was also captain of the
baseball team in his senior year.
Among the many honors garnered
by Stock were All-Conference in
football for two years, All-Conference and All-American for AllScholastic in 1960, football team
Most Valuable Player in 1960,
Northwestern Athlete of the
Year in 1960 and the Thomas

Coyne Award for athletics and
scholarship in that same year.
He also won the Western Con-

ference Medal for Athletic and
Scholastic Achievement in 1961,
was co-captain of the North team
in the North-South football game
at Miami, Fla., and played the
first All-American Bowl Game at
Buffalo in 1961.
A native of Barberton, Ohio,
Stock was graduated from Northwestern with a degree in Physical
Education in 1961. He stayed on
that year as assistant freshman
coach under Tom Pagna (currently backfield coach at Notre
Dame) and also served as a
scout.
In 1962 he en|dsted in the US.
Army and eventually went to Officer Candidate School at Fort
Sill, Oklahoma. He received his
commission and was stationed
in France for almost two years.
While in France he coached the
offensive and defensive 'backs
while playing for the SHAPE
Indians. Stock was an All-Army
and All-Europe player in 1963
and 1964. -After his release from
the serivce he assumed his present duties at Akron’s South High.

maSr h i

ess

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Novom)

000
0 0 0
3f 23 63

Total*

Tot*Is

23

n

55

LaRocque Resigns
Ron LeRocque, who has been
continuously associated with UB

football since 1950, has decided

to leave.

In a statement last week, LaRocque said:

“Coach Urioh and I have had
opportunity to discuss the
enthusiastic plans for the future
of UB football.
an

“He offered me a place on
his staff, for which I was both
pleased and flattered.
de

"However, after arduous
liberation, I have decided to investigate and pursue other chat
lenging opportunities.

"Needless to say, I wish Coach
Urich, his staff, those connected
with UB athletics, and especially
the college’s fine athletes, the
very -best for the ambitious road
ahead.
“At this time I would be remiss if I didn’t thank the University, my associates and friends
for 16 wonderful years as student, teacher and coach.
“It will, indeed, be unique for

me to become just a Very interested alumnus.’”

LaRocque earned three varsity letters playing center for

UB from 1951-53. He received
his degree in 1954 and served
as assistant freshman coach that
year. He became head freshman
coach in 1955 and held that post
for 4 seasons.

In addition to serving as offensive backfield coach in recent
years, LaRocque acted as liason

for the football coaching
staff with the various UB administrative departments. His
soouting-recruiting territory included New England where his
prize find was Gerry Philbin, an
All-East tackle at Buffalo and
currently a regular defensive end
with the New York Jets.
In 1964, LaRocque’s backfield
man

ranked

17 among the nation’s

major college teams in rushing

offense.

LaRocque has been head wrestling coach at Ufi for 10 years
and has had 9 winning campaigns
in that capacity. In the spring
of 1964 his grapplers won three
individual championships in the
4-1 tournament in Cleveland.

HOOPSTEBS TO FACE
BOCHESTEI TONIGHT

The UB basketball team will
conclude its ’65-’66 season at
Rochester this evening when it
faces the University of Rochester
Yellowjackets at the Palestra.

The Bulls, now 14-7 for the
season, will again be working

without the services of Bill Barth,
whose absence was only too obvious against Kent State Saturday night.

The Yellowjackets, 12-6 for the
a 70-68 win over Hobart Saturday, will be looking to
even the long-standing series with
the Bulls at 32 apiece. UB won
last year’s clash at Clark Gym,
year after

88 69.

The game will be broadcast by
WBBN at 8:15 p.m. A freshman
preliminary will precede the varsity contest.

WELCOME
To UB,
New Coaches!

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Tankards only $6.50 postpaid.
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a complete set of four authentic, rugged aluminum tankards—at a fantastically low price.
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Please send me 4 Tiger Heed Ale drinking tenkerds. Enclosed Is my check (or M.O.) for $6.50.
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•

•

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                    <text>STATE

PEACE

Un]vERS^^^n1w^^^AT~BUFURICH'S
appointments

corps
H

{See Page 7)

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1966

VOLUME 16

NO. 27

Draft Symposium Sponsored By SSCC
The Selective Service Counseling Center (S.S.C.C) sponsored a
symposium on the draft last Tuesday to clarify draft requirements
and to demonstrate alternatives
to the draft offered by the Selective Service Training Act, according to S.S.C.C. president
Mark Robison.

i

3iL,

ii

V
MU* Louise Duut of the UB English department, indicate* Quaker
view of conscientious objection during symposium on the draft.
Photo by Edward Joscelyn

Instructors Comment On The Draft
As 'Imposition On University Life'
Graduate students and faculty
members held a meeting Tuesday
night to discuss the “ddlemna”
which Chairman Kitty Katz describes as “the usage of the university for purposes other than
education.”
fVrculty JiiciAlicr OlWfw

t

iviaj-

man opened the meeting with a
speech noting that we must preserve the university as an educational institution. He urged the
withholding of grades and emphasized the need for “organization and loyalty.”
Miss Katz

cited one

of the

major problems facing the university today as the reclassification and drafting of students in

the lowest quartile of their class-

es. She said that “it’s time to

take a look at what we can do

to keep the military machine
from overtaking the university.

“The

academic institution is

being used,” she

commented.

Miss Katz also pointed out that
the lack of concrete accomplishment resulting from picketing and
pure intellectual discussion makes
genuine action a necessity.
Dr. Newton Carver urged that
the “whole intellectual
communu

nj

~tr

—

'•"**

—o—“

—*

dent deferments.
Graduate student Robert Little
reemphasized the necessity for
establishing “a concrete group,”
suggesting that well-known speak
ers be invited to address the university community on these problems.
Graduate student Rick Salter
urged that the public be made
conscious of the student deferment situation.
Four people were selected to
write an agenda for a meeting
Monday, March 7 at 8:15 p.m. in
urge
Norton. Meeting sponsors
all interested graduate students
and faculty members to attend.

Captain Kast from the R.O.T.C.
noted that there are “legitimate
and proper ways of obtaining'deferment,” emphasizing that the
draft board must be notified in
all cases. Mr. Kast mentioned
that R.O.T.C. and similar summer military programs provide
alternatives to the draft.

The Student Senate passed a
resolution questioning the conolution at the meeting Tuesday,
February 22. The Senate also considered two amendments, one widening powers of the Student Judiciary and another which would
eliminate the Student Publications
Board.
The Senate Resolution was in
opposition to an IRC Resolution
which prohibits “soliciting, campaigning, and canvassing in all
residence areas except main lobbies and door-to-door distribution
of any material.” The only exceptions are IRC and House Council
material and Residence Government campaign material. The
Senate’s Resolution charged that
“the restrictions on campaigning
are an unfair and unjust limitation on free speech and assembly,
and also violated the right of
Resident Students to hear, know,
acand be involved in campus
tivities.’

for a ruling.

IRC

President

was present to

The Freshman Cb»
discussed its organisation and pur
poses in a meeting Tuesday night.
The council decided to devote
rethe next few meetings to a
vision of its constitution, since
representation on the Student
Senate will be increased next
year. Constitutions of other organizations will be used as
models.

A

el

‘

d

g

summer planning

cononfere nces since freshman
ferences will not be held next
year. In the past, voting has taken
place during the fall semester.
that the
It was also -pointed out
most of the council’s activities
campus
can be handled by other
8)
(Cont’d

on Pg.

Captain Henry Kaat, of the UB ROTC Detachment

ditcinaaa alter-

natives to the draft during symposium on the draft. Mr. Richard
Lipsiti, of the American Civil Liberties Union it at his right.
Photo by Edwmrd Jotcmtyn

Student Senate Opposes IRC Resolution;
Defeats Publications Board Amendment

ceded the election rules of the
Student Senate. The Resolution instructs Student Senate President
this
Clinton Deveaux to present
challenge to the Student Judiciary

Discusses Role
Frosh Council
Connell

there is a conflict between your
own conscience and the state, the
Quaker has an obligation to follow his own conscience.”
Mr. John Brey, a representative
of End of Draft, who is currently applying for C.O. status,
reviewed the pros and cons of
C.O. status.

Mr. Richard Lipsitz of the
American Civil Liberties Union
noted that conscientious objector
(C.O.) status is granted to those
who have political, social, and
moral as well as religious objections to the draft. He explained
that previously a Selective Service Training Act clause required
belief in “a supreme being" for
C.O. status. The clause was removed by a Supreme Court decision in the 1950’s.

Further objections were made
on the grounds that the IRC has,
by this Resolution (1) Set itself
up as a judicial body by referring
violators to the IRC and (2) ,’&gt;uper-

possible dissolution
Freshman Class Council faces

Miss Louise Duus of the Buffalo Society of Friends reasserted
the Quaker position by affirming
that “war is an unacceptable
means of solving international
difficulties.”
She
continued,
“there is a certain loyalty to
the state and government is viewed as a positive force. But if

Gary Roberts

defend the IRC

Resolution. He said that the purpose of the resolution was to “prevent residents from being badgered by uncontrolled door-to-door
soliciting.” Roberts agreed that
worded
the Resolution was poorly
be
and promised that it would
altered at.the next IRC meeting.
The Senate Resolution passed 13were
2 The two opposing votes
cast by the IRC Senators.
The Senate passed an Amendment which gave the Student Judiciary jurisdiction over all matters of student misconduct. Previously. the constitution stated that
the Student Judiciary would not
sexual mishear cases involving

conduct

and mental

disorders.

Judiciary’s Chief Justica slot
charged with either sexual misconduct or mental disorder, and
that such a stipulation serves no
practical purpose in the constitution. The Amendment was passed
19-0, with one abstaining vote.

A second amendment, which
would abolish the Student Publications Board and form a Communications Committee as a Standing Committee of the Student
Senate, was defeated. Kim Darrow, who proposed the amendment, argued that the Publications Board had met and endorsed
the idea. He said that the Board
“does not logically belong as an
organ of the Student Association, but rather under the heading ‘activities,’" Much of the debate concerned the responsibility

of the Senate In matters of libel.
Dial*

I.——

*—»

*•

ible editorship without destroying
freedom of the press, for “control" would imply censorship.
In other action, the Senate approved the following budgets:
Engineering Student Council,
$989 New Student Review, $2466;
Med-Dent Student Council, $2367;
Student Nursing, $1276.50; Italian
Club, $387 American Society of
Chemical Engineers, $458; American Society of Civil Engineers,
$563.20; Ippon Club, $358.71; Astronomy Club, $220, and American
Chemical Society Student Affiliates, $553.
Objections to the International
Club budget were raised concerning an amount of $600 earmarked for a Boston trip. A total
amount of $3218 was approved.

Pinkertons and Campus Police
Will Enforce Sticker Rulings
By

JOAN ROBERTS

All automobiles parked on the
UB campus must display a 196566 parking permit sticker on their
left window by Monday, February 28. Chief Institutional Safety
Officer Gene Murray announced.
Stickers must be obtained by
students, faculty, and staff members.

Mr. Murray reported that these
stickers are necessary to maintain gontrol in parking lots and
to keep students from faculty
parking facilities. Students who
have not already obtained their
stickers may do so at the Bursar’s
Office. Faculty and staff members may apply at the Personnel
Office in Hayes Hall.

officers will be
Pinkerton
temporarily assisting the campus
police maintaining orderly parking during the next few weeks,
noted. He said that they
are attempting to provide adequate space in the lots by allowing oars to park only in desig

Murray

nated areas. In addition, yellow
warning slips are being distributed to cars lacking stickers or
parked incorrectly. Following the

dismissal of the Pinkerton force,
campus police will continue to enforce the regulations. Any car
parked without a sticker will receive a $10 fine, Murray said.
He commented that the chief

problem in controlling parking
is “keeping students out of the
faculty lots." As a result, any
student having a permit, but
parked in a faculty lot. will receive a $5 fine and will be subject to judiciary acfion by the

dean of students

The sticker requirement and
enforcement of parking only in
designated areas is necessitated
by the lack of control resulting
from removal of meters and
gates, Murray said.

All visitors to the campus must
secure a temporary parking permit at the Visitor's Parking Lot
booth, he noted.

�Friday, February 25, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

Concert, Parade and Stunt Night Are Campus Barrel Drive Collects
Activities Slated For Spring Weekend 200 Dollars For WUS To Date

Spring Weekend will be held
from Thursday, April 28 through
Sunday, May 1. A stunt night,
dance, parade, and concert have
been planned for the weekend,
according to Spring Weekend
committee member Diane Levy.

The Laurentian Singers will
appear on campus on Thursday
afternoon, followed by Stunt
Night that evening, Miss Levy
noted. Any individual or group
interested in participating in
Stunt Night may submit an application to the Union Board Office.

A faculty reception will be held
at the Hearthstone Manor immediately prior to the dance.
Music will be supplied by Ralph

Westfield’s orchestra. Block tickets, at $3.50 per couple, will be
on sale in the near future.

Several special events have
been planned for the weekend,
Miss Levy continued. These include a Grand Prix Tricycle Race
sponsored by Theta Chi Fraternity and an outdoor mixer around

the Norton Union fountain. There
will be a heralding parade
through the city of Buffalo, publicizing the candidates for Mr.
Faculty and Spring Weekend

Queen.

The theme of Spring Weekend
is “Anything Goes," Miss Levy
disclosed.

Campus Barrel Drive Co-chairman Robert Martin announced
that to date $200 has been collected for the World University

Service (WUS).
Most of the money has come
from three cources: $120 from

I.F.C. and Pan Hel Report Rushing
Inter-Fraternity Council Vice
President David Franko reported
that 269 men rushed fraternity
this semester. Sorority rushees
numbered 130, according to PanHellenic Council President Cynthia Perl.

Mr. Franko noted that although
the figures for rushing are greater than last semester, they do
not equal last spring’s. Sorority
figures are “about average,” reported Miss Perl,
The spring rush program completed its preliminary activities
after a mixer, several parties,
coffee hours, and a game day.
Fraternity bidding took place

February 21, 22 and 25. Sorority
bidding will take place March 1.
Registration for fraternities was
held January 31 and February 10.
Rushees were required to show
proof of a 1.0 average and to pay
a $1.25 fee which was deposited in
the I.F.C. treasury. Sororities have
the same average requirement,
but must pay a $2 fee. 1

Both fraternities and sororities
submit preference lists to their
respective councils which then
match the bids with preference
lists from the rushees.
Mr. Franko explained that the
decrease in the number of fraternity rushees is due to the increase in grade requirements for

Graduate School, the draft, a lack
of housing, and the question of
national fraternities.

MILITARY BALL QUEEN
Ann Kohler was crowned queen
at the annual Military Ball last
Friday, following the parade of
queen candidates through a florid
arch.

Miss Kohler, a 21-year-old junior majoring in English, is a
member of Chi Omega Sorority.
The Mi'itary Ball was sponsored
by the 575th Air Force R.O.T.C.
detachment and the Arnold Air

Society.

the Tower dance February 6, $10
from the School of Nursing senior class, and $25 from the Freshman Class Council.
In addition, WUS girls, collecting donations between 10 a.m. and
2 p.m. since Monday have netted from $10 to $15 per day.
The Allenhurst House Council
has pledged $101 to WUS.
The goal for this year’s drive
is $2,500, according to Mr. Martin.

‘This could be realized if each
of the ten thousand day students
would contribute 25 cents,” Mr.
Martin said.
The Student Senate decided last
fall that the money raised in the
Campus Barrel Drive, which is
the only charity organization
sponsored by the Student Association, would be given to the
World University Service. In previous years it has gone to the
United Fund.
‘To show our concern for the
people of the war torn countries
of Southeast Asia, the Senate has
also requested WUS to place our
donation in its Asian Fund,” Mr.
Martin disclosed.

Contributions for the World

University Service may be left
at any Campus Barrel (in Norton,
Tower and Goodyear); at the Norton Candy Counter and Norton
cafeteria cash register; and in the
Student Senate office, Norton 205.

Engineers and Scientists:

Let's talk about a career at Boeing...
50-year leader in aerospace technology
Campus Interviews Wednesday and Thursday, March 9 and 10
The most effective way to evaluate a company in terms of its potential for dynamic
career growth is to examine its past record, its current status, and its prospects
and planning for the future, together with
the professional climate it offers for the
development of your individual capabilities.
Boeing, which in 1966 completes 50 years
of unmatched aircraft innovation and production, offers you career opportunities as
diverse as its extensive and varied backlog. Whether your interests lie in the field
of commercial jet airliners of the future or
in space-flight technology, you can find at
sional challenge and long-range stability.
The men of Boeing are today pioneering
evolutionary advances in both civilian and
military aircraft, as well as in space programs of such historic importance as
America's first moon landing. Missiles,
space vehicles, gas turbine engines, transport helicopters, marine vehicles and basic
research are other areas of Boeing activity.
There’s a spot where your talents can
mature and grow at Boeing, in research,
design, test, manufacturing or administration. The company’s position as world
leader in jet transportation provides a
measure of the calibre of people with
whom you would work. In addition, Boeing
people work in small groups, where initiative and ability get maximum exposure.
Boeing encourages participation in the
company-paid Graduate Study Program at
leading colleges and universities near
company installations.
We’re looking forward to meeting engineering, mathematics and science seniors
and graduate students during our visit to
your campus. Make an appointment now
at your placement office. Boeing is an

••afc

equal opportunity employer.

I) SHAKESPEARE
V is EASIER

when you let Cliff’s Notes
f be your guide. Cliff's Notes
explain most of Shakespeare’s
plays including Antony and Cleopatra. For each play Cliff's Notes
gives you an expert scene-byscene summary and character
analysis. In minutes, your understanding will in"e ase Cli,, s
'
t
Notes
cover
minni
more than 125
major plays and
novels. Use
them to earn
better grades in
all your litera
ture courses.

125 Titles in all-among
them these favorites:
Hamlet Macbeth Scarlet Letter ■ Tale
of*Two Cities Moby Dick Return of the
Native The Odyssey Julius Caesar
Crime and Punishment Ttie Iliad
Great
Expectations
Huckleberry Finn King
Henry IV Part
I Wuthering Heights King
Lear
Pride and Prejudice Lord Jim
Othello Gulliver’s Travels Lord of
the Flies
•

.

•

•

•

•

•

•

(1) Boeing’s new

short-range 737 Jetliner.

(2)

Variable-sweep wing design for the nation’s

firet supersonic commercial jet transport.
(3) NASA's Saturn V launch
vehicle will power
orbital and deep-space flights. (4) Model of
Luiar Orbiter Boeing is building for NASA.
(5) Boeing-Vertol 107 transport helicopter
shown with Boeing 707 jetliner.
Division.: Commercial

Al.pl.n.

.

.

Spec.

.

Turbine

.

V.rto,

.

Also, Boeing Sc,en.lflc Research Lebore.orles

•

.

•

•

.

•

•

•

•

•

$1 at your bookseller

/y/Vvv
cum Mm. we.

or write:

Nttam ttaltaa. limit. Mr. lists

�Friday, February 25,1966

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

UB Foundation Passes Million Dollar Mark
By LORETTA ANGELINE

“The University of Buffalo
Foundation, Incorporated, has recently surpassed the million dollar mark since its charter in
1962,” Board of Trustees Chairman John M. Galvin recently announced.
“The foundation is a private
organization, with encouraging inovation on campus as its major

role,” said UB Foundation Director Dr. William O'Connor.
According to the foundation’s
annual report, the organization
is supported by gifts, grants, and
cash flow services which are used
toward cultural and educational
programs.
Threepenny Opera will play until February 27 in Baird

Photo by Alan Gruber

W.T. Chan Lectures Monday
Dartmouth faculty since 1942.

Dr. Wing-tsit Chan, co-director
of the Comparative Studies Center at Dartmouth and Adjunct
Professor of Chinese Thought at
Columbia, will give a public lecture on Chinese Philosophy Monday at 3 p.m. in the Fillmore

Among other books, Professor
Chan has written Religious Trends
in Modern China and the Basic
Classic of Zen Buddism. In addition he has contributed to 16
books on philosophy and religion
and over 50 articles on China.

Roome.

A native of China, Professor
Chan received his BA degree
from Lingman University in Canton. He took his MA and Ph.D at
Harvard. He has been on the

Professor Chan’s lecture will
be presented by the Student Senate Convocations Committee, Refreshments will follow the lecture.

Petitions Available For Senate Elections
205 at 2 and 4 p.m. that day

Petitions for candidates in the
Student Senate elections are avail
able today from 9 a m. to 5 p.m
in 225 Norton

The required number of signa-

According to the rules and regulations for the Student Senate
general election, “petitions must
be completed with the proper
number of valid signatures and
signed by the Dean of the school
in which the candidate is enrolled.”
They must be returned in person iFriday, March 4, at one of
two meetings to be held in Norton

tures is “five percent of the envision or a minimum of at least
50 signatures, whichever is great-

er.” Officer candidates must obtain at least 500 signatures.
As stated in the election rules,
all petitions will be kept confidential by a member of Miss
Haas’ staff. Petitions will only
be accepted on the official form
received from the secretary in
Norton 225.

NAVY STYLE

LEE
TAPERED

PEACOATS

14.95

CORDUROY
TROUSERS

arH|

HEAVY
WOOL
SHIRTS

Wom.n'. BollDonim*

Bottom

8.95

Special library and equipment
acquisitions, alumni continuing
education programs, scholarships,
fellowships, and faculty study and
travel grants were listed in the
annua! report as programs of
“great benefit to the Niagara

Frontier which would have been
impossible without private gifts
to the privately endowed locally
directed UB Foundation, Inc."

Culturally oriented programs
supported by the foundation are
the Budapest String Quartet, the
Creative Center for the Performing Arts, UB Music Department
-

and the Buffalo Philharmonic.

Others are the State University
College Creative Education Conference and acquisitions of manuscripts of James Joyce and Robert Graves for the Lockwood Library Collections.
Accomplishments within the
university community listed in
th? .refiojt. a_r£L 35ft, scholarshios

Frances and Marion Tallman Memorial National Merit Scholarship innovation studies in chemistry and engineering; development of new laboratory equipment in medicine, dentistry, space
engineering, nuclear studies,
pharmacy, and chemical engineering, and breakthrough studies in
psychiatry, medicine, dentistry,
nursing and pharmacy.
According to the report, programs extending beyond the university are: International studies
in anthropology, linguistics, psychoactive drugs and blood chemistry; urban studies on the Niagara Frontier, and special grants

for faculty studies overseas.
Chancellor Furnas said in an
open letter in the Annual Report:
“The University of Buffalo
Foundation, Incorporated, is providing an indispensible service
for UB by spearheading many of
our creative innovation projects.
The partnership of private and

state funds is essential to fulfilling our university's obligation to
society. With state funds providing a major portion of the university’s expansion and budget requirements, private dollars given
to the foundation can go directly
into creative projects and scholarships."

Action to Be Taken Against
Grads. Owing to Loan Fund
Graduate Student Association
Chairman Dr. Norman Lazarus
announced in a release to the
Spectrum that action will be taken against graduate students who
have defaulted in their payments
to the Graduate Student Loan

in the large percent of cases,
admirably justified, it appears
that there is a small percent of
the graduate population who conveniently forget that they owe
money to this loan fund. Because
thia fund depends on rapid turn-

According to Dr. Lazarus the
Loan Fund was formed by direct

“It was thought that a university graduate body would be more
aware of its moral obligation to
repay this money within a mutually agreeable time period,” Dr.

ments deprive other needy students from obtaining loans.
“Despite repeated notices, the
outstanding loans have not been
paid; in fact these notices are
totally ignored.”
Dr. Lazarus related that the
Graduate Student Association is
considering two methods of insuring repayment of funds. The
association will either hand over
“delinquent names” to a commercial collection agency, or it
will “incorporate a rider into the
rules of the loan fund stating
that no graduate student can
graduate from this university un. he has repaid all money
til

continued. “While this
feeling of confidence has been,

that he has borrowed from the
fund."

Fund.

contribution of the graduate students, All graduate students at
this university are eligible to receive loans. “It is probably the
only place in the city in which
amounts up to $150 can be borrowed, not only interest-free, but
with a minimal investigation of
the background of the person applying for a loan,” Dr. Lazarus
said.

Lazarus

over of the money within it, it’s
clear that any delinquent pay-

..

Lockwood Library Displays
HvLn Thnmac

Mannf/pm*f

SHARON SHULMAN

By

manuscripts and
A selection of Dylan Thomas'
reading
books is on display through April 1 in the mam
by
owned
collection
is
The
Library.
Lockwood
room of
library’s Poetry Room, and contains Thomas original
notebooks from 1930 to 1934. The University topossesses
the readditional information on Dylan Thomas due
at
English
professor
Maud,
former
Ralph
search of Dr.
UB. Dr. Maud recently published Entrances to Dylan Thomas' Poetry, an analysis which
of
Hives insight I" the meaning
dealing
each poem as welt
and
with Thomas' background

personality.

Dylan Thomas is

,

WP?*

i

ifex

'

&lt;M

considered by

authorities one of the
great modern poets. Due to his

many

TmTuence as wett

as

rnai

like W. H. Auden, modem poetry
emphasizes self consciousness. This is due in part to such
or
elements of disillusion as war
the bomb. Thus modern poetry
■

FLEECI

has developed a

philosophy

of in-

dividual responsibility, aimed
toward the creation of a “world
of peace.” Thomas once described
his work as the record of his
“individual struggle from darkness towards some measure of
light.”
Dylan Thomas was born in
Wales in 1914, where he was in-

A great chance to meet

people, make money

Pizza
by DiRose

&amp;

train for a future job as
an executive.

SPECTRUM

advertising

staff. Also needed: Private

99 i for Large 13"
8 Slice

Join The

secretaries to Busi-

ness and Ad. Mgrs. Call

Ron Holtz at

831-36JO.

Ati

‘APHIBHwfl

PIZZA
TR 3-1330

TO CAMPUS
4 p.m. 2 a.m. Sun. Fri.
12 p.m. 2 a.m. Saturday
-

■

flue need by Welsh folklore, but
never learned to speak the native language. His first poems
were printed in 1934; he immeand
diately became famous,
toured America as a lecturer.
Thomas died in Greenwich Village in 1953, at the age of thirtynine.

The SPECTRUM
Published

parlntri

P

by

-*■&gt;■*.

_y4ifoll €t Smilk

Sue.

P'imlimf

1381 KENMORE AVENUE
(at Delaware)

FREE DELIVERY
■

Dylan Thomas In 1938

Phone 876-2284

�Editorial Comment

.

LEAVE DEMOCRACY TO THE PEOPLE
The Inter-Residence Council has never
been noted for its dynamic leadership.
Usually a condescending tool of the housing office, it has remained content to show
movies, hold dances, organize openhouses,
and (more recently) to inform its constituency of their good fortune in having
high quality food at low prices.
Last week, this august body decided
to tackle democracy.
The I.R.C., realizing its responsibility
to protect the resident student from the
grasping, pushy campaigners of the World
University Service fund-raising drive and
from the corrupt and immoral politicians
seeking election to a subversive Student
Senate, resolved to declare null and void
the First Amendment to the United States
Constitution.
The Inter-Residence Council declared
that no one will be permitted to solicit the
vote, aid, or contribution of the resident
student beyond the dormitory lobbies and
in an organized fashion. There is, however, one exception
candidates running
for an I.R.C. election.
When Gary Roberts, President of the
I.R.C., expressed his concern over residents
being “assaulted” by organized groups,
he obviously took into consideration that
most I.R.C. candidates are a great deal
less disturbing (differentiate from disturbed) than most others, in addition to
the fact that I.R.C. elections are an internal problem. (It is rumored that the InterResidence Council plans to secede from
the campus.)
By prohibiting campaigning or preconceived floor discussions, residence government abrogated the rights of free
speech, free association, and free assembly. In an effort to find a workable solu-

oCetterA
Editorial Scored
TO

Friday, February 25, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACK FOUR

THE EDITOR:

While in the past I have often
disagreed with the views expressed in the Spectrum, never
has there been any one as unintelligent as in the Editorial Comment, “Who Is Responsible,” that
appeared in the February 22nd
issue.
The point in question is not our
view on whether or not the war
in Viet Nam is right or wrong,
but it is a question of whether
or not college students should be
drafted, and if they are
whose
fault It is. Whether we like it or
not, our country is at war with
another country and some of our
young men are going to die in
this war.
—

1 now ask this: “Is it better

that a young man who seeks a
career in a field that does not require a college education, but
otherwise special training, such
as printing, die rather than a
college student? It is not! While
our country needs college educated men, it also needs men trained
in the special arts and crafts.
Then, why should a young person, who is doing well in his
tiade, although not college
trained, be drafted rather than a
college student who is just above
“flunking out?”

The writer of the column in dispute stated that the instructor
who gives a student a bad mark
is responsible for that student’s
life. Ibis is the logic of a college
student? To me it sounds more
like that of a person in kinder
garten. If the person responsible
for this article had his way, all
students would receive a good
grade simply on the basis that it
would keep them from the draft
This, if it were possible, would
not work since there would still
be a lower percentile. Further

to

•

tion to the very real problems of privacy
and harassment, the I.R.C. has violated
this nation’s basic rights.
In light of a dismal failure, we urge
the Inter-Residence Council to reassess
the logic of their prohibition or to return
to their movies, dances, or even their attempts to convince students of the many
merits of the UB Food Service.
THE PUB BOARD AND THE
STUDENT SENATE
At Tuesday night’s meeting, the Student Senate, in the rather infamous tradition of its predecessors, soundly defeated the amendment to abolish the Publications Board and create in its stead a committee of the Student Senate. Among the
major objections to the new structure was
its elimination of recognition as a prerequisite to a publication's campus distribution.
Recognition is an unwarranted restraint of a free press in regards to publications, and is an unwarranted restraint of
free assembly in the case of clubs and
other campus organizations. To believe
that the Student Senate, or any other
group, is either competent or justified in
determining the right of others to meet
or express their views in written form is
in direct violation of our rights as citizens
of this country and particularly as members of an academic community.
While recognition remains as a criteria
for existence of groups other than publications, the Senate is somewhat justified,
for the sake of consistency, in demanding
that a similar procedure be maintained
for published material. Yet, it would be
infinitely more consistent with the past
performance of the 1965-66 Senate if both
the Publications Board and the requirement of recognition were abolished immediately.

the Editor

more, the grade a student receives is earned by him for the
amount of effort he puts into the
course, not awarded at random
by the instructor, as the editor
seems to think. Our Selective
Service System has devised a system whereby college men below

a certain level in their class

standing may be drafted. This is
a fact, qnd must be accepted.
Therefore, if a student is drafted
because of low grades, he and he
alone is responsible and not anyone connected with the University.
To sum up, all young men other
than college students then, are
Americans and should be willing
to die if necessary for their country, while our editor, and also

Graduate Students
Congratulated
TO THE EDITOR:

The graduate students and faculty members, who planned and
attended the meeting Tuesday
night concerning their determination to regain the university for
scholarship and their alarm at
the Selective Service attempt to
scour the university for soldiers,
are the objects of warm admiration for their efforts. Mr. Taylor
is commended for his recognition
of the importance of this organization and for his editorial giving
support to the endeavor. I implore
all graduate students and faculty
to involve themselves in this most
urgent discussion and necesary
action on these issues of public

concern.
As an undergraduate I am not
in a position to aid directly with
a power to deny the assigning of
grades, but I do offer my support
and thanks for an effort to reestablish the university as a place
of learning. I give my services to
this group in any way they can
be helpful.
Ruth Shapiro

grump

The

•

Editorial Termed
Nonsense
TO THE EDITOR:

There are many legitimate argu-

ments that can be used to justify
or condemn our role in South
Vietnam or the method used by
the Selective Service Administration. A few have been discussed
in the Spectrum. The article
found on Page One and the editorial of the February 22 issue
reach a new low in logical

My worst critic put down the
Spectrum afterreading last week’s
“Grump” and said, “Wasting space
again, huh?" No, it was not my
wife, she is much more subtle

and devious than that. It does not

The editorial, entitled “Who Is
Responsible,” shifts the responsiblity for the administration of
the Selective Service System to
the individual teacher by stating,
“if a teacher gives a student an
unsatisfactory grade he must realize that he is passing judgement
on his student’s life as well.”

I would like to accomplish only
the small thing of making very
sure that those students who are
out there camouflaged as believers—who the hell can remain uncommitted in a society as completely committed as this one?—
who really are somewhat too very
doubtful as to whether this whole
silly thing isn’t just a bit ludicrous at least part, and probably
most of the time know that they
have a whole bunch of company.

ers).

It would seem valid that some
would consider this space wasted
if I am not up on my podium

railing away at the rest of the
world. I think I recall twice in
the past receiving the comments
of Herb Taylor in favorable fashion, albeit it may simply be that

he avoids my column because of
the uncertainty of my loyalties.

I very definitely feel that there
is a place in this newspaper, this
university, and (fool that I be)
even in this society for a person
who is willing to speak out on
several subjects on which he
holds strong, if perhaps unfounded, opinions. I am not writing
this column to give aid and succor to anyone of a particular
political or philosophical viewpoint because it has been my
observation that there are at
present quite enough people who
are willing to assure other people
who hold views similar to their
own that they are right.
The lack I have noted is support for those who seem to find
the claims of knowledge and absolute truth that are so abundant
and definite in these times somewhat lacking and would prefer
to be left alone damn well long
enough to make up their own
minds without two hundred and
seventy knights in silver armor
mounted on white sneeds (or is it
steeds) galloping back and forth
in the land proclaiming loudly,
“I, and I alone, have the way, all
who do not follow me are traitors,
(or damned, or rat finks, or something depending on the cause for
which he is scourging the unbelievers).
If I am trying to support anybody in this column it is an organization called Doubt Inc.,
which exists solely to ask such
questions as “Are you very, very
sure of that?” This is best asked
by a Doubt agent as he stands
there at, say a political rally with

THE

by STEESE

his finger marking a place in the
Statesman Yearbook, but also
works very well when one (anyone can do it, really) simply asks
“Who the hell are they?” after
being assured that “THEY” say
such and so about Vietnam, Civil
Rights or the recent discovery
that the moon is really made of
solidified bacon and horseradish
chip-dip.

really matter who said it; the
point that occured to me was
that it may be that a number of
readers of this column might
agree with this opinion (like, say,
four out of my nine regular read-

thought.

...

If you read this far you had
best watch it, your thinking may
be contaminated. An agent of
Doubt is probably sulking about
in the shadows stalking you at
this very moment. Hurry to the
newsstand and buy a copy of The
Buffalo Evening News, that will

reassure

you.

Works of Clifford Still
Shown at Albright-Knox
The Albright-Knox Art Gallery’s
famed collection of 33 oil paintings by Clyfford Still will go on
display February 24 in the gallery.

The exhibition coincides with
the publication by the AlbrightKnox of “Clyfford Still: Thirtythree Paintings in the AlbrightKnox Art Gallery,” a hard cover
book with all the Still paintings
illustrated in full-color.
In 1964, Still presented the
gallery with 31 of his paintings,
covering 26 years. It was one of
the largest gifts ever made by a
living artist to a museum. The
gallery previously owned two
Still works.
“Shortly after World War H,
Clyfford Still emerged as the
leader of that sudden, vital
and unprecedented in this country
upsurging of exceptional
creative energy and productivity,”
Gallery Director Gordon M. Smith
—

—

notes.

SPECTRUM

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo, N. Y. 14214.
Published twice weekly from the first week of September to the last week in
May, except for exam periods, Thanksgiving, Christmas,
and spring vacations.
Edltor-in-CMaf

JEREMY TAYLOR
.LARRY SMOHET
RAYMOND 0. VOLPE

...

Managing Editor
Business Manager
**?

Uhor

SUSAN GREENE
Assistant
Bwchlef. Russell

--

-ALICE EOELMAN

Buchmsn, Karen ®rsen,
Groan,
Shul

™"'

What utter nonsense. Or perhaps I should say what guilt transference. The responsibility lor a
grade lies with the student and
his performance. Bis rank in class
is a result of his work and its relation to that at bis peers.
Guilt for injustices under the
new system must lie with one of
two sources: the student or the
Selective Service Administration.
We, as students, must not transfer the consequences of our own
academic actions to the administrators or faculty. We must not
hold them responsible for the administrative actions of a government all of us helped to elect.
General Hershey admits that
the criteria for selection of college students for the draft is inadequate. But responsible critics
must take the task to recommend
superior alternatives. I find no
suggestions of this nature in the
editorial.
Howard Gondree

Psaturs Editor
JOHN STINT
Assistant
JQ ANNE LEEQANT
Bartow, Ron EUswofth Bartaea Ann Rtzslmmotn, Barbara Loeb,
Audrey Logs), Bob Martin, Suzanne Rovner, Martha Tack, VMlm
Weinstein
Sports Editor
STEVE SCHUELEIN
0***'0 MIk Uolan, Steve Parbman, Rob Frey, Scott Forman,
*

’

Layout EdHsr

Stall—Joanne Bouchler.

SHARON HONIG
Stave SRvemmn.
LAUREN JACOBS
Hillp#m S d

Stephanie Parker,

Copy Editor

..

25iJrfi^^,? rSu^H*Z«

0

'

*"

*

Ozer,

Advertising Manager

RON HOLTZ
Angelo, Audrey Cash, Pat Rosenfeld,
Steve Silverman, Joseph
Photography Editor
EDWARD JOSCELYN
Staff—Don Blank. Pater Bonneau. Joseph Feyes. Carol Goodson Alan r.n.h.r
Ivan Makuch, Michael Soluri, Anthony Walluk,
Susan Wortman,'
Robert Wynne.
Circulation Manager
DIANE LEWIS
Faculty Advisor
IRENE WILLET
Financial Advisor
DALLAS GARBER
EDITORIAL POLICY IS DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING
Second

Class Postage

Subscription
15,000.

Paid at Buffalo, N. Y.
year,
circulation

per

for national advertising by
National Advertising Service. Inc.. 420 Madison Ave., New York. N. Y.
Represented

PRESS

$3.00

�Friday, February 25, 1966

Murder
By JOHN MEDWID

SPECTRUM

of Gonzago

To the 95 ministers of the
Southern District Conference of
the Christian and Missionary Alliance held in Atlanta this fall
who endorsed capital punishment
goes our Whatever You Do Unto
These the Least of My Brethern
You Do Unto Me Award.
To the U.S, Information Service who has hired units of the
South Vietnamese Army to recreate battles with the Viet Cong
for their propaganda films goes
this week’s Unnecessary Expense
Award.
To the State Department who
took away the passport of Yale
professor Staughton Lynd for
traveling to the Democratic Republic of Viet Nam goes this
week’s It's a Free Country (as
long as you don’t use any of
your freedoms) Award.
To the unnamed large South

ern corporation that used a computer to give “objectivity” to the
hiring of white and Negro workers and later discovered that prejudice was programmed into the
computer goes our It Can't Happen Here Award.

To Carroll Baker, who has U.S.
military commanders in Viet
Nam looking for $7000 worth of
gowns which she apparently lost
goes our First Things First
Award.

To Lyndon Baines Johnson who
is spending $400,000 to kill each
Viet Cong soldier goes our
Wouldn't It Be Cheaper to Bribe
Them Award.
And finally, to Hubert Horatio
Humphrey who was so moved by
his own oratory in support of
Johnson’s War that he began to
cry during his speech goes our
Carrying Himself Out On His
Own Shoulders Award.

Cuban Refugees Struggle
The following is the first in a four-part series originally written
for the Michigan Daily by Betsy Cohn, a Daily staff writer, after
extensive interviews with Cuban refugees in Miami.
By BETSY COHN
The Collegiate Press Service

As millions of Americans rest
safe and secure, the majority of
them remain oblivious, uninformed, or misinformed of the international turmoil occuring in
this country
in Miami, Florida,
just 90 miles from Cuba.
—

In Miami there are thousands
of Cuban refugees who have spent
the past seven years resettling in
hope of finding new occupations
and working to free their families
from Cuba.

However, like any alien culture,
the Cubans met with difficulties
when they first began to come to
the United States; thus, they
stayed close in proximity to each
other as well as to their homeland
with hopes of soon returning. As
a result, Miamians have spent the
past few years sharing two cultures with their new Cuban neighbors.
S e c t i o ns of the city have become concentrated with Cubans;
Cuban restaurants, stores, movies,
nightclubs, newspapers, and radio
stations. Exiles relate that these
parts of Miami are models of preCastro days in Havana.

Un 1 i k e many alien cultures
which seek refuge in this country,
The Cuban exiles do not represent one faction which had to
take its particular beliefs and
doctrines elsewhere, but rather,
a cross section of ideals, philosophies and customs. In Cuba they
varied from low and middle class
to aristocracy. In the U. S., ex-

senators run amusement parks,
ex-mayors and grocers and for-

mer members of the cabinet are

bankers.

In Miami, they have divided
among themselves into exile
groups of laborers, professionals
and proprietors, all working
toward the same aim: to return
once again to Cuba.
Nevertheless, while Cubans remain in Miami, they will be welcomed as a boost to the economy.
Statistics show a large decrease
in unemployment since 1958;
apartments and hotels which remained vacant throughout the
winter are now full all year long.
The federal government has
welcomed the Cubans as additional taxpayers, as well as major
contributors to the inflow of
capital, and as important factors
in the decrease of Miami’s crime
rate. (Seven years ago Miami was
fourth in the nation; today Miami
is 25th in the ratio of the number
of crimes to population).
Do the Cubans feel resentment

toward Americans for the Bay of
Pigs fiasco? “La Culpa no caya
en las quelta” replied Raoul Menocal, ex-Mayor of Havana, member of the House of Representatives, Minister of Commerce and
past senator. ‘The blame cannot
be put in one place’’ he explained, “it is a strange feeling
of resentment; the Cubans sometimes resent Americans, and
Americans at times resent Cubans, nevertheless, we are grateful for how Cubans have been received and in turn Americans
are grateful to Cubans for economic reasons. Now we want
Americans to be informed.”

To keep the United States well
informed is also the aim of Alfredo Gonzalez, a law student at
the University of Miami, a member of the Bay of Pigs invasion,
and past president of the Brigade
2506, an exile group in Miami.
“The American government
moves by public opinion, as is
evident by the influential Gallup
Poll. It is important for the Cuban people to have the assistance
of American awareness and action.”
There is no doubt that Miami
is living in a revolutionary age;
this is Obvious in its schools
(where classes are being taught
in Spanish and English): on its
streets (where signs point “a la
derecho” to the right) and on its
newsstands where newspapers
such as Zig Zag Libre, outspokenly feature a bearded pig being
taunted by knives and spears. The
headline reads “Todos Quieran
Matat A1 Cochino” (“Everyone
Wishes to Kill the Pig”)
•

Newton Garter
Talks To WBFO
Newton
interviewed on
WBFO’s “Meet the Faculty”
Tuesday, March 1 at 6 p.m..
Philosophy

Carver

lecturer

will be

Carver plans to discuss the
appeal of the Feinberg Oath to

the United States Supreme Court.
Miss Magavero said. He is one
of five UB professors who contested the constitutionality of the
Feinberg Law in January, 1964.
(See Spectrum, Friday, February
18 1966.)

Further discussion topics include Carver’s writings on the
nature of violence and “a possible venture into the nature of
language,” Miss Magavero added.

PAGE FIVE

Hoover Accuses Demonstrators Of Aiding Moscow Cause
WASHINGTON

(CPS)-The latgroup of demonstrations
war
the
in Vietnam has prompted
J. Edgar Hoover, director of the
FBI, to issue one of his occasional reports charging that the current “insurrectionary climate” on
American campuses is serving the
est

Moscow cause.
Writing in his monthly letter
to U.S. law enforcement officers,
the FBI director said that the

college student today “is being
subjected to a bewildering and
dangerous conspiracy” through
“a feigned concern for the vital
rights of free speech, dissent, and
petition.”
Hoover said the Communist
Party is “jubilant” over the developments on the
American
campus and is exploiting them
with a two-part movement: “a
much-publicized college speaking

and the campus-oriented Communist W.E.B. DuBois
Clubs.”

program

He said on many campuses the
Communists are helping create a
"turbulence built on unrestrained individualism, repulsive dress
and speech, outright obscenity,
disrain for moral and spiritual
values and disrespect for law

and

order."

-SPECTRUM BULLETIN BOARDOlilcial Bulletin
The Official Bulletin is an authorised
publication of the Stale University of
New York at Buffalo, for which the
Spectrum assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to 114 Hayes Hall, attention Mrs. Fischer, before 2 p.m. the
Friday prior to the week of publication.
Student organisation notices are not accepted for publication.
GENERAL

NOTICES

University College students planning to
major in Modern Languages. Psychology,
Anthropology, Sociology and History
meetings will be held during the first
week in March in order to make available important Vocational and Academic
information. There will be speakers and
panel discussions with ample opportunity
to ask questions.
A Reminder: Applications lor make-up
examinations for the removal of incomplete grades (recorded for absence from
final exams) will be accepted no later
than March 4, 1966. Make-up examinations will be given the week of April 11,
1966.
University College students
(EX—

—

CEPT THOSE ON STRICT ACADEMIC

PROBATION)
registration for next
semester, September
1966, will begin
Monday, March 7. Students whose last
names begin with the letters designated
below will see their advisers, plan their
programs and register for courses on the
following days. This schedule does not
include Nursing Students who are advised
and registered through the School of
Nursing.
—

March 7 through March
K, L, O.

March 14
C. J.

R,

11

March

through

—

—

—

p.m.
MARCH

1

The Department ol Chemical Engineering
presents Lemuel B. Wingard,
Jr., Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering. Cornell University. The topic
is "Studies in Bio-Chemical Engineering,"
4 p.m., preceded by coffee at 3:30 p.m.
presents Dr.

—

—

—

—

Students will make appointments with
in
the University College Receptionist
Diefendorf No. 114 one week in advance
of the above mentioned scheduled times
beginning Monday, February 28. At this
time the Receptionist will give the student registration cards and a list of in-

Religions Tidings
Hillel will sponsor a Sabbath Service
this evening at 7:45 p.m. in the Hillel

House. Instead of the weekly sermon
there will be a question and answer period designed to give students an opportunity to clarify certain aspects of Judaism. Hillel’s annual South Sea Island
Party will be held this Saturday. February
26 from 9 to 1 at Temple Sinai, 50 Alberta Drive. Admission is free to members of Hillel. Hillel will hold a supper
on Sunday, February 27 at 5:30 p.m.
with the Student Christian Association in
the Hillel House. Mr. Hans Vigeland will
speak on: “The Music of the Church and
the Synagogue." Students serving as volunteer workers in the Campus UJF Drive
must complete their solicitations and make
their returns Sunday, Tuesday or Thursday.

a lecture given by
Arthur Lynip will be the theme of
an IVCF meeting to be held on Friday.
”

“Christian Careers

Dr.

Greek Notes
Alpha Gamma Delta will hold a Formal
Dessert on Sunday. February 27. at the
Three Coins, from 6 to 9 p.m. Mary
Gugino is the Sigma Phi Epsilon Queen
of Hearts candidate. The new officers for
1966 are: President, Mary Lou Pieri; 1st
Vice-President, Margie Nelson; 2nd VicePresident, Donna Lisson; Treasurer. Terry
Recording
Secretary. Louise
Goldfier;
Lieifer; Corresponding Secretary, Anne
Garon; and Pan Hellenic delegate. Geri
Moreno.
Alpha Epsilon Pi's cumulative average
was 1.75 with over
for the last semester Dean’s
List standing.
35 brothers attaining
fraternity
Alan Weingast achieved the
high with a 3.0.
Phi announces the apFalcone,
"Aristotle
and "Chad" Oliver and
Induction
pledgemasters.
Dick Smith as
Wedof the Spring class will be held this
nesday at the Sheridan Lanes. Emery
"The Bachelor" Dessoffy will preside.

Joe

social chairman,

Bela Phi Sigma is presenting “The Un
tonight
called Four” at the DMSO Mixer
Dona
in the Multi-Purpose room at 8:30.
tion is 35 cents.

The newly elected officer, of Chi Omei*
are: President, Genie Knapp: Vice-Pre.i
Recordtn, Sec
dent, Chriata Ulbrichl:
retary, Carol De Kramer:
Tre..ur.r Pal.v
Howr
Vicki
Secretary.
Brenda
He mi nek: Pled.e M..tr.»,
IniO'Hearn; and Herald, Janet Le.be.
afterSunday
thi.
tiation will be held

Corre.pond.nj

MARCH 2

Academy ol Medicine
F. Sullivan, Professor
of Neurology, Tufts University School of
Medicine. The topic is "Diabetes and
Diseases of the Nervous System." Butler
Auditorium, Capen Hall, 8:30 p.m.
MARCH 3
The Department of Psychology—presents Dr. Douglas Crownc of the University of Connecticut, whose topic is “ChildRearing Antecedents of Self-Evaluation,”
231 Norton Hall, 4 p.m.
The Bullalo

—

Alpha Sigma
pointments of

WEEKLY CALENDAR
FEBRUARY 28
The Department ol Mathematics—presents Theodor Ganea, Professor of Mathematics, University of Washington, whose
topic is "Induced Fibrations and Cofibrations," 2 Diefendorf Hall. 4 p.m.
The Department ol Medicinal Chemistry, School of Pharmacy
presents a
Seminar. The topic is "Hormonal Control
of Fertility," 244 Health Sciences, 4:30

—

—

18

March 28 through April 1
H. A, N. E. Z
April 4 through April 8
S. Y, Q, Z
April 11 through April 15
M, T, U, V.
April 18 through April 22
G, P. I.
April 25 through April 29
W, D.
May 2 through May 6
B, F.

structions to follow in the subsequent procedures.
P. T. students will make appointments
with Miss Heap, 264 Winspear, dtrectly.
Students who do not make their appointments at the scheduled times, or
who do not keep thm when made, will
be required to register in Clark Gym on
Registration Day. Thursday, September
8.
Students on Strict Academic Probation
will not he permitted to advance register
during the scheduled times. If the Quality
Point Average of these students improves
to such a degree that they become eligible
to continue in school, they will be informed in June, after semester grades
are in, concerning later registration dates.
Students on strict academic probation are
strongly urged to see their advisers to
discuss their present situation and possible
ways of improving
it. e.g. change of
habits,
major, improved study
adjustments to and motivation for college and
any other problems. It would be helpful
if these students could make an appointment during the alphabetically scheduled
times, but. if the problem is pressing, they
can make an appointment at any time.

—

John

MARCH 4

Biology Seminar
features Dr. Leo
Levenbook, National Institute of Arthritis and Metabolic Diseases, U. S. Public
Health Service, Bethesda, Maryland. The
topic is “Free Amino Acids and Protein
—

February 25, at 7 p.m. in Norton. Room
344. The Rev. Dale Fisher of Calvary
Indepedent Baptist Church will lead a
lecture-discussion
March 3, in Norton
second floor lounge. The topic for this
meeting is: “Jesus Christ—Was He What
He Claimed?
The Newman Club will sponsor a
speaker at the Weekly meeting on Wednesday, March 2, at 7:30 p.m. in 329
Norton. Lenten Masses are offered daily
at Newman Hall at 11 a.m. and at 5
p.m., and Saint Joseph’s Church at 12
noon. Newman Discussion Classes are
being held every Tuesday and Thursday
at 9 a.m. and at 10 a.m. Also, Sunday
Night Suppers are served every week at
Newman Hall at 5:30 p.m. The Newman
Educational Weekend is being held in
Itahaca this weekend, February 25, 26,
and 27.

noon at the apartment and dinner will
follow at the Lakeview. Ann Kohler is
this year’s Military Ball Queen.
Gamma Phi't "Togga" party will be
held tomorrow night at the Club Bar at
8:30 p.m.
Kappa Psi will hold its formal rush
dinner tomorrow evening at the Club Bar.
Phi Epsilon Pi will receive official recogniticn for its outstanding scholastic
achievement of having approximately 20
per cent of its brotherhood on Dean's List
with Honors and several 3.0's. Terry K.
Kiningstein. newly appointed social chairman. will be master of ceremonies at our
"Get Friendly Pajama Party” to be held
Saturday night at Emile's Polish Ball-

room.
Phi Kappa Psi will encounter the "pink
cat” at the annual "Sewers of Pans
Party” tomorrow night. Joe Fetto contributed to the discussion of Sororities
and Fraternities on WBEN TV last Sunday. Roger Fredricks won the school pool
tournament which was completed last
week.
Phi Lambda Delta will hold a TobogParty at Chestnut Ridge. Saturday
night from 7 30 to 10 p.m. Afterwards
there will be a "Toboggan Bash" at the
‘Lisbon Animal Corner" with a guest appearance by the famous singer "Marvelous
Marino'' and his "Pompi Five."
gan

Sigma Alpha Mu would like to thank
the students and faculty lor their support
in the "Bounce for BeAs" Heart Fund
drive. The brotherhood also challenges
anyone to try and beat their record of
28 hours of continuous ball bouncing but

Synthesis in Insect Metamorphosis,” 134
Health Sciences. 4 p.m., preceded by coffee at 3:30 p.m.
preThe Department of Economics
sents Dr. Anne Krueger,
Professor of
Economics, University of Minnesota. The
topic is "Some Economic Costs of Exchange Control; The Turkish Case,” 22S
Crosby Hall, 3 p.m.
—

PLACEMENT ANNOUNCEMENTS

Additional information can be obtained
on the following announcements and interviews by contacting the University
Placement
Services, Schoellkopf
Hall,
telephone 831-3311,.
applications
Junior - Civil Engineers
are now available for summer engineering
positions with the U. S. Agriculture Department of Soil Conservation. Applications must be completed by March 31,
1966
The Buffalo Public School Examinations for teachers anticipating September
placement will be given on Saturday,
March 19. 1966. Applications are now
available and must be filed on or before
March 4. 1966.
The National Teacher Examination, required by the Buffalo Board of Education, will be given on March 9. 1966.
Registration closes March 4th.
The New York City Board of Education has forwarded a spring schedule of
qualifying examinations which is posted
in the Education Division.
—

PLACEMENT

INTERVIEWS

FEBRUARY 28
Chevrolet, Tonawanda
Joy Manufacturing Co.
U. S. Naval Air Development Center
Bausch fit Lomb, Inc.
Ford

MARCH

Motor Co.

1

Y.W.C.A.

Investors Planning Corp.
Mineola Public Schools
Birmingham Public* Schools, (Michigan)
MARCH 2

Manufacturers At Traders Trust
Burroughs Wellcome As Co., Inc.
Eastman Kodak Co.
Lincoln Rochester Trust Co.
MARCH 3
Sylvania Electric Products, Inc.
Rath Packing Co.
Elliott Co.
Division of Carrier Corp
Elliott Co.—Division of Carrier Corp.
Kendall Refining Co.
—

MARCH 4

New York State Dept, of
Mental Hygiene
R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.
Johnson fls Johnson Ortho
Pharmaceutical Corp.
Bailey Meter Co.
Sperry Gyroscope Co.

The American Institute of Astronautics
and Aeronautics will present IBM systems
engineer David Campbell who will discuss
"Computer Applications in Aeroptace Industry” at 3 p.m., Wednesday, March 22
in Parker 104-6.
The Ukrainian-American Student Association will present a film entitled "The
Treasures of the Ukraine” on Wednesday.
March 2 at p.m. in Norton Conference
Thearte.
The Ukrainian-American Student Club
is sponsoring a trip to the University of
Toronto to attend "Ukrainian Poet Evening." The group will depart from the
first floor lounge of Norton at 10:30 a.m.,
Saturday, February 26. The group is
sponsoring a youth panel for high school
students on "College Entrance and Financial Aid” at the Ukrainian Club "Dnipro”
on Genesee Street at 3 p.m., Sunday.
February 27.
The International Folk Dance Club
meets every Sunday night at 8 p.m. in
Norton 344.

recommends they do it in the spring.
Sigma Kappa Phi is having a social
tonight with the Graduate Burmese Fraternity. The following Special and Standing
Committees were elected: Dinner,
Miller; Public Relations, Pat Kelly;
House, Terry Neal; Social, Judy Karr;
Philanthropy. Joan Paxton and Barb Stager; Sing,
Julie Preston; Scholarship,
Barb Knapp; Historian, Marcia Tritchlar;
and Activities, Betsy Mitchell.
Sigma Phi Epsilon invites everyone to
attend their annual Queen of Hearts Ball,
to be held Friday night, March 4 at the
Camelot Inn. For tickets, contact any of
the brothers. There will be a Nurses Social tonight.
I
Tonight there will be a stag at the
Tau Kmpi*a Epsilon apartment altar the
induction of members into the pledge
class, at 7:30. Saturday night, beginning
at 8 30. there will be an informal party
at the Hotel Worth.
Thais Chi Fralsrnity has purchased
tickets for the Thr vspenny Opera to be
held this Friday at Baird Music Hall.
Saturday, the brothers will support the
basketball team's last home game of the
season at Memorial Auditorium when the
Bulls meet Kent State.
Thais Chi' ■ newly elected officers are:
Debbie Brodmck;
1st ViceArlene Ardanowski; 2nd VicaPresident, Barb Tycha; Recording Secretary. Benue
Popselaaa; Corresponding
Secretary. Janet Savanyu; Treasurer. Barb
Ellis; Chaplain. Judy Woodruff; and

President,
President,

Pledge Mistress. Claudia Elliott.

�Friday, February 25, 1964

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

Education and Cultural Affairs
First of Technology Lecture Series
To Be Presented By Sociology Club

Pousseur, Semester's Slee Professor,
Will Lecture On Electronic Music

Miss Raya Dunayevskaya, author, social critic and political analyst will deliver a lecture on

Henri Pousseur, Belgian composer and Slee Professor of Music
Composition for the second semester, will deliver a lecture on
“Calculation and Imagination in
Electronic Music,” Monday, February 28, at 8:30 p.m. in the Norton Conference Theatre.

"Automation and the New Humanism” on Monday, Feb. 28 at
3:00 p.m. in 146 Diefendorf.
Miss Dunayevskaya is the author of “Marxism and Freedom,”
a critical analysis o fcontemporary Communist and Capitalist industrial societies. She was
private secretary to Leon Trotsky in 1937-1938 but broke with
him over a fundamental ideological difference.

Professor Pousseur, born in
Belgium in 1929, was educated at
the Royal Conservatory of Liege
and Royal Conservatory in Brussels. He taught in Darmstadt,
Basle and Cologne. Many of his
compositions for voice, piano and
strings, as well as electronic music, have been formed throughout
Europe.
The lecture, previously scheduled for January 28, was postponed due to the snow storm. He
will deliver lectures on “Harmony, a Renewed Question,”
March 14, and "Webern and Silence,” Monday, May 2.

Because of political events of
the time, notably the Stalin-Hitler pact, she labeled the Soviet
Union "the greatest totalitarian
barbarism in the modern industrial world.” Miss Dunayevskaya
later designated the Russian sys-

ton.

No

experience

is

necessary.

Birthday Party, Harold
Pinter's “comedy of menace,"
will be presented in April by
(he Department of Drama and
Speech, announced Production

tracted

international

attention

only for their exceptional
skill in dialogue and characterization. but in their presentation of
humor and menace together,”

ROMA

DEALS Jewelers

Free Delivery

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

We Deliver On end
Off Campus

8:30 p.m. -12:30
Sunday

—

(next to

Amherst

DIAMONDS
WATCHES

a.m.

w-

Theatre)

!

EARRINGS

4-12

will be held Monday,
February 28, 3 to 5 p.m. in 248
Norton and Monday and Tuesday,
February 28 and 29, 7 to 9 p.m.
in 3336 Norton. “Anyone who
Tryouts

has done or would like

Director Ward Williamson.
Williamson, a drama faculty
member, said, “The play deals
with the successful attempt by
two persons to destroy a third
who thinks he has found sanctuary among friends—a somber
undertaking conducted in an at-

not

FROM

some acting is urged to

to do
attend

The Academic Committee of
South will present
“What’s New Week,” a program
of cultural, scientific, and literary nature, Monday, February 28
through Friday, March 4. The
open lectures will be held in the
Goodyear

Goodyear South Lounge at 8 p.m.

“We hope to prove that the
dorm is not merely a place to eat
and sleep,” Academic Committee
chairman Lynne Bernstein explained. According to Miss Bernstein, this program is designed
Everything Photographic

If we can't
fix your watch
throw it away

Professional
\

V, ■

&amp;

There will be an open

meeting of the Executive

Committee of the United
Students Party on February 25, 1966, at 3 p.m. in
Room 218, Norton Hall.

Supplies

•

•

“Bob Dylan’s Poetry” Monday.
February 28, at 4 p.m. in the
Conference Theater.

j Summer i
I Employment |
Saturday, February 26, 1966

—

9 tol

SO Alberta Drive
Temple Sinai
(Only 2 minutes from Allenhurst)
—

FREE BUSES LEAVING NORTON AT 8:45 P.M.
Music by KEN PUMPI
Refreshments
2 Free Drinks
—

Free to All Member of Hillel

1

Full or Part Time,
Car Necessary,
Guaranteed Salary;
Sales &amp; Advertising

|
|

J

»

Contact;

Unisphere Enter; rises,
Inc.
2488 Delaware Ave.
Phone: 876-1250

with an opportunity to enrich
their minds without leaving the
residence hall.
Dr. Charles Ebert of the Geography Department will give the
first lecture, Monday, on “The
Soviet Union Today,” featuring
slides taken on his most recent
trip to the Soviet Union. A question and answer period will follow.
On Tuesday, Dr. Eleanor Jacobs
and Dr. Bruno Sohutkeker of the
Veteran’s Hospital will speak on
“What’s New in Mental Health.”

University Relations, will discuss

2635 Delaware Ave.
877-3317

)

to provide the resident students

Mr. Thomas Hanna, assistant
director of Public Information for

Cameras

Projectors
Photo Finishing

Hillel s Annual South Sea Island Party

Election clerks are
needed to help in the
Spring Senate Elections
March 15 and 16 from
the hours of 9 a.m. to 6
p.m. Interested Students
call 831-2262.

the tryouts.” Williamson commented that, “the play offers a
variety of challenging opportunities for student actors, both
male and female.”
Williamson noted that scripts
are available in Harriman 5N,

Drs. Jacobs and Bruno have been

conducting
LSD.

experiments

with

“Current Trends in Philosophy
and Religion” will be discussed
on Wednesday by Mr. Rand of the
Philosophy Department, Father
Duffy of St. Joseph’s Church, and
Hillel Rabbi Hoffman.
William Sherman of the English Department, lecturing on
“Modern Poetry” on Thursday,
will read samples of the poetry
of modern writers.
A mixer Friday night will con
elude “What’s New Week.”

Union Board Committee To Present
Discussion on Poetry of Bob Dylan

for

Amateur Use

DELAWARE CAMERA
MART

\

Movie Rentals

—

30.

Goodyear South Academic Committee Presents
What's New Week' In So. Lounge Next Week

RINGS

832-9044

Miss Dunayevskaya’s lecture
will be the first in a Technology
Series sponsored by the Sociology
Club. UB sociology professor
Sidney Wilhelm
will discuss
“Technology and Social Control”
on March 7. Mr. David Wieck,
associate professor of philosophy
at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute wlil speak on “Eros and
the Machine” on March 14. Mr.
Arthur Efron, assistant professor of English at UB will dis“Art and Technology” on March

Department of Drama and Speech Does
Harold Pinter s The Birthday Party

mosphere which is generally
highly comic. This play and the
other plays and films of the
young British dramatist have at-

"New York Pizza"

Union.

tem as a state-capitalist tyranny,

Henri Pousseur

The

All students interested
in becoming a studio operator for WBP'O are invited to the studios on
the second floor of Baird
Hall or Room 323 Nor-

touching off international debate
experts on the Soviet

among

"

Tape recording of Dylan's
songs and poetry will be played
during Hanna’s discussion of DyIan's work
Hanna was awarded the Morri
son Poetry Prize as an under
graduate student at Cornel! Uni

versity. He has studied Dylan’s

songs and poetry since 1961.
The program is being presented by Che Union Board Literature
and Drama Committee.

International Student
ID Cards For Travel
An International Student ID
card, entitling the holder to discounts in the United States and
Europe, may be obtained for 2
dollars.

The ID card and travel information is available at the NSA Travel Information Office located in
the Prism Office, first floor of
Tower. The office is open Tuesday 4 to 6 p m. and Thursday 1
to

3.

Students must bring an applica
tion-size photo: Additional infor
mation may be obtained by calling 831-3175 or 831-3457.

�Friday, February 25, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE SEVEN

Peace Corps
“Many of us who did not know about
the United States thought of this
great nation as a wealthy nation, a
powerful nation, endowed with great
material strength and many powerful
weapons. But how many of us know
that in the United States ideas and
ideals are also powerful?”
foreign minister of Thailand
-

Now in its fifth year of existence, the
Peace Corps has been called everything
from a “nest of spies” to the “most powerful idea in recent times.” Its self-defined
goals are “to promote world peace and
friendship by making available to interested countries Americans willing to serve
overesas who would: help people of these
countries to meet their needs for trained
manpower; help promote a better understanding of the American people on the
part of peoples served, and; promote a
better understanding of other peoples on
the part of the American people.”
Whether the Peace Corps is the means
to achieve these goals or whether Peace
Corps action is limited to them are both
debatable points. But one scarcely debatable point is that “the Peace Corps ideas
and ideals are indeed powerful; and the
most potent of all was set forth by David
Crozier in a letter from Columbia to his
parents before he was killed in an airplane accident. ‘Should it come to it,’
the young volunteer wrote, ‘I ha'd rather
give my life trying to help someone than
to have to give my life looking down a gun
barrel at them.’
”

INDIA. Peace Corps Volunteers William Grubber (white short-sleeved shirt glasses),
of West Seneca, New York, and John Bird (right, dark shirt) of San Jose, work with
small industries in the Kampur-Andreapredesh region in India. They are working to
show them how to make their production more profitable and, in general, to increase
the efficiency of operation.
-

service, easily 10,000 more are presently
serving overseas. They work in education
(elementary, secondary, university, phys-

While almost 7,000 Peace Corps volunteers have returned from their two year

ical, and vocational), rural and urban
community development programs, health,
agriculture, and public works. They serve;
Asia, Africa, and Latin America at the
request of forty-six nations who have submitted proposals for Peace Corps projects

in their countries.
Volunteers average age twenty-four
years, are selected primarily on the basis

»

-■

•

of personality. Selection officials seek
autonomy, gregariousness and motivation
as the most desirable characteristics of potential volunteers. The nature of an individual’s assignment is determined largely by his own preference, in addition to
scores on a standard placement exam
which tests such factors as verbal and
modern language aptitude. A majority
of volunteers hold either a graduate or
undergraduate degree.

Volunteer training is contracted to university centers which work up a syllabus

for trainees and assume full responsibility
for their program. Universal to the four
basic curriculums (which correspond to
the nature of an assignment) are courses
in United States History, Area studies, 200
hours of language training, and physical
education courses. Peace Corps staff, in
an effort to improve the three-month training sessions, have experimented with a
number of the more progressive techniques
in education and seek to extend these techniques to the entire program in the near
future.

COLOMBIA 20. Volunteer Janet Klein of Buffalo, Now
York, makes her usual morning rounds. She is in charge
of nursing at a 333 bed hospital in Popayan. She is one
of the instructors in the hospital's practical nurse program.

Having survived what Peace Corps
members term “culture shock on both
placement in an alien setting and return
to the mass culture of the United States,
45 per cent of the returnees are completing

their studies in either graduate or undergraduate training, while 11 per cent are
employed in Federal, State, and local government, 15 per cent in teaching posts, and
4 per cent in non-profit organizations.
Before this year’s recruitment drives,
the State University of New York at Buffalo had contributed twenty-six students
to the Peace Corps ranks, a ratio of approximately 1.4 per 1,000 enrollment. This
ratio compares favorably with the nation’s
large colleges.
Right now, nineteen UB graduates are
overseas in some fifteen countries. They
are sharing their knowledge and skills
with students of Ethiopia and Iran, the
subsistence farmers of Chile and Brazil
and the exploited Indians of Columbia and
Venezuela. Another seven graduates have
returned from their two years of Peace
Corps service.
In those countries in which the Peace
Corps functions, it seeks to improve the
social and economic status of the impoverished, in addition to offering substandard communities the opportunity and
know-how for basic organization. The
communities in turn utilize this organization for their own needs and desires, be
they political, social, or economic.

The tangible returns of Peace Corps
service seem virtually nonexistent, both
in terms of individual gain and in terms of
advancement of U.S. policies. Yet, an
evaluation of Peace Corps effectiveness
cannot be restricted to tangible results.
While an ex-volunteer may indeed have
left a schoolhouse or a crudely organized
community behind, his real contribution
was toward the advancement of mutual
understanding and of the realization that
concern and compassion can be realities in
the Twentieth Century.

�iFaassas Mm iLsiwas

Higher Tuition and Educational Costs
Charged To U.S. College Students
By DAN WEBBER

I’ve often wondered why so few films are made today in the
tough-minded, sardonic style of the American “Gangster” movie of
the '30’s. A few of the best people working in .the vanguard of the
French nouvelU vague (Truffaut and Godard, of course, and Cayette
and Melville —especially his La Doulos) recognized and responded to
the powerful appeal of this versatile sub-genre, but our local people
haven't done very much in this area recently. Occasionally, one sees
an imaginative utilization of the basic techniques and attitudes of
the gangster film in so-called “Exploitation Flies,” low-budget “B”
movies or sleepers by semi-independents like Sam Fuller, but for
Hollywood, the old creek seems to have dried up.
Perhaps because the movie was made primarily by the British
(who have the advantage of some historical perspective), The Spy
Who C»me In From the Cold (now at the Colvin) draws a great deal
of its strength from its skillful distillation of some of the best elements of the gangster movie. Martin Hitt, the director, (Hud, The
Outrage) has combined felicitously the terse, cynical and somewhat
jaded outlook of films like Scarface and The Maltese Falcon, with
a very modern sensibility that is nicely suited to a story set in the
nether regions of the Cold War. The movie is astonishingly faithful
to John Le Carre’s book about the frightening immorality of the
operatives on both sides in the espionage profession—indeed, it is controlled and limited by the strengths and weaknesses of Le Carre’s
plot, his characterization and his basic philosophical projection of
the problem inherent in an increaingly immoral society. However,
Ritt seems to have realized that the way to make a complicated story
composed of long stretches of dialogue interesting, is to make the
people involved damned important to us all the time. The no-nonsense attitude which Ritt’s camera adopts at the onset gives the characters a certain immediate significance, and a series of brilliant performances by a superbly casted set of talented players works to
create a vital interest in an unsavory, murky field of human activity.
Richard Burton, after about five years of foolishness, looks like
an accomplished professional again as Leamas, the “spy” of the title.
He underplays effectively so that his intense personal conviction
breaks through the fog of disgust and disillusionment he supports
with a special force. Oscar Werner, as his moral foil, the Man
with a Cause, is simply breathtaking in a role that should be
larger. His intelligence and control are fantastic—it is a real delight to watch him work. Olaire Bloom equals her best work in
a part that is not properly developed, verging on stereotype at times,
and Sam Wanamakcr and Peter Van Eyck and a few others I didn’t
recognize interact like parts of a repertory company.
The movie is not watered-down. There is no concession to people
who want “happy endings" or inspiring stories about admirable
people. It is unsparing in its cool appraisal of a shoddy collection of
people in a pretty rotten world. And it is fascinating all the time.
Because our reviews appear separately and consecutively, some
people seem to think that my colleague Bill Sherman and I are
■always in full accordance on the films which we discuss. I have
heard it whispered, for that matter, that both of our names are
aliases for a third person who writes all the reviews. Actually, we
disagree often. For example, the fine, new
theatre on Niagara Falls
Boulevard, Cinema I, opened with a heralded new film called Inside
Daisy Clover. Aside from a powerful misguided performance by the
distinguished stage actor Christopher Plummer, a surprisingly good
one by the usually inept screen star Natalie Wood, and some interesting "inside material" on the techniques of film production, I felt
that the movie was mostly familiar garbage. Mr. Sherman’s contrary
opinion follows:
Ultimately, Intide Daisy Clover is jn unsatisfactory film because it implicitly upholds the philistinism which it claims to criticize. The team of Pakula Mulligan have once more compromised
their art in the same way they did in Baby the Rain Must Fall and in
Love With The Proper Stranger. In that film, as in this new film of
theirs, the viewer is presented with a valid and well-rendered
criticism of contemporary society; then it deteriorates into a sentimental
tear-jerker upholding middle-class suburban values of life. Thus
Pakula-Mulligan films always make money, and as a result of this
hard fact of Hollywood life, they always get artistic freedom to
work on their next film. Some day, one hopes, they will take the
necessary risk and not cop-out on their work.
Milligan, when he believes in what he is doing, can be a fine
director indeed. The first half-hour of Inside Daisy Clover is excellent especially Mulligan’s direction of Ruth Gordon, who plays
Daisy s mother—a vulgar, pathetic, half-mad, Americanized and
further debased Madame Sosotries figure. It is easy to pick the
point at which the film is allowed to fall apart; the moment Robert
Redford, as Daisy’s lover enters. Mulligan directs as if his heart were
not in it. But even after this, there are two scenes which alone are
worth the price of admission. One is a musical number which is
a fine parody of Busby Berkeley. The other is when Daisy in a recording booth is forced to confront multiple images of herself in
scene of its kind since Donald O’Connor’s "make ’em laugh’’ number in Singin' In Tha Rain.
The film may be, as Leon says, "garbage.” but to quote (wildly
contex) a poet:

Rehearsal

Km

Friday, February 25, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

you

uncover honey/where inagg™**m*"*

frem Orestes

(Fillmore

Room, NUrch t-ll)

American college students pay
higher tuition and a greater share
of the cost of their education
than students in most other countries.

There are no fees at all in
many foreign countries, and in
many others almost all students

receive monthly allowances to
help pay for their living expenses
and any tuition charges they may
face.
Higher education is free in
Denmark, Norway, Sweden, and
even “under-developed” Afghanistan. In addition, higher education

is free in all of the countries of
Eastern Europe and the Soviet
Union. Students receive monthly
stipends of about $42 from the
government in East Germany and
comparable amounts in several
other Communist countries.
It might be noted, however,
that not everyone can qualify for
a higher education. A certain ability level is required and the Communist countries generally favor
those with talents in the physical
sciences.
The Soviet Union pays college
professors about eight times as
much as a Russian factory worker gets. U. S. professors get less
than twice as much as the average factory worker.
The average tuition and required fees in the United States
last year was $818 in private institutions and $292 for residents
and $639 for non-residents in
state universities and land-grant
colleges.
College costs in Canada are
comparable to the U. S. However,
the highest Canadian liberal arts

Election clerks are
needed to help in the
Spring Senate Elections
March 15 and 16 from
the hours of 9 a.m. to 6
p.m. Interested Students
call 831-2262.

college tuition was less than $600
last year compared to $2,000 a
year charged at several private
American colleges. Last March

the government of Newfoundland,
Canada, announced free tuition
for first-year university students
not already supported by scholarships or other government grants.
The third most expensive country in which to attend a university in Gr. Britain, where tuition

averages less than $200 a year.
Although Cambridge and Oxford
advise prospective students to
have about $1,300 a year to cover
their living expenses, including
board, room, and personal costs,
only about $150 of this goes into
tuition charges. In comparison,
last year’s literature for Harvard
students advised a budget of
about $3,350 with more than half
of this sum going into tuition.

Univ. of North Carolina Bans
Two Speakers From Campus
Students and faculty members
at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill have taken a
wait-and-see attitude following a
decision last week by the university’s executive committee to
refuse to allow two controversial
speakers to appear on campus.

committe established by the executive committee of the trustees
is now studying the situation and
there is some doubt as to whether
the board wUl be willing to place
this authority in the hands of the
chancellors.

At an open meeting of the newly-formed Committee for Free Inquiry, more than 350 students and
faculty members debated the action by the trustees. But there
was general agreement that the
group should hold back on demonstrations or other forms of protest until after the February 28
meeting of the full Board of Di-

8 to 3 last week to refuse Herbert Aptheker of New York and
Frank Wilkinson of Washington,
permission to speak on the campus. They had been invited by
the Chapel Hill chapter of the
Students for a Democratic Soci-

rectors.

William C. Friday, president of
the university, has proposed the
following procedure:
—Campus groups desiring to
invite a speaker would consult
with their faculty adviser and
then file with the chancellor a
statement giving details of the
invitation and the adviser’s opinion as to the speaker’s “competence to deal with his topic.”

—Then the chancellor would
refer the invitation to a joint
student-faculty committee for its
advice.
Under this system, the ultimate
decision would rest with the chancellor of the branch of the university involved. However, a sub-

The executive committee voted

ety.

The majority agreed with Gov.
Dan K. Moore, who is chairman
of the executive committee. The
governor contended that the invitation to Aptheker and Wilkinson had been issued to create
controversy and not for “any true
educational purpose."

Frosh Class Council
(Cont’d from Pg. 1)
groups. One council member suggested that next year’s council
serve as an advisory body to these
groups, informing them of fresh-

man opinions.

The next council meeting will
be held Tuesday, March 1 at
6 p.m.

��Friday, February

25. 1966

SUNV
d fize

SPECTRUM

PAGE NINE

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ArtsCommittee to Present
Fine
MUSIC ON CAMPUS
Series of American Films of 1930's
By DAN SHROEDER

The Fine Arts Film Committee
will present a series of American Films made in the 1930 s to
be shown every Monday at 8:00
p.m. in Diefendorf 147, starting
Feb. 28.

Fine Arts film committee member steven Kovnat said, “the
ser ies w jii nm the gamut from
.
the near surrealistic comedies to
the Marx Brothers to the power....

,.

ful and dazzling documentaries
of Pare Lorentz.”

Mr. Kovnat added that each
week will be devoted to one aspect of the 30’s films, including
The Informer, The Thin Man,
Nonotchka, Mr. Deeds Goes to
Town, The Riven, Lost Horizon,
Hawk’s and the B-Film, and Capra’s Good Life.

Beta Phi Sigma
presents

THE UNCALLED FOUR
TONIGHT FROM 8

—

??

IN FILLMORE ROOM

The Buffalo Philharmonic Concert on Sunday, Feb.
20, was concerned with composers from the first half of
the 20th Century. Works of Ives, Sessions, Copland,'and
the American period of Hindemith, were presented. An
early (1920) Stravinsky piece was the only composition
unassociated with the United States
The Steeples and the MounIves, the father
of American music, is stunning.
A chime scale (augmented by
amplified prepared pianos, because the part goes below the
range of ordinary Chimes) and a
figure like the first three notes
of “Taps” in the brass, builds
into an amazing conglomeration
of three part counterpoint,
Bach of Stravinsky’s compositions seems to have its own individual life, although there are
a great many similarities between
them. The Stravinsky Symphonies of Wind Instruments is a
one movement work which fits
tains, by Charles

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strikingly original conof Stravinsky’s idiom
always (for me) throws a cloak
of comparison over anything else
on the program. Thus Paul Hindemith's Four Temperament* appeared a far less intense experience than the work which preceded it. The singing melodies
in this most melodic piece of the
program were barely done justice by the orchestra’s strings but
piano soloist Norma Bertolami
was fine. Still, the work is a bit
too melancholic for this taste.
The

tribution

Roger Sessions conducted his

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837-9324

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J

in perfectly with his stylistic
evolution of such devices as contrasts of instrumental groups,
polytonal
structures, unusual
voicing of chords. Foss' conducting was of the careful and almost meticulous type that Stravinsky’s work, with its misplaced
accents, demands.

j

former Creative Associate Paul
Zukofsky performing the solo
part. The work has a great deaf

of merit and It is obvious that
Sessions deserves his place in the
front line of American composers. 1*0 content of his work
almost avoids the inconsistency
which characterizes the style of
the "eclectic" composers. For instance, the motor rhythm beginning the Scherzo movement does
seem to lead logically to a slow
section followed by a happy twostep. On the other hand, a waltzeparody in the final movement
does seem a bit out of place.
Sessions as conductor reminded me of Debussy, who was
forced for financial reasons to
conduct his own works, although
his personality was entirely unsuited to conducting. This is not
to suggest that the case with
Sessions is identical, or even that
■the performance was inferior.
The orchestra kept the delicate,
lyrical texture foremost, and
Zuknfsky’s playing was light and
nimble. If Sessions appeared to
be inept at conducting, the players gave him all the help they
could.

��PAGE

Friday, February 25, 1966

SPECTRUM

TEN

ACU RESULTS
The Fourth Annual Association
of College Unions Regional Tournament in Bowling, 3-Cushion
Billiards, Pocket Billiards, Chess,
and Table Tennis was held at UB
last Friday and Saturday, Eighteen schools from various areas
in Region II (Ontario, and New
York State except New York
City) participated in the tourna-

A.M.F. and Brunswick
present.

sistant Regional Recreational Advisor Michael DiGerlando, and
Norton Union Director Dorothy
Haas delivered informal welcoming addresses to 185 guests. Regional Representatives Jack Orcett from Dutchess Community
College, and Representatives of

Gary Fowler scores against Western Ontario

Photo hy Peter Bonneau

Take Pair
By BOB FREY

by a surprisingly tough Western
Ontario team, 21-18.
Gary

Fowler, Bill Miner, Dick

Cushing, and Norm Keller led
the wrestlers with two victories

each. Fowler is still undefeated
and boasts an 8-0-1 record, while
Miner looked quite sharp considering the fact that these were
his first starts in three weeks.
Tomorrow the University of

Rochester’s
wrestlers
invade
Clark Gym to meet the Baby
Bulls at 2 p.m. and the varsity
at 3:30 p.m. The Oswego match,
which was cancelled due to ad
verse weather conditions has
been rescheduled for March 5
at Oswego. The Results:
Alfred 14
Buffalo 23
123—Fowler (UB) won by forfeit; 130--Johnson (A) won by
forfeit; 137—Rothstein (A) d.
Gullia; 145—Miner (UB) p. Crouthamel; 152—Cushing (UB) won
by forfeit; 160—Heidt (UB) d.
O’Driscoll; 167—Bower (A) d.
Burr; 177—Keller (UB) p. Stone;
IPwt.—Bcnmosche (A) d. Stiglitz.

FOR SALE

team, Mark "Mick" Murtha, 5-11

170-pound quarterback from Endiwas selected Most

cott, N.Y.,

Valuable Back.
Wesolowski is a graduate of
Cleveland Hill High School where
he was team captain in his senior
year and made both the Buffalo
Evening News and Courier-Express A11-EC1C teams for two

straight years and the Courier
-Express All Western New York
learn in his senior year.
Murtha is a graduate of Union
Endicott High School where he
led his team to the league cham-

pionship and made All-Southern
Tier Conference.

Dennis

Przykuta,

fullback for UB

who played
the past three

seasons, signed a contract to
play for the Hamilton Tiger Cats
of the Canadian Professional
League in 1966. Przykuta received a bonus and a one-year
contract.
Przykuta is the 5th UB player
from the 1965 team to sign with
the pros. Previously announced
were defensive end Gerry La-

Fountain and defensive tackle E.
Greenard Poles with the Edmonton Eskimos of the Canadian
league,

placckicking

specialist

Joe “The Toe” Oscsodal with the
Toronto Rifles of the United
league and center linebacker Joe
Holly with the San Diego Charg
ers of the AFL.
Former UB players in pro ball
were back Don Gilbert (Ottawa
Houghriders), back John Cimba
(Hamilton Tiger Cats) and defensive end Gerry Philbin (New
York

Jets).

Singles
Boliver (Cortland), 511;
Lyons (Cortland). 505; Rodder (Albany)
Karas (Ithaca), 1480;
All Events
Boliver (Cortland), 1429; Lyons (Cortland), 1404.
—

Cornell B

RESULTS
MENS

477.

CHESS

(Perlo-Joss), Cornell A
UB

low-Holmes)

Gibson folk guitar J45, case included. Also autoharp. Call
836-4703 after 6.
57 Chevy hardtop 4-door sedan
2 new tires, heavy duty suspension, must sacrifice. $250.00
Call 873-4298.
style house. Living room
dining, 2 bedrooms, kitchen,
bathroom, attached 2-car garage,
large yard. Newly redecorated,
(assumable mortgage). Call 8391834.
63 VW, red. while interior, white

Ranch

walls, radio, heat blower, spotless. Best officer. Call 837-9644.
Guitar for safe, $25, good tone.

Excellent condition. Call Lou

837-7925.
LOST

AND

FOUND;

Navy blue coat

“borrowed" Feb.
19 from Tower coat rack. Identity of borrower known. If coat
isn't returned to Tower desk by
March 2, individual’s name will
be turned over to proper authorities.
Reward for return of maroon ski

parka

“borrowed” at beer blast

Feb. 4. Call 649 1772.

OPPORTUNITIES
Attention! Sororities and Frater
nities: Looking for a wild new
rock n' roll band for parties or

dances? Call 662-7456 for appointment

Apartment to share, 53 Hewitt
Ave., walking distance, clean.
Kitchen facilities. Can be seen 15 p.m. except Tuesdays and Sundays.

SITUATIONS WANTED
Typing:

Term

papers,

theses,

etc. Reasonable rates. See
Gloria in room 323 Norton Hall.

(Ber-

(DiAngelo-Pam-Felsin-

ger-Rothschild).

BOWLING

—St. Lawrence, 2723
Team Event
RIT, 2704; Utica College, 2678.
—
Van Brink-Brown (St. LawDoubles
1160: Riffenberick (Albany)
rence).
Richter (Geneseo). 119; Mosher (Brock_
siish (RIT). 1104: Keller-Vanport)
derploog (RIT) 1104.
Brockport). 619;
Fehlner
Singles
Keller (RIT). 598; Riffenberick (Albany),

—

POCKET BILLIARDS

MEN’S

(RIT). Dowe

Cooper

(Ithaca).

POCKET BILLIARDS
Fagan (UB), Conklin (Albany).

WOMENS

THREE-CUSHION BILLIARDS
Saeger (UB), Mignano (Ithaca).

—

594.

MEN’S TABLE TENNIS
Appleman (UB); Camel
Singles
(Cornell).
Doubles
Camel-Chow (Cornell); Appleman-Finkelstein, (UB).
—

(St.

Van Frank
(Ithaca).
Wright
Keller (RIT). 1697.
All Events

rence).

—

1734;

WOMEN’S

Law-

1717:

TABLE TENNIS
Wilbur (Cornell); Goldine

WOMEN’S

BOWLING

Singles

Event
UB (Davidson, Carlin,
Zeitz, Krauter. Wrzeisien), 2247; Ithaca,
2205: Cortland. 2174.

Team

—

—

—

(Cornell).

Wilbur-Goldine (Cornell);
Doubles
Fierstein-Koester (Ithaca).
—

mmm

Here’s an all-cotton oxford with an all-tapered
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Long collar points with the new high collar that
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55.00

Clothing Fashion Confer for Men

—

Grid Notes CLASSIFIED
Jack Wesolowski, 6 0 205-pound
center-linebacker from Chcektowaga, was named Most Valuable
Lineman for the 1965 University
of Buffalo freshman football

—

-ARROW- Cum
Laude

Grapplers
The UB grapplers evened their
season record this past week at
4-4-1 by downing both Alfred and
Western Ontario in Clark Gym,
The matmen decisively beat Alfred, 23-14, and then squeezed

Doubles
Karas-Martino (Ithaca);
937; Ward-Cullen (Ithaca) 929; CarlinDavidson (UB), 910.
—

In a statement to the Spectrum, Paffie expressed his thanks
to all those who helped to make
the tournament a success.

ment.
Tournament winners were an
nounced at an Awards Banquet
Saturday evening. Regional Recreational Advisor Joe Paffie, As-

were also

3151 BAILEY AVE.

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                    <text>THREEPENNY

NARCOTICS

VBHi

raid

(See Page 3)

VOLUME 16

NO. 26

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1966

Draft Deferment Defined
At Today's Symposium
The Selective Service Counseling Center (S.S.C.C.) will sponsor
a symposium on the draft, “So
Now You’re 18?” this afternoon
from 3 to 6 p.m. in the Millard
Fillmore Room.

The purpose of the symposium,
to S.S.C.C. president
Mark Robison, is “to give a full
picture of the responsibilities that
are required of the American
male between the ages of 18 and
25, and also to demonstrate and
elaborate upon the alternatives
that are offered by the Selective
according

Mom.
Dr. Cox quoctions ftudont appraisal of Acadamk
Photo by Alan

Gruber

Service Training Act.”

Mr. Robison said that types of
deferment other than 2S, ranging
from the Hardship to Conscientious Objector, will be explained
at the symposium. The speakers
will also discuss reasons for using these deferments.
He continued, “The counseling
center has been organized on this
campus because of the ever present need that has been displayed
for such an organization. Students
are not informed as to what laws

Forum Discusses St John's And Academic Plan
By SHARON SHULMAN

Student Association President
Clinton Deveaux appealed to the
members of the Student-FacultyAdministration Forum at a meeting last Friday to take action
against the St. John’s University
administration.
In further discussion student
members of the forum suggested
improvements in the Ten-Year
Academic Plan.
The Student Faculty-Administration Forum met last Friday, to
discuss its stand on the St. John’s
University situation and the student members’ ideas on the TenYear Academic Plan,
-

Deveaux

read

a

statement

which if supported will represent
the general position of the University on the St. John’s issue.
The resolution, addressed to Reverend Joseph T. Cahill of the St.
John’s University administration
read:
“We,

students, and
members of the administration of
the State University of New York
at Buffalo, wish to express our
dismay and the action taken by
you and the St. John’s University Board of Trustees in dismissing thirty one members of the
St. John’s University faculty without any recourse to hearings before their peers, on December
16, 1965.
faculty,

“We feel that this act gravely
violates not only Academic Freedom, but denies due process and
free speech to the dismissed faculty. We implore you, in the name
of Academic Freedom and of basic human rights, to come to a
settlement with the dismissed faculty which respects and is in accordance with these principles."
Deveaux hopes to circulate the
resolution in the form of a petition to be signed by members of
the Forum and the entire academic community.
Student Association Vice President Kim Darrow then presented
his suggestions for improvement
of the Ten-Year Academic Plan.
He listed what he believed should
be the purposes of the Plan, These
include creating a meaningful
system through understanding
and relating facts to each other,
establishing a social identity for
the individual student, and cultivating leadership and creativity.
However, Harrow emphasized
that certain conditions are necessary to the realization of these
goals. “The presence of academic
freedom is vital,” he said, ‘ as
well as a high quality of faculty
members.” He added that good
facilities and organization are also necessary.
Darrow pointed out that recog-

nition of individual interests is
important to his concept of the

To Graduate Students And Faculty
action on changing the institution. We must realize that our
private anxieties are actually publie issues
issues to which we
have not addressed ourselves. History is replete with examples of
intellectuals resigning from the
stituted in which the lowest quar- pursuit of human dignity and we
tile of male students may be re- must not join this retreat,
classified 1-A.
Universities are the place for
The university has generated scholarship and community, not
heated argument on the justice bureaucracies which orient the
of this particular war. But it can- academy to the needs of that
not be a matter of dispute that which is oriented to human
our students have come to us for needs. Come to the Graduate Stuknowledge, not for oblivion, for dent Lounge, 3rd floor, Norton
life and not for the regimenta- Union, today at 7:30 p.m. and retion of death. The perversion of affirm yourself as a responsible
academic faculties into selecting scholar. Help us to regain the
agents for the military will force university.
us into abdication of our prime
obligations and duties.
John C, Coe
Dusky Lee Smith
Kitty Katz
Many of us in private discussion have registered concern over
Jerome A. Challman
Judity C. Eddy
the trend of the modern AmeriCarl Ratner
can university and have rationWilliam M. Mayrl
alized our passivity in a plethora
Stuart Katz
of ways. The time has come,
Gilbert Klajman
prompted by a life-and-death isRichard Salter
sue, for us as respectible human
Maija Dusults
beings to begin dialogue and take
Do you realize that by giving
grades you are signing the life
or death sentence for many of
your students? General Lewis B.
Hershey, head of the Selective
Service System, has announced
that draft regulations will be in-

—

plan. In his opinion there should
be less emphasis on the student’s
choice of a major. However, he
recognized the value of 100 level
required courses as a method of
acquiring background and contact with other students.
Senator Carl Levine introduced
the idea of a “free choice of

courses.” Under this system, badistribution requirements
sic
would be eliminated. No general
agreement was reached.
Darrow then suggested that

involvement in the academic and

outside communities might be increased if credit were given for
activities such as political internships.
Student Association Secretary
Ellen Cardone noted that if these
features proved impractical for a
large university, they might be
applied to a “small island” in the
academic community such as the

Honors program.
Discussion also dealt with the
degree of faculty input regarding
the Ten-Year Academic Plan. Participation was found to have differed in the various departments.

regulate their status and also
c)uestion how these laws can be
used to help them instead of hindering their school careers. I
think it is a necessary responsibility of the students to know and
to understand these laws. I would
like also to express emphatically
the fact that this is the only purpose of the counseling center and
that it has been organized on the
students’ behalf. Since its inception four students have come to
the center for guidance in obtaining different classifications,”

Robison added.
Symposium speakers will be the
following:
Mr. Richard Lipsitz

(lawyer)

—

The American Civil Liberties
Union

Mr. Eugene Eagen (Dave Mitchell
case)—End the Draft (W.N.Y.)
Captain Hast

—

R.O.T.C.

Miss Louise Duus
ciety of Friends

Buffalo So-

—

Mr. Mark Robison (Objectives)

—

S.S.C.C.
Sgt. Arnold Jadofski

—

Army Re-

cruiter
Jeremy Taylor
Mr, William Mayrl

Spectrum
—

S.D.S.

Sigma Alpha Mu Raises 800 Dollars
During 'Bounce For Beats' Marathon
By WILLIAM B. WEINSTEIN

The 28 hour “Bounce for Beats"
sponsored by Sigma Alpha Mu
fraternity, ended last Friday, netting approximately 800 dollars
for the Heart Fund. During the
last three hours, in order to stimulate donations, Michael Richter,
SAM, offered to
match any contribution over 50

representing

cents.
Starting at

11 a.m. Thursday,

the brothers trouped up Main
Street from Lafayette Square to
the campus. By the next afternoon, it was estimated that they
had bounced the ball more than
182,000 times, drank more coffee
(donated by Maxwell House), and
bought more gloves than any
other fraternity group in UB history.

The 28 hour marathon was
capped by an exhibition by Harvey Poe, member of the UB basketball team.

S.A.M. winds up marathon bouncing for Haart Fund Drive at Norton.
Photo by Edward Joacatyn

Duquesne Places First In Debate Tournament
Duquesne

University

Debate

Team from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, won top honors in the UB
Eleventh Annual Debate Tournament held last Friday and Saturday in various UB campus

buildings.
Twenty-one debate teams from
twenty schools attended the tournament debating the proposition:
“Resolved: That the law enforcement agencies in the United States should be given greater freedom in the investigation and prosecution of crime.”
At an Awards Banquet in Norton, honorary UB Debate Society
member Mrs, Janet C. Potter

awarded the first place trophy to
the Duquesne team.
President Fums, after delivering a welcome address, presented
the remaining awards. Canisius
College placed second and Clari-

on College, Ohio, placed third.

Duquesne appeared on Jhe UB
Round Table, WBEN-TV, Saturday, to discuss this year's proposition

Cadet Awards Based on Skills
Scholarships awarded to Air
Force ROTC cadets this faU will
be based primarily on skills needed by the Air Force, according
to Brig. Gen. William C. Bindley,
commandant of Air University's
Air Force ROTC.
He stated that, “Financial assistance grants wilf be used to
attract high quality students with
particular skills and abilities of

use to the Air Force. However,
these scholarships will be awarded only to students who are fully
qualified."
One scholarship will go to a
fourth-year UB cadet provided he
is fully qualified. If no qualified
applicant is available the scholarship will not be awarded. Five
scholarships were awarded at
UB for this academic year.

�■

»«f

Four Lectures In Technology Series
To Be Presented By Sociology Club
The Sociology Club will sponsor
a Technology Series this semester,
“The Virgin and the Dynamo,”
announced Dave Gardner, Program Director of the Club.

'The series seeks to explore
the many dimensions of the quesand
tion of what has happened
to man in
what is to happen
advanced industrial societies,”
Mr. Gardner explained. "The distinctively human implications of
technological thrust will be emphasized in an attempt to break
through the ossified contemporary approaches to the issue.”
—

—

He continued, “The intent is to
introduce into the public consciousness some entirely fresh
and novel persepectives
in
this area of vital human concern.”
...

The four lectures, each elaborating on some facet of the basic

theme, will be in Diefendorf, Rm.
146 at 3 p.m., with question and
answer periods following. The
lectures are open to all students.

Miss Raya Dunayevskaya, author, philosopher and political analyst, will give the first lecture
on Monday, February 28. She
will speak on “Automation and
the New Humanism.”
Miss Dunayevskaya is the author of a number of works including, Marxism and Freedom, “an
incisive and highly critical analysis of contemporary industrial
societies of the Communist—and
Capitalist Societies," according to
Mr. Gardner, and Nationalism,
Communism, Marxist Humanism
and the Afro-Asian Revolutions,
written after an extensive tour
of West Africa.

alyst and social critic, will lecture
March 7 on “Technology and
Social Control.” The author of
the book Urban Zoning and LandUse Theory as well as numerous

essays and articles, Mr. Welhelm
has recently been involved in
work on the Negro, automation,
science and technology and the
city.
On March 14, Dr. David Wieck
of the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute will speak on “Eros and
the Machine.” A philosopher and
social analyst, Dr. Wieck has written on Civil Rights, science, ero-

-

Dr. Sidney Wilhelm of the UB
Sociology Department, social an-

Students interested in
being election clerks for
the spring Senate election March 15 and 16 between the hours of 9 a.m.
to 6 p.m. may call 2262
or 2465.

Have astronauts

made pilots old hat?

loce

Sure,

off the "pods" gel the big, bold headlines. But if you
want to fly, the big opportunities are still with the
aircraft that lake off and land on several thousand
feet of runway.
Who needs pilots? TAC does. And MAC. And SAC
And ADC.
There's o real future in Air Force flying. In years to
come aircraft may fly higher, faster, and further than
we dare dream of. But they'll be flying, with men
who've had Air Force flight training at the controls.
Of course the Air Force also has plenty of jobs for
those who won't be flying. As one of the world's
largest and most advanced research and development organizations, we have a continuing need for
scientists and engineers.
Young college graduates in these fields will find
that they'll have the opportunity to do work that is
both interesting and important. The fact is, nowhere
will

yoi iu

have greater latitude or responsibility right

Team —the

more is at the
office of the Professor of Aerospace Studies, if
there is an Air Force ROIC unit on your campus.
Ask about the new 2-year AFROTC program available at many colleges and
universities. If you prefer, mail the
coupon below.

f

Officer Career Information, Dept RCN 62,
Box A, Randolph Air Force Bose, Texas 78148

.Class ol 19

Addr

UNITED STATES AIR FORCE

»

Tuesday, February 23, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

Dr. W. Leslie Barnette Gives Lecture
On ESP to M.F.C Psychology Club
At a lecture-demonstration on
extra-sensory perception (ESP) at
the M.F.C. Psychology Club last
Friday, Psychology Professor W.
Leslie Barnette commented,
“while there may be something to
ESP, I have found that it is an
unproductive area because of the
inability to control EBP experiments.” He explained that many
people who are reputed to have
EBP are the victims of dishonest

one held them to his forehead,
applying BSP.

The five members of the audi-

ence who submitted the questions
acknowledged that Dr. Barnette
perceived every question correct-

experiments.

Dr. Barnette began his demonstration by shuffling a stack of
cards. On each card, one of 5
symbols was written. As he studied each card silently for fifteen
seconds, the audience wrote down
which of the five symbols they
thought Dr. Barnette was seeing.
Dr. Barnette read off the symbols in the order he had shuffled
them. The cards we.e then reshuffled and read off again. The
results showed that there was no
significant difference in scores
when EBP was used than when
mere chance operated. Dr. Barnette noted that a shrewd demonstrator might explain away the
poor results by claiming that the
audience is untalented in EBP.
A second demonstration was
conducted by passing out five
cards randomly throughout the
audience. Each person who received a card wrote a question on
it and placed the card in a sealed
opaque envelope. Dr. Barnette
collected the cards and one by

Cramming
Clowning
Crashing
Pubbing

Dr. Laolio

Bomotto od drosses
standing-room-only crowd.

Photo by Michael Soluri

ly. Dr. Barnette then explained
that he had selected one of the
participants before the demonstration, submitting a question to
him. When he collected the envelopes, the known question was
placed on the bottom. Each envelope was opened after Dr. Barnette had supposedly guessed the
question, but he was actually
reading the next question.

�Tuesday, Fabruary 23, 1966

PAGE THRU

SPECTRUM

SDS Establishes Free Theatre
The Free Theatre for Buffalo,

an acting group presenting theatrical productions dealing with
pressing social problems, has been
established by several members
of the Students for a Democratic
Society.

The Free Theatre will present a
variety of theatrical media, including one-act plays, recitation
drama, and socio-drama. Recitation dramas will consist of dramatic readings coupled with visual
slides depicting social conditions.
Improvisation will highlight the
socio-dramas.
Tom Hanna, an active member
of the Free Theatre, emphasized
that the main purpose of the
group will be “to provide floating
theatre to dramatize and publicize those problems confronting
the community.” Performances
will be presented throughout the
Buffalo area, concentrating in
areas of severe social depression.
This form of theatre is “free,”
Hanna noted, because there is no
admittance charge and no discrimination concerning problems
presented. In addition, the Free
Theatre will be concerned with
fredom and will make use of a
variety of dramatic forms.
Hanna commented that support
and advice for the Free Theatre

has already been secured from
several members of the UB Drama
Department and from the Studio
Theatre Workshops, located in
downtown Buffalo.
Individuals interested in participating with the group are encouraged to attend meetings held
each Wednesday at 7 p.m. in Norton. Writers and Actors are in
demand, as well as people interested in technical production and
research.

Jazz Concert Today
The Sam Noto Quintet, a Buffalo jazz group, presents a concert this afternoon in the Norton
Center Lounge from 2 to 4 p.m.
The concert is sponsored by the
Union Board Music Committee.
The quintet, consisting of
saxophone, piano, bass,
and
drums with Mr. Noto on trumpet,
performs jazz in an idiom “between bop and avant-garde.” It
is presently performing at the
Renaissance, a downtown jazz
club in Buffalo.
Sam Noto has performed in
many jazz organizations including

those of Count Basie, Stan Kenton, and Woody Herman.

Tables And Demonstrations Planned!
By Union Board for Activities Drive
The Activities Drive, sponsored
by the Union Board, will be held
from Monday, February 21
through Friday. Feb. 25, Drive
Chairman Allen Burden noted
that the purpose of the drive is

"to encourge student participation

in various activities.”
Several demonstrations and
performances have been scheduled. and activities tables will be
set up in the center lounge and
end lobbies.
The Women's Chorale will perform in the Haas Lounge on Monday and Wednesday at 4 p.m.
Today's activities will be highlighted by the Music Club’s Jazz
Concert in the center lounge at
2 p.m. The Student Theatre Club
will present the play “Home
Free!” in the Conference Theatre
at 4 p.m. on Tuesday. In addition,
the Industrial Relations Club will
hold a mock debate in Room 233
at 3:30 p.m. Special films will be
shown by the Anthropology Club
at 7 p.m.

The Math Club will have a spe-

cial display in the center lounge
throughout the week.
“The Activities Drive is an integral part of Union Board’s pro-

and challenge at every step.
Reason enough for starting your
■
|
Hip ■
teaching career in New York City
schools. But the opportunity for
professional advancement on supervisory
and administrative levels
...

■

I

lilC

recrea-

tional events to encourage interest and student involvement,”
Burden commented.

Narcotics Squad Visits Campus
Thursday afternoon a U.B. student was approached in the center lounge of Norton Union by
two plain clothesmen of the Buffalo Narcotics Squad and taken
off campus for questioning.
The student, a Buffalo resident
and Junior majoring in Philosophy, was not charged with
any crime.
The contact in the lounge took
place at two o'clock in the afternoon in front of over two hundred
students. The narcotics officers
were not in uniform. The student
was driven to the downtown headquarters of the Buffalo Police
Department and questioned by
Chief Michael Amico. The questioning lasted about an hour and
a half.

Neither the campus police nor
office of the Dean of Students was informed of the presence of the narcotics squad on
campus. Chief Amico said in a
phone conversation that there
was no fear of security leakage,
but that it was sometimes impossible to inform concerned
authorities of his department’s
the

there’s
room

gram of educational and

activities.

When questioned why his department was on campus. Chief
Amico said that he was always
on the lookout for narcotics viola-

tions and that experimentation
with narcotics by college students
was not uncommon. He continued
that because of this trend his department keeps the campus under
surveilance.
The student told the Spactrum
Saturday that he didn’t know why
he was singled out for questioning. He said that the narcotics
squad was confused as to his
being a New York resident. Also,
that they were suspicious because
he drove an expensive car and
dressed well. They wondered how
a student could afford these
luxuries.
The Dean of Students office
said that if a student were arrested for pushing narcotics it
would be a civil offense. He
added that there has never been
a conviction of a UB student
using marijauna. If there were a
conviction of a U.B. student using or pushing marijauna and a
clear cut case and conv'ction,

the student would probably be
taken before the Student Judiciary for possible expulsion.
The Dean’s office said that they
were surprised that the city police came on campus without informing the school, but the campus was within their jurisdiction.

Norton's RocrooHon Cofitor hosts woskond ACU lourmmont.

Photo by NkAm/ Soluri

TEMPLE UNIVERSITY TYLEK SCHOOL OF ART
IN

ROME

ITALY

SUMMER SESSION IN ART: Painting, Sculpture, Print-making

WINTER SESSION: Art, Art History, Italian
GRADUATE OR

UNDERGRADUATE UNIVERSITY CREDIT

Write for Summer or Winter

Brochure

European Program
Temple University Tyler School of Art
Beech and penrose Avenues
Philadelphia. Pa 19126

Hillel's Annual South Sea Island Party
Saturday, February 26, 1966

—

9 tol

Tempi* Sinai
SO Alberts Driva
(Only 2 minutes from Allenhurst)
—

FREE BUSES LEAVING NORTON AT 1:45 PAL
2 Fraa DHnki
Music by KEN PUMPI
Rafrasbmants
—

—

Free to All Member of HilM

�(Editorial (Comment

.

.

of Gonzago

Murder

.

WHO IS RESPONSIBLE?
is
a
very important meeting scheduled for
There
this evening. It is a meeting called in response to the
the policy
new policy of the Selective Service System
which says that the lower quartile of male college students will be eligible for reclassification as cannon fodder for our criminally stupid war in South East Asia.
—

This column was aghast at Mr.
Volpe’s editorial Breaking Apron
Strings in last Friday’s Spectrum
and is concerned not so much
with a continuing dialogue as
with rebuttal. He argues that we
have a commitment in Vietnam;
that it is justified by their use of
terror; that it is unfair to exclude
certain segments of the population from the draft (college students and women); and that drafting students would not bring
about a critical shortage of talent

This new procedure has made the instructor and the
grader partly responsible for the names on the death
rolls in Viet Nam. It has incorporated the university
in those areas needed for nationinto the Selective Service System by making the acaal defense.
demic records they keep a criterion for military service.
We are “committed’ in VietIt has made the administrators who docilely turn students’ nam but the legal status of our
grades over to the military responsible for the young commitment is rather dubious.
The 17th parallel was under no
men who go half way across the world to die. The adcircumstances to be considered
ministrators have said, “we are not responsible”, but a political boundary. Elections
were to be held in 1956 to decide
certain faculty members have recognized that the responhow the country would be govsibility of giving grades, the responsibility of passing erned. However Ngo Dinh Diem
what may ultimately be a life or death sentence on a had consolidated his power in the
South and on July 16, 1955, with
young student cannot be ignored.
These teachers have responded to that responsibility
and have called a meeting to discuss alternatives to the
dreadful task of assigning students a class rank which
may ultimately kill them. Every teacher at this University, no matter what his political convictions, should attend this meeting.
Because the administration has failed in its responsibility to protect an intellectual tradition of freedom

and political impartiality, the teachers have been forced
to assume the task of protecting, not only the individual
student, but the heritage of rational, responsible ieam=&gt;.
ing as well. No teacher may say in good faith that the
grade he gives is merely an estimation of a student’s
work
General Hershey has made it more than that.
If a teacher gives a student an unsatisfactory grade, he
must realize that he is passing judgment on his student’s
life as well.

our support, refused to hold elections. Thus Vietnam was effectively divided into two political
entities. A fraudulent plebiscite
was held and decided by a vote
of 98% to abolish the Empire and
establish a Republic with Diem at
its head. Diem was so popular
that in the Saigon-Cholon area
605,025 votes were cast by 450,000
registered voters. By 1963 Diem
had become a political liability
and he was replaced by a series
of military dictatorships, having

No man has the right to pass that kind of judgment
on another. But if he does pass that judgment, he must
accept responsibility for his action. No man may stand
in the dock and say, “I am not responsible. I was only
carrying out orders.”
Who is responsible? The administrator who sends
the IBM lists to the Selective Service is responsible. The
secretary who records the grades is responsible. The
teacher who gives the grade is responsible.
The teachers will attempt tonight to confront that
responsib-.ity. Whatever course of action they choose, if
it is a meaningful action, will put them in some professional jeopardy. But if they take no action, it is the
lives of their students that will be in jeopardy.

THE

SPECTRUM

Th« official student newspaper of the State University of New
York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall. University Campus, Buffalo, N. Y. 14214.
Published twice weekly from the first week of September to
the last week in
May. except for exam periods. Thanksgiving. Christmas, and spring vacations.

Editor-in-Chief

JEREMY TAYLOR

Managing Editor

News

Editor
Stall —Loretta
Karen Green,

EDELMAN
RAYMOND VOLPE
DAVID

Manager
SUSAN GREENE

Assistant
RONNIE BROMBERG
Joanne Bouchier. Russell Buchman, Alice Edelman,
Peter Lederman, Joan Roberts, Rick Schwab. Dan Shroeder.
Sharon Shulman, Eileen Teitler, Nancy Toder, Patti Wartley. Judy Weisberg.
Feature Editor
JOHN STINY Assistant
JO ANNE LEEGANT
Staff—Bonnie Bartow, Ron Ellsworth. Barbara Ann Fitzsimmons, Barbara Loeb
Audrey Logel. Bob Martin. Suzanne Rovner, Martha Tack. William
Weinstein. '
Sports Editor
STEVE SCHUELEIN
Staff—Mike Castro. Mike Dolan, Steve Farbman, Bob Frey, Scott Forman
J. B Sharcot
Layout Editor
SHARON HONIG
Stall—Joanne Bouchier, Stephanie Parker. Steve Silverman.
Copy Editor
LAUREN JACOBS
Stall—Carol Becker. Estelle Fox, Jocelyn Hailpem, Sandy Lippman, Betsy Ozer,
Claire Shottenleld. Susan Zuckerberg.
Terry
Mancim.

Angelina.

Angelo.

Advertising Manager
Audrey Cash. Pat

RON

HOLTZ

Rosenleld. Steve Silverman,

Joseph

Photography Editor
EDWARD JOSCELYN
Stall—Don Blank. Peter Bonneau, Joseph Feyes. Carol Goodson,

Alan Gruber,
Marc Levine. Ivan Makuch, Michael Soluh. Anthony Walluk. Susan Wortman,
Robert Wynne
Manager
Circulation
DIANE LEWIS
Faculty Advisor
IRENE WILLET
Financial Advisor
DALLAS GARBER
EDITORIAL POLICY IS DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING
Second

Class Postage

Subscription

$3.00

Paid at Buffalo. N. Y.
year,
circulation

per

15,000.
Represented
for national advertising by
National Advertising Service, Inc., 420 Madi

son Ave., New York. N. Y.

no support among the people, who
are not allowed to vote.

This commitment is in effect
treaty made by the executive
without ratification of the Senate, bringing up all of the dangers of leaving our constitutional
framework, not to mention the
dispatching of 200,000 troops to
Vietnam who are fighting a war
without the approval of Congress.
If our commitment to Vietnam
is justified by their use of terror, then, logically, the existence
of the Viet Cong can be justified
by our use of terror.
The Vietnamese peasants have
traditionally (for about 500 years)
elected their own village chiefs.
After Diem took over, the village
chiefs were appointed in Saigon.
At best, the appointed chiefs were
incompetent and usually failed to
understand the village’s problems. At worst they robbed the
villagers blind. The attitudes of
the chiefs were generally those
of overbearing petty tyrants while
the villagers usually hated anyone who was appointed in Saigon.
Thus, if the Viet Cong killed a
village chief, they were usually
seen as Robin Hoods disposing
of the Sheriff of Nottingham.
American terror is generally less
selective than individual assassinations, often bombing a village
which is merely suspected of
harboring the enemy.
It will be remembered that one
of the issues of the 1964 presi»

.

.

.

By JOHN MEDWID

dential campaign was the status

draft. The arguments
are still valid: it is unfair and it is inefficient. (It is
also immoral and possibly unconstitutional). Both parties urged
careful consideration of the Selective Service System and this
columnist fails to see how a nation with almost 200 million people cannot devise a better plan
to supply the nation with cannon fodder.
To draft college students because they will not be needed
for national defense brings up
the entire idea of the military
state. Ought America strive to be
like Sparta of Athens? If we
choose Athens we then realize
that the vast problems facing our
country cannot be solved by taking thousands of potential teachers, doctors, scientists, and engineers out of college to train
them in the manly art of digging
foxholes. The solution to the problem lies not in drafting college
students to carry guns beside the
other troops but to support men
in government like former Senate Majority Leader Lyndon
Baines Johnson who said in 1954
that he didn’t want any American
lives lost in the rice paddies of
Indochina.
The drafting of women is not
more immoral than the drafting
of men hut it is. a purely personal
prejudice that this nation can
survive without G.I. Jane.
of

the

against it

THE RIGHT

—

Business

Tuatday, February 23, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

By JAMES CALLAN

Since this newspaper has not
yet reached such a level of sophistication that photographs of columnists appear alongside their
columns, your deep-seated (no
doubt) desire to see what we look
like has not yet been fulfilled.
To fill that gap at least in my
case I have endeavored to label
myself so that I will be easily and
unmistakably recognized about
campus. The manner I have
chosen is to wear in plain view a
button, printed in (black on a
white background, saying “BOMB
HANOI." To my knowledge this
button is unique on this campus
(if I spy another one I’ll dig out
an
old "GOLDWATER FOR
PRESIDENT” to wear beneath it).
So if you can’t find me to throw
sticks at now it’s not my fault.
Why do I advocate bombing
Hanoi? Why do I advocate blockading Haiphong harbor, and
bombing important industrial centers and trade routes of North
Vietnam? Why, in a word, am I
such a warmonger? Because the
United States is engaged in a just
war with North Vietnam and
should win that war. It has been
shown to my satisfaction that
Hanoi is not a target of sufficient
military importance to warrant
extensive bombing, but I am sure

that there are targets in or
around that city which are at
least as important as those we
have been hittiqg. A strike at that
capital city would have the further effect of demonstrating to
that country and the world that
we mean to win, and that we are
going to win. From a purely military point of view however, Haiphong is the key to the country.
Perhaps the most damaging blow
that could be dealt that nation is
to blockade its harbor. Why, you
ask, don’t we do it? It’s certainly
“humanitarian” enough. I’ll tell
you.

Britain, and who knows how
allies, is trading extensively with North Vietnam, and reaping a huge profit
from that nation hungry for industrial goods. If we were to
blockade their principal harbor,
Britain would lose all that trade
and might be mad. We can’t afford to lose any more friends, so
the argument goes. Well I say
with friends like that who needs
enemies. Britain has been keeping Castro alive for years and
there hasn’t been a word of official protest about that either. The
U. S. is so afraid to step on anybody’s toes that it’s being backed
into a corner, alone.
Sometimes this nation acts so
foolishly that I can’t attribute
many more of our

oCetterA
TO THE EDITOR:
Monday, February 7 at 2:50
p.m. a “fire drill’’ was announced
on the PA in Norton Hall, which
in reality was a bomb scare. Students jammed doorways and the
Norton-Harriman tunnel, waiting
to return to the building.
In a properly supervised fire
drill, building occupants are
evacuated to a safe distance to:
1—Insure their own safety and
2—Facilitate activities of firemen.

In a bomb threat situation, it
is just as imperative to do this.
Had a bomb actually exploded,
who can say how many lives
would have been lost because of
the utter stupidity of the Norton
Security Officer. Announcing a
bomb threat might have caused
panic, but announcing a fire drill

to

everything to ignorance or incompetence or cowardice. There
must be in the minds of some of
our leaders a certain degree of
unwillingness to stop this leprosy
of communism from ravaging the

Think, about it-*- it’s not
all,
too hard to believe.',
earth.

communism is jusf' an aborted
form of socialism, and socialism is
not far removed from the brand
of liberalism that infects the city
of Washington. .There is always a
certain amount of identification
between men of similar ideologies, so naturally some of our
legislators and administrators feel
“close” to the Vietcong. The same
men who were first to advocate
stopping the imperialistic Hitler
are the last to lend a hand in
stopping the imperialistic communists Why? Because to them
a Nazi was the devil himself; a
communist is but an errant brother.

The h a w k o w 1-dove-chicken
dichotomy discussed recently in
this column has application here.
1 firmly believe that all of the
-

“chickens” and many of the
“doves” reason in this way. Perhaps also do some of the “owls”
who for one reason or another
cannot disagree with the president. Myself? I don’t like communism
I’m a hawk.
—

the Editor

arouses too little concern. If the
building fire alarm had simply
been sounded, people would have
evacuated the building swiftly
but without panic, not knowing
whether the alarm was real or a
drill. Of course, sounding the
building alarm would have
brought the fire department, but
if there had been a bomb,

wouldn’t it have been desirable

to have the fire department on
station?
I question the judgment of the
person(s) responsible for the
safety and security of building

and occupants, if indeed such

person(s) exist. I suggest this incident is of too serious a nature
not to justify a full investigation
by the campus police and the
university administration.
David L. Schriber

TO THE EDITOR:
I am surprised that the review
of the UB-Buffalo State basket
ball same put so much of the
blame for our loss on the officials. I don't think that many of
us who went to the Auditorium
last Thursday night expected to
lose. But if we want to examine
the reasons for our loss we ought
to look beyond the officiating.
Although some of the disputed
calls were decisive factors of the
final score, the person who reviewed the game has no right to
say that “poor decisions by the
referee made UB pay for the
official’s mistakes.” “Poor decisions” are made in every basketball game. Whether a spectator
thinks a call is “poor” or not
usually depends upon which
(Cont’d on Pg. 5)

�Tuesday, February

'Home Free!'
Shown Today

Students and other travelers
who go through Pennsylvania
Station in New York City this
winter can enjoy one of the
comic experiences of our epoch.
The old monumental station, with
The Student Theatre Guild, in its astonishing vault, has been
cooperation with the Activities demolished, but the shell is being
Drive Committee, will present a kept for a more profitable strucsecond performance of Lanford ture. Now winter winds freeze
Wilson’s “Home Free!” in the you while you wait and the ticket
Conference Theatre today at 4. salesman huddle in fur coats.
p.m. Joan Bromberg and William Thunderous noises startle you
Cortes star in the play directed and the sparks of welders shower
round your ears. You cannot get
by James Golata.
a meal. MEN and WOMEN are
“Home Free!" was presented
somewhere in the bowels of the
Theatre
last
the
in
Conference
Long Island R.R. below. The operweek as part at the Student Theatre Guild’s regular series of free ation of the trains goes on id
tunnels.
productions. An evening of short makeshift
Meantime, in the glass cases
plays sponsored by the Guild will
(grimy with dust) on a temporary
be held in the Millard Fillmore
wooden wall, there is a splendid
Room in mid-April.
display of pictures of the New
Pennsylvania Station that
is

Poet Award Contender
P r i p t Marshat, a book of
poems by English professor, Irving Feldman, is on the list of leading contenders for the annual
National Book Award in Poetry.
The 1000 dollar prize will be
presented to the winner March
15, by a group of publishers from
various companies.
Books are referred to the committee by their publishers. From
these, and from their own reading, judges compose a list of approximately six leading contenders for the award.
According to Mr. Posner, Curator of the Twentieth Century
Poetry Collection in Lockwood
Library, many other visiting poets
and faculty members have been
nominated for this award in proceeding years.
Pripet Marshas is a collection
of twenty-six poems, including
two long introductory poems. The
book was published by Viking
Press in February, 1965.
•

Letters...

PAGE

spectrum

23, 1966

going to happen many

a moon

from now. A poster proclaims
its virtues: “New Modernized
Railroad Terminal at 2 Pennsylvania Plaza. Featuring:
Electronic Train Information.
Moving Stairs.
New Ventilation System for
Air-Conditioning and Heat.
Modem Lighting from All
Points.
Completion

during

1966

or

1967.”
It is a triumph of Madison Ave.

I

Cjoodman —J

It gives us the image and the
public relations of reality almost
as if we had the reality. In the
conditions, it is quite impossible
to read this sign without cracking up. (Incidentally, the new
design, by Charles Luckman Associates, is banal and skimpy.)
Students of several hundred
colleges in the United StSates
will recognize the analogy to the
building boom taking place on

their campuses. The few years
of their careers in college are
spent among scenes of devastation. This is supposed to be transitional; but before one reconstruction is finished there always
seems to be a new exxpansion in
the works; and the community
shape that used to exist—whether
Yard, Green, or Quadrangle—has been irremediably destroyed.
Also, it would not astound me
if by the time the whole expansion has finally occurred, the
idiocy of universal college-going
might likewise be over; in 10 or
15 years some of these makeshift campuses may look like
ghost towns.

Usually, but by no means invariably, there is an esthetic plan
for the greater campus, namely a
picture or model rendered obsolete by the next Federal or Foun-

dation grant,
With the bulldozing and reconstruction, of course, there are
the other concomitants of Expansion: the enrollment is excessive;
students are processed electronically; they are housed three or
four in a room meant for two; the
curriculum is continually in process of readjustment; and professors are on the move, pirated
away by competitive offers. I
have seen all this now for ten
years and the immediate future
will be worse. A whole generation is being sacrificed.
I have no idea if the demolition
and reconstruction of Penn Station is necessary or useful. But
much of the campus expansion
is both unnecessary and harmful.
To begin with, 1 am not sold on
the vastly increased college-going
as the best way to invest more in
higher education
rather than
underwriting more direct means
—

of access to many careers and
some professions; underwriting

cultural enterprises like Little
Theaters, local TW and radio
stations, independent newspapers, and design offices; giving
more of the Research and Development slush-fund to small firms
that can train scientific apprentices.
When increased college-enrollment has been necessary, it has
usually, in my opinion, been unwise to exxpand the existing
schools rather than starting new
small ones. I do not believe in
the putative advantages of academic centralization; there is a
good deal of rationalization to
cover administrative imperialism.
Certainly in big cities like New
York and Chicago, it has been
immoral and anti-social for universities to dislocate poor tenants and swallow whole neighborhoods.
A very important defect of the
expansion has been to increase
and freeze the dormitory method
of housing. This is a poor way
for most students to live; it is necessarily restrictive, and it is almost invariably more expensive
for the students than sharing
small apartments or cooperative

houses.

But it has been the inevitable result of the Federal subsidy for dormitories.

Ford Motor
Company is:

(Cont’d from Pg. 4)

team he is rooting lor.
Let’s face it—the interceptions
by Buffalo State were just about
handed to them on silver platters. UB played some pretty
sloppy basketball last week; they
paid for their own mistakes. An

honest review of the Buffalo
State game would have included
more solid criticism of, and fewer
excuses for, the basketball team.
Patricia E. Kowalski

TO THE EDITOR:
Why a silly damned crane
seventy feet high?
To meet the expanding educational needs of UB it has been
necessary to start construction at
an inopportune time of the year.
Please note also that the urgency of the project necessitated
the use of temporary type struc-

tures.

Anyone knowing the conditions
at the construction site would

realize that a crawler crane is
necessary to maneuver in the
mud, snow and water. All the
trailers of material had to be
towed by a tractor with crawler
type treads to the building sites.
We are happy to note you prefer our buildings even though it
would be under doubtful circum-

stances.

Robert L. Mazuca

diversity

The college graduate’s initial exposure to the
world of business is often less than exhilarating.
The reason? A great many companies require the

recent graduate to serve a long-term apprenticeship in a role that offers little or no opportunity
to demonstrate personal capabilities. That is not
the way at Ford Motor Company. Our College
Graduate Program brings you into contact with
many phases of business, encourages self-expression
and helps you—and us—determine where your
greatest potential lies. An important benefit of the
Larry Moore
B.M.B., Univ. of Kansas
Program is getting to know and work with some
of the most capable people in industry. One of many young men who
believes he has gained tremendously from this exposure and experience is
Larry Moore, a Product Design engineer.
After receiving his B.M.E. in February, 1964, Larry joined our College
Graduate Program and began work in brake design. Stimulating assignments followed in product evaluation and disc brake development. Later,
he learned production techniques while supervising one phase of the
Mustang assembly line operations. An assignment in our Truck Sales
Promotion and Training Department added still another dimension to his
experience. The “big picture” of product development was brought into
focus for Larry when he became associated with Thunderbird Product
Planning. From there he moved to the Special Vehicles Section . . . into
the exciting world of high-performance cars!
Currently, Larry Moore is on leave of absence, studying to acquire his
M.B.A. degree at Michigan State. He feels—and rightly so —that we’re
100 percent behind his desire to improve his educational background.
Young men with talent, initiative and ambition can go far with Ford
Motor Company. Think about it—and talk to our representative when
he next visits your campus.

TM

Amtfcjn

Nm4.

FIVE

Durfeom, Michigan

Ait equal opportunity employer

�Tuesday, February 23, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

KLEINHANS
MUSIC HALL

Today is the last day
for fraternity bidding in
the I.F.C. Office, Room
346 Norton, from 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m.

NEW

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� Slid* Rules
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FEBRUARY 22-23
Tuesday
Specal Program; Union Board
Actvties Drive, 3 to 6 p.m., Con-

ference Theatre.
Meeting: Master of Arts and
Humanities Center, 2 to 4 p.m.,
Norton 264.
Concert: Buffalo Philharmonic,
Kleinhans Music Hall, 8:30 p.m.
Play: Home Free, Student Theatre Guild, 4 p.m., Conference
Theatre.

Wednesday
Symposium on the Draft; “So
Now You're 18 . .
3 to 6 p.m.,

Millard Fillmore Room.

WHAMDINGER OF A THRILLER!”
"A
CUE

/?

«

"VISUALLY
FAULTLESS!”

SIGHT 4 SOUND

,

Serial and Salactad Short Subject*

each year by the Arnold Air Society to the organization having
the highest percentage of donors
in reference to their total mem-

bership. For any information regarding the blood drive, contact
Major Ozenick at AFROTC De-

tachment, 831-2945.

Food Numbers Stamped on ID Cards
Must Be Done In Foster By Friday
Resident students on board
contract must have food numbers stamped on ID cards by
Residence
February 25, Inter
Council president Gary Roberts
-

Stamping will be done at the
audio-visual center in Foster
Hall basement during the week
of February 21 to 25 from 9 a.m.
to 3 p.m.
According to Roberts, this policy was instituted to prevent nonresident students from" sneaking" past checkers and obtain-

ing free meals. Roberts pointed
out that many “guests” have eaten free meals on weekends when

substitute checkers, unfamiliar
with individual students, have
been working.
In addition, it was reported
that large groups of commuters
using any number, have walked
into the cafeteria during breakfast hours.
The stamped ID cards will
serve as meal tickets. Roberts
reported that they will also permit the switching of meal lines.

Weekly Calendar

MIRROR

POWER! ’

Filch stand* astride Pegasus a*
members of The Wapping brothel
hold him in check.

Collect Blood for Hospital Use

MAKING A WOW OF A SHOW!"

jMji

TRIBUNE

Mack the Knife and hi* oh) flam*
J-W Dlvar dance th. fateful
Tango.

The American Red Cross, in
cooperation with the Arnold Air
Society, will collect blood for use
in hospitals throughout the Niagara Frontier, March 17, from 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Tower dormitory basement, according to Major
Ozenick, Assistant Professor of
Aero-Space in the Air Science Department.
Donors are entitled to reciprocity lor their families and themselves if they require blood-bank
help from Red Cross, Ozenick
noted.
Students, faculty, and employees of UB may sign up to donate
blood February 28 through March
16 in the Norton Union lobby.
The information table will be
open from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m, each
day. A goal of 344 pints of blood
has been set for this year's blood
drive, Ozenick said.
A rotating plaque is awarded

STARTS THURSDAY

■

.

Varsity Swimming: UB vs. Geneseo College, 8 p.m.
Seminar: Master Science Department, 3 to 5 p.m., Faculty
Lounge.
Thursday
Musical: Threepenny Opera,
Baird Hall, 8:30 p.m., through
Sunday.
Meeting: Arts Festival Committee, 4 to 6 p.m., Faculty Lounge.

Play: The Glass Menagerie,
Milky Way Theatre, February 24
to 27. 8:30.
Play: A Man for All Seasons,
Studio Arena Theatre, February
24 to March 19.
Friday
Varsity Basketball: UB vs. Buf-

falo State, 6:15 p.m.
Musical:

Threepenny

Opera,

Baird Hall, 8:30 p.m.
Photographic Exhibit: Photography Club, 4 p.m,, Second Floor
Lounge.
Art

Exhibition:
Temple Sinai, 50

Israeli Art,
Alberta Dr.,
Eggertsville, February 25 to
March 4, 10:30 a.m.-5 p.m. and

7 to 10 p.m.
Lecture: Spring Slee Series I,
8:30 p.m.. Conference Theatre.
Pops Concert;
Tchaikowsky
Night, All High School Symphonic
Band, Kleinhans Music Hall.
Saturday
Varsity Basketball: UB vs. Kent
State, 7:30 p.m., Memorial Audi-

torium.

Varsity Wrestling; U6 vs. Roch-

ester, 3:30

p.m.

Varsity Fencing: UB vs. Syracuse University, 1 p.m.
Musical: Threepenny Opera,

8:30 p.m. Baird Hall.
Sunday

Folk Dancing: Student Zionist
Organization, 7 p.m., Norton 344.
Musical: Threepenny Opera,

8:30 p.m. Baird HHall.
Concert; New Christy Minstrels,
Kleinhans Music Hall, 8:30 p.m.
Monday

Lecture: Literature and Drama
Committee, 4 to 5 p.m., Confer-

ence Theatre.
Drama Department,
Conference Theatre.

Meeting:
3 to 6 p.m.,
Meeting:
ment, 8:15
266.

8:30 p.m.,

Drama Department,
246-248.
Philosophy

Depart-

to

Norton

11

p.m.,

Lecture: Chinese Philosophy,
W. T. Chan, 3 p.m., Millard Fill-

more Room.

�Tuesday, February 23, 1966

PAGE SEVEN

SPECTRUM
BULLS SWEEP PAIR
(Cont’d from Pg. 8)

Viewpoint
(Cont’d from Pg. 8)

alas for some reason, the ball
never seems to bounce their way.
This tragic problem was no moreevident than in last Thursday’s
loss to bitter rival Buffalo State.
One UB player made a great
steal late in the game, and headed down court. Upon reaching
State’s foul line he realized he
was not going to be able to negotiate the final distance, so he
jumped up and around to pass
it off to a teammate. However,
there were no white-shirted men
in the near vicinity so he had
to eat the ball, and give posses-

sion back to State. The Bulls
also failed to count on many
one-and-one foul situations and
tip-ins from underneath the hoop.
The Bulls’ efforts were valiant,
but the final outcome showed
the efforts were futile.
Take heart, though, my compatriots, the outlook is bright.
They still have a very outside
chance for a post-season tournament bid this year and next
year even though the varsity will
be comprised of juniors and
sophomores exclusively, it will
be one of great potential, as
this year’s sophomores have already proven their ability, and

this year’s freshman team has
some very fine talent. The frosh
could have almost a perfect record as all their losses have been
by exceptionally close margins. In
two years, next season’s juniors
and sophomores will be seniors
and juniors, respectively. I feel
so strongly about the possible
strength of the team two years
from now that I’m going out on
a limb right now and predicting
that the 1967-68 Bulls will be
as strong or stronger than last
year’s

tournament team.
By the way Bulls, please massa
ere State next year. I seek re
venge.

CJIBoaJ

60-foot shot at the buzzer by
Mike Bloom gave Albany a 35-34
The Modern Dance Club meets
lead.
from 3 to 4 p.m. on Tuesday afterFredonia’s Bill Barth made his
noons in the Clark Gym. All men
finale a spectacular one as he
and women are welcome. (In the
broke UB’s rebounding record February
15 issue, the time was
the former rewith 26 grabs
incorrectly given as 2 to 4).
cord was 25 by Gary Hanley
International Club will present
(’62-’63) and Jim Horne (’52-’53).
movies on Malaysia at its next
Thomas, Walker, and Culbert meeting on Thursday, February
turned in fine performances for
24 at 7:30 p.m. in Norton 340.
the underclassmen.
Everyone is welcome.
with
IS
Bloom Pacod Albany
The Mutomen lifted their record to 11-5 with a pair of convinding victories. After defeating
Alfred, 83-68 on Wednesday, the
fv**V**0 rhot»B«pWc for Proftu.onal
Frosh rocked St. Bonaventure,
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�Tuesday, February

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

23, 1966

URICH DISCLOSES PLAN

New Coach Advocates
Wide-Open Football
By STEVE SCHUELEIN

If Doc Urich is as successful
in defeating football opponents
this fall as he was in impressing
those he met at a press conference at the Park Lane Thursday, UB should run into no gridiron problems whatsoever.
With the popping of flashbulbs,
the fizzing sound of rye and ginger, and the satisfying smell of
shrimp, minature franks and

meatballs furnishnig the backthe 37-year-old Urich handled
over an hour’s worth of assorted
questions with poise and person-

ality.

When asked of his reaction to
the Faculty Committee on Athletics’ decision by telephone on
Wednesday, Urich said, “I was
elated by the decision and tickled
to death (a pet phrase) with the
opportunity. When I told my
family, my 13-year-old daughter,

Urich at Press Conference
you know how 13-year
Cynthia
old girls are
cried, but my
10-year-old son, Danny, just jumped up and said ‘Hot Dog!’
The former Notre Dame assistant to Ara Parseghian, who
—

—

”

somewhat resembles the Irish
head coach, stressed a wide-open
offense, the proper evaluation of
personnel and the importance of
a good staff as instrumental to
his basic football principles.
As an advocate of wide-open
football, Urich said, “I believe in
order to win nowadays, you must
be able to throw the ball. If you
don't have a passer, you have
to work on defense and the kicking game to eke them out. If we
have a good passer and receiver,
you’ll see us do plenty of throw-

ing.”
Urich said that the most im
portant thing in regards to the
team is "the proper evaluation

of personnel. We’ve had to switch
boys at Notre Dame around to
three or four positions before we
found out where they belonged.
“Some boys will have- to go
both ways. I’d rather have a boy
go both ways than filling one position with a weaker but betterrested player. That’s why we went
both ways with Dick Arrington
this fall. I think we’re going to
have an All-America tackle at
Notre Dame this fall who was
put there after failing tryouts
at fullback, linebacker and offensive lineman.
“Take Zloch, our quarterback,
too. A lot of fans wanted to see
a certain sophomore quarterback
play more. But the staff had seen
Zloch and the sophomore a lot
more than the fans every day,
and, although we realized his limitations,

we decid

le

was OUT

number one man.

POE, BARTH STAR AS
BULLS SWEEP PAIR

Concerning 4he coaching staff,
By MIKE DOLAN
Urich commented, "I think a topOn Wednesday UB played at
level staff is of prime importance.
This is why I’m not going to make Alfred and topped the Saxons,
any hasty decisions about such
81-62, for its 13th victory of the
an important matter. I’m someseason. The ailing Bulls, spotting
what behind in recruiting, but I’m
Harvey Poe, Bill
three regulars
willing to sacrifice this for findwere
Barth and Artie Walker
ing a good staff. I do hope to able to rely on their depth and
have the staff together by March the limited play of Poe and Walk1 when 1 want to meet with
er for the victory. Poe and Barth
them.”
both had colds, while Walker was
As far as the standing of the
still nursing an injured heel.
three remaining members of Dick
Alfred set an early pace as the
Offenhamer’s staff goes, Director early going was nip-and tuck.
of Athletics Jim Peelle said, ‘1 With five minutes left in the first
think Coach LaRocque will dehalf, Alfred took a six-point lead.
finitely be given full consideraThen Poe came off the bench for
tion. It may be very difficult to
the first time. Poe’s field goal
keep Coach Deming from acceptput the Bulls in front to stay,
ing offers at other schools, how25-24, and by halftime the Quuen
ever, and it may also be difficult
city cagers held a 37-32 advanto retain Coach Wolfe.”
tage. Poe continued to lead the
In regards to the student-athBulls as they increased their lead
letic relations on campus, Urich to 10 early in the second half.
said, “I am for closer public reNorward Goodwin put on anlations between the athletic ofother fine demonstration of office and the students. I’ll do my fensive showmanship as he led
best to make my staff and myself all scorers with 17. Another Erie,
available for talks to the stuPa. product, flashy Bobby Thomdent body. I don’t know the stuas, had a good night as he hit
dent up here, but if apathy exists, the nets for 14 in a starter’s role.
I don’t see why this method
Poe added 15. Jon Clubert, anshouldn’t work.
other of UB’s fine sophs, came
“A team must also keep winoff the bench and scored 11.
ning to maintain interest. WideAfter a cold start, UB finishopen football will also produce ed with a 41% shooting percentmore exciting football for the
age, while Alfred managed 36%.
spectator and help attendance. I Jim Reardon paced the losers
don’t want to sound professional, with 16.
but we’re in the same market for
On Saturday evening, Clark
the spectator dollar.”
Gym was filled with an enthusiasThe new coach seemed anxious tic student body to bid farewell
to begin work on his new assignment. lie left immediately after
the conference to return to South
Bend “to finish up my business
—

—

to five seniors playing their last
game

there. The crowd

Poe,

Barth,

Goodwin, Jim

from the fans to meet the outstretched hand of Dr. Leonard
Surfustini. In the locker room
afterwards, Dr. Surfustini said,
“They have given us 100% all
year long and tonight they really
did a great job for us. I command
the greatest of respect for them
and they deserve a lot of credit.”
It seems as if the tournament
fever is beginning to hit UB as
the crowd on hand was the most
spirited of the season. It’s been
rumored that UB is being considered for a berth in the NCAA
College Division Regionals. Last
week LeMoyne was selected as
the site for one of the regionals,
and that one of the teams being
considered for the tourney along
with LeMoyne, Hartwick and Buffalo State was UB. Notification
could arrive this week, but probably won’t be decided until after
Saturday’s Kent State contest.
Against Albany the Bulls started fast, but an early lead soon
disappeared as State’s cagers
caught fire and UB had trouble
setting up its offense. The game
remained close for the remainder
of the first half until a sensation(Cont’d on P, 7)

there,"

Urieh said, “I hope to return
to Buffalo by Saturday night and

begin a lot of hard work.”
Urieh continued, “I hope to
meet my squad next week or the
week after. I also plan to be
studying a lot of football films
to get an idea of what I’ll be
working with.”
One began to realize that when
Parseghian said “You’re not just
getting my top assistant, you’re
speaking in jest.

Last year, I can remember
watching the basketball Bulls go
through their schedule for a 19-3
mark. They looked almost like
a professional team: sinking key
shots, making clutch steals, and
never seeming to be ruffled under pressure. The consistent play

of seniors Dan Bazzani, Jack Karaszewski, and team MVP Norb
Baschnagel

plus

juniors

Poe,

Goldstein, and the ever improving Billy Barth made the team
a thrill, and even a privilege,
to watch. They worked the ball
with precision, with the ability
to break a man open for an easy
lay-up almost at will, and played a very sticky, harassing, manto-man defense. They also displayed what I consider to be
the most important ability: that
of coming up with the play necessary to turn defeat into victory.
Now, the Bulls of the 1965-66
variety have a 12-6 record going
into the Alfred game, a fine
mark. However, let’s have a closer look at this record. The Bulls
against the University division
teams have defeated only one,
Bucknell, and were really close
in only one other, Colgate. In-

cidentally, that loss to Colgate
at Clark Gym was their first defeat on their home court (discounting games at the Aud, their

in two
years. Against Syracuse and Niagara the Bulls were badly outclasses. and against Penn State
were manhandled in the second
half after looking like worldbeaters during the first half.
Also, some of the teams they
handled easily last year gave
the Bulls a tough time this year
(for example Windsor and Wayne State). The only time the
Bulls have actually played up to
their potential was against Akron, then undefeated and thirdranked College division team in
the country. The big stars in
that game were Poe, for his
great shooting; Walker for his
clutch play; and Barth, who
amassed only four points, but
his rebounding and defense were
home away from

great.
I would

home)

point out the Bulls’
main problems as being lack of
precision playing, the inability
to capitalize on chances, and
their occasional second period
slumps that have either cost them
the game, or made the final outcome much closer than it should

have been. The lack of general
experience from having to rely
on many sophomores is probably
behind the Bulls’ troubles. I am
not trying to minimize the ability of these men, as they are all
talented, or they could not have
been on the squad to begin with.
However, perfect timing and execution can only be accomplished through team effort, and playing new men just doesn’t lend
itself to achieve this precision
timing. The seniors on the squad
have also been guilty of some
slopiness on occasion. At other
times one would almost swear
he was watching Bing, Schellhase,
or some other All-American. It’s
a shame the sophomores who
joined the team at the start of
the second semester couldn’t have
been playing from the beginning
of the season. In the few games
in which they have participated,
these newcomers have shown
the potential to be very useful
and even outstanding performers.
This inability to take advantage of breaks has been a cause
of great anguish in this writer’s
heart, for the tremendous hustle and drive they have displayed
has kept the Bulls close, but,
(Cont’d on P. 7)

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Be-

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Viewpoint
By J. B. SHARCOT

wasn’t

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One by one, the five seniors—

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�</text>
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                    <text>J

STATE UN 1VERS| TY

new

L—*———— 1

v

VOLUME 16

NO. 35

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1966

Darrow Outlines Senate Goals
Five Faculty Members Appeal
Court Ruling On Feinberg Law
Five present

or former UB

faculty members will appeal the
January 5 Federal Court Decision upholding the Feinberg Law
and Certificate to the United
States Supreme Court, according

to Buffalo American Association

of University Professors president Dr. Leo A. Loubere.
The Feinberg Law states that
it is illegal for a subversive to
teach in the public school system. Newton Carver, George
Keyishian,
Henry
Hochfield,
Ralph Maud and George Starbuck contested the consitiutionality of the law in January, 1964,
when the Feinberg Oath was instituted in the State University
system to implement the law.
The Buffalo AAUP established
an ad hoc committee to raise
$3,500 for legal and court expenses by appealing

to faculty

and students through the mail
and direct contact. According to
Dr. Loubere, plans have been
made to contact AAUP chapters
throughout the SUNY system urging them to initiate appeals.
Chairman of the ad hoc committee is Peter Uichols from the
Bio-Chemistry Department. Other
members ipclude Byron Koek
Koek, Modlern Language Dept.;
Carl Moos, Bio-Physics Dept; and
Jack Nelson, Education Dept.
The committee invited undergraduate student Kim Darrow
and graduate student Henry Simon to participate in the campaign. Both Darrow and Simon
_

have been active in opposition
to the Feinberg Certificate.

Loubere asserted that the de-

cision will be appealed whether
or not the funds are raised.
The Buffalo AAUP engaged attorney Richard Lipsitz to file the
appeal to the Supreme Court.
Among the questions presented
in notice of the appeal and signed by Mr. Lipsitz is, as quoted
in the Buffalo Evening News:
“Whether the New York statutory complex, together with
the administrative regulations,
rules and certificates, unconstitutionally condition public employment of teachers and scholars at the university level in
contravention of First Amendment freedoms.”

An extensive report by VicePresident Kim Darrow highlighted the Student Senate meeting
Tuesday, February 15. An amendment to the Publications Board
constitution was proposed, the
rules and regulations for the upcoming Student Senate General
Elections were accepted and four
budgets

floor of Norton that would go
off in five minutes.

The phone call, made to a Norton lobby counter at 2:40 p.m.,
immediately sent to Norton Busi-

ness Manager Jim Gruber and

Assistant Manager Greg Sodus.
An announcement over the loud
speaker at 2:44 p.m. asked everyone to leave the building for a
fire drill. Mr, Gruber said that
the pretext of a fire drill was
used to avoid panic.

Mr. Gruber explained, “We did
not want to take any chances and
we evacuated the building as

.

UB’s Eleventh Annual International Debate Tournament will be-

gin today, Friday, February 18,
and end tomorrow, February 19.
The UB Debate Society will host
debate teams from over 20 dif-

ferent schools of the United
States and Canada, who will de-

bate this year’s national proposition, “Resolved: That law enforcement agencies in the United
States should be given greater
freedom in the investigation and
prosecution of crime.”
Tournament chairman Chuck
Liarakos has devised a schedule

tion for the fast in a letter to student association president Clinton
Deveaux. Two weeks ago, Assistant Vice-President for Business Affairs Paul Bacon alleged
that the Freedom Fast Committee
had lacked the necessary permission to conduct its drive. Although the fast had been permitted by lesser food service officials, Bacon claimed that the only
proper source for such authorization was the FSA Board of Direc-

The Freedom Fast Committee
had exepected $1.25 allotment for
each meal. Food Service Director

quickly as possible.” The Campus
Security Police were contacted
to investigate the bomb threat.

proposal

now orien-

tation of Senate committees.
Photo by Carol Goodson

The building was cleared in
less than 15 minutes. Mr. Sodus
commented, “Considering the
number of students and the number of rooms that have to be
evacuated, without the co-operation of the student body as a
whole, we could not have been as
successful as we were.” Mr. Gruber commended the students for
their co-operative reaction to the
situation. The students remained
outside Norton for 15 minutes.

The telephoned warning could
not be traced because of the
brevity of the call. Mr. Gruber
said the caller was a male.

of five rounds of American debate, two rounds today, and three
tomorrow. The tournament will
be climaxed Saturday afternoon
by a banquet for all participating
teams. Trophies will be awarded
to the first, second, and third
place units (a unit is an affirmative and a negative team, four
men), to the best affirmative and
negative teams (two men), and to
the first, second, and third place
affirmative and negative speakers. The first place unit will be
obliged to appear on the UB
Roundtable to be broadcast Saturday evening on WBEN-TV,

the participating
Connell, Vermont,
Western Ontario, RPI, LeMoyne,
a number of
Rochester, and
schools of the State Univonity,
such as Cortland, Geneseo and
Some

of

achools

are

Albany.
Timekeepers are still needed
for a number of rounds, and spectators are welcome. For further
information, visit the Debatfc Office, Room 357, or call 3601,

DR. CLAUDE E. PUFFER
David Rodler approximated an
offer of 68c. A compromise price
of 87M-C per meal was finally
granted in Puffer’s letter to Deveaux.
In response to this new development, NSA Fast Co-Chairman
Jeffrey Lynford stated, "We are
very pleased with Dr. Puffer's
rapid handling of the situation.
He obviously cares about the best
interests of the 2000 students who
voluntarily abstained from dinner.”

The NSA Freedom Fast funds
will be distributed in poverty
stricken areas of Mississippi,

“

.

.

.

activities.” These include the
Civil Rights Committee, the Convocations Committee, the Student
Activities Committee and the Public Relations Committee.
The next category of committees encompasses those dealing
with shortage problems; primarily the Student Welfare Committee, the International Student
Affairs Committee and the Commuter Relations Committee.
The final grouping of committees include those dealing with

this committee’s function to involve the academic community
the society of all
with
mankind.” “If the University of
Buffalo is to integrate itself into the world academic community, It must establish working communications with other universities throughout the world.”
Mr. Darrow proceeded to explain that any differences that
. . . must be recogmay arise
”...

Kim Darrow

Channel 4.

tors.

The second group of commit-

protees are those which
vide continuing enrichment of
the educational experience, constant and promotion of student

long range problems. Only one,
the New Campus "Committee, belongs in this category.
Darrow also suggested the formation of an International Education Committee. It would be

Debate Society Will Host
Eleventh Annual Tourney

Norton Fire Drill on Monday
Disclosed As a Bomb Threat
Norton Union was evacuated
by 3 p.m, last Monday, after an
anonymous phone call warned of
a bomb planted in the ground

“

were approved.

Mr. Darrow’s statement was
concerned with the Student Senate’s responsibilities as a governing body and the possible improvements of the Student Senate committee system. VicePresident Darrow's first concern
was the seemingly “factory-like
operation” of the nation’s large
university systems. He advocated
the necessity of guarding against
such circumstances. He stated
that “if the student body is to
make any significant contribution to the solutions to the university’s problems, the scope of
its student government must be
as broad as the scope of today’s
educational needs.”
Darrow proceeded to categorize the committees of the Student

Freedom Fast Funds Authorized By Dr. Puffer;
Will Be Distributed In Poverty Stricken Areas
Vice-President for Business Affairs Claude E. Puffer announced
the granting of $1750 for the National Student Association Freedom Fast funds, Monday, February 14. The decision resolved a
two-year conflict between the
Freedom Fast Committee and the
Faculty Student Association
Board of Directors, involving both
the legality of the fast and the
amount alloted to each meal.
Dr. Puffer granted authoriza-

Senate. The first subdivision includes those committees which
.
. deal primarily with the
mechanics of student government: the Senate Executive Committee, the Financial Committee,

“

not as commuter problems, not as foreign student problems, but as university problems,
stemming from the lack of integration in our academic community.” He continued by stating that
“an academic community isolated from society would be like an
imagination and conscience iso-

nized,

lated from the human mechan-

ism.

Mr. Darrow concluded with “the
Student Association has great
potential for constructive activities and the committee system
of the Senate can play a vital
role in it.”
Vice-President
Darrow presented the proposed amendment.
It advocated the abolishment of
the Student Publications Board
and the formulation of a new
standing Student Senate committee, the Communications Committee.

The Student Senate Elections
Committee presented their suggestions for the rules and regulations for the Student Senate
Following
General
Elections.
amendments to these suggestions,
the Student Senate accepted
them.

The Senate approved four bud-

gets. The Physical Therapy Club
was awarded $240. the Undergraduate Math Club $185, the
Law School $4160, and the Spec-

trum

$33,270.

Sam Conducts 'Bounce hr Beats'
To Collect Money For Heart Fund
Sigma Alpha Mu Fraternity is
conducting a "Bounce for Beats"
today, to collect money for the
Heart Fund

The boys began bouncing a bas
ketball in front of the Heart
Fund Billboard in three and fourman shifts, the marathon bounce
continued along Main Street all
night, and will finish at University Plaza at 3 p.m. today. Donations to the Heart Fund arc being
accepted throughout the 28-hour
bounce-athon.
The "Bounce for Beats" is being

conducted by Sigma Alpha Mu to
coincide with Heart Month. Tc
advertise the campaign, all broth
ers are wearing hearts this week
and leaflets were distributed
Wednesday.

Prior Ron Silver, who is ir

charge of the Bounce, along witf
exequer, Dennis Sadowe, hope,'
that the student body will sup

port the Heart Fund. He woulc
like to see a large turnout at
University Plaza this afternoon
when last year’s varsity basket
ball high-scorer Harvey Poe
makes the final bounce.

�Friday, February 18, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

Students Attend Conference Arts Festival Features Happening/'
On Latin American Policy Includes Readings, Presentations, Films
Student Association President
Deveaux, Regional National Student Association Chairman Carl Levine and NSA Coordinator Marion Michael attended a “Conference on Latin American Affairs” last weekend in
Washington, D.C. Mr. Levine described the conference as “an
educational discussion on American policy in Latin America."
Clinton

Opening speaker Sacha Volman.
top aid to former Dominican Re
Juan Bosch,
public President
stated that American interference in the Dominican Republic

conflicted with
the peoples’
choice and caused the US. to
lose many friends.
On Saturday. William P. Rodgers, a member of the Agency

for International Development,
defended the policy of the ad
ministration in Latin America.
He was followed by laitin Ameri
can Peace Corps Director Frank
Mankicwicz, who discussed the
problems of community development in Latin America.
Dan

Kurzman,

I.alin

can correspondent for the Washington Post speaking against present policy, Kurzman called for
the return of the policy of John
'Fitzgerald Kennedy and more
cross-cultural understanding. He
said that “we must turn away
from the policy of supporting
military dictatorships merely because -they ostensibly represent
political stability,” He continued
that they are not stable, but that
they create conditions for ultimate Communist takeover.
Mr. Levine said, “The conclusion to be drawn is that our ac-

tivities must be geared to the
needs of the people, and that
the American “big-stick” policy is
a “policy of the past”.
The conference, held at the
Shorcham Hotel, was sponsored
by the USNSA and the Collegiate
Council for the United Nations.

Applications for Union
Hoard committees are
available in Norton.

Amori

“A New Theater Piece,” a series of related arts events, will
be the main feature of the Spring
Arts Festival, March 10 to 13. The
Festival will include exhibits,
poetry readings, the play Orestes,
an art film, and a jazz concert.

"A New Theater Piece” will be

presented March 13 from 12 midnight to daybreak in Norton
Union. The Spring Arts Festival
Committee is requesting permission from Dean Scudder for resident women to attend the allnight event.

The “Piece’ will consist of poetreadings, music, films, and
dramatic presentations. Its creator Jeremy Benjamin is a producer of several “happenings” and
is associated with off-Broadway
ry

productions.

Spring Weekend Committee firms plant for event* at semester's end.

A Spring Arts Committee mem-

ber stated, “The scheduled time
is of utmost importance to the
event which is going to occur.
The environment which the indidual could encounter at this hour
would be different from that
which he would ordinarily experience and would provide a new

Photo

perception not only of the arts,

but of existence itself.

A poetry reading Thursday,
March 10, will be open to students
who want to read poetry. Friday,
March 11 Denise Levertov, Allen

Ford Motor
Company is:
recognition

by

Alan Gruber

Ginsburg, and Mr. Orloffski will
read their poetry by the Norton
Union fountain.
An exhibition of artwork by
graduate and undergraduate students will be held in Norton 233,
March 6 to 12. On those same
days two exhibits from Boston,
“Architectural Landscape Images”
by Jekabs Zvilna and “Marina”
by Daniel Farber, will be shown
in Norton Union Center Lounge.
“New Works and Collaboration,”
an exhibit by Donald Blumburg
and Charles Gill, will be displayed in the Norton Game Room
March 10-13.

Orestes will be performed
Thursday, Friday and Saturday
nights, March 10 to 13. A jazz
concert is scheduled for Saturday, March 13.

What does it take to gain recognition at
Ford Motor Company? If you have skills
that we can utilize, and if you’re ambitious
as well as able, you can move ahead fast at
Ford! Consider the career of Eric Mangelsen;
Eric came to work at our Ypsilanti Plant in
February, 1961. During the initial stage of
his training program, he was given the
assignment to supervise the development,
design and construction of special production
calibrating and test equipment for automobile voltage regulators. Later, he was
assigned to processing and production of the transistor ignition
amplifier system for our 1963 cars. He was
responsible for introducing
a new cleaning process for voltage regulator contact points,
which
substantially reduced costs. He was also instrumental in processing
the refined transistorized regulator system used in our new 1966
Eric Mangelsen
B.S., Univ. of Kentucky

automobiles.

Now a member of management with broad responsibilities in a key
Production Department, Eric Mangelsen has moved ahead rapidly
with a company that believes in giving young men every opportunity
to demonstrate their skill and ingenuity. Why not investigate? Talk
to our representative when he visits your campus. You can go far
with Ford.

Pizza
by DiRose
99(. for Large 13"

8 Slice

PIZZA
TR 3-1330

FREE DELIVERY
TO CAMPUS
The American Road. Dearborn.

Michigan

4 p.m. 2 a.m. Sun. Fri.
12 p.m.-2 a.m. Saturday
-

-

An equal opportunity employer

�Friday, February 18, 1966

IRC Food Week Is Extended

Food Week, a trial period initiated by the Inter-Residence
Council to curb waste in the
dormitory cafeterias, has been
extended for at least another
week, Inter-Residence Council
President Gary Roberts announced last Friday.

actual figures
as to the amount of savings have
been compiled as of yet, the program appears to be quite successful,” Mr. Roberts reported.
“There is a good possibility that
this policy will continue for the
rest of the semester.” Under the
current system students may take
one of each item and return for
seconds.
Last Friday, the IRC Food
“Although no

Committee met with Dr. Claude
Puffer, Vice-President for Business Affairs, Paul Bacon, UB Food
Service Director, David Rodler,
and several other administrators.
The meeting was called at the
request of Dr. Puffer.

The administrators pledged
further cooperation with the IRC,
stressing that students would be
consulted before any changes
were made.
The Food Committee of the
IRC meets with the Food Service once a week. One product of
a recent meeting is the newlycreated Tower Snack Bar. The
snack counter servies pizza, hot
dogs, hamburgers and sandwiches.

PROPOSED AMENDMENT
TO THE STUDENT ASSOCIATION CONSTITUTION
Articles of

Organization,

Article

One:

Name

and

Composition,

delete "the

Student Publications Board,” and change the word “five” to "four.”
The Constitution, Part IV, Student Publications Board, delete the whole part.
The By-Laws, Part III, The Student Publications Board, delete the whole part.

The Constitution, Part V, The Student Association Executive Board, change
to read, “The Constitution, Part IV The Student Association Executive Board.”
The By-Laws, Part 1. The Student Senate Article IV. Standing Committees
of the Student Senate, add “Section 12. Communications Committee
A. Functions
1. To stimulate a high level and quality of communication on
mass media.
guard freedom of the press and report to the Student Senate

campus through the

2. To

any abridgements

thereof.

keep a register of all student publications as a condition of
eligibility to receive Student Association funds.
4. To act as a liaison group between the student communications
media and the Student Senate.
5. To serve as a consultant to the Finance Committee.
6. To serve as an intermediary between the communications media
the Student Judiciary.
B. Membership
1. Editors or the designated representatives thereof of student
communications media receiving funds from the activities fee.
2.
to be appointed by the Senate from the membership
3.

To

A chairman

of the committee.

3.

PACE THREE

SPECTRUM

more advisors chosen by the committee.
The By-Laws, Part 1. The Student Senate
Appendix A, Financial Rules of the Student Senate.
6. Student Publications
a. Delete this part and replace by, “Registration.”
A student publication must be registered with the Communications Committee in order to be eligible to receive funds from
the Finance Committee.
The By-Laws, Part 1. The Student Senate
Standing
Committees of the Student Senate, Section 2. Student
Article IV.
Activities Committee.
A. Functions.
2. a. Delete, "the development of new functions for existing activities,
or abolition of any student activity”
b. Change to read, “To keep a register of all Student organizations
and
as a condition of eligibility to receive Student
One or

-

activities

Association funds”
e. Delete this part
The By-Laws, Part 1. The Student Senate.
Appendix A, Financial Rules of the Student Senate,
with
Organizations and activities, replace "recognized”

1. Jurisdiction,
"registered”

a.

Within the next two weeks the
Snack Bar will expand to include a fountain service, bakery
items, and delicatessen.
The Snack Bar is open weekdays from 9:30 a.m. to midnight and weekends from 4 p.m.
to midnight. Prices are comparable to Norton Union prices. The
expected profits will help balance Goodyear and Tower dining
hall budgets.

Zeldner Defends Voting Record
During Freshman Class Council
Freshman Senator Charles E.
Zeldner .read a statement defending his Student Senate voting record at the Freshman Class
Council meeting Tuesday, February 15. Zeldner’s record, which
had been questioned by Council
members, has been the subject
of letters to the Spectrum in recent weeks.

Student Burns Draft Card

William Draper, a freshman at
UB, made public today that he
has burned his draft card and is
refusing to co-operate with the
Universal Military Training and
Service Act. In a letter dated January 6, 1966, copies of which were
sent to Local Draft Board 88,
President Johnson, and Selective
Service Director Hershey, he stated that for religious, moral and
pragmatic reasons he could no
longer conscientiously support an
institution which he felt to be,
“cruel, unloving, and inhuman,”
In the copy sent to his draft
board Draper enclosed the ashes
of his draft card. The penalty for
this is a maximum fine of $10,000
or prison sentence of 5 years, or
both. The penaly for his refusal
to co-operate carries with it a
similar punishment.
In a statement issued to the
Spectrum, Draper described his
reasons for the above:
“As a Christian and a member
of the human family, I find that
I can no longer remain silent and
inactive when faced with a situation which violates every precept
for living, if Love, Peace, and
Freedom are to survive. There is
an obvious and all too prevelant
discrepancy between our ideals
and the way we carry them out.

All students interested
in running for the Student Senate are invited
to an open meeting of
Campus Alliance Party
today at 3 p.m. in Room
234 Norton.

“We claim to base our society
a Judeo-Christian tradition.
Contained in this tradition are
certain statements: ‘Thou shall
not kill. Love thy neighbor. Turn
the other cheek.’ We claim to
have founded our country on the
basis of ‘life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.' Thus we legislate laws to prevent murder and
other crimes against the person.
And yet we defend and maintain
our religious traditions and laws
by the same means we are trying
to prevent others from using.
on

“Today throughout the world,
States, in the SoNorth and South
are organized and
each other
not
only with guns, but with napalm
and terror. The old argument that
the ‘ends justify the means’ is
not now and never was true. Our
means must be as moral, and with
as much regard for our fellow
man, as the goals we seek.

in the United
viet Union, in
Vietnam, men
coerced to kill

—

“The time has come to commit
actions. A. J. Muste has said that
‘men must stop playing games,
stop being actors, and begin to
make actions which have a real
effect both on themselves and
their neighbor!'

The lives of those who have
religious convictions or enjoy a
student status, are as Ray Volpc
sugestedj no more valuable than
the life of a Negro in the ghetto
or a dropout. This is why I have
refused to accept status as a concientious objector We are all
brothers and must not consider
ourselves above any man. Aside
from this, the evident purpose of
any deferrment is to aid the ends
of the draft: to gather a conscript
‘Those of us who seek peace
(Cont’d on Pg. 7)

ENGINEERING OPPORTUNITIES

I

on the Reapportionment
Amendment, which was passed
at the January 25 Senate meeting.
He said that "even though the

Particular concern was expressed regarding Zeldner’s negative

army.

for Seniors and Graduates in

vote

mechanical,
AERONAUTICAL, CHEMICAL,
ELECTRICAL,
and METALLURGICAL
ENGINEERING

ENGINEERING MECHANICS
APPLIED MATHEMATICS
PHYSICS and
ENGINEERING PHYSICS

CHARLES ZRLONRR
Photo by

Edward J.

Concerning the St. John’s Resolution, Zeldner felt that UB
would have nothing to gain by
supporting the strike there and
that “since our Student Senate
could acquire a poor name and
reputation by such an undertaking, I therefore felt it necessary
to register a negative vote on

this issue.”
Senator Zeldner admitted that
he had erred in voting against
the Feinberg Resolution.
He
hopes to have his vote formally

changed.

“1 believe I have seriously and
honestly represented the Freshman Class during my term as
Senator, having personally and
carefully scrutinized and deliberated each issue brought before
the Student Senate,” Mr. Zeldner concluded.
Mr. Carver, Advisor to the
Council, questioned the feasibility of having a Class Council next
year in view of the fact that
four senators will be representing Freshman interest. The Council waived discussion of this issue until the next meeting.
In other business, the Council pledged 25 dollars to the
World University Service.

Washington's Birthday

V2 Price SALE

CAMPUS INTERVIEWS
MONDAY, FEB. 21
Appointments should be made
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amendment has added four seats
for the Freshman Class, I felt
that the consequences of the
other parts of the bill far outweighed the advantages of this
section." Zeldner specifically disagreed with the formation of
the Student Association Executive Committee.

ALL SALES FINAL
CASH ONLY at these low Prices

Amherst

(£l u tl|P0

43 Kenmore Ave. (next to Univ. Plaza)

This coupon must be presented at time
of purchase
(good only until Feb. 22)

�Friday, February 18, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

Editorial (Comment

.

.

The

.

THE FREEDOM TO GROW
Last Tuesday the Publications Board voted unanimously to abolish itself as presently constituted and
asked the Student Senate to incorporate the revised
functions of the Board into a standing Committee. This
action, voluntarily assumed, was greeted with approval
by all the publications under the Board's control. The
Student Senate will act on the proposed committee structure and eventually it is hoped that the Faculty Committee on Student Affairs will approve the measure since
it represents responsible and united student opinion.
The reasons for this action are threefold. First, the

change in structure removes the atavistic vestages of

administration domination of the student press. Secondly, it puts publications into the overall framework
of responsible student government and creates a structural link between the publications and the students at
this campus. Thirdly, it offers institutional guarantees
for the freedom of the student media to serve the needs
of the campus free from coercive pressures of either the
community, the administration, or the fluctuating tides
in student politics.

grump

This is being written with
much and undue haste down in
my own cavern and if it seems
even more disorganized than usual you might consider what

the German homework I just raced through must look like. I did
that even faster than I am attempting to do. this. I did not
want to pass German anyway.

Now that 1 managed to ignore
Valentine’s Day it would seem
safe to sneer at it. Although I
guess it really isn’t fair to sneer
at St. Valentine’s day. At least
it has some historical background. I am probably simply
projecting my wrath against
Sweethearts day, et. al. against an
innocent and genuine day. But
do the candy hearts have to go
in the space they make by taking away the New Year goodies?
And we all know that there will
be Easter gookum where the
stuff for Valentine’s Day was
right?
How the hell come it takes
a silly damned crane seventy
feet or so high to put in the

The controversy surrounding the coercive practices
of the old Publications Board which has raged for almost
four years has finally been settled to the mutual satisfaction of all parties. The publications will be able, steelwork for temporary buildunder the new structure, to select their own editors as ings? I almost think I would
they see fit, rather than being subject to the fiat of the rather be in some of those temPublication Board. The new standing committee would porary types along Bulldozer Alhave as its primary focus the improvement of existing
publications and mass media as well as the encouragement of experiments in communications media and the
fostering of quality, “one shot” publications.

ley than in our permanent piles
of stone when the bomb falls.

Oh yes, last week I suddenly
found myself highly insulted by
one of my neighboring columnists. The Right's writer (cough)
claimed that 1 was a liberal. I
am- not a liberal, nor, I would
think, did I fit into any of the
other nice little niches in a pigeon hole desk. At least if I do, I
have failed miserably to live up
to what my ornery old father
and mother taught me. I hold several views at the present time
which place me outside the
warmth and friendship of liberal circles, or of conservative
squares for that matter. Hells
bells at least my wife still loves
.

.

.

I think.

I do not think I have ever
deliberately changed a viewpoint
to offend people albeit, I may
just possibly have pretended to
do so. I serve a nice useful purpose in life. I feel with the inactivity most of us suffer from,
everybody could do with a nice

brisk workout of the endocrine
system as often as possible. The
more adrenalin I can cause to go
coursing through peoples veins

oCetterd

With the improved system of checks and balances
incorporated in the structure of the new standing committee, “editorial responsibility” is assured in a much
more meaningful way than under the old system of rule
by decree. The proposed structure guarantees, as much
as any institutional structure can guarantee, that the
students at this University will be served by vital and
interesting publications.

This proposed amendment also brings the situation
of the campus communication media in to line with the
statements of principle of the United States Student Press
Association. These principles were arrived at with the
help of professional journalists and broadcasters and
has been adopted by most of the best campus media in
the United Press. It is high time that the State University
of New York at Buffalo joined the other great universities in this country in the area of publications, if not in
all areas of higher education.

THE

SPECTRUM

JEREMY

Editor-inChief

Managing Editor
Business

News
Staff

Editor
Loretta

TAYLOR

DAVID EDELMAN

Manager
SUSAN

RAYMOND VOLPE

Assistant
RONNIE BROMBERG
Bouchier. Russell Buchman. Alice Edelman.
Joan Roberts, Rick Schwab. Dan Shroeder.

GREENE

Angelme. Joanne
Karen Green, Peter Lederman,
Sharon Shulman. Eileen Teitler. Nancy Toder, Patti Wartley. Judy Weisberg,
Feature Editor
JOHN STINY
JO ANNE LEEGANT
Assistant
Bonnie Barlow, Ron Ellsworth. Barbara Ann Fitzsimmons, Barbara
Loeb.
Audrey Logel Bob Martin, Suzanne Rovner. Martha Tack. William Weinstein.
Start

J B

Mike

Sharcot

Sports Editor
STEVE SCHUELEIN
Castro. Mike Dolan. Steve Farbman. Bob Frey.
Layout Editor
Bouchier. Stephanie

Claire

£* ro1

Becker

Shottenfeld.

Mancmi

Scott Forman,

SHARON HONIG
Parker. Steve Silverman

Copy Editor
LAUREN JACOBS
Estelle Fox. Jocelyn Hailpern, Sandy Lippman, Betsy
Susan Zuckerberg

Advertising Manager
RON HOLTZ
Terry Angelo. Audrey Cash, Pat Rosenfeld,
Steve

Silverman,

Ozer.

Joseph
K

Photography Editor
EDWARD JOSCELYN
staff—-Don Blank. Peter Bonneau. Joseph Feyes, Carol
Goodson. Alan Gruber.
Marc Levine, Ivan Makuch. Michael Solun. Anthony Walluk. Susan Wortman
Robert Wynne
Circulation Manager
DIANE LEWIS
Faculty Advisor
IRENE WILLET
Financial Advisor
DALLAS GARBER
EDITORIAL POLICY

IS DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR
CLASS HONOR RATING

IN CHIEF

FIRST

Second Class Postage Paid at Buffalo. N Y
Subscription
$3.00 per year,
circulation

15.000

Represented
for national
advertising
by
National Advertising Service. Inc , 420 Madi
,
son Ave New York. N Y.

the more smug and satisfied I
become. Of course these damned
agitators who don’t know when
they are well off and have the
gall to irritate me are quite
another story.
Why the maintenance men have
me and
allow their fan belts to breathe
heavily on the back of the legs
of students was explained to me
in no uncertain terms last week
on a very wet gloomy miserable
day by one of those nasty men
who drives one of those horrid
blue trucks. Well actually he
couldn’t explain it. He was
sneezing too hard. Seems he had
been carrying packages back to

a tendency to honk at

his truck from all sorts of buildings because he could not drive
within two hundred yards of
given
building
any
without
crushing several student cars,
bicycles and skate boards. He
drove off into the sunset muttering something about a tow
truck and hasn’t been seen since.
Our motto for the coming
week. “Down With Hot Chocolate Prices”. POX! or is it PAX?
Dear me where did I leave my
Latin book?

the Editor

Annoyance Expressed At “Ode to the Left?’
TO THE

EDITOR

ever, they have every right to
their opinions. These
opinions have been based on a
broad knowledge of the situation, and I only regret that I am
not as well informed as they are
to be qualified to express an
opinion.
express

I

was extremely annoyed to

read the letter to the editor
entitled “Ode to the Left.” The
person who calls himself the Majority sits upon his pedestal looklooking disdainfully down on
what he calls leftist groups—those that have taken a stand
on the Vietnam War and other
foreign —policy of the U. S. I
am not saying that I agree or
disagree with these groups; how-

The writer of the article calls
the thoughts of these groups
“illusions," I am interested to
know if this person has ever
given the situation some honest

thought and had the courage to

stand up for his convictions. The
very fact that he does not sign
his name shows that he really
does not want to involve himself.
To label these groups as dirty
young radicals, without supporting views for a conflicting opinion is of no value, serving no
purpose except to show that this
person hasn’t enough courage to
express his own opinions on the
subject.

Rose Kaplan

Extremists Considered One-Sided
TO THE EDITOR

The offici.il student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo
Publication Office at Norton Hall. University Campus. Buffalo. N Y
14214
Published twice weekly from the first week of September to the last week in
May, except for exam periods. Thanksgiving. Christmas, and spring vacations

to

by STEESE

After reading various Spectrum
editorials and other articles on
draft conditions and the situation
in Viet Nam, I would like to express my opinion of the extremism surrounding these issues.
There seems to a gross inability
on the part of many students on
this campus and elsewhere to see
the error and self-defeat they are
facing by taking extreme stands
on these issues, whether they be
right or left. To attempt to categorize a condition such as war as
being cither moral or immoral,
without taking into consideration
the numerous and widely assorted conditions that make up such

a situation, exhibits an inability
to see past a one-sided interpretation of existing realities. No one
can say that war is moral, yet it

cannot be said either that defense

of the ideals of freedom and deis immoral. You can
argue until the day you die as to
whether the U. S. is justified in
being in Viet Nam, but the fact
is that we are there. Leaving Viet
Nam is going to take more than
just laying down our rifles and
walking away. To reach a solution is going to take some constructive and creative thinking
on the part of those who really
care enough to do something
mocracy

The pseudo-intellectuals who
sit around in their self-righteous
indignation singing songs of protest and giving lengthy orations
on the error of the opposition’s
ways, seem to overlook the common goal towards which all men
are striving
that of peace. To
blindly march off in one direction without admitting seeing the
merits of ideas from both sides
is the surest and straightest path
to defeat. Not until we struggle
out of the stagnation of extremism will any real and lasting solutions to the problems facing
mankind be reached.
—

about it.

Judy Gallion

“Majority’s” Poem Considered Degrading
TO THE

EDITOR

After reading the letter written by the person (I assume by
the use of the possessive pronoun "my” that one person wrote
the letter) who claims to be a

majority—of one; I hope—I am
disgusted. I’m appalled not for
his disagreement with the Left,
for I don’t claim to be fully in
accord with everything they believe myself, but rather because
of his degrading method of criticism. Even the poetic form he
employs can’t raise his argument
from the abyss of ignorance in

which it is written.

Just as I believe in the right
of anyone to express his opinion,
so do 1 believe in the right of
anyone to criticize another's opin-

ion. What I do not consider justified, however, is criticism which
resorts to type casting a group

of people and labeling them with
various traits such as hypocrisy,
dirtiness, cowardice, lack of
thought, and subjugators, when
there is no proof of this being
true for the great majority of
the group. His assumption is
based on extreme generalization.
In legal circles, such criticism is
clearly outlawed by the forbiddance of libel.

The Left has just as much
right to a table in Norton as does
a sorority selling cookies, a fraternity selling beer blast tickets,
or a literary club selling magazines. The nature of a Student

Union should be such that all
the interest groups of students
should be allowed experssion. I
further suggest that if a statistical survey were undertaken
there would be just as many
cigarette butts per person found
in any other area of Norton

where a large number of people
congregate.

“The Majority” criticizes the
Left by implicity stating they
have no thoughts. I’m sure if
really questioned, he’d agree that
they have thoughts—as he shovfs
by the fact that their thoughts
“lead to a conclusion.” Since he
obviously disagrees with their
conclusions, his objections would
be raised to the level of valid
criticism if he’d state them
rather than call them false (by
whose standards) All he gives
as an objection is that they claim
infallibility.
Finally, I really don’t care who
says something and how clean
shaven they may be, but rather
I care to know only of the validity of what they say. Thus I
think this can be the only type
of revelant criticsm.
Marsha Gold

�Friday, February 18, 1966

'Threepenny Opera' Featured In Miss Peach'
Comic Strip During 6-Year Run In New York
By BARBARA LOEB

The nationwide fame of the UB
Music Department’s next attraction, “The Threepenny Opera,”
was reflected in a syndicated
newspaper comic strip on one occasion during the show’s phenomenal six and a quarter year run
in New York. The comic strip
was “Miss Peach,” and it showed
a box office over which hung the
sign “The Kelly School Dramatic
Society Presents ‘2 lk Penny
Opera’.” The principal is asking
Marcia, the demon-child, it she
made a mistake. She replies, "No
mistake, Mr. Grimmis . . . Business is slow, so we marked it

censors thought that one of the
show’s hit songs might corrupt
children The song was “Mack

The Council on Intercollegiate
Affairs will sponsor a Variety
Show Sunday, March 6, at 2 p.m.
at the State University College
at Buffalo, according to CIA member Peter E. Schwiner.

The chances are this will not
be the case with the UB production which runs February 24 to
February 27 and March 3 to
March 6. “The Threepenny
Opera,” which closed after its
2,611th performance as the longest-running musical in the history of the American theatre, has
a history of turning people away
at the door, people eager to pay
many times 2% pennies for admission.

SZO Speaker
History

professor Dr.

Iggers

discussed “Democratic and NonDemocratic Elements in Germany
Today” at a meeting of the Student Zionist Organization on
February 13.
Born
left the
turned
1961 on

in Germany, Dr. Iggers
country in 1938 and refor sixteen months in
a research grant.

In post war Germany, Dr. Iggers found what he described
as “the extermination of the German past, including fundamental
changes in the sociological structure.” He stated that there is
no danger of the rebirth of Naziism in Germany but expressed
concern over Germany’s role in
foreign affairs.
As evidence of the regression
of Naziism in Germany, Dr, Iggers cited a general recognition
of responsibility for the atrocities committed in World War
II. He explained that the older
and
generations, conservative
highly romantic about the past,
had attempted to bury Nazi history. When the younger generations matured, they began raising questions in public about the
extent of German responsibility
for the war. Their questions evoked “frantic debate” which led to
the national realization of responsibility and shame.

GRANNY and GRANDPA
EYEGLASSES
GOLDFILLED RIMS: ROUND, OVAL, RECTANGULAR,
OCTOGONAL, DIAMOND SHAPED

For RX or with sunglass lenses

tain information

Kalaidoscopa Players who will
appear in Dylan Thomas' Under
Milk Wood tonight at 8:30 in
the

Millard

Fillmore

Room.

Optically Correct Lenses

NEW

MAGIE
CONCENTRE'

at NF 4-0518

SPRAY

JlntroJiiclonj- Offer

GREEK NOTES

Kathy Kayson of Alpha Gamma Delta graduated magna cum
laude in history and economics.
Louise Liefer received the Best
Pledge award for Fall, 1965.

Oheri Sheuer is the candidate for
the Military Ball Queen.
Alpha Kappa Psi will hold a
closed rush stag at its Triple-S
apartment at 215 Highland Ave,
this evening.

Recognition will be given to
the 40% of Beta Sigma RHo who
achieved an average of 2.0 or
better. Richard Zachary will receive the semi-annual award
given for a 3.0 average. The
average index for the fraternity
was 1,7. The Grand Treasurer of
Beta Sig, National, will attend
Monday night’s meeting, French
football films will be presented
by Horn Day, honorary member.
This weekend there will be a
tobogganing party.

Chi Omega's pledge court will
be held Monday night.

The new officers of Gamma
Phi are: President, Paul Jenkins;
Vice- president, A1 Kahn; Corresponding and Recording Secretary, Dave Potter; IFC Representatives, George Cushing and Ken
Starobin. Tomorrow night, the
brothers will go tobogganing at
Chestnut Ridge.

While the Germans have begun
to understand their past, Dr.
Iggers continued, they are unwilling to understand issues involving foreign policy. He stated that “these issues are emotionalized and put in terms of
blac kand white as they are in
the United States.”

Ersing, Treasurer;

Ronald Lamb,

Clarinetist Performs At Temple
bers will perform works by BenHaim, Bernstein, Lavry and Weiner. This is the final event in the
Jewish Omnibus Series and is cosponsored by the Jewish Center
of Buffalo and the Bureau of Jewish Education.

from

Recording Secretary; David
Corresponding Secretary; George Weister, Assistant
Treasurer; Gary Mosher, Chap-

$5.00
V*lu«

Fleicher,

lain; and James Kowalski, Historian.
The newly elected officers of
Phi Epsilon Pi are: Superior,
Robert Fink; Vice Superior, Neil
Sapin; Treasurer, Alec Glasser;
Recording Secretary, Jeff R. Perchick; Corresponding Secretary,
Pat Morotta; and Members-atLarge, Stevie Ginsburg and Steve
B. Ronis. The rush dinner will
be held at the Executive Room
of the Prime Ribs Restaurant.
Phi Kappa Psi will hold a
Founder’s Day party, Saturday
night in respect of the founding
of the Fraternity on February 10,
1852. Ceremonies honoring the
founding will be held in the Fillmore Room at noon.
The Pledgemaster for the spring
semester of Phi Lambda Delta is
Lou Pompi; the assistant Pledgemaster is Tom Hammond, Sunday night, there will be a “Solemn Slumber” party.
Shelly Lacman was chosen
the Best Pledge of 1965 at the
Sigma Delta Tau initiation of
the fall pledge class. Mikal Lessner is SDT’s candidate for Military Ball Queen. The new officers
are:
Geri Gruson, President;
Judy Aroneck, First Vice President; Evelyn Damashek, Second
Vice President; Sue Schreiber,

Recording

Secretary;

Carolyn

Kazdin, Corresponding Secretary;
and Lorraine Weingrad, Treasurer.
At the initation of the sisters
of Sigma Kappa Phi, Sunday, the
following avyards were made:
Best Scrapbook, Eleanor Cantwell; Scholarship, Bobbi Law; and
Best Pledge, Jane Haas.

The annual Queen of Hearts
Ball will be held March 1 by
Sigma Phi Epsilon at the Camelot Motor Inn at 9 p.m. Those
interested should contact one of
the brothers. A beer party will
be held by the pledges in honor
of the brothers.
Tau Kappa Epsilon will hold
its bi-monthly semiformal affair
at the Seagram’s Tower at 6 p.m.
TKE will hold a ski party at the
estate of Frater Frank Scirto.

y

BUFFALO, N.Y. 14214

3077 MAIN STREET

Schwiner reported that the
program will consist of two hours
of entertainment by individual
students or groups of students
from seven local colleges. Participating schools are Canisius,
Bonaventure, Rosary Hill, D’Youville, the Diocesan Preparatory
Seminary, Buffalo State and the
University of Buffalo.
Each school will be alotted
time for two acts 7 to 8 minutes
each, or one act of 15 minutes,
or three acts of 5 minutes each,
Schwiner said.
It was disclosed that first prize
is $75,00, second prize is $50.00.
Two third prizes of $25.00 each
will be awarded. An independent
panel of judges will appraise the

or at 215 Norton.
The Council on Intercollegiate
Affairs was described as a panel
of representatives from each of
the seven schools.

/

E. P. LAUER, Optician

acts.
Closing dates for entrants is
Tuesday, March 1. Students interested in performing may ob-

Kappa Psi will hold an informal rush party this Monday at
the Club Bar, on Austin near
Grant, at 8 p.m. All students
seeking a degree in Pharmacy
are invited to attend the party.
For information call Lou at NX
2-0186. Recently elected officers
are: Louis Kudla, Regent; Gary
Reynolds, Vice-Regent; Richard

Professor Allen Sigel, clarinetist, will appear on Saturday, February 19th, at 8:30 p.m., at the
Jewish Center of Buffalo, 787
Delaware Avenue. Professor Sigel
will be accompanied by pianist
Carlo Pinto.
The two UB music faculty mem-

the Knife,*’ which went on to become one of the biggest recording
hits of all time.

Intercollegiate Variety Show
To Be Held At Buffalo State

down.”

There was a time when Germans had to stop going to see it,
because the Nazis thought its
story about corruption and crime
was too dangerous to allow people to hear. There was even a
time, years before the Marc Blitzstein adaptation opened, to take
New York by storm, when radio

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

$3°°

during introductory period

On* of th* world

I

I

*

molt eiquisit*

In a r*fill*bi*
bottle that it *n atomizer after us*!
You'll be proud to have this fluted
bottle topped by a brushed gold cap.
fragrance* now

com**

UNIVERSITY

BOOKSTORE

'ON CAMPUS'

�Friday, February 18, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

To any kid
who’d like to go somewhere:

Well pay half your fare.
Ihe idea’s not as crazy as it may seem
Anytime we take a jet up, there are almost
always leftover seats.
So it occurred to us that we might he able
to, (ill a few of them, if we gave the young
people a break on the fare, and a chance to
see the country.
The American Youth Flan*
We call the idea the American Youth Plan,
and what it means is this:
American will pay half the jet coach fare
for anybody 12 through 21.
It's that simple.
All von have to do is prove your age (a birth
certificate or any other legal document will do)
and hnv a S3 identification card.
We date and stamp the card, and this entitles von to a half-lare ticket at anv American
Airlines counter.
The on I catch is that you mijiht have to
wait before you get aboard; tbe fare is on a

round except for a few days before and after
the Easter, Thanksgiving and Christmas
rushes.
If you can’t think of any places you’d like
to go offhand, you might see a travel agent
for a few suggestions.

We can’t add anything else.
Other than it’s a marvelous opportunity
to just lake off.
Complete this coupon —include your $3.
(Do not send proof of age—it is not needed
until you have your ID validated.)
In addition to your ID card, we’ll also send
you a free copy of AA’s Go Go American
with $50 worth of discount coupons.

American Airlines Youth Plan
633 Third Avenue
New York, N.Y 10017
Name

\

basis.
"Standby” simply

standby

that tbe passengers with reservations and the servicemen
jret on before you do.
Then the plane's yours.
The American Youth Plan is good year
means

Addresi
City

State

Birth date,

Signature

Color of hair,

.Color of eves.

American Airlines
•DOES

NOT apply IN CANADA AND MEXICO.

.Zip

1

�Friday, February 18, 1966

PAGE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

OFFICIAL BULLETIN
GENERAL NOTICES
Make-Up Examinations
applications for make-up examinations for the removal of incomplete grades (recorded for absence from final exams) must be
filed in the Office of Admissions
and Records, 201 Hayes Hall no
later than March 4, 1966. Makeup examinations will be given
the week of April 11, 1966.
Graduate School Calendar
Today, February 18, 1966 is the
last day to resign from a course
without penalty.
University College students
(EXCEPT THOSE ON STRICT
regACADEMIC PROBATION)
istration for next semester, September 1966, will begin Monday,
March 7. Students whose last
names begin with the letters designated below will see their advisers, plan their programs and
register for courses on the fol—

—

—

—

CLASSIFIED
FOR SALE

65 Chevy Impala SS, white with
red interior, power steering,

R&amp;H. Must sell! Call Ron TR 5-

6009 or 831-3610.

65 Yamaha 80ce Excellent condition. Call Ron' 831-3610.
Skis. $25, Northland, double safety release binding, poles. Very
good condition. Call Louise TF 44982 after 6.
Gibson folk guitar J45, case included. Also autoharp. Call
836-4703 after 6
57 Chevy hardtop 4-door sedan,
2 new tires, heavy duty suspension, must sacrifice. $250.00.
Call 873-4298.
VW 1962. Red, sun roof, reason
able. Call 683-0532.
Ranch style house. Living room,
dining, 2 bedrooms, kitchen,
bathroom, attached 2-car garage,
large yard. Newly redecorated,
Call 839-

(assumable mortgage).

1834.
Two guitars, Goya and Giannini,
nylon strings, classic neck, case
included. Also, RCA portable
cartridge Tape Recorder, two
speed, 4 track, includes several
tapes and adapter tapes. Contact
Dick, 837-9568.
WANTED:

Drummer for well established GoGo band. Call 674-7600 after 3
p.m.

Men for part time sales display
work $57.75. Car necessary.
Call TX 3-4657 after 5.
ROOM FOR RENT;

Room, board and laundry for male
student. About ten minutes
from campus by car. Call TX 55106.
LOST AND FOUND:

Reward for return of maroon ski
parka “borrowed” at beer blast
February 4. Call 649-1772.
Thanks for borrowing my light
tan raincoat after the WE TRY
HARDER BLAST. How about returning my keys! Bob 834-8693.
OPPORTUNITIES

Attention! Sororities and Fraternities: Looking for a wild new
rock n’ roll band for parties or
dances? Call 662-7456 for appointment

Class of 1968
CANISIUS COLLEGE
presents

The Mixer of the Year
WILMER

starring
&amp; THE
DUKES

Canisius College
Student Union

Feb 21 8-12 p.m.
Refreshments &amp; Beer
Admission: $1.00

lowing days. This schedule does
not include Nursing Students who
are advised and registered
through the School of Nursing.
March 7 through March 11—

K, L, O

March 14 through March 18—

R. C, J
March 28 through April 1
H, A. N, E, Z
April 4 through April 8
S,. Y, Q, X
April 11 through April 15
M, T, U, V
April 18 through April 22

FEBRUARY 21-23
Peace Corps Film
“A Choice
I Made,” Conference Theater,
Norton Hall, 11 a.m., 1 and 2 p.m.

Saturday, February 26, 1966

—

P I
April 25 through April 29
W, D
May 2 through May 6
B, F
Students will make appointments with the University College Receptionist in Diefendorf
No. 114 one week in advance of
the above scheduled times beginning Monday, February 28. At this
time the Receptionist will give
the student registration cards and
a list of instructions to follow in
the subsequent procedures.
P. T. students will make appointments with Miss Heap, 264
Winspear, directly.
Students who do not make their
appointments at the scheduled
times, or who do not keep them
when made, will be required to
register in Clark Gym on Registration Day, Thursday, SeptemG,

—

FREE BUSES LEAVING NORTON AT 8:45 P.M.
Refreshment*
2 Free Drink*
Music by KEN PUMPI
—

—

Free to All Member of Hillel

ber 8.

Strict Academic
Probation will not be permitted
to advance register during the
scheduled times. If the Quality
Point Average of these students
improves to such a degree that
they become eligible to continue
in school, they will be informed
in June, after semester grades
are in, concerning later registration dates. Students on strict
academic probation, are strongly
urged to see their advisers to discuss their present situation and
possible ways of improving it,
e.g. change of major, improved
study habits, adjustments to and
motivation for college and any
other problems. It would be helpful if these students could make
an appointment during the alphabetically scheduled times, but, if
the problem is pressing, they can
make an appointment at any time.
on

FEBRUARY 25
Biology Seminar
featuring
Dr. John F. Stogg, Associate Professor of Biology whose topic is
“Ecological Problems of the Bahama Reef Area,” 134 Health
Sciences, 4 p.m.
Seminar in Engineering Sciences
features Dr. Ronald A.
Gellatly, Structures Research Engineer, Bell Aerospace Corporation. The topic is “Large Scale
Design Optimization of Aerospace Vehicle Structures,” 104
Parker Engineering, 4 p.m., preceded by a social hour in 128
Parker Engineering, 3 p.m.
—

—

PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS
Please contact the University
Placement Service, Schoellkopf
Hall, telephone 831-3311 for additional information.
FEBRUARY 21

California State Government
Pratt &amp; Whitney Aircraft

DEADLINE: FEBRUARY 25th

College Week In

Bermuda

gineering.
Peace Corps Panel Discussion—

Fillmore Room, Norton Hall, 3 p.m.

9 to!

50 Alberta Drive
Temple Sinei
(Only 2 minutes from Allenhurst)

—

FEBRUARY 23
The Department of Chemical
Engineering
presents an illustrated lecture by Dr. Julian
Szekely, of the Department of
Metallurgy, Imperial College of
Science and Technology, London,
England. The presentation is at
4 p.m. and is preceded by coffee at 3:30 p.m., 104 Parker En-

—

—

—

—

—

Students

Hillel s Annual South Sea Island Party

Spring Vacation (March 19-26)

8 Days and 7 Nights including below:
if Round Trip Jet Flight on Eastern Airlines from Buffalo and
New York
if Round Trip Cab Transfer from Airport to Accommodations
Hotel (Carlton Beach, Guest House,
if Accommodations
—

Cottage, or

Apartment

if Two Meals Each Day with Hotel Accommodations
� Full College Week Program of Activities
BEACH PARTY —COLLEGE QUEEN CONTEST
TALENT SHOW &amp; MUCH MORE

—

Complete for
$165 FROM NEW YORK CITY
$185 FROM BUFFALO

Guest House Cottage and Apartment Accommodations

$240 FROM NEW YORK CITY
$260 FROM BUFFALO
Hotel Accommodations

con'

aC'

DONALD MATHISON
837-5964

3876 Bailey Ave.

—

Representative of Garber’s Travel Agency

FEBRUARY 21, 22

The Dow Chemical Co.
Co.
Parke, Davis
&amp;

FEBRUARY 22
Union Carbide Corp.

—

Linde Division
The Trane Co.

FEBRUARY 23
Mutual of New York

Phoenix of Hartford
City Products Corp.
Navy Dept,
—

Bureau of Yards and Docks
Somers Central School
District No. 1
Little Lake Central School
District No 9 (California)
FEBRUARY

24

Humble Oil Refining Co
Brockway Glass Co,, Inc.
Kemper Insurance
U. S. Geological Survey
Water Resources Division
Ashland Oil &amp; Refining Co.
Chenango Forks Central Schools
&amp;

WEEKLY CALENDAR
The Department of Medicinal
Chemistry, School of Pharmacypresents a Seminar. The topic is
‘The Effects of Concentrated Urea
Solutions on Proteins; Application in Enzyme Studies,” 244
Health Sciences, 4:30 p.m.

FEBRUARY 21-MARCH 1
Peace Corps Recruiting—Room
234, Norton Hall.

—

FEBRUARY 2S

Dow Corning Corp.
Graphic Controls Corp
General Foods Corp.
Moog, Inc

Draft Card Burning
(Cont’d from Pg. 3)
must be willing to suffer for our
beliefs. We cannot equivicate in

and inhumanity, and may help
the establishment of a new society based on principles of love.

the face of the present world
situation. We cannot register opposition to violence and war unless we are willing to take the
risks comparable to those asked
of soldiers.

“I don’t want to see my children and yours grow up in a
world where at a young age, a gun
is put in their hands and they are
told to kill an enemy they don’t
even know.”

‘Thus I have
action

Mr. Draper has been visited by
the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and is awaiting further action on the part of the govern-

committed this

“A man must not accept without question the orders and dictates of any establishment. We
must make our own decisions
based on morality. And if these
decisions come in conflict with
the structures and laws which
exist, we must fight and dis-

obey

them.

“It is my hope that what I am
doing may in some small measure
have an effect on those who tell
us that we must take the life of
our brother to protect our own,
that it may in some small way aid
the abolition of world insanity

ment.

IMPORTANT

FOOTNOTE
Don't fail to study the newest develop
ments in footgear at the Establishment
Classics are stressed, but some of the more

advanced offerings are also well-favored.

The third University of
Buffalo Trivia Tournament sponsored by WBFO will be held Monday,
February 21 at 7 p.m. in
the Fillmore Room. The
undefeated Skansks will
meet Alpha Epsilon Phi
and Alpha Kappa Psi
fraternities.

CRUISE

Cordovan Bluchar
Wing Tip "Tailor Made"

$32.95

$23.95

(Etje Campua Comer
326}
. . .

Maim Shut
appviif U B.

�S?BiLS5fl2

Musical
Group,
New
Uncalled
Four/
M Gherman
Provides Entertainment For Activities

Even though he is only in his mid-thirties, Jean-Luc
ten feature length films to date,
must be ranged alongside men like Griffith, Eisenstein,
Dryer, Gance, Murneau, Welles, as one of the cinematic
giants—men who have extended the genre of film. I’ll
go farther—way' out on that proverbial limb—and say
that Godard’s place as one of the great creative geniuses
of our century is virtually assured.
Sound about the
Peter Brook, writing in Sight
non-localized stage, says of Shakespeare: “He could conjure up images such that, if you could chop open the
head of anybody watching his play and pull out the impression from his brain matter, you’d get something
more like a Rauschenberg than anything else . . . The
non-localized stage means that everything\under the sun
is possible: a man can turn into twins, cruingp sex, be
his past, present, future, be a comic version of himself,
and be none of them, all at the same time.” Brook might
just as easily have said that about the films of Godard.
And if it seems inappropriate to invoke the name of
Shakespeare in relation to Godard, it is only because
Godard has been so misunderstood by the critics that we
tend to think of him more as a kind of fringe pop-artist
than anything else.
Godard is the only director who is able to fluctuate
between styles and conventions as deftly as the mental
processes inside a person’s head. He is the only director
who can capture some of the mobility of thought found in
Shakespeare. He does this by attacking the filmic consistency of each cinematic image. In Bande A Part for
example, Godard’s best film, he liberates the frame of
the film from itself so that at one moment you are looking at a kind of photograph, then at several people, then
you are half alienated, then three quarters alienated,
fully alienated, then you are watching it as a film, then
as something made by Godard the conscious film maker,
then you see it as being acted by actors, then suddenly
you are caught up again and find yourself believing it
as a reality in itself. It is the same type of changing relationship one finds in Shakespeare.
At UB this week, the film committee is presenting
/
A Bout de Souffle, Godard’s first film—the film which
catagulted both he and Jean-Paul Belmondo into the
public eye. La Femme Mariee, now showing at the CircleArt, is a film he made five years later in 1D64. Most
critics both in the U. S. and abroad have acclaimed La
Femme Mariee as a masterpiece. I would disagree. The
film is second-rate Godard; he made the film in three
weeks, motivated by an unfavorable reaction to Truffaut's La Peau Douce which treated a similar theme. But
judged by comparison with the work of most contemporary directors it is indeed a masterpiece.
I could go on to explicate the film—discuss things
like Godard's exploration of cinematic parataxis, the
integration of (he music with the cynical structure of the
film—-but explication does not equal evaluation (the
trap into which the auteur critics fall), so I’ll conclude
by stating that there is precious little difference between
philistinism and a person who claims to be interested in
the arts and who is asleep to the continuing development
and achievement of Jean Luc Godard.
Godard, who has made

&amp;

You can count on the fingers of one hand the film
critics in the U. S. and Great Britain who are worth
reading. Pauline Kael is one of them. Her book, 1 Lost
It at the Movies, a collection of her film criticism over
the last decade, is finally available in paperback. It is,
as the publishers claim it is, the best collected film criticism since the work of James Agee.
I recommend it highly in spite of the fact that Miss
Kael and I disagree, sometimes violently, on many films.
She is always intelligent, always engaging. And most of
the time strongly partisan and biting in the tradition
of an Eighteenth Century literary bitch. Her essay on
“Hud, Deep in the Heart of Divided Hollywood" and
her definitive put-down of Andrew Sarris, auteur critics,
and the "new American cinema" are alone worth the
price of the book. She’s infuriatingly wrong on, for example, Billy Wilder. Fellini, and Westerns in general,
but anyone who dislikes Sarris that much can’t be all
bad.

here

Some suggestions

Friday, February 18, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

for the student film committee

'If you, check the catalogues of Contemporary Films,
Brandon Films, and other distrbutors, you'll find many
films previously unavailable, now available in both 16
and 85 mm.
laude Chabrols Les Cousins for example, which
Miss Kael calls the first and still one of the best of the
French nouvelle vague films. Or Ride the High Country,
a Western by Sam Peckinpah, one of America’s best
young film makers, which both Film Quarterly and Sight
&amp; Sound
called the best American film of 1962 bar
none.
Or Aldrich’s Ki»» Me Deadly, the best murder mystery since The Big Sleep. Or Rope, Hitchcock’s most experimental film. Or Welles' Lady From Shanghai, his
baroque masterpiece with the fantastic “hall of mirrors”
ending Or Bunuel’s surrealistic Un Chien Andalou and
Lot Olvidadoi.
(

—

A symbol of university life has
arisen on this campus during the
past few months. A new musical
group, composed of five UB students, has become much in demand, yet remains quite Uncalled
Four. Since its inception in November, the group has provided
the rhythmic impetus for fraternity blasts and parties, Tower
and Goodyear dances, and local
night clubs.
Jeff Lesser, a drama major
from Manhattan, graduated from
the High School of Music and
Art. Before becoming the lead
singer for the Uncalled Four, he
sang and played the harmonica
with a jug band and appeared in
the campus production of the
Fantasticks. His comical exhuberance establishes the group’s raport with the audience.
Bob Van Slyke, a junior in the
School of Pharmacy, is from Warsaw, N, Y. and has his musical
roots in the country and western
field. Last year he performed with
the UB Blues and his own rock
and roll group, the Dutchmen, In
addition to playing rhythm guitar,
Bob’s ranging tenor voice provides the basis for a solid vocal

background.

Bob Case from Franklinville,
N. Y., who was instrumental in
forming the group, is the only
member whose background lies
solidly in the field of rock and
roll. He has ben playing guitar
for six years and is largely selftaught. Last year he played in
two campus groups, the Four X’s
and the Dutchmen. Bob plays
lead guitar and also provides
vocal background.
George Levinton and Dave Gittler, the newest member of the
group, attended the same high
school in Rockville Centre, N. Y.
and both bring jazz backgrounds
to the group, George has been
playing drums for seven years
and has had extensive experience
in both jazz and rock groups
throughout high school. Last year
he was a member of the Four X’s.
Dave, who began studying piano

on his own eight years ago, has
been involved primarily in the
jazz field during the past three
years. In previous semesters, he
has been seen on campus as a
soloist and in small jazz combos.
Upon joining the Uncalled Four
he switched to electronic organ.
The group, under the management of Jay Nisberg, a UB soph-

KLEINHANS
MUSIC HALL

omore, will be appearing in the
near future on campus, at Buffalo
State, Baldwin-Wallace College in

Cleveland, Ohio, and at Cornell
University.

Make it a

DATE!

NEW
CHRISTY
MINSTRELS

NORTEL

THE BIG SOUND

BAR and LOUNGE

SUN., FEB. 27
8:30 PM

732 HERTEL AVE.

Tickets:

NORTON UNION
TICKET OFFICE
ADM; Orel); 4.50, 3.75, 3.00

Bal.: 4.00, 3:25, 2.50

at the

(near

Elmwood)

Popular Prices
Excellent Food

Dance Every Saturday
Night to music by

The MELODEERS

�18, 1966

at 11

a.m. and 5 p.m. and at Saint
Joseph’s Church at noon. Newman
Discussion Classes are held Tuesday and Thursday at 9 and 10
a m. This week the Sunday Night
Supper will be held at the Hillel

IVCF

The Regional Winter Conference of the Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship will be held at

Houghton College, February 18

and

19. Winter sports facilities

House at 6 p.m. instead of Newman Hall.

are available. Discussion groups
will center on the topic, “Is God

HILLEL

Dead?” Bible studies meet each
Monday at 3 p.m. and Thursday
at 11 a.m.; prayer meetings are
held Wednesday at 1 p.m. and
Tuesday at 10 a.m. An open discussion group meet Friday at
3 p.m,, all in Norton, Room 217.

Hillel will sponsor a Sabbath
Service this evening at 7:45 p.m.
in the Hillel House. Dr. Justin
Hofmann will speak on: “Principles of the Jewish Calendar,”
Hillel will hold a Delicatessen
Supper on February 20 with the
Newman Club in the Hillel House.
The Graduate Club will hold a
Mixer and dance on Sunday, February 20 in Norton.
GAMMA DELTA
Gamma Delta will go tobogganing at Chestnut Ridge Park,
Sunday, February 20 at 11 a.m.
In case of bad weather there will
be skating and bowling at Leisureland in Hamburg, The next
meeting of Gamma Delta will be
Wednesday, February 23 in Room
344 Norton.

NEWMAN
Dr, Raymond Ewell will speak
on “The World Population
(A Food) Problem” at 7:30 in 329
Norton, Wednesday, February 23,
sponsored by Newman. The Newman Educational Weekend will
be held in Ithaca, February 25
through 27. Lenten Masses will
be offered at Newman Hall daily

CRO

The Council of Religious Organizations will meet Tuesday,
February 22 at 3 p.m. in Norton
217, Advisors of all religious organizations on campus are asked
to attend this meeting. Plans for
next year’s activities will be discussed.

I

II

EXCLUSIVE BUFFALO SHOWING
FREE PARKING n««t to LIMrty
Bank. A half block from the theatre.

|

|orthPari!!§
1
Bj«MM4iniEIITEI. AVE.* TF6-74II

ExtendedPremiere Engagement!

Student Discounts

|

r

PAGE NINE

SPECTRUM

Both Theatres

-

m

y. Times

\

1

GO-GO McVAN’S

Long Winter Void' Filled Saturday
By Cambridge and Hester In Concert
By LEON LEWIS
Last Saturday night, the IFC
made a fine effort to fill the
long winter void with a gener-

ally entertaining (and commercially successful) program in
Clark Gym. The old building,
reeking with noxious vapors and
the ghosts of a thousand athletic
contests, didn’t dampen the en-

thusiasm of the audience—which
seemed awfully anxious to like
the performers
or of Carolyn
Hester and Godfrey Cambridge,
both competent professionals who
would probably do their best anywhere.
Carol Hester is a folk singer
from Southwest Texas, young,
pretty and stylish in a kind of
mod way that identifies her directly with the sixties. The social stances of her songs are im—

mediately recognizable and contemporary, but there is something about her singing that has
its roots in the red clay country
of an earlier America, She is free
and easy in her singing and her
manner, and when she talks, she
is a girl at home with the hard,

frenetic pace of life in anonymous urban sprawls on both
coasts. But her songs ring hauntingly with the sound of a slower,

softer time, and their mood and
tone is more the blue of intimate personal experience and
tragedy than the familiar gray
shades of a society struggling
for a face, a posture or a distinguishing gesture.
But I heard these things in a
promise that remained unfulfilled. Miss Hester has some-,
thing to say, and the intelligence
to say it in her songs, but she is
severly handicapped, I felt, by
what is, simply, inadequate vocal
equipment. The range of her
voice, her obvious musical dex-

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Photo by Michael

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BREATHLESS

Soluri

Mr. Cambridge might have been
even funnier (he is a comic; he
presents himself as a humorist
even if he is more than this too)
if he had discussed some of his
subjects without any regard for
the constraints that a “collegiate”
performance might suggest.
There were times that more corrosive commentary an honest
expression of justifiable bitterness or gall, seemed necessary.
Mr. Cambridge, a Negro, does
not use racial humor as his special bag, but he is undeniably
“good” at it and uses it with
very telling effect. And, let's
face it, we all respond to it for
one reason or another (no sociology here). However, Mr. Cambridge describes himself primarily as an individual fighting for
some sense of personal integrity
and dignity in a crushing, corporate world. He puts down everything that bugs him. and this
includes both sides of the NegroWhite question. He is a black
man in a white world and very
aware of it, but his outlook is
ironic, not bitter or dispairing.
He is able to recognize and delineate the special foibles and follies of nearly everybody. When
he is at his best, he is dealing
with human comedy, not racial
comedy, and he has a special
poignancc about him, for his
performance and his commitment to it suggest that his act
is his life.

//V?

/

&amp;

International Club will present
movies on Malaysia at its next

meeting on Thursday, February
24 at 7:30 p.m. in Norton 340.
Everyone is welcome.
Students tor the US in Vietnam
will hold a meeting on Monday.
February 21 at 4:30 p m. in Norton 240-242.
Anthropology Club will hold a
general business meeting on Wednesday, February 23 at 7:30 p.m.
in the new archaeology lab, 3230
Main Street.
The Photo Club will not meet
on Friday, February 18.

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teller, social satirist and mime
from New York City. Scheduling
him and Miss Hester on the same
program was a brilliant idea.
Their very dissimilarity makes
each one of them more interesting in contrast with the other.
There was no sense of destructive competition between them,
just the feeling that they were
both actors on the same stage
—different parts of the same

v

****�«»*«* «&lt;***»****«*****

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the insights of experience, but
singing on an instrument that
does not, finally, match the performance to the possibility that
we saw and felt in the performer.
Godfrey Cambridge is a story-

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shore up the facade, but the
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the sonority or depth that a singer needs to ultimately infuse a
new, vibrant and vital quality
into a song. We hear her singing
in the vanguard of a rich and
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DELL-VIKINGS
TONY ODDI

Photo by

Very few people cart be interesting for an hour of consecutive conversation, but I thought
that Mr. Cambridge managed it.
In addition, he was genuinely
amusing much of the time and
on occasion, really hilarious.
One’s sense of humor is, I think,
almost the most completely personal of one’s tastes, but I felt

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—

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�Friday, February 18, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACE TEN

UB Cagers Host Albany
Five Seniors In Clark Finale
By MIKE DOLAN

As

UB’s Varsity basketball
team takes the floor in C 1 a rk
Gym against Albany State tomorrow, it will be for the last
time in the collegiate careers of
five seniors. UB’s last Clark
Gym game of the season will be
the first contest there since the

Plattsburgh victory on January
28
Seniors Harvey Poe, Norward

Goodwin, Bill

Barth, Jim Bevilac-

qua and Dick Smith seek to make
a repeat performance of defeating Albany State. In Albany’s
Washington St. Armory on December 11, the Bulls impressed
Capitol District fans with an BO66 victory. The Danes have compiled a 10-6 log so far this season.

one-sided triumph over Buffalo
State last year with 24 points,
and pacing the Bulls to a 73-70
upset of Akron this year with 29.
a career high.
Barth, the 6-S eentef' from Fre-'

The UB freshman basketball team will meet
the St. Bona, freshmen,
led by high-scoring John
Hayes, in a 6:30 preliminary game.

donia, is averaging 14 a game in
both the scoring and rebounding
departments. Barth will best be
remembered for his remarkable

improvement during his stay at

UB. Last year he blossomed into
a star on the UB tourney team
which won 14 straight. His dunk
shot against Niagara last year
will best be remembered by his
fans. This year he has developed
into the team’s steadiest performer.
After a disappointing junior
year, Goodwin has regained his
sparkling form of two years ago
and is averaging 12 points a game
this season. “Goodie,” from Erie,
Pa., has enjoyed many a hot
streak against his opponents, but
his best game was probably in a
losing cause to LeMoyne in his
sophomore year when he scored

24 in vain in an incredible shooting exhibition.

Bevilacqua, better known as
“Bevo,” is the only Buffalo boy
among the five. Averaging over
four points a game, Bevo has been
fifth or sixth man most of the
season. His great driving ability,
aggressiveness and hustle have
made him a valuable asset to the
team.

Smith, a 6-4 senior from Spencerport, has seen limited action
this season. In his appearances,
he has performed as a capable
reserve in spelling a weary

,di
NORWOOD GOODWIN

starter.

The five seniors have given UB
many bright moments in their

Varsity careers.

Poe, from West Orange, N. J.,
is the team’s leading scorer and
offensive sparkplug with his
sparkling play and ball handling.
His most memorable performances came in leading UB to a

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HARVEY POE

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Start it up and you’ve tuned in on 396 cubic inches of
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Get it moving and suddenly you’re a driver again. With
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Now take a curve, surrounded by a machine that
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�Friday, February 18, 1966

PAGE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

Wrestlers Drop 2

1NTBAHUBALS

The Results

By BOB FREY

The UB wrestling team had
its worst weekend of the current
season by losing to Cortland
State Friday night, 36-2, at Cortland, and then journeying to
Ithaca and losing, 28-5, thereby.
returning with a 2-4-1 record.
Both Cortland State and Ithaca have very strong teams and
the UB matmen were battling
without four of their regulars.
Bill Miner, last years 4-1 champ,
who is capable of wrestling three
weight classes (130, 137, 145) is
out for the remainder of the
season with an ankle injury.
John Misener, a promising
sophomore, was out of the line-

up due to a broken hand, and
John Cunningham (130) and Tom
Pettit (Hwt) were absent due to
personal reasons.
However, there was one particular bright spot this weekend.
Gary Fowler, UB’s 123-pounder,
remained undefeated as he was
held to a draw at Cortland State
and pinned his opponent at Ithaca. His record is an impressive
6-0-1.
The Baby Bulls evened their
record at 2-2 by defeating Ithaca 21-16, and bowing to Cortland State 27-6. In commenting
on the disasterous road trip,
Coach La Rocque had this to
say about his game, but outclassed matmen: “The boys gave
100% effort and that’s all any
coach can ask.”
On Wednesday, the matmen
hosted Alfred in Clark Gym at 8
pom. The Freshman match was
cancelled due to an injurystricken Alfred squad. W. Ontario invades Clark Gym tomorrow at 2 p.m.

By STEVE FARBMAN
The fraternity bowling league
123 Fowler (UB) and Prato was tightened considerably last
drew; 130—Desaro (C) won by Wednesday when Alpha Kappa
forfeit: 137—Rose p. Gullia (UB); Psi stunned AEPi, 3-1, to hand
the league leaders their first
145—Bundy (C) won by forfeit;
152—Wallace (C) d. Cushing; team loss of the season. Led by
160—Soca (C) p. Heidt; 167— a sizzling 610 series by Len KwiaConnors (C) p. Burr; 177—Felser tkowski, who sports the league’s
(C) d. Keller; Hwt.—Camilio (C) high individual average, AKPsi
copped the pivotal third game
d. Stiglitz.
by 80 pins to remove any doubt
as' to the verdict of the match.
ITHACA 28—UB 5
Two games now separate AKPsi,
123—Fowler (UB) p. Samter; Phi Ep, and SAM for second
130—Allen (I) won by forfeit; 137 place in the league.
—Franeiamone (I) d. Gullia; 145
—SacChi (I) won by forfeit; 152
The basketball league was re—Turco (I) d. Cushing; 160—Ma- latively quiet last week. In the
digan (I) d. Heidt; 167—Peirano 8:30 Monday Independent Lea(I) d. Burr; 177—Foote (I) d. gue, both the Second and Eighth
Floors Tower won their games,
Keller; Hwt
Juglino (I) d, thereby lifting
their respective
Stightz.
records to 5-0 and 4-1. In the

Cortland 36— UB 2

—

—

Swimmers Down
Oswego, 76-19
The UB swimming team upped
its record to 6-4 with a 76-19
drowning of Oswego State at the
losers’ pool Saturday.
Roy Troppman shattered the
pool record for the 200-freestyle
with a 1:55.2 clocking; Troppman
also captured a first in the 500freestyle with a 5:29.8 timing.

Other standout performances
included Chuck Zetterberg’s victory in the 200-backstroke, Mike
Conroy’s triumph in the 200-individual medley, Craig Hoffman’s
first place in the 200-backstroke
and Howard Braun’s win in the
200-breaststroke.

The Bulls were also triumphant
in the 400-freestyle relay and the

400-medley relay.
Diving ace Rick Rebo rewrote
his own UB record by accumulating 203.6 points off the spring-

board.

UB will travel to Rochester tomorrow to meet the University
of Rochester mermen.
—I
*

’

11

mhn

'

MB

v.

.

*

_('■&lt;'.

_

II

on Monday, February 21.

ACU TOURNAMENT

The

The individual winners of the
'handball tournament were reported last week. The team winners are as follows:
1. AEPi

Competition will include men’s
and women’s bowling, table tennis, pocket billiards, three-cushion billiards and chess. An Awards
Banquet will be held in the Fillmore Room on Saturday at 4 p.m.

All entries for the next event,
Racquets, must be handed in today to the Intramural
office. Competition will be in
singles play only. Each organization may enter a team of 8 in-

from Pg

.

of College
Intercollegiate

Saturday.

Paddle

(Cont'd

II.

Recreation Tournament will be
held in Norton Hall today and

2. Sig Ep
3. SAM
4. Phi Ep

BULL PEN

Association

Unions, Region

Spectators

.

are welcome.

.

12)

didn’t feel there was a real turning point; we just hung in there
and didn’t lose our heads.”
Gracious as always to his opponents, Mancuso added, "I thought
Poe was fabulous. He’s so smooth. Last year when we played, I
didn’t think very highly of Harvey’s tactics. I mean it’s all right to
be psyched up and all, but there’s a limit to everything. This year
I was very impressed with his behavior. He has matured a lot, I
mentioned in my column in the State paper before the game that
Poe was one of the finest basketball players I had ever played against.
His playing was as great as ever—he has a really pretty shot and
moves too, and he was all over me on defense. But his behavior as
an individual is what really impressed me. I might have even gotten
slugged by some crazy fan in that brawl if Harvey hadn’t warned me.”

Mancuso continued, “That Thomas is something, too. I don’t
believe how fast he is. You can’t keep up with him. And that shot
he made to put UB ahead—I though it was from midcourt!”

MacAdam later said, “Yes, I remember him saying that I was
using unethical tactics during the first half. It really surprised me
because anybody that’s seen State play in recent years couldn't possibly say such a thing. Although Coach Scrfustini never specified
what he meant, the only thing I could figure it referring to was the
boardplay of Charlie Davis. Naturally when a bigger man and a
smaller man go up on the boards, the bigger has the advantage. In
the past, UB has always been the physically stronger team and our
State boys were always knocked all over the floor. I never heard
any complaints then.”

I

-

found themselves in sole possession of the top spot by beating
their opponents, 30-22. The games
which were postponed from Jan.
31 will be played on Monday.

Another noteworthy incident revolves itself around UB’s ubiquitous coach, Dr. Leonard Serfustini. Obviously upset by the progress
of the game, UB’s ambassador of good will continued his seemingly
endless quest in winning friends and influencing people by accusing
opposing coach MacAdam of using unethical tactics in the first
half.

+

iss
SssssaSM&amp;SaigaBi

'

dividuals. Matches will be held
on Mon., Tues., and Thurs. afternoons at 4:00; 4:45; and 5:30
p.m. The tournament will begin

League, the undefeated
Avengers and Blueballers met in
a head-on clash for first place.
At the buzzer, the Avengers

9:30

*

Davis certainly is a big, mean, unfriendly, aggressive and rough

r

cuse MacAdam of telling his players to use unethical tactics seems
absurd. Except for Davis and Richie Dcgnan, there is nobody on the
State roster that could be considered "big." And it would be a brilliant move on MacAdam’s part to tell Mancuso or Bluman to get
“unethical” on the boards against the likes of Artie Walker or Jim
Bevilacqua. State’s starting guards would have been in an ambulance before you could say “Jump ball.”

YOU MEAN YOU REFUSE TO SELL

us/imimS. Blazer SfvrjGdats
JUST BECAUSE MERE SQUARE ?

Mancuso probably explains Davis’ individual actions best.
Charlie’s just a big, rough, clumsy kid, whether it’s in practice or
agame. During practices this season he has already given Joe LoTempio a black eye, Duric Burns a split lip, Richie Dcgnan a cut
eye, and he almost killed Urby (Mike Urbanski) and me on a couple
of occasions I’m sure he wouldn't intentionally want to injure any
of his teammates. He’s just big and rough."

E®||e1

wt

flifxfl
mm

%•

“As far as Serf's actions go," the outspoken Mancuso said," I
though they were disgusting. After he accused my coach of using
unethical practices at halftime, MacAdam tried to shake hands with
him after the game. My coach said, ‘Len, remember, you started
this. There was nothing unethical about what we did.'

Martha m.

”

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Mancuso, a popular figure at State, went on, “After telling me
how well I played while MacAdam was trying to get his attention.
Serf went on to congratulate Kozen, Bluman and Saunders, but he
refused to talk to MacAdam, who was following him around. It was
the poorest display of sportsmanship I have ever seen."

H.I.5.
Polka Dot

",
&amp;

The highly respected State senior concluded, "I can respect Serf
for what he does for the team at UB as a coach, but when I see what
he does to my coach, how can I respect him as a man?"

Modnik"
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Coach MacAdam was somewhat kinder to Serf regarding the
incident. “There’s no problem," MacAdam said with an audible
chuckle, “I don't really remember what happened. Certainly nobody likes to lose, but at times Coach Serfustini seems to forget
that the other guy doesn't either. As far as shaking hands goes.
Coach Serfustini congratulated both me and my players, although
I’m not sure of the sequence of events."

Apparently the sweet taste of victory makes the milk of human
kindness flow eternal.

�Friday, February 18, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

•|

¥

==&lt;■

Urich New Coach

By STEVE SCHUELE1N

Urich, 37, assist-

Richard
Begin with two confused zebras. Combine a determined underdog with a cold-handed favorite. Add a wild melee involving a
couple dozen players. Blend in 2,800 screaming, hysteric fans. Simmer in a hot headed coach for extra flavor, and you have all the
ingredients for the wildest, woolliest UB-Buffalo Stale donnyhrook
in the history of the two institutions.
The Aud fiasco, in which the Elmwood Avenue underdogs
pulled out a hard-fought 73:68 .decision, last Thursday, must be
considered one of the relics of the 31-game scries. An offnight by
all of UB’s outside shooters except Harvey Poe was a major factor
in the defeat, but the gritty Orangemen deserve most of the credit.
A tenacious zone defense, which forced the Bulls to gun from the
outside, and the sparkling play of guards Charlie Mancuso and
Benjy Bluman were the keys in making the State victory, its fifth
in the 31-game series, a reality.
State Coach Howie MacAdam was ecstatic after the win. “It
was definitely our best name of the year,” the State mentor said,
“in fact it's probably the best effort I’ve been associated with at
Buffalo State. We’re thinking in terms of a tournament bid now.
UB’s been invited so often in the past. I hope we’re considered this

ant fdotbalT coach at Notre Dame,
was named head coach at the
University of 'Buffalo on Thurs,,
February 17. He will succeed Dick
Offenhamer who resigned last

referees attempted to restore peace while hordes of frenzied fans
made their way to ringside.
Finally the players were separated and the fans were coaxed
back to the scats without, miraculous as il may seem, any damage
being done. Vie Hadfield andTeddy &lt;jreen should have it so good.
Then the zebras, technically referees, look over the spotlight.
It was their unenviable duty to dictate the terms of the peace treaty.
With the score 70-67 in State's favor and only seconds remaining to
be played, neither team was ready to accept the short end of a
decision. Bernard and Davis were to be banished—that was obvious. The zebras managed to make that move without too much confusion, but then they reverted to earlier form of baffling both coaches

and the fans with indecisive calls.
Coaches MacAdam and Serfuslini, trying lo discover what the
gestures and the shrugs of the zebras meant, wasted five minutes
with the zebras before these jesters were able to clarify the muddled issue. The decision was apparently interpreted in different ways
by the stripe shirlcd pranksters, for Serfuslini was informed that
the substitutes for the ejected players would shoot two foul shots
apiece, while MacAdam understood that any player could shoot them.
Hence, understanding two separate proposals. Serf inserted Bill
Barth, an excellent foul shooter, while MacAdam put in Duric Burns,
a good rebounder but poor shooter. MacAdam would have undoubtedly never made such a tactical move had he known that Burns
would be forced lo shoot the fouls.
After John Noworyla, who was originally fouled when the
Bernard-Davis battle began, missed the first of a one and-onc situaincuso. a lough man in the clutch, to
shoot the fouls. As Maneuso prepared to shoot, a justifiably an];ry
Serfustini pounced onto the floor and kindly informed one zebra
that Burns, not Maneuso. should be al the charity stripe.

DOC URICH

was announced by
month after 11 seasons. Urich’s
UB President Dr. Clifford C. Furnas. Terms of the new coach’s
contract were not disclosed.

appointment

Urich has been associated with
Ara Parseghian for 16 years, at
Miami, (0.), Northwestern and at
Notre Dame.

Urich and his wife, the former
Patricia Straight, also of Wapakoneta, have two children, Cynthia
(born in 1952) and Danny (born
in 1955).
Urich holds a B.Sc. and M.Ed.
from Miami, majoring in Physical
Education.

After a two week lay-off the
varsity fencers will return to action when they travel to Ohio
tonight to engage Oberlin College and Cleveland State College
at Cleveland State and Western
Reserve University and case Tech
on Saturday afternoon at Case.
This is an ambitious schedule
for the swordsmen, meeting four
schools in two days, but Coach
Schwartz feels the team has the
spirit to come through a winner.
Only eleven men will be making
the trip which means there can
be no sickness or injury to any
of the key men. The UB record
to date is seven wins against two
losses, and a successful week-end
will mean a winning season for
the team.

The record of those making
the trip for the meets already
fenced:
Joe Paul, Captain
Robert Frey
John Houston
Carl Engel
Jim Mondello

18
15
18

...

Use the
HOT LINE

Herb Boedecker
Jon Rand
Tony Walluk
Lance Eggelston
2 7
The freshmen, with a record of
two wins in five meets so far,
will engage a group called the
“WNY Stars” at Clark Gym on
Monday night, February 21,
1966.

Now! From Schmidt’s TIGER HEAD ALE, you can get
complete set of four authentic, rugged aluminum tank-

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The real thing—tough, metal, drinking tankards with
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and bears the tiger of Tiger Head—The All-Male Ale.
Looks like, drinks like, and feels like—in fact, is like—tankards costing many times more.
This is a special offer to promote Schmidt’s TIGER HEAD
ALE —get in on the chance to buy four authentic tankards for only $6.50 postpaid.
Order now—supply is limited—send this coupon today to

in the
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•

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.

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•

11

Richy Fitchelte

Now! Four Authentic Quality
Tankards only $6.50 postpaid.

Spectrum Office

6
11

Dave Kirchgessner Cap.

year.

Need Printing?
Michael Soluri

coaching.
In his first year at Notre Dame,
Urich was responsible for shifting Jack Snow to split end and devising the exciting offense which
broke numerous Notre Dame records and brought the Fighting
Irish back to the heights of glory
after a number of seasons in the
football doldrums. Knowledgeable

Urich is a native of Wapakoneta, Ohio, where he attended
Wapaknncta High School and was
captain of both the football and
basketball teams in his senior

In 1951 Urich joined head coach
Ara Parseghian at Miami (0.) as
head freshman coach. In 1952 he

by

football men assert that Uriah's
1965 Notre Dame offense, going
without a real passing threat, was
an even more superb job of

Here is what Parseghian says
about Urich: “When I was appointed head football coach at
Northwestern, my first choice was
Coach Urich. Eight years later
when I was appointed football
coach at the University of Notre
Dame, my first choice again was
Coach Urich. Much of our offensive success has been due to his
preparation and strategy.”

At Miami (0.) Urich was a
standout in college football. He
played four years and was captain of the team in his senior
year. In his junior and senior
seasons he won All-Ohio honors,
and in his last three years he was
selected All-Conference (MidAmerica) end.

Remember tbal old "What’s black and white and red all over?"
nonsense riddle? Well, here was the answer, literally,
as the two
embarassed zebras, their faces glowing in various hues of red, w'alkcd
back .to the scorer s tabic, conferred, and told MacAdam that Burns
would have to shoot the foul.
When Burns missed both of his attempts and Barth
netted one
of his two, UB found itself within a basket of the Statesmen, a situation which might not have existed had the referees made their decision clear. The ensuing tap went State s way, however, and Man
cuso’s two foul shots clinched the game anyway. Had
the Bulls been
able to control the tap and send the game into overtime, however, a
great deal would have been heard about the zebras’ blunder.
The unassuming Mancuso, who led State scorers with 18. said.
"This was the best game we played It helped make us a team, I
(Cont’d on Pg. 11)

moved up to a position on the
Miami varsity staff from whence
his trail led to Northwestern, Notre Dame and then to Buffalo.

Fencers Heading West

time."
In the final minute of the action-packed contest, when hunger
for victory often causes tempers to flare, the emotions of two sophomores, UB’s Doug Bernard and State’s Charlie Davis, could no longer
be restrained. After colliding under the boards, the pair exchanged
words as they trotted up the court. One word led to another until
the two decided to settle matters via a wrestling match as both
benches swarmed onto the field of combat instantaneously. Pandemonium broke loose and reigned supreme as policemen and the

Photo

M

rA=-*=

1

-/(

THE BULL PEN

Serf and the Zabraa

~/

Schmidt’s Tiger Head Ale Tankard
P.O. Box 360. Palisades Park, N. J,
Please send me 4 Tiger Head Ale drinking tankards. Enclosed is my check (or M.O.) for $6.50.
Nami
Adi

This offer not valid in states where unlawful or otherwise
C. Schmidt &amp; Sons. Inc., reserves the right to
offer at anytime. Offer good only in U.S.A.

prohibited.

discontinue

C.

Schmidt

&amp;

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•

*

�</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY 1)F

STUDENT

M

shoplifting

\

I
VOLUME 16

K

—

LANGUAGE

I^IVllE^PlEJI

TABLES
Page 7)

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1966

Peace Corps Team Mid-Year
To Re-visit Campus

NO. 24

Graduation

Mid-year commencement exer-

mace, symbol of the University,
were carried by History Department chairman Dr. John T. Horton.

cises were held Saturday, February 12 at 10:30 a.m. in Kleinhans Music Hall. President Clifford C. Furnas presented de-

grees to 750 graduates.

Peace Corps representatives
Jerry Sternin, Klenny Murphy
and a team of return volunteers
plan to visit UB, February 2026. Convocations will be held
during that week and an Information Desk will be set up in the
Lobby of Norton Union.
Placement Tests will be given
at frequent intervals February 20March 2. The test includes a %
hour General Aptitude Test, a
Vz hour Language Aptitude Test,
and an optional hour test in
French or Spanish.
Student Coordinator Michael
DiGerlando said, “the testing is
to determine placement in the
Peace Corps. It is non-competitive
and does not determine acceptance.”
Questionnaires and applications
may be obtained at the Information Desk in Norton or by contacting Mr. DiGerlando in Room
225, Norton.
An advance team of Peace
Corps representatives will be at
UB February 14 to set up appointments for groups, organizations and faculty that would like
a Peace Corps member to speak
February 20-26.
Four UB students have been accepted to begin Peace Corps
training in March.
Jim Jiminez received his BA
in Sociology Saturday, February
12. He will begin training in
Arizona for placement in Venezuela. Jim recently performed as

“El Gallo” in The Fantasticks.
Linda Schwartz will begin training at the University of Hawaii

for placement in India with her
fiance, John Hammond of Ohio
University.
John Murphy, a graduate stu-

dent

in

Mathematics, will

be

working in the Dominican Repub-

lic.

Rosemary Brown, who recently
resigned from office of Student

Association

Vice President,
-

is

training at UCLA for placement
in Nigeria where she will instruct

Teacher Education.
According to

DiGerlando, Un-

ion Board First Vice-President
Jill Mantin, Student Judiciary
Chief Justice Richard Jaross, Tom
McGorry, and Judy Button will
begin Peace Corps training in
June.

The Chancellor’s Medal, highest honor given by the University. was awarded to Buffalo attorney Edwin F. Jackie as "a
statesman, dedicated citizen,
staunch champion of our University, and warm friend—Mr.
Republican. Mr. Good Govern-

Dr. Harold C. Syrett. executive
dean for University Centers for
the State University of New
York, delivered the main address. A distinguished historian,
Dr. Syrett has received national
acclaim for his work as executive
director of the 20-volume Alexander Hamilton papers. Former
dean of the faculty at Queen's
College in New York City, Dr.
Syrett is an experienced administrator. He has written several

ment. and Mr. Buffalo.” The
award has been presented each
year, since 1925, to a person
“who vivifies public service in
the eyes of the citizens of Buffalo,"

books.

campus
Methodist
minister
Reverend Robert A. Jones delivered the invocation and benediction. The lapis and silver

Twenty-eight students
were
graduated with honors. In addition. the School of Education
announced that thirteen graduate
students in education will receive
specialist in educational administration diplomas. The diplomas
qua fy the educators for certification for superintendency positions in the slates' public school

C. C. FURNAS

Students Voice Opinion to Faculty
Students were given the opportunity to voice their opinion
on advisement to the faculty at
an open meeting of the Faculty
Advisory Committee on Arts and
Sciences on Friday, February 11,
1966.
Committee chairman, Orville
T. Murphy stated that most of
the opinions were critical rather
than commendatory. He assessed
objections to the mechanics of
registration as the major complaint.

ion

on the advisement system.
The committee is currently devoted to the sounding of student

opinion. Dr. Murphy stated that
he is primarily interested in finding out whether the student body
would really want closer student
faculty consultation if mechanical contact between students
and faculty such as card signing
and course listing were eliminated by automation. If mechanical contact were eliminated, Dr.
Murphy suggested that students
and faculty could meet to dismiss academic issues.

semester the committee
worked to ascertain faculty opin-

is presented to the
will review
the criticsm. Working closely
with University College which
has hired a research consultant
to sound student opinion, the
committee will revise the advise-

problems

committee, members

ment system.

The committee was formed
after SUNY President Samuel B.
Gould ordered various divisions
of the university to submit a
ten year academic plan.
According to Dr.

advisement

Last

systems.

Murphy the
originated
(Cont’d on Pg. 6)

program

After student opinion on these

Seven cadets of the Air Force
Reserve Officer's Training Corps
were commissioned second lieutenants at the exercises

The First Commencement of
University of Buffalo was
held at the First Presbyterian
Church in 1847, a year after the
University was established. Since
then, more than thirty-thousand
men and women from Western
New York and all sections of
the nation and the world have
received degrees form the University in the traditional cerethe

mony.

Military Ball Queen Vote Today
The fifteenth annual Military
Ball, sponsored by Arnold Air
Society, will be held February
18 in the Connecticut Street
1965
Armory ballroom.
The
Queen, Eunice Browning Shaw,
will crown the Military Ball

Queen.

LORA JEAN DESMOND

The dance is open to all students, with formal dress optional.
Tickets at $5 per couple may
be purchased from Arnold Air
Society members at Cadet Wing
Headquarters in Clark Gym or
at the Norton Ticket Booth,
According to Major Ozenick,
400 people are expected to attend the ball, beginning at 9
p.m. Music will be provided by
Jay Moran’s Band. There will
be indoor parking.
The following are the 1966
Military Ball Queen candidates:
Lora Jean Desmond, repre
senting Phi Beta Chi. is a 20

year-old junior majoring in English. She is a member of Pan
Hellenic Council and the Debate
Society, and is interested in
sports and fixing her car,
Ann Kohler, from Chi Omega,
is 20 years old and a junior
majoring in English. She is a

member
Chorale,

of Union

Sophomore

Board,

the

Sponsors,

and W.R.A. bowling. She is interested in sewing, music and

water sports.

Mikal Lessner, 19. is Sigma
Delta Tau’s candidate. Majoring
in psychology, she is a corridor

representative and a tutor at St.
Augustine’s. Mikal is interested

in sports, music, literature, and
dancing.
Cheryl Ann Scheurer, Alpha
Gamma Delta’s candidate, is a
20-year-old junior. Majoring in
nursing, she has been on the
Baccalaureate Nursing Confer-

ence Committee, the Goodyear
Scholastic Committee, the Clement Publicity Committee, Senior
Banquet Committee, and is an officer of AGD. She is interested
in sports and sewing.

Gwenda Whitley, from the Ski
Club, is 19 years old and a sophomore. She hopes to enter the
field of Occupational Therapy,
and is a member of the executive
board of the Skj Club, the House
Committee of Goodyear South,
the band, and The Occupational
Therapy Club. She is interested
in sports.
Cindy Wolcott, 19, is representing Sigma Kappa Phi. She is a
sophomore majoring in nursing,
Cindy is a Sophomore Sponsor
and a member of the Freshman
Orientation Committee. She is

interested in sports, music, dancing, sewing and nursing.

CINDY WOLCOTT

4
*'

ANN KOHLER

MIKAL LESSNER

CHERYL ANN SCHEURER

GWENDA WHITLEY

�Store Owners Show Concern
Over Shoplifting By Students
By WILLIAM B. WEINSTEIN

A survey of local stores has
shown concern over shoplifting
by UB students.
The manager of Tops, a super
market frequented by Allenhurst
residents, said students, when
caught, always have enough money to pay for stolen goods, which
leads me to suspect that “college students steal just because
they think that they may be

smarter.”
He added, “college students
are the worst shoplifters."
A spokesman for Adam, Meldrum and Anderson assumed that
most shoplifters are teenagers
because most stolen merchandise
could be used by teen agers. He
did not, however, specify UB students—although some have been
caught there.
Merchandise worth $15-520 is
taken weekly, according to the
manager of an A&amp;P supermarket.
Students as a whole are no better or worse than any other group
of shoplifters, he said.
Although some UB students
have been caught there, students
he continued, arc not as bad as
the housewives who try to walk
out the door with a cart-full of
groceries, but even minor losses
mount up. Their chief difficulty
is people who steal shopping
carts, an unlikely target for anyone who lives in a dormitory.
The manager of the UB Bookstore feels that the chief reasons
for stealing are for personal use
or resale at half price. Books and
clothing are the most popular
targets, followed by records and
cosmetics.
Some students do not consider

Dr. Alexander Katz
Dr. Lou Krop

it stealing when they take Book
store merchandise.
“I didn't steal it from you,” one
insisted, “I took it from
the university.”

student

Shoplifting also affects the
Food Service, which reports
“thousands upon thousands of
pieces of silverware,” and “cups
into the hundreds" missing. These
thefts are attributed to the desire of the dormitory student
to have utensils for snacks.
Most stores have mirrors and
guards in order to keep a better eye out for shoplifters and
most issue orders to cashiers to
the same effect. A spokesman for
University Textbooks Inc., said

that the turnstiles and book
shelves in the front of the store
have cut down on theft considerably. In the UB bookstore, anyone standing near merchandise is
promptly approached by a clerk,
in an attempt to prevent shoplifting. Presence of attendants
and guards has been considered
to have a deterrent effect on the
potential shoplifter; and, as the
manager of the UB Bookstore explained, they “would rather prevent fifty than catch one.”

UNIVERSITY PLAZA
BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226
Phone: 835-331 X

ANNO

GRADUATE PROGRAMS
leading (o

MASTER OF SCIENCE
DEGREE with specialization
in

Largest Number of Books Handled
This Semester By Book Exchange
According to Book Exchange
Chairman Peter Cohen, this semester’s Book Exchange was an
even greater success than last
semester’s. Of the 2500 books received, approximately 1800 were
sold for a total exchange of
$6,000.

All cheeks received as payment
for books must be cashed by
February 22 to be honored.
The purpose of the Book Excommented, is
to alleviate the expenses of students and to reduce the prices of
Norton Book Store.
change, Mr. Cohen

Mr. Cohen stated, “The UB
Book Exchange, modeled after
one at the University of Pittsburgh, has become an even greater success than the latter. I judge
that a great number of books
will be sold next term.”
Some 150 books remain unclaimed and will be contributed
to the Civil Rights Committee for
distribution in underprivileged
areas.

Organizations Collect Blood
For Use in Local Hospitals
The American Red Cross, in
co-operation with the Arnold Air
and Chennault Drill Societies, will
collect blood for use in hospitals
throughout the Niagara Frontier,
March 17, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
in the Tower dormitory basement.

OPTOMETRISTS
Contact Lenses
Complete Eye Care

Donors are entitled to reciprocity for their families and themselves if they require blood-bank
help from the Red Cross.
According to Arnold Air Society Information Officer Chuck
Cummings, a goal of 344 pints
of blood has been set for the
blood drive. Students, faculty and
employes of UB may sign up to
donate blood February 15 through
25 and March 11 through 16 in
Norton Union.

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FEBRUARY AND SEPTEMBER
Course is designed to prepare
graduate pharmacists for positions of responsibility and

leadership in management,
marketing, selling and research in pharmaceutical, cps-

metic and related industries
in the wholesaling and retailing of the drug trade; in
preparation for teaching of
pharmacy administration; and
in the administration of the
hospital pharmacy.

Admission for matriculated

graduate students is limited
to those who possess B.S.
in Pharmacy degrees.

Slide Rules
Drafting Set*
Drafting Supplies, Etc.

Student Book Exchange completes second successful season.

Captain Henry Kast Lectures
On Bombing of N. Vietnam
Captain Henry Kast, Assistant

Professor of Air Science at UB,
lectured Friday, February 11 on
Air Force Doctrine and the Bombing of North Vietnam.
Captain Kast spoke to a group
of students invited by Young
Americans for Freedom on Air
Science terminology and the
North Vietnam situation to date.
He explained interdiction and
the major role it plays in the war
effort. According to Captain Kast,
interdiction, the prevention of the
supplying resources to an enemy
for its military operations, has
been our foremost goal. He continued that in striking at areas
of resource concentration and
convergence in North Vietnam,
the U. S. has successfully stopped
the Viet Cong from mounting an
offensive.
Captain Kast expressed hope
for a quick solution of the war
by continued interdiction and for
the containment of further Communist aggression.
Captain Kast, a graduate of Alfred University, is a past mem-

for

FREE DELIVERY

ERIE BLUEPRINT
and SUPPLY GO.

TO CAMPUS
4 p.m. 2 a.m. Sun. Fri.
12 p.m. 2 a.m. Saturday
-

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ber of the Strategic Air Command, the Aviation Cadets and
the 72nd Heavy Bomber Wing.

Half-Fare Rates
A program sponsored by the
Student Senate will now give
students the opportunity to travel
by airplane for half-fare.
Any person between the ages
of 12-22 may purchase a “standby” card for $3. Legal proof of
age must be presented. The
“stand by card enables the holder to fly for half-fare if there
are any vacant seats on the desired coach prior to departure.
This card is valid until the holder
reaches the age of 22. GTs and
businessmen, however, have preference over students.

Representatives

from

Ameri-

the program, will be in Room 264 Nortoday. “Stand-by”
ton Union
cards may also be secured at the
Taylor Travel Agency, University
Plaza.
can, coordinators

of

llaaeilar Hi Meaeealar

Av«. Buffalo 14
TB 5-7472

1211H«rt«l
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PHARMACY

ADMINISTRATION
and HOSPITAL
PHARMACY
ADMINISTRATION

Tuesday, February 15, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACK TWO

Profass.unal

Delaware Camera Mart
Movie Rentals - Photo Finishing
Camaras Supplies - Projectors
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MONDAY MOVIE!!
Fine Art Film Committee
presents

2«3S DELAWARE AVENUE
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Diet. 147

Mon. 8:00

ATTACHE CASES, BRIEF CASES
HANDBAGS and COTS

A great chance to meet people,

DISCOUNTS to University Faculty and Student*

future job as an executive. Join

make money and train for a

Complete Selections of Nome Brand Luggage

Courtesy

3400 MAIN STREET

(Opposite UB)

TF 3-1600

The SPECTRUM advertising

Open Monday, Thursday and Friday evening till t P.M.

staff. Call Ron Holtz-831-3610.

GRANNY and GRANDPA
EYEGLASSES
GOLDFILLED RIMS; ROUND, OVAL, RECTANGULAR,
OCTOGONAL, DIAMOND SHAPED

For RX or with sunglass lenses

E. P. LAUER, Optician
3077 MAIN STREET

BUFFALO, N.Y.

Optically Correct Lenses

14214

�Tuesday, February 15, 1966

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

Under Milk Wood' to Be Presented
By The Kaleidoscope Players Friday
Thomas’ Under Milk
will be presented by the
Kaleidoscope Players Friday, February 18 at 8:30 p.m. in the Millard Fillmore Room,
Under Milk Wood, a play about
a spring day in a Welsh coast
•town, will be sponsored by the
Union Board Literature and
Drama Committee

were designed and constructed
by technical director Sam Buck.
Tickets, on sale at the Norton

The Kaleidoscope Players, established five years ago by producer actor Bill Fegan, have
toured the country with their
productions. Previous tours of
the players of Under Milk Wood
have received acclaim from critics in Alabama, Pennsylvania and
Oregon. Other presentations include Androcles and the Lion,
Cyrano de Bergerac, and The
World of Carl Sandburg.
The current cast includes New
York actress Lee Speich, actordirector Ben Zeller, and former
musical comedy actress Marjorie

During the second week of
January, Steven Bigwood was
appointed to the editorship of
the New Student Review, the
campus literary magazine. The
publication is a potpourri of
creativity from any source; campus, community, the world.

Dylan

Wood

-

The World University Service Student TB Sanatorium at Tambar am

Marson.

Tuscaloosa News Critic Dr. J.
Goossen has commented, “The
Kaleidoscope Players not only do
the theatre a service by offering
this
. . repertoire, but
give
pleasure as well. The production
was of uncommon excellence and

F.

.

polish.”
Settings

Individual Is Stressed
In W.U.S. Fund Drive

All UB organizations have been
contacted via representatives for
contributions. The importance of
individual contributions has been
stressed by Mr. Martin. Contributions may be given to the Senate office or put in the barrels

the

production

The New Student Review'
Appoints Bigwood as Editor

Under the previous editor,
Harriet Hettinger, the magazine
gained national prominence in
the Saturday Review Contest for
student literary magazines.

this campus has reached the level

of intellectual superiority in
which creative ideas should grow
freely, the major portion of the
task lies in the future. There
will be a new selectiveness in
fiction and poetry, a shift to
theory rather than commentary
in non-fiction, and a new emphasis on the creative arts, particularly music, dance, photography, and fine art.

Tlie Politics Club will
hold a coffee hour with
Mr. John P. Jones, one of
the newer members of the
Political Science Department. Wednesday, Febru-

Since its initiation, the magazine has held the collection and
unification of creative material
as its goal. The new editor and
the editorial staff: Beth Mason,
Julie Sullivan, Harold Goldberg,
David Tirrell, Lynn Bernstein,
and Jan Thompson, feel that
much has been done toward the
accomplishment of this ideal.

ary 16 at 3:30 p.m. Room
344, Norton.

Mr. Bigwood feels that since

Organization And Formation of Free University
Discussed By Members of S.D.S. Last Friday

W.U.S. mass X-ray program in Madras Women's Collage

According to campaign chairman Robert Martin, “The goal
of the World University Service
which began its drive February
1 is 2500 dollars.”

for

Ticket Office, are $1.00 for students, $1.50 for faculty, and $2.50
general admission.

in Norton and the dormitories.
Funds collected are aimed towards the Asian fund of WUS.
Some of the countries that will
receive funds are Ceylon, India,
Indonesia, Japan, Korea, Nepal,
Pakistan, Philippines, Thailand,
and the Viet Nam Republic,
“'Light Along The Way,” a movie dealing with WUS, is available
to any interested organizations
for showing.

Members of the Students for a
Democratic Society discussed the
formation and basic organization
of a Free University of Buffalo
at a meeting Friday, February
11. Choice of instructors and
course offerings were the major

items under discussion.

According to SDS member
Barbara Brody, the goal of the
Free University is to give students the opportunity to “learn
things not taught at UB.” Organizers of the Free University
disagree, however, as to methods of organization.

low Earn

EXTRA CASH
Selling Ads for

The SPECTRUM
Earn $20-$60 Weekly
No Experience Necessary
Start Now
by Calling

RON HOLTZ
ADV. MGR.

or

RAY VOLPE

831-3610
or TR

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The necessity for "teachers”
as discussion guides was debated.
advocate the
Some students
abolishment of the typical student-teacher relationship: others
preferred a more formal struc-

ture.
Whether
"teachers” should
represent only radical views or
the whole political spectrum war
also considered. It was generally
felt that the Free University
should not be strictly an SDS
school. Further, it was hoped
the Free University could reach
members of the Buffalo commu-

nity

Suggested courses were Modern Ethical Thinkers, Journalism, Censorship, Zen and Eastern Philosophy, Anarchy, The
Negative, Radical Critiques of
Society, and Latin American Contemporary Poetry.
Flyers will be distributed on
campus and within the community to publicize
course list.
in

the

tentative

The committee will meet again
two weeks to continue the

plans.

*

�Tuesday, February 15, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

Editorial Comment

.

FEES, FEES, FEES
The students at this University are
subject to a number of fees and charges

whose arbitrary character and “sine qua
non” effect make dealings with the administration frustrating in the extreme.
For example: the “late fee” for registration and the “administrative fee” for taking make-up exams serve only as a punitive measure and make it more difficult
for faculty and students to carry out the
business of education most effectively.
When this University was privately
owned, there may have been some justification for these fees. Secretarial salaries
were paid by the administration and
the extra time required to process late
requests for administrative recognition
could be reckoned in added secretarial expense. But today, when the administrative
costs of such procedures are accounted for
in the overall budget of the State University, this justification disappears.
This raises the interesting question
of where the “late” fees go. Where does
the money that students pay for “added”
administrative expenses go when these expenses are already being aborbed by the
State? Although exact figures are unavailable, it is possible to suppose that
the total money collected in “late” fees in
one semester is a considerable amount.
It is also possible to suppose that this added student expense is no longer necessary,
and that the administration of this University might abolish the “late” fees in
good conscience. Indeed, a total reevaluation and restructuring of the fee procedure might be undertaken.
The other justification for fees offered by the administration is that the fees
serve to “keep students in line”'
that
without the late fees the students would
do everything late. This line of reasoning
does not stand up under scrutiny. Students
come to get a degree as quickly and easily as possible. Arrangements for late registration and make-up exams are hard
enough to make, regardless of the fee,
and the more late activity, the more time
one has to spend hassling with the administration. The administration should
realize that the vast majority of students
come here because they want to, and that
—

oCetterA

to

•

YAF Soundboard

•

By THERMOPYLAE

the vast majority of students are mature
We have taken note of Jene A. La Rue’s letter in last Friday’s
enough to do things properly without the
Spectrum. We were much impressed with her incredibly naive aschildish coercion of arbitrary fees.
sumptions, e.g. the Communists “are interested in securing basic
human rights in Vietnam.” Every expert, each authority, every
AN OLD PROBLEM
knowledgeable source concedes and freely admits that the ComThe Student Publications Board, almunists are interested only in the frustration of human dignity,
though it has undergone radical re-organinot its preservation. Even when we consider the most highly dezation since the confrontation between the veloped of all Communist countries, we feel obligated to remind
publications and the administration last Miss La Rue of those slave labor camps at Archangel, Vorkuta, and
year, is still in need of reform. Today the Vladivostok which characterize Russia even today.
members of this board will convene to
The other day I spoke with two soldiers recently returned
consider a proposal to make the Pub Board from Vietnam. They told me stories of a number of atrocities coma standing Committee of the Student Senmitted by no, is it possible?—the Vietcong!
ate. This action has been long in coming
One told of the pregnant wife of a government soldier. When
and if it is enacted it will rectify a coerVC discovered that her husband was in the army, they took
cive situation which all the publications the
the poor woman and dragged her around the village behind an ox
long
campus
have
resisted.
on this
cart until she and her baby bled to death. A fine example to any
As it stands now, the Publications husband who might doubt the virtues of Communism. They told
Board is in effect an arm of the admini- of a rather common VC tactic of drafting a young Vietnamese and
stration since they appoint the members then kidnapping his parents. I wonder how bravely Miss La Rue
and has operated independent of the would fight in battle, knowing every second that one moment of
wishes of the Student Senate and the stu- hesitation on her part would mean death for her parents?
dent body since its actions were subject
Are these then the same “Vietnamese who are interested in
to no appeal, and on paper it is a body securing basic human rights in Vietnam?” It makes us wonder.
empowered to operate by fiat. The proposEqually incredible was Miss La Rue’s absurd statement that the
ed change will make it a coordinating body Vietcong
do not represent a part of the Communist alliance seekwith the power to give aid to publica- ing the overthrow of non-Communist governments; a fact to which
tions, but not to truncate the freedom of both the Vietcong and Hanoi readily admit!
the student press. This is the kind of PubWhat distressed me most, however, was Miss La Rue’s unlications Board we should have, one with
regression into that enemy of constructive dialogue—reasonable powers which exists within, fortunate
name calling. It continues to grieve us deeply that she should
rather than outside, the structure of stu- resort to criticisms couched in such warlike and belligerent terms.
dent government.
Young Americans for Freedom wishes to thank all those stuThe problem of the transfer of leaderdents and faculty who donated to CARE through the Apples for
ship within the various publications rebrought in eight dollars which
mains a complex one, but one which the Freedom project. The sale of apples
program. We would also like to
publications themselves will be free to goes to CARE’s Vietnam relief
thank from the bottom of our free, enterprising hearts, that gensolve under the new committee structure. erous
individual from SDS who departed from his picketing duties
The proposed change in the Pub Board near the fountain to buy our last $6 worth of apples. The idea that
rules also facilitates the growth of presome students actually supported the United States in Vietnam
sent publications and the creation of new obviously offended the poor man’s sense of uniformity, so he tried
publications to a much greater extent to buy us out and force us to leave. Happily we had more of the
than the present administration-dominated forbidden fruit stashed away and grossed another $21 for CARE
before the day was out. Which only proves of course that $6 a day
structure.
On a campus where intellectual fer- won’t keep the YAF’ers away.
ment and genuine education take place,
the student press must be free to serve
the academic community without undue
pressure from particular interest groups.
The Publications Board has attempted
in the past to encourage new and better
New York University initiated the NYU chapter of CORE, had
publications. The proposed changes in
Pub Board policy would go a long way non-credit courses this semester contacted the American Associafor
in the direction of free student press and dealing with Vietnam, Marxism, tion of University Professors
Negro and revoluhelp in establishing a program
the
American
an informed and educated student body. tion in Asia.
in areas of study important to

N. Y.U. Initiates Non-Credit Courses;
Covers Asian Studies And Theories

the Editor

Alumnus Attacks Editorial
Jeremy Taylor has misrepresented completely the relationship of the alumni to the University. His disservice is compounded by the implication that
Dr. Furnas is not in full agreement with the position taken by
the General Alumni Board relative to the intercollegiate athletic program. In fact, the President has publicly shared our
conviction that the present level
of competition should be maintained.

The editorial statement that
"the alumni has expressed more
interest in athletics than education” is either a deliberate distortion or betrays a lack of research on the subject. On the
contrary, the alumni group has

oeen active in al
lases olUhiversity endeavor
Had Mr. Taylor the inclination
to inquire, he might have learned
that literally millions of dollars
have been obtained for the cul-

tural enrichment of the University through alumni efforts. Various research projects in the proonly
fessional
schools exist
through direct financial contributions of alumni. A contract
for four National Merit Scholarships was successfully negotiated
only after alumni supplied the

initial funds. Direct financial aid
is being given The Department
of Music by alumni. Individually
and collectively, alumni attention has been focused on far
more than the advancement of
sports.

From our view, athletics repa rallying point for alumni

resent

and greatly assist our total effort. Simply stated, we feel that
greater benefits will accure to the
University and its undergraduates if the athletic program is
comparable in level to the academic.
Contrary to Mr. Taylor’s apparent impression, the prototype
alumnus is not a Neanderthal
tattooed with Block B’s who lives
only for The Big Game. Nor do
we believe that the average student is a left-leaning, sandaled
supporter of unpopular causes
who is satisfied to exist in an

scene to add confusion and antagonism to an already congested

situation.
To those students who are
not so fortunate as to drive from
class to class, I offer my sympathy! For as you walk anywhere
near the roadways, you are apt
to get muddily soaked by some
“idiot" who seems to think the
campus roadways are the Bonneville Salt Flats.
And

to

you antagonistic motorists who seem to find delight in
attempting to set land speed rec-

ords, this campus is not for you.

one’s education that are not included in the present curriculum.
The AAUP suggested he contact NYU Education Professor
Frederick Redefer, who last September had sent a memo to other
faculty members urging the increase of courses in Asian and
other areas of foreign studies on
the undergraduate level. Professor Redefer, who has not received any reaction to date, felt
that “students will want to know
where they might die.”

Student book exchange
checks must be cashed before February 22, 1966.
After that date they will
not be honored.

intellectual womb.

THE

Very truly yours,

Richard C. Shepard
President,
Executive Committee
General Alumni Board

Mud And Drivers Considered A “Mess”
TO THE EDITOR:
No doubt we have all noticed
the absolute "mess” created by
the construction of the "beautiful new temporaries” at strategic
points of our campus. Wallowing
in ankle-deep mud has become
commonplace, and our roadways
have been splattered with this
mud from the construction vehicles.
I suppose we must attempt to
endure such conditions, but there
is one condition I refuse to ac
cept. My friend, the inconsiderate
SUNYAB driver again makes the

The program, begun February
10, is under the direction of the
New Student Union, including
Core, Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee and Students to End the War in Vietnam.
Students will meet with faculty once a week in informal
discussion sessions. There will
be no lectures, tests or papers
in the classes limited to 15 students. The only cost to students
is for the purchase of books
to be used. Participating faculty
members, mostly from NYU, will
volunteer their time.
Courses in the new program
include the Social and Historical
concepts of Marx, Seminar on
Vietnam (from World War II to
the present), Marxian Economics,
History and Literature of the
American Negro—A Cultural Approach and Revolution in Asia.
Jerry Bornstein, chairman of

Take your toy to the dragstrip
if you endeavor to be a “winner,” Meanwhile, have some consideration for your fellow students.
Is there a solution? Possibly,
for somewhere in the depths of
our batcave there is a campus
police force which is supposed to
regulate traffic and confine our

EDITORIAL POLICY IS DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING

SUNYAB speedster.
So I appeal to you, Police
Force, help our cause before our

roadways ibecome NASCAR testing grounds.

Ronald Holtz

SPECTRUM

official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo, N.Y. 14214. Published
weekly
twice
from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and spring vacations.
JEREMY TAYLOR
Editor-in-Chief
Managing Editor
DAVID EDELMAN
Business Manager
RAYMOND VOLPE
News Editor
Photography Editor _ EDWARD JOSCELYN
SUSAN GREENE
Continuity Editor
Asst.
RONNIE BROMBERG
MARCIA ORSZULAK
Advertising Manager
FMfun Editor
JOHN STINY
RONALD HOLTZ
Asst. Feature Editor . JOANNE LEEGANT
DIANE LEWIS
Circulation Manager
Sports Editor
Faculty Advisor.
IRENE WILLET
STEVE SCHUELEIN
Layout Editor
SHARON HONIG
Financial Advisor
DALLAS GARBER
Copy Editor
Leprechaun
RUSSELL GOLDBERG
LAUREN JACOBS
The

Second Class,
Subscription
15,000.

PRESS

Postage Paid at Buffalo, N.Y.
$3.00 per year, circulation

Represented
for national advertising
National Advertising Service Inc.,
Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.

by

420

�Tuesday, February 15, 1966

cjCetterA to the

Editor

Editorial Read With Amusement
TO THE EDITOR:

I read with amusement your
coverage of the teachers’ strike
at St. John’s University. No mention has ever been made of the
basic issue involved. The basic
issue of public versus private
property. The teachers decided
that they don’t like the way things
are being run, so they present an

ultimatum to the administration.
“Either you run things the way
we want them run, or we go on
strike.”

I was always under the impression that teachers were hired to
teach and that the administrators were hired to run the affairs of the school. If the teachers don’t like the way things are

yy

toy soldiers on opposite
sides of the runner rug

EDITOR;

waiting to play pretend-kill

BASIC TRAINING

little boy white not so
little growing into little
boy black
plays with rusted green

he begins battle on rug-far field
and sends troops shooting
live air. one soldier
falls and bleeds rusted green

overthrow the duly constituted

authority and take over. Maybe
if people just did what they were
supposed to do and minded their
own business a little more, this
would be a better and safer world

to live in

Norman Frankel

paint on lint torn battle-field

little boy tired grows red eyes
and mommy big smiles at
little boy who

plays
so nice

William L. Cirocco
5-9-65

Soviet Students Desire Freedom
By ROBERT COHEN

LENINGRAD, U.S.S.R. (CPS)—
The life of the Russian student
is a most fascinating phenomenon
for an American student to see.
Surprisingly, the desire for more
student freedom, which is so
basic to student movements in
America and abroad, is also present to a large extent in Russia.
This period marks what could be
a most important change in relationships between the Soviet student and his government. Students are not satisfied with the

status

they want rapid
change and are living a life which
centers about learning as much
as possible about Russia and the
quo

—

world.
Were an American student to

meet his Russian counterpart

on

the street, he would be immediately surprised by Western influence. His clothes are Western,
often purchased from foreign students although this is illegal. His
mannerisms are those of the
West, and one is instantly surprised at his knowledge of the
history and current events of the
West. Attending a party at a student’s house means listening to
the Beatles, the Rolling Stones,
Elvis Presley, and Fats Domino,
not to mention the almost fanatical attachment the students
have to American jazz. These students may seem to be, as some
observers say “in revolt” against
the customs of their system. However, they are greatly dedicated
to a life under Communism —but
they want it to be a life where
they are free to formulate their
own opinions and to debate over
controversial ideas. They want to
know the whys and hows which
were so often unknown, if not
Unknowables, under, Stalin. They
are in the midst of a new kind
of life, where the consumer has
a greater voice in production of
goods, where incentive on an individual level is no longer a violation of state policy, and where
experimentation with * Western
ideas is not heavily frowned

upon.

Literature Available
There is a significant amount
of uncensored literature available to Soviet university students.
In the large public and university
libraries, students may read The
New York Times, The New York
Herald-Tribune, Newsweek, Time
Magazine, The London Times, Le
Monde and the Daily Telegraph,
even though there are few copies
available and long waiting periods at many places. In addition,
there is a weekly news digest of
articles printed in the Western
press, which have been translated

and printed in their entirety,
which is available at the universities.
Although none

of this litera-

ture is available on the street,

and the articles translated into
Russian are usually critical of
the United States and its allies,
these are not their only source
of information, for students are
dedicated listeners to the Voice
of America and other Western
stations. Most of their Western
songs are on tapes made from
these broadcasts. Surprisingly,
there were few questions about
President Kennedy’s assassination
since portions of the funeral had
been telecast nationally, and had
left quite an impression on those
of college age.
From the beehive haircuts of
the Soviet girls, to the modern
sport clothes worn by their male
counterparts, the youthful desire
for rapid progress
Russians
are urged by large signs to “catch
and overtake the United States”
—is readily seen throughout Leningrad and Moscow. This rush
towards a new life is coupled with
a search for more empirical facts
to support the basic tenents of
Communism. Recently, the famous
experiment of Solomon Asch on
the conformity of an individual
to a group’s beliefs was repeated
at Leningrad University, and students and faculty are now using
—

this experiment to argue for placing little importance on the individual in their society. Also, there
was talk of a modification in the
system of elections; the possibility
of presenting the people with a
slate of two candidates in the

next election, both of whom

(Cont’d on Pg. 7)

Di. Fall Interview
Carried By WBFO

Dr. Aranguren, who is visiting
the University at Buffalo under

the sponsorship of the Department of Modern Languages, has
been until recently Professor of
Ethics and Sociology at the University of Madrid. He is one of
the five university professors who
were removed from their posts
last year because of their inde-

pendent attitude

tions. and he

on political ques-

is widely recognized

in Spain as a symbol of academic
and intellectual freedom, especially among students and the
younger generation of intellectuals and scholars.
Dr. Aranguren’s lecture will be
an analysis of the role oi the
University in Spain under the
present regime and in past years

(By the author of “Rally Round the Flag, Boys!",
‘Dobie Gillis," etc.)

ROOMMATES: THEIR CAUSE AND CURE
You’d think that with all the progress we have made in
the education game, somebody would have found a cure
for roommates by now. But no. Roommates remain as big
a problem today as they were when Ethan Mather founded
the first American college.

(Contrary to popular belief, Harvard was not the first.
Mr. Mather started his institution some 100 years earlier.
And quite an institution it was, let me tell you! Mr. Mather
built schools of liberal arts, fine arts, dentistry and tanning. He built a lacrosse stadium that seated 200,000.
Everywhere on campus was emblazoned the stirring Latin
motto CAVE MUSSI— “Watch out for moose." The student union contained a bowling alley, a weighing machine, and a sixteen-chair barber shop.)
(It was this last feature—the barber shop —that, alas,
brought Mr. Mather’s college to an early end. The student
body, being drawn chiefly from the nearby countryside,
was composed almost entirely of Pequot and Iroquois Indians who, alas, had no need of a barber shop. They

braided thehairon top of their heads, and asforthe hairon
their faces, they had none. The barber, Tremblatt Follicle
by name, grew so depressedstaring day afterday at 16 empty chairs that one day his mind gave way. Seizing his vibrator, he ran outside and shook the entire campus till it crumbled to dust. This later became known as Pickett’s Charge. )
But I digress. We were exploring ways for you and your
roommate to stop hating each other. This is admittedly
difficult but not impossible if you will both bend a bit,
give a little.

I remember, for example, my own college days ( Berlitz
’08). My roommate was, I think you will allow, even less
agreeable than most. He was a Tibetan named Ringading
whose native customs, while indisputably colorful, were
not entirely endearing. Mark you, I didn’t mind so much
the gong he struck on the hour or the string of firecrackers he set off on the half hour. I didn’t even mind that he
singed chicken feathers every dusk and daybreak. What I
did mind was that he singed them in my hat.

WBFO will broadcast an interview with Dr. Bernard Fall Thursday, February 17, at 7:30 p.m. as
part of the Transatlantic Forum
series. The series is produced by
the National Educational Radio
Network in cooperation with the
British Broadcasting Corporation.

Dr. Fall, a Professor of Government at Howard University, is an

expert on the Indochina area. His

doctoral thesis examined “The
Political Development in Vietnam
from V.J. Day to the Geneva
Ceasefire.” His published works
include The Viet-Minh Regime
and The Two Vietnam*.

The London interviewers are
Windsor, Lecturer in
Asian studies at the London
School of Economics; David Wil-

Phillip

ley, Correspondent with the BBC;

and Richard Gilbert, BBC Correspondent.

The University in Spain'
Topic For Deposed Scholar
“The University in Spain” will
be the title of a public lecture
given in English by the distinguished Spanish intellectual, Dr.
Jose Luis L Aranguren, Thursday afternoon, February 17, at
4:30 in Diefendorf 148.

On Campus MvSNman

being run, they can quit and go
elsewhere. They have no right to

Little Boy White Not So?
TO THE

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

from the point of view of a philosopher and sociologist. His numerous books include: Catolicismo y Protestenfismo como formas da existencia, Critica y Meditacfon, Catolocismo dia tras dia,
El Protestantismo y la Moral, El

futuro de la Universidad, Etica y
Politica, Implication** de la Filosofia an la vida contemporanea.
La juvantod europea y ostros ansayos. Moral y Soeiadad, and So-

ciologia da la Comunicacion.

1966 Buffalonians are
still available, but the
supply is limited. Order
your yearbook now at
the the Norton Ticket
Booth now.
The Freshman Orientation Committee needs
workers. Help us to make
orientation a success.
Pick up an application
at the Norton Union
Candy Counter.

To be fair, he was not totally taken with some of ray
habits either especially my hobby of collecting water. I
had no jars at the time, so I just had to stack the water

any-old-where.

Well, sir, things grew steadily cooler between Ringading and me, and they might actually have (rotten ugly
had we not each happened to receive a package from home
one day. Ringading opened his package, paused, smiled
shyly at me, and offered me a (rift.
"Thank you,” I said. “What is it?"
"Yak butter,” he said. “You put it in your hair. In Ti
betan we call it yree nee kidntuff"
"Well now, that’s mighty friendly,” I said and offered him
a (rift from my package.“Nowyou must have one of mine.”
"Thank you,” he said. "What is this called?”
"Personna Stainless Steel Razor Blades,” I said.
"I will try one at once,” he said. And did.

“Wowdow!” he cried. "Never have I had such a smooth,

close, comfortable shave!”

“Ah, but the best is yet!" I cried. “For you will get
smooth, close, comfortable shaves from your
Personna Blade —each one nearly as smooth, close, and
comfortable as the first!”
many, many

“Wowdow!” he cried.
“Moreover,” I cried, “Personna Blades come both in
Double Edge style and Injector style!”
“Sort of makes a man feel humble,” he said.
“Yes,” I said.
We were both silent then, not trusting ourselves to
speak. Silently we clasped hands, friends at last, and I am
proud to say that Ringading and I remain friends to this
day. We exchange cards each Christmas and firecrackers
each Fourth of July.
•

•

•

C 1WM. Mu stimuli

The makers of Personna Stainless Steel Blades who sponsor
this column—sometimes nervously—are also the makers of
Burma Shave. Burma Shave soaks rings around any other
lather and is available in regular or menthol. Be kind to your
kisser; try some soon.
*

®

�Rascher Plays at Saxophone Institute
Friday and Saturday At Free Concert

'Threepenny Opera Horse

The Music Department will present a Saxophone Institute featuring saxophone player Sigurd
Rascher, on Friday and Saturday,
February 18 and 19. A saxophone
recital with Mr. Rascher, saxophone, and Carlo Pinto, piano,
will be given Friday evening at

Pegasus, a gray-whit* horse, it slated for an appaaranca In the
"Throe-Penny Opera" to begin at Baird Hall on February 24.

WBFO Interviews Madden
On 'Meet the Faculty Today
Philosophy Professor Edward
H. Madden will be interviewed
on 'Meet the Faculty,” on Tuesday, February 15, at 6 p.m, on
WBFO.

Interviewer Carol A. Magavero
will question Dr. Madden about
his experiences at the University
of Iowa, University of ConnectiSan Jose State College,
Brown University and Amherst
cut,

College.

Dr. Madden will discuss the influence of Gustav Bergman and
other Logical Positivists, under
whom he studied. He will speak
about his writings in the philosophy of science and American
Philosophy. His favorite philosophers, the minsconception of the
scientist disinterested in humanities, Bertrand Russell, European
travels and family pastimes such
as canoeing on the Niagara River
will also be discussed.

Spectrum daii J3oarJl
The Occupational Therapy Club
will meet February 17 at 4:30
p.m. in Norton 330. Yearbook
pictures are scheduled to be
taken February 16 at 8:25 p.m.
in Norton 2nd floor lounge.
The Politics Club will hold a
coffee hour with Mr. John P.
Jones, of the Political Science
Department, on Wednesday, February 16 at 3:30 p in., in Norton
344.

The Modern Dance Club meets
Tuesday afternoons from 2 to 4
p.m. in Clark Gym. The purpose

of the club is to develop body
control, and technique.
International Club will hold its
second membership panel: “The
Family as a Human Institution:
Is it Obsolete?” on Thursday,
February 17 at 7:30 p.m. in
Norton. A special invitation is
extended to parents and sponsors
of all members.
The Math Club will hold a problem-solving session on Wednesday, February 16 at 7:30 p.m.,
in Norton 334. Pictures will be
taken for the Buffalonian, after
which refreshments will be
served.

ADVISOR EVALUATION
from Pg. 1)
to service the needs of a small
academic community. As the
community grew there was no
revision of the basic structure
of the program.
Other committee members arc
(Contd

Dr. Robert Buschman, Department of Mathematics; Dr. Lynd
Forguson, Assistant Dean; Dr,
Joseph Fradin, Department of
English; Dr. Morris Fried, Department of Sociology; Dr. James
O'Rourke, Assistant Dean; Mrs.

8:30 in Baird Hall, admission free.
Institute Director Richard Rodean says the purpose of the institute is “to provide unique musical opportunities for area musicians, students and music educators through active participation
in saxophone ensembles, clinic
demonstrations and hearing the
artistry of a recognized master of
the saxophone.”
Born of Swedish parents in
1907, Sigurd Rascher first received instruction on the clarinet; in later life he taught himself the saxophone. After playing
in dance orchestras in Europe,
he decided to become a concert
saxophonist and initiated his career as such in 1932.
Since his American debut in
1939 he has appeared as soloist

Tueaday

Deadline for filing for financial

aid

Play: Home Free, Student Theatre Guild, 4 p.m., Conference
Theatre.

Dr. Joseph Firestone, "Origins
of Our Involvement in Viet Nam"
—Business and Professional W
—B u s i n e s s and Professional
Women’s Club of Buffalo, The
Park Lane, 6:30 p.m.

Meeting: Dean of Women, 4
to 6 p.m,, Norton 329, 333, 334
335.

The Community Aids Corps
will set up a table in Norton
Union Wednesday and Thursday,
February 16 and 17, from 10
a.m. to 4 p.m. Applications will
be available for students interested in volunteer work in the
community.

The

Community Aid Corps,
formerly the Community Relations Committee, was formed last
semester as a special committee
of the Union Board, with Jocelyn
Lundquist as chairman.
The

committee intends to encourage
and coordinate student involvement in the community through
programs that emphasize working with people of varied age
groups on a person to person
level, committee member Joyce
Edelman commented. “To succeed with such plans, active par-

•

•

•

Sonia Robinson, University College Advisement; Dr. Vincent
Santilli, Department of Biology;
Dr. Allen Sigel, Department of
Music; Dr. Irwin Silverman, Department of Psychology.

Friday
“A Few Thoughts about Music Education,” Sigurd Rascher,
Lecturer, 4:15 p.m., Baird.

Sigurd

Rasher

Rectial,

8:30

p.m., Baird Hall.

Wednesday

Last day to resign
course without penalty.

Play: Home Free, Student
Theatre Guild, 4 p.m., Conference Theatre

Millard Fillmore College Registration (A-K), 6:30 p.m. Clark

Symposium, Recital Hall, Baird,
4 p.m., The Threepenny Opera
Colloquium Music of Brecht and

Debate Tournament: Debate
Society, 4:30 10 p.m., Norton 240,

Weill.

Meeting: Dean of Students, 3

to 6 pjn., Norton 233, 234, 240,
242, 248.

nette, “Doy You Believe in ESP?
8:15 p.m., Norton 359.

Saturday
Jazz Concert; Louis Armstrong,
Kleinhans Music Hall, 9 p.m.

form

a

Gym.

264, 334, 335.

Play: Under Milk Wood, 8:30
p.m., Fillmore Room.

Lecture:

Dr. W. Leslie Bar

with more than 150 symphony
orchestras in America, Europe
and Australia He recently re-

Saxaphone Clinics

Rascher, 9:30

a.m.,

—

Sigurd

Baird.

Varsity Basketball Game: UB
vs. Albany State, 8:30 p.m.

Frosh Basketball Game: UB vs.
St. Bonaventure, 6:15 p.m.
Varsity Wrestling: UB vs. Western Ontario, 2 p.m.
Association of College Unions
Tournament: Chess, Bowling, Billiards, Table Tennis, and Bridge.
Sunday
Folk Dancing: Student Zionist
Organization, 7 p.m., Norton 344.

Mixer: Hillel Foundation, 8 to

11 p.m., Norton 233.

Monday

Concert: Creative Associates
Recital V, 8:30 p.m. Baird Hall.
Seminar in Medicinal Chemistry—244 Health Sciences, 4:30
p.m.

turned from a European tour
where he earned the title of
“Mr, Saxophone.”

Selective Service Counseling Center
Educates Students On Deferment

Recent increases of student
draftees has prompted the formation of the Selective Service
Counciling Center, an organization designed to educate males
from 18 to 25 about types of
draft deferment afforded them
by the Selective Service Act.
This organization will host a
symposium on February 22 in
the Fillmore room of Norton
Union from 3 to 5 p.m. Speakers will include a representative
of SDS, a member of YAF or
the RIPON Society, and a representative of the Society of
Friends. Jeremy Taylor will discuss the pros and cons of conscientious objection. Mark Robison will act as moderator.

Student Volunteers Needed
For Community Aid Corps

Weekly Calendar
February IS to 24

Thursday

Tuesday, February 15, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

ticipation by the student body is

essential, and all interested volunteers are encouraged to sign
up at the Community Relations
Table.”
Students who already have applications may return them to the
table or to Room 215 Norton.
NOW OPEN

...

malcolm’s
music shoppe
s
#

3142 MAIN STREET
837-9324
featuring guitars, amps,

accessories
STUDENT DISCOUNTS

&amp;

President of SSCC is Mark K.
Robison; Vice President, Danny
Katz; Secretary, Nancy Cave, and
Treasurer, Nelson Heintzman.
Newton Carver is Faculty Advisor.
Meetings are held Tuesday and
Thursday nights at 7 p.m. in Norton 266. Further information
may be obtained from any officer.

International ID Cards

Students may obtain an International ID Card, entitling the
holder to discounts in the U. S.
and Europe at the National Student Association Travel Information Office in the Rri*m office,
first floor of Tower dormitory,
Tuesday, 4 to 6 p.m. and Thursday, 1 to 3 p.m.

The ID Card, providing for reductions on transportation, hotels,
museums, stores and restaurants,
costs $2.

HASSIP
IS
COMING
FEB. 26

�Tuesday, February 15, 1966

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Informal Language Instruction Maryland Loyalty Oath Called
At Tables in Tower Cafeteria Harmful to State and
University

Language tables in Tower Dining Hall are offered each Tuesday and Wednesday from 5:30
p.m., in French, German and
Spanish.

A member of the Department
of Modern Languages or a native
speaker will be a guest at each
table.
Resident students must contact

Language students may partici-

pate in informal sessions for practice in conversation and discussions about the cultures of the
lands where the languages are
spoken,

RA’s to have dinner numbers
transferred to the Tower Language Tables. Commuter students
may purchase tickets for each
meal from Modern Languages Department secretary Mrs. Kinsinger in Crosby 212

Colonie Cocktail Lounge
1795 HERTEL AVE.

Rock to THE CAVALEERS
WED., FRI., SAT.
"Your Host JIMMY DeMARCO"

COLLEGE PARK, Md, (CPS)—

A former employee of the University of Maryland has served
notice on the university for lack
of payment as a court test of the
Maryland state loyalty oath develops.
Dr. Wiliam W. Krause, a former psychoanalyst and consultant
for the university’s counseling
service, refused to sign the Ober
loyalty oath after completing his
work. The oath is required of all
state employees.
The Maryland Attorney General’s office is studying the case,
and a federal district court in
Baltimore has yet to set a date
for hearing his case.
Dr, Carl Bode, a Maryland professor of English, who has opposed signing oaths in the past
calls the Ober law harmful to the
state and the university. “By its

very structure, it casts an asper
sion on every state employee,’

Bode said.

Earlier this semester, the faculty at Morgan State Teachers College passed a resolution urging
Gov, J. Millard Tawes to ask the
legislature to abolish the oath.

In an earlier incident, civil
rights leader Bayard Rustin refused to sign the oath last fall
before speaking at the university. The state attorney genera!
ruled at that time that the oath
was not required in order to pay
a speaker for a "one or two time"

appearance.

Soviet Student Life
of heredity, changed its view on
incentive in the economic structure, and relaxed its ideas about
the control of students. Now that
Problems Presented
the students have this new free
But in large measure, the Sodom, they are trying to discover
why the changes were really
viet government has recently presented these students and their
made, where the society is going,
and whether they may exert some
society with several disconcerting problems
it has denounced kind of influence over the future
Lysenkoism, a biological theory
course. They are faced by a great
barrier
the great number of
politicians now in power who are
products of the Stalin era. But
the winds of change arc spreading over the land, and to some
degree these changes are due to
the searching and probing that
and instrumentalists will have a the new Soviet student is conchance to meet the conductor at
stantly involved in. These stua coffee hour.
dents arc fully dedicated to the
Communist system
but they
Mr. Foss is the third Guest
want to influence their nation
Conductor scheduled
in the with new vitality to be gained by
series. Last semester Mischa free discussion of issues and exand Alexander Schneider conperimentation with all kinds of
ducted the orchestra with much new ideas.
(Cont'd from Pg. 5)

would be Communists, was sen
ously discussed by faculty members and students.

—

—

TF 2-8056

TF 6-9695

Kensington Theater

Foss Third Guest Conductor
For UB Symphony In Baird
Lukas Foss will conduct the
rehearsal of the UB Symphony

7 DAYS STARTING WEDNESDAY

February 16-22
Matinee Wed. 2 p.m.—Evening 8 p.m.
Saturady and Sunday continuous 2-5-8:15

LAURENCE OLIVIER as

on Thursday, February 17, from
7 to 10 p.m. in the Band Room
at Baird Hall. The rehearsal is
open to the public. Observers

CLASSIFIED

OTHELLO

An actual performance of the Nat’l Theater of Great Britain

Regular Admission

—

$1.50

STUDENT RATE WITH ID CARD

a SPECIAL show—"The most brilliant, most intelligent, most exciting film
I have encountered this season I"
—Roger Angell, New Yorker

—

NEED WE
SAY MORE?

JEAN-PAUL
BELMONDO
IS

HERE!!

BREATHLESS
Our Rebellious Presentation

C^onference
7

Terence
831-3704

$1.00

FOR SALE
TWO GUITARS, Goya and Gian
nini, nylon strings, classic neck,
case included. Also, UCA portable cartridge tape recorder, two
speed, 4 track, includes several
tapes and adapter tapes. Contact
Dick 837 9568.
CHEVY IMPALA convertible; rac
ing motor excellent; good tires,
new battery and brakes. $225. 882
5281.

VW 1962 red, sun roof, reason
able. Call 683-0532.

ROOMS FOR RENT
ROOM, board and laundry for
male student. About 10 minutes
from campus by car. Cal! TX 5-

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MISCELLANEOUS
"borrowing” my
raincoat after the
WE TRY HARDER BLAST. How
about at least returning my keys!
Bob, 834 8693

THANKS
light

tan

for

—

success. The Symphony has prepared a program of music for
this rehearsal, including works
by Glinka, Stravinsky, Schubert,
Ravel, Hindemith, and Gold.
The UB Symphony is made up

of approximately 70 instrumentalists. They number students
from many departments of the
University (only 50% are UB
Music Students), and also include
some faculty and staff. Positions
are still open on many instruments. Pamela Gearhart is Director of the orchestra,
Mr. Foss is internationally reknowned as a composer, pianist,
and conductor. This is his third
season as Conductor of the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra. He
also serves as a Director of the
Center for the Creative and Performing Arts at UB, with Chairman of the Department of Music
Allen Sapp.
Assistant Conductor of the
Buffalo Philharmonic, Richard
Dufallo, will conduct the UB
Symphony in April. The Sym-

phony also has a concert planned
in the Spring.

But to bring about change in a
vast monolithic society is a very
difficult thing. When one visits
the home of an artist, he may
seek many works greatly influenced by the abstractions. However, he is told that such work
is frowned upon by instructors,
and that experimentation is only
done at home. Also. Russian students are usually cautious when
police are nearby.
This ca u t i o n serves as a
reminder that a great deal lies
in the balance for the society at
this time
for so often in the
past, the great pendulum like
arm of the state has swung back
with awesome force, once again
—

to impose regulation and to instill fear. But to a limited extent,
the new Soviet leaders have at
tachcd some relevance to the
views of the students
how the
—

future for Soviet students and
their society unfolds will be most
interesting to watch

�Tuesday, February 15, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

~^==£^=t=

==&amp;==X

s

Bulls Blast McMaster; Bow to Buffalo State
Sophs Spark Weekend Victory;
Set Modern Defensive Record
The University of Buffalo cagers snapped at two game losing
streak with a 75-31 victory over
the University of McMaster on
Saturday night to produce their

twelfth win in the current 65-66
basketball campaign. The Bulls
finally had a breather with a
Canadian ball club as they set
a modern school defensive record limiting their foes to only
31 points; comprised of ten field
goals and eleven foul points. The
previous low was against Rochester at Clark Gymnasium back on
February 13, 1963 when that club
was held to a mere 34 points.
Recovering from a two game
losing streak and a physically
exhausting schedule of four games
within a seven day period, the
Bulls showed signs of vast improvement. In compliment of the
splendid defensive effort was an
equally fine performance on behalf of three sophomores. The allsoph. trio of Bernard, Culbert
and Bobby Thomas combined for
a total of forty points as the UB
hopes in the future began to look

as from Erie, Pennsylvania, with
a great improvement in the defen-

sive end of the game, showed the
fans his impressive offensive effort as he pumped eighteen points
through the net and this was good
enough to make him high man
of the night. Thomas was followed by another sophomore in
Jon Culbert who netted 12 and
who was followed by still another
sophomere, Coug Bernard, who
was good for a ten point production rounding out the sophomore
overall to forty points.
On Thursday night, the Bulls
fell prey to their long-time, crosstown rivals, Buffalo State Teachers College in a contest at Me-

put.

Besides dominating both the
offensive and defensive elements
of the game, the Bulls also were
in complete control of the very
important third phase of basketball
rebounding. The UB Cagers outrebounded the University
of McMaster by a tally of 59-42
with dependable Bill Barth (last
Friday's Bull Pen) hauling down
thirteen to lead the field.
Flashy sophomore Bobby Thom
—

Thursday, February 10.

Richard Brehoff and David
Me Daniel placed as the top
North and South team. The first
place East-West team was Rich
ard Fleisman and Roger Pies.
bridge tournaments
Similar
were held simult aneously
throughout Region n (Ontario
and New York State except New
York City.)
The Regional North-South and
East-West teams accumulating

the greatest number of total par

points will be eligible for an allexpence paid trip to Bradley University, Peoria, Illinois, where
the National Championship Tournament will be held, May 6, 7.

and 8.
Ihe ACU Intercollegiate Recreational Tournament will be

sor, and Niagara’s physically punishing contest seemed to take
their toll as the Bulls were lackluster in ballhandling and taking
advantage of key opportunities.
The foul line was especially important in spelling defeat for the
UB Hoopsters. The contest was
marred by some brawling as the
officiating got out of hand, plus
some poor decisions by the referee made UB pay for the offi-

The cross-town cagers also were
able to cash in on a few free opportunities as the Bulls were
caught napping and allowed State
about four field goals from underneath the basket. It was a
long night for the Bulls as they
just couldn’t seem to get things
rolling in their favor.

Action against Buffalo State at Auditorium

MIKE DOLAN

BUFFALO
Goodwin
Barth
Bernard

Poe

Thomas
Walker
Bevilacqua
Calbert
Mann

BOBBY THOMAS

morial Auditorium, A cold field
goal percentage, a poor foul
shooting percentage (only 11 out
of 25 in the second half alone)
and some disputed officiating
coupled with a weary overall team
effort produced the three point
loss. This unexpected loss, second to a College division team,
along with Tuesday evening’s defeat at the hands of the Purple
Eagles from Niagara really hurt
UB’s hope for a post-season NCAA
tourney bid.

Smith
Williams
Curran

Cavanaugh
McMASTER

—

College Bridge Tournament Held;
Recreation Contests This Weekend
The Association of College
Unions Bridge Tournament was
conducted by Edward George,

at the Aud. Last weekend’s road
victories up in Detroit and Wind-

cials’ mistakes.

very bright indeed.

The host team had very little
to cheer about as the hoopsters
from Buffalo completely dominated the contest. If there was any
hope on the part of McMaster’s
five it was totally dispelled at
halftime with UB commanding an
impressive 38-19 lead and was
finally shattered as the Bulls restricted McMaster to only three
field goals in the final half, certainly a credit to the team for
such an unusual defensive out-

With only four games remaining on the 65-66 schedule, it would
require victory in all four of
them to up the chances for UB’s
trip to the post-season regionals.
The Bulls showed signs of extreme weariness in their contest

held in Norton Union, Friday
and Saturday, February 18 and
19. There will be continuous
competition in Men’s and Women’s Bowling, Men’s and Women’s Table Tennis, ' Men’s and
Women's Pocket Billiards, 3Cushion Billiards, and Chess.
An Awards Banquet will be
held in the Fillmore Room, Sat
urday, February 19 at 4 p.m.

THE SPECTRUM
Printed by

Partners’ Press, Inc.
ABOOTT ft SMITH PRINTING

1381 KENMORE AVENUE

KENMORE,

NEW YORK 14217

Allingham
Murray
Smith
Gruhl
Wheatley
Oakes

Henry
Wall

UB Basketball Team
Travels to Alfred
The University of Buffalo Basketball Team will travel to Alfred tomorrow evening to meet
Alfred University in their nineteenth game of the season. The
Bulls, who have been having their
difficulties in the past few weeks
will attempt to regain their top
form.

UB, now twelve and six, will
probably start its usual five of
Harvey Poe, Jim Bevilacqua, Norward Goodwin, Artie Walker, and
Bill Barth. Reserves Bobbie Thomas, Doug Bernard, and Jon Culbert are also slated to see plenty

Now! Four Authentic Quality
Tankards only 56.50 postpaid.
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a complete set of four authentic, rugged aluminum tankards—at a fantastically low price.
The real thing—tough, metal, drinking tankards with
see-through bottoms. Holds a man-size 18 ounces of brew
and bears the tiger of Tiger Head—The All-Male Ale.
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Order now—supply is limited—send this coupon today to:
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Please send me 4 Tiger Head Ale drinking
closed is my check (or M.O.) (or $6.50.
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,

•

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tankards. En-

•

of action.

Last year the Bulls trounced
Alfred at Clark Gym as Jack Karaszewski had one of the greatest
shooting nights ever for a UB
star in hitting 13 of 14 field goal
attempts.

.

,

•

This offer not
prohibited. C.

valid in states where unlawful or otherwise
Schmidt &amp; Sons, Inc., reserves the right to
discontinue offer at anytime. Offer good only in U.S.A.
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"

I
.

�</text>
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                    <text>1

MONEY FOR

STATE UNIVERSITY

Of'nEW

YORK AT

BUFFALO

VOLUNTEERS

NEEDED

——■

STUDENTS

M

(See Page 7)

VOLUME 16

»

B&amp;jiB

■

‘

IlHH I

(See Page

*

NO. 23

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1966

Engineering Dean
Takes Georgia Post
Dr. E. Arthur Trabant, dean
of the School of Engineering at
State University of New York at
Buffalo, will become vice-president for academic affairs at the
Georgia Institute of Technology,
effective September 1, 1966.
According to a joint announcement made today by Buffalo
President Clifford C. Furnas and
the Board of Regents of the
University system of Georgia,
Dean Trabant, will resign his
local post on August 31, 1966 and
will officially assume his duties
at Georgia Tech the next day.
At Georgia Tech, his general administrative function will be to
provide leadership and direction
to the academic, research and re-

Hester. The program of comedy and song will
The IFC i* presenting Godfrey Cambridge and Carolyn
begin at 8:30 p.m. in Clark Gym. Tickets are $2.00 and are available at the Norton ticket office and
'

at the door.

Furnas Traces Growth of UB
Chancellor Clifford C. Furnas
discussed plans for the new campus and presented figures for planned increases in enrollment, research, and training programs in
an informal discussion held in
the Conference Theatre on Tueslay, February 8. The Chancellor’s
lecture, “The Future of Your Uni-

versity,” was the first in a threepart series discussing “Problems
and Advantages Unique to a Large
University.” The series Is sponsored by the Public Relations
Committee of Union Board.
President Furnas traced the history of UB through 1962, when
it became a unit of the State Uni-

versity of New York System, "a
great and growing collection of
some 58 institutions."

He continued that "SUNYAB
has a distinction within this system as a university in the basic
university tradition. It is an institution devoted to research, instruction, and public service."

Dr. Furnas presented projected
research, enrollment, income, and
gross area figures to emphasize

the extent of the expansion pro
Revenue is expected to
reach $80 million dollars by 1973.
It presently stands at $36 million.
the first residence buildings
arc expected to be completed by
Fall 1968. Dr. Furnas emphasized
that these buildings are being
designed with “more human" asgram.

*

&gt;

in mind, important fur a
student looking for an identity
within a large university.
Academic buildings are to be
constructed in a relatively small
central area on the new campus,
according to plans. Dr. Furnas
said that students could look forward- to “a fascinating and excitpects

campus.”
informal question period
followed the lecture. The second
discussion in this series, "Dorm
Commuter Relations," will be held
March 2. Head Resident of the
University Housing Stephen S.
Burke will be the speaker.
ing

An

DR. FURNAS comments on past and future of

University.

Prosser Addresses Ripon Society;
Discusses The Liberal Republican
“What is Liberal Republicanism?” was the topic of a speech
given by Drama and Speech Professor Michael Prosser at the organizational meeting of the Ripon Society, Monday, February
7.
In a quote from the John Lindsay Issue Book, Dr. Prosser described a Liberal Republican as
“one who brings vitality, intel-

ligence, and activity back to city
hall.” A Republican group must
function as a check and balance
against the Democratic view.
A further Republican view

“which

President

Johnson has

in the last few
weeks,” is that foreign aid cannot continue if the countries receiving aid are not interested in
helping themselves.

come around to

A Political Symposium to provide the student body of UB with
various
an opportunity to hear political
speakers on topics of
was
and academic significance

the Ripon Society
Committee. It will be

proposed by

Executive

jointly sponsored by Ripon Society, YAF, and SDS. An improvidpartial moderator will be
ed by the Politics Club.
A statement of principles

was

for
approval. It outlined the basis
of the Ripon Society as a belief
that “the Republican Party has
been and should be inherently
and essentially a progressive
party dedicated to constructive

presented

to the members

policies."

in a
free market economy and the
right of all peoples of the world
An expression of faith

to

self-determination

were con-

tained in the statement.
Martin Feinrider and Jeffrey
Lewis were unanimously elected
President and Vice-President. The
position of Secretary Treasurer
was filled by Richard Bredhoff.

lated programs of the institution.
In making the local announcement, Dr. Furnas said:
"Dean Trabant has been the
driving force in a program which
has seen the School of Engineer-

ing become an important center

of education, research and public
service both locally and nationally. He has brought in new fac
ulty of the highest caliber and
distinction, has overseen the enrichment and expansion of existing programs and the establishment of new and pioneering
ones, and has achieved major
national accreditation from the
Engineering Council for Professional Development for the majority of the programs of the
School. Under his leadership, the
annua) sponsored research
volume in the School has increased to a level of more than
$500,000 and the School has embarked on a significant program
of graduate education which now
has more than 100 full-time students and has awarded its first
doctoral degrees. The School has
also become a leader in the field
of continuing education for engineers."
Commenting on the change,
Dr. Trabant said, “While I look
forward in the challenges at the
Georgia Institute of Technology,
I also look forward to the many
years of progress which lie in
the future for State University
at Buffalo. The strong bond
which has developed between the
University and the community,
particularly between area in
dustry and the School of En-

ARTHUR E. TRABANT
gincering, has provided a firm
foundation for future progress."

Dr. Trabant became dean of
the School of Engineering in

July.

1960,

Parking

Problem
The thaw should do muchto

current

alleviate the

parkWg

promem on campus. According
to Eugene Murray, director of
campus police, snow around the
edges of the lot has taken up
to 20 per cent of the available

parking area.
Failure to obey the parking
regulations and even the dictates
of common courtesy have complicated the problem. Mr. Murray

been
Cars
have
across exits preventing
movement of traffic. In the areas
previously controlled by meters,
cars have not been left in the
marked spaces and have edged
out into the roadway causing a

continued.

parked

hazard.
To correct this situation tickets
will be issued to cars parked
y in si

side of the previously meter controlled stalls in front of tower
and the drive up from Main St.
Students found in the Faculty
lots will have their ID cards
seized and will be turned over
to the Dean of Students for disciplinary action.

Senators View Movie
On WUS Goals, Drives

A movie illustrating the goals
and accomplishments of the
World University Service was
shown at the Tuesday, February
8 Student Senate meeting, in conjunction with the Senate’s WUS

fund-raising drive,
Included on the ,agcnda were
the proposal of an amendment,
the recognition of two organizations and the acceptance of a
department budget.
The World University Service,
an organization offering welfare
and educational services to students in other countries, is con
ducting a fund-raising drive.
Three barrels, to be situated in
Norton Union, Tower dormitory
and a site yet to be chosen, will
be set up for personal contributions. Canisters will be distri
buted in all the dormitory cafeterias. A substantial amount of
money is expected to be collect-

ed by the individual campus organizations
The Student Senate constitution states that the Student Juoriginal
.
diciary shall have
and appellate jurisdiction in matters of student conduct except

in cases of mental disorder and
Senator
sexual misconduct . .
Carl I-evinc's proposed amendment provides for the elimination
. except in cases
of the phrase
of mental disorder and sexual
.

misconduct

.

.

The recognition of Students for
in Viet Nam
and the Ripon Society followed.
The Senate approved the $1303
budget of the School of Social
the United States

Welfare.

A special Senate meeting will
be held next Tuesday to review
the rules and procedures for the
upcoming March elections.

�Friday, February 11, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACE TWO

Senior Women Ask Abolishment of Curfews;
Granted 2 Hour Extension By Dean Scudder
“In response to the request of
senior women residents for the
privilege of exemption from curfew, this office has agreed to an
extension of two hours beyond
the curfew at the discretion of
each senior woman," stated Dean
of Women Jeanette Scudder in
a statement issued to the Spec-

decision on the matter, can be
employed. The seniors will make
periodic progress reports to the
Office of the Dean of Women.
Miss Weinstein expressed hope
that lowerclassmen will work in
the future to abolish senior curfews.

trum Tuesday, February 8,
Dean Scudder continued that
“overnight permissions for seniors will continue to be available. This privilege is extended
on a trial basis for this spring
semester. It wil be evaluated at

Enrollment of College Students Hits New High

the end of that time."
Senior women had requested
the complete abolishment of their
curfew system. MacDonald Hall
President Sue Weinstein reported that the seniors “arc disappointed that we were not given
a chance to prove our system
workable."
continued,
Miss
Weinstein
"There is nothing more we can
do and wc arc grateful for this
much." She stated that senior
women intend to show that the
new system, Dean Scudder’s final

The dean of admissions at the
of Cincinnati concluded that “today’s millions of
American college students repre-

University

sent the most massive movement
in the history of higher educa-

tion” in his annual survey of

college enrollments recently.

Dr. Garland G. Parker reported 3,292,539 full-time students and a grand total of
4,586,057 attending the 1,095 ac-

credited universities, senior colleges and four-year colleges reporting to him.
This represents an increase of
12.7 per cent in full-time students

Further

complications

arose

over the question of senior wo-

men residing in halls other than

MacDonald and Cooke, the traditional senior halls, Mr. Donald
McClain, Assistant Director of
Housing, explained that a short-

age of police guards might make

it difficult to administer the new
system in Goodyear, Clement, and
Schoellkopf Halls. He added that
the few seniors in question will
be asked to move to vacant rooms
in Cooke and MacDonald.
If the girls prefer to stay in

and 10 per cent in grand totals
over the 1964 figures.
Parker’s study was carried by
the educational journal, “School
and Society,” as its 46th annual
collegiate enrollment report.
Records were set in all but one
category. The number of parttime students in urban universities dropped slightly.

greatly

increased numbers of
transfers from the junior and
community colleges,” he added.
The number of freshmen rose
17.3 per cent in both 1964 and
1965 even though the increase
in the numbers of 18-year-olds
was only 10 to 12 per cent over
1964. Parker cited the following
factors as significant in this in-

Last fall’s increase in full-time
students will mean “significantly
larger numbers in the junior and
senior levels in the next two
years,” Parker predicted. “Even
larger entering classes will succeed them and be augmented by

crease:
Rising

ira

Jim

\\

H.A., Hushit

W &lt;i*h

branches, community and junior
colleges. Expanding main campuses. A belief that every graduate of an accredited high school
who wants to go to college
should be able to.
The 3.3 per cent overall increase in part-time students

—

far lower than increases of the
was due
previous three years
in part, Parker reported, to the
change from part to full-time
status by many students “in an
effort to postpone or evade the
military draft, and many others
were drafted or enlisted.”
—

social

and

economic

pressures encouraging more students to enter college. An enlarged 'base of student financial
support. Increased educational opportunities such as university

Ford Motor
Company is:
ms

their present rooms, the Housing
Office will experiment with methods of administering the system for all senior women regardless of dorm. “If it is administerably possible,” Mr. McClain said, “we are willing to
try it.”

College graduates, new to Ford Motor Company,
often comment on the comparative youth of many
of our top executives. The example of these men
in key positions is evidence that being young is no
handicap at Ford to those who possess ability and
ambition. In fact, new employes can expect
challenging assignments while still participating
in our College Graduate Program. This means an
opportunity to demonstrate special skills and
initiative while still learning the practical, day-today aspects of the business. Consider the experience of Jim Weston, who has been with Ford
Motor Company for three years.

Jim came to Ford in February, 1963. His first assignment was in marketing
analysis where his principal job was evaluating present and potential
dealer locations. For a time, he also gained experience in the actual pur-

chasing of dealer locations. Later, an assignment forecasting sales and
market potential with Ford Divisions Truck Sales Programming Department gave him the background he needed to Qualify for his present position.
His job today? Only three years out of college, Jim is now a senior financial
analyst m F’ord Division’s Business Management Department.

Jim Weston’s experience is not unusual. At Ford Motor Company, your
twenties can be challenging and rewarding years. Like to learn more about
it? Talk to our representative when he visits your campus.

But more important, according
to Parker, is the fact that “many
part-time students have been
denied admission because of a
need

to accommodate

full-time

registrants.”

(Cont’d on Pg. 11)

TIME INC.
Campus Representative

for 1966
A position is now open on your
campus. A Time Inc. college
representative on a small or
medium-sized campus can expect to earn $200 to $750 in
commissions annually selling
subscriptions to TIME, LIFE,
SPORTS ILLUSTRATED and
FORTUNE at reduced students’ and educator rates. On
larger campuses, many of our
representatives earn over $750
a year. They work hard, of
course, but their hours are
their own, and they gain valuable business experience in
this year-round marketing program. Send name and address,
college, class and any other
information you consider important to Time Inc., College
Bureau, TIME &amp; LIFE BuildYork City 10020. All applications must be submitted by
March 1, 1966. You will be
contacted promptly.

College Week In

BERMUDA

Spring Vacation (Mar. 19-26)
8 days and 7 nights including:
•

•

•

Round Trip Flight from
Buffalo and New York
Round Trip Transfers from
Airport to Guest House, Cottage, or Apartment
Accommodations
Guest
House, Cottage and Apart—

ments

BEACH PARTY
COLLEGE QUEEN CONTEST
CRUISE
TALENT SHOW
&amp;
MUCH MORE
Complete for

$165 from New York
$185 from Buffalo
Contact:

Donald Mathison
3876 Bailey Ave.
Ihe American

Road. Dearborn,

—

837-5964

Representative of
Garber’s Travel Agency

Michigan

An equal opportunity employer

�Friday, F*hru*ry II, 19*6

PAG!

SPECTRUM

THREE

Meets
Faculty
Committee
Advisement
Exercises

President Furnas to Present Degrees

At Midyear Commencement
Chancellor Clifford C. Furnas
will present degrees to appro**the midmtefcr 75* graduates atexercises,
year commencement

10:38 aj*, Satan**. Fehnenty Xt

in Kleinhans Music Hall.

minister,
the Reverend Robert A. Jones,
will deliver the invocation and
benediction and Dr. Harold C.
Syrett, Executive Dean for University Centers, will be the main
speaker. The Chancellor’s Medal,
the highest honor given by the
University, will be presented to
an “outstanding Buffalo citizen”
during the exercises.

Methodist

Campus

President and Mrs. Furnas have
invited guests to a luncheon in
the Tenth Floor Dining Room of

Applications for the
Browsing Library Contest must be returned to
the Browsing Library or
to 225 Norton on or before Monday, February

Goodyear Hall, beginning at 12:30
following the commencement, to- hMtar Be, Syrctt and

pj&gt;L

the winner of fte Chancellor’s
The graduation ceremonies are
open to the publie free of charge.

ments.

The meeting will be informal,
and students muy enter and leave
at will.
The committee hopes for student support and participation,
since student opwuoo will be a
key factor in any modificnlion of
the advisement policy.

Conference on Latin American Affairs
Student Association President
Clinton Deveaux, National Student Association Coordinator,
Marion Michael and Regional
NSA Chairman, Carl Levine will
attend a “Conference on Latin
American Affairs,” in Washington, D.C., Friday, February 11
through Sunday, February 13.
The conference is sponsored by
the USNSA and the Collegiate
Council for the United Nations.

Shoreham Hotel. Students will
attend lectures, workshops and
pane) discussions.

William Fulbright and Arthur
Schlesinger, Jr. are scheduled to
speak at the conference, at the

Kaleidoscope Players Will Perform
Dylan Thomas' Under the Milkwood'
The

Kaleidoscope

Milkwood Friday, February 18 at
8:30 p.m. in the Fillmore Room.

Participants in the conference

will discuss the merits of American foreign policy toward the
rest of the hemisphere. Supporters of the administration and
“friendly critics” will present
their positions.
Senators Robert Kennedy and

the Buffalo community arc on
sale in the Norton Ticket Boolh

Players, a
group, will

touring theatrical
stage Dylan Thomas’ Under the

The production will be spon
sored by the Union Board Literature and Drama Committee.
Tickets at $1.00 for students,
for faculty and $2.50 for

Dr.

Murphy iddrtMM

UvElH

Senate on problomi of mMhment in the Collogo of Art* and
Scioncov Photo by Edwmrd 7&lt;ara/yn

Free Univ. Committee
The Free University Committee
will meet on Friday night. February 11, at 8 p.m. in room 235.
Norton Union. The purpose of
the committee is to establish a
Free University of Buffalo (FUB).
All people interested in FUB are

$1.50

encouraged to participate.

“Let’s unplug the computer, boys!
Start thinking!”

DEALS Jewelers
UNIVERSITY PLAZA
DIAMONDS
WATCHES
EARRINGS
RINGS

If we can't
fix your watch
throw it away

ODOoafjte
jdo

ooJjjS

Theatre)

,

Amherst

(next to

*
'

\

v/H

Everything Photographic for Profess unai
and Amateur Um
®

*°°

gjpEnErj]

Delaware Camera Mtfh
Movie Rentals
Photo Finishing
Cameras Supplies Protectors
-

1435 DELAWARE AVENUE
•774317

®©000@
°

—n

°

O

—

IJ

o

\BBfif

°

O

TT

Interested
A lot of people believe that someday
computers will do all their thinking
for them.
Well, a funny thing is going to
happen on the way to the future:

You’re going to have to think
harder and longer than ever.

Computers can't dream up things
like Picturephone service, Telstar
satellite, and some of the other
advances in communications we
have made. Of course, we depended
on computers to solve some of the
problems connected with their
development. But computers need
absolutely clear and thorough
instructions, which means a new and
tougher discipline on the

1

14.

The Faculty Advisement Committee will hold an open meeting
on Arts t Sciences advisement in
the Hans Lounge from
pJK.
today. Students are invited- to
discuss their complaints, preferences and suggested improve-

human intelligence.

a practical way to lock a door or turn
off an oven by remote telephone
control, or to make possible some of
the other things we'll have someday.

It takes individuals ... perhaps you
could be one ... launching new
ideas, proposing innovations
and dreaming dreams.

Saving Money?

Take Advantage of
Our Semi-Annual
CLEARANCE SALE

And someday, we’re going to have to
find a way to dial locations in space
Makes you think

&amp;t\j&gt;le®rest

And it will take more than a computer
to create a pocket phone the size
or find
of a matchbook, let’s say

®Bell

System

American Telephone &amp; Telegraph
and Associated Companies

UNivmmr plaza
THANsrroww plaza

lb

AM. to

«

PM DAILY

�Friday, February 11, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACE FOUR

(Comment

oCetterA

...

Editor’s Note—Because Afr. Volpe is a member ol the Editorial
Board ol this paper, the following editorial appears here in the
hope that this opinion will contribute to the dialogue surrounding
and does not indicate any change in the
the issue ol the dralt
position ol this paper.
-

BREAKING APRON STRINGS
A privileged community exists within this country.
■ l exists because of the present system of deferment
.fiven male students and all women from military service.
This privilege to an alleged elite society brings into
serious doubt the credibility of the expressed commitment of the American people to their policy in foreign
affairs.
Only when all levels of society are eligible to participate in the war effort directly can the true burden
of its demands be appreciated. Only when Scarsdale
parents are upset by the same absence of young sons
that is being felt in Brooklyn, when Nottingham Terrace
homes are tapped as are those homes on the West Side
or Jefferson Avenue, can this country stand unashamed
before the graves of the new dead.
How can a democracy permit a segment of society
to be exempt from the consequence of its decisions?
All should be eligible; all should be prepared to face
death. Only then will the commitment be meaningful.
Protest to draft eligibility by students is damnable.
In a war that is being fought in the mud and dung of
Viet Namese fields, where animal instinct is the best
weapon, why should the scrub-faced student’s hide be
valued more than that of the trained mechanic, electrician, or other blue-collar workers?
Drafting students would not bring about a critical
shortage of talent in those areas needed for national
defense. The practice of selecting only a segment of
society
the uneducated and too often the unemployed
to fight for the privileged, reeks of immorality.
Why should students be secure when thousands of
young wives
many pregnant with their first child
are told to go it alone while their husbands are shipped
off to die in flooded rice paddies and delta marshes.
fAnd this denial of deferment should also be extended K to our nan&lt;*:&gt;ke-inakeup citizens. Israel, subject
to repeated attacks acrbi* its borders, has, since its first
heroic- minutes as a free state, demanded that women
bear the cost of their freedom. Pete Hamill, writing for
the New York Post Magazine, reported tripping over
female bodies in Viet Nam, too. The tactic of terror
spread by the Viet Cong is plainly visible; bodies are
found with breasts cut off, with eyes stark open at the
sight of children being smashed against stone walls and
husbands slit open from neck to groin.
In a country where brightly colored magazines lament the “American Woman” in search of her proper
“role”, perhaps the path to self fulfillment and reality
can be found in the jungles of Viet Nam, at the bottom
of a mud washed pit patching the bodies of men pierced
by stakes pointed upward to catch falling bodies.
“Mother instinct” might be discovered while nursing the
thousands of Viet Namese streaming into Saigon’s refugee stockades. Femininity might be found anew in the
"dark I'.ves nf -children starved and diseased in a land
considered the bread basket of Southeast Asia.
Remember Kiris when you asked to be emancipated,
to share equal rights with the male? You were right
then, and you would be right now. Where is the DAR.
the female VAFers, the sign carrying moralist. Where
the hell is that bloody body of consensus our faces are
being shoved into?
All political factions agree that this war will go
on and on, that grave will follow grave across still uncleared fields. Can we stand by sacrificing only the
bodies of the poor, the unemployed, only the lives of
the “flower of our young male youths"?
This is our war, we should help fight it. Let each
do his part as needs demand, but let each do a part
—

the Editor

to

Committee For Victory In Vietnam Defends Beliefs
TO THE EDITOR:
It is our belief that contrary
to the Spectrum editorial, the
ideas of the Committee For Victory in Vietnam have been stated quite clearly in our statement
of purpose and our statement of
principle, both of which have
appeared in the Spectrum, and do
not need further elaboration.
We have stated our belief that
the U. S. has a moral obligation
to promote democracy in Vietnam and to do everything in its
•power to help the Vietnamese
people fight their other enemies
of poverty, hunger, disease and
illiteracy, but that it is impossible for use to do so while enemy
soldiers are shooting and throwing bombs at us. We therefore
must use military as well as economic and political means to promote freedom in Vietnam, and it

is difficult for Us to see how
freedom
in South Vietnam,
Southeast Asia, or anywhere else
will be helped by a Communist
victory, which would undoubtably occur if we ran away.

If the architects of the Speceditorials do sincerely
agree with our principles and
do not wish to "drive the people’s of Southeast Asia into , . .
bureaucratic communism,” then
it is up to them to put forth
practical alternatives to prevent
it. Until they can do so, rather
than “cease to agitate” for an
American victory, we intend to
exercise our right of free speech
and do all in our power to promote it.
In conjunction with this, we
would like to announce the start
of a campaign to support our
troops, in which any person who
trum

—

•,

!

—Raymond I). Volpe

THE
1

SPECTRUM

TO THE EDITOR:
Perhaps the best way to answer
Mr. Morrow is head-on.

1—“A single copy random sample is not enough on which to
base opinions.”

*

°

"*

would never attempt to review a magazine with which I was
not well-acquainted. For three
years I had a subscription to SR
and, for two of those years, read
it as thoroughly as possible. If
a magazine has a lively editorial
policy, each issue will reflect it,
and is such, subject to review.
Also, if Morrow noticed, I made
about 3 or 4 references to the
magazine as a whole which would
imply that I was familiar with
other issues.
I

2—“He could note the fact that
SR has part of each issue devoted
to a certain specific area . . .
Such sections are invaluable to
those of us who can’t devote
time or money to specialized
periodicals in those areas.”
The fact is so noted. So what??
If Mr. Morrow finds the record-

ing section, for instance, invalu
able, I would question Mr, Morrow’s musical values.

3—“Kenneth Rexroth’s Classics
Revisited column is valuable for
the simple reason that it is clear
and concise.”

'

TO THE EDITOR

DAVID

It has come to my attention
how quiet and clean the lobbies
of Norton Hall have become in
the last month. It seems as
though our young radicals of the
left have subordinated their
ideals to save humanity from itself and have taken to the pursuit of self-interest (if somewhat
less glamorous) and have been
studying for their exams. Can it
be they really have self-interest?
perish the thought! I suspect
they'll come crawling out of the
woodwork soon and in anticipation of this I've been inspired
to write the following for their

Newt Editor

SUSAN GREENE

Asst
Feature
Asst

RONNIE

Editor

BROMBERG
JOHN STINY

Feature Editor

JOANNE LEEGANT

Sport* Editor

STEVE SCHUELEIN

Layout Editor
Copy Editor

SHARON

HONlG

LAUREN

JACOBS

EDITORIAL POLICY IS

Photography Editor
Continuity

Editor

Advertising

Manager

Circulation

Manager

Faculty

Financial

Advisor

Alas,
We

Advisor

leprechaun

DETERMINED

EDWARD JOSCELYN

■VAX' -

,

the cigar-

ettes they do squash.

RONALD HOLTZ

IRENE
DALLAS
RUSSELL

dentally.)”

we have disthat is usually
esoteric film
I read inci-

I’m glad that somebody reads
those “esoteric film magazines”
but Mr, Morrow will gain little
if he persists in this habit. (I exclude from this some issues of
Sight and Sound and Cashiers
du Cinema.)

7—“He should look at a magazine overally, not just at the
minor faults of one issue.” First-

ly, the faults were major and
secondly, “overally’ may be a
word but it certainly is a clumsy
one.

In any case, I must thank Mr.
Morrow for his letter. I hope in
the future to infuriate rather
than simply annoy.
Jeffrey L. Simon.

There they squat so proud,
so small.

And

of

their

thoughts,

enough to bore,

Their essence is “Make love,
not war.”

bad, not bad for a hu

Not

man

goal,

Except when

the bed your

enemy stole.

What difference if our freedom's lost,”

(what

filled

with

illusions

them to their false
conclusions.
Leftists, socialists, Liberals

Lead

all

your shoulders
world will fall.

Upon

—

Since dear brothers I have
scorned you so

And in a moment I shall go,
The pangs of pity and sorrow in me you spark
So may I end with this re
mark?

Perhaps it’s bad, perhaps it’s

Peace, peace at any cost,”

Their thoughts,

But none of you, mistakes
will claim.
For
it’s not You
the
worlds to blame.

nice,
But please take note of this

advice.
In your desire to be free
You’ll get your strength

unity.

in

So brothers of the A.D.A.
And brothers of the S.D.S
Ban together as I say 1
And form the A.S.S.
(Anyone for a Subjugated
Society)

our
The Majority

Sophomore Complains About Parking Lots

LEWIS

WILLET
GARBER

TO THE EDITOR

GOLDBERG

BY THE EDITOR IN-CHIEF

Second Clast, Pottage Paid at Buffalo, N Y
Subscription S3 00 per year, circulation

15.000

amongst

MARCIA ORSZULAK

FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING

c7A\;

alas, oh friends of mine

see those back without
a spine.

Sitting

DIANE

Why on earth would anyone
to be pseudo-intellectual?
What Mr. Morrow probably meant
was that I was trying to be intellectual and succeeding in
being only pseudo. Good name
calling should be clear and concise (see number 3) as well as
witty and original. Sorry about
that, Chris.
5—“Something Mr. Simon overlooked are the outstanding, film
reviews by Hollis Alpert and
Richard Knight.”
I love movies (and movie criti-

6—‘‘Here again
cussion on an area
only discussed in
magazines (Which

try

thoughts?)

a wash

RAYMOND VOIPE

4
“Mr. Rexroth is not -trying to be pseudo-intellectual as
perhaps Mr. Simon is.”

Upon the floors of Norton

With beards and hair denied

JEREMY TAYLOR
EDELMAN

Managing Editor
Manager

Business

proves.

Hall

•

Editor-in-Chief

Being clear and concise is not
a value in itself as any first
grade reader (e.g. Dick and Jane)

too much to concede this.
It’s a simple matter of taste and
SR’s cinema twins make me sick.
By the way, Knight’s name is
Arthur, not Richard.
cism)

An Ode To The Left

enjoyment.

Th
l,ud n' new&gt;p«per
m
of the Suit University of New York el Buffalo.
Publication Office .1 Norton Hell, Universily
Cempus, Buffalo, N.Y. 14214 Published
twice weekly from the first week of September to th. lest
week in May, except for
period*.
■•m
Thanksgiving, Christmas, and spring vacations.

Sincerely yours,
Frank Klinger
P. Stephan Sickler
Alan Kerman
Dave Murawsky
Donald Rich

Reviewer Responds To Criticism

—

—

wishes to write a letter to an
American soldier may give the
letter to us along with 8c for
postage and we will see to it that
it reaches a soldier in Vietnam.
This soldier may then correspond
with the writer if he wishes to.
We believe that this offers an
excellent opportunity for those
who support our policy to encourage our soldiers in their
fight and possibly to get first
hand information about the war
from a soldier. We urge all those
who really do support our principles to write such a letter and
either give it to one of us or
leave it at our table in Norton.

Repretented lor national advertising by
National Advertising Service Inc., 420
Madison Ave , New York, N Y.

it known that my automobile has been vandalized and
dented in the Michael Hall parking lot. I revengefully plan to
detect and punish the offender
be it man, woman or animal. I
do not have collision insurance
so I must provide the money to
repair my car from my own
Be

The culprit who has
forced this hardship upon me
will be well aware of this fact
when he. she or it is appre-

pocket.

hended.

Last year, I recall parking on
campus lots with the aid of policemen who directed traffic and
guarded

the automobiles. If this
continued, I be-

practice were

lieve my current circumstance
could have been avoided or at
least deterred. I suggest that if
these unlawful situations are not
corrected the driving students
organize their own police to protect their property
Very truly yours,
Sigfried Sophmore

�11, 1966

Friday, Fabroary

Conversion In Loan Policy
Extends Financial Benefits
Con
WASHINGTON (CPS)
version of the government’s stu
dent loan program from federal
—

to private financing as proposed
in the President’s budget message
will make about 90 per cent df

the nation’s college and university students eligible for assistance, an Office of Education official said.

year which

During the fiscal
ended last June J 30, the number
of borrowers under the National
Defense Education Act was about
319,000. In his message, President
Johnson predicted that the number of borrowers would rise to
775,000 in the fiscal year beginning next July 1.

He explained that loans would
no longer be restricted to students from the poorest families
but would become available to
those from families with incomes
as high as $15,000 a year.
“This takes in a good propor-

tion of the middle-income families
in the country,” Muirhead said.
“Approximately 90 per cent of the
students in institutions of higher
learning today come from families

The

with incomes of $15,000 a year or
less.’
President Johnson has proposed
new legislation that would abolish
direct federal loans to college
students and establish instead a
system of government guarantees
to banks and other private institutions that make such, education

The Office of the Bursar has
announced the following information regarding student medical
insurance for the spring semester, 1966:
Full-Time Undergraduate (Day
and MFC)
All full-time undergraduate students are asessed insurance for
the spring semester unless they
signed a waiver that was honored in the fall, 1965. Those Who
are currently assessed the insurance for spring, but wish to
waive it, must sign a waiver card
and Show proof of other insurance coverage. The waivers must
be signed at the Office of the
Bursar, 230 Hayes Hall, by Feb-

11.

Undergraduate Students (Day
or MFC) Changing Registration from Part-Time to Full-

Time
Undergraduates Who change
thedr Status from part-time to

full-time will be assessed insur-

ance unless they have signed

a

—

has shown this dull and drab
campus for so long I must crave
an indulgence, I am not a well
man.

loans.

Indeed I am ill in both body
and mind. 1 shall ignore all remarks concerning the latter part
of the former statement until a
later date. It has occurred as
usual that I almost convinced myself that I was a true connoisseur
of the good and fine things of
life . . . and then tripped over
the ends of the army boot length
shoelaces which happened to be
the only ones I had in the drawer
that morning and how the devil
was I to remember that they
would fit my tattle-tale-grey tennis shoes in a most messy way?
But that is not really what happened. Nay, far far worse has befallen me. Last Friday evening I
took my wife out to celebrate her
birthday at one of the finer
places to eat in the city. When

government

In addition, the
would pay a subsidy to the lenders in order to maintain a 3 per
cent interest rate for the student
borrowers. Normal bank interest
rates on such loans at the current
time range from 6 to 8 per cent.

The loans would run as much
as ten years, with repayment deferred until the student had completed his studies. Part of the
principal would not have to be
repaid by those who become
teachers.
The delinquency rate on the
NDEA loans has been high, according to normal loan standards,
Office of Education officials say.
On any given date last year, officials said that 16 per cent were
overdue or in default.

me

oHcc MAi/J THIS
r'llRICAU OF

CA«C T« TEE

ANARCHIST SATIRE
/S 0«o«eHT TO you
THSWW To THf
EFFORTS «F V«UR

Chcerv, cneRuB'Cj
CHflRfllVCj,

So

above students. Students desiring
insurance coverage must sign an
insurance election card each semester. Letters Will not be accepted. Election cards are available at the Offices of the Pro-

fessional and Graduate Schools
or at the Office of the Bursar
and must be signed by February
11.
Married Students (Family Plan)
A Family Plan Insurance is
available at the Office of Business Affairs, 139 Hayes Hall.

Foreign Students
Insurance for foreign students
is handled through the Office
of Foreign Student Affairs, attention of Mr. Lawrence Smith,

GB-

amm,

many

OISbUltEO
*

AS

rtRU-MAW^MH)

Professor »r
/EUOiEAR

PPvsics,

CHATrcRlWfc,
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

Mtitreieer HActmf if
rtV /*«r
ALMWT C'HfLrreo. ATtw ulr HALL Iff
if foim hwbifms cam't Be vii/re 1*1
?
one etu tvecf
0
■
o
*-o o •:»
r
0
a
o.e
”5
.0
■
'

i'll tf/wc 7Kr

Of To V*0- SIM
Ptev»ficmion-

*•&lt;

run

So«* o» r*«»
t
lo»KU« 6oo# Ctutifi-

rtenMNW
OF

THE

So for the second time in three
days I gorged myself. When Monday morning finally arrived
I
did not sleep awfully well
I
made it as far as the shoes and
socks before 1 rolled over weakly
on my side and sent my wife off
to do the dirty work of calling in
—

—

sick.

1 laid around whimpering for
most of the day until my stomach
could be persuaded to please release something in any direction.

*

interpretation. The underlying
point is this: should a union be
allowed to coerce management,
by legitimate means, into establishing a union shop? Ordinarily
I would say that it should have
that right, thereby favoring repeal and incurring the wrath of

my fellow conservatives. There
arc other factors involved, however.

Currently there are laws on
federal books forbidding an employer to discriminate in hiring
for reasons of race, color, national origin, creed, or membership
in any union. Repealing 14-B
would explicitly permit, and in

many cases virtually demand, that
an employer discriminate for reasons of non-membership in a
union. The administration is utilizing a double Standard in its de-

mand for repeal of 14-B. They
arc saying, “Discrimination is
wrong except "When that’s what
the union wants.” The problem is
quite simple: is discrimination
wrong, or isn't it? If it is, leave
the laws where they are. If not,
repeal them all. It’s the same double standard that’s been used for
years in matters of anti trust legislation and judiciation: “Any-

f tft 'll

run

Pf »ricT

,»*&gt;,*»

•*

( a/V» jcitvtr-y»v

I

mentioned shoelaces.

thing that gets so big that it can
harm the national welfare should
be broken up. unless it’s a labor

union.”

There is another consideration
as well. Right-to work laws protect employers from unjust methods used by unions to bring about
a union shop. Labor unions are
not known for their scruples or
restraint, and if no better way
can be found to eliminate the use
of threats and violence then we
must rely on right-to-work laws.
It's a roundabout method; rather
than outlawing the means, we

make the end inattainable and

hence the means useless.

The result? Well, right now it
looks like the filibuster will succeed in burying the issue for
some time; a formidable body of

Senators are opposed to repeal.
Furthermore, the transit strike

in New York did little to further
tabor's image. When such formidable landmarks of liberalism as
Lyndon Johnson, Walter Reuther,
George Meany, and Eric Steese
come out against the union, you
can be pretty sure there’s going
to be trouble in obtaining any
labor legislation.

7)

(Cont’d on Pg,

&lt;^M«wiecr

SKinPtR leek. uKt

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fOK

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ofmm

—

(AiffgjTM*

mmm
I

of Memorial Auditorium watch-

ing St. Bonavcnture and Providence meet in a basketball game.
Oh foul and fickle fate. To
have given me what has the soul
of an artist such -low and common taste. Exit he. weeping, by
falling over his feet, and fore-

CdlllT

° ”

|'«

H.M.C.

1

On the horizon was Godfrey
Cambridge and Miss Hester, he a
very funny and erudite man indeed, she of a fine voice and some
high standing in folk circles. And
where will I be on the night of
12 February 1966? With pretentions drooping to dust I shall be
perched high up in the gray seats

StM UP

semrntio*

—•*

So perished the legend of E.
Steese, boy gourmet. Oh the irony
of it to have a piercing keen intellectual mind and the stomach
of a peasant. Which wouldn’t be
so bad, really, but even before my
stomach arose in much wrath and
decreed much penance I had befallen me to find out I am not
even an intellectual. Oh, Oh, Oh,
to be destroyed and without
dreams so young.

'J ft/BLIC

°*

•

&amp;o T

n!

*j»e
'*

ret

U

UT/Y£fl»^

eovomon

dffl«
TAK^Pltff

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To ecoffo*C
•

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re.

.

—

autts wH

B.F.
HKeK /

*/tvpns

HfY!

or

—

•

/

££££*"•

Since they eat out frequently,
I thought we should at least show
them where this restaurant was
in case they would like to patronize it themselves at some future
date. We went in to have a drink
and wound up staying for dinner.

by STEESE

|

UWIF OflAKTY

cleft r tV

father-in-law not her father and

oversimplifications

have come up lately concerning
the issue of section 14-B of the
Taft-Hartly Act that it’s about
time that straight truth is p-inted.
Senator Kennedy says it’s simply
the question of whether unions
should have to bear allegiance to
management, and he advocates repealing the measure. Senator
Dirksen, leading the Senate filibuster opposing the motion to
bring up the repeal of 14-B, says
the question (is simply whether
workers should have to bear allegiance to the unions, and advocates retaining the measure.
The complexity of 14-B itself
reflects on the complexity of the
issues involved. The section says
that the federal government shall
permit state governments to pass
laws outlawing the closed or union
shop. Nineteen states presently
have these so-called right-to-work
laws, and the question is whether
these States shall be allowed to
retain those laws. Note that the
measure does not establish a national right-to-work law, as Kennedy seems to think, nor would
its repeal establish any kind of
closed shop contrary to Ddrksen’s

All Professional, Graduate and
Part-Time Students
Insurance is optional for the

Ofirut jor»&gt;

THAT nASTER

.

my mother) arrived.

By JAMES CALLAN

i

sm

.

THE RIGHT

Insurance Election
Students who have waived insurance in the fall, but now wish
to have coverage for the spring
semester, must sign an insurance
election card at the Office of the
Bursar, by February 11,

Synopsis;

.

we do splurge, we splurge. Escargots, filet mignon (or however
the hell it is spelled) and other
assorted goodies of similar nature. I was quite well stuffed
when we left. ■! did not eat
much Saturday and then on Sunday my mother and father-in-law
(that is my motherin-law and

—

213 Harriman Hall.

waiver.

grump

Should by some chance this
particular column lack the by
now famous
justly so I should
think
wit, sparkle, and forthright intellectual leadership it

Office Of Bursar Explains
Insurance Plan For Spring

ruary

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

•

-ED.

15 THIS

THE E*
OF HUnW
UTC

/)«

U/£ KWV

IT?

(hit,

huh?)

�Friday, February 11, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACE SIX

Professor Cancels Class;
Finds Parking Problem

Cjoodman
With regard to the present propaganda in the Vietnam War, the

Division of Humanities in the
universities is again demonstrating its worthlessness and unconcern for reality. I have not heard
a single critique and protest from
any academic faculty, in Literature, History, or Philosophy, of
the style and morality of the
Vietnam coverage in the TV and
other media. But if these facilities
arc not society's watchdog in
these matters, to maintain the
fundamentals of civilization, who
else?

The jingo propaganda has ra
pidly descended
into pornography, calling on ultimate passions and suffering showing enduring, bleeding, and crippled
men, to win trivial political consent from a comfortable audience.
It docs not help, either, that the
scenes of suffering arc interrupted by commercials for sexy
soap, filtered cigarettes, and sleek
automobiles In my opinion, almost no human purposes are profound enough to justify showing
the suffering, and sublimity, of
war; only the compassion of
Homer or Tolstoy can carry it.
The appeal to patriotism is always
suspect. But certainly the motives
of the Vietnamese, whether right
or wrong, for freedom, self-defense, or revenge, are more appropriate to such violent rhetoric
than McNamara’s calculated
policy, whether correct or not.
It is shameful for our propaganda to use such scenes and
glibly say, "150 V.C. were exterminated,” as if they were not
human beings loo. We shall not
be forgiven it.
The war between the National
Liberation Front and Saigon has
been marked by horror, terror,
and torture on both sides. Twenty
years of war have brutalized the
Vietnamese people. Nevertheless,
from a moral point of view, this
brutalization of the Vietnamese
is a far lower grade of evil than
the dehumanization of our highflying airmen, detached, scheduled, raining down death and fire,
and destroying the crops. These
airmen arc not much different
from public hangmen. In the TV
their gab is presented as cheerily
technical, a beautiful American

disposition but which, under the

circumstances, does little credit
to them as grown up men. There

is no way of making our technological onslaught look good; our
media should have the decency
to. refrain from trying, and to
restrict their coverage to stoical
communiques and abstract statements of policy.
Historians recount with ridicule and disgust the similar propaganda of previous wars of other
countries and of our own country.
We ought to get wise to ourselves and say, This won't do.
Think, after this is over
if it
is ever over and if the nuclear
war doesn’t break out
how we
will look at the pictures of our
goodmatured soldiers giving out
candy to children. Meantime we
burn the rice fields. And it has
happened that the candy itself
has been used as a bribe to show
the way to father’s hiding place.
Because of its peculiar nature,
the Vietnam war has cast a bright
light on the moral degradation
of our country: our sentimentality and callousness; our selfrigbtous cant alnd irresponsibility
to other people’s needs and dig—

—

our abdication of democracy to authorities who are not
even believed; our abdication of

By

nity;

morals and politics to technological means; the complacency of
our middle-class drafting the poor
and sharing vicariously in their
ordeal; the domineering wilfulness of great power that says
“Submit or else.” Unlike Professor Genovese, I would not “welcome” the victory of the NLF
and Hanoi; every “victory” $t
present is a further set-back for
world peace. But if we won this
war, it would be an unmitigated

ALICE EDELMAN

Professor of mathematics Albert G. Fadell, unable to find
a parking space on February 4,
cancelled his Math 242 class in
order to remove his car to the
University Plaze.
Arriving on campus in a
Volkswagen at 9:20 a.m., the
professor stated that he entered the faculty lot near Bailey
Avenue. After scouraging the entire lot he found that it was
full.

Finally escaping from the lot,
which was blocked for ten minutes by oncoming traffic, he tried
mankind.
to park in the faculty lot near
me
Let
tell a melancholy anecDiefendorf. After everal attempts
dote. I was recently at a conferto raise the gate an attendant
ence at Cornell, attended by a notified him that the lot was
galaxy of distinguished theolofull. Dr. Fadell asserted that, to
gians from all over the world. his knowledge, there were no
During a sharp exchange, sud“lot full” signs in either faculty
denly Visser t’Hooft, the execulot.
tive secretary of the World CounIn a student parking lot, Dr,
cil of Churches, turned on me Fadell’s next target, the Volksand said, "Don't talk morals to wagen got stuck, but there was
me, you’re an American.” There no space to park.
was nothing for me to do but
At 10:10 a.m., .after forty minhang my head. That’s nice, isn’t utes of searching, Dr. Fadell left
it?
his car and went into his 10:00
Copyright Paul Goodman, 1966 class to tell his students to go

moral disaster for ourselves and

Campus Interviews Wednesday and Thursday, March

and

tention given

New Draft Legislation
WASHINGTON (CPS)
Alaska’s Sen. Ernest Gruendng, a leading congressional opponent to the
war in Vietnam, has introduced
legislation that would prohibit the
involuntary assignment of draftees to fight in Vietnam.
—

Gruening’s proposal came in
the form of three separate amendments to the defense supplemental appropriation bill for the war
in Vietnam. He was joined by
Sen Wayne Morse CD., Ore.) as
co-sponsor of the amendments.

9 and 10

of unmatched aircraft innovation and production, offers you career opportunities as
diverse as its extensive and varied backlog. Whether your interests lie in the field
of commercial jet airliners of the future or
in space-flight technology, you can find at
Boeing an opening which combines professional challenge and long-range stability.
The men of Boeing are today pioneering
evolutionary advances in both civilian and
military aircraft, as well as in space programs of such historic importance as
America’s first moon landing. Missiles,
space vehicles, gas turbine engines, transport helicopters, marine vehicles and basic
research are other areas of Boeing activity.
There’s a spot where your talents can
mature and grow at Boeing, in research,
design, test, manufacturing or administration. The company’s position as world
leader in jet transportation provides a
measure of the calibre of people with
whom you would work. In addition, Boeing
people work in small groups, where initiative and ability get maximum exposure.
Boeing encourages participation in the
company-paid Graduate Study Program at
leading colleges, and universities near
company installations.

We’re looking forward to meeting engi-

neering, mathematics and science seniors

and graduate students during our visit to
your campus. Make an appointment now
at your placement office. Boeing is an

90* for

Large 13"
8 Slice

equal opportunity employer.

PIZZA

737 jetliner. (2)
Variable-sweep wing design for the nation's
first supersonic commercial jet transport.
(3) NASA’s Saturn V launch vehicle will power
orbital and deep-space flights. (4) Model of
lunar Orbifer Boeing is building for NASA.
(5) Boeing-Vertol 107 transport helicopter
shown with Boeing 707 jetliner.
(1) Boeing’s new short-range

TR 3-1330

FREE DELIVERY
TO CAMPUS

/7/7/YA^

-

Divisions:

Commercial Airplane

•

Military Airplane

•

Missile

•

Space

•

Turbine

•

Vertol

•

at-

the problem. He
suggested that attendants supervise parking to minimize the
amount of wasted space and to
post more obvious indications
when lots are full.

development of your individual capabilities.
Boeing, which in 1966 completes 50 years

Pizza
by DiRose

park

hj

to

The most effective way to evaluate a company in terms of its potential for dynamic
career growth is to examine its past record, its current status, and its prospects
and planning for the future, together with
the professional climate it offers for the

FEB. 26

-

Dr. Fadell stated that

Unilater

many of his colleagues want

Let's talk about a career at Boeing...
50-year leader in aerospace technology

COMING

■

park.

Engineers and Scientists:

HASSIP
IS

4 p.m. 2 a.m. Sun. Fri.
12 p.m, 2 «.m. Saturday

home because he couldn’t
He finally parked in the
versity plaza, where, he
found out, it is illegal to
unless shopping.

Also, Boeing Scientific Research Laboratories

�Friday, February 11, 1966

Regents Scholarship Checks
Now Distributed To Students
Regents Scholarships and Schol-

ar Incentive checks for the past
semester are currently being distributed to students. Approxim-

ately 7,000 checks have already
been forwarded to their recipi-

ents. Those who have not yet
been notified will receive their
awards within the next few
weeks.
Extensive evaluation and proc-

essing, both in Albany and at the
university, has created slight delays in distribution, a member of
the Admissions and Records reported. However, if a student submitted his annual application for
aid, prior to last July 1, he will

receive his ward without further
complication.

The Regents Scholarships and
Scholar Incentive Awards are
granted at the conclusion of each
semester. This process enables
Admissions and Records to confirming each student’s final number of semester hours and to appraise his academic standing. Consequently, awards for this spring
semester will not be distributed

PAGE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

OFFICIAL BULLETIN

until the latter part of the term.
Further information concerning these awards may be secured
at the Bursar’s Office in HayesHall,

The Official Bulletin is an authorized publication of the State
University of New York at Buffalo, for which the SPECTRUM assumes no editorial responsibility.
Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to 114 Hayes Hall,
attention Mrs. Fischer, before 2
p.m. the Friday prior to the week
of publication. Student organizaActivities tion notices are not accepted for

Organizations Hold
Membership Drive

The Union Board
Drive will be held February 2125 on the main floor of Norton
Union. Interested organizations
will be participating in an effort
to encourage new membership.
Special events will be sponsored by the participating organizations. Exhibit booths will be
set up Thursday and Friday, February 17-18, where students interested in joining activities may
pick up applications.

in getting
commuters to participate to stimulate their interest in University
Activities,” emphasized Activities

“We’re interested

Drive Chairman Alan Burden.

publication.
GENERAL NOTICES
Graduate School

Hawaii, whose topic
is "Neonatal Response and Conditioning,” Fillmore Room, Norton Hall, 3:45 p,m.
University of

FEBRUARY 17

The Department of Pharmaceutics, School of Pharmacy—presents a Seminar. The topic is
"Barbituates: Stability Considerations,” 244 Health Sciences, 3
p.m.
The

Calendar

—

Friday, February 18, 1966 is the
last day to resign from a course
without penalty.
All 1966 Degree Candidates

—

all graduate and undergraduate
students planning to graduate in

May 1966, who have not previously done so, must notify the Of-

fice of Admissions and Records
no later than Monday. February
14, 1966.
F'ailure to comply with this reg-

ulation will result in postponement of graduation until the next

regular commencement.

FEBRUARY 14

FEBRUARY 18
Department of Mathematical Statistics —presents Dr. Peter
The

Lewis of IBM Watson Research
Center. The topic is “Correlational Analysis of Point Stochastic
Processes, ' 306 Diefendorf Hall,
4 p.m.

The Department of Biology
presents Dr. Allen Wilson, Associate Professor of Biochemistry,
University of California at Berkeley, The topic is "Evolutionary
and Taxonomic Studies with Enzymes,” 134 Health Sciences, 4
—

75‘ CAR WASH
GRAND OPENING

THE RIGHT

ROTOMATIC CAR WASH SYSTEM
535 KENMORE AVENUE
Between Starin and Englewood

Special Student Introductory Offer

from

Modern

4:30 p.m.

The Department of Psychology
—presents Dr. David Crowell,

(Cont’d

of

—

WEEKLY CALENDAR

OF THE REVOLUTIONARY

Department

preLanguages and Literature
sents a lecture featuring Dr. Jose
Luis Aranguren, recent Professor
of Sociology and Ethics, Faculty
of Philosophy and Letters, University of Madrid. Spain, The
topic is "The Spanish University,"
(in English) 148 Diefendorf Hall,

Pg. 5)

Lastly, I’d like to admit that
I’m not quite so naive and idealistic as 1 seem, I realize perfectly
well that this is really nothing
more than a power struggle, that
nearly all Senators involved care
a hundred times more about next

p.m.

•

•

•

term’s campaign contributions
that they do about the intricacies
of justice involved. This is just
to inform anyone who agrees
with me that there is an ideological justification for their point
of view, if they care to subscribe
to it.

PLACEMENT
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Please check with the University Placement Service, Schoellkopf Hall, telephone ail-3311, for
additional information concerning the following announcements
and interviews.
Northwestern University is offering Graduate Cooperative Edu
rational Programs for qualified
students with a science or engineering background who wish to
earn their Masters Degree in Environmental Health Engineering.
PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS
FEBRUARY 11
Aetna Casualty and Surety Co.
Marlin-Rockwell Co.
Equitable Life Assurance Society of U. S.
New York State Dept, of Public
Works.
West Irondequoit Central

School District No. 3

FEBRUARY U

Boy Scouts of America
,
F. W. Woolworth Co.
Glens Falls Insurance Co.
U. S. Marine Corps.
Factory Mutual Engineering

Division
Chemical Abstracts Service
Ohio State University
Bedford Public Schools

FEBRUARY 14, 15, 14
U. S. Dept, of the Navy

FEBRUARY IS
The Carnation Co.
American Oil Co,
U. S Public Health Services—
Communicable Disease Center

American-Standard

Hercules Powder Co.
Rochester City School District
Niagara Falls Board of
Education

FEBRUARY 16
Co.
National Labor Relations Board
U. S. Air Force
J. J. Newberry Co.
General Mills
Wrighf-Patterson Air Force
Base
Aeronautical Systems
McCurdy

VALUABLE COUPON

A great chance to meet people,

Good from Monday thro Thursday only

make money and train for a

25' OFF CAR WASH

Industrial

Division

&amp;

—

future job as an executive. Join
The SPECTRUM

Offer Expires Feb. 28

advertising

staff. Call Ron Holtz -831 -3610.

Division

Eden Central Schools
FEBRUARY

17

Socony Mobil Oil Co., Inc.
FEBRUARY 17, 18
Firestone Tire and Rubber Co.
Firestone Plastics Co.
National Security Agency
Gamble Distributing
Proctor
&amp;

Co.

FEBRUARY 18
National Steel Corp.
Niskayuna Public Schools
Fremont Unified School
District (California)

CLASSIFIED
FOR SALE

1962 VW red, sun roof,
able. Call 683 0532.

reason

Chevy Impala convertible; racing
motor excellent; good tires,
$225.
new battery and brakes.
882 5281

A*

Y.»i

A SOCIAL

UON#

a

F.!!
T. G. I.Meets
Tonight

Ok e youn 9 Set

Two guitars, Goya and Giannini.
nylon strings, classic neck, case
Also, RCA portable
included.
cartridge Tape Recorder, two
speed, 4 track, includes several

tapes and adapter tapes.
837 9586.

Contact

Dick,

Attention SENIOR &amp;
GRADUATE MEN
Students—U.S. Citizens
Needing nominal FINANCIAL
HELP to compute their edu-

cation this academic year
and then commence work
cosigners required. Send transcript and full details of your
—

Continuous Music
CORDON BLEU RESTAURANT

Two Bands

—

3909 GENESEE STREET
1:30 A.M.
Heel* &amp; Tie*
9:30 P.M.
20-35 YEARS OF AGE
MUST BE SINGLE
-

—

—

—

plans and requirements to

Stevens Bros. Foundation, Inc.
610-412 Endicott Bldg.
St. Paul 1, Minn.
A Non-profit Corp.

�IFQQAfB MM ILHWilg

G.S.A. to Evaluate

Grad. Students'
Housing Interests

Many European sportswriters are amused by our
national passion for “ball" sports. They can understand
football as a bastardization of soccer, but baseball and
basketball are just girl’s prep-school games for them.
To get them interested, one must discuss the “real
sports those in which men must look Death in the eye.
That leaves you with auto racing and mountain climbing
which have lots of fanatic adherents in this country, and
bullfighting, which doesn’t.
The movie called The Moment of Truth, which is
playing currently at the Glen Art theatre in Williamsville,
caught some of the pulse-stirring excitement of the
plaza del toro» with several minutes of remarkable
football, but aside from some fine scenes of bullfighting
and a bit on the life of a bullfighter in Spain today,
there isn’t really very much happening in the film.
-

The Executive Council of the
Graduate Student Association is
conducting a personal survey of
graduate students to evaluate
interest in campus housing on
the Amherst Campus. Information
gained from this survey will be
turned over to the University
Planning Committee,

If there is no positive response,
the committee and the G.S.A,
will assume that graduate students are not interested, and
therefore, will not plan for oncampus housing.

Graduate students interested
inn expressing an opinion on
graduate housing may obtain
questionnaires at the G.S.A, office, room 311 Norton.

The Graduate Tutorial Service
has been re-instituted. Applications are available in the G.S.A.
office.

The G.S.A. Executive Council
will hold its monthly meeting on
February 28 in Norton 329.

Petitions will l»e avail-

Monday, February
14 and Tuesday, February 15 for those people
wish to seek an office in
the School of Business Administration. The petition
can be picked up from the
secretary in Room 205,
able

Th* crowd roort and pays it* hlghatt honor to Miguol Matoo
Miguelin in "Th* Moment of Truth," the Rizzoli Technicolor, Techniscope film now at Glen Art in Williamsville. Linda Christian appears
at special guest star.

The story purports to be fiction, but the young
bullfighter is played by Miquel Miquelin, ranked among
the world’s top 6 toreros by nearly everybody in Spain.
He is supposed to be a typical restless rural youth, hoping to escape the limited prospects of a sick economy by
becoming a star in the bullring. He comes from a small,
poor farm to Barcelona, has trouble finding a job of any

kind, drinks, carouses, apprentices himself to an oldtime
retired bullfighter with dozens of other eager youngsters, and, somehow, makes it. Then, he finds that Fame
and Success (played hilariously by Linda Christian who
is parodying herself on so many levels that everyone
loses control entirely) isn't such a gas after all, and
ennui, malaise,
succombs to the maladies of our age
anomie and weltsmerz. I think that a reasonably straight
documentary on Miquelin as himself would have been
more interesting and vital, but then, I can’t help thinking of Barnaby Conrad’s beautiful book The Death of
Manolete. (Which I recommend to everybody).

Norton Union.

Loving two men.,
married to one!

I

I5Mr.
K
.

I

ACADEMY

«w.*o
WINNER

tfei

MlRlSCH COMPANY
EOWMtD L ALPtRSCH

-

i

'

0N

™

MaeL3lNE. I
BILLVWILDWS

LAST WEEK!

Student Ditcountt teth Th*«tr«t

■

tony

NEWMAN

The Newman Apostolate is
sponsoring a free Tobogganing
Party today at Chestnut Ridge
Park. Cars will leave Newman
Hall at 6:15 p.m. On February 25,

INTER-VARSITY
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP
Stan Bliss and Elisa Thomas,
members of the national InterVarsity staff, will lead a discussion on “Personal Evangelism,”
Saturday, February 12, beginning
at 10 a.m. in Room 355 of Norton
Union. The Regional Winter
Weekend of IVCF will be held at
Houghton College, Houghton, New
York, February- 18 to 20. The
conference wil feature all winter sports and a discussion of
the topic, “Is God Dead?” Regular Bible studies are held each
Monday at 3 p.m. and Thursday
at 11 a m., prayer meetings each
Tuesday at 10 a.m. and Wednesday at 1 p.m. An open discussion
meeting is held each Friday at
3 p.m. These groups all meet in
Norton Union, Room 217.

The SPECTRUM

26, and 27, the Newman Educational Weekend will be held in
Ithaca, New York. Those interested may register at Newman Hall
or at the meetings. “Woman and
Sex in the Modern World" will
be the topic of discussion at the
meeting on February 16 at 7:30
p.m. in 329 Norton. On February
15, Newman Discussion Classes
begin at 9 a.m. and 10 a.m. Tuesday classes will discuss “Marriage
and the Family”; Thursday
classes, “Fundamental Concepts
of Theology.” Registration will
begin with the first class.

Published by

partners PreAA, w^ic.
9

-sAbyotl

&amp;

Skwill Printing

1381 KENMORE AVENUE
(at Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

Kensington Theater
February 16-22
Evening 8 p.m.
Matinee Wed. 2 p.m.
Saturady and Sunday continuous 2-5-8:15
—

$1.50
Regular Admission
$1.00
STUDENT RATE WITH ID CARD
—

—

A Royal Films International presentation

A JEAN-LUC GODARD FILM

married
woman
——*

GKISvK
3109

BAILEY AVE

/

TEA BBSS

"UNSURPASSED! ONE OF THE BEST
BULLFIGHT MOVIES YOU’LL
rwrn Qrriff
Lf mi OCCS

*■

HILLEL

Hillel will sponsor a Sabbath
Service this Friday evening at
7:45 p.m. in the Hillel House. Dr,
Justin Hofmann will speak on
“Religious Object of Judaism”
with a sermon lesson on: “The Essential Elements of a Synagogue.”
Hillel will join with the Wesley
Foundation in a program of religious music on Sunday, February
13, A kosher delicatessen supper
will be served at 5:30 in the Methodist Student Center at 410 Minnesota Avenue. Professor Robert
Beckwith, Director of Choral
Music at UB will present: “The
Music of the Greek-Orthodox
Church.”

OTHELLO

TOIH AND IRMB I
*

—

An actual performance of the Nat’l Theater of Great Britain

are fascinating and Miquelin, who has no special distinquishing features like El Cordobes, is a pretty fair
bullfighter. The color seems washed out (wrong lens,
bad print?) but somehow, the film had the soft, dusty
look of a Spanish landscape about it.
If 1 haven't made it clear already, my reactions to
this movie are more subjective than usual. What I mean
is, this isn’t anything special as a film, but there’s enough
going on to keep nearly everybody amused some of the
time.
i

J&amp;eiifyiouA

LAURENCE OLIVIER as

However (that old qualifier again), the bullfighting scenes (filmed in Madrid, Barcelona, Seville, etc.)

ARE IN BUSINESS
TOGETHER!

—

7 DAYS STARTING WEDNESDAY

-

*

Friday, February II, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACE EIGHT

-Leonard Harris.
N.y. World Telegram

�Friday, February II, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE NINE

Colloquium On Threepenny Opera'
Held In Baird By Faculty Members

A colloquium on Brecht and
Weill’s Threepenny Opera will
be held in Baird Auditorium on
February 16 at 4 p.m. The program will be presented in connection with the UB music department’s production of Threepenny Opera.
Dr. David Fuller of the music
department will speak on the
music of Kurt Weill. The politics
of Brecht will be discussed by
Dr. Wilma Iggers of the Kiwanis
Colliege department of modern
lan iguages, while Dr. Rene Tabe

KLEINHANS
MUSIC HALL

of the UB modern language department will comment on Brecht’s literature. The ironic background of the Threepenny Opera
will be traced by Dr. William
Sylvester of the UB English department and Dr. Thomas Wattson will speak on the dramatic
theories of Brecht.

Gold and Fizdale, highly experienced and acclaimed duopianists, performed Mozart's Concerto for Two Pianos, K.365. The

work represents Mozart's finest
development of the always flow
ing, sometimes brilliant, but

never too-weighty “galant" style.

HENRY WICKE

Student Theatre Guild Presents
A One-Act Play, Home Free!'
The Student Theatre Guild will
present Lanford Wilson’s Home

THE BIG SOUND

I

I

SUN., FEB. 27
8:30 PM

FREE PARKING not to Liberty
Bank. A half block from tha theater.

Monday through Wednesday, February 14 through 16, at
4 p.m. in the Conference Theatre.

lorthParfcwi
“THE HILL"

Cortes portraying Lawrence. Marilyn Stefonetti is the stage manager, Anne Selman and John

Tickets:

NORTON UNION

—plus—

“The Americanization
Of Emily”

ADM: Orch; 4.50, 3.75, 3.00
Bal.: 4.00, 3:25, 2.50

Free!

The one-act play is directed by
with Joan Bromberg playing Joanna and William

1428 HCRTEL AVE.*TF6*7411
SEAN CONNERY in

TICKET OFFICE

I

with James Garner, Julie
Andrews, Melvyn Douglas

STARTS THURS.!
OUR FIRST
CinemaScope®

James Golata;

Reeves will handle lighting, and
James Golata will design the set.
Home Free! was first presented

in 1964 at New York City's Cafe
Cino. It is concerned with the adjustment of a brother and sister
with life through an incestuous
relationship. The play is realistic
after the style of Albee.
The production is being pre-

sented free of charge by the Student Theatre Guild in accordance
with its policy of making quality
theatre available to students.

FILM
ON OUR NEW GIANT

SCREEN

ACADEMY AWARD

WINNER! "Best Foreign

Of The Year!”

The piano duo struck the delicate
balance of light touch and full
tone which put the best shade
of gravity on the storm-in-a-tea
cup first movement. The details
of movement two
unusual melodic turns, occasional orchestral
punctuations, the pianos' bass
grunts at the close - were translated by Gold and Fizdale into
something profound. The final

cles to transmit the gaily of Mozart's lighthearted story. The
ladies sang exquisitely, their virtuosic parts overshadowing the
ponderous buffo arias of the men.
All vocalists were often overpowered by the orchestra, and
some good lines lost. Nevertheless. the audience seemed delighted with the hilarious changc-ofpace, so delighted that they didn't
notice the great lack of musical
significance in the opera. Opera
appeals only to a special breed of
music-lover. Should an opera bo

performed at a regular subscription concert? Whatever the answer, the programming of Sunday's concert is characteristic
and worthy of the ideals of Buffalo's Music Director

—

6.

MINSTRELS

SCHROEDER

initely all-Foss,

The program will be moderated
by Mr. Wicke, director of the
UB production of the Threepenny Opera to be presented at
Baird from February 24 to February 27 and March 3 to March

CHRISTY

By DANIEL

The Sunday, February 6 performance of the Buffalo Philhar
monic was an all-Mozart concert.
But the programming was def-

Following the general presentation, there will be a question
and answer period.

NEW

MUSIC OH CAMPUS

Try-ouls for Shakespeare’s Troilus and Cressida will lie held Friday,
February 11, 8 to 11 p.m.
in Diefendorf 105.

rondo, requiring most demanding

articulations and alternations between pianos, was exciting but
musically less interesting. The or
chcstra was fine: a little too
cumbersome on fleeting passages,
but a little less imprecise than
usual.
Lukas Foss joined the duo for
the Concerto for Three Pianos,
K.242, as he conducted from the
keyboard. This concerto, of the
same style as the previous one, is
neither as finely conducted nor
as melodically satisfying. But it
was enough to serve as a show
case for the talents of the remarkable duo and our own Music
Director, whose great courage
docs not far exceed his ability.
It seems that Foss has to present something new to the conservative old public whenever he
can. Instead of giving up this
ideal at an all Mozart concert
(darn it! Schoenberg didn't make

any arrangements of Mozart), he
decided to produce an unusual
form of music from Mozart; unusual, that is, for a Sunday after
noon concert
an opera. He
chose The Impresario, a one-act
satire consisting of five numbers
connected by “prose dialogues.”
Foss changed the dialogues into

Interviews On Draff
ByWBFO
Held
WBFO will sponsor two telephone* interviews with members
of the Selective Service this evening at (i:03 p.m. Discussing the
problems of the draft system will
be a speaker from the Public Information Office of the Selective
Service Bureau in Washington,
D.C. and Major Meader of the
local Buffalo Draft Board.

The

interviews

from a factual talk

range
on the en-

will

listment figures and deferments
to anti war demonstrations and
their relation to reclassification.
The speakers will answer ques

lions concerning the U.S. Korean
War draft standards and student testing for deferment. “It
is hoped that the discussions will
deal with the current surge of
enlistments tu avoid the draft
and possible modifications of the
present system," interviewer Sara Schrom reported.
WBFO broadcasts 780 AM closed circuit to the campus and 88.7
KM to the general public.

—

harpsichord - accompanied recitatives, and added some stage ac
Won. He came out with the something new he was looking for.
The soloists, sopranos Sylvia
Brigham-Dimiziani and Carol

Students interested in
joining the Senior Week
Uonmiiltee ol Union Hoard
may contact

Dick Schaller

at 83I -4244, 4 to 7
Hick Cellinan at 831-2504

or TF 5-3806; or the receptionist at the Student
Senate Office.

baritone Laurence
Bogue, and bass-baritone William
Wagner, were the perfect vehiBlantamura,

CKe MOCION PICCUF
WICK SOMEChiNC I
OFFEND EVERYONE
Metro GoldwynMayer and Filmwaysprtwm
Martin Ransohoff’s Production

Qm/
A

V

A

OAVIMOYU
AOUU

PLUS

Loved!
sUrrinf

ROBERT MORSE -JONATHAN WINTERS
ANJANETTE COMER

Can* UwM SUn

Wt arp jm b wt "taxtayt ud CyMt" Inn tM
—

The A

.

Dm Andrews MiltonBerle • James Coburn • John Gielgud
Tib Hunter Margaret Leighton • Liberal* • Roddy McDowall
Robert Moriey • Barbara Nichols-Lionel Slander

FROM

•

—

Selected Short Subjects and Chapter 3 of Serial
Our Long Awaited For Presentation
831-3704

•ROD STEIGERScrwipiii b» Terry

Dinetad bjTony

THE MAN
WHO MADE
"TOM JONES"!
-

Southern ud Christopher
Predxad bj John Galleyud Haskell Weikr

1

now f J 4 L J"-l .1 aar
\

2nd WEEK

�Jrj

•J-V,

-

On Physical Education
(A Column Exprouint tho View* of Hit H.P.E.R. Motors)
Contemporary TromH

ThtSMtrf the PlvtelEdnca

were questioned and

even banned

from some schools, lope sports
flourished and ultima* br Increased our programs, to times
of notional conflicts, phpiieul education responded with increased
emphasis on fitness. With "Sputnik” our programs showed signs
of peril because of increased emphasis in other educational areas.
However, when the total Astronautical picture was examined,
this scientific advancement
served as a force to renew the
demands for fitness through education. Currently all pressures
for conditioning, weight control,
and general physical fitness are
coming from outside of our profession, a situation which we feel
is sound because it allows us to
continue the course of action,
within our programs, that we
know to be most beneficial in
developing a sound mind and
body capable of many accom-

tor's philosophy t» tat-&gt;-apMte
the aM and the bet$. to their
fullest limits Many at onr objectives me similar hi eontent
to those of other educators, if
different in approach. We are
concerned with organized, sequential and systematic human
movement as a mental and physical means of communication
and expression. We in Physical
Education have an identifiable
body of knowledge obtained from
science, the study of humanities,
and accumulated through professional experience which interprets these movements and their
effects on individual students.
History will recall our growth,
our problems and our development, and will show, that persecution and prejudice have always served to strengthen our
total program. When athletics plishments.

Spectrum Cdaii i3oard
Young Americans for Freedom
will meet today in Norton 233
at 4 p.m.
Students for the US in Vietnam will hold a meeting today
at 2 p.m. in Norton 266. There
will be an informal discussion
pertaining to the resumption of
bombing in the North.
The Student Zionist Organization will present Dr. Iggers
speaking on “Democratic and Undemocratic Elements in Germany

Today,” on Sunday, February 13
at 7 p.m. in Norton 234. Refreshments will be served and folk
dancing will follow the program.
The Photography Club will
meet today at 4 p.m. in Norton
332. Members are requested to
bring as many prints as possible.
WBFO will interview Professor Charles . Beyer on "Meet the
Faculty,” Monday, February 14
at 6 p.m. Mr. Beyer will speak
about his special interests and
his recent trip to Nigeria. “Meet
the Faculty" is a twice weekly
presentation of WBFO Campus
News Department heard Monday
and Thursday evenings at 6 p.m.
Industrial Relations Club will
hold its first meeting of the

Friday, February 11,

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

spring semester Thursday, Febru17 at 11 a.m, in Norton 234.
The International Club will present its second panel on February 17 at 7:30 p.m. in Norton,
rooms
244-46-48. Parents and

Student Senate Needs Volunteers
The Student Senate is in need
of interested students to work on
two of its projects for this se-

work as election clerks for these

master.

to write the summaries. The Departments of Foreign Language
and. Mathematics will be examined-

Dk Course Evaluation Committee is in need of students to
interpret its questionnaires and

The Student Senate KJeetjoe,
slated to he held on March 15
and M, is in need of people to

ate Office, Room 205 Norton, or
call axtentwn 3445 daring tike

days.
Any student interested in werking on either of these projects
should apply at the Student fins,

school day.

ENGINEERING OPPORTUNITIES
For Seniors and Graduates in

mechanical,
AERONAUTICAL, CHEMICAL,
ELECTRICAL,
and METALLURGICAL

ENGINEERING
ENGINEERING MECHANICS
APPLIED MATHEMATICS
PHYSICS and
ENGINEERING PHYSICS

CAMPUS INTERVIEWS

ary

sponsors of club members have
been invited to attend this discussion by panel members representing each continent.
The Ukranian-American Student Club will have a Valentine Toboggan Party on Sunday,
February 13. Members and guests
are requested to meet at 10 a.m.
at 199 Oneida St. for departure
to the toboggan slopes.

The Math Club ds sponsoring a
tour of the Niagara Power Project on Tuesday, February 15. A
bus will leave Norton Union at
noon. There will be no charge
for members, and non-members
will be charged fifty cents. Further information may be obtained
from Dr. Chilton of the math department, or from club officers
Neal Felsinger, Johnathan Swift,
Ruth Munk, or Lorraine Eaton.
The Astronomy Club will meet
at 4 p.m., Monday, February 14,
in 11 Hochstetter Hall.

INt

MONDAY, FEB. 21
Appointments should be made
in advance through your
College

Pratt &amp;

Whitney

DIVISION OF

Aircraft
|

An Equal Opportunity Employer.

SPECIALISTS IN POWER .

y
0

Placement Office

COBP.

MAP

POWER FOR PROPULSION-POWER

FOR AUXILIARY SYSTEMS.
CURRENT UTILIZATIONS INCLUDE AIRCRAFT. MISSILES, SPACE VEHICLES. MARINE AND INDUSTRIAL APPLICATIONS.
. .

AN EVENING WITH

�Friday, February II, 1966

Alpha Epsilon Pi's new offiare: Steve Schulman, Master; Jeff Keller, Lieutenant Master; A1 Scholom, Scribe; Mike
Yosha Exchequer; Mike Castro;
Senior Member-at-Large; Marc
Kunen, Junior Member-at-Large.
j

The new social chairman is Kim
Blackman. Jeff Wasson, who
placed first in the intramural
handball tournament, and three
AEPi semi-firtalists are in the
lead for the Palhowitz Cup. The
annual Valentine’s Party will be
held tonight.

Tomorrow, Phi Lambda Delta
will have a Rush Cocktail party
at the Three Coins Restaurant on
Niagara Falls Blvd., following the
I F. C. Concert. The new officers are: President, Ron Holland;
Vice-president, Ken Brodie; Secretary, Dick Dixon; Treasurer,
Cary Hitchcock; Social Chairman,
Brian Fraser; and Senior I. F. C.
Representative, George Bhresman.

Sigma Alpha Mu announces the
new officers for this semester.
They are: Ronald Silver, Prior;

Robert Levitt, Vice-Prior; Dennis
Sadowe, Exchequer; and David
Seamen, Recorder. This semester
celebrates the 50th anniversary
on campus of Sigma Alpha Mu.

Phi Kappa Psi will hold a rush
social to be held with the nurses
from Buffalo General Hospital
tonight at the Hotel Richford at
8:30 pjm. For information call
Roger Fredricks at TF 2-4567,
Tau Kappa Epsilon is holding
an informal rush party at the
Sheridan Lanes at 8:30. For information call 837-7838. The officers for this term are: Dick Carmen, President; Jim Ringler,
Vice-President; Marc Berenbach,
Secretary; Jim Schmid, Treasurer; Joel Kershner, Historian;
Dwight Richadson, Chaplain; Jay

Katz,

Sargeant-at-Arms;

Pete

Reese, pledgemaster.
Alpha Kappa Psi will hold an
open dated rush party at Brighton Acres, corner of Brighton and
Egert, at 8:30 this evening. For

rides, call Herb

at 877-3750.

The newly elected officers of
Alpha Sigma Phi are: Emery Des

soffy, President; Charlie Botula,
Vice-president; Joe Morelli, Secretary; Dick Planavsky, Corresponding Secretary; Tony Alessi,
Treasurer; Nedley Ryan, Custodian; Tony Micelli, Marshal; Phil
Tennant, Scholarship Chairman;
Pete Doukas and Gary Adelman,
I. F, C. representatives; and Don
Pippitt, Editor.

Bob Fink and Neil Sapin of
Phi Epsilon Phi have been elected

Superior and Vice-Superior, res-

pectively. The Champagne Party
will be held tonight at the Clinton-Aire by invitation only.

The pledges of Sigma Kappa
Phi will be initiated Sunday at
the apartment; a dinner will follow at the Hertel Inn. The Military Ball candidate is Cindy Wolcott. The new officers are: Judy
Page, President; Tari Bretch, 1st
Vice-president; Kedra Dobrindt,
2nd Vice-president; Bobbi Maschek, Treasurer; Jackie Allessi,
Assistant Treasurer; Roslyn Sci-

arrino, Recording Secretary;
linda

Me-

Corresponding
Secretary; Lynn Corse, Registrar;

Ohilcott,

Janice Uffner, Rush; and Diane

Hunt, Assistant Rush,

The final open rush function
of Gamma Phi will be a stag at
the “Best Yet” down Bailey, tonight. Dr. Cazeau will speak at
the annual rush dinner at the
Claredon in Williamsville on Monday night. For information, call
831-3663.
Alpha

Gamma Delta's

pledge

initiation

will be held Sunday,
February 13, at the Executive
Motel, The annual dinner dance
will be held on Saturday night
at the Park Lane.
Phi Delta announces
their new officers; Donald Colpuhoun, President; James Muffoletto, Vice-president; Donald
Alpha

Weber, Treasurer; James Cocuz

zi, Corresponding Secretary;
Michael Piecuil, Recording Secretary; and Gary Mitenas, Sargeant-at-Arms.

Ann Kohler is Chi Omega's candidate for Military Ball Queen
with the theme of “Annie Get
Your Gun.”

Records Fall as Swimmer:;
Capture Two Out of Three

■

By

SCOTTY FORMAN

The

UB aquaman met both
victory and defeat within a period
of three days last week, as they

overcame

a

surprisingly

weak

Buffalo State, 61-34, and lost to
a powerful Colgate squad, 70-25.
Both meets took place at Clark
Gym and set the Bull’s record at
44-0.

mc-rs when commenting on the
two meets. In reference to the
State clash, Sanford remarked,
"They (State) should have been
a lot stronger than they were.
We anticipated a lot stronger
meet, especially after last year.
Our kids were really up and
Carl Millerschoen, our Captain,
did a fine job of leadership.
We were too ready they just were
not going to beat us. I got the
feeling that they were afraid of
us, I can’t name a man who
didn't swim well that night.” Regarding the Colgate meet, Sanford
summed up the whole story in a
,

GREEK NOTES

cers

PACE ELEVEN

SPECTRUM

The Bull swimmers boosted
their record to 5-4 by torpedoing
Niagara, 86-8, at the Clark Gym
pool Tuesday evening. UB records
by Chuck Zetterberg in the 100
yard backstroke, Rick Rebo in
-divings and the 400-yard medley
relay team of Howard Braun, Mike
Conroy, Roy Troppman and Zetterberg paced the onslaught.
Against State on Wednesday.
February 2, the mermen performed admirably in all events.
Howard Braun set a UB school
and home pool record in the 100
yard breaststroke, clocked at a
blistering 1:08.9 seconds. Also
chalking up first place scores for
UB were Roy Troppman (200 and
500 yard freestyle), Carl Millcrschoen (50 and 100 yard freestyle), Mike Conroy (200 yard
medley), Rick Rebo (fancy dive),
and Charley Zetterberg (200 yard

j

Four days later however, although our swimmers remained
the same, Colgate saw to it that
the final tally was vastly different. Colgate, now about the
third-ranking swim team in the
East, showed exactly Why they
have obtained that status. Swimming as if UB were a warm-up
match for their meet against Yale

this week, the Red Raiders cap
tured every event with the single
exception of the 400 yard relay.

The handball tournament has
been completed. In the singles,
Wasson of AEPi defeated fraternity brother Stein to capture the
championship. Wasson and Stein
teamed up to defeat Klipstein
and Kriegel for the top spot in
the doubles competition. Goldberg and Marrus of AEPi secured
third place, while the Sip Ep
teams of Southal-Brassington and
Eldredge-Teller finished fourth
and fifth respectively.
The regulation schedule of the
basketball league moves into the
final two weeks. In the 8:30 Fraternity League, AEPi, which drew
a bye last week, remains in first
place with a 4-0 record. Phi Kappa
Psi defeated Phi Lambda Delta,
30-22, and moved into a tie for
second place at 3-1 with Beta
Sigma Rho, which received its
first loss at the hands of Sigma
Phi Epsilon, 45-30. In the 9:30
league, the battle for first place
found SAM coming up on top,
rallying to defeat second place
Alpha Kappa Psi by a score of
35-25. Of the Monday Independents, the 8:30 league is led by
the Second Floor Tower with a
perfect 4-0 record, with the Eighth
Floor trailing closely at 3-1. In
the 9:30 league, both the Blueballers and Avengers remain undefeated, with the Blueballers

the battle of the fraternities will
take place. The following evening, March 3rd, schedules the
winner of the Monday Independents to play the champs of the

Wednesday Independents at 7
p.m. On Friday, March 4th, also
at 7 p.m., the winner of the March
3rd game will meet the top fraternity team for the championship

of the school.

Many of the races were extremely

close, however, and in fact two
of the relays were decided by a
matter of about six inches. Colgate broke two pool records and
tied a third in the 400 yard med
ley relay (3:58.9), 200 yard freestyle (Martin—1:53.0), and 50 yard

freestyle (22.8) respectively. Highlighting the dim picture for UH
were Rebo, Zctterberg, Braun,
and Mark Gras-haw.
Coach William Sanford had
nothing but praise for his swim

The next two events coming
up on the intramural calendar
are wrestling and paddle rackets.
Wrestling practices will begin on
Monday, February 28, at 6:30
p.m. in the wrestling room of
Clark Gym. Paddle rackets is a
new sport which will replace
squash this semester. The competition will consist of singles
matches only. All entries must
be submitted by Friday, February
18. Check this column next Friday for further information concerning these two sports.

By BOB FREY
Thp Colgate grapplers forced
the UB matmcn into a corner last
weekend and beat them, 22-10.
Coach Ron l.aRocque’s boys hit
the road this weekend with a 2-2 1
record. Today they will meet
Cortland State and tomorrow
they journey to Ithaca Collette.
The grapplers had an easier
week than they expected as two
scheduled matches had to be cancelled. UB couldn't get to Oswego due to the snow and Toronto cancelled the scheduled
Feb. 8 match in Clark Gym because of an injury ridden squad.
The Colgate match was far

from Pg. 2)
that
also reported
Parker
urban colleges and universities

increasingly
an
are “serving
larger proportion of our student

population!.” Parker

listed

the

top thirty universities in enrollment, which make up 29.4 per

cent of all full time and 32.4 per
cent of all grand total students.

match

venture in the weeks ahead.

404

1. AEPi
2. Phi Ep
3. SAM
4. AK Psi

31-9
30-10
29-11

.

.

.

In grand totals the top seven
were ranked this way: 1. California State Colleges, 177,324; 2.
State University of New York.
176,739; 3. University of California, 134,789; 4 City University
of New York, 130,911; 5. Minnesota, 58,274; Wisconsin, 48,504;
7. Texas, 47,783.

and wrestled the best
of the afternoon. Henry

Gullia upped his record to 32
and Dick Cushing drew in a
hotly-contested match. Bill Miner, who was ahead with twelve
seconds left in the 145 lb. bout,
reinjured his ankle and had to
default. Coach I.a llocquc could
have left Bill in for the win
as the latter probably could have
held on, but the coach removed
last year's 41 Champ due to fear
of further injury. The Bulls meet
Alfred February 16 in Clark
Gym.

The results: Colgate 22—UB 10
123—Fowler (UB) p. Dake;
130—Haney (C) p. Cunningham;
137—Gullia (UB) d. Raibcr; 145
Shapiro

(C)

won

by

default;

160—Conncrton (C) d
Heidt; 167~Mintz (C) d, Keller;
177—Damski (C) d. Burr; Heavydrew;

weight—Yorck (C) d. Pettit.

CORNELL GAME OFF
The Cornell basketball game,

postponed on Feb. 2 because of
a snowstorm which disrupted the
final schedules at Cornell, has
been cancelled for this season,
but will be played next year.
Director of Athletics Jim Peellc
was notified Wednesday that the
Ithacans could not squeeze the
Buffalo game into their crowded

The standings of the top four
teams in the bowling league at
this writing arc as follows:

College Enrollment
(Cont’d

The Freshmen, it should be
added, also bowed to Colgate, by
a score of 76-17, Gauthier stood
out for UB in the sprints. The
Varsity team now look forward
to tough Rochester and St. Bona-

Colgate Tops Matmen, 22-10

match
having won one more game. The
Wednesday Independents did not
play last week, so the standings
in that league are unchanged.
The playoffs for the campus
championship will be played during the first week of March. On
Wednesday, March 2nd at 7 p.m.,
the winner of the Monday 8:30
Independents will play the top
team from the 9:30 league. At 8
p.m., the Wednesday Independents will clash, and at 9 p.m.,

coaching.
•

UB Wrestling Ttim

Fowler, our outstanding
lightweight, won his fifth straight

STEVE FARBMAN

’

backstroke).

Gary

By

few words: ’They were just t o
for us,” An interest:
sidelight on the Colgate match s
that the Red Raiders had a m n
disqualified in the 200 yard in. ividual medley for illegally swiU'ting men. This mistake was one
which Sanford commented he
hadn’t seen before in 17 years of
strong

basketball calendar. As an Ivy
I/eague member, the Big Red will
be playing games on every Friday and Saturday for the next
month

Next season, Cornell will travel
to Buffalo to face the Bulls on
Dec. 20 in order to make the

game up

BASKETBALL STATISTICS as of Feb. S)

Individual Scoring
Harvey Poe, West Orange,

Bill Barth, Fredonia

FT

N. J.

Norward Goodwin, Erie, Pa.
Paul Goldstein, Rochester
Artie Walker, Cincinnati, O.
Bob Thomas, Erie, Pa.
Doug Bernard, llion
Jon Culbert, Niagara Falls

Jim Bevilacqua, Buffalo
Rick Mann, Cheektowaga
Jim Williams, Niagara Falls
Dick Smith, Spencerport
Larry Brassel, Snyder
John Cavanaugh, Niagara Faalls
Dan Curran, Hilton
Reid Crete, Kenmore

Totals

59
64
30

TP
235
222

Avg.

15.6
14.1
13.0
9.5

25

196
115

44

12S

8.5

13
19
19

37
79
63
56
16

6.1
5.2
4.5
4.3
3.2
3.1
1.4
2.5
1.0
0.7

12
2
4
4

22

1
1

16
15
1

1
0

3
0

298

1204

0.0
80.2

�Friday, February 11, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACE TWELVE

-/

—^[=

S

==#^==^====^&amp;===^-===feE=
THE BULL PEN
By STEVE SCHUELEIN
With less than three minutes remaining in the Clark Gym
clash, the Brockport State eager drove for the basket, faked once
at the last instant and prepared to spring skyward, when suddenly
—Wham!—down to the floor he went.
He had just been toppled to the ebony surface of Clark Gym
by a tall, scrawny UB sophomore who couldn’t retain his balance
when the Brockport player executed his well-timed fake. A chorus
of laughs sounded through the gym when the 6-5 reserve landed
on his opponent’s back, looking much like a stork in his rodeo
debut, and both tumbled to the floor in a heap.

Niagara Cagemen
Blast UB, 72-53

By MIKE DOLAN
The Purple Eagles of Niagara
snapped a four-game losing streak
with a 72-53 victory over the UB
cagers at Niagara Tuesday evenin. The Eagles’ run-and-shoot

As the fans were recovering from a case of splitting sides, the
Ichabod Crane-like predator lifted his bony limbs from his prey’s
fallen body, and play soon resumed. To this day the fallen player,
whose name is insignificant, probably doesn’t know what hit him
on that February 4, 1964 evening.

When the 1964-65 season began, it was generally agreed that
Norb Baschnagel, Jack Karaszewski and Norward Goodwin could
share the forward posts and that Dan Bazzani and Harvey Poe could
effectively fill the guard slots. The center situation, however, left
something to be desired; Bill Bilowus, who was to graduate at midyear, Dick Smith and Barth emerged as the only likely candidates
for the job. but it was obvious none was a Hanley.
At 6-5 and 230, the rugged Bilowus started UB’s games in
December, but Barth was slowly being groomed as his mid-year
heir apparent. Although the Fredonia junior still hadn’t added
much poundage to his angular frame, Barth, through dedication and
hard work, began making his presence felt on the court.
When Bilowus graduated after the first semester, the burden
of UB “big man" fell. squarely on the lean shoulders of Barth,
Resnondinu to the pressure with amazing coolness, the crew-cut,
poker-faced Barth began drawing raves by more than adequately
fulfilling his new assignment.
As the season progressed into February and the Bulls maintained their winning ways, Barth continued to look more and more
like a basketball star. As Barth continued gaining confidence, his
uncanny outside shooting ability became a readily-used weapon in
the Bull arsenal. The pinnacle of his impressive season was reached
against Niagara, in the midst of a 14-game winning streak, when
Barth's “dunk” shot off a fast break broke the game wide open and
drew frenzied cheers from UB fans in the Aud.

When UB finished its 1964-65 season with a 19-3 record, Barth
had sunk 75 of 132 field goal attempts for 56.8% to set an all-time
record in field goal percentage at UB, He also led the team in rebounding and averaged 9.6 points a game after a slow start. As a vital
cog in the machine that won 14 straight games, Barth improved more
during the course of the season than any other team member.
This year Barth has turned into the steadiest scorer on the
team, but. as is often the price of consistency, his efforts have been
partly overshadowed by the flashier performances of Poe, Goodwin,
and more recently. Bobby Thomas. The senior geography major has
seldom scored over 20. but has finished under double figures just
as rarely.

younger brother of NiErwin
enabled the Eagle Freshmen to
nip the Baby Bulls, 58-56. The
Niagara Frosh is now 10-1, one
of the best teams in the school’s
Edwin

-

agara Varsity eager Butch

-

history.

FOR FOOTBALL POST

The incident was only a trivial one in UB’s 98-57 demolition of
seasons ago, but it always flashes back in this writer’s
mind when that same individual, who appeared to have problems
standing up then, cans a difficult basket nowadays. The individual,
of course, was none other that UB’s dependable senior center, Bill
Barth.

the center slot capably, but the fact that Hanley was a senior led
to some question as to whom his successor would be.

Again it was Poe and Bill Barth
that sparked UB in the losing effort. A good job in ball-hawking
and rebounding was turned in by
soph Artie Walker. Walker was
high man for the Bulls with 12
points, while Norward Goodwin
and Barth each notched 10.

For Niagara, Bill Smith was
high with 21, followed by Art
Coleman with 20. Big Leaks, besides his boards performance,
scored 16 points.
A pair of foul points by Pete

URICH INTERVIEWED

Brockport two

Two seasons ago, when he averaged 2.3 points a game in limited
appearances. Barth's lack of experience was as glaringly obvious
as a James Bond film with an all-male cast. At the time this fact
didn’t hamper the team very greatly since Gary Hanley was handling

falling apart and made some serious errors in ball-handling. From
this point on, Niagara began to
turn the game into a rout.

ARTIE WALKER

however, was not the deciding factor it was a combination of complete board domination by Niagara, out-rebounding
game,

-

the Bulls, 58-29, and a poor 29.3%
UB shooting percentage.
The 19-point margin was not
indicative of the quality basketball that the UB cagers played.
A tough man-to-man defense upset even the Eagles’ brand of
run-shoot-and hope for the best
brand of action, as the Bulls
forced several shots to 'be taken.
The UB hoopsters, however,
couldn’t click on offense themselves as they failed to capitalize
on several key opportunities.
Manny Leaks, Niagara’s 6-8 center, did a tremendous rebounding
job and was a decisive factor in
the UB defeat. He also scored
several crucial tap-ins.
The opening half started at a
slow offensive pace. The Eagles
grabbed an early lead but Harvey
Poe’s field goal tied the contest
at 11-11, The Bulls had trouble
finding the hoop both from the
field and the foul line and as a
result, the Eagles were able to
gain a lead they never relinquished. Nonetheless, Niagara only led
the Bulls, 32-26, at the half.
In the second half, Niagara’s

The Faculty Committee on Athletics began interviewing applicants for the post of head football coach last Monday, but no
decision can he reached before
next week as to whom the successor to Richard Offenhamer
will be.
The committee interviewed the
man who gained top rating on
its preference list, "Doc” Urich
of Notre Dame, on Monday.
Urich, 37, is first assistant to Ara
Parseghdan in charge of the offensive line at .Notre Dame; he
has been connected with Parseghian for the past 16 years at

Miami of Ohio, Northwestern and
Notre Dame.
According to Director of Athletics Jim Peelle, Ulrich “made
a fine impression on people he
met and is favorably impressed
with the UB situation and the
opportunities of the new campus.”
Ed Biles, the head coach at
Xavier University and second on
the preference list, has been
scheduled for an interview on
Tuesday. The committee will
then have to decide if it wants
to interview any other applicants
or if it wants to hire either
Urich or Biles.

■

•

superior height began to produce

results as the Eagles began getting two and three shots at the
hoop on offense. UB began to
tire rapidly and Niagara took full
advantage of the let-down.
At the 11-minute mark of the
second half, the Eagles broke the
game wide open as they grabbed
an 11-point lead. The Bulls began

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This is a special offer topromote Schmidt’s TIGER HEAD
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Barth, who seems to thrive on pressure, hit a season high of
22 against Penn State in December, mostly on his patented one-handers
from the corner. Barth is currently averaging 14.8 points a game,
and it seems almost certain that this mark will not fluctuate more
than a point by season’s end.
If there was any individual the Bulls couldn’t have afforded to
be without this year, it was their 6-5 center. This semester it appears
Rick Mann can relieve Barth adequately for spot duty at center, but
it was a long drop down the depth chart at this position during
the
first semester.

Hardwooders
At McMaster

The UB basketball team will
travel to Hamilton, Ont., Saturday evening to face McMaster
University. The two teams did
not play each other last year, but
UB leads the series, 10-1. AlThe Poes. Goodwins and Thomases may continue
monopolizing though the Bulls will again be
the headlines, as they well deserve, but the player
Bulls
the
can favored, it is doubtful that they
least afford to lose is Bill Barth.
will be taking any game too lightly after the scares they received
When “54” loops in a long one hander or leaps high to
tap in
a teammate s shot in the remaining weeks, various thoughts may last weekend.
come to the mind of the spectator. I still have to
The game will be broadcast at
blink twice to
believe it s the same person who, only two years ago, scored his 8:15 pan. by WBFO, 88.7 on the
only two points against Brockport on a takedown,
FM band.

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•

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                    <text>DOROTHY

STATE

‘

OPEN
FORUM

HAAS

I

(See Page 5)

VOLUME 16

BMiK

I

I

(See

NO. 22

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1966

President Furnas Will Address Students Today
Student Forum Members to Present
Their Alternatives to Academic Plan
Student members of the Student- Faculty Administration
Forum will present their own
conception of the goals of the
university as part of the FSA’s
discussion of the Ten-Year Academic Plan. In addition, they
plan to prepare a final statement of the SFA’s stand on the
situation at St. John’s University
and submit it as a petition to the
-

University Community.

Due to their dissatisfaction with
various aspects of the Ten-Year
Academic Plan, the student members offered to state their own
basic ideals and goals to the
Forum at the February 18 meeting. Primary objection to the
plan focused on the “lack of an
eityoverall philosophy and specificity” used in defining instruction, research, and public service as the goals of the university. It was also felt that these
goals did not do enough to differentiate UB from other university centers. Doctor Puffer explained that the plan was not a
self-study, but instead answers
to specific questions for this reason there was little emphasis on
the philosophy behind the program.

Jeremy Taylor, Spectrum Edian emphasis would
be placed on quantified studies
such as sciences, rather than
qualitative courses in the humanities. According to Dr. Charles
Fogel, Assistant to President
Furnas, this is due to the fact
that each department laid out its
individual goals and that each
area represented itself in the plan
as it saw fit.

tor, felt that

Student Association Secretary
Ellen Cardone felt that an independent study program would
contribute to making undergraduate education a better basis for
the graduate program emphasized

in the plan. However, Dr. Good,
from the Chemical Engineering
Department, stated that such a
method of education would most
likely be limited by the State
University budget. The discussion wil continue at the next
SFA meeting when the student
members present their views of
the University’s goals and functions.
Student Association President
Clinton DeVeaux reported on his
first-hand observation of the faculty strike at St. John’s Univer-

Tn his lecture Dr. Furnas will
discuss the problems of the new
campus and the progress of the
present university under his administration. Dr. Furnas became
Chancellor of the University in
1954.
Today is the first time President Furnas will address an informal group of students. An ex-

By PATTI WARTLEY

Public Relations
Committee
Chairman Thomas McGarry explained that the purpose of the
present series is to foster a belter
understanding of the university
in its internal as well as external
relations.

cafeteria lines and dissatisfaction with the selection and quality of food were common complaints.

Student Senate President Clin-

UB Food Sorvlee attempts to curb watte . . Student* hovo broken
Board Contracts, as IRC Frugality Plan starts this weak.
.

State which serves two meals
daily.
Mr. Schillo disclosed that other
large universities, including the
University of Michigan and Berkeley, exceed UB’s $435 fee by as
much as $100. He indicated that
a choice must be made between
increasing the fee or cutting back
on the quality of food served.
The food service is attempting to
find a -happy medium, he reported.

bia

CLINTON DEVEAUX
Student Association President
President Phil Shelburne, NSA
Academic Freedom Director Steve

Suderland, and A1 Lowenstein,
former NSA President and former

Dean

at Stanford University.

a

Two fired faculty members,
of Higher
New York City Board
and the
Education representative,
(Cont’d on Pg. 6)

Head Resident of University
Housing Stephen S. Burke, second speaker, will address students on '‘Dorm-Commuter Relations” Wednesday, March 2, at
3:30 in the Dorothy Haas Lounge.
Dean of Students Richard A. Sig
gelkow, third scheduled speaker
University” in April.

Mr. Schillo cited several reasons for board cancellations. Students who do not eat three meals
per day considered the charge
for 20 meals per week an unnecessary expense. Distaste for

Students frequently remarked
that they expected to save money
by eating off campus, Mr. Schillo
called this “absurd reasoning,”
noting that UB’s board fee is
among the lowest of all universities. In 1964-5, Mr. Schillo said,
UB charged less for meals than
any other division of the State
University, excepting only Buffalo

PRESIDENT C. C. FURNAS

tensive question and answer per
iod will follow his initial remarks

of the series, will discuss "The
Mechanistic Approach to a Large

Director of University Housing
Thomas Schillo announced
last week that 75 students have
broken board contracts since permission to do so was granted in
November.
Mr.

ton Deveaux participated in a protest strike at St. John’s Univer-

Frank Mira, vice-president of
Columbia’s Student Senate Executive Council, acted as rally chairman. Among the speakers were
National Student Association

for the Defense of Academic
Freedom at St. John’s University
was read, and it was resolved
that student members would submit a statement for approval of
the individual members of the
Forum.
The next meeting of the Student Faculty-Administration Forum will be held on February 18.
All members of the academic
community arc invited.

Unique to a Large University”
sponsored by the Public Relations Committee of Union Board.

75 Students Break Board Contracts;
Schillo Cites Reasons For Cancellation

Deveaux Attends St. John's Protest;
Strike Supported by Student Senate
sity and a mass rally at ColumUniversity Friday, January
28, to protest infringements of
academic freedom at St. John’s.
Deveaux’s trip to St, John’s was
authorized and financed by the
Student Senate in a resolution
adopted Tuesday, January 25.
President Deveaux joined the
picket line at St. John’s at 5 p.m.
Friday. There he met with Father
Peter O’Reilly acting chairman
of the fired professors and formerly an Associate Professor of
Philosophy at St. John’s.
Deveaux attended the Columbia University mass rally Friday
evening. The rally, sponsored by
Columbia’s Student Council, was
attended by more than 1000 students and faculty members from
over 50 Eastern seaboard colleges.

sity (see From the President’s
Desk on Page 2. A statement by
the National Citizens Committee

President Clifford C. Furnas
will speak to University students
at an informal discussion on "The
Future of Your University” this
afternoon at 3:30 p.m, in the Conference Theater. His lecture is
the first of a three-part series on
“Problems and Advantages

A suggested change in the
cafeteria setup was the use of
food tokens. Mr. Schillo pointed
out that such a system would not
be feasible since the cafeteria
staff must estimate the number
of people to be served. The entire
fee structure is under discussion
at present.
Lack
of kosher, non-dairy
choices at meals is another reason for cancellation of board contracts. Mr, Schillo said that the
food service honors this and similar religious requirements to the
greatest extent possible.
“It is because of oversubscription that we can take this liberal
attitude concerning board contracts,” Mr. Schillo explained. Between 400 and 500 professional
and undergraduate off-campus
students desiring to eat in resident cafeterias cannot be accommodated. These students have,
been filling the vacancies created

by dorm students who prefer to

eat elsewhere.

In the future residents may
have a choice as to whether or
not they want board contracts.
The decision will be made before
the school year begins; no midterm changes will be honored.

“The discussion today with
President Furnas is the first of
the series on university life and
its future,” McGarry stated. “The
topics to be discussed affect everyone in a large university. It
is hoped that this will provide a
forum for students, faculty and
administration to meet on an informal basis.”
McGarry disclosed that the
committee is planning to sponsor
individual political discussions
later in the semester.
A coffee hour will follow President Furnas’ address.

A&amp;S Advisement Policies To Be Reassessed;
New Academic Program Ordered by Dr. Gould
Committee Chairman Orville T.
Harris announced that a committee to reassess the advisement
program of the Arts and Sciences
division has begun its investigation. The committee was a
direct outgrowth of SUNY President Gould's order to the various
divisions of the university to submit a ten year academic plan,
which would include future advisement plans.
According to Dr. Murphy, Professor of History, the program
originated to service the needs
of a small academic community.
As the community grew, however,
there was no revision of the basic
structure of the advisement program.
He disclosed that several steps
were taken to establish guidelines
for revision. The committee con-

tacted twelve other universities
UB, seeking informs-

similar to

tion concerning their advisement
policies. Replies were received
indicating that the universities
contacted were facing similar
problems. Dr. Murphy commented, “This seems to indicate to
me that this problem is nationwide and is not confined to this
campus.”
The committee conducted an
informal poll to ascertain the feelings of Arts and Sciences division faculty members concerning
advisement procedures.

The committee includes Dr
Irwin Silverman, Department of
Psychology; Dr. Robert Buschman, Department of Mathematics;
Dr. Morris Fried, Department of
Sociology. Dr Vincent Santilli,
Department of Biology; Dr. Allen
Sigel, Department of Music; Dr
James O’Rourke. Assistant Dean;
Dr. Lynd Forguson, Assistant
Dean; Dr. Joseph Fradin, Depart-

fCont'd on Pg. 4)

�Editorial Comment

.

.

.

THE SAINT JOHN’S AFFAIR
The teacher's strike at St. John’s University in
Jamaica. New York, has raised a controversy across
the nation. St. John’s, a Roman Catholic institution, has
fired some twenty-five teachers for “unruly behavior’
in connection with requests for faculty input in academic
policy making. The academic freedom question has been
raised anew, this time in the particular light of the needs
of Roman Catholic higher education. School is virtually
out, and the American Association of University Professors has condoned the strike by saying that the AAUP
would not consider it unethical for a teacher to refuse
to cross a picket line of his colleagues, or to refuse to
take over the class of colleagues who had been fired.
The flimsy justification used by the Saint John’s
administration to legalize the wholesale firings is that
the professors in question 'disrupted the tranquil atmosphere in which education must take place.” One is
forced to wonder what the quality of that “education”
is, if questions of curriculum and text books are “disruptive." Academic freedom is not the private property
of liberal, non-denominational colleges; it is the cornerstone upon which all legitimate intellectual inquiry rests.
To say that a Roman Catholic university has no need of
academic freedom is to say that denominationally-sponsored education has no need of intellectual discourse,
no need of critical argument, and no need of arguments
tested by debate.

All higher education has need of these things. The
principals of logical and informed discourse are the
principals of responsible learning.
The administration of St. John’s has refused all
offers of arbitration from Mayor Lindsay for the teacher's union, from the alumni, and from diocesan authorities. It is rumored at this writing that the Papal Legate
may offer to arbitrate the teacher's grievances, and it
may be hoped that an informed opinion, with Vatican
authority, may be able to break the stalemate. The St.
John’s affair is a blot on the long, and for the most part,
meritorious history of Roman Catholic higher education.
It is also yet another reminder that academic freedom is
not merely a slogan invented by liberals to prove a point
—it is the foundation of all responsible scholarship.
MC CARTHY ON DEMOCRATIC SOCIETY
Congressman Richard I), (our own "Max”) McCarthy has introduced a bill that would give the President authority to deal with labor disputes not covered
in the Taft-Hartley Act. He suggests that his bill was
prompted by the New York City transit strike and would
allow executive intervention in labor disputes affecting
“any substantial portion" of the country.
No matter what one may think of the Taft-Hartley
Act. this is going too far. If Congressman McCarthy envisions a society where all matters of public import may
be resolved by administrative fiat, then it is possible to
wonder how a “democratic’’ society like ours differs
from the society of the Caesars.

In this context, it is interesting to note that although Congressman McCarthy ran against John R.
Pillion as a “liberal." by the standards of the John R.
Pillion chapter of the Y. A. F., Congressman McCarthj
has the second "best" voting record of any Democrat in
Congress.

THE

SPECTRUM

»»»**•"» newspaper
of the Stale University of New York at Buffalo.
. . TK# ,
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo, N Y.
Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and spring vacations.

14214.

_

Editor-in-Chief
Editor
Business Manager

JEREMY

Managing

News Editor

SUSAN

Editor

GREENE

JOHN STINY

Editor

F«tOf.

Worti Editor
Uyovf Editor
Copy

Editor

EDITORIAL

JOANNE

TAYLOR

DAVID EDELMAN
RAYMOND VOLPE

RONNIE BROMBERG
Feature

Tuesday, February 8, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

UftANT

STEVE SCHUELEIN
SHARON HONIG
LAUREN JACOBS
POLICY IS

Photography

EDWARD JOSCELYN
MARCIA ORSZULAK
Advertising Manager
RONALD HOLTZ
Circulation Man.,.,
DIANE LEWIS
Faculty Advitor
IRENE WfllET
Financial Advisor
DALLAS GARBER
Leprechaun
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Continuity

Editor

Editor

DETERMINED IY THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
HONOR RATING

FIRST CLASS

Second Class, Postage Paid at Buffalo, N Y*
Subscription S3.00 par year, circulation

15,000

Represented for national advertising by
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Mad.son Ave., New Ygrk, N. Y.

Commentary
The doves of “peace” have
flown away, chased, no doubt, by
the warhawks or the American
eagle So much for'the analogy;
the fact is, as Senator Wayne
Morse so adequately stated, we
are an “outlaw nation” and we

are being tragically led by a good
old-time Texas outlaw. I do not
mean to say that this country, or
any of its leaders are really outlaws, legally, however by both
the morals of mankind and the
morals of nations, we are indeed
outlaws. We more than exemplify the “code’ set forth by Niccolo
Machiavelli in his II Principe.
As regards to the war itself, it

.

.

By JOHN H. BONER

.

is turning into a fiasco in ail respects. Firstly, the American military leaders, fdr the most part
the
notoriously underestimate
calibre of their present opponents, the South Vietnamese
(who can believe they are really
our allies?) are consistently showing themselves to be inept, cowardly, and at times even hostile
to us in the face of the enemy.
Even the greater minds of the
Pentagon cannot seem to decide
how they are going to fight the
war. Americans in the majority
seem to be hostile to any attempt
at a peaceful solution, but their
hostility actually comes from the

fact that their self-confidence is

being shaken. The American people most maintain this shaky selfconfidence at all costs because
without the Illusion they cannot
really see what a lot of good,

young, live American manpower
is being expended for.
The ethereal spectre of .communism that the American people have created for themselves
is a psychological defense, a buffer against their subconscious feelings of guilt, and their fools-paradise patriotism is a poor psychic
protection from their own feelings
of foolishness and embarassment.

Jrom the President 6

.

*

On Thursday, December 16,
having closed school “to enlarge
Chirstmas recess,” the administration of St. John’s University dismissed thirty-one of its full time
teachers, relieving them of all
functions, duties and responsibilities including teaching assignments effective immediately.” No
charges were presented and the
professors were not given hearings either before their peers or
before the university administration. This act interrupted the students in preparation of final
course work coming approximately one month before final exam-

inations.
Reaction to the administration’s action was swift. The St.
John’s University chapter of the
United Federation of College
Teachers called for a strike on
January 3rd; demanding that the
professors be reinstated, that
contractura 1 tenure for faculty
be granted; that freedom of association for students and faculty
be granted that principles of academic freedom be instituted; that
grievance machinery be established and that reprisals against
university members participating
in or supporting the strike not be
taken. The American Association
of University Professors chapter
at St, John's Endorsed both the
strike and the demands. Both or-

ganizations offered to negotiate
before the strike deadline. The
administration responded by refusing to discuss dismissals, ne-

gotiate releasing a statement to
the press branding the professors
conduct, “unprofessional,” citing
“using classrooms for propaganda purposes . . participation in

unauthorized demonstrations . . .
use of libelous and slanderous
statements in literature and placards
a continuing effort to
impugn the credibility if the Vincentians” (the order which operates St. John’s). These charges,
though vague and not specific,
are as yet unverified.
...

The Student Senate and the
AAUP chapter here at SUNY at
Buffalo have both supported the
academic rights and freedoms of
the striking teachers. Support for
the striking teachers has come
from many .areas; including; The
New York Regional Council of
the American Association of University Professors; Dr, Timothy
Costello, Deputy Mayor, New York
City civil rights leaders Bayard
Rustin and J. Philip Randolph;
Richard Hofstadter, Professor of
History at Columbia University;
John Leo, Editor, Commonweal
Magazine; members of the faculty
at Notre Dame, Duquesne,. Fordham and Georgetown, Seeking

oCetterd
Cohen Answers
Levine

TO THE EDITOR:

After reading Mr. Levine's letter of February 4, 1966 I feel 1
must make the following com
ments
1—Mr. Levine has accused me
of involvement in political slander of "the highest order” but
1 can only conclude of Mr. Le-

vine's uncentainty and instability
since 1 fail to understand, as do
others, of how Mr. Levine proves
this to be truth rather than mere
conjecture.

2—It feel that

Mr. Levine has
deliberately attempted to becloud
and bemuddle the issue at hand
for his own political aspirations.
I personally cannot claim this to
be true of myself since I am a
second semester senior and am
therefore ineligible to be a candidate for any political office in
the upcoming March elections.
3—Apparently Mr, Levine fails
to understand that I am capable
of speaking as an individual and
that my views need not be those
of the United Students Party.
The Policy Committee of the
United Students Party was neither consulted in this matter, as
Mr. Levine seems to feel, nor
does it wish to comment on this

issue.

4—I

feel

that

claims

are

totally

Mr. Levine’s

unjustified

to

.

moral and financial support, the
Citizen’s Committee for Academic Freedom at St. John’s University has been formed under the
co-chairmanship of Editor Leo
and Professor Hofstadter. The
United States National Student
Association is actively working
with the dismissed faculty, informing students across the nation of the crisis at St. John’s.
Students at UB can be proud of
their Student Senate’s and the
USNSA for their continuous record of support for the principles
of academic freedom, due process,
and freedom of association on
campus for both students and faculty. These principles must apply
to all schools, public or private,
secular or denominational. The
action of the St. John’s administration, in firing without warning, discussion, or just cause,
thirty-one of its professors, represents an agregious violation. of
these principles.
THE ISSUE: HISTORY
The professors were fired because they criticized university
policy and because they asked for
academic freedom. This the administration admits. Such action
can not be justified especially in
an academic community but it
can be explained in terms of the
(Cont’d on Pg. 7)

the Editor

since he produces broad, sweeping conclusions without ever having consulted myself or Mr,
Zeldner. Mr, Levine’s letter is
full of generalitites which he has
consummated without, it would
appear, consulting the Freshman Class. As for myself, I have
discussed the matter at hand with
several members of the Freshman Class and am confident that
they have accepted my views as
well as those of Mr. Zeldner. In
this manner feel that Mr. Levine
has not solved any issue nor does
he desire to solve any issue since
his caustic comments seem to be
mere

.

By CLINTON DEVEAUX

thought unsupported

by

fact.

In conclusion, I can only pity
Mr. Levine for what I consider
to be an unsuccessful, trite, and
fruitless endeavor to undermine
not only my past lettbr but the
desire to see true democracy
exist and operate on the UB
campus.
Sincerely,
Sheldon Cohen

The Book Exchange is
now closed. Students may
pick up hooks and money

Thursday, February 10,
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Any hooks not collected
will he sent to the Civil
Rights Committee.

Graduate Student
Condemns
Parking Lots
TO

THE EDITOR:

Being a common, struggling
graduate student, I appreciate
every opportunity to save money,
and so I was pleased to hear that
parking will now be free at the

student lots. However, the situation that has prevailed in the
Acheson lot (others perhaps, too)
is utterly chaotic.

Inconsiderate as many people
are, they park their cars in,
across, between, and in front of
the aisles. This makes it some-

what difficult for those who got
to the lot early enough to park
legally to get out. At least one
student came up with an ingenious solution. He repeatedly
rammerL the ear that was preventing his exit, until it was no
longer in his way.
With this and the many other

door-scratching, bumper-denting
incidents that must have by now
occurred, it was obviously cheaper to park when we had to pay.
To remedy the situation, I suggest that

either the lots be pothat the gates be reinstalled. Perhaps the revenues
could be used for a scholarship
fund.

liced, or

O

M? ;.s

Spitz

�t-

V

'*

Tuesday, February 8, 1966

Officers Elected, Purpose Defined
Of Fresh Men's Honorary Society
Phi Eta Sigma, an honor society for freshman men students,
recently completed its annual
elections. Richard S. Horwitz will
serve as president; Larry S. Horwitz, Vice
President; Robert
Lerch, Secretary; Joel Wallach,
Treasurer; Michael L. Montgomery, Historian.
The purpose of this organization is to foster scholarship, leadership, character, and service to
the school. A unique system of
membership selection is designed
to insure the fraternity of the
most qualified, capable, and industrious students. Students who
achieve a 2.5 quality point average in sixteen or more semester
hours of work are placed on the
Dean’s List with Distinction. To
be inducted, a student must meet
the above qualifications, and in
the opinion of the membership
committee, display the seriousmindedness and leadership char-

PACE THREE

SPECTRUM

acteristics required for induction.
The initiation ritual is held in
February, and to provide further
incentive for students whose
scholastic standings may have
fallen below the required 2.5;
another induction meeting is held
in the beginning of the year. Students who have attained a cumulative average of 2.5 for two semesters’ work are considered for
membership at this time.
Through enlightening and educational programs, presentation of
speakers prominent in their
fields of endeavor, panel discussions, teas, special projects and
social gatherings, the society
hopes to foster the high ideals
of scholarship and leadership to
which the members have pledged
themselves. A tutorial committee
to assist students seeking aid in
troublesome subjects is one of
the special projects which will be
undertaken by the group.

Cecil Taylor, ‘Jazz Musician’
Holds Lecture-Demonstration
Cecil Taylor and his group of
jazz musicians will present a lee-

lure-demonstration, “Three Little

Words," at 3 p.m, Wednesday.
February 9, 1966 in Baird Hall.
In the evening at 8:30 p.m. in
Baird, there will be a jazz concert featuring Mr Taylor's group.
is $.50 for

students.

srr.

$1.50

for fa-

avant garde and the creator of
the first new movement in jazz
since Charlie Parker. He was born
in New York City, received his
first musical training from his
mother. Later he studied at the
New York College of Music. He
holds a degree from the New Eng-

land

Conservatory

of Music
In 1956 he started teaching,
and a close group of students
gathered around him A year later

Career Planning Conference Scheduled
A conference on career planning, for women, “From College
to Career,” will be held on February 15, 16, and 17 featuring
discussions by prominent career
women from the Buffalo community.
The keynote address will be
given on February 15 at 4;00 in
the Millard Filllmore Room by
Mrs, Barbara Cook, Director of
Placement at Purdue University.
The Conference, under the cochairmanship of Sue Schillo and
Barbara Witzel is sponsored by
Cap and Gown,' senior women’s
honor society, and Sophomore
Sponsors, the Big Sister organization for freshmen women.
Miss Witzel explained the purpose of the conference. “More
and more among University
women there seems to be a dissatisfaction with chosen majors,
accompanied by a fear of taking
steps to change the initial choices.
the program sponsors,
hope that by making women
aware of the diverse opportunities open to them, they will feel
more confident in their decision
for a future which hitherto
seemed unattainable to them.
Woman’s role is rapidly changing
in America today. Education
should be a leader in the opening of new worlds, for these victims of a changing society.”

We,

Wednesday, February 1
3:00—Engineering—Room 242
Mrs. Carol Boesl Braum.
Finance
Room 233

—

—

Insurance

Mrs. William Everett
Mrs. Sally Traeger
Investments
—

—

Room 248
Physical therapy
Barbara Stevenson
Occupational therapy
Miss Ruth Gebhardt

Teaching (College)
Mrs. Shelia Rhodes

4:00

—

—

Room 329

Psychology

—

Dr. Maxine Cavanaugh

Social Work
Mrs. Caroline Daughtry
—

Room 334
Peace Corps and vista

—

—

234
Medicine—Dr. Nancy J. Stubbe
Dentistry—Or. Joan Staker
4:00

Room

Chemistry and biochemistry—
Miss Sue Griffith
Physics
Room 329
Retailing
Miss Nancy Schweigler
Accounting—Miss Jane Bickman

Judith Gordon
Government Service
Miss Bernice Poss
Room

he opened the now famous “5
Spot” in New York, and, in 1958
he broke into records as part of
the “Newport Jazz Festival."
Since then he has recorded extensively.

In 1962 he appeared in many
parts of Europe in a very successful tour. He has appeared on
numerous occasions on radio and
television in New York City,
where he resides at present.

f

Victory IW*
In Vietnam PCommittee Forms
Guidelines For Polity of Organization
•

•••

■■

•

4 meeting of
Committee for Victory in Viet

At the February
t(le

several euidelines concern,he Pollcy °i t he orgamzalion were established. Co-chairmen Steve Sickler and F r a nk

N

‘

lng

Klinger conducted thc

mee ting.

Philosophy professor Dr. Marvin Zimmerman suggested that
the name of the committee be
changed. Frank Klinger supported the name by redefining the
purpose and goals of the committee. Dr. Zimmerman persisted
that the name was not neutral
and could be connected with
Young Americans for Freedom,
a group presently in coalition
with the committee, A decision
will be made at the next meet-

•

in Operation Mail Call where students who care to do so may
send mail to soldiers in Viet NamFurther activities will include a
mass ra u y in j he near fut ure . and
a speech by a Viet Nam refugee.
Mention was made of the previous plan of YAF members to
oust Spectrum editor Jeremy Taylor because of opposition to his
political views Vice President
David Murawsky pointed out that
the CVV does not have the right
to reactivate this movement.
Sickler stated that all Democrats, Republicans. Liberals and
Independents who care to support the goal of freedom in Viet
Nam are invited to join the committee.

ing.

—

—

335

Advertising and Public Relations
—Mrs. Samuel Shatkin

Radio and TV—Miss Liz Dribben

The group decided that no position will be taken in identifying the strategies involved in the
war since this is not the immediate goal. The committee will dematerialize voluntarily as soon as
the war ends.
The committee will participate

Sophomore sponsor applications will he accepted
al the Candy Counter until Thursday, February 10.
Additional application
forms are also available at
the Candy Counter.

—

—

Thursday, February 17

3:00

—

Room 248

Writing
Mrs, Nat Hawes
Library Science
—

—

Mrs. Ruth MacDonald
Room 242
Law—Mrs,

Maryann

Saccando

Freedman
Banking—Miss Mary B. Jeffrey
Room

234

Pharmacy

—

Mrs. Janet Jacobsen Antkowiak
Medical Technology—
Betty Murphy

Room 233
Teaching (Elementary and Sec
ondary)—Diana Rochford

Get a move on in the blucher with the Flexit Cushion insole inside. Outside everything's smoothed over in smooth black forest
or black cherry or black calf. City Club Shoes $15.00 to $24.00.
Wouldn't you like to be

in

our shoes? Most of America

Available at these fine
Goldman Shoes
Blvd. Mall
Buffalo, N. Y.

is

International Shoe

Co,

St Louis, Mo

stores;

Wexler's Southgate Shoes
SoothBat* Plaza
Watt Sanaca,

N. Y.

Settlers' Dept. Store
Wl Broadway Avo.
Buffalo, N. Y.

�Resolution by Univ. of Minnesota
Places Hold on Membership Records

Of Student Campus Organizations
A resolution asking
that students be able to place a
hold on the record of their membership in campus organizations
was passed December 3 by the
Assembly of the University of
Minnesota Student Association,
reports the Minnesota Daily,

feels they’re not such good ideas."
The Dean, in consultation with
his staff, now has authority to
make decisions on the release of
information about students, subject to review by the vice-president for educational relationships and development.

This hold would prevent any
release of this information by
the Office of the Dean of Students without the student’s per-

Both the Dean and his assistant
expressed disapproval of
closing student files on request.
Assistant Dean Martin Snoke said
he protested “this notion that we
have the right to hide a particular aspect in of our activity.
This is contrary to the essential
philosophy of democracy.”

(ACP)

—

have

mission.

The resolution, which originated in an MSA policy statement
on academic freedom, was previously passed by the MSA Senate It must be approved by the
dean of students before becoming

Dean E. G. Williamson said he
wanted time to discuss the ques-

tion "to find out just how the
students propose to improve conditions. It took us five years to
form our present position and we
think we have some good reasons
for it.

effective

MSA requested the change in
policy on the basis of the idea
that "an organization which
seems reasonable to some people
may seem subversive or disloyal
to others. A student's investigation of ideas must not be inhibited by his concern over the influences society may exert."

Vice-President Howard
Kaibel put it this way. “The University is a place separate from
society where the student has
the opportunity to experiment
with ideas. He should have the
right to suppress information
about his activities if he later

"If a member of the FBI comes
to me and wants to know whether
a student was a member of the
DuBois Club, I’ll tell him,” the
Dean said, “Am I supposed to
lie? I’m a public official and I
have a public responsibility.”

MSA

The Assembly also mandated
the executive committee to take
necessary stops toward the adoption of the proposal by the dean’s
office.

Advisement Policies
(Cont'd

from Pg.

I)

ment of English; and Mrs. Sonia
Robinson, University College Advisement.
Dr. Murphy

will appear before
the Student Senate on February
8 to inform the Senators of the
work of the committee. He indicated that a good advisement pro-

.

gram must rest on the dual sup-

port of faculty and students. A
forum will be held in the Haas
Lounge, Friday, February 11, to
enable students to air their
opinions on the faults of the present advisement program, its
merits, and what can be done to
improve it.

Volunteers Needed In Study
By Student Health Service
in

The Student Health Service is
immediate need of an addition-

al thirty volunteers to participate in a blood test. Fifteen

should be students who ate the
infectious shrimp in Goodyear
and fifteen who did not cat the
shrimp.

The blood tests wil be used to
conduct a comparative study of

International

Club

will

give a Valentine party on Thurs
day.. February 10 at 7:30 p.m.
in Norton 340 Members and
guests

are welcome.

All students interested in work
ing on Spring Weekend please
leave your names in the Union
Board Office

Applications
the candy

arc

now available
counter for all
those interested in working on
the Union Board Personal Com-

at

mittee.

The first meeting of the
Free University Committee will Ire held Friday.
February 11, at 8 p.m. in
Room 335 in Norton. All
students, faculty and members of the Buffalo community who are interested
in a free university are
welcome to attend.

CORE Plays Key Role In
Community Activities
By

Volunteers should call the &lt;3ity
at 856-2800.
The Department will secure parental permission for any student
under twenty-one
Dr. Markellis, wdio is conducting the study, said that only a
small amount of blood will be
taken from each student.
Health Department

The Student Theatre Guild will
present Langford Wilson's play
Home Free, February 14, 15,

and 18. at 4 p.m, in the Conference Theatre. Under the direction of James Golata, it stars
Joan Bromberg
and William
Cortes. Since The Student Guild’s
policy is that
the students
should be able to avail themselves of good free theatre on
this campus, students will be
admitted free of charge.

I

BOB MARTIN

In a small, poorly lit and
poorly heated building, approximately twenty dedicated people,
members of CORE, meet once a
week to provide the Negro community of Buffalo with a channel
through which it can voice its
grievances and a political arm
with which it is able to contend
with the other powers of the city
and state. This organization can
promote an attitude of unity and
co-operation, The Buffalo Chapter of CORE includes college students, nearly all from UB, and
community members. The officers are: Luther Burnett, Chairman of the Executive Council;
Elmore Alexander, Vice Chairman; Dianna Bleich, Secretary;
and Roy Gore, Treasurer.
According to Chairman Burnett, the general aim of the organization is to “give the Negro
people of Buffalo more effective

control over their own destinies.”

accomplishing this end is initiating, encouraging, and co-ordinating various community organizations. In the past, CORE has
played a key role in the crea-

tion and continuation of such
groups.
These include; East
Side Education Council, formed
in October, 1965, to study the
educational problems of the community; The Michigan Oak Residence Council, created in October, 1965, to act on the problems
of urban renewal in that area;
and the East Side Community
Organization (ESCO) which was
recently established for the development of the community as
a whole. In the future, ESCO
will be playing the dominant
role in both the organizational
and economical development of
the area, with pledges presently
estimated at $100,000.

The Central Office of the
State Commission on Human
Rights, which is located in Rochester, has been accused of actingslowly and laxly with numerous
complaints and problems. CORE
is presently organizing political
pressure to correct this and possibly bring the Central Office
to Buffalo. Also, CORE has been
effective in the investigation and
correction of individual incidents
and complaints in connection
of individaul incidents and complaints in connection with racial
equality.
Special

Committees

Since its foundation, CORE has
evolved into a larger and more
sophisticated organization. With
its continually increasing membership, it is now able to decentralize to provide it with a
more effective structure. It is
beginning to function in a committee structure. The three committees are Housing, Education,
and Labor. This system will
allow the member to play a more
dominant role in his specific interest and provide the whole organization with more detailed
and experienced discussions. Two

major shifts can be noted in the
organization as it matures. It has
changed its tactics from those
predominately marked by public
demonstrations to methods characterized by working through
channels of various community
organization. Its devices for raising funds for its budget has been
changed from , merely fund-raising of profit-making events. It is
felt that these changes mark the
growing success and stability of
the organization.
Like all organizations CORE
is in a constant strife for more
membership and money. To become a member one must attend
any weekly meeting at 1536 Jef-

ferson Ave. at 8:30 p.m. As for
fund raising in the near future,
CORE is sponsoring a performance by the Clancy Brothers and
Tommy Makem February 16, at
8:30 p.m, at Kleinhans Music
Hall.

Tryouts for Shakespeare’s Troilus and Cressida will be held Wednesday, February 9, from 3
to 6 p.m. in Health Sciences 246, and Friday,
February 11, 8 to 11 p.m.
in Diefendorf 105.

Other Vital Functions
Another vital function that the

CORE Chapter serves, as indicat-

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ed by Mr. Burnett, is providing
the community with an organ
which gives strength and importance to the grievences and
opinions of individuals, voices
which would otherwise be helpless. In the past, CORE played
the dominant role in the correction of the alleged incompetent
running of Public School No. 6
by Principle Patty. CORE is presently gathering funds to appeal
the convictions of twelve people
who were arrested during demonstrations against the administration of School No. 6.

He states that the surest way of

Ihc type and level of antibodies
in the blood of the students.

cun Bo* j

Spectrum
The

Tuesday, February 8, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

AS COFFEE

explain the plot and
characters of more than 125
major plays and novelsIncluding Shakespeare's

works. Improve your
understanding-and your
grades. Call on Cliff's Notes
for help in any
literature course.

125 Titles in all-among
them these favorites;
Hamlet
Macbeth Scarlet Letter Tale
of Two Cities Moby Dick Return of the
Native The Odyssey
Julius Caesar
Crime and Punishment The Iliad Great
•

•

•

•

•

•

•

Expectations
Huckleberry Finn
King
Henry IV Part I Wuthering Heights King
Lear
Pride and Prejudice Lord Jim
Othello Gulliver's Travels Lord of
the Flies
•

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�Tuesday, February 8, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE FIVE

Haas Marks Thirty-Two Years of Service
As Director of Norton &amp; Student Activities
This month marks the anniversary of
32 years of selfless service by Miss Dorothy
M. Haas, director of Norton Union, to the
student body of this university. Miss Haas
is the rare type of human being who has
become a living symbol of her profession’s
ideals.
Born in Buffalo, New York, she attended Public School 56, Lafayette High
School and the University of Buffalo.
Miss Haas possesses a B.S. in Business
Administration which she received at UB
in 1934 as well as a Masters in Education
which she received in 1957.
Miss Haas began her career as a secretary to the director of Norton Union in
1934 and went on to become an assistant
director in 1941 and acting director in
1943. Dorothy Haas was made director
of the Union in 1946, a position she holds
at the present time.
In addition to her position as director
of the Union, she is also Co-ordinator of
Student Activities, a position she received
io 1956.
Miss Haas is a member of Cap and
Gown Alumni (Senior Women’s Honorary
Society of UB). She has held the position
of president, vice president, secretary and
treasurer of that group. She also holds
memberships in the Faculty Club and
Faculty Senate.
She is a member of the Professional
Development Committee, the First Presbyterian Church of Buffalo, the Campfire
Girls Council, Zonta International, the
American Association of University Women, American College Personnel Association, National Association of Women
Deans and Counselors, New York State
Association of Deans and Guidance Per-

sonnel, Phi Lambda Theta, and she was
formerly regional chairman of the Association of College Unions.
Miss Haas received a University Citation at the dedication of Norton Union in
1962 and the naming of the first floor
lounge in her honor.
In addition to her many activities in
the Student Union and community affairs
she also became Acting Dean of Women
from July 1, 1964 to December 31, 1964.
Miss Haas has often stated that she
hopes the out-of-class activities which
come under direction will “assist students
in acquiring knowledge in social interaction, learning how to deal with people
in a free and considerate manner, as well
as enabling them to develop the courage
of their own convictions and the capacity
to stand firm when they are involved in
any course of action if their sense of justice and their good judgment direct them
to do so.”
Dorothy Haas feels that students who
enter the university “are better prepared
academically than they formerly were and
that the university can no longer take a
laissez-faire attitude about student activities.”
Few members of this university community possess a record of service, dedication, and achievement that Miss Dorothy
M. Haas has built. She has become a vivacious example of the perfect blend of
administrator and counselor.
Her accomplishments, infectious smile,
genuine concern for the welfare of her
staff, and the student body have endeared
her to all.
For a lifetime of unparalled service
in her profession the Spectrum salutes her.

�The New Yorker:

Something for the Ladies?
second in
a series. The issue reviewed is
that of January 29).
(The following it the

By

JEFFREY L. SIMON

In the beginning was the word,
and the word was with Dorothy
Parker, K ■ B White. Robert
Benchley and James Thurber.
That doesn't say all that much
but. at least, the magazine was
funny. In 1966, it's twenty years
behind the times and that’s the
way we like it The New Yorker,
like all magazines, has a formula: in this case two parts
sophistication (sic), one part
humor (sic) and one part litera
ture (sic). The formula whould
work too, except by now it's
sic(ki anyway you look at it.

First there is the matter of
sophistication. Since sophistication is. largely a matter of tastes.
The New Yorker's critical taste
is crucial. In the goings on-about
town dept. motion pictures subdivision. we learn that These Mag-

nificent Men In Their Flying Machines is a film of more than
routine interest (after all, it's in
heavy type) and that Joseph I.o
sey's King and Country and Kelli
ni's I Vitolloni are not. The movie
ends
review, by Brendan (Jill
with this magnificent observation:
"The Shop on Main Street will
make you laugh and, if you ever
cry at movies, it will make you
cry. It is very funny and very
sad and who could ask more of a
movie than that?" I don’t know
about Mr. (Jill, but I could ask a
lot more of a movie than that.
Anthony West, the book reviewer,
is properly nasty and intemperate, and unfortunately, wholly

likeable.
Yorker
Sophistication, New
style, deadens the magazine's
s e n s e of humor completely. The
cartoons, with the exception of
Charles Addams. who should he
knighted, are as stale as possible.
The notes and anecdotes in the
"Talk of the Town' are enough
to depress anybody. There is one
in particular which made me
long for the jokes in the Farmer's
Almanac. You see there are these
two "book laden' girls from linn

Tuesday, February

SPECTRUM

PACE SIX

College and one asks the
other if she can keep a secret,
and the other, having a sense of
responsibility, says yes, and then
the first girl spills the goodies.
“George gave me his peace button last night."
The New Yorker's attempts to
publish something vaguely analogous to interesting literature
and commentary are the most of
fensivc thing about the magazine.
True, in this issue, there is an
ter

interview with Marianne Moore
but the short story this week is
straight New Yorker formula:
lots of pithy details (his charbroiled hamburger . . a limp sliver of carrot and a pale tomato
solid with green seeds) and a
couple named Proctor. It’s entirely possible that two-thirds of
the stories that have appeared in
the magazine in the last five years
have concerned a couple named
Proctor. I don’t think anybody
would notice. The New Yorker
takes no chances with its “literature.” They publish Salinger’s
latest bubble bath with the calm
assurance that the magazine will
sell out in two days. Capote’s In
Cold Blood, a pretty courageous
book, is serialized in the midst
of a notably un courageous wave
of publicity. Baldwin’s Notes
From a Region of My Mind was

published simply because there
was no way to avoid it.
The only thing The New Yorker
publishes which show any sign
of activity are Dwight MacDonald’s all too-rare essays on culture. If it weren’t for these occasional spasms of enterprise, The

Yorker's editorial staff
would be worse than the Saturday Review's and that is quite an

New

achievement
It is no accident that most of
the ads in The New Yorker are
for nightgowns, perfumes, cosmetic soaps and jewelry. The
New Yorker is a gutless commer-

Courtney Interviewed;
Speaks on Experience
As Fulbright Fellow
French Instructor William

H,

Courtney will be interviewed on
WBFO’s Meet the Faculty, tonight at 6 p.m. His subject matter will concern his experiences
in France as a Fullbright Scholar.
Carol A. Magavero of the
WBFO News Department disclosed that Mr. Courtney will
discuss his experiences while attempting to extend the one year
fellowship time limit by working
as a professor and film dubber.
He will give advice to students
applying for the Fullbright Fellowship, discuss the comparisons
and differences between European and American Students, and
indicate his opinions regarding
the education process including
free universities. He will also
touch upon classroom discussion
procedures, examination methods, and degree requirements.
WBFO broadcasts on frequencies of 88.7 me FM and 780 kc

AM closed circuit to university
residence halls.

Weekly Calendar
8-14

February
Tuesday

Varsity and Frosh Swimming:
UB vs. Niagara, 8 p.m.
Varsity Wrestling: UB vs, Toronto, 8 p.m.
Meeting; Freshman Class Council, 6 to 7:30, Norton 234.
Meeting: School of Business,
10:30 to 2, Norton 266, 234, 264,
and 262.
Rush Registration: Panhellenic
Council, 2 to 5 p.m., Norton 248
and 262.

Wednesday

Recital; Cecil Taylor and his
Jazz Group 3 and 8:30 p.m., Baird
Hall.
Concert: Music Department, 3:3
Concert: Music Department,
3:30 to 11, Conference Theatre.
Meeting: R. U. S, E„ 10 to 12
a.m„ Norton 262.

Thursday
Varsity and Freshman Basket-

7 p.m.,
Memorial Auditorium.
Seminar; Professional Negotiations, 6 p.m., Millard Fillmore

.

Room.

Discussion Group: Inter-Varsity
Christian Fellowship, 7 p.m., Norton 344.
Meeting: R. U. S. E„ 10:30-12
p.m., Norton 262.

from Pg. 1)
John’s American Association
of University Professors chapter
Secretary also spoke at the rally.
Saturday
On Saturday, January 29 DeMid-Year Commencement
veaux visited the United FederaInter-Fraternity Council Con(AFLCollege
Teachers
tion of
CIO) headquarters where he reportedly was informed about the
teacher’s point of view concerning the strike. From there, he
Everything Photographic for Profess.onal
and Amateur Use
visited the “School in Exile” at
Jamaica where he met with students who had been boycotting
Delaware Camera Mart
classes.
President Deveaux returned,to
Movie Rentals Photo Finishing
Cameras Supplies Protectors
Buffalo Sunday morning, January
(Cont’d

St

•*

�

'

cert: Godfrey Cambridge and Car
olyn Hester, 8 p.m., Clark Gym.
Concert: Albright -Knox Art
Gallery, Evenings for New Music
Series Auditorium, 8:30 p.m.

Pops Concert: Buffalo Philhar
monic and Richard Dufallo, Kleinbans Music Hall.
Sunday
Meeting: Peace Corps,
p.m., Faculty Lounge.

6 to 11

Concert: Amherst Symphony
Orchestra and Helen Boatwright,
Amherst Central Junior High
School, 3 p.m.
Monday
Colloquim: Dr. D. Crowell of
the University of Hawaii, 3:30
p.m., Millard Fillmore Room.
Play: Home Free, Student Theater Guild, 4 p.m,, Conference
Theater.

ball: UB vs, Buffalo State,

Friday

St. John's Protest

8, 1966

-

-

30.

•

3435

•

Cambridge and Hester
Godfrey Cambridge and Carolyn Hester will appear in a concert sponsored by the InterFraternity Council at Clark Gym
on February 12, at 8:30 p.m. Tickets are two dollars and may be
purchased at the Norton ticket

booth.

Dr. Alexander Katz
Dr. Lou Krop
OPTOMETRISTS
Contact Lenses
Complete Eye Care
UNIVERSITY PLAZA
BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226
Phone: 835-3311

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(77-3317

THE SPECTRUM
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a redundant phrase) which succeeds only
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�Tuesday, February 8, 1966

The Threepenny Opera'
Given in Feb. and March
Contains Two Hit Songs
Of the 21 songs by Kurt Weill
Threepenny Opera, the
all-time record-breaking musical
coming to UB on February 24-27,
March 3-6, two have achieved the
highest Hit-Parade ratings. One
of these, “Mack the Knife,” can
be credited with making the career of a popular singer, Bobby
Darin. The other, “The Bilboa
Song,” wasn’t in the original
score, but got into the successful
Marc Blitzstein adaptation of the
show by a fluke.
in The

Kurt Weill

wrote “The Bilboa

Song” for another show. When
the New York production was
being rehearsed, the adaptor and
the director felt that they needed
an additional song for Polly
Peachum, the pert daughter of
the operator of the Beggars’ Outfittin Shop. They borrowed “The
Bilboa Song,” dressed it up in appropriate lyrics, and were delighted to see it gain prominence on
juke boxes all over the country.

Audiences at Baird Hall will
hear Mary Frances Coniglio
(Polly) singing it under the title
of “The Bide-a-Wee in Soho,” as
she celebrates her wedding to

PAGE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

the dashing James Kirach in his
role of Mack the Knife.

CLASSIFIED
FOR SALE

SALE
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Roof excellent condition. $750.
TF 5-3061 after 5 p.m.

FOR

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very good condition. Call Louise,
TF 4-4982 after 6 p.m.

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New York, N. Y. 10016. A nonprofit organization for students.

OPEN FORUM:

Theology And The State University
By BOB RYDER
During the past ten years, state
universities across the country,
brushing away old fears and superstitions, have made the theological faculty an integral part
of their academic life. However,
the relevance of a theological
faculty is not a recent issue. An
essay published in 1919 by Adolph
Harnack, German historian and
theologian, explores this very
question. Many state universities
have recognized the importance
of a theological faculty; others, including the State University of
New York, have failed to inculcate a serious study of this question. This writer was told that
the State of New York is “historically and traditionally” opposed to the establishment of a
theological faculty. A cursory
look at the real factors involved
will reveal the superficiality of
this position.

is important to note the
unanimous assertion that the
question of a state-supported theological faculty is an academic
rather than religious one. In view
of the place that religion occupies in the life and history of
man, it must of necessity comIt

mand attention in the academic
life and this attention should fall
within the formal context of a
theological curriculum. No one
would consider the dispersion of
historical study to other disciplines, despite the fact that all disciplines are concerned with the
history of their own inquiry. Similarly, religion calls for a discipline of its own anti a depart,
ment of religion is imperative
from a strictly scholarly point of
view without regard for creedal

State systems already have theo
logical faculties. The number and
scope of these programs set a
worthy precedent to the case of
New York State. At least twenty
states have theological faculties
administered by the Stale. Enroll
ment in these programs has been
remarkable; introductory courses
at the University of Iowa and
Michigan State enroll nearly 1000
each year; more than 350 partici
pate each semester at Califor
nia's Santa Barbara University,

commitment.

Another important consideration is the “separation of Church
and State" principle. The issue
here is not whether the State can
establish a theological faculty,
but whether the State can maintain, the proper neutrality. Thus,
if certain guidelines are followed,
the separation principle can be
adhered to. For example, while
offered for credit, enrollment
should be voluntary. Secondly, the
University must avoid discrimination by offering a broad variety of topics. Thirdly, religion
should be taught to promote
knowledge rather than to seek
converts or train clergy. In short,
the State must avoid policies
which promote or inhibit sectarian beliefs.
Many consider the question of
state-supported theological faculties to be a legal one. The New
York State Constitution provides
that the State shall not use its
property or money to aid or
maintain any school of learning
under the guidance of any religious denomination or in which
any denominative doctrine is
taught. This broad prohibition

has been interpreted as barring

the establishment of theological
faculties in the State system. In
contrast, William Katz, professor
of law at the University of Wisconsin, states that there are no
legal obstacles to teaching theological topics in a State-supported institution provided the instruction is educational in nature.
In fact, the omission of such
studies many indicate non-neutralily toward religion. In several
recent decisions. Supreme Court
Justices have made it clear that
there is a definite difference between devotional exercises and
the study of religion and have
indicated that the latter may take
place in tax-supported institutions.
It was

mentioned that other

Today's students realize that
this is the Age of Dialogue and
it is necessary to be informed
concerning matters of religionnot to agree or disagree, but to
listen and talk.

Haupert Gives Lecture
On Jordan River Canal
Dr. John S. Haupert, assistant
professor of geography, will pre
sent and illustrated lecture on
Kecent Progress of the East Ghor
Canal Project in the Jordan River
Valley, The lecture, sponsored by
the Geography Club, will be held
Friday, February 11, at 8 p.m. in
146 Diefendorf

Dr. Haupert conducted field research in the Jordan Valley in
1964 to ascertain the effect of
water diversion projects on the
agricultural economy and land reform in the Kingdom of Jordan
The first business meeting of the
Geography Club of the new semester will be held in Crosby 225
at 7 p.m.

Need Twins for Study
school or college-age
will have an opportunity to
participate in a biological study
sponsored jointly by the depart
ments of Orthodontics and An
High

twins

t (tropology;

The departments desire twins
to aid the study by filling out
questionnaires and giving genet
ic data and various measurements. The information will be
used mainly for the comparison
of

identical

and

Anyone interested in donating
an hour to this study should contact Dr. J. J. Lowney at 2845 fox
an appointment.

St. John's University
(Cont’d from Pg. 2)
St. John’s atmosphere. Prior to
the dismissal, at St. John's:
1. There had been no provision
for contractural faculty tenure;
2. Students and faculty in many
instances have not had the right
to form organizations, hold meetings, distribute literature, and
maintain an open forum at the
university;

3. Neither students nor faculty
participate in the formulation of
university policy;
4 Both students and faculty are
subject to arbitrary discipline by
the university administration; a
student or professor charged by
the university is not given a
statement of charges, right to a
hearing, or opportunity to hear
an explanation of the just cause
for the application of the penalty;
5. Faculty salaries are among
the lowest of any Catholic institution and student tuition continues to rise despite yearly
profits in the university operation of nearly $2,000,000.
6. The Faculty Senate consists
of seven representatives elected
by the faculty and sixteen administrative appointments.
Criticism of university policy,
i l l4*4

«

non-identical

twins.

...

especially under these conditions,
is not only justifiable but is the
solemn responsibility of all members of such an academic community. The dismissal of those
who make such criticism can in
no way be justified.

The situation at St. John’s is
unprecedented in the academic
world. St. John’s no longer can
claim respect due a university
community. It has violated not
only principles basic to a free
academic community and to a neoacademic community, and to a
democratic society, but has also
distorted basic Christian doctrine.
As members of an academic
community. I believe it is the
responsibility of each of us faculty and students to demonstrate our support for the courageous professors who now strike
against St, John’s University. 1
urge you to protest to The Very
Reverend Joseph Cahill, President, St. John's University, Jamai
ca, New York Financial support
should be forwarded to the Na
tional Committee for Defense of
Academic Freedom at St. John’s
University, Fifth Floor, 300 Park

Avenue South, New York, New
York.

�Tuesday, February 8, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACE EIGHT

x

E

=^=^==^==^=^==

Basketball Team Takes Two

THOMAS SPARKS WINDSOR WIN;
BARTH SHINES AGAINST WAYNE
By

MIKE DOLAN

The UB basketball team
started its winning ways again
v ith a pair of victories over the
weekend. On Friday the Bulls
tripped Windsor University of
Ontario, 8780, and came right
back Saturday night to win another close one, this time over
Wayne Stale of Detroit, 80-76.

The pair of victories enabled the
Bulls to boost their over all record to II 4 and kept alive their
hopes for a post-season NCAA
tourney bid as they enter the
final month of competition.
Throwing a big scare at UB,
A’indsor gave the Bulls a surprisingly hard lime Friday eveo ng. but a great exhibition of
f all handling by Bobby Thomas
nullified Windsor's zone-press
defense. Thomas, who regained
his eligibility at the beginning
d the semester, turned in his
host game of the season with

five assists, even rebounds and an
11-point output.
At halftime Windsor held a
44-42 lead over the Buffalo
cagers. In the early going it
was Bill Barth’s clutch shooting
that kept UB within range of
Windsor until the Bulls were
able to break it open in the second half. This set the stage for

success (having lost only to Syracuse away) by defeating Wayne
State, 80-76, Saturday night. The
victory enabled the hoopsters to

Thomas’ performance; the flashy
sophomore from Erie, Pa., Was
the key to solving UB’s problem—a tough zone press by

Norward

has
the
past few weeks, again led UB
cagers with 20 points. A wellrounded effort was needed and
this came from the Bulls two
steadiest scorers as Barth and
Harvey Poe tallied 17 apiece.
Next were last year’s frosh
flashes, Thomas and Artie Walker, as each accounted for 11
Goodwin,

come into his

Barth and Poe again turned in
splendid efforts for a team victory: Barth blocked numerous
shots and hauled down 17 rebounds as well as being UB’s
high point-man with 16. Poe
came up with 15 points to contribute to the winning effort.

who

own

points.

The Bulls continued their road

Reserves Doug Bernard and
Thomas contributed 12 and 11,
respectively.

BILL BARTH in Action
gain their 11th win of the season against four losses. It was a
hot hand from the field (51%)
and a slight edge from the foul

Bull Cagers To Oppose
Niagara and Buff. State
By STEVE SCHUELEIN

The UB basketball team, with
i pair of four-point week-end
victories under its belt, tackles
vo challenging assignments in
siagara and Buffalo State
this
week.
The Bulls will travel to the
• lagara University Student Cener this evening to face the
"urple Eagles in an attempt to
core their initial victory of the

rason

against

a

university

DT

ision team
Jim Maloney's Niagara club has
compiled a 7-8 record to date,
but the last five games have all

been losses. The most recent set
nack was an 85 68 setback to St.
John's at the Student Center

be a major factor in the game.
Should Thompson's aching back
force him to the bench, the
Orangemen’s forward wall will
probably consist of Dave Saunand Richie
ders, AI Kozen
Degnan, with Charlie Davis and
transfer Durie Burns in reserve.
The senior backcourt duo of
Charlie Mancuso, a reliable veteran, and Mike (Urby) Urban
ski. will probably start the game,
lien Bluman and John Noworyta
are slated for reserve duty at the
guard posts,

9-4, return to
Frcdonia State to-

The Orangemen,

action

against

15-minute mark of the first half
the Bull? pulled in front to stay.
The visitors took a 40-35 lead
into the locker room at the half.
As the second half began, the
Bulls slowly pulled away and
held a 62-52 advantage with eight
minutes to play. This lead proved
too much for the hosts to over-

Bernard
Williams
Culbert
Curran
TOTAIJ3

WINDSOR

Kwiatkowski
Nevetta
MeWha
Mazuchin
Horner

Taranzuk
Brown
Dolano
TOTALS

come.

Windsor.

really

line that contributed to the tri-

umph, but the most important
single factor in UB’s winning
effort was their complete control of the boards, outrebounding
the Tartars, 53-31,
The home team made it tough
on UB from the start, but at the

Paul Widdoes was high scorer
for Wayne State as he netted
20 points.

Walker
Goodwin
Barth
Poe
-

Bevilacqua

Thomas
Culbert
Bernard
Mann
TOTALS

WAYNE STATE
Widdoes

G

8
5

Goodwin
Walker
Barth
Poe
Bevilacqua
Thomas
Goldstein

6

7
2
3

0
0

Mann

F
4
1
5

3
1
5
0

2

T
20
11
17
17
5
11

2
2

Letzmann

F
4

4

5
0
0
0

4
1
5
0
0
2

29

2
18

8

Gardziola
Carlson
Lester

G

8

...

Smathers
Hay
Andren
Markham
TOTALS

1
3

0

night after a two-week break.
Regarding the UB game, Coach
MacAdam said, “After such a
long layoff, a team isn’t as
sharp as it should be. I’m afraid
this may have a bearing on the
situation. I’m hoping today’s
Fredonia game will regain our
timing, but I wish we had a few
more games before Buffalo.

“The loss of Joe LoTempio and
of Paul Thompson
has hurt and leaves a hole in the
team, but personnel-wise I have
felt all along that we have more
talent and height than we have
ever had.
luestionability

Saturday.

Thc

Eagles arc

led by 6-8 soph

•more center Manny Ix-aks who

erformed brilliantly against St.
'ohn's, dead-eye guard Bill Smith
md forward Art Coleman. Greg
ludecki and Bob Sheldon round
■ut the starting five, while Art
'hillips, Dave Smith. Jim Carno
md Butch Erwin should sec spot
mty.

BUFFALO
EVENING NEWS

Now! From Schmidt’s TIGER HEAD ALE, you can get

The recent losing drought and

the loss of sparkplug guard Pat
Hroderick due to disciplinary reasons has left its mark on the
Eagles. Against St. John's, Nia
gara displayed an abundance of
talent, particularly in Leaks and
Bill Smith, but poor ball-handling
and equally ineffective teamwork. complemented by a case
of general sluggishness, made
the Eagles easy prey for Lou
Fornesecca’s Redmen.
Tonight’s

game

appears

to

match the height and talent of
Niagara against the teamwork
and finesse of the Bulls.
Thursday the Bulls will meet
Howie MacAdam’s Buffalo State
five at Memorial Auditorium in
a game which never creates any
problems as far as either team’s
being "psyched up” goes.
The availability of Buffalo
State’s leading rebounder, Paul
Thompson, who has aggravated
a chronic back injury, should

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�</text>
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                    <text>STATUS

COMMITTEE

I

(See Page

VOLUME 16

Theme

Catcher

in

J. D.

In Tha Rye
Salinger’S
and Saul Bellow’s Tha Adventures of Augic March" was the
topic of the first lecture in the
Spring Literature Series delivered February 2 by Mr. Marcus
Klein of the English Department.

is the constant search for love
that characterized both Holden
Caulfield and Augie March. Both
“heroes” were filled with a certain self-awareness which made
them sensitive and unique; yet
each was unable to make definite
connections with other people.
This need for love was a conscious factor in both novels, and
the characters were willing but
unable to find love due to either
internal or external forces. Thus,
both novels ended on a “whimsical upbeat;” both Holden and
Augie acknowledged their failures, but continued to seek love
from other people.
Mr. Klein concentrated on the
situation of Holden Caulfield,
protagonist of Salinger’s novel.
He felt that of Holden's numerous adventures, nineteen had the
possibility of love. All proved
disappointing; most notable were
his love for his dead brother
Allie, and for his younger sister
Phoebe, who, being ten years
old and much like Holden himself, was relatively sexless. Other
encounters with girls ended in
failure, as Holden took refuge
in an innocent idealism which
no physical love could offer him.
The suggestion of his latent
homosexuality was developed in
Mr. Klein’s examples of incidents
between Holden and two of his
school teachers. Because Holden
recognized

this

impulse,

he found no love to be satisfying.

The committee report includes
the following sugestions:

MR. MARCUS KLEIN
The next lecture of the Spring
Literature Series will deal with
Bob Dylan’s poetry, and will be
presented on February 28 at 4;00
p.m. in the Conference Theater.

The program in question took
place on January 31, at which
time Miss Dribin, having completed a three and one-half day
tour of Egypt, described the country in what International Club
members termed an authoritative
manner, “with a notable lack of
tact."

After about five minutes of disimpressions of the
country, Miss Dribin closed her
remarks with the following statement: “1 am glad to be back on
American soil and away from
Egyptian dirt.”
cussing her

Members of the club felt that
such careless and irresponsible

All parking gates and control
equipment should be removed immediately, since
maintenance
costs are high and unnecessary.
These gates do not serve as an
effective means of counting the
cars entering and leaving. The
parking keys are also inconvenient and unnecessary.

All parking meters should be
removed immediately, and the re-

maining metal poles should be
eliminated as soon as possible,
since they are no longer useful
and would serve as nothing but
"ugly eyesores.” However, parking would still be permited in the
parking meter area.

Two new areas, the upper section of the library circle along
the two curves and the space
along the left side of the new road
from Clement Hall to Bailey Ave.,
should be designated for parking purposes.
The parking circle in front of
Tower should be officially designated as a parking lot rather than
a roadway Parking would be prohibited in this area from 2 a m.6 a.m. only from November 15
to April 1 to facilitate snow removal. Students would be permitted to park in this area all
night at times other than those
specified above.
Changes have been proposed in

Dean's Group Hears
Free Hour Proposal
A proposal for a UB campus
free hour will be brought before
the Dean’s Council by Commuter
Board Chairman Stew Edelstein
and Student Association VicePresident Kim Darrow for final

approval on Monday, February 7.

Mr. Edelstein described the free
hour program as a time when no
classes would be scheduled and
the majority of student activities
would be held.
The proposal originally recommended that a free hour be ini-

International Club Registers
Protest with WKBW Television
The International Club of UB
lodged a formal protest with
WKBW television for what the
group considered statements
which cannot do other than damage mutual understanding among
the nations of the world. In a
letter dated February 2, 1966,
the International Club criticized
the remarks of Miss Liz Dribin
on her daily program “Dialing for
Dollars—Girl Talk.”

Ad Hoc Committee Formed
To Re-evaluate Parking Policy
The Faculty-Student Association
has set up the Ad Hoc Committee of the Student Association
to Investigate the Parking and
Traffic Regulations of the State
University at Buffalo for the purpose of making recommendations
concerning the present situation.
The committee will present recommendations today to the Board
of Directors of the FSA.

According to Mr. Klein, there
are many parallels between the
two novels. One such similarity

never

NO. 31

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1966

Discussion Held by Klein;
Lectures on Love Themes
In Salinger and S. Bellow
“The Love

(See Page

statements can easily destroy the

great and time-consuming efforts
taken by the American people
and government to make America
the center of fraternization among
nations.” Their letter to WKBW
concludes with the following: “For
statements such as made by Miss
Dribin . . . reflect adversely on
the Capitol Cities Broadcasting
policy.”

When members of the club
confronted Miss Dribin following
the program she offered them an
appearance on the show to refute
her remarks and to clarify their
understanding of life in Egypt.
The first available time period
will be around February 20.

tiated on Tuesdays and Wednesdays, 11-12 p.m.
The Assistant Deans' Council
endorsed the free hour proposal
but recommended that the time

mb
Ym/Sn
w

K
*s

Alliance Parly platform.

The committee is unalterably
opposed to sending money from
fines and parking fees to the
State University of New York.
To avoid sending money to Albany. it would establish a “double
schedule' of fines, whereby the
student would be given the choice
of paying a fine to SUNV or
donating a slightly lower amount
of money to the Samuel P. Capen
Loan Fund, which is used for
aiding needy full-time UB students.
Th« committee further recommended that after the second
traffic or parking offense by an
individual the fine should be
doubled; after the third offense
the Student Judiciary should have
the authority to revoke the student's permit.

It was suggested

that the penalty date be extended
from seven to 15 days before the
individual is subject to fine.
J. Z. Friedman, chairman of
the committee, stated:
“1 believe that the recommendations of this committee will best
benefit the students, faculty and
administration of the University
of Buffalo. The State University
of New York would be very unreasonable if it were to insist
that monies collected at UB be
sent to Albany when they could
be put to far better use benefitting our own students and our
own University of Buffalo.’

Cambridge and Hester Appear
In Concert Sponsored by IFC
Godfrey Cambridge and Carolyn Hester will appear in a concert sponsored by the Inter-Fraternity Council at Clark Gym
on February 12, 8:30 p.m.
Mr. Cambridge received national prominence for his humorous comments on the racial
situation in the U. S. A performer in plays, television and

movies, Mr. Cambridge writes for
several national magazines.
Folksinger Carolyn Hester has
appeared at folk clubs, on network
college
television and
campuses. She appeared before
Princess Margaret and the Earl
of Snowden in England.
Tickets for the concert at two
dollars may be purchased at
Norton ticket booth.

STEWART EDELSTEIN

be changed to 3-4 p.m, on Tuesdays and Thursdays.
According to the Council resolution, the time was changed because 76% of the students are
presently not attending classes
at 3 p.m, on those days; the time
is late enough in the day to be
“open ended” for meetings of
long duration; it is a time of day
when Norton Union and other
student service facilities are not
seriously overcrowded.

“When the name of any country
in such a manner, a similar protest is warranted.”

Copies of the International Club
Buffalo
letter were sent to The
Evening New*, The Courier Express, and the Federal Communications Commission.

It was noted that similar programs have been instituted in
several units of the City University of New York, where the student body is made up almost en-

is used

The free hour program origi-

nated as a plank of the Campus

regulations.

Chairman, Commuter Board

Because most student activities
are presently held at night, the
Commuter Board has supported
the resolution in hopes of facilitaing commuter participation, according to Edelkein.

Michael Nicolau, president of
the International Club, stated:

of commuters. Edelstcin
described the program as “successful."
tirely

the Parking and Traffic Regulations Manual. One sugestion is
that the University should accept
responsibility for all cars damaged in towing except those cars
parked in violation of University

Dr. U»m4 Tailor tmMii law Say «Wt aa 4taNn«aWta4 alalllwt
jrifcmr trim laatura to Sigma till.

�College Week In

BERMUDA

Spring Vacation (Mar. 19-26)

8 days and 7 nights including
o Round

Trip

Friday, February 4,

SPECTRUM

PACE TWO

Flight

from

Buffalo and Haw York

o Round Trip Transfers from
Airport to Cuast House, Cottage, or Apartment
Guest
o Accommodations
House, Cottage and Apartments
—

Alleged Academic Double Standard On Athletics
Provokes Inquiry By Student Affairs Committee
An alleged academic double
standard on athletics, discussed
at a meeting of the SFA Forum,
is the basis for an inquiry which
will be conducted by the University Senate Committee on Student Affairs, under the chairmanship of Dr. Raymond G. Hunt,
Professor of Psychology. The in-

BEACH PARTY
COLLEGE QUEEN CONTEST
CRUISE
TALENT SHOW
A MUCH MORE

vestigation is being done in conjunction with an Ad Hoc Committee of the Student Association, headed by Mr. Jeffrey Lyn-

Complete for

Although students on probation
may not engage in student activi-

$165 from New York
$185 from Buffalo
Contact;

Donald Mathison
3876 Bailey Ave.

837-5964
Representative of
Garber’s Travel Agency
—

ford.

ties, they are permitted to participate in intercollegiate athletics
with the consent of the dean of

their division.
Dr. Hunt and his committee
have proposed to verify the allegation of the double standard,

Spring Weekend Slated For April 28-May I;
Plans Include Stunts, Dance and Float Parade

Spring Weekend will be held
Thursday, April 28 through Sunday, May 1, announced Lois Mentor, Spring Weekend General
Chairman.
Stunt Night, a competition for

The special events committee
is sponsoring a Spring Weekend
Olympics including a Gran Prix
Trie race and other events.

Students interested in joining
the Spring Weekend Committee
may apply at the Union Board
office, 215 Norton.

fraternities, sororities and other
interested groups will begin the
weekend, Miss Mentor reported.
A formal dance will be held Friday night, April 29 at the Hearthstone Manor in Cheektowaga. A
concert in Clark Gym has been
planned for that evening, an entertainer has not yet been con-

A float parade, formerly a main
event of Spring Weekend, will
not be included in the activities

Chancellor Furnas will
speak on “The Future of
the University” Tuesday,
February 8, at 3:30 p.m.
in the Millard Fillmore
Room. All students are invited to attend.

tacted.

Everything Photographic for Profeu.onal
and Amateur Um

Delaware Camera Mart
Movie Rental*
Photo Finishing
Cameras - Supplies Projectors
2435 DELAWARE AVENUE
•77-3317

FREE BEER!
Valentine's Day
Dance

the various departments of the
university to explain the proeedure for determining eligibility
for intercollegiate athletes.
After the investigation, the
Committee will suggest uniform
procedures.

Mr. Lynford stated that the committees are also planning to contact the admissions department to
leant the procedure for the admission of athletes and the granting of athletic scholarships. The
committee will then ask heads of

this year. It has been suggested
that there be a stationary float
which would be decorated with
objects donated by various organizations. These objects could
be judged, and a prize awarded
to the winning organization.

Ford Motor

Company is:
F

/

Sponsored by
NORTH AMERICAN INDIAN
SOCIAL CLUB OF BUFFALO
to benefit Scholarship Fund

SATURDAY, FEB. 5
Harugari Hall
1257 Genesee Street

encoura ement
Graduates who join us are often surprised at how
quickly they receive personal assignments involving major responsibilities. This chance to demonstrate individual skills contrasts sharply with
the experience of many young people entering the

$5.00 per Couple

Ihiriil Trnnisirmul
U S . Mu hiumi Stall■ Ihifi
M S.. Mirhifinn Shilr Ihm

business world for the first time. At Ford Motor
Company, for example, a graduate may initiate a
project and carry it through to its final development. One who knows is David Tenniswood, of
our research staff.

Dave joined Ford Motor Company in July, 1961.
Assigned to our steering and controls section, he helped
develop a revolutionary steering system that will facilitate driving in future Ford-built cars.
( uncut v
a design engineer working on suspension design and analysis,

I

Dave has been impressed by tbe extent to which management encourages
personal initiative among recent graduates like
himself. Here, management
looks immediately to young engineers, like Dave, for
fresh concepts that
reflect their academic training and special abilities. Moreover, when the
idea is accepted for development, the
initiator is frequently given the

opportunity to see the job through —from drawing board to production line!
The experience ol Dave Tenniswood is not unusual. Ford
Motor Company

C IS
ament al to individual growth and a
successful career. If you are interested in a job that challenges your
abilities
rewards enterprise, we urpe you to contact
our representative when

tie visits your campus,

ie

American Road, Dearbor

An equal opportunity employer
•

%

tj i i.

1.1

i

•

&gt;

•

•

■

•

&gt;

«»»

m*

�Friday, February 4, 1966

PAM THREE

SPECTRUM

History of 'Threepenny Opera' Represented; Free University Committee
Play To Be Shown In February and March To Be Established By SDS
The Threepenny Opera, which
has a history over two centuries
long, will be presented at Baird
Hall at UB February 24 through
February 27 and March 3 through
March 6.
The play was first produced in
1728 and presented as The Beggar's Opera in London, where it
was a great success. Too much
for the Victorian era, it was not
produced again until 1920, when
it ran for three years in London.
Brecht and Weill adapted the
story to create Die Dreigrotchenoper (The Threepenny Opera).

It was presented in Berlin in
1928, and met with great enthusiasm all over Germany and Central Europe. This time its success
was cut off by the Nazis, who
banned it in 1933.
At the time it was banned in
Germany, an English version of
the play was presented in New
York. Though well received by
the critics, it did not draw any
crowds, and was withdrawn after
twelve performances.
After this series of collapses,
Marc Blitzstein made a new adaptation which was, in the end, to be
the most successful musical up to
that time. This adaptation was
presented off Broadway on March
10, 1954, and it was very enthusiastically received. In the midst
of success, the play was forced to
close after 12 weeks because of
the prior booking of the theatre
for another attraction.
The opera had been

so well

liked that critics began to cry
"Bring back The Threepenny
Opera."

Finally, after 15 months of public demand, the show reopened
on September 20. 1955. in its
original theatre.
By now so well publicized by
the critics’ outcry, it was an overwhelming hit. It did not close
until December 17, 1961, 6 years
and 3 months later after 2,611

continuous performances, making it the longest running musical of its time. It is succeeded
now by only "My Fair Lady" and
"The Fantisticks."

The musical ranks high for its
hit records. “Mack the Knife,”
and “The Bilboa Song” are both
songs from the Threepenny
Opera. The original cast album,
recorded in 1958, was a bestseller.

Students Interested in Pledging
Must Rush Register This Week
Students planning to pledge a
fraternity this semester must
“rush register” this week with
the Inter-Fraternity Council, on
Monday in Room 346 Norton, or
Thursday in the Norton lobby.

The informal rush week will
end Friday, February 12, with a

concert by Godfrey Cambridge
and Carolyn Hester in Clark
Gym. Formal rush week will
begin February 12. During this
week fraternities will hold formal dinners for invited rushees.
All rushing for this semester
will conclude on February 21 and
22 with formal bidding.

UB Debate Society to Conduct
Annual International Tournament
The Debate Society will hold
its Eleventh Annual International
Debate Tournament in Norton
Union Friday and Saturday, February 18 and 19.

DEALS Jewelers
UNIVERSITY PLAZA
(next

to Amherst

DIAMONDS
WATCHES
EARRINGS
RINGS

Participating in the tournament will be local as well as outoMown debating teams.

Theatre)

J/J

f

&gt;

If we can't
fix your watch / «jaw.
throw it away

The program consists of five
rounds of orthodox debate on the
national intercollegiate debate
topic, ‘Resolved: That Law Enforcement Agencies in the United
States Should be Given Greater
Freedom in the Investigation and
Prosecution of Crime.”

Students and faculty are wel
to attend the discussions.
Further information may be obcome

V

tained in Room 357 Norton

Free universities are currently
in operation in several major
cities throughout the United
States Minimal fees are generally
charged for courses so as to eliminate relying on any private
benefactors. Many of the courses
comprise such topics as Marxist

Barbara Brody, creator of the
Free University Committee stated
that the goals of the free university will be “to provide a real
educational experience for the
participants—faculty
and
students.” All courses are chosen by
the participants themselves, and
no credit or degrees are issued.
The courses are taught on a seminar or lecture basis, depending
upon the course itself and upon
the desires of the students.
Miss Brody commented that students in the present university
system are unable to receive an
adequate education. Through the
free university, Miss Brody foresees that students will no longer
choose, but will create.
The Free University Committee
will endeavor to contact those individuals who are interested in
participating in either teaching
or learning through a free university. Anyone, regardless of enrollment in the State University
of New York at Buffalo, is encouraged to join the committee,
and an open meeting will be held
at a date to be announced during
the week. Although the Students
for a Democratic Society are initiating its formation, the free

community organiza-

tion, experimental cinema and
radical social movements.
Founders of free universities

across the nation have varying

notions concerning the concept of
such institutions. Free University
of Florida members advocate that
"free" refers to taking a “nonideological” slant on its courses
and teachers.
Rick Horowitz,

from Chicago

SOS, has another conception of

the free university. He envisions
it as a “social translation of symbols, experiments, and imagination of exist-entialism and the

avant

garde movements,"

Concerning the formation of a
University of Buffalo, a
number of practical suggestions
were presented by Miss Brody.
She urged that the free university should not be an SDS school.
In addition it should encourage

Free

all interested
considering the needs and potentialities of the participants involved.
All persons interested in joining the Free University Committee should contact Miss Brody at
TT 2-0449 Date and time of the
first meeting will be announced.

Female Managing Editor
Joins Harvard Crimson
NEW HAVEN, Conn.

(CPS)—

The

Yale Daily New*, which
loses all composure every time a
female wends her way into a
Yale dining hall, has erupted
over the announcement that a
woman will hold the number two
position on the Harvard Crimson

terpart at the Crimson. Rothchild has challenged Linda to a
game of jacks, reasoning that
“this would be her only weak
point. If I challenged her in
wrestling or drinking, she would
probably beat me.”
Miss McVeigh agreed to the
challenge and has also said she

"Her appointment is just an
other part of the feminine con
spiracy to end the male sex,’

Opportunity

terested persons, both on campus
and in the community.

Free universities are based on
the assumption that the educational needs of today’s students
cannot be met by the established
private and public colleges.

for the first time.

areer

university will be open to the
help and participation of all in-

A Free University Committee
was established by the Students
for a Democratic Society to form
a free university in Buffalo
at their meeting on Wednesday,
February 2.

ing editor of the News, declared
of Linda McVeigh, his new coun-

would compete with Rothchild in
tennis, headline writing or news
writing.

merited, “she’s already trying to

usurp my role again."

UNITED STATES PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE
-

COMMUNICABLE DISEASE CENTER

We ore going to eradicate

syphilis in the United States.
We need people who want immediate job involvement, interesting work, an outlet
for creative ideas, and an excellent opportunity for advancement.
We want to talk with above average senior students who are majoring in the
following academic fields;
BIOLOGY
ENGLISH
JOURNALISM
ECONOMICS
HISTORY

HUMANITIES
LANGUAGES
PHILOSOPHY
PUBLIC HEALTH
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION

interviews for June Graduates will be conducted

FRATERNITY

RUSH

REGISTRATION
Norton 346
Mon., Feb. 7

POLITICAL SCIENCE
SOCIAL SCIENCES
PSYCHOLOGY
SOCIOLOGY
MATHEMATICS

T. G. I.F.M

on

Meets Tonight

FEBRUARY 15

Contact your Placement
AN EQUAL

Office

to arrange

for an

EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY

interview

Two Bands

—

Confinuous Music

CORDON BLEU RESTAURANT

3909 GENESEE STREET
9:30 P.M. 1:30 AM.
HmIi * TIm
MUST BE SINGLE
20-35 YEARS OF AGE
-

—

—

-

I

VENEREAL DISEASE BRANCH

••*»■»*

U

�Friday, February

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

Editorial Comment

.

.

THE RIGHT

.

GOOD FAITH?
By JAMES CALLAN
Even the most casual dealings with the administration of this University in any one of its protean forms
The Peace Offensive is over,
are sufficient to prove that the majority of administrators
strike North
are incompetent, and that the formal structure in which the bombs again
they are forced to work is grossly inefficient. Most Vietnam, and Rusk, Harriman,
and Goldberg are back in Washpeople who have business to transact with this Univer- ington.
The immediate effects of
thought
supported
by
the
able
to
muddle
thropgh,
sity are
the lull will be hardly visible,
of
the
administrathat, despite the obvious inadequacies
but the underlying effects will be
tive bureaucracy and the obvious inefficiency of most of far-reaching. This 37-day period
the bureaucrats, everyone concerned is doing his best.
marks the breaking point between
This is certainly a comforting thought, and it helps 1965, the year of passing the
to keep tempers cool and maintain a modicum of politbuck, "backing the Administraand
tion," and doing nothing
ness and decorum. However, sooner or later, the credulity of even the most generous person becomes strained in 1966, a year of well heeded
to the breaking point. The situation surrounding the dissent, of many divergent points
a
more exdisposition of charitable funds collected to ease the pain of view, certainly far
citing year.
of the dispossessed and the destitute suggests that the
Consider for example the U. S.
administration is not merely blundering and incompetent, Senate Last year, with very few
but operating in bad faith as well. The National Stuexceptions, the only opinion to
dent Association Committee had for the past two years be found was to keep plugging
collected money for food and clothing for the poor in along, don’t go back, don't go
the Southern United States. Students here were enforward, don’t do anything, and
couraged to give up a meal at Thanksgiving, the cost whatever you do don’t rock the
boat. Well, the bombing lull
of that meal to go to the “Freedom Fast.”
Last year the check for that money was held up on changed a lot of that. While the
the pretext that the food services’ books were undergoing an audit and that the money could not be disbursed
until the books were put in order. The Editor of this
paper received verbal assurances that the money, $1.20
a meal, would be forthcoming as soon as the audit was
complete.
Plans for the “Freedom Fast” went ahead
as scheduled this year, desipte that fact that the money
collected last year had not yet been sent to the national
A Defense of Apathy; or. The
office of NSA.
Activist's Guide to Indifference
Now we are told that this money can not be turned
over to charity. We are told that no agreement was
The hue and cry has recently
made, and that if it was, the administrators who made it
gone up from the campus’ more
were exceeding their authority. This ceases to be a vocal activist groups
lamenting
question of ineptitude and stupidity the administration, the lack of
support from the
either then or now, has acted in bad faith.
general student body for their
In light of this criminal hypocracy, three questions circus. “Where have we failed?”
must be asked and answered
they have been heard to hue;
(1) What has happened to the money collected
“Why have collections fallen
for the “Freedom Fast?”
off?" they have been heard to
cry. The trouble, as Galileo said
(2) What measures are to be taken to see that
as he scratched, is not in our
situations of this sort will not arise again?
stars, but in under-things.
(2) How much longer will the members of this
academic community put up with the stupid
Many activist groups, for exblunders and blatant violations of the good
ample, have picked the wrong
faith upon which this University rests?
causes in which to try to enSUPPORTERS OF THE WAR
gender enthusiasm. Few people
A new committtee uniting students and faculty who have such an emotional composupport our military efforts in Viet Nam has been formed sition that they can become frenunder the leadership of conservative students. This etic over the folkways of Tierradel-Fucgo; and yet, the Fuegan
committee sattes its purposes in part as follows: “freepeople from the Rathskeller to
dom for all mankind . . . and
to defeat the Communist threat to South Viet Nam and to guarantee in- see their movies on hemp hoeing
and the making of salt maps of
dependence and freedom to its people.”
By implication they suggest that those who are op- the Straits of Magellan. It would
these
posed to continued military action in Viet Nam are also be far better. I believe, for
Fellows to sponsor something that
opposed to these principles. In fact, these very principles could probably be adopted by most anti-war groups. appealed to the gentler nature
There is something wrong with a statement which is not of the other students, like an
open to disagreement from its supposed adversaries.
This paper, which has gone on record innumerable times
in opposition to military action in Viet Nam, could and
does support these principles, without altering in any
way its stand on the war.
The architects of the Committee for Victory in Viet
Nam should restate their principles in such a way as to
make clear their disagreement with those who 'oppose
One sits here amidst piles of
the war. or they should themselves cease to agitate for scribblings and wonders what to
the senseless brutality and death which shames this write of this week. The blizzard
of (ili has been discussed enough.
country and threatens not only to obliterate the population of \ iet Nam, but to drive the peoples of Southeast Printed media have discussed it
Asia into the abyss of totalitarianism and criminal stu- and the electronic means dislittle else. Now the slow
pidity which characterizes bureaucratic communism cussed
growth of tales will begin until
today.
every man. woman, and child who
*»

—

-

-

.

.

...

The

SPECTRUM

official

student newspaper ol the Stale Un.vers.ly of New York at
Buffalo.
ubl'Cation Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo, N Y 14214 Published
weekly from the fast week ol September to
the last week ns May. e.cepl lor
*«am periods. Thanksgiving,
Christmas, and spring vacations

Editor-in-Chief
Managing

Bviintii

JEREMY TAYLOR

Editor
Manager

DAVID EDELMAN
RAYMOND VOIRE

even saw a snowflake will have
been in mortal danger.
Those who really did the
Police. Highway. Ambulances
assorted other public services
stagger home and collapse

job.
and

w ill
for

several davs.
While some people were trying
very hard to save others from the
elements, it seemed as though

General Hcrshey. resident djinn
of the very Selective Service,
Editor
MARCIA ORSZULAK
seemed to be trying to save the
EMturt Editor
JOHN STINY
Advertising Manager
RONALD HOLT
country from itself. Damned
*•*•«
Ci,&lt; u U.ion M.r,,,.,
JOANNE LEEGANT
white of him. What is most frightDIANE LEWIS
*P«rt» Editor
SIEVE SCHUELEIN
Faculty Advisor
ening to me from personal recolIRENE WILLET
Uyoot Editor
SHARON HONIG
Financial Advisor
lections of the Army is that HerDALLAS GARBER
Copy Editor
shey is so damned typical. I have
loprochaun
LAUREN JACOBS
RUSSELL GOLDBERG
visions of the military protecting
EDITORIAL POIICY IS DETERMINED IV THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
the U. S. the same way it is proM«*T CLASS HONOR RATING
tecting Vietnam
Then I read something like
Second Class. Pottage Paid at Buffalo, N Y,
Subtcriplion S3 00 per year,
circulation
The Right as it appeared in last
15,000
Friday's Spectrum and 1 become
Represented for national adverfiting by
National Advertising Service Inc., 420
even more certain that I am out
Madison Ave., New York, N Y
of place than I was before. As I
(lam becoming certain
no r
*S.*. ww*
yvvrA
VfWj n;
rfvft
Nows Editor

SUSAN GREENE
RONNIE BROMBERG

Photography Editor

•

Mike Mansfield and advocate continuance of the bombing lull. On
the other hand, reports, that John-

son was considering something
really big if the peace effort
failed provided an opportunity
for others to advocate harder
measures, bombing Hanoi and
Haiphong, and getting tough with
our allies who might be supplying the enemy. These two groups,
together with the “keep plugging
along” bunch and the “get-outers," Wayne Morse and Ernest
Gruening, split the Senate into

four distinct groups, each with

its own idea of how the war ought'
to be run, or unrun. The result
is a much harder body for LBJ
to control
It is noteworthy that none of
the big voices for a soft policy,
Morse, Gruening, Fulbright, Mansfield, Kennedy, etc., are up for
re-election this year. Johnson can
be happy that such dyed-in-thewool liberals as Paul Douglas and
F r a nk Church are, for their
meagre weight, the wrong way
might be enough to tip the scales.
Republicans shape up well on
the “hard policy” side. Even Jake
Javits, Mr. Liberal Republican
wanted us to step up the bombing. Naturally this solid bloc support is invaluable to the president, and therefore their directly
opposite stand on domestic matters will put him in an uneasy
position.

All in all, 1966 looks to be an

interesting year, if only to see
01’ Cornpone sweat a little.

EDWARD JOSCElYN

Continuity

***«

—

.

_

Ugly Man’s Shrunken Head Contest.
Other groups demand an excessive degree of commitment
from their members. Why, for
example, does the Mau Mau Junior League feel compelled to hold
its fertility rites at 3 a.m.? and
in the middle of the fountain?
Far better, I should think, were
they to reserve the Card Room,
for though they might antagonize

the few hundred habitues of that
place, they would no doubt make
up for that loss by attracting the
pool players next door.
In addition, some students take
exception to the ways in which

activists make their presence
known, and for how long. Granted that the Tank Club is a worthwhile organization, but was it
necessary for them to stage a
drive-in when a Socialist came to
speak on campus? Had these mechanically minded, reb blooded
lads found a less obstructive,
more appealing method of enlisting support, such as giving
a class in engine-gunning in front
of Goodyear, or publish a weekly
pamphlet on Status Values of
Cars, I can’t help but feel their
■

grump

The

THE

president was hedging on the future, new opinions were quick to
form. Since Johnson had not
made a decision, the senators
could say just about anything
without bucking the administration. Many liberals, strangers to
the foreign policy arm of the
right last year, took the opportunity to join behind the huge
wings of J. W. Eulbright and

Che Circus

[

.

12“

,

j

efforts would meet more success.
And finally, some of the trouble
lies with the members of the
groups themselves. Many, have
developed a flaming paranoid
complex, and they now see persecutions and plots left and right;
while the validity of their feelings is debatable, it is unfair to
expect an already indifferent student body either to assume a position akin to the Anti-Defamation
League, or to make Mental Health
Week a year-long affair. And besides, who wants to picket for
the War on Poverty when your
compatriots look like thdy were
the first casualties?
I would wish that these few
observations would stand all in
good stead—both the activities,
and those they seek to entice. I
might also mention that I am
starting a club: The SUNYAB Students for Beer and Longer Vacations.
We’ll be meeting at the Stage
Door for the 1 a.m. show, after
which we’ll all get stinko, draw
up a petition of some sort and
tear up the joint. I expect a

good turn-out.

by STEESE

that nobody reads any of the columns except the other columnists
checking on the opposition)
The Transit Workers did not
FORCE New York City to pay
them any more money. Force you
see is purely physical and all the
Transit Workers did was demonstrate how valuable they were.
—

In addition, that arch-liberal
John Lindsey is an ass for not
understanding that Mike Quill
and Co. were only demonstrating
their value. But perhaps the real
l.v hard line for me to swallow
is the assertion that since the
courts issuing the stay of the
strike were wrong the late Mr.
Quill had every right to ignore
the writ.
1 have a record featuring an
organization called the Almanac
Singers at home. It is a collection of Union songs on which
Pete Seeger makes his first appearance. I do not play if much
anymore It is very hard for me
to work up much sympathy for
the poor starving union members
who arc tying up an entire city
so that they can push their al-

ready high wages even higher
and only have to work four days
a week.
The conservatives might take
note that while it is an undeni3ft

iVi D

able fact that the drive for acquisition resulted in construction of
much of our modern technical society there would seem to be certain grave doubts about the future. When the drive to acquire
material goods becomes so strong
among certain groups that it is
necessary to take them away, not
from the rich but from those who
lack as much as the group still
driven one is laying the groundwork for troubles that could ruin
the whole system.
Being one of those sillygoddamliberals I hear so much about
may I respectfully suggest that
if an effort is not made to teach
some of the people in this country that the answer can at times
lie in the use and understanding
of things already available rather
than the acquisition of even
newer and more shoddy goodies
this society may not make it.

Would it not be fitting indeed if
we buried ourselves in our own
wealth, sloth and obesity?
Will we prove that we do indeed have a system far superior
to communism only to prove that
we didn't have the slightest idea
in hell how to use the system? I
make few predictions. 1 just ask
questions.

(Cont'd
)

■ *.0

uyT.yJt

on Pg. 6)
iii.J t

�cOlll
-

Friday, February 4, 1966

i

:

Selective Service Policies
May Change Within Week
By ROBERT MOORE
The Collegiate Press Service

There is a good chance that the
Selective Service System will announce within the next week a
return to the general ideas of
the student deferment policy of
the 1950’s.
This will mean that for the
first time since the Korean War
students will be yanked from colleges and universities and put
into the armed services. Unlike
the present system, student deferments will be given sparingly.
Right now, everyone who is
taking a full-time load at an accredited college and is heading
roughly
toward a degree in
a Straight line is granted a student deferment. The 1950 plan,
however, was not so generous. It
was based on two yardsticks by
—

which local boards were to determine whether a student was
academically qualified to be given
a deferment.
The first yardstick was class
rank. The university gave to local
boards each student’s class rank,
a system changed
in quartiles
only three years ago.
—

Washington suggested guidelines for satisfactory work. They
were, basically, that a student at

the end of his first year of col-

lege should rank in the upper
half of his class; at the end of
his second year in the upper twothirds; and at the end of his third
year in the upper three-fourths of
his class.
(If the Selective Service System elects:to use the same guidelines today, then a college student would be considered satisfactory if he had a 2.74 at the
end of his first year, a 2.62 after
his second year and a 2.65 after
his third year. The figures are
based on the 4.0 system at the
University of Michigan. Find
your own local statistics).
If this were the only standard,
the system would be disastrous to
students in the better colleges.
The 1950 system, however, also
used another yardstick to equalize the difference between
schools: an optional, voluntary
test.

If a student thought he was
ranked too low in his own school
to get a deferment but was welleducated in comparison to other
students in the nation, he would
take the national test, prepared
for the Selective Service by the
Educational Testing Service and
Science Research Associates.
When the test was first given
in 1951, 53 per cent of the freshmen, 62 per cent of the sophomore and 71 per cent of the juniors passed it. The results varied widely with the schools, however; at one college, only 35 per
cent passed it, while at another,
98 per cent had a passing mark.
The test appears to have been
weighted toward the sciences.
Sixty-eight per cent of the freshman engineers passed it, while
only 58 per cent of the freshmen
in humanities did so.
Students in the physical sciences and mathematics had a 64

per cent passing figure, compared
with 59 per cent for students in
the biological sciences and 57 per

cent in the social sciences. Only
48 per cent in general arts and
42 per cent in business school
passed it. The lowest scores were
education majors; only 27 per
cent of them passed the test,
A report published in 1951 re-

that many of those who
took the test were enabled,
through it, to get a student deferment even though they would
not have gotten one through class
ranking. Fifty-two per cent of the
ported

PACB FIVB

oCetterA

juniors in the lower quarter of
their class were able to pass the
test; 42 per cent of the sophomores in the lower third passed,

and among freshmen in the bottom half, 35 per cent passed.
How well did the

work?

1950 system

First, it worked efficiently. Of
1.2 million youths who reached
18% in the 12 months preceding
the Korean War, 65 per cent

either enlisted or were inducted.
22 per cent were physically or
mentally unfit, and only 13 per
cent “escaped” actiye service. Of
this 13 per cent, many served in
reserve units, so actually far less
than 13 per cent avoided their
draft obligation.

If the Vietnam war achieves the
proportions of the Korean conflict, one can expect an equal effect on today’s young male population.

the (Editor

Senator Regards Charges Against Zeldner As True
TO

THE EDITOR:

I read with interest Mr. Sheldon Cohen’s letter answering the
charges levelled against Senator
Charles Zeldner (Freshman Class)
by certain interested and knowledgeable freshmen. These objections referred to Mr. Zeldner’s negative vote on the Reapportionment Amendment, The
Feinberg Resolution, and the St.
John’s Resolution. 1 believe, as
a member of the Senate, that not
only were these charges truthful
but that Mr. Cohen, as a member
of the United Students Executive
Committee, has involved himself
in a political slander of the highest order.

Mr.

Cohen

stated

that

Mr.

Zeldner cannot be expected to
2,440 freshmen in
his voting. I find it difficult,
however, that there were many,
if any, freshmen that would not
desire to have four seats, as opposed to one. on the Student Senate. This is a more equitable

represent all

representation

(one

man,

one

within the school, and, in
that, Mr. Zeldner is supposed to
represent the Freshman Class, I
do not think his vote is “constructive," either philosophically
or politically. In addition, his
negative votes on the other two
resolutions give the impression
that the Freshman Class is
against academic freedom, which
1 do not believe it is.
This idea of democratic repvote)

resentation points up another
fallacy in Mr. Cohn's and Mr.

Zcldner’s argument. If, indeed,
Mr, Zeldner had been elected
by the Freshman Class as a
whole, his vote could be accepted
as in the interest of the people
that supported him in the election. He was, however, elected
by a small group ,the Freshman
Class Council, which, although
elected by all freshmen, does not
make for pure, direct democracy.
It might be pointed out that the
17th Amendment eliminated indirect election of United States
Senators. This reapportionment
elminiates this form of election,
and Mr. Zeldner voted against it.
Member, Student Senate
Carl S. Levine,

Zeldner Upholds Representative Voting Record
TO THE EDITOR;

The 1950 system had some serious effects, however. Besides the
consequences to the 65 per cent
who had to take two or more
years away from their peace
time pursuits, there was also a
serious effect on colleges. The
1950 system cut into the student
population, and many small, liberal arts colleges ran deeply into
the red. One small school was
forced to dismiss 30 per cent of
mainly young inits faculty
structors without tenure. Com-

to

Due to a lack of space LETTERS TO THE EDITOR must be limited to 200 words.
Complete identification, including phone numbers, must accompany each letter.
Names will be withheld upon request. All letters must be typewritten, double
spaced and submitted before 1:00 PM. on the Tuesday before publication.

Student Deferment Status Could
Revert To Korean War Situation

—

•

SPECTRUM

It appears to me most resignedly ludicrous that is has taken
nearly five months to hear anything in the way of advice or
comment from those whom I rep-

resent. And, last week, when this

glorious experience finally transpired, I was subjected to public
ridicule in our respected and colorful sheetlet. Upon further examination, I find that of the sign-

ees, three arc losers. Messrs. Rotholz and Weiner are Allenhurst
losers, and of Mr. Lynford, I can
claim the satisfaction of having
handily beat him in our conference hour elections.

Their statements so unseated
me that day, that I immediately
canvassed the campus, interviewing about 100 Freshmen in this
endeavor. And, lo and behold,
not one of them disagreed with

my voting policy. If this is not
an indication of Freshman sentiment, someone please let me know
what it is.

As for political aspirations, it
is indeed a shame that these four
formerly fine young people have
had the misfortune to have come
under the influence of party
bosses so that their every move
has become ruthlessly regulated.
Charles E. Zeldner

—

panies reported severe shortages
of engineers; in June, 1951, a survey of companies showed that
there was a need for 80,000 engineers, yet 19,000 would-be engineers were scheduled for the

draft.
Even though the 1950 plan did
fill an immense need for manpower, many disagreed with it.
They argued that neither class
rank nor test scores were adequate or even acceptable standards of a student’s intellectual

growth.
But, as Gen. Lewis Hershey said
in 1952: “I just can’t think of any
other way.”

Airlines Announce
Reduction of Fare

Darrow Criticizes Feinberg Decision
TO THE EDITOR
A federal court has affirmed
the constitutionality of the Feinberg Law, but has based the decision on extremely tenuous
grounds. The decision reads like
a treatise (a poor one at that) on
civil liberties court cases and almost completely ignores any substantive academic freedom issues.

The decision was defended
primarily on the basis of judicial
precedents relying extensively
on Adler vs. Board of Education
in which case the Supreme Court
upheld the constitutionality of
the Feinberg Law as it applies to
secondary schools. Justice Leonard P. Moore, who penned the decision, attempted to justify the
requirements of the Feinberg
complex as preventatives against

Reductions in plane fares for
anyone between the ages of subversion of the American sysso largely negtwelve and twenty-two have been tem and in doing
lected the perversion of fundaannounced by Allegheny, Amerfreedoms wrought by
ican, and United Airlines. Fifty mental
these rules.
per cent reductions by American
and United Airlines were effecAn extremely repugnant cletive January 27. Allegheny Airment
of the decision is its lack
regular
rates
of
two-thirds
lines
of academic
understanding
3.
of
February
price will begin
processes and of the purposes
rates
reduction
Applicants for
and ideals of higher education.
in American and United flights In defending the constitutionality
must purchase a three-dollar ID of the state's objectives in enactcard. ID cards must be obtained ing the regulations, Justice Moore
in person and present proof of states, “The interest in national
age is required.
self-preservation
'the ultimate
applies
Since no advance reservations
value of any society,’
will be accepted students are adto the university campus as well
vised to check available flights
in advance. People flying at reduced rates will be seated in the
de
air coach section. If this section
first
class.
is filled they will fly
American and United youth TO THE EDITOR
rates are effective at all times exApparently the person who
cept Easter (April 7), Thanksgivwrote the YAF SOUNDBOARD
ing (November 23 and 27), and
is reluctant to asChristmas (December 15 through on Friday last
sociate his name with his belli24 and January 2 through 4) vacose views. It struck me that the
cations.
author hit upon the wrong nom
Allegheny Airlines will charge
de plume, for Thermopylae
ten dollars annually for ID cards,
“Hot-Gates”) should
and five dollars per half-year (meaning
of a losing,
after June 30, Discount rates carry connotations
rear guard action for those who
apply at all times, including holiknow their Greek history. Inasdays. Reservations will be acceptmuch as this column was couched
advance.
ed in
—

—

Nom

as to the rest of our society.” Any
university community for which
the narrow nationalism described
here can be asserted as a prime
value is not a truly academic
community. High among the
ideals of an academy are a dedi-

cation to the unhindered search
for truth and the unfettered interaction of individuals at the
level of ideas. Antithetical to
both of these ideals are the limitations that national, cultural or
ideological particularities would
attempt to force on our universities through such devices as the
Feinbcrg Law.
In attempting to justify as due
process the administering of a

political purity test to university
personnel, the court apparently
missed the important point completely, They refer to George
Starbuck's dismissal for refusing
to answer a subversive activities
question on his employment form

note that if he had answered
it “yes,” he "would have had an
opportunity to explain and a right
to a full hearing." The point
missed is that by inquiring into a
person's political beliefs as a factor in granting an academic position, his freedom of speech and,
just as important, his freedom of
conscience are being violated.
Such a practice is also in disharmony with the theoretical
ideals of a “community of schol
and

timate activities are not deterred
, , , the statutes." It then continues, “only teaching that government shall or should ‘be overthrown . . by force’ is a basis
for adverse consequences under

by

these sections.” This in effect
declares that advocacy of such a
doctrine is forbidden. Advocacy
of doctrine however, is a real and
legitimate a part of any good educational system as is objective
presentation of facts. To say that
a certain doctrine may not be advocated is to deprive scholars of
a very useful form of discussion.
No legal mechanism should be alThe preceding arc but a few illustrations of the weaknesses of
the decision. At best, it is a piece
of ironically humorous semantic
manipulation; at worst, U is an
insult to all who share the aspirations of the academic community, and a severe blow to
academic freedom. Regulations
such as the Feinberg Law, do
more to subvert the freedoms of
American democratic theory than
any of the activities they attempt
to restrict. There is a chance that
this case will go to the Supreme
Court. Hopefully it will and hopefully our “American way of life”
will be set more in harmony with
the freedoms "guaranteed” to us
in our Constitution.

ars.”

The decision states that,

Kim L. Harrow

"Legi

Plume For Thermopylae Questioned
in the most warlike and belligerent terms, how much better had
the author used the pen name
Thermoboulos, i.e., “Hot-Head"
(ah! pour I'amour du grec).
So numerous were the cliches
throughout the column that it is

difficult to know where to strike
first. Among his many oversimplifications and distortions the columnist tells us that the Vietcong
“are part of the Communist alliance seeking to expand and to

overthrow non-Communist governments,” whereas, in truth, it
seems more reasonable to believe
that they are Vietnamese who are
interested in securing basic
human rights in Vietnam.
The writer also suggests “that a
Vietcong victory would bring
about a totalitarian dictatorship
.
Might this sentence not be
more fairly rewritten as follows?
The South Vietnamese govern(Cont’d on Pg. 6)
.

�SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

There will be a Delicatessen Sup-

GAMMA DELTA
There will be a meeting of

per

Sunday, February 6 at

on

Delta on Wednesday,
February 9 at 6:30 p.m. in Room
344 of Norton Dinner will be
held at 5:30 p.m, in the Rathskellar before the meeting

5:30 p.m. Dr Joseph Masling, will
speak on “Highlights of a Sabbatical Year in Israel.” The lox
and bagel brunch of the graduate
club has been rescheduled for

HILLEL
Ilillel will sponsor a Sabbath
Service this evening at 7:45 p.m.
Dr. Justin Hofmann will speak on

Professor Rafael Artzy will speak
on "Experience in Israeli Haganah and with the Illegal Immigration to Palestine.” Volunteers are
wanted for the United Jewish
Fund Campaign; a meeting of the
fund committee will be held Sunday, February 6, at 7:30 p.m.

Gamma

On Saturday, January 8, Vice
Humphrey
President
Hubert
visited Buffalo and during his
stay spoke at a banquet at the
Statler Hilton commemorating
one thousand years of Christianity in Poland. His presence in
Buffalo prompted local peace
groups, under the sponsorship of
the Buffalo Youth Against War
and Fascism, to hold a demonstration in front of the hotel
aimed at highlighting their opposition to the war in Viet Nam,
and particularly their opposition
to certain public statements Vice
President Humphrey had made
in connection with the war.

Sunday, February 6 at II am.

"Tu Bishvat in Jewish Tradition."

GREEK
NOTES

STUDENT CHRISTIAN
ASSOCIATION

The Student Christian Association will meet at 7:30, Thursday,
Fe b r u a r y 10 at John Buerk’s
home, 49 Heath St. “Job: an introduction to existentialism” is
the topic for discussion. Dinner
will be served at 6 p.m. for 50c.
Reservations may be made by calling TF 6 5806.

Phi Lambda Delta will hold a
beer stag at the club 161 Grider,
tonight at 8:30. Call Dick Dixon
at 831-3496 or Tom Hammond at
895-9496 for rides. Alpha Kappa
Psi will hold an open rush beer
stag at Johhny's Night Owl, 2424
Bailey Avenue, at 8:30 this evening. For rides, call Herb at 877
3758. Saturday night, February
5. Tau Kappa Epsilon will hold a
rush slop party at the Sheridan
I-anes with a hand. Call 837-5890
or 837 7838 for rides.

NEWMAN
Father Edward Mahoney, S. J.
will speak on “Academic Freedom” at 7:30 p.m. in 329 Norton,
Wednesday, February 2. Mass is
offered daily at Newman Hall at
11 a.m. Sunday Suppers are held
each week at 5:30 p.m.

Registration
will be held Monday, February 7
and Thursday, February 10 from
9 to 5 in Room 346. Registration
is compulsory for pledging.

from

WBFO will hold a meeting tonight at 7 p.m. in Norton, Room

242 for all old and new staff members. Positions are open in engineering, announcing and news
reporting. All interested students
are welcome.
Astronomy Club
The Astronomy Club will meet
at 4 p.m., Monday, February 7, in
llochsteltcr III. New members

Pg. 5)

menl is now a totalitarian dicta
torship which liquidates its enemies and deprives the Vietnamese people of most of their
fundamental freedoms. ■

I am not permitted the space
to reply to each and every one

flicting

Photo Club

day. February 4 at 4 p.m.

UlRlTTf*,

ORai

Inreteu /hi the
IHIHlTRta 5TR6

or jou-ijocuitf,
JACOBS JftW)

former operators of the University Food Service. It seems doubtful to me that private concerns
bid for the privilege of losing
money. In case anybody is interested if you project the 33
thou deficit the FSA reported on
food service over a whole year it
comes up to $101,324.22. If they
pay me only fifty thousand a year
I will take the entire mess out of
their hands and into my own, as
long as I get to keep the profits
too.

To

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Do
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—

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College
Newspaper

1

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writwe

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preferably typewritten, aiid may be returned
to Newman Hall (Across
Main St. from Hayes Hall)
or at Norton Box 64. Anonymous or signed articles
will be published monthly
in a free, campus wide
journal called DISCUSSION.

Q

Jir.

7K£
ui

GOT ANY OPINIONS?
Newman Club requests articles by any student or
faculty member on any
subject. Articles may range
from 100 to 400 words,

Addendum: In view of current
reaction time REF clean side
sidewalks after snowstorm would

TO

/
'--

v»p

the activities fee support personal
monogrammed snow shovels?

testimony,

prosecution

q roue*/Mo- R/na-e.

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/*Ai.*pRorrsf eue'V t

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from Pg. 4)

1

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thi wove**

orrse

So far this silly column is
about as jovial as the Vietnam
altercation. My apologies. I keep
forgetting it is passe to be anything but brightly cynical.

Detective Schwartz admitted
that he had recognized Katz in
the crowded lobby of the hotel
from having seen him in previous
anti-war demonstrations. During
a discussion ot the conflicts between the police witness testimony and the testimony of Mr.
Katz, Judge Luchowski stated,

There will be a meeting of the
Photo Club in 332 Norton, Fri-

Jene A I.aRue

DAZE

•

International Club

nostram perniciem pertinent?

sunf

(Cont’d
•

however.

The International Club will
have a Valentine Party on Thursday, February 10 at 7:30 p.m, in
Norton 340. Members and guests

ad

MM*, TH0HO

pealing the decision.

;

welcome.

S-jnopsis:

Katz was convicted on January 27 and fined twenty-five dol
lars. He and his lawyer are ap-

chowski later dismissed the latter charge on the basis of contradictions in the testimony of
prosecution witnesses. The judge
refused a motion by defense attorney Richard Lipsitz for dis
missal on the grounds of con-

Rippon Society
Rippon Society, a liberal-moderate Republican club, will meet
Monday, February 7 in Room 329
Norton at 7:30 p.m. Dr. Michael
Prosser will speak on “What Is
Liberal Republicanism?”

namese.

QUonam haec omnia nisi

•

the peace movement, the civil

rights movement ,and any other
movement which actively dissents from the status-quo.”

Later, in a hearing before
Judge Frank J. Luchowski, Katz
was charged with disorderly conduct and attempting to enter the
elevator on which Vice President
Humphrey was riding. Judge Lu-

welcome.

of Mr. Thermopylae’s banalities.
Let me merely react to the fatuous suggestion that the war in
Vietnam is a “gallant fight to preserve freedom." Freedom for the
Vietnamese does not seem to be
a serious concern of our government. And what, I ask, is gallant
about this dirty war? It is brutal,
cruel, and soul destroying for
both the Americans and the Viet-

The grump

I would like to suggest that
somebody borrow the books of

treatment at the hands of the
police, both in the hotel and on
the way to the station, and stated
that Schwartz, who was in plain
clothes, had never identified himself as an officer and that Katz
had never been informed that
he was under arrest.

WBFO

(Cont’d

When asked his reaction after
the trial, Katz stated, “I feel that
the actions of the arresting officers were an intimidation of

Katz later complained of rough

CJiEoaJ

Letters...

feel there is a certain area
where the credibility of the (defense) witness can be challenged.”
“I

The demonstration had been in
progress for over an hour when
four of the demonstrators left
the line and entered the hotel
“just to warm up” as one of
them later stated. After they entered the crowded hotel lobby
they were approached by Detective Joseph A. Schwartz and one
of the demonstrators, Daniel Katz,
a student at U.B., was asked to
leave. A scuffle ensued and Katz
was arrested for “refusing to
aceeed to the reasonable request
of an officer.”

Rush

Fraternity

Friday, February 4, 1966

Student Arrested at Humphrey Speech;
Claims That Police Harrassed Dissent

—

—

*.)

(asp!)
(CHOKd)

�Friday, February

4/1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE SEVEN

To any kid
who’d like to leave home:
Well pay half your fare.
&gt;T
itnW

The idea’s not as crazy as it may seem.
Anytime we take a jet up, there are almost
always leftover seats.
So it occurred to us that we might be able
to fill a few of them, if we gave the young
people a break on the fare, and a chance to
see the country.
The American Youth Plan*

round except for a few days before and after
the Easter, Thanksgiving and Christmas
rushes.
If you can’t think of any places you’d like
to go offhand, you might see a travel agent

for a few suggestions.
We can’t add anything else.
Other than it’s a marvelous opportunity
to just take off.
I

We call the idea the American Youth Plan,
and what it means is this:
American willpayhalf the jet ci
for anybody 12 through 21.
It’s that simple.
All you have to do is prove your age (a birth
certificate or any other legal document will do)
and buy a $3 identification card.
We date and stamp the card, and this entitles you to a half-fare ticket at any American
Airlines counter.

The only catch is that you might have to
wait before you get aboard; the fare is on a
standby basis.
“Standby” simply means that the passengers with reservations and the servicemen
get on before you do.
Then the plane’s yours
The American Youth Plan is good year

Complete this coupon —include your $3.
(Do not send proof of age—it is not needed
iinl iI you have y mi rHWa 1 i d a t ed. f
In addition to your ID card, we’ll also send
you a free copy of AA’s Go Co American
with $50 worth of discount coupons.
American Airlines Youth Plan
633 Third Avenue
New York, N.Y. 10017
Name
Address
City

.State

Birth date.

.Signature

Color of hair,

.Color of eyes.

American Airlines
•does

NOT

APPLY

IN CANADA

AND MEXICO.

.Zip

�Mv;

PAGE EIGHT

IFUILSSflo M Gherman
Despite the fact that there are over one million
people in the Niagara Frontier area, the market for
good films here is nil. Since Thanksgiving, there have
been few films of any value at all which have been
shown in Buffalo. This area is usually three to six months
behind New York in getting films, and I suppose this
must be tolerated due to the distribution agencies, but
what must not be tolerated is the fact that if these last
months are typical, then the worthwhile films which
are going to be shown in this city will be few and far
between; and if and when they iare shown, then due
to public apathy they will last only a few days. As did
The Hill or Mickey One.
It is easy to blame the owners of the cinemas. And,
in part, it is the men who run the movie houses who are
at fault. But let’s face it. No matter how sympathetic
they may be to the art of film, they do have to make
money. They are, ultimately, businessmen. The real
fault lies with the public. With those of you who go to
see That Darn Cat or Where the Spies Are but who
won’t go a bit out of your way to see an important film.
,

For example, I was speaking not too long ago with
a colleague of mine in the English Department who is
interested in films, and 1 told him about The Hill, which
was showing in Buffalo at the time. He told me, the
following week, after the film had closed, that he did
want to see it, but didn’t want to go out of his way—downtown in the middle of the week—to see it. Yet, I
saw this person and a great number of others who “don’t
want to go out of the way” at midnight, on a weekday,
in the snow, downtown, for outrageous prices at a dank
barn-like theatre, for the preview of Thunderball.

Friday, February 4, 196*

SPECTRUM

UB's Department of Music
To Hold Festival Weekend
A “Festival Weekend for Singers,” including lectures, a panel
discussion, recitals and a program by the Buffalo Philharmonic
Orchestra will be held February
4 to 6. The weekend is sponsored
by the Department of Music at
UB.
An “Art Song Recital” on Friday will open the weekend. Mr.
Heinz Rehfuss, professor of music
at the University, and pianist Gilbert Kalish will present the concert at 8:30 p.m. in Baird Hall. A
reception will be held following
the recital.

Saturday, following registration from 9 to 10 a.m. in Baird,
Dr. Donald Procter, professor of
physiology at the School of Hygiene and Public Health, Johns
Hopkins University, will lecture
on “Voice and Physiology.”

eastern district governor, Nation-

al Association

for Teachers of
Singing; Mrs. 'Rehfuss and Mr.
Laurence Bogue, Mrs. Dorothy
Rosenberger and Mrs. Muriel
Wolf, members of the Universty’s voice faculty.

Lutheran Church on Sunday. Mrs.
Boatwright will perform the work
with chamber orchestra and
chorus under the direction of
John Becker.

The panel discussion will continue in the evening, followed by
a lecture on “Opportunity for
Singers,” by Mrs. Marguerite
Knowles, representative of the
Metropolitan Opera National
Council.

The Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra will present a concert at
Kleinhans Music Hall at 2:30 p.m.,
including “The Impresario,” by
W. A. Mozart, with soloists Carol
Plantamura, soprano; Sylvia Brigham Dimiziani, soprano; Laurence
Bogue, baritone and William
Wagner, baritone.

Bach’s solo cantata No. 84 will
be presented at the 10:45 a.m.
services of the Holy Trinity

Reservations may be made with
the Music Department at 8313411.

A panel will explore ‘Repertory
and Vocal Interpretation," Saturday at 2;30 p.m. in Baird. Participants in the discussion of art,
song, oratorio and opera include
Mrs. Helen Boatwright, soprano
from Syracuse University; Mr. Julius Huehn, former baritone with
the Metropolitan Opera, now associated with the Eastman School
of Music; Mrs. Jean Ludman,

The point is this: it is you—those connected as students, faculty, or administrators in the University who
are at fault to a large extent for allowing the movie
houses in this city to show us trash for years. The University should provide the greatest potential cinema audience if for no other reason than a University is supposed to be a place of learning and the cinema is the
most exciting art form of our time.

through heavy-handedness.

The Tenth Victim has been playing for two months
at the Circle-Art. It continues to play because people,
mostly from UB. flock to see it. How many of you who

have seen it will also bother to see The Moment of Truth
when it opens at the Glen-Art? Or Godard’s The Married Woman when it opens at the Circle-Art?
Here is a brief list of some films now in New York:
Alphaville, To Die in Madrid, Red Beard, Sallah, Juliet
of the Spirits, Spy Who Came in From the Cold, Viva
Maria!, The Leather Boys. Just a few. And five of these
films have been in New York for the past five months.
Juliet of the Spirits will probably be here because Fellini is a big name; Viva Maria! will come because it has
Moreau-Bardot: Spy because it has Burton and because
it can be made to fit into the “spy" genre. The others?
If it weren’t for Fred Keller’s willingness to take a chance,
probably we wouldn’t see any of them. And the brunt of
the blame lies with the Philistines masquerading as intellectuals. It s hard to review movies when there aren't
any worth reviewing.
,

—

~

Speaking of movies not worth reviewing, The Agony
and the Ecstasy is playing at the Granada. From the
looks of it. it will he there at least another month. It
is directed (and I use the word loosely), by Carol Reed.
Reed can be a fine director (The Third Man, for example), but he sure as hell sold out when he decided to
make this film. The Irving Stone book on which the film
is based was intellectually dishonest; the film is faithful
to the book. Rex Harrison’s talents are wasted again.
And Charleton Heston is again type-cast. Heston, by the
way, is a good actor. See Major Dundee or any of Heston’s pre-Biblical epic stuff.
A concluding note: The Greatest Story Ever Told
(it isn’t) is opening soon—which means it will run for
at least three months. It is going to be shown on a very
large screen. When Cocteau was asked what he thought
of the large screen, he replied: “The-next time 1 write
a poem, I’ll
a bigger sheet of paper.”

SUNDAY, Feb. 13—8:30 P.M.
KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL

TICKETS NOW ON SALE
$5.50, $4.50, $3.50

Denton, Cottier
32 Court Street, Buffalo.

All Seats Reserved.
&amp;

Daniels,

The MOTION PICTUR
WITIV SOMEThiNO O

OFFEND EVERYONE

I

As of February 1, there are no good films (outside of re-runs and re-releases) in Buffalo. The best
film in town is probably Our Man Flint, a mid-camp
parody. Thunderball is the worst Bond effort to date;
the first one that is rather boring to see. The Slender
Thread is sentimental garbage. The Tenth Victim is an
example of how a potentially good film can be spoiled

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and Filmways present
Martin Ransohofs Production

Tlve

Loved

_

One

stirring

ROBERT MORSE -JONATHAN WINTERS
ANJANETTE COMER
famro

SUr»

Dm Andrews - Milton Berle - JamesCoburn ■ John Gielgud
Tab Hunter - Margaret Leighton - Liberate - Roddy McDowall
Robert Morley - Barbara Nichols- Lionel Standee

iROD STEIGERxMrJqiq'

SerompUy by Terry

Dincud by Tony

Southern ud Christopher Isherwood___

FROM

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�Friday, February 4, 1966

PAGE NINE

SPECTRUM

The loved Ones/ A Comedy-Drama Film Committee

Begins Today At Downtown Theater Presenting Andy
Starting today, the Center Thea-

tre will present Martin Ransohoff's production of ■ The Loved
Ones, which has been acclaimed
as the most outrageously funny
motion picture ever to have been
brought to the screen.
The movie is based on the famous novel by Evelyn Waugh.
The director is academy award
winner Tony Richardson, this

being his first picture since the
spectacular Tom Jones. There
is a fine cast of performers including Robert Morse, Dana Andrews, and Jonathan Winters. Mr.
Winters plays a dual role as Wilbur Glenworthy, the originator of
the “Resurrection Now" plan and

also Wilbur's brother who operates a pet cemetery.

The movie is a comedy-drama
of the way of life and death in
Hollywood, which pokes fun at
everything under the sun
"A
helluva Movie”
Jessica Mil—

—

ford.

Holiday Magazine.

Tryouts for Shakespeare’s “Troilus and Cressida” will be held Wednesday, February 9, 3 p.m. in
Health Sciences 246, and
Friday, February 11, from
8 p.m. to 11 p.m. in Diefendorf 105.

By MARK K. ROBISON
For the first time at this University, the Film Committee has
arranged a first run presentation
tor Buffalo in our own Norton

Conference Theatre.

The film which was written,
produced and directed by Richard
C. Sarafin is entitled 'Andy.' star
ring Norman Alden, the film portrays a forty year old mentally
retarded man who is thrown into
an emotionally down trodden environment.

The film has just completed a
six week engagement in New
York City and was regarded as
being an unusual movie displaying areas never before attempted.
The photography is rather unique
for it is continuously either displaying sequences of fast motions
or double exposures. This tends
to add to the emotional eruptions
that take place in a more than
real life episode of the life in a
and

degenerate
society.

unsympathetic

BUFFALO FIRST RUN
T hursday—Sunday

Ann Wedgeworth and Norman Aldan in a acana from "Andy'

All French Program Played Jan. 20
By Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra
JOHN L. ROBISON

The Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra. under the direction of
Maestro Lukas Foss, presented an
all French program on Sunday,
January 30 at Kleinhans Music
Hall. The concert consisted of
Iberia by Claude Debussy, Concerto tor Organ and Orchestra in
G Minor by Francis Poulence and
Harald in Italy by Hector Berlioz.
The first piece that was performed was Iberia by Debussy
which included all three movements: “On the Streets and ByWays," "Fragrance of the Night"
and "Morning of the Festival.”

Hans Viegland, organ soloist,
was the guest performer who brilliantly played the Concerto for
Organ and Orchestra in G Minor

with the Philharmonic. The Concerto opened with a tempo introduction, heavy crashes of organ

chords and runs. The composer,
Poulenc, wrote the piece mixing

Baroque with early modern, jazz,
and with a touch of Romantic.
Poulenc is considered one who
does not agree with the modern
avant-gardism or the brisk, heavy
Romanticism. He draws his compositions from all eras of music
and mixes them without concen-

trating on any one.
Harald in Italy by Berlioz was
the last composition performed,
which encompassed all movements: "Harald in the Mountain,”
“Procession of the Pilgrims Singing,” and "The Evening Hymn."

The solo violist parts were performed by Jesse Levine, first violist of the Buffalo Philharmonic.
Following the concert there
was a “kick'off” reception in Livingston Hall for the Buffalo Philharmonic Maintenance Fund
Drive. The goal is $291,000.

“A picture of considerable quality. Uncommonly good
performances from top to bottom. The sense of reality
is maintained to an extent not often found in movies
of this kind or any other. Sarafian has worked extremely well
the mark of a rare ability. This tour.

.

.

de-torce overwhelms the spectator."

—Archer Winsten, Post
"A forthright demonstration of the pathos and irony
of a subnormal human condition
. directed by Richard
C. Sarafian in an interesting style. He has a talent and
a feeling for humanity. Sensitive and well done."
—Bosley Crowther, N. Y. Times
..

Party time is
any time there’s
an Epic album
around!

‘ANDY’ attempts to explore a relatively neglected
the attempt is noble
Mr. Sarafian is
subject
interested in the emotional and humanistic values of
his story."
—Judith Crist, Herald Tribune
“

.

.

.

.

.

.

‘ANDY’ rates a great commendation for exploring
an untrodden movie territory. Norman Alden stirs up
a remarkable storm and creates a poetic area of insight into 'ANDY'."
“

—Alton Cook, World-Telegram-Sun

f
*~7t

BN

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PILLOWS
CARtUSS

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THE GREAT GOSPEL VOICE OF

MARION WILLIAMS
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RICHARD C.

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�INTBAMURALS
STEVE FARBMAN

By

is con-

Intramural basketball

tinuing at an exciting pace. In
the 8:30 fraternity group, AEPi
won it sfourth straight without
a defeat, while Beta Sigma Rho,
which drew a bye last week, is
in second place with a 30 record, In the 9:30 league, the two
top teams, Alpha Kappa Psi and
SAM, each won their respective
games and are scheduled to face
each other in a big game this
week. Of the Monday Indcpen-

Light Along The Way'
To Be Shown Feb. 8
-

A special film, “Light Along
the Way," describing the activities of the World University Service. will be shpwn at the Feb

ruary 8 Senate meeting in the
Millard Fillmore Room. The film

is open to all and free of charge.
Martin, Senator
Mr. Robert
Senator from the Council of Re-

ligious Organizations, is seeking
students to work on a commit
tee for World University Service
in February. The committee will
be concerned with making up
packets on the WUS campaign
to be distributed to various or
ganizations.

dents, the second floor remains
the only undefeated team in the
8:30 league, while in the 9:30
teague, the Avengers and Blueballers are still tied with 40

The Wednesday Independents did not play last week.

records.

The handball tournament has
moved into the finals. At the
time of this writing, Wasson and
Stein, both of AEPi, are scheduled to play each other for the
championship. In the doubles,
Bracket No. 1, Wasson and Stein
will face Southall and Brassington of Sigma Phi Epsilon. In
Bracket No. 2, Walsh and Salmonson of AEPi will meet the
winner of the Nathanson-Whitcomb vs Klipstein-Kriegel match,
which was postponed from last
week. In Bracket No. 3, the finals
will pit the Sig Ep team of El
dredge-Teller against the team
of Ooldberg Marrus of AEPi.

should leave

this committee
his name, address, and phone
number with Robert Martin, TF
64386: Robert Potter, 895-2453;
or the Senate Office.

By MICHAEL CASTRO

American sports mirror Ameri-

can life. In athletics can be seen
the struggle, triumphs and frus-

trations of existence. Our athletic tradition as a. nation is so
pronounced that its lore reflects
the mythic constructs of our culture. Myths shape and reflect a
nation’s thinking, temperament
and ambitions. The “Horatio Alger myth” of the poor boy who
by pluck, hard work, and luck
makes it big, is basic to the
American psyche. It has permeated our literature since Ben
Franklin started the whole thing
with
his Autobiography. In
sports, this American success
story is found in the familiar
myths surrounding such figures
as Lou Gehrig, and Joe Louis.
Opposed
to this industrious
The bowling tournament re“good” American idea is the
the
sumed on Wednesday, with
myth of the “slothful American,”
standings at this writing remainthe boy from the other side of
ing as follows
the tracks, rejected by family,
full of the devil, lazy, revelling
36-4 3. AK Psi 27-9
1. AEPi
in being unrespectable, yet whose
26-10 heart is naturally in the right
2. Phi Ep 29 7 4. SAM
place. It is the Huckleberry
Finn, Rip Van Winkle figure and
its best known correlative in
sports is the irresponsible and
loveable Babe Ruth,

CLASSIFIED

WANTED
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sales display work. $57.75. Car
necessary. Call TX 3-4657.
—

DESK for student

WANTED
apartment. Call 833-6115
Female roomate, imWANTED
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GOT ANY OPINIONS?
Newman Clult reipiests articles liy any student or
faculty mernlter on any
subject. Articles may range
lidiii IOO to 1O0 words,
p r e f e r a li I v lypewrilten. and may lie returned
to Newman Hall (Across
Main St. I rom I laves I la 11 I
or at Norton Itox 01. Anon\moils or signed articles
will lie | hi 1 1 1 islied monthly
in a lice, campus w ide
journal called DISCUS-

SION.

just opposite UB. Call 831 4610
days, 837-6320 evenings.
FOR SALE

1959 FURY
Hardtop, V-8,
torqueflitc, radio, heater, snow
tires, mechanically excellent.
$175. TF 2-7006 after' 6.
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—must sell. 365 hp. 2-tops, AM-

FM, many options Call Paul 6942727 or Roy 837-5243.

1966

Now Printed by

Partners* Press, Inc.
&amp;

SMITH PRINTING

1381 KENMORE AVENUE

KENMORE, NEW YORK

“Symphonic" all

FOR SALE
transistor portable stereo phono:
flip down changer. Garrard turntable, detachable speakers, diamond stylus, 2 mos. old. $90.
Call 8820728.
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whitewall tires, radio, heater, plus
new scat cover. Call 834-3278
after 6, all day weekends.

THE SPECTRUM

ABGOTT

The Jackie Jackson Myth;
Super-Hero of Basketball

WANTED

Anyone interested in working

on

14217

Attention SENIOR &amp;
GRADUATE MEN
Students—U.S. Citizens
Needing nominal FINANCIAL
HELP to complete their edu-

cation this academic year
and then commence work
cosigners required. Send transcript and full details of your
plans and requirements to
Stevens Bros. Foundation, Inc.
610-612 Endicott Bldg.
St. Paul 1, Minn.
A Non-profit Corp.
—

—

Do
You
Want
To
Write
For
a

College
Newspaper
?

SPECTRUM
Third Floor

Friday, February 4, 1M4

SPECTRUM

PAGE TEN

Norton Union

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Currently, the super hero myth
is sweeping the nation. Post-war
America, plagued by complex

seemingly incomprehensible
problems, compounded by the

ever-present threat of nuclear
oblivion, has long been in need
of a super-man to believe in, in
order to make these anxieties
bearable.
The late President
Kennedy filled the bill for many,
but his assassination destroyed
the possibility, at least for the
present, of a superhero within
the realm of reality, and gave
impetus to the escapist superman construct evidenced in the

James Bond mania and the Bat-

man
and Superman revivals.
Sports mythology has kept pace

with

its counterparts in other

areas of American culture. The

escapist super-hero myth has
been growing in basketball for
the past six or seven years at
least. Out of the schoolyards
and community centers of Harlem. where the need for escapist
heroes has long existed, comes
the myth of Jackie Jackson.
Jackie Jackson (his name is never
separated and is pronounced as
though it were one word) is six

feet four and the greatest leaper coach, Freddie Schaus. Schaus,
that ever lived. In Harlem’s sumastounded at Barnett’s reports,
mer schoolyard games where the and particularly intrigued by
greatest professional, collegiate, Jackie
Jackson’s phenomenal
and neighborhood stars compete leaping ability, demanded to
it is reputed that Jackie Jackson know why he hadn’t been told of
has outrebounded Chamberlain, this fantastic prospect before.
blocked twice as many shots as
“Well, Coach,” Barnett replied
Russell and stuffed Robertson in a moment of reflective canand Bradley on consecutive plays. dor, “the rest of his game is
He has taken half dollars off the weak.”
top of the backboard placed -there
Barnett’s evaluation, bringing
by the seven foot tall Chamberthe myth down to cold reality,
lain. There is of course a real had little affect on the legend.
Jackie Jackson around who reIt takes the professional, in movolves the myth. I have talked ments of stark objectivity, to see
to people who have played against “just-a-man” where the legend
him and they all speak with says superman.
Significantly,
awe. One player, an all-city cenBarnett had to struggle with himter several years back of fanself before deflating the myth.
tastic ability, describes in mystic People normally prefer to believe
tones how Jackie Jackson huin the myth. Only when Barnett’s
miliated him 20-0 on twenty professional competence as an
straight dunk shots, in a one-onobserver was challenged could he
one confrontation, while blocking think objectively.
every shot he attempted. The
The San Francsico Warriors,
player swears Jackie Jackson two years ago actually drafted
was “high” at the time.
Jackie Jackson on the sixth
round, indicating the legend’s deThe myth and reality are imgree of growth. (It is not absopossible to separate. Little is lutely certain that it was the
known of Jackie Jackson’s backsame Jackie Jackson for an obgrounds. It is assumed he has scure southern school was listed
no education, has never been a as his college, but the physical
high school or college star, has a description matched perfectly).
normal nine to five job when he
True to the myth, the player
can get work. The young men never Showed up for training
of the community find him easy camp. Jackie Jackson, it says,
to identify with. According to preferred to remain in Harlem,
the myth, Jackie Jackson reflects thumbing his nose at the NBA
professional basketball, embodyand crass success. The myth it
ing all the bitterness and deseems always laughs last.
fiance often felt but rarely expressed by the community to
other “establishments” in a white
man’s culture. He shows up occasionally in a community cenPublished by A
ter league or in a schoolyard but
rarely plays for the same team
for any length of time. His difre is,
ficulty to pin down aids the
spread of his legend.
&amp;

The SPECTRUM
’

jp

Jlnc.

itL Printing

Until recently Jackie Jackson
was purely a local myth, unknown outside the borough of
Manhattan. His fame is spreading. Three years ago, on a Los
Aingeles interview show, Dick
Barnett, then starring for the
Lakers, was recountnig Jackie
Jackson’s legendary feats to his

1381 KENMORE AVENUE
(at Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

�Friday, February 4,

1944

PAGI KLIVIN

SPECTRUM

Toronto Tankmen Dunk UB

Frey, Paul, Mondello
Lead Fencing Team

By SCOTT FORMAN

The

Last Friday and Saturday, the the R.I.T. freshmen for its secUB fencing team went on the ond win of the season by a 9-7
road to challenge Hobart, Paterscore. Steve Morris was the outstanding freshman with a 3-1
son State, and R.I.T.
at
at
Friday
8 p.m.
the Bristol record.
Geneva,
Gym in
the Bulls downed
a good Hobart team, 17-10. Our
varsity took the foil event, 6-3;
epee, 5-4; and saber. 6-3. Outstanding for Buffalo were Jim
Mondello and Joe Paul .both 3-0
in foil; Carl Engel, 3-0 in epee:
and Bob Frey and Richard FitchBy BOB FREY
ette, both 2-0 in saber.
The UB wrestling team boostThe frosh team posted its first
win, after three defeats with a ed its record to 2-1-1 by strug16-9 victory over the Hobart gling to a 16-16 deadlock with
Brockport State at Clark Gym
freshmen.
On Saturday, January 29, the last Wednesday and then posting
a 19-16 triumph over Plattsburgh
varsity participated in a triangular meet with R.I.T. and Paterson States at the same site on Friday.
Outstanding for UB in the two
State. After a 5-4 defeat in epee
and a 7-2 score in saber, the victories were lightweight Gary
only hope for a Buffalo victory Fowler, who upped his mark to
over Paterson would have been
4-0 with a pair of victories, and
167-pounder Norm Keller, who
a 9-0 sweep in foil. Under this
condition, the foil team set forth recorded a pin and a decision in
and was 6-0 before finally losing regaining his outstanding form of
a bout; the final score was 7-2 last season.
in foil. The whole foil team was
130-lb. sophomore John Cunoutstanding with Mondello, 2-1; ningham kept his slate clean with
Frey, 2-0; and Joe Paul, 2-1 (his a decision against Brockport, while
second bout loss of the whole
152-lb. Dick Cushing, another
season.) R.I.T. proved almost as
soph, moved his record to 3-1
formidable as Paterson, but the with a first-period pin against
Bulls defeated them, 15-12. The Plattsburgh.
varsity record is now 7-2.
Ron La Rocque’s forces have
The freshman team defeated been weakened by the indefinite

UB

swimmers were desively set back by the University
of Toronto Saturday by a score
of 77-22 at Toronto. The UB
freshmen were also defeated, the
final tally being 59-26.
The mermen, swimming under

decided disadvantage, performed remarkably well. It seems
that Canadian schools individually maintain their own eligibility rules regarding just who
is to be allowed to swim and
who isn’t. In the case of Toronto,
which does not abide by NCAA
a

MATMEN EDGE BY PLATTSBURGH;
NOW FACE DIFFICULT WEEKEND

THE BULL PEN
(Cont’d from Pg. 12)

loss of veteran Ed Miner due to
injury, but the return to action
of 145-pounder George Ehresman has compensated for the loss.
The Bulls will face their sternest tests of the season when they
travel to Hamilton to face Colgate and then journey north to
face Jim Howard's Oswego State

powerhouse Saturday.

The results:
UB 16, BROCKPORT 16
123‘—Fowler ■ (UB) d. Monroe;
130
Cunningham (UB)
d.
French; 137—Henry Guillia (UB)
Gelman;
d.
145
Kaczmarski
IBS) d. Ehresman; 152
Wait—

—

—

word (BS) d. Cushing; 160—Null
(BS) d. Bob Heidt; 1667—Keller
(UB) p. Consul; 177—Alessi (BS)
p. Avery Stiglitz; Hwt,—Tom Pet-

tit

(UB)

drew with Bolish.

UB 19, PLATTSBURGH 16
123—Fowler (UB) won by defaulted over Buhl; 130—Plattswon by forfeit; 137—Gomez (PS)
p. Gullia; 145—Ehresman (UB)
d. Rudas; 152—Cushing (UB) p.
Barnet: 160—Heidt (UB) d. Murphy: 167—Keller (UB) d. Fradinburg; 177—Nathan (PS) d. Dan
Burr; Hwt.—Jacques (PS)
d.
Pettit.

UB Fortifies Grid Schedule;
Plans Ten Games in 1966
The 1966 UB football schedule
was swelled to 10 games with the
announcement that Youngstown
University would meet the Bulls
at Rotary Field on Nov. 19. UB
Athletic Director Jim Peelle, in
releasing the 1966 schedule, also
stated that the Cornell game on
Sept. 24 might be moved from
Rotary Field to War Memorial
Stadium and be played at night

Thomas’ deadpan expression belies his colorful,
heads-up play the same way his diminutive stature belies his ability to dunk the ball. The reuniting of Thomas
with Artie Walker, the taller of last year’s Mutt and
Jeff 9ombo for the frosh, could provide the drawingcard appeal missing from the team.
Mann, a sturdy 6-3 springboard from Maryvale,
made more progress during the course of last season
The complete 1966 schedule
than any other member of the frosh. Possessing a relists Kent State, Cornell, Villamarkable likeness to former UB great Gary Hanley in nova, Boston University, Dayton.
features, stature, shooting style and jumping ability,
Mann adds some much-needed board depth to the squad.
In fact if Mann had been given a little more time
to display the talents he showed in the final 80 seconds
against Northern Illinois (two for two from the field and
domination- of the backboards), the final outcome might
The Fourth Annual Association
of College Unions Regional Tourhave been greatly altered.

Boston College, Holy Cross. Delaware, Tampa and Youngstown as

opponents for UB.
In the 1967 and 1968 seasons,
the Bulls will continue their pol
icy of improved caliber of competition when they collide with
the likes of North Carolina State,
Virginia and Iowa State for tihe
first time.

rules as UB does and must, our
swimmers found themselves up
against graduate students with a
decisive experience advantage.
Keeping this inequity in mind,
Coach Sanford stated, "All our
kids swam well. I have no
gripes at all.

There were bright points, nonetheless. Our fancy divers, Rebo
and Mitzell, scored heavily, and
in fact, they dove uncontested.
UB placed second in both the
200-yard backstroke and 200-yard
breastroke, behind Grashaw and
Braun, respectively. The freshmen, despite the final tally,
“swam well” as Coach Sanford
remarked. Such fine prospects
as Bennett (fancy dive), Gauthier
(100-yard freestyle and 50-yard
freestyle), Phillips (100-yard butterfly, 100-yard breaststroke), and
Clancy (200-yard freestyle, 400yard freestyle) scored substantially.

Coach Sanford and the swimby
the Toronto outcome, and both
look forward to splashing against
(V) I gate here tomorrow.
mers were not disheartened

"And from there on," Sanford
commented," we should do very
well. We have the best team
we’ve ever had and will come out
heavy on the win side." It might
be added that UB probably has a
tougher schedule than any of
the other state schools, but note,
SONY, we would not want it any
other way.

BASKETBALL on WBFO
88.71m 780am in dorms
-

Norton Union To Host ACU Tourney

Things Are Looking Up!

Now Earn

EXTRA CASH

nament in bowling, billiards,
chess, bridge, and table tennis,
will be held February 18 and 19
in Norton Union. Fourteen other
regions across the United States
will be holding familiar tourna-

Don't Underline!

ACCENT
with

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Read-Through

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by Calling
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RAY VOLPE

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Accent,
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colors command attention
to important passages in
books, reports, classroom
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Since Norton Union has all the
necessary facilities, all previous
tournaments have been held at
UB. Twenty-five schools in Region 2, (Ontario, and New York
State except New York City), have
expressed a desire to enter.
All bridge players may participate in the bridge tournament in
the Card Room, Februray 10. The
top regional bridge team will
compete further at Bradley University, Peoria, Illinois, May 6, 7,
and 8.

Mr. Joe Paffie, Region 2 Recreational Advisor, said, "In past

notes.
Read

leges.

The winner of Men’s bowling
competition will attend a tournament in Rochester, April 23-25,
while the Women's competition
winner will go to New Orleans,
Louisianna, April 16-18. Four regional winners in billiards from
a field of fiteen regions will be
selected to compete in a face to
face tournament in Miami, Fla.,
April 28-30.

Major

Earn $20-$60 Weekly
No Experience Necessary

ments open to all accredited colleges, universities, and junior col-

49&lt;

Get Major Accent at:

years Buffalo fared fairly well.
We've always had a male and female bowler who went on to further tournaments."
The winners of the ACU tournaments and their schools will
be honored at an Awards Banquet, Saturday. February 19, 4
pm. in the Millard Fillmore
Room, Norton.

Parlntri

JL.

Jiifil SmilL P'imtlmf
&amp;

�Friday, February 4, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

-

=-t=/

:

--

f

=fi

By STEVE SCHUELEIN
According to Director of Athletics James E. Peelle,
the recent state of confusion with SUNY concerning the
status of the UB athletic program was nothing more than
a passing cloud of “mutual misunderstanding.”
In a recent conversation with the former Purdue
football great, Peelle said, “SUNY has done nothing to
change UK’s policies, and I don’t believe such was ever
their intent. Their recent survey only intended to formulate certain policies and there were no changes made in
UB athletics.
We were head-and-shoulders above the other state
units before, and it seems foolish to think that SUNY ever
intended to lower us. Each state school has its own level
of athletic competition and this should be retained.
“In the SUNY system, no rules could apply to everything. What took years and years to build could be destroyed in hours, something which I’m sure Albany doesn’t
want.

“As far
football goes, only Cortland and Brockport have varsity teams in the other 58 state units. No
as

interstate program could work with only three teams, so
I’m sure SUNY doesn’t want to change things.”
Peelle then cited how this program of individual
and unequal units has functioned smoothly in California
and Indiana under the state university system.
The Director of Athletics continued, “Samuel Gould
has told us to go ahead and find a new coach. 1 think
this shows how SUNY feels. I don’t think they ever
planned to make such changes. The study was never
planned to change this.
“1 think we should face our problems as they arise.
No problem from Albany has arisen. Our immediate
problems are selecting a new football coach, getting, him
the support of the student and continuing to improve
our football team. Right now this should be our concern.
“We’ve been told by Albany that they don’t intend
to interfere with our program, and the progress we make
in the next few years should assure us of keeping the

program.

“We've {rotten the go sign from Albany and all
wheels are moving forward. We’ve been assured of no
change and don’t anticipate any difficulty.”
According to Jim Peelle's testimony, the vicissitudes
of UB football have again shifted in a direction of
optimism.

It can only be

hoped

that the skies above UB remain

s

=^==&amp;=*=

—

THE BULL PEN

—t=

Five Considered For Coaching Job
The committee will
then select one man for recommendation to President Clifford
Furnas.

number of candidates
considered for the post of
head football coach a,t UB has been
sliced to five. This was the decision reached by the Committee
for Screening at the Montefiore
Club, Tuesday, as 49 of the 54 applicants for the vacant post were
eliminated from further consideration.

riecessary.

Although no names could be
released at the time, the five candidates, in order of preference,
are: (1) an assistant coach at a
major Midwest power; (2) the
head coach of another major Midwest school; (3) an assistant
coach at a major Southwest
school; (4) an assistant coach at a
major Southeast school; and (5)
an assistant coach of a professional team.

tiion, be under 45 years of age,
and be adept at public relations

The

being

The names of the five applicants will now be submitted to
the Faculty Committee on Athletics, which will interview as
many of the candidates as it finds

The following criteria, some
concrete and some abstract, were
used by the Committee for
Screening in making its decision:
the candidate should hold a Master’s Degree in physical educa-

and promotion. The applicant
should also possess a good football background, at least as good
as UB’s and preferably better, be
associated with winning football,
and be able to produce an interesting team.

The committee said, “We are in
a competitive position for salaries
regarding leading applicants and
hope a decision can be reached
as quickly as possible.”

Buddy Ryan Quits Post
Assistant football coach James
(Buddy) Ryan followed the scripts
of Dewey Wade and Dick Offenhamer by resigning from the football staff on Monday. Ryan accepted a post on the Vanderbilt
coaching staff for next year.
Ryan’s move may have been
prompted by news that he was not

among those being considered for
the UB head coaching job, a spot
he had allegedly sought,
In his stay at UB, Ryan, a personable figure with a heavy southern drawl, had molded the UB defensive line into the mainstay of
the team and one of the most
feared units in the East.

UB Cagers To Meet Windsor, Wayne
The UB basketball team, after
having its scheduled game with
Cornell last Wednesday postponed until a later date, will resume its hardwood battles tonight at Windsor, Ont.

The Bulls, who last year
drubbed the former Canadian
champs, 115-71 in Clark Gym,
will assume the role of the heavy
favorite as they meet one of the
easier teams on their schedule.
It appears that only if the game
is played on a hockey rink and
James Bond makes an appearance in a mountie uniform will
the Windsorites stand a chance

tars of Wayne State. The Michigan team has a 2-6 record to
date, and the UB encounter will
be its first game in two weeks.
The Tartars, three of whose
losses have come at the hands
of Kent State, E. Michigan and
W. Michigan, are led by four
individuals who are averaging in
double figures. Marty Letzmann

is the team’s leading scorer with
a 19.1 average, with Paul Widdoes close behind with an 18.5
average. Tom Carlson and Dan
Gardziola are averaging 16 and
13, respectively.
UB won last year’s meeting
between the two clubs, 106-71,
and holds an overall 5-4 lead in
the series.

against the Bulls.

Saturday the Bulls journey to
Wayne. Mich , to oppose the Tar-

Pee lie, who had just returned from a meeting that
had reduced the number of candidates for the football
coaching Job to five, also mentioned that “we hope to
announce the new football coach by next Friday at the
latest if everything runs smoothly.
’’

The t l» basketball team s 1HI-77 loss to Northern
Illinois Saturday night was much costlier than a casual
first glance might indicate.
I he setback was lilt's tirst to a College Division
team (Syracuse. Penn State and Colgate are all University Division clubs) and this fact will carry with it a great
deal of weight when and if the Bulls are considered for
a post-season NCAA College Division tourney
bid. The
loss has put the pressure on the Bulls; one bad showing
can be overlooked, but a repeat performance against another College Division team would probably spell the
end of the tourney trail for the Bulls.
UB’s cagers must perform almost flawlessly in February to compensate for the Huskie setback if the Bulls
can seriously hope for a return ticket to Akron for the
N( AA Regional.* in March.
It&gt;s amazi, |K how different individuals will react
aillerently to similar situations and circumstances For
example, mention the words “Thomas
Mann" to an Enghsh class and you will probably
discover vourself enKUlfed in a conversation about The Magic Mountain or
U
these same two words to one
r rfo-"
1 , ,! mention
B S basketball
fans and watch his eyes brighten as
the talk shifts to (Bobby) Thomas and (Rick)
Mann. The
vatl on of ,he se ,wo Payers,
who sat out the first
t
bec U8e of at-ademic deficiencies, should bolster
ih
irn squadJ*considerably.
the Ub
5
tiRer *’rom Erie ’ Pa "as the spark
nf
f
f last year s freshman
team with his lightning-quick reJ um l&gt; shots and eye-opening passes. He
£ l6X 8
has kept UB fans spellbound by demonstrating
this same
forte for exciting basketball in limited appearances
the
last few’ weeks.
......

'

V

-

™“

.

.

„

'

,

.

.

u*

-

t

-

’

&gt;

(Cont'd on Pg n)

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�</text>
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                    <text>STATE UNIVERSITY

NEW

ATM3UFFALO

FREE

I

(Sec Page

VOLUME 16

(See Page 7)

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1966

Football Coach Assignment
Postponed; Uniform Policy
From Pres. Gould. Awaited
University Chancellor Clifford
C. Furnas announced that he is
not in a position to hire a football coach for the next academic
year until uniform policy on intercollegiate athletics throughout
the State University of New York
has been established.

Dr. Furnas emphasized that
“the most critical point of such
a policy, particularly as far as
football is concerned, will be the
allowability of grants-in-aid for
potential scholar athletes.” He
agreed that a full student and
faculty intramural program
should be provided as well as an
appropriate program of intercol-

cannot be expected for
several months.” He said that until the policy is formulated, the
universities will continue with
present commitments to athletics.
Dr. Gould assured the student
body that there will be ample
time to adjust to any change in
the policy. He .added that Intercollegiate athletics are not in a
state of crisis and that he is perplexed by the current distress
over the matter.
cision

-

Panhellenic Rush
Today Tomorrow
,

Panhellenic rushing for spring
1966, will open with
Convocations on Thursday, Feb-

semester,

ruary 3.

Activities

scheduled

for

the

sorority rush period include a
game night in Norton Union for
all rushees and sorority women,
parties and coffee hours. The an-

nual Panhellenic Fashion Show,
“In Style With Sorority,” highlighted the pre-rush period.

NO.

Dr. Teller to Speak Today

Visiting Professor in Nuclear
Science Edward Teller will deliver a lecture entitled “The Small
World of Niels Bohr” at 11 a.m.
this morning in the Norton Conference Theater.
Niels Bohr was a Danish Physicist who constructed the atomic
model of a nucleus surrounded
by orbital electrons for which he
received a Nobel prize.
The lecture will be sponsored
by Bisonhead, the senior men’s
honorary society. It will be aimed
at a lay audience and will be
open to the public.
Dr. Teller will discuss applied
research for Sigma Chi at 8:30
p.m, Wednesday in Room
147
Diefendorf. “Quasars and Origin
of Universe" will be the topic
for a physics colloquium at 4:00
p.m. in Room 114 Hochstetter on
Thursday, Refreshments will precede in Room 103 Hochstetter at

3:30 pjm.
In a press conference on his
arrival last Tuesday Dr. Teller
expressed the hope that many
members of the University community would attend his lectures,
especially those of a less technical
nature. He said if a man does
not know anything of the writings of William Shakespeare, he
is not considered to be a cultured
man. Yet a person can consider

Dr. Edward Tallar,
himself cultured and know nothing about quantum theory or the
concepts of relativity. This is an
unfortunate and outdated idea.
When questioned further about
the role of the electorate in making decisions of the technical nature required by modern society,
Dr. Teller commented, “These decisions cannot be made by experts
if we are to preserve a demo-

Freedom Fast Funds Withheld

C. C. FURNAS, President
legiate athletics. He suggested a
policy assuring that the level of
competition would compare favorably with other state universities having similar policies.

Public Relations Officer, Mr.
Hugh J. TouheyJr., emphasized
that the review which will establish uniform policies throughout the State University system
will be concerned with both athletics and academic departments.
On January 25, 1966 State University President Samuel Gould
disclosed that “the State has not
yet begun to think of a uniform
athletic policy,” and that “a de-

A decision determining the legality of disbursement of FSA
funds for the National Student
Association’s annual Thanksgiving
Freedom Fast is expected today
from the office of Dr. Claude E.
Puffer, vice-president for Business
Affairs.

In a recent meeting between
Mr. Paul Bacon, assistant vicepresident for Business Affairs,
and Evelyn Damashek and Jeffrey

Lynford, co-chairmen of the NSA
Fast, Bacon stated, “I feel that I
do not have the authority, deleeated or implied, to request that
a check be forwarded to Freedom
Fast.” The funds, earmarked for
distribution in poverty stricken
southern areas, have been withheld for the last two consecutive
Thanksgiving Day appeals.

The conflict arose when it was
discovered that no records are
available to verify the NSA tallies
for the 1964 fast. Mr. Bacon
pointed out that the Freedom Fast
Committee lacked the necessary
authorization to conduct its drive.
While the fast was permitted by
lesser Food Service officials,
Bacon claims that the only proper
source for such authorization is
the FSA Board of Directors.

In the 1965 Thanksgiving Day
Fast, 1,187 students voluntary abstained from their evening meal.
At the rate of 68c per person, the
current offer approximated by
Food Service Director David Rodler, the total for this year’s drive
is $807.16.
Mr. Lynford, dissatisfied with

WUS to Receive Funds
The Student Senate has designated the month of February for
the collection of funds for the
World University Service’s Asia
Program Receipts from the Campus Barrel Drive, which formerly
went to the United Fund will
now go to WUS.
Heading this years campaign
are Robert Potter (U.C. Senator)
and Robert Martin (former CRO
Senator). Publicity will be handled by Jocelyn Linquist, Union
Board Community Affairs, and
Mark Tracten, Chairman of the
Union Board Publications Committee. Rosemary Brown, who recently left SUNYAB to join the
Peace Corps, played a major role
in planning this year's campaign.
IRC. President Gary Roberts
has announced that a .dance will
be held Sunday, February 6. as
part of the fund-raising campaign.
Other fund-raising events are in
the planning stages.
The World University Service
originated in 1920, when students
in the United States and elsewhere launched a drive for the

relief of refugees in Vienna. Today some fifty countries are sup-

porting over one-hundred projects
in twenty-three nations. WUS
Funds are collected from students
and go solely to projects initiated

and largely sustained by students.
Projects include construction of

dormitories, libraries, and health
facilities, scholarships, lab equip
ment, books, typewriters, medical

(Cont’d on Pg. 7)

both the suggested price per meal
meal and the manner in which
campus officials have administered their part of the annual
operation, staled: "The entire
situation has been delayed far
too long. Officials of the food
service stalled originally in quoting a price per individual meal.
We expected at least $1.25, a figure in line with the 1964 Freedom Fast, and were shocked at
the paltry 68c price offered."

-

-1—t-t-»

piifMClMf

»-

IW

of

system

cratic

i^Ha

government.

Rather, the people should inform
themselves so that they will be

able to intelligently make the decisions required."
In his book, The Reluctant Revolutionary, Dr. Teller stated, "Is
there indeed any sense in the argument that the scientist should
make the decisions? Is it true
that because a scientist has conceived the atom and has put it
to use he should now say what to
do with it? Do we insist that the
men who make the laws, the legislators, should apply these laws?
Or do we rather separate the
powers of the congress from that
of the judges? Do we insist that
our generals

who

know

most

about was should make the decisions between peace and war?
Rightly or wrongly, in a democracy we say that powers should
be divided, and the ultimate pow-

er must belong to the people."
Dr. Teller concluded, however,
that perhaps the reason people
should most want to know about
modern physics is because it is
interesting.

Supporters of US Policy United In
’Committee For Victory In Vietnam'
A

new

campus

organization

whose aim is to unite all those
forces supporting U.S. policy in
Vietnam announced its formation
on January 25, 1966 The name
of this group is the Committee
For Victory in Vietnam.

The committee’s two co-chairmen, Frank Klinger and Steve

Sickler, in issuing a joint state
menl summarized the purposes
and principles of the group as
follows: "The purpose of our or
ganization is to join together in
a coalition all those liberals, con
servatives, Republicans and Dem
ocrats, who support the goal of
freedom for all mankind, and
who in pursuance of that goal,
favor an American victory in
Vietnam. We want to gain a

broad' campus and public 'following for our position, and to
crystalizo that support toward
the objective of an American
victory in Vietnam. Toward this
end membership is open to any
student or professor who is in
general agreement with our statement or principles
In conclu
sion they stated, “We support the
present U.S. objective in Vietnam
which is to defeat the Communist
threat to South Vietnam and to
guarantee independence and freedom to its people This is our
conception of victory We eagerly
urge all those who believe as we
do to join the Committee For
Victory in Vietnam,"
”

Indian Health Clinic Oparafad by WUS.

I-R-

IVWQ

Other officers of the CW in-

clude:

vice-chairman. David Mu-

rawsky; treasurer, Alan Herman;
publicity director, Don Rich; corresponding secretary,
Norman
Frankel;

Woody

chairman.

committee coordinator,

Langton;
Ross

convocations
Pudaloff; and

membership chairman. John Kohl.
Of the officers, five of them
(Frank Klinger, Dave Murawsky,
Woody Dangdon, Ross Pudaloff
and John Kohl) are members of
the canrpus organization, The Students For the U.S. in Vietnam.
Three of the officers (Steve Sickler, Don Rich and Norman Frankel I are members of the campus
organization. Young Americans
For Freedom. One officer. Alan
Herman, is an independent.
Head advisor for the CVV will
be Captain Henry Kast Other
professors will also assist the

group.

The committee intends to spon
sor lectures by well known authorities, hold mass rallies in
support of our soldiers, and take
whatever additional steps within
the law that may be deemed necessary to promote freedom.

The committee's first meeting
will be held on February 4 in
Norton Membership is open to
any student regardless of whatever other campus organization
he may belong to.

�Tuesday, February 1, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACE TWO

University Calendar Committee Makes Revisions

10% STUDENT
DISCOUNTS
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Very Big
On Campus!

The University Calendar Committee, a standing committee of
the Dean's Council, has established the university calendar
for the next three years. All revisions incorporated in tlje calendar were submitted to the Dean’s
Council by the Student Welfare
Committee of the Student Senate
and later approved.
A calendar revision effective
spring semester, 1966, provides
for a two day break between the
end of classes and the beginning
of the finals. Classes will end on
Monday, May 9 with final examinations beginning Thursday, May
12.

According to both the 1966-67
and the 1967-68 calendars, classes
will begin second semester on
Monday rather than the previous
Thursday.

The 1967-68 calendar provides
one additional day for the
Thanksgiving Recess. Classes will
end on Tuesday instead of Wed-

nesday. The Spring Recess extending from March 30 to April
8, will begin one week later than
in the previous two years. The
Student Welfare Committee had
suggested this revision to enable
UB’s Spring Recess to coincide
with those of other schools.

Chairman of the Student Wel-

fare Committee, J. Z. Friedman
and Vice-Chairman Sheldon Cohen
served as the first student representatives on the Dean’s Council
Calendar Committee. Mr. Friedman commented, “These calendar changes .
will no jjioubt be
favorable to faculty, students and
administration alike, because they

provide a better schedule for vacation periods.
“The calendar changes also
serve to give the student needed
time for relaxation at intergession, as well as time for study

purposes before the final examination period commences in
May.”

Marcus Klein Begins Literature Series
Tomorrow, Sponsored by Union Board
A Spring Literature Series,
dealing with the works of con-

temporary writers, will be presented by the Literature and
Drama committee of Union Board
starting February 2.

The Series will begin tomorrow at 4 p.m. in 233 Norton with
a talk by Dr. Marcus Klein on
“The Love Theme in J. D. Salinger's Catcher in the Rye, and Saul
Bellow’s The Adventures of Augie
March."

The three remaining lectures
will take place at 4 p.m. in the

Norton Conference Theater. “Bob
Dylan’s Poetry’ will be the topic
of Thomas Hanna’s talk on February 28 Dr. Leslie Fiedler will
discuss Norman Mailer’s An
American Dream and Saul Bellow’s Herzog" March 9; and on
March 14, Dr. Herbert Schneidau
will speak on “Robert Frost’s
Poetry.” If possible, the Literature committee will highlight the
Series by inviting a contemporary writer to lecture.
Paul Blatt, chairman, has described the purpose of the Series
as “an attempt to stimulate dis-

cussion, thought, and eventual
understanding of the ideas presented by five major contemporary writers, in order that we
better understand reality,”
The Literature and Drama committee will also sponsor a professional performance by Dylan
Thomas “Under Milkwood” on
February 18. Those students interested in helping with publicity,
production, or ushering should
contact Miss Hicks at 2511.

I

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Course is designed to prepare
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marketing, selling and research in pharmaceutical, cos-

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in the wholesaling and retailing of the drug trade; in
preparation for teaching of
pharmacy administration; and
in the administration of the
hospital pharmacy.
Admission

for matriculated

graduate students is limited
to those who possess B.S.
in Pharmacy degrees.

Arm yourself with facts about DuPont
These booklets helped influence some 863 new technical graduates of alldegree levels to join us in 1964.
For example, if you want to start your career in a certain
section of the country, you’ll find that Du Pont—with facilities
in 28 states-will try to accommodate you.
If you're interested in growth for what it can mean to you
personally, you'll be interested to know that our sales have
increased more than 750% since 1937. You've probably heard
that R&amp;D expenditures are a good indicator of a company'sl
future success. We spend $90 million a year on it, $60 million
of which goes straight into “pioneering research”—the discovery
of new scientific truths and new materials.
Our booklets will answer most of your preliminary questions.
Later-or even now if you wish-we can talk specifics by letter,
or face to face. Why not write us or send our coupon? We'd
like to know about you.

mm
BETTER THINGS FOR BETTER LIVING
. . . THROUGH CHEMISTRY
An equal opportunity employer

Technical men we'll especially need from the Class of '66
Chemists
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2S31 Nemours Building

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Wilmington, Delaware 19898
Please send me the facts about Du Pont,
Name.

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address.
State

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Code.
I

�Tuesday, February 1, 1966

PAGE THREE

SPECTRUM

Director of Asian Professor Project Dr. Clifford Furnas Concludes Service;
Explains Program on 5 Month Tour Various Committees Choose Successor
Dr. Burvil H. Glenn, director
of the Visiting Asian Professors
Project and professor of education, is undertaking a five-month
tour of twelve Asian countries.
Dr. Glenn will travel as a
specialist for the Department of
State and explain the goals and
Asiaj) Professors
operation of
Project' to scholars in Burma,
Ceylon, Indonesia, India, Japan,
Korea, Malaysia, Nepal, Pakistan,
Philippines Singapore and Taiwan.

He will interview Asian
scholars who are potential candidates for the project which “is
designed to increase the exchange
of knowledge and ideas between
American and Asian students.”
As director of the project, Dr.

Glenn works with the coordinators

Do
You
Want
To
Write
For
College
Newspaper

of participating American instituBy B. A. FITZSIMMONS
tions in the selection of the proIn August of this year, Dr. Cliffessors from Asia and the topics
to be included in their lectures. ford C. Furnas will conclude eleven years of service as Chancellor
and President of this university.
Dr. Furnas resignation, submitted to State University President.
Dr. Samuel B. Gould, in April,
1964, was necessitated by State

Freshmen Women
Have Big Sisters
The Sophomore Sponsor
gram is the “big Sister”
gram for freshmen women.
freshman is assigned to a

3rd Floor

(fa

T

Norton Union

pro-

Each

spon-

sor, usually a sophomore. Resident sponsors are assigned to

resident sponsor and commuters
to a commuting sponsor. The
sponsors make contact with their
charges by letter or phone before the opening of classes. One
Of the most popular aspects of
the program are the informal
get-together where sponsors
answer questions of the incoming freshmen. Other activities include greeting the freshmen
upon arrival in the dormitories,
a get -acquainted party, and a
fashion show. In thus personalizing the freshmen’s first anxious
days on campus, the sponsors
attempt to make them feel at
home and to acquaint them with
the wide variety of services and
activities offered by the university.

The selection of Sophomore
Sponsors is made by the Dean
of Women on the basis of scholastic achievement, attendance
at the freshmen forums, and participation in campus activities.
All freshmen women are invited
to apply. Applications are due
at the candy counter by February

SPECTRUM

Pro-

1.

The state of California’s projected

1965-66 Budget

exceeds

the total amount of money spent
by all 48 states in 1938.

Junior Year
in

New York
Three undergraduate colleges offer students
from all parts of the country an opportunity
to broaden their educational experience
by spending their
Junior Year in New York
New York University is an integral pari of
the exciting metropolitan community of
New York City—the business, cultural,
artistic, and financial center of the nation.
The citv's extraordinary resources greatly
enrich both the academic program and the
University
experience of living at New York
body in
student
cosmopolitan
most
with the
the world.
This program is open to students
recommended by the deans of the colleges
to which they will return for their degrees.
Courses may be taken in the
School of Commerce
School of Education
Washington Square College of Arts
and Science
Year
Write for brochure to Director, Junior
New
York
in

NEW YORK UNIVERSITY
New York, N.Y, 10003

-

University policy,which requires

that all administrative and executive personnel retire following
their 65th birthday.
The announcement of his impending termination of office put
into motion the mechanics for
choosing a successor to Dr. Furnas. Selection of a new president
is basically a three-stage process,
involving State University faculty,
an appointed Council Committee,
and Dr. Gould and the State University Board of Trustees.
Faculty participation in the selection is of an advisory nature
only. In May of 1965 a Faculty
Advisory Committee was elected
by the Faculty Senate, with Professor Saul Touster of the Law
School as Chairman, The role of
the Committee, as stated in a
report to the Faculty Senate in
November, 1965, is to "suggest
criteria, nominate candidates, and
appraise candidates under consideration.”

The final authority for recommendation of a candidate to the
State University Board of Trustees lies with a Council Committee named by the UB Council. Its
members are Seymour H. Knox,
Council Chairman; William C.
Baird, Vice-Chairman; and Dr.
Edward F. Mimmaek. The Executive Secretary of the Committee
is Dr. A. Westley Rowland, assistant to the president. This Committee screens and interviews
candidates, in addition to working with the Faculty Committee
in considering it? recommenda-

An important development took
place in November, 1965, with the
announcement of a change in the
State University policy regarding
presidential succession. This policy change made it possible for a
member of the present faculty to
succeed to the presidency. Althopglt it was announced that the
search for a president would be
nationwide, this pplicy change
again widened the field tor in-

The creation of a Free University of Buffalo will be the topic
of discussion at the Students for
a Democratic Society meeting on
Wednesday night.
Barbara Brody, an advocate o(
free universities, stated that "the
very nature of American universities . leads us to state that
we must provide alternatives to
the established decadent places
of learning in America,"
.

Miss Brody quoted the catalogue of the Free University of

New York: “American Universi-

ties have been reduced to institutions of intellectual servitude.
Students have been systematically dehumanized, deemed incompetent to regulate their own lives
sexually, politically, and academically. They are treated like material to be processed for the universities, clients
business, gov—

The Inter-Residence Council issued a fact sheet last week concerning the current difficulties
in the dormitory cafeterias. Background information on the food
service situation and the future
plans of action to be taken by

The final decision on the choice
of a new president lies with the
State University Board of Trustees, in consideration of the
recommendations made by the
Council Committee.

The fact sheet stated that “IRC
has been given the opportunity
to test its own solution to the

ence,

ability to publicly interpret

the university’s role, a concern
for academic freedom, and sensitivity toward faculty responsibility.

Because the confidential nature
a search for a new'president
precludes any disclosure as to in
dividuals under consideration,
there is at this time no available
information as to who might possibly succeed Dr. Furnas,

of

~

ernment, and military beauracra
cies

Miss Brody hopes that the Free
University at Buffalo will be in
operation by this summer. Initially the courses, many in the form
of seminars, will emphasize the
liberal arts. Later other courses,
such as science courses, will be
added to the curriculum.
"The Free University of Buffalo should be , . . ideological,”
according to Miss Brody. She
agrees with the statement made
at the Free University of Florida
that “Birchers and Communists,
evangelists, and atheists, right,
middle, and left are all welcome
as teachers and students.”
Miss Brody invites everyone interested in contributing and work
ing for the free university to at
tend the SDS meeting.

Dorm Cafeterias Troubles Explained

the IRC were discussed.

above mentioned, certain
criteria have been agreed upon
by the Council and Faculty Committees to be applied to potential
candidates. In essence they include scholarly accomplishment,
previous administrative experi-

System.

Free University Discussed By SDS

tions.

As

elude educators more familiar
with the operations and problems
of this largest unit of the Slate

cost problem during the week of
February 7 through February 13,
1966. During this period students
will be given the chance to show
that they can voluntarily curb
waste without having to drastically limit the amount of food
they can receive, IRC's proposal
allows each student to take only
one portion of each item the first
time through the line The student may then return to the line
for such items as butter, salad,
juice, and fruit."

food service In addition the fact
sheet stated that "if waste is not

curbed,

even more stringent measures will have to be taken by
the Food .service to provide efficient service to us. IRC has
made its proposals to the Food
Service on the basis of its faith
in you as a resident student."

Support

Our

Advertisers

The effectiveness of this pro-

posal will be determined by the

DRIVEN
BY A
LONGING
HE

COULDN’T

UNDERSTAND
***

-U&amp;

Dr. Alexander Katz
Or. Lou Krop
OPTOMETRISTS
Contact Lenses

Complete Eye Cere
UNIVERSITY PLAZA
BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226
Phone: 635-3311

�Tuesday, February 1, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOUR

Editorial (Comment

of Gonzago

Murder
.

.

.

To the Austin Souvenir Com-

THE MURDER OF
GONZAGO AWARDS

ESPIONAGE AND ART
There is little doubt that Humphrey Bogart and
Ernie Kovaks have both earned a certain kind of immortality as actors and have each immortalised, in turn,
a particular style and genre. Their contributions to the
world of art are immense, and since they are both dead,
it has even become fashionable for intellectuals to enjoy
the works they left behind.
Although the Spectrum is content to leave trend
setting and intellectual fashions to those other publica-

tions, like the Evergreen Review, and other persons, like
Susan Spntag, more suited to this dubious pastime, new
archipellagos in the vast sea of currently unfashionable
art should not be left uncharted.

A British Actor, named Patrick McGoohan, appears
to be well on the way to assuming some of the mantel
of a genuine artist engaged in popular entertainment.
McGoohan, the star of a show know originally as “Danger
Man” and now know in the U.S. at least, as “Secret
Agent’’ has turned a show, which at first glance would
appear to be only another in the vast array of coat-tail
riders on the unprecidented success of the James Bond
Hoax, into an artistic experience worthy of being mentioned in the same breath with “The Maltese Falcon”
and “Casablanca.” McGoohan, who is also a “serious”
actor of rising stature, has created a character in John
Drake which is eminently more masculine, more intelligent, and more “cool” than James Bond, and has added
to it elements of real drama which make it satisfying
and enjoyable for even the most sophisticated and cultured of viewers.

pany. who is selling rocks and
cattle, droppings wrapped in cel-

The Evangelist Billy Graham
who apparently has a hot line to
God since he assured about 1000
Pentagon employees that God
would not let'the earth be “lost
forever" and told them that “we
must have military power to keep
madmen from taking over the
world” goes this week’s Plowshares Into Swords Award.
To Lewis Chambers, 57, and his

son Dennis, 21, of Savannah, Georgia who face charges stemming
from the December 23, beating
of a Draft Board member who allegedly refused to give the son
a deferment from his 1A classification goes Draft Dodger of

the Week Award.
To Secretary of War Robert
McNamara who said in 1962 that
we were winning the war, who
said in 1963 that we were winning
the war and who said in 1965
that we are not losing the war
(the same war) goes our Edsel
Salesman of the Year Award,

called L.B.J. Land Chips
with the asssurance that the droppings are genuine goes our Good
Taste Award.
lophane

To Arkansas Governor Orval
Faubus, a member of the politicaly powerful Baptist Church who
supports a law prohibiting the
teaching of evolution in public
schools because the law is useful
in keeping the “way out” teachers in line, goes this week’s
Progress Is Our Least Important
Product Award.

.

ski and Daniel in,order to obtain
freedom for writers and a public
trial goes our It Can’t . Happen
Here Award,
To The New York Times which
gave front page coverage December 10 to' 190 professors who support Johnson’s war and put an
item concerning “more than 1000
students and several hundred faculty members at Yale* University
who called for a nationwide reappraisal of U. S. policy in the Far
East on Page 21 of the same, issue goes the All the News That
Fits We Print Award.
To the

To former President Dwight D.
Eisenhower who recently said
“When our country is in a position of crisis there is only one
thing a good American can do,
and that is support the President,” goes our Why Didn’t You
Say That When President Truman Needed You in Korea Award.
To the Soviet students who
demonstrated and passed out leaflets criticizing the government
for the arrest of writers Siniav-

&lt;jCetterA to the

By JOHN MEDWIO

unnamed stockbroker

quoted in the December 18 New
York Times who said, “A genuine
peace offer at this juncture could

knock the market out of bed. Remember, the government has
scheduled $60 billion for defense
a sizexpenditures next year
able chunk of the gross national
product” goes our The Profits of
War Are an Anticipated Portion
of the Harvest of Death Award.
—

Editor

Freshman’s Voting Record Upheld
TO THE EDITOR:

Class, it would be foolhardy for
to belive that it is possible for him to fulfill each and
every desire of his 2440 constituents. This, however, is not to say
that he must not attempt to turn
constructive ideas into realities,
the latter of which I feel he is
anyone

As both an interested and active member of the Student Association of this University, I would
like to express my consternation
and disenchantment with the remarks recorded in last weeks
Spectrum concerning the voting
record of Mr. Charles Zeldner,
representative for the Freshman
Class. The authors of these remarks, Jeffrey Lynford, Sharon
Shulman, Robert Weiner, and
Daniel Rotholz seem perplexed
and dismayed by Mr. Zeldner’s
voting record and are apparently
ignorant of the following:
1) Although Mr. Zeldner is the
representative of the Freshman

successfully accomplishing.

2) Because it is impossible for
Mr. Zeldner to speak with each
of his constituents on an individual basis, I think it would behove
Mr. Lynford, Mr. Rotholz, Mr.

Weiner, and Miss Shulman to

ignorance on the part

of the
above mentioned individuals can
only lead one to conclude of their
apparent non-concern.
3) It appears that, in my estimation, the views of the above
mentioned individuals are confused, bewildered, and dictated
by political aspirations and
“geniuses,” rather than by their
true feelings.
I feel that if one will examine
the voting record and qualifications of Mr. Zeldner, as I have
done t one is sure that he truly
reflects the ideas of those whom
he represents.
Sheldon Cohen

speak with Mr. Zeldner concerning his voting record and why
Like other television experiments, “Secret Agent,”
he has voted either positively or
negatively on certain issues. Such
deals with issues and ideas which have long been considered taboo, but unlike shows such as “The Defenders,”
Reviewer Asked To Revise Methods
it has maintained the interest of large audiences. Much
TO THE EDITOR:
tion, the fact that SR has part of the best film critics in print toof the Credit for this financial success and artistic freeday.
each issue devoted to a certain
dom must go to the writers for the show, and to its proMr. Jeffery Simon should respecific area
one week it will
Another point: the year-end
ducer, Ralph Smart, as well as to McGoohan himself. vise his methods of .reviewing cover Recordings, the next Com- movie issue is one of the most
—

work and editing far exceed mere technical competance

copy

ions.

Patrick McGoohan is a name to watch, and “Secret
Agent” is certainly a show worth seeing.

random sample is not
on which to base opin-

enough

tions are invaluable to those of
us who can’t devote time or

to specialized periodicals
in these areas.
money

Mr. Simon’s first jab (in the
14 Spectrum) was at the

Dec.

respectable

Saturday Review,
which is no longer called the
Saturday Review of Literature,
mainly because it includes a liberal sprinkling of articles and
ideas from other areas of
thought, rather than just book

reviews.

To pull out an example, as Mr,
Simon has done, Kenneth Rexroth's Classics Revisited column
is valuable for the simple reason
that it is clear and concise. Mr.
Rexroth is not trying to be pseudo-intellectual as perhaps Mr. Simon is. Also, Mr. Rexroth is not
attempting anything definitive,

year, by me at least. Here again
we have discussion on an area
that is usually only discussed in
esoteric film magazines (which
I read, incidentally).
I’m anticipating Mr. Simon’s
other articles, but it would be
nice if he would not criticize a
single issue of a magazine. He
should look at a magazine overally, not just at the minor faults
of one issue.
Respectfully yours,
Christopher W. Morrow

I’m sure

THE

One can not always agree with
a columnist’s views. Mr. Simon
should become a regular reader
of SR rather than a random sampler. He could note, and then men-

SPECTRUM

The official student newspaper of the Slate University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo, N.Y. 14214. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and spring vacations.
Editor-in-Chief

Editor

JEREMY TAYLOR
DAVID EDELMAN

Manager

RAYMOND VOLPE

Managing

Business
News

Editor

Asst.
Feature

GREENE
BROMBERG

SUSAN
RONNIE

Editor

JOHN STINY

Photography Editor
Continuity Editor
Advertising Manager

Aaal. Feature Editor

JOANNE LEEGANT

Circulation

Acting Sports Editor

STEVE SCHUELEIN

Faculty

Layout
Copy

Editor
Editor

Manager

Advisor

SHARON HONIG

Financial Adviser

LAUREN

Leprechaun

JACOBS

EDWARD JOSCELYN

ORSZULAK
HOLTZ
DIANE LEWIS
IRENE WILLET
DALLAS GARBER

MARCIA

RONALD

RUSSELL

GOLDBERG

EDITORIAL POLICY IS DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
FIRST

\
PRESS

CLASS HONOR

RATING

Second Clast, Pottage Paid at Buffalo, N.Y.
Subscription S3.00 per year, circulation
15,000.

Represented for national advertising by
National Advertising Service Inc., 420
Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.

Film critic and copy
editor for the Hartwick College weekly
campus newspaper,
Hilltops, Oneonta, N.Y.

Something Mr. Simon overlooked are the outstanding film
reviews by Hollis Alpert and
Richard Knight. They are two of

Liberal” Position Defended

“

TO THE EDITOR
,
In reference to Mr. Richard J.
Evans’ letter of December 17, I
should like to reply in defense
of the “liberal.”

Mr. Evans has termed the situation in this country “unfortunate.” Indeed it is, but not for the
reason that the ‘liberal’ condemns
the TadicaT as he asserts. I am
sure that we all realize that what
is unfortunate is the fact that
Mr. Evans, like the majority of
martyred SDS members, believe
the Liberal condemnation, which
they believe exists, is wrong yet,
do not exercise the small amount
of insight necessary to understand
that their’s must be so also.

More to 'the point, the liberal,
who admittedly is not discussing
the radical policy, is neither discussing their radicalism or subversive tendencies. What is being
discussed, then? The answer is
in itself questioning.
In what way is the radical
policy made more clear or furthered more efficiently by the
wearing of the radical ‘uniform’?
In what way is the country
strengthened by pointless demonstration?
In what way is democracy furthered by men and women who
oppose very well, but support
nil?
In what way will anyone bene-

fit from the radical method of

voicing his ‘personal opinions and
beliefs?’
The liberal no more stands

with the conservative than any-

body else, yet the conservatives
are not sitting about advocating
nothing constructive. The liberal
on campus is standing by his beliefs, is voicing his opinion, but
we are doing it in a civil and
constructive manner. Let us all,

conservatives, radicals, and liberalike, hope that our ultimate
goal will be realized and that
this goal—the strengthening of
America, will be arrived at constructively, conscientiously and
with the ultimatum constantly in
mind.
Liberally yours,
Abe Reis

als

�[

Tuesday, February 1, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACE FIVE

Uzomba, Nigerian Grad Student Discusses
■Problems of Africa' With International Club
Mr. Tony Uzomba, Nigerian
graduate student in Education at
Canisius College, discussed “Prob-

lems that have hit the headlines
wifhin the last fortnight in Africa” in his lecture to the International Club on “The Problem
of Africa,” Thursday, January 27.
He was particularly concerned
with the recent coup in Nigeria.

T. R. McConnell speaks at dinner in Fillmore Room.

Dr. T. R. McConnell From Berkeley
Lectures on Problems of Education

Dr. T. R McConnell, Professor
of Education and Chairman of
the Center for the Study of Higher Education, University of California at Berkeley, delivered a
lecture Friday, January 28, in the
Millard Fillmore Room. The topic
of the lecture was “Problems and
Prospects in Higher Education.”
Professor McConnell used the
problems and difficulties experienced at Berkeley as illustration
in his lecture.
The faculty has organized at
Berkeley an Academic Association which is composed of committees from each campus. Each
of these campus committees has
sub-committees which have various functions. The administration is not eligible for membership in the committees. Consequently it is difficult to maintain
effective iiason between 'faculty
and administration.
Dr. McConnell discussed the
role of a president in relation to
the university. He stated that the
president should form a “grand
plan” for the university adding
that without a plan there is no
need for a president.
The maladies at Berkeley are
the fault of all the administrators
and faculty not just President
Kerr, continued Professor McConnell. The faculty is largely unconcerned with the needs of the students, he asserted. He anticipates
that if the attitude of the faculty
towards the student does not
change after the superficial reforms have been completed, the
Dr. McConnell criticized the
fact that much time is spent on
committees by some faculty members thus limiting them in scholarly work. Some faculty members, after serving on committees
for some time, have become administrators. This situation, according to Dr. McConnell, is one
of the chief sources of mediocre

administrators.
Another fault in the

faculty

government is

the operation of
the budget committee whose
members are not disclosed. The
reasons for their decisions are
not announced and appeal of decisions is impossible. Furthermore, the budget committee does
not report to the faculty on the
allocation of money and is therefore a relatively autonomous

body.

oriam
Frank Gugino Jr.
Senior active in student
affairs whose contribution
to the University will not
be forgotten
*

Dr, McConnell explained that
the purpose of leadership is to

mobilize the efforts of all parties
in pursuit of educational goals
by “generating and infusing energy beyond the day by day efforts.” Failure to set these educational goals and to judge the
administrative acts by their relevance to these goals constitutes
the most basic failure by administrators. The leadership should encourage sensitivity to social needs
without compromising their educational goals or integrity. It
foster innovations not organizational stability.

Mr. Uzomba stated that “trouble in any part of the world is
trouble in other parts of the
world.” He pointed out that the
strategic location of Africa with
respect to Europe, America, and
Asia holds important implications
to the future of all nations.
Nigeria, the most populous
country in Africa with 55.6 million people, is particularly influential. Since it achieved independence five years ago, Nigeria has
maintained a leading position, respected as one of Africa’s most
successful emerging states, and,
until the recent coup, as a model
of stability and democracy for
the rest of Africa,

The January 14 coup resulted
in a military take-over of the Ni-

gerian government. It was Mr.
Uzomba’s opinion that the new
government, headed by General
J.T.U. Aguiyi Ironsi, marked a
return to stability.

He further stated that the
army was not power hungry, in-

American Educators Compose Panel
For Symposium of Higher Education
At a symposium of higher education a panel composed of American educators Harry Porter, Algo
Henderson and Harry Rivlin discussed “Problems and Prospects
in Higher Education.” The symposium was held in honor of G.
Lester Anderson, former VicePresident of Educational Affairs.
Harry W. Porter, Provost of
the State University of New York,
discussed “Decision-Making Within a State Co-ordinated System of
Public Higher Education.” He

cited basic reasons for the necessity of state-wide coordination of
Hy of educational opportunity and
large numbers of students

Mr. Porter then discussed several of the problems facing coordination He pointed out that
“no one wants to be coordinated,”
that there is an historic tradition
of lack of systematic planning,
that every college president has
individual qualities and traits, and
that there are traditions on each

campus which demand that the
institution retain its autonomy.

Certain decisions must be made
at the local level, Mr. Porter as-

serted. These areas include the
appointment of faculty, course offerings, and student admission.
Total enrollment and matters of
salary and student faculty ratio

are not decisions, however, to be
made at a local level.

Dr. Henderson, Director of the
Center for the Study of Higher
Education at the University of
Michigan, spoke on "State Coordination of Public and Private
Higher Education.” He feels that
the State University is becoming
“moderately independent of the
Legislature at Albany.”
In speaking of the hazards of
state coordination, Dr. Henderson
asserted that it is the “nature of
a University to function best within an optimum of freedom,” but
he did express a positive belief
in state coordination. The matter, he feels, has become a political issue and requires public

debate. Dr. Henderson closed with

a plea for diversity in our insti-

tutions.

Mr. Rivlin, Dean of Teacher
Education of the City University
of New York discussed “The University in an Urban Setting." Tha
city besets the university with environmental problems but it offers definite cultural advantages.

dicating that the Nigerians desire

Mr. Uzomba called on the West,
particularly the U.S., to develop

peace and remain supporters of

the democratic tradition. Mr. Uzomba cited General Ironsi’s intention to call a constitutional
convention in June, adding that
he believes elections are likely
to be held by the end of No-

“definite aims in Africa," He criticized the U.S. “two-pronged"
policy that seemed overly influenced by desire for British approval and fear of Communist

vember,

aggression.

** *

/

On Campus MwShuJman
(By the author of “Rally Round the Flag, Boys.'",

“Dobie Gillis," etc.)

.

ROMAN IN THE GLOAMIN’
Now as the end of the first semester draws near, one fact
emerges clearly: you are all going to flunk out of school.
There are two things you can do about it. First, you can
marry money. (I don’t mean you marry the money itself; I
mean you marry a person who has money. Weddings between people and currency have not been legal anywhere in
the United States since the Smoot-Hawley Act. Personna*
Stainless Steel Blades, on the other hand, are legal everywhere and are, indeed, used with great pleasure and satisfaction in all fifty states of the Union and Duluth. I bring
up Personna Stainless Steel Blades because this column is
sponsored by the makers of Personna Stainless Steel Blades,
and they are inclined to get edgy if I omit to mention their
product. Some of them get edgy and some get double-edgy
because Personna Blades come both in Injector style and
Double Edge style.)
But I digress. I was saying you can marry money but, of
course, you will not because you are a high-minded, cleanliving, pure-hearted, freckle-faced American kid. Therefore,
to keep from flunking, you must try the second method:
you must learn how to take lecture notes.
According to a recent survey, eleven out of ten American
undergraduates do not know the proper way to take lecture
notes. To illustrate this appalling statistic, let us suppose
you are taking a course in history. Let us further suppose
the lecturer is lecturing on the ruling houses of England.
You listen intently. You write diligently in your notebook,
making a topic outline as you have been taught. Like this
L House of Plantagenet
II. House of La
III. House of Y

Mr. Rivlin stressed the necessity for today’s high schools to
work with individual students, to
raise their “abilities and sights"
and to prepare them for higher

education.

Kace Relations Is

Topic on WBFO
A series of talks dealing with
race relations is currently being
presented by WBFO each Wednesday night at 7:30 p.m. This
week’s speaker is Robert Gardiner, Executive Secretary of the
UN. Economic Commission for
Africa, and former speaker in
this year’s Reith Lecture series
of
the
British Broadcasting
Company.

Mr. Gardiner deals with his
topic on both the emotional level

and rational scientific level. He
has said of the subject, "Do we

really have to assume our superiority or prove our equality before we can decide how we
should act toward other people?
. . . Equality is a political concept. Either we accept it and
behave accordingly or we disregard it and conceive of society
as a collection of different animal species struggling for sur-

vival.”

The Commuter Relations Board, special committee of the Student Sen-

will hold a membership meeting for interested
commuters on Thursday,

ate,

February 3 at 4 p.m. in
Room 236-7, Norton.

«-

Then you stop. You put aside your pen. You blink back
a tear, for you cannot go on. Oh. yes, you know very well
that the next ruling house is the House of Tudor. The trouble is you don't know the Roman numeral that comes after

Ilf.
It may, incidentally, be of some comfort to learn that
you are not the only people who don’t know Roman numerals. The fact is, the Romans never knew them either. Oh, I
suppose they could tell you how much V or X were or like
that, but when it came to real zingers like LXI or MMC,
they just dang away their styluses and went downtown to
have a bath or take in a circus or maybe stab Caesar a few
times.
You may wonder why Rome stuck with these ridiculous
numerals when the Arabs had such a nice, simple system.
Well, sir, the fact is that Emperor Vespasian tried like crazy
to buy the Arabic numerals from Suleiman The Magnificent,
but Suleiman wouldn’t do business —not even when Vespasian raised his bid to 100,000 gold piastres, plus he offered
to throw in the Colosseum, the Appian Way, and Technicolor.
So Rome stuck with Roman numerals —to its sorrow, as
it turned out. One day in the Forum, Cicero and Pliny got
to arguing about how much is COL times MVIX. Well, sir.
pretty soon everyone in town came around to join the hassle. In all the excitement, nobody remembered to lock the
north gate and —wham! before you could say ars longa—in
rushed the Goths, the Visigoths, and the Green Bay Packers!
Well, sir, that’s the way the empire crumbles, and I digress. Let’s get back to lecture notes. Let’s also say a word
about Burma Shave*. Why? Because Burma Shave is made
by the makers of Personna Blades who, it will be recalled,
are the sponsors of this column. They are also the sponsors
of the ultimate in shaving luxury. First coat your kisser
with Burma Shave, regular or menthol—or, if you are the
devil-may-care sort, some of each. Then whisk off your stubble with an incredibly sharp, unbelievably durable Personna
Blade, Injector or Double Edge —remembering first to put
the blade in a razor. The result: facial felicity, cutaneous
cheer, epidermal elysium. Whether you shave every day,
every III days, or every VII, you’ll always find Personna
and Burma Shave
combination.
*

•

•

9 IXM, Mu SOulGiu

Pertonnam amo, Tom Pertonnam amat, Dick Pertonnam
amat, Harry Pertonnam amat, quique Pertonnam amant—el quoque amabitit.

�Andy/ Film Shown In Conference TheaterConcerns Mentally Retarded Man In NYC
Andy, a motion picture starring
Norman Alden, will be presented
in the Conference Theater from
Thursday, February 3rd, through
Sunday, February 6th.

The film portrays life in New
York as it is seen and felt by the
forty year old, mentally retarded
son of Greek immigrants. The
protagonist is involved in a sort
of urban “Odyssey by Subway.”
The denizens of his world range
from small children to degenerates. In rapid succession, he is
shown in encounters with sailors,
blind men, the Salvation Army,
and a hostile janitor. His adventures culminate with a shattering experience involving a run-

down homosexual. The child like

Andy, totally non plussed by this
confrontation, beats a headlong
retreat to his parents’ apartment.

Andy on on "Odyssey"

Dr. Harry Gehman Receives Award
For Distinguished Service To Math
Dr. Harry M. Gehman, professor of mathematics was named
the seventh recipient of the

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Tuesday, February

SPECTRUM

PACE SIX

“Symphonic" all
transistor portable stereo phono:
flip-down changer, Garrard turntable, detachable speakers, diamond stylus, 2 mos. old. $90.
Call 882-0728.
—

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Hardtop, V-8,
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$175. TF 2-7006 after 6.

Award for Distinguished Service

to Mathematics by the Mathema-

tical Association of America
(MAA) at the annual meeting in
Chicago.

Norman Alden, cast in the title
roles, has claimedthat he received
the part for the simple reason
that no established actor would
have submitted to its physical demands. In one Hudson River sequence he was alternately frozen
or soaked in sweat. In one bar
scene, the script demands that he

fight his way through twenty-six
bulky “extras."

Orestes' Presented In March

Orastts by Euripides will be
presented by the University Theatre in fhe Millard Fillmore Room,
Norton Union, March 9 through
12 .In addition to the four campus performances, a tour of the

production is being planned for
the Spring vacation.
Orestes, a melodrama with
strokes of dark comedy, was written in 408 B.C. and has interested
a number of modern critics, although the play is still rarely produced.
The production will be directed

by Dr William S. E. Coleman, a
new staff member of the Drama
and Speech Department. Dr.

Thomas Watson, Director of the
Unviersity Theatre will coordinate the set design and lighting.
Costumes will be created by Miss
Esther Kling. An original music
score, was written by Gary Cohn,
a senior honors student in music.
The background music was recorded and will be incorporated
into the production with the assistance of the composer.
The cast for the production includes Gary Battaglia as Orestes,
Jeanette Veling as the Coryphaeus, Pam Dadey as Electra,
Peter Levitt ase Pylades, James
Golata as Menelaus, Carl Thoma
as the Phrygian, Francine Zumpano as Helen of Troy, Richard

Haney as Tyndareus, and Anne
Selman as Hermione. The chorus
of Argive women will be played
by Joan Bromberg, Barbara Haen-

lin, Barbara Vogel, and Robin
Herniman, Golata, Thoma, Haney,
Selman, Haenlin, Vogel, and Herniman are new to the UB stage.
Ticket sales will be announced

at a later date. Volunteers for
crew work should contact either
Dr. Watson or Dr. Coleman.

Horse Sought
A large percheron or Belgian
workhorse is needed to carry the
messenger in the grand finale of
“The Threepenny Opera” to be
presented at Baird Hall. Should
anyone know of such a horse,
either white or dapple grey,
please contact Mr. H. Wicke, the
stage director of the play, at 8314341, or Roseland Jarrett at 8314155.
Miss Jarrett is also looking for
people interested in doing work
on costumes and props.
The final outcome of all this

searching will be presented February 24 when “The Threepenny
Opera” makes its debut and will
run through February 27 and

from March 3 to March 6.

In

the January issue of the
official journal of the Association,
the “American
Mathematical
Monthly,” Dr. Gehman is praised
for “devoted and diligent service”
to the field of mathematics.
Dr. Gehman first came to the
State University at Buffalo as
professor and chairman of the
Department of Mathematics in
1929, in the then new College of
Arts and Sciences. He resigned
his chairmanship in 1962 to devote more time to his duties as
treasurer and the first executive
director of the MAA.
He earned his bachelor’s and
master’s degrees in 1919 and 1920
just at the time that professors
R.L. Moore and J.R. Kline brought
the new field of point-set topology
to the University of Pennsylvania.
Dr, Gehman obtained his Ph.D. in
1925 with a thesis prepared under
the supervision of J.R. Kline.

HIGH SCHOOL
Amataur

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A long-time member of the
MAA who has served in many
capacities, Dr, Gehman was for
twelve years (1948-60) secretarytreasurer before assuming his
present position as treasurer and
executive director.

—

1966 FORD Futura. Automatic,
whitewall tires, radio, heater, plus
new seat cover. Call 8343278
after 6, all day weekends.

Attention SENIOR &amp;
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1, 1966

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•

SORORITY

RUSH
REGISTRATION

Last 2 Days!—Today &amp; Tomorrow

.

M.

I

�Tuesday, February 1, 1966

Free Universities Take Root
(See Story on Page 3)

AARON FINESTONE
The Collegiate Press Service
When philosopher Paul Goodman suggested in 1962 that students and teachers “secede” from
their universities and form independent communities of scholars,
there was not exactly a rush to
begin . . . education’s civil war.
Yet three years later, gaining
its impetus from the student uprising at jthe University of California’s Berkeley campus, the
“free university” has become part
of the scene near several campuses.
During the Berkeley demonstrations of the 1964-65 school
year, leaders of the Free Speech
Movement called a student strike
and invited faculty members to
join a free university and lecture
on subjects such as civil disobedience.
“There comes a point when you
can’t go on acting alone,” Carolyn
Grave, an organizer of San Francisco’s New School, said at the
time. “We feel that we must provide some intellectual basis for
what we are doing.”
Since then, free universities
By

PAGE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

have taken roots in New York,
Chicago, Los Angeles, and Boulder, Colo Others are in operation or being planned near many
of the nation’s major universities. At strife-torn St. John's University in New York, striking faculty members have started ■ a
“university in exile" to keep students in touch with their regular
teachers.
Some of the free universities,
like San Francisco's New School,
are operated by New Left groups
such as Students for a Democratic
Society. Others, like the Free University of New York and the New
School of Los Angeles, try to encompass a broad spectrum of
radical thought while remaining
independent of any specific organization, The Los A ng e 1 e s
school has accepted $1,100 from
the Communist Party but claims
td be free of all groups.
Free university classes usually
consist of evening lectures held
in college facilities, churches,
apartments coffee shops, or any
other facility with four walls and
a roof. None of the universities
are accredited, none of them
grant degrees, and that’s the way

most of them want it. The three
largest
at Boulder, Chicago
—

and New York
each have about
300 students; Though all the
schools plan expansion, total national enrollment at present is
about 3,000.
—

Typical is the Free University

of New York, whose shabby headquarters are above a Manhattan

coffee shop. Policy is set by the
students and the faculty. In spite
of its name, FUNY charges $24
for one course and $8 for each
additional course so it will not
have to rely on any private benefactor.
Most of the 46 courses are
Marxist-oriented. They include
Marxist economics, the theory
and practice of radical social
movements, experimental cinema,
and the search for authentic sexual experience.

Other course titles include community organization, literature
versus LBJ’s 20th Century theology, the literature of the Vietnam liberation fronts since 1936,
hallucinogenic drugs, and black
ghetto radicalism.
Many of the 54 faculty members
like most of the student
body
are either full time teachers or students at various colleges and universities in the New
York area The catalog lists only
half of the faculty members as
having any college degree them—

BUFFALO FIRST RUN
Tbursday—Sunday

—

selves.

SUNY Institute of American Studies
Moves Paris Home Near Sorbonne
The Paris branch of the State

Dr. Ewell. He said that at one
time early in the building's history, it had been a famous Paris
restaurant. He remarked that a
plaque, inside the door tells that
such famous men in French history as Voltaire and Robespierre

University of New York, the In-

stitute of American Studies, has
acquired a new home, Dr. Samuel
B. Gould. State University of New
Ybirk president announced.

had dined there.

The Institute, under the direclion of the State University at
Buffalo for the past two years,
wijrUsoon move into its new quar/Ters opposite the famed Theatre
de France on Paris’s Place de

Directed by Dr. Simon Copans,
the Institute at present offers
four courses in American culture
and political science for French
students. The courses, conducted
in English, are supported by a
State Department grant. Students
arc charged a nominal tuition fee.

L’Odeon.

The new location brings the
Institute within two blocks of the
Sorbonne, and thus makes access
easy for its 200 French students,
man./ of whom arc students at
the Paris university as well.

Weekly
Calendar

The building, constructed in
the 1700's, comes to the University completely modernized. The
former tenants, the Benjamin
Franklin Library of the U S. Information Service and the American Embassy, rennovated the
building during their ten-year
stay there.

FEB. 1-7
Tuesday

Rush Registration: Panhellcnic
10 a.m. lobby, Norton
Discussion: Alumni Greater
Books, 8 to 10 p.m., Norton 232

233.

Concert: Buffalo Philharmonic,
Kleinhans, 8:30 p.m.

Dr. Raymond Ewell announced
that the U.S, Embassy has donated
around 10,000 volumes from the
library to the Institute. He said
this would give the Institute a
fine reference library on American cultural and social history.

Wednesday
Varsity Basketball: UB vs. Cornell, 9 p.m., Memorial Aud.
Varsity Swimming: UB vs.

4 p.m., Clark Gym.
Lecture: Literary and Drama
Committee, 4 to 5 p.m., Norton

State,

The Institute’s new home has
a colorful history, according.to

233.

Thursday

WUS Program Receives Funds
(Cont’d

from

Pg.

1)

equipment, duplicators, and medicine are among the things that
WUS funds supply to “help students to help themselves around

the world.”

"A picture of considerable quality. Uncommonly good
performances from fop to bottom. The sense of reality
is maintained to an extent not often found in movies
of this kind or any other. Sarafian has worked extremely well
the mark of a rare ability. This fourde-force overwhelms the spectator."
—Archer Winsfen, Post
“A forthright demonstration of the pathos and irony
of a subnormal human condition
directed by Richard
C. Sarafian in an interesting style. He has a talent and
a feeling for humanity. Sensitive and well done."
—Bosley Crowther, N. Y. Times
.

.

.

.

.

Lecture: Colloquicm,

Dr Ken
Acronau

neth Tcrhume, Cornell

Students who wish to conlrib
ute to WUS may do so through

tics.

Lecture Discussion:
-

Inter-Var

sity Christian Fellowship, 7 p.m.,

the Student Senate Office, 10:30 Fillmore Room, Norton.
Lecture; Dr. I). Farnsworth,
to 4:30 Monday through Friday
8:30 p.m,, Capcn.
during the month of February.
Friday
The Student Senators will con
(act various organizations during
Concert: Dufallo and Buffalo

A complete “Programme for
Action” will be available at the (he first weeks of this month. Philharmonic, Kleinhans.
WUS table in Norton Union.
Students may contribute through Saturday
.
,
Funds for the Asia program will their fraternities, sororities, rew.
Varsity
and Freshman Swimbe used in Ceylon, Hong Kong, hgious and other organizations. m j ng; UB vs Co| gate
2 p.m„
India, Indonesia, Japan, Korea, Resident students may contribute Clark Gym.
Nepal, Pakistan, the Philippines, through the Inter- Residence
Concert: Buffalo Philharmonic,
Council.
Mozart. 2:30 p.m., Kleinhans.
Thailand and South Vietnam
...

_

.

,

.

'ANDY' attempts to explore a relatively neglected
Mr. Sarafian is
the attempt is noble .
interested in the emotional and humanistic values of

Things Are Looking Up!

“

subject

.

his story
"

.

.

.

.

"

‘ANDY’

rates a

—Judith Crist, Herald Tribune
great commendation for exploring

an untrodden movie territory. Norman Alden stirs up
a remarkable storm and creates a poetic area of in

sight into ‘ANDY’

"

—Alton Cook, World-Telegram-Sun

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SCOOLER ANN WEDGEWORTH •MURVYNVYE
•

Our Educational Elite Presentation
[)

83, 3704

{conference

&lt;CJ,neatre

RAY VOLPE

831-3610
or TR

5-6009

�Tuesday, February

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

'Andy,' Film Shown In Conference Theater;
Concerns Mentally Retarded Man In NYC

Andy, a motion picture starring
Alden, will be presented
in the Conference Theater from
Thursday, February 3rd, through

Norman

Sunday, February

6th.

The film portrays life in New
York as it is seen and felt by the
forty year old, mentally retarded
son of Greek immigrants. The
protagonist is involved in a
Of urban “Odyssey by Subway.”
The denizens of his world range
from small children to degenerates. In rapid succession, he is
shown in encounters with sailors,
blind men, the Salvation Army,
and a hostile janitor. His adventures culminate with a shattering experience involving a
Andy on on "Odyssey"

Dr. Harry Gehman Receives Award
For Distinguished Service To Math
Dr. Harry M. Gehman, professor of mathematics was named
the seventh recipient of the

CLASSIFIED
WANTED
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sales display work. $57.75. Car
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10 to 14 in. Will pay $35. TL 4-

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WANTED

DESK for student
apartment. Call 833-6115.
—

Female roomate, imWANTED
mediate occupancy, modern apt.
just opposite UB. Call 831-4610
days, 837-6320 evenings.
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FOR SALE
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—

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transistor portable stereo phono:

flip-down changer, Garrard turntable. detachable speakers, diamond stylus, 2 mos. old. $90.
Call 882 0728.

1959 FURY
Hardtop, V 8,
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tires, mechanically excellent.
$175 TF 2 7006 after' 6.

Award for Distinguished Service

to Mathematics by the Mathema-

tical

run-

down homosexual. The child like
Andy, totally non plussed by this
confrontation, beats a headlong
retreat to his parents’ apartment.

Association of America
the annual meeting in

(MAA) at
Chicago.

Norman Alden, cast in the title
roles, has claimedthat he received
the part for the simple reason
that no established actor would
have submitted to its physical demands. In one Hudson River sequence he was alternately frozen
or soaked in sweat. In one bar
scene, the script demands that he
fight his way through twenty-six
bulky “extras,”

Orestes' Presented In March

Orestes by Euripides will be
presented by the University Thea-

tre in the Millard Fillmore Room,
Norton Union, March 9 through
12 In addition to the four cam-

pus performances, a tour of the
production is being planned for
the Spring vacation.

Orestes, a melodrama with
strokes,of datk comedy, was written in 408 B.C. and has interested
a number of modern critics, although the play is still rarely pro-

duced.
The production will be directed
by Dr William S. E, Coleman, a
new staff member of the Drama
and Speech Department. Dr.
Thomas Watson, Director of the
Unviersity Theatre will coordinate the set design and lighting.
Costumes will be created by Miss
Esther Kling. An original music
score, was written by Gary Cohn,
a senior honors student in music.
The background music was recorded and will be incorporated
into the production with the assistance of the composer.
The cast for the production includes Gary Battaglia as Orestes,
Jeanette Veling as the Coryphaeus, Pam Dadey as Electra,
Peter Levitt ase Pylades, James
Golata as Menelaus, Carl Thoma
as the Phrygian, Francine Zumnano as Helen of Troy, Richard

Haney as Tyndareus, and Anne
Selman as Hermione. The chorus
of Argive women will be played
by Joan Bromberg, Barbara Haen-

lin, Barbara Vogel, and Robin

Herniman., Golata, Thoma, Haney,

Selman, Haenlin, Vogel, and Herniman are new to the UB stage.
Ticket sales will be announced

at a later date. Volunteers for"
crew work should contact either
Dr.. Watson or Dr. Coleman.

Horse Sought
A large percheron or Belgian

workhorse is needed to carry the
messenger in the grand finale of
“The Threepenny Opera” to be
presented at Baird Hall, Should
anyone know of such a horse,
either white or dapple grey,
please contact Mr. H. Wicke, the
stage director of the play, at 8314341, or Roseland Jarrett at 8314155.

Miss Jarrett is also looking for
people interested in doing work
on costumes and props.
The final outcome of all this
searching will be presented February 24 when “The Threepenny
Opera” makes its debut and will
run through February 27 and
from March 3 to March 6.

In

the January issue of the
official journal of the Association,
t h c “American Mathematical
Monthly,” Dr. Gehman is praised
for “devoted and diligent service”
to the field of mathematics,

Dr. Gehman first came to the
State University at Buffalo as
professor and chairman of the
Department of Mathematics in
1929, in the then new College of
Arts and Sciences. He resigned
his chairmanship in 1962 to devote m6re time to his duties as
treasurer and the first executive
director of the MAA.

He earned his bachelor’s and
master’s degrees in 1919 and 1920
just at the time that professors
R.L. Moore and J.H. Kline brought
the new field of point-set topology
to the University of Pennsylvania.
Dr. Oilman obtained his Ph.D. in
1925 with a thesis prepared under
the supervision of J.R. Kline.

HIGH SCHOOL
Everything Photographic for Profess.unal
and Amateur Uu

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COLLEGE STUDENTS

Summer Job Opportunities
Would you like to work and play in the Rocky
Mountains this summer on your vacation? At a
Mountain Resort, Dude Ranch, Hotels, etc. For 150
exclusive listings, Send $2.00 to Western Resort
Review, P.O. Box 9, Commerce City, Colo.

AN EVENING WITH

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FREE

Roy

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A long-time member of the
MAA who has served in many
capacities, Dr. Gehman was for
twelve years (1948-60) secretarytreasurer before assuming his
present position as treasurer and
executive director.

Two winter coats. Owner

going to India. Kept at the cloak-

room. Norton Union.

1966 FORD Futura. Automatic,
whitewall tires, radio, heater, plus
new seal cover. Call 834 3278
after 6. all day weekends,

Attention SENIOR &amp;
GRADUATE MEN
Students—U.S. Citizens
Needing nominal FINANCIAL
HELP to complete their edu-

cation this academic year

—

and then commence work
cosigners required. Send transcript and full details of your
plans and requirements to
Stevens Bros.
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•

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SORORITY

RUSH

REGISTRATION
Last 2 Days!—Today Tomorrow
&amp;

M.

|

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i

�Tuesday, February

1, 1966

PAGE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

Free Universities Take Root
(See Story on Page 3)
By AARON FINESTONE
The Collegiate Press Service
When philosopher Paul Goodman suggested in 1962 that stu-

dents and teachers “secede” from
their universities and form independent communities of scholars,
there was not exactly a rush to'
begin . . . education’s civil war.
Yet three years later, gaining
its impetus from the student uprising at the University of California’s Berkeley campus, the
“free university" has become part
of the scene near several campuses.
During the Berkeley demonstrations of the 1964-65 school
year, leaders of the Free Speech
Movement called a student strike
and invited faculty members to
join a free university and lecture
on subjects such as civil disobedience.
“There comes a point when you
can’t go on acting alone,” Carolyn
Grave, an organizer of San Francisco’s New School, said at the
time. “We feel that we must provide some intellectual basis for
what we are doing.”
Since then, free universities

have taken roots in New York,
Chicago, Los Angeles, and Boulder, Colo, Others are in operation or being planned near many
of the nation’s major universities. At strife-torn St. John’s University in New York, striking faculty members have started a
“university in exile” to keep students in touch with their regular
teachers.
Some of the free universities,
like San Francisco’s New School,
are operated by. New Left groups
such as Students for a Democratic
Society. Others, like the Free University of New York and the New
School of Los Angeles, try to encompass a broad spectrum of
radical thought while remaining
independent of any specific organization. The Los A ng e 1 e s
school has accepted $1,100 from
the Communist Party but claims
t a be free of all groups.

Typical is the Free University
of New York, whose shabby headquarters are above a Manhattan
coffee shop. Policy is set by the
students and the faculty. In spite
of its name, FUNY charges $24
for one course and $8 for each
additional course so it will not
have to rely on any private benefactor.

Free university classes usually
consist of evening lectures held
in college facilities, churches,
apartments coffee shops, or any
other facility with four walls and
a roof. None of the universities
are accredited, none of them
grant degrees, and that’s the way

Other course titles include com
munity organization, literature
versus LBJ’s 20th Century theology, the literature of the Vietnam liberation fronts since 1936,
hallucinogenic drugs, and black
ghetto radicalism.

most of them want it. The three
at Boulder, Chicago

largest

—

and New York
each have about
300 students. Though all the
schools plan expansion, total national enrollment at present is
about 3,000,
—

Most of the 46 courses are
Marxist-oriented. They include
Marxist economics, the theory
and practice of radical social
movements, experimental cinema,
and the search for authentic sexual experience.

Many of the 54 faculty members
like most of the student
body
are either full time teachers or students at various colleges and universities in the New
York area The catalog lists only
half of the faculty members as
having any college degree them—

BUFFALO FIRST RUN
Tbursday—Sunday

—

selves.

SUNY Institute ofAmerican Studies
Moves Paris Home Near Sorbonne
The Paris branch of the State
University of New York, the Institute of American Studies, has
acquired a new home, Dr, Samuel
B. Gould, State University of New
York president announced.

The Institute, under the direction of the State University at
Buffalo for the past two years,
will soon move into its new quar-

Directed by Dr, Simon Copans,
the Institute at present offers
four courses in American culture
and political science for French
students. The courses, Conducted
in English, are supported by a
State Department grant. Students
are charged a nominal tuition fee.

ters opposite the, famed Theatre
de France on Paris's Place'de

L’Odeon.

The new location brings the
Institute within two blocks of the
Sorbonne, and thus makes access
easy for its 200 French students,
many of whom are students at
the Paris university as well.

Weekly
Calendar

The building, constructed in
the 1700’s, comes to the University completely modernized. The
former tenants, the Benjamin
Franklin Library of the U.S. Information Service and the American Embassy, rennovated the
building during their ten-year
stay there.

FEB. 1-7

Tuesday

Rush Registration; Panhellcnic
10 a m. lobby, Norton
Discussion; Alumni Greater
Books, 8 to 10 p.m., Norton 232233.
Concert: Buffalo Philharmonic,
Kleinhans, 8:30 p.m.

Dr. Raymond Ewell announced
that the U.S. Embassy has donated
around 10,000 volumes from the
library to the Institute. He said
this would give the Institute a
fine reference library on American cultural and social history.

Wednesday
Varsity Basketball: UB vs. Cornell, 9 p,m„ Memorial Aud,
Varsity Swimming: UB vs.

State,

4 p.m., Clark Gym.
Lecture: Literary and Drama
Committee, 4 to 5 p.m., Norton

The Institute’s new home has
a colorful history, according. to

233.

Thursday

WUS Program Receives Funds
(Cont’d

from Pg. 1)

equipment, duplicators, and medicine are among the things that
WUS funds supply to “help students to help themselves around

the world.”
A

"A picture of considerable quality. Uncommonly good
performances from top to bottom. The sense of reality
is maintained to an extent not often found in movies
of this kind or any other. Sarafian has worked exthe mark of a rare ability. This tourtremely well
de-force overwhelms the spectator.”
—Archer Winsfen, Post
...

“A forthright demonstration of the pathos and irony
directed by Richard
of a subnormal human condition
C. Sarafian in an interesting style. He has a talent and
a feeling for humanity. Sensitive and well done."
—Bosley Crowther, N. Y. Times
", ‘ANDY’
attempts to explore a relatively neglected
Mr. Sarafian is
subject
the attempt is noble
interested in the emotional and humanistic values of
.

“Programme for
Action” will be available at the
WUS table in Norton Union.
complete

Funds for the Asia program will
be used in Ceylon, Hong Kong,
India, Indonesia, Japan, Korea.
Nepal, Pakistan, the Philippines,
Thailand and South Vietnam.

Dr. Ewell He said that at one
time early in the building's history, it had been a famous Paris
restaurant. He remarked that a
plaque inside the door tells that
such famous men in French history as Voltaire and Robespierre
had dined there.

Lecture: Colloquiem, Dr. Kenneth Terhume, Cornell Aeronau-

Students who w|sh to contribute to WUS may do so through
the Student Senate Office, 10:30
to 4:30 Monday through Friday
during the month of February.
The Student Senators will contact various organizations during

tics.

Lecture Discussion:
-

Inter-Var-

sity Christian Fellowship, 7 p.m.,
Room, Norton.
Lecture; Dr. D Farnsworth,
8:30 p.m., Capcn.

Fillmore

Friday

Concert:

Dufallo and

Buffalo

Philharmonic, Kleinhans.

the first weeks of this month.
Students may contribute through
their fraternities, sororities, religious and other organizations.
Resident students may contribute
through the Inter- Residence

Saturday
Varsity and Frashman Swimming; UB vs. Colgate, 2 p.m„
Clark Gym.
Concert; Buffalo Philharmonic,
Mozart, 2:30 p,m., Kleinhans.

Council.

.

.

.

.

.

.

his story."

.

.

—Judith Crist, Herald Tribune
great commendation for exploring

‘ANDY' rates a
an untrodden movie territory. Norman Alden stirs up
a remarkable storm and creates a poetic area of insight into ‘ANDY 1."
“

—Alton Cook, World-Telegram-Sun

Things Are Looking Up!

Now

EXTRA CASH
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The SPECTRUM
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No Experience Necessary

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RAY VOLPE

ME SPOOLER-ANN WFDGEWORTH ■ MURVYN VYE

Our Educational Elite Presentation
83, 3704

KLoyference

or

&lt;7/neatre
,

831-3610
or TR 5-6009

�page

Tuesday, February 1, 1966

SPECTRUM

eight

s
=it=A===&lt;

«

UB Hoopsters Split Pair
Bulls Thrash Plattsburgh,
Bow To Northern Illinois
By MIKE DOLAN

The University of Buffalo had
its four-game winning streak upended Saturday evening and a
severe blow dealt to its possible
NCAA post-season bid as the Huskies of Northern Illinois beat a
weary UB team, 90 77. On Friday
night the Bulls clipped the Cardinals of Plattsburgh, 117-94, but
were not as successful in the Saturday contest—the opening game
of the night—of an Aud. doubleheader between UBNorthern and
Canisius-Army.
The UB-Plattsburgh game was
played before an enthusiastic
gathering at Clark Gym, It was
clear from the very start that UB
was there to win as the Bulls
kept up a blistering pace for the
entire game, Harvey Poe and
Norward Goodwin started the
ball rolling with some great outside shooting and good ballhandling, and from there on in,
Bill Barth, Doug Bernard and
Paul Goldstein took turns in providing the fans with an exhibi-

tion of offensive brilliance.
UB realized it had a great challenge on its hands, but with a
great team effort they were able
to come out on top. Artie Walker
played an outstanding game, especially off the boards, but early
foul trouble limited his effectiveness. The continually improving
Bernard contributed 14 points to
the effort, Goodwin and Goldstein shared the high-point honors
for the evening with 21 apiece.
Poe turned in his usual hustling
floor game and scored 18. Barth,
as consistent as they come, scored
11 points and grabbed 13 reDounds.
Tom Chapin notched 31 for the

Barth was high with 18. Next was
Paul Goldstein with 14. followed
by Walker and Goodwin with 12
apiece and Poe with 11.

Coach Muto's frosh forces had
an easy time for a change Friday
night as they trounced Guelph.

son, Bob MacCready, Blaine Aston and soph flash Gregg Morris.
The Big Red may show traces
of rustiness after a two week lay-

off, hut it will take much more
than this to make an upset a possibility for UB With the Northern Illinois nightmare out of their
system, the Bulls, 9-4, will have
to return to the form they showed
against Akron if they are to stand
a chance against the Cornell five.
The odds for such a possibility
becoming a reality would be
greatly enhanced by a large
turnout supporting the Bulls. The
partisan support of a large crowd
plays an

immeasurably

signifi-

cant role in the motivation of a
team, and nothing would prove

more damaging to UB spirit than
having the seats in the Aud. take
on the appearance of a pastel

desert.
The tall, talented freshman of
Cornell, rated as one of the East’s
best, will tangle with the UB
yearlings in a 7:30 preliminary.
Admission to the game will be
free upon presentation of ID
cards.
Buses will be leaving from Nor
ton Union at 6:15 and 8:00 p.m,

BULLS
G
3

Poe

4
6

F
0
1
3
6

Bevilacqua

3

Bernard
Culbert
Goldstein

1

18
7

4

6

14

2
9

1
3

5
21

Walker
Goodwin
Barth

10

Smith

The Saturday night basketball
scene moved to the Aud. where
the Bulls hosed Northern Illinois.
It was a poor second-half effort
on the part of UB and an offensive spurt by Northern Illinois
that led to the Bulls fourth loss
of the season. At one stage of
the game. UB held a 14-point
lead, 29-15. but this was to be
short-lived as the Huskies closed
the gap to four, 43 39, as the half

Thomas

TOTALS

1
4

46

3
1
25

T
6

21
11

5

9
117

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ended.

BULLS

second half began, it

became evident that the Bulls
were in for a long evening. The
Huskies made two quick scores,
but the Bulls still led. 44-43, This,
however, was to be the last limb
the Bulls held the lead. After this
point, the Bulls could not do anything right, while the Huskies
could do no wrong. Poor ball
handling and an ice-cold field
goal percentage plagued UB for
the remainder of the contest.
Last-ditch efforts failed as the
Bulls tired and their defense
collapsed The visitors took full
advantage of this let down and
gradually pulled the score out of
Buffalo's reach
Stellar performances by Willie
Hanson, who scored 28 for the
evening, and Bobby Taylor, who
had 19 points and a batch of
rebounds, were decisive in the
Bulls’ defeat. UB had five men in
the double figures bracket as

By STEVE SCHUELEIN
The UB hoopsters will attempt
to regain their winning form
when they meet Cornell at 9 p.m.,
Wednesday, at Memorial Auditorium.
The Bulls, victims of a 90-77
upset at the hands of Northern
Illinois at the Aud Saturday, will
assume the role of underdog
against the powerful Big Red. The
Ithacans own a 7-6 slate, but the
caliber of their competition makes
this mark somewhat misleading.
Of the six losses absorbed by
the Big Red, only one has been
by more than six points, that a
98-83 loss to Brigham Young in
a Quaker City Tournament consolation game. Other conquerors
of the Cornellians include Syracuse, 87-81, Minnesota, 84-82,
Army, 65-63, Brown, 68-66, and
Columbia, 69-68. Cornell is currently in fourth place in the Ivy
League with a 4-2 mark.
Coach Sam McNeill’s quintet is
paced by 6-8 Steve Cram, a Swiss
born center, and 6-5 forward Bob
DeLuca of Schenectady. The other starters will be chosen from
among Dave Berube, Gerry IV^un-

Court action

losers.

As the

BULL CAGERS TO FACE
CORNELL TOMORROW

Walker

Goodwin
Barth
Poe

NORWARD GOODWIN ;
100-39. Six of the Baby Bulls hit
double figures; Ed Eberle had
18, John Jekielek 14. Ken Bazinet, Bob Stettenbcnz and John
Fieri 12 and Alan Creech 10 for
the evening. The frosh now stand
at 84 for the season.

Bevilacqua
Goldstein

Thomas
Bernard
Mann
TOTALS

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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Gates Down, Meters Gone

Parking meters have been dismantled and gates removed from
the eoin controlled student lots.
Collection of parking fees on campus has been suspended in light
of a recently announced state
policy prohibiting the Faculty-Student Association from deriving
revenue from parking.

sion of Audit and Accounts last
October 25, suggested “All profits
earned from the parking lots
should be deposited in the Income
Fund.”

According to Dr. Claude
E. Puf
fer, Vice-president for Business
Affairs and member of the FSA
Board of Directors, representatives of the university were informed January 5, that the state
university system would not support the redirection of parking
income into student activities.
Rather than lowering student fees
the money would have to be paid
into the state treasury. Collection
of parking fees was immediately

New York State has demanded
payment of approximately $100,
000 from the FSA. This sum represents the net income of the
university parking facilities since
the merger with the state system
on September 1, 1962.
The relation of the FSA to the
state in the operation of income
producing facilities was unclear
at the time of merger. An audit
•report issued by the State Divi-

parking after the suspension. Any

errors that thus occured

may be
corrected by appeal to the Student Parking Court. Appeal forms
may be obtained from the Bursar’s Office.
Key controlled parking gates
will be retained on the faculty
lots. The Student Parking Committee will decide on the controls to be utilized on the rest of
the campus. One suggestion
was
the modification of the parking
gates to accept ID cards and the
replacement of meters to control
traffic in key areas e g. the front
of Lockwood Library.

■

ning Conference executive and
aid for two years, Co-ordinator
of the World University Service,
and a history tutor at St. Augustine’s. In addition, she was active in the N.S.A., the State Uni-

U.C.L.A.

versity Congress on International
Education and International Pro-

Miss Brown finalized her plans
after lengthy discussions with
Student Association President
Clinton Deveaux and other members of the Senate. Said Mr.
Deveaux
of her retirement:
“Miss Brown’s decision is a result of her commitment to international co-operation and The
World Peace Organization.”

gramming, and
attended the
N.S.A. Congress in August, 1965.

At the senate meeting Tuesday
night, Mr. Kim Darrow, senator
from University College, was
acting Vice-President until the
Student Association elections in
March. Prior to this meeting,
Clinton Deveaux and Secretary
Ellen examining extensive files
prepared for her successor.
The World University Service
Drive, and the Student International Program Conference,
formerly headed by Miss Brown,
are now being advised by Carl
Levine, President of the New
York State Regional N.S.A.

She wlil spend two years in
Nigeria instructing teacher education.
Miss Brown, a Junior, was a
History major ernolled in the
College of Arts and Sciences.
Among many of her activities at
UB were the Freshman Woman’s
Honor Society, Summer Plan-

Volume 16

Buffalo, Now York, Friday,

The sub-board structure proposed by the Faculty-Student Association Re-organization Committee was unanamously adopted at
the FSA meeting on January 20. The plan, presented by Committee
Chairman Clinton Deveaux, would establish three advisory panels.
Financial matters occupied the remainder of the meeting.
Under the new system (diagramed below) the Board of Directors,
which bears final responsibility for all decision, will be advised by
three sub-boards. Each of the boards will have a specific area of
concern. Membership is weighted to give students greater control in
areas relating to student activities and less control in matters relating to operating details.
The state appropriation of the net income from the parking
(Cont’d on Pg. 10)

FACULTY-STUDENT ASSOCIATION WITH NEW
SUB-BOARD SYSTEM
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Chairman
Dr. Clifford A. Furnas
Vice President
Dr. Claude E. Puffer
Secretary-Treasurer
Charles
Bolhin
Mr.
Assistant Vice President
Mr, Paul Bacon
Graduate Students
Dr. Norman Lazarus
Mr. Stanley D. Travis Faculty
Dean of Students
Dr, Richard A. Siggelkow
Mr, Clinton A. Deveaux
Student Liaison Officer
-

—

—

-

-*

-

-

—

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• FEES
1

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Student Activities
Student Senate
Union Board
Student Club*
Graduate Students

,

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organization

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Solid line

..

Student

Miss Dorothy M, Haas

I

Dr. A.C. Bartlett
Dr. Robert Rossberg
Dr. Claude E. Puffer
Dr. R. A. Siggelkow
Foa.l
Mr. Charles Balkin
ul
Ba
P?
n
w.bst.r
H. Webster
Miss Emily H°

•

|

—

■

Activities-

Graduate Student—
J. Schurensteot

Wade J. Newhouse Jr.
Miss Col.tto A. Klug
Dr. Claude E. Ruder
Dr. R. A. Siggelkow
Mr. Charles Balkin

-

Welsh

Coordinator of

•

Sub-Board #1)

Dr. Howard Tiecklmann, Chairman

2 Graduate Students
Dr. Norman Latarus
Ronald Stein

FacultyDr. Claude

SUB-BOARD #3
Pres. &amp; Vice-President
of Student Association
C. Deveaux
K. Darrow

SUB-BOARD #2
4 Officers of the
Student Association
(see

Develop

-

ment of Land and
Norton Hall
Norton Hall Operating

Budget

Recreational
ment

&amp;

Mokuch

Develop-

Budget

Dotted line

—

r
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!

• •
•

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--

:

:;

INCOME DIVISIONS

•

!

|

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I

Food Services

By RICK SCHWAB

The election of three officials,
the adoption of two resolutions,
and the passing of the reapportionment amendment comprised
the major portion of the agenda
of the Student Senate meeting
Tuesday, January 25.
Kim Darrow was unanimously
elected Vice-president of the Student Association at Tuesday's

|

[

function

|

1

26, 1966

No. 19

For Text of the Feinberg
Resolution and full accounts
of the debates on reapportionment and the St. John's Resolution, see page 10 of this

a result of the state's requirement
that funds accrued from parking
he deposited in their treasury.
Revenue was formerly allocated
to the University and the Capen
Fund.

which replaced the United Fund
as recipient of Campus Barrel
funds. Deveaux called WUS a
“fine and worthwhile organization.” Proceeds of the Campus
Barrel Drive, scheduled for February, will go to the Asia Fund
of WUS.
A committee headed by J. Z,
Freidman was asked to make recommendations for a new, more
realistic parking policy. President
Deveaux urged a new policy as

The budgets of the Cap and
Gown Society, the Theatre Guild,
the Ski Club, and the Anthropology Club were approved.
The Senate voted to allow the
staff of the Summtr Spectrum to
retain the profits derived from
the summer operation. In other
action, the Student Discount Serv
ice was transferred from the
jurisdiction of the Presidential
Committee to that of the National Student Association.

issue.

Food Service Shows DeficitDorm Cafeterias See Change
By NANCY

Student Senate meeting. Darrow
will replace Rosemary Brown who
resigned from her position early
this year (see story on this page).
In other elections Ellen Cardonc
was chosen as the Student Senate’s representative to the Student Association Forum and Carl
Levine was elected to the Executive Committee of the Student
Senate, replacing Senator Gunsberg, who resigned.
The Senate passed two resolutions, one concerning the crisis
at St. John’s University and the
other concerning the Feinbcrg
Law. Kim Darrow, who presented
the Feinberg resolution, felt that
since the Senate had previously
taken a stand on the issue, it
should reaffirm its position in
light of the recent Federal Court
decision unholding the Feinbcrg
Law. Darrow felt that the court
had acted on “precedent rather
than principle” and that "the decision was detrimental to the academic community.”
Reapportionment
The Senate passed a reapportionment amendment after a long
debate and defeat on the initial
roll call. The amendment will
provide for a new organ of the
executive branch of the Student
Senate to co-ordinate the activities of various interest groups
and reapportionment on a “one
man one vote” basis.
In other business, Clinton Deveaux reviewed the Student Senate’s previous action concerning
the World University Service

TODER

A report on Food Service Operations for the period September
1, 1965 to December 31, 1965,
indicated a total deficit of $33,774.74. The report was issued to
members of the Faculty Student
Association Sub-Board III by Mr.
Charles Balkin, assistant Vice-

KIM DARROW
New Vice-President

-

Vending

January

K. Darrow Fills Vacancy;
Reapportionment Passes

Directors OK Sub-Board System;
Explain Decisions Made On Parking

C. Deveaux

Ivmn

Some cars may have been inadvertantly ticketed for overtime

Student Association Vice President Rosemary Brown has resigned from office to join the
Peace Crops. She will leave for
Nigeria in February after an
extensive training period at

K. Darrow
E. Cardone
S, Seide

Photo by

suspended.

Rosemary Brown Resigns As VP;
Works In Nigeria For Peace Corps

SUB-BOARD #1
4 Officers of the
Student Association

6*t*« diupposr from UB porkinp lots

President of FSA affairs.

.

The report was prepared by
request of Mr. Clinton Devcaux,
president of the Student Association Mr. Dcveaux desired the report to determine the standing of
his proposed 10% discount in
Norton cafeterias.
Each of the various areas of
the food service, the catering
service, the Faculty Club, Norton
Union, the Tiffin Room, and
Goodyear and Tower dining halls,
operated at a loss. The outstanding figure occurred at Tower
dining hall where the deficit
amounted to $25,348.85.
To mitigate the food service
deficits in the future, several
changes in policy have been in-

corporated

into

the

dormitory

cafeterias, Mr. Rodler, recently
appointed as head of food service, discussed the purpose of the
altered policy. He "wishes to
maintain the same level of food

service without raising the cost
to the student." This necessitated
several revisions in policy which
according to Mr Rodler occurred
under his supervision and were
prepared by efficiency experts in
the food service. Dr. Puffer and
Mr. Deveaux however, have asserted that efficiency experts outside of the school, such as a
woman from Syracuse University,
were called in to help prepare
efficiency reports regarding the
cafeterias in the dormitory.

Asked to comment in the rela-

tive success of the several modifications in management. Mr.
Rodler said “that the method of

eliminating wastage has been partially achieved, but that it is still
too early to make any definite

conclusions." He added that the
success of this plan depends on
the attitudes of the students.
The revised food policy places
restrictions as to number on several items. Butter has been reduced to two pads per student.
During breakfast, students taking
two glasses of juice are not permitted a fruit cup. Limitations
have also been placed on the salads and desserts and no one is
allowed to return to the food line
for seconds.
Mr. Rodler also stated that
there have been and will be
changes affecting labor. Several
workers including some students
have been fired. The elimination
of cafeteria workers does and
will depend on the necessity of
the job and qualifications of the
individual without regard to their
status as student or local em-

ployee.
Students in the dormitory have
organized to protest the present
food policy. Gary Roberts, president of the Inter-Resident Council stated that approximately five
hundred students had signed petitions in Goodyear and that complaints have been registered in
regard to Tower cafeteria. He said
that he would "compile the in-

formation and lake action.”
On February 9, a food panel
will be held to give students the
opportunity to make constructive
criticisms The panel will be held
in cooperation with the Food
Committee of the Inter-Resident
Council and the Food Service

�PAGE TWO

Friday, January 28, 1966

SPECTRUM

Federal Court Decision Reaffirms
Constitutionality of Feinberg Law
By ALICE EDELMAN
A Federal Court decision of
January 5. 1966 reaffirmed the
constitutionality of the Feinberg
Law, which states that it is illegal
for a subversive to teach in the
public school system.
K also upheld the Feinberg
Certificate, adopted by the State
University of New York Board of
Trustees to implement the Law
in the State Universiay system,
denying that the oath constituted

an ex post fact law because the
teachers were advised of the oath
when they were hired.
The Federal Court decision
holds that while the teaching of
Communist philosophy may not
be proscribed under the Constitution, it would be “dangerously
anomalous to proscribe advocacy
of violent overthrow of the government in all parts of the U.S.
except the breeding grounds of
future leaders of the nation.”
The Law and the Certificate
had been contested in January,
1964, by Newton Carver, George
Hodhfield, Henry Keyishian,
Ralph Maud, and George Starbuck, five member of the UB
faculty who had refused to sign
the Certificate.
However, on July 1, 1965, six
•

Bookstore Discount Now In Effect

In summary, the Feinberg Law provides “that any person who
is a member of an organization advocating the unlawful overthrow
of the government of the United States shall not be eligible for
employment in the public schools of the state. The Board of
Regents, after full notice and hearing is to make a list of such
subversive groups, according to the law. The law retains the right
to a full hearing to anyone fired or denied employment with representation by counsel and the right to judicial review.”
months before the Federal Court
decision of January, 1966, the
Certificate was abolished by the
Board of Trustees, and a new system for the implementation of the
Law in the State University sys-

tem was adopted.
The system now in effect at UB
provides that a candidate for a
post within a particular school be
shown a copy of the Feinberg
Law by an appointing official of
that school. It is the responsibility

At the present timd the Uni-

versity is developing a standard
procedure for a uniform implementation of the Feinberg Law.
The law school applies minimum
implementation, requiring that
each applicant for a teaching
position read the law and understand its full meaning. Other
schools use more stringent means.
If the procedure adopted by the
Law School is accepted by the

seek such employment in accordance with the ordinance. The appointing official is authorized to
conduct any inquiry deemed necessary to further resolve the
candidate’s eligibility under the
Feinberg Law. Refusal of a candidate to answer any question
relevant to this inquiry may be
considered grounds to refuse the

other division, it will become
school policy.
The American Association of
University Professors, has stated
that “the freedom to learn depends upon appropriate opportunities and conditions in the classroom, on the campus, and in the
larger community. The responsibility to secure and to respect
general conditions condusive to
the freedom to learn is Shared by
all members of the academic

appointment.

community.”

of the official to determine whether or not the individual can

Students enjoy

10% discount

The proposed 10 per cent reduction in prices on required
textbooks in the bookstore, resulting from a resolution passed
in the Senate October 26, 1965,
has gone into effect.
The Senate resolution calling
for a 10 per cent discount in
University Bookstore prices was
passed the same day State Comptroller Arthur Levitt issued a
statement on the Faculty-Student
Association profits. The auditors
stated that the FSA had “made
profits and accummulated surpluses far beyond that contemplated at the time of . . . (its)
formation.”

on texts
Photo by Ivan

Makuch

Student Association President
Clinton Deveaux remarked while
discussing the reduction: “While
the discount on required textbooks is not all that we have
hoped for in terms of a general
bookstore reduction, it is nevertheless a beginning. The implementation of the discount indicates the increasing willingness
of the University Administration
to hear student demands. At the
end of this semester the FSA
sub-board in will re-evaluate the
bookstore reaching a decision as
to the discount policy for next
year. All earning from the bookstore will be used to defray student fees.”

Ten Year Academic Plan
Released by State Univ.
The Ten-Year Academic Plan,
formed in accordance with State
University President Gould’s request, was submitted to Albany
on November 1.
Each full-time and part-time
faculty member received a copy
of the 10-year Academic Plan and
was requested to prepare suggestions, criticisms, or comments for
submission by January 15. From
these comments, the plan will be
given clarity and perhaps have
new program ideas added to it.
While the first draft of the
plan was submitted to the State
University, the content of the
document, according to Dr. Westley Roland is not static. It is a
document which will be added
to the revised in conjunction
with changes in UB expansion
plans and educational philosophy.
Included in the plan are projections about the new campus.
In the near future SUNY at Buffalo will be operating a two locations; the (present campus

(South Campus), housing Health
Sciences; and the new campus
(North Campus) housing all other

divisions.
There will be dorm accommodations for 2400 students. The
Buffalo Law School, the only law
School in the State University
System, will be moved from downtown Buffalo to the new campus.
The College of Arts and Sciences pledges itself to experiment with dormitory instruction
using
television, independent

study, off-campus work-study programs, and study programs in

foreign lands.
Also proposed for the new campus is a new four-year undergraduate degree in Social Welfare.
It is probable that a B.F.A. program will be developed in the
Department of Theater Arts. A
possible new Baccalaureate de-

gree program in Millard Fillmore

College is now under study.

New additions from the different divisions will be attached to

the program,

ven if you don’tknow Port from Starboard, you’ll
love the new C.P.O. shirt. Authentic navy look with
anchor buttons and flap breast pockets. Expertly tailored in a fine blend of melton fabrics.
Available in Navy Blue and burgundy in
men’s and women’s sizes—S, M, and L.

Men’s $9.95

Women’s $8.95

Add t.50 for handling and postage.
Specify sex, color, and size.

BELLE BOTTOMS SHOP P.0. BOX 115 CEDARHURST, N. Y.
•

•

�Friday, January 28, 1966

q

•

;

-s

n

-•

*

\ •!**

-*&gt;

•

*»

■

-

SPECTRUM

PACE THREE

New High for Book Exchange SFAF Sees CourtDecision
On Feinberg as Offensive

After a week of operation, the
Student Book Exchange has handled nearly 4,000 books for students seeking “equitable means to
dispose of and acquire required
texts.” The exchange, in its second semester of operation, will
function until February 2. Room
231, Norton.

The Student Faculty Administration Forum declared the
Federal Court decision on the
Feinberg Law "offensive to all
involved." at an SFA meeting on
January 21. The Forum also decided to set up a subcommittee
in conjunction with the FacultyStudenf committee for Student
Affairs to examine the "double
academic standard" for athletes
and non-athletes in various departments.
It was the consensus of the
Forum that the Federal Court
decision of January 5, reaffirming the constitutionality of the
Feinberg Act, was a threat to
academic freedom for all SUNY
■

All books for 100 and 200 level

courses, in addition to hard-bound
texts for upper division courses,
will be accepted until Saturday,
January 29. Following the closing of the exchange, students

will be allowed to either reclaim
unsold books or pick-up the money for those that have been purchased until February 4. Unclaimed books will be contributed
to the Civil Rights Committee
for distribution in underpriv-

campuses.

ileged areas.

Unlike last semester, students
whose books have been sold will
be paid by check. Peter Cohen,
Book Exchange Chairman feels
that the new system will help
avoid losses and speed-up the
clerical work. To meet the cost
of the checking system, the exchange is charging a five-cent
fee per book.

Mr. Cohen feels that the inability of the exchange to dispose
of many of its books is caused by
the overabundance of texts apfirst semester
propriate for
courses and the late date at
which many books are brought
in for sale.
The book exchange, which received 1003 books and sold more
than five-hundred during its first
semester of operation, is modeled
after a similar endeavor at the
University of Pittsburgh and “was
initiated as a protest against the
at the Uni. . high prices
versity Bookstore.”
.

...

HHHHT

.

Student Book Exchange active during first week of classes

The Student Book Exchange is
staffed entirely by student volunteers and is thus able to sell
books at prices set by their owners. Prices generally fall between the amount offered for
used texts by the University Bookstore and the amount charged
by the Bookstore for the same
texts.

President of the Student Asso
ciation Clinton Deveaux stated,

Today is the fourth day of Dr.
Edward Teller’s ten-day term as a
Distinguished Visiting Professor
in Nuclear Science here. Thus far
he has delivered two lectures and
will give four more before he departs on February 3.

«

Reading Speed
Course

f I*-

f

“I am very glad that the Book
Exchange has , . . proved to be
a great success. I am especially
pleased with the success because
its formation was a hotly debated
campaign issue last year.”
The Student Book Exchange is
a sub-committee of the Student
Senate Welfare Committee and
was part of the Campus Alliance
Party Platform in the 1965 Student Association elections.

University,

Dr, Furnas and SUNY President
Gould are required to certify each
year that to the best of their
knowledge no faculty under their
jurisdictions are subversive, and
that each faculty member understands the meaning of the act.

The Forum decision to examine
the alleged double standard for
athletes was part of a discussion dealing with the recent statement by SUNY President Gould
that football would be de-emphasized and made uniform in the
slate schools.

Objection to Dr. Gould's plan
lies with alumni who felt that a
de-emphasis of football would
hurt the University's national image, and the students who generally support the team. At present.
UB is reportedly the only unit of
the State University system to
sponsor grants-in-aid. and to devote its state athletic fee allocation to football. The University
permits a ,76 minimum average
for athletes, as compared to a
1.0 minimum required for all
other students. It was noted that
a 1,0 average is requisite for graduation, and that this is needed by
all students, regardless of athletic participation

Builds speed, comprehension, and concentration power. Classes now
forming for six sessions,
meeting once weekly,
for basic skills training.

TR 3-2450

As such he is attached to no specific campus in the system, but is
rather free to travel among them.

A final lecture in Room 114
llochstctter Hall will conclude
Dr. Teller’s visit He will speak
on "Quasars and Origin of the
Universe” at 4:00 p m

will include advising various state
commissions on nuclear power
possibilities, pollution of air and
water, and reactor design as well
as the visiting professorship.

"The Large World of Albert
Einstein" was Dr. Edward Teller’s
theme in the Convocation Committee sponsored lecture In it Dr.

Three of his six lectures will
be directed to lay audiences. The
first of these was held last Wednesday night in the Conference
Theater under the sponsorship of
the Convocations Committee. At

Teller sought to explain the basic concepts of Einstein's Theory
of Relativity which he described
as being very simple, but suf-

11 a m. next Tuesday morning
Bisonhcad, the senior men's honorary society, will host a lecture
on “The Small World of Niels
Bohr” in the Norton Conference
Theater. The New Science Auditorium at State University College on Elmwood Avenue will be
the site of the “Role of the Atom
in Space Exploration" lecture at
3:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Eebru
The other half of Dr. Teller’s
lectures are of a more technical
nature, but are also open to the
public. They include a presentation on “The Theory of Nuclear

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Dr. Hunt of the Psychology Department said that the first concern of the University regarding
the law is the manner of its implementation. Presently, the act
is being minimally applied in the
law school, but as yet there is
no general policy for the entire

Legal precedents are against
repeal of the Keinberg Act, and
a decision favoring the law's opponent's does not seem imminent However, the committee felt
that there would be a higher possibility of judicial as opposed to
legislative success.

Dr. E. Teller, Visiting Professor
Serves As Lecturer, Consultant
Dr. Teller holds the post of
Professor of Physics at Large
with the University of California.

r
•i-

■

ficiently foreign to most people's
way of thinking that it is con

sidered difficult

DR. EDWARD TELLER

Collapse” delivered on the first
day of his visit, last Tuesday, to
a physics colloquim.
Sigma Xi, an honorary science
society, will sponsor a discussion
on applied research at H:30 p.m

Distance and time are not the
invarients we consider them in
common experience. They can
change, although they do so in a
predictable manner related to the
velocity of the observer and the
speed of light Dr Teller suggested that ati Astronaut traveling at
almost the speed of light (presently impossible) would age about
20 years on a trip to a distant
galaxy while the earth would age
;ome 4 million years.

Course Evaluation Program to Begin
BE AN EARLY SHOPPER

10% STUDENT

DISCOUNTS
HunJreJs^^Itetm!

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Slide Rules
Drafting Sets
Drafting Supplies. Etc.
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MICROSCOPES

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*

*

ERIE BLUEPRINT
and SUPPLY 00.

The Course Evaluation , Program, conducted by the Academic Affairs Committee in conjunction with the NSA, will
begin this week, Tom Carroll,
head of the program announced.
Professors and instructors of
100 to 400 level courses in the
departments of history and
mathematics will distribute qucs
with
the
dealing
tionnaires
courses being rated. Questions
pertaining to the corresponding
courses of the preceding semester will be divided into short
answers and essays. Courses
other than history and mathe
matics will be evaluated at a
later date.
Students will evaluate the instructor’s methods, the content
of the course, the textbooks, and

labs or recitations. The instruc
tors will also have an opporlu
nity

to comment.

Results Summarized

Student volunteers who have
never taken the course will sum
marize the results in essay form.
The information which will be
given to the department con
cerned, will be available to students in booklet form before
pre-registration for next semester. "In this way students will
have more information concerning the subjects they wish to
take," commented Mr, Carroll
“This is the first time that
such an undertaking has been
attempted at this university,"
Mr. Carroll stated. “Its success
depends on the co operation from
the faculty and the student body.

It

provides a good opportunity

for students discontented with
their courses to take effective

action."
Mr. Carroll urges students interested in evaluating results to
leave their names at the Senate
office.

The "History ami Logie
of Seienee Club” will hold
its first meeting, Monday
February 1, at 8 p.m. in
Norton Union. Paul Piecone will read a paper on
“The Scientific Revolution." New rnemliers
welcome.

are

�(Comment

.

.

YAF Soundboard

.

EDUCATION OR ATHLETICS?
President Furnas unleashed a storm of criticism recently when he announced that the athletic program here
was being examined prior to being “brought into line”
with the athletic programs at the other units of the
State University. Most of this criticism--came from the
U.B. alumni; this is not surprising, since for years the
alumni has expressed much more interest in athletics
I
than education.
The Spectrum fully supports President Furnas, although he has little choice in the matter, and furthermore
supports the administrators of the State University in this
effort to shift the emphasis of the university from athletics to education. The tail has been wagging the dog
for too long, and the student body has had little return
for the thousands they pour into the athletics machine
every semester in the. form of hidden taxes in their activities fees.
The funds expended in maintaining a “professional”
football team are presently three times greater than the
total funds expended on all other extra-curricular activities combined. If the alumni don’t like it, they can pay
the fantastic amounts required to keep our athletic program at the level it now is the students are a little tired
of shelling out, without choice, to support teams they
can’t even see because they are segregated in rotten seats
at games. It is also interesting to note that, by official
count, more students have attended the Norton Union
Film series than attended the football games all last year.
ROSEMARY BROWN
Rosemary Brown, Vice President Emeritus of the
Student Senate, has accepted a position in the Peace
Corps and will be leaving the country shortly to devote
two years or more to reify her concern for her fellow
men. She has served the students at this campus in many
capacities since she came as a freshman and many students will be sorry to see her go. The Spectrum wishes
to extend its sincerest thanks for her work, and to wish
her a productive and meaningful experience in the Peace
Corps. Thanks to Rosemary Brown for a job well done!
STUDENT SENATE
The Student Senate had what was possibly its most
productive session last Tuesday night, and despite the
criticisms this paper has had of that body in the past,
it deserves some measure of congratulations for the performance of last Tuesday. It is possible to hope that
the Senate will improve upon the meeting of Tuesday
night in the semester to come, and that they may begin
to deal with the pressing matters of university reform,
student rights, and student autonomy which they have
so long neglected.
NEW SPEAK
The administration has just concluded it’s much-publicized “peace offensive” and it now appears to have
served only as a justification for increased military activity in S.E. Asia. The “peace offensive” obviously has
had a military effect, and some have even called it a
military tactic, but what is perhaps just as upsetting is
the docile way in which the American public accepted
the term, “peace offensive” itself. It smacks of “NewSpeak” the most horrifying erosion of the consciousness.
The phrase has built into it all the elements of George
Orwell’s diabolical, totalitarian language
“War Is
Peace,” in a “peace offensive,” and perhaps it is also true
that “Ignorance Is Strength” in the new lexicon of war
and institutionalized immorality. Perhaps we will be
lucky if the society we are approaching in the twenty-first
century resembles Huxley’s “Brave New World;” perhaps
we have arrived in the year “1984” before the calendar.
“Hate Week’’ appears to be scheduled for some time
next month . . .
-

•

-

-

4*-

THE
The official student

SPECTRUM

newspaper of the Stale

University of New York at Buffalo.
University Campus, Buffalo, N Y. 14214. Published
September to the last week in May, except for
Christmas, and spring vacations.

Publication Office at Norton Hall,
weekly from the first week of
exam periods,

Thanksgiving,

Editor-in-chief
Managing

Business
News

Editor

JEREMY TAYLOR
DAVID EDELMAN

Editor
Manager

RAYMOND VOLPE

SUSAN GREENE
RONNIE

feature Editor

BROMBERG

JOHN STINY

feature Editor
Acting Sports Editor
Layeot Editor
Copy Editor
Asst,

Photography

Advertising Manager

JOANNE LEEGANT

Circulation

STEVE SCHUELEIN

Faculty

SHARON

LAUREN

HONIG
JACOBS

Editor

Editor

Continuity

Manager

Advisor

Financial

Advisor

Leprechaun

EDITORIAL POLICY IS DETERMINED BY

THE

EDWARD JOSCELYN

MARCIA ORSZULAK
RONALD HOLTZ

DIANE
IRENE

LEWIS

WILLET

DALLAS GARBER
RUSSELL

GOLDBERG

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING

Second Class,
Subscription
15,000.

PRC 88

Friday, January 28, 1966

SPECTRUM

PACE FOUR

Postage Paid at Buffalo, N.Y.
$3.00 per year, circulation

Represented for national advertising by
National Advertising Service Inc., 420
Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.

Vietnam

By THERMOPYLAE

support

the

following

Ideas;-

Announcing a new organization!
It has become increasingly evident over past weeks that '(1) the

North Vietnamese government is
not interested in a peaceful settlement of the war and indeed
(2) they still believe that by pursuing their course of aggression
they will succeed in conquering
South Vietnam.
President Johnson called off
our bombing of North Vietnam
and launched a peace offensive,
urging all nations to help us end
the war. In this effort our Ambassadors were sent the world
over to search for peace. Unfortunately, President Johnson’s efforts have received not even a
nod from the Communists. Plainly they need further convincing.
The time is now for a reorganization and consolidation of the
forces of support for a strong
United States Vietnamese policy.
To that end a new organization is
being formed which will present
a united front in calling for a
victorious policy in Vietnam. Although this group is not affiliated with YAF, we back them
solidly in what they are doing.
At this crucial decision making
time for our country it deserves
the consideration and support of
every student. The name of this
organization is the Committee For
Victory in

Vietnam.

Its statement of principles is
as follows: We, the members of
the Committee For Victory In

We believe that the alliance of
Communist powers represents a
formidable threat to the Free
World, as did the Nazi Threat 25
years ago.

Having observed the complete
lack of democracy, brutal totalitarianism, and persecution of opposition, which has taken place
in Communist nations, we believe
that the forces of Communism
should be vigorously opposed.
We believe that the Vietcong,
supported by the North Vietnamese, are a part of the Communist alliance seeking to expand
and to overthrow non-communist
governments.

Oppose Communist Victory
We are opposed to a Commu-

nist victory for several reasons:
On the basis of the ruthless terror that has been exhibited by
the Communists against their
own people in Vietnam, we have
every reason to believe that a
Vietcong victory would bring
about a totalitarian dictatorship
which would liquidate its enemies
and deprive the Vietnamese people of all fundamental freedoms.
We furthermore believe that
an American military defeat in
Vietnam would be a tremendous
propoganda victory for world
Communism, that might result in
the fall of many other nations,
particularly in Asia, to communism.

The United States has pledged

its word bo(h to the Vietnamese
and to the entire world to defend
the South Vietnamese people
against the Communist threat. We
believe that it would be both
morally indefensible and politically disastrous for us to break
our promise and to withdraw
from Vietnam, without having
guaranteed its independence and
freedom. Following the conclusion of the war, we favot free
elections for the Vietnamese people.
Following victory

-i,

we believe

that the U.S. should do its utmost
to improve the living standards

of the Vietnamese people, and
combat their other enemies of
poverty, hunger, disease, illiteracy and social inequality.
We have seen America’s peace
peace gestures contemptuously
rebuffed by the North Vietnamese, and we believe that until such
time as the Communists are willing to agree to a peace without
American surrender, it is our
duty to give our firm support
to our soldiers in Vietnam in their
gallant fight to preserve freedom.
In summation
we support
the present U.S. objective in Vietnam which is to defeat the communist threat to South Vietnam
and to guarantee independence
and freedom to its people. This
is our conception of victory.
We eagerly urge all those who
believe as we do to join the
Committee For Victory In Viet—

nam.

Cacotopia and
By STEPHEN CRAFTS
One is both contemptuous and
terrified by a mob like the one
which descended upon the SDS
vigil on two successive nights.
One was abused in numerous
ways, the most ironic being the
charge of cowardice from a mob
who came under the cover of
darkness in sufficiently large
numbers to be brave against people they knew were devoted to
non-violence and among whom
were many women. The mob had
everything going for it but the
traditional white sheets.
The most pathetic thing about
them was their supreme ignorance. None of them probably
had any idea of the historical
context of the United States in
Viet Nam. None of them tried
to argue the moral issues involved, And most of them had no
idea that the vigil and fast had
been called to mourn the deaths

of those killed in the Viet Nam

War, Americans' and Vietnamese.

How could they be opposed to
that? What was it then that made
the mob so vicious? Alone most
of them are probably decent people. The kind who after the genocide of the Vietnamese will say,
like the Germans after WWII,
“we didn’t know.” And the most
pathetic part of it is that they
probably do not and will not.
How absurd it was for them to
sing Christmas carols when it was
a mob that crucified Christ. How
absurd it was for one of them
to yell, “I bet they don’t even
believe in God
let’s kill them.”
How absurd it was to hear them
sing “My country tis of thee,
Sweet land of liberty.” How could
they do it?
Are they so insincere that an
exhibition of moral commitment
could so disturb them? Was their
shell of apathy pierced to the
—

conscience? Did Mr. Formal suddenly dwindle in importance?
Does the responsibility for one’s
actions rest so heavily on them
that they must hate those who
have assumed a freedom to choose
alternatives to the depravity of
the world? Are they really that
convinced in the inherent righteousness of the United States and
its government that they must
beat up those who know differently?

In the end, I cannot explain
their actions. If one of them
feels he can, I hope he will write
a letter to the Spectrum. In the
meantime, it is hard to either
love or hate them. One only
realizes once again how close we
are to savagery. Everything has
changed about us; nothing has
changed within. That was partly what the vigil was about, if
only the mob had listened.

THE RIGHT
The endless stream of criticism,

disagreement, and opposi tion
that comprised this column last
semester has perhaps persuaded
some of you that I don’t agree
with anything. Well, I do, and to
prove it I decided to say something about the Student Book
Exchange.
The students of this university
showed remarkable poise and independence in establishing this
exchange. The student body, and
especially the Welfare Committee
of the Student Senate, decided
that book store prices were higher than they wished to pay, (some
I
called those prices unfair
—

would shrink from such terminology), and did it the right way,
without appealing to force or
threat of force.

I wish governments would take

note of this system and make
use of the principles involved. Instead of trust-busting or pricefixing, the government should
deal with high prices by helping
the people set up a reasonable
alternative or in special circum-

stances set up that alternative itself, as in the case of the aluminum and steel price changes

last year.
Labor, instead of appealing for
legislation guaranteeing minimum wages, maximum hours, pension, etc., should obtain its demands by setting up a reasonable

alternative to

management’s

orders. To do this labdr must
demonstrate its worth, by stirke,
boycott, or any similar method
of coercion without force.
Coercion without force

—

that's

a phrase upon which a lot of
political and economic philosophy
twins. A lot of people can’t understand that phrase
to them coercion and force are synonymous.
These people are unfortunate
products of our times. A lot of
people don’t want to understand
they’d like to obliterate the
it
difference they see. They’d like
to say there’s no important difstriking for
ference between
higher wages and lobbying for
wage legislation. What I don’t
—

—

see is the difference between the

legislation and putting a gun in
the boss’s back and telling him
to raise wages or go out of business. To disobey the law is the
same as to disobey the gun—you
get forcefully thrown into jail
or forcefully do what the gunman says you should do.

The point is this
when two
individuals or parties enter into
a mutually voluntary agreement
under specified terms, neither
has the right to force the other
to accept different terms, where,
by force I mean, as always,
physical compulsion or threat of
physical compulsion. They do
have a right to prove their worth
by any other means, short of
breaking the agreement and
thereby to increase their status.
The Transport Workers’ Union of
New York City demonstrated an
excellent example of the application of these principles during
the recent strike. They showed
their boss, the city, what they
are worth and the city recognized that worth paid up. Mayor
(Cont’d on Pg. 6)
—

�r
v
Friday, January 28, 1966
.

Murder

j
"

•

•

;

of Gonzago
■

The Founding Fathers decided
that only Congress should have
the power over war and peace
under one of those quaint Eighteenth Century notions that a
strong executive is a threat to the
people’s liberties. As Jaimes Madison warned, “A standing military
force with an overgrown executive will not long be safe companions to liberty. The means of
defense against foreign danger
have been always the instruments
of tyranny at home.”
One of the traditional defenses
of the Presidential declaration of
war is Article II Section 2 of the
Constitution which provides that
“The President shall be Commander in Chief of the Army and
Navy of the United States.” This
somehow implies that the President has the power to send troops
anywhere he pleases, possibly to
create a situation where Congress discovers that a state of
war exists and that it has no
choice but to issue a formal declaration.
Congress, however, cannot delegate its power to' declare war by

.

By JOHN MEDWID

executive decision.
Much is made of the Congressional resolutions of August 6-7, 1964
(The Tonkin Bay Resolution)
and
the Joint Resolution of May 7,
1965 making a supplemental ap
propriation for the Vietnam operations. The Tonkin Bay Joint
Resolution is not and was not
meant to be a declaration of war.
It merely “approves and supports
the determination of the President as Commander in Chief to
take all necessary measures to
repel any armed attack against
the forces of the United States
and to prevent further aggression.” The Resolution, however,
provides that all Presidential
steps shall be “Consonant with
the Constitution of the United
States, and the Charter of the
United Nations and in accordance with its obligations under
the Southeast Asian Collective
Defense Treaty.” The Resolution
is not only not a declaration of
war against anyone, it does not
even mention North Vietnam.
The

President’s actions

All hail returnees! And such

new grist for the mills of education as may have joined our rickety craft are also welcome. But
let not those who have succumbed to visting professors
“What the hell do you mean
he never heard of a curve?”
the rising cost of living, or Gen“Sorry kid, you
eral Hershey
just don’t look like a student.”
be too soon forgotten. Who knows

—

—

—

—

—

who may be next,

I am sure most of you have
noted the tell-tale little signs
which indicate this is still the
red
same well run institution
and green lights still illuminating Hayes Hall, and the Christmas Tree and accompanying Santa
Claus in front of Engineering.
(If gone by the time this is published I feel no remorse—some—

body squealed!)
Anybody know a nice cheap
football coach? Maybe we could
convince Joel Collier to drop by
a couple times a week next
autumn and at least look over

the situation.
In addition to everything else
the Faculty-Students Association
Gouge
(First Federal Trust
is tryCorporation of Buffalo)
ing to cut its way into a lower
tax bracket by removing parking
meters and cutting books by ten
percent. Now if we just could
finagle some honest prices in the
food service and vending machine departments we might be
getting somewhere. Forward the
.forces of 'truth, Justice and the
—

have

not been consistent with the Constitution or the U. N. Charter,
Another favorite argument of
Johnson’s is that three presidents
have committed this nation to the
defense of South Vietnam. (The
President in addition to declaring
war, now takes on the responsibility of making and ratifying
treaties). President Dwight Eisenhower recently said, (New York
Times, August 18, 1965) that his
Administration made no commitment to South Vietnam “in terms
of military support or programs
whatsoever.” President Kennedy’s commitment was limited
to aid in a war which he repeatedly emphasized was South Vietnam's.

TlOI 30A'?

;

PACE PIVC

Clearly, Johnson believes in a
government of executive superiority with a rubber stamp approval of Congress. There is only
one lesson to be learned from
the Johnson Administration: "The
time to guard against corruption
and tyranny is before they shall
have gotten hold of us.”

to

the (Editor

Due to a lack of space LITTERS TO THE EDITOR must be limited to 200 words.
Complete identification, including phone numbers, must accompany each letter
Names will be withheld upon request. All letters must be typewritten, double
spaced and submitted before 1:00 P.M. on the Tuesday before publication.

Letter to President Scores Selected Draft
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF
UNIVERSITY PROFESSORS
At a meeting January 10,
1966, the SUNY-B Chapter, American Association of University
Professors, endorsed the following open letter to President
Johnson regarding draft deferment of students. This statement
was originally prepared by members of the Law School faculty
of SUNY-B and was signed by
103 professors of law throughout
the country.

Dear Mr. President
As professors of ( law, we wish
to express our deep concern about
recent statements by officials of
the Selective Sf e r v i c e System
which warn those demonstrating
against administration policies
that student draft deferments
can be revoked for actions
"against the national interest."
Although Selective Service Director Lewis B. Hershey has more
recently qualified this by saying that those performing "unlaw-

ful" acts will be so-reclassified,
there are serious doubts as to
the legality of even these reclassifications.
Whatever our individual views
are on Viet Nam or other national issues, we are united
in strongly condemning the use
of the draft to stifle constitutionally protected expression of
views, the inevitable consequence
of such statements. We need not
emphasize the special responsibilities of public officials in dealing with young people in the
midst of their education. A society educating men for freedom
cannot compromise its ideals by
imposing penalties for the exercise of such freedom.
As to the so-called “unlawful"
actions, neither the Selective
Service Law nor its regulations
make violations of law uncon
nected with the draft, a ground
for denying student deferment.
A society which cherishes free
speech and the rule of law can-

not allow the lives of its citizens
to be vitally affected by individual and often capricious judgments of what is "against the rational interest;" nor can it permit officials to induct students
into military service for allegedly
“unlawful acts” when Congress
has not chosen to make such acts

relevant.

Mr. President, you have recent-

reaffirmed the traditional
American dedication to freedom
of speech and to the rule of law.
We call upon you, and on Genly

to state unequivocally that the draft will not and
legally cannot be used as a
weapon to stifle criticism of administration policies or to impose
conformity on issues which vital
ly affect the American people.
We call upon you also to take
such steps as are necessary to insure that no student is unfairly
prejudiced by his participation
in demonstrations or in any exercise of his constitutional rights.
eral Ilcrshcy,

Freshman Class Reps Voting Record Questioned
TO THE EDITOR
As constituents
of Senator
Charles Zeldner, representative
for the Freshman Class, we feel
we must express our consternation over the inconsistencies registered in his Senate voting record.
Last Tuesday’s Senate meeting
many pertinent issues,

resolved

including

a reapportionment

amendment which quadrupled the
present freshman class representation. Considering Mr. Zeldner’s

negative stand in this issue, we
wonder whether he has correctly
interpreted the will of his constituency. It seems paradoxical
to us that any under-represented
interest should wish to deny itself an opportunity to ameliorate

its situation.
It appears that his political aspirations have overshadowed his
obligation to his class on this issue and perhaps certain other
resolutions pertaining to academic
freedom. Resolutions passed by
the Senate deploring the situation
at St. John's University and the

reaffirmation

of the Feinberg
Loyalty Oath also received Mr.
Zeldncr's negative vote.
If Mr Zeldncr's stands result
from inadequate understanding of
his constituents’ sentiments, let
us hope he will endeavor in the
future to increase communication
so that he will be able to truly
reflect the ideas of those he rep-

resents.

Sincerely,
Jeffrey Lynford
Sharon Shulman

Robert Weiner
Daniel Rotholz

Swimming Team Asks for V oice

grump

&amp;

t

oCetterA

approving an

Somehow your correspondent
managed to get lost in the fine
points of Constitutional law. I
realize that the Constitution says,
“Congress shall have the power
to declare war” but this is obviously so simple and so straightforward that is cannot possibly
mean that Congress has the
power to declare war. There is
obviously some hidden clause,
(written between the lines no
doubt, and only visible to those
with sensitive antennae) which
gives the President the power to
declare war, with or without the
consent of Congress. A government as complex as ours with
remarkable systems of checks and
balances certainly can not be so
stingy that it would limit the
power to declare war to only one
of the Branches. After all, the
President like Congress, has a
mandate from the people to conduct the nation’s business, and
war is the nation’s business.

—

-i

SPECTRUM

Calusidius

The

-I

TO THE EDITOR

by STEESE

year.

American Way.
If I sound bitter or sarcastic or
cynical or any of them nasty horrid things kindly forgive me. I
just have a sneaking suspicion
that the same cats are still just
about as fat as they were before.
Now if there were to be a nice
detailed balance sheet telling
what came in and where it went

to, perhaps

my groundless suspi-

cions would be alleviated once
and for all.
Most enjoyable interim reading
was an article about Kenneth
Tynan, English critic and general
gadfly in the New York Times

Magazine, Sunday, January 9,
1966 Article included some discussion on the results of Mr.
Tynan using "a four letter AngloSaxon word for the act of love9
)
(what on earth could that be
on a live BBC-TV panel discus—

sion.

The description of the Scottish

Grandmother who

wrote simply,

“Dear Mr. Tynan. How wonderful
sweet word
it was to hear that
on Television.” I liked very much
to Mr.
but my heart goes out
Hughes is
Emerys Hughes. Mr.

keeps
the gentleman who sort of
(House of) a little
Commons
wary. At the height of a rather
of
heated debate in the Househead
Commons as to whether the
be forced to
of the BBC should
the use of
permitting
for
resign
suggested
word
and
that awful
fairer
that it would perhaps be
(Cont’d on Pg 6)
—

repeated, year after
The swimming team, at
the time of this writing, has had
three swimming meets; none of
them have found their way to
print in the Spectrum. We work
hard at our job. We swim two
hours a day, five days a week for
seven months. We only ask for
the Spectrum staff to put in a
fourth of that time.
Spectrum

Attention members of the Spectrum staff! Contrary to popular
belief, there are other varsity
sports on this campus besides
football and basketball. All one
has to do is go to Clark Gym and
look. If one looks long enough
and hard enough he can find a
swimming team, a fencing team,
cross-country team, a wrestling
team These teams work long and
hard and desire some campus rec
ognition.
I have been a member of the
varsity swimming team for four
years and have stood by and
watched sloppy reporting by the

Not only does the lack of inhurt the team’s morale,
but it prevents the school from
taking any real interest. How can
people take an interest if they
don’t even know when the meets
occur' 1

terest

Many times, I have listened to
cries of student apathy by the
Spectrum. “Let’s get out and
support the football team." "Let's
get out and support the basketball team.” These words ring
out. Your fight against apathy is
well taken. But don't you realize
that your form of apathy is far
worse for us?
It leaves our
stands empty. We hear no cheers.
We get no applause. You take
away from us all the much desired recognition.
We ask for a voice Nothing
more
Thank you,

Mark tirashow

Are President’s Parties Necessary ?
TO THE EDITOR
We students are all very fortunate to live in a democracy

If this country wasn’t dedicated
to the principle that all men are
created equal, university presidents would give parties in dormitories for the wealthy elite.
On December 19th, Goodyear
Hall attempted to hold its an
nual Holiday Open House. Hours
were set from 2 to 5j) At 3 o clock
a voice announced over the P A.
system that “all males must
leave”. President Furnas was having one of his perpetual festivities on the 10th floor and all
those nasty, naughty and possibly immoral boys had to be
cleared away before the vener
able guests arrived. The fact that

this conflicted with the plans of
five hundred girls who are paying in excess to live in the build
ing was somewhat overlooked.
Majority rule, you know
When

students were studying

for exams on January 12th, our
dear Chancellor held another
event for the upper strata. Girls
had the pleasure of losing pre
cious study time while waiting
for the only elevator available
to them
After all, you cant
expect the best' people to ride

the same elevator icky college
kids do. Coeds studying in their
study rooms were aroused every
ninety seconds by the sexy voice
of the campus cops yelling at

other students for parking in
front of the building. (Just because you've come to see a rcsi-

dent of the building is no reason
to expect your belters to have to
walk past your cheap little car.
is it’) Funny thing, but the cam
pus cop seemed to be looking
the other way when a chauffer
driven Cadillac went the wrong
way on a one-way street.
Can't C. C, Furnas and the
residents sign some sort of peace
treaty"’ The ideal pact would

prohibit him from having these
during
exams and
nuisances
would always call for peaceful

coexistence

concerning
ing social events

conflict

And just one more point
1 Who pays for these extrava
ganzas?

2 Are they really necessary
and or functional?
A. Student

�Friday, January 28, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

Education and Cultural Affairs

Professor Dobriansky Advises U.S.
To Attack Moscow's Imperialism
Georgetown

University ProE. Dobriansky de-

fessor Lev
scribed the contest between the
U.S. and the U.S.S.R. as “basically between Sino-Soviet Russian imperialism versus freedom”
in his lecture on “Communism.
Captive Nations and Vietnam,"
January 20, at 7 p.m. in the Norton Conference Theater.
Describing the “120 million
people in the U.S.S.R. (as) , . .
captive nations,” he emphasized
that the U.S. must attack Moscow’s “basic weakness,” her im-

perialism.

Dr. Dobriansky described Moscow’s political tactics in Vietschools which provide a "revolving fund of revolutionaries.” He
said that the U.S. should “meet
the enemy on the same political
warfare grounds.”
Dr. Dobriansky suggested that
the U.S. turn to the “unfinished
liberty on Soviet
war of
.

.

.

that it
is time for the country to “rededicate itself
to freedom
and . . national self-determination.”
Dr. Dobriansky, who is also
President of the Ukrainian Congress Committee of America, has
won a number of awards, including
the Hungarian Freedom
Fighter’s Award. He is the author
of 9 books and over 200 articles.
The lecture at UB was jointly
sponsored by the Ukrainian Stuents
Association and Young
Americans for Freedom.
...

Belgian Composer
Lectures Monday
Belgian composer Henri Posseur, Slee Professor of Music
Composition for the second se-

his public lectures on Monday,
January 31, at 8:30 p.m. in Baird
Hall. His lecture, entitled “Calculation and Imagination in Electronic Music,” will include a
presentation of taped music.
Monsieur
came to Buffalo from Cologne where he has
been teaching a course in new
music since 1963. The author of
many compositions for voice, piano and strings, as well as electronic music, he is also well
known for his articles on theory
and criticism which have appeared in American as well as European periodicals.
M. Posseur was educated

The

grump

from Pg, 5)
if every member of her Majesty’s
government who had used that
word in the last five years also
resign Support of the resignation motion is said to have fallen
off rapidly.
(Cont'd

I have two different suggestions concerning the truck problem on campus. These came from
xwo separate acquaintances of
mine. One feels that the trucks
might as well pull little cars
around behind them and that
they be required to clearly display the next building they are
going to. A somewhat more
hardy friend thinks it would be
much easier to simply put foot
rails and straps on the trucks so

at the

Royal Conservatory at Liege and
attended the Royal Conservatory

in Brussels.

that if one went by in your direction one could simply leap aboard
and ride off into the smog.
On a more serious note I would
think it safe to assume that there
are going to be steam tunnels on
the new campus as there are on
the present conglomeration of illrelated architectural glories. Why
not spend an extra hundred thousand dollars or so to build those
tunnels so people could walk in
the silly things? To wit, if you
wish good reasons, less worries
about plowing, and no great enormous drifts directly where one
wishes to walk.
Besides
it will be easier for
the National Security Agency to
take head-count once we become
a Federal Institution. Till next
week
take care and duck behind the bushes if you see General Hershey coming.
A non-partisan PS. for those
who have not yet realized it is
(like
out to like folk music
me)
The Clancy Brothers
Kleinhans, Wednesday, February
16 sponsored by CORE. Thank you
for reading this, my sister may
now let me in the house.
—

from Pg. 4)
demonstrated his characteristic inability to grasp anything deeper than a court order,
but Quill and the others rightly
ignored it. The next logical step
is to raise the subway fare and
let the subway users pay for the
workers' raise. If Lindsay succeeds in bucking logic and justice by taking these funds from
general city coffers, or worse
yet from the state or federal
government—well, that’s another
column.
(Cont’d

Lindsay

My compliments again to the
Student Book Exchange, to those
who conceived it, those who run

K, and those who use it. It is the
finest example of functioning
conservative principles that 1
have seen on this campus.

Holds Degree in English
and Rumanian

In addition to teaching, Mr.
Trifu, who holds a degree in
both English and Rumanian, has
collaborated on an English-RuDictionary,
featuring
manian
British and American pronunciations for some 50,000 words.
SEVER TRIFU

ology of Cluj

University,

The Fine Arts Film Committee
will sponsor a lecture by Mr.
William McCutchen, Community
Relations Associate of the Motion
Picture Association of America,
Inc., on February 2, Rooms 240248, Norton. He will discuss aspects of the motion picture in-

Ru-

mania, held his first class in
modern Rumanian Monday, January 24.
Mr. Trifu’s visit is part of a
State Department program sponsored by the Committee on International Exchange of Persons,
Washington, D. C.
Mr. Trifu began the first class
with the teaching of Rumanian
vowels and sentences. The text,
A Course in Modern Rumanian,
was written specifically for English-speaking students by Dr.
Ana Cartianu, Dean of the Faculty of Germanic languages at
Bucharest, Rumania. Mr. Trifu
expects that by the end of the
term most of his class will “be
able to carry on an easy conversation using grammatical sentences and to read a basic Rumanian text and write the language.”
The course in elementary Rumanian, open to students and
faculty, is offered Mondays and
Wednesdays at 2 p.m. in 227
Crosby. Interested applicants can
still enroll at the Department of
Modern Languages and Litera-

the

ture industry.

Mr. MeCutchen will lecture on

cluding:

the increasing variety
film fare now available to different audiences the importance of
building a discriminating audience; “freedom of the screen;”
the motion picture as the “language” of today’s young people;

WILLIAM McCUTCHEN

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CONFERENCE
THEATRE

information on current Hollywood
film-making and the public service programs of the motion pic-

ALL WINTER SPORTSWEAR

Delaware Camera Mart
-

Mr. Trifu feels that “the opportunity is good for strong cultural ties” between this nation
and Rumania.

Mid-Winter

•

MfiMAI IMfiMAN S

U.

a number of related topics, in-

“Unquestionably one
of the film events of
,cki,r

S. Government ExProgram has sent an
American professor in Linguistics to the University of Cluj.

The

change

A small library of Rumanian

Daily

-«

Mr. Trifu’s visit is part of a
State Department program sponsored by the Committee on International Exchange of Persons,
Washington, D. C.

Mr. McCutchen is experienced
in both the advertising and television fields. He has done production, direction and has hosted
his own television show.

Every Friday, beginning February 4, Mr. Trifu will give one
of a series of informal weekly
talks on Rumanian history and
culture. Lectures will be held
from 2 to 3 p.m. in 227 Crosby.

—

N.Y. Hirald Tribun

manians.

dustry.

ture, Crosby.

—

this year,”

Also published are Mr. Trifu’s
Anthology of English verse, and
four artiples on ' English literature in Rumanian reviews. He
has worked on a textbook of
English conversation for Ru-

McCutchen Discusses Film Industry

Mr. Sever Trifu, visiting lecturer from the English Department staff in the Faculty of Phil-

—

—

THE RIGHT

books on literature, art, and history will be available in Crosby
Hall to students and faculty
members. The majority of the
300 books are written in English;
a few are printed in Mr, Trifu’s
native tongue. The collection, a
gift from the Rumanian Ministry
of Education, will be placed in
one of the campus libraries upon
Mr. Trifu’s departure.

territory.” He contiued

mester, will present the first of

DR. LEV E. DOBRIANSKY

fAr. Trifu Conducts Rumanian Class

|

|

Would you like to work and play in the Rocky
Mountains this summer on your vacation? At a
Mountain Resort, Dude Ranch, Hotels, etc. For 150

I

exclusive listings, Send $2.00 to Western Resort
Review, P.O. Box 9, Commerce City, Colo.

i

|
|

�.•&lt;

Friday, January 2S, 1966

1

f ■

TRAVEL

MORE IN EUROPE THIS

SUMMER, see it better and save
—traveling with NSA—a choice

of 33 flexible trips of 21 to 63
days with other college and graduate students using special rates

for travel, accommodations, adonly
missions, etc. available
Trips to Europe,

through NSA.

Israel, Latin America and the Far
East. Student ships available.
Write for free book: U.S. National Student Association, Dept. Z,
265 Madison Avenue, New York,
N.Y. 10016. A nonprofit organization for students.
ANNOUNCEMENTS

M.Sc. and Ph.D. Degrees
in Nuclear Engineering
Financial

aid

available

for

engineering and science majors for study in Nuclear Engineering. Fellowships
(NDEA, University), traineeships (NASA, AEC), and research assistantships availa-

ble.

information

For

and

applications, write to Chair-

man, Department of Nuclear
Engineering, the University
of Virginia, Charlottesville,
Virginia.
FOR SALE

1965 YAMAHA 80c.c. Motorcycle.
Must sell! Excellent condition.
Call Spectrum office, 831-3610.
Ask for Ron.
1953 OLDSMOBILE for sale. 831
2057.

WANTED
VANTED

—

DESK for student

ipartment, call

}

833-6115.

Attention SENIOR &amp;
GRADUATE MEN
Students—U.S. Citizens
Needing nominal FINANCIAL
HELP to complete their edu-

cation this academic year
and then commence work
cosigners required. Send transcript and full details of your
plans and requirements to
Stevens Bros. Foundation, Inc.
610-612 Endicott Bldg.
St. Paul 1, Minn.
A Non-profit Corp.

—

—

Prominent Educators Participate
In Higher Education Seminar
Three prominent educators will
participate in a panel discussion
at a symposium on higher education to be held on January 28
from 2:30 5:00 p.m. in the Con■

ference Theater.
The symposium, which will be
highlighted by an address by
former State University at Buffalo chancellor Dr. T. Raymond
McConnell, is being held to celebrate the occasion of Dr. G. Lester Anderson, professor of education, joining the faculty of the
School of Education.

The three educators and their
topics include: Dr. Harry W. Porter, provost of the State Univer-

sity of New York, "Decision Making Within a State-Coordinated
System of Public Higher Education;" Dr. Algo Henderson, professor of education, University of
Michigan, “State Coordination of
Public and Private Higher Education;" and Dr. Harry N. Rivlin,
dean of teacher education, City
University of New York, “University in an Urban Setting." The
theme of the panel discussion is
“Problems and Prospects in Higher Education."
Dr. McConnell, who served as
chancellor at the University from
1950-54, will deliver the keynote
address at 8:00 p.m. in the University’s Faculty Club.

Helwig Displays Oils and Drawings
Mr. Harold B. Helwig, Assistant
Director of Norton Hall’s Creative Craft Shop, will hold his
first public showing of his oils
and drawings in Room 231, Norton, 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. weekdays
and 1 to 8 p.m. Sundays. The
exhibit will include a visual book
of 10 plates.

it’s as valid a medium as any if
used properly.”
Mr. Helwig describes his linear
drawings, less complex than his
other drawings, as "a momentary
prolonging . , , almost like an
image within an after image.” In
his oils, he uses the technique of
a scrafitto drawing over a paint-

All of Mr. Helwig’s drawings
are in ballpoint pen. He explained
that “most schools of art overlook ball point pen, but I feel

and MA at Kansas State College.
He feels his art has had “no

ing.

Mr. Helwig received his BA

NEWMAN CLUB

The

Newman Apostolate is
sponsoring an Ice-Skating Party

today, January 28, at Roosevelt
Rink. Admission is $.50 for ice
skating and a free mixer will follow at Newman Hall. Wednesday,
February 2, Father Paul Karas
will speak on the Russian Orthodox Religion at 7:30 p.m. in 329
Norton Hall. Sunday suppers will
be served every week at 5:30 p.m.
at Newman Hall beginning this
Sunday, January 30.

MOSLEM STUDENT

ASSOCIATION
Student Associat.on will celebrate "The Eid
Festival,” in the Millard Fillmore
Room, Sunday, January 30, at
6:30 p.m.The program will include
lectures about Islam, films, exhibitions, and dances from different Islamic countries. Oriental
and middle Eastern food will be
served. Tickets ($1.00) will be
sold at a booth in Norton and at
The Moslem

the door.

HILLEL

Hillel will sponsor a Sabbath
Service this evening at 7:45 p in.
Dr Justin Hoffman will speak
on: “The Synogogue." The Hillel

Lodge between 10 and 4.Sigma
Alpha Mu will hold the annual

brother-alumni party this Saturday at Krotch’s house.

HUMANITIES

PUBLIC HEALTH
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION

will be conducted

FEBRUARY

Dr. Rokate, who is presently
director of the Medical School's
Rehabilitation Medicine program,
will head the School, which will
provide an academic home for
the programs of medical technology. occupational therapy and
physical therapy. The structure
of the new School will allow for
planning toward the creation of
new programs in the health re
lated professions.

RUSH
REGISTRATION

JAN. 31

-

FEB. 4

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tailored to write his own way

POLITICAL SCIENCE
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from an
Interviews for June Graduates

Dr. Clifford C. Furnas, President of State University at Buffalo, today announced the appointment of Dr. Albert C. Rekate as Actig Dean of the recently-formed School of Health
Related Professions.

Buffalo.

COMMUNICABLE DISEASE CENTER

LANGUAGES
PHILOSOPHY

Rekate Made
Acting Dean

SORORITY

Professor Charles J.
Beyer of the Department
of Modern Languages will
present a series of slides
about life in the Peace
Corps in Nigeria, Sunday.
January 30, at 3:30 p.m..
Room 233, Norton, at a
meeting of Les Amis de
la France. French Club of

We are going to eradicate syphilis in the United States.
involvement, interesting work, on outlet
We need people who want immediate job
opportunity for advancement.
for creative ideas, and an excellent
senior students who are ma,onn 9 m the
average
with
above
We want to talk
following academic fields:
BIOLOGY
ENGLISH
JOURNALISM
ECONOMICS
HISTORY

*

Study Groups of the new semester will have their initial meetings this week. The Hillel Grad
Club is resuming its get-togethers
on Tuesday evening at 8:30 p.m.
for graduate students, single
faculty members and senior girls.
The United Jewish Kund Committee will present a program on
Sunday, January 30 at 8 p.m.

overt influence of either the East-

UNITED STATES PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE
VENEREAL DISEASE BRANCH

&lt;1

—

—

Career Opportunity
-

.

PAGE SEVEN

ern or Western coasts.”

Freshmen Women Have ’Big Sisters'
The new Pan Hellenic Council
representatives of Sigma Kappa
Phi are Cindy Nash and Pat Miller
with Judy Kerr as alternate, Mary
Leary was elected to Phi Beta
Kappa. Alpha Kappa Psi will hold
an open rush stag at the Parkridge Inn at 8:30 this evening.
Sigma Delta Tau will have a social with Alpha Omega Dental
Fraternity to be held at 400 Getzville Road at 8:30. The new officers will be installed Sunday,
January 30 at a dinner in their
honor at the Old Post Road Inn
at 6:30 p.m. Sunday afternoon
SDT will participate in the Buffalo and Erie County chapter of
the March of Dimes fund raising
drive at Glenwood Acres Ski

f

®

SPECTRUM

CLASSIFIED
SEE

-

ink bottle.

Beautilully gill boxed. See

it

today-stocks are limited.

15

arrange for an interview
Contact your Placement Office to
OPPORTUNITY
AN EQUAL EMPLOYMENT
"ON CAMPUS"

�Friday, January 28, 1966

SPECTRUM

PAGE EIGHT

Studio Arena Theatre

iMssas ilmdss iLnwag
There have been quite a few films developed from
or based upon a play by William Shakespeare, but I can
only think of three really satisfying cinematic recreations
of the Bard’s work. Curiously, they are vastly dissimilar,
each bearing the distinct mark of its director, and yet,
each pne is faithful to the spirit and the matter .of the
play. The films I have in mind are Laurence Olivier’s
Henry V, Orson Welles’ incredible baroque production
of Ohtello and Akira Kurasawa’s absolutely brilliant
visual rendering of Macbeth in the film Throne of Blood.
Olivier’s Henry V is the most “conventioria!” conception (I do not mean this in a pejorative sense). The
camera
alternately restless and composed
captures
the sense of an unfolding historical tableau which Shakespeare used as the unifying force in the play. At the
same time, Olivier keeps himself in check to deliver a
thoughtful performance of a man growing to become a
king a performance which doesn’t overshadow the fine
work of a strong supporting cast.
Kurasawa’s film is strikingly different. It is entirely
in Japanese, set in feudal Japan and has none of Shakespeare’s language to carry it. And yet, for me, it was
Macbeth. Toshiro Mifune( the star of Kurasawa’s stock
company) is lusty, forceful, passionate and hugely human
as Macbeth. The elements of the super-natural which
structure the play are breath-taking. The integration
of sound with actions is unusually imaginative even for
Kurasawa and the camera work is like a text-book on
film making. Lady MacBeth endlessly washing her
hands, the advance of Burnam Wood and Macbeth-Mifune’s bizarre death by hundreds (literally) of arrows
were all singularly memorable moments in a production
that got extraordinarily close to the heart of Shake-

-

-

speare’s play.

Presents Productions,
Has Panel Discussions
By MARTHA TACK

Finals are over, and once more
we may take advantage of the
dramatic offerings at the Studio
Arena Theatre.
Running from the January 27
through February 19 is the musical comedy Irma La Douce. Providing a glimpse at the business

transacted after dark on the back

streets of Paris, Irma La Douce
stars Arline Woods who has just
completed a tour in What Makes
Sammy Run with Sal Mineo.
A Man for All Seasons is next
in line on Studio Arena Theatre’s
list of productions, beginning on
February 24 running through
March 9.

Besides the regular classes at
the Studio Theatre School, special events . open to the public
have been scheduled:
Late in February, time and
date to be announced, there will
be a panel discussion on the trend
in the performing arts to less
structured and more improvisatory presentations, entitled “. .
But Is It Theatre?” Members of
the panel include Mac Hammond,
associate professor in the English department at UB, Gerald
Hoke, chairman of English at
Depew High School and in charge
of the integrated arts program;
Donald Wildy, director and
teacher of the theatre; and Bernice Rosen, instructor in Modern
Dance at UB. Everyone is welcome to attend.

Orson Welles, who never does anything conventional,
did a film of Othello (with himself as the Moor, of course)
which is an enormous feast of rich, varied food and drink.
Too much will lead to gout, but Welles is in control most
of the time. What saves him, actually, from losing sight
of Shakespeare amidst all of the incredible “bits,’’ is his
obvious understanding of Shakespeare’s work. That is.
all of the tricks he tries work in conjunction with the
context of the play. Even his grand final scene in which
lago, snarling like a rabid dog, is hoisted off the stage
in a cage, fits into the characterization of lago he has
been developing and seems perfectly consistent.
This brief review of Shakespearean cinema was occasioned by the production of Othello (with Sir Laurence
The University of Buffalo
Choral Ensemble is hosting the
Olivier in the title role) by the Royal Shakespeare Company which has been filmed and will be presented at the Women’s Glee Club from the
OneCenter Theatre on February 2 &amp; 3 and at the Kensington State University Collge at Polyon February 9 &amp; 10, for two performances each day. onta and the Rensselaer
technic Institute Glee Club this
One immediately thinks of the inept “film” (ElectronoSaturday evening, January 29,
vision, they called it) of Burton’s provocative Hamlet, in a joint choral concert.
but this is something else again entirely. The players
The concert will be given in
actually did the play without any audience, on special
the Millard Fillmore Room, Norsets with appropriate lighting, exclusively for the camera. ton
Union, at 8:30 p.m.
The result is an intelligent, thoughtful and sometimes
striking effort which is not completely satisfying but is
Oneonta’s Women’s Glee Club,
directed by Charles Burnsworth,
quite definitely worth seeing.
The problems, primarily, are these. First, the magic has appeared at the New York
World’s Fair and the annual “Allof a “live” theatrical presentation is, naturally, not preconference of the New
sent. And, the great things that are possible with a State”
York State School Music Associaany
been
realized
as
motion picture camera have not
tion. R.P.I.’s Men’s Glee Club is
kind of compensation. Thus, it isn’t a play with a sense directed by Joe! Dolven.
of dramatic illusion drawing us into the action, and it
Student tickets may be obisn’t a film with that media’s awesome ability to project tained for 50 cents at Norton
infinitely varying modes of reality before us. But the Ticket Office on by contacting
sets are pretty, the lighting good and the color quite a member of the UB Chorale
faithful.
Ensemble.
The UB Chorale Ensemble
What counts for most is the playing and the players.
with the Buffalo Schola CanOlivier’s Othello is original, personal and, ultimately,
torum, under the direction of
brilliant almost to the point of distraction. I am conRobert Beckwith, will present
vinced that he projects the essential aspects of the man
the
first Interdenominational
of
his
created,
techniques
but
felt
that
some
I
Shakespeare
Music Festival on Sunday,
Frankly,
I’m
and postures might have been excessive.
January 30,
reluctant to criticize a portrayal that was so well received
The festival, sponsored by the
on the stage, but this is film, after all, and Olivier may Catholic and Protestant Churches
have been repeating mannerisms that were more effective of the Bailey-Delevan and northon the boards. I have no qualms about his extravagant
make-up or Jamaican accent, but I feel that he might
WINTER
have exercised more control at times. But this is carping,
Storewide Clearance
mainly. It’s a rare and volcanic job and not to be missed.
Frank Finlay, as lago, was competent if restrained.
Perhaps he felt overshadowed by Olivier who seemed to
upstage him in his best speeches. I would have preferred more sheer animal viciousness at the end, but his
conniving seemed to smoulder convincingly within a
on all
cloak of evil. All of the other actors are up to the
mark, with Roderigo especially good and Desdemona
Outerwear Sportcoats
worth special
played by the gifted Maggie Smith
Suits-Natural Shoulder
mention.
Shirts
Maggie
course,
but
Olivier is the main attraction, of
Smith presents a beautiful performance in a difficult role.
Desdemona can easily become sickeningly emotional,
foolish, hysterical, fatuous, or a combination of these
traits. Miss Smith is none of these and her winsome
beauty is always very sympathetic. I thought her work
Clothing Fashion Conlor for Mon
was definitive
3151 BAILEY AVE.
The movie (“filmed play?”) isn’t, but it is fascinaTF 2-1200
ting and powerful. I’ll definitely see it again.

Bill Helwig

copper, and silver enameling

Creative Craft Center Shows
Arts at Open House Wed,
,

The Creative Craft Center, for-

merly the Craft Shop, will hold
an Open House Wednesday, Feb-

ruary 2, 1-4 p.m. “to familiarize
those interested in the opportunities and personnel available for
the students, faculty and staff of
SUNY at Buffalo.” Various crafts
will be demonstrated.
Sylvia Rosen will illustrate
hand-building in ceramics; Ulli
Chamberlin will “throw” pitchers, vases, and other wheel
forms. Centrifugal lost wax casting will be demonstrated by DuWayne Wilson, silver jewelry
construction by John Dunham,
copper and silver enameling by
Bill Helwig.
Mr, Joseph Fischer, Director of

Groups From Oneonfa, RPI
Hosted By Chorale Ensemble

SALE

20-40% Off

-

-

-

Ml®®®®!!

in craft shop

east sections of Buffalo, will be
held at St. Gerard Church on
Bailey and Delevan Avenues at
8:00 p.m.
Verdi’s TE DEUM and choral
works by Byrd, Bacon and Willan
will be performed.

the Center, states that the change
in title was precipitated by a
misinterpretation of the term
“Craft Shop.”

History of Film Traced
A 16mra film program tracing
the history of the American cinema will be shown on Monday
evenings in Room 148 Diefendorf, at 8 pan., beginning January 31.
The films to be shown this
Monday include The Great Train
Robbery, So This Is Paris and a
selection of Charlie Chaplin
shorts. Among the films to be
presented in the future are: The
Jazz Singer with A1 Jolson, The
Gold Diggers 1931, The Shiek,
featuring Rudolph Valentino and
various selected shorts, including
Chaplin and W. C. Fields.
Admission is free. Film sched
ules will be posted.

Applications for the Freshman Orientation Committee may be picked up at
the Norton Union candy
counter.

�Friday, January 28, 1966

SPEC.T-RUM

PAGE

Skanks Still Undefeated
The Skenks upheld their undefeated-position in the 2nd Trivia
Contest-tpn Tuesday, Jan. 25,
against Phi Sigma Epsilon and

The main purpose of the contest, according to the program director and producer, Henry L.

sumes no editorial responsibility.

Notices should be sent ip TYPE-

Tenenbaum, is “the dissemination
of totally useless and banal facts
in an attempt to pollute as many

minds

as possible.”

WRITTEN form to 114 Hayes
Hall, attention Mrs. Fischer, before 2:00 p.m. the Friday prior
to the week of publication. Student organization notices are not

4

The contest, structured after
the GE College Bowl, was copied
from other colleges in the country. The first contest was held
in December and Mr. Tenenbaum
is planning to continue the match-

Tenenbaum MX.'s second trivia tournament sponsored by WBFO
Photo by

Alan Gruber

Browsing Library
Sponsors Contest

THURS. SAT. SUN.
-

-

The Browsing Library is offering a top prize of $100 in the
annual Browsing Library Contest.
Originally scheduled to end February 4, the contest will continue
until February 14.
Entrants should submit a collection of no less than 15 and no
more than 25 books on a single
topic or limited field The collection must be accompanied by
a paper of approximately 1500
words explaining when, how, and
why the books were acquired.
The applicant must list 10 books
which he hopes to add to the
collection. Five of these must

“ONE OF THE YEAR’S BEST’
INGMAR
BERGMAN’S

TWK

ACADEMY
AWARD

be annotated.
-si-

All full .time undergraduate
students under 25 years of age
are eligible to enter.

Participants must return appli-

Chapter 1 of

cations to the Browsing Library,
Room 225 Norton on or before

"Sons of Geronimo

Friday, February 4. Applications
are available at the candy coun
ter or Browsing Library.

and "THE CRITIC'

Our Back to School Presentation

Royal Arms

lieatre

19 W. UTICA
885-6262

HERBY
MANN

IerI
ONLY!
4TIMES
2 3
PERFORMANCE*^"^!*
Evenings 8 P.M.

and His Orchestra

LAURENCE ■KJ

ACCEPTED

%

EXCLUSIVE! Y
engagement

PLUS
with

J. P. Belmondo
Jean Seebery
Gert Probe

matinees—$1.50
EVENINGS—$2.50

RPPULSiON

fmmmmm Convenient Moll Order Coepon

"""""j

!

CTHUlO

■

Enclosed

;

\

for ,he

$

J

N Y. 14202

□ check □ money

order for

—

—seats

|

'

performance on (date)

Address
Please enclose stamped,

self-addressed^envelope^

Next Week

—

THE MOMENT OF TRUCE

Name
I

1. "Decision making within a
State Coordinated System of Pub
lie Higher Education '
2. “The Place of Independent
Institutions in Higher Education."
3. “The University in an Urban
-

Center.”
Lecture

—

featuring Dr. T. Kay

mond McConnell, Professor of Ed
ucation and Chairman, Center for
the Study of Higher Education,
University of California at Berkeley, whose topic is, “Problems
and Prospects in Higher Education," Fillmore Room, Norton
Hall, 8:00 p

in

February 2
The Department of Classics

—

presents Professor Niall Rudd of
University College, Toronto,
whose topic is “Approaches to

Horatian Satire,” 224 Norton Hall,
3:30 p.m.

presents Dr. Fd
Teller, Distinguished. Visit
ing Professor of Nuclear Science
The topic is “Applied Research,’
147 Diefendorf 8:30 p.m.
—

ward

3

of Cornell Aeronautics Lab, whose
topic is "Negotiation in Simula-

International Relations,”

The Department of Physics
presents Dr. Edward Teller, Distinguished Visiting Professor of

,

EM
IN

WILLIAMSVILLK

The topic

is

trie

Association
present Dr.
Dana L. Farnsworth, Director of
University Health Service, Harvard University, whose topic is
"Unrest in the Colleges," Butler
Auditorium. Capcn Hall, 8:30 p.m.
—

February 4
The Department of Mathematical Statistics
presents Colloquim: "Estimation Problems • As'

—

sociated with Linear Discrimin-

ants," featuring Dr
Seymour
Geisser, Chairman and Professor

of Mathematical Statistics.
Diefendorf, 4:00 p.m.

.

306

PLACEMENT
ANNOUNCEMENTS
A reminder
all candidates
for teaching positions and persons establishing a file for grad
uate school admission should
check with the Educational Placement Division in Schoellkopf Hall
to determine if all confidential
appraisals have been received.
The University Placement Services will maintain a suite at the
forthcoming American Association
of Colleges for Teacher Educa
tion Convention to be held in
Chicago, February 16-19, 1966.
This Convention offers excellent
opportunities for interviews and
the review of credentials by college administrators. All gradu
ates interested in college teaching
and administrative positions are
—

urged

to develop current

dentials with the
Placement Division,

cre-

Educational

PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS
Please

call

the

University

Placement Service for additional
information on the following interviews. Appointments should
be made at least one week in ad
vancc of the interviewing date if

possible.

January 28
E I DuPont de Nemours, Inc
Gleason Works
New York State Dept, of Public
Works, Division of Transportation Planning
Worthington Corp.
31
Alcoa
American Telephone and Tele

January

graph

Provident Mutual
McEarland Johnson
February I
AVM Corp.
Greece Central School District
(Monroe County!

February

1, 2
Chevrolet. Tonawanda

February 2

Beech-Nut Life Savers, Inc
Scars and Roebuck, Inc.
College of Guam
February 3
Burroughs Corp
Niagara

Machine

&amp;

Iroquois Gas Corp
Merck

&amp;

Tool Works

Co., Inc.

West Seneca

District No
February 3, 4
Motorola, Inc

Central
1

(Erie

School
County)

February 4

Maritime Administration—US
Dept of Commerce
The Carborundum Co.
Scaliest Foods

ROMAN POLANSKIS

HMtCOLOft* PAHAVISKHT FROM WARNER BROS.

I 580

—

"Quasars and Origin of Universe,"
114 Hochstetter Hall, 4:00 p.m
Refreshments will precede in 103
Hochstetter, 3:30 p.m.
The Department of Psychiatry
York
and the Western New
Branch of the American Psychia-

BACKFIRE

The greatest Othello ever by
the greatest actor of our time.

Moin Street, Buffalo,

Panel Discussion
Conference
Theater, Norton Hall, 2:30 p in.

Nuclear Science.

OTHELLO

2 4 8 P.M

tion.

p.m

ORDERS

CENTER THEATRE

Higher

Fillmore Room, Norton Hall, 3:45

OLIVIER
TWICE DAILY

sents a Symposium on

Education, in recognition of Dr
G, Lester Anderson, on the oc
casion of his joining the full-time
faculty of the School of Educa-

tion of

MAIL

HlBpCX;

28

The School of Education—pro

The Department of Psychology
—presents Dr. Kenneth Terhune

and

ACTUAL

WEEKLY CALENDAR
January

February

I

WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY

NATIONAL THEATRE
OF GREAT BRITAIN

GENERAL NOTICES
ATTENTION! All 1966 Degree
Candidates
all graduate and
undergraduate students planning
to graduate in May 1966, who
have not previously done so, must
not.fy the Office of Admissions
and Records no later than Monday, February 14, 1966.
Failure to comply with this
regulation will result in postponement of graduation until the
next regular commencement.

Sigma Xi

OPENS MONDAY, JAN. 31

Matinees 2 P.M.

publication.

—

The January 25 contest will be
broadcast Friday, Jan. 28 on
WBFO, 88.7mc FM and 780kc.
AM closed circuit to university
residence halls.

-NEWSWEEK
-CUE MAGAZINE

for

accepted

es.

-N. Y. TIMES
-N. Y. HERALD TRIBUNE
-N. Y. POST
-DAILY NEWS
-SATURDAY REVIEW
-TIME MAGAZINE

OFFICIAL BULLETIN
The Official Bulletin ii an authorized publication of the State
University of New York at Buffalo, for which the Spectrum as-

the Emanons.

NINE

,

General Adjustment Bureau
Speer Carbon Co.

�SPECTRUM

Reapportionment Amendment
The Student Senate passed a
Reapportionment Amendment at
Tuesday's meeting only after it
had been amended in several
parts and initially defeated.

This was the third reapportionment amendment considered in

three ' consecutive sessions. The
first two were decisively defeated.
The original roll call vote Tuesday night lacked two of the twothirds vote (18) for amendment.
A motion to submit the Reapportionment Amendment to referendum in the March general election was then proposal by Secretary Ellen Cardone, initiator of
the amendment. The motion was

passed.
In an unprecedented mdve, Sen
ators Dennis Gia Quinto (Pharmacy) and Raymond Volpe (Univ.
College) moved that the rules be
suspended in order that they be
allowed to change their votes to
"ayes.” Gia Quinto originally
voted against the amendment,
and Volpe had abstained. The
two votes passed the amendment
eighteen to seven.
The amendment involves several drastic changes in the constitutional rules deciding representative groups. Previously, the

constitution seated representatives from major school divisions
and special interest groups such
as the Inter-Fraternity Council,
Pan-Hellenic Council, Council of
Religious Organizations, InterResidence Council and the Union
Board

Under

the

new

amendment,

representatives from special interest groups and the four officers of the Student Association
will constitute the membership
of the newly created Student As-

sociation Executive Board. Allocation of seats on the Senate will
be based solely on a proportional
basis in line with the recent “one
man-one-vote" ruling of the Supreme Court. There will be one
seat for every five hundred students with the stipulation that
freshmen shall have four voting
representatives.

The amendment creates the
Student
Association Executive
Board as a new organ under the
executive branch of the government “to coordinate the activities
of the member organizations, and
to act

as an advisory body

on

student activities to the Student
Senate and to the student representatives to the FSA subboards.”
The membership, consisting of

the IFC, IRC, CRO, Pan-Hell,
Union Board and the four officers of the Student Association,
will elect a chairman and vicechairman to the Board.
Senator Martin (CRO) objected
to the provision in the original
amendment*'automatically establishing the President of the Student Association as chairman of
the SAEB. Miss Cardone defended
the amendment stating that the
automatic chairmanship was necessary to insure coordination of
the activities of the various interest groups. Martin’s proposed
revision was accepted.
During the debate on reapportionment, Secretary Cardone said
that the new plan “removes many
of the flaws of the present constitution” because “representation
would be more proportional and
more flexible to the changes in
enrollment.” Creation of the
SAEB would “fill the need for a
mechanism that would co-ordinate the activities of various interest groups on campus,”
Senator Carl Levine (A&amp;S)
strongly urged senators representing groups with an interest
at stake to abdicate their private
interests for the general welfare

of the students. He said that the
amendment provided an opportunity for true representation
and that it was “not morally right
that the Freshman Class should
have one representative for 2300
students while other groups have
one represenative for 250 students.” Levine also stated that
under the present system it is.
possible to have six or seven senators representing one student’s
interests.

During the debate the proposed
amendment was altered. Senator
Gia Quinto proposed that the
School of Health Science, including juniors and seniors in Nursing, Occupational and Physical
Therapy, Medical Technology, and
undergraduates i n Pharmacy,
which were to be represented
proportionally as a group, be
broken up into the Schools of
Pharmacy, Nursing, and Health
Related Sciences, each to have at
least one representative. Senator
Gia Quinto explained that it was
more practical to have these separate schools also separated in
representations, and also that because Freshmen will be registering in these areas instead of University College in the future, increasing enrollment in these
schools.

Offie Resigns As Bull Coach
Head football coach Richard
Offerahamer announced his resignation January 8. Offenhamer,
who compiled a 58-37-5 record in
11 years at UB, said that he had
given the decision extensive previous thought. He gave his reasons for quitting as “personal,”
Offenhamer. a high school football star in Buffalo, started as
halfback at Colgate University.
After coaching high school football in Kenmore, Offie was hired
for the head coaching job at UB

in 1955.

Coached by Offenhamer, the UB
football record improved. In 1958
the Bulls, maintaining small college states at the time, beat Harvard and Columbia.
In 1959 UB had an 8-1 season
and finished second in Lambert
balloting. Due to its progress, UB
was classified as "major college”
the following season. In his final

Support

Our

Advertisers

season, Offenhamer’s Bulls de-

feated Massachusetts, Richmond,
Delaware, Colgate and Viilanova
in completing a 5-3 2 season, including a 28-0 win over Colgate.
The announcement of a successor to Offenhamer has been
delayed indefinitely.

Friday, January 28, 1966

St. John's Debate

SENATE RESOLUTION

This Student Senate has previously asserted its aversion
to the Feinberg Law and its
former method of implementation, the Feinberg Certificate.
The Federal Court appointed
to review the cases of those
individuals who refused to sign
the Certificate has declared
both the Law and the Certificate constitutional.
deplore this decision as
detrimental to the academic
community because if sustains
We

and attempts to justify an unjust limitation upon academk
freedom.

We further deplore this action
because it endorses an arbitrary restriction upon a particular group of individuals
due to their political beliefs.

The International Club
will present slides from
Europe, South America
and Asia on February 3rd
at 7:30 P.M., Room 340,
Norton. Coffee and Music
will follow the meeting.
Everyone is welcome.
Applications are available for the Union Board
Personnel Committee in
the Union Board Office.

The Senate Resolution concern-

ing St. John’s University auth-

orizes f tfip by student body
President Clinton Deveaux to a
protest strike at St. John’s scheduled for today. In addition, the
Student Senate is sending a statement of support for the strike to
the Very Reverend Joseph T. Cahill, President of St. John’s University, and is urging faculty and
administrators at SUNYAB to do
the same as a result of this resolution.

-Us

.

The strike is a protest against
the “arbitrary” dismissal of 31
professors at St. John’s on December 16, 1965, According to the
National
Student Association,
“this action culminates a long
history of violations of the basic
principles of academic freedom
at St. John’s.”

“The administration of St.
John’s failed to give any reasons
for the dismissal, and only one
of the professors was given a
hearing,” (NSA fact sheet.)
NSA Regional Chairman Carl
Levine stated in his resolution
that “the present crisis at St.
John’s University was caused by
some of the gravest violations of
educational principle that have
ever occurred in the United
States.” He charged that “St.
John’s Administration had “first
ignored, then evaded, and finally
defied the most basic traditions
of academic freedom.”
Chairman J. Z. Friedman stated
in opposition that the “text was

BOARD OF DIRECTORS
(Cont’d from Pg. 1)
lots has cost the FSA dearly. Although final figures will not be
available for a month or more, the estimated payment will be about
$100,000. This sum represents the income of the lots since the state
merger less the cost of equipment and a “reasonable.sum” for salaries
of attendants.

A change over in fiscal year from an “April to March” system
to a “September to August” plan necessitated a budget extention.
The five month extention will continue operations at the same rate
of expenditure as the previous budget. It is hoped that the new
fiscal arrangement will more closely parallel the actual operations
of the university with the new year starting in September.
Dr. Norman Lazarus, Graduate Student representative on the
FSA, sought to have $1000 left as a surplus in last year’s Graduate
Student Association budget reappropriated to the GSA loan fund.
Mr, Charles Balkin, FSA Treasurer, pointed out that money allocated
to student activities does not revert to the FSA if it is not spent
and was thus still available to the GSA to do as they saw fit.
The $44,000 increase in funds for undergraduate student activities will not result in an increase in the activity fee. The $89,000
proposed budget will be met by $55,000 from activities fees as in
previous years and such additional money as required from the
funds of sub-board 2.
The two financial requests from the Dean of Students Office
included a $300 appropriation which was added to student collections
to cover alleged airport damage during the “Thallus of Marchanti”
incident. The request for $1200 to pay Student Senate officers was
postponed until a clearer understanding of grants-in-aid to student
leaders could be obtained.

emotional” and warned
that the Senate should not resort
to using "highly colored language in its official documents.”.
He was particularly concerned
with statements such as “wholesale dismissal” of faculty members, Mr. Friedman cited that
the Student Government Organization at St. John’s failed to support the strike and considered
it a problem between the faculty
and administration. He felt that
it was improper for the Senate
“to support a strike carried out
by a dissident group of professors especially when they were
unable to gain any support among
remaining faculty and students,
not even nominal support.”
In a statement issued to the
Spectrum, Mr. Friedman proposed
that “it would have .been more
proper and in better taste to have
sent an affirmation of the principles of academic freedom along
with mention of our grave concern that the faculty and students
of St. John’s University have not
seen fit to insure protection of
their own rights as individuals
within the academic community.”
Another objection was raised
by UC Senator Curtis Montgomery. Montgomery denied that the
students of SUNYAB have a
“right to pass judgment on St.
John’s University when St. John’s
own better-informed students are
unwilling to take action.” Senator
Montgomery further objected to
the “emotional language” in the
highly

1

PACE TEN

text.
Senator Ross Radley objected
to the amendment on the grounds
that the “strike” is not the ideological struggle it is made out to
be but rather a power struggle

between the Union Federation of

College Teachers and St. John’s

administration.”
In urging passage of the resolu
tion, President Deveaux cited
many instances where St. John's
had violated the basic principles
of academic freedom. He said
(1) St. John’s has failed to invoke
a tenure policy in accordance
with the AAUP. (2) Professors
were arbitrarily dismissed with
out judgment by their peers, (3)
The professors hands had been
tied by the inadequacies of the
administration. Other students
and faculty probably failed to act
because they feared the same ar
bitrary action, he stated.
Deveaux reminded those who
considered the strike a “power
struggle” that the “union involved
was a union of college professors
which deserved as much respect
as any group of college professors.” The crisis at St. John’s
“is truly a matter of limitations
of academic freedom,” Mr. Dc
veaux summarized. “We must
take a stand on the issues and
principle involved.”
The resolution was passed 11-4
with two abstaining.

�Friday, January 28, 1966

SPECTRUM

WRESTLERS SPLIT FIRST
2 MEETS; PLATTSBURGH
HERE THIS AFTERNOON
By BOB FREY

On January 15, the UB matmen
opened another season under
Coach Ron La Rocque by beating Western Ontario 21-11. Coach
La Rocque has a young, but capable squad and expects to have
another good season. The starting lineup for the opener against
W. Ontario included six sophomores, one junior, and one
senior.

Wrestlers compete in the fol-

lowing weight classes; 123, 130,

137, 145, 145, 152, 160, 167, 177,
and heavyweight. Gary Fowler
(123) is only a soph and was outstanding as a freshman. Bill
Miner, a junior, is our 130 lb.
starter. Last year as a soph he
won the 41 Championship in his
weight class which had forty
schools competing.
Our
137
pounder is Henry Gullia—a sophomore with good potential; he
was sectional champ of Western New York in high school.
John Misener is our 145 pounder,
and he too is a sophomore, as are
Dick Cushing (152), Bob Heidt
(160J and Dan Burr (177). Norm
Keller, our lone senior, is an
upperweight wresseason he was the
most improved wrestler on the
team. Tom Pettit is a leading
candidate for the heavyweight
outstanding

tler.

Last

class.
The team is open to candidates.
Those interested please contact

Coach La Rocque or Asst. Coach
Jack Valentic (a former UB alltime great) in Clark Gym.

INTRAMURALS

-

By STEVE FARBMAN

The handball tournament
moves into the semi-finals, the
basketball

schedule

is at

SAM

(Cont’d from Pg. 12)

university of California hasn’t been foolish enough to
make a mockery of itself by telling UCLA to lower its
athletic level to that of the state university at Bakersfield. Similar situations are in operation in other states
including Minnesota and New Jersey. The athletic successes enjoyed by such state schools as a UCLA or a
University of Minnesota reflect favorably upon their
states, yet SUNY seems prepared to lower the guillotine
on the only member of its system with a chance at
achieving such athletic prowess.
UB has put in a tremendous effort over the past
decade to make the football team a symbol of athletic
achievement to parallel the strides of academic progress
made at this campus. They can continue to grow side
by side, but only if SUNY hangs its sword back on the
wall where it belongs.

Cut Out Coupon and Present for

FREE KARATE LESSON

Monday Independent League
3-0 Avengers
3-0

2nd Floor
5th Floor

BUFFALO, N.Y. 14202

26

10

The undefeated teams in the
basketball league are:
Thursday Fraternity League
9:30
8:30
30 SAM
AEPi
Beta Sig
3-0 AK Psi
2-0

UB Swimming Team

SWIMMERS DEFEAT
WESTERN ONTARIO
The UB swim team
its third win of the
submerging Western
the Clark Gym pool,

”

from I’s,

FG
1
6
5
7
5
4
0
0
1

Walker
Goodwin
Barth
Poe

Bevilacqua
Culbcrt
Bernard

Williams

3

Brassell
Totals

32

I

12)

FT
4
4
4
2
4
3
1
2
0
0
24

Ontario
FG FT
3
1
0
0
6
0
0
1
3
4
3
I

2
2
2
23

Burton

Zanin

McKinley
Totals
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4 p.m. 2 a.m. Son. Frl.
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TR 3-1330

TO CAMPUS

_ _

University of Toronto.

(Cont’d

SPECIAL FOR U.B. STUDENTS
on all Sweaters

”

The water Bulls journey to
Toronto at 2 p.m., Saturday for
a return engagement with the

University of Buffalo

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cember,

...

Artie Walker sank a pair of foul
points, that victory was assured.
Walker tallied 16 points, while
“Sumthin 1 Smith paced the los
ers with 21,

Marten
Newman
Crowe
Morton

®fje Campu* Comer
.

Coach William H. Sanford, in
his 17th year at the helm of
the Bull tankmen, labeled this
year’s squad as "the best team
UB’s ever had." The Bulls have
defeated Buffalo Stale and Toronto as well as Western Ontario, while their two setbacks
have come at the hands of Syracuse and Brockport State. The
tea malso finished third in the
14-college Upper New York State
Relay
championships in De-

200-yd. freestyle, Mike Conroy
set a school mark with a 2:16.2
timing in the 200-yd .individual
medley, and Rick Rebo established a 1-meter diving record
by scoring 200.95 points.
Other UB victories were scored
by senior captain Carl Millerschoen in the 100-yd. freestyle

Burg

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ami Howard Braun in the 200

yd. breaststroke.

Three record-shattering performances highlighted the triumph; Pete Troppman set pool
and school records bby churning to a 1:54.8 victory in the

Gagers Win
N.C.A.A. regionals. A phenomenal
performance by Harvey Poe, who
hails from West Orange, N.J., was
decisive in UB’s victory over a
fine Akron team. Poe's exhibition
and point performance was a
career high for UB’s brilliant
guard with 29 points, which included 12 straight field goals.
However, it was not until the
final seconds, when an elated

splashed to
season by
Ontario in
53-42, Sat-

urday.

Pool

Anytime for Information

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Wednesday Independent League
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Smith

WORLD FIGHTING ARTS, INC.

-

half-way point, and the bowling
league is coming to a close. At
the time of this writing, the
handball singles tournament

On Friday night, January 21,
■the grapplers stumbled and schedules Walsh
Stein, both
were nosed out by RIT by the of AEPi, to playand
each other in
tally of 21-16. The Bulls’ Bill one semi-final
match. The other
Miner had to default his bout
one will see, Salmonson of
a
leg injury, and this AEPi playing either Wasson
due to
of
proved to be RIT’s margin of AEPi or Bienstock
of Phi Epsivictory.
lon Pi, The finals are to be
Wednesday, January 26, the played on Monday, January 31,
at 4 p.m. In the doubles, bracket
grapplers hosted Brockport State
in Clark Gym. Plattsburgh in- No. 1, Wasson and Stein will
vades Clark Gym this afternoon meet Reinig and Capozzi of Phi
to try to pin our matmen. The Kappa Psi, and Deal and Lommatch is at 4 p.m.
bard of Alpha Kappa Psi will
see action against Southall and
The Results:
Brassington of Sigma Phi EpsiRIT 21, UB 16
lon. In bracket No. 2, Walsh and
123—Fowler (UB) won by forSalmonson have already entered
feit; 130—Cunningham (UB) d. the finals and will play the winGardella; 137—Gullia (UB) p. ner of the Nathanson-Whitcomb
Thompson; 145—Maynard (RIT) vs. Klippstein-Kriegel game. In
won by default; 152—Robinson
bracket No. 3, the semifinals
(RIT) d. Misener; 160—Cushing
will pit the team of Goldberg(UB) d. Simmons; 167—Mulvehna Marrus of AEPi against the Sig
(RIT) d. Keller; 177—VanderEp team of Graves-Bryan. Elvene (RIT) p. Burr; Mwt—Michiedredge and Teller, also of Sig
wiczy (RIT) p. Stiglitz.
Ep, will play in the other match
against either Heffenstein and
21,
UB
W. Ontario 11
Shields of Phi Kappa Psi, or
123—Fowler (UB) d. Proul; Mingle and Hens of Tau Kappa
130—Miner (UB) p. Angus; 137— Epsilon. Finals will be played
Bum (WO) d. Oullia; 145—Mison Tuesday, February 1.
ener (UB) u. Dahl; 152--Cushing
(UB) d. Jamieson; 160—Heidt
The standings of the top teams
(UB) and Clare drew; 167—Kel- in the bowling league are:
ler (UB) d. Schorl; 177—HawW
L
ward (WO) d. Burr; Hwt—Brown
AEPI
4
36
(WO) d. Ratamas.
Phi Ep
7
29
9
AK Psi
27

THE BULL PEN...

632'/a MAIN STREET

PAGE ELEVEN

Blongiewicz

Dalzell
Clark

Totals

3
3
0
11

�PAGE TWELVE

SPECTRUM

Friday, January 28, 1966

M

=f==/ ——jA
THE BULL PEN
By STEVE SCHUELEIN

Bulls Stampede Toronto
For Third Straight Win

The cloud of uncertainty which has blackened the
UB athletic horizons for more than a week continues
to hang menacingly over the Main Street segment of the
State University of New York. What the future holds
in store for UB’s athletic status has led only to conjecture and speculation, but it is no secret that the deemphasis or obliteration of “big-time’ athletics at UB
would become a grim and bitter reality if SUNY decided to take such a course.
At the moment, UB’s athletic program is left in the
precarious position of Damocles, writing on the verge of
extinction as Samuel Gould and his Albany subordinates
play with the controls to the suspended sword. A decision may be reached by next month or the matter could
drag into the spring—nothing seems certain.
The current state of chaos was triggered by the
resignation of head football coach Dick Offenhamer on
January 8. Offenhamer, the Messiah who had led UB
football out of the wilderness over the past decade, had
compiled a 58-37-5 log during his 11-year stint here.
The decision, news of which penetrated even the
most apathy-filled nooks and crannies of this institution during finals week, was accepted with traces of
mild shock. Offenhamer explained that the decision,
to which he had given extensive thought, was prompted
by “personal reasons.” When SUNY announced its stunning decision less than two weeks after Offenhamer’s
resignaiton (freshman coach Dewey Wade had resigned
earlier to accept a similar position at the University
of Maryland), the proximity of the events seemed more
than coincidental.
After Offie's announcement, athletic director Jim
Peelle was approached by a number of reputable football coaches concerning the vacant post. Peelle had
originally hoped to make a decision by the end of this
month, but his efforts were brought to a grinding standstill by the news from Albany.
How will the situation be resolved? It appears
that only time will tell. As the co-ordinator of the many
links in the SUNY chain, there obviously are many
areas which Albany must ameliorate in a direction
toward uniformity. If this group is to act on anything
except a theoretical basis, however, it should have no
Bill Barth icon* for UB against Toronto
right to dictate or meddle in the UB athletic program,
Photo by Carol Good son
an area which should not fall under SUNY jurisdiction.
Grants-in-aid which are given to a number of athletes, primarily in football, seem to be at the core of
the problem. SUNY contends that since none of the
other colleges in the SUNY network follows such a
The UB cagers will play three Cornell. Cornell’s record is a sogrant-in-aid policy, UB shouldn’t be allowed to either.
games in the next five days so 7-6, but this mark is somewhat
home
the
for
these
If
money
grants-in-aid was being
in quest of a second consecutive misleading. The Ithacans’ losses
drained from the SUNY vaults, Albany should certainly NCAA bid.
include a six-point setback at
have a say in the matter. Since the grants-in-aid are
the hands of Syracuse, a two-point
financed
UB
student
fees
are
being
by
through
(which
This evening the Bulls host loss to Minnesota and a 15-point
paid back through free admission to home events) and Plattsburgh State in Clark Gym defeat to Brigham Young. Coralumni funds, however, SUNY is clearly intruding in at 8:30. The Cardinals have an nell’s Ivy League record is 4-2,
affairs which should be none of its business.
8-2 record and will be putting but only three points separate
Just because major football success hasn’t been a seven-game winning skein on the Big Red from an unblemished
the line. The visitors are paced slate.
achieved at other state campuses is no justification for by
co-captain Tom Chapin, a 6-5
abolishing or de-emphasizing the sport at UB. The other
center from Brooklyn, who has
Cornell’s probable starting linestate schools have never made the effort to go “big- been
averaging 18 points and 20
up will include 6-8 Steve Cram,
time” in sports and seem quite content. Some state rebounds a game. Coach Joe JasBob DeLuca, Gerry Munson, Dave
schools can’t even lay claim to a football team. If SUNY trab rates his team as one with Berube and soph flash Gregg
wants to establish a uniform standard for its members, "plenty of speed, ball-handling Morris Bob MacReady and Blaine
it would make just as much sense to force small-time ability and shooting prowess.”
Aston are also slated to see plenty of action for the Comellians.
football upon its non-playing segments as it would to
On Saturday evening at 7:30,
drag UB down to the level of the ones already playing
the Bulls will make their third
The upcoming games should
small-time football.
serve as true indicators to deterappearance of the year in MeIf SUNY were to de-emphasize the athletic promorial Auditorium to face Normine if the Bulls have really
gram at UB on the grounds that none of the other state
gained the momentum to stay on
thern Illinois, a colorful run-andschools employ such a system, could it not also destroy shoot club, which just missed upthe victory trail or if they were
the nuclear reactor on campus and the hockey rink at setting Bowling Green last week. just on a hot streak. Although
Oswego State, for they too are found only in these The Huskies, who are averaging the opposition is extremely rug83 points a game, are sparked by ged, UB will be enjoying the adplaces in the SUNY complex. In fact there are an infinite number of establishments at the various SUNY guard Willie Hanson, 6-5 Don vantage of the home court. The
campuses that obviously don’t coincide with those of Nelson (no relation to the Celtic news that Bobby Thomas and Rick
and Roger
Mann have regained their eligithe other 58 campuses. Should this all be changed to of the same name),
bility should also bolster the
Dutton.
make 59 identical robots molded by SUNY? Sounds ridepth and morale of the squad.
diculous? Yes, but no more so than the grounds for
In the nightcap of the doubleSUNY’s wanting to strip UB of its athletic program, header, Canisius will host Army,
I.D. cards can be used for adone which took too much time, effort ,and money to a recent 97-60 winner over Colmission to the Cornell game, but
build to be suddenly halted by the irrational decisions gate. $3 tickets may be purUB students must purchase tickof some sword-wielding tyrant.
chased at the Clark Gym ticket ets for the Northern Rlinois-UB,
Canisius-Army doubleheader Satoffice for $1 to see the doubleIt is time that SUNY realized that there are cerurday evening. Be sure to buy
tain discrepancies among its 59 members that it has no header.
your $3 tickets for $1 at the
business in trying to iron out. Other state university sysWednesday
Bulls will again Clark Gym ticket office today,
tems function smoothly under this principle. The state venture to thetheAdd,
this time to for you will receive no discounts
r
'i (Cont’d on Pg. II)
meet the powerful Big Red of' at the door Saturday evening:

Cagers Face Busy Week

&gt;••

•

By MIKE DOLAN
Tuesday evening’s 106-50 victory over Toronto University
boosted the University of Buffalo
basketball record to -8-3 for the
season, as they make their bid
for a second straight N.C.A.A.
tournament invitation.

The Bull cagers encountered
little difficulty against Toronto as
every player saw ample action in
the one-sided victory. ‘Doug Bernard paced the scoring parade by
■hitting eight of ten shots from
the field for 16 points. Bill Barth
contributed 14 points, while Harvey Poe, who canned his first five
field goal attempts, and Jim Williams split 24 points. Jim Bevilacqua and Artie Walker also
notched double figures with 11
and 10, respectively.

A partisan Clark Gym gathering of 1800 loudly cheered the
return to action of sophomores
Bobby Thomas and Rick Mann,
who had been scholastically ineligible for the first semester.
The flashy Thomas brought the
crowd to its feet with his brilliant
floorwork, including an incredible
over-the-shoulder pass to Bernard
that brought the Bulls to the
century mark for the first time
this season.

In the freshman preliminary,
the Mutomen raised their record
to 7-4 with a surprisingly easy
88-65 triumph over the previously
unbeaten Canisius freshmen. Ed
Eberle and John Jekielek divided
44 points for the Baby Bulls,
while Griffin standout Tony Masiello netted 35 for the losers.
The Bulls are now riding on a
three-game winning streak after
a long holiday layoff. This is the
second win of the season over a
Canadian team this campaign.
The Friday before, UB crushed a
Western Ontario team by the

score of 88-50. A well-balanced

scoring attack coupled with a
rugged defense enabled the team
to win by such a decisive margin.
Harvey Poe and Norward Goodwin were high for Buffalo with
16, followed by Bill Barth and
Jim Bevilacqua with 14 each, and
Jon Culbert with 11.

The weekend before, however,
in Dr. Serfustini’s words was “the
roughest back-to-back games he's
encountered in his coaching career.” Both games were not decided until the final five seconds. On Friday the Bulls came
out on the short end of a 7674 score against Colgate at Clark
Gym. A long one-handed shot by

Colgates Gerry Blongiewicz enabled them to nip UB with only
five seconds remaining. A lastditch attempt to score by UB fell

short. Although the Bulls played
a fine game, a poor 39 per cent
shooting average was the contributing factor to Buffalo’s third
loss of the season. George Dalzell led Colgate with 21, while
Bill Barth scored 19 for UB.
On the following night UB
played host to the Midwestern
powerhouse, Akron U„ and were
successful in upsetting the undefeated Zippers hy a 73-70 score
It was the same Akron team that
the year before, with essentially
the same team, had beaten the
University of Buffalo in the
(Cont’d on Pg. ID
•u,
•

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�Unhoused Transfer Students
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By ART CONDUZIO

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Subs, Heroes, Bombers

Afro-Asian
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The "Soul Literature"
Center of Buffalo

university policy regarding the
housing of transfer students by
next semester.” Under the current! policy, transfers are not being housed.
Mr. Schillo explained “There
simply isn’t enough room.” Many
dorm students are tripled up and
until this problem is solved transfer Students cannot be housed.
He continued that there is a
waiting list for transfer students
desiring housing but it is quite
substantial and presently no one
is being housed. Exceptions are

made, more

4

3

often

for

female

transfers than male transfers, who
cannot find suitable housing.
Mr. Schillo sees no solution
to the problem at all this year
but he stated that there would
definitely be a change in policy
by September.

At present, the policy change

is just being discussed by the
administration. Alternatives are
expected to be proposed by early
January.

After these alternatives have
been proposed, “the elected representatives in the residence
halls will be given a chance to
help make the decision (regarding the new policy.)” Student
preferences will be presented to
the administration which will
make the final decision.

HAPPINESS

ANNOUNCING

»*

J CHRISTMAS

£

WINTER FANTASIA

sponsored hy
Winter Weekend

£
FAIRFIELD HELENCA KNITS £
Jewel or Turtle Neck,
&gt; e..iiin, w.«
$3.95
J

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Poise n lv.y fc£

Holiday Sportswear
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886
1086 Elmwood Avc.
51
Open Evenings

0011'

Dec. 12-18
mixers, movies, carnival

Imported African Merchandise including African Woodcarvings (from $1.50 up),

•

Book Exchange to Operate
January
to
19 February 2
The UB Student Book Exchange
will be in operation January 19
through February 2 in Room 231
of Norton Union. It will be open
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily and
from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturdays.

The Exchange, sponsored by the
Student Senate, handles all 100
and 200 level books and only the
hardboard texts of the upper divisions, Each student sets the price
which he desires for his book
and the Exchange receives five
cents for administration costs.

Annual Open House

Set for December 19

Goodyear and Clement dormitories will hold their annual
Open House this Sunday, December 19. Goodyear Open House will
be from 1-3 p.m. and Clement’s
will be from 2-5 p.m. Arrangements have been made for girls
to escort boys who would like
to tour the dorms, but have not
been invited personally. Refreshments will be served.

The dress required is skirts
for girls and a shirt and tie for
boys. Anyone driving to the Open
House should park his car in the
lots behind the dorms.

U

Informative Books on
Negro and African Life
and Cluture

•

Friday, Dacambar 17, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWO

The Exchange was instituted at
the beginning of the fall semester, 1965.
Peter Cohen, Book Exchange
Chairman, stressed that much
help is needed to make it a success. He added that application
forms available at the Norton
candy counter and the Senate Office, Room 205 in Norton.

Faculty-Student
European Flights
The Faculty-Student Charter
Flight Program will operate two
flights to Europe during the summer of 1966. It will also sponsor
a guided tour of Europe, coinciding with the second flight.
The first flight will leave on
June 8 and return September 2.
The second is scheduled to leave

July 3 and return August 22.
Costs are $258.50, round trip;
passengers are limited to State
University faculty and students,
their spouses and dependent chil-

dren and parents.
For application forms and further information on the flights
and tour, contact: Prof. S. Jay
Walker; Faculty-Student Flights;
Post Office Box 231; Geneseo,
New York, 14454.

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paintings, masks, plaques,
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Page

&lt;See PagP

13)

VOLUME 16

NO. IS

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1965

SENATE ENDORSES CALENDAR CHANGES
Skanks Are Victorious
In First Trivia Contest

The final session of the Student
Senate for this semester approved
over $4,000 in financial allocations and selected a chairman for
the freshman orientation program, The two and one half hour
meeting of last Tusday night also
endorsed calendar revisions suggested by the University Calendar
Committee and an NSA life in-

surance program.
Michael Henry, present editor
of the yearbook, was unanimously
elected to head the Freshman
Orientation Committee, This committee plans the three day introduction to the university
which incoming freshmen are
given. Last year's program included an “academic convention" on
current problems, a festival of the
arts and “Approach to Learning

Panels.”'

Henry

Tennenbeum MC's Trivia. Winning Skenks

The Skanks, a student team, defeated Sigma Alpha Mu fraternity
199-105 and Allenhurst 240-141 at
the Trivia Contest on Tuesday,
December 14 in the Millard Fillmore Room. The audience, permitted to participate when neither
team could answer, scored 65 in
the first bout and 126 in the sec-

ond round.
Neither team nor the audience
knew who wrote “The Night Before Christmas”, giving the radio
audience a chance to answer. The
answer was telephoned in and
the respondent will receive a free
WBFO program.
Some of the questions asked
were: “How many points are there
on Sky King’s crown?” and “Who
was the next to the last Mohigan?” Acceptable answers to the
question: “Where
was Anne
Hutchinson scapled?’ were either
“Mt. Vernon” or “on the head.”
When Allenhurst had a score
of zero in the first half of their
bout they exchanged places with
the Skanks to test the buzzer system which was proved to be working properly. Another problem
arose when one of the accepted
answers was contested. The Emcee passed the controversy off as
“a mere matter of semantics.”
Members of the Skanks include
Fran Fishbine, Sebastian Dangerfield, Leon Lewis, and David Bergen. Representatives of Sigma Al-

(r.),

Sammies (I.)

Photo by David Collins

were Danny Alterman,
Sunshine, Bob Levitt, and

pha Mu
Steve

Freddie Hirsch. Jerry Hirshfield,
Howard Cralla, Alan Sturtz, and
Steve Koeningsberg comprised the
Allenhurst team.

mester.
The new system would eliminate curfews for seniors and es-

tablish freedom to leave the dorm
and a plan for campus police to
be stationed in Tower to let the
girls in the dorms after regular
curfews.
The plan was first discussed
over a month ago at MacDonald
House Council. At its last meeting, the Council decided “what
a good plan would be,” according to Miss Weinstein.
The petition signed by 150
seniors,- was drafted- by Susan

Relations Club, $997.
The allocation for the Student
Theater Guild was proposed by
Treasurer Sanford Siede at $1,661.
The Senate postponed consideration when some senators felt that
the reduction from the original
$4,000 request was too great. It

(Left to Right):

was felt that a member of the
group should be present to assure that the budget had not been
cut unfairly.
Senate approval has given Mr.
Siede the power to loan the Interfraternity Council $1,250 for
advance expenses on a concert.
The loan will be interest free and
secured by a note signed by the
presidents of all campus fraternities. A similar loan was extended last year. In addition to
1FC
repaying the loan the
realized a profit of over $1,000

Ten Year Academic Plan
Formed At State Request
By

LORETTA ANGELINE

“Our goal is that this University is to be developed into
one of the outstanding University Centers of the nation,” stat-

ed President Furnas in his forward to the “fen Year Academic
Plan”.
This plan was submitted to
State University President Samuel B. Gould on November 1, in
accordance with his request that
each SUNY center prepare a report of campus plans.
The material for the plan was

provided by the deans of each
coschool of the university in
operation with their faculty. Each

full-time or part-time faculty
member received a copy of the

Senior Girls Petition
For Lifting of Curfew
A petition requesting elimination of curfews for senior women is presently being considered
by the administration. MacDonald
House Council President Susan
Weinstein has requested a decision by January 20, for the
opening of the dorms next se-

Budgets for five groups were
approved without dissent. These
include the Medical Technology
Club, $500; Photography Club,
$344; Business Administration
Student Council, $275; Student
Speech and Hearing Association,
$585; and Business and Industrial

HEAD TABLE OF SENATE

Adler, a senior resident.

PresMiss Weinstein and IRC
ident Gary Roberts hope to speak
with Director of Housing Schillo
and Dean Scudder.
“no idea
Miss Weinstein has
(but)
what our chances are . . .
it will be easier for the next
class.”

Open readings for ihe

Reader’s Theater Produc-be

tion of “Ulysses” will
held Monday, December
20, at 7:30 p.m. in 26 N.
Harriman Library Basement.

The production will

be given at the Albright,
Knox Art Gallery.
(

report and was requested to prepare suggestions, criticisms or
comments for submission by
January 15.

President Furnas stressed that
the plan was "only the first draft
of a first report”. Dr. Rowland,
Assistant to the President, com
mented on this by saying “The
‘Ten Year Academic Plan’ will
always be a ‘draft’ since the university will always be changing
subject to new conditions”.

Sanford Saida, Rotamary

Brown, Clinton Deveaux, Ellen Cardona

ment on the administration’s outlook, stated "The whole academic
community is looking forward to
the new campus and the development of our present campus into
the Health Sciences center, and
wants to move as rapidly as possible through the transition.
There is no question that the
future holds great things for
SUNY at Buffahr which will ultimately stand among the best
universities in the nation. The

which was used to defray the cost
of Greek Weekend.
Calendar Revisions have passed
the University Calendar Committee and have been referred to
the Dean’s Council for approval.
The Senate endorsed the changes
for 1968 which include semester
classes beginning on Monday
rather than Friday, Thanksgiving
recess starting on Tuesday, and

Spring recess, March 30-April 8.
The question of a co-chairman

for the Freshman Orientation
Committee sparked lengthy debate. A resolution of Senator
Roberta Grossman of Arts and
Sciences, eliminating the position
of cochairman President Dcvcaux ruled that this required Mr.
Henry to appoint assistants of
equal authority rather than giving any one a superior position.
Mr. J. Z. Friedman, chairman
of the
Welfare Committee,
pointed out that fewer than fifty
students had registered as having three exams in one day.
These students will receive a letter through their departments per
milling them to make special arrangements to avoid this situation. If there arc any students
who have discovered they too
have three exams in one day they
Kaiser in the office of admissions and records.
The closing item on the agenda
was the presentation of a re-

The “Ten Year Academic
Plan” includes the following projections for UB:

intervening years will require
patience, tolerance, and adjustment until we can enjoy the full
facilities of the new 1046 acre
North Campus."

SUNY at Buffalo in the near
future will be operating at two
locations; the present campus,

Judiciary Invalidates Election

(South Campus) housing Health
Sciences, and the new campus
(North Campus) housing all other

divisions.
Ground will be broken in the
fall of 1966 on the new campus
for the construction of dormitories accommodating 2400 students. Construction of academic

will commence in the
fall of 1969.

buildings

An Office of International Education and a Study Abroad program have been proposed as part
of the plan. Under the proposal,
graduate divisions would be
strengthened and enlarged.
the
Two possible changes in
undergraduate structure are men-

tioned in the report. Admission
would be restricted to those in
the top 5 or 10 per cent of their
20
classes instead of the present
percent. The number of students
admitted directly from high
school would be less than the
number admitted after completing two years at a community

college.

Dr Rowland, in a general com

Student Judiciary, in a meeting on Monday, December 13, declared the election of the School

of Business Administration invalid, stating that the school must
hold an entirely new election.

Mr Frank Darrigo had officially won the election until an additional fifty ballots were found
giving Mr J. Edward Smith the
majority.
Mr. Barry Bicnstock, Chairman
of the Student Senate Elections
Committee, said that the addition
al fifty ballots had been overlooked in the bottom of the bal
lot box. He testified that neither
he nor his witnesses could understand how it had happened
Mr. Darrigo asked for relief of
the fifty ballots that were found
on the grounds that they were
counted by Mr. Bicnstock in the
absence of any other member of
the elections committee.

The Constitution of the Student
Association states that the Business School’s Student Council

apportionment

amendment

by

Miss Ellen Cardone, Secretary of
the Student Association.

elections falls under the jurisdiction of the Student Senate Elections Committee. The Judiciary
decided that the failure of the

Elections Committee to specify
and procedures for conducting the election resulted in
discrepancies between the number of votes cast and the number
tabulated.
Mr, Darrigo, stated after the

rules

decision, that next semester he
will be a senior and therefore
ineligible to run for president.

New registrations for
student ears using the Campus parking facilities must
lie registered at the Bursar's Office, 230 Hayes
Hall, by February 15,

1066.
Faculty and Staff will
register their cars in the
Personnel Office, 278
Haves Hall.

�Friday, December 17, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE FOUR

Editorial (Comment

,

.

grump

The

.

by STEESE

THE IVORY TOWER UNDER SIEGE
On the evening of Tuesday, December 14, VanBuren
that BLINK on AND off, ON and
Writing this weekly collection
W. DeVries offered an editorial opinion to the Western
and other things that
bed OFF
New York television audience over Channel Two. This of asininity is not wholly aand
FLASH
FLASH and
I
of roses. Take this week
FLASH
faculty
the
massive
frontal
assault
on
editorial included a
a whole collection of wires and
really wish you would. I am sitand student body of this university and several assertions ting here at the typewriter and it relays and a number of other
similarly busy portions of the disabout academic'freedom that made it appear that learn- is creeping closer to four o’clock play.
The designer’s attempt was
I find a certain lack of live
and
ing and subversion were closely linked.
issues on which to vent my apparently to duplicate the finale
of a fireworks display in electric
Mr. DeVries mentioned a statement issued from the spleen.
There is of course Bulldozer lights. Congratulations are due.
Office of Selective Service which stated in part that Alley, which currently resembles
I shouldn’t really complain
since draft deferments for continuing education were not nothing more than a convention though. If N-M had done something quiet and soft and pleasant
compulsory, that the draft board reserved the right to of Bulldozers which like to wallow in the mud, but I stand in to the tired eye I wouldn’t have
inclassifications
for
students
suspend
II-S
arbitrarily
great fear of repetition having had anything to help fill up this
volved in demonstrations. Mr. DeVries, of course, thought mentioned these large expanses column, now would I? In addition
has helped simplify the
that this idea was just dandy, and that anyone who was of mud rather frequently in this N-M
judging of other peoples’ Christspace before.
implications
speech
all
nervous
about
its
for
freedom
of
at
Then there are Christmas mas lights this year. For example,
could justly be suspected of cowardice, or worse.
Lights. Hmmmm. Yes indeed, are
someone asked me what I thought
of Hayes Hall at night and did it
lights. You can
there
Christmas
Mr. DeVries went on to say that this new procedure see how far we have advanced in such a manner as to leave
might clean up “the Main Street campus” and that acathe art of Christmasing when you little doubt as to what they
demic freedom was “never meant” to include the right consider that all the Christmas thought of it.
I simply pointed out that it
Story had was one lonely star.
to dissent by “our founding fathers.”
Take, by comparison, the job done could be hardly as bad as the
Perhaps academic freedom was not in the front of to the Niagara-Mohawk building Niagara Mohawk Building, and
in celebration of this spiritual
that around this time of year, I
their minds, but freedom of speech, as the Constitution time of year. Niagara-Mohawk had am grateful for just about anything. It turned out I was right. I
to do it. Nobody else could afford
will testify, certainly was. Mr. DeVries’ unprovoked atmean what the hell, it only has
tack on the entire academic community only highlights the electricity bill for that cacotwo colors, red and green which
phony in color.
young,
exhibit
the
the distrust that many middle-aged
for
is palatable. And it is unbusy. The
What really interests me is wonand most particularly for the process of liberal educadering how many people who lights don’t go on and off, or flash
tion itself. Even President Johnson has supported the work for the Niagara-Mohawk Co. in a time sequence, or chase each
are really convinced that the disother around the Tower. If they
right of the people to demonstrate their concern and
play is really attractive. Notice are on, they are on, and my simdissent.
that I said attractive, not active. ple mind appreciates this highly.
—

—

The new procedures of the Draft Board represent
an even more dangerous and ignorant attack on our constitutional rights than Mr. DeVries’ awkward and illinformed rhetoric. Mr. DeVries’ bigotry is easily demonstratable, but problems of evidence arise when a student’s
1I-S is arbitrarily removed. True, the Draft Board has
published their willingness to take reprisals against demonstrators, but it is difficult for the individual against
whom the reprisals are directed to prove that he is indeed being made liable to the draft as a direct result of
his moral actions.
The arbitrary bureaucratic procedures of the establishment put our constitutional and civil rights in jeopardy
in such a way that redress is almost impossible.
The Ivory Tower, and the humanistic values it perpetuates and represents, is under siege from trivial bigots
like VanBuren VV. DeVries and from anonymous procedures of administration both within and out of the academic community.
under siege; we must recognize where the battle is being
joined. It is being joined in the conscience of every man,
in the hearts and minds of men who believe in morality
and the possibility of the human community. We must
muster our spiritual and mental resources and stand firm
on the principles which have sustained western civilization
since the time of Christ. We must have the courage to
follow the truth whereever it may lead us.

The latter I freely grant. It is
sort of disappointing when they
could have done something sort
of quiet and festive that they
chose to have a mass of things

—

—

Whether this simplicity is due
to a corresponding simplicity in

the person who selected the motif
in question I do not know, nor do
I care. This is the season where I

count what few blessings I can
salvage.
I suspect that I am sliding into
a Christmas mood and that this
really nasty a bit
difficult. "Which is unfortunate; I
mean it is a well known thing
that consistency is much more important than being correct. Why
anybody can be correct, but it
takes strength of character to be
consistent even if you are right,
or wrong, or uncertain, or something.
Enough. If I can’t even be an
honest grump, I may as well go

away and hide. But think of the
fun I can have after the Holidays
when everybody goes back to
their miserable selves and it is
easier to remember that people
I know are being shot at in a war
which seems to lack purpose or
goals; to remember that outside
of this rather narrow view of life
you get in a university there is a
very real world where many people, even in this fat land, are
lonely, hungry, or miserable. And
in some cases a combination thereof.
Watch it Steese, your Humanism is showing. Point being this,
people: Most of us have a whole
bunch of stuff going for us and
perhaps at no time is it more important to remember this that at
at the lushest season of a lush society.
Since there ain’t no monstrous
Christmas issue, replete with
foldouts, Merry Christmas! (And
a bah! Humbug to you too!)

Cacotopia and Eutopia
CACOTOPIA '65 OR
VARIATIONS ON A SPEECH
BY LYNDON JOHNSON
By STEPHEN CRAFTS
“We are there (in Vietnam)
because for all of our shortcomings, for all of our failings
as a nation and as a people, we
remain fixed on the pursuit of
freedom as a deep and moral
obligation that will not let us
go

.

.

.”

(Lyndon B. Johnson
Courier Express),

further and further into sticky,
black gum and finally one suffocates into the liberation of suburbia. One perambulates through
the day, interested only in buying
and selling. Emotion becomes
punctuated with an occasional
canned laugh. Everyone talks like
a newspaper or a TV commercial.
Sometimes, someone outside
screams in the fresh air and a
sticky arm clutches at him
the
Tar Baby’s FBI. He suffocates or
goes to jail
all in the name of
the Gallup Poll the Nielsen Ratings, and the vast majority of
—

12/9/65

—

The horror of American life
diffuses to every corner like cigarette smoke, the morning after
a party. Everyone inhales it and
believes it to be air for lack of
ever having breathed anything
else.
One looks in vain for weak
spots, takes a swing, and discovers that it has become a giant
Tar Baby. Each swing pulls one

Americans,

This we call freedom. And it
must be defended to the physical
death from those who would take
it away from us. So we spread

our cigarette smoke
Tar Baby
throughout the world; enveloping,
gumming, wherever we go like
the residue angleworms leave on
—

wet sidewalks. We must have our
freedom and eat It too. Everyone

must have freedom
slaved,

or be en-

By Communism. A Tar Baby by
any other name would stick as
well.
Two Tar Babies clash like the
late show. One strikes and gets
stuck in the other. Another blow
and soon the two are one. A dou-

giant, economy-sized Tar
Baby evolves and scientists are
paid to justify it genetically. And

ble,

74, an amazing new scientific discovery that works wonders on the
mind, soul and body.
And then there is nowhere to
go except to the moon which turns
blackish gum as we envelop it too.
And those who used to scream
in the fresh air long futilely for
the flying saucers which will not
come near any more.

THE RIGHT
By JAMES CALLAN

to the peace-mongers
long enough and you’re bound to
hear their one basic supreme
commandment:
Self-determination for Viet Nam! Why? Because self-determination is the
be-all and end-all and nothing
further need be said. Anyone who
speaks against this holy ideal
must iindeed be the devil and

Listen

THE

SPECTRUM

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo, N.Y. 14214. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods,' Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easier.
JEREMY TAYLOR
DAVID EDELMAN

Editor-in-Chief

Managing Editor
Manager

Business
News Editor

RONNIE

Feature Editor
Asst

BROMBERG
JOHN

Feature Editor

STINY

JOANNE LEEGANT

Acting Sports Editor

STEVE SCHUELEIN

layout Editor

SHARON

Copy Editor

everyone

RAYMOND VOLPE

SUSAN GREENE

LAUREN

HONIG
JACOBS

Photography Editor
Continuity

Editor

Ad Co-ordinator
Circulation

Manager

Faculty Advisor
Financial

Advisor

Leprechaun

EDWARD JOSCELYN
MARCIA ORSZULAK
GARY

FISCHER

DIANE LEWIS
IRENE
DALLAS
RUSSELL

WILLET
GARBER

GOLDBERG

EDITORIAL POLICY IS DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

A
\

V

PRESS

FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING
Second Cla»», Postage Paid at Buffalo, N.Y.
Subscription $3.00 per year, circulation
10,000

Represented for national advertising by
National Advertising Service Inc., 420
Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.

knows you shouldn’t
listen to the devi'.
You with virgin ears had better stop reading now because
they’re about to be deflowered:
Self-determination is not a universally desirable goal and in
South Viet Nam it would be tantamount to national suicide. Still
with me? Good, after that I guess
you can take anything, even a
little reason.
The question of just when selfdetermination is desirable is a
touchy matter. For those of you
who still feel that it's always desirable, how about self-determination for Rhodesia? I doubt that

of you would parade
around on that nation’s behalf.
Or do you say that self-determination must be backed up with
majority rule? Sounds fine, but
how about self-determination for
Mississippi? Aren't you the ones
who are always calling for the
federal government to sit on the
white majority down there?
What's this—you’ve got another
answer? Self-determination and
majority rule must be backed up
with minority rights. Great, but
I have one supreme answer
how about self-determination for
me! I assure you that the majority (me) will rule, and that the
minority (there is none) will have
all its rights, and so I now set
out to determine myself. First
of all I don’t like income taxes,
or for that matter, any taxes, so
I’ll stop paying them. Maybe I
don't like the draft, or the grocer down the street, so I'll do
away with them.
Caught you
again, didn't I? It might take
you, too long to answer that one
many

—

for yourself, so here it is: selfdetermination with majority rule
and minority rights should exist
only when it does not peril anyone else in the world.
Great! Now you’ve watered
down your principle so much
that I’ll agree with it, and maybe
even plug for it. Now let’s see
what self-determination would do
to South Viet Nam. I take it as
a maxim that that nation would
immediately come under Communist rule, because that’s what
the whole war is about. If America walks out, communism walks
in—without blood if possible,
with blood if necessary.
Majority rule? Name one Communist nation where the majority
rules. Did it rule in Hungary in
1956? Does it rule in Russia,
China, or North Viet Nam right
now? Do one-party elections reflect the will of the people? Do
no-party elections? A Communist
country is under
Communist
rule, and it stays that way no
(Cont’d

on

P. 8)

�Friday, December 17, 1965

PAGE FIVE

SPECTRUM

rjCetterA to the (Editor
Student Disputes Editorial On V ietnam
TO THE EDITOR
A few w’eeks ago this paper
proudly proclaimed to the student body that the U. S. was unwilling to negotiate the war in
Viet Nam. The respected professors Powell, et. al. quickly
vindicated their I-told-you-so contention that this country is unwilling to negotiate the war on
the basis of a Look magazine article by Eric Sevareid, In fact,
-our—newspaper's edit or, shamelessly branded our President as
LIAR. Had these stalwarts of Democracy waited a few days for
further investigation to be completed, I am sure they would
never have resorted to namecalling.
Time magazine, in an effort to

the full facts behind
our "alleged” refusal to negotiate, spent an entire issue on this
topic. In summary, the report
proves beyond a shadow of a
doubt that at no time had there
been any contact between U
Thant and North Viet Nam. In
fact, and here is the remarkable
thing, LI Thant did not have any
assurance that Hanoi was ready
to lay down arms! Also, Time
magazine points out that if Hanoi
is interested in negotiating, Huy
are to contact LBJ at The White
House, Pennsylvania Ave., Washington, D. C. and not at 836 Monroe Drive, Roma, Italy. In short,
Hanoi did not have any plans to
negotiate at that time.
In last week’s issue of the Bufascertain

falo

Courier-Express,

the

chapter in this whole ridiculous
mess unveiled. It- seems that
Hanoi, laughing like mad at the
whole thing, broadcast through
its radio system that AT NO
TIME, NEVER, UH-UH, NOSSIRREE did they have any intention of negotiating! Is this
enough proof—Profs. Powell et.
at, J. Taylor, SDS—for you? Are
you man enough to publicily admit you were misinformed? It
doesn’t take too much GUTS to

-eaH-our President MAR; it takes
even more to admit you were
wrong and ask for his apology.
If a public apology isn't forth 1
coming shortly, then the student
body at this university Will be
justified in calling you LIAR.

final

I’hilip Fanone

Equal Dorm Opportunity Should Be Granted to All
TO THE EDITOR

Murder

of

By JOHN G. MEDWID

The Right, a column expressing the conservative viewpoint,
is a remarkable a piece of intellectual sophistry as this columnist has ever seen. Having decided to take a position on Lyndon’s war, he asserts, “I still

don’t know all the facts. Few
people do, and few should.” He
is probably right when he says
that he doesn’t know the facts,
thanks to the vigilarice of the
Johnson Administration, but this
column would like to remind
him that one of the fundamental
premises of a democratic society
is that the people shall have sufficient correct information to
make the decisions that affect
their lives. The tendency to accept the government’s word at

decisions, poses grave
threats to the democratic process.
If columnist Gallon is really concerned with democracy, he should
be outraged that his government is robbing him of his
decisions.
the vital

As for his suggestion that we
declare war on North Vietnam,
it will be interesting to declare
war on a country whose existence
we do not recognize; not to mention the reaction of the Soviet
Union which has a mutual defense pact with that nation.

I am frankly overwhelmed by

the humanitarianism of column-

ing for the pure joy of it”). He
does advocate killing if it will
win the war and goes on to defend nuclear genocide in Hiroshima at the end of WW H.
Curiously enough, the Japanese
made peace overtures two months
before Hiroshima, so the main
reason for the bombing of Hiroshima was not to stop the war
but to scare the Russians,

Gonzago
other people die so that the
world can be the way he wants

If he wants freedom, he should
also want it for others; specifically, the freedom of the Vietnamese people to decide the kind

of government they want.
This column fails to see how
the continued destruction of Vietnam by the United States will
be anyone’s interest hence this
column supports peace and democracy rather

than

“victory”

in Vietnam.
MURDER OF
GONZAGO AWARDS

To Dean Rusk who recently
said that we have to wage war
in order to preserve peace goes
this week’s Newspeak Award.
To Eugene Van Denburgh, who

isfactory explanation of why I
have not been granted this opportunity. All these men agree
with my position and completely
sympathize with my situation, but
they all claim that it is out of
their jurisdiction and they can
do nothing about it. I am fairly

I contend that the transfer
student is an important part of

Men, the Dean of Students, and
the Director of Housing, I have
neither been given the equal opportunity to bo admitted into the
dorms, nor have I received a sat-

the student body and should
have the same opportunities as
any other student. This serious
siutation can and should be immediately remedied.
Donald Levine

Appalled by SDS Outbursts at YAF-SDS Debate
TO THE

EDITOR

Having myself observed the
YAF-SDS debate, I am appalled
by the letter in last Friday’s
Spectrum written by Mr. Daniel
Katz of SDS. Though Mr. Katz
was quite right in stating that
the moderator (Miss Peggy Morano) attempted to explain why
the debate was being held on De
cember 7, he neglected to mention that she was virtually prevented from exefeising her right

members in the audience, who
shouted her down.
Mr. Katz was concerned that
Miss Morano’s remarks might
destroy the “formality" of the
debate. Yet he didn't mention
the extremely numerous outbursts by SDS members in the

audience, which started long be
fore the question period and
which, never, in fact, ceased.
These audience outbursts took

the form of statements, insults,
questions and laughter when the
YAF debators attempted to speak.

Why Must ‘Liberals’ Condemn ‘Radicals’

Lifetime Award.

TO THE

this week’s Understatement of

and are, of course, completely
out of order in any type of de-

bate.

I might add that these outwere completely unnecessary since the SDS view was
very well stated by their two
debaters.
It
nevertheless did
seem to be highly peculiar, coming as it did from an organization dedicated to a "democratic

bursts

society,"

Sincerly yours,

Frank

on

Klinger

College Campus ?

a

To officials of a Euclid, Ohio

high school who suspended William F. Hornsby Jr. for six days
because he wore a black arm
band to signify his mourning for

American and Vietnamese dead

in South Vietnam, because his
outward display would disrupt
classes goes our Freedom of
Speech Award.
To the squirrel who apparently
short-circuited power to 4625
Staten Island consumers Saturday, goes the George Lincoln
Rockwell It's all part of the International Communist Conspiracy Award.

Columnist Callan’s logic sets
up the argument that if we

the right to bomb North Vietnam, which reminds me of the
argument that if I stole his coat
last year, it gives me the right
to steal his pants.
Putting logic and fact aside,
(incidentally, there is no evidence
that the bombing of the north
has had any affect, and every
evidence indicates that it failed)
this columnist is somewhat taken
aback by his willingness to let

And finally, to Joseph Mangani,
a witch doctor employed by the
Krugersville, South Africa, Town
Council, who successfully exorscarcised a ghost that had been
ing workers and chasing them
from the municipal sewage pump
goes the Murder of Gonzago’s
congratulations. Incidentally, Mr.
Mangani is a member of the
African Dingaka Assn., the of
ficial witch doctor’s organization.

we now have

certain, however, that if a trans
fer student was a varsity football
player who wanted dorm accommodations, these same men (who
say that it is out of their jurisdiction and can do nothing) would
be able to provide him with a
room with little effort.

five-year-old daughter between
the eyes in an attempt to hit a
tangerine which he placed on her
head, “I guess I fouled up,” goes

To a South African magistrate
who allowed a witch doctor an
adjournment until January 9 so
dethat he might prepare his
fense by bringing a witness back
to life-goes this week’s Seeing
Is Believing Award.

bombed Hiroshima,

It seems to me that all students should have an equal opportunity to be admitted into the
dorms. This, however, is not the
case. Men transfer students are
not given any consideration and
are neglected by the University
in regard to on-campus housing
facilities. The administration has
taken up a policy of “discrimination” against this small group of
students. By not allowing the
transfer student the equal opportunity to be admitted into the
dorms, the administration is deny-

ing this student a basic “right,’
afforded even to the Freshmen,
After speaking to the Dean of
University College, the Dean of

EDITOR

In the United States today we
have the unfortunate situation
where the so called “liberal” of
this country condemns the so
called "radical” who stands up
and voices his personal opinions
and beliefs, which may be contrary to that of the consensus
of the people, I least expected
this situation to occur on a college campus where the student's
mind is supposed to be open to
all forms of expression.
It is quite 'appalling to walk

around our "independent island”
of academic freedom, hearing stu-

dents lash out at SDS, They are
not discussing the organization’s
policy on Viet Nam but rather

their "radicalism" and “subversive tendencies."
It seems as
though the student refuses to
hear the other side of the story
proposed by a minority group

These

condemning

students fail

to realize that a democracy can
not exist with majority opinion
alone. The unalienable rights of
minority groups must be upheld

and heard. As Justice Douglas
said in a case involving freedom
of speech: “A function of free
speech under our system of gov-

ernment is to invite dispute. It
may indeed best serve its high
purpose when it induces a condition of unrest, creates dissatisfaction with conditions as they
are, or even stirs people to
anger." The minority dissent today, may be the majority opinion
of tomorrow.
Respectfully yours,
Richard J. Evans

“If The Buffalo Evening News Can Run UB Sports,
Why Can’t The Spectrum ?”
TO THE EDITOR
You expanded your paper, so
I assume, in order to be on top
of the news sooner and then you
turn around and instate a policy
that defeats the very reason for
expansion. It took three days
after the second basketball game
before even mentioning the team
besides from the fact that no
other sport has been mentioned
since before vacation. If The
Buffalo Evening News can run
UB sports, why can't the Spec-

trum?

Some day in the not too distant future, All-American could

very well be Buffalo's title and
what then? When we play in a
field house holding over twenty
thousand fans, almost twice the
size of Memorial Auditorium and
are on national television will
you, assuming you are still
around which is always a possibility, will you limit that team
to less than minimum coverage?
Will you now continue to ignore
completely that part of the student body, which I believe to be
in a majority, that wants to consider itself university students
and not elite radicals? When

then Sir. Editor, and what now?
I charge you, as editor of, the

with being apathetic
toward student activities. I myself have had alone, at least five
incidences in which my article
wasn't included because the “political columns take up too much
room." Rant and rave all you
want in your editorials; tear the
roof off the U. S. Government if
you wish, but please, for the
school's sake, if not your own.
put UB back in the Spectrum.
1 cannot emphasize that point
any stronger.
Spectrum

Mark Tracten

Publicity Director
VVBFO

�monologue
By JEAN STOLL

Over coffee cups, the faceless
ones speak'. Several stacks of paperbound books, impressive titles
face upward, obscure most of the

table tops. The coffee, cooled in
transit to the mouth, is neither

good nor lousy; one can hardly
thing about when the mind is in-

volved with great and abstract
thought.

stand, you fools!

The longhaired girls in dunga
rces exhale blue cigarette smoke
languidly, and the discussions continue. “Sometimes 1 think all governments should be run by mothers, Think of the lives that would
be saved.”
"War is inhuman, to say the
least Have you ever seen pictures
of bayonetted soldiers? It’s not
pretty.”

The coffee is poured from
saucer to cup; the mercurial second hands begin to register minutes, which become hours. And
still, too few are willing to take
a stand, too few are willing to
make sacrifices for the good fight,
too few . , .
Information is an awkward
it may either be true or
false. While, one may argue that
it may be “interpreted” in various ways, its truth value may not
be altered, despite its consistency
—

with a belief.

An opinion, on the other hand,
is not the least bit awkward. It
need not be founded on a rigorous framework, it can flex under
the slightest amount of pressure,
and it is utterly unassailable. (I’ve
got a right to my own opinion,
haven’t I?’’)
Unfortunately, if a situation
arises where one must be honest
with himself opinions are as

worthless as they are convenient.
And, as disturbingly rigid as facts
Interpretation of fact on a political issue is not a complex process. All one needs do is rid his
mind of extraneous assumptions,
such as democracy, and compute

all facets of all information sys-

tematically, weighing advantage
against disadvantage.
Here lies the difficulty
collecting and analyzing data is a
tedious and unrewarding job.
Vital information is not always
immediately available to the public, because of security precautions or, more frequently, because there is no demand for it.
(Readers invariably prefer a superemotional, undocumented appeal to an amorphous body of

cold fact).
From a given set of facts constituting a logical set, one and
only one set of conclusions may
be drawn. All else must be confined to - the dismal limbo of
“Well, that’s your opinion.”
For the student who lacks time,
energy or enthusiasm, apathy is
more honorable than opinionism.
And yet how frequently one hears
the tour de force: “At least we
stand for something.”

E. Dobriansky, pro-

Georgetown University,

recipient of Freedoms Foundation Award, Charles Hayden Memorial Scholar, Shevchenko
Scientific Society Medal, Hungarian Freedom Fighters Award,
and given tribute in the U.S.
Congress for origination and
authorship of the Captive Nations Week Resolution, will speak
on Thursday, January 20 in the
Norton Conference Theatre. The
Ukranian Student Club in cooperation with YAF is presenting
Dr. Dobriansky in observance of
Kruty, where Ukranian students
died fighting the Russian Com
munists. He will speak on Com-

muriism and 'Vietnam-

'

tions, noted that three exhibits,
on Walt Whitman, James Joyce

collection includes Leaves of
Grass, valued at 2 to 3 thousand
dollars; How I Still Get Around
and Take Notes, with an essay
by the author, and an autographed
letter by Bliss Perry concerning
publication of this essay.

Mr. Sy continued that the Private Press Book exhibit at the
entrance to the library, a collection of fine modern printing, particularly by Kelmscott Press, includes some of “the most beautiful books ever printed.”

sessions take the form of either
weekly seminars at the teacher’s
home or individual consultations.

size.”

The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill is organizing
its students into an increasing
number of residential colleges
within the institution.

Four colleges have just been
established; four more are
planned for this spring, and two
more next fall, if the students

want them. A 90 per cent vote
in a student referendum is needed to set up a college.

The “living-learning" concept
is also implemented by assigning students in the same department or college to the same dormitory. These arrangements are
designed “to promote closer relationships between students and
faculty,” said Dr, Howard R.
Neville, provost of MSU.
The president of the

University of Minnesota, O. Meridith
Wilson, talked in terms of a tutorial system at Minneapolis to
combat the anonymity of a 36,000student campus.
The tutorial experience is in
effect at the University of California at Irvine which opened
tWs fall 'wittb the firatr of -its

The Irvine campus, which cur-

rently has 1,600 and expects to
grow within 25 years to an en-

rollment of 27,000, has instituted
several innovations.
The College of Arts, Letters
and Sciences is divided into divisions that cross the traditional
boundaries of subject departments. In this way, Chancellor
Aldrich said, “We hope to avoid
having faculty and students lost
in the rather shadowy institution of the college, yet not narrowly confined by
the limitations of the department.”

Residence halls have been reduced to “family units” of eight,
housed in two-story cottages. A
junior faculty member is assigned to each cottage as a resident advisor.

v

v

.&lt;*
t

Dr,

Nguyen-Dinh-Hua, Visiting

of Vietnamese Languages and Literature at the University 61 Washington, will give
two public lectures on Vietnam
Monday and Tuesday, December
20 and 21, in 335 Hayes at 4:30

p.m.

The lectures, entitled “Vietnam:

Young Country and Old Nation,”
are sponsored by the Department
of Modern Languages and Literature as an outgrowth of its recently-established Neglected Languages Program.

*■'

-X'•••/■
rr;'..r?.

'

Whitman manuscripts on Exhibit

Photo by Marc* Levine

Mr. Sy mentioned that “The
Paris Library’’ of Joyce’s personal books, many notes from his literary friends; original paintings

of Joyce and his family and photographs of the author and his
friends will again be exhibited in
the Joyce Room.

'Operation Home Talent' Gives
Careers for College Graduates
“Operation Home Talent,” a
placement project announced by
the Buffalo Area Chamber of Commerce, will provide Niagara Frontier careers for college graduates
living in the Buffalo rea.

Under the new plan, area firms
have been invited to interview
Buffalo college seniors attending
any school in the United States
and planning to graduate in February or June, 1966. The Chamber
has arranged a program which
will allow private meetings between local seniors and representatives of about 35 area firms for
the purpose of discussing career
job opportunities with the com
panies. The mass interviews will
be held in the Hotel Statler Hilton on December 28 and 29.

resume forms, and a company information manual providing descriptions of companies participating and the jobs they anticipate

will be available.
Any college senior who will
graduate from a four-year degree
granting college or university in
1966 and who resides in the eightcounty western New York area is
eligible to participate in the program. Also eligible are persons
who will be released from active
duty with the armed forces and
who have not, held permanent
jobs, since graduation.

Art Exhibit Held
In Norton Lounge

Participating firms will have interview teams meeting with individual students for 20 to 30 minute periods in private rooms of
the hotel. An appointment schedule will be developed for each
student at the formal program
registration, which will be held
in the hotel on the morning of
December 28.

Student advance registrations
will be accepted until the time of
the opening assembly on December 28. By filling out the registration cards available at the
Chamber Office, 238 Main Street,
or at the Placement Office, students will be placed on the mailing list to receive participation
instructions, program schedules,

of English at the University of
Saigon. He is also Secretary-General of the Vietnam National Commission for UNESCO and Director

Spring Arts Festival
“Contemporary Arts,” the gentheme of the Spring Arts
Festival, March 6 to 13, will emphasize expression of the self.
eral

The Festival is being planned
the Steering Committee of
Union Board, chaired by Pat

by

Jones.

Dr. Nguyen-Dinh is at the University of Washington for the
current academic year, on leave

“Although plans are already
underway, there are still many
vacancies on the various groups

from his post as Associate Profes-

—art, dance, drama, literature,

•SOT of Linguistics, and English,
’and Chairman of the, Papaci mint

v

m,l

Lectures on Vietnam Given
By Dr. Nguyen-Dinh-Hua
Professor

.»»

v*r

_3

January 1 through February 15.
Manuscripts and
books by
George Barker, British poet scheduled to visit the. UB campus in
the spring semester will be exhibited on the Lockwood balcony,
January 10 to March 1.
According to Mr. Sy, original
manuscripts and rare first editions by Whitman will be shown
in the Main Reading Room, The

sity.

NASULGC heard of the efforts
to “scale education to human

•f

and the Private Press Book, will
be on display in the library from

quarterly “conclaves,” a gathering of all students and faculty
members to consider some topic
of “intellectual weight and contemporary concern.” During the
regular academic session, every
faculty member is responsilble
for counseling 15 students. These

This year, however, MSU carried the "living-learning" units
one step further with the opening of a small college within the
large university. The 400-student
college has its own residence
halls, its own faculty, and its
own special curriculum.

fessor at

Mr. Edwin A. Sy, Lockwood Library’s Curator of Special Collec-

EduMINNEAPOLIS (CPS)
cators attending the annual meeting of the National Association of
State Universities and Land-Grant
Colleges held November 14 to 17,
are responding to the problem
of mass education by creating
smaller units within the univerIn a session entitled “The Challenge of Bigness,” educators from
the 97 member schools of

.

By PATTI WARTLEY

National Conference Discusses
Answer to Mass Education
—

-

A

are, they mean something.

Michigan State University has
been experimenting with academic/residence halls for several
years. These eo-edueational halls
arc self-contained units that include not only living facilities,
but classrooms, laboratories, faculty offices, and counseling services as well.

Doctor Lov

Whitman Joyce and Private Press Books
On Display In Lockwood Jan 1 Feb. 15
,

...

—

Occasionally, their eyes shift
slightly, so that the agregates of
apathetic commuters enter the
periphery of vision. Apathy—how
can it exist? Especially when
there is so much, so much! Believe in something! It doesn't matter what, but take a position, for
God’s sake!
But the hands of the clocks
continue to move, and the arcs
swing wider, and soon have completed their cycles. And they
watch the discusscrs-of-broads collect their drab, unimpressive textbooks and leave for class. Take a

thing

Friday, Dacembar 17, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE SIX

and .music,” .Miss. Jones com1 :t;l ‘I
. I.M
mented.
-

Art

Department

sponsor sale.

end Craft Shop

Photo by

Edward

Joscelyn

A “Student Exhibition and
Sale,” displaying art done by stu
dents in the Art Department and
the Craft Shop in Norton, will
be held in the first-floor lounge
from December 7 to 20.
On display are drawings, paint
nigs, collages, sculpture, ceramics and jewelry. The ceramic
pieces include vases and bowls.
In the jewelry display are rings,
necklaces, pins, cuff links, and
earrings. The art work ranges
from abstracts and pop art to
pastels

and still lifes.

Many of the pieces
are priced to sell.

exhibited

ATTENTION UNIVERSITY

COLLEGE STUDENTS
Students who wish to drop
and/or add courses on January
26 should see their University
College Adviser according to the
following schedule, in order to
avoid standing in line for long
periods.
JANUARY20—A, C, D, E, I, J, L. 0, Q.

T, U, V, X, Z
21— N. P, R, S, Y
24— F, G, K, M
25— B, H, W
Student are urged and welcomed to make changes earlier
by seeing advisers without appointments anytime ' beginning
December 2t. . u .r

�Friday, Dacambar 17, 1965

OFFICIAL BULLETIN
Tha Official Bulletin is an authorized publication of the State
University of New York at Buffalo, for which the Spectrum assumes no editorial responsibility.
Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to 114 Hayes
Hall, attention Mr. Fischer, before 2:00 p.m. the Friday prior to
the week of publication. Student
organization notices are not accepted for publication.
GENERAL NOTICES
Library Hours for the Holidays
—All Libraries will be closed December 25, 26, 1965 and January
1, 1966,

Lockwood Memorial Library
will maintain regular hours (Monday-Friday 7:30-11; Saturday 9-5;
Sunday 1-11) except Dec. 24,
closed 5 p.m.; Dec. 31, closed 5
p.m.
Harriman Reserve Room—same
as Lockwood except Jan. 4-13,
when the library will open for
study until 1 a.m., including Saturday and Sunday.
same as
Art-Music Library
Lockwood.
—

Chemistry—

24, 8:30-5
Dec. 27-30, 8:30-9
Dec. 31, 8:30-5
Dec.

—

8-5

Mathematics—
Dec. 24, 8-5

27-31, 8-5

Physics—

Dec. 24, 8:30-5
Dec. 27-31, 8:30-1, 2-5
Law—

Dec. 23 95
Dec. 24, 9-12:30
Dec. 27-31, 9-5
GRADUATE SCHOOL
CALENDAR—
Dec. 17 (Friday)
Last date for

.

.

.

submission of
thesis and dissertations for February Graduation.

Jan.

14 (Friday)

.

.

—

PLACEMENT

ANNOUNCEMENTS
Engineering students in their
junior or senior year anticipating
graduate work are invited to register at the University Placement
Service for summer work in the
field of engineering. Opportunities will be available at Eastman
Kodak, Bethlehem Steel, Owens
Illinois and Harrison Radiator
this summer
Full-time and part-time students
interested in part-time on-campus
or offeampus employment should

time.
Candidates for teaching positions who are registering for the
first time are reminded to check
with the Educational Placement
Division to determine if all their
confidential appraisals have been
received. The forms which comprise a candidate’s credentials
must be returned in good order
to ensure bis active candidacy for
vacancy notifications, professional interviews and the forwarding
of his credentials to interested
administrators.
PLACEMENT
INTERVIEWS
December 20
State Farm Insurance

Dec. 24, 8:30-5
Dec, 27-31, 8:30-5
Health Sciences
Dec. 24 8-1
Dec. 27-30, 8-5

Dec.

lie with Patricia Memming, University Relations
Old Faculty
Club, 831-2929.
In order to distribute the Weekly Calendar by Friday, it will be
necessary to make the proceeding
Monday the deadline for registering events to be included.
WEEKLY CALENDAR
December 21
Chemistry Colloquim
with
Er. Gary A. Rechnitz, assistant
Professor of Chemistry, University of Pennsylvania, whose topic
will be “Specific Ion Electrodes.”
Room A 322 Aeheson, 4;30 p.m.

register with the PartTime and
Summer Placement Division. Opportunities are available at this

Engineering—

Dec. 31.

.

Last date for oral defense of
thesis or dissertation.
Master Schedule for University
sponsored events—
By request of the Dean’s Council, University Relations has
undertaken the establishment of a
Master Schedule, a listing of all
events sponsored by the University and its organizations. It is
hoped that the Master Schedule
will prevent conflicts, particularly in the scheduling of events of
general interest. In addition, the
Communique, Weekly Calendar,
and Semester Previews

PAGE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

will be

prepared from this Schedule. In
order to make the Master Schedule inclusive, please register all
events of interest within the University community or to the pub-

Companies
Consolidated Freighfways

Provident Mutual
December 21
Northrop Co.
Leeds

Millard Fillmore Room of Norton
Hall

of

Frank Cipolla. Director
Bands, and Richard Rodean, Assistant Director, will conduct the
three band groups in works of
Gustav Holst, William Bergsma,
Gordon Jacob, and Clifton Williams. Admission is free.
“Participating in the program
will be the Concert Band, the
University Band, and the Symphonic Band. The Concert Band
consists of 70 players and provides an opportunity for instrumental music majors and other
qualified students to gather experience in wind music of high
caliber,” Mr. Cipolla said. Mr.
Cipolla will conduct this band.
“The University Band, conduct-

The Student Theatre Guild will

present "Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Momma's Hung You in the Closet and
I'm Feeling So Sad," by Arthur
L. Kopit, Saturday and Sunday,
December 17, 18, 19, at 8:30 p.m.
in Baird Hall.

The play is being student-directed and -produced with the assistance of the Drama and Speech
Department.
Director Corinne Jaffee stated,
“Many people feel that Kopit’s
play deals with such subjects as
the mother-son relationship, the
castration anxiety, the girl-boy relationship, and so on. I feel
that the play has these as intentions and they cannot be ignored,

but that the main purpose of the
play is to satirize the plays of the
theatre of the absurd.”
Miss Jaffee is the first student
ever to direct a major production
at UB.
William Cortes and Ronda Lyon
will play the main roles, with
Francine Zompano and Gary Bat
taglia in the supporting roles. In

Albright-Knox Gallery

Student Theatre Guild rehearse*
The Student Theatre Guild
charge of Set design is Jack Mehopes to produce one play a
Grodcr.
General admission is $1.00. Stu- month with free admission for
students," Miss Jaffee said.
dents will be admitted free.

Will Hold Free Concert

CONTACT

LENSES

The Creative Associates will
present a concert in their series
of “Evenings for New Music" on
Saturday, December 18 at 8:30
p.m. in the Albright-Knox Art

DR. LDU KRDP

gram,

Francis

Pierre,

OPTOMETRISTS

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

French

Buffalo Philharmonic last week,
will also perform.
All of the works on the pro-

area premieres, from
Schoenberg Mengewachse
(1911) to the 1965 Tolls of Cecil
Taylor. Works by Berio, Porena,
Simons, von Biel and Amy will
also be presented.
Admission to the concert is
gram are

the

I

|

PIZZA

U. S. Plywood

Scintilla Division,
The Bendix Corp.

837-6120

January 20, 21

International Business
Machines Corp.

Subs, Heroes, Bombers

21

Roche Laboratories
Acme Electric Co.
Central Washington

3

State College

Ro^^

compos

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Free Delivery

20
Northwestern Mutual Life
Insurance Co.

is

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Uncommon

PAISANO

January

ing 68,

N. Y. 14226

isthe
Christmas
timef9r gifts of

free,

—

BUFFALO.

PHONE; B35-3311

harpist, featured soloist with the

Iroquois School
West Irondequoit
South Glens Falls Central
Schools

ed by Richard

CAPE

DR. ALEXANDER KATZ

Gallery Auditorium,
Newly appointed Creative Associate David Tudor will participate in several works on the pro-

January 13

January

COMPLETE EYE

Creative Associates' Concert

&amp;

n’

of students for w
avocation, he continue

P

»*

CHRISTMAS

ij

S

■

The Symphonic Band combines
these two groups for works demanding a large orchestration
and will be conducted by both
conductors.

Opera Workshops

The Opera Workshop students
a
of Vittorio Giarratana will give
Derecital on Monday evening,
Baird
cember 20 at 8:30 p.m in
Hall.
as CarArias from such operas
men and Don Giovanni will be
act
presented. Mr. Giarratana will
works.
all
the
in
accompanist
as
Admission to the recital is free.

i)

1‘

S

PRINT BLOUSES

jjj

Also Basic Solids and Stripe*

L

BEAUTIFUL

S

*3.98?:

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J

HAPPINESS

21

Symphonic Band Music
Program This Sunday
A program of symphonic band
music will be presented by the
Music Department on Sunday, December 19 at 8:30 p.m. in the

Student Theatre Guild to Present
'Oh Dad, Poor
'This Weekend
Dad

Holiday Sportswear
Elmwood Ave.
Open Evcninfs

k

884-0011 i

10% STUDENT

DISCOUNTS

� Slide Rules
� Drafting Sets
� Drafting Supplies,

Etc.

•leeeelar ni Meaeeilar

MICROSCOPES
ERIE BLUEPRINT
and SUPPLY 00. U

J211 Hertel A»«., Bitffth
T1 S-7472

TRANSITOWN

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%*e rest

PLAZA
10 A.M. lo
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P.M.

Daily

|

g
S
|

�Friday, December 17, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE EIGHT

IF®®®2 MM

ILSWag

Dining After Dark

More and more people have been discovering how

exciting an experience dining can be at one of Buffalo’s
oldest and most interesting restaurants, Le Dejeuner
Chicago Nouveau, or the “New Chicago” as it is known
to its regular patrons. Located conveniently on Main St.
at the busy intersection near Ferry Ave., Le Chicago (as
the “in crowd” calls it), is one of the few restaurants in
the city that stays open all night. The combination of an
unusual and extraordinarily varied clientele and a surprisingly enterprising bill of fare have made this fascinating bistro “a place to go” in Buffalo especially during

those “off hours” when a restaurant can be such a

weary affair.

The decor is Basic American Civic Gothic, but by a
lucky chance, a number of renovations have taken place
recently (after the fire that nearly gutted the kitchen
during which the restaurant never stopped serving food)
which have wrought a transformation to a daring popart setting that is a rather fantastic collage of brilliantly

executed faded shades and off-tones. The woodwork
benches, the long counter in front, the original use of
mirrors and the rare tile floor all contribute to the distinctive atmosphere, while the stunning direct lighting
creates an optic feast that is as satisfying as the food
itself.
Although the merriment is curtailed somewhat by
the management’s strict insistence on temperate beverages, unless you’re unusually standoffish, you’ll find that
you are immediately drawn to the conversation of total
strangers. At those times when other places in Buffalo
have put up the shutters, Le Chicago is at its best as
late-night notables from some of Buffalo’s most engrossing industries drop in to grapple with the delectable
short-order dishes and desserts. The dress is strictly informal at these times, but one of the most distinguishing
features of the patrons of this striking and colorful cafe,
is there utter disdain for the conventional amenities of
dress that make most social occasions so stuffy. The individuality of the restaurant itself is nowhere expressed
so clearly in the unconventional, deeply personal, challenging and (I might even say) idosyncratic dress of
its customers. The life-style of these people is equally
unique, I might add, and is one of the most infectious
aspects of dining at Le Chicago.
But perhaps 1 have been making too much of the
setting and suggesting, by implication, that there is nothing about the food to recommend this striking establishment. Nothing could be further from the case. Once
you have decided which dish to select from the elaborate and attractively varied bill of fare, your order will
be cooked precisely to your instructions and in a minimum of time. The owners of this fine place realize that
there are two basic kinds of customers, and they are
both treated regally. The staff, (which is an uncommon mixture of bright, vivacious people of several nationalities) will respond to your wishes with astonishing
haste if you are anxious to dine quickly in order to reach
some other engagement promptly. But if you are in
the mood for a lazy, relaxed meal complete with courses
before and after the entree, no one will hurry you on
your way and you will never be made to feel that there
is a demand for your table no matter how crowded the
restaurant may be.
The food may also be divided into two separate
categories. As I have mentioned, the side orders and
desserts are delicious, perhaps the most outstanding
feature of the place. Even the most prosaic sandwich
may contain some delightful surprise in the form of an
unexpected garnish or fillip. Connoisseurs of the omelette and souffle come here as to a shrine. The food is
always fresh and the portions are ample, even for someone with a truly gargantuan appetite.

‘Creative Associates Program IV’
Presented In Conference Theatre
By DANIEL SCHROEDER
Charles Joseph, violinist and
Norma Bertolami, pianist were
presented in “The Creative Associates Program IV” at the Norton Conference Theatre on Monday, Dec. 6. The program included sonatas by Telemann, Beethoven, Schubert and Brahms.
The character of the pieces
ranged widely. The stately, graceful Telemann won the audience
from the start, with Mr. Joseph’s
fine tone and articulation especially powerful in the very fast
Vivace movement. The Beethoven
was even more demanding on the
ensemble-playing abilities of the
performers, but they remained
together at almost every second.
The Schubert Sonata contrasted
greatly with the more academic
Beethoven, and the performers
caught the change in spirit immediately; the melodic second
movement was probably the most
outstanding performance of the
evening. The Brahms drifted in
from the mist and, after solidifying enough to make some beautiful rhetoric, drifted out again,
to end the concert.
Miss Bertolami never overplayed her role, even in the more
showy passages of Beethoven and
Brahms. Mr. Joseph was most
distinctive in his full tone; his

a:

The Right

.

.

.

The spirit as well as the fine
points of each work were attended to with much care.

(Cont’d from P. 4)

matter what the majority says,
Minority rights? Do you expect
that minority rights, or anybody’s rights, will be preserved
when the leadership is impressed
with the principle that the end
justifies the means? Does minority in the Iron Curtain countries
have the right to cross the Berlin
Wall? To start a business? To
speak against the government?
There is no such thing as a
“right” in Communist countries,

SHAKESPEARE
FILM FESTIVAL

only the “common good.”
Peril to the world? Has

WHAT-IS-AN.
ART-FILM FESTIVAL
Fri., Sat., Sun.

with Maurice Evans

Shoot the Piano
Player

4:30

7:30

-

-

9:30

p.m.

Sun., Mon., Tues.

phis

Hamlet

Knife in the Water

with Sir Lawrence Olivier
1:30

-

4:30

-

8:00

p.m.

—SPECIAL!—
22 and 23
Peter Sellers in
Dec.

THE AMOROUS GENERAL
plus

OKISvW
3165 OAH.EV AVE I TFd 6SBS

"livo" Intro by Loon Lowit,
Film Critic, The Spoctrum

Mon., Tues.
Orson Welles'

The Trial

Adapted from the novel

rwrea
by Franz

IN

Kafka

WILLIAMSVILLE

GALA NEW YEARS EVE PARTY
g

■

TECHMICOLOr TECHNISCOPE*

Ig

I

flgMWHgTIMtel |g&lt;P&gt;l«l«gnHvB56 g
W;S»5SK5!SS*»a3asS38aBg55!S55SSS3Sasa
|

Starts Christmas!

8

B

S'

P

«

|

s

s

Matinees Daily
Dec. 25
Jan. 2
—

8w
|

CinmaqAmhe&amp;t
i
wa
sumacs liBcoM«iiismTO6
win

I

at the
GREENSLEAVE

Coffee House
719 Elmwood Avenue
Every Fri ft Sot from 9:30

g

ALL NIGHT ENTERTAINMENT
WITH A PARADE OF STARS

The REVILOT Lounge
275 E. Ferry St.

com-

munism ever been content to sit
on its haunches? Was Russia content to sit and watch Czechoslovakia, Poland, Hungary, et al?
Did North Viet Nam sit and
watch South Viet Nam? Will
South Viet Nam sit and watch
Thailand, Malaysia, or the Philippines? Will the Philippines sit
and watch Australia, New Zealand, or Seattle?

FrU Sat.

MacBeth

Wrong Arm of the Law

Grist for the gourmets includes the more ambitious
side dishes and the justly famous main courses that the
restaurant is proud to offer. Such staples as beef, chicken
and the finest samples of the freshest catch of the local
lake fishing fleet constitute the main component of the
complete dinner menu. On occasion, something really
unusual finds its way on to the menu, and steady patrons
of this eating emporium are always ready to order whatever the management will offer as an “extra.”

Naturally, this restaurant may not be to everyone’s taste. But it is astonishingly reasonable, and it
serves good food quickly in an atmosphere that is, it is
safe to say, unique in the City of Buffalo. You may
have been to restaurants before, but unless you’ve tried
Le Chicago, you've definitely missed something.

pianissimos sometimes became a
bit too hard and his phases tended to disappear as they ended.

TT 6-9400

�Friday, Dacambar 17, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE NINE

Graduate Students To Hold
Free Annual Holiday Buffet

A personal invitation is extended to all graduate students to attend the Holiday Buffet, Friday,
December 17, at 7:30 p.m. in
Room 240 Norton Hall. All graduate students and their guests
are welcome. The Graduate Student Association will sponsor the
evening, and there will be music,
fun, and food. (Free)
Have you received

yoi/r

&lt;
r Graduat e Tu
ttonal Service are available in
your respective deparments and
at the GSA office.
If you haVe any questions con°

.

,

corning the Graduate Student As.

sociatlon

or campus activities,
feel free to contact us. Room 311
‘Norton Union, .831-4305.
..

„

‘Meet The Faculty
Hosts History Prof.

student

directory? If not you may pick up
a copy in the Graduate Student

Dr. John T. Horton, professor
and Chairman of the Department
of History, will be featured in a
half hour special on WBFO’s
program “Meet the Faculty.” The
program is to be broadcast Tuesday, December 21, at 6 p.m.
According to Carol A, Magavero of the WBFO News Department, the interview will center
around the development of the
UB History department, Dr. Horton’s graduate school experiences
at Harvard, the administration of
past Chancellor Samuel P. Capen,
the honors program for outstanding juniors and seniors in his-

Association office, 311 Norton
Union, open Monday to Friday
from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.

As occurs in all organizations,
the GSA has many committees
and very few members to help
on them. If you are interested in
working on any of a number of
committees (e.g. Public Relations,
Social, Food &amp; Bookstore, Academic, Affairs, Art International
Relations, and Library) please contact us. Your active support will
benefit the graduate population
here at IJB.

01,11

'

,

Ipnataaanr?

’

tory, the recently instituted senior colloquia. and the development and progress of this university.

Interviewer Magavero noted
that “Dr. Horton's warm sense of
humor—well known in the classroom—manages to shine through
the personal interview.”

tionaires

next

semester.

Leave your name and
phone number at the senate office or Norton candy
counter. Course evaluation
will not be successful without a large student participation.

forth PariS

504 PEARL STREET at Tapper
JAZZ

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From 9 p.m. to 2 a.m.

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Also AFTER HOURS JAZZ —Fri. A Sat. 3 a.m. to 6 a.m.

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dom, and just a little something

SUZANNE ROVNER

“Toll that bell. Toll that bell.
Toll that big fat black and sassy
liberty bell.” This is the message
spread by “Purlie Victorious,” a
highly entertaining comedy
Ossie Davis.

by

“Purlie Victorious” is part of
the repetoire of the Free Southern Theater—a group working
to establish “a theater for those
who have no theater." Free Southern Theater is people doing what
they love for people they love.
Perhaps it is this fact that makes
the comedy so alive, so believable. One comes to realize, as
the play progresses, that the artists arc not merely acting; they
are truly living their roles.
On the surface, it would seem
that the characters in “Purlie
Victorious” are not particularly
difficult roles to play. Each represents a definite type, familiar
to all of us, There is a diehard
segregationist, his idealistic son,
an “Uncle Tom" cottonpicker, a
sheltered young girl full of
“white folks” ideas, an elderly
mammy, But watching them, we
see so much more. We sec a father and son torn apart by their
different views of mankind. We
seen an “Uncle Tom” who will
change his mind only when
threatened with a baseball bat in
his wife’s powerful hand, and
who firmly advocates running because “it emancipated more people than Abraham Lincoln ever
did.” We see a girl who can recall no life except that as a cook
in various wealthy, white people's
And wo see a mammy
fighting the battle her own way;
patiently teaching her charge
about the wrongs of society while
waiting hand and foot on his
homes.

�

Hamburgers, Cheeseburgers, Fish—Chicken—French Fries
Thick Shakes—Soft Drinks—Coffee —Milk—Hof Chocolate

bigoted father. Each character is

different, each human. And guess
that is what the whole play, and
the whole struggle, is all about.
The personality of Purlie Victorious, portrayed by Bob CostIcy, is delightful. He has a vision
—freedom— and he makes every
!

WE BUY THE BEST—WE SELL THE BEST
STARTS DECEMBER 23rd
Clothing Faihion Cantor for Man

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Schedule of performances and prices
Eve. 8:00 p.m.
Mat. 2:00 pjn.
Wed.-Sat.
$1.50 Sun. &amp;thru Fri.
$2.00 Sat
Sun.-Hoi.

I

.

PHILADELPHIA

BSBSf
I

1390 FILLMORE AVE.
(Near

$3.00
_______

|
MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED
Main St., Bflo, NY. a
SCHINE’S GRANADA THEATER, 3176
at $ each
tickets for (date)
J%
Please send me
1 ■ □ Mat. □ Eve.—1st alternate date
Ji
3rd
2nd
•

g

'

•

I15 NAME

—

J

I! STREET
| | CITY

a

East

Utica)

$2.50
1. Steak Sandwich
2. Submarine
3. Italian or Polish
Sausages
4. Hamburger
5. French Fri
6. Coffee
V

-i|

j|
ZIP CODE__J|
'i

_STATE

"Western "n."Y." Premiere Thursday, Dec. 23rd
Schine's GRANADA Theatre
aaiMjaasSp—

TAKE-OUT
PHONE

896-8900

Bonmtu

‘Purlie Victorious’
Too Easy To Watch
By

Volunteer to distribute
course evaluation ques-

(Opening Under New Management—formerly the Boar's Head)

Thursday thru Sunday

Free Southern Theatre present* "Porlle Victorious"
Photo by Pmt*r

one around him sec and live that
vision. The feeling was so real
you could almost touch it when
id, “FPurli
M

left over; that’s all I ever wanted
all my life." In rare moments,
Purlie allows himself to admit
defeat; "All these wings and they
still won't won’t let me fly";
"Tell Freedom there’s a death
in the family." But more often
Purlie is singing and preaching
his dream, certain that he can
overcome all obstacles. Oddly—and very beautifully
Purlie's
victory comes when he is reacting
only as a man, not as a Negro. He
storms up the hill to defend the
honor of the woman he loves, and
returns one step closer to free—

dom.
I overheard the comment, "This
play is too easy to watch True.
"

Cap’n Stonewall Jackson Cotchi
pec was not as detestable as “Mr
Charlie" usually is. And looking
realistically, Purlie did have a
relatively easy victory. But to
strengthen the character of the
antagonist would have taken
away much of his humanity. Instead, he appeared a pathetic and
fallible creature of the limes.
The problem of bitterness versus mercy became real, and the
answer has yet to be found.

The play did become a bit
melodramatic towards the end,
but I think this can be justified.
The Free Southern Theater plays
to people who, for the most
part, have seen few or no plays
before. The message it brings
must be obvious. The significance
of the fact that the Old Cap'n
“dropped dead standing up" could

easily be missed by an inexperienced theatergoer, but the sermon at his funeral was precise
and easily comprehended. In addition. it did contain an important

for everyone. True freedom docs not require total assimilation. The Negro race has a
beautiful heritage, and if the
battle is to be truly won, its people must be proud of their identity. “Being black is a native
land in neither time nor place."
Only when men realize the beauty in their common humanity and
the richness of their differences
can we toll that bell; “that big
black »■
message

�Friday, December 17, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE TEN

oCetterA

to

the Editor

(Continued from P. 5)

WBFO Answers Criticism
TO THE EDITOR

I should like to take this op-

porutnity to reply to Miss Ellen
Cardone’s irresponsible and inaccurate remarks appearing, in
Tuesday’s Letter to the Editor,
regarding the discussion of the
defeated Senate reapportionment
on Campus Report, December 3,
on WBFO, Undoubtedly some of
the inaccurate accusations re-

sulted from the fact that Miss
Cardone did not, in fact listen to
the program which she so vitriolically attacked.

Miss Martha Obers, moderator
of Campus Report, in accordance
with FCC equal time requirements, made a “reasonable effort" to have differing viewpoints represented. Messages left
in the Senate mailboxes of Senator Volpe and Miss Cardone apparently were not received or
else disregarded.
The program in question cerwas not one or two-sided;
arguments were offered support
tainly

ing several differing viewpoints.

Furthermore, equal time provisions of FCC regulations do not
require that opposing parties be
presented simultaneously on the
same program, but only that the
opposition in a controversial
issue have an opportunity to air
its views on a subsequent program. Miss Obers submitted to
the Senate Tuesday night an an-

nouncement

inviting

not

only

views from “the other side,” but
indeed any responsible comment
on the issue.

Allenhurst Student Scores Administration
On Slum Conditions
TO THE EDITOR:

1. Collapsing ceiling

(Apt

435A)

There is something drastically
wrong in the State of Allenhurst.
I have found it impossible to contain my emotions any longer concerning the situation which presently exists in the freshman (and
I might add, sophomore and junior “dorm.” To be quite blunt, it
has now become evident that the
administrators of housing apparently regard the students residing
at the "Allenhurst Garden Apartments” as something other than
human beings. I do not contend
that living conditions are un-

bearable—I do say however if the
maintenance continues as it has
for the past three and one-half
months Allenhurst and its students might very well float off
happily into the similarly polluted
Lake Erie. Among the conditions
now present in Allenhurst which
have fallen on deaf ears (N. B.
Mr. James Bailey) are as follows:

2. Collapsing walls (Apt. 435A)
3. Unpainted walls (Apt. 435A)
4. Faulty toilets (Apt. 435A)
5. Garage hazards such as missing man-hole covers (Apt. 435A)
6. Broken heater vents (Apt.

435A)
I shudder to think of the even
worse living quarters of my fellow
residents. I must add that the
Resident Advisor in every case
has reported these trivial deficiencies to Mr. Bailey, the “Head
Resident,” some as early as two
months ago. But from where
comes the action? I think its about
time that this so-called center of
higher learning woke up to the
fact that somewhere within its
vast bureaucratic structure a
decay lingers and is seriously
threatening many of the students
it “serves.” No, James (or Clark),
the new campus has not arrived
yet.
Scott Forman

“Campus Police, Are You
Really Doing Your Job?”
TO THE EDITOR
I’ve just read a complaint letter by Terri Marnor on the de-

plorable traffic situation in front
of Goodyear Hall on Dr. Furnas’
“Party Night”
Perhaps the campus police are
at fault?

It seems to me that the campus parking and driving regulations, the New York State V. and

T. Code, and the President’s Uniform Traffic Code were established for the safety and convenience of all, and the subsequent
fines were established for the
relatively few offenders.
A question—Why are there at

least two Campus Police ears sta-

tioned in the immediate vicinity
of Goodyear on many evenings to
prevent just the type of situation
described in Miss Marnor’s letter, and quietly dispersed on

“Party Night”?

Perhaps the solution to the
problem would be the selection of
Auxiliary Police from among the
student body to do the job the
Campus “Police” are obviously
incapable of? It worked at the
university I attended before transferring to UB—why not here?
One final question—Campus Police, are you really doing your

job?

Tom Malorzo

Maintenance Trucks Get in Students' Way
TO THE EDITOR

The Student Welfare Committee has received numerous complaints about the maintenance
trucks on the sidewalks. With the
inclement weather fast approaching, students are forced off the
sidewalks and onto the lawns,

Which' wmvvfcwfcVwfc.’ and
muddy.

This committee is aware of the
necessity of maintenance vehicles
to use the sidewalks, however,
we would hope that these vehicles could remain off the sidewalks from ten minutes before
the hour until five minutes after
the hour.

J. Z. Friedman, Chairman
Student Welfare Committee

reTwenty SUNYAB
cently went to Montgomery, Alabama to tour the Air University

at the Maxwell Air Force Base.

of WBFO
founded.

est

is

totally

un-

Finally Miss Cardone states
that “WBFO news and opinion
coverage is usually quite good.” I
have no idea whatsoever what
she means by “opinion coverage.”
WBFO does not indulge in opinion coverage. WBFO presents
United Press news, commentary
on the news from responsible
sources such as PI correspondents and New York Times, and
free discussion of controversial
issues.

Miss Cardone is mistaken in
stating that the WBFO News Director was at home listening to
the program, which was more
than Miss Cardone was doing. Her
reference was to Mr. J. Z, Friedman, who participated in the discussion, not only in his capacity
as Assistant News Director at
WBFO, but as Welfare Committee Chairman of the Student Senate. he was identified as such
on the program. Miss Cardone’s
implication that Mr. Friedman
was representing a vested inter-

Air Force Base
Cadets Tour
cadets'

Miss Cardone’s remarks are
highly offensive to this station.
David L. Schriber,
News &amp; Special Events Dir.
WBFO Radio

Major Bailey, Director of Education, briefed the cadets on the
mission of the Air University arid
its physical composition. A question and answer period was held
at AFROTC headquarters. The
cadets had the opportunity of
meeting Brigidier General Lindley, Commandant AFROTC, and
to question the General’s staff
regarding AFROTC.
During their stay some of the
cadets were guests of the Women
of the Air Force (WAF’S) at a
Charity Ball, while others visited
Montgomery’s landmarks and attended a dance at nearby Huntington College.

Mr. Joseph Plesur, Director of

Instructional Television at UB,
was the guest of Major Ozenick
on the flight. Mr. Plesur spent
his time at the AU Television
Center comparing notes with Captain Kendrick, Director of AU
TV, and touring the television
complex’s facilities.

Because the cadet’s tour
filmed for inclusion in an
Force documentary, the flight
be permanently recorded for

p.m. to

90&lt;t

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1 a.m. Weekdays

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4 p.m. to 2 a.m. Fri.

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International Club
The International Club will
hold its annual Winter Season Reception Sunday, December 19, in
the Dorothy Haas Lounge, 3 p.m.
to 11 p.m.

Samples of international food
specialties, entertainment, dancing, games, and prizes will be
featured.

PIZZAby DiRose
4

was

TD Q.IQQfl
A SI V IwVU

�Friday, December 17, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE ELEVEN

Greek Notes
Gamma Phi would like to welcome the addition of four new
members: John Anderson, George
Cushing, Ken Starobin, and Scot
Moss. A champagne party will be
thrown in their honor tonight.

,S#aS3

Funds from Wishing Well in Goodyear will aid children at Buffalo
State Hospital.

Photo by Alan Gruber

“That's Paul’is the theme of their
Mr. Formal candidate, Paul Jenkins. Today is the last day of voting and they urge all students to'
vote for your Mr. Forma! candidate. Sigma Delta Tau is holding
their first annual Mother-Daughter luncheon on December 29, at
12:45 p.m. It will take place at
Rossoff’s Restaurant in Manhattan, The sisters will begin the
new semester with a game night
given by their pledges. They will
meet in Norton Union, Room 234
on January 22, from 2 p.m. to 5
p.m. Phi Kappa Psi is proud to anounce its officers for the coming
semester. They are; Pres,
Carl
Millerschoen, V. Pres.
Roger
Fredericks, Pledgemaster
Pete
Congo, Treas.
Lee Schweichler, Corresponding Sec.
John
Sansone, Recording Sec.
Tony
Capozzi, Messenger
Gary Helffenstein, Chaplain—Bob Schmidt,
and Sergeant-at-Arms
John
Campagnola. They would like to
thank Sigma Kappa Phi Sorority
for a very enjoyable social last
Friday evening. Dave Franko is
the recipient of the Solon E. Summerfield Award as the chapter’s
outstanding senior scholar Monday, December 20, from 3:30 to
5:30 p.m., they will present “The
Rogues” for a mixer in the Millard Fillmore Room. Wednesday
evening, December 22, they will
hold their annual Christmas
Party. The pledges of Phi Epsilon
Pi will hold their Pledge Party
tomorrow evening in the Beta Sig
Hall, above Aliota’s. The theme
is Ding Dong School. The dress
will be in accordance with the
theme. The brotherhood would
like to thank the student body
for the enthusiastic support given
to Mike Fish their candidate for
—

—

—

—

—

—

The CRO will meet this Tuesday, December 21, at 3 p.m. in
Norton 217. The next regular
meeting will be Tuesday, January

Sunday, December 19—6 p.m.;
Monday, December 20—4:45 p.m.;
Tuesday, December 21,—7 p.m.;
Wednesday, December 22—4:45

p.m.

25, 1966.

�

�

SABBATH SERVICE AND
ONEG SHABBAT

The B’nai B’rith Hillel Foundation will dedicate its Sabbath
Service this evening to the holiday of Chanukah. Special readings on the Chanukah theme will
be included and the Oneg Shahbat will feature Chanukah songs.
Dr. Justin Hofmann will speak
on: “Chanukah and Jewish Tradition.” The service will be held
at 7:45 p.m. in the Hillel House.

�

�

�

CANDLE LIGHT SERVICES
Chanukah

C a n d 1e Lighting

Service will be held in the Hil-

lel House at the following times:

—

—

—

Candles and Menorahs are
available for students at the
Hillel House at a very nominal
cost.

�

—

�

�

�

MID-WINTER SOCIAL
The annual Hillel Mid-Winter
Social for college students who
are spending the winter recess
in Buffalo will be held on Sunday, December 26 from 7:00 until
10:30 p.m. in the Hillel House.
Students who are attending outof-town as well as Buffalo colleges
are invited to attend. Refreshments will be served and recorded music for social dancing will
be provided. The social is designed to afford an opportunity
to students to renew friendships
and to make new friends.

See Dream Diamond Rings only at
NEW YORK
Albany—F. J. Lambert
Auburn—Geo. A. York Jwlr.
Binghamton
—

Callao-Major Corp.

Buffalo—A. M. A.
Buffalo —Harry Gamier, Inc,
Buffalo—E. A. Pflster. Inc.
&amp;

Canandaigua—
L. M. Campbell Jeweler
Cohoes —Timpane's, Inc.
Corning—Ray Jewelers of
Corning, Inc.

Cortland—H. Alpert Jwlr.
E. Setauket —Dawis Jwlr.
Elmira—Elmira Jewelers
Elmira —Ray Jewelers

Freeport—Lloyd's Jwlr. Inc,
Glens Fall—M. C. Scoville

Surprise!

your ArICarved Diamond Ring comes
to you on its own precious throne.

Herkimer—Winstons Jwlr.
Huntington—

Einsohn Jewelers Inc.
Ithaca—Cramers Jewelers
Jamestown
Vincent’s Jewelers Inc,
Johnson City—
Messner’s Jewelry
Little Falls —G. J. Morofti
Massena —Peets Jewelers
Middletown
R. Edgar Clarke, Inc
Middletown
F. D. Kernochan; Inc.
Monroe—Monroe Jewelers
Newburgh—Cowan’s Jwlr.
Olean—Reed's Jwlr., Inc.
Ossining—Hartnik Bros.
Oswego—Schneider Bros.
—

—

—

TRIBUTE

PROMISE

Plattsburg—

Stoughton's Jewelers
Potsdam—Carey Jwlry. St.
LOTUS

blossom

on a little

throne

charmingly 9 n, boxed
shown wMh then Mine thtones.
the written A,tCatved
by
backed
S1200
from S150 to
Value Plan
guarantee and Permanent

AM styles

Poughkeepsie—
David's Jewelry Store

Riverhead —Kaller Jwry. St.
Rome—Infusino's Jewelers
Silversmiths
&amp;

Sag Harbor —Fritt Jwry. St.
Sayviile—Fred Stadtmuller

Jewelers Inc.

dream

diamond flings

.

Mr. Formal. Phi Lambda Delta
will hold a cocktail party at the
Hotel Buffalo this Saturday night,
sarting at 8:30 p.m. This annual
“pre-Winter Weekend” party
should be the pledges’ and Ron
Darling's shining moment of the
year. Theta Chi will hold a closed
cocktail party tomorrow night
starting at 7:30 p.m. at the
"House" prior to the Silver Ball.
The Fellows and Alumni of Beta
Sig arc looking forward to attending their 17th annual Autumn
Nocturne

tonight. Weather permitting, they will be going tobagganing tomorrow night. They will
be seeking their fourth straight
victory in basketball next week.
Tl.ey will be inducting their Fall
’65 pledge class this week. Lewis,
Sam, Gerry, and Sandy will be
representing Beta Sig in Sugarbush, Vermont during intercession Alpha Sigma Phi is planning
a gala weekend to cap the semester’s official activities. Things will
begin to happen Thursday afternoon when the brothers, pledges,
and a few miscellaneous friends
congregate for an informal party
at the Chez Nedrick. Friday night
the pledge class will throw a cas-

ual party in honor of the brothers.
It will be held at Bacello's Lounge.
Preceeding the Silver Ball will be
a cocktail party to be held someplace in Buffalo, Special guest
will be “That Man.” Entertain-

served at mid-night, after which
Old Saint Nick will present gifts
to the brothers' dates. Saturday
night there will be a cocktail
party preceding the Silver Ball.
Tau Kappa Epsilon would like to
announce the officers for the
Spring '66 term. President —James
Ringler, V President
Peter
Marc BerReese, Plcdgemastcr
—

—

enbach, Secretary-Treausrer
James Schmid. Historian
Joel
—

—

Kershncr, and Chaplain—Dwight
Richardson. Rides to the Thota
Chi project at Buffalo State Hospital will leave Norton at
p.m, on Wednesday,

(5:30

Pi Lambda Tau also wishes to
announce that their Pledge Party
will be held this Saturday night
at 7:30 p.m.
Marilyn Royer of Alpha Gamma Delta was elected to Phi Beta
Kappa. Sunday. December 19, the
sisters and pledges will Christmas Carol at Buffalo State Hospital, at 7:00 p.m. Afterwards
there will be a get-together at
Linda Holt's home in Williamsvillc.

Alpha Epsloin

PI

announces

their Annual Fazio's Rush Party,
to be held this evening at Fazio’s
Capitol Hall . . . Rides arc being
arranged for freshmen.
Last Sunday night Chi Omega

extended Christmas kindness to
the patients of Buffalo State Hosrobi Trio. The official activities
pital. They went through the
grind
slowly
a
will
to halt Sunday wards singing Christmas carols
afternoon with a “ritual purificawith the patients and passing out
and
clearing up apartment" presents. The pledges arc selling
tion
at
party
the Poultney Avenue mistletoe in Norton this week.
Place. Sal and Destro will preside
and oversee. Merry Christmas to
They arc also planning a Christall and to all a good night. Sigma mas program at the Veterans HosPhi Epsilon would like to urge pital, Next Monday night the Chi
support for their candidate for Omega sisters and pledges will
Mr. Formal, Mike Couture, whose hold a Christmas party in their
theme thei year is C’est Moi. Sig apartment
Ep will hold its annual Christmas
party tonight at Leonardo’s RestSigma Kappa Phi Sorority will
aurant. Buffet Dinner will be hold a Christmas party with the
alumnae this Monday at Roz Sciarrino's home. Denny Hens, "Man
of Fire" is Tau Kappa Epsilon's
candidate for Mr. Formal, TKE is
these Authorized ArtCarved Jewelers
going to hold a closed cocktail
party before the Silver Ball next
Saratoga Spgs.—P. S. Eddy
Saturday. Alpha Kappa Psi will
Schenectady—
hold a toga party at Mike Sonnen
Maurice B. Graubart
reich’s apartment Saturday night.
Scotia —Mayfair Jwlr., Inc,
ment will be provided by the Nai-

Sherburne—
Turner Jewelry Store

Southampton—Corwin's
Main Street Jewelers

Springville—Robert H. Engel
Syracuse—Albert Jwlry. Inc.
Syracuse—

E. W. Edwards &amp; Son
Wellsville—F. A, Drew, Jwlr.
West Hampton Beach—
R. F. Vail &amp; Son
White Plains—
Bramley &amp; Co., Inc.
NEW YORK CITY
Brooklyn

—

Louis Amols Sons, Inc.
Brooklyn—Nilsen’s

Jewelers

Brooklyn—B. Senter Inc.
Brooklyn—
Swiss Jewelry Center Inc.

Bronx—Bick Co. Jewelers
L. Is. City—Chas. Anagnos
Manhattan—Clive Jwlr. Inc.
Manhattan—Dial Jwlr. Inc.
Manhattan—
Dyckman Time Shop
Manhattan—
M. L. Kester Jwlr., Inc.
Manhattan—Maryo Inc.
(Tower

Jewelers)

Manhattan—Schwartz Bros,
Manhattan—Scolnick Inc.
Manhattan—
Silver's Jewelry Store
Manhattan—Morris Weigler
Manhattan—
Wexler, M. &amp; Sons
Ridgewood—Isaacs Jwlr.
Ridgewood—F. Stadtmuller
Staten Island (Great Kills)
Paul's Jewelers
Staten Is. (Pt. Richmond)
Russell-Reed, Inc.
Queens Vil.—Jaeger Jwlr.

GRADUATE PROGRAMS
leading to

MASTER OF SCIENCE
DEGREE with specialization

PHARMACY
ADMINISTRATION
in

HOSPITAL
PHARMACY
ADMINISTRATION
and

SESSIONS BEGIN
FEBRUARY AND SEPTEMBER
Course is designed to prepare
graduate pharmacists for positions of responsibility and
leadership in management,
marketing, selling and research irt pharmaceutical, cosmetic and related industries
in the wholesaling and retailing of the drug trade; in
preparation for teaching of

pharmacy administration; and
in the administration of the
hospital pharmacy.
Admission

for

matriculated

graduate students is limited
to those who possess HS.
in Pharmacy degrees.

—

—

LIU

•

•

SOllITIN of
INFORMATION
APPLICATION FORM

�CLASSIFIED
FOR SALE

1961 CADILLAC Coup de Ville,
full power, 32,000 miles, like
new. $1,375. Call TF 8-2049 between 6 and 8 p.m.
MEN’S HOCKEY SKATES, size 12.
Call NF 2-3346 after 6 p.m.
HOUSEHOLD furniture for sale;
kitchen, bedroom, living room;
good condition; reasonable. TF 6-

4540 or TR 6-7076.
MG 1600—black, removable hard
top, new tires, good condition.
Must sell, asking $795. Phone

838-2779.

TRIUMPH HERALD ’61 sedan.
good condition, bucket seats,
new tires, very good on gas, excellent for student; $300. Call
856-8455 after 6 p.m.
ORGAN PLAYER, rhythm guitar
player and/or singer. 741-3506.
USED PLAYBOYS or similar
publications for sailor in Vietnam. Phone 836-6472 before 5
p.m. Fri.-Sun. or after 8 p.m.
Mon.-Thurs. We’ll pick up.
FOR RENT

4-BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE, $125
per month; 2-car garage; living
room, den, large kitchen, two
baths, bus service to Main available; grocery, laurdromat, and
other stores nearby; excellent intellectual neighborhood library
nearby. For information contact
837-6183, ask for Larry.

FEMALE grad student wishes to
share her two-bedroom furnished apartment with the same.
It is a five-minute walk from the
campus. Call 836-2915.
FOR GIRLS who don’t like to
walk! Newly furnished room,
2 minutes from campus. Separate
kitchen facilities; washing machine; television. Single or two
friends. 836-6733 after 5:30.
LOST AND FOUND

WILL THE person who accidentally took a brown overcoat on
Wednesday, December 1 between
1 and 2 p.m. at Acheson Hall,
2nd floor, please call Fong 8313268.

RARE OPPORTUNITY
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Friday, December 17, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE TWELVE

—

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For complete information
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The SPECTRUM
Published by

Parfneri' Preii, Jnc.
mill Printing
1381 KENMORE AVENUE

Saturday Review
(The following is the first in a
series of articles on American
magazines. The method used in
writing it was to review a random issue, in this ease that of
November 13.)
One of the peculiarities of
American magazines is that they
tend to coast along on their reputation for an unusually long time.
The Atlantic Monthly is still considered by some to be a generating force for ideas. Nothing could
be farther from the truth. The
Saturday Evening Post, on the
other hand, is still thought of as
Ben Hibbs’ showcase for the
illustrations of Norman Rockwell. Ironically, the Post’s wellpublicized troubles have spurred
the magazine on to some vague

resemblance of life. It is no
longer the perfect complement to
the Reader's Digest.
The Saturday Review is one of
the best examples of a magazine that is undeserving of its
former reputation. About the
best that can be said for it is

Amendment Is
Topic on WBFO
By DAVID L. SCHRIBER

Each issue begins with the
SR sense of humor which is not
quite as good as the Post's used
to be, which means that it has
not yet reached the plateau of
non-existence. The Phoenix Nest
and Trade Winds must amuse
somebody, but whoever he is
probably reads Burt Bachrach
and Charlie Rice for real laughs.
Top of My Head in this particular
issue was a crotchety dissertation
on the evils of vandalism. Goodman Ace, its author, was once
the highest paid writer in television (on the Perry Como Show.)
Also many years ago, he did
some movie shorts as a straight
man for his wife. No matter how
he tries, a straight man can’t
change his spots.
Then we hit the big gun of
the SR columnists: Ciardi. Joy
spreads through the soul. But this
week, John discusses his wife, the
League of Women Voters, ,and
the idiosyncracies of women in
general. The life of organized
suburban womanhood is just not
funny or interesting anymore,
even when it is conveyed by a
decently witty prose style, I
can’t help thinking that supposedly intellectual magazines
shouldn’t be playing in Alan
King’s backyard.

The recently rejected Student
Senate reapprotionment amendment was the subject of a discussion on Student Interview last
night at 10 p.m. on WBFO. Martha
Obers interviewed Don Mingle,
IFC; Rhea From, School of Education; Bob Martin, CRO; Dennis
GiaQuinto, School of Pharmacy;
J. Z. Friedman, Welfare Committee Chairman; and Dr. Marvin
Zimmerman, Student Senate Advisor.
Don Mingle argued for a dualistic representation not only by
academic school but also by
extra-curricular activities. He suggested that if activities are not
represented, then the jurisdiction
of the Senate should be limited to
the academic sphere. When asked
whether non-voting interest group
representatives would adequately
express the special interests in-

4

possible.)

The book reviews are not even
worth talking about even though
they are the heart of the magazine, but I suppose they shouldn’t

p.m. to

90* FOR 8 SLICE 13“ PIZZA

I a.m. Weekdays

4 p.m. to 2 a.m. Fri. A Sat.

—

be completely ignored. Typically,
Granville Hicks, in his review of
Updike’s new novel, defends Updike’s right to be a small writer.
Hick’s reviews are all of a piece,
all middle of the road literary
observations by a singularly dull,
pipe smoking “literary man.”
Kenneth Rexroth, on the other
hand, is nothing at all like Granville Hicks. Gut in his Classics
Revisited column, (about Sophocles Theban Plays) he manages
to sound like Hicks doing an
introduction to a paperback
classic “for younger readers.”
From Rexroth’s column one can
see the true oppressive nature of
SR. It is not easy to take an irritating and almost always interesting outcast and turn him into
a pedestrian member of what
Mailer calls “the literary mafia”
but SR's editors have done it
and deserve all the credit.
When McCall’s bought The Saturday Review, Cousins, in his editorial, yelled at the top of his
voice that the purchase would
in no way affect the quality of
the magazine and it hasn’t. That
means that Cousins and Co. are
doing the best they can. The
whole problem with The Saturday Review is that it has long
since stopped greying at the temples and grown completely bald.
-

-

-

-

slow
to get
the
holiday
spirit
try

spiking it
with

mental bodies, which have representation by constituent groups
and not interest groups. Lobbyists in Congress are quite effective; why should it not be possible for an interest group (like
IFC or CRO) to exert pressure on
divisional representatives?

roosters.

I
rooster

$2.50 and up
■

Y
IN YOUR WARDROBE Com* To
2900 Dolawar* Av*., K*nmor*, N. Y.

TD Q IQQA
Ill v'lwvU
—■

-

es

Dr. Zimmerman said that a multiple basis of representation is incompatible with a democracy because of overlapping interests. He
said it is conceivable that a minority elite of students active in many
special interest areas would dominate the Senate as a result of
their multiple votes arising from
representation in federal govern-

Rhea From appealed to students
to make known to their Senators
their views on this reapportionment issue and expressed hope
that the problem might be resolved in a referendum.

Then we come to the articles
of SIGNIFICANCE: analysis of
the Watts riots by Martin Luther
King and Murray Schwartz. King,
like the SR itself, was once great,
but unlike the SR, his greatness
lasted only a few years. He is
no longer the courageous pariah,
the “Black Jesus” he rmce was.
He is nothing more than Martin
Luther King, Nobel Prize Winner
and everybody’s favorite Negro
leader. In late 1965, he seems already an anachronism with little
to say but however little that is,
it is certainly a great deal more
than Murray Schwartz who is an
example of one of the silliest
forms of political man: the ineffectual white liberal. A lot still
has to be said about the Watts
riots but not in the SR. If they
had really wanted something
worth reading, why didn’t they
commission Mailer, Buckley, I. F.
Stone, or even Murray Kempton?
Norman Cousin’s editorial (on
Vietnam, of course) is straight
Norman Cousins, naive, idealistic
and a waste of space. The Collected Editorials of Norman Cousins could easily be made into
a classic comic book, not unlike
SUNY Daze, only worse (if that’s

3 BIO SHOPS

tion).

Bob Martin suggested an expa n d e d Executive Committee
which would be responsive to the
influence of interest groups and
have a veto over actions of the
Senate. J. Z. Friedman countered
that it would be essential to have
a provision for senatorial override of such a veto. He also asked
if an enlarged Executive Committee would not make the Senate
even more unyielding than some
people charge it already is.

Jeffery Simon

.

PIZZA by DiRose

representative would have no
more power to influence action
than a common student who sat
in on a meeting (except that a
non-voting representative could
introduce, but not vote on, a mo-

(*t Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

that in an age when most magazines cost thirty-five cents, SR
still costs a quarter.

..

\

%

—

■

'

�Friday, December 17, 1965

Arthur L. Kaiser, director of Records and Admissions, is
attempting to establish a university rule whereby no student is permitted to take more than two exams on any
one day. (All students who are scheduled for more than
two exams on any day, must report to the information
desk in the Office of Records and Admissions, room 201
Hayes Hall.

EXAMINATION SCHEDULE
January 5-14, 1966
12:00-3:00

8:00-11

DATE

Wednesday, Jan. 5

4:00-7:00

1) Modern Language 103
2)
R
3) Business 0201

History

101

Thursday, Jan. 6

1)
2)

Friday, Jan. 7

1) Drama
2)

Saturday, Jan. 8

1) Sociology 101
2)
S

1) Mathematics 117
2) Mathematics 141
3) Mathematics 241

1)
2)

1) Chemistry 101
2) Business 5201

Monday,

Jan.

10

Tuesday, Jan. 11
Wednesday,

Jan. 12

1) Political Science 151
2) Nursing 111

H
V
&amp;

E

Speech

126R

Q

Z
Psychology

101

1) Economics
2) Economics

D

2)

181
182R

N
T

English 101

Thursday, Jan. 13
Friday, Jan. 14

PACE

SPECTRUM

Modern

Languages 101

Philosophy 203

THIRTEEN

Representative NS A Program
To Be Found on UB Campus

By BARBARA A. FITZSIMMONS

The 1965-66 program of the
NSA on this campus is especially
representative of the purposes for
which the organization was founded, and as such, deserves elabo-

ration.
In the

area of developing better
educational standards, the NSA
is planning, in conjunction with
the Academic Affairs Committee,
a program of course evaluation.

Early

next

semester,

question-

naires will be passed out in
classes for the purpose of obtaining individual studentevalua
tion of 100 and 200 courses taken
this semester. Student opinoin
will be requested on such questions as types of assignments
given relevance of lectures and
recitations to text, usefulness of
text, and how profitable the
student considered the course.
When the results are collected
and tabulated, they will be published and made available to both
students and faculty with two intended results: first, to aid students (especially incoming fresh-

in choosing courses by giving them more detailed information than is given in the univer
sity catalogue as to what a course
consists of and what will be expected of them; and secondly,
that this (hopefully) objective
evaluation will be taken into con
sidcration by the faculty and
thus lead to an improvement in
the educational standards on this
men)

campus.-

According to Marion Michaels,
NSA Coordinator, there has already been a great deal of enthusiasm and cooperation shown
by the faculty for this project,
especially in suggestions made
for the composition and improvement of the questionnaires.
A second area of NSA activity
this year is the institution of a

tutorial program in which uni-

versity students are asked to devote two hours per week to tutoring children from underpriviledged areas in the city who arc
failing in school. The children
to be instructed will be chosen
from grades two to eight by their
teachers on the basis of need.
There will be three areas of instruction: 1—Reading and math;
2 —Non academic: music, art, gen-

and 3—
Instruction of unwed mothers.
The tutorial sessions will be for
two hours on weekdays—4 to 6 or
7 to 9, with the cultural program
being held on Saturdays. Each
student will be assigned two children, and will work with each of
them for one hour per week.
This program has a doubleedged purpose. First and foremost
is to help the children involved
—to develop between tutor and
child a relationship whicli will
foster in the child a desire to
study and work to rise above his
economic situation. The second
purpose is student-directed and
one of the prime goals of NSA
eral cultural program;

as an organization. It is to develop
in the student a spirit of community awargness and involvement,

both for what he as an individual
can offer to the community and
for his own enlightenment as to
the world beyond the campus.
Faculty cooperation has also
been

evidenced in

this under

taking, and in the next week or
two. faculty members will speak
to the tutors in an orientation

program.

Textbooks and materials are
being supplied by St. Augustine
Episcopal Church which originat-

ed the tutorial program, and
with which the NSA program is
affiliated. This was the first tutorial program to be officially
recognized by the Buffalo Board
of Education.
It should be mentioned here
that students need not be education majors to participate in this
program. Volunteers are needed
regardless of their course of
study. Interested students may
call 831-3175 or 837-6744 for
further information.
NSA’s third major activity is
the completion of a project
begun last year to set up a Student Service Office, which will
be located on the first floor of
Tower Hall. Its purpose is to
make available to students information regarding services and
discounts for which they aie eligible. It is felt there is a need
for this agency because many students are not aware of reduced
rates available to them in such
areas as world wide transporta
tion, student tours, room and
board, European car rentals, etc.
Students will also be able to ob
tain from the Student Service
Office an International II) Card.
This card, which will cost S.2, is
recognized almost anywhere in
the world, and will be especially
valuable to students studying or
traveling abroad. The NSA coordinator has advised that this
Student Service Office is expected to be in operation by the second week of November.

D Junior Year
in

New York
Three undergraduate colleges offer students
from all ports of the country an opportunity

broaden their educational experience
their
junior Year in New York
New York University is an integral part of
It)

by spending

the exciting metropolitan community of
justness, cu tura
New York City—the
artistic, and financial center of the nation

because now you can
complete Air Force ROTC in
just half the time!
Are you interested in starting a military career
while in college—but afraid it will cut too deeply
into your schedule?
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NEW YORK UNIVERSITY
New York, N.Y KXXH

Yeai

�Dogs Live Well
On UB Campus

BUFFALO, N. Y —Going to the
dogs at the State University at
Buffalo isn’t such a bad idea—as long as you happen to be a dog.
For the six German shepherds
used by the University’s security
forces for guarding the campus
at night, a “dog’s life" is one of
good food, clean kennels, and rigorous exercise.
The dogs, which are used to
protect the students and the University property, are professionally trained in security control
methods before they are used by
the campus police force. Used
during the evening hours only,
the dogs, who are always kept
on leashes, prove to be a valuable asset to the campus officers
who patrol throughout the night.
The use of dogs was instituted
during 1961, when the University
was faced with the problem of
having troublemakers and vandalism. The University’s security
personnel found a dog to be very
effective in getting unauthorized
persons off campus very quickly.
In addition, the problem of
“peeping Toms” around the wom-

en's dormitories has been virtu-

ally, eliminated, according to Mr.
Eugene Murray, chief of institutional safety.

On weekends, the dogs are of
invaluable assistance to the campus policemen who must check
unoccupied buildings. “One of
our dogs can sense that there
may be someone inside a building who doesn’t belong there
much easier than a human being
can,” according to Mr. Murray.
The dogs and the campus po-

Friday, December T7, W65

SPECTRUM

PAGE FOURTEEN

licemen who will handle them,
trained by a professional trainer who teaches both
men and dogs the necessary commands and gestures involved in
working with one another on the
178-acre campus.
According to Mr. Murray, the
number of thefts and “incidents” on campus has been reduced because of the dogs.
The six canines are kept on
campus in a large kennel, and
each dog has his own individual
exercise area.
In dealing with troublemakers,
the dogs are taught to circle a
person rather than attack him.
Only in an instance where the
have been

campus policemen was actually
being attacked, would the dogs
go after the attacker.

Greeks Present
Choral Program
Several Greek groups who had
participated in Greek Sing presented a choral program for the
patients at Buffalo State Hospital
Tuesday, December 7,
After performing individually,
the groups led the audience in
singing Christmas carols.

“All the Greeks involved found
this night a rewarding experience,” one participant said.
“Judging from the spirited welcome we received, our efforts
were very much appreciated.”
The performance was given at
Andrews Hall, the hospital’s audi-

torium.

Unity: Community Snynbles
By DANNY

It was all in the past and you
could only get to it when you
die, and the essence of this life
is futility. And since, somehow,
sexual intercourse made life
seem so goddam relevant, it must
be a sin. They were bad losers.
They could tell you a lot about
Hell, too. You go figure out why.

OK, so if, as most of you assert, life has no meaning, where

are you running?

Be on time! Do the reading in
a half! Chase the
girl! (Why is she running? Is
she running away?) thinking is
such an effort, isn’t it?

an hour and

Stop. Stop still. You are. You
breathe for a purpose. You touch
with your hands, and then you
feel such and such. You look with
your eyes, and then you see that
over there. You have needs, and
breathe and look and touch in order to fulfill those needs. You
orient yourself with your senses,
you relate with your being. Freedom happens here. Freedom to
relate to the world as you choose,
is freedom. Freedom not to run.
I don’t care if he is dead. When
he said, “Ask not what your
country can do for you, but what
you can do for your country,’’
he was, as things now stand,
wrong. Not only do I expect my
country not to throw me in a
bloody ditch in Vietnam, but I
expect it to make the air I
breathe smell sweet as, I am told,
it once did.

Now, there is nothing but concrete which is a receptacle for

dogs. “Dirty” is the password
permitting entrance into the refuge from the plague of sterility

outside. The concrete makers
have the promise of no dream
to which they must conform their
actions; they can progressively
crush a tree underfoot anytime.
They own them. And everybody
knows that possession is 9/10ths
of the law. The concrete makers’
law, not the garden makers’.
O Freedom, 0 Freedom Over

Me. An integrated chorus from
a high school in Charleston,
South Carolina, starts singing a
swaying Gospel tune as the

humble, proud, no-cavitied, tall,
jockey-shorted, average American in the Volkswagen saddle
speaks: “I’m free to bargain with
any car dealer I please. Free to
shop at the A&amp;P or, if I’m not
satisfied, to shop at Super-Duper.
Free to watch television or even
golf if I prefer waiting in line.
Free to send my children to public pschool, to high school, to collea£. Free to be retired. Free

All the ordinary jungle man
wanted was a nice garden. They
used to sit around and smoke and
dream and say things like, “I wish
gardis place waz a
den.” They were very earthy people. Then came the people who
wrote down the myths of creation. They remembered the beautiful garden dream and called the
garden Paradise. Then came the
people who only half remembered
the dream. They screamed frustratedly the rejection of the possibility of building a nice garden.

H

I

fi

We’ve been taught two things
in school. That we have

very well

Presentation of J. S. Bach

Christmas

|

Oratorio

k:

by Lutheran Choral
and Orchestra

E
John

W.

Baker, Conducting

Mon., Dec. 20, 1965
8:30 p.m.
at Holy Trinity
Lutheran Church
Main near North
$
Open to the Public
i^rssssasssssasaajagssasssjsssjast:

RUSSELL

|
|
$

nothing to say, paint, play, or
hum—so shut up and do the assigned work, or so shut up so the
teacher can finish telling us the
truth. Concomittantly, that we are
incomplete people who must always produce or be considered a
godforbid failure. Also, in order
to be complete, we must run a
required obstacle course consisting of at least twelve years of

“education,” damned little of
which has been helpful. At the
end of the obstacle course we
are given a concrete plated wallet to collect money in and, incidentally, to live in. Freedom
ends, for most of us, at the beginning of that road.
That most of the people around
me have no sense of the meaning

of their existence makes the
noise of the wooden heels on my
boots seem louder than it is.
There is, friend, something,
somewhere, to be discovered.

VIEWPOINT ,|i
.

(Cont’d from P. 16)
Bill Bradley of Princeton-could

have assumed this role, but he
has decided to sacrifice his prime
athletic years to research and
study. He deserves only the greatest acolades for this decision,
however, even though in doing so
he set back the NBA’s timetable
by four years. As a native New
Yorker, could you just see the
scramble in the Eastern Division
this year if the New York Knickerbockers had Bradley to work
with Dead-eye Dick Barnett and
Walt Bellamy?
Why, the tyrannical Harry “the
Horse” Gallatin might even have
kept his job with that much
talent under his roof.
The N.B.A. has long coveted a
full-scale television contract such
as baseball and football enjoy.
With the coverage that Alcindor
will bring to basketball—his name
will be a household word inside
of a year—he could bring a network tieup in on his elongated
coat strings. I’d just like to be his
lawyer. He could be the most
astronomical of the “bonus-boy
age.”
First it was baseball, until they
adopted a form of collusion with
their version of a draft, and now
it is football. Witness the American Football League’s national
emergence with Joe Namath and
John Huarte (who?) at the helm.
Basketball should be next in this
game of break the banker. If I
had a fifteen year old son, I
would make him sleep tide to a
chinning bar for the next six
years to get in on the glory.
Alcindor’s the big one, though,
and don’t bet that the N. B. A.
isn’t tracking him day and night
to make sure that nothing happens to their stud. Remember
that Bill Russell is already thirty
and Wilt Chamberlain has quit
the league more times than he
has led it in scoring. The big man
in baseball is the home-run hitter or strike-out pitcher; football
has its quarterback or long bomber; and basketball its co-ordinated
giant in the middle.
Alcindor should approach both
RuSsell and Chamberlain at their
individual strengths given time
to mature. The challenge of the
young college star against the
declining old pros will be too exciting for even the casual sports
fan to pass up.

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�Friday, December 17, IMS

manager,

base their selections
assessment of a player’s physical attributes and skills,
and not fully upon the record
he compiles in collegiate comupon their

petition.
According to the scouts, Cazzie Russell, Michigan’s fabulous
6-5 backcourt man, has all the attributes of a superstar and will
definitely be the leagues’ No. 1
draft pick. Cazzie averaged 25.7
points per game last season.

Teamed with Russell, 6-7, 225pound forward Oliver Darden
makes the Wolverines runaway
choices for their third consecutive Big Ten title and a good
bet for National championship
points per game last season on
a team that also included AllAmerica forward Bill Buntin,
now with the Detroit Pistons.
Joining Russell in .the backcourt is another 6-5 guard. Matt
Guokas Jr., of St. Joseph's, who
averaged 13.3 in 1964:65 and was

SPECTRUM

The Pro

Scouts' Basketball
All-America
First Team

Oliver Darden, Michigan
Clyde Lee, Vanderbilt
Walt Wesley, Kansas
Cazzie Russell, Michigan
Matt Guokas Jr., St. Joe’s

Second

Team

UCLA
Lou Hudson, Minnesota
Mel Daniels, New Mexico
Dave Bing, Syracuse
Bob Leonard, W. Forest

Ed

Lecey,

6-7
6 9
7 0
6-5
65

Sr.
Sr
Sr
Sr.
Jr.

J Jr
6 5 Sr
6 9 Sr
6 3 Sr.
6-J Sr.

PACK FIFTEEN

lina; Jim Burns, Northwestern;
Don Freeman, Illinois; Jim Walk
er. Providence; Stan Washington.
Michigan Slate; Wes Bialosuknia,
Connecticut; Jim Ellis, San Francisco; Lonnie Wright, Colorado
State; Bob Vcrga, Duke; J i m
Ware, Oklahoma City; Leon Clark,
Wyoming: Dome Murray, Detroit;
Tom Kerwin, Centenary; Dexter

Westbrook

(ineligible),

Provi-

dence; Mike Silliman, Army; Jim
Williams, Temple; Cliff Anderson.
St. Joseph's; Ed Jackson. Bradley;

Jack Marin, Duke.

llullim (rout will) billion trim at side vcnls
Ivy Round Room.

MOREY'SClothing Fathion Center for Men

3151 BAILEY AVE. at E. Amherst

Dial «32 1200

�*

Friday,

SPECTRUM

PACE SIXTEEN

Daeembar 17, 1965

S

iipgtesriawaa

LIONS SUBDUE BULLS
By

Viewpoint
Age of Alcindor
By

STEVE OBERSTEIN

Starting next year, forget the
National Collegiate Athletic Association’s basketball championship for the following three years.
That is how good Coach John
Wooten’s freshman basketball

team at University of California
at Los Angeles looks. When you
consider that U.C.L.A. has won
the title for the past two years,
and is ranked number one in
the nation for the 1965-66 season,
Wooten’s coaching record is quite
impressive.
But the UCLAn’s fine varsity
was defeated by THEIR FRESHMAN TEAM by FIFTEEN POINTS
in a pre-season scrimmage. Woot-

en has lost two games in the
last years. If he can get through
this year, he may never lose another.

The cause of most of this excitement on the Bruin’s campus
in Westwood, California, is an
intelligent young giant named
Lewis Alcindor, Mike Castro last
year wrote a column in this paper about a tall bumbling “ballplayer” whom he saw in a schoolyard about five years ago. It was
a glimpse of a man before he
became legend in New York

Fencing Team Posts 3-1 Record

kpf

I*

I ill. t/mLI
*

i

The school’s fencing team, under Coach Sidney Schwartz, enters the holidays with a three
win one lost record.
The varsity squad, which works
out on Tuesday and Thursday
■

nights each week, consists of: in
foil. Joe Paul (co-captain), James

Mondello, and Bob Toth; in epee,
John Houston, Herbert Boedecker,
Carl Engel, and Tony Walluk; and
in saber, Dave Kirshgessner (cocaptain. Bob Frey, Richard Fitchette, and Jon Rand.
On November 30th, the varsity
engaged a team of U.B. alumni.
The fencing Bulls overpowered
the alumni for a meet score of
28 to 19, dominating the foil
event 12 to 3, with Joe Paul's
5-0 record outstanding, and the
epee 9-7 with John Houston 3-2
and Carl Engel 3-1. The alumni
won the saber event 9-7.
At McMaster University in
Hamilton, Ontario, on December
3rd. the varsity defeated McMaster 23-4; winning all three events:
foil 9-0; epee 7-2 and saber 7-2.
Outstanding fencers were Joe
Paul, Jim Mondello, and Bob
Toth, each with 3-0 records in
foil: in epee John Houston and

The highly-regarded Nittany
Lions of Penn State overcame the
effects of a ten-day layoff to subdue the Bull cagers, 68-60, before
2,184 at Memorial Auditorium
Tuesday.

City at the age of sixteen. Awkward is hardly the term for Lewis
any more, however, he is presently seven feet one inch and, at last
word, still growing.

Wooten has surrounded him
with four other high school AllAmericans; the average height
for his freshman five is 6 ft. 7 in.
Since he only has two seniors in
this year’s lineup, Wooten’s second team next year might be
number two in the country. Their
scrimmages should attract standing room only crowds because
that might be the only time his
boys will have to go all out.
But Alcindor himself could be
even more of a story. There is
no question that he will be able
to do the work in college. His
high school average was close to
ninety, and he has already expressed a desire to major in
journalism, so his ambition goes
beyond the wooden floor. Assuming that he continues to improve
in the top-flight competition that
awaits him, he could be the one
big star that the National Basketball Association has been waiting
for to make it completely big
league in the eyes of tne American public.
(Cont’d on P. 14)

Carl Engel each had 2-0 records;
and both Bob Frey and Dave
Kirshgcssner were 2-0 in saber
competition.
On Friday, December 10th in
Manley Fieldhouse at Syracuse
University, the fencing Bulls picked the Orange 17-10. The Bulls
won the foil event 6-3, with Joe
Paul 3-0. Tony Walluk and Carl
Engel each 2-0 leading the epee
squad to a 7-2 victory. The saber
team lost 4-5, Bob Frey with a
2-1 record was the best saberman.

Action undtr the boards as UB

meets Penn State.

Basketball
On WBFO
Bill Barth will be tonight’s
guest on Wally Blatter’s SPORT
TALK on WBFO-FM and WBFOAM at 6:50 p.m.
Barth, a 6-5 senior from Fredonia, N. Y., is again this year
one of the team leaders in both
scoring and rebounding.
It was his dunk in last year’s
UB-Niagara game that broke the
contest open. This year he pulled
down a season-high 17 rebounds
in the Ithaca game and scored 22
points against Penn State, also a
high for the year.
Both varsity and freshman UB
basketball games tomorrow night
will be broadcast over WBFO
(FM 88,7 me.), (780 AM). The
doubleheader starts at 6:15 p.m.
The student station will broadcast the second half of the first
game at 7 p.m. Rich Baumgarten
and Howie Novick will cover the
play-by-play. The varsity contest,
which starts at 8:30, will have
Jack Karaszewski doing color and
Wally Blatter following the live
action.

The SPECTRUM
Published by

Parhieri Predi, Jnc.
’

gotI

&amp;

iti printing

1381 KENMORE AVENUE
(at

Delaware)

Phone 876-2284

The Frosh team lost its first

meet of the season to the Syracuse Frosh 19-6.
The heretofore undefeated varsity bowed to Cornell on December 11 by a score of 7-20. Cornell

dominated

all three
6-3, epee
6-3 and saber 8-1. The outstanding fencer for the Bulls was John
Houston in epee with a 2-1 record, The victory gave the Cornell team a 1-1 record for the
season so far.
In a very close meet the UB
Frosh were defeated 14-11, for
their second loss of the season.

events:

STEVE SCHUELEIN

in

winning foil

Main Street in Snyder
ovp «v«ry avaning

'til Christmas

Paced by 6’ 4” jumping jack
Carver Clinton, the Lions weathered a UB shooting storm in the
first half to score their third
straight victory of the season and
16th in their last 17 outings.
After trailing the hot-handed
hosts 33-30 at intermission, the
Lions roared back by singing the
silk with an 11-point flurry at
the outset of the second half.
Visibly stunned by this scoring
spurt, the Bulls never cut the
lead of their taller foes to less
than five points.
In the first half the Bulls had
been able to neutralize the impregnable Penn State zone with
Bill Barth goes up for a shot slick ballhandling, brilliant outand scores.
side-shooting, a tenacious defense
Photo by Peter Bonneau
and yeoman boardwork. After
twenty minutes of play, however,
BUFFALO
PENN STATE
the UB carriage turned into a
G F T
G F T
10 2 22 Walker f
113
Clinton f
pumpkin at the hands of the
12 4 Goodwin f
7 3 17
Saunders f
Lion zone as careless passes and
4 1? Rarth c
8 6 22
Mickey c
2 0 4
Reed q
5 3 13 Poe n
forced shots were quickly cong
g
5
7
17
Goldstein
2 3 7
Roseboro
Bevllacqua
Mickens
1 0 2
0 1 1
verted into baskets for the
0 1 1 Bernard
Oil
Persson
visitors.
Smith
0 0 0
Cutbert
2 1 5
UB was never really “in it”
Totals
24 14 48 Tolols
52 14 40
Halftime: Buffalo 33, Penn State 30.
after this rally, and the Lions
Attendance: 2,184.
seemed content to trade baskets
the remainder of the way for the
68-60 verdict. Clinton, the smoothNIAGARA C.C.
UB FROSH
G F T
G F T
as-silk
All-America candidate
4 4 12
KiiowskI « 4 0 8 Slwek f
Bator
I 14 30 Jekielek t
5 111
from Selma, Ala., paced Penn
Ridley f
10 2 Breunsch'r c 2 3 7
State with 22 points
10 for 12
Blake c
0 0 0 Shea g
10 i 24
Schuglal
9 3 21 Fieri g
6 1 13
from the field
and hauled
5 1 11
Sutherland g 0 3 3 Eberle
g
Norton
0 0 0 Rutkowskl
2 2 6
down a dozen rebounds, while
Kennedy
0 0 0 Creech
1 1 3
Cugini
2 3 7 Stevens
0 0 0
guard Jerry Roseboro saved most
Lukasavich
3 2 8 Milter
10 2
of his 17 point effort for the
Lozina
1 0 2
0 0 0
Sclbilia
second half.
28 25 81
Totals
34 17 89
Totals
Hallllme-UB 44, Ninoara CC 43.
Bill Barth and Norward Goodwin, whose deadeye shooting kept
the Bulls in command throughout
the first half, led the UB scoring
parade with 22 and 17, respecAfter nine weeks of fraternity tively, Barth, the wiry senior
bowling, the standings are as
from Fredonia, did most of his
damage from the corner, while
follows:
W
L
“Goodie,” who seems to have reAlpha Epsilon Pi
32
4 gained his shooting eye with the
5
Alpha Kappa Psi
27
addition of glasses this year,
25
Phi Epsilon Pi
7
continued to make his disappoint10 ing junior year look more and
22
Sigma Alpha Mu
13 more like a bad dream.
Alpha Phi Omega
19
Tau Kappa Epsilon
16
16
Gamma Phi
16
16
UB will resume its cage wars
Sigma Phi Epsilon
18
18 against Bucknell at Clark Gym
Phi Lambda Delta
18 Saturday evening, and then host
14
26
Beta Sigma Rho
10
San Francisco State at the same
Alpha Sigma Phi
9
23 site Tuesday before taking a
Phi Kappa Psi
5
27 three-week layoff for vacation
3
33
and finals.
Pi Lambda Tau
—

Intramurals-

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                    <text>PENN STATE

MARY WRIGHT

I

(See Page 3)

&gt;Bflr I

VHC

(See Page

NO. 17

BUFFALO, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1965

VOLUME 16

IRC Eliminates
Dress Standards

HHR'-’* ■

Km '*.j**y

*

Dining hall
were abolished

dress

standards

by the InterRcsidence Council after a meeting with the administration on
Thursday, December 9,
MICHAEL COUTURE

As of Sunday, December 12, students must adhere to the following code:

KARL OUTH

man
Wr.

RICHARD

(Candidates

MILLER

MICHAEL

“In all indoor residence areas
where students may expect to encounter the public, students must
be fully clothed in street dress
(including shoes). A high standard
of dress should be maintained by
the individual whenever he comes
in contact with other people,
whether it be in the classroom,
the dining halls, or the community. Good grooming is the
most important factor to consider
when choosing an acceptable
ner of dress.”

There was no opposition raised
at the meeting with the adminis-

DENNY HINZ

FISH

Winter Fantasia' Features Activities
Mr. Formal Contest

As an integral part of this
year’s Winter Week activities, the
Winter Week Committee is sponsoring the annual Mr. Formal
contest. The campaign includes
skits, today and tomorrow between 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. in the
Conference Theatre; a Fashion
Show, tomorrow at 3 p.m. in the
Fillmore Room; and the voting,
requiring valid UB Identification
card presentation, taking place
in the Center Lounge Thursday
and Friday between 9 a.m. and
4 p.m.
The Mr. Formal competition
winner will be announced at the
Silver Ball, Saturday evening.
The men contending for the
honor include the following:
Alpha Sigma Phi’s candidate
for Mr. Formal is “That Man,”
Karl Guth. Karl, a 23 year old
senior in Political Science, hopes
to go on to graduate school and
to eventually work for the C.I.A.
Richard Miller, whose campaign theme is “Miller Hi-Life,”
represents
Beta Sigma Rho
Fraternity. A native of Buffalo,
Richard is a Junior majoring in
Philosophy.

Gamma Phi’s candidate for Mr.
Formal is Paul Cary Jenkins
whose theme is “That’s Paul.” An
avid sportsman, Paul was selected
as a Mr. Formal candidate because his college career has reflected his belief in the university ideals.
An active participant in fraternity and athletic activities,
Mike Fish has been selected as
Phi Epsilon Pi’s “Big Man On
Campus” because of his popularity and size.
Even though he is an active
member of his fraternity, particularly in sports and UB activities, Denny Henz has found time
to be Tau Kappa Epsilon’s candidate for Mr. Formal. His campaign theme is “Man of Fire."
Man
With
Manhattan
“A
Moods” describes Paul Schwiegerling, Theta Chi’s candidate for
Mr. Formal. Paul is a 19 year old
Junior from N.Y.C., majoring in
Engineering. Michael Couture,
chosen by Sigma -Phi Epsilon as
their candidate, is using the
theme, “C’est Moi” or “It is me.”
Mike is a Senior in Economics.

Silver Ball Will Climax Winter Week
“Winter Fantasia,”

December

12 to 18, is featuring numerous
student activities planned by
Chairman Stephanie Sacks and
Jerry Dade. Silver Ball, a semi-

formal dance, will climax the
week.
The Mr. Formal Campaign began with a motorcade on Monday,
consisting of six of the seven
candidates. It met at 2 p.m. in
front of Norton Union and proceeded through campus and the
city of Buffalo. Following this,
there was a coffee hour at 3 p.m.
in the Charles Room, Norton
Union, enabling the student body
to meet the Mr. Formal Candidates.

There will be a mixer featuring the “Maniacs” this evening
in the Millard Fillmore Room,
Norton, between 3 and 6 p.m.
Thursday will be Carnival and
Free Night at Norton Union from
8 to 11 p m. Various organizations

will sponsor booths in the Game
Room and there will be free
bowling and pool games. Students
may buy 25c tickets entitling
them to participate.

A toboggan party has been
planned for Friday, December 17.

will be leaving for Chestnut Ridge Park at 7 p.m. in front
of Norton Union.
A Student-Faculty Basketball
Game will take place on Saturday
from 1:30 to 3 p.m. in Clark Gym.
Campus leaders from fraternities,
Allenhurst, and Tower will chal-

Buses

The Public Relations
Committee of Union
Board will hold a coffee
hour Wednesday, December 15 at 3:30 p.m. in the
Dorothy Haas Lounge.
Mr. Gary Hoskin, instructor of Political Science,
will debate the U.S.
and the Dominican Republic, for Better or for
Worse” with another
faculty member.

man-

lenge the faculty members. Ad
mission will be IOC.
The Charity Committee for
Winter Week has planned a drive
on December 5 to 18. Clothes will
be collected for children between
the ages of 5 and 15 who are
staying at the Buffalo State
Hospital. Boxes for the clothes
will be placed in Norton Union,
Goodyear, Clement, Tower, and
Allenhurst Residence Halls.
Another highlight of the activities is the movie One Potato,
Two Potato being shown today in
Norton Conference Theater.
Trophies for the various Mr.
Formal competitions will be presented at Silver Ball, to be held
Saturday evening, December 18,
in the Mary Seaton Room at
Kleinhans Music Hall. General
Chairman of this event is Thomas
Hines.

Music for the Ball will be provided by Jay Moran’s Orchestra
from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.; $3.00
tickets may be purchased in
Norton Union or at the door of
Kleinhans. A Faculty Reception
will precede the dance.
The snow sculpture competition scheduled for Sunday, was
cancelled due to lack of snow.

tration.
IRC chairman Gary Roberts petitioned for power to plan residence activities and events, to
control allocation of residence activities funds, and to set social
rules and codes of conduct.
Dr. Siggelkow, Dean of Students, assured the IRC that residence activities involved academic
freedom, and that resident government is “free to invite any
speaker at any time."
He would not grant complete
control of residence fees, explaining that part of the funds must
be used for "long-range plans.”
An investigatory committee, consisting of the IRC chairman, and
student, faculty, and administrative representatives will
be formed to explore possibilities.
Dean Siggelkow continued that
the IRC has the power to initiate
social rules and codes of conduct.
The issue of dress standards falls

into this category.
To enforce IRC legislation, the
organization is planning to establish a student judiciary to operate on the individual responsi-

bility system.

Dean Siggelkow spoke in favor

of the establishment of a resident
student court, promising to support decisions made by the body.
Dr. Schillo, Director of Housing, felt that the establishment
of the judiciary would pose three
problems: informing students of
violations, obtaining support of
the student body, and interpreting the rules.
Suggestions were offered by
Gary Roberts concerning establishment of visitation privileges,
and IRC control of curfews. No
decisions were mpde.

According to Mr. Roberts, this
was the first in a series of meetings with the administration, “to
make IRC role in student policy
more meaningful by asking the
administration to delegate certain areas to IRC which will accept the responsibility through
the establishment of a judicial

system.”

Course Evaluation
To Be Conducted

The, Academic Affairs Committee, in conjunction with the NSA,
is conducting a course evaluation
program to give students a voice

in their education.
Departments will be evaluated
individually with a questionnaire
designed to deal with the particular course being rated. The first
two departments to be evaluated
will be the History and Mathematics Departments. All courses
from the 100 to the 400 level will

be included.

The program consists of an evaluation of the instructor methods,
the content of the course, the
textbooks, and any labs or recitations based on student comments.
Instructors will also have the opportunity to make comments concerning their courses.

Questionnaires will be administered during the first week of
the second semester to all students enrolled in the two departments. Questions will pertmn to
courses

currently

being given.

The questionnaire will consist of
two parts
short answers to be
written on IBM sheets, and personal comments of the student.
—

Both students’ and instructors'
evaluations of'" a course will be
summarized in essay form by student volunteers who have never
taken the course. “The essays will
be written objectively, expressing
the bad aspects of the course as
well as the good," assured Tom
Carroll, head of the Academic Affairs Committee.
The information from the questionnaires will be given to the
department concerned for the

improvement or changes in the
course under consideration. Mr.
Carroll stated that the course
evaluations are not exepected to
be used by departments when considering

tenure.

The essays will be published in
booklet form before pre-registraCont’d on Page 6

Ad Hoc Committee Plans Sub-Boards
On Friday, December

Ad
the
to

10, the

Hoc Committee to reorganize
FSA, met in Norton Union
finalize plans for revision of
association. The new scheme

the
calls for three sub boards reportmembership.
ing to the general

The first sub-board, it was decided, will contain four under-

graduate Students, two graduate
students a member of the faculty
Dean of Students or a
and

the'

representative of his. The

pur

evalupose of the sub-board is to
ate and determine student fees
and to review budgets of the StuGradudent Association and the
ate Student Association.
The second sub-board formed

will consist of four undergraduate students three members of
the faculty, and three administrators who will be responsible for
long-range University planning.
Two undergraduate students,
two faculty members and six administrators comprise the third
sub board whose duty is to review
and set the policy for income-producing divisions of the FSA. Evaluation will begin during intersession when an itemized statement
of food operation will be presented to sub-board members.

Certain divisions like Athletics
and Parking are not affected by
this new move because FSA is

awaiting policy statement from
State University headquarters
which

will affect future

ment in these fields.

involve-

Ellen Cardone, secretary of the
Association, had this, to
say about the revisions:
“This is a good start towards'
opening the ESA to student par-\
ticipation since the sub-boards can
now initiate policies that were
formerly In the bands of the
Board of Directors. We hope it
will be foUowed up by future
changes In the Board of Directors
and the membership of the ESA.
both of which are atiH adminis
trative-dominated."

‘Student

�Editorial

.

.

.

TACTICS AND STRATEGY
Informed sources have recently suggested that plans
to bomb North VietNam were well under way some five
months before the “incident” which supposedly triggered
the first “reprisal” by the U.S. on that country. This
raises one or two interesting questions: the most coherent
explanation for this is that it is merely another example
of diplomacy by duplicity; however it is possible that it
was merely an educated guess on the part of the military
that sooner or later there was bound to an incident, and
they merely wanted to be “prepared.” Although the
first explanation is probably the more accurate, the second is more intriguing.
If the ultimate purpose of all the death and misery
of this and other wars is to defeat, or “contain’’ international communism, then preparedness for “inevitable”
incidents is just tactics. If, on the other hand, the ultimate purpose of this war is to ensure a prosperous domestic economy and an undesputed dominance in world
“affairs,” then preparedness for inevitable incidents is a
strategy designed to create such incidents a strategy of
carefully planned and executed butchery, a balance of
terror, which ensures terror and makes balance precarious. If the purpose of the war is to defeat communism,
then it is obvious that our “tactics” are stupid and selfdefeating. Even President Furnas knows that political
“unrest” grows like a weed in the rubble of bombed
cities, particularly of these cities were leveled by American bombs.
It becomes obvious that the two “explanations” gf
the five month discrepancy between the plans for bombing and the bombings themselves are really one in the
same. It is the old lesson about means and ends. Evil
means polute the ends they are meant to serve, whether
they are adopted by communists or capitalists..
A very wdse man once said, “Our means must be our
and opr
ends.” Our tactics must be our strategies
strategy must be peace. Political ideologic.? can not be
extirpated by bombs and brutalism, but they can be
confuted with food and friendship. It makes little difference whose food and whose friendship save the world
from the blinding smoke and the bitter ashes, but it would
be a source of genuine pride if it could be ours, for then
ours would be the tactics of intelligence and the strategy
of love.
-

-

“i*in-Chief

UB Has Chance
To Join WUS
By

Dr. John Donaghue, professor
of anthropology at Michigan State
University, criticized the initial
United States involvment in South
Viet Nam in his lecture on "An
Anthropologist's View of Viet
Nam" on Wednesday, December 8.
He noted that United States diplomats lack knowledge about peasant culture was disastrous.
Dr. Donaghue characterized the
typical South Viet Nam village as
a rigid hierarchical administrative arrangment of occupational,
territorial, and religious groups.
Veneration for the land is closclv
tied to ancestor worship.
In the Mekong delta, which has
been settled in the last hundred
years, these loyalties arc not so
strong since scattered settlements

have replaced tightly-knit villages.

After this brief description of
the villages, Dr. Donaghue, discussed the problems the Vietnamese have encountered beginning with the French occupation
which began in the mid-19th Century.

A group of Michigan State prolessors, including Dr. Donaghue,
were present during the initial

United States involvment in 1956.

Dr, Donaghue characterized early
U.S. aims as the containment of
Communism and the building of a
free, democratic and prosperous
society

According to Dr. Donaghue,
diplomats, depending

American

the advice of the Frenchtrained urban elite who had accepted Western values and were a
generation removed from contact

on

SPECTRUM

THE

The official student newspaper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Publication Office at Norton Hall, University Campus, Buffalo, N Y. 14214. Published
weekly from the first week of September to the last week in May, except for
exam periods. Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.
Editor-in-chief
Managing Editor
Business Manager

JEREMY TAYLOR
DAVID EDELMAN

SUSAN
RONNIE

Feature Editor

GREENE

BROMBERG
JOHN STINY

Asst. Feature Editor

JOANNE LEEGANT

Acting Sports Editor

STEVE SCHUELEIN

Editor

Photography

Continuity Editor

EDWARD JOSCELYN
ORSZULAK

Ad Co-ordinator
Circulation

GARY FISCHER

Manager

..DIANE

LEWIS

Copy

Editor
Editor

Faculty Advisor

SHARON HONIG

Financial Advisor

LAUREN

Leprechaun

JACOBS

IRENE WILLET
DALLAS
RUSSELL

GARBER

GOLDBERG

EDITORIAL POLICY IS DETERMINED BY THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
FIRST CLASS HONOR RATING
Second Class, Pottage Paid at Buffalo, N.Y.

Subscription
10,000

S3.00

per

year,

As a non partisan organization,
WUS has worked for 45 years to
help students in more than 60
countries. This aid covers four
major areas, mainly dealing with
needs existing in student health,
lodging and living, individual and
emergency aid, and educational
facilities and activities. The cause
of World University Service was
made imminent with the recognition of the increase in leadership
demands, especially upon the
students in the new nations of
Africa and Asia. WUS help goes
only to projects students initiate
and largely sustain by themselves; each country matches any
outside donations to WUS.
Students at UB will be given
an opportunity to take part in
this international academic community, which through mutual
understanding and aid, will provide the leadership of the future,
Marjorie Silberman, chairman of
WUS, hopes that a great number
of students will participate by
contributing to the cause and
joining any of the following four
subcommittees: soliciting, publicity and
education, special
events, and administration. This
is an opportunity to do something
about student problems on an innatiohal scale. Those interested
in joining should contact Marjorie Silberman at 831-2463.

with village life, gained little
knowledge of the peasants. Conse-

quently, American intervention
contributed to the benefit of the
urban elite while impoverishing
the peasants. The downtrodden
peasants were vulnerable to various religious sects, communists,
and terrorists who infiltrated the
peasant villages. These groups
later formed the National Liberation Front, or Viet Cong, in 1960,
Dr. Donaghue continued that
propaganda techniques of the government were unlike those of the
NLF: While Diem's leaflets promised "reunification, democracy,
and security," the Viet Cong utilized well-known instances of murder and rape by "imperialist" gov

ernment forces. Marxist ideology
was not referred to, since it would
not be understood by the villagers.
Although atrocities were committed by both sides, they were propagandized only by the NLF.

SUZUKI X-6
250 cc

12,000 mi. or 12 months

GUARANTEE
(parts &amp; labor)

55 cc ■ 80 cc 150 cc twin
250 ec twin
Lay Away for Spring
(no extra charge)

Ed's Suzuki

circulation

Represented for national advertising by
National Advertising Service Inc., 420
Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.

.

campaign to educate the students
about this, raise funds, and encourage students to participate
in this cause.

■

Layout

.

the world. Beginning early next
semester, WUS will sponsor a

—

MARCIA

.

SHARON SHULMAN

6-Speed
100 m.p.h.
(no oil-gas mix)

RAYMOND VOLPE

IS HERE

GIVE BLOODI—THE

The University of Buffalo will
have an opportunity to participate this year in the World University Service, an association of
college professors and students
who wish to share materially, intellectually, and spiritually with
their contemporaries throughout

Dr. Donaghue of Michigan State Lectures;
Condemns U.S. Foreign Policy In Viet Nam

News Editor

Tuesday, December 14, 1965

SPECTRUM

PACE TWO

715 Elmwood Ave.

8 blocks S. of State Teachers

Harriman Remains Open for Finals
During finals week, January 4
to 13, Harriman Library will remain open until 1 a.m., the Stu-

dent Welfare Committee announced this week.
“It is hoped that the opening of
Harriman Library will alleviate
the current shortage of adequate
study space during the week of
final examinations,” stated Sheldon Cohen, Assistant Chairman of
the Student Welfare Committee.
“Further, all books in Harriman
Library can be borrowed this
week until 12:30 a.m.”
Through the cooperation of
Scudder all curfews will

Dean

be extended to enable resident
women to use the library facilities until the closing hour.

Harriman Library will be open
Friday from 7:30 to
Monday
1:00 a.m., Saturday from 9:00
am. to 1:00 a.m., and Sunday
from 1:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m.
■

The Library Hours have been
extended through the cooperation of Mr. John Heeling, Assis-

tant Director for Readers’ Services.

Lockwood Library will operate
according to regular schedule.

ACLU Meeting
A meeting of the Niagara Frontier Chapter of the American
Civil Liberties Union entitled
“Bill of Rights Day” will be held
on Wednesday, December 15, at
8 p.m. in the Conference Theater
in Norton Union. The presentation of the Fifth Annual Niagara
Frontier Civil Liberties Award
will be given to the Reverend
Peter J. Riga.

The obtaining of and admissibility of “Confessions” will be discussed by William B. Lawless, Supreme Court Justice, Victor
Turyn, Special Agent of the Buf-

falo FBI, Paul Ivan Birzon, William H. Schneider, Commissioner
of Police, and John J. Honan,
First Assistant to the D.A. Professor Herman Schwartz will be the
moderator.

College Week In

Bermuda

Spring Vacation (March 19-26)

8 Days and 7 Nights including below:

fa Round

Trip Flight from Buffalo and New York

fa Round Trip Transfers

from Airport to Guest

House, Cottage, or Apartment

fa Accommodations

—

Guest House,

Cottage

and Apartments

fa Full College Week Program of

Activities

BEACH PARTY —COLLEGE QUEEN CONTEST
TALENT SHOW &amp; MUCH MORE

—

Complete for

$165 from New York
$185 from Buffalo
Contact:

DONALD MATHISON
3876 Bailey Ave.
837-5964
—

Representative of Garber’s Travel Agency

CRUISE

�Tuesday, December 14, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE THREE

Dr. Mary Wright Lectures
Discusses Development of China

Study Emphasized
Dr. Mary Wright, Professor of
History at Yale University, discussed the importance of studying
Chinese history as a basis of comparison for Western history in a
lecture to the Graduate History
Club, Friday evening, December 10.
According to Dr. Wright, a history major should study Chinese
history either as a practical or
intellectual service to his devel-

By RONNIE BROMBERG
Dr. Mary Wright of Yale University concluded Friday, December 10 that there is no evidence
of “Widespread unrest or potential for overthrowing . . . (China)
from within . . or its being conquered from without.”
In speaking to UB students and
faculty in the China Lecture Series, sponsored by the Convocations Committee of the Student
Senate and the International Club,
Dr. Wright discussed the develop-

opment.

Dr. Wright noted that China is
a good area for study because of
the differences found in the vast
amount of territory she encompasses.

ment of the Nationalists and the
Chinese Communists before 1949.
She appraised the present Chinese
situation.

Dr. Wright related that China,
proud of its achievements, was
subjected with suddenness tto the
lowest state by Western invasions.

In the first decade of the 20th
century there was a new effort at
nationalism j to establish China as
a great power.
“This is the first example in
world history of a planned tranto make enormous
sition
changes in the whole society.” Dr.
Wright explained that social reforms of great magnitude were

She continued that Chinese his
tory is "very well documented,"
making it convenient to study.

DR. MARY WRIGHT
kind of rupture was

formed) some

predictably near,”

Dr. Wright noted that the rest
of the war held favorable conditions for the Communists, who
won the civil war in 1949.
An

...

attempted.

She noted that the speed and
vigor of the reform toppled the
existing order. The country degenerated into a “shadow of a
central government.”

Dr. Wright continued that the
beginning of the 1920’s marked
the polarization of Chinese politics into two totalitarian parties—the Nationalists and the Communists.
She related that in 1927 after
an attempt at a united front, the
Nationalists expelled or killed all
Communists. Chiang Kai Shek, in
power for 10 years, had no real
control over all of China.
Chiang’s government, “inadequate to its time,” attempted a
“modernization of limited scope
at the top.” There was no “sweeping frontal attack” on the problems of China.

She continued that a wing of
the Communist party, escaping
to the back hills, presented a
threat to Chiang.

A second united front tore in
1941. Dr. Wright explained that
when a “coalition between two
political parties with fundamentally different ideas . . . (was

authoritarian

CORDUROY
TROUSERS

non-authoritarian government had
left the country a complete sham-

bles.

Dr. Wright continued that the
consolidation and power produced incorruptible efficiency in
China. In the football game of
international politics, China
moved up from “football to
player.”
In discussing the apparent stability of the Chinese Communist
state, Dr. Wright noted that the
“price (of Communism) is not too
high for the Chinese to pay.”
During a question period following the lecture, Dr. Wright
explained that China, “hypersensitive to foreign intervention, , , ,
(is) not recklessly expansionist.”

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cating the peasants in one generation.

She explained that the education and advancement of the peasantry was looked upon with favor
by the ruling class, for this was
generally considered to promote
harmony and stability.

Dr. Wright continued her lec
ture with China’s urban history.

Cities were built to be either administrative or trade and commerce centers.

She discussed the civil-military
conflict. In China, the military was
considered to be subordinate, not
superior, to the civilians.

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Chinese believed in the “myth of
mobility,” the possibility of edu-

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THE BLUEBIRD OF HAPPINESS
HAS FLOWN THE COOP
Can education bring happiness?
This is a question that in recent years has caused much
lively debate and several hundred stabbings among American college professors. Some contend that if a student's intellect is sufficiently aroused, happiness will automatically
foliow. Others say that to concentrate on the intellect and
ignore the rest of the personality can only lead to misery.
I myself favor the second view, and I offer in evidence
the well-known case of Knut Fusco.
Knut, a forestry major, never got anything less than a
straight "A,” was awarded his B.T. (Bachelor of Trees) in
only two years, his M.S.B. (Master of Sap and Bark) in
only three, and his D.B.C. (Doctor of Blight and Cutworms)
.
in only four.
Academic glory was his. His intellect was the envy of
every intellect fan on campus. But was he happy? The answer, alas, was no. Knut— he knew not why—was miserable; so miserable, in fact, that one day while walking
across campus, he was suddenly so overcome with melan
choly that lie thing himself, weeping, upon the statue of the
Founder.
By and by, a liberal arts coed named Nikki Sigafoos came
by with her Barby doll. She noted Knut's condition. “How
:

come you’re so unhappy, hey?” said Nikki.
“Suppose you tell me, you dumb old liberal arts major,"
replied Knut peevishly.
"All right, I will,” said Nikki. “You are unhappy for two
reasons. First, because you have been so busy stuffing your
intellect that you have gone and starved your psyche
I've got nothing
against learning,
mind you, but a person oughtn't to neglect the pleasant
gentle amenities of

life—the fun things.
Have you. for instance, ever been to
a dance?”
Knut shook his
head
"Have you ever
(wd Ihcn In ajiiKlire of the pnm
watched a sunset?
Written a poem? Shaved with a Petsonna Stainless Steel
Blade?”
Knut shook his head.
“Well, we’ll fix that right now."said Nikki, and gave him
a razor, a Personna Stainless Steel Blade, and a can of
Burma Shave.
Knut lathered with the Burma Shave and shaved with
the Personna and for the first time in many long years he
smiled. He smiled and then he laughed —peal after peal of
reverberating joy. “Wow-dow!” he cried. "What a shave!
Does Personna come in injector style, too?”
“Itdoes,”said Nikki.
“(Jloriosky!” cried Knut. "And does Burma Shave come
in menthol, too?”
It does,” said Nikki.
"Huzzah!" cried Knut. "Now that I have found Personna
and Burma Shave I will never have another unhappy day."
"Hold!” said Nikki. “Personna and Burma Shave alone
will not solve your problem—only half of it. Remember I
said there were two things making you unhappy?”
“Oh. yeah,” said Knut. "What’s the other one?”
"How long have you had that bear trap on your foot?"
said Nikki.
"I stepped on it during a field trip in my freshman year,"
said Knut. "I keep meaning to have it taken off."
Allow me
said Nikki and removed it
“band’s sakes, what a relief!" said Knut, now totally
happy, and took Nikki’s hand and led her to a Personna
vendor and then to a justice of the peace.
Today Knut is a perfectly fulfilled man, both intellectwise and personalitywi.se. He lives in a charming split-level
house w ith Nikki and their 17 children and he rises steadily
in the forestry game. Only last month, in fact, he became
Consultant on Sawdust to the American Butchers Guild,
he was named an Honorary Sequoia by the park commissioner of Las V'egas, and he published a best -selling book
called / If,is it Slip/icry Kim for lh&gt; Kill.

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She continued that ability became the most important criterion for admission to the ruling
class, the “elite of merit.”

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proaching totalitarianism, Chinese
“controls have probably been less
resented in China than they would
be in the U.S.” She explained that
China’s first experience with a

Dr. Wright compared the governing of Imperial China to the
governing of modern states. She
discussed the parallel problems
of the emperor and a modern ex-

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�Tuesday, December 14, 1965

SPECTRUM

PAGE SIX

Trivia Contest Today

Twelve Tone Music Lecture

WBFO will hold a Trivia Contest tonight at 7 p.m. in the Millard Fillmore Room to be broadcast throughout the entire city.

be so challenging that, at most,
one person in the entire room
should be able to answer,” said
Mr. Tenenbaum.

Participants will be a team
from Sigma Alpha Mu, an independent group called the Skanks,
and a group from Allenhurst.
Emcee will be Marvin Click.

If the contest is successful, Mr.
Tenenbaum plans to schedule regular contests weekly or monthly.

The main purpose of the con-

test, according to the program
director and producer, Henry L.

Tenenbaum, is ‘‘the dissemination
of totally useless and banal facts
in an attempt to pollute as many
minds as possible."
The notion for the trivia contest was copied from other colleges in the country, Mr, Tenen-

baum related. The contest is
structured after the GE College
Bowl, but there will be audience
participation if neither team is
able tp answer a question,
"Some of the questions will be
easy to answer, while others will

Course Evaluation

.

.

.

from P. 1)
tion for the fall, 1966 semester so
that students may use the information when planning programs.

(Cont'd

WBFO broadcasts on a frequency of 88.7mc FM and 780kc AM
closed circuit to the university
residence halls
Any teams that would like to
compete next semester should
submit a list of 25 questions with
the name of the members and the
phone number of at least one
member to: Trivia, Care of WBFO.

Daniel Pinkham will give the
third Slee Foundation lecture entitled “The Twelve-Tone Approach to Tonal Vocal Music” at
8:30 p.tn., Thursday, December 16,
at Baird Hall.
Composer and member of the
England Conservatory of
Music, Mr. Pinkham will present
and explain a program of music
performed by Soprano Barbara
Wallace, tenor Richard Conrad,
and harpsichordist Helen Keany.
The composer will appear on
piano.

uished organists throughout the

world. He has been the recipient
of both a Fullbright Scholarship
and a Ford Foundation grant. He
is a co-founder of the Cambridge
Festival Orchestra and musical
director of King’s Chapel in Boston.

ber 15 at 7 p.m.

New

in 1923 in Lynn, Massachusetts, Mr. Pinkham has studied
organ and harmony with disting.
Born

Pastjfe

x

WBFO will broadcast a
talk by former CBS
news correspondent David
Schoenbrun titled: V iet
Nam: From French Legionnaires to American
G. I.’s Wednesday, Decem-

Stencil Demonstration
There will be a demonstration
of stencils without a typist at an
open house in Mr. David de Meza’s
technical writing class Tuesday,
at 6:30 p.m., December 14 in Hardman Library, 58S (beneath the
Reserve Library).

partners Press, Jn
mill Printing

The Company’s first engine, the Wasp, took
on May 5, 1926. Within a year the
Wasp set its first world record and went on
to smash existing records and set standards
for both land and seaplanes for years to
come, carrying airframes and pilots higher,
farther, and faster than they had ever gone
before.

to the air

Pr

The instructors’ names will be
listed on the pre-registration
course list.
A number of students will be
needed in January to administer
the questionnaires and write the
summary evaluations.
"This is the first time that
such an undertaking has been attempted at this university,” Mr.
Carroll said. “Its success depends
on the cooperation received from
the faculty and the student body.

It provides a good opportunity
for students discontented with
their courses to take effective ac-

tion.”
“Students

interested

in

this

project arc urged to leave their
names and phone numbers at the
Student Senate office or at the
Norton candy counter."

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Engineers and scientists at Pratt &amp; Whitney Aircraft
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Management s determination to provide the best and
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�Tuesday, December 14, 1965

SDS Plans 18 Hour Fast
Students for a Democratic SoDecember 9,
to discuss a 48-hour fast planned
for December 16 and 17, and the
lamination of draft cards.

ciety met Thursday,

According to Mark Robinson,
SDS member, the organization is
sponsoring a vigil and fast to commemorate those who have died in
the Vietnamese war. “The protest,
which will start at Lafayette
Square and move toward the University, is intended to show opposition to the war, and to remind
people that there are some who
will not be home for Christmas,”
Mr. Robinson said.

Last Tuesday at Canisius College draft cards were laminated
to reply to the recent burning
episodes, one spokesman reported.
At a meeting with Mayor Kowal

PACE SEVEN

SPECTRUM

on December 7, the “Laminators,"
in favor of United States policy
in Viet Nam, were picketed by

protestors. Laminators apprehended the picketers and locked them
in a room until the end of the
meeting, proving the protest ineffective.
The Junior Chamber of Commerce is presently attempting to
start a similar lamination movement on campus. The JC’s feel
the lamination wi 11 make the
draft card less destructible
through processing by the general
binding company.
Mr. Robert McVeight, directpf
of public information for University Relations, has agreed to locate a sponsor for this project. As
of yet, no on-campus organization

has been found.

NSA Sponsors Regional Conference
By ALICE EDELMAN
The National Student Association sponsored a two day regional
conference on community involvement for twelve colleges last

businessman should be directed
toward the common good of the

to provide basic services to student governments and to provide
a structure wherein the membership can define policies and un-

community," Mr. Kane said. According to Mr. Berghash, "the
primary goal of a businessman is
profit; however, once he has created a profitable business he
should use his Influence in politics to promote such programs as
urban renewal and pollution prevention." Mr Berghash suggested

dertake action."
The Conference began Friday
evening with a keynote address
given by Mr. James Kane, Chair
man, Buffalo AFL-CIO, who ex-

tween industry aand college students would be possible by making business courses more relevant to what is actually going on
in industry.

weekend.
“The purposes of the NSA are

plained some general provisions
of the Federal Anti-poverty program. The conference then broke
up into workshops.
Mr. Kane and Mr, Robert Berghash, President of Roberts Dental
Manufacturing Co. Inc., led a

workshop on “The Role of Business and Labor in the Community.” “The primary goals of the

that better

communication

be-

Student Association President
Clinton Devereaux, Dean of Students Richard Sigglckow, and Mr.
Jay Brett, attorney and President

of the Amherst Young Republicans, conducted a workshop Saturday morning, entitled “Role of
the Student in the Community:
Protest vs. Welfare." They were
concerned with academic freedom
and the role of the students in
academic studies vs. community

responsibility.

Another panel on Saturday considered the "Role of Government
in the Community" with Mr. Miles
Bender, member of the Eric
County Board of Supervisors; Mr.
William Buyer's, member of the

Buffalo Common Council: Dr. Jora
Minasian, associate professor of
economics and Mr. Bill Harrel of
the sociology dept.
Mr. Harrell said that morality
and ethics should come first in
government policy, while Dr. Minasian gave priority to economic
theory. Mr. Bender and Mr. Buyers emphasized need for a com
bination of both.

Saturday.afternoon three workshops on tutorials, civil rights in
education, and civil rights in employment and housing, were held.
They concluded that rather than
tutoring students who have been
deprived by an inferior education, students should concentrate
on the improvement of the educa-

tion system itself.

At a banquet Saturday evening
Dean of Women, Miss Jeanette
Scudder spoke on the role of NSA.
At a general meeting Sunday
Rosemary Brown outlined a conference to be held in
the spring on American foreign
student relations. Three college
graduates from the National Headmorning,

quarters helped students with
problems that had arisen at their

colleges. A regional treasurer was

elected.

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�Tuesday,

SPECTRUM

PACE EIGHT

December 14, 1965

UB Basketball Team Shows Penn State-UB
Improvement Over Weekend Game Tonight
Back to back wins over Ithaca
and Albany State this weekend
have given the University of Buffalo Basketball team a three and
one season record.
On Friday the UB cagers
blocked a late rally to win over
the previously undefeated Ithaca
College team 71-66.

The Bulls led by 11 at the half
but that was nibbled away to a

the field, hitting on 29 out of 50
attempts and more than made up
for Crocco. Bill Barth turned in
his best scoring record of the
season with 21 points.
The Baby Bulls picked up their
second and third wins over the
weekend. They came from behind
to nip the Ithaca Frosh 76-75 on
Friday and trampled the Little
Indians of Siena 75-57 on Saturday.

four point advantage in the final
minutes of the game. Victory was
clinched at the free throw line
as Paul Goldstein netted two after
scoring a short jump shot. Harvey
Poe then sank three more from
the foul line as the clock ran out.

UNIV. OF

BUFFALO
GF

Goodwin f

6

2
3
7

Walker f
Barth c
Poe g

Goldstein g 7
Culbert
0
Bevilacqua

1.

T
2 14
2 4
17
6 20
2 14
0 0
7 4
0 4
0 0
15 71

ITHACA
G P T

Lyke

f

Buckley
2
0
Totals
38
Totals
Halftime: UB 27, Ithaca 26.

Bernard
Smith

An estimated 2,000 spectators
saw Albany State scorched, 80-66,
by the UB Basketball Bulls. A
scoring record for the Washington Avenue Armory of 35 points
was set by Mike Crocco of Al-

5 10 20

Valesanfe f 7 2 16
3 17
Andreika g 5 2 11.
Harris g
2 0 4
LaLond*
1 02 4
Fario
2
1
Pratt c

BUFFALO
G F

1 0 2

25 14

64

ALBANY
GF Ti

T
0 5 5 Constantino f 2 3 4
11 13 35
8 2 18 Crocco f
Barth c
8 5 21 Bloom c
5 0 10
4 19
Poe q
3 5 11 Marcus o
Goldstein g
3 3 7 Morrison g
0 2 3
Bernard
3 1 7 Jursak
0 0 0
Bevilaqua
1 0 2
1 0 3 Lanqt
0 2 3
Culbert
3 1 7 Doody
Smith
1 0 2
Totals
33 30 M
Totals
39 23 80
Halftime: UB 40, Albany 35.
Walktr f

Goodwin �

bany.

Buffalo sank 58 per cent from

New Series on WBFO
WBFO is currently broadcasting a new series of programs entitled “To Be Negro” each Wednesday at 10 p.m. and rebroadcasting at 4 p.m. on Friday.
According to Hank Tenenbaum
and Bill Siemering, producers, the
series is designed to help communicate on a personal level
some of the feelings and frustrations of being Negro.

“The staff felt that all too often
the only time members of the
white community hear anything
from the Negro community is in
a time of crisis or active protest,
and that it is essential for the
total community to be more
aware of the Negro community
in Buffalo,” Mr. Siemering commented.
Participants in the program this
week and next are Paul Edwards,
Assistant Dean of the School of
Social Welfare; Charles Brewer,
UB student and Chairman of the
Civil Rights Committee of the
Student Senate; Luther Burnette,
Chairman of the Buffalo CORE;
and Bertha Ford, Chairman of the
Michigan-Oak Residents Council.

Dr. Reeves on Civil Rights Cases
Professor Frank Reeves of Howard University School of Law addressed the Politics Club, Wednesday, December 18. He noted
that mass protest demonstrations
are helpful in accelerating the
pace of the vindication of rights,
but added that they do not represent an effective substitute for

protests may prove effective in
some instances, serving to “focus
public attention beyond the area
in which the difficulty exists,”
often leading to “corrective legis-

litigation.

mosphere of pressure.”

He discussed the techniques for
choosing and carrying out test
cases in civil rights.
According to Professor Reeves,
litigation and mass protests “start
from two different premises.” He
explained that the purpose of litigation is the vindication of constitutional and legislative rights,
while mass demonstrations cannot
vindicate these rights and estab-

Dr. Reeves continued that mass

lation.”
Mass protests serve

to "accelerate and influence the results that
might occur,” presenting an “atProfessor Reeves is “favorably
disposed toward the mass protest
demonstration technique within
certain limitations.”

He explained that the validity
of the protest depends on whether
its purpose is the vindication of
constitutional rights or chaos and
confusion.
He noted that a “valid demon. . can be an effective
stration
means toward the end . . . to ac.

better.

Weekly Calendar
Student Art Exhibit and Sale;
Paintings and Craft Objects all
day, Center Lounge,
Meeting; Spring Arts Festival,
4 p.m., 266 Norton.

Tuesday:
Varsity Basketball; UB vs. Penn
State, 9 p.m., Memorial Audi-

torium.
Mixer;

Freshman Council, 3 to

6 p.m., Fillmore Room.

Film: “One Potato, Two Potato,” continuous showing Conference Theatre.
Student Art Exhibit and Sale;
Paintings and Craft Objects all
day, Center Lounge.

Winter Weekend: Ticket selling
for events, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.,
Lobby, all week.
Trivia Tournament: WBFO 6 to
8 p.m., Fillmore Room.
Lecture: Western N. Y. School
Study Council, 2 pm., Room 264,
\ .
c
Norton.
Show: “Skits” for Mr, Formal,
Union Board, 9 to 3 p.m., Conference Theatre

Meeting:

Music Committee, 12

to 1 p.m.
Friday:
Varsity Fencing: UB vs. Syracuse Univ., 7:30 p.m., Away.
Meeting: School of Education;

10 to 12 p.m.. Room 234.

Dance: Activities Committee of
Clement Hall, 8 to 12 p.m., Fillmore Room.
Student Art Exhibit and Sale:
Paintings and Craft Objects, all

day, Center Lounge.
Play: “Oh Dad, P o o

Bonaventure, 6:30 p.m., Away.

Dad,
Mama's Hung You in the Closet
and I’m Feeling So Bad.” Student Theatre Guild, 8:30 p.m.,
140 Capen Hall.
Biology Seminar: Dr. E. Cohen
of Roswell Park, 3:30 p.m.,

dent Theatre Guild, 8:30 p.m.,
140 Capen Hall.
Slee Lecture: Daniel Pinkham,
Organist Harpsichordist, 8:30
pjn., Baird.
’

Colloquim in Statistics: Mathematics Department, 4 p.m., Diefendorf Hall.
Philharmonic; With UB Chorus
and Schola Cantorum, 8:30 p.m.,
Kleinhans Music Hall.
Mr. Formal: Voting, 9 to 4 p.m.,
Center Lounge.
Toboggan Party: Chestnut Ridge
Park, Buses provided, 7 p.m.
Film: “Man With the X-Ray
Eyes,” and “Castle of Blood,"
25y, Conference Theatre.

Wednesday;
Freshman Basketball: UB vs. St.

Thursday:
Varsity and Frosh Swimming:
UB vs. Brockport State, 8 p.m.,
Away.
Dinner: Student Christian Association, 6 p.m., Chaplain’s home.
Play: “Oh Dad, Poor Dad.
Mama's Hung You in the Closet
and I’m Feeling So Sad.” Stu-

‘

,

Turning to test cases, Dr.
Reeves explained that this technique is within traditional legal
practice: If one has a law situation that can be affected by a
court decision, then one may deliberately create a situation where
the law is brought up for determination.
One may instead select an existing situation for the test case,
which according to Dr. Reeves,
must be carefully planned, having as broad a purpose as possible.
However “tedious and frustrating” it is, results must come
through litigation, Dr. Reeves emphasized. He noted that it is the
one most effective approach for
lasting and enforceable results.
Professor Reeves, acting attoris involved in litigation in the
Watts riots. Mrs. Opler, pre-law

advisor at
to speak.

UB, arranged for him

There will be a performance of the short play “The
Marvelous Pageant”, by
Cervantes, performed by
students in Drama and
speech 119-120 (Drama
workshop) in room 231
Norton on Thursday, December 16 at 4 p.m. There
will he no admission

UB and Penn State, two teams
that posted combined records of
39 wins out of 46 games and played in NCAA tournaments last season, will meet at 9 p.m. tonight
in Memorial Auditorium in a contest which could be one of the
real highlights of the 1965 66
Western New York basketball
-

W

campaign.

whose 20-4 mark
last year included a 13-game winning streak and victories over
such perennial powerhouses as
Kansas, Kansas State, West Virginia, Houston and Detroit, is
loaded with veterans and seems
primed to make a bid for nothing
less than the national champion-

"

Penn State,

CEH

ship.
Heading the Penn State stars
is 6-4 forward Carver Clinton
from Selma, Alabama, a genuine

All-America candidate. Last year
the crowd-pleasing Clinton averaged 17 points a game and led
his club in rebounds. He is cocaptain with Ray Saunders, who
also averages in double figures.
Other powerful guns in the Penn
State arsenal include 6-1 guard
Jim Reed, who shot 49 per cent
last year, Jerry Roseboro and
Jeff Persson.
Veteran Penn State coach John
.igli also has available his son-inEi
law, 6-9 Paul Mickey, a junior
letterman. Mickey did not become
eligible until mid-season last year,
but set the season’s one-game rebound high with 20 against Rutgers.
“The key to our season,” said
the Penn State mentor, “will be
how well the newer players come
along against a difficult schedule
in the first month.” So far the
Nittany Lions have fulfilled their
coach’s wishes by scoring victories over Maryland, 65-61, and Gettysburg, 81-63.

HEAD COACH JOHN ELGI

UB-Penn State Notes .
The
Aud seems to bring out the best
in the Bulls. UB won all four
games there last year and carried highly-touted Villanova to
the wire before dropping a twopoint decision there two years
ago
. . The game is the first
meeting between the teams since
1927 . . . Mickey transferred to
Penn State from Troy State, Alabama, where Coach Serfustini
launched his coaching career . . .
The UB frosh will meet Niagara
Community College in a 7 p.m.
preliminary this evening.
.

,

UB students will be admitted to
Memorial Auditorium FREE upon
presentation of their ID cards at
the Aud door. For non-students,
tickets are on sale at the UB Athletic Ticket Office, 104 Clirk
Gym; side reds are $2, side blues
are $1.50, and grays are $1. Buses
will be leaving Norton Union for
the Aud at 6 p.m. and 8 p.m.

d^oarJ

Spectrum
ANTHROPOLOGY CLUB
Dr. Willard Walker will speak
on "Cherokee Literary Revivalism” on Wednesday at 8 p.m. in
the new archaelogy lab (on Maine

and

.

Memmac).

interested in the program please
contact Gail Myers at 831-2269
or Julie Maley at 831-2552.
The
;

AIESEC

There is a meeting of AIESEC
Tuesday, December 16, in Room
244 Norton from 4 to 5:30 p.m.
If you are able to attend and are

Wft

skj
oil

SK1 CLUB
club
ho , d B meet

ested in a trip to Vermont over
Intersession, in the Third Floor
Lounge opposite the Ski Club
Office (Room 320) at 7:30 p.m.,
Thursday, December 16,

i ft ft ftft $ ft « tt aa a

*

charge.
Approval has been
granted for a 3:00 a.m.
closing hour for women’s
residences for the night
of the Silver Ball, Saturday, December 18.

Health Science.

/hr
Complete Luggage Center
3400 MAIN STREET Opposite UB
Open Every Even inf Until Ckinlmi

Main Street in Snyder
open every evening

'til Christmas

.

tVirvoo members inter-

CwrHiy DncMNh I*' University Facnhy A SteAsnjs

TF 3-1600

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